The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, May 06, 1865, Image 1

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    _ -.-
T 110316 or Tur.zurimunti , J 411 U RNA P.
T Rgs-$:9 Zgyer_annutti, payable id &diaries-.
83 00 if not paid in advance. . • •
These terms will be strictly adhered to hereafter. .
, . TO CLUBS:
Thy copies to one address' (in advance). .......$1 00
• " "• . ". ~" 00
y o rirrecn"' " • . . 28 00
club subscrint meet invariably bepedd in advance.
T he ,meat aill be furnished to Carriers and other!
et .4 - 0 Per / 00 COPlee, cash 'on delivery. • :
Clergymen, and School Teachent willbe tarnished
with the Jecosit at $1 50 in advance, 0r51.15 ii r -
dd
within the year--Over one' year. full ratty. •
Rotes of Advertising: . • ,
T o r S Trpes, including date, one insertion, 'l5 cis» and
obequeot insertions -.lien , . One square of T lines, and
0 .. r 3 *lea, for or 2 Insertions $1; 9 insertions $1 es
liasertiona,. 25 cents per square. ..Larger
etas PTOPortion• . .
sownro. 'rim • its. swittxr.,'
Three lines . - ... .... $2 00 . $ll FO." • .•$5 00
Bevenlinet, sndoter3... 400 100 . .00*
T wo sq uares, or 141blap,
rtree 021 " . 00 'l4 00 ' 20 00
Four " "39 `• 9 00 16 00 24 00
r y e 311. " 10 00 18 00 .-26 00
gaarter win= 18 00 90 00 .45
.00
. 0 -Larger space as per agreement. • -
rf- Nine vorde are counted as a line in advertising.
dz ,N , tices and rY*oll3tiOrlP, 2 and 3 times. $2 50
Administraton Notices Ind Dissolutions G times. $3,
COAL ~.71713,A_IYE':AIWEWEISEMN717.S.
Terminus of the Philadelphia k Reading R. It., on the Delaware, at Philadelphia.---Piers for the Shipment Of Lath:mites.,
COAL.
QUINTARD & -WARD
N. 11 •PINE Street,
NEW -YORK.
Sole Agents for The Consolidated Coal Count
prtny's Baltimore Vein Wilkesbarre Coal,
shipped from Jersey Sty and Elizabethoort.
. Also. for the ITAMP'SIIIRE and BALTIMORE 'CO.'S
Ilampshire .George's Creek Coal, ,- shipped
at Baltimore and Georgetown -
Agents for GEORGE NEARS. celebrated Broad
Top Coral; shipped at-Philadelphia. .
- From their Wharf, No. 1, at Port Richmond, Phila
delphia, they are prepared to ship the best qualities 4
3..otain Mountain and. Med and While Ash
litchuylkilt Con's. . .
From their docks aitsjersey City (where the depth. of
water is from 15 to 15 feet). they are prepared at all ,
seasons to 'supply - the above Coals, and L.V.IIIGII, to
steamers.and . ships for ports in China and elsewhere.. •
• Steamers can be coaled at, any hour during day or
• . . Agent at Sersev.City.
Agents' at Boston—WAßD BAUM, 42 KilbySt.,
-at . .. Newark—if: 3f. DitCAMP.
Nardi 12, '64. "11-1 y •
' Pier No. 7.
tiff N R. II TE ;
• • •fftrpEz 0, • ,
SCHTTYLKILI, COAL,
Whorf.No. 7, Port Richmond. '
°mu" g o olcUi l v ‘-- e n sT i ' l!hre.en t- I ' V a `I P Y ;l o s ;k
Octpber 111, 'IA • .
Pier No. 14
NEW YORK & SChuYLKILT., OOAL 00.,
BROAD IifOITh.:TAIN; - RtACK 'HEATH, AND
SUPERIOR RED ASH COALS:
nirw ,,,,;.r. 45 South street, New York.. •
1132 Walnut street, Philadelphia..
PI qL4I)EtP. WA ;X - ..
SCHUYLKILL NAVIGATION.
Shipping Wharves for ANTHRACITE COAL at
Greenwich, Delaware River, Philada.
'Wharf No. 1..-
LEWIS KEDEIVRIED. dc
itoinnEL, POTTS & Co.
• . r 2.05 Walnut Street. Philadelphia.
OFFICES: U 0 Broadway. Sew York. • ,
- 114 Ent; street. Boston:* ,
~• Wharf IV cv. 3. • . •
ItEPPLIER 41' BRO.
• (N. E. tor. Walnut & Fourth eta, Phila.
OFFICES: 35 Pine Street, New York
L.Merchantr Bank Building. Providence
DAVIS 'FICARSON , do .Co., •
. .
wrainui AND antrprita Or MT.
CELEBRATED LOCUST MOUNTAIN WHITE ASH
. and SPOHN VEIN. - •."
RED ASH COAL.
• (No. 1:18 Walnut Street. Philadelphia.
• J No. 111 Broad Way. Room No. 9 Trinity
OFFICES: 4
Building, New York; .• :
• - • LNo. 11 Doane Street. Boston.
Wil.kßF,-GRERNWICH . , DELAWARE AVENUE.
DA rif Pr ASSONL: MANTEL BAST, ASHLAND.
P.'6. ' , UAL WM.. 11V.ENC7.ER. A. C. ISILLE.Z.
!MAAS, .011ENIZER fi:Co.,
MINERS AND SIIIPPERti OF TDB CELEBRATED
Spolin 'Vein led Ash: and Diamond
1 •
Vein led.. Ash •
.
NoTelty
Colliery. - I C OAT J. I Worrington
I Colliery.,
The Nuperior"White-Anh Coal..Troza
New flhenandoals.City - Colliery,• •
Which w•ill-he found to excel any Coal yet **tied from'
the Schuylkill 11,...t0n. •
Agent!. fur the enle of GEO. W. SNYDER'S
Superior Pine Force' White. Ash Coal.
OVFICES ' - .
91% WALNUT St.. PIIILAD , A.
tom - Ni. 9 TRI
U NITY LTILDING; N. Y.
starch • 11-1 y
CAIN, HACKER & COOK,
• .fulrlFßa 0/ • '
L'OCUST GAP, •
-
.I,OCUAT ITIbtrCTAIrr,
'BLACK
llsa, deniers In other first qualVties of • •
WHITE AND-RED ASH. COALS.
!14 Walnut Street. Philadelphia. and Wi;odland
Whlu•v ei; Schuylkill River.
MOT:1115 HACKER. JTSISIT. M.• COOK
r, MOODY, Shipper ; and Agent.-
'
Schuylkill littven,
rehrnrai IA, '62
ANSPACH.& SONS,
• MLNERS : ANLI tiIIIPPERS OF . • •
LOEVMT morNprAiN • 1,11.41.11:40T
VEIN COAL. • •
di.e) SOLE .AGENTS Fie TILE SALE OF TOE
CELEB "'TED . '• • •
L.INCISTER 'COLLIERY SHIMOKIN COAL,
324 - Walunt Street. ROOM
Oman: NO.-i.3.lvinc,or. • • . ' •
' Building' 111 Broadway, York.
March . . •
,_,_ r _ _.
BROAD TOP.
GENERAL.. OFFICE.
BROAD TOP Wlita ASH
Se mi-Bituin.inons
COLS,
No. - 104 WALNUT. STREET,
PHILADELPHIA. • .
ROBERT HAKE POWEL, Manager.
CONNECTING OFFICES:.
16 *rarely/. Sin'iidings, Boston; Mass.
SS :Trinity . 4 New York:
Feb: 14, .63 ' • . 7-tf •
BROAD TOP ASII 4.
.
I'AILBITITNEI3 .- OTIS COAL
OALDWELL; SAW LER
.112 Walnni fttrcet,
pp.. 1111 Brottilweny, Nenr-lork:
No. 144 State Street, Boston:
rer a taperiikr qualitylpf thii.celebreted coal from their
EDGE. liaLL . co
fined and flapped exclusively by them. •
April 4, - . - • . • .14-17
In -& tINE'LLIS
COMBINATION - COAL SCREENS •
11 , - undersigned take pleaenre in announcing to COell
s'ratofs and others, that they , are manufactUring,a
.w COAL .SCREEN of, their invention, which they
uuarantee to wear twice as long, and do its
.work
ttter than any crimped wire Screen in use, • The. seg
lents turned out by us Gm be bent to any circle re- •
-_lTe at.° guarantee that the mesh' will always
main its original air unta entirely worn out. In the
rimped wire Screens the meelun , .fremiently elip, and
use the proper mash. before the Screen is - half- worn'
'at. We manufacture and sized nwah of our New
'oMbination
. Sereen.• used in the trade. • • -
who was associated with Mr. Beach
n In the business of mannfattnring Sererus. at Nur-
Tr.lan and Railroad iitreeta. Pottsville. having .dis
yed partnership. and-disposed of his Interest, has re
ed to Railroad street, in the rear of th Esterlyte
'ware Store, Centre St reet,.and associated with him
manufacture of their new Coal Screens of all de-
Mr. Jasper Snell.. lie 'solicits a continuance ,
-age heretofore so liberally Imitowed upon.,''
II I ONAii LE ';
CLOTHING.
Ift. opened, a aplendid ar.gortment • of Foreign and
1f,..t1c CLOTHS, CASSLMERFIi and vssr.
which will be art and fit In the, lato4 and
improved xtyle4k, at Mg' Old Stand,letarket:
lbw door above Ceram,. Pottaville..
HENRY ?dATTEN . , Merchapt
Patti/AN, Mara b. 'it.' 104 f
11=ZEZE
BE=
VOL. XLI.
LORBERRY AND LOCUST . BOUNTAIY:COAL;
E scirEzmn.
.cturinz a style of Wire Screen by
m that need ' in making crimped
in every respect,' to which the at-
& SWELL,
tiptiona at the
~
..,.....I„,__:. ,
~
.%),............ -
- ^ - .- -- - ...-;...' ..4.
t ,
f;
./5
.. , -...7 .o , ... :1. _ -.X. 3f.J '" '',..-.t-'2 . r 1 -111: •"-'-'-•- • ,• ' -, - :•,) : -,,,,_, -...... 4 _....- , . 1 ,„..„ ,-.,..::. -- .- _ -,, •-,, - ~ -- - .
.. -1 ,:; - ', . , - 1
- ::::, --.: -: • -: ' ---:_,' ::= -,-. _ ,_ - ,•:-,•,, 7., , :
,-,-; , il ,__
_ 1 .,..„,___ ,. _
~,, ----: •__
~_.__,.,„ rivatinimitworpicz.
, .. . . _
, ..
~.. ;. -,.. ~ ~... ...,,-. ...„.:,.,,,,..
- .
~ - - ,- 4 -4 A z-,.- ..-... , i-- --I - ‘.. . ; :- .. s ........ ,•• 0 ,1- ... ,_, ~ ----,-.1.„, . . . - . „
. .
...
- - . . • -- . - , 4,-s, tar; • -- 'k'. 4 ,... i, „..,...,-,. . ~ . , ,---_,-. 1 : -2,,; , --1 .- ,1,
mait .-0410.t . , ,pti0n.
at eiel„* .vi,thsois6 ' inti rbier cioxyath. emmo z ‘iiti l l ovime.ot". , eyeras. :br e 6 r a' theape *
..
. . - ;_ - t• _ ', I-- • • 46. ,f i .- .._ m• dr" , ..e - ' -.-, - -, ~ „
_ _ , , . , . . Guinean be done St et toe
, . . _ ,
...., -- --,- .
• - - , - t. f:. • - .4 11 • - - 4 - ' '•-' ' - - - amnia: goals, 3:7.";z4; '" - 4 1 ,
-i r • ' ,- ' '
I " _ --- iitli..' .. r rr ' . ~ - 'r: ' - • r • - , .' ' . '- - Rooks, Patott.4. 4 & - .. - faciffieti
. , t. •
- - - . . ,.., : .. . .I.ltrige istratoot * V- ` l t:-• iliothait Ticks
_.. -t A ---' 1 - I :Cik.. , . &ii__;_77,2,- ; I : 7_ - -,-- - -, - _' ' -..- ' , ih, . E . -... ~ .•• .trriii—levirib,. - --40-- - --':1/= ,
,orrsviLLE - _
J At the at:tome icoleiL- On sal it Jlla
IWO teach you to pierce the Bach of thelArth, and brhigienit frost - the estii , e - Ins if lionitohnt lihnds - whichwiligtve strength to our hada alai It all ratan ta am asa and VW 10..4111. JOHISOL' , ."‘ -- • - ' sectionor the Stsks, % . *La UV bitlidiK
•
-,-
ngcan be turueal9utilltbel: l6 l l -= nalnVi i i4 l s.- ,
:PUBUSHEDgO.TRM . G.:MPTIM - AN;:-,i....V0
• Pier No. 15. .
•. • -
BLATEESTON,'GRAEFF. dti Co q
• . miNigs suirmaraor.
Shipper! of other approved qualities Of.
Warx.h. AND . BED ASH. COAL.
SIS Walnut Street, Philadelphia. •
S Trinity Building, Newlork,
Cur. of filthy & Doane Street, Boston.
Feb. 14. •63
Piro. No. 11..
LEWIS ADDENICIED. & i
. Virbolesale Dealers In the best varieties of
Anthracite.. and .Bi t uminous.. Coals.
• 1205 'Walnut Street, Philadelphia.
OFFICES : 110 Broadway, 'New York. ' •
. • • • t. I.olllby Street,Boslon.
..• Pindeer Shippers trom'Elirsheihpori, of
LEHIGH, SPRING MOUNTAIN, HAZLETON, 'AND.
COUNCIL RIDGE COALS: r:53 13-
.
Pier 'me. 9.
. .
. .
BANCROFT; LEWIS ds Co;,
MLNLED AND 15131PPEIL6 rtr THIS • •
ASIILAND COAL,'
FROM MARINOY MOUNTAII3
•
OFFICE-11i • Walnut Street, Commercial :Building,
• • •
New York - Ottice-17 Cedar Street, Bo . priin Otliae—T
Doane Street. '• [Oct. '23; 43-. •
OONNER & PATTERSON
• • . 'HAVE ArPOINTED • • •
.LEIVIS AUDIENICILED Co.
Agenti for the' sale -Of their 'alebrated . ;
LOCUST MOUNTAIN COAL
sindirardville
ELIZAPETIIPORT.,I-, - - . 4.
COAL: * • • • .:* • COAL.%
. •.
• A-:.1": STOUT.
:
(S.riceessom to STOUT & -VAN WICKLE.) •
Ninon and Shipt,ers of the. celebrated 'FULTON (LE-
Illt:11) COAL from tho Ebbervale 'Colliery. near na
zleton. and dealers in the best varieties of , '•
ANTHRACITE AND BITEHINOUS COALS.
Delivered direct irinn the ntineo or on board•of ves
-sets at: .
TRENTON. 17.4,, • • ELIZATIPTITPORT, N. J,
N. BRUNSWICK, N. J., PORT,
. .
•
OFFICES,--441 - & 46 Trinity Building,
111 BroadtruY, New Iorlc.•
• '
1.
T. Sturm • S. VA.K7iTOILLK. G. Irx Siocrr.
April 4, 'l4 • ' : •
NEW YORK.
SAMUEL BONNELL, Jr .,
Nos. 43- &45 Trinity Building, N. Y.,
SHIPPING POINT,
Pier 4, EILIZABIETIAPORT, Ni J.
OFFERS FOR Sklr
HONEY BROOK, N. SPRING MOLTT ATN
AND BUCK NOVNTA
LEIT.IGI - 1 COALS
BALTIMORE Co.'. BLACK DIAMOND
WILKE SI3AR RE COALS,
AND THE. CFI FBRATED
GEORGE'S CREEK CUMBERLAND COAL
May - 21, '64.- " 21-1 y
•
• MOR RI S
' ELY;
.• • : .
STRIPPERS OF " •
LEHIGH,:
.WILKESBMIRE RED: ASH ,
LOCUST. MT.' 8L BITUMINOUS. .
co.ALS:: • •
47 Trinity Building, 111 Brondvray,
B. L. MORRIS. .
LEHIGH WASHED PEA COAL;
The beat and cheapeat now for. Steam parpore.
. April 22, Na. IccSna
H. N.JIOLT,
N0. : 6 Front Street.'New Tork,
BROKER-
znr.cou., ,FIG a, R. R. IRON. FIRE
BRICK, FIRE CLAN, CEIIIENT, - &e.
• • . .
. .
, ..,
' tapecial attention paid to .purchasing And shisping .
above named property.: Being daily in' the Market,
dealers and consumers can rely upon having these at:
ticlea heneht and shipped at the li.weat market mites,
- ' • -•.- REFERENCES:. •• • • . •
r,EO.. A. • fIOYT, :Dm—Treas. Penna . : Coal Co.. N. Y..
ISAAC N. sEymourt..F.eq..,Trea, Dela'. ,t, Lind. Canal
•
Fri AN KLI•N SN,A7, F,eq..; N 0.4 Commerce Sf., • Bootto.n.
J. S SEY:g OUR, Esq.. Treat: Bank of Auburn, Auburn
C. ET, SIGN. Esq., Buffalo. •
. Aprill9,
LEHIGH.
ituLL a Co.;
MINF.PS emtr►.cce OF
SIIITIPS SPRING ROUNTAIN
Yorktown, Carbon Connty, Penna.
OFFICES:. •
322 'WALNUT street, Philadelphia,
JEALINEtiVIII. - LE, -lazerne Conntr, Pa.
ly 23, '64. 30=
CCHARLEIGII COAL.
• . Onr "HARLEIGID , COAL is now acrid excl naively, in
Philadelphia and vicinity. by, DAY & FLIDDELL.—
Partial , ordering from Ahern, may alvraya depend upon
getting a pare article. ` - . . .
OFFICE--109 Wallytut St., Philadelphiit.
SILL t AN &.MoKEE.
Hasletoti, May 9, .94
LORBERRY CREEL
LOBBERRYICOAL.
- . •
CWe. t he undersigned, having consolidateil our... Three
:tolled es In the I.orberry Region, will hereafter trans.
act our business ender the name, of • •
MILLER, GRAM' & Co.
• . MILLER. STEES & Co..
• GRAEFF & NUTTING. •
Mr.. GRAEFF, 6 member of our Arm, having agenda
ted himeelf :with 3. R. BLAKISTON, will • reside in
Philadelphia andell our coal ehipped by tido-water will
be under the exclusive- control. of 131,A.E1STON,
GRAEFF CO. • - • .
. .
By increased ewe and attention in Its preparation, we
hope to maintain the reputation of our celebrated Lor
berry Coal. Purchasers_ abroad can rely upon having
ihia coal shipped iu the very best order. _
•• MILLER, GRAM & CO.
Feb. 13, '63 ,
JENItINS'
PATENT COLL . SCREENS..
, .
The undersigned having purchased of -the NEW . York
Wire .Balling Co y - THE JENKINS. PATENT," for
improvement •in the process of manufacturing Coal
Screens. &e., hereby givesmotice that the value of said
invention and the • validity of the, patent:has; already
been fully established after a long trial In the ,Erntted
States Circuit Court:that injunction:l haVe been granted,
and will continue to Issue against Any and all violations
of said patent right: Also that the Injunction. against
J. &-L. lanbenstein of Minertsvflle„Ta„ inffingens
of Said patent was by order of the U. s. Circuit Court,
Oct. la, Mt, fully and completely restored. - The'snb
scribtirs also desire •to give notice that the follow
ing are the only persons who are.at present authorized
1 to Ilse the said patent ImproSement as manufatturersof.
Coal Screens, in and throughout the Coal Region:,
J. W. BROCK; Scranton, Pa.. it a .FRICK,IPott&
Mlle Pe., BROCK 'dr SHOEMAKER, Monique, Pe;
• As the manufacturers would not make in violation of
the said patent unless euenuraged by owners orrenteri
• of Colltertee. -we are . determined to prosecute. every
'case that we 'discover of purchaiierelind • users, aKerell.
as manufacturers of Coal Screens, made In violation of
geld patent, tothe full extent of the laW.
New York, Jan. • 'IS, - 765 , 1 CHASE ACo.
513=Z=IM=M
=M!MI
OASTNER,• STIOENEY &WELLINGTON
- • - DEJ.i.I6B BY THE CARG.C)., " IN • .
Anthrabite& Bitiiiiiinous Coals
•. 1301. E AOTNTS 114 TILW EtidLAND /OZ .
PACKER'S LEHIGH SUGAR-LOAF COAL..
SAMUEL CASTNER, - New York,
: .:" •C. P, STICKNEY, Fall River,
• • •:
J: C. WELLLNGTON, Boston.
• Trinity.Bnilding. New York, . •
OFFICES.: 4 215 Walnut Street Philadelphia
, • 05 Kilby Street, Boston,. •
:Wharf - No.' 6, Poit Richmond;PhiiftiVa.
May 16, .65.• • '•
'
VANDUSEN, 451: Co.,
i.OOITST.MOUNTAIN:LOCUST GATYWITIf EklAll
- • RE, - LEIIIOI,I. AND OT . ITER
WHITE 'AND RED ASH: C OA LS,
Aeents for the sale of the celebrated George* Creek
Clahaberinind Cont, from the. Mitw. of the Cola
solid4osn Coal and Iron Compiny of Maryland.
~ Richmond
Sutrrcva • WHAR Elizabetliport,•• : • • '
• Baltimore.. • "
• • • {_Georgetown. . .
*. • ..
1201 Walnut street. Philndelnhh.
OFFICES: 4 Trinity.lhillding, New - Yorki •••• •*.
. •: • l,.6DoaneSt.,l3eatou:• .• . •
Feb,ll. 765. • • . 6tf
HUNTER, Jr., tic Co.,
tincl ".Red' Ash Anthracite- . Ccal;
...• • ' And Agents for the .
"PRESTON
, . . .
From the Mines of the file:tot'. COIL ANT?. TMPROVX.
HENS Comrwrovin the celebrated Mahano* Coal . Fields
r - N0..2(e...w Walnut btreet,
OFFICES:" No. 13 Broadway, No. 1, Rector:St...N. Y.
tNo 31 snd _3 Doane St., 130:d0n..
Pier . No.•ll7: . lfachationd. - • ••••
Feb 1.5., 'GS. •
. .
SCHUYLKILL :V t.
.
T.'. H. SOHOLLENBERGER. 'AGENT,'
' Minernnd Shipper dike
Clack Death White Ash and Pealted-31Oun
•-• • taln Free Burping' •,:.- •• -
PINK ASH •
P: ADDRESS—PorravtLi e gorMuars - viLts, Schuyl , '
kill County,Ta,• . "-• • • • ' .•
April 1.2., '62 .• . . •
VAST 'F8.47 1 11(1.17 , 1 LOBBE RAM Ir
1:4 VE-IN COAL. ' • .
My Mot Franklin Lorberry Coal is now sold exclu
sively 'by Nlessre. CALDWBLL SAWYER. C0.,.wh0
are my sole Agents. Parties ordering from them, may
always depend upon.getting a pure article. • :
•,, "No. 11.2 Walnut St., Philadelphia. •
• OFFICES 111 Broadway, Trinity Building,. •.
.New, York. • . .
• ' No. 144 Btate Street, Boston. . • . • •
HENRY rihn..
.Tremont, March 29, , q 2 ••• •.- ••• 13.• • .
• CON*OR..fifi PATTERSON,.. • -.
And Shippers. of the C6lehrateti ,
LOCUST MOUNTAIN . COAL
J. J. CONNOR; • • •J. S. P4TTESSON,
• : AEhlßnd. - • ••• • Poi Uri Ile,
• Schßy, lk ill .County, •Peramv. 1 •
. . .
-.•
THE RIDDLESSU:I3G..
. COAL A.*D O . lllP . Alll* . i.
. • . axb morreas •
Broad Top-White Ash errii:•Bittuili..
'Rim; Steam Gtheratirtg G0a1...::
GENERAL OFFICE-528 Walnut St., Phil-
adelphia,. Pa.. •
' -
• EocoMotive Engiries arldStembere, the Coal frO•M
their Mount Equity Colliery ie; on Recount (AIM purity,
.believed to be atiperioeto any now in, the market;
April 15', •
..
T ° 4.10.4.1., OPK..lit4Tollot. .. • • .:'.
...
GREAT: IMPROVEMENT . IN COAL SCREENS.
The undersigned are now prepared to manufacture,
at their hop in .741.inermille, all kintle-of SCREENS for
sereenina• Coal; of the improved manufacture, patented
to JOnatiLanbenateip., 4th February, 1362.: . .
Screens manufacttired by tnis process. are .more.dn
rable, maintain their form better. and are furnished as
cheap as any to be had in the County.... • • .
• They are -made of &Mare iron, in such shape as to
prevent: the Coal sliding from -one size .to the other be
(pee it is thoroughly assorted.- thus
. preparing -it better
thin can be dune by cast iron or wire, screens. : .
1 I I
1111111•1111
IMBIUMIIII I .
11111111111111111111111111
111111111111111111111111
11111111011111111111111
11111111111111 MIN
. . . . . . . .
• The -mannfacturers. urgently. !wiriest all 'Operators
wanting Screens, to examine those new'patent Screen
at tkeir shot.: or at work, at the Mairimoth•Vein Col-1
Jiery or fleorge S;Repplier, near . St. Clair, where they
have been muse for some-lime. - •-• . - • .•• '
By . ,purehasing screens* made under' this Patent,- liti
gat Somor Any . tronble astAllnitentlights will be avoided.
All work done with promptness and dispatch.
L.LAUB.E.NSTEDI,
Ninerecille., June T. 1862
. . •
• • . •• • .
• I4N - 4- •'' '
• ••
:_ • '4A:a • •
• • 4--k7;
• • a • - •
• :
• •
(succs.ssoirTQßßOCK ,t . fitIO.E.MAKER,)
• : : m.uveracruept or . •
- ;SCREENS
• : 117ilder the Jettitkets , ..rtatenti • ••.
COIL RAILROAD- & - NORWEGLST'S.,
- . ,.PCiTTSVIILE, PA. • .
DEDERICK'S
COAL HOISTING 'MACHINE.
Pstinteii April .12tb, 1962.
•
This celebrated land unequalled Coal lioisting Ma
chine has been in successful operation for over three
years.iand the turrnmatx large number already 'sold
are giving the most perfect satisfaction: • It is:slmple
and dnrable, having ' no-gearing atall ; is rapid in its
operation, and very easylibr the .Lhorstr:: : Deseriptlve
Circulars. containing letters of ecrounrindailiton. , priest,
-&c, sent freA, on aphlication: •
-. L. PW, DIMERICK.-Sole Minirfactnrera,
Albany Agricultural and Machine Works.
March U. firn Albany.
- A.rifiURPAY.:II9IO.ITIsTq; 4:AY. -,04:':A.80f.,
fwarrrele ros Tunler , 4 - ps! aorank.o
- DT 11. D. TOMINT.
All over our Northland A chorus peaPd out—. . • • '
Front hamlet and city, therkiose: a wild shout- • '
Of freemen exultant, all doubting. dispelled. •,• • •
Oar armies victorious, fair peace they beheld :I, . • •
With angel-like pinion careering the air. •••:'. •
But recently dmtsd with the elondirof_des ‘ pair. .. •
Piscomfitted: scattered.. on every field; • ' . • ••. .
Oar enemies sawnothing left bat to yield • . •
To valorous Northmen. who mantled in might,- .••
They feltwere impelled bY, -God, Justice and Right:..
'Scarce out of the path of fleet . Sheridan pasted; •
Whek into the jaws of braYe Sherinan they, rush .
- And Terry and Thomas, 'Kilpatrick and•Ord, •. t_ •
Came down on theirhOsts like-the breath•of the Lor d,l
' , Whilst Schofield and Weitzel, amt Caster:: in wrath.' • .
'Flung death and dismay on. their blood-drinking path.
Now and his legions seerpnwerecd, give up-" •
To save from their qtraffing the blondpping cup.
' To Gasxr- the brave hero, with mien like a God,
-They bow.for.the beck ofk conqueror's nod . ; • - • _ 1'
And wide thro' the north. on electrical - ' • .
There flashes the Conquests our victories bring, ; . -• ;
And, bells' in wild tremor of phreiny are snug,'
Bright banners, from hrmsedops and Windt:ma are tug,:
The braienotiOnthed cannon its - echo - prolongs, • :
To blend with the. cheers of the gathering thrsinga,.
'Anti nmkets„.deslribing their pathway of lighh•*. -
Flash out our rejoicings abroad an the night; •• -
Whilst bonfires illumine the streets far and wide, •-•.;
.To light the 'espression of joy's clam`rciustide..• •
'The conscriptunwante&retorningagain , • • •. '
Reels; drunk with.the echtaity thrilling his brain ; : •
•
Delicious delirium of rapture tau '-• - -
The wire Of his bosom he Clasps and their child. .
The . mother embraces her still living boy,. ••
• . .
'Till every wrinkle is'radiant with joy • .•• '
Wives,linsbands and fathers, now rush thro' the sheet,
Detaining and haillngretichrine that they meet 7 -
•••The struggle is Oyer." they rapturously cry.. ' - •
The red - yew - le retreating, has left our land dry. • •
• - Now bloodshed and slanghter—Starvatlon will cease, •
And - Freedom - put on her bright garnients of peace.' •
mere Castle Thunder Or Libby, can tear ,
•;•
;ank.flesh from the.bones of our boys dungeon'd there . ;
.he aim of Jehoviih,.unbered to the blast,' • • • •
stretched forth to gave us-L-nnited. , -at last:
et shouting, exalting, rejoicing. arise. - • . •
..fillTasuis of pleasure, shall gladden tlieakies . •
nd nations, abroad see our land decked in smiles _ •
nom mountains and prairies to oceans and tiles. . .
ut hush 1 What is that! How quiet and still 1 .••
- :hat message=-what' Summons has: wrought • this .
strange chill? • ' • •• '
. Clod what calamity strangles ,Marjoy? . • •
rid changes its gold to shiner alloy 1..' • ..
gain does the lightning , unwilling pmelaina-:- •
ot victory now. but•-ti crime without nature"- , s •
anther Pontinsa fiend wersethan
nr kind-hearted - Preatdent, LiNcru,S../tai slab: • .
beast thus inhuman, wits fonnd.who for pay. ••
fiat Christian. thatStat ; esman. that Hero could slay..
'e pass by the act, for•pen maynot trace . -, ; '•
stroke so , nunatutalsuch damning disgrace;
• indmay. nor contemplate—passion not dwell
• a what would dishimor an inmate of Well. • •
, * e fell in his grandeur, and ;goodness, rind might, •
Martyr to Peemom, to Jugice and Right,'— • '
-e fell With . the pleading still fresh from - his heart '
• . k those who thro , infamy. bade him depart,
• ; sat they might secure, like honorable foes,.
ro ' •
he lenient term's a conquer shows.
e fell, with his countrymen's bonier enshrined
t every emoticiu of feeling and mind.- . •
.•• .11 wild is the agony., bitter the grief. _. • ' • '
• hat falls on our hearts( like the frost on the leaf,
rid tears universal, unbidden: reveal • • ,
he pangs.of.bereavement !Citation can feel. -
;low Cold, silent, Pulseless
.
' .• • -• The honest map sleeps,
Ind Wakes not to comfort a:peorile that weeps.
Struck 'down in Vie work of his Goitlike career,
Ills fall is unsealing liumankos tear, • . • •
'Arid life; love and liberty bend their needs low - ••. -
To take front Jehovah this nectar of wee: . • . -
-Yet. lifeless and Senseless. 'Tie not death We see.
.'.
He changes to hire In the hearts'of the free i• , • -
- Andtptirerdind grander by fir than before, '•
Will'shlnethe soul now that the flesh is no More..
Think 'not a base bullet. 'or:knife:can control • ,
By striking•the nuirtal, the itnniostalSonl •••
Created diiitielY, his conntry to save; •.• '• •
• Ills lamp will still burn thro• the opening grave ; =
And even the wretch who hesstricken him down •
• 'But adds a new star tb his deathless reuewti:. ,
:For murder will "give-but the finishing stroke, • •
The, high-lightS of freedom andleme to invoke. • •-•.-
' Ills lessons of mercy,.ofjustice and tenth', .-•'
• Each Year will hut gather new beauties of 'youth . ; -• • ,
: And Where !intone impulse of liheily starts, • ;
in nation, or kingdom, to thrill impalas hearts; .
The name of Tire YALT.r.N,a watchword will be" ,-• •
• To nerve both' the will and the arm to be free.
.obr confitrY„ exalted that he'waa its - head,. . •
New glories and triumphs of prowess:alkali spread,. .
lill lovedlor its mmervs. our land embrace .
.New'piigrirnir to fr'eedom from every race: . •; •
And brighter, and , broader our bant.er ; shall gleam . . .. •
-.011-every ocean arid. every : • .
That Limpets had fallen its stripes to uphold, ' •
And keep each bright star. in. its sky-azured ,
'O'er dusky-hued features big tsar-drupe will fall.
As as e'er Moistened a patriot's pall, • • ••• ;
And black hands unshackled, upraised in the air, •
• Will clasp. as the frehdmen unhurthen in prayer. ..
- Their sorrow undying. for hirn they love bests, • '. .
- Who more than all others, their people had
Oh, God of the annahine, as God of the :-
Our tower of great strength inrstorms that haVe imas"d.
Bend down front .thy mansion' imercy above, .' •
And bor on our.heasts thy compassion and love .
oh, show us Great Teacher. 'that Thine was the hand
That struck but to elbsten, this jubilant land. • •
And knit uS together more pure and More:brave, '•
Whilst rising rebuked from our. President's grave:
. .
OVEITTLN . F66 THE AitNE* JRURNLI:.]
TO, Ova
.iti,s.n.wwrc;.
GGLA• VE3EIIIIII
-.. _ .
GO. to that land where the inartyra await ;thee ;'•
nark ..- to their eMmts ar they-welcome thee hOme 4 '
There; in that clime_ boue4Mall harm thee or hate thee,
. For into heaven no Treason dare come i ,
. . . .
Go where the waters of lire, evorrlowhig.. -
Wash from the spirit all truces orein : . - . •
Nevermore, of the cares and the toile of earth. knowing,
Into thy rest, Martyred one, .enterin. .. ... -•- . -
.
Into thy hatulsthe "victors paint...given%
Placed 011 thy brow the circlet ofgold;.. • „ • •
lienceforthawheir of the glorletiot heaven, . • •
. • Thine 'shad be pleasurea and rapture untold. : •
. .
.
Thes . e are all thine 'but for us what:reniaiOeth t
• who have knoWn thee and loved, thee for years!
Nautht bat the-tonlb that thy hody contain - eh/. .
• And a sorrow that.eaunOt.be lightened by .
. -
.
Seel round thy tomb how a nation' comes. weeping ;
. Hush ye your wailing and so:Maier each moan.;
Disturb not his rest where'our Martyr is sleeping
.Enwrapped in his glory,.go, leave him alone I .
•• - •
Soft ever that tomb . shall the winds whisper ever
• •
Sweet shad the blrdi Sing-;• the flowers bloom fair
Enshriried in,the hearts of
.thy people forMver.• • .
• As•S w.eet andms fresh shall thy, memory theft, I
Pottsville; April 25th, lts6s, • • ••• • • •
.•
SERMONS_
Delivered in Pottsville on the Da* ,of
. President Lincoln's . Funeral in.Wvish•
inton._
.
. . .
• Anneied will be found two sermons • de- •
livered„ha'this Bortnigh on Wednesday, April
19, 1865, • tlie.day of the funeraf:ceremonies of
the' lamented -Lincoln. in Washington: :The"
first vas deli vered . the.l.;piscopal 'chw-eh,
bYitheilector, Rev:• . Tile
second by; Rev. Isaac Riley,, Pastor - of the
First Presbyterian,
• • . Nlr. LE W1P4 , 6.1 1 1;310101‘...
`Wolin Teel, w lieu we have -• lost a fnend . er
relation,-that it is licit until after - the funeral
that.their lose is fully known.: There is'.at
firSt an excitement,:a harry, a sort of intoxi . .
cat ion of the mind. But when, the last. Sad
rites are. over; then the aching - void is felt, a
.flood of driariness .rushes. in upon the soul;
:and the futurejs feat to be a blank, ,
.It..is as a
.. family.mourning. one who has .
been *taken away frotn...their .head, that the
hearts of all worshippers are turned at this
moment' toward Washington, - and that bur
spirits wend their way with the: procession,
rest at.the grave,. antl'hear the Words of Holy
Writ •"tv hich fall -upon the. ear like stately,
distant musiC, - .heard in . the . stillnees _Of the
said .Over the eminent . . deafi:- :And
the . eares.of thislife;the uncertainties of the
futuie, and the-momentous' controversy still
unsettled,7will, I am. sure, only make us feel
more,.:that.whed it pleased Almighty God,
His . wise providence; to take that. ,soul- to
Himself,. took out of this 'World: one who
Vnia eminently bent upori being ``the repairer
.of the . breach, thaxestorei of paths to dwell
in.
.When a son is mourning the loss of a father,
it makes little-matter to him that his lather's
death has put him in:posSession of
p , large
and ample fortune. And we, must all be
struck with the 'fact that the inheritance of
victory, which was.the fruit of his policy and
principles, has been, for the present., banish , :
eti from our thoughts, is now:an insufficient
solace. News, that a few days ago would
haVe given a quickened - pulse - to every loyal
heart. is now almost unheeded.' The re-pos
session-of all but the last fort, and the sur
render of all but the - last army'of this rebel
lion,,how differently are they now received..
It is as if jewellers and artists; and _cunning
workmen spread their , costly array of wares
More the heir now gifted with untold gold ;
'But he puts them all aside, and says "miser
able comfoitei are ye all-- Give me back' my
father.' •
And yet,' brethren,
.this feeling may be car
ried top far. I call upon' you to, admit, and
to, recognize thefitifid of God in the fict, that
this direful deed - was'notpermitted until the
moment
.when God had given , us Sucks mea
sure of victory, as might at ;length • make us
look upon the, military result of the war as no
longer trembling in the'balance. I call upon
you to admit What additional- horrors.would
have clustered , around this - bereavement -had
it been sent , for instance, just before, the bat
tle of•• Gettysburg. Surely God has given
strength. to bear the 'burden, and not laid
upon us the heavy cross until we had some
assured view of the crown...
But as any, eath. should , teach - us lessons
. goOd.' for ourtinole.future lives, so, let this
great eatn' mpreis . trinh, g 004., .not .for;
day.only. bat for all time.. ` . : : . ;
7 0 4, 1 4 1 earn firat, tto.w 9 11 a*Mtillsbcs
the Ott wofriti fie:hag - to* do.6ltheloads
mi - kb, upon tfiln"esith, :Iris not by tinnyiiit:
initiirbselistb of silken
.0n• - no bed of roses can ever repose''SnY
brave, true, tltl, earnest man. No tiara of
diamonds can. evei , bind .his _brow. 'The.
disciple is not 'above his muter," and tlis
was a crown of thoins. No spirit will .eper
worship before the thioip of God . ..that cannot,
show marks of the true Fcrogs imprinted deep
both on the:shepherd and the sheep.. : have,
oftett told you until -you have perhaps, -al
most tired of hearing it, that the cross of the
everlasting Son is the
,type and the cause of
everything that, is real valuable,, solid i. and
,eternal, in human thought and . human ac
tion. I ask you'Ao_ tee it - More and more,--
Such men as , ..klosel3, .Elijah, John. the Baptist,
Paul and Stephen, have - never: found this' a
pleasant world. if, in this life only, they
have• hope in Christ, they are of ail men most
I. learn again the deep, unavoidable neces
sity that has existed for the pie Sent war.
And learit.this because of the development
of the sPirit animating our enemies, which
the President's assassination has given. We
had been slow to admit this necessity. There
`has been the plea for .gentleness, and the
aVoidance of bloodshed. Beaten in. the open
field, reduced to military insig,nificance and
eip:Fterage t this.spirit has resorted to a means
of warfare which carries us.back to the mid;
dle age, and 'the days of the Borgias, and
if carried out, it will make every. man look
upon hisfellow-citizen as if he bore- about.
witti him ,a concealed dagger. The Bible.
has a way . of, stripping off the accidental
clothing of actions,. and showing them . .in
tbeir'naked - feality. It thus reveals to us a.
spirit of evil, a inyStery of iniquity, a lawless
ore:.. Theologians sometimes go to seek the
fulfillment ot such ‘vOrds in remote countries
and tiMes, when they indicate brimense.prin
eiples which are showing themselves in and.
'by actions, undertheir very eyes. - •
Can there be any concord, anything but
perpetual ,wqrfare, between righteousness
and such unrighteousness as this?. Can war
stop until-it is no more? Does not the blood
of our soldiers ery to us from a hundred•bat
tle fields aud ask whether it has been shed in
For, the future there can: he but twoparties
ainung us: those who api - Rove of assassina
tion, and thoSe who do 'not.
There is this 'danger .a.-,republican form
of goirernment proceeding_ as it : dnes, froM
the people,—we are:AA to . think that.it.is'a
creature of the people,.and that. they have
plenary power : over what
.they have created.
•But surely,' 11 a. monarchy. is to .be obeyed,
unpopular the. rei,ghing-severeign
may he, simply because his blood . •
"leas stood for eentuiles
. •In the kingly reServoir, ho calls hisline,".•.._, •
,
'certainly, notie . the -leas is the
.head of a re-.
.pnblic in.reality, a soVereign,',. since the open.'
ly.cpresSeci wish-cfatnajority, sometimes a
very large. one, ot:.those he 'governs: has
placed.hlm Where he is. GOv.erunient- is the
. creature or God,. and lie,who -`l3car
etti.not the - ,sword in vain." • •
Many hard things, have been said.. of hirii
who now lies low:* His actions, have been
"cavilled . atollS - counSelS aind.thalt with, his
motives Oscoustrued; his plans derided, his.
integrity.of purpose attacked, Well;..he was
a (tillable gtuu placed in a pOsiiionofTitronense
. .
and unparalleled -'difficulty ; WhiCh,• in. my
j tulg Men t, he •haS filled, wisely arid well. .1:To- .
der his4tintinistration we lave enjoyed great
liberty - 0f4%0t1 and 'action—as great. certain
a* was 'clampatible with • the, carrying on .
au immense war against . a cuuning••and
un
.`scrupitlous.enemy, who l aidnot.grant similar
priVilegeS to those
.Whoni uE 6 Ontrollecl. We
have traveled whither. we . , Would t ..our • husi
ness las been carried on as in times of peace;
liberty ; and even license of speech have .not
been suppressed. • Ve can hope ~for nothing
moue than:this in time to come. •
"May the Ahnighty Lord, who - is a most
'strong tower Of defenee - to "those .Who put
their-trust ...ilini,•tp, whom all things.in
heaven, in earth,: and under.the earth do bow
and obe'y, be now and .evermore - our defence,
and make. Us know and feel that there is none
.Other name under heaven, . giVen among, • men
through whom,' we may receive. health' and
salvation;but - only name of our.
,LOrd Je•-:
•
• • 4 7. he righteou.siperisheth;l and no man lay
nth it to heart, and merciful . men are taken
away,. nene. considering that the righteous
taken away
: from. the - evil to come.: He shall
enter into peace, they shall rest in:their beds,
each - one: walking in his uprightneas.
;.• ".Cotne:,. my. :people, enter thou, into thy
chanibers,. and shut thy doors • about thee ;
hide: hyself, - as it were, for little moMent,:,
until the indignation be oierpasu • For be=
hold, the Lord COnleth .- mit .of - His- plaeeto
punish the inhabitants of-the earth lot-their .
iniquity,.• the . earth alsh- shall disclose her
•blotal, and: shall no more cover: her slain." .
. -• PoTr.svn.j.r;April 20th, .1865.
• Rev. IsAAc RILEY—Pear Sir I.—The .0
signed desire-to express their - high apprecia
tion of the address you deliVered in the. First
Presbyterian Church, on this Occasion 'of the
funeral of our, loved and himored President,
Abraham Lincoln, and . respectfully request a
copy . orthe saw for publication.
Respectfully Yours, -
. T. A. GODFREY, SOLOMON FOSTER, •
ILIUM. PARKER, ISAAC BECK,
'PRANK P. MYERS, WM. Fox, •
C. F. Gr..oveit, " J. S. PArrsasox,
. .
. .
. • . • Potrsvuxu, April 25th, 1865... ‘
. -Messrs. .Gonre.V.z . .Fos MR,. • PAttiont.'•and
others-.:- . Genttemen :-I` thank you for • your
kind note of the 20th, and , comply with. your
request by enclosing S. copy. of my discourse.
• - ...: ,:-. • ,; Very respectfully yours, =:
. •
.. .
, •
• - fl.siAc RILET.
Mr. RILEY'S SERMON.
We hlve met to-day to add - our tears to
the mourning of• a sorely stricken people.—
The saddest scene of all our history is that
upon which at this hour, the .lofty. domeof
onr natidna capitol looks down: While we
are gathered in God's house., to mourn God's
awful providence;: to lament the departure of
God's .ervant, • our dear .President; to bow
our, orphaned hearts in the Divine presence;
thiough the - draped streets of our. . central
city, beneath the low: hung flags,.with - the
boom of cannon, the, sad dirge of -"mourn
ing martial musie," with funeral pomp and
tears, and grief 'moves the saddest cortege our
country has ever seen. . Beneath the bend
ing plumes lies the form of one around whom
'a nation;has gathered with the hoMage of no
common • love • whose name now written
among.the great and good, the wise'and 'pure
and brave; worthy of its high place, had be
comet-6 us thegrandest name of the age.
There is the heart too pure for:suspicion, with
love te compass a nation, with, sympathy . for
all distress, and - pardon for all the erring,
even for traitors; too small indeed to' harbor
any remembrance of malice,'or to compre- -
hend a -personal hate; yet broad enough to
hold the millions of his people, who to him
'were all friends. • That loving heart -is cold
ferever.;• Our friend has gone. „There is the
brain,' plowed' through and through with
the bloedy furrow .-of the bullet. No.more
to weave wise plans for a nation's redemp
tion; no more to devise deliVe.ranee for: the
enslaved and far-reaching seheines for a
world's advantage. That busy. brain is still
in death. Our great statesman ; is gone.
There straightened and stiffened by the
cold hand of the destroyer. is the face so, fa
miliar to us all:. Frotu, these eyes no more
-.shall gleam the - light of love; the kind. glance
,of sympathy; or the earnest look Which her
alded grand , thoughts. more from those.
lips. shall fall thewise and gentle and'hearty
words which have solong delighted us; those,
light-seeming , yet mighty-meaning:word's
which have with a laugh cut the knot which
perplexed 'cabinets sought in veld to unravel;
those soleihn pledges. on which a confiding
people have laid_ their unquestioning trust ;
- those straight-forward utterances of honest•
purpose whic,h have settled the destinies of a
great nation._ Tows forever those eyeti - are
closed - , • The seal which cannot be broken
'rests on those lips. , ' • - •• _
There to-day bovirs a widotved heart '.She
for whom a nation should lift' its: prayer that
God may_ prove , : in -every desolate moment.
more than a husband. - She before whose
very :eyes the 'assassin dealt his blow, *and
passed like ther demon of destruction ; she
whose cry of stony first told the •awfultile.
With her We mourn for the vanished:light of
her life. There arc those Who are left fail
:erless, to .grieve doubly; : with: an. orphaned
people.' With' them we mourn for the strong
hand and wise counsel - vise forever: - There
are-those whose names- are Ltouse,hold words
with the -.nation; the sages whose , Wisdom
has ;strengthened the handtrof him Islo:was,
their leader ;• the: ;brave; and ,strong : whose"
mighty-blews'on land and sea, on every: Side,
of a fire-encireledobellion -- wronght=x - mt the
end (Arai. wbleh 10; - their-chief
was ert:tatted - W. rejtilee.befoiehe Raatittnek:
pays.: --, -.!:/There are personal then& who have`
162f011OwfWrith *Wu
nallaror Ord OliWhifiettleylieiekielredi)apc
aroma as a great man and rider, but as a dear
ULU SCHUYLKILL COIINTY, PENNSYLVANIA..
riend: There are the' strong-hearted,, brave•
Soldiers and Ballots of the republic, mourn .•
for-him . whose name bad come . to be the
bodinietit,_or the, drand:.principles for Whieh
they. offered. theirlifes..... the. sad privi
leges of all these-to gaze upon the .shrocled
coffin -bearing . snch.preckins . freight ;Am they •
cannot offer smcererhoinage, not drop- more
htmest team; • nor - 'speak' more sorrowing
Words than •we. Distance is "no, bar to grief,
and the : pall hangs - over the whole
All hearts mourn our: departedlather. ' •
There are . .many. f. reasons concurring to
make this the' saddest event of. all our histo;
Ty. Our fatbeis haVe told us of the niiiVer-. •
sal thourniag,which - . 'shrouded r•the land, ..
when the great . Washington died; of the deep •
Sorrow .that. filled- every heart,.• and: wecan
believe them .When.- they • tell of the true
griefthat.wits felt, for .behold - in our: OWn •
days, even• now: we mourn - one, who .- by the
common voice of the nation has been ranked •
viithaie founder, of: the Itepablie. These ••
both have won their • renown, by , the force of
characters in the•great points
strikingly. sittu
'lar: - To both, under - God; the nation owesits •
deliverance: To both the hearts of then were
bound - and welded in the furnace . of affliction
and by the blow's of the fierce battle. - To both
earnest hearts.have trusted with great
- Each,prOved. true to his trust,; msWerving in
'allegiance to country, truth and' God. But •
it is no parade.of -,grief to' say our • burden is •
heavier than that - which our fathers bore. -
Washington was callettaway when the.ripe
•Nvork of a finished' life had.been given to his
country and by.thein enjoyed.' His double
term of service had :expired. He had 'enjoy=
ed the fruit of his•labor. - And: there seemed
- nothing more fit - than the peaceful days. at
MOunt Vernon, the calm bright. - evening .after
the storm and clouds. and -.fierce - glare of the
troubleds morning or mid-day. : ; Not so with
us. The grandest.-work of all connected with
this accursed rebellion was, yet . to be 'done;
and the hand audbeart we ad- judged so tit
to do it - are pierced and stricken ; ',snatched
ari instant .from.. our bewildered gaze: - He
Saw- indeed the.day ..Which.the old ititttle
flag Was hoisted over
.the, fort . where it: was
first lowered. ' Hehad seen the crushed' heart
'of the rebellion-; .knew, that. its : head was a
dishonored fugitive,. its right arm shattered to
the shoulder blade: •He - heardthe that glad
shouts of thanksgiving• Over fallen Petersburg .
captured Richmond, .flying Davis,:surrender
ed Lee, - and the blasted, dying confederacy.
Ile heard not the•grand.chorui which wel—
cauies• returning peace. - Nor shall We. For in
to our rejoicing death 'has entered and none
Can rejoice over thetriumphal 'issue of this
war without sad . renienihrance . of hint,' 'Who
greatest, of all has gone to' j - oin the great ar
my of martyrs who have laid their lives' ou
the altar,of right and country. •
•He had just entered his second term of
service; which a grateful pationbad .call
ed liim - The - first was -the wilderness jour
ney ; this the Proinis , id .Land of Peace. He
saw it only. from - Pisgah: He died by. the
hand of 'the assassin; - . nocalm and peaceful
doivu • life's 'burdens - and trust; no
. words of farewell tb friends, and country. ; no
:measage• of hope and:holy auurage, except
littWhich his life has left us." But struck
dumb and insensible sinking : each women
thereafter through the slow minutes of a
breathing death, into the darkness that lies
beyond.--The whole nation stood aghast
with the :unutterable infamy of the deed ; the
ssriftranui sudden' plunge from the height 'of
joy to the depth tif anguish. • Fallen , when
"we felt we could not spare him.'Be for
whom we knew nothing we would not have
given.—How many.-and many a heart an
swered—nay rather what heart over all the
land did not answer to the words, "Our
Preaident •is shot." "It is impossible. it
cannot be." Cut off in tiftnaldst of his days;
in the high noon of his labor, torn by rude
hands from tlie nation, from whose hearts
daily increasing love was going forth. • How,
many an . unbidden tear ; how many a con
fession, `_l did not know how much I loved
him,' how many, a sad, sad heart' and mois
tened eye to-day - gives proof that this is' our
greatest day of grief. .
There are many. thingS *remarkable in the
time and manner of this calamity. We could
not but notice that it was,on the anniversary
of the day of the crucifixion of our Redeemer,
and measureless as •is the distance between
the best of men and Him'who is more than
man, "God over all blessed for ever," yet it
was with, deepest reverence we could say,
anotheranartyr for the truth and right,• dying
for humanity'.s sake, has goue to join the
great'army of, which Christ is head. It was
worthy of note that the first public commein
oration of the event-came on Easter Sunday;
that day'which by. all its. association was to'
have been one ofjoy, W£l.3.thus to a nation
turned into deepest mourning. That was the
resurrection day. He *whom We mourned'
Was the represptative of that grand rising of
- a regenerated people from the•bbutiftee ofsla
very, the burdens of war, and the fierce-con
test with. treason. Had he lived no Sabbath
like that would this country ever have seen.
Having died 'we can see" none . like it.: But
alas! how different the expectation and .the
reality. It was to have been a day of inex
pressible joy. It was a day of sorrow mut-
It was remarkable in our country's chrono
logy. Four years ago insane Rebellion raised
tsaraitorous hand against ourflag. It sent
'its valiaut seventy thousand to beleaguer the
doomed seventy. Then for the first time the
bolt of war was flung by:traitora at our banner
Then arose iu all its might and majesty, an
insulted nation. Then there was fear in every
h s eart, and men looked from•bewildered eyes
intia - blank faces and knew, not: whom to
trust. It was a day of gloom and terror; and
of fiendish exultation. •-
:On this day by the President's order the
Same old flag rose grandly over Sumter. The
same hand's that lowerd it, God has spared to
raise it again. The same men who fought so
valiently and mourned, its Tall, now cherish
its rising. Thu eyes that had filled with tears
at its' disgrace, now glistened with joy as the
battered, smoke-stained ensign wee again
triumphant. Over the ruined battlements
volleyed the hundred guns,. answered on eve
ry side from every fort that had buried.ii
sile at the flag four years before. Again rose
the voice - of prayer... And God was praised
for his deliverance ; for the justice which
brought rejoicing over the triumph of right
and liberty, and the scourge of overwhelming
deatruction to treason and slavery. .This day
our great leader was permitted to see' every
fort reoccupied-as he had promised, and the
old flag first to,fall, - though not dishonored,
- set agate with a nation's .rejeieing in its own
place. Then again the main stay of rebellion
haClheen swept away. It was the privilege
of our President to sanction the terms of that
Surrender in which the traitor Lee had boived
before a greater general,
.a nobler man, and
above all before the stately 'progress of truth'
and right. - . • *
It had been granted him to see beyond • all
doubt the breakiug, up of organized opposi
tion to lawful authority; to see with his own
eyes. the prostrate image of our great Mo.
loch, 'against which he had struck the direst
blow that had ever, been delivered ; and to
sit in the high.seat in the Verymidst of fallen
Babylon, which so long had sold the bodies
and souls .of men, and . ' whose antoke, even,
then vials rising up as the smoke of a gre,at'
furnace. And above all his privilege to send
abroad over the whole land that undeniable
earnesi - of certain peace, "Letalldraftingstop
arid all recruiting cease." -
. There is scitriething remarkable also in the
Manner in which this deed was done. What
mild have been more fitting as the final
.stroke of this long tragerdy so far as concerns
the guilty miscreants, that this wise, good
and noble man foremost of the age, should
have been murdered, rissitesinated, .by a
low, vain actor," who even in the awful mo
ment must needs sump the; stage, and flour- 7
ish his dagger and vanish behind the painted
scenes ? What more appropriate than, that
there should be , such a horrid misappropriate=
tion of the grand mouth of Virgi'ma,• "'Thus
be it ever;to tyrants"? What a stupendous
blunder has been - all Virginia's history in this
terrible crisis. How fallen is she"who. was
once hailed "Mother of -' How
far she has 'Wandered .from the councils- of
her great sons of old ? -Hew fitting the close
of her rebellion?. course. that her once sacred
watch word should at tnis horrid murder. of
one whose heart,ebiald - neVer have harbored
one tyrannical tieling - , be Minuted by. a vile
braggart in the eyes of an appalled World.
This is rebellious Virginia - of - tp-day, repo
aeutatire,and bulkwark, of treason; not Vir
ginia of the past ; nor, let -cis believe% loyal
-Virginia of the future, regendated, • pained
and free. • ' • '
This act stands too as the tit - emit/1: of •this
;whole infamous revolt. Conceived in trek
sou and:filaehomland perjury,
,ear ON FM
ottrirearried'ihroigh wittbnikeif
ilex; and more than saviigeeni
eltyr*itifrOlngllielife ant' :of frif4,
hwit.uut of foe.i, the gral4 bawl% =hike
'
high over all' of ' every a g e;-rec ur, Lusatia,
!A t ' -r:?'YFci hfe2~ - (+c Yri :?~ ~~lb.ic:_:: - ~y?is_4,{p' a.ls: r,;+,i: .
.. ~. ..` .. ,'„'~.Y ~,g;:.. .. ,iatir.~~£:~~.~'tt!"..~~.3~l ' tE'7!:::.rr.3.,:,~;~'": :-. ..t
devilish. It would seek in vain all the rec
orfis of Crime for one more anprppriate with
which to seal the Tecord of. its. mfatny than
this double., 'unless, hideous assassination.,
Just here in its utter uselessness; is another
strange.featurc.. If this had .I:4een done at
any of the times:When itwas attempted, there
might have seemed some lesson in there - moval of an enemy and the confultion of a
bewildered peoPle; 'but 'now when the na=
thin is united as never betkre ; when there
was no organized conspiracy to help; when
it could only rouse, the whole peopleand en,
list - the *Orld - against :the. murderer and all
his accomplices; when it flewin the face of
the most wonderful kindness,' a . heavenly
compassion for the conquered; when it struck
down the only man who seemed to stand be=
tween the helpless rebels and overwhelming
justice.-,surely "whom God would destroy,
1 - 1 e first . makes mild, "—and 'all posterity if
•it .could forget the, victim and the mime, it
would seem must-stand amazed at the mad
fleas of thkdeed.. ' •
But my - friends did we not need some such
a Shock to bring us fitee to face - with justice,?
Did we not need just this concretion and em
bodiment of all the wickedness of this cursed
rebellion and of slavery ; so that in years Ito
come, if we should, ever
.forget—wluch (led
forbid—the murdered martyrs of a hundred
battle-fields, And the- wan-eyed spectres' of
Belie Isle and Andersonville,.the perjury, the
the blood of all these awful years, we could
say to a silenced world, "we conquered a re
bellion, . we . crushed out -the slavery that,
murdered our dear President ?". -
Did we not need this to teach us what trea
son was ;. that it .scar DO holiday
. pastime at
which, ambitious men might play and fail,
rind be forgiven ' but that there • is no deeper
depth of crime belowit? •
And has there. not gone up from every
heart, over our' whole broad laud, -the sol
.erntt vow,. that this precious blood, poured
out for • us, shall not go 'nnavenged ; that
everyone, 'not by deeds of violence, into
which traitors are too eager we shall be . be
lived ;- not by the hand of the assassin. now
for ever. doubly cursed ; not by the wild
storm of popular tumult, which would drag
us toward the level of this crew we so hear
tily abhor ; but with the calm' words and
deeds which spring from the infinite strength
of a pure - resolve, with undying devotion to
'the- country which a dear, lost leader so much
loved and for which he - died, will heap high
the coals of fire on the head . of treason to
gleam forever down the ages, the baleful
light to warn all thoughtless, wicked ambi-
Alen oil this rock of a sure and swift destruc-
Atom • - • • •
'f - .Did we not.need to. learn the -,power and.
the light of justice?. and -it may be here is.
God's strange plan :to . , work out the lesson
with-all its fearful application.' .. Our.depart- .
ed Ruler has 'often been likened to Moses,.
: the. greatest- name of ancient history, and
.many ifartillojs justify this popular judgment.
Each was a great -deliverer .of the enslaved.
.Each was God's.chosen servant to hring His
people thretigh the Red Sea and the Wilder
, ness•to the Promised Land.' Each was a man :
giving hirnaelf for His-people. n.
. Each a wa
of tuee.kiess and supreme reliance on. the
.Divine presunce. My friends, we mourn to-'
day..that Gbd has carried the 'parallel- one
Step . farther. -Each has seen the Canaan of
•peace and Test only frota afar. off, and has,
:not entered in. .1 • •
• And 'may, it-not be that the Divine hand
Wi'.l work out the likeness.. yet further ; and
coming up froni the Jordan of • our grief and:
tears;- we .shall: find Joshua the successor,-
who shall compass• Jericho with the Seven- .
fold circuit of destruction;., shall crash guilty -
Ai, and be indeed the - hornet .plane and
destroy:the Cariaanites, 'whose .cup of iniqui
ty is thus made suddenly. to overflow ? VPe
know not ; but we, can. and_ must . leave all to
God, who• says vnsne.tacc,..ts iititi, I. WILL
.' •
It would. semi fitting that T . shoUld say
solnething mere directly cencerning.the citar-.
acter of' him - , for , witonts.lhis day a.
mourns.. But whatshall irue ? :No words
of,etilogy cap tell you .more of your loss than
you know, . The best:ordered phrases of the
eloquent when put beside the • pure of
that lite whose. remembrance. Is a. nation's
rich legacy, are dwarfed
.and Cold: What
hetter.than to leaVelhe,sid yet precious mem- .
ories undisturbed in the sacred silenee? . .Efold
thiS record to the clear stinlight of• truth,. as
it shall be- developed in the • coming years,
and behold•the glorious lustre .which adorns
• The traveller wandering through the streets
of Rome,- comes upon tlic - pliurch of St Peter,:
.and looks, and scarce believes his eves. when
he. recala all the inagititicence-wliich descrip
tion and expectation had clothed itwith ;.for.
he-sees the (tome - he had conceived so - gr And
- the peditrient, which does .
not at all unprens -with loftiness and
grniuleur But.. he draws nearer. He changes
his place. He learns to measure . the 4eight..
He enters,
..and - gibes, the - dome -. rises and
s wells. more and - more . magnificent ,. "-and his
. .
faith is•awakened. But it is only When he goes
upon the campagna or stands on some distant
hill, and high over. all, the putiy . works of
lesser men sees .the grand dome rising lord of
the city, gains true views and some -conceit
tion of its vastness and sublime beauty, that
he really knows what he has seen.. such'is our
experience. They who have drawn nearest and
looked up most steadily to the height of the
pure grand character•of hirn - who is, gone
have learned best what he was.' But it is he
who looking over the Valley of time from the
elevation of years to come,, or from the level
'plain of a calm judgment :.which can be
reached only in a distance,--only he can tell
us the greatness of him who in the loftiness
of a pure nobility shall stand forever side by
side with that other - grand and precious
name of our history. •
*Recall that which you know Reid again
words of wisdom whieh shall now be, our
treasured. posseasigna. Consider the feerful
intricacy of this net with which treason, hate,
aloes : cunning and a sordid ambition have
sought to snare his feet and behold how be
fore their baffled gaze he has walked unharm
ed by the light of a pure and holy, purpihe.,
Consider the Wonderful wisdom of his plans,
and how they Stand tekday towers --of
strength" four-squared to every wind that
blows." How the nation rests on the same
sure, foundations on which he stood and
-which he so sacredly guarded-
Consider his ft - rill:less, -which net all the
indecision of 'friends nor the determined
assaults of,fees could shake ; -firtnneas that
we were daily learning- more :and 'more to
Consider that noble reticence.. Not all the
brawling of, noisy demagognes nor the
hounding cry of pestilent, self-elected ad
viiers ;: not lilt the -mistinderatanding of
those whose obtuseness was another name
for their hate; .nothing in all the circle of
mighty 'forces with' which he was plied
brought any belittling explanation. Ito was
working,for time and for.. his country, and
knew that in good. season God 'would clear
his record as with the light of noon-day.
Recall alio his single, hearted devotion to
the _great cause for which we have been
fighting, the unity of otir nation ; and the
noble work of Emancipation with Which his
nature will stand forever . crowned. •
Remember his pure honesty. He was the
'truth-doer,' •No wind can: tell the honor won
in every heart by thiemost noble trait: .. •
And remember as the fOundation and cap
stone of all,. the cement binding together• all
the, character in' splendid symmetry. that
.t.solemn, earnest, personal love ef God and the
Lord his Redeemer. Here is the shining
crown of praiae, lustrousfor ever, it:matters
not whit else is dim.. ,
It is a sad And .awfully solemn pleasure
to utter these words of praise; to feel that
he ofwhom they are spoken, is beyond, the•
reach of any human eulogy. It le _happy to
think that he is beyond thereach of sorrow
as well; and that to him totatit no more any.-
unwelcome voice. But how sedates! how sad
to stand orphand children by the graveofour
dear father, pipit% the - lest tribute of respect,
hearing in the, cho. of :.every word the sor
rdirfal refrain '."a - shits.th ashes, dust to dust,"
and feeling in the : heavy heart that 'they are.
the' Words of our hereavment, sad witness of
our unspeakable grief:.'• •
He whom we so Much loved has gore .91;t
Into eternity. - HIS eyedithall lighten no more
on . eartlf in kind reaponsci to the , glance Of af
fection. They have tipened.on' better scenes.
But 'we exehereaved:-. 'sorrows are over,
and thotigh'we would not caU him back.this
,is the' burden of our eorrow. We may go to
-him, he shall -retUrn • tO us, no more forever,
. .
appelliag •iireSt w heiddvion, tin- tua*
mercies.; said ;_lh reAti''Cad;4lOhb* . 110er
loet'lnatient7 petetelmit*,=-bedime
eiingrafulaMil thaididtihwfoillePq49olbleri"
adeweirkbi
Bread daIAWO :SW 'A-tnt*
fro- wagnari nowt Dd time Oan make '
out of hell any time, T do. believe." •
O aon . u s~a . hoee:.c
• . . ER . •
-
EooE
efeis iaratiot*l•! 7
o. eveiy deiectiOlotizsigundliduredi boium3 ip_a4 =led to
orticy, atitickrtest,not4o ! -
„. ' • '`
NO+. 18
, . .
THE OPERATIATS NOBILE."
•, . . • •
• STARK'S LANionni,:ALL
(In Sight of Mobile,y April Bth, '8.3: -• •
Entroai hlninie • .TocayAi ::•Tile",move
ment on Mobile commenced on the-Jfittrof
31arch, by,-General . ,Grtuw,ers, 13th C.
moving slung Atli eastern e2iore of Mobile
Bay, from Nav y - •
Previous to starting, it had rained for sev
eral-days putting the roads in, a terrible COll
- obliging us..to leave ppart of the sr
-
tillery and wagon , train behin - d: After a few
days marching through mud - and )water, sln
in which we built 'fifteen miles of. corduroy
mad, we reached . Fish. River where we met
Gen. Smith's -Atli A. C, aceolnmMied by
Gen. Canby, 'they, having - embarked on a
transport at Fort Morgan and got - to Fish
River day' previous:- Several, dart..• ware
cupied in .pringing.up supplies; ,
the march was resumed.; , On ,the 26th our
advance met abobt tivo hUndred rebel env
-
airy; and atter niliglitSkirinish put them to`
flight
flight 'capturing = three 01 . then' from. Whrgn
we learned that several large torts were not ,
far distant. • About 3, P.
,31„ .on the 27th tbe
advance came in sight of Spanish Fort; ` - and=_
as soon as the - main column couldhe brought
up, the work. of investing. the fort; was com-
mewed.. • On the 2Sth,scoutarrived Frith
tdispatches from Gen. *Steele. Non]
learned that Steele with his forces;- had - left '
Pensacola on the 20th, and went; by way:of
Po l ard and Greenville, to within .forty miles ~•
of ontgomery, destroying the railroad, cap-_
turing two trains and .. mail, a number of
ricers and about - $25 006 worth of rebel- past- '
'age stamps. - Ile then moved- -rapidly in the•
iirection of BlakelY, surprised anddefented
the rebel Brig r Gen. J. „LI. Clanton and his
forces, capturing five hundred of his men;
and mortally wounded the General, who has
since died. Steele was near Blakely, on the
Tensus'River when ihescOut left. ~ the
29th Gen. • 1 7.eatch of the 13th A. Q.', with-his
DI-Visiou left with a large supply train for
Steel's forces and by the 31st reached and es- •
tablished. communication : . .
Our lines now extended over ten..milrs
from near Blakely, on the right to. Spanish
River on the left. Mal-Gen....F..Steeletiom
mends the right, litiaj.-Gen. A. J. Smith the
centre,- and Mai.-Gen. • Gordon Granger the
left. On Granger's front near. Spanish Fort.
the lines are only a hundred yards at:tart:L.-
Spanish Fort is a formidable work bnilt of
stone and shell, and is protected by sand
bags and earthworks in the front. • .The gulp
have been recently casemated, with several
feet of sand and earth above them. A wide,
and deep ditch partially surrounds the fort;
thickly laid abattis surrounds it, between
which and the fort and for some distance out
side the rebels have placed torpedoes to pre
-vent an assault upon the fort, in case- their
guns are silenceu..
It is said that the rebels have' a large num
ber of guns in the fort recently brought from
the fortifications around Mobile, but the con
tinuous fire of our sharpshooters and artille
ry prevent them being put into position.
Five hundred will cover our loss in killed.
wounded, and missing since the campaign
commenced, 'while there have been nine hun
dred rebel prisoners seed, to New Orleau.s,-to
say nothing of the killed and woimded. The
Naviil forges under - Acting: Rear Admiral
Thatcher have been somewhat - unfortunate.
The. monitors Osage arid Milwaukie and the
Tin Clad, No. 48, while trying to get within
range. of Fort Spanish were sunk in elictal
wafer by torpedoes. • -.-
The former can be raised,. but it is .feared
the two latter will prove total loss, with the_
eXCeption of their guns, which have been
brought ashore, and will take .part in tlle •
bombardment of Spanish Fort. 'The bar
barity of placing torpedoes along' the road
sides and in .entrenchments . has been.-fully
. .
carried out by. the rebels. Steele out of a
single line of entrenchments he captured.
found one hundred and forty torpedoes--
Thus far seven men have been, killed, fonr
wagon destroyed or blown to pieces and
five - mules crippled by torpedoes.
Gen: Lucus's cavalry while out scouting on.
the Ist' inst.,. captured a rebel telegraph oper
ator, on whose person thellobile Register of
the sth, containing the gratifying news that
Brevet Maj. Gen. J. H. Wilson, , bad captured
Selma and thirty two cannon, and that Shell
man- had defeated Joe. JOhnson,. with great
loss to the' latter. In honor of the news:
Thatcher- ordered a salute of • ono- hundred.
guns, a certain number tb be fired from. each
vessel of the - squadron, the Flag Ship taking
the 'lead.
.One hundred pounders are being put Into
position; the Floating Mortars - are being
brought forward and era long Spanish Fort
will witness such a bombardment - as.bas ne
ver been heard , of in this Beaton of rebeldbm.
Hoping soon to chronicle the fall.,'orSpartish
Fort and even Mobile itself. . .
. . , y.ery. respectfully,
• : _
T. Et. B.
FROM THE 66th Pratitt. REGIIIHAT
. .
• : : CAMP 5.6 TH ISEGT,Y. V. V. 1 .. I,
Beinix's STATION VA., April.-18, 1865, ..
Eurroas MINERS' Jovas.LL,;7-43inee We left
camp. at Hatcher's. Run 'we have :been con..
.:
itantly..on the' move from.daylight until dark:
Fighting ,- has not been AO
. bard. - Still, we
have had full shate olthat. 'We expect .to
. go tO Sherman in a . few_ days to help him'
to
to 'wipe out Johnston as ive.havie done Lei.:
Witiave rumors in camp thaVPresident Lin
cohrhaS. been:assasinated in --Washington...
There.has been great 4ifficulty in getting the-..
mail and newspapers. The drat 'paper Tgot -•
was that. lbyal paper,. the Miszas'Jenanazi
and right glad'was Ito get it, so .1 could hear :
from.my own County. .. When received It • .
you should have seen:. the •:boy" '
.gather around to 'hear me read It. One of' •
my old .tent-mates.frojn Ashland ,it'about. to
be mustered out of thilfiervine, hiSterM of : •
service has: expired. His ,naine- .la, Miehsel.
Maher:. On the 29th orMarch I leili- 1 :47 08 0'
.. rain. ... He was" t ha. best °Meer' in the .
meat one the boivest; - and never tasted . '
dtop of liquor:': . We .deeply mourn ,our lose.
He was wothiddin.thAbewela while : lead!ng
a charge.... :Hewes takento Piti Point, where
he died a few: days. The' Bth Regiinent
has keen' • intcour: Reglinent since 'the.
_eodniencentent 17 . the . - campalgn, - butLonly-.
temporarily.. They are a btave lot of men.,
:There .are also several Schuylkill County men : _
in that:Reginient, bet - Mine:have been hurt.
Hoping peiee may soon, be declared ;that
.we may return to our loved ones at home;
remain,
The casualties in the Fifty-sixth Regiment
from March 29th to April 2d, inclusive,vere
afi follows :
Brut, Co. H, killed. •
Capt.tlA. - Shaw. C,o. K, wounded mortally,
since died at City Point.
Joseph Hare, Co. D;. wounded.
March Stet.. _
Jacob Wolf. Co. D, killed.'
Daniel Race,• Co. A, wounded.
George Brakall, Co. F,-wounded.
William Reed, " F, " -
Vlo.llniE 4SIII MGT., P. V. 'V.
CiMP 48141 t
FARitSTILLE, VA., April 16th, 1865.)
Eotrona Misers! JOURval.:.:-Efaving had
the luck of obtaining a number; ofyour . val
uable paper,
.(which : I assure you was , a wel
come sheet to a soldier in this out of the way
phice), - saw therein an article relative to
the 48th Pa. V. V.; and•also to. Ite.lats
Geo. W. Gowen, and •• wayrejolced-iolearn:._
that there was at least one purist of the day;
which Sympathized lois_ of one,
ho," as a gentleman - and ra -- soldier,; was:re
spected_ and .belovedibyall whri.knew.hint.
I may say 3011sont exaggeration , there .l3 sad
in the .48th, Who :would not: volnstarbdly
• down his life in defence of his(COLGow
ent)-,chtiractei: His - Men:tory canitever :be. .
Uptpoted!freattlie heartapf.theaoldignirwha .
compriaolw4Bth... Lieat..-Cat t Brennan thol
asalstant °Mit Gowen, comes in for no
iimidrshire ' After' the fait of Its"
litiniedutte4't sesitadeS';cemtnaS' at;
tholinewn ll 4‘noWY lenantilbealkPkWitolk
'OntleximitP " toi P.lg • ..b**4 8 140 4 1:9 1 .1
punpartYofi • , giant nni,: - 4,o44timwtor
theati4lo ttith'ttafteavisitritatif-'"
'maw* nittid themselv* ablriaikrAne
hodar tv SObaylkiE Covey.
L . E. Co. lt, tee, P. V. V.
VOWS, •
SERGT. I. B. .I
11are6.29th . .
Henry Buchanan, Co. A, "
J. H:Elitsbrill,' •" G,
R. B. Potter, -•• ‘` X, .- "-=
John Coil, "- A, "
Adam Robbins, - " A, "
Charles Con, " - A,
Lt. R:Raymond, Co. - A,Vounded. _ _
Seigt.-Mai..M. Kirrm, Co. H, wounded.
Corp. Charles G, wounded
John Laidig, eo. F, wounded.
levenger, Co. - F, wounded.
Augastus:Vebinger; Co..F, wounded.
2d Corp. S..Seehmon " _ "