The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, October 14, 1865, Image 1

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    OF TINE lIIIINIKR - 8 9 JOURNAL.
i lkitniiLS l 75 Per anent. Payable In' *drake
-0 if Dot R advance
..•
in • advan. .•
•
j 0 -
ternie will be strictly entered to here Alter.
'4;e t TO. CLUBS?.
copies to °hr. -address (in advance),
13 00 1
r.t„ ” ." . • 2S 00
ttn.tbt,tAptions maid hiveriably be paid i n advance:l
j or aNit will be furnished to Canters • and others
,p..) pa 100 copies, cash on delivery_
i••• cs er evinen and Sehool Teachers will be furnished
j oun s A ist $1- 50 lu advance; or $1 75 if paid
e .r—over one year. fall rates. • . • • -
c•I'"" o.atica of Adve r • •
pt 9 noes, including. date; one insertion; 75 cts., arid
‘,,quint imertions 25 cts. One square 0f.7 line& and
tines, for 7 or 2 insertions $1; .3 insertions $125;
';',..ern•nt insertions, 25.. cents per, square. -Larger
; tWELYL.
fi ............ $2 00 $3 50.55 no
F,rclmand over 3.... 400 -•7 00 -
12 00
, asi es, or al liana 6 00 - 10 00 • 18 oo
" 800 • -14 00. .. •20 00
.Iz ee l4 " • 900 • 'l6 00- 24 00
F
35 4.
10 00 18 00 . 26..00
re •
column • 18 00 30 00. 45 on
afitarcer space is per agreement. • ,
f r• !‘"ine words are counted as a line en advertising
NpLiCeS and Dissolutlons,:. and 3 tulles, $2 $
:
oainistration Notices and Ditwolutions. 6 . times. $3 •
.
Ilb
1.4 • •
Menelaus of the Plallade!phie & Reading.R. R..on the Delaware, at Philadelphia.- 7 -Plers for the Shlpinent of inthradtes.
QUINTARD & WARD,
No.: 9 :PINE _Street,'; • -
NEW • - YORK - . . •
.
- Foie Agents for The Coniudidated Coal Cons.
p . n or's Baltimore Vein .Wilkerbarre Coal,
c hipped from Jersey City and Eliiabetbport. . . •
_Cm, for the HAMPSHIRE and :BALTLNIORE CO.'S
Hampshire: George's 'Creek-Coal,. Shipped_
e Baltimore and Georgetown, •
._eats for GEORGE MEARS' celebrated Broad
Top Coal,' shipped at Philadelphia. , . •
From, their Wharf,No.-.1, at Port Richmond. Phila.
fr:phirt. they are, prepared.to ship the best qualitlw of
Locust - Monacan' and Bed aud- White Ash
Schuylkill Coal.. .
From their docks nt Jersey City (where the depth of
s-ns.r is from 15 to 19 'feet), they are prepared at all
en,ons to supply the , above - Coals . , and LEHIGH: to
testrons and ships for ... ports In China and elsewhere.
se.,lmers can be coaled . at: any. hear during day or
, • • •I. W. ATWOOH,
Agent at Jersey City. *.•
. OFFICE IN TIOSTON.'42,KiIhySt. • .
•
at Newark—J. M.' Es.CA3IP. . • • •
Starch 12, '6l. . • • •• • - .• 11-ly -
071 N R T _ •
IifITPTEZ OF. '
SCHITYLIK/Eti COAL,
Wharf No, 7 1 Pcirt Richmonii.
OFFICES r IN°, 316 Walnut. Street. Phitedel phla:
(No 300 West Thirteenth -St., N: York
October 16, , . •
.4. 9 - •
,YORK & MR YLRTT,L. COAL Co.,
MEM=
BLACK lIEATIT, AND
• 'SUPERIOR •RED - ASH COAL S
OFFI ' IS: -
f 45 South street—New York.
• • 1138 Walnut ntreet; Philndclphia.
ytitLmLPUTA,. , &„
SCAB tilk - LKILL NAVIG'ATION.
hipping IlliarTs for ANTIIIIACITE COIL at
fireenwith, Uciao are Itiver, Phila(ia.
- Wharf No. 1.
LEWIS AIUDENWIED & Co.
ROMMEL, POTTS & Co.
. . .
' /205 We.hult Street. Pkiladelphia
OFFICES: 110 llwadway. New York.
. • 1 . 1411)3. Ftreet,'Llostom •
wharf T 0, . V. •
ItEPPLIt lit.: it BRO.
• . IN. E. cur. Walnut* Fourthsts.,
OFFICES: •“15 Pine Street, New York,
I.3l6rebruite , Back Building. Providence.
- . .
•
IYAVIS PEARSON di;.
• 311NEES ANT 811iPPYRS,OF TOR . . •
CELEBRATED' LOCUST. MOUNTAIN WIIITE ASTI
and
.61'01IN VEIN
. . .
RED- ASH - 'o' 0. A -
• 1:38 Walnut: titreCt,
OFFICES: NO. 111 BrOadway, Room No. 9 Trinity'
•
• Building, New York.. • •
• '
" : (No, 11 Duane Street, Staiton. . • •
WHARF-GREEtiWICII, DELAWARE .AVENUE.
DATIS I'EARSON,•IIIIIJ. 8:1410JEL BAST. ASIILAI9,.
T 813 - 013. G.
COAL AND _ IRON COIIIPANY,
,11111 , V.r.B„ '
MO Top White 'Ash Senai-liitomi7
nous, Steam GerieraUng : Goal,.
GENERAL OFFICa-52S.Waluui,p0., - Phi
itdelphia; ca.. • • • . •
Fer Lomanotlye Fanzititts and Slimmers, the Coal from
i• tetitt,t 'Equity Coiliery is. on account °fits purity,
rt is yeti to. ire superior to an now in the market.
D. P.'!lA4b,• • W. 11:1rNIZER.
.4. C.
11A-AS, BRENEZER.
MINERS AND SHIPPERS OF THE CELEBRATED
.Spolin - Vein Red Ash and Diamond
Vein . Red Ash
Nmrlty
I COAT; WUrrin..l6n
.. 1 . Culliery.
The Superior - Whitt; Ash Coal, ficint 'the
. New Shenandoah City - Colliery,. •
Whi.'t , •w ill be found to excel any COM yet shipped from,
Ileulon.. • •
;...Atzents sale of GEO. W: SNYDER'S
!Tiperiar• Pine .IFOre.t White ANIt Coal:
OFFICES :• '
• 21S WALNUT St.; PriILAD'A.-
No. - 9 TRINITY BUILpLNG, Y.
, Nln! eh ..6•4,' •. . • , ' 11-ly •
- -.OAIN;IIACKER & COWL-,
LOCUST -- GAP. -
. •
LOCUST MOUNTAIN,
• • •.• - HEATH.
Vt.o, dealers In otherfirst qualities (it • '
• WHITE - AND RED - ASH COALS....
Yl4 Walnut Street, Pliilad(;liihia. and Woodland
' • ' ' .Whartas,
7404.01 CAIN. MORI:1101M: DiemWMl.
W3l. F. :MOODY, tinfpper and Agent; •
Schnylkill liuven, Pa.
Fehruiry 15, '5'2.. • ' 6-1 y
AG EINCI for :the -Sale . of
the SIIAMOKAN.COAL, froni the LAIICaaIT
11:15 this day been - trail:4mill from A_NSPAL:II:
bAV.P. - ; PE ARSON
. Philadelphia.
the only authorized Agents to diailm'e Of
iii bratal Coal.. to drrs and. communications to
ac.r.r.7.N.-ed to them it Philadelphia or - New .
• , • • . ts: - ItAST, President.
‘. I:- I N rFq:l:,'Seeretar3' Anti Trua--mier,
July 20,..!;:)...•. ••
BROAD TOP.
GENERAL. OFFICE
BROAD TOP WHITE ASH
SO.mi-nituiliipous
• • • -• la•,•
• ••• C• 0 - . A_ -•
xo. 104 .11 , A . LNUT _SIPRXET,
•, • PHILADELPHIA.
. ROBERT. RARE POWIEU; Manager.
• • COIII:NF.CTING.OFFICE§: '
Iti . writTi•ber Buildings, BoKton, Manx.
3ti ?Yew . Ipric.
BROAD TOO WIIITEASII
:SEMI-BITUMINOUS 00AL.
.• • CALDWELL'. SAW YETI, & - CO.; •
112 Walnut Street. Philadelphia;
• No. 111 Broadarrty,...llew !reek: ,
• No. 144 State Mtreet,..BOstop,
Ter a superior gnat i ty of tbi. celebrated crud from their
EDGE HILL COT.LTPRY,
Mined. and shipped exclusively by thela.
APril 'CB
LORBERRY CREEK.
orramititv.
t:Wo; 4 he unitemitreed.letving eimimlirlated our Three
anti eri ea.in the Lorherry IteLtion, willherettfler trans .
act ourbuAneve, under this name of„ •
?A rt.i.Ert, (11t.. 4 4 . .PF & co; • •
- • -
.. , 111.1.LE1h., STEMS & Co:
.• .
.'' .• .- ... - . GI{AEFT , & Nl, - .l",llNri. -. ' •
Mr. GRAF:I 7 I 7 .II nu•lnlvr. of bar lift. liavlyay wh.hnela
1 , . - l.hirtisolf with 'l. It.. 1 . 11... A KlS'l't):s, w tit, re,liii: i n
Illilt..!t•li;hia, .atia all onr coal Aiiiihinl liy . .tid,...‘vater ‘, - 111'
h. I:IA - or-112e - excluiiivc.; ..c:toltryl of BLAKISIVN,
h;I:A EPP i CO.. - •
lncreased Carennst attention in its'preparation. we
thaintaltithe reptitation 'of Our celebrated Lot -
I,, cr: Coal. }burl - lasers abroad can .rely upon hating
e.bipped la the very best order. ' •
MILLF.R, GRAEFF 4; CO.
Fth. I?, .r 1
WINDOW DE FACTORY,
• • Reading, Pa. • • .
t 14a
Simile!! of nil colors and 'alt ntylcn, gilt bplazs
on -baud r,r made to order. • Aridrewn .
G}:llli47. IF? :PC. WTI I TIN.
630 Coact Alloy, ttendiag.,,
1,3-Cnt•
...•• . . . .
•
~-
.-
...„. :
..... ,
•
,
. .
- - ' „ _. ... ', ,• ;Y -
-4:1 7 ,,,,, - -0 4 k• _
.. ' - • ' - -
- •
. .
. .
. ,
._
...
2 ,:- - - - , . - '''...,-) :-. •- ' ...- -•• 7 444. . f, ' -'--.. . ' 111 -" , -- t -
4 , ti ...
oim v . r ..., 411 1- '4 •
.• - -- . • .•- . -- ,.J.
.._.., , . , ~,.
,
E
. ;',-). ' , ,'-'" ...':;:.• • „:.-"-- z -,
, P ri le": - .., - •"' -ea..... i • •Iguil4 -• ~•' - ' ''' ... 1 -- ' - ' 1 " -14 ` 7 "S- •'.-;.`•`• . . . " -
. AD
RTISER.
. ..
- .u.wAsilEp,:-: . q:.pq - .RATuRpAY_ . .go:wN:O , ,_';w : B.N,TOIN- - -.._-14NN.A. i -..p : QTrysyiag . .i.sclwy.L:K.l.L.L..i..-Qov : NTy;. PENNSYLVANIA
VOL .XLA.
~= --
-• Pier NO::-15...
BLAXISTON; .GRAIPF & Oo. ;
• . "MINERS AN!, SHIPPERS OP * . •
LORBERRY AND LOCUST. MOUNTAIN COAL;
Shippers or other approved Annlitiesjot
WHITE AND • 13.. D ASH. 'COAL..
Feb-14.433
LEWIS AUDENRIED & CO.,
,
Wholesale Denim in the beet varieties of
.
.
Anthracite and Bituninons Coal%
• • •'• 00.K.Walnut. Street; Pltilaclelphlit.
OFFICES: .{ 110 -Rmaaway,.2.lew-Yotti.
• . L . l4;llllbyStreet,Bosten: '
.Pioneer Shippers from E 7.allethport, (
LEHIGH, SPRING MOUNTATN:HAZLETON; - .AND
COUNCIL RIDGE COALS. 13,,
BANCROFT LEWIS &
imams Atm -suirrims or .
ASHLAND TU
ns -•• • .
Celebrated ASHLAN D -COAL;
'OFFICE—Iit Walnut, Street, Commercial Entitling,
• . •
\ewrl nrk Office-7T Cedar Street,t Bostori Offiee,-.7
Doane Street, •. • '• [Oct. 23, .53. 43,
. • ' iI..fiV.E.'APP.OINT'gI ) • .
LEWIS ..AURENRIED.
LOCIJST:MKENTAIN - 00AL
Ambllntid and -Girardville..Colliiiien..
'RIZAIREPIPM; - :&.
COAL.`. • • r COAL.'
A. T. STOUT. & •
fFmec.sone to gTOLIT*.it••VAN MICIME,)
11inieni• and Shippeas of the celebintd FULTON (LE-.
mc;l1) COAL, from the Ebben - ale: Colliery :near"lla
zlenin. Pa:, and (161 c l -sin the best varieties of
ANTIIRAGITE . A.Np Brrunsors COALS.
Delivered direct from the mines or on. board of vei-
Prls at
TRENTON. N..T.,• - ELiiARETIIPOIP,
N. DRU IV
NSICii,:I4. J, FORT RICHMOND, PA..
41z:46 Trinity xestilding,
1.111.1 Broadway, New Yorlc.. -
• . . .
~. •
L OTOCT. 1 , .A.N ' ICKLE. 14P.TE STOUT.
•April 4, , r 4 - ; •l4.
SAMUEL BONNELL, Jr
.
Nos. 43 & 45 Trinity Buildin4, N.Y., I
SHIPPING POINT:
Pier 4, ELIZABETIIIPOIiT,N. J.
OFFERS FOR SALE
HONEY BROOK, N, SPRING MOUNTAIN
AN I) • Bucs. M OUNT A
LEI [IGT3 COALS
BALTIMORE CO.'S tr. BLACK
WILKESI3.A.E.RE COALS;
AND TFIE CELEBRATED
GEORGE'S CREEK CUMBERLAND COAL
May 21, '64.
No. 6 . i'ront Strcet. N4pw YorlE,
BROK_Eat
, . .
Ii V COAL PIG. /41... li. •11{ . ...IGON,:itEIRE.
liliol,l{,. FIRE CLAY, CEMENT, '4ll:c.
•..
- EsbeCial attention paid to purchasing and shipping
above named property. • Being daily 'in. the marker,
dealers and consumers can rely upon •liating these
4 F..
tides bought and shipped.at the lowest market rates,:
• • •• REFERENCES: . • • . .
IlOYT: Efq., Treas. Penna. Con Co.. N. Y.:
ISAAC N. SEYMOUR, E.R., Tres. Ilad;.Canal
FRAiI KLI N . Esq , - ;*.co. 4 Columerce St., 13Oston
.T.'S'SEi MOU.H. Esq.: Prost.. Bank of A nburN.Anburn
C. ENSIGN. Esq., Buftalo".
•
April 29; .
THOS. HULL tic, CO.,
" MINIMS AND 81111'1'1.M OF
SMITH'S SPRING. MOUNTAIN LEHIGH
CO AL
Yorktown, Carbon. oounty, Penna.
OFFICES:
• 322 WALNUT Streel, Philadelphia,
SEANESVIILLE, Luzerne County,.Pn.
July 23, 30-
. . .
6.II7ARLEIGII COAL..• •••••
. .
Oni-"HAHLEIGH" COAL nose sold exclusively, In.
Philadelphia and :vicinity. • by .DltY
Parties ordering . from them, may always. depend upon,
gettlnz a'imre article. •.. . . :
OFFICt-I.o9.lVallasit
• . •.• SILLMIAN 4Z.ItteKEE...
Hazleton, May 9.'64' : • 2 . 3-/ Y . •
JENKINS'
PATENT COItL. SCREENS
The nmivrsigned having purchased .of the .New Torts
Wire flailing Co.,' "Tnr. JENNINS' , PATENT."'for•
improvement in the -prpqas of triantifactnring_ Coal
Screens, &C, hereby gives notice that' the %lane. of .laid
and • the' ttlidity• pf the iintept has. - titri , iitly
bectifully - estalilished after a long. trial in the United
States Cirenit-Coiwt: that injunctions have been granted.'
.and will continue to issite against any and all violations.
of said patent right.- . -Alsn'that-the irjnnctton against
.1.. & T.. Lanhenstein' of fdinersville:l'a., :IR iprritice.re
of said . Intel washy *order of the F: is - Circuit Court,
Oct .vs, 15c4., tally and completely reStOred. The sub'
scalinTs also desire to gii.e 'notic.e, dint' tiie folios=
- tilt! are theonly persons who are, at present anthorized
to use, the said patent improvement as marinfactturs of
Coal Sc, WS, in and throw:bent - the Coal Itegiml : •::
.1.- W. p,Rof•K. s4'-ranfun. Pa." J. d 4 FnlCK;'PottS
yille. PR., RItfICK & SllOEMAlitlt,.Tamaipia, l'a, - . -'
As,the mannfartnrers would not make in :violation of
theio '4 patent-wale:Ss encourag&l by owners or renters
A' Co lieries we arc determined to prosecute every
)
,case t twe discover of purchaser:yr:lid • users. as well
aa .1)14;1(1i - wen , Af.Crall Screens. made in violation of
said itt'ent. tri the full 'extent of the law. -.• ': .- : . '
New r.nrk.. Inn, 9g..`e.ne4 •• .•
• AllAsE .k. Cod :
- . . .
' WHOLESALE AND RETAIL i?.EALETt IN
TOBACCO; PIPES
' • • AND-•CIGARS!,
CenWq. 814 Opliogite ihe Town
POTTNYILLE J.A.
Feb. 21. 'in. . • . 38.41'
CIIP GARY .4i'litt4T IT trT E., . , . ',... . '
.. . . .
. . . .
. .
. . .
English and Fronchoarding. and Day.. ...
School z • • -••.- . S
For YOUNG LADiES, No. 1417 and 11549 S ititiE
STREET, PHYLA DELrillA. will re-olien on li7ird
nifffdlt7', 14.eptr'anber 110th. French is the lan-
Mace or thdramily, and. is constantly spoken in- the.
Institution. • For circulars apply to • - • . . -
Madame 111 9 .11fEl1Y;11.:1.,lr Principal.
July 9 9 1....!6. - • .-. • . . - -..'
..29-3m. - .
‘ t r 13,AV CAAIIII IST(11111 , 1.-41w4' t:.opene ,
1.1- the Ftand lately occiipisal by N. C. Morrison.: Celts
ire street, nearly 6Kx - wire. Market., a • New Drv.Gtiotliy
ftrOcery and Provision• in which- will be kept
constantly on hand . a'ehoice stock of•fioi.tda - in that.
line. Also, Queens Ware, Inner and Feedl . &e:
• Thu undersigned 'hiopes by.. strict attention ra . •
Antes, to receive a fairishare of •the public patronage. -
• . ROBER'r A. QLOVER.
Potts...llle, October 20..64.. •
. .
r 0. ENGINEERS; IDEA EGIITS:VIEN, 1 -Q e.—Drawing .
Paper, in itolls.or by the yard, dif;
ferent width. -for plain and fine work.
A leo; Drawing Paper, backed- with work. ,
different
Traeing 7ifn.lin, by the pi ere Oryard..different widths.
• 'rreeing-Paper, and tattrtieleau.ed by Engineers, for
anle at • B. "HANNAN'S'. •
June-4, . Book and . - §tadonery Store. -.
31.9 Walnnt Street: Philadelphia.
9 Trinity Building; New. York:.
Cor.'of Eilby & Doane Street, Balton
Pie's. No. II:
FROM 31ATIA1,70Y.MOUNTAIN
CONNER' ISL• • PATTERSON
Agents for the e'Ale of their; cplebigted:
NEW YORK.
H. N. DOLT,
LEHIGH.
I WIII teadi pm to pierce the Bowels of the„Earth; and bring out frOin the Caverns of;fountains Netahrwhirb will give strength to.our hands . and subject all Nature to our are and pleasure.-1/11; JOBISON;
•
OA' STNER; gTIO . 15..N..EY•Sr, WELLINGTQN
.• • . .
knthracite.dißittinitotis-Coah
. 807.1 C AGYN76 • IN NEW 16;01,AND TOR
• PICKER'S LEHIGH SUGAR LOAF COAL. •
, SAMUEL CASTNER. Nets Tork,..:
. ' C P. STICKNEY..ISOI: River,.
•
J. C. WELLINGTON, Boston. •
• • • ,9 Trinity Blinding, New .Yoilt„
• OFFICES :_4.ls.Walnut Street; Philadelpitta.:
•
15 Kilby Street, Boston, ' . • •
Wharf No. 6, rciik.Richntond;*biladia.
; • ...204f .
•
VANDUSEN, LOCOMAN : Co.,
. .
LOCUST MOUNTAIN. LOCUST GAP, WILIKESRAR
-: RE, LE,IIIOII, AND OTHER - • •
WHITE:AITD. RED. ASH:: GOALS;.
Agents for.the sale of the celebrated Georgen CriNek
Cnnaberinisd -Coal; &Ott -the Mines of the COn-
Soildation Coal:andiron Company'of. Maryland. •
• "(
Eliza )ethport,. Pf. Richmond, • •.•
•
Snll4 Ina' W.- • ---;; • j
Balthitore, • • ' • ...
• ••' • (Georgetown. •-;
• --• (201 AVainnt street, Philadelphii.. -'• •
Ort•icza Trinity Thilding; New York:
.'-• • .
•
lii Doane St.; Soston. •
Fe . b.1 . 1, 'O5; ••. • • • • . 'O tt
.1 . V111:: . .g1_111.TE R, -Jr.;c o:,
White and' Red Aeh Anthracite peal,
• -lAnd AgentAttat the •
.!teRESTqN,ViItAL,i,
. . .
. . _ .
From the Mines' ,
of the PRE4rOlt COAL . krin liMnove
neer COMPANY. in the eelehmtett Mnhanov Cc' Fields.
•._ •'. r (No. MY', Walnut Street, Philadelphia.. - :
OFFICES: I No. 73.Broedway, No. 1. lieetrir St.; N. Y
: •
...• . (No'. 9.l.•end - 23 Doene
. St., Boston. .
.. .r
Pim; Na- 17.. Richmond... .
.. . . . . .
• Feh..l9...fie, : , -.- . • ..
.•
..- 7- . ' .
SCHUYLKILL CO.
:T.. H. • SOHOLLENBERGER :
AOENT - - •
and Shipper of the Oel - Phratrri
Black Heath White•A'sh and Peaked Mom- .
ASH. COAL..„
• P.O. ADDRESS= 7 Pcrrsvfx.i.r.or biINERSVILLY.,
kill
County, Pa. '•
APT Ph . s IN.II,
E 0 E
• My East Fritnkiirt Lorherry Cunt is now Sold
steely by Messrs. CAI:IIWEL.L.'SAWYEE & who
nfe•my'sole &lents. Parties ortiering from them,,tnay
always-depend npon tretting a pure nitride. • • .
o, 112 Walnut St.; Philadelphia. •
••. OFFICES: IC°: 111 Broadway,. Trinity _Building;
INoat9l'Stnte,:Street Br rbn.. !
-• Tivmont, Mardi 29, '62 -•. •• • .• • •-.,1q
CONNOR •it PATTEIOON,
ldinera and Shippers of the Celebrated
LOCUST MOUNTAIN COAL.
soN, •‘.
. • AO-14 t 1116
. •
J.
J, CONIC• PT
penusi•
CoptiFy.
O•4IDA L LEAMEIC—The rn Wive'
determined to make Ferenil. ro:IFCF , on their perm
eity.. known as the KENI'VeNT Psormirr, situated In.
Schuylkill County, and in .the . inunetliate vicinity of
Tesemma.A. The mond has heel' fully developed. nod
those desiring . a.fir.t . rate colliery. can obtain one, - with
out making any further explOrations of thesame.
• None need make application unless capable of erect
ing all the improvements • •
Apply to GIDEON' BAST. Schuylkill Tfaven..Schoyl
kill County. Pa.. or to DAVIS PEARSON, •2O Walnut
street, Philadelphia. •-
January LAW% •
• . .. •
e
COAL. ••
T ,•
. .
GREAT. IMPROVEI . IENT Tel COAL • SCREENS,
The undersigned are now prepared to manufacture,
at. their sliop, in .iilineftwjlle, utf.kinds of SCRP.E.NS for
screening Coal; of Ifid'improiied manufacture, patented
to Jonas Laubeastein, 4th . ,Fehruary,.lB62. .
.Screens riamnfactured by 'tills process, are mnre du
rable; maintain their form better. and are furnished as'
Cheap as any to.be'haTin the County.
'They:tire -made 'of snare iron; in simh, .6:tape trs-rto.
prevent the COM-slidina. from one , size to the other be
fore iris thorouahly aSsorted - , thus. pretiar . ing it; better
that call be'done by eastlion.dr.ivire screens. • - --'
. . . . . ..
•
.
' • The .rminrifectmers urgently. request all ".Operntora
wanting Screens, to examine those new patent Semen
at their shop. or at•Avork at" ttielklamtnothlrehi Col
lier of George S. Tlepplier, -near St. Clair, where they
"have been in use for some time.. • - , .... .'. ••
. . .. .. . ..
'. 'By purrivikinm Fereew: =WO inkier this. PUtent liti
gation,or any trouble as to patent rights will be avoided
' All.work done with iworriptiwaa and dispatch: ..
. .
..7. & L. LALTRENSTEIN,.
• . . . •
, Mineraville,Tane 7. ISa?.. . - • . , :2:144. ...1
. -----‘ 7-.--.--7.- .. -7-- ' - ' , ." - •: , . ,- -...--,, , - - - ---- 7 :. ' " . .
- • ~71" - ~. ' 4 . •4; , -'=`-'• „.-:---; • . -
. . .--- ••,„ - 4 "-... .., _,_
_.- ;---.
- -,-,'-''' A' • - z..< 'e, , e: - Z - - -- =_% ' ''' - :-..--_-' : . .
. -y-Stit..i.•-..-e- -..., "t171,.? -4 " . . , .
J. C : 'FIIIOK,
... ..,
'(SUCCESSOR To Tz ArT or n i n, & , o l , lloENLA.4E .. R.) .
I°l' 4
11 1- . LS( WIR ° li.t h . . ' Li io Patent,
. ' Under the Tett— !FI
COR. RA I aIT
. ' poTTSVTLLE,.rA.
.. . 4-
OAD oft
_ . NORWEGIAN S7S.,
•
Jan . /R. 44. .
de -14NEZ'
.Lill_ .
.. . . .
i)rEnil- - -
NEW COMBINATION COAL SCREENS
. . . . .
s - Theimilersigned take-pleasure in 'announcing, to Coal •
Opera-ton( and (ahem:Bud they •are. mannfectoring a
- new COAL SCREEN .of their invention, -•they
will ,gtierantee to wear twice as 10ng,.. and do its work
penes then any Crimped wire Screen uSe; The.„seg
menu; turnigiont by us:can - lie „bent to any 'circle re
quired, We atee'!rearinitee that the ..tnet,h will. alivettpt
retain - OA original iza Sidi( entirely warn-out. ' In the
crimped Wire Screen's', the . meshes •fregnentlY AIM. and
lose the *per me(b.. before The Screen is -half, worn
out. We maniihreture any sized: mesh Of our New
Combination.Scree.n. used:in the trade: ".•-. :
M. - , 'Mr. Dichm, nbei was associated with - Mr. Beach
am in thebusinnee of Map facturing Screens. at. Nor
. wegian and - Railroad streets, Pottsville, having dis
soh;ed partnershiM and disposed of his interest. has re.
moved to liallrOad • street: in.. the rear of IL Esteily's
Itardware Stem,' Ctintrc . Street,rand.tisepciated with him
lti'the manufactureettheir new .Card :Screens of all de
scriptions, Jasper Snell: lie solicits a continuance
Of.the patronage heretofore so liberally bestowed upon
. . - . .
We are also manaithetu ring a style cif \l'lie . Sttien by
a Process different - front that. used in makina•erinaped
wire. screens. as 414 A in every respect, to .which . the•at
teak* of Cotil 0 .
. igiretorais. invited-•UIEII➢t.,.i-'sNE.
L ' . . i..... •
•
• Mannfatturers of - Screens. of - all descriptions nt . ..the
shortest notice: • -
.... ' . . : [Dec. 26.•`63 ...., ::52--tf ..
...
CALENDARS.—A. : new and. benutirtil
Calendar. giving the months, days and date's, suita
ble for Offices, Depots,•&c.. It requires no altering:and
ts.in fact, .a perpetual 'Alumnae and . a' perfect •TIALE.
KEEPER. Price V. 15. Call'and see . •
. ' It. C. GlikEN..
• *. . Cen tre st....:Pin t.mit e
St - MAC HI NEM
. . .
, . . .
' A.Finit,e &,..Lyon Sewing .Machirig_ for- sale at the
Floiattire.nr ihe'sniwcriber. Alan alVilerix ,Ft. GibliA
Seiving Machine.. Both new . and-of.latesipatteriw. and
Will bet] Ad c•he.iii. •.. -.. . -. .- -.. 'B. BANNAN..
. SCREENS
SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1865.
BUSINESS CARDS.
gaMiiEMiii
CIVIL AND . ..WRING ENGWICER,;, •
Invecta . Cglllerl :and . examines. Mineral and Oil
Landi. • OFFIE- , -Sollltlvivert Coiner of Market
cenere-Streew
MAY 6, '66
wEsp4i , E"BLAND
. . .
.Offers his Piofeleilorial Services to the citizen of Potts
•.• '. ' •. Vile and. vicinity.. • • •• —.
°Mee—Ceram!. •Ma Lich Chuokac . Coal, Bb.
f i V T.
.qtriz ITC , nu& Mining'
• •ille; •,. •
OFFICE on 2d floor of . Gin.' f'right's Building, Con-.
tre:Street.-., • • • • „fDec..lo,
.L 1 ;.../IBOTHERISI;CiriI 'rind Mi..'
lilt ning Erigineers:;•Barsel'u Building, rBecorid:and
Mahantaugo Streets.' • .
.•STEPIIEN HARRIS:.. . JOSEPH' s'. HARRIS::
'July • • . September 'O, • 149- •
. ,
LANG gurgetion:
LI.: Dentist, Market. Street; secencl'iil- , 2_,__ , 1 -
door itbore Third Street,- south _side; !!csiaii i ii
Potrsville: • • '
May 5, '6O
'Mll.llAAllelti Pottsville, Pit,late
• or tkie'Peruisylvainia. State Gecdogifnl Survey,. x
plores rands; mines,
. Octobei 13;-..55
CIAAN'Ii 'CARTER - . Real Egitate
31.AILLNOY 'CITY, Schuylkill' ountY, Pa., , •
•• OP - Letter Addrem-"lktsktotioy . City P. 9.". • •
AGENE Y--For the , Parchime • and .Male
'of Real &tate': buying and selling. Coal taking
char„e.of Coal Laiide.lytines, Sc.. and collecting ream.
Oilice Maluintanko •• ' ••
'• April a; - 2•REIA.S.• 31.111 LL. •
J .
011 N. T
OTO, Mnin factii leer 'and
Deuler In all kinds of Lumber,'.Willisuaspurt, , Pa.
June 29, •G . . 1. • • • ;.- • ' ' • ,
W, . . • • '
.
CIVIL AND MINING .ENGINE ER: .
OtilveLttumeci , ii Mnhantioniim
-• • Street,* . •
May G, '65.
G N. BOWMAN, -
SURGEON DENTIST, arigiaTii
Market St.. - 2 Doors below Od.,
Where he is 'prepared to perfOrm all operations. on the
Teeth; such as Filling. Inserting Teeth on i',301C1, • Silver
or Vulcunite.Rubber, the hest,. and latest styles.--
Teeth 'extracted by the . use of 'a battery or. ether.. ' •
S: - . iTAESE . R;
• .W;i4LESALE.I.NP '•
'l' A".O C O . ; F,
... •
iTAIEET;'I .- POTIrtiVVILLE.
Newly Oppit.s:ite - the . 111cirti*er House...
:.PHOTOGRAPHER: - .- -- •
. .
Ties - pectfully :announces to tho • citizens. of PothOille
had vicinity. Out heitiati taken'and fitted• n - p the PllO
- GALLRRY, in the - building at the North;
east corner - of Centre and East Matket - stroet--where he
-
Is in pared to furnish in the highest style ot.Art,llll - 4=
.NETTWAMBROTYPES; CARTES 1../E VISITE;•&c.,
Ile — Ile asks a share of public- patrOnatre..nnd hopes.
by strictitteution.to business and courtesy, to .receive
. Cpl" Call and examine specimens of. my work.
. ,
LEGAL CARDS.
i~Eti.ll AALIOt Attortikl •ni
Law. OFFICE=- , --312ihnntnii,ti • Street. "otbove .
Centre.-.•
TT -CLAY. ItEittAMTILESSER,/:
— . Alto - racy. at Law,
Ashland, • Seldylltill, C?itinty. „Pa: Office-Oacentre
'street, oinxite. the Nat, olliCe; • .
;. '••••
. AV. itVAN,' Attorney. and faun:
•) Law, PpttsgBle Sehttylklll County.
. Office in. Sillitnan's new- building, on il,l6ntre Street,
nearly 141,-osite..the Miners• Bunk— ' . -
s.
abiive * Ceo
tre,•Eoll6ville. Ea. • •• • -
• Yobruniy. 7, , 6:l' • ' ' •-•- 6.1 y
JAMES - n. . " • " "' totem,
-1 . 1 - 21 - ,IPBEIL11; de: SiTII T toritcp. al
'Law. OFFICE-Icentre - •Sfreet, .opposite. White
tiorfe rottivillei PA. .1
GEOIIPPE ?9111.11.A1i, Jr., •.
;ATTORNEY_AT LAW • " .
Ofpce REMOVED to No. 226 Solith 4th Strhet.
Aprll - 15. AGO.'
' • • -,
Aitoimey at I.nw,..and ; Notary
. fAutlyWhied by -Law to ,admit inter
arid to 'take &pm...Wolin: and nclitiowledgmputs of
deeds, mnitnattes. poWern.of Attorney, &c.,) - ~
-• POTTSVILLE. SCHUYLKILL Uri:. HA.,
LAW: AND COLLECTION. OFFICE, •
• iNalitint - dnget §t....foppuslto Poet Ufllce.)- •
V E*S.IPIiNER, • •. •••
.MILITARY . •CLAIM AGENTS •
tor. -24 and Ilnrkct sli., Pcillmwillre,-
Attend to the . cplleetinia of all claim ,tteninit::theU.
F..WEHNEK," . • • .I.jANK: R. LEIB,. • •
Latc P. V. V. I. Late CAP. 116th P: V'. V.l.
1865
"19 'yearn established In N. T. :
"Only infallible - remedies known."
'Tree from Poistins." ..• . • •
.—Not . dangerous to the Humati PlMlily."
".Rata come out of 'their holes to dig."
g d .
osa a— R
a •- pox &c., Exterminators " • IL;
Ia ti pate—used for Rata. . •
. • . Mice. float:hos, rta,ek an , ! • 2 •
lied Ants, ,te., &e.; •
‘ l "Costar ' s ' ' Be&Bug; . Externiingoi,
wash, used to '.. " . • ' 7
tle.stroy. - and - also as a pre- ..•*. • -•
. • - i , eutive for lied Bees,. • " :
. "apstes" Eleotric Powder foilnsebts
Is for 2lnth.i. ,Vos4ttitiirs,
Flak. Bed Bugs, Inwects on .
Fothl4,'A.ithnals,.4,e
• UrSoid by all.Druggistx and.Dmiers everywhere. •
.
:Tr ! of ' itniUUxme.•
•Q irSce that.'!Cosrmee.. - name is on each Box, liot
tie and Flbsl4, before con buy. - . •
111 EN OW 111...COSITA - M.
• *. iaPluNqtr.m.Dcf‘vr, 482 BILQADWAY, N. Y. '
aTSuld by all Drilgl,4sts;gnd 'lliudera Aittsville
1865,
, .
.•I'N - E7l2.i3AE''-OE-: itATS.--The . - Farmer'A • Colette.
(Englihhi to3sert!? and provesiwilgureti that •one pairof
rah; will have a progeny and deiceolants'no tep , s (Min
(15 t,(150 in three years— • Now. - unlet?'this immenie fam
ily 'can be kept loWn',.they' would consume paore.fund
than.wonlil sustain 65.000. human beings„.... •.. .
• . itz,See •,,coatku.;a" advertisement in Mil? viper.
. .
. ..
• -
. .. . . .. . •
.'..... .... -. •' - 866..,: :. -.. •.,-.-.:..,;-':
.
RATS 'stints BlRDS.Whoccer engages in
: shoot,'
ing small - birds is a cruel militi,whoprer aids AO exter7
initiating rats is it.berrefactor. We shiinld•ltk . e some of
our correspondents to give us' the benefit of their expo:
rieoce. out theim pest .'•We need
: something
besid6 dogs, cots, tin
intaps for this . husiitess.—Sefea,
ti j ia inSriesin, N. F. • • • " • , •
VtrSee - •.CosTiavv.advertOeinentiii this paPer- •
1865;
. RAT-. EXTERMINATOR - tit,'Simple
safe, and snre.--the Most perfeet .RAT-ification- meett
lugs we have ever intended.. . Every Rat thet:.can get
It. properly prepared `according to &making.. will eat-
It. and every otfethat eats it will die.. generally ai some
Iplaceas distant its - possible frOM where the medicine
was taken..--Lake*Shore. .111 ch;; Mitror. . • . •
"Itifr,See . ."CosTmi'ir tulver . tlicm . ei4 to this paper.
1865.
. . . . .
A VOTC:C..FRONI. Till? FAR WEST . ,- , -Spenking' of
t•CesTmet. Hat, Roach: &c,
,Exterminator—"mare
'grain and'provisinns are- destroed • annually.: in Grant
Connry-.byverniin than would pay 'for tons of this Sat:
and .- Insectifernl4. • • •
"Cos^r.tn'i". advertisepient In: this piper
18C5,
. . .
:FARMERS AND ROUSEIC,REPRRS—shonId recol
lectlhattiundreds of - dollarb. worth of Grain, Provie
ions, ; ire:annunlly Hit?, Nice; Ants,
and other-insects and vermin-IR. of which =be
prevented by n few dollani• worth of. "COSTAR'S'! Rat;
Roach, lcc., Extenninator; bought and used: free l ,7•; . .
pr - See .4'lll3TAlefi" advertisement in this paper. '• •
rriiolitin-Potteville, wholesale and .retarl at
BANNAN'S.-and by, all Druggists and Derderil: •
y 1. 1731111ER.:-Several thorisand ears Of timber;
LI Hemlock; Whin , Pine,- White Oak "and other vari
eties of unuruniluaLty, With. steam and 'water. mills
thereon. - tapabii• 41,irm the'
.htri.:est 'dimensions re
quired. - Orders zuld'proniptly executed. - •
• Addiesi • ... • C,IIARLES TETE.; •
:Girard Mauer, Tamaqua P. 0., it.kbnylklll Go:
. 'April - • ' ..10-6m• .
.-ItIECCA-,LUBRICATING. OIL."
- tusT R.EicitiVETir .lot of GENUINE
Aleccd Lubricating . - Oil-Alielieet CHEAP OIL in
the Inarki.t for Lubricating' pirpoees 7 -for sale whole
.sale..s atnanufacturererkes by • •:- .B..BANNAN; •
Alen, Piire Winter Bleached Oil, the. quality
of which we Y•arrant, at the lowest. yholec4lei New
DEAFNESS,
NOISES DT THE HEAD,
DMCHARGES 17R031 THE'EAR,
CONSU ) ffMON,
RHEUMATISM,
BRONCIII,4.isAFFECTION;
trriLLs..A;7d) FEVERS;
THROAT
DISEASED EYES,
. . . , .
Loss of Bair , ' Dyspepsia , 4Enlargeinent orthe ',tier,
Dleease of the . Kidneys, Constipation. Giiivel, -. Piles,.
InSanity, .Fite: l'aralysis; Rush of lilood to the Head.
Every stoptinue of te - human :body. is'completely
opened up and the.otf lye - trim - ter' earried ont orthe
systire by MRS. M. G: ROW I , P S' Metaphysical Dls
etli3
•
113,10 E •-.- •• . - • 6 *OO
. . .• , .
Cektirated Po9i Richard's- Eye WOO::
.. ..
"I.nige'Sze,BottlC.-.....'.;....'.. . ; .. .;........$1 SO
mtwo all - 4‘.. ''''" ' ''..-; ... . . 1... --- . .. ......... • - ' 3O
`Cele brited • IRcalplßlPoovinioir...l;... .-, . -l' 30
. OF.F.ICE-Pio. '41.11 Ar•ch.l l 4l.:* rhilada, --. •
. .
.N0:.51 BOND St.. - .New York. -•
- No. IS PEMBERTON SQUARE.','Boiiton
N0...141 BALTIMORE St.. Baltimore. •
` The people .'of Pennsylvania Will fileniie "ask their
Drnmelsts fur *thefitswer. hfislicines ; if they lama' be
siniided by . them enclose Ihe amount above statettin
letter to Mrs: M: G. prown,,NO 410 Arch Street, Phil-.
The money. Will come safe in this .way and
the medicine will be' forwarded' . 'on receipt of the
An Appeal to the Intelligence-of
the PeOple.
• -
• . SOUND LOGIC:
. .
:Mci grealfflusult can be offered to- an' intelligent
'people than that•of getting up: a vimplicated inhuman
machine' wherewith to:operate. en the delicate organs
'of the helid-:-Pissing
: through' tile ears and tip the nos
triTi.fora core of Catarrh' and Ditiffriess.• . This mon-.
sirens morle• of treatment. may . .rm
. he
~This
to where
Oen is neither lighC.iir kriewledge•;- it is s 110 on the
.cluinfcter -of (id t It Is and na opposite to
truth ti.s light to •datknesS; it nicks :and - destroys -the
. entire niirvoutiliyitern; • lind many. never recover from
the terrible disast e r.: • Many-never rafi_y -from this nn
'natural . '•vielent Mode' et.treatmeat i,some have
lest t ir reason.' .God's plan Is simple and' mail); en
deestond : they diat'inn mayread. - • - .
' '0! foolish people. who hath bewitched yen - that : you
' slionld believe n lief,
Be logical ; your talents;
and find that. monittire—is •the'diVinplan for the phys
ical world as.well'as the vegetable... •
•••Ttlii LIFEMP.THE BODY IS THE EYE...
. The sankcirmachinery of the eye' is the. Fnr'e'Pre-_
emsor of : disease and The niethodical - . use of
Mrs_ M. G. • •Rfh)WN'S- POOR.:RICITARD•S EYE
WATER., merning.and. night, will in tine time lift 'the
sunken eyes. anti also.prev'ent the eyes from sinking.
.1t will also cleanse the eyes and keen - , theni :in life , ns
.dewdropti.the. plants. "Franklin's: Almsnne".. (from
which the Eye Water:de-dims its, natneysays • "an mined
of. preventive is worth a Pound of cure." . ••
REMARK ABLE eTTRE OF DRAFNES§:DIZZINESS,
ANRNOISES INTim . iIEAD: SWORN T 0.,„
• •
• •-• •• • • • • •, • amforen, - ,
Mi • G.. - 13noWis—, honest have goL entirely'
Welk and. otnier'Qxl; I owe It
,t 6 yoti. 'My right ear. I
have
_with fern number of years. ' bead
now hear with loft lie hearing left it: just
afterliarveSt, • in . ...this •way . : I , took n dizziness in My
head, 'so I could nit work. accompanied • ivith-a ringing.
ifofse in my earl. - I was so .bad - that I could not bear
'without they would hallo nt the top of their voice's. I
went to Philadelphia. - jiiir myself . under the care' of a
celebrated 'Moist,: he bored 'pi my' ears .with Instrit 7
meats and ran others np .my 'nostrils: for live•weeks,
and-ended by cheating me out of.seventy.fiVetiollars:•
.
I then saw.onir of your advertisements I not. the'Atet
aithysieal Disrovery, - .lred. not More than hair
lined recovered my hearing . ‘r.hich 1 had lOst fOr years.
. remain yours truly; •
.-T1108:B;DfCIKEY. thcford. Chester CO., Pa..
Affirmed arid subscribed to, i lore me this . 3lst day
of .Alarch,'A..l.). 1605. \\ T. Fol.Toir; •
, • • • ' Otutos; . .
• ' •• • May 2iith,
Ma. M. 0;.-Pitovest—MAni'n't—From the date of my .
birth (d 3 years ago) . l have been a tittered with fat,stated
periods) what T snopntiM was a gathering. in. She head,
and treated it as such. and would obtain a short respite,
for froin one month , totwri;., a lien I,woniff Invanably;
be ironbled.wittra repetitum rif it—lasting from one to
twe ;months I'then became convinced that it was
,sotnething more. as I began to. feel. low, sninted, Inn;
rose, and sullen.: I. also became taciturn, tarely'speak
ing, unless directly appealedlo. and felt as if Lwernan
ineumbismee to • myself .-and everybody around me:--
MV'tnemory. Which was very powerfal.- began- to fail
me, So that I cold not, - .remember the particulattrof
•any occarrenee two day? niter. it happened. •
. About-this time (w,hich - was. about three years ago)
a celebrated Auristi : who was on a . profes.tioner, tour
thrinightitit - , the country, made a' stop a -fe days
- where-I was. then living, • -I aeseidingly- called upon:
him; anti had him determine Abe- nature. of my coin:,
plaint and.the remedy:for-it... ,
was dobmed to disappointrisent.-Be told melt
'wmeauSed by :Set - dale:. but it 'being of- the bone and
not of 'the:Tesh.-it.'wouldlie an uttefimpossibilitY, for
Mohan.. Itands or relicediea to effecta care. Yet, I did
adt- despair: I went to other4.but was told-the same.--
I was beginning then to-lose all hopes; when chance
:placed - one : of -your' advertisements sinder my eye: • I
then became:hopeful'. and. resolved not to rest until!
had trietil'our remedies,. I have tried' them and with
. .the followsugre , ialts .•: • ' '• , •
1865
.
. . ..
. . . .
' My.meinory is improving—ray *wiper lively'spirits
bare returned: .. - •Formerly. My 'sleep lilasibruken and
ili.turbed z.arid I, RIM' yi;- • aroSe wi Lk a 'very b.id _bead
.aehe: bpt.'now my sletiti In regular and sound,:and 1:
arise in. the.' , morning'. 'ivitliont
,O.VORLig,O of lily former
.
Thpse are the happy rennlia so firr..throngtrthe nse of
yOur 3tetaphytical Disiaivery—and Lirtist !if the bles
sing of God, and continuance of its Use; to he a cared
r.S'etrhe gentlemnn who *rites Abe nbove'docs not
1:1;41141F name tt> bOpnblitteti. I.IIA 14ter can-bneeen
• • • Cnie . • •
.
[Exl.rict froth 'a Balthrofe letter.] -• •
. . ••••• BA LTDIORIi. 12th; - i.Seti.
• Ides -M; Bannit-11..iiism write ft,' inform you
that.' havg been predisposed to. pulmonary. dud-throat'
ditileulties , -nntl have had a scrofnlons swelling for the
past: tour yeaes'stancliith . ori the right ...side of mp neck.
Every remedyl.have tried failed to much my case, till
happily; I.ohttilneti yone'ftletnphYsical .Etiscoyurythe.
result.:th' that my general health is improved laid
I. have-'onee.thore becorae• etiergeficrfienially and .
.phySically. • lily throatismithli better: the invelhng on
tnyineckluts ulthost diSappeared.. : • '
• A neighbor-of -thine is alito ythic'filetaphyalcal
Disrovetywith'vcrySatisltlCtory results. :
hiy address is 1324,• N; Jay street; . • .
. • .
• E.VITt.A.CT-FROiIINA:LtTTEIR. ••
' 111oSstouTti., July 1, UM.% .
TiROWN-LlklrcnAmicv-1 hinte used-your
MetaPlipdcal ifliscoverj.. and con praise it , above all
tried lei nes —for discuses. of. tt rout, lunge, - pains. - soie•
beQs antlsiiffnesa of joints:' also sore eyes. It has
indeed done winders for, ata• • - I now find : ita pleasure.
to work:will eat- and. slecp, .andleel as nimble as I
did twenty years ago. • . . • ,
. . . . . •
• Certiften.io of /Motherand .
lifrs..S. M. r`hiptnan..'•of Parker Street, •Charlmr--
town. M ass., , do certify - for the• ben efi t 'of mother s and
children'who are 81Iffererti as we Were, that I have been.
afilienid with-confusion and 'dizziness • in•mytead since
uhildUuod-:-1.164g up audeitting: down was obliged to
hold my head; my .eyes were:drawn. and contracted,
Also dry and:painful.' . The circutailon..thronghout my
system Was - weal:And-poor. toy feet being- Always cold..
'even in summer; I was Obliged to wear woofen'stock.
logs, and have then'[ . rubber:l . :regularly; My mental
powersi• silt/hied also—to -that I could not- hold .'my
thoughts cinany one subjCct more, . Matra few minutes
at time.: irymemory failed ale and my whole systeni
was gradually - . •• . •••••
-Every attempt to relieve me.-for thirty Yearn proved
useless.:. till most providentially I noticed. Mrs..M. G.
lirOwirs.MetaphysicaLDisenvery adVertised in the Bos
ton papers: I thought I-would try it.'. I did, ;with the
most reetilts. - - My disease was broken, at
'once.- the. confushress and -3 'dizziness in, my head gave
way 7 all 'pain and trouble ceased:. -.My eyes began to .
expand:and arenriwelear and strong • • -• •
•.- Circulation has taken .plaee throughout my- entire
. system.: I had not in' warm • my feet . at - the flre once
last winter, Tim oar - winced. it is the, only, antidote-I
:ever found that corridteaeh - 'm'y- case, and r ant cond.,
dentAhr* it - Will break op thetrorxt '
• :
CASE OF MY 'Arum DAuouTpt. -
In .relation to my child
,of fourteen. months :=She
was very sick witlivoroiting and, dinivinza, • from teeth
ing: Alf,l lost two children before in the same way. I
beanto fear she would go too..and - realiaing,the bene
fit, I had received from the Metaphysic:al Discovery:con
cluded to'applyit to 'my child, and did so. when she
fell &sloe() and slept four hours:* ()Awaking 1 discov...
erect her ears, were discharging. most:offenalvematter.
Worn that-MOnient my child begsn,to'get Well: . It.is
30W, six Months since, and frotn that time she hitsnev
er had diseased' any kind, .1" rie vet a, child "row
FO sweetly and Fo fast. s - • • • • •.
Dad it not been for Mrs_ o..Drown's Idetaphysi ,
DiScciecrY, 3 believe my beloved 'child would have
died. mine us my other childrch did.. .•• .• • . .
The folloWink.i3ersons hare been cured _of the abort.
disease-s; thiongb the !Ise of my . Metaphysical - DISCOS ,
e4 :l:ll6 : E:Rebeita We . St:Panl, St, Frankfort cured
of. &airless and noise in the heat can,..now hear . the
children 'called their =m
by eir ein the nest -
Einweerder. '1849 North 'Front street:Mad. of
about is years, was eery -deaf';: can now bear the notes
distinctly on the piano: •
.Could not , hear a toned be
fore—his Whole system wonderfully- benefited, as he
was. an turnip:l. • . , • , : • : . : . : •
reterKelly„ 1627 non a was
.qn te Beat
in one ear: and partially so hi, the other, has- regained
thehearing.ot both well. .•. •' • ' .• • ,
The above Medicines are to be had of all, drumiate
and tredirin* iettlers. . •
205 p.. • • t.Vialth , 65- . 1(:1-Gri . 3] 35-
CATARRH,
NEURALGIA,
ASTII3La,
scRoKTLA,
Ju.tiCe of the. Pence.
THOS..I):.IJIC DICKEY
• • '.....F.011181(.11tit 1607kING:
, . .
The ;lark tabu' the.itrokenf atz,% •• :
The fatberfs.itork la done; -•
Sweep up the' hearth, and mend the dre,
• ;And put the kettle on. . I. • •• -
The wildillgtit-Mad is bloirlng
eTiatireary crossing o'er the wold.. •
.
He is coming Oseethe.wOld apace. •
He-Is stronger than the storm
He dotfis not feel the cold. not tie, .
His heart it Is So warm.. ' •
For fathers heart Is stone and true
As eter human bosom knew. •
.11 . e makes ail toll,all hardship 1i bt-
-
Wtild all men were: the same—. . •
So'ieady to' be pleased; so *tad; •
So very slow - to blame t
Rilks.'need not . be unkind;
than
• -
For love haUv readier ;will than tear; . -•
Nay. do not ciosethe fthatters, child;
For far alone; the Irmo '• . • '
The little window-looks. and he
c.qh eee it ahinin2 . plaln.
• '
I•ve.heard him say he loves to mark •
The cheerful firelight through the dark
. .
And - well do all Olaf father likes, '•
His wiShes are so few,'
Would they'were more t that every . hoar
'Homo wish of his knew
yin sore It makes'a happ . rd,,y .
..• . •
When I can please hinaany wak. • •
.
I know bets coming by this stgrt-H
Tbd babYo; almost wild : ' .. . ... ...... •
See . haw he laughs , and cr0w:8.... and 'stares:—;
!leaven bless the merry child!' .. - ..
':4 fathdr's self in face and limb,` . . .
d fathers heart is strong in him; . : .: •..
. .
. . .
~ . .
Hark i hark I 'I hear his footsteps now
Ile.ii thmugh the garden gate,
Ruu, littlerfless;'atid ape the d00r,..: ..- ...
And d 6 not letkim wait.. • - ':'. .
Shout; baby, about! and elitp.thy bandit,
For father on the threshold stands. "
.:.NEGRO . SUFFRAGE IN THE .SOLTII. •
. . .
The.following letter onthis'sultiect„is - from
the celebrated John Stuart Mill, the English
political econatuist..:lt.is . a strong •argitinent;
presents the . question. in a'clqar light, - * and
will be read_- reflecting men with in
terest. A gentleman of Ohio sent the distin,
guished writer the speech of. General Cos,
the.. Republican' candidate . for Gbyernoi of
that State, 'hi: which he took ground in favor.
of separating the two races in the South; giv
ing the negroes exclusive • control of certain
States, and the following rejoinder . was made
in answer to that letter - .
,
BiActias .PARK • KEYI.,.Sept.I, 186 i. .
• DeiatSne.: I am. sincerely obliged . to you
fof.givino-me . an'oppOrtunity of reading 'the
letter 'orGendial Cox, and your:excellent
paper in rePly . .. • • .• •
:Y •••
oU . .ask me for in..opinion. Ishould hes-'
State xery : .:long.. before Obtruding Upon any.
American;'. and still .more itpqmthe Atherican
public, any mere
.opinicitiOf mine respecting
their internal &means: - Wit it is the concern]
'of. "all mankindi almost as .moch, as of.the
United States, that the conquests . . aelilei?ed
•by yciiir: great. and.. arduous struggle Should
not be, in: the v.erybour'of iic.ory, carelessly
flung away; and .t he Opinlon . which .you do
me the_ honor ' to 'ask, is- one - %which I.share
with so many .of the - noblest and :wisestArne-
rictus; ;heti need havp the' less scruple
expresslng.it.
. .
• it is certainly some, gain to the negroes,
and to the prineiples.Of . - freedom, that they
have been made even:naminally free. 1...d0
not pretendthat it is nothing that they can no
longer legally be bought and sold.. But, this
is about the areouot. of :all t i hey have gained '
if the power of legislation over them is, hand
ed °Ver. once more to, the pld:thSters; - -andtO
thenietra whites; hy.whom they B.re:despised-,
as Mobil • arid,: probably.. More than 'even -by
tti.eir Masters, and. have been. fighting
these four years to retain thent enslaved.. If
it were not for.
be
State institutions the:
ease :could not .be -so preasingi• thr Those who
have niadelliethlree could keep,thein so.—
but, once the war power laid down and :the
regular * move of the State . goveinni cot -re
stored,''W,hat is
,to. prevents State Legisla-..
tore, chosen by theirenetnies, • iron, making
laws mdev which, hitlesSalteY riaistby force,
they,will have as 'little ae' control or: their
own aetions, ralittle protection for.life, 'hon—
or and proper;y, will., in short, 'be, eicept in
. 11 -few of,the outward incidents of slavery; 'al
most ag • much: alavea as • befoye:::- To ;bring
this about; it would sUttice to leave-the . ..phi
ones unrepealed, .by which the testimony of
egro cannot be'received, - against ,a white.
Nay; even Where these laweabrogated, noth
more would be heeded than prejudice in
'the whiteeports of justice, and. would it he,
eonsistentwith •ortlitary.htinian nature that
such partiality - and...prejudice Should . not ex,-
ist ? .All this is so evidentthateven the cart
. (Witte, to whose letter you . so ably replied,'
is quite aware of it; and can suggeSt no means
Of averting.: the • evil: exeept what I agree
with :you. ip • regarding' : as - .the chimeri cal project "of' effecting lecat-.Separation
be-
tween the-two.raCes,.:.e.xcludingibe . negroes
'.trom the. of the States,, -and
giViag them is territorial government apart. It
is not to be „believed that' the President or
CongresS Will: entertain" such a' scheme.. as
. .
this..seririuSly, then;: they. allriw .•the
Southern. States to - reorganize .. theniselves,
and regime all their constitutional rights,
Without. negro suffrage, - what. is to . be . done ?
.TO - abandon . the negroes to the': tender mer
cies of 'those front .whom . . -. -at. EO terrible. a cost, you - haVe so lately. resened them? •No
party or set of Men in the 'free' States ere-so
shatrieleqsas to propose this . coMbitted: turpi
tude and : But the . freedom *Of the
negroes and the.selfgoVerriment oftheSoutb
ern States,. as at present constituted, cannot
'co=exist; and if: it is detertfithed that, come
• what - will. the • former shall be a •reality; it
Must he intended' that the latter shall be a
.mere-pretense.. A. censorship. will - have to be
exorcised 'over all -- t he - acts; both legislative
and adrninistrative, , of ate:State - governments;
the Federal - ant horit les w.ill,'by military ce‘
ereion; preventor:aet 'aside all *proceedings
caleulated toiriterfere • with that equality, of
eivilfights• therare - Volta(' by
eVery . consideration, both of dal:Y.od - of in,.
terest, to Semire. ti - ohe freed . , reee.. And this
military . dictatorship . have . to. contin-
net] fora - very great lengih.of :time ; 'for it is
speaking Within bounds to :say,f.hat - •t wo gen-.
,erations nuiSt - elapse and
feelings engendered
. by . slavery give phme to
new 140 S—befor- the stain - which the posi,
tion of slave-master . burns into the, very 801413
.of the privileged' population can..he expected
.to fade out„:•• •
.. •,•::• • • - : • •
This isthe state - pf things which the Pelicy..
now.: apparently acted .ori • by the Federal
•Government,, leads to ; . - bUt - .1 have toe:high
an ripinion. of the intentions and feelings of
The . President, and the practipal 'good Sense
and 4eterniloation. of • the. American people,
to believe. that such a: policy will be perse
veredrin:• "It • would:1m: nothing else than
electing to. rule tyrannically over . the whole
- Senthern - poPulation:- in' order to avoid - de-.
priving the white half :of that populatien of
the power of tyrannizing over the other blaCk
Instead of, restoring to the - States lately. in
rebellion a nominal self government which,.
unless you are willing to sacrifice all that has
been gained by four years of civil• war; can
not .be suffered .to be real, would ; it not be
better to make the self-government real, but
to grant it only' to a mixed community,- in
which the population who havebeen corrupt
ed by the vicious institutions , will be neutral
ized by black citizens .ands white emigrants
from the. North ?
-And what is the hindranCe to this -in the
minds of the President:and the Cabinet?. Is
it scruples about legality ? To.lie scrupulous
about exceeding his lawful pmiers; well be
comes the 'first magistratettf . a free people.---
But in this case the scruple.s seems wholly out
of place. We are told that the'rebel - , Stales
must be asSumed neVer . to have been -out of
the Union, and therefore to he' uncondition
ally:entitled to all their Original liberties and
-powers the moment they condescend to AC
.zept them. Reason would say,• on the con-.
trary, that, by declerieg - themselves hide
' pendent of the Union, they could not, indeed,
divest themselves'of its obligations ; . : but cer
tainly' forfeited its. , privileges. A state of civ
il war suspends all legal rights and .all Social
'Compacts between the combatants.. ••Except
under the terms of a capitulation, defeated
rebels have no rights- but the --universal ones
of • humanity. • '1 he' Southern people, their
lives, bodies, - and estates, were, by the issue
of the war, placed •at the discretion of their
conquerors.; but, of conquerors whom' , both
the general 'MR ()Fright aud the special pen-,
eiples of their own social and political insti
tutions forbid to exercise permanent detain
ion over any human beings as subjects, or OD
any footing - than • that of equal cid
zenship.- .1t would, however. . be on the
part of the . free States a generosity par
taking of silliness,. were they to give back . to
their bittefenemiet; not only .power to.pvern
"themselves and the negroes within them !ha
ils, bid. (-through . representatives in Congress)
to govern: he free States too, without ftra ex
acting such e,hanges in thettructure tif South-.
ern society as -will render : such a relation be
tween them and ilde free States rational and
safe. IT you have not a right to do this. you
,had not a right to impose the abolition of sla-
very. Consider'what an elemefit yin are go
lug` once more to admit into, the supreme.
Governthent of the Union. Think of this one
,thing--it is but one of. many. Every South
,ern member of Congress. elected withciut ne
g.° suffrage is a sure vote, for. that blackest
and most disgraceful breach 'of..fitith, .which
would brand American democracy, and popu
lar go.vernitient• itself with a Mark that would
endure for generations-the;'repudiation of
the wet debt. 'The Southern representatives,
inlact, would be the only. merilbers of Con
gress c'who could honestly vote for this; since : .'
to their, minds, unl.s the Confederate debt is
'recognized', too, it .would• seem, only equal
juStice. This 'is c,f itself a sufficient reason
why no community, composed 'exclusively or,
principally of .those who hive -been engaged
in the rebellicn, is fit to have a voice in Con
gress. Of course the States have to be read
milted; to keep them out•tind govern ;them
as: subjects would be' in Contradiction to . all
the principles- of 'the American or any tither
free constitution. But-the future••history. of
Atuerica, perhaps for - ages to: come, depends
(I' cannot - but think) upon you requiring
them,. before admission, to give guarantees to
-freedom, , by admixture with fellow,citizeria
whose interests and .feelings= are in unison'
with justice, and with'
_the principles of the
free : States: Migratiori from the Norih will
do this fit time and in - part,' but only negro
suffrage - can do it sufficiently.
I have no objection to requiring as tt, condi
tion of suffra,ge, education up to the point of
reading, and. writing;.. but upon condition
That this shall be required. equally, from' the
whites. The poor. whites :of of the South are
understood to need educStion quite as much
as the negroes, and are certainly. quite as un
fit for the'etercise of ,the'suffrage without it.
I atn, dearsir, yours, very sincerely,
• ' , ..J. S. 3IfLL.
lion. Judge Dickson;' etc.
tFram the ,Troshington.
WE' 'publish , below a. corresPoadence • be
tween Mr. Carfipbell,- the -Minister -Resident
of the United States at Stockholm, and COGIU
31E111143trom, his Swedish and Norwegian
.MajeS Minister for Foreign Affairs; rela
tive to the' deplorable. events of :the night of
the - 14th of last. - ,ln no country irt-En
rope has' the news of President Lincoln's
Murder been received with more greater in
dignation. and horror than in Sweden, nor has
any country shown . mcire sincere sympathy
for the cause of the Union, or a fuller
.appre
ciition the character of the 'late President.
Immediately on -the receipt there of the, pain- -
ful ticlin,gs of his assassination,:, the flags on
the public buildings in. Stockholm and. Got
tenburg, and on the vesiels in the harbors ot
these cities, werelibisted:on half mast, and a
public feast, which was to haie taken place
at Gigtenburg, in honor of the fall of Rich
Mond, was postponed, as it tokee of respect
for the
_memory of thelamented victim.' ..
• • LEGATION OF TOE . (T. S. -A.,
- Srocknom April 27, 1865.
Sin: It. becomes my painful duty 'to in . -
form his . Majesty's Government :of the United
Kingdoms or Sw eden and. -Norway . of the con
tents of a telegrarn 'received, by me, last night
from the lion. Charles' Francis Adams,:En
voy. Extraordinary, &c:, of the United. State s.
of America, near her Brittannie Majesty.
- Mr. Adams.announcestome the trielancho
lv intelligence that his Excellency Abraham
_Lincoln, President of the: United States of
.America, was assaisintited while in his box
at the theatre in Washington., -.
To my country this is a terrible catastro
pile, for the 'Pre . siclent was ensbrined in the
.hearts.and shared the confidence of his .coun-:
trymen in a Temarkabla degree. .The'nature
of the crime by - which"he perished -shocks
civilization, as it ciptiages hnnianity ; but
hls death „will not. retard the .restoration of
national authority; nor arrest the functions of
- the Government.
The - Vice President,.the- Ron. Andrew
Xehnson, has assurnAd the duties of President,
in ne.eordinee wit h the provisions of the Cen
stito t ion of ihe United States of America.
Official despatchei,containing the details of
this most abhorrent 'Crime have not, yet reach:
ed this legation:
. Permit me to renew•to your Ex . dellency
this sad .
.occasion : the assurance of my most
distinguished consideration._
JAMES 11. CAMPBELL
To Ills Exc:ellency Count .MAEDERSTRoM:.
{Translation,]
• •• -Brocanot.af April 27, 1 . 80.
Ste.r I have. received. the official conimu•
nication by Which
. ypu . have confirmed, this
morning, the . ..melancholy intelligence . already :
in circa kit ion. yesterday evening. of .the,odi
ous Outrage to which the - - President of ,the
United States fell a Viet hry upon the elienirig .
;of 'the 14th oftlis. [Oath. .. • . .
. .
L•have thought i my. duty to .bririg
oVerWheiming . newslinniediately tolhe
ledge of my-august snvereiffri,riiid-it Is by his
.express .order that Thastedlo . c . orivey-tolyou,;.
sir, all the horror. and :Profound regret with.
whichlt has inspired Not drily the old
anciexcellent relations whieli . existed beim/eat'
the two'.GoVernreents, bet :the ; high :esteem'
arid .the: sincere cnnsideratinri TrOfeised
the King for the, noble character and eminent
qualities of ithe illustrious Preaident7,vho has
been torn from a country,. to the wel fare'Of•-
'which hd was devoted,the'nicist atroci
ons. eried,. may easily. explain t:he - sentiments
of just - grief. and: - sad sympathy with which.
• the King is
.penetrated,,.and.thdreprobation.
with Which - -his 111idesty - sutuips shathetul;
assaSsination;, directed. by . a 'parricidal hand
against that good rnaDi•
This criine.ts pg,graVated . .by - the: infamoUs
iittaek made epon.the distinguished stittestrifin
. confined tp his.bed.of_ - sufferipg,. and:. who,
w(ntrided also in h s _most
,cherished.affec•- •
seems .to leave-ns litile:bdpe of seeing
'him recover from his physical and mental an
.
.
.
•The King haS'ebarged. - me to beg you, "sir,
to testifym'your Government the sentiments.
entertatnect.by . hini;• - and which, %be aSstired,•: .
are shared by.tbe.- 4 tWo, peoples united •under
In • givieg,' utterance to the.. intist sincere:
wishes that this . frightful misfOrtimndOei not
injure the United States of America, the Gov- ,
ernnieht•of . .the King , eXpresSes the hope of
continuing with President :Johnson the same .
relations of confidence and athity,wltich hnVe
. been maintained under the: Government. of
the - Illustribus;'Preaitlent whoie loss ..we so
bitterly. deplore..;;• - • • • • .`
do begging fop; sir, - to accept the . expits;-
aionot my.utost profound' personal.regret, - .1
permit rujaelf" to add the assurance. Of my
most distinguished 'eorisideration,
•-, , •
• ANDERIITRC x.
Mr.. cA36nar„ • Minister_ Resident of the
United Sistea. of Atneript.
•
chblemis making alarming progresins
The Yeteiin-Riseive Cinti his been
air The Governaient has chartered 1572 Nation
ife-The cattle, plague is on. the increase in
England. • . . •
. /or Therawill be a large German - immigration
this .*ear. • • ' • • -
.4a - Nothing !pa' is developed about the Feni
ans in Ireland. • •
• sa - Estensive flrei3 are -raging in the woods of
,??Judah IN. Benjaidin intends to become . an
. English 'barrister. - =:. ..•
. 'SR - There 'were 1113 arrests made iri
pima inring September.
Tb 6 losS by lire in New York:. during §ep;
ternbef willamount tof•1,000.,000. '
.
.
"eii"Pablishers of newsp'apera are'
required to
takeout lieense,s as mauuraeturers. : •
..tar•The Secretary...of the Treasury denies that
he has.any purpose of. tnaking.another loan.- • .
aiii - The Georgia Rate Convention -has . unani
mously repudiated the ordinance of sesession. •
OeTThe Gintecl States SerSice Seciety . of
New York WS - endorsed' Preaidont l'lnhnson's
. • , • • . . • • •
police.
/1 The eittle:plaugue in England is called'•
the' iinderpf . *t.' ~ On the Gontinent attacks .
air Ali:ink company hae been formed in. Ban
gor,.Maine. '• It. furnishes phre milk for.five . and
nix cente.a quart.... • • • ... ..•
• Aa - Tbe price of printing paper has risen' lately
• in. Boston. and thereis a scarcity 91:both.printing
and vtritinr , ' paper.- ••••
,•' •"''
• 407.C . 01.5am1. Zulick;.29th Pa; Regiment.
Itaa: been brovetted - .Brigadiof General.; also Capt.
C. G. McCermick, 7th •Pa, Cavalry..
• /.13r Frequent depredat one of guerrillas aro re
ported on theTombighee-river,. Alabama. They
attack Cotton' boats passing down the dtrertin. '
..iiW,Tiiell'enianicare said to be in strong force
in Canada:. Toronto is their head-quarters. The
French netispapi3ra th ize with the Veni.
irThehorirs dailylabor at the• mills of
'Woonsocket; B. I; have been reduced'from 15 to
11; mileb. to the gratification of . the - overworked
- or Brigadier General BrisCoe has been arrest:
ed at• Lynchburg, Va.; ellarged with. stealing
.
30,000; in Government money. .It. was found in
his tsviiession: • • • • • , .
• /SrThe conditionof Mississippi is repreiented
to be very sad; The - railroads are unrepaired
'the country devashitid;•anti the crops so poor
that the people will have to be supported by the
Government., . - • ,
BAlsil4Aics
STEAM PRINTING, MAIL
Butte linentidlinee
eteente .101 hind 8008 return:Ml of every de
erffetlon at thar.offite of ' the Mnnee• - Jetniset.,'theaper
than ft Can he done 4 any otber' -oneblishinent ' the
County,- =eh ita • - ' • '
• - -
Rooks, katnablifei k Rills at:Lading,
'Large Polttets; - , Railroad Tickets"'
'Rand- Billd, Paper Books,
Articles ofAgtt felt, One Rooks,
ill.. Heads, . Order Books,,
At the very ehertest *dew., :Oar stock of JOB TYPT
is more estenalye than that Of an other - office in this
section of the State, andae keep bands ',employed ex
preeely for Jobbing. Beluga preelltOl'Onter ourself,
we ail; guarantee our work to - be ar aelle.aktny that
can be turned otaln the cttlea PlafiTOß? IR - 901. z
ORS dowel the shortest notice' • • •
- . .
.....
. . . BOOK '_ IiiNDERY. ' ,
, .. .. .
-BoOe bound in'every vaiicty of.. aioo. filiaturilookit
01 mu y description_ MUM ulluibutd; bound and ruled l to
ortam; 4 phortest optic*.,: • •-: --„. - '',,' , ' •
NO: 41.
04pegOn#VION..nik
. . . .
J. A. . 211; PASSDIORV, .Editor.
•
•
AU communiinticniA intended for, this 'column' wig
nddremed la 7: A. M. PAssmost,'Pottioille. '
. • . THE COUNTY
As the time fxed for the convening of the
County Institute ltsfast approaching, we feel
it our duty to say a fevi.worcirt in reference
to it. Every - pains has been taken . by the
executive committee to get up a programme
that will tuake the sessions of the Institute
both instructive and 'interesting. Ou'r lade
fatigable County Superintendent is laboring
hard to do, everything in his power, to make
.it a complete. success: Now we sincerely,
lope that'the teachers, directors, and friends
of: education in the County will come to,
our aid and assist ns in making this ths, beat
Institute ever held in the County. The ; .
di
rectors' in many districts in the County, give,
the teachers the . time.to, attend the Institute,
and this yearwe hope to.see this . imitated by
-the directors in the whole County. The Su
perintenclent if ,desired, will lornhth any
school board ,erith the attendance oflheir
teachers at'the Institute, thus enabling tbeni
to see what. teachers . are really intereatcd . in .
their worlt.. We would urge upon directont
`to allow their teachers the, time_ to attend the
Institute, It,will not be timelost. And we
would urge -teachers, even if, they have to
make up the time, to, attend; they will not,
regretit.
_They will go back to their schools
erward , refreshed. with new ideas, and: •
buoyed up by the encottragement they have
received from their:fellow-teachers. - Dime-.
tors, come and see wliat We do at our Insti
tute,;.sce if we 'employ our time usefully.—
Let u's have at least, the:_ encouragement of
your presence. ',llere is one class Of testifi
ers in this County that - take little ,or no part -
in our Institute,: We allude to - theteaChers,
of private schools. The Institute is intended -
for all the teachers, and we hone thiS year to
see a hirgetiumberof them present.. •
The eoinmittee haVe concluded to'hold the
Institute in this Horough, and we hope to sen
our citizens attend both day and evening sea-,
sions. The evening sessions will he held In
the Court House. „ •
Prominent lecturers froth abroad are ei- .
vgeted in the evening. :.= . " - •
here will be CLEWS drills and ether exerci-
sea during
.the day.
..In:conclusioU, allow us to., urge upon our
citizens to unite- in -- giiring- the - I) edaßgical
fraternity hearty Welcome: The war is now_
happily.over, and we . ought to 'turn our at
tention more than ever *the- instruction of
our youth, bearing id mind that thl cruel
and needless war would never have occurred
had education been. as -urfiversilly. diffused in
the South as in the istorth.
-
He whelsidl&and
,vicious in Selool is'
.
more s p . when he leaves' it.. •He • who fires
squibs, time fire pistols, •.-Ht ivho:
plays:' cards for sport, wi11,.! if he. .turn:
not i . play erelong forthimiey. He :who robs
,hen-roosts and= orcliart.WWill probably some
day.,rob safealtnci:poOketa. He . nisyltot do
it in;the way fo.expose .himself to . the .penl
tentiary.: they haizehis wits so sharpened .
as to robAegtilly; by- setting up •a wild cat
bank,..or.hetray,Mg ..t he confidence of his ern-,
• ployer, or Obtaining the poAsession of. prop-.
erty without. the .rneans of,paying for it, pr
'bv.gettiog his , htind ' , upon :tile public &offers,
:that he may filridS own, • under the soft' ap
pelts thin of !`breach sof trust. : •
. .
I would that you mild see 'With my . eye.s -
for a *little while; you, jvotild. Olen think with
me; that he 'Who, - W hen ti boy, Could, nOtrue
trusted, cannot. now . :that he is a. - man. It
would not be proper for me to mention names;
or I could illustrate thisiby.thtmerous . painfut.
examples. But they . are - not
.necessary. - Ef
fect will follow - catiseas a .man sows, so
shall Vie reap; boyhood is . the seed tithe, .of
Which. manhood is the harvest. •
As therefore, you !rive , . yOurselvei, - form
the habit., while yourg, of employing" all
your time. usefully.—Never be uneMploy.ed.
The land is full or, idlers, striving to Tice
without labor.: • IL.is net to be supposed that .,
you are never, to take recreation; this is use- •
ful, , it is necessary—but if it,come after hard
Study Or productive- labor, it "will: probably
be, healthful and rnoivrate. An honorable
niind in the desire of ' mere: relaxation, will
not, go forth in forms of ruischievousexertion.
It is not to be
.'supposed that a boy - is to be a
man, much less and Old man;,but; -in the
midst orbis mirth and hiErity, he may - be
innocent and amiable. •
111FIRTEAR.' (IMISTIANITY—A STORY OF
- BISHOP SELIVYY.
- troirespendence orthelktinehm.ter.Examtner.).
In the , autumn of - 1857 rapent a few
.days
in a country parsonage, .and on the - Sunday
morning, at breakfast, ' the past Or's wife re
'ceived a letter. which her tittering told us,
must be a tit:bit. -'-" Al, uncle," exclaimed
she, !'Here are cleric al doings exactly to your
,taste." The writera,latly m a distant.coun
try,- narrated; that there had.lately come into
the .next parish a ,new vicar—a very fine .
youngmin,- who at' School:lad no superior .
either in Greek:or in his boxing, and-wha at
the university won lor.ora .for.. his .classics :
and silver cups' for his boating.° He was, be
ginning in earnest the worst of an evangelist, -
among a long-neglected, vi cious-' aud'bnital
pecYle. He ,had a plan and, a will ;- but
many worthy folly ; ,were tearing that
his zeal';was withotit knowledge—
er - wisdom, at any 'rate.' - One of his first
measures .was t?-open schobt in 'a remote
part of, the yarish, and get, the room licensed
tor weekday preaching,.; But all the drunk
ards rose against such Unheard-of - proceed-,
I jogs:: would run' after him,
.cnrsing
and hooting; and discharging volleys of sods
and, other missiles. Finding remonstrance -
vain;.he adopted.another course on the Wed
nestle.), evening in the - week before I beard
the.story. Making .a stand.in the: middle. of
the road, at - theuntrance of the harnlet. just as:
the storm arose, and looking the savages in the
face, he addressed them thus in a firm; quiet..:
voice, which commanded their attention: "My
good fellows, I Italie borne this patiently. for '
some time, but now I must put a stop to it;
and 1-'ll,do it in your own way. Choose your. ,
best man, and well fight it out. If I beat;
you'll give up, yeti 'know." They looked at ~
him unbelievingly ; 'but'throwing his Coat on
a bush, he added, 4 1. am - earnest; send's *
your man."_ The ruffians laid their beads.to
gether and thena burly , giant steppedlOrth .
and stripped, and made a furious dash at his .
.reverend challenger, who ciutetlY parried the
unskillful blows, and 'played Wittothent for a
few seconds. But,-tben„.a.-fist. was planted'
in the - yeasant's shest, and , . he ,lay at, full ,
length` -On the - greund. Quickly gathering' -
himself np, , :liowever; he skulked away to -his
- dompatkons. -Now , send your next hest.
and I'll go through the ,lot of you." -Again
their headi drew together, 'and another threw
dewn - his jacket;. going to work, however,
with' a more cautious energy. But at once a
stornaeler stretched him en the mad. "Your
next." Once more a conglomerate of dense
pates was forined. "Bill, thee tech him."--
Bill eyed tire - hero askance; and shOok his
head.. "Thee, 'dim-;'" a sltake '
et the heed
from Jim also.- "Dick:A heel tech tit' parson?"
a shake-more decided, and a stiff "Nay, nay;
"I'm see thee:hiing - fust." And now the first
one Who - wal vanquished stood forward, and,
like a brave man;-called out, "I say, parson;
yo're a rare young un, yo ar. I'se tell thee
what; we're going - to- hear you , preach.".-
And they all Plowed' hint- along the. little •
street; said the writer, and heard the Word
qiiietly, adding, it , remains tit be seen *bat
will become of the fight. What (114:vconie of
it? I heard, a lvng time afterward, that from -
that day the men doffed their-hats, and. the
women, curtsied, and: the children looked
awe,stricken, :when . they met or ' passed
him;:',.hat the 'cbureh . aid schools were
filled ; that;iv
he beer-houses were; nearly , all:
- shut up; rind that a great moral and religious
reformatlim was in progress. Thai gentle
man loud:previously been the instrument/of a
like -e.hange in an equally deracralizoti paris - b..
Imay, add that a fe l iv years back be .was,
[deemed the fittest rle'rgyman, in the' ithureb
to. go out as bishop to a scene t)f great per
soual danger in a beatbert.cOuntry:
IDLE BOYS.