The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, April 14, 1866, Image 1

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ni - 01 . Notices and D • issolutions , 2 and 3 timr
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::.: - .. SATURDAY - MORNING.. ..-APRIL . 44 - . 1:866- ' ' '.' ..":- ...-.:' .. ...'*. .. ... • --:.'... '. .:: -.•-• '.' -''- - -• .... : .. N . .
inistration.Naiem. and -Disitointions. 6.t mes. 3 % 1 ••.• • •• .. ••• • • ••• „.- ~ •. • ... .. •• . . • ... •. ,
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..: . :-..: MEDICINAL:- - - -': ...-.. , -': . MEDICINAL :-.- ..
- MISCELLANEOUS.......
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•. • MASTIC.. CEME. ' ..'
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• • -ii,' i s h for the Ertei , ioi• Mills of .Builtlingi n "- - ' . • . t it . Ilivrk i T i on .• .
...:....- :.--:-....::.-:-.-:- .- . ,...„-.,.....i .: .... -. :. ......- ......-...
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-1.,. material ia entirr ly• different [resin all ether te-'• ..- I u l i .- . IMPORTANT.. .- NOTICE:.
's or coating applied heretofore.' "It is composed oti • • - un . .. . _
,i,,,T .durable niaterials mixed tvith derapnapor,.. l to p
Of Pun:Mimed oil ;• it becomes perfectly water- i tax RENG . TH TO THE WELK !•- .. ~ . -. . . - - • - .
. ... iimi adheres .ffrmly to-any snrface of brick 'or , . . .
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•' - :.; ' • :YOUTH .T - THE AGEE! • L _ . .
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.• .103,8:11.14: BROWN, :.- • ..- .
• with unequalled duralillity, making. a beautiful 1• " . ... ~
This preparation is uneowille - d as ri Rejuvenator and- -;
Hetttp 3s e 3 e an t • . •
.. Yee ,
finish equal ta the • finest quality of hrmen sand.' h-lal - Ph : s1 I ' 410' Arth St ..
t
'•ltc..storer of wa.led -or inert fauctrons. ;
_. : • :
- ttr to any color desired. - . . ed av ehopld be certain . to
. Make the Blukte . De's
undersh:is-A ha& twen applying . this ntastit'.oO. 1. : ,::.. 1 . 1 . „.• . , : e Ti.
. in d,' inasmnctras it, witl render them youth- . rom a . 1e of -study, observation .and expen
: wine the - past 'sevuntecii years, an. whlch time he , i f il n !!`",' ..
~ . • • •••
nin wetio„,..ana in strength, ' and enable them to live .... ...
• . Tie many improvements and " finished the exteri- 1 ehee,- , and . - yeare - of•pi - ac fiord
. applieetiOn Of . iny!
ver again the days of their nristine joy.
,I. It novenkr . - -•-.. - --,.
f s4ane of the mo, , t elegant - buildinee in different-1 .-9
f exhilerates . but; strengthens, .and is really rut ' ini , alea , .: : .P) . . .•
~ .ry .. ..: .„
.... .
"Meta . b 'ideal Discove "••on - thou : sands of • 'am
- -of the, country. , furiong• which herefers to the
•iner • . . . . -. • . ; ble 'ales•sing; - especially to those' who. have been' re,. - eased men,' ••women and . children : , I. have 'justly
• ... -, - minced to a. condition of serility, self-abuse, misfortune,
,STON. MASS.-Revere Bantle ifie Anieri- 1
ii- tol it, •• . .- .. ._.. y • i-or ordinary 'sickness. 'No matter. what the * cause of the . cO • rue to the. conClus ... ier!,. that everffamily in. the'
• PALO, :C. Y..-L'llie Grand • Residence of .
impotency of any humfm• organ, this superb prcpara.: . landi . !he:Wish to ; get rid of . disease, -and keep . it
• - .• Ilion Will temove the effect at mice and - forevsr.:
.- :.• • . -
president Pillinore,-Drlanrare St. at bay mist. have •iny..Metaphysical . DiacOveri ,
'VELAND, 01110.angeor BOuse, and ' -• "• • ":" - BIOKRENI, -. • --. • -.-. • . •.. • . • . . • •- • • - - . -
- •• • • •• always on hand: It is a Certain preventative
t &caitiffs& Residence of .11 - . W. Clark; • Cures 'IMPOTENCY, • GENERAL DEBTLITY„ NER--:•• :•. • • ••• ' •' • ••• , •- • - • : " •
1 ~ Eire 1 i drst. .: • •-• : :,• •. . - .•• ._•• I'•YOUS: INCAPACITY, DYSP.EPSI A, :DEPRES,4I.O'I;', against-disease. -It aLso treate find •destroys the.
". thi l :::•RG , ' PA. -11 - .1 irtird ' 'noise ' an& NE - toSs OP APPETITE. LOW :SPIRITS: WEAKNESS : . : enn . ati. f'l • .. . • -ki *th •• - if : 6ts'die i
o r isease consequen y ee e
; ' .' Charles Bencl, and the follow lOF TIIEORGANS OF GENERATION, IMBECIIITY; '-•• ' • ' •'-•' • : -- - :. ` - • :
. • :. -•• : hi...mailmen's splendid resideM 'MENTAL INDOLENCE, EMACIATION; ENNUI . beginning With: Deafriess, Catarro,. itheumatiain,
• • . .. , •
.. ''-- • • - ces :••'. - - • - • It - heti a most . . delightful, :desirable' and - novel effect Neuralgia . , With . - every disewe man, .VVOlnan or
- . ,-.
.- J... Er, Shoinberger, Esq., upon the Nervous system s and ilroiha are.in any ,- Way ' -, - • • • • - . • • • • -• . •
e_ ila is her to ' - "
-• • . • . Penn St:. • . .. • : - prestrated by,nervolle disabilitie,s are. eanieStly advised; - h-- • • i-, ••• .'•••:' •• " • • '
-,- . . . ," John Bisect', Esq., cio .• •- . to, seek a cure in this most excpllent 'and unequalled :. It is ilie bnly-safeguard against. - Cholera. - It
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v sewer of the human body - hard
. • ~ DS ;McCord, Esq.. do . • - persms who, bY imprudence, have lost:their NAT- • . c l ean • s e a ever -. • • . • •• • "' • -
. ..... _ . . .
' - , .. • . Ent •-crn Adams, Eso.„.Novel- URAL VIGOR, will tind k speedy :and periattinent cure: ••eps the flesh and Puridea • the *blood:' . In conSe
: ISRURG;PA..-The Beautiful Residence of - , - _ .
'• .. • '.. -•-••- '- - ' • iplence - Of the above - facts' I have 'this. •day, re
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. . . . John B:ALloxe..Esq.. Front • - • 81.011.10 ENE.- • • . .. ~.
- ~‘ - -,.- dueed - the price so an to leave. no -- barrier in the
,
--, . - • - : - street.. .•.. . - • .... ~ .• ,• • . The :FEEBLE,- the LANGUID, the DISPAOUNGs• ... • _
. war of the tliscased. • - -- • . : -.' .' - .: •
*- • R. • . 1 1..11,sluiliertoti; 'Eali;,' the 01. D should 'give title valu•Mladisedvery a trial ;it. , . ... •.. .• ... • • . •
' Second• Street. - -.. . will lx: fonnd totaily different - from 'all other art:cies '. :The package consists Of three bottles, One
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- • - '. • Senator - D. Fleming, do .... Mr the came purposes: - ,
••• - : . - • • • • . iied for the E ves, cine..fcir We' Ears . , and 'one' for .
• ~• • . . • iler. B. 'Fleming, do • To petyartle»..,-This preparation is inviduable in . .. ... . . , .:• . .. ~.,,. .. .
• : ; • • Rev. J ns. Coldcr , s Benet- •nervous.weaknesses or all kinds, aitt will reStore the :theScalp.• • These . three work to eonjunction
...
• . ti fu I New,Rit pt. Church; wasted strength with wonderhil perrnandice: ..'. - If .LE lIMMERS,
- passiiii -, inte the.system by abiorption, thus kil,' - :AL, .
.. . • .. • .
:. - . - -• • Fourth . and State Sts. ;. -• ..••It is also a grand tonic.' and will give relief in Bye- . • . 0 . . . . • . .
• .• . . Labe Simon, -Eaq., . Arcial-. .pepaia . witti the .first dose: " A briet persfstencein. its. bog the . vei'y root of - disease,' which'is iri a spe- '
.
- .
• .•• - . tect, . • ..• ... -: • , . • .use will - . renovate - the strmsach to a degree of Perfect' citielocality. in the head: - - ~ • •. , • .*. •
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1 I sviLLE, PA.-LThe :71fognifiteenf . Hotel health,:_andbauish . DySpepsia forever:. • ... ... .... •. .. .
• - •••.- '. • of . .13.. P. Brown: Esq.,. . One Brdlar per Bottle, or sia BottleS for $.5..
.Sold.
• by : INI,y Metaphysical Discovery is Packed in. a neat
. . . .
--- . -••.-* ' • - ' - :Mem ti us• tlie . Pennsil vas - Druggists generally. '..- -.., • ... •
• • . • • Wociden edie, and will .be despatched t 6 any part
- • ' niri Ilan; Centre St. Also .....Soot bY expreas anywhere. by addressin, • .., ~ . • . - • •
..... '. . •' ' - fr - " • '• • " ' lILTCHINGS'&,IIILLYER, Proprietors,. • -
he Residence of L. P. ' . . fth'' dd . 'tf ' I tie .. wh . di wil
o e war no reccip .o tle ice, . It
.. 1
--• •.. : • .. - ..- aloyer, Esq... Coal St.. and - • • .
- ' • • ' • t2S.Der Swett - New • York - . '.. .be frOth
. , thii . ..2fitia day: , of Novemlitir,• sold at $4 - .
. .. • that cif Jame's, L'anigan, • - SOld by Driiggitts eVeryWhers: ' - . ... •- • '.• . •• • 1. .. r. -- 0 • c k • ..... $1 6... ....• ,• . : ... ... . ,
- 'lE.sq.,-Mahanteriml St.• • ..
Occaber 24, 'plc . . Is• lIITIM. E.
.BOYER,
. . . - ..- . .
,-: ' Mimic id Hydraulic Cement properly applied, and . - . .• .• :.• ' '• - Celebrated Peor. Richard's Eve. Water, . Large . VT: -.-
:,i' - 4 - emir:My different to any none heretofore. ' ... $ 1.00 " . "-r--1`" . • ..- ' . ' .• • :-. -••-. • • . • .• , - .
Size, 1.1-,per bettle; or - Sii bOttlen for - :ss. - • _Susan ' -
::•.-:.,. in, , r k , . 1 ! ln,;.(m_reatni.!thie Loins, end • strictly • -.- •.. • . -. .. . , . „ . ~, . , ... .
: .1 ir jll pay to any Docter Or member of the Medical Fra 7 „ sizp,
.50 ets.,. - Sehlp 'Renovator- .11, -or: lia bottles.
irk - nett ,1 f. ! tice• ncifisfaction. ..
:.' . . . . .
... . ternity. the sum of $lOO for any Compound.that.posses- -
fOr.ss..- The medieiees can be • Obtained . through
i ••-.' .e ti..l(lreee• • - . •
... ~ • •- • - See more medital virtues and curative powers 'than' .• - . .
k,A . VI" Vrs.o.N, Box 26:1 . , Harrisburg, Pit, Miabler's Herb-Bitters. -B. mlsimEß, Propriettir. - . . ; 'crier Driiggistsi - or at the "
Depot, 4.lo . Arch street, .
: ws.i . , dew ti5,..a15 . .....• •.. ' 'l3O-1- 1 1. '• • 43-• ;..
= • : :- S. F... Corner et centre Square, Laricaster, Pi... • .
1 -1- - - - ;:. •
• ' .• • -
rt3_,:.. -. , •I. - •
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• ;.'ili„-, r...Re,ad This.,c
.i. • The followino• letter is obe of the mail which ' •
••• -.. ..- • - ,1, receive daily:at my different
. oflices : ~ .• • -.•
. - Feb. 21; ~ 6 1.
~.....-;--------... -..: ' : • , I will psy $lOO Reward for the discovery of anj Medici- -.•,.. - •_ •
. •• . • : SN.S. - mo a ST.Vilinti;:tiOT. - kill, 1.5e5.•••
. ''''''
- . 11: Tr o XEIL, L . ' S
-.4- nai Prepitratinn that eau cure a greater variety - of cow- .
i " -. -plaints than :31ishier's Herb nil t ens. .• - . .. ..111:II„.7 M. C • 1-. .11.sciWs.-.Madam :-I• miticed an
.
..- - . , 'B. IMISHLEFL Proprietor, .. - • . advertininent in a- new *paper of ydar Metaphys
-.. , • .
. ge - 0....,.e mod-
Corner of Centre 'Square, Lancaster, Pa: • • ical BiSeovery. .I . sent for. e - packa fsh
1- • • k- . AR• -CHINA 'GLASS : AND' - • - -s .. E.
• • - - -, • ' 'Leine.. .1 write •tis tell Yonthat it ..has .. pro_vecl, a
M A• - ,; ••- . - • . 1 • • 1 .
a- i.,.,. - . .
• ' CROCKERY .- STORE,' - :-- '$.5C 0 RENvAnD ; ' '... .- .- •
• - . ,off ; i iftleceSs in a• ease• of ileafnesi of inany
- .. . •: • . - -. .- years' standingi .i - - Now I send to - • you for. three
o
. 1 ,.: - q'. - • - - ' • •
.ra.. ie : btre,e'.. Opposite
. liortuner - ,H.ouse
- I.win pay ./.seo to •the Proprletorcif 'any Medicine that packages for . my neighbOrs; who 'are afflicted in
can :Mew a greater. muuher of oennine - Certnicates of • the *same way. - . -: -Yours rcspe.cifidly - ,•• • • ..-
• -
-' 7-
'.. , PO I I " ThN 1.1..J..E.‘ ..•• - cures effected I.y it nenr the place where itts made. Mau -•
.. • . MISIILF•It'S DERR BITTF,RB -of t'Onsimmihni, Dys-. -.•• . • .
.•• • -
'- • , pepsia. Liver Coniplaint . : Bl,a•ny , Fht . x. Dl:m . llmA. Ty- , • S . ** ' • Si t' - • e .
' .napp s a ion,. ratvford Coonty„ Pa. :I': Jan 20;16
re . •- . ritizo:s 01 .1 , ,At.,,i11 , -and nelghttoring• Owens. phoid Remittent Intermittent and 'Bilious Fevers, Fe- . .. Perfeet'enre for AVealc aiuleliaeseed oyes!' - . -- ' .
.. •,‘ find hamlets. one and% all. are it:tiled,. to. etill - ver and Ague, Cholera - Morons Yellow Jaundice,..seamf-• •_The Met apliyisical biscovery • wOrke by laws is logical
OR amine my steel.: of Wares behire lillYinfi cl , o - • luta Running or Coral Leg,. Canc , w, Almess,•Neura.. - .• •
1 ite thosetvlileh revoke' thejitara " ... '' -- " ' -
iit it' , / at° . n' i t to 'be - t""I'-'n''" Id • "it can tufnbilt . gia Illienmatisin;Cotighs ,- Colds.. Crainp. !tithe Sinni-
... The-Celebrated POOR RICHARD'S , EYE • WATER,
=the key whirh opens the.dimr. to • • the health of botti
- ceps's With every article they warea in. inyLline
:L ich. Chronic•Diarrlicealfiles.-Tetter. Scald Heal. Opti- . •
aild - m i d and.issl •- I. all use it Morning and night. '
'nese: liithe stock or .-. .;' .. .. nema. or- fallin,q.away. sicknesa 'pent:a to children, mii • . y. . ec, • .
. 1. ~ .
.. . ,
•••,,, -- . rreucla_:.China, : -• • • _Lend:pi - rut. Falling of the. W•wrilvall Obstruetheis •to Ply-ase tient' .trt tile Depot • lir a eirculer. , •
•••
• • . - •=' •Is , •J ILN 0 BROWN & SON Illrtv , - .
"" 'fesnkl Tea Setts, Dinner Setts. Card sod- Cake - the clue course , . of mature.in .fernales, all veuereal .dis. . For . ali...a . i by.
.0
... . . ,v- . •-• .
" frem i tire 111. dor gists;*Pottiville. . .• .. - , .... . . . .
.. •
'tont .• - : ••,: AV:drh' Ca....es, Seg:lr 11,J1den ,. , Match . Saes, ;eases. and all complriinta incsileg •, p. ,aa
, z
...„. , ~..„ .
.. ~
.. , . . ..
.: . 45-ly - -
3: a••., Motto Cup.atid Saucers, Vae•ett, Coliellie • e; a Weak: rind - disordered state ot the .St• mach, Liver or ... , pee.....i. (to. •. : . • ••• . ... . . . . . .. .
Ola. - Set ri fur ChildreY, and a general variety of Toys, Itielueya. • C,:rtitiestes'of .cures , of, the ellow Fever in . .7,-- , -- --•.---• . .
.. . . .. . .
. . . - ,-- .•••••.• 31exico can alsm be hunisited. tteinemoer if . it dois not
~ .
COltfialiflPTlVE ,l i ' • ' • . ''• '
rm. , .
• - -
i 5,,,,„ • --- . Glass I Ware. -.. .
--•- • • cure. the money Will be refunded by the proprietor.
• . • ' •BENJAMIN - MISHLER, • - :- . .. READ WHAT DR. - SCHENCK IS DOHIG: •••
",''' • ' ler-Ft. late:.t. piitteina. ciiii.istino• Of Table and - . •
' .* • ..
• - -... . 7
. -• • S. E. Comer of •Centre SquareoLanclieter, Pe.- - -...
~• : . - .. .
.. • . . .
... . ,
:.
~ ,
eni?,:ere.,Chanirr.ne , timid Wine GltieSei. Ale and •
- -- Jasses. Decaraors. - Bar and Bitter- Bottha Gob- ' . '• - -• . •_ •
- *---•---: 0 : 4---- ..... . • - 'mi. lit SCHENCK:- •• - --..• •-' '• :iv, •• • • ".-
I gtl , .* tate:. t'a.•;iir Dottles, Pitchers and Creams. Cer- . •• • ' SEND FOR A citicrr-AIL : - •.• . • .... '. •
•ri 1 • .' Deur. -Sm-'l.- feel' itia • duty!
. role •to 3'on,, and to all ,
• ---" Sugar Bowls Spoon- Holders, syrup -Cans, Fruit - - .. • -,. •
• The tragedy= used iii coMponniling • Miahler's er ) , ._. . .. . .
an: _ .. - l'ilit Jars, Cake: Stands. Kerosa• le' Lamps ot -Bitters are
, • -q (4 • '
not kept secret by the Proprietor.
....end ir.
• wio are sunernm, miner the .distmees knewn• as Con. '
• ~ enmption ati•l Liver Complaint, to let Menai:no* What
lical .r.• ertles Of
•- ; •-' " s -sc,-;v,.imied chituncyc , ...Lano_wit -c an dlesticks, a Circular and yob will learn 'the me: . .
..1 . p .
me, ,- ,
,i ' ;- c : - -- -• • all' the articles: esed tri the preparatem ; also in the . .• „ . .•• • .
great betietite I have received Man your Pulnionle - Syr.
. 4 :. ; -Jr ' '..
c "
S'e-
. ' .. - .'
'' - . g ' Which they . ° •' 1 II .vst .rn 911 i Math' :. up and Seaweed Tonic in so short a time:. By tbe•blo.-
. an• ' 1
' Cr Gektgl ; :'' CrO - !Ty 1 ! • •-• mann,: in lara eon te .... L• . t of God it Illla cared me thus tar ,' .
caber valuable. inform:it:on. •If yon - are ritnieteil. With -- ntitt .. .,... , ~. - . .
..., :. . . , -.. • , • .
11 re , •••-- u ll n , so rt rue e t of. IRON: S'fo ~0111NA:Mf Me.
• - e,..,sase eelid I , e:dishier's Herta Bitters Circular; resd • • • ff
sc emit L sirt . uom make my statement to you
..,,...s.• • ' paiogns. in setts or mtiliZlO - 1 1 tI• lo'sflitilw pub.-. •',: ~'e t iiilv 1 ',At by the hints it centaius, Mid you Will- -itaft,llows..: . -Abnnteightum months ago I was attacked
Wilh'i • - A large ati,tortment 'of 'coranon C. C:. Ware,- Nei: ich " -`-'• - - •.' '''. -- - .-I t. ... -• • , . - - with a. severe coeglL-anti -it • se. thal isi my lungs :. I
.• . . . • be placed.on the• sure mat o recoury .. .. • _ - .
..ur . i -',` . 1 serrift If iw figures: ._ -•:. , - .. , . .- - • .••-- . -, . - •.. • -could not retain tutythltigi ate; and Suffered with eve
. ''.• - Yellow amid - Slosie: li r are. - -• lc --
7 ISIILEIWS lIITTIEBS.W IL I, .. ' • - . - - - •
' nina fele'. mid. -tight •sweate; : I.' was :very
. nitieh re
ilall. actin. Dishes. Pre- Dishes. Culiontlers; 31ilk. Pans, 11,1 - •. . •-. •• ',. • .
.• . -. •• - . • • duced. -. The „whites .0f..n1y.• eyes Neve
.very yelliiw ;
• . . • .. - .-likewise• nly ekin •my appetite 'all gotw,-;aud unable to
- T a Pots B.tter 'Ms, li It . -•
' • - ' -
Dia- . ' M " ul a F,. Pktcher&: '• • •:, • 1 3 • t •• •• CI RE - ALL DISEASES, OF THE•III.009. .. -
, dimst What -I Ala eta : bmiels ewollch, iirramlar and -
. _ Jars, Jugs, eta. eta - .: . - ,-.•- . .. .
to le ~. scIit.LANE6I.TS:.-z-Ttillet Set Is; Carters:Slop Jars .
. • •• . Di:maser. of Me skin are numerous and. with lia one costive. I .was very -low starioatand had such -iipiellt •. , •
' ' ' ' • '- • ' ' '
. • rmt &id'', . Quail, and Puit FlaSks ;:C - gal Oil, •kc„ OutWU exceptions. may be traced .to .. inipurity of -.the spella of coughitra when I laid down.at ni-Mt and tvhen '... C. A. llosuvenrita. .
Wlla Fruit Jars. of every description.. •- - ' -•o° • n 3 - ••
bl d I nian . nerame 'this impaity is born in the ' I arose in the morning thatchey would last one or Psi . ) . • 'Potteville,Anii.i..2, -'0 . 5.
. . .
• - I:I:CHANTS IA can sell Yon Goods at c . ,*(it.Piiiec . ,
.iyelvre ; wldle -others acquire. .... n p .per.
..
. saving yoe freight. :Call and see if it is ilt sq.• ... treat Ment of score. Of diseases,: 'Ceder this head may , I theri Wiruld ..be nearl , eihanstedi and •was entirelY '..
•
1, tt - . - ~. • - •.... , • . . --. J. R. TROXEL,... • be classed-.- unable to lie 0r . ......my left ) side • I cannot deseribe, my
.rillE• 'GE - •• .. .. . ' ase is hereditary and I. trans -syn.:idled - suffering as I Weald wish to do • Every. or
.. 16. - - Ist. Scrotal:L . -This dise, _ .. • . .. . .. . .
.. . . c . ,
'ed f*i - - ----- - ' • • ••• : mittee from generation to generation.
,-. It Is 'cuased be . eau trani,y body was. diseased_ or deranged.. .. tich was
hile.gession of the laws of 'nature. both mural and. my situation at this time, anal was confined to my bed
1 , 01. t h. i „. e illost Contplele - Sewing - Ma- . • 11 ,v r ,,i,.., 11 , in
...
er
tn words, it is caused - by siten... Ading- !runt the last of FehrnarY, 1802. - ter June. ISM!. not able
-• . • ' chine in - Existence:. -. .
'frai'.., .• •- .
_.. . •. . i -/' . t • '.41 i' r - -daces the venlity.of thabliiod, ,to sit up.- I 'bad_ Mt: best of Medical attendance - the
as a awl. p.a. li ~ L .
Id -ha - a Introdnetion. - of the 41 FLQRENtiIi
^ , r , fi - - and weakens t
• hodeitu . atiug organs; s.. that they failicr . • tvh•de. of . the Mile; •My cough . Was. so Very bral that' it
- discharge or - cast out the impurities that are continually . racked me very.much. .1. at . .this time raised a largel
, ~„4 II Ltes a -new era in Sewirio• Machines. • oenerated in t e sys e. A :.
' h . • t m per 'en physically pure am; nilautitY of -thick, yellow, ' offensive matter, mullet Imee
' "--- - ••
• ' b ': - ''*-" ' • :• li.- or setne . other secrYwAiscase ;he uri-• • . with blo•wl, .aud it :wits 'generally ric
quiroLtonorr ata„ , .
.. . companied - -with
. : - , e we Fells, Rinda,. Gathers, I - Crnirls;
:Want - •- ' • --. • -•• . . ilevetes a cenrse of mercury, Die disia.....l,- eel, mt., : .: , ,
, •:.•- , -• • s t • • nailma fuer a furred' and Mick edated toieme At the
-:- Qit ill.. ;Ind 11.11111elts. and Sewa On 11. Id hate sharp shoot
and the Patient pron•moced Sell.. • yitto ib:111:. Will: The • tibl!.. , ol.c o nt•.. nti.: • 0 A•
. .ly. 1% It .
... , ,
av ; 1 •_ .. Ito tile at she !Laurie [line. -
otio ham is ind taired ; its eininnid- IS onlynilertert Mg Paine ill taY.left side awl •heart, night.-sweuhe and
- • . • ,e rulder,igned has bgen aptionnett Agent for si
. dof makiter its appearance:orate:y( l in it, sicts ini. 1 serengcs till throuoh -illy . whole. -chest : had much in
-1.,s nest .
.rik , .ll county., of the 'Florence SPAY ing :111:Whine ' trh 3 ternal ovate, and -scrofula, .which is bequeathed - *Ward fever, peiu . 111 niy paek: and under 'my shoulder
h „,. u ;.; pany. NumMiciniers . of the celebrated Reversible.
f' • fatherto sou. is the MAIO.. Miny persons who blades and itt the !small of me back, andnt thnee so se;-
°. e . . Sea inuNachtties • .• rom
. .
.. 1-f • s from all immorality-and -vine areal-. Vete that it - tveuld throw - me into epasrris N.M. my ,
. areperfect N It .
.ie, i % • (~ fitt:liala t : ieletiiilnee over any and alt.bewira •.. , •
i „ •ras. wt. clainied for the "Floreocee :-• •- • h - •f 1 • Tif •• a • auffering for the sins et:. ' physiciau gave me Alp -to die; Othera I had. and the i
'' -Mad, tut scro ua. it \ e -
ling ll latiket•letir different stitches, the lock, knot;don- -Ith • • - lescrilied in . best ol ihent..but thi.yeould do 'nothing' for me, - upd at
nd lablyrira um er e curse
their fat hers. a , „, .
~. . .
~.
the 'Boa. 0f:800k5..." I will : vont the unquinea 0.. t. . •
f th. th-at time.l was nitthing but Skin and bolos; I then I
....... carce. t. oil: and double-kent, op one aud the same ma- • • • - wa. in the se.tern pait'of 31iitiouri. In - June last. We I
father.' upon'their children.", • • • .- • •.. . ~ . - .
•. •Eiali stitch being alike on both sides of.the To 'dire this dreadful com Plaint it- Is neeesSarytnit left there forth° East:and in August 'leaf we.catne- to'
~.) wore .. r.. .• .. • • ' .• • . the•bliatilSbotild be thoroughly„purified, - all the organs - _New York, and I Wile -a0 rednced that iconic' only Walk
..
. . .- . 1.,,. the teversible feed motion, tylilch enables the
, of the badv • ibrought into a healthy state of action. and- ' a little with.my husband's help... f . lfter Itiad beenloge
- , • -E . :,` , t t o r, b:, ' het Ay liitning U 111111111) SCrete. lithaVelde
the e 'titerri bU t mecd'hp and :_yo.,:ngthened by Invigoratin'g, • a short time. the . ..alf.walet M'isze ninde •aie fAil'irrilch
in f,,,ht
......*, • ran i .ther to thereilit. in. left.. to etay :lily pinto( ..,.. i .,? .. ,. .
1 lalek .at the • articles: used in sCernpoundile4 better for a time, and 'then I hadamtin to,eall a physi,
"- ~ ante. or fa•••ten the eimis of the seams, Witiaout turn. '." ;
3\ I, hie . r. Bitters . ; - see the allay Of purifying dud iraig , trail Arad. We had (Olin id the best physician.. o f :sew
ba I°l ' ' 3*--' ' - I l '' ' i ' '..iLin• • --
; i' •* . - • . ' . . - ' -.•
--
' . • t• ' • ••h •th g there i. •in anti :York •orathe discase..of
(111111te' IlledlCamen s. nut say vi L t ... • . the ltlnZ9, and (lecture of "all
_ „ :•,,, _ ewging.the • lengtirof tne stitch. and fmtiamne kind- ' . .
this, alt -.,. ttish triaratilier, 'can readily be.ilune Whit • the • list Of medicines - thee equals it.' We kinds: but of no avail. They said 1 - wits:past eure...htid
, eh: in ilie Whole .. . . .1' • be •1 'y ••• 1. rf M for•i • , •t •‘ •
L In.-- here emphath.ally assert without the fear of contra( im lat my nu...set re o,art. ne aiyoi L 0 cute „me.
- th t li 1 . 11 - -i . ' Pitter will cure.all 'kinds ofecntro , , • But •at.this time I was. on my feet alma the honse, not
' met a 3 s • a . s
.. . ..,- sty stio II Is perfect in itself, making the searri se, - ' •.• • - I .. fl •s tl blond it • •trenethens the. ..libletd - do mnelf of anything. lii - Noveniber. last I grew
lous diseasta. Conti L. le .• . _ n ,
Ctat, • alti - ,el.l uniform. .. • .
..... . . . l tl:e con.un. Won diarrhea set in •sed boted
Internal oroans and aids them ..o, perform - their natural. wcirse, ant _ 1• • . . , . _, .
• - ' is aonost noiseless, and can be Med wbere . qinet is niii ...,- . ~.• t. - 1. • ta d a tonk audit will eine about eight - Weeks. - :- We • had tried - All and e% ei•ything
cal 'es. it is a s luau AU n . ,
.. .-
• - MIL 1 Valid grasp a like a dying. person for my diseases
.1 „d u i • motmes are nll Positive; - there are no.springato . ,
, 21, itannlrv , Sores and•'lncers.-Ranning saes and -consumption anriliver compla Olt -Ini t an. a a.ttil: t . •
- - -', • mr• " I ''' - ' l ' l '•' F '" l Ile el 'Pl' liCil Y enblee the M • C ' el • i fr •- Miters inearkildylialleare•a ECrOftllcams . laiht. .They are : In - Jamey: 19(13, I we , bronght dOwn again ou my
to two- i :jisih - eil to i,perwe it. .-, .. 1 . : . -, e. the I'm - purl. bed' rind iva. not expected telive the 11:44it Mit' •31 y
=tied be the effort Of nature to db.:cling, • . _ ,
.. .
, - . will Ira ,•Y tile dresS.'or the operator, as all the . -. • -
Tharil) • e..v I . (t qt.( i. f the t,ihle, ' • . : ties of the blood.; Many penmns a .
filtered with ninniug - husband stayed at my Ade. and other friends. and they
d iI: •-• 11 ; , tv ine u to•iii , „ -At this trine ever nne who save
- • sores.and ulcers succeed In dryinathem rip ati ill n
•• a ~ e •p , , ....
.. .. , . s . ~
..
....,
..
b et im .. 1,1:4.. raost r: mid secret' in the 'world ;.making five real when the skin grows
. oeer the. sere. . - me did not think I would ever_eave my . bed a livirm: we,.
il *-- • are Cu
le)
19 , 19 It.l:ll.rovi ,lut ion. - _ • , • - . .
s_s .e, 1 . • • They.are,lMwever. but Ma • , ,
. 1 - in4 bad worSe." for the • man: • The that might I Wri..attacked with =NMI.. arid
lora e• • stitch is the wonder. of all. because of its • corn im - • -I t • • dimliaraed front •thm-al.tem, was•derang,e'd mrai of thetithe.. A Need... Mrs. Harris,
• . -• " , - - pant rts!.. Ila • Mere • . , •
- ~,.,k - -1,15.14.••-•:, strength and eeauty. • • . ' ' • •he llst . Of the WeCI - and bro eht he
through the medium of the . ta , re now act internally ' camel° see rile t.. , • .. .s• U_ t .
.2- ''' eee• die aeavid4 or fines- +toil, sill) equal Neill-. furl cease innunierable diseases and often death; The. • Stuiday Mercury.. It: it wee an account "oll'a groat enre.
3*.'indlXt Ithien cliaage c,l ten,ion or machinery... •• „ .only tree and sure cure for all running s:ores and ulcers - perforimn by Dr, Scheeck. - She' read. it to •Ma and it
. , • Try Machine has Mk: of Jeuck , s patent hemniers •••- • . '
Vilelel ,6 heti: -rft!e right Mese which st•ti c t 1,) bl 4 -
en ro . etaa inn. •• it-it •s •. continued and -persevering use of ' was so Much like ray 411t.ease that I a.ked • my' husband
is Ithshler e L tr., a . . . •
which will most certainly effect a pertnrown cure, . ._. . .
t •to di Said See him for ine. At Mistime I had 'given im
els,- RM. vele! : ty hi tura any•witith .01 - 11ein desired- • . ad. San Rheum -S of ever:get titig•Well atelin and made ow peace
an - Rheum is a vague. Indefinite. , all hopes . _ . , .
.. . .
~
. - e puolie is resia.setfullyint ion to• examine - them tlnworah. popular term given to almost. all • the' nom With God, to be ready A heneyer he called for me.. ~j
- awforl .ine , qt. the .tire of the andermig'nedteentre street,: febrite"erti tiona :of the skin that afflict adalls.. - It'• is' On the '27th ol4anuary:l663; my huslyand• called on•
'; • Ville, where full particulars will be given. . - ~ ,•11 ' a Y :Mere that of vasicins 'in sill:111 distinct' uld. • Dr-Sehenck, ail Bond Street. New - York. and : stated to
- receive' .
.: .. • ..- it. - it...moth:is, . gantra y .
.?... h • .
t." ---, sti wii ,, sens•ithin. him me cut:, with a regtiest. for him to call andriee tine,
- ers accompanie• si. it - a etUar in n , . n,i , ,
.. , . , . .
..
. a d . . d
..
Iti. t
~ ' earlieft - • _ :rust 941. 41-1: " -.:. ; '
.: •
..t.ti'•• . with a tentlency - to creep or spread - ever the arboining
. .s hich ly di ,an examine me UII . IT respirwmeter. '
. . .
t, Both. _ . .
~ • -: • • artace ' Mishler's.Bitters are a sure mire for • this dis• :-Wheii he was abeut to go I asked,. himsf he could cure ,
I. EIJIIIIE fkla, of- Pat tsville, Penns,: • e •• ' •' - . • ...• • ' .••• -• • ••• - .mel• Him reply - mate: '•:I - .cannot tell.' both' lungs are 1
. .
,te-r" lit.. • • ilea er •in 'MUSIC. MUSICAL INSTRU.MENT§ ' , • 4t h„pimpies - aad Blot ches.•:-Pimples and Blotches on •diseaSed: and the' btonCbialinbee are affeeted . on bothl
. - - :I isI.'3IEI.OIIEONS..,GRGANS , &M., haying 'been - . ili a a k.t„ are a p,vaes a , snre'sign of Impure blond, Al - -- .sides." - And yet. he set . med tri thinii- there . wereltuurs 1
- - . - altin solatieent is.w the celebrated --. .• • •
.. thOugh ',ever dangerons, ertcept ip case.. ofearbunelert;'• - enocinh left to effect a eum. - if the diarrhea cinild he i
.
- I neenti 8.-. 'lnsulin,* Cabinet Organs, • tht , ty are very disagreeable. . . .
• Often we will see the mo.t . slopped. .lie said in order to dO this. he WoOld.have to ,
, . .
...--
~,,if„ti,:rii i . • 'handsome tea ..
. ture. reodered hideous by great - blotches ..give - me Mandrake Pills in smalidosea a first. to carry I
. ... -. ' l ''' .C° " 6l-r " f• SchuYikill ' .. " . "" la re '' -.-- . ' - ' l . d -instead Of the pleasing - look which - off: the morbid matter. and then, with. astringents, he I
.- .. • : - 46- tii: tle: mu:iical eommunity that he can furnish , "dl"l".liatT
-- - -.. um•qualled favorite Cabinet Organ.. in all:styles 'shout( Fey - . .
the human * face We 'ace nothing hut . , hoped to cheek it Which he Ind: - but the constant 1
f • 1 it hi tcya •• • -co igiliw , niolit sweats lard dfarrhea had prostratedl
disgiisting corruption, iw pimp es ap o. Ls are t . „. ~_ ~ . „ „ , . .
-.... .- -..-17. es. at manufacturenr prices.. •The . .quality and ,
- Anne but tlw corrupt accumulations of the System . me so thathe. was -afraid fify vital -Powers: were 'tool
- ille (a 1911 e. With the power 41( express-am in these' .
c u e cited threugh the medium of •the'skin. 'The - n4i of . mucaprestrated - ever to 'rally, Mel yet he,' seemed to'
I l i tb s. ~.. i. i, Imi.. - ...r,-, , aily ailinired end praisin. while their
Mi l ;hler , i Bitters Will force the•ti•e Corruptions to tie dis-: thiuk it • IdttiLl ilee to 'get. enotieh Pelninnie Syrup
-.-.; - bliity•and beautiful finish make' than. the most el;
charged thronith the natural . channels. and thus curea through inv st stem to cause: exPectoratio . n. there were
SusoOthir •• 'parlor ornament: • . .' • . I ' . :" 1 dblth • • ' LAI' aWI o desire I lung. etiouli-left. for me to recover, - Ile Wished Ule to
all Muds of pimp es ap nc 4 . 5.- a.- . i
la i * It' "-* Every Enmity Shonld.lirsio Due. •• - • a fair cornplesion; free from -- pimplea, shoeld bear
. tlais try the Pul Morrie Syrup and s.eswerd Tome ,at once.
'tls: PT . I.IIIGANti are ••ti , trat'lr'd • ft; F - A.311:. fact ha Mind, -.. • , • •• - . ••- • • .... .• . . .. a
• • .• • satin. , it wotild do me ray ham,- if it Md. nie Migoed.
•i, • eolk ••••• ' ' I'.. • CA' • --- • -- ' "' • •'. • - - -- • '•''• . • • ' . ''• The first Week lifeemed to' give me . strength; ' so.that
f let. .1 ',. ', 0.11.1a1t..ES AND SCHOOLS. -•-• " •... •
fi le ie. ;.• y tary in . pri..•• fr,•iii slto L 0 st.po. enc . .. -.. • ~ .
..
TISEILCEWIS ~ - • : •• • .- : '. . on SundaY 'after rsat Until lied 'and ate hearty.formisiek
; .•••• -.-. . . . ~ ' • ' . •worunu.; - but the next
,week I lost all hope hntlnished
• ' Fvesry tn.,traiu -nt ItEnrinnted • • '•• • "1 . •
1 Iron - ' " - ' • • '.' • - • .. -- • -
e. e. ' kr,... . . . • .. , . . ..
..._ . • ~.,_ ,_.., ~.., ~, My hesband not to give me any' mere medicine. Bra
. ~ , . - lse. Anelil • for ti - (e sale of the much adruited : B .i. T :..1: .11.. 1.. - 5... - '•. '•
. • the doctor had warned hire of this, avid when. the Med
i. ballet .....-.'' • ' • • '. - •. • . ' - • - • • . ...--. • . .••: •• ' • Pia: tvaa clearing out the syet. - ,m it. inade them feel
• , '..C7„, • t g Melodeoni.and Harmoninni Azans, .... -• , .•. -.-.. • • .. -..• •• - . . .. •
.. -. .- ni . : READING. • • •• • i•somewhat restless: and' to per Severe: and-he insisted
.1 u). " • •.:`,.. ,- • c,,- - nti • : -i • or.s.t 4 M-• tili -N - emmirrland mid •• . ' . .. -.- • .
• ---.••-. .. • .. • •.- • . - •on mYtakfir. it : and no* I feel the:benefit of It.: .FOr
- ,(' . .5. . ,„:„. on, is all :ratrumemas aredutwersa ly Itkei .- . . - after eilti. days- I hegan to gairtmi 'strength', and,:with
' • . 1 7MT - IT R A S.. DONE !- .. • • • • - . I
posse , -(t a .wi...: , 1 1 ,-..q gild fullness .of tone; Which ' -. • :•• he eicepthai of a. coldthat put me back some.. haye
.. 7 _, .cut A..theenited . ointment - lame of the MIAMI - • ap ...., . t u , •. .. .. • • .
C . t q q ra k.s" airS be NV(le cured of a severer : me .. ..btam gaining strength of •bedy .my congh is geing
the.
• • *•'-' . ' ' - i•.L. and. hahiee.l an aime.t. unpreriedented sale. - of Jaundice apd-Chmnie Diarrhea • collo - acted. in . away, aid an my pains • are gone . no. serene_ ~ . ,
______. - :t. • tet,ert , are mstemt fully invited to c: ill and ex:tm- • Army: by:
- • the use of Mi6ttlers. Ilerb Bitters.- •. . -
..bOtly, my bOwels Are regular. and My 'breath 'is loved, -
- -, f•• '...- r tbefiLsoll ea..- All cominunicationa and . orders .• . .' - ...
~..-. .... .1.,...; • .• ' , • ' • ....• • • . • .. ..atid I thank Gin that lam now going .abent, and sew.
priOYiao. .
. •.. • `U. kerE 'OM • -,, Illomt• oltroolora - cl'aio - • - and read as well as evert cottld.. I have taken eixteen'
: purateally answered or-filled: and.every Juror- • .FeCER A- • • . ••••,
_. , , . • • _ • .
..
i nillt 0V : ',... nin rria , v , ii te thrrn :2:ladly given. .. :. . - The • undersieven. a former resident of this city, now bottles of the medicine. e. eht o eae . • MIOW • ale a
• - .re.h“.l W:ire It.smis,-Ut the JeWelry Store on Cen- resaling at Fort*Wr4 no. Indiana, hittieg been afflicted good:appetite:and - test •well at .night: my cough dots
: over: l . . met, four doers from Mahantango street, rats'. with tee itiove ceinplaints while on a visit to Reading. .not trouble me in getting .up or lying down. 1.• *Mid .
- •
3 to' a 13° - P• • • '' • - • ... . ql• - • was loduced Octal 3112111 d -is Ildb Bitters, and has the ' • here aay to the-alffieted.with'e•nsumptien orliver corn;
ct* l
lemon, - _ . - .
CARPENTERS •& BUILDERS,
- satisfacnun co Flan: that they have. performed.a•nidical . . plaint, that Dr. SchenciLis no humbug: - You can rely
' lii 4ratiiteie to - the discoverer of these Bitters. I on what he eays. Delay .not :: it is dangeroes to trifle
. . 'c arindueiru ; 1 . ...1 give'thls 'red Mc:11C: and far - the benefit w ith, th.e .di
inane:. •if ss at Would• be . - mired, ga at
tUtilble r : • . ---',------------,-- -----"-- , • ••• .- ' -oft:aces sithilailysituated. .1. -'-- • • •• • once: .and ank one wishing to kniiiii the faCts as herein
~ i t s . • •T,ItO S,ellayllcill - County - - - • HARRY' A WHITM.AN. stated can calf at -iny residence. 117 . : West - Houston
11 tae g! 1. •. . • .-- :'. ' ' -•'. • -. ' •.o ' - c ' . 'Ai - i cies Bugene,-Thaun - - street..Nen: York city. ; • - :MRS. MARY F.•FARLOW.
• • • • - -.. . • : . ..(Ite,ltatallSl l trarP•IIV . ISII. .
SeP arAl Imi3er & Manifkturing Co dersi-med cell Ms that he.wa... for a loug time seeerely . • We. Me- undersigned: . residents ‘(ir :New. York, are
• ibie fl-- . . . ~ • •
• - ' ;afflicted - with Rheumatic pains; Which incapacitated bhp - acquainted with Mrs: Far.ow,.andknowher statement
_on band at their . extensile establishment, -on from .following,
• 'his husinft , s, • Not being able to obtain .to be tree.- - Weals° know that - she 'used . 131 r, Schenck's
' 'DV , . . , .
eateli .ad Street .-a great quantity or Mather of every kind relief. he finally re..otted to the use of MiShler's zee- Palmonic Syrup-and Seavreed Tonic, • and:„haye snaion
deserip loi1( vallchqltey Can gnoply to Operatrit., ' brated Herb Bitters.. which .effected a perinea - chi- cure •to believe ttiatto this medicine she owes „ erpre*Va
---- • • -
.. mien; and Builders . , et . lower rates than it mil be - 'in tbe ceursm of ter. dass. -No return of any of the' tion from a premature grave.. .. , .• .: .7 .
e f t'll inc ' •ht . .eisewh ere. - They ars also' roadv to supply, -symptoms, luive'been experienced. Since and' the cure Is '
,•B: FART:OW.I I i West Hinistan 5t...._ ..• - :
........
-- f t o- • ligh the means of . thelrexteesive business and. la- - a radical one.. - ' . • ,- . -C, 31:: DEEM.. -. ' ,EUGENE 'UNDERHILL. 616 Greenwich - et.: .. •
ass °' - ' - - ving machines; menufactured articlee iii . the& line ' -- : ••• -' . • '.S. B cornerSthand,Blngm Streets: 'MKS: EUGENE UNDERHILL, der. 1: •. •. • '.•
~- s• toe
al to-. maving.ofY.s per' cipt. on former Cost , .• -- Reading, December Gth, 1 5 . 65. ... , . . • '
. • -•- • • ''' '- - AUGUSTA „UNDERHILL: • • do. • • :- -.
- , . . ..,. . •••• Glasl,
• „ I t t , eir lage workshops have huen iat successful opera- . ••-... - • -. ~.. •.':. A. F. BARRIS: Ili Viitllentstonat. - .
.
ble'• In". - for the past year, turning out N9lBl Ml:unities 01 • . p..- ithae d .sa,„• - •Esq.Dear Sir :,-The.underslgned .. ~.. r .. .. ..
ban. EMILY GLOVER... ''. do. ,
..
~. ... . . • -
- • nil s' ' eer,, •.•.i. • -• Wasidosi *ramie*, - - h r . received greet benefit :.•from • the vise or your Heidi ' *.- •J. L:coLE. , ss'cotiaoe pL. '-.-.-.- . • i. . .
•fl • ' To
• . tta.kb; • ..: .- Patna , I.Vork, . . , • Bitters titrel .this ''oppnrinnity; of•acknowliidging the - .14: A..LEIGIITON:.:4B3Broadway. .. • .: .
.... i . ...
•,,, • then ' . ~
' mottlidißlits , . .• . Ited-Posts. - : same. In order that othersiilmllarly affficted,may team • ..Mits,HENJAMTN CLAPP,l9..fimits PI:
- od '
t add - AMA .an
Ir F * ti; • . d •
- . Blinds, , • • . Banisters, -- - - the faer.... Having been afflicted' with severe rhenmatie ,
.• I ant well acquainted With Mrs... Mary . .
' ' . ShOtters, .••-. • ' : • ' • pales in' my. left -•clionlder, contracted by e7posnie, I with her hnsband, -31r:B..Farlon . ...they: having; fon a
c ollilf/e. all kinds 'or Framed. Paneled and-Turned Work, was fora lone time coal:del° steep.; .„I tried Scur Herb -few month§ past, attended at inny church, and f.am con
. . tia-v have constar.,ly en hand.. They are ready Bitters, aud aftertaking nnc dome rWall. able toeleep oriaced: that any ntatement: "which thee - might Maka,
. .
.
. .
• evil. orders at the shone - A*4lm, ibinny quanti two hours. I look another dOse aed I slept -two hours May he relied on as trne.• - JOHN DOWLING. p .0'
q .,liti o rs:weed or manufactured stuff.' -: . . -inure, 9A heni attain awoke I then tOok artotberitore- . - •.• • Pastor of Bedford St Baptist Church, - NT.'
.
chiclic ti .' . .. and tisen Hemlocks' of - all kind& for building went-to...sleep and %from that time t have ncit been -• ... ....... ... • ... ...,_ . .... ~• ,-. ••• ,
.•
.c.s.:. •Oak. Maple, Peplar. chair, plank and scant- • treubled With itteumitism; brill continue •tcruie. the . Price 'nf the'Poliiienic" Byllail , and Seaweed Tonle,
,n - ,lya - e. . - Is.ards ; Cherry, Walnut, Mahogany. tc:„-for cald- .iiittersonce in a while as a precoation •seainst the. re ,
_ each SI sciperlsottle, or ST .00 per half dozen. ' .titan .
. vith -. _. •-ork : While And Yellow Pine' boar. (Is for floating.. turn of the complaint • I think. the Bern Bitters me ( drakePille 25 t box_ . _.'. • • ,-. • , „:".- :-
.. . cen a per
Ste, N . -... • made to Order : While Pine.inanlf. 3, '-` 2 ,%, - 2 ;" IM . , • best medicine in eaistence fur rheu.matima. ,
• . . For sale hy . all On:gals - de - and Dealing.. ..-.' •- • •
.., - .
,
reid illWr°:. ''. and 3 . i•inch - nane always ready; also,„ Plank, . Reading,. N6v 10, ',GS •. • . JOHN ESITI. .-' .D ec . 2 . ...6 6 - •• . •••• .- .- . ..: ..". '. •••• •40-ly ".* '
. mils_ scantling,. poets, shingles, lath, . ceiling ' • • : •For sale at the - itiesi Wholesale NVine. and - Liquor
- . eliiCh '
tcri .. • Pilling.;..k.c., .sze. -.- - • •- • ' ' " • Store, Silrer Terrace. Pottsville:Pa. -,, •--. .: .
... . . . . . . . .
..
_.. •. • . • . •-, . . . •
..
. i• ,.
iiiiits.--e . • Bills ig .w. .I tr Ind eVe ;tl/1 ^in the r line . HENNESSY & .101.1UFF.V; Priprietors. - .
efl et i r 3 n r , i . . • . ~,, ,•,, . lIE ad rtiser havind a large a fitintence in tne ,
T ve - cq
:=. • - . • 4 ui'oriler, at the shortest. notice. .. •' '. • • . :Dec. 23, '65 - • - ••
-• •':: • ' ---• • • - ' - Retail Coal Tmde,ls desirous ot acting as Boat
' 0 '
awayt. , villo., March' 'la. 1.% .... •- - ..
JO. ••• .
.. • •.„.. ..._ ___ .______________- __ _.• - for a BSA class Colliery; -. Persons wishing their. tftal
' Diet '• • . • GENUINE IMPORTED - HAVANA sic: , Introduced to Philadelphia Marketwirt : please . Oddre . ss
8 ' a - -.'
000 .BEWAitji,....olncn.sn - alse rife*. . „GAMY, tooldlftetalls ,l it) cents a Piece by • . • .1. BLOM, Montgomery Hotel:Stith and Willow•Ste4.
, -.-. ;._ Fork- Az Seim, lkill - Coal . Co., . . . .• •..- ~ . :GUSTAV WOLTJEN,.. '- - Philadelphia: , .:,. -.; ' - -:' .-, Mamba, M6--41-Alt '' .
------r- f ora. February I. .15fiti; N0..26.-Exchangerlace. - . Centre St, next • dcipr to the Luton, Hotel, Pottsville,: . . . . .
e above rewind will be - paid to any' potion or per- Oct 25. • ':03...1 .. .... • • •.. - ' • 43 ' -'• • ••E•it ILI.SWOIIT ll* ' SlitisetiV.Copy Iliwiskia,
• tea, 0 - - - who will give information which wilt - lead to the : ~- -7 - -• ;-;:_•__-. -
- I.:tir marks fi:rmt Commercial..Analyeis.] ' -.-. .- .-1-:.1. Just, .IFileehreil.;:Alliwcirthe. , - Slated' - COpy '
. . ~t ,
aad-ata u , t N a.ndoniv4iion of the murderers of HENRY H. •• .Aftera earetul •examination of lielmbold's Prepars: BoOks for Female:far& Piimary • &boas; - Complete 1
el. tiathe night of thaleth of - January last. near ' • - •
.11p or t •••••• .ville, Schuylkill County. PA, The Sum of 84300 Rona, they enjoy our uin
„,
t est tyintlidenees We' consider In three nurnberi. - - Tor sale at S. BANNAN'S, centre .
~
~. , , them Safe sod reliable. -. • N.BVEERS.L - YATES:- - St,. _qej es . ...• . • __ • _ • . _
.. . i
• - ;,,:. • be paid for the &test and - conviction of the per- p„„ m i,,, ne•l 1845. .0ct...9 1 i.'`65 .4,5-tina... .. .
.ir . q 11, . - _ wt. were acociaories to the murder Whether be- • '.''''---- --- --IA. ' hi
2 " .
.
°rafter " ' . . --• • • ' .• • ._ •• ' A •:•Clioiime-Asistsettsie-trl ot Plain and Fancy_Dress • .
A Giied - AOSOrteiseint orsci,,.-iiirs and &doe Oolongl
Testi et lowest market pri - - '' '
les .giving inforrnadon may feel *seared 'that * ZS- Goods it reduced prices at . R. A. oLovE - res,: • •
.. .
.. . .. , . . ....... R..A ... ix - xi:vit a l. .
..
. . . .
unmet , . Will net be Med, nor will they be called - fts .- . • Ceutre St., nearly opposite' Market SC• 1 . . - . :
. fold ' • •• . 2-tf .
>O Oll - e " e '' e xcela with' their comment, and should they : .•
• Jan 13. .6 . 6 '.. . .. *.
.• : .. • • 2 - - ..Centie St.; nearly oppoeita Market Sf...
.s '. eto leave-Me .Conety
tomer,. . ...empioyment wal -. be pro
• for them eliewhere. •.• . •.'' :- . A Choice Assorthweinaof Wool' Long:Sh ... awls at • .
61t, 100 ~... fonnraion may be &mato MOM.' JAiIES ELLIS;- -• • redo Ced prices at . • ' R • Al-- G L ° " 4. ' S ' . .•' stia t Eu• wAIt.E.-Ii fine isisimizifent..sneh as'
Neva flle 1,1 Attorney .of Schnylkill Cour iv, to:Pottslill '
. 1 .„„ • . 1R - . - •
(„Vntre St,, nearly oppealte•Market St;
..: soild . siiver spoons; Fnike....wies. . Fnitt
iitaya,
.. ... W.-DUFFIELD. Esq, at. We:xi - side. or tO th e ' ' .--- - .. 66 : . . - .'
- * • -.
.' • • - 24 f ' • * . • tee Cream Scoopa, itc., ile. Silver Tobacce Bottles. it
tiler, f n Nevrlerkagill
' ;.. 0 ; Nv. Di/Nis, -Piett: • ' tinkrrxern Conant - calor% Pairoslto an nrUni°4 l.s . /• - '''''. - • -• • IL C• G ' B3/B-B" 4..C epl • ze .g' t • • Th V ill ' -.
.
.
- " 4 '
."
• •' • • . • ..
. ' '- t. • •- g B. - • - -• • •er. ail, •fis, 53.80. -, •-- Dee..l6, -•8: .••- • • .- .... : .• . - . ,
.. . _ . . - -
.
. .. .
.. . . •
. - . . . . . . _ .
. .
. . , . . . .. . •
.. . .
.• • - . . • • . ,
. . -
,
• . . , . - .. • . ... • . • .
. -
. .
. .
BUSINESS.CARD.S
CIVIL ANDA4NINGFIENGINMKE4
Tn~peC~+: Collieries ' •atir.entraineti :Mineral and Oil
Lauda:. Orricn- - -11 , 111
fit. Opposite Bpisitipal - • : •
LA. T. QU IL . LITCII; Civil maid 'Mining
1:a • Eamineer, Pottsville P. ' .•: •
OFFICE' on 2clPoor or Geb: BAgheri-Boildin Oen"
Atteet. • • 11)0.410.!bk-7,50-
t
ITARRIS. BUOTIIERS, CiTU
LA ntfig.EllgineerEs 'Rimers:Bnilding; . 4econd snd
hiallintango StreeUK " • • •
STEPHEN HARRIS. :-• JOSEPH 11:11ARRI*..
• Jnij 30. . •-• September.•26,'63' • 39-
L.tNGDON,. Surgeon
8.. Dentist, 'Market Stro4 seconda s -
Boor abe‘ie" Third' Street, -kiotith side, a aaaa
Tuttsville: • •
May 5, •60
P. W. - ISILEAFER, Podsyille , Pa., lute
• • of the PennsylvaniS.State Geological Survey, ex
plores lands, mines, ac.
.r:Oaober
PRANK C ARTER , . Real Estate; Agent,
1." MAIIANOY CITY, - Schuylkill Cotttity, Pa.
'VW - Letter Addres-"liiittamqy City P, 0." .
;cp. ENC V—*- For the Purchase and Sale
23. Of Real Estate bliking•taid Belling Cbsl Walt
charge of Coal -Lands and. collecting renter:
Office Mahan , Tiro Street, Pottsville. ' . •
April 6, - 760 . 14-3 CIIAS„ M. BILL. *.
W . ; .111.'SY310,18,.•••'. s •
CIVIL Alslit, MINING ENGIBIEWL
Ogice--Itunselis Mahitnicirige
Street, ..•
.
9MEPU W.
. Cirilintd%llining Engineer.
P•TTSVILLE, Omoz: •Simat. Trackci
. . CLOCKS., , • .
and' JEWE .
. .
ALWAYS ON 'HAND
•
• !art -it irinciti of ltluitral.lnstruments, Violin Strings,.
Balt , Viol Strings, Guitar and Banjo Strings, constantly
on. bantL • • . ' Jail 30, . [J.. •-
WHOLESALE Als.Ml-HETAIL:DEAIMR
TOJA_CpO; P.I
AND:. CIGARS,
Centre St., Oliposite t 6
,e, Tntria
rcANx IIAt , SE. : CULS:.W. NriLDERMUT/I.
HATESE...&•.W.ILDERYLUTH
(Sur.cwsors to S. 11.1ii.tselef,)
I' . ... '• . 1 ',. WI!OLY.SLLIC 'A.Np 1iETA1C14,4.1..E88
. 11
- : Tos4occ,. SNUFF and . SEGAIrAi .
15 EARLY - : 01TO ITE • iLIE,., 3101iT13(E1t:... IitOUSI
•PoCievillc, Pa.
•• • 'PHOTOGBAPHER ••• -
Respectrally annolincesl to - -the. citizens of Pottsville
and vicinity..that he has taken Etna fitted up:the rno-..
TOGRAPIIIC GALLERY, in the building at the North
east cernOr, of Centre.and East larketstrect. where be
is nruitare&to furnish in the.highest style of Art, NIG-.
..NETTES, A.IIII3ROTYPES; CARTES DENISITE; &c:,
ie'ife asks a Share Of, public patronage, and hopes,..
by strict attention to business antl . coUrtesy, to. receive
, ,
Or Call and examine spneimem; of. my work;
.. . .
NE `'''-. :DOD D
, .
K.- A N ... STATIONERY .
The. nrideraiimeSl are noW - prepared' :to _famish a fine
assortment of Books and first ciass .Stationery, at their
New Store on Centre . Street.. four .doora. below, the
Episcopal Church.. - Panting, Binding and Stamping to
. • . . • .
Ilytajc, . • •
.
.I. l crfn !awry, • • . . ..•
.;
Fancy *cam's;
..• . "..
. . . . .
• • • • • "" :
Ordets pintaptly•atten(lcd to: :•Ghic ns,aqap. • •
BOSLIYSIig.I;ti B.:;.BROTTIEg.
'O. C. licaltysne.i.a...
16•11-.
. .
Encourage:. -11.onw.11.1.Tinufac.tiares.
iaA.Nt4C.rurt*-.Fl'
• ,
...S..ALLANI . ANDER•
Pottsville, •
Announces 'to the business community of this . .
and the adjoining Cotinties,' that he manufac- tv
tures; SALAMANDER:SAFE of. in.. sizes and
kinds, Warranted FiCe-proof..whieb; in point of - •
worknianshipand finish. will compare with those oh- :
tained from any other establishment in the. countiY.-7
-Ale always keeps safes ou hand for sale, and will - mtikg
• them any size, for flanking, and other Public Institu
tions. cheap; if not cheaper than they eanbaohtalhed
Ile refers to Benjamin Ilaynw;d, Georetright, Thos.
• Cooch and A. Ilentlerson,• of this Ibirongh. who• have
• his tt-bifes in use:, 13.
. .
L.-I . W. ;..80.--5.8.-YaIf:ETT,.
AGENT FOR
LUBRIC OILWORKS
COITISFOUD & CO.
. . . ,
OFFICE-.No. 26 flintrltet:kti., Pittositiarg;•Pn.
.
• • • •
• .The attention of MINERS in paiticidar is called to
the.excelleat Oils for . Cqiil Car. and StatiobarKEnginek
'that. we are now. manufacturing.. 'Parties. using' Our
ill rind an imlneuse : They Will liet
nor' conceal in cold Weather and-.are entirely:free.trom
grit. • Our "As Oil ftw Engines: and - •••C" Oil fir Coal
• Cars;:cahnot• be equalled. • Orders. should be left- at
Railroad Ticket Other. carbon: in' at . BOSI3Y
SH ELL ,t.."800k-store, "Centre St„ rotts‘lll6. -
,TliesxcelSior Axle Greri... , e..• triantifictnied
the beetarticle in the market for, gres-sing - w.igonsi
carriages, , ,te.:• • • •
The, trade E•ppllieil - on liberal 'term.. • • .
. •
L. NV,IBOSBISEIET,L,.Agent.;::•
& • • • - *-
. (Successors tot'. TittesslerA :-; : • • -
Dealers.in GrcOs 417eoseriSx.
Donelstic..Fruit.,..Fiiih, - Oynters;
CORNER eIk:CENTRE AND NdIZTE:CIAN..STS.,
EVery attention paid friquality of articles sold. The
patronsge the publie. is rupsctfrilly.
BROOMS! BROOMS. 1!
. . .
The:nodPittgited'annoiwcei. to the citizune OrPotts.
rillO'niol vicinity; that thOy liareOlytined • .. •" •
.
•.. CORN DROO7I.3I,NEFACTOILY, , •
.
. . .
" • • . • of.
• Coal. Rt:;.lNfortk ;Union'
Wbbr.e thee ate.pmpared.tO supplY merchant's and 'Other
6itizensayitirßrnonis at .4hole4e :and tepid] prices.
The patrinage. of the public - is fee pcctfully .
They
,are :also prepared to furnish to : purchasers, at
moderate: . . pikes. the:•01 - iirli - :.Pnicnt , lirooni
WrnppOr;an article of •great economy' to . all house ,
keepers. .
Dec 23,1( 1 5 • , '
.•• • •
• out . . A.. 13 . '
GOOD- ROOFING • •
ABOUT HALF THE PRIG -OF . TIN .
*. - WARRMN'S•IiENUFNE•PEBBLII.ROOFING .25 now
.used'raore=tharrfilig other kind. •'11...18 both Fire And
Water PrOc4,lll:hl will: outlast two tin roofs t - while. if
:costs Only. about half the price of tin: rooting is
.pa *6O try - the
. sObscribers, at short hofice.:. •,• • ••••:'
. • • •••- .‘ :BAN AS T . DrAtEllN;TOttiorille..
• It cannot he . ptit Ortroofs.pitching over 3 inches to
Ulf:Soot.. Itcan bo not On flat,. if necessary:: • .
•. SE
GA .
RS:
. SE
&
sIetiIiRIiCREPERS arid otbers inwant of•a
Prime article of Tobacco, Segars. etc.. will do well to
give men call: • All goods soldmt at; prima, -
purchaser" saving expenmof freifrbl. •
..• • . . • , , GUSTANT NVOLTTKW
• • . - •. •-• Wholeiale and Retail Tobacconist, .-
..Centre next door to the. Union Hotel,. Pottsville:
BERNER,
Second St.; betweca Callowidll and iliigh
: • HOF' connected with his l'Ottery a large se.lectiOn of
. • • • . • •
• .
. . Que . eits • .•••
••.. . • Eind Stiono Ware;
To which' he. ieepectltilly .calla the.. attention of the
public '.Give gave call: , March 24. •66.;:-1.2-3ni.
• .
•-• 13 .
E•R .
.• .
• A LL kin&
_of -Books,:: lidagazinm;r-Neicanaper3,lo
gether. with Music and . Old .I;too4 rebound at abort
notice at our-Bindery. . • . • .
:.. All tiride of Blank. Books and bound tn- any
pattern at .the.Binde.ry.nf.:the entistriber: • • •
:,Send In yodr. orders. '. • • • .•
BAN'NAN.
N EW:EXeltl44l[olt BAKERY;
• .• ,
. .
Ceti treStreet,'OpPtisite Terr' or'
- . • Penna.
. .
FOE BMA .. TIES, A. OMEES
Tgg )3AKEIT „L .L 1 TOWN
SATISFACTION
- - -
... . .
s.:
- 4WA,..RANT.4'.811. , -.
, .. - . •
Balls - ap4 . Paitiee tap "
plied id low.rater. . .-;
. -•- . - Jlll4lN.llENlillre:Pirsprilitark
reli. 4. •61 , -_,.. ••• ". :' f '. .- . - - 1. -- '-. - -8-am• .- ..
. .
PLUMBING: AND: cas.. FITTING
ATTENDED TO IN ALL,THEIR
" ' ' • • • - •
PriEIiARGES'I,IO4OI3IEcATIL.4I: ,
. , .
Orders left 'at the afPreie ' "of BOSI3TRIELL dc . PRO.,
anA,
•• GEORGE , tEn4NET, Centre ' St.; ,mlll,' receive
`prompt atntion. . • -• • :; •
rirCitd Braes, Copper and Lead konght: r .
, • .• • . - GEORGE N. DOWNING, . •
• ' Collier cif Stith and Sdibirlkill Avenue.
,
• . le, Mira 3 ; '66 . • • 9-tf •
. .
'RAILROADS.
m irrE NT. E it & systrwmuzz HA.
aifEgMEl
Clisingo of Tillie er.srasiielgei. TrOne.
..
. .
. .
. '..on. 'and after, MOM: November 27th, - ISGrk. Psi-
Banger Trains will' leave•Scbnylkill • Raven las follows ;
. - • At-1.15 et.....11:, , F0R IieIINERSVTI_LE; •. - :.
• • • -. I Af12:20 P. M:.:PpIt.PIEN CARBON..
Returning: will leave. Mineriville• at 3.03 M.. and:
Glen'P'arbon at 1.40 connecting . - Schuylkill
Haven with'. morning and afternoon; Passenger Train' s
. for Philadelphia. . • • . -••-• , • •: • •
Faisenger Train between Ashland and. Locust Gap
Junction. connecting with stage to and from Shamokin.
Leave Locust Gap Jimetion at 10.30 A. M. -.••: ."
Leave Ashland at 2.43 r,_41.• • . • •
Connecting•with Passenger - Trains on & B,X. R.
11. to: and from, Pot - Ovine. at which-point connections
will be made with.trains on - Philiula, And Bending
• J. 11..WOOT . T.EN, Sup't.
• 43-ti -
Crits . kauC.Ngy. 16th, '65
. .
QC Mt Tr* LECII.II6 ISIMQVITITANNA
MAlLROAD:»Clumge.of;lfourp., ; •
•
On and sifter , Noy.: 27, 1365, •Paiseluger TraineWill
leavePottsvi ile,dnily - (except Sundays) at. 0.45 A M.for
Auburn, Pinegrove and Harrisburg,. and . at I . P:Mfor
AnhOrn,•Pinegrove and Tretriont. • . •• •.• •• • •
.••••Pastseng,ers by. 6,45 A M train from.Pottsville , Willar.
rive at Harrishorg•Nia Pinegrove, at '11.30 A M in time
•to connect with trains going. east or west on Penna.,
Cuniberland 'Valley; Northern .Central 'and Leh - align'
Valley Railroads. ••:. : ' • • .
• • The-7•QO P M train . from Pottiville .will connect at
Auburn with up morning train from Philadelphia. leav-.
big Aubritri at - 1,30 P Mfor Pmegro • ve,'• and arriving at
-Tremontat 3.30. P . Will leave. Tremont for Pine-•
on . se at: 600 PM connecting : there with COO P M
train from Harrisburg and • returning to Tremont at
7.00 PM. Returning.• will leave' Ilarrisbnrg. at 00:
PM. connecting at.. Pinegrove at G. 35 P M.:with train
•
for. Tremont, rimiest . Auburn. with tip Passenger Train
for Passenger Train Will leisve Tremontut.
7,00 A M. connecting at Pinegrove with train to liar
.rishurg.-at Auburn -with.. down- morning Pasienger
Train•from.Poitsville.to' and arriving at
Pottsville at 9.4 - .1 - 1. M. •• • • . ••• • • •
Fare from • Pottsville to • Harrisburg...SToo. .* For
tickets br other inforMation appily 'to , . •• 1' •
••• •• • E. IL WHEELER, Agt, - ..'at•Pottsillle:..
.
)13111FGAILVI!LL LE V R.A.I!LBOA*C--. , 013.
2 - 1 . . . •..
• - •
•
fWit . .rfaßgalleStx..
.AI4I).AFTER MONDAY,• Sept 19th, the •Pai
setiger.Traina of the Lehigh - ValleY • ltailroad company,'
• .
DOWN OR EASTWARD TRAINS. • . 5.
SiktioNs: . . • . . • ' •No. 5., -No, 3. NO. 1:
Whiter HilUen •-•- 0 0 8 9:00 -
Tannery..... ... :. . ... .. . • - .9.08 . :
Hipkorißun .. .• . 2.45 3:19.
Mud Run
Rockport. - • • . 5 302; 5 9.38. .; . •
Drake's Creek •3' 09 9.46
Stony Creek:. • • 9.53
.. .. ..... .. •
Beneer 'Meadow - 5 " . 0 0 0. •. • .
linzle.Creck Bridge ' 2 50. • ...• '
:Weatherly • - 300 • • -
Penn Haven* ' •
MAUCH CHUNK • • • 50 . '10.40 4.30
.Lehighton ........ ~ . .10.50 440
Maryville,' 5 ' •
... 406
~ : 4.46
Lehigh flap,, .• -• •• • 421 •• .• _551.
Slidington. ; - .4 27 • 11.13: :,5.07
Rock Dale . ' , • • •
.4 36 . ••
5.17
Lamy!. • • . ' • .4 49 • ' -• ..5,21 5
White Hall: ....... .. . . ... . • . . '5.34
Coplay . • • . 4,59 11.38 :5:38
.Flok7nd.ancina. . ' .... ..... .. - ....• . . • '.5.42
Citiasauqua • • • '5 07 ".11.43 • 5.46.
• Allentewn Furnace •5.15 • - • 0.54.
kJ:lei:town • • . • 5 : ,
.Bethlehem • ' •• • 5 . 37 • 12:13 6.15
Fr&mansbiirg • ..5.47 12.21. :6,23
; . 553 12.28 .6.29
- . Easton, (arrive) ' 610 • 12.45 6.44'
• Ott •WESTWARD TRAINS.
'BTATIONS: No. S.- No. 6. No.
4.
. •A, M. P. M. P. - M. A:M.
Batton ' 9.39 3.25 ' 7.40 11.42 , 10.03
Lime • Ridge • . 3,42 7:58 • , • "
Freeniansburig.. :9,56' - .3:49 • 8.06' "
•Bethlehein • ..10.00 4.00 6.15 '12.13 . 10.04
. .4.15 8:30. • -12.23
• 10:43
AllenpuFurn'ce : • 4:20 ' 8.34 •. • ••• '
Catasauqua......lo:2s. 4:28. 4.42 . .. • .
liokendauqua::.lo:3o • 4.63 8.47 . g
C0p1ay..... . . 10.34 4:88 - 6.51 •
White Hall • 10.3,0 4,43 -- .6:54 . •
Laury•N 10.46 , 4.55. 9:04 si • • t .. 1
Rock Dale . 0,56• 5.00 • , 9.14 :• • -
Slating:PM 11.07 5.12 r '9.25 •". • '
Lehigh Gap 11.13 5118 9.31 •• I t
Parryville...;':„.ll.2B• 5:83 . .9.45' • • --
.Lehighton '.11.34 • • .5,39 9.50 . , - ••
Mauch Cheink:;.ll.4s . 6.00 10.00
Penollaven:...l2:ls • • .
Weatgiiirly ' :12:40 . •• . •••• ,
Hallo Cr. Briliger2.so . .
Beaver sleadow. .1.10 •
.1.30 • '--
Stony - ,Creek.......• • .. .6.36 • , . • '
Drake's ' Creek. - .
mna Run . . . :12.46 .- 7,0 5 7 •
Hickory..un. :.. 12.03 - .7.13 ' • t 5 •
AtWhitii .: 11.n
yen. I.lo' "7 32 - :.• -
.5. • CIONNECTIONS - • •
. .
ni:NTILALIIi.'I:: or NEW JERSEY.
• "
All Up and . Down trains connect.with the trains the
Central ItailrOMlcif•Ne* Jersey - to Mid front New York.
- ...• NORpl PENNOYI.) ' lA. RAILE.O.O. • .1
All Down Trairis and-Up Trains Nos.:7 and S connect
with the • tif: the . N. P. It. It. for Stations above-
Bethlehem.' .Down. Train No. 5 and Up : Trains 1408. 2.
-and 6 fur Stations hetuw Bethlehem. ..• . •
All trains ennriect with the tritins'M the East Pennsyl-.
•Vania Railroad,. except Down Train. NO.I and Up Train
• ItELVIDERE PrLAWAIti RAILROAD. '
• Down trains Nos. -land 3 and' Up - . Trains nis. 6 and •
.I - connact with Triilna of the' Belvidere Delaware Rail
.- : CATAIVIBBA AND QI46AKE IGROADS: • *.
Down Trains Nos 1 and 5 and tp Trains Nos. 6 and.
S connect- with . the Trains.of the Catawiesa. and, Qua
.kake Raltroadi..
•nwzi,rttix 13411.116ATL..
:pown Trains sos. 3 and 5 and.ttp Train . NO.- con
nect with the Trains' of the
. 11azleton Aailroad. .
Down Nos. 3 and 5 and L'p Train, Nori. 5-and
it will connect. with the Trains to and fromWilke-4barre.
• -
ROBERT
• . Stirierintendent and Engineer L. V. R. R.
piIILADEL •WA REAVING
Winter _Arrangement Arrangement of Passenger Trains.
xiiov ; Eirinun•%7; rios.
, . . . .
Leave Pottsville at 6:95 and 8.3 C.; and:B.9s P.
M. ; arriving in Philadelphia: at 1•2:93, noon,'and '5.00
and T. 05, 2 • • :
Leave .Philndelphla: at 8 - 00, A.M.. 12:45, noon. - and
3.30, arriving at Pottiville. T.-35
The 0 45 and S:3O, A. M;,'and 2.45,'P, M.. iio*n; and
&ea; A,141.; up Trains, connect at "Reading for Allen',
'town. -Eaaton, New Tork, - .Lebanon;:llarrisburg,
Balti
more., and the West. . • , • • ; , •
Tne v.*, and 3.3 n, P. M.; up Traltis, : connect only
for Lehanert..llarriaburg,'&o.; and-.with Beading and
Columbia Railroad. •• ' : • : . • '
•
On Sunday' leave - Pottsville at. 8.00; A. 51.,'and,Phila-.
Aclptlia at 3.15, • , . • •-.:- • •
.
. .
• • .11Iine.11114 Rai Bond.
Trani Itlinersvig . • e
of: 8.05, 'A.M., - and
Gldn Carbon - at; 1.40.:P. M...connecti • ng - at;.fiChnylkill
'Haven ;with S 30; -.A. ancl2.4s,'P. fir... - -Traina for
Philatleinhitt. Ulf Tralna leitie Schuylkill. Haven at
7:15, A.. M.. and 12..20. noon. connecting Witt' 6.45; A..
AL.:Train from Pottsville; and 8.00; A. fm.tn
deiphta Leave Loci:o4, - Gap 10.30. A. M.;:and Ashland
2.45, , P.... M.. connecting With 2.45. P. 'AI Train forPhil'
ndeiphia and 8.09,. Ttain fnc;Pottsville...,-.INo
Sunday-Tx:ons. ' - •
• •
. . .
.." Schuylkill 'mod Suagitehamais R. A..
_ The.. 7.00; AL; and 6.00. P.N.•, I:redrew from:Tre
'mont, and &ONE 31.: from laareishuru•-:4(mnect. at Au
'burn wit &nil. A. M.,•Train for Philadelphia, and
Train'i•or Pottsville::. • ••. • 2 - •.•
T.he1.46.'A.1d., and 1160. P. M..- Trains tram Anbiun
connect with 6.46, A. 1,1— 1d., - Tralua froth
Pottsville. 2>fo Sunday Trainei. • ' ' •• , •
. . . .
. .
.. . .
Schriyl.,Vanify•nisd Mountain ' Liciikllt. R.
Learn . Paisyille at.6:45 and.ll: .A. M., 0nd.T.15,.P. M.
:Lea - ve.Tarnsqna at1.:35, A. 31:: arid 1.40 and'4.ls, P. X.
Sandayez• Le:we Teniagria ac5...00,; A. AL; and:Pattaville
. .
. • .
.M: stritil . U. Pit. atuttE,.. M. U. U.'
The 6.00 and 11,45. A M.: - Trains from Aehland...coh
nect at :Mt, Carbon:. with .8,30; A . M., *and it.MN: P.
Trains for Philadelphia. • ' = •
-The 9.45; "A. M.,. and 1,00 and 13::3. P. M. Trains froM .
Tamaqua; connect at. Mt. Carbon with 0:45. A.-3&. foam
Pol.timille3 . at Port :Clinton with A. up Train,
from Philadelphia...and at Mt. Carbon with 3.30, r. M.:
np Train from Philadelphia A mixed Passenger and
Freight Train leaverilishland at 135, P. M., forTami
qua.... Sundays : Leave Aahlanci.B.oo4. 'AL; and Tama-'
. .. •
. . . .
• • Little Schierilkill 1Ft.:11. •
' The 11:44 A. M:. Train from - Port Clinton; and 2.15,
Train from Tamaqua, connect..with 8.00,.
Train- froM Philadelphia, and. 4.45:: .Train • for
Philadelphia. • •• •. • •
On Snodaya Leave Tamaqua 'at ; 4.30 and Port
"Clinton at T.OO p,11„ . " .
, The- 8.34 , M. down Train to ;leading; and 'the
:3.34 P. up TraM from Philadelphia; atop only at
'principal stations
CODrIKIITATION TICKETS, .
With 26 coupims attached ; adylootnts desired,-
*25 percedi. discount. • - , • • • •
. .
'.-3MILMAG B.TICSETS;
Poostfor,2,ooo milmk, between all.lioints, for Families
and Busies Firms, at $52 .50. . . • . _ • -,* • .:
Season 'rickets between , all points at reducedrates, -
..'.Schrol Season Tickets ne-third tem; •
so 113s-:of baggage allowed.nach Passel:gm.
Eficsariiiiii 'tickets 'from Philadelphia to Potts
vine and
each..:.-good for Saturday, Sunday and . Monday,
$4. 33 each. . :. : - • .
•.• , • . • • . • • iticoils;
General Superintendent,
lsloveniber 25; 'G
.
Q LEVER AVARE.—Pickla: Jaivr, Syrnp Jars'
Sugarlare;•l4llEn. Butter. Napkin Rings
bake Basketa4ee:ntetsFri„ &c„ Silver Tobitpxo.
Boxes . . /12°3.1'4111104 . . _ ,R. C.
• GREEN, . •
Dec 18.!66- - .6 0 - '.. • ... „Centre St.: Pottsville.
_ _
ATEW JUSTICE PEE
- ready, - new Justice Fee Bills, for sale at. • •
• 13,. BANNAVI3., CentreStreeti Pottsville. '
O IT 111ffiETT (Sixteen Years. %Falr
P
ricYBOlON, P hi I adelph I a.—Poudrette.
$20:O) per ton: taken tram .the .FaMorf l ocee.- or 50 .
Cents per.basbel:. and $26.00 per. ton in . delivered.
at Steamboat Sud. Railroa - Depots ;lil Ptu
. Bann factory, ; Gray's Ferry .Hood abcrilf the 'Arsenal:,
Phpad~el b ib *,=ot.,'Peyeson`srants. Olmicestcr, N.
•Ottice;-I.Abrail street,'Ne: SOO, - .of the Bow
Post Office; Philadelphia: PeaIem . FEENCH. RICH
• ABM& CO:: a* and Oallowtditlida.,..Pldladelphia.
Febl4. '66 • ; S-1)va" . •
THE CIVIL-.BIGHTS BILL:
Mast&ly Argument of Senator Trumbull.
" : . • . - ••Wssuirsizon, 4; 186& •
•
• •. opium oi '..•
, •• . . .
The•TetAinewiage being taken up - , Mn. Tru m bull
• Mr:Preildent; I fogy shire . With 'the President of
the United States in'. the regret
,expressed that he is
• .unable to sign the bill. to protect: all perions:in the
;United States their civil. rights, and to-furnish the
the wins of their tindicaticin. I regret' it' on '•my
own Account beettnise of the disappointment and be
• cease the-just - expectations raised -when this bill was
presented to the President"before its introduction iu=•
to the Senate;:have.been disappointed levet it on
'the - President's - account, because IV la - calCulated to -
alienate him fforo those: whoelevated -hint to. power,
'and-who bave gladly rallied around his atintinistmtion
to sustain him to the principles -upon which . he was..
clected•:- but above all; ir; I regret ttfgr liberty's 'sake,
to secure - which, to ourselves and nor posperity, this
Government was founded... But if thebill•ts_miconsti
'tutionaltind unjust to the whole people 4.,W0i11d not
have liad the, President sign it.provisions
That its -
are not uncosthutiOnsl, I shall' endeavor.to shoiv.by.a
candid' sod ..dispassionate review and extuniliation - ,of
the President's serious objections: • • '
-Uebegins these objections with the - very -first lines
I 'of the bill, which declare. that. all pershns. born in the
'United States, and - not subjeet to•any foreign power,
except:lndians,. not taxed,-are declared citizens of the
United States.:, The bill as originally introduced did
notzchitein this prOvision. 'lt was believed by myself
and many others that all. nittiVe • born since the itbOli-
T ti gs i f slavery. was. t e , o w pi e i re on citi t z h e e p . s offi o cr f ia t i te o ' p lin ni i
otend....Qf.:st States.r: Bates, the Attorney General of Mr. fincoln's ahlminie
tratiOn. . The opinion . adOpted by his administrition
and •acted - .uponsince by all the departmentsof the el*
ecutive goyeruntent, including the Secretary-of State,
Whgheslssued passports to persons of color, recounts
.ing thent as citizens. It Was the opinion expressed by
Mr. Marcy:, -when FeCietitry - of State, that all' pertains
-born in the United States Were citizens or the United
.
. States t• not referring of course, to slaveia- . -rslayeery at
:that tinie'existine. the country. • • •
.• The Presidentdoesmot object to this declaration, in
the lazes' does, however. say
that it does mit' purport to declare' or confer any other "
right of ditizenstalp than Federal citiienship, does
not•mirPort, he says, to' .give these 'classes otrpersona
any status as ,eitlZetis of 'States,..excent that Which'
may result front their stains as "citizens of the United •
'States.' The ...poiver„ he 'adds. to confer , the richt• of
State citiiensitip is just aaexclusively with the several' •
States, as the power to diclare'the right.of Federal citi
zenship is with Congress.. Now ; sir, we rell.know that
no State has:. the authority to malm'a citizen'
. of. the
ttuited.Stateg. The Constitution of" the United States
vestswith Congress the - sole power of Maturalliation,
anil•it Maymake.i. Citizen of a foreigner, but no State
can make a citizen of the United States of at foreigner: •
hot Wit true,;eir..that When It person becomes a eiti
.zen of the United• States,:. that he isnot also a•citizeri
of the State • wherever he' may.bd:rePilding? On - this
point
. 1 wiTlrefer. to the decision pronounced liv the
Snprerim Court of the, United States, delivered by.Chicf .
'Attetiee Marshall:the most eminent juristwho ever'sat
upon'the.American bench, lit the case Of Cane against
Rallow,Veportedin the sixth of Peters' Reports. The
Chief 4ustice, In
"delivering : the opinion of the colt,
t.The defendant:in error Is alleged. in-the proceed
•ingi.to.he a citizen of the , United States, -naturalized"
iii,Louislana and residing thetein.. :This is equivalent
'to an averment "thathe is it Citizen of 'that' State: - A
'citizen of the United :States residing-in: any'State of.
the Union is a citizen iif that State. Thia.was throaty
.point in the case.'.' This is the opinhio of the highest'
tribunal in the country, pronounced . b thentost
emi
nent man tharever Sat upowthe be.nchlti America. '
.• .3tr...loiiistSCN, , of Maryland... Will the Senator give
ins thematic, . • • .. .
Page
.11111 M -trim is to he disregarded,- the President of the
United States' niistaken in his law. It- is not fine
that when a nom is made neitizen.of th . etlnited States
he is nets' citizen or every State,:. The President next
alleges thatthe right of Federal citizenship thus to he
thinferred on the several eacepted races before men
tioned is now for.the first time proposed to he given
law. Now.-iir, this is n - mistake. not of the:laiv;
hat
- a, misapprehension of fact : 'And it will appear, byre
ferentes to which I shall call the - attention of:the Sc-.
nate in a moment. that: the Presidtnt's facts'. are as
bad as his law. elf the Senator from Maryland [Mr.
Johnson] wishes to take e note of the antthirity he will.
find it in Lawrence's W-hcaton. international laiv
- arid 'various siatutes•of the United States; I read froth
• Patze • S.. 7 : •:" 1 • r. • ' -• • - :
"Thereltave'been the.ifrilteci StateaSeveral Cases
of collective naturalization by the annexatien of- terri
tories. By the third article •of the first conventkin, of
April ad,..1700,. with Prance. in the- cession of
aim, it is provided that 'the - inhabitants' of the .ceded
,-territories to-be incorporated into - the United States'
should be-admitted as soon as ..possible, according- to
the principle of the Federal. Constitution; to the .enjoy..
meat of the rights, privileges( and immunities of the
'United States: A provision to, the effect is to.he
found in the sixth article of the. reaty with.: Spain for
the purchase of Florida, and by the eighth ar ticle ofithe
treaty of IS4S with Mexico.; also,. by the' annexation
of Texas under. a -resolution of Congress of March.
.154 X, in its admission into the Union on an equal.foot
ing with the other Ststes...,;• . • .
Collective . natinalizatiOn," says the authority from
- which." quote, "may also take piaCe ' of a . class of per-.
•sons, natives of the conntry'or otherwise, who; with
out 'any act oh thepart of the inillvidnals,Maybc made
.citizens. 'ln the United - . States it is incorrect.. to snp
pt:ise that aliehs; as opptised to citizens, implies , for-,
eignerti as respects the country: 'lndians are the sub-.
jects of .the United States, but. - they are not - therefore
citizens, nor can they become citizens under the nat
uralization lawai..but:tbey may be. made -citizens, by
some Competent act 'of the General Government,' by
treaty:tir otherwise." .• • •. • • .. • • .•
• .By these...variOns - treaties,' restitutions. and aetS.of
• Cont..;:ress,i it will be obseryed .. that p,renchineti.':Span
lards, MeXicans, and - Indians haVe all been - m . le citi
-zeni of tlithUtiked StatesL-Some of the very classes of
persona spoken of in this bill: and yet the -President
tellit.nathat this right of Federal citizenship (as . if there
was 'such a ft Federal as eitizenship - as contrail's;
t h rguilthed'from State 'citizenship):-he ns thatit is
now forthe first time proposed to be governed by law.
l'lf," says, the President. ." claimed by many per
sons,.
thcise with are native hornalready are. lay virtue
of the Constitution; citizens of- the United States, the,
passage of - tbe. pending bill cannOt • be necessary 'to
make them such'
.. • ••
. Brit, sir, is the . President to• learn-now' for the first
time that • that principle is to be found in • the • very
Ithme-bortlis of the law, that an act 'declaring what a
.law is, 'swine of the most common acre paused by keg
islativelthdies ? When there is no question is to what
they, law is, fOr their greater .certainty: it. is the most
common thing in the - world to pass a statute * declaring
ith•object. My opinion is, and such WWI . the Opinion
Of the Attorney General and of the. present Secretary
of ;State such wars-the • opinion ' Lincoln's ad- ,
ministrath'
in, in all its departments anal such I believe
tai, he the prevailing opinion tu the United States, that
all native born persons,-not subjectto foreign Powers,
are by virtue ..of theirlfirth, citizens of the - United'
States. , But some. disputed :this. :notice,. for greater
certaintY;•it is, proposed lit Pass this.law, - and. reason
given 1:1. 4 1 the President why he cannot ipprovejt, be
causeit is a declaratory act... *. .. • ;- • •
"But if such is .not the says.. the , President,-
"the graVe Anestion •Presents it.self, - Whether, when
eleven of the thirty-six States - are unrepresented in
Congress,: at the present time it •is arnind•polccY to
make our thitith.colthed population, -and all other
cepteil clasies, citizens of theTnited States:. This is
the standing objection' not 'urged 'against all hills,' for
the President -tells ns in this 'message that he his
signed some forty bills 'that-bare been presented .ta
him.
,Who is it made an objection to this bill? . The
President.stateanotibjectiOn as applicable to this-par
tictikir bill. It is A -general . objection that hem akes,
apPlicable alike to, all bills.: brit, if there is anything
in it, no bill can MiSathe Congress. of the "Culled States
until these States' are represented.. Well.. sir; whose '
fault: is it .that • eleven States. are not represented
Whcise fault is' - that twenty-fiVeltiyal States,- which
'hare stood - by the. Union . and • Constitution; are to he
deprived-of their right- to legislatel'.. Sir. it is not the
+fitrilt of the twenty-five loyal States ...and. if the reason
urged. by the President is a-good one now, it has.been
good one all the . If the:. fart •of, sane States
having rebelled Against • the -Government is to - take
ffom the Government the right. to leglidate'..why,•Sir;
then the criminal is to take advantaiie of- hiS crime,
and the innocent are to be punished for the silty;" • • .
~ Within a few. daystlie President has iasned a prortla
:Mallon, not. of 'peace.. as the .Senator froth I.levadi
. (Mr.. Stewart" seems to anti - prise, % by no means not a
- proclamation . that - the. rebellion- is over, -Mit. that 'in
certain States it is over:' . The President does not tell
ns.that -Texas, one of the States that. were in - rebel
lion.;.is in a' condition to be,rethesented here. Sir,' if
we had to wait fOrtlie. eleven States zwastwemOt wait
for. Texas. ? ' The same piinciple world require its to
wait for.Texatt. and 'She has' not .yet reorganized her'
'State government; and, these .States which .have rent,
.ganizell have not vet reorganized as; having - a re-.
publican forth Of -goyerionent, entitling theni l repre-
Sentatton: The representativei they baye . eltosen.from
Most of these States thathive undertaken to reorganize
were persons fresh from the rebel. Congress and fiom
the rebel amities: men: who _could' not ; tie admitted
here, could not take.the requisite oath to entitle their;
to theinitha ts. , And are', we to Wait and abstain.from
all legislation of A general character Are. theloval
.people of - this country to -be compelled- to wait:LW
necessary legislatiariantil these States shall be admit
ted tO repreSentation here,-when,. they refuse tiasend
.nien here exceptthese whose hands are dripping with
thehlood of loyal men?. Are the Vice. President of
the rebel confideracy. and his colleague, One of the.
Senators of the rebel. Congress, to tome:here: to legis
late for the loyal people of this country! Are the men
who orgahiseil:the government that carried on. a font
Years' war, as the-result of which' this nation has, bad
to !Pend: morethan four thousand .millions - Of" dollars.
and-as a consequence of which more than a qitarter of
a million 'of 'men. ;patriotic heroes, have laid-down'
their liveinpon.the battle-field' and •in the unity hos ,
pitali.,4re these men to Come here to - legislate.forthe
loyal people of .thie country? : . :
Sir„ these • States can , only be represented through'
-- State organizations'. 'All -menibeiwof this.: body can.
only-be elected, by State Legislatureti.; :Members of
• the other Howie can only.he. elected in 'pursuance of
'State laws. - - 'Hence; as•preliMinary - to any represents
flan' in either Hume of. .Congress, it must be deter;•
'mined whether there is a, State Government; whether
there is 'e State .legislattire :having autiomity to elect
'Senators, and • havine•anthority to:,provide laws under.
Which representatives maybe elected: . ..There Waei a
time, certainly, When there averexto such : Legislatures .
in any'of these eleven States; There meta time when
the Only - kind-of g-overnment in any of..them was hos
tile to the United .States when. everyember:in it
had abjured his allegiance .to' the.' m
e.' United States, and
sworn alleglince . l,6 a - gOvernment.hOstile to this.—
. Will aeybody pretend that whiles State : 'government
,was in these hanilelt was entitled tcfrepresentatlon in
either 'Bow of Congress?lf 'not, Shall - vie not in-
Attire whether it• has gotbut of, these hands Into. the
handsof loyal Men ? . • •
•
. Sir, this proposition that.no bill is .to'be patieed be
•cause +certain States are unrepresented when itis their.
own fault that - they are: unrepresented; 'would be nt
.terly destructive of the 'Government • .But, then.the
President tells . - ris -that the -bill -in effect proposes to
diseriull*lteCtidahls.t a - large number. of intelligent:
worthy, and patriotic • foreigners. - and In favor of the
• negro. ' sir; - is that true ? . :Whit is the bill?
Whylf declares that. there shall be - no distinction in
civil rightihetween :ant race ciilor 'and the White
race. • It declares - thatthere. shall be no
. different pun
ishment Indicted on a colored • man in tenserinence of
his color than that which is indicted on a white man
for.the same offence' Is that a diseriMination in favor
of. the negro and. against the foreigner,: in 1L',10114 - the
only object of which to preserve equality .rights?
Bnt . perhaps itw.ould -- be replied -to this,l that the bill
•propoees to makes Citizen of, any:perison:born In the
tuned States, and„therefoin, it - discriminatee in that
respect against theforeigieria • : • .. •
- 'But, Dir. 'President, is not a Whit.e•child wheishotn.
in the',United - . States - a citizen? - Is it not lobe pre
mimed that therein 'a , dis,7lretrustion , ' here" in- favor of
the white infa*, who Is a - citizen the -Moment of . its.
- birth, sad against the worth - j, intelligent and patriot .;
it , reter, who emigrates to ithisAountry, and as . is
Sumer by a Siaiilltdr be - 14d me, even the etail ogs
.
foreigner?. *The .
Infant child of a foreigner, born in
this land, is a citizen long before his tether.' 'The Pre
objectien to making citizens of
Chinese. an•lGipales.' lam held that tsat few Chinese
-are born in this country, and where the. Gipsies; are
bernl cannot tell.' Like Topsy, , it is questionable, for
' "they were notborti at all,-butjustehme." flAnghterl
But, Mr. President; perhaps the test answer to this
'objection that the -.bill proposes to make • Citizens, of
Chinese and Gipsies; and this • reference to foreigners
is to -be faun:din a speech delivered in, thilbody„bv.a
-Senator oecopying,.l think;. the seat now* occupied
across the Chamber by niy friend:Crom 'Oregon ("Mr.:
sir years 'ago, in reply - to ssveto'
measagesentto thie body.by•Mr. Btichanata, the then.
President - of the rniteA,States; 'returning with his ob
jections :what was Iniown'as the bill. '
that occasion the Senator to.whout Lallude. gelds.", •
. • SUMNER.. Whet Senator wee it? iLaughter.l
Mr..TRU:tiBULL.. - Ile* said :"this idea* about poor
foreigners somehow or other appears to haunt the Im
agination of a - great many.. .I am constrained to say,"
says the Senator Alluded to -"that I look*. upon thii ob
jection of the bill as a mere quibble on the partof the '
Presideht, and as being hard pressed for: some excuse
in withholdinglda approval . of the' measure.:
al
lusion tothe foreigners in this connection looks to.me
more like the: ad coptandiem of, the mere politician or
'fiemeesigne,•thanit grave -and - sound' reason to-be of
fered by the.M
President of the.nited States in a 'veto:
tuessime upon. SO important a measure e. 9 thelMmes
stead .'. : . •••• • • • • .. '
Mr. SUMNER. • 'Who was the, Senator? • •
' Mr. TRUMBULL. That 14 the language of 'Seniitor
. Andre*, Johnson. • IGreat•Langhter) It is, pierhaps, .
the best answer, though I should hardly basic ventured
-to havehs.ed such harsh lanenagein reference. to the.
President' of the United States as to accuse hire,* of
quibbling and demegeging, amiplaying the mere pol
itician,- in eendlng u yeto.message to the Congress of.
the United States. • • • ' •
• • The President also ,Makee -some other- allusions In
.this bill of -the Caine character, For instance, he
'speaks Of theimproPriety of marriages between whites
and blacks:. lie then. goes on, to . say:* "I don't ens"
'that this. bill repeals State:leas on the subject of mar
,Well;then, for what purpose is it Introduced
this bill?-. 'surely: asan "ad captandum ergu ,
. menttO excite prejudice, or as the argument of a dem
..agogne and politician." • *. • . . •
President further says:. "If it be granted that
- bengreas can. repeal all State laWa discriminating be ,
tween whites and blacks on the *subjects covered. by •
. this hill, why, It may, be' sked.. May not-Cc - ingress re
. peal in the aame.wey all State lewadiacrimlnating be
tween the two races on the. subject of suffrage and of,
. lice? -It Congress eawdeelare.by iIINV who shall hold:
lands, Who shall testify, who shall *have capacity to
make 'a contract in a State, then Congress can also, by
law, declare-who, without regard to race or color, shall
have the. write tcisit as a-juror, or as a judge to held
any office; arid; finally,
to voteineye . ry. State and Ter
titori• of the -United t.iites." . '
Perhaps the best answer,:afr..President, I could give
stn - this would be the answer of -Andrew Johnson him
self. He' undertook in recognize State government/1.
in the disloyal Steles.- 'When he dltl.so.; LO Whom did
he extend the right of suffrage'! To the blacks? NO,
-sir. ::but he extended the righter, suffrage. to those an:
thorized to vote under the laws' of those•Stateabefare.
the rebellion.' 'When urged to allow the lOyal blacks
to
the - rebellion.'
what wee hisanswer!. 'That -he had no pow
er; that it was neconititntionel ;.but hehad 'power to.
pretect them .intheir civil rights, and' he did protect
them in their civil rights. . • .- • • • •
-Then; if it be true that protection In civil right ear;
ries Withit the right of.auffrage, what becomes :of, the
poailliin he assumed when he extended civil rights to
, the negro all through the.Sotith, as I shall presently
.show ; by orders ..issued by his. authority and yet- he
• ref nsect to give . them the right of snffrage, on the ground I
that lie -held po conititational *power to /hilt that it
- Was aright vested itstheStates,with which he.could
'not interferi'::- • • . ' ~ *.• • ,: • .
Bitt,tlir ' the grant Of chil rights dees net, and-nev
• er did in thincountry,Carry- with it political rights, or,
moreproperly speaking, -political privileges., Aliiiiin
may be a citizim in this country 'without the' right to
vide or-without the right to hold - office: '.The right to
vote arid hold 'office in the StateS depends' noon the
Legialatnres of-the various 'States: the - right to hold
mike under the Federal Government' 'depends upon .
the Constitution of the United,Statec The President
nmatlat a itattirelhorn. citizen.,' A.Setiater, a'-Repre
aentlitive,-.'must -have been' eitiien of the' United •
pates Air a certain, ha.
in , humber•of sears before he.canbe ,
elected ementher of eitherthishr.the other. House of
Congress., So that the fact :ofbeing a citizen does not
• qiialify a person ihr. holding officenecessarily,' nor
does ithecesseillyauthorize hiin-to- vote. Women are
'.'citizens, children are:citizen's', butthey do not exercise.
the elective franchise by virtue. of their eitlzenship.,-
Foreishers,'as is ;stated by. the, Pied/lent In his,:mes
• sage, bef • oretheyere naturalized, are: protected in the
'-rights enumerated • In. the hill—the right to -contract;
. the right to Sue. and: mostof - the rights we' have eon
: inerated: They do not: ,because they possess these.
rightsthe right to Make a contract and.arhold land;
whith lathe mime in moat if not all the - States id pres
ent—l say they vii not therefore vote.. The rights enu
- meratedin the bill do not - carry with' them the right to
vide. :Brit, sii,.what - rights do' citizens of the United
• State% have. ?, They have
,spine.. To -be a citizen'of.
the'United States- carries with it some 'Fart:. de. What
are they? Why, eta they ere those, inherent and fun
d:inlet/tat tights. widen belong Le, .every, citizen ;and
. freer/lan an all countries—such as the rights - etinmere
• ted in this bill, and. they belong iii citizens in all the
States of the Union:: • The right of• American citizen-' ,
ship meansehnieting.. . It does not mean in the case of
a foreigner. that when be is naturalized he is to be left
at - the mercy of State • Legislature's. Ile has 'a • right, I
when duly naturalized, to go-into any State of the Uni-:
ted States, and; submitting to ay its lanai, reside there;
andthe•Unlted 'States government would -protect him •
le, thatright. It sesuld prinect atizeir of the United .
States not oniv in one of the States. ei of the Union; but
It whiprotect - hini in foreign lands. In the laliguage
of Mary, When Secretary of State,' 'Se citizen in a
fareigneountry is entitled to the :same protection that
'is extended-by that Govenuncnt to. Its own
•
In the great essentiel rights Which I have enumera
ted,, these rights,' - which heti - Mg:ha. citizens and , are
- known - am natural rights, are defined: by Blackstone in
his definition. of .civil liberty, th be no other:than na
turn] :liberty, se far, restrained by human law; : taa' no
farther than is necessary. and 'expedient for-the gene
- ralailvantage of the public; In this deftnitien of civil
liberty: it . ought to he understood;'or rather expressed,
,thattlie.restraint introduced :by the law be equal to
: ell; onus muelteo as the. nature of the' leis will admit.
"-Equality of rights is the baslSof the Commonwealth,"
as is s:aid by : Kent: and Rent himself, in speaking of*
these :rights; say/3 that the naturalrights of individn
'ale may. be said to lie included in the rights of personal
security, the rig.ht.Of personal liberty,- and the right to',
acquire and enjoy p . roperty.":These rights have mostly
been considered. and frequently declared by the people
of this country to be natural:inherent - and inalienable.
What•ere they, sir?, The right'Of personal security,
'personal liberty, and. tire* right to acquire and enjoy
property.. And these are declared to .be -inalienable
rights belonging to everYcitizen of. the United States,
no matter where.he may be as a; citizen of the United
States. Rent in the second voltiMe of hirACominenta
ries, says The privileges and immunities granted
by the Constitution of the United States to the citizens
of the several Statea Were to be confined to those Which
were in their 'nature fundamental,: belonged of right.
-tothecitlzens of all free governments." Such ere the
'rights of_protection to life and liberty; and the right to'
'acquire and enjoy Property: , • • • • •
• There is :a case •reported.'in the - 10th, Johnson
which goes lunch' farther than thiswhich decides not
simply that, a' citizen Of, the United. Statee, as such, is
entitled to protection In:these. rights,. but his case goes
farther,"end decides that an alien :enemy, permitted
to reside in the country' during a time-of war, if he
isellowed toreslde here,,iii to be protected Well these
rights.. In :,giving' the opinion of the court in that
ease the court says :* "Lawful residence implies
thin and thecepactty to one. and be sued." I would
like to inquire if the negro Is lawfullY in, this country?
If not,' where !Wee he. belong! Sy the law of nations:
an alien who goes to reside in a foreign country,. so .
long as he,cioncincts decently, is annoyed to,
c
'continuto reside the - re; under the* . publie 'protection..
-In the . same opinion the learned -Chancellor says:
"This le the public-law- of 'Europe;• intennitiosuil
and 'any person. residing in the United-States - is.
entitled' to the protection of the lriw by the Federal
Government, because the•Federal.GOvernment has ju
risdiction of such cases; and; sir, if ,it were tint so
- American citizenship Would be -worth nothing.','What
Is it worth if it does- not protect the citizen in:the same,
• low is it, sir, that every person born In these tni- •
• ted Statee owed allegiance to the 'Government Of the,
UnitenStates ?• • „Everything that be has, his property,
his life, miuy betaken-1V the Goveniment of the:United
States in its defence or to maintain the:honor of/the
nation :, and can it be, sir, that one ancestors struggled
through-a long war to: setup this Government, and
that the people' of our day haveatruggled through
another war to Maintain it;that after all the:Sacrifices
• we have - made .We havezot - a* Government which is
ell:powerfal.to command obedience of the citizen, tint
has no nosier, to afford him' protection?. 'ls. that-all
that this'
. bortated American' citizenship; amounts to?.
SO tell it sir,*to:the fattier, Whose. son was starved to
'death' at Alidersonville; to the widow whose husband
Was slain . at Mission - Ridge, or to the .little boy Who
leads Iris bliiinfether•throngh the streets in your city,
who lost hie eyes • On the Gall coast: 'So tell - them that
'this - Government, in defence of which the son end the
bite-band fell and the father lost his eyes, is a Govern
ment Which has nright trice]] these persons to its de
, f e ne, tot hoe no power.to protect:lts friends, in any
right whatioever. • s • • • . .
Sir,-it cannot be. Stich' is not the meaning of our
Constitntitm ; Euchre not the meaning, of-American cit-•
As enship. This Govern ineut which 'would go to war to
protect itsmeitfest citizen or inhabitant in any'forelgn
-laud whose 'rights were tanjustly-encroaChed" open, hos
certainly some prosier to protect its own citizenem their
I pass from the consideration -of this first 'section of
the bill•to theiecond.Whie s t is obleeted to, by the Pre.
• sident, as affording -discriininating protectioti to col
ored-persons. - -Sir, I will-rend that-section, and letne.
'see if : any of .us eandiscover these discriminations: :
• "Szarices 2: And be - it further feasted: That any.
person-who, under color of any law, statute, ordinance;
regulation, or custom; shall Subject, or cause to be, sub
jected,, any inhabitant.Of any. State or Territory to' the'
deprivation, of any right seenre•V or protected, bythia,
'act, or to different pnnishaient, pains, Or penalties; on
account of having at-any-time been 'held in a itondl- .
-„tion.Of slavery or involuntary servitude, except as a,
punishment for .crime.;•.whereof the party ,shall have
been duly cenvicted; or by reason of his color or rice;
than 'it prescribed fin' the punishment of White per..
sone,.6 - haTI be deenied guilty* of a misdemeanor,, and,
on conviction, shall' be punished by finemot exceeding
one thouiand dollars, or imprisonment not exceeding
one year, 'or both; in the discretion of the, court." ,
• :Now can human ingenuity' point out wherein the
'section diacriminates in favor of colored persona :It
says that "no person shall subject a coloredperson
a different punishment than that inflicted oritt white
person for the same offence." Devi that discriminate
in favor Why, sir;the very' object of the section is to:
preyentdiScriminetion. ..The. , effect-of - it is to 'prevent
itni.well as *object, and the'langnage, it does seem
to nie,.Conld-not mare 'plainly express that effect. It
'May be said that it ie for the benefit of : the black man ,
beeanae he is in, some-instances discriminated against
by State laws iont - that is-the ease with: Ail remedial,
-statutes. :'.They are for the relief of persons wtio need'
relief, not for the relief:Of thoee.Who :have is tight, al-
ready: , and When those, needing relief obtain it they .
. stand nfontlinpteelselaiating of these whci do not'
" There arei: however, other and - se one 'objection!
made te ibis. section:' It Is saldthistit • Pardshes by fine
andlatprisonmentlezislators who pass - such conflict-,
-Mg laws. 'Let. us seelf that is - the' iting_aage in the:
Proper 'Cotudnaetton-:of the prosisiona ; ; f - Irwill.• read
again theerst-linetsq declare-that' any.person who;
• under-Color of*anylaw, &awaited or tanse to be sub ,
jeeted anYlinhabbanit of any' State or ;territory; to :the
. deprivation' of-any:right secured or-protected," Ete.'—'
•Now,. sir, who' bolo be, Famished ?:.1 1 6 law :to be
•-inatioted ?' Are theinen who make , the looi tO•he pun.'
betl? "Not ;Ceti, .1V any
,pienion under ;color,of
any law shall stibjeet-aPereon'l tirlfeipOns
isyed Who 17My, - the peraou'whei,linder color of
'law; econmittethe offence,,not ttnemen who malielbei
law- - :"If any persontoder.eitior of :any law, ,statute,
onlitteeets,vegelatkai , or eastiom," etc: , Inaotei erno!'.
zetzdttesof the SOoth 'undoes prevails by_ irbbtitdif'
fereit tranieheutet— is billieted-uptnt the blido. e
than
• that.tirhtok le Ewell out to, the whiles for Abe'lete of;
T.hia iecdon preps itutiel the trona..deity:, .fir
ttAlstS'Am.:'::: ; ',:,y.;' . '..•-
-tlitatilitfrittil',oMlr4
Bortniprocured tote Proms: We azo now.ramoroll
to:JOB and. - .IIOOIE-.P/UNTIM of wary. sio• .
outption it actooto. the MSc' of tbo . ifamoof • JoosatuaboolX o '
than tt ante stioso Moot gitim-utitotlikaasot, .is tho
ltd, 8 0 1 ' 11 . 1 ' •: ,
. •
niliklit a - 4 1 .IPill ea , : Hills etladitair.
ient
Lit:lPiettsrev. , ,'..".- Illearee4 Tickets'
Illtuasi 11311.11a4 ; i. .. .._ .._-, P 1
ieper lasetks;.. *.
Aisicieii of Agressis'at i p Time "Reel., . • .
initnelac r'; - '. Ardelr . ,lP"'fluil kr,
At the Siefitioitest dui stocic oi JOB -irsra
is more extensive than' that of szky other office in Obi
section Sttlielltste,Ancrwe Were- bends. esnlithied ea
'primly far Jobbing... Beings practical- Printeer oared,
we will wisrantee our week to beau sear as say gag
cut be earned out in the cities. NaNTINEFEN CO&
OM dose st.the shortest Seem ' • . •, • .
BOOR_ BINDERY.
Boots bound in every variety of style. Blau* Boobs
of recydeeeripticar mannteeturea; bound and -ruled to
to punish the pertOn who endue color' of such custom
commits the, offence..:lt is a monstrous perversion of
the meaning - of thesecticin to give it any other' con
struction: Mut it Is. said that under this movi4on.
judges of thecourts mar be mini-shed, and m ini sterial
officers ~ may be punished' who.are engaged in the exe
cotion of any such statute as this ; and this is made an
objection to the . • '
.
Well, sir, 'I .admit that the ministerial officers and
Judge Who .vicsasly.. and-corruptly in -the exe
cution of an illegal law may be. and ought to be pun
ished but if he acted Innocently, the judge would not
be punished. What,-air, is Why; it is a vice.
lotion of-some public law, to constitute which there
must be an act, and a vicious will in doing the act t or.
According to the definition•in some of the law books,
to constitutes crime there mustle &violation of a pub
lic law *pled with an intent or with criminal neglect:
There must n be a union and. ajohttopery ~
ion of act and
intent in order to commit a crime; and the judge who,
fo:r.the purpose of having. qu&tion decided in the
.Federal courts, should give. a decision that would al
low the case to be brought up,. who acted. Innocently
and not viciously or oppressively would never be con
victed before any : court In Christendom. Ant, . sir ; if
be acted.viclonsly or oppnealdvely, I repeat he 'ought
to be punished, and it Is no novel provision to put into
a 'statute book. • ~
Why:" air; 'ITU then after the orgaaLtation of this ".•
Government; in thefirst years of its existence, as long r• • •
- ago a5..1790. the Congress of the Gnited States prOvi-'•
dad for punishing men who, 'under color of State laws, • • •
viobitedgbe laws of the United Stites. I will read'
from giith section of an act passed in' red "In ease- .
any person or persons shall sue for or prosecute any •
such writ or process-such: person or persons, and all . r*
attorneys ann solicitors prosecuting hi such case, and . •
all officers executing any such writ or proves& and bee. _
ing.convicted thereof, shall be deemed violators of the, - •
law of nations, and disturbers of the public repose, and -
shallbe imprisoned not aceeding threeyeara, or fined . .
a thousand dollars - , atthe discretion.of the court."
• :Mr. Tr/rabid], after discussing the, objections of the -
President to the second section, reviewed other poi , -
Mous of the veto message.* In proof that- conflicting
legislationexisted and that-danger was to be appro.;
heeded from conflicting legbaletion not vet effected. - -
Mr. Trumbull 'cited official return' of military officers ~ -
connected with the ' frtkdmen's bureau, of ..State •
laws recently enactedth prohibition of the right of the • ••• .
negro to knee or to own land, and either rights secured. • -
to them In this bill. He also, referred to the military , •
. order's saectioned by-the President, ,showing the same '- •
thing aniongthem;•those of General Sickles at Charles
ton; cautioning the lew-makitig authorities against die-
'erlininatirig against 'any class , of the -population, de-
'daring that all laws should .stiould e ff ect alike all ttoe
inhabitants oftheStat - e„and that they' hould express-
1Y secure in all respects equal justice to freedmen MW.'
.„ •
all other people. ' • •
• His order of the fourth of March declares the eieln-
. sive jurisdiction in , all, cases affecting freedmento rest -
With the superior and eireult provostcourte. Ile ton- .
tinned in illestrattens of the frequent exercise of these
porcereunder authority of the President, Rut assumed ' , -
a radial change in the - President's opinions. and ac
tions upon this 'Subject... He also discussed the specific •
powers of the President, claiming that the war power . ' •
rested in Congress...* lle next proceeded .to examine ,
the objection' of the President of. the' third Section of .
the bill, lying against the exthritiifjurisdiet ion to Fed- _
eral courts granted in casesarising uuder•this act: lie -
claimed • that the President had made a - strained con-' - • •-
• strife-don of it, in assuming that all cases arising un- • .
der its provisions - Mein neceesarlly be'• excluded from ;
the .
State courts.'. ' ' • ' •
'lint if it did sustain each construction, nod It was'
Pound to be the 'only safeguard for. the rights of the
freedmen, he. ould freely say that their, liberty should • „
be maintained at' all hazards; and he would ;further
say, that if. it was found essentially' necessary for their
protection: he mould put in'. the hands of the colored
man the ballot; and the bayonet. too, so far ac he was,. • -
concerned. * In connection with the faith of the nation,
pledged to protect those: Who-have. fought to sustain
'the unity -of the nation.' he world never cease in his.
efforta'to make that pledge good. • ' • •
1 - • ITo the objection made tethe number of officials and '
I•agents required by the bilk-he, replied - that It was all • .
copied from the statute known as .the fugitive-slave
_•
' law-..nuithinery in itsel; always held to be 'constitution-
al and proper, and now Used in the interest of freedom, ..
:as it originally was in the interest of slavery. 'As onr •
soldiers employed .the weapons wrested from rebels in
'putting down the rebellion, so the weapons of that law •
:were sanctified In the uses of 'freedom... - Otherobjee. . •
tiensto the seventh and eighth sections he showed to . -
be-taken-verbatim from'former tans against _which,no
objection had been made: :That with reference to eir; . ' • ,
ployment of ttinarmy-and navy in :enforcing It, execs-,
tion he explained was taken tromp law*enacted in _Vazi. • '
Buren's adminietration in'lS3S.: , '
In. conclusion. Mr. Trumbuli : said : Mr. President,
I have now gone .through . this yap message. replying •
with whit patience I could command to its various ote
jections to the bill: Would that I could stop here—that •
there was no occasion togo farther but justice to •.
Self...justice to - the State whose. - representative - am. • •
justice to the people of the. triple etintry. in legisla- -
ting, for ,whose behalf I am ealTeidth participate, jeetice
to. the Constitution-I. am Sworn to support, justice .-
'the rights of American Citizenshltli it secures. and to,
htimanliberty.now imperilled, require me to go farther. .
Gladlyyronld I refrain• from speaking- of the spirit of •
thiamessage 'of the dangerous doctrines itpromulgatea. -
nf
the inconsiatencienand•contradictlene of. its author.
his encroachments utein -the constitutional rights of,
Congress and his assumption of unwarranted powers,
which. if persevered in., and not checked. by, the people.
must eventually lead to a . subversioe-of, the Govern,
ment and the destruction of liberty. . .
Congress, in the r .pemage 'of the bill under consider- :
ation, eoeght no controversy with the - President., So.
fai from it, the bill Was - proposed with a _view to carry
out what men supposed, to be, the views of the ,Presi
dent, and was submitted to him before its introduction
into.the Senate. lam not able to relate private decla
rationeorthe Preeident, but it is right that the'Amert- '
can people should know that-the centroversy which ex
ists between him. and' Congresa, - .lnreference . to this .
Measure,riteof hle own seeking. • 'Soon after Concrete' •
met it became aptiarent that there was's-difference-of ;
opinion between the 'President. and some members of
Congest! in regard .to the condition of the rebellious . • . .
, States and the ri,:hts to be secured to freedmen. . -
.The President in hle.annual message had denied the
constitutional power cif, the : . General-'Government to
extend'tlie. .elective :franc - Me to negroe. - but hp Was
equally' decided in the: assertion of the 'right of every •,
Man to;"life. liberty; and ` the pursuit of, happiness... -
. This Nils his. language : "Brit 'which.l have no doubt
that now.'after the.clole of- the'vin it IS not competent
for the General Government to extend the elective free=,
' chise in the several states, it is equally clear that good
faith requires - the security of the•frendmen In their lib
erty
L and in - their:property." ' - . •
'There ives some members Or Congress who expreiss
ad the opinion that-in the reorganization of the- rebel- *. •
lions - States the right of suffrage should be-extended to
the colored man. . Though this was not the prevailing
sentiment of Congress: all were anxioes for a reorgani- •
ration of the rebellious States and their admission. to
i • Federal '
full part make in -the Government; as soon •
as these relatiOnerequld be • restored -with safely to all
• • ..
concerned.';. .
Peeling the importance of harmonious action, be- ,
••
tween . the different.departments of the Government.-
and' an anx,nits death to sustain: the President, for ••
whom Thad always entertained the highest respect. r
had frequent interviews with htm during the early part • ,
of the scission. Without-mentioning anything-said by
him; I may with perfect safety, state that, acting' from, '
the. considerations I have stated, and believing that the '
passage otalaw by Congress securing equality in civil • .
rights' when denied*by Stag authorities to freedmea
and all other inhabitants of the United States would do
Much to relieve ' anxiety in the North; and - Induce the
Southern States to Secure these rights -by their own ac-
tion. and thereby remove many - of. the 'obstacles to an -
early reconstruction: I prepared the,.substantially's,' . •
it is now retnrned with•the President's objections.
After the bill was introduced and printed a copy was
furnished him, and at a subsequent period,' when it was • .
reported that he was hesitating about signing the freed- -
men's bureau bill, he seas informed of the condition "of
the civil rights bill, then-pending in the House, and a •
s hone expressed that if he had - .objections to any elite
'provisions he would make them. known to its friends,
that they , might bp - remedied, 'if not destructive of the . •
measure ; that there was believed to he no disposition
on thepart of Congtherrand.certainly none on my part, - . •
to have bills presented to tilm' which he could not sp. •
prove... He never Indicated to - me, so far as I knew, to
any Of its friends, the leastobjection to any of the pro- •
•
visions of the bill till'after its pang& , And how mold •
he, consistently with himself?,' The bill was framed. . •
ns was supPosedinentireharmony with his vieses. and.
certainly in harmony with what he was theta and. has.
since been doing in protecting freedmen in. their, .civil
rightif all through the rebellious State& •
It was strictly limited to 'the, protection of .the civil
rights belonging to every freedman--the -birth-right of -
every. American citizen—and' carefolly avoiding con=
faring or interferhig with political rights or privileges
of any.kind. The bill neither. confers nor. abritigei the . -
rightS - Of •any one, but simply declares that. in 'civil
rights there shall be anequality among all' 'classes of
citizens.' arid that all alike shalthe subject-to the same
punishment..' Each 'State. ao it does not' abridge the
'great fundamental rights belonging. under' the Consti
tution. to all citizens, maYgrant or withhold euelichrit- .
rights as it pleases. All thatie required la that, in this • .
respect, ite•laws shell be hapintinl ; and yet this is the
bill now returned with the' President's objections: and
inch , objections I What are . they ?.' That "in all our
history,•in all our experience 'as a people. living ender
Federal and State law& no such system as that control ,
plated b the details of - this bill has ever 'beforebeen
p aye I not already - thorn - hi the action of the Pres
ident himself, through Gen. Sickles declaring that "all
- lawsehall be applicable . alike te all inhabitants." and
invariona acts of CoOrem a precedent -for every pro
vision
•-.•
of this bill?"'. -"The detail of 'the bill," says
the President: - "establish Mettle security of the colored •
race safeguards which go, infinitely beyond any that the ; ,
General Goiertinient has. ever provided teethe white .
race." - With what truth this can be said of a bill_Which . . -
declares that the civil rights and the punishment of all
race& Incieding. of course; the, colored, shall be the '-
same as those "of white persona," let - an
- !`They;" (the details) earn the President, - ..Interfere
With the municipal legislation of the.Stetes :, with the
relations existing exclusively between a. State and Its , ,
citizens: or between the inhabitants of the carne State
an abarption and assumption of power.by the General ,
Government, which,- acquiesced in. must - sap' and de
o/troy our federative-system of . ltmited powers,. and'.-
break down the harriers which -preserve the rights of
theStatei. 1. - , It is smother 'step, - or rather shide,lowaid
centralization. and'. the concentration - of all.legielattrs •• .
powers in the National Governtitent... •: • •‘. •
All ihlele , said bya _President who,-by flat;
betted through General Howard, eistadde an - act of, the
Legislature - of and -by another. order,.
through • Geeral Terry:' an act of the'
&later& and forbade any magistrate, or civil. officers '
from attempting lexecute It, who. through General
Canby, ordered the court. to„,stvmend suits
against persona charged, with offeseeslor which white
versales were.nre outdated 'and 'We in kriowthepen
alty.vibich.WCittldhave been visited . upon State pdgee
or official/ for a violation of any of these orders. • •
A , Prealdent sneer vebeing;li provision' of the
..
freedmen's bureau bill, beause it secured to the own,
pants of land under Major :General Stierman's order.
possession for the limited period-of three years.'himaelf
-leafed =Order, within lees than thirty days '
.through EL AV, Smith. issalstant Adjutant
'daring that - grant& ollands-.-totheifre people: in
complience.with Gen,; .histman's speniStleld orders.
N o , IS, dated „hinteiry-101h.
- beregarneii as'
goodaa . said! Well,Mary we exclaint.:lte.vieie of
these acts of the President.th hie own hinptnage, when
dinned= a veto of President Buchanan:. ellconalefro
cy . thon aleundmuchto, be wthilied,,,thit way to be
In View, of these fath&whois itthitta hnisilauediwrsi
the barriers :of thee !Rotel.. and . roallitoLatridef toward
tt,Coogntss.-Wthe *whir oriel'
bill: or thiPzeindelit..who, , .ssithinif.law t dearsognenc
to'tdmveltfat gmttee:-..powerel :a:inferred by.
thhvbilly .- Let ft liald;tbat the Powldatilcoe:.
clam PosTur,--
He told us In.ble isinoitatatavagallod.the war !wacciver:
and,vehether;beek4OC, ;no , lochletitil power. ere
.vested the Conithintlast;la firs Preeident, either - as
President be; . ndia-bitaderett of the army The
4w•
oneollar. azia s S:Libt l ,caming inbi..exccuteet
'pewee vested ..,'Coratittititca• In the:ain't:4=s°st
.or that:rifted asp any. deptcpnentor Officer
The President rbitilied:•tti.elmitti oat his few:
•••