The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, September 01, 1866, Image 1

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    TEEMS of TUE ir7VERS7 JOURNAL.
TERMS7-S2 75 Per ...men, payable in adrance—
is3 00 if not Paid in advance: •
Than terms will be strictly adhered to hereafter.
TO CLUBS:.
Three coplee to one elidreea tin advance) . $7 00
'Sir" " " ' .13 00
Fifteen . - 30 00
clabsubEmiptiong mast Invariably be paid to advance:
sot:II:CAL will he tarnished to Carriers and others
et $4, 00 . 1r.1r 100 copic, cash on delivery. ' •
rr-Clerry men and Sehool Warho' will be fin-Mab
el with the JOl/11611L at: V. 50 In advance, or „id 75 if
p within tho year--oar one year full rates: •
Rates of Advertising: .
. Fora lines. nen:rime data, one insertion, 75 els., find
stOseguentinsettious Zcents. One square of T lines
a 111.4, for lor ti insertions ; 3 insertions
Si 25: snlitwinent Inmtiorm, - 25 cents per seinare.-
Larger otes . ln proportion. . • • • •
. .
• • 1101CPB3-•Two TATLEZ. BTX. TRULTE.
Three Una% with date, - $l5O $2 00 P5O 25 0 0
Seem tin.•lt. awl .2 401- 4 00 .710 It' 0 0
Two plasm* or 14 lines, 500 000 10 00 12 00
Three " "21 - h 100 , 800. 34 00 20 00
•. • • 28 - 00 In 00 24 00
Five. •• "15 - 000 1000 10 nO 28 00
Six " "42 " "1050 -ISOO2O 00 85 00
ee trier rolumn 14 00 18 0 -80'00 45 00
Hal( column, 24(0 3000 50 00 7500
003 column, 40 00, 50 00 so oo .350 op
Linn: fiver a square, 15 cents per line. .S.pet.tal Noti-
C 15 per levl. Li;;hor. Local Notice!. 20 cents a Tine,
COAL man sevommataDiSmoihial
Terminus of the Philadelphia & Reading it. D., on the Delaware, at'Philadelphia.--Piers for the Shipment of Anthracites.
QUINT/RD, SAWYER, ez WARD,-
9 Pine Street, Neiv York.
1,18 Walnut Philadelphia.
42 Kilby " lao4ots
COAL OF ALL KINDS BY THE CARGO.
Jan ”7. el,
Pier NO. -14
NEW YORK & SCHUYLKILL COAL Co.,
StllFP!={l OF
BROAD MOIINTATN , JILACAHEATH, AND
SUPERIOR. AEI) ASH COALS.
.1 28 Er;iutila'e, Place, New York.
OFFICES: va27 Walnut stieut, Philadelphia.
J •
S. C. Thwing •A; Co., Aals. 77 State
.r,S 43- • . 'Boston.
Pier No. 12
EtArNE PAC!. P. Ki..l.t.V.R. J. 1.. NurrtNo•
BORDA, OILER, & NUTTING,
Athippers of Conti of the bro.( _Quolithrm
from. Port. Richmond & Windmill
• liplund.
R. BORDA.•jj
HrtiLER, 3121 Walnut St., Phllnklphla.
JAMES 1.. NUTTING, 30 Rilby St,
11. XL Agt., %min 61, Trinity Buitl., N. Y.
Anguk. .
. Pier No.. 10 Pars Richmond
JOHN I R. - WHITE dr.SON,
..HIPPERS'.OF COAL,
No. 316 Walnut Street,' Philadelphia. • .
•I,Erom FOICSTORAGT: AND BALE OV.t /AL: .
No. :100 West Thirteenth St.,
New VA.....
'third Avenue and Porty-ninth St., New Yotic. •
. Wharf, Providence, Rhode Wand. •-
A isga, , t 4. 'Gil
PHILADELPHIA. &t.
SC II LI I,IL NAVIGATION.
Shipping 'Wharves for ANTHRACITE COAL at
Creennieb, Delaware River, Philada..
LEWIS AIIDENRIED &. Co.,
MIENTS FC43 THE SALE OF. tnic
Wolf Creek Diamond Coal Co.'s Dia
mond Red Ash, and
Black Heath White Ash Coals,
rilus Walnut Street, Philadelphia
OFFICES: 110 New York.
- .04 ireeet, .13of-ton.
Feb 17,'06
•
- ♦Vbnrf No. 2.
•
JCEPPLILR & BRO.
•
(N. E. erfr. Walnut s& Fourtlists., Phila
OFFICES: .1 :15 Pine Street • New York.
Proildener
DAVIS PEARSON '.SIV Co.,
minus AND ISIIIPPVitS Of TIIN
OICISIIRATED LOCUST MOUNTAIN WHITE ASH
and SPOIIN VEIN' •.
RED ASH C-OAL.
No. 13S Walnut, Street, Philadelphia.
OFFICES No. 111 Broadway, Room No. ti Trinity
Building, New York.
No. 11 Doane Stmt.,
.WHARF-GREET WICII, DELAWARE AVENUE,
AVI rEAARIN t MLA, mmANpit DAVI, AMMAN")
AIIDENRIED, NORTON & Co.'
Miners and Shippers of •
0 A. •L
LOCUST .MOUNTAIN'—from Ilizat Dnr.r.. COLLIERY.
SIIAMOKINfrom ENTERPRIAR COLLIERY. •
GEORGE'S CREEK CUMBERLAND—from the CON.
BOLLUATION MINCE Or MARYLANIi. •
/.3
11S Walnut street: -Philadelphia:
OFFICES: 119 Broadway, New York.
134 State Street, Boston.
.‘ April 7...66 14-U
GAIN, HACKER & 000 K;
LOCUST 'OAP, •
LOCUST MOUNTAIN,
BLACK ILEATU.
Also, dealers in other flod qualities at •
WULTA AND RED ASEL . COALS.
No. 214 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, and , . Woodland
Whams, Schuylkill Riper. •
T 10IfAi3 Ceti. Morena I:harm JESSE M. COOR,
WM. F. MOODY, Shipper and Agent,
Schuylkill Hav 43 en, pa.
Havel
Febrr.Ary
HAAS & IiIIENIZER,
MINERS AND :SHIPPERS OF THE CELEBRATED
SPORN . VEIN . RED ASH •COAL I
Pormerly mined by ittoacar 8; Co., which we guaran
tee to ship free /rum any mixture with other Coal.
ALSO sole agents for the sale of Geo. W. Any.
does Superior: Pine Forest White
and I , lpotita and Level, Veins Red Ash Coal,
seht:h he is NOWprepared to ship.
, S Walnut St., Philnda. • '
• f Ripon:l63 Trinity Buildlt
D. B. HAAS. W3l. 13ItENIZER..
Feb to, t 66 61y.
J,. TOIVIT,INSON I
SHIPPERS 'OF
RED AND- WHITE ASH COAL .
By f3chaylkfll Canal,)
213 WALNUT ST.,
• PIHLAWELPIIIA. •
Reshipping Wharves "
Foot or ALLEGHENY AVENUE, Port' Riclitriond
and foot- of LAUREL STREET, Hensiugton.
March 17, '6 11-1 v
DOS:NPR, • j IV. P. RYON, - •
PrX. VERY= . w. K. RANDALL.
J. J. CONNEIR Co.,
KIN FHB AND SLIPPERS OF THE
CELEBRATED LOCUST MOUNTAIN
COAL!
opre:—Pier lee. 19 Pt. sicLmuod, Phila.
No. 309 *alum st. ! Phila.
No. 63 Empire Building, N. 1.
.
J, 3. Cosaau, (late Canner & Patteraoe,) Lee.na.
Mountain, thranicille. • •
AiakEttboN LONlit Mountain, Big Mine. Bun;
near Centralia, Colombia Co.
CONNER. & Cd.,,Loeust.Spring.
-May 19, '66
nOTUKULEG.
110THERMEL & SHAVER,
xtrasa AND 11111117318 ar
ANTHRA,fIITE at BITUMINOUS
CO_ALSI
111 - Sole Azentit for the Elsie of the CELEURAiII)
I'ST MOP , ' AIN COAL, from the CitryFekidA L'ou..ruty,
- o,7ices:-3 $1 Walnut Street,' Philadelphia.
1 1 Broadway. and
11 Donna Street, 'Benton.
ialand; Phila.; Port Richmond.
Mar 19, '66 . 26-11
BROAD TOP.
GI4.I.NEItAL OFFICE
• ornire eimuoiritti
BROAD TOP ASH
Semi-Bituminous
•
COALS, .
No. 104 'WALNUT STREET,
PIEMADELPIECA.• -
ROBERT MRS ?OREL, Manager.
CONNECTING OFFICES
16 Travrier Building, Seaton, Mass.
3!.1 Trinity - New York.
Feb. 13, ,G 3
•
BROAD TOP At'llilTp :ASH .
- CALDWELL, GORDON ts •4304
No. I EJ IVolout Street,
No. ill 11, road vrtly, - NOsr York,
No:1.14 Mato Street, Bellel oB 9
OTer a superior quality Of this celebrated Ooal from their
EDGE BILL COLLIERY,
Mined and shipped exclusively by them. •••
AVM 4. • • • - 1417 .
LORBERRY CREEK.
LOILItI4IIIIV COAL.
CWe, the undersigned, .havin consolidated' oar Thrite
Coiled ea in the Lorherry /fell, on, will ttereafter tra.l/5 •
, act ourhushuxe under the name of ' •
•
MILLER, GRAEPP &Co.
• • ' MILLER, STEER &CW.:
GRAEFIr & NUTTING. . ••
Mr. - MULTI`, a member of our Ann. having-agenda •
Led hinewlf ulth J. it. BLAKISTOM, will reside in
Philadelphia and all oar coal shipped by tide-water will
be ander the 'exclusive - control' of . BLAKIETON
,
GRAEPP & (XL ' • '
By Increased care and attention in its pram' „' aration, we.
hope to maintain the reputation of our celebetted tor._
pie's. Purchasers abroad can lel) , etpaar i l . latag
lkippe4 la the at : be , order: ; ;
9 ) 4llkrialQi),..
fob, 11 l IS, • . :
..„ ,12
TUB
Vol. 35.
-.Pier N0.'15. - •
BT. AnSTON, GRAEIT &
. NUMBS AND earerzsti or
LORBERRY, /AND LOCUST NOUITAIN , COIL;
Shippers of other apptoved qualities of
WHITE AND . BED ASH COAL
. - 318 Wetont Street; Philadelphia. •
9 Trinity Building; Nets York.
Cor. of KUby et Doane Street, Boston :
Feb: 14, , tl3 •
LEWIS AUDENIHEO & CO.,
Wholesale Dealers in the hest varieties of
Aritia*Oite and. Bltnxninl uB Coals.
. .
• - r 205 Walnut Street, Philadelphia.
OFFICES r 110 Broariway,lslew York. - •
1.4111111ry Street, tkottorr. '
` Pioneer Shipperf; from Hiii , Abethport.,
of -
LEHIGiH t SPRING . MOUNTAIN, HAZLETON; AND
COUNCIL RIDGE COALS.. • C 59 is. :
Pier No. 9.
BANOROFt, • LEWIS & - Co,,
T UNP.IIB AND HIIIPPELS nF VIM
Celebrated ASIILAND COAL;
FROM MAIIANOY MOUNTAIN
OFFICE-111 Walnut Street, Commercial
Philadelphia.
New 1 ork Oftlee-71 Cedar Street. 'lloston ditee-7
Doane Street. [Oct. 23, 'SS a -
..
J. W. DIJNKI,EI Co„
• SIIIPPEES OF . •
.
. IA
Pier No. 19, Port jiielimond.'
• • AGENTS YOR - •
lianOlieter Red Ash , Now. Haven and Lo
test Mountain White Ash,
..
OiFICE.2O.S#'WALNUT ST, PIIILADELPIIIA.
Juiy 21, , G 6 • .• • - -
ELIZABETIPOR7', :-:;:::
• 2 . " ' " ' COAL.
- A. T. STOUT & CO.;
fEucCessors 'to STOUT 5z VAN.WICIELE,) •
Miners and Shippers of the celebrated FULTON fLE
BUS ll) COAL, from the Ebbervale Colliery, near Ha
.7.10.431i, Pa., and dealers in the beet varieties. of
ANTHRACITE AND BITUIDNOTS COALS.
Delivered direct from the - mines or on hoard of-vcn
eete at
TRENTON, N. J., ' ELIZARETIIPORT, N. 4.-
N. DRUNSWICE, N. 3., POST Pd,
OFFICES 4-44 0[7.46 Trinity Building,
11.11'Benadway, New fork. • •
A. T. STOUT. S. VAN WICISLE.. . G. Lai Sven.
NEW YORK.
SAMUEL BONNELL; Jr., :
'OFFERS FOR 1\1.13 ,
Are o~inRR
. COALS ;
• •'. -
Wyoming, Lacltavommi.& Scranton;
Delivered on board Vei , eele at Diem: Noe. 4 & S,
•.. ELIZABETUPO#T, 11.: J.
43 tRENITY• BITILDING,
111 Itroadumy, Srew fork. •-
May 12;,'66 ' - • tfl-ly
lUCIiARD I.IECKSCHER., J. FRED. A. MASON
- lIECKScIIER ItIASON,' -
ANTHRACITE & 13ITLIMINOUS
C 0 -A :
OFFICE-NO. 71. BROADWAY. (MIME BU.ILD
-11%,) .R00*:34, NEW. YORK:
April 2101
0 "• 16-tf
DANIEL .PACKER. • • E. A. PACKER,
DANIEL - PACKER. & Co,,
3111(8203 AND lIIIIPPIRB Or
Lehigh. • Schuylkill, Wilkesbarre,
Lackawanna, Cumberland,
and Elk Hill Gas COM
• Company .
COALS.
OFFICE—No. 4 Pine Sweet, New Itoik.
October 14, '65 , 41-ly
DAY, HUDDELL &:Co.,
MINERS An SHIPPERS OF
ANTHRAOITE & BITUMINOUS
C 0 A_ .
No. 109 Walnut St, Philadelphia.
111 Broadway, (Trinity Building,) N. Y.
7 Doane Street, Boston.
Fob 10, .60 -
. .
JAM W. CAL DWELL, C. B. CoN.u.r. Wm. REED:
• CALDWELL. CONiiNT.ii-- Co.,
119 ktroadwity, Corner -Cedar Kt., N.. 1(
. •••• WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
C 0 .-. L. • .S
LEH Riff, COUNCIL RIDGE, -WILKESBARRA:
• MAHANOY, RED ASH, LOCUST MOUNT..
• AIN, CUMBERLAND, BROAD TOP
• AND OTHER •YARIETIES. ;• •
Feb 24, .66 , • • - air • •
1110 S. HULL at co.,
DMUS AND merles or
SPRING NOMA 'LEHIGH
COA.L
Yorktovrn, Carbon County, Penns,
OFFICE'S
3911 WALNUT Street, Philadelphia,
J A NE/WILLS, ILTatertre Coaster, Pi.
July 23, .64, 80•
El3C2Eall
DEDERICK'S
00AL HOISTING MACHINE;
• Pateated April 12," 1802. .
This celebrated and -unequalled COM Holding Ma
chine has_ been in succeesinl operation for over three
years, an. the min:malty large number already sold are
giving the most perfect, satisfaction. It is simple and..
durable, having no gearing at all is rapid in its opera
tion: and very easy for, the horse. . Descriptive Circa.
lar. containing_letters of commendation, pricee,.&c.,
sent free, on application. • -•
, L. & P: K.' DEDERICK, Sole Manufacturers..
Albany Agricultural:and Machine. Works,
Itiamit 24, .66 11-6 m . - Albany, N. Y.
nCE - HASK EX'S, for holding' scraps .of
piper for sale at .11a N . NAN'S Bookstore.
JOHN IL DIEH M,
• •
- . SCREENS;:COAL: -•
-
Of the Latest amid lOsat Approve," s ty l ei ,
:. • Theanderelgeed allele tismietical fietien - Banufac - -
hirer, informs Coal Operators. and others, tbat he is'
marnifaciuring a new SCIMBEN, patented
4writl, 1354, and-smother' patented -*wad& -OW
B GUARANTEES THAT ,THE NMI WILL .AL.
RETAIN 173 ORIGINAL SIZE UNTIL' EN
RELY WORN OUT. ' . . -
_, • • .
-.- e respediallysoliciti a =Broome of the pstroia;
heretofore so liberally bestowed upott . bloi,
. L
. •
JOHN R.DIEHM, ' . .
• Thillroad - S rear of Esterlri Hardware Stole, • --
Nov. 4, V6-44-tt : - • • - POTTIMLLE. Pd. • .
SAFETY LAMPS or the most
01 approved Davy .Patterna. for worlde . made of
Inspected Gauze:- AlimotterCinnej.Lamp or
Boo6illl and ilk' for **(irking. Also Iron and Copper
Giuza, an of which will be sold:wholesale. and retail
by - B. BANNAN_,,Pothreille., .
sviAmp: Genial; both bon and VotiPeP..-Xel.d.9
wide. always oil bard. Odd Mel* Inadelo ord er.:
100 WEICZ 6811 810L'TIN6,`ditetea
- =-, ',.= ' ""-,,- - , - I' - •'' - ';
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ENEIt:AL - ADVERTISER
. .. . .
, ~.
...____ _____.......
A ir i i ttit.
t i e o uvary tea raii4 of.higieeiss ,.
notice. ' .
. 74 :: : n i i an stock o ., 11:11up 0B ,
Tins.
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- ,is more extenthothaa thataf anyather aka in thin :• •
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..I WU tea* Yin toile:vs th e Bowels of the Reilly ' oil beliti oeffreek ale Cam of 11 4 8 &tab 'aid(
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—........... p rim l y tot:jobbing, Dettc a piiilical Printer ourself
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.
• VILLE • C
J )IN, 0 ...
LISITED EVERY SATURDAY .• MORNING.-•EY 'BEN AIN BANKA P TTS . ' • •
' • 1,.5. 1111. n. PLI.4 . - .. CO . UNTY, PENNSYLVANIA.
.. _. we 0n5 wi1 d ,..g.,... z. ...........,. ,i, 7 . any gat :: ,
.. . _ .
_ . . .
... . . .
Pier No. - 11.
WHOLENtLII. inr4LERB IN
LEHIGH.
biANUFACTIIMIR OF
.OASTNER, STIOVIEY & 'WELLINGTON
itfillers au4'Shippers of Coal !
• u rniside (from their Banal& CoL at Shumokin):
Lewin Vila (Red AO).
Uncurl flairatwia (Wh
I ito
, a : . Trinity Building, New York;
onticgs - :{ 21.6 Walnut Streit, Philadelphia.
t . lb Kilby Street, Boston, ,
Wharf No. 6, Port •Richmond,
Feb 24, , G 6. - [May 16;''03-20.if] ,
V,4 NDUSEN, - LOCIUrrA N -Co.,
!ACtIST MOPNTAIN„ LOCUST GAP, •WPIXEStiA.R
RE, LEHIGH, AND ()TIM.
WHITO . AND RED. ASH COALS,
Agents for the We of the celebrated Geioiges Creek
Canibtrtaiid. Con!, from the .15fines of.the Con
solidation Coil and 'lron Company of Maryland. . -
.1 - Pt. Richmond,
. .
• ' Elizabeth rt=
Sniveled M'irenvM3:P l3- - • .
. • Balthimre. •
• - -
LGeorget.own. . • .
' :. r 207 Walnut street, Phlladehihts. . ...
Orvices: . .{.Trinity Bqi:lcling, New . York.
•
t Dosuo St., Boston.
-Feb. 11..0. • , :.. - .
. . . •
& CO.,
. .
. -YINHBB AND fAtIPPUIGS Or
AND RED A S H ANTHRACITE
. .
C. 0 • A: L. 2 ]--
(No: VOW Walnut/Street, Phlkulelphia,
OFFICES: { No. 79 Broadway, No. I, Rector' Sr., N.Y.
rifelm no o a n ne d t . St., Boston, •••
- - .-rgriiTinr-virl fifi
Otillit/ juii.s.sAACl:
• .
H. .SCHOLLEITBEHGER ACiENT,'
•
Miner and Shipper of the Celebrated
Blanc Beath. White &eh and: Peaked Moan
- .twin Fret - Burning - . •
- PINK ASH: COAL'
' P. 0: A DDRESS-Rarravtwe or AfixEitavica, 6erotga
kill County, Pa. ". • • • .
April 12.'62 .• 15-tr
J A NUE S J., C OWN E .111,•
Miner and Shippcc the.celebrated. '
LOCUST MOUNTAIN COAL.
County, Penn*.
15.59 ' . 27-Iy.
ALTHOUS.E & FOCHT,
MINERS AND simpEns OF THE CELEBRATED
ROSTON. RUN LOCUST . MOUNTAIN
COAL,:
. .
PIIILADA., 21636' Walnut St; N. TOrk, 111 Broadway
Agt. at Now lork—,4l. 414 EU. •REPPII.IIEIdt..
DA:It,. MUD DEL dle, Co., Port.hichthoad. -
.._ - . .
March 24, 'NJ . . • 12.4312.6 m.
_ -
J . ::: 11- . E, CIC'
MINER AND SHIPPER OF THE.
Centralia ; or Locust • : Mountain
COAL. I. .
•
-Poet OM& AthIrem,.ASIILAND. Schuylkill cicurity,
Pa., ofCentrrilis, Columbia, County. • • .
Julie 4, %a ' . 22-
. CHAS. J. & J. H. EAST.COK,
SUIPPRIIS or • - -
WHITE AND. RED ASH COAL
COAL
, AOISICTS TOE TIIE BALK OF MS
BD/IMO:DR COAL AND IRON dOMPAIMS
RED ASH .SELAMOKM . .. OOAL,
- OFFICE-- : -131 StREET,
- • . piTTLATaiLPRIA . • •
July 1, .
EEFRANKLIN - LOMB .E Y
"VEIN VOA', . •
My East Franklin Lorberry Coal is now 'sold exclu
sively by Messrs. CALDWELL. GORDOR dp Co., who
are my sole Agents, Parties ordering from theta, may
always depend Upon getting a pure article.
o. 119 Walnut St., Philadelphia. •
OFFICES:No. 111 Broadway, Trinity Building,'
New York. • .
. No. 144 State Street, Beaten.
•
. HEISRY
Tremont, March 2903 . . • 13-...
COAL LEASES...The •obseribere‘ have
.' determined to make several leases on their prop.
erty, known as the Xerwroxv Paoriary. situated
Schuylkill County,' and in the immediate vicinity of.
TIIISCAIitHf.A. The ground has been frilly developed, and
those desiring a Brat rate colliery, can obtain one, with..
out making any further explorations of the same.
. None need make application unless capable of erect.
Mg all the improvements: • .
Apply to GIDEON BAST, Schuylkill Ram,
Uounty, Pa., or to DAVIS PEARSON, 201 Walnut
street, PhEaclelphla.
. January T. '65:
•
COAL.. •-• COAL.
THE anderid aura in -now prepared to
orderg for Leitigb, Wyoming, Oita,
mok in, bebnylkill;• White and Red - Aob . ,
Cumberland. and Rae Coal—bem Rauch
Chunk on the Lehigh Canal :Schuylkill Haven. Port
Carbon . and . Port .Clinton on . the. Schuylkill Canal,
and from Ainboy,, Trenton, -Hoboken and Port Rich
mond, for Rant and North.. '
11170rdera sent:will.receivei prompt attention.
W. J. HARLAN,
Rooms 70 and 71, Trinity Building, New York.
Jiine 20, 16 .. . •• . 26.1 y -
• 0. 0 A• .1.; • I, A N
filo I.IIAMIC.-The . SchuyikillCoal Company are'
A. now prepared to make leases on their tan& In
Foster Township; Schuylkill County: These lands are
located on the very best portion of the Heckseher Ba
sin, having ever font miles run on.ths..Daniel. Crosby.
Lealor, and all th,e.veliss' icnoWn.in - that Main; both
above and below water level.- Favorable leases with,
an abundance of timber for mining porpOses,'-will now
be made to good tenants, ; on application to 11. H.
BODY...President of the Company, ND. B Wall Street,
- New.York.. . • • .• Junel3, ,
Read This I.2*Ri
J..R . ..'I7ROXEL - Li.'S
°NEAP CHINA, GLASS, AND
CROCKERY. STORE,
Oentre Street, Opposite liortiper House
POTTaVITX.E..
The citizens of Pottsville and neighboring lowa
villages and hamlets, one and all, are invited to call
and examine my stock of wares before bnying else ,
where, aa larn not to be - undersold, - and can - Ininiah
Housekeepers with every article they wary in my line
of business. In the stock-of - .
.Fietich • China, - - - -
will be found Tea Setts; Dinner -State, Card and Cake
Baskets, ,Watch Cases, Seger Holders, Match Safes,
Motto Mugs; Motto Clips and Saucers, Vases, Colognes,
China Sett/ for Children, and a general variety nt Toys,
.. .
' . Glass'Wlire.,
.
Choicest, , latest patterns, consisting of Table' and
Bar Tumblers, Champagne and Wine Glzusses, Ale and
Beer Glasses, Decanters, Bar and Bitter Bottles 'Gob
lets, Plates, Castor Bottles, Pitchers and Creams; Cel
eries, Sum Bowl Spoon Holders, Syrup Canis, Fruit
Bowls; Fruit Jars, Cake Stands, Kerosene Lamps of
every varlety,lemp Cbitrineys, Lantern% Candlestick%
Candy Zara - der.., &a.. .
.•• . •
• • ••
Crockery '.Crockery!!
A fellasaortmert of IRONSTONE CHINA, of dd . .
/emit palterne. In aetta or Angle pleoakto snit the pub
lic, A large aaeortmcza of cormou C. C. Ware, which
I will 801 l at law llgum.
Yellow. and Stone *are..
PaMink Dishes. Pie Diehee. Calleudera; Milk Pus,
Jelly Moulds, Ptebers. Tea rots.' • 13 7tIcr ruts. Milk
.11usetc., etc. • -
iscrico - .
1118:—Tollet Betts, Ourtors.fficlidars
and Foot Baths; quart and Pintniskez Coal Oil, az.;
ac. Wilde Jars. of every description. *
.•
• xiciti 1.1 can sell you Goods at - City Priers,
Um saving you freight ' ' P.ll sod eee if it Is ant so.
• • ' • R. TROIMI4,.
• Merit. 'at. . • ; • - - • • : •
Cuteo by
SEDDOWEi DYEREPSLI. TRQOHES.
A Perf6 . :t Core, or Vw Hefty Refunded.
These Troches not only give Immediate relle.hat are
mire to erect a permanent cure in Dyapepili. They
are not a prgative, and therefore their ' use does ' not
create a necessity for the habitual nee of Cathantra.—;
They cause no sletmese - of the sir:Minch. or griping of
the botv.ele, and areoerfectly harmless to the mot del-
.
'They will immediately correct a Sow' Si :
imutch. mire.
Flatulence. Heartburn. Sickness or Pain in the SW
mach, Costiveness.' Belching of Liver, :Corn
plaints; Headache, and in„ fact aU. those disagreeable
'and dengerotutsymptouni Of this dbmeakyetwurgt
one 'for the pleasures and duties of ' • •
Weak and delicate persons who have been injured by
the use of powerftd etlinnlanta and 'purgatives, will.
And them a mild, safe and sure restorer of thedigestive
or•_!)__ . their T 1 strength and rigor. , - .
the_PrOprietore, •' • • _
z-7ar r. J. 19' ERSLOOT - CO.. therilista. •-• •
. . _
- . , 718 Habit street, Philidelphia.
• Sole ..Amt for Schuylkill County, Henry - Saykit,
Draggle. ....Arne 18. VIL 98,1110 .
Ipriaieb lballintidpreatand :Heti Suiched Linen
.Eandlcerchie,ll6 cbOsp WApRIDI itRRICIVB:
dunete.'64:-. . - Wks
Drina* at WALKER ik PRIORS. Mink 9 4a.qp eta.
S. - lor bast trends. 4100,41,41,
• eltdom for may; Juke aiimit;zoinii lima
N.P OMB sad Lime. hi Idiom Mods. fined
IA 'OWN* ratn.by _ ---• .„
Gfr i ali f y W an it o PlMAti=e4cit
orauf . ' 7FrAiPt 11 1 164H4k, -
S/VT - UR_DA:Y, MORNING, SPAPTEMn_ETt 1, 1866:
BUSINESS CARDS.
• •
Ricriarir rimipts.aPnre; - • • • -
. CIVIL AND BUITTirG 11316nliKER,
hrqucts' Collieries, and examined' Mineral and' Oil
Lands.
.Orrica-113 Illaltahsg, Cesare
.111s is tiptoesile Episcopal Church.
TI T. 11/1S1LITCII: Civil and Sliming
. 11 :10 R pri veer, rettaville, Pa. • •
tr •-
OFrICE on td Boor of Geo, Wire 'Building, Cen
e Stmt. •
cranium; :“Korusiss, Civil, avid
itdsaelta Wding,. "Second and
11411.11113,.._ JOSEPH'S. HARRIS.
July SO .. • • &lineman 423 ' 39.
8112,10/1111. IPeusimile. Pa.; lase
& • of the Peaciaylnala State Geologleal Srieeel,
plorea lathe, mines, ae. : • -
October 13, .56 • • 4141 • •
vnSANK canvas; Ural Estate Agent,
.111.411ANOY -CITY; Btheyikill Ceeety, Pa.
Ititiettee ddreae—"Mahanoy City P. O . " '
Maw/ill% . 124 •
A fileareir--.Wer Mae 'Pereksee wed Male
of Bela .Ratate • baying anti selling Coat; taking
charge of Coal lends, Mines, de., and collecting rental.
Mice Makuultange Street, Pottsvllle'
April
a; 410 14. - - • I
- .
w .. sTsin - 1 --- ww • .
=MG 4WD MECISING PRGLISTiIEa.
. . .
OMl'o—Alums - eV. Bendin Masia
btiiiiiii
Street, - ..IPon g; ,ville. • .
H+7.418
joistr.tin w. amiktrar,
chrit wad :
roTrEIVILLB, Orrsot 2,: Bum= TiacActi.
. marchioo66 : • • • . ' 1(Kr:.
AN. P 0:1-1N
BUTCHER, .
•rEattrket St., stortli aide. t wiesiof2L . etttre
POTTSVILLE: .
.• • •
Choke Fresh Beef; Sutton. 'Veal; at., .applied to
customers. • -
The Ostronage of the pnbltets respectrally Both:Rest
14, , 66 - • . • 15-tt
M.
LLWA • 01:COXII, ,
" • and JEWELRY,
ALWAYS ON HAND
11,"111 Wads or. Magical Instruments, violin Strings,
Rua Vtol Strings, Guitar and Str i ae onetmtly
on band. , - Jab BC4 414:—S
WWI. E.: BOYEIE. • • • :
WROIMATZ - AND RETAIL DEALER IN
T08A.00.6 0 , . " PIPE S
- AND. CIGARS • -
• - Centre Eli., Oppookir Tirein ÜBE,-
POT*BIFILLE; P.
Feb. 91..a1.- ' - UV
• FLANALIAU/W... . QUO. W. iv/mm=lmm.
HAUSEA:WiLD.E.RM,IITH I
• . ' • (Stic==ors to F. B. Haeseler,) . •
• . WINILINALZ AND RWitATL DNALINRI IN. '
• - TOBACCO, SNUFF and EiEGAB.S . ,
NEARLY OPPOSITE THE MORTIMILII 'HOUSE,
Pottsville, Pia.
.041 . • • . 3-t1 -
VIEW- .800 IL , AL N D STATIOIVIEBT
le '' • ISTORII,
The suldersignedare now. prepared to thrnish a fine
assortment of drat class Stationery, at their
New. Store on Centre Street, four doom below the
Episcopal Church. Printing; Binding , •ind Stamping to
, •
• IPerfuntery, - . •
• 'Fancy Soaps,
• . • lichee! Books.
• Toy Books, • •
, . _ • are, ike.; -
. Orders prompHy.attended - to. Give . mm a call.
BOSBYSHELL BROTHER.
C. A. Ekvinesums.. 0, C. Bosarsuatt.'• .
Pottsville, April 28, `65. iti•tf •
JOSEPH Digus,
:Waiekmaker do Jeweler, •
CT.ITTRE Err.,-Powavilms. PA., -
(three doors above the • Mortimer lionse„)has now oil
handailarge and well selected imaortruent of
Haver Warts , • , . •
Of the latest styles. and 'Atheist standard of Silvei.---
AIPO Silver Plated. Ware.' . Alo.rgeand general
variety of superior Plated Ware, such as Tea and Ta
ble Sugar Spoons, Oyster and Soup Ladles, Pie and .
Fish Knives, Cake Baskets, Blends. Castors,
Better Dishes,' Winters, Pitchers. etc., all of which
will be sold at the very lowest prkee. •
Silver bought and taken' in exchange.—
The highest price given. ~ March 8,,'66—e-
Encouragie • iloine Itilatiurstoteires.
CHARLES .KEILIFIEK
m#..airmaluncm.or
SALAMANDER SAFES
,; •
. - Second. Pottintille • • •
Announces to the business community of this
and the adjoining counties, that he .mannnte. E
tures SALAMANDER SAFES of all •sizes and I
kinds, warranted Fire-proof, whiCh, in point of .r.„
workmanship and finish, will compare . with
.those ob
tained from any other establishment in the cOnntry.
He always keeps safes on hand for sale, and will make
them any size, for Banking and. other Public Institu
dons, as cheap, if not cheaper than they can be obtained
from abroad. .
• He refers to Benjamin Haywood, George Bright, Thos.
Coach and A; Henderson, of this Borewh, who have
his Bates in use. ' amen, ,a3.444t
L. W. 130SBYSITELL I
AGENT FOR
LUBRIO OIL ITYORKS,
CONSTOBB & CO.
OFFICE.ANie. BOlurket Pittsburg Pit .
The attention of In pexticaliw be called to
the excellent Oils for Coal cam and Stationary Engines,
that we - are - now -- nitumnictewhig; Parties axing oar
Oils will and an immense saving. Trey will not gam
nor congeal In cold weather and aro entirely tree limn
grit. Our Oil &Ones, ' and "G". 011 tbr Coal
lairs, cannot be wallahs& Orders elionld be left at
Railroad •licket Mice, XL :Carbon,' or at BOBBY
BULL & BROS.. Book-stork Centre
The }insider Axle Grease. manufactured 1:1 , be, la
the best article in the market for greasing wagons,
The trade ' , applied on llbend termer •
1 0 /..IIOBSYSECEiLL, Agent.
Nov. 2.7. 4115 - 46- •
.& E. &IGO,
•
' .olncoessor7 to F. HaeseletA Bonj •
Dealers in Green Groceries, Previsions, Fee.
eign aint Doesestis Fruits, Fish, Oysters,
CORNER OP CENTRE AND NORWEOIAN Hrs.,
POTTSVILLE, PA. '• •
Every attention paid to ottality of articles sold. The'
patronage of the public is resrecgally
Jan 20, 416 ' -114,1
•
• CIEEAP,-.600D•3001ING; •
•
ABOUT HALF VIZ PRICE OF TIN
WARREN'S GENUINE PEBBLE ROOFING now
used more than any other. kind.' -It is, both Fire and
Water Proof; and will outlast two tin rods. while ft
costa only about half the price of tin. This roofing le
put oh by the subscribers, at short notice. .
BANNAN & WRENN, Pottsville;
It cannot bei put on roob pitching over 8, inches to
the foot. It can be put on W., if neceesary.. , .
- March 46 'B4. .
• 800.8 BIN_DEBY..
•
ALL khuts or Itoolts, Magardurle, Newspapers,
gethe . e 'with Binek.and Old Hooka rebound at abort
notice at oar Binder,. • -
All.klndsof Bleak Bonita 'ruled and hound is any
pattern at the Bindery, o[, the subscriber, • -
Send In your orders. B. }IOWAN._
PLUILBING 'AND GAS FITTING
ATTENDED TO IN ,ALL THEIR BRANCHES..
arcitanirais moionenwric..,o
Orders left at Dot stores of BIXEBTREINLL do BRO.,
and GEORGN BIRNST, Centro St. will. recetye
prompt attention.
/10rOld Bryn, 9opplir and Lead bought.
• • - GEOROEN. DOWNING, •
Corner of Sixth and Bdutylkill Avenue.
POOtrtile, Muth SRI
CHARLES MIESSE;.
tuarraertaaa or
. .
00111 ION AillD , - - FINE °ANDY,
AND mutat re •
•• " .
NEM VINE ESSENTIIN. OIL.FLITORS,
AND CONEECTIONEWEIDRUGS.
WEDDING CAMS prepa re d and lundsomely te
nse:welted. Parties sapplied - with all ktr.da of confect
)4° Ae I tdrSI I II I 4ViNCODGIiCANDY. sad gooda .
variety °fall kinds.of COCOA-NDT AND NOLAMES
CANDIES always on Wuxi, wholesale andr i eW
the FACTORY IN RAILROAD STREET, p
VILIAL PA. . • • . July 24.•66 110- •
•
'..GREAT BARGAINS ! •
SELLING. OUT AT ..ef bST
Rbeimbeciber Offers- teleell out at cost. Is entire
stock of Dry Goods, Notkone, end witch othei articles
u generally belong to dry good storm. The intention
is to deal attentude in lotteries., door, feed, and each
article' belonging to grocery stores. • • • •
To storekeepers or anti pone iondir itt iiin dry
good! be - offer egrest inducements. The of dry
Volk as band , it a Nell doe. Wetted one:. No on
igadr nu hand. atil and woman* for yourself. •
- $ 7 4 1 • ' 11,ABSEL112.
VEILING.;.
Would riniieethilly announce to the &bans of Potts;
-that he WM open a elan for
InsfractiOns on' the•
Every Tneaday sinryttinTimalign, front half 'past 7
until halt past 9 o'clock: ,
A,COI7ItBE OPT& Di:880Na" $8 to. •
ThoSie diebing_to take limns wlll please leave their
sildtees st Prof..DelPs' house, Iteroad street. or with
P. SOW, as Mr. lielhig Intendelopeelog the class as
soon as he has test achalms. Aug. 18, NSG -
: • J.A C ;:
.•
ROPE, TF_DMIOCIEDAGE 11,14=14,
- r4iNstiractric,.l!4.,
We resPecifullysolldt s abare;ot.ihe iatontexof thd
.busizion men at Bckayl.kl/1
&coy
Welders to Irni, Ka: K -8 0 11 geor asa
CoUlery Supplies is genera. f
-.. Ware Rooms .Rsilmsd smlOsatre - et . , Po:Steens.
- Ilklmatostm qt. - Dell to Won Ran. ' -
BROONEt,BROOMS;IL
Ti•tatuagitammoineittaisedit
'ln.sal im pr.our •
saw
,fiCesimilt we
ara=olllollll* reltitath o t et ,
**A i t e * * lltr ite :
11ita d ebittinitatj:
W I ! - 1 - 5 -: 0 11MO lici r
, ,
FERTILIZERS. •
1-I.OIJT'S
Superior Improied
Super-Phosphate of Lime
THOS.
sc}rcriLka,L HAVEN;
iviARK
Farmers and Dealers in Fertilizers will observe that I
hive adopted the above ''Tratle Mark," td show those
who .use myMnpur-Pbospbate, mute from the Raw.
Bone, that they are getting my mannfacture..
My pawns will please be careful 3'l'par-basing, that
the above "Trade Mark". Is. stam,ped. upon each bag, as
none other Ia genuine.' • • . .
I am now ready to- supply the alxive ..superi - or Fertlli'
'ter in large or - small quantities-In' new ling,s of 200
pounds each.. Also, always on hand, a stock of fine
Itaw Bone Bust—compost--for top dressing, Plaster,
&c.. arc. "A trade discount allowed to deatooL
The above Fertilizers ran be pnrchnaell at GEORGE
BRIGHT 4 SON'S Store, Centre St., Pottsville, who
th
are anorlat4 to act ea my Agent:
• • THOS. I,.TIOLT.•..Agt.
'POST OFFICE-ADORE-SS—Milos. E. rigoLT,
Airt., ticbayl a ill Haven, Pa; •
Feb 10, MG .
FXAmiNE.,THE BRAND.
FOR SALE - BY DEALERS GENERALLY
. . . ... .
ThrOghmit .
the Country. . ...
_..
-- •. • - • •
. • . .•• - . ... - • . .
Iltatorrd kreordlng fo . Att of Cortrefo, is the per The& by Allan k
Dkroiko. in - thrt Clarks OfOre of tho Dintrict. Corot of tho Uulto.l
Mateo, hi =0 for the Hokum Dbtriot of Peonsylvantal ' ' .
PRICE NOT ADVANCED.
835 per 2000 Ilbs;
Juno 16,.66 23-13 t,
BENEFIT TO FARNMRS I
1110110 PHILLIPS'
Improved MEli-PHOSPHATE of - Lime
M=rl:ict9rers Deivls
27 . N. Front ni.,bettreenTnntioet anal Arfit,•
PHILADELPHIA:• • .
14 . Bewley ht 'Whorl; and 94 SonittStrioty
• . • itA11 . .1431101{4 *a. • •
ONG REf4l3 having;repeoleq Die Internal Reve
‘...).•nue Law, taxing :Fertill?.ers aix per-rent.. I bog
leave to inform the Varmers that from thin tiny the
Rune per centage will Iw taken off the retail price of
•Nioro Phitfi pot MukTr-.Pho.phate.of Lime,
.v.iz,f $OO ea lees 6 per cent., making the, retail price
now $56.40 per ton- of I,ooe 11)0„, l'hiladelphia and
Baltimore., : .
Discount to Dealers. • •• •
MORO PHILLIPS,
• ' • • • • SolePraprietor and, hlanallictaier.
Philadelpni, August 1, law • • 1:1-31a '
STANDARD .
.Supei-Phogplaate
.of. 1 4 irne.-
Mie ilitw-Bone - ..SuperPhosblaate .
Warrautpd•free (row Adalterptingl
• - . . "ltlaterial. ' • . •
This valuable Fertilizer has stood the, test of trial
during the past season, and htut been proven to be
very superior
,article. All who have used it at-
Price $56 per, 2000 lbs.
The numufacture is conducted under the direction
and control of Mr. 0. Alfred bmith, late - Amide= Pro
fessor of Chemlatry at the _Agricultural College of
Pennsylvania, who _will spare no effort to make his
&fanner beyond dispute, the altandesrd elope-
Phosphate of this tountrt ,
MILLER & • SMITH'S
PURE GROUND BONE,
Very superior Artiele.-Warranted
. Contains no admiiture df plater, settlings from
glue kettle; or adulterating material of any kind..•
Price $45 per,2ooo lbs.
We ii tte an analysis of our fertilizere, 'aud in any
and every caoe In which the presence of adulteratutg
material ia detected, we stand pledged, to reiundthe
purchase money and submit to expeaurd
stinr eatabliehment, unlike moat other manufacto
ries of artltiCial fertilizer!, is open to the inspection of
farmer!. We are vrorking hioszerlir and tio notlear
MTT
.& SMITH,
Agricrdtural Chemical Works,
BEAI,ING, PA.
N. 11.--All'ordere left at No. S, South Fifth street,
Reading, Pa,,,:or addressed •to the proprietom will
meet with prompt attentiutt
• Aiiguet 4, '66
Peruvian Guano Substitute,
• : 13A.UGH'S•
• mz, A WBOZT
SUPER-P.IIIOSPItATE OF'LIME
[
T gADE MARK
i L
After more than tivelveyetirs. or constant • use, this
highly concentrated msnare has attained u wicio 7 spread
reputation as a ,
. . • .
Stibstitute : for Periiiiaii •Vatano,
-... . • - -
Being fend active In Its operation: end of great dura
bility. It doer not. exhaust .the soil, but. on the, con
trail, permanently improves it. The.inereaslng sales.
annually, abundantly prove thd high popular value of
this manure, and establish the fact of its being relied
upon by a wide cheie •of agriculturists to - supply all
wanta in thei dlrention'of manures fur every crop. • 4:
- BAUGH & SUNS. . .
[Sole
[Sole Mandsoircrori and . Proprietors,
Mae, le. , 20, fieuth• Delawari Avenue,
_ _PHILAIDELPHIA.
PRIC'E $0 per: 2000 lbs. CASH.
. .TCST PUBLISIIRD,• Abe .13th edition o 1 new
pamptilit, •TIOW TO MAINTAIN TILE - .FERTILITY
OF 'AMERICAN FARMS AND.PLANTATIONS;c-
Atroluhed free upou'appliCation tone or our Agents:
• • • IMAlUtin•ik MONM,
". 20 - Ment6 Delaware Avenue
• PRILAIDELPIIIA.
July 28,196 : 50L3m .
MORO PHILLIPS'
Genuine! ;Improved
• .
Super-Phoiplito 'of .Lucke.
•
STANDARD' GLIARANTEED...
„ .
Por Saloat Mgomfuctureri Depots
Nis. 27 North. Front Elt.; PYrlaaa,, Pe.
• rt.. 14 Bgiwlitio Wharf. Nflitissuireald..
And by Dealers in geOritl throughout tile tounizy.
' The material 'Cif. which MORB PM&
PRATE Minnlnctered cant:Oxs fifty per cent. more
Bone Fhoephiteitian . Raw; Bone; therefore it Is more
durable . .Thi-aminont".*efin( gives ii gmaiad
q4tmeal fertdtztnglatue:.
rive:yet* eximirtencit hininvveld to the F4rmerthat
it mikes a heavier grain : then even stable ,Manure, and
le not only naive hot lasting. • • .' . • .
1 5 6. 0 eieettOR20001bd. •
'eobnnt tai dealers.
• '
. • • in[Ono,riti - LuiOs
-..Sololkopriitatind:Manufacturer;i.
-
saint Camiles; - guiiii
Dealers fisCarrims ' -
NOM Olt ITT OASKI AI D : A'Rlltt
4twayiroittandand far elitist the veri lowest market
• N - Toki:=lst "matt St.. ecornerlialdmilartie.
RASTIXEIB;Iievr York.' -
JOHNHASTINWNew Bedford: ''
Ememptisslik.:win auPPlYMirOtli
.11(azatICetv ' '
- -Tiowlretir. Mirth
aria)? vicii3voliii Awn Bitkiviririm
saiegr: 041110/WOODII,UBFART..'
411alliend amiss' tba - large- stack - at Flinch
LikvinAmd.Withe goo& for Xadlow•DreroOs.' . -
•-• *AIM 0114411111 1 - New Moot.
• ,
••. . •
[Fram the kaintid Monthly for SeptOpber:3
THE 10111 NO N. PARTY:,
„
The President of the 'United Stateit.has so
singular a combination of defects for the:office
Of -a constitutional magistrate, that he ".could
haVe obtained the opportunity to - mismle the
'nation onlyby a Visitation •of Providence.•
Insincere'as well: asStribborn, ennning-aavell
as unreasonable, vain as Well as-ill-tempered;
greedy of. pepularitY.' l 4 well as .arbitrary in.
disposition,' veering . in his mind as,"well as
fixed in bis will,: he unites in hil character the
seemingly opposite . qualities of demagogue
and autocrat, and converts.thc Presidential.
chair into a stamp or a•thiorte; according as
the impulse seizes hire to cajole or to.com
mand. Doubtless much of the evil developed
in hire is due bilis misfortune in having beta
lifted by events to a - position which he lacked”
.the elevation andbreadth of intelligenceade
-quately to fill; was cursed With the post:-
sessiemmf a potver. and .authority Whic.h no
man of narrow tniud; bitter prejudices; and
self estimation can exercise With
out depraviug .hinisielf as well as injuring
the. nation_ - ' Egotistic to the: point of - .mental
disease,lie'resmited-Thedirect and manly.op.
position pf . statesmen 'to: his :opinions and
woods as' a - - perional affront, arid. descended
to the last degree of littlenessln apolitical
leader---=that of betrayieg his party; in order,
to . grat
.He of 'course became
-the. prey of-intriguers and sycophants; of
persons who' understand the art of inanagine•
minds which are weak,.
at once arbitrary and
allowing - them to retain unity of Will amity
the most palpable ineonsiatenetee of -Opinion,
so.. that .ineonattiney; to . Principle , not
weaken force of purpose, nor, the emphasis
lie at.. all abated with wig& -they nuty.blesS
today what -yesterday they cursed.. Thus .
the abhorrerof traitors has nowbeCome their
tool. . Tints • the denouncer of .Copperheads.
has now sunk into. dependence on their sup
port. Thus the imposer of conditions of re
construction has now become the loremOst
friend of the uncOnditioned return of the.
relict States. Thus the, furious Union Repub
lican,. Whose harangues against. his political
opponenta alitiost scared his political friends
by theirviolence, has now become the shame- -
less betrayer of the people.whd trusted him..
And in all' the. changes of base he has ap--
peered 'supremely conscious, in his' wn mind,
of playing an independent, a consistent and
especially a'cimscientioip.part. .
Indeed;llr. 'Johnson's character would be
imperfectly described if : some attention were
not paid to his conscience, the purity of which
- is a favorite subject of 'his own discourse r and
the perversity of which is. the wonder 'of the
Teat of mankind. As a
.riblie 'man, :his real'
similar to that of a commander of
an army, who, should pass osfer to The ranks
of the enemy he was commissioned •to fight,
and then plead his individual convictions of
• duty : as . a•justidcation of his treachery... In
tffith; Mr. Johnson's conscience is; like his
understanding, ; a mere - form or expression Of
his: will,. • • The wilt Of ordinary men is ad
dressed throegii their underatanding . and con
seienee. Johnson's . understanding .and
conscience can-be addressed of .y through his"
He piits.intellectual principles and the
nioral law in the poSsessive case,. thinks he .
pays them a coinpliment and.adds to their au-,
thority when to makes them the adjuncts Of
hiS petted Pronoun "my ;'' and things Whini
.are reasonable and right,mot front any quality .
inherent in themselves, but'lmeause they are:-
made so by - his, determinations; : ..lndeed, he.
sees hardly anything - as . it •is; but almost
everything as.. colored hy his own dominant
egotism. Thnslie is"ncver weary Of assert,
ing. tliatthe,people are on his ; yet his
method ot, learning the wishes, of the people
is lb atrutinize -his own, 'and,' when Bating
..
out his.6Wn itapelse.i; ho
sista that lie is obeying public sentiment.: • Of
all the . wilful men. who; -by . -Strang.e . chance,
haVe found themaglvesi at the head of 'a con ,
Satin ional government, heMost resegibles the;
last Stuart king of England,' James 11. ;, and
the likeneis is increased from the circum-.
stance that the.. American James has; in his
.stipple and plausible Secretary of State,' one
competent: to play the part . of Sunder
land;
Tlie party which,' under the ironical des
ignation of the National. Union Party, now
proposes; to
- take the policy and character of
Ms.-Johuso under :its charge, is composed -
chiefly of Democrats defeated at the polls,
and Democrats defeated on the field of bat
tle: The few apostate Republicans, •who
have joined its ranks while seeming to, lead
its organization, are of small account. . Its
great strength is in its Southern supporters,
and if it Comes into: power, it must obeys
rebel direction. By the treachery of the
President, it will have the Executive, patron
age on its side, for Mr. -Johnson's "con
science" is of that peculiar kind which finds
satisfaction in arraying the interest of others
against their convictions; and „having thus
the power to purchase support, lt will not
fail of thtse means of dividing. the North
Which come from corrupting it. The party
under which,the war for the Union WU con
ducted is to be denininced and proscribed as
the party of disunion, and we are to be edi
fied by addresses on the Indissoluble unity of
the nation by secessionists, who. have hardly
yet had time to wash from their hands the
stains of Union blood. • The leading propo
sition on which , this conspiracy against the
country is.to be conducted lithe monstrous
absurdity that the Rebel States • tisvean in
herent "continuous," unconditioidekconsti
tutional right to form a part "of the . Federal
Government, when they have once acknowl
edged the fact of the' defeat of their inhabi
tants In an armed attempt to' overthrow and
subvert it--a proposition which implies that
victory paralyzes the powers .of the victors;
that ruin begins whys success is assured;.
that the only effect of - beating a Southern
rebel in the field is to exalt him into a maker
of laws for his antagoniet.
In the minority report of the Congressional
Joint Committee on Reconstruction, which is
designed to supply the new.party with con
stitutional law, this theory 'of State rights is
most elaborately presented. The* ground is
taken, that-during the rebellion the States in
which it prevailed' were as "completely corn- ,
petent States of the United States as they
were rtefore the rebellion; and were bound
by all the obligations.which the Constitution
impoied, and entitled to all
.its privilegeis;"
and that the rebellion consisted merely in a
series of of illegal acts of the citizens ofsuck
States." On this theory it is difficult '
.to find
where the guilt of rebellimi lies. The States
are innocent because the rebellion, was a
rising of individuals; the Individuals cannot
be very criminal, for it is on their votes 'that
the committee chiefly reply, to build up the
National Union Party: Again, we•nre in
formed that, in respect to the admiiision of
representatives from "such States;" Congress
has no right or power to ask more than two
questions. 'These are:" "Have these:, States
organized,governments? Are these govern
ments - republican in form ?"- The committee
proceed to say : "Row they were formed,
under what auspices they were formed, are
inquiries with which Congress has. Jto 'con
cern. The right of the'people to forma go
vemnient for themselves has never been
questioned." ::Qn this • princifile, President
Johnson's labors in organizing State govern
ments were: works of supererogation. At the
close of-active hostilities the RebeiStates had
organized, though disloyal, governments as
republican in form as they were before the
war broke - out. - The only • thing, therefore,
they were required to do was to send- their
Senators'and Representatives to Washington:,
Congress could not•have rightfully:refused to 4
receive them, becanie all queStiona as to their
being loyal or, disloyal, and as to :the chan
ges which the war had brought in, the rela
tions of the States their represented : to the
Union, were inquiries," with which •-..Congreis
had no'concern And here again we have
the • evet-.reeurring difficulty respecting the
"individuals" who were alone • guilty of the
acts of rebellion. "The right of the people,"
we are assured, , "to forms government •for
theMselveS has never been insestioned." But
it happens that "the people". here indicated
are the very individuals who were .before
pointed out as alone responsible for the re
bellion. In the exercise of their right -" to
forma government for themselves," they
rebelled;:and now, it seems; by the exercise
of the same right, Off can :'unconditionally.
return. , There•is no:wrong anywhere;:it is
all "right." The people.-are first made critic-.
, hubs, in order to exculpate the Stats3,-- and
then.the innocence of the States ie - used - to
exculpate the people. When' we see such
outrages on common.sense gravelylinrpeteti.
ted by so eminent ;a lawyer_ as the one who
drew up the• committee's report, 'one' is
'almost inclined- to define minds 'as of two
kinds, the legal mind and:the human mind,
and to doubt if there is any possible connec
tion in reason between, the , two. •;Tollie
than mind it appeani that . the Federal .Gov
ern-merit' has spent thirty-five hundred:mil
lions of;dellait, and sacrificed' three hundred
thousand lives,. in a contest" which the legal
mind dissolves into a"mere Mitt ofunsubstan=
tial phiaseS; and bYskill in the trick of sub
Blunting words for thing's; and , definitions for
.eventi, the legal mind .proeeeds to skew-that
thesewordi and;though. ItieraP4 -
, lonely shielded.from atiyeontitct with realities
.are sufficient to : prevent - the nation:, from
taking ordinary precantioiffigainst thireenr
retina of calamities ft.:AU-its bitter-
The' phrage7. State Rights," trans
lated - :from "legal iangulge,, Is
ToUnd to mean the power , co [Jim/L . ' wrongs
. owinOividuabi . *bow 'Sustell- may, desire to:
oPPresS , or the newer to:Prete - et - the inhabi
tants of States frourtiM consequences of their
own'crimes_ Theinintirity.rif theenotimilttee r
Weed; seem .to have -Ihrgetytn,..that th we
has been any:,real ,vitar;77,iinAliring toMind the .
conyortedAustraruM e 0 M
age!who-the.mis- -,
sionary,could-notlinake penitent finltniurdelf
-committed-the da - i*ore; begt} tttie flit} tuff ink
, r eppectinn.-
rebels andiebel , qiutteavtnlillial.;tnivatitige
thk,44rx NO, - .49 141 #' 4 1: 4. , " **40:410
_go -textictw. , 14.3000141 th
•
rising of individual citizens of Statek it would
have been an insurrection against the States,
as Well as . against ; the Federal government,.
andinight have been - easily'pitt down. In
that base. there would have been . .ito with
drawal of Southern Senators and Representa
tives from Congrses, and tiferefore no ques
tion as to, their inherent right to return. In.
Missouri and Nentucky,. for' example, there
was 'civil war, waged' by inhabitants of those
States against their local governments, as
well as against the United States; and no
body contends
_that the rights and privileges'
of those States were forfeited by the criminal
acts of their citizens. But the real strength
of the rebellion consisted in this, that it was
not a rebellion AGAINST &DAM, but s rebellion
DT States.. No loose asstimblage of indivh)u
though-numbering: hundreds of thbu
sands, could long have.resisted the pressure
of the Federal power and the power of the.
State government& •They would have had
no means -of subsistence except those de
rived by plunder and voluntary contributions,
and they would have lacked the military or
ganization by which mobs- are transformed
into fortiaidable armies. But the rebellion"
being one of States, being virtually decreed
by the people of States assembled in conven
tion, was sustained by the two tremendous
,governmental powers of taxation •and con
scription. The willing and • the unwilling
were thus equally placed at the disposition of
a strong government.: The -population and
wealth of the wkole immense reglon of coun
try in which the rebellion prevailed were at
the service of this government:. 'So complete
ly was it a rebellion of States, that the tuii
versal excuse of the nainority_of original Union
nice for entering heartily into the contest af- I
ter it had once begun was, that they thought
it their duty to abide by the decision, and
share' therfortunes of their. respective STATUS..
Nobody at the South believed at the time the
war commend4 - tir - during its progress, that
his State possessed any "continuous" right to
a participation in the privileges of the li'ed
eral Constitution, theoh l ientions of which. it
bad repudiated. -- When confldentof success,
the Southerner scornfully scouted the mere
buspicion of entertaining such a degrading
notion ; when assured of defeat, Ins only
thought was to "get his State back into the
Union on the best terms that could be made."
The idea of "conditions of readmission" .was;
as, firmly" fixed in the Southern as in the
Northern mind. "If the .politicians of the
South uow adopt the principle that the rebel
States havo not, as "' States, ever altered their
relations tothe Union, they do it from policy,
finding. that its adoption will give them "bet.
.ter terms" than they ever dreamed of gelling
,before the President of' the United States
taught them that it would be more politic to
bully than to plead:
In the last analysis, indeed, the theory of
, the minority of the Reconstruction Commit=
, tee reduces the rebel States to mere abstrac
' lions. It is plain that a State, in the concrete,
is•conatituted by that portion of the inhabi
tants who form itslegal people; and that, in
passing . back of its government and constitu
lion, we reach a convention of the legal peo
ple as its ultimate expression, By such con
ventions the acts of secession were passed ;
and, as far as the people of the rebel States,
could do it, they destroyed their States con
sidered as organized communites forming a
part of the United States. The claim of the
United States to authority over the territory
and inhabitants, was; of course, not affected
by these acts.; but in what condition did they
place the. people? Plainly in the condition
of rebels, engaged in an attempt to overturn
the Constitution and Government of the
United States. As the whole force of the
people in•each of the rebel communities *as
engaged in this work, the whole of the peo
ple NVE-r-C ,rabe r iutini public enemies. Nothing
was left, in caernaSe„ but an abstract State,
without any external body, and as destitute
of people having a right to enjoy the privii
eges.of the Constitution as if the tbeiteryhad
been swept-clean of population by a pesti ,
lence. •It is, then, only this abstract State
which has a right,to representatitim in Con
gress. But how can there be a right to rep
resentation when there is nobody to tie repre
sented? All this, may'appear puerile, but the
puerility is in the premises as well as in the
- logical deductions ; and the premises are laid
_down as indisputable constitutional principles
,by the eminent jurists, who supply ideas for
the Natibnal Union party.
The doctrine of the unconditional right of
the rebel States to representation being thus,
a demonstrated absurbity, the only question
relates:to the conditions which Congress pro
poses to impose. Certainly these conditions.
a 8 embodied in the constitutional amendment
which-has passed both Houses by such over
whelming majorities, are the mildest ever Dl
acted of defeated enemies by a victorious na
tion. There is not a distinctly "radical"
idea in the - whole amendment—nothing that
President - Johnson has not himself, Within a
comparatively recent period, stamped with
his high approbation. Does It ordain univer
sal suffrage ? No. Does it ordain impartial
suffrage? No. Does it proscribe, disfrandhise
or expatriate the recent armed enemies of
the country, or 'confiscate their property?
No: It simply ordains that the national debt
shall be paid end the -rebel debt repudiated;
that the civil rights of all persons shall be
maintained; that rebels who have added per
jury to treason shall be disqualified for office ;
and tbslthe rebel States shall not have their
political power in the Union increased by the
presence on their soil of persons to whom
they deny political rights, but thet represen
tation shall be based throughout the Republic
on: voters, and not on population. The pith
of the whole amendment is in the last clause ;
and is there anything in, that to which reason
able objection can be made?" Would it not
be a curious result of the war against , rebel
lion, that It should end in conferring on a
rebel voter . in Soutir Carolina a power equal,
in national affairs,"-to that of twoloyal voters
in New York ? Can any Democrat have the
face to asse4 that the South should have,
through its disfranchised negro freemen alone,
tt power in the Electoral College and in the
national-House of Representatives equal to
that of the. States of Ohio and Indiana cora
l:Lined ? •
Yet these conditions, so conciliatory, mod
erate, lenient, almost timid, and which, by
the omission of impartial 'suffrage, fall very
far below - the requirements of the average
sentiment of the -loyal nation, are still de
nounced by the new party of "Union'" as
the waif • of furious . Radicals, bout ..on de
stroying the rights of the States. Thus Gov.
james 1.:. Orr, of South Carolina, a leading
rehel, ' pardoned into a Johnsonian Union
man, Implores the pwpie of that region to
send delegates to the Philadelphia Conven
tion, on the ground that its purpose is to or
ganize "connservative" men of all sections
and pvties, "to drive from power that Rad
ical. party who are daily , trampling under foot
ills Constitution, and fast converting a con
stitutional Republic into ,a consolidated des
potism" The tams to which South Caroli
nals asked to submit, before she can be made
the equal of Ohio or New York in the Uni
on, are stated to be "too degrading and hu
miliating to be entertained by a' freeman for
a. single instant." When-we consider that
this "Radical party" coruititutes nearly four
fifths of the legal Legislature of the nation,"
that it was the party which saved the coun
try from dismemberment while Mr. Orr and
his friends were notoriously, engaged -.in
"trampling the Constitution under foot;" and
that the man who denounces it owes his for
feited life to its clemency, the astounding in
solence of the impeachment touches the sub
lime.. Here is Cod:2mM treason inveighing
against-tried kilalty, in the name of the Con
stitution it has violated and the law it has
broken: But why. does Mr. Orr think the
terms of South Carolina's restored relations
to the Union "too degrading and humiliating,
to be entertained by a freeman for a single
instant - ?" Is it because he wishes to have
the rebel ditbt paid? . Is it because he desires
to heifer the ,F,ederal debt repudiated ? Is it
because he thinks it intolerable tliat a negro
should have civil rights?,ls it because he
resents the idea that breaers of.oaths, like
himself, should be 'disqualified from having.
another . opptirtnalty or forswearing them
selVest. It because he considers- that a
white rebel freeman-of South Carolinia has a
naturatright to exercise double the political
power of.s white loyal- freeman of Massa
chusetts?- He must retani. an affirmative
answer to all questions .itt order to make
it out that his State will be degivided and hu
miliated by ratifying; the amendment; and
the necessity of the Measure is -- therefore
! proved by the :naives known to - prompt the
I.attacks .of its vilifier&
.
The insolence 'of M. Orr is not merely
jlividnal but representative.' It is the result
of liti.;"..Tohnson's attempt "to produce har- •
. Mont bet Ween the tivestetions," by . betray;
big the:section -to.witich he owed his election.
Had it, not been for his treachery, there Would
have been little difficulty in Settling the terms
Of . peace , : so as . to entities:. for future
war but; from the , time he Viarrelled With
COnicress;:hc•hal!bein the . great stirrer-up of
disaffection tit the South, and the . Virteal lead 4.
er or. the Southern reactionary party. Every . I
man thel3Onte who was . prominent in , the 1
rebelybe;;.ei , ertman In:the:North - . who vait .
put:went:in thn:rebelliON:l4: no w '
openly 'or:covertly hisipartisin, . anti byfavin,
l ilt o'MM:orArno theyightto dettlitaii:o9 rep
,of; people bywhom.the..."
belittle was. put. dawm.. - =Arcong tialuirit,and
Copperheadm. fear:'ot . punishment has
been ;succeedo bY_thetepe revenge
ticinia - ontidc , C)viiiiilthe downfall. of Mith
- P49o4* ( e*Bk;l44.:ii'llrituii to
00**** united tikiiitkrOled country
expected by thi.lyhtile. crew. of 041iticii.buP
&wind Polititaligibeithintm.lfhile rting4,li
billiii'.ititiiseiiteht.cCitwlustlw'.lltrliu even
i*
.gleiti7oo4ocW:WeVerCobi*V - fa di. meti.flt
will be thirt , ate nol!iy,:igirtlBsiiii,
1 - Vaii-whoek-.***C..tif ;the
- ' . -fir 1 0(100:010‘C. '447.14140i.
SinglE3 Copies Six ,Cents
we are promised' on the assembling of the
next Congress, a COUP D'ETAT. • •
Garrett Davis, of Kentucky, was, we be
lieve, the first to announce 'this executive
remedy for the "radical" disease of the State,
and it has 'since been. often prescribed by
Democratic politicians as a sovereign pana
cea. Gen. McClernartd, indeed, proposed •a
scheme, simpler even than that of Executive
recognition,, by which the Southall Senators
and Representatives might effect a lodgment_
in Congress. They should, according to him,
have gone to Washington, entered the halls
of legislation, and proceeded to occupy their
seats, "peaceably if they could, forcibly if
they must ;" but the record of GI McCler
nand, as a military man, was , not uch as to
give to his advice on a questions'o - carrying
positions by assault a high degree of anthori-•
ty, and; there being some natural hesitation
in following his collude', the golden opportu
nity was. lost. Mr. Montgqmery who
prpfesses his willingness to:act with any men,
"rebels or any one else." to put. down ..the
Radicals, is never weary of talking to .con
servative conventions of "two Presidents tind
two Congresses." There can be no - donbttliat
the project of a corn. n'in/Cr hastecome dan
gerously familiar. to the "conservative" mind, ,
ard that the eminent legal gentlenien of the
North who are publishing opinions ailinning'
the right of the excluded Southern represen
tatives to their seats, are playing into- the
hands of the desperatd gang of unscrupulous
politicians who are, determined to have the
right established by force. It is computed"
that the gain, in the approaching elections, of
twenty-five districts now represented by
Union Republicans, will give 'the Johnson
party,in the next Congress, a majority of the
. .Ifouse of Representatives, should the South
ern delegations be counted: and it is propos
ed that, the Johnson members legally entitled
to seats should combine with . the Southern
pretenders to seats, organize as' the House of
Representatives of the. United States, and
apply to the President for recognition.=
Should the President amply, he-would be
impeached by, an unrecognized House before
an "Incomplete" Senate, and, if convicted,
would deny the validity of the . proceedina• b
TlinTesult would be civil war, in which the
name of the Federal, Government would be
on the side of the revolutionists. Such is the
programme which is freely discussed by par
tisans of the President; considered to be,high
in his favor ; and the scheme, it is contended,"-
is the logical result of. the position he has as
storied tus'to the rights of the excluded States
to representation. It is certain that the pre
sent Congress is as much. the, Congress of the
Gaited States'as lie is Presidentof the United
States ; but it is well known that he considers
himself to represent the whole country, while
ho thinks that' Congress only represents a
portion of it ; and he has in his character just
that combination,of qualities, and is placed
in just those anomalous circumstances, which
lead men to the commission of great political
crimes. The mere hint of the possibility of
his attempting a cone D'ETAT is received by
some republicans with a look of incredulous,
surprise; yet what has his administration
been to such persons but a succession of sur
prises.
But whatever view may be taken of the
President's designs, there can be - no doubt
that the safety, peace, interest and honor of
the country depend on the success of - the
Union Republicans in the . approaching elec
tions. The -loyal nation must see to. it that
the Fortieth Congress shall be as competent
to override Executive vetoes as the Thirty
ninth, and be equally removed from the peril
of being expelled for one more iu harmony.
with Executive ideas. The same earnest
ness, energy, patriotism and intelligence
which gave success to the war, must now be
exerted to reap its fruits and
i prevent its re
currence. The only danger s that in some
representative districts. the people, may be
swindled by plausibilities and. respectithili
tics ; for wheu, in political contests, any vit.;
lainy is contemplated, there are always found
iota() eminently respectable men, with a fixed
capital of Certain eminently conservative
phrases, innocently to furnish the
wolves of politics with abundant supplies of
sheep's clothing. These diguitied-dupes are,
more than usually active at the present:llElQ;
and, the gravity of their speech is as edifying
as its emptiness. Immersed in words, and
with no clear perception of things, they mis
take conspiracy for conservatism. Their pet
horror is the term "radical ;" . their ideal of
heroic patriotism, the spectacle - of a great na
tion which allows itself to be ruined with de
corum, and dies ratheg than commit the
slightest breach of constitutional etiquette.—
This insensibility to facts and.blinduess to the
tendency of events, .they call wisdom and
moderation. Behind these political dummies
are the real forces of the 3blinson party, men
of insolent spirit, resolute' will, embittered•
temper and unscrupulous purpose, who clear
ly know what they are after, and will hesitate
at no "informality" in the attempt to obtain
It. To give these persons political power
will be to surrender , the results of the war,
by placing the Government practically In the
hanols of those against whom the war.was
Waged. No smooth words about "the equali
ty of the States," "the necessity of concilia
tion," "the wickedness of sectional conflicts,"
will alter the fact that, in refusing to support
Congress, the people would set a reward on
treachery and place a bounty on treason.—;
"The South," says a Mr. Hill, of Georgia, In
a letter favoriug the Philadelphia. Convention,
"sought to save the Constitution out of the.
Union. She failed.:Let her now bring her
diminished and shattered, but united and ear
nest Counsels and energies to save the Con
stitution in the Union. The sort of Coned
tution the South sought to save by warring
against the Government Is the Constitution
which she now proposes to save by adminis
tering it Is this the4one of . pardoned and
penitent treason? Is this the spirit to build
up a "National Union party ?" „No; but his
the tone and spirit now- fashionable in the
defeated rebel States, and will not 6t3 changed
until the autumn elections shall have proved
that they have as little to expect from the
next Congress as. from the present, and that
they must give securities for their future con
duct before they can be relieved from the
penalties incurred by their past.
GOVERNOR BROWNLOW,
His Address ti) the Loyal People of
Tennessee, -
Andrew Johnson's Polioy again Reviewed
. .
In his own State as Xverywhere
. -he isiganlorsed by. none
. • bot-Rebels.
The Traitorous &themes of tho Reconstruct
ed Copperjoiutsons. .
rn the Knoxiille Whig of August 22d Go.
vernor Brownlow publishes an address to the
loyal people of Tennessee.: He states at the
outset thatomable to address his people in
person, and in the present condition of his
health, lie takes this method of responding to
the calla made upon hint to speak at different
points. After speaking of the ratification of
the amendment to the Constitution by the
Tennessee Legislature, the Governor con
tinues: ;
With loyal men in Tennessee, Johnson has
no more influence than Jett. Davis. After all:
the letters written by the inmates and bang
ers-on at• the White louse to members of the
Tennessee Legislature, urging them not to
accept. the constitutional amendments, they
were triumphantly adopted by a vote in the
Senate of fifteen to six, and iu the !louse by
forty-three to thirteen. Whilst in neither
branch of the Tennessee Legislature eau a
resolution 'ix adopted endoniing Andrew
Johnson or LIE policy, unless it be to declare
him a TRAITOR and his policy
.TaILUSON, both
rank and : damnable.' , • •
Why do I charge all this? Because he is
turning-loyal mert.out of office by thousands,
to make room • for rebels and 'traitors. • 13e
cause he is appointing Tennessee legislative
bolters to oflice - as a reward for their revolu
tionary and villainous conduct. • Because he
betrayed the 13reckinrige- Democracy after
working with and for theory up to the day on
which;Lincoln was first elated. Because he,
betrayed the loyal North after they hatielect•
ed him tollte.offlee of Vice. President. Be
cause he has betrayed the down-trodden and,
unoffending negro,, trying again to sell him
into bondage, after promising to be his MOSES.'
Because he has betrayed. the Fenian -to the
British Government, after selling them guns
and amnsualtion,• and impressing their minds
'with the belief that he was their Mend. And
last, but not least, because be hats never been
true to any one but Andrew Johnson. -
.As'an offset to, all this -.it will: btasaid the
writer of this Address. was &member of, the
Baltimore Convention, and put Mr. Johnson
in nomination foftlia Vice Presidency. This
is true; land MA writer takes this occasion
pubfkly. to acknowledge that it was the worst
act of his:protracted and somewhat eventful
Wet But be has to say, in, vindication of
iditituil4 . thit the: Miiietssee delegation had
agreed to Present the name of Mr. Johnson
for the second office,: and the 'writer was
made the.Organ...,thresigh. which' to make
known tithe convention their wishes. Bet
ter would It bave,beeAfor the - cause of re
public:lA liberty if the Tennessee delegiftion,
is:tab:ding the writer, had all' been In erebel
prison tenth , rather than in the Baltimore
convention,' helping tp:plicir Johnson in a
Rohl& where he; -whet um "vatustris should
•
murder: the: patriot'. Lincoln; should, become
Presidesit of these,United ' Slates.
It is the settled purrose „of the traitors at
QM I / 4 Vi4:101 1 1bAll Of doottt to
and Denounced;
BOOK BINDERY.
. .
Boat bound to every variety cdstrlo. Slant Books -
cot every description munntactured, bound and rttlint to
order; st abutted notate. ' . • •
.0
'involve this country In another bloody . war,
and. this they aim to do - during' the next two .
years, under the lead of AndreafJohnson.—
An attempt to, force Southern ' traitors into
their seats in Congress with bayonets, Will be
made the occasion for the.outbreak. .Let the
despot no* at the head, of the • Government
attempt a thiug of this kind if he dare, A
million of gallant Union Men will -at once
appear in the District .of Columbia; surroun
ding both the Capitol and White House, dis
pesing of the heads of leading traitors after
the most approved style of die ago in. which
- the King of England lost his heed. If pnoth :.
er wr . shall ' be forced upon the.country;
the I yal masses, • who constitute an over
whe ming Majority of the people of this great
}tali n; Wend, it shall be no child's play.—
i )
They will, as they ou"ht to do, make the
entire Southern Confeileraey as God found
the earth when ho commenced the • work of
creation; "with Out form and void." They
willnot, and' ought not leave a rebel fence
rail, out-house or'dwelling in the eleven se
ceded States. And us for the rebel popelit
dein, let them be exterminated. And when
the war is Wound up, Which should be done
rapidly,. and with swift destruttion—let the.
lands he: resurveyed and sold to pay the
expenses of the war, end settled only by a
people who will respect the stars and stripes:.
Should another conflict - et, arms be' forced
upon the -country--,as I honestly - Mica it
will; by the combined. efforts of .Northern
traitors and Southern
,rebels-=the work of
reconstruction, after th conflict is over, will
be easy. • A surfeyor general, with a deputy.
and laud office for each county in -the rebel_
States, and a few bityeneta to:guard them,
are' all that will be .required. -
.
The loyal Men Of-Tentioased will allow Me
to contrast, Andrew Johnson of 1865 with
Andrew Johnson of lsed. His official des-
patches shall speak for him: ". - . '
.W.Asnixoros, D. 0., -
. - . July 16; 1 tids,-;;./0 p;m:
To Gov. W G. BnowNi.ow : I hope es I -
have no doubt you will see, that the !etas
paised by the last Legislature are faithfully'
executed ; .and that all illegal voters at the
approaching election be kept from the polls,
and that' the elcctiod of member:3'ot' Congress
he conducted fairly. Whenever it becomes -
necessary for the execution of the, lain and
the protection of the ballothex, you will call
.upon General Thomas for sufficient military
three to'• sustain' the civil authority of the
State:. I have just read your address, which
I most:heartily-endorse. . . •
• . ANDLI.KW JOittiSON,
. : President, U. S. A. • •
• My "eddies's," the'peeple of Tennessee will •
recollect, avowed the very principles_ upon .
which I have . siuce acted, and upon which the
- President is now' making war. Exactly one
year from the day when he telegraphed the
foregoing, he sent the ffillowing to General
Thomas, refusing military aid to compel the
attendance of refractory members, and <if
two armed mobs resisting the house and its
legally-constituted officers :
" - WASIIMITON, July' la, 18611.—General ..
Grant will iustruct • Gen. Thomas that the
facts stated In his telegrath do not warrant
the interference of the Military: authority.
The adnitnistration of the laws and the Ares - •
emotion of the peace in Nashville belong
properly to the State authorities, and, the"
duty of the United States forces is not to in
terfere in any iv ay in thecontroversy between:
the political authorities of the State, -and
General Thomas will strictly abstain from any
interference between them." . . _
. At the same time,l was refused the neces
sary military aid at Nashville to protect this
Legislature and its legal officers from nmol
violence • the President, soon thereafter,
ordered dm Government authorities at New
Orleans to use the' military* to aid an inturi,
atcd rebel mob to break tip a Union conven
tion of peaceable and loyal men, which has
resultedln the cruel Murder and wounding'
of:hundreds of loyal white and colored men.
This feast was intended for Nashville, and
was only prevented by. the proMpt Italia' of
a talented, fearless and patriotic Congress
admitting Tennessee to her original position
in the Federal 'Union. But loyal men of
Nashville,* and • of all-parts of the State; art's
still envirotted with danger. The rebel papers .
-ofaho State all encourage violence and re-
tistax-Gov. Neil 4.4rewn. - in
a recent rube..` (Abut in IsittalfVillirVir
ported by Were e plige . fsAtihave cautioned
the Radicals of Tennessee—meaning the
Union men—to beware, and cited the case
of Robespierre and his associates at the time
of the French revolution. Having no hope of
. protection from the President, in the event of
an attack flora a rebel mob, "I
shall look with
confidence to the Northwestern States to
-come to our rescue, as soon as attacked by •
the minim's of 'Jed-Davis and Andrew John
son. And if further developments seem to
justify it., .I will call out the loyal militia of
the State; and - call upon the Legislature to "
arm and equip them. We must and will
meet these traitors and sustain the Govern
ments, State and National, or tall with oar
faces to the foe !. - .
- I trust the loyal Southern Convention, to be
held in Philadelphia the 8d of September, will
have a full representation , from Tennessee.
The Washington 'lntelligencer," President
Johnson's organ, says the, Convention of
Southern. Unionists "is called to assemble in
Philadelphia, because there is no place in any
Southern State where such a convention
would be tolerated." • .
This Is the old familiar style. Really the
world has not moved much.. In 1856 .'Fre
mont speakers were not. "tolerated" in certain
States. In 1858 these States would not, "tot:
crate" anti-Leconspton speakers. In 1860
they would not "tolerate":" the election of
Abraham Lincoln P
• the consequence was that'
in 1863 these people had to *.tolerate" a mush,
convention callus by Grant at Vicksburg; in
1864 similar meetings of Sherman's men in
Atlanta and Savannah, and in' 1865 a grand
convention in the neighborhood of Apporeat- .
toi. Ara these same Idtates anxious to renew
the experiment? If so, there are a million
of veteran , soldiers who are ready to "fight it
out, on that line," until lawful assemblages of
Union men are tolerated ou every acre of
ground belonging to the United States—New-
Orleans not even excepted.
Whit are most bitterly opposed to the pre=
sent Radical Congress? Jetf. Davis. is dead
out against It.. Robert E. Lee, Beauregard,
Bragg, Kirby Smith, and all the whipped
generals, colonels and captains In the fate,
rebel army are against it. Alexander H.
Stephens, all ex-rebel Congressmen and rebel
legislators' are against it. Andrew Johnson
and ell his rebel Democratic supporters are
against it. The men in the South who con
scripted Union men, who burned down Union
dwellings, robbed the Union &millet of all
they had, and made war hideous along - bur
borders, are against it.- The sneaking, his- ,
sing Northern. Copperhead, who creeps after
Southern rebels for the sake of social position
or pecuniary reward, is against it- 'rhe
Northern and Southern Democracy, who are
still bent upon the overthrow of the Govern
ment and, the - restoration of slavery, are
against it. Every guerrilla chief,. highway
robber and whisky bloat of the rebel army is
against it. Every traitor who edited a rebel
paper during the war, and at its • breaking
out, is against it. • ,
Who are in savor of the Radical Con,gresa
and its bold and patriotic course? Every
radicallover of his country, North and South,
is in favor of it. Every - unconditional
Union man, who stands by his country in •
opposition to another war, is in favor .it.
Every mother that has lost a son ; every wile
that nas given her husband ; every one who
visits the sacred graves that lie all over the
land, and on every line of march ; and every ..,!".
one who In tears and sorrow speak and thick
of their losses', are with our brave and patri
ode Congress% and will not be turned against s.
, that body, as it is= now the only hopo ot the I I.
-county. Every clergyman, and every good • I
man in the churches, who believes that we • 'Z..:
have had strife enough and wishes no more
demoralization, stands by Congress and praytir , .: , .ya
for its success and. preservation. Every man i •.
in and out of the church, who - thinks more t r
of law and order. and of our tiovermeent,
than he does of office and spoils, is, for Con--11 ~.
grass. Every Wan not in, the Johnson-rebel; 1 .,<.
conspiracy to bring . on another 'rebellion, is.
for Congress, and Will stand by that body tocir
the last.
The reconstructed rebels of this State, and4ll_,
their dirty organs, represent Mr. Johnson asyrF
having obtained for tee the position
_of
error of this Commonwealth and consequent
ly as being ,an ungrateful man. The fakiii
are, that I bold the position IN SPITE OF MR, , :'y
Jonxsosi, and in the face of his opposhion to et
my nomination and election. I was , both
nominated. and elected against his wishes,
and for my position. I tan alone indebted tc • Y :I
the loyal people of the State. .
-I was nomina-,
ted by a convention of 540 loyal delegates, t
representing, every county but o'.i in tin :
Stale, *TrIIOUT A. DISSERTItRi VOICE; ; and run
ning upon the general-ticket system,_ I rate
.about. 2,000 votes ahead- of the Legislative; ,•
ticket. I. repeat, lam widerpeat, no obligationl,„,` .
to the Ilresident for :Bur position 1 hold a
present.,
His rebel admirers in Tennessee hart ‘..•
boasted that; he would set :iside the preseur -I ,".ri
State Government of Tennessee, and appoiniq i .
a Military Goveruor. .lledare-not no do sc - ;.. 4 :,: i
without subjecting himself to iinpeaeltnieniJ
and expulsion from office. 'Tennessee ani ; fl
her Governor sustain the same relation te4- - . ,
the Federal Union that the States of Massa;,
chusetts, _ Ghio and Pennsylvania do, anl—.f:
their Governors, and the President dare nod t,t
usurp the control of either.
The rebel papers and orators of ;-
think that I displayed a great want
in sending a private despatch to thi
of the tatted States Senate, givim
of the ratification - oflt ecoustuntio
n ,
meat, and giving aspects -"tt
.
dog of the. White ouse." ' The
mrspna n 01341018 went .almoSt - -
glee when the Prkxident of the UM
addresshm aCoOpialfead mob rrol
.
of the White Mouse, called s' : w
ediWr trod tha Seegraimr.of 1110
,
4,
• r',