Mittn,s' Moutnal. POTTS VILLE, PA. SATURDAY, SEPTRMIER '29, 1.566 • • • • • S UNION STATE TICKET FOICGOVERNO.- MAJOR-GEN. JOHN W. GEARY, OF, crmurrlAND 00V7TT C'NI() COUNTY TICKET. • . Cona-rexa. ilENItt L., CAKE, .Assioriisli , judge JOI3N J. PARSON, South *anhelitt lAliEs _' .• CA4j. EDWARD L BENT-1:11:..2511111anoy . Prothonotary. litAJon OLIVER C. BOSISYSII . ELL, Pottryille Recordrr Dr. cr. JOSEPH P. DEN,GLEii, Schuylkill Haven • Reigister.'• LItri....kLEXANDER S. BoWEN,.St.,la:r 5 , • '• Nexidows JAMES G.LENN;P4t t rille. . County Conunisoioner.. : •. ABRAHAM T.TlipUTMAN,grivich Township. • "Director of Hie Poor. .11E1: nr. ,- ; HOT, North 7400* rowm4ip. Auditor.: ELITTIONIPSON, East Norwefrjan Township; 0011141 TY MASS 00131TENTION OF SOLDIERS AND :SAILORS, • Mi.... Honorabl y. Discharged Soldlers 'and Sailors of Schuylkill County, who . favor the National Convention of Soldiers and Sailors to he held at Pittsburgh, on the 25th inst., arc earnestly requested to meet in . COrtiaty Conrcrit ion at Pottsville; on • •• . Sattirday, ,Septeintkee 291.11, 1566, t to o'clock in the morning, for the purpose of rect•ivine• the report of *the •DelegateS sent from this. County . .to such National. Conve ntion, • . , By direetion of the County Convention of ildiera andSOlore,-held in Pottsville on the :zotii inst. • 0. . IrowAnoEo3ioNos..- * Committee CHAs..E. BECK; • ) l'orrsvALE', Sept. '2l, 186 G. • - COUNTY STANDING- COMMITTEE. - A,l le.lit:z iof the County Standing Committee will tt..ld at the Union Hotel on TUIitSDAY, , OCTOBER . - L!; 1.3 y order of - " • . . TIIEOD9RE G.4,IIRBTSON, Chairman. • UNION' MEETINGS YLKILt • lIAVEN—In Bfriing Gar- - 04-9 Iln MOnd ay' eVening, Oct: 1, at the-house of lictij Teter-. Speakers; lion. C. W. Pit lain. Gen. )birtz. -Wallace Gu.4s ; and others. I I ; I NSTO W.NSIII P-01) Moutlay esed in .1, at Ihe hotiSe of HarrST-Traut man. • Speakers, Capt. C. M. Brumai and (;1-orle P. Weaver.. • • Di tNILDSONL—On.. Tuesday'. evening, at the house of. David Lomison. On Wednesday evening net. at the house of George Fertig. ELDIIED=—On Wednesday evening; Oct. a, at the house of Joel Keller. . . • Wednesday..eyeriing, Oct at the Louse "ot• Martin Zerby, .Swatara Speaking in English and Gentian: • .. .TRENIONTOn Thuisday evening, Oct •F — riday - eyenjtig, uot at Yeagyr. ' Friday-eveniug, P.I N 1 tOV EHC, rand - Meeting. ori Saturday., October 6 %. • • • POT'I'SVILLE AND ST. CIAIR--Cin Monday evening, -October 8. EYRE AND LANDEII, Orb 3 ~L reli. A treetp, Phil alelphia; ihare copipleted their Improv'emeut, and are• now hffering their 'usual, display. of Dry. Gf.,ods to Pitreliasets. Read advertisement.• . . I'AP,PETINUS, OILCLOTHS, &C., in great variety at J. wart Dep4s, 254 Smith Second street, Philadelphia. ritreliaa‘cis tiiii do well to give him a call. 'I teita Advertisement.. . . Til lm have beetv.aiSastrous floods in the lowland -Lounges of Etigisnd. TILE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH 613IPAN Y Wit reduce its tolls to one fourth the preset] standard. • . ' - , • C1101:Ei:A t;xisisin N e as an effldeiti ie and the inhabitants are fleeing from the city. The deaths have reached seventy in VOTE!! are taken almost daily.on all of the prin iAml lines of radhvay tn . the 'State, and the result is iuta~ iably, large majorities for Geary. His majority for Governor it is anticipated, will reach fifty thousand. THE PENZCSYIVANIA STATE • FAIR - 17'1./3 formally opened at Easton nu Tuesday. One of the. Vice Presidents' f the Society is Mr. John H. Cowchir, sPinegrove, this County. Th - attendance ' Wati very large. , The display was finci.- GOt. • WELLS of Louisiana, haS Written a letter in which he denounces :the• policy of the President and upholds that of Congress:. The Governor is. not the man to prefer.bread and butter to principles. • • . "Fannettica INstrrurs:."—The Winter ses sion of this educational institute, located at Frederick, Montgomery County, Pa., .will ,commence on Monday, Oct. 22: Under the, able superintendence which this Inatitute has, .young men and boys •ean redeive•tt thorough education. ' . . WIIA:t IS A .COINSEIIVA : IIWE ?---The . great English Reformer and friend of : this country,. John. Steward lltill, recently Stated that he. would . not designate ALL cOuseryatiVes as fools, but.it was notorious that all fools were conservatives. A v.i;ry apt illustration - . • A StaPPEiTER of ,"I.ly Poliey" at Trenton, cent -.plained to a Beptiblican - at hip Party - not - turning out to dohonor to the President on his tate tour. Said he. "When President • Lincoln's body: was bnenctet th . rough : liere,..we all turned otit to receive - "As to that'," said the other; "the Repnbli.:- ca - ns el teerfullyturn out tO receive Johnson's ishly whenever it shall come along." A FI' , K . C9S . I) BLUNDER!—A . delegiap.to the re cent eippeljohn convention in: Philadel phia, after witnessing the tremendous tis semi)lages of the people in the-support •of Congress, remarked-:--"That their gatherings, were terrible: It the South hai made a sec-. tl,l mistake,, dO not blame MS, tut Andrew .t usas encouraged in the course we have taken 4.-, • .I:lliladeli3liia4,',r . esd of Tuesday e ays ',nun that, Hon. - W.L: •Helfenstein, of ' , churn:in county, has consented tn. - canvass Bd.- t•fal di,•rictm - of the State be invitation-of the union 6 , ntral Committee.• Judge Helfenetein p.werfnl speaker, and one of the most earnest ft - 1 , 1,1—f the -Cause. The Press is correct in- - its estimate of Judge lirlf~n,tein.. Ifs .is.. a powerful speaker; and lii,erervr he addresses the people he will make as prilt ail impressionss he has in Schuylkill Conn , Tim Judge is doing yeoman_service in this e.oupalgn for the good cause.. Pi,OR HOUSE FARM Busr.gts . si.LAynopg The Lodes of doinglmsiness thit are peculiitt UR: Directors of thel'oor of this County, was the p:vate sale some time since to Senatoi Randall, uf three acres of they farm. This the,people and . .talpayrs hnow,.beside the fact:that the landwas • d 1 for less thin it would have brought :at a Rub li;., 6ompetitive sale.-' The taxpayeni also knew, ;Lac 434)0 or the $9OO asked for the land, was•paid hut thatthere is no record of the'payment of the a 6 r Mil. Where is the balance? Can anybody throw . light on this subject? . • • Tn c Cleveland . Soldiers' Convention was a c , inplete fizzle. The masses of the soldiers wr•re not there, but old, scheming politicians P ere Gen. 'Areal, who is in his dotage, made a speech, and a letter of congratulation fr4,rn the rebel Forrest, the Fort Pillow butcher, was 'read, and is evidently, highly Priced, as it is incorporated in the published proceedings.. The true soldiers were at Pitts-- Luigi thin week. Andrew JOhnscin *ill hear from them at the ballot-box this Fall. - Tut Copperhead Sheriff of ilediord eounty having refused to publish itj laka election proc lawation, the State law disfranchising deser ters, a prosec,ution . Par Misdemeanor. will be Iri , ulediately commenced against him: Like action will meet the Bedford tactics else where. The Sheriff of this cortnty, publishes the law, but, puts ha x ante after it, telling the 10.4111 e and eleetlon officers that it.is, of no hinding effect upon them. We should like 10- know by what right that official:consti tutes himself a 3nage in-this matter? . An impudent piece of business on bis part to least. . EYES OF THE COUNTRY 'pan us. The. Republicatis of the Ates are watching the result of the here with the deepest -interest; and , ill not take their eyes ' off till 'the da y eleetion has chised. Then let 'every': Ivanian work as Ire never worked be- There never has been a time`quite; to. this, unless It . -was during tlie'Wet, t . the Copperheads were trying fir lib* • as they now are trying to theatAts . fruits of IL If-the people:.df Thi can steed up against the treiteliery nibery or Andy' Johuset,•thCniint= THE: HANDWRITING ON . - ..:.. - :' . .:-,THE .IVALL::;:..:::::...-.--,... THE COPPERHEADS AND REBELS DESERTING ANDREIV JOHNSON. SEWA.IID DEOL ART'S THAT HE IS CRAZY. A LESSOPI TO MR. JOHNSON [From the Philadelphla Press.i . . . - We . 'may understand the' exact' dilemma or the lea ders of the skaTILEW Jonasoie party, •by asking what would have become of the Itepub,ican party,, if it bad been forced to'carry his" public policy Willi ali his per - soot! protigicy 7. It ivould'have gone to pieces in the. tempest of wrath that:would have punished any Each: attempt,. no matter how reluctantly made. • The Dem ocratic politicians begin to realize that they cannot much longer hear up under the loads that have been laid upon them by his Accideney. On - all sides they hear the sounds' of angry warring:. There is scarcely a decent Democrat who does not depore or denounce hie vulgarity and violence, and there are . thousands .who openly dentiunce his appointments. We have•already quoted the .New. York if orliPs repudiation of him, and the forty-third recantation of. the New York Thrum. We have printed the satires of the New York News, and the sneers of the New York World. We'llONV add the following ' - . • . • . The Journal of Cominerce (malignant,: Copperhead)* of Satarthiyanys •.. • • • : — • ' It is safe to say that Pr . eiident Johnson bas Nimmit -ted'a serious error in this toga - id so far 'as relates to. the bliddle States, and that the result ofhis recent tour has been to make more compact the Republican ranks, and to repei r rather than win, the Who wereincliued ,to come ever..- , . The Buffalo Commercial Advertiser, hithertiii rabid' bread-and-butter sheet, eays :. • • We are loiredto the Coneluslen that the trip was an wisely coneelved, and stillmore untriselyearrled out. We-do not know from what source, the idea emanated : but-whoever Is re_spansible coinmitted a great blunder.. If cannot be denied that the ,President is not as strong, with the people as be was two weeks Since. • 'Th6 New York Cc:utter des - Rate Unix (French) . of , Monday last says : .' • . .Alt hough a partiiM:a of :the policy of Mr: Johnson, the truth compels its to say} that the impression left by his recent-tour isileierredly'untarerable, and that ffie chief of the nation, by Ida too nnmeroua and 'often ill timed Speeches, has, in-a Mee:tare, prevented the ei cellent results . which he had a right to.e.t"pect 'from-the Philadelphia Convention. : • ' • Turning to the South:, we find 'the. rebels "preparing • to discard him ' • The 'Augusta (Geogia) -Constitution . eget; of the 18th - inst., contains a,. letter front New . York, from 'Which we take the following startling con . _ , The violence and other'phases of the . political. San= "s a ss are the absorbing topic of Conversation, even In circles and on occasions when_politici are usually • nored.. The probable results I taws already predicted —with what rea.on- • the Maine. - election . will have : already told you. -The Democrats have already re , ceived a sad his Son, and they are destined' to he -hum bled stiff lower. It was a proverb of Franklin's that, "if a man cheat me once, hels - a khavi !the cheat me twice, I am-a fool.' They have ptit themselves tinder the leadership of a man whose whole career is one of fraud, violence told unblushing , demagoguery . : one who has been steadily andjustly'.denOunced. es most unfit ,to govern, they have accepted as a leader -when great qualities were most"needed., . _ . Mr. Johnson's tour has clone the hnsineigi for It is impossible' o express the vehemence with - which he is denorinced by men, of all parties, He halt sunk to the level . (i(he were ever above_ll) of Secretary.Sew ard'arid Parson Brownlow:. Be is no longer feared by the Badigals.;:heds simply bated and deSpised: 'A few who Would apologize for him say that. he is simply un fortunate. to his temper; •A man who has no *record of principle to fall back upon, has no recourse except .to • The Democratic leaders all . over • the country kneVi J. Johnson, .- They knew W. 11, SeWard. - They had' been deceived and' betrayed by both of. them. Yet. their leadership "was accepted. The result. is, that., - everybody is disgusted- - The Radicals are in a rage of joy at the victories they :achieved - and still expect. That Mr. Seward and his Immediate followers are . prepared *to -tarn tail... "(as father .Abrahamwould say), the reports of their. private conversations, which reach me, afford evidence. Mr.,Seward is reported. to have said that Johnsen has become. mad, (crazy'.) and that he- (Mi. Seward) is content to be under. the-har row for the next two years, to prevent hini doing mis chief, and save the country frorn . destruction. Mr: , Itaymend is reported to have 'said, that they. must' stand by Johnson, or In his rage he would" hand the ' Government over to 'the "rebels.” Stich uage,'if, used, is employed tojnstifylhe assent to the,. impeach. ment.of Johnson, which for a quid pre quo. they' are preparing to yield. If this hypothesis be true, Jeffer son Davis May congratulate himself teat hie Present jailor had.before him a greater humilitation , than It .is possible for him to inflict., • This letter is not c fily copied.without dissent.; - but is. .charged by-'another - Georgia paper' fthe Augusta' '!Chronicle")to be in accordance with Me feelings of the'editor of the "•.Constitutionalikt...' We commend It to our Pennsylvania (and -especially our•Philadelphia)' politicians, as fair reflex of their real if not their .pyin ted sentiments.: . ' We close "with•the following froni.t.Wo of the feeding 'organs of the "rebellion '(and accordingly of Andrew Johnson) at Richmond, . •.. • ' . .• The Riehmund Whig says . • A sudden sense of impending calamity, Which can be 'attributed to, no particular and, well defliced.cause, sometimes seizes upon the minds of masses of men: at one and the same moment. Such a feeling, whether ariunguarded fear, a mysterious instinct, or a rational' deduction 'from a genewil survey of nubile affairs; has, witirin'a week pavt, taken p tic-cession of the Southern' mind. . A shadow, gigantic and gloomy. hovers over us - all x:ppiessing . onr spirits and exciting our fears. • The Itichmond.Times lOtym , , .. • . . We regret tit.obserce that there are Melancholy and most significant 'evidences. that. Henry J. Raymond, the anthor . of the address of the National Conservative Cimvention. has grown weary Of the arid. pastures of conservatism and iv Tonging to rettiin to the more at:., 'tractive fields of radicalism. This treason to-the cause wuich lie has most clamorously and vigorously -es• potised'for three months :Would lie:unparalleled in its infamy and enormity hut in deserting the cause of the Consenatlve ticket' in New 'York Mr. Raymond has inflicted a.terrible blow Jim u the cause of. the President. He has - certainly reached a sort of half Way house on the road to a lima disgraceful abandonment of a party which recently. Au national council. assem bled, selected him as its leading chsamien and Mouth piece. , He has probably brought rain- upon . the cause of the Conservative party In New-York by declining to support Mr. Iluffnian, the : Conservative candidate fur Governor. He has certainly given aid and comfort to the reeulutiontsts lu supporting a candidate for re„elec tien'who appointed the twgSenators from New Yink delegates, to the late Mulatto ConVention. . The American people are animated by the same emo tions, and . generally convinced by the same 'logic.— The principlea of the Reptiblican 'Cnion party would have prf.wailed AtireW.JohnSon• had de.vated self liken decent and consistent man; they . beeome resistless when his own . profligitcY:acts as a .cont rest to their purity; Justice and t.zt rengt The. Artterican peo ple nee, 'read, and yield belorelacts too true. to he, de nied mid too potent to be successfully opposed. ' • As an addendum to ttie above, we give.the following froth ibe NewYorkHerald of Sat: urday last, . which is rather "rough" on the so-called Democraey: . The World accos•es its :or having deserted the 'De mocracy. That's queer. When old we .belong to the Democracy? When did' the ,Democratic party . have ns? The party belonged to ua, not we to them. That we have patronized the Democratle , party 'for font' or live yeare, we.grant. We found them in trouble and gave them come good advice, which they, foolhthly did not follow, and have thereby gone astray, If not toner, Truly, the once mighty Democratic party is "in the sere".and yellow leaf," when h serves no other purpose than sport the New York Herald. The New York Evening Post, whlch'has all along upheld the President's policy, !•Does Mr. 'Johnson know - -that, by his iridecornus language and iniudicions conduct,"he is seihmsly in creasing the difficulties under which the country al ready staggers? If he does 'hot: - it 'would. be well tf some judicious friend-4f he . .has 'any such left—would 'lt would be well, for . hiin .to know, that he is very fast maklng.hirnself personally odious. The loyal peo- Ple of the Northern. States, those who stood - by the Union when It was attacked by rebels, see with a die satisfaction and alarm .which _is, no longer, ctincealed, that the. resident,.whimi their votes" elevated to ,hiti position, aurroundi himself, by his own' choice siva rently. with men like Vim Florence, . Garrett - Davis, Saulsbury and others, who; like these, during the- war, never concealed their syMpathies with "treason. They see Mr. Johnson, further, removing from office men of ability - and of undoubted fidelity .to the. Union, and • putt Ing Intheir plathis not war democrats not republi cans who agree with his views on the question of rea reseritation, hurcopperbeada; sympathizers with trea son, persons whose course during the .War made them forever hateful to the loyal 'people.' - "They have seen him but lately, 'in Louisiana; via late his own often declared - policy in regard -to, the Southern States, .and 'violate it- in favor, of beistfel rebels; mid to the'injury of. men -who were: known as Union men ; and they ask Why, if. the law Is.. to be stretched, if what the President asserts to he true policy is t.; be violated, why' it is only In .the interest of men who are notorious as haters of liberty and union ?' They have seen him pardon many of the most flagrant traitors .--such men as Mayor Monroa-men of a temper which Makes - them-had citizens, and whomlt , would certainly he more- judicious to leave: unpar cloned. Finally, they are alarmed - and hurt at the in decorous language which Mr. Johnson uses towards Congress: .they are disgusted tai bear him"on every oc. casion denouncing "Congress, - . among *hose members are 'many men - of spotless honor andloog-tried loyalty, as traitors, rebels, usurpers, 'hanging on the skirts of the government,' They hear him speak of a `subsi dized press,' and they ask, .'Who subsidizes It, *ben Mr. Johnson has all the patronage!" . • • • - The N A TION one of the most able, and- con-- . - • • • servative journals - In. • the - country, which heretofore supported his policy has than doped - .. him, and-declares that the time. has arrived for the presd- to speak : out-. in •the • • • strongest condemnation. of Johnson's- insane . conduct, otherwise •the . country. that 'elevated such a man to. power•will stand .disgraced in the eyes of the.world. . . . : . • JOHNSONISNI. The Assassin john Wilkes Booth Eulogized at a Johnson His Fame to Outlive that of onr,Anrdered President, Abraham Lineoln: ...• Bzurotto. Pl.i Sept: ll:Deinoeratic meeting held in the court-house - on Saturday evening, the Pratt= dent of the meeting. on motion of B. F. Meyers. the Democratic candidate for. Senator, addressed the meet ing: Dnring his remarks he said the name of Booth would live. Ile, like Winkleried, had laid,down his life for his country. That Switzerland bad her Wink leried. Scotland her Bruce.and America her Booth and that the time would come when a: monument would be erected to Booth higher than that erected to Lin: And these atrocious sentiments were not only received without marks of disapproba tion, but .apProved and applauded. The party that will countenance ouch, an outrage as eulogy of an; assassin, is unworthy of. the conlidence :or respect •of the people and should be severely•rebuked at the polls. It is the Most disgracefid occurrence that ever - happened at a political meeting in Pennsyl BOUNTIES Wherever _ you hear a Copperhead or a Copperjohnson (we belieVe there are some of the latter, bathe County) state that COngresi voted lug& bounties to colored soldiers, than it did to white lioldiers, just 'cram' the fie, down his dirty,.. lying throat. .It is a basei and infamous lie, and deserves no milder lan guage. We are aware that Andy Johnson, said shivben "swinging round the circle,"— bid he signed the bill—did, not veto it, and of ciiiitie‘ tipaCivellOt -there' , such claim Jikit: When he made the declaration,. he of courie was t*o drunk to kijovi what lie was eityhg. „ * tcrilak! , Geheril Onint, who hilows the diffettnee eiprewa talqwitoopirno uz7 • "TO Air itrir•eintireli To Tots ; iroii lath' /"IkitateStAiraptrractipAx . ?; 4 7;./,44 w AMO2BB t WHO iIEICTZD mixt:me trsiol.—Att iiNNOWAW BYWIPIT cpoStitz, wAii 11 Gaols ni . warr, ' W.:-..E . ' - --i-NI - ...:T.:4'.''''...t.l;'S'.7-'.-. GEARY AND' FREEDOM, .: .- 1 -- z;v:V4 - 4 -- .N.*;. ,. :...._ : . -.• AROUSE 1 -OEFENOriYOUIRI6HTSI AC.411 AN D MA4.ISMEETING OF. THE UNION , CITIZENS S C 111717. L KILL COUNTY WILL BE HELD In Pottsville ON SATURDAY; SEPT. 2916, 1566, AT :. 2 O'cLOcs, 'AND IN THE . EVENING. The folloWing Eminent . Champions of the T:lnion cause and distingitished: speakers, will positively be present; and addren our peo ple on the great National - questions now agi-. biting the country c 2 GEL GEARY, the Hero of Sixty Battles, 3TTDGE PITKINS, of. New Orliana, DR. W. O. DOANE, Of Masli., How ED. IetePHERSON, of Pa., How W. HALE, of Pa., AND OTHERS. A.nd hear these Earliest Defenders of the Op-- pressed and Persecuted Union: Men, of the . COME!. And And hear these. Men who in the Field hafie crushed treason, and.in the ForOm sought to make, it odious. ' • • ' • C O M. - And hear these friends of ProtectiontoAme ries!' Industry: . - • •. COME! And bear these Ailvocatea of ReConstruction onn basis that will guaranten . Equal *Rights The Union people of Schuylkill County and vicinity, are invitedlo attend a GRAND ,COUNTY MASS MEETING, to be held in P 9 1 1 : T S AtTL . .-1; E.; ON SATURDAY, SEPT. 296,. 184 to ahoW the enemies of • the crushed Union men of the 'South, of Freedom and Equal Rights, of Humanity, Peace, LaW and Order, and of Protection to American Industry, that they arc not onlyup but.nre resolved in "Oc tober next to strike a powerful' bloyi for FREEDOM AND. PROTECTION. Rally, Sons of Schbilkill I Come from your ! .Come from your Valleys! • - . - - . Come from . your Mines . . Come froth your Workshops ! Come from your. Farms!",, - Come Come from the North, South ; Feast and West ! . • Come, 4eceived and: betraYed DimmTats, .:Come, Friends Of the Undying, Principles of the Martyr Lincoln, Come'! Come; Ye who revere the.. Memoriei of 'your slaughtered Braves, come ! • Coine, •Ye who.helieve that Traitors should be punished and treason be made odious, Come, Lovers of:Freedom, Come! Come, 'BOYS IN BLUE," and true-heart 0-Women of the Comity! • . COMEDNE!' CONE ALL! Union men, there has - - never been a Cam-- paigu in the political history of the country so important as this.: After foUr years of , 4bloody war -which Fesulted in the success of the Uniorinrms, we are threatened with the loss of the fruits of victory.- - Andrew 'John son, the bold, bad man- now occupying the Presidential chair, has abandoned the Union cause "and the people who placed him in power, and' onsorts with rebels and traitors. At his bidding the blobd of several hundred • Union men has crimsoned the streets of New.: Orleans. Montgomery Blair, "Ids mouth piece, threatens civil war if the people !JO not vote for the President's policy of RecOnstruo lion. The plan is, if the people of the North' endorse it at the polls,to Three the rebels and traitors into Congress. arid trample upon. the true Congress. • If the people allow this to be done, our liberties will be lost, We will be. come the slaves of the South, while the na tional debt will be repUdiated • and the relief debt assumed. . • MEN OF SCHUYLKILL, Afe you willing that this .state of -Altiiige should come ? . . • Do you want: the Rebels and Traitoni or the South to regain power and rule us again? Will you protect the oppressed Union aiten , . Shall the Copperheads and Southern hutch , . era'of.Union men, usurp the*wernment? Will you support a President made by:the assassin Booth, in his traitorous and bloody work ? • - AN.S W E,R- First by your - presence at the. Union mass Meeting iitFottsville on the 29th of Septem ber, end again in Tones of Thundek at the,ballot-box on the 9th of October next. LET PENNSYLVANIA respond to VER MONT AND MAINE in 'support of a faith ful Congress and in condemnation of a faith less President, who violates his oft-repeated pledges, that : treason should be made ocliima and that traitors should "take back seats." • T.' GA.IIIIIKTBON, ' Chairman Schuylkill Cimwity Union' Coniinittee. GEN. - GEARY :WILL: POSITIVELY BE • • IN POTTSVILLD TO-DAY. • A doubt having . been er.preased that Gen. Gnairk would be here to-day, it is set at restby the following telegram : ' , • PHELADELPHIA, Sept, 28 1868._ • Lin Benznoinissw,..Esq - :--Gen: &teary will be at Pottetille to-morrow-if alive. • .'. A WAIiNENG. The-Copperheads have' given up allliopes of electing Clymer Governor of Pennsylva nia. They well may, for there is not an earthly - show foe his election. This they know so well that they are now .engaged in trading him off for votes to elect membere of the Legislature or of Congress - . We trust that our friends will not be led into , this snare, and jeopardize the Union majority ki either house of the Legislature. We want .a huge majority for Gen. Geary, but we do not want to see him in executive chair confrOnted. by .an adverse majority itit the. Legislature.; Remember that . upon the . nest Legisiature- Will devolve : the important daty oP electing a United - States. Senator - to-succeed the- rene gade Cowan. To insure the election of a real Republican reprtmntative-look well to the Legislative districts. Do not exchanges Republicantallot fora Clymer vote. Befirli also, upon the Congreisional:vote. Matra no exchange 'upon it. Vote for that candidate' ,who will support unwaireringly, the ' ConatiS : tutional Amendment. 'Remembey that BoOth`e President - is now striving by every ntealtyn -his power to gain enough members to ena him, with a combination of DeMOMltil, and renegade Republicans from the loyal States: and .unadmitted nien4ters , from States; to make .. a Majority sufficient. to organ ize a bogus or revniutkizary Congriss, and so faren:the preinatnii admission of quered Stites: The Legislative and Con;gretlz atonal electiontAtti . i:of, vital 'ilioniell:‘.. - 1 : 5 ( .114‘ theivhole ticket tram Geary .doirtt Auditor,, and in 'spite of Ed the' we wilt roll . X-s4fROTi the EOM AbOWltita Stir Division:- , he ,Boys. in Bine Will* Afert that ' Titzlinswmosic =unman flea gained over se,ooo *new subscribers - 11o! the tat of Auangt, sal . is still rstrlinyAu r • A BSRBtiADVI3 •Whenlit..Haymond, edit of the limes, broke with his party to run iftef false gods, t:was feared :that from his 'prorainerice and infidence, he would create a sirloin breach in the party to Which he 1114-pioited faith, less. His journal had a large circulation and his sophistical articieslvereclSicillated to mis lead.many honest, earnest Republicans. He became a leading exponent and defender of the polici2 Of the President, and - consorted With Copperheadleaders to build np a John" sea party.. He has fidiedi most signally, and cheated by the Copperheads and repudiated by the Republicans; lie stands alone, shunned and despised. The subscribers to his . paper hive by thouvandslraniferred their names to the stlbacriptiron list of the . ,Hew York Tri•-• bane, and his influence as an editor and politician, has departed. To show . how sig nal in this respect; is this renegade's-Punish 'ment, we will . quote. fiom tho %New York . ••s Mr:Raymond Is .edltor of th e Tim and the sib , .itaibers of that journal have been deseding by thou min& and transferring their names to the Trilene. 'since Mr.. Raymond fully committed himself to the' Philadelphia movement.. They would have equally de ferted if the call or. the- Albany Convention had been . Issued)antly by the two Committees, instead of issued . by one and i••••-• by the other baveequally desert-. .ed if fieueral Dix had been nominated. .instead of 'one-halt HoMmian i. equally if the Republicans hid had ono-half . instead 01 one-third, of the 'names on the Central Committee. The thousands' of new subscrib.. era to the 21-Ibune have notieft the Them on any emelt trivial grout* suslbese. It *as not the bask they oh; jetted to, Mit what was within the husk. - • . • ' . We trust that the . mrited pun ishitheitt of . 3fr..Rayniond provei• a useful . lesson. to selfish. politicians .Who would divide an earn est people . puritan'. the riiht: As the . . :question • Of , Raymond's return to - the Republican party; he may dO so, but:he can never..thiumand'The.e.Onfidence he once p.n. Seeing . his mistake. Mr. Raymond in his paper of Monday last Publishes as editorial, advocating - the ratification :of the constitu tional amendment; as "conducive to the pub lic peace and the welfare of the South." Yet a little over, a Month since this man in. the Philadelphia Johrumm Convention' Wrote and reported the Address in which the amend ment was misailed .and the Southern States smiled upon -not to ratify it.- The Roston Advertiser well says : : , Mr. Raymtind, of the New York TIMM, shows some disposition to return to. the Rev,bean .party. There la time .enough for. the .Time to change six times be tween now and the last of.this year's elections -z-so. it had better .rentslii Michangeil. for • the .present.". ky:•:4lfrAvaie)}:y:f:TA,ll):“:),.;(cei)zizt:4:l Thiirclass who dinhonored. themselvei during the Rebellion, and deseited the : Bag of the coon-: try in: its hour of 4treme need, are 'under the wing and protection' f . the Copperhead party of this state.'' The . papers of „that party here :and . . elsewhere are, endeavoring to secure these votes at the comineelection. _Now; these • papers will Most; assuredly 'get the deserters who vete. and the:election officers who receive their Votes, know ing:them to be deserters, into trouble, for there is a law.on the statute-books of- E'ennsylvania - die franehisMg deserters,: . gvery:oilicer of election boards, or other persons, who set the law at deft . ance, will he ptOlecuted, . • For the infor _ uationpt election officers we pub; ish• the law : Whcreas,lßv the act of Congress of the United States,' entarlia "An act to amend the several acts heretofore passed to provide for the enrolling and calling out the, national forces and for other. 'par ' approved liter& 3,186 k -all persons who have deserted the militaiy.Or naval aerViceof- the United States, ind Who have notbeen discharged or relieved from the penalty - or disability therein provided, are deenied and taken to have volun-• tartly relinquished and forfeited their • rights of 'citizenship. and their - . rights to becbme citizens,_ and are deprived of -exercising any rights of citi zens thereof.. • - • - - And whereas, . Persons not citizentiof- the pal tedStatea, are not, tinder the Constitution and laws of Pennsylvania, .qiialiptl electora of the Commonwealth : *: . . • _ • llEcnori 1.: Be it enacted by the 'Senate and Housp of Representatives of the anninonecealth of Pennsylvania en -General.Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the'authority of the same,. That in all elections .hereafter. to be held in this Coin-- monwealth, it shall be unlawful for the judge of inspectors of any such election to receive any,, ballot or ballots from. any person or persona em hracedin the provisions and subject -to the disa bility imposed by said act of- Congress Approved March 3 ; 1865, and . : it shall. be unlawful for any such person to offer to vote any ballot or ballots. Sec. 2 That if any such. judge and-inspectors of election, -or any..ime, of them, shall receive, or consent to receive, any such unlawfal. , ballot or ballots, from any such disqualified person, he or they . so . offending shall ' be . guilty, of. a misde rrieancir,- and, upon conviction thereof, in court of quarter sessions of this Commonwealth, he shall; for each offence, be sentenced to pay a. fine of not lees 'than one hundred dollars ; and to. Undergo an imprisonment in -the jail of the proper county for not less than sixty days. • • fire. 3. That if any.. person deprived' of citi zenship and 'disqualified air aforesaid; - shall at - any . election hereafter to be held in- this Com monwealth;vote or tender to the officers`thereof, and offer'. to vote; a ballot or ballots, .'any, person so'offending shall be deeinedguilcy:of a taisde.:. . mail:nor, and on conviction thereof in any -court • of quarter sessions of this.Coinmenwealth, shall for each offence' be punished in' like manner as is provided in the preceding sectimiof thin act; in the case of officers of election receiving such lawful ballot or ballots: .• ._ • • Sec. 4.. That if any persori•._shall hereafter persuade or advise any person . or. persons de pnved of citizenship, or disqualifiell Its afore said, to' offer anyhallot or ballots to - the officers :Of any election' hereafter. to be held in this Coni;, monwealth, or shall persuade or adviise any.such I - officer-to receive any, ballot Or ballots from spy person deprived of .catizenshin and 'disqualified as aforesaid,. such person so offending of 'misde meanor, and, upon conviction thereof; in any Court of quarter seashmein this:Commonwealth, shall be punished in like manner , air is provided in the second section of this act in the case of offt °ere of such election receiving Stich unlawful bal lot or ballots. , • • " . LOCAL NOTICES. . Ilatmensn's CoLoTurio at Browns°, l'harmacen . listf, Centre street. . • . ° , .0-1; ' . COCOA-NM OIL ♦ND OLYCRRINII fur beautifying and promoting the growth of the ihdr, at Bromma% cultists, Centre street. • - • . ...1034t DANDZLION CorriF,an excellent article for persona afflicted Rith Dyspepsia; Browny, Pharmaceutists, Centre street:. • . • 38-4 t . . SAIMAPAIIILIJ A.ND T0D;14r.., the great Blood Purifier, atßrowne', Pluirmaceullete, Centre street. . 813-4 t . • • HAGENiII MasiNoma. BAur, for Beautifying the C Oesion; at Simla., fluquiaceutiate,Centie 8t '39-4 "ItibricAtive steam engine packing.—for tams see no. 639 arA - and- no, 2. day st., new . york," . - *ay 14119-ly Ilnourse Ham Rarrotailve hielegintly perfruted.— It linparts a richneasand brilliancy, remove. dandruff, . . . . and promotes the growth . o the hair :.' The m . . ly arttcle for the toilet..'. . ost clean arms aND Soma) Tzinru, sweet breath, and Clean lisouttiAie cibtabaed.by tan OWNTIII.IC, prepared by : flogbapi Av)ttieciry." Ear -:worm ( in another column plckiog grapes for. Speers Wine. It le an admirable article, used In the hospltels'ind by the first cities families in Paris; Lon don and Npw York; in prehmance to Old Port Wine.--; It is worth a trial, as It gimagreat eatiateCtion. - . . . Nsw•Seacoo .Cessnanuoi at D. A. Smith's ClOtfifrig Store, Centre street, Pottsville. . ' . . Faisoci,'BOglish and American clot)* all styles, and of the !West qualities, at D. A. Smith's, Centre street. Groves, Neck-ties and Hose, to suit every taate,and at 'reduced prices, at D. A. Smillee„-Centre - street. m . - Solt . / and Sununer 'Underclothing can be'obtained at D. A. Smith's; Centre 'sheet. . Fazica PADDXD Loom De4.la., a beautiful article, at- D. A; Sielitvis, Centre stre et . ' • , . . . ~ . • . Toe Cramps, Cbolera, Diarritsea. - DysenteryandAnY disOidered state of the bowels,: use the Cholera and Diarrhtea'inixture, prepiredby Huirbes,aiothecary.- THE COAL TRADE. Pottavipe r ,Elleptqmther . 29, 1866. The'quiritlty sent by Railroad this week is 56,66611—by Canal, 27,396—f0r the week 84,0562 11. tons, • against 122;452 tons for corresponding week lest year. The tirade - continues Very dull,. and dealers abroad are holding-beak, until the • election is over; and also , under the impriondon thatPid ces may go • . - A conple himdred boats - are tying at the wharves waiting for loading, This beam very hard upon the boatmen, , wh6 are compelled to keep up their teams while lying idle, with freights that are. not' more than • remunerative with constant emplciyment. • No ADVANCEAN consetiumice of the present:state of the:coal trill* -we learn that , our transportinicOmptmiei hit* decided to maker* advattie" in - tolls on the ISt of Oc- The trade sums up this week as followt compared with last fea • • - piss, ' wgze. TOTAL. MS= TOVAL." . ADO. . • Rg. skim, iitss 156.567 2,874, 758.195 s c huyi can 118505 669,215 57,396..1 ' ,007,902 549,081 L Val RR. 42,8551,048,067 32,160 1,404,022 357,966 Lehi% Cu 51,709 566,744 32,869 740,. , 124,150 Saint Bth. 6 446,820 21,118 712,801 808.063 ;•7 , th 1, • 734,324 8 , 13 1' 307,094 172,470 • R 6 , 913 84466519,296 - 479= , 0426 By Canal.. - 784 22,873 828 1%1 4,718 Del it R 17,814 461, 3 05 3 5," ' 936. :" 596.859 Wimg tilb • 97,933 ' 350,27.• 242,423 Shautolrin.. " • • 209,060 494,987 112,927 Frankll .n. . 86,026 32,741 415,219 Skid Top. • 219,699 I.lB j ' • alta,oll • '10,051 0,022,061 , ( t arn ANS* COVIVE. SALE.-.Thinmant to 5.." an order of the Orphans. Ootirt 'or the' County of Schuylkill; in the .Commonwealth of Pennitylcanki; thesabscrlber, - Admintstrator of Henry "'Kline; late of the Township of upper litaltantongo, In the County of Schtlylklll„ d *IV expose to sate .by putilld .tiendue, on' • '' Ellattorday„Oosbei 'Jet 1...00h ' ~-•i'v,- At, 10 rYclock in - the Yonpon;sil,the„pvirilses, in the: Township of lipper'Mshailtougo. ih....Tha County of: Schuylkill atoweetid,—All tbr4 ' Certain - Farm or Plan--. Won eitallitlit irithe Tovnustri , p pf2Upperldaltin-101,, nd...,..•_.. 355 . tango ' Voresso Artmoderl,,by: tor Adair! - itiiii4tl Irt . , - IWlit - Afeiethirtlitti -. bit After A . , l 'Ar elr- L°— • -- ir ri) d quasi twenty live acres and sev • ,'• . „ '2, Paartucket. ...:.. .. :,, - i 25 e " _ • 13 g, i f tti • - , ", ' ... N. { three private. the appurtenances, consisting. ..,,-.2ar iast . .. ' ' ' 115,_,Tpu34t. ..' . g-15 ent7 - ___.. 114 -"•'•• . „„ seketv jia ,A = • „,,,. tte . ,l of a two-Awry log house, bent. rte.. • Also all that oar. andAftifeitililitftiraiitabl Yftel 'Al a:. • -...- .*"./:,7:::44140: lain tract or..pie:Apr Woodlstrfrt o attaateha the T.owu-,- - -.., ship of ITOper -Mahantoligo si d, board ed liabisortiritrehitkia lauds of Jacob Wart. John - W; Eteple r rithuo iv. . ...-- George Mauer Alai John - flaber, end oolltidning re'cy • • 1 014*WOOSini ; lefk r"draWiaSlaillkr acres andlifty-two perches; late . the - adAy444l6r*„ . , tlmii aifiode-fthi(libilfhoi. irFl) „ . ___ - •1 - -,.. •- juitislitili proalsllielltbilsire.- - -,_ - - , " 1- .. . darn andplace of Sale by. •• • - • , • eft; liiiite to-theikaitiaction of the, Wyoming-a& - te1iht1ai1e1p10,..,..•....': - ......'...:. . .;•.';.51..75111 -'• • ' IRMO IL kNORR 3 - , -..a'4 , •- t Aura - .....t"' NO, Mgt..' -•• ' - '' ' ''. ' ' 2 1 1 5 1 21 = •---- •By order of the •Ijorthiirsachilk- +um : wakit;''°"' ^"". Bodek;••;:-i - 44. .... •-, • -•-- ' • 8:401r.'-'• ' • ',- • -•• il' luu ro= • Elterloi- ,'''' ;'''''''' ~.- • Pothrrilla. 'NOV. 64 ' , 32-1 t '-'•-: Vfe'.. o ilentilirW . .....' .....,.,.„,,,, Peg° ~,_.: ~..„.. 'lllerlatt : 1 09°K.1 4 ,""" •-r - - ' - . - . /-**, •c e- 4 h .....'.:::-.1.41 4 11111P - 1 ' ,-• Art GP , llll*lihita'llaidialL ' Vibit t r ' dhnißialmi.,anonC - -.4auumuir Pit*" - 1.011 --- ,_1414 -7 °' v edr. ........e t -!P-Wi7' ; ': ;- , . ...---. / 156 -;. ~. jut", , -- 7,uwaiirtimiNm c r, &c0. , 8... ..._ ~. . Silt Otafitrgbiß •Of /$ l 4 7* 41 /C l O 1 1-* "OOP , •••••••1. • '. I ". . ' arilt P - Sq• '• • Cur. - COOS MA POMO* •- . eTOI7 . IiNAL.E;- - EPr±:"EM'jEVER *;9, 183'66. wentnated, - and • • the balance or of the 4) • sseason,irellie f fktia'send to - market but little to re cod-Omni they ilk I last year, and may seal leas • „ .The list Anetso' n • Sale of Scranton , dead • shims astill further' decline . in prim of over -cents a ton on the average. Schuylkill County •jettnnbt compete with 'these prices without a further reduction in price; and•pro 4tera cannot reduce without a reduction in the prift of Wages. Our , impreasion . fs - .that some reduction in *ages must take , place, under :zip cirqamstances, :before our opera tors can compete with _"other regions in the present state of the trade,- or they must Stop. There is no other alternative. But until the eleCtioriis over, we presume but.little will be done. The reduction' will depend upon the result of the election: - • It the people succeed in devil: k g a Congress that will protect the country against a usurping Executiire, durieg his whole term 'of ?thee, _it will continue cc;_ prosper without a co-operating President —hot if Congress Should - not be sustained, every branch of business would become core:: pletely paralized aiii4 the effeet would be disk aitions.to all theproducing classes. We are -:astonished to find a . foolish article in sty sensible a paper as the Geratan town Telegraph, on, the price of . coal. If itlaj. Frees will visit our Pegion and spend three days here, ..We guarautee to con yince him that his whole article is unjust in• every particular with regard to tile trade.— Coal is.absolotely sold, at a. loss,, and the - re duction in the price of coal has been greater than that Of any other commodity sOld in.the Market, eicept perhaps, cottorifshrics, which advanced several hundred per cent., while labor, and all the articles that , enter into the . production of coil, has declined .but little.'-- The coal trede is but; little tinderstoodby the press abroad, and this aceounts for so many erroneous iMpressioes created and poititive falsehoods - promulgated. And - besides, we . find that many editors are Very selfish, and if, they. are forced to pay even a remunerative price' for an article,. which rear pronounce high;they . censure the producer without in quiring into the, causes that produced these ' high prices.. . -Auction Sale of Scranton Coal at New ' York, Sept. 26t6, _ 1866. ..:LUMP:—On'EllE1)10,000 T11$13: AT PlfitCll.4Bsll.4:• !TONS:: AT PCEOIIABEILS. 200•55 25 Sta,ckpole•.• 500 $4 CO..AndeOried 'l5O .5 12 . 500 50 .Waterbury 250 5 00 Sheppard: . ..! 200 . 4 50.11(46er ' • 1b"00 5 , 00 . 43anka.. 11000-4 50 • Clark. • 500 00 Waterbury .1.500'4 50 Talinage' .• '5OO 462 .•do ' ;1000; 4 50 - Clark •.. 500 455' Merritt* 1100 4 GO Smith-. • . 100 455 Grav 800. 455 Merritt • • 1060 410 Clark • I'.loo - 4 57 Barber 'lOO. 4.50 Merritt= • 900. 4 55•Ilopldna &Co 1000 450 goirdard & Co'' • s • , • ,STBAMBO.6T-;OFFEBEB '5,000 TONS. .' 1.060 gE 00 _Talmage. ..(09. 5 00 1000 VOO C p pass itROKIn . OPFERED 9,000 TON 1000 $5 . 00 C H Bass. • 1000 500 Quintard ac'Coi 1000. 5 00-'l`almio - .512 Stanford Migeol •1000. 5 12 - C . ll Bass •• 000 • 5 25 Dile 150 5 25Smith 100 .5 25 Mallery ..%'•EQO-- . .OFFERED 5,000 TONS. 100 $5 62 Rami, • • 500 05 55:11rinckerhoi T 500.'6 62 Haynes : i 200 .5 55 Howe 500 6 .. isn Talmage i . 600 51,0 Griftlll .- 200. 5 :,31 — Clark . .• •-1 300 5 :a) ,smith • • 200 545 Merritt • 601 .5 50 ' 500 . 555 HerkKher do Co .500 - 5 55 Quintird..& Co STOVE-OFFERED SeO7ONS . if* V, GO Leilngten• 'l5O &60 Lelater 1000' 6 . 69 Talmage • • 500 • 6 31 - C H Saes ' 600:6 37 Clark 700 639 Merritl' •- •- . , . . .. ~. - 'CHESTNUT—OFFERED :,000 TONS: • 400 $4 25 Alexander 111100-$4 10 Talmage' 500 - 4101 Woolsey . - 1000 4'15 Hopkins &Co '.500. 410 Stapler • ' - 'SOO 4 .12.13ru10n • 700. 4 . 10 !lodger •.200 4 12 Dover- 500- 4 10 . Church. 1 000 4'15 Sleeker. OW .I,ls..Nicholtiou .••.: • sale . . - Compared with the Of Scranton Coal on the 29th of August, gives the folloVing . result -: -- . ' • Atlitil2 26T11, Lump, .-average...Ts . • .$3 . 70 ',it •34 .St..Boat r .. . 5 53" • • ' • ZO4 'l9 Broken', 5-16 Egg, ' • 493 - : 4,14 79. Stovp, . • , "..673 .64l '' Chestatit,• •" .. 653 ••• 4, 14 . 114 'Average_ d'ealise; 66 cents per trin.aiuce fast sale. • EDIT'Org MINECte.JoUiLNAL: GENTS: --In the:o times of depression in the coal trade, would it. not welt for our operators' to look around and See if there are: not some .appliances, if adopted, that. would tend to cheapen the production, of coal There. are but. few collieries above water level south of the Mabanoy vat; legs. and ono of the great sources of expense In'work-. •Mg below water level is pumping the water *tinder tile 'old - system of working the cost of the necessary pump- ing machinery is enormous, and tbe.wear and tear, oil ' fuel and attendance is something that any operator be low water level can appreciate: For sonic time past, an effort has been trade by different persona .to intro duce steam pumps ter the pufpose of freeing the mince . from water ' but with few exceptions our operat rs have failed to diacciver much, merit in them, partly from the fact that the pumps offered do not coma np•to. the re- - quirementis of •the coal region.. Quite a number of . operators have been waiting for our Schuylkill Ccianty machinists to get urVasteamptimp that would, be free . from 'all objections' for mining purposes. Several of the shops have entered the list for this purpose and we have no doubt the resnit will be highly creditable to our machinists and 'of. lasting advantage to . the coal perators. A. few days ago, we in company - with a num ber of our prominentnperatora and mining Superin-• tendents. visited the shops of the young and enterpriss • ing firm of Aliison & Batman in Port Carbon, to witness. the trial of a steam pomp, the production of Mr. Robert Alllwin one of our most prominent and reliable Schnyl kill County Machinists. We found" the . - pemp in • cur- . cessfol operation; getting its supplyoftvater from the Schuylkill River. some 18 feet below the pump. From'. The simplicity and compactness of.consitruction and ce.- tainty of action, We alt came to the conclusion that it was a decided success and free from . . all objections that could-be brought against the Steam pump for mining, 'purtkoses. The pump is a . simple double acting polo pump . B inches in: diameter. and a feet • stroke the steam power consists ot a steam cylinder 14 incites in ternal diameter. 3 feet stroke with a simple valve mo-. thin, the invention •of Mr. Allison:. This .comprises the whole machinery and. from its simplicity and ab sence oreumbersoine and complicated machinery, the liability to get out of order is not one-fourtA that of a pump 'of the Same capacity on the old plan. . This' pump (an 8 in.) throws as much Water' as any 14 in. of the old kind. Messsra..Allison and Barman inform us that quite a number of operators, superintendents and . engineers have pvamined-the pump, and all have ex; pressed themselves highly pleased with it, and . , are of the opinion'that the steam primp will eventually super 7 cede all other modes of pumpingwater from the mines,. The cost of this kind of machineryl be. as we understand it, about one pumping -third tha t o in f the w o ol d phut 'and the difference in wear and tear ; oil and fuel; will be a very great !tern. • We are informed that' one of our Collieries not eight mileis from 'Pottsville, has paid more this season for "break downimin'their pumping machinery "than would . pay for putting up the steam .pump with all the fixtures complete; of a sullicleot ca• pacity.to drain their slope. . , . . In view of the above facts we think it would be Well for 'our coal men to investigate this matter, and see if 'they cannot discover something in It that Will be n f advantage in thelmining of coal. We Would advise "parties interested to call on !deem' Allison is Hannan, see the pump In operation and examine for themselves. . • SiTXBINT/LNDIMT, Parrsvu,ta, September 20, 1880.: • COAL Freights from Pt. Albany • 170 Bridgeport 2 00 Bedford: 8.00 BatLi: • 800 Commercial Point... .3 00 Chelsea'.,. • 2 15 Charlestow 2 00 Csmbridgeport 2 6:i Cotoussett Narrows:. 300 Dorchester Point.... 00 Dighton - - 960 Darezisport.... • 3 00 Bast Greenwich 2 50 Fall Hirer 220 Fredericksburg, I 75 'Gardner • 3.9 6 ' Georgetown • 160 Gloucester SI 85 Hartford - 8.06 Hudson - .2 00 Hingluuti • 950 Lynn . • • ' 980. Malden • . 8 50 'Medford • • .8 53 Mystic ' 2.50 Marble Head ' 8 00 Norfolk ' • 1 501 New York- . . . . 1 70 Boston 900 • 146 yawls and 78 boats THE. COAL MA itKETS PRICES OF 00AAT OAR,GO. rooliaiorip wzna,t Fos TEI mrs.ool...TojhaziA.L.3 , PHILADELPHIA - SErmrese. 28th, 1886. 13ahuyatill Bed Asb Prepared, 5 25(i656 00 ""' *VT= ken, Ltin; Boat ti ° ITO 550 • 550® , " Egg and Stave; ' '5 506 " Cheetnnt,. 4 00(dt Locust Mt. Lump, St Boat 5 50a0 ..• • ! " Broken 5:50t " " Prepared • ' 5 50© " Chestnut,' .4 00 1 4 425 L0rberry.........................6 00(a - Franklin, (Lykens Valley) Lehigh Lump, St. Boat & Broken,.. ' • " Prepared, .C 6 " Chestnut, Broad Top„ AT . N ., 1611 YOBS . ER27th, 1868. Schuyligil Bed -Aeli hy Boat Loa4..s Ott 750 • " Che.stnuti L "• - ' 4 75Q 500 • ' " White AB Lump 6 - 50 Qt. 675 " - Steam Boat • 6 50,Q - 6 75 " Broken. ... • ... . . 6 75Q 7 00 " Egg. • 6 75Q .7 00 • " Stove • • 7 000. 725 " - Chestnut 4 75®:5 00 Lehigh White:Ash bump • 7 25Q :7.50 "..:`Steamßoat ' , 7 250 7.50 ..... 7 .25Q 7.50 .. E gg -• • 7.:2.5Q 750 " Stove ' 7:25® 750 . r Chestnut, Scs elites C•al atßli nbatb ea :: Lump, by . 5......5 6 120 625 . replirek-. - " - ......... ... . . 6 5510 6 70, Cheatnut, "• - 5 'SOQ 5 70 .••• . . • • Leitigla Coal at Elisabietkpert. Lump,Lump,. • • • • by Cazgo 7oo ®' St. Bost .:... 'r ..!!• 6•75@ tilos SDI BtOVe 7 25(al AT . .111.41.1LTIBIORE. . BErra~sa 13 , 186& W3lll.e"'reti Pittatony.l..-wholesale• 7 25% 7:50 . • .l " -retails.. 8.25@ 850 1 4 ftei4lalAlliiiq77,:A. 7,25@ 7,50; - " " '8 2sat 8', 75. altEliKkeljELP DO. :Lank of mine 15 75 f. b l / 4 at:Lecautt.Pcibt, for gypping: .. Strall.Aota : --- 7 7 " at"' filitilelEillisobethipnOr4.,: New Tad/. - 111-VPortland - , - 906 Falllther. - .- X X 1 ~,..,-... 1-11 NOW - 10nd0n..i,:..., 100' .i . •!• • •• . ••'• • .7.3.1°" 284 a00L ' 1 •-•'•.• -t -- - . A/. tank . vell-. - , r 4.:„..A.: -8 6: - Iliorwalk.„ - .... -- . . i., / P0rt5m0uth......,...,..A40: iingdbXoW4;•,••••••• : • 4 i. New 31011044:,:.:::. 140; Ititthm .• ',;..*,..•,:..1, . Mp0r,...,:....,,. •1;s0: laun ... ,:•.•••• ~ - 4 1, 4 1- • ...-,.:4,1.-••••••• ,-3 - 81 ). " ern. ..- ''',4• ,,,,,- 2 lot 1000.45 12 Garrison ~ 1k Co 1000 .5 12 • do- 400 - 00 .Qtrintard 4.-Co 500:55 25 BrinckbCrhoff 200 5. 25.Churcli ' 100 6 '25 .Parkge. 300- - -5 15 Tyler '250 5 15 Preko WO 5 'Li MO(111, 557'•5 22 . Garrisori & co 600 0 . 55 Bradford 050 $G 40 Audenried 550 .633 Barbet 200 640 Church 6 40'gniutard• . PO' 200 0 40 Smith, (1 Wall EIGHTS. 'ichinetid [P131184141.. INew L0nd0n........ 2 60 Norwalk ' • • 2 20 New Bedford ...... :. a 25, Newburyport.......: 2 40 Nantucket • 3.00 `Nenonsett - 226" Newriort... . . : .. .....*- 2 .00: I Poughkeep ............ 175 I P0rtem0uth.......... - 2 , 60 Portland - ... .2 00 • Pawtucket ' • • 2 25 Providence ' ' . 2 00 t x ittcy Point ..ury , 1 fil Rockport 3,25 Richmond ' - 1 85 Saco - 3 G 2 ' 5a1em......:.,: ...... 2 25 Sallsbury...::.: .. . ... 3 40 St. Johns (in g01d)... 1"25 Washington Lt. C..... 1 50 Weymouth . ; 3 20 -Newark ' 250 Parkahell • ' 1 80 Yarmouth • ' 8 25 Kennebrook Point... 3 60 West .Cheater 1 80 [lpawick • . - 8 35 I Stamford ' 1 60 Norwich. . : ..... ... 2 50 arrived for the week. • - . . Ce. foe. 18 ti.* • The folloiring la the quanttty orcoaltptnaported over the following Ihdlukada for the week ending on Thins, day evr_ping last: ' • • Mlne 11111 S.:l4Vin R. B. • 22,024 04.1,6226,550'11 Mt. Qizbutt. - ,.; --- .. . ... . . 1,110 06, .77, 8 42 MITI creek- - • • ii,e(m .540,940: 16 Xslttnoy I Etroad. Mt • 21,6V2. 11 1,066,267 07 Little Schuylkill_ Vallev. Pilsegrave eoed - Trade for AS6O. Amount transported during the tut moth:. • • Swamis. Railroad: • :3,705• OS Union Canal Railmad,...; 12,0a4 .1.4 • ME= :.7,3 - 12 ia,eos 00. .35.3 05 . 1 . 1,094 00 ':. 16,077.1 S •• 11,930 0 : _*, . 4,493 05 .. . - 4,351'10 . . $. Chita • • Port Pottsville • • ••• • Schuylkill Auburn Port.Clintort ... . . . : • "Total for w • eei • ' . 66,606 11 27,300 00 Proitonsly•thla • ye3r...„.•... , .•2,Sl7;Blo 01 950,Gi,3 IT 2,514 5 t 4• .. 1,00t901. 17 To tome time inet.yMtr.......12,116,350 OG I 6Z9,21.5 00 746,194 00 t• Increase. sue fisOberlaind CoaI• - Trude - for 111S06. Poi. week ending Sept. .6 ; . ' • Per Baltimore & Ohio Railroad . 13,630 " 441.6:43 .Per Chesapeake & Ohio Caua1....... 9,663 214,156 Lehigh de ITlalianofeogi Trade for 1866 Yi*h ending with last Satwilay. • .' ' . ' • , • • EAMSB bP SLELTP Trenton "'Coil Company.',...:.. -Mount Etna -- .. ..... ... Delano Colliery • Glendon Coal Company • Rathbun: Steams &Co ' E. S. Sliliman " • • - McNealCoal .t Iron' Company : Knickerbocker Coal Company. .'Thomas- Coal Company Williarils • & Herring • W: F. ether Shippers • Corresponding' week fast year. Decrease lactease. Tirone ac.Clessefleld R. Coal . Tride. Amouut of coal shipped over.the Tyrdue and Clear.. field Railroad for the week ending on Thursday last. Tyrone & Clearfield Railroad ' • • ' 2,320 15 • - Lehigh Coat Trade for 1866. ' For week enditut on 'Saturday • last: . • . . ... . .. . . • : •' • • -'' - RAILROAD. „ :CANAL:. ~. • ' WLEK i TOTAL: 'WEEK" TOTAL: . _ Hazleton - • ''. '- • 4,426.. 1504149 :3,061 .. 53,200 •R•aSt Sugar 1,031 . .'...:' 4,626, 145.516 - • .. •.• - Mt: Plea..T.mt . :551: ' 18,401 f .; : 38-1 .• 4,200 Jeddo :...: . 3,040; - 111,697 - 1,368 • 36,663 Harloigh •• • 1,042 ' 40,679 • .:571 , 10,452 Coze.Bro & Co. -.'..... . 51.1 1 .. 1-, - . . ,8l . 2,301 Rbberrale Coal Co.. •1,308 ..42,621 ; ' 1 . ,222 • .15,914 • • Stout.: ~- .. .... .. .. 1,070] .35 . ,906' ' 520- - 10,344. Counciißldge • • 1,692, . 1,149 1,159 21.579 Back Mountain , .1,860 , .43,960 . 617 . 15,594 New York & Lehigh 6201,-52,177 • .- , 6,940 - Honey Brook C 12441 C 1,6•611 103,254 • .1,002 21,392 German Pa. COM Co 6 901 . 41,168 • 62 23,197: Spring Mt.' Coal Co. 3,04 5 1 1 0 1, 0 59 ~ 63 5,039 "Coleraine: . 613', - 24,820 11,323 14,889 Beaver Meatbs4.-. - .: - - - 1,733 - . ... , • . . John Connery . . '.: 99 .3,071 Lehigh Zlric.Co - • . , i • 7.466. , . .. .. . . J. B. Reber. & C 0... : • . '6,542 . - ... MeNeal:.',... .. . -..- 99, 48,760 - .• 372 ' . 12,224 Knickerbocker C 1 .. , 006', . '21,903 - 235 . - "8,696' Coal thin C0a1•C0....• • • • _ _•11 56 .. • • • . Rathbun Caldwell Co -•- 295 ' 30,365 . .. ' • . '; Glendon Coal C 0.;.,, • ..":. • .22,247 .... " : 760 Mahanov Delano Coal CO -• • . ' , 2 4 , 920 . •,". ' 6,306 EL Meyers . . • Silliman - ' • 1,378, . 36,727 :.: :' . ~'... :Baltimore Coil Co..' . ' .i. , 57i :'. 26227 ' - 251 , - . 9,4,54 . Franklin • - , • • 316 16,069 • - 570 ••• 8,074 Andenried...... .. . ... : • - 13,759 ',392 B,6lsLehigh & Snag. Co.. 140. ... 15 , 650 1' . 3 6 5 - .. 9,497 • • Land - messra 851 7,9721 . .-.• 194 , ..7 .0 9 4 . Wilkubarie • • . , 191' 48,940 ' 1,161 • 28,962 Warrior Run' . ' 163 5.666 • -376 .. • 4,095. • Parrish & Thomas.. 784 16,609 ' . 213 Leh: Coal & Nav Co ' . .. ' • .12,911, 264,597' Packer Skeer &Co, .. ~ - ' • ' '2,460 - 63,992. Other Shlppeca.'... . 143 '..10.P2 8 , , 244 -.• • 7 363 . , Mt. Etna - • : '. . • , 4,321 NOrth Mahanor .... '''... " • ..SA 6,658 •Walter BrOs. .14 ' C0..... - . „•'_.. ' • • .• :. 12,495 N. Jersey Coal Co., 119 • 1;953 • ..' .• 3,974 John Lanbach & Co. . ".. ' •. ' 80 - .870 . Trenton Coal C 0...... . . 130 ... . . 376' Union Goareo .' -. 64 • - 415 -. '723 • 893' Wybmlng Coal Co.. .• 263 , 2,043 '-98 - 1,258 ..... .. ~. . . : • . •.• • .. - - . . ---- .... . lbw •- ' ' 32,160 1, 404 ,02213'1,969 , • 740,994• . .. • . , • 32,8691 . '740, 9 . 041 . . •. , Total by R. & Canal 65,02912,144,916 ' . • • .- • • Same time lest•year. 74,564'1.615,604 ••• -' • ..:. . • 'lncrease -- '' 53'2,1.12 . NEW ADVERI'MENTS. SLATE PENCIL 110 LEERS with Pon ell Poings.—A new and very-desirable article for tise in schools, etc.,-etc.. Just - received. Call and 4ce thorn at- BANNAN'S'BOOKSTORI3. ^ FLOWERING BULBS BULBSI Sl l lO as lIYACINTIIS, different kinds, double and differente Mors :.'PC LIPS, single and doable, CROCUS, NARCISSUS, JONQUIL'S SNOW DROPS, just received and for sale it LBANNAIIPS Book mid Need Store; by the single, dozen or hundred, at lowestprices. • • . • • Ciarpets,•Oil Cloths - and . Window Elbndea. . J. STEW.A.,IIT DEPITY; . • . • 253 S/Second St above SprucU, Would rm3peettully Inform , Ms customers and others, that hale selling - from our of the largest and best as sortments of -CARPETS; OIL CLO'I3B, 'WINDOW SHADES, .&e...; that he has had - lor many years,, and at reduced prices. • Bent 29,..641-39-3m GOVERNMENT STAMP. AGENCY... (AMES A. INNEN. •Eigq., Collector. of this J ,Dls!r Ict , having relinquished the sale of Stamps.. and turned his whole 'stock oven to us, wo will here 'after funiisn.all kinds of Government Stamps In sums to stilt purchasers. -We ,will always keep a fall supply on hand. Persons - in-the District. selling Stamps will be furnished at the usual discount. . . '• • - BENJ. HANNAN... FREDERICK INSTITUTE. FOR:YOUNG MEN AND BOVii. .The Winter Session of this Inititute will commence on Illonday, October ! 2)d. Prof .. Charles Long hurst; M. A.. of Cambridge University,. England, Rev. F: T. Hoover, 8.. A.; and others equally competent, are in charge of the several Departments of Instruc tion:- Send for a Cataltsme: Address, ." • • : A. PurSteE,§IIPPLECE, Principal, Sept. 29; Frederiek.,-Montvmery Co., Pa. O _ RPHIANS , COURT. 16112:—Punma . rit to an order of the Orphans' Court . of the County o Schuylkill; in the Commenivealth of Pennsylvania, the snbscriber, 'Administrator of Daniel F. Berger, late of the Township of North Mantielm. in tho.Conn ty of Schuylkill ; deceased, will expose to sale by pub lic vendtie on ' flattsseday,, ; Notemlbet 17tli, 1866:- At 10 o'clock in the. forenoon, at the public house of Mrs..Eoons. In the Borough of Schuylkill . Haven; la the County of Schuylkill aforesaid — All that certain e or plantation -situate in the Township of North Manbeim.aforesaid, bounded by lands of Jacob .Bittle, Sr.. Reuben _Schroeder, William Berger, Daniel Drees and others, and .containing ninety - -six . acres and fifty-seven perches, with the appurte nances, consisting of a two-story frame dwelling hcinse, Swisa - Barn, &c. :This farm_ has two apple orchards upon it andi is pleasantly situated on the Pinegrove road within'a mile from the Borough of Schuylkill Haven.' late the eetate of said deceased. - Terms and conditions made known at the time and place of sale by • WM. BiTTLE, Adtoinistrator„ By older of the Orphans , Court, A. Dotramaror, Clerk.' Pottsville,•Sept 29, 00 .* 99 VALUABLE FARM:FOE BALE, Near Lewisburg, Northumberland Co., Pa. . . The subscriber -will sell °tie 'of the .best located Farms'in the State, containing 90 acres, all in a fine state of cultivation, except 6 acres of woodland. It is located in Northumberland County, four miles from. Lewisburg, 'and within a-quarter- of a mile 'from the' Railroad station .on the Sunbury and' Erie Railroad, . Mersey field of which can be, Bean from•th:f i l dwelling bowie . , the • land being nearly , There is a line Apple Orchard- of 58" Trees jot in bearing, besides other:Fruit Tiees, = and is well watered by . streams -.running through the farm. The libprovementa. consist of a new Brick :House, 32-feet square.' .with Summer Kitchen and a Spring House, anew Bank. Barn TO feet in length, with two ..dOors for threshing, .with" well of water, Pig Pens. 'Com 'Cribs and other.ont buildings. The fences are all good, and everything . connected with the Farm is in eacellenteontUtion. The subscriber is engaged in other business, and has determined to sell at a bar gain. The price can' be obtained at this office. For farther particulars apply to or addreei tbe'subscribi3r, fLeyrisburg - P. 0., Union C 0. ,: Pa.. . • . Sept 29,,'66: 7 99-6C.: ..• .N. B. ZEKMIII2 . 3IAN.' • C 0 L 11M B HOUS E l 111 and 113 liorth Brinut St., (ABOVZ 420/11 PHILADELPHIA . - The subscribers beg..lettve - to Inform . their many friends and the public in general, that theY have taken this,old and well known-house, -and. have retarnished it in the best manner( and . are now prepared to accom modate the Public on the most- reasonable terms. ' They also desire to announce to the traveling com= inunity that this house is very gonvenlent.to the Phil adelphia and . Reading Railroad .Depot, and bat a few' steps to Arch street, where the street car§ are up and down town,lbe moat central railroad line for tautness,. and a very desirable part of the city for com fort. • All we rife" to to give us a call. . • . - BERTOLET & BARADT, Proprietors, *Sept '29, '66 " 59-6ta ORP)IIII.ANIV.COVIIT :*ALE.—PurMant to an order of the Orphans' :Court of the County of Schuylkill,' in the.. Commonwealth - of Pennsylvania, the subscribers: Trustees to sell the Real Estate of Henry.M. Berger, late of the Township of Wayne,, in the County of Schuylkill, deceased, will expose to sale hy Public,vendue, - on._ -- Saturday,, November 11404,18‘111,• Atjtio'Clock in the • forenoon, at. the public horete of •John H.• Wornmer; in the Townihip , of Wayne, in the: County of Schuylkill afOresaid, the following described - Real - Estate situate inthe ',Township . of Wayne afore- . . .. . . . No. 1. All that certain' tract . of land. &Minded a by lands of John 13nrkenbach, by landa formerly of John Humniel.. George Wagner. fiert. Scholl; John Zimmerli*, and othera, containing 241 _acres, 'and allowance.. • ' - - . . .. - : . .., ,•.. ..• - No: 2. All that 'Certain tractof land bounded by lands formeffy or Daniel R. Berger, . the New York Coal' Conwar,. John Burkenbach and others, and contain to 202 ~ o. 3. All that certain tract of•land adlolning tract ' No. 2, lands or George Bretzturs, and others, and con- _ taming 22 sexes and seventeen perches. No. 4. All that certain tract of land adjoining tract No. 8, lands of John Burkenbactiand others, and non- . taming 21 acres and fifty-seven perches. • - No. lt. All that certain tract of land bounded by lands of John Barkenbacb. Jr„ Jobb :Dieter, Joseph Irertig, John. Si. Crceland and others, and containing 35 actw.aud fifty.soven perches.'. . . No ; 8. All that _certain tract of land .bounded by lands of •Fretierick Hahn; George Zsehman and binds. late, of Henry Berger: and :containing seventy-five ' acres and one hundred and-rlfty eight perches, late the 'estate of Henry. AL Berger, deceased; . Also at the same time and place' all that captain tract or piece 'of land situate in the Tawnshrp of Wayne aforesaid, bounded by lands of John Ziegler, Wm, Young, David Lehr, and lands late of H enr y -Berger, deceased, containing 8 acres 128 perches, late the estate of Christian Berger, lammed. - , Terms and conditions made known at the time and ',place of, sale by • • . JACOB D. WoIi.M:LB., , " ANTBONY TRICK Tniateee. By order of Ilia Or&ans' 00120, • . , • - A, DOEMIAIOT, Clerk. • ' Pottsville, Sept 29, 'GO • • • 39. I. E. WALRIA_VEN., 719 Chestniit St., Philadelphia. .4,423 is M 5,376.11 159.5501.3 21,123 IS 80,413 II Brueatcltc. 349,656 1-- . . , Ani nowoffering' the moste.omplete assortment of. the above goods of my own importation. • Sept 29, 'O6 iIIITAXT, - STRATTON stir, KIMBERLY'S .• •• INT4itifATIONAL''.i • • COMMERCIAL COLLEGE: TELEGRAPHIC: INSTITUTE, ASSE]tBLY B 1 ILDI GS— . . . • Cor. Hada: . -• . : . The CollegWe'Conrie - erubraces . . Commercial LaCr, .; Commercial, Calialudtioata, • . Ilusine.. Papyri,. • ' . • • , 'Telegraphing,. - • Phoiiograpby, and Spcllin~. Stimieots received at any time. Dlplonms awarded on a satisfactory. examination. •_ - For further partied . lariplease call or send for a circular: . - Sept 29, , 96 . 2309.3' 441,543 724 13,121 23,990 29,977 23,214 3U,393 44,623 67,750 30,932 6,36 D UNION 11A.1,1, EXTRAORDINARY ANNOUNCEMENT. Wiil be i)erfornicifthe . Drama of HUNTING: A TIIR,TLE, With' MISS CORDELIA 7 CAPPELL In bah plecen The distingnished COmedian and Burlesque Actor, STUART ROBSON .- - - The greatest favorite ever known to the Philadelphia publ; will commence •au engagement,. during 'w hich he will appearin many of his Ade-splitting .BUR LESQUES, FARCES; MUSICAL. INTERLUDES, in cluding among others “KING LEAR, THE CLISS, ,, ••HAMI;ET, OR'. WEARING OF THE . 'BLACK, , ' Ac., Ac. . • CZerBecure you seats early at . flosbyshell torcheatia Circle..„ 25 etS, Secured scan in Orcbestra Reserved seatican be had atbosbyshell Bros., C'entie street, whern they can be secured 3 days in advance. DOORS open at T o'clock. - Performance to commence tit S precisely . : , • ar See Bale of the dliy for each evening 'a perform N. B. Persons of an [raj - wooer character, not ailmitted Sept. 29, '6C,-It . •.. F YRE .& Fouith and Arch Slre!t., Philadelphia; Have now Completed thOir IMPROVEMENT and are ' • now Offering on the BEST of TERMS— • FULL STOCK OF FALL DRY GOODS. • Fine Stock of SHAWLS, - • Ft'ne Stock SILKS, Fine' Stock Of DRESS GOODS, Flee Snick of-.WOOLENS, ' . • ,Fine Stock of STAPLE GOODS, • • Fihe Stock of FANCY GOODS, etc. 'etc. New and desirable Goods daily reeei red, - and Sold at Small advance'Wholesale! Sept 26,'66 LETTRifte4 Remaining Unclaimed in the Poet Office, at Pottsville, State of rentiSylva niti, on the 'nth day , of September, isec. • , • To, obtain any. of these letters, the applicant • m st call for .t! advirt4ed Letters,” give the date of this Mid pity'one cent for adVertiaing. . If not called for within one month be sent to the Dead _Letter O ffi ce:. . • • Be . . Benson . son Martha Flyzin Kate' Morris .Totat sh Gonyngharn T D GrirriJ 'Co: Meredith Le6nora Cooley Frank: ". liahr joeepti C - ... Perry AJr -• ' • Conrad H ',.: -HorrY.Joho - ' Prescott Thomas ConroyJ C. ' Jov es Edivard . • . St. Co o'llolin .Johif Kennelly Jacob : Richardson U. S ctizileY M . Kerigan Martin , .. Rofroth llnniel W S Kenny yalk Elt Sayre Gen F. Day Jacob 'Leahy Thomas . Sullivan Tinit.iby Denuley John eh Larkin John ph - Spellman I,'at all-- Dalton Mary MeGaughrtin T I'urreyll.l) Devine Cath Mullen Joseph . Ward Margaret- Duhaney Annie Masnu Michl Werivick Lydia .lasentinth John . , .Wm Yost Jadob G Sept 19, • - SIi•SILIAMAN, P.M.. EAECLTOE'M MALE 'of Real Barks and Schuylkill Counties. \VIII he sol4.at. public sale: at the ••!Port Clinton ••110u5e,..• near, the Hailiond'tletiot, ludic town of Port Clinton, on-tues aly,. • • No. L=All that valuable TA VL'iiN 'PAN,D situated near the Rending Railroad Depot d. T in ort Clinton, an known as the -Fort Clinton Rowu.," • formerlyzt occupied by"the'Messrs.'Lebbo, wit h amyl!: ac. • commodation for travelers or Summer boarders, . and all necessary coil veniences—wi th the inlet of -laud upon which the camels erected, containing 6 acres more or.less.• The'buildinga and grounds' are in good repair,. and immediate posawision given.. No. 2 : L.-The tract of Mountain Land adjoining' No. 1, containing 412 acres, 'More or less. . • No. valuable FARM. near the town of. Ree ls, (Ringgoat station:) on Little Schuylkill Railroad; now occupied and farmed by Frederick Leuhsrt, and . containing 138 acres and 115 perches, on which are erected good farm buildings. . - • • No. 4.—A - tmct of land' in Schuylkill Townihip, Schuylkill County, adjoining lands 01 Danielj. RR Miller mid others, contenting 111 acres, more or NO. 15. 1 —The undiVidedhalf of all that traerof land situated in Wear Penn Township, Schuylkill. Can aty, adjoining lands of Sulcimon Bochert; and --, 130 lien, and others; containing ill acres, more or leas. • 411 the above properties, (except No. S.) are situated .upon the route of the Atli.mic Great Western Rail-_ wad; and will undoubtedly increase, largely In value upon the completion of that important direct Road frozn•the Atlantic le the great Wert.' •• • . bale to commence at la o'clock, noen, on said. day, When conditions will be made known by • RieCtitor of Wiliam A. 'Richards, deceased. 'D EPO T FOR -• • •. • • " FURNISHING DRY .GOODS: . . • .: A CARD. Eußprenr, VAN ILAELISOEN it AMMON, No.'looB Chestnut Whose establishment for the sale of • • ' • • HOGSE-FtILIDSIDD(CDRY GOODS Ie unequalled in the extent and • 'Variety of its assort meta,' beg to announce to IioUsEKEEPERS• 'RE NEWING THEIR SUPPLY, or persona alicint to far nigh, that they are /tow. receiving their FALT ASSORTMENT OF FIit t II4IILLNENE . COTTON WOOL FOR HOUSEHOLE• USE, .Linen Shootings, • .•, • Cotton Shootings; ' • .• • ,Pillow Linens, . • t • ~ • • • PIIIO'W Marlins, • Damask Tabli-Clothi, • • '..'fable Linen., • . • • Damask Napkins, • • • llierdeied Towelm, , • • • • Toweliugov, - . • :• . kilanketio, Table and - Embroidered 'Piano and- Ta-' ••• ble Covers, ••. • And: every other article suitable for Well-ordered household,: -• . • :' • . Sept. 29, ,0C.39--tt lUIRCE'M • PATENT` EiCATEIS.—Just '1 redeivedPeirCe's Patent Slates, with leaf for WS= ces and Schools. , Also Leaf Mentorandums for - the pocket. For 'sale at B. BANNELITS,. Centre Street, Pottsville, Pa •.• • - . ' . IiNDAY 'SC . IIIOOL HOOKS AND 11.1- .0 :BBARllini and dandayNchoollEgequi mites of kinds, at Union prices, - always for sale at • • . • P...BANNAN , S . . . • • 800 k and Stationery Store, Pottsville. Prßy purchasing of as they save the carriage. -MASOIIIC HALL ELEC‘NT CIJRTAINS Patters, 7. i kra)4eak, Dining awl .81repiug• neonl6, Darnairksi . Terry, Reps, 8 wibasLacir.and ' Nott in emus Lace. WINDOW :.SDADES OF TIIE . .NE - WEST DESIGNS THIS SATURDAY EVENING, SEPT. '29 The Streets of Neir York, And: the Fake of ON MONDAY: EVENING, OCT. Ist, PRICES OP ADSIISSION October 16th, 1966 SUCH AS "VIAL SIVOILTH. 9 I4 Misted Copy Book. -1124 Just Receilred..:Bllsworth's Slated COPY Books for Families and Primary Schools. Complete In three numbers. For sale at - B. BANNAIPS, Centre St.,, , Pottsville, Fs. SIILVER % WARE...PIckIe Jars., . Synip jars Sugar jars, Mugs, 'Butter Riches, Napkin Rings take Baskets; Ice Pitchers, • &c . .; &c. :Silver Tobacco Boxes lined with gold. • It: C. GREEN, ' • 'Dec la, !By '4O. • '.Centre St:„ Pottsville. • • S2LOOO YEAR made : by anyone with $l5, —Stencil Tools. No experience necessa ry._ Tne Presidents, Cashiers, and Treasurers of 3 Banker Indorse the circular. • Sent tree ' , with samples.— Addrees the Anierican, Stencil Tool Works,- Springtleld, . Vermont .• July .23, • '66-30.3m . . . . r.III.IeII.ANS , . COVET. SA LE.-,Purtmant td V ill order of the Otphamr Court of the Countynf Sclitulkillyin the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,-the eutuicriber, Guardian of the minor' children of EVAN J. Etusit,tata of - the bbrough of St. Clair; in the County, 'Of Scbuylkill, - deceased, will 'expose to Bale Saturday,' October 6, 1666; .at g o'clock In the afternoon, at the public house of Francis W. Richardson, In the borough aforesaid. NO.:l.—The two undivided third parts of all .those certain three two atoryfrime - houeea,.and lot or piece ;Aground.' Situate in the said 'borough of St; bounded in front by Third Street. In the rear by a ten feet wide; and by lots No. 29 and -No. 23, con taining In - front:oo feet and in length 'or depth 95 feet, being part of the lot N0..24. • •• , .. • • • Na. .2.—The undivided third parts of all that certain. . two story frame house and lot of ground, urinate' in the said borough•of St .Clair , bounded in front by Third street, hathe rear bytho other half of -Int No. 99, (of . which this lot lea part) andby lots No. 97 and 99, - con taining in front on said Third street sixty . feet and in - .depth 100 feer,, with the appnitenancee, the estate 'of said minor children.: . Terme. and conditions made known at the time and place °fettle by : • JOHN SEITZING ER.- • . • . Guardian. By order of the Orphans' Court, ' • • • -, • . • . A. D9I3R4ANN, Clo-k . . Deedtor the rrerriainleg ' one undivided third.put of said Houses and Irate will be given by M. Pyle and husband eo tbat.the':Otirehater eau get a good title, to the whole of theni.._ ' - , • . ' • JOHN. SKITZWIER,.Oustrdiau.. .31,1 t . Bept.l6, !NI . „ . . • A • 1`4141,117_A IIZE , PARDI tetairarettat. public sale 'on • ' Saturday, Oesobtail3e.llli66...• ' • • On the preadets., •In Shamokin Township,- Northrint- - .I;krAnd..Ccataty...reana.. within....oae,mite.ot the Rt liallroatt: and . lire Wee 'olShaitiokbl • t q we,•ku tut tettaiwthrni,:tlintatitni'and tractcitl69 mcfirdeleaai-jed Ind. 130 of hhicb le :1 • tkereditild ander a good-Istateof caltivation, the bat-, an erell.titabera-Wittt white catit,.:tbeataot pine-and chest:hut - • • - •.- , • • - •• The ImPeowemellit ski s h it !arm eOinitiodroaa two lOW derail* hOuse,''' "with Oderneatti;:a. good weIIVE-watatitiltelitor,•wittitAree Aiverilk ligang - ~9CCO*tet k 'eotivenientto - the ' hOaae,it - good, tame log` 'sad frame ; barn and .. • Wagon house, User with tbe - necessary. out .build=' taga..c.Two good betirtogorritaide otadataing• Sep-: teboiceagg4l.trees,7, with a gteat: Vioietir Of otherfralt . - plaseteAvatm plum, cherries, Ac- .;Sate will .commeatestatbsei• ..Odt on'Addeltayl tertoteteditbatills4lll4l4t belnscia latoWn the of gale- ~...HTRAm L. - GOLDIN; .sept ifie‘4l4l • • -• • : NesiPainos.• . . SCHUYLKILL :COUNTY. PARIC..ASSOCIATIGN. • The First Annual Horse Ehr.hibitlon of the Assocla, tion will be held on the new grounds of theAssocistlon at I'oU...rills, Vredueaday.;.Thursday and Iftri. dor, October 17th, Il9ttiondl.9th.. • • The rark contains 37 acres of land, beautifally loca ted, onehalf, mile from :Pottsville, with a one-half mile tract.. ' , • • • $llOOO, will be itstributed in pritet, - 16 follows: • • .WEDNESDAY;- OCTOBER ,17th. - • slßio for Trothng Horses owned. In Schuylkill County ; to go to hainess—beld • .5.75 !qr . all Running Horses-1 mile dash. • • .$5O. for Mimeo that never. _trotted for money—beet in 3, to harems. . • , • THURSDAY, - . OOTORER :18th. , €:23 for Trotting Horses"loin' 'yearn olcVand under bent in three: to harm. • •, • : • $lOO for double teams, Open to all . horses--Lbest 0 sop' for Tieing horsesest in' 5:- go . as they please. " • FRIDAY, 00TOBERA9th.. $3O for Trotting horses to go to' addle (for horses thst.never beat 3.Z.0), best in 5. ' . 1.4,100 for Doable Teint, owned and • driven togeth :er —hest in 3. . . . *3OO for all Trotting Horses—best in 5 to harness. • ..Entries with 10 per cent. enclosed,; can . be made up to October 13th, to the President of the Association, three or four to 11 . 11, two to start ; to be &e 1 days and track; • • Smgle Admission for team Season tickets • ."' ". . • J. J. D: Bei sitii4x, Svc{etary apd • Treanurer. - Septa', •G 6 sPIA.N.O FORTES: Messrs. C - U.IIIIIINGS, :JENNIS, of Nevi York City, • • • Would respectfully. inform the. Inhabitant 'of Potts ville and vicinity, that one of the firm has _jest arrived' in this Borough, and. Is uow opening at the Store or. P. Harrigues,Centre Street, at which place he will of fer for .sale; for a short . time, a Variety of their Ele.: glint Piano Varies. These Instruments every modern, improvement,: are all Seven =- richly finished In plain and carved Rosewood cases, each' has the full Iron or Metalic Plate, by which is secured, strength and ability to stand In tune,- as also the Over 'strange Bass; adding volume and power, which. togeth-:: er wit ill: their Supenor ticale, got up atgreut labor, and carefully conetrocted Sounding Board, gives to their. instrament that: pleasing resonance of tone so much admired in their Piano Fortes. Each -Piano has the. FRENCH GRAND ACTlON.acknewledged by aline , qualmed With the mechanism'" of the Piano Fortes, to be far superior to any other in ee; For superiority of tone, Ilueness of touch, elegsnce of finish and general durability, , the Piano ' I.'Ortes "of Cummings - Jennys are acknowledged to be, In every retipect in the fore most rank. . These instruments Millie offered to this piaci: at less than New Work, prices, and a full -guaranty for live years will • accompany each henry. thirty of these Instruments have been purchased at Riiadlng within the last three months, among whom are the manes of Dr.. Hoffman; Dr. Slagel, We. Wester; • 4;4., Wm. -H. - Melly:tine, 'Esq., George Sowara, Saul. Heckler, George Freese, .Danlel 'Ermentrout, Esq, Prof. - Wonnberger, Mid others, ill of which - lupin been selected by the followiug; Professors of Music: Prof. Robert George Page, Pref. EilWand Berg, Organist. of Trinity Lutheran Church; Prof. Carle Weinberger, 'Organist of St..lohu , s Germ:in - Lutheran Church t Prof. Loesli, of St.. John's Lutheran Parish School .A. San. ,ers,•No.: Nu North bib street Maj. Samuel L Young, and Louis Bichard.S. , will be taken in exchange-Lai • . Sept :S. '66 • • . SS4t • V.XIItiRIUTOWS ISA LE of valuable TIMB LI COAL and IRON ORR.LANDS, situate in Morris Township, Tirie„a County, and Brown Township, Lveo ming Connty, ea., on. Pine Creek and Trout RIM.— Will be sold at public sale on - ' •• . . Thursday, 9ctober ISth, 1860, At the Court Idolise, in Williamsport. Lycoming-Conn tY, 'Pa., at IVA. M., the follbwing lands, on which.tbere is a tine lot of Pine, Oak, andUlleinlock Timber', Iron . Ore and Bituminous Coal. •.. . _ . . .. -•- -TIOGA COUNTY. - • • • " No. 1.-4 undivided ball IA Iron -Ore and COM. Tract-No. 4,3s4,"containinic 1,000 lu:rea, more ur in the 13luesburg Coat Baum.- , INCOMING COUNTY: No, 2.—That Well known and valuallle Tavern Stand keowg . Lloyd's Tavern, "situated• on rine 4 .4 1- 'Creek and on the Stage route from Jersoy Shore to Wellaboro* with large Barn and other r ings, good water, and 100 acres of excellent laud. • . •No. 3.—Undivided half of Vermont Tract, No. .4,303, containing 732 acrea, more or lets: No. 4.—Undivided half of Hampstead Tract„ No. 4.301. (Coal Land)'emitainlng:449 acres, more or less. No s.—CudividLxl half of Maple Bottom Tract, No. 1,1;50,. Faatern Dart, 40 acres.-more or less. . -• • No. 6.—Undivided.hall of Southern part, .120 acres, No. 7.—trrelfelded - ban of Soith-weeteni part, •35 acres,. more or less. -• • , • • •. Coeditio'us of sale Made know%.lm i t i t,titaPpffe by • - Executor Wm. A. Ifiebartbk„ deceased. .' - Sept . • • , 35 , 3 t • . toxEcuwouos 14AI I E .of-Valitable Real ble 11.4 tate in the City of Reading, Pa.. Will be sold at public saie . ou ' : ." . . .. mintuedny, October Willi, 1566, .' - at the Keystone !lonise, ;iii the City ,of -Reading, all Nw.l.—Three-story Brick Dwelling Rouse, with modern improvements, No. 435,9 p Penn Square, north Bide, between 4th and• sth . streets, 'third house'e: teed of Farmers' Bank of Reading, and,the lot Of ground upon' w h ich the same is.erected, feet front by 230 feet in depth,. including a two.atory - Brick Dwelling :House on Liberty Alley, on rear of said lOt. • (inn bo : easily converted into a first class store. - • - , • Nu. 2.—The undivided two-thirds of all that valua ble IRON ORE TRACT, on Pend% Moimt, near the City of Reading, known as tit "Weimer Tract," ad jolniug lands of E. Jonathan Deininger, Esq., and oth ers, containing 59!:‘ acres. 'listother 'undivided third Will be ()Bereft by the Owner thereof of the some time and place. 'llere will also be offered at the same time and place, SEVEN CHOICE PEWS—Nos.t.S, 64, 65, 98, 101, 1011. and Le.iin Christ (Episcopaly Cuurch, Refuting, au edifice well known for its exterior architectumi beauty, itStasteffil• internal arrangements, and, other excel lencies. • Sale tireonunenee at one o'clock, P. M., when con ditions will be made !Mown by .. ' WM.' R: GRfl •• Executor of Wm. A. Richards, deceased. Ws. Y. Lviisa, Auctioneer., Sept '22 —ItEi4M 7111 OBBle.ING?N WIRE ROPE AGENCY 1% at- CEO. BRIGHT CO.'S, .Pottsville. Rcpt. LOT Or CIGAID4 FOR 14A.I.E..—Twenty -1-4 six thousand Cigars of good quality tobacco, and gaud 'size, are offered for sale by the. subscriber at SIS per thousand;All tuxes being paid on them. They are put up itt boxes containing mu cigars each. Address LEVI BILLIG, Ilamburg, Barks county; Pa. . Sept S i far, • • • 26-6 t• CUT. FLOWERS,' . BOUQUETS, AND ORNAKEtTA:I, WREATHS, Farntithed of all sizes and pricer, at Greenwood . Alisroory, , (ioniegl/isig - New and Novel for-Agents, Ped -1.0 Slere, ennotry'Storee, Druggists. and all seeking an honorable and profitable bueineee. Free by mail for Sa eta.; .wholeeale s9,per doz. Canvassers realize $6'W $l2 per day prellt. , ABBOIT,S DOWD, Sep 11, 311-411 Manufacturers. 196 ll'ater St.. N. Y. .NIJRSERY. - Grape GREENWOOD . Vines arid Baser for Faill.Plaating. • We offer a fine Stock•of Concord Vllies for planting , this, season, all grOwn from bearing vines, reasona -tile prices. • Also. a choke collection of hardy Hybrid Perpetual-Roses grown on--their own roots, These Eases withstand the cold .of our hardest 'winters, and are therefore peculiarly adapted for Cemetery purpo see:- Send in your orders early. ... B..BANNAN. Dowder.—Duponvs celebrated sporting powder, Fg. FIT,, in kegs of 'AS, r2m and. 63( lbs., or in smaller qualgitiee. We have also aluil stock of Eagle, Duek and Diamond grain Powder. in pound and half-pound caulkers. Shot, of a Verysuperior quality sizes,. by the bag of 25 pounds,. or single pound. Eiers celebrated Water Proof Caps,. Eley's and Bald.. win's (itut Wads, and everything In the hunting line at L.EWLS C. 'THOMPSON & CO.'S, Cor. Centre and Market tits. Sept 2.2,,34- A VALUABLE FARM FOB SAI.E.-- 21WIUbe offered at public sale on • Saturday, Bctober.2oth Nest; . on,the premises, all 'that certain Farm Mid Plantation, situate •in Shamokin Township, in the County of, Northumberland, Pa., containing 116 acres, more or lees. - being about four miles- from Shamokin town. • The Philadelphia and Shamokin Valley Rail road passes through said property. The improvements are-k good: large; commo-A diens Dwelling House,' with.A goon Cellar in. derneatik good well of water at the door two never failing springs •near the hOttee. A: good large frame Bank Baru,. wagon house ; .corn crib, and the neceseary outbuildings, a good thriving and hearing apple orchard of srafted fruit, together with peaches, pears, plums; and cherries of the choicest kind.. ' About eighty acres of the above described land is cleared, and under a good state of cultivation. There are about thirty acme of excellent, meadow on said premises. Sale will commence-at 1 o'clock, P. hi., where due attendance,wili-be given, and terms of sale made known by'ANN WOLVERTON ' Near Yakima, Shamokin Tp. Said 16 89-4 t jpIOTIP SWILL E ..11.11SCUL A TING •LI BECALM 17. The undersigned having purchased the Brotherhoad Library, with the view of making it. a permanent institution iii Pottsville, solicits the liberal patronage of the reading public for its support. The Library contains a large collection of books, men se lected and of groat variety,-affording ready and cheap moons for both instnaction and amnsethent. The latest and best publications added-from time to time, as they appear.- Yearly subscription, $l5 00 rorboolisilaken at :3 cents a day. Special privileges allowed to - subseri. bers residing out of town, • C. Sept 22, - Market St.-, above ad:. CHRONIC DISEASES CORED. ACUTE PAIN RELIEVED AT ONCE. 11. ADDISON, 111. D., Late of ilattibuig, the hoce.eriful , Herb and Magnetic Doctor HRS . talwii.Room No. at the Union Hotel, fcrmerly. the Exchange; Pottsville, where he will practice from the 15th of September to the Ist of October. 1866. , Dr. Addison's practice is merely diseases of a Chronic na ture, to cases who have believed their health gone for ever. His treatment Is pleasant and Mild, yet so pow-, 'erAtl that perions who bad suffered fo'r years from dis :easei pronounced Incurable, have been restored to their health in an incredibly - abort space of time. - He combines his magnetic °pen - one with his medicines in many cures, which effect a speedy and petmanent 'cure where any treatment canavail. Healing the sick by the touch or by Manipulation, has been practiced - by men In. all: ages, yet few luive each a remarkable influence over disease* of the body' and mind 'Ls non-demonstrated' by the pradtice of-Dr. Addison. The life and. vital* that' ho Imparts to others by his magnetic= Operations causes; many to re joice. .. Some call it the girt-of healing, but there Is nothing marvellous or supernatural in It. All. ho does is strictly scientific and in accordance with the laws of -Dr. A.'s examinations are - peculiarly'valuable; inter esting and satisfactory: they show to the patient that he clearly Ascertains what ails them, He seldom asks the patient any questions respecting their diseases - of complaints: 'He invites the &Render) of those labor ing under any of the, various characters or 'forms of diseases, such u Sore Throat, Catarrh. Coughs, Incip. lent Consumption; Disorders of the Liver and Stoat seh,diliduey Complaints, Gurel and Disordets of the Bladder, Diseases of-the Heart, Nervous Affmalens, Isienralgia. Rheumatism, Weakness, Constipation, Piles, Fistnla., - . iticrofula;- Canker Erysipelas, Tetter, Itch, Salt Rheum-Eruptions, Old Sores, Sick Head , .ache., Raising. Mud, Asthma., Pain in Back, Side'and Shoulders Cramp and Suppression and Womb Diseas es, General Debility, Bits, St. - Vitus .Dadoe„ , ' and all kinds of Sexual. W•eaknosetand.Diseases. . . - Mee hours fromll tai 18 IL, and from 21 . 0) BP. Sl.' - All consultations will bta free of shame. • •• . Sept 1.8,..'86 SALT' nuiemn . Oft-TETTEB, . Chilblains or 'Frosted reef; old lingering Sores, Bum' and Scalds, Bites of Poisonous Insects, Sore Lips, Sore: Irlpples Breaking text and Soros on Infants and child ren, Corus and Bunions, Ingrowing Toe Nails, and all -Skin Diseases are. cured by. Dr. S. BOGERS Botanic ointment.'.Price; SO cents a boa. Sent by mail for 60 tents. Depot 206 pink Street, Philada., • stipc • ' - ST- - 1..1 . 0ENE &LOT AT PUBLIC 4.11.11:18: I • The agbacrlber:will Real at public eldeort,Monday, , • tlictebee. Ist, 1866. • . At y, P;ltt, one 20-foot lot Ila leetrleep, .containinga new two-story frame dwelling house, Ablated Ai m i on Market Street, between Wood • and Clay Sti..,_ k am In the Boforigh of Pottsville. Title 'clear and• free of all ineambrancea,.,' It will be sold.at private • a S e e P if tA .a. ' p 6 ed 4 44 bte,f ore taWstolja.-Y. C RMICS• 1 • 41t - . ; GRRENWOO,D , Trees , ei.ery..deseription suitable. for Pall .Platitlag, including. a splendid lot of bearing • Pear Trees con reellraam.edi .Callalittemuoine ouratoels.,- • ' . , . . EVIRS!. PATENT HAIR- °JUMPERS, Fertheilaipiinakised . Waviraglf„aaOlei'lkalr: 1:0 4reqi ; Aii-yotir storekeeper for them. If hadoert datieep them, write to the manufacturer, E. riflNS, Sixth St. and Coltdnbia Avenue, Phila. Sept 29, 'Ca p 984 m I -111111111,42111111i VIRUS 7, I—We have Jest re ,'celved-s Stock Htinis.r.both single and - d on k t biareity-. .Ajoi Powder. Flasks. 'EihOPonches, Clone Balm &c., &c: - Iret saki cheap - at.- - Sept LEWIS C. THOMPSON & CO.'S, Sept . Cor. Ceram sod Marks% Sts, rotoript Satztrday; Septenilbei 291.1866. ''..I . ATEST‘i'NEWS. The . ' Poor . . Cope-:-A gim-4g.griesalleirol Report. for • lber—Riscellenp. -- • . , • , • Tlie Democratic candidates throughout the' t i'• 1 .,.: country are to be pitied. The .Tolinson men . I ," i; r r deliberately subsidize them, and dictate the '. „Ir - '; amount that they must pay for electioneering -',„•,,.?'7, purposes and,ex . peases. ',The wretched. DO:- "•-'• gnash neocrats ash their teeth in the of ;•''. humiliation, but have .no alternative (ithe‘. : , than submission. It hi the Johnson men' ha . - 1 - ;' , :1 get the offices and do the dancing. Tim hap- -'.. ~,-, less Democrats ate being:Jklad to. Pay - the '2,11 fiddler. The base uses to„which the Demo- exacy have come are extremely distressing to , those who think upon Its formertirestig,e and :,-.. its lost grandeur., • , : . • -.. , ~, s, The Agricultural Report, for . September, 1 ,; ' ,l argues a demand for breadatulls ; from: this ' :',,,i1 country: The British giain crop 'is poor; ' t not more than 30 per cent. of last. year: • In France the same ~condition °Mama.' The . - United-States have begun : again-to supply , 1 , • cotton to Great Britain, the Imports from January to June being 9(i,704 bales, it '34.i ', i' cents against 27 and 22 cents for other cot- tons. The cotton crop is estimated at'l,Fro.o,- . ,- 000 bales. There will be 1,000,00y000 bush- .. els'of corn. The report, as a whole, is high- ly encouraging. „ At the steel works of the ;London and Northwestern. Railway at Crowe, irr.Bugiaud, - ..! there is a reversing roiling mill . This mill is -' . reversed every time a bar is passed through, so that .the bar can be passed ba'clt. again be- 1 : tween the rolls and the time is saved that .. / would Otherwise be, lost le passing it back !,- 'ovsa,them. This mill is 'said to have been reversed irithont difficulty_ 73 times in a mi- ". 1 . nuts. It dispenses with the use of a - fly - ..• ''. wheel, and the power used fix reversing is ~ hydraulic, and altogether separate from the -• . steam powei which : puts the mill in motion. .. • The Yout.g, America and St;George crick- . et clubs played at • Hoboken on Tuesday.— The game was drawn. . -One innings only was • f . played. _ The Young America's last. wicket , • tell for 43, \and the St. George's for 43, /. , A woman named' Churchill was fatally scalded In Detroit by the explosion of a can • . • of tomatoes which she placed upon the stove while sealed. ;' ' • 'Cis estimated that it - will, take 'eight bun- . • '',dred Million feet lumber to rebuild the burnt . district of Portland, or about the entire' pro- !, duct of Maine for Iwo years. • Several British.regiments will encamp at • • St. John's near the Vermont. line. ' The Kanucks are again frighteried about the Fenian& - • •- • The Oregon Legislature has baUotted nine times for L. S. Senator, without result. . Rev. Dr. Hawks, of the Episeoptd Church, died in New York,. on Thursday. The cliOlera Is active at Memphis and Nashville. • " . The rebel' Geneml Leadbeater is dead. . The Iron Mountain Railroad, of Missouri,. Was sold on the 27th, to the State for ft, 700,000. GETTING THEIR BREAD AND BUTTER. the Prmident has"appointed" Gen..thic Minister, to France; Gen. Ewing Minister to the Hague; the Gen. Custer a Brevet-Major General in the regular Army.- - e All the above have recently figured in the .support of "My Policy," and abandoned the laurels won in _the. field for' bread and , iittei. Any loafer can get .an otilce from Andy Johnson if he.will only write a letter in favor of "My Policy." . . A WICKED LIE. -The only. capital the Copperheads Italie in, 1 this campaign, consista.ot' lies, bold - and un-. blushing. Their strongest card. as welChS ' • most contemptible falsehood, Which Andrevi Johnson did not disdain to !after; is,' that Congress . voted twice as much bounty to neL. gro soldiers as to white: We haVe alreadk exposed this lie,. , but to leave no; room -for doubt; and to bring the mattei to light in ery detail, we give the following from:the Philadelphia PaES's of Wednesday last:' •- SOldiers of 1581 (where all were white) received no bounty atilrit, but m 1344 they wereaskedto and received - WO bounty fliy. subsequent enactment) for their three years' service.' . Second.: For their •additional .service they' rerieived' s36o.bounty, and from cities, States, counties and bit:- ought., sums miming from sinst to sl,ooo, as an extra dotteMr.. These men served until time end of-the re bet lion. , .Soldiers of . 156 received $lOll bounty from the (lasi. - e m inent, and, In a few raisers bounty from home; Soldiers of 1563, white and black, received $lOO bounty from tho ttovernment, and additletnil bounties • and • 'Soldiers of MA received $3OO bounty from the , l.lMv- . ernMent, and additional bounties. Some black soldiers received no bounty whatever, particularly those who had been slaves. Thu law Is to correct the neglect of 'the Uovernment and to equalize the status of the sold Mrs of I.Sii6 and lobs, and .. the blacks who received no bounty. -Their right to such bounty, must be shown by their discharge papers. Reader, when a cdpperbead utters the bra- . . . zen falsehood that negrir soldiers received more . bounty -than, white, nail it with . the above facts: Lies and indecent langu,sige on . theatutnp distinguish - the copperhead canvass • in this County, to the disgustof the intelli- gent and respectubU.s.. • WORK! NG:ORS WORK! ! ! Next Tuesday week will be election day, • Let the few .days left be marked 'l4 ; active. .• and unceasing elfort on-the part of every ltc publican. 'flier° 'never was a time ;When more impOrtant isstms were at stake,orWhen greater exertions were made by the enemies Of our cause fo*:::24..oroplish their" . endi.. We rival our opponents in energY_ and de- termination. We have before us the glorious .• • examples of Maine and Vermont, who stand ; as beacons to - light•ui on the pathway of, chi r. - ty. Let us 'give to Congress au endorseinent that - will uphold it in its noble work foillhei- . ty-and peace, ani. forever silence those who would surrender to ltebels the fruits of our national victory.. . . , , TW/N-BROTHERS IN ORpLE. Major James Haggerty, the warm friend of , Universal Freedom, whose elmiuentspeechtis ' • are fresh in the memories of our people, says truly, that `!the nine of Andrew Johnson, will go down- the histeric pige blazing with infamy, along side of that of. J. Wilkes Booth ; for J. Wilkes Booth but struck dOwn . the life of a single man, but Andrew Johnson 1 • would strike dolvn a principle for which .' three hundred thousand men sacrificed their lives." F. W. HUGHES. Has became quite hoarse in his'efforts tO convince- the workingmen of Schuylkill: County that one Sduthern Rebel is equal•to two Northern loyal men, and ought to have two yaws to a Northern man's oue—and this 1 Mr. Hughes calls DE3IOCItACY ! We•. should suppose that none but a cowardly .• - deserter could be found in the County that would vote for such , a principle. It is abso-: • lately voting for self-abasement. - I° FLAGS. Let, 'The display" be fine to-day. Every, 0 ,:;• Union *man should hang nut thi; titan, and stripes. • Let . Pottsville be dressedgaily t,.,; is bunting to - welcome the Hero of the White Star Division. • ASE YOU ASSESSED? If not attend to' it at once, as this is the last day on which you can Be assessed,.if you. desire to vote at the next election. • SOLI3MEES, Cieueral Grant, excellent atithority, says:.. r "Vorg-oricr FOR Strait MEN AS WREN LOYA L . TO THE COUNTRY IN 1861.1" . • P-OLITICAL. Arria reviewing the Pennsylvania Conkressional !kid,' the Tribune trays:—"On the whole. we can count , hat one District where the Republican Union ticket Is V likely to lose, and two or three wbereiu there hs good:: prombe of gain " < . •,C Driiw.—The Unlen ticket was elected on Tuesday • In Rising . Suni a promising Indiana village, by TO rat Gras. CCSTRII:who rode to a' railroad car . with the President from Washington. to Springfield, has appointed Brevet Major- General in. the Regular army. I libiesefulnees hi th at brilliant raid ints'ia..en speedily retitarded.•' .1 ; . "My Pouor."—Pxoseitinen roe Arreithien Tun •71 LOY/Jai:lV Puma tiyAPHIA. CONYV , TIO3I.---NOZO/L4.:• Va., Monday. Sept. '24; 12643.--J.- W. Broemley and r f 4 ••", John IL Clements have been removed front the Yard at Portsmouth for attending the Southern Loyd: bite Conventionat Philadelphia. . • • • • • - OTetentl.—Tug- Domes or Ting lantaLAlnitiLiiit 71 , - FRANCISCO, Sept.. 23, 1566,--A Wallah% frtim.satemol:- Oregon, dated yesterday, nye: "The Dettiocratic con jestanta from Grant County have' been admitted- to seats in the.lionse and two Union members Ousted. was tbnittgb the aid of the hitt& members' that the constitutional iunondment was Weed in the Hout , e-- ittad previously passed the Senate:, The. Senatorial ; election: comes up on Tneithry.f. Tris.,Poeinatillimsterdam,lttontioiniery County,. M. Y., whose three sons, son-In-law and brother.in-law fought in the Union army during the whole Rebellion. '1.., 'has been•remeted-jrom elites aral an unconditketal Bredrinedge Democrat appointed. In Portsmouth • • two meahave been dismissed front the Navy-Yard 'for • 4' attending the Southern Loyalists , Convention. So 31 - r.. "Johnson Wrings- round his t irele, rewards loyalty and I L : makeit trtleen odiona..• ; • • • • . • • '.Tan Rebellion has been renewed in Texas,: lad no t . .; One Can be surprised-who has watched. the 14%1;4.5t - hem:l • of that State; anti - seen-the hatred of the Union showw . .,;, In he lowest form by the persecution of loyal l ou t : * • and blacks, in its highest by contempt of the test - oath, and the election of Itebels to Congress. It recalls 124 I. I: when, we read ok . Vnited' Stales - troops attacked by; Texts State militia. The•matterhas importance other - than, as an indication of the spirit of the,. Rebels,. and Gen. Sheridan baa-gone te• the relief' of one troops. . Ter. Bova lv Bien • Kkow DoWN Sow N &CM= ruse Tait in 1361 v-An holnenite - Uniont'. 'meetiug was held . in National Phihuleiplaia, otti; Tuesday.evening-iliPt. Arnontrthksteakers'was Capt;Z, ' D. T..JClUgure of Missend, - He dellyered; a brief bet. , • pertfnent address, dating which be alluded In nie4 • scathing terms to the &posters of Andy Jolmsoit; - .•:.Ttle to • speaker said that the. "Agri in Blue , * were williag now if; •to abide by tile dedslon at the ballet-boxes; Ter 'they A.-. -were COWident Cit'vretatirAtiere but if treason end l -; .Johmscriatign attempted to usurp or defeat. the trtnitrep..„s,. resentativeauftilif American peoples-Congretifto3oo, : in Hine wonlbagain bOundr to shoulder *ferr y mnakets,egil,eoaldfladtbeir -we better •now.ttuntils., • 1861: Captainßillgore appeared Rlijifstleetn theloyt,ll• al men of the South, and claimed that the colorediziewstil• of the South had prontlibeir,lnytilt‘runi. our:country,if, would deserve the execnt - ilea of the civillied.worldA ' it denflusWit th elate •whe bad ndbly " perked Mee in defence of our flag. while it piirdoned and wards l those oho trilled It In the deal. • . . , . ~~.