TIB : OIIRNALL , „ „ TittiNS--$ 2l 7 5 per annum , payable in a d v a n ce $:l 00 it not paid in advance. - • These terms will be strictly adhered to hereafter - TO CLUES: • • . _ ill re copies to one adilrems CIO advance) • 57 . 00 bit 13 00 " ' 61 • • ' 30 " 0(1 (lab subeeripl ions must incaricd ybe paid in advance. The ,locat: et. will be funabibed.to Carriers undidbeca pevloo copies. cash on deli'vecy. - netcymen and Sehool Teacherowill be furnish ni with the JCWRN AL at $l. 50 lo advance, or $1 75 0 • whin the yeal•--over one year full rates. IiATEiI OF AnvEitwisilwro or , s ling including duiP.*One Inaerthin; 7ticta and 1 , -ct;lle'llt insertions '4, cents. One square-of 7 Ifnes,• line!, for lor 2 insertions U insertions $1 1f.% Eutwortent insertions, 25 cents per. mit:Lam,. ;;er ones In proportion. .. • , . .. moserns—Two. tenza. " cox: siartva. p .rere lines., with date, $ ll5 O .isoo • $$ $ O .- - $660 . 0 ~-13 lines. and over It . 800 , 4110i 1 - 2 Go" ii 12 00 iv,,.0"-trittnsi., or 14 lin , cx, aOO " i 6 00 •1000 ". 'l9 i 0 Three *. "21 * 706 • 600 14 00 - 20 00 - Lines over a square, 11 writs a line. Special Noti. ~.„...i. Is per cent. higher. Local Notices, 24 cents Aline. (die inch spare is equal to twelve lines. - . 1 nrger Advertisements as per sgreemer t. • Nth -, winds constitute a line. - • A-rlihe circulation of the Jorratrat is not exceeded b - rai iy paper published in the State out of Philadelphia. , pittshiirg. and itisnow the largest sheet published Ir. Pennsylvania. . . \Catlin the last five years the arttbscripton list was doalited. and it continues tdincrease rapidly. - AA an advertising medium it is one of the best in the State. Terminua of the Philadelphia & Beading R. R., on the Delaware; at PhDadelpi Iryt Pt. Richmond. QUINTARD, WARD, ez CO. 9 Pine Siyeet, NewilVork. .220 Wa 2; 14.11 by ic Boston. COAL OF ALL KINDS.BY TKE CARGO. Jan 27, .66 W. DUNKLEE & SKIPPERS OP COAL q Pier No. 2 19, Port Rielimonil. ' AGENTS FOR • . Manchester Tied Ash; New .Haven and Lo cust Mountain White Ash. OFFICE 2nrix ITALNT7T ST., PHILADELPHIA.JuIy 21, 'CS 2945 • Pier No. 17. aIM.MEI & • HITYTER, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN TIBET' BITUMINOUS OF • ANTHRACITE AND . BITUMINOUS COALS: _ . tirncEs ;-22i 1-2 Wain= 81.; rhilndo. . . Trinity Building. 111 Brood 'York, Room 68. . • 21 dc - 22. Donne 81., Boston.' Feb. 16 1 .67 -7- BANCROFT, .LEWIS 00., . & . - . . . MTNEILII AND BIIIPPEDS OP VIE - _ . Celebrated `ASHLAND COAL, FROM MAR - ANDY MOUNTAIN. • ' OFFICE-111 Walnut-. Street, Commercial Banding, Pliii,delpida.. . . . ' New lurk Offire-77 Cedar Street._ Boston oMoe-2 Doane Street. . . [Oct. 23, '5.9 - 43.. !Pier No, 11 LEWIS T AUDENRIED & CO.; Wholesale Dealers in the befit varieties of - Anthracite and Bittaninotts • • . •. _ r 205 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. OFFICES: { 110 Broadway - , New York. - - - " l. liltalby Street,Roaton. . Pioneer Shippers from Ellzabethport, of -. • : LEHIGH, SPRING MOUNTAIN, HAZLETOi'I, AND - . ' COUNCIL RIDGE COALS: ['s9 13- , 'Pier- Aro. 10 I.oxi. Richmond. J II N-R E dc . S.O N, SHIPPERS•OF • • No. 316 Wallint , Streety. Philadelphia,.. DEPOTS FOR STORAG AND SALE OP COAL : • • No. 200 Weat Thirteenth St., New York: ' Third Avenue and Forty-ninth St., New -York.. !vest Wharf, Providence, Rhode Island.. 4. 4;6 • AUDENItna4 Chp rrirl74* Miners and !kippers ofj, C 0 A. IJ . LOCZST 3fOIINTAIN—from Haar. Diu. Com.ricar. BRAY oKM—from ENTERPRISE COLLIERY. OEORGE'S CREEK CUMBERLAND—,from the Con , soisnaTtort Mama OF MARYLAND. " 1321 S Walnut street, Phlladelphla. OFFICES:. 11.0 Broadway, New. York.. 27 Doane Street, Boston. April 7, '66 PHILADELPHIA, &,€. CII IJVLKILL NAVIGATION. Shipping Wharves for AITHRICITF, COAL a Greenwich, Delaware River, Philada.. LEWIS AUDENRIED dc Co., AGENTS FOR THE SALE OF THE Wolf Creek Diamond Coal Co.'s Dia mond Red Ash, and Black Heath White Ash. Coals. r2osWalnut Street;Thlladelphls OFFICES: { 110 Broadway,'New York. 1.14-Kilby street, Boston. Feb IT, .66 ' Whart.No. 2. .." REPPLIER it BRO. ‘. (N. E. nor. Walnut & Fourth ate., Phila OFFICES: 35 Pine Street, New York. tAercbanterßank Building, Providence DAVIS PEARSON , dr.. Co., mums An sirmas nr TEis CELEBRATED LOCUST MOUNTAIN WHITE: ASH and SPORN VEIN . RED •A'S.H - COAL. 43 fr • ~ ..139 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. OFFICES::No. 111 Broadway, Room No. 9 Trinity ßuilding, New York.. • - - No. 11 Doane Street, Boston. • WHARF--GREENWICH, DELAWARE, AVENUE. . . . P.c.' rr...kaaorr, MLA. ritaauM. BAST, ARMAND. DAMS, PALES Si -Co.,' SIIIP,PERS OF LEIIIGH, . LOCUST MOUNTAIN, SHA. IBOKIN, LORBERRY, _ . AND BITUMINOUS COAL. Bear Valley .Shamokin Coal. .Agents for )Freek's (Centralia Col.) 'Locust ML Coal. Plymouth Wilheabarre Coal. Office, N0.,.:333 Walnut St., Philadelphia. ' May 11. 'l3l 19- MAMMOTH VEIN . CONSOLIDATED COAL CO. .Oar lIICROMi and BROAD MOUNTAIN COALS arc now sold exclusively. by DAY, 'HUDDELL A- CO. - • PArties. ordering from them; may always depend ❑pon_recciving a pure article. . • A. B. ALLMON, Treammrer. Philadelphia, 1811 Feb 'CT 811 • GAIN, HAOKER. & COOK, =X3 LOCUST GAP, .LOCUST MOUNTAIN, • BLACK MEATH. AI&, dealers in other first qualities of ' WHITE AND BED ASH COALS. No, 214, Walnut Street, Philadelphia, and Woodland Wharves, Schuylkil lßiver. • TdogAl 211011 MM HA03133. JEER M. dooc, JOIIN B. STRYKER, Shipper end Agent, Bc6uylkill Haven, Pa. 6.1 y February 15, .62 BROAD TOP. GENERAL 'OFFICE or Ter arctsas? D BROADTOP. WHITE_ ASH . . Scml43itiunintous • • •COA:LS,' No. 104. WALNUT •STREET,', PHILADELPHIA. • . ROBERT HIRE , POWEL, !tanager. COITNEoTTSG OFFICES:. • - 16 Traveler Buildings, Boston, Bass. aS Trinity • " New.Vork. Feb.14..63 • • ' - T-tf LYKENS VALLEY. Lykena Valley Franklin Red. Ash C. O AL • Thr undersigned bating' .the exclusive agency for ru e of the above Coal, are now prepared to furnish the New York and. Eastern • trade a largely increased tepyly of the.celebrafed . , • . Lykens Talley Fran - kiln Ridlb Coal. This coal, from its pority, free burning and lasting is acknowledged to be the best Red Ashwsl . • the market. ~ . . - . thinAmtogementa recent t ly made wil i l i nab tie to offer coal to the trade a more adv rates thaxi eier before and more nearly approximating the price et other Bed Ash coals.' - . • Arrangements have hems completed at Port Itich mond for the shipment of the above coal from the wharves or Messrs. SINNICBSON & CO., lindllessn. & HUNTER, to whom (=stamen for thia r - oal may apply or direct vessels. - • • G. 1100bY 46 CO., n 2 Trinity Building, New York. WALLACE & MOODY, 11 Doane St., Boston. May is, 437 DIEHM & SNELL'S PATENT SLATE PICKER. . _ Thill is I t to remora all tat and ream star many' et It through the brealairr. - It le Wed tluoughota the: Begioff with perfect, eattetaetiou. We refer to AL tinign.Pottaviner John IL-Dersr•,..._ ea, m i n,Blll= end Henry . Heil, Tremont, who "'", the Picker use. Address. _ ''' '' ' . i i 41.21 IT - MUM db Utak Pan - Pk • - . _ • 44 -10L , - T. -• • _ OA.; 411 f i • 4 • 110 — r —4 'I'.L.N 44't yr ;• 114$ • " • • 1 1' • A. • _ AND poTTs - A's; GE RAC ADVERTISER PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING BY BANNAN & RAILS-EY, POTTSVILLE, SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, PENNSYLF . ANIA. Vol., XLIII.----No. 26. • - "N ''"1" OE. WE bave - appoilita3 me*.r..III:AIRIBIETT .431; NEILL, 217 WALNITT STREET, FEILADEL.I - sole Agents for the sale - ot our. • . . . .SILVER BROOK .. T.EMGH.CIOLT,; From Port Elehmona, Phlledelphle: • ncianc ar LONGSTREE Miners. Silver Brook; Feb 21,18 C. . . HAMME.TT ~ S z• RE - ILL - , ~ 9 17 Wnlnnt St., Phipidelphin, OFFER FOR SALE the FOLLOWING CELEBRATED . A N.T 1tA . .0 'C 13ALS. PEON POET 17.10EntoNte. .. • ..• • SILVER BROOK, (Lebigh,)' SHEN. ANDOAR CITY, (White Asti) mined by Miller Maize, SPORN • and DIAMOND VEINS; (Red Ash), • ,• - Also BITUMINOUS. and CUMBERLAND COALS • of well established reputation. . •". . Piero 18 'and 19-Port nicht:nand.. - OFFICES :--.I'IIILADILI.PIII./.. 217 Walnut St..' • NEW Yoax, Rooth F,. Trinity . Building. • • ,• ' Peovitemoa WeYbosset Street. • Boarox, 25 Doane Street. March 2, 67 • • . 9-ti •• . OASTnit, .13TIOKNEt & WELLINGTON Miners and Shippers -Burnside (from their Burnside Col. at Shfunok (Red Aitt). • • . . • ••'. Loenot Mountain (White Aattl... . . • • 'B9 Trinity Building. New York,'. - OFFICES : 215 Walnut Street, Philadelphia: 16 Kiiby Street, Boston, • Wharf No. 6, Port Richmond,Philaipa.. Feb 24.'86, . • [May 18, .68-- - 204.1] . , Pier NO. 19. CHAS, J. &J. EASTWICK, 150. 121 WALNUT STREET, PRIMA., - SILIPPERS OF WHITE and RED .ASH COAL, Agents for the sale of the celebrated BURNSIDE COAL, From the Luke Fidler Colliery, Bhamokin, March IG, .6T 11-ly • Pier No. 13. • • • BOBDA, KELLER di•IiIITTING • • Wholesale 'Dealers In Beet Varieties of . . ANTHRACITE •& BITUMINOU S • COAL. • 3117 - Walnut Street, Philadelphia, OFFICES: 4'234 Ellby Street, Boston*. • . Room 64 Trinity Building, N. York. 131"11ole Ageati for West Lehigh Gre en_ wood Coal and - Coar• from the • Locust Mountain Colliery of the Mammoth Cott. bolikluted Coal. Company."; • GEORGE CREEK BITUMINOUStin board-at Balti more or Georgetown. •• [Aug 11,' !Gal VANDUSEN, 'LOCHRIAN & Co., LACOST MOUNTAIN. LOCU S T GAP,-WILKSSEtAR. ' - RE, 1...E1T10R, - AND OTHER ' . . . NV HIT E - AND • RED ASH COALS, 4ents for the sale of the celebrated ilieorgel Clime,: Cumberland Coal, from the - Mines of 4 the Con folidation Coal and Iron Company of Maryland. ' ' • . - Pt. Richmond, o Ellikbethort.' '-• - .81711.11ti0 *IIAWO23: i • " . . Baltimore, . . • -. „peorgetown... • . {2Ol Walnut street, Philadelphia.. - Omura: Trinity Building, New York. . • • ' . . • . • 5 Doane fit:, Boston. - • ', • . - NEW YORK. PACKER, HEALY .& ' =MOM AND ISHIPPEES OP . Lehigh, Schuylkill, Wilkesbarre, Lackawanna, Cumberland, and Elk 11111 Gas Coal Company COALS. OFFICES.--* 20 Nassau St., New York. . • . 203 Walnut St. Philadelphia. 29.K11by Street, Boston.- Ociober 14, .64 . . 41-ly JAB: W, , CALDNYLL, ' C. B. CONANT. WY. Rxzo. • CALDWELL • CONANT & Co. ; • 119 Broadway, Corner. Cedar 194.,'.N.. - . WHOLESALE DEALERS IN LEHIGH, WILKESHARRE. LOCUST MOUNT- Api, RED ASH„CUMBERLAND; • BROAD TOP..AND OTHER • • • COALS: • Soleltßents for New York and the region North, of the celebrated Connell' Bidpie free-burning Le. highrCoal, also of the Lehigh and Mosque. ',anon. from the femona BALTIMORE • VEIN, and of other first class collieries. June 1, .67' • ' [Feb 24",-- , 86 8-tfl . 41 . WILKE S BARRECOAL; Dr.L1V)13414) DIEWS YILOI! Tat IitHEIS Or . 111 • • WILKESNANNE: COAL AND IRON . .00., OR FOR RE-SHIPMENT AT lizabethport 'and' Jersey City: Ornot:-NO. 16 .WALL STREET, NEW YORK. . Feb 16, .67 ' • • , • '• 7-em , ELIZABETHPORT. COAL. • COAL. A; T: STOUT & CO., Miners and Shippers of the celebrated "FUltori" & "stout" (Lehigh) Co - aht t . •.From the Ebervale Colliery and the Stant Colliery, • near. Hazleton, Pa., - • . . And Dealers in the best varieties of -ccrinucrrE /ND BITE lIINOIIB COALS. Delivered" drect from the mines or on board of Tea sels at TRENTON, N. J., ELIZABETHPORT,. N. J. N. BRUNSWICii, N. J.,' " PORT RICHMOND, PA. OFFICES-44 dc 46 Trinity Building, 111 Broadway, New.lrork. • - • 6zotrt, 8. *an Wmax. G.' La &rove. MORRIS & ELY. SHIPPERS OP' Lehigh, Bnok Mountain, Franklin, Newport Wilkesbarre, Lomat Mountain and Mammoth Vein'' C 0 A_ 1.1 Delivered onboard vessels at NEW BRUNSWICK, N: J., ELIZABETIRPORT, N. J , HOBOKEN, or direct tron:CMALICH.OHUNK,PL. yi&. Canal: OFFICE—Room 47 Trinity Bit Briondwity,-New York. . N. 8.--LRHIalt WASHED.PEA • FOR STEAM. April 6, '67 . , . 14-3 m HASTING:S & Co:;_-: Mannfacturero of .OH and Candlel. and Deniers in Carrieri> Oil.. • MINERS' OIL IN.OASKS. AND BARBELS Always on hand and for sale at the very' lowest market Priee• New. TONT-154 Front St;, corner .Malden WAITSTILL HASTINGS. New York. . . JOHN HASTINGS,-New Bedford. B. HANNAN, Pottavllle, will suptily our Oils at man. nfacturera prices. • - Manufactory at NeWßedford. , . New York, May 18 , 1 67 • 25,1 y JIBAT CLASS COLLIERY fee Imare. —The executors of James Dundalk deed, and the executors of Win. Richardson, deed, offer for lame the Peaked Mountain Colliery on. the • "Catharine Groh" tract, situate in- Feder Township, Bchnyildll County, Penna. The lease will grant the right to mine On the north dips of the ` Big.. Orchard." "Primrose,. "Hobnes, "Crtsby or Mammoth," "Skidmore," and "Buck Mountain" Veins. - Also, the right to establiab a new colliery-oaths- basin between the peatedMoun; taln and Mine Hill, and work all the veins of the basin on both dips=and likewiseall- coal above %water level on the adjacent lands of the Foram Im tOom pan). between =tight points:: The Mountain Colliery is worked by two shafts, and the improve- Maths, amaisting of boleti= engines. new litrrin-. atak engine, pumps. minearlouses. are, all In excellent condition. This most desirable proper.. ty will be leased on liberal terms. ' , • The owners will make aisatisfae tory arrangement with a good lessee for building a first class 'BREAKER. • Further IttiOrmation and eatilbito of istiiipr‘ si i c VIM n ir k ept IM RWM. Bl94.RDsplit . 41 *PrOM . PIULAIL, or to I.IOI,IDAY — PRES7INTIL..A -apleadld -ma lection of -Watebaa Gehl aad Infkataad Osa. gortbb and 0111111 magi , , ; B. , k ;kg' IS t - WWI 06 .--Plero for the Stdpment of InUmidteit Pier No. 15... & 00., urn= AND =mai or . kORDERON'iND LOCUST mourumucOli, Shipp( re of other approved qualities of . • WHIT AND .ED ASH . COAL.. .813 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. • . 9 Trinity Building, New York. • • Cor., of by . d; Doane Street, Boston. Feb. 14, •tat. - ..• Pier 19 Port Richmond. '•c -JOHN C. SCOTT & SONS, • •• • ..I:NERB &ND WIPITBJI 07 . • MAPLE..DALE. And dealers in other . approved : (Mantles Of *bite and Red Ash 'Auihracite, • sed Cumberland C0a1.,• ••••• . Philad elphia, NO. 926 Bridirii St., Room 'No. 4, Grlgz Building.' ' . • • .OFFICES N:- Y., N0..09 Broadway, Walter, Broe. • . I & Agents. -• 'lBoston, No. 11 Boine Street' ". • Vt-.:5r.131 . • Wallace & Moody,'Agents. J. J. Doi , sr. M. S,:Etrt.s.tars. WI. .Efirsostcs.. DOVEY, .BUTArttIY.:&- CO . . • .JOHN J,..DOVEY,. SON -& CO DOI2Y, M. , I. BULVISY, WM: IMCDRIOIL..I. F. D0111ri) Miner's ignd ShiPpera . oi the 6:ebrated .- • • PRESTON AND: • OILBERTON ....• 7C 0 _L e i:l4 • Wharf No. 20, Portalciamoad. • ' . . OFFICES.: • . PHILADELPHIA—No. 226 WalnntSf., Rooth No. 5. A N A H e V o iLlt ern K h Oß ae —J A 'rt ze n n ltz .Room No.' C 6; 1.1; • BOSTON—JAA. M. Reed, Agent, No. 19 Doane St. WASHINGTON, D. Jones, Agent. • . • Mardi U1,..87 • • .11- NEW YORK & SOK YLKILL COAL Oo 'BROAD . MOUNTAIN, BLACIL HEATH,• • AND • • - SUPERIOR RED ASH COALS. • rala ot a k . . 26 'Exchange, Place,New eloal Y . • OPTICES: }BET Walnut street, . • •J 5. • C. Timing & Co., ARM, State '5B ..43 , St., Boston. 8. HICCEOSCLISR, 311. liparf MASON HECKSOH.ER . BOWNS & .1)0 . . 'l.. - MINERS AND SHIPPERS OF 7 2 • • o Office, ROom 34, Empire Building 71, Broad way,' NEW TOBY: WHARVES—No. 4, Port RiChniond,. Phiin • Foot ' of 201ir•8t. East Riser, . New York. April 6, '6I " April 21; '66,16 14-ti' ROTHEML & sHANT,B; ANTHRACITE & BITUMINOUS COAELS KW - Sole Agents for . 1116 ele of the Cznamerro Lo -01713T Mouffrsts Coen,. from the Cravrts COLLIZRY. . . . Offices:-31.1 Walnut Street, Philadelphia'. 11l- Broadway, N. 1r.., and: .-. 3 Doane Street; Benton: ' . .• . Whir oes:--Winil4ll Island, Phila. ; P ort Richmond. : May 19, '66 " - ..:. • 20-tf SCHUYLKILL CO. 3 I . EB J. CO NNE Miner and Shipper of the Celebrated LOCUST MOUNTAIN - COAL Pottsville, itehuyikill Comity, Penna.: ISM) 97-ly J.. . F . R.E - K. - MINER AND SHIPPER OF THE CMI.M33IRA.TM3D Centrailia Locust. Mountain COAL: Poet Office Address, ..i!6HIAND. Schuylkill Coauth Pa., or °entrails, Columbia County, Jane 2, #66 TICE HILL* HARRIS COAL. WE HIM APPOTWrED Messrs: RQBEIDEL- itc HUNTER, • • 2021-2 Walnn's Bt., 'Philade" bar each:Wye Agents Tor the sala.of our coal, along the. line of the Schuylkill, in the cities of ,Philadelphia and laetYork, and In the ,Eastern liarketeC=to whom all orders should be addressed. By continuingg to prepare our coal in the intim mar w/Lwrace, we hope to retain our old customers and secure new ones, being prepared to do a largely in creased business this year.. mu, de. HARRIS. Mabanoy City: Jan. 815t,.186t. Feb. 2, '67; —5- • VAST - FRANKLIN LORBERB V VEIN COAL. . • • My East Franklin Lorl3erry Coal Ls now sold mkt. elvely by Messrs: CALDWN.Ls ; GORDON & Co., who. are my sole 4eate. Parties ordering from them, may always depend upon getting a pure article. : „ co. 112 Walnut St., Philadelphia. • OFFICER No. M' Broadway,. Trinity Building, New York. • No. 144 State Street; Boston; HENRY BELL, Tremont, march 29, '62- • • la- • -• • • COAL LANDS rno LEASE .— The, Schuylkill Coal Cknnpany are L • now prepared to make lollies on their lands in Foster Townihip; Schuylkill County. These lands are located on the-very best porticin of the Heckscher Ba sin, having over four milee ran,ori the Daniel, Crosby; Lealor, and all the veins known in that basin, both above and below water' level. Favorable leases with an itiandance of timber for mining purposes, will now be made to griod tenants, on application to H. B. BODY; President of the Company, No. 8 Wall Street, New,,York. June 23, .68.--28, 00110. . • .7731.1fL P. 00E10*. •• • • • ' • -.• • • ' ' M.:V..• B. CbHO • . • .DEALERS IN • .SCIIUYIAII,L di 'SII&M,OIiti ••• • AND -RO - -ASII • - • OFFICE :Iflailistntiin g o Alma, 241 'Floor, Clay's Building, opposite the .llnion Hall, Pottsville, Pa.,- , Jane , 61". • • • .2341. MIT ROTHERMEL- & SHATTER SOLE AND ONLY'UTHORIZED AGENTS For the sale of the celebrated • C.ENTRALIA COAL . • In the New York and Eastern markets. omen : its 1 Trinity Balla:qt. New york. •• - • • . 1311 Walnut street, Philadelphia. . •J. L PREM. May 4, .67 • . 1134 m LEHIGH. TKOS. HULL CO., Illimrs emu sourriti LEHIGH COAL, - Yorktown, CM= Ootulth - Pewit ass WALNUT street, Philadelphia. JEANEtitLLLE, Luserne CT Pa. LORBERRY CREEL LORBICRWir 4)0A1;. . CWo, t he =dearly:oi; hayinp consolidated onr Thre e soiled es in the Lorberry Region, will_heroafter taw acrourbusiroorrnderthe name of • _ • . Mr. GRAM OeiRcAar o ?, a member f our firm, having iisbcil , tett himself with' B. BLASISTON, will resift ha Philadelphia _and all our coalohippW by tido-water will be -under the exclailve conbnl of BLAKLICM :By bummed care an* , attention ts pepara ho ;to maintain' the reputation o in if our Celebrated herty.Coal. ' Purchasers abroad can wily upon having this cool @hipped in the vetzl iax asst ardor. • • 6 .• - • • • 4 - • • • • iffINEIRAItIfIUPPILIELi-Tbeinelimerilber JAL 111 Agent fte the sale of the Boston Gran Belting Hattori, =I furnishes enpedorßella at FuV e V nesi n an odsmith4litsOkaattbs Bette 01 Valor tbefahoen to JULII4 m idi to ceder, it the shortage notice, is hlepidos for Colliery peewees hate tbelee ferencesttheYlll.-PALLeolltesto Field* orevery.de- Vhmi alia tha man = OX-11.311-M.104 of the- molt Mewed pattern% - endear tengettellieeetzdemet. 'item sit e s.itegh dllllVa g 4 Ad ea. or the fon tisamori I will teach you to pierce the Bowels er the . Ruth, sad helm fat rein the_eaveris Kalamai gt► e w ealth to ear h an d s an d la dd ea can N a t o* ear me an d i d eanire ....m mind& Pier No. 14. •DissoLvTrorr oF . eo partnerstdps here tofore ethwlng between the undersigned underthe firm names - ad. C. Miller & Co., Miller, Son .h Cu , Miller & Haire. have been - this day dissolved by mutual con sent. All accounts of the above- firms will be settled by August C. Killer: ' • A; C. _murk •• • • HENRY .11: MILLER .. Pottsville, June 15, ittt.• • - = . . • -- , CO.PASTNERISITIP.-=The under signed have this day-formed a - cointrtnership for the mining and Aga? of coal, under the Arm name of Son & • • . • . A. C. MILLER. HENRY E. MILLER,' J. O. ROADS. • - Fatallle, Jana S, IS6T. COAL LOW FOR SALE. TnunximeNarvis and VALUABLE LANDIS- belonging to this Little .Schtlyikill NayLlation Railroad and Cftl Company; adjoining the I town of Tamagna Schuylkill County. Including 5000 acres. of which 3000 - acres are, Coal lands, underlaid. by all the veins of Anthracite Coal known in - the re-. tion ;-also 250 building lota In the town of Tamagni, There are on the property !Oven collieries, two of. which are leased, this restworked by the Company.= The machmeryls of the most complete and improved pattern, having been completely renovated. The Col lieries are in good working order and capable of pro ducing from Three to. Four..lluntiredThou . . Nand Tons per annum. The late discovery.: of !Black Band- Iron Ore'. In : Schuylkill County, and which is now known to under lie a large 'part of these lands, makes them a desira ble purchase to Iron Manufacturer& - • 'Parties whiffing to purchase are Mirited. to examine the lands, Maps of which can be seen at the offices of the Company, 410 Walnut street, Philadelphia, or at the town of Tamaqua. • • '. . • Proposals may be made to the Little Schuylkill Nay. M.R. and Coal Co:, 410 Walnutstreet, Philadelphia. • May 95,17 - - "What 25 _Cents Will Do" 00,009 AGENTS WANTED TOR SOMETHING ENTRTILY NEW. . • , . HEM WOMEN - AND 'CHILDREN can make money by - acting as our agents. .. • , - - *No Patent Rostrums, no Book Canvassing, no Gift Enterprises, no Patent Rights. '• • . Entirely different, in every respect - from anything heretofore offered, . .. ' - : - - . SHO'T'S 'NOVELTY, The . liteet snd most fibers" method of conducting bits • . nese ever known I• Entirely Origionl and. "Junky' Aoithing , . .now in .Existence • . === HOYT'S SYSTEM : TOTALLY ECLIPSES • ALL GIFT OR PRESENTATION SALES. I=CIES • We want Men, Women and Children to. act as Our Agents in , their respective Community, iu every' City and Town, East, West, North and South.' I=o=l . , . . . ItlirTersbna :wishing to become. our . Agents. wIl please write_ at once, and -in response we will 'ma: them Catalognei, Show Bills, &c., giving them . . . OUB SPECIA.II. TERMS 13y special circular, which is a per 'canine payable In - . Let it be distinctly understood that-we want agents for an entirely new business, and not for the worn out occupations soroften advertised. Enclose a three cent P, O. Stamp, and the return mail will carry the partic blare bran entirely new buainess that any one can en; gaee in without the outlay, of a single penny: . Write at once to • - • . . A.'3. HOYT . 6c. CO, . 329 CHESTNUT STREET, Philadelphia. IliLam .• May 4, •C 7 war. .ci ntzle, • -' - • ie WHOLESALE AND,RETAIL DEALER IN TOBACCO, .PIPES dc SEGABS, Centrefilt., Opposite the Tosin Hall, . . . . • POTTSVILLE, PA. pASSAGE TO AND F11011:1 GREAT BRIT/LT AND IitEILAND, Steamship and Sailing Picket, at Reduced Rates- TAPSCOTT OROTIIERS Si CO., 80 SODTH • STREET and 23 . BROADWAY, • . . - NEW YORK, .., • . , Continue to tune Name iliche, available for Twelve Months, from LONDON LIVERPOOL, or QUEENS TOWN,- and DRAFTS, payable on demand, for any amount from El and upwards.. • . " • - ALEXANDER S. SILLY - 1 1 JAN; Agent, opposite the Union . Hall, Pottsiille. ' March 2," .67-9-ly NEW BOOKS ! NEW. BOOKS I THE OPEN POLAR EE S.-Dr. Hayes. . • Every person who has read Dr: itane's rations, or has a copy or it 'in ' his Library, should read and owl/this interesting book. . ." • . • • THREE YEARS IN FIELD HOSPITALS.—By a lady well known in this community. It la an interest ing record of HoepitalWork. • THE RICH HUSBAND:—RiddeII A TALE OF TWO CTPIES.—The third of Peterson's popular edition of Dickens! Works. • JUST RECEIVED AND FOR SALE AT BANNAN & seummizios Bookstore. Net a few of the worst diaorders that afflict man kind arise from corruption of- the blood. EZIALISOI3)4I Extmtet: Beaskrantra.a hi a .remedy of the utmost value. .• June 8, !CT-23-6m .HYDRAULIC•. CEMENT. • 300 . 1b5...- . . . The Copley Cement Comtatey having* appointed es their dole agents in Philadelphia, for the saleof their superior artieW.we are now prepared .to supply the same. at LOW. RATES. .. • • Orderaltre tilled either from our Warehonse, or di rect from the works,' according .to the. quantity re - ALLEN ez NEEDLES,-- 42 South Delaware . Aveneel p ßlTAnn p inA. • Water Street, May 11, 'ef • • " • 19-ISt . lifelmlboAdos Vorteentruked Extreme .. ear. saperrilla, is the Greet 8100d _ Purifier. . June 8, ,6T C. SOMERS. & . SON SO9 CHESTNUT STREET, Calithe attention of: the public • to' their stock of FINE CLOTHING. - Also, to' the large assortment of new etyle piece goods for SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR Our Measure Department is so organized that gen tlemennm can feel every ccurfidence that the garments ;ob tained will be made in the - • .Best Manner and Latest Pitytee. . April 20-1 3m ' C. SOMMERS & . . ThOse w ho "Desire Brilliancy Or'Com plezion mast purify and enrich 'the hlood„ which HSLAIBOLD'I3 CONOWNTEATID EXTRACT OT SATOAPAIIALLA illValiablY - does. Ask for Itelrabold , s. Take no other. • Quantity vs. Quality.—Hausem.nli EXTRM32 SAREMPARICLA. The dose is email. Those who'desire a large quantity and large doses of medicine MR. .Itme Wh is 1e - : Whale Oil 11—Pare Winter • Bleached Whale 011 .direct from New Bedford per boat; at greatly reduced prices. A prime' article.— quality gaaranthxi May , • . LBW'S C. THOMPSON R CO. . . nelmirtild '. Extract Sarsaparilla cleanses and renovates the blcod, instils the vigor of health into the system, and - purges out the humor, that make disease. • .. Jane 8, 'o'l-23-6m • D. A. MERCHANT__ TAILOR. MIMES ET, POTTSVILLE, PA: April 7. %G. 144 f TEA!.. TEAL TEA ! TEAT OOLONG. BOISA*NAIN Grocers. Market.iiit. above 34:1., Pottsville. • Awl 5, .67-7-14-tt . . Glittsingh.P*olVAlWlNlS, Fl.olCrit ,OF. ALL DESCRIPTIONS, - AT BOIMANNAAI dr, MCIINEBEPIO, Market Street above Thiel; Pottnille. ' AprilA, 67. • , . 14-tf • . SQICIXER ' WARE .. Pickle Jar% • Syrup Jan Soc i l k arei c lag eheri lktter Dlalee. NOM ithlP Cake .* . c., ,ae. . silver Tobacco Bates lined with gold.-, - ,B. C.. GRIMM . Dec 'IL .116-0.. • (Untie Rt.. Prdirintet. ' . . Piing Ladies IlliesSiare • • of the Injurious Effects of Face Powders and Washes. All such retnedieselose up the pores of the akin, aid in a abort time destroy the complexion: : • If FM would have a frerh..bealthy and. youthful Appear ante, use Eftinissip•a'arraacrr B.WIAPATELLA: Jinni fi r tsf • •.• .• • • "-• • 2341 m Htx.tio VECTOR/MIA for .the /ire of COUOM. - 03LDO: end 801112IIISS OP TIM CHEM pranotnietd by those Who hire teed itto be the beet remedy for the caus of able aver offered to the plit Bteadtho Billowing testimonial , - Loma C,. plea: ere to bear teetirainirlathe :office* of 7= *iPe•- ralls,” In removing Coughs and BronaW Meadow turrtag feared tonnedlide and maimed .rellet tram the use of too bottle, •after having tried many other rentedka ter a vary severe coldand emit' with which I =Bared for come etc weeks :dadag U2ll past winter. 'Beepotteltricans, 'T. d. OODPRZY. cursIIThBLAIRS. For. tt,e of' BEIRM e fthoc . Ekwe Ewe Riau, for i ' sink t7avitritrusa Pod irdenulan4 !n•.' o rl *# l !Fun h * Ammer, 46;4 • : - .n j i& mw dy i the Xcatbneyll,l, 4W7aile Ulf or. itereWrekvisght. L ial rfra i riwitatt_t_OWLAPEOlA=ll :, mailmen -1/Invit..- '4.l"CEdanallo3l"l4 11%74, C lr uir q uimh . Qttober MEE SA_TITIII)A:Y MORNING: '29 1867 . HENRY 11'LEASAL.N113,-. —• • . • arta, AI 211 : 1 7 11 WIZIGINEER, Inspects Collieries, lind'.e.xaminem 311r.eral and. 011 Lands. °rms....Busman,. Building; cent re .Mt -oppiiiiitnEpiscopul Church. . AGENCY -=For the. Purchase wad Sale of Real Estate; buying and selling Coal; taking charge of goal Lands:Mines, ite.; and collecting yenta. .ofllceldahantango Street,. Pottsville. -April d, .80 14-7 ' • . crus. M. RILL. wB. symords, - , . 77 - 77 ortil. AND XINING: ENGINEER.. ' ORlce--Rusieni Building, nahantongo: Street, Pottsville. ,65.. • -MANOTACTOBXR or . • . , gALAMANDER SAFES, - Second St., POnsville Annonnces to the business community of this and the adjoini counties. that he manufac tures 8 SAFES of all sizes and' • kinds; warranted Fireproof, which, in' point of - Workmanship and finish, will compare. with those mined from any other establishment Mc' country.— He always keeps safes on band for sale, and will make Them any size, for Banking and,other Public Institn= w as , as cheap, if not cheaper than they eau be obtained from abroad. R e c et er a to Benjamin Haywood,.George Bright, Thos. Cooch and A.- Henderson; of this B .rouch, who have his Safes in Use. • time ,63.--24.tf NEW ROOK -• AN le • STATIONERY • STORE. . • . • . . . . . ' The tmdersigruad are now prepared to famish a line assortment of-Books and lint chips Statiouery, at their New Store on Centre Street,. lour thffirs below the Episcopal Church: Printing, Binding E.T1.3 Stamping to • • • Perentnery, Fancy Sonpa I Toy • . • Orders promptly attended to. Give us a call. "BOSBYSHELL BROTHAR. O. C. Bcsomseet.r...• 16-tf LUMBER! LIMBER !- LUMBER I To• Corzienters, niid all using .or Denling i Lumber. . . The undersigned desires to inform 'the public tha he has always on hand, at hie exteu,ive yard on COAL ST.,t►ear,RAILROAD DEPOT a large assortment,. of all kinds of Err,re.e, Sill and other Lumber,' As he has his Owe'Tireher Land with Steam Saw-mills capable of sawing from three to font hmidred thouisud feet per mouth, he' is able to Mier • LAB,GE ADVANTAGEg to those wing or dealing In Lniaber liming a huge quantity of .very long .and heavy timber, ei.oet hi] at [elation will be pabito Breaker and Mining bills. Apply, or addreee, SILLS BALL,"Poqsvilie, . • YAIIIi.-On Coal street, near the n z ,i!„vay D e p o t . Idn.ca—At Girard 3Lanbr; Catawie4a Railroad.' Feb 2S, '6l CHAS. E. "B .Warehouse, Morris' Add itiou, • • Buckwheat Flour, extra Family Flour, - • •• Cora . - . . . . . Kiln Dried Corn 'Meal, . • . • _Coro, • Oats and Corn Chop, ' • Also Mill Feed of all: kinds. Fill,' consisting in part of Mackerel, Shad,- Salmon. Ilerring, - Iladdock, Cod Fish, Alwaya a good as:ortmen. of Provis lona, Citocerles, Sc. • • Van. 1, . • 01 - I.A.S. I,OGITE, FOREIGN AND. DomEsTia: WINES An LIQUORS, Centre St„ Opposite American Honse, • POTTS:VILLE, PA. is SOLE AGENT HUBBELL'S GOLDEN BITTERS, Sure Remedy for Dyspepsia. MISH.LER'S BITTERS . , FOR SALE. • 'IIIII,LS' BCIIIP.BON WHISKY TANDEINEEIVS- BCH/EDA.II SCHNAPPS. June 2, .66 • 22-1 y ML E 1:1131 IN RIC of POrtaviii.;, Penna., •• dealer hi MUSIC, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, PIANOS, MELODEONS, ORGANS, <rt.., baring been ' • appointed sole agent for theAelebrated Blazon Hamlinls Cabinet Oigrins i ,.. , In the Cointy of Schuylkill, wonld respectfully an nounce to the musical community that he can furnish these unequalled favorite Orbinet Oogans, in all styles and sizes, at manufacturers. prices. The quality and volume of tone, with the power of expression in these organs, Ls universally admired and prat:TO, while their portability and beautiful finish make them the most el-, iagant parlor ornament.. • THE CABINET OTIGANS. Are adapted to FAMI LIRE, CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS. • They vary in price from $llO O? $6OO each. Itiery.lnistrunient Warrantea. Also, Agent fOr the iale orthe mach admired • • . Spring -lifelodeotiz and Harmonium• . . . Organi, for. the Counties of Schnylkill, Northumberland and Lebanon, which , instruments are universally liked.— .Theyweess a.sweetnese•and fulluees of nine, which has received the united. commendation of the -musical 'profession, and induced an idmost .nnprecedented sale: Purchasers are respectfully invited to call and exam ine for themselves: .All communications, and orders will.be punctually answered or filled, and _eve7 infot- mation in relation to them gladly given. ' - • . Store and Ware ftooms, at the Jewelry Store on Cen: Ire street,four doors from Mniintango street, PettA villa, Pa.. . . DR. K. LINEAWEAVER, • . - DENTIST,- • 7.4 Ormi n ate.of Penneylvanti Collere of Dental • Saigery.) ROONIS ;--Illarket Street nbovc Third. Nitroue.O.ryde Gee,. Ether and Chlorprorm admin. istered.when doelred; . Aprd '67-144y INSTRUCTION. ON THE • PIANO. ..• Prof. H. A. 'I3IgCS.ER • . • •Has taken rooms in the building no Market at.. POttat vine. Occupied by.Mr:Lineweiver, dentist, where pu. pile will be Instructed on the piano forte. Feb 16, .61 • . • ..7. - ISAAC 'MOYER; •., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN ' • _FLOUR • -FEED . & - c, . 7 • . 1.. I AHD MANUFA, , CTURER '• OF M Railroad St.,•betwieglllarket • • • Having opened a new Flour and • Feed stoie, and ®Raged in the manufacture of Corn Brooms, would be Milli' to meet 11115 . old customers , a 9 he is satisfied that he can give„entire sattsfsction. Merchants are requeetfrti to call and examine his stock of Brooms.— Brooms manufactured to order. , April, t 6 T= l 4-, 1 3' - OPPOSITION, LINE to Calffornp r , e every go d am ' w ith passengers,' ight N an ic d 11. 4ffl u A, .on. the following First-cl ass . :I .4 , Staamald :—Oa Avi..k.arno .00TAS—SA 24- TLIDO MN PRANCLSCO. NI • ' l '. e lAt DAKOTA.' Cavravarrarre PACITIO Ocearr—AKERI CA; MOSES 'TAYLOR, hftRASEA: I nri l iDA---; Paarage and !Freight at Reduced Ratw. • Ig days from new ;—,Tannary 10th and 30th, IL. Pell:. nary 90th, : March mI 4 IE:Lb ; April fah : 7/oth. 30114 Jane geth and esesy.twenty days thereafter, leav, ing an the Sattirday.prevlons when a Regular Sailing Alley comes on Sunday. Pot farther information app -- ply to tbe,North American Steamship Co. W.M. 'H. wEanit, Pretrt4 54 Place, N. Y. *.D. N. CAB BIN GT°N , allt. In w St.;_cor. Warren , 14-: Y., or. in Pottavi ll e to RICRAROIDWARDS, Market St.' ' MIWEBS? SAJLIETIIf:LAIYIPte of the.most approved' bevy Patterns, for worMn:&,...made of ThAlPeqed Graze; . • Also the Cluny Lamp Meru t 4; Bowes tend also for workfec:: Also Iron and Copper 111 of width' will be said wbolesitle and retail. P , • .13ANNAN &RAMSEY, Pottsville; . uw -4 4 3 cmitl '.Gaazeisi: both Iran and.. Copper,, rend! made. Always on bawl, • Odd sizes made to order. ''• . . . . A 103 otßoOke, Books NeWsPaPerlt: 4 3 - .ther with Yule aad Old Books reboFnd at notice at our nina,m, All Med' of Blank Booke . ruled *and henna to any Pattern at the Bindery of the anbocritera. Send taPoer orders.'; 'RAMAN as RAMSAY- BAMAINS BARGAINS SELLING : OFF. „SELLING . OFF: . , ILA:GLOVIER. ' ' ,upioniacee th athi3 his: diftemlned . ,k7aTgl," la *lain! °tack arpri. 4 :.„ 4 ,o 2lol 4,,,fteriCand win oltr. icitiiiish A ih r i sit i terg a n s «fa orlll3, 41T-154 . . . , ... . . - . ..... . „' • • , - . . 1 :1- • ... '-- A 'DS '.-..[.• ' -.- '•NISCELLANEOUS • - . _ . . 41 AR R I. S .• El R.O T li, E. R. S - ' Fir HAICHERAITIS Entity . ' and' tnte.Pat .- Prcl lNG f" . 'WI'. ' , t ' 1- - pert, Ultherto uncollected..-By Wtc..11.. cIVIL:•)ENGUIFEE.Its •• . • . VaacEvas.v.,—This. volume contains some of .Thaciter .. Mining " • - • '_, - ars most characteristic and attractive azticlea It treats - Attend •to -Rngineming, Railroad Looation ...In Ma inimitable , style, of Memarlaie cif Garvin:Wiz and Constructi* Vopographiag Sur : raying, and all :tug ;, Men aril Coate: liluebeard , . Ghost. ;.. Dickens in ! I .France : johrileeclAs Plant's, or Life and character, I Little 71'raveis and 'Roadside Sketches: 'Men and Pic othA°erprifiwlciti—'inr a*srEErEC ' eliii. e--151:72)the ' ir ~ .. IT-ly • 'tures, and other interesting tonics. -1-Vol. 16 too.. 11- ' instrated;-andmeMsteel portrait of Thicken ...Price, $.3 00.. &Or eale by -l • HANNAN & . , 1 fallipAPEß, POttavllle, Pa., bite one penneylvanla State Geological Sure eyi -ra plorealantia, mines," ' • getolier 13, '35 VIVANK CARTER, Heal Ertate Agenti MAHALIWY CUT, Schuylkill eintulty,l'a; • rar Le tt er Ailda"3lalianos , city P. 0.0 Encostrage Home Mau afticiFres. CHARLES. KEIMER, . . C. A. BosaYscrin.c. Puttindlle. April 22, .66 oFr'RftS FOR SAL LEnk-y Fainily•Shonld 'fare OUP. • - • - .Are. Lame ; yea Lae; Crippleirer Deformed, Or have you, or your neighbors, a boy or child lame : with contracted limbs,• - or :curved spine; or Rooked feet, br weak or paralyzed limbs or ankles, or who are entirely-helpless, .or who are obliged to creep, or to walkgviEh crutches,,Pr whose limbo are shortened , crooked, or drawn-np, or 'who walk .on the Piesco or r . whose ankles rollover or turn' inward, or who have crooked knees Imm white swelling or scrofali, or who limp from hip difficultietrY. To save such from a life of. misery will you not writes 'giving the prom inent points of the case, and receive' irvreturn, free' ef charge, a circular.: which may be the means of Raving them? If SO, address Dr. 3: P. 1d.A.1,1N, 133 West 41st Street,New York: . • . • . • - ..F E •W • '... . JOSEPH H. PURDY, •r. 33 and 34 . 1111aidem Jamie, New 'York.. - *: .. TWENTY TOI7I3TH• ANNUAL . 3ALft . • Guarantees' batittinality, foil eizeimd weight, and a Complete assortment at Reduced Prices. . • Orders executed' with -.care and despatch. City, town. and private displays furnished to any amount. A Liberal Vammirlion.Ailowed for eecur- Ang dry or town Rxblbtt3one. • . BENJAMIN f - BULLOOK'S SONS. 1.1 0:0 L. co.„..ssioN. MERCHANTS,. . . 40 d: 42 8 ,OUTII - .1111ONT . •"81"11 . 1611T. •• . _ •• • , • 'PHIIADKLPAI.A.. . • COMfiliPeollt9 5 per cent. - Advances in cub made: In. tereat 6 per cent. per annum. • • June 16, ,crr MADAM' TOY'S Conet skirc , Muilliiort Combines in one garmeit a :rzo-r Firma Cour; and most pirable Skirt Supporter ever offe .the public. It places the weight. the skirts tiptin the shoulders In. stead of. the 'hips; it improrelythe form without tight lacing ; give ease and-elegance app roved r recopumended . by, physicians. Mai Cfactured D. D. Sit T 01:1484' 11118 TOB- I-a CAE NOVELS. .- • • ,•-- • • , _ID:APPLETON & Noe. 4 4 3 and 4 - 43- ikoadway: . • New York., • Raveling pabllitied, by L. MUHLBACH, FREDERICK THE GREAT AND HIS FAMILY.— Translated by MIL Chapman Coleman and daughters. 1 vol:, 8 vo. Paper cover, $1 50 z• Cloth, $2. "Each an:tee:ling novel of the well. known Muhlbach series 'adds to Mrs. MandVarepatation.—Tribune.— ' • JOSEPH IL AND HIS COURT. An Historical Nov- Tranalated from 'the German by Adelaide De V; Chaudron 1. - vol:. 8 vo. Paper cover, $1 $0 : Cloth. $2 ; "IfiJoaeph she transcends her previOns et torte:—Philadelphia Inquirer. . • • . FREDERICK. THE GREAT AND' HIS COURT. An Historical Novel. Translated from the German Dy *Mrs. Chapman Coleman and her daughters.: 1 v01..12 rem 934 pages. Cloth. s2.•Most remarkable yolume of oar time,—Troy Whig • -___ • • • • • THE MERCHANT OF :BERLIN. An HlitOrical Novel.. Translated from the Germain by Amory Cof fin, M. D.. '1 vol., 12 mo.. Cloth $2. "There is not a dull chapter in it."—Utica Herald. • • • BERLIN AND SANS WWI: Or, Fainuarci . Girsair AND inairsonima. By L. Mahlbach: 1 vol., 12 mo. • $l. "Uurivalled in the whole domain of histor ,ical romances."—Chicago Journal of Corhmercei: • Either .of the above Bent free by mall on receipt of . . DOOK AGENTS .WANTED, to 'canvass LS' for Chas. W,- - Elliott's new work. REMARKABLE CHARACTERS and MEMORABLE PLACES IN THE HOLY LAND. , The contributors to this work are suf ficient, guarantees of its value. Henry Ward Beecher, T. D. Woolsey, L. L. D.. - Pied. of 'Yale College. Joe. Cummings, D. D., L, L. D., Prest,..nf Wesleyan Univ., Rt. RevThos. M. Clark; Bishop of R. 1., &c. Agents are meeting, with astonishing Succias, selling from 220 to 200 copies each per month. It has no equal. 1121rIcor full particulars and terms '-address the pub lishers, Jr; B. BURR ,& CO., Hartford, Conn. Ai rA ORIVI F R I6 Ifl l atl r lP ., l4' S Vllll3o e CT . E v eO r i THE BIBLE. Showing what the Bible Is not, what it is, and how to use it. A -work of *lent reseirch, diligent study and ripe experience; being in fact the life work of Professor. Calvin E; Stowe, D. D.: • It is destlned:to be one of the, most popular books ever published- • Clergymen, 'Teachers, Experienced Agents and Ladies Wanted, to ean4ase for is work. Address or apply to ZEIGLER, MoCURDY.,k CO., 501 Chestnut SL, Philadelphia, Pa. . • • BOOK AGENTS WANTED FOB" `I3EYOND THE MISSISSIPPI:" Frew the Great River te the Great Ocean. • BY ALBERT B. RICBARDSON. OVER 20,000 COPIES SOLD IN ONE MONTH. Life and Adventures on Prairies, dienntains, and the Pattie Coast. With over 200 De scriptive and Photographic Views of the Scenery, Cities , Land, Mines, People and Curiosities of the. New States and Terri tories. - ' , Td'prnspective emigiaits and . 'settlers in . the “liar W . 03 4 ,1 this of that vast and fertile region will prove au Invalctible-,sasistance, supplying as it does a want long felt of a fait; "mtle and reliable guide to climate, soil, products, means of iTavel, Send fdr Circulars and see our terma. aL'.,,s full de scription of the work. „Address NATIONAL PITO LISHING CO., WI -Minor Street, 'Philadelphia, Penner, VolfjßßAM , * AFIERICAN BUSINESS JUP • COLLEGE. SPRINGFIELD, MASS. . • A Model School •of Trade, associating_Theorywith Practice by a system'of Actual Busbies? Operations, which practically illustrate and simplify theNcience of Accoentantship, Mercantile Exchange, .tc., in all their various relations. ' . ' . - - • - .31• A A • COLLEGE BUILDING, erected at a cot of $125,000. • Acknowledged to be the best and most complete' Badness College ever estab lished. Book-Beeping, Comthercial Calculations and Cor-. respondence taught in an interesting and practical manner. Banking [louses, Merchants' emporium, and fifteen }liminess Offices in daily operation. A thor oughly organized department of Mercantile . Law.—: Physical Culture under a skillful gymnast. . Penman ship taught by masters of the Art. Students can enter at any, time: no particular degree of advancement re, galled: Ladies and gentlemen prosecute their studies together, and• enjoy equal advantages. Graduates have averaged over nix months in completing the prescribed course of stody,.and, as a reatlt, seven eighths of them have already secured lucrative situations in business.- Strict attention given to the moral and social 'welfare of students.. , . , Four Flplendid.Prigei, of-$l 5, will be present ed Dee. 25th. 1847, to the four graduates who shrill hate entered college from Feb. .let to - July, Bth,' 3887, and made the best improvement in,Book-keeping and Busi ness writing. • . • Springfield is situated in the beautiful Connecti cut River Valley; has 25,000 inhabitants, is a City of great business activity, and the most healthy and de yightini place of resdoace In New England.' . Collcge'Review, Circulars, ete.,givlng full particulars relating to the course oLstudy, .expense of . board and tuition may be hart gratis: Persons pnr snit of the.mbst complete Educational facilities should address LOUIS W..BIIRBAM,, President, Springfield, RODMAN, FISK & Co., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, No. 1163 Nassau ISt,, NEW YORE', Bny and sellitmarket Wee; Ste pe r cent. Bonds of '1931; • Five-TYcenty• Bonds, all nes; Ten-Rorty Bonds Seren-thlrty Notes, all series; Compotind,ln tere:stNotee, and Gold and Silver Coin. • 'Convert- all series Of T•3O Notes into the New Qin ,solidated t.20 - Bonds at the best market rates. " 'Execute orders for purchase': and sale of alt misial aneousnecuntlas. • ' • lieCelye Deposita. and allow 5 per cent. Interest on balaneee, pubject to check at eight. Make collections'on all acceseble-Pokita. . • All leSties Of Government • Securities .credited .or re- mitted for. on receipt, at market rates, Fier; of all commission charges, -t'AINTS • FOR' FARMERS A rairo there.THE GRAFTON MINERAL PAINT COMPANY are now manufacturing the Beet, Cheap. eat and most durable paint -in nee • two coats well put on, mixed with pure Liwed 011, will last 10 or 15 yearn ; ft la of-a light : brown or beautiful chocolate color, and can be changed to green, lead, - stone, olive,. drab or cream; to rult the taste of the consumer. It Is valuable for Houses, Barns, Fences, Agricultural Im plemente, Carriage and Car-makens. Palls and Wooden-- ware, Canvas, Metal and :Shingle. 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B.—No agents siimointed.. Copyright second. March 9. 'ST . - ..__ .. .. , :::.U;.5.•.S T.-. AMP.S. - P.. :LEG111.14'.......,',...,-.:--„,..,.:',.:,: ' ''''. • .:401111IERCIAL -• ';luiC:.:, ,-;.'_,.-:,-, •.-' -..-•-'• -- - -•••• - 7 . , , ; ..,.1‘-- , ~_.;•,-. ..- slift3, . , . /411411KirCli.400011-*Pilii**l Addressed to hid Felletw-Citizeee Assem bled to Greet him es his Return teem the Mee ill. Judge Kelley said :—My friends, neighbors and- constituents—l am profoundly grateful for this demonstration of your . affectionate interest I never knew how sacred that word home, so felicitously , uttered by Mr. Pierson was, until during my recent - absence from you. When cowering before- more than a hundred bullets, or while my body was shel tered from them by those two negroes; who periled their lives to save mine,. I realized how dear were home, kindred and friends. I left you at an - invitation of the Goyernor of Louisiana and the Mayor of New Orleans, to visit that distant State and city, hoping that I might serve our distracted country, and eager to view that nearly one half or our cis- Mississippi teraitory from which, by-reason of my love-of personal liberty, I had so long been excluded. I • did not dream of danger.' Others spoke of it, but I scoffed at the idea. I went, bearing no hatred to - any man; but believing that -the truths which for' the last eleven years I have been in the habit or pro claiming to you, would be specially useful to the people of that - section, I gladly availed myself of- the opportunity of uttering them kindly and courteously in their midst ; and, my friends, throughout my extended. excur sion I waa received with all the kindnees and courtesy the people were able to bestow upon me wherever I went, save in ona•city. I therefore, beg you not to the mur derous spirit of the Mobile mob to theßouth ern people at large. , (A.pplause.) • That out rage, was due more largely to Andrew John son,' the reactionary President - of the United States, than even to-the municipal authorities Of Mobile or the mob they should have held ' . in subjection. !The chief promoter of that 'murderous riot was a recreant Northerner, who had,been sent to that city by the Presi dent as Assessor of Internal - Revenue, Colo nel Mann, formerly of Michigan, who owns the • Mobile Truss. That paper had, -in advance, of my arrival, excited the passions of the Southern people against me, and in an article on the day preceding my arrival, every allegation, us- which Colonel Marin admitted in -the presence of two gentlemen now present to be wholly false and unfound ed, had inflamed • the passions of the. Irish citizens -of Mobile agatnst me. But not to ,detain you with the details of that sanguinary scene, let me say that the outbreak was pro voked by no indiscreet word of bine. It had been planned before I went' to the meet ingt if not before I arrived in Mobile, and the man immediately behind me would have been shot through the head, as he was, and another not five feet from 'me would have been murdered, as he was, at the preconcert ed signal, had I. been reading the Litany or the Lord's Prayer.- I am told it has been sneeringly said that I got under a table. I have never been a soldier or sought reputa tion at the cannon's mouth, and very freely admit that, 'when the bullets were whizzing by and nattering against the wall behind me, I would have thanked Almighty God for a bullet-proof table under which to creep. In Memphis, the people of which I ad dressed before going ,to New Orleans, the elegant opera _house was crowded. My au dience represented every shade of complexion and political opinion. In many Instances, at least, so well known citizens assured' me, the late Rebel soldier, who had met our army -on many a field, and the' enfranchised slave, Sat side by, side, and.when I closed my ex - ,tended address, my ., name and those of our city and State were heartily cheered. ' Had I been in some signal respect the na tion's benefactor, I could not have been more honored in New Orleans than was during my four days' stay ha that gay and beautiful city. After I had addressed ten' thousand of her people in Layfayette Square, I was gen eroasly entertained by (among others) a former citizen of Philadelphia, three of whose sons had • served and one had fallen' in the Confederate army: • From' many such I re ceived thanks for the frankness and courtesy of my.speech. . • Leaving Mobile on a government boat, which, I may remark, was provided for , me not at my request but because General Shep pard, the Post Commandant, concurred in the judgment of the Union men , of Mobile, that my friends and I would encounter insult,, if not outrage, on the regular boat for Tenses, • where we must take the cars, I proceeded to Montgomery. In that city, the .picturesque site of which strikingly resembles that of 'Washington, I occupied 'rooms in the hotel from which the order to fire on Port Sumpter had gone forth, - frorn the' balcony of - which, the Confederate Declaration of Independence had first been read to the public, and on the balcony of which Stephen A. Douglas bad been pelted with eggs in 1860. Though pur sued by the malignant falsehoods of the Mo bile papers, I felt as safe and' spoke as frank, ly in Montgomery. as I now do at the thresh hold of my home. . I addressed the _citizens from the ' rear of the capitol. The meeting numbered about three thousand people, white and colored, whose political opinions were quite as di as their complexions. Nothing dis turbed the harmony of the meeting;:and at its close I was nub-only cheered, but leading citizens grouped' about his •and presied me to visit other sections of the • State and. ad drese the people. Conspicuous among these was Judge Walker, Chief Justice, who wad' also Chief justice of the Confederate State of I Alabama. To comply with this request• was impossi ble, and I started next morning for Atlanta, •Ga., a beautiful and prosperous city, which, by its sudden rise.from its ashes, exceeds the fabled Phcenix. It is rapidly fulfilling its destiny, and becoming a great railroad and commercial centre. We arrived there to ward the close of a bright Sunday afternoon, and were received at the depot by a commit tee of prominent citizens, and thousands of colored, people, in their clean, gay Sunday Attire. The next morning we visited the Storr's school for. freedmen, and, - large as is my familiarity with the schools of the North, I am free to say that I have never seen a classified school superior -to this. In the af ternoon .I addressed a "meeting resembling that at Montgomery in numbers, character and good order. The Same generous expres sions followed my remark', and, among the pleasant,things said by the many who gath ed around me' was an offer by the Quarter master,General of the Confederate State of Georgia, to pay my expenses if I would re main in the State and address the people 'of every county. - . My engagements in North Carolina, re quired my early departure and we left. the next morning. On arriving at Augusta, we was met by Mayor. Blodgett,. and' at the. Planters' House, to which he conducted us, were waited upon by large numbers of citi zens. I shall always regret that my engage ments precluded -the possibility of my com plying with their urgefit request to, remain 'and address the citizens. Had I been able -to do so, it would have deprived the Copper head papers of the stupid story that General Pope had admonished mejo speak no more In Georgia. - • In North _Carolina I spoke in the cities of Charlotte, Concord, Salisbury and Greens boro. and my - reception in each case was as cordial as at Memphis or New Orleans, but less demonstrative, because the cities were smaller. I came thence to Daoville,. Virgin ia, where I made my closing address to a very large assemblage of citizens.. Thus,: you will see, my friends, that I crossed Ken- - tucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Lonisian9, and, leaving the last named State by Lake Pontcharftain and the Gulf, - for Alabama, and coming thence through Georgia, South Carollha, - North Carolina and Virginia, on the homeward'trip,• I saw something of "the South. I now know from observation and inter course, -something of its people, and I do but say to you, what I said to each of my au diences, large or small, public or private, in school room; or from the public platform, that the whole people will soon regard the terrible war through which we have just passed, as the throes and agony of the birth of a new, higher, 'holier, and more blessed nation than the world has yet known. (Great applause.) • - I saw during my, trip a country upon which the Almighty has with his most lavish hand bestowed His richest material gifts. It is gorged with every, mineral.' I have scarcely been 'in a State-that does not abound in coal iron, copper and lead, and have travelled for days over a region of country as richly un derlaid with gold-bearing quartz as the moun tains of Colorado or , California.'.Let me 'speak specially of North Carolins,'becanse, as is equally so with _Virginia, poverty, has driven. hundreds of thousands of her.nathre citizens into exile. My friends, North Caro-. lina is the most beautiful-and richest' portion of. God's earth' tipon Which my vision or= feet have ever rested: You know that she pro duces cotton, rice, indigo, tar,, pitch, turpen tine isnd superior -timber. You know that -her soil' arid Climate are adapted to -the alrovheat,'Com, rye, tnickwfieat and oats. :]tut you probably do not know that that State long known as the .Rip Van - Winkle of the Tinian, from-which mare than fifty thou-, sand free White people have fled to the two States of Indiana and 1111110 3 / 3 , is the. land . of Wine and hobey, the apple and peach, of the fig - .and -,pontegraziate, .. all of whichT ea*: prospering in open-field and wider the - mei - it -artless culture. Its native vines made the fortune of Longvrorth; who carried;cuttings thence. The wine prodricing- vine — yards of Western Pennsylvania, - mound the.. base and On the Wanda of Lake'Brk: -- and - ,seitttered througha:elk& the taken' tram the native'vinea-of Ninth Carolina. ; The Cratawbe, the' Llnebby_ the Debella, imairleher then the einniOnina af.w l / I ° ll tte ,bee not I, ret leenoily unti l:boated,- mom 'North Cirollnahee theme _POPool)% ;Tiikez:alf_icrominent oli r as a" %. The ittiaititatti, ibiell teem with the 491141101nntithilitthstivretty end the hew in. SPEECH OF JUDGE; KELLEY." : t;, • - -':?,`.'-.;:, , ': , , , 1.:«;,-. --,;.&! Single Copies,Six Cents , . vise You-to put ens indebox; that they May . reward 'your - Icindnetts With the sweetest treasure. There is not it __vegetable we pro:- duce that wilt not;thrive North Canslina,- and 'under these aboundizigstores of:agricul tural wealth, a belt; ranging .frem forty to one hundred miles - wide across the- entire State, is so richly underlaid wlth gold, that a person with a common frying -pan, may wash the sands of many of the rivulets, and make from one to three dollars per dhy. friends, as I traveled from day to day , through this native wealth and beauty, I caw how- bin had driven man out of Paradise; foinever bad I seen such poverty as I found to North Carolina, save: in South Carolina, 'Alabama and Mississippi,. where people are, starving in the midst of nature's richest bonnties., you cannot comprehend and credit this statement, I tell you it is true. I could not credit it myself. It was long before obser vation enabled_ me fully to comprehend it.— Go with me to Mississippi. I will take ybu to Hernando. Once Hernando was an Im portant. railroad town and station. There are scattered around- it a few large old man-- sions, abandoned and goieg to rum. - It was once the centre of a great cotton growing re gion, but now, as far as the eye could range .from the platform of the car, wasaw nothing but sedge grass, a weed that Is valueless, or the red, glaring subsoil, washed and cut by countless gullies, till under the bright sun, it looked like emillion fiames'of red fire blazing up from the earth. The owners of thst once rich land had planted it each successive year with' cotton, till they extracted from it every agricultural element, and those fibrous roots with which nature' mats the soil and protects it from washing. In response to a question as to the extent of the desolation we beheld, . a fellow traveler,. a Mississippian, said "it is pretty wide. There was' not a plantation -within some miles , of the station, on which a family could make a living," and added, "the soil was always light, and when the rain began to wash it, It made -quick work of it." Skill ful culture would not only have saved that wide region from.deselation, but added to its wealth- producing power. Come with me again my friends, to South Carolina, and behold a mother who, having "roped" herself to a plow, is striving to drag it through the earth, while her son, appa rently about eleven years old, endeavors, to guide it that they may open a furrow in which to deposit the few seeds Northern charity has sent them. You cannot imagine such a scene. Bat I assure you I could de tain you for hours by illustrations but little less striking than those of the terrible results of devoting an entire people' to the produc tion of a few bulky agricultural products. I wish you to remark that I have- not spoken of the noes of the South, but of the poor non-slaveh egr olding Whites, "the low downs," as I often hearff them called. - What would we, in Pennsylvania, with our manifold diversification Of pursuits, think' if the owner of , a farm of .one hundred acres should apply to the , government fin rations to support his family.,Yet it is not a' novel or unnatural sight at the South, Liehtenant- Colonel J. R. Edie, of the Eighth Infantry, is Post Commandant at- Salisbury, N. C., and administers the affairs of the Bureau of Refugees and Freedmen within his command. .I recognized in him not only, a gallant son of Pennsylvania; but an old personal friend.— It happened to be ration 'day, which occurs, I believe,, once a fortnight, and with my com panions I gladly accepted his invitation to his office, that we might observe the character' and necessities of the applicants. They must have numbered hundreds, a large preponder-- ance of whom 'were whites. Many of them had walked more than fifteen miles to pro cure a-little corn and bacon. As one lean, pale woman advanced and gave - her name, the Colonel said You have been here before._ andl think you own land." "Yes, sir," said she, "I own a little." "How much ?" asked he. "About a hun dred acres." : "How much of it is cleared'?" "The butt end of it." - "Well, then, why did you not plant it?" All that's cleared is plant ed." "What, then, brings you for rations ?" "Want, Colonel, I must have something for the children to eat till the the ripens. I can't make it .ripen till. the season comes." A voice—(They are too lazy to work.) No, my friend, they are not too lazy to work. They need guidance and instruction. I told them in my public addresses that in their primitive way they work harder than we: (They are too lazy to work.) No, my friend, I understand them better than you. You would deem it pretty; hard work to walk fif teen or twenty miles for a few pecks of corn and pounds of bacon, and carry them on your shoulder to your distant - The woman of whom I was speaking was not probably a lazy woman. She knew noth ing of our agricultural implements or meth ods, but was probably regarded by her neigh bors as an adept in Southern agriculture.— Like her neighbors, whose lands would not produce cotton, or who did not own laborers to, cultivate and pick-it, she- had planted her exhausted acres with corn, and when that single crop failed the country was famine stricken, as Ireland was when rot assailed the -potato. , Yet'we had eaten, the day before at Concord, but thirty miles distant, at the hospitable table , of Mr. McDonald, an old Pennsylvanian, but long a citizen of North Carolina, a variety of delicious vegetables, among which were potatoes as mealy as can be grown on our virgin bill sides. These people of whom I speak had been taught -to believe - that _cotton was the one thing to , the production of which the South should devote itself and that corn as food for "mules and nig,:ers," might, with propri-, sty, be raised when cotton could not. A for mer Southern leader said to me--; . -"Vire bought niggers and mules to raise cotton, and raised cotton to buy niggers and mules," and I good. humoredly replied, "Yes, and your , continu ous culture of cotton having eaten up your land, your negroes and mules were about to eat you:when you' begun the war.'' (Laugh ter : and applause.) Thus it came that-desti - - tntion and despair brood over the sunny South, while its unequaled water-power runs to waste, and its widely diffused and Inez haustable mines of gold, ailver, - copper, lead, iron, 4c., &c., and coal to work them, all lie undisturbed where •nature :had deposited them. There are in North Carolina, as.the census shows,. 47,000 white adults who cannot read,. and in Virginia 74,000: These figures I ap prehend; tridicate the general condition of the South in this respect. In their ignorance the masses have been swayed to their ruin by the wealthy and ambitious men who dwell among them. • They will gladly enrich them- selves by adopting our methods and pursuits when they come to understand them. When I told them that they worked harder than we, and at more exhausting labor, that we lifted the toil that bowed them, from the shoulders of man and devolved it upon coal and iron; and that without swinging the heavy scythe we made machinery mow and ul reap our fields, many of them looked Incred ous. To sustain my point I- invited their atten- tion to what they had all' seen, that ingeni ously contrived mass of iron, a locomotive, and begged them to-note how it would, when animated by a little water frum one of, their purling brooks, and a little coal from one of their abounding beds, under the guidance of a single man, move, at speed greater than that of the racehorse, masses of freight which their mules and negroe3 could not move. You ask what are the chances of improving these people. The great difficUlty in the way is their indifference to, br contempt for edu- cation. In this they contrast most strangely with the freedmen and their children. The white people seemed to be indifferent to education, but at Memphis, New Orleans, Montgomery, Atlanta, the four cities of North Carolina and Danville, Virginia, we visited freedmen's schools, and I do but state the simple truth when I say if that we do. not es.. tablish schools, and contrive some means to induce'the white people of the South to-edu cate their children, the colored people; will in five years, be their superiors intellectually. By day the freedmen's schools are crowded with children from. five years upwards, and with men and women at night, after their day's work is over. The story of one black man was this :--That he had. come into the' school, and asked whether be could stay there until he could get an education. He was asked in return who would Support him. "I will support myself while I stay," said he. "I. got a little piece of land, and made a good 'crap,' and soldit well ; I have come for an education while my brother works the land on shares. I want to here until I can get an education." He will get an 4xlucation, for he is the first scholar - in one of the finest classified schools I ever saw. . : Another remarkable thing it these schools. is the large proportion of white pupils found hi. them. doubtless, ;'surprises 'you. .after.what I have just said. That is - because you have not visited many of the cities of the South, and suppose that the quo/Ilion of the color of a person depends on prismatic rays, on pigments, or on chemical-combinations. That is a delusion. - - Throughout the South the color,of a human being is not a question of science, but of tradition ; and the teach ers pf•one . freedmen's school; in which:there was no_ pupil: that hail not been a dere,- as sured tut' that quite - twenty-flve per cent. of the scholars would be recognized as people in any part of the North. This gives you the key' to the abandonment by the Southern leade.rs of the narrow dogma that slavery was - Ilie true position of the negro, and their assertion of the broad - doctrine that slavery is the _true_posltion_of theiaborer; Thia occurred about 1847, and - I.remember 'inviting thiattention of such of you as t)iea~ henid me, to It, on the 16th ofl3eptember,, 1856, in , my address. atl3pring warden-Hat t.' : Promiscuous intercourserhad aireadyexpelled thetlotd Atria from thervelattotao - nisy r •pf their slaves that they - We* . peuntiellediti. takelhisl!6ololl .4 - 9 1 '. - Wt 64 . 10 7 1 _t th .Orl - -Yeldel4P;9lDregteadelc;.- • ; !Bat xotilak - 4 4'40 then , Palilect- - . lb= _ • , • • , B Al;tl%tAM &^ ItA:makts STEAM. OMB. Haablg pro:tared several Premed, we are sew prepared ,to motto JOB and BOOK PEORTING - of army de malptien et the ofeeevf the Maar Jocular, chow tbari It isa be dime at soli other' ottobliebraont In the .fib, Ocala • ' ' - • , . ric*kik:Pimpidessh 1 . 1 ; 1111 1M)Posters, timid Bllle.. • Taper 8 8 8, JiMicimorAgremaliti t Time Ilmoks. 111111(eitia;. *rim Beebe, ix.. At; the, leribbactiet ocffice. :Oursbxlc otiOß TYPE hi more atesitreibie that Of op other office in WO •Igtim 04, tt b efrattfit.RA IntfeeP Wm& ccepibled Peak" tot lobbteiviteboctesetkilvee we trill goioutig k t, lb be sot`ne#As azgffifilb: an be tanked 0 41 1 1 1 44ffiel. PffingEr 1151, ow &ma it the w3egti al t notice - • BOOK BIM!EBY. Books bound la My rilitiq a Maria, .maim Books or eleridesddiMon.mango**b9ll4so4 r.Old igder;it shortestuotice. - • • less, rc great deal of sullen discontent. The thee has notyet cone when it wouldhe fare to withdraw the military. Not but that there . are large portions of the South that are well resulated and , orderly, without any troops within fifty or a hundred miles of them. I have referred to Danville. The noun post to that town, at which troops were stationed, was seventy-three miles, and' yet order pre vails there and in the vicinity, as perfectly as at the larger stations: Intelligent people, all over the South are welcoming Intercourse.. With the, North, are subscribing to Northern Republican, agricul tural' and4sllgletts" newspapers; and are, in a political sense, asking- honestly and prayer fully; what meat we dri to be saved. The colored peo ple understand, themselves and the questions at issue thopiughly. They need no Northern missionaries among thew' If the North *ill educate them. that is all • _they want, to be freed from the shackles of ' ignorance. The political work there will be better done by themselves than through Northern visitors, • They have among them - orators that would surprise those who assert the Intellectual inferiority of the race. L. S. Berry r of Alabama, end e d not to his letters when the war ls said to be one of th e most remarkable orators In the United States; and it Is defined that, If he - ,makes a tour through the North, he will ri:- val Fred. Douglass, with all his schelarshiri and foreign travel. In North Carolina, a colored man rimed Harris has the reputation of being the ablest popular orator in the State. James Simms, the brother of Thomas Simms, the slave who was taken froin Beaton in triumph, Is said to be gifted with the power of declamation and invective almost beyond any living American orator; Mid the. people in. every town in which- we were entertained did not fall to bring to our notice men who.were their slaves two years ago, and whom they recognized now as their political equals., gpe gentle- • . man, speaking of a shoemaker, said to me:— "We always knew he had better sense than hid master, though he was-a learned judge." Some of you , have heard me called a "ne gro worshipper." If that phrase isintended to apply to one who appreciated the intellect 'and character: of the Africo-dinerican peo ple, it was misapplied to me. - I freely admit that I had done the race gross injustice by my highest estimate, and a few years will demonstrate the fact to all unprejudiced minds. Poor and ignorant as theywere when they escaped from slavery, they are rapidly acqui ring property. In this good work members of the Society of Friends are aiding them moat judiciously, by purchasing land in large tracts and selling it to them in small quanti ties at cost and on time. I saw places nicely improved, on- the last - payment for which seven years had been given, but which two years have served to free from indebtedness. They have neither eaten or wasted the seeds sent them by Northern benevolence or the Agricultural Department, but around each . freedman's home where these have gone, is a vegetable garden, such as we obaerva in our rides in this vicinity. They are an im proving people; and if men from the North - do not go in to . aid them, will, by their Indus.. try, enterprise and thrift, regenerate the South. My Mends, some of you tired 'of city life, * " may think of emigrating. To such, I say, put not a thousand or fifteen hundred miles betleen your family and their old homes by going to the West or Northwest. There is a more genial and a country as rich and as beautiful within a few hundred miles of your - home, where you can buy agricultural and mineral lands at from two to five dollars an acre ; in which you can buy land almost ' contiguous to towns destined under the Influ ence of. freedom, soon to be , large eldest whose railroad connection are alreadiestab lished, at -from five to fifteen dollars an acre. • In this regiodyour skill as machinists will be of immense value. Many of the rich gold and - copper mines pf North Carolina have already passed into the pOssession of Northern men, and are being worked bythe most approved - machinery. • • As experience demonstrates their richness, - - this field will become , largely productive of wealth and employment. But the rivers of • - the South furnish boundless -water power much of winch washes beds of iron, coal and limestone. I have - Tidied Lewiston,- Me , Nashua and Manchester, N. H., and Lowell . and Lawrence, Mese., end I assure you that a single stream in each of the States of Ala barna,,Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina, furnishes_ power vastly in excess of that required to move the , machinery of the cities I have named. Much of the cotton crop will be spun and - woven by this power, • near to the fields on which it is grown. To enterprising and ingenious emigrants I say, go to the: rich and fertile, - but exhausted South. • .What is required to regenerate the South is subsoil plows, phosphates, agricultural imple ments, generally enlarged increase of horses, , mules and horned •cattle, and a steadily in- " creasing supply of steam engines and mining . machinery, and such manufacturing machin ery as can be moved by waterpower. These, - with a few earnest men to teach others their • use and value, would in a few years make the _ South bloom like a garden, and develop a population as loyal as was that of any North ern State daring•the war. (Applause.) dnd , the interests - of Northern capitalists require _ . them to supply those patent agencies attbe earliest practicable day. • - But, my laboring friends, when I advise you to move South, understand me to 'couple__ it with thei engiratiott th'ittyeig - 6 - in little colonies ; say of ten or twenty families.— DersT" with you your Northern habits.. dr- - range for the regular receipt of the papers - and magaziriester which you now subscribe, and let one of your number be at least capable of conducting a fair - country school.. In thin way yon will regenerate the neighborhood - into which you go and preserve yourchildren- • from the Ignorance which prevails. A single man or family going there would uncon sciously lapse into the habits which prevail. . Again, let me say, do not think of going to work for wages. There is little demand as - 'yet for skilled labor, and unskilled laborls in „ terrible excess. - The colored handi in the tobacco factories .of Danville, Va., can earn - about nine dollars per week ; but In one of the towns of North Carolina, .we saw girls and women, who in a Philadelphia faatory'would receive from four to six dollars per week, who were working long days in a tobacco factory for twenty. five cents a day. One of - the applicants to Colonel Edle for rations stated, and estab-.• lished the fact, that her husband worked in a saw-mill for thirty cents a day; and the best laborers in their vicinity, Without distinction of color, are - employed in the rich gold mines of the latter State at one dollar per day. _ In this picture of helpless destitution I am not:portraying the effects , of war. Nq the fruitful seeds of this misery were brought from Africa in slaysships. It was not the war that reduced Norfolk from the first com mercial port of the Union to the position of an inconsiderable town without foreign cam merce. The war did at convert the rich and beautiful land around Hernando into an arid waste. The war did not drive the once proud occupants from those long-abandoned man sions, whose columns afici • architraves are now-so dilapidated, or from those villages of huts, about which the poisonous vine has twined its beautiful but fatal embrace for years. ' Said one who for years recognized Mr. Calhoun as - his inspired leader, but now has but little hope for the South :—"We have sacrificed bur country to cotton, mules, and niggers, and If you regenerate it, its prosper- Ity will be our lasting reproach. They were most happy . ho fell in the war. before the delusion was guite.dispelled." Said anoth er :—"Wby did not the North and south WI. derstand each other? I believed I was fight ing - for the prosperity of my country ; but some months' imprisonment in one of your forts, "and a plentiful supply of .your news papers, satisfied me that I was fighting against every cherished desire of my heart.'• -The South must be regenerated, and we of the North must do it. There are, however, many there who will aid us in the world, but we must guide and plan Let our states men traverse the South, and, gut occasion of- - fere, speak frankly, bating no jot or breath of their opinions, but uttering them courteously, and If any of you has a friend in any one of these States send him your paper daily after you have read it.' What they need is to un derstand us, otthhabits and purposes. When iu my several addreisee I told them—not the colored people, or the "low downs," but the wealthier portion of my audiences—that. masters as they; had been of thousands of acres and hundreds of slaves, they had never been ablito ptovida themselves aftd families With many of the best results of wealth which • miter into the daily life of a Philadelphia workiitigman, they would look skeptical ; but, isfterrl had described our nest two story: houses.with four rooms each, and the outer . kitchen and bath room supplied with hot wa ter from the range, and lighted through, with gas ; and the large, well lighted end ventils. ted school house for the children,-near hOma ; , the public library or institute near by-; the choice among churches of alidertominations; the cheap daily newspaper, and s othez things &miller to yon all—most of them: would' id mlt the correctness of. my proposition.- W. can thin-teach thpm muck:and - thetime has come when maul. of those who.were recent- , ly our foes-aremilllog-tolssr-ns,. and. co. c.perat.6. with, tut. ,any. good work for- the • poor among *tem - they Let tui, then, my friends, while maniblly defending ail that is'goed in our. Opinions or : inititationa, endeaVor Ao forget the Put and strive. to. improve the. future. Yesterday is lone-.-no man knows whither; but to-morrow is befbosts with its inevitable duties and its :pasillife-breedniS or calamities. Let- each minatiabor,uwithin. the limits .PresoriliedbY rood couidelice , to Prottletelli 01115,velfere toad t, of family, for do 'will be • bleak:a. ' - rri thifdivelapinetit r iii the Seca; WadiMillerskigad . Ms2o l otuthig rellaFOIN 4' . ' iLI, - ;.... 1 `,.,:i f.. '7.• /
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers