J',,t .isl,o' : - ~Noutttal POTTSVILLE, 'PA: iATORDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1867. Be just and fear not; Let /az thr eads thou airiest at be thy could-47'4 Thy 6E4% and trutke." . THE INCPCOITANOE OP TECO OCTOBER ELECTION IN PENNSYLVANIA. The Republic is in a condition as critical as when the first murmurs of armed Rebel lion in Charleston Bsy reached the ears of the incredulous North. h f,er four years of ter rible conflict waged by the loyal people of the country to save the nation, a conflict which . cost us half a Million of valuable lives and three thousand millions of treasure, we succeeded .in defeating the cohorts of treason. With that necessary and bloody work dosed alas; the earthly career of Abra bath Lincoln. Had he escaped the assassin's bullet, and lived, Reconstruction would have been accomplished within six months after, the close of the War. Bat it was not to be. die was succeeded by Andrew Johnson.— From his previous expressions of fidelity to the principles upon which the War for the "Union was fought, the nation trusted him. But he has deceived the loyal people of the country, and be stands to-day in an attitude or: hostility to the laws, which threatens to precipitate the Republic into another conflict of arms. _ By his acts Andrew Johnson has rendered himself liable to impeachment and removal from the office he disgraces, The peoPleek pect this at the hands of Congress immedi ately upon , its reassembling in November.--- Should the Copperheads by ,the apathy of the Republican party, or.by any other cause catlyTennsylvanin in October, Johnsori will accept it as an endorsement of his policy, and resist: impeachment by force of arms and prorogue Congress. Ile would have no right to prorogue Cougress,only in case of disa greement to adjourn, but the usurper and traitor has, resolved upon this desperate act-, in case the northern elections'are carried by the Copperheads. %Pennsylvanians, -the coming election in your State is therefore, of more importance tban would appear upon the surface. It' is npt merely the election of a good and true man like Judge Williams, to the Supreme Bench, but it will be of national importance. Elect the Union• Republican ticket by the largt majority possible, and it will cause Andrew Johnson to pause in his revolution ary and anarchical purposes, in Tear of the consequences - to himself. Neglect this or vote with the Copperhead- party,, and the country may be again plunged by the traitor at Washington into another bloody wer.— Votera should think seriously of this. TILE JOIISSONIAN OUTRAGE AT ANTIETAM.- The correspondents of the daily press fail to give an adequate idea of the indignation_ of the loyal people , who were present at the Antietam dedication on Tuesday, at the at tempt of the . traitor Johnson and his Wel lites, to gag Gov. Geary and the other loyal Governors. They called vociferously for Geary and hissed and hooted at. Andy. The tumult became so great that 'Johnson, pale with apprehension, begged Gov. Swann of Maryland, to quiet the people; But Swann -was as much afraid of the loyalists as his master, -so he turned to Gov. Geary, and begged him to say something to allay the tu mult. "But," said Gov. Geary, "these are yqur people—on your own ground—your dedication—really, my dear sir—.". "It would be of no use," interrupted Swann, "they won't listen to me. Positively, you must talk to and quiet them." Gov. Geary then very courteously, complied, and Laved the concern from being mobbed, as it in all 'probability it would have been if he had hot been present. For the patriotic address delivered on the occasion which was markedly in contrast with the rebel sympathizing speeches of 3 Phu son and Bradford, Gov. Geary receives the thanks of'loyal men everywhere throughout the country. We are proud of out noble Governor ,who in every respect meets fully the expectations of the loyal people who placed him in the position be so worthily fills. At the polls in October, Pennsylvania will ad minister a signal rebuke to the Traitor Who attempted to put an insult upon him and the State of which he is the boomed Chief Ex.: ceutive. A MYSTEIIIOI:fi Sit u,eu.—On Saturday last while we were strolling through Ham burg, we observed a small old man, with a patriarchal beard • and a queer little red cap on his head, with a stick on his Shoulder from which .was sitspendedi'a bundle, trudging along•on the road leading to Port Clinton.;— Men, women and children slopped to look at him, but apparently, he heeded them not, for as he strode on in the middle of the road with sturdy stet), he seemed. intent on reach ing some desired point and acquiring • some object. Many we - o- the queries as to the identity of the odd looking old gentleman.— We have since ascertained that he continued his journey north until he reached the grounds of the Schuylklll County Alms House. Ile penetrated the enclosure: and made a thor ough search of the premises, until finally ac costed by the Steward as to his business there, he replied with a sigh expressive of his view of the hopelessness of his task,- that he had been deputed by a scientific Society in New Jersey, of which he is a member, to come to Schuylkill County, and if possible, solve the problem as to the whereabouts of "them" Ten Thousand Dollars which the Directors of the Poor drew from the County Treasury this year, before making their Nay statement, and for which they have never accounted. We trust that this revelation of , the cause of the mysterious movements of the Mile old man, will be satisfactoit to our hamburg friends, who certainly, watched Lim with some interest As he passed through their town. THE GERMAN VOTE ALL Ibl:fir . —The Dem ocrats have been calculating -to get the Ger man vote of Philadelphia at the coming elec tion. But they are bad calculators. -•The 'Germans of that city, as a mass, are too in telliceno, too patriotic, to abnegate their man hood and vote the Democratic ticket. They „held an immense mass meeting on Monday evening last. A series of resolutions were presented to the consideration of the meet ing, and heartily approved of. They dis countenance the - party which sided with the rebels in the hour of the ceuntfy's peril, and which invoked the aid of the enemies of re publican institutions in • the old world.— Dropping:ail side issues, they indorse the principles of the Republican party, and the platform adopted for the present campaign; they pledge support to Henry W. Williams for Judge of the Supreme Court ; they de mand the impeachment of President Johnson at the next session of Congreis, and denounce the leniency of the - censer iative element.of that body,. by reason of which such action has not already been taken; they tender thanks to Congress for its just and liberal leg= islation on the subject of emigration;. and they favor the passage of it' law whiCh, if necessary, will force people to send their children to school, and which will prohibit children of the, ages in which they should at tend school from toiling in factories, and thus imperilling their health. THE New JUDICIAL DISTEICT.—Of the en tire constitutionality 'of the-Act"establish ing thejudicial district composed of the corm ties of .Dauphin, Lebanon snd, there ie no doubt in the minds of the ,most eminent legal_gentletrkn in the State. But as it has been questioned for partizan-pur poses„and impediments have been in the way of the action of the neti.Court, lion. DAvto B. GREEN, originally. appointed Presi dent Judge_ of the Court of the District, and now the nominee of the Union party for _the position, some time since requeited the At . torrey. General to issue a writ of quo war rant° in the case, for the purpose of having It brought before the Supreme Court of the State, .and a decision given. The natter would have teen brought up before that tri bunal .td an earlier . day but the .absence of Judge Strong in Europe, rendered it impaal • ble to have a full bench before November, an the 4th of which month the ergunent will be heard in Pittsburgh. Ofittfccinfirmatlon of the constitutionality orthe ;Pref . - eirtablishiqg the Mew Judicial District, no cliintit,Cnitie reasonably tnicTIOPO, • - • • Csuroavri.-.—lt is amusing to, , witness the . large amount of comfort which the Demo cratic journals extract hum the CAqorniii election news. BetweeU rooster* and can none, and eagles, and _hugely displayed head lines, it would be surprieng itthey did not persuade at least some few of their benighted readers who have been waitingie long for a, change in the tide, that the Democratie revival had 'come at last. ' The truth 111, hOiviver, the reat& of this - election, !waning that it has gOiU 3 Demo -milk, affords no proof whatever of s change in. California sentiments, so fai as the pond- _ cal issues of the day are concerned. The dissatieftetion with Gorham's neminsfion was fir mote wide-spread than we generally sup-_, posed, as the vote of Fay; Independent Re publican, now demonstrates. - The former - was not only charged, *ith being a political corruptionist, but _with baiting" packed the nominating Convention. Many of the lead-: ing Republiesns in tfie -State, therefore; - ie- Sused to support hint, but voted for Fay, who is a merchant from San Francisco. The Bulletin, Alla Cedifcenis; mad most of the other prominent Republican journals in the State supported the latter ty till the day of electicm. The c o ntent was in fact a newsps. per one, all the national tames having for the time- being been' laid aside, while the 'Union jOurnala turned their guns , upon (Latham, and aimed, as the Bulletin declares, to "break a" corrupt. Combination of schemers and dema gogues. which threatened to appropriate rpu-b -lie. property and impose extra burdens on tax payers for the benefit of speculation." . The Republican Party is undonhtedly strong in the State- to-day as trier, mnd had both Gorham and Fay retired,land a Gabes malarial candidate above reproach been nomi nated, •he would doubtless have obtained as large a majority as President Lincoln who, in 18&4, received eighteen thOtmand votes more than General McClellan. EDITORS! , TABLE. Danottrzr's l'Youlto Amimma.”—The present (October)' number closes the first year of this. popular juvenile periodicaL which in that short space of time has won its way to thousands of children's hearts. Its toys, Ind colored illustra tions, its "puzzle pictures, and other mite origi nal and attractive features, render it ' unique among periodicals for children; and we would advise them to lose no time in renewing their subscriptions. Something very novel and attrac tive is promised for the Chtistmas holidays. Sub. saription Mice, _51.50, *CM a microseepe, book,' pocket knife, or other handsome premium. Pub liebed by W. Jenrings Demoreat, 473 Broadway, New York. - . • Tam trAie9 FErvirn.—The Odobet 'number con tains a beautiful - steel engraving called 'The Lace Maker;" a fine double fashion ,late; •outs illustrative of Children's Fashiongt, Walking-Dress, Spanish Mantilla, Tunic Peplum, Velvet Jacket, New Bastille Waistband Lady's Jackets and Pale tot, Princess Tunic, Paletot with Saab, Little Boy's Blouse, Little Girls' Paletota, &0., &C. The Music is "The Wife's Dream;" and is of itself worth the coat of the number. Among the liter ary matter we note "Ralph Kirkwood's Sister-in. Law," by Amanda 111.- Douglas ; "How a Woman Had Her Way," by Elizabeth Prescott ; the con clusion of "Orville Collet , e " by Mrs. Henry Wood;. "In Love," by Helen 1.1. 'Pratt ; "How to Make Wax Flowers," (with illustrations) Editorial Arti cles, Receipts, the Fashions, &c. • EVERY, SATERDAT.—Thie popular weekly pre 'septa WI readers just those portions of European 'currentliterature which every intelligent Ameri can wishes and needs tome. Omitting the heavi er papers, discussions of topics of local interest; it gathers from all sources the reliable and in strnctive articles which express the best current thought of England and the Continent; and w;th the utmost promptness places them before Ameri can readers. Any wood story, any popular sketch or eesay, any interesting • semi-scientific paper, any striking poem, or literary intelligence ap pearing in a European periodical, is sure to reap pear speedily in the pages of Every Saturday. .11 is pnblished by Ticknor and Fields, Boston. goat affairo. Weekly' Almanac. * gum 1 g " woos% I:SI.I.NEMS. 515!11 •-••— 6. 46 5 69 • E. it. 15 47,5 - 67 Olret 41,..5 6 85 mo. 49 5 36 Full M. 13.7.37 mo, 6 49;5 54 Legt Q. 2 0 1 0 . 9 'ev• 159:15 New lf. - 27 6 46 mo. 5 6116 - . • • 6 52,5 49 • . P67%—eibt. 21• SATURDAY, 22 SUNDAY 23 Norma/ ... 24 TUICSDAY.. 25 WIDNYBDAY 26 TUMID/a.. 27 FIDDAY METEOROLOGICAL TABLE. Temperdtetre at Greenwood for the week SEPTEMBER, 1,961 Mr. George Matz of this Borough, is en ioute to Europe where he will remain for a few months. Me. 'E. N. Ilarpel of this Borough,. has re— moved to Shamokin, to engage in-the boot and 61100 bll5illl3lM. • -. ..74-ntorrota.—Thirty-eighth Sunday of the yeaY and foutzeentli after Tinaity.- - Dafe length, 12 Loons and 10 ro , nutes..- . - Ti'iPiam laird, fornierly of Tamaqua, wa4l se ionsly injured latel. while worl . ;ng on a re -- road ,u Illinois. Mr. Laird left Tamaima a few weeks einen to seek employment in the West; - . An eclipse of the tetra which attracted great attention, took place on the evening of the 13th inst. The sky was a'nlost pnclonded. The ectipse lasted for about two hours--from 7 t' 9. The yand attached to Mrs. Eitahl's residence, Mahantongo street, Was entered on Monday night, and a quantity of clothing which had been wash ed that day, talien from-the lines on wt"ch they were hanging- Tire in 'Tamaqua.—On. Wednesday night laet the frame dwelling of John S. Boyer, Tamaqua, was partially destroyed by flta. Thagoss which we have not heard stated, is covered bylesnrance in the York Mutual Company.. Erie . nsire Radish.— At the store of Bannan -Ramsey, can: be seen a radish groan this season. by Barney Eisenhnth , at Frackville.. It is about i 20 inches n length, 15 inches in circumfetnncr, and weighs 54 pounds. It is quite aCo iosity. The ladies are introducing a new Style of wear ing their hair. A portion of their back hair un dressed, is allowed to hang doa a the back. In one instance wo noticed tne other evening, the hair reached to.t.lhe waist, The style is certainty unique, and we presume in a. abort Vile 101 be generally adopted. Killed in the Mines, --On Tamalay mowing last a miner named Levi Neld , in.er working iu the mince of hfi»er & Graeff, at itanech Creek, this Count; was i"ed shortly after commencing work, .1.13 , a fall coal. He • was about 45 . years of age, a resident of Washington Township, end leaves a wife arid family in a destitute clndition. Sherry's Sew York Theatre. sm commence a bi:ef season at Union Hall on Monday evening next, with a fine company. The play for the open ing right ;`1 bo the &oat 'English play,- "Wait ing for the Verdict, or the Dark Deed in the 'cods, Thia efficient company under its excel , lent management, should attract larga audiences. The Fair of the Schaffll County Agrioultnral Society will commence •on Tuesday next, 2lth instant ; at Ora igsberg, and continue three days. Should tho weather prove favorable, we•have no doubt, that the Fair will be largir attended. At this Fair the Berke County Agncultursl Society, n:11 be represented by the following visiting com-. ruittee : Piaster Clymer, Wm. Rosenthal, S. E. vicona. • • • Junior's Pic41 . 1 . 4.—W C. No. 47, P. O. 4. S. of A., of Schuylkill Haven, Intend holding their sec ond annual pie•nic on TnesdaY, September 24th, 18G7. Judging by the enemas of their last Rio nic, we have no doubt this will be a most brillumt affair. .Those deairans of spending a day of plea sure Will do well to be present. Jones's cele brated band has been engaged for the occasion.. ' , Accident.—On the 9th iuet.. Mr. John 11. Slier Man, of Llewellya, an old citizen of this County, met with a ptiofnl accident. As he was riding on a wagon drawn by four mules, he accidentally fell to the ground and one of. the hind wheels passed over his- body pmdticitor severe jamas! injuries and fractui lag- the third rib. Under the skillful treatment of Dr. J. B. Brandt he is recovering. The case at first looked yeas emions. - .27. e Montane, Post, of August 24, says that Dr. James Dunism' while exploring the head wa ters of the Yebowetone, discovered a salt water lake, coveting "about forty acres. The water Is always at the boiling. temperature; meat thrOwn in was boiled in lees that forty minutes. :The water contains a large percentage ot.the crude matetial from which borax ie manufectn - ed. The Doctor is a son of the late Dennis Dunlevy of this • Borough. . Robbery in . Nara Manhiem • Township.: -On Saturday night last, the more of hire; Catharine Rogers, in North Manhiem Township, near Mount Carbon, was entered and robbed Of a quan tity of - dry geode, liquor, etc., 'valued at about two hundred dollars. Next morning a piece bf black alpaca, which had been dropped bY the mbberw in carrying the goods off, weer found rm. der the Reading :Railroad bridge in. Mount Car bon. The perpetratare remainmrdeteeted. A horse attached b & buggy in which were Ir vin .Rdwanis,, bis wife and child, rut - away on Monday evering hist". while deecend;ng a stew hill on the road from Centralia to Asbland. were thrown from the vehicle.. Mrs. Edwardi oeived vary serious injuries from - being tramped and tun over by the horse, her. face being badly wounded. The child received. wound, on the back:of its head. _Mr. Edwavin escaped without much injuvy. The buggy was completely. wreck ed. Serenade...-OUTtteelay evening bust it being the anniversary of the birth-day of . Mr. Connen Scvrzes, the Independent candidate for Truro- rer of this C the Baengerbend of this /:k -ron&h, under the leadership of Prof. Ve , ing, pro em:a to hie farm about two miles from Pottavil ,le and tiorenaded him. Itirass entifely unexpected on the part of Mr. ikattuna, but he did everything to make the *maim.pleasant to hie Getman friends. • He responded in an appropriate speech, thankitig . thrim for the compliment. Santelhisig should be done by the Borough ar thoriffeeto prevent pip and goats running rt large. At tha beet these animals present but am ruksightlyappearance on our etreeta, while :be destruction they rause when they break into gt-- den* which they frequently cb, ie evroallugly an noying, and a cause of lees to citizens. The only effective plan to stop anelrtreepes!ingis to compil people to pen up theirsoattindpage, If there an ordinance to this effect:it is to bi3ltoped that the Chief .Burgess will enforee . 1t; `and 4 ritop 'the Jury loners:--Inviey, baying been me.ae: .03 to the salary of the jury. commisaiOnets to, be ;elected this fall Ender alata soLof the leg islature; it nay be well to state that the law al, - .ktire them tire .diellers sind *halt: a_dey for.. the. thne neMelly ocenpied,in the pertoitaanoe pf deltas. An it' would 'peohnbry-kitoenpy more then tendays, it higthest, al y ea r iltteredle the links !Implying upon !thtnozwitrialetr,ot climb *could seinhel evenige ave r Hire 40- Jets* Yeak• aro* acjiyl/ 0 0 - 1001), OM et NeogtrAtt}erthen pm*. E=ESIBM .An accident attendedwith toga Uf.' 4 e.happened on Saturday last Dear :Ashland, .011. the railway lead;ng to Heatoies breaker, and on the trestlik work ner•conner's breaker. , Mule a trainof for ty coal cars. pushed by an engine, was paseig down thutrack near the trestle, , the front car attack a cow' which was stainaMg on the track.. The car was thrown from.the track; caries- Ed te.m cars to pi , e up on the trestle, which broke doca under, the accumulated weight, -arecipita ting the cars to ix-depth of aixt)... feet. -Matthew Morton, a young man, who was on the.front car, wee instantly, . _ A Jklan' 4 to Pfires on the Beaclaitycl2aftroad. —On-Vi'ednesday evening heat &boat 8 o'clock, the up Harrisburg train ran-aver a man abOve kilt Haven, near the Cresionalead . crossing, cut ting hie body in two, one of his MMUS, off, :and otherwise - horribly mutilating , US' body: ascertained that up to a recent pe,riod he had been an inmate of the Alms House;, and at the. time he met his death was- wandering about the was leading a drunken, ,vagaboad 'life. rfe was in a state of lubrication when he was lulled. His name. was Wil iam Joyce. An inquest was -held _and a verdict rendered.in accordance with the facts. The engineer of the train was exon eratedfrom all blame. - „Mr. 13ouraty's Art Untan.—The number of osititbags -inchaded in Mr. - Boungy's Art Union is fourteen, some of them of large lure, 80x40 inches, and' of gilt' value as. rare specimens of art. They are a I beautiful, and the smallest is a gem 'that would grace any parlor in the land="A Boy Catching Butterflies.'.' • • • • • The sporting seem, entitled, - "Patlridge Shoot -4.44,” in our office windoW, is a large and excellent iamiting, in fine taste: and natural as - nte. The "pointer' sees the game--you feel that—arul the sportman's r aol and yet expectant expression and attitude are duumbgly . told on the' canvas.. This pinta; can be seen m our window, and. halt et forib much admiration-for its tnethfulness ' Alleged rurlailens of lite 'lnternal 'Revenue' Laws —Louie Schlientz was before United States' Commis...rimer John P.. 'Hobart on Wedie.sday last, charged with tampering with a lock placed by the United States Collector of this District, upowthe receiving room at the dietifeiy of.C b F. Abright, Pottsville. Schlieptz was' held for a further hearing. '" -• On Thursday Charles F. Abright was - before the Commissioner, charged with distilling spirits without paying special tax therefore ; with re moving spirits otherwise than to a bonded ware house, and with tampering with a lock placed by the Collector on the receiving room of Abrlght's distillery. The accused' waived a hearing, and was hold in $l5OO bail to nervier at the next term of the United States' District Court in Philadel- Death of a Brave Soldier. Danisl Frarddin McCoy died at his residence in Orwigsbnig, on Sunday last, agel 26 years, 6 months and 1 nay, of;disease contracted in the service of his , corm, trY. When the rebels tired upon Fort Sumpter he enlisted in Capt.: Anthony's • Company, 'for 'the three months' service.-• At the expiration of that term of service be enlisted in Company A, Capt. La Mar Hay, Ninety-siith Penneylvania Regi ment. • Dminv the seven: days' fight in 1562, be= fore Richmont., he was wounded in the right aim, rendering amputation below the elbow necessary. Subseonently he was in 'the Invalid Corps: • Du ring Ins entire With of service he was recognizqd as a faithful, hrave soldier. Ho died a stanneb, enthusiastic Union Man. He leaves a young wife and one child. On Triesday forenoon last his re mains were interred in the Lutheran CemeterV, Orwigeburg, attended to the grgive - by a large number of friends and relatives.. -„ „ Base Br:L . —The second game of Base be: tween the Cressma and Pottsville Clubs," was played on the grounds of the Cressona Club, at ,Clreasona,. of Monday last, with the following re sult CRESSONA, 0. R. POTTSVILLE. 9: 11 G. A. Stitzer, 3. 4 . , Sl.'Stllimsn„ . e 2 G Rittmer. - p 6 2 J. Waters, c -• '2 3 - 11. Hem, Ist b... 4,3 .A.. 7: Smith, 21.1.,h:: 3.. 4 • Ed. Krellor, 2d 2 6... T. Smith. 3d 5 2 W. T. Reed, 3d . 2.5 Greesem , , , 4- f.... 2 - .G J. B. Hoffman. PS:, 1 5. .7: 51111=414. b... '5 . 2 Wm. Neiman. 11. 3- 5 IS. Reatf,.l7 A •a. 4 G. E. Huffman, ct. 2' 5 , ;J. Sanders9u; 1 1... 1 4 L. R. Keefer, r 1.... 4 3 'J. Stiehter. p 4 4 • • Total . - 27 33 I • Total ' 9.T25 'lnnings 3d 4th stli .Calt 71h Sth 2th • Cressona u Pottsi, I 110 6 ' Umpire—John Birkpayiel-, 'Pottsville. Seorei Tileon Stead, Cressona: . Odd Fellows' and Thin' School Celebration at Ileginsroille.—On Saturday last an interestiegcele bration .took . place at the village of Reginmille, in Hegins Townshin, this County, about, twenty Miles west of Pottsville, whicV was participated in by several Sunday Schools of that locality: and by the follcosing lodges of the Order of. Odd Fellows: Ellsworth; No. se; Sacramento, Schnylkill . Co. Uniontown, 603, - Uniontown, DanphinCe. - • . Georgetown, 56-1., Gitsargetown, - Ncethumb , -.1 Co. Eureka., NO, Greenbrier, .. do -do,: Donaldson, Donaldson, - 335. Donaldson, Selinyll - u' Co. Tremont, 245, Tremont; ." .do do. There - was a procession, Thiorf , e - F. Wiest, Mar shal,-headed by the Tremont Baud; which pro ceeded to a beautiful grove in the vicinity, wnere exercises coediting of singing by the choir of the. Ftiedene Kirche, ue the Sunday Soho& eehalare and teachers numnering about two hundred; re-. ligions services in English' and Gelman, and ad dresses' by Rev-. J.- r'ritainger of Northntnher , - land, Rev. Randolob Duenger of Fonntain Spring, - Sch. ev,. N. E. Bressler of Fishersvaie; Dauphin C0., b0., and Rev . J. S. J....ReGonne , l of Tre mont, took place,. There was a substantial colla tion. The attendance from the entire - Valley was large, And everything - passed off-very pleasantly. List paintings Composing • gr. • Boundy'a "Art Union :" ' . . Partridge shooting, an original painting. Size 21x40 inchto, valued , Taking . a Smoke, original design. 25110, Price Gen. Grant, copy. Size 24x30. The Glpsey, -" • " . : SChe 3) Days." " • 2.3x21 :Dear Faits, • original " 30a40 Feeding 'Doge., copy. " 3ox3d Home Scene, original " 23x31. President Lincoln, cony. ". • 25k30 ..." Death of the Stag, " 24f.11.1. Sleighing by kloonlighL or &ill 23x29:. A.Fruit Piece, 'copy. size. 39x27 A Cattle Piece, original " 204,4 " Catching a Butterfly, " " 12116 . . " 53 0 78 01 66 601 44 56 64 GO GO TO 1 56 78 66 75 • Total $1,045 These paintings are placed to subselibelli at $9OO, in 300 shares, at, three dollars share. Of course all cannot obtain pictures, brit the lncky ones will get paintings worth from. $3O to $l4O, for the mere tulle of three dollars; while all, who patronize so deserving a man, and so neble aa charity will feel amply rewarded in the success of the fortunate and the benelit'conferred by.their liberality on our crippled miner artist. We may here note that the above mentioned paintings are all mounted in heavy gat frames, and that the coat of the material alone is over $300; leav;ng Jess than $6OO for, more than a year of hard; diligent wort: at painting. . ' . . The Grand. Conclave of Celo . - .Piitrol.On. the 10th instant the. Second Semi-Annual Conclave of the Grand Chapter. Cele Patrol, .of. Pennsyl vania,convened at the Hall of the '.`Beta Char- ter," in Reading. _A 'I . the subordinate chapters of the State were represented by two delenates each. Tho grand officers' chars wore all u'lecl; and consequently the conclave .was complete its organization. An address of welcome was delivered by Hr. E.W. Jameson of Rea hog. .. • - . An oration was delivered by J. Wallace McCool of this Borough. - The Dispatch of that city thus notices the effort:. • ' , . "The Oration, by J. Wriclade bleCool, r;F the Delta Chanter, Pot til - :"e r was a brilliant efl'osion from the - fertile brain of him who has few eupc, rims among the young men orat 3re of. or- State. Wtoe bie whole speech was one ccint;mial tlow of eloquence, his enuject was handled , n‘adin 4 able style, and retlecteu the ti ae basis noon Wh.ch a" the leading secret organizatiors or the lrid are. based—Fidelity, Love; and Truth..: - The to'lauing officers cf the Grand Conclave were elected and ineta"ed to serve the ensuing year: • . . . . . . . . N. G. M.—D, Yonna JonoO, Itea'o , ng. N. G.R.—Dr. Wm: Do ll... Reeder; A "entoRLI N. G. 8.- 7 E. Lohm "ent(or.u. • N. G.T.—Prank W: Hazzard Pottov"le. Seven charter's for:the ;natitution of new chap • ters different pm le` of the. State were granted; after which: ucti other business was 'transacted and the conclave' adjow ned to meet at POttsvme on the second Tuesday of Feln nary, 1868. ' After the adjournment' the members of the Or der proceeded in procession to C. B. Miller's di ning balls; and had a banquet. Although young in years andcomparatively few in numbers, this organization' is =ling rapid progress and will soon take rank among the fore most secret. societies otthis country. . - , . Proceedings of the PottsvireSOliool Board.—A. stated meotiug of the Board was held on Wednes day evening last. Present, Messrs. Martz, Hodg son, linber, Lindenrnlith, Little', Derr, Wel's, and- Boyer, President.. • - ' • Alihntee of prev:one meeting were read and adopted. Tae majority of the Committee On subject of furnishing desks for ptimarY echord in the Lecture room of Female Grammar School building..report ed their introduction not necessary at this time. Report adopted. Mr. Wells a melnber of the Com. Mittee,.favored their introduction. • Mr - .. Little of the committee on renting .Fiel - - bach Chapel for school• purposes, repnrted that the building had been secured at a rent of $1,50 Committee on matter of establishing High School reported favorably, and was discharged. The matter of its organiz:tion was then referred to a committee t - indieting of Messrs. Sheafer; Little and Hodgson. A letter from Mr. J. J.. Cake, tee :her, stating that be was prepared to pass an. examination in the extra branches tangnt in the High School, was read and referred to a committee consisting of Messrs. Sheafer, Little and Hodgson. Treatinrer's statement was - read and . illed , The Secretary rertotei orders drawn to (late amounting to $3;819...• • • . • Theiullowing hills were read and orderedito be paid . Ruch & Adcock - , lease Moyer, Mattion.br. Haber,— , Previorte Total Mo7o 50 A !Alt of Mr. Lippe contracted several years since, was ordered. to be paid if found correct ••• Atesars. Martz -and Lindenntuth were 'appointed visiting committee of schools fw• -Sep tember. It watt resideed • that the -boys !vrho have been annoying - the school in Eefit .liorWegitil street, should be arrested. • • The Odd Fellows' celebration at Hamburg', Berke County, on Saturday laet, was well attended by the fraternity of this .vicinity, while the far mers and their (amulets were present in force al most equal to their attendance on Battalion occa sions in that ancient town. The procession was -large, and the brethren with their handsome ban ner* and regalia presented a fine appearance. A beautiful feature was the presence of thirty-four httle girls droned 1 .1 white with - red and "bane scarfs. goixersl excellent bands were in line. The beat decidedly, was Jones's'' Cowet :Bend of this Borough, dressed in their DOW and beauti ful uniforms, made for them by Capt. David A. Smith, of this Borough: Thil dhief Marshal was Dr.-J. B. Potteiger, of Hamburg; assisted by Wm. WWI, Charles' Reicher, Wm. A. Arnold, Jews Shirey and I." 0. Becker of Reading; Thee. N. Plater of Hamburg, and James Glenn and Jacob D. Moe of Pottsville. •The follow;ig lodges and encampxnents were in line:: . . , - ,Lonents-.-Continental, No. 498, Reading,. ,; Hern- ' don, No. 559, Cressona; Auburn; No. 543, "An .burn' Longswamp, No. 534, Dingman:in ; Rea& lug,. -No. 348, 'Beading- Idetamora, No:- 147; Reading ;.Berirville, No. ITA Bernaille ; Salome, Rex 105, Reading ; Symmetry, No. joB,4lsuilmarg; - -11...0ny, No. 86, .I,quit ;_klontgomeg, No. Z 4) Heading ; Lily of tbel'illey, No. 281, _otteL• "sale;"Blue Mountain,. N. 249, Steitittvil le t'Eia blematie, Nod, Reading', Gsrmattlic (Oar.)- , No. 158, Reg ; Grace, No. 157, 'Orangeburg ; Girard; No. -58; -Pottsville ; Schuylkill, No: 2 7, I Port, Carboni /diet's% No- 20.: Pottsville, -, , , :- I ' . Th i cuseaunan_liabusg,,No. 166. Hamburg ; Readhjg, N0..43, Reading ; Hebron, 1 , 10.13; ,Read-' ing •, then, No. 4, Pottsville : ' • . . • - After parade 'the brethreneded to a grOVe iu the vicinity 'of the town where addressesi Were de/irered by Rev:Dant: Washbuni, 'Rep. U. Gravlts,-sad other speaker& •.-.,-, - -..- - - ..,' 'no aixplose4 ,plotiantly....vlib4he usual feii-,, 'tivltiear;hicident trt Ireinburg on such nceasione.. Phel.peolo uf:lffUhtirgVd'eertiill 1,01444' L Atte twee peso )tereothtly-b, the vieiter andlr t few , lol WAN" eveolok' wittent terie benie , to the coneltedentbatittweeweedte berm' there' sod =mimed the beepithlity offeettriendr-qt- FpP e t 14444 ..,,-. ,i .f. • c. ... ,*? ~..)..-....-.:i : - 1 - : .f; 0 ,, -.,,„, ~., ~,, -. , , ,- J., i..._:.:,, ‘ , -.. ~, - ..... • , ~ _ie. T HE: . 11 RE 6 7:: 1,125 So 75 75 ell 140 1('1 $2,221 50 '3,349 09 In the case of Jelin Fell 'and others previouslyre. ported convicted of Riot,. a motion has. been made for a mew trial. Thomas RuspetWas tried for Aktul tend' Battery on Abraham McGmugh. Deft. Jovial not guilty, but to Thomas Brillion was Convictedof •AWanlt and-Bat: tery Off John Ilannoralm, and - tined s2h, and ewes: Same den. was convicted oe a like charge as to An tis Penerstein, and sentenced to pay, the costa.. - • . Williani Powers was fcnind guilty of and Bit ten on Mary Savory, not sentenced : 'Jacob Hinkel was cont:ctdd of Assatilt and Pattery on. Adam etininger, and fined IMO: and colts. Catherine Bane and Mary Sweeney :were. ined for, Larceny, charged by Anna Powers. , Acquttied, • and Co. for costa. John Gowan was conyktedefaellinglionr without licerise,a4 tined $OO, and coats, . • . - • Sarah Preston was tried and found . pilty of Adel. tear.' Not tentetieed. • ' - - • Francis Agnew and Patrick Lanigan wag trial for an attempt to commit Larceny, chirgedby. War.-Zecluresn. Not guilty, Co. for costa, • • , • _ • • • Joseph Quinn and WWlssn Sinters wire found guilty on at/large of larceny, - preferred by Mtehaei &Hui.— • reels Mass woe cinnicted 0 0 glign 4 ; 0 ' tombloos.. Not sentenced, . • • • Adam flornitlrias tried for Wudritaininga nuisance ; in stop , ing a water comae acmes his premises.- Found Zohn 'Wright and Georgr not r lickert, , - *Wheys, eleven tothirteeti year a of age, were „tried.' and' convicted - of' xualicioner mischief, in gettlog'on a cite beater Jain H. Shed, near Alidlt , s Furs.., and breaking carte In • articles on board, amearingPaint abort tbe . Jr.c. 'The court reprimanded them sharply: and ' thILUY al.. . lowed them to go tonne On' cendlUon that they would be baiter honk/ the Thomas A. CA. fornterlt minister Of the Afrjean, Medualist Chtwchof place;,wes• tried on a .chatge . of-thibientesat, far collecting fundain the name and for theme or the can and approptirittng thirm fai his owl benefit t the charge watinotanatained, and the defendant was formally acquitte(L• . • • The Court then adjourned till next Monday Morning: .„ :when it . la expected some fartherefbrdwariansdnes will . .bedispored 04 :-ThevrivltTrial List appeintedibrewert , Week la whollypastcomd,lnahrl i kka ecalwideretlen for, 'Judge Rybres bealtlN 'taw; ' ohnidemotTha, would baxily , tie able t&sit,"-Mter *sekirithnost. continuous 4lani onthrißewch: ;• • ; rat • • •••.161Ples :livisamihArgt. f 7 , a. ty w th egwed:L*4z 14114 ith i ti l ogurFiesk egairweAnthony "IdWd..WV-4ree for' .1 n or : itrlut likethe r strut the /ghee' fberiellholg y:t A tic k tw pAgajoktiunizadiligoilontrammitvbinirma it nlrforir of which were I,3talklig-for. cord& Ablithron:W„Shape via ftarpd yitb Letr,exty t ,tiy awrsistoierliner. IgroreittitidSto..rottoot" • :;•Xtutaisettitlitte intiktediomiticifsiksitituraiisi, ellAomPljtof 4 0, 430* Tene; l l l 44ri VANIV4II- • Tiitirj , John and others were . attllttoday schoolitacconplabig ri ll . l o l l o loll - :, 1111 rtgb 11'.3:„ • r Proieedings r itthe Sohnigh - a ii--A elated .meeting of the 800 ugh Council was held :on: Tuesday evening last. resent, Mit"lres• Nrchol'S - Rienzle, , ' Cochran; Brain, Russel, Fox, Shearer, - &Wringer; Lamar, c. Honer, ()odium sod S. Heffner, Frandenti = ' - • - The Street Committee reputed croitaings,in Centre street, at-- Burkhardt's carriage factory and ataisvket street,. Erished, and limn plate at Centre and hishantongo streets. • The Finance Committee reported the report of the Chief of Porte correct, and also that-they' bad collected iltlai3 to the amount of $ll 00 from Justices Jacob Reed and.F. W: Conrad; and ac knowledged-receipt tif woo ,chimed Wait ter in nustake at a, previowasettlement. The, rules .werasuarpeaded batman; tlus.-ooni, plaint of Mr. Wells,"of the BonmgliScliwilltoird,' m relation to the bad condition of a stable . = the lot adjoining 'the 'Norwegian street school ones. Masers. 'Brown, Russel and Rill were appointed .a committee tcunseet the committee of the,School ; Board, on Wednesday mousing.' -. - The Committee on Lamp' and Folios repo's.' ted against nutting a lathrs at the upper end 'of the culvert in Railroad street._ They. alea. mann- - mended the t'scharge of Wm:Staut, one of the nieht police. The report was accepted and filed. Thcreport ofthe-Borors,, , th -Surveyor, etrerinit grade for George eltree4 n orth' of RaceistnarA vras laid over until next meeting. • . The. Brads 91 Coal etree4,--fremtherimmiter 'Coreptsisfs gr ounds to Igichißal . and to the middle of Front street. was adopted, r • - ' Th e survey C.ommithui vtaltll,lltAariZed. to pet ' in grade. stones'where grad4ts'ire established for ungraded streets - iu the western section tif-the The Sandal) , : doiroxiittise repOrted Railroad street, from Church- Pley.tcs Union- street; se a nuisance, and on motion , of Idr.ll,ussel, the ClOirt7, mittee were authorizedro abate said, nuisance: The special ocontnittee on the claim of Jas:. S., Kirk for 447 00, for cleaning's culvert front Mal street, xmar.Noi sexism, to Railroad street, reciarv t mended the payment of $4l. 40, afraid claim. ter discussion, a motion to pay the claim suss Wet,' The stateratmt tile Borough Treasurer .was accepted and Sled; and the et/dement rdithe Chief Burgess reterrid to the Finset* Coinmittee. The communication'Jif"Soksion' Feeter'ind ethers., asking for fo= crasinnee in Centre street, be ..• 'dram hlatiantongo, and'.Nonvegiatt streets, was referred to the Etreet Committee, with, instruct lions to report at net •. . • • • . The rules were suspended to health() liPPligt-: Lion of,Hydraullan ana'A - nerican Fire Compamee i for larger buildings, agi they requiivi more room than they have at Present. The same was (dada: by Mesons. Fox 'aid .Laney to be the case: with; the other fira companies, and the ,Goad Intent buildinte was reported as why unsafe." . The Committee on Fire Apparatus reported teen sections of hose seat to Philadelphia' for re. pairs, and asked permission to have .the hese greased: there, which' was granted., . '•-•• . - The Good. Intent Fire clompany. having * offered' to do a great part of the work of tearing•dosa their old building and,ereeting a new one,on ma, tion:Of Mr. lianer it Visa agreed that the Build ing, Committee he instructed to prepare and re: port a plan, and-when the thin should be liceepted, they ationld immediately tear down the 'old build ing. The different Are companies Were requested to send, a committee to center with the Building Conimittee in relation . to the erection of new buildings, and the placmg of the . outire, Are de partment a state of efficiency. were . The Street Committee anti= ized to repair all crossings in the Borough,. whenever it may be necessary; also to make a culvert, two feet eqtutrii, , with a plank bottom, from .the: east side•of Coal street. to Norwegian creek, between' J. Trough's cementer, shop and Thoompsoies oil ivarebonee. 'Zoe matter of repairs to the property et Jahn Hurley was referred 'to the Street Committee, NN ith power to act.' : ', • The following billiwexe ordered to be paid : filreot hands..._ • - • $lBB 63 Mrs. Diens ' , ; • 750 S..l.la . wley, • • 55 00 l'tevioos Totsl Adjourned. . . • - ,Teniperaucie:— The foll o wing.haa been comma niesled to us :=The first of a course of lectures, ou Temperance, under the . amrpices " Shelf) Mountain" Division, a of T., Now 71, of Palo Alto, has been delivered in the M.H. Chapel in Palo Alta, by Benj. Haywood, Esq. . The elognent words of the speaker All.3 , ,istened to withMarkial attention, by an audience, who seemed impressc.l - truth of the speakers remarks. . Theeneaker said he -did riot pretend to tinalce- a lecture, out would draw npon his memory,• and toll them'of things that he had seen in the courso , of Wattle ; he congratulated his friends in Palo Alto, • and was glad to see so many of bin,workmen en gaged -in the, good pause, and prayed that . God would shower Ms blessings down upon the Order. Ho had noted in his own , experience that" there 'was a strong .feeling among men; they needed help to save, them from an appetite for Honor ; which daily grew upon them.; this Order. needs veer sympathy to help to lead men to sober lives, its principine are not sectional, and prevented- no man of whatever religion, from joining , it ; it ie a brotherhood of mankind, to restore them to man so that:they could stand up as - American' citizens free from the curse of intemperance: He said that- rum wasthe cause of telthe crime and outrages committed, and that if thaTeruner. ince rainciple • was es.l. 4 ied oat-:au this would be prevented ;. he was. In the habit 'of N:sitiiig the County Prison every. Sabbath; and conversing with tete prisoners there confined; his-beef t often 'bled for them ; in the majen'tty of cases they had be - eu addicted to the' use of, liquor, became vic tims of crime, and not, fit to•erooy. the society .of man ; some of them traced .tne • cause. back , to early habits in their 0101 famity.circle. Mothers, women of ourlancl you ought to be the'inost ni teresterl in this greet.canse,• and to you they look for aid. „ . 'He remembered in his early life. whim he 'WP 9 an apprentice, is employer was addicted to the nee' of .strong dt.ink, and eame home nightly beastly drunk ; the eight of him treed to diagustbini, and he vowed to himself then never tolie a drunkard; he hadliept that vow, and be thanked God for it. Temnerance men were in danger of one thing ; that of malstng Temperance loading virtue to the excluEion of religion.:. Temperance not.re lie inn ; it is one of its teachingS; hulled: seen Temperance halls open on Sunday.; .he warred them that this• was an usurpation of. religion ; one, of the constellation of the oeanties of the church was the principles of Temnerance,•and nothing could have a fOundation without it. • . • During his - residence in San Francisco, he pc- Heed the tot rible effects of. iotemneranee, heat ;,-- rendinS - cases ; ho knew .hrtudreos of .men who were disappointed, gave - up all hopes"; resorted to the intoxicating bowl-to banish from their minds the dearones at home, whowere,waiting patient ly for news from them; men of splendid iritelli.ete; and of noble Minds, good faMilies, fell icOne to the accursed bowl, the intoxicating cup, and. died, alone, degraded and forsaken.: • • - Loa at the effects of intemperance in our. OW,a commimity he :pointed to the inmates' of our alme-houses, 'our prieone, , would ask - what brought them there, and it a" could be atttibnted to tona.,.When man becomes addicted to Strong (Vali, mind becomes feeble, health is ea..:ed away, and his System is open to all i"seaees, he comes to liis - death-bed rad fil!o a aril's grave:. He s ol:e. favorably of Gov. Geary ;be knew him when he was Mayor of San Francisco, and he was then as he Li now, a strictly temperate, man, in fluenced by nobody. He argued the unportance.of, the matter, and of the max m, "Man know thyself. 7., What education, social position?, All /5 lout under the influence of the nto.7 4 cating cup. , ' • . • Habit makeu our character, you can know a man by his. habits ; yon ;', always find a temperate man in the right place; a mau needs a moral, a. pin - ideal - effort, and , the • exercise of temperate habits, to make himself an otaament to society.: , He warned the young men present not t fcirm the habit of diint;ng ; it is dangerous, not only to themselies but 'to their fareores, and may lead to •endless miseries hereafter. • • '. • . Look' at that poor heart broken' woman,'Wh6si husband had.promised on the wedding day, t I love, cherish,' and protect her, and she • had pledged her! , .fe: Ler a"'+,bitn. Did helreep that promise? Not lie had-betrayed her trust in hiin, spent all his, earrings, had be' ome a fiend, a monater;•abnscd his.family; .brought nmsa himaelf, and brought, them to the Aleas-Itoese. What was the cause of, all ? Accursed ruin: Many man who have 'determined to becomeintiu malls, citizens -have been led iota bad comPanY, and were lost forever ; theiefore wou'd, warn you to.keep 'away from strong drink, for in' the, end " biteth like a serpent and stiogeth like an adder.'Y I pity a drunkard, I.do not discard him ; I blame htm that • manufactures the liquor, hire that sells it, and him.that rents thb place - that it is Sold in ; they are conspired together. to ra , Gl Men, Intemperance. is national eisgra !e, and young men and old mustiMite On the great Temperance platform, carry out its principieS, and with that, good Temperance man, Gov.• Geary, at Your head, ‘'on rot/ succeed. I congratulate you, citizens of Palo Alto, on the noble stand you have taken. The Temperance Masa Convention referred . t& in i our. lest, came off. 'on Tuesday, - at Union Hall.' Luther S. 'Kauffman, grq:, Chairman of 'the - "•Schuylkil.l. 'County Temperance Union," called the vast assemblage to order, and in a few -well-timed remarks,- stated the objet for, which they had assembled.. )3:F. Crawahaw,' Secretary of :the "Union," then road the call, arid after the apPointment' of several committees on "Creden.. • bats," "business" and "pet ,m a nen t organization" the Converition'Was soon fully at work in- perfect lug Measures which it is hoped will'at no -distant day prove - a powerfal aid in reocaing• our land' from the blight of intemperance. • It proved .a grand success, ant in intelligence and unity of feeling, was certainly second to cone ever held in, the County. Stirring, anneals Were made byHon.' Wm.. Nicholson, of - Philadelphia,' Rev. Di. Moore and. Rev.. U. Graves, whose rerearke Were atten tively listened to and warmly applauded. •• The. Teinperance reform has been strengthened by the noble - efforts of itAt friends on - Tuesday.last., and the 'delegates from the various sections of•the . County, have'returned to their homes inspired with renewed ardor; zeal and energy, in their no ble, and holy.cariee. •• • • ' • - We shalt .furnish our "readers .with se- - count of the precesdings in our next. -. • H : : CatiILTPROCEEDDIGS. . .. • Ciintitme4 from ptoptoO report to Thursday ut list . .. _. REPORTED EXcLEEItTER 'NE THE.-MMERS'3OEriMAE., .. . EV .cinuarpAlTn LITTLE, ESQ.: . ' . LLETTER'nom Trim, Visit_ se. a tiraidigiira Cave < :a&. . -. ..„lrrieste—Tike.inkgt erse m or p i tr i ty iajltalr itasA siiper A inoe at thaPeo. . -4,l4s= 7Yrtii , 4 l *Miticit•ai of *it -21q1114',42.• nagaitleent.: Catbadeal-= : =. 'eir•illto . .atildefais—Gamata—Arilial fa 19 , }ximis , st.Aw=x - 3himeJou/i/LAzJ 44ast , !• 1 4. 4 . 1247 ' LaimitViptig Rh. Trieste, I pawed iiver . otie the • mods, romantic ?Opal routes : that have thee far been erimPlet"ll; thresding ita way through arid between the Styrian Attic:and over the particelar OPOCiiO" as the Seawteriag, st thi highest point of which the road is 3 ; l4o 'ircettibove the. AArlitlieSea. - It costes valleys andrivers Over viaducts and bridges to the niMlbe".lfliteeni end- traverses egad), fulv, =AV tan nets, end - the sceneritikeg the whole distance Of Enna bemired mileats of the Wildest and- emit - idettiresOne . ._ . description.'; '• • • -• . . . . At Adelsberg, a town about lily „Telles north of Trieetaaratird r. tilitheiolloi'llict*, facird6rta visit under the edifice* reountiin. the renowned cave, • idiclilar. to out Mammoth Cave in EenirtiT,lnd w h ich indeed, Oteientett 6) . 110 istorlsbed Ora the Mosteron- - deninl and stupendous eactentrieliy of at that. -lever beheld. • Entering the caVeoe.ohntrany with 'two Ea. - esti gentlemen and li v e through a-door of iron grating, we passed along a siibtenareaustingwaf a dis - ' 'tanctofi imndredjarda or morei when we reached a seat expansion of it; called the dome, at leasta hundred 'feettfth, and the samein width through epary dlivetiori• Bat before . proceeding fruitier fahonid elate that the en- - Are cavehed been illumirited for ns, at- a reasonable eXpense,'With egoist number of lights. I n thini dome we Passed akongtts aide over ,a corridor . of - rock midway il betweencor and ceiling, over two natural bridg-• Is, under-WI-kb stream'of: Water _called the Pinks, runs along, sod lotto hamneken tinder the moon rain, apPeating again in the cuter world at a &shore 'front here of eight This stream, in -connection sA the portion - of the care clOse by ktrwn as The re-:, gion ofPlitto, tills one's sons with all the dread agery of a veritable river Styx; and the murmuring 11° . und... o ,t l t B oshingWater Coming up - "front the glOomy . depth +nip the pep:delve' stillnees of these pasta, ie On?' • inoroly•peridextrig to folks of tender nerves. Oziward we Furled to the windings of this cavernous ettuntel,. ascending and descending -ifs course, and turning angles to the tight and left, till we.reached altother di latailon; forming agreat chamber known as the dog hall, wF'ch affords comfortable room kit a thou land persons. . Further ontwo'conderable acclivities -of the cave are called; ihe one the greater, and oth- - er the leiverMetint Calvary : in traversin,ghriskly the whole of these subjetianeeclpassa'ges, wereguired ke ciselytim boars , time, from which some idea May be folioed of their vvenderfaresierit. Aluicet throughord, the entire ease the ceiling - is' studded withtnnomemble stalactites, large and small, rind presenting shapes and ligires of every conceivable - description t ce-tabut hanging - in - folds of sat prising mituralnaii, appearing woven texture of, alternate white and red-colored. stripes and perfectly translucent when e.iight behind them; end shapes that have an exact similitude to an .orgsn'in a church, with all its pipes of ft ' nlPlts and thrones, and many Other things. Prom the floor . of the cave in numerous places, stalas,mites ascend in most eccentric shapes, of human beings, animals, palm trees and ryprees. In many instances Abe stelactiiea, from above and the . opposing stalagmites from below have gradually inereast..4 in the direction towards each other, until ultimately, they United and formed solid columns, some of them She feet in:diameter, that play sn architecture of rare perfection, and seem to sup- . port the yanked roof of this. extensive cavern. 'And whenve cons'der that alt this has been• preduced by the gradual deposit and solidification of earthy matter from the Of • water , that take place here, we cannot but be utterly bewildered in contemplating the centuries ttf.on mantles that Most have elapsed In its Construction. Ou WhitinondaY of every year great fee tivitiesare celebrated in thistave, On• which Occasion-it is tilanitneted with over five thpnsand'llghts ; a grand :ball is heldin the dancinghail mentioned above; with all its accessions of music and good things-to eat and drink, and is' participat in by a' greet concourse, of people, that mostly % J Verney here from Vienna end Triotte. .• . -. 1 • ' 251 IS 4,985 41. $5,236 55 . From Adeisbergthe road passes over the-bleakest, most:dentate and God-forsaken country .Imaginable, but enters a tunnel and. Omerges suddenly:at Trieste, In. a land where Myrtle and fig trees• grow in. abundiiin; Where'll:l,o9ln grapes are' already ripoand . excite devouring meditations': where the wide expanse of the Adriatic Sea C.MuMs l'ae fancy, and seems the very Thetis' lap, iv . her Pluebus 'spunk - out his light and, sinks int 'u calm repose:. here, too; I came at last into a outintlY Where • no:overcoat is. necessary; for. 'with few excepi days; I was obliged to protect my pereon with such st article; agairSt the inclemency of -the Weather daring the entire einntnet, - ii Mai it is said was an unitsuallyeold one. Bat putting all things Renter, I am satisfied that the climate of- Perintia:liania is yery,witlerably milder than that of central Runge: Trieste ja !nal: important .Cornmercial cityi and bears ''.e.bont . the:same relation.to Austtia that Hamburg, dons' to northeir ciertisuy. A great deal oftraflic by ship. ping hies , tied on there, and ifs population is coinneSed `of people '.em ell pai,s . of the globe, Italians being rather in the preponderince ; nextfollow. in snecession Qcrmana ireich, Greeks, Turks.Rngllah, Americans, &c., and the Intermingling'of all these people of diger ent la ngesges is exCeedinglydroll. There Is. a French - . . and a Greek. church at Triestc„ and : !he ; latter' being open forierfie'a'every . .motnir!a; and evenirg, I took oc erasion to enter it at one of.tbese times, but cannot say th'at I was greatly edifier, • for :the 'worship : Was Greek tome, and rifor.unately, only addressed itself to my Cl/tit/I/9 admiration in the light of a.parttomime. .It was a beautiful evenlng ; the moon was just and the sky as clear and serene as n "pureßahan sky'. can possibly be, when:With - pleasant anticipations of a' I radonlight -sail, in the tile Spirit- of -poetry, - over the AdriattetyVerice," r took tan my in tmantearf and pro: ceetlol6 the: steamer. There arrives!. the officer of the , veriel f : reatly: disappol uteri miirith the statement that all'Passengers "arriving at •Venice by sea were obliged to lay 11 .eon days in quaranti ne,on account of • the cholersoyldchie said i r prevail !lE(Tiieste es well • as all through holy. Raving neither tine nor lndlda= tremor such an adventnre„ I was perforce constrained . to reverse my steps, and proioed to the railroad depot, and thenee by the. drat train adept- the Most Prsztimble Way of reaching Venice. •• • • • :in relation b the subject of choleral would state that It fins bcyond..doubt; married a very grave tom, and made fearful ravaged especially in s.onthein From January - to. July as - plank an'tl,376'eases have been reported, of- which 3sD74'c`ed. 7.46 Sicilian pro‘inces have beenthe most' seriously affeCted, arid. among the,deatbs there wee that of the amen-dowager . of Naples.. More than half the aggregate asses have proved ratio, - ring pf the 4D proViucce ofitaly haVe been spared, though to mine cities, such as 'Florence,- only a few cases have occurr 'Besides thie, a moral . disease.%quite ae alariinwas the playsini ninlady, has been observed ti•nrighout Italy; espminlly in the.Cal.a betas and 'Sicily, though even the .northern:proyinceis are not, free-from its contsgion. 'lois is, that poison. • • otis . .agenCies - htiY . e 'been 'disseminated - by malevelent : means, and . ..the - Mind of the selfei;ng . population •Is greatly eic s itedby this horrid apprehension : eel dle`is ire 'supposed' to 'be in tome Mysterious manner connected with_the cholera, - and It thirst for vengeance . is felt bythe pepple„though both officers and teen - have, shown r'i .. unremittirig zeal and kindness in tlie . I .eireof the suffering and - slck.: • -At Melilla, near Syra= - - such was the excitement orthepop . nlacs Owing to, their belief that Poison had been adnaintateredby agents of theltallan Governmerdi.tiutt a large 'meeting was held Inthe . dead of night.in.:.the public eeinetety,. • which' It was, resolved....ithat'all the Carabisiere- and Itidianagents resideatin the place should be killed for spreading the cholera." r The plot was fortnnatelY . covered and hustrated bythe authorities. 'At Catania: :nearly all the -shops are closed, and all Who had stall. clentinea hades.caPed from the city..'. Prowling doge and raven°uemenijimt :eh h o a l7 at ib t e i v i e li4 wok o f lifei -: 6 work tir s p e e l r Y to' themselves, and the b:mined by.thisoldiers, Who too frequently fall to their Ruinous, and overstrained labors.- 'They none the kick and bury the dead, and iireturn for tlieirkind nen meet With acoffs . and maleffictlOne. The agitation Is indescribable' throughout: the. country,- even in the • 'northenfior..ion;' and in the polished and * enlightened ' city of Milan itself. Just now the cholera prevalla to a' eonSlderabie extent nt Rome, still more at Naples, and: fearitilly so at Palernuo. .• . .• • .• • :Well. I arrived at lasthYrailroad Venice, whirif Was:greatiy surprised- to find. all the - passengers driven into a room like a and; of sheep, to.be fumigated, with , chlorin, as a preventative for spreading - the chelera:— . This maitematters look-a little anion, and persons of constintionalliMidity might-be • frightuned into bysuch alaincessitself*:. the ordeal !sex.' • ceseively annoying, eateelanY to people" With, tendir. thrOnte er:eyea, trisay nothing of- the ugly impression ft mikes upon - the :sense. of smell : We were kept in this rooni about Sheen fi teen minutes, during Which time, all bad toexpoee it i '6l r baggagetolie famed as well ai them selves It was time ling td see the 'different 'reinnein in orhicti' .f,,,Dtgatiou Was submitted to. - Some .groaned, and staffed bandirere'alefs into their months t otheis swore and gruinbledialem ; 11 gly about ridicrdons such thinks; whilitionte, .Iforces, imperious fools, r rid tandlhe moStseneible , r:Ottion; took it down ma a good joke, with much merriment and fenny retuarkir. Arty' Ameritan friend suffered a little from bronchitis at 'gm' thin, and said Some very nanghtY . Words; that I featly; 'Wouldn't like to repeat. -.Slime .my InlttstlOn" into .the preens at Venice, — l have been fum i gated ateve4pls6 3 'Where I stayed over; at least. a dozen Until in al4 and . bitie come to the cOnclualoa . that it Is. an fastit u tk in. *kith Woe'd not meet with gieat, favor from the .tray-...- cling public of the Untied Staterc - • I ein hirc:y oar Itt, Meg, for instence, being.oblllittd. to .unpa.cit their liars... togas la every station-1100k, anCepniad . ' on i• t h e i r wardrobes on exteruied lines, to be trent* :th ,ptiyaiating vapor Of chlorine, slid trceine theatildect of mutpal critical °beer, vaikal ;hear the chatncter * of 11111...1 feria', the - cid4:4,6e yob:W.l'o tie style and lirdsh of :the embroidery. • Phew 1, - whet a Whatan-1 Other War - of the .Rows there ;would what a re- fresh Ire' rebellior, aster:the AWO,Years , p uce. - ' have had thoughlbis dentinal . whethe r el . the we.: ling' Of the North. and South combined tertid,quell It. But to return - to Venice. Wonderful place l that seems 'Jake the very 14011 , 3'S arkdf citic* which had been hitt there by unoiritty into and . wimps titled • entleipation of renathei deluge. -.Just to thi n k of large city t:eating on a submarine foundation, rest Tog heir oars . ,:ilottalhead . fro - m4e him) . watern i se iitiet:tlilth.NePtribe, and lintaCtliber Jit441113; bra. :clitg:ber rattinnttryi, sad etifte•Pnif, her: timbers in de: rielve Begin. of. her 1413631and4Oberly wherein nitride* may. Winn •..Inivegrpwatray: .witiiiiekes and for' -steree:Set.foot ripen ioritbki i t a i is:Alf ; Where aPkeina nulYtitePtett the Street end take A:bath. or dahlareard!Wors with a hook, dud line outot . hie•ctureaber Window: wherioru?thern . c.ttidifal* , Walate; by wt.& theittetiklitlibeirt: 'Vrtillell4 lean*, Swinibithsr highways,eooven 11l th ibeli Stet iffortS at,B thl The: ) 4. 4 : : ibitur iti ampit*li people nebAY ertni Suicide by drowning 'if .they'ent attempt cold bath;lobers ,thipU2:irAnene baek Ici•Ttotagein• Eliketqleces': there *re, hOw: which ever;afford a .4400 tta te ihose ped estri .S.•4lriciinitti*chlefest.of whitiftli the piazza of liar.- groupd.lboiebelaii ocOuPted by Ores' •di vii.f atired.A.Pf icriellentlenttdtecOnniett eeemeiening,'Whiletion.,' ..e4nds, oftlre atT e rrwld:nre.seigett . ;n ifont wtApitnitinnudlog up end down the,nnt; Ivry:wa ft. g'.o l *ArthiOPrilke*l"ffo . ol4erest,to Uto etriuiP;il 11413,0.. wilono.:EfewUtai. „p out eb..sdriaiiioottl. Zetattekiti4-Idi.4 row arnios umktintilitullukletztuu :0T hunuorde ibisitPlea; rWrAll. ' 214 4 PFe.4 0 44 1 . 0 40 11 5ktrs 0196 ltoOge,ciuet . ant 1,?...4.1101,W*1P45,4)31c".*.i"414pg oast tip tha t•w# , lrefi el t to .4 t kPOrtiallie. 0644 4101 . 11. 00. 1 0. 1 4 , 3hdtatt wirehair OW/. , . .• . , : ever trosaed't3de. hildge but once; and that then . .its . - passage tel i ninatedin cietaitittieca,:on. •Mther ob ject; of interest fa Tie. Bridge of ..the vibloOrt niadY carhzam for containing tientylone shops, in ,and aroPutt Which, tbe triabitd traffic of Venice mites Placti . : -Axone end'ot.thit Midge is a Column of Rgyg- . tiara Marble, tainpodatty the figure of a I seelingelave. 4 .llohbo.froni"which coluniii the proclamations of theileenteduringthe ttmeofthe republk were iminedf tbe Merchant of Venice. An, WO; was publicly:cafe 'ad and diviaced because, he Aland Mini:Mune by eat 'typo:Wan '...paitO a different atpry froin that -.which thakapeare.. ,tiveit.c.: Abe's/fain. Ali sods of*zotkina . placea . are Painted' nut to the stiviiit, ; among them the mildew* for atims, of lead Byron ; that of Pnharek the poet, who tiamortalLved not_ only himself, but the .Leura wham ,he ievad so deerlY:the loam itherrinTbdan, the artist, Wed . for* .mang,3o4l, Needled at tb4 vented aged of nMeiy-nine years the' innate' of the eminent Taglimal. who had'come into greatroneeeloni hemnee dui understood - how: to dantariinly, her • understanding had beeiavery neefol t) her; the house Of IthitialikeVii . .afar, blatriet tiandarren—Just . to thinkl , -ther parental 'te4:lGll . 6 - Vesdetiions, the :moony but innocent victimof.pthelicnajealotsy... : - The firtit'cinimit (allot Olter*itii out in n 1 9 .1 02 16 bookes that of greateet baterestjthat I.Went to see was the St. Giovanni e PitokOnt upon tlPM9fideing it,' . oheetved a greatiOnroden'and crowd of rciple, a hur rying bit* and thither -vid/r . bucket : lf-of Water , w,hy, d'aplic porn") in frill'or. 4 a' ation, short; all the ev; • ideates or a fire. - - The interior of the' hatch had been burning, and the fire was . jrai about baingimbdued; but rainy valnable relics and paintings to the estima ted amount: of twenty millien cane,, bad been dO 'etrciyed: it is: supposed' teat, church was set afire by the Tioininictue glare, and bereby hangs a tale... seem: that ever tstice thereignOf Victorßmannel,over . Italy, therelei been a great War between the.. Domini. can and .Capocbm Ww ant on the one. aide, andthe - called /Cti.gelical pilestboci on the other.' The: King and a - great tna'ority Sof the people support the latter, and recently a decree , had been passed depriving . the ..friars of all ecclesitstherii rights and re.vileges; and the day of the fire was thatapr.4itited for them to give *up the keys of the churches. and Cloisters heretofore under their charge. The coincidence has oet , toicoed the sus picion ; and uplto the preterit they have been confined loathe church; under railitaty grind, and will conVoner to be so it is saki, nit" the matter-has been picirly investigated: Boit; much of truth there As in Tone's leg ta be gc the angels ;• ; • Aspiring to be angels, men _rebel! , • "Alas ! 'what a melancholy pictarethbi bale • envicion presents to the mind ! How can religion prosiier as it should when dodoes of . ditleti are almost: es savage,. and . lealons, .eniione; eachothers creeds as doctor_ ofinedicine f Will the blessed millenium ache . when itutAty end good feeling (Mel *sisal:m . l7.e: the humeu isto'bt ea. lc _ought to Bet What tie dickens litt?.-. - -tdO believe fhlv. pen ; has tieteoilittla.moraliziog•ratiible on , its own hook. CoMe theretiliinaOre ;of' that !Jou Make 7 a bodj(rq: spolisibie for -What you scclbble: • • • Talking about tha•ltyveminds me of a (taxies of live stock wl . 'ch enters lnhithe anti:sated nature of Venice: that •has tithe whatever;.'allualoo ispaade to theme I bave rstwhi.fel encouidercti • seme of the Tatingnisited ((weighers in other lands:known ,as as:the gallinippers of New Jersty, but alongside of .their Ve -11418,1 preth'elp t hey may hang t helr heads' in shame; for these surPevs them in the science of phle hotom'y sO : Cmlneidly, that hencefortht shall look upon Pnainvertion of 'a Jerseyitemosqultoe's frail proboscis with. pity for his • 1 >werlees efforts. and 'as' a, pletirnt - contrelt to the fleshing I endured in Venice. • • • I now crossed . the Italian . 'hoot Just' about where the . . straps might be supposed to exist. takiagyenice on the. Adriatic as one. sad Genoa on theltediterraneas coast . 83 •the 'othei., The post city thatl took a b.:ef lehk at waS Padua, cerebral-all for clr•asic,unlvemity, that has sent forthSe many. lea( .docters, oot .excepting • Shaksi.aares creation, the fair Perth whose Ingenious al gnmeni settled_ so thoiougbly the little matter of old' Shylocios • bond. Then alirlimpse at Verona, whose 4Cena, .Is , ssid, will seive to bleak:ionic - what the eorpriee occr.stoned by the sight of Vie'Coli).ssenin lit!Rome: feele . en .exit were, -to leek fat the too hof the •Capule4y where should re; ?se the gentle FOrtieti toed Joliet; the tomb la each a fernlliar acene upon the stage, that one . would be y ableto.meognizn it at a glance.. Then I Oro-. enndcd to the' eity.of . .3111an, cionatnglon .my way the. historic tl6cre of TagllattiOnto. ktinlcoaMl 4.pda, sud oveigevnod'mademeinorabitty battlen, tint es. • specially hose-of Eilfie !no and • Magenta. Milanis. a 1-indeanie,•biti-iand apparently vet/ prosperous city, hut ie..eistingoislied principally fot the giand Cathed which.: it :eontalna t, enter upon 'a de.. tierlptlan of • which vrould talteinuch meteepaceilien have at COMtrille and convey no adequate idea lii.the end. Vie, Maly 'eiay t J obt^in thista 6 kee pieoloasal' pile of:marble itself, which present') biltserimplcated construction, the a.stoinidlngnuraber of seven thousand distinct to go into its interior, and wander throngh tte live great naves and, forest of Cohn:cis of gigantic proportions, andthen to rtccnd upon Its high est li'ntisele, 10015. down . 'upon the wilderness of. spires,' each one s'ur'mounted bya stable, from the hinds' : of the ablest schlptota. '71)(2, thlieuthedral,* the-alioe , crowied Alps an the one side; and the rich vegetatic - ton the far-reaching plair;9 of Italy,. on the other. le one of indwrJbable griudeurt. Here, too, I Ns itnessed,for the first' Vie; that the pro.: verbial beauty of an Italian sky is a tepid-y * Bnd- no fir • tion, for clewed .from- a short - distance thrOugh 'the • empty space's of come rni!rble': railing that ornaments . the top of ,i -t ie,catheeral, it seemed to make windoWs. of the:C.l;lll4lgs, aud.llDed theispar;v; With,..spfurent glass of• a soft scam hue. and the best Behenilan ufacture. •Rne•genitta who could invent. suehu color, and with ethereal thine the walls and c'illirga 0f..-our . chambeL) With; world ithmortatize hittself, ')iris an tncticulable fort"ne,, and translate our anb-. ptradisical abodes.' - -Prom Milan I wmatitci the Like of.Como, and took •It'• itearnbeat. excursionon its watsr_ss fay as Bellagg'o- The numerous Wilts 'on Its Precipitate shores • of slo ping mountains and the lap:Timis vegetation with which these shores are clothed, sffordli ples9iog prospect to the eye in everrd'rectlon, -. My American friend , kept a ebSep Icokont for Claude Melnotts . .B - "Palace lifting to eternal smnnier Its marble walls, from onta glossy 'tower.. • Of &utast foliage, musical with birds, Whose songs should syllable" the name of Pauline. There .were plerity of such palaces, es vs. the "breathless heavens" and "arching vines;"the"Orange groves iiiilminrmfira'of low fonntains" too were - there, even the" alabaster lame!' and " ' music froin sweei kites." were doubtless present in the evening, (I ;lop see), whilst Melnottes and "Paollnes *eie sprinkled all over the eunntry In extravig.tprpftuilou. At Bollaggio especially, the scenery ia quite tropical and lovely In. the . extreme.- 'There • WaS noep3t that. I' could call my.own, but:l sheltered mysalf from the warm sun 'under somebody else's . '" vine andtig tree,'" and dreamed of Tenoyson's beautiful poeM—in a gar- My next route was by reit to Genus, through Pails and Alevandritt, over the .rivere Ticino and Po; 'and crossing the Apenninemountaina..throngh deep gullies and numerous trinheler t - one of which it took the train ten minutes to traverse -.TONdS,An4er;can the city of- Gsrma would naturally be Interesting •from Its seine atone with the disnoveret of our country; Christopher Columbus, to . whom memory time Gennese appear much more attentivettutit they were to him while living, for the. moitament . erotted to hini of the pare.sfearrara marble, is one of 'the ilar'st I have seen. The city heti all the appearance of abusy, bustling seaport, and-for . the - rest is 1361i:feted abont- the mountain sides a great deal worse than PottsKille. It has ae.old, somewhat: sloitenly look,and was enveloped when I was there in a :rattier disagreeable odor. In a word, I shalinever be come a Citizen of. Genoa. Ttiedinuer that we s, - served at table d'hote the day that I was at Genus, deseiyes,. blethinki, a little notice; and: have it. la the first' place there was .velinicello soup, !obi a • plateful of which every guest pet a ttblespoortfal of grated'cheese that le mei° at Parma ; after this was dispatched we had huttei and "eardellen, 4 --the latterle a emall.B'sh, done op like Mrs.."Strowse's, pickled herring ; .then we bad some fried sole; . (1403 f Course )- With a Slice of lemon rifext reitst veal, -with - • dressing consisting of. -holed rice, tomatoes, pot , tteeti and sonrkron•,. ail on the same dish ;,this was followed , by boiled macaroni, (not those things With almonds in them, thatyoa get-in the candishopl.) highly flavoied with onions then again roast chicken, cut. up . in email ptecca, St:Lail Covered over: with.e batter-of eggs and. a thick 'sprinkling of young pepper-pods .-; next thioslicee of broiled beef, all curled nn;-:(apparently under-the-agony of broiling.) with a areesing of young lettneiand some more onions. Now followed some .of piddling,. succeeded by • a slice of che:te. (not made at Tame.) 'and "a slice of butter. I; •t?r . -Able ensued, the dessert, consititing sweet cakes, peaches;. fresh figs, gripes, wateiniclions, centeicries, fresh. almonds and. walnuts ;• during . the whole of the meal, there had been a plentlfel supply of _wine and Ice l water. Now, Vweeldlike to k low how It Is possible to get the cholera en each living I Leaving Genus,. I traveled fourteen hours In a dtli geitee,ilittie time in slevi of thelfetliteriai2ese era, to Spezia, atailtherice.per railroad to Leghora and 'Where, secepded the Leaning Viver, and entered the cathedral in which, as the most.hoteworthy thing, truly bementlonedthe same'clindel'er entrended f l om the ceiling of tie dome; Pfom which' flallleo made ills Mat Obaervaticuia of the, cendniuM and rotation. of the Friim Elsa two hours ; of very.qtdek.'trireli ng S hroeght me to Florence, ell aglow with ex. irciations,ind still more with- the temperature of the Eprroain 00.118ESPOtANOE. 6 tartareav Nerve Ramat, saes Raeround , / DLLs JOURNAL :—Ttirratgb the rollteneaa of the Rev. Prebendary 'limits, a LW friend of my _wife, we are spending a delightful vbait at his parsonage. It la just one of those places which we have o,len reed of with so much plessure,,surrounded with the moat luxuriant foliage, and the brick walls almost entirely , covered with fry green: The adironce le outside of the enclo sure lined with ahtebbery, to st`idile"entrance; where you Wight and entvx..thelunee Matting to the ball, which opens out to 'a beaV.ul green lawn, almost as, smooth as a Boer, bedecked Withl3eautiful flowers and clumps of aluubbe.ry. Tbla lawn, a part of which con atitut,s the croquette gamed, is shut out 'rem all the public avenue.; and acariely an) dttng is heard except 'tie chirping of thelittle sparrows which Ewe ca mauler. ous sada* Idgarming to thelcrver of nature. The oc cupant of - eh parsonage IS one of the most genial and kindhearted gentlemen we have ever met' with. We. moiety knew-'bat it was pcsitible for se old bachelor upwares'orat;tibtch hi Is; tObe el 7 affable and gentle; in high the, Whcde place and-hs surroundings seam to WVI the serysphit of the 'pure-and holy -religion, which be stably filifirmsei , at the tilt= of the perishes : of f4aithstior Notts and _rfetford, both:: of which, with' the twaistatice of a very genflemmtly and devoted Mt: ,rate, Itei..idt4autestm.he odiekties in. This church' , -IttrfirotostariNOtts,ls one of the oldeet In 'Ragland; and' lion the of the Dr.tui or lifewintsikt. ' .: . .The litr-: 1 Ing* qW/ntAllE o o..con.l 3 .4 4o, tbliiil Xlindtanntea- oflexatinOtird. The tithes wets, computed for thla 1 land, baonletto get rid of die anctoyarieow collecting. 1 the llama ^ Thl4 aces of thin land is *BO by the' fleeter, and.hul,ging from Ole . Oidik.; Act' stixic oz the, . . _ . farnt, and t he , contents of: the dairy,. which-the dairy VP/ Tectileitad. tilkto'ilete he :ie seulteur:ftwitier: 'The llama Is Jest , ell to_thq Duke of ' iteuikli4 iibe f l iiYf al* 44 11 r licii 3- rtilti t ,r,Willttliii gedal lii tris fl ' I. ierert_ Wed . bl'ikil?..Wii.o..0 1 4 . .... t***PiPtick la- tierusignontheolli .. He arcoormen the , gclassestoatte , thilr earplugs, and in owistto them theilitiesto do oh he schsasbanker for husou, Awitr g e t*P the lr ign Al a ßTE /1 41' 1 9wAtheOle* -Nssil, :41"ppt ilis'Asithigii, ulfic.h 111 it r matei:" us* of Inter:- ern th i l No 2l *.T*eh!ed*PtrelAraiiiii4„Eii thelauto eate!gidiso Awl ainitlitiaqcsociefies amon 7. .tee.estldso g I Flitkehlfiitetitol44s4 eerighs :,, f; I SSW#11 4 0W0 111 /14P ". -Litakcir**thi ' m . ro u to:Ottetsre.lbelquitt suitable souses. Vottairldllsintlihtlaldftliteffhlefright 124= 4sumPhfir ,a,1Cirae:ji.44`1(44.164, - Oil thilieitalliiiiitige twheiColdwil . ei sets in..' With this fund the Rectorprchattesinelle . .quantltles ornanre- feeorable Mimi for mak, and, the shop-keeperealso'f,iidaliclothingehispirielarge ea they are anions ta ; obtain ''thia" trade. Sdeh to' the irdaence taxertedbyideldnd, superintending cana, that in - all eases of eiflieulthas firiSgEkg franiany caam what, .ever, he M. conielitd hy the people M the neighbor= . hc.od, and tits . adviee Ind judgment are almost turves sally accepted and acted upon_: We ; toted a number , of the cattageSof the poorer daelle6ll o l wgce surprised. !to fled tioiv . :comfortable , they were, eiteptlit a:single Anstancialehare the cottage 'was old sod dUtrpidsted: In front of nearly all these cottages was the little 1339rer . gadder,andthe.tvjgreencreefang up the brick walls, and to many instauces,covering nearly. the whole 'cot , tege. Where there were DO yards' le. front, thetrin.: :doors,' however small in s'ne, eahibitisi ah array of flowers-1n bloom. To all! the reeldences of the gentry: and large fanners, .nreaitactrol heal:Alfa preen lawns' • and grounds, and" these are decorated:with beds of flowers in bloom, and. clumps - . of shrubbery. .tc,, and all the snail farmers and cottagers imitate them is far is,their grounds and. means will permit. 'The parish schoolhouseaare also Models worthy of imitation._ In. these schools the poorer classes in the parish are taught.. These.echoel imams are generally ;14 the own 7 . ers'of thean% and fer. as we obienred item, they are befit in a neat copnge Style, with yands decorated:, with flowers and atimbbery; all of Which are carefully .protected by the scholars, end in. this WO. even the 'poorer tingles acquire a- taste for the timuttiful, which has contributed to much to adorn-England, and make her the most beautiful country we have seen eo far" in 13nrcpe. In the erhool building at the pariah of Gnus tan Roue, is embraced a dwelling' for the %teacher, neatly. furnished, where she resides.. and always exer t/en a minervlsion over the scholars, so long . is they are at the building.. WhileWe can boast of fine public school honsie in our towns and cities.. fur the , more ad vanced 'scholarir,- the primary schools' in the. United States do• pot 'compaie in neatness and convenience, with many of the parish schools in 'England It oily a taste for the heeettita could be incelcated amongthe children of the United States, by the adornment of their school house with flowers and shrubbery, and rains were taken on the part of teachersto Increase that taste, by interesting the. thildreu le their cultiva.; tion and preservation, no one could estimate,the effect . it would have in beautifying our gkeiona covetry, and perifYing our gross and:groveling nattire; turd lifting them up through nature bt Elite - we tied. • At the Norman Conquest , when - England had'only about three million inhabitants, tide entudy, Notting. ham, was a vest wilderness, known 'as the Great Sher wood Forest, Which Roble Heed eed,his 'merge, men , Itthabited ; and we EMI/ the great ,Queen Oak" still standing inwhlchlt is said Robin Hood. often secreted -himself., This Royal Oak - measures thirty , three feet in circumference, and is 'hollow, and a short tine ago no less than fearteen young ladles found shelter In the trunk-',Which the 'present size of crinoline permitted. , Twelve pretty- stout gentleinen , attempted to enter eleven-did so, but there was not quite room enough fo the twelfth. This Royal Oak elands atone; and its .widesprerel branches, in a direst :line, coter li'encee or not less than one hundred and fifty feet.- We also, saw, another oak on -the Duke .of Portland's estate, which had lost Its top, and is . eC., that the remain. lug portion of it has to b e propped np. ' The Centre of the trunk his decayed, and may:two. of the tintSlife shells renege itandleg, 'which supped the remainin,g top. Through this decayed part a 'carriage and four ..hcirees have been frequently driven. One of the props' in'orfered ix Utile with the open epace, other Wise we • endd have driven our carriage and borais through 'the . . Poi the Information 'of oar - yOlll/u readers, we will detail'a little history Of . Robin...Hot-I, whOse . Memory. is so mricifelairishol by the poor,youngolut romantic, Particularly - in, Englatul. Robin Hoed. flourished -towards the cinse of the:eleventh-century, in the reign of Richard 1., at the. time" thegame laws were very severe . ... By some !Lig : said that he was a yeritan, and fled to the forest in order.: to .i.veld • paui-b.'nent for a violation of 'these Jaws., Others ea,* (hat be was . hohleborn, and - laid clalm - to the Harldord Of. 11uuting •dern,..whieh was - diriputed.- ,He however, took. refuge In the forect,Ond collected at ent him one brindred tall ithd.expett bowamen,WhO lthtnries with thethief. • The smallest.. among this band of - rubbers woe John,'' who yea§ over six -feet In heightz- . This band beesturCiteded robbers, and were se eiper't Mid daring that in every . contest they , could vanunish at least . font times-their number: They were' very gal. battle all the women they' encenntered,ruid.always, protected them from any outrage, - They nevei robbed any hat the .itch, and noble, • ford alWays distributed their surplus plunder among the poor—nor did they `ever take life eicept In seltdefenee; Robin Hood was looked Open as the prince of thierma, -and was almoet adored by the. poorer classes whOse. petite he seemed -to espouse. He appeared also,, to be a very Conscien tious thief: haclgreatiespect for religion, and liad'reg :ular services performed by a priest.. He died-in : 121;, having been bled to qeath bye practitioner of Medi, cihe whom he 'called upOn In Cease of illness, and who betrayedhlin. , After his death' the hrnd was dispersed. The ovlyportions of Shet wood Forest remaining ate • embraced Indite large Perky of the Dukes Of Newcastle -and Portland, and Lord . .. Manners: Fermerly. it . was .called -" The Dukeries,;'' because the estates of . no less, than five Dukes werehere ouriiele over these s. parks and Mates 'FaS a rich treat, for which we are in debted to the, kindness of our host, Rev. Prebendsry Twella; who enjoys the aequaiitatice of.tbeoe noble men. We thought we had eeen.some trees in thefor 'este of Amerlea, but-we must confosa thatio never sow each specimens before. The tre-s are tiearly . all royal oak; - they do not stand thick:_ but they all lock old and venerable; some have lost their tope, and 'others have • delayed so much :that every storm Of wind is sure to prostrate some of them. WO Scarcely saw a tree -that would measure lees than 15 or r fCetin circumference, and although they stand:frem 190 to:lsofeet apart, the: ,branches - -generally meet and completely shade , the whole. ground, except - where avenues have, been tut, which wind . and lead through: • the ' forel, moving the appearance of the parks:. The Most bean tiro partion of an'Engliatt path is that which embraces a [(nest to 'ragged. and . nrituratitspect, particularly , . hi agricultural distrietHlience those - . portions Of Sherwood Forest embraced /a these Parks are 6'11.0. crud atitongthe most beautiful inßegiand. Iu large.. portions of this forest there Is scarcely any undergrowth of t bushes or other smaller trees, but the ground iscov: 'Ored with, a thick groWth of green fern,Which stands flora two to three' feet high, and appears' like . a sea "of :green- . In. this fern the deer and ail iiindsor game "abound. ....In.Ldril Manners park we learned that, there were including th . e. 'young.. fawns,. abont....i.s.teen or eighteen bindred - deer. We met .themin every dime tion.witli their heads protruding above the fern : some old bucks with splendid antlers, and just in proportion as, the forest is wlldcilb..the. deer appear to be mllll.--.. Rabbits were running around in almost every di!'ee.... don; enitetame, 'and, in several' Instance-a we saw number - .Of' the beautiful English pheasants ingrain fields on tlieOutskirts of thenarks,.feeding.. Iti.tivo of the purki - nanied thereweie Upwards of:three thousand ;leer. We saw In -a field. iti the Hake of Portland's . . park, about two hundred deer grazing the same as cat tle. .The increase of game of fakirs:is ;stilled offletir: ly in the right season, and that width is not consumed • on the place is Sold or exchanged With dealers In- game . for Other products;br game'. which may ,In some instences' the game-keepers. Of noblenien ro - cave their" salary by-having the privilege:Of disposing of the tunnel inerea•ze of, one kind... Poi instance, a . gale-keeper had the disposal of the increa.eof.rabbtts, • and liere.alized five hundred pounds in a year'from this • • source of revenue.. Of course, as his revenue depended on the Inereaseruni Cale of rabbitit, he paid great atten ticrn to the.proteCtion of this species of game, and al- Ways kept up a good stock. The poor tenants complain bitterly of these laws which-protect the game otitife • • proPerty of the' nobles and gentry; bat - it is self eat.: :dent thatif these - laws did not exist, garlic would coon cease to existia.Englend, where the country is se gen enittvated. -They have do reveres' reimining for. :game to resort to; and this renders it so . hard hithe es timation of-the poorer classes, who have no.Ciprorthel-' tyta hunt, and who Beldam have the merino to Per.' chase game,-unleats it is bestowed its them by-the hied -holders—ltalia they will "poach"..to procure it, and if . caught andimolebed, -they-ere emu to 'enrae the game laws, enacted. as they.say,,tcr protect - the rich landed . . • On-the Duke of Portland's' estate large 'forests. Of Buell]ave been planted....Rath year be planbs Some, and the date of each planting is marked. t - So meny'of ,thelarge forest- trues were decaying and. blowing-down that he deenied It'Pritdent 'to phuit . other Muttons of the park to-take their place. Many of these •pimited - trees have increased to a foot in dLameter. When first. -Planted thefare supported With veleta : to prevent them blowing about so ester destroy the life fibres that pat foith near the marrow: until thpY have, taken sifficient root to stippoit themselves. • :The Make is - , an odd gent, n its. He has beesufFernag for a long time - with' a se vere cutaneous dianue, which of coarse, does not . ims prove his temper mnch... He has lately been engaged In tearing 'doWn hie tenantbenses, and it - Is said' that he prope , etrarralng hhi estate himself,, He refcises to see.any Renton, except on important bovineas, and eve- . ryttilng that to displease hirn he hue iemoped.— He made hiiivever, some . yearfi..ago,' one of : Alan :Most wonderful improvements On . a . portion of tiaN..i lends , thituone /Mtn nobleman of large means could Make: A stream:inns through . his. estate,. and': the ": ground for about as mile gradnally aiopitetwarde this streitin.. Rebuilt a dain on the stream, which' forms a beautiful lake in his parWi; and from this dam he haidu6 a race 'along the upper portion'of this sloping ground a die. taste of over a mile;,and the land lying hetween the stream and the, race, wherever aneier; ties been level ed off •on the slope, and from this lace the 'whole is it . • tigated, while at the same pine the , whole is under drained: •At the lowest peintabout a mile from the damL•theunderdnduing , runs below the stream, and of course there is ncroutlet forthe water. Herd it,is collected and ran into a kind of well or semi), and a water wheel is erected 10 hnilding,. seek below the surface.. The water from the stream, is ' conveyed to and propels the, wheel which . Putupanp the water from this underdralning, 'clears it, ,and throws it tract into IheistreamAgain - whieh enries it off. The whole ex- Aent of this meadow ground than lrilgated and drained, to one of the greenest sr,gts,we t hays seen in. England, and from two to three hews , crops of grin are out each sesion.'", • . . The lite Duke of Newcastle,, who accompanied the i'ence of Wales on his visit to the United States, now deceased; was quite :unfortunate . managing' his ineman, aru:i was compelled 'to irertg,ge .his large eshite.. : :Hewes niqortuttate also, in.manit other re-• spects; and his isueOmeor is a lidlegiven to racing; and 'unless he restock* 'changes'', be le noi, likely to re , trieve its fortnnes. Wise sphindid.eetste, and attrazati la tat Ina high shde - - of cultivaticM. But Dab* are poor morfals'itire ourselves,. aid are liable to.' be (bite_ as unfortunate as other people: -'- While in the r 'chitty &brother of the late Duke died,. Lord .We at ifintledlEe'Voierirwhich rwie-ConductiTtit'aPiiitite 'Manner, NO it atfordqdna an opportunity ot Seeing the rune:rid of a notiottimut Mile remains. were, dettneft &dip. the same vault in thochapei • ereeteilz cif i the es- • jate,littheside of7the remehea of the late Dote -of - Idol Mangera is quitea young o inan, andtakes great pride in improving and beantifilugtds'esiate. -He is -1;4414 lirdlyrmn3sicra or b beau:Hid and .tom.; 1254 - ulin g lit;ene F restilence,' Which Is' a We behind, the .ageri - aud,is iciesied.in .Unlintithi. poeHion: H 6 is a sensible .hatiriiitadant mess # . ? : 1 4 is 741e11 , MitkrZed:7-11 P. ! - • '"'M thielether le already long, I will chine, by bidding , ,1117 1reililerf!“ 1 03 - -/4 052 ' ,- sett iiady'aohnibit fee removed '. Oetietati BODY% lit Fcrt,i464,Votelk l ought to be Ingoadhed. wry' liteieron. wad one of the moit toroth& pettlots he the' emploY efthe GM4ra i / e S t mangth arvie.P. 3 to' the cbtl# l 7- 1 7ere rO lll F* l er# ‘ __. n :.4 4 , lll k4 , 3koliellions'. th at Con.. IttativalPaitba, drunken boson. - skid • traitor , to totarthe'etnluttre ' tereinli theft mtl:' 'l '4 ll ;attati;h r ub Mai ~ t he'oonater annam gen:Grant win ad terfoituteg the • tasition;'' - iiidetialtiirek ;tht!in.,74oBo;434l4e.atineot, The Seoul tti r,uitca‘tbi len clews* rst44ly 0114114t' Li,. r. 42-• .* • log, and If it were noefor the ertrat i?erSeLaton of - facts New-Yotic . . and Washington correspondents of the lading Hingirab paps, .the ' change would be - still greater. I. bare met a number of English gentlemen whoivetpstbizoi With the South, and after - the differ ent positions and the (Meets. of the Sonar Were fully. captained, they bad no hesitation in declaring that if 'they had understood the_ question 'fully their syntpa thiesWould have taken a differeut direction. Our very kindanci gentlemanly- hoit told me thit he had always 'advocated the North - on Reward 'Of his opposition to slavery,: but he acknowledged that he Dever inderstotd the questions involved so fatly before f, and . so great was hi desire that many of hiis-friends who favored the South, should be correctly informed, that be !stilted a considerable number to dine that they might have, an oPportnnityto learn the real state of affairs. - In &linnet every instance they acknowledged that, they had not Anderethod :the questinns involved They firmly hew tiered-that the Southern, Stateehe aright to secede tuiderour consilintion, and that It WM an outrage on the part of the - North to attempt to coerce them. This fallacy had been industriously circulated bythe South ern emissarL:Li inErtoupp, and they state that-in all the 'aigriments made in England, thia point had not been 'toothed upon. One very. Intittential gentleman in: • fer T n -ed ne thatietbe:finterlean hiluirder bid exposed" this fallaey, so industriously cirtalithed' and- believed, the current would not have been 'so strong in favor of , theSontharnongthe gentry in. England. While there was a large class wheyrauld have favored the' South. right or .wzong, from motives of interest and the desire efeheek the growing pOvreepf the United States Still there was - another large' class whii never could have been intineneed to have taken sides -with the South, it they had known that the right to secede Wu prohibited ie. our Constitution,- which bad , been , ratified by the. votes of the Staters. ' I have jest seen the announcement that Oen. Grant has accittiesaud In' the removal of Oen. Sheridan. DO they want to make the gallant soldier Presidenthl At thiedistancel am net tudlieleittly informed to comment inteftigentlyoulbis 'outrage, and therefore forbear: The contest between the traitor Preeddent and the reP resentativesef the people iq closely watched hi Europe 'among the ruling biasses: In England by the passage of' the Reform. bill, lord, Derby says they have "taken a step to the dertrp, and judging • from the mutterings they have not yet-seen light. •• But it liveuld *be the grandest Moral trinniOyet achieved by oar country,. If Congress would' hurt from power the vile traitor who not , only disgrayarthe Presidential chair. but hov ers the dignity and weakens the infinence of our coun try abroad:.: Thotiartyr Lincoln no w iaiu with the korai:trial Washington, and' if Congress would 'crown itself with this One great addevenient, it would rank with the im m ortal Congress that: proclaimed the De. duration of Indep.ondence.: • ITCH`S.ITCH!! ITCHIT ! SCRATCH.! scßAToiti I SCRATCH!!! • • - - from 10 to 40 boort. -- - Wheaten!" Ointinent- corm ..The , .ltch. • : Wheaton , * Obit:tient caret @nit Rheins. . : Wheattin 9 a Ointment . curet Totter: Whentou , eoinniten , cures .'Barber'. Itch Wheaten , . Ointment. met - Old-hereti: • Wheaten's - Ointment 'roue -.Every kiwi : • of linnaor like diagic. Price, tfrrenten boa: by malt 60 cents. Adtireie 'WEEKS POTTER, No. 170 WM:Miriam:in, Boston, . For Hale bran Prima - Ist.. Sept 21, ..417—*1y T.O cpxsumprivics. The Rev, EDWARD A. 'WILSON will send (frea.of theme). to all who desire it, the prftriciptlon with the. directions for making and using the simple and byWhlch he was cored- of a lung affection and that dread diseam Consumption: Ills only 'object is to benefit the 'dal end' he hopes every sufferer will try this prescritdon, ae it will' cost them nothing, and may . prove a hic sine Please address • • . . „ • . REV. 'EDWARD A.•W11,8024,.• • • NO. 163 Smith Seco . nd Wllliam9burgh, N.. Y. - . • Sept. 14, MT .• • • ••• • '61%.-20-ly INFOIE.IIATION . . -information guaranteed to prod uce a luxuriant krowth of hair upon . a bald head or beardless - face,' also - a recipe- for . the removal of, timpies,-BlotChes. Br notions, - etc., on the skin, leaving the same soft ; clear, and beautiful.: and can. be obtained' wlthodt charge by addresring . THOS F. CIELA.P.MAN, Chemist, Nay is, 'G7 -9.0-ty , • • 523 Broadviay, N. . -GREY HAIR, BALDNESS, DANDRUFF, ANY DIS.BASE OR .2.13:E SCALP. - NO DDICOV eatt cOMIJEWLIC wha "London Hair Color Restorer and Dressing.. "London 'Hair Color Restorer and Dressing." ' . "London Hair Color Restorer and Dressing." • (Invaluable as a dresser and beautifier.) . •"London". • • • . "Hair Color Restorer.. -"London r Oar, It eat "Hair Color Restorer." “London".• • ' "Hair Color Restorer.. "London" 71Pisysicittati• "Hair Crilor Restorer." "London"• •• . - • "Hair Color Restorer." "London" Die and "Hair Color Restore;." "London" • . •.: • "Hair Color Restorer." "London." Iceeeinmend: "Hair CtdorTestoier.. "London" • • ''Hair Color Restorer," "London"' .• . •,- : "Hair Color Restorer.. •• - "London" ,• • . . • • • "Hair. Color Restorer." This, together. with. the anrimval of all who use "London Hair Color itotorer and Dreestng,. plates it far beyond comparison with any,other Hair Restorer ever tutrOduced to the American people. It never fails to impart , life, growth • end vigor to the weakest. hair, fasteris-and stops its falling, and is sure to produce a new growth of hair, causing it ; t3 : s thick and strong.., It isandatnted to containnothing. • Is Does Not Dye th e Hair, But acts as' a stimulant' and tonic to the organs; and fills them with new • life and coloring matter. Dry,, harsh; dead, 'or 'discolored appearance of the hair is changed to lustrous, shining,.and beautiful locks: The Scalp is kept clean, .coot and healthy, and dandruff cf.: fcctirally cured. ... • • . • • Only 75 cents a bottle: six bottles, $4. Address M.- ders.to DR. SWAYNE & SON, 330 North Sixth street, Philadelphia. • • . • Sold by HENRY SAYLOR, Druggist, Pottsville, it'd by all best Druggists and. Variety Stores : . • April 27. '67 . . , • .11 • IELMBOLD'S FLUID. EXTRACT • ...33112TG9EIT_T • ds'a certain'eure for diseases Of the BLADDER. KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY, OR GANIC NEARNESS; FEMALE COMPLAINTS, • ' GENERAL. DRILITY, ' and all diseases of the ' • whether existing in URINARY, ORGANS, s .. . . , -.- ' MALE OD FRHALH. • • from whatever caw originatingimd no matter of HOW LONG STANDING. ;Diseases of these Organs require the use of a din . , .-- , If no treatment is snbmitted to, Consumption or blianity may ensue: ...Oar Flesh aud.Blood are sup-. port ad (rum these sources, and the . ' . . . . . HEALTH AND HAPPINESS, 'and that of Pomerity, depends upon prompt use of a reliable remedy. • . . DRLICIOLD'S lrXTßA.Ctßtrdht; 'Eatabllshwl upwards of IS'years. prepared . by . If.. T. HEIMLIBOLIik s Drugist, Btbadway, and . 104 Booth 10th Pigla delphla, Pa, Sold. by Dnicrg . :sii:eireriwberd:.(Junii ?OT-23.1y Eyrywhere. . . • Rarely haa . -Mere been a seruMn as. fruitful as this of Malarious cliSeases. Not only on the pralrlea and In the valleys of the West; . not merely in all the old 'haunts of Fever and Aine. Ind Bilious Remittent Fev er have these Muermting diaeasea been unusually vir ulent ; but they have extended to. towns and -.cities never before infested with them and have even - as cended the mountains and attacked. thousands of pee pie supposed to have been placed by the laws of Na ture above their reach. Bence we are compelled to admit that a fatal eleMent pervades the Thilversal Air this sewliOn;ariAshonld at once resort to the only ap *ProVed preientive of its consequences. • 110STETTEWB STOBACH BITTERS, • . toile so potent; an anti-sr .- 641c so perfeck:an alter .ative so irresistible,: and -- a stlintilant-eo pure; that it eriablesthe hitman system to resist and baffle all the 'predisppsing causes of disesise. .Whlrthe confidence. that ono" clothedjn inerwriburtible . ,ianneide ,might: move among blaziug buildings, the 'man: who arms hirdself against Malaria with thil3 powerful defensive medicine may. walk a fe‘er-scourged district fearless of its .insalcibriots' atmesphere. The Mterraltients and remittentiat inneent so general in. all parts.. cif the countrymay be bht the forename : re of a deadlier scourge on its Way westward from the far Kok . Pre pare the sysiem with ' • ' TIOST'ETTER'S BITTERS , for a saccesiful battle with the mephitic anima of all epideteice.. Be wise in Bum', Sold everywhere.— New York World, Nov. 13, - 11 . 65. , 31-4 t If, CUlies , Trusses, Supporters, Elastic Bandages, Belts,,' Stockings, Knee, Caps. Banning's & Flteb's Braces,' Spinal, Shoulder. and Erector Braced, 'Light French and German Ruptore Irruases4 .Syringes, in great variety, &c.; &c., -r^; NEEDLM on. Twelfth St, Srst'dOor below Race, MI ILADELPILIA. Min De— parttnent is cnnducted exclusively for Females and Children, by competent - ladies, and the stock Ls adapt ed to their special wants.) In adjusting our Mechant. cal Remedieg we Cimbine correct construction, with ease, and comfort! • Organized by the Proprietor,. !YEE EIIrLESS,' Professioind adjuster of Trusses,__ ,&c. rke._ Corner of 'nth and RACE Streets; FEMADICLPHLA. May 4. 'CT ' 18481 ' • ERRORS OF .1r OUTII. • It' Gentleman who suffered for years from Nervous Debility. Premature Deasy, and all the effects of youth:: Int indleare— tion, Will for the Sake of suffering humani ti,- send free to all who need It, the recipe and direr, tions for making the simple remedy by which' he was . cured. Sufferers wishing to root' by the advertiser's experience, can do so by addreesing, in perfect con& den ce,' JOHN B. OGDEN, 42 Cedar Street, New York. ?day' la; 93r -20.1 y 1 : FISTAB4 RUBIN OF. WILD CHEM. This' remedy ban long been cherished by tie corn inn nity for its * remarkable efficacy in relieving, healing and curing the most obstinate, Wahl, and long-stand. lug" cases of Cough;. Cold; -Influenza, Bore Throat Bronchilim, Whooping Cough, Crimp, Aithme,., mail=. of.the Lungs ; while even Consumption has yielded tons magic influence when all'othibw . ineans have ailedi Its'whole history, Mover that the rsuit has ;induced no remedy cCequal Amine, as ,a cure for the numerous and 'dangerons ;Mammary affections which prmimil, all over the Bind. - UNSOLICITED ' TESTIMONY. • PriecAansasi Aicura, Req.,of Fairfie ld, . "About eight years since, my eon, IlennrA. Archer, now Postmaster at: Fairfield, Somerset Cormty, Me., was attaeked with spitting of blood, cough, weakness of Lungs, and general &Witty, so mach's° that Oat • family physician declared him to have a uSsartriCost ingrrion.". • Re wasunder medical treatment for a .number of months; ; but received no benedtfrom it. At length, fro.n'tbe solicitation of himeielt and.others.- 'I was induced to-purchase ONO . - Bortue of -WISTATI•S BALSAM OP WILD CHERRY, ..which benefitted Innt so much I obtained 'another bottle, which in; he time restored him to his Anne state of health.' 'O,l think I can safely recommend this remedy ,tia others like condition,,for It le, I think, all it .porpests to be—. TITIC.OftaAt RMIZDT Vaa Till TIM/X!,' . The above statement, gentlemen, la my voluntary of fering t, you in fay* of your-Balsam, and feat your' din Deal." ' - • • • Prepared by SEMIS% FOWLS. 180 N, la Trerr4rnt St.; Boston, and for gale by Druggists generally. • '• . . The deo. &tow ..0111rooklyn, sap, la the Bible .lizaminer, by way of apology for publishing a medical =Mute Intl" - Magazine.. of the cure of . his only son,. of Scrofula, "alter 41asolutkon inevitablftn -."We publish this statement, not= but in gratitude to,God.who bas thusanswered prayer. and iniustine hint Anderi: being satiated that there Is virtue in thelodine: Water treatment. ,which the readmit of this Magazine will thank its" Editor for bringing: their notice.". DrtkAnders' lodine Water- is, for alle 'by J. P. DlSSMOif,Tropriotor,li6 Dey St. N. Y., and by sir DrPirgf 4 f3;s:. - ' Ang. Shit; .67 !Wit , Itch I' litchi. Scratehloio -10 re LI . . . ... SWILYITEI3 OpTTMENT— . - . . . . - Caiiss the moat obstinate area of Tatter, Be lt niteipi a Wallet:did &quick and sere ettre:' It silos ialtilk ing at anew; is parelyrigetabia;.ool be neelkoitt the .'moat tender inthnt . __ "Oares_j_Xti is from 12 to - 461*.a ' ' ..OwAYNIIIOr-ri- e ii....... ~ ... `I3WAYNBI3 OINTAMIT% ""'7 ITOU 1- mai =la 1 SWAYIUMEI 01121133,1 ft “ionlasrasorermionsiv : c oIvATA. !nice! :,'!. i _, "SWAY6iSti 0112TX112gTr g...,,„. , e: - ..._....._ "MAYNE'S o r ""'" '"...." o, acat 1 ''SWAYITBI4 , Cane Iscansaihx.re 1 “SW.6.TNIVI %!..swk - yirge inn= 001 &Rap BUD 1 "`": . - - i et " j li w W it A rrni ngeg .B.o o nmentr, DlTßlNT, 42.*11 ,- ..,,' ii a . i . 2, , zrati .,-... ~ ~-.. "SWAThipS 0 ~' ^ "., ~,,.' -•- ' ,' - I. OSVAIMBse ORMOINT. ..,, ,, uaaa owl WAnaist ..;'J . 11 6WAY61116 01:2111tiliqt. ' 7 '.."/J : - , :e: " %., . ; 3 ,, • "MOWN% RIMPALZ. itereDoweenr i.' Ilia° 60 cents.434= 60. tilObefitil(filiii ii X be id free - to " -'- " a tiO "MU AO% Ift W.'411 CONSIMPTION CURABLE SY Da. immzzircivs MEDICINES • f. TO CURE CONSUMPTION the system must be pre paresis's) that the lunge will heal. TO - aecompllel mjA the liver and stomach mast first be cleansed and ee appetite created for good, wholesome food; which by these medicines will be digested properly. and coca, healthy bleiced Made; thus building up tbe constioni.r.: SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE FILLS cleanse the atomaal of all bilious or mucous , secnmulations -; and by using the Seis Weed Tonic In cormectlON the appetite Is rc. Stored:' - • • SCHENCKS ruutolue SYRUP la nutritiona ea well'as Malik:hie, and, by tulbilt the. three remedies. all imparities are expelled kom the system, and go od wholesome blood Made, 'which will repel all dtscare„.: If Patients , will takethese medicines according to dl. rectforts, Consumptioti very frequently In its last binge . yiekla readily. to their idiom- Take the pills frequent. ly, to denim the User and stomach. It does not 'fel low .that becaus e the bowels are not ensure they are not required, ter sunethnea Mania: a. they are ne cessary. ' The stomach must be kept healthy, and an appetite_ created to allow the Pulmonic Syrup to act on the respintkey organs properly and . allay any irritation. Then all that is requited to perform a permanent cure la; to merst.teking cold. Exercise about the m aw as t wit as isolioKeatokitttk)ricluati food—fat meat, gami, and in fact, anythihg the appetite craves: but be particular and masticate well. October ST, *66 AMMO OHOLERL IN CHINA, AL3O4ST EVERY CASE Roma Bev. R Telford; Welke my •in China, no w visiting hie home in Pennsylvania: • Waannorras. Pa., June 25, rneelllll. PMY DAVIS dti Bay Paovroaaar, It. . Deis Bus:—Daring a residence of some ten 3"esra as a missionary in Siam grid China. I found your Veg etable Pain-hiller , a moat valuable remedy for that Awful scourge, the cholera. - : • -• . - In adminietering the modieine I foetid It most ef fectual to give a teaspoonful of PaLn-Killer In a gill of hot water sweetened with sugar :.then, after about. fifteen minter, - . begin '. to ere a tah.repoonful of the same mixture eevveerryy minute until relief was obtained. Apply hot appliaticos tothe extremities.. Bathe the stomsch with the Pain-Biller clear, and rub the Ihnhe briskly. Of those who had the cholera. and took the medicine faithfully in the way stated. above, eight out of the-ten recovered. • • Trpb , ponrB.• B. TELFORD ' If attacked with Diarrheas; D 3 sintery. or Cramp Coll; don't delay - the wig of the PAM-KILLER. . BEWARE OF ALL IMITATIONS_ ". • The Paln-Elller is sold by all 'revealable Draogista throughout the 'United States and foreign countries.— Prices —26 cents, SO Cents: and $1 per hat*. 'August SI, 'o' . • . ' 25-9 t Meth mind Ifereeklest. The only reliable remedy for those brOwndiatolors• Bons on the tiled called Moth Palizhee and Freckles Is PERRY'S Mont AND VIUNNILI Lorton. Prepared only by Dr. B.C. Raeder. Dermatologist, 0 ',Bond - Street, New York. Sold by all Druggists in-Pottsville and eliewhere. Price S 9 per bottle. July IS-2S-3m *FADS) .140 yoRE DAtito _ NO MORE.GRAY LOCKS • ELECTRIC HAIR RENEWER,. is pronOunced.ll all who have used it the very heat preparation' for the Hair. It is a positive cure for Baldness, eradicates Dandruf' and • Humors, stops the Hair from fallingoot, ant speedily restores Gray Likks to their, original hue and luxuriance. • . • It Operates o - the secretions and tills the glands with new life and coloring matter. Thin; dead, faded or gray hair will always be brought back by a few ap plications, to its, youthful abundance , vitality and color. • • • • It makes the hair soft, glossy, fragrant, pleasant to the touch an 4 easy to arrani iii - 1 .Dry, wiry and intract able locks betome moist, t end disposed to remain In any desired Position. altar Dressing it haa n‘, equal. The sales are - enormous and it is a universal favorite with old and young of both sexes. , Stud by Druggists - throughout the United States,— Address all Orders to - - ZIEGLER et 1141MITII, . • , • , -SOLE PROPRIETOR% . 131 Nardi Third 81.. Philadelphia. Mardi 16.'6T 4 C,91 11- ftlilibuo Nutt'home. COUNTY SABILLTH:BOIIO . Ot . ARSOCIATION_- A meeting of the'Executive Committee will be held this Saturday evenitig, at 8, o'clock, at the office of Y. W. Shelter, Req, on Centre street. The members of the committee are, Pottlville—Wm: L. Helfenstein, Chairman, J. K. Seigfried, P. W. SheafervatePhen Hartle, Cheriel Dang ler, Jno. Stine.' • •. . • . . Minersillle—j.Witzemart. Port Carbon—T. E. Wintenteln. • - Tremont 7. Sanders.. • • Tamaqua—George Wiggan. Ashland,-Rev. R_ Sykes. Mahal:toy tity—Rev. W: H. Dinsmore.- Jour M. Mccc&R Secretary. -Lurneamv .Survioaa.—Rev. U. Graves having re turned froni hia trip to Canada will preath in the Court Howe to morrow (Sunday), and every Sabbath until the completion of the eulargemebt of the Church.— Services in the morning at 10, and in the evening 1.34 SYNOD OF EAST PECIPSYLVAIIIA.—The. Twenty- Sixth Annual . Convention of East Pennsylvania Synod' will be held in - the town of Pottsville, Scbtlylkill County, Pa.,• in the •clanrch of Bev; Uriel Graves, commencing on the evening of the last Wednesday, (25th) of Septilmber, 1867. . . • - J. H. Hscx, Secretary. Mr. Graves' church not being completed, they will bold the convention falba Second Presbyte rian chnrch, on Market St. below sth, acacraing to the above notice.. NOTICES. tardlethadist R. Church. Second St•Nabore Market, Rev. Fatitairs Moon:, 'a D.. Pastor: Ser vices; Sabbath, at t), A. alt., and 736, P. - M. Prayer Meeting, Tuesday evening, at 734 o'clock: tarEntylksh Evan. Lutheran Church; Market Square; Rev. Al GaAves, Pastor. Services , Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock ; Evening, 7M. Week ly Lecturer and Paler. Meeting, Thursday evenings.. 734 o'clock. • IsirEvangelicel Church, Caliowhill street.— Rev: . 8. 8. entrna, Pastor, • will preach' German ev ery Sunday morning 'at 10 o'clock, and English in the Evening at 7M.crelock. Residence Market street above 10th. . • nr- .uni a a prayer • Mfeetiag, every Sunday morning, from B.g to 9,‘ o'clock, in the •frame Church on Second Street, bet:Omen Market and Norwegian Sta. 'All are 'invited. • • Gerwrant ReferniefiChiarieli, Marks t St., Rev. J. C. Btrenza, Pastor. Regulaimorning services, alternately,' In the German and English languages, at < . . - —. • Tne German tiervlces occur at 10, A M., on the nit of July, the 11th and nth of Anguat, and the Bth and 22d of Sept. All other Bervices--including each Sab bath evening; at TX otloest, aro held in the English language. Prayer Meeting and Lecture, each Thuteday even t°. at TM , mAnurnip. . ettlifartiaof Notices must to accompanied with 96 dents to appear in the.Jouanac. ALLEN—MA.T.-,4t the Mt. Carmel House. ML Carmel, on Monday, Sept-160..186T, by the Rev. Mr: Tregallis, &tam of Mabanoy City, to Miss EMILY R. May; of Shamokin. No cards. • BARCLAE—RUSSRLL—On the 12th of September. by Rev. Jartiee M. Shields. N.,C. Basorry. Req., Edi tor of "Pottsville Standard,” to Miss Sister.: 1).. daughter of , Thomal Russell, Esq.;. of North Bridge water; Beaver County, Pa; •'• .• ' The happy couple will accept onr acknowledgments for a reniembrancein the Blume . of a luscious cake, . and oar sincere wishes thattheir wedded life may glide along smoothly and happily.. DAVENGER---ORDM.—At _Pottaville, on the ever- Ing of. the lath hat., by-Rev. Joseph McCook, Mr. JAB. Dsvasoss, of Pottsville. Pk, .to Mrs. Harris D. Bami, of CortlandvMe s .New York. . • . . FRNSTRIIMMIHER—DRPSS.-,On. thilsth Inst., at f3chrtylkBl Raven, by Rev. 8. Rhoads, Mr. ELIAS FINSTIMIAOI4II4II MISS- ADSLIA Dazes, all of Wayne Townalafp,:fictozylkin Co; FULTON—DUELL—On the 19th Inst., by Rev. W..H.Dinstnote,st his stndpn Battanoy City. Mr. DAVID Furrow of New Boston Plane, -to Mine MAsr DIDTZI... of Cape Breton. Nowlin:Ala. • • DIED. . . •Biffspie atilsounemente of deaths, free. Those a° amplified with not(ees, must be paid for at the rate of 10 aerate per line. , . ALUM—September 14th, in. Tremont. Maml:DA Hangmen, daughter of largo H. and Henrietta Alter, aged 22 yeam. 1.1 months and 13 days. - DODSON—On the illst of August; in Tamamm, Ross Ezrzierre, &Righter of Milton and Lizzie Dodson, aged 6 months andl4 days. • • DOUGHICRTY.--At Dreesina. on the 9th Met , Jos_ Roves, aged 2 weeks. Also, on the I.4th inst. Ts Chas. F.M.woon, aged 2 weeks and 6 days, twin sons of and E. J. Dougherty. • ' • "Pelle r, Thy will. not. mine, be done' • LlltlidAliN.—On the ln Donaldson, Isa nna4, daughter of George Wa n d Oaths-Me Lehmann* aged 1 year. 10 monthe and 11 days. . = • ITICUSER—On the 26th lilt, in Llewellyn, WILL4M, eon or David and Locdea Newer, aged T mo. and 2 days.. ZREIKTTER.--On the let lust.. In Palo Alto, Crna anis, wife of John Zehnter, aged 80 years. Obituary. . . • . . Mumasvitiz Lowe, 222, A. Y. If. WilleiriN It bee pleased the Supreme Architect of the Universe in His Divine wiliem, to remove front our midst by sudden death, our lets worthy brother. HIOTOIt liretl29 therethoughfore, be it Easotvan That we bow with umble sub: mielon MN* , decree's of Divine Providenc h e. it to with feelings of deep regret and profound sympathy that wo have hard of the decease of oar worthy brother. Hao- SOISIIIIGHIII3. McGowan, That in his death the L.idge has lost a worthy and exemplary' brother, the community *faith-. fat citizen, and his family a kind and loving husband and faithful father. . Resowzo,- That we tender our heartfelt sympathies to One family. of ourdeceisedThrother, and that we would endeavor to point them to Him whom we , wor ship as our rather and our God. and "who tempera the winds to the shorn iambi:. Hagerman, That this Lodge wear the usual badge of 'mourning for the apace of .thlat7 days; lad that copies of these resolutions be. transmitted to the family, and to the County papers for publication. • . • - • • .7. IP G.lforarmsl G. W. Cuarnsout.. Committee. . G. W. Baron, - • d. 0 ui ca I :15 e i ea 54 ca tr.; g Napomats Ruclosures, Taps. „. Work executed in ttie beet ekle _of artand warrant ed to give eatiattetion: . mum 10, .ALEXANDER - MORRIS, KEYSTONE .MARiIE WORD COEILIR SECOND AND - ,P I O4!ISTZ.9:Mnd. Tombstone*, of Adierie sn and Italian - Marble frr m 8 Fla owards.'. !Each 2. ,62. H. wEspow, THE BALE - OF liMair - wnt'BoTle, Ri a u e: B , Wee Contret3l. 4 . ildlioor Mows Ilitildioirmtruce next doo! to limo* 4 . IS, 471—tuit-em" No MORI UNPLIABANZ : AND ITHEIAFS MIMI= kw :ueemant, and , dangerous disarm.— trae Eilmboldm SztraG . . Bator aid Improved Rom Claming. litclwrar. Palate, SIAM sad b cat-ba " 4- an ufacta :tocjaia and tack, geatetTly, at karat man. . o rea: at BREW 3 001. 1311 ILlMlLltam.eliganw -Peweir-itit* Hand aft-fmafirm4a=hatt and for Pairkmrthattilge -- 7 4 ,(04 Me STRAY , RAlthr 11011&14 ,abcl STILY—SMON foe in : ar ,,k pT^Tort , d `-.1 Co • ammo 0 . sur A r liaTigt4 St.PhilsgOdil. rat ijakANDrataeln/ t aguniart lir t o m sem; use tr=ro , o r coos Tet; drablisk Upd . , , 'PON% igeOr . , . Clty ev4w Stories. sabstand F_ i~~ . .