TITE DAILY EAGLE fUBLIBEED EVERY Arißutupli. . (Bunday. Ezo•ptod,) • AT TEE OPPIOE OP THE READING ADLER, No. 361 PENN Writgarr. • Ti t e WILDING DAILY 1 1$ c urs VIII be ftirnleliedin yl elwrlbers in the oil 11$ ONXII,IIIII WINK. WO A sit iebtotlbers st . 6 iretar.Of *UM saunte r : to be paid for Inn 17 In adynnes. Mamma dednallon_7lll be m eto clubs or tenor more gib. terlbert. e prevent tnlitakeh ell letters ehouln be odiesool.slllADlNO DAXLY 'MILL ! :- WILLIMIL 5. SiTTIIII, 1 IMMIX G. ge.wiaar. 1868 FALL. SUCH & BRO'rHER, Nye opened a Large and Selected Stock of NEW GOODS! At Portico Row, NO. 643 PENN STREET. READING, PA. or Levi COLVIIAN, Cutter, '* N Their Stook of NSW FALL GOODS! Were 'sleeted In the City of New York, and will be disposed of at prices far be. low those of any other es tablishment in the City. Gentlemen' a (Nothing made to order. Boys' Clothing constantly on hand and wade to order. The Stock of Furnishing goods is decidedly' the best and moat extensive in the city. Call, sec and satisfy yourselVes. The mere feet of tiering the services of the cele brated eutter. Mr. Levi 0. Coleman, is sufficient guarantee that all garments will be made up in the but style and latest fashions. Remember Kell & BRO.'S! Headquarters of 'Fashion 1 NO. 648 PENN STREET, READING. Portico Row, außpTiArt ItTETERI3, 411IMINE BLOOD PIIRIFAER, lao_wa under tho name of "FEDTHIVB PAOK 111§N." a valuable &Mole: Comb) at the "Eagle" ooltatore l &tat!. CLOTHES. WRINGERS, STEP LADDERS, ALL WARRANTED. MI WKNIGHT'S H A RiD AVR4EIIB T 0 EE N THIRD AND PENN S7S. sn to tAILY FAST FREIGHT LINE ! 1 11WWEKiN READING AND NEW YORK MORRIS AND ESSEX RAILROAD. Leaves Reading at p. tn. and New York at PO r. utootle manta for New York at Reading ntitht Howe, before S o'olock_p. in, or for Read- Rat foot of Barclay street. New York. before 4' Irelockpp m., will be delivered at either point with out reshipment. W. jr. HALLTDAY. .tleail Freight Agent, M. a N. R. R., Hoboken. E J. RAUCH, net duo Local Agent, M. I E. it. R., Reading. O H B PRINT/N . Gt roa r ri°Ai °b P ting n.ollflY oXMltedliat..4 lo " AO E' X /1 t r intiag n titablohment. .. 1868 VI A , 1 -- - . . L- ... 1 11• 1............................. , .......... r . ...................-..A........1. .........L......0....•••••. ......................-....-1.-.... ..'„ . • , . -' • .. ' ' 1 - . _ • NI • . _. , . . . . . . .•. . . . . . . , I • • I . . I. , • • • ) . . . . . . . , fr,..4 ...,.... —A -- 1 , 4 3 .. ,` .,:-. , :" ,!in• ' R .....,- ; . . . t.. .., ~,e. • ..‘ '' v... 1 , 4.....:) . ,..;.. ,•• . •......._. v. •-- ---,. ' -.• - " as; , - - -:-. . , -...,-.._ :.• ..., ~. , „. • —___________... . •________ _ . ------ _ ----- . --- 7._::::::::::::.:•_ - _1: - . 7_:1:2_17.. - .. 7. - ..1: • :. -.,.-..- .:.....*: :. Y.: :.v • :......-__:..-, - .1 - __: ---- ___ .V01.8.1---No. 259. PROFESSIONAL." DR.. LOUIS De NAIRIII KUHN. OFFICE A lib Jj'ESIDENCE. Ito, 244 North Ninth Street, Read Itii • Pa. bet 26-Imo* _ • • WILLIAM H. 001111ENER, ALDRRMAN AND ATTORNEY AT LAW. 'olllre No. 515 Court Street, Heading.. Can be consulted in English and German. 0ct.31•3m HENRY Nt. KEIJI!, - ATTORNEY , AT LAW. °Moe. 29 NORTH SIXTH STMT. READINO. Oot 28. JOUN W. 11110KICIA. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office—Loeser Building; (Ist door, back,) - No. 180 centre street,Pottsvllle. Ilit-Oan be consulted In the Glertnan fencing°. wart C. 8540K1411. 9 ATTORNEY tiND COUNSHLLOR AT LAW. Office: Ni), Cr Court Eit.. (near SiXthORRADINO.N. • ATTORNEY AT LAW, • REAPING, PA. I Ovvroir: No. MO Court Street. (up staira.) _ ILK. NAOI.LE, . PHYSICIAN. (U. S. pension Surgeon.) 840 Penn Street, RedAing, Pa. Office hours-12 toe. p. m. otoBp. m. JENNE U. HAWLEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office, Nb. 40 (second floor,) North Sixth Street, noarly opposite the Court house, Reading, Pa. Jan. 2ii- LOWS ItICKAUDS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Moe, N 0.530 Court atroot, over tho °Moo of John 8. Rlohards, Nog.WA- WILLIAM 0. BREWSTER, (Organist of First Reformed Ohnrch . .) TFACIIER, OF. PIANO FORTE, ORGAN AND HARMONY. No. 223 North Sixth Arcot, Reading, Pa. N. B.—Pianos Tuned. (tune 20- DR E. MOSER, SURGEON D.R.IBITI4 i T, • , OFFICE-519 Penn Street, Rending, Pa. • Invites the public to call arid examine his new plan for extracting teeth without pain. All oiler ations in the profession neatly executed and charges reasonable. • apts D R. A. 1111,11 lit, . WENTIST', Office—No a North Finis Ht., Heading, NM DOOR TO P. O'BRILLY'EI ODOR STOOK.) Particular attention paid to curing dimness of the Mouth and Gums, such ns Scurvy, Proternatu groWth °Owns, 'Alveolar Abscesses, disease orthe Alveotar process. Fissured Palates, and all dsenses to whieh the mouth and gums aro Ba cot. Tooth extracted without pain, and inserted on all material used by the Profession Oilloo hours, from 7A.M.t07 P. M. - 8e . BOOTS AND SHOES FOR THE PEOPLE. TIM BEST AND CHE/“"ESTI REINHOLD & SOHOENER No. 41 North Sixth Strooti READING, PA. rIPIIII SUBSOMBERS HAVE. JUST ESTAB JL Belted& first-class Boot and Shoe-makinieetab lishmont and store at the Above stated place whore they aro able to accommodato customers with the best articles in their lino of business, and at lower prices than at any other plate in the city. Tho following list of prices proves all we say : Men's calf boots, $4 00 and upwards. , Mon's kip boots, - 1 1 3 00 . Mon's working shoos, 160 Mon's French calf Congress gaiters, box toes, 300 Mon's calf Vongress galtors. 225 Mon's calf Balmorals, 200 Men's kip Balmorals, 180 Boys' calf Balmorals, 1 60 Boys' kip Balmorals, . - 125 Youths kip Balmorals k 100 Women's lasting high Polish, 2 76 Women's an:gross gaiters, to 250 Women's lasting Balmorals, • 190 Women's Morocco Balmorals, Women's Morocco shoes, Women's M orocco slippers, 65 Misses' !tufting Polish, • 145 Youths', gaiters from 15 its. to 75 Youths' and boys' shoes from 30 eta. to 90 Also. a largo stock of notions on hand and for sale. The above prices are lower than at any other • similar place of business in the city.. REPAIRING. - Partioulae attention is paid to all kinds of re- Pairing. REINHOLD:* SOIRENER, NO. ;41 NORTH SIXTH STREET, (AROVR TOR COURT HOMO READING, PA. , peril 11- A LBEDYLI, k .C 411.1t1 1 S II • PnVion STEAM r SCOURING • AND DYEING ESTABLISHMENT, r • / ' 141 Month Seventh St., opposite Depot. • Office in Reading. Pa. • • • Offices in Philadelphia, 510 Race Street. and IW, • ' South llth Str e et • Ecouraged by our success in our new method of enuring and dyeing, we have resolved to open a branch o ff ice in Reeding, and respectfully call the attention of the public to our above named estab lithment. • By our process and newly invented machinery. we are enabled to clean and dye goods in a very superior manner, to u to give perfect satisfaction. •We clean and finish Ladies", Gents' and Mild- Ten's garments without taking them apart or inju ring them in the least, whether the colors are genuine or not. Our dyeing Is done in the very best manner, and the goods in all oases fi nished off in superior style. Rid Gloves, Ostrich Feathers, so.. cleaned at short notice. • slept 28.3m0 NEWSPATERS._ of pets, on hand at lb office, .which "ill be s p oti obeap. EMI MEW 46 run 1111111 GOOD THAT LACKS AINIIIITANtaCt WOK THE WRONG THAT NEEDS RDSIDITAKOSIo" BEADING, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING; N - oV — EldliEß 25, 1868. RITTER & CO., Booksellers, Stationers, PAPER OP EVERY DESORIPTIOR, PRO- PORAPH ALBUMS. POCKET tg L OOXS, Having constantly on hand a largo and wellseloot- ed stook :of MISCELLANEOUS, SCHOOL AND BLANK BOOKS, PAPER AND STATIONERY, such as Writing and Wrapping papers, Envelopes, Pens, Pencils, Ink, Slates, Copy Books,Pass Books, &0., which aro bought for Cash and will be sold. on terms as favorable as those of awl Other hintse in the I City—we respectfully invite Mel l ohnnts and-others who desire to make purchases in s ethyl° to favor tie L . with a call before purchasing elsewhere. Orders by mail promptly and carefully filled. JOHN FOLEY'S For sale at the "EAGLE" BOOKSTORE, No 351 Penn Street. near Fourth. Jan. 28 Sold by all Druggists and Dealers to Poem. Medicines. • H. BIRCH & BRO. =l%t,X=l AND WOOLIFIALI MIMS IN No. 851 Ponn Stroot, i (Near hurth.) !LEADING, PA., CELEBRATED GOLD PENIS. A I It 0 ifr FIRST PREMIUM Of a - Silver Medal w*. AWARDZO TO BARRETT'S HAIR RESTORATIVE 115 the NAL State ilmieultond Society. at i ff its kalr, holden In ZS ' , Aug, Sept. 9 0 , MUU. lIAMMETTIS ‘. Negetable Hair R estorative Iteitores Ora' Hair to Ito Natural Color I pro vides the growth of the Nair 1 change. the 1 111. Aitoots to their Mend organic action t eradl-- cotes Dandruff and Lturnore t prevente4 Belt telling out els a superior Dreeetng. It contalna no Iniudoue Ingredients, , and Is the mod popular and tell able article throughout the , 4,East, West, Note. tad &nth. lb" yr fa J. R• OARRETT & CO., Proprietors, MANCHESTER. N.U. Da. A. H. LIGHT, W.. 1. THTERWECHTER. WILLIAM WELLS. Agents, Reading, Pa. may 51Y Mt=MMEI THE TOROULIGHT PROCESSION. In the dark, with rt child on her Loso►n, A woman is walking tho door Moaning, while hushing her darling, Oh, God l what it is to be poor. In tho dark, with a child on her bos.im,' MI In the dark of a comfortless loom t Not even a candle's dull ray to soothe The terrible ache of tho gloom. Down tho street throngs n joyous procession, With thousands of lamps ail alight; -And the glaro of whispering rockids Ascending the shadows of night. Oil enough for tho multitude's marching, And MUPie, and banners, and flowers; While the blue of the zenith is biasing With grand pyroteohnical showers, All alone with her poor little burden. A woman with hungering ow. Soothes with lips that pro pallid with fasting H i er famishing baby's pies ; She catches the echoes attend " 4 , "(heat God!" she sighs, under her breath, "While opulence squanders so much away, • Must my little one starve.to death ?" lark the tramp of the marchers comes nearer, Transparencies gleam past her door; Our Cause," "Our Kind," and, "Our Country," she reads, But novor ono mottood "Our Poor!" And sho looks at tho flickering torchos, And counts the magnificent flags; Tien turns with a ensp to her darkness again, And her scant and unseemly tags, Like a river of light tho proseslon Flows away down the stony street. And the star•:studded gates of the midnight Close on the retreating foot, The music dies out in the dim afar— All is silence, and pew) and Save a maniac mother Pacing tho floor— A !into cold corpse on her breast: TRA(Th 1)Y O& INDIAN LIFE. The following story, from the Milwaukee Wisconsin, reads like a romance of Cooper's condensed, but is said to be a record of facts gathered by a gentleman who is collecting material for a history of the Upper Mis- sissippi Valley : • • A party of thirty Winnebagoes can►o down from the scalp dance at wh'i'ch the tribe were gathered on the Trernpelcau River, in the north, and encamped on French's Island, in tho Mississippi River, just_ abOvo the St. Paul's Railroad depot at La Croise. The band was under the control of a well known chief of the Winnebagoes named Wau-kee-sc-hoong-emr,or Snake Thief,who had two wives, Se•es-ka and He-nee-kee. Se es-Ica was about thirty years of age, graceful in appearance, IVith a pleasant look and an interesting face. With whites - she was a favorite, while with the IVinnebagoes she was looked upon very kindly—indeed, actor. ed with all the ardor of Indian fervoe. Snake. Chief was a noted warrior of the Winneba goes, and was very much liked by his tribe. He was a powerful and brawny fellow, and when sober was peaceful and good-natured ; when drunk ho was ugly .and disagreeable. One of his favorite paatitnes, when in this condition, was beating his wives. On Friday last, Snake Chief returned to his wigwam drunk. Se-es-ka: was in the wigwam, and the chief commenced betiting her over the head and shoulders. Driven to desperation, and unable longer to stan i d his brutality, she drew her knife and stabbed the chief twice, the blade -penetrating the heart of the warriorovhodied instantly while the first notes of the death song were on his lips. The affair:at once created a sensation among the Winnebagoes, who did not know know how to act. They loved their chief, and they loved their chieftain's wife. ,It is a well known "regulation" among the In dians that when a man is slain, a relative must avenge his death by taking the life of the slayer. Se-es-ka know this. Some of the Winnebagoes urged her to fly, but she would not. With true Indian resignation she folded her blanket about her and sat . , down in her wigwam, facing the door, and awaited her : avenger. It was believad by many that Ife-nce-kee, the yoUnger and favorite wife, Would be the avenger, but she -'seems to have had no such intention. She mourned the loss of her husband, but took no steps further than to send a rdnner up the Trempelcau, where 'Snake Chiefs rela tions were, to notify them pf what had taken place. Meanwhile Se•es•ka sat in her cabin chantinehe death song, stoically indifferent to what was going on about her, and only talking when questions were asked her. On Sunday morning an Indian from Tron pelcan made his appearance in camp. lie was known as Chen.no•no•ga, and had evi• dently traveled without halting since he learned the death of Snake Chief. Entering the camp, without a word,. he walked sol emnly to the place where the body of Snake Chief lay, took along look -at it, and then turned sullenly away._ Nobody spoke,t) bite, yet all watched with interest hismovementS. Deliberately loading his gnu with buckshot he uninterruptedly walked deliberately to the * wigwam where Seses-ka pat, she having remained there since the nuirder,and took one t look at at the wonom, -- who loudly chanted the death song.. Not a muscle of the woman's face moved to denote that she labored under any exeitetnent,but she sat there quietly and calmly, her eyes moTing upward, •and her voice; as the uncouth song escaped her lips, 'steady and firm, She know the avenger was be.fore her—that in another moment her spirit would leavo the frail tenement of clay and seek that of the chief who had gone be fore her; yet no look or sign i!tdicateti that she feared her fate. Such' is Indianstoicism and iiWifferefiee.' , The eyes of the two slidnot meet. In the face of Chan-no-no-ga there was a look of misled hate andrevenge. Deliberately ho raised his musket to his shoulder—deliber• •atelY he aimed at the woman's head—coolly ,he , fired, The report rang out through the In. :dian camp—the smoke cleared away—Se-es-• ka still sat there—her blanket about her— her alms folded, but ono side of her head Was blown completely away—her spirit had fled, and the code of Indian justice was sat isfied—Wau-kee-se-hoOng-or- er was avenged. The mu t er, with just a look to satisfy hint that his work had been well done,shoul &red his musket and walked deliberately out of the camp. Nobody spoke to him— nobody ()tiered any interference, and step ping into his canoe he paddled to the shore, and disappeared in the woods, leaving the Wianebagoes stupefied." , \ [From the Col utohlo Spy.) "IR IT WELT. WITH THE CHILD?" ,It is morning in Oolumbin, cold, glooniy and sad ; sombre clouds drifting over head, dead leaves drifting under foot. In ono of the narrow lanes of the borough, close to where the_beautiful Stunichattna moans forever unquietly, on its way to the sea l stands a little hut, yesterday the home of a Mother and her.child, to-day, in its one room, unfurnished to the last degree, the child is left alone, the mother is out wash ing to earn the last dollar for her darling boy. , The shutters are closed, the room is very dark; there is no fire, no light. On its poor bed, the little boy lies; beitt tiful with an . unearthly beauty. Ho heeds not the voices of merry children in the street, but lies still—silent—:dead. Who oholl mourn for him ? Who mourn with the mother? • A stranger in a strange lend, with but one object to love, and that lies there, with no watcher, no kiss for its clny•cold lips, all this long, cold day. - . The mother at her work, sees the little form through her tears, and feels that her last hope is gone. Oh ! how she loved her boy ! Hers was the office of constant rninistra- ion to its Wants. Every gradation of feature developed be fore her eyes; she detected every now gleam of infant intelligence; she heard the first ut terance of every stammering word; sho was the refuge of its fears, the supply of its wants; and every task of affection wove a now link and made dear to her its object. - And now her child is dead, and a portion of her own life died with it. How can she give her, darling up,, with all those loving memories, those fond associations;tho timid hands that have so often taken hers in trust and love : how can she, alone, fold theni on its sinless breast, and Surrender them to the cold grasp of death? The feet whose wanderings she has watch ed so narrowly, how can she see them straightened to go down into the : dark val ley ? The bend that sho has'pressod.to her lips and bosom, that she has watched in peace." ful •Olumber and burning sickness, t► hair of which she could not see harmed. Oh 1 how can- she consign it to the darkness Of the grave? It was a gleam of sunshine on her lonely path and a voice of perpetual gladness in her home; she had learned from it blessed lessons of simplicity, sincerity l purity, faith ; it had unsealed within her a gushing, never, ebbing tide of affection, when suddenly it was taken' away, and her home is left dark and silent, and to the vain and heartrending aspiration, "Shall that dear child never re• turn again;" there breaks in response THREE RENTS PER 00P'T TEN OUTS PER WEEK NM= I Aillittnit*o it* rtstotoitca 10 IWO ikt !telt ad , ' Tertisetuenti *0 Mb' in On uay tot poF,:itit.„ *0 niki' rapidly tnetr*olt; dr.ulnl Wu t‘oppq.E. tok..co itn to press abnut 2 1). to. . - . • COMXlL'XtekrtiiKfil,ntettiletl tor ribli6tioa - irt the t 1 MN' \ Villtit u.q rimmed by it 1 . 4 your • we tinmeots.tt guarantee $1 tkinektlty•po is t , l, of the writer. WhO unto wlt tiot he totbi is tett u - ti ss ( wired by the eerrestioniltut. •1 • • ' Write ()ply ea tote sic& of the paper, owl as pp&tible. without tiourkthes. ' • who fail to receive the 11114, Mill counttivvoy by leaving not tev at Nilotlice, otrice, where all row plaiobt of irreg War ot t ,l latenem of delivery tYill bo prOuivtly otteeloil to. o % RSts otiould tutu itiPir6l l ll ll )Dniint o t•lliqt nud t 4) the paint. Our il‘lAi`J Om lied tor very lung artielint. • , . through • the c01d,,, gray silence, "sjever• morel oh, nevermore!" Iler heart i like a forsaken maicion, And !lint wora goes cehoin3 through its tlQ.;elato chambers. She cannot stop to ray, ter she ninet work to bury the dead, lilt between over) , sob she hears ft sweet voice suying tu en the resurrection and the life," Anil she ku, , ws it is well with the HUILIM:4; TOO t IVCII.— , :TILLIO - 13 such a thing as being in too much of a harry. \Vo were lately reminded of this fact in watching the actions of one who . wns performing work which it was necessary to have done liy a cer• fain hoer. The porsonalluded to hurtled so much that ho became nerveus,and inste,A 01 working. more rapidly, made wrong movo• mutts aad• 'committed blunders that 'would hot Imo hnppened had he kept' his mind' cool and colleetcd. It is certainly pesFibla to hurry one's self, while attending to . our mond. duties, , and at tidies it is very important : that it should bo done, but, in doing so, we ought to ho careful not .to become excited, and &us rather retard the labor to ho accomplkli +l. The person ,Wlto l is able to control ltim..llf, and at times of,:ncod does his wort: coolly and'seatlily, will always he found to be , one who can be most depended on, and that which is finished will bo well done. Tim mind eau be controlled so that this ex(iLo• ing fooling will , not have the mastiwy ; ter every mug) human being has that within that gives him tlm power to control bin;" 'II in every particular. —A. Californian thought to est , upo t' 0 pnyment •of a loan of $2,500 by ntavryil the woman front whom ho horrowod R, b t, She sued her now husband for the tumuli., and the court gave it to. her. , —Oen. Waddy Thompson, iteprononlnli• in Congrem; front South Carolina, from to 1841,and Minißtor to_Moxieo in 1812, dit I in Tallahassee, Flit, aged 74!.. —The friends of !'Woinan's.,ltights,"in 0 ) District of Columbia, nro prolmt•ingq iiivin• • Tints to Congress for the establishment f female suffrage in the District. —General Grant's official majority in l;ll:• nois, is 54150. East Pennsylvania Railrocui, SUM= ARRANIIIMENT. COMMENCIN 1 Wednesday. May 0)tli, 1 13s. SIX TRAINA, p4TA'x,p? jg4w.yquK 11=tOMMESZI On an& after Wednesday, May, :Mtb, 1810, t Sassenger Trains will Nava Reading daily, ten...l t undays,) for Allentown and wily; stations, at 10., 1 A. M. and 4.20 P. M., stopping_ at all the Ivo>. -1... tuns between Heading and New York, itialiio also close conneeGetts for Maueit Cliclnk and I Gil . ..dolphin Vim ',elfish Valley it. R., and arrive New York at :Lao and 10,151. M. • Four (4) through Exnrek Trains will teat ► Rending daily, (except Sunday..) for New N'„, and the East f leaving Reading at 4.11 and 1 A. M. and at 2.40 and 11.40 l', M. Those Trains run through from Pittsburgh t New York, withoutohange of ears, Stop/dm :11101 nt Lyons, Allentown, Bethlehotti, ton' Sommorville, Plainfield and Elisabeth, aw, tirrivo at Now York at 10.00 A. M„ 12.00 A1„.7.2 P. M. and 5.00 A. M. The 4,44 A. M. train will not leave Reading .ott Mondays. The 7.06 x. 51, and 11.40 I'. M. trait, run daily, Sundays incluilad. Trains leave New York, foot of Liberty stree , : daily, (except Sundays)at PM A. M., 12 ileum 5, 'I and 8.20 P. M., and arrive at Rending at LiAl, and 10.10 P. M„ and at 1,00 and 2.52 A. M. Thu 8.00 I'. M. train from New York leavesdnily, Sundays included. A Sunday Excursion Train will leave Renal:at every Sunday at $ A. M., stopping at all' statinn I and interinediato points. Arrive at Allentov, at 10 A. M. Returning / lenvo Allentown, .at co) • P. M. Arrive at Reading at 6P. M. Passengors aro requested to purchase tieliet‘ r. fore entering the cars, as 25 cents extra will it charged and collected on (be train from all who pay the fare to the Conductor. June 0, STOLTZ, Eng. and 1:11..t. Philadelphia & Beading; Railroad. (Revised,) • Rum°, Attuvar ant Mi. QIUMMER ARRANGEMENT OF PASSENGER, TRAINS, August 3,1868. Fivo Trainsdown to Philadelphia, passing It cod ing at 780. 1015 and 'll3O a. m., and 4 25 and Up to Pottsville, at 10 40 n. and 550 'mid )105 p. m. Trans West to Lebanon and itarrbthurp Western Express from Now York, at 1 to a• m. and 134 'and 1 10 p, m. Harrisburg Accommodation Train at 715 a, and Mail trains at 10 45 a, m. and 6 01 p. On Sundays,the down trains pass Rending at 940 a. tn. and 425 p. and up trains at 10 50 ,'... tn. and 57 p, tn. The 4 25' p. m, down, and 10 50 m in. tip trains run only between Philadelphia and Rending, Up trains leave Philadelplitt fot Reading, Har risburg and Pottsville, 47 30 and 615 a. an, 12 n noon, and 330 p. in. and 515 p. m., for Headline only. The 815 a. ra. trains connect with traius I r Tamaqua, Williamsport, Elmira, Buffalo, Niagara and Carman. The 81.5 a. m, and 330 n. tn. up lralnafrom.Phil adelphia, and 1035 a. tn. and 4 25 p. m, down traiir stop only at principal stations, below Reading, Reading Accommodation Train : leaves Iteadiwt at 730 a. in., returning loaves Philadelphia at 5 L ., p. rn. Pottstown Accotamodation Train leaves Pettgr town at 6 45 a. tn., returning heaves Philadelphia at 430 p. m. The Western Express Trains connect at lin rr;-. burg with expreas trains on the Pennsylvania R. It. for Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and all points west, and the 10 45 mail train Connects at Harrisburg for Pittsburgh, Lancaster'Cliambersburg Sunbury, 80/Anton, Pittston, *llkesbarre, Lock' Haven, Elmira and tho Canada& Passenger Tralmsleave Upper Depot at 700 a. )t and 615 p, tn., for Ephrata, Litiz, Lancaster gill • • • Througry First-class Coupon tickets and EMI • grants' ti kets at reduced fares to all the prineipal Points in ho North West and No Canntli.s. (1 9 11MUPA TIQN TIG'K IsaW, With 26 coupons. at 25 per cent. discount betweca any Points des M re lL d, / EAGE TICKETS,' , • Good for 2000 ;i l l: , lz Ar twe7 lc a lk il;l B 7.at 8 2. :50 for families and business firms. Good for the holder only, for 3,6, 9 and 12 mor....as, between all points at reduced fares, Schad Beaton tickets at one-third less than the 'above. .1 !lir Passengers will take the; Entrails Trains west at the (miler Depot, and all, other trains at the Lower or Oki Depot. 100 pounds of baggage allosiid each passenger. Passengers are requested topumbase their tteli.:ts before entering the cars , as higher fares are Char./ - , ed if paid in the can. • Excursion Tickets good for one day, by 7 20 Accommodation Train to Philadelphia and relit ils at $2 55 each •\ • Cr; A. NICOLLS, Gen% Supt, - -