iVcdnoRdaj', Nov. r, 'ir. tiETTIXU DOWN. The agitation in fiimitiil waters ennnot always continue. Tho late troubling lias lirt J t!ie effot-t of bring ing the si.'um to tlie trj, ami tlicru is ivory prospect of it buing tliuhcd high up among the drift, there- to decay or Le washed down agstin bv tie wearing , , " .. , , b wes of popular feeling. The plan of pionopolists to ruin the ewmtry and enrich themselves is easily discerned in the movement to flood tlx; country with greenbacks in the hope of fund ing our debt and freeing us from tax ation. Nothing can be further from the objcot named. The inflation of the currency would give these monopolists the opportunity of plundering the la boring classes to an extent never be fore realized. You have the example of the war. For the time money mat ters went smooth enough, the upward motion was pleasant and the senses of tho nation reeled with excitement n the giddy height of their money moiinluin. The descent which we have since been accomplishing is even more perilous. The base of the moun tain specie payment we must reach bv tortuous winding if we would do it with safety. None would be so il 1 hardy as to throw themselves headlong from the top. Yet those who would turn back are not our saf est guides, CWseious that we con iu.it exist at u gmtt hitjht wli.it induce ment can be offered for building still higher ? The fabulous prices of every thing during the war would be still more fabulous were thisstatus of affairs to txTst, and the poor can answer fur themselves whether it would be ruutr agreeable. With wages, food, doth- iiijj snd all the necesnitic of life liiadruplcd what advantage would uc ri! from light tnxrft ? Who would be the botler off, the rich or the poor? Abrogating our sense of honor to the kmdholdtt's would not be compensa tion for the misery entailed ujHm the lower tfWies. However unple.taant it may be foe us to pay our honest dMits we behove in paying them. To t'us end we ouacrve thitt Mr. hdmunds, of tin; Senate, has introduced a joint resolution declaring the fiiith of the 'Sovcrnment pledged to the redemp tion of all tho public debt in coin, ex cept where otherwise stipulated in the loan. This resolution, tabled for the present, will doubtless be called up eoon and passed with entire unanimity in Iwth Houses. Our ability to do this is uivijootionabk and the straightforward announcement of de termination will settle the uneasiness of our finances. Democracy will make it political capital by misrepresentation, but the steady decrease of our debt and wise action on the part our legis lators will meet there mere than half way. The people have only to wait and watch to be convinced of the truth of our assertions. The rebel Democratic organs arc not at nil pleased with Sherman's speech before the "Army of the Ten nessee." In fact they ca.n find no words stroug enough to express their indignation at that part of General . Sherman's speech wherein he wonders .' how "a'ny Soufhcrn man can speak of the" 'lost cause' in language other than that of shame and sorrow." They in sist that it is as' impossble to connect infamy with the 'lost cause,' its it is to ' associate vico with holy religion. . There is not a man in the South, "but glories in, and k proud of, the part ho . took in tho war." A few days since they were forSliormnn as the Copper- ' head candidate for the Presidency on the occurrence of a certain emergency. -.They evidently arc not now. We publish elsewhere a schedule of . tho mail routes in ourct unty, to becon ; trusted for by the 4th of March next. We advise our disabled soldiers, who can obtain the required bail to put in ' for the job. Indeed, It would be no - more than just if the Department - -would turn this pant of tho service tivcr to our maimed and crippled vet gratis.' It 'would be part recognition for value received. LivixosTqx, the famous Afri can explorer, Is qriuauueud "by th,p ca ble dispatches to liavo fumed tip again. . He is pursuing his iovostlga ' tions in the unknown wilds of thut country. . When he returns to civili- ffition hi can have tho pleasure of perusing his numcrousobituary notices. as ... . JFiib body of Maximilian, in a. bad ly decomposed state Has at last been, delivered to . Admiral , Tcgothorff. Mciioo lias contributed d : lesson the world might profit by', in the summa ry nnd just disposal of Her National 'urinijnals, ' : - '. , . '' Col.. Jambs- Armstrong, Las dU- pawJ'of his interest in the Washing lou, ra.,. Reporter, a staunch. Rppubli njwpi t J. W JMVillianis, Esq, The reconstruction of Southern State gwerniuents-is-sapidly going for ward notwithstaudiug the obstructions placed ia the way by the rebels and their co-workers of the North. In a number convention have-been called and constitutions are in process of for mation. Thus far tlte sptntof lenien cy has prevailed and earnest effort is manifested to secure impartial justice to every dast. That theso conven- L,. . i:.,'.i:..., States wo have no reason to disbelieve. Those prevented by Act of Congress from exercising the right of franchise have no choice in the matter, and are less blamable than those who exercise that right persistently against their personal and national welfare. Yet the nation was saved in the face of such opposition, and though the war shall be to fight over again the loyal men in the South will not shrink nor take one stepjiackward. . ' In my prison cell I sit,' i T'liokinii mother dear of yon!" J II. Ohei.l, of the I'cnver Local a bemocnitic sheet, and a beloved dc ciplo of "Briek" Pomeroy having been conviVtodof libelling Cant. Barters, a one armed noldicr and Treasurer- of Beaver Co., finds himself inditeing his windy articles from a "prisoaeelU" The county will board him two months for two hundred dollars, and allow him to fee the lawyers generosity "worthy of the great mind from which it cmenated." Two charges yet against him may prolong his stay at Hie county "boarding-house." We thftvk he will bo convinced, if not already, that 1m has paid dear for his cheap notoriety. The (qvernment has been defraud ed by President Johnson's revcuuc collectors of $ 100,000,0X) ou whiskey , mid -25,000,000 on tobacco in. the past twelve months. Tho public debt will be likely to bo rapidly paid off if this class of politians get entire control of tho (lovcrnnipiit. (Jux. V. S. Hancock, in connec tion with Thernmu, of Ohio, is named for the IXailocjiirtio Presidential ticket. Think of Ctypcrheadri running Han- cock for President. Whv, he was a soldier in the Union artuy, and a good one. TliK Old Theatre, in Pittsburgh, resounds alternately with tho ribald jest of tlic player and the sonorous prayer of the preacher. Divine service was held there last wotsV, and one of our city exchanges says there was not standing room so great was. tlie press. N I X k of the 7-iy bond conntM-feit-ers have been arrested. The counter feiting was done in Paul.slwro, Glou cester Co., N. J. The establishment has been in operation since July 18(J.V and has netted the parties 4 over one million dollars. Thev were living in litfcrent parts of tho Union in grand style, . . 1 1 . Ll . 1 1 ! ClIAlil.Ki Dmckns, tlw fuiunt English - enthor will give a scries of readings in this country. He is now reading in Boston, Xt.itt RKMS. CoyuRixfl . couvciuhI on tho 21st and proceeded immediately to busi ness. A dispatch from Washington says : There ; was a large nttcryLtnce of visitors ac( ioetatars, wu the galleries were filled long before tho hour of meeting. The cxcctation of many that the impeachment report would be trescuted in tho House gave that )ranch the secno of the greatest inter est. The Senate met at 12 o'clock. Near-, ly all the Senators were present. , Immediately after the reading of the journal, Mr. aunnier took tho floor. Ho presented a petition setting forth that the petitioners, a hundred and fif ty in numtar-, were colored men 'who had been , discharged . from their em ployment in the district because they voted the liwlical ticket , at the last municipal Titection-. "They asked for relief,' and ' the subject was referred to the Committee on the district. After a pession of half an hour the Senate adjourned. t : ' . The moment tho journal was read in the House, , the Democrats through Mr. Brooks,' of New York, and Mr. Eld- ridge, of Wisconsin, objected to the newly ; elected Tennessee delegation being sworn in, on the ground tlint someot them were disloyal. Hie Jat ter oddresecd the House for an hour giving specific details of his reasons and tacts as applied to eacn member. A running debute followed for three hours, when the House finally voted to admit all tho delegation but Butler of the 1 irst Tennessee District, whose credentials were refercd to the commit tec on elections for investigation into the charge of disloyalty prefered against him. - The rest of the uelegatioo were swarn in. t . , . . : - Both Houses adjourned until Mon day, . ..,;. ', . , . i Dowx. South -people, profane ones, say. that the don't care a Confederate "- where they tised to say Contiucn- The- St. jLoula Lrmocrat says dead crows are reprcauttatives of th kt raws. 'he llSrtmiesburg Republican, 1&ebncsl1c.i, Ittovembev 180T: ., THE ALAB.l.Hl COSVESTIOX. ' A corespondent of the Cincinnati Commercial, writiug from Montgom ery under date of the 8th, remarks: Tfie- Mobile 7ii.ua and other papers have for weeks been describing or rather denouncing, this convention as exclusively composed of unprincipled scoundrels. Yankeeadventiirers, scal awags, renegades, niggers, &e., (I spare you somo other epithets as too strong for your type.) and I have just read in a- pei-fcctlv reliable Northern paper (tho New. York IIW,) that "the Radical delegates are of such utterly unknown antecedents, and so wntirely unrecognizable, even by mine,' that in nublishins General Pope's order which contains n full list of their names and pseudo constituencies, the Montgomery Mail omits that section, with the fol- low intr remark : "The delegates are wholly unknown to the iteople of AlaiMimn, and as the publication of a list of their- names would be of no interest to our readers at this time, we omit them." "Alnlmnia." continues tho World. "is tho heaviest -otto rrmlueing State intlie Simtls and weshall wntcli witn interest the process of its restoration to pence and prosperity by three seore and ten nonnentitWM iyid a uor.cn anna half of blacks." Under the ininrcsstons such articles. are raleukited to produce. I have at tended two sessions .(yestenlny and to- dnv.) of theso "tluto score and ten nowutitin.ttnd ndozen inula nair oi blacks," with the following Jesuits in the way of impressions and infer-' motion. The convention is held in tho hall usually occupied by tho Ijowcr House of the Legislature of Alabama. The Mcgntes are one hundred in numW, and sixteen are freednicn, The seats having been been drawn by lots, the members are, of course,seated irrespective of color. As I looked nt them I could not but reflect flint I be held a magnificent exhibition of poetic and retributive justice, for these men now occupy the place where at but seven years ogo the promt, defiant Confederate Congress that made slave ry the key-stone of their nrcb. of gov ernment. . As to the general select and bearing of these men my first impression was also- my last. A more- earnest, serious and orderly deliberative body I have never seen, and this, improsion is con firmed by the general admission in Montgomery, that they are a much lietter-Iooking set of men than the Ala bama Legislature. Of the eighty-four whites, twenty two arc Northern, men who have taken up their rcsiikuK-c in tlie State siivce the war. The remainder avo nil Jd citizens. I made special inquiry as to their various callings, and social positions, and found ttvtt among them were : Nine members of former Alabama Legislatures. Eight present or fbrnierjudgps of va rious courts of the State. Twelve lawyers. Snrn officer awl siut'ern iol-coi-mitmioned ojieers anil private of the reb el amy. Six physicians a,il a ii'imV'r of planters, merchants,' &a. The president of the Convention is the Hon. K W. Peck, for forty years resident of Juscaloo.su, formerly Chancellor of the State, recognized as possessing ono oi the first legal minds in tlie country, and a man of unblem ished purity of character. Anions' the rebel officers is Major Scmplo a lawyer by profession, and a graduate ot Cambridge J jaw rviiooi, ..-tin ,e KTunr. tinui minniMiiili'd t te artillerj- in Clchurue's divisions und listingUishctl llimselt Ut Uliekailiail- I matle tncaequaintsnce ot ami con versed with some twenty mouthers, Judge , Peck, Major Semple, Judge Martin, Mayor Horton, Messrs. rient- ford. Griffin. Koffer, Miller, nnd oth- err, and frund them far from being nonentities.- On yesterday General Pops arrived from Atlanta, "and ivited ton seat in the convention. lie made a short ad dress, strongly marked by good sense, and indicating a high order of ability I hear on all sides praise from the loval and admission lroni the rebels as to the produce, energy, and moder ation of his adtninistratian in Georgia ami Alalwmn. ' Although only at their secon 1 and third day's session, with very few members familiar with parliamentary usages, the Convention dispatched business rapidly, and appeared to un derstand that their real work was to be done in committees. Ifthisconvontion is a fair index nnd exponent of tho conventions to lc held in the nino other Southern States, it is risking but little to say that their in telligence, honesty ami ability will soon! silence - misrepresentation and abnsc.! :i :T Pedestrlauslsm. Mr. Sofh Wilbcr Payne stnrtcp from New York on the morning of the 11th ihst., to wtlk to San Fran cisco, Oil., in one hundred nnd fifty dayo. By way of the Central Pacific Railroad the distance is precisely three thousand three hundred miles between the two points, so that an average of tcnty-two miles per day will have to be miidc, M. Seth Wilbcr Payne, the pedestrian, in well known to the pub lic as an author. He walked over pretty much nil of Europe some years ago, ana upqij His return wruiu a liook of all lie saw, heard and did. The oljeet of the present trip is the same as was his JMiropjitn tour, ono. his limiting kinwolr'to acertaiu length of time was doubtless cnusod purely from a desire la perform a feat of dis tinction. He will take eopiona notes on hi way, which will be published in book form aftcn hi rottlrn frum. Sun Francisco.-". -. .. ,'. - AilUrmsr Orii. Ntanriua hrfarw the o- eletjr rih Army r the T"- At the last annual meeting of the Society of the Armv of the Tennessee, whicbi was held at St. Ixmis on Wed nesdiry last, Lieutenant General Sher man 'delivered an address before the same, froiu which we extract the fol lowing passages : . I have often been asked by my fel- troubled bv the re ports of the dlsturbel condition of things at tho South, whether, after all, our labors had not been in vain ? Whether we might uot be culled on to wnait the ienes of 1803 and 1861 ? Or, wH? the rebels. ; defeated in. Uittle, might not, in tne nuriy ouny of time and iiolitics, regaiu their "lost caoso" and their lost pride ? How anv Southern eenilenmn. wan these facts "plain and palpable, every where staring him it tho face, and re corded forever in the book of history, can still boast of his "Lost Causey" or speak of it in language other than ol siiamo and sorrow pass my umler atiindunr, and instead of being revi veil I know that their Lost Cause will sink deeper and deeper into infamy as the time mora keenly nrobw its hidden mvsferics and reveals them to the light of daw. . . s - . On these points I. feel ho great so- h'eitiule ? biit whether I can convey to your mindsthesame conviction, I will not say. History rarely goes back ward, ami events in the past arc usual ly as real as the crranite nx-k on which we stand; Surely no men ever had a more gleriMi cause than we ; and never, in my judgment, did war so completely- fulfill its natural, fifliec. Slavery . was the cause of the war, and slavery would surely have been extinguished in th's country by a gradual and natural process, and we might have been spared our civil war, had not other causes come into play. It was found that the soil and climate of the Soutlurn -States were admirably adapted to the growth of cotton. The power of steam was discovered and applied to machinery of all kinds, es pecially in Old and New England, nnd Hli Whitney, of Massachusetts, in vented his cotton gin. These- seat ed an immense demand for tho staple, and seemed to hj',ve changed tho whole current of public opinion, The in vention ( the cotton gin did more to fix slavery upon us than any amount of prohibitiM-y legislation, or any amount of anti-slavery agitation, so that I have always felt that both Old Kiigland an 1 New England had much to do in fastening slavery upon us ns a people, and should have a just share in the responsibility for its baneful re sult. Under tlwse iiilliu'iicis. Cotton bec-anw a poner in - the land. It was nrwved arrogant and clniniMl to b? king. It ilictatated its terms, and threatened war unless its imperious demands were granted. It claimed the right to go were it pleased, nnd to extend itself over lands, such us Ianas. and California, not adapted to it or to slave labor at all ; and at last it rebelled 'and set up a government of its own, whose very cornerstones wei;c cotton and slavery. Nothingon earth could justify such a rebellion, and I onlv mention thes.; facts in the past to show that others than the people of the ?oitl were partially responsible and should share the natural eonsc- ipicnces of their own act. ' nw that slavery is gone, and gone forever, with its unhappy wrecks left behind, and nil diuigcr is past, if any set of men again appeal to war when thev have courts to secure their rights ami redress their wrongs, I would trust our national destiny ngnil.1 to those grand old 'national laws which raised iour countrv tiiroiio-ii tne ioiij:, tedious vassalage ot'eohvtixat ion ; which car- neo ill sueiv itinm-ii its; unrati ui tllll IVCVUIllllUllill V Hill , lllllliv I'lll flag famous on the hi'li seas in 1812 ; le:l our eonquerino- armies to tho gates of Mexico in 1847 ; and has borne us gloriously through four years of as hard war as ever tested the manhood ot any people,.'.'. ." ' ' l.tll'KAt II.nKAT. Ureal Kxeltenient In Political Circles A Mn.orllv Keport lit f sior nf Impeael s ItiVtiie lreslilcnl Member leelnres the President mil be out ofOlllee In Forty Keys.. A dispjiteh from. Washington, I). C, of Novcnibor 23, says : There has been a great deal of excitement it) jioliticnl circles on the subject of .impeachment. The injunction of secrecy voted by the Judiciary Committee at a recent meet ing has given rise to tho impression that at. last one of the Republican members. (Mr. Churchill, of New York,) has changed liis V'fowa on the subject of injjicachmcnt, so as to give a majority report lor 'ho measure on Monday next. Mr. Lawrence of Ohio, says the President will bo outot ofhee within forty (lavs, believing it will tuke leas than thirty days to owy the articles through tho Senate and secure convic tion. ':' The Committee o:iim;)3achment had a meeting to-day, but of the result nothing positively is known. The most that lias transpired is that there has been. a very, stormy time in the Committee. . ' . The State Deoartment is informed tlint $3,000,000 worth of projierty was destroyed by the tornado on the Rio Grande of October 8. Six hundred houses were destroyed ,and all ranches for thirty miles around Matanioros were throw down, . At (tho mouth of a1. t rt me river scarcely a House was leu. All tho fiver steamers were wrecked or disabled, except dne, Twenty per sons wpro killed au forty or titty wouiuieu, ( . Thukh candidates for llfayorin New York City; -John T. 'Hoffman, Rammany, Fernando Wood, by the Mort, and William A. Darling, by the Republicans. The election occurs on 1 ueliiy IXtJcmber the 3rd, BAILROAD ACTIO EST. I CvllUlan Between; Exprea mi rrl(bt Train-Foax Wmea awl Man BarneU ti Deatku Cixcixsatt, November 21. A ter riblenecidentoccured on theCincinnati, and Dayton It. It. this morning. The broad caue express arrived here at six o'clock A. M., was detained tit Loeklandby an extra freight coinine south, and while waiting for the freight train to take the side track, a freight train tlint was following run into tho rear of the express train bo- fore a man could get out to flas it, Four women and one mau were bunt ed to death. Nearly all the train was burned to ashes. '1 he rear cars was. a train from Toledo that the express takes on at Dayton, tho fast ear being- a sleeping car from Toledo. The names or residences ot tuoso killed have not yet been ascertained. ,Ax Irish priest wishing to explain tlie naturo pf a miracle to a skeptical parishioner, gave him n tremendous kick. "Did it hurt ye?" asked the reverend father. "Hurt?" exclaimed the victom, tenderly solacing tho ag grieved region with his hand. "Well, then, smd the clergyman, compla cently, "it would have been a miracle if it Imdn t hurt ye! JLhis is a good definition, but no better than one just given in Massachusetts of the ill Iter- enec between nn "accident" and a"mis- fortune." "If Andrew Johnson should fall into the river," says tho definition, "it would be nil accident. If he should ever got out again, that would ba n misfortune." A Dkmocuatic SrttoxoiioLU. Fernando Wood said in his Cooper In stitutc speech, the other day : "I charge that at the late election the Tammany Hall organization iniMirted thieves from Philadelphia to vote their tick et ; that theso thieves were organized in different wards of the city,, and that IxiniUkof them voted in more than sixteen wards and in more tlum one hundred and twenty-five eleetorial districts. Cheers. Morotlvuithat; it is known that several of the insii!c tors of election, after receiving the bal lot from thje voter, substituted an other bullet and deposited, it, in the 1W Tiierr is a very general disposition in Congress to relieve all the confeder ates who cordially assist in the recon struction of the South, Such men ns extGovernw lii-own, of Georgia; ex Senator A. G. Brown,' and Judge Al corn, of Mississippi; General Barrin ger, of North Carolina, and Generals Iiongstrcet, Jeff. Thompson, and Ikirksdule, will probablv be among the I ist. Mr. Stevens openly expresses t he hope that all may be restored to citizen ship who help in the good work. Dax Uice, tho showman, has rotir A'.l permanently from the business. At his, farewell performance in Pitts burg 10-made a speech, in . which he boasted of having made more money than any six circus managers in the country, and said that he had given nwav, during twenty-six years, more than n inilliiu'. and a half of dollars to various charitable enterprises. The overcoat of ex-(Jovcnior Cur tin was stolen Friday morning while he was at breakfast at, the Moiiongn hehi House, in Pittsburgh The eo;it was in his room, and some impudent individual woitft hitler and gobbled it.. Mas. Jki-kkiwdx Davis was ser enaded in -Rutland, Yt., with Dixie, and saluted by tho firing fit' two brass cannon ns an ovation, by her husband's menus, the Democracy. . VAr.UAIIl.E HEAL ESTATE 15 THE TOWN OF WAYNESUUKO, FOU SALE. Ilv Virtue of an order, lo nn. frotatheOrnhnna- f'onrtof Ori-ene County, we will expose to Sale by public Vundno or out-cry, on the premises, on WEDNESDAY THE 18TH DAY OF TiECEMBEH NEXT! The following ril estate, ate the property of tViiieri .minis iiruniMni, I. That certain well known S'limre of I.ot mttiilwrcH Ki the nlnit nf Ihii Inwtl nf Wnvnes- bura W 17 nnd 4S hounded on tho h'jiat by lorrls Sinst, on the West by lltnckhery Alley, on the North by Franklin Htri'et nnd on the South by stmwbi'rry Allev, contnlnliucOne llundred-nml Klltuiy ieet siiuirn more or less, oeimr inc uoine ntiid nropi'rtv of tlie lute Holiert Adams, dee'd. On thin there is erected a lame and commodious BRICK HO USE!. two Vwlp high ; brick kitchen, one story; also ndJoliiTnKlla brick house ono story With with tw j rooms. There la also attached to tills prop erty an EXTENSIVE TANNERY I with lame nnd powerful STF.4H EUI3f F and fixtures nttached. The aiiiare Ih-Iiik act in fruit tra makes It a most beautiful situation, with every convenience necessary for town property and residence. It baa always been rexanfeil as aniong the most desirable properties in the town. ' A LSO-. A i tliM snm limn nml tilnrp. no much of Iht HiaiirenrUM ImmwIlutHy North of tho above 4l4HcrHfrl, aM lRoontuiiuKl In one hundred nnrl twenty feet on 'Morrt ntxm und running Imrk onehuntlrerl nndelK-ity ftetto niwklirrry ullev, mom or u-rH.-iuijoiniuK mat pun ion oi haw aqunni nold by Itilen Adnina In hi UMIme to Jumeii (ioldin, hnvfnK on the portion to be nold a kmI ntnlile. These- lott ImIii In very llKtle posi tion, would make mont Mcelluut lot tfl build private rmldetice upon, , A L S Q-rr At the same time and place, so much nf that Honare of lota numliered 4U. s0 and Al. na remAlns afur taking off what waa sold to Dawson Adams by theanid Robert Adams, in his lifetime, to wit ! l!Klnnln on theoorner of lraiklln street thenee alonit Morris atreet aliont one bundrcil and twenty Ieet to Una of said Ilawsoji Adams, thence along said lino a boot one hundred and eighty feet to Fruit alley, thence ly some about one hundred and twenty Vet to Franklin atreet. thenee alonn same aliuat qna hundred and eluhty feet tobenlnnlng. TERMS OF SALE Ona-thlrdof the pnrchaae money nn confirma tion of sale, one-third In sla rpontha theroaftrr, and the Imlaner In twelve months from oondr uiutlon, with IntATHt from confirmation. "" HAWHON ADAMS. .'... , . kiJmah adamh, 1 ll;-.T-ta . Kieculon, pcctt Notice. Ae-AddrcM to the Nerrou end Deblll. tirted whose auOerlngs hive been protected from hidden cauaeMnd whoso cues require prompt treatment to rundcr existence dMlruble. It you ro uir,irlng or huve lutrcred from Involuntary dlaclinrKus, wlutt effect doc It produce upon your gunerul health t Do you fuel nrouk, delilll tuted.uully tired t Uoca sllttle extra exertion pmluee pnlpltaUon of the heart T Poes your llvor, or urinary ornan, or your kldnoya, fre quently net out of order ? Is your urine aome times thick, milky, or flccky, or la It ropy on M'HIIngr Or doca a thick scum rise to the top ? Or Is a seilluiont at the bottom after It hus stood HWlillet Ooyou have spcjlls of abort breathing or dyspepsia t Are your bowels constipated? Du you have spells of fainting or rushes or blood to the hciid t Is your memory Impaired t . Is your mind constantly dwelling upon this sub JentT Do yo feel dull, listless, moping, tlreil or company, of life? Do you wish to be Ion alone, to get away from everybody? Does any little thing iq ike you start or Jump? U your slwp broken or reslli-ss ? Is the lustre of your eyes as brllllwu The bloom on your cheek as bright ? Do you enjoy yourself In society as wJlt Daytni pursue your business with the same energy ? Do you fuol as much confidence In yourself? Are your spirits dull nnd flagulng, given to (Its of melniioholy If so, do not lay It to yonr liver or dyspepsia. Have you restless nights? Yorir Isiok weak, your knees weitk, and lutve Imt Uttlo nppcllte, and you attribute this to Ayspcpslu orlver-complalnt ? Now, render, solf-ubuse, venereal dismsei be.illy cured, nnd sexual exorcises, are alt enpn. blcofprodm-ing a wenkuess of the generative orgnns. The' 'organs of generation, which In perfect health,' mnka the man. ' Did you ever think that those Imld, ileHant, t nerut'tle, per- Keverlng, sueuessful business men Are always those whole gnnerutlvo oritnns are In perfisit health? You never hear such men cnmplnlniof being melancholy, of u-rvotisncas, of palpitation of the heart. .They nre iiever.nfruld they cannot amroeil lit husltus ; lliey dont liecoinc sail and dlsconnigoil; theyuro always polite and plens-- nnt In the company of ladles, nnd look you and them right In the face none of your downcast looks or any other mean noss about them. I tlbi not nirain those who keep the orgnns Inllamed by running to excoss. These will uot only ruin their constitutions, but also those they do busl ucss with or for. ltow many men from badly cure'd diseases, from the effects of self-abuse and excesses, have brought alKiut that state of weakness In those organs that has reduced the general system so much ns to Induce nlmost every- other disease Idiocy, lunacy, paralysis, spinal eireotlon, silt clde, und alnijftt every other form of disease which humanity Is heir to, and the ril cause of the trouble scarcely ever ns(iectcd, and live diH'tered fir all but the right cue. Diseases of tho organs require the use of a dtii- rctlc. IfKI.MMOMVS FLUID KXTBAIT 11U I'HU Is yi great Diuretic, and Is n certain cure for diseases of tho lllndiler, Kidneys, Gravel Dropsy, Org.mlc Weakness, Female Complnlnts, (k noral Debility, and all diseases of the Urlnnry Oigaus, whcther exlstlng In male or female fio:n whnU-rer cause orlgliiatlng :Mtil uomntte of how long atnuiliug, If no trstiuent rssubukltted-to, t'onsumptlon or Insanity uiny ensue. Our llesh and bjood arjf. supported from these sources, and the h.-ta) and happiness, and that of Posterity, depends UfMin prompt use of n reliable remedy. Ilclinlmlds Kxtrnet Ruchu, establishrsl up war. Is of IS years, prepared by - II. T. IIKI.Mnni.n, Druggist, : all Broadayy, New York, nnd miSontb I'lthHtrnet, Phllailelphla, I'n. ruti'B U.'i'i per bottle, or II lmttti for Si'liV), de livereil to nny address. Hold by all Druggists everywhere. :i:l.l.-if7-i'owly. .. - . ! To I'oiisiimpllvcK The lU-.v. KDWAKD AWII.SII.N will send (free of eliarg..) to all who desire It, the pri-. 'rliitliin with Iheillreetions for milking and using the simple remedy by which he triiscinvil of a lun iifl.'eliou and that dread dlsensc Consumption. Ills only iilijert Is to bell ellt the iitllli-ti il anil he hopes every sufferer will try this prescription, as It will cost tiiein noth ing, tllld lllfrt prove n Messing. Please lliidl-ess i.ikv. KiiwAiti) a. wn.n.v, No. liMMou'niSeeoiiilsl. Williamsburg New;Vor. l..'.,-U7.lj':h,J-l'i i. Inruriiiatloii. Infornuitlon guaranteed to produce a luMirlanl growth of hint- upon a bntd I......I t. I....ir.ll.rf.u f..n.. I.li.n .luil.u...., ,1... v.i- ! ni'ival of j'iiiiplisi, Itlotehes, Kruptiotis, etc., on tliesklu.leiivim: Hie sniiie srii'l, elea, end beau tiful, cull be iilitahlisl without Uurue Viy ut- iln ssliDt TlltiH. K.citAl-MAN, CnKvtsrr. li;.i.-iiT-b-ehtt;ls S2;l ltroiulway, New Yorlf. fi.f'oltriite A- t'n's. O t It A K ERASIVE SO A V Is manufactured from H'rtr? conslilered the STA X I IA III) OF r'.Xl 'KI.f.K.Vl '-.. For Huh: by all Groceries. O-.-'i-ly. 4 Jr-Tlie Kenlliix Pool, nnd House of Iter-ej-. Hownril "Assoclntloii Deports for Yoiinn Men, on the erluie of snlltudn, nrkil the errors. H ITI.'II (IU ...... U.. abuses and disease which destroy the mimly powers, nnd ercnte linpcillniciits to miirrine, with sure minus of roller. Kent In 11 letter envelopi'S free of clmruCfc Address DH. J. SK II. I.IXIItiruiITON, Ilownnl Association, riilln delphla, I'n. t-r-Jy- 4-F.rrr at oulli. A (reiitleman nlio ii irered for .rears from Nervous Debility, J'rc mature Decay,' nnd nil the effects of youthful In discretion, will, for tlie snknuf sull'erltiR liuinniil ty, send free to nil who neiil It, and reis-lpt and directions for limkinu tile sluiple remedy by which he wiis'eiinsl. Kufferers u-lslilnu to profit by the advertiser's experience, can do so by ad dressing, In perfect confidence, .lOIIXOOOKN, HS-ly 42 Cedar HI., New York. civ gulvcvtiocmcntii. W. IJlMitUM. Jit., At l-'ilh Street, 'lltl hunjh, in the (tutfOr'izut ntjmt for fte HKHi:al.iCAiv, i ihutdt'j. , LIST OF t'AL'SE- SET DOWN. FOR TUIAl(AT D'iC. TEKM, lttt7. Hook vn Hook, No. m Nov. Term, Issn. Ilmnk v Kent.Tfii bin, March Term, IsdO. Morris vs l.iii-as. No 71 . 1 line Term, lsni Wilson v.-i fiowney, No..'iii,Is,omlH-.rTerm, 1W1. sliiiriiius-k vs curie. Nif. llll. June Term. l-5.' Kniidera vs Morels ti.. No. tiHept. Term, listfi. l'etttt vs rnrne, No. 41, Mi'pt. Term, lsili, Coleiiinn vs'l'ayior, No. s;(,Hepl. Term; isftn Maple vs Prior,, ct al, No. :I7, ln-c. Term, Isftl. F. S D. Hank Vs'Melllen, No. IK), Dee. Term. 115. j'eltlt vs Itlrhhlll ll. No. I 111, Iac. Term. ISIVi. Messenui-r vssiime. No. III. IHs. Term. IM'Sk Mi-strexutte vs Mnn. Jt Ken Oil Com., No. In, ainreii'jemvrw. Iuiley vs Taylor, Xn. M Mari-b Term, WIS. Jayue.ra Kent, 'So. mi. March Term, 1MI. Hoas vs Illclitilll.tp., No. I'.7. Muroh Term, IKK. Foster's' Admr a,1 v Anderson, No. 13, Jul Term. IHWt. -- - Jllacklcifc Ouarij.'vt Vale, Jio.M, Juno Terra, Cr.iln et nl v Peterson & Downey. J(o. &5, Hept. Term. MIS. ' ... Ifiirnlnike va Ilule, ct nl, No. 08, Heptcmbcr Term, li-ai. Ri nulds vs Waters, No. ll, Hi-nt. Term, lsBfl. IJnilsey Ex'ra.a Hni'i'tM, l. 111. Kept. Term. lsmi. ' Oorsl va Itlchlilll tp So, 171, Msrch Term, MM. KransvHHith etnl, Xo.'7. Dec, Term, lsiia. . Jones vi Morris ID.. No. 1:11. Dee. Term. laWL I'orter'a Adm'ra. va lllnehart. No. Itx), June Term. IHH7. First Nat. Bank vaAntell, No. M, fent.Tnrm, 107. lhOT-tc j. r . rr.jiri.r-, llerk. s TKAYEDI me tnthe oremlnen of the MiiWrltK'r. on the 3lHtor Uwt month, IH'N COW I wide, nil in nornn no eiir nuirKM, seven yeiirn mn. mr owner will pleaau come forward at once, jxiv .....s. .ai.l t..lu Km uu'nu ntlia.ivlau.alhn Will Dttom a mn eat ray. jwm.i mi..irj. - Dent P. U, Oreene Con Va, ll;373tr . yQENTS WANTED FOU TWO OP THE licit selling honks ever published. One entitled "MysUirles of the Neapolitan Convents," by an Ex-Benedictine Nltn, hi rue account of the In ner life of the oouventa the most thrilling and Interesting work hefove the public. The other antltled "The Cottage Cyclopedia," a rem, of Intellectual wealth, and wanted In every family; complete In one large volume of over 1OJ0 pages, Illustrated. Mend for circulars nf terms, which are very liberal. - HA 1,10 A Co., ll:17-it Hartford, ('onn. Q M-8AYER9, . ATTOIMIT Alb CU,m.O AT IAW. In addition tn other Inislness will attend toII eaaea tp Bankruptcy that may be entrusted to hi- ea re. umis'.opponlte Drug Btortof o. w. Hob ijjrclliMfowjj. JJK1ISTKU-8 N0T1CK. j i Notice Is hereby given lo'all creditors, lnso toes, wards and other persons Interested, fii the undersigned Kxis-utors, AdnilnlstiMcsand lluardluna have lllcd their aeeoanta In MstNra Ister's Ulllou, and that the ssnw will fta kre Minted to the Orphans' Court lobe hrhswMTiln. nnd for the County of Um nr, on WediiMilsy. ifis-uiiAT i-, ino., inr eonnrmaoon anaaiiow anco. I'KlFJUIKtrwS. . , UiKlais.ndrueorder. Account of Jim Onidnrtr, gturdlnn of i.'i.e.., ii,iiiir eniiu oi isormuoii forayce dlHeasisl. Account of J, H. ltrlstcr.. Athlitmlo apoa ...uiTinnni, nnicn jiismr, wee u. iir.1, Adinlnlslnitoot sirai Oi estate of A Martin. Ir.. .1m.'.I . IV Aecount of J. am NiGlomshr. Admlnlitmbsr- niwn therstatu of iiuUliuiol Luupson, ds Final ucsount of MASTinmitLTMi Onardlsm ... nnK, minur, .cnini missus Kill, dee il- 7 ' Final ucount of Dsn lei Knller, sorrlvlM snsr- Aocount of Aiuim Vnll.m,.OnrHjsfti, A. Julili Hm. .I.h.'iI t. I.....IM. HHIlOKIUllimig. jimnuiM wnstou. disnsised. r Aocount of Amos T!ilti.n, filtnnlmn of J. If.. nuiion, uiuiun cliUill of Juiiiitliun Walton,, disi d. AtssHint of Vhli:, SSsrah, Ooardlun ol Mnrr lmrblii,,a inhior A.-uHt ot Jainta. I sir, VtniOilstmlnr nnon tboi i-stlllu of llelllulllllvllrlliiiu.; tl.M.'.l Account of Wlllutiu Uwyn anil Marsliatl tlwyn,, ; jim ura ms tH 4SUItSi Owyn, iluerd.. Aecimiil nf F.llnv Wraver, Administratrix aniU tlevntt- Wisiir, AdmlnlslmUsr upon ths s lltl.. t.t lk,.J. U'.M..-.. .l.u..l Account of KJl Jim.oIw, V'.x.vutor of the IsstJ Will and ti'Kliiiiu nt nfCiiTilli r4'i.lnil, dee'd. Aceoiiiit of .lnseli I'.. Kis-ner, Admlnlstrstiir of Misirue lilcller,. tiw u Final aeeiiiim il .lust pli. n. Issitey, Kxeeutor of tin- hist Mill ami teslnmrnt of liar net lteliner, deu'd-.. lnrtlnl iieeiniiit nf ...i.ili Itecvee, anil I. L. l.-mn, Kxisiilors of tin. lust will sud Irsla- llletlt nf Julili It. Iisves, dee'd. Aipniuiil of DilrM It. J'-.nix, AdnitnUtrsM na on -I be estate of Avorhlu Jones, dts-'d Account of lien. II. Illiyumm aiut t "..J.,l.llider, Ailiiilnlstratorof Isune la.nVliniknjjlNi . Account ol Klhells rl Low, one of ttir r.seculnrsi ofthe luti Will' and Testament ot Htepheu, Htone,. dwr d. 18'GS Tin luntiKl dully piipitr In flW-JMp at tTio My I vim t, cut. T the Wml war of iuv wnjnu-ii'! with InurfiiMMl fiu'lllltr for ilUi'iiiiniitluctlio. curri'iit new of tin tiny, nii'l fir iiniibri;ijjjv Kkm( piiUtltMil Ht-rvicc In 111, linportHJit. irrwJ- tlfiillnl CMiivm-M nf mw. Tlif fnrllt(Miinu'kw Nton oi t'oiiKrWi iimiiilwH ti nnn.n mr Ui imwt ImiMiri.uit li'M hIuw tw ttmunlUn,tt tUm (luviTiinit ul, unit tin i.riH'i'iiilf nut. wtJJ Wkiii tytyly ttolutii iy tUn iiiii'lIJitrid. mmwuim., Ia vlfvtoC M.t UfU'itti4 n.'itt'r.iiit Lm Dm m. cwnupt, hf prsyrlt'tnf &r-"-4tJ!t'tt" iim'iU tirniiits'rinri.lH lor trMt iWrMttelMM ml lt-t torn fliit liibt I lit- kokIom, Iron nr rslMy lnirl- llu;fnt rorrfS)Miiiiltnt, whomJoyM lHM-JtMtl-Mrr mid frU'iul-Hhlii of tin IiiiiIIiii( iwnitifn 4 thm S.-nnlr nml House, (It)' IicikIn of tli vurftinn ti imrtntftitM, nml tin lenlhiK iiolMIHniiM wlio fr Ufiit WuHlihiiflon, m thut n'otliTM-itin ilrtH-ml on tve.'lvtim ltu Hint, fullt'Hl Htnl iihmI rrlubln Inli lliKi'i.t'o irotu I he unit of 41tiviTuniitit, Til ) W K K KL Y G A Z KTfE. TheWKKKI.V OAZKfTK has li'n enlarged to Hie stinie Mi.e of the Dally, und. Is now t lis every farmer, ineehiiiik- i'ml business num. It gives cv-n H'ci'K, rorly koiiii coijgims ot r'srrcni mwm l leli'txriiph mid nitill Hit letidli, fdltn. rmls ot thfdiilU'. i)il ii 1-lMiicfJu-lrTtlfHL i liter ry tind Heli'iilllh Itrmx, tivtlier wltii every Uilnjf lni)oi'iiitil iH-rluiidriittotliV wtiffiSof M)l 11 leu. it iiKrlcullurrtl i-oliihim will lie sfitn In rtucli ti tuniviu-r iv to ilml fnvnr with thi' lHruir mid uiirdriier., 'I'ltr ninrkK irpnrtrt of tint WKHK t, ...KrL'Kt nre, ly iimiuioti eonwul, fickfimvledut'd fo In th fttiuidtml thorl!y Inr Imtli ImyiTHnnd xr-tli'm, tind In roniinriaUl fit vUm In WeKittm IVniMyhninly, Ktitern Httw titi'l WfHtern Vlrulnln tire wlthmit tHiuil, Tho nii'H"! i tit' . i', i 1 1 lire used excjitrtiveiy oy tht'Clvll Court of AlhvlM'iiy eminty. n r-fer- euri'lit hitiri i iiml Ihhucm, lo detepiuin' the rill ImtprierH in the mmkWM nt Ihf Time of til biiKineKrttranHiti'tloii hi IUiiit'i V. Our uui'iilH will favor ih bv uettluc tintlielr eliiliri nt once, mid tint nllnwliuf their prewnt ones to iidri', let w mc iiiiIixim Hint imneof mr rcitden diuild he ih-prlved of n wwldt newa. iMitluiirt in rluhn enii tit made nl Hny lime, m yeiirly rnti's. riMnnitiaiH nml ifV'ri'miiiU r lU.H(d lilrt( ( n A iijCt'iilN, tkum -n1 rm: v..K.vtv tf.yJ-rrK-, S'mjc mtiHcrilirr' i ..... cinliHof live...; ; ciuiisi f.r ten ., iihil mn tn th uettrr nn of t lt- flnli. 1 1? A.-Kur Mp:Timeii tiph' of eHiier wiy or. . it'ui , iiiiMrri i in- iiiKiirit-K'in. es the proprietors, I'KXMM N. ItKHll A ('(!.. llA.l ITK lll'ILIMXIl, Nos. l and sti 1 Kill ftre.., 1'ltt. liiiin-tf. gOMETIIIXU JJy'.V! MR. K. H. SAYKIlfl IIOKKIX.IOl Have Jua arrived from the Kast with a lar nssitmeul offorclgn andiUnui'stle . FALI AND WIXTKIJ TXKt Which tliej- mopose to st-U at tllrlrnject ( ASH prices ! sNh-iTim Dress fissls,Drcs(liu-y " Inline, Dress Muttons, Ijidlea sjbnwls, Ituots and Hliiva, . ' ' llatsaml t'nps; also.a Itnsd variety of nlcearlicjcs, at, ' VffV low.' ' .l., ' ' OKNTI.BUEX AXD l.Wim WKAK Wares of n II k Inds, and a complete variety of thai lie.t (lltlM'r'.IUKM. A II of Which thev nronste tn sell at the very lowest na-ures, depending on the, ouaiity mill cheapness of their grssla to gala tlieiu cusivui. Clue tl..i it m.M hntn nil oil Ma I wm atlaraha-a nnd thi'V will nmve thut lli atlMrVt In mttWU we la eotreey f opposite (hat luiom in AiiiKon m niiuonip runny c viun umitw, vv ityneromrK. fPHE LADY'S FRIENliT" L 'W.VftlllX.'JjTOS AT MOUNT -VriWCOX.'i Tnit I.APV S FKtr;Nn annnnneea fin MM, the, followliiK novelties: Tur. flr.iiABBT foart'!a, liv Aniandn M. Doinlas, autluar of "In Trot,'l "Hlephen Isilie," c- A DkaO Mu'f Kl'LK, by. Kllnils'th I'remntt, anthorof "How a Woman Had Her Way," c. ; KcKLlsia Vnn Fats, hy Ixililsa f'liaiwiler wiulton, anther of ejnBa Cllf- It will give a splendid Dni-Hui Pam framr. fouiiiKD Kahiiiom rLATiccutfravcd oa steel . In every numlier. It will give a boaqtlfally' xemta4 Fajarr Trrx 1-NiiaA Yiiro in every nbmber. 1 It will give a large aasortmentpf Wood fcra. llltistruting tlw Fashiona. Kane Work,eln evcrv numb It will ulve a noDnlar..nleea i( UmiA warth ilier. the cost of the Magazine Id iUeUlo every" iiuiniM-r. It will give ft copy of tlie new and splendid Premlnm Hteel Kngrn' AT .MOUNT VKKNON "-thirty In. mg WAKiiTaj: ncliea leukbr tweiitv-one wide toeverv fnlttM ali la-r, and to every person avnillui Auyb," I MlSKTl- it oirera as preminma a large variety of nooas, Wliis-ler Wilson's Hewing Machine, Silver I'lutislTea H'U, Bpoons, lMU hers, Gold anil Hllver Watcbea, clothes W fingers, .Croquet, Appleton's Cyclopedias, de. . -A Hi-i.Kni u l 'rrr.a. New snlsaw IBaia srlio auliscribe for lr by thenrat of Nuewner,aliall rcisdve the NovemWr and December number or this year In addition,- snaking rwrteen 'months In all t Those who aubserlba by tha first nf December shall receive Uaa Preamaer numlwr, thirteen montlia In all I . , ' ' -, li'J.'-i THUMB, f'i.r. (:.' 1 copy 'large Premium Kngraving,)...;.. M teoplca Mf 3 " ..... iand one gratis), .,,,.,,,. s R " (and one rat .MM One copy each of LuY' rmun D and oavi The getter no of the club alwan leortvt a copy of the PKKMitm Ritonansn. Mcmberaaf a Club wishing the-premium KlMTaVflM, set remit own doi.lab kxtha. ' --Thoe dealrrau Of f.ttlng aa Clata I minm l.ista. should enclose fifteen cent Mr sample Macaatne, eontalnlng th aartawtla. Address, DEACOX VKtrvAOr: - - iwvthm, aiw t ainnu. isirrei, I niis.ir-rjiB. w ANTED! 200 FAnicnai To engage In a light and tlooyraWe Dtulaeat i fcr the wTummtua, In tha 3ft!C n-l,K which IU net ttei f)0 eV tM 0 MEI.EK nttOr' at Vawaav lre?t, nilfaM. .kla Kkaaall. ' ' . Kor nnrrieniara snniv sa. or si.m. rss- : v.. s "' -