krgu s WitibiteD'.l;urroA ;JO , . Taormina lleinner. Pa" Wards Se. fflinciolat resolutloh posed by the House at Harrisburg last week, Fres . tins a penslen exaininiugi calm, and. ' Appointing Mr. Nicholson of this conhtribtlitt;Avitriwithdrawn 'by 'the Haase; wheid• itelibithe k nown that the Senate nrOuld not adopt THE Benate Committee L. , on Prete flees and road:tads has agreed to re pOit: bill ,tatbaldtzlng, the Pacific Mall. Btearoablp .Cotnpany for mall enrolee between Ban Francisco and Chill* to the extent or one million per (Munro. Benda. newt monthly. Tu • Chicago Journal contradMs .• the itatenseat, supposed by authority • of the New York Tribune, that gen. Sheridan la now desirous of being re lieved front. the omunand of . the Western Department and beassigned to duty•eb'ewliere, bemuse Col. Be • ker has not been and will ridt be pro moted, as ho'reiloested. Gen. Sheri dan Is not desirous of being taken from thatdepartment, has never inti mated anything of the kind, and he has not asked the promotion or Col. Baker. Iv anybody ever daubted that the western Stites were More enterprising and progreasive.than their sleepy sis• tees in the North, East, or. South, let them read and digest the following extract item the proceedings of the Wiscorudn:l4Tbdature last week. A resolution' was o6red providing "That all persons acting in thecapac- Ity of lobbyists shall, during the re mainder tit the session wear a bstige on their hats or caps, or . In a conspicuous place on the broadest part of their persons, with the name of the scheme they represent plainly printed there on." • Why not have a resolution of this character adopted by our Legislature? iii that case every gravelienator and honorable member would know. who to dicker With at sight... 11 1 4 call for the adoption of.the resolution at once. ''The President in an Interview with Senator Borman, We yirginia, on Thursday bust, stated that he had al ready prepared a special message to Congress hi whith he recommended the passage and grunting of universal a rnuisty to ulliately in the rebellion; end that, he was In favor of a law granting amnesty to; all and every one who derireddhat all that he would luesi them :iici Would be to make si record of the same at the nearest Court. Senator Borman said he was In ISivor of general amnesty-With hut few exceptions. and to these he would never Corearit be was concer ned. The President replied that he did not desire to make any exceptions and would so_recornmend,that noth ing less , th an universal au:meaty .would be given. He said further; that ;after Georgia and Texas were admitted he would send in the, Rifti ng() alluded to. TROLL/014). Carr, 'f.sr tho murder alf Louisa C. Fox,• near Ht. Clairsville, Ohio, in January 11169, was executed in the county Jail at St. Clairsville on •Wednesday afterimon last, at titi o'- clock. No one was admitted to the jail but the sheriff and his assistants and the newspaper reporters. Carr was cool and collected throughout, but the reckh..4inals which character. ized his condket during the trial en tirely disappeared. By his own con fession he is believed tube the greatest manslaughter ever born in this or any othercountry. fleacknowkslipis hav ing perpetrated fourteen ixild blooded murders and made five unsue'iiessful attempts to take life before the killing of Miss Fox. His execution was the first that ever occurred in Belmont county, Ohio, and created great ex citemeut. . , A TELEon.trure Dispatch of the 23th tnst says: On the 1411 last. a general strike took place on the Des Moines Itupids Governing improve ments at Keokuk, lowa, owing to an Increase of hours of labor without in crease of pay: The strikers number el from eight hundred to one thous and. /luridly Swedes and Irish. On , Thursday last about one hundred and fifty of the strikers, variously unite" made an attack on a few laborers who butt rest/med. work:. The belliger ents, all ollictired, adviiiwed• on the workmen with a red ,flag. Itedst auee was made and several hand to baud conflicts took plate, but the Workman were soon overpowered by the assailants and all quit work.' The rioters then moved on the stone quar ries adjacent, where a bloody — fight ensued hi which several men were seriously Injured. Tharioters, great ly augmented in numbers, then ad vanced on Scott's mill, when the Generaltsuperintenoeucur the worlimy, • McDonald, and two others escaped the vengerinee of the rioters by tak ing to the river iu a skiff. After wards Sheriff Bishop arrested nine of the rioters. There were rumors the morning that the works are held by seven hundred armed strikers, who declare intention tohtold there against any force that may oppose them.• About noon the Sheriff, with a large posse of police, left for t he seat of war, but nothing has been heard from them uplo three o'cloCk, although numer ous explosions, like the sound of .'imuskotry, have been heard during 'the afternoon. A raw members of the Pennsylva nia Senate who have been quite 'sore' over Gien. Irwin's seems., have tried their ,ntmoet since his election to get him Into legal troubles. Resolution after resolution has been brought for ward, ordering hhiarrest, and appear ance before the bar of the Senate, yet somehow or other his enemies , have always failed in their purpose, and succeeded in nothing but showing their hale toward the State Treasurer elect. Last week, as usual, they made another raid upon hint, but af ter the subject of his arrest, so that they could ask him a Int of silly ques tions, was elaborately considered In a full Senate, It was decided to postpone the matter until some fature time. We piesume this ends the question. Now let the Legislature* turn ha at tention to the law making huainews, and tat one of its earliest enactments I be the raising of the Treasurer's wate ry, the keeping of the unexpended balanise out of his hands, and If any interest can be realized from it, it to go to the tax payers of the State, and not, as heretofore, Into the pockets of a feat "seedy" politiciana, wades* hero and there throughout the State. Ir Is reported atid generally belief' ed both at liarrlsburg and here, diet the Mends of Mr. Mackey *lie Lelpr 'stature, will resist the wive Or tufY law taking the unexpended out of the State Treasuror's hands- They take this course now, It Is ,Ileved,, thinking that they will, have , 0444 4 t r ii ii14 . 0/o:*in ousting den. Irwin, and electing Mr. Mackey or sortie one.eise who will a tool in the hands of the lobbyists.' Haying faith in their ability to 'bring that result about, they desire the tin , expen d e d balance to remain where it to be used as they may deem pro per.. By all means thew, let a law ta king the unexpended balance out of the Treasurer's hands, his put upon .passage, and if , Mr. Mackey's friends see Pro* tri resist it, let the record shoe , that tick. , THE ,EOIUTU WIDE EWIEDLE. We referred last . , week to the at tempt made by Certain Parties in this county and etsewhere to drive' the Baltimore, Pittsburgh and • Chicago Railroad Company to select, a new route for their road other than through this county, or to force them to pay to these parties a large sum of Money for a .",squidters claim" which they are,ygeking to get on the route virtually decided amen by the B. I'. dr C. company. That these parties have any intention of building a rail road thenaseiVes from Pittsburgh to _Beaver is simply preposterous. The project is a new one, as most of the persons who are named In the quay bill never heard of the thing until they saw their names In_ the. news papera as corperators. • • It' Is therefore only a "pincher"—an effort to obtain money withobt giving am equivalent fort t. For the purpmeofshowing that this Is the objective point of these men we her Ireprodnce . what some of our Cotemporarits say' on the Same siddect: The Harrisburg correspond mat of the Washington Reporter of lust week refers to the matter in this wisp:„ . • Mr.iihurlouk, of Deaver, has introdun jed st.proclous "Serpent" lu the Mouse, In the shape of an Innocent, mild mannered /Olio railway bi/l. It has the queorest set of . corporators Itentaistlng of Don Cameron, Thema* A. Scott, M. S. (Duty, and, three - other Bea ver county men. 'lt, proposes to run a railroad from Pittsburgh to Deaver by 'way of the loft bank of the Ohio. Mr. Adair°, of PI/Slidell/Ma. couldn't "sco anything" In it; and so objected to its considenglon. Adair° likely wants a friend among, the corporaturs. Cbusid ering that bitter animosity , that was re- I ported as existing between Don Cameron and Tout Scott, and that Quay in his pa per had sworn eternal war against the Pennsylvania Railroad,this combination oritamett on the project In question Is most remarkable. Has the hatchet been buriodsiresdy T or is this the preliminary step of that. inipurtantsieremony ? • The tittle, peauctuL enterprise doesnot . . l ook much' tike or scalps, I am' eur prised at the tied appoaranoo of Mr. Van• kirk's time anionic the corporaturs. I think they are treating hint decidedly' shabby in view of his services, and it I were ilk his place I would juin Adair° and oppose the bill nuiess let in person. ally or by proxy. The Pittsburgh Dispatch. a wide awake paper on matters pertaining to that city, believes that the whole movement comes from the Pei:may'. nada Centml, and that the purpose of that • Company Is to prevent the building of a road on the iVouth bank of the Ohio, which 'lvo= compile with one owned or run by tliat cor poration on the North bank of the same stristm. The Dlapatehputs the question in this shape : That "Joielithirissir B. It. riehense. It is no l i nger doubtful that the Jost:ldled South Side railroad bill, now before thu Legislature, is either a dishonest attempt to citavitsT the building of a railroad on the left bank of the Ohio front Pittsburgh to a point Nil:mute Beaver, or an attempt to"ptuch" those, who wish, in good faith; to build the Feast Both tricks are as old as legidation itself. We Justly likeued the first, the other day, to the rat:e 7 eourse trick oilockeying." A great corpbottion ow ni or runs a Milrouil MI the north bank lir the Ohio, which forms the only tnilrirril outlet train Pittsburgh to the West. It is rumored that 'it wealthy rival compa ny cortemplabai the .budding of a cone 'pet big hoe on the other bank of the river Which wilf 'veva an untold blessing' to Iliii‘comutunitv. Thereupon the leading spirits of the drat line, assisted by such toirtingliolitleians as they own. wucoct schema ut s forisnall their rivals. They prepare a Bill empowering them to build it`Soutli Side 'railroad themselves, which, I if it pass, will enable them to OCCUPY TUE (muesli. This isall they want. Having got the bill Passed, they will let the whole thing drop, never sinliaapade In the south side, but put a paper blockade upon It, which will eflectually prevent any ether Company frOin sinking a spailethere. This .hail charter will be held, to Tannoitnif, over any corporation audacious enough to make the attempt. Thu "Audit ne.gaine is a little different but equally bath linos : top; that wino: corporation, like the COT nellsville Company, whose interest it is to build a road on the south side, is about to get a charter so to tie, 110112 e shrewd and maw: rupuloui politicians wish—through the Legislature—a bill giving TIMM the required charter. They then se'l this charter to the highest bidder, which might be Mie Cminellsville road, or might nut,— sell it tidier for Money or political little ! enee,—and thus "pinch" the buyer.' That one or other of these processes Is the object of the present South Sideth i ii road bill, is plainly seen In the M.. 4 casual planet, at flue list of ineorporators, The Pennsylvania ral I ri iad people:l.4llre p non. Mealy there. The politicians, ton, whose 'names are in I his . list, are known In he in close :titillation with the Pennsylvania calumny! W hat does Mr. Scott, orany of Ills retainers, want with 4 South Side mitoad t ill.siously IMI Cu, head oir the Connelfsvilfe people.' If the '!Arieglivily delegation" at Ihirrisburg wish to show the people at Pittsburgh that they are quiek image and light fbr her Interesia they will not fait to "squelch " this neat :little phut toplace a ilerpetual nil Iroad embargo on the South Side :if the Ohio, and cut oft one of the 1111k4 reabona. hie hope". of el competing outlet that nut people entertain. On the some wubJ et the Pittsburgh Gazelle holds forth a. follows: A bill to husorporate a company to tem struct a railroad front Pittsburgh down I the south side of the Ohio river,to a point ' at er near the borough of Beaver ; was introduced into the Rouse of Represen tatives at Itsgrisburgb, on the 17th hist, and referred,after an nnsucesaful attempt to pass it under suspenSion of the rules. Who proposes to do this thing? Is the question that will find arise in every odud upon learning the het We have no other clue to the answer of that ques tion than is found In the names of the proposed corporatons. They are .1. tt. Harrah, D. L. lusbrie, 11. McKinney, Jr., IL N. quay, .1. I►. Camert ts and Thomas A. goat. Then the Anther questions arise: Are not these gentlemen already connected with the powerful interest now in possession of the north side of the river? What is their object in seeking to get thit of the south aide? These are perfectly legitimate snbjeets of Inquiry, both for the members of the Legislature, and the people of -Pittsburgh. Commenting on the above, the Lateiinee Journal: We have seetilinportant railroad route' In Pennsylvania obstructed and the con atruition of a road' delayed fbr many year., by; parties who had no bops or In motion of building a road by getting a charter, and preoccupying the route by getting an engineer to run over. it, and stick down, 110Inepegs, end who would nut abandon their riehf to the route, al though they had not *secured tbe right of way from a laugh) property' holder on the route, without getting a large Mint fur their interest, which c onsisted chieflyin the "Charter." Public necessity And public sentiment will, ere long, compel the opening of another through line of railroad from East to West, and if, *lithe ifiazelte sup:gouts, the gentlemen named as eorporators in the bill referred to, ar. already connected with the owerftil in terest now in possession of the north aide of the river, what Is their object in I socking that of the south aide? Can It he to (*Minato the making of another raltrathibetweeti Pittsheightina Rimer? We me sun, that hewing-Amnia . will. the then acid the dialwentkistltoed+tter est to We Notion . otihe ehguirt corn* lo therconehttlelo. r ;$ • 4virrATENTAD MINDEN A usuniorlal algued by J. Cli horn Fell, of Phlladelphla y ei-Seere• tary of tho Navy, A. F.'". Berle, A. Pardee, James Roes' Snowden and anenrotheterbasireenntly-beets - • seated to theliegislatero, asking for favorable legbdatlon in regard to en patented tracts of lands. Vat, pill.: eat law directs the 13tti4Or . General to calculate the amount of purchase trioney, interest and feeedde on each unpatented tract, and atter the de scripUon of said tracts: have been transmitted to the Prothonotaries of the rasl►ective counties, and entered as hereliudter provided, the • amounts so found to be due, tegether. with (lye dollars for the labor and costa of mak ing out and aling,.and shall form an Aggregate sum which shalt be catered ,ita a lien docket to be provided and kept for that purpose; and that the saklaum shall bear interest at thereto of•six per cent. in conibrthity • witis tins law, len dockets bare been for. warded to each countynd oti the alit of 3lay next,and so on the 27th of No vember, the Attorney General may coin mence suit for the recovery,as it is provided by the act of Bth of April, 1869, of the amount of lien, with ad• ditional costs. • The meinoralists say , that the State might, of course to receive her fair dues, but that it Is not Just aftlirhav lug so long slept upon her rights she should at this late day, prosecute a suit' to recover against' a citizen a claim, nearly nil of which Is In some cases composed of the accumulated interest of inure than a century and a half, and in Most of over half a cen tury— a claim which In some in stances exceeds the present saleable value of the land.-÷They'also say that much, ot' this land has passed through. many. Minds since the, original war rant was issued by the State;.much is Owned' by widow and orphans; Much has been 501 a for taxes and is held by a county talk tide, and on hundreds of tracts more . money has been paid for taxes than would, with interest, amount to treble the present value of the land. And they:consid er that it is a grave question wheth-. er, should the land be sold under the law, the holder wield not have, a right to recover from the county all the back taxes he has paid. ' Tun following circular has been sent to us from Department Head Quarteni of G. A. R. with a request to.publish, w bleb we take pleasure in doing: . HEAIXWAItiERS—DEPT. OP PA. CIRAND ARMY OF TUE ItHrunLic, Mart:ol9, '7O. COMRADD3 t The love we bear the fallen soldiers of our State, can now be shown by the interest we manifest In the widows and orphans they haveleft. We have ull felt a pride in the course pursued by Pennsylva nia towards the children of the thin mouwealth, in fitting up comfortable homes, where the little 'ones are prop erly educated and cared for, till old enough to battle with the world themselves. At our last Convention we impel n ted a committee, with (lon. 14.astrunft ar Chairs:nun, ita visit the "Homes" throughout the State, and report at our nextEneampment. We did not Imagine then that the Legislature would undo its noble work, by opening,the doors of servi tude to the soldiers' orphans, and pay the preminin to task masters fordriv 7 ing them in,—yet such has been the case. By a bill that has' recently passed the Lower House at Harris burg; the mother or guardian of the child Is permitted to take sway from the School and receive a certain sum per annum folk keeping it. This vile bilistrikes ut the root Of the present system. It- empowers the guardian to enter the Home Where his wards may be,and break the course of its moral and Intellect ual training, and while he works the little orphan for his own 'advantage, the State promises to give him an additional t 82.50 per annum, for his so-called guardianship. Aid this vile system of peonage is to be the lot of the soldiers' orphans of Penn- I I sylvaola..., There are those who greW fat on the bhxxl of the fallen, who would turn in abhorrence from wealth wrung from the orphans' face or ob tained from this'sale of the so-called "children of the Commonwealth;" . I appeal to yciu my comrades; as organizations and Individuals, to raise your voices In condemnation of this movement. By the love you bear to the dead, and the pledges you have made to the living, let not thwe chil dren be scattered through the State, 'bound but to tasks masters, and checked in their developments. Ask that they be retained where we can See their daily growth and Improve ment, till time places them beyond the treed of our care. Let letters and petitions be sent In from comrade s and every, post in the State, till the legislators \at Harrisburg., become cvnv ince& that: the surviving soldiers of I'ennsylvanla, and Its warm heart ed citizens will not permit this odl us bill to become a law. You now have an oppcirtunitylor work, and I feel,' my comrades, 'you will act promptly and at once. \ A. It. CALuotrx, Cominauder Official Rom. B. BEATH, MOE 1111fth And lllos Army. A correspondent of the Clikargo Tribune, at Salt Lake City, writes: The population of Utah is, doubt less near 100,000, of where / to begin with, twice the usual proportion ere children. They do not themselves claim above 12.000 militiamen; and I am satisfied no more than 15,000 could be squeezed out, even by "rob. tang the cradle and the grave.' In 1800, we are told, "they made steam engines, guns, pistols, and could cast ainall cannon. They have never friatle any of these things. They are tolerably well supplied with small arms, guns, and revolvers. There is enough powder in the Territory to I make quite a squirrel hunt. There las lead mine far South, which would furnish bullets. They have threeor four pieces of artillery, sold or elem. doped at the breaking up of :Camp Floyd, which would assuredly burst If ever flrett They Look passable well at a distance in re• procession. They have, since the bulding of the railroad, a amity supply • of trans portation. They have a limited supply of ponies, very little other stock, and no surplus of grain,Vegeta bles or fruits. The cowstruction of the railroad brought Into requisition perhaps five thousand men and ten thouftwel mules. Before It had fairly entered Utah grain .went up to twelve cents a I pound, and hay to fifty dollars a ton. Tins shows what the coantry Is in the matter of sup. ;Mew . The northern part is muck the -best agriculturally, and should it be given up it would be hard to sustain the &Lannon population. The fact is they are the most rant o p in the world—ignorant, pover tretricken, half starved, tiod-forsa ken, priest ridden, besotted fanatics. Taklngaway their lieutenantgeneral, "and there would be little left of the military show they would fain amuse themselves with. —A Provhienee:mad awe for his &lghter between her three suitors, 1 1. Y plaguing Veeven up" with them. Ho,..det up" the came and .neither of them got her. WHO DECLIIIIO OW ADIEIRISIIIN - • .S,OIIIIIIBRCE. itAkeesarie from , the PreskienC.-He .i:.44,eyeehunends Immalinte Cbngfoos• .;:loivort.Acliononihe &hied. . WAsfittorrox,ifferch fowlnglithe we of the Preilde sent to Congress to-day-In relation to the decline of A 7b the Senate eno2r a dtiiel=il Wires: "." Initter'Executive - message - of•Dec. 14.1869, to ,Congreeithe. Importance of takingsteps to novice ouetkalying merchant .Meritie : weal urged:and a special , meserigrpromisedatotiltdure day; during the' peseidtstedoni ter Otromending:itnoreapecilksdly to accomplish thhtresulL; Now that: the,Oommittee of the Hem of Rep.: resentativosi Intrusted withthe labor of ; ascertaining theeawle of .thO - Tdo.. cline of American co:menet - hos completed ititwOrk, and submitted a report to thelegbilativehraneheff the Government,. [;deem this :grinning time to execute;thatpromise....., The very able. calm, and ;exhaust tivo report or thuCtinomittee.polnts out,,the greatallows , wh ich; have prodUced ; the ,dectihe ip 'ear ,corn‘ com merce It is a national humiliation ?ve arc tune ,:oltilibeiied- 4. :WY from f( 2 . o l ooo iak tiitVl 6 49l oo o. P 47 ally, pitchisiVe; . peasage money which we should 'Share with ;other nations, to foreigners for doing, this work which. should; lie done toy AO , 'micro owned and'Airierican manned vessels. Thli is' direct drain: open the resioureesorthe conultry.paust so nuich money,Cqual too nitinkif,lirtio the sea, s o far as the nation Is comeer 4 iced. AOatitui of the vast and ever increasing !Metier renolinsca of .the United AgitateS, extending di* from • one to the other of_the. 'great WOWS of thottverld; w o,c t 'hide* Moms, ' .1 16 1i' ulattogrneeone • its . full Atiecoiliffii. triteartic nOiWter only'inereteof ild'enidatier thediffieuitYor ttldningttreireprit„; I thensfore'piff inierhiest:pleafee Corti*, action in this 'Matter 1n q way! Rl' secure the Increase of Arlieticarr counneree.' AdVianeed period of the'yeat. and the,firet that:nob:attract 'Air ship building" Willtintitiably,lie en tere until 'this q n Unsettled by . Cougeess' ' andlhe (nether fact there sh ould be delay ail large 'VezieCls 'Contracted' for thts*year will fail of completlon'beinit Winter sets 'ln, and will thitefore'be'carried for another year, inducer' ire to 'ft , quest youreirly consideration of this, subject. :I regard it of, such grave portance,' affecting every interest of the Country 1,11110-grost en exteut,l that any method whielf Will gain-tire -end will secure a vieh; Motional Meas.! him; Building ships and navigating them utilizes a.va.st amount eremite at home; and employs thousands ;of workmen! inlheir construction' .and manning. It Creek:at-home market for the products Off , the Cann and the shop. ~ ..lidiminishes'ihe balance: of tradeavinst us precisely to t he ex tenh • of fietgbb and passage money paid tot American - vessels, rind gives us a s un premeds upon the seas of, Inestimable; value -in ere ;Of. foreign. war;.' Otiri navy at the Commencement or the, late war consisted of leas Allan 100 'vessels of about 140,000• tuns, and; n; force of about 8,000 men:. We. drew ; from the merchant marine-.-which. had Lest the government 'nothing,; but which had 'teen a source of na-, Lionel wealth - 600dressels, exceeding 1,000;000 tool, and about 70,000 men, to aid In the suppression of the Re. hellion. Thlsitatementdenionseptes the value of the merchant marl near a means of national defense in time of war. . The Committee on the time of the Reduction of American Tunteige, ter tracing the cause of Its; decline, submit two. Ms, wideli,:if adopted, tney noneve win resioreinvie nation its maritime power. Their, report shows with great minuteness the act ual and comparative Ameridautun nage at the time of its greatest .pros pertly, thenetual and comparative decline since; together with the crus es, and exhibits "other • strotistliso material interestin reference to the subject. As the report is before Con- greet, I .willnot recapitulate any of its statistic* but refer only to the methods recommended by the Com mittee to give back to us our last commerce. As a general rule, it can be adopted. I believe a direct money subsidy likes I lableito abuse than hid tact aid given to thesame enterprise. In this armor however, my opinion is that subsidieo, white they may be giv en to special lime of lout mers or other vessels. should not ho exclusively ad- • opted ; but in addition to subsidizing very desirable lines of ocean traffic, a general ,11.19bitattCP9 should be given, In an effective way, and therefore tem mend to your favorable consideration the two bills proposed by the Com mittee, and referred to _in this me- U. S. GRANT. £reeufire Mansion,. lOothingfon, March 23,1870. IC E. ANNUAL CONFERENCE. terms the eotreepeudenee of Ike Pitt. thuette Join:wows, Pa., Mar. 24, 1870. Last evening a very larg audience assert:ll4W to hear a sermon by Bev. C. A. }loin*, 1). I). This morning the Conference as sembled at 8 o'clock forreliglous set , vices. These lasted one' hour and were of a very interesting character. At '9 o'cloek Bishop Janes appeitroci on the platform end the busineis of the Conference at once began. Rev. P. Combe, of the Philadelphia Con ference WM introduced and , ?onimti; nicatedthe :greetings of Rev. Dr. C. Cook, formerly a member of our Con ference. Dr. Nesbit presented the resolutions drafted in reference to death of Bishop Thompson, which *ere adop& ted by a rising vote. Drs. I Cox, Holmes, and Hartshorn wereappoin ted 'the Committee to attent) the fu neral at Delaware, Ohio. A large number .of resident and visiting ministers were introducpd to the Conference. • ' Inasmuch ILI Bev. T. M. Hudson now enters upon the fiftieth year of his ministry, be was requested to preach at the next SeAsion of the Con ference a semi -centennial sermon. The following chugs of young men were culled up and addmmed by the Bishop: Elisha B. Webster, Jesse F. Core, Hugh H. Pershing, IMnial S. .Montyre, John T. Riely, Lewis •B. King, Benjamin E. Edgell, Theodore Finley, Isaiah Winters, John H. Huddleson. Jaws A. Swan, Jared B. Wallace. •Sitnps3n W. Homer, Samuel H. Cravens and William B. (bate. Theseareeandldatesforden eons' orders. The address Waii masterly. :Its thought, diction and elocution were huiltless. Its powerful utterances must have produced a deep Setpres• lion on the hearts of the young men. The following persons were elected to Elders' orders: Joe. N. Pershing, Jos. Mechem, Geo. Orbln, Thos. Pat terson, William F. Smith, James E. Starkey, Charles W. Siett, and 1). C. Knowles. Rm.. J. W. Baker represented the Allegheny district, A prosperous year. The people here are enjoying the semions of the Conference. This afternoon t he annual missiona ry sermon *as lax...ltched by heir. W.' C. P. Hamilton. —Charles Stewart, of Butler county but who has been employed at Mill creek, Clarion trounty, for sometime, borrowed live dollars from his, pros- Is ctive mother in-law lust wek with which to hire a conveyance to take her dough ter to the parson's. ,ClCarlem hired a sleigh, skimped a quanity of whiskey himself; and then started for the bride. She refused to leave the house to Ise married, and Charles then proceeded to bring thOrninister tothe house. Being intoxicated, yo says ho lost his way, and sold the sleigh, robes and bel ls nine dollars. Charles was subsequently arrested for stealing, and is now in Clarion Jail for trial. 1! Alli PR. ler , 1 9 .21 1 1111 " 4 J: MI TO . C., Mar cs, MO.; Con satins, at last v etolo thy 1 054 3 rpeople of the Distriek: ' " *-three twine ono tr th;fues been ilet a coluddenition 'of its business. - This ti e t t s*=7ll= 44.Y9ti 2,11 1 %44,41f0e 1 .7.41t la/ , W44 .nWIM , not only VIII 1 1 4144WWW100_4 1 4 discuss.* in& also nem; constant contact. Wltts' the ;clams, who never lose an tffortunityof making their wants known: A nuaihOcOthnportaist bills hive pasta! foe Mouse, among them laime to abolistqte Miry bam and to al /WittlStfrost of 100 r cent In all COMM W.M.contnict Ia made to that effect. 'nide- law 4111 relieve the peo ple henivery =eh from the exor bitant yloOLl!icit or those who have ntoneitti Man And who are willing to take aliilie i cLike under .the ent law litrocure large Interest. It is very co MS_ on i to pay from p to :II per ceuttlihte on the very beet securi ty, and' tl4u to on large arnanntA and on logg.thne. The chileges against the Cloven). ment Orin*, A. M. Clain); have assumed It isingible shape, and rare now beingannsidered by the Senate ComlnltWgfin 'Printing. They are seventeen - U number' and substan tially as-110tretpi — first, placing imcsi perieneed *ill in charge of the most importaniliepartmentsofthegreatest 'PrlatlllgmtAllshinent in thetWorki , therebyvtrtioss tii the Go V,. erninenkc., . ndi-that on account of the blundina and misprints in a 'lather of /Ineuments that bad to be re-printed, u 9 causing a loss to the Governmof from $BOOO to 810,000. Third, employing hands not needed at an expa tirs. $1 of_each day; or about 6100 per . • -Fourth, that he has employed itillopy revisor without the nanctkin ofieW. Fifth, that the pres» ent foremtukefthe printing Is totally Itl&mlpeNatt . 'Sixth, that the pres ent chief,i d e specification room was d • for ,incompeteney. Seventh, thattli s ere is a recklms waste of inaterlat/ Eighth, union solders antigen(' printers intim been discharg ed and reboil' kept itr office.: Ninth, that a stettotyping 'establishment . haa been'PlatOased without sanction of "faW. Tenth, "th'at" incompetent and useless Mechanics are kept on pay. Eleventh, to correct - other los nes, he remit* compositors to dis tribute, setud -correct six thous and ‘!erini . " Inelght hours from badly written,,Mikalinost Illigible manu script. .Twitiveth, that becairse the men eonldnot perform the foregoing work they - 4ire dlnharged. Thir teenth, that Vie men in theoffice are driven; wil is injurious to the pub lic I n terests.l•Fourteeth , tlAt former ly there wal l enough “pi" made in the office to keep one man censtantly busy In settl/ig it up and distributing —now, thinnest) hi •"honest." Fif teenth; partiality to men from his own dlstrietauffalo, and Injustice to others. Sixftith, discharging men for inanupetency and receiving them ir again as co tent, and repeating. this over o ver again. Seven teenth, !hat e discharging geed printers andlitepubikates without causedie hat 'slandered and abused thein inAteli newspapers he. Mr. Clapp has pOri a written reply to thole charges t iatt It IS lifi yet tumor lain what thaiesult will be. The reconstOotiontsts of Tennetsee are well repr*ented in Washington and they ate vigorously at Work moulding public. opinion In favor of holding a new tdeotion in Tennessee. It Is reported that a bill which is fit• voted by GeOlatler, Is already pre pared look/utto that end. Holders of Tennessee health+, claim that such a movemeneat thia time would work lajury to the i l3tate, and depreciate Wee ivecitt. , . After weeks' of daily conflicting rumors as to the nature of the report thatthe Housaf,lprmnittee on Foreign allaini woultk„make on the Cabala questibn, thrift people are .at .last assured that ' 1 the Committee has agreed on aeport, and that it is subatantially.::'sis follows: " That the President ist*Fitructed to declare, and maintain Strict and impartial neutrality onitie part ofoUr Govern- Meat in the 7,i:opted now existing between the: pie of : Cuba and Spain; and t .alt acts and provis ionstie the sin . approved in 1818, for the punishinent of crimes against the United Slide shall he construed to apply equa* to each .tithe parties In existing caliest between Cuba and Spain. ...4 6,..‘,, This pro rt Is nearly like the resoluti on by Almenal Banks on the . pub of February last, and without dnialit, with some slight mallfleationsAlanks' resolution will be pressed Mitkote. The advocates of, Cuban laipandence now Ls!l sanguine thatlibisresolution will pass both Rouses *d be signed by the President at 'abort notice if'pushed forward, and iirkth the same beiliger r eat, rights alitire now accorded to spate by ourlptalnurient, Cuba will gain her inolepeqtledee within sixty days. ,•t .7 Thu Geneea s t . d Office is in re ceipt of it• report . from the Surveyor ' General at Phattsmouth, Nebraska showing the jpt»pletkin of the stir-, veY of tea ad tonal townships on; Lodge Role. n ear • near the south.: westernpart of '' ate, embracing an aggregate 'II ' of two 'hundred 1 and: thirty t - and four liundred 1 I acres. These lauds are well waVire(kj and the surfiscaj'along the streana is gentlylevel 'With a good isoll' Well adapted 'for tatitiVatlon. The up lands ; are more rollidg and In places liro-. ten with a thits gravel or sandy soil. This tract included within the limits of the grant Made to the UnloW Pacific Railway , .-lalllieh erixtis. thd. tract. Also, from Helena, Montana,: showing the completion of the Bur- , vey of two additional. townships, and eighty-eight miles' of standard lines In Madison windy, in the southern part of. the territory. The surface of -the land eltibraced In the tarn townships sublPild , . is generally rolling prairietlO a s • ~ .nd rate soil -well adapted foe-cultivation. These lands are well watered by the Stink; frig -- Water rimer and its affluents, which.afford fine water power. The greater part ofthese lands aro claimed by actual setticiamumy of whom:have made ex tensive inaproveme ins. The town of Sheridan, loaded on this tract Is a thriiing place. . ' ' —Dutton • speeulators have sunk E 300,000 i n (I)limibus, Georgia, Ulla season. • J ._ Penn i a. ogolature. It. - . 1 .4 i, , :........4.4 ,to did " i n l c ° l ll„ .. " 4 ' A ci dI V „vir a 14 .''' yr. Itiet v IZl r dWisi* o ut' ni„nu• count im !Seminary Rill,' Allegbenreouo• 11. * ka7l _p* • 144 m 1. . te . • number of local lill a ttiasixt The ',Aim oon federal ireponed, l-wprolestainst,-the panaure, by Ategrenso(4/serman's Fund ing BR ilfitrBE.—Sqmo Allegliehrtilahtt idat ters passed, : The Border Raid bill - Was objeeied afrthe Calendar: It:Wee', in the event otita passage, takiover two mullion *Bars from the &ate Treasury. Safrirs, March 23.-,The appropriation bill Was debated all day. 'ln the. evening BMW was si ribscesilon relative to State Tresitier clett,' bet it was postponed for the present. Bones.—A Joint resolution—appoint ing Thomas Nlcholrhn, Esq., at Deaner, Commissirmer to examine all claims For Ninon" from Penesilvaniu, at a salary ol" $3,000 per annum—was agreed to, It was lesolved to pay the mentheriot a corn ett* in a coutintial election case 11300 melt; andlheir clerk the usual atkoVance. A resoluumrtoadjourit April ith passed. resolution was adopted authorizing trustees to invest In Pennsylvania ntilrient bouds. A hit to 19creasu the uumber ur Supreme Judgiat to six, passed. SENATE., March 24.—M r. Haan intro duced a bill fixing the compensation of the high sheriff of Beaver county for services In . ..conveying prisoners to lilxmout llos pittilniid,Wetern Peolu.ntiary. The ap propriation bill wes'then debated till the hoar otanjournment. • :'l4Uusit.—A bill authorizing the Erie :S; Pittsburgh Railroad Onnpany to dispeSe of etpiwi stock, intastal. The bill author. iiing turnpike, plank road and caual corm patties to issue bonds and senure them by mortgage, anti alkuition portions of loath and lines for public use, tufts amended and passed. The hill to permit railroad COM. - pAlittl to build lateral roads, ULU) pissed. The bill - J.:N*lm; Railroad, Camel, Navi gation and Telegraph . companies to make uulforw . reports, to thti Auditor ,llentral, pesied. The bill . contianing . the jolt:Mkt. •tlon 'el' Bates' lthsuirrof• the l'etwsylta uiti Volunteers, ut tin: dollars a VullUlle, wised sewed reading. A bill auttiorming We - ertectitrn ofu Mounmelit iii front ur the capitol buildings, in meniury of l'cunsyl vatilit volunteers who fell In combatting the rebellion, passt.' Thu llousV bill di verting taxes from tavern licenses, tneit. trey, &c., (rum the Sinking Feud, prised. The bill requiring diviSion cauvassers to prepare the voting lists usually prepared by 4.3-4t . &3ori, neet,l“l reading. l,tiixamk, March 2&—Mr. White in quired why the now railroad omnibus bill had not been presented to the (My. for his signature; to which It was replied by the Clerk of the Senate, that the bill passed. Use lit:use on Friday, and was returned to the Senate after Its adjourn ment; and, the Speaker being absent, it mini...l4lot be signed until the tollowing TiMsdiak, when it was returned for cleri bud informalities by the Governor; had to be re-transcribed, and was signed by the Opeaker on Wednesday, and was heldin the Senate—as Lt usual in 14111111.1 tautens- r tor six days, awaiting contingen cies of its recall. The appropriation bill Was resumed and a aection passed grant ing money Weever/al llospitals. Durlim a.dehate on the question of holding an o'enhrgseaeionen•Monday,touch bad feeling and abusive language were in dulged in. The motion was lost. tlovar..—Nothlog "Interesting to our reader* transpired. Adjourned till Mon day evening.. EWA" StailLtali. —New York has live thousand grant children who never 'attend school.• • —Mr. Ilurlingnme Intended to s,t tlq In cttllfignin after his mission fur elitrtit ha/ ciasot4 • —Ten dollars was the wager which induced a Connecticut woman to eat a bushel of roast Oysters. —Two Western girls decided the ownership of a lover by a duel with ease knives. One lost a chignon and the, other it twait. —The French limiter is •'break ing" the newspaper into in New' 'York ; but the pit.ets are not particularly valuable. —A New York woman was ! , :tvtvi from suicide by a friend who caught her by the !wets as she jumped from tx window. —A Gold -Owe in a Westerner's pocket wasn't melted the other day when the lightning struck and con sunned him —Carlotta Patti will go to Califor nia in Mdy,and in the fallslie intends to make n profeastonal visit to South —The female jig-dancer at the Bos ton Adelphiu Theatre is Miss Clara Burton, a member of the Thawniut ,avenue Church. —Mrs McFarland Richardson is now the twcupant of a cottage at Woodside. II part of the OState OF her. late husband. —A Savannahs negro accidentally bhot his hand otr while etwking a n volver with the lauthhle intention of killing , a policeman. Ma&iager Bateman and t:eorge Jordan, the actor, had a little rough and tumble fight at the New York I tote! a few nights since. —The body of a little Kentucky boy, frown to death last week, tees guarded two days and pointed out to the parents, by his faithful dog. • ii serious diairuity in Louisiana, 'foci chirfsinee, Wuq tinpplly preven ted by the death of the aggres.'sor and the wounding, Of two other men. —A• drove of 6S i turkeys passed through Italtimoru last week. They Inereolne all the way from Ohio on foot, and were hound to Connecticut. A.Youni; Westerner who fell heir to a large property a few months since has penuriously starved himself ou slo,muld it Ant.e. —Chicago boasts of a wedding where the blissful principals aggre gate thirteen feet in length, and as,b,, "How is that for high?" —Bevels means to have colored clerks in the Treasury Department, and the white young ladies are in a flutter ildistreks about it. _ —The family cat taking it small bite Out.of a presented turkey and (lying in .1.0110:111:4011ti immediately, warp - what armed ,an Indiana family ittitribeing iitryelmined (6 week-. —Miss Kate Putnam, of Nev Yorl , , u daughter of the publisher, has re ceived from the Melleal College of Paris the certificate of TITS SatiVitil, won thiS year only by herself. —The last of Washington's held hands has died again ; this time in St' Louis. ()imar !he was 111.1 years old and all his faculties unitnpairetl. lie Is still living in several other places. • e —Casablanca, an Italian counter feiter just arrived at New Orleans, imitated his namesake who stood On the burning deck. lie would no go with the officers tilf their revolvers euchred his bowie knife. —Women enjoy military rights on the coast of .Africa, and an English naval officer says a regiment of rifle women which he saw there, and that contained not a Angle was equal to any corps he ever tact. —New York is at present regaled with the history of a deputy sheriff sent from the city with four convicts to Sing Sing, the whole party get- Wig. drunk on the excursion, and the police, who finally took charge of them, putting them all'in jail to gether. Cum —Virginia city la to havedon'ts log match fotd nurdeof 411,pg0 and the charripiodship of flevada.. —The governmerOuts cox laded , the treaty with the Republif Col-. umbia for tho,right ctfAvaY f in teroccanie c.v*Ll acryaki the hams, °Marlin). . it tiro on - Humboldt • street, Cleveland, on Friday last i lirs. Bare, a German woman, atallter child, were burned to death. tier husband —A.- T% •Stewiirt,) New . York merchant millionaire, has reduced the rents on all his city property from tea ttittilrty.(pqr . withentOolicitatiMilif thethenanbii • —Rev. Wm. G. W....Lewbb a Brom- Inent Methodist 'minister or raltigh, keepsie, N. Y. .has given out that he and flintily will soon unite with the Episcopal Church., Ho.'came from Massachusetts'. • -Boston hod l'fartha" on Friday evening; with Mias Kellogg as ".11nr tha" and Miss PhillinS,Lotti and &t -aint in the other three parts. 'rhe critics theto'speak of 1111 w Kellogg's "Marguerite' r as painfully artificial. —Wakeman, the dead New York journalist, met hisend bravely, bade hie wife good bye, pressed her hand and is the subject ofa newspaper item as affecting as-anything he over did binvelf. —Senator Wilson, Chairman of the Military Committee, requeAed Gen. Sherman to give his views upon the Army bill, passed, recently in the Douse, before the Senate• Military Committee. Tien. Sherman responds in a long letter, in which he approves of the bill in nettrly all its features. —Judge Treat, of the U. S. District Court at St. Louis, has decided that a man who suspends and does not re sume paytnent of commercial paper within fourteen days is a bankrupt under thr law. That:llse in question was G. A. Steinwinder, , large retail grocer, who allowed three Idnaloql dollar:3 to go•to protest. STANDARD PRINCIPLES There Nhould be dondardprineiptes in medicine as well as philosophy. Without a "zero" to start from ' or a "standard" from which to (-oleo lote the deviations, the principle and prac• the of medicine, in fact the principles of any art or science, cannot be satis factorily elucidated.or properly un derstood. :I.lid `art gild science of, medicine:is divided intocceveral .deptirt :mots, each Irving their standard principles which for: thb basil . for their Scientific elucidations. Every ixarticular part of the htiman body has had its average natural pro pertiestxmstitnents, quantities, &c., reduced upouscientifie principles to a standard of nearly definite piCupoa time.; in health. This servw, for, the more correct elucidation of; tlitiase by compark4ln and measurement of the deviiitiims from the heal thy standard. Thus the average proportionate constituents of the blood in health being reduced to standard, any considerable deviation from this standard quality of the blood is dkenves. The same in the urinary excretion; tbo average natural proportionate mustituents of +whir in health form the standard, a ny eon.iderable devia tion from which ba-ds, either in pro portion or constituent., exhibit. di:i -e.:lse. This hitter Li a practical fuel' which we are daily 'demonstrating at our office ' No. 12:3 Grant street, d which any one can have testNl to their entire satisfaction. 6y sending a standard sminten (, nomilig's uripe l Irlr scientlre analysi§ and eXlatnitta licni. If we fuel to detect the" morbid emditions," if any ; or to determine the nature of the - disease, or the organs affected, as the lungs, liver, stomach, brain, kidneys, womb, .lc., there shall be no charge made. Be sure to give the age of the patient at the sante time, es fhe urine varies in properttonute constituents in the different ages of infancy, child taxa!, manhood and old age. The name and residence of each patient should be given also, in order to avoid confusion of aties where Medicines are taken. New Adeert isements ,k dastalstratorts Notlce.—Lrtitqr of All • Inisi•trattorr;huvin,, her,, ty,rnmerl 1. , the re ly. Prriller MI the ...tato or John w,cno.lc, late of llxecoon two - Dello. I:,.aver a runty, Pr, .alt p. , l4ll.lntlelrted to ~lel an:sten, by n• that Inttur•ill.,ty pAynk.•bt I. r.. r..r-Ist. Jot vie:: rhiln). nzal.r..l. 7:10 OW. a 01 I.r\. nt 01m11 duty a th,..rtla.ortl for ...111....n..0t na.orltll:. 31.1'31.111 relllOhe Notice. Letter , Tvit.l,ll.llllly l e i 11:1,i11,!irr,1 1.•11.41 L. 111 • .1. , ,e, rib„ r the M IC , Mert Tem& olere.erll: • , 1 well hmnehip, 11,merronniv. P. 1., Al 11,...,1 , &Met: Lr omd I,la , Mr I. r. by ',millet! that , no- media, t topuent MI thew has-. tnq vlnftw , a,iinet The cam , pr rent lbel. Ma ly amhemlealr , ,l fir errt , lement mr3l.Mr•) tbp Vlri PATTON'. J r r. BISS.EII4 & GO., •_:5., Liberty Street, Ink tt+l, ita-..-h, l'it.. Maaufactururs of all Size-) and Styli., of (#1 S. SUMMER; FEN DERs. 'KING RANGEs VRII (Mil 11 . 60,1 ',Jokin g sTovE Fon cum,. The .Thrboin .''ore fin• Coat& Wool, 1).1 Ibe Mack Cool: W." wi ) S. • .1 RE EN?' STO .Ifor 13111:it2= Coohing-. We \Val aitt I Isci r ()pi tim GEORGE MA UN MERCHANT TAILOR, Brortd y. New- Beightent. HAVING JUST RECEIVED ASI) WELL :•1•11.1(:1•Ei) OF SPRING AIID SEER GOODS) Consisting of CLOTIIS,CASIINIEICS4, I.:Jigllents and Ire4ings, In. iq Priparra t•lT.ittke• loth%ler IN'THE LATEST STIES, (IN TIM tiiiMITENT IsiOTI(11, .VXD 'lll P.ll nST RJ: tsON Utl.E 'YE!: 3I S nirtirs iiny thing in liii and ilourntis cif N 'MC, N1?.1.' 1V(;u1.1 ;11) well TO G-INIK A CALI, Ilef.we Part:tinging Elirc ,Is Iris Nlock of Goods is all of Fird Autufartuer -AI.O A. Full t4t.oellc or Beady • Made Clot•hingr. 4 • I IMME ANU ACT r umar:Sll :m aw ..daverelsentents. ii cared Of Dcistutki anaCatarrat4 a oluipia *easeo7 and grill sand the renew , free. 11 ws. C. ISMCIET'r, Iloboken, N. J. max.TJ;ia , _ _ THE . OARTICLE OF FOOD. For Twenty-I're Cents you ran buy of yqqr t Orayttisl or tifyeer,upueessyr of giLot M3Sk PA iii,V„laqtair : fiLAWAT "r e aT2II - F4iett,tc . qma . ko&l4 quart. 4 Blanc Jlange,. and a like quantity of 1'11(1111,3gs, Custaiybr„ lotte Raw, .tr., &e. ft ix by far 11w cheapest, healthfest.awl most (blinking food In the world. : ; ' RAND SEA MOSS FARINE CO., Plantation Bitters S. T.-1+.4;0-X This te . onderfid Vegetable Restora lire is thesheet-anchor of Mefreble and debilitated. As a• Thule and Cordial for the aged and lanyard, it has no 05110119 stomachic.f. As a mae dg for the .Nereous Weekness to which Wimsen arc especially subject, it ix XII. Ft-weeding (Tern other dinaulanL all climates, tropical, temperate or frigid, it fit:lx as a xpecific iir crf ry ve etc* cp./disorder which undermines the bodily strength and breaks down the animal spirits. l•br sale by all brug- I gist,. notr3o:4;m:, FARMERS ' Their m. 10%. alai °there', tan in It mon, rapidly E • USTIUTED FARNIEILS' ci1:10 iy GEo. E. Jr Practical Farmer and Author, end late Agtienlti..r.sl Eng kkk eer ul S. V. l'entr.tl Park. for aced It hhtore I,l.nraing. It a ounr.(l,l.thter money 11.1.e.thft- bane bought it. and 100LI•Pyid• mune want Ir. 13th cuithea f fitly. Liar' Agel.to hat A 11. 111."11- It AHD, 11,0eh...nnt 9t. NIP i A. t !..lI3C THE GREAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY! Dr. %VALUER'S CALIVOIENIA VINEGAR BITTERS. - 41 More than 500,000 Parsons Ik•r.r tqrtilririlly in 111. r Womlvriu PS. oloil To effort Z' • , 0 Wfia• .1 IZE 12 ; r 1: ° FT: f_3 2 :6 UZI 1)1:1 N K. m..h. of Poor 14 tlua Wh Pro° r r - inn and Illettoto Liquor*, thnl lloClOted i P; 1 1V...1, ill ‘ 1 11.1001 1 11 , 11 14..1&:-.2,10. 1101 e, ...ltsstorcr.," 111.11 :1,11 nl.O. r on to nrunkrnne, utol ruin. but 3, .1 trte no3llente, nt-nle iron] the t.atite t:non. herb- of l'ulnornla, free from nil Alcoholic St Ina lams. Tney Ore theultli.l7 IILOOD IE It and LAI: 41.,:tviiigyrinelple. pernsa itesecooor amtlw.htunuo, ,, of 11,,, on n'rrl. Carrl . lllyr oclall poitobou.llll.4/t , r, and rt,tor. rue Mood In 114 1 211113 condlllon. .Nt3 tot, the..• ti t.r. :Le. ur.llnz co ntreenon...anl ',lnn. Ion,: nun( II $lOO s‘lll be t. it 1,. .v;.;• ed the betty. art Ind .I,••trdp tonter.tl ...no. or 4,1 her tundur. and the t nal ttrgatt. a I>tr ' l Itryintd the point of. pp:lir For I ullanituolory A Chronic Libra* maiDus and Doug, o)*prp*la, or luall. ifeatioa, lillllony Bemllarnt. and Ilu Pryer.; Dlarraal. oy the 111100i4Liver,Klittieya and tilladdeeohe., Biller* two i***: *too *ocre—ml aorta Dl*: elliCal ere moron by Vitiated Blood, Sir Ille:1 i• rrtt.lttved Ili , derail.;, ut..at of Dime:dive Orman*. Cicalls, the 'Nlu.,te.l 1/10 ‘lll,n.,cr tun 4.1 It, Issfel:ll.4 llsts.s:l4:l tA...kni In Pins yp isf Stsss • 1 , n., fl NA.II %..0 n tot It ob.tnltt.: 1110 Sst•is It IA Isins.:llsil I, Is s s, 111 Is 11 , s, on Is Inn st twin Lull inn Ltntllli tif Ibc es) ests.:l:l u ill Is:snows Pl., •1 . . PE nt!it.r tlfotlS. horkm.: In In rY4t..1111 111 .1) uunnl thou,and, are e , r‘o r.l or I, Mos ell. 11;1 , t1.11.0., 1:••111111r LI 14.1 lweritsat,:r tkere MOT+ Ewe no °final. For tall 4.1. 11., r. 1 , 1 tarellills ntot.tol colt 1.0111, prlut,tl in four lanzon;‘,. Gerlo.tn en.l.ch wy ,p:1111.5. %VALI:Lit. Proprietor. 111 — oulmereo N. V. It. 11. Mc l / 1 1S-Vl.ll & Cu .1/1 - 14;zisl- and .% Ll , lO, Salt FratiLlAcoCaltrornl“, .12 A: 31 Commere, St N 1 :sol.to BY ALL DILI 4“: h • AND DEAL ."13,1, Urn 1111 l urro %LILL TEN YEARS IN WALL STREET It im .1131 i N , :r.. Li,e di. Nli•d. iced Luton. I dd. Niu , it and 311 1.1.1 . i. grcr, rid:. -pi • liipitur.oli•, urclcluil, Sc., ill nu. of \aud. rLf lt . Ili. ',Lau utheti; mg- id noted Witte,. Life ,il.l Ut.c-i.uiiiiiod - Nruil Sri IS •:11 .1. 115 lord vdidi 1 rr ti '1 . 4) C 01 1 ,411 mi. II vv... l'ruvuleltLally In) d.lll.4lita r w. 4.) r lured n. 11. a'lli lit n6~plu flll,ll, ILL Rt., F. IL N -nye% I-:.totl. To Mail° Gmb I r it ..tntont-,.., A ono. In, It. Ono 11l , to nACTIC ‘v.itit, Cu, Mar'. m 'inn, I lit. Mitt _ . • nt• n Writ .L i••• p.,..• I:LnF. , ullial..1:14•1.11ad 101 %V. FON, j.. N 0...! lin rr.n. -" • Cal INlAll u filkCiliNß `•• -s urt%•••"" 1,•114 1.1; w yrEn •nlar rnd •In, :Will,. I:1 LEY SiFI rrl sr; wit ISL Viti i • Me.. ur :in wARTE D, melt, lionur% and l'ctrix, to . ur 411114 :10 , t Mitnloltry .on 4°, :A. t 14 owl /In 1:..ttr0.1.1. Ix, W e , V‘r,,ln. h Inierm igon way hat cotteernlttz the work he MI in • awl• at tI,Ir re-Lichee to It ••.I J. I', .1 lIOW •Ir., twit:lt:ln I i•ontraenttc • li'4)i• VA I:M. 1.11,1 • 1111, N 0 1,1, -••• ••tt:••r••••• "r 1. ils• r••-ktv•Ilt-, 1,11,m1, a- th • kr-overly ••1•11•Iin .11•••111 otie mil.. frl•nt 1;••awr ,1•••,:t 1:••• ah from r.- 1..1.1111•1=!itrm. .iit 1 7 attlerilliti With (sAlt. .• 111 it :t : • 11:11.• :and .t Aaltiaal ul Frlll tr,..•• lb: Oink -1,1 e , l • pe.it , ,e+, pio, , laa"P"^ 110 p• . :‘,. 111 "..'l ei.ita• 1.1 cal:th.ltiott. .1 l'iree of Lund I,oo iMinr. (0 UM r+tatr• of the enure• deed., LI/OW o n• the:eau Mtil 'property, no l(rtuly'e rots. A . 1.11 tat t,• lug about t•lxtrolvcaert 7 e. Dearly all tintierimitt with .4 TArCe rein of (*oaf. It!. w elt 1110.1 - ed. har :;..041 % . 0140 . I , :ehry it thhht, In th, th ,1,104130 , 0 u It, he ,enwetts Mid a frame ea lee thmt•Lm , 00 , 1et1 J.012:42:0' I,) .17.11 ) T uTli, !nlairellt 31, ISIO ; IL T. Taylor, Prinitial •,.. :Ode itiortetor+ in the llitrereot lievirlinenta ,are twin:: eintituib:il, non, in rr.h, It and German t he Principal Linetater mud Experimi.a. 1, 50111 Ida Apparatus, l'hilieaoldileal and Chenil. CO. Si WIG on 111 Piano and Organ tatitilit by Priife.-aor and coral music by at aucre.•fol yornit.t. • m i . limitation la flonriehinz, and It no 'xi, ei• rio , hl and It I. determined by time, basing the direction flt that it *hall eiand In the ran of Ara deinlee and no it Wu done for ten yeara. REV. IL T. TAYLOR, Bearer, inar.tlf • ifer,wel.ciain-ews. Jim yA I. SPRING - GOODS Sella &JERI/VS ,DRI 0.004 & CLOVIDJO STORE ; NEW BitIGIiTON. ' Choy llliVe Wirt:ll44Min air t 1..• Iftte lOw„, pitie prier,, A y Domestic & Foreign DRY - GOODS, ikazzaarssaz, MEN'S Goor),, :11;.' rill•! Ik, ~. 13401isrt: tli.• I•Vait 'So -N10111:7, Rioting to,PittsbAtt, rrhe;s- arc iDOW !-;4.11.ing The very I, -.t .I:h t iv:Ater:l4 Sprinz. Nt) i, 4:: .t . . N,. - 1111..u•Ii.:11 4 :tli Muck. anal 4( 'erliibred • I isava. -1 to r I,- '.lO I AI .s t:~, „I rte, 1,1. , .. 1,. M bharh.•l Alf , 3 :11,, •,f r• I Eh Their Stock of Clothing, 0 cr OW . N M AN:I MI Ni W ...OMPLITtr ilti 1111, 1,11 .1-.IIN . Ow 1;6:i. th Wat./ h. 1 'old. xad (1, • Merchant Tailoring ‘,ll by Li.. Virul in , . 1 I =CI or Evvry ~n.• trhn hi l'Atrunizeti (filly otie pi ice, is their tuittt ,, . I.ow Prie,4, their nim thuir nt Fitting litinlient, Ikw 14 litui ARE No 15 Hand% in gni. Denim:nein 102==111•1=11 ExEcL oittiEits,l.l:o,,lpTL) NI) IINI: WISIII;;ND. i ti-ocipds at. a Harp:ail' :tit .1 Schiff & Steinfeld's, in:sr:l4;3ml NEW BRlGitiw, Faii,banks . St a Ik(14141 S • OF ALL KINDS • Unproven Money Drawer. FAIRBA.N Ks. MORSE tti 111:1110:11:111 IW2 211 a iv roue. Pit t•hil rO, Medicinal. SEWARD'S krHICHCRE A Safe and Spead7 Cure for Coughs,Colh, Asthma Bronchitis, Honrscnew, Croup, Influenza, Whooping Cough, kncirlect, Consumption, and all Diseases of tie Throat and Lungs. Don't ne . Z:CC: severe eough,or throw away money cn 3 worthless medicine PRICK FIFTY CENTS PER BOTTLE Prerarrkl by SEWARD, BENTLEY lk CHENEY, Druggists, Buffalo, N.Y. Sold by all Druggists. jc3o.ly I) , i , ersia, Fever an.l. lily of the Stomach, Loss 01 A i , Fre: Nausea, Ilt,rt-Spun. Jatimia-e, :,nd diseases :41i•ing •Crcln n di•ordered .%• { e of the Stomach, Liver or Inte•tines. I'n•pan•l - SI:WARP. A (AMC I;rti l nnoc: IttlfrAo. N•Y• 4p all 111114.;ri,.. fer - BlAttk No:, for tl • \r.;, SELLING OFF AT COST. it,lenigu,l,ll,l••udiuz lo 11 et— I. till, r)•111 n•I.0 oeopie I ,• tl t; C Orr .00gr_f- tons IL , . Ore o c r At.ret. tol ,•. roltlet• hl. 14 I.lk c•():-:1 FOR THE NEST 114 Stutic oatai.t• w P In of Dry Good*, Ittxt. anth`do". law", 116 Is awl And all altlclea usually Natal In ,I1:1 -" I %mi. and at, for yam...ls e '‘," elm; .elivrt. 1111,31.‘" mar Via• DralL:awat ,, ' Tios , .. FININI
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