The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1863-1866, October 28, 1865, Image 4

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    tht tittisintrigt" (Bazettt.
816.TVIttaT OCTOBER 28. 1851
TEI GUIDE
Allival and Departure .of Trans.
PenusT Central Railroad
Depots. _ Arrive.
d:Pay liairixx...., 2:0 a IWM'all... .. ......... IV ID
AROMA AOem'h SAO a in; ran Lane........ 205 a m
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Thus. Expreza— 4=,p te,ed Wall Accom.. 850 s m
:Johnstown Az . o CZ p m JOhnst , o Acen—tOst I m
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4 1dne5...... 11211 pre Pitt& Eels Ma 11.12.1" pee
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- -... Pittatrargh, Coihmhtia and Cincinnati.
-Armco.
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Altera& 2;40 to Expresa--- 8:4 p in
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sommundati . 44E0 io commoda1101.10:00 a m
. .
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". New Brighten Accommodation leaves Allegheny
..','' elejlet fie "., a..M.; 1100 a. m., 4.4.5 p. at., snos,seo
.';gip.. IL Wthoder, 21.6 p.,1 tu.l New Caitle, co
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at-140 p m. : " .'
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Plitshurgli and co ell Wine.
Arrtaa.
tads m!hisill SOO p m
- Espr_mm ,;.. 3.le7p.m,Eapress 1010 a m
-. in Aleliterrotialar,a milzsat MK..
ceesport 600 a os
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Ist fleaddock's.. 7.90 a m Ist Braddoakfa. 620 a m
Ad. . 4 , .. :. tae pm m ' . ....6:16 pm
• . Alleghenj , Valley Railroad.
&palm diviner.
.Alail.. eveo a m , Fnrees P•3O a m
- .•Exprees , tee p in! 7:00 p cri
' t/lecOMMOdatigti. 200 pnii Accommodation 8:0..50
CITY 'AND SUBURBAN
- .TOE" . POISONING CASES.
'Trial of Mrs. Martha Grinder for the Murder
of Mrs. Mary Caroline Caruthers,
:FIFTH AND LAST DAY
Fittosx, Oct. 27.—Belbre Judges Sterrett and
Titi Court ri.arsembled at the usual hour.
The prisoner was brought in and seemed great
ly depressed; that stoical, indifference which had
previously been observable, having disappeared.
The room was not io much crowded as on Th tire
pap, and filere was diminution In the number
f,,al lake In atteudaiee.
- The evidence, as- we fully and carefully re
yortedit in the Goiefre,we think establishes the
guilt of ,Mm. Grinder of the fiendish, horrible
crime with which she is charged, beyond a
doubt, and what has followed since the eon-
elusion of the testimony, the speeches and ar
guments of counsel, has been a mere matter of'
form, as far as further demonstration of guilt
Was necessary.
The counsel for defence, after the operatic of
court, again expressed a desire to submrt the
calm., having, doubtless, after a most careful
anal to of the testimony, failed to discover a
foot-hold to stand upon, in further defending
the prisoner.
The District Attorney considered it his duty
to sum up the case to the Jury, and therefore
would not k•onsent. as tea' as he was concerned,
to the enteldesion of the case. The counsel for
the defense then cOncluded to address the Jury.
siMecn or wt. JOYES,
E. P. Jones began his speech at a few minutes
past nine oVock. \„ii.e stated that it was the
-first time that he had s been called npcm to defend
-a female charged wlth s murder The prisoner,
Mrs.' Grinder, was - cll,znful with a horrible
crime, width° evidence M-eserated was terrible
in Its nature. She appeared In Court unattend
,ted-, save by her counsel, andswas deserted by the
Patine - opinion forced her friends, If she
, ',.eVez had any to desert her. Ie did not blame
i
the preen for its *WWI ill gathering up . all
the infortnalloa possible, sail" '
it to make -- thefr papers
publications had ;preludlced thr
-against her,
and thirprejndice we
t it certain ertenyhyjne jurors.
mit be. It was a cardinal prlr
prisoner should be, considered
proven guilty., Easing 'no other
Jurtr,should sympathize with her,
protector; and.under their baths,
Mirefuny coneider the case, and if then.
&WO, to gore her the benefit of It. The strang
est, most Meunier, roiaaxmatable feature of the
-ease was the tibsence s of any motive. lions had
1= erns or pnrreii. The proverblatkindaess
.of the prisoner, r and the - fact that she
- was iot even Suspected. until a con
siderable time after the deallt of Mrs. Carothers,
was a iseculLor featßre. t e did not believe there
misted a Munn ermi of right mind, who
,could be gullty,oteattalog the excruciating ago
`ay and torture which had been dew:sib-Ai by the
wit:magas. There waseenne evidence of tbe
trourtming talked about the Caruthers' haring
suosiey„ pat he'did not think Ws by any means
aidkraPtory. or as tending to - Show thst she de
, Biped, be get, wmaearlott of it by causing the
deaths)! Mrs. Cul:Mms to the numner she did.
btlealrejencd to the Wiliam. and
ClWed adtb an eloqUeut appeal to the jury to be
the.dlsc.barge of flex duty.
„ AZOLIMST :OF Ira.
: -- Thociaa...M Marshall, Esq., followed Mr-
JOISINW le Mid Ittitame to the consideration of
the ease; with. centsiderable embarrassment,
Voacff arose from duty to the commonwealth
and the persona, and the gravity of the charge.
Be submitted the following, points upon the
` .'force, and bearing of circumstantial evidence,
dip= 'ditch be asked the 'court to charge
- Fist. That In order to courier the defendadt
Apes; etretunitaddal evidence, each link in the
• thift Of "eirettmsfancely Must be proven beyond
' " - .frearMable donbt., - aMh elreurestruica must
concur and be'consistent with every other cio
etuzstance in the chain, and they moat all be
consistent with the milt of the prisoner. and
leconsiatent with etery other reasonable =pls.
.nation or hypothesis.
&wend. If , the Jury have a reasonable doubt of
the corpus &licit, that Mary Caroline Carothers
died by poison, It Is. their duty to acquit.
Third. if the Jury shoidd believe that the de
- • ceased: Mrs. Caruthers. died from the adminis
tration of poison, butentertain a reasonable
climb: as to the truth of the charge, that Martha
. • Grinder the defendant, administered the poison,
it Is their duty to acquit-
Fourth. if the Jury Award believe that the de
fendant,•Mtrilla Grinder, did administer poison
pntha deceased, lire. Can:oilers. and that she
Ated 9 t thc iviera ,40 administerra, yet AO
lierturitthattlia defeirlatit was con
troued by !mins= impulse which she could not
resist, she lama golity of murder. • •
These plants *tie streAraul taken up by Kr,
<, Marshall, and .argued upon with much force.
remarks occupied veer one hentr- We will
• not atiempt synapsis, .H.e pad lif
Grinder was utility of the charge, she must be
regarded We. moral monster, not iinponsible
fOrher acts, dliditaM, as uncontrollable tot-.
plat. The' adnalirof Luillciel Jurisprudence pre
sented no parallel or similar ease; Neal In tura
City or ere terribWin all its details, and as an
illustrarldif dier'3l. referred m graphic language
tOttta eircunistituCto of the veal soup.
ermsca-•
Ohn M Kirkpatrick, Eam, the DistrictAttar
'
lief;'f ni l d thOuldkinKidrdcel- 7. - .Ne'relletfed the
• evidence ' hi a rapid manner, and dwelt with
powerful eloquence upon the many strange
Toyota, indicating beyond the posaloOlty of a
daabtlhegoilt of Uri. Grinder: whose - duds,
helold, w...3peerrthord of the Burgin and other
noted poleonere.
During his remark's the prisoner was visibly
effected, and, once nearly fell from her chair.
She - „kept constantly' imbbing and twisting her
hands apd fingers and gave other evidence of
very great uneasiness, afri :Kirkpatrick spoke
r anlaourantlit ludfpopnebadlng atone o'clock
'When the Conrt,tOpir a recess.
- Upon the is-tweterablleg - of the Court, dodge
:Sterrett 'will deliver the chatte; and we mid
dpate Wier: will not' be long In renderings rec.
••• 1 •
:S. •
AFTERNOON SESSION.'
The_ cent at iwo o'clock when
•
e . Jags Starrett Sollvtred the chuga to the Jury,
•: 43 follows:
4:•.Thetcwills whleb we are about to submit to
- ion Is omit! *viand wouttiltude and tmkort
anos la 01 Re , twaritiol; and denuedo4l Pre
hatwpillai sobs Partial and
* setion.
teitd•-libk:WeCtriel,rlth - Way bp
, tot bath Cditu Tao
Altillnir ri questionsbn
`tilve34.- bas
lot! ti; estlPttral feral, presented;
dev l rglue ` troexplatxt briefly the
ply
eattle*r,the masa thus
wi trourouiriiteatiSowiraiat the power
• r~v hßeejanditteacrlbioc
. —ToitWliabuteiliSebsebeeu cezzuo.,
the Mdeltdoteut:f, Hos the pm;
.toe
Mita. MVO and Jarles ere
Whatever mal our itaThenrtst
-'4", wilvielmo pito the' ponlibutt aP
v,
6 c.%44. Musa, t*
they Ant not.
to co ..
luxe. "It hour dtozr toe:how
the-taw.as we SO it-;psexpsand ancvarorly
• -- atietithilattleatO ems tverisei;-•.entriz-jer.
zdaisigrltpirly ; but a; gm emu timotrysts4o4
it-t 9
lo the atitc;aiatrai. I.h.
1.111.1 c ere duties peculiar to the court. and •ttl. -
to toe Jury. Each has its appropriate sphere. It
is the duty of the court to decide what ghat; he
edrilitte3 as rempetentjand legal end .• and
:Ler.: 1, tttaia It you thr rule, of ta , , .1
the Lac abd circuniitaa.7es v ..
'the anion of th. , court in these vs e r,, if
roncons, may be reviewed and corrected
supreme c.dirt.
lt la toe oror.ci, of the jury to receive the
law Lrem the coon—to carefully consider and
Impartially weigh ell the testimony, and con
scirntionsly apply their best Judgment to
the disoov, ry of the truth, and then render
their vet diet accoro Lc sly.
If each thus acts properly within its appro.
[white sphere. the law will be administered ac
cording to Its true theory, and all that It within
ranee of human power will be done for the de
tection and punishment of the guilty, and fin
the ',entity and protection of the in nocert.
It will then be what It ought to be, a terror to
evil doers, and a praise to them that do well.
The general character of the evidence upon
which the Commonwealth mainly relies for a '
conviction in this case, has been very fully dis.
cussed and commented upon by counsel. The
uncertainty and danger of mstlag a conviction
upon circumstanthil evidence has been strongly
urged upon your attention by the learned conn
ed for the Owner.
(The court bore dwelt at some length on the
distinction between circomstantial and direct
testimony, and cited a nrumber cd cases affording
the points in each.]
The Indictment contains three counts.
She first count Is drawn according to the com
mon law form—charging the prisoner, Martha
Grinder, with the murder of Mary Caroline Car
others by poison, viz: arsenic and antimony, ad
ministered to her in - .artielet of fboa, drink and
medicine. as deseribed therein. The second
count is drain in the same form without setting
forth the manner In Which. or the means by
which, the poison was administered.
Third countla drawn In the short form au
thorized by our penal code, and charges In gen
ital terms that the prisoner at the bar "did
feloelonelY. willfully, and of her malice afore
thought, kill and murder" the decimal, without
setting forth the manner In which, or the means
by which the death of the deceased was calmed.
The Indictment Is correctly drawn..and In sub.
stance charges the prisoner with the murder of
Mil: Caruthers.
It may bo remarkrd in this connection that It
is not nevi - scary/or the Commonwealth to prove
that the deceased was murdered, by both or ei
ther of the particular poisons named in the in
dimmett. If the was murdered by the prisoner
by means of poison :of any kind, designedly ad
mit l.tered,:tt will be sufficient to sustain the In
dictment. Nor le it necessary fbr the Common.
wealth to give Mina. and peeitive proof as to the
quantity or ptistn that will destroy life, nor that
such quantity was found on the body of the de
ceased. It Is sufficient If you art satisfied be
yond a reasonable doubt from all the circum
stances, that the death was caused by poison ad
ministered by the prisoner.
In airs Stale we have no statute defining mur
der. We have adopted the t ommon law defini
tion, which is as folio,, 8, viz Murder Is where
a porson of sound memory and discretion un.•
lawfully kills any reasonable creature in being,
with malice aforethought, express or Implied.
The must be unlawful, and must also.
be malicious. The term malice is used In a tech •
steal sense—including not only a;oer, hatted
and revenge, hut every other unlawfol and un
justifiable motive. It is used to denote an ac
tion flowing from any corrupt motive—attended
with such circumstances as arc the ordinary
symptoms of a tricked, depraved and m allguant
spirit—the plain Indications of a heart regard
less asocial ditty; and fatally-heat on mischief.
Hence malice Is implied in every act of killing
for which there Is no legal justhlcation, excuse
or extenuation. There is no act in which the
existence of malice IP, more manifest than in the
wilful 'preparation and admitistration of a
deadly poison with intent to injure or destroy
any human being.
Murder, as it existed at common law, Is di
.ded Mtn two degrees, by oar am of 1794.:This
net yr. yldes that 4 xdf murder which 'Judi be per -
petrated by mans of pAsenZer hiing in tead, or
by any of kind of toilful, deliberate, and pro
meditated killing, or which shall be commuted in
the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate any anon,
rape, rubbery or burglary, shall be deemed ntr•
der of the tint degree; all other kinds of murder
shall be murder of the sexed degree."
Ton will observe, gentlemen, that the statute
expressly declares that a ISLIIDILII PISICPSTNATSD
SI KNANSOP POISON 811.41. BE tam= MURDSS
or THE runt DEOBEIL Keep og in view, then,
the common law definition of murder, the ques.
lion at Lune In this case Is: "Did the prisoner at
the bar murder Mary Caroline Carothers by
means of poison?" If she did, she is guilty of
murder of the &el degree, and you owe It to
yourselves, and to the cause of rattan justice, to
say Co. On the other hand, if you entertain a
reasonable doubt of her guilt, It Is your duty to
render a verdict of not guilty. The law pre
sumes that she Is Innocent uttll she Is proved
guilty. She is protected by this shield until it is
pierced by proof of guilt, but no longer.
In considerhui the question at lune and
applying the evidence, you can, perhaps, arrive
at a more satisfactory conclusion by dividing It
into two inquiries, which naturally arise, sad
which embrace the whole case, viz: First—
Was the death of Mrs. Mary Caroline Carothers
caused by poison I &Coed—And If so, was the
pefion criminally administered by the prisoner
at the bar.
Dearing In mind then the character and effect
of the evidence la theuisesaalready explained,
take up these questions in their order. and lee
what tithe bearing of the testimony on them.
Fired, then. was the death of Mrs. Caruthers
catused \ by poison?
In support of thir, taking up the testimony in
its chronological order, you have, first, the
amterns exhibited by Mre. Caruthers during
the several attacks preceding and during - her
last sielthese as described by Dr. .nish and oth
ers, estate ,synttoms exhibited by Mr.
Carnthers. 'Thesra! symtoms were nausea,
vomiting. parsib m aK e:ar olent burning pain in the
stomach and, great thirst and general
prostration. Dr. _ Ir h tells us that when he
-drat attended'ides..C.avuthers, be suspected that
some poisMsens agent ,as at, work; that he
made inquiry as to the diet used is the family,
the cooktog'ntettalle, edr-,latt filial to discover
the cause that produced the effect msolfcsted
hi the efin_ptbms of Mr. and \ Mrs. Caruthers,
and Ilutt toured them to leave the preselect
and' go the country.
But It may be Bed that these liymptoms are
common to other dimities, and,"therefore, It
would be unsafe to Conclude from inch evidence
that death hail been canted by pollen. You
will remember what the medlealgentle inset, who
were examined in reference to It.• Dn. McCook,
Isiah, King, Herron, Rodgers and Mahon have
been examined with referemee to the symptoms
of poisoning by arsenic and antimony. They
all say that they vary somewhat, according to
the sine of the dose, and other circumstances;
but the leading symptoms are the same as those
described by Doctor Irish, as wimessed by him
in the cue of Mr. and Mrs. Cs: tither*. Dr.
King says that the WIN symptoms may be indi
vidually found in other cases, but if he found
them anited in one cave of sudden illness, he
would regard It as a case of poisoning. But the
case does not rest alone on the evidence to which
we have Just referred. If it did, there mleht
he some doubt as to whetlder the death of Sirs.
Carathera was caused by poison or not.
The eymptoms. to say the least, were so
g'y indicative of poisoning as to prompt
further investigations. The body of Mrs.
Csajthen Was eXkuined at the instance of the
CfltOner the etomach and others turns removed.
and subjected lo thank:al analysis. It la claim
ed that the result et this sulyeb Is such as to
removeany doubt that may bate existed before,
in regaid to Mre. Carnth death—Mud it re-
'Seale erred
miMittikably the exLsteneeof hotelmen
- to and antimony in considerable quanUties. Prof.
Otto Wntb has explaided to you at length how
he proceeded to teat the portions of the remains
placed in his hands, which:appears to have bun
,Une according to the moat modern and approv
ed mmoritlea. His testimony Is also eon firmed by
Prof. Pemberton and Prof. Jillson of the Western
Delimit" of Pennsylvanis, .These are all gen
tlemen, ained and experienced in their profes
sion, and their testimony. as men of science. Is
entitled to great wear- If Prof. Wath Is cor
rect as to the remit of his analysis, there is no
room to doubt the exitteace of moth acetate aqd
antimony in the remains of Mrs. Caruthers. If
thin, then, be no. dote It—.thee t a ken In coo.
nection with the emp toa of lira.
Caruthers* during bet siek ni lealt_datisfy. vont
minds beyond a reasonable dou bt, tbat
she died from the effects ofUpon
what other reasonable hypothetic can
tho pre
score of these poisons In the remaina,anq sit
the symptoms manifested doting the several
attacks of Meknes& that preceded her death
satisfactorily for I II you entertet o
a reasonabie doubt on - this point, vim that her
death wan the result of pcasou, you need prose
cute your. Inquiries no further. it-would be
your duty to render a verdict of not guilty, be.
cause there can be no conviction trobles YOU are
satisfied that her death Wail occationed by
poison.
On the other hand, If you are Satisfied beyond
a reasonable doubt, from the evidence before
yon, that she did die from the effects of poison,
then It will be necessary to go a atop Weer.
and Enquire "ithethir the, poison on. criminals
administered by Pa prisoner at Ow bar or not."
This question must he deter ni ined by you, from
en the evidence In the cane. It to impossible,
said, indeed, JIM =actuary for- us to advert
to the bets and elitumstanees upon which the
Commonwealth Mlles,to Which thisPropesi-
Mit -- Your owyttetobleethei Of Xiiii.testimony,
refreshed,by thaaratuitentiof.counselvill call
them to yonrmindis. _ „, , •
On this point, the moat' natural luciidifes ; are .
whether the accused had poison. ta her Cl -
Maly whether ahoheids opportutity of
adilais
tering the pokiest; and ithetheratvolutd-a*mo
use to poison the deceased: ,
• As to the peteleallieteeOf Vsbleire,"lfte Mittman'
shows frequent purchases otturtsuizot antlato•
ny In quantltlca of - 8 , 11.0nt Ott fFaine 11 • time,
d is r= paid:that she b alleged to bad ad
the ,poesessAnnie ilultlian. the
girt who pent tellit With Mrs. Grinder an the
. litfk Ottltdl4 tillages to yurchaslng titter
emetic between that date and
the deldt'of Krutaruthers, on the lot of An
gnst...,-TbstpOftue Of tuner emetic is further
•
tT
propta hd the tetitime,y hf Dr. Brown and oth
" 6 " , teiete. Yon c , d c,rnember the tes
taunt yes to they'd:lo, which Mr. Grin
drr told the iittie tiel the wanted the tartar
tmetle. Ole. to make a calve to rub ber aide.
As to the e...,•^1P Lb.rei4 no positive proof of
her Lar.kg ar.:, a 1,,f Dr. BrOWI, to
he at one time sold
=MEM
tat 501tIt. tut 1;11e
In the u, , nnd p . - sonar an oppor
tunity of adze :List , • o 7s.i•on 1 The testimony
shows that she hed —teat during the Illness of
hire. Cana hens ahe was only, and almost hour
p In the house of Mrs. Caruthers, ministering
to their wrests, oppetrently, and, as every one
then supposed, rrompted by the spirit of kb:A
tter. It Is claimid by the Commonwealth that
the testimony stows numerous incidents in
which articles of food and drink were prepared
by Mrs-Grinder for Mr. and Mrs. :".laruthers,
and in a very short time after they had partak
en of them, they were seized with the violent
symptoms that have been described by the
physician, while food and drink prepared by
other persona, and partaken of, where followed
by Do such symptom*.
The Commourfealth has alsooffered some tes
timony, tending,,as they claim, to show a mo
tive for the act charged. You can take this for
what h is worth,.and give it such weight as you
May think it entitled to. We naturally, expe- t
to Ord a motive for every act, but we me not
ways able to do so—nor is It necessary that the
Commonwealth Should prose a motive. If no
motive for the act is shown, it Is n circumstance
that makes In favor of the accused, but guilt
may be, and In many places Is, established tic
yond doubt, ',while no motive is apparent. It
often happens that the secret intents of the
wicket heart arc never revealed, and are blown
only to the Searcher of all hearts. If criminal
purposes are entertained, the party generally
chosen to keep his ows secrets, and It is only
from conduct and external acts that a criminal
intent may be inferred.
Gentlemen, we have said all that we deem ne
cessary, and now submit the case toyon, hoping
that you will be guided to a Jost end righteous
conclusion. We feel assured that you will re
turn such a verdict as yen believe Is warranted
by the law and the evidence before you—a ver
dict to which your minds can hereafter revert
with Satisfaction as the result of a conscientious
discharge of public duty,
Answer of Court to the points submitted uy
priaOsees counsel:
' The Ara, sekond and third paints are aff t eni.
ed. Theitentain a correct statement of the
law. The fourth pointlis affirmed, but without
a irw words of explanation it may be:tnienuder
steed.. Every one is considered sane until the
contrary is made to appear. Evidence of insan
ity may de derived incidentally from the conduct
of the patty in the acts charged as crimi
nal. I/ the-acts are such as to Indicate insanity.
Insanity may, sod mostlyis provod by testimo
ny adduced directly on that paint- Tae unnatu
ral character. in humanity, or en!, sordisary
wickedness of or. urinal acts in themselves
would Furnish a re, uos.,le ground on which
to base an acquittal on the ground of- insanity.
Criminal acts are not in themselves evidence of
insanity, otherwise no one could ha held resp.m
-11 10.
it the prisoner administere. - he poison and
thereby cat— Caruthers, she
1 Is answef , at the time of
doing to such an ex•
tent: , -re and consequen
ce! r .1 destroy her per-
I. If she was Insane
~. not be amenable to the
cep
to tl.
ctirolnal,-,
The law Is that t-peter insanity be general or
partial it meat be eo great as to control the will of
Ire EmbJect and take from her the freedom of
moral action. There Is a species of insanity
that has been sometimes recognized, consisting
of an Irottistable Inclination to kill or commit
some other particular offense. The doctrine
which acktowkdge ltdarnaata is very dangerous
In its relations, and can be recoguizel
only in the clearest easel. It ought to be
shown to be habitual, and It should be
ccndned within .the strictest limits. If Juries
were to allow It as a general motive Its recog •
cities would destroy social order as well as par
sons' safety. To establish it as a jestification
In any particular case, It Isneceursary to show,
by clear proof, Ito cotemporaneras existence—
evinced by present Mem:mamas, or the exist
ence of a very habitual tendering, developed In
tireN JO= casea-14.ecoming to itself a second na
ture. The proof of insanity is au the party al
leging It. What tmdence of Insanity is there
in this ease 1 The prisoner has offered none at
all, and where arc we to look for It In the testi
mony of the Commonwealth I The whole tes
timony is for your consideration en this as well
as other questions of facts involved In the
case.
If you should acquit the prisou ex on the ground
of insanity, It will be necessary for you toss ez
pres a in your verdict.
Court remained in session until five o'clock,
when it adjourned until nine o'clock this morn
!ln, the jury not having agreed upon a verdict
at that time.
The Accident at the Elevator..
We yesterday stated that the name of the
young man who woo =Mil by (billet' from the
Grain Elevator was John H. Heron. A note
has been left on our desk giving lets name as
John WHare, but a lady who called at Mr. De
vore's room after the oodv had been taken there,
said his name was John 11. Hare. This corres
ponds with the Initials on his right arm, which
are "J. H. H." immediately over the Initials
is the figure of a woman, and on his left arm Is
a star, all done in India Ink. Ile has been In
the employ of . Messrs. Moore and Pollock.—
paintervom Smithfield - street—for some time
past, and any information desired by his rela
tives, will be cheerfully given by them. The
deceased was a sailor by occupation, and has
traveled almost all over the globe. He boarded
at No. itiTourtli street, and was about twenty
seven years of age. Iris believed that his rela
tives residaelthez In_Boston or New York. -
We learned butidentally that the book that
was used to support hts platform was cranitel,
and that he was told ao only a few motnents,be.
forehis fatal - fall, but that he aaswerel,
I gneiss it will do." It was made out of _three
quarter Inch iron, but had been driven Into the
buildhaidad pulled out man every time. his
platform Required slatting, and that IL was by
dale mesas =eked. H 6 employers, Messrs.
Moore i kollock, had offered to oronre for him
a more aware seat with which to do his work,
but his only reply was that the one he was us
ing was suinclent. Ma occupation as a sailor
had inured him to danger, and he felt no (Oar.
His confidante was the cause of his death.
Amusements
Pirrsumsort Taah.lllll.—Notwithstandlog the
inclement weather the Theatre was packed last
night on the oicasion of Mr. Adams' benefit.
He Ls a fineactor, and It has made no difference
in what role halms agpeared since ids engage.
meet, whether in Inured:, polite comedy or
&Atha, he has shown a last appreciation of the
charities he enitatned. His engagement has
been a triumph-
To-night—the' last of his engagement-4h,
"Bert or Love Levels All," will be re-produced,
tcgether with the drama of •Bleckeyed Susan."
Mr. Adams sustaining the characters of lien,
in the Berl, emit William, in the latter play.
Between the pieces the Orchestra will exenum
the "Champalgee (Salop," arranged by George
Burt, expressly fbr this occasion.
BILUIPLET'S IRON CLAnB.—These excell,.st
deliveranre of the COrk Opera have filled Si a.
wele Hall evert night thie week to Its utmost
capacity. This Is one of the best troupe. that
has ever slatted our city, 'tad we do not wonder
at Its popularity. Their is ono are beautiful,
their jokes original, and free from vulgarity, and
their farces, duces, &d., vet.* tine. Remember
that to-night le!the last of their stay in this
city, the only chance to pee them for many
months to crime.
Blot IO (tie Opera pause,
A riot occurred last night In the gallery of tea
Open Rouse, which for a time threat/used to
prove Bedew. It appears that certain parties
were makings disturbance in the gallery when
°Meer Bernard; Dougherty, interfered for the
purpose ofping the note t e . The- rowdles,'.
not reibitilog to totuiferoce pitched Into
Dougherty and were handling bias rather rough
ly, when he strict one of them by the name of
Isaac Little a Wens blow on the head with his
cane, cutting tits isealp open. and causing the
blood to flow plufturely. At this time, Robert
Little a brottserotassada Cl= op and struck
Dougherty a number of times. Other policemen
coming In, leak Little started to ran, but was
stopped by the pollee on the corner of Buillidiald
sue Fißti street, and ho and Ms brother were
taken to the watch house when charges for dis-
T 11917 conduct. and tor riot and assault and
u o 7 k etaWall made against this
morning.them. hey were
l up ter
•
Mu. Exmoor-4TM you penult us through
Por Inner to sekthe proper -authorttlea WllO-
eve $ 1, 1 124 7 he, to erect a Po P 051 1" 14413 P
on TUnnel stretti Welton peansywartlitavenue
824 wot " 104 - VolPedestrianswhe traverse
ircansylvatia arenas atter dark,' Awl the QM
atenaloir =lief talsoitreeahle y espeetally.oh a
rate? night; and Thatoulli tutu up Tuanel street,
. w hi c h has a paled side welt. 13y Wait is •
this You wtIC °hate • number of your Mends on
Pemnulvatile Miennt‘ ' '
, Hook,. tamider sea Hots ciispuitty.— The
gibacti to this we erssistsette e d oy-p f t,,
vows ma% =I the , meets or Atie dew.
Prise is no longer qionbtell..._ ,`ldscror L, lly AO
all the oflietals ot the FirO pekertemtet ect i Tio
(sPr . tke 1444 1 4331 4!1t tloCoillPftor•
Arlto Vomit illsl9l-Irrtettst. , -f;Witweitilta
corerTrirsto Wmale , Tor sale- by: Armin&
dekbrthirromigNiies , YrieW.i Pap
Ot
t th0.44140r50 "Jechtrestraser
insesseemosspeabstAileli Sox. or =I lissl
addressing ,
Toui ! e
n lri t eod, A t r A c.9.9
to Ze g rsrleeritl
84Filsix'41W 441.4040.
•
From Yesterday's Evening Gazette. !
Meeting of Veteran Soldier.—The Bounty
Questiou
An adjourned meeting of discharged soldiers
was held at Wilkins' Hall. on Thursday evening,
for the purpose of healing the report of the
Committee appointed to tnemoralizii Congress in
reference to granting land or bounty to those
soldiers who entered the war in 1661 and Tr.:, thns
putting them on an equal ("citing with those who
enlisted snbseonently. Colonel J. B. Swelter
yresided. and the following memorial was read
and adomea
T., the Honorable Sr:iate and Hoick. of Reprasen
beim :
We, the undersigned soldiers In the late war
for the Union, who enlisted for three years
under the President's calls of 1681 and 19.61 for
SCO.OOO men, invice the respectful COualderalloa
of your honorable bodies to oar claims for the
uecessmy legislation to eritialiU the bounties of
those who brat responded to their countrlrs
call, with those who enlisted near the close of
the war.
Your memorialists solicit this action of your
honorable bodies, as a matter of simple justice
to those who stood op their country's flag, far
ing every danger and enduring many toils
through the dark and dreary years of the war,
as well as participating in the glorious victories
That brought final peace to the country.
Farther '
your memorialists. represent that as
they faced the rebellion in its prime and vigor
as well as on its decline, they have earned and
are justly untitled to equal bounty with that
awarded by the Government to soldiers who en
tered the army near the collapse of the rebellion.
The soldier of the Mexican war received laud
wan - anti after the war, as a reward, by a grate
ful country, for services not near so arduous as
those rendered by your memorialists, In a war
which threatened the very existence of our
Government.
The action of your honorable bodies "on this
subject la not only due to the survivors on
these calla, whose lives were preserved by. Prov
idence frosh the missiles of war and the sauna
Of disease, but it is pre-eminently ... due to the
maimed and disabled aoldiera, as Well as to the
widows. orphans and surviving relatives of those
srno - gere stair lives r9rihelr country.
The Justice of the claims of your mernrkrlallstn
Is freely acknowledged by all classes—citizens
AP! soldlets.
Fully aware that the services of your memo
rlallats are Justly appreciated by your honorable
bodies, we deem it unnecessary to dwell further
on our special claims to the desired legislation,
and we humbly pray that you may grant the pe
tition of your memorialists at the present session
of your honorable bodies.
=l=
Jos. E. Robinson, Knap's Battery.
Charits &Men, 611 Regiment Peons. Vas,
Wm. Heys, 101st itsglntent Penns. 1 ult.
R. F. Weslaco, oat Keaerv, e.
Charles T .McKenna, VZtli regiment Fenn.
ols.
Hon. Thomas Williams. haring been invited to
be present and address the meeting, answered by
letter, In which he expressed doubt as to the
propriety at 1.14 teklnw peel in the tne«ting,
since the memorial has to come befote the body
01 which he le a member. lie declares himself
in favor of the fullest reward for the past ser.
vices of those brave men who first rushed to the
delenee of the nation, without stopping to nig
gle as to terms.
Alindina to the carious phases of the bounty
question, Mr. Williams says
"To adjust all the eases on principles of equi
ty, and upon any statement that would include
the priests or ieesl bounties, is, of course, utter
ly impossible. How much money It would re
quire on the hypothesis of their exelnalon, I am
wt prepared even to conjecture, and would dc
eire to know before I could undertake to pledge
the Government each an undertaking In the
present condition of the finances."
"1 did look forward to the time when V,
should be able to recompense one gallant defend
er, by carving inheritances for their .children
out of the enormous possessions of the great
nobility of the South, who arc mstionsible be•
fore earth and heaven for all the suffering and
all the expenses of this wanton and wicket war,
and so expressed myself in a speech made b r me
in Congress nearly eighteen month ago. The
Into Republican Conventlou of the State, enlors
ed as if was by the action of another of the cob
diets themselves, adopted substantially the same
views, and the people at Large have recesitly af
firmed them et the polls. Bm the policy of the
President In pardoning all, or nearly all, of the
mat rebels, and restoring the confiscated lands,
has cut off this resource entirely.
"There Is but one other left, sad :that yen
have referred to. We have stW more than an
Imoertal domain extending to the Pacific ocean,
and only awaiting the magic touch of free la
bor to awaken into life, and blossom Into
wealth and power. It has ceased almost en
tirely to be an article of sale. Under the home
stead policy It lies open to the European emi
grant to make It his own without cm:at:mass
tine to the proprietor, It Is our rightful inheri
tance. The South wished to divide It with us.
Yeti bays resettled oar title by your swords.
The cantor• of the neaten are entitled to •
lien aeon it. Tow are of than!, eft ditors.
It le yours, if you desire It—yours to accordance
with the old policy—because you have earned It
by your services to the country, which basnoth.
lug else at present wherewith to pay, except
her gratitude and the blessings of that returned
quiet and prosperity which yon have dant) so
much to secure. If • home In the national
domain will pay but • part of that debt,
you may rely on 'my vote for securing It."
The letter was read to the mooting, and re
ceived with the heartiest applause.
Addresses were then delivered by Geo. Neg-
Icy, Gen. Pearson mud Gen. B.Me., after which
these genUesnoti were appointed a committee to
prencat the memorial to the next Congress.
The Murder at Plthele--Great Excite.
We flnd the following details °flit: murder
at Pith°le, on Wednesday, In thla Meadville
Daily Republican of Thursday: many ro
cent robberies which have ocenrref. in this sec
tion of the country were eclipsed ViSdnesday
night by a murder under the following circuit,
stance:
4 'A new eptablishment to be Imbirn as the
"Varieties" was opened Wednesday night for
the Mat thee with a ball. The ettbiettee shows
that late at night an actress, arbesams in com
pany with dohn Simpson, of Rochester, went to
the circular, room preparatory to going home,
and while In the room two men entered, one of
whom was the deceased, and attempted to rav
ish her. - -Her screams attracted Simpson to the
room, who it 13 alleged shot one of th em named
Mat Fintee, from Troy, N. Y., the beeper of the
Heenan saloon there.
"Simpson was immediately arreseiland to-day
WA! fully committed for trial The town has
been the scene of excitement all day. The
friends of the deceased threaten that tiimpson
shall never care the town alive, and the place
of bin confinement is continually surrounded by
a crowd. Several Deputy sheriffs in connection
with the lueal police and citizens are deemed
sufficient to insure the or:mated a safe conduct
to Franklin, which will occur during the night,
"A public meeting of the citizens is called for
Thursday night, to devise some mean. of rid
ding the community of the hand of despcsiskics
obi; infant that section."
Hilted In the Tunnel
A moo by the name of John Scott clta kill nl
h. thi tunnel of the Steubenville railroad about .
two o'clock this morning by being run over by
the train. It appears that he had email drink
ing, and two of his friends bad started to take
Mtn to Ills boarding house In Sligo, !sub after ac
companying him to the bridge left him suppos
ing that he would go home. Ifs must have re
turned, and strayed into the tunnel and laid
down. He was very badly mashed, and the
skin was stripped from his skull like a puled
apple. He was a single man, about twenty-live
years of age, and was engaged by the SII;ro mill
to haul sheet iron. Corner Clawson held an in
quest over the body, but as all the tgstimouy de
sired could not be obtained, the jury adjourne4
to meet to-morrow afternoon at four o'clock at
the Mayor's olilee. Ihwore took charge of
the body.
Another Accident.—At twelve o'clock to
day as John 11. Heron was painting the outside
braces of the grain elevator, the book whl:h
held his platform broke, and he felt to the ground,
allstatice of nearly one hundred foot, etriklag
a windlass, end killing him Instantly. no book
was mule of at least, half kat iron , or probably
larger; and must lustie:oeen defective, otherwise
we caonct Imagine now his weight broke it. Ills
beck, rigid reg,and left arm were breken,besties
other !Azalea. Be was a atrengar in the city, a
single man, and boarded somewhere on Market
street. Mr. Dame took charge of his body, and
Coroner Clawson will hold en inquest this after
-110011.
Routh Ptt.teburgb•—Tbe flonthilttaborgh
Methodist Episcopal Churchbaring bees closed
for Several weeks while undergoing repair's, will
be opened for service on Sunday next, Oct.,29tb.
Bernces at 103 i A. M,. and 3 and 7P. IL Raw.
Charlet W. amltb, pastor, will be negated to.
BET. Hiram tdtlier at Canton, Ohio, and other
distinguish's! ministers. Tlto publio are •cordi
-411, moat to De prams.
Lamm gale of lints and ilaeges.—Oar
maitre wilt beat In mind that the tarp and deal
salts of Wet/ Intl bargee beknillas to MA Gov
ernmeat, are to be made :at LOUISYWO on the
28M, Efammlihe on the am, Cgroitte , let end
24 ;of November and 81. Lonia the.ith of No.
let, OW Coal , dealers and otters Alibis& eaek
;Medi WUI do well kiiip,ma thae thesesolos* , •
Not •.Citadtditee-...W5. mrs uthOriztifiik
statallistWM. d. Eichardraa. ER- *ham same
hae ha= tuted n .eatmeetion with Ma atm of
} ilibiete•of the s i lktronalt TeinnetaiteeillW, is
AO • eadidits, and-ill nottoider any elMure.
maw% allow Mein:mot Ma amain commetimi
theetillea.•The,electiew takes - Owe 'Jilt
-414 "linghel 28th Wt.-- •
•• Allitheqn to
goda'soM i4dernaus .440.4
irta tenth box•MtaLiner ..e.kg,htfgion
'rte. Case of Smith and Vail
Mr. Smith. proprietor of the gift book store,
whose arrest we have noticed on a charge of in-
Balling ladies at the Fair, on Wednesday Vast,
entered bail last evening for a hearing at ten
o'clock Saturday morning. ft arpears :hat
,:mith and Vail were riding mound the Fa r
grcunda in Gardner's turnout, which was driven
by Gardner's "nigger." and the party were put
ting on considerable "style." The black man,was
seen to gut out of the buggy. and carry a note
or message to a couple of respectable lathes, lit
tera Mg them that the two "gentlemen" above
named were highly pleased with their appear
ance, and would be happy to meet them at the
other end of the grounds. The lady more Im
mediately addressed in a daughter of one of our
manufacturer., and of the highest respect abil
ity. Of course she scorned the proposal, and
sent the black "boy" about his business. The
note was thrown down by the lady, aad picked
no by a gentleman who inspected that &orat
ing was wrong.
This was not the only Insult offered to respec
table ladies by theme fellows. Vail himself was
aces to get ant of the buggy and hand a card to
the wife of one of our Market street merchants,
who of coarse declined to take 14
The behavior of these blackguards having
come to the cars of some of the lady's Mandl,
she was approached on the sub)ect and stated
what had happened. They soon left the ground.,
but were followed outside the gate and
stopped, and a demand made that they
should apologize to the lady, but she
deelleed to accept any apology, and on
reaching home Informed her husband of the
effete. as made an laformatton for dia6rderly
conduct, (as did the father of the drat lady
mentioned,) agallutt Smith and Vail, but the
latter escaped, taking the night train eau. The
black man wan also arrested, and held to ball
;or a hearing. As the facts will be developed en
the hearing, we need add nothing further now.
City Mortality
Vt. Garage L. McCook. Phr tieltta to the Board
of Health, reports the to/hrxlng deaths In the
thy, from October Iltb, to QoVotr! Ql3l,
Under 1 year.. From 20 to 30
2 .o 1 '' un to 70....
,to It " f.;11
" 15t0 90
~f the above ttit, were Nephotlp,
General arum:Lou of 100
estarrhus Bennis, Mae., 1 : , ;ph -
alexia, 1; Ilydrocaplialus, 1. Trptiold Fever, I •
Ccrebrltie. 1; IMptittieeli.la, 1; 13.:,0us ftemiwnt
Foyer, I: Still (I era. 1, Convulsion,. I, Chronic
Milian., I: Syphilis lotierlta. I; Premature
13Irtn. 2; Jaundice, Acute Myelitis, 1,
. 11°/ '• •• • . '2O White...... 2° Total.. .....
FuMaic:. „ S . Co
A Sharp Theft.—.lntro Pont II e
T. MeGieiland's hat Federa:
ny, on Thursday, anal wh,' • ‘Aruln.n.; a
int .f hats took the "number rani — tom
or hick titled Lim, stuck the earl in tho Oil bat
and left it ou the counter while lie waked off
with the new one! The r.wri.N. discovered Li.
loss 501114 . ttme After, and gave a description of
the loan to Chief of Police ilkln, who arrester!
Lim at the Alle.zh..ny Hattie yanh., with
Or.
stolen hat nn his head. Hrma. held to 'rai.
:km' for trial.
ROBINSON McCLEAN & CO
Bankers and Brokers,
No. 75 Fourth, Street:Plttaburgh.
Dealers In all Wade of Gorreazent Secletting,
Silver, Um:imam Beak Sown, Foreign and
Domestic Exchange, an.,
traNSCLUI tattLuaraid La Ytaft. FUNDS .ad CUR
R ENCY
tereal allowed on time deposits. llolleattona
made In all pans of the Waned States on moat
favorable term.
Pram sift Wed with dispatch for ►scrptb' as
to 1.1 0 b lainess ►t the Boston, New York, Patio.
cetpbla and Pittsburgh Brokers , Boards strictly
on commission.
Dr% on A. CLEWS &Cn , New York.. 7 &I"
0 ‘t, RE 6. CO , Philadelph.te; Ewe. C. D. REAL)
h T IL PERKINS. B 0114" n.
FINANCE AND TRADE.
6ROKERI3 AND BAKKER/3 BOARD
(Roux/won IT 1.981511011, •'CLt&X al. co.)
FR, ou r, Ont. 21, 1365.
operta. Atka.
S. Ws 18211 105 75
C. S 730's, Si Issue 1/1 80 93 30
1.1. S. 92 OU
C. S. Certillcstes —. 97 th)
Gold 142 co
Allegheny Co. Flves,(comp)--. 12 55
Pittsburgh s's tromp I. .—.... 0 00
Connellst Ille It. 11. lionds—.... 10 0/II to
l!ash Lna------ 11 oo
Eureka 62
Cannells•llle 11. P.. Interest 9 73
Connellarille R. R. son-f 01......... 1 2.5
Exchange Nat. Bank.-- 83 10
rourth Nat. Rank —......—_ 130.5:1
Peoples Nntlonal ...... -105 50
Tradesmen, Nattouni 120 00
Dusk Creek Valley 93
Gnat Entail Wining Co-- . 1 Si
1150 Shares Ohio Valley 23
The gold market Is firmer agstn to-day. Neer
York morning quotations, 14.31 i, noon 144114. Pitts
burgh rates, buying 143, selling 145V14.1. There
was a further decline in government securities, in
sympathy with lint adviecs from Europa Five
Twenty Bonds, ITlNetria—sales st the former
Amite in our market to-day. Seven Thirties were
to more demand early in the day, but dose bevy.
The stock about as follow. lit series, 09;2d dO,
cegv% sales at the latter !atm Sd at 01}((Pal.
Our market for stocks Is unusually heavy.
Bank shares are firmly held, but the demand Is
limited. We are able to report a sale now and
then, but the stock brokers are having Idle times.
Verattonally a Ladle made (Demme of oar western
county bonds, Allegheny, Lawrence or Butler,
but of these, also, the market la very bare, or
holders have high estimates of their value. Con
eellaville Bonds have been more lively--quite
large sales at 81. In Railroad shares there Is no
thing doing.
On stocks are daily sinking farther and farther
out of sight. We begin to dispair erne promised
reaction In any of themdo the major share of them
we some time since bid • sad .but friendly fare
well. We did'at think so once, but we now ace
plainly that their real worth man expressed Intim
Broker's Oommissiosa. Now, even that Is beyond
their value. We learned of a touchtng case to.
day. A broker wan handed a bundle of certan:
eaten (the stock we will not name) with the re
mark "can you sell these for me any price r' The
broker looked doubtfully over the list for min
ute or two, and replied. "It is possible, my friend,
that the .lock would pay half commissions. Will
you depoell enough to cover the balance'!" Com
ment Is not necessary.
Columbia Oil Company .lock was uttered on the
street et (211. Buyers have withdrawn thou bids
at (25, sales were reported of Ohio Valley ni 23.
Sales were made of Paxton, but the firires wren
not named. The Pittsburgh a. New York c 0,,,
pant Itn a declared a dividend sal tee,, per cent
lin for fatten rounly.
The day 1111111°n loan itAll been leant as the
ant:l..llo/mm are in excess Cl the Amount offered.
It Is cilkially announced that prior to the meet.
log of ..gress.no further conversions of the coin
pound interest notes will be made. The Se , retary,
ti ougbal length interceding in placing the amount
41;01,0.20, filly million, was unfortunate In the
time ch2nen. A variety of .1111•11 combined to
make ant Unusually sir agent money market. Tilt
apeculatieng in cotton, produce, and other art
dee, the demand far currency, both west /M it
i), together With the ala mint bring daily tr it h•
drawn by the old eitate Banks produced such a
condition of thingi that it was inevitable th it
government bonds should largely decline, and
temporary Bye per cent deposit. he largely tetth
drawl, It Is a matter of doubt whether the Sec
retary really gained anything in the opera
tion.
Contrnctions to' be made permanent and nit
slimed be gentle end gradual. It is reported that
bits racCullocb has remarked, tbst•he bad nothing
to do with the commerciol and bistsidA interests
of the country--they must lo'bk ouut for them
selves—his duty lay towords the gdviceameot jt.
self, and italimmense interest.earrylug debt, de
manded a coutraCtiou in, the currency, one
speedy return E ton specle buts.
Commerce, which includes to Its comprehensive
grimy, the entire indititry, fanning sod me
chanical, and our Worthy Secretory must
see that in his haste to boodle the gold, he
does not lay open the gore Whe lays the gold.
Let speculators and. busineas men understsud
that contraction Ii the law, and a spode hods the
Ultimate end, but :that the end will be carefully
sought, not madly grnspetl at, nod hnsin.s men,.
and .peculators alike, will soon conform to what
In inevitable. , •
We received n Speitalielegram from Numer
day, reporting a "Strike' on the property of the
Cherry Run Central Oil Co. of this city. The dins
patch will belound Wont tekwraptnanenve.
As we predicted, the reported "strike? . by the
'p arr , st o ry cnerrYliTim 'Oil company, is
true—mt.lealinthe.Olneeri of •tfie"Coranany have
receirect - no[efuth litioratatleM. , at. 1. 'hat proper
to stite, Owes.erf, that a w,e4,00 thoptoperty of
lhte comp's:4o,lMo; , lithtl:rhictizires ever)
itleatlobot auccers. ,
," •
:.,;"*The Phturdelpfila Pr en, of Thttradiy, MLitt
! sou Kale draw slimly along. -Theelilet meek
w hy the great majority of petroleum stooks hail
e ither no market yoltte, or a ,yers low, oneu Is that
the ebmPantes, them . lieie :organized Cl
Mat speculation*. Otl a • Pled ' , Which istaibl
.P>sdattn the lariat: plural* 'arakat:
money{ rtiPtTl4..e#° ilie4Attra ralweopmeta ,
bf their prpiartY• ' ciP y csea tlathinif Waste
aerve# foe working cepa, and Ea..others ot4y a
cratraa xralititter illok; •
- muarts.raratlutraidis: au,
,
ia r * P 4.404 to hOired*P"Ask
twOoltrimpimPalllef afklyins. , httariyoeglen_ted.„
!Steatite Ille , 'lSSlnitinien ' bititlatAtiOnt are •
'hire with the meeze nweene e
rent The .to, LI:oil ere • Ix
pay an saseasment on the, plrottsta th.
latter; but at the lame lIIe the tends belong ad
to a large number of these e,a - ipan,os could be
Elected 0.1 It, 1. t..: .1-, thea res . • -
Thte wool'. ;It o ;tn impel.. to ; ..t
irottbly It. .ati•Jr•
tint eetuntereit; turtlts.
—The ennounctment I httt the gob! certinettel no
Ion; tAlkod of Are readi fox use, will be hulled ea
stop townr.is specie payments, and le
such • way es not to prod,,ce the slightest tremor
of a panic In financial circles. The idle masses of
the precious metals which have:P....en lying in bank
Inuits, like bears of manure, which, until spread,
are tc, IC S 9 11 . 11: LoW be made mashie. The.'
certificates will ht received as gold by the iive
ernment In payment of denim and as they see
convertible Into gold they will find their way
abroad, and be used In commercial transactions
like the notes of the Bank of England. The pre
cious metals will be constantly accumulating In
theLlovernzacnt vaults, whilst these certificates
will Inc flying about on missions of usefulness.
The Government will feel securer In the knew'.
edge of the specie reserve of the country, and a
general resumption by It and the national banks
Will be rendered much more easy. For as soon •s
the public confidence Is established as to the abil
ity 01 the Government and the banks to pay ape ,
tie, n bank bill ornertificate, that may be snorer.
teal at pleasure, will be regarded the same as gold.
Nobody wants gold for a currency, but everybody
cu, rency that 4,1) be converted into gold
5i10,,. And as sm,o as specie p‘fmenis are
on, more established, it will not require a tithe
of he rec.,. metals to sustain the paper cur
rency of the coon' ry as it does In a time of sill
pension, when gent-, - distrust In verythin; es,
„mu the solid yellow metal, that is the world-wide
repreuntative of salue.,y !Vali..
—At New Tark a good Many of the banks re
port ihenieelvee !DO poor to lend even on caJt, ow.
log to the withdrawal of currency to; nouthern nod
It et-lel - or - 4n*, t... 1 the loading of legal-1..1;1er%,
The Timer, in this connection, says :—"The
care rind other western markets are reported as
stringent for currency; so much so as to lot.ay,
dole. the price of grain. and set It afloat for the
neat•oartl, In place of being held up on specula ,
TI,. t ;Oa 'A no co,ne of regret, and if
e- et nzeney in lien y..r% 3119414 be hilt spree
-0.;,; •.0 to.er. ;-rodo and
no, li, , .et, ._olopon oath ,
omouto to o:. .• enyt t. el.nrte. e.
ft, loot if, -In- t • • money p reTt . . -o
for •
eel 1. The ot,ten:ent In • roger fto
the al 11th01 the t.. 1 “ nry to meet the eln.lms •
Itpnu It hat Anne ton and rhecklng
exettetnent. There In enodtler•hle potnting to.
ward the large Lalhnee. be/onglog to tbe govern.
men( stlll left In the national bank., and It seeme
to In the prevailing lEtlj-telkStort that, while these
load tutlona MO drawing a double intereat taint;
In,edUnente for eircnlxt...n, and the Treastaty le
In., tun lute. - It,, temporary loan., tack an WI-
C is, IC ell 1,1 1.1. re to It, credit ought not to remain
u. -tonluyed
—The I h 1 Ago rennin ram-n,t of Thursday,
- The d.eln In ! for Itl.tnev w.ttt le.o presalnt; taa
ttt ), on tn, tnalaly to the fact that I , nm - titters have
%w en t•blulled 0d act often that thtty hate betoott,
•Imeouraged. and have decided to waif saddle be.
reneu ingsibe sttampt. The suir; , 'y of Money
Is no better. and the flanks refuse to discount fo
ie) but the most fleservfnc customers. The rate ,
Is him at le per cent "
rITTSBURCR MARKETS.
FRIDAY, Oct. 27. 13.35
The re was tt;.: ontut t more activity manifested
in !ix produce markets to-day, and the tranattc
:lons in the aggregate. were little larger than
uu SUSI. Prices, however, hare undergone an
ange worthy of special notice.
(IPA IN—Wheat is more Belli c and steady, but
o it 11 out nut-001e chanae; sale of I ear Nu I ;'lnca
go Spring it 31,4,1 ear Milwaukee Club—pn me—
st $1,40; I car Amber at *2,16, and Mtn bush prim...
Wisconsin White. In Cleveland, •1,62,25. Datil
r and steady but unchanged; sales of n can at
Csta, and 3d. do •t 60; also, •rnall sales from
more at the usual nal canoe. Barley Is dull and
nominal, mitt, small sales from wagon at $1 to
31,10 for prime Spring nod Pall. Corn Is seine,
In ni store, In Antall lota, at rintitti. Bye dull no•I
uu. hanged.
FLOUR—There l• no new features In the Flour
trade worthy of specoal notice. The demand is
fair, although restricted altogether to supplytns
the tvant• of bakers and retailer., and prices re
main uncharged. We note regular tales of
Sprint Wheat Fainif y at $ 1 ., 75 4:0 ,0, sod Winter
at slo.7f.fg ;...s5. Sale of 40 hbla Panty
s• 312 RI r Flout and Cornmeal dull and un
rhang,l.
g[PR0V1.510.715--13a,n0 Is quiet mod nn
sales at 11.t.t‘e 1 A/ Mr Shoulders; 224 - .412, 1 $ fonrits;
so for Plain, and 33 for Sugar Currn Prime
kettle tendertsl Lard ta selling at 211 1 /,9 - 13. Mesa
Pork Is dull and nominal, with occasional smut I
sales at r7ft
POTATOE.S.--The demand for Peach Blom! Is In
excess of the supply, and prices, consequentl y,.re
well maintained; sale , of 1 ear load at 412,25 per
bbL Sweets are selling at 111,60414,711 per bbl.
APPLES—The urirsis today were unususily
large. reaching In the aggregate Lear 'AXitt bbla,bul
the demand in active, and, •• yot. rice. are foil, -
sustalned, ranging from 33,1 , 0 to $4,40 for Lair to
prime, and for amine.
* '" . .
BUTTER—There la a fair demand for Roll Rut
ter, and with but little otterliv, the market ms)
lw quoted firm. with sales at 10 to 15,, to gull
t No
-' ''' .fl ' A ° ‘- ' ; ''' ffit ‘ i ' ll ' ht " r ' tt rd er . tuleticieed, and, with
Chic demand, mut On caucediwily light supitl y,
CI azket may be quoted Gm at =e,. • (In Phil
adlasta q . u d oted y. at gm ,
z
e failkbblut demand
at 23 for lumbar;, and Ti(r...2 for alien—mostly
at 21.
• -
ONIONS—In fair demand and steady at 61,1
per bbl.
11031 INT—Is selling at b et, per lb.
OILS—No. 1 Lard OH I. quoted firm at gi,35.
Linseed 011 ILI held at shout $1,55.
BEANS—We note sales at $1,"401,60 per bush,
ILA to euality.
SALT—SaIa 0110 bblsAt P-3120. Mall Sale. at
13 .4 165—1hg
le tter Strum in IL retailway.
Small Isles of klaiseed at 10,76 per ho.
Nothing doing In Timothy or Clover.
CIIENTNUTS—SIay be quoted at !IS per bush,
buyinn, and ft 9 selline—aupply light.
URANBEIZRII.—heId at 1 14 4 1 : . 1 , er 'Ad, to. to
qunlity.
ill011(WINES—Sole of IfO barrels, at depot, at
82.30.
PITTSBURGH PETROLEUMMARK ET
Patarr, Oat. V, 1865.
CR I DE—Tke market for Crude was moderately
active luring, but prices have still further de
dined. holders, in view of an immediate resump
tion of navigation, being anxious to realize, and
to make this point, concessions were freely made.
We now quote at 216,24, in bulk, and barrels re
turned; and gae,23, bbts included. :Sale of 176 bbls
at 273; CO6 at 22; =tat 21; 1000 al 22; 1200 at 23;
In bulk, at git; and V 700,10 bulk—on Thursday, but
not before reported—at 2414, to arrive. The mar
ket closed dull and weak, with more sellers than
buyer. at quotations.
REllrilillt—The demand for bonded oil con
tinues very light, and we have to note n still fur
ther decline, notwithstanding there is but little
°tiering, and but little to offer. Sane of our re
finers are In condition to contract for future de
livery, but they.lo not appear wstlstleal with the
figures now offered. We hate Mit one sale to re
port, tofu blits to be deliverer! to Philadelphia be
liver, the first and fifteenth of November, at M.
Free oil is unsettled and dull, and there Are IZO
established quotations.
NAPTII.A. AND RESIDUUM—We can report
aale—the first for some time—of Cat bbis of Nap
tbs. in bond. al 21.. Residuum is quiet, and, In
the absence of sales, may be quoted at 1g. , ,240,03
per Mil.
RECEIPTS—The following la n partial report
of the arrita/s ludo by the Allegheny Hirer,
ninoe to.r lesi report: -
II H. I.ollion 17i, iN. Huang. 70
. P I.okon t,Uniort R0f.1.10 fro
Pisher A Itro 1 , 1101 R. L. Conran— &Xi
Louisville Tobacco Market
The bresks lodey amounted to 102 Wads incl..
ding 4 of trnsh, at froth 03,2.0da,30, with rejections
of bids on 07 lihda. Of these the Louisville ware
house sold IT hilts; Boone 04; Ninthat SO, and the
/`' cacti 20 hhds. Priceswere thought to be 14
ebsde better than on Monday, tint the Improve
ment was too alight to excite comment. The fol.
lowing exhibit will give our readers s fair idea oto
the priers °Meted, viz: 17 lihds nt164,86,
000,90; bat 64:041,90; 13 at 7002.93; tout 809140
0409,96; 16 at 10,110,75; 9 nt G at 12Ce1..2,76;
10 at ISt 13.754.9 , at 111e14,73; M at 151316,03; it at
16,26; 2at 11,70; '2 it 16,22018,73; 2 at 12,20; 2 nt
26.24r26,59.—Dreitersit.
Louts' , llte Coal Starke(
We have nonhange to make In our figures dot
coal. Dealers are still selling Pittsburgh at Wu,
at retail, and by the barge load at 2c. The
amount on hand is light, sulficient for four to six
weeks , nippit. - ' There Is now but hbout rti,to)
bushels in tint bonds. There la a conaiderible
quantify in port designed for the lower market,
some of orhieh may be brought into market. We
understand that the tow-boat Stun. itobe,ta Is
out from Plttablyrgh with aim', of 65,900 bushels.
designed - for this market, and the rireeent rise out
of the Kanawha may enable her to get Onto pert.
We undetstamithe Clurrernment has about Sdpoo
bushel. below tho fails, which I. being sold et ma
per tquhel by the barge load. •
Chicago Live:Stock Market
e Hit AGO, Oft. teeelpts of Cattle the
pasttwenty-toqr bouts were.,2,030l -alkipmente 1,.
iv. Entered sales 11,55.1. SaleCW.We niako this
inornieg at prices winging from emoes,9o., caule
axeSricopy dull
eeelpta of bogs the past_ twentiAour hOlirs
;Were ?pea; 141patentic
Ales were mane this morning et prices ranging
from $12013 per In/ lbs. There.-la. WO supply
with only a moderately active market. Prices - me
Weedy at our quotation.
We bear of no Wee of Sheep today. There
arc plenty Willinylerds bii yera. ' , We quote
them tomlnal at Kf.' 0.35050 per too lbs.
, . Flewelaad tat
Ctirstalvo, itltl,.Z.-Inour--Ctulet and steady
at prevb. us rates, iy6,6001050.t0r XX red, country
brands; 210,60011 A f or white dos Wang)
for XX red, city madei $12812,64 for XX white do.
Wheat—Dultand held acmimally 0..51,70.6W new
Nog Ittdiel,62 fo6 old dodo: Cora—lnialetequest
Ltregulat; sales 2 oars No 2 Mixed from store
et ittc; lON bush do do at Gte; 6,500 bush do do at
68c. Wets--Flrm;salea I car trom , stereat 4113;
car do.do &VC°. 'llye—Nocolizat at 1635 , 35;: (rout
store. BarlepriNorabutl. -Ito, aid.
a zic ii,o.;ost,vl,44,.• S,RtenVTI34II.4, ivere 3 i4
putout itt Isar tette*, biat buyer* were..ilow' sn it
tar between." and refaseA tralic to
atrietty {MB reseryts at rm.., Ocite4 f eted
Batley th partlEular hews so/ sit 200, an is
roefisiZtratelaitilergualgillirjaut Ainter
-49"118..^-
PET IZOLECM STOCKS I NNEW 'SOFA
Spectsi D:sys . ch to Western Preis.
Nnw Tom Oct. Ye, tuy,
F,S,`"l"St has been sett,.
uhel Earn. 7,1: ,
ElFtlill‘lr rlanhuttsa, Zl, SIALSIIey,
LOS, Pithole Creek, it Eicanchoir Rau, 14.3 ,
Bradley. First N Eli Weostcr, I in.
En.pire City, 4J, ilerman:‘, 24;, Iliontana, 1.2 , ,
Oil Creek,llo: Rynd Farm, 95; &thistle, oYd; Tack,
25; United States. 01.15.
rho stoeknohlers of Petroleum Companies are
yrlulually nss.tirg to S reduction of the Capital
stook down to the saws- assount paid. In High •
gate the stockholders will probably demand a re
duction of 1155,100, and in Germania to SS:0,011
NEW YORK PETROLEUM MARKET
Special Liapatcl, to Western Preis.
Nrw Yoltr, rkt.
Petroleum market unaettled isle' to-day of
Crude at Nei 2,600 Able Refined at PreWe, In Dace.
Tree Oil L dull at 16E9''.
New York Stock and "Laney Market.
NEW Your, October 27.—bloney reffiet ;ender
at 7 per neat.. for nail loans. Stirling &Waage
dull at 105%.
Geld limes, opening at 14 5 % arguing 1453it0
nr d closing at
Goeernnient Sinai without deidded
E2MMMMii
Hud50n...._._...._.... 10611 C. Ss. X, W. p 1 ....
Reading 104%; o.a ......
Allenlean Southern 27111 P. Sc._ W. & 0 .nS
Pittsburgh WIC Prairie du Chlen ,
Philadelphia Market.
Pentaosztritu„ Oat. 21.—Pse6otatly daellned
ttlee; Crude Wei sales of 4.000 bale Bernet in
Bond Ist Mated; Free 1148 D.
Ftor a—Wllll • dedinlog tendency; extras, tatil
7.60,
f at, —hat with • declining teadeney;
me of now
rat
at 0,2 d; oil red at s2,ta.. Rya.
St left Porn err) dullt yellow at fP,e9:le;
Duvet demand a reduction. Oativery delis: lea.
, matosts—ritcam Pork 1416. Lard 2.9 e.
W wan v--Closed flew at 1=,3682,31.
ISaltrixiote Market.'
A :?I rnitm, Oct. 77 —Ft.orn—Ar•ry.
ilLAlN—Whcat dell and declined 6, Corn :Am;
mint of IvLite at .Sc;Br,gl yellow OW/ cad lower et
plc: oats 484/500.
SZEDA—DuII; darer y4.2.5(0,.5 , 3.
Atioclaiows—Doll and hanyy..
R' irrsr—Nontlnsl e{ ea,s, forwestozn
Buffalo Market.
Barrel oC , ct 27.-6corn—Dral.
Ga.—Wheat quiet and unchanged. Corn—
ealee of warm at Go; No. lat el!{. Pate quiet.
Barley. C anada, 515 , 2 i,,
YC ts—Pork 5.8.
Montreal Market.
r1 , 01•T REA I , — superior extra,
4v• ext., j;,354',50. fancy, 5T47,10; Welland
(:ana1,18,M1,6.251 No. 1133110/1s Wheat .5.4.t1 , 3,40;
Western WhesL $ 6 ,/ , Q 13 , 30 ; 4, 4Wg 1 . 10 i
61,2301,20.
Toronto Market.
Towner+, Clot. 27.—Ftotra nominal and easter;
Double Extra 0508,40.
.
CI main—Wheat, fan, 11,10f21,59; spring sl,2oip
narlay nominal at ate. By. Gla and nom
inal. Peas Cagritla. Oats wanted at 300310.
Mining Stocks.
New Tons, Oct. 21—The followingare the prices
Rocks bid in Boston today:
tlentra', no bid; Copper Falls, 2l; Franklin, 77;
Bannock, Huron, no bid ; Inleßoyal, e; Mtn.
nesots, I I, Quincy, 60; Rockland, 3.
Greatly Exaggerated
&Detroit paper says that the damage to the
Winter Wheat from rust., sprouting and excessive
timidity, which occurred in some portions of
Southern Illinois and other section. lying on the
Ohio river, has been grossly exaggerated by inter
ested parties, anti in ant likely to cause any scar
city even among the high and fancy grades of
Wheat and Flour, which are mostly., consumed in
the home market. The Wheat crop la Canada
West, which yields a large surplus for out coat.
merre and consumption, is unquestionably a fall
as erage, so that there is no reason beyond a spec.
niative one for the high prices which now prevail.
We need not remind our readers that these views
fully coincide with our own, founded on personal
observation, which were fully set forth In these
columns loose time ago.—Shipping List.
.h , r_syttt.e—Pro SCLi A No. 2.--Clark & to
firm bbls flour, of bags flaxseed, 11 rolls leather, 1
tub butter, bbl gra; W P Berk & co, 2 bble mo
lasses, tub butter, Ito egc.•,• North American
Ott co t 100 oil bblz; W P Wooldridge, 100 oil bbls;
I) 31 I.dgertons t oil bbls; Ardesco Oil CO. 157 oil
blast Bead &. Stetrzar, 6 Ws flaxseed; T B Young
& co. 1 , 4 dos chairs. A Milliken & co, 13!.4 doreo
chairs; Fetzer & Armstrong, a bbl. eggs, d boxes
butter, do pawpaws: T L Sbields, lux and bbl
trees; W 'McKinney, 3300 feet lumber; (C elrern, GI
We apples.
RIVER -INTELLIGENCE.
.111:in N0.:...__ I 'oul.on
Marietta... Hoff....
MINX!
moan, wearaest, rm.
The rirer was about at a stand lug night, with
three feet six inches to the channel. The weather
was wet, rain falling slowly nearly all day, and
in fact, It looks as though the weather had settled
for a good steady rale. A dispatch from 011 City
yesterday morning reported that It had rained all
day Thursday and Thursday night, and was still
raining. and the river beginning to rise. The con
sequence in, that there is a general ..mtmemeat
among the boat■ at the wharf. Stage planks are
being run out, and everything is being got In rend
loess to receive frOght„
The Sults No I, Capt. Coulson. came in from
Zanesvillenight before last, and will leave again
on her return trip at 4 o'clock this g. x. Her man
ifest will be found elsewhere.
The Nevada, Capt. Evan% is fast ltllting up for
Cincinnati lad tinidaville, acid Lite 'present
prospect* for water, seffidoubtleas be able to leave
on Linesnay atterboon.
rinnicier. Capt. Darragh, la nearly. Wailed,
and Will leave for Cincinnati and Youia►!lle on
the Brat 'rater.
The Kenton, Capt. Dunlap baring been thor-
Mighty - Overhauled and repainted, looks as brightas a new shilling. She has her shingle out for
St. Paul and all intermediate polntk and Will com
mence loading as soon as the Ametitit got* out.
There IN 120 =Lasko about It this time; •• the Ar
menia is loading for_Si. outsnnti willso out on
the Brae water. She is li Ling repyraplollt, and if,
as we have every reason to believe,' them shoul d
be a big rise now, she will be able tO gOOlit. early
in thocoming' week. Wall evade, it catulot be
long now before she takes her departure. Capt.
McCallum, says he. does not wish t$ deceive any
one by false promises of when he' will go, and
thereforeewe ate desired to say, c tit bkwrn go on
lL
the Bret water. Capt .' d. O. Al Dirta, - 3r, -can
he found in the Mike, and will .51 tid to the wish
es and deatires of passongen with his usual urban
ity and courtesy. i
The lint. Putnam. Crept. John Annivea%vells be
the neat boat la turn to loserfor ST•4lu , after
the Kenton.
.. 33 99
The America, Capt. Golding, has grte on the
ways for repairs.
The Allegheny visor packets are all getting
ready to leave in anucipuloa of a rise.
The Diarietta, Capt Heft left fart evening for
Clncinnatt.with • barge In tow.
The Citizen, which was so badly damaged se,
oral weeks einee, by coming in contact with the
plies driven in the channel of the river at Steu
benville, has been repaired, and left that port
too or three days Mime for St. "nuts.
The rain fell In torrents last night, and • there is
every reason to believe that the river will to rising
this morning.
allsor.itaa sono.—There are seven and a half
feet and falling, in the 311.1slemippl, from St. Louts
toCairo. There are four.feetin e t . er in the Cl,
net from Cincinnati to Louts,' . Capt. K
Beek - Carter died at Little Beek f days zinc
. .lIIPI2
Nuhville Gazeur, of We says: . Tit
berland is still decilni , lkkonalawelvitel
on the Shoals. The " peel/W.3a aground at
0.1: Vi
The forty -ilve.gni ' low Clarks
ville- The steamer St. .7,ginewelers sold at New
Albany a few OptitamtclOapt. Wel. Knight and
°there, f0L159,000.1....._,
nawiires BY RALLROAD.I
Ferr Wards & Chitos6o R. R..
Oct. ' r staves, J 61111er; cars oats, El
31esnet -4 ao bbltls flour, D Wallace; 10 bars steel,
, Anderson. Cook & co; 35 basseanals,Slarlvis & Ls.
crestrail do do, Jaa Connor;: bids ens. 2 11 . 0 31, 1 . ,1 ,
I:cis:lit h. co; 12 kegs nails, Zug Jr. co. ,
+9
L. Os;
sonp, R 1 Sellers co; 20 do candles'eans
Coffer: kegs lard, Meek Armstron_g
-
M packages
musks; d, J Daub; :12 bbls apple ; L %Mgt & co;
2 hhds robscco. Reinhart S. cu; 103 hbls flour, Culp
& she pard; s buls apples 11 Rid Le. It bbls rye
;four, Kirkpatrick & BM; 4 bids off, Illstireight,
Cushman & co; 300 bids apples, Potter _ Aiken .&
Shepard;ear urbesUbiggett col' 44 lades. "J Lt
Ralston; Lau fire clay, ,Y Best; 197 bits apples,
Robinson &-co, 1 car barley, S Hartaugh k co; 1.4;
pkgs grease, E Sellers it Co. I '
tMarstaim 'Lib • Prriartmos Rut RoAD,
Oct. 27.-233 aka mill feed, Sturgeon .5. tlnit; 1 car
• oats, A .7 Eagan; a bbla apples, T C fent:lllg 1:
sks potatoes. sJ 0,;*1; ska lama Godfrey fc ()Lurk;
e - pkga U C Robley; 17 dozlirooms,Zßohloson
co; f, , L 3 Blanchard: p bile appleu,ShOcars
ker a Lang; 12 bids apples, bbls potatoes, •.1.. a
Voliihr; 11 bbls apples, 10 PR,,Peeribrdl4o7, Graff
.1k Better, 25 bas cheese, Potter,Altdiric Shepard; •
15 plies pearl barley 00 ,1 out meal, 0 Bruin do eo;
1 do do, Wen Regina; labs' cheese, N J. Braden;
•/9 ibis olti§ B Floyd; so baba llotulJaarGardlner;
190 49 IN1"403ell k co) th) bbll potatoes; 0. . 11
- Volgt a 0; Is 2 bbls adplea, Stordeeltik' .
Ere; 115
bids .A
N .Pruden; 0.0 de do, E Reatleton)e.o --
dodo, buceop; tbbl eggs, 31cOullougff, Smith
& cos 200 Wu cheese, J B llaniteldt"al do do, S
-Ewtrtik. 00;S,aD.bbls apples; Graff la XtelLet.
Ate.sonster Nrasiod, Oct. 24=6 ski.potatoes,.
- Jas Lyons; '6 dos brooms; Huhn fa .E. 16114; 6do
do, G Comle,y; 1.5 do do,. lk.canao. to: N 1 ona; is,'
bags barley, W R Anderson ; • 112 "bbISOPIdez ,O W - 1
ens bliennedy;47.s do dap) . lierbertslo cars same,
Kennedy is Brol 53 aka amused, Eder 4a:Nsmil•
ton; 42 bbbi apples, S port 25 bbli angler. -Tay
lor O. Atolillinery; 206 bags mill feed, (.4 S 7 Stow. ,
art; 27.11 ks bade/I..yr s zce-ovalon '
,Yobascoa. • • I 4
• " W. CA11:74.16 7 4 .--
Itaviagjust Ten:Liza:trail! I , 4ll*uil
sad comyleul iva tmeat or: -; "
136Citg; and Shiesi.
waanenabledto-`.offtraapeitor laeuciimentirci
puschaasire, thinitocitombruts '0,11140
LADIESI.'SIi 4 SESr Arm
Bourg, tilluleS, GAITERS i 8114.41.94/LLS.
Alsot
AND'ESpE§: -
tiemtrabcr ens s = - •
go. b 3, aitirkttAlid-- maul.
••
. .
y '.-i'=ti.~~ ~i.
BEEDICAti
cON tif'ficni
HOW TO CII4E IT,
ao. tore a t 33-tartoz-y-
Dit, SCUENCIPS 04'N CUE,
Mil Laboring Under that Disease
PrLmcom'c
SEAWEED I.V.ONZO
zkr.imacirals.olVsiiii
;
OP TES SISIVI 114 CU6lli inn DORM
GREAT SUCCESS ATIENDINCOITI
Many years ado, Whilst reatt6ig irkindelphis
a l i bed p &rogreuel th i a,
my recov4 i y ar telng cilsaip P ted tIO TI wairtelWeed by
any phyalciae, racrialt let remote brio the
country. Noltrestowv, N. Vent- miles dn.
tent, bete" in native place: . W4l removed
two
frill dap tegtosnation.
thither,
his amt.lys had lived muddied
Sly Wars and
them-and died of Pulmonary natteneption, pn my
arrival at rdonceStowto I wasen to bad. when
l u leas Y ,z 7cjo . adt 'uu tu,, l an o 7 n. wee pta Ltr l idd.. .Th lnol %,:te u nt. - "W_ t roa Wli hr i lted uLde4.. -'44 lu .e!r
to
U3n ` :-. „.„/
m bagat
f ee---Y - •n:-* me cute vodka
decided that I must dis. and Ku. all
arrange my temporal enew gill Ind 50...
die of consnmption and therefore couriu
ded that, death trim the dLea.l watch had =rues
all my kindred to the grave would aiso take we
o ere. In, this apparently hOpebtu cOndltion, I
I and of the made. which I now make and sell
seemed to me that I could feetthem, workthelng
their Way, and
_penetrating ortrynerVe, ghte and
• Wltle of my netem.
M) , lungs and liver put on a :fttw actkei; and the
morbid matter which had for:yens acetunulate4
and Irritated the =meat organ of the body, was
*limited; the tubercles Cu._ sty lungs ripened and L
expictoreted from my Wogs es much ass plat of
yellow of nuttier eve? , morning. tide
expectorant:mot matte' entelokl, the raven abated
the gain lett tee, the cough Meted to harms me,
end tthe exhauging night wenn were no /outer
!known, and I had refreshing stp, to wide/ abed
tong been a stranger. Sly sopbntq now bogie to
Kt and at tams I bond it difiloult to restrain
myw from oaring too much., With this return
of health, I gained in strength4and am now fleshy
m now me, With a large,nales
Matrix s lobs ,the
he lowerin O lebe heparin:l, witke of itreplate,ad rightbingand
hasian
of the pluers.. The left ,hoognts sound, and- the
upper lobe of the right one nitatederehis healthy
sronditton.
Uoteumprion at that tininit ' L thought idle an
locuartge omen, by every oum - pbsztalans as well
as three Who were unlearesUnoindiable-or
'wally such eases as were retturlto the o mitt o
I
•was This induced . ase people to t e/Lev
my recovery only temporary. ',..now prepared and
gave the medlelne to. Ousinentdtee for Wee [ thie,
and made
.owny wonderful , cures. andth e danutaa
maenad so ratddly Vat . rdetanalned .to offer
them to the public., and devoaday undividedatteci
eau to aka diseases.,-I4 trUSII, a was next to
'forced to it, forenoon would and for us [4: and
near. to awertan whether ttnir eases were wire
mine. Having occasion to e=nine mum cues of
lung ailment,/ was prompted to Invent in truant.
meat calledeSetenekls Respirontater.. , which
materially &W AS Me In detecting the mines
stases of lung disease
sor cony year; t o coolunelon with my pried
pal office in FhilWelphia, actin been waking reg
War nate. to New York, Boni: om Baltimore Um
Bittabuntb.
For several years past I Ohio Made as many as
Ire h mine (warn.. .otone weakly with thismi es
piromeser." For such si<seVstioa my CUM* le
three dollars, and it enables a. to yin each pe.
tient tie true ocoiditlen of...lncensed telltam
frankly whether he willow. nit
Una af tn. paint- alticithiss I have.srltb pa.
tient' &Meted with lung. Minn, is to convince
them tcraveld taking btris enda. Many think 11
they takeray mectleinee they anould nue, no mat.
ter bow carelW they may be le TOL te
gnat error, for if any - oner will over the
many cures which L have put from thus to
time, they will rind that mOit:Of them were those
of persons who were conrimill to tears beds and ,
row. not talscreold, sod byte/eventful avoldenee
t cola the Ones were heated. Pliyannuts &Lisa
heir patients ‘to to out and inhale the :rest atr
but do they cede by so doino let the hundreds -
or deaths ity ediannkLad - 3.l:l7Terg , city &hearer
the question. -
would rather risk /I patiee,.l4 ang/414/ yew
tined tonl.ls l slet thew' ee opt, sad ems a
ailed eoht wind felvetturn by a
medians, when once 'Bei MMus:. were so offen
awe, that one could' tuutty, magiallai the
and yet they got well eithour
stns ittesianteithis oplo
The great reasons Irby' Pliniden 'do Rot ewe
consumption is, that they try N ticqlOO neat
they give' ni.M.da. .* Wane enigh,testkos the
night sweetsftwetio Sent,ens by to dots& tars
derange' the whole ve.,kettere.lo -Mug up
the secretion; and eventually, the patient. dies.
w
What I too that makes careftriains
with my do
Bee t t
tifro=a arid 111, tad lupnenougli
left, I dant the
en. /ho Co wtaMrnheation
Wks, Sad time cure hi knOW.efelarall teal
it is impoesible - to make nee ltaga.or arca news .
the portion ;Qit dettrOyetitt u rtoWiri.
tame tan thee anitte*ln Us 'and ale
tins in tea. lanyz brouridal alba:part be s
r hoak shah ,= " lN c y = t 7,,, tl 4. S A I
drake Fills," whilst thee arC t
the orhsary treatmeet OL MutriCiara. .
It la a great. instan cometell wing sanyletal ,
Linn persona, that them are Medlelles whisk
purify 'the. blood. ;Nine tholdood diseased t,
moan be purined'it is then itannels[diter
lease matter Lo
ratttrol, n antrfeill o a:o be
Med out of Igui by te
e e ,Whick are
InTold, which can t i .0 4 ?..497 8 ,...gth.=, 4
function and se g the digestive apparstas In
good working laddomagd,llrereadbowei
once restored to a healthy ;Detention, thei r t
abundiece- Cl - munneotg tbod
new-blood edger Inlet °Want weer, and
the place of that wldrii isdialawri. Ora tote Ct '
ly the - Swat s of rite body. ",
Tye Fetratonto srita L hie Otitis Dane
able medicines known.. /t ten_utrio=7
tonic, end bealleg In itself. ,Isis
and absorbed tote the blood:4o LtuAltapaiu
his bearing properties. I knew no that .
has done or. Dee do am much to rebuild, liorowo
and brokondown conditions or the systati.
Sows= • haawszo Team • la from
seaweed,combleel with Other tonic and
ale
root and Wake, In etch a mantis to make •
decidedly' pleasant medicine, /levies a powerful
taste agent, without the tertible disastrous results
Iron : alcapall• stleinents. The Seawe ed 'Ludt •piodueea Latins nettat4 thfiroughly tarn.
naiad the gamut and
a alfOrtilli system, and
enabling it to e te take Into healthy
blood, tee toed which, may tet Doted for that. par
pose. lt so; wonderful La Heinen, that a In..
glass full will Odes' a
_hearty Meat end • little of
it taken berate break/nit will ern a tom to the
stomach which few medirines Sneak the power of
deans. •
Tax ettannaitz R
nec ua may hataken with eutlre '
g stf2 r =szs it and clo.Mtguizro• insit
Rom jlitheor
any of tens t . t tz t
a etanzial re,ri vi i : and
carryVaoticf.iltlts
antes of of their
feculent and worriont matters loosened
and dietallred by my hintweel.Tonto sad Putman
glass tauwrit be seen that At tams co my meat
aloes are needed in mon cunt* enrollonsump•
tion; and, in fac my large experience enables me
to deride say t he y hare entek' more mute tti that
disease than that combloariOncof =Wane known
to mom.
1n lle various edltlou of paliptlets I have pub
listed many of the moat wonderful curer of -Pal
a.ouan .oorstimption on. renal. • Persons, Ming
with - both Runge agtotediosnettnieflarge cantles •
In one lens healed oven ay . • .• ,, 1•••• are nor
living yes , enjoying eice ant'aealth. withetv
a few and select theta foie different parte.
Om .couetty, so that those who w
ar may visit 0
writs to them for moteeentivoltdmatiot. . • -
RIM Beery Horgan, s. adeleter 'or high tOonte
le tie City of Boston, and ;well gnaws orm- the
United State* es a Mauer great teat
e ns
by taking my_ met:llene Inn ellother treatment
had tailed. He has often bees - Slitter to ms with ••••
regard to the feria in his cam, siskaaraya anew=
.“1 am the min.". A full stalebtent of hitr. case
may be. noes
in
r.r pamoblell,'lle bad" frontal
hemorrhage Of the lungs, ittLd, Nal. Very Mae
Bono H. ileseen, of Berhigto* N. J. was
.cured of. Scrofula and - - hteran ri di Munn. 'Ai CO
Um* he commenced niter therniedirises le we
almost a mass of sores. Re blow, perfecUy Wee
and attribute& hie tun entirendo say motto S.
• Marten 'Kece, , forwer, Inlay soar, rent)urg. IkTa.
lowing county, tahio, woo awry/4d Cite Of P:11 me /yin
Cozsumption, Wet elitirdl caved fr TAY sledt4ces
tie it Ira known le list meneuelly, sad Asa ewe vet.
=caned inducing a great inatneVrsone Obfn se
lotramdire, sod with-endfitiocret, Me P.l3tt
-rope, Din before etut epee tanattlettrent Can.: sef
niodyner,Dr. - Festenar,lF Sodareeti -Maur , *
Mari ;iliessialV of Entistaib,
-Csenxt of I'l4m bad ease of Ilyspents artiLlver
tioceplaint by tae Seaweed Tonle add' Mandrake
sam Jane' Barter, a - wiadixtaccatn -
need of a bat case of Dlspet4is and
pleat, 'Erin 1.11; so agml woriah add Int, amayt4
nursery t-very reloarkabbv, -
IMMO
1.1.11111.1
Duct.
Zanvarill,
blta Preec* TArLawa, WitS it CUL : Jetties.
.ow reataiss at tio. IS W. man - aisteti'Wllllass.
burr, Pt. Y„ wu cued at Pafturauy
A e laatid la sow as hearty sakill &os
Peter Ptyker Beaman, oU.Scrwerrl/Phic,ali
arm attather remultabla aura Pulatonary.arsa•
lemltleett.. 'Mantillas* isitteataVyttele •
Zan aad allterwrellkacnira ellhatat.
= t-ast Eslualar,or Kasugt6S,
ban east-esStlatralaptiott ruad Lulu ttoarstal
artirttaluttputlstram lwll4 hulas at au lass
more trsart3artl *yon err Pelee!. •able !IA
sheanlU, aatt to um mat*albe4...elas• - • -
,t - ssacirja -tudanist, mush
- - - : -
;
pzialapes owe at __ t xi
T 0 t2508132401PS
Mark _Street, =au wwwwarrse
il Lai-others all antra team twadtheasst, ep
tn be letilt/ UM; Refelebletailti MAT
•
- %Ma GEO. - HatEralErk
flqFill:atq`etiOttstkitifTir
Lataii4alsitzic
MEM
1315:1013
AND DOW*
Atm ".""-
AND TEE'