PITTSBURGH GAZETTE .PUBLISH A.LD WIT D. Tow PITTSBtTAGEr( M PRIY 11010111 . 63, Mir. 16, 1 866 Advance Ptmenta.- 7 Hereaner,e 0 sub '.eiiiii‘rienlWQ.i'air—tai Dahl' ;11 ma. ta adalitleV Ithooner to ilia la lay to whleaktb. valmertation la JAW, the papa 11,1001/901. mamba Ilaliabintatlas aamaa amata pirolat. traattrat sayorthilalt i mai . ybiarual... will to ratabad Lai pad In a 4 WNW TM' 06111 alsallathes *Ulla when maid =nth M conexasto are sea. . tialatta • vaximbalrylni Nomad, 011116111114 , eXtramlni am brim.four WWI Gagne otters to oar badman man mot Mantra madam of mattes tbids balaas tam,. car .haaYt mL bstanatase sad lkne tboamadlanialliai ammaaat; wallmaanir as& shorkaspre is Ask:a PeasErhastla and Lama Ohio. 11;E=g;z;;;za;qvi7;;;;wq R agout., AmosnmailbiodadnUoir salionto &war saw Mir 014 31 5 4 . 11 7 laCq.ing• ri n o o . l bAnd th P" . WWI 6 o cloet. on latosair. l!tatutir es . ieseb min .f tbis ■aver Warm vnit Weis.' l'oar.—Since the par- tint 011Ini timer Nothings inliew York and.Mitisaeitinietti, the lender' are throwing off the reier4 ei - manifest before th.Veleetion, and hillfriii4their reel pro-ifiaveti intimations. In Order to ituoseed at all,, it was reeccisary -to hood. • Wiarthepeoplearith antiaaveryprotessions;•but no* *timeline has been - Won thite professions may be cot 'to the winds. Thuscihe Neer York .Kiersu, the leading oracle of the ,s‘Anuericaue" • of that State, announces boldly that its party will not' divide from the South on the Kansas 'lees; “thily entertain but one opiniot4," Wive, ','*Vt*oli; Weisel value,.kad which they do not mesa to sacrifice to Koreas'.' la plainer lea gieige,. Kansas , will be sacrificed, if necisessiy; fir Write' ' Know Nothingism. The party was or leedsed for the latter, and not for the former.- .., .I.eother words," Centimes the Express, "the Antirican party was . -created for Sam, and not i0e3,0)9. It 4 held to MOf more importsbOa fri *CWOI4 the whitimen of the country in foreign and 'Papal invasion than it is to ba le • about the African, tel the sacrifice of everything American." This sling, (for It is nothing else,) is Indedige4ln to convey to the public the intim:is- - Son—which it does moat thoroughly—that the • great °bleat of the. K. N. party is Nativism, and that to accomplish that object all issues Vora Slavery must be throat aside, no matter how; if it an only Do obtained by handing Kansan over to Ilia tender mareitW of alaveholders, that will do as well as say other. "The American party was created for Sam and not for Sambo." The purport of all this la too plain to need comment. "The AmeriteM party," adds the .14rns, "is the only one now that can embrace all sections of the cooOLoy—tke elaveholding States is well as the noti.alaveholding States—Kentucky, ..Marylitni;tennessee—wrivell as Massachusette, __Yemeni, and_Conneetieut." And of-course it can only embrace ..botirneatione by -getting rid of all taint of anti-slavery.; . , : To maintain its • nationality It moat give up its opposition to , the . extension of Slavery ; for "the American party was created for Siun and not for Sambo." Let • • Slavery spread asmuoh Si it will, so that "Sam" - gels what he wales. i ...14eartele Of tbe Zones is imprtant only as indicating the tendencies of the current. The ~.iumxpeeted. succeseettif the Know Nothings in New : York, musiehmsetta and Maryland have stimulated the belief that they can carry . their candidate for President next year if they -can --only keep Op the nationality of the party; sad' •• to attain this end, eo such thing as deference to theinti-alivery sentiment of the North is to be ialowid. 'elle' , is. now considered sufficiently strong to cops with ...Samba." Sow the party is to, be kept a unit, with the question in the way, remains to be yet lkanoiistrited. " A pert of the scheme is now Wading at .Washington, and Its development may belookidlor in the course armed in the organiudicm of the That there is treach ery of some kind meditated on the part of some et the Mirth= Knott Nothing members of the Honk Is becoming every day morksppuent— Two of the New York members ere stready there, closeted with leading , Southern members of-the Order. ' We so*, therefore, to the people, look well to your repreeentativee. • • • • • The New York Towel:al of Oarsraeres boasted, ''''riotlong since, that there were &tiniest tiveloo N. N. niembers of the House from that State, elected - as hati•Nebrusks men, who would, in the hour Of trial; be found upon the 'side of the South; and it was also broadly hintid that others would be found in Peausylesnia and Ohio, and:perhaps other Northern States. peep a sharp look-out, then, for the doughfsoeh. There is tame sew :dads* on hand—tame "Compromise," it may beg, or,,pertutpo opith treachery may be thonOit lisist,..trusting s to the; power of Sam" as a :men* of deem*. Hower it may be, the Sense of Freedom in the territories has anus • aptly - littlerto - hope for. It will be ratblessly ssuriflosd, we leaf, ao nuke room for "national hmerioon" party sound enough on Entionalls . - sues for the South to trust. At least, it will be all to watch, cloudy, those whose entl-Nebraska L pldpa are but little more thin a year old. ;,;and . . ails by What moans they eapeet to fulfil thoir plodgetfizid jet accomplish the " national ity'' they seem to long for. • . -.. CIIZAP FOOD.—The two muskets' artiedes of • 'food in'..this. country are 'wheaten bread"end nthat;•-the latter bolos mainly pork and beef; •'. and now that it Is, certain thst neither of those will be cheap this wioter;it 1 , 10,000111111 S serious question . who • have bu t a nun or ~ . . , - w ` . , precarioxls income, to how they are going . . • • to get thraugh the cold season without starve •'-don: '''fbe most sensible . teens seems to 'be to acliptobsap substitutes for the articles that are 1 • dear; and it is nowa' -Acting' time 'to assairtHsin what' 'substitutes of thst kind can'be obtaiied.— . Theiaw Toh Tribune has a/long artleitiun this subject, in widah it enumerates the several articles of consumption, and th eir relative value , . . na • means of sustaining life. Beans, peas, nat . - , meg, oorn-meal and hominy It regards as not only4epre nutritious 9p say other articles of "food, but much cheaper, and adds : , , . Porhipe • i:lf '/111 the articles named, taking into secoopniAlsespribe •Ond nutritious qnalitioat ss meal Will the greatest amount of no era for the fsast money . But when" will you p ad it In use? Hotpot' family in a thousand et r saw . the artiolec not one in a hundred ever heard of it, acid many who have beard of it have a tape impression that 'nona but starving Boots& or. ...clash am use it; and; in short, that oats in -ArDeritlib are only fit food for pigs end boreal. .. • . It is a great =intake. °soonest. is' excellent in punidgs, end all sorts* of cooking of that • kthd, and oat-meal cakes are ,sweet, nutritious _ . and an antidote for dyspepsia.' Just now, we believe oats are cheaper than any Rain' it' mar lot, end it is &settled foot , that oats -Or AOl greatest amount of powsi of , iity,grein _con = maned by meteor bast. - - , ,• , - - AZ This cheap fobd only needs to' e imilitelable, to ba extremely popular among all laborers; all of whom, to say nothing of , other Gimes, est *ninth Hee . flour bread. .' • • ',- ..: --,' Hominy, Whip, - hulled -- ooro, we have so often recommended and.urged upon the • attention of elf;' both sigh and poor, as cheap, wholtesmth nuttitioie - food that wo have induced atter to try it, who would not give it up now vadat; any rxmaiderathas.' We reiterate all that we 'have ever mid in its thror. Thirty, yesre expirienoe in ititusa:anlyserne to confirm us in the °Yin ien-thst it 11 such excellent and. economical food that too much *mot be said in its' favor. -The Pull, iting necessary in Its cooking Is to 'ceok , it enough—it cannot be cooked too much. ...'..: 'Every familythOuld est beans and pees, be "; - meth of all articles they Ilford the most out*, _suit for the least many.. ' • , . , One Nudist .of , white beans wilt ; feed ithinnlaboting men than eight Wadi of potatoes. .:We would not =fine the laborer or the poo l :. Id *oily So Able cheap food; but; we do , theist , 'that ails: their ditty to subsdbate such food cema• 2 10 2 /Byjo place - of that which is more: expan .: sink 'and • thne by saving, lay• up a few dollars In • the savings hooka* save themselves from the - Mali lifil.aVillg oontrivanas, the ' soap house. • ". - ire hope !WM' SO' see soothes' of these pau- Pereitikint jestebibilunints - in operation again - in thieititF Let,tnect think. *los before they oPon• • t .. lie et . e very : one think of • the economy of -- tubing a soup hooesAit hOlna4 IVOSPOkOat pat imosr,..:: is there any living witness of th at good 61 0 4:failiOil dish of ebe4libed,. called Wei - pot" aid gef= lit it be reviets‘in *sal family; among . Awe & a ~...07 , v soh* e hwy. ifligistu?g the poor as aa *it ~...:,. , si yl k i ~ ~ ! 41 , i imria.;_matialr Yankee dish ' 6 bum.: anoint& baked WWI ilibi:tre e feces mi rit aiind .fist is th• *iced Indian mealfed-, . .. ding; and this tuitei us ad ludien 'formai a Ali, tun of atreahirds.ll o rti Mal and ane-thirdiOs cual,tibtkirioll our.. which snakes most ; delicious •-• braid ,stipile: 6 6!li' 98. 40 11 119-0 . 4 g. 0 .'10, 41 ' # llll4 7 - I - - 0 :,0-i.,.., , i t o-141-1, : • -..! We could go on a long time pointing out the er rors of tieing in which economy has been lost eight of, if we-thought the wished-fa...effect would bs • oxblood, We urge all - tiX think eff what , chi* maid, undlint'One of the best things tilt:* be don* fae . the*, to leech Oka pistitiSein* any in every-day -• No charitable societies have ewe done so much, food to the poor by a distribution of food as they could - do by printing and futtlitgliith the' ban of every family a little tract containing practical lessons of economy in the art of living well and living Oliestianaktrat avoid Pinvent thiiraste of food, and lessen Abe expense of first purcha ses, and immune the nutritious gvalidae, while it added immensely to the table inioyment of every. family. In a . great majority of cues it may be eel down as an incontroveriable foot that want comes of wide, and node comes of want of knowledge of the properties of different articles of food, and how to combine them so as tsatroduce the most beneficial effect. It may de sot down Si another inoontrovertible lint that no class of people can want food and remain virtuous. Their degeneracy, both phials. _ally and morally is certain. , :It is our religions duattyy then, to study and teachtsionomy in food, and the art of living beam sad cheaper; mon in accordance with the principles- that promote health, vigor, intellectual oapanity, comfort, hap piness sadmarality of the human hinny. One of the most singular accidents on record is that of the train, blown of Use track, lately, on the - Harlem (N. Y.) Rantoul. The following are some of the statements given by those who Pere on the train: James E. Duncan, a young man, was in the baggage car with the bagpge-roaster, Jobe Shelly; the train was coming , round the curve about half a mile north of Boston Four. Corners, all at onoe the front door buret epeekby the vio lence of the gale, which was then blowing from a south-easterly direction, and almost instantly the car went wheelingdown the embankment, a distancie of thirty or forty feet, and was smash ed up; the coupling bad broke from the tender, and the locomotive.went on. .DOZlCVlWlldbruis ed about the head; and his neck was stiff from pitching head bretinto the top of the ear: After Duncan gathered , up, he heard Shollyewtaring lustily and ordering Duncan to get of:Mini. It turned out that Shelly was washed down under •heavy chest containing couplings and,topla.— Hii amps was miraculous, and, although he was covered with braises about the head and body, and injured in the snipe, no bones were broken. lily injuries are not considered at all dangerous. Judson Barnes made the following statement: I am a brakeman, and was standing on the rear platform of the baggage oar when the ac cident occurred; we were running about, twenty or twenty-flve miles an hour on the curve in a southerly direction; a gale of wind was,hlowing through . the valley from the southeast; I felt the oar nitwits gently at first, and as I saw it was going over attempted to gain the upper side to jump off, but could not make any headway against the wind; the next instant I was flying in the air clear from everything, and landed down the embankinent about thirty feet, Into a little hole; the baggage car alma rolling down the emba nkment and crushed me down; I man aged to crawl out and all around was dark and still. some fifteen 'minutes elapsed before I could get a breath or speak, aud then I saw some men coining along on the track with lan terns, and occasionally they would stoop down and hold on to the rails to prevent beteg blown down the embankment ass sudden gust of wind would blow over. When I was going in thedair . I heard "Lew" blow to put on the brakes, but I was making an extensive break myself. Next heard. "Jack, " the baggage master, swearing. the biggest kind for some one to get off of him, and could not help laughing. I then crawled off • Mils on one side—as I supposed, to die. Barnes was bruised about the head, body and legs badly, but is able to be around. Mrs. Van Veohten, residing at Pittsfield, whose luishand is a master mechanic on the Western road, was in the middle car, and by her attentions toward others, regardless of her own injuries, showed that she was • women of spirit equal to almost any emergency. She assisted to dress the wounds of three-bodies, the newsboy, and several others, and finally, after the lapis of several boors, it was ascertained that her In juries were more exteimive than any she bad assisted. The first intimation that she had of danger was the gentle riling of the : oar, and then it pitched down, turning over and over, and her impression Was that they had run off a very high bridge and were whirling down into a stream of water. Seats and various missiles were fly ing about In all directions, tearing the dress, bonnet and cloak nearly off her. All at once they struck the ground 'and she wee standing upright In a mass of ruins; all sae dark and Brill, not even a grout to indicate the presence of a living being. . A moment before the anal dent she.. was conversing Irtilt Mr. White, the conductor. She called out for Mr. White, and he replied that he wee safe. Ile then procured a lantern 'end with Mrs. Van Vechten proceeded to extricate the ladies and others from the ruins and make them as comfortable as possible, by spreading mate and cushions for them to lay upon. After some three or four home all of the injured persona were conveyed to the hotel at Mellerton. ' The neighbors gathered round and looked on while Mrs. Van Vechten dressed the wounds of three Wiles and then attended to the otrwtboy. It was then for the first time that discovery was - Made that he wee injured. She received several severe gashes about the bead by striking against tke top of the oar and from dy ing missiles, and was injured in the back. The road leading to this point for three quarters of a mile forms a/1 embankment about ll•ty feet high, with 'imn corresponding in its course with a range of mountain half a mile eastward of it. • From a close examination made ofi the track and indentations In the ties, it is evideht that the wind, raised the oars and carried theta .a dis tance of sir feirt_fonr inches westward, so .thst the east-side wheels slighted eighteen. inches west, of the. west•side. rail, and that they thus ran with wen Wide wheels at a considerable elevation above the etabankment for - • distance of nine feet, when It is believed from the jagged oondition of the rail, that the coupling.between the tender and baggagtvear gave way,. and set the oars at 'liberty •to roll down the embank- Harvey Gaylord, brakemen,sof Chatham, says that wee on the front platform of the rear ear, that the wind blew. w pevfect hurricane; had never known the. triad blow so hard before, and found it utterly impossible to keep one of the ear doors closed; that while at his post be felt the entire car lifted up by the wind, and almost at the same instant the ear turned over, and that he Went down the embankment with it, which vie the last: he had,..any recollection of rolothe to 'the ootidentt, until rescued from the wreck ota ear and takew to •,:honse near the scene of .disaster—where. be Hecht a very pre-, carious state, hating •frre ribs broken, his binge raptured by the points of the broken ribs, his skull depressed, and his right shoulder, chest end face severely braised. . . One man was killed, and seventeen wounded, some of tikten Tun. Rona. -- ANIMAL ANL. HOUTIONLTLTIAL Dulacrozi.—This is a little bend book on gar dening end frnit'trees, containing directions for the preparallon of the ground for the orchard and fruit garden, planting, pruning, A 0. ,, with lists of fruits recommended by the Atierican Pomologital Society and / the several State Boole ties.; Alai direotlons z for making and planting lawns find flower ,gardens, end a catalogue of ntirserymon in the ilJnited States end Canada.— The work is Ohio:rated with GO engravings, rep resenllng„iarifauf !arms of trees, leaves, and fruits, pruning, desips for plantations, etc. A aery , wahlablellttliarork, richlyiworth the money askeditir ,- PulfUshed by James Vick, Itochts . . . tar. rfti* Tas MTVIIIILLIR OF TM COON? or THII BTearsa. —By Wm. Harrison Ainsworth. T. B. Peter ion, Phßadeipljie, has just publiabod • cheap edition of thisnorel, in ono volina. For rale b~.3liasr do Co. and dilcienfonny & Co. PRIVATII LOBARILILTIIIO Rev. Laker, Fern 'ham read a paper before 'the New England His toriatletstalogical Society the other evening, on the private libraries of Boston. :He estimates that there ars 'BOO,OOO - volumes In private libra ries within ten miles of the State Home In that city, each of which contains 1,000 'tellurian or npwards.. Twelve. of them contain 30,000 voltunes, , , t and ten 9200. Some of these libra ries are of great seine from the character ea well as number of books contained In them. ELIMOIIII as deepiteh from NOW Oiliaus ancounera that the Demooratehave triumphea In that State; eliding the Governor, State °Seers, aad three oat of four a the Con gressiong delgation. , . F lIIILD—In Anal - won LIrLJULLI IL PALMER. wife of I= ll .l bra.= (3sta:l - Aar) at 11 o'clock, A. IL, float the reddeare of tether, )t. S. BMW. lade," Id' no muds 'of th• fowls or. invited to stt...a. Thofo/s7. Nov./ 5 W'; len wlfc of awl asrtswor Boat' Plibborgh. • - Rho f sierit I'M tots "lon from the madmen of boo Ists boabiald thii.(hsdonsfhomooll. of I o'clocit. Rho filieds of the thodlT am Invite to stand. • lietliallandsoie Ritter.—Vir hive-reed stiottie tottaikato oat Oreanclitiotes. litttoft.o.d.6l •r titer Des.a Delliager.liedemes to :Willett hi the M6l.44.4l.lilerileettollelett Sheen eattnls awed the' otlootopottiotatrotoono Debility. with libietibte loin .a an motet* hear is enteral to the totogir to:iota:li mat rteitorouto isksirlida mu of new 014 ,f 11 1" kalM O W ' 4606 ' 1ff114",,0H SPECIAL NOTICES. Have tri a Unmixed Livertr•rhkquei tson. temugh stiruni& V gatkiwOr .b.O the feet le Mlorn infainueldereMen that. . of Lbw hare became mint aleambarlt tartan,. In the Vol. tad State. Intel. the:Mare fe Itandlabla dimities that are ma In mum mar traceable to s deranged Rate of that I..p or t n .r,orgart. Many &the mentlalnte usually clawed ~ under the head of Thrormattlom hare their ortatn tolhe Liver. ...toy tamed? ehat would Imam acintleatf, and laslthful action friths Liver; wood be • blaming to min. khiar has. teen the web...am of thoumulla That re ably has been hand: It le sere and sure. When a tar . DIM bag tam 'Darted It. It hue never beau knelt. to fall. gesacr.here yOti ear Nem of the Liver, or &cram which yea hells.. proceed. from hepatic dentogeateutf— thee note moment, but ronehsee, a boo of Dr. brtaue'e Pte, and they will rattan, nolo health. It I. the rely remedy padhanvered. In which Implicit orattlaton may b• Diem& lalt.Parchacierettll ha canna to mak for DR. isn...erre 016111111.031 D tallEft PILLS, and take none else. Then are at 100 PIS.. t0tT106 616 8 to es Lim MU. now Wore the 'addle. Dr. Inoue, Lim Pills. elm Ida celebrated' Verudfut% eau ocw to hod at all rcalteetable Drug Storm la the United Stater; and Canada. Par calo by the able lualtdetrou MUM) BROTHELS. 1et12.1.11 llturosore:a ut J. Kidd a' Co.. 60 Wood .1. The Greatest Medical Discovery OF TkiE AGE• Mr. Kennedy, of Bo dieenvnreet. ha one of our ammoa pasture mods • ramedy that owe mew Mid of Star.. gm - mine mnfido I /MA. Be has Wed It Is am *Luna taradred mom and veva felled elmc to two moo (both thtuider humor.) He hail now In hie scamodoa am two hundred toriftlentra of Ito • elm oil Tetthla twenty miler of Barton. Two bonne am Truncated to re ne auirston ...mouth Boots threw bottles will ours the mast had of simples of the Two thin bottle. will :10 r the hcaa Two bottles are warrenbst to oars th. wont Man to the maths:al etmasoh. Team to ere bottles are warranted to our the wrest esm of erpdpdas. One to two bottler are waresadad to oure all hum I Ow Two e. bottler are warranted to curs Menthe of rho and tandem annul the hair /oar to an bottler are Tenanted to env earr o pt arid runnlas dean One bottie will ewe e.l7ernatton at the akin. Two to three bottler are warranted to can the mon des mate awn ofrhanmatlem.. Two to thne bottles sr, warranted to one the wont oarretrinerworm The. to ft= MUNN .. warrastal to arm lan ski. . Five to sight bottles will tun Lb* wont d It hest Dr /06 Meth lArtod Whig *sod opting hous• l'h•Ettothuhista Ozontbui 0•4004 1110 haute. Torso NW 2014 Miran= 80tt 03 MAW. oh I.lLoo4 7 3OO'bblii.•Pabilitto a la raw Tl2llllll.lMllla, •I 1 4 , UtrbilliaAalfala u ttl m anta. matlbraOsar DaviD O. nol4 'earner Libertr sat llaatest. vyANTED-Bilokirheat Flour, 50,4)00 lb s. , to •hrsh'en. biga...t =Walt prim 14 paid by on 4 ;: D. CL liiftBBT. ear barty Mud aR nIIILDINO LOT in East ."Eintinglaam or IJII/ Mop $lllO. , ta.om floiroat by till noli IkellTOßlUtia SON, 6S M.Fakat STRAX MOILERSOR . .4 A Tir,--•New and With lira Ibboberli wit"i beim' 94 fed bob; by 30=s Men • ' • • SIN01:1111DBP:Y SON. 110' O. IdOLASSE.S.-351 .bbbi. N. O. No- . =lww oaut n r a iX t I t7 n 2Wowo m . a d a U WA t tßl' haW.E.RT HAVANA - -ORANGES receirid l 7 LT • :nets A.'wertaxstd. OSTON Isom, Spon%do, Nish. re. GIGIS--4 bb:e fresh Ego jnet: recd and lb: soot was : ME WL% a DILROMIL. QYRUP-4O bble.,Golden Syrup; I t .13:1! 4:16 RtgelsoAthradignitylibediAlrf. IMI 5 • PLES-20 bble. choice Appl 11U4 'enticed an* Da obi b 7 RAM' ELCOLIM. QUG4RS.-50 t!blor. Refined'Sugars forage RHUIVII34:DILWOIMIL c l urmax-Nr- to.s.r—murphy fr., Birch.. luskia wilcvlaim oat thole stock...of Main Meta ttyak lb* du: 6 a°l6 W1A.84E13 —5O bble pr , ,Molaases for 67 ■Ol4 annmaa4wos.m. li.o. ' innuitesAakrut i. 2 7 /edit-150bble. "Wilmingtott,"in lar&kba-- X far 66. by IdeGILLS NJ& Li lit)Cai §-30 sone Hatfield Form, , tk a4 • -.-114:01U1.61 a ::' , f -; 3'o dash • • . --, , e liti t# L A G ..VES AND do do Burr. 4-,- 60 40 111100 1 • ..'do' Darilialsod do. ,- ' " t p• 1 ' , tcelll O. 1(X•0114 4 00. 110 at. - • 11WARLAEOV-20 casks prime .Pbarlab -12131.1 lan obr ibu by MIT= ADEL=. :bCOTTON-6 bale: Mid. CO =kl'• i!"4.17-