0 CI Aitsintre r eaaitth 1110X,DAY, JOLT 211.. UM. It M v On Baturd4 we laid before oar read eta the message of UM President to both Rouses of Congress containing his rea-- sons for withholding assent to the Sup. • plemental Reconstruction 811, as, also, the prompt and final action of those hod. lea upon the whole matter. • 1 That the message is an able document, I St would be tujhatice to deny. Written with great force and clearness, it makes the most that can be made from the Pres ident's point of view. lint the g round upon which he stands is altogether erro neous. If no rebellion had °emoted, Tendering necessary and so Justifying a resort to - military coercion, what the President urges would admit of no dis pute. Indeed, no measures would have been maturated or thought of giving rooui for such en argument. Ills prime fallacy consisu in substantially Creating the case as if there had been no prodi gious upheaval in the affairs of the Union, and as if the current of events had moved on in the ordinary settiaice. In this ',cue:, the vast armies that were maraud'. ed, the memorable battles that were waged, the patriotic graves that ridge half the continent, and the most conse quential laws that emblazon the national statute books, were all needless and -un constitutional. The war for the suppression of the Rebellion is a great fact. It stands in history with colossal proportibns, almost overtopping the -Constitution itself. War knows its own methods. They are not those of the civil code. It is on ab sardity to talk of prosecuting war on peace principles Neither Congress, nor the loyal masses represented therein, made the war, nor are they answerable for it, - or the consequences naturally result , ing from it. The leaders of thollebel _lion were not weak or ignorant men. When they appealed to arms they knew what arbitrament they invoked. When the fortunes of the field compelled them to !pannier their arms, they compre hended what fate awaited • them if the laws should be allowed to. assert inure. stably its claims. "Treason is the high est crime known to the laws, and must be punished as such." Never before waS the punish'ment of gigantic treason so light. In the history of nations, it has been the invariable rale, when the sword wee returned to to scabbard, after quelling a mighty revolt, ibr the scaffold to make atonement for the violated sanctity of the civil code. In this instance not a victim has suffered; not a drop of expiatory blood has been abed, Only guarantees for Were peace hive been demanded; and these have been sought not in crushing the insur gent populations, or in decimating the leaders; but in lifting into the sunshine of . freedom millions of men and women held In the cruelest bondage. A remedy Ms bees sought, not in the infliction of pains and penalties on those who richly lieserited punishment nuderthe laws, but 1111 breaking the bonds of the enslaved and letting the opt reseed go free. This marvellous clemency, -in which the President finds nothing to commend, and everything to denounce, to-day ex- cites the astonishment and admiration of the civilized world: For all time it will . , statilthe most illeatrious example as yet .lilted into cortipicaity for the imitation of other governments. „ • The Senate and Rouse of Representat lives did well in not entering upon a formal - discussion of the doctrines em bodied in the message. In advance, a Washingtoemewspiper, known to be in the confidence of the President, and . often to speak by his dictation, admon ished Congress that the President would base lilimessage treated with what he ISIS pleased to consider due respect; and the - threat was thown out that if this was not done he would resign and .preciol - tate a struggle, Which was dimly forshadowed as something terrible indeed, -hut the exact purport • of which , was conveniently shroud ed in ambiguity. What the Presi dent meant by due respect can only be inferred. It has been the - custom of the Homes not to debate at length any of thq veto messages Of the President, but to proceed promptly to the work of passing the bills into laws over his ob: jections, which is one of their constitu tional prerogatives.. In other words, his arguments have seemed mightier in . his own mind than in the minds of the rerpiesentatives of the States and the people, and this has proved a deep an noyance to him. It teemed disrespectful to bite to have his objection dismissed and set aside with an- air that possibly, ImPorted they wire entitled to no special - consideration. Hence, we are pleased that Congress did not deviate in this in. stance from the precedent it had estab lished. Now, if the President will inf. llii his threat by sending in his }coigns- • bon of office, lie will perform an official act the wintry will applaud. I The Supplemental bill is now the law I of the huid, and the District Command era will doubtless' conform to it with alacrity. What the l'reeident will do can oply be inferred 'from his course hitherto.' When the Military Govern- - ment Act was originally passed over his veto, he proimisett to carry it faulyrinlo eyeettion, not as he thought it ought to have been Named, but SS Congress ac tually intended. Fora brief season,.he mailfaited some disposition to perform • his duty in this regard; but it soon be came evident that he had no intention of redegining his pledge, but every to- I Mallon to violate it. . Doubtless, this was one of the reasons which drew from I fittlrthlt the strong expression that it was the dpty of Congress, either to de pose the *dent, or to remain perma nently .in session, es a constabulary , I force, to watch his. conduct. Sias the flex - into; , from • Ilassachmetts valid reasons for putting a signincani inter: . pretation upon the threat of the Presi dent to precipitate a fresh struggle? • Rave the organization a, existing through. out both North and South, ostensibly to make a raid on Mexico, any connection with thlimatter? Ms. ROLLINS, the Commissioner of Intense! novenae, has been waked up by the newspapers to a consciousness of the fact that Immense frauds are perpe trued uponthe revenue. These frauds,' though not confined to one subject, are particularly 'conspicuous in alcohol and - whiskey. In respect to' these, fraud has bear the rule, and hiinesty the exception. Distillers of integrity hrie stood little or "no chance. Of course, frauds so Dustier ' mu and gigantic base not been censure,- '" mated without the knowledge and par ticipation of Revenue °Mears and officers • of the UnLed States Courts.. The bun - dred million dollars of which the gov ernment has been defrauded has mulch ed a good: many place.holders.- The whole affair In utterly disgraceful; and : terribly, illuitrites what sort of men lave been allowed to secure 'responsi ble Opel:dramas by sustaining the Pres• !dent against Congres a. Ms. BaiaTon Btoneu informs us that while the - Judiciary Committeo will meet In this city to Inquire Into discrim inations by railroad companies against tlas interests ofahe citizens of this Com monwsbalth, it will not assemble here as soon as he hoped. It will bo here odor before the, middle. or October, and dne aoti...* of its coming be given. 10 that all who desire to be Milett., as wit. lusies maxhave an opportunity, TIM Palle Atoniteur is specially ma. Dgoaat towards Mexico for cxecotnfg Maximilian. and scarcely less so towards the Vidted States for opposing th e Franck intervention. 'lt curled Ice malice towards our country so far as to hope It may !swallow tlie whole Mexican • 'Republic. . • (From V. Indepalidez E.) THE NEW ROPE OF LABOR EY HORACE GREELEY Co-operation is not a hypothesis. Its value does not depend upon the sound ness of any political or social tc eery. It has been subjected to the test of actual experiment, with signal and enduring success. flow far the principles may bo profitably carried, aro cannot yet say; tint enough has been demonstrated be yond cavil to justify sanguine, far-reach: lag anticipations. The aim of this article is simply to explain to those wt nee at tendon has not hitherto been called to tee subject the nature and workings of the central idea Let us employ the bulieess of shoe making to illustrate the principle in and around the city of New York several thousands of men and women gain their livelihood by the manufacture of all manner of boots and shoes. Some of 'them are foremen or cutters, earning $2O to 30 per week; the ordinary jour neymen earn front $lO to $2O when in full work; the women, ty binding, earn from $2 to $6 per week. All are liable at any moment to he tlfrown out of em— ployment by mere dislike, suspicion, or caprice; all hold a rt lotion of virtual an tagonism to their em ployersosho occupy an intermediate poaition between the ac tual producers and the consumers of shoes. The workman wants more pay; he is under a constant temptation to slight his work—to make appearance serve instead of faithful performance— ! and be is liable to be cheated ousel his enrrilors by the roguery or bankruptcy hf his "boss;" who, 011 his part, may fall. through no fault of his own, but because insufficient patronage, exortiliant rents, and falling markets ;have devoured his capital. Co-operation would replace this indus trial chaos as follows: Let 1,000 (more or less) of the shoe making men and women subscribe their respective savings to form a working capital, say of $lOO,OOO in shares of t?.10 to $lOO each. Let them assemble and choose toanager or general agent, who combines experience with capacity, and who can give ample security hr his fidelity to his trust. Loot the martu,mr hire a suitable building, tiny the rctitosac stock and fixtures, anti comtimuce the manufacture and sale of Floes for account of the company, giving employment to the etoekhohiers, mid, at times, to °fliers alro, paying each fairly for his or her work and selling the product to custom ers, and to the trade, should eastern ever prove inadequate. Let the public he burly advised that this is a work men's concern—that its products are made upon honor and are said at fair prices, to the profit of the producers alone. It does seem that the great body of consumers, being themselves work ingmen and women, would prefer to buy at this shop, provided the goods and the prices are eatisfactory. The advantages to be realized by the system are briefly. these 1. Steady Work—The public demand for shoes is nearly constant. The mak ers would be paid such wages as the des obtained tor their work would testi fy; but oboes could always be sold for inure than the cost of the stock. In good times their earnings would be lib eral; in dull times they would be moder ate; but each worker would keep doing, and_would always have something to carry home to his family on Saturday night. 3. Just Btcompense.—Whatever the wearer paid fur his shoes, the maker would receive, less the ineviuible ceet of rent, interest on capital, manage meat, etc. If the n carer paid .$1 fur the making of a oak of shoes, th maker could hardly fall to receive PO corks of it. 2. Constant Ineittnunt to 6eiris9.— Under the ordinary wages system, nine tenths of our journeymen save nothing. . When trade is dull they cannot; when it is brisk they do not. Liberal earnings are squandered in drink, in excursions, in every fashion of degrading sensuality. The journeyman marries poor, if at all; when children swarm around him, lee cannot save if he would. Discourage• meat Is drowned in drink; he loses hope and staggers aimlessly into a pauper's grave, leaving his children to charity, and to run the same ereary;ronnd. But a cooperator must have Mved some thing to term the nest egg of the enter prise, whereof the capital will always need to be enlarged. When trade is good, the business will need extension; when trade is bad, all will wish to keep their products for sale In better days, so as not to have them sold at inadequate prices. Let such a concern start with a =vital of $100.,000, and the associates wnuld strain every nerve thenceforth to double and treble i . Inerersite of Bey Reepert.—The work !nen regularly employing and paying theniselvea, choosing and changing their own agent or manager, and main taining a vigilant oversight over their common interests, would inevitably be more sedate, considerate, dignified, than so many. "tramping jours." They would dud little time ler target shooting or games of any kind. They would be. responsible, tax paying members of the c l community, alive to ite--well being, and solicitous, tor its prosperity. Each a body would - not develop one drunkard or other reprobate where the system of journey-work turns out a dozen. Such are some of the manifest advan tages of co-operation, The hours of labor would :really adjust themselves. He who chbae to work hot eight hours would do se; if he effected as much as hisneighbor, who devoted ten or twelve to his work, so much the better. Jour neymen and employers being identical, it would not be possible to prejudice er array one clue against the other. There would be no selling on credit, and of course no bad debts. If goods could not be sold so as to pay every one each Sat urday night,. the workmen would blame no one, .but await the sale of bit own property, by the neat of his choice. In short, peace and thrift would supercede war and waste. Of course, I Lave aimed to exhibit single aspect of on operation. How it may be applied •to trade, or the supply. mg of each_family with needful food, and to ministering most economically to other wants, I may set forth at another time. I now seek only to call the atten• tion of the wise and good to the prince- Ind bespeak for it their favorable re• gard. I sadly err if tbe not destined to brighten the history of our age, and improve the condition of labor through out Christendom. The Trip to Europe. A. voyager to Europe gives the follow. leg account or the passage, in the steamer: There are several ladies . :who keep their state-rooms from the beginning, eating nothing, holding nothing, cryirig to the Captain to stop the amp nod put them on shore, and • a.king piteously whether the next wave will be as big as the last one. These are hauled up en the fourth day, and have a sensation of being bounced into the air and len bang ing there. But none are so utterly mia erablo as the ship's bride, who came on board with her groom to a new travel ing dress of silver colored poplin, with a tear on her white veil as she bade her mother good-by, dropped upon her groom's arm, and thought of love, too teener!, Paris, and presents. In two bourn she has a sensation, as she stands on the hurricane deck; of having eaten too much fruit cake. This increases us the ocean drawn nearer - . and finally re solves. Itself into a great ache, both in the bead. and stomach. Proud as a i Sioux brave stands her husband. Pale l as a captive squaw is she wondering whethdr such pains are immediately con sequent upon the marriage state, and wishing one were single again, or had taken the other man. At last she fades below, like the specter of a mermaid, and sobs her pillow-case full. Poor_dear ! She think& that John will be ilLgusted; while John, like a horn surgein,•lB run. ning for hartstiorn,. salts, Congress wa ter, and brandy, all of which are thrown at him out of the depths of her distress, and she lives to believe that the first week of marriage Is the weariest of life; Tetu Chicago Republican thinks that St. Louis offers a broad del for Illin101211.• ry work. It says that a St. Louis Sunday is a splendid holiday. Beer gardens and beer-houses are in full blast. The best bands of the city are always engaged for the people's atuttsment. The parka are crowded, and the whole city seems to regard Sunday as .a gala day. In the evening the theatres (German) are thronged. and there are several of them, and the largest audience we ever saw at any theatre In St. Louis was of a Sun day evening at the Varieties Theatre to witness the opera of "Five Hundred Thousand Devils," when the house was literally peeked from "pit to dome." In no City as there so good a chance for mis sionary work as In St. Louis; not prose. 'Ling, but bringing these into the fold who never have been to church, never no to church, and aro actually heathen. Here Is, then, good work for the various religions denominations of the country. Instead of getting , up societies, as Sleek myosin the play, 'to send morel .tracts, and red flannel shirts go every fresh born Ethiopian babe," let them plant their banners in St. Lends, and go to work. mining in Virginia - la rapidly lnereaeing. By the let of 'November seventeen ranee will have been opened Spousylvania, Culpeper, Orange and Loua countlea.; ' ^ --- -- —ln some pari.h... in Lonkiana many T° LE•Tr - freedman am tlyna, of allolura. Fatal TWO SMALL HOUSES, • ,m 5 , ,,, have oaeurre , l al V n•kulas rg. —The grass gr a tes •.n t hal: m Nioule ou* or ssbleb Is e-tlesir uso , "WY ,In th e I.s!atul th us season that{ . .vi1. , 5 it I. mow- .",,,,',,,.. vl . ie n r . d..... , t , t.rcuur p t Trr i :::7 0 e:: ,. ... w ur .. .. .d. It h. to ha carried' to 01.11, !wit!, 10 how, Ira,ntre 'e on e prem. , ,Iry. Jr:LI:al: C. TITZPATIRICK. —3. B. L •Ila .„ I.iterts returns the heaviest in I FO R - „m“t Sr. !Atis for ISt.s, and I SALE. Plant, the dour nianuateturer, I A Good FamllY Hone, John Morriqsey has I tirned bin; In irk up.n Lis le4l , lallve tintite, at - [ baryain. 'De e ther or th And L em VIII he sold separate. ti4tol3, and gone to visit the n tiger - aotatlst Iran tat, sPaslatilt. FIZTA tenet Ertel:won. or of itre. AnnerOalli., he. of at !, ratogo. Yedcral street. •11•11 1 ../. ITUteal • iale reorce it. I te I• • •.re,t, of Nen . ; Tark, lean ra a,,h b of • • PROPOSALS WILL DE 11E , CEtVri, hr the en , erstened rnr PALNT. Ina inn* ouldmn 11%1. laz tiE.V Cavil w A ILU 11001., HOMO:. widow il.,10,0•11). ore s - e -• %" . Z,V• s ihn. r .'Peciaeatlons can • —The editor nr the PratriTewn I I rtr7t•Tt..dt.:‘ ne 4 ell. Zta . r .. ti ' ett, 4 Vat i t'et /:•-itot , tter say that its =.n •n day% he tow!, be kr, mutt an; or the usseri,nea, on the 29th AI. K Si e/KE. all. -even /nuns nr potato 1111, front lhi It•ittil, hills of praatts, 111.Katif.. j —A4 .. 0,411111.7 in a Pitilndelphin tairs.r. . N OTlCr..—scon.RT H. LEEK If. • teat I telont - that else trom OVUM' ot the h. Allettatur even in the moth aristroeratte por - heel. "."4.0 ff`la an tr ars of the env , are so lutnlerahle that • .tt-he*” J ' it `c . . to me hste , lt ern. - an evening . anti/. almost anywhere is 7,=, .1",):2Lr.7414;'„1 . , b,;,4 1 r.v1:., , ,-. 10 , - , punishment instead ill a pleasure. - hot claims ' , IL pltsts Desent the same . tie ee NA TeCte.nt street In the t 1 , 7 at —A Ilium for • Little burs has been es - se.s. GEO. It. tti DULY.. 1:11.1kinel near 1,..nd011. it nee A•Heo . e H. H. L.e..r. on.. Unwired. 'file only retpi kite- • tar entrance is eolliplete tiestitutlon. 'font. art lit thousand olltellet boys Ito iiig in the streets of Ord great na.trotettt, army, fighting the 'aragtianms, has men during the year, and a sixth tron elad is Isinig built. 'l'b.• [mod. fettling in Boon. Acres, an :Illy - M . A.:km!. In. however. in titenr of n tt.sation tt. Ito tilttiost —on hearing the nig, allot pot don, the Eutprem I.:unit:no is 1111 to bay° burst into loam : turd tin ono l4 tlareri inform Alitxtottlion's molter aunt the return of Up l'ront•ot Joseph rrorn Munielt, lieu be Itnit, the NO tilling' to bor. --It to intimate,' from New Orleans that len. lhheradan will :910,1 10110 no order removing, with a few osceptiens, the entire I,odv of civil officers in Towns, nod that Judge Paschall, an original llnloni,t, will he appointed Governor in place of Throchtnorion. -A few days at a man front Fort llarl.er, Kansas, (.ho was on horseback, ant armed with n Spencer rifle and a re. von er, was attacked be thirteen Indians. Ile got dew n by the slap of the horse and stood them light, lolling four Indians and receiving a wound himself. --The second annual session of the National Loiter Congress will be hell in Chicago, on the third Monday in Amnon next, (19th.) Every trades' union, work ingaten's union rind eight hour Rogue in the Mina ry will be entitled to One delegate for the first five hundred mem bers or less, an.l one delis:Pe for every additional tire Itandr.l or fraetional part thensill —lnternal Heroine Co tttt tissioner 'Mt nns has issued a eireular nsmesting bankers, brokers, merchants tom others who Uhl , revenue stamps to destroy the stamps when the iustrumeots upon whieh they ere used erase to be valua ble, and tiro thrown into wastoptqler baskets. Persons are now engaged in collecting these stamps, ;Ind preparmg them tb be used over seam. • —Extensive depositsoleo:ll have been disemered on Ow line of the Union Pa - mile Railway, Kansas Brunch, about nue hundred out seventy miles from Point ereek, On the route of Alliersinenine. Mr. Sanders. the proprietor of the Santa Fe sumo line, reports the veins from I I to I. teet thick. -Specimens al...Mei-11 at St. Innis are pronounced a Wsid quality of hivittninotm ...ed. At throe feta a vein has Inks been discovered, twenty miles amst. Of Fort Harker. --A dissatisfied couple in r I ihio, quarreled the other day, when the husband converted lus nroperty into cash, intending to separate altogether Mid leave the city next day. Ile depos ited forty-live hundred dollars between the cloth and lining of his vest, whore los wife found it in the night. She sub stituted an old trimaran., and the next day they took dttlerent tnrins, he going to Toltsfe In blissful ignorance of his loss, told she to her friends in Indiana, with the money. —The photograph business of Yale CA' 'liege has become important. Here is a huitemen t regarding it which would indieate that the young gentlemen of Yule are as fond of seeing themselves as others see them : "The • custom of ',changing photo graphs has grown to wonderful dimen sions. The total picture bill of each class is between SL.w t nad C 1,600. Tli total weight of the photographs pur iduossi Is about twenty-tire hundred pounds. A contract has of late rears has been made by the ditlerent classes with . entineni photographer of Lowell, 3lits,.;Nehu conies to New Haven at the bezMning of the senior year. takes negn• lives of the members of the class: and spisids the remainder of the year iu priuting photographs therefrom. COEN DVSPEPFIA CURE r. fl“.•11113 ILI- fur r , 3c11C:e.,%:::: o•al out lit run stood ihe etro - lieet • 4 . 4 r. riin Orr sleety. Yncric the paint `letn y over . .1, e r c I, 'ins rm. iedCr. e•.O o 11, 6 ife•inc ro. fly p Indliter• 4 11 in, o•taers. Oendacte. rtol ra m•royee. cystn!ey - and erldertilty • r •o•il .4 ter. 1T Ibl gle. Wale e ure• Von aireln It re fall .41 Mit ram ocy rn its ire Ile una-tt .cursor t•t • 1.1 •ec. e•er tried 11, too cretins cues ; ant. corm • eighnirs. yuur Fluty lo lour• I ":T c`fl' ,..l - :t ""'near 10an.,,,.v to , I. ` l " i If ..er out. ecouc.ru.ng 10 wonderful vic• v.t oSt et ' , ° c ' e o [l o .!7? .":"r ne r e on. awl wood a erful—lee renoance...:47:,.. ,17 0 :1,:.trZ174,,ag I 6111 . . to to , apett ad a 321,1.113.1 ps•atlon 01 1 0110 1 nutt •r• entitled to you coniitte en . . rid t) , drvggist.s enre.7 ls. ..e_re. Y., anent for 11.111.1). Drop.. N 4 Usenet. street. IRE 4 TOUES GUlf or FADED 11.4.11 t. ass as • al.esslue esgnialte• birp• Heir from W. 1.. RM. Dm , fruit lica4achn and Ail Erupt., Ithwaset o , tin &alp. Th. Most Perfect flab Restorer Lcedoa Ever Hair Color xt.r In.don Initoduettl. W or estr' rwration IptlrErlor I..storer. .T.0135. - r; Egad !leads ilar &WO"; itemorer , London Hut Color Restorer• . L. lldoo ritc/oth.d Colebr Itettorer , •London Hair Color I.torer , conlou wlth aur.O•lor !tes.orcr” ,Z I.loov vzieoizi• ••Loslon Nora/ glair. Holy Color ilootoreill .roly cools. Onitle . bet Soun. Add?... Ord,. Is Ur , 15M AY :4 .t /N. llillodelpolo. Sold try Ka:LASSA s MESS, ng.Lby JOS. YLE.IIII4Ii. TIIHor.SCE. H. 0/ UAL Sr. I. Co.. 2 ttlotrargE: SANE 1 11[1 - YrY, A,legts.o7. A TIMELY WAIUiI It Li upon:ally Importnet at OM time, when the .tearaeli of the United blame are hooded with the Wren rations, under the name of Lao. norted Ilquois and when domestic compounds Plieporl inn to be undlcluel, but not • whit lean peralcons, are be . uNeo to Mu world ds "soon. elan rethedles,.. that the petite should fully us. denised the feels. Ile ft known, then, that all the nlffeelse seneslthis vaunt tenses •re Lathan, and all the Tank, containing also tot an manafactur d with a Oars article en tal nth. amyl arplstt oil, • andel torn, 11.1 a. rHTTcltn. CLLCHnbTLU en/1111.1.31 111 C. rElth eunthln none of then thlees. bat are a comelnatton of pare testace at tale with the puce Jule. , •1' the most saleable stomachic, anal tonne ao4 ap,rlent herbs and pleats, and that las a safe and rapid rens , dy for Dysorpsla and all Its kindled towel/dap, prepontton e. and. blare the world without • rival or com petitor. Its bah, to-r 1 y ere equal &a the c.a., Irlimit net., or all Me other toolm arlver ..... I la the Ilotted tits me, awl the ctrtilloatee which maim/treat,. artfulness ere alteeti by ludl of Ihe highest etimilleg to every .land citillocered walk of Itte. Ir•ware at tat tatl ms and larpostme. PINCI4 CANAIIENSIS. A. trim which Is abundant in Canada, Nova icolla, and the more northern ;arts et the New Eat land States, and la also found in the elevated and mountainous rerlorui of the Middle dtates, and abound. In medicinal 'silence. Dr. awe , . of Boated. has prepare, a utrillethe from the sweet tumid. bark of the pint tyre, Gallen PO- L DOS WIIISB PIA Ctlldi./tLNIP. watch Is on- of rare rains In all debilitated stake of the kidney.. It nets like a charm In ail diseases. melons mesclaratice, etabllnt them to regale their lest tone and coerce. It will be found well adapted to all thole diseases. weer. nacho has teen tiled and billed. rite likewise west wilted to chronic youths. and in lafallthle specific for old and debt:hated eases or asthma. nen, per sons who at drat only tarok a bottle of trae meet. cane. to try. idterwatila came twee Ltd Not • loran. or h dozen, blab enacted radical ow of disease, of the der mid kidney of Store stand Inv. thalietem, • diseasii that has town looted stem &I:ix...Wary, speaking of he pine, my.: lilt be preeeribed in leneorrhavi. to and o th er dlecasseof the nrinary paesaireei lo plies and ehronlo Intlantoodlen or u marathon of the bowel.. In chronle rstarrhal alfwellone, and In earl.* forms of rheumallent.i• It le ea ofwdlnerly valuable In nil graseliy affections, bloody wine, attereiu there tore red nod welt. evllment It es b• taken within , . , PLCITOVUon tb on et naval re ions.: and Instead of oken- Inv. produces a bridled, healthy power widen and Tikes. trier. pe t of six for O. W MT . & I.lLyi or se.m. k ' sti ' l at V U. Mita :EA; g n ersi 11 ` . ' drali:g e , Im Wood street. at= • ay*i — g — i ama 4 t:l3 0 DiC RINTIBAIif, Jr., Adams tfrprou Llr• Itoe, 64 JlVllarr.reaf, fa on authorised Afirrlf to memo delirert4aements forthe GIAZA'TTR.,and Othw roper. Aroughoui fhu UAW etatea ROBINSON BRonms, 1 0 .78 WOVETII STRELTtrlllotlalrgb. Ornreera 1-110 , .. free of ebarae, noon oven tonna. They Olen coastal:lily on hand all Undo of tr. al. - 13 1 0 , 1\TI:119, led era ',remand tobny.d 101 l Italleoad hoods Ror IltootaLklank. oaa Land on 11.nl 0.1414. Land Warrant.. te. - 40010 of the cools.. of but ler. Beaver. o w ed , Mercer and Waablonlon. I ter Or tal toned on to UO.Ol/i1 a. • NOVELTY CRACKERS. • A oew article, vary Mee, Nut ttrelrad: OM, frpeb 80. a, Wlaa as MLA LI tvl , , la Map eiby ele yourl, for sale se rat Family OrafAly ore of • . . . 40EIN A. RENSELAW, caner Liberty tid Ren d M. 1.1404 RI POT .CLAY.-AO a• Inr ore. will to sold at M. LOU. Dn./. 14414 trolght• by rite , pr' tOCICET a CO. J COTTON-1n bates !Middlings, Instotn. tLL be .old tow, to wind up the wisaon's Dulness. .17301011U1 DIOSZT CO. PITTSI3URGH DAILY GAZETTE : MONDAY, JULY 22, 186/ ONE• 9 , HA AR AND v./T MIMI' 0•8 trrocK..—u. Tlltit'DaY EVENi J., VA, at o'clock. will be oa ecutl.l .10 .1 . Of COcoaterclal 4alca Itoomk. 108 ctalthdeld • rec't ZI &harem Jonta• err,. 10 P, es Ma rl,s, r P.M). Sant. 6 share. Gceood Natloual Hank. 50 shares llirmlngluan 11.4 s Co. IT= ' A keII..WAINE, Attet.loocer. _ A D'OINICTIIATOIVA NOTICE.— ..-.Lrtterr of Admit, Itirstion have be.nnAr . ant- Zl ' ' a l : Allrexh.4l county. Va. MI mraosis Indebted to 11 de ig“, by no id .1 to male I.4lA:di me pay,. era. •wi those Paving claims will Ott . - (Out them, without delay. July •11 benticated for oqii..ment. JA..lll.:ti dm.t.tvaur. SHEPHARD'S CRACKERS 317 Liberty Street, PITTSBI7BOR, PA. H. M. LONG & CO., 11AN Mktg ULICILS UY PURE 16IIITE BURNING OIL, Brand-- " LUCIFER." Office, No, 2 Duque no Way, I= IMED FOR SALE. Half Interest la an Established Dry Goods Store, I= DOING AT PRESEET *40.000 PER ANNUM. D , potito Shwa to any Perna Adams. O. IA; Pun °Mee, Allegheny, Pu. - • • - CO2IPREI.SED BUNGS. ARMSTRONG, BRO. & CO., Manufaciareri awl Wholesale Dealers la MACHINE CUT CORKS, Plugs, Taps, Irish Noss, Pilch, =! Nog. Mrs & 121 Third At., ritc.banti IRON CITY CUTLERY CO., No. 3 St. Clair Street. Having foarehated of A HDRICW 00003 the entire neck of Hardware. Cutlery and Variety Got ds, at the above stand, It It the!? tntentlon to keeo on baud • era:class stocs of HARDWARE. CUTLERY. OUR, Ileverrers, PlllOll. 'lslamic Tackle al an el . raTa ' rf4f To d l " n r e tto r Corik/ kkelnal r ng Racora...namsre. en Wu, Stencil. and . rump, and enaklnn real and Lannelllna bumps, at shor,s‘ nouns. W. K. SOWN, II • BEM DISSOLUTION NOTICE.-THE Arm of BAILIFF. DROWN a co. In mill day dlaselsed by thaltallau and mutual to scut, Jon!. IL WATSON alsposlug of bla Interest ty. the retnalulog par., ers. All person trtne , lng Lliemselves ludelned to firm will p.m< call sad make Immediate easmeut. sod all pars°cs having claims will present the same . to JOIIN N. WATSON, Si our .11loe. 53 redual street, be beteg acthorlse4 to gettle all accoholo. Aileg!letlytity, JO, • 7 . 1719 cto BAILIFF, BROWN & CARSON, PLUMBERS; Gas and Steam Fitte rs =I Water, Gam & Steam Pipem Mg cr, SG SCQoraai NM $.O E:= EC= FIRST CLASS LOOKLNG GLASS AND PICTURE FRAME MANUFACTORY. ONS, No. 110 Wood St., Pittsburgh, ' MN.? b •i'.ll.l°N"`trl'E._,r-`74.1. , 1,*.M.11: w WALNUT, OVAL And coll•ICK MIRROR.. ora PoILTBAIT and PICTUFLIS YHASINS, Carta!, Cornice, Bands and Buttock, Console, Tripod and Bracket Tablas of canuistte design ad - - .. , ILDISti AND IMEGILIMIU executed In th e highest nyth of tbe art. So-PRICIth MCMILICATIC. • 006:ualawa pITTSBUII . GH CITY Lvf 11.TD11 r. All binds of wa.blig done with protet/tnela and dieeetch. Tu.. Limed,. pap-,... 1.11 cap for atel .1 liner .I clothe...me ot eases a[. e. Leave ceders lee fo me o'clock • lo the more. PI Once them atu an ea t i. o.aamo dew Orden left ed a. the following planes Mill he promptly attend- Jos. Ahrl. rum mad Gentit etc Hoidaminla Hoop vAlrh-65 Market at. Cool A (nave,. ca .F ederala Ohio. Allegh•y. Yteem a Haug., r. rain st , cot. a. a N. J. onmigraes, corner rodent! and !Avoca' aaaa eta, Allen...Ay. 410144. N.. 4 or. CLAIR NT. 1.17,:5wr 13lININESS MA/I'S COMMERCIALCOLLECEI Nos. .6 and BnLtlair Street. Naar Pospetual Charter. flook-Iteepttig. Penmanship and Arithmetic. time unlimited .... 010 00 • Arithmetic Ann Penmanship per miamer of throe ....... —•••..... 110 00 Penmanship. per month y 00 /or Otreelszs or Specimens, sildreu N. 011A//KB. or notirerr 1. V MeCLAVSIONDS. AINFALICAN WATCH - LB. ♦ EIPLYNDID 140C1C or Fine Gold and Sliver Watches, PINE COLD JEWELRY, BILVEUWARE, OLOCKB, tal: " tin t a n =lin . ut T atrgaVt7p l =l4 altewstara. Watca repaltlni prvmpuy Put:aired to, at W. WILSON'S,' No. 64 VW:MTH rTUILT, Tlso cl.re atone Market street. ea:ski:amp JUST RECEIVED, AT ROBERTS & SHE/MATTI NUOLESALE AND RETAIL Tie, Copper id Siert Ina Tare ludoctorp, U. 61 oraturtzr,u BT.. rmantirourl. tr"g'irg:;:fg' `7:rr'.4e4 • n ' estra, Neat nate. water &o'er. te oaotd nem sod falllloa of Honm.forolalalog non. Also. atanufset”ers of tlllit /La , 'IS ST al coos . fi 1 . 1 . 01/LTUn, tor melat, inutdALlgo. to lealitn43 INTCOTIC7M. w . J. MMUS,- WV MYERS. HUPPEIL a CO.), Having sold his Ottet.st to WIC. d. WILT. on aprtl Is; LW. cretins from the arm. and Mr. WILT cot.. as partner Rom that date. 'the 11110311 of the arm 11111 remote as moil, md eon. Um. on at their old Mum. Pa. 45 ISMITIIFIELD NTREET. Jytbal __ PILE QUEEN OF TUE WANU. TON.—The Hate Wight for tearylaud. With privilege of manufacture of • PATENT WASHING FLUID, Which, Irterever Introduced. bee Wet with lou ver/mkt haves., 0111 be cold on reasonable terms J. K. naal MON, 110: 023 MI Third street. HILLDALLE budoes. 'Mb tbe Cordovaatop oM dale C to•o17. of date aetallof la /O o r opal!. 1017. and rotnalelog unsealed, Too b. oltanded to at oaf oftica, be. /9 /iIW/14 err., woad doer. _J .. JOH If SIMPLE. . GLASS MANUFACTURERS. /On SALE—AII Otto PRVISVI, MOULD% :;rll.:gnir...rt:=„l°.;s. "the ror roll rtrtlettlars maldrods Or 1at.0.6 WMAICIL, Thlrd Lotar• 7 Matt ttAtt ZlPt.iihtaltr,trZ=TevalLll 27,121,1:2 . l'Atizra.tr„Ab t -nr . r.-. 17111c3a r1)1011111 T91111•611h NEW ADVERT IsE PIE ENT s TiIIiSOLIITION.—The Partner.' st,`l'2l?.;,;:°•":.F.sto'y the ratt , e Inures' o . rpt.m9&N utaatsta. Vb..t . snie tare cery sod Cuntsultsteu at the Old stead. No. Z. Mtn," t. A C. N 'Oh ay