THE DA.NT GAZETTE. rUBLINIED tVICIIYIEOAaLISO. Zacsrrato PENNIMAN, REED i; CO., ; woraprictoxv., 7. I. ..... a T0x..__:........ • UAEETT7', BEILDINO. 144 !LSD 145 WAWT/i ,tentntil Fru if Begin Pentilura uncut PAPER OF PITTSBURGH. /HD ALLEGHENY OITY. ILLEGttIT. CLIZAPEnT zed DEIST 'FAMILY end ORILRERCLAI. PAYER In the htnttb, • • Enzats or ERZ 1 1 / 1 1LE1 Mite PVT ...... 3 cent,. Deltrupl by Parrlert. prr tenet 15 e• dubseribers. Der Y.. 09.110. Atlldrenn; • • tiAZETTE, PITIEBREOR. 1.1:01A. f(fir Ilittsbur,glf-Ca;Ettt AS TAX AdCOILKODATION or l'sroma:l WON— 'Mc. the cit 7 4inhor the eommer menthe the; can have the balcrin 'mailed to their andrea. hinnloring the ia.thent the onion, ter fitteeneenti per week far:one week or Thu New York Herald leports Gen. Onewr as saying 'that if lie shall Le I ~, nominated for the Presidency it must be 'without ex Ming pledges from him. We do not hol that journal to ?me the best autivinty on-a matter 'of that sort. If, however, .the General, has :taken that podition, he has done no More than is umpteilionabl3r his privilegt.i Any chi- itenhas n'perfect right to gibe or with holdnonsent to be a candidate for Mike; or, consenting; to annex - wlMtever con ditions he may see Primer. ;Any politi cal-party has the corresponding right to exset pledgis, or, what is - cohivalent, to knOw precisely where an' individual stands on:essential questiona before :tonal . nitiiik Vim We doubt not the flopubli can party will insist on being satisfied as to the opinions and purposes of the man it msy Maim its presidential candid. ate before naming him. . , Tn Borrow Advertiper 'contains a special from Washington .which goes to confirm Mr. Jadd's statement regarding the disposition of:the Lincoln tablet from lime. • It 'states that after three d; ys search the stone was found in a coal hunker in the cellar. The gory given out that the stone was placed in charge of )3.'u. French, and by him placed un der lock and key in one of the rooms of the Ermutive Mansion, is utterly Un true, use unimpeachable witnesses who saw the stone in the cellar within two . weeks, 'will testify . If need be. The mark of disrespect paid to the memory Ist-the martyred Lincoln by Mr. Johnson - In Mus disposing of the tablet calls forth censure from all right minded persons. „Unow the nomination of Mr. Stars. woad the demoengie organs made ex travikant bouts as to his popularity ofestliiith repnbll'eais. If there ever was a basis for thud pretensions - , Whirh we certainly doubt, that period has gone ley. yhe Pottsville Journal says: "There is now great probability that ho will be opposed by numerous demo cratsfsho are not willing to trust him wh h great power. If his decision against the fltlidity of "greenbacks!' could be carried Into practical efect, it would compel every man who owes a debt of any kind to pay it down-in gold, no mat ter what the cost. It id no wonder, therefore, that ,Judue.Sharswood is los - mg strength every d ‘y. We cannot of lord to plaecta man upon the Supreme Bench who holds opinions so directly ppposed to the public interest." Tux watering places are but poorly , attended this summer. The 4ntaries of fashion have either remained at home or gone' to Etrope. A writer in an Eastern journal thinks that the proprietors of the more ; pope* places of summer re. rat have dlseover.d d ntthey have killed the goose which laid the golden eggs, by overcharging their purons last season. It is certainly more fashionable to cross the than to rusticate at home, and 'wealthy folks have found it • to be more economical - Tun cause of temperance was never ' advienteil by mere friends in Ohio than at the present time. There are no less than. ten thousand Good Templars in the Northern counties of the State. To-day *grand convenuorwsf the order will ,be held in - Clevelecid. Senator Wilson, of 3lttesae.husetto, will be in attendance. THE National Base Ball Club of Wash . ingtcn, 'which has been travel ing in the West, has met with triumphant success es everywhe e. • In a match genie with the Atiant s iat of ChiCago it -scored 13 to 17. The National has been challenged by the Enterprise of this city, but anwc. centance has not ;et been received. • ix VIEW of the political excitement existing in Tennessee, consequent on the State election, which will be held next Thursday, the President has prop erly ordered the Federal troops station ed in Kentucky into that Commonwealth, for the preservation of order, TELannarn announces that a Board of Internal Revende Commi;sion ent will be named - by . the PreSidont fur Vittrburgh ; also, for each of the other principal cities. Ti:ese Boards will have the same - functions as that recently ap pointed for New York. TuW Paris Monitcur gives what see to be an aids: denial of the war - rumors whichbave been prevailing in Europe. Te Easenth doubt the •sineerity of the denial, believing that Fiance is not so - peacefully inclined as she 'Could have outsiders Tax exports of petroleum from the *United States. so far this year have reached 33,280,18.5 gallons against •29,- 150;711 gallons during the vitae lime last year. This, shows - an increase dur ing this year of 30213,071 gaVons, or :8,161 barrels. • IT to not icoprobable,tbat the Conetl tutional Convention. of . 4)"ew York will favonthly rep . = for the prevention of truantn, and "making attendance at the Public Schools ccatirulsory.. • ta said that there if living rn Z11:105-. villa. Ohio, an old lady of , isinty Live yearsoeho still stars from a severe beating ?calved. fifty years ago at the hands of her mistress, • A ill 6 mible DSsaa er —Over one flan. .drea Men Buried Alive In a teat Slier. . The Ottimiis of the European German papers are filled with the particulars of fl one of the greatest di ,, aters that ever I desolated any mining district. On the Ist of July last the wooden fracaewook of a thousand lve linndred I .-feet deep Pit of a coal mire in the neigh. boyhood of Luella, in Saxony, gave way, blocking up with an . itareuetrable mass of timber and rock the pit nt the depth of about three hundred ells from the top. At the moment of the disaster one bon- 1 "died and two men, nearly all of them • the supporters 'of.large families, were - I working at the bottom of the mine. Their provisions were only calculated for one day. On the 3th. of July, the,' tate of one , 'latest news by mail, the pbeewhero the fallen as ses had stepped the plt was of such a solid structure that the water -was standing on _Many feet high. Front all sides j. the most ' available help was of. 1 feted, but ti e conviction that noth ing could be done coon enough to save the unfortunraireiners weakened, as it I ' ' seems, to -an energetic efforts. They were doomeddie ot starvation and want of fresh air. On the 4th of July all au tempts to reach the bottom of the mine by any quick process were abandoned, and a slew bat sure plan was devised, by which at least the corpses of the per. isbed could be extracted. Iron tubes of About two feet in diameter - were to be sunk through the obstruction down-to • the bottom of the Pit. Among the dead Are bonny-four married man, one of whom.has wwife and nine living chit-: dren. The scene at the entrance of the „Pit are described as lamentable without a parallel. One hundred and thirty liven children filled the air with their' woeful erica, while the Superintendent of the mine, to whose negligence the • ...lienster -was ascribed by toe People, could only be saved from being mobbed by his sudden imprisonment. 1r: 1 1 , dl+ ' ' 1 0 ' ) e ; 01 ~-.4 ~,:-.,' ' f, ~.. ---.,,, , , ~,- VOLUME LXXXTT.---NO. 173 A Celebra , cll Parts A Paris correspondent gives an triter. eating account of the late Dr. Trousseau, the celebrated. Preach phyeician: EIC talked, looked and_ acted wofully like a quack. You could not at first help thinking, "What a humbug he is!" When you became litter acquainted with him, you saw his manners and appear ance were only the overflo* of a Well- filled, well-trained, ever active mind 1)r. Trousseau was one of tlit - folv medi cal men who thought„ There is no pro fession in the world; where thinking is mere frowned on than in - the memral profession, which is one reason it makes so little progress. Inquiries into the nature of disease, its causer, the nature of tirtigs,.the causes of their action,.at. tempts to deduce the general' laws of disease, arc heterodox in t hat profession. Empiricism is the canlinal rule. .Dr; Trousseau, like Dr..ltirord, thought for himself, and, thinking fir himself, in vented one of the most admirable surgi- . . cal operations of modern times; troche. otimay, which remitted croup from the fearful group of consumption,. cancer, and otherineuroblediseasta. hp simply as Columbus's erg. 'lt cciasiata in mak , . ing an artificial aperture In the tiroat and inserting s Elver tube; air Is .supplied the. lung: below the (Ilse seal part, and CM physician has time to apply speeitics for its cure and Await their action. Where Dr. 'Tresseau was moat admirable was by the bedside of a patient. Hit diagnosis of the invalid mind, heart and body was miraculous, reached divination and the remedies ha. preicribed were fated for that peuAn and none other. Doe of the most remarkable Oir.guosis of Dr. Trousseau was eivan a gent teman whim name lie old not know. The man was singularly robust, looked the picture of health—and yet. "Doctor lum not well. It teams to me my . atuength is failing use. al strange is:i.tude takes possession of me.. 1 leel—l scarmly know-how need" De. Trilusseau kept his brilliant eyes riveted on' the patient while the latter spoke and when he end ed the doctor asked: toll, sleep every day immediately alter dinuer'," "Yes I do, doctor." 'Axe unmarried; have no family, are ignorant of domestic life?" "True, doctor.,, What you want is— not medicine, hut—affection; domestic ties; sometime, somebody to live for—i you do not form these tie; if you du not rive ailment to your heart, you'll ba in your crave lastote eighteen months." _ . The stranger smiled skeptically. t utu Si f in gold on the doctor's table out retired. Fifteen months afterward Lord Seymour Cures lie) was buried. Armand Trout- Fran wets not horn with a silver name in his Mouth. There la someetourliv nis'• earlier years. lie was born el Tams - the. of October. - His - sisters (if not his brctliuta) still live ai Tours, endure highly respectable peo pie in circumstances of easy fortune. lie sent his only ion to live on an estate in that cfry's neighborhood, 'which %norml his prolestatimis of enrichment ro bit native place were not lip affection mere. ly. Re began Me, some Fay, as baster; _others, as teacher of rhetoric in a school, and - when be bail accumulated money enough to enable him to grilify the turn be hsd for mediasi studies, he went tothe medial school.' lie graduated' In Idilt Five :years afterward (I believe such rapid sowers unprecedented since Bichat'S days,) he secured, although competitors were many and formidable, the place of physician to the hospitals, in a contours still remembered for its bril l-army. Six and thirty years of his lee lie gave to the Door: This charity is Jo •diciOus setae:mess. - By the bedside of the poor he daily saw those innumerable cases which Bacon insisted were neces sary to the establishment of any general law. Lie studied diseased Mature in all her forms. and leetned to observe the effects of all UM specifics given. Last year lashesell began to give way, and Le resigned ' chair in the Medical School. • Tr 6 Wit attached-with comer in the stomach. Seeing, his end not dim tent, he began wine:. his uffrirs in order. fie bad a vine. Made, and visited it. is week before he died, to rev everything I was ready ford- him. ' . pa. tent came to .ql6 him, Saying: "Doctor, 1 cmunwell; 1,10.13 something" which will enable me to attcad to .my oust , nets." Dr. Trnessyssu prescribed, and tern added: "Physic is efliciute, hat Iwill is more efficient still. Look at me. I shall b 3 dead and buried in six weeks "from now, nut yet you see I Latent: to my busincis." Five'days before he died he Went to theUndertaks-r's, and made every arrangement for his funeral; "be c ause one's family, in the first moment I of grief, canna:44[l:lo . W these matters." Be undo a diagnosis of himself: every day, and it was as clear and ttrililant us ILIA Was made of a stranger's disease. Ilie would make LPs' pupils place their t heeds on him, and he'd say, "You see the tumor is daily ir.creasing in size; in three weeks—in a lerinight—iu c, week —to-morrow, there will he an end of me." He suffered greatly during the last hours of life, and abed a physociah to give hies a sub eignueous injection of morphine to alleviate Llajoiina, and lie deriyered a-brilliant clinical lecture . on this specific' lead on sub-cpsecous injec.l, Lions. Seeing Isis last breath utiont expire, be said, 4 9l3thember, above all— no pomp and no eps2cbes at my fo• emit" Then.lid Da. Trousseau attained everything an ambitious man Icould ask .Irom fortune, except the most .valuable gift of all— happmess. Thin was steeled him where 'awns most desire bleat home.- fits- domestic life was most wretched. CO- 0 1;eration at kir.gincii in Konutc. The Hart:bid ee!irraet gives Chia re count of a co-operetve,lactory in North hold, Ct.: "some twenty years afro a number of workmen in the knife factories through out the State stanch for. higher wages, feeling sore that theirceiployere received the lion's share of the profits. The de-" mond 'was not acceded to. Instead of loafirtgarountljdle, and combining to pre vent others form working, as it is taste- tenable. now.s days to do, these men— mostly Englieh and ficoteb—saremb:ed and talked over the 'situation,' nue con cluded to go in ITObllsi eTS for themselves. One of their number' reconnoitered, found an aid tintlfed DIM an a IlttlilJro.dc in Northfield, sad made a bargete for le' ' —five dollars a month, and the farmer who owned, it was to take his pay in pocket knives. They counted up their 'capital, and found it to consi.it in an even five dollars apiece Ilia Woo' of those who had only two or threirdellars being 'pieced out byithose who . Fere-the forts- note possessors of raven or eight. They appointed one of their number President of the company, invested this copilot in the machinery required, bought their stork on time and went earnestly, to I - work. They were generally sober and industrious—those who' wets otherwise dropping out of thrh' own - weight, ,and place to better men. The business succeeded. The capital was largely increased. Dividends were deelared.l The profits, instead of being absorbed by one, were shared by ail. 1 The old Atop was enlarged. The work. met. capitalists gathered their families about them, and each built himself a snug white eottnge along the road lead ing up the adjacent hillside. Some of the past °racers have proved unworthy or Inefficient, and the. company has met its shares ot mishaps, but the general re sult has been prosperity. The meek, largely increased, cannot be had for any thing like par. The workmen, drieen to think for themselves, are mostly Ile pnbilerms; awl they form as pleasant a picture of thrill, skill, sobriety and com .fort as one would encounter In a week's travel. Several of the orig nal proprlig tore are found at the polishing wheel, and as each man hes a personal - Interest in the excellence of 'Pre work, there are in the market no better or handsomer knives than those produced .by the NorthCald Knife Company. Why should not other workmen, of every craft, profit by this experiment ? When the Linde hote 1, sit St. Louis, vas dt.itipvcol. by • re t Cul. •llontddson wan stopping there, nod had in his MOM sato 'containing money and valuable papers, and a Mammal on rained at 01,000. On Saturday Mottling, July 20, the workmen who have been pagaged in clearing away the debris, came across Cot. I).'s sale and it we dello ered to the 'corner. 'rho content, Were found to uninjured. • • • --SPenking or tho Nramity of the bronetutie Air the clerlcel inoreeiion, the Providence Journca aaye: ..11, rarely et tacka a clergyman_win.t o aalary is lose than e 2,0.10, orwhose congreintlon is net Fatally:* ,Zi.; , r.g . %. ~------_ - -'--- P-"W7'''' , ,,..k:i,-. A. _ „.... ~'... i ? , .1 4 -•'- ..,;,..",*--‘-'"? F ) -- -".—...-, : l : N u / '' 7 .. k.f,--” , , b/.. : - - 1 . - %; - . ',.1 - - / - 4' - i l l i I , ...,_, Nyf,...;,,,......__;.,. , n ~.„..,.. • ~.,, ~.,,,,,,5 , :w v ,,,,„,,..4 :...: ,„, ,:._, .4 _ , i 1 "•:' ~ P r-- ar '' V - s - • • ', J -_,_.- _-',l -- :_ -- ---_: - - _----/-' -.-,-,-----:-----x%"-::-.;---'z.":- , \ ._ . -----/ - -- -- - ----------- , --=7 , INT MOIR. MIDN FROM MEXICO Earentlon of CirflOttlii Tldunry—Yltrat untlann Cooper! arretted—Anurep. et 2Seolnalo to lailperlal Subaltern, Sr,&C. der eel. to the ritt.htimt Gareth.. 3 linowsevitte, July 2S, Via New tiriewrol, July iiii.—Adrlees from San Luis to the Mb Instant glen the following listallizertem General ?binary mu OM in. the City wf Mexico. Ile dealred Jost before it exeme don to here . en intAirvitier with General itiuy, which moo then nehell the:privilege of seeing Me ton; but Chit Mho W 11.9 nittlecil; • - Eip ' , Schaffer, Counsellor of the Emperor has been ImpmsonstL Trke Liberal Generals arrested at (lucre tar . who were not already aunt, will in, rent to their respective stations Par trial. Gt , neral Marquez was levying Pre..-alto. In t it n cap it a l until an hoar beforo he le. It goTermocut. deMdfa ft l that ell ills imperial PrOteMS chin tr. rent PK° exit for Mx hears, end their I,m:retain • for years. t; amen Escohado made the following ad dn.:, to the hobaltero officer, et the 111.1 - Gal alloy Leen° htolawalm Mew, .."rho: goterment Might Anon,o of the Grist of those %ha, fergattleg they wme blenletnis, fonebt for a foreigner, elobaem tOMover Or the lavutler; I governmeot. alwoya I:lagoon lumua. largrirch the-e who Until now have kern ...ea:lc a of t..oan try, olp:eLo thslr gut evotl del .111 Corre4p..:l Otrn,llCV I , ra . ar.l. thr.in 10 RI: son, Mexico. Ynn arm al. I;berl.s: and mar s%k y^nr p:.asport lee nay port wtlere Stu M stoler: Ade An letri,/11.1 ' , Didier,. taken .prnaner Querelare, but. elnea :11.ratm% roc, !Mtn MOtrilll. that 101 bad reCeiv.l aoo.t aeaL aletti 1 0110 lb:L:1.111:e, of TI n (..err_l array. A hirocle tent% lett .je a ,t. a.:11:... 00 the at. Several tr,mch pmhoo erh, latmy encased. aCcoin panted the train. FROM NEW YORE Cl:v T,O xr.s,O, to the I . t.ltsuorgt: tour., NOW Your. ittly Prof. Giant.. Aptnon. Of Colombo% Col lege, died to-day, agoil ::.pear.. A light occurred among an azcarAun par ry wh!eh IrruE up tbulluilsum tho atenuter rita• Tit:Luau - a and two barge, 000 loon wa4 potted nverltatr.l and ilrotrnelown a:ll2ra tuaataul anti larqa runairur Injtire I. Tbe Ilebt laotatl near, ail the tan. tile pally was uharla. moot al wboub inaludlna numb, of ban kila, ware la:tact:l: al - we:a:ars Ed Silo brutal scene. • • • no l e n r r n l o c , a l S the e t he n t C h r o m f th g c l Ouesnonlon, o , , f CUME.I.IIO, :lames Gordon 1,11- 550 r 1th,17. 7- Tao platntlff had! askeo that the th•fen dan Os answer Cr male loons dohoths Trio Casrt •I• Cu lt° ottnnah., This wlli probably Co fatal to the east. The Government e9rtim ete Cr.i Coy - shoe% utl Misin I u ere .s1:1 of auvtion To . the (Oraler for All.thr. end the latter for LAAniLIA. It is SlAteilthe et the Lined Ills are net laes than a qusetcr of a tall. lien. Willie amen estithate theta at over million. It te lestrel the deposliers atll not reciriva ten cr ou the iln:lar. Ile celver 11100 W ~ itcniimturt has Loma 'moth, tor. and Will arrive in a lea Os , r tirriit ,MM. Nta.ut l natinla tee 'R0111611,11 widow, beeline crawl 1.7 her lost. Another attmapiski suicide. Tabs }floral -g Mr, Etnfir Yiz, frlaa of an o,fromnil craxen CommitG:.l anacioo Ly flu°. tog Inninelflnto the Hudson. Ste hall takan laudanum. and =as unnonbionly in -I.7lllx,upaer mental aberrtuon. • . •I VATALI, ISJIMCD. • Dexter 11. Van-Oltrarol, of the firs of Dodge X. Van Oortol, was therm n from a an smortloy nicht, tad fatally In• Sara, al tJO beloro morning. ATTEXI,ZO na