El Ritistricr .. 6 ttaA roispikw. scrroar.a ma. mica rus.itiucTiox. Should any 'one , doubt the existence or oestmlueltnuag nntare of the reaction in favor of demeciacy, in Permayle ma* Warty one quesholitke fact of the re demption of the Old. Keystone, and its thorough io Johnseatim and Jed Doable:a, to Yallandighandarn and all other Democrat 11mas; whitd are sammed up in keep-down-the Adoration, let each doubter reflect -‘ on the official election reporte.. whin r hlrpeared in our issue of Saturday. T democratic vote, is the red *rated, rescued and ten thousand ti 's glorified old 'democrutic State, is only 29,150 lean than it was 114,year. t Who can doubt,. after seeing the Molt, and ' kw:meg that every effort said trick known to de mocracy, and tke Influence of the gen. erel . ltevellunert, were brought to bear on the'. election, that our good old State ut hermetic beyond i peradventure? . - Do not the figures thaw that there is no change ice` the minds of the great loyal mums, who droie their leaders to victory; through a &or years' war? From Me fire, those leaders have halted- and relied and filtered, and sometimes the ceePle have grown * Weary of driving them and have halted by the way; but they soon came up again, and the rear ranks l' have forced the van onward. They in presentee their lives and for. tunes j 1 and sacred honor, an .w e iampart spinet rebellion, and will not, now, seeptaideind see it triumph. The men who brought mounting intaalmost every .Imm:hold, ideal not again step into pla ces which the 3, have heretofore need fbr the destruction of their goveriment, while those _ who saved It, from their machinations and theii lasattlts, have the power to exclude them from like op - portunities. &The men who saved the government will not, now, deliver it, bound, info the custody'of its enemies. . They will not permit those who have heapedilP.yer.l l 4ry Po n Perjury,. in oaths to defend e Conetitution, while busily eturag in plots for its overthrow, to tuns an usurp the place of its saviour as its a meats and its fondant'. For a Routlin rebel, or his Northern rsepathize to =mime the part of chimPloir tote Constitution, which lives is deft= of his efforts to ,destroy 11, 'is an acme of bravado which could not hive i bein attained in any other school than Undo! American Democracy. • . 1 L- That school which taught its disciples to cringe to irerldngrentn in one locality, and stigmatlie them as i l'inudaills, greasy mechanics and small.fi tad farmers,!' in another—that school wbich taught men to claim the title of specie guardians of the sights of labor, and male all righti sub servient to the elalm o capitalists to Sell laborers--that school which taught man to claim the champlonsltip of the rights of conscience , while d trying their own adult children the nght of audible prayer, is the only school which could have Imparted the sublime impertinence of demanding anthorityin the Govern ment which has just l f riumphantly de. fasted their treason against its authority. The Republie= party Ihu made many mistakes, and has much ; to answer far ; but it stood by the Government and saved It from its mortal foes, through a period of trial such as few governments have.passed, and for the people to take that rescued governineni out of its hinds, and consign Itto the Mire of its con quered enemies, could and mould be nothing lest than the insanity of suicide. Let the wolf take ctre of the lamb, give your infant in charge topic hyena, when you commit-'your :government to the men, and their abettors, who spent thirty Years in plotting, and four in fighting, to accomplish its overthroM. . ' That the people hsve , :not votedthns to'bommlt It, Is ecident, now that the official returns are before as: We read them; thank God, and take courage. The people have good reason to be dia. . phased with, and to reprove the majori ty in Congress. That they have shown their displeasure is well, and woe to the men who wrongly read: the lesson. It wee not too much, but too little rigor to -"> rebellion which has called for the silent reproof given in the last election. • Negro suffrage in Ohio was less defeated on its merits than: by the arguments of its friends to show that we could not en ' franchise Southern negroes without do ingas much for those of the loyal State,. This was a departure from the well-con aide:red and oft-repeated doctrine of the Republican party, that treasoa should be made odious and iridtors punished. Negro suffrage in the loyal States is a question to be settled by those States at their leisure;' and cannot, and must not '..be made a national party issue. We moat reconstruct and re-admit the re volted States on abuts of their loyal in habitant'. On this ground the party Is agreed, and it gives work enough for the present. The great reaction allows no • change in the minds of the people on the questions they tried to decide at the bal lot box in'66. Congress most stand its ground and manfully finish the work S lum so well begun; make traitors take back seats in the work of reconstruction, enforce freedom of speech, and the press, for' Southern Unionists; protect 'them from the violence and vengeance of their, , endow, old libel ibis; and the nutelec tion will show such a reaction . u did '63 after the Democratic victories of '62. C 2! Ter. Memphis Poe calliuPon the loyal Governor end Legislature of Tennessee to protect the loyal men of such counties and municipalities as Obion, Tipton, or .Lagrange and Somenine, Humboldt and Jackson from the disloyal officers who are there clothed with a little brief authority. The law Is inoperative and void through,perjtiry; and the Port says: "The alMeit Upiof loyal men who dare not speak demand It of them. Men just escaped from slavery, now about to close their year's labor, cry to the loyal State authorities because of their wages kept back by fraud. The sleeping dust of loyal men murdered by rebels, and their *dews and orphans, speak in no uncer tain tones to this tegialeture and de mand the enforcement of the law." Tar. Hon. A. G. Taunmies, in his - - Pittsburgh speech, Raid : "The white people are not willing to surrender their liberties and their nun hood. and-to become the serfs of the black race. The people of this country are not willing to see the Booth a Po `land, governed by military despotism." Does he wish any one to believe that the -470,722 white voters of Ohio were afraid the 6,000 black men of- that State would reduce them to serfdom, if. they were permitted to vote? Are Meek men • so much wiser and stronger than whites, that the small minority of them In this country could reduce the Whites to a state of - vassalage, If they are permitted to have an equal chance 10 4 the MS of life? -The Democratic doctaihe on-that point is en insult to the Anglo Saxon. As for the South, the Democracy were hitterly opposed to \ conquering her, and . of course they will Mr opPosed to govern. ing her, new that she is conquered. Tan La Crosse Demmer is the most . popular, - widely circulated, • of all our democratic papers, and in rejoicing over the reset' In Pezonylvanis and Ohio, says, respecting Abrahant „Lincoln and Booth: "me gaunt and boorish ran splitting specimen or vulgarity - and obscenity, who, thanks to the American Brutu, J. Wilkes . Booth, has gone to' his own ,placel" Tat krantOzi Republican claims that there were more fraudulent democratic :rates oat Ica Luxerzie District than the sajoritittirJudge WOOdliatd. Tan New York City Democrats bars two tickets.-4 'Tentaituty . Reiland Dent cratic Union. Mn. Jeaneoir attributes the result of the late elections ,to ths. Philadelphia oonvention. R coed ' Cenhecthm with the Pacific re tb:Editera of the Pittsburgh Gazette: GINVLZILEN , : For more then thirty Years I have felt a -deep and abiding in terest in the subject of a connection by railroad with the Pacific coast. I have thought much and have often written upon the subject until recently. I hardly ventured :to hope that I should Ins to * see the great enterprise cOoltUn- Meted ; yet I felt bound to do what I could to call the attention of the country to the political, commercial and moral benefits which would flow from such a direct connection with that greatest of ocean& and with the vast populations that inhabit its shores &IA Wands, and also farm iamb a bond between our own latlattic and Pacific Writ-Corte& As year correspondent in the late excursion toyer the Union Pacific Rail way, Eastern DlVialdri, I had much to say of MMus and the country be yond ;" those letters, revised and amplified, will soon be published in a I more permanent form. I now beg leave to offer some general remarks upon all three of thei great railroad enterprises now in progress between the Missouri river and California; and for what I may-say I alone am responsible. I state facts because I_ know them to be true, and I utter opinions because I believe them to be correct. They are the result solely of my own reflections. Pardon this much egotism. The time is rapidly approaching when Congress will be &led upon to act upon this great question—to review it in all its bearings, and make such provision for its further protocution, and take each action upon it in- regard to routes as later and fuller revelations of tope. graphical and other facts may render necessary and expedient. The Union Pacific Railroad of the, Platte, which commences at Omaha, is now graded to Cheyenne City, on or near Ridge Pole Creek, one of the up per tributaries of the Platte, at the base of the Black Rills, and but a few miles east of the main range of the Rocky Mountains, and it is expected that the road will be completed to that point by the fast of. November. The Enion-Pacific Railway, Eastern Division, which_ commences at. Kansan City, at the month at the Iranian river, Is now completed about 275 rodeo west of that point, and m proireming up the valley of the Smoky Hill at a rapid rate, and may reach Pond Creek, 200 miles beyond Port Harker, and abont42o miles west of Kansas City, by theflost of Jan- The Central Pacific Railroad, which begins at flociamento (Cal.) and rune in a northeast direction, la now comple ted to ttb eat Edo of the Sierra. Nevada Monotam, and ban entered the State of Nevada. • These are the three great roads nowin progress. The Platte road and the Cen tral are designed to form one great line to the Pacific—meetinst each other some Place in the vicinity of Salt Lake. The Kansas road is designed to form an Independent line to, the Pacific, by a more southern route, through southeast ern Coloreds, and through the centres of New Mexico and Arizona, and thence, up the great slimy of Southern Califor nia, to San Francisco. The Central Pacific road fions Sacra mento to the eastern elope of the Sierra Nevada le the most stupendous cons pleted railroad enterprise la theworld, I and, so far as • revenue Is concerned, is 'grate successful. In the first 31 miles it attains an Wilted, of 930 feet above tide; at the end Of the next 11 miles its alti tude is 1,600 feet; 14 miles further it Is 2,443 feet; 10 miles (lathe; It is 3,415 feet; 7 miles farther it is 3,625 feet; 21 miles farther it Is 5,911 feet; and 11 miles further, at the gre.d summit tunnel, (1,658 feet long,) it is 7,042 feet. Nearly the whole distance up the mountaia slope le a series of crags, precipices and frightful ravines, over which none but American engineers would have thought of carrying a railroad. The summit is more than .twice the elevation of any other railroad on this continent, and more than one thousand feet higher than the famoui Mount Cenis tsuanel through the Alps, between France and Italy, now in progress. In 1866:(75 miles being in operation) the gross' earnings of this road were 6865,016; the operating expenses were 6209,133, Which indicates a-high tariff of rates—too high, ore rata, were the road extended to theldissouri. The net earn ings of UV, on 105 miles of road, are estimated by the company at 61,030,000.• Still this Is not proportionately equal to the Pon revenue of the Union Pacific of the Sauna, which, for the month of Latest - hat, on less than 200 miles of road, aggregated 236,600, or at the rate of . $3,837,000 a year; but the operating expenses, although the road is nearly level,wers considerably larger in propor tion than those of the Central, which in dicates that the tariff of rates is much lower. Still a large net revenue was left. The route of the Union Padfic road of the Platte, as far u it has been made, is as remarkable for its smoothness and levelness ea the Central is for its rug gedness and acclivity. But BUM work was needed other than to dig ditches and lay down the ties and.ratio. Hence the work progressed up the long valley of the'Plette with s rapidity altogether unexampled. Sometimes three miles of road were laid in a single day. It, too, has proved to be a financial success, for there is a large trade and much travel between the .111motud and that portion of the great interior mountain region to which it reaches; and were it never to he anted another rade beyond Melon= City, it would be for all time a very use ful and profitable road. It has not cost much, and could easily be made to pay the interest upon all its bonds, and leave a handsome dividend to the mockhold. ers. If it does not do that much it will be because it is not properly mussed. But a greater topographical contrast than that between the regions which lie behind and before the tracklayers on this toad, where they now are is not to be found onthe surface of this planet. Thesiain over which they bare jest passed issue of the smoothest and most extensive in the world; while the moan; tains Just before them are lofty, prectp Boos and rugged to thelast degree.. But as our bold California friends have ac tually surmounted the Sierra .Nevada range, it:would not be 'slate ray that our friends of the Platte road cannot sur mount the triple range at the base of which they have arrived. .I shall take it for granted that it can be done Het , there is one thing that they cannot do: , they cannot prevent the overwhelming , snows of that Alpine region from.filling up the gorges they must pass through and the 'artificial cuts which they must make, thus , obstructing their road for several months in every year.. . Were there.ne alternative—did that . mountain barrier stretch from north to south across our entire national territory— then, rather than have no avenue of communication at all between the Cen. teal Valley and the Pacific' Slope, the country Would say, let it be made, even though it should be unavailable for half the year, as it if very possible that It would be. But .there is an alternative and • very good one. That mountain barrier does not extend entirely across our territory. We have a route from the Missouri to the Pacific, not much, if soy, longer than the ether, across which no enow.clatt mountains rear their huge obstructing masses, on which there are no snow drifts, and over which cars may run 565 days in the year. We allude to the route now being explored and aut.• veyed by the . Union Pacific Railway Comp ray of the Kansas, legally known as the Eastern Division, through New Mexico, ; Arizona and Southern Cantor- This laid mentioned route runs all the way from the Missouri to the Pacific through rich agricultural, pastoral and minmal lands. Diversified as the re. gloss are which it traverses, through Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Ari zona and California.. they arc all rich and productive, and every section will pour the quota of ha penile!' Pro.ducts upon this great thoroughfare to well the gnued aggregate of its trade. s re C ol °' redo and New Mexico it will peas over coal deft, both bituminous and anthra cite, probably not second to those of Pennsylvania. The numerous and rich mines of gold, silver and copper, espec ially copper, among which it runs fer hundreds of miles in New Mexico and Arizona, will draw to those now warded territories a large population. , Southern California tee= with rich and TariOttS remorse& both of soil- and mines, prob ably beyond any other -section of our country. Every part of the line, there fore, from Kansas City to San Fran cisco is good for something, and much of it sormmidagly productive. A. road. through such a region would be selfenstalninA at once, as the portion completed in Kansas already ie. By this I mesa- that it would pay all ix . penses—the interest on the cost et its construction, Including the Gee. ernment bonds; and, moreover, by 44 developing power it would rapidly volts meat the national wealth and the vol of the precious metals. • Oa the outtrary,the Unlos Par-Mega. road of the Platt& can have comparative ly • Ilttle dint:Mph:lg power along lu line, for the simple reason that there fa • n'be maasitars,.l4 a Liar state= 'The lopl Imam= ea thsonsp: trxl 4 l.ft tlea an PITIOas onamtso. TD . ature i rg l arltialtar ending Anzasals a» " follOws , in . gild: Oresi •iirarnittge t. kel,lllll „, 01L87 .141 expeoses,l9B.l met sinalagN R1V31. - If. • - little to be developed. The vast plain through which the Platte flows, from the mountains to the Missouri, is for the most part arid, unproductive and anis. siting; and beyond thS heads of the Platte, entirely across the lofty Central Plateau, to the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada, a distance of more than‘twelve hundred mi ies, we know of nominee; and, with the exception of the basin of the Salt - Lake, we_know of no territory fit for cultivation and settlement. The whole region ie lofty, rough, broken, mountainous and Mild. In the valley of the Humboldt water freetes in Attgri4, and on Hear river the climate it mull more inclement. The coldness of the climate on this Central Plateau of the continent is more attributable to its great altitude than to its high latitude. The following statement of the altitude of a few points will account for the fact that that region is too cold for settlement, even were it sufficiently fertile: Feet above Ude Summit of the Sierra Nevada " qt Vltlanla Staten, ht Nevada sAlal Humboldt, when!, the Humboldt river ends Ina em/lilake—lL, water bete`` DarUy evaporated and partly absorb In the sand • Humboldt Wells, toeards the head of the vaMer, where lea la 101=61 In - Aucust.....— • MIS Salt Lake Ltee Panes of Rocky Morainelas— L 7WO to CCO Any good map will ahoy{-.that water flows from this lofty region over which. It Is proposed to carry this great conti nental thoroughfare to every point of the campus. The Colorado the 'Yellow Stone, the Platte, and the principal trib utary of the Columbia, all have their sources here, which fact proves that it is the highest region on the continent. In view of all these facia. I submit to the gentlemen engaged in that enter .prise, and to the country, whether It is to i d wise to attempt to build a railroad ugh each a region? Is it possible that . t can be a financial enemas when It mm 'rely almost solely upon its throng% ,b me for Its revenue, besides being , ed by snow at least live months in the mart Would it not be a much safer and there fore a wiser policy to terminate the Platte lino at the base of the mountains— at Cheyenne city, which would soon be come an important place, far surpassing Denver—and push forward the other line on which-no difficulties are found, either . topographical or climatic, and which Is sure to have a way btudnesa suf ficient alone to make it pay, leaving the revenue accruing -from the through busi ness clear gain? • But what. is to be done for the rich mloing State of Nevada! , it may be asked. To this it may be answered Nero& is already pronded for by the . Centred reed of California;' already spoken of. San Francisco is its natural commercial metropolis. All that is of much value or importance in that State lies within two hundred miles of that city; and through that city—far better than through the valleys of the Hum boldt nod Salt Lake, the rough plateau of Northern Utah, and across the tower ing heights of the 'Rocky Mountains— the people of Nevada can reach the east ern States- of the Linton. This is the better policy for both Nevada and Cali fornia; and li for them, certainly for the people on this side, whose only desire in reference to this matter Is to secure the safest, the best, the most reliable, and the least expensive railroad communica tion with the Staten and ports of the Pastille, and one that will develop, most largely the mineral treasures of the in termediate region—one that will add greatly to the strength and nothing to the burdens of the widen. JOSIAH COPLEY. Allegheny City, Oet. lit, 1867. • Me. Boxura thus replies to the chal lenge from Vanderbilt to ran "Mountain Boy" against "Dexter:" MT DEAR COMMODOEE! The good• natured contest between you and myself for the ownership of the fattest trotting horse in the world, Is attracting Increas ed attention on account of_the recent performances of Mount= Boy, and your published letters concerning him, I have observed the challenge by your trainer which I rather expected to see yo diltvow, as you know I never enter any of my horses In a public race. That certainly is not necessary to test the rei• antra speed of horses. No one can con cede more cheerfully than I do the mer its of your admirable horse. Ha best performance—reckoning u his the 2:34 in which be was beaten by both Thorn and Lucy—was only six and three fourth seconds—or at Dexter's rate of going, between sixty and seventy yards -behind Dexter. ' Whenever your huge shall have closed up this gap, and have equalled Dexter's time-3:l7l—and needs nothing but increased speed and bottom to do thin—it will be soon enough for me to further respond to your publications. Until then, my dear Commodore, I &hall remain--aud 1 think the happy relation propane* to continue s good while—as ever, billoetelY yours, Bonsai Boanza. SPEER'S PORT GRAPE RUM ArIJLIVS PUSS (mar wait EPEES•S PM.' liflaPZ tile ..taro Cam Or the D•n Wlniresetmd this orb Ohm, a emaptate assartment at Call. torala Wises ant Brandt., for sale Ist lb. mitf lowest rates. at =11=1:33 =I =I COI•S ”TOrafigt& CURL COI, (AMUR namAii. Twenty gross of lbws valuable mettle low. Jest noniron and for sale at !try low roves. at JOSEPW, PLERING'S DRIJO STORE, Ns. el Market W.. on. rf tin Diamond. SYSTEMS DEW DOWN. • fermis often al ow sheer eyetinam to ...re* dna," or fuller no eon Ana by ovenorito secosionin by insg.eet of the pamper mesas of isilsentlen. The can't Ls net to Was "general debt 1117;•• la ostler words, .• Mess end partial nazi,. of the physicist lame, U. isinginfid! 1,115117, an' greet delftnelon of spirits. test lonely Airman weed le Hph TATTER% BIT raga. Whether - the tote of exhanmilen hee been incubi at 07 noon,. [Apical labor. dleedistin, anxiety of sin, expos. A Or mor Chet nate, the renl•dlal elect of /tall gent stoinseb. All be fond egisabf mono nod eerteln. Ai • reetsrative. alter ••• sere sickness lies anstz•Vott the Wily Sad nom. •Ocreles, It It pteeoo.c'd, b/ OM Went eakbertiy, ..... In Ines" If men were net teritskil/ caretets sneak their basin, and .ter COutidelt la Ihniesision inn monad einem Oleo ensnedlo fly nil that r , belied, gent ..Woe. In* torrapeaeltur rims*. of sustaining their simian. woe thU Demme stioST6Tria.e AfTTlkis tea lonian , 4111 Sollars Stead en thou SA as Wino. rut. /Ortbeeerosetantly Innekiled la talleat initiations: neer-141y In Crowded' treritelep• • tee/ nay be reckoned iss ieeirery Senn/era.' of beat*. Where Mars le • predisposition to none abettor', or a totaleney no Oilmen., ten inn be trop sin to be • epesille for Olin there . Is no Aeneas... BLIND BIEN azerovagtvki The mat to welch we Mindful some weeks Mo. of Christiana Ylther. or comity. Is now •illAre/y molinhed iy the appearance of Mbs fisher hermit. who to.dm celled of Do. EXT., &Ellin permit, to thenk Um for Ms Melee eed etlll In rehiring her TO INTL= AND PROT SIR /Ohm had twa nearly' blind for faurmontho• nu wee so blind thee she could not filettnentsh my obiaree nt to Maki out what It was. The ease ,te remarkable, sit hundreds et cases Ilke nets an doomed to never endlnk Wines., on the Maw pretext that teen le no aura, and nothing can Of 1113.1 was ends,. DOCTOR RZYNTLItin traatamat for two monthi. and before Me applied to elm tupp tf ee tfek brother, Simon P. llatisr. MAO hopes were entertedeed of per ever eettins her Mat. Ber!ama le 0712 known In the nelgebor hood whore she rend.. and hss Moo regarded one of wztnonllnary etrarary. We, the t_todefelined. Mow of the care of miu. TOUT. and tam willing ttelimonv to th• facts 80101 P. Puna, (15.nsabeW AXXI3 BZ.II/01XL, . , Tllll.ol A.V64611.1 1 / 1 1117.07 MIMICS MOCASEST, Umiak TIMM, (oar anteca . D. 116IM1IRS 011D6 I.KINOtr.L4II - 1100110,N0. 120 PICNIC lITIALT, comer or Evan. Cloy. r ... Fi3ivirADlrtitiiyiztardo:4;v4A war. wirrwiZar..w., Adams *Wear CC IgoN AM Him; to authariemS noon Atarrlesassunts for Ma MAMMA and AU as, rap irs fArmsgAeld Ow rmsgAe . Slaked Maks and Lad Cluadna. MEM, FOREIGN WOOLENS,. F o r ran and Winter • • Wear, I . t .l„a u ... brattlild DZWIRII RI? TIROIIIVIALs. • VERY 1.141.011A1111ET PRICE. nit TOSSER, it. USD,. • merch a nt Tailors, 42 ruth It.. Plttla*lgh- J . IKEA •-• Wholeul. sad B.gll Dego. 6 al klatliat. LAKE, RIVEII - £ND *It:A 11017116 ADI MGR: , , 310. In.asesa Karket,. ritiabainit. lir W. keen open smell Ocean, on natordir emoolnin eating./ P=BURGIE _I)ATE c T_ GAZETTE NEW ADVER HENRY W. HORBACII, Confeoticmery and Bakery, 40. 900 SKITEITIELD MIXT. eeneaa kleventh sad bilicrfir if/PWLDLICIP °Mit PALOON attserk.t. ESTATE OF MALCOLM! LEECIMIEG RORER *B Adßibeldralor sied Traltee *timid Kilda thewe .rd f. , 11 kla add office mad Min. by tb.' MN put . eV Alletrry ebutera; is i a r tgontrlr ". B.UWIb, 0c=:.46 Attorabb COT P.".."' SUPERIOR COAL. C. CHERRY & CO.. kW = 7.V . l7,l.4lZeller`"ML U tzla MACK. Owe eellve.“ nremOttr t • el Pane " fiel=grlrVinl:::rV r raltlrrn WAN. BO INF (Ramsay Can.!. • OTALIETS, rlttantigl4 U. BOX. ll= Coca: NEW STYLES BISRA.RE AND GRECIAN SUITS, ne i g . weNt otyp23 fet I. mlsewn. of 110711. GRAY & LOGAB, • Ea. 17 SC Male attest. .THE MAOI OLIS FARM 3.1311:, ALCURIZIIII. tw.ten near WeNomad.; not Ler firm woes Mallow the 4Joinsll.lll4 Wew hoe.. l• trestle.t eendltion: bum lava.. few In the eenntry AU Ireva.ments en the ada. ...darn the best'ltlne. lioU a sureas rad Wy Cl, In the country be Trutt. area. it., In ahead... ~,, Wing sprtnnawboend. Opal bent ohen• Yemen per. Wet. WMbo sold cheap. • pply STEM & WILSON, ur.►:r..n4 Seal zei.t. 4..t6. No. 06 666161010 athrad. LADIES , : PUBS, 11=20 QM" a:V I -7:i7=OtZ.T. 1,7 ruVlV:gra HATS and OAPS. Me CORD & C 0.% No. 111 WOOD ISTRZZT TRY IT 1 TRY IT !! Ea= = altaroaan grad halt. au &hair antataal Won. Aida tam glowth when the hair Is tale and Is .away Utal dream*, = $Di. /lona for rttUbprghl J.ll/LES R. CL* &. • Darla:llM 0e1111,... • 103 VIM •$nS CITY bilLeatroalib 01/TICS. • PI essaCsell, bats.. It MA. 1111 r. I . NOTICE. - In this Conti of gamer eleselese, xe. P. bertliaber T. oug. winorinew or waasnes oral. All peneie Ise. natal/ will ebbs • Olieatbst tbs •liMment of amass. bad bowies la MACAW Uts Cowl. DM. bean bled Misr olio. sag we Ss • the assesubeen• Mull be bold Wets dm rtes We Saba. It alb es *TAM In secant Ise 'Me 1Lt. , 141M/ to law. • • All pcepert , bevel.* gnat Sal Masa axe, streets lee bees swesiml ter poise.= 51 au= J. f. ew.Jtz, Cit, setbtar =I Dl °a"i•. =1 1= I=l WHITE, OAR & CO., I= 1 1 ,1.,?IforArvrisHiNzienum W. J. GILMORE, CSucassor teen...cost Lnuttaa.) If•••Awrasvr.rbolessle sad WDtI Dealer hi TRUNKS Valises, -Carpet, &wk . sir.::..aareasoksa, or LADIXT BA.11:78- s oa bud •.• Sirintrwr”itur. FEDIA,LE .SEIIINAIIT. • irnvii trots en nn 14111111'46; 11DUCTION OP Tap. Hosritne Nenneed I. mei Mein, ea* Reel.. et h• mosse...,-. sceordtse te.C1...410.00 - 1011.14e50. Weeds'. Del &M.O. • • 04 1/1.4 .1114114 tem. ...1.11.10. et leper IS wads for Ur. degetteirs a Um:me* awl Wafers. tk . C .L ejtar...te.. rret-J. rCtOz _tejlviu.,' ESTABLISHED 04 1819. J. T. WRAY & BROS. 1112RXIDOOMJS TO M. tXIfiIiOLLT STEM ROM NIEL 29 and El Irwin Sired, - • irrrnoviten, ra. ACMIO., JACKSON & FREW, ~...nA,eria.Ul?;DipsrAftw,a sumorAcrtrazu /AID 0/ 11N IlarsesF, ?mks, Arli Asd .111 eh* kt as tied *se Import la ON4 Sanwa ssiurts the laSa sonitivir. vt7lo. YA liapnnemlail.• 1.• Oak, Usk by ad Imo hi pigs. MME!= IN WIC DISTRICT VOMIT OF Irgtailqugp wrlimlflreitair Is the assurVlZatet • , 11R13 alid JAL ;On MILL! iu treal 71 . 1214 . • 1. WI. ib l ifreili NA, deacciu Tliesa;Unasell Web) vs. map elAis appstablAnik km AV 2. y 2. 1 3 ° K. 32a. v I #l 3friTvitintolk uwenattor AM= terzl h tal a rtz Pax. tvaltar=ll . GOON creditor , ...a. ay. ALADDIA COO% •er 2•14 MAMA 00•4 Alloglkes, CID. the Mitts, ut MOW,' A. D. Dit. . A , ODD IL ilfratc. cawis ®OCAS outwAsrr. KIM t SCHIIIIII2, Wbalesalsu.4 ilataUlLsaadatarers or Elheet Iles - . Ware, Mod Dealers Ist 0001I1NO WINYCLII AND /SWIM rummem.no DADDWASZ. tlVlNffil In 141 VIII 1111 11 MR era rr tO. Pon "Inl; l olrafilV:l:witiellarga tVII Tuaxe 1. . UV • GUAVA lightri tiIIW 00.• • • • Psrlialvsetti..igibM HO. • COMPANIIrIs aim var./ Wanda'' , Itesefirtelki lull • rairiuMittmas "l ttte Znata i iit V i li k 1 04:: bared Railroad WI ad , :Ss bdafallav, aka Pittsburgh din ins Etas Wt. arta Ipfmtptser fil i vatid ' irstlil a. n, sad '• W i tiFeta a 441 dt, Ida Cisawf =Ur listdl.l.o Ila ea, av alma: mond vo de Ws MP Ma! *MY harems. Wu la ad. _Mtn. . ealtgit. ' *Mr. LTITLII. AIWA. - II SALE. SALE. 320 '• ACRES flood Farming Land to lowli. Tonneau. Oood atte. Taxes all veil. Will min fannl yrolmnr. Venladne-lonstre of Waal 33 YAM= !TIMM RARic ciwicx• BAKERT FOR B.M. • 4 banal at dila' *Anil. sad aWwC at n 96. 40 !Me V* Bt., Allegheny thy; Will b. aware,idds.tarai. = t woo," antis, elan as nadi, aid ka Pe Writ: dam! inch as* tesa E i s vi t... o „.. rr la lbe rai Tam allialLiB3lllT. luntifasoti*apn " 11. D. VMS. n. eavaitAtaitri cO.; - . 10.114 LIBERTY Mtn (arr.. w 0,1.) ndOliell &bat Mil inIUS. Al. ndll4et Pimigrirmallts,‘RniVi.l.46o in4 S-Y-11±2.41"'". ./ /Mitt 10. arlii 'tits areVatrt , • Illogova4r- - : Argil! ~tgrxtl4o U. ak-orinviowagostnitio. " '".""": 11 / 2 , 111tarilink u r. - "Wan pn a ll ; • - .n MP ~wa~VNrlaYt urn erns. ' '•' 4110111111 r •00. : TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, , NEW ADVEN, NEW CHEAP GOODS, CHOICE 'MEL NEW D.14:::113 GOODS. t.yoNs VELVETS SUPERIOR BEAU% BILKS ARENCH MERINOS, ll= troNtrsl'lc.s, JOHN PORT al 91 MIARKST 8111JULT: Oa:TTI • MAIFICILD.4II co MAME FLOWER FINE - our TOBACCO, IN NOM Tate eelgbtatea tine-Wit CbewlnsTobageo Petttotlf Pam trlthost Aukr sash-stare at mese gainless.. aglth arnica tbe ontlnaw Cbeslos Tabu. 11 ontalnili•Wd. • ' • Yei gale Wholesale and Netall. ' CHAS. C. BAER'S, Desks la Waal, hif, fir,uk ftipts ni finding ,foisco. 1011 WOOD 578ZZT. 0C1.1:444 STBAN lIRKWERY, PITISSURtiIi, 'll