The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, November 27, 1867, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1
THE DAILY GAZETTE,
pußtaßarD
ma.
=1
PENIIIIIIA4I, NEED do CO.,
W''zli 3, 7gbrtatcrx.m.
r. E., ilVitatAX.
7. r. trOtrorrolf. .
-Editors.
onion, OLZETTE souanNa.
NN. lit sad MI MTH mussr.
Infig !sidling isper of Teem Famines.
ornow. VAT Fa nw r IMIIIGH AID
Lamammaigeaux"
1112110 DULY:
rgir,=l: t ,„
Mall brut tr, pert "ek—
*man
Add,•••• GAZETTL.
P/7711111713011, PENN'A.
IT IS PROPOIXD that a Nati -nal Expo
salon of wool and Its man. • red be
held in Chicago daring the month of
May, in the coming year. Inssmtich es
the subject will receive the attention of
the National Woo! Growers' Associ
ation, which holds its 'annual meeting
today, at the Court Horne, we
deem it prudent to anggest that the
position bo held in this city instead of
Chicago. Pdtabargh is central to the
great sheep growing interest of the coun
try, while it Is admirably, located for a
national meeting of the chit-oder. Itle
generally understood that the National
Assiciation of Wool Manufacturers is
favorable tb the holding of such en ex-
Whitton in eonjunedon with the Nation
al Association of Wool Growers. Oar
manufacturers, merchants andotherscan
certainly offer inducements for the hold
ing of the Exposition here. andwe hope
they will not be slow to act in the mat
ter-. but at once take each measures as
will wove to Pittsburgh the honor, as
well as the advantages of having held
within her lintits all exhibition which
will &I'm thousands of visitors from all
sections of the country.
NEW BY V3MaI2kRAPH
- 7 JoMa 8.. and George p. Wise were
presented before the grand Jury a.t, Bal
timore, on Monday, for astanit wlth
tent to kill E. A. Pollard. '
—A fire at Plymb utb, Masa., on Mon
day, resoltOd in damage to the amens
ill' about t 50,000.
--Uri'. Howell, Jell. Davis' mother-in
law, - died at Montreal, n.n•ds on Mon
day. -
'lieu. Joseph terry, Professor hi the
Unlveraity of Vermont, died yesterday,
nt Itut:Unstop, aged about seventy. •
—ln the Canadian Homo of Com Mons,
on-Monday, Dlr. Cartier stated that he
would take thefts& opportunlq•th obtain
a renewal of the Reciprocity Treaty with
the United State.s, •
steamer Idaho blew no at the
New OrieuneWharf yesterday. Sizmen.
were woundul, two mortally. Tho up
per works Were completely wrecked.
—4 fliigti-Lrederwood, of Virginia, on
Monday _granted Gen. Imboden a man
damus to compel Gen. Schofield to per
mit. him to rote, the writ being mailo re
turnable on thosth. proximo. • •
—lt ores reported in Charleston, S. C.,
thn an election riot took
_plate at Rock
'attic, Woolf:null= Wand, Monday night,
in 'winch a number of whites and blacka
wen. killed.
—A Judgo of a United States Court In
North. Carolina has Mined an Order de
claring the competency of the Court to
determine the qualifications of ita_cau
juroniOndependent of affinity author-
•
—The Board of Coin=lmen . of New
York yesterday accented an Inv - Hatt=
from the Mayor to Join - with him In are
union On Thursday next' of Trish chi -
rens, who will express their sympathy
with their ecrarnt men in Manthmter by
a funeral prooesafon.
—ln the New York Constitutional Con
iltutioind Convention, Monday, a rest.
lotion was introduced. but laid over
under the ruler, providing for tho
moral Of the Convention from Albany
to NOW York City after the amt of Jas
nary•
1121 El
■
—The prize fight between Kelly and
Collyor did not come off yesterday, as
annetinced, the latter failing to provide
a boat torake Kelly and party to the
piano named. Cuidek has been arrested
and Kelly claims the stakes.
— . Detective" Baker, arrested by or-
der of the house of Representatives to
• answer for contempt in felling to appear,
as summoned, before thelndlciary gom.
mine°, was discharged yesterday, on'
payment of oasts. . -
• —The President has been milled upon
by Congress for the entire list of purlieus
extended to otunterfelters of bonds and
currency of the United States. It le un
derstood that nearly two thousand MM.- •
'viduele, who have been convicted of
counterfeiting and sontencedln the pen
Itentiary. have received .Executive Clem .em. -
obey, to continue, • If they lee proper,
their nefarione p.actice.
• --hlonday, evening, at Bergen, N. 'Y..
a ripentlty of nitroglycerine used fo r :
blasting exploded while In the hands of
a workman who was holding "it. • In an
instant all the inmates of tee building
were blown away, and of the noose not
a'fragment remains. Some of the men
around the Chop shared the same fate,
While at the saute Instant a shock like an
earthquake shook every building within
a Mille and a half of= she scene. Every
house adjacent was damaged. '
Hire New York Chamber of Com•
mums yesterday adopted the report of
committee recommending the resempt
honor aped° payments. They urge, as
preliminaries, the funding of all floating
debt of the government, except legal ten
ders, and the receipt of customs of ten
walled In greenbacks, said notes to ins
until gold and greenback. ap
proximate. A memorial goes to Co*.gress.
—The explosion of nitro-glycerine at
I Bergen, New York, on Monday, caused
the foss of nine lives. Six ;tenons were
Injured. The Connell of Bergen have
since learned that six hundred pounds
of nitro-glycerine wee stored In a build
, Ing near where the catastrophe occurred,
nod ordered it removed beyond the lite-
Itt of the town forthivith.
. Maw • a nunTestae
Ar to Caused •
Man e s cata.
The following story IS told by the
Parla correspondent of a London paper-.
"Louis Francois Wafer has just died
at Doebllng, Austria, at the *goof alg.hty
i• • -seven, from a guillotine furere. Howse
the son of a servant of the nnfortuata
Louts XVI., acid was born at Parts.- The
•• ; Revolution burst out when he was only
ten years old; his er was beheaded,
but his mother eu eded In reaching
Germany with hereon, Luckily enough,
she also succeeded I n saving a panto
her fortune, and ale was thus enabled
to give a good education to her son. In
• a very short time ho was appointed pri
vets secretary to - an eminent Anatrisa
personage, and he published in French
a 'History of the French Devolution.'
"Ma patrimony allowed him to live
m n i brfsblY.he purchased at Doebling a
house, from which he never went out
since 1831 only two friends of his were
received in his house, and through them
• his eccentricities w. re known. Iris,
house consisted of five rooms. lie had
devoted the !upsilons to the perfection
of the guillotine; that room was full of
beams, ropes and beadehoppers. Fvery.
time he Improved the dmdiy instrument
to his satimaction Ine bade his friends
bring Idol cats and dogs, which ho bo.
• headed with hi. rumbles. During these
trials be was so incited to kill that once
he threw himself on one 'of his friends,
whir tin Intention to cut his heed off;
• that friend comped, thanks to his an
rior strength: Ifs teed to wallow la the
blood of animals, and looked more
like a cannibal- than a elvillred man.
Be left Ms bed only during two borers
• daily, from three to five in Maarten:eon.
• Those two blurs ho domed le his
Perimeata. He ate, read • and wrote In
bed. On Friday hurt ho was making
some experiments with his guillotine,
when he fell III; ho rang the bell, • bet
when his servant meld mme in he was n
corpse. lie had been struck - by an at
tack of apopleXy. Ile always need. to
ray, 'My father would not have suffered
at all, lout he been beheaded by my own
guillotine.' What do you say of that
retrospective filial affection?"
—Abraham Palmer,* entered man,
llving in Jenkintown, Bfd., bad a dint
. culty with Ms son Georg*, a lad of about
eighteenyears of ago, a few days ago.
For punishment die father tied his son's
hands behind his bark, compelling him
' to remain in that condition for a number
of hours. On the night following, when
the father was asleep, the boy made s
' sudden assault upon him with a raaor.
in the presence of his mother and other
members of the family, which resulted
in the eon cutting his father's throat in a
fearful manner. In the, struggle the
razor was binken. . At last accounts the
Victim was still alive with Unto hopes of
recovery. Theson was arrested and M.-
' ken to Montgomery comaty jail.
—A .woman named Jolumna . Connell
and a man named James M. Delaney
have been committed to jell on thecharge
of having wilfully and mallelonaly net
fire to the Catholic church at Bristol some
days dace. The woman- bad been em
ployed in the fluidly of the pried. De
ane,' has also been connected with the
church in some capacity.
E=EI
===
M123=1
;'.vouThog
IRST EDITiII
MIDNIGHT.
OONGRESS.
ME
.ty of Resolutions Offered
"liniment To-Day ' Until
,•Xtinday..
By 7 - eitsph to the Plaatmalt Gentle.]
' . WAsamaroar. Nov. isa„ 1887.
BENATE. •
°MM O . strums.
Ann nowian.
Mr. CONKLIN° presented a memo
rial from the Union League Chab,asking
Congress to prevant the mnatering oat of
the volunteer service oNiens.likklas and
Howard. .Referred to cot*lttee on
Military.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY OTITRAL. --
Mr. 'WILSON Introduced a bill relittve
to theappointment of Amnstant Attorney
General, providing the same shall be
subject to confirmation by the Sextate:
Mr. '071113.1b." suggested the propriety
df this matter would be seen, in vie* dot
the slanders and libels on the county v
which had ernenated 'from-that -.Pepart
-went during the laid few, Monthit:: Re
ferred to Committee - on Indicter:y.l'
On motion ot Mr. tHlith - R.H. theYrUe.
dent was asked to cornmunicat• any ad
ditional corrospondenoe relative ; to.the
remoVal of Mr. Motley, late Minister to
ADJOI7II.II)IENT—TaIi rnsenkter.
Mr.
hat
Introduced a - joint moo
lution that the President of the''Sekitdei"
and Speaker or the Rouse adjourn 'their
respective haunts witkont day on IMent
day next, at eleven o'clock. - i '-- •
My. SUMNER su. • ~ tea it, homed°
twelve o'clock. We. . they, he aked,
leave to the President ono half f hour
within which hocould take advantage or.
their absence to make an appoint/nen;
which, as the next Congress might :It
until mid-iutxuxter or autumn, might be
valid until the last day of that sem?
Mr. GRIMES moaned the ressi on
accordingglly.7 _.
Mr. S MAN . did not see th any
object could be gained by pressing the
resolution. The Senator'e t t a a
wonbi be attained without that
34:-course PESSENDEN thought them was
anoliVtauts. danger
ifa e l r f rus b lt i O l a P r p firt c • a m ded ' eft '
ji ;
an adjournment might - be had five -
Mee before :Wave o'clock. There ad'
be Name slightinterinission, and oertanir
no harmileould be date In five. min
Mr. - TRUMBULL' laid it was lm a-
terial to him whetlitillheY odio to=
day or - next meta, but her pro ted
m•,ainst any such reasoning as had-
advanced. Coegresseieouid purses e
even tenor of its way. When they laad
a President of the halted States,7they
ahead treat him as seek - and not antra
pate some terrible thing,. Lea hlm take
thq waysKiltenami or hie inwn Acta, and
they fib:do their own duty. /le did
not believe the Union wear to be injured
or destroyed .by a few. ralitidas . time.
What they did should be' done with re
ferezie to 'their own conVenienee, end
with noaartienlar regard to what some
one mi ght
t suppose, or what .some alter
personmight do. I
Mr. SUMNER made farther remarks
in eupport of the resolution. ' i•.
k Mr. TRUMBULL said if the Senator
from Massachneetts chose to govern his
action as a Senator by some suspicion in
regard to what another department, of
the government might do, be saga do
so, bathe.(Mr. Trumbull) should Tote
on tide question with ference to Mis
duty as a member of th is body, without
undertaking to anticipate the danger of
Illegitimate acts by another departnient
of the government. Sufficient ;Mint
the day Is the evil thereof. llt
was not his - purpose nor talri''
ince, nor was .It •conaistent ;with Is.
sense of public duty, to make=
upon nor defend • the President, nee
would he bo placed in the position of so
doing. • He should vote on the rasolu on
without reference to - the 'President of
the'United States, and be governed In
of
his actions by what. seemed I to
proper The the convenience of Congress,
and for the best interests of the p eople
at large, i
The resolution was adopted. The Sen
ate then went Into Executive, Session,
and after a few minutes adjourned-
- '
HOUSE OF REPRESENTA.TIVFA
VSTOIIMATION WASTED CIENIMIL
=!
A resolution yrs offered
Grant
BLAME, directing General to
communicate to the House all comes
' pondence addressed by him to the Pres
ident on the subject of the removal of
Secretary Stanton and General Sheridan;
also, any correspondence or order in hie
°Moe showing theioundition of the Fifth
Military District prior to the passage of
the Military .Reconstruction 811 , •and
any recommendations homey have made
thereon, and what steps, it any, were
taken by the civil authorities to such
recommendations; . also, all the corres
pondence in. reference to difficulties in
Baltimore, touching the Police Commis
eioners end other matters pribr to - LW;
and in reference to the proposed. mission
of the General of the Army to Mexico in
Mr. FARNSiVORTII ,loggeitod that
the resolnUon also ctill for the - auras
pondence In reference to Gen.Blekles.
Mr. BLACLNE consented to the roodi—
licaUon and the resolution was adopted.
PAY OP TICE AUNT:
On motion of Mr. WASHMITIME, pf
Indiana, the Committoe on Military Af
fairs wait instructed to Inquire into the
practicability of paying the, army once a
week, instead of Amery two months an
now provided by low.
flatmate's mason.
On motion of ELLIOT, the Com
mittee on Freedmen's Affairs was di
rected to report whether there were any
reasons why ' the Freedmen's Burette
should be continued beyond the time
limited bylaw. •
111 Er. AIL IN TUB stones. •
A resolution for the appointment of a
committee to ascertain weans of obtain
ing a endleient supply of
_pure air for the
Hall of Representative. was offered by
Dir. BROWNWEL, end referred to the
Committee on Public RulkUnga.-
- -
The SPEAKER presented a memorial
of the Alabama Convention praying for
the repeal of the cotton tax from e Ist
of September Inst.' Referred tothe th
Wave
and Means Committee. S
WIIISYCT_METT:BR.
•
A meal Eaton was offered by Mr. 3117N
asking the geeretnry of the Treat
nry for Information ea to•Lreetera la be
attached to stills. whether he had adopt
ad any and with what anoxia.
Maiolotion adopted. •
' lIXISOLUTION TO TtXPIAL TAX.
Mr. KELLY offered a resolution for
tho repeal at the tax on cotton and pro
dilations of manufacturingand mechani
cal. intermits, ezmpt distilled spirits,
malt Noma and tobacco. Itafeared to
Committee on. Ways and Minna.
raimorts Post oomeraarzurnra, &cr.
On motion of Mr. SCHENCK. a reso
lution was adopted waking the President
for fall infOrmotion MI CO plrdol72l granted
tosersons convicted of netjury , or min
.
AD.TOtrilliriMPT ON MONDAY%
The concurrent rasoluthin of the Ben
ate for adjournment on . Monday a.
eleven o'clock, waa agreed to. . .
•
twisting. - • •
• Mr. MILLER - introduced n bill grant
ing penalona to - solders of the war of
1 11011- firtztuorr.nnanitin ttorze.
Mr. BINGHAM offered , a raliolution
instmetleg the Committee on Ways and
Mains to inquire Into the expediency of
proriding by law against any Anther
contracUon at platens of non-Interest
beartog - notes.'and for. tba' increase
thereof equal to the amount of outstand
ing compound interest notes. ' '
BUM AND 430:C,D TAX.
Mr. PINE Offered a resolution that the
Committee on Ways and - Means Inquire
as to the expediency of a tax on United
Staten bonds of one per cent' abut of au
thoricingthe Secretary of the Treasury
to leant bonda eubjeot to state and attu
old* taxation,. and exchangeable -for
outstanding bonds at the , option of the
holder, and providing for the payment
of th e tax paid by the National Sanku to
the Tmainrer of the Slate in which the
banks are landed. Adopted. '
nomearlum LAW
Mr. JULIAN offered a resolution In-
structing the Committee on Public
Lands to inquire into the expediency of
ao amending the homestead law of
tut to prohibit the thither este of pub;
110 lands . ezcep t on conditions ro.
. .
• h
- •
NI& • , :"
•-•4.404.• - - ) s •
t. •
€l ,
• .4 )1.42
'1711111 ,4.1 EW,
:
(7k ttt
• •
, - •
- -
. ,
qtdring their settlenient and improve,
ment.l Adopted.
cuni=scr nsioLtrnox
Mr. ROSS offered &resolution Instruct
ing the Committee on Banks and Cur
rency to report a bill providing for the'
withdrawing from circulation Rational;
, Bank currency and to supply the wane
with greenbacks. •
Mr. SPALDINO objected to the reso
lution being made mandatory but sub
sequently withdrew his objection.
Mr. ROSS Moved the previous ques
tion, bat dteMonse refused to second It,
only nineteen voting in the affirmative.
Mr. FARNSWORTH moved Its ret
crones to the Committee on Banking and
Currency.
Mr. ROSS, in eider to Mit the nse of
the Home, moved to burn n beatablet—
yeas filly-tme, nays ono hundred and
one.
Ur. RANDALL ouggeeted the word
"requested" kro ..sub,tltuted for "In
structed." '
Mr. ROSS consented.
Alter debate,the motionPto refer was
adopted. •
rftnrrttra narrxoxr
--•- • .
On motion of Mr. WASFIBURNE, of
Illinois, the Committee on RR* way
hiettmeted to Inquire Into the expediency
of providing that no testimony taken be
fore a committee be . printed unless direct
ed by.thsCenunittee on Printing-
,
" LAICOS ran RAIL7I.OA.TSI:
Mr. WAgEfitURNE • alma asked leave
to offer a Jew/talon deckling that in the
Judgment ofthe Home there shall be no
farther appropriations of public lands for
railroad ptireoses• •
Mr. MAYNARD objected and the
Rouse refused to suspend the rules. -
CVE=iCIT AND TAX.
_ , • • -
Mr. BAKER Offered a relolntien In
structing the..Qpnunittee est Ways , and
Alums to
the
hito the expediencrot
changing the lows to wrest the contrite.-
' don of currency; of reducing the tax on
distilled' spirits, and reporting a more
economical means of collecting it; re
pealing the tax on cotton and .adoptLng
a scabs .of revenue-which would yield
only sufficient, with the surplus In the
iTreasury, to 'pay' the expenses of tha .
Government, the interest on public
debt, &n. Adopted.
CMOILIS OF BOUT lIHERN STATE 3.
Idr. B.A_RNSWORTII offered a resolu
tion inatrneting the Committee on Recon•
struction to inquire into the expediency
or taking a canals in the southern
Mato'. -Adopted.
Mr. Bit,OWN. WELL, of MO., offered a
resolution that sufficient greenbacks be
at all times supplied for the wants of the
people, to the exclueloiler all otherpaper
The Monge Wailed to second the pre
vious questlon. and Mr. FAT OM
WORTH. rising to debate, the reeolu
don went over,
- -
jr..l HURL offered a resolution that
the Committee on Wept and Mame in
uire into the expediency Hof modifying
the existing. lamp ao aa to impose a tax
on distilleries according to their =nn-
Maiming capacity. Adopted.
mixrrAllY Eirancier
- • •
'On. nintion. of Ste INGERSOLL, the
Cmmittee was instructed to
inquire Into o the expediency of reducing
the military establishment to - the lowest
possible: number consistent with public
IVIUStT TA7C
. .
Mr. MYERS. ofTeied a resolution di
recting the Committee on Ways and
Means to inquire into the expediency of
taxing distilled 'spirits on the capacity of
distilleries and reducing the present rate
of tax. Adopted. •
.val.rrAp. -.
.
Mr. PlLF:offered a resolution direct
ing the Eaacreta of War to report the
number of rented or !maid L 3
- St:Louis for zoilltary purposes. Adopt
od.
' ITNSOLD LANDS.
DIUGGS offered a resolution
Lund etructing the Commlttepon Public Lunde
to inquire into the expediency of report
ing atoll setting over all unsold or on
appropriated public lands to Staten in
which they ere ettitetecL Adopted.
CONFEDETLATE
Mr. WASLIBURNE, of Wisoonsin, of
fered a resolutien directing the Secretary
of the Treasury to fuirilsh information
as to the effort. made for the recovery of
Conlbderate preperty in Europe, whether
contracts heel, been made by which par
ties era to receive a there of the property
recovered, Mid" on what terms a settle
ment had been made with Trenhothi,
Frazier /ItQba.i kamed,
xtrirr nazism:sr palate:
Mr. COBB oilfired: a reaolution direct
ing the .Toint Comirdttee on Retrench.
meat to Inquire Into the whisky (muds
in New York.
Mr. SPALDING rising to debate the
question, It went over.
=I
On motion of feft. JUDD, the Secretary
of the Treasury was directed to report the
number of secret apecial Treasury agents
appointed since the tat of June, 1860.
DISCUSSION ON TILE PAT/SENT OP INTER
-
LIT ON 'BOND&
• The Mouse went Into Committee 'of
the Whole, and Mr. BLAIN made an
hour's spee ch against the proposition to
pay United States bond/ In currency In
stead of - gold. •
• Mr. BUTLER.replled e taking the op.
posit° greand. e
rose Before he concluded the
Committe and. the Mouse ad.
pained:
•
The Raman Remotion tenirentlen.
Me 'pecanlva to tea Pittsberie ensue.) .
Monanntarar, November-^s.—ln the
Reconstruction Convention a memorial
was offered to Congress, preying. for an
amendment to the present recenst' ruc
tion law to require only a majority of
the votes given op the question of the
adoption of the new State Constitution.
Sereral members stated that they de
aired the law amended so that the oppo
altion could not defeat the Constitution
by staying, away - from the polls, and
• pruned the' immediate adoption of the
memeriaL /t was finally tabled and or
dered to 'be printed. • - • •
An ordinance was listrodueed and re
ferred to establish a Board of immigra. ,
',inn Ibrildn State, and to provide for al
Bureau sf Industrial Statistics
I The radical majority decided not to ,
I press the adoption of the amendment I
, requiring commis- carriers to make no
distinction on account of color be
tween pensions traveline -in- this
, state, -. and refused to bring np the I
question this morning. This action wait
taken because thebbjeet in view had al-t
ready been obtained, In'part at lead, by'
thaadoption of the Rill of Rights, which
declares all persons pessesa equal chill
• n A np arti cle
wa g s report ed
p an or d t p dby c p the v ll C e om ,
mittee on Education providing for the
establishment throughout the State, In ,
I mils township or school district, ono or
more schools, at which all children of
the seat between eight add twenty years'
may amandhoo of anar g n,: A . m o ti on te,
amend, by providing separate schools for
white and colorer" chddred, woe tabled—
Yeas A. gay,. 27. Una final vote the ar
ticle was idopted—yens 51, nays 3t.
t Is highly probable the proposition
to argentine a provisional cird State
vernment, in place of the • present Government, will be gnashed in
B i t„
mittee.
curruowarr, Nov. The
Consti
tu owl Convention adopted the follow.
in • article to the Comdltution:
~,,,,,,E.-Th.tation—Alltastwonprope
e yln thla State shall bo guessed Inez
. proportion to the value of such prop
s
, A provt i od v , h a nsom, thatee Geni
exceed ono dollar n e7d a tirs mota tax n o%
la poll, which shalt bo spelled ex
c naively in aid of the public etheol
f nd.
The day's session was consumed In the
Iscassion of the proposition to Teat pow.
in the Governor to appoint all Judicial
[Boers. 'rho Convention finally preii
ded for the election -of Supreme Court
i to uclges and Chancellor. by the Legisla
ture, and all other Judicial cakes by the
6EAELGIL COURfI4.
AOJimeramealt—Nazi iteellair at
ritte•urid.
C v . neeente ea. the Pittsburgh
yr. WAirix. .November
Ir• e Conneilleld a sosalon last night to
ft • tho Important bestowal on bserd
an. adjourned today - sine die. At the
Intitatlon of the Brat English Lutheran
Coiag. remotion of Pittsburgh, pegsgyi.
omits, gimp will meet there next yaw.
Aig Executive Committee for Items Effe
ct., Was appo in ted and Roy. W. A.
vent,
..1) D., of Pittsburgh, elect
ed
dthe aent of tooo 'Council' In the
p ulion of the important work.
•
• • ••• wool, -•
Totoltrab to no Pittabotztt assists:l
Larvae* radians, Nev. Z.—Weston
arrived hers at &t minus meta
o'clock. this evesdng.eem te
EU will re
here to•ttlght, and leave tomorrow morn
nyie -
in H o expects to arrive at Chicago at
slook, Tkuraday morning,
SECOND EDITION
THREE OyCLOOIC A. M.
FROG[ EUROPE
Advices from China
Prmishment for Outrages on
Ameritan Seamen.
Fearibl Loss of Life by Inundation
Garibaldi Return! lo Capron
taly Not in Favor of a Conference
The Ilbyinianian War
American Females in Gernian
Addreu to Secretary 111,Ca
:fly Talegozoa to me Pittabortla Goootto.l
4 . 11 0 11 M,
*inane smote Catill.—il77ll3llMENT FoR
eteraeass us. setscuts.
lementuf November 2. Dispatchest
feorit anzuindo` that several
vessels of the United States Pfeifle
squadron departed for Pormosa to pun,-
ish ttio perpetrators of the mango en the
crew of the American barque • Rover.
The United States Consul General at
Amoy was to have accompanied the ex-
Pedition with a body of Imperial troops,
which had ‘ been tendered him.
nitYIINSE LOW O F
. Additional psulticulars of the disastrous
inundation •ljytehich the island of Lu
nn was visited last month are recelied.
Besides great damage to shipping and
crops, whole villages ware overwholmsd,
and the lon of human life is computed
•
at tea thousand.
-
TIER .11.1Hi891.1!LAN .11:2PCDISIO3.
Lourros, November 26—Abening—In.
the House of Col:1=01U this evening
Hon. Mr. Disraeli, Chancellor of tho Ex
chequer, moved a vote of supply of two
million pounds sterling for the expense
of the Abyssinian war. He supported
the motion with a speech, in which
ho recalled the various pacific efforts
made in vain by England to obtain
the relesae of British captives, and just!-
' lied the final action of the government In
sending:A}Miltatyiexpeditionlo Abyssin
ia. He thought that should it be found
necessary to replace the Indian troops
aent on the expedition ,by European
troops, the supply required, by the gov
ernment might be increased , to 3,500,000
pounds.
A debate ensued. Mr. Logs . made an
attack upon the Ministers, tesslitch Lord
Stanlexreplied.
Jacob Bright ♦ has been elected to Par
liainent from Manchester.
rtfit
• aesreatra szsyssre rtoxa
FLOYIENOR, Nov 28.—deriba14i bail; 813 -
favrecovered from his receetilluelf Auto
be considered by his medical advisers
able to support the fatigue of travel, and
by parroted= of the Government be
will Immediately set out from Varigu
ano for his home In Caperars.
YIIIDL&TCAL REPORTS.
The report. that. Italy bad agreed to
tbs proposition of France fora geueral
Conference are premature. The Italian
government has not yet algn Med, In any
way, Its Intentloit of joining in the pro
posed Conference.
=MI
AIIZIFICA2I fMMIni236--ADDILIOnI TO
SPCIUMAIIY ICCULLOOI4
Brzu.l.r, November mer
chants and brokers of this city Interested
In American securLtiss propose to send
an address to Secretary ArCulloch, mak
ing inquiry In regard to too payment of
bonds in go'd by the United States Gov
ernment.
&salvia °Err.
Lormort, November W.—Tbe Rt.:me
Atlanta, from New York, arrived to-day
FINANCIAL AND COALIUDICIAL.
LoNDoN, November M.—Evening.—
Consols, 941; Five-Trvenites, 701; Illinois
Central, 851. •
Fusourrour,November
U. B. Bonds, 75.5-18.
Livsnrom., November 26—Butning.—
Cotton cloned heavy; Middling Uplands,
8d; Orleans, 81; sales 13,000 "bales. Man
chester market sr goods and yarns dull
and heavy. Brmthtnfilt closed heavy.
Corn declined Sd skim 2 r. It.; new mix
ed Western, 4808 d, Pena firmer, 'at btu
dd. Wheat quiet; lOs 9d for California
white, and Its Sd for No 2 red -Western.
Barley andithsta unchanged. Provisions
and •Froduce dosed unchanged.
Sorrwzur, November 28.—Petroleum
quint; 15 francs for standard white.
OETRAGESONAMERICIMITIZEIS
Immense Mass Meeting in
New York. .
Osr Toisarsta to Um PUtobaroll Smolt.)
NEW Yonx, :November M.—Art Mi
meos° mites meeting was bald to-night
at. Cooper Inatitute, to givo expression
of Indignation at the recent outrage on
tho 'rights of American citizetas,by the
British 'grareinmmt. Speeches wore
made by Judge Daiy, John Cochrane,
Horace Greeley and others.
Letters were read from Generals Banka
, and Butler. A committee was appointed
to proceed to Washington and urge on
tho Government the adoption of mra
aura for the protection of naturalized
citizens throughout the world. .
ST. LOUIE,.
Beare of Beall% Iteralettovue-glie
Lees geeeelly-413easielee cam
e/ :..:rani tette feestrarge %Wee 3
- 'Sr. Lome, Nov. 20..—The Board of
• Health have 'prohibited the cutting of
keno= anypend or sink hole In the city
or rich:My. or frorritheMlasissippi River
below the Northern boundary of the city,
-and have Instructed their Meseenger to
I examine and report all ice house. bar_
log ice held Geer • from last winter.
The Board have recommended lc* to be
cat from the current of the Mistier
eippt or Missouri river, In preference to
that from all other rime or lakes. The
Beard also prohibit the sale by droggiets
or other
y persons p of orrtaln specified I
pocep hom
the ed anderous drugs and preparations,
ext he ibed by physicians,
or obtain
pernalt furnthUd by
the clerk of the Board.• Last* summer
the Board of Health prohibited the eale
of distillery elope to dairymen. Theo
have now modified the order so that such
food may be used in epectled dolga; but
reqall milkmen selling milk from
cow en fed to label their wagons with
the words ...swill milk," so that citizens
ma) net be deceived in what they buy.
Horny Welber, who was dint yester
day morning by Max Klinger, died Tas
ter-day afternoon. His wife is still alive,
and will probably recover. Klinger has
been arrested.
Th
_le cane of Dr. Harrington, for the
murder of Rudolph Walterspoil, but
December; closed /ast night, and the
L returtiaverdlet of m tesuA eldgrmt l thgt L t
mcnt at tfeet;eadin the penitentiary.
WEST INDIES,
Zuptive 718 Swam; iR Deudigs and
May&L
(ft . :III.IIVA la UM , Roberta Gu5111.63
HAVANA, Nov. M.—latest advlces from
Hayti and St. Domingo confirm • the re
ports of the rapture between the two
countries.
. .
The istaurrection'teat the antbotih'
of Sol nave In Hayti .come to an en d.
The foreign 03001113 in Hayti,
a mane of whom animosity hadtte u ry
arisen, had been guaranteed' 'protection.
The Resobattontate on the frontier of
Bt. Domingenrunbar four thousand men.
They are in poettendon of the Important
;Torino of Cabo. :
~~
sBI7IMII. WEDNE
FROM WASHINGTON.
Ocean Mail Contracts
Representative Ashlei and
Sanford ConiVer.
International Coln Opgeinaelis
•
Consideration of Appoin tments,
•
fOr Telegraph to um Pittsburgh no./
ant i .
Wa.straieton, y, .W t ISIII.
ItAILI TO 011.14 T AIN.
Tim Postmaster General accepted
tondora for carrying the mistlabn. 'Great
Britain, for the year 1368, front Bitatara
burg, North German, liloylps . and In
man linos, at a - . compensation "nt fifteen
rents per singlerato for loner* and elz
wins per pound for printed matter, tn.'
The regular days for sending from Now
'Kora will be Tuesday, Thstraday and
Saturday. This compel:manta in tonsid-
. erably less thou thteunount cif aea post-
ego stecuredin not„postal reremea to Me
Department from Me Ailabdo- Malt . soi
-10. It is anticipated that •an arrange-
mead will .be made ;for' an-addition all
weekly mall bv,tbo Cunard Brat, making
four per week. - ' r ' • 7,
TIM ASECLIST-cONOVIM MATillTi. .
s ltePresentative.A.Shley was before the
Judiciary Committee on "Saturday end
testified, in stt(serer to a question by
Messrs. Eldridge und idarshakthathe
produced before the ,Cinunzlttee all • the
evidence which he couedde=l or
valid on (ho question ,or len eat.l
Ho admitted having numerous 'confer
ences with Conovernitas.thuMaitt while
the latter was in Jail Wasbingionunder.
conviction for perjury; that thane eon
ferenceS were force purpose of obtain
ing some letters which Conover assort
eel were in existenoe, implicatingPresi
denflofinsou in guilty knowledge Ofthe
conspiracy to assassinate President Lin
coln, but (head( could get no Inch 'let
ters, and that all Conover's statements
were so vague and otweliable that he
(Mr. Ashler). would not present them
before the Committee.
TILE INTZILNULTIONAL
A specimen medal vf the proposed in
ternal coin of twenty-live Rao©, rooently
struck by the - Government of• France,
was presented this momhur So the Prest
dent- through Mr. Samuel 11. Ruggles.
It is very elightiV larger than our half
eagle. Mr. Xtuggles• odicitd report' of
the proceedings of the Intametlonsl
llonetery Congress will ho sent to coa
st-its!, during the corning week.
NOILLNATIONTS 00:14IDETLED.
The Emu:dire Session of the Semite
to-day - n . 0510. consider the question iiof
taking up nominations, laid over at feat
session, that of Co!. Capron, for Commis
sioner of Agriculture, and others.: Eionie
of the Senators desiring to obtain Anther
information in regard to some of tho
nominations, no action was taken..
=
- -
Ur. Plumb writes: from •
Mask* that
the letter which Captain Rog 9; tito Tor
coney, with - swa' to•• tiWPrealsiont, zu*.
questing the delivery. of hlsultrdlitui's
remains to 'Admiral.tiorr. 1 "4.
neyer received by the P eMrnt.
=EMI!
The land agent of the Memphis and'
Little Rock Railroad him flied with the
Cl' num 11431°1:1er Goneral orthe Land Of
tide a Wisp !thawing the line of that mad.
JEFF. DAVIS.
His Trial Does Nol Proceed
Pas; pootaent Till March-...8b Bail
Bond Extended.
RICHMOND, November • 28. -Judge
Chase did not arrive here thin morning.
The Court roam was densely crowded,
and In the park outside was a detach
ment of cavalry. The Grand Jury was
brought in and all the counsel of Mr.
Darts were present ezeept James T.
of rady. of New
ia. York, awl Wm. D. Reed,
Philadelph
Judge Underwood took his seat on the
bendier 11:30, and the Grand Jurors be
ing sworn in, he 'iellvered his charge.
Judge Underwood regretted the'abseuce
of Chief Justice Chase, and cautioned
the Jury that no party or class prejudices
ebould , influence their deliberation;
The" .oreases connected with the
rebellion, be stated, should have
their first attention. 'lf it should be
brought to their attention that any ono
had committed treason, ho must be in
dicted, unless he has-bee'n specially par.'
donettby the President or by the general
amnesty proclamation. Ile then recited
the law and penalties for treason. Ile
*d 'violations of the Revenue laws
should next claim their attentlon, and
thoy should becuisparing in the mane of
public officers engaged in such .viola-
Bons, if any each should be found.
Shortly after neon Mr. Everts, for the
Government, said the !Meatier' of the
Government wan to try the muse of Mr,
Davis some day this tem. One con*•
errdion in fixing the day , was the time
when Judge Chew could. attend hem,
The govern meet proposed to names day,
after the adjournment of the Supreme
Court, for this trial, when ho could sit
with Judge Underwaxi, Mr.' Everts
suggested thatthe fourth Wednesday to
March be llned as the day for the trial to
proceed.
Mr. O'Connor said the personal con
venience of Mr. Davis' would have been
promoted if the trial had taken' place to
May last, and it would bo very conve
nient to Mr. Davis to have the trial pro
ceed. Ills • counsel • would, however,
naive to the projamition of Mr. Evart".
They thought the - presence of ChlerJus
Lice Chase would be beneficial, not alone
to the interest of the acme*, but to the ,
interests of all. t,
• • .
.
Judge Underwood said the arrange
ment proposed by the Government for
thetrlalof Mr. Davis was agreeablete the
Court, and particularly so bocause the
Court earnestly desired that Chief Jus
tice Chase should sit upon the trial., It
was also due to the defence that two
Judges labonld elt on the mac, la order
that nil appeal might be takes on dis
puted questions and the Cale carried up
by defendant to a higher Court. The
Judge then agreed to fix the firth day of
Marches the day for the trial.
An stppllcatlon was made ,Nfr. O'Con
nor that the ball bond or Mr. Davie bo
extended until the time fixed for the
trial to proceed. This was agreed to by
Judge Underwood, and it was further
agreed that If Chief Justice Chase could
not bo present to preside over the Cour t, that the leave of Mr. Davis be extended
to the term following. 'rho order for the
extension of the leave of absence of - Ifr.
Davis, and fixing the lEth of March next
as the day for his trial; was then entered
by order of Judge Underwood.
Mr. Davis did not appear In Court,
nor did the witnesses for tuegoverament.
Three witulisses who came in, Ex.l3ec
retary Seddon. Ex-Governor Letcher,
and Gen. Wickham, were held in recog
nlzances to appear in March.
LOUISIANA
The Beeenstametloe Convention.
Dy Telegraph re the Mubarak tiesegto.l
•
:New Onbserts, Ziov. Z.—Eighty-Ave
members were presentin tho Convention
to-day. Judgo Tallinforro was elected
President; Wm. Volayers, &doted,
permanent Secretary, and a negro Ser.
ireanbebarm.s.• The President made a
brief address, entirely upon the duty of.
tho Convention In framing a now State
Constitution.
Slaw OnLmsne, Nov. 26.—Iti the Oon-.
vention to-day a committee of thirteen,
of Which W. L. McMillen Ls chairman,
sra appointed to draft rules and regula
tions, pending which the nem and roan.
lotions of the House' of rtepretentativera
of tho United States Were adopted.
• BILADELLPHIA.
T. Iftek4Wassuor Cane—ltirtdinsee
toeaaaea—•moment Darned.
==!!!211
PIIILADTTRIZIA, Not , ember , 33.—Ths
Tack case was heard today 'before
Judge Ludlow, the examination, of
witnesses occupying more than tour
hours.' Tho argument et the coun
sel will bo heard at a day. to be named.
A phonographic report cif the testimony
has beeritaken by-a competent reporter,
and will be published.
New Turk Canal. Navigation.
Vovetraoh to Vltsabonth Gavotte.]:
ALLenr, boats` Conn
thane to arrive slowly by ' - The
-difficulty la a lack of water on the lave].
Loaded hostile left Buffalo Do ]slo t as yes
tesday fbr Ude water.
~- ~i
~,
Y.. NOVEMB
GEN. GRANT.
A Correspondent, on Intimate
Terms, has an Interview.
What Re Says of Strictures on ills
Reticence.
:Saw Tong {{ November M.—The Now
'Haven Paikuihtm publiehes the
follow
ing.frout a correspondent who Ls on intl
.
mate terms with General Grant, and who
had a free Interview with the General
Speaking of the sctures of he Now
York Tribune on htisri t
reticence, General
Grant said if there bale Giese complaints
knowptions of tact which / may
to be erroneous, I do not now and
here controvert them. It there ho in them
any inferences which I may believe to be
falsely , drawn, I will not now and hero
argue against them. If there be pereop-
Alble in them an impatient and dietato
riaLtoue, I wave It in deference to others
who have a right to think and speak as
they may be prompted bya sense of du
ty. As to my principles, I have not
meant to leavoanyone Cis doubt. I would
save the country. I would save tug
the abortost way tinder the Comak
Union. If thorn be these who would
not save the country unless they
could at the same time save their own
theories, Ido not min* with them. bly
wish Is to save the country, and as 210013
as posaibto to restore all the States to
their proper relations as such, and
upon I
the principle of even-handed
Justice. What, do in the premises, I do
use I believe it helps to save
tha' country; nand what /.forbear, I
forbear because I do believe it helps
to save the country. I shall do less,
whenever I believe that I am doing what
hurts the cause. I shall do more, when
ever I shall believe that doing more Will
help the cause. I have now elated my
own sense of personal and official duty,
and I intend no modification of any oft
repeated personal wish. that all men may
be permitted to think freely, and all, on
suitable oce_aslons, speak 'out what they
think, if by so doing they can bcriont
manielud and help to save the country.
CITY AND , SUBURBAN.
voutrru PAGE.—The Courts; Pollee
Items; Telegrams, sad other lateral-
Aceidentally Dreitrand.
Coroner Clawson vesten.lay held au In
.
quest on the body of Nicholas tfender,
aged about forty-stx years, drowned in
Tiirtle Creek, Versants' township, Mon
day evening. Dceeased resided at Six
mile Ferry, where he leave's; a wife and
anon children, was employed at the
C.eal works of Di Stewsrt. & Co. at
Teeth, Creek. Ile. purchased a,
and alter . making attrangements ••
Ifonday evening towards - banding
house, started front a tavern in the vi.;
daily. between seven and eight cfcibek„
In a sober condition to go to his board
ing house. Ito fellinto the creek,. secs
dentell cries Is believed, near a bridge,
and his for help attructod attention,.
but assistance came too late, as when the
first persons reached him he Was draari
ed.' The body was immedlatel3r recover
eel. The Jury .rendered • verdict in
cordance with the facts. • •
serious
Between two and three'o'clock yester
day afiernoon a serious aocidontoccerred
at Cenemaugh station, on the Pennsyl
vania Railroad, of which we have the
Mr/twins partioularse Thenaser Reamers,
a resident of Lancaster *aunty, Pa., was
walking along the track at the time Mad
placoabovistoted, and observing a train
approaching he attempted to get out of
the way, when by some means be slipped
and fah into - a gulvert which be was
crosAing, inflicting severe injuries upon
his head and back. He was observed by
the engineer of the train,- which was
stopped and the Injured man taken from
where be bad fallen to a house near at
band and medical atom:lance mammal/ed.
/t was ascertained that be was a
arranger and in destitute circumstances,
having no - money. , and the *moon of the
company very
hid*genrously ordered him
to be taken to borne free of charge,
which was done hist evening. •
Saivry of Aimslc
It has been a problem among those
who have given musical Instruments de
served atudy, whether in the swam of
time the natural voice will matte sup
planted altogether by the production of
an instrument which will clearly imitate
its shrill sweet - tones of deep gnabing
sound. The nearest approach to this de
sirablepoint bee been made In the now
Justly • famous Decker Plano. It. tones
present ouch en extraordinary volume
and overtones, and, brilliancy, and rich
ness, and kweetneas, an toeam the poetic
idea of being the envy of lingua. But
with all the superiority which this ins/ni
-1 ment pnitente, the machinery Is no more
' delicate than that of rival instruments,
but quite to the contrary is stout and
durable. The patents of Mr: Daniel
Decker, introduced in the Inatrumente,
are quite simple, but at inestimable Im
portance. .The Decker Plano is destined
to supplant all °therein the estimation
of the public, as true worth (amulet go
nerocogulued In this progressive 'age.
The leading magical spirts of the age
have Joined In disinterested praise of
this instrument, white everybody who
Is so fortunate in poatesabag one, am see
no excellence in any other piano when
compared with the Decker. C. C. Mellor, -
No, 81 Wood street, la the sole agent
for the Decker Phlnos In this city,
An Infuriated Steer cut some nueer ca
iors in Allegheny City, Monday even
ng. The animal had beenpurchneed by
GeorgeWidner, a Manchester butcher,
and when taken from the enclosure et
the stools-yards .became-unmanageable.
After rift:ming about the streets for some
titne,Trightentng people almost out of
their wits, and toning aoSeral boys on
Idet horns, .without, however, serious
injury ttijachez en
{Vent
ta
le7teer go za tug! the
railroad
and
"eel himself' for an approaching locomo
tive, Which he encountered with lull
fordo, at once ending his career, for, in
less ttmo than we one write the set, a
ilead'ateer lay at one side of the track. -
Harness Telen.--Monday night the
stable ofJohn Brown, Esq., Clerk of
Courts, located on Glary's Run, was en
, tend by thieves, and *set of buggy har
ness stolen. The robbery was aswv
ered yesterday, morning, , when Mr.
Brown was nbout having his horse
hitched up for the purpose of coming to
the city. Tho.t.hief also maliclotialy cut
the top of the boggy, and tore orr the
apron, thus rendering. the vehicle-unlit
for use until It can bo repaired. The liar
neea vras , iained at Thant sixty dollars:
No clue which would lead lathe detection
or the thief has yet been discovered.
. .
•Vlto notice that the street loafers In Al
legheny aro becoming More numerotis,
and, consequently more, aggressies, The
stone walleleir the' Suspension Bridge,'
the four owners of Federal and "%ace , *
strocte, between tho mlioay station and
Stockton avenue, and sonfo four 'or lies
pianos On Ohio street, aro particularly no.
Oceable for this growing evil, which, if
not promptly eradicated, tnaylead to an
othertragedy; such as the one what,
young Hamilton lost his Bro.- -
A Supposed lifarderer, giving his riaine
es Scott,. boarding for some weeks aStbe
house of - Mrs. McNulty on O'Hara
street, suddenly decorated a few nighti
since. It to said his hoe y departure was
occaeloned bribe reoMpt by kiln of a
letter from Baltimore convoying the
Inlbrnean Wet a man who bad been
stabbed by him had died from the effect
of iris wound, and also that bls (Scott's)
pnesenee In Mb city was known.
The ItilcoieoliParemcnt la . prolymelng
quite rapidly on Wood street, and the
Workmervezettoar engagodon the equate
between Fourth andro Fifth streets. At
the pmeent rate ot Pgress t ha , h , A .
of Wood 'etreot to Fifth, ande
op FIRE
from Weed to Smithfield, LrW bo com
pleted by the time spec-Wed to , the eon
tract—middle of December. •
The,Opening or the New Orphan Asy
lum, on Tannehill street, will take pines
on Wednwiday and Thursday • eveninp.
November 27th and =h. There willbe .
two bands of mneinaad two pianos, fur
nished:tor the ocesalon by Barr, Retake
dcßuottler. Tickets, including supper
and promenade, $3,00, admitting lady
and geatleman. -
thr. EJectment Case continues on trl.
al belbre Judge 2dcCundleau, - 1n the Unt
:ted Buda; Occult court, and wfil mace
ly be concluded this week.
• TtuD Sixth Ward ReOubllleaes meet this
eroning at the School - Home to - ao : •
amdfdates for Ooeneilmon,_ Alderman
'and other ward ;Macre.
Tito National Wool Growers' Aavelit
don will meet in Quarter Sections 119 om
of Coact /loan to-day 012 o'clock
, • A Belt Maas Man.
We are among those who admire self
made men. There is no grander eight
than= that of a man struggling out of
poveoy, leaping over obstacles thrown
in Ids way and advancing, Steadily .to
wealth, fame and honor. We - have a
particular case In view, one Which should
bo familiar to all our readers sod which
might servo as a bright example toyoung
.men. who are pushing their way on
ward through life. In !our daily
rounds snatching for items we have seen,
located In various quarters, an humble
individual whose countenancebetokened
in no unmistakable way that he had
been pinched and fretted In pover
ty, and that his pathway through life
had been strewn .\ with the thorns
of roses. He was a study. Ills hat told
its age in the number of bends and
breaks which appeared on its greasy
cylinder; each bend denoting a decade of
years, and each break a fractional part of
that period. Ilia coat was thread-bare,
hut not bare. of threads, for here and
there the patches of many colors told,
In Illustration alone, of the -garment
worn some years ago by one Joseph.
Tile breeches were shining In the glory
of antiquity, and clung lovinglY to the
well devolopeallegs of their owner. Huge
brogans, Innocent of strings, and practi
cally run down on all sides, covered
;She feet of our hero, giving ono the
. ddesibf the breadth and longthbf tom un
atillinktiltag of the wearer.. He wore a
neck.HO Iblinadin ths shape of a stock,
at> painfully stiff that his massive head
had to be carried extremely erect, thus
giving this walking bag of rags an air of
1 stately Importance and ;dignity.. When
we first met this man we little dreamed
that be should nee day hold a high place
among the self made moo of the city;
but fortune plays queer pranks some
tlmea. Ho was then sole proprietor for
a machine whereby the strong
and- the weak might learn how
'od they mi ho when . they
d l lo, bow man y
times their hearts
throbbed, how weak wee their lungs and
how mu.soular their .bodies. The price
for thla knowletl.. wu,
_"only Aso cana"
and the h. :
,i„..;.. ' - , - vldual. exhausted
his evi ',.. • :‘, idlie .day In explain
ing__._,.rr:. ' l'-"tier mashasn wi'd
whl. • ', ""n -'I Ho was frequent
ly.d.llatusireeltllipthe pollee and made
enalw his Bakti . :4sf operations, but the
mightyintalleoherhich ,grapples with the
stars of heaven cannot be annoyed by the
eekortlal emblems of terresthal 'authori
ties. He persevered., ; Wealth , tioried in
upon him till he was a walking depoal
tory of ragged flee cent fractional' cur
rency. Witio what energy ho labored to
amass' enough to start him in life,
mu brat be imagined by them
who have enterod Into the race
to
t make,-the first thousand dollar'.
us dollar'..
Co mdl around the young-men
(we would point to that ex
,
ant In glory and raspeetabili
an ;
ty, ' , say, "go and do likewise;" but
as wo cant draw . those worthless vaga
bonds about us,lre will proceed to the
rosy part2of ear That poor man
s e ti
Is now in busineaa .on One of the most
iminent thoroughfares of .the city.
ron number repM . entatives of
m of eociety and . lie is rapidly
ng Ws ,worldly goods. Ships,
, laden with the choicest offerings of the
tapirs climates , bear to him his stock
Fu, trade, 'and '' the rich orchards of
our own'^ country are in a rams
ore subservient to his order. That
man, render, who was in poverty a few
years ago; is to-day the Sole proprietor
of an' mainly - and well conducted pea
nut . , ittitt while prosperity smiles
upon tots toot prowl. Ho kno ws '
full, t a decline Impala nuts might
ruin 'financially ftetiver, and living
In good Sallowahip with all men, envying
r d.
not thmewho are higher '
Raring "cotuf! ,
up" to th ey() lower than himself. hs Is
prepared for reversee, knowing that
none will rejoice If he panes down Into
the dark depths of bankruptcy.
rdttersat■ lined Lettere from the Lead
log Pittsburgh Papers.
WEIGIIT IN GOLD.—We
have frequently spoken of the populari
ty aud excellence of Colonel Boaxell's
great patent and copyright. We refer
our readers to the ibilowing latter, which
L to the point, and the. right kind of an
indoreemeut.--Pitteburgh Daily ant
inereia/ j
.Bcri.r.n. Pa., Nov. 3. 1E67:
Col.V. W. Delimit, Pittsburgh, 7 Pa., No.
Diamond etreel, Room N 0.5:
I take pleasure 112 informing 3 .01 3 thatl
havo succeeded elegantly with Butler
county, tiro territory I purchased from .
you recently for 8150. I hare already
cleared three hundred and sixty dollars.
(Penn. in canvassing two small villages,
and I am confident I can make several
thousand dollars out of the county.
Your pnfent and copyright is more than it
is represented; it is worth its weight in
gold. liesivetfully, your.,
Josrset Luenbutt.
-
Trunk -- Bones, 101 Wood street, Pitts
buh.
flow rg FOIMINES ant BEING Minn.—
The following extract from a letterJost
received from Mr. Wm. 0. Barnard, who
recently purchased the right for Eastern
Virgin will give the reader an idea o
the popularity of Col. Bewails area,
Patent and Copyright. --Pittsburgh Daily
'Post.
Morino:al:4We., Nov. Bib, ififir.
Col. J. W. Beanll, Room No. - 1, 03 Dia
mond street, Pittsburgh. Po.
Oxen San —l have just commenced
operations i,ore with your splendid and
popular Patent and Copyright, and have
made It7OOM less Duna two days. I have
good offers for nix more conntief.'.. it
works elegantly and/ must have more
terrttory. What will you take for the
rights of North Carolina and Georgia?
Very Respectfully, -
how A FORTUNE CAN DE 'MADE IN A
BEIOET Turx.—Tho valuable patent ad
vertised in our "Patent” column to-day,
by Cot. Beerelt; exceeds in poprilaritv
anything ever offered to the public, and
the sato of territory by him le unprece
dented. We have given it a careful ex
amination, and can confidently say that
an naive business man can make a for
tune by securing the right of a State, city
or good county. Over a hundred dollars
per day is being made by thew) who have
purchased territory.—Ptfisburgh Dia
patch.
RAPIDL
Y.— I C w AN b e
TsOe M A
bDyGE r e M
fo O rr NET g
to our want column to-day that Colonel
Benzoli offers to the public a valuable
and popular patent, ha which all claosos
are specially intereated. Wo have ex
tmied it carefully—baring thorough
knowledge of it—and can say without
hesitancy that thaw, is a fortune In it for
any assing a State, city or county
right. Alter purchasing territory there
lee clear profit of ono hundred and eight
dollars and sixty cents on every eleven
dollars and forty cants expended for
working material. —Pittsburgh Gazelle.
CIIANDE TO Mout MONET SELDOM '
OrgEnanc , See advertisement in another
column to-day;of a valuable patent,
adapted in use to all closaes. It has
proved ono of the most popular ever of
fered, the public, and the oale of terri
tory. . by Colonel Bearall is unprecedent
ed.. We speak knowingly, when we say
there la a fortune for every man securing
.good territory. An ides con bo formed
of the amount of money in it, when we
assure. you there lea clear profit of one
hundred and eight dollars and sixty
cents on every eleven dollars and forty
cents invested, after securing territory._
Pittsburgh Chrpniete.
Ate OrroicriTorrr To MAIM Mossy
Roglot.T.—rln our want column, this
morning, will be found Colonel Bearell's
advertioement, offering for sale State,
city and county rights of a , very valu
able patent.:
Nothing ever offered the motile has
succeeded it in popularity, and although
it has only boon made public a short
time, rights of States cities and countim
are being disposed of daily.
It lojust what ft is reprasented, in
valuable to all classes, and we can say
freely thoro are fortunes in it for all ao-
CDPIDE. territory.—Pitbenicoh Republic,
• SPLENDID CIIANCE TO MANX Fott-
TtrEs.—The patent which Col. Bearoll
advertising In our want column, this
morning, is selling rapidly. From per
sonal knowledge, we am say there lo a
fortune in it . for any one owning the
right of a State, large city, or populous
cou nty , , — .PitabargX.Ocrily annuicretal.
Those wishing to rritdzy con opply to
Col. Jahn W..."DOILtall,l No. 03 KOhn's
' B ‘r Waom No. 0, or to Win.
D. Moore, Deputy United States District
Attorney, and 11. D. McKelvey, Crated
States District Attorney's ofnce, Pitts
burgh, Pa.
The Sleet • Tee rim. Sabbath
• . Selma or Allege...r, •
neejlest boon'aupplled with ono of those
musical wonders of the day—a Mason it
Raman Cabinet Organ. It is ono of the
. largest sloe, having two banks of key.,
aa ght stops of various qualities of
tone-from the liquid 'melody of the
Flute," the dolma tuna of the "Haut
bois," to the low," religions strains of
the Diapason, and - Bourdon. It lea
magnificent Instrument, and is auto to
A grand acquisition to the fiabbath
prove The committee, composed of
the leading musicians of the Church,
after trying all the Tarim:is organs oda:trod
for sale I. the city, finally decided on
Mason
_ge a s "the best." The
instrument wee: narnhihed. /ram Mr.
Mallor'a rooms, the mole agent in this
city for three unrivalled , ',roans.
niccoacoplo Invasrlsatlark
Scientific men are constantly attaining
the most valuable Information by their
assiduous attention toMlcroecoplo Loves ,
ligation, and the art ofmedielne !Scoop
ing the richest rewardstrom their labors.
wonders which are thus being
brought to light in tho physical sciences
are no Emitter than those being disclosed
in regard to the laws of life and the na-
ture of disease.
Every part of the human body has
been decomposed into its elementary
tissues by the aid of chemistry, and the
structures not only, but the actions even
clench part have been minutely. ezam.
Wed by the Microscopte.
The Bones, which constitute, the
skeleton.
The Corti/ages, which cover their ex.,
tramples. •
The Ligaments, which hold them to.
gether.
The Muscles wboas contraction gi ,
motion,
The Tendons, which communicate that
oUon.
Tito Nervous-ganglia, Which &enemies
The Nerve -fibre, which convey
The Skin, which clothes the body.
The 3fembrones, which line its cavities.
The .4 esistiktling Glands, which make
e blood.
The Secreting Glands, which purify It.
All these. and manyethernarts and tis
sues which might be enumerated, to
gether with the Secretions and Ere-re
heat themselves, have been thus exami
ned Red their 'lndividual facts fully
sketched.
The composition of the human body
being formed In its different parts of dif
ferent kinds of matter, one general law
pervading, yin that the mute kind of
aubstance always assumes . the same
form, each Aisintegrated particle, will
exhibit thS`pecullar form according to
the substance of which it Is composed, as
of bones muscles, liver, lungs, kidneys,
brain, and In aceirtiance with its
formation,,,as In disease of these organs
' or
la nrts. fact it is in the diseased condition of
the Isxir that the micros cope lends Its
greateet ald, and In the examination nf
the "urinary deposits" that the most
valuable practical results are attained.
When any organ or part of the body
betxtmes dieesseirit gibes out more than
it accustomed aimro of particles from
that. These separated particles are car,
tied out of the taxly.throogh the medium
of tbe kindeya, and may by chemical
analysis and microscopic examination be
definitely ascribed to the precise locality
whence they aro derived.
... . • • • ....
These are practical facia I not merely
of value in ordinary cases alone, but sci
entiSe men, Todd, kennel, Queckot, and
others, have placed on iecord numerous
Instances whersin the correct diaimosis
in oba'eure eases depended solely upon
these kind of investigation. .
We Ourselves, during an experience of
over twenty years' practice, have bad
many Individual cases wherein the era- -
m•lnation of the urinary secretion alone
revealed the true nature of the disease,
after after alt the 'other well known me
thods of the very best physicians of the
country had signally 'failed.
. When we propose to detect diseases by
an examination of the urine alone, being
prepared, as we are at pur office, No. 132
firant street, Pit ts burgh,
with all the
chemical and microscopic apparattie for
.testing it In the most scientilic manner,
.we basis our proposition, not upon cialr
voyand, spiritualism, Cocas-pocus, or
!al
legerd n, but upon the incontroverti
ble fse and make ourdeducUons in ac
cordin with th e immutable laws of
arien'gr . .
Ind ,it is these filets alone that give
to oUripeculiar system its true value that
lantana It 93 a science. For that only la
edam fie which lit based npe n incontro
raft'i, e
facts. L OLDSMSE, 3L D.
4 Professor of Urine Bathology.
Orwell Erawerr.
Agl .."of goodold ale war= the blood
and quickens the brain. It is the bever
age which, when moderately used, con.
tribe largely to the health andstrength
ens 'ii ciortstitution. Of late years the
breivaig ; of ale has received much study
and attention In this country, and, as a
result; those who know tell us American
alesalp the krist In the world. True, a
remnant of the popularity of the famous
old_E4lish and Scotch ales still remainsi
and ny are found who cling with per
tinaci y to the belief that our country is.
still liehind those countries In the pro
, ductidel era better article. It Is a grand
1 mistake to so Imagine, for right here, in
i
this ci of manufacturing importance, is
brew ale that defies the world in corn
potitir . E, The old Oregon Brewery of
Messs ii. Pier, I/annals rt Co., Stevenson
street. 1 . ghth ward, has contributed
large! , 03 our fame in thLs direction.
The f' e, Cream and Burton Alen. mid
choice otters, brewed at this already Ih
moos rqwery are of superior quality,
and ar hlghli commended by the meth-'
11 .
cal fret Ity, as well as by all who have
partak n of them. Packages In barrels
and half rrels will be shipped to any
point at. delivered in any part of the two
1 .1 citier e boroughs free of charge.
I k
The Ifeiidelessolin quieten° Club of
Boston, Whose concerts are pronounced
by the presi of every city in which they
are given. the best musical eutortain
moots ,bfrinvii to the American rublle,
will give tWo concerts in Pittsburgh, Do•
comberand Sth.
1: ' CITY rms.&
'tiltapperinands. face and all roughness
ottheftkin,J certainly cured by using the
Tatilpo; :Tar Soap, made by Caswell,
Hemet& Co., Now York. It surpaases
all other remedies, as It will prevent
roughisesa ~ e f the akin, if used cittrig
cold weather. Ills conveniently applied,
avoiding all the trouble of the greasy
scompoueda'now in use. It can be used
by ladice iwith the most tender skin.
without Irritation or pain, making it soft
and clear. !Sold by the Druggists gen
erally.] w.
Dry I
vita th.,
who.
'
dresa
gtaplo
Goods at Whalen.le.—We In
. • cal= attention of buyers at
it to out complete stock of silks,
• and all kinds of fancy and
• and to the fact that we sell
oared eastern prices, and cut
• cult purchasers.
1 J. W. Rentals it Co.,
, t 9 Market street.
Barred Fiannala,
Flannel.
Opera Flannels, , •
• ed Canton Flannel.
snton Flannels, dc. .
toe& at very lowprices,whole
tall at War. Einurpee,
d OC Federal St., Allegheny.
• an.nleyratt A Seldle are about
y their palatial now Fifth street
ul.previons to removing from
+sent house, offer their entire
ovrelry, watches, clocks, Barer
• ornamenta, at greatly reduced
i• member the place sib. Zl
r Z .
Ware,
prices.
Fifth at
nomet ng Goad. Lahoes,
gaiters, • for men, ladles and children,
kept at Market street, am made a
the very • t Material; and sold as low
as the to eat. All goods are warranted
to give tiathetton. If you want Boma
thing •• ,• and at gold prima, mll at
Robb's . 6. or House, S 9 market street.
•
Holiday Goods.—The attention of ladies
Is directed to the fine stock of velvet
hero, embroideries, Imo goods, gaits ,
furnishing goods, trimmings and fancy
goods for the holidays, at the retail trim
ming and notion house of W. W. Moor
hmd, tio . Si Market street. Prices' very
reimonable.
Shawls, Sontag., Hoods, Nublaa,
Balmoral and Lloop Skirts,
Trimmings, gosiery, Gloves, Notions,
hc. The attention of country merchants
and retail puiclusaera are respectfully In
v il,ll to the dame Mock and moderate
prices, wholesaleand ratan, a
Wit.us.st Szstrwds,
180 and 182 Federal Bt., Allegheny.
• At W. W4MoorheadYs will bo found a
fresh nod judiciously , assorted stock of
trimmlng3, embroideries, notlona and
fancy goods, which is offered to the
Credo at yory reasonable prices. (hdl at
81 Market is • , t and examine the goals
offered.
Metering Plano, Sea Seat Furniture,
Barmoro Pia o, ono old style Phut° new
carpets, stoves, two express wagons,
ttc., at auction, tide dap, at 2 P. IL, at
Masonic Roll notion Rooms, 55 and 67
Fifth street. mason, Farman et Co.,
Auctioneers.
To Alleghenl. Arthur Kirk, whole
sale and retail grocer, N. 172 and
174 Federal street , has received one ofthe
beat stocks of grocerlos aver brought to
the city, which trill be Bold lower than at
any house In the city. .
•
Buy your poultry for Thankevvingat
tho grocery ofJ. Kahan & Brotheri; No.
80 Federal street, .111 • ben •.
Velvet Hats, Straw Hata, Itlbbona aad
Flower., heap at Wm. Semple' s. 180
and 101 Federal street, Allegheny.
Bargains can be had at Wm. Flemings,
Nn 1A W,wt iginwn in leoiloo,
-,i_ -
e.
CITY ITEMS
Mrs. Partington lnsulted..••TheWhite
Mountains of New Utunosntre are nvi
dently a. great institution—very sign,
heavy frosts, beautiful view, four dollar
dinners. But the practical eye of a cer
tain renowned Drake saw those smooth
faced rocks, and thereupon adorned and
variegated the bridle path to the. Tiptop
House with his familiar S.
Plantation Bitters. This raised the ire
of the Mrs. Partingtons comprising tho
Legislature of the Granite State, who
got their wise heads together, 'outlawed
.Dr. Drake artist ic ade it a penal offense
to
ply
the brush on their beloved
hills. Verily, the tine arts are at a dis
count in New Hampshire. Que—Dnk
ry.
Drake pay them for this splendid adver
tisement?
Iliaotintra Warau.—A delightful to ,
let articlo-i-suporlor to. Cologne, and
half the price. anvir:F
To Country Dierchants—Yon? atlent
lion Is called to the wholesale and vi
tal! grocery store of Arthur Kirk, Nos.
172 and 174 Federal street, Allegheny,
lust the place to buy your groceries.
Mr. Kirk's facilities for buying en
ables him. to sell to retail merchandise qt
a lower figure than any other house in
the two cities. Ho keeps atall times all
.kinds of groceries, and will be pleased
to have parties call and examine his price
list, and the quality of goods kept by
him. Remember his numbers, In and
174 Federal street,.Allegheny City. srw
Go to WM. Fleming's, No. 129 Wood
street, for bargains In ladles' Furs. tf
Kentucky State Lottery.—ThO only
legalized Drawings Di tho United States.
The Grand liolliday Drawl,* will take
place December 31st. $Z30,650 to be dis
tributed. Capital prize 550,000. Com.
municatiotis strictly oonfidentlaL • Cir
culars sent free, by addressing
MUHEAT, EDDY dr. Co.,
Covington, Ky.
To Fatallles„—Go to Arinur Kirk's
Grocery Store, Nos. 172 and 174 Federal
street, Allegheny, and buy your. Sugar
for putting up fruit. Ere has the largest,
beet and cheapest stuck ft city. Call
and see for yotuselves.l ' 21-W.
Boots, Shoe* and Grtiters.--Snedgrass
ec Roes, No. 24 St. Clair street, offer the .
wholesale and retail yade a splendid
stock of Boots, Shoes and Gaiters, which
they will sell at less than manufacturers
prices.
ld Gloves. —h. ano assortnaentof whits
and colored kid gloves for ladles and
gentlemen, just opened at W. W. Moor
head's trimming and notion store, No.
81 Market street.
Hats and Cape.&ll,tho moat fashion
abla styles; allele and Ceps for monand
,boya at greatly reduced rates at tho pop-
War store of Snodgrass -d: Ross, No. .'24
SL Clair etzeet.
Trunks, Traveling Bags, 6, - .e..—Thebent
and cheapest • place In rho city to pur
chase Trunk., Traveling Bone pairsea, is at Snodgrass fi Rma'; No. 24 St.
Clair street. •
Furst Fursa-rarsta—Buy . sour Furs
at the well known and popular store of
Snodgrass et Ross, No. 24 St. Clatr street.
A splendid selection is offered at very c
cheap proses.
• Call and Examine the taiga and com
plete atonic of Ladles' Fore, at Wllllant
Fleming's, No. 139 Wood stmt. tf
•
Semething Pure.—The Teas, &Mee,
Sugars, Spices, Ota, rold at litrk'a Gro
cery Store, 11 de. 172 end 174 Federal
street, Allegheny, aro warranted to le
the yoro best in the market. Call and
get sopfice list • for,
Eye, Ear, Throat, Lime, Omar
Dimusim and CATARRH, enoorsatally
treated by Dr. Ahern, 134 Smithfield
street. A hopk by mail 50 cents.,
37E4
•
Hats, Caps and Ladlea' Fars, saMag
cheap, at Wm. Flea:Wag% No. 139 Wood
'street.
Buy your raid/is,. pickles and eondli
manta for Thom kaglvin g day at the pop
ular grocery and pr oduce home of 7.
Bohan Bn3thera; .3.0. 69 Federal street,
Allegheny.
Buy your groceries for. Thanksgiving
at the well known wholesale and retail
hers, grocery and produce house of Kohen
..t Broers, No. 69 Federal street, Alle
gheny.
•
Ladles , Fan.—Tho beat and' cheapest
Furs In the city can be found on 'west
corner or Market and Fourth streets.
at '• GamerEa &STEWAIIT.
Jewelry at reduced rates at Relnoman
Moyran & Sledlo's, No. Z,Fifth street.
5a.00313.00. 110.00, Elegant Sacks,
on wag corner Ata,rket and Fourth street,
WS ; GAIIDNES ot STZW.MIS.
Chlarld' Its Cloth, olegunt, alteolors, on
west cernerldarket and Fourth stmt.
'73 GIARDERR et. STEWART.
Cheap Grocertes.—For cheap Gro
ceries and something good, go to 'Arthur
Kirk's Grocery Store, Nos. 172 and 174
Federal street, Allegheny, 'mars
Jost received at Wm-Morning's, N 0.139
Wood street, a large Mock otladies' [hrs.
New Good.: New Goedslt—A large
stock of beautiful Pura, wholesale and
retail, at William Semple'e, ISO and IS."
Federal street, Allegheny.
Elegant GornotSoloatloaporters'.ptioes,
at tho jewelry store ofßelnemart, May
an 4,t etale, No. Fifth street. .
Coustltailani Water lea certaig sure
for Diabetes and all diseases of the Id&
neys: For Faleby ail druggists, amp.
pargsdns in Ladles' Fun, at William
Fleming'', No. 139 Wood 'treat. • tt
COMM
MORRIEION.-00. Tue.day, None Seth
SAM lIEL gon of Wna. J. Morrison,
*0(111 years.
. .
. ,
Feaeral from hit father's r• Wince, N. 17
repta street, tine arris Noel., Nov. Mk, eta
o'clock. The Wendt of the Welly are rerpoet
telly invited to allied. -
/ItlittP2UNTil VetaitZSlTg g linlgin% ' i
Alexander and Hart A. cline, aged n
The funeral will rake place ruts A►Tnlllool.
.t i o'clock. from the realdeneo of her bag..
No. a Rohlhaon street. Allegheny.
tiIirDERT • 3,4:
ROBERT T. BODBET. Eadei.
'AKIN AND Enit No.'ot ODA* St.,
Alleibeny, and No. JO Diamond Moo., (bo
John Wilson i 8r05..) keeps always oo band Cat
but Metal, Ramorood, Matelot and battalion
Rosewood Comae. Walnut Coto. Rote IPS op.
wards. Rosewood Codlas $2O upwarde; all other
Collifte In proportion. Carriage. .24 neams
Pardoned at low rates. Crape, Olovea, ?late
.dlovavlng (Drubbed grans. Oakes open toy
sad Wont
Alnr. AIKEN, lINDLIFILTAILEB,
No. ISt Fourth BtTert, Plttabrryrb,
COPPIN.9, of all kinds: CRAPES. (11.1.111111,
anry denription of Ihtuaral Purnishlai
flanklead. Noon. open dal esq 1100. H.
and Carrlagn fluntsbed-
Raysamfera—lkor. David E. D.
/IL W. Jaooboz, D. D., Thum Evan, ltaq.,
Jacgt. U. Milt., I.Q. •
t j G. RODGEBS. IONDERTA
• KM AND ItHDAIASER, Isnoceswor Sotto
late ewanel E. Rodgers.) No. 9 Ohl* *son,
three doom rm. Rearm Antibes,. cps. Mr
taWS RooewoOd. Itabogany, ISSInot sad 11.00 i•
wood ladtallcus Comma, st, the lowest mused
lsrloot. Roam open .t all bouts. AV and OW4.
Hear.. .W 1 CAssisges Assulebed oe short aOl,l
and am teat ressonsld• terms
RDWAILD CZ4JIYIECKT, UV
DZiCTAXEIt. Oglea, No. 244 OW Una,
Alleghear. kletsille. Rosewood and ashes (Ve
das, din , stack at !Usual Buratsitimu
Batas. on hand sad famisked at aborted mallet,
04 lowest pricks. 0810 mad Idverf Maths, 000.
13112 , or, tint and Kiddie Streets. lassrlaw
for Ildmuchts, Buggies, Saddle Itorms, ga,„ te„,
htra
CENETERY DIAREILV WORKS.
A.l. RARBBUOIL at the Cemetery ttealt.
Lagrreneerllie. P. • ORNAMENTAL MAMMA
sad STONE WORKS; STONE BURIAL CAM,
erairute4 grater proof: '
Fzio):ica.4,:q
F O B . BENT*OFFICEB.The
room now accepted by the Secretary of the •
Coln Railroad aal Tra*Ketalleal ernapael.
N. .3 Plithatreet. over 0. ReCliateek A Ce. , I
Carpet More- Those rooms are very detftlau
he <Com beet loured In the metre or tatat
ease, and au 7111 ii meet. new betel bid will
the II leolnn paeeeteet. ;tided*/ thee tree
froze nabs. eta. Front roost revalue tam ea.P.
proof Tacit. • PEIM4OI2 eau he had es Motet
prortato.' roodr• of °LW= ReCtS11204:1111
CO., .7 RIM atreilt.
ROLMIES,ILELL &CO., . •
Anchor Cotton MIN Fittsbargth.,
Momentum*. of num . Mon= mull 1 / 4 10?
Lathor and/Is/polls
Istwnerm a i s awn aa ww
TEE WEEKLY GLUM
TWO =MOS%
WEDIEWAY LAD ELTITHDAY.
• I .rin aup.t. coombiteg FORTY CM.
DIM et letemetug guadlug visitor. Isebtelatt
leadtai Editorials. latest Newo'blTMLlPoPhoste
ealoablo itesdisv Matto, Par Out rboakr.
sad fullest mid most naiad. fisittalat and Was.
trierelal Market Saporta oho. ST aal PiPow
to
the etty. ele -Tamen Meabosle or Startamat
etteald be wltheat - It.
=ales leOlt OAJTeTis
A ulit . li f lubseettste
cub. .. I:ta.
—and one
copy
or paper to thrt.PllW,l 2 ZIO
up the slob, kddlttoss W O 4l.
aitr itom. at tub rbta.k.sl.4ft, -
NOnca ..i4 l edik .10MO
p.m. be ...a nmus". 2 ".• 43 t=
we luso Wed.:Mhl_ ,.„ _ —
.".Ib'tt."tMPattPow palls week.
4Milostalk_ ISt:
"S'itskt 0 . --'
WANTS.
WANTED --To wen oat, a well
!Matti bqd TOBACCO 5T0.118.,, located at
N.-11 to •haet. ablrd daor belaw tbe rad
Sea} Cllyt. Small eaplialrealli.d.
Cah.
W ALA ttooK-KEEPSit.
—Must pn i thotinghly roll Ible. A souiee
middle age, and in thorough account.. NOM
others need 'PAS... ; To a pen..
gbh: and permaxeni position will be glee.. , tllh
a liberal ialarr. ;/4 dd rest, with retheennet. DQ
Pitt.parilt:Pa. I
WANTEI),—we want Agents
• •
in every county la routs sylvagla and Ohio,'
to sell three intllsponiable wasted
every house. This Is no humbug. Our atents
aro making tour to sixteen skillsn per nays call
on or address CUSIIING L I:MCI:WART, Roost
•
tt. lit. Clair lintel.
WA NT ell—A.o Y .0
AILIIT REVOLVERS:SIap CUR RR are
On Mlles or Carbines; Q 3 to girmihtkir ;
Hides or Carbines; $1 .0 *thirst, forOLA s .T
on. Nary He rob Cr. Rash Vold ( On .arritaT d••••• •
acrlption or Are arms.. Pertona haring an 7 ..•
abort arms eon soul skein bv Zayre., o. Q.l
J. H. JOIINSTON. Urtat Western Gun World •
•
All Penn tares I, corner Wayne. Pittsburgh.
POIITIOAL
SIXTFI
MENTING.—The faidtbilein Yellers of Dm .
Sixth Ward; Plltsbotesh, and requested toasts
at the Public School Home, on WEDNESDAY
EVENINO. November inb ; jat Old selopk, to .
and
candidates for tho r lons Warn
atransactns other Important business.
RIG MIT WAHD
PRELIMINARY MRETING.—A -
ego preliminary meeting will be held at the -
Eighth Ward School Iloosej Ann street. nn
MONDAY EVENING, December 2d, to norm
oaken to be voted for for Ward Dares.
THE HE PtIfILICAH VOTERS Of
the Ninth Ward' will meet at the &boo&
House, on WED,N4dDaY, November fftb. be
tween the hours of '2 and oteloek r. se., to plea.
In notnto t Mtn two persons for Select and three
Persons fur Common Connell, to be voted for by
hallo[, dUDN DLILEY,
T. W., /MM.
I _ Committee.. )
FOR SALE
FUR HALE.—HARE CHANCE.
FEED STORE for doing a goodiMS
seg. for rstallers. Enquire at OSy Pass
FOR SA L.E.—A LOU PAVING
ROUTE on this paper, betzotri Irr
st
sober, eersstle min: Nose othms
at GAZETTE CoLIXTING-ROON. • ;
FOR NAVE —ik GOOD BARGE.
nearly new. 11:11 feet long, It feet yrtile. 41‘
feet deep. Apply to D. B:TLIOSIAS, tit.Valc
llotel, rlttseergh.
FOR SALE-820 ACRES GOOD
PALMING LAND, In lows. Ter® elor.
Good title. T. all paid. Will tradelor city
property. Wor portteolore 114121. bf D. W.
8013111. No. la Market etreec
It S
et
LE
—TWIEE BILIttIING
Lars 111 BELLY/ELD, near 0ak1.6.614.
tlort, two vinare. from the horse ear trao.t..t JOWL
lot '40:14% boautlfully 'ln:toted. and wrlll.lotlotta
cheap. Enqulte of WILLIAM It01.3 . 11:0 7 ';401
Liberty`Janet.
F°o SALE—One Or et-rate tern
glory BRICK DWELI,ING HOUSE, , f
eight rooms, linished attio Atka good dry cellar;
brick stable end carriage house; all In good orr ,
der. Situate on the corner of Beaver street nyt4
North alley. Gas nod Dot end cold ender In Bo
bone.: Knoulre of RAILSEY &BALL, Beal Its.
tate Agents, So. In Beaver street. Allegheny.
FOR GALE—BRICK
The undersigned will mil all or one-halt Of
• Brick Yard, to 007 Per/K. WighltUr to engage 1e
like business. The yard le new. with all thitroodw
ern improvements. Lease rungten veers. Hoag
need apply but those who mean hostas..
drew E. T. C.. gale, -
OR EALE-7-11OR8E8.—AT
ill/WARD'S Livery and Sale Stable, Ono
doe reurcr HOUSE (Die): three DAPPLE
GREY HORSES, one LARGE DRADIDIT
HORSE: three BLACK MARES; two _GREY
MARES. /TUT STREET, newels Abarmolgee
bola House. -
sHonsa bought and sold on tOottnissio •
FOR ALE--lIA ELEIVE—A goild
Bakery. dolng a business of from to lb
turrets ot dour south, nursitnated .blo.ta
PALO ALTO STIVEZT, AlleghenY City. will W
sold on rrAllol24bll3 tenns. The anon bakery •
doing , a good basins., and has the facilities a..
dolor • moth larger one than Is wow mining.
Any parson - wishing to engage to the loudness
will gad thlsa rare opportunity. For putlenhtrit
tno at the BAKERY.
•
Fofl SALE.—House and Lot ova
corner of Manhattan and Adam lama;
near Paaaenger Railway. Lot 44 Ly 111 tedds
Hones home, containing 7 rooms end good hall o
well Improved. House and Lot onitheilield, mar
Bidwell meet. Allegheny City. Lot s = by it
feet; boo. frame. eel:axing hall. dye rooms sod
igood nailer; water and gag. Also, anal =tall
Hennas and Lot. in goal locations'. BMW.. et J.'
& CO.. Beaver &Beet, near Cannata. -
Maneheeter.
•
FOR RARE CHANCE .
la offered to an amtvo gentleman, haling
cash capital of $1.50; to purchase a one-third Istv
Iciest In a well established and well paving La , '
btioallog nennerr. To a man accustomed to
graveling, thlv I a rare opportunity, as In addS,
lion to his Interest he will receive a salugOtgAgg
per month and expenses. 111 health la Ate ongg
mason - for project owner offering to salt: rol
garklesdars enquire of SILL & SHUTT/JILT.
Baal 14tate Brokers. Lawrenceville.
•
FOR SALE—ROUSE AND LOT.
• —A large lot of ground 30xLC fen. In Evan
Liberty, ton the Frantstown r. ad. =7.. 1 . from
the Railroad Station, on which to erected • Ono
two story brick bons. of-Six rooms. :with two .
tellers. This Is h end home, well tabbed • • ,
throughout with marble mantel., ge..; cellar
..•
doors laid with brick: a pomp at the door af- • •
fords as abundant and ...Want ropply of gOad.
water, and will be told very dna!, and on any
terms, if applied for soon. For rarilettlaw en
quint of O. 11. TOWER, Real zitite Areas; NCwa • x „r
144 Fourth Street, Plthourgh.
.
F 0.11 AI. —BIIAIIPBIIIJIIBI
, • 8
, Ltyll4—rya ewe offer op esnedingly On,
terms • new plan of large and desirable lots, be. '
hag oast of t h at saleable property briongingto •.. .'
the heln of L. CI. L Noble, situate et the ninth .
6. a Orea.R.6.rir. end near 0 nysu la Station, OW
' the {net Penna. liallroad. A portion of they
;..
lots hoist th ' railroad on the vest. and MAW '
Street on the south. The lets eresdby Dainty . -
with wide at to mooing through the miles,
ro
property. "I% soil tor gardening minsene dan.
Pot be excelled, and for beauty of tontine aid
noon base no neat. For deeetipUre plan end
turner toren:mill...lt at SILL .1. SilitiTilfat.
LDS. lint Estate Agents, Butler sinet. Lew. • ~.
stile. I
UNITED, STATES -.
I
WATCH MUMMY'S WATCHES.. .-
. •
We havd Jug rdeelyiel madam,. lot or thud pg.
ebredad W te te. They are nuelodldddly the
.FINIST a:d dY.Wr for the pied ever drought be
WU Werke te bel , W ldweled wild CLIWPSOW,2%.
Lryoeed Escaped:mat, With .
CIIROIrOnErRit BALANCX
IVlalesale ,and 114 tall AirMita,
DUEBEATE it HABLETT,
ee rim! anzrr.
°pros= MASONIC RAM.
HEART G. RALE,
Merchant Tailor, *"
Coy. Pezukand St. Claur Stitiwt• 4
PITTEBURoy,:pk, 'l.l*
Mato the ig" ERSAtttabCTMUN all.1132"11:4171°"theillr"T ji,iii:i14:::::";i:1:1:43:Irti
MFG xicranrsa • , " -t • - "„. 1
,d, „ ~,„, ~ 0 1
;""b" tro. 22 'TRU OTILUT.I. , .• I:+— ! : Ji . .l
14111 T
MM=EIM
•
olf4 .1 414 W. 11.4111 A
•., . . 611 a•-. 4,4
WEI'? bOdbi
riferohant TA. ir
,
.1/ (WO
Wirri7ll7.intt / .4
ASSEIEEPX3. vasrnrae
NEW S
"
MEI
mai