~z .z ~z 6,7trttr. PUBLISHED DAILY, BY PENNIMAN, REED at: CO., Proprietors. F. B. PENNIMAN, J6SIXII RING T. P. HOUSTON. N. Y. REED, Editors and Managers. OFFICE: - 'GAZETTE BUILDING. NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh; Alle4beny and . Allegheny County. Terms-laity.'Sen7f-TVo!k _ - ly. IVeckly. One year....e..1.(6 , One year. "e2.&1 , 51u One 1110:101. 75 :SIX MO S.. /.5.): 5 rople, curt. By the week, 15711m:eine). 751 u • • - 1.15 - (7rem carrier.) and one to Agent. .THURSDA.Y, MARCH 26, 1.565. , 7- We print on the inside pages of this morn 'illYB GAZETTESVOnd page—Robin and illaggie, - an - idyl, Table Talk. Third page— Financial Matters in New Poet, Markets by; Telegraph, River News, Imports by Rail -roads, Railroad time tales; 6 . c.' ASirtnpage— .Finanee and Trade, me Markets, 6-c., .5.c. Secenthpage--Asylum or useless young men; The steam man, Dyna 7 lite or Giant Powder, How to Communicate cil Tittlngs, Anecdote of Sherman, Miscellineous and . Amuse men 0. i • ,•\ . GOLD ised in New York yestord4 at 13q. TILE Holism non-concurs in the ;Senate amendmentA to the manufacturers' - tax and it must go to a Conference Committee. W HAVE ANOTHER veto mes.mge, the last we may hope, from Mr. JoPson, Fie returned with his objeetions . _the hill regulat inv appeals to the Supreme Court, and his veto meets with the usual fate. SoM REPUBLICAIC journals insist on con founding ion. Thomas Williams, member of Congress from the Allegheny• District, and one of the Impeachment Managers, with Judge Williams, of this county. While neither will suffer by - being confounded with the other, still we wish the fact kept, in view that there are two able lawyers in this sec tion of that mime, and for bah our people have a large measure of .respect and esteem. THE HOUSE COMMITTEE on Elections will report in 'favor of Mr. Delai•.o, in the con= tested case from the XIIIth Ohio District: The investigation of this case has occupied much time, involving great labor and the examination and comparison of a mass Of testimony never before exceeded in a Con gressional contest, and the result embodies = the conclusions of the Committee as to the systematic frauds alleged to have been com mitted in the interest of Mr. 3lorgan,- the sitting member THE ENGLISH PEESS with great unanimity. concur in the" declaration that the pending question with the tnitedLStates, touching the Alabama claims, affords a proper and longer needed opportunity for a revision and amendment of the international law, as to` the. privileges and obligations of neutral powers. They agree in holding that the public law should attach, to the right of re •cognizing belligerents, the corresponding !duty 9f preserving and enforcing a strict neutrality as between tiem. That right they cannot relinquish, nor do they understand Mr. SEwAiti:r as demanding it, but all the , other questions, both' of law and fact, Eng stateimen and leading journals of all parties aver their reUdiness to submit to any 1, impartial adjudiCatidn. More than that, if in arbitrator should' settle by his decision all the points now seriously mooted of interna tional law in the American sense; they ' frankly declare their readiness to accept the interpretation as in itself justly in accord ance with the advanced' intelligence of the world. , Ix 1860 tbe friends of General CANEB.Oic were largely in the majority in the. State Convention, and undertook to appoint and instruct all the delegates to the National Convention. This was denounced by the leading friends of Mr. Cu nTrx as an intol &able • usurpation; and they made such sturdy resistance that the supporters of the General were forced rto recede; though he• himself told us that to recede from that point was virtually"to wipe him out at Chicago." This year the friends of Gov. CIIRTIN had a very decided majority in the State Con vention, and were led by nearly the same men as in the Convention eight • years ago. They boldly adopted the plan of appoint ment and( instruction they formerly de nounced as unjust and inadmissible. Re monstrance and. protest did , not suffice to make them recede, out of respect to the rights and feelings of the nilnority. ' • Will the Commercial tell "us by -what Al chemy what was monstrously wrong in 1860 was : transmuted' into an incontestible right in 1868? The "little joker" sort of man agement in politics always perplexes us. LAST TEAR, at the solicitation of the Rail way, Companies, the Legislature of Penn sylvania enacted that thenceforward no pas senger by rail should hold a Company re sponsible, in case of loss, for more than eighty pounds of baggage, to be . valued at not exceeding one dollar a pound. As a good trunk, of even the smallest dimensions, cannot be bought for Jess than forty dollars, this law virtually prohibits a person from taking an extra milt of clothes.= a journey, except at his or her own risk. It is now gravely proposed to apply the same principle to lives lost through the,asre7 lcssness of railway companies. We have not seen the bill to this end 'which is now pending before the Legislature; but should not wonder if we found it , to provide that in all suits hereafter brought to recover dame ' g . e.s for loss of life, the maximum weight of -.an individual shall be held to be one Itund.. jred pounds, and of a vidue not.exceeding two dollars a pound. .F ?, We helk.rneuil;s_Fa r of.the„ ,4 oslature shameful, stdiSeiVi r eriO: . to Railway :iiion l P;tilkeN : 1 4 111 tblitO ; hlintried principlez-of die -4Couootraini, that - they may escape just lishility, haa not gone already far enough.. THE FREE HULROAD BILL. In 1.. 1 .66 General GEARY wss the Republi an candidate for Governor of this Com monwealth.- After his nomination, some of his fellow citizens who felt an especial in terest in the enactment of a. law granting the right to construct :railways to all men desirhig to engage in that dePartment of enterprise, interrogated him by letter as to his opinion and propose - touching that measure. In; reeponse he pledged himselfe plainly and unreservedly in favor of such law.- " In .1807, at the Williamsport Convention, the Republicans of the State, upon due con sideration, obligated themselves to pass the desired law, in case they should be again entrusted with the ascendency - in both branches: of the Legislature. Their com mittment in this regard, was neither equivo cal nor deceptive; but full, paramount and sincere. Upon this issue,. among others, they went to the people last, October, and althoUgh they lost their only candidate on the General Ticket; they • carried both the Senate and House of Representatives. ' In accordance with the pledge thus given, at the opening of the current session of the Legislature,' Free Railroad Bills were intro duced into each of the Houses. Both-of these bills were excellent.= That of the House was most "liberal;" but that it was best, all: things considered, p - e are not pre pared to say. Each House Matured and passed its own bill,- and then a Committee of Conference was appointedwith a view to agreeing upon a middle ground, for harmon izing the points of difference. This Coin mittee wisely performed the duty assigned to it, and soon the amended bill was con curred in by both HotiseS; and went to the GoVernor for his approval or rejection. 'Yesterday we published the exact text of the bill as it passed finally, and we trust it flas been, or will be, read and pondered by all the citizens of the State who are, in favor of a measure of its generel import. 7he.points of difference between the Sen ate and House bills were two. 1. The Senate bill provided .that no charter for a railway company should issue until $lO,OOO a mile had been subscribed; while the House bill deManded a. ,subscription of only $4,000 &mile. 2. The House bill fixed the °inside limit , of borrowing 'at $20,000; while the Senate bill fixed it at the amount of the paid up capital. The bill, as passed, fixes the the amount of subseriptiens'reqUisite to the obtainment of - 6 charter at $10;000 a Mile; and allows of borroWing to . double. the amount of sub scriptions, whatever that may be. • I.Now, - we maintain that the bill, as passed, . . 'is a good ,one,—a much better one, looking at all . the interests properly to be taken into the account, than the House bill,'as orig inally reported: We come to this conch'- because we have an invincible dislike to building railways by questionable expe dients. "Moonshine is good in its place, 'but it ought not to stand instead' of solid Ma terials when g:veat works are to be Con structed, Rail4ay -bonds have become fa orite mediums, for swindling the public, and it is not well. to. offer- special facilities to their employment in that, direction by men whose ideas of • enterprise, consist mainly, if not exclusively, in _making money for them selves, no matter how„ only so that they do not get into the penitentiary, and without , regard to what amount of suffering. they create or non whorit it falls. It sounds pleagantlY enough to talk about capitalists protecting themselves by a care nil scrutiny info the value of railway.securi ties before,they make investments. Dut, it must not be forgotten, that when great bank ing houses take railway loans they rarely or never hold them, or mean to hold them, but push them off upon their clients on the strength of their established reputations for business sagacity. These clients are com monly persons living on - salaties, as clergy men, clerks and the like ; widows, orphans, executors of trusts, lawyers, physicians, far-; niers, mechanics andothers, who have made small savings against _periods of illness or old age. These are the ordinary ,victims. &lready there , has been a good deal too much of this; and we are fully of the be lief that railW : ays had better remain unbuilt,' than to be constructed by indirectly fleecing multitudes of confiding people. lln the end all railway lines that will pay, I will be made_and put in operation. If the I people of a particular district wish to hurry results out of the natural order of develop ment, in this regard, there is uo fairer way for them than to make actual subscriptigns, I somewhat ratably to the advantages they expect to derive through the enhancement ; l in value of real estate, or through the quickening and cheapening - of facilities for commercial, transaction& ._ When they have done this, it, willbe time enough to summon credit to their aid. , 'lt is passible; licrWever,, that experience will demonstrate tin - bill passed by the Legislature :to: be, top staingektt, _notwith standing our belief to the contrary. 'lf this shall appear, ,it will be easy, at any futuie perind, to.remedy whateirer defects May be disclosed. _ ' - Meanwhile the bill, as it stands, is assailed from two different quarters, and by tWo sets of men who ought not to be found co operating to a common end. el. The opponents of Freedom in Rail roading assail it; some' df them openly and others by dissimulation and subterfuge. The latter • sort, masking their real inten: tions by, a thick veil of , hypoCrisy, haite en deavored to persuade the Governor that in vindication of Ins. personal pledge, and of the honor of the Repu4can party, formally committed at Williamsport, he ought to veto the bill. They. have, indulged high en pections of succeeding inthis disreputable • _ genie, though, we apprehend, the Governor . baSitot; for so much as a moment, -been per influenced *their representations:- 2,, some gerisflleitie# of 4 3 a PreeAall roadlo3M assail it. So, absorbed are theyin the idea" of Winihig the/ construction of the largest Possible numbe r ' es of- 1 0 1 , lwaY that they overlook the means by which the eyired exult is 4o -watikineksumithol lateral infelicities and losses ..likely to Clime. On ground, new and untried, they propose z lEEE to rush headlong, rather ..than• make. their nap under the Safe illumination of expeti . 12121 Against both of these classes we are con strained to enter an carnestyroteSt. Mit, there is still another view to ate taken of, the case. : The Republican Party gave its solemn pledge to pass a genuine Free Rail, road Law. That pledge it has redeemed, so far as the legislative bodies are concerned; and as we think, in spirit as well aS it let te. It suits soine: Republican journids, nevertheless, to clamorously aver in sub dance, that the' Republican party has not made good its promises, but stands so dis honored as to be unworthy of further confi T (fence. They do not say thik in express terms; but this is the natural and inevitable inference from what they affirm. If the facts sustained this Conclusion, while we should deeply regret their existence, we should not endeavor either to conceal them or break their force. 'We hold that the first duty of a publie r journal is not to the politi cal party with which it in the main concurs, and hence acts, but to • Truth, Justice and : Honor. It cannot do a better service, when its party falls into error or is swept away from the true course by sudden exeitements, than to•say so fearlessly, and to insist upon a return to better sentiments and healthier action. But there seems to be no excuse for. Republican journals, upon matters of- detail and on points not yet brought to the test of experience, to set up their judgments as the . standard of orthodoxy, and virtually to denounce . the party as 'insincere, : false and treacherous, because it takes 'a different view of these matters, and leans to the side of prudence in concerns which vitally touch the pecuniary interests of large classes of citizens. Such conduct is all the more cen surable at the opening of a Presidential can vass when it is:essential, for the protection of.paramount national interests, that the Re publican hosts should not only fall into line,. but should do so with enthusiasni, arising from aYrofound conviction. that the avowed principles of their party are not only sound and beneficent, but that the animus that per.- cedes and controls it is pure, honorable and unselfish. We can understand why er.einies in disguise should resort to this species of tactics, but when they are displayed by those we have reason to believe to be real friends, we are constrained seriously to \ question their discretion, andsto regard theth 'as guideS most unsafe for any RepubliCans to follow. THE ciurx :JUSTICE. It seems hardly worth the while to reit- • crate the opinion we have'so often expressed I that Chief Justice CHASE never will. as he never could, be .a Democratic candidate for the Presidency. The idea is only possible on the basis of an entire surrender of avowed principles, either by him or by the party. which would now tempt him to a betrayal •of his'official trust and of his personal integ rity:-.-Would he surrender his financial lopinions? Or, - will.Westeni Depocrats leave I their own ground to meet him ? Would he ignore the Republican policy . Of reconstruc tipn to which he was long since committed ? Would he repudiate that impartial suffrage r 'which he has advocated, even since he was elevated to the Bench, with such consistent li ability?? Or, would the ;Democracy accept /both reconstruction and equal political rights irrespective of race? Would the very large and influential copperhead wing of the De mocracy receis l e kindly a candidate whose past services to the Union uite been so con spicuous arid efficient ? any of our read-- ers can see the slightest likelihood that the Democracy will ignore its past ten years' record, or that Mr. CHASE would, ex change for all of the reputation, which he has acquired for history, be . content . with the possessiOn of any office within the gift of his countrymen, he can „see more than we can. We will only.. add that; while the Democratic intrigue .to in fluence the present 'action, of the Chief Justice is too shallow and impudent even for contempt,we have also regretted to perceive, in some professedly Republican quarters, -a most unworthy readiness to de 'nounce the admirable impartiality and the high regard for the dignity of the position With which the Chief Justice presides over the highest:tribunal of the nation.. Whether these criticisms be prompted merely by an over-zealous apprehension that the man who', is'on trial may unjustly escape punishment, or by a lingering sentiment of distrust for the Judge who was once a bold and success ful politician, and like all such, counting his worst enemies in the ranks 'of his own par ty,the censure is undeserved, and the suspi cions are most unworthy. It is but four days since, in a general conversatiOn with a friend,.Judge CnAsE declared:, would rather go down to posterity, as a pure and upright Judge than as a President of the United .States. Who among his intelli gent and fair-minded countrymen can doubt that this declaration expressed :the nearest and dearest sentiment of Ids heart? The country, fortunately, understands thdt &can repose the Most. implicit confidence in the fidelity and impartiality of the Court and its presiding or. Nor as the;cause of the people so weak' that we need'have a fear for tne_result., TUE MONEY VALUE OW LIFE OR A bill now pending before our Legislature proposes to limit the money value of lives lost or of lesser bodily injuries inflicted upon railway passengers in this State, through the mischances inddent to that method of car riage. We trust that; no such:measure will meet with^ the legislative approval. The very idea of affixing a set price to human life, or of cOmputing in advance a horizontal tariff upon lesser personal injuries, is itself _so shocking to the Common moral sense of society, as' to forbid that any enlightened `legislator should serionslyi entertain for a moment the revolting proposition„ The spirit of our lawif, Whether statutorror rived from precedents and decisions of hundreds 'of years.'in the mother country, Pea, ,ver recpgritAed q ae,cll best ` practical disposition Ilainiaio4l*- iiie,lts reference in each' ease;.witli Ml the attendant peculiar circumstances, to the con- :~~?A r~ UM LIMB. -~-. ;~, .. ,~,~~~ OE . • • t • • -MAACK • • sideration of a jury, conferring upon that jury the amplest •discretion 1 and enforcing upon its deliberations but one single principle of law, viz: of the absolute inability of the 'common carrier to escape from the just penalty of his own actual- or construe- Lice neglect. This principle of , ,' law,- explained. defined • and hedged in by • distinctions setting forth its.. precise interpretation, stand's today, as it has stood for hundreds- of years, unshaken. Binder this principle, courts and juries 1 aye always been able id' -each the ends of substantial justice. -..Noi has this justice, as a rule, been vindictive. 'The: - verdicts of juries -have ever been more likely to undervalne than to over estimate the'pecuniary worth of ;life or limb. That there may be cued occasional exceptions is no argument against the rule or the long-settled practice, in this regard, "of English and American law. We hold therefore that—as justice has ever been sub stantially ,administered uider the law as it is—as courts have never be n..disposed- to expand the principfe.nor hav , succeeded in contracting its (gyration - 1.)) improper re strictionsi-a7 juries haVe in he main Satis fied by theiryerdiets the ends , of justice be tween suitors with the uniform approbation, i of. societythe rule establish d and con firmed by the experience an wisdom Of generations should not now be ,et aside. i. =1 THE CROPS At this time last year the prospeetS were flattering for abundant harvests and low nrics.. 'ln conseqUence of which there Was a general expectation that the cost of provi sions falling off, the:7e would follow such an adjustment Of the wages oflahor in the de partments of mechanical and manufacturing industry.as would impart a fresh and i.igor ous impulse to production. These ciilcula tion, were doomed to disappointment. The 'crops did not prove as bountiful as was an ticipated. A large foreign demand, induced partly:..by shbri - crops 41 Europe, and, partly by the war preparations of a number of the leading nariOrij on that..continent, caused such an eifi"Ortf . of meats 'andpreadsttiffs as Maintained the former'firices. Lever before, in six months, Was - so much - food sent out of this country, or'so high, ,prices realized. . Of course this' export ,demand afforded certain definite and pluable commercial ad vantages in furnishing means for liquidating, in part, at least, the obligations created by vast purchases of general merchandise. , In addition to the before mentioned causes for the continuance of disproportionate and oppressive-rates for provisions, an impres sion obtained that the Southern Stittcs,,as a whole, were short of food, while in par= ticular districts the scarcity must reduce the : population-to the verge of starvation, 2 Thai scarcity existed in some 7 narrow localities is certain, but the fact- that, for mouths past, - altubst all vessels arriving mirth froM sciuth ern ports have brought considerableguanti- . ties of corn for sale: clearly refutes the idea that there was not bread enough in that di vision of the country for the people„ - -Still, so long as the opinion prevailed that an actual scarcity existekit tended to keep up prices: The export_ demand has almost:entirely ceased,. thus causing a marked deficit in the • grosY value commodities . sent, abroad during the last three months; as compared jlllj With the corresponding portion-of the year before. There would seem to be no present available resource to cover this defMit but in. the shipment of coin and national, state or. corporate loads. All the auguries and reports relative tothe approaching crop are favorable. The fall ing of heavy-.snows early in the winter, over mast of the wheat growing territories, and the uninterrupted continuance of these snows upon the ground until the spring had fairly set in, were circunistances full of en couragement. The winter was so severe, •• and the cold continued unabated-to So late a period that it is reasonably-ealculated the spring will •be warm and. pmpitious- For two or three weeks past the plow. and har m* have been in motionllfroughout, the Southwest. At the rate of from ten to fif teen miles each day the vernal season'moves northward, so that it is easy to calculate how long it will take for these :agricultural implenients to obtain motion even along the 'shores of Lake Superior. . . It is, hardly, probable that an extraordi nary. European demand will occur this year for food from this country. The breadth of land sown will certainly prove beyond pre cedent, and unless special - and unforeseen. causes of failure shall arise, the yield will be, so bountiful as to adjust many , of the em , barrassments under which the.laboring pop ulation all the large tow's are now suf fering. HON. TuolLts WILLIAMS is thus sketched bye Philadelphia Press correspondent : "Mr. Williams is perhaps the mildest look ing of all the Managers. Of all the men in the world, no one would, take ( hini for a leader such an impprtant move ment as the ;one now pending before us. Not that he does not look capable, but be cause his sayer loclui and whitened beard, mild blue eyes, and pleasing countenance, suggest the idea of. a good-livimg, retired lawyer. whO is satisfied with his - condition. and would avoid publicity. He was an original impeacherwith Boutwell, Butler, Logan and Thad Stevens. He talks careful ly, without brilliancy in anything, but with remarkable, effect, I produced by an impres sion.conveyed at first glance that hals hon est and earnest in what ne says. Although he seems to be retiring in his nature, there are but few men in Congress who - have more warm and true friends than ho has, jand his personal popularity gives' him great intiu ence." MoNEv is said to be "tighter" in Wall street just now than at any previous period for years, and no relief is looked for until after the first week of April. Although no panic exists; the pressure of !the stFews is said to be very severe, and attendedwith great injury'to the reviving interests oftrade and business; The'eauses assigned for the existing state.of things are as various as the financial theories of the journals which dis cuss them, scarcely lug ,two agreeing in their explanations. • •a ut e 4111 , Seniciatil - Aiiii tire heldVithe Supreme Court to be liable to the, payment' vr• taxes levied by thefritate authority upon their •iie posits,. 'whether intastedlin Federal ties or not. - • , ';~ 3~Y The press of the country ( announces that President Jormoi: and his two daughters attended the funeral of W .M. SLADE, ft colored man, and, steward of the White Houk. There has seldom been S better comment on the Meaning of the term "col ored" as applied to men. If it meant' dark hue of skin, the announcement' would be that our colored President, 'accompanied by his colored and white daughter, had attend- .; ed the funeral of the white steward of the I White House. If the gradations of cotor ,between President JorrxsoN and Wm. SLADE were represented, on an artist's pal- 1 lette, there would be three shades., percepti ble to. one familiar with flesh tints, between the President and the steward; the President being that much the darker. Mrs. PAT TERSON is also of ;inucli darker complexion than was Mi. SLADE.; who was . fair fbri a white man, and bore so strong a resem blance to Chief .. . Justice CHASE,. Until Mr. Cirisi became very corpulent, 'that few brothels 7 are so much .alike. The top 4 his head was bald, and the white hair whie.l surrounded it gave no sign•of curl. His eyes.were a light blue gray,' and there was not a hint of . Tiegro blood in the fonniof any feature. It was so easy for him to pass for a white man that he not unfrequently had to'admit his claiins to the title of. colored. Even street-car con ductors, the most keen-Scented of all the blood hounds of oppressiOn, were wont to pass him, and any member of his family, as a "gentleman and Servant," for his wife is a. dark quadroon, and all their children show the negro blood. M. SLADE was reputed to be the son of aj:nited States Senator. He was 'educated, refined and glntlemanly, a member of the Presbyterian church, consci entious and honorable. He would have had no difficulty in ignoring all connection with the oppressed race, of which one of his mother's great-grandfathers, was one, cast ing in his lot with that of the oppresSors to which all his other ancestors belimged; but, like MUSES who -refused to be ‘icalled the son. of PuAnAart'a daughter," he ranged hiMself with thoSe who were waiting, pray ing and working for the elevation of a race given over to the spoiler by the rapacity of a nation boasting of its justice. ' He was long a messenger in the Treasury, Department. He removed at one time to . Ohio to educate his .children, but found the social-disadvantages so much greater in that free State than in the district when it was slave territorV, that be returned, was once .more appointed messenger and held that place until about a year before Mr. LINCOLN'S death, when he.was adVanced to be his spe cial messenger!: Mr. JONSON found him in that office, and he remained in it until by hiS own request he was relieved from this personal attendance and reade'Steward. By economy and judicious investments he ac- cumulated a handsome property, and was liberal, according to his means. His wife was one of the:good angels of the war, and many a poor contraband and wounded, sol dier had reason to bless her for her untiring labors: That love of finery," ascribed to the "female negro" by Helper, was left out of her composition; LLTCRETTA MOTT is not more plain in her attire and very little more dignified 'in ber demeanor than is Airs. SLADE. = f;,.; THE LATE STEWARD OF THE WHITE EL OUSE. They lived in handsome style, observing all the etiquette or refined and cultivated life: and one of their daughters 'was the most beautiful woman, I have ever seen. She was educated 'and accomplished; and, for her sake, her father had intended emiTratinT to France that she might be relieved from the odium of our American caste. But the brilliant Josephine fell in love with a young quadroon, a SOU of WORMLEY, the proprie tor of "The Wormley Block," An elope- , ment and mariiage followed, and the young bride, soon after,. died of diptheria. Mr. SLADE never ,recovered from the effects of this great sorrow. He is one of those who has an account, in the general judgment, against his countrymen 'for the injustice which attaints the blood• of millions, while proclaiming, in their fundamental law, that no bill of attainder can ever. be passed. Well 'Might ANDREW JontisoN attend his funeral; for in his grave was laid many a broken pledge, of justice to the dciwntrodden. To no man had he promised more on behalf of Whoin he was to lead, as Moses, and to no man had he labored harder to explain himself away. JANE G. SWISSRELM, LETTER FROM PRILADELEHIA, The Snow Storm—The Late Convention -Save me From my Friends—The Eva_ n- Cnristiah Convention. Correspondende of the Pittsburgh Gssettr.3 PititiintrnrA, March 21,. 1868 The, snow storm commeneed about five o'clock last evening and continued uninter ruptedly all night and all this day so far. The snow is now from ~twelve to fourteen inches deep on a level. - In some places, al though &Mali and heavy, , is.considerably drifted, for the wind, during the night, was strong It .is somewhat singular that we have news by telegraph this morning of - heavy. snow storms yesterday at Byffalo, Washing ton and Baltimoie, while here not a particle fell nntil •after• five o'clock, and at ten o'clock last night we bad not over one inch. The railways are blocked and trains de: tained. Those on the >Pennsylvania mid due this morning are detained at Downing town. - ' . Political matters are quiet, and everybody seems to be of one mind as to the result of the impeachment trial. The action of the State . Convention in the matter of the ap pointment of delegates to the Chicago Con vention is, I think, generally condemned. It was an ill-considered movement on the part of the friends of Gov. Curtin, and'was consummated under the'stroag pressure of the enthusiasm of the ,hour, > Certain, , it is, that It has damaged that. gentleman's pros pects more than anything that his opponents were able to do. .= The better way to-correct' this error is for the people of 'the' several diStricts to go on and. appoint their delegates to Chicago—not itt opposttien to Curtin, but in vln4icitthiii of popular irght—and :then 1% the autkora of this bltiii4 - 0; forbear to :offer, any serious 0 1 3 pbtiltiOnlq, %ink ' 441111s „" 'slant P,ThA may beversonauy,paraaglajtz , w Wine 'Who Mok tbs.bite.titto ventlon; but we c cannbt , .. , help Aliat e , :pitten must, as a general thing, reap what they sow., ,tx r aV0a%44 , , . . . In this way Gov. Curtin may escape the re uit of the indiscretion of his friends, to call their action by no harsher terra.. never heard of any man .who had more cause to utter the hackneyed cry, "Save me from my friends ! " than he. Next week tiler& is to be a general Con vention of representatives from the several denominations of evangelical Christians from all.parts, held in this city—not to work at the technicalities of a formal organic' union, but to discuss - together The great in terests of their common faith, and. to take measures for a still More cordial co-opera tion in the work of evangeliiation. It is expected to be a meeting of unusual interest, and it is a significant and hopeful sign of the times. It is. written, "They shall see,• and flow tog - ether." . J. C Soldiers , and Sailors , 'National Convent' There will be a convention held in China.: go on the 19th ..)f Slay next, composed of soldiers and sailors of the late war, to piacti in nomination ,candidates for the offices of I'resident and Vice President. At the Soldiers' State Coniention, held in Philadelphia on the ktli of January last, General James A. 'Beaver, its presiden4 . was directed to appoint the deleguites from this State, and they were instructed to vote for Grant and Chrtin. • • We have received the following list of gentlemen selected by General Beaver. Gen. J.T. Hartr4nft, Gen. Charles H. T. Collis, Gen: A. L. Pearson, Gen. Harry White, Gen. , . Lemuel Todd, and Gen'. Har rison Allen. ' DISTRICT DELEGATE.S. •I. Col. H. C. Alleman, Col. 1%1%.;ei; Aso and Lieut. Samuel C. Perkins. H. Gen. Hector Tyndale Col. Isaac Par ker, and Major Richard Ellis: . 111. Col. William B. Mann, Lieut. Nathan Spering, and Benjamin Thomas. IV. Gen. S. Irwin Givin, Capt. Harry Conner, and Capt. W. J. Mackey. V. Gen. Charles M. Prevost, Gen. Joshua T. Owen, and Capt. Alfred Marble. VI. Gen. IV. M. Mintzer, Major W. Yerks, and Col. W. H. Hammersley. VII. Col: N. A. Pennypacker, Col. Geo,. F. Smith, and Hiram-Eves. VIII. Copt. C. D.. Elliott, Capt. Wm. A. 'Sands, and Capt. Geo. W‘ Durrell. IX. Gen. J. W. Fisher, Col. W. L. Baer, and Dr. A. M. Barr. X. Col. D. S. Mathews, Col. J. G. Frick; and Gen. J. IC Siegfield. XI. Gen. Chas. • Albright, Col. W. 'Armstrong, and Gen. J. L. Selfridge. XII. Col: Henry Hoyt, Col. F. S. Hitch cock, and Col. Lewis Burnett. XIII. Gen. H. J. Madill, CoL A. J. Frick, and Lieut. H. R. Durham. xrv. Col. H. J. Sheaffer,- Col. John Me- Cleary, and Scott Clingan. XV. Col. P. B. Kauffman, Capt. W. H. Irauricks, and Lieut., Samuel Foster. XVI. Gen. W. D. Dickson, Capt. Sidney Russell, and Capt. Ed. McPherson. XVII. Gen. J. P. , Taylor, Col. R. A. Mc- Coy, and Capt. Joseph A. Green. Major Jese Merrill,- Major Nichols, and .Capt. c',4,1. _ XIX. Gen. H. L. Brown, Col. E. Irwin, and Lieut. A. B..lleClain. XX. Col. S: B. Dick, Col. A. P. Duncan, and Capt. Geo. W. Westlake. XXI. Gen. J. .F. Gallagher, Capt. W. C. 'Gordon, and Capt. Anvil S. Fuller. XXII. Col. H. Biddle Roberts, Major E. A. Montooth, and Capt. John ,McConnell. XXIII. Gen.' Chas: Barnes, Gen. S. M. Jackson, and G. W. Black. XXIV. Capt. M. R. Adams, Hon. J. R. Kelly, and Capt. W. W. Gibson. —The Committee appointed to investigate the charges of bribery - agianst the members of the Missouri Legislature and others re ported that no evidence could be proctired to substantiate the charges. . - Dr. Sargent's Cougli,Syrap will cure gun RAVE 1 - 01: A COLD ? Dr. Sargent's. Cough Syrup will cure you HAVE Tar Acv r or. CunoNic DhONCltirlS Dr. Sargent's Cough Syrup will cure you: RAVE. YOL" ASTHMA OS Punitsic? Dr. Sargent's Cough Syrup will relieve you. HAVE VOC OPPREASION IN THE HIIEEMP Dr. Sargent's CongO syrup will relieve you HAVE \OU WEAK LUNGS? Dr. Sargent•s Cough Syrup will cure you HATS...var . A SosE TIIIIOAT ? Dr. Sargent's Cough Syrup - will-vire you. HATF.I'OC ANY DISRASSS OF 1711.8TIIIIOAT, LIYNG Olt CIIF.ST Y e r ;i %trg i 7t e l' s s e t;tgr z h e ly a rina!s . the best -preiwatton. • FIFTY CENTS PER. BOTTLE. That the feeble should totter, with uncertain - steps, over the face of the earth, in danger every- day of falling victims to the morbid influences by which we are all gurrounded. when a tested and proven yege table tonic, . capable of endowing timid with the vigor they need, is procurable In es-err city,•town. and settlement. It might reasonably be thought that after the twelve years , experience which the world has had of HOSTETTER'S - BITTERS, ALL. would know that its effect Is to prevent disease. • ' •At this season the atmosphere Is surcharged with the seeds of,intermtftents, remittents, - rheumatism,. pulmonary disorders, billous complaints and the like. Persons whok -nen'ous systems are relaiecl arc the first to succumb to these distempers. - Brace up the physical energies then with. this potential vegetable tonic. It is the most powerful reguperant which the botanic kingdom has ever yielded to pa tient research and experiment. Try it. The blind est disciple of the old medical dogmas will at least admit. that a tonic and alterative, compounded of wile ttde herbs, roots Tho d u b sa a f r i k g fu an leeo no harm. a trial of its virtues. Vigor is the thing most neededin these cases, as well as in dyspepsia and nervous affec tions. and HOSTETTER'S. BITTERS is the safest, surest and mostwholesome strengthening prepara tion that human skill has yet concocted. Hundreds of physicians bare abandoned all the eflicittai receipts and prescribed this harmless tonic as a preventive and cure - for all cases of Chills And Fever. ANOTHER ; . CURE.OF .Ipg4FNEB9. I lost my hearing during the last. years Ira:S.of the time I was totally : deaf: In April of this yearl was induced, from an .adiertiseteent, to make ap. plication to Da. Sicralm,,3lslo Wenn, street, Pitta burgh. After having tried various medicines from doctors, without any.*Ueftt, I hive been under Tor. Beyser , s treatment lieu' for pearly two'months, and am entirely restored to my hessinit..so that I can hear a pin drop.' . . -Joluf SCANLAN. A man called to-days it Dr. Beyser's once to _ In form him of a great cure Made liV DO:SLUNG Oting; or Pnt.Morraux RzsvOitartyz. list these .cUres are made with the Dieter's preParations, be desires it to be distinctly understood that; most of his wrest cures are mademnceordance. With the established laws that govern the silence; of medicine:, In which he Das been engaged for the put twenty-tive . , years. Last week he was alio in receipt of a letter from a clergyman , ln the State of Ohio, detailing another most wonderlul core., DR. KEYSER'S. RESIDENT iCOßSirroTnal - FICE FOR titlltiii) l o - 10 , tIfiATIOXS AND TREAT MENT OF CLIRONIO DDiNASES,Ifo;'Isq PENN sTRET, F1y:1413 . A; - .3.1:,111 , 1111 , 3 314Nea.Vara BAYING§ BAWL. -tualegbeari_ra4 Mazola ins. 4 lgrAN tkixerroit;'FartPßlESN' • . • DENT a umBIX;DIBEOTORStErf - the Max cheilterftriaVit /411 -too rt st, Sklar MHouse, on HA 1 h 0 ,. /1 1 11 , 44 1 01)4 • 44 ? : eets the heu Of flullb-elit - t tnt zuhlAkuun THOU . B. trr 1112: ladder. ~~~~~~; DELEGATES AT LARGE RAVE YOU 1 COUGH I For sale by alt Druggists. IT IS AMAZING doalllluits,*ostilngtoli Co., Pa AIiSTHEU CURE. NoTIGES