The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, April 11, 1868, Image 4

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    I
L - Arm
ft'D't
PUBLISHED. DAILY, BY
PENNEILIN, REED & CO. Ptoprieto=s
P. B. PENNIMAN,j JOSIATUKINO,
T. P. Uosl3TOlr iors
an d
M N. 11.1tT . . 0„
OFFICE:
GAZETTE. BUILDING. NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST.
OFFICLUL PAPER
Of Pittsburgh, Alleighelikraiiii Alleglleny
COlmillty.. • '
, .
. .
• rerma—Dagy, Beint-Treek/V.l • • Weekly.
One year .... 00 One year.s2.so Single copy-411.80
One •month. 75 Six mos.. 1.50 5 copies, eah..1.7.5
By the week,.....15 Three num 75110 " ' 1 . 15
(from carrier./ and one to Agent.
SATURDAY APRIL 11 1668
THE WEEKLY GAZETTE, issued on Wed--
,
nesdaysand Saturdays, is the best and cheap
eft family newspaper- in Pennsylvania. It
presents each week forty-eight columns of sol
id reading matter. Terms : Single copy, one-
year, $1.50; in clubs of Jim $1,251 in clubs
of ten, $1,15, and one free to the getter up
of the club. Specimen copies sent, f ive to ank
address.
We print otitlite inside pages of tAie
_ _
ing' GazEr.er.: Second page -:-..poetry and
Condensed Emu. Third page---Firiadeiat
Matters in Mao, York, .bfarkets by Telegraph,'
River Neuis;' Raileay Time Tables and
Imports. Sixth page---Pinanci and Trade
and Home Markets. Seventh page--. Real
Estate Transfers, Milocelktneova Reading
Matter, 6.c.
(loin closed' yesterday in New York at
1381.
Tme President's especial friends, is e. his
counsel and his Secretaries, with a brace or
two of newspaper correspondents, are very:
confident of his acquittal. Their efforts to
lead the public mind to a similar belief re
mind one of the old lady's attempt to sweep
back the ocean With a broom.
THE NENi tax-bill, now before a Con
sgressional Committee,'will make nearly one
thousand printed pages and would occupy
Congress nearly two months. It is believ
ed at Washington, thefore, that no general
bill will now be passed. Whiskey, tobacco
and some other articles will be attend
ed to, and the residue of the proposed
amendments left over for the next session.
FLORIDA holdi her Constitutional elec
tion on the 4th, - Sth and 6th of May. A
schism in the Convention resulted in the
preparation of two Constitutions, but it is
believed that one of these , will e he seascma
bly withdrawn; otherwise, both are likely ,
to be defeated. The efforts to heal dissen
sions among our friends in. North Carolina
prior to the eleotion day, are likely, also, to
be successful.
THE Erie Gazette with deeded impu
deuce and coolness hints that "reliable Re
publican journals" should take the place of
those which fail to eulogize LOWS; the
State Senator from the Erie district. We,
are amused - at this new.test of reliability as
furnished by our somewhat obscure neigh
bor. If its advice prevaiLs there will spring
into_existence many new Republican jour
nals throughout the State. -
Arroinnu. large draft has been made upon
the unemployed operatives of this 'vicinity,
by the general resumption of work :which
has been for three monthsstiverided in the
ew~llienes boidering.upon the .110thingskela•
.
and its tributary, the Youghiogheny. The
miners, who have been gent" on a strikefor
the period stated, aceepted on Thursday the
wages offered by the pit-owners, arid 'have
gone in to work. - 1 .Eniployment at fairrates
is once more given', to, several thouiande of
operatives in tlie viriotur branches of labor
in and about these great collieries. With
the miners who merely dig the mineral and
load their wagons for its transportation to
the surface, work is again , given to a large
force of track and inviteh-men, bank-view
ers, teamsters, boat-men, &c., whose 1313131-
berg are usually quite' equal,. in each large
colliery, to the Miners' tliethselves: ;We are
safe in estimating the number who, once
more haVc employment and wages at not
less than four'' thousand persona,- whose
earnings, at.the ;prissent rates, range
froth $1.50 to $3.50 and $4.00 per day, and
the aggregate pay -rolls for weekly disburse
ment will range from $00,00016' $70,000,
including the entire distrintlhi Which wo -7 r.k,
is now resuined. It only needs now that
our forges, founderies, "and
glass-factories shoUldbe again hi full opera
tion, to restore the largest;measure of pros=
perity to the, city. And. the day for this
general renewal of activity in all our lead
ing manufactures may not be very fc.r dis
-taut. •
Winn.; the champions "the peculiar in
stitution" . •
were endeaVoring to engraft It
npon,Kansas, theyseaehed a point at Which ,
it became necessary, in furtherance, . of .that
design, to cause the arrest of a number of
. the Free State Leaders, in orderr , to'lettheni,
Out of the way. Accordingly, five. of them
were arrested on a charge of treason, and
in the abserice of a jail were put irdomilite:
ry custody, Col. ST. GEORGE COOKE'S regi
ment being eneainped
_On the Plains, •and
:made to to keep
„guard over .the prisoners;.
It was early in the spring when the arrests
were made jedictmcnts were'foundagittnit
the accused at the Inne‘term,- and the priso
ners brought into; Court,..Tudge LECONTTE
presiding. *hey put in pleas of 'not guilty,
said they were ready and anxious to have'
the trials proceed; but the District Attorney . -
asked for delay, that he might: make
farther preParatibri: At his requeist., the
cases were put over l y. the fall term. Upon
hearing this order, the prisoners requested to
be admitted to bail, offering ' to give security
in the sum of othiltiiiiiired thousand dollars
each. The. Court decided that the offense
with which ti . ilottvere-1114 460-111apil
able at, that Idigki orthe .
sequenuy, thir were takei;' , li4 l - 4 4 :t# 41 iiit'f
and held undetreow, r ;thit t ir o wib u oi n - . 1,
In the fall they were brought into Ceart
again. The time had not arrived when the.
Gay*.
- Pliiiavery leaders thought they, cou ld safe.,
, , ,
ly allow of the enlargement of the aecnsed,
and, believing a conviction to be at least
doubtful, were anxious the cases should
'again go Over: The District Attorney ash:
ed another postponement on two grounds:
First, that he was still tunes , , and seco nd, that the excitement in the Territory; made
it unsafe for him to proceed: The CA591143"--
ing Judge 'LECOMPTE. heard the counsel for
the prisoners, and then intimated his inten
tion to put the cases over.
-At this point rose up one of the prisoners:.
This was - Mr. GionoP. W.- gnowN,, (for
merly of , Crawford county, in this State,)
editor of the Kansas Herald of Freed Om.
He asked permission to address the Court,
and waS told to proceed: - He said substari
tially--"Tour Honor, we havebeen detain
ed as prisoners four full' months; all the
while protesting
,our innocence, and. de
manding to be tried according to the laws.
At the June term, the Government was not
ready. It is not ready now. We are ready,
and demand that our trials be not farther
delayed. Besides, it is not for the Govern
ment to urge the existence of excitement in
the community; that being the privilege ex
clusively of defendants ,in criminal cases.
More; when prisoners are ready for trial, and
the Government unready, by , the laws of all :
the States,e ven in murder eases the accused,
in case the government will not proceed,
have the right to be released 1 on.. common!:
bail; that is, on their own recognizance,
We, stand upon our rights." Judge LE'
COMPTE, turning to the District Att9rney,.
inquired wind lie had to say in ani*el to
the points thus raised.. He frankly ' admit
ted that the points , were well taken,-consid
ered in the light of legal principles. 'Judge
LECOMPTE ordered the prisoners to be
released on common bail. Before the next
term, thepro : siavery champions abandoned
the cases, and they have never teen — Called.
The principles herein involved are not
without an application to the case of . Mr.
JEFFEROIC'D/Ml3, which both theSttpreme
Court and the people of the United States
will do well to consider. Chief Justice
Cliasa can afford to hold as even a balance
as Judge LECOMPTE.
ME.. JOHNSON'S DEFENSE.
The opening argument of Mr. JOEMBOX'S
counsel , accords, in its general drift, with
the expectations of the public for ten days
past. But our intelligent readers will con
cur with us in the opinion that, so far as it
purports to embody the President's case in
defense, it is essentially a failure. Making
a shOw of grappling boldly with the main
issue, which had already been formally
made in the pleadings, viz: the constitu
tionality of the Tenure-of-Office law, the
whole course and the tenor of Judge Curtis'
argument is no more than a ceaseless kaleid
oscopic variation from one to the other of
the opposite and most inconsistent extremes
between which Mr. Johnson is finding
himself crucified. At one moment his
counsel denies the constitutionality of the
law; at another he, defends its spirit and
endeavors to show that the act of his client
did not fall within its scope.. In one breath,
I,he asserts the President's unrestricted right
of appointment and removal; at the next,
he fortifies him within precedents which
he admits to be based -- upon no
express law whatever. Now, he claims
that Mr. Stanton was justly remov
ed ; then he reminds the Senate that, as no
removal. was perfected by the Secretary's
assent, no violation of the law &in" be justly
char*: Here he gives good reasons why i i
a SeCretary should hold
office during,the 1
term of the "President Who appoints him
there, ignoring the fact that the . Secretary's
office was confirmed to him, by, Mr. John
son's- express act, he asserts an absolute,
( I ,
right to remove him at plea Sure. He a its
that the Suspension was in deference to a aw
with Which his client aimed to - avoid a con
flict : he'subsequently argues that if was his
client's_duttto reject the enactment as bind
ing in any particular, and to make a case for
judicial. interpretation. He declares that an
indiiidual may plead and establish, for an
adequate defense, the unconstitutionality of
a law which he is - arraigned for yiolating,
and boldly claims the same right
for the magistrate, who, is sworn. to 'execute
evety .. law when enacted
The argument, of Judge _Cunns presents
no new views of his client's.case: Every
point that he takes has been already and
quite as, forcibly e l laboratedib,y . , the Demo-
Catic journalists and politicians who have
so generally volunteered, amid curia., in
the httigresto of:pure, Justice s toiaaya good,
word for their"friend it the bar. The argu
ment abounds with the technical astuteness,
the verbal criticisms, the hair-splitting.dis
tinctions, the fine points and the , plausible
but shallow exceptions of the mere lawyer,
who is at the hetid of I& f 'profeision, no
doubt, as to that sort of ability, but it lacks'
the comprehensive breadth of consideration,
the 'enlarged, wise,, liberal views, the just
conceptions pf pnblic duty, ;of the neeessi- .
ties of the State,'of . the .intentiona of the
Fathers and of the requirements of the fu
ture, Which can. only animate thestatesman...
He Minot risen to the higher:ram upon
which the merits of impeachment are to be
judge& It is a Statelecessity, tar, more
than any mere vindieation of a la* violated' ,
In its letter, but, as,to either nue* the other,
fitib 'abundant justificationin the facts,
and upon bethigreiticla the judgment of, the
Eieuste awaits the,proper :hew for delivery.
A LAW NCH: SHOULD ,BE BEt
PEALED.
Of the Tour contested election eases yet to
be decided by the Ilouse of Representatives,
two are , from Mistionii, one 'from Utah awl
one 'firini Ohio. The latter, DEraina - tii.
MORGAN, is much" the moist important, the
case turning upon the law of Congress dhp
qualifying deserters froth voting. The evi
dence in thikease is very- voluminous, but
is said to establish the clear title :ef
Isl .„to the seat, under the operati94 of
the lawn referred to 3 the other
,cpit-,
t be'ffisPoied 11111
'10 1 i;
discussion fi4;
twill be =devil Ithe.doori - whei the
Vtieffiditee , B liehfeDittlio's favor
shall be wounded. If the House should
•k , r
So long as :strong mem:think themselves
able to:"stand" the daily use; for months,
of hnpure - -water wtthour manifea: - And'
patenl ; injury to health; _so , long as the
citilens of ..Pittsburgh shall *sieve the int
pending visitation , of a fatal epidemic,: which
sooner or later, is, sure to sweep down upon.
them, in the avenging, mastless fury, with
:which nature ever vindicates
laws; 'so long as thieeloW Isolsbil Which
reaches every •hbUsehold, *Cogs :into '
every mouth, and hi taken lntia l theblopd, of .
every l4•AttelktlrgkflAnflute4struatlions I
E avi * o to gio.prpraggravatiork'of ordirutry
and - usisl'esium, or to its more direct and
palpable assults Upon tender infant life: so
?~._"~
Mfg
• e . _
--.ls.l7lSrikalrtnEtirk.AtußDAY APIULTIL:-.1868:*
concur with the - Committee in accelitti;g, as
proVed, thefactthat his opponent hold's the
seat only by virtue of votes which the law
has •
declared illegal, they have no option,
but must recognize the LIT and award the
seat to the contestant.
The experience, however, of the House,
in this and other cases, and thegeneral -dem=
timentof the country alike suggests the re
peal'at this period. , of the enactment upon
which these . don6sts have hinged. We can
never hesitate to - concur in any just expres
sions of the public disapproval of the shame
fur refrisal'of any citizen to meet, like a good
loyal Citizen and true patriot, each and all
of his obli,gations to his country, Whether'
in peace or war. We have no sympathy
for "skedaddlers," or draft-sneaks, or deser
ters, who fled ~from; duty or turned,
their becks upon the old flag during the re
bellion. We can subscribe to any, well-,
considered' legislation which 'Wait . punish
such conduct by a loss of-civil fiivilegis, or
shall brand with the 'atigma of a
life-long disgraCe. But we have
never been able to regard
_the law in ques
tion as capable .of any proper,
practidable. enforcement - The- subsequent
purging of the polls, with all the intricacy
of investigation and the delays, which must
attend cases like this from Ohio, constitutes,
in fact, the only way in which the law as it
stands can be made opdrative: It is, prac
tically, a fatal objection to any law regale.-
ting suffrage that it has no other method of
enforcement than by a contest afterwards.
Every law to that end should be so con
trived, in principle or details, as to be im
mediately effective at the polls themselves.
.Contests and scrutinies of the ballots should
be the rare necessary exception and not the
constant, unavoidable result. The inspec
tors and judges of elections 'should not be
exposed - to - the alternative, eitlier of admit
tinga class of votes of a very doubtful le
gality or illegality, with the inevitable con
,test afterwards, or of suspending the poll
until they can take evidence and decide
each claim as it is challenged, according to
its merits upon the facts to be then submit
ted. The latter course is;evidently not with
in the purview of our election laws, while
the former can only result in a certain con
test in every close poll, or in an en
tire disregard of the law of the land
as it is written, where the majority; is
in any event, even with such votes thrown
out, a large one for the successful candidate.
We regard the ' present law, therefore, as
impracticable in theory, as inoperative in
point of fact, and that these are ample rea
sons to justify its repeal. We observe that
a bill modifying the provision was intro
duced.on Thursday, and infer that the view
we have taken is shared in by members of
the House. It is better that the class of un
deserving citizens, whom the present law
was intended to reach, should be punished,
if at all by law, in some more convenient,
practical and decisive way, or that, if that
be not podsible, they should be remitted
to the contemptuous regards of the
vicinage, which may be relied upon to keep
alive the shameful remembrance during the
offenders' natural lives. A good deal better
this, than to retain upon the Federal statute
book any enactment which is incapable _of
general, effectual and prompt enforcement.
OUR SLOW POISON
At the village of Terling; in Essex, Eng
land, one hundred and eighty persons, out
of a Population of about nine hundred, were
recently victims of a new and strange ept
demic, and some twenty or - more of the
cases resulted fatally. It was ascertained,
upon investigation, that the epidemic' was
wholly attributable to the use of well -water
which was poisoned by the sewerage of the
town.
We doubt if the citizens of Pittsburgh are
yet quite ready to • appreciate the:vital im
portance of a supply of pure water to the
health Of oui vast and rapidly extending
population. They remember that the sup
ply from our reservoirs was unclean last
year, offensive to the , taste, the smell and
even the sight. Because it was not found
to be so offensive to the internal organs of
the body, may, be' owing, perhaps, to our
fortunate exemption, thus far, •from the
scourge of such a visitation as that, in the
English village above spoken, of. But are
our readers quite sure that their bills of mor
tality in the summer and autumn of 1867
were not increased. by the fatal secondary
results of drinking a diluted sewerage? Can
the medical gutctitioners of the city cor- ,
dially and conscientiously unite in a state
meat that ito maladies of the seabon were
intensified,
_no,: symptoms aggravated,
'no usual and proper, medication mys
teriously and effectively resisted, by rea
son. of the vile'elements which lay but half
hiddentrt this fluid,
,which is the essential
basis of food for the Well and of diet for the
invalid? Can they certify to us that the
iinpure Water which we were for months
coMPelled tome, had no deleterious effect
Upon the general health?' Are - they quite
sure Ihet among the very yotirkg, the
z chil
dren, the infants, such a 'large number or
Whom. are aWept away each year, there were
none witose , detiths might be • traceable 'di:
rectly to the fatal influence of.the fluid With
which, in various combinations, they Were,
so • largely fed. • What physician, what
mother, does not knowthat; in the absenee
of the food which natures provides for in-
fart nurture, the absolute p,urity of the :wa
ter with which another diet must be prepar
ed is vitally essential not only to health hitt
to - life itself ?
•
long as the avenging Nemesis of pestilence
forbears to punish our neglect, just so long
may our people be found procraStinating,
putting over from year to year, until a more
cihweriient season, this plain, urgent duty of
reform in their water-supply. We hope
that, when they shall* last not only per
ceive their duty but resolve to perform it,
the immediate pressing necessity will not be
enforced by the ghastly presence of a sweep
ing and terrible mortality.
RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.
The new "Church of the Messiah," New
York, Rev. Dr. Osgood pastor, was dedicated
on the 2d inst. It is represented as being one
of the most beautiful , churelkeain Gotham,
and occupies a comtnandir4gite. - The pas
tor belongati 'the, conseivitlie wing -of the
Unitarian denomination. . ,
It ; is: thought some few cases 'of recent
awakening have taken their origin in Hie
State Conyentions of the Young Men's
Cluistian Associations, and in the faithfhl
efforts of young men and laymen.,
Quite an interesting work of revival .ex
ists in the Lutheran, Colleie in Gettysburg,
Pa. About . tAYenty have already found
peace In believing; and the work is still pro
gressing.
Bishop Eastburn, - of • Massachusetts,
preached on are ent Sabbath in Boston, in
the Olds South C 4:,.
ngregational Church. He
had on no gown, nor bands, but his usual
citizen's dress; he offered extemporaneous
prayer; spoke of the hOuse they were in as
the temple of God, and prayed for "all min-i
liters of the Gospel, and the congregations
committed to ' their charge." Dr. Nichol
son, an Episcopal clergyman of that city,
has recently officiated in a meeting house.
The annual meeting .of. the New York
City. Sunday •School and Missionary Society
of the Methodist Episcopal church, • was held
in that city some, days since. Its mis
sion element has had a wonderful
success during its' brief history. Al
ready the real estate and other property
belonging to the Society, is valued at $71,-
000, and consists almost exclusively in
Mission chapels, for preaching and Sunday
School purposes. The receipts for fourteen
months ending March 1, amount to $05,766,-
95, and`the expenditures, $65,248,10. The
President, W. W. Cornell, is a lice lay
man
The call for the National Convention of
Christians, opposed to secret societies, is be
ing widely circulated. The meeting will be
doubtless an important one, judging from
the efforts of those in the management to se
cure eminent speakers, and a full reprmen
teflon from all parts of the country. The
Convention is to be held in this city, com
mencing Wednesday, the !itli of May, and
continuing four days.
. The newly acquired right of females to
exercise the right of suffrage in New York,
in the election of trustees, was effectually
used by the female members of • Alanson M.
E. Church, Brooklyn, the other day. The
novelty of the thing, we presume, brought
out large numbers, and one trustee received
four hundred and thirty votes—most of
them by females. The Diseipline of. this
body of Christians provides for the eke
tion of trustees by the Quarterly Conference,
unless the corporation of a church..avail
themselves of State laws.
Reference has already- been made to, the
wonderful awakening in New Albany, Ind.,
and the.effect it hashad upon the communi- .
ty in various ways. According to a daily
of that city; the accessions to the Pres-4
byterian churches, reach about three hun
dred and fifty, to the United Brethren
nearly,- seventy, and to the Methodist
churches, including the Ciernum, nearly
nine hundred, making a grand total.of over
thirteen hundred accessions to the Protes
tant churches of the city during the past
winter.
The Maryland Legislature have before
them a bill, if not already passed, with a
view to provide such favorable legislation
that Southern Methodists can disposses Ithe
MethOdist Episcopal Chyrch . of its property.
However much the State lawi may favor the
Southern Methodists, we presume the
Federal COurti protect the M. E.
Church in her sovereign rights. Considera
ble feeling has been roused by this special
legislation.
The Southern Baptist Convention• meets
in the Seventh Baptist Church, Baltimore,
31d., on May 7th. The Committee of Ax
rangements giie notice to any 'brethren •of
Baptist Churches, or corresponding Associa
tions in the North, who desire to attend
the Convention, that they will receive a
cordial welcome, and hospitable entertain
ment during their
Friday the 27th of April, has been set
apart, by request of the Bishops of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, as a day of
• fasting, special prayer; and intercession in
behalf of the General Conferenee, which
meets in Chicago, on the first day of May.
An extensive • revival has occurred at
Mansfield, Ohio; especially in the Lutheran
Church, which has had two hundred, riecei:
;Such crowds Were in attendance at
the seq4ces that,the pastor was comstrained
' , requestfa the older MeMbere to remain at
home, in order to give the Impenitent hear ,
ing room. The congregation Tiow numbers
five hundred members.
Grants were made at the late stated
monthly meeting tbe Ameriban Bible So
ciety, New Y9rit - ,*onntiing to 26,258 vol
umes, besides others to the value of $2,080.
Rev. Herman Dyer, D. D., of the Episco
pal Church, New YckKaiurßei.:l":
Fowler, 1). D., of , 'Utica, N. -Y., were
elected•delegates to represent 'the Society at
the.. apProaching =annual'-meeting `of - the
British and Foreign Bible Society;: ,
A
A Bristol' paperi id, represents
" Trix," anew perfume -for the health; to
hide sin, and leanly whisky • salved -over t
It says . it is one of the tricks of Satan;
RA 10?. ;:o
Tito iliouthenul Bypod'af PeMikylirahht is
raving :preptired a ieatit*"niedal, com
memorative of
d r1 1 *P.4§. 1 24:1'41.4 1 t4o*
tention,to give.bni well 5n4d11 134 :404.*
iaiotar in connection, with It
will be a precious treasure to them in yearr
Li
• -
fr
,o 1 -
•
to come• and will be referred to by them
with great delight should they live to see
and enjoy another such greaat 'festival.
A. M. BROWN v ESQ.
Perhaps no name has been more •promi
nently and 'favorably mentioned in private
and public circles for succasorship to Gen.
J. K. 3 foonnaan in Congress than- that of
A. M. BROWN, Esq. No betteror stronger
candidate could have been selected, but he
peremptorily declines taking the geld for
that or any other office, prefening to devote
his entire attention to his large legal prac
tice. here is what he says
MESSRS. EDITORS GAZETTE :---Notwith
standing my repeated and uniform, deolara
,tiona'4sf refusal to stand as a candidatefor
Congms, Fund my name again presented
in this morning's Gazsm for that office.
Whilst I duly appreciate the partiality of
my friends and the honor and importance of
the 'position named; my determination to
continue the practice of my profession, and
not be a candidate for. office, remains un
changed.
My sincere thanks are due„_and hereby
tendered, to the many friends who gener
ously offered me their valuable sppport.
A. M. Bnowri.
Prrtsnunon, April 10, 1868.
WE ARE not to be outdone in magnanim
ity by the GAZETTE, and cheerfully with
draw the charge that it endorsed'the utter
ances of Hickman, but our magnanimity,
copious and extensive as it is ' will not per
mit us to recant the political opinions ex
wessed in the Post because they are offen;
sive to large sections of the , population of
this city and county.---Pittaburgh Post.
-The Poat, as it has the right to be, is decid
edly partizan, and Maintains, usually, a bad
cause with grace and ability, its column in
dicating that none know better than its
managers the practical value of courtesy,
and of a just regard for theproprieties of po
litical journalism.
—Advices from Mexico to the 3d state :
The Diai•o (official) has been forbidden to
publish Ex-Minister Romero's private °or
versation with Senators Sumner and Fow
ler. Romero asserts that the Republic did
not owe the United States as much as was
generally claimed at the end of the war
against the French. Every mail fails owing
to the attempts that are made to bully cor
respondents•into representing the tone of
sentiment and state of affairs in Mexico in
favorable colors. The French and Austrian
residents are• leaving in haste. General
Herman and others have been banished. A
military squad pursued 'a German, eighty
years of his age, on his departure. On the
2d inst. President Juarez, in an address to
the members of Congress, compliments the
country, and refers in flattering terms to
the budget and the condition of the Trees ;
ury. The Chairman replied in the same
strain. Every one looked jubilant on the'
anasion.
—A son of James Rankin, of Mt. Pleas
ant township, Washington county, was shot
through the head one day last week and in
stantly killed. Ho was handling a loaded
rifle, and while blowing into the muzzle
put his foot upon the trigger and the gun
was discharged, the contents passing
through his head..
—A trestle work over Mahoning Creek at
Eddyville, Armstrong county, erected pre
paratory to the building of a bridge, fell
that Wednesday, precipitating the work
men into the creek. The contractor, Mr.
Hastings, was thrown sixteen feet, but was
fortunately not hurt.
--ALlska advices to Marh say t
the health of the garrison was good. Shatev
eral Indian chiefs visited headquarters and
were entertained by Gen. Davis.
=1
GOOD HEALTH
IS TUE GREATEST OF ALL BLESSINGS
And to preserve. It, to the privilege and duty of a
DR. SARDENTS
ANTI-DYSPEPTIC AND LIVER PILLS
Arg the great severeign, speedy and sure cure of the
age, for Dyspepsia, either' in its mildest or worst
stages, and hundreds who have long suffered under
the:inflictions of this most annoying and dangerous
disease, hitie by - the use of this invaluable Meeting
been 'restored to health and the enjoyment of
Is your Liver Ilia torpid condition of inaction, '
thereby deranging the whole system f
DR. SARGENT'S LIVER PILLS
Will speedily remove the secretions and restore it
to a healthy state.
Are you troubled. with loss of appetite, foul stom
ach, eructations of wind, sick headache and general
derangementof the digestive organs
DR. SARGENT'S LITER. PILLS
Are a sure, safe and permanent remedy, and by their
mild but certain action will cleanse, renovate and
reinvigoratetbe system.
DR. SARGENT'S LIVER PILLS stand high aa .
one of the standard Medicines of the age. For the
cursor all diseases a arising from a disoidered state , of .
the liver, as can be attested by the certi fi cates of
large numbers of our citizens who have beenbene
tited and cured by their use. \
These Pills can be obtained. either Plain or Sugar
ctMted, from all Druggists in the coulittT.' -
UNRIVAILLED.
Nothing that hap ever been known or neard of a
tonic adds so much to the resistant power of the
.. .
.
human system. under circumstances unfavorable to
health, as HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS.
If von would escape the intermittent fevers. tits of
. .
Indigestion. bilious attacks and bowel coraplaints,
of which cold and damp are the frequent causes,
use the. BITTERS as a PROTECTIVE MEDICINE.
Thl^ is the wisest course;_but if already an Invalid. '
try the preparation as a RESTORATIIM. in either
case flu reliance may be placed upon. its efficacy.
There Is no mystery about the causes of its.suc
cess. It is the only stomachic and alterative In
which are combined the grand requisites of a mild, I
pure and unvitiated vegetable stimulant, with the
finest selection of.tonic, anti-bilious, anti-scorbutic.
aperient and depurative herbs, Plants , roots and
barks that have ever been intermixed in a medicinal
preparation.
The Bitters have this distinCtive quality', which Is
not shared, ills believed, by any tonic, tincture or
extract in the world. It does not excite the pulse;
though it Infuses a wonderful degree of vigor into
the nervous system, and .trengthens and sustains
the whole physical organisation.
California and Australia have emphatically en
dorsed It as the MINER'S MEDICINE
_par excel
, ience, and in Spanish America/mid all the.troplcai
climate, it is considered the only reliable antidote
to epidemic lovers,. - - . '
The already Immense and ' still increasing eon
sumption.of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS,
backed bk many of the most Influential physicians
throughout the conntrY..skould convince tie most.
skeptical that It is worthythe confidence Ana appro
bation of all. '• -
APJIMI;mt CURE OF DEAFNESS.
. .
I lost my .bearing daring the last year. Part of
thellme I was totally 'cleat April of this year
was induced, from an advertisement, to make ap
plication to Da.,/lnrins, VIII /Penn street, Pitts
burgh. .A.tter having tried ,rariona medicines from
rdt.itc.rs,:withontiny benefit, I been under Dr.
Keyser , * treatment now for nearly two months, and
am:entirely iestored .. to my bearing , so that I can
hear a pin drop. .
, COal Bluffs, 'Tomb/118ton Cd.,-Pa.
Aziyrify.it CURE
A m s s celled- ;(
toraiNm or a great cure made., l 7 : _ltkiLyteek . pqnsk or
rtTLMOgAltlr RYSTORAI:I4. - 11 Se Shes e cures
are m ad e with the Doctor' ilincipitiatiOna.' be dentrej,
tern be distlnen.vbnderstood that
.snose of his great
• bieretijii; made to SainitinnenlWitili: eke eataidlshed .
laws that govern the seitark of it kede‘Re4Al4 which
hi has been engcge d 10, th4.94t iI'abIYATO, years.,
Xast week ilt(*,ifi !as? a:te*r
cle of. PilliC4eNiiiiOi,inotiter.
itIiBICRIV299It92IO U 99111114199
Wet il i :Nil.N 3 r 3 N2kitNAT/ONS MID MEAT;
BUNT Or CHRONIC INSEA33B, No. UllO PENN
3TRENT, PEON 9 A. N. 17NTU. 3 P. N.
NEW ADTMRTzsmkez4.7i3
IN DESCRIBING ! A
RECEPTION AT THE WHlif HOUSE
THE WASHINeI'ON ST A* SAYS
"A peculiar - style of wearing the hafr, last even
ing, among the ladies, was a subject:pf much cam..
meat, and the remarks were, .for he most part,
;$
altogether In Its favor, as a becolitingrubstlente for
the watered'',"
An exchange says: "Now that the - i i 'waterfalL` is
is a little pcmai, It is rumored thlst It Otiglasted not
in Paris, but in India." The luxtOlant, glossy
' tresses of the maidens of the Indies hSire, for centu
ries; been celebrated and sung by a ihouslind b e
witched poetasters, while the secret otitheir hirsute
charms remained undiscovered. It wait left to Bur
nett, the famous Boston chemist, to l'clive the mys
tery, in his invention of the article stylpd "COCOA
INE," by which the active principle,,of cocoa-nut
oil (a product which the latices used, ) ls secured in
a deodorized and liquid th - rtn, delightfly perfumed
and chemica ll y combined with other ?ngredients.
This compound foil:ns an article unriva l e d in excel
lence, upon which . the public has, for:tears, set its
seal of enduring approval. Its fisme tiyanliersal.—
Cincinnati Enquirer, Feb. 19, MS. A
Burnett's Cocoafn
. .
Is the hair-dressing which the belles anti fashion of
this country use. Ito effect upon the gl: erlneae and
richness of the appearance of natures/ a4d artificiat
hair fa equally durab/s, eplendfut and elkaolous.
"Burnett's standard preparitlons ,
througliout the civilized world. "-v/C. Y
Barnett's Standard Pre
Are just now all the rage among the i
generally indorse them as unrivalled. T.
themselves highly delighted with
BurneWs Cocoaine,
and dwell with no slight enthusiasm on it
ful effect in promoting and preserving t
of the hair.
Burnett's KaUiston
Is equally admired as a healthful, fragrant
tifying cosmetic. Burnett & Col are also
prietors of the choice perfume called
Burnett's Flortmel,;
and of the pleasing dentrthee.
Burnett's Oriental Tooth
They hare since added
Burnett- 1 s Cologne vat
to the list. It is much admired by ocan -,
among - whom it has acquired the reputat
big : second to none other, foreign or dome
BURNET'S FLAVORING Eti
Take
,unexCepUonal , rank -as the best. • in
America. They are carefully prepared &Oa eniltr
and spices of the best quality. Their univae r sal suc
cess is based upon their merit. neferencells made
to the principal rurveyors, Confectioners And Ho
tels in the United States.—Chicago Tribune. -
COMMENTS OF THE PEE
REGARDDi'a
Burnett's Standard Prepara
• I
Unequalled among the preparations orAti
chemlsts.—True Flag, Boaton. • .-
The ladles of our household indorse tireb: s.
alled.—Horns Journa n N. Y.
. Enjoy the highest reputation among the, la .
Louieville Journal.
Deservedly prpular. — Cineinnati Commerii,
Are fully established as goods of high order
cago Tribune. ,
Important auxiliaries to a lady's toilet.—
ington Chronicle.
Of approved usefulness—all that they pro
be.—Phttadaphfcrßuitettn.
The best preparations of their kind eat,
Stara , Ifationat Viell).
Remarkable for delicacy, freshness and per
Christian Guardian, Toronto.
We heartily recommend them to all our read:
L141(64 R 4 m. fly - Magazine. - • '
. -
. Once used, they recommend themselves.—dhrte
tan Freeman, Roston,
Burnett's reputation la ' aullicleneguarani
the excellence or hie preiaratlona:—ilorton Jow. ,
We learn from
_lbeigrat Confectioner In thi
. that Burnett'¢ Extracts of Fruits and Fiore_
equal to the English artioleit of She same kind ;
highest celebrity.—Monfreof Witness.
mmrrin!TzaL TErrnsorrir.;
You:, ;actuary 0,
- •
3ERNETTIS STALNDARD PREPARfsTIONB
rank high among the leading staples in our ittie of
trade. Experience has taught us that a reptitiillon
so srlde-iipread and enviable as that enloyedbn the
articles of their manufacture, , can only be earnTby
peaufnit aura. • .' ' -
• -YoursresPeStfullY.
• D4E4B BARNES et). •
The ii - boye axpresses ',the opinion of dealers '#exi
rall
ey. Ear: eide - wboleitaie' and retail by all dimg
gits and dealers In medicine. • • -
• ,
Oriental.
le a preserver, of the teeth. and beautifies. tiliem
without indult*. to Dui caloric'. In this tespexit' lt
stands alone. The evidence of Chemlate ind,ifitbe
Dental Faenii* ilibatantiatia Thew facia:
•
-1 - • etVis .Florinael • • , •i
r eal 4 *ol9. the_ 904 of rare
bouquet of Militia &of* l'entliet,itaittle,i4tfi=
willed. A flaw drops will leave its peenllif and 41e
bonglIghttel fragrance upon the handkerchief forma ' ny
•
• '1!
II
11
11
celebrated
Tribune.
UM
rations
dles, who
ey express
wonder
e beauty
nd beau
the pro-
ash.
Isseurs,
of be-
JilL►7
ii;
111=1
unri-
ME I
Chi
-.l-
=I
D:E3
13:1
2EI