al • 1 4. 1110 te littshuro Gap*. PM3LD3REED DAILY, BY PENNI:KAM, REED & 'PropTietorg, P. B. PICNNIMAN. I ' JOSIAH EING,•- T. P. HOUSTON, /MEW, Editors and MakuNrcrs.. . OFFICE: GAZETTE 8OILOING; N05.;84 ANC, 86 FIFTH St OIFFICIAL PAPER Or Pittsburgh, Allegheny and Allegheny County.. 1 Terint—Daktv. Seeit-Weekly.i - Weekly. ~. One year." 115.00 One yenr.C.so Single copy .. -.l's° One month . . 75 Ellx mos.. 1.60, 6 copAes, each. 1.35 Bt the week, 1,5 ThnT, mos 751t0 1.13 (rrom carrier. ) , and one to Agent. SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1668 WE Pnrrr on the inside pages_of this morning's GAZETTE : Second page—Rphem. eris and Poetry. Third: page—lncial Matters in New York, Markets by Telegraph,. Imports, River Rims. Sixth page+-Home Markets, Rnance and Trade.. Seventh page ' —Local News, Amusement Director,Y, City Items. GOLD closed in New York yesterday 188 f. Tam Indianapolis Herald, the Democratic. organ of Indiatia;linnk $20,000 last year. It has passed into the hands of S. nepheti of Jesse Bright, ex-Senator. Tire strccEssioN to the Presidency, in case the office be vacated prier to the expi ration of the Constitutional term, is regula ted by a law passed in March. 1 792. As some. of its provisions are Of - doubtful meaning, it has been proposed at Washington so to amend it that the Senator who may be act ing Vice President shall hold the office un til the 4th of March ensuing. TUE press or the North and South are running wild on the subject of the - Ku-Klux- Klan. That such an organization of rebels exists we have ample assurance, but its strength and power.is greatly exaggerate& It is nothing more nor less than a new edi tion of the Knights of the Golden Circle, which all will remember as a weak and powerless body of desperadoes, who faded away like snow before an April sun, when the hand of law was laid upon them. In alarming good citizens and freedmen of the South, the K. K. - B's. will succeed, but as a political auxiliary to the Democratic party they will be of no consequence, but rather prove a damage. THE ERIE RAILWAY SLAUGHTER.. We print some additional andinteresting particulars of this shocldng and whole ) sale murder. We also give place to the statements of the officers of the cOmpany as to the condition of the road, and we add to it the wickedly heartless pretext upon which they seek some palliation of the uni versal execration. The track is shown to have been for months in a condition so hn perfect as to endanger the safety of all trains • speeded up to the ordinary passenger time. The rails were generally worn out, being so weakened that in the one single month of January last, fully one thousand of them were taken up broken. The. officers insist that they were engaged in measures for the repair of their road so, as to render it once more safe for the public use, when the con troversy for the control of the company's affairs, was initiated by i outside parties, and that the litter, by the ;legal proceedings which, at -their instance, suspended the financial solvency of the Company, are alone responsible for the horrors of this event. But no such infarnous plea Carl in duce the public to forget !that the officers who -make it, deliberately, in< the face of positive assurances from their own subordi nates that the road waebut - a murder-trap; did, a few weeks since, reduce their fares for the express purpose'of tempting to their road an increased travel. Promising to an unwary public low fares and regular con nections, for which fr high speed was in evitable, and solely for the purpose of dam aging rival and safer routes and of securing a daily revenue to their impoverished trees ury, they gave to their infernal machine an accelerated motion, and the slaughter at. Carr's Rock tells the rest of the story , IMPEACHMENT." The Senate 'continues to indulge. Mr. Joamson's counsel in a very wide latitude of testimony, its intrinsic weight having apparently very little to do with its compe tency. For example, they open wide the door for the introduction of proof shoWing that he consulted counsel in relation to legal proceedings against Mr. EkkiliTON. wide as that door stands open. the defence are marshalling through it no Witnesses to the consummation of the ,President's judi dons and praiseworthy intentions in that rega-d. Many people swear thathe talked much about sling informations and apply ing for writs of quo toarranto, but; nobody yet turns up to testify that the much baking bore even the most meagre' and shrivelled of fruit. The Managers certainly need not com plain of that sort of a defence. It' hi' only the • patience of. - an impartial Senate, of a people beginning to weary of waiting for justice:to be done upon this disturber of the national - peace, which suf jers by the unexpected delay. Witnesses for the defence also establish:the fact that the speeches "around the circle" were -correctly reported. ° These 'are to be fol lowed, it is said, by the members of the Cab inet and by Generally:3E4am ‘; It is believed that the evidence for the defencewill all be in by Tuesday and - that, unless the Mani gers have rebutting testimony to present, of which there is but a sinau pgbability, tile arguments will be commenced by the, mid dle of the next week. The Senate, recogni-* ,zing the importance of bringing the pro ceedings to the earliest posilble close, meets hereafter at an earlier hour, so that each day will see more accomplished. . , An absurd rumor, that ono or two of the . :Nhumg . ers, dissatisfied :withv the rull , the Senate, have liope z iedto ,withdraw from the case, would not " beiyorthi of con; tradtetion, had it not eothehoir,:bbiiineA circulation yesterd4: 'The 'Awl IS of a • = *piece with the insinuations against the.in tegrity of certain Republican Senaters, is entitled to.. eipal credence andoto dottbt; emalates from the same discreditable Sources. The Managers, each, and all of them, will falthfallY and to' th‘lat to the great trust which the House . has reposed in them, and the day is now closely, at, hand which shall see their difficult and resptiruil , ble labors rewarded with a crowning tri umph for the cause of .Tnstly Reiu.lated Liberty. MR. THOMAIS WILLIAMS. The third teim of service of Mr. TizomAs' , WiLLia.ms in the House "'of Representatives at Washington is drawing to a close. Car ryling to the duties of the position a mind uncommonly gifted Vy nature,' trained by the severest and most accurate culture, and for tified.by long and varied experience before popular assemblies, at the bar, and in both branches of, the Legislature of the Common .wealth, he rose rapidly into conspicuity and influence, continuing honorably the long line of, illustzious men which Allegheny county bas furnishedlo the national c(i.un dls. Assigned to the Judiciary Committee, his labors hi that sphere, and particularly as connected with the investigation into the conduct of the President, and in preparing the Report of the Majority in favor . of peachment, presented at the opening of the present session, so demonstrated his peculiar and commanding abilities and usefulness that, when Impeachment was finally- re solved upon, he was chosen one of the Managers of that grand and historic trans action—a signal distinction, and most fairly earned. We are not informed as to Mr. Wn.umis , intention respect to being a:candidate for re-election. We have, indeed, heard of higher honors-designed• for him.: by deioted friends; but whether their.powers, of , ful fillinent are equal to their good Wishes is one of the problems that cannot be solved in advance, but must be left for events to disclose. Meantime, the period formak t ing nominations is approaching, and it will soon be needflil either to re-nominate this gentleman or. select - another as his successor. In default of a declination from Mr. War.Lums it is fair to infer that he will accept a re-nomination if it shall be tendered to him. At least, if he shall not decline in view of this intimation, it may be taken for granted that he is not averse to furthenservice in the House, if such is the pleasure of the Republicans of the district. It has become customary in many north ern districts to limit the period of Congress ional service, for individuals, to two or three terms. This custom has mainly, grown out of competition between aspirants, though the "claims of locality" have induced a con siderable tendency in the same direction. "It is a custom more honored in the breach, than in the observance." Statesmanship is not avocation from which a man ‘shouid be laid aside as soon as he has mastered its in tricacies. Even in an ordinary mechanical trade, it would be thought absurd to dispense with journeymen, and trust to apprentices altogether. Much more is it absurd and per nicious to change representatives in Con gress; when a valuable one is in the seat, simply because another person would like to All it, or because the:claims of locality in the disiiibution of honors are construed to re- Taira the change. The high places of government ought to be given to the men Who are capable of filling them with the largest shire of wisdom, courage and discretion. These general considerations derive addl . tional force,;as applicable to the case in. hand, from:the fact that the next Congres sional election may be the last that - will be held under the existing apportionment. It is quite possible that the district, two years lience, , will not- be composed of the same counties and part of a county that now con stitute it. . A new man, taking Mr. Luits' place, might find himself thrown into strut& ,territorial connections towards the end of hiibtirst term of service. It is prep:nimble that the Allegheny por tion' of the 'present district greatly prefer to continue Mr. WiLmeats to the end of the apportionment. But to this end, it is re quisite to ,obtain the concurrence of either Butler or Armstrong counties. - But our design in bringing up this matter, now and In this form, is not so much., to forestnll, action, here or elsewhere, as to suggest the , necessity for a definite under standing in the premises. If Mr. WnasAms desires a reelection that fact should be known, and if concurrence shall be dis- ,closed in one or both of the other counties, his nomination Would follow as a matter of course. If he prefers to retire, unquestion ably the candidate will not be claimed by Allegheny, but - will be conceded either to Butler or Armstrong. - RELIGIOUS, INTELLIGENCE. The General Assembly of the Old School Presbyterian Chinch will hold its annual session at New Albany, New York, com meacing May 21st, and will be opened with a sermon by Rev. P. D. Gurley, D. D., Moderator of the last Assembly. The New School' Assembly meets 'at Harrisburg, Pa., on thn- same day. The Triennial General , Convention of the Episcopal Church will convene at New York City in the month of Odober next. The General einifeienc,e of ihe Methodist Episcopal Church will hold its Quadrennial Session at' Chicago, co-lumen...d ing the first of Maya The Missionary Union of the Baptists was held at Chicago last fall, and the Southern Baptist , Conven- Hon meeta in Baltimore,. next month. The General Synod of the Evangelical tutheran Church convenes at Harrisburg, PA., next month.. The 'General Assembly of the Vnited rresbyterian Church meets at Ar. gyle, New York, during May. , From the report of the American Sunday School Union for New York,. read at the annual meeting held last Supda,y , there have been one":handre4 missionaries • eV1P.41144 0 4 1 13 .3 - reir., located. i " e fi lt r ; FTP:‘ , o4 l/4 - 134441 :' BP'6° eigl `,limir4;-amorian#o4; .i. k`" - ' it. ,,,,..,- .a.06,40."4-711fLEY-7':=77,7,------- PITTSBURGII GAZ.F,TTA.. SATURDAY, : APRIL 18. 180 self-sustaining. Receipts for„hooke:444,o F missionary purposes about thin' - hiffidiet'd thousand.dolhirs,of 'which,ever :olie,ftitirth have been 'expended `for 'Salaries 'of mis sionaiiies, donation of books, and other • Such ha. 9 been the interest felt iiti:the re . , vivid of religion at Lewisburg, Ohio, that during its progress a minstrel trouptsrvisit ing the place, took only two dollars , at the door. The United Breftan church there has received eighty-one additions. -There are seventeen hundred and eighty three American domestic missions under the care ofthe Methodist Episcopal 3fissionary Society. The Generalatissionary Cotnmit tee, appropriated for this work, for the year 1867-8, the sum of five hundred and forty nine thousand and eight hundred do ars. The Methodist Church, in Birm ngham, under the pastoral, care of Rae: 43. West fall, has been favored with quite as exten sive revival. - During the special services, recently cloired, onehtuidred•and thirty-one professed to have found peace. -‘ , The :American 'Churchman, commenced its seventh yb,ar, April flth, in a new dress, and enlarged. It presents quite a creditable appearance. The paper is well edited and is of the progressivii school. Fears are entertained. that the. Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church will end the year of its work, which closes on the Ist of May; with a large debt encumbering it. ,This arises from the high price of exchange and , its en larged operations. This vigorous body of 'Christians should see that this noble cause is sustained. The dropping of the "Dutch" seems to have started new life into the Reformed Church. We notice the record of more re vival intelligence, in that ably , conducted jottrnal, the Christian Intelligeneer, than usual. The revival at Ellenville, New York, assumed broad proportions, seventy. five having professedconversion; also, about fifty in the Church at Napanoch, in that neighborhood. The New - England 31. E. Conference, at its late session at Boston, denounced the proscription of the 31. E. Church, by the Government in the selection of chaplains to the army and navy. A Convention of 'Methodists was recommended to be held at Chicago, in May next, to adopt a memorial to Congress, asking that their ministers may be represented in the above departments, in the proportion of the numerical strength of the denomination We learn from the United Presbyterian that the new church edifice of the First United Presbyterian Church, Allegheny city, Pa , Rev. J. P. Pressly. D.D., pastor, will be pushed forward to completion as rapidly as possible. The site is on Union Avenue, (East Commons) one of the hand somest in the eity. The structure is to be of the most modern style. - s Rev. F. E. Abbott, a Unitarian minister, late of Dover, N. H., has renounced the ministry and Christianity, and proclaimed himself a Theist. Inconsequence of the divisions in the Presbyterian Church at Paris, Kentucky, the members have agreed upon a separation and division of the property. The radicals are to get the old church, the school house and fifteen hundred dollars in cash. The conservatives are awarded the parsonage and the new church edifice. , There are now thirteen Methodist Epis copal churches in. Boston, worth nearly one million of dollars. Considerable missionary labor in the Sabbath school is done by these churChes outside of the regular church or-, _ ganizations. . • The Tribune represents that owing to the bitter feud existing between Rev. Dr. Scott, rector of the Church of the Redemption, and its senior Warden, considerable exeite ment prevails in the congregation. The presence of the police, however, prevented any unpleasant circumstances from trans piring. The Scott party threaten to seek redress in the Selpreme Court. The bill hurried , through both, hou es of the Maryland Legislature, to emba the titles of the M. E. Churches in that Stet , has been defeated, Governor Swann refusi gto affix his signature. . Rev. Charles S. Robinson, who h just resigned the pastorate of the First P sby terian Church in Brooklyn, succeeds Rev. Mr. Eldridge, pastor of the American C unit at Paris, France. ' The Synod of . Missouri has appo* a Committee to attend the next meeting of the General (0. S.) Assembly of the Pres byterian Church, for the purpose of setting before the Assembly the position which that body now occupies. It is possible an effort will be made to heal the distractions which exist in , that . State, and also in the State of Kentucky. ' The Presbyterian thinks that some of the papers of the Presbyterian Church have expressed unnecessary alarm in, Supposing that.the Basis of Union agreed upon by the Re-union Committees will be rushed through the Assembly without any further action being necessary. It says, that the Basis of Union is again to be , submitted to the Presbyteries, and that no union can be accomplished without the concurrence of three-fourths of the Presbyteries_ of. bdth Assemblies. • ' Rev. Dr. Beckwith,late rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, New' Orleans, La., has just been consecrated at Savannah, Bishop of the Diocese of Georgia. Rev. J. H. D. *lnfield, of Portsmouth, Va., has been elected his successor at Trinity. In the.eighth anniversary sermon etßev. T. L. Cityler, pastor of the Lafayette Av enue (New School) Presbyterian; Church, Brooklyn, 6unday week, the remarkable fact was stated that-eight year@ ago the Membership of the church Was a little over one hundred; it is now one thousand- on e hundred and thirty-two, corantunicants.. During Bishop Quintard'S absence in Europe,. some weeks ago, •he received intel ligence that a hill was gotten' tip `for the; benefit of Cirist: Church,. Nashville. The 331ithop z ite7 ilroperly denotuieed the *pole Prodiedipg; si/d4l2pudiated eve:lll44 per tidtguitAckit. .7' He flirtlicl' l itatelthat Tait• fluPPenV idriiuuk . • • t 3- 4. - 0. 1" cr , 44 , ' ""' • abominations, at once destroy, all true prin. aples of making an offering to God, as act of worship: This has the true evangelical ring and will have a good effect not only Cm' parishes in his own diocese,: but the Chrls_ tian world generally. - In - New York City the total number of Churches and places of worship of - all kinds is over four hundred, with accommodations for .two hundred thoutimd persons. The average' attendance is about one hundred and fifty thousand. - • Reference was made, not long since, to d re-cleetion of Rev. Dr: Nesbit, ird term,; as editor of the Pitts- the, expee for the burgh air . ia'n Advocate, since which, we are inform „his name has been proposed for one o the , three Bishops likely to be eleCted the General. Conference next month. he is not elevatefi to the -Epis copate w confidently look for his return as editor. I= lE;RAILROAD We append all the additional - particulars at hand of 'this shocking calamity, and its probable cause. Mr. M: A. 131akeslie, a resident of Olean, N. Y., who;was a passen ger in one of the cars which went over the embankment, says: "I was - awakened by the sudden stopping of the cars. There was a wrench as if the coupling was breaking.. ,All was quiet in the car yet. I sprang from my berth to the floor; j,ust.then the car was dragged by the others over the 'embankment. I then•threiv• myself full length upian - the floor and held fast as the 'car went over and over. The outer roof was torn off, and the sides fell outward. I - was about to rise When .the ner roof of the car came, crashing down, and was held by a broken framework within three inches of my head. Crawling out over dead and wounded, I managed to ex tricate myself from the wreck. The ladies' car was on fire, and on every side of me sufferers were shrieking" and groaning in agony. The mean came up when the fire of the car went out, Lind thepasengers then began to extricate the dead and wounded. I helped to cleat -away the rubbish of the wreck." Mr. Blakeshe declares "that it was the most perfect wreck that ciauld be imag igned, nothing but a mass of chips and splinters remaining of the three sleeping and one ladies car. •.1 counted five dead bodies' in the car that I was in. There were five or six killed, and afterward burned in the ladies' car, and I saw five more dead bodies upon the railroad track I should judge there were at least fifty badly wound= ed. I: as told by a friend of mine, a Mr. Porter, that the train was running at the rate of forty or fifty miles an hour. I was told at Salamanca, when I emhsrked, that the train was then thirty minutes behind time, in consequence of having been de layed some time near Corry, Pa.,in picking up the body of a man who had een killed by the train passing over him." Another passengei says he knows not how to account for the catastrophe; but narrates the following colloquy which oc curred in his hearing between one of the brakesmen belonging to the injured tram and a friend : • This latter, addressing the train-hand remarked, "Jim, you had better leave railroading; its getting to be dafiger ous." "No, I won't," replied the brakes man, "but I will know better than to go on a train again when so many railroad dele gates are on board. This affair occurred because our folks were putting on airs; they wanted to show off, so they crowded on all steam in order to make fast time, and now you see the consequence." This colloquy may throw some light on the cause ,of the accidEat. The New York Post of Thursday evening says : A number of those who were slight ly injured arrived in this city last evening. Among the number were A. S. Gillett, Mer cer county, Pa.; Mrs. 0. S. Gillett, and her sister, Miss Stewart; Mrs. Gillejt's little boy, two years and a half old. Mr. Gillett's fern; ily and Miss Stewart were taken to the residence of a friend. The bodies of the dead were placed In charge of properofficers yesterday, and an inquest will be held. The statements in relation to the cause of the actident are very conflicting. Some attri bute the disaster to a broken rail, and others to a - broken wheel. • • A Inter edition of the same journal says: There has been no further intelligence re ceived at the Erie Railway office in this city this morning from Port Jervis in rela tion to the 'condition of the killed and wounded, further than contained In - private messages to the friends of the Injured. It is understood, however, that those still at Port Jervis are doing well. The number of persons killed is now said to be twenty four, but the complete list of names has not yet been received. The report In a morning journal that the wreck was burned last night after the killed and wounded had been removed, lacks confirmation. Those that were shghly wounded have arrived in this city and departed for their homes. They all unite in representing the scene after the' cars had reached the bottom of the embankment as one that defied des cription. The shriekingof the wounded and moaning of the dying in the broken mass, the darkness only relieved by the light of the burning car, contributing to the scene of horror the like of which they have never before witnessed. The New York Tribune says: "The Erie Directors charge that in conse quence of the grantingof an injunction pre venting them from issuing $10,000,000 worth of londs, the. Vanderbilt party are indirectly the cause of the deplorable acci dent which occurred on the Erie Railroad." Six weeks ago, an official report upon the condition of the Erie Railway was made by the Superintendent to the. Board of Direct ors, in which he said "The iron rails have broken laminated and worn out beyond all preCedent, there is scarce a inile of your road, except that laid with steel rails, between Jersey City and Salamanca or Buffalov, where it is safe to run a train at the ordinary ,passepger ,train speed, and many portions of the road can only be traversed safely by reducing the speed of all trains to twelve or fifteen miles an hour, solely , on account -of the worn-out' andsotten condition of the rails.' Itrokemwheela, axles, engines and trains off the track - have been of daily, almost hourly., occurrence for the last two months, caused mostly by defective rails. Fully one thou'. sand brikken rails were taken front thiktrack in the month.cif January ) while the number removed on account of lamination, crushing or wearing out, was much ,greater. Feb ruary will show a worse record than. Jan 41:Yrlie condition of the Iron at the present 'date is such as to give me much anxiety and apprehension for the'safety of trains. We cannot and do not attempt to make the smiled: tile time with our trains; nearlyalllose from two to five hours in.passing over the -road, and it has been only, by the exercise of ex., Aram caution we have bri; able thus far to` escape serious accident" • ' - • . It was found from the report of the Treas., arreithat the Company was in debt , sl,loo- 000: this The Directors ~saythat It was at meeting that they resctived to/Betio $ 1 1 0 0 0 • ;; J pin *orshxl,bonds, to repair ro" purchase steel fails Th ey:iin# l 9444'4.94* tractett for .the purchase of, 20,000 -tuns of steel rills, to replace the broken rails which bad been snapped during the severe • cold weather. That, immediately after the grant lug of the injunction, the firm the finger,of a lady who was at the time consci ous enough only to be able afterwards to tell the story. People who weie'at the scene, say they could not protect the sufferers from-- this sacrilege. • The following are the names of additional killed and wounded:: Killed—An unknown man ,since identi ged as J. D. Hurd, and the unknown boy, his son, J. D. Hurd, both of Urbana, Ohio. H. P. Corwin, of Urbana, Ohio, should have been Mr. Erich, of HornellsvMe, New York. Mrs. J. Decker, of New York, probably hurt, has not been seen. Philip Kerchter died at 6:30 P. M. Wonnded— Unknown woman; Mary Sterling, Wells ville, Ohio, supposed to be going to Ithica, New York. Lewis B. Collins, of South Byron, New York, Susan Squires, of; Stafford, New York, and A. W. Gardener, of Batavia, New York, are reported missing. They were traveling together. - - THE Philadelphia Preis says - . -•- r A Conference of the friends of American industry will be held at' the Metropolitan Hotel,- New York, do Thuriday, the 28th inst., at 12 o'clock. The object of the con vention is to take counsel as to the present condition of our industrial and financial L interests, and to enfor e the necessity of in ereased'efforts to awa en-and instruct pub lic sentiment on t ose subjects. - This meeting, whose obje ill Um protection of Amencan labor, will a en a warm inter est .in Pennsylvanitt, who, under the auspicious of her own State League, will doubtless be well and 'carefully represented. The cause of labor is the cantle of the j:,Re publican party, which holds in its hands the destinies of the Coinin nwealth. - BEWARE Of that remorseless and Insidious destroyer of the human me. 1 • . , . " CONSUIVirTION . - • ~ • Cheek and conquer Its ad anceit, lest youlall the vietlm. , Whenatta.cked with any . of its preliminary symptoms. no matter how slight ' , be on your guard and promptly use the remedy ere too late. DR. SAILMIes COUGH SYRUP Is an old, well tried, certain and standard remedy for' Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Croup, Difficulty of Breathing, Pain or Oppression In the Chest or Lungs, and all Diseases of the Pulmonary Organs. Its sure and certain emcacy has been Ibily tested and endorsed for many years by numbers of well known citizens in our midst, and their certificates • are on record. Have _you a cough 'which has ually Increased from a slight one to one of perma nent standing? Lose no time. but procure a bottle .of DR. SARGENT'S COUGH SYRUP. which will surely relieve you of the dangerous 'premonitory symptoms and effect a permanent cure. Do you spend miserable days and long sleepless nlghts of torture and vain from attacks of Asthma or pillion.- ty of Breathing ? Dr. SARGENT'S .Conch Syrup will act promptly. relieve you, and gradually re store you to your freedom ofpain; and sound, pleas ant sleep. Are your lunad sore and irritated,i.ndi eating inflammation ? This is ono of the most dan gerous svm_ptoms, Coughould be promptly sor e -remd Dr. SAIffiENT'S Syrup will heat the ness, allay the inflammation, and rester* the lungs Syrupeir prestine andh and vigor. _This Cough Ls pleasant agreeable to take, while DOW.. emir and sure in Its action. For sale by all Drug gists in the country. A MISERABLE. SHAKER Is the victim to Fever and Agee. This tedious and enervating, disease is, unfortunately, too well known to need a description. It is strictly a maledone - disense,'eaused by exhalations from the soil, especially from marshes, swamps and newly cleared lands encutubered with decomposinevegetable mat ter, The chills is one of the most troublesome of maladies, as the 'patient, thoughhe May not he con fined to his bed, is incapable of action. ' The experi ence of years has demonstrated the Met that 110 - , TETTER'S RITTERnis a sure means of fortifying the system against all atmospheric poison, breaking - up the paroxysms and rapidly restoring the stjongth. Quinine, which has so long been the great remedy for Chills, has been supereeded by this powerful and harmless, agent; while as a preventive it is unequall ed, as Its use will certainly exempt all who may live in unhealthy localities from the ravages of this dis ease..HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS--is now among the most popular, and, at the samerime, valuable specificsin the medical world. In recom mending it to the public, we aro Rally conscious of doing them a great service, knowing, as we do, their Many excellent qualities, and sure and speedy action in all cases where the disease is caused by irregularity of the digestive ergans. Asa tonic is both - mild and agreeable to the taste, and stimula ting In Its action upon the system. " .. A I4IO TRER;pURE OF DEAFNESS. I lost my hearlailduring the last year. Fart of the time I was totally deaf. In April'of this Tear I was induced, from an 'advertisement, to make 111,. PLlCatiOn to Dn. kinrsEtt, 120 Peiitt street; Pitts burgh. After liaving tried . Varlopanistlielnes , from . doctors, without any benefit. I have beenunder Dr. Keyser treatment now The nearly two, months; sad eat entirely restored to. m 7 hearing,- so that I can hear a pin drop. , JOHN SCANLAN,. , , , Coal Bluffs. Wiuhhigton Co., Pa.- - .AX)TILtit CURE A man called to-day at„Dr. Keyser. Mgr* to,in form hirtiore , great cure made by hie LtamCenz, or PutarorrAnir ItstsiOnalTrz. • list these oures are made with the Doctors Preparations' be deslins It to be distinctly understood that most ot,hlsiniii cures aro made in accordance with the establish e d'- larkttott govern the science of medicine, in which, he had been engaged for the peat , twenty-dye y!,Mi„'. Laat week he wag nimbi reeeig,,,t,o4 letter from a ele4gyinink in the awe of owe. detailing another i mOsAvrondeifill Owe: • . , Xr•r;OLIVS DlODOZNPtOgitirrlllige,OP•i- PIOXIFORLIMO/VX-414gberpOPOIND TREAT= *Oft` OP CHRONIC :‘0340171`, IRON" A. it MI: ' , ; Blindfold a connoisseur in perfumes, and then sub;. to him for comparison BURNETT'S COLOGNE . WATER, and the best manufactitreil bi• Jean Mnile . Farina, on She banks of the Rhine. This 4.64 - of ex cellencels challenged by the Atuerin manufactu rer, and he believes that his article l l under such an ordealovill be mistaken at least thiee times out of six for the '`genuine German." Kalliston. To the beautifying influence -of KALLISTON thousands of ladle? ow tion of their complexions during al Apply it in the evening and it will on chief the wind and tom may. hay! 4. during the day. Tan, 4ickles, m prickly beat blotches. Ae.., vanish , , lug, purifying oPeratloni like mists the breeze. . • • . • The Brown Family.. Ladles migrating to the country fo, arc pretty : sure to become members ,: family, unless. they are wise enough NETT'S KALLISTON as a protectio% indefatigable tanner, the sun. rinit healthful, cooling and beantityirtg pre may brave his beams with perfect imp Warth Reading. . • • • In anchor the 'hair firmly in the scnlP., to give It curl and lustre, to preserve its color, ti keep It pure and free from scurf, to qriliken* its gl i piith; to Im prove its texture:, to make and keefi it *hat it ought to be—the crowning personal charm oflboth sexes... It. is only necessary to use BitTIFINkTTI COCOAINE as a dell v dressing. • To Achieve 41raeles Is not within the, compass of human: , that art can accomplish In beatitifting; ing, thickening and perpetuating the effected by the use of. BITRNETT , B There is a stimulating property In this which literally compels a /lipid growth while its emolient action ruiders t silky and elastic. • • . ; .The Coronet of Nature Is a magnificent head of hair. It ; nobles nobles the features, however , homely. To proserye this pei tm; ional charm, or to obtain it where thereA a de fi cient growt4 - and a tendency to decay, apply II ETTg COCOAINE. It fertilizes the scalp, an gives life and vigor to the roots of the fibres. Not ng else so. perfectly asainfilates with the dieralcat 4rtstituents of the hair or renders 'it so pliable, 'soh and bril liant. , . • ' Superiority Will Tell. • • The reputation of the toilet articles ' ufactured by Joseph Burnett & Co., of Boston, h subjected • the Ann to "a 'pressure which no maul a n d i n the pleasant- compulsion of a vast • and i h n , creasing business., the central trunk af baston puttorth a branch.. This branch Is locitted in the Metropolitan Hotel Building, BOA Broadway, and • it has already passed through the blossoining and is bearing solid trait of success. "Cocoalne" for the, hair.. "Florimel , for the haildkerchlet "Eallisten" forthe complexion, and mei ° deli c i ous ~_ . palate delicacies known as '!lturriett,s Flavoring . i ia Extracts, "Are as p o p u l a r. in this remota a r t of the -.., unlierso as theyare , at its .: !glut)," and• tla quite , handy to hike..them witidOtach.-, After All, if pos.. .. ! + ton is tti e ixie of the globe, Broad**, _la the grand thhrouglifare of the Contirt7nt, and all that is exeek7 : - lent:Ands its best market there. — lrmo Tar. Mereuhr. . . 21 " take C(CrireeteclL .. licKire insists that "all that's sweet wa to ha last whin sweetest." Naw sea b tale shalt inn the lioet'datya. ' TIAM. !sweetest pertizate the . vet., breath at Axed and periiii6Cht deli ht It se ineorTierikad`wittt: whattite,lt ;teiteheet respect: ie fa :JO-, oth ers''isitithirdif a'- furio46 , - ,-, v, • 1,., ;., • NIM MMOEERTIIO=IWITS., 13 - U - 11, Success Tells Its Ourq • The Immense demand. for . !BENET'. & CO.'S - standard preparations for thi toilet, In New. York, his induced - that - celebrated Alston± House to open a large and elegant braneh estahllshment at No. 592 Broadway. Already the eustoit of the - fashionable public seems to be dmwn • there. For example, among the thousand and one i t'dresaings ,, ‘ for the hair, where can you find anythl g at . all coropamble t 6 BURNETT'S COCOALWE I!: it very lady who has need It will Join In the answer--'nowhere." . . The Chemhitey of (*eke • Nobody' ever tastes a creme', is custard, a pie, a pudding or a sauce Savored apptopriately with one of Barnett's Standard Extrats. without, like Oliver Twist, "asking for. Morel" 'The indiviihtlik whose palate has not been tiekliii ; sritb an, ice cream rendered delicious with BURNS 'S "Vanilla," or a soup dashed with BURNE'rk , S "Celery" has missed an epicurean testacy. , ; : ' iinportsot to Epicure,,. Some of the most eminent cook' among the rest Monger Blot', the l l .—have emphatically approved o lug Extmets. ' There are twelve include all the fruitful and floral c for the table, No lady in the land tlieni, and whoever uses "them o. To the Educated Palate Burnett'a Standard Extracts iii of 'all othei"Havorlng preparations' try. T hey have a; national repuim who understands their valie will them: Yee cream, custards, pies, 1 soups that "take the reason prison bered among their, triumphs. •-1 Burnett'. Extracts. Authors ofte.n interlard their wort poetimttructs," but the true Dodd ism is condensed and perfected in lug preparations known aS .. Burneft tracts;" The subtile essences of fln fruits are embodied in them, and American housekeepers who do noth uschilness and acknowledge their aril A Challenge and a Teat. iM =I In this country- . Parislan Cuieinier Burnett:li Vlsivor , t them, and 'the" . ndhnents Suitable Should witliont .ce will nee tbena tte taken the lead lased in this cpnn ttton, and. no lady I! ever, be edtltoat lollies, Sautes rind 'n -"-may be p - ata with "elegint of epicurism le twelve flavor- Els Standard Ex- M most delicious. there are few appreciate their perlority. BURNETT'S the preserra thei 'season's. . 0' all the miff ... e to the skirt . .. ew, redness, tinder its cool . aged away by =I the satniper dastri to nee egiihat that with this • .tion,,they . ' ' kill, bat all strengthen= an hair 1e I OAINE. eparattoe, the fibres, I smoot , 3 made bu;,' ow a film, the ::: !lam; • 49.,111,:t- ME