fit littAurgt MILIMED DAILY, BY PENNIttALI4, REED do CO., Proprietors. . B. PILNRIMA.N,. JOSIAH KING, T. P. EIOU I STON, R. P. REED, Editors and lianagers. . OFFICE: GAZETTE BUILDING. 'NOB. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST - • OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and Allegheny. County. Terms--Dolly. Semi-Week/y.l weekiY- One Year. .V.oo , one year.V.so Single copy. .$1.50 One inoniit. 76 1 5tx mos.. 1.5 o: is copies, each 1.25 By the week, 151 Three mos 75110 • • • • 1.15 (from carrier.) - and one to Agent. THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1668. , THE WEEKLY GAZETTE, :salted on -Wed— nesdays and Saturdays, is the best and cheap at family newspaper in Pennsylvania.: It presents eaeh week forty-eight columns of solid reading. matter. It gives - the fullest as well as the most reliable market reports of any paper in the azte. Its, files are used ezcZu sively by the Civil Courts of Allegheny county for reference in important issues to determine the'rfyirg prima in the, markets at the time of the business transaction in dispute. Terms : Sing!!! copy, - one year, $1.50; in clubs offive, $1,25; in. clubs of ten, $1,15, and one free to the getter up of the club. Specimencopies - sent free to any address. ' Wls pliniT on the insiere pages of this morrtinea GAZETTE : ,Second page: Poetry and rEphonerii. Third page.: Financia r ,l Matters ' Nem York, Markets by Tele graplf, River . News, Imports, SteaMboats, tc. Zizth page: Some Financial, Produce -and Petroleum Markets. Seventh page: A story': entitled ' " Proposing by Letter, " • Arnuomehts, • Goal closed in New Yo 1391@1.88;:. • GENERAL • SeitortELD arkthorizes the state ment that the President nominated him to be Secretary of.. War without even intima ting that he desired to do so. He has writ-. ten a Utter declining to accept the nomina tion. A. Ti:AsurnaTolt letter says of Mr. GnoEs- BECK'S argument the President's behalf that "he did not acquit ANDREW JOEL'S - SON, but hp probably mane himself BEN WADE'S successor in the Senate, in case the latter becoMes President." They say, however, at Columbus, that the Ohio Democracy have already assigned the seat to Mr. JEWETT, of Zanesville. ' WRE.IS ARRAIGNED the other day by Lord. Derby, in Parliament, for vacillations and inconsistencies in his views of Irish policy, an eminent English statesman had the manly courage to avow that the peace of the Empire was the aim of his life, and that, preferring his own plan, he had accepted another as,- under the circumstances, the -most practicable solution of the Irish dila.: •culties. It would be a good 'thing for our own Republic, if its leading statesmen and politicians were more frequently found da ring to emulate the moral courage of Emu. _RUSSELL. - FLonrox "will vote early in Ku, and no 'serious opposition to the success of Recon struction is anticipated. The Virginia elec tion, which had been ordered for June, has been postponed by. General SCHOFIELD, in consequence of the exhanstiori of the funds appropriated by Congress. The difficulty will be speedily remedied and a new order of election issued. General SCHOFEELD'S recent visit to Washington is understood to haVe ben for the purPose of 'arranging with Gmeral GRAICT the details of a plan to submit' the new Constitution to the peo ple of this State, in separate pa;ts, in order •• to obviate any existing danger or the defeat of an instillment winch, as an entirety', is most wisely framed, by the Injudicious and unpopular - disfranchising clause, upon which his opinions were submitted ineffec tively to the Convention before its adjourn ment. Tan PROTRACTED speech-making by coun sel is likely to answer a very 'good purpose, in developing, among Senators, an evident impatience of further needless delays. It was voted, the other day, by 30 to 19, that fifteen minutes in debate was too much to concede to each. Senator upon each article or separate proposition. A proposition to give to each Senator half an hour and no more in the final deliberation, was also lost by 34 to 16. ,Although the subject was. then laid aside, to be again brought up after the.. conclusion of,, the argumenp, the present decision; as to the Jength.of 'Senatorial dis, cussions, is not likely to be .changed.. As it stands, each SenatOr will have fifteen'min utes for explanation of his vote, on all of the articles, and no more. This will make a decision of impeachment attainablewithin. a two days' discussion., pinbarmasitig ques tions may arise-as to the extent of the pen alty—whether It shalll'or not; irolnde dis qualification for t RyltioAk. Ao. any ~Federal office—and also as to the mode of Agreeing upon a verdict and of prOtfOrnicilig judg- ment,.but butlt is believed that Senators have already reached conclusions upon these points, and _that no additional delays will result from 'then): It is worthy of, note that the Wide latitude of" speculation in which the public ,have . indulged? anlthe leafless fieling of uncertainty which has beerfinsid iously Triendi;, are entirely due to. the reticence of the . Senate. And that reserve has 'been most commendable, GE4, Ilaaccoca. is fut . gaining grotuid with influential Democrats as a Presidential can didate; and the indications are now that, Mr. PnNDLETTT, who, sixty days' since, would have secured the nomination almost 'without an retroXtf :win find a dangerous competitor in his military rival. The postponement of.:thl f e r ^nvention to so late E a period as "Jitlyls , found seriously detri mental to Mr. PisirtLicrox's prospects, and he is palpaigyledd*l4rehiP,didikl i Wiilk new and formidible'comtinatimni torn:: ingolOitionlible.cat, ¢thy ts 4 • .1 • r:t..ri .1.14 ERE tlid he. ,The _General'sofficialFageneptin..l the hanging of Mrs. STIRSIATT is apparen i ly less objectionable to an influential wing of the Democracy, ttan the practical epudia tion with which PENDLETON leads the as sault upon their pockets. Nor is the Ohio politician's war-record altogether acceptable to the shrewder Democratic -leaders. Dis guise it as they may. attempt to, these 'gen tlemen cannot wholly conceal their hank ering desire for a candidate whose loyal military services shall lend a Valuable aid in obscuring-the popular fetnembrane,e of 'cop perhead disloyalty in: . the ,trying period of public danger. If they did not help us fight the battles, they are cheerfully prompt in snatching at the fruitS of victory. Demo cratic politicians are dissatisfied with the postponement ; of their National Convention to July, and a plan is on foot to induce their Executive Committee to change the call and fix an 'early day in June for its meeting. • . SPEAKING! of .frauds in the collection of the whisky excise, the New York Times pays to New Jersey a handsome compli ment as follows : • Some of the New Jersey districts were at one time quite as bad as any in this city. The change for the better in that State is at tributed entirely to changes made in the lo cal revenue offices and to the rinn and no ble stand taken -by the Federal Court—in that State. Rogues havereceived no quar ter there. They have been arrested, tried, convicted and punished to the full extent of the law. And the'r&filt is seen there in the entire diaappearance of fraud in regard to the whisky tax, from that, State. If the revenue officials and . prosecuting officers were everywhere as zealous and faithful as in New Jerseys in ferreting out frauds, and subjecting them to imprison ment, Commissioner Wpta,Es'..esiimate of fifty millions levenue• from the whist y tax this year would be more than' realized. So far as thd paragraph - Abini*.e„cpioted. would convey . an bnpressxmi lhat - the• 'Federal Courts are responsible for the non-adminis tration of the law, Torrect bnlyln a very limited sense. Fidelity in enforcing penal laws and the measure of punishment inflicted upon offenders are practicallY de pendent, in a very - great degree, upon the,ef flciency and integrity of the prosecuting of ficers,.whose representations and influence, direct and indirect, in other ways, are usual ly potent with the sitting judge. - rk yesterday a It is nearly eighty years since, in this journal, appeared the following- account of the operations of the Indians of the Ohio valley. The Pittsburgb. GAZETTE, of May 26th, 1787, says : "A gentleman, who arrived here the 19th instant. "from Lime Stone, which place he left the Ist of 'May, informs us that Beret' warriors of the Shaw "sinese nation had come on there, on the 27th of "April, with nine white.people- to exchange for - the "same number of Indian prisOners taken by Col. "Logan. The Chief of these savages, Captain "Wolf. gave the gentlemen to understand that thtr •ty warriors of the Cherokee nation were' then out "at war. Our informant adds. that as he came up •the river, husaw five bark canoes and three rafts "crOss - the Scioto. full of Indians." Mrs. Eva Jessup, who died at Fairview, Indiana township, on Monday afternoon, was perhaps the last remaining resident' of the county _who had a personal _acquaint ance with the history of that period. When the paragraph above quoted was first print ed in the GAZETTE, Mrs. JEsaufr, then. Miss JONES, was in her sixteenth year:, and living in a cabin located a little west of the present site of the Penitentiary, in Allegheny City. Mrs. JESSUP has always, declared that she. was born in that cabin, and, as she was some .years older than the late General Ronmsox, there haire r- been - titany to insist that she; and not the General, was "the first white child born west of 'the Allegheny river." One of the commercial marvels of modern times is the sudden development of the Petroleum trade, a business which, like Minerva springing fully armed from the brain of Jove, at one bound has attained an almost' world-wide diffusion and import ance. Eight years ago the article was un known to commerce, and yet, in 1807, the exports .to foreign countries -of Refined Petroleum footed- up the large amount of nearly 1,700,000 barrels. ln thei,same year the amount of Crude Petroleum produced is estimated at about 3,000,000 barrels. This immense business,is almost solely con fined to Western Pennsylvania, and our own city has contributed more than any other to develope and foster this wonderful traffic. At the first discovery of the oleaginous treas ure, our capitalists, with an unwonted pre science and enterprise, detormined to draw the; new business to Pittsburgh, and forth with erected, as if by magic, a large number afiefineries until, at this time, titres millioni Of dollars are invested iri buildings and stocks in this neighborhood alone. As Pennsylvanians. therefore, !mt. more particularly as Pittsburghers, we are peculi arlytintetested.in a business Which has con-. tributed so Much to develope the resources of our COMmonwealth, ' and as citizens of. the United States, we are anxious to foster a manufacture which has contributed so large ly to make up the deficit in our exports of cereals,and cottan, , Prem-twenty to thirty millions of dollars are annually placed to our ,credit abroad in return for our ship ments of this single article. As Pittsburghers We take great pride in meeting the produc tions of our city,i and the imprint of its name,lhroughout the cities of Europe,'ln . the depths of Afrieii, on' 'the black steppes of.liussia. tho gold plains . of", California, or the fragrant fields of the celestial Empire. Turk and Arab; Chinese and Patagonian, Rindoo and Japanme, -- Prenchman' and . German alike enjoy the cheap and beautiful illuminator which Pennsylvania - Wells prdduce and Pittsburgh Refineries utilize. ,No production of the labor or - ingenui ty.of man is more deseryingof Ithe,encour &gement and protection of Government, yet, none hits been more persistently hunted down arid . discriminated against; from the earlieg davelopment of the trade ':lMpiesSed with the ideathat the "rivers of oil " Were veritable :Pitgteafik, streams , our Legislators 'Oai r e charged?Otroleu*w#h an;undue pro. • nrtion Parflons: Most ,ua Oifly it , hete.lleezi singled_out fregiAe`.chuis •••''' • ,5...'< WM OUR EARLY HISTORY. PETROLEUM AND; ITS TAX. „._ .'1 PITTSBURGH GAZETTE.: THURSDAY, APRIL 30. 186 E. list of luxuries,' 7- 11 -iPlk may 30: legislated against, and, from the first has been heav 7 ily taxed, amounting for the last - two years to one hundred per cent. Recently this has been reduced to fifty per cent. of the value, and such a reductiou might seemsuf ficient to those not acquainted with the great interests involved. What reason there 1 is for placing a fifty - per cent. tax on the poor Irian' slight where the rich man's gas is charged but five or seven per cent. we can not see. A beneficent Government shoald reverse this order of things and lay itsur dens on those most able to bear them. It is justly claimed— that the busi ess of exploring the - oil field, and tha - of i preparing 4ts - products for use, are the ost -uncertain and hazardous of all our mi 'ng and manufacturing operations, and demand encouragement and protection rather han adverse and opiressiie legislation: :. "y ..,vik should it not simply be placed in the te gory of useful manufactures instead - o be ing outlawed like whisky ? For what rea son should it not be treated in the same manner as we treat the mining of coal, or iron, or copper? Why discriminate against a business that is more uncertain in its re sults than either of these, and equally as useful ?. Should it t ba said that PittsburgA need not complain, for the reason that our product is mainly exported Madlherefore free of tax, we answer, that, whilst -nominally free, the existence' - of the tax requires': .system of most embarrassing and expensive, regula tions, which imposes a heavy burden on the business, and at the same time contributes nothing to the Government. This, too, at a time when the European refiner can come into our, markets, purchase - the erude article and, by means of cheap labor, cheap chemi cals and a good market for Naptha, drive the American refiner out of the foreign markets. Should our Government foster this im portant branch . of 'American manufactures, or should it continue to embarrass the busi ness by unreasonable and expensive;tegi -lationstintilit-has driven thitrade into the ,hands of foreigners? It seems to us that every unnecessary obstricle should be taken out of the way, and every reasonable en couragement extended to a business which contributes so largely to the development of our national resources, to the maintenance ofour national credit, and to the comfort and happiness of the world. Use of .Stimulants. Dr. Willard Parker, in a recent address before the Young Men's Christian Associa tion of New York, discussed the subject of stimulants at some length. He said : The five chief stimulants are : tea, coffee, alcohol, opium, tobacco. E Stimulants when talc( nin a liquid form, go at once into the blood, and of course operate promptly upon the tissues of all parts of the; body. 'Pea and coffee stimulate, alcohol,s opium and tobacco poison. Some persons. can use both. tea and coffee with impunity; a few coffee, but not tea; 4 good many tea, but not coffee.. Tea and cof4 _fee used in moderation do not shorten life; used in excess they do, however, producing great nervous irritability and exhaustion. Milk and sugar ought to be used with iboth tea and coffee. Their nutriment pears to protect the system against over stimulus. - • Man will have something to drink besides water. He is a drinking animal. The thing required. therefore, is only that he drink what shall not harm him. There need be no quarrel :with pure lager beer and pure light wines, used inmoderation. California wines are from tery sweet grapes; therefore fermentation (which changes sugar into al cohol) makes them strongly alcoholic and intoxicating. The liquors now drank are poisonous. I have not seen a case of delirium tremens in hospital for years. There used to be such 4 but now. such patients - come in scraz,r—rav ing; from the effects, not of alcohol, but of adulterated liquors. As between tea and coffee on one hand, and alcohol on the other, a certain good man in New York used to say that "he was always glad to find that a young man like tea snkcoffee, because then he was not likely to become fond of alcoholic drinks." Again, tea and coffee retard the processes of waste in the system, and thus enable the two nervous systems to furnish working pWer to the body for a longer time.. Al chohol has no such power. • Opium-eating rapidly increases in Ame rica. *The effects of it are well;known, yet its, use does not necessarily shorten life. Opium used as a stimulant gives very pleas urable sensations for the time, but these are followed by a corresponding depression, a slough of exhaustion and misery which continues until the pleasure is brought back by the Use of a little more opium ; than be 'fore. The moderate use of tobacco doe not necessarily kill; but it cannot be said that the moderate use of it is harmless. - Perhaps tobacco is not quite so bad as: rum, but they are twin brothers, and tobac co makes men drink. • Tobacco depresses, and the user then craves liquor to stimulate him. It is found impossible to cure inebri ate patients of the use of liquor so long as they are allowed to use tobacco. The French public revenue from tobacco from 1812 to 1882 was annually $5,000,000, of late years it is s3o,ooo.ooo.During the former period there were in Prance at any given time 8,000 lunatics and paralytics. now there are 44,000. It will be seen that the two totals increase in 'nearly an even ratio—six and a half times as much tobacco, five and a -half times as much lunacy and paralysis. Those .who live out doors may use tobacco with ,out feeling it:so Mitch; but not men of se 7 dentary life. There have died in New York within a few years three excellent clergymen, all of whom would now be alive had they not used tobacco. The difference in the operation of tobacco and alcohol is this,. while alcohol causes tangible changes in certain organs, tobacco gradually lowers the vital' tone of the whole system, so that the life ends sooner than it ought to. MESSRS. ALEXANDER DlcDoxian and B. F. Rice are the United States Senators elect from Arkansas. The former is a native of Pennsylvania, about thirty-six years of age, and for several veers did businesses a bank er and liierclituttiri Kiinsai. - At the close of. the war he fettled at Little Rock; Arkansas', and he Is now ; President of the Pirst.Na, - tional Bank 'of that place. He has been' elected for the short term. Mr. Rice was born in Kentucky, but early in life migra ted to. Minnesota, where he obtained some eminence as a lawyer. Atthe breaking out of'.the war he was commissioned a captain , in the Third Minnesota Infantry., but re signed while the regim'ent was in .&rkeitses, land took up his residence at Little Rock, for. .the purpose of practising law. Though an, uncomproodOg Union-,man, he is said to 14e*OppOsed,to negro:s °frir ~..p. , e - O.x . TIEE-'43ERMAWERTATRIAITOI I V --- '" -TREATY. - The annexed portion .of a dispatch from Minister BANCROFT, to the State Depart ment, dated Berlin. April 3d, will be of in terest to our readers. It is observed that the provisions of the treaty are construed, by the German Diet and by the Chancelfor, BISMARCK, as a most complete declaration of the change of nationality by the act of foreign naturalization. Mr. BANCROFT Says: , Irteteditt Yesterday he treaty came up for accep tance in the I perial Diet. • Mr. Konig, in the first insta ce, - and then Count Bismarck, took the oc asion, publicly, and in the clearest and ost emphatic manner. to con firm my interetation in every-particular. A discussi n arote, which brought out a. full interp retation of its several articles. ,) Mr. Konig, the plenipotentiary who signs the treaty onithe part of North Germany, in explanation f the - first article, said that a five years' c ntinuous residence in:Ameri ca, and no re, was all that the treaty. re quired in re dto residence. The Cha cellor of the Confederation, Count Bisma ck, spoke on the same point, declaring t t the words of the article were too plain to be misunderstood;, - that the period of fiv years was :to date from the moment wh n the -emigrant should cross the America line, and that the 'continuity i of residence hich was required was to be interpreted, "Nicht in korporelichem sou; dem in jurislicschem scone," not in a cor poreal but in a legal sense, The interpreta tion of the second article of the treaty was equally explicit. - Dr. Schleiden, of the t ommittee of the Diet, reported that inasmuch, as the lia bility of the naturalized citizen on his return to his original country extended cnly to breaches of law committed before emigra tion, it followed that any breach, of the law which might be committed by itself was ex cluded from the class of punishable actions. The view was confirmed by Mr. Konig, who pointed out that as the emigrant re mained liable only for acts committed be fore emigration, emigration, itself, and the consequent withdrawal from'military duty, could_riOt be included among such acts. So then, said Mr. Lowe, one of the ablest members of the Diet, and well known as a long and esteemed resident of New 'York, the hateful military business is now put aside, and the emigrant on his return is not liable toarrest for the violation of the military duty from which he ,had withdrawn by emigra tion. While he fully accepted the explanation of Mr. Konig,.Mr. Lowe still intimated a wish that it might be confirmed by Count Bismarck himself. The Chancellor immediately arose, and replied as follows: The gentleman who has last spoken fears that a person who has lived five years in America and been naturalized there may yet, on his return here, be held to military duty. This apprehension I can designate as perfectly and absolutely un founded;.the literal observation of the treaty includes in itself that those whom we are bound to acknowledge as American citizens cannot be held to military duty in North Germany. That is the main, purpose of the treaty. . Whosoever emigrates bona fide with the purpose of residing permanentlyln Ameri ca shall meet with no obstacle on our part to his becoming an -American .citizen, and. his bona pies will be assumed when he shall have passed five years in that country, and, renouncing his North German nationality, shall have become an American citizen. I believe, therefore, that no room has been left open for the anxiety that has been ex pressed, and I lay great stress upon the plac ing of the subject in its true light , Dr. Lowe questioned the Chancellor on this point once more, saying : "To my joy I think I may understand the Chancellor to say that no prosecution for unauthorized emigration can take place, even if the emi grant shall have ceased to be an American citizen." Count Bismarck replied : "I herewith confirm the declaration - which the , gentle man desires," and he added,joyfully in form, seriously in aubstance, "I might also assert. that we will treat the five years ab sence in America, when connected with naturalization, as a fulfilment of the mili tary duty with the North German Confed eration." • ',„ The fourth article Of the treaty came also under consideration. - Mr. - Luker, one of the ablest members of the Diet, inquired whether• the German, naturalized in AmeriM and returning to Gennany, would, after two years' residence in Germany, be held liable to military duty? The text of the treaty, he said, gave no color to such an interpretation, but the re port of the Council of 'Confederation was a iguous and, therefore, he called upon th Chancellor for a clearer explanation. n the beginning of the debate, ex-Consul M" or had mdst clearly explained that the . P h h e e i rw s g re enrin la w t 'all i h on : as a citizen of North Germany, would, I A e: ru ca ilicat n nß la cisi N mt : - za re erne q k, u o i r r ne e p d riesi t e 'r du o m m thian th tg e t b me naturalized a total revocation of his all glance to any other power, holding fast to his fact. within the treaty, stand in the light of a. foleigner emigrating into North Germany; th t he could not be held to the discharge of arif old military duty, but only to such new Mi . itary duty as would attach to every for eigner emigrating into North Germany and becoming naturalized there. „< • All the proceedings were marked by the disposition to cherish more friendly rela tions with the "United States. . • , On the fourth article I will add a few words. The American law exacts from the citizen who becomes naturalized a perpetual renunciation by oath of his former nation ality. Hitherto the Prussian government has made no formal secognitionotour maw 'ralization laws, but now that it becomes bound by. treaty. to respect thUm; it would tot have restored ,the returning American German to his German: cititehshitr had not .the consent of the United States to his re• lease from his obligation to them . beeri• given, as it is given:by ... the 'fourth article of this treaty. .-- - z.... - I 4 : . e I iemain, sir, yours sincerely, . GEOROR BMWROFT. WILLIAM H. SEN4,w, Esq., Secretary of State, &c. Tim Central Pao .Ballroad has been operated on both slopes.of the Sierra Neva da mountains during April. ' Passengers and freight are hauled by wagons around the incomplete gap of six miles at the east end oflgke suntmit tunnel;when Alley again take t'.-e cars downto. the Big Meadows of the Truckee, one hundred and fifty miles east of Sacramento. The track Ist mean while being graded at the foot of the moun tains, and so soon as' the spring rains admit the line will be, pushed rapidly, forward across the plainsto the Humboldt Valley. It is expected three hundred miles will be an operation in August. TuE Hudson Highland ' Suspehiiori Bridge bill has become, a law. The bridge is proposed to be located at or near Fort Montgomery in the Highlands, and is on tho lmo and of course- in connection with the Erie and Nerw'England Railroad, to be constructed from Turner's on the Erie Railway, to Derby in the State oSCohnett ticut—therefore crtming the Eudson:Firver - rtiad as well as 'all theknorth and south niads 'betANeen thOsMinW: • MEIN =7.1 z{{- „ ' • ' Mr. Darwin has published' more vol umes on the "Variation of Plants and Ani mals under Domestication," to confitm his theory that the different forms of animal and vegetable life have been produced by natural law, and not by creative acts. The conclusions 'of Mr. Darwin may be reduced to four :• • ' • 1. All animals, especially domestic ani mals, have a tendency to great variations of form; and artificial selection depends for its operation on this fact. ' , 2. Many forms of animals and plants, not 1 in existence in nature, but derived from nat ural types, are called into existence by man: 3. These are produced' by artificial selec tion; by a. careful observation of individual variations, - *hich.are selected for breeding; and these are preserved till they are perpet uated as specific.characters. 4. Breeds, which are thus introducea by artificial selection, show differences of ex ternal form and of internal Structure, whicli.would warrant a naturalist, ignorant of their origin, to call them distinct species, or sometimes even distinct genera. Prof. Aglissiz is the leading opponent' of ,13 Mr. ,Darwin' theory.. 'He asserts ' that species are immutable; that man can °rig'- _ nate breeds, but never species; and that breeds are fruitful in offspring, but species if crossed, are barren, or have sterile off spring: He claims, also, that in the whole range of observation in iving nature, or in fosiil history, no instance hits been found of transmutation of Species. Where such emi nent naturalists arc at valance, who can decide the controversy? - American Cities. The London Atheneum remarks in the course of a review of a recent Atnerican vol- ume Baltimore will live in the traveler's rabid. as a city of lovely giris,.of passionate song, and of perfect terrapin. It will keep , its place, when things of higher interest may have passed away . , by the color of its streets, by the dash of its people, by the heat of its pavement, by the frolic of its (pulpit. Other cities of the Union have their charms. Bos ton is very massive; Richmond is very - pic turesque. New York abounds in riches, Chieage , in enterprise,'NCW Orleans in wickedness', St. Louis is fervid, Philadelphis . nobly built; but Baltimore has a charm—beyond, nearly all cities in America, which' . many .a visitor has felt without being able to describe.. The streets are very sunny, the citizens very gay s . But-these things may be seen else , where, in places of which you do notfeel the instant charm. Perhaps the seeret . lies in a certain combination of brightness: and thoughtlessness in the city and the people, which is rather Sicilian than Jimmied:L . New York and New Orleans are far • more dissi pated cities than Baltimote; yet- for &kind . of decorous excess in the ways of vice,— for dancing and dicing, for driving and drinking, for all the delights which are sup posed to hang about wine, woman and song this city on the Chesapeake bears away the bell. - A Pair of Portraits William H. Seward sat on the floor of the. Senate on Friday. His small figure and. slim head, the latter covered with smooth gray and white hair, attracted all attention. Simon Cameron graciously gave him a. chair, and Mr. Bingham addressed him wits the words of welcome and assurance as to his health. Then Thaddeus Stevensengag- - ed in conversation with' Mr. Seward. Two physiques ripe for death were they, but Seward looked the older, having not'the advantage of a dark wig, like Mr. Stevens. The latter is a grand looking old man al ways, but on this occasion his firm month, strong brows, and habitual firmness of cyn icism, gave him great advantage over Sew ard's irregular and weak face, which show ed many facile lines, as of ready wit, but not of deep principles. • Seward has always seemed to me to be a literary mart, intrust ed with statesmanship.' His weaknessestire all those of a professional writer He is fond of talk, of sentimentalizing, of good wine, and frequent rich, food, or riding, flattery and company,., and he always has his leading speeches and state papers writ ten out, maturohied, and forwarded to the press in abundant time to print them with.: out error or abridgment. It was in this way that he lost ppsition in politic% loving the dream of empire more than the abstract truths of freedom, and too indolent at his age (nearly seventy) to join an aggressive party again.—G. A. T. ciarelaticlLeader: =I lOWA, though not yet a q u a rter of a cen tury old, has a population of:' over, onemil lion, and, though not rich, claims to have devised and constructed the most ,commo dious and eligible Hospital for the Insane of any State in the Union. It is located at Mount Pleasant, • Henry county. Its cen tral structure, ninety by sixty feet, is foul. stories high; tbe six wings (forming a quad rangley are three stories; it is built of cut stone lined with brich, has an iron roof, and eleven miles of iron pipes for water, gas and heating. It - has 425 rooms above the basement. - it has cost $600,000, includ ing an Artesian well 2,100 feet deep, which is no longer used, because of the corrosive properties of the water. Dr: R. J. Patter son is the superintendent. SUNDRY representatives of the manufac turing interests of the country, in anticipa tion of the speedy resumption of legislative business in Congress, are in Washington to secure modifications of the Amendatory tax bill passed last Month. They are, greatly diss.atisfied with the two-and-a-half percent., tax on sales, and say the cost of collecting it will.be .so...gre,at-that, the -provialon—will yield little, it any„ revenue.,Theyilthgre fore, will ask the repeal of that section of. the bill, and if the necessities of the country are so great that the manufacturing interests can not be entirely released from taxation, they will suggest especial or Hameln that can be paid without subjecting persons to so mach inquisitorial examination. A Cumous js;supr.aptain Irowell, :of 'I the Milteattke telle us of 4 curious Welt, he - 1 witnessed on' Lake Michigan on •Sunday night. Ho left this poft and s gettingoutinto the lake he found it as calm and still as the river, without a ripple to break its sur face. The lake was frozen over its entire ividthhy a coating of clear blue ice about as t4ck as glass, and so calm was it, there was not sea enough to break this coating. He saw the Ministrae about threl:i miles off, and the reflection of her lights upon the ice was one of the finest sights ever witnessed. The ice was madepn Sunday,evening and night- f t but soon disappeared. Such a sight is wit-. nessed only once in a life time.—Mtheaukee I paper. • TILE Ways and Means Committee,in their , report making the Internal . Revenue Bureau an independent establishment, not under control of the Secretary of the Treasury, provide for one, commissioner, one assistant, and six deputy .cominissioners, besidas solicitor. The commissioner is to be respon sible for the entire duniagethent of the Bu reau, min for the odllection of revenues, and to this end he is to have sole power of removing and appointing collectors, asses'. sore, and their"assistants. , % RE , lik a n tli th den tose ti nf o . f the W ij itte nivt be nn% a C t ° D li e e' l g a4 e ware, - dehottnoedtho diottontfairhig skit 'ofthe Ohio Legielathre; in a 'series :of ittsolutioni. rm--i—fi - iv prose•,:s:lirti4il,6 -- - -- . 1 g• i Over two hundred ragabais of the medi cal faculty assembled .th 4 other day in the anatomical museum aitached to Bellevue Hospital, New York, to be present at an autopsy of the ' bodyl Of a female, aged about thirty, dead seventy-six days, which had been preserved inf Tlike freshness by a new process of embal 1-like called "nekros oziac. ' Professor Do omits presided over the autopsy, in which several of the most distinguished physicians and. surgeons of the city . participated. 'riiis new process of embalming consists siMply in a wash of the deceased body without I round or incision. Some of its specialities;dre to dispense with the old system, of disenilsceling and ex tracting the brain; also voiding mutilation or injection of any kind, and acting asks thorough disinfectant.' e body operated upon this day woo not. t'he slightest de ,gree discolored; the featinctwere asregular . as in life, and the misell l i Its'inoffensive as of a body twenty-fotrr honts after death. The• opening ofthe body regealed the fact that: the bowels and brains, ds well as 'the flesh, were free of the slightest appearance of taint or of smell. Thel :limbs -were as plia ble as in life. Sever,* Of the Burgeons spoke in high terms of, the extranimary discovery ao likely to. WOrk a revolution in • the preservation and trasportationt of dead bodies. Another body) preserved by the same process for , onoljhundred and- tiwee days has been subjected to an equally satis factory examination. MMQZ Mlxed it'sunity. - A gentleman well idown to one of our friends relateslhe folloidt , iturious. family experience: I got acquainted with a. young, widow , who lived • with her step', daughter in. the• same house; r marri4d. the - widow,: my . father married. the step!-tiatighter of my wife; my wife became the, mother-in-law and also • the•daughter-hulaw Of my own father; nay wife's step-daughter is My: step-mother, and I am the step. tier of t my mother-iralaw; my step-mother,:wito the step-daughter of my wife, has al boy; he. is naturally my stepubrother, but , because. he; is- the eon of ow wife's sleptlaughtir,..so lanky wife the grandmother of., the little.boy, and I am,the grandfather of .my . sgep4brother; my wife has also , a boy;;my stepmother. is, comae q_nentlyr.the step-stster of: my boy, and is also his- grandinothett beame- he is- the child - of her step-ion,l and my father IS-the brother4n-law of mY eon, because ha has got his step—sister for a...wife; I am the brother of my owu n tlmp.wholathe son of ray step-mother, La thellbrother-in-law of my mother; my wife Idt the au.ut . of her .own 'son; my_son is. the grandson of. my father, and I tun my own graildfather.r A writer in .Thitna: 'Monthly ,Nragsatrie this sums up the bap lo • t ottheJapagese - "Take the Japaneselas-a.,whole, high and , low, tich and poor !they are the bestled, best dad, best lodgtil; , letiat overworked and'most genial and happy people on. the face of the earth. "Fbod is-abundant and obeap—imagina ry wants rare; an thus. temptations to crime are less thaMiwith us, though the land is- no 'Utopia. . • "There is-no suchl44.as squalor- to be seen in Japan. In the house of the very poorest, a lafth ave4e belle might sit:upon the matted floor without' soiling her dress. The-streets are adn "utibly sewered; ali offal and garba,g . ,e are renOved,for manure. "There is no bigotry.. ,The people are wondf , q-no iha tred ' t is fearer &deal diem QM =2 - CONSU*PTION.. Check and conqueritOsd vances, laist you fall the , victim. When ittackeltrlth any a Its preliminat7 symptoms, no matter lusic slight, be on your guar* and promptly use die riknedy ere Oa late. 1 ' DE. SARGENTS COUGH, SYRUP._ Isms ol,d; 'Well tried. 4n re ttain an standard mad, fOr CofighS, - Colds, ..iiathnk; Croup, _ Difficulty of Breathing, Pain or OP"pressloar in the Chess or Lungs. and all DiseasOpf the Pulmonary Organs. Itssure and certain elacy has. been fully tasted and endorsed for Man , ears by numbers of well known citlseasin our dst, and their certiliscates are on record. ' Have A mush which has grad ually Increased !rem a light one to one of perms nenestanding? Logonetimes but procure a bottle of DR. SARGENT'S cquGrt SYRUP: which will surely relieve you of the dangerous premonitory symptoms and effect Z. IDeMXlAllent cure. Do you spend miserable days • Unkl_ dew sleepless nights of torture and pain from idiseks of Asthma or Dliileni ty of Breathing? Dr; [SARGENT'S' Cough Syrup wilt act promptly. relieve you, and gradually re shire you to your freedd of pain, and sound, pleas ant sleep. Are your lungs sore and Irritated, Lndl caring Inilammatlon ? Iltils is one of the most dan gerous symptoms, and should be promptly removed. Dr. SAROENT'S' Cough syrup will heal the sore ness. allay the Inflammation, and restore the lungs. to their prestine btadh and vigor. This Cough, 1 Syrup is pleasant and agreeable to take, while pow erful and sure in its action. For sale by all Drug gists in the country., 1 i , ' FALLACIES 9 ~77 F THE . FACULTY.' "The stomach is the ne organ of the system. It BIC digestion is imp rteet, every member, evert gland, ereirmusele, fiery nerve and fibre Ismer* or less out of order. 1/ 9 11 the fluids are depraved. The brain is clouded/ The spirits are depressed. AU dyspeptics knout liis ;..) be the truth. It is not, however, half the truth. Columns would be re quired to enumerate tilt pains and penalties of dys pepsia, nor could any lien do them justice. Tens of. • thousandsfeef them; 1.1? man can describe them. • Can they be preveUed ? Can they be relieved? Can they be banished at once and forever? Unques tionably- they can. No dyspeptic has ever taken HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS in vain. Be lieve no one who saySi the complaint is incurable. . This great vegetable stomachic will eradicate it—is .eradicating it in thousands of cases over which med ical practitioners haveishaken their heads ominous ly, saying, "Nothing ane be done." • The .faculty has its (insoles. One of them is that indigestion Is the moist difficult of all the ordinary ailments "o'f mankind te combat and subdue. This Is a mistake. Nothing tan be easier than to conquer It if the true specific beiadministered. This vegetable dombinatiou which ilds become famous throughout the civilized World' of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS is 'an aulote to the disease which has never been known. d fall, and fortunately it Is everywhere procura le.. If you wish to fool with the dyspepsia, try the Pharmacopoeia prescriptions. If you want to root # out and prevent Its occurrence take the Bitters deli There. Is no discount on - the testimony in its•favo a If there is a-man or woman who has ever tried 1 for indigestion without being beinfitted, Abe fact has not transpired. Universal, uncontrafficted pralM avouches its wonderful tonic virtues: . I ANOTHER - C URE OF DEA • -- I leetray hearing .filtring the last ' yeitr. Part of . the time I was totalli deal In April of this year I was induced, from as advertisement, to Make apr, ? ii, plication to Dn. ICE.I. - . in, 110 Penn streets PH* . .• ' burgh. After havin -tried varftras medicines from doctors, without nal:ibeneilt. r itave bieu under Dr..... geyser's treatment nip* . for nearly two mOuthi, ani; ~':: 1 am.etaliely iestore to - my, hearing, so that I Oa, .: .'.;-I !tear a pia drop.l ~t JOHN SCANLAN. --' ' I_l ' • ' • Doi Miffs', Washington co., •P?ii 7 ', , , • liilt CURE. -- • - , "; • f r ' S i' A man called t at' Dr. Keyser!' office to in , form him eta great Fire made by his LUNG! 0 . 01, or ; . : I , Pimstoliaft.r.R l / 3 1'01,Artili.' list there cures.. ,i are made with the TioietOre preparations, be desires ':!: it to be distinctly understood Met. most of his are" cures are made in r;jeardilneii with the - established ,laps that governithieiaeleuee of aellichie; In which . • !glm beerL pgagedlor the pas Meta) , re Ta ds . . + ,• Last week t!lil..ras also is receilite i a Ittier frou!!t:'-,-' clergyman la.he itlite of .ohlc., detalllllg mothe r : .'itoist wonderftilourg s '-- -', ' • t - '.'f! * '' DB. kirysizren3 :iir.sirmix CoFeirPrlEN.....„...w clit , i .‘ r . RICE IFORLUNG ,. A 279 ~NAIT.I , _I ) u w'''''' riow;;.. gi=l;llP pinty q.insiAsEx 24 ?.. Amu,., ~...f, , -.1f;:, . ritoxie .!m.Writ Pi!. BF. -,,_,,•..;:,c,?1, A• Padise. Mel led Ari-o. • N MEM