OE E= #65 °: . Wittftt 4 6 4 ti- 7;- t a 2 tat :. , ..I, , g_ ' _ ll %, t-. z ' . '.• .._ !11l e:1 r , ,' : + • Pl7/3111311111) DAILY, BY PENNBTAN, MID & - CO., Proprietors. . • P. 26 .73laVititax, ' , I JOSuir LIRE, tirogliOrs and Proprietors: OFFICE: 'GAZETTE ButiDING; NOB. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. - OFFICIAL PAPER Ol iilialrargh l : Allegheny and Allegheny County. at yi . 1 _8 Weekly . net yeltr.:,..6.llCOne year.S2 501SIngle wpy $1.50 kontn. 75151 x. Ikea.. 1.501 5 cOptes t - ina . ..1.25 igit: week, 15 Three mos 75110 " • 6 1.15 carrier.) 1 . 1 and one to Agent. FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1868. - !HIE WEEKLY GAZETTE, tamed on Wed— ssueLays and Saturdays is the best and cheap .l(:(B • , ast family paper in Pennsylvania. .IS 7•*_i:Prlse" ,- • - -litiok s fort/POISat :columns. of • Ibtid rad( maitter. _lt gives the fullest as wellsikthe t raliable market reports of any paper in i State. Its Oa are used exclu * :' lib ! dy blithe Civil Courts of Allegheny county for reerence in important ilium to determine Pte . ru/iny Trion in the markets at the time of theritivailussstransaction in dU'nnste. Terms: • /Itinirie itopy,'one year, $1.50 ; in dubs of.five, . $1,25; in dubi of ten, $1,15, and one free -- , to' the gaiter up of ,the club._ llpisimen espies ' sent free to any address.'_, . WE r am on; the inside pages of this morning's GAZETTE: Second page: Poetry,' Foreign Notes, Salaries of New York Cler ; Thfel }gage : Pittsburgh ,Markete, Sandal Matters in New York; Markets-by Telegraph, Inspo:rts, River , Notes. Seventh page; Reportofq . cmnittee on inspection of ..:the Allegheny PitblicrSclools, Miscellaneous. GoLD closed in •Tels , yederday at - L 1 • -• • :TniDemocraci of New' York lost their . ;bee!` political wire-worker in the death of et,er Cagger. ',He had been identified with party daring thelast thirty years, and . death found him Ina Convention in politi; -cal business THE succeas..of &maul= at New. York 3111 a sore' bTow to . : the:PEIiDLETON men of ibis region, nad all the more so that they can now see it was the result of a secret in , higae fornied specially for Pzin:mwron's ;49fcat. They look as if they felt conscious :of , baying been .deliberately sold Out. Their long fines and disapPointed looks are pitiful to liehold. IF THE DEIIO6HATS look glum and BOUT over SEIIOI7R'S nomination, the Republi . , • cans, on the contrary, look pleased and gratified...:They ate better satisfied with it than - with any Other nomination the party :could postibly hove made: • It was edifying yesterday afternoon, to look on the faces , of Republicans', all smiles, and contrast them with Democratic countenances, sour, disappointed and in every way unandable. Bolen good:comes out of every ,evil; and severe rebuke administered to CHASE, 7:IIdiCOCK and. ioracson is the gohd that has collie out of the Democratic Neitional Con ; , volition. Poor CR!sni Only four pitiful L" Totes, after goingdoirnso low andbehaving mean ! The rebuke to HAritiOck and • -. .Toinson is notlquite so severe, for they did .not before stand eio high to fall so low; but ,they must,, alike with Ciusz, feel inean and disgraced beyonditedemption. The nominaliton of SEYMOUR waS . an as .,oniattet to the Democrats of this city. It as one of the many things that were ndt dreamed of in their philosophy. And the as tpitiatment, strange to say, producedstapor• instead of excitement. Not .n cheer was -heard frpnt any. Dentocratic throat when the telegraphic ann.outteement of the itomina - lion was made. It', failed to 'provoke the slightest enthuittunnin..any one. It took - the party most unplessanly,by surprise. • ITHes been said that the flintily physician Of , HORATIO SuMOl.9l advisedlini against being a candidate, for ',President, because, there being a hereditary taint of,insanity in the family, the unusual excitement of a Presidential ellction would be sure to de-- velope it. So long iy3116 ieniained perfectly • , sane. HORATIO persistently refused to be a 1 candidate, but, as he has now accepted the nomination, it is falr to infer that the heieditary taint ; his proved too much for him. , • t •IF SEYMOUR 8 •a Tay to .discharge the . duties of • President' are to.be• gauged by - the capacity he shouted as the ,President of the lilig.fttiii.Confeniion;', he must be adjudged utterly incapable He was a deadiallure as - ofile4r.t_ He forgot this, over looked that,, was oblivfous of the rules, 11tindered In his dellifoits[itid then reversed • them, and made complete boggle of it, - geneially., fio• thorough and, complete was phis• break-down, that he was compelled to callto the chair'oue of the Vice-Presidents, „, who was sufficiently versed in 'Parliamen.' tart' la* to make the proceedings' pass off is a ,tolerable Evidently . , HORATIO , NU never cut our for, a President ; ti a" Wars; the news came yesterday , that SE - irmiinn 'was nominated, there was no gathering of Tnthusiaitic Democrats at the , office of the Post to!, respond to the nomina --116ii..7,Tbe-,hlgbest-nutnber-that" could be counted there, - - mil , ' one time, was /14. The factlai it ' - wAs not what might be called au, • ting Awmhiat , lo.e. wasßrobably ,disenased, and not very complimentarily, in - 'irinking saloons, by the''aWfally pointed victims of iti-lmt the streets were 'bars and as quiet osif no. nomination had been' made,h dieds The.; of excited , ,aisk,:expeCtent - DeMocrate:visible on the ;I L mums- „iltstbeffne, diaap*r te l, , . r .; I. „ :44;:t4Ate5,..40.1140.:4;240,14,-ia-eiz - ~'HB~EDIOC~A~I'IC TYCK~'i': The New York gatherifit of Confeder- ate Congrestmen, rebelZaierals-laihrZtorth-, em Copperheads yesterday laid ali t other candidates aside and nominated HottaTio SEV3iottn,Of Wcw York, for the 'Presiden cy. This was the culmination of an in trigue which had, for twenty-one ballots, artfully `;played prominent, _aspirant against anOther, until the object of the in triguers,--the slaughter of PENDLETON and HANcocs— had been neatly and effectively accomplished. The Convention had sat for six days, including Stmday, which seems to have been a Democratic working-day. The Southein and Western delegates were equal. ly eut of:patience and of funds; every other scheme a'nd combination, which could stand in Mr. 13Entorolt's way, had been blown up and shivered to fragments, and the delegates, exhausted and ditacuelized, were sufilelently subdued to be led - quietly, like ltititbs In the hands of the butcher; to their inevitable fate Sixitoun thoroughly represents the Copperhead , element of.. hie, plgty. He is pronounced and thoroughly an exponent of ita most obviate, and ultra opinions, on all National .questions, Repeatedly coin mitted against the kiraints,ToN heresy, he has opposed its incorporation into the party creed, although: helnigist not sppe4io scribe to its: balflwar•expre&Aon in the lieinooratic platform. Hia record through., ont the war was one of imperfectly dis guised' syniliathr thtzetkelliOn. His disloyal efforts to, cacao 1118.0 m Site and its metropolitan city _ eilsi the Federal authority, and to weaken the efficiency of its arms on Southern battle-fields, by awaken ing _a, - spirit actively treasonable _in the miter of tile loyal States, his shameful 'part in inflaming the New York mobs to , -the firing: of orphan asylums, the constructive murder of innocent cliii- dren who perished in the drapes, and to the incipient rebellion, in that city of forty thousand ; Democratic majority,' which, re. draits - to bloodshed,' required the prorapt'intervention of the Feder*. E3ov- ernment, and was only sappressed by the strong hand of' its`- ndlitary power, can never be forgotten. 'HORATIO SEYMOUR was the very man, of all others, who was conspicuously responsible for this abortive treason. And froin that day forward, he has stood convicted of its guilt. His har angues to that infuriated mob, his abso lute failure to labor . loyally for ifs-suppres sion,'and for the upholding of the Federal authority, his undisguised hostility to the National efforts to .ni4iintain the suprema cy Of the Republic—a hostility which he was ozever able to, conceal, whether as a citizen l • Or•as Governoi of his State—and his subsequent sympathies with the con-, tintied,reltel, opposition to the reconstruc tion of their States in the interests , of , loyalty,—certainly 'nothhig • more is -needed to show that the Democracies of 1860 and. 1868 are identical, and that SEY moult fitly represents them both. Our political history does not record an intrigue more selfish and, shameless than this, which has achieved hii nomination at the expense of the; other candidates and, as he has himself acknowledged, of his own honor. But this is purely a Democratic af fair, and we feel no concern in it,, except to congratulate our Republican friends upon that actierC oar 4ippiitneuts which, dis honored';by ita own admissions noir, will in .due time be sttll more effectively con demned by the popular voice. The; same party has nominated Mr. F. P. Brant 'for Vice: President, according, the place to him on the first -ballot, and by ac clamation. This man acted' with the Re publicans in 1 60;-‘he - turnekagainst us:subse quently throne" I,penional and local quer -rel in Missouri, and is now a Copperheadlio extreme, that he asserts it to be the duty of the President elect "to declare, the recon strnetian hag lull 5 1u111‘ veld,' compel the' army to rindo its rumrpations at the South, disperse the carpet-bag State governments," (tc.; &v. • In the same letter;:he says,that "it is idle to talk' of greenbs, gold, the public faith, the; public credit;", until the Constitution "shill be restored by ~a Pres iiient4ho will trample into dust the usurpa l tions of 'Congress known as the reconstruc tion acts.". This intemperate and revolu tionary letter from which we quote, was written by him eicpressly to place Um as a candidate before the Convention, "He wished to stand before the Convention on that issue as the only one worth contending for." The 'Convention takes him and his platform; and : thereby -, illustrates its own spirit and intentions, in-the clearesi These nominations may have been in tended to - stiviithe organitation, but after the election 'there will be only a Ade: ton of it left to be preserved. Arrayed against them mud, lie' every lover of the Union—every loyal. hand ! Abet upheld the ark of the NatiOnal honor in the fearful'War •of the rebellion4- 4 4sitery loyaV.heart which gave then, and still gives, its, prayers and its hopes for the , peace and the glory of the , R e publiO:-every voter wtiO .believes that . trgason is a crime, thrttithellion was wick-' can*, and that our only path to peace and. Rational i.rosperitY lics,in the perpetuation I of'the Union—every citizen who believes in the Go d:givett rights of a coramonhannanity, =pa the , supremacy of a loyal government over a loyaf people—all - those who prefer Iliatthe Southern contest be not re•opened —all who degire that the Southern people should a• be' , .stifferell ,to make a fair ,of ;the : new scheme of self government which they have just adopted— all -who think that the country has suffered,. long `enough from the etrifei; dissensibris and the bloody war which' this Dentocratic pirty bNeght upon us eight, years since all who 'uphold the Rational 'falth--itillxoß... believp 4th/4„ ,trtto ; Democracy should be • Honesty, Patriotism, Peace and EquaLiuti- , Repablicanisra, in the' Union, in Libertrand Christianity the living and practical ideas which alone should rule #l6-4'`m!irl6-4*:•PdAle* And the Oiliart .L kt,t u m aztaaay The xa , CitY 'Rept Wein tee meets soon, to decide, uoin WI Convention to nominate a M4fif; ler and Treasurer, for at the October election. Thefet ate of lit reasons for the desire that the (ionwelltee shall be led to the atfoptlon of the tonal ef , feetive measures for omitting the'istlelifloti. cy of Republican principles even' tt@pfielt went of the city governineill, pop-- ular choice of such canilfilMes Shall faith= fully represent the very large - Republican majority of our citizens: We hate been admonished, by a 'lore• experieliee, that the plan of nomination Merle In vogue is Ua= ble to very grave objeotion#, audi o itoiccd, as- to imperil the Itepuhlioatt control or municipal affairs, The Incidents T am! te. sults of the lastpudest for the Mayoralty, were such as ,to prove that the-time hart come for the party to' get out Of the old ruts anti upon some now. track, in its infithoil of effecting nominations, or else that some other remodY must be devised for the mis chiefs, in pest experience so flagriutt, which hitve practically nullified the benefits legiti• mutely dudte Prank 'and dill consultation among honorable politicians. It has come to bo understood, and admitted freely, even by ihnieteran manipulators , of nominating Conventions, that some oiliugo be made, In the interest! -eV -a mere perfect, 'harnionY, of purer ancl more straightforward tactics, -of, a fakes trial of thb popular strength of 'the respec tire bandideites for the non:dilations, and; f a more cordial acquiescence by all in the seleonii when Maisie, It Is not so much thep ode , !n of appointing the delegates that: is foufnobjectiotiableindeed we question' ifany hitter plan in that •respect can be practically devised, than the present. Bift the dissatisfactions, the heart-burnings and aversions toward the" ticket, which have heretofore embarrassed the Republican ac lion; have resti:ted almost ex - elusively from allegations of misconduct against the dele gates. Year after year, the ticket has been assailed, with more or less persistent acri mony; as the product of log-rollini combi nations, by which minorities among dele gates are charged with parcelling out among themselves the o ffi ces whiCh ni ter of them hashed the separate strength to secure. It is not to be wondered at that the friends of Al who has really more votes'than any offier man -for a nomination, should com plain-it - finding themselves beaten by an opposition which secures a majority sup port by going for 13, C and D, for the other offices which they respectively desire, Con; tendons organized in thisway_ have come to be too often controlled by "rings," thus made up among.the espirantawho are really less prominent, and who could never have secured, respectively, majorities of the dale- gates upon a square popular vote. It would be well Tor the Committee to I conilder ; not only the expediency, but the need, in fact, for breaking up this faulty and dangerous propensity, to ring-tactles and log-rolling. 'They will be entirely right in concluding that any Municipal ticket, each of the candidates upon which is fairly and undeniably placed thereon by the pref erence of a majority of the Republican voters attending the primary meetings, will be cordially and triumphantly sustained by the hearty and undivided votes of the Union Republicans of this city. No such ticket will ever be bolted, scratched or defeated. With such a ticket, the polls in this city will invariably.open with , the Republicans con fident and cordially. united, and will as reg-' ularly close upon swelled and still welling Republican majorities . And with that con clusion, the Committee should have no hesita tion in recommending the amendment of the old system, in such partieulatsand to such an extent as shall the most faithfully con rduce to the more - cOrdial solidarity of the `:Republican party in-Pittsburgk. Quite sure as we are that thiasiihject will receive die consideration froncthe Commit ! tee, -we deem •it not improper to suggest I that the Republicans of Philadelphia, mak ing the Same objections ea 'ablicilai system I which had for years dragged down their local politics frOM bad to worsen until the most diaastrofis results to the party were threatened, have recently devised and ap plied a remedy of the most radical and effi- cient character. They revised their Con vention system so as to cat this log-rolling business up by the roots., Their Executive Committee, abandoning the old plan of one Convention and tie set of delegates for fill ing the nominations to all the offices, adopt ed' the simple, natural and moat effective alternative, by ordering the assemblage, on the same day and hour, of separate Conven tibna, and delegates for earn office. The effect of this action- was magical. Thirty three different Conventions' assembled, each of their hating,but one office to consider, and all but one of these aocomplished its work, promptly and harmeniously. ' The exceptionresulted in a schism, butthis con erned - one office only; as to the other thirty 4wO, these -: schismatics were as entirely agreed as . any ,of the party, and their split has itself already been healed by' the, .withdrawal Cli" ' both candidates, and that Contention will re•assemble to make ,another nomination. Here 'was one of the beauties of the new system, that even a split upon , one, office could not ex tend to the rest of the ticket, : which the other delegates 'had hannoniouSly agreed upon. We have said thd effect was magical. For the first time in the 'politics of that city, a great party had accomplished its nomina tions without leaving an element of dissatis faction and. weakness behipd. Every name upon it was placed there by a majority of the delegates fairly , elected upon a square vote. Log-rolling was played out com pletely. If it existed at all, it was in the . , primary meetings, where it could-do little 11Fra, as long as thes.neople were there to watch it . and ha;ie . a hand in it. And, as ;when. the Philadelphia Conventinn adjourn , . ed three weeks ago, so to-day not a murmur of dissatisfaction has heeri heard ;The jorgarotiFs% compact and reiolute, and the October faction wiil i witn r esikA tun and heart] vote NOB Preclieli4)l4 Witgirlaio)l4l4lll4A if our s soti r e-u,Ab a,e,t— , ..'oterttenikiliiittd - lo= IF Iltint, Philadelphia plan. Its al* !nip much easier here since; rations. and as many sets o e required. Could there l une period for making the aniiiiifte 'ca r b y adopting the pilotion td ce but limo Cony dologofrs, will lip i tooro-oppo dotage? • fie Tlu INQUkST. Demoerney of Western h 1 i and other Western VEIIDICT The bstol►vti summoned by in atllictive view the il l nortal remains of non 11.'I'snor,wron. Cut of ils 'strong life in the f his plattire-esque beauty, bora it 'vigor of his' manly iw 1 ted bonds which have 1) and threatened to etran a virtuous and indor'rupt .l hapless victim ,o! a most oni lies cold and stiff Jain of political death. WlllO i1111111)14) ,1 ilipinnototion, to their friend, Ott, off IJI the 'IOW!) r/f4014A1 bloom in thn moot too l etricn against th ontUngind thn 11 gin the breitth o 1140 party—thl, rout ussusslost, lu the gory o spirited and, vigilant —that devoted band which, Not. even enro of his Es miliao the 'demise of Its leader, has evapo ; rated into the viewless air—could be effective to guard ....ro l in Greenbacks" ' from the Murderouseblow. The : assassins slew him • in thidiirk clots 91 Taminany, and only his gaffing wonn, s can tell the tale, "the deep 'damnation of his _taking off." The assassins live; 'they ri . en'boast of the deed. Those hated bonds are wound an twisted and redoubled: closer and ti ght r abCut Democratic limbs, and 'the melancholy pros- . pect is that, net only a candidate .basely plain, but a party hopelessly hetrafed will .ore long be the subjects of "c owner's quests." , : But'another corpse Claims efficia notice. With some difficulty, and only lif4V6 close examinatleityy the few Irian& :who knew the, deceased' intiniate . ly while' `living, it is , . recognized. .I.The 'death has been recent, brit decomposition seeins to have very rap idly set in, and too close proximity to the body is especially offensive to the senses of the by-slanders. But there is no doubt that it is really all that remains on earth of t 1 = late Chief Justice CITABE, sometimes known while living as "Old Greenbacks." Shock hig as is the spectacle which the body pre sents, a large . crowd is collected, of all shades of opinien and from every quarter, representing - in-fact every party among his late fellow citizens, which, in stead of being properly awe-'stricken by the scene, indecently moat - , and sneer, and ridicule the, -lifeless . clay. A jury, hastily impannelled, hears all the accessible evidence, and has no hesita tion in finding it to be a clear case of suicide. The &Ceased could hardly have been of sane mind, since witnesses declare that he had made repeated attempts upon his own political life, finally accomplishing his wretched purpose at New York. The ver dict is accordingly : "Perished by his own hand, under a long-continued aberration of mind, supposed to , have been induced by an intemperate indulgence in political am bition. We, the jury, find him very dead, and smelling very bad." - , The remains of both were removed, the first to be einbabned and then . enshrined by thousands of mourner's in .a splendid mauso'- leuni, while the others were hustled into a -hole in the earth and covered up at the public expense. They both sleep the sleep that shall know no political waking ! A MYSTERY, AND A REVELATION. On Tuesday night, alter six neffectnal ballotmgs in the Conyention, iL' became evident that the powerful New York dele gation, with such interests as they could control in the other States, entertained same mysterloukpurlxiSe'as to the nomination to beinades. mystery •ao`impenetrable that, beyond the intent to defeat PENDLETON, nothing more r,ould,,be divined. Specula tions were rife as to the preference which they would ultimately disclose; some opin ions led one way and some still another, the belief that Cintsz. Was.really, their fa yorite perhaps predominating. True, XT. SEYMOUR had been spoken of ; but he had repeatedly, the last time from the very plat ' form of the Convention, declined the honor, absolutely declaring that he could in no event be a candidate. It was insisted in some quarters that this refusal might be withdrawn, but the public finally agreed that he was out of the field, and that his name would not solve the mystery. That night, riding in the Central Park, his friend, Mr. PETER CAGGER, the most conspicuous and influential political manager of the Now York Democracy, was thrown from his can.' riage and almost instantly killed. A. re porter says : Just before the catastrophe, and yet when It was Inevitable, Mr. Cagger le reported to have exclaim ed, "This Is the last of. it. John. But tell them to stick to Seymour, it power," These were his last words. ' : : • ' His companion, Mr. JOun E. DisviaN, survived, although fearfully hyrt, to report those last words. The 'bated breath of the dying politician revealed the whole pur pose of the NeW York .Democracy. Their game had been played, from first to last— and he kneNrit, for he had been its control ling spirit-to secure the nomination of Horan° 'l3rvasonn. That was a fin e stroke of finesse; allowed the public to be deluded with the idea, that CHAsn - would be the beneficiary of their perfected designs; a game with only that cbject would have been shallow, too palpable to suit these adroit poli ticians.' The candidate's own reiterated declinationswere but Cassn's thrice put ting the crown away, but the Lupercal nev ertheless heard the cheers for his final as sumption of the purple. ,The intrigue was deeply laid, and its revelation was delayed until its Masterly consummatio , except in , thissping,. unstudied, hear nfession Of poor l lC ra Ataamt, who, no longer t e astute and schemiyg politician,, hung fo a moment, trembling and conscious moltality, the nat ural man and nOthing more, in the, ver,gate way of death. More thap this, the dying man's, last = utterances, thus given to' his friend,' reyeal; the devoted -attaciliment of his school. of politicians to the candidate wtwee-enuaelhey led - espoused; This at laehment ivas:qnite cemne4 pereencl as Po - MC Aan d • bat beei Cemented ,brthirty nat. Of thts s Meet'aM# 4 lo,l l tW i*erc, *OP 1 !: *APO. of Shit Paitr . ea AL Q. 18618. ill;'ll.jlWaa: fiiZa Train Breen Through a Bridge and Two- Passenger Cars Wreeked-- - List of the Killed and_Wounded--Bridge Sup posed to Have Been Tampered With. (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.) Pa., July 9.---The Erie express train on the Philadelphia and Erie Rail road, which left Erie at 7.40 last evening, broke through a bridge over French creek, about three-quarters of a mile east "of Union. Mills. The engine, tender and bag gage car got over safely, but the two pas senger cars went through= the bridge, the bind car running on top of the other, mak ing a complete wreck. There was about five feet of• water in the creek. The following• is the list of the killed: Mrs. J. A.Peese, Flat Rock, Seneca county, Ohio, and her two children, aged two years and tough months, and fourteen months; Miss Angie S. Brainard, of Erie, formerly of Vernon, Oneida eonnty, New York; Jen nie Patton, daughter of Scott Patton, of Erie, aged three years. , The wounded, severely, areas.follows: Mrs. Andreiv McCrea, Concord, Erie coun ty. Pa., her shotilder and abdomen severely hurt, hopes of recovery; E. Hippie, Erie severe injury, face bruised and body gen erally; Frank D. Reeves, Warren, Pa., leg, back and: body and artery in left hand cut; Mrs. Jerome Woodbury, Jefferson comity, Pa., severely, neck and shoulder; John Boyce, conductor, serious internal injuries The following were slightly wounded: Warren Post, Jamestown, New York; C. O. Bowman, Corry, Pa.: N. R. Bates, 11- tusville, Pa.; L. VV. Holmes. Spartansburg, Pa.; H. Bartlett, Corry, Pa.; H. Baker, Corry, Pa.; Win. Furey, brakeman; Chas. Freedy, baggagernan• Scott Patton, Erie, wife and three children, all slightly wounded. - The bridge was examined within two weeks and pronounced perfectly safe. - A heavy freight train, with an engine ten tons heavier than the passenger engine, went over the bridge yesterday afternoon. The bolts of the bridge were found with the nuts unscrewed and it is supposed the bridge was tampered with to plunder the train, several passengers being robbed on the train while in the wreck and the bag gage broken open and rifled of valuables. A special train with medical assistance was sent from here last evening, the injur ed receiving every attention. Another Railroad Accident. " NEW YORK, July 9.—The baggage car, two passenger coaches and the sleeping car on the Rutland and Washington Railroad, near Cambridge, above Troy, were thrown from the traok early en Tuesday morning, by the displacement of a rail, Ten or twelve passengers were injured, three of them, an old lady and two men, probably fatally. The passenger coaches were con siderably, broken, and the baggage car campletely demolished. -` BRIEF NEWS ITEMS. —Tht colony of Georgians who•went to Honduras have mostly returned. , —Capt.- Wm. Lee has been appoliited Chief of Police of St. Louis, vice Colonel Fenn. - —The Grand Army of the Republic-Con vention assembled at Pottsville, Pa., yes terday.' —A Havana letter gives a rumor of an in tended invasion of Mexico by late Imperial leaders. —The Palace Varieties, an old place of amusement in Cincinnati, was destroyed by fire last night. —A ere at Champaign, DI., on the 6th, destroyed property valued at 8l00,000; in sured for 645,000. , —The United States bonded warehouse of S. C. Sloan, at St. Louis, was nearly de stroyed by tire yesterday. - —Gen. Grant and family arrived at St. Louis on Tuesday, and yesterday visited his'farm, a few miles above the city. —Gen. Howard, with the approval of the Secretary of War, has instituted proceed ings for the removal of the Fieetdmen's Bureau from North .Carolina. —A portion of the Woolen Mills of Boyd, Basket do Co., Decatur, 111., was destroyed by fire on Wednesday morning, Loss, $60,- 060; insured for t1.4,000in Home companies. —Rev. Dr. O'Hara and Rev. Dr. Shauna han, Bishops elect at Scranton and Harris burg, will be consecrated at the Cathedral in Philadelphia on Sunday next by Bishop Wood. -Au ReP_ub in Phil; candict Part,' effort' is being n'ade to have the two lean nominees for District Attorney, /t delpnia, withdrawn, so that a new to may be taken up •on whom the ;:n unite. k Grayson, pedestrian, left Rich ezterday tolvalk to Omaha, to make i emocratio speeches on the way, the .nsome forty-seven days. He car ; ag marked "Democracy." . —Ma' mood sixty I trip, to nog a ;1 and was broken on the Atlantic and Railroad, at Springfield, Alo., on h Inst 4: with imposing ceremonies. :ry C. Fisk, daughter of the Vice. ttnt of the road, removed. the first of- earth. ernor•Geary having been urged to extra session of the Legislature in ~ at the registry law might be modi :. made constitutional, .declined, be ''f the attendant expense and the fact lould be looked on as a partisan 1. ent. trains of the Central Pacific railroad n to Wadsworth, one hundred and Miles east of Sacramento and five d miles from Salt Lake. The Com ave nine thousand men at work, and to lay twenty miles of track • from Big Bend eastward. Aurora, yesterday . afternoon, Thos. I shot his wife at the house of his i r-in-law. The ball entered her head, .ved fatal in an hour. Owens imine= r drew another pistol and shot him= d died instantly. The parties have ,en living together for some • time, to &rally difficulties. Heav3f Rain Storni. Puumno, Pa., July 9, 1868. GiazErrE.: This section was visited day afternoon by a heavy rain storm, did much damage to roads, bridges, and crops in, it 3 path. En yeate. whie. fenoe- Th. its ju acro: abut. river. railioad bridge aerate Deer Creek, at (Aden with Shenango, was carried the latter stream and its beavystone eats were left , near the middle of the I: village is on Sherumg.o, about a mile the mouth of beer (;reek, and the the latter stream was so rapid that ii .d of the Shenango ass not sufficient y off its waters, in consequence of a mirrent was started up the Shenan over the mill-dam of Ravis,-Ketch at this place ' and the, dam having • gilt to resist the passage of the water stream, was oonsiderably injured: :aid thaeCieneralTillow got his "ditch wrong side" •in - Mexico, but who Sound a dam,- before this, with the " on the .wrong 'side. The miller, lid his grinding, was rather astonished that the-.water.had "about faced," I. as t a king his wheels in reverve, com ia just where it had hitherto gone tn. Pu LASKI. and frig o .. i g4 15 41 Mutate' by . Cable. Kos; July 9,--.E'vening:--Comola, • ; 941.0.5; . ac00unt, 95; bonds, 78a73g; 8, 1 1g; Erle, 45g. . • Ipr(llt f T l 4tily 9..-11011d3 EnrooL, July_ 9—Cotton market Is sales amount to 8000 bales mop Min Ln easiol 6.25. . •Loi quiefl NEE . 'Km. Jul y i rgrrßetirkeit . Petroleum Sugar , qvikaild, 044... The det. 4 1. I.- of 04111ofi. ti: th 133Ithy pf s itagland '' ' 4Koilio1 1 i., i' -,, •''',- - -- ' ' 19WPAlit .-- ' ei* 0 4 441 .rt; MEE , - Nk, '4° A4 14 0 '''`N s '44l. Fn: ;4 2s*-Nr * V.44 rF El It But few days have elapsed since there page ed through our dingy, ditty city, gth au . band of heroes, who were wending their way to the great city of New York toni ert mighty influence towards making theb favorite,one "young greenbacks" by name a candidate for the Presidency. Th e came froba the pork-packing village 0 'Cincinnati, and had written on their brow - the sacred words "greenbacks for bonds.> Buoyant with hope, every heart swellini with the importance of the mission, ard ent boisterous, intoxicated with arrimal spirit s they marched through our streets impr ess ing the onlooker with the magnitude 0 the business they had undertaken. n os We re to regulate the great conclave of la terrified about to assemble in the wicked metropolis of the country, and "only this and nothing more." Thiry 'were the Pen. dleten Escm t. But, alas ! These, men were slain. Their bodies pierced through and through with the poisoned arrows at the greedy bond holdrinq will to-day. pu s through the town. Their elastic step will not be heard on our streets. No shout will be raised, no exultant hand wave a banner over their remains. They died as. they liVed—in their sins. With a greenback 'folded on their stiff boaies, a bond drum in their hands, wrapped in the Canted. orate flag, these heroes Will pass through the town unwept, ranhontrred and unsung, and yet they are not unworthy -the sympa thies of those who bewailithe "lost cense: , Into the• valley of death q.crdo these men. Verily, "in- the midst Of ,life we are in death," and "out of this bond-age there is no redemption." 11.- • , Twenty-Seventh Senatorial District--Hon. James Kerr,• of Butlezt County, NOWASt. ted.. .The PeUletsft The 'Conferees of the; Twenty-Seventh Senatorial District met Onnmat M adjourn meot. yesterday morning at eleven o'clock ; . and after , several ballots,t. without mak ing; a nomination, adjourned to meet at ' three; o'clock At three o'clock the Conferees reassem-; bled, and after severat unsuccessftd ballots' adjourned to meet at nine o'clock P. it. Evening Seasion.—At nine o'cicick in the' evening the Committeo of Conference; again assembled, and ;t i n motion of Mr. i Hans, Of Lawrence con ty, the_name of Mr. McKinley was withdra3M''•• On' motion of Mr. McCandless, another ballot was taken, which resulted in the nomination of Hon. Jarttes Kerr. of Butler, by a vote of six to thrbe, the Armktrong delegates voting for Bonner: Notwithstanding over a bundted - ballots I were taken, the meeting was iharmoniolut one in the end, and gas bed of feeling pre vailed from the beglritoUg to the close. Real Estate limns( ers. The following deedS were filed of record ; before 4 H. Bravely, ~ Recorder, July _ _ . . 9, 1868. John P. Schneider to Birmingham Germain Church. ••• May 911,, 1868; a lot in• East ;Birmingham, 120 by n ; feet T. S. Gray et ux. to Illichael-Krall. Januarf24B6B; a lot of 'ground in Narrow Rani: contain - hag 1 acre and 67 perches • • •• • , owl John F. Cluley to Catherine Neely, July_lst. 11918; 2 lots in Colwell's plan, Sevurath.wird . Pittsburgh, each 100 by 90 feet ' • - • • $l,lOO I Juno A. Kaersher• to Valentine' Jones, Nov. 2. ! - 1887; a lot in Eighth ward, Pittshurgtt,=l: ! 800 Joieph Haupt to•Gotielb Billdenberger, March , I 1858; a lot inOhio township, SOO by 50feet MO Wm. Hinely to -Bois Irwin: June Bth, 1868; a lot in • Pitt township 1 11 C. Hanson Lore to John Henry Maper, Aprit 16,1868; two lots in Chartiers tomlnahip, No. 89 and ItO in Hanson Loye's plan ' 96:00 • I Charles Joseph to. Ludwig. Babel, Starch 24th, 1868; i a lot in Reserve township,' lite by 2.5 feet • • $1.700 Crehan tat, 31 - ra.'Ann Civaham, June 28th. 1868; a parcel of ground in the village of NoMestown; also another on the State riantd, the drit'eontaining • 52 4 , 10 perches, the latter Na perches • 5960 • •, MORTGAGES. • Sae e day ele en mortgages were filed. Twenty-Fourth Congressional District.— ; The confereAs - .af the Tw.enty-ropttit Con gressionel DiStrict met yesterday. morning pursuant tol Adjournment, and .continued I in session until one o'clook i .'When they ad- , Joarned to Meet at t l / 4 5, p. in. At two : o'clock they;re.assembled, and after several I urisitccesfullballois, x idjonrued to meet at' ie. ten o'clock this Morning. OT BE DE D. — • min once T reated it will not rally i .cord; it needs help—lt tinst be i d inirigoratild; thbs Is esnectally the When the of 14' airn strengthened a: case when the ADDER 0 URINARY 'ORGANS or Immedlato relief and, permanent DR. DAD iarris KIDNEYS.. B Are Mreeted . 3 -r i c -- • . • r ; or • kaehe Pins ti - ' - safe aid rel bls specitic.;"This well i Ltseffected iilarire number of speedy 'l Cures, and liave never tailed So give ii .7 Item accordin' to 'directions. a gent's A ackache Pills ~i Sl _getable, and contain 'no - mercury or it ydo ' not e.tha st the' systerci, but on 3 hey set as a tOilic. imparting new tone fie organs anih ptrengthening the whole •%:, lilts have stood the test of thirty-five • - ii still gaining n popularity. xi 11 ' • :.t ix I.E. BY • DRUGGISTS AND DEAL- A WINE ENE#YWHEE.E. . . Diure Are a perfect! known reined,. aid remarkab relief when Dr. Ha Are purely v calomel. They the contrary and vigor to qi body. These years, and &raj air FOR 8. ERZ IN NED; e Ceri .Per Box. SECURE.HEALTII IN ADVANCE. It Is as difficult to eetringtrish a 'raging fever as a . raging fire; tnit you can 'prevent a. conflagration by rendering your dweilltig fire-Eroof, and you can prevent an Mack o fever by invigorating and purl- 5 tying your "house of clot , The outside pressure" n on the constitution and the vital powers at this) season - is tremendous. Every pore of the million.e which cover the surface' of the body is &drain upon Its substance and its strength. Tdineet this depletion, to keep up the h - stamina under such a constant outflow of dissolving .1 flesh, a tonic and hivlgoratit ie absolutely necessary, If, and time, that tries all things. him proved that HOB- V. TETTEIt'S BTOki4CII BITTERS impart a c egree 'Of strength and resistant power to the overtaxed 'forces, which is un t.talnable by any other known Means. The effect I ,of this inestimable vege table preparation is to increase the appetite, accel erate ditestlon, tone the' Secretive organs; give F 2 firmness to the nerves, purify the blood, cheer the spirits, and, by titte - rallying 'all the forces of the ' FA body, enable it to defy theneryeting influence of `the heat; and pass triumphantly through the trying • ordeal •Of the summer. menthe:- As a safeguard '1 . 22 againstepldemlca: 'antra Oreventive of the feeble- news, lueltnde and prostriitiMi, of which so many thousands complain at thiii season,' it has a national •scputation founded on tweUty-iteo yearg of uninter rupted Arid tinequilled suCtess. • CURE OF! FISTULA. . Da. %Mita : I write tolttliank Ton fbr your kind ness and scientific ` management of my disease, for which I called to consult you some time in January . . last. • You will remember that I had a complication of diseases, which finallytided in a terrible fistula, , which I had been advise to "let alone," on i .. . ac count of a harassing co ugh, which it was feared might fasten icon my lungif. . I knew that the peen lair mode of treating diseases like mine was by a cutting operation, whieh,lli• successibl at all, would naturally throw the dieeade upon thb, lungs or some Other vital organ, on acsditut of the suddenness of the cure and the immediatil check to the discharge;- which I believed was a'' sautery provision of nature to, get rid of Some morbid condition of the system. I feel perfectly Shaded that your method of treat ment, purifying the sYsttiin, and . looal applications to the re!tetoea - part, must cure, if anything could, without tutting, Wfilch I fi nd it did, and,i. am happy to. Mott InYllelf Well' in ' every particular, with ionnder and better healtiiithani hate had for years. '1 ' would also[ add that tbe 'applications' you made ' were alnioit'painfesiWititiNave tort; ine a neW men. with all the enetirtes Mid *lsor offieitored health. ... xiieri,..gra_tdcuu,y; i-- C--. DIt.*BEYBtIPSTAINSpLTATION ROOMS FOR 1 lit.ol‘lo4nlillAtlMl Ifo:-I,S, IMALSTEZIIT. leolittfri.l4lllVritial If . 7 ;: ( 1 1 : ttittelittl4 itios, ,, : - .::it:1 o t -;Lz , t , L.L I L „ .....LL.I 1,,, .11.4. i ' , t•• _ .t. 4 ii. - ,; i.O 4117.iA t,R,54.ii..:•:.; ' -