ll= 15tt littz'i%lAl 6taisttt. PDILISIFIM DAILY, BY • 112MINAN, GEED & CO., Pioprietm. • B. SISISHINAH, JOSIAH TM, t. Po HOOSTOX. I Jr. P. BI MD. Ultras and Proprietors. . • 011incE: BUILDOI6.I4OS. 84 AND 81,FIFiN ST. OFFICIAL rwrisar et ettuararsk,A*-6-1F- County. . :,. rorist—Do44..,.. Stoti-Wealetd 'W aal* „." gelle-year..o6o 0116 year.s2.s7Oy. 4.5 +Owe moo* 75 Mx mos.. LIM 5 copies. ea*. 1.15 Untie week, le Ttqe, e mos •71 ID "S atom caviler.) ,and one tOisent. MONDAY, JULY 18, 1868. Vim Wtuatpi 9r/inn% ) Issued On Wed l a wesdays and Saturdasis, is, kit and cheap at f am ily newspape r in wslisania. It reit** tack week • ht 'columns of sou maw wetter. IS • the faucet as IBM Le:fie Wit rediabk kiiiVriKkritOt any paper in the 13tcste. its are Used Occiu lied/ by the CisslCessits 4{l6Yheny county for reference in important is:vett° determine OW rating Prices in the f markets at the time of At business transaction in disvute. Terms: SRO .01 1 5° , ont9alar, $1.50 ; in -clubs office,, $1,05 ; in clubs of ten, $1,15, and one free to the getkr.• sip of the club. Hpicimen copies Mat free to any address. .. Wz narr es the inside pages of this isiorning's gezErrg: &emu! page: Poetry, Table Talk, Miseellaneous. Third page : Anemia/ Matters in l New York, Markets . by Telegraph, Rim* News, Imports. Birth poor /ifnanee and Trade, Home Markets. Beeenth, page.:'-"How it feels to' be blown imp." "Fruit," "Little Women," " Willow • " "Bismarck's Daum." GOLD cloaed in Nelar.York on Saturday at 1 411. ' . ALL of SiswAsiv's intimate friends have Come. ont.for tis.A.N-r; They hive no idea of - being on thilosine side. A nimocnaTz6 ?Aran in this city has ont on its' flag "Bnymotra and the Constitu- Von.'! iliave they droripedßiani alieady ? *But& POMEROY speaks of SEYMOUR and But= withrefreshing freedom and unetion, as 1111 may see by reading his invective, 'Whim wereolky elsewhere. A 1 TEE divisicin in the Republican ranks, at .Philidelplua, will soon be closed by the withdrawal of both Mann arid 11AZLE -311:18.11T, the riial candidates for District Lt. President has proclaimed the recon . on of North Carolina, in conformity to ILw. While the Democrats grumble and declaim, the work of restoring the Union on to comp letion. • • VBEYWIEIBB throughout the country Uri, Republicans:are inspired with the as inuiance of victory. The nominations of Riclnfoui and Rusin have changed tbeir . of:success into certainty. Mom, of Philadelphia, sind the Hen. I. S. IdcCiuni, of. Chem le.- burg, Pa:,. have aisociated themlelves. in the practice of law in Philadelphia, and I open an office on Sixth street. L.u:a is in -favor 9f overthrowing the :government& formed lin every Southern State. He is for Nullification first and , ttvoyttion afterwards. His election means other war, to bring back things as they lood-in 1880. ___ .1 7 iii \Sin - morn is the embodiment of Demo %tic hates and prejudices. He represents ly the sentiment that 'opposed and ob. —feta the war throughout, and has done eve4thing possi to prevent_recon. * struction eince• THY. 'CHASE Curs, of. the city of liew York, composed of Conservative Repnbli l r cans and dissatiskied Democrats, hive for ly indorsed the nomination of GRANT .and CoLve*. Tins may be taken as,pne of the straws whim indicate the set of the 'po- Mimi mind.".. Ix 1861, Mi. • Eiwisiork declared that' "successful coercion would be as revolti lionary as Secession. His conduct through . out the great struggle was in, accordance with that opinion. 1 , The men who saved tbe iljnion want no such man to admiriliter the ..Gorernment., Tar:nomination pf , SEIM:LOUD:and BLArn, has plunged the Democrats into the depths lio . cheers; no tiring cif ::4M111101;1.13; welcome candidates. - :Nor will time work any of this depres ,elon of spirits, but 'serve to. nnite it more profound. - 1 1 413peech'oft.1`itkx it I': Biirn in York an Be l tacky. might, , which I've publist elsewheie.leost the Democratic party -:.one thotisang., votes in Allegheny County and fifty tlicinsand in the State., By: all means, gentlenien, help GRANT along ,by puithkg Built on the stump. Mn. Bt./anis letter, given elsewhere in these columns, was not the product of an over-dose of whisky or of a temporarY ebu lition: of temper. After being nominated Jae made .a speec. in the same vein, at New T . ork, of viNch • e give a telegraph(- re port. -Few sold :is whd serve 4 in de cute .....a.tha flag,w be fortrulmiging to vote ?or ;dun, afteipe sing these-documenta. ~W have het fore spoken' ` in 'strong terms of the rei.lntionary hitter, written' ' ,Rlpet monthAy Arr-Buuni,.the Democratic AandUlate for Vice 'President, -and which ensured his:rioininatlon. As part of his • ~current political history,, it, Will repar a :.careful perusal; It reflects more perfectly - .than any other recent doctuitent the real feelings and intentions of a veiilarge ma , jority of the Demoerata. _ . Cosicnarse,lby strong notes in each of the Houses, harrassed a law, providing that , none of thel - Southern States shall partici pate in tb.e approaching presidential elec tion, except such as shall previousithave reconstructed their government". TIM telegraph brings us no tidings of bonfires, drink of guns and illuminations over fixtria+nu f s nomination. These are the usual concomitants of Democratic Na tional nominations; but the party feels too mndi depressed, last now, to burn gun Po wder or anything else over such candidates. Tait decrees of fate, for once, have been reversed. The .Republie, of Thursday last, announced that the nomination of ANDREW .TOrtgeott was that day as certain as the de crees of fate. As he did not get a vote, that day, and BETMOUB was nominated in his stead,_ Fate must have ' reconsidered her decrees between sunrise and noon of that day. , _ Crum, bigiting his influence in favor of JOIERSON'S acquittal, got half a vote for President in the Democratic National CO.ll. vention; BLAIR, by writing a letter in favor of Nullification and Re:volution, lot the nomination fotililice President, from the same Convention. The Chief justice, it seems, was only half a renegade, while BIAIR went the whole figure. . , TAM A.I4IOIIHIVZ VALLEY IUILHOSD COMPANY viawneier in a more flourishing condition than_ at the present time. The receipts from :freights and passeigers are daisy on the increase, while the running expenses are zirpidly being reduced. Through the closeapplicatior, perseverance and industry of its wortliy President, Col: WILLIAM PHILLIPS this important road has surmounted all olistacles and its future opens more brilliant than ever. Taz Demoosti staid pledged, by the action of theirliational ConventiOn, to tax all property ecirially. From this stand point, it is not difficult to determine what they mean by.insistins that National bonds shall be taxed. If they tax the bonds, they must, in order to be consistent, tax all kinds of real estate ! , including farms , and at the same valuati on and rate as they tax bonds. We appeirtid the agricultural Democrats are - not prepared to take So much ' Democ racy as that. 1 Trim New York Pot having denounced Mr. lifoonn a tariff bill as intended rob bery—as designed to,"lncrease the already onerous mimicked duties on iron"—the Iron Age ea attention to the fact that pig, bar and rail iron—which constitute the bulk of the production—are entirely un touched by the bill. • The Iran Age ought to know by this time that the Post is always reckless and un trustworthy in , statements touching the • manufacture of iron in this country. Tan "Pnnourrou ESCORT" wentthrongh this city, on its way to. New York, boldly, in the day time, with flags eying and music' playing, and the local Democratic Coihmit tee of Arrangements riding in a hack in 'front. It sneaked back, at midnight, with lout noise or\parade, nnwelcomed by the lo cal Committee. and without the firing ' of a gnu to announce their arrival. ' "Notand was heard. nor a funeral note., _ As his rpm to the ramparts they hurried." The local bounnittee !might at least have played the Dead March in tanl for them as they passed ontheir cheerless way. TICEBE has been subscribed towards - the capital stock of the Chartiers' Valley. Rail road the sum of $250,000. Originally the owners of the road mace the proposition'to complete it, providing titose interested would subscribe $BOO,OOO to the.stock:- It it thought that the amount subscribed' Rill be accepted in lieu of that required, and a Committee will leave the citytavlay to con sult on the subject with .1. EDGAR (ramp sow, Esq., President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. ''lt is highly probable that the work of completing the road will commence within a comparatively short time. WE NIENTIOICED recently the contraction of the gauge on the Ohio 'and Mississippi Railroad The adjustment bt the quarrel aboutthe Erie Railway was made, in part, to hinge upon the laying down of a third rail, so that all the new rolling stock may be of narrow gauge, and when thef old stock is warn out the broad guage tq be fybandoned. This will'prove the end of wide gauge railways lit coOttry. It costs 'at least ten per cent. more to stock a wide road than a narrow, and ten per cent. more to ruh one when stocked. This difference makes it ha possible for a wide road to compete with a narrow one in carrying either passengers or merehandise. • • ' . . . Gov. GEARY haabeen urged, from various quarters, to, call an exits session , of,the Legislature ; for the purpPS( of amending the Registry Law, so as' to make it conform withlhe ' recent lecTsieli 'of the Supreme Court. ' - There are two objections to taking this .course, either ,of Which, ,ought to be conslusive,: , 0 . i. 'The October election Is so close at hand that' the= Legislature-canioV be con vened,' and the law duly consigered and al tered, in time. to have it properly dissemi nated and carried into . cffect. o 2. No matter I how carefully the law might be altered to make it conform to, the judgment of the Court already pronounced,ttbe revised law would speedily be brought up for fresh tre view, an the Judges .would readify find pretexts or another decisiodagainstls con stitution lily. - • , .. , , , Judges are the most irresponsible of all publid functionartes, and vilien'inclined. to. do ' ,ac wong, or to' sustain one dote by . , ~ others, sily manage , to gild the tamped by platit des about the eonstitution; vener able pre (lents, equity,' natural riglifs: and what no . i t • -, - . Welf lE p i it better, thereflire, not a te call an extra session, but to Wait,till the Legis lature +all '..iniet In regular vAlini iies. Winter...) - 7 ' 1 PITTSBUItOR GAZETTE : MONDAY; JULY 13; 1868 .....THAT The Wiendikof Mr• Bunn, " 4 : 2 7 . wor th r= school teacher, who aspires-to something beyoud the humble position of the , Class-. room, for which, we dare say, he is emi uontly.qualifled, have been working zeal ously s ' g the past six weeks in obtain ing at • tures to a requisition upon him to become the "Independent Working men's and Citizens' candidate for Con, greaa." The document, so long promised" and about which much was said to mislead Republicans as to the numerical strength and political standing of its signers, watspread before the public yesterday in the columns of the Sunday Leader. We were surprised at its weakness. Only same one hundred and eighty names were appended, although the, customary gag—"and fifteen hundred oth ers"—vras pinned to the-tail -end of the re qpisition., Having leisure we made a care fat analysis of the names appended, and found not a dozen which will carry any weight with them in this commdnity, and the overwhelming preponderance of Demo cratic names developed fin no unmistake able manner the strength, and popularity of the gallant IT - math in the rinks of his own parry. Ostensibly the call emanates from the workingmen, but there is to be observed a woful dbficiency of namesbelonging to the leading and intelligent citizens who have hitherto been identified with the cause of • labor reform. Workingmen are no longer to be duped into the support of - political tricksters who sympathize and affiliate with them only so far as to secure place and po sition, and besides, the elms of men to which Mr. DIRTY belongs cannot be reck oned in the laboring element any more, if as much, as the editors: of newspa pers, lawyers, doctors, manufacturers and merchants. The time.; ,is past for such political trickery. ' The - work ingmen have found their way back into the old lines, and instead of setting prem selves up as a distinct organization will make their influence all the more powerful by cooperating withand helping to make up the ranks of the two greakpolitical par ties.. Mr. Braerr,accepts the "invitation," and with. due dignity proceeds: to inform his one hundred and eighty friends and, "fifteen hundred others," of his viewd on the na tional debt, the army and navy, public litids and other leading questions, adopting the ideas of Gen. Sam. Camtir and filling in with "taking talk" intended for the work ingmen alone. It is highly probable •that the. Democrats will unite on Mr. BEATY and place him in nomination against Gen. NEOLZY, for whose defeat . they world move mountains, as his known patriotism and fidelity to Re publican principles render him especially obnoxious to that class of our citizens. How the slate may . be made up is of little mo ment, as no combination or species of sharp political trickery can prevent the Republi can party from sending. General NEOLEY to Congress,and that, too, by an overwhelin- Ing majority. Coicscr.varisst is having a rough time in England, but acts like itself in shutting its eyes and refusing to see the inevitable end of the pending controversy respecting the disestablishment of the Irish Church. Of course, the real dispute lies far back of that question, involving it ohly as it does many others, and giving it conspicuity simply becauge in the progress of the gene ral discussion the time`has arrived to begin an actual movement against the principle of establishing religion by law. Under such circumstances it could not be otherwisethan that the doomed system should be assaulted where it was most indefensible. • Whoever concludes it will not be attacked elsewhere generalizes from do small and ill-assorted a collection of facts as to entitle his judg ment to no weight whatever. They who have carefully observed the current of English thoughts, during the last quarter of a century, as disclosed in monthlies and quoterlies of the higher grade, and in books of the more recondite sorts, have no difficul ty in determining whence the assault upon the Irist4horch comes, what it means and portends, with what auxiliary movements it stands related, and what the upshot of the whole will be. . • The motions of a snake'begin with the head. It is precisely so with human soci ety. The discussion and application ,of Principles begin at the Atm,. with a limited class of select and powerful thinkers. The problems 4 ,they deal.with to-day, will be the topics uppermost,. with the messes ten, or 'twenty years 'hence., It is• always so, and by virtue of. a law never to be successfully resisted; the' head is pre-ordaines l to govern all other. members. Monarchy received its death-wound in England long ago, though It line* it not,. because It took the sentiment of federal loy alty to particular familiesklotig: while' to wear out. Eveh yet iris not entirely bx tinct. , It has still considerable , vitality among the •peasantry. But, just in Propor tion as . that sentiment is weakened,. the life of monarchy dezays.. England really raised froth under . knightly rule,.in all ~ bot' the name, yeFs ago. The power of Parlia ment is greater than that of the queen ; but that is organized bligarchictdlY ; 'not demo erotically. It cannot long remain so// and that is what thepreseth Popidar ino4el4olltt watched with deepest solicitude from this side of the Atlantic, really . signifies. The chief props .of monarchy throughout-, christendorn are the church establishments, and they must;be prostrated: When they shall be no more, all the rest will be corn panttively easy.. - ..Tur.' men who ? ttoderto9h tiM;Prinage meht of the New York Convention aisum ed a delleate and' dfficult task, andnxecut9d It.with 'consummate abilitY. and tact;'playing ono set of delegtites agiiinst another until ate momlent arrivpd for dieelosing their own , purpose,: when they executed it With un ilinciting energy and success. It se,oms probable that these managers bad and have no expectation of carrying •the "elation.= They Ave,"feel and acicnowledgo that all the important issues of the lag , tWeu- ty years are decided irrev ocably against the -Democratic party, and 4t this could not , be without entailing upon it a degree of popular odium that makes the chances hopeless ior some time to come. 80 , circumstanced their aim appears to have been to choose such candidates and avow such doctrines as would beat tend to keep the party together until fresli'questions shall arise of such magnitude as to cast ex isting ones into the background, and, enable the Democrats to take a new start. In addition to this advantage the policy of the managers has another. It affords them an opportunity for maintaining their local organizations, which a different meth od of treatment would -not have kin them. , Mn. HEART ' BEICHOUR, the father of the present Democratic csadidite for [President, was >for some years a Canal; a Commissioner of the State of New York. About 1836, while holding that office, he committed sui cide, in the' basement of his dwelling at titica---the same now occupied by his eMi neht son—by shooting himself with a pistol. Immediately the impression obtained cur rency that his fidUcial accounts were in an t l m unsatisfactory condition ;in n words, tht4, he was a' defaulter. An xtubination showed hfs Offfeliil 'accounts to correct in every partimilai, l and his priVa affairs to be altogether prosperous. He fell by his own - hand, a victim of an overtax brain, as many another man did before and has since. 1 ' This, we think, is theonly eof insan ity in the family. Aeither HORA!rIO, nor his . brother, Joint F., nor his two sisters, (the youngest of whom is the wife of die Hon. Roscos. -Colixtaxa, a R3publicen Member of the United States Senate,) have given the slightest indications of inheriting the malady. The story to that effect, which has obtained currency, was coined by a reckless Bohemian, connected with a West ern journal. MR. 'HORATIO SEYMOUR'S career, as a 1 public man; affords a striking verification of the truth of what Lord CHESTERFIELD said to his son, Pamir STADROPE—"Eloquence and good breeding alone, with an exceeding small degree of parts and knowledge, will carry a man a great way." :4 11is Lordship proceeded to show why this was so—" The elegancy of the style, and the turns of the periods, make the chief impression on hear ers: Give them but one or two round and harmonious periods in a speech, which they will retain and repeat, and they will go home as well satisfied as people do from an opera, humming all the way one or two fa vOritetunes that have struck their ears and are most easily caught. Moat people have ears, but few have judgments; tickle their ears, and depenil upon ityou will catch their judgments, such as they are." • Mr. Seviaoun has no touch or quality of greatness in him. Of comely presence, graceful education, polished manners, a flu ent delivery, and, unexceptionable morals, he has made his way, not , by force of under standing, or imagination,. or reason, but by a pleasing address and an unfailing plausi bility. A CONSIDERABLE body of voters com monly remain undecided to which party they will attach themselves until a Presiden tial canvass is fairly opened by the selection of candidates and the declaration of princi plea. Frequently this class is very large. In that contingency, if they ultimately di vide about equally, the result is involved in doubt'up to the 110 moment; if they take one direction, with oomparative unanimity, their action settles the issue in advance. If any uncertainty had rested, from the beginning, upon the prospects of OaltaiT and Col,Fax--which we, d 6 not believe— it would have been removed by` "the move 4 meat among the doubtfal voters which has been witnessed during the last few days. They show distinct signs of going, almost in a body, for the Chicago nominees. Doubtless the Democratic leaders note • tkis I march and understand what it portends. RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. Bishop Thomson, in an address to the candidates for ordination, at the late session of the East Maine Conference, said : Be ware of any imprudence in your intercourse with families. We are admitted at all hours with a.iiiblime confidence. Let it be re warded with a sublime purity.' A minister guilty of impurity is guilty of a conglomer 'atiori of sibs, fraud, dishonesty, hypocrisy, 'etc. In preaching, beWare of using other men's sermons. This Stultifies the intellect, Impairs the conscienceond the , reputation. Avoid volumes of skeletons. The man who settles down with a stock‘of one hundred and fifty sermons, and says I elm get along now without mental labor this year, Is poor all the year, , and cannot grow. Every min ister ought to write a good sermon each week, but not to use them till he can well extemporize. The grand hymn, beginning, "Rock of Ages cleft - Tor me," is gencrally..belleved to be the productiOn of TopladY2 Facts have been ascertained, on "good and reliable au thority, that it was written by Charles Wes- The consecration, of the Catholic Bishop elect of the Diocese of Erie, having,been autherlzed by the Pope, the ceremony will be performed in St... Paul's Cathedral in this city, on the 2d of August. AS people are apt to get "sleepy in meet lag," the following remedy is buggeded And Warranted to cure the worst chronic oaks:* Take a horse-radish root of good size to the sanctuary, and the moment the sermon begins, put a piece in your mouthof the size of a common acorn, bite and moist-; en it faithfully with the saliva, and,theeyes will not Only be easily kept open, hut Jar ful attention may also be promoted, to the exclusion- of 811 drowsiness till the sermon ends. • Try it, deepy hearer:li . Stingy-Church membera sometimes make the plea for, not eying to , the missiniary cause, thai it iahealib much Of each dollar to send the money to foreign missions.. The Missionary Herald pronounces the state ment a malicious untruth, and demonstrates that for the first fifty years of the American Board, the entire expense of collecting and the Constitution, and who will fail to Ohio ; the cost of publics- dut7 if he allows ; the Constitution to *lib disbursing, includin under a series of Congressional enactments l tions given away • order tb inform the which are in palpable viclation of its Ire._ I i churches of the wor was only about six damental principles. in ~ 1 and a haif per cent . It is a little More now 1 If the President elected by etc T \in consequence of increased expenses of 1 cy enforces or permits others „ulcer* living. . . these reconstruction . acts, the . Radicals', by .. the accession of twenty spurious &niters Two new Presbyt ries have been erected I and fifty Representatives, will control) tie in the far West, th Presbytery of Sante branches of Congress; and his Adminlittra- Fe, in New Mexico and the Presbytery of non will be as powerless as the present one of TtLY. Johnson. '1 I Colorado, in - the territoryof that name . There is but one way to restore the flee_ The volume of sermons, "The Gospel in ernment and the Constitution, and that is the Trees," embracing several. discourses for the President elect to declare these acts null and void, compel the army to undo its delivered by Rev. lAlexander Clark, pastor i usurpations at the South, disperse the car.: of of Pr First Methodist (Protestant) church pe u tlliag State governments, and allow the of this city, has been favorably noticed by white people to reorganize their own leov the press generally. We have not been ernments and elect Senators and Represeo.„ favored with a copy and therefore must h alvee • The Nouse of Re p resentatives will contain a majority of Democrats from • tho take The " Weill! ' of °there ' The New 'ilorth, and they will admit the Represen.. York Christian Advocate, while it commends tatives elected by the white people Of the the style and the lessons inculcated, thinks South, and with the cO-operation entity that one who Contemplates the world of President it will be difficult to compel the mankind as involved ins fearful and fatal ti e rs oeftlisteubColinst o tit e u e tio ni n o . re lt t° X ?o l t il t ruin, which only the mighty power of the able to withstand the public judgment, if Gospel is sufficient to reverse, is tempted to distictly invoked and clearly expres4d, on, impatience at seeing - what purports to be this fundamental issue, and it is the sere the preaching of the. Gospel used for any tray toavoid all future strife to put , this plain) to the country. IL other than that purpose, -epecifically and I r epeat - at this is the real and only: quell earnestly. -. tion which we should allow to control us z N. Fisher, of the Nevada lif. E. Shall we submit to the usurpations byWhicia Rev. A. the Government was overthrown, or shell Conference a ,,legate to the late General we exert ourselves for its full and complete Conference, on his return spent a Sabbath restoration ? It is idle to talk of ,bonds, 1 1 at Salt Lake City. In consequence of his green ic bac creditks, gold, t What he public faith De a , anti the e. acquaintance with some of the offidals, he Eubl. tic f President do in regard td any of these with was invited to , preach in the great Mormon a Congress in both branches controllo4l by ~ Temple, which he accepted. Nearly six t h e carpet-baggers' and their ! aegis 'Be thousand persons, mainly Mormons, includ- will be powerless to stop the supplies; by . ins the elders and leaders, crowded the which idle negroes are organized into polit ical clubs—by which an army is maintained I edifice, attracted by the novel announce- to protect these vagabonds in their entrap . : 'went that a "Gentile" was to preach. upon the ballot . These, and things e According to a late financial exhibit of these, eat up the revenues and resources of the Protestant Episcopal General Theologi- the Governme r nt an between god destroy ld an its edit-- cal Seminary, the value of its real estate, .ak the diffeence d green We can restore We e mu st erre theeetore the Constitution notincluding the Seminary - lots, but those before w finance s , and to do leased for business purposes, amounts to this we must have a President who will ex- 5253,000; personal property in bonds and ecute the-the will of usurpat i the peo of pl C e ongby tra ampknown. ling 1 mortgages and cash $350,563; total $603,563. into dust ons res as the reconstruction acts. I wish to stand . ,The estimated expenses for 1868-9 are, before the Convention upon this issne as it. 417,300; estimated income $15,100. Rev. is one which embraces everything elite that. Francis Vinton, D.D., has been nominated is of value in its large and comprehensive results. It is the one thing that includes all by Miss Ludlow as incumbent of the profes that is wortha contest, and withoutit there sorship recently endowed by her. is nothing that gives dignity, honor or The pastor and session of the Fifth lJni- value to the struggle. Your friendi riPresbyterian church of this city report- . Fusitri P. Bran. ed at a late meeting of the Monongahela Presbytery, that the Mission in the Eighth ward, Pittsburgh, Ithd been organized and the congregation will be known as the Eighth church, Pittsburgh. Thirty-five members were received, sixteen by exami nation and profession, and nineteen by cer tiAcate. - , Reference has already been made to the jubilee meeting of the Episcopal Diocesan Convention of Ohio, since which we gather from its proceedinga that the first Conven tion, held at Worthington fifty years ago, embraced but four clergymen. Now, there are one hundred clergymen engaged in the several fields of labor. The annual address of the Bishops indicated every healthy State of the. Church. The Second Adventists have again fixed the time . for the long-looked - for pe riod of the second coming of the Savior, namely, the 2d of October next. The action of the following Old School Presbyteries, in favor of the basis of union of the Old and New School, are important at this time : Presbytery of Troy unani mously approved the terms of union. The Presbytery of Albany' approved by a vote of—yeas, 42; naie, 1. Carlisle Presbytery, the largest in the Synod of Baltimore, al most a unanimous vote. At the late session of the Ohio Congrega tional Conference of Painesville, a resolu tion was passed disapproving of Masonry, but refused to recommend the exclusion of Mescals from the Church. Thetsnbject of Masonry and secret societies was earnestly debated. Elder Knapp, the noted Baptist revival preacher, held ti. farewell meeting at San Francisco, where he had been laboring for some time. At the close of his address, the young converts presented themselves to the number of one hundred and seventy.' The elder gave the hand of fellowship to each of them, 'with a word of counsel 41nd encour agement. At the late Methodist General Conference, the rule was fixed for future actionthat re baptism, whether baptized in infancy or adult age, is entirely inconsistent with the nature and design of baptism as set forth in the New Testatment. The Memorial Church, just erected by the Lutherans 'at Washington City, occupies's central and commanding posiffee. The Church' is spacious and elegant, and the Sunday Scheel roinn is said to be one of the most commodioui in the cOuntry. - An official meeting of the Free Will Bap tist in Wisconsin *opted a resolution that the raising.of hops, to be used intim manu facture of beer, is an evil, and as arch,' should be c,oridernned by 'all Christians everywhere: . • , At the laying of the, corner stone of the new' Jewish` Temple',' on Broadway, - Cin cinnati, one of the. speakers referred to the restoration of the Jews to Palestine Wan obsplete idea. General. Bleir/ . 8 Letter. WASIIINGTOIt, June 30. 1868. Oolone/James 0. Broadhead: , DrAlt COLONEL:---111 reply to your in quiries, I beg leafe to say . that I leave to , you to determine, on consultation with my friends from . Missouri; whether my name shall be presented to the Democratic con vention, and to submit the following'' as what I consider the real and only issue in this contest: The reconstruction policy of the Radicals' will be complete before the next election; the States:so long excluded will bave been admitted; negro suffrage established, :end carthagaers installedintheir seats in both brapenches of Congress. • There is no possi bility of changing the political character of the Senate, even if the Democrats should elect their President and a majority of the popular branch of Congress. We cannot, therefore, - undo the Radical plan of reoan struttion by 'CongrOisional action; the Sen ate will cmitinne a-bar to its repeal. Must welsubmit to It ?. How can we overthrow. ? It can only be overthrown by the 'authority of the .Executive, who is sworn to mantain . Gov. Gaits* has declined to call ''nn extra session of the Legislature. The following is a letter from him on the subject!: PENNSYLVANIA EXECUTIVE CHAMBER,HARRISBURG PA. July 11th, 1868.—Hon. L. D. Shoemaker, Wilkesbarre, ra.:—Dear Sir : Your letter of the 7th instant, and numerous others on the same sill:Pet, are' . duly received, some suggesting and others opposing an extra session of the! Legisla- t , tare, in consequence of the recent declsion of the Supreme Court against the!; constitu tionality of the Registry Law. I very much regret that decision, annulling an act affecting the purity of ; the ballot-be*, which I regard above all price; but after a most careful examination of the resons. for and against the proposed action, I feel constrained to decline calling ail, extra ses sion. The election laws remain substan tinily the same as for years past,,Und inmy judgment the facts do not present-such an extraordinary occasion as is contemplate* ' by the Constitution. Truly ydare, :(Signed) Jiro. W.lGEAriv.- DO NOT BE DECEIVE!). t... 4 • , When the system is once affected it will not rally of its own accord; it needs helplit must be strengthened and Invigorated; this Is especially the case when the- 1 1 • KIDNEYS, BLADDER OR ITRINAfiIt 'ORGANS , • • .11 . Are affected. Forimmediate relief sup. perms:len% cure, r, ffftl DR. essemars 1 Diuretic cr' Backache PiUs Are & perfectly safe and reliable specific. This well known remedy his effected a large manlier of speedy and remarkable Cares , and have never failed pa giver relief when taken according to directions. Dr. Sargentls Backa;chie PitiB , Are purely vegetable. and contain , to mercury or celomel. They do not exhaust the stem, but or. i the contrary they act an a tonic. imparting new tone 1 and vigor to the organs and strengthlning the whole body. These Pills have stood the tee .of thirty-live 1 i years. and are still gaining in popularity. i . sir yoR BALE' BY DRUGGISTS Dr.A.lr• ItltS IN MEDIC= ENERYWHB E. / 1,:i...4 • Fria, 60-Cents Per Box. 4 .if , - i SECURE HEALTH IN • 'VANCE. It Is as difficult to extinguish a Aging fever as a raging - Pie; but you can preventla conflagration by rendering your dwelling tlre-groof, and you cam prevent an attack o' fever by invigdrating and puri fying your "house of clay" 11 Li The outside' pressure" upon the r ;eonstitution sad the vital bowers at this season; is tremendous. Every pore of the millions which ',over the surface of the body is a drain upon its substance and Ito strength. To meet this depletion!, to lip up the stamina under such a constant outflow of dissolving flesh, a tonic and invigrorans liabsfilutelynecessart, and time, that tries all things. hasproVed that HOS TETTER'S STOMACR BITTERS impart a eegree of strength and resistant power id the .over.taxedi vital- forces, which is unattainable by any other known means. The effect of this Inestimable vege table preparation is to increase the appetite, accel erate digestion;" tone the secretive, organs, give Prniudsato the nerves, purify aid blood, cheer the. 'spirits, and. by thus rallying alf . l the fortes of the. body, enable' it to defy the enervating influenced t h e h ea t, and pfliS triumphantly I.hrough the trying ordeal of- the, simmer months.! As a safeguard against epidemics. and a preVetitive of the feeble ness, lassitude and proqtration4 of which so mad, thodsands complain at this aelnioh it has national reputation founded on twenty.ffie years of uninter , repted and unennallid success. 4 ' - CV RE OF FISTULA.' Du. Rimers : I write to thanif you for yout kind." Hess and scientific manigemenl of my disease+ o r ,: which I t calledlo consult you some time In Januar!, last. You will remember that 1 hid a complicatioi of diseases, which finally ended ins terrible feri,d*; , which I bad been advised to `let ac. count of; a harassing 'cough, Which It was iired might fasten it on my lungs. tkriew that the peep',. '` lair mode of treating diseases` like mine was trf 6 cutting operation, which,.if sliceessful at sil,woold naturally throw the disease open the lungs or 'thitss other_vital orgith, on account lf the suddennaiurof the cure and the immediate ch i ck to the disagrees. • Which I believed Was a salutit# provision of Hater*,' to get rid of some morbid eogditten of the syilallie I'feel perfectly satiated that Your teethed of trait. tevnt. Irielffluit the , system; and loom application* to the listulous 'Dart. must cure, if anything could. without Cutting, which i . end It did, and I am bevy/ to report' myself well in every particular+ 11 1 0' sounder and better health thth I have hadfor Taini ! , I would also add that the a6l,lcations you ma : were almost painless, and tine° left me a new math, with all the eeergies and viger of restored . health. • Yours, gratefully; 1 - DR. KEYSER'S CONSULTATION ROOMS FOR CDRONIC DISEASES, NW IRO rIr.NN from if A. ti. 'UNTIL 9 r.,m+l . _June 17th, 1809. I Nl=