A._ M====sm ..:0„ .. F* . ..* . 0tt. I'UBLUNED DAILY, BY nWIM REED & p 0„ ftiorietaL riorimaair, • . zatrus Kula; P.l . ImaraTgot. t P. asion Editors and Proprietors. OWCZt 'INAZETTE BUILDING, NOS. 84 AND 88 FIFTH ST. - - OFFICIAL PAPER iIU.b ens 411.01111117 ramm—notho I sod- fradtsl, Wiatty. w.... year: - 41E00 One yese.P. Single c0py...41A0 inapiis. 15 5112 50041.. 1.50 5 ocies.llop. 1.55 ' she week, 15 Three mos 75 10 1.15 canter. ) ' • sad oas to Agent. MONDAY, JIII,Y 20, 1868. Ts* Wriezza GAzeTTE, utued on Wed mgmetariond Saturdays, is the but andeliosp _nog Samar ;se*.ivaPer in l i onnotioankk 11 _ _ IP each week forty-mat whams of mn t a ' maber •it gives - the failed as pUd reads . moon lathe reliabieetwhittrlpottoof any impels . - age. its OW are iisid eisi!is- - *WY bliglm, cripa qourtl9444 B l_ ihonY "MY for ref - in important iisies 4 to determine `lle ruling ' in Ilte tria+s4o at time of ilhe business transaction in divide. li4ms: 1160 oopycono year, $1.50 ; in dubs Rf.doe, *;# s On aid* of ton, $ l l l5 l and one free r uff ii the 4 :ophsub. opaisen m in wit me io any addkr. WR Piairr on the - inside pages el this .socknitilig's Gebni.ic • iffeeoiul page: Poetry land Ephemeris. 'Third page: Itisaneial Naiteni in Yeti York, Telegraph Markets, -imports - bi Railroad, River Newt. _Rica aye : City Tnance and Trade, .Produas and Markets. Alumna rigs : General Martford Speech, Cremation Japan, Bloating Ambulances, tc., &c. • Qom dosed !Wordily in New York a 248 0 1481 1 • Bow. Wx. Bnm,En is lying _seriously ill at his residence in Clearfield. Tits, Editonal excursion party is-well on I • Its way towards sun-dowst. While at Chi , itiego, en route, the other day, they were 2. _ :nay courteously entertained by the mem bers of the local press. 1 • IT VIM not escape general observation - that while the Republicans in pongress are storing the Southern States, one after an- Wither, to their old places in the Union, every DemocraOmember of both Houses regular ly votes against such restoration. , Ex-Gov C > ra nu has.become President of the - Eastindia Telegraph Company, which purposes to connect the ten principal thief 0 mill by a submerged telegraph eight hundred and tinety-five miles long. The olikie.of the Company is in New York. TEE Ruz-lux arid Blair party in North , Carolina are held responsible for the mys r larious disappearance of Mr.. Ness, the Republican representative elect from the 1 1 11th District of that State, who left his bome for Washington four weeks ago, and Ins not since been heard from, ~.1 . Tait Missouri Republicans, in Conven lien, have nominated Col. AfeCmino, a gal- Lint Union officer and the present R,epre ' 'imitative Si Congreilifrem the Fifth Die tilt. irict, for Governor, and Mi. aznirsni, a . • prominent merchant of Bt. Ms, for Lieu - tenant Ehivernor - with a ticket for,ths ;'ether; : Stabs office& The ends of the Makin in lassoed have sale ed too much, andNishtst powerful odds, in the past.en t years, to - surrender their age; with its • ..! Promieing future for freeclo to m party widchoupparts BLAIR and another . . 1 -, / 6 •,-i ' ' • Ws print this morning the very remar • - \tie article in , which? an influential German po ytin c4 lB newspaper in Ohio, heretofore amp g --Abe Democriiti party, rejects the . ew , Ireik -- 110111t and Platform, as rm . 'worthy of pport Of patriotic and loyal,citizeni. This declaration bas e cited -11 , great sensation in that section of Ohio, and tome of the Copperheads even proposed 40 inaugurate that next war of BLAra's by mobbing the editor who dared to speak his mind. But ultimately, when. - the . affair loOkid aerie* they showed the old wisdom ',1'; . 43f1 the serpent by, crawling into. their holes. NEWSPAPM announcements have been made from time to time to the effectthat the Pennsylvania ; Railroad anigiany had Aimed to l eatablish a line ot,steamships be tween Iliiladelpkia and Liy,erpool. Thee announcements nre certainly Rabic to large qualifications. As welmaderstand the matter .'the Railroad Coinpuni le Inclined to furnish the capital required fo'r two shipkof the con . , templated line, provided other .ptuties will t; pat on enough more yeasele to, enable pne to arrive and depait - eaak iie.elr - thr'oughout . the sh ip. aT9-Te9Afed.4 l 9o4 l l Pur pose. Mr. Thanes A. Sccrrr, Second Vice s , Treshielit'of theltintroid CongianyVie boys , In England on this ;business, and the prode ctition ,or absndonment , ,of the -enterprise will be determined upon w hen . he shall re,- tarn, and in view of such facts as he may have it in bis.PoNief ie resent. SOME months ago President Jonsson wa indigruu4 beeanse Congress though proper to propose amendments to th, Cop stitution. He was for that instrument pre sgaely as it eanie„down from the fathe Oa §aturclay.last ,he sent a message to Co'. I gram, going in for amordextensive alteratio# - Wei Constitution that luta hithesto bee,ia p ro posed. , . Among thenils one for the elec. lion of the President and •Vice President , di _hy thepsivle,whlCh would destrey one essential feattuvsof-the federal system as lust eilsted from the beginning. In the same. tlirection is his recommendation that Unite 4) S t ates Senators be elected by , the people.' Tomsk° this latterrecommenda lien • consistent with itself, be should have . Sc l llo, further and _lmg,gested that 3enatora dlionid be'aptickito l ited tirholig the respeetiVe 13tates4 acoOrding •to'poptthstioW 'Plea 4L• .o-'~N.s•r°e YasAuJ.':es.s~+t.~,w3c-.Y,."`.w. iE2M Irtil4l have reeommendud i tt tutaldeEtt tare those' elements . I hitherto been deemed essential to the just Wanes of our national :system. -l eNeither COngress nor the people will, accept these propositions. . : ME 4 THE DISTURBING ELEMENT. / Whoever considers the present political conclitio: - "net see that the Dernocral to be *hie it has been petit, the chief ele ment tin by menacing it with _ hereditary-re sult of that pernicious deebdOn •in asking which that party repudiated the cardinal doctrines of 'Universal Liberty, allied itself with the Slave Power, and became instru mental in bringing on Mt- Rebellion. It Would not:perhaps, be just to say that this decision was mid, tenaciously, and with a definitetuiders4muling of what it implied, , by,rill qr.-even : a inajority of the men . who participated in it. Parties are but aggrega tions of persons, and are liable to the same Belt deceptioni as the indivldeals who com- pose than. They are as often 'swayed by Passions, dominated by,-..preindlccs, and swept headlong in the pursuit of selfish or unwarrantable ends, as solitary men: When the memorable controversy in re-. laden to slavery commenccd, the Demo- , cretin party sympathized very largely in the views and purposes of the oPponents of that institution. it would have been false to its mune, to its instincts, to the reputations of its founders, and to the memoriesof its early years, if it had not. In Pennsylvania, in State and County Conventions, it at one time took strong grounds against slaverygoing much farther than the Whig partT ever went. But soon it began to distrust its own doctrines, to take Counsel of its fears, to , lis ten to cunning seducemeets froni the slave holding interest, to judge that its way to protractTd supremacy, lay not through championing the Nail rights of all men, but in lending itself to prescription, to caste, to aristocracy Mid slavery. Some experiments In that direction inflamed', its ambition, set a keen edge upon its cupidity, dulled its sense of honor, and transformed it into a bedecked menial of the Slave Power. It began its terrible descent by apologizing for itself; by protesting that it still held to its old ideas of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity, but was overruled by a , sense of paramoarrliga bon to the. Constitution, upon which it put forced said unnatural constructions, :making it seem to say what its words did not im port, and what the fathers never intended, but would.havii been irretrievably disgraced if they had designed. Soon its , mor a l con victions became so blunted that it undertook the justification of Slavery as the natural and necesiii4 condition of the black race, and of the larger part of all races. It as 'Burned a profound knowledge of ethnology; of the distribution of races and their subor dination to one another; of the most recon dite purposes of Providence and of the true intent and meaning of the Holy Scriptures. It was wonderflil to see the Apostles of Democracy go abroad with the Types of Mankind in one pocket and the Bible in the other to prove the dogma that the Supreme Court ultimately thought safe to promul gate that "black men have no rights that white men are bound to respect." ileanwhile the Southern leaders, finding how intensely the Democratic masses had learned t4hate negroes and adore Slavery, c4mcelvedlthe thought of making them the . Instrument for overthrowing the Republic and setting up a monarchical government in Its place. No, difficulty whatever was ex perienced in bringing the Northern Demo cratic lea dm into , the arrangement. The precise extent and terms of this contract have never been dividged;. but enough has transpired to disclose its, general wipe. It was to so change the basis of the govern; Merit as to'bring it into harmony through out with Slavery.' Examples of sneh a gov ernment are not lacking In the history of past ages, nor are _they. entirely unknown to these modern times. , This is why' the Democratic leaders, when the rebellion tamed out, were found to be complete sympathy with It and resorted to , all manner of technical objections to prevent the - nation from saving its own life. When !Revery was overthrown they resent ed its destruction as a great wrong inflicted not only upon the slaveholders, but upon the country aid the whole world. If the Government had listened to their remon strances, and followed in the line of their wishes, the rebellion would have been crowned with success. When the work of Reconstruction com menced, these men were disquieted because safeguards against a recurrence of the tragic scenes of the war "were insisted upon; as also securities for, the rights crf,, the liberated bondmen. The feeling upperniost in their mindewns clearly to get the rebels out of "the i difficitity they were with the the few est losses possible; With '"thp fai'gest practicable amount of power for mischief re:: maining in their hands, and to leave the only it' , gilaik - ria Of freedom, and exposed to serious hazard of having that little takenSrattr.them. , r- 1 1 This is what the Democratic leaders hav been atriving:for during the last four years, and erestilkintent upon pursuing by all the means at their command. The Republicans, on the centrary, want, the great controversy 'closed out,' so that it cannot be:revived: to, the dam age o f per -, sonal liberty ,. and to , the, detriment of all the material `interests of the people. Th e y 'are not disposed• to deal harthly with even the rebel chiefs. 'Not 'one nf them has lost his life by a Military Comtnlssion or by de cree of a Civil Court.- Norr are the Re publicans inclined•to centime for any, fur ther considerable period the disaidlities under which any of the Southern people, now rest. Their 'mishit' not to punish,:or to execute vengeance, but to establish peim neatly the results worked Out by the progress of the war; to ensure juitice , and equality to all classes of citizens; to fortify and pre serve the National honor by fulfilling hon estly all contract s with., its, creditors; and by covering with of all political offences _ as so .. ozi , ascomion prudenctwill allow.. =1 :"x=,~~3E~~ai~r"'f~:i'~'lssr~-.-t~".-~' E?s""i~4-'".t~~ :% r :;.:, LbstmtigitiMlnib,i P i E s i - 7 Er~l : l►7r . lid''Pxmin4erco'lo - 'ePeetle . -i . before the . West Virginia Democratic :-Convention, at - Grafton, olitlie - llith; is an emphatic repu diation of the -, Comierrative construction which the alarm-of ..rmuly. Impala of ,his party has caused theint4i give ttiLikii--:'New, York platform. At the same time, he pro ! ceeds . to declare the true - intent: and :mesningOf that platform, as he understands its finandal bearings. • DiellingMtechdly upon that clause; of the third resolution, which restricts the progress of redemption to the apPlication of the surplus In the , Treasury; from, time' to time, of the ordina ry . receipts from taxation- . -of which we here heretofore obserivedi that the ..Pmatnaz- Tommie would find, Out that plank to be a, sham,-the leading Apostle of greenback-re detnptiOn; pretending to eonstine it,, in effect, repudiates.tinit, plank altrigether. For. he insists, Yost, that warding to the plat-,1 the debt shall lie paid as rapidly as 1 -possible; , ;:Second;.. that. it practitabln ' to' . pay off. "the' very instant you tiip to • do Bo," • it e. this. year, the $830,000p0 •of kende held.in. the Treasury.-as security for the. Natitinal Bank - dradation, substituting the legal tender notes therefor, ter he siMilarlY, held in trust; Third, he would also begin to. redeem,. this year, the $500,000,000, first irsaunOf itire•iwentigi, from' the surplus of notes in the Treasury derived from taxation; goo * * helpropoilet an expansion of the active currency at least $200,000,000 farther; by Issuing that amount of new legal tenders.. This expansitin..he says, would make the people. rich, while, by the redemption of the '5830,000,000 of bonds in 'greenbacks, as above, "the debt, would be reduced $BBO,- *000,000." Th4se legal tender notes, which are equally a public debt, he leaves to be paid. subsequently; when the country. become rich: 'ln all this, Mr. Parrorzron _reiterates his original ideas, exceptthat he seems to aban don, at the requirement of the Convention, his earlier proposition to take up the bonds at once, by making and issuing new legal tenders for this amount, expanding, the cur- ready instantly to the same extent. But the platform does not embody his proposi tion to substitute notes for, the bonds owned by National banks on the Treasury, nor does that platform recognise his theory of expansion. In these" two very •important particulars, the dogmas of the Pendletoni ans have gone to pot with their candidate. The latter, however, deluded with. the hope of a nomination in '72, tries to swallow his chagrin, and engages in an effort to satisfy his old adherents, by deluding them with the notion that the platform accords with his own former position. It does no such thing, as he very well knows, but be has been yery suc cessful in making a set speech which was artfully adapted to reconcile his especial friertds to this year's ticket, but - which at the same , time • gives notice to the politicians of the party that he intends to stand none of theirgammon. To the peo ple, he says: "Support the ticket and plat form ; they are all right." T 3 the leaders of the party, on the other hand, he Bois : "Gentlemen, I am not to be humbulged ; your platform and mine don't agree; e all know it, and I wish you to understand that Your theory is to be construed practically after my Ideas. Let `that be ..understood at once between ourselves, and we can easily satisfy thecrowd." It le very likely that such la the understandint, actually come to, and Mr. Ponourrost, acts ,not unwisely, considtkring the slippery 'faith cd' the poll ticians whom he canner:to with, in making record of the matter in his Grafton. speech. Tua Pottsville Nimes Journsirra most . excellent authority upon all matters relat ing to the anthracite coal trade—gives a very different account of the strike among the miners from that sent . over the country by telegraph. There has been no violence on the part of the workmen; only "demand for increased wages and a redaction of the hours of labor to eight a day. Some of the proprietors who have contracts to fill .have acceded to. both demands; all the others have refused. As the owners are making no money at the current prices, they cannot and will not advance wages until the falling off in the supply of coal shall carry up places, and then they will advance wages in proportion. Consequently, there 25a -fair prospect that the strike will last some weeks. The strike is very general in the Schuyl kill and Carbon •mines, but has not yet reached the Luzerne. In some of the ma chine shops the workmen have also turned Ont. Mn. J. W. Sco'ry has leaned a pamphlet, with the cover embossed in all the bravery of gilt ; /Were, to prove that Igondoa.tand Paris, New York and Philadelphitclare soon to by surpassed ,commercial and mannfacturing metropolis to be situated somewhere between; the Mopelacidare range and the Rocky .Idoeritairts, rad that,the Site thereof will be identical with Toledo. "4 In reaching this conclusion he deals largely in natural laws controlling the dispersion of inhabitants ovorlhes surfaue qL Abe earth, forcing, them arbitrarily to support, a.ire- Conceived theory by presenting such facts as suits his purpose and leaving out of eight all that make agakust It. This Is a coves. Went mode of proceeding, becanse it allows those Who mit to establish whatever prop , osition they will. . Wrina our soldiers were fighting the batile of Gettysburg,,Horatio Seymour was making a speech` in width denounced every effoit ' of the - Government for-Carry ing on the war,' which he declared an enor mous waste of men and money. Two weeks later, he addressed a mob of rioter& and murderers in New York, ,promising them that all measures for recruiting the strength of our, armies should. be "suspend ed." And the !next c year when Sherman was cutting Ids way to the sea, and Farra gut thunderiniat the gates of Mobile, he presided over e Convention which called the war a ." falluze," and demanded a "cell satiow of hostilities." Should, not the sol _dierp be proud to yote for such - a mandidate —especially Amen :the recommendation of 'Patriots like Pendleton, and Vallandizhani.: —Alb. Eve. JOtir,,•. ot. , ...„ • , =MMS= 7 . 1.7,W c yjpa,Pj•,FAV,W•'':':Yg Ck IW•'•4J-34F:NA.ZgaUit:44'af-44:.iag;U$kVVVi?lag •I ki At • • • s„, . . : M ,1- 1 1AY -7 A f retiligfer. Correspondence of the Pittsburgh Gazette.. Crirceoo, July 17th, 1868. Dm GAZETTE The Editorial Excursion Party which left the Union Depot on the noon train, Wednesday last, arrived in Chicago the following morning athalf-put nine o'clock, feeling but little the worse of the hot and scorching 'long ride .over, -the Pittabtolb, Fort Wayne'and Chicago Bail , road. Hid Messrs:. Peale° & Co., the' ,• widely knewn Advertleing Agents. under , whose anapices the melon , is" held, 'sr ranged the party wi , a view solely to have nose other but seal and companionable . gentlemen of the is and quill on board, they could have do e no better, , for "never before have we peril pitted in an occasienof the character irk all- appeared to contaib-: sate so much and ly to the 'general o . l ' their _ ghl*n• Between and good humor, story telling .and; table. talking, the momentit tipedirr rapidly and the enjoynient *se trei,Versal Arrivlsg. in Chicago the party, which has been taken charge of by Mr., S. D. Page, of the Neir York Tribtise--4 gentleman tall lif , gener one idess,, Prompt, 'at deciding what is neeliwy for creature 'comforts, and withal , the est leader who ever hid lairtY of explorers to the Becky Mountains,'or any other, olace---were conveyed to the elegant; Model' hotel of the West, the Sherman House, and were assigned parlors and other apartments. There tiusy 'will ,rensain tmtil this (Friday) • afternoon at three -o'clock, when stakes will , be palled np and the party set forward for Omaha, which city- will be reached on Saturday afternoon. THE wnrrz PAWN. • The party visited the vend Crosby Opera House'list night hisbody by invita tion of Meserw-Hess & clarrett to witness the "White Fawn:"'• Of course the sub scriber accepted the invitation, desiring to brighten up his ideas on theatrical matters, was to be enabled to appreciate the unpar alleled exertions to please the public prom ised fbr next wagon by the high toned and, ni liberal anakement of our own little dinkey of an Opera House. The entertainment was.very grand, and appeared to please the Chicagolans vastly, if we were; to judge from the hearty applause awarded the mul titude of airy fairy dancers. The scenery was elaborate and beautiful, and the New York excursionists awarded the "White Fawn" representation st the Crosby House the palm of superiority over Niblo's Garden. The Opera House under Manager Hess'd administration has enjoyed unusual pros perity. Pittsburgh can never sufficiently man t r a the loss of this manager, who was the say high-toned and faithful caterer to the tes of our citizens thathaa ever shone to lose money in our Smoky city. He' as secured the Crosby Opera House for next sewn and will play the best stars in the country. By the way Lapo, who accom panied the lionfanti troupe to, Pittsburgh, and who was such a favorite with the admi rers of the ballet, was taken home to the East from here, a day or two ago, a perfect wreck, having a complication of diseases, from which it is probable he will never re cover. His sister accompanied him. - Our. visit here is employed in sight see- Mg. In my next I win have something to say of Chicago, as It appeared to me, when shown in her best light by enthusiastic 'sena anxious to have her put forward .into proper rank. Messrs. Purdy, McGann and Fleming of the Pitteburgh delegation are in excellent spirits, and are delighted in com mon with your correspondent with the ex cursion we have entered upon. AN lIPORTANT DECLARATION Seymour, Blair sad Revolution Repudiated by a Carman Democratic Sournal. The Zanesville, Ohio, Grulatia, th e only Gen sum paper published there, and which has hitherto.been Democratic, in last week's inane, rilpudlalea the candidates nominated at New 'fork, and shows a decided leaning towards Grant and Colfax. It reads: Ittmrsoran. (Translated from the Ge rommla.) do lle n 'recently' assembled ' isimmi cienlie bled York irfor . the selection of candidates for gm Presiden cy and Vic& PreilideitayVvirhere- thireyea of both continents were turned with ea pr and also with Anxious! expectation, which the great Industrial Exhibition did not equal nor, call such a rariltitude of people to. wit ness, has, at bet; after 'twentY-tsr6' unitedin selecting a candidate for the. Presidency—a candidate who, itseenw, from the beginning would not have his name used and therefore one whom the Demo- - era& party never more. thought of, viz:: Horatio Seymour, of New York. Notwithstanding they dragged long with the candidate for the Presidency, they , were soon done with the. Vice Presidency, the candidate being proposed, indeed, in a very thoughtless manner and accepted. , Shall we eveour candid and impartial opinion about - the whole matter? After fol lowing with the greatest attention and the highest interest the whole proceedings of the Convention, we cannot help but—supported by the opinion of conservative associations and prominent personslities—think that this' is not the will of the Democratic people. but that it is only the work of a grand, old, wide-and-broad.spun, secret, political clique. Why shall we conceal the truth , and deceive ounelvea? Can patriots stand It with calm. blood to be thus humbugged by the politi cians and, like greenhorns, say to this, lit- ical finesse : Yea and Amen ? Is this an introduction of the Democratic honesty destined to repudiate the . pretended 'radlisereorrilpfkit fs A bad omen. " The , nomlnation , l is therefore, speak freely, `(ind At:finnan''recognizes freedom of , spee*) netlite-expression , of the De= niddricy b t _but fhb work of August' Belmont, ot, York, tho.rich banker, and bond holder. -.Ypere, in this connection, are the fruits 'of progressive Democracy, of 'Democracy that bas leprued...sometbicg. since the ; con menc:ement the war , . and with k ' whom conservative. Republicans could unite ? Is not this nomination anther a retrograding in the old, ways of' Democracy that once destroyed the party and nearly ruinea the country, ? Orohall the nomination of Idr. Blair, who, in his letter to the New York Convention, preached quasi rebellion, and the installation of the President as a dicta tor, be a sign that Dernocracy - will open a way to the prosperity and freedom of the country ? •• / The people expected thL% Convention to fond a renewed, newly-Made, - yigorous t i Democracy;' under whose win . upright Demberats and moderateltopubli DB could associate, and which would set aside the old wire•pullers of:, the party, but w-were they cheated? , A Vallandlgham wasthe firstto bring the nomination of. Seymour on the carpet. A notorious :rebel General Porrest, a 'Wade Hampton, and more ,of the mune, calibre, frame the platform, give the key . - note and play thibig bass Addle, and 'the innocent delegates dance around the,ignia fatuua and, like kegs, Mint 'their win g s: 4 A: f'.ollliiir, velie• ketlegg, age ate,tifd Pa' a, taleeieWl l ,ll4l ..,,, l. I '414- 1.!. 111." i: LI!: N:1:. It.l ~le% I • , ailc fi6B. 31 rebel letterto , the'Convention not only re. oelved . perfect remission for his sins but also "earned full grace.- Such acts as these certainly are greatly applauded by rebels,:lint received with great indignation on the part of war democrats, who, finding themselves deceived, will again tear themselves loose from the party enact. , ing them. The fact of the matter • is; they are speaking . already.. , Consternation and .anguish are in the Democratic camp. No where, not even in New York. Is there true enthusiasm. Gen. :.Sherman declares for Grant against• Seymour, and, so •up to this time, do all hitherto conservatives. . Thus stand, unhappily, - the facts and every democrat who will lace the truth cannot de ny that the Deniocratlc National Conven tion Irma mis-carriage, and the nominations a-swindle and blunder. Leading Democrat ic papers, such at. the New York Herald and others, aclumwredge that a Democratic victory can only be Insinght on, through a • •Thelast chance:was given the Convention to help Democracy.-to the sceptre, by the placing of men progreak of tried Union ism and uusw_ ... erring hottest" before the peo. plo, but it - %dated its mission—it fell into wronghands • - Day A 1 41 0 40116 101 1 1 01 7- • - Me= the A:Revels:Rl Herald.] , - On Monday, July • 18,:1888 --exactly five years ago commenced the terrible draft riots in New York city. The rebel - armier Were facing the Union' unties at every point,. and threatening to carry the war, into the North. ' Lee had made the attempt,' bur into., been checked at Gettysburg. Morgan had * that morning crossed the Ohio line and threatened.to water his horse in Lake Erie. There wan nrgeet., need of reinforcements: for the Union army, and after , many delays • the order for the draft had been issued. The 'draft in New , York was ordered to com mence Monday, - July 18. ' ' Events showed that secret arrangeMents' had been made fbrie general uprising of rebel sympathizers throughout the North, taking the.draft as a pretexti-and that such uprising should prove a fire in the rear of the Union armies that would enable Pem berton to drive Grant into the Itisaimi_ppi,- Bragg to sweep Rosecrana into the Ten nessee, allow Lee to breakthrough .Meade's barrier, push on to 'Philadelphia and New- York, and surround Washington, Morgan and his raiders dished through Ohio and cut the communications between the West and the. East. The coincident' fall of . Vicksburg and defeat of Lee at Get-' tyaburg spoiled the _programme, but the demon of discord had been excited in New . York, and could, not be kept down. al- - though its opportunity had passed. 'About noon of Monday, July 18, snub, at a preconcerted signal, suddenly attacked a building on Third avenue, New York, where drafting had commenced, gutted it, fatally injured as -enrolling officer, and drove the other occupants through the win dows at the peril of their lives. They then attacked the Government armory on Second avenue, brutally maltreated the occupants, and fired the building. Led on by a Virginia rebel, they attacked and disarmed soldiers and police, hunted them down like dogs, and frightfully man gled them. They swarmed, a pack of thou sands of yelling, whooping demons, around I the Colored Orphan asylum, set it on fire, drove off the firemen that attempted to ex tinguish the flames, and would have hung the Chief Engineer but for the determired resistance of his men. The building was stripped of its contents, the orphaned chit dren turned naked and friendless into the street, to be kicked and beaten by the infuri ated brutes, and the building leveled with the ground. " Fresh from this scene of dastardly and cowardly outrage, the now maddened vil lains hunted up the coloreepeople, hunx them to lamp-posts and trees, beat them to death, set them on fire as they lay dying, and burned their homes. Thus passed the first day of the riot. All night the reign of blood and fire was kept up. Next day an attempt was made estin a United States hospital, in which Tay two hundred And fifty sick and wound ed soldiers. The' troops were called out and wend fights took lace,` the mob— which on their way McClellan's resi de:Me 'itzurchwa cheetink lustily for; Jett Dri. , On that daY lie;Stkl8111110iir; ibea,ClOy emor at New YOrkt. Issued* Peeelemetien in which be spoke of the mob- having some befor -their pro c eedings, though' be told them they must now atop. -On that. day- the • "same Horatio Seymour dressed the mob of inceaditiries and asses bilis,lheir bands ' reeking with the blood of defenseless men ' and itomen;their lockets, tilled with plunder and their clothes - smirched witu the smoke of the dwellinuit of, poor' people and helpless orphans; and Hors.: tio called these cut r throats and thieves "my Wendel!' . From that; speech, his"frierids," Mingling cheers for`Seymour with frantic:yells, rush ed to' fresiiideede of blood and violence. ,7 It is thie saute Horatio Seymour, stained with the blood .and 'indoire of July, 1888,. Who in July, 11368, with falsehood ttesh on hit accepts frora his' "friends" 'the Democratic nomination to the :Presidency. Tits xtpiess asks Who saved the National capital when Lee marched into Pennsylva nia and gravely , answers,- Horatio Sey mour! The credit of the battle of Gettys burg has testes-11y leen given, heretofore, to . Gen. Meade and his, gailimt army. .While they Were saving the. capital, Horatio Sey mour was making a speech in New :York to prove that the war was a failure, and threatening the Republicans with w - Northern rebellion and thd terrors' of mob law. ' 'INUIT NEWS ITEMS. AtiNishtriife yestois)rty the therrnotn-, eter stood nt one htindred - degrees in the shade.:.l 'Two' deaths resulted • front stokesttn - - . " • . • , _ The, Democratic . Convention of the Bey enth"District,' liictiana' have nominated. V.'D; Mown, n'fyilontlichxnery cop.n • 't•y;" for' Conkredi. " ' " • ' • —A winkrann named john Hesa:"fell' tim the third.istOry' witidow of the -new. Theatre. building, ai Indlanapolis, yeeter -dv, and wiihimill3r hijnred. FG~iiilnni'B. &win and Isaacs Voile hurets.itepublican. cAndidatee for . District Attorney of Philadelphia, have withdrawn, and Charles Gilpin will be the'candidcte. The first semi-annual meeting of the. Grant Army of the Republic, Department of Maine. was held at Banger on Friday. Thirty-eight , Posh' :are in existence and others are in process of organinannn- • . . Tbe.shop of Nathan Folks, pawnbroker, in Eit. Thule, was broken into Thursday night, and robbed of from Sicr,ooo to ;18,000 Worth of property, inobiding fifteen geld watches, !t valuable diamonds and, other. jewelry- —Later 'iiecoonts (NMI Miltois; Texas, re port that the disturbance }there isnot yet ended. The negroes sent defiant replies to orders from the ; Advil officers and agents of - the , Freedmen's Bureau to disPerse them. There is , but a small squad of soldiers on the ground., •- • . The railroad'' bridge across the Stusitte-: %annu l sit 011eC i west Of Harrisburg, tdoir fire about three O'olook on Friday morning and five Spiioirere . destroyed. :.No • delay ortiallis'wlll. be caused, the railroad oom-' ry, h, w .Ontrol 9f • two , other , Jridges , theyty;;;; pt, :11,11,1 ,-4 , 1}1A) 4.1.04 i rtf/t4.1.?1,it " - -Wettel'ol•WlCltt- (By Telegr4h to the RingPunta Gite!3e.3 NEW YOnic, July 18.-'-The death s the week were 1,142, of which more than fifty per cent. were from sunstroke and War rhea diseases. Infants suffered terripir from the latter, but the exaa number fa not known. The , increase in the total °wil iest week 528. • The weather is todeg fine. The thermometer only reached gg deg. There were, however, quits a number 'of cases of suastroke, but , few compared with those of the early Part of the week; The steamers America;lona and Ctrief Cork, from Europe, arrived tedev. John B. Trapp, convicted .a year anc half ago of presenting a forged bond - elide: 4 , has been by the President., . The recent fire at Bing thug is said toluwe, been the work of convicts, who, to theatre:. ber of one hundred, had planned to sebtelhe propeller Eureka, a 'market boat rtnuillte to New York, and escape, Informatics given by,one of the conspirators, however, frustrated the plot and the ringleaders were placed in irons. • An attempt tb rob the' Farmers and Drs.. tura National Bank of Somers, Westehen. ter county, last. Sunday, felled. The hese ball match tollay between tbe •Yale College Club and Atlantice,ofßrook. lyn, terminated in favor of, the Athuitles„ Beare 40 to 16. Moses Y. Beach, the veteran editor of tee ` New. York.Suu, died at. Virallingford, this morning. The weather has again been very, 11-4 m today, bat a thunder storm about seven in the evening cooled the atmosphere; angst midnight the thermordeter marked 75 deg. • . • • • Tennesse e!Wit'. fieLegraph to the Intraburs:lreszette '3 ":, NesaVn.t.soltily 113.—Fonr cases of sun. idtoke occirrred to-day , two of them iktal. The Governor's office was crowdetwitli -negroes fromktaury county, who left. there , fronrfear steel Ku-klax. a negro. was taken: trent the jail at'Prtutklin yesterday and shot by a mob.. Ens offence was rape upon a white girl and two negro girls. A. gentleman who saw Hon. John Bell a few clays ago reports him as partially par tymd but in fair health notwithstanding. Se hopes to live to see Seymour elected and to die a freeman. John Rhea was killed by likhtriingSt Gal latin. Ripiblteis _ltatttleattin at St. BY Telegnieh te the Plltabarsh Gazette. 1 Sr. Lems,July 18.—TheRopublicsurs held a large meeting at the Fifth street market to-night to ratify the National State floral nations • and Platform. Col. Asper;' or Northwest Missouri, Judge Forrest, lately of Ohio, E. W. Fox, and Chas. A. Jolin son of St. Louis, were the speakers. '' A. 134 V deliberate 'attempt was made 'by a: numberof unruly Men to s top the; - irig and break up the meeting, but, it , ed. Reference to the Impartial suffrage react)u tion in the State platform was, received with cheers and a very'deCided destrtnina tion expressed to carry It through. • The Georgli Legbdatcuit. By Tilegripti to . the Pitteburgh Etasette.y Aorrourr4, July 18.—In the House'all the members were declared eligible. A feta lnticin Was offered that the action of the House and all; documentary evidimoe be ~ transmitted to the Governor and by him to Gen. Meade. Mortality- in Boston. (By Telegraph to the Pittabargh Gazette.) ' . BOSTON, July 18.—In this city for the week ending to-day one hundred' and two deaths occurred i including seven from sun- —A prominent feature on the stand- at the Demi:auntie ratificatienineetinkin New Orleani, Saturday night, was di:Mintier , or Catholic clergymen two cOlortid-mpreseir Wives, and a colon;dlDO*lerritintb.'" A. - large number of -negrptis were in-the'pio- —Allen J. Thompson, a. temperance ad vocate, did at Binghamton, New York, on Friday. He was a native of Ohio. DO MY BE DECEIVED. 4 When the erstem is once affected it will not rang of Its own accord ; it needs help-It mist be strengthened and Invigorated; 'this is esoechdlr the ' case when the ' • miotmns, BLADDER, es TIRINABT OIZGANB Axe affected. ?or teueediate zellet imd panattent* cam, nu. 15,11161ERIPS :.murettes or ikethathe'Patit . ' 4 s pe niliktai as Ida well C kiiiiwn raved, Yu effected sare nixiibeiiif argody, ritußtabld tux.. . 111141 4 ii. p eter filite ki ° Ft's relief vilunitateir wording to-1111tictions.:, . • , . Dr. - -SaiventPB 44selcat* - . - Are purely - vegetable, luad-Aiontant no meraid or calumet Thly do not exhMiut the , qatern, but on the contrary they act is Wale: Imputineneite and vigor to the organs asid atreagthenbig thi • body. These PAW hire steed the test of thirtillve yam; and arevtill gaining in popilatity: - - - 411?'.FOB BALE BY - DIMG4ISTB AND.Druile; EBB LK MEDICI:NZ ..ItNIRTIVEMBIL, • t .1. Pries 54,11- Ce*ta • Per Sox STRENGTO6I,TO -DEFENCES: . , • . active In Julyand August., The blaring.ri Malaria, the =On deadiV,Aniemy of health; 1$ everYWhere sun I. decomposing end fermenting every species of, vegetable and animal abomination, 'and poisonous gases that depress and the system are halves salir.present. On the prairies:lu the swamps.• in the woods. and In the midst. of crowded citicia.,this development of the elements of disease Is now going and reason and, on. In short the henna bodY is hi • 040 of liege. r ina s oo F rrecti n tv E ter s i rsi d w a tT a rxu teratty . e A are s . z reg iund uhe an d i, t a o t li e u n t ie... it combined in ROSTET'TER'S STOMACH BITTERS. , .a e n uun d the n ce s fo ense ur . f7and a r t e t q b a l lsite t ita s p ra ll ; A man" must be made of steel not to be aftecited by the morbid matter set afloat in the atmosphere by the rays of an almost vertical inn. , Nine-tenths of ' the conunuulty areigeinonisbed , at this season:by , debility, . indisposlt On for exertion. nervous . -woes, &C., that they need something to Wild them up and regulate their sulmsl machinery: _, Do they want to_ debt it out on that ilea all summer, 9 , or eoi d w dd an immediate victory over their.unpleas ant avdp. toms, and secure that first lof aesivenss blessings-. i tir t w del dunde sy li f ela: T inu l taill i agr e eable aEdreilan9dr ix'll3'. an t ll t P r e e te ' :''ll. n i t if" v t e h6 geti, Eitt b tte re if i ll geneis ure will soon restore the system to its bslaace —regulazinlithe liver. irtrengiliening-thiSidswinice repay relieving the, bowels , and giving vileir riche and 'energy ; o the whole fr ame.' These p r oven flew woman , who reads tbisteillinonyion which that Aro ;banded can .iPsr a moment 'dcrebt CURE OF FISTULA. Dn. KICYBXII : I write to thank you for yoni kali! nesa and scientific management of my disease, Dm which I called to consult you , some time in Minn* last.' Yon will remember thst I had a coMpllcaticat of diseases, which niftily ended in a terrible fistulas which I bad ..been adrlseito "let alone." on 14.• _ count oriliarasaing sough,.; which. It was feared might &sten it on my lungs. :1 kneri that the Perm. lair mods oitreatiqi diseesu like mute We Ly e cutting opemtion,-which, if auccesiPal at all, wop3d ‘ safari/4'4l'l'ow the disease upon the hinge or - mime other vital organ. , on account of the imddenneall of the cure and the hrune4l4e cheek to the discharge, ,Whicli T belleved.was •• aidutary provision of name itoriek lid of some morbid condition of -the system. 'I reel perfectly satialled ghettoes - method of treat.. went, purifying the system.; and local applleations Ito the fistidona Mart, mast ioluu, anything could, without cutting, which I find it did, and , I am happy to report myself .welL in every partioniftr, with sounder and better health thaw! have hid , for. Yeses, I would 4110 "add 4:kat yeti . 'Ade tialliletia,l94 have left we a kr" With , qtkie pc,irgieeand'yii* . of restored . 'c te NTLlL\r ' 61±6*(j.bletiAsts; •ptO PENN i4D.Eltre rriopi 9 erittit. 3 • 111 • :