El li D II liiiqi t t, ll („..t. (4 La I 'l (4,14, • e", Co E. 11 II PUBLISH:BD BLILY, BY PORmAN, REM & CO, Proprie4rs F. R. PENNUKA.N, • JOSIAH KTING, T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. HEED. Editoia and Proprietors. OFFICE: GAZETTE BUILDING, NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH S 1 • OFFICIALS PAPER - - ft et, Pittotrarigh,A cco lie un gtie tr a . y and Alleighdtny . . i rerwse—Dail . 1 sei- Weeli.l TVeekty. One year. .48 1.10 .mie year.trr.6o atiglecopy..'..//.60 1 (hie mmth. I 7,5 1 x mos.. 1..50 5 copies, each. 1.24 1 li:i' the week. . 1 Three moe 71 101.16 i s from carrier.) - —and one to Artnt. MONDAY, AUGITSTM. 1868 PITTSBURGH: - GAZETTE 'FOB THE CAMPOGN, ! • I Theg.Presidential fight' hiking now fairly i- began., and the newspaper ,press being °nap! I,the best weapons :for 'e f fectual warfare, we 3 propose - to fumish the GAZETTE for the . Campaign at _thevery -tow rate of 40 .oent a . 'l 1 .P copy for the WEEKLY, and 32 far tke: 1 _ ~ DAIL a 7; fro= now to the close of the Presi 7 :: , . 1 dential election.. • ' ' 4 • 1 :: 1 The GAZETTE Ras been an earnest, COl4. aistent - and ;efficient advocate of Republiecni isrinciples, from the start, and it is therefere all the better quaiified to present Republican avant/reds now, in this decisive ecmteet, which must settle conclusively whether the nation shalt go back to the oid domincdionof slavery, and the slave power, or go forward to UteLjuti fruition of the restate accomplished by 'tke war. The <)t , ::1 Southern politicians, galvanized into new life by.,the Democratic nominations at New York unheiitstingly avow that all -- the Confedertzey fought for is to be gaixed in the election of Seymour and bletir, and that .seeeanott is not dead, but is to 6e fully • and finally trtuniphant in the success of the . • Demoeratte candulate& it has also been plainly given out, by the Democratic caiididate frit nee, liesident„ that the Democracy, i I ,successfulthis It 21„. intend to overturn by force the .sYr:de Govern 'inents .Ttcsbi l ished . by the people of the South, thus giving notice in advance of another war, • and the Derweratic Convention, in lumina: Ling him for the Vice 1 3 residei4, gave the emphatic endorsein ent of the party to ale in • eendiary and revo/Utionary Shall what the Confederacy fought for, and failed to attain, be now attained through Seymour's success? Shall secession; over turned and defeated in the field, be allowed to triumph at the polls? Mail the Democracy, xnder the lead of Seymour and Blair, tie permitted to inaugurate a new Bebeition f • If tug, it behoones the Pepublieaneof West ern Penney/Minict to labor with an .eases.: mess and zeal befitting the perils of the ho u r; and l one of the surest ways Of meeting the en- CM *my successfully ie to circulate /i'epulqican apers freely, gn pact them into the hands of all who are Milling to read'them. To their end we ojfer. the GAZETTE at a very . /ow rate far the campaign. = There l are ME very few men who cannot afford 'to give forty yenta eo aid the geiod cause by eirCUZCaing a Rood Republican paper. Try it, frieintla, try it for your nebyhbore. There is seareely c! neighborhood in the ,coun . . . try fit, which from ten to twenty more weekly papers cannot be distributed to advantage; and a few thousand q weektypapere read ea.re- fully from Twit , Co .the election tall do inoie good than lens of thousand' of Congreisioned veeche& Meadquarters Republican County CoM. City Hall, Market Street. Open every day. County Committee meets every Wednesday, at 2 • WE PRIRT an - the inside pages of this d, • :morning'sGAEETTE--;Seeond page. Does • Irnateledge Cause Crime, by .Pereeval Beck ett. .17&irdand Sizth pages : Gainenereial and River 'News. Seventh page : Teeth,' ilarbarous Operation, A Hint to Cities, Bize of the Stars, - General Butter's Alleged "Rztortiori," Rebel Slander Refuted, Pe*:, 6" - c., to. GOLD closed Saturdays-in New York at 144;@145a. - IT gyres been decided that no election shall. be held in Virginia until after the next meet ing of Congress. It seems that additional legislation will be required... THE Steubenvilie Hercad states that "ate German Demoerats of Ohio are abandoning that party by thousands" and enrolling' among the friends of Gge.HT and peace.''-'. _ - Oun .Ikinister to , England, Hon. BEVER int Jommozr, sailed from Baltimore on Sat urday. The widow of the 'late President _Ln - cols is a passenger:on the saino veeseL , THE building for the new Insane Asylum at Danville, Pa., ;is to be eleven hundred ,and thirty-three .feet in length, and, the wings will have a frontage of nearly htm; dred feet more. . • - NEBRASKA will cast her-virgin vote as State in November. The campaign for GRANT and CoLvix has been auspiciously opened and an overwhelming kriumpki will certainly folloiiv. . THE speech of Senator Mu, of Georgia, for GRANT and Coiatsx, at Atlanta, on the f 3 31st, is followed y his declaration that he will at once take the stump for the`Union ticket and nominees. Ti mHorn HENRY C. JO/11410N, of Mead. - ville, has fi4ally been made the Republican candidate for Congress in the ,Tvientieth ci t District. Leis a gentleman of high soCial repute, ala yer of distinction, and a `.tried' and consist nt &publican. He served in the Legislature with decided success, end lug as Speaker of that body. _ 4 IT is understood that, hi flew of the de sire of the present COMMissioner of Inter nal Reqnue to retirekts soon as a suitable successor shall be de.:signated for the place, the President tendered it, first, to Ex-Gov- Co; who declinm and, 4 subsequently, to Ron. C. Ditta.ve, t of9hio, who has it under advisement. ' Tim Democracy of the West are heartily dissatisfied with the candilAtes put forward ,ftir their suffrages by the New York Con .vention., SEYMOUR is looked upon as an artfuktriokster, while Bt is regarded as a revolt:llia:list. Neither name evokes any enthusiasm, and the Republicans with their noble standard-bearers have matters pretty much all their own way. t Sarin To9Kus, at the rebel Brain ratifi cation meeting in Atlanta: "The Recon -structiou acts are null and void, and shall not stand. * , The grinning skeletOns *hick have been set,•up in our midst as leg islators ithall be owed by Frank Blair, whom OM PARTY 11AS EXPRESSLY APPOINTED FOR THAT PURPOSE." Let no honest Democrat declare.that he has not had fair notice of the real designs of his leaders. . THE RECEIVER of the Atlantic and Great Western \Railway reports a reduction of working expenses from 73,9 to• 61.8 per tent.; receipts for last year, $6,769,673, and disbursements $6,690,950; and recom mends the adoption of a' narrow gnage on account of economy, or at least the putting down of a third rail so as to al low a.narrow equipment to be used until • the broad Shall be worn out. Kw:Tacky holds her State elections to day. BAKER (Rep.) and STEVENSON, (Dem.) are •the respective candidates .for Governor. The minor State i'Mficetrare also to be tilled, but no Representatives 14. Con gress are to be chosen until next year. The rebels have full control in Kentucky, as was shown by her last vote: This was Demo cratic 90,225; Republican 83,939: Third party, 13,167: But the friends of GRANT , and COr.raz will , poll evetty vote they have, no matter against what discouraging odds. Mil Tan Literary Societies of Lafayette Col lege, at Easton, Pa., were addressed, last week, by Hox..G. A. Gaow, who had been designated as the orator of,the occasion. The leadtng idea- which the speaker elo quently elaborateA was that the stability of a nation depended upon the recognition of the righti of all classes ofher people. Rome fell not through her' extent of territofr or vast population—but because she did injus tice to the people she enslaved. The oration Was_regarded as the most btilliant effort of the COmmencement exercises. Timm are . very significant indications at Waship' gton, that not only is the president indisposed to promote the election of ,Ev - moms and 13tItin, but that lie desires toCon ciliate the regard of the friends of Gen. Gn eVel4 if need be, by openly espous ing the - RePublican nominations. Mr. 13F.wean alsiiis likely to anticipate him, by an open declaration in this direction at an early day. 'NP.e hear, from all quarters, of gentlemen. ¶ho - Ittached themselves two Tqlitrs since to the interests of Mr. Jormsow, who now announce their adhesion to the Chimp platform and ticket. .IN% an -admirable impromptu speech-. by `Hon- SCircritint COLFAX, subsequent to his • great.. reeeptiort speech at Bondi Bend to thOtisands of hid const ituents'. who met to . . - ;; welcome..lum. home, he uttered these Words, - which ought to be written ,on the banners brae dlmpaign : UoyeraiSAALL . . IgOVIERN,PiIriIT LOYALTY NAB PRREIRRYRD." The, whole 'sentence readi-tbus: • *•lll,ati their hours of disaster and eloom, when inen's Acute .fitinted by _the - way,' there was one Party, every maw of which around our balmier, and never despatted of *tic American Republic; and there is one organisation . that, since the armies of 'thit.rebetiton were crushed: has demanded, and in-. tends to stand by that deinmid." God being our iper,-. to the end that loyalty shall goyertt what loyaltylas preserved,7 „ • . , . THZSABLIGATIONS of their. parole are not wholly ignoiedl by some` of the officers of thelateConfederate army; Gene. Cawer !r.4tritir and 8., 4 101um0n. have forward, in their State of .Tennessee, to op. . pose the K.• K. K. threats of violent resistance to the laws, and on Saturday 'no less than thirteen.of these pr -rebel Genirals met at Nashville; to Condert with theloyal authori ties the proper measures for the preserva tion• of the peace. One of them,-Gnmeernett, said that "he kept the par Ole which he gave when he surrendered, always about his trei son, and felt that he was honor-bound to yield quiet and; honest obedience to the ' • Dunmn the stay of the Rocky Mountain editorial' excursion party at Omaha, the.pro prietor of the Re4ublican newspaper surren dered the sanctum to the guests of the city, and gave them full control over his columns. The Democratic editor's took advantage of the generous tender, to print villainous and abusive aiticles op Gnm.vr, COLFAX and the ;Chicago platforni. This deParture from goodiaste might have been overlooked, had not the Omaha herald, a copperhead.sheet of the worst s character', republished the arti cles next day, crediting them to the Repub ileivi,:withoui a Angle word, of explanation. Such small and disg,racefulpnrfonnanCe l on the part 'of the ;opposition plainly show how. 'sadly. thiki are in•need of political food f9r Capital „ ' . AmoNG the reports, which come throng ing ipen ms I fi.om all sections of , the Union; Demoirats 'whose patriotism' impeli them to the suppoit of GRA4iT and CoLvex, Nyo ,lutY9 one from California P. a 0P 3 1 ,1 5 Esq., a metaber, of the bemodratie Central Committee, pub: - lisheda card on the 13th ult., advising his' tormer associates I.bat he is no longer with them. Resigninglis phtee upon the ,Com ntittee, givesi • expresslon . to, a. patriot isM as sterling as the purest ore - ever found in the hilliof the Golden State. Fer exaMple: ”kl7.ltidgment-neblier 'approves the platform of principles put forth bythe blew York Lottrcutten, nordoes my sense °I.-duty to the, country Justify me in aiding to advance Jioratlo a eytnuur to the office of President of the bolted diatom. In reincutherlue ' that Lam eMOCriit, canno t for g et lona It Igber allegiance t, the Altterica ct li b i gn , b b e i n d b e 1211411 glad to I ILD , 4,1110 l Mlle Deny, count I be lieve that Id doing 80. i am nut trterltlct ng those , prinelpies of patriotism that arc higher bud huller than any sentiment or mete patty &atty.+ , • PITTSBU RGN GAZETTE ; MONDAY, AUGUST '3: 1868. THE , YRIMARI " MEETINGS. On Satlirday week, the 11;th of August, the &publicans of. Pittsburgh hold their primary meetings for the nomination of a city ticket. It is proper to remind our friends that these nominations are to •be made directly by the voters at these meet ings, withoutany intervention of delegates, each Republican designating his preference . by his ballot, and the returns from all the polls being Canvassed and announced by the Executive Committee. the candidates hav ing a majority to constitute a ticket for the support of the entire party at the regular election in October. This is known as the Crawford County system of nomination, and the great merits I which have been claimed for it have been I abundantly established whereverithas been fairly tried. It is decidedly a simpler, more direct and .more decisive mode of testing the wishes of a majority of the Party, ob viating completely that objection to the old plan which rested upon the alleged Corrup tion, or falthlessness,of delegates in log-roll ing and,making neW and improper combi nations in convention, With proper regtr , lations to ensure a fair poll, and with such an interest entertained among Republican; citizens as will bring out a full vote, there can be no doubt that the new system would result in a satisfactory expression of all 'preferences, The duty of providing those regulations has been entrusted to the Ex ecutive Committee, and we have yet to hear of the first man who entertains any doubt of the wise• and faithful efficiency of their action in the premises. - The ,imporbuice of a full vote,,also, can not be over-estimated. If there be any virtue in any system which obviates the mischief resulting from a general r and dis organized scramble for office, In the face of an -organized opposition, at the 'Cctober polls, by harmonizing and uniting the votes of an entire patty, in the selection of a ticket 'which, being wrceptable to the majority, is, for that reator4submitted for the support of all, the plan now proposed Inuit be conce ded to be the fairest possible mode of ascer taining the strength ( of each candidate. While it submits the question of personal preference to , a direct vote, it renders the obligation pt each voter the more conspicu ous. It becomes, more -than'ever, his per sonal duty to attend. these primary meetings and have his preferences there recorded. NoW that his vote cannot be traded away or ignored, but each and every ballot is to count one, and Will have its just weight and no nlore ; now that the voter, accepting the need Tor any system of nominations, has this opportunity given to him to take a di rect part, himself, in bringing those nominations aboat, it F is his bounden duty to attend at the time and place ap pointed, to use an honest effort to secure the selection:, of his favorites,. to concede precisely the same rights and privileges to the frien+Lof lOPposing candidates, and he and they, all alike, are honorably bound to abide by the result and ever after hOld their peace. Let us therefbrehave a full vote on the; 16th: Let .every Republican voter in the city bear in mind his privilege, and the obligation which results from it. No man has honorably a title to vote at these meet ings, who intends . to bolt the ticket if hie favorite names be not upon it. No candi date has any honorable claim upon the. Re publican suffrages at these meetings, who intends to withhold his support from a suc cessful competitor. And no Republican, who might have attended the meetings, but has not done so, has honorably the right to except to a ticket which. by his primary vote, he aright' have successfully opposed. We have the fullest confidence in the fair nesi with . which the primary electiOns will be conducted.- Now, Republican friende, whontever your favorites may be, make your selections beforehand; and; on the 15th, . go and vote for them. 'Nominate them if you-can, but if not sum:WI:IL in that, re member Yon have had a fair chance, and that the ticket be it What it mai', is fairly entitled to your .cordial 'support. In this way, you can , eniure tho.selection of a good ticket and that it will have the largest majority in October. HOWARD , ' UNIVERSITY. By the adoption of the Ftiurteenth Amend ment to the Constitution it Is made certain the black inhabitants`of ten of the Southern States, now between time and four millions in namlier, and rapidly increasing, all pre tended statistics to the 'contrary notwith standing, wpl permanently Sconstitute part and parcel of the political power of the Re- public. It is, theiefore, a Matterotnational importance to make provition for the Intel lectualeducation of this mass of population. Of course, ignorance and its ct;ncomitants, passion and prejudice, are as 'endurable in black voters as in white ones; but the diffi culty consistsin making depraved and de graded . white men. think' so. White men Who are so untaught and unthinking as to render their participation impolitical . . affairs a problem of serious Magnitude as touching the stability 'of molar institutions," arc loudest and sharpest in deninciation of 111., lowing negroes the ballot. Those naturally; fail to see that the peril is not in the color of the skin, but in the 'condition of the under-j, standing, reason •and conscience. I These general considerations Lave led to various plans forth° mental elevation of the colored people at the. South. Among other instrumentalities Primary Schools have been extensively organized inn used. The zeal evinced by the blacks In the pursuit. of knowledge, demonstrate that, they know, this is the secret of their former masters'. Power, and that if they would ,protect and maintain their . newly acquired liberties they must share equity' "with the whites. In addition to these cognnon schools, twenty-live Normal: Schools, be several still higher institutions, have , been established 4 for the blacks in the , Southern States, and are in successfeoper ation: , - The Howard University is designed to be the chief of the. Seminaries' of• learning for the colored people of this country. It was .chartered by, the Thirty-ninth Congress, 113 located at Washington, and was named M=EI . . tin honor of G \ en. 0. o . , Hwerenp, the Coin iniiisioner of the Freedmen's Bureau'. The plat, fifty acres in. extent, is situated upon the circle of hills surrounding Washington; and overlooking the city. Here two spa cious buildings have already been erected; one for -recitations, lecturea, Offices, chapel, &c.; the other for dormitories sufficient to accommodate two hundred students. For a year past the normal and prepara tory departments hive been in operation, under the superintendence of Mr. `A. L. BARBER, a graduate of Oberlin College, Ohio. The Medical department will be opened the approaching autumn; For clin ical instruction the students will have ac cess to the Freedmen's General Hospitil: It is hoped that a freshman class in the Col legiate depatiment may be organized at the same time. It is intended-to open theolog ical and law departments in due season. Tuition in the Normal and Collegiate &- partments c Istit three dollars , a term, and board can be obtain d at three dollars a week. So far the success If the enterprise has f been excellent But it mains to complete the endowment ; toe ablish scholarships and professorships. T this an ap •al is made to the liberality of the public. . ==M A few years ago Mr. THOMAS CARLISLE advocated a new plan for dealing with of fenders against the peace and good order cif aociety, which consisted in taking summary and relentless vengeance upon them. , His theory was that the weakest point of modern civilization lay in criminal jurisprudence, `which utterly failed t either to protect: the community or to reform the individuals who depredated upon it. ' PolloWing this coarse of reasoning he reached die conclusion that the best wait to treat a criminal was to cut his head off as soon after he was caught and convicted as practicable. That would cer tainly prevent his doing further mischief; but the effect of this sanguinary discipline would be to trarkorm the; civilization of these times. into doWnright. barbarism In deed, no nation could he brought to deal after this manner with criminals 'until all its truer and nobler Mstincts should be cor rupted. Mr. Centisis was right in nil% that all systems of dealing with 'crime and crimi nals, nowlin use, entirely fail of producing a curativeleffect Nay, the tendency of all these systems is to make the men and women subjected to them worse instead of better; to organize offenders into distinct classes, having no feelings or purposes in unison with the other portions of society, and no hope of success but in fresh offence But to intensify this system - , by suPeradded elements of retribution, would not reason- - ably inspire a hope of rendering it more sue emend. It is not difficult to make an end of a particular 'criminal by chopping his head from his body. It is a very different matter to deter others from like courses by the exhibition of such severity. Hell is re : presented in the popular theology as a sort of penal colony where punishment is grad "Mtted exactly according to the nature .and extent of misdeeds. Under such conditions 'punishment ought to do the best it ble of Yet we do not recollect an instance in-which the fiery discipline. of that place ever converted a sinner into a saint The only evidence of human sympathy left in that abode relates to a man who had some solicitude that his brothers should be spared the horrors he endured.' Not another man has been chronicled atOuiving any kindness left in him. But, It *net be remembered that this colony was not designed to be re formatory, but strictly penatt, M. Minx DE °meninx, editor of the Paris newspaper, La Liberia, has gone off li the opposite direction from Mr. CARLISLE. By a powerftil series of articles upon -- the right of society to punish crimes, and the beat methods of restraint and 'reformation, hu. has" produced LC profound sensation throughout the; continent of Europe. Instead of sending criminals swiftly to _their final awards, or even driving them from all_the infiuences of home, friends and family, he would try to make those influ ences stronger. instead- of destroying within them the sentiment of self-respect, .and the hope of obtaining the respect of others, he would endeavor to make those motives prominent and controlling. To this end he would frame a complete family and neighborhood police, - giving each Mini-' ly and neighborhood' so much authority over the liberty and lives of its members as to justify holding these responsible for their conduct. By registration and pUblicity, and by being sent to his.own home and people, find there placed under supervision, he thinks that nearly allthote who are arrested for crime, and who becomp enemies to society, might be saved. In other words, , he would deal with moral delinquencies as with other departures frbm the normal con dition of human beings, treating crime as a disease to be cured rather than punished. He would'divest law entirely of all idea s of dessert and of distributive justice, and put its dealings with disordered ,members on a basis analogous to the treatment of diseased organists:is by. physicians; directing the whole energies,of the community to the re storation of universal moral health, and not to the excision of diseased members. Y .- Not that lie would of a sudden swing from the methods In uso to that het suggests; but, that he wourd approach it' gradually, and with as much celerity as the circumstances allow. In European. countries this plan can.be tried more faithiblly than in this. There everybody is under the direct supervision of the Government. High and low, in town and country, Government papably over:, shadows and touches each indivitinal„ Here Government is (unlined essentially differ , ent, making its presence felt only in the larger concerns of life; andleaving each one comparatively without restraint in most other .affairs. I'Vhateverimay be maintained on either _side of this queition, it is manifest to care ful investigators that the criminal` laws of all the more advanced nations are desthaed to be thoroughly reconsidered and revised . , before many years shall elapse. Under these laws as they now stand, the criminal classes, shut out .from association and sympathy with alt other classes, are fully organized for thel commission of bad deeds, which they have ; come to regard in some measure as just re taliations for the miseries they end - greT There is no probability that any:civilized 'nation will adopt the savagery of Mr. CAE : LISLE; there is a chance tliat,a modifiiaon of the' humanitarianism of 3f.r Gth ARDIN may prevail. Tits Republicans of the• Northern States are "rapidly completing their preparations for the fall elections. Their nominations, both State and Congressional, are all nearly filled up, and in each State the preliminaries of a working organization are receiving at tention. The Democratic opponent of Mr. GruswoLD, for Governor of New York, is notyetselected, CORNING, HOFFMAN; Mun- PRY and Gunner( being all named as candi dates for the honor of a defeat. In Michi gan, the first four Congressional districts will be canvassed by their present mem.J bers for re-election. H. P. BALDWIN for Governor heads a full ticket for the State °T wee. Nominations have been made in fife of the six districts of lowa, only one member, Loom:1111ms,, being a.candidate for - re-election, the others voluntarily retir ing from the public service. In ALLISON'S district, no nomination has been niale, and the wish is generally expressed, within and without the State, that this excellent Repre sentatiie will again serve his constituents. The Ohio districts are nearly. filled up, the latest announcement being Judge . STANLEY Mit'yramws in the Second. district, ,at Cin cinnati, and his triumphant election will evince the re-establishment of. the ,normal and healthy condition of politics in this district, which prevailed before the develop ment of a pernicious caries two years since. In oar own, the Keystone State, the nomi nations in several of the districts are not yet made, but we trust that another fort night will see all preferences reconciled, and the tickets filled up from the Ohio to theses. On Saturday we mentioned that the cattle . . plague was prevailing tusuch'extent sa tb create serious alarm'among the people. As indicating thebattire and 'extent of 'the evil, we make the following extracts: TARINA, ILL. July 18 6 / 1 1.--To Ells Excellency, Gewernor Ogles by: 1 take the liberty to write to you to inform you of a dreadful cattle . pleague that fatalroken out la or t he m edst., which has proved so , as to battle all ffortsto save a sitagle ani mal. There ha totalne recovered that has been attacked. Theloss up to this- date is - from forty to fifty valuable milk cows and fat steers—: A week have had fifty head otfat, steers in pastare; now I twenty left, and they continue to die at rho rate of five or ten per day. It Is rapidly spread ing over our prairies, and there are but feW cattle In this neighborhood that are not affected. It has taken them all from ninny a poor lamlly, and •if we cannot dlscove.r some remedy, it will surely tweet) our country of a good deal Ladaluabl • committee have been informed that there been a or scientific men appointed by you to examlnc some cases or the kind in -Sangamon County: If so, you will confer great favor upon-us, and we believe the country. to havethe matter examined. and see If the dreadful 'ecdurge cannot be' stayed; It Is be lieved by many to have been brought.here by Texas stock. that were With ours a month ago. It Is cer tainty contagion of some kind, and Is Increasing In violence rapidly. Your obedient servant, E. EICIIAnDSON. The : Nei. Albany (Indiana) Commeivial _ . . says: "A gentleman Informed to:yesterday that at a nor. tails point north of, and about one mile from, the city, the carcasses of over Atty. cows that have - died of the mysterious cattle plague, have atmosphere and deposlt&l. and are now filling the with the most pestilent odors. Every cow that dies of this disease- should:be buried at, least four fr.et under ground." The Chaiiipaign (Indiana) Gazettes.states: Re'Vegalquittle have died of a disease supposedo be the Spanish fbver. contracted from dead animals thrown off the cars by the Illinois Central Railroad Company two miles north of Champaign. The dead animals were left unburied for several days, and the tattle on the adjoining farm were taken with a dim ease, In eight or nine days. In several instances dyird In an hour after exhibiting symptoms of dia -1 ease:" , . The Sullivan (Ind.) Ilepublicansays - : - "We learn that a drove of fine cattle, herding close to Peach Orchard In Lown townshlit, are dying off at the rate of fifteen per day witiathe Texas fever. They were shipped from the Soh th in ears that Texas tattle had been whipped n o n t may- prove destrue jive to the cattle In our county, and means should betaken. to stay Its progress." At Omega and other . Illinois towns the inhabitants have made forcible resistanceto . • the passage of Southern cattle through to Chicago. - Last winter the Legislaturesipf Mississip pi, _Kamm and 'lllinois passed stringen laws to prevent this .disease Item spreading "THERE ARE," Says the' Memphis Post, "four buidred empty storetOn'. Memphis, and very few property • holders are getting more rent than will pay their taxes," yet . the fire-eating, ' rebel element in that * city still persists in discouraging the Immigra tion of Northern enterprise and capital, and , in its hostility to all those present residents who avow Republican opinions, although ,the imminent ruin of all the material inter eats of the community is thus made a mere Auestion of 'time. Such are the character istics of the ‘,‘rtl or ruin" politicians of the Btarn Democra every here ,':. North or South. The Post, upon thi3 facts above cited as a text, presents to its readers the in evitable results of thisproscriptive policy, in the plainest and most instructive light. Yet we have no hope for the restoration of wiser counsels among the' Southern people, until they shall'become satisfied of the complete fallacy of the revolutionary holies which BLAIR'S nomination hits inspired in them. And that c..in only hp accomplished by the election of Gen. GitXriT. Tun Charleston Courier in its declaration of what basis it would have the , Southern Electoral Colleges organized upoi says: "Congress, by numerous acts and decla rations, lifts recognized as legitimate all the State Governments existing in the South at 1 the termination of the war. Therefore,, in case two sets of electors should presentthem- I selves from such States, the votes only of those I should be counted who were chosen tinder the Government so, formed by tha pebple. The country should see to it, that the votes'of the negro .organications should not be received." Here we have the issue of the" Electoral College joint resolution 'fairly put. The work of the last two years must be entirely ignored.' G t overnments recognized which have been set aside•as 'invalid, the elective franchise given to the blacks trust be takeu from them. This is the undisgeißed issuei , , ,_. • .111 . Essits. Fowrzn and Ross, members of the United States Senate, publish in the , Congressional Mat, defences of their change of front on the impeachment ques tion, each occupying several columns. They contribute no additional facts to the stock of information previously before the public, but they dp what. they' evidently re gard as much better--abuse Mr. B. F. BUT LER soundly. That, doubtless, gratifies their spite, but 470 fail to see bow it relieve . ; their .reputatiops. I. A NEW Yong letter of the 30th, to the 1 Philadelphia Ledger says: -"The most in . teresting political rumor of the day is that , • / Mr. Seward, who passed through this city yesterday, onhis way. to Auburn, gaie his friends to understand that he was about to break ground in favor of General Grant. A' _brief -editorial in one,, of the Republican morningpapers has a hint to the same effect; but the Secretary, in conversation on the subject, 1 am - assured, was much more out - spoken-thin-the hint would seem JO -_ imPl t r The Democratic politicians lire not a lii e perplexed by this movement. They say that they cannot understand how the Secre tary can take such a position, and yet occu py a place in the Cabinet of President John son. But, in answerto this, the more know ing ones °lithe 'other side intimate that, if -they will have the patience awhile longer, President Johnson himself will be follow ing the example of his _Secretary of State. That is how both' sides are talking., Time must tell which is nearer the tnith.' "_ :nen what the Cincinnati Enquirer said of 3L4trit,in 1861 : `llt was because a set of demagogues, to subserve their own ambitious purposes, made the people of the free States believe that African slavery in the Southern States was a 'great moral, social and political evil, and should not be allowed to extend into new terfitory. This was about the whole of it. It was the negro, and ambitious dem agogues* riding on his back into power. Rather than they- should not do so, the peo vle. allowed the grandest Government in the world to be destroyed, and civil war to deso late the land; and Frank P. Blair was one of thou demagogues." • _ Ti New York Commercial says : "It is rumored that two of the most prominent Major Generals who took part in the. Sol diers and Sailors' gathering held in this city during the .Democratic Convention, are `kicking in the traces,' and _are only held back by very powerful influences from de claring for . Grant and Colfax. The gallant soldiers who led the armies of the Republic. to victory for the Union do not feel at home• in the Seymour ranks. • There are other weak spots in the enemy's lines thatawill show themselves sooty" —A general agricultural report of the con dition of the harvest on the Continent says: The harvest in the south of France is-ter minated. The fears which hadgenerally prevailed have been dissipated .and the re sult better . than expected. The mops, which in certain localities weresuppoged to be in jeopardy, will be abundant. At Anglers reaping was going on 'everywhere, and farmers seem to be well satiated. The yield will be large, although the qualit, leaves something to be desired. At Monti ney the sickle is abk) in the corn ' and the crop will be good. Lettere from Norman dy give the greatest hopes and at several points the preduct will be above the aver age. Similar 'accounts are received front the East of France. In Hungary the harvest is advancing rapidly. Great plenty is united to excellent quality. That country has still in its granaries wheat oflast year. Cmps and prima' are eensequently"failing, Throughout Germany- also there wheatea abundance of grain. In Belgium le almost ready everywhere for cutting. The crop is fine in every respect. • • _General Prim' has disappeared from London and has probably gone to Lisbon. where all . he military men of the progre4 stye party who had to leave• Spain, are pro eeeding. The friende of the Spanish Gov ernment were betoming alarmed, and a. state of seige will probably be proclaimed shortly. The belief was prevalent that the present Portugese,Ministry is in ; favor of a revolution in Spain. IS YOUR DISEASE RHEUMATISM! • Many , persons, supposing they are suffering from this disease, haveapplied I:laments, Plasters and other Rheumatic Remedies without obtaining any relief, when in fact the cause of pain is a derange.. meat of the If.idneys. These are small organs., but very important, and any obstruction or interference. with its functions are indicated by Vain in the bank and loins, languor and weaknest, difficulty in avoid ing and 'unnatural color of the urine. A Dia.retie should t once be resorted to. Dn. iwiismarra Litiretio or Back Oho PUis Can be rellefl on for these purposes: they bare si direct influence on the cells of the 15Idneya, assists nature In relieving them or any foreign partlcles m . anciatizeulates them to a healthy 'and vigoroas ac lion I . I Dr. Sargent's Backache lls Contain nothing. inittrious,•belng .eompoeed of en itirely vegetable remedies; they.do not sicken nor ripe—on'the contrary they act as a gentle tonic and • restores tone to the system. They are reconuninded by all'who who have tried them. - Psleo 50 Vents Pei 844. POSBALE IifDRI334aLSTS. Sole Proprietor, GEORGE A. KELLY,. Whoesale Druggist,, 37 WOOD STREET, PITTSBURGH., . , . ... . . . SWINGING 'ROUND, T E CIIRCIL. li There are fifty ways of iillevLst n g the agonies of. dyspepsia for, the..moment t but here is only one wayto ceps lt. After "sviinglniround the circle" Of temporary palliatives the patient rinds that the disease, so far from being subdued, has actually gathered strength, while he has been parleying with its symptoms..., The, only way to get rid of the demon is to endow the stomach with sufliclent strengh to- edit it out and keep ft out. Impart permanent energy to the digestive_ organs with HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERA, and the object is accomplished. This powerful vegetable remedy Is not a mere stimulant. It does not brace up the gaitric machinery for hour or two, leaving it, when the temporary ,ex citement has passed oft', in a worse state than be fore. Such is the effect of the ordinary alcoholic nostruins. They keep the htemach-in a perpetual, See-saw between unnatural activity 'and utter relax ation. Not st. the BITTERS.: Medicated with the finest tonic, itheratlve and anti...bilious extracts, they permanently reinforce and continuously regu late the a.ssimliating organs. debi l ita ti ngh xperience of tenet of thousands. At thi season of the yea weakenede solv nciple or the gastric Jake Is by-a c un, t ant drain the animal fields through the pores, HOS ' E fTER'S 5T0.31- ACH BITTERS is au article ofpritne necessity for the weal.. To neglect the use of P a tonic and altera tive, so wonderfully efficacious-and entirely harm less. Is slmpll to fares* the blessing of health and vigor, and voluntarily accept feebleness and - dis comfort in their stead. ' . ______________ CURE OF FISTULA. Da. ICZYSfin I write to thank you for your kind. UM and scientific management, of my disease,. tbr which I called to consult you sometime in. January last. rOtt will remember that I had a compliant= of diseases, which finally ended In a terribha winch I had been advised to "let alone," on a o. ,oount of a boatswain: cough, which it Was feared* might fasten It on my lungs. , I knew that the yam bar m ode of treating diseases Ilkoonine - was by cutting operation, filcoesslnl at all, would , naturally throw the disease upon the lungs or some other vital organ, on account of the iuddinness or the cure and the Immediate' check to the discharge, which I believed was a salutary provielon of nature to get rid of sonie morbid condition of the system.. I feel jperfectly satisfied that your; method of treat• mlt, purifying the system, and leoal applications to the thittilous, Inn. must cure, if anything' could* without cutting, which I find It dld,'ind I am happy to report myself well in - every' ` particular, Mtb, sounder and better health than 1 have bad for Years, I would also add that the aPplleations you made, were almost painless, and have left inc anew man, with all the energiec' and Thor of restored health: - Yours, gratefully. I— DR. RICIVER'd CONSI7LTAIrION-ROOIIB4FOR DEMONIC DISRASEB, No. 120 PENN BTRISST, from' 0 a. DI. UNTIL'3 r. s. 'June 17th, 1868,