13 ..;nt'....lit . 4 . i*ttji. -. lt.i4:ii.tti BUMBLED AIM BY PRIINDIAN, REED 1400., Pmprietors. P. B. PENNIXAN. - JOSIAH HMG, T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. REED. Editors and Proprietors. OFFICE ;GAZETTE BUILDING, NOS 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and Allegheny County. Term —D . ! Hemi-Weelly.l Weutty. One ye: , l ....16 year.. 2.50 Single c0py....51.50 One mont Six mos.. 1.50 5 copies, each. I.'Z't y, t ,, .• eek Three mos 75,10 •• • • 1.16 rom carrier. l—and one to Agent. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1868. National Union Republican Ticket. NATIONAL. President—ULYSSES S. GRANT. Vice President—SCHUYLEß COLFAX. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. AT LARGE.L G. MORRISON' COATES. of Phhadelohla. - THOS. M. MARSHALL. of Pittsburgh. Jpistrice. ,Digtrict. • • 1. W. H. BARNES, 13. SNOW, 2. W. J. Por.t.ocx, 114 . B.F. W AGONSELLEB. RICIIARD WILDET. CIIAS. 1110.1.10 c, 4. G. W. HILL, . 1 16. Joust STEWART , 8. WATSON P. hisoiLL,II7..OICORGE W. 'ELSE% 6. J. H. BRINGIIIIRST, IS. A. 0. OLMSTEAD, 7. FRANK C. DEATIDN, ira. JAMES SILL, & ISAAC ECEEILT, • , 20. H. C. JOHNSON, 9. Moittus Hoorun, 1 2 1 . J. H. EWMR, 10. DAVJD M. RANK. 22 . WM. FREW, U. WM. DAVIS.• =. A. W. CRAWFORD, U. W. W. lisn:ubli. .2 4 . J. S. RATAN. STATE. 4uditor General--.T. F. HARTRANET. Surveyor General—J. M. CAMPBELL. DISTRICT.. Corulress, 22d •Dist.-JAS. S. NEGLEY. 23d Dist —DARWIN PHELPS. COUNTY. ' State Sencife—JAMES L. GRAHAM. E!:=3l GEORGE WILSON IM. S. HUMPHEYS, GEO. F. KORGAN, , ;VINCENT MIL R LER, JAMES TAYLOR, ;SAMUEL KERR. District Attorney—A. L. PEARSON. • Ass't District Attorney—J. B. FLACK. Controiterz-RENRY LAMBERT. Commissioner--JONATHAN NEELY. Surveyor—R. L. Mc9ULLY. County Home Director—J. G. 'MURRAY. • CITY. Mayor—JARED M. BRUSH. Controller—ROßT. J. McGOWAN. Treasurer—A. J. COCHRAN. Headquarters Republican County Com =Mee, City Hall, Market Street. Open `every day. County Committee meets every Wednesday; at 2 P. M. WE •nuvr on the inside pages of this roPning's asaatTrE—Sseond page: Poetry —"Echoes . from Maine," Blitz and tho Darkiesl infra Mural Graveyards, The Breech Loading. Shot Gun, The Iron Crown of Lombardy, Tidal Wave on the North Pacific. Third and Sixth pages : Commer eial and Ricer News. Eleventh page : Dangers of Petroleum--a Remedy, Drank enness in'England and France, 'Torture in Russia, The Most Itentar7cable Swindler 4n Record: Gala) closed in New York yesterday at 144.. Tan Legislature of Alabama is in session for the purpose of providing a system of re gistration for legal voters. The rebels ob . jeet as usual. COLOItADO gives BitADFORD (Rep.) for Delegate 131 majority, with three counties V) hear from, Which are t estimated to add to this 50 more: A Dzmomwric Jountim. in Boston learns that from: $5O, to , $5OO apiece Were paid for Dem:taunt in Maine, either to vote the . Republican ticket or to stay away from the rills, and - "it great many" such bargains were made. " This is terrible." Taa Maine majority is fixed by outlatest I lespatchesUt 20,000. The Republican vote ;will exceed 70,000 while tke Democratic will -fall short of 50,000. Those who laid wagers on the Republican majority, being less, than 20,000 have loit, as the official returns will show in a day or two. MB. Holum° SE'rxoua did not read the - news from:Haine in thesame light as the Post. When he finished the unpleasant task, he telegraphed to Mi. PiLLSBDBY, of Portland, exclaiming "THIS IS TERRIBLE 1 mere are the victories you promised us?" The Portland Press is the authority for this statement. ' Ous Asurocitsuc FRIENDS in this city, in "looking out for the main (e) chance" - within a day or two past, have contribUted very large sums to Republican pocket books. Let it be a lesson to them to be ware, for the future, of "special telegrams from the N. Y . World" or of fanciful dis plays of poultry on the Post's bulletin board. In this way the lesson may be valuable—as it should be, for it has been very expensive. "Om Austir. IN FLANDERS" htid no ex perience whatever in profanity, if it be com- pared with the universal and resistless storm of execrations with which Democrats ! ' who have wagered their money on Maine, stim ulated by ihe World and the Post, are now • cursing the miserable arithmetic of those journals. They have not only lost all their bets but all their confidence in Democratic newspapers. The Poet, of yesterday, al lowing us only 18,000 majority, on the strength of "private dispatches,l' puts the Republican claim at 20,000 to 22,000, and then adds “We are thus particular in giving all the information we have at this writing and not only retain for this paper ite reputation for truth and veracity, but escape the blame from those who see fit 'to bet their money on dispatches which may hereafter prove erroneous." . Democrats, who were iliish with money for bets on 17,000 and /SAO on. Thursday ; afleinoon, claimed to have their information from the office of the Post. Its own bulletin loud paraded precisely_the same claims. - Upon all this, confiding Democrats "went in" to bet; it is needless to add that they come out at the small end of the horn. yon't these,victims admire the - efforts of the ross to dodge itsresponsihility for their /ono ? PENNSTLVAY.IA. Mr. ANDREW JOHNSON' has "instructed Mr. Jonx L. DAWSON to return 'home and inform'his friends of the absolute party ne cessity of carrying the Keystone State for the Democracy in October." The N. Y. World pitches its Vermont and Maine glib meticinto the fire, has no more "special tel egrams" to - send West for the depletion of Democratic pocket-books, and flourishes its tomahawk as follows : The bat.le ground of the Presidential contest this year is in Pennsylvania. To the Democrats of that State the country looks for Toilet from the burdens which Radicalism has piled . upon the nation. If they obtain a majority at their, election on the 13th of October next, Horatio Seymour will bo the next President. Upon the Dem ocrat= of these three States—Pennsylvania first, Indiana next, and Ohio last—rests a great responsibility. They should know not .a single idle moment until the sun sets on the 13th of October. Their motto should be, work, work, wouw. That it will be, we feel.confldentj knowing how thdy are im pressed with the importance of succeeding in this campaign. Now, Democrats, one and all, to work ! `t All this means that the Copperheads, led by BLAIIt, DA.H.PTON and FORREST, repulsed in Vermont and Maine, and: hopeless of- Ohio and Indiana, will make their last final desperate charge upon Pennsylvania in Oc tober. And it means that, to ensure their defeat, every Union vote in the. Common wealth must lie polled; that the opposition must be checkmated in their gigantic scheme for colonizing the border counties with voters from New York, New Jersey, Mary land and West Virginia;andthat their fraud ulent naturalizations must be detected and debarred from the polls, as well as subse quently. punished. We annex the later votes of Pennsylvania: Rep: Dem. Total Vote. 11.). 1660—President. "X/1,030 195,636 476 442 391. 1934 206.391 276 316 572.707 20:075 1865—Ault. Gen.l.. 218 400 215.740 454.= 2'2.030 1866-IlioNwnor.... 307.'54 - ZlO ,1 917,470 17.178 1867—Sup Ju re. .\.. 536,624 M 7,746 534,670 dem.9112 Our total vote in October will .exceed 600,000, but not much, and at least 310,000 of these votes should be, for the Union tick et. , We have yet to hear of the first. Union iran, who supported GEARY, who will "go back" on the ticket now, while our natural' increase in the two yeais should be nearly 5,000 votes. Nor may it be forgotten that, of the , thousands of Democrats who intend to vote for GIANT and Peace andagainst Burn and Rebellion in November, no in considerable number will go for KART ftespr and Cum:m.l.l.in October, by way of getting their hands in. \ We are entitled, therefore, to 310;000, and ought to have 315,000 Union votes at the first election. It is idl& for the opposition to talk of matching these numbers in an honest poll. If our friends should come as near a full vote hfre as they have done in Vermont and Maine—and why should they not?-the opposition have not the shadow of an honest chance, and they already Know it. The vote ~ of ,'66 was a square leOld on both sides, and,' up to the day when this canvass opened,, could have been - repeated without the change of a thousand votes on either side, and each- profiting by the regular and natural increase for nearly twolgara,. While we know that there are thoiffiands of honest Democrats now' who cannot and will not suppoit the New York nominations, and while it is fair to expect a handsome per tentage of gain from that source at the first election, who is there that can lay his, finger on a corporal's guard of GEARY'S supporters - in '66 who have since deserted us ? We keep_every man whom we had then, and this is what the opposition cannot say. Give us then, from ell sources, an increase of 8,000 votes and the opposi tion must gain at least 20,000 to match it. They'can't do it honestly—and they don't mean to try. But they do intend to bring into the Commonwealth from without, and , to man ufticture fraudulently within it, at leaf t 25,- 000 votes. They will distribute them through all the border counties and throughout the State where they can find convenient courts, complaisant officers and conniving election boards. It is a desperate card, but it is their last play, and their only salvation as a local or national party. Now we insist upon it that, as the opposi tion can only succeed by frauds so gigantic, so it will be a shameful negligence and cowarclici in our friends to fail either of de tecting in blocking that game. The rebel yell of Jonwson, BLAIR and the Copperhead newspapers frightens no one. We have the votes to make this thing sure. Fifteen thousand majority at least of the people'of Pennsylvania are Union men to-day, and' friendly to the Republican tick et. 411 they have to do is to turn out and vote in October,„ every man of them, and see to it ttat the Democrats poll no more votes than:the law allows them. Do these two things and the Old Keystone will be all right. MORE WAILING. "This is terrible," telegraphs Houvrno SEYMOUR to his friend, the defeated Demo cratic candidate for Governor in lVlaine on Monday night. "This is terrible !" ex claims the.Preshlential nominee, as he con leraplates his dissolving hopes under that glorious victory for the Union. "This is terrible " said another'. eminent Democrat, also his friend,. Glen. when he found• • himself hopeiessly , hemmed in at Appo matox by the triumphant legions'of GnAnT. "This is terrible'! " said another Demo cratie friend of his, the pirate Smuts, as he sprarig overboard from the Alabama sinking'under the shot of the avengers of the Republic. "This is terrible 1 " groaned another 'good Democrat, Wrmtnii 13oorn, when, a hunted assassini he was hemmed in by a wall of fire, and death, the summary and inevitable retribution for his crime, was wrappinz its black cloud around him. "Where are the victories you promised us ? " is Mr. SEYMOUR'i reproachful de mand. It Is the same enquiry which, over and over again, j the Southern- rebels ad dressed" to their Northern Copperhead friends in the late four years of war. "Where is the reaction of the North against Radical misrule ? f You prorated us a peace ful secession, or 1 an easy triumph over the disunited North. I You proclaimed the war a failure; you boaliited of contributing•neither PITTSBURGH, .G.Q►Z SATURDAY. , SEPTLM a man nor a dollar to its support. Yon told us that we Were right, and pledged to us your .sympathies and your material aid: You vaunted your own ability to take care of the Republicans at h i ome, while we should subdue their armies L in the field. Why didn't you make good these fine pledges? Where are the victories you promised . us, in the name of Democratic disloyalty in the North ?" And only Echo answers ! "Thig is terrible" is ;the wail of the De mocracy of Allegheny as they contemplate the, ruinouh defeat of their friends in Maine "This is terrible," gnashes from their lock ed teeth as they pay up the thousands of dollars which they have lost in bets upon the majority—bits which they never would have made but for the reckless falsification of the returns by leaders in whom they had placed their fatal confidence. "This is ter rible" will be the burthen of their lamenta tions, as they drag through the remaining days of the canvass in impecunious silence and darkness, while the Union men of Al legheny—all their election expenses more than paid with the good Democratic dollars won 11rom the Fictims of too much confi dencein Demdcratic brag—keep the streets and squares blazing night after night with their brilliant displays, and go marching on Until November with fire-works, torch lights, banners, gun powder and the ringing shouts of assureiltriumpli: "This is . terri ble! 'Where are the victories you promised us?"—and Szymoun, the Copperheads, the rebels, the disunionists and Ku Klux every where, North and South, and the thousands of Democratic speculators—confidence-vic tims who have seen the last of the hundreds of thousands of dollars wagered upon the delusive brag of. DeMocratic journals—all of them join in the chorus of lamentation. This is not terrible for Union men—not any! MATE POLITICS. • JOHN BROOKS, Esq., of Cameron, is the Republican nominee for Representative froth Cameron; Clinton and McKean. A. G. OLMSTEAD, Esq., is the Republican nominee for the Senate in the Potter dis trict. For one Representative, Potter and Tioga have united on B. B. STRANG, but cannot agree on the other, Potter insisting on J. S. MANN and Tioga preferring Mr. NILES, both of whom are consequently in the field. We trust that our friends there will emulate the good example set for them In the the XXth Congressional district, and heal their differences promptly. The im portance of having a working majority in EL., the lower House this win rls too manifest to be needlessly imperilled. The difficulty in this, as„i'n other insta this year in our State, would not occur under a proper sys tem of representation in the nominating body. The objectionable features of the Conferee sygem have never been more man fest than this year. The triangular contest for the Republican nomination in the Bradford District has not yet terminated. Bradford adheres to Lew pox, Wyoming to OBTERHOUT and Susque hanna to -JESSUP. It looks as if Wyoming would give way in favor of LANDON. The Democratic nominations for Con gress are, completed, with the exceptions of the IXth and Xlth districts. We append the list as it now stands : I Siang J. Randall. 't XIII V. E. Piolet. • II r. B. Florence. XIV J. F. Knipe. , 111 John Moffett. I XV It J. Halueman. IV J• B. Nicholson. XVI.F.-X. , V J. H. Reading. , XVI/ John P. Linton: VI J. D. St des. XVIII L. A. Mackey. VII R. E, Monaghan. XIX R. Brown. VIII J. L. Getz. I XX R. M. De Francei lx XXI H. D. Foster. X J.J. Connor. XXI/. A ndrew Bunt. XI XXIII! L. W. Mitchell. XII G. W. Woodward. !XXIV David Crawford. THE NEXT ANNUAL TREASURY RE- It is announced that the official report of the Secretary of the Treasury, to - be made to Congress in December, which regularly includes the figures for receipts and expen ditures during the last fiscal year, will state the exact amount for the year ending in June last, as follows : ' Revenue. Expenditures. Customs 9164,464 MI Civil 00.000,000 Internal 191,000.000 War ..Isooo.ooo Direct tax LRAM L.terlur ' 27.100.000 Lands 1 800,000 Navy 25,700,000 Miscellaneous . 46,900,000 Interest 140400,000 Total These totals were sometime since stated by. Commissioner WELLS, in his published letter, at $406,000,000 for revenue and $371,. 000,000 for expenses. His approximations, therefore, were remarkably correct. REPUBLICAN MASS MEETINGS. We eontinue our announcements as fol lows : FRIDAY, Sept. 25t1L—Butler. Governor Curtin, Messrs. Phelps, Minor and Penni. man. At Mount Pleasant, Gov. Pollock and Col. McClure. At Greenville, Hon. John Allison and T. J. Bighant. At Sha ron, Capt. F. Schluembach (German.) SATIIRDAY, Sept. 26th. Kittanning. Gov. Curtin, Messrs. Penniman and Minor. At Altoona, Messrs. McClure, Fisher and Owen. At Emlenton, (Venango) Messrs. S. A. Putviance and B. F. Lucas. At New Castle, Capt. F. Schluembach, (German.) Monday, Rept, 28.—At Elderton, (Arm stong,) Gov. Curtin and S. S. Minor. At Freeport, Messrs. Purviance, Penniman and Lucas. At Pittsburgh, Capt. F. Schluem bach (German.) Tuesday, Sept: 29,—Indiana, Gov. Cur tin, Messrs. Penniman and Minor. At West Newton, Gen. Hawley, Mr. Covode. ' At Johnstown, Capt. F. Belduembaea (Ger man). Wednesday, &pt. 80.—C1earfleld, Gov. Curtin, Messrs. Schofield and Swope. At Uniontown, Messrs. Hawley and Covode. A DAY or two ago the Post, of this city, assuming a virtuous indignation it did not feel, expressed itself in the following terms: Extravagance and pillage marks the sway of the Rtidicals in the State and Na tional Legisla urea. The swarms -of new employ6s at Harrisburg, the increase of the pay of the members and the rapid rise in the aggregate legislative expenses, have been sulliects of common remark." To which the Seaga Guard, of Harrisburg, thus pithily responds: "There was a little dividend made of an appropriation to a certain Pittsburgh char itable institution; which corruption was not consummated at Harrisburg, and of which the Post has a knowledge it owes to the Democratic party to lay before its readers. Bishop Domen:o understands this kind of corruption because he suffered by it,. and the Poat knows who was, benelitted thereby." What - answer has the Post to put in PORT. 4203,6C0,000 ♦406,364.000 ER:-SECRETARY STANTON. The Washington Chronol6 says : Secretaiy STANTON expects to start West this week to take part in , the campaign. He will speak at Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati l ,and Dayton, and possibly at a few other 'points. He then intends to visit New York in time to enter the field there. He will visit Philadel phia before going West. . On the other hams, a Columbus dispatch states that Mr. Stan on telegisphed to the Union State Comm' to of Ohio, that he can not now tell when e could return to that State, and that his esent wish. is that no appointments be ms de fOr hiss to address meetings. Tim strength of HORATIO SEirmouß with , his party has, by common consent, been located in the Eastern and Middle States. In the West and Northwest, heis supported by the Democracy in virtue of his nomina tion; all the solid claim he has ever had upon their regard as grown out of his iliiidis loyalty during t e war. In all other res pects, he is a can idate most distasteful to the Western Dem erotic leaders. Could'nt some Democrat, who is busy cyphering out the Vermont and Maine problems, suspend that work long enough to tell us tow much he is to gain in the West, where he is weak est, when the, Democratic losses in 'Maine and Vermont are so decidedly ruinous ?, RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. The Warren Baptist Association, of Rhode Island, has met and adjourned without taking definite action in regard to Rev. C. H. Malcom, though a strong effort was made to ostracise him for his open communion views. Dr. Herman Lincoln presented a resolution evidently aimed at Mr. Malcom, and his church at Newport, in which it is stated, the Association regards it an inver sion of the Scripture law, in inviting to the Lord's table those who have not been bap tised, contrary to the universal custom of Christendom, an infringement of the Di vine law, and a violation of Christian pro priety. Dr. Lincoln was the only person who spoke in favor of the resoldtion. Sev eralr) oppose it as injudicious, inasmuch as the question w ether baptism was a neces sary prerequisite to the Lord's table was an open one, notATefinitely settled in the Word of God, and thusleft to private judgment. The zesoltition was referred to a commit ee which is adverse to it, and which will report at the meeting one year hence. Rev. Henry Ward Beecher will speak in Boston on the political situation before the• presidential election, but he willfot lecture much during the coming season, says the liidependent, being engaged on his "Life of Christ." The long looked-for trial of Rev. J. P. Hubbard, for allowing Rev. Frederick Den nison to officiate in his church, commenced on Monday, the 9th. The court appointed •by Bishop. Clark, of Rhode Island, entered upon he duties at that date, but nothing was done, and the court adjourned to meet on the 22d inst. Mr. Hubbard pleaded not guilty to the presentment It is gratifying to note that quite unex pectedly the American Board of Foreign Missions have been favored with so many remittances, that it will be wholly unneces sary to report any indebtedness to the next . meeting. This week's issue of the Presbyterian Banner begins a new volume, the fifty-fifth. Ever since July sth, 1814, this paper, though the name has been changed several times, has continued to make its visits to the homFs of subscribers. Under the editorial man agement of Dr. Allison and Prof. Patterson, the Banner has steadily risen to its present elevated and popular position. It is ably edited, and conducted, too, in a liberal and catholic spirit. The paper well deserves the patronage it receives. The Old School Presbytery of Indianapo lis declared that dancing was a proper ground of discipline, according to the rules of that Church, as expressed in chapter first, section third. Not Only is dancing condemned, but members are not to countenance the same by their voluntary presence. The approaching General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in October, promises to be an interesting meeting. It is expected that every Diocese, without a single exception, will be represented by its Bishops and clerical and lay delegates. The Western Chriation Advocate, pub lished at Cincinnati, says all the Catholic papers it sees are outspoken advocates of the election of Seymour and Blair. Their partisan bitterness Is not surpassed by the vilest sheets of the , party. The new parlor amusement called Plan chette Is pronounced by the Catholic clergy of St. Louis a diabolical invention, and members of that lath who practice it are threatened with excommunication from the Church. The Michigan M. E. Conference, at its late seamen at Tines Rivers, received twenty six additional ministers. This body is ono of the largest of the flity-odd Confer ences of that denomination. Rev. Charles Franklin Robertson, the newly elected Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Missouri, is a son of Mr. James Robertson, a member of St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church at Peeks kill, N. Y., and brother-in-law of Rev. C. D. Fess, a distinguished Methodist minister in New York City. Ho was early a clerk in a New York mercantile house, and be came a communicant In St. George's Parish, under the eloquent Dr. Tyng. He gradua ted at Yale College In 1852 and at the Gen eral Theological Seminary in 1802. His age is thirty-three. When the , Rev. Washington Baird, ,a Presbyterian minister, was dying in Clay ton, Georgia, a few weeks since, in response to a question as to how he felt, he said that he was "passing from the bosom ofhis friends on earth to the bosom of his Father in Heaven." When asked how he found the passage, he whispered, "pleasant—glorious." We have more confidence in the testimony of this dying minister, In the power of Christ to sate for time and eternity, than the atheisti- ER. 19, 1868. al declarations of such men as Mr. Burtt, the Democratic-Labor candidate* for Con gress in this District, who is said to ques tion the existence of a God, and to ignore the fundamental principles of Christianity. Christian men seeking to have a more de cided recognition of the Sovereignty of God in the Constitution, would not get much help from such perions, it sent to Congress. Some of the Indian tribes , are evidently "reconstructed," and should not be classed with the wr'tches out on the plains, as would appear from the fact that, a camp. meeting begins this week on the "Tonawan da 'reservation" in New York, for the bent t of the "Six Nations." It is to be under supervision of Rev. C. D. Burlingame, ;" minister of the Genessee M. E. Conference. - _ The question of music, always ,a trouble some one, is assuming a _grave aspect in some of the leading churches in the East, mainly because of the exorbitant tax to sustain choirs, and the "soiled" character of many of the singers. Among the leading churches which have taken steps to dispense with 4i, choir, and return to simple general congregational singing in its worship of God, is the First Baptist church in Phila delphia. Some other of the largest and most influential churches in Philadelphia'are meditating the same thing. Some of these 'choir" luxuries cost a congregation full, two thousand - dollars per annum. Many of the persons who are found' on opera, and sometimes other stages, during the week, are engaged in the cnoir on the Sabbath. At a late meeting of the United Presby tery of Chillicothe, a paper was presented stating that the United Presbyterian - church of Chillicothe," by an almost unanimous vote, had withdrawn frOm the jurisdiction of the Presbytery. The step was taken in view of the recent decision of the United Presbyterian, Churchin the matter of instru mental music in public worship. The most ritualistically • dined Episco { in pal minister in San Francisco, California, is said to be the Rev. F. Dillon, o f the, Church of St.. Tames the Less. He usually appears in the Sabbath services, clad in a white robe, with an immense cross down the back. He is surrounded by a number of attendants. Seven candles are on the 'altar, and the number of genuflexions gone ,through with in a morning service is of an unusual character in an Episcopal Church. It is said he, has, -been twice suspended by Bishop Kip, but;; as soon as restored, wears the cross as conspicuously as ever. The Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Na- tional Local. Preachers' Association of the Methodist Episcopal Church, meets in Christ M. E church of this city, Saturday, Octo ber 17, 1868. Lay ministers from all parts of the Union are expected to be present, es pecially from the East, West and North. The last annual meeting was held in Boa ton, and was a season of marked interest. The Preachers' Meeting, comprising the pas tors of the two cities and vicinity, of the M. E. Churches, on last Monday morning, appointed Drs. Li:F. Morgan and H. Miller, and Revs. W. H. Locke, S. M. Hickman and James A. Miller, a Committee to co operate with the Local Committee of the association, in making arrangements for the Convention. The Local Committee con sists of Messrs. J. F. W. White, J. L. Gra ' ham, J. F. Dravo, J. Wilkinson and W. H. Kincaid. 88. SAlWEfirii BACKACHE PILLS Are the most efficient and most popular Diuretic medicine known, removing at once any obstruction of the Kidneys, subduing intimation and strength ening the 'Urinary Organs. Dr. Sargent's Backache Pins Have bet nin we 33 years, and an daily perform ing wonderful cures. In many Instances where pa tients were unable to walk upright or to rise without assistance, they have been relieved by a single don. Dr. f3argent's Backache Pi llti Cure all diseases of the Urinary Organs, the symp tomsof which are weakness and rain In the back and :obis, pains in the joints, difficulty' In voiding the urine, general debility, an. • TES lIDHETS, BLADDER, &0., Are those organ. through wide' most of the waste or worn out particles of the body passes; these worn out and dead particles are poisonous. conse— quently when these organs are diseased the whole spites,. becomes deranged. and if tot mitered at once the resort may be fatal. • Thts much .ateemed and most efficient medicine is the only diuretic that 1- put up in the shape of Pitts, and is mach more easil taken than the ordi nary diuretic draughts. the ri lls using sugar coated FOR BALE BY DRUGGISTS HAPPINESS DEPENDS UPON GOOD "Weakness of the Stomach" is the source of more evils than were contained in Pandorss , Boz: De bllity, headache, nervous tremors, palpitation of the heart, and local piens hin.merable, are its dtrec' consequences. It obscures the intellect 'and gives birth to tee most absurd and incobernt fan cies;.l eapaeltatera m in for business, sand renders persistent exertion next to impossible. Yet, strange to say, indigestion Is the 'most neglected of all ali ments. And this is the more extraordinary from the fact that an absolnte, Infallible specific fbr the disorder can be obtained In every city, town and village of the United States*. HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS takes as wide a range as the malady which it curs,. .It per. vales every civilised portion of the Western Hem isphere, and its celebrity as a tonic and alteratlye is everywhere established. lii; due to the common sense of the American public to say that the demand far It is Immense, and continually on, the increase; bat still thonsa,ds c ntinua to suffer from dyspep sia, with the great tact Lazing them in the face that a remedy for it exists, as it were. within arms ' length of every sun er. Such Is tbe inconsistency of human nature I Day by day, however. the num ber of those wee manifest this foam • indifference to their own h. alth and comfort