13 c y t , t litt s .! )ittg i j Gaisttt. 14BLIBBED DAILY, BY PENNIMAN, SEED & CO, Proprietors. r. B. PENNIMAN, JOSIAH KING. . T. P. HOUSTON. N. P. HEED. Editors find proprietors. • OFFICE; • GAZETTE BUILDING, NOS.'B4 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and Allegheny Comity. • Terma l TD ily. II Sein I . -Weekly.l ' Weekly.\ One year.... 18, th ..ne year.V..so,Slngle cup y.._..11 1 •W Ons month ' 75 .Slx mos.. 1.50 5 copies , each. 1.2; By the wee: 18 Three Mos 75110 •• 1.15 Mom ar Cr.)er.) —and one to Agt qt. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, ISt S. National Union Il l eimblican Ticket: NATIONAL. ' President--TTLYSSFiS S. GRANT. I rice_President—SCHpYLEß COLFAX • PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS.. AT LARnE. . • G. MORRISON COATES. of Philadelphia. THOS. M. MARSHALL, of Pittsburgh. District. Dixtri et 1. W. H. BARNES, 3. SAMUEL SNOW, 2. W. J. FOLL.ICK. 4. 11. F. W AGossEr.rant 8. RICHARD WILDEY, 15. CHAS. H. MILLER, 4. G. W. HILL. G. JWIN STEWART, 5.. WATSON F. MAGILL, 7. GEORGE W. ELSER; G. J. H. DRINGI/URST, S. A. G. Ot.mB2lcAD, 7. FRANK C. HEATON, G. LADIES SILL & ISAAC ECKERT, ) 0. H. C. JOIINSON., S. MARIS DOOI . BB. 1. J. K. EWING, ,, - 26. DAVID 31. RANK, ". WM. FREW, . A. W. CRAWFORD, 22.. W. W. KETCHUM, J. S. ROTAS... STATE. Auditor General—J. F. HARTRANFT. Surveyor General—J. M. CAMPBELL. DISTRICT. Congress, 22d Dist—JAS. S. NEGLEY.. %, 23d Dist.—DARWIN PHELPS. COUNTY. State Senate—JAMES L. GRAHAM ammoza GEORGE WILSON, M. S. HUMPHREYS, GEO. F. MORGAN, VINCENTMILLER, JAMES TAYLOR, ,SAMUEL KERR. .INstriet,Attorney—L: L. PEARSON. Asst District Atte. B. FLACK. Controller—HENßY LAMBERT. Commissioner—JON THAN NEELY. Surveyor—R. L. McCULLY. County Home .Direeter—J. G. - MURRAY. - • Mayor—JARED M. BRUSH. controller—ROßT. J t McGOWAli'. Treasurer—A.J. COCHRAN. • Headquarters Republican County Com mittee, City Hall, Market Street. Open every day. County Committee meets every Wednesday, at 2 P. M WE PRINT on the inside pages of this morning's GezETTE—econdpage : "Maine, and the Remainder," Rphemeris, Row New York Gets Her Vegetables. Third and Sixth pages : Commeicial and River News. Sev enth page : Farm, Garden and Household. Gold closed in NewlYork yesterday at 141 k. ON °us second • page this morning we print a spirited political contribution from the gifted pen of .TraiEs M. 31.4.cuum, Esq., of this city. THE Episcopal Church of the United states is threatened with disruption; the low-church portion thereof hsving resolved to have rittiplism repressed or to secede from the Convention soon to be held, and estab lish a Reformed P. E, Church. Tait meeting of Soldiers and Sailors, which will be held — at Philadelphia on Thursday and Friday of this week, promi seito be unusually large as to numbers and specially grand as a popular demonstration. From all parts of the country, notes of the preparation of delegations thereto Leach us. HON. Jomr M. KRUM, an eminent Demo cratic lawyer of St. Louis, General H. F. finurraFsm.ow, the original border-rudian of Kansas and the compeer of ATcrusoN and others, who led the great prh-slavery raid upon that young Territory in '55, and Postmaster CLEVELAND, of Hartford, who went over to Dembcracy two years ago, are among the latest accessions to the cause_of GRAFT and Peace. . Do ROT FORGET the meeting at Union town tomorrow ! Excursion tickets by railway, fine weather, a beantill country, a live crowd and a pleasant time generally ! Our friends there send a special invitation to the Boys in Blue, inviting also our Clubs to attend and take part in the torch-light procession of the evening. Let us send up a good delegation to- cheer our struggling friends on that hard , battle-field I WE rhiNT the address of Gen. BLAIR, made last evening—precisely word for word as pronounced by him, being the only pho nographic report made of his remarks. The Reech as printed by our cotemporaries this morning is. a document dictated by Mr. &am to reporters during the afternoon in his rooms at the hotel, and is no the speech as delivered and now printed in the GAZETTE. The discrepencies, between the speech as written and spoken are very decided. TILE brilliant auguries of the last few - weeks have filled the Republicans of this regiiin with a wild enthusiasm. That quali ty is well enough in its way; but it is not a gopd substitute for hard work in conducting a campaign. , Republicans! only a fortnight remains be. fore the October election. Much is to be done in this short space. What we want is net simply a victory, but such a one as shall be - absolutely decisive of the whole campaign. To this end the attendance at the polls of every Republican voter must be secured. This is a matter of detail and pains.takinz, which mere enthusiasm is likely to overlook. It is not sufficient that your neighbor will V oce for GRANT and COLFAX, and so stay away from the October election. One vote ad ded tip the majority ofHARTRANFT and CAMP BELL will avail more than twenty votes ad ded to the majority in November. . Act on this presumpiion, and get ont two weeks ',env. every Republican voter. • MEETING TO-NIGHT. There will be a grand rally at Hare's Ho tel, Liberty street,. mouth of Fifth street, this evening, at half-past seven o'clock, which will be addressed by General Jonx F. FARNSWORTH, member of Congress for the Second District of Illinois. His abili ties, as well as his experience in public af fairs, entitle his views to the highest respect and confidence. I In addition, the meeting will be addressed by the Hon. 3IAnLoN °RANCE, of, Ohio, an eloquent and accomplished speaker. As this will be the first meeting held dur ing the present canvass in the old Fourth ward, and as the oratorical attractions of fered are quite unusual, we hope to see a rousing turn-out. GEN. FRANCIS P. BLUR. On the 30th of last June, just prior to the assembling of the Democratic National ' a Con vention, this gentleman wrote letter to Mr. I3RODHEAD, which found its Way imme diately, as was intended, into the newspa pers. That letter contains three remarka ble paragraphs, which read as follows : "If the President elected by the Democ racy enforces or permits others to enforce these Reconstruction acts, the Radicals, by the accession of 20 spurious Senators and 50 Representatives, will control both branches of Congress, and his administration will be as powerless as the present one of Mr. Johnson. "There is but one way to restore the Government and the Constitution, and that is for the President elect to declare these acts null and void, compel the army to undo its ?au , potion at the AS'outh, disperse the c•trpet bag &ate Governments, allow the white people to re-organize their own governments and elect &motors and Representatives. The House of Representatives will contain a majority of Democrats from the North, and ploy will admit the Represeotatives elect ed by the white people of the South, and, with the co-operation of the President, it will not, be difficult to COMPEL THE SEN ATE to submit ones more to the obligations of the Constitution. It will not be able to withstand the public judgment, if distinct ly invoked and clearly expressed on this fundamental issue, and it is the sure way to avoid all future strife to put the' issue plainly to the country. "I 'repeat that this is the real and only question which we should allow to control us; Shall we submit to the usurpations by which the Government has been over thrown, or shall we exert ourselves for its full and complete restoration? 11 is idle to talk of bonds, greenbacks, cold, the public faith, and the public credet. What can a Democratic President do in regard to any of these, with a Congress in both branches controlled by the carpet-baggers and their allies? He will be powerless to s'op the surplies by which idle negroes are organ ized into political clubs, by which an army is maintained to protect these vagabonds in their outrages upctn the ballot. These, a•-d things like these, eat up the revenues and resources of the Government, destroy its credit, and make the difference between gold and greenbacks. We must restore the Constitution before we can restore the finances, and to do this we must have a President who will execute the will of the people by trampling into the dust the usurpations of Congress, known as the Reconstruction Acts.'- I wish to stand be fore the Convention upon this issue, but it is one which embraces everything else that is of value in its large and comprehensive results. .It is the one thing that incLudce all that is worth a contest, and without it there is nothing that gives dignity, honor, or val ue to the struggle.!' This language is singularly direct and un ambiguous. It is susceptible of only one construction, unless through manifest and inexcusable violence. In point of fact, both political parties, in both geographical sections of the Union, instantly gave the same_ interpretation to Throughout the South the leaders in the late rebellion were delighted, because it gave voice to their own thoughts and feelings. At the North all the Democrats whose sympathies ran with therebellion received it with the same manifestations of applause. It gave Mr. BLAIR the nomination for the Vice Presi dency, and on a Platform made- to match his epistle. The candidate and the declaration of prin ciples were greeted with great enthusiasm all over the revolted States. Orators and journalists, in all the principal towns of those States, vied with each other in prais ing Mr. Biala and his letter, and in com mending the Convention for its courage in selecting him as a standard bearer. He was hailed as the pre-ordained leader of a fresh assault upon the government, in the inter ests of the men who surrendered to GRANT and SUERMAN. There was nothinglunnatural in this, ex cept that, under the circumstances, so much frankness and audacity should be displayed. We saw proper at the time to collate extracts from theie fulminations which made two full pages of this journal, for the. enlighten ment of our readers. Other Republican journals Wrought the loyal States aided in disseminatinz the exaltations and threats which Mr. Swan's letter, and his subse quent nomination inspired. The impression made upon the people of the Northern States was instantaneous and profound. s The Northern Democratic leaders prompt ly discovered that they and Mr. BLAIR had miscalculated the temper of popular opinion outside of their own organization, and• measurably inside of it. Consequently the ,swiftly despatched orders to the chief Southern cities that all swaggering of fresh violence must cease. Some of the newspapers thus admonished concludini that dissimulation would be profitable, took the hint and followed it with alacrity. Oth ers of them, directed by sturdy and uneom plying writers, not only refused, but, in ad dition, revealed what injunctions had been laid upon them. This courageous, but in discreet avowal, added to the disgust and alarm which pervaded multitudes of minds all over the North. • . Among the orators, Mr. WADE HAMPTON had been conspicuous for the intensity of his bravado. But he was prevailed upon to change front, and even to deny that he had 'made the speeches attributed to him. With unblushing impudence ho averred that the press of his own party, and even of South ern cities, had conspired to put thoughts into lds bead that he had never meditated and words with his mouth that he had never spoken. The pres sure must have — been very great when ithis man, who never shrank from the com mission of an infamy l was thus Induced de PITTSBURGH- •GAZETTE : TUESDAY, SEPTEMMI 29, 186E1. merely to eat his own words. We put it in this shape, for everybOdy understood him. He was not misrepresented, but simply wished to ebunteract the mischief his bold utterances had done his party. And now Mr. 13man. is upon a pilgrim age over the Northern States to put a forced and unnatural construction upon a letter the authenticity of which he cannot deny. He asserts, in substance, that lie was misun derstood alike by - friend and foe. No man was ever so unfortunMe before. Does he attach a meaning tot words and sen tences entirely peculiiir to himself ? Then he should not presume to ad dress the public until he has acquired a speech that can be understood without an interpreter. But what assurance can the people possibly 1, have--if he used language in the letter to Mr. BRODHEAD in so, unusu al a sense as tol mislead every body—that they comprehend his meaning now ? - Last evening Mr. BLAIR undertook to de fend himself, and the interpretation he now seeks to put on his BROADHEAD letter before the citizens of Pittsburgh so far as his audi ence was composed of Democrats, we have no hesitancy in expressing the belief that they liked that Letter not at all as he ex plained it, but vastly as Mr. HAMPTON ex- I pounded it when it first appeared in the newspapers. Mr. BLAIR was careful to have his speech not simply prepared beforehand, but put in type in ,advance of his delivery of it, and proof-slips thereof furnished to all the re porters of the press who were charged to take notes of whtit he said. We have not space this morning to com ment in detail upon BLern's attempted change of base. That task will require a separate article. It is sufficient for us to say now that MR. BLAnt's explanation not only comes too late, but is of such a charac ter as to do neither himself nor his party a particle of good. His present duplicity is transparent even to the dullest ap9rehen: sion. His purpose is not to recant and atone for his recent violence, but so to allay the alarm he created as to gain a position from which he would be able to put his threats into execution. For this he is too late. The people understand the issues it is their duty to settle at the ballot-box, and no amount of chicanery will deflect them from the fulfillment of the purpose they have already made up, to avoid the possibility . of serious trouble in the near futore by the election of GRANT and COLFAX. i•SET HNC THINGS TO RIGIITS.” Oar Northern Democrats are generally attempting to dodge the BRODHEAD letter of General BLAIR, but their cowardly taetics are scorned by the Southern rebel leaders of the party. For example, the Mobile Tri bune says of this letter : "This is the main plank of the platform. A few timid politicians and poltroons may revile Forrest, Hampton and Blair, hut th se statesmen stand on the Democratic pl ,tform, which is broad enough to support the South as well as the North." The Louisville Courier, of the 24th, edited by the es-rebel Generll Buctoirtit, wh H e works at Fort Donelson were so unpleasant-, ly and disastrously moved upon by General GRANT, also says : "As to the Brodhead letter. we thank Gen. Blair for his exposition; and, so far as we are concerned, we indorse it to the full est extent. * * * * * * There could be no doubt as to the position of the party on the subject. This General Blair knew when he penned his letter. He knew that his sews entirely accorded with the views of the part.. If there are !boso— ns we are led to infer from the language of the Times—A ho endeavor to quibble ahout or explain away Blair's words, the 'east we can say is that we do not comprehend their Democracy, and that we have no manner of sympathy. with them. What Blair said was well-timed and to the purpose, and, as we halie.said. we thank him for It. It was a manly and bold_ avowal of Democratic sentiment, and presented a practicable so lution of the rec3nstruction proolem. * * * * * That %birth we have to consider, and the country has to consider, is what can hedone now to set things to rights.t This problem U •neral Blair has solved in the only way that it was possible to s lye it. Radical usurpation renders a settlement of the &ill. cuity through the medium of the courts im practicaerte, and the only way, therefore, and it, is indeed the plain and obvious one, is for the incornirg Democratic aduiin s traticn to see that the - highest law of the land, the Vonstitution, is enforced and maintained. • The party -sneaks at the North will per ceive that this is a track of their old mas ter's whip; they are not to be permitted to retreat from any position which satisfies the views of the Southern Democracy. The Brodhead letter is distinctly affirmed to be of the essence of current issues, and to af ford the only correct guide for an "incoming Democratic administration." The Democracy arc also distinctly ad vised, and the country is informed, that the Brodhead letter means the armed and ford ble intervention of the Executive, and troth. ing else General BLAIR himself excludes Congress from any participation in the bu siness of "setting things to right." His suggestion that the Senate should be "com pelled to submit" was rather the rounding of a rhetorical period their:l - the expression of any well-founded expectation. The entire context of his letter supposes the exclusive ly independent and arbitrary action of the President alone, and, indeed, is based ex pressly upon the idea that no Congressional concurrence can be hoped for. As to the Judiciary, although Brant did not literally declare its exclusion from the work of setting things to rights, yet no other inferences can be drawn from what he does say. And this is made clearly apparent in the above commentary by Gen. BUCKNER. "A settlement of the difficulty through the mediuni of the. Courts is impracticable" says this cordial endorsement of theißrain programme, and nothing remains available for " Setting things to rights" except the sword in the President's hands. BLAIR hints at judicial decisions declaring the unconstitutionality of reconstruction, but all his practical suggestions mean 6nly a Presidential Dictatorship. BUCHNER, equally frank,' but vastly more logical, throws out the Supreme Court altogether. Thus both of the co-ordinate departments of the government are to be Ignored and laws duly enacted by the Congress of the United Statee but which ore Wasteful to_s political party, are to be removed from the statute-book, not by their constituticnal and orderly repeal by the law-making depart: ment, nor by their condemnation as invalid by the revising power of the Judiciary, but by the new Democratic plan of nullifying disagreeable laws by violently overturning and defying them. This defines the issue too plainly to be misunderstood. Republicanism says that no law, once legally enacted, no matter how unpopular it may be, least of all when so just and necessary in its purview as the re- Construction acts, shall be modified, amend- i: , ed or brogated exiept in the due course of repeal ng legislation, or of judicial scrutiny and ondemnation. The Democracy de mand the right to nullify laws by military force, , rrespective of the regular constitu tional methods. One party upholds the sanc tity of law, as the law supreme; .the other appeals to the stronger might of the bayo net! The one party points to the ballot-box as the only method of redress under our constitutional government, for any wrongs, real or imaginary, while the other avows its traitorous preference for a forcible and rev olutionary-resistance. The Democracy are at leas consistent in this, for they propose nowactly what they did in '6l, when, beaten by the ballots of a majority, they re sorted o bullets. Ballots Against Bullets is the issue they now make before the people, and upon that issue we have no hesitation in meeting them, and intend to overthrow them once more. ARE YO ' ASSESSED? If you are not, r if you do not know positively the fact ti at you are, go at once to the Assessor of ye ur precinct, and have it attended to. Re a ember that the period expires next Saturday night, October 3d, at midnight. We annex a correct list of the Assessors in, the several wards of the cities and in the boroughs: PITT§BURGII. First ward, Pittsburgh ,Samuel Patterson Seefuid ward, Alexander Aiken. Third ward, John D. Eagan. Fourth ward, A. P: Thompson. Fifth ward, John Quinn. Sixth ward, Ch.ist King, Seventh and Eighth wards, Wm. Shore Ninth and Tenth wards, Joseph Irwin. Eleventh ward, John Crawford. Twelfth ward, John S. Normine. Thirteenth ward, Robert Inder. Fourteenth ward, James McGinness. Fifteenth ward, J. P. Pearson, Sixteenth ward, Thos. Merkel. Seventeenth ward, Edward Davidson. Eighteenth wan!, Sarni. Caro hers: Twentieth ward, David Aiken, Sr. Twenty-first ward, Saml. Chadwick. Twenty-socond ward, Wm. Irwin. Twenty-third ward. Wm. Wyde. ALLEGE' 1:14Y. First Ward—Simeon Milford. Second Ward—John Sterrett. Third Ward—H. R. Ray. Fourth Ward—James Graham. Fifth Ward—Henry Paulis. Sixth Ward—Wm. Motheral. Sffventh Ward—John Mierhoffer. Eighth Ward—George Moul. BOROUGHS. Birmingham—Wm. D..y. Ea.t Birmingham—A. J. Rapp. Monongahela,l—JOhn Cregan. Temperanctiville-,F. C. Dorrington. South Pittsburgh--Win. Lloyd. McKeesport—Wm, Mains. Sharpshurg—Jonas Butterfield. Mt. Washington—Eli Buribrd. Bdlevue—JamesSterrett. Tarenturn —Win. V. Evans. Braddock—M. J. Bennett. 'Orrnshs—t:eorgo .Geyer. Sewickley—Wm. Miller. • Elizabeth—J. N. Laughlin. West Elizabeth—John 0. Percival. HATR ED OF UNION SOLID FIRS "If I could have my way I would place JEFF. DAVIS in Congress, where he richly belongs. Then I would go to Concord, take all the miserable battle•fiags 'from the State House, and make a bonfire of them in the State House yard. (Great applause.) Then I would go all through the North and destroy all the monuments and gravestones erected to the memory of soldiers. In short, I would pat out of sight everything which reminds us that we ever had a war with our Southern brethren.. ."I do not know that I would hang one lezged and one-armed soldiers, but I would pray to God to get them out of the way as soon as possible."---Henry Clay Dean, in a speech at Manchester, N. H., February, 1868. Ma. B. F. BUTLIZR was yesterday renom inated for Congress, in the Fifth Massachu setts district, receiving all hitt four - out of 179 votes, and the nomination was subse quently made unanimous. No man in this country, and few in any other, have been so persistently or atrociously vilified and abused as he. - Adverse newspapers and or ators have seemed to consider themselves licensed to invent and promulgate any con ceivable chlumuy upon his reputation. But his rare endowments have enabled him suc cessfully to endure and easily lo surmount all the assault of his detractors. He fur nishes ,a living demonstration of the fact that a man who has substantial matter in him, and is true to himself, cannot be writ ten or talked down. The instinct for fair play operates strongly in his favor, and car ries him along, where he might otherwise full, GEN. GRANT'S dispatch of November 10, '64, to Secretary STANTO, congratulating the President upon the grand victory of the Republicans in his reelection, was included in our recent report of the es-Secretary's speech nt Steubenville. The publication of this dispatch attracts much it tention now; in view of the fact that, for full three years after it was written, Democratic journals and leaders everywhere were advocating his nomination as President by their party. And to toll the truth, the' would gladly ex change him for BEIMOIII today. Nor has their preference for the ictorious comman der been so thoroughly uprooted, but that thousands of honest Democrats are bent on giving to him their votes. NEvEu.before were the Republican mass es in Western Pennsylvania so thoroughly aroused as as at the present moment. The majority' on this side of the Alleghenies two i weeks from to-day will be unprecedentedly large. f our friends on the eastern side of the Mo ntains only keep the balance even, as wed übt not they will, the Republican 11 majorit in the State will be enough to elec trif7 the country. THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU. The entire cost of the Freedman's Bureau, includine the very large expenditure to feed the starving white rebels, was only a little over six millions of dollars up to August Ist, '6B. The annexed letter tells the whole story. WAR DEPT. BUREAU OP REPOGELS, FREEDMEN AND ABANDONED LANDS, WASHINGTON, Aug. 5, 1868. Hon. J. G. Blaine, Augusta, Me.:- Dear Sir—l have replied by telegraph to your letter this morning, and herewith, en close some c•ip es of a letter to Mr. Eliot, which I drew up a few. days .ago. - That letter Covers the expend tures for three years from January 1, 1865, to January 1, 1868. The bureau was organized in May, 1865, and got fairly under wav in July, 1865. The accounts of the old ..Department of Freedmen's Affairs' were turned over to this 3ureau, and are ail, included hi the state Went of expenses. Total cash drawn frr m the Treasury :end received from rents of abandoned lands. Cr spa ,old, taxes, tines, and a:1 utheettaueous soureeb up to Jan. I. 9T48.‘11 .19 Transferred to Agricultural Dent. 11:11an,,e Expeudia from Jun. 1 to Aug. 1, INA @MI The pay of army officersought to be reek oned as expended by his Bureau, it being accounted for by the Pay Department. General Howard has gone South, where I hope he will do g .od work. Yours truly, ' (Signed) E. `VIrITTr ESEY Acting Assistant Adjutant General. P. S. - --The total cash drawn from the United States Treasury up to Aug I, 1868. has been $6,247,251 78; deduct Agricultural Bureau, $50,000, leaving $6,107,251 78 as the real cost of the Bureau to the Government. The balance of the $7,935;285 88 was oh tained from the rents of abandoned lands, &c , at the South. E. W., A. A. A. G. DEMOCRACY TWENTY YEARS AGO A State Convention of the Ohio Demo cracy, held at Columbus, January 8, 1848, adopted the following resolution "That the people of Ohio now, as they have always done, look upon the institution of slavery as an evil, and unfavorable to the full development of the spirit and prac tical benefits of free insthutions, and that entertaining these sentiments, they will feel it to be their duty to use all power con sistent with the national compact to prevent its increase, to mitigate and finally to eradi cate the evil." THE "Democracy,"whom General BLAIR addressed last evening, were thus described by himself three years since: The Democratic patty at the present day is democratic in name and nothing else. The old Jefferson and Jackson principles have been abandoned. The man whp did not escape the rope by three hours is the author of all to which the Democratic party of the present day subscribes. It has not one scintilla of true Democracy to animate its carcass. WHEN General Grant went to Governor Yates to offer his services, he did not even mention that he fought at Palo Alto, Resaca de la Palma, Monterey, and served under General Scott in his campaign from Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico, or that he had been promoted to First Lieutenant on the field for gallantry at Molino del Rey, and brevetted a captain for brilliant and skillful fighting upon the Heights of Chapultepec.. Not a word of all this—nor did the Governor remember it—but he simply said he had been educated at the expense of the Gov ernment, and, as. the Government was in trouble, desired to serve it in any situation he might be placed. Assigned to a clerk's desk he went to work quietly and faithfully. Such is the man who rose to the highest place in the army through the power of 'his talent for doing well what was before him. He never asked anybody to promote him. He never seemed to care for promotion. And yet there are those who say that Gen. Grant is not a great man. If he is not, who is or liaG been great in the world's history ? —Harrisburg Telegraph. == BRIEF NEWS ITEMS. -Chas. H. Grappon, of the Philadelphia Sunday Mercury, died on Sunday last. —Abner Greenleaf, formerly editor and proprietor of the New Hampshire Gazette, died yesterday. • —John Isherwood, a native of Belgium, aged twenty-six, was killed by the Erie railway train at Passaic, Monday morning. —Henry Dol z, a brakeman, wasl killed, and several others of Bethlehem, Pa., were injured yesterday by a passenger car being upset on the Penn-ylvania railroad. —Four English miners, named William Moore, Richard Sampson, Jas. Richards and Jas. Thompson, were instantly crushed to death last Thursday by the falling in of a shaft of iron in a mine at Mount Hope, Morris county, N. J. They were buried en Sunday. An immense crowd of miners attended the funeral. Mysterious Poisoning Case. (By Telegraph to the Pltt.burgh Gazette,) NEW Yomic, Sept. 28.—Another case of mysterious poisoning has occurred in this city, the victim being James Hamilton, proprietor of a boarding house on Thomp son street, who died this morning from the effects of oxalic acid taken in a des° of sonna and salts, purchased at the drug store of Mr-Roger- Spring street, about a month ago. Rogers and his son were arrested and held to await the Coroner's inquest. They deny that the salts contained any ox alic acid when purchased. The family of the deceased say the package of salts was not interfered with while in thelhouse. 'I he Suspension of Rer. Dr. McMullen [lty Telegraph to the Pittsburgh tiazetted CnIt'AGO, Sept. 28.—A mass meeting was held , at Father Maubow Temperance Hall last night for the purpose of taking action upon the suspension of Rev. Dr. McMul len, of St. Patrichs Church, by Bishop Duggan.! Resolutions sustaining Dr. Mc- Mullen were discussed at length and final ly adopted by a large majority. The friends of the Bishop then left the ball in a body. Subscription list‘were opened for the purpose of rasing a sufficient sum to pay Dr. McMullen's expenses to Rome. A considerable sum was subscribed. Dea•h of an Indianian (By Telegraph to the littebursth Oazette.l BUFFAt.O, Sep ember 28. Capt. Fred. crick H. IBrandleo died suddenly in this city this morning of paralysis. He had Jost ro urned from Europe. He has resi ded in the west for a number of A ears. In his pocket was found a commission as Justice of the Peace in Cass county, Indi ana,•clated 18t36, and also showing him to have been the agent for several Insurance Companies in that state. His body was taken °hero of by the Masons. He was about seventy years of age. The Calamity at Wheeling—Business Sus , peuded. (By Teletriaph to ttoi Plitsbumb Goiwtte.l WHEELING, W. VA., Sept. 28.—1 n coin pliance with the Mayor's proclamation. business was entirely suspended this af ternoon. the citizens generally uniting with the city in paving the last tribute of res pect to the police and firemen who were killed by the falling walls at the fire on Sunday mprning. Tf.e Boys In Blue Convention. Mg Telegraph to the Pltt.bargh Elasette.l PHILADRLPIIIA, Sent. 28.—The National Committee of the Soldiers and Sailors have received letters from Generals Pope, How ard, Siegel, Sherman, and others, which will be read at the Convention on the first proximo. FBOhi EITROPE. Progress of the Insurrection in Spain—A Great Battle Expected --The Revolutionists Gaining Ground. By Telegraph to the l'lttsberzb Gatette.3 .M.tnnin, Sept. 26.—The insurgents have , torn up the railway in the Sierra Morena. Count Gergente with his troops is compelled to remain in the mountain defiles. General Prim is expected at Barcelona to-day, where the people are only waiting for his arrival to rise: Madrid and Saragossa are also ripe for revolt. The vanguard of the army under Novalechez, numbering 3,000, has joined thb insurgents. He has, in ixin sequence,, been obliged to wait for reinfOree ments. The French squadron arrived at Barcelona. LONDON, Sept. 2g.—A battle is hourly ex pected between Novalechez and Gergente near Cordova. rho royalists Lst over six hundred men in the fight at Santander, but they succeeded in retaining possession of the city. General Cologree marches to- Morrow on Santona. He has resolved to barn the place if it makes any resistance. LONDON, Sept. 28.—Advises from Spain to-day confirm all previous reports that the insurgents are marching in force on the Capital. The royal troops sent against Santander, wlm have since captured that city, have been engaged in pursuing the re tio bele in that quarti r. They b. ye since been ordered to return to Madrid 'r the protec tion of the Capitol. The reyo ution is rap idly progressing in the interior. The city of Valladolid had pronounced against tho Queen. and the revolt already extended - to most of the provinces into which the WO and new Castile are divided. tot) ck) 5. 9(45.94.6 , 3 49 =3 FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL LONDON, Sept. 28.—Evening—American Securities firm. Bonds, 73. Illinois, 94. Erie, 33X. FRANKFORT, Sept. 28.—Bonds firm at 75. LIVERPOOL, Sept. 28.—Evcning—Cotton advancing, with uplands at 10d; Orleans at 1030; sales, 15,000 bales. Petroleum 11d. per gallon. Breadstuffs and Provisions un changed. Lard at 725. Bacon at 575. Arrest of a Negro Desperado—He is Lynched on the Spot by Blacks and Whites--Gen. Hindman. C. S. A., As— sassinated. [By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.l MEMPHIS, Sept. 28.—The Avalanche's Helena, Arkansas, letter says: Yesterday morning Deputy Sheriff; Joseph M. Maley, with a posse, surrounded the cabin of a no torious negro named Lee Marson, who killed several persons last winter.' He shot and maimed for life Sheriff Bart Taylor who was attempting to arrest him, and recently knocked a jailor in the head and escaped to the hills, where he has been the ter ror to all white and black people. No sooner had the Sheriff's posse knock ed at the door, yesterday, than Marson fired, instantly killing Maley. Others at tempted to close in on him, when ho made a desperate resistance, severely wounding Perry Neagle and Andice Barnes, colored, and then escaped to the woods. News of affair spread like wi (Hire. Soon fully a hundred men were svouring the woods and succeeded in finding Marson, whose arms were broken and also wounded in the side. A vote was taken on the spot, black and whites voting in favor of hanging him, which was accordingly done. Gen. J. C. Hindman, late of Confederate States Army, was assasinated at his resi dence at Helena, last night. The Superin tendent of the Police received a dispatch this afternoon directing him to arrest It man named Robbins, passenger on. the Shreve, who it was relieved committed the deed. Robbins was arrested and sent back. He is from Springfield, Missouri, and served tin der Hindman. He stoutly denies being the murderer. LATER—The Avatanche'B special to-night says: General Hindman was shot at ten o'clock last night while sitting in the midst of his family smoking, his left hand,which held the pipe, being carried away by a charge of buckshot, two of which entered his neck, inflicting a wound from which he died eight hours afterward. His assassina tion, it is said, *as procured through polit ical causes. Serious Railroad Disaster. (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette CuiclrmATl, September 28.—The Piloher tunnel on the M. t C. Railroad, which caught fire some days ago and has since been burning, caved in on Sunday and buried two men. Their remains have not been recovered. While a construction engine was backing up to the scene of the disaster, it ran over two hand cars near Athens, containin4 eighteen men, and in stantly killing five and severely injuring three others, two of whom are not expect ed to rec-ver. The men endeavored to jump from the cars which were demolished. One man hal his head entirely severed from his body and another had half his head torn away by a splinter from the car. The burning and caving of the tunnel has blockaded the road, but the ompany are building a track . over the hill, which will soon be completed. Large Flre az Buffalo By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.] BUFFALO, September 2S.—A large fire oc curred this eveninz in Adams' block on Washington street. It • ccurred by the burst ing f the gas pipe in the basement of the Commercial Advertiser newsp per office. A laige rive story building in the rear of the block was entirely destroyed. This building was occupied by Mathews and Warren, proprietors of the Commercial Advertiser, and an extensive job printing office, Adams & Co.. wholesale tobacco manufac,urers, and Clayscoek & Co , litho graphers. The front building was occupied by the above named parties, also by the Plat Fruit and Oyster Co., the Assessor of Internal Revenue, and sei eral law offices. The loss will approximate $150,000. Gen. Banks to the Workingmen [By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.] BOSTON, September 28.—1 n an address to the workingtnen in Charleston, this even ing,Gen. Banks reviewed some of the acts of the last and present Congress, especially treating on the e ght hour law, which he said was but a preliminary step towards co-operation between the employer and em ploye. The time was soon to come when the laborer would receive part of the prof its f his employer as his compensation. Beheld that the national debt must. be paid in go d and silver, as promised when the leans were created, and said if the people repudiated this they repudiated their own interest. New Orleans Market, CEty Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.) NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 28 —Cotton In fair demand and firmer; middlings U%; sales 3.30 bales; receipts, 4,727 bales. Exchange, Sterling 152%; New York sight draftsMa % discount. Gold 140. Sugar and Molas ses unchanged. Flour dull; Superfine 87. Corn dull at . 85041. Oats dull and de clined to 56c.' Hay declined to 823. Bran declined to 81,15. Pork steady at $30,50. Bacon shoulders,l34i; clear sides 17c. Lard steady; tierce, 19%c, keg, 21340. itsceipts of-produce since Saturday heavy. Chicago Market. • By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gasette.l. CHICAGO, September 28. Wheat—the market to-night ie easier, and sales were made at $1,4.134 for No. 2. Corn is firmer and higher, and sales were madeof No. 1 at. 980. Oata is firm at 62e. ziPAIN I=l MEMPHIS