The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, December 01, 1868, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1111 .
_.• Itts trAV
• ,
• •
. _
- /usual= DAILY, 331
11111.NINIAN," REED & 004 • Proprietors.
'IV. S. PI2SRUMAN. , .1061A11 =Eh
P. not N, N. P. Bars!).
sawn anti propietba.
lIANETIF. BUILDING. NOS. 84 AND 88 FIFTH ST
- oFFICIitVAPER --
aR intssaursa,mai36.l/2n;i4iiiiiiikay
Strati—Datty. reteski-Wiekty. Kroger, ,
yesz....so,olo74eyearpsl4l) 131zglecoPY--1: 65 °
qb h
ese f b Six nos., licoVeg, A.. ,
Thiecuet , 10 t. • WI
Vartler.):" , . "yawn todant.
morio",l lo 7 ll *Wit 30, 1866' •
Gmairt74 isnied on:roe
al days End szturavh, is the itslandlOpesp.
nit familinewriapix l'elinspitania. It
Irwin/di each, meek forty iight Mums. - - of
I,ll6.ll44i4oustter. it 'gives the figUestiai
lig/ as the most rtliaticinarbnyePartenf anY
lonPer in the , s!inn• Its * 8 ntn , neni
vilsay by igica Om* of Allewhes . sy count,
Ito redresses tif& importanL totidernsiss
-44 *Wing prices in the markets at the Unmet
ao & l upine:stratum:Alm in *outs. Terms:
41Ertgist copy, one year; $1.501 inloluhs offige,
- 11,25; in dubs of ten, 41,15, an& one free
io the getter it , Pof the chg.. 8 2*inien nslo
cunt free Many GNAW.
ralrnv on the inside pages qv this
1 - naming's GAIETTE- 7 -Ssionil page: Poetry,
...41zetnerie 9 ,- Thirst .and Berth .poges: Com
weemal, .3firiPeatitileand :Financial, Markets,
&vend page: City
Council ;Proceedings, Asnuinnost :Directory.
GOLD 'dosed in liqw yesnirday
411105 i.
'13:lnlot a tecent Act of Congress, the
members of the Mast Congress will organ.
ize tbelr House on the 4th day of March
a3Kti instead of deforrinclt to December as
before the passage of that •Act We. will
enema seasonable action npon'thitticon-
F stitutienat Claims of HirYlaild: and Ken
-Maki tosh'sixcessliics leforesmitation a in case
fast %melon should iguoied at the pre
-o.YalnitsessloT,L. , •
Watop.NaTekslelegrtun thus.forestugh
aows, the , annual . report. of ' Cothmisslonei
`VV:usis, in its
,bpotings-upOn a questum of
Est' Impojbuice 4o the interests - ,of -this
szommotity. Is said to be
. _
Tfieriblest andlnost exhaustive he luts-yet
evade, a large porticin of being devoted to
-a fulLeonslderation of the .tariff question in
41; its Oates. Oongressvill have this ie
portin atuole Arne to enable it to `avail, itself
of 'aiguments,, facia andastatisties; bi case
- - Alto tariff question‘should-corne up 14 the ap
'4lroaching session.
...Qua 'Republican ,friends in Missouri are
dot i Unaulimious their '41164 as to the
.propar disposatto be made of the iinestion
- of Pilkanchigemen,. 4 210iernor / ti ldeber .
'othins favor-the reetoratlQn of the suf.
Arne .to •the 'rebels now excluded, *ldle
• Carl ~hurz and many
_-ethers , oppose any
change Which shall not also include -the
Colored race, making suffrage universal.
This 'divisiortuf sentiment is regarded with
much favor by Senator .leudeuson'afriends;
who It* -thereby to Ofighlier life; ril*=.
A sovnesz, which commonly commands
respect for.its opinions, and !, net seldom! our
.coufldence in its judgmenti ins recent par.,
agraph advocating the adoption of a Con
atitntional amendment declaring impartial
--suffrage in: the Motel!, -expresses *mad
-*lief that the Legislatures will ratify it, and
'that no Biate-authori4 would theri continue - .
to This is Inv 'well. But the.
"same Journal edde:
""Nor need we anticipate adverse action
Tlrout 'the , Sureme Co urt , ,of the : United
:fiats& The J udici ary . is the :weakest of
:the three ': branches "of -the Government,
.commonly -but erroneously called 00-or
• dinate. it cannot long oppose its will to
..thator the'doegislative an of the Breen-
tit needed :n 43e4: 0 n d p erusa l - t o Assure us
Abut thiawas slot alpdon frau the iiind
c%
Ihead letter, but ethyl au- editorial state
ment in a prominentgeli to'lluurnal.
`.- r - ' : -: :• •
'ELECTION RETUItNS.
portion of the Western toress, -- inelnd
iizi g two er liCree • Of the Oincinnati journals,
.
Men lint° an error in sienouncing
-that: the electoral <vote of ,Lo' *slum had
'been given to , Grant,. by the action 'of the
gdtate-carivaasemln.throlving oat, titkillegal
wetturati from some twelve imcdshes. This is
Aguitiraty a mistake, Votes - Were' thrown
.ont as ostated, but the result left in an
estensible majority .of ~ ovar 12 1 000 for
. • •
Alearmour,
California polled clout :115,000 Notes,
. wadi 40,000 of whieh , were - for •Grant.
Jigging allowance for w :uncommon we.
paiderance of malesla the population of
OA State; the aggregate enumeration ofets
people aotild best lent half a.miliion.
The latest &dykes from Orogen repcat
a very rtunarkable re,ductloa' on the, anniori.
ties &alined by WI DentociaCir, so that 13ey.
moue's rasjoritY, official pad unofficial, is
alreadyeat down to 23. If Me sameelaink.
age affects the few counties remaining to be
ogicially canvassed, there .will be an &Id.
tional three electoral votes for Grant
` ACT IL
thassze B. Glam. and likaurnaraCinr
7.6.. x are to•day the infandsd President and
Pico President of the Republic. When to
..js orrow's sun sett comm-they will be Fred
&Jot and Vice President elect. _ln February
sheb t. title tethe%rellleee will fire
,ciari. 3 And is *rather will he delY in
augur` aced into Feseeteleti
ircKiiiifFiii:the first Wednesday of - De
cember,:iesambiagia3f-thirty-
foor tWeet9To l ..', 43oll egeeir 7040 - , ref each .
Stchiald "chat Pa CaPital=4, give official
and legal .;tettenuice to_ the PePtihe Audg
, 'lnca of thi; pf e iNcivember. Our own
twaistresiFlllia7tOis vslll duly attend
_at liar
:" rill* , ,*llti?r..lo l 4 l o , ' *4l- cast tit & bal
lets,rateldolbe 'do; of the
eases,ccr tliciltt,i4jekt of Wede !la Oen
' •
and then, having empletod all their li3gal
tininess, wilindjonrn. ~.
•
The practiee; winch has ; sometimes pre
vaned, of undertaking the extra-official bn
shins of•cabinet-nutleaig, or of_endorsing
the arpilanoiis of TI:61, Dick and Harry for
office wider:the nee administration, p one
me'" in be honomi, this year, in the breach
than in the observance. -The inthering af
fords an excellent opportunity 13r political
•cancussing, arid it may be very )profitably
improved in that m ay
this year. But the
Electors vedi .. exeniplify their wisdom by
me in
carefully abstMaing m an/ .antion in the
nstnre gif an at partteipsuoil.s therein:
Yer suhri• ultra . ' m, 4
, ,
..
DICTATORSHIPS;
/forty of the lading Derooeretie punt&
hate yet '
•niad'eiieite: Of tletkAineNT's bi-
puled intention to advocate, in his lung
' Address, the , One Term -principle,
sack notice has strangely ended our:caret
tttl qudnition of • our exchanges. Each`
and all og those journals were eloquently
bitter before the election in their'denuncia
tions, day afterlay, of- 'the ambitions pur
pose with which GRANT would make the
Presitiency a stepping stone to a perpetual
_Dictatorship. In their netting desire to ex
calpate their own candidate, and that
wretched politician, Butni, from what
seemed to be a threat that Gnaws shouldb_e
assassinated, they were-diligently carefal to
construe his declarations as being simply an
exposition of our candidate as a Cataline, in
tending to efface "the few, remaining
Constitutional, liberties" of the people.
And Bumf, thus, interpreted, yielded the
staple for - countless. Demme/tie: editorials
against the revolutionary and . unholy pur
poses of Gen. GRANT and his friends.
Come, gentlemen, now that the eleCtion
is over, you, can certainly ifford to dethe
fair thing Buffer us to - suggest that even
your own code of ethics warrants. you in
being sometimes Ittst, especially- when it
can loie no votes to your party::- Diversify
your columns; now,- with some graceful ac
knowledgments of the foreshadowed policy ,
of the President-elect Wethome this lan
nouncement as the most acceptable gift of a
patriotic statesman to'his country, and , ad
mit, with what modest humility - you may,
that your former accusations against him
are proved by this result to be Tuirtiztua and
unjust. Pledge to his administration—as to
that of one - who is to close with it his active
public career, and who can only shape his
policy with a single view to his country's
.good—the impartial:judgment of 4111 the
people regardless of former party disarm
lions, and yetis approval inwhatever shall
.be found to deterve it. In , this way, men
and brethren of the Democratic press, you
can recover your own standing as. honor
eke and iniiartial jouinellete-
Talking ofdictatorships, by bye, it is a
little,curious that a proposition of that char
acter has: once, and but once, been enter
tained. by any claw of polltiellins, of the
present gelieratiOn., in this country. Very
little has yet transpired of all the 'details ot
that inopesitioni, but that;:little is srdlicient
to fix blithe - responsibility for it upon prom:
inent leaders of the Democratic party who,
in the'autumn of - 1862, authority contem
plated an attempt at a coup gat by making
IdeCona.ol a Dictator and marching the
army, ofthe Potomac, under hie lead,, upon
.Ntipbfiiiito*p:•!_vegi;*" PrVaPienkU N "6cax and the "Abolition" Congress, and
to secure the-thunediate se-establishment of
I peace, uporiThatliatiof secession and sepa
ration which We..allr4tor tit-have betel,lifi
grateful to Governor SEYMOUR and other
leaders of the Democratic party. It is a pity
that the minutes details of this conspbscy—
which events tertnitately made an abortive
bite7bari been. thus far._ 80 an CCellitar ;con ,
ceded from the pu blic eye Time -will
yet unerringly reveal the whole - troth,
and we - Shall then kik.* not - only
'what specific' objects -mere proposed , by
the conspirators; but—an equally interest
ing- Pointroho those conspirator. were.
We already know encash , the latter
'bead, to be , Justified is Promising to the peo .
plea"first•claii - scithation," when the lames ,
shall be disclosed, uot only - of the principal
intriguers, but the considerable number
of ' , eminent and '` . ."respectabie" citizens who
were cognizant; of the plOk, gave to it their
approbation,'Or Wished it so well that they
safely kept the of the Conspirators.
Perhaps the Democratic journals, while
"ecknowfalging the corn" art to the Dictate:
rial destine so. falielii i i l nputed to General.
Gnaw, will be kind en, h. to throw a little
light upon the ethevphit. to whit . % we hairs
alluded: They can, - if . they • choose, tin
doubtedly make some valuable.. ccmtribu-
Along on that to the historical record. ‘
Let us hive the facts, gentlenien, no matter'
whom you hitt - • ,
ORDER NO. ELEVEN.
A letter from Gen. GRANT, dated in Sep
tember, and addressed to Hon. L N. Mon
eflllinois, states , explicitly that he does
not sustain i. an 'order which gave:, Ranh
offense to the Jewish race. The General
says:
;At the time of ita publication, I was in
&need by a reprimand received from Wash
ington for permitting acts which Jews with
in my lines were engalged in. There were ,
many other persons within my lines equally
tbadlwith the wcirst of them, but the differ
ence was that the dew# could pass with im
,panity from one - army to the other, and
gold, In violation otorders, was being smug
;glad _through the : lines--et least it was so
reported. The order was Issued and , sent
without any reflection and • without think
ing of the. Jews as a sect or race to them
ueLves,'but simply as persons who had suc
cessfully (I say successllilly, instead of per
sistently, because there were plenty -•of
others *thin - my lines who envied their
Success) violated an order, which greatly
• inured 'to the' help of the rebels.
Give &Fr. Moses assurance that . I have no
preitithee against sect- . or race, but want
each itiditviduallto:be 'paged by hid own
merit. Order No. 11 does_uot sustain this
statement, , admit, lint • then Ido not sus
tain that order. It nbver mould have bean
issued if it Mid 'nut been telaphed i the
'moment it wan penned, and without refit*.
tion. Yours!, truly, U. S. GRANT.
Tim workinionien of New York belie:
moved in behal fof Lleater7Vanglin, now
in jad in , Philadelpbia; tinder, tentacle of
death forinfantielde. A , , petition will be
be borneeitattine fbe it 'fill pardon, to Gov.
Geary_ aommittpe of women. •
• ^
"
' l, --PITTEIBURG GAZETTE :ITT ESD4Y 4 , - -I)Erd'EMBER: 1, AMA'
FROM MINNESOTA.
tporrputondenee Pittatinnb cauptte.i
By PAUL, November 20th, IS6S
- The,wiapper on; my Weekly warns me
that my imbscription expires Itovembei 25th;
•
and should tie ' Westin:l: ll 4 meet Vtil no
delay, tie next yeai's subscription will ar
rive on time
The "smoke of" the late election swell
.
lifted, and the results are - now certain. (
ten ilioutiand majority for Grant andlColfiii
is - geed! , enough for a young State,--nine
thouisand .'inajority: for Wilkinson;,(late
Uniteitatites Senator) in the, First District,
is also refreshing, and bad it not been for
•
the bolting propensities of 'guiding Don
_
nelley, General Andrews, .the nominee for
the Beccmd.;Cotagressibnal IHstrict, i would
Most certainly have been elected. As it is,
Mr. Eugene Viltani, - , of - Minneapolis, a
Copperhead,: in ele'cted; and /Torten, our
traitor. Senator,' will "have some enertiihob•
nob with`hlei for ttire years - to some. ,,
On the third trial the Bepubbesnparty
has prOven Consistent; :Negro Suffrage is
carried by, near or quite two •thousand• ma
jority. It is sad to „think that some eight
thousand Reptiblicans within the iiinits of
1 this Staten were- still willing' to - tai 'some
seven thousand colored men without repre
sen4tion, t4tui giVing the lie to their pro
fessions; yet their sins ought not to le too'
severely,reprovedi when we recoilet t that a
Itepublkan Senate confirmed the ..uomina
don qf Mr. Reverdy Johnson to inii-reprei'
sent ns at the pout. of Great Britain.
Who would'ut be proud .'to hall from
glorious old Allegheny county, after, read
ing the'returns of theard instant ?
Although the election binver considerable.
excitement still prevails,' and the - question
who shall be elected United States )Senator
for six years treat/104th of March proicimo, - .
is yet to be Bayed. ,To use a slang ex
pression, I am not in the "nug,". and what
I may jot down must be taken with several
grains of allowance; nevertheless I strongly
suspwt s that my conclusions will prove true.
There are, as reports have it, three candi
dates in the field; first and foremost, the
present- incumbent. Governor, Alexander
Ramsey; second, the inevitable Donnelly;
did, third, Hon. - Morton Wilkinson, late
Senator, and now member elect to Congress
from the First District.
Winter is .upon us; a few more days and
the most interesting item of intelligence
will be the fall or rise of the thermometer.
Then God pity the very poor!.
(Prom the Philadelphia North American.)
We want aliret•class man now, i nt> mat
ter what section he may comb from. We
ought, therefore„'only to choose public men
of familiar record, long and well tried, and
whose past history is a guarantee for the
future. It we send some new nonentity, to
take Backalew's place, .some one of no ex
perience and no- record of publicl service,
how can we expect oueState•to have its due
weight in the nertate?
(Front the,Phltadeiphls Bulletld•]
Isiever haa a Legislature gone to Harris
barg whose every act has • • ••• sifted and
scrutinised as the acts of • e next one will
be. The Republican p •of the country,
of Pennsylvanla, and • ' hiladelphia have
had too many severe lessons upon the mis
chief of bad nominations and bad appoint
menti. to be arty longer careless or indiffer
ent as to the acts of their representatives.
It becomes the Legislature of r -*.o.sylvanla
toguardltself carefally against every sus
'pi on of being influenced in its selectionof
a Senator of the United States, by l any (=-
Indention but that of the tumor and highest
interests ofthe Republican, party. I If it hon.
estly guides its action by thisiprinciple, it
will win the fall confidence' of, the people.
If it adopts any other, there is not 'combrned
cleverness enough in Pennsylvania to blind
the public eye to.the fact, or, to avert from
the unfaithful representative the just retri
button, for his infidelitylo the great cause of
Republicanism which he is sent to Harris
bliFflP- '
"(nom the Sharon lienld.):
Able, energetic and honest; ft faithibl,
vigorous supporter of Republica princs
piety Mr. Grow Ifranid be in 'the. United
SOO. Senate whit he has been in the veri; ,
ouapuitions has oecupled heretofore a
•clear.headed, strong-minded mani not afra id
to work, and'ever mindild of the interests
of his constituency:
(From Lewlsbart Chronicle.)
,la many porta of-she State ; there 'is a
growing desire to lave Hr. Hrow sucteed
1; tickalew in the trnited - States Senatorship.
His selection for this office: would leis rep
ward fitly bestowed.
- • (Prom the Bedford Bealater.)
The Sootstme' would - honor lerself by
placing Mr. Grow= is the &mate of the 4
United States, and her actiop,wmild re
ceive the unqtuditled and heart) , coMmenda
lion of the best Repablicans of e Mugu.
The north will sup • •rt Kr. Grovi 'as eunit,
and will stand by and earnestly urge
his election as ..a measup3 due to this section.
• -
t from the Mont:foie Republican—)
A laige number of papers late already
expressed a_preference for Hon. Galusha A.
A Grow. Hcf in , Ole and thorough or
ganizer, an energetic and tireless worker,
ahclan inspirithigleader.. His hibdrii. more
thaathose ofany
_other living man contrib
uted Co taweirthe majority of the Wil
mot dvatrictn-toAlmost ten thotucand.:lt was
tht3 chingewrought In this clistrict that drat;
broke the power of the Democratic Party in
the State and has , continued it Ina minority,
ever since.. - =1•
trrcan tht ). •
, Governor Gearyby hie' judicious
and upright administrat ion, won the regard
of his people; and his tridendid: wirr record
in the "struggle , ' against retaioniluis en
deared him to our citizen soldiers.
.If,
then, they demand his re-notrituktion,
they doubtless will, it will be an endorse
'meat of the man and his services.
titre=the Botilertet He rald.)
Governor Geary kat =de ,
two excellent ,
appointments lately—Judge tienrY W.Wil
ihtms, to the Supreme bench, to wbl h po
sition he was fairly elected a year since, to
fill the vacancy occasioned by the resigna
tion of Judge f3trong, and John M. Kirk.
patrick, Esq., of the Pittsburgh bar, to fill
the vacancy . on the bench of the District
Geurt of Allegheny. •
(Frani the Washington Reporter.)
It ie generally supposed that G en . I rw i n
will be re•electeci as State Treasurer. There .
Will be no opposition, as it is custom to . - give
the incumbent three terms. He has maAle
a most excellent financial officer, and has
performed his duty with ability and straight
forward honestY.;
ileum the Xittazdng Tree Press.)
' Boma of our -cotemporariel, not content
with the severe and:','laborious campaign
Mjust ended, are urging the calling , of the
ate- :Convention; for -the nomination of
Governor at an earlier day than usual, on
the plea that the more time there Is for dis
cussion the better for the party. We can't
see that Mir would" be of arkx.prnet!Cal ben-
Tn long diseenelons 'between' the-Ban.
;miens and the Oroatiana concerning the
rights claimed by the latter - for:. the Slavic
matins/Ulf seem to have been successfully
iettled, for we read that the Croatian Depu
ties have takeri their aide .fif the litingarlan
Fo;Witati .
°Pinions ir the Press.
FLEX, GARDEN hu b. HOVSIZOLA
• - BIITTE.II SACK%
A coml . pendentof the Rockford Bvister,
writtnufiota gives the
method used oaths Peel& coast for primer,-
leg butter
"l think the, dairymen here have an art
in the management of Intter that might be
turned ,to good: account, at the: Ent, but
which I never , saw practised till I came -to
this coast.- allude to the banner. Of . „pat
ting up butter for market. Perhaps neces
sity was the-mother of this ;invention ? lint
it makes the Invention none the.less valua
ble: Here suCh &thing as a butter lirlrinor
a stone jar to pack 'butter in Is unknown,
bean batter. is paeked , in • muslin sac a,
made to such Mr& tixst the package; when
complete, Is a cylinder three or four Inches
in diameter. and , frent hilts foot to' s foot
In length.. The butter from the churn,•
as soon as worked - over, into the cylindrica
bags, made of•fine bleached• muslin. The
package! are•then put into large casks con
taining strong brine with a slight Admix
titre of sidtpetre,' and by means of weights
kept always below the surface: = The cloth
lute_ .. ~ eat always protects thebutler from
any . purid that ' change to come in col
tact - with the "package, and being always
buried in brine, that • protects • it•from the
action of the air; • and it has. , been es
eeitidned by trial thatzbutter put up in this
*ay will sweet longer than in: any
other way. •,---, Besides, it is found easier and
cheaper for the Manufacturer then. to pack
'either in Arians or jars, And'. for the ' re.
o
'taller, there i s no telling the ad Maas, on
the scpi*Of safetyand conveale Fee. These
;off let can . of can lie upon Ida tinter as
safo frabi i nry, from dust or other contact
as barge( I —can be rolled up for his cus
tomato a sheet of paper with as much pro
iiriety as a bundle of matches. If the con
sumer, when he gets home, discovers specks
of dust upon the outside of the sack, he
can throw itinto a pail of pure cold water
and hike it out clean and white. As he
uses the butter front day to day, with a
sharp knife he cuts it off from the end ofthe
roll In slices'of thickness suited to his want,
peels off the cloth from thelend of the slice,
leaving it in tidy • form to place upon the
table. This improved manner of packing
butter first caught my eye in the market of
Ban Francisco, where I saw cords of it
piled up like pigs of lead. The simplicity
and great valve of the improvement so im
pressed me that I wondered the Yankees
had not long age found It out." , • ': •
PRIPAILDIG FOlf/WANTILTI. : -
Cold. weather will sooacome inthe North ,
ern Btates,And the • farmers should be pre
paring for it as rapidly es possible.;'.WOO°
all more or less, -negligent, butibere!!:are
many persons who are always bahind,haid
with their work' ConsequentlY each ;bike
in the season conies long before they are
prepared for it, and winter Buds them with
out a proper amount of feed for their stock
The barn doors will not shut, and there
are great holes in the cattle shed:; the hog,
penisluit of repair, and everything seems to
be going wrong. Of course there are some
good promises made tobe fulfilled in spring;
but when •when warm' weither comes again, the ,
need! ofgood warn sheds and tight roofs is
not felt as keenly as during the snow and
rainstorms of January and February. Let
every farmer begin to think what will be
needed next January, and act 'as well, and
commence repairs immediately. There are
very few buildings that do not require a lit
tle looking over every ' fall, and a few, extra
nails and boards applied. ' ' '•
Besides making repairs on buildings, his
well to see that they are well filled with suit
able food for the stock. ! Bay, Corn and oats
are not enough, because cattle like a variety
of food as, well as man, and turnips, carrots,
potatoes, beets, and similar Vegetables will
not only be relished by stock in winter, but
will do much toward keeping them in good
Every spring the cow• and hone doctors
in the country have plenty of business; but
as soon as the grass starts so thit the cattle
can get a good bite, their occupation is gone;
and why? Simply because green food is
natural medicine, and more effbctiVe than'
the cattle' doctor's 'drugs. Perhaps you.
have neglected to raise root crops; If.so, try
and exchange with your neighbors,
,or pur
chase a strpply, and, do not'ssy that your
(tattle hive, done well Without them and
Will do so again, beiAuse there is a chance
of their failing, and the fault will be your
own.
Would you like to helrept On bread and
butter and.a little cold water for sixmontin?
If not, please remember that {Your Animals
te cti
have s' gtidti lhingsAs well as
yourself; an if en do notbellevothis, try
the old grey orse'or brindle `cow-With a
peck of sw eet apples some !cold morning
neve winter, and if they do not, thank you
for the luxury, then it is because you:*Tattoo
dumb to ,understand animal language.—
N. Y. Bun. t, l, .. :
,
Okar Apple Jelly.—Pare , and. cut :up Ave
dozen 'large, juicy, acid apples; . pat then'
in a pan with as. much :water en will cover
them; boil gently until soft;: , let 'them cool
and strain them , through a Jelly by,; put
the juice in your preserving-.pa n, and to
each pint `of juice put one pound aline-Su
gar and the peel of two lemons; :then boil
it until it is reduced the stiffness of Coins
foot jelly; skim it well, and add the juice
of a lemon: • - . --• 4 , . -
To Provos Oileon Meters: ='=- TO eachh
pound of melon allow one pound Af.augax'
.and one large fresh melon.. Cut the melon
in slices three-fbuiths of an inch thick, and
take off the skdtc; ' Boil it in weak alumwa
ter until It is - qicite tender ; . then put ,it on a
hair sieve to drain until the next day, •and
throw aivay the water. Take a part of the.
anger and piste a thin syrup slice the lemon
and take. pot the seeds, and boil them in the
syrup until tender; boil the citron a few mo
menta and put 'tin the jars with the lemon.
Add the rest of the sugar to the syrup; let it
boil a minute, and skim it; then pour it over
the leicon hot, and seal up Immediately.
This makes a delicious preserve. •
Veal Osetet.—Take four pounds of lean
veal, and one pound and a half of fat, salt
potic; chop them veal line; or run theta
through a sausage -cutter; - add one table
spoonful of, salt, one of black peper, two of
- sage or 1 summer , savory, - four of btead
crumbs or pulverizedciackers,four eggs,and
two gilla of Sweet cream; mix the eggs,
cream and bread ' (or crackers) together;
then ,add the other ingredients; bake, in a
deep pan thiee or four hours; put on the t o p
small bits of butter,. : before cooking; when
done, turn it out on a platter, and cut it 'in
slices as you would head-cheese. It will
keep for several days.;
To Cook a- Turkey.-As the holidays are
approaching, perhaps'some one Will `have
occasion to try mxvlan for, cciotdogturkey.,
Bete It Is ; - . , , .
. After dressing and. stuffing the tirkey,
put in a boiler water to . .cover the ,
bottom,
a basin to put, the turkey: on. , JAY' lion
the back, not letting . the miter :reach it.,
Cover the boiler, and steam tag) hours !
Roast' , one hour. ' Boil= liver, - gizzard - stud
heart in this water; then chopiine and put
It into the gravy. Pour tho , water from the
boiler into the - rotistpan ) to'bsste the tuttkeli
IThe "Wrigleit ota customer”, mot but
/O 3 tender, coohed'in , this . Uay-- ,, ,rogiftl
*Liu" t 1
in. wisterniAgiak . - • ,
, My :'MN , to rilekto Pork-41rd , cut: up
NY pork' into , strips four to viz !aches
-wide, without any bone set it Clp edgFivaya
in your barrel, after sprinkling salt on the
bottonrof the cask, and so on between
every layer, using ten pounds of salt to
every hundred of meat; you do this -whip
the lain a 'warm condition, Or before
all the animal beat has passed off, and let it
stands day or two. Then dissolve• two
pounds of salt to every gallon of water, by
boiling Auld skimming, and •then turn it on
my meat while the water is in a very warm
state. I use solar or rock* salt only. I
think freezing'meat hurts the juices and
destroys the tine Astor; .also injures Its
keeping qualities. Prepared in this .witT,,
it will alwnys keep.—[ W. - 7.
Western Rurq.
- I
NOW To AZLECT A YOWL.
A young turkey km a smooth leg and a
soft bill, and the eyes will be bright and the
feet moist. Old lerkeys have scaly, stiff
feet. Young fowls have a tender skin,
smooth legs, and the breast bone yields
readily.to the pressure of the linter; The
best are those that have yellow legs. The
feet and' lege of the old fowls look as if they
had seen hard service in the world. Young
ducks feel tender under the wing, and the
web is transparent. -The best are thick and
hard on the breasV Young geese have yel
low bills, and the feet are yellow and suP
the skin may be easily broken by, the head
of a pin, the breast is 'plump and the fat
white. An old goose in unit for the h u man.
stomach.
MORT Btrth TO ItIIIiFORE pnerti
An exchange says : "It is convenient to
farmers and 'purchasers to haves correct
rule by which to :measure corn in crib&
Here is one : Having leveled the corn in thii
crib, measure thelength, breadth and 'depth,
and multiply them 'together and deduct
from the product one-fifth,and you have the
number of bushels in the car; for shelled
corn take. one-half. To be, strictly correct.
add half a bushel to every one hundred. -
Persons 'who are fond of ciphering can test
the correctness of this rule by taking 1,878
solid inches forefoot, and 2,100 inches in a
bushel, sad see that the latter is neatly , one
fifth larger than the former."
THE HEST HUME, POE HUTTEB.
If you aim at . a great flow, of milk, feed
young timothy and white' clover;: if at
the best results, both in quantity and qual
ity of butter, feed - on fresh pasture of white
clover and timothy in summer, and early
cut timothy and wheat bran inivinter. - The
grass must •be cut when heading out; or,
better, young aftermath well pared. A.void
roots and garden stuff in general, if you
wish a good quality, of butter. though it is
now held that thobe fed While milking or
immediately before.,.Will remedy the evil.--
Valley Farmei. _ •
.
-'lx the care : f cattle nothing keeps them
iu hetter order than the light of the eye of
the:owner several' times a day. The eyes
of boys and hfrodnien 'are covered with
, "%run the cattle are, fed:on straw, the
boys on skimmed milk, the old man on tat
pork, and the hens are obliged to icratch
gravel, the breath of the beaux of the girls*
will smell of whisky.
much to
Ox many farms it costs as much to keep
the rats as to: keep a cow. Ile 'who can
clear arms of rats will get rich without
advertising.
•
1.7 is recommended to winter bees in
dark, unoccupied room or large closet, and
to fill the honey boles with cobs, to absorb ;
the moisture. • - -
Gov. Grisar has appointed - Hiram Car
son, M. D., of Montgorhery-cerriV, Ed=
ward C. Haines, of Centre•county; and A.
Boyd Hamilton and Will _ Colter. of
Dauphin entity, Commissioners to.repre
sent l'erinsylvinia at a COnvention to be
held :at Springfield,- Illinois. on the first of
December, for the purpose, among other
things, of preparing and recommending to
the Legislatures - of the several Slates therein
represented, a wise and efficient Systein of
legislation. for the' repression and Pre rention
of the diseases among cattle, known as the
Texas fever and other kindred diseases.
-D TSPEPSIA IN WORST FORMS.
it ellered andpuld. - •
IS Ink Headache and Derangement of the litomail',
A tuirlinktdinndiceorndBllllolisnest '
,111 emoted and permanently eared. • -
O alleMlilatf. Hatitaal Colitivencit;
E veryltorm of Liver Complalnt4" • -
N stases, Hemtbard or.Hrater Dmall, and
ronlyee of the•Diger bre errant
peedlly, surely and elliclently cured.
L ever Complaint. Swimming of the Head,
I sillgest4on, Depreulon of
V &liable and ifillotstain 4ppet4e,
la verxivaptoiaat Dyspepsia
ensued by Dr. 13argent's Lutl•Dispeitte t Liver
P fill They have effected many easea; . i
In' tinny ease they brie given teller. • '
L6t no fondly be wlthout this remedy. '
L ook 'to it that ion get no other and much
ft lanes, said pain will be prevented.
YUEPAILIMI AND SOLD BY
FORGE A KELLY.,9
:*- • * Wain4SALE * D 8116 "4/ 6 r.
corner*ood dont nod Second snow
REVOLT IN ••TIIE INTERIOR • • •
«
When the stomach is rebellions, the liver Contu
macious. the bowels disordered, the brain confused
and the nerves. In &tumult, call in the aid of HOS
TETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS, if you would re-
store quiet, regulartiy and harmony to the action of
these important organs. A large proportion of the
comptaluts to which the human family are sukect,
originate in Indlielltien. For this distressing math
dy, and parent of innumerable sibsteita as dlitivis—
MS as itself.,the BITTERS are the only a ucie
proved,by experience to be a universal and 1111%11-,
lag, remedy. But although it was as a remedy foi
dyspetsis and billiouiness that they first obtained.
..111•Stfge twenty years ago; it is new pretty well um•
dtritood, bdthby the public ,and the medical profes.
shin, that their curative properties take a far wider
range. Inuervous complaints, ellesmodleiffectiaris,
!bier and ague, and eyery variety of general And 1 0 .
cal dchility, their elect la most saintari ;Lind 'as •
means of prepiring the system to ribist damp, cold,
poisonous delicate In the water or the air; priva
tion. exposure. de., no medicinal agent at present
known can be justly ecmparsd with this powerful
yet narmieu tonic. The feeble and sensitive, who
can ill witlu laud the &clemency of 'the winter sea
-son. will dud the BITTERS exactly article they
need to Ibrtify and'sustain them.
A 'FACT OF. GREAT VALUE.
Ho one cad be too often impressed with thetruth
.
of all &gouty' which mankind are, prone to, none
are of prevalence at season of the year
than those winch manifest themselves in the lungs
an d animater/ Micah". Dr. KEYSER'S PECTOR
AL SYRUP Is a speedy arid infallible cure in all
mat cans of cough" and lung diseases. and DR.
ILETSS/IT. LURO'CURIC in cases of long standing
and grist obstinacy, will be found of inestimable
vein". - The i r, is scarcely skeins or fanilly in Pitts
burgh.thatCannot testily telt" merits, and instead
of a person Wasting time on other inert and Ms*,
propriate remedies.' let them
, walk themselves to
Aeiseris, 44,0, Wood street, wkeratbny will
;ad tbs.:Mkt medicine adapted to their cure. The
Doctor Daps long'experience in medlclne. and in
tbsse lung cues, he kas ilven"ignal,pri.of of his
great ability end thorough knOWledite of all those
diseases 11 which the lungs tali a prominent part.
His residence to Pittsburgh la' overtwenty yea r%
and the value of hit remedies la extended wherever
coughs are prevalentemd lung diseases to be cured.
sasittizOrr 41.1cz for LUNG
Etagr 2 4TiONS AND TEEATICCNT or
011iffINAIIVoremno, Dozens, no PZNN
STREXT: rirmtaulttilis: 021'N bows woo
=
ztonstooiXei WIC - ' '
EIMYTEMIMIS.
.
—Nevr counterfeit ten dollar graenbaeks
are in izirculation. -- -
—Thirty-four deaths occurred in Aezr
phis during last week.
—Commodore Kearney , died at Perth (
I!..mboy, on Sunday, aged seventy-eight
years..:-Ths reddened of.T. M. Robertson, of • _
tbeaseis, Tennessee. Was destroyed by firei
Sunday evening. Loss $10,000; Weured for ;-
one-half-the amount. - '• •frt'
„ —Rey. Alfred Bartlett, ef_lireeklYe, ban
accepted_. a call from the Plymouth Church
of chicago, and will leaye On Monday next'
for his new pludorate.- , • • -
—Asher T. Smith, produce dealer, wan
knocked down and robbed. Boston, on,
Sunday night, of over fifteen hundred dol.
lira and a gold watch.' The rObbere4satp4.:
—James English, who murdered tJames
Hoban, a saloon keeper, :last Septsm.bero
was convicted on Monday at CWvelands
Ohio, of mprder in the emend degree, after
avery shoit trial. - . A
—General Grant left Washington yester
day for Hosea. He stopped , in Philadet-,
Rhin , bleb night. He is accompanied by
General Comstockand his son. He - ,He will re
turn about the 9th or .10th, and after a few'
days will go to Chicap, to attend the re
union of the soldiers of the Western Ar
mies. • - • • •
—A.dvices -from Elf: Domingo report'-Oiat
the rebel General Ogando —was - . badly
wounded, and that Col. Haifa istait *rig.;
oner and sentenced to be'shot. :The Gov
ernment troops were pursuing „lieir 'ad.;
herentei. The elections were progressing
. t r t i letl i y and trade was reviving of Puerto :
nailwaY Fare&•.• - -
The London Quarterly Review distrumes
the railway monopolies,- and shows that no
company has ever , yet adopted the policy of
very low'passenger faxes and carried it out
persistently for a reasonably long time with. ,
out achievie 4 a great success. _ _ ' •
f The wisdom of this poliny has been prov
0g
ed on a v large sca le in Belgium for two
years past ; and its success there has had s
great influence on the fares in France; and
especially in Prowls. But in America no
fair trial hU ever been made of cheap travel.
Competition has sometimes brought the ,
fares very low for a - short ' time, but they,
have raised again as soon Vasa a compromise
could be made.
..• _ ,
It s wouldbe interesting, in this connectio n
to know what were. the receipts and • aspen:
see of the ateaMboats °Along Island Sound
last summer, when paseingers :were taken
to and from Boston for a - di:nisi each: The
travel on them was 'Certainly many times
1 as great as ever befere.-=.l 1. Post:.
"AeiLooe keeper of Schenectady, who
has been greatly annoyed -by persons who
sit about in chairs to sleep of they, effects of
bad whisky, has caught 'and tamed a num-,
ber of rats, and trained thcm to- - run across -'
the floor. A sitter wakes up and'sees the
rats running, and calla, attention to, the -
facts; when he , is USA that theie are, no rate,
there. This frightens the mw, who thinks •
he hai got the tremens, and he quickly dia., .
appears from tne scene.- ; - • •• •
riorrass—uTizot," "OP . 8114 1 * " Zeit.*
"Wolo.* "Ibigvu4. l * ** Boarding, ll, iiot yr:
Cliedinfr YOUR :LINES nth 'dill be tstertvliii that
whams owe for' TWA 7937-1772 1 .032128; sadi
Use IFICC*RPTB.
WANTED-.-EIELP•
i f ir.ittNTED—HELP E
-At mploy..
t Ofilte, No. Elt:. Clair BIM Pt
43 BLS an. MEN, for diltarent kinds of emplig
ment. Pens wangng Leap or AP kinds can be
supplied•o • short nonce.—
WANTED--43I=ATIONS.
, .
ANTE-sAtiatitiloli 'as Assist. ,
v ant Book-keener or Shirdtbrif rt Ad-
&reek laming where an interview may be bad, cult
tins' ape, Pittehstrah gostodlee.„ • • , ,
WALMEII3--BOARDNSI3.
1)0AIWING-Good Boarang at
No. 1.6 JINN 6TY4ZAT. I 4 I4 Ihog : eiti* far
:50 perweet.
„ .
ii•rooAingNu€ _
.geuEl_eminc an_A
wire, witao t cnuares.- De.. sewn
W th as trearnished room and tagrdThg try mating.
Inquiry at No.'• 74 MARTIN STRE.III4 - Allegheny:
O A 11111 I NO:r.-- . 41110NT, ROOM,:
r with Riardlag, - Ip. house Just ovenlefty auk
IV. WU= at tiol BIS ROBINSON ST : 4
4.llesbeay. . .
MEI
N
ITA'iiTED.;6IIOAUDEVIS--V.lleas
.. .
. • ant room, 'Pith board,indtable [ o r
and al% or. Awe young gentleman at ORNOURTH
eTRLET. ' AR. ,c. a few day or dinner boarders ea%
be atuananuxissea.-Reference required.
.
loollT—'..A• - • one. of - the,
Pleasant Vallee ganway Can on BA'PORDAY, '
vember Aist: • The ender will be rewarded or
4.T;i0BTE14.110100, Alleatellt•
•r• ' •
fr ---- , '- ' ;:-_, ~ _ ,
ILICI6- . H 011.86111 Allegheny_
.81zrooms andlunl: rent US oirnionth. in
n or . JOH:eSTON ./S JOHNSTON, No It Dts,
mond street, Plasbuntli,'. or No . . 90 Manhattan
street, Allegheny. --, • . -. • -
rse•
• LET—Two well - -.' linishal
-holism with; elgOt and • eleven rooms on
ttile.ell STII,InT ;near genn. ..Enantre at $ll2l.
PAWN nTREZT. .
PitUburgb
rmrELET-Twofturnished rooms i .
- Ith or :telthoub.boara. • ajkoly at 3*
T.riext door to Marble Works. .
.•
r r LET—Pall , or a igo)od House l
.:
pleasant location. within ,fitrominutes 'mitt -
I, oMonte*, to spar:y.lth° , will board wznant
wile for the - real., Addreloi N. W. %mews once. ..
:LET—Two unfurrifisho
rooms. with board. to-_ ontleman and mite*
single gentlemen. at 881 ims STifiCH.T. • •
furnished i Sleeping
ROOM, azdtabbr for one or -two gentlemo
t e bonitoit of s prtrate Landly.ll9. MMO I?A0OVA.
STREET,- Alleghezry city. • - .
Cil o M ut bo llr- Ird. "1:1l
In, p iiiC7.W
lessane loes tat tletro. °
SW
Federal street. AUSitieny Coy. on second or third
O LET---RoolsB, :with
Washed, pr meant/bee,.
BlTomo
BEtr with nisi riall boarding alto. 1158, PENN
O ILET—Furniahed SCRIM,
within two squares or the Postoffice - oU
LD
BTSEET Address L. M. GAERTI office.
TO LETTitat• beautiful' new
prick dwelling house, No. ROA. Ohio Javan% .-
r Bagleyta Lane, contains 8 rooms, b roam.
61dalted little, good dry cellar, fitted- up w th AAA
water and outer - conventesees. &apply ;Am=
WARD% 41110C1Calr, 68 Palo Alto street. Alle•
;fanny citrf • . •;• , '-. ' . ' '' '
. .
FOR SALE
giron .SAIX-445 per acre will
purchase a tam ot -10 u acres in BEAVER -
ANTI,
siTr 4 Pe-una„ jj of a mile from Enna Station.
P.ll. W.,5 3.; 15 scrag cleared. 25 acres Sts
timber, all underisrn with mal need, house of stic
rooms and.all " neatuary outbuildings, mbar' or
400 trees. ell - varieties of fruit; watered , 17,
springs and a running stream, warm sandy sou,
convenient to schools -r churches within 3 mile.,
and a good nelehbothciet. The owner.hassiovrns
west, otherwiae it could not be purchased- at the_
above price. Teams ew. Tor further partleulare"
cation or address OROFT & PHILLIPS. Real Sa tan
Agents, 139 Fourth avenue.. - • • r '. ,
3011 t -LawrencevilleSALE :.
I PROPERTY destmb a rfrovemon PROS.
near , $ BT t poirrenrelillet
now oectonett b? the snbeertber; Os A * trylUP feet
emnfbrtable - modern Um - story 'back tow* et
roams. good cellar, wa s noose, &c. P rice k seem
tenni may If sold soon, A.pply un the prltnienliSli -
SD WARD SICISZII. , , . • ', - '•
1 -1 08. acres
• of good loud. athlete& .Peon • To, on
moreland ebunty. two =Use from Irwin Station. om
the Penna. B. B. Itontovernente. hewed tun_bOnie
to rood repair. bank . barn Altel older outbuildings.
TOMS moderate. I Enquire. ot 14141.
*era Elation. or B. A. HOPE, Perm atUf on.'
15 A ILE--A Blejosligegg :- , 11.111t
S- STOOL. Abe; hays been - irerittleStSed
b ind s ;
S ,l
islk cost lbw mon th s ego SlueM i
PON Tia 7 cbsoiS. Address 0..11, O. .
II
MI
.'. , p . P1,13';',- . ..*:,
TO LEV.
II
1E
N
U
11