1- .' gittsturgt GkEtts.l I PUBLISHED DAILY, lit fIWSIMAN, REED & CO., Proprietor& • - I , B. pENNTHAN, JOSIAH KING, T. P. HOUSTON. N. P. NEED. , Editoss ind•Proprtetors. OFFICE: lIASSETTE BUILDING. NOS. 84 AND 86-FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER Of rittabluig h, AllKkny ax;.4lfAlleatieny County. Dig 64. ilfeni- Week gy.l Weekly, obe yeir_.smol one year.o2.sollslngle c0py.....1.50 Due mouth. 76' SIX atos.. mom 75 10 1.501 5 copse, each. 1.25 Br the week ITtweet " " 1.05 (Oromiturter.) —undone to Agent. s DECEMBER 3, 1868. WIEDNESDAI . TEli Wzatsimt GezErna, issued on Wed— itesdays and Saturdays, is the Coestand cheap est family neraspaper in Pennsyleernies. It prism* each week forty-eight columns of solid readinvmatter. It gioes the fut/eg as well as at most relieeSietnarieet morts of any roper4n , ffie State. Its fike . are izsed 'twin- l dolly try the Civil Courts of A tleiplen county foil reference in important issues ete es to e r mine the ruling filial; in the markets at the &neat the business transaction in mute. I Term- Single copy, one ,year, $1.50 ; in dues gffisa, 11;25;.in clubs of ten, $1,15, and one free . Ito the getter up of the club. Specimen copies sent free to any address. WE PRINT On the inside • pages aj thie -tnerrning's GAZETTE—SeOOnd page: Pinery, Ephemeris. Third , and Sizih pages: Vorn-' Financial -and Mercantile, River ..ltreFs, Imparts, Maiket Reports. Seventh -loge: General Hisceibrip rof Interesting aetscling• _Matter, Amusement _Directory. GOLD oTosed in New York yesterday at 1,15. As LATE as the , 17th ult. the weedier con -tinned favorable for operations or. the Pa --eitic'Rtdlway, and the managers entertained a strong•conviction that they 'could reach Oregon, - a point • thhrtypro miles north oT Salt 'Lake City, by 'the first of January. Tu Speakership of the Assembly interests - politicians just •now,. 'Messrs. Wirnsoa, of I,Rogheny, &PRIM% of Tioga, and Huta, of Dauphin, are named as the Republican -candidates, while 3fr.- Joitzs, , 'of Berks, is - to receive the barren honor of -a Democrat ic nomination. , Ix THE face er a duty 0ft4,00 per ton, , of : 2,000 lbs. for iron, in& of forty-five per -cent. on the invoiced value .of steel, the - Itnportation of foreign railway bars has - trebled within three years; showing, for the same period of nine months,in 1866, ,70,405 loner in 1867, '137;884 tons; im 1868, 209,868 -tons. Ms. Dram declines Her Majesty's -offer to raise him to the peerage, but accepts ' it for his wife, who thus becomes Vie . "counted Beaconsfield, taking her title front : -- thelmough which her husband has so long represented in Parliament. This offer, from the'ueen, is not an unusual mark of royal favor to a retiring Premier, and is, so far, , significant of his , entire acquiescence in the - result of the late elections, as terminating This official relations - to his sovereign. - A , N.nw and Most .piadtable source of -wealth has been very latily developed in lionisiana. The rice-culture of the State vas, only a few years -time, confined to a few Smallicoastphtnters, whose product attracted little or no attention in the local markets. Tet now, as we learn froM the New Orleans Bepublitic - m, such success han -.attended the cultivation of this grain as to - warrant an estimate of the Louisiana crop, for thiS year, at an . aggregate of five thou sand tierces more than the entire product of the &Yolks& Larp additional invest ments of'•Northern capital in the business have also recently been witnessed. I n compiled from the official record, show that we have had, in the past forty years,r seven Indian wars, (the 'last still pending) and an almoet countless number of less important outbreaks. And this Indian question, with, its final adjustment Mill Sn affair , of the future, has cost the • nation nearly $1,000,000,000 and over 20,000 lives, while the present war, if pio secuted upon the plan 4. that with the Seminoles, will cost over 30,000 lives addi , tonal, with-several hundreds of millions of 1' expense to the treasury. One peculiar / feature of this Indian ques tion is the inipaatial freedom of opinion ;with which People differ upon its merits. That latitude :of discussion and judgment -which:a jealous patriotism would forbid, - were a foreign and powerful nation con-, cerned, has the amplest expression in rela tion to Indian affairs. Thus we see that public sentiment has always divided, in that regard,intp two strong parties, one asserting that the red men have been persistently wronged, and so justified in a forcible re sistance, while the other denounces the sav ages as-faithless violators, without excuse, of all their treaty obligations. Public Ben liment will continue to differ in this way, t until the question shall be disposed of for ever. This may not come until the race is itself; extinguished. Let us hope that this. extinction may result, in the march of time, -;fromnaturel causes, and not from a mur 7 ' erous extermination which would leavAn in effaceable blood-stain upon the Amyrican as me• l'he more carefully we consider theres / extra don—policy, as lately adopted by the Govt .rnment, the more heartily we can ap prove ,it. If, t herefore„the pending hostili ties. it ipported by an adequate force, and i n n eecr, - danee wtyrwhat seems to be a well deviaeCulan of campaign, shall be success ful i n enforcing the acquiescence of the In dian tribes, it will prove a long step to - ward the a melioration of their former state, and the remisolon of ,t/ie whole question to the quiet but ,resistless influence of those natural causes which, unimpeded, will yield a ineyitabls solution. GERMAN- EMIGRATION AND ITS PAUSES. e Germany, though a densely populated country,' is by no mews a poor one, and in that respect is saphior to France or Italy, from both of whichleountries but few emi grate in pursuit 4 a new home. It has well established .governments, that watch with zeal over the lives and possessions of their citizen's; and have all of them begun, .more or less, to adopt liberal principtes as their rule of cop duct..: Moreover, Germany is a hesittlitl country, teeming with grand rivers, lofty mountains, fertile plains, thriv ingl tow= and innumerable institutes of arts and sciences, and is possessed of sherd, thy clionateand yet •we see the strange phenomenon of an emigration from its iser ders, 'standing without an example in the annals of history. True, Ireland alto sends her'sons and daughters across the sea; but the seasons are so obviobs, that we discover. nothing strange or inexplicable in themove ment. Want and 'opccession—no matter whether real or imaginary- 7 th t in the masses of Erin's sons;" but in the case of Germany, as a generaL thing, we have to look around for other causes. There may be something in the tate;pollti cal movements, adding its weight to olaer previous inducements of emigration. Prussia's preponderance in the north, and the annexation of various smaller States to her body, may hare given offense to some shortsighted individuals, and the general ob ligation to bear arms and do military service may have driven many young men from ' the new provinces across the ocean; still, these circumstances are far from giving suffi cient light for the explanation of the phe nomenon. Everybody 'mows that the Germans are brave, and that the mere fear of military service could hardly produce an emigration so stnpendous as to remind one of the great Wanderings of the Teutonic tribes about four or five centuries after the birth of CHRIST. We have to go deeper for an explanation, and applying our criti cal microscope to the condition of Ger many, and the character of its inhabitants, we discover two circumstances, to which we may—as we think—reduce the universal Commotion amongst the 'Germans and their desire to change their domiciles. The first cause of It lies undoubtedly in the general conviction of the people regarding the in stability of the present condition of Europe, andthe second-in the character of the Ger man- race itself. We see at present in Europe the strange sight of millions of bristling bayonets, with the earnest protestations of the most con spicuous powers concerning their love of peace. Yet while they give us repeated asp surances of their peaceful intentions, they rival in the preparation of mnrderous weapons, and spend the best strength and means of the nations in forming and up holding formidable armies. Instead : of re ducing taxes and thus lightening the burdens, of an already oPPressed people, they ask for more money every year, and nevertheless create deficita.of ever growing dimensions. Now, no thinking man can look at thii and believe that such>a state of affairs can go on muchlonger, without bringing on a Crisis. The irrepressible - conflict between the Ro manic and Teutonic races will just as surely take place, as that between free labor and slave labor took place in this country. A crash must J come, sooner or later, and a young man can hardly be blamed for wish ing to escape the general ruin. He may be courageous, and yet dislike to act the role of a pippet, that has to move at the bidaing of some irresponsible potentate, and to risk his limbs and life for the mere gratification of a King's or Emperor's notions. No doubt, , the desire to withdraw from the theatre of the inevitable bloody conflict, 111 at the bottom of many a young German's resolu tion to desert his native country and seek himself a home under distant skies. But another, and• perhaps weightier reas ons. is to be found in the German character itself. The Germin is a born cosmopo litan,' and there is,hardly a country _on the Globe, where he does not live and thrive. The Irishman coming to this country has an immense advantage over the German in his knoWledge of its language, yet it takes the latter but a short time -to catch up with his competitdr, and, in numerous instances, to outdistance him. The political- insignificance of Germany, through centuries, has undoubtedly its source in the character of its people, tho' the latter may, in turn, have been- somewhat • influenced by the former. Deprived, of the opportunity of a practical development of their genius by stupid, petty tyrants, and tiro easy and phlegmatic in their disposition to resist tlyeir despotism by means of force, they naturally turned their attention to the arena of science and roved through the spaces of iipeculatiie philosophy. simply because they were prevented from exercising their talents on a field of practical 7614. Satisfied to discover the principles of modern mathematics and natur)‘l sciences, they left it to the French and English to put them titi• a 'practical /t:est, allowing• them to reap the golden fruit grow ing on the tree of knowledge. Con tent to enjoyhe fame of a nation of thinkers, they / red but little about the con tempt in which their neighbors held them / - from a political point of view. Having nevebeen taught to call themselves Ger mans, but Prussians, Saxons, Bavarians, ,et / c.: they now lack that enthusiastic affec tion for the,soil of their birth, which is pe culiar to the French.,. But he that'imagines the German without native pride and love of country, in a higher sense — of that word, is very much mistaken. In fact, we hardly think that there is another nation, whii is so ardently devoted to the ideal conception of •the term as the German. Only he does not attach his love .to a particular -spot, but feeling at home wherever he dwells, imag ines himself the apostle of the great mission of civilizing and enlightening the world, which, according to his opinion, has fallen to the lot of his race. Does not the great national song of tho German, commencing; "What is the Ger man's Fatherland?" express the cosniopoii tau character of that nation in an admireple 'PrriSIIIIIRG GAZETTE W EPN PS D AY, DEC I3ER manner ? Wherever his tongue is spoken, wherever the genial spark of intelligence flashes front eye to eye, where German hone esty, German industry, German good nature and genial disposition is appreciated, there is his country , . his fatherland. We, however, may congratulate ourselves that this mighty stream of emigration set in towards our shores. • LIBERTY ITHOTYr The civilized world regards the situation of Minks in Spain with a serious anxiety. Thedanger is imminent, that the revolution, which w a s peacefully inaugurated in the .dothronement and exile of a dynasty, with oat the shedding of blood, must yet pais . .throngh all the horrors of a sanguinary and tprotracted civil war before accomplishing its ordained result: The lorderly and nal versal harmony with whiCh a great nation put aside, in a day, every trace of a . despet, ism which had immemorially governed Spain, excited- the admiration of all Christ endom. It_ seemed, for the hour, as if her people with - one quiet, , long, decisive step had not only emerged from , the political darkness of centuries, but had in the same moment, attained' a foremost place among the freest nations of Europe, well deserving to stand at - the side of Eng land or the German States, in the recogni tion of Popular Rights and Personal Liberty. .dint then came the crucial test for the pa triotism and wisdom or the nation: Per sonal ambitions, the jealousies of provinces, the inteinperance of political visionaries who had not yet ripened from zealots into states men, foreign intrigues to attain control in shaping the national future—these already clearly expose the national unfitness for a purely popular Government, and tend inev itably to replace monarchical institutions over them. - I But the crisis is not ended. Let us hope that it may not terminate in a catastrophe which will shock humanity throughout the world, and which would react against the cause of Popular Liberty in Europe for an other generation. Yet it, is painfully 'evi: dent that Spain hangs at!this hour upon the verge of intestine commotion, which threaten to deluge her imperial peninsula with the blood of her people. As history tells us that Spain has given to her former civil wars a wretched preeminence for their implacable, exterminating ferocity, we have the more reason . to observe her present, per ils with a saddening apprehenaion. The essential elements of true Republi canism are as a sealed j book to the entire Latin race. Neither, in France, in. Spain, nor in Italy, have these radically essential ideas effectively penetrated the masses of the people, preparinethem adequately for the reception of a plan of self-government, which, from a traditionary age, has found faVor and a lneasure of recognition tram another race in Northern Europe.. As with 'Spain, so in her magnificent colony, Cuba, which crowns the Antilles almost m in view of the American coast, we perceive the same incompatibility which forbids us to hope for eSuccessful development, of the Republican principle. And Mexico, like Cuba, presents the same unfavorable field for Republican propagandism. Whether in the mother country, in her colonies. or in those regions which have shaken off nothing of-Spain excfept the yoke of her sovereignty, the apotheosis t,f a pare, simple, self-regu lated and self-containing Liberty awaits a. far off day lathe march of time. THE SHERMANQOHNSON SURBER. The New York Spirit of the Times makes a very interesting statement' concerning the precise origin of those terms of capitulation, the concession of which by Mr. SHERMAN to the Confederate General awakened, at that day, such indignant manifestations of public feeling throughout the North. The statement of facts, an now made by the Spirit, places the entire responsibility for the precise terms of that agreement upon President Lutcomi, General Stutlimen him self strenuously objecting to the eoncession. The subject was discussed, and so disposed of, in an interview, March 27, '65, at City Point, Va., between the President, Generals °Avis. and Snaraman and Admiral PORTER, "one of whom" is claimed by the Spirit sa its authority for its present staternents, which proceed thus : "Mr. Linooln, had come din to City Point with the most liberal views towards the rebels, and was willinirthat they should capitulate on almost any , terms. His heart was tenderness throughout , and is lenges the enemy laid down'heir arms, he did not care how it was done. , After hearing from Sherman a description of his position, he` proposed thaethe same terms should be offered to Johnston that would have been given to ,Lee. To these Gen. Sherman siren uously,afected, declaring that he had John stozycooped up where he could not get away, and that he would be compelled to ,surrender at all hazards, whafever terms we proposed. I never saw him more ener getic in my life than while he was arguing , this point; but Mr. Lincoln leaned towards milder measurea, fearing that the Confed erate General would _escape South by the railroads and have to be chased again. This, Sherman declared to• be impossible. 'I have' Johnston,' said he, 'where he cannot move without breaking up his army, which' once disbanded, can never be got together again. The Southern railroads are all broken up. ' I have destroyed them so that they cannot be used for a long time.'" Gen. Grant asked: "What is to prevent their laying the rails again?" do 'Why, said Sberman, 'my bummers don't do thing's by halves. Every rail has been placed over a hot fire ,and twisted as crooked as a ram's horn. They never can .be need again till they have been through a rolling-mill." "The President, however, was very de cided about the matter, and insisted that Johnson should be induced immediately to surrender by granting-him most liberal terms. Grant, too, was anxious that John son should not try to get into Richmond, where he might give us a tereat deal of trouble, and Sherman was eompelled to yield, thouph he did it very unwillingly. The terns of capitulation which afterwards made such a disturbance were in fact ea& stantially arranged by Mr. Lincoln himself, and if he had lived he never-would have allowed Sherman to bear the responsibility of them." Ex-Goy. Cox has been offered the Presi dency of Kenyon dolleie, and has ,expressed a willingnesS to accept the po- Sition. The President salary has been raised to $B,OOO. Prof. Sterling, it is Said, is to occupy the chair lately filled by Prof. Smith, and Prof. Tappan; of Athens Col lege, is to' succeed Prof. Sterling. The Mysteries of Physical Death,. and of the Roads Which Lead to Death Eternal. (CorresponCletioe of the' rlttebargh Gazette.) For some time, scientific men have been discussing the probability of the human head retaining c,onscionsnese, and suffering pain, for hours, after being severed from the trunk. The subject's worthy of grave attention, but it is probable thatit never can be satisfactorily settled. The strongest test I woutd probably be to have the voice, most Loved, speak to the severed head, and ask a sign in answer. Very few people could speak, in a natural tone, to the .heied of a etry dear friend. There • might be con iousness without the power of making an answering sign; but if the contortions of the features, which always follow decapiti i tion, are signs of conscious pain, the same consciousness could command a response to the voice,which had had power to control the, emotions of the perfect body; but the question of sensation, in this form of death, will probably remain, to us, 'a part of the great mystery. I have sometimes thought that the mystery of . .leeith itself is scarcely more profound than that surrounding the entrance gates to that broad road thro .h which'so many women go down to infa , here, and a hereafter in which there appears to be no ray of hope. Once entered, there is such a great gulf fixed, between them and a virtuous community, that all their futnie is enshrowded in a darkness almost equal to the eliestion of the severed head. Of the sensation of drowning, we h ire very clear conceptions, from learning the experience of those who have narrowly I es caped; and, occasionally, we get a glimpse beyond the doors of darkness, from tho'se who have been on the threshold and have, been drawn back. I once knew the widow of a Union officer, a woman of unusually good judgment, courage and force of char acter, and one who had always filled a place of more than average hOnor and usefulness, who,'when she was sixteen years old, was going from a boarding-school home for vaca tion. She traveled alone, and was to meet a lady !fiend, whom she knew well, in a city on the way, spend a few-days with her, and take another railroad to reach hqme. Some years ago, passengers changed cars, or took lacks, or omnibdsses, in nearly , every large town on a route, as each corpo ration built a barrier against the iron horse, and.felt it beneath its dignity to permit hini to pass through. When our inexperienced traveler came to the depot, where she expected to meet her friend, no friend was there. She had been instructed that in this contingency] she should take the Omnibus labelled for a par ticular hotel—the first in the place—and there wait for her friend. 'She did tic.,l and' in the parlor meta lady, in an elegant morn , ing dress, who kindly took an interest in her, and learned her disappointment. A shy, awkward, country girl,' she was quite flattered by the attentions of the lady in the silk morning dregs, with the nominating smile, and kind, motherly interest in her welfare: , The lady, in the fashionable toilette, qintelascinated the girl In the pink gingham sunbonnet, and assured her that she need not be at all disconcerted, as she would take care of her until her expected friend arrived. She took her down to break fast, saw that she was helped, escorted her back 7o the parlor, and stated that shO was obliged to go out, a short distance, to get some worsted for a piece of work she' had on hand, would take but a few imoments, and, as the girl would feel Pwkward , sitting alone, proposed she should accompany her and see the city. Our Colin ' try girl felt that the men they had met, in the passage, and breakfast room, had stared I at her rudely, and dreaded being left alone, so she, very readily, consented to golwith her fascinating friend to select her worsted —fascinating friend took her into her own room, to brush her hair and make her self neat. The country girl hesitatedibout appearing. in a pink sunbonnet beside so much magnificence; but Madam Magnifi cence was condescension itself, and placed her quite at her ease, by assurances of her utter disregard for the varieties of this; life,' and - the weariness and 'disgust she felt; un der the restraints of good society, which made it necessary, in order to maintaining her position, that she should sacrifice her own taste for simplicity, adopt fashions for which she cared not a straw. So for from being ashamed of the appearance ofl her young protege she was quite gratified to have her society in her small shopping ex pedition, which must be short as they must ; be back before her friends came for her. So they got ready, and as they stepped into one, door of the parlqr, to cross it on their way out, the expected friend, a premi nent lawyer of the place, lend his slater, stepped in at the other .door. The yOung novice rushed to meet them uttering excla mations of delight, and was quite surprised to see them both stand in blank wonderland look from his to her charming friend. !She caught the new 'comers 'and tried to hurry them forward to be presented to her protect-' tees, and join her in thanks; but both par ties drew, back. The protectress returned by the door they had entered. The friend who had, found her in such company, turned pale and tremblingly hurried her away. Once' at home, she explained that that woman was the most infamous mill the city—a "procureu." The fact of her being permitted to occupy rooms at that honse, was quite a mystery to him; but it was such a.very delicate•question that nothing could be done about it. Any attempt at investi gation would have mixed the . ..girl's name with a scandal, and her friends were I too happy to have rescued her, to take any steps for the safety of others. In explaining her situation, her rescuer DER. MITERS nom mitt. swissmtut: NUMBER FOUR. told her that this woman would have taken her into some shop where there was a dis play of fancy goods, would not have found what she wanted, in the room .opening on the street, would hive been invited to a back, or up stairs apartment, by the shop woman, would have taken her young friend with her, and the young friend would.soon have found herself a prisoner, in a place where resistance, on her part, and search of friends would have been useless, until she herself would have dreaded nothing so much as being found.' In talking of it, fourteen.years afterward, she turned-pale, and her - blue lips trembled, as she said if she had been abducted, and been unable to escape or .defend herself, none of her friends should ever again have seen her—that to all interests and purposes she would have been lost,; as she never could have faced the shame—"holl Itself," she added, "would have been less terrible and I could have opened my eyes and walked into it easter than go back." Is it right that our Just condemnation of crime should take such form as to drive the unfortunate, or. even the guilty, from crime to crime ? Is it well‘that our holy horror, should be more terrible than the. terrors of eternal death ? Is it well that virtuous women should hold themselves so far, aloof from the falling, that the secrets of their prison houses—thce motives, . and causes, which• drive them from stage to stage on the downward road, .should be as unknown as the mysteries of death ? Christ did not so hold them, and as to the. possibility of saving' lhem "The Good 18f8, Thephuas" of the Catholic Church;' and other associations, have proved that a good ly proportion of them are not past the pos. - sibility of reformation. They are not be yond the reach of God's pardoning grace, , and those who profess to call sinners to re pentance should not forget them. The work especially belongsto woman; for, even Theodore Tilton could not give personal at tention to this subject without encountering snares which would imperil his usefulness in any field of labor, let the people of this community come forward and aid the ladies who have undertaken this work, now, while their enthusiasm is enlisted and they are encodraged by many causes of hope. JANE G. Swlssirmal. General Grant's Report. The followiiiig is the report, in full, of the General of, the Army for the present year: HEADQUARTERS ARMY Or THE UNITED. STATES,WASHING'VON, D. C., November 24, 188--Geaeral J. M. Schofield, Secre tary of War.i—Sut: I have the honor to submit the reports of division, district and department commanders for the past year. These reporti give a full account of the operations and service of the army for the year. I refer Iyou to them for details. I would earnestly renew my recommendation of last year, that the control of the Indians be transferred to the War Department. I call especial attention to the recommendation of General Slierman on- this 'subject; it has my earnest approval. It is unnecessary that the argument in favor of the transfer should be restated. The necessity for it be comes stronger and more evident every day. While the Indian war continues .I do not deem any general legislation for the re-. duction of the army advisable. 'The troops on' the plains are all needed. Troops are still needed in the Southern States; and further reduction -can be made in the way already used and now in operation, where it is safe, namely: By allowing companies to diminish by discharges without being strengthened by recruits, or by stopping ap pointments of second lieutenantsif it should be deemed advisable. The veteran reserve regiment might be discontinued by absorp tion and retirement of officers and discharge of men without detriment to the service. Very respectfully-, your obd't servant, ' U. GRANT, General I S. AT THE Woman's Suffrage Convention in Boston, last week, Colonel Higgins= allu ded to the services of a lady, who, after moving among the tragedies of the stage, went among the real tragedies of the front. "To this lady's, attentions he owed the fact that he was here now. She improvised a hospital for two hundred inmates wnen beds and everything else was wanting. A cler gyman who came down there for his own health instead of attending to the wants of soldiers, asked ifthe could be accommoda ted. 'Can you dress wounds?" the lady retorted with a queenly power never excel led by Mrs. Siddons. 'Spiritual wounds,' he answered. 'But the body must be first attended to, and_ the spirit afterward.' This was the with of General Lander, and Mr. Higgins= contended it was manifest injus tice that the clergyman should have a vote on the settlement of the questions raised by the war. while the lady was disfranchised.' GEN. GRANT has deciced to attend the re union of the armies at Chicago, on the lqh of December. He will return from the . Edst in time to accompany Generals George H. Thomas and Schoftetd and quite a bodylof officers, who will go thence together. From information received in military cir cles, it is thought the reunion will bring together more officers than. haive met at any time since the close of the war. —The Presidential Electors of the State of Ohio assembled at Columbus on Tuesday morning. G. Volney Dorsey was nomina ted to fill the vacancy in the College caused by the death of Ex-Governor Tod, after which an adjournment was effected 'until to-day, when the vote will be cast. D. YSPEPSIA IN ITS WORST FORMS. elleved and Cured. S Ick Headache and Derangement of the Stomach, A ttseks zfJaundiee and Billioasneas R emoved and permanently cured. G eneral Debility, Habitual Cositivencse, E very form of Liver Complaint, II eases, Heartburn or Water Break, and T roub' es of the Dlges' lye crgans S peedily, serely and efficiently cured. - ' L aver Complaint, Swlmming of the Head/ I ndigestiou, Depressibn of Spirite, ,• V arable and uncertain ppetite, •--:-- E very symptom of Dyspe ale R elieved by Dr. Sargent's litl-Dyspeptic A Liver / P Ills. They have effected ma 7 cures. 1 n every ease they have given r Ref. , L et no family be without this remedy. Look to It that you get no other aril much - S Ickness and pain will be prevented. PREPARED AND SOLD B • . L \ (31:011,GE A. KEE . . WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, corner Wood street and Second avenue. Pittsburg , REVOLT IN THE INTERIOR When the stomach is rebellious, the liver conta macione, the burels disordered, the brain contend 'awl - the nerves in a tumult, call In the aid of HOS •TET TER'S STOMACH BITTERS, If you would re store quiet, regularity and harmony to the action of these important organs. 'A large proportion of the complaints to which the human family are sutnect. originate in Indigestion. For this distressing mala dy, and parent of innumerable ailments as distress ing as itself,, the BITTERS are ithe only a Mole proved by experience to bet a universal and nufeill ible remedy. - tint .although It was as a remedy for dyspepsia and billionsuess that they drat obtained presitge twenty years ago, it is ntw pretty well un derstood, both by the public and the medical profu sion, that their curative properties take a far wider range. In nervous eouplalnts, spasmodic affections, fever and ague, and every variety of general and lo cal debility, their sileet is meat salutary I ana as means of preparing the system to resist damp, cold, poisonous elements In the water or the air, priva tion, exposure. &c., no medicinal agent at present known can be Justly compare 4 with this powerful yet permit:as tonic. The feeble and sensitive, who can ill withstand the inclemency of the winter sea son, will llnd the BITTERS exactly the article they need to lenity and sustain them. A FACT OF GREAT VALUE. No one can be too often impressed with the truth of all disorders which manklnd•are prone to, none• are of more prevalence at this season of the year than those which manifest themselves in the lungs and pulmunary organs. Dr. KEYSER'S PECTOR AL SYRUP is a speedy and infallible cure in all re- cent 'cues of coughs and lung diseases,. and DR. KEYS/ WS LUNG CURE in cases of long standing and great obstinacy, will be found of inestimable' value. There Is scarcely •house or family in Pitts burgh that cannot testify to ifs meritg, and instead of a person wasting time on other men. and 'nap propriate remedies, let them walk themselves to Dr. Keyser's, 140 Wood , street, where they, Will end the right medicine adapted to their eti t ee. The Doctor has a long experience in medicine, and in thole lung elutes, he has given signal pr.of of his great ability and thorough knowledge otall thosO diseases In which the lungs take a prominent part. His residence in Pittsburgh ts over twenty years, and the value of his remedies is extended wherever coughs are prevalent and lung diseases to be cured. DR. KEYSER'S RESIDENT . OFFICE for LUNG EXAMINATIONS AND THE TREATMENT or OBSTINATE CHRONIC DISEASES, 120 PENN STREET, PITTSBUROH. PA. Once boors from 0 A. m. UNTIL 4 P. No November 20. 11162, • CHICAGO. Congressmen En Ronte—Germine Winter Weather—Libel Suits—National Con. • yention of Cattle' Commissioners--cut_ mination of the Corn Corner—Fires. tity Telearaph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.l - CHICAGO, December I.—Lieutenant Gov.; ernor Merrill, lion. W. B. Allison, Hon. James Wilson, of lowa, Senator Yates, - Hon. John A. Logan, Illinois, and Hon. C. C. Washburn are in this city to-day on their ,__ way to Washington. , It commenced snowing at an early licaar ' this morning, and has continued at inter- Yale during the daythe first genuine win• ter weather this season- Henry Wanderly, of this city, whose rowdyism at a boarding horse on Wabash Avenue was made public by the Chicago Tribune, has commenced an action against that paper for libel, laying his damage at $lO,OOO ; also against the Chicago Repub. /lean for the same cause) and same amuont. The National Convention of Cattle Com missioners met in the hall of Representa tives, at Springfield, Illinois, this afternoon. Hon. J. Pool, of Indians, was nominated as temporary chairman, which was carried, and H. D. Emory, of Chicago, as temporary . Secretary. A committee of three, Dr. Manse, of Missouri, Mr. Howard, of . Michi gan,' and i.)r. Johns, of Illinois, was ap pointed on Credentials, and the following named ten gentlemen were appointed a committee on permanent organization: Hon. J. C. Christie, of Canada; Prof. Smith, of Missouri, Colonel E. Messenger, of Ohio, Mr. Allen, of Now York, Mr. Carter, of Maryland, Mr: Erle, of Indiana, Dr. Niles, of Michigan, Dr. Snow, of Rhode Island, Dr. Thayer, of Massachusetts, and John P. Reynolds, of Illinois. In the aftemmon Governor Oglesby ad dressed the Commissioners. At the afternoon session of the Conven tion Mr. Christie, from the Committee on Permanent Organization, reported the names of the following officers : President, Hon. Lewis F. Allen, New York; Vice Presidents, D. Christie, T. Reber, R. Mc- Call, M. R. Patrick, P. A. Chadbourne, G. F. Thayer, S. Howard, H. J. Moore, H. C. Johns, J. Poole, Peter Melendy, A. B. Hamilton and Dr. Snow; Secretaries, Dr. - G. M. Snow, Rhodeisland; J. P. Reynolds, Illinois, Dr. L. D. Moore, Maryland, and Dr. M. M. Gores, New York. Hon. J. Stan ton then 'delivered along and able address. There were no less than five alarms of fire in this city this evening, between the hours of seven and eight o'clock.. The first commenced at 416 State street and de- atroyed everything mo to 422. The build ings were all two story frames, generally occupied by families above and small shops beneath; loss about 510,000. The second occurred in Judd's Block, on the north east corner of Randolph and Lasalle streets, occupied by A. B. Sturges, Yankee notions. ma stock was entirely destroyed; loss $3,000. It Is supposed that incendiaries had something to do with this fire. The third fire took place in the dwelling house of John A. Hicks, President of the Chicago , Brewing Company, located on the corner of Fullerton avenue and North Clark street. The reporter was not able to ascertain the extent of this fire. The other alarms were false.. • The corner in corn culminated yesterday and resulted in. the repudiation of about two-thirds of the "shorts." The number of bushels repudiated was about one hum. dred thousand, and the difference about twenty-five thOusand dollars. MARRIED: ARBUCKLE—KERR — On Tuesday morning. De cember Ist, at the residence of the bride's mother, by Rev. David R. Kerr. D.D., ,J OHM ARBUCKLE, Jr., to Miss MARY A. KERR. li cards. DIED. • DICKEY—On Monday, November 30th, 1868, CL ARA DICKEY, mite or Samuel Dickey, and daughter of Thomas and Lucinda Neely, in the. 27th year of her age. • Funeral from her late residence No. 7 Day alley, on WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, Dec ember 2d. at 3 o'clock. The friends of the family are tespectfhlly invited to attend. ' • 21 (Harrisburg papers please copy.) ffi rI TON—On December let, at 10 o 4 clock A. m., THU& A. KIN I ON. late Lieutenant 102 d Pa. Vat.- Vols., and late of the City Pollee, at ed 52 years. Funeral, from the residence of Thos. Maxwell, 160 Penn street, THIS APTEHHOON, at %X o'clock, to proceed to Uniondale Cemetery. UNDERTAKERS. WEI. AIKEN, UNDERTAKER, No. 166 FOURTH STREET, Pittstmrgh, Pa. INS of all kinds, CRAPES, GLOVES, and ev cry description of Funeral Burnishing Goods, far.- nished. Rooms open day and night. Hearse and Carriages fbrnished. RZERZNCEI3—ReY. F David Kerr. D D., Be,. W. W. Jacobus. D. D., Thomas Ewing, Esg.. Jacob H. Miller, Esc. . ES &PEEBLES t UNDERR. TAKERS AND LIVERY STABLES, corner Of , 8 DUSKY STREET AND CHURCH AVENUE, Allegheny City. where their COIrPIN ROOMS are constantly supplied with real and imitation 8080. wood s , Mahogany and Walnut Collins, atpriees Tae tyin from to anndOC• Bodies prepared for inter ment. Hearses and C fUrnished; also, all Linda of Mourning Good ur Sl required. °Moe open at all hours, day and night. • 110011EBT T. RODNEY . , lINEIER• TAXER AND EMBALMER, No. 45 OHIO BET, Allegheny, seeps constantly on hand a. large assortment of ready-made Collins of the fol lowing kinds First, the celebrated American Be.. rial Cases, Metallic Self-sealing Air-tient Capes and Caskets, and Rosewood, Walnut and Rooewood Imitation Collins. Walnut Collins from 015 up wards. Rosewood. Imitation Collins from ,45 up. wards, and no petite mill be spared to give entire satisfaction. Crape Ind Gloves furnished free of charge. Best Hearses and Carriages tarnished on short notice. Carriaires retraished to funerals 114.• GENUINE , SCOTCH PEBBLE SPECTACLES, ' WERBEETED TO 'REPROVE TEE BIOS! FOR\SALE BY 4- DUNSEATH HASLETT., 66 FIRTH STREET. 11ENRY G. SALE, MERCHANT TAILOR. Comer of Penn and St. Clair Streets, Has now In stock one of the largest and most iarieil assortments of Fall an&Winter Goods ever brought ao this city. His stook embraces al the latest French utd English manufactures of Gloths, Cassimeres, _Suiting!, OTertoalings. a of Gent's Furnishing Goods NEW GOODS. FOR A STYLISH OVERCOAT. FOR A STYLISH DRESS COAT FOR A STYLISH BUSINESS COAT,. 808 42. STXl.4Bff HAAB N COAT, FOIL X fit PAI it OF FOR A STYLISH VEST OF ALL KINDS, For alt the latest styles cut clothes, made of the' peat material. and by iirst.class workmen. and at prices. surprisingly low, go to the well known Merchant W. HESPENHEID. NO. 50 ST. GLAIR STREET, now Sixth. nolB TEOB. F. DALE, M. D..... 8. BUTTON, D. D. milE UNDERSIGNED WIPE AS- A, SOCIATED thentselTes together for the PRACTICE OF MEDICINE. OMee, N 0.19 STOCKTON AVENUE, Aliefittony city. THOS. F. DALS, M. D. so:0:AM X.. 13. BUTTON, X. D. NEW GOODS.