4. U .Ell.-li - 4,s'Otglj::.6kitt • PITIIIMMED DAILY, BY ! eENNIKAN,. HEED & CO., P;oprietors. F. B. PENNIMAN. JOSLkli KING. S. F. HOUSTON; N. P. REED. Editors and Proprietors. OFFICi: IAZETTE BUILDING, NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. " OFFICIAL PAPER of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and #ll.llmay County. . . . 1 Teraii--Datiy. elaf-Weektit - -Wesktp. One ye5r....56,00 Oxe year.#2.ooragla c0py....11.00 On* month. 70 Six nos.. 1.50 Imp! es, ea c h.. 1.23 fi_i_i_re2..._ Three isioo 11 10 ... 1.10 ) .- - --swim* to Agent. '' v4l`'''' - . TUESDAY DECEMBER 15,1868• . TEE Witituar Qv:mit issued on Wed— sastistys and Saturdays, is the best awl cheap set family newspaper in Penns:Mania. -;.lt prasnts, each tau* forty-eight columns of solid reading matter. It glees the - fullest as wort as the mod reitabie market reports of any paper in the State. Its flies art used mitt bythe Oiesi Gotirts of Allegheny county for reference in important issues to determine sise ruling. Prices in the markets at the time of the business transaction in digitate.' Terms: Single copy, one year, 11.150 ; 'in clubs office, 41,25; in dubs of ten, $1,115, and one free to the getter up of the club. Specimen copies sent free to any address. WE PRINT 011 the inside pttges of this morning's GAzETTE---Elecoliflpage: New Pub— Keations. Third and Sixth' Pages: ComMer eiai, Bnancial, 'Mercantile and River Neyis, itarkets, Imports. Seventh page: Agrieui- Surat Department. 7: GOLD closed in New York yesterday a 185 i. • Thm "Molly Marlins" have appeared among the coal and iron miners of Alleghe ny county, Maryland.. One atrocious aims- Em elution Already alarms the• , people, and the rumors are adoat. We have no doubtithAtthe laws will be enforced and the community efficiently protected ,-by the an= ,t] thorltie& ' _ •, • . ii the closing up of the business of the freedmen's Bureau GeM Howeno has Very properly asked for Congressional in vestigatien into its affairs and operations from theirganization . up to . the present time. Such investigation the philanthropic officer knows will redound to his own great credit indput at rest forever the idle rumors and - Charges made by the enemies of the Bureau; cimceniing its management.. - Tin EITIOPEAIIatnisION of Mr. Coin tau is now said to have a three-fold object; Ist, Consultation upon the Alabama claims, with our Minister in London; 2d, A. careful exuaination into oases pending . in the _ . iPrencli_Vourtalor the sequestration of Con federate property; 3d, To advise with Mr. Hans, at Madrid, upon the Spanish and Cuban questions. This constitutes a sort of roving commission, which no diploma tist - could more successfully execute than Cains Cumin. SPaxraH Ainwas look better. The mac. thputry movement at Cadif is on its last Isgs, aFti its failure will strengthen the Pro iitiOni4 Government against the danger s of similar opposition in other quarters , of the Kingdom. All the world who were dis posed to regard any Spanish insurrection is the mire precursor of: anarchy throughout . the Peninsula, must now.accept the suspi cions settlement of theta* at Cadiz as a very forcible proof that Spaniards are much more tit for self than they have had credit for. ' in intelligent Englishman—Hr. Drinzs, the author of "Greater Britain,"-=-trav suing through the Southern States, after the close of the Rebellion, was struck . by the apparent apathy with which the aristocratic land-owners regarded the political crisis, and by the actively demonstrative ifiterest exhibited by the numerous class of "mean whitesr who had never been rich enough to own slaves, but who were the voeiferous champions of the system and fiercely oppos ed .to the introduction of Northern ideas. HeliCer the writer inferred that these mean whites were in fact the governing class in all those -Sates: He made thereLun very decided mistake. The superioi planting class were : always quiet and undempnstra . tile, because they knew their dirty work to be well and eagerly done for them i hy these mom dependants who swarmed about them, the obsequious agents in running the po . machine. The cue once given to them • by their surriors, the , latter have always \ kept in the back-gronndi''because iincla...wiyik was not to their taste, and be cause they knew that the poor whites could' be depended upon. for fidelity and zeal, in the interests of their masters. The Slave , holding aristocracy ruled their States with iron heads, although, for the moat pat, under veltret gloves. And-that Was about what their "apathy" amounted to. Wn LL & U from the 'Baltimore Ann:lean that the existing antagonism I?etween the Northers entre, sad - Baltimore and Ohio Railway Coraramies, has culminated in a close combinatiaa of the Northern Central, the Baltiniore and Potomac, the Wesiern Maryland, the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore and the Union Railway Coin- patties. ,A. nevi: . passenger and freight depot, for their joint use, is to be built on land west . of the Charles street bridge, where the old Mount Royal reservoir stood, and on the other side of Charles street, , where the rains of Laurile factory have long been standing. The Amtrican , adds: Th e l on ikabops of the Northern Central are to be transferred from Bolton to an other localltY, which will enable the Com pany to dispose of the whole Bolton prop erty for building purposes. The Philadel pkia Road 11 to• transact its principai pas songs; business here also, but will probably not abandon the passenger nines and depot at President street. Bo also the Northern Central, 'the Westprn Maryland and the . Baltin2Ore and Potomac, which is now being rapidly constructed., This, it will-be been, is an immense arrangement, and will place the new road to Washington not only in full connection with the North and West, enabling through passengers to be taken around the city by stem, but will give it a depot on the line of the Charles Street City Passenger Railway, which is not the case with any of the present depots. ' The Northern Central controls both the 1 charterof the . Baltimore aid Potomac, taw securing an independent line to Washing ton, and that of thetnion Railroad, which proposes to make a suburban connection of all the roads entering the city. But only so Such of the latter is to be constructed as will snit the requirements of the combina tion, so that the B. & _O. Company must come to them near Jones' Falls, or oast ill. So far as the projected clumps are to afford larger facilities to the businese of the North Central line, aid perfect its un er . , broken nnection with. Washington, these ' arrange, ants bare great , interest for the people of l'ennsylvalla,.and, in general, of the North and Wee, and we think that the statements shove made may be relied upon . . , as essentially correct. , // __ BLACK SUFFRAGE IN PENNSTI.. VANIA. An article under this title ) ,written by the senior editor of the GAZETTE, a number of yes ago - has recently'been rewired, and copied' into inoet'' of the Republican jowl:kids. of this Commonwealth. From this article we take a few paragraphs: "In 1682 William Penn promulgated 'the Frame of Government' of Pennsylvania, under authority of the charter granted him by King Charles IL In this document the , 'right of suffrage was given, *without restrica tion to 'the freemen of said province.' "In 1701 Penn granted what is known as the 'Charter of Privileges.' By this instru ment the right of suffrage was broadly given to LW/4 freemen of each respective cilunty.' 'The first constitution of Pennsylvania wa y s adopted in 1776: The convention that fr... ed this instrument was presided over by I: enjamin FrertldM. It .gave the right of •, t •e to 'every freeman of the full age of t7enty-one yearL ' The men of the Rev olt on, while asserting their own rights In fill to stead d a-g f td is n t s b t y 4p Oi ro e lm airditud i3 idea tionw of ere he political equality of all men.' ' In 1790 a new constitution was framed. li i El mas Mifflin presided over the conven t° that smade it.. This instrument gave he right to vote to 'miry freeman over the of twenty-one years.' ' In 1839 the Constitution was revised. Jo n Sargeastpresided over theconvention. i Th basis of suffrage was changed so as to include only 'every white freeman of the age of twenty-one years.' "For one hundred and fifty-sia years black men, if black they were, voted in Pennsylvania on precisely the same condi tion as white men. None of the evils now predicted of black suffrage were expinienced. Neither the mental or social equality of the two races was therebrestablished. Amal gamation, either through matrimony or without, was not encouraged. Not a black man was made Governor or Legislator. Social order was not subverted. The Gov ernment was not made by white men, for white men, bat by all men, for the benefit of all." It may be remarked, in order to the better understanding of the whole matter, that in 1838 a case was brought before the Courts of this- Commonwealth to test the point whether a native-born black man, not a slave, was a "freeman," according to the true intent and meaning of the Constitution of 1790. The design was, by a judicial decision, to deprive the blacks of the right of suffrage, which they had enjoyed from 1682. All the points were learnedly and ingeniously argued; and, at length, the Supreme Court, Chief Justice GIBBON, pro noundng the opinion, in conformity to the pro-slavery fanaticism and, blindness which then prevailed, solemnly decided that it "black Man" could by no possibility be re garded as a "freeman," within the mean ing of the Constitution. The. Convention that framed the existing Constitution was in session when this judgment was rendered, and it made haste, ' under the leadership of Mr. GEORGE W. WOODWARD and other members of kindred sentiments;to insert the word "white," as qualifying "freeman," in the ' draft of the organic law which they framed. The iriends of Liberty and Equality, at that period few and despised, remonstrated in vain, wild, e the masses of the white voters made joyful haste to proscribe the blacke and debar !them from all participation in ipo litical affairs. Of coure i , so rank an injustice cannot last forever. According to that measure of abil ity given t us, we have steadily advocated not simply with the political Freedom of all men and wolnea, but their political Equality likewise. For long and weary years we were subjected to odium for this Radicalism. But that era has gone, not to return again. The day is now not distant When the Constitutions both of Peansylva nia_and of the Union will distinctly recog nize the political equality of all men and women. , • J 131PCIE-RESUMPTION. The namts of a majority of thti Judges of the Supreme Court are freely used at Washington, as agreeing upon a decision overturning the Legal Tender Acts. The opinion may not be' , announced for some weeks. If the rumor be well founded, its truth will be generally acquiesced in, in advance of the open decision, and the business of the country will- begin at once to adapt itself to the new standard—or rather-to the old one again re-established, the solid'specie basis. Congress must at once provide for the $390,000,000 outstanding in its paper thus discredited. This can only be done by funding that debt into lqng bonds. The notes no longer being a legal-tender, lose atonce their superior character and become no better than the notes of 'the Banks. There are but two hypotheses upon 'which the Treasury can arrange its affairs, one that of an immediate cash resumption, the other of a bankruptcy continued and con ferred. We must.; regard the latter as out of the question, and the former must inev itably be adopted. , ' The entire business of the country midst follow at once in the same difection. The National Banks will' be strengthened by $150,000,000 of reserves in geld Instead of legal-tenders, .and may home occasion for a port of it. There will - z PITTSBURGH GAZETTE i TUESDAY, DECEMBER / 15,. 1868: • . ~ , • .. be for a While an active business in the sort , ing and - redemption of their own notes, but that businesi will Probably be confined to the brokers, and not shared in to any great extent by the masses of the people. A general reduction of values in most descriptions of, property may be looked for, but very little disturbance beyond that—certainly no panic •—in, business generally.. Settling down so suddenly upon the hard-specie, there must be something of a jar all around,_ bu , we do not hesitate to express our belief that the great body of the people are, s z s4rer, disposed to sustain, and not inapede or em barrass, the operations of the / Government, and that we shall all get through the much dreaded crisis without any need less,/ panic, and the' country will, within thirty days, and/itself squarely planted upon the specie' basis and wondering how it got there with so little difficulty and dam-. age- 3Ve do not - imagine that it is to re qtdre, za very long time to convince the peo ple that the Government can Ow.. its debts, and, with that become the general belief, the Treasury will be able to pay those debts entirely at its leisure. This Confidence in the Govermnent will speedily be extended to the banking institutions- 6 and confidence t i l answers practically the lame, p se as specie—perhaps a better'one. If this confidence don't suffice, e specie will, suidn f this the country, has.• enough, and to spare, for the present emergency. The $24,000,000 of gold certificates ,held by the Treasury will be put to use, and in aid of the banks if needed. The gold with which speculators have been gambling loses all its value] for that purpose and will go into useful channels again. The immense amounts hoarded among the people will also appear again in circulation. Altogeth er, the country, instead of being poorer, will find itself considerably richer than it expected, and the situation really far from an uncomfortable one. • WILL PITTSBURGH ACCOMMODATE - - ITSELF!--WO. 1. The approach of persons, whether in car riages or on foot, to the Union Depot of this' city, is more difficult and dangerous than to that of any other like establishment in the United States. In part, this is owing to the topography of the district on which the city is built, and in part, also, to the way in which the city was originally laid out, conforming well enough to the social and commercial ideas andinstrumentalities current in those earlier times, but Unsuited to the present condition of affairs. rive railways use this depot in common. These are the Pennsylvania, the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago, the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and St. Louis, the Erie and Pittsburgh, and the Pittsburgh and Cleve land. The Pennsylvania road approaches it from the East, and in a way to: interpose no obstacle to the business of the city or the movements of its inhabitants or visitors. The other • four roads approach the depo' from the West; the Pittsburgh, Ci l iv ii ir .nati and St. Louis, after crossing the ( nongahebs running under several stree b means of a tunnel, and otherwise pre aril ing few or no obstructions, while the the three lines cross the Allegheny over 0] bridge of the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne an Chicago Company, crossing a number. the principal thoroughfares on a level wii them, and entering the depot at the B eni thiough whieh all passengers go out Orja. Several things conspire to make matters still worse. 1 The Grain Elevator stands di rectly in front of the entrance to the Depot, ao that all cars running in or out of it neces sarily intercept suiteinih , inger the stream' of vehicles and pedestrians. Beyond the Ele vator, to the west, on one side of Grant street, is the warehouse for Express 'Freight; while on the other side of the same street is the Metal Yard of the Pennsylvania Rail road.. Still, in front of the Depot, but to the northwest, is the warehouse and river crossing of the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago road, causing a constant succession of trains each way across Liberty street, at the point where Grant street enters — into it; is the most difficult, point in its whole length. Thea, too, the. Pennsylvania Railroad Company has its principalWarehouse'on the Point, at the foot of Liberty street, makihg it necessary to run a track from the Union Depot all the way down to the river, and rendering . ' still worse, what would be bad enough without, the impediments - to ordi _ nary travel at the intersection of Grant street' and Liberty. , These various lines and crossings in front of the Depot are made passible only by the introduction of numerous frogs, which ren, der the transit of trains slow and uncertain. With the utmost precautions the employes are capable of wheels get thrown eff the track, causing teams to congregate, and putting persons on foot to additional incon venience and peril. If the whole arrange ment had been contrived to see how much annoyance could be given to the, people of the.city, it would have been made no worse than the necessities laid on the railway com panies have made it. These evils are sufficiently great as mat ters now stand. But, it mast be remember ed that the increase of the city in popula-' tion and business will' certainly, mike ~the case worse. So, alio, will the general growth of the country. Twenty years hence the number - of trains each day pass ing the point of embarrassment will be at least doubled; perhaps quadrupled. Penn, Liberty and Grant streets, at the railway crossings, will become impassable for teams and foot passengers. How shall the evils thus brought under consideration be so met as to be guarded against and removed, or, at least,=be re duced to the lowest possible - sunount, so as to be endurable ? This iin question which the people-of this citi, - and their representa tives and agents in the Councils, ought to consider thoroughly t wisely, and without do lay. The longer provisions to meet the case shall be delayed, the more difficult, em.,; barrassing and expensive will-they become. The question thus propounded is divisible into two. What measures of relief . will most effectually meet thete s d lahe wan an 1T Of the,.. people ? ... What meantres,. while . .... affording the needed relief, il l be least ex pensive to the respective'Companies, and allow them the largest reasonable facilities for the transaction oftheir appropriate busi ness ? It is forthe welfare of the city that both of theselispects of the case should be considered, not In the ligh l t of past conflicts between the inhabitants Or the authorities and the railway corporations; or under the impulse of animosities surviving those con flicts. It will be well, so foi e to forget the past, or, rather, to let the memory thereof be inoperative. Doubtless, i the railway com panies have not been faultless. They have erred both in judgment and intention. If the people of this City had made no mistakes in dealing with these rperations, their Treasury would to-day be richer than it is by many millions of dollars. The errors have not been all on one side. Awes recently proposed by a correspond. ent of one or `the morning papers that the PittsbOrgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Com pany should be required to sink its track so as to pass under Liberty and Penn streets, through a tunnel. This would be an excel lent arrangement so far as relates to diseir cumbering those highways. But to accom plish' this the trains Wald have to start from a subterranean apartmentunder or near the present Depot, and then the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad would have to be correspondingly sunk for some distance East, or it would be impossible to send freight or passengers through, in either di rection, without changing cars. ' These changes would not oniy'cost large sums of money, but might prove exceedingly incon venient for the transaction of business purely local. Besides, it would not . do to lower the railway bridge; over the Alle gheny so as to impede the prissage of steam hods, which would be found necessary by the adoption of this suggestion for a tunnel. That project seems not to be feasible. The tunnel Would have to run under the river, or ' not at all. Liberty and Penn streets would be largely end inexpensively relieved if the through freight trains, East and West, passing over the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago road, should go round over the Western Pennsylvania road. On this plan, trains from the West would keep up the right bank of the Allegheny river, after leaving the Allegheny Depot, striking the Pennsyl vania road East of Pittsburgh at Blairsville intersection ) . Trains from the East would :take the Western Pennsylvania road at - Blairsville intersection and strike the Pitts burgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago track at Allegheny, thus avoiding this city entirely. As the. Western Pennsylvania road belongs to the Pennsylvania Railroad .Company, and as the distance by it is .ationt the same, there can be no serious difficulty in making this arrangement. There would then be only tbrengbpassertger trains to cross Liberty and Penn streets, and these would be coin- t 'paratively few, as the local trains, with only _ one exception, now stop at Allegheny, and will tontine to do so. ~ Tie objection of the Pennsylvania Rail road Company to this plan, if we are right r ly informed. grows out of the, fact that it is e convenient for them to dispatch trains from d the East made up of cars destined to be sep )f mated here, some taking the Cleveland ,h road, some that to Chicago, and others that cd to Cincinnati and St. Louis, and so on. This objection is not well taken. In the main these cars .can just as well be separat ed at the East, say at Altoona, as here. If the case is reduced to a question of can• Denience, the Company ought to give way and consult the welfare of this city in the premises. If there shall, however, prove to be in superable objections fo sending the general freight trains round the city, there can be no valid reason why the cattle trains should not be sent that way, thuadording a con siderable degree of relief. This would in volve a removal of the Cattle Yards from East Liberty over to the Western Pennsyl vania road, which would Subject no one to loss, but be a decided gain all round. Land is now so valuable at East Liberty, that the exchange of locations fur the Yards would prove' a handsome ~speculation; while the Hotel would be worth more.with the Yards away than with them there. In addition, the trade in cattle, by the removal, would escape city taxes, to which it is now liable, rand residences now near -the Yards would be delivered from sundry annoyances. Other points remain for consideration upon which we cannot enter to-day. Tice Future of Mormonism. . _ The Gentiles are coming thicker and fas ter. Brigham sees the threatening danger, and is struggling desperately to avert it; but the events of the last few weeks show that tie - principle of exclusion is to prove at least a partial failure. The number of doubt ing or disaffected Mormons is larger than, generally supposed, and it is reasonably certain that if he '"outs off" all who deal with Gentiles, he will perform that act fer at least one-third of his community. And a here let me mention a curious fact, not gen erally known to' outsiders. Of all tholtif who have enabraceff Mormonism since 14_, start, over sixty per teat have apostatized and left them. Brigham lately stated this fact in one of his sermons, and their own records prove it. Their gains have been grossly exaggerated; as, for instance, they published, last summer, an expected immi gration of twenty thousand, and the whole number brought over did not reach five hundred.—Salt Lake- Later. The Value of Immigratiou According to the best estimates that can be made or that have been made, from 1820, to 1830, 244,490 persons born on the other side of the eqean landed on our shores. From 1830 to 1840, 552,000. From 1840 to to 1850, 2,667,624. The annual average at is about 300,000, though a prominent politi clan of Massachusetts chooses to put it at 350,000. By actual immigration, every im migrant, it has been ascertained and estab lished, brings with him between eighty and a hundted dollars, for himself, man, woman and child. We have. then, from thin source thirty millions of specie added to the nation al pecuniary resources, and more than sev enty-one millions brought in by the arrival oficretkners from the first of January. - 1881, to the close of 1164, or civet, at the rate of eighty dollars per capita. Allegheny City Republican Executive Com mittee—lPrellmluary Meeting. A meeting of the Allegheny City Repub lican Executive Committee was held last evening in the ,Treasurer's office, City Building, for the purpose of determining the time for holding the Republican prima ry election. The meeting was called to order at segen and a half .o'clock, John McDonald, Pao., occupying the chair, and Mr. W.W. Brown officiating as Secretary. The President stated the object of the meeting, after which the roll was called, when the following members answered to • their names: Messrs. McDonald, W. W. Brown. fiddle, Scandrett, Bothwell, Gang, Alex. Patterson, Sprague, Shaffer.Wettach, Holmes and Hastings. Mr. Gang moved that the primary elec tions be held on the last Saturday in camber. Mr. Brown moved to amend by Imbed ting the first Saturday in January, 1869. The_ amendment was adopted and th motion, as amended, carried. ' I The question in regard to the qualifica tions of voters was then taken up. - Mr. Holmes moved that any person who voted for Grant and Colfax at the last ele - tion be allowed to cast a ballot at the ens - ing primary election. • Mr. Seandrett opposed the motion. He thought that none but straight out and odt Republicans should be allowed to vote. Mr. _Gang favored the motion. He co - t i . Mitered a vote for Grant and Colfax a a ticent proof of any voter's Republicanism. 'B . rown stated that there was a Repub c t 11 majority of 236 in the Sixth ward, and ye the Democrats, by a method similar to Ili . one, no* under discussion, controlled the last ) Republican primary election and elected \ Councilman of their party. ' , After \ considerable discussion further, Mr. Hastings moved to amend by leaving the matter in the bands of , the election board% iii • the different election precincts. Mr. Hastings' amendment was lost. Mr. Sprague offered as a substitute for the original motion the following resolu tion : Resofved,, That the Republican, voters of Allegheny City be and are hereby instruct ed to meet at their respective election pre cincts on the first SAurday of January, 1869, to place in nomination Republican candidates for city and ward officers for the ensuing yearAhe qualifications for voting being proof of their former Republicanism satisfactory to the Judges of th? . said pri mary election. After some further discussion the resolu tion was unanimously adopted. On motion it was decided to bold the next meeting of the Committee on Monday evening, January 4, 1869, at the same plaCe, to bear the election returns. On motion adjourned. -- Brinesloss Escape. Mr. W. W. Kennedy, master .machinist at the Keystone spring works of Messrs: Norris & Ruian. No. 85 First ayenue, nar rowly escaped a horrible dbath yesterday morning. It seems that he was engaged about eight o'clock in filing a piece of Shafting, and while so engaged his clothing became entangled in a cog wheel which' was revolving with great rapidity near him. He was whirled around several times with fearful velocity, and was only extrica ted from his position by the giving way of his clothing, which was stnpped complete ly from his body. Dr. -George Puryiance was summoned immediately, and found, after examination, that no bones were broken, though the gentleman had _suf fered a number of severe and painful bruises. After his injuries were attended to, he was taken to his residence at/Oak land. His escape from death, and even without the breaking of a bone, seems almost incredible, an'entirely beyond the comprehension of those who witnessed the accident. Nominated. The Nominating Committee of the Young Men's Library Asso'clation have placed in nomination the following "regular" ticket for officers of the Association for the ensu ing year. The election will take place on January 11th, 1869 : President—Joseph Albree. nee Presfdent—Gen. J. B. Sweitzer. Secretary—Augustus H. Lane. Treasurer—D. P. Corwin. Trustees—W. D. McGowan, J. J. Donnell, R. S.,WouiHarper, Malc olm art, A. J. Par Ha. Audicrrs— ng J. M. IL Reh sons. COUGHS, 'COUGHS, FOLDS, COLDS, When n per takes cold the lungs become charged with phlegin, which oppressing the con. stltutton a natural effort is made for , a relief. This enort ts a cough. The only life and prudent remedies to be adopted are those which assist na- tare la its work, by looser lag the phlegm and excl• tln g afreedom of expittoration until the evil is re moved.. DR, SARGENT'S COUGH SYRUP is ad. mirably adapted to promote expectoration, ease the breathing, loosen the phlegm, abate the fever, and allay the tickling which occasions the cough, with out tightening tue chest, or in any way injuring the system, and for all temporary and local affections. such as irritation of the t'aroat. hoarseness of the voice, Influenza, &c., It is of incalculable value. Es pecially at this inclement season of the year it would be well for every family to hive tilts valuable remedy at hand. Drepared by GEO., F E .F.4,LT. Wholesale Druggist, corner Wood street and Second ay. nue, Pittsburgh, and for sale ,by all druggrsts ana dealers In medicine. 50 cents per bottle. PREVENT OR•REPENr I When health has been sacrificed for want of the cafe necessary to protect It. regrets are unavailing. It is better to prevent than to repent. The molt In clement season of the year is at , band, and its cold and damp are the source of inn it:Ural:de distressing ailments. The best means o f esciiping tt em la to keep the outward surface of the body comfortably warm with suitable clothing, and' the internal or gans In' a vigorous ccndltlon by the occasional use of a healthful tonic and eotrective. Winter makes tremendous drafts upon the vital forces, and there fore it is a season when a pure vegetable stimulant and Invigorant like HOSTZTTIOE , B STOMACH BITTERS is of infinite use, especially to the weak 14 feeble. ft gives stamina to the system, and 1 :1 ereby enables it to withstand the shocks of cold, hlch produce cough, bronchitis. catarrh, and other , eases of the organs of respiration. Dyspe sia d e•ery species of indigestion are also greatly granted by cold, damp weather, and for these mPlalnts the BITTERS are an acknowledged spe fie, There is no feet better known in this country, d, indeed, througho . .t the civilized portions of e Western Hemisphere, than that this genial pre ,. ration Is a swift and certain remedy for all ordi ary diseases of the stomach and the !trek- A FACT OF GREAT VALUE. No one can be too often Impressed with the truth o all disorders which minkind are prone to.-none i eof more prevalence at this season of the year ;tr ) t I - . those whi h manifest themselves in the lungs and pulmuuary rgans. Dr. KEYSER'S PECTOR-' AL SYRUP is a peedy and infallible cure In all re cent Cares of oughs and lung diseas e s; and DR. KEYSER'S L NG CURE In cases of long standing and great o thistly, will ,be found of inestimable value. The is scarcely alums or' family in Pitte l in burgh that net testify to Its merits, and instead c I of a person altlng time on other Inert tknd inap propriate medics, let them walk themselves to Dr. Keys , e, 140 Wood street, where they will find the rig tinedleine adapted to their cure. The Doitor bas long experience in medicine, and in these lung cases, be .has given signal pr. of of his - great ability and thorough knowledge of all those diseases in which the lungs take a prominent par Ills residence In Pittsburgh is over twenty years, and the value of hie remedies is extended wherever coughs are prevalent and tang diseases to be cared. DR. KEYSER'S RESIDKNT 01710 E for LUNG EXAMINATIONS AND TILE " TREATMENT. or OBSTINATE CHRONIC DrSEABES, 120 PENN STREET. PITTSBURGH. PA. . . Wilco hours Iron 9 A. K. .CINTTL 4r. air. - - • , Ncrtiutbes Aii, 16611,' ,- - . . - BIIIEF TELEGRA —Half a million in currency was sent West, yesterday, by one of the .New York banks. —A. tire at Yarmouth, Me., destroyed the paper • mill of Charles J. Little, valued at $50,000, and insured for $20, 000 . -,The West Wisconsin Rail Road is now . open from Tomah to Black Raven Falls; Veins are running once a day. —David Price fell from the Peoria and Warsaw Railroad bridge, at Peoria, Sunday night, and was almost instantly killed. , -A scheme is on foot to have the tax on whisky again raised to two dollars, and Congres*iTs being quietly secured in . sup. port, of It. —Another accident occurred at Baldwin's Locomotive Foundry, Philadelphia, yester day. Another girder fell, seriously injur. ing three men. —The! steam tug Addle, of New York, e Z. was b ed at New Haven, - Conn., yester day mo cling. Loss estimated as V 4000; ' insur for $ll,OOO. —H. . Clinton, who robbed William. Fargo of tvio hundred thousand dollars in bonds last January, was recently ceptnred at Panama and brought to Buffalo,, N. - Y., for trial. ' i —Two en, named Talmadge and Ripley, have bee arrested at Cleveland, Ohio for stealing o notes valued at eleven thous aiad doll, from Boken,Whitmore dc Co., of New brk, on,the 4thinst. sli—The New York Tribune editorially ye: We are confidentially advised. from Washington that the Supreme Court is pretty certain to adjudge the Legal Tender Act unconstitutional. We are told that there will probably be bat one dissenter from the Cotart's judgment. • —The New. York Times denies the report of the story relative to the Alaska purchase money, and says that seven, millions two hundred thousand dollarsmiere sent from that city to Russia last Auguet. The five millions referred to as having been sent from London were in payment for Russian railroad loans. " —A dispatch from Byan station says: In telligenee has been received here that large quantities of overland mail matter have been stolen from a coach near Fort Bridger, the robbers having cut open the boot. A portion of the mail haA already been re ooyered. Strict inquiry will be instituted as to the manner of carrying these mails. P. S. Knoles, of Jackionyille, llle., was robbed of a. check for 19,000, at the Union Stock yard in Chicago, on Saturday. The check was drawn on the Third National Bank of Chicago. When he discovered the robbery, Mr. Knoles started for the bank, but when he reached there he learned that the thief Was ahead of him and had drawn.; the money. - -An iron tank in the cellar of Easton, Sander it Co's drug store under the South ern Hotel, in St. Louis, exploded early . Monday morning, and damaged the store to the amount of tbout 12,500. The force of the explosion passed upwards through the heating register in the floor above, and _ broke fwenty-live jutnefelof plate - glass -in the windows of the\ store; and pressed one of the side walls out of plumb, but did not disturb a bottle on the shelves. The tank was simply used asi a receptacle of steam and waste water received frotn the steam heating apparatus of the Southern Hotel, and the explosion cannot be accounted for on any known principle. • Henry Nichols. , Thus far in their course the Lecture Cow - . • mittee of the Mercantile Library Associa- - tion have been singulatly fortunate lit securing prominent and popular 'lecturers, - and, as a consequence, they have been gratified with large and appreciative audi ences on every occasion. The ,next attrac tions of their programme, which promise to be not a whit behind those which have pre ceded them, are the elocutionary entertain meats of Mr. Henry Nichols, the eminent t. English elocutionist, whe recitals from standard English and Am e rican pots have gained for him a wide spread popularity is . the old country and won golden opinions' from all who have heard them in the new. So confident have the Committee been of his ability. that he has been secured for two performances, and on Thursday and Friday evenings the Pittsburgh lecture go ing public will have opportunities of judg ing for themselves by visiting the Academy of Music. The sale of reserved seats will commence at the box office of the Academy on Thursday morning 'at ten o'clodk, and in order that all may be accoModated no . _person-can purchase more than six tickets for one evening. - • . oa- NOTICES— . To 144 k, "Nor Batt, “Lott.' Wantt. ,, ~ F ound,” "Boordtpg, ,, ae.. not ea. mutiny FOUR MB ES ea4ml/1 be instilled in thatt *ohms* moo for TWENTY-F/7B CENTS ; stub acktgtmsal ;YE, osoors. WANTED-HELP. WANTED MACHINIST—.Who understands the NUT AND BOLT BUM NES§. None but a competent workmen need ap ply. Good wages will be paid and steady employ meni: BOLENSHODE'S BOLT AND NUT WOBS2, Nos. 403 to 505 West Third street,- , Cin- Mutant!, Ohio. WAIWTED—A few salesmen to v v go to the country and sell goods on commis- Mon. Address Box 889, Pittsburgh. Pa. (} ANTED - HELP ',-At. Emplolf went Ogee , No. St:Clair Street, BOY: 8 G LS and MEN, for different kin da of evil:Ray ment. Persons wanting help of AL kinds elm tre supplied on short notice. WANTED---BOARDERS. GABBING- Good Boarding at No. 16 ANN STREET, Allegheny elty, for 50 per week. WANTED-.BOARDERS—PIeas - : ant room, with board, suitable for gentleman-- and wile, or two young gentleman at 68 FOURTH dTitEET. Also. a few day or diriner boarders can be accommodated. Reference required. WANTED-AGENTS. NVANT ED AGENTS--IM to 1200 PER MONTH—To sell a New Book pertaining to agriculture gad the 31ethaLtIC . Arts, by GEORGE E. WARING. Nee., the distinguished Author and Agricultural Engineer of the New-York Central Park, .t... Nothing like It: SOO Eutaw. wings Sells at sight to Farmers, Mecnanles and workingmen of all classes. Send for Circulars. A. L. 'PA LCuTT /1 CO., 58 Market street, Pittsburgh, Penna. WY' ryo LET.-• TWO HANDSOMELY furnished rooms. with gas and lire. one on first oor, and cue front up stairs. Inquire at 199 Third 'VOA - RENT—The large four 112 story building. 38 SfiIITrIFIED STREET, at present occupied by Messrs. T. B. Young Co., as a Furniture Warehouse. Possession let April next. Enquire of SifitoN JOHNSTON, c o or f ner of Smithfield street and Fourth avenue.-.: To LET—A. urnished keeping NOON, suitable for one or two gentlemen. In t T O house of a private family, No. 511 . 1:1 LACOCK I:3TREE'r, Alleghouy city. FOR SALE ......_ ....... FOLRa te SALE Ce - ntra C l O AL d " iv W o O n R of R tShe , atiltmre %yd Ohio Railroad. sight-elict colleS east of Columbus, in Suern,ty county, Ohm, 110: acres of Coal Ran k, opening only 100 feet from the railroad, with all accessary bank carsomules,tools, houses for misters, blacksmith 'hop, railroa ' in& &c.. ae. Price 112,000. lerma, 000,45 balance in coal, or will tate an active partner with a cash capital of 67,000; !Satisfactory reseons given for setting. '•oply to, or address CROFT & PLIMLIPS, b10..138. Fourth avenue. VOR SALltire-=.IOB PRINTING OF.. FlCE—Vstablisbed and doing a geed business , Address. JOB PRIN • ER; ibis • Fou • . SALE—DRUG STORE -A first class retaLtdrug store la overt desirable location. Terms easy. .oddreSs box 78&, Pitts burgh.. _._ OR SALE— FAR M.-_-400 melee ] Fof good Land, situated In Penn TP.,West .— moreland county, two miles from IrwitiStauon ,-011 the Penna. R. R. Improvements, hewed log_PouSa; In good repair, bank barn and older outbulidLtrs Terms moderate. Enqui of W. WILSON, Lart.. met , ' Station, or R. A.. HOP re. S, rena atation4 TO LET.