El Qs .. .Pilittpitglj.. - o.aitt; PUBLISHED DILLY, BY PENNIMAN, REED & CO., Proprietors P. B. PENNIMAN", JONAH SING. P. HOUSTON. N. P. SEED. Editors and Propiletora. OFFICE GAZETTE BUILDING, NOS, 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER • Of Pittsburgh,,Allogheny and Alitigheny County. ralni — Dailll • i dent-Weekly .1 Weakly. year ....es, one year. V.IA : Slggle copy....eL 50 a month. 7 ' SIX MOS.. 1.60. 8 copies, each. 1.25 ilVheweet ' , Three mos 211t10 •_• '• 1.15 m carrier. ) I - —andone co Agent. FRIDA , JANUARY 15, 1869 Tn Wsziriv Cisznmt, issued on Wed •sesda,ys and Saturdays, is the best and cheap est family newspaper in Pletinsy/vania. /t -presents each week forty-eight columns of reading matter. It ghee the fullest as well as the most reliablemarket reports of any paper in,the State. Its Ales ars used exclu sively by the Civil Courts of Allegheny county for reference in important issues to determine the ruling prices in the markets at the time of the business transaction in dispute. Terms: Single copy, one year, $1.50 ; in clubs °IAN, i 51,25; in clubs of ten, $1,15, and one free to the getter up of the club. Specimen copies sent free to any address. WE PRINT on the inside pages of this morning's GAZETTE—Second page: Poetry, Ephemeris. Third and Sixth pages: Com mercial, Ifinantiai, Mercantile and River News, Im.ports, and idarkets. Seventh page: Scientific. Items and :Miscellaneous Reading Matter. oaoLD cloNd yesterday in New York at 1861. • Tan new State Treasurer enters upon his office on the first 3londay of May next. • "Cs unmAx" WALLAcEstill lives. A Rep fesentatilie from an extremely rural district presented him as a candidate' for Senator yesterday at Harrisburg. Look out for cof fee-colored ballots next Tuesday. MAN - K 8 to the publishers for the Tribune _Almanac, for 1869, which came to us yes. terday. No well-informed citizen can erer afford to be without the publications of this series, while the present number embodies a much more than usual amount of reliable information and statistics. THE pending writs of error, which have carried up the New York - naturalization cases to the Supreme- Court, work-a tempo rary suspension of proceedings in the simi lar cases in the Ohio Federal Court. Justice SWArtim has ordered the latter to be con tinued until a decision from the Supreme Court shall be obtained. Tits Naval Committee of Congress re lases to restore Commodore 31E,Anz to the active list, and the matter wasilisp4ed of by an indefinite postponement. The old Com modore has served his country well and faithfully, and' in' dealing with him Con gress should be careful not to give truth to the assertion that republics are ungrateful. I:flCoExt the President's recent-,proclama tion of amnesty, the District Court at Waih ington has ordered the discontinuance of the criminal prosecutions therein against Dams and BRECKENRIDGE. And thus treason has been made "odious!" The Court hesitated to complete its record' by the discharge of Stiank . rr, whose case remains under ad visement, perhaps until he can exchange congratulations with his fellow-conspirator, Munn, releas6d from prison atihe Tortugas. CONCLTRRING in the recommendations of the President, Congress has repealed the act in reference to militia. organizations in the Southern States. That act, it will be remembered, received his original signature under a written protest. The repealing act was delivered to, him on Tuesday, and he has ten days froni that date, to consider the expediency of justifying , the singular but very confilent expectations of his friends that he will veto a bill, the passage of which he has himself advitied. ROmons at the Capital concur in repre senting four of the eight' Supreme. justices .--GILLEE, DAVIS, §WAYEE and . MILLIFS—as favoring a decisio'n for the ccinistliritioriality of the Legal-Tender acts, :!and Messrs. FIELD, CLgesPofio and XeLsort against it, with Judge CHASE "believed" to side with the majority. His vote the othet way would idivide the Court evenly and leave the pres ent state of the question undistarbed. But en imPression has become general; in quer tersthe best informed, that the act will be sustained by a clear Majority' of:the Court.- Torii have the news - biLondoil tiat NA now,anweraglinkag. idea? which; be hal; once before encouraged at . a disas trcius mist to France and to an Austrian Prince. This time the plot gathers head4t 'Madrid, and its object is to place one of the BOURBONS, Who is at present 'Out of bust mess; upon the "throne" of Mexico. The story goes also that Plum consents' to the connivance of Spanish officers in the affait% If the whole - story were not a`sheer canard, one might be tempted . to think that the French and Spanish' Goverkments had not enough, to do` ., just now, in looking after their dwu affairs at home. CARL SCRURZ is the. Republican nominee for the Missouri Senatorship, from which M.r. Jinni:mason retires in March next. The nomination has not , been secured with out a long and bitter contest against the personal Interests of a limited but influen tiar,section of the party in that State. But we see no good reason for doubting that the nomination, which has been fairly won, and with an ample majority in the party caucus, will he honorably ratified in due time by the formal election... Republicans will wel come General ScirtrEz to the Senate as to seld in which great distinction awaits Wan, and as a sphere of enlarged ateefulne,fes to the country. A. WASHINGTON letter-Writer finfidently predicts that Grant's Cabinet ma/ be clearly named as follows : Stanton_ for the \ State Department,. Welles for the Treasury, Wash- burne for the Interior, ; Schofield for the \\Far, Schenk for the Navy, Greeley for the Post. office,and Edwards Pierrepoint for Attorney I General. This leaves new England all out in the cold—a view of the programme which efficiently refutes it: Any speculations upon the composition of the next Cabinet are not so much efforts to unveil'conclusions already reached by the President elect, aj to bias his ‘ judgment indecisions about to ;be made. For no one really believes that lus choice of advisers will become public until .he latest possible moment. : THE • OHIO RIVER BRIDGE BILL, passed at the last session VE the Senate, is still pend ing in the• House which his'sent it to a Com mittee, and w,e learn that, , an early_ report thereon will be made to the Housd. We entreat from all members, representing the millions ` who are directly concerned in the Wise dispositioriof this matter, such an at tention and fidelity as will ensure a prompt passage of the bill. The matter has noth ing to do with GRAses Cablnet, no; with railway subsidies; nor with jobs of any sort for private profit, but it does vitally con cern an interest of vast importance to • the entire population of the Ohio River Valley, who are - not unreasonable in their demand that Congress should occasionally give some attention to questions of a practical char acter. \ ,k NEMESIS INTIM SEAT „t - Of 'the seven Senators who, separating from their associates, came last year to save I ANDREW Jonrisori from the merited punish ment of hiicunnumbered offenses against the , nation, the epitaphs may' already be , writ ten. Thair political extinction is only a question of time, and that limited only by the duration of their current terms of office. Mr. HENDERSON has been excused from the Republican service in 31lisouri. In West Virginia, no one is found with assurance enough to suggest the re-election of VAR WINKLE. Two of the seven are thus dis posed of. Other four await the same end in the two years \ coming, their terms not ex-. piring until 1871. Messrs. GRIMES, Ross and FOWLER entertain no hope of are-elec tion, while. Mr. FESSENDEN sees, in the alacrity with which Maine discards his friend, Senator MORRILL, the same hand writing on the wall_for himself. If ho should be'agiiin chosen, and if 3lr. TRUNI. BELL be re•elected from Illinois in 1878, they will have to fight hard'for it, and even then will owe their success :rather to their marked ability than to the confidence of I their old political friends. RAILWAY NEWS Thellempfield road is advertised for sale, under a foreclosure of its first mortzage bonds, made in the Philadelphia Courts Without the knowledge of its directors. The latter held.a,mehn.g at Washington a few days since, to consider the situation. The annual meeting of the Erie and Pitts burgh Company, on the 11th ins_t., resulted in the re-election of the old Board of Direc tors, with the re-appointment of the former officers for the cnsuinz year. Eight-tenths of the stock-list were • represented at the meeting, which expressed its hearty ap proval of the policy mid ability of the man agement. • We adverted yesterday to the sharp dodge by which' the New Tork "carpet-bag" clique achieved their startling coup, in revo lutionizing the Cleveland and Pittsburgh road. We also announced the equally sharp and substantially the mote successful move ment, in behalf of the old management and of the stockholders generally, to protect the valuable interests of thel corporation from such an'audacious piracy, by the interven tion of the Courts. .At their instance, a Re ceiverhas been appointed Who has entire possession of all material property of the Compiny, and that possession will prove to be a very strong point both in law and in facts. " ' • We now feel authorized to state that be yond the nominal direction of the company's affairs, and the decidedly.irtusory -posmises of the extraorffiilarY .ProSllUnme adopted' at their first official meeting, tho bogus. di rectory of the C. Sr I'. road have taken abso lutely nothing by theirmotion. They did not succeed in removing from as Company's office] a single dollar of its bonds, securities or cash, and the seal remainsinideithe cone trol of the President and Secretary, where tfie raiders cannot reach ft., The carpet-bagger,s, went honieto New York with hands MA \ earpet-bats as empty as when , they entered Cleveland to spring their little game upon an honest, honored and responsible , . ca r po rE k tion. So effectually is this game noir blocked that no amount of paper resolutions and official - voted of theliogieall'board" will secures dollar's worth of confidence from the financial world. r , Scy without either - cash or valuable papers, without the pfficiat without the possession of the road it self, and without the confidence of, enough people to make a corperal's guard, the Wallstreet fillibusters have the minutes of the proceedings of their bogus ',`board," and nothing else, to show as the spoils of vic- Of — course there, is likely to be some show of legal proceedings in their behalf, for they will not accept the present situation if they can help it'. But we thinklt 4111 - be entire: ly safe,' for such of our readers as: may. be owners of this , company's stock, to ,dismiss any special a pprehensions as to seriously unfortunately results to their interests from this unprecedented piece of fillibuatering. • This reminds us to add that other. cOrpo. rations may profit /by the experience of this railway company, In providftig: such regulations and precautions as will no longer leave it in the power' of an unprincipled combination to buy into the control of their stock at just the right moment to resell im mediately, emitting the valuable right •of a vote thereon. It was sharp in Wall street to? frrtsßuito ft dAZETTE t t .TRIDA.I,, sjkitAri -45, .1869. see and profit by that neklect in one but it will be the most -censurable folly in any other corporation which exposes i self to a similar blow in the future. As. :.to the actual condition of the affairs of the C. and P. railway, - at the date oi l the annual meeting, the annexed parsgrtph, from the sworn statement of its President, submitted to the Court at Cleveland{ on Tuesday, affords an interesting statement: Thotinances of said company were 'at, the time of said meeting in a sound and healthy condition, and no money - was needed by said. 'company for any purpose except such as had before been proVided for; said company had no floating debt and was financially easy and independent; that ~in the legitimate business of said company -there was and is no need of or use for said issue of five million dollars' worth of bonds or of said increased stock; that the Com pany has no need of or nse for a double track, and is not likely soon to need a dou ble track, and is capable of doing wi h its present tracks more business than it has yet had to do; that the extension ot` said road from New Philadelphia to Zanbsville - is entliely uncalled for, and if built would not be self-sustaining; that there arepther direetious in wider . it , would be much bet ter abd more profitable for said company to make i extensions than the one proposed; and said proposed extension is not under taken by the majority of said board fir the business of said company, but must, be a great injury and loss to said companVt. DEATH llN‘' THE LAMP. Prof. C. E. CHANDLER has recently made a report, to the Metropolitan Board of ilealth of New Elork, on the - quality of Burning Fluids' sold in that city. The New York Tribulte in speaking of it says "Is irply frightful. there is not a single one f the seventy-eight establishments which is not selling a dangerous explosive substance, through the desire to have a cheaper article than kerosene of the legal standard." We give below a synopsis of the repo t, the whole of which is too long for our co umne The burning iiiiid 'sold so exte t tuively throughout the United States un er the name of kerosone oil is refined peqoleum froni the oil *ells of Pennsylvar.K Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky and Canada. lAs it 1 . comes from the wells, petroleum is eneral ly of a dark-yellowish or greenish brown color, and possesses an odor more or less ' offensive. To render it salable, it is sub jected to a process of refining,by-which it is rendered almost colorless and eed as much as possible from its disigreeab e odor. One of the most important objects o , i tt the pu rification is, however, the separatio of the more volatile constituents—the 4enzine, keroseline, gasoline or naptha, as they are variously called. These liquids•being very volEdile and at the same time very . combusti ble, are the substances which giv; rise to the explosions which, render the use of ke rosene so dangerous, and fill the newspapers with accounts of frightful burning a4cidents. The crude petroleum, as it co es from the wells, is subjected todistillation, when the most volatile constituents pass' off first in the form of vapor, and are cond :used by passing through a coil of iron, pipe stir rounded by cold water, and • collected as benzine. Subsequently the burni g oil or kerosene makes its appearance. T is is fol-, lowed by a heavier oil, which ma be used for lubricating machinery, and there is finally a small residue of tar or co e left in the still. -That portion of the product which is designed tor illuminating It is then subjected to the action of sulphuric acid, to remove the odor and color, and estroy a little tar which it still contains. - tis then subjected by the more careful refi ers to a somewhat ,ele'vqed temperature, o expel a small per ventage of benzine wh ch it still 1 contains. Thus purified, it cons itutes the kerosene oil as it is sold in the ma ket. The conscientious refiner r s all the dangerous oil into the benzine k, and only when the oil is sufficiently heavy to be safe does he allow it to pass into the hero- I u Te acne, receiver. But as the Benz i must be sold at slower price than burning il, the re finers are, many of them, led collect as little benzine and as much kerosene as pos sible. It must not be supposed, however, that the specific gravity of the it can be I considered a safe index of Its quality. On the contrary, the apecific g.rs.vityfives very I little idea of the duality--for while benzine I and naptha render the kerosene lighter, 1 the'gravity of good kerosene I preserved 1 by the presence of heavier oils. Bo a poor, dangerous oil may be much heavier than a safe oil. As the products, of petro leum are dangerous in proportion to their inflammability, a fire-test has long been in use by which the temperature is de termined, at which the oil revolYes an .iin flammable vapor—the "vaporizing point"— and thetemperature at which the oil itselt may be with a burning mateh--the "burning i i . point." ~ The vaporizing point o good kero sene oil should not, be belo 100 deg. Fahrenheit, and the burning Int should should not be mucn below 110 deg.-Fahren heit. Unfortunately, the resultsof this in vestigation show that but little of the oil sold in New Fork comes up to this standard. The old law of Congress fixed 110, deg. Fahrenheit for the burning test, but this law was, ,unfortunately, repealed. The free laws of New York fix the burn ng point at 100 deg. Fahrenheit, which is decidedly too low, as is shown by the great increase in the number'of burning casualties. I - Processes have been:patented, and Tend ers have sold rights throughout the country, for- patented and secret. processes fot ' ren-f dering benzine, gasoline, and naphtha non explosive. Thus treated it is sold under such names as "liquid gas," "itunrs • olls" etc. These patents and secret processes are not only ridiculous, buttheir sale.to Ignorant persons Is a crime oply eqUalleil, by, murder. It in impassible to render light oils , non explosive and safe. The addition OIL few grains of alum, potasirihorax,lalObol;'grart caMphor, etc, to a barrel of , ,berizine Acme . it s, not change its, dangerous character i the least. The experiment of.po ring& little of the fluid into a bottle and ap p lying a hurn ing match is no proof hatavee, for to produce . an explo ion it is necessary ' to) secure 'ti , t certain , ratio of air to benzine vapor, , which it ‘ would not be possible to do in a bottle once in fifty times. The fire-test gives the only sure in dication; apply a lighted match to a little of the oil contained in a cup orsaucer and if it can be made to.take fire, ithould inamon sideied at once as unsafe - even though the experiment be made in oneof the hottest days of summershould it tot•take fire, it might still be a dangerous I oil, as safe oil must not evolve a combustible vapor below' 109 , degrees Fahrenheit. Experimenters, must be-reminded that greed( care is neces sary in applying this test, its persons, not accustomed to making such experimentsare liable to serious accidents. I By carelessly trying the fire-test on a sample , of kerosene, a gentleman in New Bedford burned up the entire refinery, oil, barrels, still and build ings. I Professor CIIANDLEB proc from seventy-eight different at random throughout the ell pyrometer• tested them all izing point of none of thel than nlnetyfoar, and of butl - ninety, whilst one was as and eighteen were beloi sit of these specimens weal copa] per cent. benzine and ten per cent running oil, and the best of two per cent. benzole and ninety-eight running oil. Every refiner can send a perfectly safe kerosene to market if he chooses; he may make it to stand fire at 110 degrees F., 120 F., 130 F., or any other temperature he may elect; it is merely a question 'of a few cents, more - or less, per gallon. Consumers should understand that in demanding the cheapest oil, they compel the refiner to sup ply them with a mixture of benzine and kerosene; competition is irresistible, and if the price is run down below cost, adultera tiC•n must follow. The results of this examination will, I. think, be sufficiently startling to interest the members of your honorable body- in the 'speedy enactment of suitable laws for the 'protection of the poorer classes who are not supplied with gas and are consequently de pendent on the honesty of the refiners and retailers of kerosene. There is only one plan by which the safety of the public can be insured, that is by the enactment of strin gent laws compelling the refiners to remove these dangerous substances from the kero sene, and inflicting heavy penalties upon those who are' reckless enough to endanger the lives of innocent purchasers. A. proper i nspection Of the kerosene sold, made under he authority of the. Board of Health, would - prove sufficient to enforce such a law.,_ For the purpose of registration, the retailers should be required to procure licenses from the Board. The sale of dangerous oil should be followed by confiscation, lose of license, and perhaps fine. • The Public Flounces. ' The following comprehensive statement of receipts, estimates, expenditures, and other matters bearing upon.the financial condition of the Government,.hai been compiled from official (lite and furnished to the House Committee on Appropriations, by Hon. D. A. Wells, Special Commissioner of the Revenue, and will be found of interest and Value : • Deficiency celled for In Nov. 1S" $ 15.564.015 CO Deficieney called for io Dec. I , 21,345,131 00 D ceinber. 1567. the Secretary ot Treasury estimated the apuropria- tient required for the fiscal yzar end- • in , June 30. PO, at f 1372,000,000 00 I. ecomber, 1503, he states that the ex penditnres for the first quarter are $105.152,470 00. and estimates the • stnount needed for . the remaining three quarters of the Year at $2.31. • 0u0.600, mating a total, Including In tercet and deficiencies, of $336.152,470 CO rtraNDlXOnts. - 13?3- 0 3. ApprOpriations actually made $110,715,070 17 Permanent appropriations required,' 35 459 estimate( 000 00 Interest ae ount 1e.1.67d,073 50 Pit• chase m ney for Alaska ' 7.M1,600 00 Defidenele asked for 21„ 315 151 00 L'uexpende balances of previotis appropriations. e c stimated as re• (aired 24 609,184 53 •—•-- . Total expenditures for fiscal year.... $3M,078,484 7.7; REVENUES FOE 186849. Actual receipts for first quarter $ 5i,V2,1,69 77 Estimate pf Secretary of Treasury tor • remaining t [tree quarters 216.000.000 00 Total by Secretary's estimate &ILL ftn, 541 77 Special Commissioner's estimate 336,12tX1,00.1 00 EXPENDITI:IILS - 00- 7 0. ' .kpuropriati.tb , ni Iced for 1in5,014,011 74 rcrunt leat appropriations rtquired, - tstlrnate,l 10,052 nr.o no Interest. Account I-S. Giro, 676 00 tinexp , ivied balances of previous s.opropria , lon-, estitnited as re quired 5.05,312 26 -- - ECM • This figure gives all that is asked for, and there is reason to believe that the Committee on Appropriations will reduce the amount given to at least $290,000,000. itgrENuiv3. 1569-70, Secretary of Treasury estimates 1, Cr27,0n0.0a 0 :Special Commissioner estimates •tUo.fon The following figures give the total ext penditures of the government for the las three fiscal years, with the estirdates of the Secretary for the present and next fiscal years: - I , 1./Vr.f;..V.:.. , , 000 1...66. 346.73 a. n(VO IN6:-8 377. X 10,600 1,4•5-7336,0.104(X10 1 .th.'.)-,70 303.000. COO It should be said that $43,47 ,500 of the expenditure for 1E 1 67-8 was for b unties. The following tables show t e expendi tures and receipts of the government for the first and secorill quarters of the current fiscal year ending next June: i _ 1 tEVE.. - rF.9. Internal Recenaea....lst:' , •t ° .ft 3 (A • 34.151.916 Custc.ms 49,6711 Si/4 C 40,0041,000 est. Lands 714,05 1.13 500.000 eat. Direct tax 15,41/1 tl. Miscellaneous - 6.249.179 97 7 (15=.0.4 Totals i$,S, IM 565 97 $ 5A.50t,012 EX PENDlrgaz.4, Civil service. fore , ten • intercourse and miscellaneous ......=1,."""..,106 21,=.1 06 33 . 10,919,060 35 Inter or—peuelons .. Ind ISMS 12.558,n17 70 k 5.043 1= SS War and bounties.. "1'414 1 .117 (a, 2.3..9!5.573 30 fstsv7 h.1%04 ' , SS 33 c.v.a.:cm fO Int. on public debt.. 31.742.614 37 k 21,277.879 32 Total $105.15/470 7S II n,367.314 95 Less repayments 5C0,000 00 CE!TRAL BOARD ¶)F EDUCATION. Reports of High School Principal and City Superintendlent-•Additional Teatheno. Colored School...Resignation—Charges Against Prof. liughes--Ainandments to School Law. A regular meeting of the Central Board of Edication was held yesterday (Thurs day) in the High School building, at two and e half o'clockl P. at. The roll was called when the foll Owing members answered to their names: Messrs; Anderson, ChUdwick, Covert, Ciaig, Getty, Harrison, Maysi Nobbs, •Shaw, Sergeant, Wilson, and President Brush. The minutee , of the' irecedir were read stud approved. Mon' scrneetp.puirrcnfit's The Secretary read, the rep Plidotus Dean. Principal, of Schad, of,which the following i Days of session —*- Total attendance Males Females. ti AN'rerage attendance of Mules_ _ 41 ,•-, Females .... 75' 'Total 'average ' 144 The averagelter,cent. _of atte dance, Was_ 85T-7i total greateritlittendinc Normal 'Department -.lDays cif-session, 19; ::Males attending, none; females, 61. The greatest attendance wan 57, and least 89. Commerc at Department.—Males attend ing from High School, 21; females, 9: from Normal School, lemares, '3; others, males, 91; females, 16. Total number stteltding the department, males, A 121; females, 28: total, 144. The report ,reuommends the appointment of Misses Agnes C. Way and Rachel Hen= derson as Teachers of Drawing. The average of several applicants for ad , mission to the High School was given. The report. was,received. - On motion (of ,ff.' Covert, Mrs. Anna Hetherington was admitted to the High 'School. . - CITY."EitirERINTENDENT'S REPORT. • 1 Mr. I..ticky. City Superintendent, sub mitted the 14.4c:wing report GcentientenT"Allpw me most respectfully to submit the following condensed report of the condition of the Public Schools of the city foi the month of December,leAlEi : The number of Teachers is the same as reported for November. Three additional Teachers were appointed at your last meet ing„but were not actively engaged until the first - of JahitatT. . The training school, though not\ properly a subject of notice in this month's report, yeti take, the w liberty of stati for the information of ' the board, went into operation on Monday, January 11th, under very favorable circumstance, and bids fair aced specimens laces, se,lected y, and with his The ,vapor was higher five was as high iow as eighteen, tty. The worst :posed of ninety to beauties an important part of our public school system. Whole number of pupils enrolled 8,355 males 4,269 41 " females 406 Total average attendance 6,920 It .{ males 3,589 II 6{ females 3,331 Per centage of attendance 83 The number of corporal punishments in the different wards were as follows: First ward, 9; Third and Fifth wards, 4; Fourth ward, 6; Sixth ward, 60; Ninth and -Tenth wards, 24; Eleventh ward, 20; Twelth. 25; Thirteenth, 8; Fourteenth, 17; Flfteenth.\ 18; Seventeenth. 13; I•7lneteenth, 2; Twentieth, 4: Twenty-third, 9; Colored School 2. 'Toe "wards not named had none. This makes a total of 221, a'decreaSe of over 11 on the number reported for NoVember. Eighty-nine per cent. of attendance in the Third and Fifth Ward§ was the highest reported. The report was received and ordiared to, be filed. TEACHERS AND SALARIES. Mr. Craig, from the Committee on Teach ers and Salaries, submitted a report recom mending. the employment ofMiss Agnes Way and Mies Rachel Henderson as teachers in drawing In the High School, at 'tt salary of fifteen dollars per month each, and the einployment of an assistant teach er In the High School at_ a salary of one hundred and twenty-five dollars per month; provided a suitable additional room can be obtained for the use of the High School. The report was received and adopted, SECRETARY'S REPORT. Mr. Sergean4 Secretary of the Board, submitted the following report : GENTLEMEN: I would respectfully report that warrants to the amount of '414,682.87 have been drawn since your meeting of Deceinber Bth. The report was received. MUSIC TEACHER. 1 Mr. Craig, from the Committee on Music and Music Teacbers, reported that the Committee was in need of an additional teacher, at least two days in the week, and asked that the Committee be authorized to employ a teacher two days in tho week, at a salary of five dollars per day. Mr. Nobbs moved that the request of the Committee be granted. The motion was adopted. Mr. Mays, from the Committee op Col ored' Schools, submitted a report, accom panying which *as a resolution authoriz ing the Committee to furnish and let the hail at such times and upon such occasions as they may deem properinot, however, to interfere with the arrangements of the school, and to be let for religious and mis sion purposes alone. • The report was received and the resolu tion adopted. The. Secretary read a communication from Dr. L. Oldahue,resigning his mem bership In the Central Board. The coin mut:ilea-ion was received , and the resigna tion accepted. A CHARGES AGAINST PROF. .11raliNg• Also, a communication from the School Board of the Eleventh ward, stating that the charges preferred by Mr. Mays against Prof. Hughes, teacher of music, did not originate in that board, but wore his own act. The communication was received. Mr. Mays stated that be bad not present ed the charges as emanating from the Eleventh ward Board, hut as his own act, and a4ked that the fact be so stated. Mr. Harrison moved that the Eleventh ward Board be informed that the charges were not presented as emanating from them, but as coming from Mr. Mays himself. The motion was adopted. el $303,0(0,0(X1 00 REVISION OF SCHOOL LAWS Mr. Craig, from the Committee appoint ed to revise the school laws, presented a re port recommending several amendments to the present law. The report was received, and the amend ments recommended to be embodied in the general school law by the State Legisla ture. The Secretary then read sundry bills which were ordered to be paid. On motion of Mr. Craig, the o Secretary was authorized to subscribe for a copy of Municipal Record. The meeting then adjourned. THE .COURTS. District Court—Judge Kirkpatrick. In this case of John P. Gilson vs. the Ardesco Oil Company, the jury Ibund a ver dict in favor of plaintiff for 51,500.. De fendant's (*nisei moved for a new trial. In the case of Dennis O'Leary vs.-tames Greene, resorted yesterday, the jury found a verdict in favor of defendant. The next case was that of the North American 011 and Mining Company, for use of Francis H. Macey, trustee of Josiah H. Madey & Sons, vs. the Antesco Oil. Com pany. Action on covenant, plaintiffs alleg ing•vlolation of contract entered into by the parties July btli. 1867, In the leasing of oil. Works in Arpistrong county. On trial. $71,867,314 73 TRIAL LIST FOE THIS DAY. 131. Hagerman for use vs. Schaad. 49. Cochran's heirs vs. Auld. 82. Burbridge & Co. vs. McDevitt. 72. Dollar Savings Bank ye. Aeschelman. 73. Finney vs. Bradley. 79. Nicholas vs. Boyd. 81. Comely & Friskett vs. Eichner Bros. 142. Ardeseo 011 Co. vs. Fleming et al. =NI Pleas—Judge Stowe. In the case of John Verner and Son vs. James Sullivan, the jury was withdrawn arid-the plaintiff took a ,non-sult. O. W. Marshall ►e. Alex. . McClintock. Action to recover 1314.50, balance alleged to be due for cord-Wood sold to "defendant. Verdict for 1297.50. . John Michael vs. Rosenback, Mailert ec Co. Action' to recover 1600, amount of promissory tote. On trial. • I s meeting RETORT. of Prof. the I) Igh a eypopeis: T RIAL %Myr FOR TO-D.A.T.k 230. Panhorst vs. McMaster. 242. Lower vs. Ihmsen. 261. ==White et. el. vs. Kearns et. al. 245. Robinson, A.dtax.vs. P..&. Company. 128. Fleming & Co. vs. Bushnell. , 247. Harrls-vs. Ihmsen. 252. •Robion & Co. vs. Duncan. 257. Clark et. al. vs. 'O'Donnell. "• • 285. Watt & Wilson, vs. Mulholland et.al. Quarter Seishinet--4udge Mellon. The Court of Quarter Sessions met at ten o'clock yesterday morning, Judge Mellon on the bench. . • • THE O i NBIL RIOT. The jury in the O'Neil riot case came into Court and Stilted 'Tor instructiens 'relative to the testimony. They have not yet agreed upon a verdict. ALLEGED INDECENT ASSAULT. George Forsyth was arraigned on an in dictment charging him-with committing an inllcent assault on Mrs. Margaret Scott. The defendant resides in -Union township, this county, and the prosecutrix is a resi dent there. The parties are relatives and the assault was alleged to have been com mitted on the premises of the defendant. Jury out. , FELONIOUS ASSAULT. _ Reilly Jackson, colored, was indicted for committing a Moutons assault and battery upon Albert Cooper, also colored, on the night of November eth. The parties were attending a colored ball, given In Birming bam, and during the evening a disturbance arose between a man , named Hopkins and Jackson. The defendant drew a knife and ran Hopkins out of the hall, but on reach ing the door he fell. As he was raising Up he stabbed Cooper, who was standing near the door, in the left leg, inflicting a severe wound. The case has not yet been conclu ded. STATISTICS. COLORED SCHOOLS lIESIOICA.TION BRIEF TELEGRAMS —The total number of steamboats arriv ing at Cairo, Illinois, for the year ending December 31, was 3,729. —The Legislative Council of British Co lumbia is - considering the question if re ciprocity with the United States. —On Monday evening, at Ottawa, 111., Draft and Thorn, two young men, were drowned in the Illinois river while skating. 1--A dispatch from St. Paul, Minn.' says, Ramsey's re-election to the United States Senate is certain. Donnelly is said to have retired in favor of Wilkinson. - - —At Wanaconda, 111., on \ Saturday after noon, Thad. Raymond, a farmer, strangled_ himself in his own barn. Financial and domestic troubles were the cause. —United States Attorney General Evart has issued a circular of instruction to Dis trict Attornies directing all. suits for the crime of treason to be discontinued. —George Donelson, of Burlington, Vt., convicted of illicit distilling,has been sen tenced to imprisonment for six months, and to pay a fine of one thousand dollars. —Of eighty specimens of kerosene oil tested by Prof. Chandler, at - New York, re cently, none reached the right standard, and none for sale in that city, that he had seen, was At to usel, . X. Bear, teiegraPh operator at Brownsville, Nebraska, was knocked down and shot twice on Wednesday night, and robbed of 'froni six to eight hundred dollars of Express money.. —J. C. Cliatlen was arrested in Fredericks burg, Va., on Tuesday. charged by his ex wife, Sarah A.- Hoyt, of New York, with larceny and obtaining two hundred dollars by forging her name to a draft. —The report of Messrs. Peckham,' Steb bins and Griswold, committee appointed to examinine the stock mattersof the New York Central Road, report the amount of its capital stock on the 16th of December fus 528,795,000. —A new theory concerning the Rogers. murder, at New York, is that the murderer is an escaped' Sing Sing convict, who had a letter for the discharged convict Logan,hat never delivered it, or at least the envelope was found in a portion (Attie coat torn from him in the struggle with Rogers. —Nelson Spellman was arrested at• - Springfield, Mass., on Tuesday, for attempt ed outrage on Miss Elizabeth Gibbons, an estimable lady, fifty-five years old, as she was going to church on Sunday. Mrs. Gibbons was thrown down in the snow and severely injured, but her screams fright ened the villain away. —The Leavenworth' Commercial says a White man named. Hays was recently mur dered at Hays City, Kansas, by three negro soldiers belonging to the Thirty-eighth In fantry. The murderers were arrested and lodged in jail, but during the night were taken from prison by a Vigilance Commit tee and hung to the nearest trees. —Pana , aa advices to the 4th state that. the crops,of -southern Chili are not likely to turn out fa% orably. Extensive gold mines are reported at Santa Rosa, causing great excitement. There is less talk of revolution In Peru. Earthquakes continue along the coast. The navigation of the Pe ruvian rivers has been declared free to all • flags. —James taring, of Lasalle, Illinois, late volunteer Lieutenant in the United States Navy, calls on all officers who served in the Western Flotilla and Mississippi Squadron during the war, to assemble at Cairo on the eighteenth of February and form a so ciety similar in character to that of the Armies of the Tennessee, Cumberland; Ohio and Georgia. _ ~—Saturday evening last a physician was, summoned to attend two dying - women, Mrs. Louisa Cook and - .Miss Jane V. Ree land, who reside on South Second street, Jersey City. Having had domestic trou bles which they thought themselves too weak to boar, the women had bought-mor phine and took a heavy dose, resolving to die together. Having been restored to con sciousness, they expressed their indigna tion that they had not been permitted to die. AFFECTIONS OF THE KIDNE Y S AN URINARY ORGANS Diseases Of this nature are found to exist in per-. sons of all ages. Children, and even infants, -are, subject to unnatural secretions of the Ilidneys, and pain in voiding the urine, as well as adults. Espe cially is this the case with aged and inernapsrsons, and those whose habits are sedentary. Nor is this a matter of surprise when we take into consideration the delicate nature of the kidneys, and the import ant functions they, have to perform. All the super fluous, unhealthy and poisonous waste of the system Must pass through the kidneys, thence into the bladder, and passes off with the urine; consequently' any obstruction In the kidneys, that awlll prevent these poisonous particles from being thrown off, will be followed bvdiseases.t the o gams themselves and more or less derangement of the wnoie system. Among the svmptoms of such derangement are the following: Deep seated pain in the small of the back, sometimes extend!, if around the loins in the aboomen, or adult heavy, numbing pain, extend ing froutthe back down the lower extremity of the rlgnt abdomen to the tuner part,or the thigh; rest dilDcultq la exne, fenced in voiding the urine, feter ish skin, headache, nervous and general debility, &c., &e. In the removal and cure of such diseases, no rem edy has yes been di•covered that equals Dtt. BAR GENT'is DIURETIC On BACILACHE FILLS. Trey have been used extensively for upwards of forty years, and hvvegiven perfect satl•faction in every case, and are highly recommended by all who nave used them. For sale by all Druggists. THE MACHINE, CALLED MAN, Is a very complicated and delicate one, and is more liable tp get out of order, and much more difficult to repair, than any combination of wheels, and Cranks, and levers'. made brae hands of man, As a rale, it Is tinkered too muck. and badly tinkered at that. It is often calomelLted."narcotized, depleted, and othsi erwise misused. when all that it really needs is a wholesome toulc and restorative like HOSI`hT TER'S STOIIACH BITTER4io put it In proper mid keep It so. The 'atom ch is shamefully trim mal treated. To the drat pace. to food wide is 1p Juices are Intended to dissolve. is too frequently aroma into tt hastily, and la • half matte-sited condition. •• In which state the gastric arid cannot properly act nnoa ft. The result is dyepessta. Then comes the doctor. and ending the 'digestive orgths weak and the bowels them, be proceeds to weaken and pens. - lyre thin more with drastic purgatives These fail lag-as they always do-to produce a salutary change, be tells the Invalid that medical science can do no more for him. This,' with all dee deference, Is a mistake.--oue of those mistakes which Taileyrand said weirettantemonnuto crimes. What the dytpep tie needs is snotperattes. et edgthen the stomach with HOSTETTER`d BITTERS. and the stomach will 'truism n ev,ry other part of the human ma chine; and make it, In common parlance, is good as new. Upon the state of the digeetion depend,. lax measure, the condition of the whole system: Now, the Bitters are the most admirable sonic known. Thermo:l'M& of the tiniest vegetable invigorants and • restoratives, combined wills an unai:ulterated illici t:dint. The dyspsptic needs nothing else to effect a. cure, ,except a light, nutritious diet.• and a fair amount of exercise.; -Even in the absence of these last mentioned "memories, the teak, and a'teratirt, properries of the preparation will' work wonders, ensoling the dyspeptic to digest inferior fare with comparative ease and to maintain. a good habit of body. In spice of the drawbacks of a sedentary occu . .pa •• • THE SOUND OF TUB LUNGS. - One of the most accurate ways of determining whether the lungs are in a healthy or diseased con dition, is by means of liatening to the respiration. To those experienced In this practice it becomes as plain, an inuex to the state , of the' Inv gs, and is as well knoen to the operator as are the voices of his moat intimate acquaintances. The belief that long standing conchs. and diseases of , t e lungs upon which thei are dependent; are. incurable. are fast. becoming obsolete. One great advantage to be gained from this advance In medical knowledge Is et e earlier appileXtion of those who become afflicted with those diseases to some one competent to afford relief. 'I im error which had hold of the pub .llc mind in regard to the curability of consuraption. or Tuber non.c arability, is fast becoming obliter ated, and it is well that It should be so, not that. persons should lose that sa,utsry fear which would make therit aoply fors eircrt , y remedy, but that all , might be induced to use remedies while there Is any hope. His the delay In these cues that ells ns with apprehension and alarm, , for if every one would make timely applicatioa of DR. IIEYSEIt'S Luxp pufiE In the beginning of a cold or cough, few cases would go so far as to become irremediable. Bold at the Doe ors great litdielne Store,No.l 4o Wood street. WILLSHORTLY.RFMOVE TC HIS ' NEW STORE, NO. 16 LIBERTY STREET, SEC, OND DOOR FROM 8 r. C1;41.1R. HP:YSER'S RESIDENT OFFICE POS. I CND EXAMINATIONS AND THE TREAT MEN r or OBeT [NATE CH SONIC MiLLSEtt,ISO.. IAU PENN STREET, PITTSBUROLI,,ri.. Office Hors trod 9 A'. - st. 'until 4r. 31.1 and horn. 4 to 6 at tight. I