The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, February 16, 1869, Image 4

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    Ell
t'ljt gdtburo Gapttt.
PUBLISHED DAILY, BY
PI:NOW, RIM & CO„ Proprietors.
•V. B. PENNIMAN. JOSIAH SING,
T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. REhL),
:Editors and Proprietors.
OFFICE:
GAZETTE sumonia, NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST.
OFFICIAL PAPER
0t Pittsburgh. Allegheny and Alle
gheny County.
Torma--Datty. Weekty.i Weekly.
One year...sB,oo i one year..so,Stugle copy ..$1.50
r..
One month 75: Six mos.. 1.515 copies, each 1.25
By the week 15 ; Three mos 75 10 1.15
Mom casrier.) and one to Agent.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16,1869.
WE FEINT on the inside pages of
Shia morning's GAZETTE—Second page:
State News, Ohio News. Third and Sixth
pages : Financial, Commercial, Markets,
River News, imports. Seventh page:
Clippings, Interesting Miscellany, Amuse•
ments.
IL S. BONDS at Frankfort, 82.
PETROLEUM at Antwerp, 584@50f.
Clow closed in Neir York yesterday
et 1351.
TEwNx.ssxx.l:tas fixed the fire-test of il
luminating oils at 120 degrees, with $5OO
fine for the offense of selling oils below
that grade.. Another bill is now pending
in her Legislature for the appointment of
an inspector. The States are- thus led to
attempt some remedy for the short-com
ings of Federal legislation.
THOSE friends of aspiring politicians
'who have been indtstrious in intimating
(that their favorites "have been invited"
' lv General GRANT to enter the Cabinet,
are in rather a tight place, since the de
clarations of the President-elect last Sat
- urday. They will not indulge in any
more "intimations" at present..
Tar, Legislative proposition to turn all
the legal advertising of this county into
the columns of an obscure print_ which
ninety-five per cent. of our tax payers
have never heard of, finds but little favor
at Harrisburg. Its introduction by one
of our members was a matter of personal
favor to a friend, and distinctly with the
understanding that' he should himself
vote against it.
'THE SUFFRAGE amendment, and all
other important legislation in which the
concurrence of Mr. Join:sox is not ex
pected, must be matured before the cloie
of the current week. Otherwise, the
President may pocket bills which are ob
noxious to him, and deprive Congress of
the opportunity to repass them over a
veto. This -* week, therefore, disposes of
the suffrage and of all reconstruction
business for the session.
The Senate amendment to the suffrage
articles - does not meet the-views of the
House Judiciary Conimittee, which holds
that, as it stands, "it does not prevent the
States from disfranchising men on account
of a previous condition of slavery, and
by inference, Congress may disfranchise
anybody, as the prohibition, as it , now
stands, relates only to the States." Yet,
it is quite possible that, regarding the lim
ited time for the discussion of differences
between the Houses, the House may con
sent, with or without a Conference Com
mittee, to the perpetual exclusion of the
.educational ..test, and accept the work of
the Senate, as it is now offered to them.
THE PRESS CORRESPONDENTS at the ,
Capital--really wield a most potent in
fluence, giving tone to the journalisrnof
the country, and a positive bias to public
opinion. These correspondents, with a
very few honorable exceptions, are en
tirely:without personal honor or political
-principle—men who either imitate or fear
the infamously notorious fellow whose
corruption was lately exposed in the
Alaska investigation. This man, and the
entire tribe of his following, are very
properly ignored by all good people in
the social courtesies of Washington soci
ety. Usually, they avenge this slight by
blackmailing the husbands and fathers
- who are at the
~same time politicians.
There are some public men at the Capital
who refuse to pay even that tax for the
support of the disreputable scribblers,
And against • ,such the whole pack, of
hounds are alwaysheard in full cry.
For example, it is said that the parties
and receptions at the house of General
Birri.riri are really the most brilliant that
Washington has ever known. 'BUTLER
himself regards the black -mailing hater
mity with contempt, and will neither buy
them off withmoney bribes nor social con
siderattori. This is an unpardonable of
fense,which Washington heck-writers will
never forgive. It is not surprising, there.
fore, to perceive that all of them, with three
or four honorable eiceptions, have im
proved a recent opportunity to malign Gen.
BUTLER, did present, him to the country
us a pestilent disturber of the public tran
quility. For the most part; the press
have followed the lead of their Washing
-, ton correspondents, so that BUTLBR is
to-day the worst.abused public man in
this country, next to Mr. Jourisori,
Tin SENATE NATURALIZATION BILL,
reported from its Judiciary Committee on
'Saturday, requires the declaration of in
lention and oato be made before a
Federal Court, orr a Commissioner of
.Bankruptcy, who is to be charged also
lEEE
with the function ; all State tribunals are
excluded. Application for final papers
must be preceded by one -month's notice
of the intention, this notice specifying
1
the particulars concerning the previous
declaration' of intention. This notice o
be preserved on file for public inspectio .
Before the' final papers are granted, the
applicant must prove four and a hail:
years' citizenship, including one year
in the State. The notice and application
may be contested by any party filing an
affidavit; the contest shall be duly adjudi
cated by the Court. The blank certifi
cates shall be furnished from the state
Department, of a character to defy
counterfeiting. All papers now out, and
dated within the year preceding the pas
sage of this bill, are required 'to be pre
sented to the Courts or Commissioners and
approved, after proof of their non-fra l
ulent origin. Certificates of an of er
date, if not so presented and endors d,
may be challenged. Final papers when
voted on must be stamped "used," when
received, or "rejected" when not \re
ceived, and rejected certificates shall be
annulled by the Courts on proof of fraud:
the holders thereof are also required to
produce them on suspicion and demand.
Heavy penalties are fixed for the iss l ie,
reception or use of forged or fraudulent
Lficates.
There can be no doubt that the pro'
ed act, of which the above is a syno 1
4
is thorough in its provisions for the
tection of honest citizens, native or
eign-born, against the infamou prac
Which, of late years, have brought
merited odium upon the present aye
making of the suffrage a prize whic.
greater the'rascal, the easier and qui
he should secure.
UNFORTUNATELY, in this ugly bus
from Georgia, General BUTLER w;
careless as to lose his temper, saying
things which overleaped the cooler j
ment of that majority of the House w
there are good reasons for belie
concurs with him in opinion upon
merits of the case. Taking a sh,
advantage of this, his opponents
beaten him, and given to an aw 6
question the go-by. Says the A.
Journal:
For once, we think Ben. Butle I was
decidedly in the right. Georgia has not
complied with the provisions of th Re
construction acts, and therefore s not
entitled to recognition or represent tion.
Her attitude up to November las was
one of quasi Rebellion and hostil ty to
i
p
the Union. Until Georgia has fUlly com
plied with the cardinal provisions f the
Reconstruction laws and the re uire
ments of the Constitution, by gr uting
equal rights to all her . citizens, sh can
n
not be e to , recog nition, an art-
nership intitled
the operattons of the F deral
Government.
Says the - Utica Iteraid:
This concurrent resolution (Ed
munds!) is one of the silliest things by
which any body of men ever attempted
to shirk responsibility. Butler was
right in making war upon this mode
of disposing of an unpleasant
duty; but ne was wrong the
manner and time of doing it. It should
have been done when the resolution was
before the House for its concurrence; and
the wonder is that any sane body of men
ever allowed themselves to be caught in
such a silly trap.
And, while Republican journals see
nothing in this busises beyond the duty
of abusing BUTLER in the roundest terms,
the old rebel element is carefully improv
ing the situation which Congress has_pro
pared for them. Virginia boasts that by
the forbearance and point-no-point , ' policy
of Congress, she is to "get better terms
than any other Southern State;" Georgia
snaps her,fingers at o:ngress and orders
a .new Congressional election lot next
month; Kentucky nullifies the Civil
Rights bill, and joins with Maryland in
spitting upon the XlVth Constitutional
article regulating representation in Con
gress.
TARIFFS• AND NATIONIL PROS
PERITY-CAREY ON WELLES.
An elaborate Report, from Commis
sioner WELLES, upon the subject of tar
iffs and revenue, was recently laid be
fore Congress, and has been generally
submitted to public opinion. Embody
ing a vast deal of correct information,
but interwoven with the most specious
fallacies of logic, and with artful but at
bottom unjustifiable inferences from cer
tain facts which were set forth promi
nently as decisive of the questions in
volved—this Reportdias been adopted by
free-trade journals everywhere, and made
use of with considenible effect, to assail
that principle of protection for the Nation ,
al industry which, in more or less perfect
forms, has been the National policy since
'HENRY CLAY distinguished himself as the
champion of the "American System."
In the meantime, politicians have been
too much engrossed •with other public
questions, of a pressing emergency, to
give proper attention in counteracting the
mischievous effects of this Report left un
1-answered. Indeed, there has been a very
general inclination, in and out of Con
gress, to postpone the readjustment of.
the Tariff question so as to cure the many.'
glaring defects in the operations of the '1
I I prevailing system, until the new Admin
istration could be fairly installedinthe
conduct of public affairs.' This Congress
lays aside the question now, not because 1 1
Kr. WELLES has given really good',
reasons for doubting the justicb of those
principles which the country has hitherto
recognized, but because other issues, of
at least equal importance, must have in
stant attention, admitting of no delay.
The XLlst Congress will meet a less ur
gent condition of the public business in
that regard, and we hale the most en—
couraging reason to believe' that the
claims of American Labor will be among
•
PITTSBURGH
• . . .
i -=------
the first to deraand and receive its patient peildent of legislation," let !us look at
and exhaustivconsideration, and with a the facts now cited.
justly satisfaq i ry decision. In 1810, we had 153 furnaces, produ-
Nor is CoMmissioner WELLES to re- cing a!total-of 54,000 tons of iron. Sub
main unanswered. Having very rashly sequent statistics are only reliable to
made an issue with Hkarr.x C. CAREY, the show that the Tariff of 'l7 closed the fac-
Commissioner sees it promptly accepted, tories and furnaces, and almost completed
and his facts 41 logic alike are to be the ruin of the manufacturers.
e
thoroughly si led, and exposed in their In 1 1 824, caidae a semi-protective tariff,
true light, as rversions and fallacies, by • under which the furnace-fires were again
a writer who eservedly stands the very lighted, carrying up the product, in '2B,
first among the living friefuli to Home to 130 1 ,000 tons.
Industry. We have to thank Mr. CAREY Under the full tariff of 1828, the product
for responding to the public desire, which swelled to 165,000 tons in 1.830; and 200,-
has, with an universal consent, looked to 0 ,
9 0 tons in '32.
him, as of all living Americans the one best The act of '32 freed tea, coffee, and
qualifiedby study and experience to main- many other articles, including railway
fain that America principle.
iron, I from duty--th!e last ti, , serious blow
The Commisslo er, haling undertaken to the trade. ' / -
i
to combat the ge era) opinion that tariff- • The Compromise tariff of '33, looking
legislation heretofore has had a direct in• eventually to the establishment of a pure
fluence, favorable or unfavorable,uponthe ly revenue system, was so graded in its
1
general probe ty of our people,attempt- operations as to be comparatively unfelt
ed to support is position by citations, until '35, the iron product increasing
as of fact, fro the actual history of the slowly for the two years. Indeed, up to
i
country, 6speci fly controverting the idea 1840 the annual .product had reached
that,las the taxi of 1842 had been benefl- 347,(00 tons. But in '4l, came the fifth
cial, so that of 846 had been pernicious reduction under this compromise taiiff,
to the popular interests. Hence, he in- getting nearly down to the horizobtal
ferred, the country had suffered, if at all, twenty per cent. prescribed.by its teims
rather from the instability of its legisla- for '42-3. Now was seen a state) of
tion than from the specific merits or de- things, which, says Mr. CAREY, was:
merits of any particular measure, and holly without parallel in the t
. n- I
that it would havelaeen really more pros. try W 's history, and even exceeding col
a u tof I
the revenue tariff period of 1817. The
perous without any attempt whatever at country swarmed with men, wome and`
legislation regarding isolated departments children reduced to beggary beca se of
of industry. The intended effect o f t hi s finding no employment, owners of nills
kind of argument was directly to strength- and mints meantime reduced to , ank
ruptcy because of finding little or so de
en that free-trading school of political mend for any of their products. its
setvoeprpaegdapmaym , and seemed uni kely
economists who opposed restrictions upon toerenatchresumption. - tates
foreign iniportations, but who, fortunate- made default iu payment ,of their nter
ly, have never succeeded in striking down est, the national treasury meanwhil: beg
the arms of Ameridan labor, except in ing at home ankabroad, and be ging,
foo, in vain, for loans at almost an • rate
that degree with which those temporary of interest.
triumphs have been attained by spe- , The new mode of smelting by a , thra
eiou.sly covering "free trade under the cite, first presented ;in '37, had, i . '4l,
cloak of trade-regulation. been adopted by only six furnaces, yield-
Mr. CARET takes the bold and direct ing 21,000 tons. The price was th-n but
issue with the free-trading Commissioner little over one-half that of '37, a , d the
of Revenue. He denies ' his facts, people more than twice as poor The
used as these, have been, and proposes total produ6tion fell to 220,000 tons, prob-
wife of a FR citizen has haANCISCOd a paperq uarre says l
othat
set
the
ably less.
to ventilate his ‘!arguments" so clearly as f .
standing with her sister,
to show that 3lr. WIILLES - 18 "wholly dis- ' Thus a protective policy carried the era) months'
when, the other day, sheinvited her to
qualified for the office of public teacher." product Steadily advancing from 165,000 I call. Sarah accepted, and found a child
In a brief history of tariff legislation, l tons in 1830, to 347,000 tons in '39-40, mother married sister lying ill, and its
. asked Sarah to take it awhile.
from which we quote, Mr; CARES writes: when, feeling at last the sliding scale of
She did so-fondled and kissed it. The
The revenue tariff period which fol- ruin under the South Carolina compro- mother then informed her, in a manner
lowed the apse, in 1815, ,of the great raise, it collapsed in' two years more than indicating great gratifcation, that the
European war, was one of great distress
both private and public. With 1824, one-third. The extreine figure of that child had the small-pox.
however, there came a partial attempt at collapse is carefully suppressed in the
remedy of the evils under which our --- A. LATE letter from George Peabody,
1 - 1 LLLES Repor•J . dated London, states that he is in very
whole people were then so severely suf
fering, a tariff having then been eatab- In 1 f'sll, with its industry thus paraly- poor health, and that he intends leaving
lisped under which pig iron and potatoes zed, the country found itself also without for one of the German Spas at an early
were abundantly pr9tected, pipes and day. He still takes the greatest interest
even the revenue which the friends of
penknives being admitted at moderate 1 . .• . in his American charities, and speaks en
ad valorem duties. The rude products foreign importation had promised from couragingly of the success of his wonder
of agriculture were, in effect, prohibited the customs, and' Congress was thenjeorn- fu
benevolence for the benefit of the poor
from being imported in their original
forms, but when they presented them- I
wiled to abandon the compromise par- of London.
_---..... 414 'MI •.I-- -----
selves in those of cotton and woolen ' tinily, by taking many articles from the lris cErtrArs that the majority of the
cloths all difficulty disappeared. Slight free list But another year showed that
those sympathized with Gen. Butler on
was the benefit resulting from such a • ' '
..a question, although th vdted
measure, bat benefit did result, and the reversal ofpolicy must be more
Re
hencethor-
it was that it came so soon to be ou',ll. against him, on the ground that heyaffirm
followed by the admirable tariff of 1828, n , . alive vote would cause a split in the
In A.itett, 842, the country came publican party, and seriously embarrass
the first really protective one ever estab
lished by Congress. Under It all was back squarely to a protective and real General Grant's administration.
changed, and with a rapidity so great revenue policy. Confidence Iviis revived,
that but five years of its action were re- , ,
~,
‘.‘,
(mired for giving, to the country a pros- uusilit-s ~- -
s r ~ u med, an , 1 a psriod of
parity such as had never before been National prosp rity returned. The iron
known. * 4 4' Northern submission product increas d, by tli close of 1544.
to Carolina threats of nullification next
gave us the Compromise of isa3, by ito 537,600 tons and by the end of 1846
means of which the country was, within , to 755,000 tons
the next decade, to be brought under a p The tariff of 1846 fortunately met an
strictly revenue tariff of 20 per cent.
le-
For the first two -years general pros
extraordinary cavity of the current I.
perity continued to be maintained. Diana for iron, so that its depressing in-
Therafter, bowever, we find the whole tiuence was no at once felt. Indeed, the
period of its existence presenting a series
of contractions and expansions ending year 1848 ended with a total pfoduci of
in a state of weakness so extreme that 848,000 tons=an increase of more than
bankruptcy was aluadst uni renal; that 309 e • t in fiveo elation
pr cell. years,pp
labor was everywhere seeking for eta- t
ployment; that the public credit was Si) advancing only some 20 per .ccia .
entirely destroyed that the closing year I Said the Cammissione : "Irrespective
of that unfortunate period exhibited the
of its legislation, production has increased
disgraceful fact of commissioners, ap-
pointed by the Treasury, wandering lat the ayerage rate of eight per cent, per
throughout Europe and knocking at the annum." Is this truer In the summer
doors of the principal banking houses
of
without obtaining the loan of a single with
'4B, the mar
, kets were crushed
dollar. Public and private distress, British iron and the home-trade was par
now, August, 1842, compelling a return
alvoed . Fillip s the p I. blic warehouses
to the protective system, we find al
- , - • 6
most at once a reproduction of the pros- and borrowing money a the certificates,
nerons days of the period from 1829 to j they soon crushed out merican compe
-1835, public and private credit having talon.
been restored, and the demand for 1a
b0r350,000 and its products having become t tons in '49.50, prices :vil to one-half
greater than at any former period. those of '3B, and two- birds the rates of
Again, however, do we non our
'4l. To sell at x 320 was ruinous ;
to stop
people forgetting that to the protectiv,e .
policy had been due the mnrvellous was rum ; but ruin war unavbidahle, and
changes that were then being Witnessed. it came. In '49, our p aaluct went down
and again, 1816, returning to that rev- to 6,_
00
enue tariff tariff system to which they .000 tons; in '5O to less than 500,000
had been indebted-for the scenes of ruin tons.' The Commissioner stated truly
which had marked the periods from 1817 that production increased from :347,000 in
to 1828, and from 1835 to 1842. California
'4O to 564,775 in 'GO, 1
gold now, however,, came in aid of Tree
but that ,was a goo(
trade theories, and for a brief period it deal less than a partial truth: he kept the
was really believed that protection had fa'of sightthat,'the,, end
become
fact out -
become a dead issue and could never
log with '5O, the pr duct had declined
again be revived. With 1854, however,
that delusion passed away, the years very nearly one-half. - • '
that followed, like those of the previous
So much for the Co missioner s
, "facts"
revenue tariff periods, having been
marked by enormous expansions and " ab,out the iron-trade, and for his iniPudent
contractions, financial crises, private proposition that this leading material
ruin and such destruction of the national ,
credit that with the close of Mr. Buchan- interest is independent, for its prosperity.
all'S administration we find the treasury of the national legis4tion. Flagrant as
unable to obtain the trivial amount ~,_ suppressions ;
which was then required, except on pay
menthis the
of most enormous rates t' interest. light the result, by the verdict of en
Once - again, 1851, do we nd the ened public men! and of all intelli
country driven to protection, and the gent citizens, will be the more gratef
public credit by its means so well estab.
su ressio f f
fished as to enable the Treasury, with , PP nn him se •
little diflicultY, to obtain the means of • We shall recur to e subject, followin
carrying on a war whose annual cost was Mr. CAnkt's ' review of the period fret
more than _ had been the total public ex- __ _
to
861.
penditurea- of half a century, Including 1t550 1
the war with Great Britain of 181. f.
Thrice thns. under the tariffs of 1828.
1842 and 1861, has protection redeemed
the country from almost ruin. Thrice
thus, under the revenue tariffs of 1871,
1833 and 1846, has it been sunk so low
that none could be found "so poor to do
it reverence."
Having disposed of WEhtEs on the in
utility of tariff-legislation, iu its real
bearings upon the national. prosperity at
large, Mr. CAREY next proceeds to ex
amine the details in reference to particu
lar interests, and devotes his next article
to the iron-manufactures.
Bearing in mind that the writer pro
poses to show the utter falsity of the Com
missioner's assertion, that, the "general
progress of the country; in the develop
ment of its material interests, is hide.
for
ices
:uch
em,
,the
her
TVESD
AZEIIE :
Y, FEBRUARY 16, 1869.
A - PRIVATE letter, written by Minist , r
Hale to a Congressman, has found i •
way into print, and greatly irritates o d
Diplomatic Billy, of the State Deparme ,
for it charges that Perry, Secretary •f
Legation, is retained at Madrid, by t.t.
celebrated firm of Weed, Seward & Co.
for speculative purposes. I should'sd,
wonder. This Perry is a snob of the
Sandford sort. You remember he had a
personal difficulty with Pierre Sonle,
when that fiery little diplomats told Mr.
Perry that the lackey in him was spoiled
by tho scoundrel.—Wash. Letter.
Tint bill of the Reconstruction Com
mittee in relation to Mississippi will pass
the House. The intention is that the
constitution of that State, as it will be
amended, shall , be approved before the
'next Congress adjourns its spring session.
Novel 011 Rgiltlerr.
The Berkshire, Massachusetts, Eagle,
publishes what purports, to be a letter from
Cincinnati, narrating a most astounding
disFovery. It seems that a man, accord- h
ing
i k i
to the story, upset a kerosene lantern
int his meal bin. Feeding the meal to
his 'ogs, afterwards, he noticed that they Il
ate 'the saturated fodder with avidity,
which led him to try the eznerment of feed- C
rug one of his hogs with What kerosone oil
the animal would eat, and with the most F
astonishing results. At the end of only to
five weeks the animal so fed could 'not bi
stand, for fatness, and the hogs being all
slaughtered, the one fed on kerosene with
his grain, weighed six hundred and thir
teen pounds, while those fed on corn
averaged only three hundred and fifty
pounds each. Naturally, the fattest ani
mal was tried into lard, and now comes
the most curious part of the story. When j
cool the lard did not congeal; but the ad
dition
of a certain amount of potash re
solved the contents of the kettle into
three distinct substances, the first a light,
transparent oil, better than kerosene or
sperm oil, the second a jelly-hkel substance
which turned to soap, l and left a small
residum of insoluble muscle' The oil
gives a better and brighter ligh than ke
rosene, and lasts seven times as long.
'How much kerosene was consumed in
this experiment is not stated, (neither is
the pecuniary profit of the transaction ,
1
•
ptto are to • furnish the title papers?
gOetofore it has been the custom that
the purchaser of a property pays for the
title papers and the stamps, and he had
the . privilege of selecting his own con
veyancer. But a late decision of the
Supreme Court has changed this. A case
came up before it recently contesting this
point by a purchaser who refused to pay,
and the Court decided that he was right.
The seller must, at his own expense, give
a good'and sufficient title.--/farrisburg
Telegraph.
CUBA has not, as General Dulce re
cently announced, received the same
rights as any other province of Spain.
On the contrary, while in Spain every
25.000. inhabitants elect a deputy, in Cuba
only one deputy is given to every 100,000
inhabitants. In Spain the suffrage is tree;
in Cuba it is conditional upon the pay
meht of a tax. Thus Spain, instead of
adopting reconciliatory measures, widens
the breach which already exists between
her and Cuba.
C./EN. GRANT told Alexander McClure,
of Pennsylvania, who rode trom Phila
delphia. to, Washington with him, that he
was very anxious that a good amendment
guaranteeing manhood suffrage shall be
azreed to at once, and sent to the State
legislatures tor ratification.
. -
-TnE editor, of the Gardiner Home
Journal mourns over the child without a
spinal column that died at Putnam', Ohio,
last week. "What a pity it is," says . he,
"that the child Idied--it would have
made such a splendid member of Con
gress."
A suoAtt beet company in Livingston
county, 111., consumes about forty-nine
tons of beets every twentreour hours,
and expCcts to increase the consumptioh
to sixty tons.
1
" THE SEEDS OF SICKNESS.
Baron Munchansen tells a story of a postbor a
born, Which had a an:liber of wicked tunes blown .
Into it. one frosty n'ght, but made no response.
Tit vertheless, when it was stung before a hot tire,
the tunes, which had been frozen In, thawed out,
to the: amazement of all present. Just so pie
human system. subjected to the injurious lltlu
{,),a
ence ; during the Winter, sometimes tr , ve o
nylon of the t ffeet they have produced upon it,
tintll the moist atmosphere or Spring deVelopes
their fruits Many epring (A:eases are the resuit
o Winter impru.nenel:s. and gre it and especial
care should he taken of th , system in the cold
ea,0.,, sot hat It may be lu a sound and vigorous
1. tr.:Ml.l*n when the malarions fog, of March a,,d
April make th. Ir appearance. To this cud,
strengthen the Etomach and the general organi
zation at this reason with 1105 iIiTTER`e. itiT- I
TEit.S. TAke tilt pleasant, vegetable antidote
In adrance of the uprising of the me .hltle mists
a• - d vattors, which produce. hilts and fever. and
other miasmatic diseases. it member that it is a
prevtlf ow me .reins—as powerful to protect as to
restort 'Uhe stonatch is apt to be overtaxed at
this time co. the year It is - a
-period devoted to
dinner and supper parties, and luxurious living
generally. Peastl.or and late hours weaken the
digestive orga , s and diaereer the liver. The of
feet of tha hitters is to invigorate the one and
regulate the other. There is no month in the
ttvelye when a total , and alterative is more gen
erally needed than in this, and there is no prep
aration of that nature so thoroughly salubrious,
so bracing, sud so entirely free from undue ex
citing-properties, as this celebrated vegetable
cordial.. . .
THE SOUND OF THE LUNGS.
One of the most aecnrate ways of determining
whether the lungs are in a healthy ot'dlseased con
dition, is by means of listening to the respiration.
To those experienced in this practice. it becomes
as plain an index to th e state of the thugs, and is
as well known to the operator to are the yolcas of
his most intimate angsaintatthes. The belief that
long standing coughs, and diseases of the lungs
upon which they are dependent, ire incurable,
are fast becoming Obsolete. One great adyautage
to be gained from this advance in medical knowl
edge is tt e earlle application of those who be
come afflicted_ wil h those diseases to some one
competent to a ff od
relief. The error which had
taken hold of the public mind in regard to the
curability of consumption, or rather non-curabil
ity, is fast becoming obliterated, and it is well
that It should be so ,_ not that persons should lose
'that salutary fear which would make them apply'
for a timeiy remedy, but that all might be indu
ced to use remedies while there is any hope. It 15
'the delay In these cases that tills us wittrap .
Prehension and alarm, ff every one would
make timely application ofor i
DR: KEYSER'S
LUNG CURE In the beginning of scold or cough,
few cases would go so far ea to become Irremedia
ble. • _
Sold at the Doctor's great ldedielne Store, No.
140 Wood street. WILL SHORTLY REMOVE
Te HIS NEW .STORE. • NO. ILIBERTY
r
STREET, SECOND DOOR FROM S CLAIR.,
DP. KEYSER'S RESIDENT 0 FICE FOR
LUNG EXAMINATIONS AND THE TREAT
MENT OF OBSTINATE CHRONIC DISEASES,
No. UM PENN STREET. PITTSBURGH. PA.
Wilco Hours from 1) A. 11. Ilan 1E P. M., and from
4 to; ft st:night. I, • .
ADVERTISEMEIst
TRIUMPH OIL COMPANY.
. .
rTICE.—The annual meeting of the Stoet
ers of the TRIUMPH OIL COMPANY will
eld at their ofilce, No, 19 SEVENT`H (late
ST4EZT,
!Monday, IL rch Ist, 1369 1 at 3 P. M.,
;the purpose of electing officers for the ensu
,gll
lyear, and for the transaction of such other
u t s ness as may come before them.
fe WILLId.3I MUSSLEP, Secretary'.
ET
ICES OF THE I:IIF,ST ORGANS AT
PR , INFERIOR WORK.—Tbe
MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO. respEctfally
a-nounce that they have ad?pted and will rigldly
adhere to the policy of prrnting in their Prise
Lists and Circulars titer very 1010eSeree 8,
which are. therefore, alike to all and feet to
'not discount., This system secures every pur
r baser againat an exorbitont price, and saves ne
`cessitv for bartering.
They solicit comparison of the prices in their
new Catalogue, (lust issued.) with those of in
ferior organs: with carefil examination and
comparison of capacity. qnality and workman
ship of different instrumeot.. 'The Company's;
perfected machinery, accumulated faciilt es and
experienced workmen, together with the tailor'
taut improvements patented and controlled by
them, enable them to produce the best work at the
greatest economy of cost, and consequently, to
offer their well known Organs, winners of the
Parts 'position Medal and eeTenty-tive other
first premiums. which are the ACENOWLEDGBD
STAN nAnt. OF EXCELLE • CE in their department.
at prices a* low or even Less than those demanded
for inferior Organs. •
The following are examples of our reduced
scales of prices:
FOUR OCTAVE ORGAN,Id Black gral
Walnut Case, (Style, No 1.) Price, t_ieltr.
FIVE OCTAVE DOUBLE REED ORGAN. ,
FIVE Svors, with Tremu'ant: So id Black
nut Case, Carved and Paneled. Sl9
(Style C.) Price
FIVE OCTAVE DOUBLE REED CABINET
ORGAN. Five brorFi. with t c new MASON &
HAMLIN IMpROVED VOX HUMANA. which
excels every oth.r attachment of this class la
the beauty and variety of Its effects. the ease
with which it Is used, and its freedom from lia
bility to get out of order, S slid Walnut Case,
Carved and Paneled. (New Style,No.2 ll .) This
is the .fineffe Organ made. size and capac-$l7O.
fty which can be Price,
Many other styles at proportionate 'prices. A
new illustrated Catalogue of styles and Price
List; a so Circular with illustrated descrlpiions
of improvements introduced by the Company
this season, will be sent flee to any applicant.
Address,
THE MASON b HAMLIN ORGAN CO.,
15 1- Tremont. street, Bosto
York
fel6:e6.sT
IFFNItY C. FRY HAS THIS
DAY withdrawn from the firm of FRY.
sh..n.PLE er. REYNi 'LDS. The business will be
continued by SIMPLE REYNOLDS t.t. CO..
who are charged with the settlement oh the bust
ne,o of the late arm.
CRESCENT FLINT GLASS \VOUS,
SE3MPLEy REYNOLDS & CO
Manufacturers of all thida of
Gas and Kerosene Lamp Shades,
Fine £reese.J, Blown, Cut and Engraved
TABLE!
.GLASSWARE,
OFFICE ,AND SAMPLE ROOM:
No. 104. I FoUrth
In retleng from ihe late firm of FRY. SESIPLF.
Sr. RN 171 ,, 0L1P.3. I cheerfully commend their sue
ces,ors to the patronage and continence of the
former customers of the hous ll e.
EN . fLY C. FRY.
PITTEBTre.OI7. February 12th, 1869. fe 61e61
•
IMPORTANT NEW BOOKS.
BEErII FR'S SERMON'S. Selected from publish
ed and unpublished Discourser revised by the
author. 2 cols. Sso 55,00
- A
S'YSTEM 0 , -C HRISTIAN ETHICS. BS Hr. O.
Chr. Ado'ph Von Harless. Clarke's Foreign
Th,•ological Library 350
MIME THOUGHTS AND THEMES. By Hors
tins Bonar, D.D. 2 vols., oia, and New Test.
o
each • mo
DELITZCitt ON HEBREWS. Clarke's Foreign
Theologic:ll 1 thrary 0,50
JESUS OF NAZARETH. His Life and T. 'wh
ines. By Lyman Abbott 3 ' 50
DILKIE'S GREATER BRITAIN :1,00
HAL PIKE. (Mile:, O'Reilly) YOs MS 5•4.50
NoONIIDE AT SYCHAR: By S. R. Macduff,
1). 1) 111,50
CA'T I.IF BY THE SEA. By sir Samuel W. Ba
ker. A sm. did hook for boy.). only 75e
I THE SEAROARD PARISH. By author of Annals
I of a Quiet Neighborhood • 61,50
WILD I IFE LNDalt THE EQUATOR.
75
By
Paul Du Chaillo $l.
Tile. ',LEE OF REV WM. MAR H. D.D. By
Authorof Heathy Vicars. Price reduced ..$!75
1
BIBLE TEACHINGti I, NATURE. BY
Re , .
Hugh MacMillan, D.l' 61,00
i CU/ -IN., SCENES IN TUE LlEa OF CHRIST.
• By D. D. Buck, 1). I) 0,00
WATCHWORDS FOR THE WARFARE OF
LIFE. By the author of •`The Schonberg-Cott&
Family" 8415
The a hose sent by mall on receipt of price, poq.•
paid
ROBERT S. D AYIS
93 Wood Street, rlt,Bburgh
=EI
GRAY'S FlEititY
PRLNIOG UK WORM.
C. E. ROBINSON,
MANITPACTI:IIIR OP
Black and Colored Printing & Lithographic
INItS, VARNISHES, tILC
Gra3's Ferry Road and 33d Street,'
MEM
FfuRST , S ARCHITECTURAL
SURitfORS HOD-BOOK.
A Hand Book of 'Formulae, Tables and Memo:,
rands for Architectural Surveyors, and otherS i
engaged In Building. . t
By JOHN THOIiAS HUBST, Civil Engineer,'
Second Edition. In one rocket 'Volume. . .
PRIOR $9.50.
.1 , or sale by. .
•
KAY & C'OMPANY:
65: Wood Street
fele.
JOSEPH HORNER. I
Bookseller, Stationer, Paper Dtaler
And Blank nook Manufacturer,
METHODIST BOOK DEPOSITORY
(Methodist Episcopal Bloek,)
N 0.129 Smithfield Street':
(COY. VIEGIN'ALLEY.)
A. full assortment of Law; Medical, Miseellan , :,
ous, and school Books constant 7on hand. Th.l.
latest styles of Fancy Note Paper, Envelope: ,
and Vlsitiog Cards in great variety. bZT:TH-1
BLOATERS.—Just received,
lot of ebblce
BLOATER HERRING.
For sale by the box or ddzen at the Family
cery Store of
4HO. A. B.ENsuaw, :
corner Liberty and Hand streets.;;
ASSIGNEE'S SALE IN BAN I- - ,
BB eTcY.—FRIDAY dIORNING,FebraIf-,
at 10 o'clock. wili be sold at No. 810 L . ,.
ket street. near Irlitn avenue. by older ot J0,..'
H. Ball ; Assignee In Bankruptcy of Jan:.
NI cConn l and Alexander B. McConnell, E.. 3.
partners',' he entire large sto k of Boots. : , tio• - :.:
ac., in s tore. Also the Counters, hheiving, tr, - ..;
other fixtures: '-'.
fete A. M'ILWAINE, Auctioneei...
ALL RINDS OF
, t
PRUNING AND TRIMMING 1.
Done by RCM= A. OVENS,
Leave °ram at No:1 entre Avenue
fe13:048
2000 !TAB . ELM OF PEAc,
it. 6 DLL LINdEB, & BTEVENI3OI:
A fy BARRELS OF SORGHt
4
BIOL&"JSES.
jsl DUALINPF.II & STEVEN2OI
PIIILADELPITIA