11 CD$ aitttt. PTIB,LIIMED P Amy, BY • ' PENNIMBIED &CO, Proprietor& P. 11.%PlillliimAit, lOSIAS KING. P.IIOIISTON. N. P. ItZED, f" - ad ProPrietoa. OFFICE: eARETTEBUILD' .Nl3. NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. . 1 13 kr FICIAL PAPER A.U.eghezty ,and 1, ;nozgy Count,. ' 91E2 ginio — Du ,Vir Seset-Weekti, - Wsatis. ... . 1 • . se oneyeu4s2.so ninglenoPY—O-w One mine ..1; 75 Biz mos.. L5O 5 colees, each /. 25 -Baur. eek 15 ThreellloB /5 /0 ' . ..... 7.75 [~• m et .) - . • EDNEiDAC MARCH 3. 1809 wa Pmitrr ;on the inside pages of this GAZETTE ...840'0a par Bihernelis.` .&tiete of 1 1ton:hip _ Maga• • tines, A Sketch by Parkin on Paintings. Third _and, Birth pages : Cohonereial, Mercantile; financial , and Biter Netts, Markets, lqaportS. *Seventh page: Genera/ Miscellany of rtniereating . Beading , Matter. • II 11,33,01ima a :Frankfort. 6811: Prmoulum at Antwexp, 57@5701 GOLD closed In New York yesterday at 132 i. THE Philadelphia Prisi,' knits new type, Is oue of the neatest in aPpearanOS of all'onr eichtuiges; THE latoistaTtutu of West Virginia -, stunt adjourn, to 7 tnoTrow, but it.will first • ratify the XVth Amendnient. t l'ffsve,Da hap ent : ared per name as fourth on the list of States - ratifying:the XVth • Constitutiimal Arnendmeat. , The States ; : iihiCit have thus far acted' upon the meas, • are were officially notified of its passage . ' 'regularly% certified OfEtCusl telegraphic despatches, and hence, their action Can. ...t9t be held premature, as tome Democrat ic jounuds assert. . MI THE Ritruntacur• memberi; of. the House of Representatives held a caucus meeting last night which Tesulted in-the nomination of Xi. BiAnnt, of Maine for Speaker, Mr. Mamas= for‘Clerk, Mr. {ORDWAY for Seirinit:at-Arms; Mr. BlM vow, of New PoorkeePer. nomination was •made for Postmaster. It is given oat Mai :Mr. Tievrni, of Massa chusettswill be appointed by the new Speaker Chairman'of the Committee 'on Appropriations Olnt ) 45.C.EPIS STATES would be pre cluded, by the XVth Amendment, from disfranchising the Mongolian race as a race, but it embodies' no prohibition against excluding Chinese, Japanese, or the natives of any other foreign land on the, face ,of the glebe. These may still be excluded either as. Chinese, &c., to nonatne4 "or, generally, as natives of Asia, but not as of the Mongolian race. The distinctiou is certainly a fictitious one, but members from the Pacific States pre ferred it, opposing strenuously the Senate amendment, which specifically forbade' eiclusion, for =flail/. . - As long as the distinction satisfies the prejudices of Nevada or California, we do not care to discuss, here at present, either its logic or its abstract juitice. Tas allif COMIIIBBIO/4/ra of Internal Revenue, Mr. DaLAwo, was Mairman of the gemmittee on Claims In the 2C.IMIXth Congress: - The country has never had an adricsata idea of the vast amount of claims from which, in that capacity, he . was instnmiental in protecting the Ms sury. Eyery fora: of influence, personal and Official ' , proper -and improper, was brought to bear_upon Atm and his . Com mittee, to secure thell-approial of the (plausible demands 'of tloi but he uniformly, turned a diafess to solicita tions which, if successful, Would have More than doubled 'our National debt.- We speak by the book, for we have the best authority for - this Statement. This _was the very man whom GRANT wanted, •• 'to take care of the Avenue-pirates, and. be will do it, to the satisfaction of every ltody but themselves. , THE INAUGURAL. The new - President takei office at noon to-morrow,, when, eider subscribing to the constitutional oath, he will deliver an in augural addresa. This, if modeled after his cluinicteristiestyle; will.:.be more re markable for its Pertinency.' than for its length. The day for prolix State papers hss ,gone by,. for four yeais and -we hope longer The:.':utterances of President GRANT to-Morrow, Peforc the vast 'audi. ence '.drawn ftum every ; quarter „ of the Republic M witness his investiture with' powor,;cumot but have in especial sig. nificanCe, as revealing a renewed expies = don of idirilewsof Xxectttive duties and responsibilities.._ Wti arif not among thOse who are aux loutly waiting for aninatisttpil announce. 'lncat of his poliFy: We know, already, that thir,notV'fiisidetit will none other - policy than that to which Jae has, more than once pledged his administra tion—a policy of the faithful execution of Yell nitdonalilegfiltdinzi and intenfationk treaties.:. Beyond this, we look for noth. lag but a brief but explicit re-affirmation of the cardinal "principles of Loyalty, Xionesty, Justiss2l and Liberty, as ~ the, guiding points of his Executive trust; and , wbielt he will commend:to countrymen as embracbly the whole luty of each good citizen of the Republic. • • •t,;, wt. 1n Nr,h. _ , „,„„ • r 1 t , FgeZEPViraftjAVN " - • • • lIE MIME Mitilll When, in due the •President ad- OVA.* timielf :to psngress, he will make each,; special recommendations as the Constitution enjoins and his sense of pub lie di:ay : tiny Prompt. But we need ex pect nothing of this sort in the inaugural of to-morrow. No one . knows what he will say—for he has been as reticent in that regard as upon his appointments to office—but past experience, of General GRANT'S character and habits of thought and speech, is such as to foreshadow what he will not say. As to both the. Inaugural Address and the Cabinet, the public are as much in the dark as ever. We have known, for the week past, that licitomaa would retain the Var-Office, and that Pennsylvania and Massachusetts would have other de partments. Beyond that, we know noth ing. REACTION IN ENGLAND. There was a period, of long duration, when the mturufacbrrera of , Great Britain :nnanimously .., advocated Governmental Protection to the various industries in which they were engaged. At first' this Protection, in UCCOIYIEUMES with their so licitations, was extended in the form of direct bounties, afterwards in the shape of mposts upon foreign competing articles. ' After a while they became conscious that they had surrounded themselves, or been encompassed by the course of events, with advantages superior to those exist ing elsewhere; that is I to say, they. ,had perfected their. machinery, beyond all precedent, MUltiplying many -fold the power of fabrication; lad accumulated capita to an extent that i carriedri interest on money to a much lower poird than in any other nation; and had been far ther aided by a redundaniy of laborers which reduced the wages both of skilled workmen and of common hands to the lowest pitclrat which the means of human subsistence were attainable. Such a body of manufaaturers could well afford to espouse the doctrine of Free Trade, and that is just what they .did. Having reached a point where competition with them seemed tit be 'repairable, they exiwatiatedon the cage, Bence of discounte nancing all ,serts of ,grotection; of wel- . coming by the, removal of impediments to trade,the results of discriminating leg- IshitiOn, and of asserting oractically the unity and interdependence of all the races of men. To Superficial thinkers,' there was not a little of ' this talk that sounded pleasantly, andexhaled an odor of htt. 'manitarianism. =I At last the British Government, which had been the staunchest champion of pro. tection, nominally accepted the Free Trade system of political economy, and Ostentatiously invited all other Govern inentii to do so. But it was careful not • to abolish its custom houses , . or dismiss the numerous corps of officials who kept watch against the importation' of foreign merchandise Isrithout - the payment of du ties. It did, indeed, modify its tariff of imposts so as' to meet the conditions of its indtltry, but that was all. It adhered to discriminations hi favor of its own people as rigidly as, ever before; only the progress of events had enabled it to dis pense with certain discriminations which had became inoperative. Twenty years have produced still far ther changes; and British manufacturers are now turning slowly, but certainly, towards protection. S,everal menths ago, we gave some accounts of its movement among the makers of iron and machinery. Now it appears that the .manufacturers of cotton goods, even in Manchester, are dissatisfied with , the degree of_ ;Free Trade, deceptive as it is, under — Which they are toiling. What - is the matter with these people ? there has been no absalute falling away In the perfection of their machinery, no diminution in their supply of capital, ne scarcity In the aupply of operatives, no, decadence in the excellence or su premacy of their commercial marine. What, then; has' rought the change ap parent in their wislies and purposes? Simply this, that &her nations, our own included, have 'advanced in the arts of productive industry; have skilled their laborers, improied and multiplied their, machinery, accumulated capital, and are coniequently prepared to compete with British producers on equal terms, or something akin thereto. ' An& We', May lkjtugl,y; taken BEI only the commencement of thii; movement. In propoitiOn as other nations come up to the point whero their Manufacturing Classes can meet the Same Brithilt clasies, on equal conditionsi will the. den2and of the latter for protection &ow 'louder and Ikinder; Until Rree Trade, even in sem blance, shall be set aiide as a' deluslomand the system of. Protection he 'proclaimed is all its,ftdiness and rigor:, It will not be long to wait for the accomplishment "of-=this /change. Let those Who; , alf interested watch for its .early COnStiln mation. • - " • • 'hie` PS:it - 1.4111/ ptuliDen • . • Itichmonflelegrams, have already ap• fprised , ritir readers of the extent to which • Men insthat City. and County haie die -' qualified thems,erves for _sitting as jurors, In the trial .of kinsNTlor the killing of ,PO,LWID.. The facts of this slaughter will he remembered. POLL ARD iris the editor ef a newripaper, -au& in the man. rigenlent theriof indulged; in a wide and gross license in ... dealing with individuals `rind their. affairs, , Nor was he at Ca:oh , . PPlottE! l !a P theage+ sex or, P9Bltion of the liereeesitereil4ol) to detidon'or * 4 -, tempt. :His purpose seemed to be to a t :4, ate a sensation, ' do as "tO :;keep his Journal in notice, and there were, MISITROHGAZETTE!' -- irEiIiCESDIY, - - MARCH 3, 1869. besades, indications that he was ac tuated,, •to a censiderable , degree, by morbid dislike _of almost everybody: Git'ART'S sister waifcoarael§ assailed by POLLARD, without cause, and in revenge for that assaalt, as is alleged, GRANT shot POLLAILD dead as he 7as entering his office the following morning. The , case was calculated to excite intense feeling; and hence it is not wonderful that diffi culty is experienced, under the rules now existing, in obtaining jurors to try the accused. But, it is not our purpose to comment upon that rule, or the trop le to secure a jury under it. The New 'lry rld Times holds that it is evidence of 4 ta hidf-civilized or barbar ousj state of soc ety" that a man ag grieved as- Giux was, should, take re dress into his ow hands. We are by no means inclined tol dispute that inference_ or conclusion. No better proof of bar:: barism, or, •at least, of.a• low condition of civilization, can be adduced than'the fact that men feel' constrainedto be their own avengers rather than trust to such administration of penal justice as can be obtained through the public authorities. But It seems to us that the Times over looks one very important fact in its don sideratlon of this matter. Such license as POLLARD exercised in, the conduct of his journal, without interference from the authorities, furnishes quite as uncon trovertible evidence of the barbarism of Richmond society, as did Ids slaughter by one upon -whose rights and feelings he had ruthlessly tram pled. And this illustrates what we, have re peatedly urged, that if, either through the laws, or the operation of public ()pin= ion, editors are to be granted impunity in publisbing whet -:they - will concerning private individuals, or relative to the private concerns of public men, the per sonseggrieved ought to be left at liberty to adopt such. measures of redress as shall :; ', appear to them suitable. We know this savagery isbarbarism; but so is the evil for which this savagery is the natural remedy. No man, unless dettssed in his Instincts, would tamely submit to, such an oatiage as POLLARD' inflicted upon the members of the GRANT family. Both the laws and _the _community are ati fault when such outraaei can he perPetiated with com plete, or very nearly complete impunity: That is the point where the: barbarism comes in; and, hen4hat is the point at, which there is most need to have an effi dent remedy applied. Tan COUNTRY will thank the Senate for its refusal to adopt Mr. Sitranteres resolution for a recognition of Cuban in dependence. However we might have been induced to deal wiih the old Spain of a Bouason despotism, in behalf of a province struggling for its political free dom, it becomes a radically different ques tion when we are asked to countenance a causeless revolt against the authority of the new Spain of liberal and progressive ideas. For it would be but an indifferent welcome which the Great Republic would thus offer to the development of republi can ideas in Europe, to improve the occa sion for stripping the people of Spain of their most valuable territorial possession. , Such would be the substantial effect of our approtal of the Cuban revolt. As for any American recognition of belligerent rights, it is becoming for us to reziteinblir what injustice'Wen have our selves atiffered from the premature and unfriendly exercise of this sovereign pre rogative by other powers not long ago. Let 118 be in no hurry to imitate the in- Miami example 1 . Tni annexed - paragraph from the New York Tribune affords a striking; il lustration of the magnitude of what are styled the vihisky-frands on the revenue. Says that journal, apropos to the presi dent's resolution to stop all that cheating: In the year 1868,_ when thetas upon dis tilled spirits was 112 per. gallon, and the amount collected was twenty-nine mil lions of dollars, one of the largest of our commission merchants, who had at the time thousands of barrels of whisky in his storehouse said that if the Govern ment would give him the right to collect the taxi he - would engage to pay the whple 'interest upon the public debt. Now this interest for that year was one hundred and thirty:three and the gentleman -referred towts at.-once tbotoughly acquainted, with' the- trade, and eminentlyy, capable of estimating its amount and the amount of tax honestly due upon it. The presumption in favor of Ids opimon is clear from the fact that only sixty-seven million° of gallons should have paid the interest "which would have left him at least eighty mil none of dollars to pay the expense of collection and give his • profit. If. Presi dent Grant puts his resolution into lull force,^at the present rate of duty he will squeeze half the filtered on our debt out of the manatlicturers and dealers in in toxicating figural. • :Vac division of Texas is earnestly Ter: commended by General CANBY, the Mill taffy CofiMuknder, who states his belief 1 ,This measure, will finelly disport*, end denibralise the • disloyal' element, and give tut a separation of the State`Which will bring to the ref* peace and prosper ity which we have for years been striv ing tolifotire. • - - AN IMPORTANT /11PROVEMXRT.--Thera -has recently been introduced In Martin's Ferry a new machine for illuminating 'gas from coal:' 'lt Cali`be applied it* ail classes of heating stoves and every va. riety of furnace. The gas can b . o. DAM, factured at a • cost of 50 .cents per 1,000 het." It was invented by s.yotmg ,flopsiek Mr. J. W. Broivn, , and is known as "Brown's Domestic Gasometer." One °talent may be`seen in operation it the store of Conrad lion& Marlin's Ferry. It an ingenloup invention. • ' —The city election. In. Des Moines, lowa, on Woodsy. resulted, in the choice bf J..EVElst4biltgublioatc' : lbr Mayor, over Shoff:44i , Democrat, 'the present in. °unbent,' by thirty , five majority. Mcst of the city oftlaeis are Republicans. THAT PARK. OnB qrAZETTE : I am not a citizen were, I of Pitb3bitrgli • hut if I should op. pose and vote against the purchase of ground for a large Park. away out where such a thing is not needed, and will not be for a generation to come. It would be very nice for a few near it, and for an other few who have the means to reach it in carriages; but to the great majority of , the dwellers in the densely populated por tions of the city, and who really need breathing _places, it will, be of no more use than if it were on the summit of the Allegheny mountains.• I should say, never mind that. There is already plenty of fresh air, and there are abundance of trees in that beautiful and romantic suburb where it is proposed .to do this thing; but instead of that, buy a little ground where the Allegheny and Monongahela come together and make a little more by filling; then let the ground thus obtained be made as beautiful and shady as possible. Cut it up by as many serpentine walks—not drives —as good •taste will allow, and then let'he swelter ing dwellers in our crowded streets, who really need fresh air, get free access to it. Do that, and you will have something, however hUmble, that will really conduce to the health and enjoyment of those who need something of the kind. The cost will be trifling compared with the other project, and the results much more profit able. trTfurataart. Washlngtou Items. IT is understood, that all the Cabinet officers, except General Schofield and At torliey General Evart's, have officially tendered the resignation of their port folios to President Johnson, and that they will be accepted. In the meantime their respective departments ' will be left in charge of officials next in rank as acting f3eeretaries. Gmv. GRA= states that the remark at tributed to him by Uolonel McClure, that though he was elected by the Republican party, he is not a party man, is calculated to do him injustice; and although he;does not desire to charge Mr. McClure with intentionally misrepresenting him, he does net want to be, considered as untrue to the rights of the party and the men who elected him. GEN. GRANT stated again, as he has before stated, that he will appoint a Com missioner of Indian :Agairs and a Corn- Missioner of Internal Revenue on his own resptutsibility, but in the case of all the other bureau officers he will take the advice of his Cabinet members, and ex pects them o select men who will serve the Govern ent faithfully and effectively. 'lat. DE o takes the hardest position in die entir Government. On this place, whil6 figb g the late Andrew Jobnson, we piled the, heaviest responsibility and work that attach 'to any place _in the country. _ The. Commissioner comes in contact directly with the biggest rings and the boldest and most adroit seouU dreis we are afilicted'tvith. Hr. Deland , happily, possesses the necessary ability honesty, and, let us hope, courage. . The latest rumor in relation to Gen, Grant's Cabinet is that the War Depart ment is the'one allotted to Pennsylvania and in consequence that the cariosity rei gardinglhe coming man from that. State will not be gratified until after Gen. SchoL field's retirement. There is a general desire for a reconcil iation between the incoming and out- going President, so as to give practical effect to Gen. Grant's "Let us have Peace" plattbnn. President Johnson has been sounded upon the subject, and ; is willing to accept overtures, but the busy. bodies hesitate to approach Gen. Grant in reference to it, the General being known to entertain very strong feelings in refer ence to the circumstances of the original estrangement. Death'of John Ericsson. ' John , Ericsson the Inventor of the caloric steam engine, the screw propeller, the builder of the celebrated "monitor," and the originator of various scientific theories and mechanical appliances, died in Itichlitno,. New York, on Thursday last, from hyd i rophobia, produced by the bate of a dog, n dieted a month ago. Mr. Ericsson was the son of a miner in Wermeland, Sweden, and was born in 1808. Hor distinguished himself even in his boyhood `by his nudhemathial ac quirements and constructive &lb, and before he was sixteen years old, itris said, was charged with the duty of laying , out work for six hundred then on the Grand Canal of Sweden. - He sabsequently en tered the army, but In about six years left It to introduce in England an engine of somewhat the same character as his later "caloric engine." There he intro duced his idea of an artificial draft for engines to dispense with largo smoke stacks, and save feel, and made in seven weeks a locomotive that won the prize for speed and lightness, In 1833 e hard:laced his caloric en gine to public notice, but It did not sue ceed 'until about ten or twelve years ago. It is now extensively used there the power is not 4 griit. He also, at ti later daY,- made know in Englands 1119E11- tion,:of the sore* propeller for s li p ' He met with no Success in Eng lan d, ind dame to this eountry, in 1839, to intro duce it here, and here he has l ived , ever since. ' ' ' - His propeller' was adopted for the Princeton some years ago, and is now the great rival of the' paddle wheel. In 113131 Ericsson bullt the lifoni; tor, the fame of which will not soon be forgotten. In person , he was strongly and heavily built, and of great physical enduranee. /lie face showed firmness. .and resolution; but not so strongly as his life.' Against material obstacles, envy and ridicule, hoihan foughi nearly all his active, life; and now the public owe to an ap t!y trifling accident the idea .of s 'one • (dr - greatest inventors and Mq- irt - additiOn to."the utmost neatness .I Wahl the tuillmom and all vessels used for milk rsod cream,. the Praria .FUr rnar'recomme4ds that dishes . ' containing pulverized charcoal be placed about the room to absorb ammonia and other gases that cannotte otherwise removed. The Charcoal should be freshly prepared, and by heating it after it hes become partially "Satdrated wittr gases, they are driven off and the charcoal'rendered as effectual as at first. 1 , ri03 fall of snow in Canada this winter so far has exceeded'any previods snow fall for twenty years Past, by thirty 14chea. Accordintto a published state 14ent, the depth of snow which has fallen at;blodtreal is one hundred and eighteen Inches, or nearly ten feet, and is now eight feet deep in the streets of that city, THE COURTS United States IMstrlet Court—Judge Me Caudle's. TUESDAY, March 2.—Court met at ten o'clock A. M. A jury was called io tbe box, but there being no cases ready for trial, Court adjourned to ten o'clock A. M. Wednesday. District Court-Judge Kirkpatrick. TIIESLiAY, March 2.—ln the case of Jennings vs. Cuthbert, reported yester , day. V4rdiet for plaintiff in the sum of $l4O 50. Wildes vs. Trainer et al. On motion of counsel, C. Hanson Love, Assignee of -G. W. Wildes, was substituted a* plaintiff. Action to recover damages. Verdict for plaintiff in six cents damage and six canna most& W. B. Hays vs. J. D. Ramaley. Report of 'Auditor presented and confirmed. -•'.:l t a t vo vs. MeCiarren. Action on a , et. Verdict for plaintiff in the suni of $492 26. TRIAL LIST FOR WEDNESDAY. No. 89. Neel et al vs. McEitiinney. No. 74. Brown vs. Owners of steam boat "Arab." No. 54. Mellon vs. literion et al. No. & Craft, ii Phillips vs. Williams No. 45. Brown vs. Ross & Co. No. 154.p/d Lid—Fleming vs. Flom Mg. No, 3. Jacoby vs. Schoen. No. 4. Carlin vs. Robb. Common Pleas—Judge Sterrett. TUESDAY, March 2.—The case of Cook vs, Fa. on mechanic's lain. repotted yesterday, was resumed. Ver dict for plaintiff in the sum of $305.81. James A. Speer vs. Cleveland it Pitts burgh Railroad.. Action on the case, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff - from the annoy ances to which he was subjected, in con sequence of the action of said company through their employes, by allowing their engines and oars to stand in front of the plaintiff's house upon tracks con structed by defendants, thereby filling the house with dust and smoke from the engines and cars, and by blowing the whistles and ringing the bells. On trial. TRIAL LIST POP. WEDNESDAY. No. 79. Donahue vs. Meisner. No. 'B2. Coleman vs. Fisher. No. 89. Czarneeki vs.. Fry. No. 90. Evans vs. Renonif. • No. 96. HoffatOt vs. Wardrop. No, 97. Wetz vs. Morrow. No. 98. Reed vs. Mills. • No. 103. Reeling et nx. vs. Sehmoll. No. 4. Christ et inr.w. Dittman et wt. No. " 5. Weber et as. vs. same. No. 18. Reibel et 'vs. Rare. • No. 41. Seiler vs. Enttlemier. No. 52. Fisher vs. Feld. Mo. 63. Carson vs. Taylor. No; 77. Dithridge vs. Allen. . Quarter Sessions... Judge stew& TUESDAY, March 2.—Court met at ten A. it. The grand jury having returned no cases] Court adjoarned to ten a. m.; to-day, when the cases published below will, be taken up awl dis posed of. No. 26. John Dunn. ' No. 48. Jacob Martin. • No. 128.' John Bird. No. 151. Franc's Hahn and Gottlelb Wooster. No. 155. Robert Foster-2 cases. No. 166. G. Tobias. No. 170. Charles Darning. No. 199. Eliza Prysi and Rudolph Prysi. Np. 261. James Dunn. No. 264. Ottmar Hoffman. No. 274. Wm. Clark, et al. No. 277. Wm. Einstein. No. 297. Wm. Powers. Birmingham Council. • Last evening there was a regular monthly meeting of the qouncil of the borough of Birmingham held at Bui gess Salisbury's office. Members present—Xessrs. Atterbnrn Mcllwaine, 'Ward, Redman, Welker, Kerr, Ihmsen and Burgess Salisbury. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. Mr. Ibmsen, Chairman of the Finance Committee, reported that he had exam ined the accounts of the various borough officers and found them to be correct, ex cept ihe report of Mr. Kunzder, Market ffi Master, which the , officer had 'been in structed to make perfect. ; The Burgess stated that he had re- . ceived a notice from the Street-Regulator setting forth that the debris on Harmony street had. not been removed; that the work of paving said street had left a, quantity of rubbish; arid that a final set.' tiement with the contractors should be postponed until the street was properly cleaned. ,The estimate of grading, curbing and. paving the above street Is as follows: Grading, 3,522 cubic yards; curbing, 1,36.130ineal feet; paving, 3,213;4 square yards., , rn accordance with the recommenda tion of the Street Regulator, a final set tlement was postpinsed: for the present. Bradford & Co. are the contractors. A communication from Mr. A. Paiter son was presented, proposing to furnish numbers for all the houses in the bor eugh a d attach tbenkin proper order at twenty-five cents per plate. The num bers to be cut on iron plates. 2;4 by 5 inches, .with raised figures two inches long, the entire plate to be japanned black and the face of the figures to be 'afterwards painted yellew or some other bright color. • The communication was referred to a Special Committee. The Burgess cause to be read the fill lowing To the urpeas, dc. The petition of T. W. Brigs, President of the aloneurgkhela V ey Railroad Comkiany, to behalf of d Company, respectfully represents: That the said Monotigahela Valley Railroad Company is a body corporate, created under and by virtue of certain acts nf-Aesembly of -the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and duly authorised and empowered ud der said acts of incorporation "to con struct a railroadfrom a point at 'or near Pittsburgh, hyena route as the Board of Direetcut may ,deterthine, to a point at,pr near , Monongahela Clty; Washing ton county; and thencexp either, baigh of the Monongahela riVeri to a point at or near 'Whet 'is known - as •Rice's, Landing,' " with , power to coedits:it Such branches as - the " Direetors may deem necessary," ee- . Your petitioner therefore prays your honors.; bier body to pass an • ordinance kratithig to the said Monongahela Valley Railr oa d Company the right • and privilege of locat in constructing and ,maintaining their said railroad over, along and across such streets, alleys, ways and grounds in , the Borough of Birmingham as may be found necessary and desirable, in Conformity with the laws of the Commonwealth, and subject to such reasonable =lee and reg ulations as may be Bound necessary fo r; the protection and safety of persons an d property in said Borough. Andyottr pe : titioner, for himself and in behalf of Bala ' Company, will ever pray, tto ofefr°Mr t e d 7s t'ao r la . ° I hn Special s Tt e eW n ° , C . nlllll e m r ual b ni: u r ts ftl'ee° t ir and ie:ll wasdi R I 11 r r r 6.11: g, with instruct:lons to meet the Directors 04, said Coinpany in referencia to the_yreposed route. The clerk read an.' ordinance Changing names of streetsas follows: Oliver street to Sixth street; Gregg to Seventh; Joseph to Eighth; Ewing to. Ninth; -Mcßee to Tenth; Grosvenor to . Eleventh; Denman to Twelfth; Ormsby to Thirteenth; Wil kins to Fourteenth; Center to Fifteenth; Perry and Franklin to Sixteenth; Har mony to Seventeenth. On motion of Mr. Kerr, the ordinance was adopted. - The following bills were ordered to be paid : • Dispatch. advertising, $4.65; A. Kent, repairing tools, $11.05; J. C. Shaffer, tools, $2.05; Regulator, $5O The other officers' salaries were also ordered to be paid. On emotion, Council adjourned to meet next Tuesday evening. - . - BRIEF TELEGRAMS. `—The small pox is rapidly •spreading in New York City, and a general vaccin ation is recommended. • —The Chief of Police at Boston has re ceived • orders to suppress all public masked balls on anaatter the 4th mst. —The medical dissecting bill in the Maine Legislature on 'its final Passage was indefinitely postponed in the Senate. —Henry Christian, the German who murdered a boy at Pleasant -Ridge, .111., last week, was arrested on Monday near —Frank Hardy and Will Taylor, the/ boys who murdered J. H. Rios, ofSham rook, Ohio, have been arrested in Cairo," Illinois. —The Opera House in St. Joseph, Mo., T was burned on Sunday, !involving a loss of about $12,000; Insurance 12,009, in the Sangamon, of Springfield, Ills., * . —The Wisconsin Senayesterdaycon ourred in a joint resolution Increasing the Governor's salary' to $5;000 and tbe c l rd Lieutenant GevernOr's t 11,000. - ~ —The President has oned John R. WlOllll3, sentenced to n years "in the Albany Penitentiary for embezzling let ters from the Postoffice tit New York. Railroad Accident In Vermont. My Telegraph to the l'lttsbargh%tonne.] 1 MONTBR&L, March I.—The Montreal train, which left New York Friday after noon, was thrown from tbe track, owing ton defective rail, near Pittsford, Vt., on the &Mans! & Burlington Railroad, at 2 o'clock A. hr. on Saturday. The sleeping car was hurled down a steep slope some thirty. feet, near the bankifof Cotter river. The car was wrecked, but no lives. were lost, altholigh several passengers were injured. Gen. Averill, U.S. Consul Gen- 4 eral to Canada, received some Severe cats and braises on his head. Markets by yelegraph. Lownow, March 2.--CobsolB 93; S. bonds 81%; Erie 25; Illinois Central 97M. Atlantic and Great Western 33X. Stocks quiet. Tallow 455. 6d. Sugar 395. Cal cutta Linseed 595. ANTWERP, March 2.—Petioleum 67(4) 673 franca. LIVERPOOL, March 2.-Cotton middling uplands 11g; Orleans 12X; sales 1 5,000 bales. California white wheat 187 d.; red western 6d.(g9s. _7d. Flour 255., 4, Corn 315 0 6 d. for old; 30s. for new. Bar ley 509. Peas. 42a. 6d. Pork 1 975. 6d.. Beef 955. Lard 74a. Chem 765: Bacon 575. 6d. Petroleum unchanged. 455. 3d. - I FRANKFORT, March 2.-U- S. bonds 863. NEW ORLRAN - s, March 2.. Cotton it- $.l regular and lower; demand and offer- ; ing light; middlings 27%c; sales of 1,300 bales; receipts. 8,391 bales; .exports, 3,343 bales. Gold 132%. Sterling '43%; Com mercial 4231©42%. New York Sight IX @,‘ premium. Sugar nominal; common 1234©13c; prime 15,4©15%0; yellow 1734 c. Molasses dull; prime 80©81c. Flour is firm; superfine 16,25; deuble extra 17,00; treble extra /37,25. Corn Scarce at 80c. Oats scarce at 80c. Bran easy at 11,12© 1,15. Hay fair; Prime 1.30©31. Pork nominal at 133,75. Bacon firmer forjob bing; shoulders 15;ic; clear rib 18c; clear . 1 sides i lBXc. Lard dull; tierce 1934 c. and keg 2134 c. Whisky, depressed; western rectified 921 , 409734 c. = toffee quiet and firm, fair 1534116 c; prime 17%©183;0. SAN; FRARcisca, March 1.-Flour dull at 14,l- 75©5, d 62ji. Wheat, 11,70 for choice. Legateners - A NAIMVILLE, March 2.-Cotton dull and droopiug; low middling 2634 c; good to ordinary 26c. HAvArre, March 2.-;Sugar nomitia t l offers were made of 10,®12 reale fa; No. 12. A MALARIOUS MONTH. *arch, that gives us a new President, iv alsl the Inaugural month of many barrassizig disci den. Entangled in Its fogs are the seeds c? coughs; colds and of that alteration of frieldit..4 and fire, more widely known than admired, caUe.:l, lever and ague. The only way to avoid thes 4 - "little unpleasantnessea, is to reader the $71.2' tem strong enough to light off the tunioapherkt poison that produces them. and the best way ts endow it with this repellentnower Is to tone 412 with H. ITITATTE it'SSTOMACH,BITTERS. If a wayfarer were credibly informed that /1 ruffian was waiting at the next corner, he won't" doubtless turn in his tracks. and take a ask'. route to, his destination.. With Jun about 'th same amount of Iron QC the attacks or disease,' 'prevalent as this season may oe evaded, Nat. the trouble will be lets, for drug stores lie it every one's route, and every respectable d ug gist In the Onion keeps on hand 1102ITET'rE4'.7-. BITTERS. The article ls a staple of trade, anti It would be as easy - to dud a grneery witholt, sugar, as the store of an apothecary without thy po_ppLar tonic remedy. . • in - view of the experience of the nation, win regard to the article, during the space of twenti years, it seems almost unnecessary to recap lets Its merits to Americus. Bat as oar populs lion is Increasing at tbe rate of a couple of m lions in a year. In the natural way and by Imml gratlon, it may be as well to blotto the ristrl generation azia new arrivals. (the old settte.i A R CH BITTERSt, 'that lIOST'ETTER'B sror ACE{ l a the most wholesome and ix k tent vegetable tonle ever manufsetnted, thatil is a specide Tor deollity dYfiltePsts, hillossneti and miasmatic fevers, the . itp. events, as WI es cures, those complaints and their compite/ lions: that It Is not '''bed to take," and is atk, lately harmlbu. • THE SOUND Or THE ZINGS. One a the most accurate ways f determinist whether the Inngsare in s healttiy cremated cal.. dillon, is by means ofliatening to the respiratioi i To those experienced in this practice it becom aeplaln anUntex to the state of the lungs, snits a well known to the operators, are the voices of- Mt most fAttgnate aegnelntanees - The belief the . . . lot standing einghs, and dlselses of the lung/ upon which they are dependent, are incurable, tee , fidt becoming obsolete. One great advantage CO be - gained frowthis advance in medical knowl-' edge is the earlier application of those who be. cote *Mated tifith those: diseases to some one " competent to afford relief. The error which Mut i c taken, hold of the utak mind in , regard to the curibilitiefeoesu piton, or rather non-curabil Ilrf ,is that becomin obliterated, and it is well th a t it t horn be eo, not that persons should lose, that fluttery fear which would make them apply } jou tn for a timely remedy' but that all might be indn-t eed to use . remedieswhite there is any hope. It Lel ~.. ~,..,... la these . r , ;that Mir us with ap ~ pre •- ' h - e j, oa an d ,t for If every one would! 1 make timely ap Hoe of pa. KEYBAR 9 S LUNG CURE hi the nine of scold or cough, lbw eases would go fares to beoolee bruited's,- Sold at the Doctor' great Medicine Store. No. 140 Wood street., 'TILL SHORTLY azmovs. Te HIS NIirSTLIt: D NO. 'l6 LIBERTY STRIIET,'SECONDDOOR FROM ST CLAIR. DR: , NEYEIRRII luvr .OFFICE 808 LUNG EXAMINATI tNO AND TRH TREAT MENTI)jf °MINA. ' CHRONIC! DIEGIAmoi, No. IRO PENN ST t • • T, PITTSBURGH. PA. Cidlce HOnis from fp at. mull 4P. ft,, and from 7 to II at night. r r -t: • . -,77.14 44)*:-,::•-,,,ze, 1 1 125