0 ni 1W.'014"t44* ITIBLIBRED DAILY, BY PENNINAN,REE) C 0„ Proprietcirs. F. H. PICANDIAII. JOSIAH KING. 2. e. N. Y. SEED, Editors iladfroprretora. OFFICE: _ iIIatTITE BUILDING. NOS. 84 AND 86 FMB ST. OFFICIAL PAPER •t Pittsburgh. Allegheny and Alle gheny County. Ilienl6B--Dafty. , I demi- Weekly. - Weals', 'Clue year...666,000neyear.166.60 Single copy ..$1.50 - '6311e mon th 75; 81x nicks.. 1.50 6 mm 106,0 1 .011 1.25 By the week 15; Three mos .76 " 1.15 Mom carrier.) I and one to Agent. SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 0369. WE Pam on the inside pages of this . - morning's , GAZE T TE &mond Page : Poetry, Relfyioits Intelligence, A Complete Story. Third and Sixth pages: tirsnelal, 1. Commercial, Mercantile and Rive News, Markets, imports. Seventh page Clip pings and Court Proceedings. , PSTROLEIIM at Antwerp, r@if. U. S. BONDS at Fraskfort, 862@861 GOLD closed in• New York yesterday" at 131. . TUE CABINET. Secretary of State—E. B. WASHBURIZE, of Illinois. Secretary of Treasury - 7 ,A. T. STEw. ART, of New York. Secretary of Navy—Anous E. BOWE, of Pennsylvania. Secretary of Interior—J. D. Cos, of Ohio. Postmaster Genorai—doirri J. A. CRBss- Irina., of Maryland. Attorney Genercti--E. B. Hoe'', of Massachusetts. nomination has been made for secretary of War. General ficsoFramn will hold over till his successor be desig nated. J. W. Sizt - cuaLtic has been male Gen -eral of the Army; Priam. H. Sumtroa.B, _Lieutenant General, John SCHOFIELD, —Major, General; and C. C. Auotra, .13rizadier General. These promotions will content both the army and the %people.. ME. Smisge has entered upon his fourth full term is the Senate, having served more years in it than say other member. Mr. CAritEnon was in the Bea- ate some years before Mr. SUMMER, but has-been out of it at two periods, so that he has sorved alessnumber of years. Tux absurd amendment, by the last nous% to the Senate joint resolution ex pressing our sympathy with Liberalism. in - Spain, was intended as a "mere pleas antr3r," the yeas End nays not being called. It was a miserable effort to per petrates mischievous joke, which willnot. - be very speedily repeated. THE Tose does not like President. -GRANT's .especially its genu ine Democracy in advocating the right of suffrage for all adult male citizens, and. .its sterling honesty An condemning the :,propogition to-pay the national bonds in irredeeniable greenbacks/. We are not. -surprised,. and think it none the worse - for the Preeident. LATE 42ovzcne from Gen. Einzzamar -report a general movement of the tostile .remnants of broken Indian trines, sum- .berin,g inal!•abont enethoutsand warriors, ,toward the extreme .southwest. The troops are idllowing then; from inarlops .dliections, with intent to close in 4upon -.them at some contra= centre, and compel a snrrenderand . "submissie to a:settle rment on their reservations, In the 4exms • PToPosed th-Government." Ana rnEn of the " marlOovernors " thas been tiikenaway. ANDRMW, BROVGH ,and TOD gave a splendid expression of ithe loyalty of Massachusetts and Ohio throughout thecontlicte and earned for .themselves a world-wide renown. _As /Governor of lfignesota, for nearly a year in 1803, gm= SWIFT, a native of Ahio, succeeded in its Exec,utive Chair to , Gov. BentEr, who had been chosen to -.the :United States Senate. This period, ;brief as it was, covered the crisis of the great .conflict, and , Minnesota has ever been proud of the energy, capacity and lldelity with which 'Got s % Swat directed her part in the work' of loyalty and lib sr p , .. deatet recently, at the early age of 47, elicits from the Minnesota press, wiihont polities' distinctions, the lighest tributes to the purity and ability cfhis chara c t er and the efficiency of hit"' _ . services. - . IT:WILL ZS 13 IT EMEMBELED thatmany years ago South Carolina passed a law to imprison all colored persona who should go., into that State from outside. Mr. HOAR, of Cancan); Mass., distinguldhed tor high personal character and profes sional attainments was appointed a Com inissioner by that State to proceed to Charleston and institute asuitin the Fed eral Courts to test the constitutionality .of that law. Ho was driven out, to gether -with his daughters, who accbm panied him. B. Home, the new Attorney General, ,is a son of Mr. Commissioner Hoerr. Inearlylife, he was a teacher of a Ladies' Seminary' in this city, and his short stay here ripened friendships that 14ve lasted to the ptesent,:time. He re• - - , -,...- ..-..,-..,:::', , v, , ,T,:: , _0z•r , ..,...f:a;z1::,..i --1- p , , E=El turned to Massachusetts, and entered upon the profession of the law, acquiring a. valuable practice, afterwards taking a seat _upon the bench - of the Supreme Court, which he held up to 'the moment of his appointment as Attorney General. ' Mr. Roan came back to Pittsburgh af ter his return to his , native State. This was as a delegate to the Convention that madethe original organization of the Re publican party. Following' the tradi tions of his family, which had been strengthened by his own reflections, ,he was unalterably opposed td t g• encroech. ments of slavery. ,Nor he fOled, since thet early day, in - hie evo ion to the prinidples of that organ :atio THE CABIN . The gentlemen selected" by Presidem Grunt as chiefs of the De artmenta, are each of eminent personal pectability. Ear% has attained marked umiess in the sp'nere - in which he elec ed to move. WAsmatrimn is the on y one among them whn, has had considerable - political experience. He has been In the House of Representatives loaner than say' Member now sitting there, and has- not only succeeded in "retaining thel confidence of his constitu ents, but has - earned a high reputation ethroughout the Country. Mr. Cox served 'vith distinction in the army, and was af iterwards made Governor of Ohio; which place he held for only one term. Mr. CRESEWELL, in addition to home State experience, was in the United States Sen ate for two or three years, to fill out 'the term for which Mr. HICKS 1 14 as chosen. Mr. SCIIOFIELD be ongs to the regular army, and has :administered the affairs of the War Office with decided ability for some months past. -The common expectation is that he will return to his place in the army in the -course of a few weeks; but this may" not be. Mr. STEWART has achieved wonder ful success as a merchant, in whiCh capietty he has evinced an order of abili ty unsurpassed in this country, or any other. The success with which he has ~ c onducted kis own finances glies assur. 'lance of his competency to manage the - income and disbursements of the govern ment. Mr. Bourn made a large fortune, and much personal reputation, as a Mer chant of Philadelphia; and then retired from active husiness. Mr. HOAR is a jurist of considerable distinction in MSS slichnsetts. However worthy each of these gentle men may be personally, or however well qualified to direct the affairs of the respec tive Departments over which they have been called to preside, it may safely be inferred that on the whole,..the Cabinet is not adapted to meet the tastes and wishes Of that class known as politicians. Per haps it will on that account give the greater satisfaction to -the masses of the people. Comparatively few Republicans even of the entire mass have any other favor to ask of the President and his constitutional advisers, than an upright, firm and ener getic administration of the governmentin accordance with the laws, and for the highest good of the whole people. At The recent election the Republican princi ples were broadly proclaimed, and tulmir ably enforced. Those principles were en. dorsed at the ballot-box, and Republicans confidently expect to see them carried out by their chosen agents in the high places of the Government. Beyond this, on all questions relating to the distribution of patronage and the like, they are measura bly, if not - altogether indifferent. In the Cabinet appointments, they will lee noth ing.— to impair their confidence in the man their suffrages elevated to the Presidency, .but much to confirta it. AUSPICIOUS PROMISES. In May last, Gep. Cimino was placed in nomination for the Presidency by a Convention politically representing, It was believed, a majority of his country men. The same body, at the same time, declared the leading principles upon which his electlon would be advocated. In due time, the nominee announced his acceptance of the position, and "endorsed the resolutions" in which these principles were embodied. Pledging himaelf to ex ecute the laws and to respect the will of the people, "with the vie vi: of giving peace, quiet and protection everywhere," and declaring again 'that "peace and prosperity with economy Would lighten taxation," he closed with a marked re iteration in that memorable invocation, "Let us have peace " Of the fourteen resolutions of the Chi cago platform, one was an indictment of the then Acting President, and one was a tribute of honor to the soldiers who had fought our battles and won back for us our menaced liberty. It Is not to be expect led that Erasure S. GRAFI. would dwell upcin the one, or reiterate the other. — Of the remaining twelve, six words briefly comprehend their. essence : Honesty, Equality, Liberty, Fraternity. Magna nimitY and Dignity.: These embody the whole National duty, whether in our do mestic or foreign policy, - whether dealing with individuals or with nations. holy, mark the exact fidelity with which our candidate, Whom we elected in November, and who formally assumed ori Thursdai his official trust, has ad hered, in every public utterance, from that day to this hour, to the just copy of the plattonn -he then endorsed. His first official . declaration, the, Inaugural Address, redeems the promises of the HAWLEY letter, and is itself but the para phrase of the Chicago Catechism Ofße public:lw ' faith.'The Inaugaral repeats with emphatic distinctness every panel- --•-, - I . ,• - , „. - ,„ _ - " - - • qtftir k - PITTSBURGH GAZETTE': SATURDAY ple iu that platform bat one when President did not make he new his official proclamation rof " sym pathy with - all oppreised peoples struggling for their riots" the propri ety of the discriminatlon—which forbade what would have been, at that moment, an unseemly =4 needlessly offensive Executive declaration of Republican pro pagandism—will command the approba tion of all enlightened - men. Who doubts, neverthelesti, that the President—himself personally so brilliant an example of suc cess, in that self-assertion which the piin- ciple of the twelfth Chicago resolution demands alike for people and for indi vidnals—willever be found administering his high office in the Interests of Liberty, Justice and Peace, throughout the world and toward ail its peoples? In his Inaugural, we shall find not one principle declared, not one measure rec ommended, not one measure of official duty or Executive privilege, which is without its precedent in the Chicago dec laration of Republican faith. Nor can the most unfriendly criticism discover In that platform one principle' enunciated, or one duty avowed, for which Thurs day's Inaugural, with the just exceptions we have noted, does not renew the official pledge of their new President to his countryme.n. The platform, the candi date's letter of acceptance, and the Pres= ident's first Executive utterance are each and all the harmonious parts In one whole, and each so faithful to one com ' mon end that either might stand as to day's:expression of the other. " We have had no solicitude for the poll ical consistency of_ President GRANT. We have not awaited his Inaugural Ad. dress to learn where he stands to-day, and for the coming years. We do not read, in his first Executive Communication ,to his countrymen, any new exposition of the best national policy at home or abroad. We do not read the history of the President's future in the light of his 4/augural words, but we do read those words in the light of his own and the nation's past—in the ligl4 of a personal reputation which no dishonor has ever yet sullied, and of a national experience in which all good fortune clusters around the immutable principles which Appotna tox vindicated, which the Chicago Con vention proclaimed and which President GRANT long, long ago, accepted for the guiding stars of his administration. And thus we read the, new. President's political and official horoscope. There is no mystery in such astrology. No cloud less night reveals more clearly to an un tutored eye the bright glory of Ursa Major and the changeless pole-star to which that constellation is ever true, than do these lights, of which we have spoken, guide the eyes of forty millions of his countrymen to.the inflexible principles and purposes of his Executive policy. The four years to come shall see every law-abiding man, within this Republic, the full vital of every man his neighbor; liberty under the law shall be the indis putable attribute of an universal citizen ship, for all men who have ,souls to save, and whom Heaven shall judge for their : lives accordingly; the Golden Rule, which every intelligence accepts as the safest of human guides, shall direct - the millions sp one man; the nation shall once more re-inaugurate the virtues, and revere the obligations, which alone can win for the individual the approbation of his own conscience, the esteem of his fel, low-men and the favor e l f Heaven; and the Republic shall attain a place yet higher among the nations, since it has twice conquered itself, overthrowing first its armed,traltors, and then—a yet harder work—purging out the wickedness of its own rulers We have an abiding faith that a glori- Ous apotheosis of Public Virtue and Prosperity awaits the people under the administration of this-President. Every art of peace will flourish, because peace itself is to be the keystone of the public policy. We shall have peace at home, and peace abroad. The peace which this man has so steadily invoked wean° sham, nor will it be so found. It will not he a peace which seeks foreign ware for a bare punctilio, or for any temptation of aggrandizement. It will be the peace, with God's grace, which passeth the un derstanding of the foolish or the unprin cipled, and which-shall smile upon the hearts of an honest people, and bless them in basket and store. With this peace, said our candidate last May, will come universal prosperity as its sequence. We know that this prosperity is all that our country needs. Could we have a more suspicions promise? g•EXTREtIE CONSTITUTIONAL MEASURES." The opposition 'merqberi in each branch of. the Indiana Legislature are able to defeat the present ratification of the XVth Amendment', by a simultaneous re.signitlon, thus leaving either House wahout the constitutional quorum of three-fifths. And this factious course has been resolved upon. The result will be that ratification by Indiana mast await the election of a new Legislature; in which the amendment'will be made an issue. Whatever doubts may have been hitherto entertained ad to its acceptance by the people of that State, the factious and disorganizing tactics now adopted by the orositlon leave no doubt what ever that they will find themselves in a stilt more decided minority. This Democratic "bolt" in' Indiana throws over the final ratification of the amendatory Artitle by the required ber l of. States until meat winter. Never theless, it is , desirable that eNery possible MARCH tf, 1869. State rteabanld..tarsecti2ed -for -it now. - If the opposition in other States think it safe or wise to adopt the Indiana tactics. the experiment upon the popular pa tience will prove to . them a losing one. As that party is consistent only in its con tradictions and its inexplicable blunders, we may expect to see the experiment tried elsewhere. An opposition journal before us speaks of this Indiana "bolt" as an , "extreme constitutional measure." There ,is noth ing constitutional in it, for it is a flagrant ylolation.of the highest duty vihidh the legislator assume by his Constitutional oath; it is a violent interpolation of parti zanship, to block the constitutional func tions of the law-making power; , it is a revolutionary defiance of the popular authority entrusted to legislators for their exercise, according to their discretion, with an ultimate popular responsibility, and it substitutes the decree of a party caucus for the letter and spirit of the fun das;tental law. These "extreme consti tutional measures" never yet did any good in the long run, and never will. Yet we rejoice that it cannot be resorted to in this Commonwealth,,for. as a bare majority in each House constitute a cclit a constitutional quorum, if all the Demo crats should resign, the Houses, would still be able to act. DESERVED RECOGNITION. The members of the great and powerful Independent Order of Odd Fellows will celebrate on the 26th proximo, in Phila delphia, the semi•centennial anniversary of the establishment of their society on this continent. The occasion promises to prove one of the most interesting con nected with the history of Odd Fellovr ship in America, and will attract dele gates and visitors not only from all parts Of our country but from foreign lands. The principal feature of the exercises will be a grand civic procession in which some twenty full divisions of the order will participate, forming the most impo sing demonstration of Peace ever wit nessed?in the City of Brotherly Love. General T. A. ROWLEY, United States Marshal for Western Pennsylvania, Grand Marshal of the State Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows, has been very wisely chosen Chief-Marshal, and under his superior management, and direction the parade cannot fail •to be orderly and precise, and creditable to the noble order under whose auspices it will be held. The high honor thus conferred on one of our justly estemed andpliant fellow citizens is fully appreciated rin this community, and indeed, throughout the entire commonwealth, for no gentleman is more universally known and respected. His universal courtesy, generosity of heart, and high-toned, honorable nature render him as Conspicuous in civil as he was in military life, and the present honor conferred upon him could not have been more worthily bestowed or, more generally seconded by the public at large. General ROWLEY has designated Hon. JARES L. Giteneid, State Senator, and General B. BIDDLE ROBERTS as his as sistants, appaintnients which must afford , 'unqualified satisfaction to all interested. DEATH OF HON. CHAS. SHALES. Hon. CITART SHALEN for nearly half a century a resident of this city, and dur ing most of that period a member in high standing of the legal fraternity of Alle gheny county, departed this life yester day at Newark, New Jersey. The de ceased filled several important trusts dur ing his lifetime, among them Judge of the Allegheny county District Court, Judge of the Court of Common Pless, and United States Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania. He was senior partner for a number of years with Enwris M. STANTON and Tu. thinsTLETTEU, EL 'legal combination of great strength and influence during its continuance. Sev eral years ago the deceased retired from the profession, and carried with him into private life the respect of all the lawyers in this section, as well as that of the general community. He was a member of - the Trinity Episco pal Church and was a high-toned, hon orable and conscientious Christian gentle man who has left behind him a record of many good deeds performed in the name of his Master. He had attained the ripe old age of four-score years, and possessed the vigor of his intellect up to the day of his soul's' departure. 'His remains will arrive in this city to-day for interment in the Allegheny Cemetery, and will doubt less be followed to,their last resting plias by the , many friends and admirers who will be painedi to receive the announce ment of his passing away from life to eternity. PENNSYLVANIA OIL REGIONS. From the =allay reTtort of the Titus ville Herald, We learn that there were nine thousand 'seven hundred and sixty tive barrels of oil . produced in the Penn sylvania oil regions daily during February —a decrease of four hundred and thirty barrels in comparlhon with the 'previous month. The wells at Pleasantville showed a lame, decrease at the close of the, month, and some ten or fifteen had ceased to produce in- paying quantities. The average daily production reached one' thousand eight - hundred barrels, or three hundred and fifty barrels less than that of each day in• january. On Church twit and in the vicinity of Titusville, the average daily product for the month was -four hundred and eighty barrels. in the Allegheny river district - between Fiank lin and Brady's Bend the daily produe , Lion reached an average for the month of emit - six hundred and - seventy barrels— a slight increase from .January, The total number of wells !completed during the month was sixty-four, and of this number all bukfour, or one-sixteenth, produced in 'paying quantities. The average yield was smaller, however, than that of all the wells struck in the previous month, and if the price had been fifty per cent. lower not over three-fourths of the wells tested would have been considered successful. Of the number of wells completed, thirty-five were located in the Pleasant ville district, twenty-five along Oil creek, on Upper and LoWer Cherry reins, and five on the farms along the Allegheny river. In the extreme north-eastern part of the Pleasantville district, several new wells were commenced and operationg were begun on about fifteen others, but in the southern and central parts of the district the demand for leases fell off con siderably, and but very few wells were commenced. On the let inst. three hun dred and thirty-four wells were being bored in this region, four only of which are located outside the. Pleasantville dis trict. On Cherrytree run, near Petrole um Centre, several farms have• been leased, and preparations•are being made to sink about twenty wells during the next three or four months. On Cherry run and vicinity severalleases were taken during the month, and the demand for territory was good. The stock held in the regions was' on the first inst., two hund red and eigty two thousand four hundred and fifty bar rels; which included that held at the wells, about eighty thousand barrels. It is eontadently expected that in the Spring, new life will be given the trade. and that sections hitherto neglected, but which are known to be rich in oil depos its, will be thoroughly tested. From the figures presented' above, it does not seem apparent that the Pennsylvania oil re gions are becoming exhausted, but to the contrary, continue to hold place as the leading oil producing territory 'of the continent.' WE DON'T reprint what DOE PLATT' says about GRANT'S reception when he visited the lobby of the House, the other day, because we believe his statement, you know, but because we have some Democratic readers who will. Says D. P.: When Grant came out I was struck with the manner in which the crowd fell to the right and left, looking earnestly in the General's face, and. covering their own with an expression of profound res pect, 'almost amounting to abject humil iation. Ashley alone, with his huge per son, ' broad face and curling locks, seemed easy, comfortable and self-sus. tained. His amiable face wreathed with smiles, and he seemed to regard Grant very much as a huge turkey gobbler looks down on a bantam game cook of thepoultry-yard, as •if saying: "Well, yes, very good for a little game cock— very good, indeed, but then he isn't a turkey gobbler, you know." I must say 1 , prefer Gobbler Ashley's patronizing to the forlorn snobbishness of the abject respect. I took comfort in fact that my compatriots did it awk wardly. It is not natural. and differs widely fro?n the way courtiers move about Queen Victoria or Lopis Napoleon. There is a finished ease about the last named worshippers that covers up and makes agreeable their toadyism. But our American says, through his manner. "I know that I am. nisiking , an ass of my self, but I have' o do it. Amusements. OPERA. HOllBL—Lotta, the most be witching and charming actress in the profession, in fact the pet of the Amert. can stage, was the recipient of a benefit at the Opera 'House last evening. The , house was crowded with a select and highly fashionable audience; and the en tertainment was highly pleasing and en joyable. The bill presented was a most excellent one, as It gave full scope to the versatility and originality of the viva cious little creature. ' , Capt. Charlotte," "Pocahontas" and "Family Jars" consti tuted the programme. The same bill l i will be presented this evening, and for matinee this afternoon "Capt. Charlotte" and "Nan." To-night, we regret to say, closes LOtta's engagement in this city. PITTSBUItGII THEATRE.—Dr. Thayer's engagement at the Pittsburgh Theatre closes to-night., This announcement we know will be received with regret by the Doctor's many friends in this city as well as all lovers of equestrian exhibi tions. as Dr. Thayer's company, is one of the finest ever assembled in this city. The last matinee for the benefit of ladies and children will be given this afternoon and.the farewell entertainment this even. ing. The house will' of course be crowded. . 12airr88'a Ameximarr Tirearnr..—The many brilliant attractions at the Ameri can has had a tendency to draw amuse ment goers toward that establishment this week to such an extent as to fill the house every night. The Victorellis con tinue to amuse the audience with their wonderful feats on the horizodtatbar. LAFAYETTE lismt..—Bob Brettle, the celebrated pugilist end ex-ohampion of England, arrived in this city a few days since, and will give a pugilistic enter tainment at lAillyette Hall this evening. He will be assisted brpten Hogan, Hen ry Harley, Patsy Crowin, and a host of other celebrities. The principal feature of the evening will he a set:to between Bi ettle and Ben Hogan.' The champion belt of the middle weights, which Bob Brettle holds, will be on exhibition at the hall during evening. ACADEMY OF Dirsic.—As we have at. ready announced. ?DPI Susan OPltolea troupe will favor us with three evenings of °Omit, English opera at the Academy of Music during the present week, com mencing Monday night, when isLitchen and Fretzohen "•the "Bonnie Fish Wife" and ' , La Rose 'de Bt. Flor" will be pre sented. The . Eastern paPers, with one accord, speak in the , highest and most complimentary terms of this company. YANAuscrtzst the great German artist, will occupy the stage at the Academy vf Mimic Thursday; Friday and Saturday , evenings of next week. The great his- torical play or Elizabeth will be presented on Thursday evening. TURNER% HALL.—The Junior Turner Association announce a grand entertain. merit at . Turner gall, Sixth avenue, this evening; -consisting of tableaux and a high gradeof gymnastic exercises. ~.- The Lecture by lidra. Swisehe . • - EDITORS OP GAZETTE : Your seders are pretty familiar with the Sash f Mrs. , Swistihelm's Damascus blade of ng and sarcasm, and the keen thrust with ,t i tr which she is wont to meet an op nent: and those of them who were pre ent at. Dr. Clark's Church, on Thursda I even ing, must have been surprised at her al tered tone—altered, and certainl for the better. She spoke for over an ho , and there was no root of bitterness, word that carried a wound . We hope t e lady, will believe us when we say at her milder mood is the stronger, that her de ductions from history, her arguments,' humor, and pathos, are her strongholds. She had manuscript. .but appeared to • speak extempore, gave a short-running history of her political experience, which' isptranger than fiction, and moved the , audience to tears by a brief allusion- to her hospital life. Her. arguments on universal suffrage are the strongest we have heard, and would be hard to an swer. We join with,you in the wish that the lecture may be repeated in this city. ERMINA. Markets by 'Telegraph. NEW ORLEANS. March s:—Cotton; re= eelPts to-day 3,839 bales; for the week 16,937; exports to-day none; for the week —to Liverpool. 3,898; to Continent 1,751; to Vera Cruk 356; coastwise 2,830; stock 155,347; sales today 6,100- for the week 16,500: prices advanced . 4*e-fourth cent; middlings 28;(,®28c.: Gold 131 U. Exchange--Sterling 143 y; Commercial 1413;®142%; New York * Sight ,6 pre mium. Sugar too unsettled for quota tions. Molaesek lower; prime 72c. Flour; superfine $6,37; double extra $7; treble extra $7,37. Corn firm at 79®80c. Oats firm at 80c. Bran firm at $1,15. Hay easier, with prime at $29,50 ®30,00. Pork dull and lower at /32,50. Bacon dull and lower; shoulders .1434 c; clear rib 1714 c; clear sides 1734 c. Lard firm, with tierce at 19®aie; and keg 2110g220. Vlhiskyr tlull with western rectified at 9234,ca11. Coffee quiet at 173 ®18%c• for prime, and fair 15 3 ; ®l6c. BUFFALO, March s.—Flour dull and unchanged. Wheat neglected: 'New corn scarce; sales at 79;4@80c to arrive, on track. Oats dull and unchanged. Rye neglected. Barley nominal t at 82,08 ®2;10. Seeds steady. Clover slow of sale. Pork, lard and IdghwineS nominal and unchanged. NAsHvILLE, March s.4—Cotton dull and drooping; low middling 25c; good ordi ary 25c. A MALARMWS MONTH. March, that gives us a new President. Le also the inaugural month of many harrassing disor ders. Entangled in its fogs are the seeds of coughs, colds and of that alteration of frikiditY and Pre. more widely known Mtn admind. called lever and ague. The only way to .avold these "little unnleasant.fesses." is to render the sys tem strong enough - to light off the at mosphetic poison that produces them. and the best way to end... , It with .this repellant pqwer Is to tone it with If , nTETTEft'S STOMACH BITTERS. If a wayfarer were credibly informed that a ruffian was waiting at the next corner, be would doubt'ess turn in his tracks. and take a safer route to his destination. With Just about the same amount of troti..le, the attacks of diseases prevalent at this season may oe evaded, Nat, the trouble will - be less. for drug stores Ile in every one's route. and every respectable &ug ly gist in the Union keeps on hand HOSTETTE article rm. ! BITTERS The ion staple . 0 rade, and it would be as easy to dud a g without sugar, as the storeof an apothecary W ithout this popular tonic remedy. . . In view of the experience of the ation, with regard to the article, during the space of twenty years, it seems almost unnecessary to recapitu late Its roerits r. Amerleas. But as our popula tion is increasin g at the rate of a couple of mil lions In a year, in the natural way and by immi gration, 'it may be as well to hint - to the rising generation and new arrivals (the old settlers know all about it,) that HOSTETTER'S STOM ACH BITTERS Is the most wholesome and po tent vegetable tonic ever manufactured, that it is & specific fur decant's. eyspepsia, biliousness, 'and miasmatic fevers, tha it p. events, as well SA cures, those complaints and their comPlles tionst that It is not "bad to take," and is abso lutely harmless. i • - ae:AFA ZTi 1 0 04 PUBLIC LECTURE at the NEW. JERUSALEM CRURCll,_coraer of Wood and Six th etreets.ou ST I NDaIf EVENING. I February A Bth. Subject—MAN AFTER SHY FLOOD, orßErx., HAIL -17.:D JAPHETII. THE FIUST METHODIST CHDRCH, (Railroad rtreet, _near Depot,) Nrwßraaniox, Pa: P. F. CROWTHER.Paator. Preaching EVERY SASSATII. at 3.0.3 i A.SL. and i! 7P. in. Public cordially Invited. CHRIST: PROTESTANT EPISCUrAL cHur.ca,ALLEOHICNY. —Bxv. MEN,feasiN F. BROOKE, of Memphis; will presets in this Chur ch ; on TO-MUMPOW. Hoar., (Sunday). lU sWeloch A. 31. and 71i o'clock.r. Y. IarFIST ENGLISH EVAN OELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Sev enth street—Rev. SAMUEL - LAIRD, Pastor. Services To-xonnow (Sunday.) and relimiarly hereafter, at /OS A. M. and org i. Y. Sunday . School at 9 A. N. lar THE FIRST METHODIST CHURCH, FIFTH AVENUS, between Sudthaeld and Grant streets; ALEX. CLAIEK„ Pastor. PreaChlng_ViltßT SA BATH, at 10.39 A. N. and 7.30 r. N. Free seats and welcome to all. Sunday School at 9A. al. and 1.45 P. N. IarTIRST CHRISTIAN • OB.IIRCH OF PITTSIIIIIIGII,_ , W. 8. Gray, Pastor, meets statedly In NEViLLF. HALL, corner of Liberty and Fourth streeui. Services every Lord's Day at 103 G A. st. and 7) P. x. The public are cordially Invited. , iIgr'UNIVERSALIST CHURCH. DoIMES OP BRANT' AND THIRD STREETS.—Pastor W V. VAN Da HAUR. Preaching EVERY SUNDAY at'lO)(LA. it. and r. x. Subject In the Morning --••The Voices O! the Dead. ,, Beata tree and welcome to all. • • RELIGIOIII4--,F.irst Chrb- TIAN CIEIDEOti, turner Beaver street and 'Montgomery avenue, - Allegheny City, di). %EMI KING. Pastor. Public worship TO.AIOR ROW. (Lord , . Day.l at lO3in the YORNING and T)f, in the 'Eves LNG). Free dests. and *cordial Invitation given to all. Itgr'MESSIAH ENGLISH EVA.N. LUTHERAN CHIIRCH,(Geo eraI SynodaHand Street . below Penn. Rev. J.H. W. STIICEENHEItII. Pastor. Religious servi ces, regularly on SABBATH hereafter. Sunday School 9A. N. Preaching at 10,4 Yw. and TM P. X. Prayer Meeting and Lecture Wednes day evenings. Friends of the congregation and public are cordially Invited. ,OFFICR OP CITY ENCIININIt AND Slturgyom, • Pittsburgh. March Sith. 18439. WNOTIIIE.—The assessment !Cr Grading.Paving f and Curbing TWEN TIETH STRED.Taate Carson street, from Mul berry alit,' to the Allegheny Valley Railroad. is now ready, for examination. and can be seen at - tab office rmtil WEDNESU&Y. March Utah 188p, - when It will be returned to the OltyTrsaa uteri office for collection. • • st. noose. Engineer. ! I GRAND-CALA DAY! AFTERNOON & Htwdle Race at 4 P. M. SKATING CONTEST Betwe , r, cerebrated STAR SKATERS in the EVENING; commencing at S. \ ' __Exciting f ORDLE RACE at 9:30. 'hide-splitting NOVICE ACT by Prot. MAT., McDONALD.Champion Skater of Penneytyanta." SPLENDID 311:11IC. VELOCIPEDE PERFORMANCES, and ti o th er. attractions toonmenots to mention. . GO TO-NIGHT, witbout fall. midi 2c)iSSOLVT/ONer-OThe CO-111111— - MERSHIP heretofore existing between WIS and JOHN ILLSESSOR, to twrobo- die solved by mutual content. WM. B. QUARTZ is authorised to colteet the bills due and settle the busintit s of the lirm • • ' LIWIS ICLSRisSoIC, . • - JOIIN ZLSICSSOR. AttaCtuar - r CITY. March 1. mhZ:fEa CIORN AND PEA NUTS. N./ CM bsgs Own; - 315 bags Pea Istits; • On 'tamer Lenellen, to arrive. For sale by tntitt DIOKET & VO, •!.. -T.