4. tigilittslift;go ftap4s., PUBLIMIED BALM BY PENNRIAN, MD.* CO , 4 Proprietors. 7. B. PENNIMAN. JOSIAH KING. T. P. HOUSTON. N. P. BLEED, If.dlteta and Proprietors: OFFICE: • ETTE BUILDIND, NOS, 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST Ii OFFICIAL PALER or _ I PlttrDn 11. Allegheny and Ally / ihany Vacuity. • Sermy—Dany. !demi- Weekly. Width,. One yea...sB,oolone year.s2.so dingle dopy ..$1.60 One month 75, Six moe.. 1.50 5 eoples,eleh 1.25 !,r the week 15:Three ma 7610 • 1.15 wont carrier.) I • end one to Agent. WEDNESIAY. MARCH 10. 1869. Wit =Neon the in4le pages of this morning's GAZETTE —:ifikeand Page . : Ephemeris, Tragedy at Quebec, The-March Modes.' Third and Siztli page, : Cons eureka, /financial, Markets, Imports, ! PAW 2r4Ele. &tenth page : To Canada and . Back, Miscellany, ~Amusement Di reetory. - 11. S. BONDS at Frankfort, 871 PETROLEUM at Antwerp, 57f f. GOLD closed in New York yesterday at 131 i. THE House of Representatives a Washington adjourned over to Friday. IT Tnitismnss that at least two Cabi net appointments were declined, the In tenor, by Mr. Borrrwraa., and the T 'rens :Dry by Mr. G. H. Smarr. • CbtranutinerTerts, smugglers, and whis ky swindlers, and other men who live and gehrich by' robbing' either the Gov ernment or the people, comprehend that• the present occupant of the White House Is not their friend. THE House hes passed a. bill repealing the Office Tenure Law. Only sixteen members in All .voted against the repeal. This May be taken as an indication of the degree of confidence on. Ike part of the body in President GRANT. NEW Heimannut elected State officers, Legislature and three Congressmen yes terday.` The Republican candidates were, for- Governor, OrisLow STEARN; and for Congress J. H. ELA, A. P. SrEv zza and JACOB BEnzoN, all of whom were in the last Congress. GRANT'S plurality, last Autumn, was 6,967. Tan joint-resolution, granting right of way to the Memphis, El Paso -& Pacific _Railway Company did not pass the Sen-, sae. The only measure of any character; conferring any part of the public domain upon a railway company, which passed late in the session, was the land-grant to the road from Cheyenne to Denver. THE variety and public importance of the business which awaits the action 'of Congress, leave little doubt that the pres ent session must continue to the end of April at• least. The Standing 'Commit tees are now settled in each House, and members are ready fqr business. The country hopes that this will be taken up at once, and completed with all possible dispatch. PRNSIDENT LINCOLN took sll his rivals for the. Presidential nomination into his Cabinet, and thus made it the focus of all intrigues for the succession. But for the pressure created by the Rebellion, it would have gone to pieces in six months .from inherent repulsions. Presideßt GRANT wisely avoided that mistake by selecting Cabinet ofßcers fiom an entirely different class of people. Tan XVvu Anmax has been ratified by, several States, in advance of any official notification, from the State. De partment, of its adoption by Congress. But this does not impair the validity of' each ratification. It is only necessary , that the Article ratified should be identi, ally. the same. State action thereon thirty minutes afterward, in any part of the Republic, fills all the legal conditions. As soon as the Cabinet shall be filled, the representation of the Republic abroad will be a leading . subject for attention The other. JOHNSON, now in England, , will be-mustered out, and Messrs. WAtm and Hanvrir will be dismissed from Atus- trio and Portugal. And so of the leading Consulships, of which those at Paris, London, Liverpool, Haim and Havana are considered quite eqtutt to some of the missions in official importance. A DISPATCH to , the St. Louis .Republi. 'can says, that "The Army order restor ing to the southern commands the officers removed rby .Toeusson, causes a painful impression, and that 6f sending Bram p.m back to New Orlmis, it is contend- exi f Only arouse a bitter feeling among people who despise him." We hav'nt a bit of doubt that the feeling may`be pain fhl and bitter;.would our sympathies leviate the misery of them afflicted rebels? ,Porrs will see a very clear Blobs lion of the Pieeldent'i ideas, totteldng the responsibility .;of corporations already , aubsidiz,ed by the government, in the de cisive promptitude with which, on Battu.- urchly, within two days after entering „office, lurremoved, with' but one map tiol2-, the entire body of Government Diree#ns of 'the Union Pacific road. Thitris pretty good proof that he finds something rotten in that Numeric,' especially since the only Director re- tained was Mr. J. S. Witzulcs, of lowa, whose clear and exhaustive statements, some. months since, impeaching the management of that corporation for ill faith to the Treasury, have never been fairly refuted. It .is gratifying to the country not only to believe that the sub sidizing policy has been entirely laid aside, but that existing engagements are to be scrupulously enforced, in the inter ests of the Treasury. Mn. A.. T. STEWART has relieved the 'President and Senate from embarrass ment by declining the office of Secretary of the Treasury. He felt that he could not throw up his business as an importer, ..and that it would be a bad precedent to set aside a good law, of general applica tion, in favor of any Individual. In this he has shown much better sense than some journalists, fortunately but few and insignificant, who, in an excess of flunky ism, have sneered at the law as a musty and senseless relic of antiquity. The law that an importer shall ..not, preside over, the. Treasury, or otherwise be concerned in administering its affairs, is just as sound as those other laws which prohibit men from sitting as judge or juror on cases in which they are interested. Nor is the law in question obsolete. Every man who has held office . in the Treasury, down to this hour, has made oath, in con formity to the law, thatOe was not an importer. PARTIES AND CLIQUES. There never was a nation, poslessing even a low degree of ;civilization, that was not governed by political parties. There is no nation on the face of, the earth to-day, but is controlled in that man ner. In all the future there will not exist a nation that will be free from the power and dominion of parties. 'ln' the very nature of the case, it must be so. So long as individuals shall not be organized alike; while some of them 'are constitu tionally conservative, and others consti tutionally radical, th4re must and will be two parties or forces arrayed in opposi tion to each other. This condition of things must last as long as human nature remains what it is. Under the most imperial monarchy, as really as , under the most liberal democra- . cy, there is no difference in this essential fact. What difference exists consists only in forms of organization and modes of expression. No man of. sense doubts but beneath the enforced quiet prevailing on the surface of French society there are political parties arrayed against each 'Other, and mutually .struggling for the mas tery as best they can under the rigid laws of the empire, and.with the liability that their, action - upon each other may result, on any day, in one of those fierce , erup tions known as a revolution, in which one dynasty is _overthrown and another set up, or reptiblican rule substitued for monarchic. With varying degrees of difference, it is so the:world arouticl. There have been periods during which, in most ;countries, the conservative ele ments have preponderated; in which poppies have been sown upon the, life of nations to such an extent as to stnpify all aspirations for higher development, if not to sink the populations down su pinely into a hopeless inertia. Then, again, there have been eras, like the pres ent, in which a strong tendency to radi calism is manifested; where manes of men earnestly challenge all ideas and in stitutions Itkat stand by prescription, de manding to4cnow whence they came, by virtue of which right they claim to re main, and to what salutary ends they contribute. Each of these epochs has its perils. there ir stag nation y and death; Ages of radical undue ferment, ending in most unwholesome excesses.. But this must - be remembered, that high degrees of agitation are always safer • than those apathetic conditions which result in putrefaction. Storms . d tempests, in the natural world; are equently appalling. It would be much orse to have none of them. As nations are divided intd, and gov erned by, parties, in like manner are parties formed into cliques and 'guided .by them. The rule is without exception. It is universal. In each State of the Union both the Republican Ind Demo cratio parties are divided into cliques. In each County of each State the same ar rangement is found; and in, each town ship of each county.. So absolute is this subdivision that when two sets of candi dates are put up for delegates to a Comi ty Convention of either party, all politi cians who are familiar, with the locality can tell to which cliques the candidates respectively belong, and which will prob ably be chosen. . • e submit these suggestions to 'show how ninate.and powerful political organ izatinrua are; : no( to condemn. Nor is this condition of affairs peculiar to poli ties. I In finance, in manufactures, in commerce, in medicine, in theology, in all departments of mental or physical ac tivity, there are as many parties and cliques as in the'realm of politics. This happens in obedience to irresistible natu ral laws. Nor are parties and cliques Outside. of politics any worse or better thin parties and cliques inside 'thereof. There are, indeed:lndividuals here and there, who care comparati*ely- little about politics.' Their public , spirit and their , selfishness—one or bOth—run in other directions. Some men are only for K,`!"-' 7 lrlP.' - `qIWL I - 2., rkrl ,3 44 .~~. Y7c PITTSBURGH GAZETTE :. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1869: 'themselves and families. They will - patronize politics or religion, provided they can gain some selfish end through either,. but not otherwise. Others find agreeable substitutes for political parties and cliques, in finan cial clans in the stock, oil and other markets, or in eccle siastical controversies and antagonisms. But almost everybody belongs not only to a party Of some sort, bat to a clique within that party. ,• In view of these facts, the demand of the Commercial that President GRANT shall not appoint to office any man who belongs to a clique, deserves considera tion. Who, then, shall he appoint ? Shall he take men who have never feltin terest enough in political on-goings to form ideas and prepossessions sufficiently definite and controlling to constrain them into exact and active associations? That would be to put under the ban all the men who impart vitality .to the Republi can party. Is our contemporary anxious to have its own rule applied to itself? and to all who, in the main, act in con. cert with it ? We give neither it nor them credit for so much self-abnegation; if that sort of thing can be accounted creditable in any sense. The Commercial has done more labOr, intended to embitter and intensify the war of factions in the Republican party of this Commonwealth, than all the other Republican journals of this city. 'lt .tkas never let an oppoitunity pass to hit lead ers of the faction to which it is opposed as hard blows as it could. "Even within the last few days or weeks it has ben en gaged in this business; and, doubtless, with the full concurrence of its own fac tion, and this, too, while all the other Re publiesnlournals of the ,city, were careful. ly keeping the pence within the party. Ref erence is iiot here made to the pastes and folder case Does the Commercial mean to be count ed out, and upon its own motion? And to insist that all of its set shall follow it into self-ordained excluslon?; Thenublic will be satitied it so means' when it is found heroically resisting xempting offers of preferment p-'Now, it would be folly to maintain that any man became entitled to office solely by reason of services rendered to • a faction or party. ' No man ought to be put into a position unless he is honest and capable. The people—whieh in cludes all factions and parties—ought to be well. served. 'But, after that point is fully provided for, Re insist that each party ought to promote thole men. who are most In harmony with it, and who contribute 'most to its success. No genii- Lue party man will own any other rule. There are two factions in, the Republi can party of Pennsylvania. So there are in every other State. Who carried Penn sylvania for G o laarr and CoLrax ? The men who are outside the two factions ? No, indeed. Both factions were in the contest, and each contributed potentially to the final result. If either faction had dropped out of the canvass, thoiltepubli cans would have been badly beaten. We shall need both factions next October, as much as we needed them last autumn. It is easy for leaders in •one faction to denounce everybody else' as !hedonists, and ort that ground to demand that they shall be set aside. But such conduct is simply impertinent. It proceeds from a desire to monopolize. The men who fur nil& the brains, do the work, or sap• ply the money to run a party, are the men whom the party should recognize and reward, subject Only to the condi tions that they combine the requisite de- grees of ability with undoubted integrity. Mr. STEWART'S OFFER. The Bth Section of the Act of 1789, or ganizing the Treasury Department, reads as follows : "Szariou 8. Be a enacted. That no 'persons appointed to any office instituted by this act, shall dipactly or indirectly be concerned or interested in carrying on the business of trade or commerce, or be owner in %hole or in part of any sea ves sel. or purchase by himself, or another in trust for him,: any public- lands or other public property, or be concerned in the purchase or , disposal of any public securities of any State, or of the United States, or take or apply to his own use, any emolument or gain for negotia ting or transacting any business in the said departmentinther than what shall be allowed by law; and if any person shall offend against any of the prohibi tions of this act, he shall be deemed guilty of high misdemeanor, and forfeit to the. United States the penalty df three thousand dollars, and shall, upon eon viotion, be removed from office, and ;for- - ever thereafter be incapable f holding any office under the United Stites; Pro vided that if any ether person 'than a public prosecutor shall give information of any such offense, upon which a prose cution and conviction shall be had, one half of the aforesaid. penalty of three thousand dollars, when recovered,. shall be for the use of the person giving such information." From the passage of this act up to this time every man who has taken office in the Treasury Department has been made to swear that he was not an importer of goods. It is noiv known that in 1860, President LINCOLN offered Mr. Montial4, of New York, the Secretaryship' of the Treasury, and that he declined it because he could not honestly take . the oath. Mr. STEWANT, to EMIJI3fY the law, of- fered to put his bubiness into the hands of trustees, his share of the profits to be dis• tributed to benevolent objects, so long as he should be Secretary. Clearly this would not be a compliance with the law, but a transparent attempt to evade it. The offer furnishes •a measure of. Mr. -STEW ART'S anxiety to hold the place; but such a distribAtion of profits as he proposes would not•eatlsfy the people. The law is 'a good one, and no reason can be pro duced why it should be abrogate& Much more difficult is it •to show that because of .„ • L_,_~~"~Y~.*'a"y'~ia`'"~•_"~Y,~,k~'c~Y~"_wj,S~tu,.N Mr. STEWART'I3,WeaIth and eininencean exception should be made in his favor. If a law should bind and! conclude poor and obscure men, It should maintain its hold upon those who are itch and promi nent. If Mr. STEWART iihonl4 divest himself of interest, as he proposes, in the profits of his business, he would'nevertheless be concerned to have affair so cohducted that his capital would be unimpaired, and upon the expirationiof his term' of public service, -OW. he would find his traffic maintained - At least , 'at its present proportions, if not still fart her expanded. This we account a direct interest in the business. If anybody should decide that this interest is; not direct, they can hardlygo farther and say it is not an in 'direct one. Mr. STEWART was selected by_ Presi dent GRANT because of hi 4 demonstrated capacity to manage a multitude of details, and so order complicated 'affairs as to en sure success. These are prime requisites in the head of the Treasury. Some men of genius, whose orations will serve _as models for all time, haveibeen so igno rant of practical affairs as :to find difficul ty in keeping out of the lists of paupers. Such men have their uses, but clearly not in managing public finarices. In that department, a man like Mr. STEWART is worth a legion of them. % The Democrats are building on the dis cussion of this case,. large hnpes of a schism in the Republican 'Tarty. They are destined 0) disappointment. The President and Senate alike overlooked the law cited above. sow, buth manifest a disposition to stand by th&•law. There is, and can be, no quarrel between the President and , Senate toucliing this mat ter. CHICAGO AND THE XVT II ARTICLE. The Republicans, atThicago, recog nized the abAute control of the suffrage question by the States, under the existing provisions of the ConstitutiOn. But the entire tenor and effect of their platform was equivalent to a clear notice to all the world that an inflexible Principle was marching on, and that it !must. in due time, and by the proper modes, obliterate and leave behind it every arbitrary and indefensible barrier to its piogresa We paused before such an obstacle at Chicago; as long as it should stand, it preiented a situation which commaoja gnr obe dience, and this we plainly a. That obstacle is now to be removed by constitutionalmethods,, and in the most exact accordance with the strictest rights of the States to which the,question stands submitted. When their decision shall be given. It will mean that each State accepts; as it originally agreed to accept, the final arbitrament of , the constitutional three fourths of their number, touching the abro gation or amendment, in any particular,, of the common. compact. The .submis sion of the Nlith Amendment to the judg ment of three-fourths of the individual States is, in itself, the highest possible rec ognition of that State supremacy over the suffrage which the Chien° platform pro claimed. . 1 The question is with the !States; and each State, alone. When their constitu tional quorum pronounces on it, affirma tively or negatively, we shill abide by the Verdict, and we, expect all who up hold State rights to do likewise,.unless their "Inconsistency and stupidity" shall tempt them into a second rebellion. It was "stnpifl".in some of them not to perceive sooner the logical results of a true, living, radical Republicanism. It is "inconsistent" in them to 4ppose any constitutional exercise of State rights, upon any sham plea ivhatsoever. Their stupidity will 'be enlightened and their inconsistency made ridiculous by the certain event In the' meantime, this inconsistency and stupidity are pe culiar to a "Democracy" which never could see why rebellion, against a dis tasteful law, should not be prtiferred to a wesent submission with an orderly move ment for its speedy and constitutional re peal. Nor, on the other handi has it ever been the Republican habit to abjure any of the constitutional rightsl i either., of States or of citizens. That would be a stupidity which the oPposition monopo lizes. JUSTICE TO ALL What does the Dispatch mean by quot ing at the head of its c‘lumniyesterday, "Gold at New York, 12111" Unless these figures are to be interpreied in sorat) occult way, the Dispatch ther* greatly ',underrates this precious metal Probably We Editor wanted to buy a draft on - Ireland, expecting to base on the quotations in the Dispatch the amount to be paid. It won't work, Mr; Editor, as a the . Bankers look at the. Gm:Ernes quotations before selling or baying. —By the way, the same profound jour• nal heads its Harrisbism news in a face. tious manner thus: "PIUs passe&" Whose pills passed ? Brandreth's or ;Wilson's ? The punctilious, and would be tunny editor of that sheet should hOre enough physic in his 'own blunders to draw his attention from those of hie neighbor's. Washington _ President Grant on Saturday last re moved all the Union Pacific Railroad Commissioners, except Williams. Frank Blair and Snow, of the Intelliglncer, were among those removed, and exrCongress man Dodge, of lowa, is understood to be one of the new appointees. Senator Fowler being considered as no longer a member of the Republican party, the committee have agreed to recommend' that he be'asked to stay away!, in:lm the Republican caucuses in Mum` The chairmanship of his Committee on En rolled Bills has been given to another, "'~a =~'r~~y,~~ n :_gin. . czy,!o:~i~~:K. Y K y ~' --- and he is no longer recognized as a Re. publican Senator by his associates. Pennsylvania Republicans in the House have expressed themselves against any repeal or modification of the act of 1789 in order to let Mr. Stewart come into the Cabinet. If special exemptions are once made there will be no rule by which Con gress can hereafter beguided when simi lar applications come in as thick as peti tions are now coming-in from the South ern States. All of the bills which passed one House of Congress, but failed'in the other, hav ing fallen with the close of the former COngress, and also those which passed bOth branches, but did not receive the President's signature, will again be intro duced. Among.them are the bill to re peal the tenure of civil office act, Mr. • Schenck's bill to strengthen the public credit. the Indian appropriation bill, - the amendatory internal revenue bill, and the bill to redistribute the national currency, giving a larger share to the South and West. There were a number of Senators and members called on Saturday to pay their respects to Mr. Delabo. Among them were Judge Kelley and Mr. Townsend, of Pennsylvania, to whom Mr. Delano exhibited a blank form of a circular letter, which he will hereafter send to all Repub lican members when charges are made against any of the appointees in their re spective districts, or where there are ap pointments or removals to be made, as he desires to hold the' embers responsible for the officers in their districts, and there by relieve himself and the Secretary of the Treasury from much labor and trou ble. Donn Piatt writes: The other day Gen. Grant said to a Mr. Slade, of Ohio, I be lieve, that he would consider a nomina tion by Mr. Johnson in the last hours of his administration as positive evidence that th%nominee was unfit for the ' place; and if die 'Senate confirmed such nomina tion, he, Grant, would do all in his pow er to turn him out. This was known to the Senate, and yet, at midnight of the 3d; this body went into executive session, and I am told to-day, confirmed the en tirebatch of nominees. I am prepared to believe this. From what I saw last night I believe the Senate was In a con dition to do any folly or injustice. These night sessions ought to be pro hibited bylaw, and the liquor agiiin driv en from the Capitol. It is true, as telegraphed on Monday, that Mr. Stewart tendered his resignation to the President, but the manner in which it was done, instead of relieving Grant, only served to increase his embairass ment. Mr. Stewart is loth to give up the Treasury Department, and he has left the alternative of his retirement with the President. Instead of unconditionally retiring, he says to the President: "My resignation is in your hands. Yon can accept it if you desire; and yet I should like to retain the office." He does not iay: "I will relieve you from the compli cations which surround you. I wiltnot perform the dutiei of the office, and you must accept my withdrawal." This was. the state of the case Sunday night, and it is supposed that Stewart's slumbers were disturbed for fear the President would take him at his word and accept his res ignation. This was the opinion of many, an 4 re was good foundation for the ste nt that Boutwell would be his suc cess° . - A Acting on the advice of the President, Mr. Stewart consulted with Chief Justice Chase, Senators. Fessenden, Grimes, Trumbull, Prelinghuysen • and many other leading lawyers and statesmen in Washington, and it is 'understood their decision quite disheartens Mr: Stewart. They hold that he cannot assign, trans fer, dr dispose of the contingent profits of a business; and inquire what is to become of the losses and what will be done if there are no profits. They also ask Mr. Stewart if he would 'not still be in the business of an importer ' even though he gave the profits of that business to the public charities. The result may easily be seen. Congress, it is very sure, will not repeal the law. He is also convinc ed, though not satisfied, that in order to get out of business he must get out of it. Therefore it is presumed that the Presi dent will be forced to accept his resigna tion, whether Mr. Stewart would prefer to remain in the office or not. Even Attorney General Evarte did not know of the existence of the. law which makes Mr. Stewart ineligible. When the question was sprung, Mr. Everts de clared to an ex-member of Congress that there was no such law, and nothing is the way of Mr. Stewart taking the office. There are several acts bearing on the subject. The original Treasury act of 1789, from which the section is quoted, was framed by Alexander' Hamilton;and had special reference to his own occu pancy of the position and the force of, the restriction is universally conceded. The act of 1791 extended the restriction to clerks, and the act of 1795 partially.re moved the prohibition of clerks and other officers, but the act of March 2, 1799, extended the prohibition to all offi cers 'of the Treasury, so as to include Custom-house officers, Inspectors, :Ike- The act of Feb. 26, 1853, provided an ad ditional guard on this subject by prohib iting any officer of the Treasury or other Executive Department from acting as agent or attorney, or prosecuting as prin cipal any claim upon the Government. So little was known of the act in ques tlon by that eminent legal body, the Sen ate, that no, allusion whatever was made to it when his name was sent in, and no one even hinted that against him there was the slightest taint of ineligibility. The question as to what will be done with the request of the President has been almost the sole topic 'of discussion in all circles. It does not seem posidble that any moffification of the act tan pass the Senate, without very 'warm discussion, involving the whole question of Stewart's fitness and business. • The sentiment of the Republican members of the House seems to be decidedly against any change in the act. Mr. Stewart's status in this matter is just this: If the modification of the act cannot be made without a contest graceffilly, and with a degree of tmani: mity, he will himself quickly relieve the whole subject of all embarrassment by declining the position. It is reported that a delogation - of importers and merchants from New York will use - their influence against Ide Stewart. • • A later statement is that Mr. Stewart, after the fullest consultation with. the President and the principal officers of the government, including Senators and Rep resentatives, has prepared`a letter of nu conditional resignation of the' office of Secretary of the Treasury, and ;has also by the ald of counsel drawn articles of agreement in accordance with his pre vious propositions to the President, and will submit the same to General Grant for his acceptance of either. It is well understood among the Mends - • t 4 z,s~: { MEN of the Administration that the present" Cabinet is going to pieces at an early. day. Gen-Schofieldintends to return to the army, and Gen. Cox is to be trans ferred from the Interior to the War De partment. The Northwest is to step tato the Interior Department in the person of • James F. Wilson, of lowa Washburne has not decided to stay in the State De partment, and will probably resign. This may give the President an opportunity teh silence the expressions of discontent and disappointment that run in the press and • among the people, without regard to party, over the existing Cabinet. The fact has been made known, with • the consent of President Grant; that both Governor Boutwell and Mr: Wilson, of lowa, were offered Cabinet positions and declined them. Mr. Wilson was strong ly urged. by Geheral Grant to accept a place, and he was given choice of three. General Grant spoke of Mr. Wilson in the warmest terms, and declared that from the first he had him; in view for a Cabinet position. OPERA FlonsE.—Thare was a remark- ' ably. large audience at the Opera House last night, notwitlustanding the rain. "Ambition" ass presented. The cast was an excellent one, and the piece was admirably rendered. Mr. Proctor is a fine reader, and is a very pleasingactor.. Miss Dargon'srendition of , "Catharine Howard" was unexception able. She is a remarkably fine reader, is evidently a close student, and is rapid ly rising in her profession. To-night "Macbeth" will be presented. • ,A.eADEntv of Music.—The Susan Gal ten Tonic English Opera troupe , ap peared last night before what may be termed a respectable audience, but one deficient in point of fashion and num bers. The parquette and dress-circle were respectably well filled, but the re mainder of - the house was unoccupied." The entertainment , furnished was, from one view, first class, and another far beneath the ordinary merit of operatic pgrformances. Judging the troupe by , fts leader, Miss Susan tialton, we must • • award it high place in the ranks of su perior vocalism; but stripping it of the 'presence of that, prima donna, we have nothing left bit ' a combination of or dinary singers, 'whose beat execu tions fell far short of those put forward by our home amateurs. Miss Susan Galton as a finished and high ly cultured artist is without many supe riors in this country; as an actress she rivals most of the stars now gracing the upper walks of theatrical life; but she is surrounded by a troupe which can lay claim to nothing higher than moderate musical ability. We would willingly pay three prices for admittance to hear. , Miss Susan Galion interpret the music of the masters, if we could at the same time shut our eyes and ears to the other; common-place offerings of the troupe,' which, considered in the most lenient and favorable light, is a dead failure. We think that the city of Pittsburgh was deemed a provincial town by the managers, and, consequeurly, but one half of the troupe was 'sent hither to please and edify our people. This was a grand mistake, as our community, Re cording to- the judgment of Kellogg, Parepa and others, are better educated in musical matters, and keenertodiscov er deficiencies, than any other class in . America, and cannot be well imposed - upon by tnat which is not the genuine coinage oemerit. To-night Miss Susan Galton takes a benefit.- The bill is good and grand. We trust there will be a full house, and that the lady niay not be permitted to depart from the city without a substantial ree ognition of her high order of talent and ability as a vocalist and histrionic artist, S2dYTHE'S 'AMERICAN THEATRE. — The many attractions at the American continue to draw crowded houses every night. The Victorelli Brothers termi nate their engagement this week, and those who desire to seethe greatest gym nasts in the world should improve this opportunity. PITTSBURGII TREArns.--This populk establishment will open to-morrow night with an entire new company, compris ing some of the leading; artists from the , Eastern cities. Mr. Williams is an ad mirable manager, and the public fully appreciate his efforts to provide first class, amusements. • NEw ORLEAms, . March 9.—Cotton essier;. middlings, 22.%®283; sales,9oo bales, 3,262 bales; exports, 658 b ales. Gold, 131%. Exchange—Sterling. 143; Commercial, 14.1%@142%; N. Y. Sight, 3 premium. Sugar nominal. Molasses 'dull; prime, .70@75c. Flour easier; su perfie, 86,25; double extra, $6,62; treble extra, 87,25. Corn dull at 78@790. Oats declined to 77c. Bran, $1,15. Hay de clined to $25 for prime. Pork, 831,150(il 32,00. Bacon firmer at 14e for shoulders, 17%o• for clear rib sides, and 17%0 for clear sides. Lard dull at lifil®2l%e. Whisky nominal; Western rectified at 95c©81. Coffee nominally unchanged. CHICAGO ' March 9—Evening.—At the open board this afternociii there' was but little done.. In the grain market a weak feeling prevailed. Wheat quiet at a de cline of 34@wp per bushel; No. 2 closing at $1,113¢@1,12. Other grairu3 neglected, and prices nominally the same as at the, close of 'Change. .In the evening trans-. actions were confined to buying and sell ing a few privileges to deliver wheat to morrow at $1,113;. Provisions neglected. Cussurnaz, Mass., March 9.—Beef Cattle; receipts 329 head; prices are equal to last week, with a firm trade; sales of extra grades at $13,50®14,00; first quality 512,60@13,60; second 'quality $11@12; third quality 89,00©10,50. • Sheep and Lambs; receipts 2,879 head; the demand was good; prices not materially varied; sales at s4®9. . , HOW HOSTETTER*, BITTERS CUBE DYSPEPSIA.. THE WHOLE STORrIN A NUTSHELL. The once of the stomach is to convert the food into threim-like send-fluid, called Canal. This is ereted partly by the talon of tsolvent,called the gastric Juice, Winch exudes from the coating' of the stomach, and partly by amschenical move. ment of that organ. which 'Awns: as It were. .the dissolving ailment. The Limn passes from the sumach Into the duodenum, or entrance to the bowels. where It Is snbiected to the action of the bile, and the nutritious portion of it convert ed Into a fluid called Ohyis, which eventually be comes blood. Now, it is eVldeut that it the great solvent, the gastrio juice, Is not produced in auldclent quan- My, or tf the mechanical action of the stomach Is not auMciently brisk, the drst proem clams. Mu will be but Imperfectly performed. It is also clear that if the liver. which plays such an im portant part in changing the nourishing portion of Me chyme , Into .tea material of the aloud, is congestea or in any unnatural Condition, the *mond Pr?msta will not be thoroughly accent- Unshed. The result of the two fat - lures is dye. The canplicated with btitouansse • The mode in which HowTETTEIVEI BITTERS operate in such cases tirade: they - invigorate the cellular membrane of the stomach, which evolves the fitarlo Juice. therebY Insuring in am pl e SUE" flelencLof the Auld, to completely dissolve' the food. They also act upon the nerves of the atom ach, attlisilat an acceleration of the mechanical Movement nmessuy Th e yduce the food to a homogeneous utast also act specifically upon tile liver, crengthsrans regu lar d suppl ying -ft te produce an ample and y of' bile, for the I:impose et converting the nutritious particles of the Minns into w ets e and promote the pusege through the bow of the useleu debris. In this way, HOSTETTER'S • MUMS cure dyspepsia and livercomplaint. The explanation la Nab, simple,'philosophical, andfrus. 0.. Anutements. Markets by Telegraph. U 0