El Visbutt Gaidtt. PUBLIBBED DAILY, BY PEMIUN, REID & CO., Proprietors. 7. B. rimisnuicr, JOSIAH NINO, T. P. HOUSTON. N. P. REED, *Sitars and Proprietors. OPPICE: CASETTE BUILDING, NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER Of Plit,taburgh. Allegheny and All*- ( - Witty County. Terme—Daily. itironi-Wakiy.l Washly. One yea...sAoo , one year.o2.sollslngle copy.so One month - 751131 x Mos.. ,Laol soces,effi o. the week. L 5 Three mos -75 10 Lib Mom carrier.) 1 =done to Anent. WEDNESDAY. APRIL I. ISAR) W • Puna on the inside pages of this 'ng's. GezErrz—Be,cond page : Po etry, ""The Tree," Ephemeris, Crimein ,the Oh Regions, Clippings. Third and Sixth pages: Financial, Commercial, `Markets, Imports, River News. Seventh page,: Additional Local News, .Amtise- Inent - pii4ctory, ; Ire. . , U.B. Balms at Prtuakfort, Pairaotatum at Antwerp, 53@531 - -430L0 closed to New York, yesterday t at 181 1 ., - • • THE Republicans -hive a majority of forty on joint ballotrin the „Connecticut .Legialatnre. Tux fOreign appOint ,ments, for the 3/1- • i plornatic and Consnlar service, are under Cabinet consideration; BO that the nomi nations maybe generally looked for ,this Gzmu liito44's bill for mustering iotP,t the supernumeraryofficers of the ;army would,. when a law, retire about threelnindred:of those gentlemen, with an anitual saying to the Treasury of some four hundred end fifty thousand dol lars, in pay and allowances. • • ANDREW JOHNSON is as Tesgest in /Tennessee, and, tiller ins lesser meas ,ure, as wickedlir anibitiotis, as Milton depicts Lucifer to have been, , after his fan..: But his ambition will be equally fruitless. His harangues attract such crowds as will everywhere gather to be amused with fluent and reckless black guard's' m, but the result will show that he has lost all his former effective influence .over the popular judgment of Tennessee. Tun Houser. OF Rsaineserrrextvzs de itisively repudiates the action of the In dian Peace Commission of hist summer • - -irefusing to appropriate a dollar to car ry out the engagements thus entered into with many of the Indian tribes. Yet the House is inclined to approve the re servation policy, which the Commission proposed to inaugurate, and to place a large suni,in the hands of the President to be extended for the benetit of the •In diens, according to his discretion. Tun advocates of blood far blood in Illinois charge, and not without some foundation, that since that State 'virtually repealed capital pUniR meat there_ has been an appalling Increase of murders, and insist it was • mistaken, false and misjudging philanthropy which led to the repeal of the death penalty. A. late case happened bgthicago which goei to ;how that soniet people at r least take advantage of the lenient law to commit crimes of blood. A murderer, after he had fired` .a fatal s)iot,.walked coolly back and 1;014 his revolver on the desk, exclaimed, "It makes no dikerenee—thereis 'llO hanging in , DESPERATE effort:, are being made to interfere with the 'course of justice in the cases of EATON and Twrraxem, the Philadelphia murderers, who are to be executed this week. In the Senate yes terday a publid bill, authoriiing the Goy cnior to commute the death penalty to imprisonment for life; was iead and passed, thus proposing to virtually abol ish capital punishment. If such a bill be paised, and < Twrrcema, and Reirrort "escape death through : the provisions, we , S urge governor , Gz e inT =to ,exercise the t eam clemency towards the poor, rind ess negro who is under 'sentence of death , in our jail: 'His crime of blood, perhaps, Wane greater than those of the more in. Iluential made:rem—but alas,. the crime of PoYeTIT Yin hang him ' even if the others do escape. .. 1 ; Thu wont hear so much Democratic talk about appeals to the people; idnixithe little circumstance which happened. in 'Connecticut last Monday. ` - Poor fellows! .They will still prattle about the 'lndiana election; and try to persuade themselves, if they can't, anybody "that the re election of the bolting Hoosier legislators was a magnificent' proof .that .prejudices of race are still. dear to the "peppier Popular fudge) Those boilers 71e r chosen . ,frCoiAtrOnglY partizan dia. trite in the that; place o and, would - not have,resigned #le3r. 4kl Been, a Ocett7 thing in their own .10460* Trot them try lI oa ' once , : in Ind(iria, -is any distfl4 . is. ressowd3ly dor, and they would be apt to , get a little Oori ifecticut cq4 8 9 4 !' 16 P1 , - 1. • As for Ohio„ next October ,will show the 'Firth:Article to )xi,the•whining card for the sincere friends of a true Demo * cratio-Repnblican'progrees. Stick a pin there! y z ~p~ ~, THE Xlith ARTICLE IX CONNEG. TICUT. The opposition have clamored tremen dously against all propositions to submit this new Article to any Legislatures elected last year, before the new issitewas discussed.. "Lev us have this matter sub mitted to the people," they demanced; and upon the popular vote, there is not a State of the North, where they have not prophesied its rejection. Everywhere, the friends of the new Article were to be routed, horse, foot and dragoons. -Re member how the opposition journals have reiterated their boast that this is a white man's country, and that the people were with than now, as in other years, in the cast-prejudice, which has been the leading feature of modern Democracy: Well, the new issue has been submit ted to the , people. - In three States, elec tions have been held since the Article was laid before .the - legislntures, and we hope that our friends of the opposition are con tent with the result. • New Hampshire and Michigan have ; ustained the last pro position of Liberty and Progress with their . old-fashioned Republican zeal: These were States in which the doctrine, excluding a man fiom all the rights of a man because his skin was dark, has never enjoyed 'a conspicuous popularity. , - Then comes Connecticut—a State in which a "nigger" has been from time immemorial so much less than a man, that our Demo (trade apostles of exclusiveness and race privilege have never doubted her hearty hatred for even the faintest approximation to the equality of men. They had fair grounds, too, for their reliance upon that State. It is only three years ' since this very question of equality at the ballot boxes.was submitted as a local issue to her 'electors, andthey voted it down. Even Connecticut responds at last to the great movement Of the age, and t .she, too, on Monday last, by. a sqaare "vote upon that express bane, ranges herself on the side of universal liberty and equality before the law. Says & dispatch to the New York World: "The Demderats have left the election go by ,default." Just so! Upon the question whether the never-by,the-Democracy - sufficiently - to be-hated "nigger". should have the same political, rights as the white man, even Connecticut "Demobrats"—as bitter par tizans as we have between the two oceans —have .. 4 ‘let the:election go by default;" they have not rallied in their might to the polls to bland the infamous proposition; they have not even rallied at all; they have gone back upon the traditional Democratic hate for a down-trodden race; they have turned a deaf ear to the frantic adjura tions of their ffie-leaders; they have basely betrayed Democracy in the very house of its friends; not even the :seductions of of office, or the eloquence of State offi cials who shuddered at the prOipect of their Jismissal from place, could bring the demoralized "Dertiocracy"of Connec ticut up to the scratch; they have de faulted on the officials, In their eloquence, and upon , Democril4" itself, and that "glorious ", : 'State" (see Pittsburgh Post of a • year ago) haa de .livered itself; f. AQW and forwer, to the "nigger loving" Republicans • and their principles, even to the new-blown infamy of the n'th Article. The Re publicans retain their:control of the Leg islaturei,this QOM, our Democratic . Jere- Simla would have accounted for by some story of a . Republican gerrymander. Better thin that, - they have refornied the State Goverrunent; pitching the Demo cwy,cint and installing good Republicans in all the- State Offices; and by way of making the "default" a sure thing, have gained another, COW§I'ESITISS. The gerrymander story won't answer any longer. It is a more terrible animal than Uist . which has tern Dimocricy liiabfrom limb and swallowed the best part of it forever. It is the sentiment of justice which ever beats in the great popular heart, and which, sooneror later, is sure to be tridinphantly vindicatat- Let us hear more of these "popular ap peals!" We rather like tyeni;, Ur, whole. The suggestion may have been Democratic, but , the application is never theless salutiry "and prodtable. ' To the opposition leaders at Harrisburg, and es pecially to those who soon assemble there to.put a State ticket in nomination, we atfeCtiOnately;cOmnend the lesson 'Which these three btates,And ConnecticMt most of all, have.thus taught them. We iniite.theni to' Make the same issue in rennsylvanie4 irthavlave the stitiabli for it, and ,no matter_ under what titular hero, whoseinsrtial !intentions may be in the exact ratiOtiVhie : pasi l eight years devotion to peace, we promise them - a Connecticut fight and , a Connecticut Ver. IVEEDLEBS"D=LIIII. The disposition of the Rouse to give the ,go-by to all questions of Southern pacification awakens a generel and pro. found feeling of uneasiness through Out theconntry. The sPeech of:Represente. tive DAwas, on the bill, in Which he commended the expediency of, remitting that State to a more protracted trial of military jpiverrunent, has not been acceptably received among citizens oP patriotic and_ jntelligeif ,diseernizeitt. Even in the litinie` itself . there are I n c cations that the postponement of the Mis sissippi. bill, involving, as it did, similar . delays - for Virginia, Texas and Georgia, hegizta,:to ‘ be regarded Sean =WWI. step. These questions cannot be deferred, with advantage -to the countri, to the ad ministration or to the Republican party. The case of Georgia cannot be neglected - - . - car PMEITMGIE GAZ:ETTEi WEDNESDAY, APRIL without a crying iniustice to her own people, as well as to the Union at large. Virginia stands ready to vote upon her Constitution-4s ready as she ever will be, with the unfortunate divisions in the local sentiment of the Republicans. These cannot be, and never will be, re conciled by themselves,- .and the plea for delay which contemplates such a possibility, is altogether 'de. lualye. The only possible adjustment of the schism in that State must'be effec ted by Congress, and the sooner we have the needful measures to that end, the bet ter. OtherwLse, Congress will, in De. cember, find the Virginia factions farther apart than they are to.daY, and still less likelk- to acquiesce cheerfully in any adjustment by the superior Federal au thority. As to that State, it is only re quisite that Congress should hold her squarely up to the same policy' which has pacified so many of her sister-States, and do that at once. Congress ought not to adjourn without 'taking the simplest, most direct, and most decisive order for the settlement of all these Southern questions, or, failing that, to put the responsibility of longer delays upon the populations whom it will concern. We have upheld military gov ernment as long as the position of State affairs in'the South seemed to require it. We uphold it still, when and where ne cessary, but not for one moment longer ; than such neemity shall exist. We con cur heartily in the annexed suggestions, on that head, in the Philadelphia North, Aineri4an : We must plainly day here that we have no sort of confidence in military autocra cy, and have no 'regard for any of the reasons or excuses given for it. We be lieve that not a feW of these pretences are .set np to hide the perssnal schemes of civilising, and, whether so or not, the knowledge and judgment .of most of these commanders concerning blvil af fairs are lamentably deficient. Congress men have made a sad blunder in post poning reconstruction for another year, and the people should let them know it. THE RHODE ISLAND SENATOR. .The Providence Journal editorially re ferred to the second speech of Senator Sraeorrs as follows: - Senator Sprages made another s pee chph in the, Senate yesterday, in , which he re iteraied views previously expressed, and deprecated the prevalent low tone of public morals in society as well as in pol itics. The Senator's intense application to his official duties and to his extensive private interests, we fear causes him to take too gloomy a view of the general situation. For this judicious and kindly mention, that high-minded statesman expressed his acknowledgments in the following letter : To the Editor of the Journal, Providence, Male letand . Stit:=-I am in receipt of a elip from your paper of the 25th. referring to me. The most outrageous insinuation' that you set forth, will be answered by me in my place in the Senate. As you reflect the sentiments, and are titlif In servitude to the overshadowing power that at tempted to control both the politics and public sentiments of Rhode Island I shall give to that influence the setting forth it is entitled to- Aal strike direct ly at the power of which you are the t lickspittle, you and - those who t y trol yon, will find I amlndeedlet In earnest. Take, therefor% as yo now have, the position in public that 'I have long known was your private sentiment. Your present is a far more honorable, if honor belongs to your nature, than your past dastardly and cowardly one has been. I. am, dm.: This letter is in the orator's happiest vein. It should be printed, together with the /outnat's Taragrapb, upon the fly-leaf of the million pamphlet toiles his three speeches, which are about-to be issued under Demoerittic auspices, but at the Senator's expense. The latter con tinues to deny that either wine, whiskey, or women have•had any share in the in fluences by which he has been actuated. ail ! 13ritAour, The Gre.at Philadelptila Robbery. How a million dollars were taken, is explained, in the Post, as follows: An investigation proved that the burg lars had unlocked the Twelfth street door, as well as the door into the yard, by false keys, and had "jimmied" , the rear window of the Saving Pahl Then they attacked a Lillie safe, _one of. the largest size, and built into the' wall. Their pro ceedings in this work'appear to have been as methodical as the occasion demanded. Their first screwed a large piece of joist perpendiculArly upon thefloor t securing it by strap hinges, and furtherbracing it 'a stout piece , of walnut six feet long. This timber was brought with them into the building, which shoWs that their work... had been thoroughly.: planned. Using the joice for a fulcrum, with a beautifully constructed tool, evidently made for the they, unscrewed the "combination" ilrenit the Anifeltad knock ed off the handle. They then bored a five-eighth-inch hole ,with a ,driii along side.of; the :lila I and tipped - the bolts, forcing the door open. Then they broke the lock off, the lade, door „with the jimmy and effected; entrance to the safe. A car used by the institution to carry books in and out on a railway was run out, and the burglars went deliberate ly at work to,,break open, boxes and re move valuables'-• They leftn quart bottle of alcohol, flask of powdec, wick;and safety fuse behind,' , The very wort' • feature of the whole, affair is that the depositors i n the &lying Fund are mainly of , the. p oorer classes, who cannot afford to. lose theft. money. Poor girls at service; daylaborors; coach men, waiters and such humble folks had faith in this Saving Fundi 04P7 1 0 11 might havivijail, addilefti Plth dent:— of Its security, their "hard-eghed Savings. This robbery, will be a ter rible blOvi to many a - toiling, honest Mini. . CAPTAIN Moltmumnr i s invention for mounting heavy artillery has been ac cepted by the .British GoVeiminent; :Who pay him $5,000 pet annum while em ployed in superintending its introduc tion, and $25,000 at the end of his service, and all expenses for models and experi ments. • " . . , . . , . '''''-• '•• -•- ""' •""',. *- 7 ''- -•'''''''''''' '' . : :: ' l4 ' ;''- ?.''''''". "4 "" '" T' F - '5' ;!1 1 141 .': -' 3"';' . :: • Xlife;-.Vizatt1111•%44.3.-W4:O4 L: ;. 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".„.4 . 4 0, .., ~. ......, ~..... .8,4,- , r 4 p „ 1.4.v , .w.g.w„4 , „,... 44 , -4 4„...,-,.......4v.._,...,..„.....„0:0?,....! ~ : .*-....e . ,. . ~ .........,..;,,,n, St:J. --..,-,-; - ,1 ,- ..:;•,-......:..„p1A1.41;,---,,,,. • - •......,.0 *-, E - - - ' - . ..,:. c....• .).3 ...7,.,..:,,,-„!-..,-..fr,?•t:,i.?.._.,..&4-.{14 aig.,2" .•46.11, . I '.'" ,. .:.: - I.—• . . . . . , . THE TWITCHELL. CONFESSION. Tsfo convicted murderers, Twrrcirsia, and. EATON, will be executed at Philadel phia tomorrow. The attempt of the "former, by a sham confession, to cast the odium of his 4 crime upon his wife, meets an universal discredit. A North kineri. can reporter makes the .annesed interest ing statement of the circumstances rela ting to that confession: Rev. Mr. Bringhurst is the pastor of All Saints' (Episcopal) Church. The Twitchells and him. Hill, when they at tended any chuich, went there, but Mr. Bringhurat had no nquaintance with them. When incarcerated on the char of murder, George Twitohell sent f or. him.- For more than seventy days he has not let twenty-four hours pass by without-a visit to Twitchell's cell. He baptised him in the prison; and believed that he had prepared him - for death. Mr. Bringhurat is one-of that class of unsuspecting, guileless gentlemen who would very, probably mistake a horse thief, if traveling with bim in a railroad car, for a student of divinity, or a gen tleman who does business with "the lit tle joker" for a missionary just returned from Hindostan. Mr. Bringhurst re ceived Twitched's acknowledgment, as above, with great surprise. Twitched begged that it should be sup. pressed until after his execution, but Mr. Bringhurst refused to receive it upon any such terms. The reverend gentleman himself produced it for pub lication on Saturday last. - The heart of George Twitchell opened on Friday when, after an absence of five days, he became satisfied that Camilla had forsaken him. He was led to be lieve that she was too ill tovisit him, and was apprehensive ,accurdingly. Unable to lie, and unwilling to prevaricate, Mr. Btinghfirst told him that his wife was not sick. and was in the -city. The lady requested Mr. Bringhurst to ask" George where he would like; after he was hung, that his body should lie. Rev. Mr. Bring hurst reiterates his statement that she so asked him. Mrs Twitchell has • always manifested exceeding,trepidation at the idea of the reporters Witnessing the execution of her !husband and ta k ing notes of the confession he might make. The report that' She fled the city on Saturday is doubtful, unless the, hour was late, as she was in consultation with kr. O'Byrne during the morning. Mr. Bring band in the'case is sorely puzzled. An terior to this confession be believed In the sincerity of Twitchell's statements; he now knows not where he can cast the anchor of hope. So far as the pulse of public opinion can be felt by the re porter of a newspaper, no one believes any more of the confession of the unfor tunate matriolde than that he was cogni zant of her murder—but before, not after, the fact. ' The application to Governor fkary-last Thursday for a reprieve has been eonaid ered and refused; the proceedings before the national ,Supreme Court are re garded as a farce. It is sadly certain that op Thursday the doomed man will pay the mortal penalty of the law. _ LETTER FROM HARRISBUIG. The Appropriation Bill in the Senate-- Cutting Down Fspenses. (Correseendence of the Pittsburgh Gazette.] • The appropriation bill has been up in the Senate all week, and has beenthe cause of considerable excitement. Mr. Wal -I.lfice led off, on the Democratic side, in a studied, but very fair speech, in which he showed that the expenses of the State government were steadily increasing, and in a ratio more than commensurate with the growth of the State. He produced statistics to show that, since 1865, when the price of living was higher than now, Salaries had been steadily augmenting, • and the cost of every department increas ing.. He did , not lay the blame of thisen I the dominant w party. The votes by which , this increase as , carriertcame from both sides, and one was as much to blame as • the other. -' But it *as time to put'a check • to this, and the , party in power would be held responsible if the -increase were not checked and expenses brought back the I standard of 4855. The Republican Sena tors had the '.power to do it, and they would have ids aid in making a etand and setting a face of flint against this steady tendency to extraVagance. •It was . plain; from this speech, that:the Democratic Senators bad resolved to make what capital they could for their partyby voting far economy, and that:the respon eibility wail thus thrown upon the Repub licans of meeting them half way or, of taking the'consequences of the cry of "extravagance" that would in that_ event be raised against them. , ' • - _ As soon as Mr. Walta s ce sat down, Mr. .Errett took the floor and, expressed his hearty concurrence in all that had , been I said, by Mr. W. In favor of economy. It had proved an easy thing. o raise salaries; it would prove a very difficult thing , to resist the personal appeals that would be made against reducing them. • For one, he had determine& to turn a cold' ear to all these appeals, and to exclude all per sonal considerations in legislating for the Commonwealth. He was glad to hear he would' have • DernocratiC help; and be assured gentlemen tin tpat side of the 01Mber that, it they stood up to the pia gftount of:the,' s enator from Clearfield, epOugh Republicans ."Would be` found, to carry every measure of ,Reform that might be propsed. But her wanted fair"play in this- He . would' sink the' partiesn,•and join with others in deciding thew, ques tions as Peniwylvaniaiiii; but 'he wanted deeds as Villas wattle: He did ` riot wish to hear Deinociatio Senators making speeches in fair'or of Economy, for -party effett;.and then Voting Extravagance.' It was 'tile , that 'would tell. not' he speeehes; and he had no,doubt with, 'Re publitan Senators Would join, them in deciding the mattereet stake in the.in teresia 01 the:-State, instead rof the in terest* of party or of individuals. Mr. White followed in the -same strain, and then the tight commenced on the sec mid section, fixing 'the salaries of State officeli: An 'effort UV 'reduce the *dory of the Sicretar, Y.of thirOommbnieealtlirrom $8,500 to $3,000 failed, the bam:erotic Senators generally going againsfit;; ! hnt " ' 1 1 914.14). APWA,Othat „Of the Deputy e— et l o ,oo ol`3 2 loo o ' , fir P;00 - vii ed, as di& also the effort tO mines the Adjutant General from $2,500, to $l4OOl and.the Governor'aprivateSeeretary from $2,000 to $1,600, and tcr cut off the ap propriation for an extra clerk in.the Cfov.. ernor's departinent. The Adjutant 'Gen eral's force of Clerks - Was cut down ffont four' to two, the titete ()Mee was`abollahed; (self at '12,000; an& three clerks at $1,400 each,) the force on the public grounds reduced from Ave to two, the force at the Arsenal discontinued, and W. SPRAOUE. HARRISBURG, -April 6,-1869 1869. the State Librarian reduced from $l,OOO to $500.. , Besides this, the force in the Superin tendent of Soldiers' Orphans was cut down from two to one, and $3OO for ad vertising struck out, the extra pay of $3OO to etch of the Commissioners of the Sink ing Fund, $l,OOO for' ice house and $3OO for , lamp posts in the public grounds, $5,000 for Schools of Design, $5OO for dedicating Mexican monument, $3,600 for New Brighton retreat, $1,500 extra to contractor on Governor's mansion, and $lO,OOO to build house for Rothermel's painting of the battle of Gettysburg, were alt struck , out, along with $5,000 for Penn Widow's Asylum, and no new appropri ations were put in, except $2,500 for UniOn Temporary Home, Philadelphia, for Soldiers' orphans. The appropriations for Northern Home and St. John's Or phan Asylum were reduced from $lO,OOO each to $5,000 each, the latter being for maintenance of soldiers' orphans. A clause was also inserted requiring the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund to anticipate the maturity of $BOO,OOO of the public debt, and pay it off. The bill how goes to. a Committee of Conference, the House having non-con curred generally in the Senate's amend ment. The probability is that the Com mittee will recommend a concurrence in most of the Senate's amendments. - Most of the Republican Senators voted for every motion looking to economy; and when Mr. Lowry moved to insert $2,500 for the Sisters of Charity at Titus ville, whose building for orphans was lately burned down, the most of them, re gardmg this as the entering wedge to a a series of local appropriations that would take" hundreds of thousands out of the Treasury, voted saainst it and defeated it. This was done with much reluctance; the claim being a very strong one, on the ground of sympathy; but the determina tion was to vote the State's money to none but State purposes and State chari ties, and the defeat of this, the strongest of all merely local claims, operated to prevent the making of any motion for any other local charity. The Senators on the Republicans side wrio stood up resolutely for strict econ omy ln every department were Messrs. Graham; Billingfelt, Errett, White and Oltnsted; Mr. Fisher, Mr. Kerr, Mr. Brown,' of Me rcer, Mr. Stinson, Mr. Coleman and Mr Taylor voted with them on mbst of the questions that arose, but Occasionally voted apinst them. Alto gether, however, the . Republican Senators stood up for economy with praiseworthy energy, and the consequence is seen in the fact that this bill is the smallest ap propriation bill, in the aggregate, that has been passed for several years. Under this bill, the item for legislative Fxpenses, which last year cost $137,000, is cut down more than half, and the ex penses of the State government brought back, as-far an possible, to the standard of 1865, and , the strong tendency to an increased expenditure in the several de partments thoroughly checked. If this can be carried out and adhered to, the people of the Stute may reasonably, look forward to an early extinguishment of the public debt and a conseqnent readjust ment, a few years hence, of taxation upon a lighter and fairer basis. B. Vi'as Items. All of the Internal Revenue appoint ments have, so far, been made by. Mr. Delano, without the interference of Sec retary Boutwell or the President. The supreme Court will adjourn next week, to the first. Monday in October. It has been agreed that the case involving the constitutionality of tike legal tender act shall go over.to the fall for set. tle:ment. Among the recent decitions was one affirming the right of cities to tax. ' • It, is rumored by I General Long street's friends, that he will hold the place for. only a short time, and should Gen.'Sickles decline the, Mexican mis- Sion, Longstreet will be nominated for that place.. Hon. John Cessna, who distinguished himself in the House on Friday,-try his noksterly handling of Mr. Covode's case, has,, prepared', a report in favor of the Hon. Leonard Myers' right to the seat now held by. Mr. Moffet. The Election Committee will no doubt adopt this' view to-morrow. Mr. Cessna bids fair early to take rank at the head ,of the Howie as a debater and party leader. Fhshionable Wedding. Pittsburgh hashed her grand wedding. Before It all•the mis-called fashionable weddings which have' frbm time to time marird the history of our local society, Mustt fade into insignificance and take rank away down in the list of ordinary affairs: The occasion bad . long formed, the interesting and all absorbing theme of conversation in the higher circles, and thei,interest in it became all the more intense when it• was the. distresstng symptoms, which accompany disorders uf the stomach and liver, will, rapidly . subside. The sudden changes of spring often In tensifies the. e complaints by checking the per sniratory action, by which so mucu morbid mat ter is evaporated through the pores of the bOdr• and therefore the BITTERS are especially usetak to the dyspeptic sucuutous 14 thin pullout