The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, May 19, 1869, Image 4

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Ctr Itttibutit Gyqrttt.
PUBLISHED DAILY, BT
PINNIMAN,Rin 1 CO„Propristais
P. B. PZNNIK/LN. 1081LH
T. .1. HONIITCIN. N. P. REED.
• Litters sad Proprietors. •
OPPICE:
NANETTE BUILDING. NOB. 84 AND 86 FIFTH
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One month 75 Btxmos.. LBO 5 ocenes,eteh 1.26
the week 15 Three mos OM • I.th
earrie74 i undone to 4Sest.
WEDNESDAY, MAY'I9, 1969.
tar REPUBLICAN COUNTY
. CoNVEN
The Republican voters of Allegheny coon
are requested to meet at the usual places for
oldixig elections in the several wards, borough's
- 1 / 4 townships, on
SATURDAY, MAY 29th. 1889; Y
And elect delegates from each election district to
exeunt the three following Conventions,
Twb delegates from each to the COUNT YCOli-
VENTION, for the purpose of nominating =Cll.
dates for Sheriff, Recorder, Register. Treasurer,
Clerk of the Court of Quarter nessilna, Clerk of
the Orphans' Court and Commissioner.
TwOjother delegates from each to the LEGIe-
LATIVE CONVENTION, for the purpose of
nominating one candidate for State Senator, for
one year, to Ail the unexpired term of . Russell
Errett, resigned, and six candidates for Assem
blY. And
Two other delegates from each lin the JUDI
CIAL CONVENTION, to nominate one canal
date for Judge of the District Court, and one can
didate for Judge of the Court of Common Pleas,
and elect eight delegates to represent the county
In the Republican State Convention.
These Convention& will severalty meet, in the
city of Pittsburgh. on •
TUESDAY, JIIA"E 1,1889,
At Ilis'elock A. it.. at the following places:
The COUNTY CONVENTION will meet at the
COURTHOUSE.
- The LEGISLATIVE CONVENTION will met t
at CITY BALL. on Market street. And
The JUDICIAL CONVENTION will meet
in MASONIC HALL. ,on Fifth avenue, between
Wood and Smithfield streets. -
The election of delegates will be held between
-the hours of 4 and 7 o'clock P. x., and re ill be
held, as far as practicable, by the Republican
r- members. of the election boards in the several
&Or lets; and in those districts where the Repub-,
Best election officers area minority of the regn-r
lee election boards. the said officers are author
ised to appoint enough additional officers to com
plete the board. .
Tbevotingin the cities and boroughs shall, in
all cases, be by ballot, and in the townships by
marking.
The President, of each Convention will appoint
a Committee of three, the three Committees thus
appointea b meet together, as soon as praitica
tole after the adjorwnment of the Conventions,
_ and appoint a County Committee for the ensuing
yaw.,
By order of the County Committee.
RUSSELL ERRF.TT, Chairman.
Jortrp. STZWART, Secretary., .
WE Piazrr , on the inside pages of
this morning's GAzETTE—Seeond page:
1 Poetry, ;Ephemeris, Miscellany. Third
and sixth pages: Rnancial, Commercial,
Mirkets, Imports, River News. • Seventh
page: Plain Questions for Pre," TrUders,
Amusement Directory.
GOLD closed in New York yesterday
at 1421. •
11. 13. BONDS at Frankfort, 86i
Prrnonatnit at Antwerp, 49if.
Tns, latest English news runs that
RETZEDY JOHERSOF has declined to eat a
public dinner. Until fully authenticated,
this report will remain wholly unworthy
of credit.
Ors Representative In Congress, Gen.
NMI'S; has given, as may be learned
from our local columns,a fresh proof of
Ills title to the mast cordial felicitations,
not only of his constituents, bit of a
still wider cirele of friends throughout
the Commonwealth.
Govicarron GRAIIT writes to a Philadel
phis Committee that he has ever‘garded
the plain intent of the Congressional
eight.hour law to be WAR provided for a
sborter period of labor, but at the same
wages. The Governor pledges his "sup
port of this view of the, subject at all
times, and wherever his influence may
extend."
Tao CongressiOnal Committee on the
Census, composed of Representatives
Gramma), Lrartaw and ALLISON, will
organize for their work at Washington;
next week, and then adjourn at once to
this'city.- In this adjournment, we pre
sume that no particular puzpose Is intend
esl, beyand securing a more central and
convenient point for labor, ,and one cer
tainly more comfortable diiring the ap
proaching heats of summer.
Tine-Constitutional validity of
'dative action by the Indiana Representa
tives, -after the desitrriCtion of a three
fifths quorum in that body by the resigna
tions of the Democratic members, is to be
tested forthwith, before the State Courts.
The issue is to be made upon an import
ant appropriation-bill which has or lias
t passed, as the Cowls may decide.
ithe meantime, the governor declines
to regard the bill ass law.
•
WN now have reports from the Spanish
Oland of Porto Ri9o, which has hereto
fore mined to be altogether free from the
popular excitement which has agitated
Cubi, showing a sudden and marked out-
burst of turbulent disaffection to the Col-
0 1 1 W Ckqemment. The reports are
probably exaggerated, and will bear as
largitcs diseotmt as it him invariably
been found safe to apply to the Cuban
edibles of the past three mouths. It is
nnderutood that more reliable and minute
adificei are soon to be received 'as 'to this
•Captuldirtsitorsifsirs in the West Ind!si
poisesskaurottipa. , ,
•;11 . .t - .:l`'_ . .ii ;-,, , .•. 4 ,0 '.l
MMEME
E!
Taz Cr . clnnati dnumercki prints the
.1 i4 3 1
detailed tistics to Show that, from Sep
tember , 1867 , to the present date, the
total los Of steamboats on the western
i
waters, y thn usual forms of disaster
have bee as follows : Sunk 102 ; 'burned
49; expi ed 14; in all 165 vessels, with
an ag gate tonnage of 34,719. This
does not nclude cases of partial injuries,
replaced y subsequent repair, but repre
sents tha p ortion of the steamboat Interest
on these 'eters, which has been "wiped
out" of e 11 cnce altogether.
that an investigating Corn-
IT IS S
3,11
mittee of he New York Press have re
ported M. J. R. YOUNG .to have been
guilty of t e charp of 'misappropriating
its news. His resignation has been Ikt
cordingly accepted by the TrThune Asso.
elation, the post abolished,f and Mr.
WKETELAw REID has taken charge.of the
officomork in his stead. The city'-editor
of the samepaper, a Mr. CLEMENTS, who
is reported to have been privy to the
same mis-appropriation, has also been
discharged. 11'
• Tha Garai Synod of the Reformed
Presbyterian Church meets at Cedarville,
Ohio, to-day. We shall have prompt
and full reports of Its proceedings.
The General Conference of the United
Brethren meets at Lebanon, Pa., to-mor
row. An exchange says:
This is the highest body in the Church,
all legislative authority granted in the-
Constitution of the Church being vested
in it. It meets every four years, and is ,
composed of three delegates from every,
Annual Conference, .who are selected)
from among the ministers who have been'
ordained to the office of au elder at least
three years previous to the sitting of the
General Conference, and who have been
for that length of time members of the
Annual Conference from which they have
been elected. In selecting these dele
gates the entire membership, male and
female, have a Vote.
.H.EiTER VAUGHAN', whose trial and
death-sentence for the :murder of her
child, occupied the publicattention about
a year ago and at intervals since, has
• • -.• pardoned. Immediately 'after she was
sentenced, It will be remembered, that
many people began, and have since con
tinued, to make eittsordinary efforts to
effect her release, and, as it seems, have
at length accomplished that object, As
the Constitution. of Pennsylvania now
stands, the Governor had but the two
horns of the dilemma to choose between,
or else, doing nothing, to retain the con
vict in - ': . confinement under a delayed
death-warrant. Hester Vaughan, after
she received the sentence of death, must
either have been hunt, or left a life-pri
soner, daily liable to etecution, or, as Is
now the case, have gone wholly free.
Whatever may have been the extenuating
circumstances, or the developments after
the trial, the Governor had and has no
power to commute the death-penalty
when it has once been pronounced. Such
being the case, the Executive is nieces-,
sarily placed in a position of great deli
cacy, for the instances are many where,
after conviction, the guilt, though uncle
niable, has been discovered to be not so
great as to demand life in compensation.
An amendment to the State Constitution
seems to be the only legal means of em
powering the Governor to act justly in
such cases by substituting a lower pun
ishment therefor.
THE NEW DEMOCRACY.
To no small part of the people of the
South, their reconstruction will be made
more palatable by the fact that impartial
suffrage, under the Fifteenth Article, may
thus be imposed upon the North. That
Article will disband the last llitgering
trace of theliorthern Democratic organi
zation, and musterit the park? forever out
of existence in these States: Its head
quarters are to be at once transferred to
the late rebel States, and the rag-tag and
bob-tails of the once proud and formida
ble Democracy of the North will be scat
tered to the winds, and beard of no more.
Changing thus its local habitation, the
Democratic party will forswear one
of its oldest principles ; imme
morially, a white man's party, it is
hereafter to be affectionately devoted to
the colored race, among which is to be its
new field of labor, and by the aid of which
all of its future victories must be won.
Thus, the lath article will work such a
transformation of the political morals of
the regenerated party, that the mere
change of the leopard's spots would be
. nothing to it. We shall then scarcely be
able to recognize the Democracy, in its
character of a newly-born philanthropy;
indeed, we doubt if the party will really
know itself. Their present leaders at the
North will do irel, about these days; to
be looking sharply to the party's latter
end: •
NASILWAY NEWS.
IT ta reported from Toledo that their
city authorities have contracted %ion fa
vorable terms with Mr: Jay Gould for
the construction of a road from that
point to the broad-gauge line, probably
near Akron. The city - agrees to pay to
Mai $240,000 ofthe municipal bonds and
Ic 4e
lease to him the road.when tamp t o for an
indefinite period. The contract llitely
to be a good one for both the part s, if
faithfully complied with. The 'pc le of
Toledo have yet to sanction it by a two.
thirds vote.
The city . of Erie evinces a strong inter
est in the projected completion of a eon.
nection between Oil City and Jamestown,
on the T.. a F., mad. The Dtspafeh says:
The. simple result 'would be, a oontinn
'Otis track withoul change of 'grads, or
, bisalting hulh,rbitween thialaity end the
011 . BasiOns , This would bring into use
the lorgi''Ailts64. nuolOtesq'94
qf . oil
7:1;-
.I•4> v -e•
k'
‘•,‘ r
-1414-:*"'
1
PITTSBURGH GAZETTE:, WE
.
refineries; kalt'vreuld ptit MIMI eitraii
equal Noting with these Mt Clevelassi
and other plaiies,—a• desideratum Me
they have tong desired and well nigh
dospared of.
/The Miners of tile, as of Pittsburgh,
are quite right in the opinion that- no
needless obstacles should, stand in the way
of their successful competition with their
-Wes ‘ern rivals who,' as the ease now
stands, gad a profit in itinsporting the
article both Ways, once in its crude state,
and again atter It Is rein ed , Our own
cities are so &eh nearer the sources of
produetiono and' to the markets Of con-
Gumption., that we should not be debarred
from the legitimate atiVentages of the
more fortunate loodion. We must
add that we shall rejoice to see that seri
valid' the trade at Nee which the Dispaleil
so Justly anticipates. }letter days are evi
dently dawning for an iinportant interest
of our Cominonwealth.
—.___—......_-•—•lm.—_____
ARE XVTH AtiTICLEI, _
Without lowa, whose Legislature had
not yet acted at all, and Indiana, whose
action is worth but little more, the XVth
Article counts thus ihr twenty-one States
IL
for .its nttitication., Rh 1 e Island and
Ne w Hampshire, within x weeks, - will
make twenly-three. As i ill session of
the Vermont Legislature will furnish the
twenty-fourth, if desirable, Virginia,
Texas and Mississippi, if organized as
States this Summer, will duke the num
ber twenty-sem—or one less than the
requisite three-fourths. That one can be
supplied by $ special session of the lowa
Legislature, and in no other .way. It Is
certainly desirable that the great principle
of Impartial suffrage should be inaugu
rated this year, but it will not' be, in any
of the States which bold general elections
in the Autumn, without Vermont or. lowa
shall come up to their duty at the earliest
practical moment. The new doctrine
needs both of those States, for we see not
the remotest likelihood of any Federal
acceptance of the recent action of Indiana.
Our friends can thus judge of the avail
ability, next October, of a class of votes
which, when duly legalized, will be alto
gether in '
accord with the Republican
party. We must carry the three States
to be reconstructed, and must have
special meetings of the two Legislatures.
Without these, ,we need count upon no
more strength, at the 'October polls in
Ohio and Pennsylvanls, than we have
regularly held heretofore. It is well to
look the facts in , the face, especially for
the politicians of these two States, who
are now laying out the year's work for
the party. All should remember that
much preliminary work is yet to be done.
tithe three Southern States come in, it will
be before September, and must be with
their ratifications of the Article. 'There
will be no trouble then in ketting the
special sessions above allude 4 t . to, and a
speedy proclamation of the ratified Article
from the' Federal authorities. We are
confident that Virg,inia,teias and Missis
sippi will be thus reconstructed, but
whether their action, with that of lowa
and.Vermoct, can be secured before Oct
ober, is not wholly clear. Only the Vir
ginia election for July is yet ordered;
those for the two other States shoUld not
be too long deferred.
ARE WE READYTO PAY THEM!
The new American Minister goes to .
England with instructions, in substance,
to make known to that Government the
reasons for which we have recently re•
Jetted the proposed treaty for the settle
ment of the Alabama claims, and, fur
ther, to advise the English Cabinet that
any new overtures for an adjustment of
that question must come from them, and
not from ,is. And there, it is said, Mr.
Mammy' s instructions stop. For the rest,
he is to await the possible events. This is
very well, since it is not only in conso
nance with the preponderating American
opinion, but leaves the affair hr - the most
satisfactory posture for English sentiment.
We ask nothing, from a people who are at
present disposed to concede to us just
that and no more. We make no propo
sitions, when it is evident that no propo
sitions, which could be for one moment
entertained, are likely to be presented on
either side. Events hive so completely
shut the door upon any possibility of a
speedy settlement of the, controversy;
that it is not worth the while of either
party to challenge fresh irritations by new
and bootless attempts at a negotiation for
which neither party ie just now in a
proper frame of mind. We have asked
what England will never4rant; sheoffers
us what we can. never accept. The
sooner then that the whole business shall
be shelved, the better for the peaceof two
nations. Shelved, it will not be forgotten
at once; it leaves a rankling inflammation
which only time, and its various 'issues,
can wholly assuage.
The President, the Senate and the
country have apparently agreed upon the
correct line Of policy toward England,
and it has been taken accordingly. It
only remains to settle another quesdon
among ourselves. Are we ready to pay
the thirteen millions of money, represent
ing the Alabama claims of our citizens so
far as ascertained, out of the Federal
Treasury t Our despoilated dtizeas can
make no demand for this money upon a
foieign government. Their-reclamations
must be, end legally matte, wholly
upon the government which enjoys their
allegiance and owes to them the fullest
measure of its prOteotion of life and prop
erty. Do what the country pleases
with the foreign, power which has
invaded
the rights of individual
Americans, the latter hide, under the
funtbmentalbrinaptei of patine.
I 1
.Jutornational, reclamation.
Bow long, then, shall our ship
owners,—whose property has been
spoiled, land who are nibs shut
out, by.our own public acts, from any
compensation for the injuries from the
pow which inflicted them,—be forced
to wait or that justice which the Ameri
can government owes to each and every
one of its citizens. We should pay, as
we are morally and by public law bound
to pay, these claims from the Federal
treasury at once—and then defer all in
ternatio al reclanuttions for the amount
as long suits our interest or our incli
nations.
This int—the obligations of govern
ment to the governed—has been over.
lookeequite long enough in this Ala
bama business. quite time that it
should have a more general attention.
The Cherokee Indians have so 'farad
vanced in civillzation.aa to have abandon
ed that nomadic and essentially belligerent
life which is always associated with all of
the aberiginal tribes of North America ;
they have a simple and regularly organiz
ed form of government, and have become
.an essenti ally agricultural people. The
early hi ry of all the various peoples of
the world shows that commencing as wan- -
dering hunters and warriors, they have
have gradually changed these employ
ments for agriculture and afterwards=
never before—learned manufactures, the
arts and the sciences. Under the super
vision of our government, many of those
Indian tribes which were formerly the
most savagely barbarious, have been
elevated to the agricultural stage of civili
zation, and the Cheerokees afford the best
evidence of the success of en elevating
policy.
The expenses necessarily incurred by
ourtwn Uovernment in' thus-promoting
the natural course of enlightenment
among the savages aro very great In
order to lessen ,these, and at the same
time to strengthen these Indiap i govern
ments, the various tribes are gradually
being induced to consolidate. Recently
the Delaware nation, numbering nearly
two thousand souls, has been incorpora
ted with the Cherokees, transferring their
trust-funds to the invested funds of the
latter for the pprpose of paying for a
land-allotment for each Delaware, who
thus becomes a settled Cherokee farmer.
The Shawnees, too, the especial terror
of the white pioneers on this border eighty
years ago, arenow negotiating with the
Cherokees for a similar consolidation.
' It is the intention of the Indian Bureau
to encourage, as midi as possible, the
consolidation of the various tribes in this
way, the ' by saving much trouble and
expense. When we reflect! that it is but
a short ti e,, comparatively, since these
very In ans were as eivage and as much
a terror the borders as are the Sioux and
Cheyenn of to-day, we Must believe
that those tribes, too, in the not very dis-
their war • paint for a more civilized and
comfortable garb and to beat their spears
Into it t i ore peaceful weaPons. We believe,
too, that under the present wise policy of
the Indisn Bureau this devoutly to be
wished for consummation may soonest be
reathed.
MAY 19, 1869,
Mint 'the Federal
lustier' recovers the
Ind, well ! Whether
long as It is justly
lean sufferers have
public indemnity
talent. If possible,
11 more clear, when
ent, asserting the
,voluntarily forbears
;faction by the for
has been at fault.
the theory of law,
lemands of its own
pl nation, ear gin
lialoility the more
ting, as it has, the
ling or abandoning
INI,IAN UNION.
ant future, yvill be induced to change
THE personnel of some of the leading
women in the New York Convention is
thus given by a correspondent: Mrs.
Stanton, with her snowy curls, occupies
the chair, Olive Logan, eminently more
womanly In appearance in her dainty
walking suit of drab, than in her lyceum
i i k
blue velvet, occupies a seat near y.
Neat sits Lucy Stone, and, as we look on
this picture, this sweet-faced. wom ly
woman,' dressed in bladk silk, with dal ty
lace ru ffl es at the throat and wrist, nd
then on that bloomer•arrayed pict of
our childish imagination, we thought ,
how these women have been nus er
stood. Miss Phebe Couzzens, the irl
orator and law•student of St. Lou is
also seated upon the platform, and attr cts
considerable attention. Miss Lily P -
ham, of Milwaukee, in appearance re lz
ing one's idea of a minister% wife, se ms
possessed of considerable executive ab ty.
Tux. sew. York Star says : We see,
that an 'announcement le made by the
Tammany Amusement Company wUch
is calculated to send a cold shiver down
the back of every one who respects hu
man life And limb. The elder Rizareill
--a wonderAilly clever gymnast, it is
true, and one of the surest of his craft—is
to perform hie perilous feat of turning a
somersault in the air at a fearful altitude
and alighting upon a single rope, • Mind.
folded awl enteloved in a sack! This, it
seems to us, is going a little too fkr on the
sensational road.
Tna congratulatory address which the
German Catholics sent to Pope Pius IX.
on the occasion of the fiftieth tumiversary
of the day when, he ffrat became a priest,
was signed by King John of Saxony, his
Crown-Prince Albert and Print% George.
Six German bishoprics furnished over
four hundred.thousand signers-of the ad
dress. Very ardatintl4, presents 'were
sent to tke Pape from many German
ci* „ i n* Munster sent to him 24,000
t ii s i
err m!p i 4:4o thalers , Pader
-00 Wl'Mt
..
.4.7 ',—.104: ..-.:4 am. _
vWtmanqgton Stems. -
T e disbursing officer of the Treasury
has refined to pay the requisitions orthe
Navy Department which have been sign.
ed by Admiral Porter, his only authority
for tiring so being_ the recent order of the
Secretary of the Navy to commandants of
navy yards to obey all Instructions signed
by th Admiral the same as if they had
eman ted from himself.
In ompliance with the law of Congress,
the Nei, Department will in a few days
renameLmost of the larger vessels of the
navy, callingtships of the first class alter
the States, and those of the second 'Class
after the prinapal rivers and cities. The
late Secretary of the Navy paid no atten
tion to'this act. and bestowed Indian ap
pellations on all the new ships.
The qudstion as to pensions due to wid
ows ofsoldiers who subsequently marry,
has been under advisement lately, by
the Pension Commissioners and Secretary
Cog: The point was whether a .widow,
niter her marriage, could claim the pen
sion drie to date of the second marriage,
when the claim had not been previously
made. tßy reference to the opinion of
Attorney General West she would be en
titled. Other opinions, however, have
been given, but it is probable the opinion
of Weir will be sustained.
The 'Census Committee will meet here
on the26th, General Garfield Chairman.
After organirttion they will adjourn to
Pittsburgh, for what particular purpose
has not yet been developed. The Com
mittee is an able and practical one, luny
ever, and with such menus Garfield, Al-
lison and Lain, a system for the census
of 1870 should be matured which should
make the work wonderful for its thor
oughness and accuracy.
' Dividing Man Against . Himself.
The Woman's Suffrage Association of
New York, have split into two parties.
On Saturday evening a new society was
organized, called the National 'Woman's
Suffrage Association. The object of this
move is made for the purpose of ridding
the suffrage movement of lunatics and
brawlers. Some shrewd politicians were
called In to advise with the women on
Saturday, evening. They favored the
total exclusion of men, even from mem
bership in. the new soelety, urging that
they would not be aids, but obstacles
rather, to its smooth working and practi
cal efficiency. The matter was settled,
and the affair is to be entirely under the
control of women.
But the ladies 'seem to forget that it
takes both the male and the femaleto con
stitute amen. Saysthe Good Book: "In
the day that God created man, in the like
ness of God made he him; male and fe
male created he theta and called their
name Adam (a man) in the day when
they were created." Upon which a Bos
ton clergyman comments as follows:
"The distinctive masculine characteristics
are those in which the understanding
takes" the lead; and the distinctive femi
nine ~ characteristics are those in which
will or affection takes the lead. Man is
more fresquently governed by his judg
ment and reason, woman by her feelings
and 'perceptions. Not, indeed, that
intellecthelongs , to the male sex ' and all
affection to the female. But the two
classes of faculties comprised under these
hea4s respectively, predombsate in them.
When men and women come together in
a good and orderly way, they supply,
each to the other, just what is wanted.
They fill out a more perfect measure of a
-
A Word for the Sparrows.
The Journal of Commerce has a corres
pondent whO adds his testimony to the
harmlessness of the sparrows in public
parks. He says :
In four of our city parks they have an
nihilated the measuring -Worm, after many
years of ezperimentseurd of unsufferable
annoyance to ladies and children, especi
ally. In every park and street where
they were properly provided for they di
minished the effect of the mosquito lava-
Blom yiry perceptibly. They afford con=
stant and durable interest and amusement
to our families, and particularly to our
children, and lessen the rigors of winter
and'storms by their Cheerful notes and
antics and visits to our windows, even
when the thermometer Is near zero, aud
it softens our natures to care for these
little strangers. In a walk from Four
teenth to Forty-eighth street, to-day, I
was seldom out of the sound of their
music. Baron von Tschudi, the eraninent
Swiss naturalist, says that witbodt birds
successful agriculture is impossible, as
they annihilate' in a few months a greater
number of destructive Insects than man
could in years. He classes among the
most useful the swallow, wren, robin and
sparrow, and says that a robin killed 800
files in an hour, and a pair of sparrows
curled 300 worms or caterpillars to their
nest in a day. In three years' observa
tion daily I have not seen them touch any
of our small fruits, nor the buds of fruit
trees..
Presbyterian Union.
The General Assemblies of both the
Old and new School branches of the Pres
byterian Churckes meet in New York,
on Wednesdayr(l9th,) and,. during the
preienteession- it Is expected the work of
uniting these two powerthl religions or
gadeatlona, will be comiileta Their
Aropeedings will be matched with the
deepest interest by the religious world
and their union will be the first step to
wards uniting under one communion
head all the various divisions of Presby
terians. This union cannot but prove ad
vantageoue to the cause of Christianity.
The trifling differences bet Ween them have
beau the cause of bitter antagonism, that
have been prejudicial to the - interests of
the churches pf the Presbyterian faith,
and were thel result "of ,prejudices that
should long since given way to reason
and a liberal Chrisan spirit. The `pros-
Peet .014 the . bigotry Which has hereto
fore separated Christiana espousing 'a
common faith shall soon disappear, is an
encouraging sign of the times, and the
consummation of, the proposed anion
will be haled with joy by all evangelical
denominations. Many of the ablest and
most devoted divines of both churches
are most earnestly engaged in promoting
the work of reconciliation and consolida
tion.
A Kamm 'velocipede is , the centre o
attraction on the-wharf at Saginaw, Mich.
igen It is made of tin about twenty
feet long . ; very eharp and pointed at the
ends'; not more than fifteen inches wide,
and is propelled by , a wheel under the
middle, similar to the:screw propeller of
la arafts. The.inotion is given to . Slit
wheel bY-cianio attached to the shafting
by bevel gear. —.The steerage apparatus
is 'also hithe ceitiebf the bbat and work.
ed by %WSW.: The boat for the space of
ten fest , ltinneichlia,hasatrltAnt them.h
BUM
- -A Salt Lake dispatch of the 17th
says: At ten o'clock this morning Brig.
ham Young broke the first ground on
the 'Utah Central Railroad, near Weber
ri ver, c immediately below Ogden City.
It is e pected the road will be completed
to this city by October neat.
THE REASON l'1111(
Dr. Keyser's Blood Searcher is the best. It Is Li
computed that a man's system undergoes three •
Dates a year, that is every four months, a reifies'
and thorough change, that Is, that at the end , of
that time nothing remains in the system of the
material of which It was composed before that
time. The eliminating organs carry out the
woyn.out and used-up material. and new matter •
Is made to take !Laplace and carryon tne Work
ings of the human organism. Tfte cost of four
months treatment in thls way would not at the
outside be more than ten dollars, and frequenUy
the functions of life have an activity and vigor
marted mancient, to renew them by the use of
on bottle, costirg only one dollar. Ro organ of
the body but will be benefited by such a process.
Th liver, - the stomach, the kidneys, the akin,
\!.
theilongs, are all. as it were, made' over again
by the Impetus given to the stomach and diger
time system—old and prostrated people whose
systems had begun to languish and decay. have
been restored by DR. KEYS.ER'S BLOOD
SEARCHER to youthful health and vigor.
Especially is this ' medicine suitable at this
season of the year, when the dormant
powers of life,..,lite all the rest oftare are
emerging from the chilling and to Id state
usual to the cold land wintry mo nth I. We
know very well that all advertised medicines are
apt to be regarded as useless and nugatory, but
with DR. KEYSER'S BLOOD SEARCHER we
feel perfectly secure in the promise that It must
do good. Country merchants and those who sup
plyl others with needful things for their wants
cannot confer a greater service than to keep a
feca l bottles of ibis valuable medicine on their
shelves to supply thbtr wants. Dr. Keyser will
take back every half dozen that remains unsold.
It at the same time ' affords the merchant a
good profit, and to those who need it, it is cif
more value than silver angold, for what can be
of more value to man than medicine which car
t health and life to the ering invalid?
l ir
earnestly entreat all who read thisto try
one the of Dr. Keyser's Blood Searcher if they
nee
.such a medicine, and we will guarantee ret
ies tion ! In order, however, not to be disap
pobs d, let them buy none but that which has Dr
Kevser's name over the cork and blown In the
bottle, and in that way the Doctor will hold him
self responsible fur its results when the directions
are closely followed.
SOLD AT THE DOCTOR'S OBEA.T NEW
MEDICINE STORE, NO. 160 LIBERTY ST.
DR.', KEYSER'S CONSULTATION ROOMS.
NO. IMO PENN STREET, FROM 10 A. N.
UNTIL * P. M. ' •
ET US PROTECT OURSELVES.
The physical structure of the strongest human
being is vulnerable everywhere. Our bodien are
endowed by nature With a iertain negative pow
er, which protects them, to wine extent.from nn
wholesome influences; but this protection M Im
perfeCt, and cannot be sifely relied on in un
healthy, regions, or under circumstances of more
than o rdinary
. danger. Therefore: it is wisdom;
it Is prudence; it Is common ferule to provide
against such contingencies, by taking an nwrt-
Dori IN ADVANCE; in other woreq; ' by Ibrtifiing
theltLtem with HOSTICTIIOI , BI3TOIKA.CH BIT
TIC the most complete protective against at
the oidemic and en emic maladies that hap
been administered in &upcountry. Asa remedy
for Dyspepsia. there C no medicine that Will
compare with it. Whoever suffers the pangs of
indl‘tation, anywhere on the face of the earth
where HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS can
be procured, does so voluntarily; for, as surely
as truth exists, this valuable Toxic and ALTERA
TIVE would restore his disordered stomach to a
healthy cendition. To the nervous it Is also es
pecially recommended. and In cases of confirmed
constipation it also affords speedy sad permanent
relief. In all cases of fever and ague the BIT
TERS Is more potent than any amount of quinine.
while the most dangerous cases of bilious fever
yield to Ha wonderful properties. Those who
have tried the medicine will never use another.
for any of the aliments which the HOSTETTER
BIT PERS professes to subdue. To those who
have not made the experiment we cordially re
commend an early application to the BITTER I
whenever they are stricgen by of the el
gestive organs. •
4C4 ) M• &
ft &O.
\ SPRING STOCK
OLIVER
iI'CLIXTOCK
k COMPANY'S.
. We are receiving 'this
week by ocean steamers from
England a fresh stock of the
latest and most beautiful de
signs in English Tabestry
and Body Brussels by direct
importations from the man
ufacturers. We invite - the
insneotion of house furnish
ers, confident that we offer
the largest assortment an
greatest variety of elegant
patterns ever brought to
this* market, at the lowest
prices. t
Great F inducements are
offered in 'all gradeS of In
grains and Three Plies,° it
being their constant aim to,
offer to the multitude, the
fullest assortment of cheap
and serviceable Carpets at
lower rates that any other
,
house in thc trade.
4441t(MMAYPIM.,
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101
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MI
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