.Eij•lt4sinttltAttirttt. - PUBLISH= DAILY, BY - PENNIMAN, REED & CO., - Proprietqrs, 1. B. PLIDUNAN. JOSIAH KINN. T. P. HOUSTON. N. P. BRED, Editors sad Proprietors. 03710 i: BABETTE BUILDING, NOB. 84 AND 88 FIFTH ST. • . OFFICIAL PAPER Pattelnarigh. Aiteghsay and Alla- glum, County. fereue—Detfljr._ Weak l y. Weal/. Due One year. 152.50 Stogie 00P7'..11L Due mouth 751312 mos.. 1.50 5 coplei,eff.h 1.251 8T the. week 160 Three molt 75 10 " 1.15; sVem wrier.) and oue to Aieut.J, FRIDAY, MAY 28,.186R. • tar REPUBLICAN COUNT • CONVENTION. The Republican voters of Allegheny -coon . ty are requested to meet at the 'usual places for liNdingelections In the several wards, boroughs and townships, on SATURDAY, NAY 29th, 1869. And e: cot delegates from each election district to each of the three following Conventions. viz: , Two delegates from each to the COUNT Y CON - 'YEN TION, for the parpe as of nominating candi ir for Sheriff, Recorder, Register. Treasurer, ' 4 ITI hof the Court of Quarter Sessir.ns, Clerk of khispbans , Court and Commissioner. T'o other delegates from each to the LEGIS LATIVE CONVENTION, for the purpose of .- nonduating one candidate for State. Senator, for one year, to fill the unexpired tam of Russell . Errett, resigned, and eLa candidates for Assem bly. And Two other delegates from each to the JUDI CIA:I. CONVENTION, to nominate one condi ' ate for Jadge of the ElstriciCourt, and onenan didate lbr Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and elect eight delegates to represent the county In the Republican State Convention. - These Conventiond will severally meet, in the city of Pittsburgh, on TUESDAY, JUNE 1,1869, ' At ll o'clock A. if., at the following places:* The COUNTY CONVENTION will meet at the 'COURT HOME. The LEGISLATIVE CONVENTION will mee t at CITY HALL, on Market street. And The .JUDICIAL CONVENTION will meet InMASONIC HALL, on Fifth avenue, between Wood and Smithfield street& ,The * election of delegates will be held between the hours of 4 and T o'clock r. Y., and will be held, - at far as practicable, by the Republican members of the election boards in the several tlistricta; and In those distriets where the Repub. Rosa election officers are a minority of the regu. lar election boards, the said officers are author ized to appoint enough additional officers to com plete the board. The voting in the cities and boroughs shalt, in silicates, be by ballot, and in the townships by markings The President of each Convention will appoint i Committee of three, the three Committees thus appointed to meet together, as soon as practice ble ' after the adjournment of the Conventions, and appoint a County Committee for the ensuing Hy order of the County Committee. RUSSELL ERRETT, Chairman. . Josh H. EriwAhr, Secretary. PutuT on the inside pages of ais morning's Gezwrririgeeond page : Poetry, "Like a Laverock to the Lift," Pennsykania and Ohio Pate Berns, Clippings. Third and Sixth pages : lifnaneial, Commercial, Markets, Imports, Ricer News. Seventh page: Letter from St. Louis, Miscellaneous Beading Matter, Amusements To-Night. 11.• S. BONDS at Frankfort, 86i -Prrnomint at Antwerp, 413-41 corn, o:mad in New York yesterday at Tom:' Rhode Maud Senate yesterday adopted the Fifteenth Amendment, by a vote of 22 to 11. Jammitt Rum, who was selected Post master of Steubenville, Ohio , . by chuice of the people, has been appointed by the President to the position. He is an ex - cellent gentleman and worthy the honor conferred. Jamsa H. Thaw; who was elected Ant master of Steubenville, Ohio, by choice of ihe people, has been appointed by the President to the position. He is an ex cellent gentleman and worthy the honor conferred. F I RDERAL OFF/CERS at the South, who defsulted at the outbreak of the rebellion, are held by Judge. Cassit to be prcitected by the ,statute of limitations against suit for the monies in default. It is probable that additional legislation by Congress - will be necessary to meet these cases. An act of Congress, at its last session, applicable to the District of Columbia, recognized, to the fullest extent, the abso lute light of the married woman to her separate property, whether acquired be fore or arta-marriage, and conferred upon her the right to sue, or be sued therefor in her bwn name. SECRETARY Fian, on being npla , fully Satisfied that the dewier Quali : was not destined for Cuba, gra n t e d,' ~ e a r . aneeirom the port of New IrotC-4 .- *er eerljt4l upon the Spanish , Consnl, not lidded With her Pacific intention% h i d m r libelled and seized, so that the ranter w i li go RAIDS boats. . ' - Coaintx is a thriving Pacific Railway town three months old; with iportlatlon ottenthousand,amunicipal government, and"i.dally" paper. It promises to live logget than tiost'of the brief experienced cittes:ethe great" interior, which rose wlih*Rew moon and were not Sound ; ; by-thtlight of the next. . syors of both cities have issued proclamations', requesting the generil ob. servanee of to.morrow zu4 a holiday, mid wishing a total suspension H of , business. We trust that our merchants aid' menu. facteMrs will nulyersallyloyespend; and this enable everybody In their, employ to participate in the ennobllng.exercises of the day. Tn Union of the Old:and New School Presbytmlac. Cjaurehes, Is about consum mated. in the Old Scho o l Assembly, at , Now York.„ yesterday, a concurrent dec laration was reported arranging the de tails for union on a broad and amicable basis. •We see no impediment remaining to prevent the cementing together of the two great and powerful religions bodies. THE proprietors of the Erie Republican have brought suit against the Typograph ical Union of Erie, on charges of conspi racy and libel. The Union took upon itself the responsibility of flooding the country with circulars denouncing the proprietors as unfair in their dealings to ward their employes, and warning com positors not to engage with them. "IT HAS recently been decided in New York, in- a suit brought against a gas company, to recover money paid by a consumer under protest, against the threat of the company to take away the meter unless the disputed bills were paid, that such payment was not a voluntary, pay ment, and,would not estop the consumer from sAitittecover it Taa•Mayors of both cities have issued proclamations requesting the general ob servance of to-morrow as a holiday and inviting a total suspension of business. We trust that our merchants and manu facturers will universally respond, and thus enable everybody in their employ to participate in the ennobling exercises of the day. 4 • Tax X - Vth Article is regarded in Rhode Island as certain, if adopted, to admit their Narraganset Indians to the suffrage. These are also apprehensions that the word "race" in the Article' is properly liable to the same objections which led to the erasure of the word "nativity" from its original draft. But, it is probs. able that the Legislature, at its present session, will agree to the ratification._ THE Philanthropic Indian Peace Com mission was interviewed by the President yesterday, and laid before tim their fully digested plans for securing the peace and happiness of the redmen, by buying them into civilization. The President fully concurred in the views of the Commis sion and acquiesced in theplan presented. Unless the Indians are more vicious and untamable than moat people believe them to the new Commission has struck the proper method of putting an end to the frontier troubles. THE Philanthropic Indian Peace Com mission was interviewed by the Presi dent yesterday, and laid before him their fully ,digested plans for securing the peace and happiness of the red men by bringing them into civilization. The President fully concurred 'in the views of the Commission and acquiesced in the plan presented. Unless the Indians are more vicious and untamable than most people believe them to be, the new Com mission has struck the proper method of putting an end to the frontier troubles. No CILLSGE, whatever, has been made in her divorce laws, by Indiana, since 1859. A variety of amendatory legisla tion has been annually attempted, but has as regularly 'failed. The laws continue unchanged, granting dlvorcos for the causes usually specified, "and for any other cause for which the Court shall deem it proper that a divorcee should be granted." It may be well enough to add that the:opinion very generally prevaila in that State that these legal provisions are conducive to domestic happiness and general morals, and should be maintained accordingly. An opposite view obtains very generally elsewhere. Trim British Government demanded the release of the Quaker City, a steamship which our authorities seized and li- belled upon suspicion that she was to be employed in the violation of our neutrality toward Spain. The demand was placed on the ground that the vessel is British property. Secretary nen, on being made fully satisfied that ttie steamer was not destined for Cuba, granted her clear ance from the port of New York, whereupon the Spanish Consul, not satis fied with her pacific intentions, had her libeled and seized, so that the matter will go to the Courts. A CLEVELAND paper has discovered "one of the finest mathematical geniuses of the age" in '"a Plain home-spun far mer, having little in his personal appear.. ance or surroundings to distinguish him from the ordinary tiller of* the earth," and Who lives in one of the rural town ships of that county. This gentleman, Mr. J. N. 13.rociwzrz, of Brecksville,. Ohio, has recently had a remarkable paper printed in the. transactions of a scientific society; its title being "Remarks on the BeedarTanetbili of the Planetary Orbits." The oontributions of the • plain) Ohio 15 Mmfr have, it is said, f 'already excited 3 UM deep interest of prominent mathema ticians in the Eastern States and in YinroPe,nuff propositions that he has prci `, . ....,,,-.. for iheir consideration are still the efforts of some of the most felifnuna among them to confute." TEE PUBLIC LIBELLER. The Pittsburgh Commercial has achiev ed for itself a most remarkable record d ar i ng its brief existence. 'Everything by turns and nothing long, its constant inconsistencies, its startling vagaries, its habitmd alacrity in abandoning to. toor • row its pOsitions of to-day, the facility , with which It has always been ready t o stab a Mend or cringe to an enemy, and the • Uniform disaster 'l4lo' hes -ay „TTMX4. PITTSBURGH GAZIE.fTE : FRIDAY.- MAY 28, 1869. ... . . , tended fla its undertakingi .in ~ the direction of public opinion—these peen . liarities of our neighbor have been steadily a subject of curious contempla tion in this community. A. variety of hypotheses have been from time to time framed by the public, which were intend ed to be explanatory of either of its vas cillations in principle, or its terrible blunders upon every grave matter of tact. These hypotheses have had one— and but one—element in common, differ. in from the rest in every particular. Ilt has been agreed on all sides that the Commercial was faithfully and consistent ly Democratic in this: that, whichever way the political winds blew, its journal. istic nose was never known to be painted toward, anything else than the public plunder. Constantly watching ior its own chance to levy a chntribution out of some treasury, national, state or municipal, not a whimper of public virtue was everfieard from the Commercial while its profit lay in keeping silence. When its managers could get neither a job, nor a fee, nor a 'blackmailing bribe, then their voices were always uplifted, in high:sounding but vague or empty accusations, as of late. Tho dollar is the Commercial's touch stone, not only for itself but for all other men. If it cannot plunder, for itself, it naturally* presumes not that plunder is checked but that some one else is engaged in it. Its normal idea of public morals is that of an universal dishonesty. It 'presumes the rest of the world to be akin, in the same idea, and that the public vir tue of which it prates is_wholly a myth. An old English philosopher held the natural state of man to be one of war. The later creed of the Rittsburgh Com mercia/ maintains that state to be one of _ peculation and jobbeyy—and it has its own reasons, no dou bt, - for thinking so. Evil to him who evil thinks! This pro clivity to impute , moral obliquity to others has ever been regarded by moral ists, as a clear proof of moral perversity in the censor. The standard by which the Commercial has always measured the ,rest of the world is simply fatal to its own reputation. Always consistent in holding some dirty and scandalous evil to be the common. aim of others as well as of itself, it has constantly groped in the mire, wading through the sewers of politics, and happy only in gloating over some secret nasti- I ness, Instead of walking erect and above ground, clean itself and in a cleanly world, and dealing with mankind in a manly way under the light of thp sun. Paugh I "An ounce of civet, good apothecary 1 " And what jewels has the Commercial found among its congenial dirt? What frauds has it exposed? What wrong doer has it convicted? W here Is its proof ? And only echo answers. When ever it has ventured to \ stigmatize an in - - dividual name, it has been squarely met by that individual's public con tradiction and challenge to the proof:. Whenever it has denounced a spe cific act, the facts are so far wanting, to upheld 14 gross azcusations, that the entire fabric of its calumnies —upon men whose worst fault, in the Commercial's eyes, is that they have not winked at its own little game of public plunder—has already fallen even below the public scorn. N t one count remains standing in the in ictment which its trumpets have flotuis ed over for weeks pas Its preaentme t has been quashed, for its own im erfections, before the jury Is een empannclled. Ins of sub tting its proofs, it 1 ores the -evade ce altogether. It has of dared to print an authentic state men, of the facts in connection with any one Of its accusations against the late Re publican legislature. It has not had the honest boldness to put its finger upon one specific case of that general corruption which it has sweepingly Imputed to the Republican party in 'Allegheny county. It has rung the changes, for days and, weeks together, upon Legislative dishon esty, and upon partizan mismanagement, cunningly adhering to generalities and even evading any precise specifica tions. It stands to-day a libeller not only of a great party, but, worse than that, of the fair name of an ancient and honored Commonweiilth—a libeller without the faintest shadow of any honorable justifi cation. If, it could, it would have stabbed Republicanism with a cowardly inuandol and it has degraded its own State of Penn sylvania, at home and abroad, with elan ders which have as slender a base as the fabric of any dream. LEGISLATIVE CORRUPTION. Rusks. Etrrons : It is eminently wise and proper in journalists to battle against c orruption ,' no matter what shape may tak e,' it or in . what tjuakter it 'may develops newspaper :out' afford to be right at all times,• and at no time do .r the people more earnestly endorse Its courant= *hen Ininfally striving to accomplish reform in any direction. When the Pittsbur gh Cithrnercial first sounded the signal,f warfare on what it denounced as a corrupt and dishonest Legislature, and proclaimed that pub-, liemoneys were being*astedirid'plun. deied by those charged with the high duties of legislation, the people applauded its course, admired its ostensible honesty and only waited to form a verdict as to the guilt of the entire body of law makers, when that journal should spread the sup posed facts held back before its readers and fix with certainty its charges of , corruption on the . members.; Tim% the public were prepared to believe that all the honest men.of the Commonwealth had not found seats in, he assembly, but they did hesitate in passing judgment on the whole body as a conclave of .thieves and ,planderers. Time wore oil- Arei . _, .: instead of' particularizing the sins of members, the onslaught was weakened by the employment of vague and uncertain generalities, and crying out "plunder" without showing where there was plunder. The public mind soon underwent a change and the child-like virtue of the Commercial commenced to assume darker and darker shades till it flashed on the people that the attacks were not animated in the true spirit of reform, but sprang from a desire to degrade, in the estimation of good citizens, gentlemen who, in sins of omis sion, had drawn upon their heads the wrath of that journal. In the absence of any positive proof of the universal corruption charged to the late Legislature, I imagine that a few facts having a bearing in the opposite direction will find place in your columns. It will be remembered that the signal for bittei onslaught on the Republic= majority of the Legislature was sounded when the pasting and folding of the iwo houses was brought before them. Two individuals, anxious to obtain cheap no toriety, proposed to do the work for $9,000, or if they failed to obtain that sum, to drop $2,000 in the price. The Houses, measuring the contractors as men anxious to make inroad to the Treasury, even at a temporary sacrifice to be re gained in the future, preferred that their own officers should continue to do the wdrk. By the Auditor General's report for 1868, I find that the officers of the - two Houses, last year, cost $111,841 05. By a law passed at the previous session, lim iting the number and fixing the pay of the officers of the two Houses—a law framed and passedßepublicans—l find that the officers f the recent Legis lature were fixed as fpllows: Two Chief Clerks A 12,000 $ 4.000 Four. Assistant ks 1,200 4 800 Ten Transcribing Clerks at 800 a,OOO Two Librarians at 800 1,610 Three Posiniaste r and Assistants ingi 2,400 Sighs nergeant-at-Ai ins and As sistants a' ... 600 4,800 Seven Doorkeepers and Assist ants at 600 4.200 Seven Messengers and A bet -tants titel 4,a10 Tyre Superintendents cf liluing room at Seveuteen.Pasteriand Foleers at 600 10,260 T0ta1.:..:. Total last year , Saving thls veer 165,041 To this 'number of otbeers the House added 27, alleging Is bad not enough, all at $ 600 $16,230 Deducting whicb, leaves total saving Or, In round numbers, $50,000 saved by the Legislature on the previous year's expenses! •Of the twenty-seven additional but twenty•three ever took their place or re ceived remuneration. Even the thirt,y -four were not able to do the work. In the caucus of Republican members it was agreed to inciease the number eighteen, believing that so many more were abso lutely necessary. If any error was made it was only to the extent of a surplus of eight or ten men, a matter trifling and yet magnified Into such large proportions by the editor of the Commercial. F Above I have sho in round numbers that $50,000 was sa d by the last Legis lature in expenses o ,er the preceding one. lii it in the eyes of thb Commercial, to save that sum was nothing, and the party de serve no credit for the economy so long as the two Houses refused to save nomi nally about $3,000 by giving out the pasting and folding to contractors. The Commercial has accomplished but one reult in its unwarranted attacks on the at Republican Legislature; it 'has furnished food for slander, to the opposi tion journals, which.will most assuredly be sent back to us in the approaching campaign. In its wholesale denunciation of "rings" and "party leaders," it vainly 'attempts to fly from the legislative cor ruption topic, wtrere it never could hold its ground, and sheltei itself in local pre judices which must always exist against meii'who, in the very force of character which makes them leaders, gain for them selves the jealousy and opposition of Those with light brains, who keep their places at tile foot of the ladder in all woHdly strAs whether in politics or business. CIIDJO. • O c ; the $40,000 raised and expended, sin e 51565, by the New York Free Trade League, to crush the interests of Amer'. can I industry, more than three-fourths was subscribed by merchanta or ship owners in foreign trade, or by the agenta and American ccirrespondents of Europ ean manufactnrers. lit a meeting of this League, held in Brooklyn on the 24th, an Englishman, named Hodgehin, read an essay, in whici , . we find the following passage • 4 20 t me tell you what Protection is.• I can but illustrate it b 3/ example. In Pennsylvania, iron ore, limestone and Niel; the three principal e 1 einents of the iron manufacture, are found , so near to gether, in such large auantltles, and of such superior quality. That anyone would think that iron could be manufactured there cheaper and better than anywhere else in the world; yet when the .Pennsyl vents iron maker has made his iron and offers it for sale, he finds that a New York iron merchant can bring similar iron all the way from England, and can pay freight on it and commissions, and make a profit on it, and' then pay the freight on It all the way from New York to the very door of the Pennsylvania ibundery, and sell it cheaper then the Pennsylvanian can. What is the cause? There are several, bit the principal one k this: In order to make iron, it takes a little iron ore, a little limestone, a lit tle coal, and a prodigious amount of la 'bor. The three first ingredients are as eheap in Pennsylvania as anywhere; but the last and principal one, Labor, is au much dearer in Pennsylvania and In the 'hole of the United States than im Eng land, that. in spite of the cheapness of the other ingredients. the iron coats so much more. to make than the English lion, that the English can pav all the ex p9nse of bringing their iron over herl i sad yet sell it cheaper than we can ours. " UIJ on which the New • York 2Wbrius pare this true explanation by a sincere, honest Free Trader with the NV staff pat forth .by Us, designed to prove that the price o nis high here • only because the duty ablest the iron masters to realise exorbitant profits. Mr. , Hodgekin touches the core of the mat ter, and exposes It to the whole world Speaks Tim Washington Reporter thus Speaks of Genaral 31 , 110. F. Ilaarneurr, in con nection with the next Republican nomi nation for Governor: iiGeneral Hermann is a young man of flue abilities, high character and strict integrity. Perhaps no public man In the State possesses such an unblemished rep utation. He Is a lawyer by •profession, but when the war broke out raised a reg iment in his county (Montgompry) and led It to the field. By conspicuous gal lantry he rose, before the war was end ed..to the rank ,of Major General. His gallant conduc t' at Fort Steedman just before the Close of the: war will long be remembered.; Se Voi,olooto,o.locille of. =EN , •` 5 - * • c am *. '„k ura =~"~= ~~. floe of Auditor General In the fall of. 1865, and re-elected last fall. He has de veloPed the highest abilities and busi ness 1 qualifications in the department over which he is placed. He is very modest and unassuming in demeanor, dislikes, eclat or notoriety, and never seeke anything like prominence. He is universally popular with the solaiers, and if nominated would receive an en thusiastic support from that element. Had he not been made Auditor General, he would have received the nomination three:years ago instead of Geary." THE, Doylestown Democrat, an opposi tion journal, denounces the Republican partY, in an article from which we clip the annexed extract as a specimen: "Their first President from the wild woods of Illinois was shot in a Mird.c/ass. theatie and diedin a house of questionable" name, from which spot they would have us believe the sonl of this "Martyr Chief. tainl went up to Heaven and the angels." Tiz Kittanning Republican remarks "The Pittaimrgh Gazette reads the Pittsburgh Commercial out of the party. We think this should have been done long lsince. The Republicanism ofthat jour4al to our mind has been long of a very t doubtful character." - Decoration Day, The Executive Committee sd' the G. A. R. - asserdbled at City Hall yesterday a& terneon, General Pearson in the Chair. Capt. liV. B. Cook read a communica tion from James Verner, Esq., President of the Citizens Passenger Railway, stat ing that transportation for the orphan children to and from the Soldiers' Home would be furnished free of charge by the Comps y, as requested. - ii A ?vote of hanks was tendered Mr. Verner for hi kindness In acceding to the request of the Committee. • Capt. Cook stated information had been? received that five hundred and fifty children from the Seventeenth, and two hundred and fifty from the Fifteenth ward public schools wouldjoin in the pzocession. The matter had been men tioned in other schools, and was under advisement. REIM $ 45,& 111.141 A communication was read from Dr. Howard, In which he consented to open and 61ose the exercises at the Academy of Mimic with prayer according to the invitation of the Committee.i This location of the battery for firing the salute on Saturday was left to the discretion of Gen. Pearson, Chairman of the Committee. .'19,141• Adjourned until this afternoon at four o'ofook. More of , The Bevins-Hemings-Fisher sensation, which, it will be remembered,occupied the attentlontot tire Mayor's court; under a forimr administration,,for some two weeks, and which was then ttanferred to New York city, where, we supposed, it had been finally adjusted, has, we ob serve., by the following telegram from New York, been revived : ' uKate Fisher, the actress, was in court yesterday on a charge of grand larceny,; preferred by Mrs. Bovine, of Long Island, in hiving, it is alleged, stolen a watch worth two hundred dollars. She denied the act, and the case was postponed until Friday." There is an action pending in the Dis trict Court of this county for slander, in which Miss'Kate Fisher is plaintiff, and Mr. dnd Mrs ! Devine defendants, which may have had some influence in bring ing about t 0 e above prosecution. From the report f the case against George 11 Helpings, c arged with larceny by Mrs. Bevies, through the New York papers, we thought Mrs.• B. had been so com pletely ventilated as to eause her to keep out of police courts, but she appears to be one of the "Irrepressible." _ ...,.........,....-- Alleged Horse stealing. Nicholas Walker made information be.. forefustice Helsel, yesterday, charging Mike Felix with horse stealing. The prosecutor alleges that he purchased a horse from Felix, some time since, for forty-tive dollars, thirty-five of which was paid down, the remaining ten to be rad at some subsequent time. On the 24th the defendant, he asserts, came to hie residence, in Mifflin township, and deinfuided the balance due on the horse, sNot having the , money to pay It, he was requested to "call again," but instead of so doing, the prosecutor alleges that he took the horse out of the pasture, brought him to the horse market in this city and sold him. A warrant was Issued. • —TheSt. Louis income return list of last Year is published, and shows only two hundred and one incomeiof over five thousand dollars. Of the largest in comes, the following are the most prom inent; John G. Rose, $211,000; Francis Whitlake, 5140,000; John Whitlake, $140,1;00; Joseph Whitlake, $30,000; L. 'L. Ashbrook, $40,000; H. Ashbrook, 140,000; Jas. Ashbrook, $10,000; (all these gentle men are pork packers;) James H. Lucas, $102,000; John G. Copelain. $79,000; An drew Christy, 557.000; Charles H. Buck, $32,000; Daniel Cattlln, 147,006; F. 0. Day, 548.000; Robert Campbell, 170,000; James Fiske, 551,000; A. S. W. Goodwin, 539.000; Henry Hoffman, $34,000; Wm. Hamilton, $36,000; Nichols Shorffer, $39,000; Henry Shaw, $41,0004 Wm. Mc- Kee, 1$31,000; Alex. Kelsey, $50,000; A. Knight, $53,000; Joseph Weil, 531,000. I, _ Markets by Telegraph. BuyirAt.o, May' 27.--Receipts-26,000 bushels wheat, 4.000 bushels corn, AO® bushels oats. and 8,600 barrels &bur. Shipments-62,000 bushela wheat, - p,ooci bushels porn, and- 21,000 bushelsoats. Freights—Wheat. 13o; awn, 110, and oats, 73rci to New, York.. ; Flour inactive. Wheat is a shade easier, with but little here, with sales pf 16,000 bushels No. 2 Milwaukee Club at 11,24, and 8,000 bush els at 11.241, all to arrive; white' and amber is neglected, and N 0.2 Chicago is nominal. Corn is dull, and there are but few eamples on 'Change* sales of 10,000 bushels new at 611g5700, according to quality, and , 20,000 bushels kiln dried at 760. ,Qats dull and weaker, with.sales of ':10,000 bushels Chicago, .to, arrive, 8,000 bushels Ohio, 1.2,1500 bushels Mil-, waukee: ill 'at 68e. Rye POminaL ' Bar.; ,ley nominal.. Peas •are nominally held at .1140. 'Pork is held at 131,60. Lard can be bought at 183®190. Ilighwines; there is no demand, and prices are,quoted at 11,07. Oswacio, May 27.—Flour is lees active and unchanged. Wheat quiet, with sales of 2,000 bushels No. 1 Milwaukee Club at 11,86. Corn quiet with small sales of new 1111nole at 720. Oats scarce and nominal. Barley inactive. Freights to New York—W heat, 9e, corn, 73 c, and rye, Be. Lake imports-16,800 bushels. wheat and 5,700 bushels rye l Canal ez. norts--2,000 'barrels flour anti- 22,600' bushels wheat. Cntosao, May 27.—At opsn, board, in the afternoon, the grain markets were quiet; No.. 2 spring wheat was„,iirmar, selling at a range of 141334 ®1,14; seller for the month, closing at the inside fig. ; urea; Other grains quiet. Provisions and freights pegleoted and nothing doing. In the,evening No. 2 wheat was n0Rd044. 41 4t ;4183‘6,415* . 12,- ': .- "kVAVFOZ? , ':' - ' . - - • .a:.':.. , )•t l, At - ' -,kiz,k'g''Vi -Resolutions are to be proposed, fo day, in the Canadian Parliament, rela tive to the acquisition of 'Judson Bay Territory, asking the Queen to unite Prince Rupert's Land and the North western Territory with the Dominion of Canada, on the terms prayed for, in the joint address of both branches of the late Parliament, the Canadian Government to make provision for the protection of the Indian tribes. MECHANICAL MEDICAL . APPLI. ANCES. There are certain phases of disease, and cer tain diseased conditions of the human systam, whirh proceed from displacement and mal-posi non of come of the various organs of the human body. These are not remediable by the usual 4 , and ordinary methods need for the cure of other' ailments; but requlre.some mechanical stay or support to maintain the parts in position until they are healed, Prominent; mong these may be classed a displacement called hernia, or. rup ture, which is a protrusion of part of the bowel, - and which must be returned and kept to its piaci •by some outward scPport whicn should be prop- '! erly adjusted in order to secure immunity from inconvenience and danger. The prevalence of this condition is now very common acid should be attended to, immediately on its appearance. not only because of the present inconvenience which its produces, but also inconsequence of the, usual danger of strangulatioa which ti rarely - remedleil but by a surgical operation. Varicose veins In . the legs and varlcocele are other forms of structural changes widen need Immediate and scientific Outward support, in or der to :afford relief or effect a cure. Each of these conditions are now as much Trlthln the pale of successful treatment as any of the other dis eases to whlctimankind are liable. Stooped shoulders may be cured at 01:1C3 by the use of my Shoulder Braces, which not only main tain the body in an erect position, but at the same time 'enlarge its capacity, and allow free and full expansion to the lungs, always a necessary condition to a healthy and peace; use of the pul monary organs. There are hundreds of females who would find great benefit from wearing these shoulder br. ces,, , i as they are eo constructed as to take all the drat': ging weight [tore the hack or spine and suspend the clothing from the shoulders.. Those who use myy ) shoulder braces need not wear euspefiders, as they answer he double purpose of shon.der brew and suspenders: in fact • they are the best sus. renders ever Invented. Bold and applied at . DR. KEYSER'S NEW MEDICINE STORE, NO. 167 LIBERTY SKEET. TWO DOORS FROM ST. CLAIR. CON , ULTATION ROOMS. NO. 120 PENN STREET, 1 0 11081 10 A. H. it. UNTIL 4P. M. AT THE STORE FROM 420 2 P. M., AN D,S TO 9 AT NIGHT. THE VITAL STATISTICS OF THE UNITED STATES Show at perioi ical fevers and acute and chronic diaorders of the sto.nich and bowele are: among the most prominent and fatal diseases 'hi ibis con.ttry. Disobedience to the iawa'of health. as regards diet; the use of pernicious stimulaits:' and the wear and tear of business excitentent,attd . of •fast life' , generally, have much to do with the prevalence of these maladies in our cities;• while in tne West, and especially in the newli` opened districts, they are chiefly due to malaria, unwholesome water, and the exposure and pri vation incident to life In new settlements. . NOW, IT IS A FACT thit that it is as possible to protect the human syStem against these maladies'' as to guard life and property against the Incur sions of assassins anti thieves. Strengthen the vital organization with IiOnTETTEIPS STOM ACII BITTERS, and It becomes as capable of re sisting the active principle of epidemic or endetn lodisease, as a tire-proof sate is of resisting, the amion of combustion. Thls is the experlincelof thousands who have remained unscathed by Ma-, larious disorders in the sickliest seasons, white their neighbors, who neglected to tone and regu late their systems with this unequaled Medicinal stimulant, have fallen thick and fast around them. .Weakness Invites disease. Vigor repels It Help nature to fight the good sight with in (. ction, whether It be in the air, in the water, or the soil with this matchless preparation—acom- I pound of the rarest vegetable extracts with the purest of all diffusive st'mulants. • AMR SPRING STOCK OLIVER ~.: 1 1':!. L 1X,..T01i. .- . ....,..:.......,..:r„..,:. .r ~1'..-.t,',0111.P.-A11r..9.5., We are receiving this week by ocean steamers from England a fresh stock of the latest midmost beautiful de- E dens in English Tabeetl7 and BodY Brussels by direct importations from the man ufEtcturers. We invite the inspection of house furnish.' ers, confident that we offer the largest , assortment and greatest variety of 'elegant patterns ever brought' f to this market, at the lowest Prices.. Great inducemente are offered in all grades of In. grains and Three Plies, it being I their constant aim to offer to the multitud% the fullest assortment of cheap and serviceable Carpets at lower rates thane any other house ,in_ the trade, No. rs nna AMEM. - - i,..7;54,:zz..ze5tr5! , --ilv, - ;vw < l,..- - 4t -4v.• 4 MEI
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