DI , ts Mittsilargt PUBLISHED DAILY BY PENMAN, REED & CO., Proprietors, P. 11. PENNIMAN, Jo:6am KING, T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. HEED, ltditors and . Proprietors OFFICZ: SAZETTESHILDING. NOS, 84 AND 88 FIFTH ET. OFFICIAL PAPER pf pittibusgb, Allegheny and Alle. igheny County. 4- 76106)-041111,1100Wtatty, Wedgy. !Yoe yekr...plosulOne year. $2.50 Single copy ..41L50 Sloe month 75151 x. mos.. 1.50 5 coptes,effk 1.2 s By Me week 15 Three mos 75 10 " Ll 5 (home/wrier.) undone to AVM. SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1869, UNION, REPUBLICAN TWEET ASSINNATIL - JITDGE DIATRICT COUNT, • ' JOHN H. KIRKPATRICK. ASSISTANT LAW JUDGE, COMMON PLEAS, B mr.pvg. H. COLLIES. 'SEATS SENATE. THOHAsiIowARD. ,'• . ASSEMBLY. ;MILER S. HITAIPHREYS. ‘•- 'ALEXANDER MILLAR, - JOSILpH WALTON, JA7dEi TAYLOR, • D. N. WRITE, . • JOHN H. KERR. • SIIIIpIF, HUGH S. FLEMING. JOS. P. DZIiNISTO.N. °USK OF COMM, OSNPH BdOWNE RSCORDER• THOMAS H. HUNTER. • • • CONWEHONL% ° CHAUNCEY B. BOSTIVICIC WORSTS% JOSEPH H. GRAY. CLICRX OF ORPHANS' COURT, ALILEANDER HILANDS. DIRECTOR OF roost. ABDUL IicCLURE. WM Ws' Panvr on the inside mot of Rd. ;morning's GAZETTZ--&COnd page: .Poetry, Ephemeris, Religious Intelligence; Miscellaneous. Third and ,S'izth pages: Commercial; Ananciai, Mercantik, and _River Nam, -:3farkets, Imports. Seventh • page: General Ifiseellany of Interesting ..Reading. Matter. GOLD closed la New York yesterday at II.: 13. roINThs at Frankfort, 84@el PETROLEUM at Antwerp, 47f f. TIES' modality lists of Pittsburgh present evidence that no other city in the United States enjoys greater immunity from sickness which leads to death. We are g hard working people, and good - public health is our greatest reward. _ -2 Turboslth of Ex-Seoce. tory Breartibri remains poor, and his friends have no hope that he will ever sufficiently recover to take active part in the affairs of the countiy... He is an example of men worn down slid death•stricken by the recent iwiw; although never in front of the ene- Iniee gum • Wz learn that the report, through the Associated Press, .of the removal of Col ' lector Sumaven (not Niltu„ as stated yesterday,) in the XXIII district, and of the nppointmeat'Of Mr. B. L. Tinown to thit ; office, is not wholly correct. This chimp of office has been under consid eration at Washington, bit is for the'pre. sent de !aye& Tfiz copse o f the American people a , desireto be , Aatudia aPeeoh-tusidn* The . English appreciate our natiohal weakness in Writ directlian4 and potince upon our . representatives 'to their capital so soon as \ they arrive turd seduce them into oratory„ 311r, 1 **Tr..sx has- been entrapped in this manner before the American mud wee fairly , shaken from his boots. Let lm . look;to the record •of his highly wined and dined predicessoi, and take warning fronihhi downfall. tins. Dn. WALKED, the lady who has theinoral courage, or impudence if you like; to throw off the peculiar garments of her own 'Bei and go in forilublic Office at the bandi of the Administration, de made occupy a very ..iMplessant position by many jdurnalisti of- the country. She is 310 better i than an hundred thousand others who have been besieging the hero Presi dent for places of, houpr and trust, and, although a woman, is no worse. Give her el laii'show, If woman's place is at the crib,•let her take her choice_ berarcen thedomestio anti the public article. •. 11 win la, lopoyeinent en toot, among • the; wiser Republicans of Tennessee, to throw oititoilledl6tii vriiii Present can i didates for Uovernonand. to unite upon 1 a npw man perhaps ,1,1p,a,a ctt2darsi t nn., It' n ew he very gratif y ing to ottronl oil theitiet;essibf thlspiopositlon, boat in its p ' ' 4iideii•On !aid in . thif popular ap- S a I p ' ' fyiiiicli'woutil be sure to follow. A ea ' datit Rite' Mi".itenn, itandfngupon - - • , the; braid ,grpund of. universal auffmge an aamesfy, and a ground Which n9ither of preamitid4alitiiia 'consistantli °it: copy—.would:sweep . .T en no.44lt, one i- own summer tornadoes.: oft l- - 4 4 4 91:41, Troo6 *alma to *km * ll 4 wbYP its , titirghleimMete4 ll . swirls sP,Perr!uOYJlT linel the msßulie; , meet off . 9 ur,1 4414 .$ rall7911: The 2W. buia can sailriely biro oftottr,ll4 course atom; sollthbor` closely, or it InaIitIONPFX4e4 a 4. ;one of the as& iiimeAgre isig4g—Anktm it amid NM utt4lJL6litsata.rj', f ,z..h.'<f i~.. day chance to tell the truth: That would indeed surprise ,everybody here;--even that small party of our eminent citizens who apparently feel a morbid pride in the, chronic stupidity, the habitual ignorance,' and the inbred mendacity always re vealed in the columns of that splendid specimen of misdirected enterprise. Tux Johnstown Democrat emulates the 1 habitual accuracy of its friends of the Commercist in the annexed, notice of the action of our late Conventions. Observe hoW lovely everything is, and how ex achy correct, as put by this.ell informed Johnstown politician: The course of the Commercial in de nouncing the corruption at Harrisburg hist winter was strongly indorsed by the se ection of a Legislative ticket composed o i five new men and only two of the old • mbers—Messrs, Humphreys and Mil . The adminiitration of Governor e • ary.was indorsed, and the delegates to the State Convention were instructed: to vote for him. Hon. H. W. Williams was alio indorsed :for Supreme Judge. The nomination of Geary and Williams by the Philadelphia Convention may now be regarded as a fixed fact. 7 . 13 'WOULD call attention to a card in another column, signed by a number of the leading clergymen of the city,tand recommending to the general public the cause fob which the Rev..T. C. KEENEY, agent of the Orphans' Home at Lauder dale, Mississippi, in now traveling. This noble, charitable inFtitution now main tains more than two hundred orphans, and and has been forced to turn away more than one thousand 'others, who sought admittance. A farm of two hundred and seventy-five acres is attached to the insti tution, and it is thought that if it can re ceive sufficient aid from the North to sus tain it for a year or two, it will become seltsupporting;ibut at present, owing to the failure of the crops in Mississippi, caused by drought and freshet, they are greatly in need of aid. RAILWAY NEWS. The Vanpunmur ticket was beaten in the electiono(the officers for the new consolidated Lake Shore line from Erie via Toledo to. Chicago. The Union Central road, uniting the Pennsylvania and Lehigh Valley roads, end giving direct transportation to New York for tho coal of Schuylkill county, is •to be built forthwith. , The Pennsylvania Ibillroad has com menced suit to s forclose the first mort gage on the road from Cincinnati to Zanesville. This is a legal formality which will supply the needfial sanction to existing contracts for the control of that line. With the completion of the sixteen miles of branch between Dresden and Zanesville, the Pennsylvania Company , : will have a continnOus through road, en tirely under their own control, from \the seaboard to Cincinnati. Cleveland and Pittsburgh stock went up ten per cent. in one day lately, on the strength of a rumor that a scrip dividend of thirty per cent. would shortly be de clared. But the accuracy of the rumor is doubted. k The charges for passengers and freight have been reduced on the Central Pacific road and further reductions are fore shadowed. It is intimated that the fare from Omaha to San Francisco will soon be put down to $lOO currency. for first class and $4O for emigrants. ;An ex change says: • Gerhe distance froin. Philadelphia to Chicago, by the Fort Whyne route, is 224 miles; from New Yotic -Chicagth by way of the Allentown • branch of the Pennsylvania Central, striking the main line at Harrisburg, is 911 miles; from New. York to Chicago, by way - of the Erie Railroad, Lake Shore and the Mich igan Southern, is 998 miles; and again, byway' of the Hudson River, New York Central, Canada road and Michigan Cen tral, 958 miles." A PRACTICAL INCONSISTENCY. W. C. Beira= and other leading au thors have been taking an active • part for .years in the so•called Free Tradel move ment, whieh has retained. its youth and freshnessthrongh repeated drafts &Ka the golden fountain reputed to be. . . lopated in an isle beyond the seu. These eminent literary gentlemen are willing that all products . resultlag, from• .manual' labor performed abroad shall be , allowed to en ter untaxed into competition with Amer ican Work, lurdened *as it is withiaii tion. That Americana can sncc?ssfully compete agaihst'suli odds is as ides lorthy of a poet's brain, for, oflcourse, ey would fancy that the ,nighty" elixir of Liberty ninst give Coltnifia's''faverite , sons ten fold strentelb to inestlherViirif:, . : But these literateura are illog cal, as it beceineis poi ts Stailrcensheista to I be. .- The , very gentlemen wh l would. so . ' 'gbidly .; She* ' the ', :Wor ' ..ti;tat. their" Nikki" ' Aineticitts •:•mtg f , A una against the 'united industries4dl 'the' effete aristocLuiea aft rotlitr rchies of the old weirld; are among Chi leaders of titaticliciAt, 4 Whieb: ietiatiiine . `dwelt' ntt and earth to haye4tutt papeolal„b ch of protection, known as the international- copyright -law,- Ratablightd.; li 4:r u f a .4•.' toren+ of staple fabrickappording tO thew, can 'pre anti dolrish 'under a free .tyode policy; but, manufacturers of light , and, - ethtrial fancies; or of solid litaature,' must be protected against the influx of 'cheap foreign productions. When we , see these , gentlemen thus anxiou s to, pro; Asa themselt;es' find. their own especial `blanch of Inittufith' We Can not help being nxicharitablevnough to draw thererAnt the et:inclusion .. that .. if t.,l3ey • were iiosk• gaiters, instead . of minders of .Pegasus, 'ttotri!,ojd'al idrOligly advocittiastf!i: Oat , tariff law, u they do now r ook ,, 1 ••• -1 0 1 1W14 r atliiiii:4i- 1 .A.i -5•1,..,tiii1k ‘ ;Wray. 40 ,n , i # - s ME • „,.. 4 4 - 221 ,~_ 4 , k PITTSITUItGfi GA 74 rE: SAl . t RpAy. JUNE' 5, 'il.E69. TUEtkIaattAINIA'AUESTION INAPOL, nit's. It is proposed, in some quarters, to make a political issue; 111 behalf of the Republican party, upon a vigorous en forcement of the Alabama claims against England. Indeed, we hear intimations that a resolution to that effect is to be pre sented for incorporation in the Republi- can platform at Philadelphia. The Republicans of Allegheny have already broken ground on this question, in the direction of a faithful main tenance "of the national rights and honor before all the peoples of the world." The. Alabama case presents but a single speci fication, in the broad category of Ameri can self-assertion, and there should be long and: wise deliberation, among our friends in Convention, upon the politic expediency, as well as the abstract propriety of making a specific demand instead of enunciating a principle as broad as intentatienal justice. In piliint of fact, we could not but re gard such a specification, at this'juncture, when every indication points to a peace ful and early vindication of the broad principle, as interpreted in the light of American sentiment, as most impolitic and unstatesmarulke. The President has already taken up the true line of our National policy. He has no raison. .to doubt the sincere and firm support which the country already gives to him. He knows, , as -we do, that we do not desire a war, that we are not prepared for it, and that there exists, and will exist, absolutely no need for it. We all know that England is at this moment substintildly ready for a concession which she would not have made 'twelve months since, nor even sixty days since, but in which her own sense- of juatice and right hi r within a few weeks, so rapidly crystallized that there is, at this hour, scareely . even a fac tion, among her public men, who are not prepared to surrender . every main point in the past controversy.. ,The facts were never so universally admitted, or the law so plainly confessed in fayor the broadest American claims, as withiii the last fortnight. We submit that this is not the hour or the situation pioper for the volunteered and mischievous dragooning of `Our own partkzanship. Events and logic march on with a power which nothing but some domestic blunder can arrest." And parti zanship will involve the Administration in -the most fatal of mistakes, when it shall drag it, as now suggested, into any false, or indefensible, or unnecessary position upon tluit delicate and critical question of international reclamation. It is only needful : that the President should be steadily assured of the hearty co-operation of his eceg i tryos,', and of their profound contidenCelnffie wise as well as the creditable vigor of his administration, in all affairs, whether foreign or domestic. If Republican Con ventions go beyond that, the Republican party may live to regret an unnecessary and unwise step. THE BURIAL OF THE DEAD. One - of the customs of civilized America is more unnecessarily barbarous than any thing to be found in less enlightened countries. Look at whatb called "Chris tian burial." That last necessity of hu manity,as provided for here,could scarcely be more aptly regulated if the intention of its constructors had been to find the most harrowing process of playing on the feelings of the surviving friends or the deceased. ' In no other civilized land does the in terment • take, place so anon after the de cease; so soon that innumerable instances are on record where the still: flesh and lifelike appearance of the corpse has led anxious friends to fearlhat life was not yet extinct, but these Emus hive almost invanably been overruled by thq require ments and etiquette of custom, In most nOuntrleso and those the most civilized, the coat,. on its way to the grave, is covered fief:Wit with an ample pall; .here .an ungracefully, shaped sar. cOphagus, bedizzened whips with glit -tering metal, is placed in view, in a fan tastic:4y ornamented glass nese, to be transported to Abe cemetem. preeenting to the people in the streets an idea of a ':grotesque mixture of death end tinsel, in a tasteless and` gaudy decoration of ttie relics of mintslity. . f This spectacle, gllttering with plate - glass and silver °Mullen% Is followed by a caravan of chariots tiled - with a pro *tenons`assembly, many teinbers of are • attracted inensly by .a cdorbld' l'iov4-of ifirti; 4 '4l# mist dr‘ .4011;34 . 1 areit all ttmeaprobably t and at,that time Itill%Otliembli to the "Chief: mourners" who',ly, nnetsitrty and ea-' sentially cruel 'dictate qtra4lott ire corn pelle,d to ride ,for r miles nVplutaiVePoot! to witness the ii . pectacle of the interment of their 4:tireqt ,fonds, have Wadi sensiti .p ears harrinned bythat mist 41s. tressing of sothil, the dullheavy thud of the earth &Mu L ; 4 011 this. cOugh Woof*. chest.iw-wifich .his bflipa ~enveloped the; gorgeoue casket so lately the chief attrac tion In the IdoW;windinglitoiefsion: l When this climax of unncccssarg elty-iftur•hCii reeiheo;'when . nerves, - IMO feelings of, the grief-stricken haye, been played upon until weak humanity ;: can bear nontOrei.the long hustling ride home still remains before them, which they atinililigid 'to' wideigi; With their minds . fell of the lenthilecettoes 'of-the I tAnt,Be iniet Y the l 11 !‘„0,,St/Ptoi, And yet tr "ail Of illi4llo to be POW MO_ iI#PRRAY listed and ea tau ripe! nowt • A E had not - - paid to the memory of the departed. Suppose that instead of all this, after waiting until no shadow of a doubt re mains as to Death's actual presence, a plain coffin, adapted in its shape and material to the use to which it must be put, should be procured and appropriate 'services as usual be performed at the house of mourning, then have the coffin placed on al truck adapted for the purpose, —and such as are in general use through out Eurep4—covered over with a heavy pall, toad aCcompanied by a fow trusted male / friends, the undertaker and the clergyman, to perform the necessary ser vices, and so taken to the grave while the mourners remain at home, spared all the harrowing incidents which at present are considered necessary! Undoubtedly many would object to this; perhaps they would say they wished to stay with the dead as long as possible, or to show the last marks of respect to dear friends. To these we say that only a comparatively modern custom sanctions the presence of women at fu nerals at all, and that in England—and in Philadelphia and other parts of our own country,rtaining En,glish habits—only the male friends of the family are invited to participate in the ceremonies, consider ed too distressing for females to be allow ed to , take 'part in. We do not believe that because a custom is an old one it should be adhered to or adopted, but if it be sensible, it; , antiquity should not be an objection. hen, teo, at present, many people are forced by fashion, and nothing else, to procure much more expensively decorated coffins and many more carriages thanare at all necessary, or than they afford. Preaching and writing haven effect in these _cases, but if the cus om were changed, if a pall rented from e under taker hide the ornaments, ore lack of them, from the vulgar gaze, I two car. riages were considered more espectful, and respectable, than fifty, m t of the temptatioUs inducive of post _ m item dia tlir play would be wanting, and o funerals would be less expensive, less o ensive to good taste,'land, to our mind far more decent than they are at presen NEW PUBLICATIO TER. 0 . /.413 TESTAMENT HISTORY. From the Creation to the Return of the Jews from Captivity. Edited by William .. Smith, L.L.D., " Classical E =liner in the University of London. Published by Harper &Brothers, New ork. For sale by Henry Miner, Pittsburgh. •• In this work we have not only em bodied a history or the Old Testament, • but critical notes of value to the student. Its arrangement is very much like the text books of modern histories, and gives Biblical history ih a style at once capti. eating and instructive. Each epoch.is traced and illustrated, with suitable ex planatory notes, by which the student is enabled to fix in his mind the grand eras of the world, as recorded in the Old Tes tament. The grouping together of the remarkable events, arc expressed in language indicating the high scholarly abilities of the author. We could select _ piatsages of rare beauty, glowing with life, and yet terse sad vigorous. For Sabbath School teachers the work cannot be iqualed. BesideS the valuable refer rences and comments at the foot of this page, there.is appended at the close of each, chapter, notes and illustrations, of' sigma ability and usefulness. The ap pendix at the cloSe of the historical notes to the -'Books of the ,Old Testament," "Chronological ,Tables of Old Testament History," "Tables and Weights of Measures," covering fifty pages, are scholarly mid instructive. The same may be said of the Chronological Tables: With copious wood-cat illustrations,- of a supe rb*. type, elegant maps, and fall -index, the student has every facility to study ScriPture history with ease and comfort. Tire Grassi Wris OPEN. or Scenes in Another World. By George Wood, anther of "Peter Eichleroibl in Ameri ca," eta . Published by Lee dr Shep ard, Boston. For sale by S. A. Clarke & 'Co., 119 Wood street, Pittsburgh. . _ The pdpularity of "The Gates Ajar" indicates that the reading public will welcome, 14 9 `,gates "Wide Open," a work of mu ch the same character. The very titles of these works, awaken curi osity, and, Indeed ionic curious things are narrated. • Certainly , • the linagination 'of the author of the "Gates Wide Open," -is thitte&vrithabold type, bordering upon' thumuirellous, ,So little is revealed of ' theSeenes liar:Lott= World" that we mina to Oonjccture, and Mitse depend upon our imaginary -coneeptions. We are not, premed, however, to anticipate »some thingtOortiraired in . this' racy, vol unte,i,and s yet „it, contains suggestive thoutts that imiy, set . the, mind to. work to sol e the jpsitione assumed, We are inforted the work. was published some i , y'rars ago with* title of. ,"Ftiture Lifc4 .or S c nest lii Ai):ollier Werld," anti situ* the p blidetionaethe 'attractive hoOk of 'Miss iPhelPii, the' within. issued it under ila the name stated. Doubtless the book will haYe a wide sale. ''' '. ' ‘ Sitsarxml-.Airriad; or, Larry Dalton. By ' Harriet McKeever, author o Edith% ' MinisterY," lifilikuitatteet 'etkr Published by J. P. Skelly& Co. i l'hila delphia.. , Par sale by J. L. Read Sod, 102 Yourthnvenue, Pittsburgh.,'! . • Thiel is,nde li glitini story and conta in . 'lessons * worthy of commendation. I sketches {he career of a youth who ;come !tea theiconntry to live in the city, hut yielding to the temptations and wick l edness aroind tin, lie lost idi fair,char aster. Happily Ala is reclaimed; and mow ; cliangcd, in heartlinskiri life, and regains aferthy tannin imele*:"..7his w,orlt illtY 'written aid ,lii areditsve to the 'IMO:. EgribsEsii34 Or k Um i ' .— a ,'':,A;L* 47 c 4 ..*7 Mlll'llifft, r ~, -. i Holint, author of "Tempest and-Sun shine, "Darkness and Daylight," etc. Published by G. W. Carleton, New York. •• For sale by John W. Pittock, Pittsburgh; Tne reputation of the author will no doubt sive this book a wide circulation, from the fact, that she has written a num ber of poptilar works. The story, in some respecte, is well told, and presents admirable traits, but some may be dis posed to question her views of Western Society, as h ardly being up to the general eharacteristi eli - of that portion of the West, embodied inthe plot of theinovel. , The story repesents the heroine following the object of her earliest attachment to the West, wherOte has attained to power and position, and finally, ends as might be en expected. Mrs. Holmes writes in a style, pure as wellite3 agreeable, and high toned. This work may alsd be found at the store of. Eenry 11...ner,'Elfth avenue. SACRED AND CONSTRUCTIVE ART; flit Origin and Progress. A Series of Es says. By l Calvin N. Otis, Architect. Published', by G. P. Putnam .dr, i3on, New Yorlt. For sale by R. S. Davis & Co., Pittsburgh. The principal objection to works relat ing to Art, in any ibrm, is the tedious de tails, which become to tie general redder dry and irk me. This work is prepared in a popularized form, and will be found very interesting, hoth to , the non-profes sional reader, as well as by those bred in Art. The object of the work is to place in a simple and practical form, the cause, origin, patuie, and objects of Construcig, tive Arlo The thought is elaborated that the peculiarities of architecture in the dif . terent ages Of the world are the result of the circtundtances and ideas of the people among whOrn they originated. Chapters are to be foUnd on Spontaneous Art, Con struction,Grganization, and then we are treated with the art of the Greeks, the Romans, the early Chriatians, the Latin Church, and.of our country. The sug gestions are valuable, instructive, and en tertaining, and we hope such works will multiply;Se this field his heretofore been too sparingly, occ4led at least in a popu lar form. THREE THOUSAND MILES THROUGH THE ROCEY 'MOUNTAINS. By A. K. Mc- Clure. Published by J. B. Lippincott & Co., iPhiladelphia. Ivor sale by Henry Miner, , Pittsburgh. The elegant manner in which this book is gotten up is enough to' give the reader a favorablC impression of its contents. But the bOok itself has intrinsic 'merits 'which ought to give it a wide ,circulation. %Unlike boas of European travels, it de picts new scenery, grand, picturesque, sublime. Nature is, seen in a trip of this kind in alliits grandeur and rugged sim plicity. 601. McClure, the author, writes in that fre(l and familliar %Vie that an tai -1 itor or s journal attains, crisp', freeh, and piquant. These lettereindicate that Mr.' McClure ie a lover oinatire and has been a close observer. The book contains much that,is valuable, too, since the rail road is opined to the Pacific Coast, that will aid travelers passing over that grand route to' proper conceptions of the country, ;The journey was made over a —yetilgo,; and , proper time allowed to gather reliable information of the country. The viewe of Mr. McClure, how to deal with Indians, are worthy of consideration. Tau Wiliam Rosa. By G. J. W. ' Publiahed by J. B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia. This nicely trimmed, bandy volume, in paper covers, of Lippincott's Library of Select Novels, is a story of fashionable life. The atithor is one of the young and promising writira of Nnand, whose name is becoming familiar to the readers of fiction. The book Igen printed and convenient size. w TascuchnErta .Wonics. Published by Harper , er,ltrothers, New York. Harpers have just commenced the pub lication' of 'cite works of Thackerey in .cheap, form, something like the style of the late edition of Read's Novels. "Vim ity Fair" 'and 'The Virginians" hitveni ready appeared. Paw is white and good, print Clear and attractive, and edges neatly trimmed. , • The merits , of the great humorist's *fats need no 'corn mendatibn from us. :Like =Dickens his rang is established, and though the gifted authoi is dead, his *mite live and are ex tensively - read. !Hak . .took; _,_ure pro , I.(inigiting that a stout book of this size can be furnished at the smell ;deka fifty bents; but it only sertgs . to pustratis what enterprising 'pub. Ushers are capable of doing. Miner can .supply the m'orks. ' TOR Mill fifins. By^F Wi Robinson. inblished by Harper Brothers, Now, ids ivioiir of fictiod, ii3 i better. written thin dtpOlOrOliof the etorY. The author shOwn• soma • genius in the con structioief the'plofi buts he Night • have' furOhea more agreeable, to - his admirers • than those promineit in the dt*. The novel will n 1 6 1 0 1 403' extehitiely;ie4 in oplte its morbid chitracter. • • • _ Tog 4Migratlba frbia Liverpool 'during the week ending May 15tb, it is reported, was of mast extensive diameter, the great bok , t pf emigrants consisting of Penults `txt Bremen and other Germai porti; gt x s owers_ ailed durieg the lietib and the Amber of passengers was 7,lhu, of I wkeit 4,088. were from the , con tinent of.. Europe, and the remainder E ng lishok,oteh and Of 'twelve ships which 'Ailed, ten were under the prorislolis of the English Emigration l ct, and, o l lidd for America with 1 6 094'04011 4 • gerWhilit 'two; which sailed' not Vader the Act, carried ot4, , 61 paseengersi s We* dertirtedidr the Brazils and yt { 14. dicia• per:, llsh Vate, that the nulugt , cilltsVoTtit'.` WWI , of co pa Arian; Ms*. 16041111; 11014 tberind 10E1 lb§ toweu f 4 . inAlth illuissmommaig,,to Aid 0 si Li L I t I*!'4? . Tnn Bellefonte Republican says If the discussion must go on, why not begin at the foundation? Why not take the Legislative Record and show how . every member voted' on every bill? If any member, or members, received' bribes, or voted for wicked and corrupt bills, for a price to them in hand paid,, why not give the names of each and every one of them, and, at the same time, pub lish the price each oneleceived? If the' Commercial has chosen‘o attend to our household only, and to expose none but Republicans, it should know what it iE4 doing, and should be able to give names,. amount of money received, and the char-, acter of every bill voted for by these cor-; ruptionists, or forever hold its reace. Talk is cheap. Charges are easily made- ,, but what does it all amount to in the ab sence of the necessary proof ? Is it hon est? Is it just and fair on the part of the Commercial to seek to throw suspicions upon, or blacken the character of any member of the Republican party by mere insinuations? Let us have the names or the guilty parties, and the evidence of their guilt. Give us these, or tease to trouble us further with the subject? * * It is not logical. It is not a. manly way of fighting to create suspi- cions upon the character of these inen,, and turn them over to the mercy of the people, without any evidence of their guilt, and assign no reason for so doing except that your "first duty is to the Re publican party." To makseharges, and then fail to prove them, wetaens a cause. Our rule is to make noicharges against any man until we first have the evidence in our poases- , sion to substantiate them. * Down with the comptionista;, but no false swearing, is our motto. Make out a case, or select some other subject. THE Hollidaysburg Register, copying . an article from the Pittsburgh Dispatch, says : I '• "It is a review of the course of the • Pittsburgh Commereial, a professed Re publican paper. The Blair County Rad ical during the past few months has used. its feeble powers, through a pretended, correspondence from Harrisburg, and ed. itorially, in the same way as the Cora niercial, and only last week had a fulsome editorial approving the course of that dis organizing paper. • In the language' of the Dispatek "We ask of . the Radiear. that it will do one of two thine; either drop its mask and turn Dernochst; and thus quit a party it, deneunces hole= lessly corrupt, or else abstain fro& lift. wholesale and untruthful charges of cor ruption" against the Republican,party." Tut. Erie Gazette says: The Pltstburgh Giacomo reads the Pittsburgh Conner.; eial squarely out of the Repttblican - party, on the charge that a Demncrat is -filling its chair editorial and prostituting Its col umns to Democratic uses. The Courser- Biel does not deny the soft impeachment but is resorting to certificates of character from private correspondents, instead of relying upon the justice of Its cantie:'"The Pittsburgh GAzzprz ig emphatically cor rect, and its course ia endorsed by the Re publican party of Allegheny county,. which does not propos& to swallow any such "True. Republicanism" as D z etAik cratic editors manufacture, Tar Beaver Dam (Vir•iscxinsin) - A?ljari alluding to the secidental ' death of Mr. Prichard, near that place, says: "There is something 'sadly strange about the fate' of this family. Mr. Prichard's grand father was killed while felling a tree; a few years since one of his sisters and her child were burned to death, and another sister hist a child by drowning. Such chapter-ot fatal accidents seldom occurs in one family." I. MECHANICAL MELIICAL APPU! ANCES. Tbere are certain plumes of &seise, sad tain diseased conditions‘; of the human-Bynum. widen proceed from displacement and inal•post• tion of some of the !Worm organs of the human body. These are rtmedtable by the usual and ordluaryinethods used •for the cure of ether.: ailments; but require some mechanic/1X stet eel suppnt to maintain the , pans In posltlmaptilt., they' are healed, Proudtient - among . ,theie may be classed a dlsplacehient Called berg onrup-, tura, which is - a protrusion of part "o bowel; aud which mist be returned sad kept tette tlace by some outward support whien should be Prop= eriy adjusted In order to seeuze Immunity limit inconvenience anddanger.• The preraleitie thiscondltion Is now 'very common and stiOuld be attended to, hantedlar r ety on Its appearance, not 'only becaise of the' present incon*entence' which Its prodnees,but also lAconsequence erthe usual danger or strangulation - -which is rarelY I remedied bit by smug/cal operatlen. : . , Naricose veins in the Sege and earleoceleare other forms of structural - changes whion need' : i 'immediate and scientific ontriard support, la ors ,der to afford relleg•or.efrket .a oure. , these eondit!ons nim is with *Mild the'Paler I ' :of =mobil treatment as any of theciber . tte-' 'eases to 'which Mankind are liable. ' " , Mooned shoulders way , I)e.eurad•at ones by the ..tuse of my Shoulder Braere,,whieh not only tan the body In Ml4OO 09151U01:1;010 the Lame , - j time el:110ga its capitally, and allow ftakerldj full expansion to - tbd Mims Ltteelearr, condition to'i beilthy anapei foci u of she-pal mount,. organs. ' ' • . nese arehlundredltot felltabmertiO-ricadd'andr i. great benefit from riesling those •boolderbrsces as they are po.coustracted as to inko ma the drag ging weight fromtill; back or 'OWL aud'llanDall. the 010,40f:from the anoghlere.. Those..whe neer my fib:Adder tiracrt 'teeing , * wear suspenders, as they answer i Yl3 AOUble purpose of shou,der brace :and suspenders: In fic`iilleY are . thi best sus penders ever Invented. • bold and applte4 at MU' NEartiEird NEW MEDICINag ,sTonm,, NO. 167 LIBMIttg tsltt ET. rwo Loous FROld BT. C1:1.1.R 061.7 uLiAcrioN, #OO4. .1TO: sod 'PENN ' Writ •lIRO/4 'lit' II NM.FROM 4110• Or. IE4 A,J • tip,lV./1/1 , ,41%.N1GHT. r SCIENCE ADVANCES. • • as figoa as an,artgle fpfl:lorLing to be of pol i ty • half beetrtegied: audits in, by putt- i.e eplnton, iniafttoindo4:9ol.es endFilfor to re "„ • ,nlenlarithefr deyletel ;I:Trees Eli atfsabstquiog* sporluno for the genuine de: 'lsc . eie tithe mercury, A* 46 Auk or pills sowderi. was it'On'A'or 4040 1 eers‘,;: of the :4)&1,4h and llirei,,Whtle ttifOle waigfg : wdultnisfered fbr thief:ll4i: Atlenigthito . 'llT;ilrittit Bll.7Elta at • and an .tare new 'ardent tit hregsfg *v44144144"; rated.. Th* 'bonen 14 ,errict* this .14.44ite, preiliklatton; rite* ' at One acknowledised t *pp!! nfluerakpolentilenfre*t ilnliteto that ppoOd•-• rlty t, which en entightened s age Ica** coatßenefli, them: There eive bein m3nyurious 41, it lip palm upon the community , w e.cb, nave been Mind peifectly 'worttde o, irhlle nog- 2:W111411M has proved, 'a Weestnit to thdesanda. who ovy e to it their reatonttlui to health andl44l. 'many years we have watched the steady eit of IZIOSTATTEI3 , 4 titivALAOIX Bac' i lo publics ittlination, and lis benefOletti:' . . effects as a air,' fur all comp *Ants at 14 )111, 'the isteni , :ish of iiiorbld to lily that ft can he relied ty:,rioit iertila to tiedremgdp. its*dpoetoi% *mik 146 . * • itiotePretorition dterlPtrs'gc.'3Wia liudy ‘ l4- i,ittins. and pillow seapiiik Orr liwirtt r by tUf mmo Oscine. ancirbtoltsist . V **a ti s ai l a l t r s iaS ' l;Wlilkoti l o lit • . 06, , k 'a'^ ::~"~ ~ s =IS ~~~
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers