M tkt • . PUBLISHED DAILY BY - . - I WiNICIN,RSED do CO., I'Toprietors, Jasiili giNp •••• - HC A, - N. P; ABED, ; . Milton! and rFnprletors.. GAZETTE 8171LOINC itS:,B4AND 86 FiFiff ST EaffllClO, 'PAPER • :" latirlitAbArichi Allegheny. and Alle t, • ! 011,1enr.04111t7. Stu I aesni. , Was/ One sear:. Atuo rie ` l Vgati. • one m i st. Ye"."s° Mee e1)"...1W ,-_Vtl on ie - Weet , ..lslTbreetdoV . ll icniez.elut " 'tartlet.) " ' - AoAatellt: ROUBLICAN TICKET STATE TICKET . 1 I • GOVERNOR, . rjOHN • W.' GEAR \ \,stniitEmE.itrnexim, .11ENILY W. WILLIAM'S. corirr TICKET. \ 1. ASSOCIATE JUDGE DISTRICT COLTRT, I j 3 abEr.N M. lasaleATE.rolr, ' Alists74ll. law aupeß, RYON' PD . ,F,RED4SII. COLL4ZR. • • *TATE SENATE. \ - THOALis HO WARD. '‘ ~ !•• MILES S. HITXPERETB. ' • , ALEXANI)EB. MILLAR.• ' \ • JOSEPH WALTON, JAMES TAYLOR,: ~ • • D. N.'WHITE, ' , P , •' °- ' , JOI;LN.H. HEBB. • HUGH El. r tE.biBraZELtiti Sue.t,• -.' ' ... - K. DENN,, 7711 4 DLtv ..... .N '' .. . . . • crams OF covirrs, , • ...- ' ..- - JOSEPH BROWNE': .• - ', - • '.' '-` RECORDER,! TED.HAR H. RIINTIit; :;"- , . . _ coinusszoNze, , •'• - -.- CHAUNCEY B:l l. osTvrxes. ' ' - ; -:. : . JOSEPH H. GRAY. cinglor oßpHaßri!. coprr, • ALEXANDER El/LANDS. DIRXCTOR OF POOR, • ~ -Axplzi., IfeCLIIRIC.' . i . IMa OEM ~~, t .: . &' i , Ws ftLIRT on the Intridi pages qf , 4W-Inicomine. iltrartris: Page Poeirg,,Mplansells„ M4seellaneawi. Third &Amin ; Commercia4 Financial, Zacantaivitui River New* Markets, Ins : PTA- &Iventh page: Westafnater Ca -, • Apt Commencement, Interesting Reading B. Bormi at Franyort, 86g, Pzmotatnt at interp, 49.gE t cloged is New Yorkoi, Satur day at 187. • _ steamer United \ Kingdoni, front 4 .New York to Glasgow, left port seventy ' ; six daytigo and has not - sinee been heard 7 1 of. She had_sinne thirty passengers. :1: interruption in the wurit'of la y ing the French Cable his . seion and succeeded.' 'ly end sad the , expidition:centee jap. idly westward under the thoSt favoiable - A_ llZSOLunasr -of COngrees, ad9pted April 10, 1869, reqUired the tiacitic Rail- Mfaileito diposietheir ficatmort 9o- gage hoods hi thO lreainrit aisicarity I- • for the cx)ospletion of those roads. &ot a • doparlutti been'so deposited.. Why . 2 • Ma. • Gioicpr PBAB0D : him enitqlred his Southern , - Edacational Truji" , with 51,406,000 -``more,, Its Tends to more .thiiii:ttf4,o2llllaszis,'"or 818 . --L '.,, /ettet i,...:,.. r dateg' , J4C,gitur,' - ,1039; expresses • :his "F' , Ev;' l3 atlakT9teltitit the present, mansgententof the Trost). egasatfflu is getting slog fatuously chitta• , Aeege• she lee a;4144 . 4107 W a 54e0 the ;;eenetitl' o " 4ll o. ea Fgffi et ePlle r heft - Sider whether it canbest be got by; with sithorough-ent,Or a tunnel.. It is suppos t o ed peresentthe•heilviCit job - in the, entire Ontiict. - ME Racetrsz, our ,cOmments. upon tin extra43rdiparyappße:of their official Lion by 4111—.Allegiteny Jury, were ioneelied and , expressed strictly in the line prededea r tsik the . lAghe4y PO; PittS, 4 11 0' i-04 81 chargeg ;abuse l upon the Gezarrt. Oar neighbor s • 'ftiOe'to be Nattily heedless fir the law and of the facts., - _ nabs THE REGD3TRIE LAM is unde . t'exatltios Lion before the fail bupreme Court, it Philadelphia: The evident desire of Jnetfeee , Tnomrson mad SUARATIOOD thht the consideration should be , delayed, was gratified. The argunients oX•eounsel for the law not oily? stiPport the coast'- , ,tutionality of its proirisions, , but impugn '• the propriety of the, S uAttsWeet! bon, at - Aft' iyfes, as granted without jurisdiction, and tc t P ar t i es who bad no, ) Jedfidetldandtti. ` All;.these , questions will be &misled by eminent +mania!, of whom *en ,Ost.*:#6oo4Band IttleeiT}l ' fiedfor the Jaen, while Messrs. gunar and 'humurtraPPOle against it. , f . . Tits , Generil.-D. E. fisowiinkin (aims? years, was 'not , a saint.----FutyiLthit he ;.of fended grieionety against and nioralltY-= . lUttst bis'adadtted, i ?3hallth:088, liAp. , early faults, • he cottintu4'44l Into his fwe, for want of frejw'.l*llittidia to 11 04 sgainit him? It appear* to Ow, Sla nYnetriVaPeng-tome of then' &put"- ' lean -4 sliihitrhoth a lack of nharity.aii . a Isidtorxteasokykthla matter. ' To il!acy ;. titan 4iiiiiitAtlistmss# man or a wp- ' iiiiii Mall Itti once betrayed or even rushed greedily into a serious yiuit, th ere dal. , , to no forgiveness and no rastotation to =l= E _L MONDAY, atrii:.5,11469- ;Quit neighbors ofthe Pea and Groomer it'42l find satfkaction in 'quoting the opin lOns of 'one :of Iheir country exchanges, 'touching the nutnagement of the Gazirrve in the interest:Sof effective Republicanism. Their quotations Tare quite copious enough to revealthe onfnaus,toWard the Gazarrn, nf their rurai s friend,—to such readers, not ourslges, ourgives, as`were previously ignorant of its direction. .Let us , observe that advice frOm that partidular quarter' should cerl tainly,be regarded as disinterested' and linpartinl,•i•fhen we remember the con trast between its present commendations of the Cenimereial, andi its 'bitter invec-- gyes, of not long ago, against the impu dence and venality, of a Pittsburgh Jour - t Whoiri it then deicriiid as coming here fresh from•the , discreditable experi ences of the Albany lobbyer mild insin uation to which one s. pf obi neighbors re torted, with equal 'candor and point, by the plain advertisement that, when it spoke of public corruption in gelleral,ita readers might ogee for' all understand a content personal allusion to .its present rustic eu logist. . But now they seem to have corn , posed their little strifes, and to join, as a common labor of Infa, in. deploring the "unWorthY *rsonalititurof theGazsrpra, We hive all heard of "Baton rebuking sin"-.—but may here behold = a yet lower anti•cliMax of reproof. We aPpreciate the kin* sentiments toward us which, seem to be, equally shared by our two neighbors, and .theli countryfrieng,,nor`have we Allied to do so heretofore We t, have no advice for them blieittrri. We alma patiently wait to SW by , whaadrolt ways their entente eord may seem tertrei'lfroken, frt„ thdir open !! B f4Filta and secret at..tiatiartv Whose " peril ", if it exists , really please s : fiittuth_ufalut trio _alike, since!!Mtet hal, to it oh WI-4111M plitihPlyipitrb. 11, l►tingisjg ' lt st%tit. itido irtg their own work, :they may display a characteristic fealty, and we hops - they may hare more than thor.uinud success, , " • ' . . " • fairor and •confidence, is decidedly inex pedient and flagrantly unjust. - What-. ever 4 'wrongs .Gen. &calms may hare clone, he .has amply expiated; and those. *rOngit have. been suceede . d by a line of ! right conduct which fairly entitles him to exemution from the abuse which is now poured upon him. - - aette, •ECRET/IJIY BOUT WELL began, on Sat. urday, the payment of $31;000,000, the , •July interest otrthe debt. : Other $2O, 000,000 ' are also to be paid out in div ,dends by. Private corporations. The l& rg ~d iplinrsentents are • an. earnest f theater ease in financialchtles. In int l inthiii, the Internal Revenue receipt , - whiCh An' , Saturday swelled to over , one and 'a third millions, % give the assurance 'that the Pecretary will be enabled, to con tinue his policy, of discharging the na 1 tional debt with an unprecedented rapid iiir. He could not pay without first col lecting 'the needful funds, through the ex isting imposts. That these are now„hon estly collected 'and applied is the dimple explanation of -the present flattering pos. tore of things. 'The thieving "rings" are flattened out7-and must be kept so. THERE is no law in the Commonwealth to restrain the Commercial from display ' ing its ignorance and stupidity, whenever a fresh question of importance arises, else we - should appeal to it in the general 41 7 ' terests of the community. But we will, • endeavor farther to enlighten it in relation' to:the 10W of Satday. The SUbrepie Court, in pronouncing an opinion in any case, can only declare the la* , on' the point .or points actually in 'volved titerein.. In the case ,of 1859, in whlCh the opinion of the Court was pro nounced by Judge Lowruz,. the only point was whether a person could lawful- I ly ride tochnrch\an Sunday in his or her wriag That pointas decided ailirma tively.: In the case of d 7 in in which the opinion. of the Court _was, declared by Judge itE4l4 the only point was whether railway corporations could be' restrained y injunction from running care / ori day;Bun:, The decision was that aura cortic•-, rations could not be restrained in that way.' journalsin Geotta rec . . onunend Ahat their Legislature, which meets next Tuesday, shall absolutely cate the seats to whic.h colored members were elected, in which they ratified the , Xl'irth Article, and from which they were then expelled and the . Beds given to their White coMpetitora This step hi urged as a "compromise," and, like most proposals of that sort, is a trap for verdant fingers; It does 'hot engage to "accept 'a possible election of new colored members; it does 'not even `fittlialt, expressly or by infer-. enco, to tin . e..ju l dgment by' Which' their Supreme Court affirmed the eligibility of negroes to office. But the door is leff wide open forttte repetition, if need be, of 'the same outrage which has brought 80 Much present trouble upon the State. Nor ever with the most,speeiffc pledges • in 4, respect firould the case be mended. The colored members first elected either have or have:tit:tea good title to their seats. In the one case, their restoration affords the only Possible reParation; in the other, 'there remains no ,sluffiow of call for any cojmpromise whatever relinquishing : an iota of the alleged rightist. 4 :Clearly, the propositio i tq be wholly at the RaffiCal expe'and therefore inadmis sible. A.ccepeit. and we abandon all of the real Pelerardatie against the Georgia rebels; and it will remain more than even doubtful/tvhether their ratification of the XlVey - Article was, or was not, a fraud, es jO the'valid claim of the State to Congressional representation. PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : MONDAY, JULY , ,1869. THE GERMAN CELE J ----------- [)RATION. •Notwithstanding the protest of many citizens, a large and respectable portion of the Germans of this city and vicinity did celebrate yesterday, the anniversary of the Declaration of .Independence. How many thousands participated, we are not prepared to say, but the procession was imposing as to nutimers; and' was as or ; - . „, derly as such a demonstration eould pos sibly be. Except that Sunday was put to muse quite unusual in this country, andaltogether at variance with the then lokfc6l ideas andhabits of large classes of the people, no reasonable exceptions could be take; that is, if the same demon stration had been made on any other day of the week, it would . .have been imiver sally considered as highly creditable. Regarding as wedo 7 not fronl tradition, but from examination and conviction— Sunday and Preaching to be among the best instrumentalities for the moral and religious elevation of the people, we are strongly averse to have their, due and regular observance interfered with. That the appropriation of a portion of Sunday to a pathetic commemoration is a breach of the;lewe of this. State, we are not pre pared' to affirm. Lawyers are by no Mesas unanimously of the opinion that it is;and. a judicial decision to that effect /. twill be required before all classes of citi- • ens will be brought to agreement on that point. • But that such appropriation of the day, or of any part thereof; does „great .violence to the religious feelings and oPiniOns of Many citizens is obvklus. In this view of the case, if from no higher One, our: judgment is clear that the de nionstxation was unadvised, and has been promotive Of harm in the estrangement of elements of the;population which will al-. timately be mingled into one, and thmugh whose joint co.operation the presmation of American liberty must be wrought out., On the other hand, we knoir'frhat the Germans urge.. They saythat they are Citizens in the same absolute sense is though. they had been born' here; that, their rights of conscience in matters of religion , are just as sacred as those of dother classes of citizens;Jhat when the rat white settlers of this country came here they paid not the least defkince to the lariand customs they. found estab. lished,.antriot. only-disregarded both, but swept the Primitive inhabitants nearly all away, and hatrelliSsEro.ka and his as.: jsoCiates in hofptirsatqf the residuelhate, 1 remain; that the foreign \ missionary, en= terprises Centhicted from th.i4et t mlitry are all aggressiveotvowedly design t t o Over-- w tura ith athllerealipgiprooul: idateasion,aortfdthsoecicalelraiNg:agne-d [ ments . based thereon,thioughotit the wlitle, world; and that a system thus puraned' „ laity of all religious denominations, can not ba morally defective,, and, come i quentlf, open to reprobation. Whoever expecte easily to adjust antag onisms of this sort, clearly misunderstands of what stuff human nature in general, or his own portion of it in particular, is composed. We commend both sides to cultivate a better acquaintance with each. otheil to give. more consideration to the virtues of each, and lay less stress on'thr peculiarities or foibles that may be detec ted on the opposite aide. The Puritan is here, in the persons of his descendants, modified somewhat, lout strong and, tit. orous as ever. The German is here, and here he will stay. lifillionii More of his cbuntrymenwill follow him, and perms neatly abide: ,These two, stocks . rill ul tiinatelY inte.rbiend. ~ I t is in the order of. Nature and Providence that it must be so; ,The result of this interblending' Will be" not a reproduction of the Puritan or. the German: type, but, we trust, someliang between the two and better than either. THE POWERS OF: GRAND JURIES' --THEIR USE AND AirsE, On Saturday morning, it was qui duty to animadvert upon the remarkable pro ceedings of oar Allegheny =Grand Jury, in uttering, a public libel under the specious pretext of a quasi Vresent meat" founded upon "common , rumor and the public press," They were, in deed, ;so "Innocent" as to invite the Judges on the beech to exPode them , T i uniut is no longer a doubt as to the selves to indictment by coming down, position of the Adminstiation upon the and into me Grand Jury room, to take Cuban qUestion. There will beno recog part in a proposed inquisition. That our nl;tazi either of the belligerency or of the strictures were well merited, is \ the 05), m- inde'endence of the shadowy insurgent mon sentiment of the bar and of thepeo• Repil ) blic. A Washington reporter says. ple. From the Bench, no opinion is yet _ 4 hlB 4:impetus, been adopted after ma expressed: be that , what it may, wheii i lt taro conaideration. " The negotiations ; hall we shall contentedly abide its which will soon be revived, between our Government and Great Britain regarding judgment. In the meantime comet. an inairuoure to' do with tkis result, for the reason that report from the Quarter Sessions of ti:e3ilinglifilat7l:tritioli t t ru l i v i l arji ° is r ti h e e Va ti Philadelphia. The Grand Jury of that consimencY of our derntuidsat Bann& Court came in on Friday to inquire as k) land. ' I have good reason to be however, that the Adininistration will their power of proceeding against car- embrace the opportunity of the present tainjotunals "which had reflected un. disturbances for the purehase of Cuba. warrantably upon themselves and upon We doubt the truth of the statement in theVeurt." Also: the last clause of the above quotation. "Row far, if at all, can the Grand Jury The Administration la making a take official action in eases where mole- use of the available public funds, better in die thins of law are by common rumor said to have been committed by individuate charginathepublic obligations. Although or by corporations, when no complaint , -pain le Just now More than ever ready has been made under oath by any prose- t o so u cub e , w outor before a magistrate, accordliqr to e are . less tha4eyer able to the usual practice in orindnal caliescP eparerttle.eieziteY,fer it. The cell/It/7 ' b " We trust that our readers will give a • entered UP O3l ,Oe line of voobbillY and. o f careful heed to the enquiry thu s Quo t e d ; the honest liquidation of the vast public its application to the case of Friday -ih. bunhens, ' and, under Gasser's leader onr. own Quarter Sessions :will-str ik e 811114 Win fight it out on that line until every one. March 4. 1878., Least of all, wo Id it be „ se th.„,„. judge, L umuw fb rth. wise • to buy either lawsuits or -civil wars. , •.-i. .... ry w i t h replied, his opi n i on w og , freely The final idectsion of the authorities reported in MSc Journals before us, lie uP O eli4 Cahill mg* *ill gratitY all. 411 9 0 1 ed of tht fi rst questioN'of an al' the World , Cut C i el sg* Baling and his I M e d "atilt t i t* 48 - imr,*hici ..011 mt MAI, -444 1 8 4 PtcPagt 41m% th d ja c Ali ;Avant] alaitain); d i et ' r ri , l . L. 'eeePtallgtheitategolen or ' the liberty of citizens and of the' ° press, ""o . "rut T eed) across the +float% and thee, added: z which we look to for the payment, a t one Observe, gentlemen, how carefully the Pat claims for' Anglo.rebel depreon/. liberty of the Wiliest iaa of th e pre atle twin our ocean con:seem The British I ' 1 , protected, and see in this law hoar arbi tire& would be the act of the Grand Jury and the court which summoned, without a preliminary oath and a judicial hear ing; any citizen or citizens, and especi ally the editors of the press, to the bar of this /court' and thus branded thein as criminals: • I would rather-suffer unjust and even i mprudent - criticiiim than violate a great 'principle, for I know that sooner or later an act of injustice will be rectified by an enligtiteisi eel public opinton,•wh Ile a viola tion of a principle not only Inflicts a mor tal wound upon fhe cause of the liberty of. the press and of tbe citizen, but that wound would fbe inflicted' by the arm sworn to protect and defend both. • Judge LUDLOW then observed that "the „powers of a Grand Jury are by no means as extensive as is sometimes supposed." To be exactly accurate, he \ \emoted the Nk definitions as ably laid down by \ Judge c esso Krzzo, and as since sustained by, his sue= 1 i rs. , These rules requiring a preliminary Information and commitment, had three exceptions: lot, the Courts may, of their own motion, call the attention of jurors to matters of general public Import, bearing on things rather than persons, the object being the suppression .of gen eral and public evils, "such as grealriots, general public nuisances, multiplied and . flagrant public vices • and the like." In such cases, the Court may summon and swear witnesses,and send thein before the Jury. (The Judge don't go himself!) But, added the Judge : "This course is never adopted in cases of ordinary crimes chanted against indi viduals, because it would Involve, to a certain extent, the expression of opinion by anticipation of facts subsequently to come before the courts for direct j mtg. ment, and because such cases present none'of those urgent necessities which authorize a departure Prim the ordinary :course of justice. In directing any of these invostigations the Court acts under their official responsibilitlns, and must answer for any 'Step taken not justified by the proper exereise of a soulid judicial discretion. • 2nd. The - ) Attorney General may, ex officio,- prefer an indictment before the • jay, without a previous binding over or commitment of the seemed. This power must be, and Is, cautiously exercised, that`oilicer beizig responsible both to the State and to an aggrieved citizen. , Brd. The other and last method is by a presentment from the jury, on their own knoieledge orsobservation Without any bill •1:: , f indictment first laid before them. And the 'ridge added: "Your power, you will observe, is lim ited to the case in which you act "from your own knowledgeor observation," or upon matters given you in charge by the Court, and "the Court have no power ex cept incases "of great riota that shake the social &brio, carrying terror and Or May among citizens, general publicMuis ances affecting public health, multiplied and flagrant vices," and I add upon my own responsibility, in cases where, by `the action of the Government, the per sonal liberty of all citizens is endan gered,and the like. The\concluding paragraph of Judge LllDLOW'S'opinion is worthy of special attention in this and at this June lure., Observe: I. ought further to'sadd that It is a se rioas offence for any jott to attempt directly to influence Grand Jurors in their action on any quastionbefore them. If any such attempt has been Made, and „is within your own knowledge, un: , l the fact being established by the oath of o • or: more of your own number, taken befo you, a presentment may be made to the Court, whereupon an Indictment am h a y may may be framed, and if the eparty shall upon trial be convicted, the offence will most certainly be punished ficoord kg to law. .. , •,' W e give much- space to this Matter, since _the Philadelphia case bears, so faithful an analogy to the affair in Affer gbeny. Its:ezposilion of the law is as timely as it is unanswerable. The public CNI ZIO W . realize into, what >a snare: our . Grand .Tury have been led,, by following "common rumor and the public press,"' into ' , vague and indiscriniinate impeach- met of public °facers without legal proof. ~ FinellY: "Gmmott rumor" upon our `streetatxplaimithe conduct of the Grand Jury oil - Friday last; by the hypothesis I dial. at least a portion of its members bad been imposed upon 'and misled into their deplorable blunder. By whom,-• and for what seeret purpoae? If there has been "eharsteery" . here, let it be exposed .and punished/. . , . ___________.____. legation at Washington don't like a de- 1 Storms and Freshets in the est. • cision which stops their expected breach A Government contractor from Fort :report, 1 Sully makes the following No • en our international 'position; our own ri f tnorth f aEr LI any account or west .o honest neutrality is no longer assailable i S!oux Cit.y, and hut /ittlo beyond Omaha. • - ' ' The Missouri river is rising at • these Us they had hoped for. ,As we I predicted i , . , , points but very little, and that little not months ago, the Cuban quesition ma been attributable to the rain. -Below Council „ 'practically transferredto London, to stand' Bluff -4, however; the damag y great. From Phelps' to Craig Station on or fall with the outcome in - the Alabama the Council Bluffer and St. Joe Railroad , affair. This result merits the heartiest ap- the track is from three to four feet under ater there havingbeen no' trains for proval of unintelligent American pnblic: w , four days. Captain rsartie, of the steam-' I er Mountaineer; • reports that at a creek below. ouncil 13 inffs, he saw twe_ nty•sev en dead bodies taken out; the bodies of men, women and children, drowned from the sudden rise of the . rivers and the overflow of the flat prairie land. From every quarter below•lCamtna City the re ports come of the loss of life and prop one o Advieas from Dubuque, lowa say that f the moat 'fearful storms- ever. knovin has just passed through the lower part of Clinton county, it being nothing more nor, less than a violent tornado, which pursued nearly the same path marked out by.the famous Camanche hurricane of 1860. Nothing was able to withstand its progress; fences were swept away like chaff, trees were wrenched out • by the roots, cattle, hogs and poultry were taken up into the- air. carried a great distance and klUed, But thegreat est scene ,of ruin and devastation was wrought at Malone', a sniall.atation on the Northwestern , road. Nearly every,. house in the village was leveled tathe ground, and hereoman- killed, while several others.severely wounded. The damage done to ted property is estima at several thou.sand dollars. A :Kansas paper,. in referring "t 1 the storms and freshets In that State, says that a colony, of Swedes, who were en camped on the Raw river in 'temporary !shanties,' they . being en route for, the book settlements, were anddenly en gulfedu by the - late rising of the haw.. . ' party endeavored to escp,tut only thirteen succeeded in doing- so, the re- mainder, numbering - 51m e twenty iti all, being Carried aYand subtaergedha the 'I waters. : • " , • 11,1UESTIONALILE FILIBUSTERS. , • The telegraph on Saturday announced that a body of men left the Port of Erie for Canada, *embark for Cuba on a fili-. bustering expedition. We do not think the telegram was correct. Last Priday . we met, in - traveling, some of, them, en' route, much too ignorant to conceallheir predatory excursion, if such 'was in tended, who stated that Cubs was the laet place t hey wanted to strike. The following, from, the Erie Dispatch; fully explains the centralization of.these mei': armed • On Irlday/ afternoon a ;body of men, with 'the Paraphernalia of carpet baggers, marehed d o wn treat to the dook, where they aWal d passage on the propeller St. .P •t Du Luth, the new city at the head f navigation on: Lake,Superior. They bared , nearly three hundred, a7d , re recruited In Philadelphia, to work, n the construe i;,ll? tion of the new railrold from Du Lath `to Sc. Paul. Bealdes Ordinary laborers,. this body of men comprise maay me chanics who go there to win howl* and wealth.' The workmen, four-h of whom are said to be Phijadelphia-firei men, I are under the carp of Contractor Strickland. . • • WESTMINSTER COLLEGE, ' An account .of We recent Commence ment exercises at this' College from our correspondent at Nevi Wihnington will be found in another . column. '.. It is, well written,. and we 'trust will enlighten many of our readers as to tbe higlichar, ester of the . College. Yery few, ive fear, • among us are aware thattsg excellent and prosperous a Colleiiate 'lnstitution is just on our borders • and in Oil panoply for large and continued usefulness. lasbingron Items. The Treasury to-day commenced its new programnie of' buying one minion dollars of bonds, and on Thursday next, July 8, 'Of Belling one million dollars of r gold. After that 4ate it will alternate weekly with the parched° 9f one million dollars of bonds in one, week, and the sale of one million dollars of 1041 the suc ceeding week. - Such of the Cuban leaders as have vis ited Washington this week, seem to be a good deal dispirited by the course of our Government in enforcing the neutrality 'awe. The attaches of the British Lega tion talk as though they had suffered a ;defeat, and the only possible Inference to be drawn from their conversation is that they hoped to find in the departure of Cuban expeditions, an advantage to their side in the Alabama controversy. Gen. Banks has been here two 9r three days, advocating the recognition' of Cuban bel ligerency. It does not appear that he made much impression on the members of the Cabinet. -[ i'as, Wellsburg Naos says a ineeting of the Directors of the projected Holliday's Cove and Wellsburg %Amid was to be held Friday. It adds: We will also state that we have the best authority for saying that everything looks voratile for the •immediate building of the cad from Wellsbttrg to Holliday's Cove. We also have the assurance that, as soon as this is commenced, the capi taliats of Wheeling 'will take imniediate steps for prosecuting the work of extend; ing the road to their city. • Or Tap large reduction in the pnblic debt, a Washington dispatch we: When Secretary Boutwelk:zeitd ;the - statement to General Grant. he expressed himself as highly pleased, end reiwited that if the receipts-of the Tieasnrycon tinned to increase, and the, public debt decreases, he was satistied pe to the enc.' case of his administration, anci4red not for the croaking and sneezing of_the poli ticians and their representatives, the partisan press. • .., • THE 8 IIiPTOBIS CIF CONSUMPTION. Paleness of the countenance. Spitting. or expect oratinn of pus. Thla pne sinks In water. • :, . . It i.e sometimes streaked with btOod. There Is chilliness Or heat. shiveran .o gs, and. sasbes :of There is a nearly whitenese of the eyes. The insii of the head fells off. A t times there's a circumscribed red spot on one or bith cheeks. ! There i.e of the'hands and feet: - There great.debillty and emselatlon of the body .. ti. i • ~ ~ There is &high colored state of the urine. With a deposla on standing Ilte brick dist: There is oftentimes ^ great thirst. The blood ill httirled through the arteries and Tha'pulse IX over a bridred. and even as high 'gas one bitndred and.forty a Minute. , `The Verne on the itirface of the body , are bluer' - ! tLarixunil, slid binguid. ' . . ! eithe,dlseaseprogrieses the'deblity murea mer . • I ' The ixpLOtt,ratron becomes more eoploui. ' .!!, 'Thh'itager naffs' are incuivated. ._ Theft Is a mamma s and wasting of all. the powers of lite. ''"- ' ! There'is often pita Insane or both /gaga There* often diarrhoea and falatuese. I• There is great slakin g of the vital :Drees. / rhea there are turbercles, smalt,oortio ns o , 1 turberculons int!tei wi I be exipetiorated. -, This tubercular matter has an offenilve odor. • On an examination with a lung sotnd,,istaing , *and gargling i.e hrttrd. There 14;always morai;ii: less corirh; • •' ' Some of these sympt:is are I . l ways,•Pre'reat ba Du l montrY'cOnsuniPOo n . and nearl y or Taut au ' I oethein in different . stages ; f tte dlse.sie. No dtaelite of which we haveany knowledge is Co common and So almost Inuits:ply falai; yet- this, need not be the case . lt.th e ear. ler SitliPtolllB were heeded. Time and agati-nfi have milted at- * , 1 Mahon to D. E/SYSEirlil LITLiG CURE, which will in every instand e of a i•ecert cough arrest '• • the progress'of the disease arid binder its drsel opulent, and even after It has become settled will often cure It had arrest ftmh.er decay of the nngi Sold at the greet MeiliclniStore, wo. lef LLB- • ZIMYSTRItEff,:ime doer from - St -Clair. br. 1 .1 Keyser mar he consulttd 'at' Ids . LiIiEIIMY P' a/MUM:OPP/Oil it vicar, -Dar. trirrn. is . o'clock. and at Isis resident office, No. 4AO Penn tr •!-Itie.,t; &moll to ISo'aloclt.' '.-.._ - , Mllik .dims 3N of? EarliAtisliOlt.4 No ailtterboir vigorous by nature the cist ern • and. thestitution reef be,"they Matt ft ,.., • ' , tily'sureimeraor less front theepleting.e •'' - - " of, the • tetipo.ra.nre tit-f- midimmulei„, ,liiitaz IlleenottbOtlf/4411_1 spate, ned bi- , %talk shine mato - ' • treatment. lite eiter pressure noon ins vital forcer mast be metan entit. - rbalatied by an ex *tr...resistaitt pourer: the untitx• 1 end rapid eo n . -_ ji gstl Ll Tg l itift krt VTiAlVll%?.7,lrali.,.': taon an swiml tut n o t the - nods:sten Into he . _......, ,- . i-. ;, , stounsett.fttar t which both thlf ;hods-and thesaildli • —At h meetink of the Trustees cif k the, ,Icsfittrittrigritud.r,red. iptkenyi s e ino , bra wl ,' es, and, t e talk ~ srsliptlitiainir Peabody Educiii;tonal Fund; held Atlgew, with tbe machine* through -.tau: hit 11. be. York on Thursday 4)1 last week, George toursopprest valid essrvataa., A lIIIX f . ; Peabody added one. ittillion dollars: in sick lejli .!. ? r e tiattgyo ti ll. -7 la quire c d o a e t Oi a al 1 -' • 1 railroad and mho/ bonds, .mostlit.-Soulb., azeitem,z.,., au, .0144„,rtrataa will r:antlN 1. ern, to the 16Peatxxly Educational Fn.od,,s,' r,v, gig:: c ' t g: 0 went ..rgaTtu'u°ll.42lZtog - so called, and three, hundred and: eighty, yi d b eat Ear e u i l t s `, l ~,MT "4 . 7 • ..-- y , tour thousand dollars , in Florida six per ~. -Tell dest deratninisilippiteffin apatstable and 4 N . cent . -bonds and over duo ciat4Polm• ~:.1 - glltztlll3 di m ea r lti: '" r',T;oTitirelitTgal. N. -_,,___ . .., . More binpire.434lver yran. experietoe. have —At Richmond yii., iPesterday, the th-. ti c 44/) 7: 1/Ij t*d°rled Vlseuisiusitit"t4 at 'writ! of Col. Atatneiß:Braniih,, who, magi ca.tal l ihrylit h ib a l lt o P.: Tit la .gtalul ,e ctrasstr ke • . ,• • ' killed' bythe 'falling of a bridge 1a41.4.10,1-, l'iurs„,isti .5,.-itsa„l:Bl.,'lt's,,aad il - ft e 'i r t, , '- - d.:Was.. atteruredV.i.a 114 fg e, P?AqqaPIO; -(11+74 9f.t7:l:7*:;o4472otWarttis t .. ii ' ' "•"--.;_k, -.,--:',.._ • 424 cagiaquir,.Zrourie amnia iisip,lialeh..,, a l,. title, vi,,, 3 tee, suctiustresiliof . ..,,, on s bit ' , • ,the,'ohttf9ll,-±tibeAT thS`i gt - etifielOrcils4l l , . &on senaliq°,9 ''' -1 - ; 41F... '.''; • 1 r' one Waa r hnt ealistit' ethe vesAtiOlo 466 kilakclintiio:. Veumn!‘ "' • .: -- -' ms , 1 i A —Thilrifb Republictui Atsb., • . , • : • .'- -:- if - ,„;,,. .., , - , -1-.4... ~ „.t., , the Malte d - State. will an -- , ' .--. ~.. ,- , . -„ . - - •",,y,- , , , ...... • ..,_.,,,,... , , today, - (init. a 111 1%g:: •'- • .-. i. , .--.• .. - , r--- • ~,,,,,.," present from all - - ,,,,0 ,- ,,,,: . -., --:.,...T,,i.az - - '''..,-----•'.* :1 '; • ' . Mr. Oeward's Reception at :B an Fran , etseo. -.' :- 1, ‘ , (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh GiTtte.j SAN PRANOISCO, July 3 :-LVVrii. Hi Seward arrived here.last night and was welcomed with a grand reception. Tha First:s California Guard Light 'Battery ] fired-e salute'of one hundred guns on the arrival of the steamer, and-the Natl o n a 1 Cluard acted as an escort to Mi. Reward and the Committee on IReceptionto the Occidental, where an enthusiastic malti. Ode assembled to greet • the venerable ?statesman, who made a brief speech thanking the people ,for:the honor cOn ferred _upon him, after which the parlors of the hotel were thrown open, anthour: citizens had an opportunity of pertional . greeting with the groat man. > 'The Kurth at Nashville. . tlty Telegritob tO cNo Plastargb Gazette.] Nesaviram, July 4.—The anniversery of sh&tuttiostal , birthday was Celebrated today by otir Germans. , " At eight,q'clock zit] the morning they formed in prooe a. ,moll, marched through a number of lbw principal streets of , the city end out Lis, th e : Horticultural Garden. The prom. aims was large and composed Of the elite; of, the:German ' , population. At the liar-. .slen l ;speecbes were made by Charles' Nebel:4 ,Jobn Rohm and •Bev. j. W. *Baluster, of Nashville, and A. - Bohr , of chetteneege. Alter , the -. speaking a barbecue was , serVed up and the remain der of the day soont in somas peculiar to the German& ,Thousandsge our °tun es of all camas were present during the, _ \-- - , -- 7 - ------ , 1 - The Evening Mail. " 1 • I Summer,weather appears to agree with our -young - cotemporary the Evening ( Mail: -All these warm, rainy days which have made the crops grow- so well Must have had the aame effect on the Mail, fars, ~ it has ,grown finely, • and has beside 5, 1 come out in a neat and remarkably "'t tasteful summer dress.' These and the • i facts that its news and editorial matter are 1 fresh and pleasing, and its advertising I °alumna generously filled, lead us to be. • lieve that the • Afaills in good hands; , f _ whose labor meets with merited public - -- appreciation. Wtr like to see a newspa- -- I per, particularly a good newspaper, show- --- 1 . signs - of Prosperity like this. and, we are 1 . right glad that- the Mali i s, flouriehing so ' i finely. - ' . , Criminal VOurt Sentences. I t In the Criminal Court Saturday the. foilowingsenfenoes were Passed. - Was. Barnes, convicted of burglarious ' Sly entering the store and dwelling of . Win. Stewart,‘, at Corry, and Rebecca streets, Allegheny, was sentenced to un dergo two years and six months imPris-.' onment In the county jail. • Joseph Myers, convicted of larceny,: *as sentenced to six months imprison- • ment In the county. jail. Margaret Mcßride, convicted of illegal liquor selling, was. Sentenced to pay the costs of • prosecution and a tide of /51 Eliza McNutt, convicted or larceny, was sentenced to the county jail for a period of sixty days. - - —Lieutenant General Phil. Snerinan ig at the Fifth avenue Hotal, New York. =2 111 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers