U tD . e gittsinttO Sayttt. PUBLIBMID BY PENNLIEAN, RKED CO„ Proprietors, PENNIMAN, JOBLiFI SING, T.P. HOUSTON, N. P. REED, tditore nd-Preprietors. INAZEITiBUILDINH; N 08.14 AND 86 FIFTH ET. , OFFICIAL APER Of Pittsburgh, dlleiheny t and Alla gheny County. ,A . (4,lBeert•Weelly. iriukty One yete.lls,oolowsyear.l2.6o Eagle 0 0 1 3 1- 1 3 1 S) One month 751812 mosA 1450 ceinee;epth I.rZ By_ the. week 15, rizee mos fn 10 • • 1 -I5 wan wrier.) I . and one toairrist. • • SATURDAY, autyl - UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE TACKET. GOVERNOR, JOHN / W. $3-EARY. - SUPREME dUDGE, 'HENRY W. WILLIAMS. COVNTY TICKET. ./11.60CIA.TE JUDGE DISTRICT COURT. JOHN. M. KIRKPATRICK. ..;,psisTAxv LAW JUDGE, COMMON 'PLEAS, • - FREDIL,H. COLLIES. STATE SENATE. THO3LAS HOWARD RILES 8.. HIJKPEREYB, ALEXANDER MILLAII, JOSEPH WALTON, JAMEi TAYLOR, D. N. WHITE, ' JOHN H. KERR. SHKRIPP HUGH 8. FLEMING TREASURES, JOB. F. DENNISTON. CLERK. OF COURTS, JOSEPH BKOWNE uscortsza. THOMAS 11. HUNTER. COMausszowza, CHAUNCEY B. BOSTWICK. HILGISTER, JOSEPH H. GItAY. CLERK OF ORFILA:SW COI7IIT, .ALEXANDEHBILA.NDS. 1 DIRECTOR OF POOR, 4 .LBDIEL WE, PIUNT on the inside pages of 4his morning's GezErrz--Seeond page: Poetry, My Iltiele's Romance, an Inter Story, Miscellaneous. Third and ilizth pages: COMMerCia; Financial, Mercantile and River Hetes, Markets, .Tmports. ''',Ekventh page : Interesting Gen , trailleseellang of Reading Matter. PE'rnorarant at Antwerp, Off. II.: 8., Borma at Frankfort, 861 Goya closed ia New York yesterday at 185/. . Gov.. GUAM' has signed the bill creating a Boatd of pirectors of Philadelphia City RIIESLA is- somewhat alarmed at the number of iron.clads Prussia has been steadily adding to her well organized navy, plus securing the actual and undis• puml claim to the supremacy of the Bal tic "sea THE Exmorntc Tztuoluam in the Uni ted IPngdom has been taken into the possession of the Government, and made a part or . the British postal service. The cost of this measure of public polidy was I. _ about 'S),ZUN),Oi3O. NEW Hemperuaz has refused to make _ nine percent. the legal rate of interest in that State, and has levied a tax of one per "'cent: on the"' business transacted within her 'boundaries by foreign or outside in seance companies. Tnz candidates for the vacant throne • et Spain twa the Duke of Mont t wafer, the ex-King of. Portugal,-Prince Henri of "gourbon, the Duke of Aosta, the Duke of Genoa; and the Prince of , Astnrlaa, with the odds in favor of the :eureka° plumes herself on hiving , "supplied .Neiv York vrith the Oceanß ank robber and Virginia with WALETJA . the sucCessful candidate for Governor.• ;In deed, it is safe to believe that Chicapils everywherewell represented—except, of , course, inheavcn. A7r Rtenionn, Indlana,,a lively war is being waged against ;tavern keepers°, by 4 the friends of temperance allied ,to the the City COimens. Cin Wednesday last the latter body advanced the annual li cense fee from fifty dollars per year to teatimes that amount, and came very. near making .it one .thousand This large tax is in addition to One of fifty dollars Imposed by the State author ities, so - that it will be unprofitable in Richmond to traffic in rum. Tux continued resistance offered by - the House .of Lords to the bill for the disestablishment ofz the Irish Church, causes an intense feeling throughout . the Kingdom. pleas the Peers abandon their position, the Hottse will be "wimp ed" by the creation of such an Aditional Jambes Of Lords as will smite a major 1,4; ror the bill. Vita extreme 'measure, although Offen 'threatened by Ministers :In sympathy:with the Commons and.ith ` - pOpular feeling, _has been but once re ,sorteti.,te,le the late English history. The bare menace has usually sufficed to over awe the Upper HOllBB, which wisely pre 'Sark the surrender of its objections to a 07710 E: ASSEMBLY, REPUBLICANISM AT THE SOUTH. . The Virginia election has resulted so satisfactorily to the Democracy, that they are clamorous for. the designation of early . dates for the elections in Mississippi and Texas, when they will anticipate the / same success. We see, no reason why their desires should not be gratified with a trial. In any event. the three States will be organized under Constititions, not only far more Republican than they had before, but in fact really quite ,up to the advanced.enlightenment of the times. They will all ratify the XVth Article, no matter what party may control the local legislatures,. and, under the Constitution of which that Article shall be a part they must, and will forever continue to be States repub lican in:form, and in fict,cling as fondly as they may to Democratic politics. We find no objection on that score to their earliest possible reconstruction, and would not delay it fora day. The reorganized States are all bound to make a trial of Democracy, and with the open aid of the colored vote. The sooner they begin it the earlier they will be through with it. Nothing is more certain than the tempo rarY .diversion - of the coloreikvote from Republicanism, except its ultimate return to tbe"polltical associations to which all the personal and political liberty of the freedmen is due. It would be as unwise , to attempt to- stem the" outward current now, as it would be short-sighted to its certain and irresistible / reflux. For the present and perhaps for years. Republicanism; must gird itself. up to fight battles and win the victories of the . Union in these Northern and always loyal States. We need / only to be true to the samoprinciples of liberty and justice, for whieh we - have in the eight past years conquered so Mtich, to be justly confi dent of fresh triumphs, although against heavle; z odde. Republicanprospectsmay look dark for a year or two, but in 1872 we r sliall again sweep the broad field of . of the 'Union from the St. Lawrence to the Gulf. French. politica have reached a crisis. It is reported s tlmt the Emperor is about to yield to the demanis of liberal opirt-. ion, abandoning the arbitrary power which he has steadily exercised hereto-. fore; and in fact restoring ttl Erma* that constitutional goverime,nt which has ever been the shadowy 114 r of the Em • pire. He accepts a 170' able ministry which is to And its or ; the lees- Wive ezusampto elq: aof the Porta - pending proposition ti rather 'than to en counter a poPuo .r movement which might forever/ex .punge hereditary right from Ihe Englis• a Parliament- A CosliiiF :EteiAL NEGOTIATION. The . , /Ws Ashington .Exlbniner charges that friene A of M. Rolex, th e Reptihii cao,,lkorr Jute for the Senate in the Beaver and - W ashington district, purchased his nomi' action from the Conferees, whose (long; session in this city attracted so much att elation. It is Stated, on the same an ti Amity, that propotals were first made to "Mr. ..McCuecumt, who VMS the Washing ton ca ndidate for the mune nomination,. to buy him off, the offers att t swelling to' the high figure of $8,500 . .hen these la r oveAures were rejected, it is ' d that the attack as . more successfully! 'Made from another (itarter, one of the Nyashington county delegates selling out McCrucumi : for $3,000. . This delegate, whose name we have from other sources, has, it, is said, since gone to Kansas with , the money. We would like to disbelieve this re margable statement, especially since the negotiation is charged by the Examiner to have been conducted by Mr. QUAY, of Beaver—the gentleman who figured in the Philadelphia Convention as the friend of Legislative integrity and of political reforms, being selected by his friend, the editor of the Commercial, as the most proper gentleman to offer the celebrated but hapless resolution on that subject whi'cla the -Convention laid under the table. 'We repeat that it is very- unpleas ant to entertain the' present accusation against one of the Commercial's favorites and friends, and it becomes still more painful to us to r reflect that Mr., QUAY, as editor of a Beaver newspaper, has been loud, from week to week, in his commendations upon the course of the ConiTheteica in its championship of pub lic integrity! If these immaculate devo tees to public purity are doing business privately in the fashion which the parniner has exposed, buying up dele gates'With cash and paying round sums for political treacheries, it is going to knock end-ways all our generous and unsuspect ing confidence in their sincerity and disinterestedness. • Noi We prefer not to believi the story. There is some mistake somewhere! Can't be possible that any high-minded poli tician of the Commercial school has been engaged in any such dirty • business! It must all be a weak invention' of the en Amy! Indeed, we should be reluctant to print theistory at all, had not the. Com mercial of yesterday expressed an anxiety to hear the particulars of the allegations. We hope it will find the exposure satis factory. It is due to Mr. RUTAN, to Mr. Mc- CEACSEN, and to the Republican masses of that Senatorial district, that these alle gations should receive the immediate at tention of their Executive Committees. We are therefore gratified to learn that the investigation is to be prosecuted ,_at once,- WHAT WILL NAPOLEON DOI PITTSELItOtt dizETIT: SATITitbAY, JULY 10, 186 gt lar will. This means another revolution, and if inaugurated *without a bloody struggle, it will be a miracle for France. It will signify his concessions to his own . dynastic hopes, and his reluctance, in creasing with years and infirmities, to re press the national preferences -with mai tan, power. A peaceful coup d' eta, in the interests of an Empire of liber ty, t3le most remarkable event in the annall of French politics, it will satisfy the world that NAPpLEON 111 in '69 is not the Loots NiPoLnox who, nineteen years ago, made his way through a bloody sea dff crime to the despotic em inence which the empire has since maintained. The man has wonderfully changed—or the event is not ' yet a cer tainty. The NAPOLEON of '52 would surprise Paris, which still means France, with a bayonet at every throat to-morrow morning, the Chambers'u der arrest, and every journal suspended ands crush ed and trembling people under his feet. It is an older, a weaker, but perhaps a wiser monarch, who now respects these national demands which he is unwilling to resisfi. Without incredulity, we prefer to aweit'the event .. TELE P.10T13 and disturbances so regular ly reported frac' Ireland cannot have the effect of increasing the amount of sym. pathy felt, throughout the world, for Ire land and the Irish. They have always been ilinown as a pugnacious people, and it is this national characteristic, as. Much as, if not more, . than any thing else, which has added: so much glory, to, the Irish name, and so many famous" ,cognotnens to the army registers of almost every , nation of christ endom. Doubtless we haye ail laughed at Lever's heroes and the wonderful as surance with - which they greeted the re nowned persons of history, and the still more wonderful scrapes oat of which they came so brilliantly. Yet when we re member the true histories of the (pou r nels, McMahons and many other distin guished military men of modern history, we must acknowledge that the. Con Cre gans and Arthur O'Learys of Lever are by no means such broad burlesques as we have been in the habit of considering 'them. It seems a pity, then; that this very characteristic, which has won for Ireland so much glory, should now bring it and its cause into disiepute, but we constantly hear of outrages, brawls, mur ders and other violations of the law - be ing committed in Ireland by Fenian - s, Seeing so much of this sort of thing charged to this party, we might be led to believe that it is English policy to charge all - such disturbances to the Fenian account, were it not that in our own country we see the same things. In any of the Irish.wards of New York, where. the belief in the doctrines of the Demo cratic party is almost universal, the Irishman who would Vote the Republican ticket would do so at the imminent peril of his liones,,or perhaps, even of his life. English tyranny; cannot be urged in extenuation of such outrages, nor can American:sympathy be induced by theirl; indeed, they are . rather calculated to lead to ihe conclusion that, perhaps, Irish tyranny would be worse than English, if it should once have an' opportunity to show itself in Erin herself. It is in speaking on this subject that one of our I Nev; York exchanges says: The telegraph informs ul; that the colored men in Virginia allowed' their colored brethren to vote for Walker, the Conservative candidate, without moles tation. The colored men. of. Virginia haVe shown themselves more tolerant American citizens than their white friends in the Sixth ward, Cherry street, or_the "Hook." An Irishman who at tempts to vote the Republican ticket in - one of the strong Hibernian districts in this or any other city in the State, does so at the risk of a broken head or black ee. If the colored' men of te Sout continue to exhibit such eminen h t qualih fications of citizenship, they will likely to make some intelligent whitebe men ashamed of themselves. Now THAT the Fourth of July has come and gone, it may be/Well to con sider low we have been in the habit of celebrating it: The nation's birthday has for years been looked upon as a day of license, and we are always certain to find, in the newspapers of the day following, long lists of murdcrs, fires, fights, and other casualties which have occurred throughout the country. Abroad, per sons opPosed to republicanism have been accustomed to urge, as a great objection 6) it, the prevalence of lawlessness and misrule under that form of government, and the way in which Independence day is celebrated in this country is regarded as a strong argument in their favor. America has proved that~ generally the people can govern themselves with a de, gree of prosperity hardly attainable un der any other political system, but this one day of rowdyism remains still as a reproach. We cannot believe that there is any reason why we should not keep the Fourth of July as we do any other holiday, quietly, peaceably and in a man ner which would not oblige quiet people to shut themselves up in their houses, armed with fire extinguishers until it is over. Undoubtedly the police should be quite as capable of preventing crimes and disturbances on that day as upon any other, if public opinion was not supposed to countenance them, and as to the fire works, crackers, ete., itmight be cruel to the rising generation to suppress their nse, but in . a few years they would forget that' they had ever been indulged in, and ' ,cgnsequentlyf pronlo no longer miss them. In_ England the . celebration `.`Of Guy Fawkes' day in a similar manner bui, been abolished, and we have heard Of 310 ill erects in oonsequenotto the youth of that country. In fact , boys and girls get along. very well all the rest of the year without burning powder, and manage to enjoy themselves quite as well as on the glorious Fourth with all its explosiveness. If a small fraction of the money spent in this noise and destructiveness were as sessed as a Lax to be expended by the city on fire works, we would have a much more beautiful and enjoyable display at some place, so chosen as not to endanger the property of citizens, and the number of lamentable accidents now noted would be enormously decrease& The question is ah important one and deserves general consideration. A RAILWAY obstruction prevents The expected receipt of yesterday's Titus Ville Herald, with its monthly oil report. The following figures therefrom have, howev er, came to hand by telegraph: Daly prodtFtion J . tp:a4 A 3661, Decrease In '69 Stork on hand to oil regions July 1, 1869 30$ 000 Decrease from June 1, 't9.. 56,000 " The daily production for June foots up about 100 bbls less than for the preceding month of May. The fact that our oil fields are rapidly becoming exhausted of their valuable deposits of petroleum be comes more apparent every day. The region has been thoroughly developed and capital has been slow to wander outside limited tract of territory in the hope of meeting with paying success elsewhere. Old wells have been pumped dry, yield ing daily,and weekly and monthly,regii larly, so long as the supply lasted, but they had to give out for want of from the mysterious sources of Nature, which originally tanked in the bowels of the earth such immense but not inexhaustible •quantities of. the valuable ituid. The problem is solved that petro leum wells cannot last foreVer, and that whole fields and districts can be pumped dry sooner or later. But there must; be other regions equally well blessed with deposits of oil beneath the surface' as those now exhausting, which will not long remain undiscovered if operators are forced to find new sources of supply to meet the great demand created for petro leum since its general introduction into the markets of the world. The class of business men engaged in producing and developing as a legillmete business will not be long in distoverinewhere next they can operate to best advantaie, Mn. McGnafir; and certain'of his Dem ocratic friends, made up a legislative slate for Philadelphia and successfully carried it through the nominating Convention. The material on the ticket was found so poor and rotten that many honest and in telligent Democrats squarely.. refused to vote it, and threatened to bolt outright from the party. Not frightened, how- ever, at this expression of dissatisfaction, the same tricksters who had made the odious slate, have set about to bring good from what those less designing and more honest would have expected to derive in. evitable defeat. They at once set up the shout of reform in politics and engineered a movergent for the nomination of a Peo ples' Ticket, on which none but good and trne men,withont distinction of party,will find place. The hypocrisy Of this_ is clearly apparent. While advisirtg the candidates they have already put 'forward to hold firm to their places, they expect to draw off from the Republican ranks three votes to every one Democrat:who will fly the ticket, and thus they hope to secure the election of the original slate. The l E /game will not win. The• Republicans are not so dull of / Comprehension as to be caught _by / such trickery into helping secure the success of a ticket offensive and unworthy to an_ extreme. On the contrary, they will stand to their own party and elect their own ticket, keeping clearly aloof from all combinations made Tor no higher purpose than to ensure the triumphs of men eminently corrupt and dishonest. - IN 1863, when the Democratic party stood solidly for peace, and were prepar ing to pronounce the war for the mainte nance of the Government a failure, Gen. ROBECIIASS, from the tented field, wrote thus • , "Wherever they (the rebels) have the power they drive before them into'their ranks the. Southern people, and they would also drive us. Trust them not. Were they able, they would invade and destroy us without mercy. Absolutely assured of these things, I am amazed that any one could think of peace on any terms. He who entertains the senti ment is St only to be a slave; he who utters it at this time is moreover a traitor to his country, who deserves the scorn and contempt .of air honorable men." The author 'of these stirring words drew down upon his head the wrath, of the Democracy, and his letter watt de nounced with a will and wickedness by thepress of that party. After the lapse of several years, however, it has purposely been forgotten and Roszcnens has been honored with the nomination for Gov ernor by the Ohlo Democracy, who ex actly corresponded during the war with those who deserved "the scorn and con tempt of all honorable men" and who were "traitors to,their country" and "only fit to be slaves." Perhaps the Demo- . bratic party has changed since then in its ideas, but has ItosEcnAns A FRENCH DOCTOR has discovered that turpentine is a sure antidote to phospho , roe, and he commends this discovery most especially to parents whose children have been socking Incifer,matches. It appears that in more than . . twenty cases• of this kind, he has-employed serpentine (one esxmfol deal) stumbeithilly, and hla re ofitn:hi,mtbet ti ly b .re iect eeiv o ed _t Ir mo cozen has of Medicine. RELIGIOUS IRT'ALLIGEBICE The Pittsburgh Chr‘istian AdvoCate thinks the vote ran Lay Delegation may possibly reach two hundred and, fifty thousand to three hundred thousand, while the roajority for Lay. Delegation will exceed fifty thouiand, and'-may reach one hundred- thousand. This viite is large, though it may not appear so to some, in view of the membership of that body. It well - says: The change is quietly effecting a revolution in the Church; 'the ministry preparing to effect' the change, if the Laymen should ask for it; the laymen without violent discussion requesting it; and so the change beingtri sured. Never before has the world wit nessed such a spectacle. It reports 80,- 000 -rotes, about 58,000 for to, 22,000 against. The General Moravian' Synod is dis cussing the advisibility of electing minis- ters by lot. The Christ ian Instructor, an organ of the United Presbyterian Church, takes the ground in favor of confining the Psalmody of the Church to the One •Hundredth and Fifty Psalms exclusively, as the only clear ground that can be taken by those who maintain a Scriptural Psalmody. The Rev. Dr. Hamilton, of Oakland, California, who was not long since dis missed from the Presbytery, because he taught that a man could r repent and be forgiven after death, has an independent Presbyterial church, full to overflowing with those who agree with_ him ,in' sentiment. A plan of life insurance was laid before the Episcopal Convention of Connecticut, by.which the parish shOuld, by an annual payment of thirty dollars, insure the rec tor's life for two thousand dollars. Bishop Long, senior Bishop of the Evangelical Association (Albright Metho dist), died at Foneston, Illinois, Thurs day week. He entered the ministry in, 1822, and in 1843 was elevated 'to the / . Episcopate. When he began' to preach there were less than two thousand mem bers, now there are sixty-five thointand. There are two churches of this body in our city. The Presbgterian, in the discussion of "Voluntaryism and the Church," holds that a person is bound to observe the ob ligations of church fellowship in prefer ence to the meetings of any voluntary associations. • The Medical" Society of the county of. I New york, at a recent meeting, adopted a resolution that "one day's rest from la biSr in seven is necessary for the health, of the body and themind." • ./ The congregation of St. John's Meth odist Episcopal Church. Brooklgn, not long since, after a sermon by,the pastor, contributed the magnificent collection of thirty thousand dollarsilo -cancel the floating debt against - the Church. The appropriations of the - American Board for this year amounts to $547,580. During the filsit nine months $284,665, have been/received from the churches, leaving $262,834 to be raised by the close of August. This leaves a heavy sum to provide for in such a small space of time. For some time the Friends in New England have been steadily decreasing in numbers; but the reports made •at the Yearly Meeting at .Newport, Rhode I . land, show a slight; increase. The in terest manifested by the young men was very encouraging.. The buknenclent says: "Cant about plain dress was frown. ed down." The Young Men's Christian. Associa dons of the United States and the British Provinces -hold their annual meeting In Portland; Maine, beginning July 14th . Representatives are expected from all parts of the United States. It is stated the Universalists have a member in Bristol, New York, who sta; tedly gives to mission work one per dent. of his income. Bishop Domened,c of the . Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese, in accordance ;with the forty-eighth Degree of the last,lPlenary Council, to take a collection for the Pope annually, has fixed upon Sunday, (to morrow) - the 11th •as the time for the collection this year. The indications are that the Souther n portion of the membership of the Metho dist Episcopal Church are more radical on the question of lay delegation than the Northern, as the vote is almost unan !motif, in the South in favor of the change. According to the Advance, the propor tion of Unitarian churches in Boston to Evangelical Congregational is now but three to two, while fifty years ago it was nine to two. ' Three reasons'are given by the Illustrat ed Christian as the secret of Rev., Mr. Hamkond's success in revival work: First. Mr. Hammond has consecrated himself to the work of saving souls. He has presented himself a tieing , saerifice, and for this reason God owns liim. l \ Sec ond. "Christ 'and his cross is all his theme." Every sermon presents two great truths: "Man is a sinner; Christ is the only &nor," and these he presses home by striking and touching illustra tions, and with great tenderness. Third. The meetings are condrieted hi accord ance with 'the ,laws of mind. Sanctified common sense &Urea direction. At the receint dedication of Rev. Robert Collyer's (Unitarian) Church in Chicago, the contributions in money and subscrip tions itmotnited to the grand aggregate of seventy . thouiand dollars, the:;' largest thlinth'collection of the kind, it is claim l ett ever made in the United States. The eloquent Rev. W. Morley pug: simi, late of England, now of T9lO/09 10.0€7 bbls 10,102 '• IMM =3 -0 .--- TEE Ohio Demoracy effected their nominations the other day Under sharp tribulations, A dispatch says: • Ranney led on the first ballot, but Rosecrans was nominated on the sec ond by seven votes over all the other candidates: The result was re.ceivedi with utter disgust by the Radical element of the party, and an effort to have the . nomination made unanimous met with a signal failure. The Vallandightimmera are loud and bitter in their curses to night, and indicate that they will •give the head of the ticket only amilk;and water support. The remaining_nothina- • ions - give better atatisfaction. The plat form excited but little enthusiasm. The republicans are perfectly satisfied with' the, action of the-Convention, and are confident of an overwhelming vic tory next Fall. Taa Ica FACTORY at New Orlean's ) , al , - • uated in.one of the elevatont, is a ?rest success. 'lt consists of six retor /of a chemical freezing mixture. Fro these retorts: six six pipes deicend six huge chests. which chestshi turn / late sev erally off into four compartments,. In 2 , each compartment arelmig,,thin tin cases, • seven on one aide and / eight on the other. This making by all / the rules of arithme- '• tic a total of fifty;six cases in a box, and -. there being four boxesto a chest, and.six chests to a factory, it follows that at full i blast this southern ice factory can turn out 1344,eakes of ice eighteen inches long, twelve broad .and two thick at the com- ' pletion of each process. The ice is much , colder than that frozen naturally, and ,lists much longer. The factory is a joint ' stock enterprize, and the property is ex ceedingly, lucrativg. / ABORT two years ago several Japanese. silk worms were imported and placed on some alanthus trees in New York. The result is that this year the alanthus trees are overrun with Japanese silk worms. This fact accounts for the huge dark-col oreds broad wingedinsects that are to be seen flying in almost all parts of Brooklyn. r. TITESYMPTONS OF CONSUMPTION. . , Paleness of the countenance. • -Spitting, or expec,toration of pui. N Thittpue sinksin water. It is sometimes streaked witk blood.. There is chilliness or shiverlnge, and Sashes of heat. There is a pearly whiteness of the eyes. The hair, of the head falls off. t times there is a circumscribed red .spot. ou one or hi tit cheeks. • There is swelling of the bands and feet. There is great debility and emaciation of the body. 1 There is a high colored state of the urine. With a depoelt on standing like brick dust. There Is oftentimes a great thirst. - Thp blood to hurried through the arteries and ions. ' Thn pulse is over a hundred, and even as high as one.hundred and forty a mintite. ' The veins on the surfacoof the body are.' bluer than usual, and languid. ' As the disease progreises the deb'lltithcreases. The expectoration becomes more copied.. The finger nails are aitcurvated. There is a marasmus and wasting of all tbe powers of lite. There:is often pain in one or both lungs. Therebi often diarrhoea and faintness. There iggreat sinking of the vital forces. Whenj th ere are turbercles, small ixtrtious o turberc ous matter wl.lba expectorated. This thbercular matter has an offensive odor'.. Chian examination with a lung sdund, rattling and gurgling is heard. • . • . There is always more or less cough. • ' Some, of these symptons are thesis present In Pulmonary consumption, and nearly or quite all of them in different stages of the nfseare. - No diseaie of which we haie any knowledge is so common and- so sitarist invariably fatal; yet this need not be the case if • earlier symptoms were heeded . Time and again we have called at tention to Dr. KEYSER'S LUNG CURE, which will in every instance of a recent cough arrest the progress of the disease and hinder its devel opmeut, and even after it hasbecozne settled will often care it and arrest further decay of the , . Bold at the great Medicine Store, No. 161 LI ERTY STREET, one door from St. - Clair. Keyser may be consulted at his LIBERTY STREET OFFICE EVERY DAY 17NTIL o'clock, and at his resident office, No. 140 Pena street, from I to 4 o'clock, I , CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE IN FAVOR 4 OF HOSTETTER'S STOMACH' in W. H. Reese, a leading dnlggirit',l4 111., in * letter of Jose 0, 1868, writes to this feet: "Having sold Hostetter's Bitters ;fur the / past four years, I cannot but speak of the article e u being the best tonic and appetizer extant.t During the ague season of 1865-11,1 could not keep ; a suflzient stock, on hand to supply ' y custom- , era. In fact, your Bitters was as stati.e as qui.) t, nine. I learn that physicians prescribe it over the-country. Indeed, a great many families' think they are Lot safe without yaw valuaole tonic." J. K. Withenpotin. Esq., • mast trate or Kernsbaw co , ine, e,, C , states, under date or ' April 13 1668 that he has used the Bitters con. *tacitly In. his own 'amity for the previous two Years Rs drat tiled the preparation when suffer. 1 ,. tug from es haustlon, produced w a rm s e. shed ck of feer. Before the first bottle Mhe experienced a remarkable change for the better.. ; lie bad tried brandy at the outset, bat found that it did him more harm than go 'd. In one month his has b frow. the time he commenced using the Bittern stresgth and appetite were restore d. He had recommended the' article to - others in I like cireunt•tabces. and-never known it to fail • and had found it a perfect speedo for chilli and fever. • Mr. damuel Young, of Marlon, Pa., under date ! of April lidB, Certifies that he was completely i cured of **one of-the most distressing attacks or dysperista that ever afflicted any mortal," by three bottles of the Bitters. after •tvarlons other s 'remedies had ,proved spoweriesso..s Restored to ! p, K r a-, healtbj he thanks ***at excellent prep.. aratiorrinrisesesnit." - , Dr. G. Id. Bpeneer. of Brush Creek, Petry Co. I ma., Inning thence Web. Sunni. salmi "I hirvisA mused 'our Stomach Bitters tor...aural yew In y Draenkte. and dad theM;sisperlor to most of I s the filt a trs now prescribed-by t e e plußsissoasen4 Canada, in describing the late dedicatient of the Metropolitan Methodist Church. in, Washington City, • says : "We spent; eight hours in the Metropolitan Church efi the day of dedication, five hours' were. spent in the house - of God, and three hours in the house of merc , handise-Zt b at is) five hours in worship, and three raising money." A"REPUBLICAN COUNTY COhvitnTiON, at Mansfield, 0hi0,., recently adopted, among others, the following resolution:: Resolved, That we are 'opposed to all clais legislation, government II sabsidiee and grinding monopolies of every kind, and that, therefore, we heart favor a. ' revision of the present oppr Eve tariff, was to adjust it to a. purely revenue 'standard!" .- The principal speaker in the Conven , lion, General BnrnicenuoFß, in advocat ing the resolutions, used thinfollowiag ) language:- .6" "It seems true ' therefore, that the Re publican party having secured to the American people .free speech, free soil and free ballot, it owes to its own grand history in the past, and to Its highest glory in the future, to carry such meas ures and such expenditures as will ena ble it not only to inscribe upon =its ban ner, but ultimately; to carry out its benft cent coru3unamettim that noblest motto of political economy, Free Trade." =I Et