El LI flttt. ago Oaitttt, • PIIBIZI3EZD BY P E NV& AN REED & CO.,Proprieter.s. P. B. Prlalri"ls. Josien fiTNO, T.E. P. novEmorrs N. P. NEED. ' 'Editors *sin Prepriatorg. .011110: 6 : IZETIT BEILDING, %4 'B'6 FIVIA - 0111*ILA1 PAPER ibut M Of rittsloitifieslien,: oak jriie., Omen* County.fr • . , .* 5044•55,04111/. .N 1 AO 4. 'rm 006t5 1511lPer le FT-41. 50 o le Teer.- 68,41 " zeiresz. 50 sooki . asoewsiti I.Z Oae mot 15 giOnnos.. L Dv the week Z6;=te ZllO 4 nin .15 sad oneAcasent. (ivem'esTrler.li. —,________ VITSOSISSDO,:3I.III:6IC: 2S, 1869. UNION REPUBLICAN TILIKE= s;r^rrE. mg GOVERNOR : .11 7 . GEARY. 6 ........-...... 3i3lc*E - OF SL pssmE • aarxtz: MENA - IV. WIZ LIA coumrv. .e..eso (lA= JUDGE DISTRICT COURT, JOHN:SI. EIRE £A.TELCE. • dieSISTAITT LAM' 3Une& COMIIONTI.RAS. - FREIVE. 11. COLLIER. STATE SEMATZ' TOMAS 'HOWARD. ." • ASSEMBLY, • • IaILES 8. HUMPHREYS , AL SEA biDER MILLAR. JCISEPH WALTo.N. `: 'JANIE 4 TAYLOR, JOHN H. KERR. SHERIFF HUGH S. FLEMING TREASURED, JOS. F. DENNISTON. =ME 0? COURTS, JOSEPH BROWNE. BTOORDEIL THOMAS H. HUNTER. commissiolgss. CHAUNCEY B. BOSTWICE. REENTER, JOSEPH H. GRAY. CLERK Or ORPHANS' OOLTIM ALEXANDER HILANDS. DIRECTOR OF 8008, AISUIEL 31cCLURE. WS FEINT 071 the inside p ages cf Mkt morning's asirrrx--Ete,cont pagez' Ephemeris; Miscellaneous. Thi rd and Sica , pages: Commercial, Ananci aZ, .16r •Gantils and River News, J!arkets, .imports`. Eleventh page: "From Bags and , Straw de Paper." PLTROWITS at Antwerp, -50-41 f. B. 8431338 at Franktort, 87}. GOLD closed in lief; Vera yesterday tit • & NEW inWresting article on the man ufaettre of. printing pGper mill be found on our Geventh page thiemorning. It will =ply repay perusal,. THE 'retsmustqcs. Meg of Ohio are likly to listen to wise counsels. Several of their leading agitators are utterly op posed to separtdo political at and in tend to be heard from, on that line, at the Urbona Convention. Tun -,..icsmEnneGovsmsous,ef Pennsyl -vania have all been natives of tbe Common wealth. The optasition now want us to dry a "Connecticut carpet-bagger." No, tleek youl The oki Pennsylvs4a stock *WM dons Jost as well. And -so say we all: Comanstousutit DZIAIiO has made an apparent mistake in reappointing, as 13u; pervisor of the Westerw, District oc Penn sylvania, a iatmen of the Eastern District. It is not a qiestiect as to the qualiticatiorts of Kr. Terrtni; the question is, rather, had we no candidates, suitably quslified for the appointment, who were residents of this District? There should have been very' strong reasons, to induce the Com missioner to disregard local claims in, this, way. Tun DOLOCRACY of Philadelphia are Tent terribly by the three.cornered fight now in progress in their. camp. The rag, tag and bobtails known as the McMu llin crowd, and comprising ninety per cent. of the party, pall one way in support of the present nominations. The city rall7 way ring, nine per cent: more, have their own private Interests to promote, While the remaining one, r.T cent., Democrats from principle, are indignant titthe oat rages lately committed in the Democratic name. Another meeting of the City Convention is demanded, and will proba bly be held, to whitewash all difficulties if siseible._ RECENT nincovEnras reveal immense deposits of coal and iron of the best qual ity in an 'entirely new district of Indisha. The Hoosiers boast, and with good show of reason, that their State "will soon rank next V) 'Pennsylvania in manufac turing.", Every new discover, of these stores of mineral wealth in our adjoining • States presents a fresh _argument for; the immediate construction of a ship•canal from Pittsburgh to Lake . Erie. Other wise, we may count npon being left far behind, at no very distant day, in the ,rivalries of the trade, for the lack of such facilities as will supply the cheapest pos , sible carriage for both the raw material and the finished products of Pittsburgh nnufacture. "00 IT I 8 ALL A RADICAL lags" says your thol tongh•going Democrat, when you talk to him shout the Packer Corrup tion Fund, But here la one Democratic journal which dare's to telt thi, truth. The .Philadelphikliiiiiifeereury is hot print oftbstscriti,'7-'ite-'ev.t ach is Oraeamilihr .. / to l e .. a mixed up for the p• ty by its ._ 1 Harrisburg. a -..4ortelferaur . It is genera' _ , _ irr . ., 'asserted at a . that Judge P Governors! —4t".l.' wafin"ntill :- r 3 .supin the hope that --,.. - ..,y and infin j i es`rnight be used 1 • ... • .i e success' 4 9 -'slcal. tteke44 9 .tieh ur rite iost ex cre lte,s-s respects tlie charade : of SID' 4 cif the persons whose name s it tears ,A tile mode of" its manufaet that w areoere pretented by my Tarty lei. the esetage of the people. 1 S . ttlmenErrrar, thst is not allsaiell lie. VIM PACKET. DIMPL4Ii ' It " 1 , 14 State Will need the last dollar.they tan .6queeze 'out of their nitwit:late to acme bliss from 1 ckeing distanced in the trat4na race. He is bound to be beaten"; the etdy remaining question is, how much?. His friends dis cover they havemade twOtfatal mistakes —the first - in making a candidate out of a "bloated bond-holden." lend seoond in crucifyinveven him .npeio. a dead-wood platform. Tire Hirritglaurg manifesto could he fittingly met - Anted ,:only by some mummy embalmed in pitch since the Attixo of the Pharaohs. In ;the other great-States of Ohio and New - York, the partAy is wiser. :The itookeye .Democracy 'swallow theiu .old ; . earn es end support c... live Union soldier upon .a -Tat-form whif.h at least does net L eepodiatesil progress. In New York the 1 poltlielanatof that pally are already ,pre ; ;paring n Plan for their fall campaign, i vile-eh inelndes a progressive policy and excepts retonstruction with its legitimate cregults as - facts accomplished. What a oommenticy upon the old fogy blindness ; ref our own Democracy is afforded by the _l•different policy of the great sister States. At the4)olls in the coming autumn the ittnalevolent stupidity of the Harrisburg , rehash' , of every, onsolete issue will be ' pointedly paowned by the majority of the Northern Democracy. fia Pennsyl vania almost aloneithe party still insists upon• embracing its own ruin. If they learzunothing front:Republicanism, could they learn. nothingCrom their own friends all over the North? The once white De mocracy is fast turning to a warmer hue : already parti-colored, like a barber's pole, the last light streak. will be painted 'out this ) year, and the Harrisburg platform, with its candidates, will be lost to ,view 1 forever in a darker than African night. PRISON REFORM. Tire.alluded a. few-days since to the prin ciple-of the commutation of sentences for the good conduct of the prisoner. At the last session of the Legislature of Penn sylvania, a Commutation Law was pis sed, et the urgent-solicitation of the In specters of the Western Penitentiary, =dein person. Wile terms of comtatr, Wort are tbe same as are re&ignized in the State of New work. :9.lreadys.the good egects 'of this new policy are being experienced in our penitentiaries, as evi : denced by the exemplary conduct of e prisoners. They manifest amuch gre ter degree of contentment, are more hope ni, and consequently moretheerful, and do their work proniptly and without corn-. plainiug. The law is in successful opera tion in the Philadelphia Penitentiary as well as in Allegheny. At the same session another law was passed, applicable to the Allegheny Peni tentiary only. It authorizes the Inspec tors, at their discretion, to congregate the convicts for labor, learning and religious services. This law is now in force; every Sabbath the prisoners are assembled in their respective corridors, where they listen to the preaching of the chaplain as attentively as in any city congregation. They take part in the singing and seem to manifest a very decided interest in all the services, Mach good is confidently expected to result from the operation of both these laws. It is hoped the next Legislature will extend their provisions to county prisons. The commutation law only apOles at present to the two State Penitentiaries.' "GRAY-II AI RE D PATRICITIBM.99 When use Pi Omni' :was dining and Wining the Ohio traitor, VALLLAMM. rum, before Pennsylvania felt a rebel in vasion, he was displaying his true politi cal colors as a rebel sympathizer. Then came MCOMIBIAND'S raid on chambers burg, and Dues advance to Gettysburg. Imagine the horror which thrilled every Democratic heart in the Commonwealth, when it was learned that the rebel troops were sacking and burning pemocratte property with no more compunction than if its owners were Abolitionists dyed in the wool. Copperhead sympathies proved to be no protection whatever. The Dem ocratic, mind, throughout the State, was demoralized and "all tors rip," by this revelation of rebel ingratitude. Then was seen a touching spectacle t Vallan dighturt's wealthy enterteiner, that warm hearted friend of Soithern the . Nabob of the Lehigh, beeame a "gray haired patriot," and promised a continu ance of wages to` - all MS operatives who would volunteer. This Is the substance of the •latest Democratic electioneering novel While the "wrinkled front of war" was so far off as to be out of ,sight from Pennsylvanian eyes, Mr. Vallandig ham' s friend PAcxEn felt east in the indul gence of his rebel sympathies. Ilesaw the case in another light when a ruthless in vasion trampled on Democratic property and threatened his railways, carals, coal mines and banks with ruin. Me "gray haired patriotism" lay then, GS now, all , in his packets, and `was never heard of,. or suspected by. his closest, friends, until these werelhreatened with rebel pillage. The less said about,,thletNutlet. 1?5', 1 the opposition press, - MAIO_ 9 44ErgE ; .4 I~DA , MIMI "tet.Fl - 1)r. elooltillie .431 ''"The: Democrac y ttl€ 6 i if: ' - e p are 7solute and tniterrt*ttlentsji their host''- '. itY to tha tegistry-lari- •-l'indin g • Justice. Einanswlicin powerless IhP'romote their \ opposition, they helm mite another tack, ti l nd propoie to nullify: the law by the refusal of the Democra4 bounty Co mmissioners to supply , needful books and other stationery tottassessors. This malfeasanoe in office ti :been malty-a' mandanise from the - Ittii i iter Sessions, I which Feints' es to reach , theright point.-1 \The Demecratic game-lain a nut shell this year. They look to a j ,sticcessful repe- - tition of their ,eimsafe: pike:dee; of fraud urea. the ,hallot-boxes, the OW, and county •iff Philatelphies, - to .elect Asa Packer Ind. carry's local ticket, the most infamous inite"CeMpOsitinek tr we might take !Democratic authert4 fort, which was ever nominated in _aisis Common wealth. Under the ne registry-law, if -faithfully enforced, th :frauds arc no : l e ;longer possitle. Er es, then, ..the -statute must be nullifi o r . Packer & Co. will .be beaten. The: opPosition know that he cannot he elec without a large illegal vote in thati , ,hity. :No other district of the' Cormlionwcalth sup plies the 'requisite *ties for such a gigantic and successitil , raid npon the ballot-homes. The petty rascalities which were in -vague in othm.quarters of the State, under the anspiC4 of the Coffee rPot Committee in former years, can no longer be attempted in die that districts in the face of the presentlaw, and would not suffice for the purp4es of the party even if successfully. prlaced. Only in Philadelphia, and by he aid of the Stranswoons, Swownn. s_, •Mclilcr..Los and , Itarrnara-s, of nullifying Com missioners and a Ortisan police, and of the mob, of rowdies and rascals •of 'every shade of wicked with which the purlieus of a, is:ige city swarm , —it is only . there and , in that way that \ the law can be set at naught and the op ' position tickets put through. It is evi dent that such is 'the intended game. Every day reveals ..from that quarter fresh proofs of the Democratic plot to evade the restraints of the salutary legis lation. When one device fails, they will , resort to another. Tie up the hands of 1 Sharswood and Snowden, and other officials , arc promptly detailed to do the dirty partisan : work. If the County Commissioners fail, to secure the Democratic end, the nest resort will be perhaps to Democratic police. In someway, the party will re sist the enforcement of the law; to the last moment. It is well that our friends there should understand this. Through the State, the oppOsition rely upon a fraudulent vote by thousands in Phila delphia as the only Ime of electing Pack er, and they wift - tOrtre It if within-the range of human possibilities. Their candidate stands no chance at all in the rest of the Commonweatth—nor in Phil adelphia upon any honest poll.. The real battle-field is there and its issue tarts upon the maintenance of registration. ON the 2Stli of June the first Interna tional Israelitish Synod met at Leipzig, Saxony. This Synod was composed principally of the Refor.ned School of Is raelites from all parts of the world: On the motion of the Rabbi, Doctor: Pun, IPSIION, of Dresden, the Synod adopted the following resolutions, which are a declaration of the principles of the body: "1. That the Synod, in conformity with the teachings of. Moses and the doctrines of the nrophets—and in recog nition of the duties and habits of modern society and State authority---considers Judaism to be in accordance with the grand principles of humanitarianism, of equality before the law, equal nghts in the government, and perfect freedom of religious thought and expression. "2. That it is in the development and establis meat of these principles that the safe y of present and future Judaism is assur d. _ "3. T e internal Pie or all religions, their m tual respect and equality in the battle o truth, should be one of the aims of manicind--such battle to be car ried on with spiritual wearims only. "4. It is the object of Judaism to -se knowledge, express and adyance thew principles." . A similar convention le ehorly to be held in this country. It, is:, said that the other, or orthodox section of Jews, regards this movement with suspicion and distrust. . , . . TLIERE is a melancholy degree of truth in the last wail of our Conservative , , . friends of the Lordsvillegournal. Thns : . . The Virginia Conservatives may have to win two or three more victories and win them under difllcultlea before they can secure any practical advantages from that already. won. The military power can turn all the seemingly line fruits of the late election to dust and ashes by a touch of its finger . and s can the Congressional power. This truth which to daily becoming more manifest, casts upon the Conservative, ;rand is Virginia a cloud that does not utnin up a silver lining to the moon. ~. " LATE advice* from (Juba report: • There are thiem distinct parties in the island: The Imperialists, headed by the Captain General, who support the Span ish inthoritiet; the VOinsiteers, who want Cuba raised into an independent province nuder their control, ant de nand - that the Spanish regulars shall be Bent home; and lastly, the party of independence. The latter depend much on help from the United States, and could be easily subju gated if the Spaniard's and volunteers could be brought to act in Concert, which they obstinately refuse to do. Tux following notice wafound pasted on a large , box , which pa er the Sioux City and Pacific Railroad a few days since: "Baggage smashers aro ro• quested to handle this box with care, es it contains nitro•glvccrine, G;eek ire, gun cotton and two ]live gorillas." The box way not broken. -,Asoretary ot Mete Fla& raxlvod at long Branch laat Ofsig. to see the rest. Oat Oli W1)074,1110 , bhtddele or State: (3 , . - -iiiiiiVailtei Vetntitr-racy-4 - - During the war. Hon. C.; L. Vallindig , ham, the noted rebel frf.,m, Ohio, was the invited guest of liort. .sa Packer, Ammo cratic,candidate for Governor, at his resi dence in •Manch fitiunk. Soldiers of the republic, and to gal citizens, remember the old adage. "SAow me your company, and I'll tell you _who you are." • The T)emocracy of Pennsylvania nominated an aristocratic Copperhead, • worth twenty-five millions, for Governor, 1-und.. planted him on a thorough.going I Ctipperhead platform, prceisely such as ixd for g e h a t haalavveybehaend abedoepatefdreebleforeThaereian. had been fired upon Fort Sumpter orb not a traitor, a Copperhead, a repudiation ist, a foe of human liberty anywhere who wouldconsider himself out of place in standing upon.it. But Debawracy in Virginia and Mississippi,profess to favor the Fi ft eenth amendment. Democracy , has become as striped as a barber's pole. The Phila. Stiiiday Mercury, (Dem.) says : The county Democratic ticket is a load which the State ticket should not.be , compelled to carr. It is not:only intol erably bad in the i nfamous character ,and antecedents of some of the names upon it, but it is quite as exceptionable on account of the violent and fraudulent manner in which the nominations were made. If these nblectionable candidates will not .voluntatily withdraw, they should be forced out of the canvass' by some per emptory action of the party or Its repre sentatives. If, however, they will not back out-of the way, of :their- , own . voli tion, nor be forcibly put out by the pro. perauthorities, then the result is easy of prediction. The Democratic . county ticket will not only be certainly defeated, and that, too, by a tremendous vote, but it will cost the State ticket, in this city and county, the loss of ballots enough to turn the scale clisastrouslyAgainst it throughout the Commonwealth. It is generally as serted and believed' that Judge Packer wasnominated for the Governorship in the hope that his money - and _influence might be used to secure the success of a local ticket which is the most execrable, asrespects the character-of some of the persons whose names it bears and the mode of its manufacture that erer was presented by any party for ' the suffrages of the people. . _ SESI The Republican future an Virginia. It is undeniable that Republicanism has leavened a very large portion of the Walker party—not the bogus Republi canism of test oaths and disfranchiSe ment, but the Republicanism of progress, which h'as carried the Northern States. All see how much advanced they are, and if 1)y. --Republicanism that has aided in s they want at least to give it a trial( You will see that whether un der Liberal Republicans, or Conservative Republicans, or National Republicans, or any one of the twenty names by which the advanced and controlling men of the Walker 'party call themselves, you will find Republican principles. Already the politicians have commenced talking over repudiation, taxing bonds,&c., and be gun to take different sies, which ds a .healthy. sign. It is good when a sick _child commences to look around him and take notice, especially when the child has been so very sick and taken such vil lainous doses as Virginia bus bad admin istered often by nurses who ltinibt kindest hearts and gentleallairnds, If one may look to 1872, - beltfer see a Republican party in Virginia . headed by Baldwin,Stuart, River, Wickham, Flour noy, Emunds, Chandler and others, with the Richmond Whig, a paper i which has proved itself the most farsighted and powerful political journal in the South, for its organ, and a Democrat or Opposition party with Wise, Bunter, Ould and others, represented by the En quirer, the ablest exponent of those old ideas which none who wish Virginia well can ever desire to see obtain the ascendancy again. There are two lessons in this election _that may be studied with profit by the men of 3lrs sissippi and Texas. First, the rights of the white men cannot. be gained without those of the negroes are granted; and. second, that the State governments and State polities of the reconstructed States are hereafter to be run by new men. and the old ones laid .N. Y. Tames. More Rivairy . for Pittsburgh. An Indianapolis telegram says : Dr. Cox, State Geologist, returned last night from &three weeks' survey of the coal districts of Owen; Clay, Vigo and Parke counties, Ile ascertains that the seam I of block coal, which is so valuable on ac. count of its availability in smelting iron without coking, extends in a west of north direction, from southwt in Owen up through Clay and Park eounties, a width of six miles with Brazil and Rock ville on the Iv est edge. In depth it ranges from three to six feet. Iron ore was found In the center of Clay county,. suffi cient quantities to support a furnace, while banded-iron andbog iron ore, bitu fonous coal und fine building stone is found scattered over th e counties in large quantities. Dr. Cox Is confident that the whole section win soon be dotted over with furnacet, and that Indiana will soon rank next to l'ennsytvania in iron mann factitring, and Eastern capitalists are in teresting, themselves greatly, quietly In vestigating the matter and investing large sums of money, and Western men may wake up to find themselves behind time for the best investments. Talc McConnellsyllle Heratd• relates that a man, designated as de. Belting' his wife and five children, In Wheeling, last August, came back to Athens , county, where, they had lived several years fore, and hirrd out as a ffirMballo. Fr o m there the w ) fe reeolvtd a letter, in June last, announcing hie death and stating that he died so poor that he had to be buried by his Mends. She therefore set about preparing for a journey to the grave of her once devoted husband, with a Niew of marking the spot ,with a tombstone. Arriving, last Friday week, clothed In mourning. at the house from which the news of her husband's death was sent, she asked o young lady at the door ,If that was where r. Si— dled, and was abmewhat aatonished and delighted to have answer that ho was out in the wheat field alive and well. “Why, he's my husband!" said the overjoyed wife. This seemed to stagger the young lady. and the wife was somewhat astoun ded, finally, to learn that the marriage of this young lady to her unfaithful ht band was to have taken place last Sun: day. Ho had written that he died in in digent circumstances, 'thinking that his wife would then have no anxiety con• cerning his effects, which be thonebt would be the only motive to bring her into the •neighborhood. The mutter was happily prevented and the tomb. ;so4e, nnbsppliy, dossed: NMI 23 atetamorphoshi—A "BeSeised,' Maiden Amaliee in, she . IMorning and Finds Herself a Man — strange Freon of a Burglar. tFrom the Terra Haute 'lnd.) Jourpti 3 A few nights since the residence of a prominentitizen was entered by a burg -Ist, and some valuable jewelry and other prDperty stolen and carried away. - But before leaving the, house, it appears he paid a visit to nearlyevery apartment in it. -Traces of him were found above and beloW stairs ; where reiindeed, it was probable any valuables could be obtained. It so happened that one member of the family belonged to that much abused - and very excellent class of society called "old maids." She is a free-hearted, generous lady, intellicent and refined, and the only fearttiat her well balanced mind hadever known, is the apprehension that in some evil hour Satan day lure her affections into the keeping of that:Abomination of her mind, a man..' The good lady prays every day that no sueh evil may befall her, and that she May, live and die in maiden meditation fancy free. Now, , whether the burglar knew this peCuliar ity of 'the lady's mind or not, ho at all events determined to play her &very Frac tical joke. To this end he carefully removedfronv tbe chair on which she had n eatly folded. and laid it, all her wearing apparel, and substituted, from another, room, a com plete suit of gentlemen's clothes. Than taking off a huge pair of false whiskers, he carefully adjusted them to the face of the sleeping lady. Of course he could not wait to see the denouement, but that pleasure was reserved for the family the next morning. • Awakening at an early -hour. (the good lady proceeded to the mirror (an invariable practice - among the ladies) to enjoy a look at her Mee. The firlttglance petrified her with horror. Was she, indeed, a man ?, The latent superstition of her nature reviving, she imagined that Satan had been playing her a horrible ,revenge for her animosity to the male creation. She staggered to a chair, and; almost broken hearted, concluded to dress and send for a barber. But now she noticed for the first time that her clothes too were gone, and a gentleman's outfit was substituted in their stead. She was certain now that the metamorphosis was complete, and re signing herself to the situation tried to don the apparel. Bat having no expert - - ence in the adjustment of this new fangled apparel, and nabit being stronger than in stinct she found that every time She put the pantaloons over her head she encoun tt red an impediment that defied all her efforts to overcome. In short, the pants wouldn't go over her head. At last, in despair. she rang for assis tance, and her maid appearing at the door, she cried out: "Don't come in, Betty, for I tun a man now; but just please step in and ask; al , brother if he usually puts his breeches on over his head, or commences feet foremost" It is needless to say the message aston ished the household. It was some time before the lady would admit to her apart ments any one of either sex, for fear she might make a mistake; but one of them, however, more adventurous than thereat, pushed !open the door, and convinced the sorely tried maid that she had not forsa ken her estate, but was yet one of the an gels of earth. a . THE GOOD OLD Tams are'not gone for ever. 'Here Is an incident. On the re cent, trip' rif inia a Miskiaaippi stelmtjhe clerk had iillotted the last state-zoom an-a wes about to close his office when he was astounded by 'an apparition, a tall Missourian, who exclaimed: "I say stranger, I want one of them chambers. " " , Sorry, sir." said the official blandly: "but our state-rooms are all taken." "The d-1 they are," responded Miss ouri; "I'v paid my fare'n I want one of them chambers." "Allow me to see your ticket," sa:d the still polite clerk. 'Plat ing his hand to the back of his neck the passenger pulled out a ten-inch bowie= knife, and driving it quiVering into the counter, said, "I'm from Pike County, young feller, and thar's my ticket; I want one of them chambers." Bethre the steel had ceased to vibrate the prompt clerk quietly thrust a loaded and capped six-shooter under Pike's nose, and cool ly answered: "I'v only got 'six cham bers,' and you see they are all fait." The Missourian edged out of "range," and putting up big "tooth pick," ejacula ted: "A tall hand's good." Tun editor of a New York paper (who probably knows) calculates the amount of money spent for drinks. He says : Leaving wines and other expensive liqu ors quite out of the question, let us see what a plain coctailist or modest imbiber of old rye is likely to disburse on his fa vorite refreshments in the course of a year. Take a very. znoderate man ea a sample. Assume that he drinks every day one glass of ale at ten cents, and four glassesof whisky at fifteen, That amounts to seventy centas day, which makes four dollars and ninety cents a week. Multi ply by four and you have nineteen dol lars and sixty cents a month, which, you know, to one hundred and thirty-five dol lars and twenty cents a year. Thus, if the lman who had carried on at this rate for ten years had all his liquor money , back, his pocket would be inflated to the tune of thirteen hundred and fifty-two dollars. This is only a small beer calcu lation; but think of the men who spend rive times thls amount on liquors, and re. k member that their name is legion. A WAsnutarorr dispatch says: The receipts from all sources, since July Ist, ore thirty millions, and the disbursements on account of government expenses are twelve millions. The interest due on the public debt is nearly; eleven millions per month, which, added to the expenses, make twent4bree millions to tome out of the t hi r ty . million - receipts, which leaves, up to today, a reduction of about seven millions, and in the remaining week of July it is expected that tilers will be two millions more come in, in —The ball at Long Branch Monday night, in honor o! the President, Was crowded. Among those present, were ex -Secretary Borie,and wife; Gen. W. T. Shman and daughter; Oen. Phil. Sher. tdan and lady; Generals Ingalls. RooNss, Ames, Porter, Comstock, Walden, Met. Act, and Lieutenant Governor Woodibrd and others. • —At a meeting he ti at WhttO s,ulphor Springs, VOL, yesterday. 433111170!Mii MU.. cipally of southerner*, repoluton* were uuaulutously adopted exposit).* - the gratitude of the southern people to t-o, Peabody fir his tuunilleaut Oft in the muse of edueation in - the Muth., The resolutions will be %Melly itresceb!si to Mr. Peabody. \ k. —Ala lamb* IA sr tit*tete ut thlion toliritS al Si` wilo'dfil NT' ' York. yehleti a, At .ki o.* tv Aftot u ilisteiitollANAloo. VW* MI Mead& . ... , . , . ~...~ p. .. 5. 131UEF - TEL - EGI. —The steamer Minnesota. from Liver p3el, arrived at New York last night. —Wm. H. Sylvis, President of the Na tional Labor 'Union, died suddenly yes terday morning, at Philadelphia, of con gestion of the bowels. —The through express train from Washington, duo in New York at half past ten last evening, was thrown off the trfiet near Newark, N. J. No one was injured. —General Canby has modified his or der for the payment of the Virginia Jan-, uary interest, by directing that only one per cent. be paid . This will amount to P 50,000. - ~ t in .-- sing a thunder: storm near Raon -don New York, yesterday :Marmon. the htning struck one of , the hi:n=B o f tbe i Washington Ice Cpuipanyfidestroy ing t at and Ibiltr others. They were all filledwith ice. Loss heavy. —Mr. Simonton, New. York agent of -the AsseciatecE, Press , and one of the editors of the New , York Times, with his family,,arrived l in Chicago on yesterday morning from California, and left for New Yorkthe same afternoon. . —Edward Halplan, an elderly man from Black Dock, fell-over an embank ment at Niagara, nearthe table rock, on lllonday evening, a distance of one hun dred and eighty feet, and was instantly killed. The., body ' was mangled in a dreadittl Walker. -. • . —Geiitiral'CanbY has ordered- that ast much of the 3EIIIIIBII interest on the Virginia State debt as. the Treasurer is able to pay Shall be paid at once. There is °ter ..1.4a0;000 in the State Treasury, a little over,One-half of the amount due on the January interest. —The soldeiia' monument lately erected in Hallowell,M was dedicated on Tues.. day, this) ceremony consisting of reading Scripture, prayer, singing and oration by General Hubbard, of . New York. A large *concourse of citizens and members of the late army partiCipated. • i —The Augusta (Ga;) constitutionalist states that a disguised party visited the jail at Appling, Columbia county. and took therefrom a negro man and w.nnan, who were found dead on the road Sun day morning. ' The negroes bad :lad a difficulty with a white family. —The Supreme ConclaVe of the United States of the °rider , of ' , Septa Sapho," Seven Wise Men, .met at. Philadelphia, yesterday. A very, large delegation of representatives froth ail the . States in which the ordernists was present. The order was represented to. be in a very prosperous condition. • BUFFALO, July 27.—Flour firm; sales western spring at $6,78; do. bakers $7,50; lowa goring 66,130; No. 2 city ground spring ;6,75; 1,000 bbis. sold. 'Wheat opened firm but closed dull and droop ing at lower rates:" sales 6,000 bu. in the morning, No. 2 Chicago spring, at * 1 , 44 on the spot and to arrivefNo. 2 Milwau kee $1,45M@1,46; No. 1 do. $1,48; in the afternoon 7,200 bu. 'No. .2 Chimp at about $1,42. Corn quiet but farm; sales of 30,000 bushels -western No. • 2, part to arrive, at $1,05:-20;000 bushels ' western by! sample at $1:60, and bald firm at close at $1,05®1,07 for No. 2. Oats quiet and.steady at 783. Rye offered at 81,20. Barley nominal. Pork firm• at $33,E0. Lard firm at 19019340. High wines; none offered, scarce and nomi naly at $1,05. Grain in store here yes terday morning : wheat, 892,000 bush; c0rn,343,000 bush;Aats. t 350,000 bash; rye, 8,000 bash; pe4 - 2,300 bush. ". . ONE. OF TEE MOST ASTOUNDING CURES EVER PLII3LISHEIR- 41 . TESTED 811 OVER FIFTY- War; NESRE7S. The remarkible cure of Miss:Fisher; of Bearer county, I one worthy of more than a passing notice, especially when E 0 many_persons are Mr" tering not only with diseases of the eyes, and partial or total blindness, but likewise with other chronic ailments which Dr. Keyser has treated with such astounding success• 'the lady concerned was doomed to perpetual it; blindness, which through Dr. geyser's skill was ,compTetely removed, the truth of A ..,..„,:, ILS been vouched for by a sufficient number ci ' tresses to establish the faet.beyond all cavil. The sub joined letter from the young lady's brother speaks fOr itself : • • , Tie. Bayssn—This is the l'st of names that I , f have to the cure of my F i s t Christiana Fisher. They wsre all willit ir to pot their names down, and were very ranch astonished to see that you brought her sight so scion. My mu her sends her thaL.ks to you: she says “you weenie of the great- est men in the world. , " :She says if we had Bat come across you eh- Datives her child would not be living at this time. We .all plaid sending our love and respects to you. • ... S. r. FISTEiII, North Sewickley. . ' We, the undergigned know of the enre of Hiss Fisher, and bear willing testimony to tbe fact above stated. CnniSTIAN Sin°. P. fibulas, (brother.) ANNIT. Bseul.E7,• T. for ay. nue. Allegheny. BrdirrkllcCAirwirr. • Louisa Ftsnin, Merl:mice.> 8. H. Brown. Philiti Friday Bacbet Friday. H. N. Teckle. A. H. csvIMI. WM. Jenkhis, 11. - W. Leven- Mb haelliarrle, J. A. Fleming, g.,eree, 134115. a Leingrai. Witta Hyde, C.S. ewlsebtirg EliraLevindor. T. 1.. Young, Wm. Alison, ter. A. U. Leven- J.Lrvendorfer, J. F. Mitchell: -dOrtev. • A. Gardner: LeVellClOrterJ. F. Monisou,. A.lO. Mori Pon Robt Manead, Miltead, Isabella Dobbs. N•Funktiouwer. D. Fisher. G.Fisher (tier) I.iszte bigbead, Tittle biair•Se. T H. blabead. Thos. wattead. Leon Alligoe. Mary J. ..town, Jane A.Xorion J. C. WslLleg. Mary J. AVeiler. N. H Hazen, Maryl3.llo , ton • ll,Morton Hare 111111e11, Jennie W (Icon. C. Wilson. mary E.wtuon mart Patten. Jennie Patten. Manes James Patter., Sadie &Dobbs. Jennie a.Dobbs 3. W Dons/. 1. Dobbs: Wm. It. Pence, .C. F.sber. • Wlillamina Flan er. (tier mother.) Deafness. (lard Hearing. Di.ebarges.frona :Ste Eat, Polypus of the -End', Catarrh. °sena, Brad Ryes, Inflamed k' es, and every sew-cies id Sate Byes and ars Rupture. Varlocook Enlarn Limbs ilmken Von:, 'll.llceisceo Lege wad the auto - s di.eases of the skin ana hale . suretteafeßy • tr. ated.. Dli RBSSEIi, may unttl be cones ted every. day' _ 19 o'c ock. sibtssi ore. IlelLtherte )•tre.t.. and. Vora 1 to 3 , o'clock at Mg oelest. No. IRO Yeral street. TILE WORLD GROWS WISER. Thetis:nen atetnach bta Dorn a thattetetly re+ muted organ. There was a Unmet:len tot . evert aereliction et duty It eras enabled with here A doses orate most dltgastleg aad tliklistazik ettage. In vain It rejected thee, and tlittnilti) Matted' Omni upon the halals of thoteartteadtaroUtared them, *Remy were terze , d wont% Its:ethane save, uhtll its *Arent poteitegat thl t ronritit4reutt 4 out of It. The world I a elate iteettitan 1 area in that , &..ae , . %It eta, %hen Onion* yargattelti Ala Wet% Wlial tittraltOn 'were whit isAtE4244 NO"! weak have 1 tailed the • ' male limit` , et the Wealth rn cages of ayerentta arid Ilverj:coteplatete. ~, I ii, paid. wort Ili antee.y rot teolesetteri tool • t5ti,,,,..x,,4,16 twervavootkNok . aoi. Mr , . TSlta. a preparation 'watch Ito 410 *letria •Cesalaaw % ,I r l lrtg t-1 4 .1AtZ , b* g tVicw *Olt ktl t%z: lale,e'ti, *ft. mot VAIINIVOsv. biNateltA: aOt hitrktbr,l-hit YAWN! It i s lirat4 rAN it e.aslrtdissVcitre\ lat Ivo ,‘ltatsrA. reap' s * Ate ri, , t. I *kik* WOO 1 Writs wbt. 1A . firq . % P'tszen. %pith% we tar eAsing that *ROA Tract WA*, L airs. IN Wla 1 11 . 6 th tglAt ...AA t4VIS as vtgAtotte •Ict he itire. *hen en We IN giro trite , tit Oorrtihil vie WO el tit:r heAt tip: to its 151.c.VVriat-Aikt,fi hoo t ok, ,t tot*, aware ~a 4- i lta V 'tk., Iffts-Atte t he h*LO CAC , st 1 1 - 6 VIA ilsockilr4 4 steWri, vitt* ea of t thi,t,ren troz,eorVrvog 1 1 0E.,•—c titerVi 1 1,11 4 a ttkoncrts. itl*Mi . VA: k tiowri , wow tletwieVey ro v it4, et t it rev=tlA -o ., k,, l i rt=r t*- " t kWh Win .ys t 'in Mitt e 'IWO ifirt. IVAttitt,-; 4) it tk#-V*4ltiv‘,, t tbt , f,-. let 4t . a 4e1:14 . .. 1414 t, e, At YltlV\b6."-6rt li rr A s 1.1 k- tAct.s ttc re- ,ith Vs.,. tit. ig otth - Vet, tlytts Witql 1 Irti.llolV6*.t t aut - Alk'Vret t 7 "t"."3"Vir N s A k rgri4 kaVt (4l*'' N z...4. 4 ,:i i tlvg - i,„-t ir:vet..- EF. to iitettotetoMettrottee_ntircea ' _re.ree late taketisaanceiteettettritsgtt FAA 'cella diet hstir• 313