The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 07, 1869, Image 4

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    P 1
Ets gbh* Gaitlit
. - PUBLISHED BY .
fERIIIMRKED & CO, Proprietora.
nB. PENNIMAN, ..JOATAH KING,
T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. NEED;
)141iti4)n . iod Prebiletors.
ovincrE: -
lIIZETTE' BUIL 1 11'19,84 itID
OFFICIAL PAPER
Of Pittsburgh, Apugiunii, hug' AIIe•
gliony. 'County.
1
Terns —Batt,. lira(-Watt,. Wally.
One year...sB,oo One year.s2.so Biagio c0py..51.50
One month 75 81x, mos.. 1.50 5 coines, each 1.25
.EXAe week 15 Three mos 75 10 " 1.15
o u=
carrier.) . , , - • and one tokiOnt.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1869.
UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET.
STATE.
FOR GOVERNOR
JOHN W. GEARY.
JUDGE OF St PREME COVET:
:HENRY W. WILLIAMS.
COUNTY.
ASSOCIATE JUDGE DISTRICT CORM?.
JOHN N. KIRKPATRICK.
ASSISTANT LAW JUDGE, COMMON PLEAS.
SERIPH. H. COLLIER.
STATE SENATE..
THOMAS HOWARD.
ASSEMBLY,
MLLES S. HUMPHREY%
ALEXANDER MILLAR,
J Os
AM E BI TABUPti WALTo'S.N.
D. N. WHITE,
JOHN H. KERR.
. HUGH B. FLEMING -
rszAinraza,
JOS. F. DENNISTON.
• • , CLERIC OF COITILTS,
JOSEPH BROWNE.
• - ESCORDEB.
THOMAS -H. HUNTER.
COMMISSIONER,
CHAUNCEY B. BOSTNnOE.
=mfrs.
• JOSEPH H. GRAN'.
• CLERIC OF ORPHANS' CODE%
ALSOCANDER HILANDS.
DIRECTOR OF _
DIRECTOR O POOR.
• ABDIEL McCLUP.S.
Ws num on the inside pages of
- Shia morning's Gazierrs—Efeeond page:
interesting Correspondence from Ohio
and Yea England, and Clippings. Third
and Sixth gaga: binanee and. Trade,
Markets, Imports, River News. Seventh
page: A Home for Little Boys, The Oldest
City in The World, The Ness Ten Dollar
Counterfeit and other_intereating reading
=after.
. • Ink
PETBALstix at Antwerp, 511 f.
11. B. Bolan, at Frankfprt, 88 ®BBf.
GOLD closed in New York yesterday
et 136+. -
Izt a late number .of the North German
Correspondent, an ,Frtgllsh journal pub ,
fished in wesee It stated that there
are sixty' American students at the Uni
versity of Berlin. Heidelberg," Bonn,
'Jena, Leipzig, and -the great mining
school at Freiberg, have each.probably as
many more. If these young men de
sired to do so, they could not get nearly
as thorough an education in this country
as they can at .these German , _ seats of
learning. Barely this cannot be right.
America ought to lead the World in this
matter as she does in thegenerai diffusion
of rudimentary education.
THZ OHIO Dm:moo/Am- antin trOuble.
Their nominee for Governor, Gen. ROSE
-18 likely to be proyen a citizen
of California; and'therefore not eligible.
Nor otherwise is it - certain that he will
accept the' very doubtful honor of this
selection. The Copperhead wing of the
party--which,in Ohio as in Pennsylvania,
:comprehends about* all that it hae:of or!.
ginal- pure ;and tmadniteisted Democracy
.r.seriously.' meditates upon Um, expedi.
mtcy of protesting, by way of a bolt,
agaiust the nomMation.of one of "Lin
coln's hirelings." These uncompromis.
- lug politicians have called a State Co
n.
Yention for the 28tli of this month, to de.
tide upon• the best course. It may have
also the agreeable duty of voting upon
the declination of Roscitalis. In the
meantime, the leaders of the party, from
all parts of the State, were reported at
-Columbus yesterday, as. hi council over
the embarrassing situation.
Tau Pis:ash, recently suggested that
the proprietors of the Allegheny &lapel].
SiOn Bridge should have placed in some
prominent position on the bridge a tablet
upon which shOuld be engmyed the name
of the builder of the .bridge, and such
'other impiirtarit', facts concerning that
mt•work might seem appropriate to
..7 .te recorded.',The' suggestion la'agood
one and should, we think, in some man
,
ner be curled out; But it would add
,
much to the beauty of the bridge, if, in.
stead of a mere tablet, a brist, or fall length
statue of Mr. Rosauge,iere inbstituted.
A bust might be placed in a niche' in one
of the central pier tOwers, or a statue
could 'placed in the centre of Federal
street where it Widens at the Allegheny
end of the bridge. Monk ef the most
celebrated bridges in the world are
adorned with statuary', and Mr. Roan.
rartieS.fame as theL.greatest bridge erigi.
nier'in the world would amply warrant
•
any such action on thipart of the 'Stock
holders% Oils structure, one of hie grand.
at, undertakings. -r '
Time Is nme,h,dhetiedon le the 114Ctl
lii an d Mfg tutpreen', fa ,the '.
:14xnuse taken bi'the az4040 of Rev. Mr. t46,4eisioe Jim=
aeon In granting an injtin .n ieatralia•
SEM
, .
tug proceedingi in: the, Bishop's court.
It appears from 'the Confession of Faith
of the Westminster divines, that the civil
magistrate was recognized by them as
having authority in such matters. The
language of the Confession on this subject
is as follois
"The civil magistrate may not assume
to himeelf-tbe administration of the word
and iacrafnents, or the power of the keys
of the Kingdom of Heaven; yet he hath
authoritY, and it, is his duty, to take
order, that unity and peace may be pre
served in the church, that the truth of
God be kept pure and entire, that all
blasphemies And heresies be suppressed,
all corruptiO, a and abuses in worships
and discipline prevented or reformed, and
all the ordinances of God duly settle ,
administered and observed. For e
better effecting whereof he hath pow r,
to call synods, to be resent at the ,
and to provide that W atsoever is tra s
eated in them be according to the nii d
of God." Chap. 23. Sec. 3.
It is proper to state that most, if not
all t of the Presbyterian Churches in this
conntry, have declared in substance,
that nothing appertains to the magistrati
cal power in reference to the Church, 4-
cept the protection of her members in the
Jun possession, exercise and enjoyment
of their rights, inasmuch as his office,
being civil and political, is exterior to
the Church. It is declared further that
the civil magistrate has no right to "in
terfere to regulate matters of faith and
worship." His duty is "to protect the
person, good name, estate, natural and
civil rights of all his subjects, in such a
way that no person be suffered, upon
any pretence, to violate them; and to take
order that all religions and ecclesiastical
assemblies, be held without molestation
or.disturbance."
THE ELECTIONS.
The vote in Kentucky and Alabama
has been a light one. In the first the op
position have elected a large majority in
each branch of the Legislature, and their
State Treasurer, the only officer chosen
on a general ticket, has received about
two-thirds of the entire poll. Alabama
elected six Congressmen and a Legisla
ture on the 3d, but, at this writing, we
have no definite returns of the result.
The vote of Tennessee on Thursday was
larger than the State has ever before
girl', being for the first time participated
in both by the white and colored races.
Very nearly the entire of that white ele
ment which 'has hitherto been disfran
chised for disloyalty, has been relieved
from the disability by the policy of oev.
Smernn in the administration of the reg.
istry-law. It will surprise no one,
who has observed the course of
the canvass in that State, to learn that
Simi= is re-elected by a very large ma
jority and that the opponents of radical
Republicanism, comprising Democratic
Conservatives and rebels, have full con
trol of the new Legislature. This body
will elect an U. S. Senator, and will also
proceed to reverse the existing policy of
the State in reference to the suffrage. It
is probable that every White citizen will
be legally enfranchised, and that the col
orectsuffrage will be materially restricted,
if not altogether prohibited for the Allure.
Yet, upon these questions and that of
the Senatorship; there are possibly the
elements of great discord among the
Legislative majority, and the final results
may disappoint to some extent the re-
bel expectations. It will be some days
before we can have definite returns of
Thursday's poll.
PROGRESS WITH THE INDIANS.
Here it is well past the mid-summer,
and we hear nothing yet of the threatened
Indian war. Isolated cases of hostile
outrages have been reported, but nothing
at ail which realizes the fearful apprehen
sions so generally felt at the opening of
the Spring. Indeed these fears did not
seem wholly groundless. In April and
May, the whole broad Indian territory,
from between the head-waters of theXis
souri and of the Arkansas and Red riv
ere, was fruitful of rtunors of a general
war. , We had quite reliable, advices of
such threatening preparations among all
the ksding tnibes, as to justify An almost
universal expectation that the Plains
would:witness; during the current year,
the last bloody struggle of these savages
against the encroachments of civilization.
There are good reasons for believing that
the danger did actually exist,—while the
peaceful repose of more than one-half the
season in which Indian hostilities are
practicable, affords the most acceptable
proof that the peril has been averted.
The entire Indian territory is to-day at
peace.
For this pacific situation we are much
indebted to the vigorous. campaigning of
our troops Wider Sumner( and his lieu
tenants in the late autumn of last year,
and even in the deep snows and, bitter
frost of December and January. The
.predatory tribes were pursued to their fast
nesses, months after the period when tbeir
former experience had guaranteed to them
a temporary exemption from any show
of; nnr military power, and the severest
chastisements ever visited upon these
savages were delivered in a winter cam-
Paign which was without parallel either
for its hardships or, fonts success.
But not'even their punishments would
have alone sufficed to secure our frontier
from the renewal, in -1869c0f Indian ag
gressions. With these tribes, we now
know 3list, at _ f our own policy has been
hitherto adronfstered, .peace was robbery,
destitution, !starvation' and death. De,
peznying wholly. upon the feithfut
lion of onrtmatyt.eugwments for their
supiffilia of "amsaisitiowiiii of that Jim.
/tad Tulety of other materiel which
BURGH ikGitttkrE • SATURDAY; 7r1.869:
_
the Indian needs-and\ tonstitutes the
Indian wealth, the tribes were systemat
ieally defrauded by our Agents, while our
unprincipled traders, licensed and =li
censed, held them by the throat. They
were annually driven into hostilities
against the frontier, as their only recourse
to supply themselves with the necessaries
of savage life. A tribe which found it
self robbed of the stipulated supplies of
ammunition and blankets, found as regu
larly its only alternative to be either star
vation or war. The disgraceful facts
which have, year after 'year, been asserted,
accounting in this way for the annually
recurring Indian wars, have at last se
cured the most complete proof.
.
The new Indian policy of the present
has completed by peaceful means the
work which - SamarnArr's arms began, and
the conviction that white faith is to be
honorably kept ensures that repose for
our frontier which no respect for our
military power, ample as that has been
proved, could permanently command
among these wretched savrkges. For the
first time-in the history of our dealings
with the Indians, existing treaties are
fulfilled, this year, in their lette; and
spirit, and every tribe which roams over
our territories. or is encamped on there
servations set apart for their Mimes, is
content with a peace which gives to them
protection and the supply of their indis
pensable necessities. Peace Commis
sions, enlightened and faithful Superin
tendents and Agents of capacity and in
tegrity are fast bringing the Indian prob
lem to a satisfactory solution. These are
the instrumentalities which have not only
averted, for this year, that war of exter
mination which seemed unavoidable in
the Spring, but which, sustained faith
ally in the future, must finally accom
plish the peaceful civilization of the sav
age tribes. .
RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.
Hon. John Scott, United , States
Senator . from this,. State, during,the last
session of Congress was besieged by
office•seekers; but gained a quiet Sabbath
by placirue on the door of his apartment
the following notice: All who desire my
influence in obtaining or retaining office
will materially advance their interests by
not calling upon me on the Sabbath day.
It will be remembered that the late
General Assembly, by resolution, warned
the Church against the sin of fcetleide.
The New-York Observer, in referring to
this action, thinks the crime not so com
mon among the female members of the
Church as to render such a warning
necessary. Letters, however, have been
received from different parts of the
country testifying to the frequency
of the crime. The Observer 4 a credulity is
now'shaken. One physician in a small
town reports three cases where he bad
been applied to aid in child•murder;
one application being by an Old School
Presbyterian minister, another by a lady
who was tempted by reading an adver
tisement in a paper edited by a New
School Presbyterian, and a third by a
member of Methodist church.
Frequently paragraphs appear quoting
singular remarks of ministers, without
stating name or denomination. We
always like to know the name and affinity
of these would-be•over-wise ministers.
The following is an illustration: It , is
reported a Chicago preacher recently re
fused to say grace at the table, saying
it was a mere formality, and "the best
grace was to eat moderately, well digest
your meal, and then go to work and earn
another." For 'the same reason he re
fused to pronounce the benediction.
Dr. Boggs, who felt aggrieved, because
Mr. Tyng officiated in his parish in New
Brunswick, New Jersey, has resigned
his rectorship, and become a general mis
sionary for the diocese.
The Baptist Home Mission Board are
asking seventy thousand dollars from the
churches for the education of colored
preachers in the schools - of the South.
It is stated that more than a dozen
Philadelphia cleigynitin have united in
the determination to attend no more Sun
day funerals unless the necessity is certi
fied to by a physician:
Two Christians bad quarreled in the
morning; in the evening one of them sent
a note to the other: "Brother, the sun
1. going down." Nothing further was
needed to effect a reconciliation.
The effect upon the prisoners in the
Penitentiary at Joliet, Illinois, ••fiom
holding prayer meetings and other ser.
vices, induces the belief an the Warden
that be could, with safety, commence re
ducing the -guard force. These prayer
meetings are held on the Sabbath, and it
is proposed to have .a Wednesday prayer
meeting and use Saturday for iichbol.
There is a Christian Association organ
ized and in fine working condition in the•
_prison.
Father' Faxon, the veteran Sunday
School worker, thinks that a Sunday
school born in a snowstorm will never
be scared by a white frost.
Mission Sunday schools flourish at St.
Louis in true western style of enterprise.
The Advance speaks of several success
ful schools of this character. The South
Mission numbers some thirteen hundred
scholars. It was started ten years ago
by General Clinton B. Fiske, a whole
Bottled Methodist layman, and his excel
lent wife. The General has recently
started a new enterprise that may in time
rival the South Mission. Benton Street
Mission, undei the superintendence of
our Edripl.l4, Jones, for
aterbi Cashier `or ; 0 0 10 '14
Think of this city,. weelargswes' in tt•
thousand children. Biddle Market Mts
.
sion has an attendance of nine hundred.
The Superintendent, Mr. Morrison, used
to be a draymen, and is now a successful
merchant.
Deacon Carpenter, of Chicago, offers to
forward President Finney's book on Ma
sonry to the first thousand ministers who
apply, and enclose twenty cents each for
the postage on the same. Apply to Rev.
A. Ritchie, 176 Elm street, Cincinnati.
The Congregational churches of New
Bedford, says the Advance, have decided
to devote Sabbath. forenoons to Sunday
school, and the afternoon to preaching.
fl
. The offi minutes of the last Ohio
Congrega 'onal Conference ,show the fol
lowing : hurches, ode hundred and
eighty-a' , and one hundred and twenty
ministers. Pastors, twenty-four; acting
pastors, ighty-nine ; without pastoral
charge, twenty-nlne.
The Protestant Churchinan gives a case
of competition between the choir and the
pulpit inMassachusetts parish, th at is
humiliating. Two parties existed in the
Church, e favoring "fine music," and
the other was anxious to have good
preaching. The matter was finally com
promised by allowing those who desired
to devote their subscriptions to the pay
ment of the choir, to designate the fact.
After the society was canvassed, it was
found that seventeen hundred dollars
was subscribed for singing, and only
eighteen hundred dollars far preaching.
Some of the contributors signed $25,1150,
and $lOO "for singing"—not a cent' for
preaching. The sequel may be imagin
ed, discord and discontentment existed.
The new Chicago Congregational
T heological Seminary. in course of erec
tion.l)
j n Union Park,is arranged that each
suit has a study room and two bedrooms,
which are both lighted from the outside.
Rev. G. I. Francis, of the last Senior
Class in the Western Theological Sem
inary, Allegheny City, has received a
unanimous call from the Old School Pres
byterian church of. Freeport, Pa.
Rev. Mr. Murray, of Para Street Con
gregational church, Boston. has gone on
his customary summer hunting expedi
tion, accompanied by a namber of ladies
and gentlemen. To the lambs of the
flock, says Zion's Herald, who are crying
for his presence and comfort may be sung
the old nursery rhyme, "Hush-a.by, baby,
bunting." etc.
Quite an unusual religious interest pre
vails in the Reformed (Deitch) church of
Clarkstown, Rockland, N. Y. Profane
and ungodly men, whOse evening haunts
were the village store and bar-room, have
been made new, creatures in Christ Jesus.
The new Metropolitan church in Wash
ington City, of the Southern Methodist
Episcopal Church, just dedicated, cost
seventy thousand dollars. The 'Wash
ington members gave forty thousand dol
lars. By request of the Bishops a collec
tion was to be taken up for it in all the
churches of that (nomination.
..V* •
THE OIL TRADE.
Interesting to Oil Shippers—Who Shall
Lose by Lealisge:—Tbe Question Set-.
tied.
Friday morning Judge McCandless,
in the United States 'District Court, de
livered the opinion of the Court in the
case of the United States _vs. Brewer
et. al., which was argued some days
since. The case attracted great attention
among oil dealers, and as given below
will be found very 'interesting and im
portant:
THE CIRCUMSTANCES.
This is a case stated upon an oil trans
portation bond. On the 88th of June,
1863, the defendants shipped by railroad
from the Twentieth District of Pennsyl
yenta to the Fifth District of New Jersey
1,080 barrel's, containing 45,324 gallons of
refined oil, in good packages and under
legal permits and certificates from the
proper authorities. Under like authori
ty the oil was removed from the Fifth
District of New Jersey to the bonded
warehouse of Reynolds, Pratt it Co.. in
the Second District of New York, with
out inspection and gauging in the New
Jersey District, with the same effect as if
the Second District of New York had
been the destination set forth in the per
mitand bond under which such trans
portation was made.
The oil was properly gauged and in
spected in the bonded warehouse of
Reynolds, Pratt dt Co., on the 80th of
July, 1886. By this inspection there was
found to be a loss of 6,264 gallons. For
the tax of twenty cents per gallon upon
this quantity so lost, this action is insti
tuted; the tax upon the residue of the
45,824 galions'having been properly set
tled and accounted for. The effect of
continued extremely hot weather upon
oil barrels,' exposed for the length of
time ordinarily required in transit from
the Twentieth District of Pennsylvania
to the Second District of New York, is to
decompose their lining and open their
seams. From the last of June to the
close of July, 1866, the weather continued
excessively hot. The loss of so much of
the 6,264 gallons as exceeds the quantity
allowed for leakage, by the regulations
of the Department at Washington, arose
from the effect of solar heat upon the
barrels containing it.
The amount of actual leakage on oil
removed in bond at the time of this loss,
allowed by the regulations in pursuance
of the sixty.first section of the Act of the
80th June, 1884, was not to exceed three
and one•half per cent. on any distance ex
ceeding five hundred miles., The dis
tance from the Twentieth District of
Pennsylvania to the Second Distifet of
New York is in excess of flye hundred
miles. ;
It is not disputed that an allowance of
one thousand, Live hundred and eighty
six • gallons. or three and one-half per
cent. on 45,324 gallons, should barnacle
for leakage, but it is claimed that there
should be a'deduction for the remaining
four thousand, six hundred and seventy
eight galloni, because the loss was occa
sioned by the effect of solar heat upon
the article transported. •
This is the question for our deblidon,
and I have given to it all the considers
tioi which the multiplicity of .my judi
cial engagements and the demands upon
niy time would permit.
OIL EXPORT REOULA.TIO2QI4
CAPV.I II I wisely e flo o tt med •to
porndlon of olt, for has, boodake an lin
pOrtant elerneot in reßtilatlng the bal.
anon of-trade between aIbaJUDIIO
and foreign nation,. 011• 6:ported_ a*
exempt from taxation. If for sale or
consumption in the United State), it - was
subject to a tax of twenty cents per gal
lon, to be assessed and collected, and
paid . by the producer or manufacturer
thiireof, as is provided by the ninety
fourth section of the act of July 13,.1866.
By the stitty-Brat section (act third,
March, '65,) the oil may be removed,
without the payment of the duty, under
such rules and regulations, and upon
the execution of such transportation
bonds, or other, security, as the
Secretary of = the Treasury may
preacribe. Upon such -removal it
must be transferred to a bonded ware
house, where it is again inspected and
gauged, and "the duty.shall be assessed
and paid on any deficiency or reduction of
the number of gallons (beyond such al
loirance for leakage, as may be estab
lished by tue regulations of the Commis
stoner of Internal Revenue) received at
the warehouses from the number of gal
lons as stated in the bond at the place of
shipment." Here there is a plain ride of
computation, and the per centum of da•
duction being Axed by a regulation of the
Department, in conformity to an Act of
Congress, becomes a part of the law and
of as binding force as if incorporated in
the body of the Act. .
TAX ON OIL.
It is contended by defendants' coun
sel, in an argument of much ability, that
the tax is upon the consumption. It is
not upon the consumption, but upon the
manufactured article.. The government
is not to ascertain whether it has been
consumed, but whether it has been ex
ported. If so, it is free. If not, it is
subject to the tax of twenty per cent. per
gallon. Fixing a maximum per tentage
for leakage, was designed•to prevent the
possibility of /trends, by the with
drawal or abstraction of any portion
of the oil during its period of tran
sit. Stich being the rule pre
scribed by competent authority, courts
have no right to depart from
it, even in case of absolute loss by the
action of the elements. The Govern
ment is not' an insurer. The owner in
curs, and must take the resposibility.
The simple inquiry is, has he complied
with the condition of his bond? Has he
produced to the Collector of the Twen
tieth District of the. State of Pennsyl
vania a certificate showing that such
merchandise has been duly placed in the
warehouse designated. from which it
cannot be removed except for exporta
tion, or, upon payment of the tax, or had
he pai d duties required by law?
THE LEAKAGE.
It is wholly unnecessary to enter into
a discussion as to the effect of solar heat
upon refined oil, or as to the penetrating
and permeating qualities of the liquid
itself. It was precisely because of the
operation of this agency that a rule was
necessary to fix the allowance. In some
cases there would be no leakage at all,
in some less than three and a half per,
cent.; in a majority of cases about three
and a half per cent., and in some cases
much more. On what principle is a rule
of law governing this: subject to be re
!aged and set aside, because there was
extraordinary warm weather in June or
July of a particular year? As was
ably argued -- by the counsel for the
Government, that the leakage in this
case happened in the ordinary way,
was produced by the ordinary causes,
with the difference, that one cause, solar
heat, was operating with more than ordi
nary power. The result was leakage,
and the law, and the regulations of
the Department. do not authorize a
distribution of leakage into Ordinary
and extraordinary as respects an• abate
ment of taxes. The law calls the loss
thus produced leakage. and has pro
vided a rule regulating the • allowance,
from which, however great the hard
ship, it is not our province to depart.
Any other construction would not only
open a wide door to fraud. but would
practically nullify the•regulation itself.
DECISION.
It follows that the defendants have no
lawful claim to or deduction for the feur
thousand six hundred and seventy-eight
gallons, by reason of its loss, caused by
solar heat, and judgment must be ren
dered for the United States for the sum of
nine hundred and thirty-five dollars and
sixty cents, with costs of suit. Judgment
accordingly.
BOARD or HEALTH.
Monthly Meeting—Reports of Health
Othcers- r eleartng the Streets, &c.
Yesterday afternoon at four o'clock the
Board of Health met at their office, on
Fourth avenue. Dr. A. H. Gross pre
sided, Mr. F. P. Case, Secretary pro. tem.
Present: Messrs., Gross, Case, Wilson
and Craig.
MONTHLY REPORTS.
After the reading of the minutes, Mr.
Crosby Gray, Health Officer, presented
his monthly report, showing that ninety:
eight nuisances had been abated in va
rious parts of the city, under his juris
diction. He also reported seventy-six
dollars realized from permits during the
month. At the same time 'Ass had
been expended, leaving a balance on
hand of $66,15. Daring the month two
cases of small-pox had occurred, one of
which proved Mal. The other patient
is recovering.
Mi 44 l, B. Williams, Assistant Health
OfticeYi also reported that one hundred
and forty-flue nuisances had been abated
according to his notifications during the
month.
Fives the'report of the Meat Inspector,
Mr. Adam Weaver, it appeared that he
had made six hundred and eighty-three
visits during the month to the markets,
and the various meat shops throughout
the city. In that time he had condemned
twenty-seven" lota, ranging from small
pieces to some of one hundred and fifty
pounds weight. The principal part of
the condemned article was corned beef.
The report gave the number of meat
shops in the city, sixty-four, classified as
follows:
No. Vs ail right •
No. 2 , g doing pretty well
No. 3`.-01.11 pretty tut 14
t'op , we all accepted and filed.
The reports wet. _
bLEARLEG THE STREETS,
Mr. Gray presented the article of
agreement authorized by, . and between
the Board and certain parties who were
granted sole privilege to remove all car
casses and similar refuse matters fro - na
the streets and alleys in the city, with
the provision that the work be done daily,
and under the supervision of the. Board.
The agreement was duly signed and
accompanied by the required bond of
$1,500, from the parties, tor the faithful
performance of the contract.
The agreement and bond were ap
proved.
A PERFUMED NOTE.
The Secretary read a cotrunumeation,
in which the writers petioned for license
to conduct their business, of cleaning cess
pools, &c. The petitioners set forth that
they had complied with the ordinance in
the matter by procuring three new air
tight box carts and all the other required
appliances for conducting the business
with dispatch. ' From their plaintive ap
peal it appeared trade • was• quite brisk.
They mildly suggested. that as several
jobs were on hand, and they were an
ions :to commenoe work, if a license were
granted before the adjournment lof the
Boapi, it would be Wahly acoeptable.
.The Secretary, after perasing the dorm.
Mont to its clots and closely scanning
theelling'saatended as an mm
u.,
Edon sat ' tharetth /114 it Math.
table with great gravity and announced'
himself outflanked. The President ad
justed his spectacles astride his Grecian
prdboscis, the other members displayed
their handkerchiefs in brightening up
their vision, and five minutes were im
pressively whiled away in the attempt to
decipher from whom the urgent missive
emanated. Their labors were in vain. '
The paper was then carefully filed, ande,
discussion as to the power of the Board
to grant the favor asked, next enaned.
All the Acts of Assembly in the prem
ises were cited, and finally a decision ar
rived at that as the Board bad already
granted the sole privilege of conducting
the fragrant trade to a certain individual
possessed of patent appliances , for the
same, and as that period bad not yet ex
pired, it was impossible to issue farther
licenses at the present time.
The Board then ordered warrants to be
drawn for the payment of the salaries of
the Health officers and sundry other
little bills, after which the meeting ad
journed.
PersobaJ.
We clip the following from a Cleveland
paper: "Mr. F. R. MyerS, long the General
Passenger Agent of the Cleveland and
Pittsburgh and Fort Wayne and Chicago
Railroads, and wholeft railroading some
time since to go into the manufacturing
business at Canton, in this State. has re
turned to his first love, and has resu a ed
his old position of General Passenger
Agent on the Philadelphia and Chicago
line. Mr. Myers is a first clam man for
the position, and the managers of this
important route have done Well in secur
ing his services."
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures Diarrhea.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURB
Cures Dysentery.
DB. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE
Cares Bloody Flux.
DE.rXEYBEB'S BOWEL OUBB
Cures Chronic Dlarrpes.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures Bilious C
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL.CURE
Cures Cholera, Infant .
DB. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Curesthe wont sun of Bowel Disease.
DIL KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE
Curea Cholera Morbur.
Da. KEYBEIVI3 BOWEL CURE •
gill enre in one or two doses.
DR. KEYSER , d BOWEL CUES
Ought to be in every faintly.
D. KEYSER'S BOWEL °DBE
' Lis sure cure for Girlplng.
DE. KEISEE , S BOWEL CUBE.
, Will not fall in one eases
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures Dlceraticn.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures summer ComVaint.
DR. HEYI3IOI'B BOWEL CUBE
Will cure . Watery Delchargea-
DIL EZYBRE , B BOWEL CUBE
DE. KEYBEIVS BOWEL CURE
TS . a valuable medicine.
Dr. azyszws BOWEL CURB
Is a protection against Cholera.
DR. EMBER'S BOWEIUCIJRE
Will save hundreds of valuable lives
If early resort is had to it.
DB. KEYBEIVE BOWEL CUBE is one of the
most valuable remedies ever discovered for
diseases Incident to chili season of the year..
Hundreds of sufferers could be reliesse In less
than a day by a speedy resort to this most valua
ble medicine, particularly, valuable, when the
system is apt to become disordered by the two
free use of unripe and crude vegetables.
Price 50 Cents. Sold at DR. KEYSER'S
GREAT MEDICINE STORE, 107 Liberty St..
and by all druggists.
THE CONDITIONS OF HEALTH.
It is idle to expect health if the precautions
necessary to secure It are neglected. The hu
man organization is a delicate piece of mechan
ism, and reqnires as much intelligent care and
watchfulness to keep it in order, as are requisite
iirtoe management of the most complicated com
bination of levers, wheels and pinto ns.
At this season of the year the body Is peculiar
ty sensitive, because it la great y weakened and
relaxed by tie continuous heat. The skin, In
summer with Its millions of pores wide open, Is
a very different sort of tegument from the com
pact fibrous covering which it beromes nnder the
action of the winterss cold. The muscles, too.
are comparatively flaccid. the nerves tremulous,
the Wood poor, is nd the whole frame less capable
of enduring fatigue and resisting disease. These
- indications of a &pe w sed cordition 'of the vital
forces are so many unmistakable hints that na
ture needs reinforcing.
Ordinary stimulants will not effact this object.
They inflame and excite. but do not strengthen.
• The only preparation which can be depended
enableo impart etaminal vigor to the system. and
it to endure the ordeal of the heated term
without givingwny under the pressure, is aos-
TETTEWs STOMACH SITTkAte. a tonic and
corrective so pure, so harmless, so utterly free
from the drawbacks which render many of the
powerthi‘stringeats employed in medical prac
tice more 'dangerous than tee, ailments they are
employed to cure, that it may be administered
wiihout feu to the feeblest female invalid,:' or
the m vegetabl e child. The cathartic combinedative ingredients, which are
with those of a tonic nature In Its comp Mimi.
keep the bowels moderately free and perfectly
regular, while the work of Invigoration is going
on. Tne finest blood devurepts which the herbal
kingdom affords are also among Its components,
so that it recruits, purifies and reghlates , the
system simultaneously..
RELIGIOUS.
Or THE SMUT METHODIST
CiilMlCH,(Raliroad street near Depot,)
Nzwltatou'rON. Fa. S. P. CEO WIRER, Pastor.
Preaching HYSHY SABBATH. at 1113; a. at. and
IP. st. Public cordially invited.
arC WRIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH. ALLEGHENY.— The Rev.
BENJ. F. BROOKE. it , ctol% will officiate at ell
vine service In this Church on TO. MORROW at
half-past ten o'clock A. Sr., and had past seven
o'clock
arCEN'rRAIL PRESBVTERI•
AGOGURCG, Allegheny corner of LA.
cock and Andersonstreefs. Preaching'q
SOW. Aognst Sib, at 10.5. j o'clock A. 11. and at
Vs o'clock P. N.. In MY. G. W. Y. BIRCH. of
Springfield, Illinois.
All are cordially Invited.
RELIGIOUS.-First . Chris-
TIAN CHIIRCH, corner Beaver street
an d Montgomery avenue, Allegheny City, JO
SEPH NINO:, Pastor. Public worship TO. M OR
ROW ,_ (Lord's Day.) at 10)(i in the IdelizsDiSi
and IN In the Eirabirro.
Free Scats. and a cordial InVitation given Loan.
Sunday ectiool at 9 A. M. -
vmr"MESSIAH ENGLISH EVAN.
HELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH,Oien
eral Synod.) Hand Street. below Penn. Rev. J.H.
W. STUCK ENDER°, Pastor. Religious • ser
mes regularly on SABBATH hereafter. Sunday
Scheel 9 A. N. Preaching at /OM A. It. and
73( r.x. Prayer Meeting and Lecture Wednes
day evenings: Friends of the congregation and
public are cordially invited.
_ _
FIRST 'CEEB ISTIAN
l ar CHURCH OF PITTSBURGH, W. S.
Gray_ Paster, meets statedly In NEVLLLE
HALL, corner of Liberty and Fourth streets.
Services every Lord's Ray at 1031 A, at. Mid 7.4
P. X.
Ray. M. L. STREATOR. of Connellsvllle. will
discourse on the L mixt": or Custer, at 1034
o'clock A. X.
The public are cordially Invited.
Itgr THE FIRST NIETRODIST
CHURCH. Avrang., abov e
Snalthdeld street, Pittsburgh. ALEX. CLARK.
Pastor. Preaching EVZRY Bassa D i vi n eo.3
A. R. "Creation Conditioned in t Rea
son" ts the general subject or a series of Bsbbeth
Eyenlng Liectares.by the
_pastor. Spectal *olden
as follows:. AL Lawless • wort_ ,d July 4; Amos
ebevea of a forme, July 11; Wat.ra that ELlght
Hays Bern, Jeff nntnnan Ligh t , Jay - Eat
Inisgeless Humanitn 'Anil. ifertundlls 'Ara
mats. Aug. ID Reason In RonLinite. Aug. , ls; As
cidental nallginni Anti 'l ,ll 'Cnnint Tran
MN semi 'gib:oak 19 itUf. • : •
Never tail'.