El Cylllqo . .aiittts, PUBLMHBD BY ' - PENNIKAN,REEID &CO,Proprietori P. B. PENNIMiN„ JOSIAH KING. T. 4 . . HOUSTON. N. P. BEET), Bditcrs and PrePrietors• OnfICE: GAZETTE 84 AND 86 FIFTII AT. - ' OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittabsurib,Allegneny and Ana. ghcny County. Spas-/Dabs. Illsesf.Watiy. Wanly. ose year-45,00 One year. 151.50 Single copy -0.60 One month 'l5l Six. mos.. 1.60 6 eates.eeli 1.25 • Battomke week 151 Three mos nlO • 1.16 carrier.) I and one to Anent. TSU@SDAY, AUGUST 12, 1869. UNION REPUBLICAN TICKEt. STATE. POR GOVERNOR: JOAN W. GEARY. JUDOS OF St PBEZdk . VPURT: HENRY W. WILI.IAH. COUNTY. ASSOCIATZ JIIDOS DISISICT COMM. :„JOHN DI. KIRKPATRICK. ANBISTANT LAW =DIM COMMON PUNA% FEZD'IC. H. COLLIER. • STLrE SENATic—THOBIAS HOWLED. Aser4rß"— A l irLl•Til i t i alreL ß lE ,YBs JOSEF&t WALTON. • JAMES TAYLOR, D.-N. WHITE, • JOHN EL lama. ` • Sammorr—HUGH B. "FLESHED. TRaLsowste— Ws. F. DENNISToN. CLERK OF Cotrwrs — JOSEPH BROWNE. „Escosime—rtioldAS H. 'HUNTER. Coulasstorrsa— EIATINCEY B. BOSTWICE Essorrss—JOSErll H. GRAY. CLERK OsrapteCourt—SLEX. HILANDS Do:moron OF Pods—LBDIEL AtcCLUISE. WI?. Pin= on the inside , pages of, this morning's Gernrrn—Second page: Poetry, ."C'harity," , Epherthis, .New York City Fashions, Breeches. Third and Sixth pages: 'St inane.° and Trade Markets, Intports and /liver News. . Seventh page: Clippings, Bilk Manufacture and Culture, illsehionable Bathing Costumes for Ladies, Popular Feeling in the New Dominion. PETROLEUM at Antwerp, 53f. U. S. Bonne at Frankfort, 881 GOLD closed in New York yesterday at 135. WE publish to-day a very interesting letter from Professor LANGLEY, of the Western University. The Professor was one of the party of astronomers who ob served the recent eclipse from various points in Kentucky. And every one must feel gratified at the success of their important labors. TICE FEcnuaits - are giving signs of prep aration for another raid on Canada. It is a pity tlaat a few hundred of these er ratic enthusiasts; who seem to care more for a scrimmage than for the freedom of their countrYp cannot be caged and sub jected to the tender mercies of the Eng lish authorities. Hanging would prove a wholesome antidote for their over zealous and misdirected patriotisin. NrrrwrEam DATES only intervene be tween this and the elecUon on the ques tion of a public park. Let the matter be thoroughly discussed, and let no vote be deposited for or against the project unin telligently. The Park will come whether or not the people. now decide in its favor. It is a necessity, and sooner or later the people will make up their minds to have it, and perhaps delay will entail, large cost. _ Tun Ohio and Pennsylvania Democrti.- ay piopose fighting on the• line of green backs, but in quite a different manner. PENDLEtosi's greenback theory is to be tried on with the masses of Ohio, while Pecsita's possession of greenbacks with out limit is thought to be sufficient Nilson for his elevatiOn to the highest place in this State. We shall see how far theoret ical and practical greenbacks go in ,a' pcilitical canvass. Year Emmy Pennsylvania had another exhibition on the scaffold, in vindication of outraged law. The victim to Justice in this case was CHARLES Oman, an az b essory to t he murder ct THOMAS 'SARAH _iItEAD, in Monroe county. if all reporti ibe_ Unlit of the treatment received by the lunfortunste MAR WWl*, in prison, his Anal taking off mast-have been accepted with gratitude as a long•wished for measure of (relief from die tortures and cruelties of 'heartless jail-keepers. COMPETITION tells upon the cost of ocean•telegraphy. The new . French line begins - with a tariff of $lO for tea words, and the old line at once comes dOwn to $7,50 for a =imago of the same length. Y We have reason to anticipate an , uniform rate.of $5,00 for both lines before , the end of the present season. The press-reports by the new line show an improvement in quality over rthose Which, by its elder rival, have been very regularly one-half trash. With the aixpidonment of the old prohibitory rates of charge, the business of ocean telegraphing will exhibit a won derful increase:inl popnlaxity and profit. It is predicted that several additional cables will be laid across the Atlantic within tbelensuing five years. wrsaT will occur ,112 1872 which will be'of very nearly as much scientific bnportanes, as well as of interest to as troaccaulli as Ulf great eclipse of Saw- day last. We shall then see the transit of the planet Venus across the Ban's disc. This event occurs periodically, but at alternating intervals of remarkable irregularity, the periods being 8 and 1221 years. After 1872, L the transit will be again visible in 1880, 2002, 2011 and 2133, arid so on, beyond* the ken of even the youngest inhabitant now of earth. This transit will be observed with peculiar in terest, since its conditions will aid in the elucidation of several questions, among others that of the exact distance of oar earth from the sun. The last transit was I seen in 17:50. THE FREE TRADE lateoun are mak ing a desperate effort to secure converts to their pernicious and damaging doc trines; Never was circus or menagerie better billed in this city than are the tenets of faith held by that monied and powerful organization. Nor are their efforts confined simply to Pittsburgh, but to the contrary, their agents are every where throughout the country, in cities, towns and villages, scattering their docu ments and talking their treason to the people at large, and planting seeds which may grow and ripen to the dismay of Protectionists. A counter effort should be made by those friendly to a tariff, and the longer such a movement is delayed the worse it will 11, as the enemy are well organized, cunning and crafty. Up and at them is the Only, safe rule now, and our manufacturers should, in self protection, adopt it at once. Wiuv nes become of the immaculate CAREY ? The soft handed friend of lsbarers, the sweet-scented teetotaler, the ardent Democrat, the frothing mouth piece of free trade, the everything to everybody, Sent CARET. What becomes of him since PENDLETON has been nom inated for: Governor of Ohio ? Poor CA.RET I We pity him. He expected mach and realized little. The cats.paw of Democracy, the tool of wiser men, the fellow of all sorts, who drifted beyond his mooring midis wrecked within sight of dry land. Let him rally. He may be .happy yet, and he may be President of these United States, if he adopts a. few more hobbies to make him self popular with the masses. We never had , ' a sincere = and earnest re gard for the man all We heard him talk most beautiful nonsense to a crowd of hard-fisted laborers, who looked on him with evident awe, inasmuch as a gold headed cane, kid gloved hands and dia mond shirt studs were new things to them in the possession of a reformer who bent his whole energies towards elevating the laborer to his proper sphere, and to securing for him the proper pay. Good bye, Canxv! We shall never see your like any more, but we are not sorry that the world has only a few of your stamp left to'correct mortality and pecuniarily improve by self-delivered lessons. FRANCE AND SPAIN. Whether the Emperor Napoleon has been actuated by purely selfish dynas tic' considerations, in his recent exchange of a personal for a constitutional govern ment of France, is at present a vexed ques tion with European politicians. What ever may have been the secret motives for this remarkable change of policy, there are no two opinions expressed, even by the most unfriendly of his critics, concern ing the iminediate consequences; France is more heartily Napoleonized at this mo ment than in anything her people have felt since those days of glory which preced ed the march to Moscow. More than this; the Imperial forecast now presents to other European powers, and especially to Spain, which waits for a sign and for a king beyond the Pyre. nees, the example of - an absolute govern ment quietly converted into an constitu tional monarchy, as not only the latest but the most inviting of Napoleonic ideas. If the Prince NAilorsois be really the coming candidate, favored by all parties in Spain fdr the vacant throne, the wis dom of his Imperial cousin, in France, cannot fail to reinforce most powerfully their kindly regards. In dissociating be (ore Christendom the two ideas which have heretofore been inseparable—of Na poleonisin and of the absolute irrespon sibility of sovereignty—the Emperor has perhaps contributed; both by intent and decisively, to a solution of the Spanish question • which shall give the govern • "meat of all Southwestern Europe to the heirs of the dead prisoner of St. Helena. A POLITICAL DEATH. • PRNDLE.TON was but is no more. The action of the Ohio Democracy in forcing upon him the gubernaiorial nomination indignantly spurned and refused by the gallant ROBECIUNB, seals his political fate and never more will he rise to the surface. He is powerless. 14 other course than to accept the very doubtful honor of leadership is left to "Young Greenbacks," and in BO doing he necessarily offers him- Self a sacrifice to his party, and blots out the vaulting ambitions of his life. The ungracious declination of Gen. ROSE main plunged the Democracy of our sister State into a fearful dilemma, and one which even the unlearned in political matters interpret to portend ;great dis aster to Mr. 'PENDLETON. Popular with the,massee, the acknowledged lather of a pernicious though fascinating financial doctrine, a shrewd and cunning politician, if not a clever statesman, Mr. Per nuvrort, over and above all others of his party, seemed the coming Presidential candi date who could muster most strength as a Demmtlige , stsge;lezd•bemisr; but his PffmuRGHTl l 7./VP'I7NmIsD hopes and those tfAsittp. 3Rng.4.495c - dissipate, for never-agitajiiiiil-hiii after local defeat iswEAt4t T :ft prominence and position in which form., by the Central Committee That hie forced upon him the position Rosecratis scorned and rejected. The friends and admirers of Mr. PENDLETON outsideof hail his nomination with regret and sor row. They bad hoped he Ikrackt ing for higher honors, and willsasldeb, at the thought that a man of iqtk . .gitiPti . strength and of such mighty 'proMlife should be crushed to save his party , 'pins disorganizing into fragments. Mr. PENDLETON was the only available' man left the opposition in Ohio. He is popular and strong, but it will be no very difficult matter to bring about his defeat. He can have no hope of election, for his party has none. He fully realizes the position in which he is placed, and clearly sees political ruin to himself no matter in which waylie turns. To refuse to sacri fice himself for the good of his party would be unpartisan and reprehensible; to accept the nomination is to accept de feat, and consign himself to a shelf where he will grow dust covered and mouldy before again called to serve any portion of the people as a candidate. Alas! Poor PENDLETON! UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE. Eighteen States have ratified the XVth Article of the Federal Constitution, with so complete a precision of formalities that no partizanship can be found so stubborn as to raise any objection thereto. Three other. States have taken action thereon, which has been clah4ed as suffi ciently affirmative, but as, to which objections are earnestly made, .by an opposition which is wholly sincere in its resolution to combat the amen datory proposition to the last prac ticable moment. As to two of these States, Missouri and Nebraska, it is beyond dispute that their legislative acts of ratification were imperfect, by reason of their recitation, in ; each in stance, of a mutilated version of the text of the Articlk It is manifest that the ratifying intent of each of these States must be regarded as having failed through this imperfect description, and the legislative act in each case must legally Count for nought. The next Legislatures in those States will take up the proposition as a new one, ratifying or rejecting it as their majorities may incline. There is no doubt as to lifissouri, since the same Legislature meets again in January next, and will then correct its record. The probabilities,_ fortunately, are also in favor of a Republican prepon derance in Nebraska, but our politicians can better rely on the certainties after the election shall -be held. As to the third State, Indiana, the circumstances attend ing her alleged approval of the Article are familiar to our readers. We need not remind them of our often expressed in ability to concur with those who defend the legality of that ratification, as pronoun ced by a body of men whose, legislative functions for any purpose whatever could not be recognized under the local Consti tution. We hay only to add, now, that if the Amendmen shall-finally secure only just twenty-eight States, for one of which Indiana shall be by this action claimed. the people of e United States may prepare themsely s for the inauguration of such a political trite, upon their precise constitutional $ his in this connection, as will be endless unless it be ended most mischievously. at one course , in this situation, can be egarded as statesman like, whether in a partisan or patriotic llght f The impe ect act which thus as serts the full action of the State authority, must count for nothing, and the question be regarded as still open, awaiting the formal decision of a legally constituted Legislature. Three other States, Minnesota, lowa and Vermont, will ratify, theist in Oc tober and the other two in January next. Rhode Island hesitates. One branch has assented, and the other is expected to -do so in January. i Of the States which have rejected the Article, a question has been raised as to the right of Ohio to reconsider her ac tion, when her next Legislature con venes, but it does not meet with a favora ble consideration among Mir Republican friends in that State. Eight other States, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, Ken tucky, Tennessee, Oregon, California and Georgia, are also to be counted against the Amendment, and it is idle to hope for aid in that direction. But three States remain —Virginia, Mississippi and Texas. The Article will be ratified, we think, by each of these. Thus we see that nine States are hope lessly in opposition to this important proposition, and that, of the remaining twenty-eight, its adoption will require the support of all, including not only the eighteen which have acted, and the five more which are reasonably certain to ap prove it, but still the other five, Indiana, Nebraska, Virginia, Texas and :Minis; sippi, as to four of which there is no posi tive result to be reckoned on, until their elections shall be held. If all these States shall be finally secured, the Article will then have just twenty-eight votes—the bare three-fourths required by the Con stitution. We have lost Tennessee by gross mis management and a shameful local quer id./ The interests , of the Republic forbid 'the possibility of such a result in the two States yet to be reconstructed. In the pending Article,' is presented the most vital issue for %lugs ogming &W on. ' 77 tibilar i Obrt l llP,o ll2 Ntr i-41 .3 12 / 4 . oft,Of . 6fdoNlanittßiNigtOlitiliigtigiAaS di — r4e4 t'Of3tdinieltbily cotintitutionalFend, • noriiattee:Olikt jt*.local canvasses shnild asstmie.‘ desaides of the South; apd 4110- repose - of the-lie liang„,:uppn pivticidkr_pade. And we believe that this fact.is every wltir,e*ll,desrs, - - IL is idle to srediciti,4iiy,speculations upon the adoption ' of the , Article , at -cer t4n to b'e ;SU 40411,15t0 fact . - AV not certain butit-is:..posechle, And with efforts ; : tlght citittitet: and kon4. t144 - -riSht: , ql/4kY , ry _it is .f 6 ktußitP 7- ly more than probable: , But. it requires vfA'PrY':.,lslo, 7144 t4:*--itij even ,Pe5e4 1 31 1 4 . 7.- IsOliiiiirrOci that a: , ' i n < which; we may as well lky, aftlds all; ialt-boksting and put our hands faithfully to the work fore nip: When we things by their right 4e,tres, and look facts as they are in the, face, we shall comprehend the idtuatiOn and the work which we have to do. This survey of the field shows us the points of which we must possess our selves, and without which we may well regret not a little of labor lost. - NEW PROCESSES IN IRON MAKING. A New York journal announces an other "revolution in iron," basing its enthusiastic assumption upon .a recent dis covery made by a Dr. Field, of Wilming ton, Del., of which we are favored with the annexed account: We have been shown various specimens of Iron and Steel made by the new pro. cese. That they are all of extraordinary excellence, no one at all familiar with Iron can doubt after seeing them, and from the Steel have been manufactured Files, Razors, &c., of the finest quality. This Iron is made on from very common g by the additi of certain chemicals in the processof puddling, whereby all Sulphur aid Phosphorus is eliminated and banished- at a cost of 70 to 80 cents. per tun of Iron. Dr. Field says that he can thus make a superior Iron of any Pi, and at a trifl eense. That sh g own us was exibited side xp by side with the famous Lowmocr (British) Iron, sold here at 21 cents per ponua, and is fully its equal; and it challenes comparison with the best Norwegian or Swedish Iron. Dr. Field also claims a like super iority for his Pig Iron, and that his cast ings are five times as strong as those made by the old process. He asserts that Iron made by his process does not stick to the bottom of the furnace, is more uniform in quality, exceedingly tough and tenacious, and can be run out of any existing furnace with a saving of some 25 pounds per day now wasted in running out. Much attention has been given of late, to the investigation of existing imper fections in the reduction of this very use ful metal from its ores, and in the refin ing of the first products, as taken crude from the smelting furnaces. Within a few years past, various important discov eries have .been heralded to the world, but, looking at the actual state of the trade, so far as it has succeeded In making these discoveries of practical profit, we are not able to find such cause for congratulation as to justify the sanguine predictions of inventors. It is neverthe less true that, while many of the expected results have not been attained, there have still been secured many valuable addi tions to tile Stock of practical knowledge, and it is reasonable to believe that the • way grows,, with every forward step; clearer clearer to the ultimate realization of the best possible methods for the preparation of the most serviceable of all the metals for the use of our race. THE ECLIPSE. [Correspondence of the Plttsbuab Gazette.) OAKLAND, Sy., August 9, 1869. The very extensive preparations, which had been made for the observation of the total eclipse in this section, appear to haire been rewarded by a full success. Four parties, working in conjunction, occupied as many points from Falmouth on the Northern limit of totality, to Oak. land on the- Southern. The principal station was at Shelbyville, to which, in addition to the eqUatorial belonging to the college there, and a very complete set of instruments of precision, under the charge of the United States Coast Survey, several large telescopes for photography and other purposes, and numerous-spec troscopes, had been brought from Cam bridge. Tne telegraph brings the information that eleven bright lines were seen in the rose-colored flames during the eclipse, only nine having been hitherto detected, and the existence of more than five of these having been deemed doubtful. This observation can hardly tail to give us more definite knowledge of the constitu ents of the solar atmosphere than we have hitherto enjoyed. The writer was one of those to whose share it fell in the division cf labor to observe, as closely as possible, to the edge of the shadow, and where the duration of the eclipse was of the briefest. The Chro nograph and some of the other instru: meats belonging to the observatory of our University ln Allegheny, were dia• mounted for the purpose, and brought to Oakland, a station on the line of the Louis villa & Nashville railroad. At the same point an apparatus was so arranged that the current of electricity on the main telegraph line was broken every second during the progress of the eclipse, by the motion of a pendulum, each beat of which was re corded on the Morse registers of every telegraph station on the main line. The operators were requested- by telegraph to strike their keys at the commencement and close of the contacts, and an accu rate register was thus, it is hoped, ob tained at many points where there could be no trained observers. The phenoniena of the totality were of a most impressive' character, though necessarily comprised in a brief period, from the position which the *don occu pied. The fast-waning light; . the sudden pro jection of that wonderful corona; the extraordinary flames of rosy light Item the sun's disc; the succesalve extinction of Writs of the sole circumference like expiring ember', a ta finally-in the one moment o4=lll. the aspect of the okhldift themoonprojeeted, • wilt - were, fotrtoard t imme. to ap priailVt!S• ind o'd ris'n kat& sithert on!the i .ittOre' Otitn,V. , the sliy;—!.811 this, arid, usual, ixtore,Went to crovithat e br ief intei,*al or, a ,fe* sec• onds WithfOOdlor long re t oolleoti.. orf. . It may. be. stated .that the ; observations this point were siceessfilf, and.thikthey, with - those, at other points. ofgi'e: eap - edi. tion, Will be.:collated widen th(i care of PlofeisorWittleekrthe Direetor.oLthe ObserititorY of Hartrard College r through whose:meats" the parties ' were Organized.. The instruments !vim our own nekhbor hood axe .on tber re.tomto - Alleglriiit wiaire it matlie.lipped they 'mg. be -- ac 2 tively employed is theless - stilklogi :but' not leek usellll,,eiery,itay. Jabors,of the Observatory. , $. P; LETTER FROM grxTir rCorresixiiidence o't Vii. rittitairgb . Ciazette.j 'Or,"l;tipis . Auginit . .10th.. 181111. • Since my last - letter, Iliave leen : Ow:la from the city,- • send- liaviiirNisited one. town at least;wherel prestitne the '44 zErrs. has no regular correspondent, - -take. this opportunity,zwhilethe• greet eclipse has overshadowed alllOcal newti;,to..4iire:, . .. . your -readers some - information 'about Cairo. This much abused town 'wnsl6eated-at the junction of the Ohio and 'Mississippi - . . ~ • _ rivers by a far seeing coinpanwhol)e.: lieved the site possessed the natural ad vantages for a great city. At that dine, in the infant West, railroads were not; - water communications were all we had, and likely to remain so, and to all appear antes it was reasonable to look tor a grand convergence of traffic thither, as of carts and omnibusses to-day at the south-end of City Hall Park, New York. Cairo is precisely such a focus, the two great rivers being represented by the broad and busy avenues which there pour their mul titudinous throng into one turbulent mass. The transient visitor wonders yet why a great metropolis has not grown up there, in spite of the low site, the annual overflow, the presumed unhealthiness, all of whichobstacles could have been over come as easily as at Chicago. The san guine citizens still anticipate a glorious future, and attribute their moderate pros perity hitherto to Chicago jealousy and misrepresentation. Perhaps so; perhaps Martin Chtaziewit should shoulder a part of the blame; per haps no system of water communication can give permanent prosperity to an in land city without extensive facilities for speedy land transportation. Whatever the cause may be, Cairo to-day, instead ot 200,000 - inhabitants, contains barely 12,000, of whom about one-quarter are indigent freedmen, who found their way there as refugees during and since the war. It may be imagined that Cairo does not wear an aspect of great prosperity. The numberless eating and drinking places that line her costly leven, stand with doors invitingly open; but few, alas! are the hungry and thirsty way-farers to cross their thresholds. The traveler whose fate compels him .o pass a night there is startled by the •ghostly echo of his own foot-tall through the long corn dors of the St. Charles. He dispatches or neglects the business that brings him there and hastens.to some esa lonely spot. Cairo approximates a nearly as any place I know of to a " nished' town. The Government is bui ding a Custom House, an elegant struct're of free stone 1 to cost, if ever completed, about $300,000. 1. The Freedmen's Bureau s putting up,a school house which will be worth $3,000. This is all Uncle Sam'S work, besides which, in rambling for a couple of days through the town, I found one frame dwelling erecting. I could not hear that there were any accession to the popula tion, except in the old I way, that even even dull times will not hinder. The future of Cairo is "in the lap of the gods." Whatever may have been said, there are much worse plaCes. Her people assert the location to be a healthy one. They say that the great mass of water contributed to the Ohio b rivers flowing from the south raises its temperature con siderably above that of the Mississippi, and that the result is a constant current of air over the peninsula and town. This is scientific, and I. rather think true, and, if eo, it must be conducive to a healthful climate. It is said very few people die there, which may be accounted for some other way. People don't like to be buried under water, and the nearest ground suitable for: a cemetery is twelve miles off at Villa Ridge. Thither 01 rail all funerals go, at the trifling expeele of sixty-five dollaTs a car. It is easy see that dying is about the most expel sive luxury one can indulge in at that city. Whether you go to heaven or to—Chicago from Cairo, you must take the Illinois Central. don't know the fare to Chi cago, but it is not sixty-five dollars. • Southern Illinois taken kindly to its nickname,"Egypt." The county of which Celo is the capital.' is Alexander. Thebes Is not far off on the Mississippi. Dengola is on the railroad; some thirty miles north. Thin beer is brewed at the Egyptian Brewery, and the shores of the Nile are not more regularly overflowed' than the streets ot Cairo. There is no Pasha that I know of, except the mild ejaculations of travelers. ;And so we leave Cairo. Let me give the Illinois. Central credit for promptness, speed and good coaches, not to forget a capital supper at Centralia. "Like a good deed in a naughty world," this shines among western eating stations, and deserves more than this notice. 'BITTY MAGINN. Washington Items. A leading member of the Republican party or Mississippi, who left here some days Bind to see the President, has just returned from Secretary Fish's residence on the Rudson. He had a long inter view, during which the politics of Missis sippi were fully discussed, the President himself leading off in a free statement of his own views on the coadition of affairs in the South. If the gentleman who had the interview felt at liberty, without the President's permission, to give in detail the views so fully expressed to him, there would no longer be the slightest doubt that the former _heartily sustained the party that supported Wells in Virginia, Stokes in Tennessee, and now opposes Dent in Mississippi. There is not .the slightest reason to doubt that he is strong. ly opposed to the Dent movement, be. lieving that it is intended mainly to defeat the only Loyal party in the State. So definite and clear were the views ex pressed by the President that a publics. don cifthem.is deemed most im rtantby leading Republicans. A statement is Wig PrirParedi =ditto 'President's On - Or - .i ca 011, will asked onTili4rifylil tiXiiihreti! r:::'-` 1 The President irretiorted to have _ex pressed"fiefibi 4 iiks.V . :iVe 7 oihOtiffiit'bhe new-fouid 'allefflen& tf i th'is" `Scrtnern Dbritocratii there' Teikublicitrirparfy,qind to have' "declared: thatthe . j.rd fugarof UWE; Conservative-Republicans in Virginia to-' accept= he offer; o.E.concillation medal by,''.) the-Radelk l 4 is--iufficie44s ) .e Pati , r i the,,, r:i ulthite. object • isit.hesteetruPtiPlqi Jae = RePtitil&m,Aparty... In Short, •he.lotilek, upon the - rffaial - is an =act which" reek'' tablisliES thV .- old party lines ill the Sow; "3 4 and hereafterhe will treat Conseftztivee:l altDemocsats. , In other , words.::havingF_) triedskparilona , vexperipent in. .-Virgigia,...... a4lproved.ine;xlishonesty. of the. South_ ., - 1 ern 1eii•440, - lie will in'the flifurePrOfitliy:', his 41401 . i noe; end' blade trust Only An - auce meiiivlio Seniifillotniiii"leti4ufed by a cts - - y performed, rather:thin bye promidea r-thefuture;, :7: - 7 •.The matter of. disposing .of the.-"iron-.: clad ,oath". Is not :s.-eubject for the Presi - .L. dentet General earthy.: to. , decide. ~.It. a ie:, , A . the ;stet ute books, - had . A there it Will ra. main , etutirporitieis. Weeds:to tale it OfEtf: Ati . iipriiithin runiol96 . that' the iirieStrimi has heett.'S'irluiasti cohildered here as 0: - . *hour, or;.riot' t h e. PtefirOht. :With - hlii settled epPOsitispite teit..balhe;,hi-W: : he is strongly suppor i nidN General-Sher man and two or , thtee::nieptlers of, the Cabinet,'Will abide.hyllie de . cisio li,drtife, , Attorney.Gerieral *pectinOlaf requlre; ! - - mentel that xiiith:fibrii- members eleetlei ; .. the in-the yet unrecolistrue• • . Legislatures . . . ted States. ..Radicals:;assert:that the de-.: cision of :the ; Attorney - ,Genexal. will bef_ final, no matter whattbe result-may lie., , Tennessee has not , yet:ratified the - Fif.'; teenth. Atifinduieht; hu' the friends of ftenter insist that -the r•ConservitiVe ma=' jority in the new Legislature are fully ,committed to it. Nous wrens: •' -_ -,:., .• - The ex-rebel enthusiasm for .ohinesel labor in . therSoutli hai.'siittk to zeicVaitee.. the announcement that the' ..Mongeliatai cannot be used in ( this free. country 84, . coolies or slaves. • , . •. : ' .:. -, r -.-....i A new Unitarian congregation has, been organized in this city, to be knOwl . as "The Free National Church of Christ." It is designed that shall be in • • every sense a free church. The first pub. lic service will be held next Sunday. . • M. in LEssErs, the engineer of the Suez Canal, has a still grander enter. prise in view, now that his first draws near its accomplishment. He has found that the great desert of Sahara lies_,below the level of the Red Sea, and thara canal of seventy-five miles would let in water sufficient to cover the now arid waste. It is believed by some geologists that the desert was once covered by (water. Should M. de Lesseps' great project be carried into effect, intercourse with the interior of Africa would be far easier than it is now. —Paul S. Forbes (the New York World says) has been sent to Madrid, by the Administration, as confidential govern ment agent, in association with General Sickles—a place which his former inti macy with General Prim especially qual ifies him. ' - CHICAGO. August 11.—Markets quiet in p. ta., and prices without particular change. No. 2 spring wheat closing at $1.41, seller August. Corn closes at 9354, seller last half August. In r• 31, a few lots of wheat sold at 51,43, seller August, closing firm. Corn nominal. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE DR. KEYS.SR'S BOWEL MIKE Cures Bloody Flux.. DR. KETSER'i3 BOWEL CURE Cures Chronic Diarrhea. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE • Cures Bilious Conc. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Cholera Insautino. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE " Cures the worst case of Bowel Disea se. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE Cure. Cholera Morton. DR. KEYSER'S BOWE], CURB Will cure in one or two doses. -DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE ' Ought to be In every fandlY. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE Is a sure cure for Griping. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE. Will not fail :roue case. DIL KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Ulceration. DR. REYdEIt'S BOWEL CURE Cures Summer Comp:atnt. DB. KBYBICIVB BOWEL CUBE . Win care Watery lialebarges. DB. BEYBEWS BOWEL CIISLE DR. .E.E'DSER'S BOWEL CIIRK Is a valuable medicine. Dr. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE Is a protection against Cholera. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE " Will save hundreds of valuable lives ' If early resort is had to it. DR. KEYBEIVII BOWEL CURE is one of the most valuable remedies ever discovered for all diseases Incident to this season of the year. Hundreds of sufferers could be relieved in less than a day by a speedy resort to this most value. ble medicine, particularly ialuable, when the _system is apt 'to become disoraered by the two flea use of unripe and crude vegetables. j Price 50 Cents. Sold at DB. , ERYBEII'S GREAT MEDICINE STORE, Mil Liberty et., • . and by all druggists. : • THE CONDITIONS OF !MALTS. It is idle to expect health If the' precautions necessary to secure it are neglected. The lm man organisation is a delicate piece - of mechan ism, and requires as much Intelligent 'care and watchfulness to keep it in order, as are r equithe , In the management of the most complicated oont lA:nion of levers. wheels and pinions. At this seamm of the year the body Is peculiar ty'setteltive. because It is steer,' weakened and relaxed by t.O continuous heat. The skin. In summer with Its millions of mores wide open . Is a very different sort of tegument from toe com pact fibrous covering which It be. omen ander the action of the w Inter% cold. The muscles, too. are comparatively flaccid .be nerves tremulous. the Wood poor. and the whole frame less canable of endur.ng fatigue sag resisting disease. These inuicat.ona of a depre.sed condition of the vital 10re.... are 50 nasay unmistakable hints that na• tare needs reinforcing. • ' Urdinary stimulant. will not effect this object. They inflame and excite , but do not suvngthen. The only preparation which an be depended / upon to impart staminal vigor the system. and enable it to endure the ..natal l the heated term without giving WILTAIIO4OI . th pressure. lb HOS.* TETTZIt'a teroluen glrThate. a tonic and freorreettve so pure, whichless so utterly om the drawbacks rendre man, of the powerful astringents employed in medical Prac tice more ogrigeros than t. 0 ailments they are lan elored to cure. that it - ma y i.e adnents.eree without fear to the feeblest, roman invalid, or the most delicate child.' The cathartic anklets,- *Use vegetable ingredients. which are nsuined with those of a tenth nature In its cam p Mien. keep the bowels moderately free and perfectly` regular, while the work of Inelgoratitin Is goer on. The finest blood desnrents which the Mabel kingdom afford* are also among it. components.. so that it reare Ul, and ftinik,ille A k e' slates itimaltange . - be Cures Dlirrhes.. Cures Dysentery Never tills. GM