El littsbut ttaittts. .• • :PUBLIPTIBDI3Y • s: - PENNIMAN, REF2i) 00;;Picolirietora; P. B. PraININI4N. SING. HOUSTON. 2j. P.:4l*P. Juniors an t'repTlesorsi, onus: SIZE *;111111,111 1 10, 8611011 A ' OFFICIAL PAPER • of 'Pitistiiiieb,.Ailogliany and Ails • • ,i. slimy amity. . • 1811164- Wean/. Wealth Ole year...ss,colOneye.ar.loZo Slagle coPY • .$1.50 75 Six awe. 1.50 5 coples,eac Lza 3VtfieweeY isaThrae mos 75 10 . 1.11 . Mcmciarrier.ll r, - andonsi to Agent. .8& ROM' AUGUST 14, 1860. UNION. Rg,. pu ) 3LIGAN TICKEraw STATE. POR GOVERNOR- JOHN -GEARY. • JUDGE OE; • ar DEBEE COURT Jll 8. COUNTY: • ASSOCIATE atMCFS DISTRICT comm. JOHN M.l ,{I4I4ENITBIOE.. -. ASSISTANT saw StriGt, COMMON PI S, COLLIER'. ezirlißmierz--TE0.11.43 nowAm, E55711=1.-MILES S. ALEXANDER , r "- ' - - Jo3Erff JAMEVULYLOP 4 JOHN H. Ei. arngli-Ti -51 : 1 e- li DENNt.orciv - - 7RamTuB B— : l -JOSEPH BROWNE. .curxx o7, ,filtuattis 11.111INTE.B. - -I_6439:l(sEuzunOlunt BILAIINOEY B. BOSTWICE . 1 .; Tan-JOSEPH H. GRAY. =ix ORPHANS' COLIIM-LLEX. MIANDI3. Drvacyps oa PooF7ABDIEL McOLTIB.E. Ws Psisr on the inside-pages of Sikiiie r i- Poetry • " . A. risA9d ff,;" .SO6iar front- Bridget' Btcr dpoNt. , ' : - The Stolen Apple. 'Aird....and Sizth.pages: inance and Trade, ,Marketi, Irikporis, Biter News. Bfventla page: Clippings, Miscellany. itisoimi_at:444 11. al3oloifit Frankfort, 68i. GOLD e.losed iti MN :York - yesterday a3a44€484t; --- - VC& F*9141113: tO eitre L signs that a raid in the Mar futcup is ,contem p;ateA on Canada. _ - Tan railroad freight war has been re newed at New York; but Pittabnrgtiers hear of•it only through the newspaper!. . . A LETTER from refs:lAS a shower _of snakes_ in East Tennessee. The election returns satisfy us that, the . shower was general in all parts - of the State. " TEE %Val section of the l'iegistay Law aboll9ml,. allgJections , for cit Y rs. ward; ‘bercitgh• "mid tisane* and elec tion:officers, requiring the future l election of these officers in October of each year. Mnsetinently " all such' officers, RS would be chosen next spring were not thii act in force, must elided on the second Tuesday - of October next: s -The :people shotdd bearthis rieceOty mind. IT is highly Probable that no effort will be made to secure the Note*-_en the Park ; question, inasmuch as. the -gentlemen clargeoftheinlAtcrstis throggh ffelay, for which 9;4 arenotlespiessi ble, lost the,option secured for "the pur= - chase of an all impertent - 4dece of iroreid "taken into :prepoSeff'•schiime:for supplying.the city witiCgrouncleeeessary ;for a piblid breathing spot, , free of cost. •We are sorry that the matter is likely to fall .to the groind; or be :` indkflnitely Pc5:284*141--TelliiiiiriThiii-•.- people -* will look back with ~ regret to the present failure to . for ,the city that which it soy edf}r, Tl;343o4ooNation of the Hudson and New York Central Hallways will be ac 7 complialsed at in:early day. And • the final edniolidation cif 0;0 entire line,from New York by Buffalo titighimigo,lo likely to _follaw in _dna time. The successful tactics of the Central route thichighTrenn sylvauhyleavermo other-alternative to the proprfetors o the „conwiting . line on the North. 'While_ lb a`yeAderhilt roads are Sim - perfecting - their 'plane the pentrallinaafebicsgo, the , latter ; is already' . teinvhiglp:, the contiotof Ocinu;4. lions - still further_ westwpid;'the Bock Island road' being regarded as 0;0- next objective polnt„with the, -hididations:in fa*or (Wits afeedy absorption. '1 T 'riinrt;`letters to the SteliCaßeputt , cans of Tennessee,, ,- Messrs. .13PoTt4itu , • and,CultewitmlirOPitut a : vcrY few dBY B in, advance Pf equ_ally. - significant and setts factory exp ression! from Gen.43nAliT... It le quite clear that !hose - letters were written in faithfufitecprd-With the Presi dent's opinions, as then known to the members of his Cabinet.' Theseopinlons have since been explicitly declared, in his conference:with Mr. Tarbcll,,of !Mosta- Opp!, of which we had kfull refisirtli'day ortato Since,' 164 in his/denllo4f di 2 al ) * P 0341 of the Conseriatlie*oyelnilkfili that State. It wouldrequiritaiery large inea4ure' "Cc'AsiiirlOici!:•-,cluirityi to make any Antelliiiii-'manlelletifios", that the,Preableiit:iier dliappresed athe letters iiiitaibi.l4Elecretadeatetrlig4 ` - -ittalltMlanh three or fittne .tzt.Lt .w7l 7 1 - 1 piither. know ' , in • Tennessee by ' this-time,as well as An Mississippi -and Teiti, w here-the- President-standt, and n that he Is openly 'an the side of those who are the only ,consistent supporters of Republican doctrine. • , . AN official statement of the receipts and expenditures during the first quarter year of the present 'Federal Adrolnistitv don; ihoWe an excess of the former of thirty.nine and a half millions of dollars. The receipts from all regular sources ex ceeded all the regular expenditures,excln sive of the public debt,by upwards of forty three millions. The surplus of receipts is at the rate of one _hundred and sixty millions of dollars for the year. It will birefaeinbered litthis connection, that Mr. Horatio Seymour last year predicted that the Treasury, Ander Republican rule, would show'on the Ist of July, ; 1869, ,, 'a dejleiancy of $150,000,00. It is now re ported frcirn Deerfield that the late Dem ocratic candidate has sent for' MAR to 'explain this failure of tion yddIOCRACY have .i. HE raiLADELPIIIA. - the reg of their elation adopted new ,"releo' vf " priaw , mcetings and nominaz ting Conyv.aons. The new code is pro mulgs•"' ° Y . a 'Convention of which Mr. • siard Veer was chairman ' and which has been in session for a week or two for the arrangement of these delicate , clues. tions. It was when assuming his duties as the presiding officer of this meeting that the mild-spoken Vanx demanded the feliest---Democratie recognition- of =, the once faiorite :dogma of the partythat "white men shall rule America;" he even expressed his, sense of the -importance of the crieis, in his prediction that the De mocracy would soon be invited to take up their muskets to secure the predominance of this excellent' principle: We are hu miliated- in the .necessity of annotincing that his.Donvention failed to see the mo mentoniiiikiiiii any such light ; qa te~he 'reverse, , for - An almost .unanimous vote struck otit the word - "white," from itspre fix to the desiiiition of -thif Deniocracy in the newicode of rules. These "rules" embody one provision .whickfisWorthy of a more general eppro bation:TheTprinniPle of minority repre sentation is reognized - c and., secures a practical illustration. It is required That, in precints whern - three delegates are to be 'chosen, each tkllot shall be limited to two names, Whence it follows that the third name chosen ba thatof the most popular minority candidates, and the mi noiity may thus control one Third of the whole body of:delegates. The workings of this novel- reguirdion -are - likely to be L:Variable. to :partizan hariony, and de serire consideration among all political organization& careful perusal of then Damocratic riles fails to reveal to us any prohibition of the traditional practices of the "'party; such as repeating, colonizing, pox-stuf fing; voting on forged naturalization - - papers and coffee : pot certificates, and so on. Perhaps and his friends Nice ot °Pinion - That these Tittle :dodges have beene L ffe.qually precluded by the theregistg-laiii tit us hOrie In the meantime, the . Democratic silence on those yointe is to. be explained in the fact 'that the opposition are more-inter esieff for a full vote than for a pure'suffrage. HOUSEHOLD HitEKETIND. A . viryieilidble in ti brief note ;winch we'printed , yeatexday, • indicated that which is "PreetiesilY the 4110 remedy tor, gte extortions which .the Teople of thesecifiee dei t ly Mae', at the hands bf middle-men and -huckstering dealers in fruits and , Laws and °nil nacces are wfillsnough, for the restraint of suckgrosslyinjurions practices as fore stalling iuml regratini,• but no legislation *otany sort, can supply the -positive and imrnedisid ittilatinixnadtai whichedways Win,Larnin y lesithY ard enterprising. cortifietltien itinonethe :dinners In ihesti small 43t., , :indispensible7articleak of con gni:option. maiketineed, is' more of thii "wldentvake enterprise, which ob:laid...address itself to-the business of supplying our populations with vege babl4 aid ,fruits—eapecially:where these to: be brought frem a 'distance, *min the first dirt of a 'Season—with a careful reference to yip. ; al tyssyst bcaeficial rule of &garge salei and small - proilts.” Bach a business, controlled. by, 'a shrewd Jude: went and supported by aE Viakmable earn tal, could - ; soon, : be, made Is most re munerative ipecialityby ihe parties who nndertake it. Bee whathis been aCCOM• Vlished by one well known ilrat in 13[4: timore, in the 84pPli , /iic, die. West with oysters. We 'need not beiriry old to remember-whenthis article-of-food - was really ltrnry, -„by, reason of ;its, high prlce„and the.. inegnier suPlgi& T4re was themf show of competition,. . but -.ls:(.6ne'd.e`aler had the ' enterprlin , the grasp - of 'detail to 'embark; !t 49 specialty; on: the basis of, n fixed _ bat re gular profit upon - an. exteeded, and sys teinatin trade A. public aced _Wad felt; in; due-timeit .was supplied and one bust ness-firm 'after another embarked in it. The result is, ihat the;oyster trade of Sal. . ticiare with the ; interior has 'assumed., a permanencs, affiagnitude and 4 regular ., NM= lEEE ity, which ensures _a constsn...supply 'l'D , ' this daliciattolood, in its,: season, at a price within the zetichpf all, It is emi nently a traffic is which large 'sales and . - ',6 l l4 . alkiqqfite . 4 4 rirp t4eti M ti Pk edeal q r, analha pnblia r ieW .the 41 «do via citizens of th lailik#Ael#444 l , ll les44.* 4 l: - 4 61 4 C;,:..F.151K.L0 PffThßll493l ,GAZETT:E :to y, in their !Tipp o nom told vegetabrer- ;Oar sewn vfne.oiArers and horticulturists have -..already.f: found out how to supply the great Eastern pities with strawberries, grapes, 4t . c. Have we ' no dealers who know as well how to im part? Why must we pay from $2,50 to $4,00, for a basket of peachesi - when the markets of those cities are glutted with them at from fifty cents 'to one dollar? Why must we pay tvienty cents per quart for berries which can be puichased at no greeter price per gallon _within two hours of railway distance from the city? There can be no good reason for this, except that the situation is waiting for the righ; men, with capital, pluck and judgmeot• to inaugurate the right sytdetn,..vith as much advantage to , the' pubo - lis to them selvesi r As things now SeCi our domestic traffic can exhibit:V=lx alPable in stance of the ure of th supply to satisfy the mturivad as in this department o f • des-and fruits. Who will see public wants, and his own spleti . id , opportunity for profit, and organize a systenistic supply at reasonable prices? When the progress of the season affords to our _markets more abundant supplies of suchmegetableiand fruits es can be prof itably raised in.. our own vicinity, our people no longer find reason to complain either on the score of quality or price, although the huckster-class always cling to their monopolizing policy , to the last practicable moment. This -is -an evil which will cure itself in thne—when it becomo :widely enough understood among the •near-by gardeners and farm ers, that our market-places are open to all competition, and that their grounds can not be more profitably employed than in the culture' of these - suialler articles for - popular'consumption. But so long as the supply is confined, as it must be, in the opening of the season, to im! poitations bY rail 'from a distance, it is undeniably the fact that this supply is put effectively out of the . reach of the poorer customers, .by the :faults of the existing system, pr. lackof-system. • The rich house-holderis able to huy, by the. quantity, frorathefisrholesate dealer at a price which kis purse doeffnOt find to be eprpi nate, While iiiipOorer neighio6r must either go without, or submit to the exactions of the smaller intermediate dealers at enormously multiplied profits. The markets of these cities should be freely supplied with all the products of a region as fattoutkas the 'North Carolina or Tennessee line, and those dealers who shall organize a practical business, bring ing these supplies directly within_ the popular reach, without the intervention of so many middle-men, will not fail to find their own account in it. THE TENPIESSEE DEMOCRACY_ ANL) THE SUFFRAGE. This Memphis Post cautions the col ored voters of Tennessee, against any teeling of uneasiness concerning their po litical rights under the new. Conservative regime. It assures them that "there is not the slightest occasion for alarm;" that the immense majority at the recent elec tion "was given in support of this Chica go platform and distinctively for univer sal sciffeage;".. that every respectable journal in Tennessee "is pledged to this doctrine, and - -cartiaot violati the pledge." We hope that the Pattie not mistaken., But there are journals in that State, per baps riot exespectable,"_ which axe already demanding not only the-,inunediate call of a Conyention, but that;it 'shall - revise the existing CoristittitiOnin*vely-impor taut particular. The spirit which such jourrtalisUvindeinak,'cir may iat, he that whibh animates the white inasses of:tho. State, but all ieiterienee has primed that when link question of a retrograde ten: dency, like that of colored disfranchise ment, is. Tresented to -the -masses of the unenlightened white population, Whines votes have just rioiv iwOlfen. ins- - joritiea as well for a Democratic Legislature as for Governor BENTE:I4 the result la quite sure to befor the worse. Bat if the leading journals, quoted by the Post as being committed , to colored suffrage, shall really succeed in controlling the proscriptive Inclinations Of the more rectlesii Partisans, we shall rejoice hearti ly with our Memphis cotemptotary. So long as such journals as' the - Memphis Akikaiih - o4 their teeth againit aiiiverdal suffrage, we must take -the contrary as serances with some grains of ilk:mance. T4e Poet is_quite right in its pleasing anticipations; if reifance •is to be put upon the; influence of one of,lts Dem °erotic neighbor t the 4egysttehd, which says: , „ Negri, snifraget is a tired, ineVibttile fiat. limonstrnotion, according .tot he Uongressional demands, - la unavoidable. The Southern people have etleePteti the situation. Virginia was the first to ig nore old party hones and notnenolaturea., Tennessee followed, and it will tieseen that Mississippi; ourj'sliter Eitittb, luta adopted the saute wise:Polley. BM sieb; lo says some old party hack;'•ilare yen going to sink the hallowed -name of Democra cy. and abandon a party tbat has stood by the constitution so long?! Wesel; yes, Mho public' good requires it, sink the name and the party sodsoi, that the hand of resurrection will never roach it.' We know that Democrats ardently desire to preserve the Constitution and our insti tutions as they received them from their fathers. But Alloy are( powerless for good. The policy_ they have opposed has tri umphed, and diOt us_ now meet the new, living, vital issues that concern the . firtth.,net as psrtisans, but. as _ patriots,- sextons 'to strike hands - with , anybody ail:it:eau do the` greatest good to a peoPle who areal) ninth 1p need'ef good deeds. t When' a party confessedly becomes . a' failureeo at i art the' accomplishment of result, theeltif.ergsnlzation Is a cheat antya delusion. , and i piettting by ,th 0,181- abliellbrOf Paoli taildelit' Ave iltibt#4. , abaapa,,it;:.Tha Daintiiritla he 11 ,9,, 0ini g -1: =. 41 ;5V 2 11.r ekt 6 =Tr:7V Ma tt-rst - ynxi Notwithstanding much interest has been awakened in the churches gener ally, relative to Sunday-schools, there is still very much indeed necessary to make them all they al:paid be, as an efficient auxilliary to the churches.. The rich pro vision for singing, and requisites of vari ons foms for the routines services are quite inn and constantly multiplying; are el:10(64111g tostiires.. Much of this, however tattle work of individualsgen erally, ii:liteati of congregations, which i n ,ortler to continue success, istooheavy itax in time and money on individuals, without estimating the labor. It is grail. ri! ,e fyi to r know that we have each goner: one ople in our congregationi; bat what we eed is provision by, congregations for all ' the Wants of their respective sch ols, on the' same , scale as musk or_ any,othex auxiliary is supplied to aid in worship.. Members of , the church should bear in mind that secular - schools are fur- nished 'with every facility to promote education, and Sunday schools should be as liberally provided witli - every help ne cessary to advance that cause. The apart- meats should also be attractive to the eye, as well lighted arid well ventilated, and comfortable in every respect. It should bo borne In mind . too, that the Sunday school is one of the main sources of supply of church communicants, and it should be in the fullest sense a "nut.- eery" of the church. The outlay of mon ey for this department wlll-produce grand results in many ways. ,:Its is said that fourteen churches in Boston pay less for Sunday school purposes than the amount paid by one of them - for music. A west ern church, says an 'exchange, pays the pastor eight thousand dollars per annum and two thousand for music, and not a penny for the Sunday school, Moody, the lay preacher in Chicago,.thinks it is not surPrising that the deitil gets so many of the eldldren. We like to see the pas- tor well paid, as he should always be, and to sea liberal provision for music, but we think there should be , special care that the Sunday school is furnished with all it needs to make it ef4cierit and prosperous. - Rev. Dr. Abel Stevens, the distin guished historian of Methodism,, preached . , Sunday morning last in the Sands street M. E. church, Brooklyn. The object of the sermon' was :to show that the New Testament ideal of a priesthood is not a peculiar class of men set apart for the ministry, but that the whole body of.lay men as well as clergymen are included in the biblical phrase "a -royal priest hood." His argument was virtually a plea for lay representation in the Metho. dist Episcopal Church. Dr. Joseph Ha ven, of the Congregational Theological Seminary, Horace Greeley, Theodore Til ton and others were among the visiting auditors on that occasion. The Independent shows that the as sumption of the Evangelist that New Jer sey and Penpsylvania are Presbyterian "pre-empted ground," is not in accord ance with the facts in the case. It claims that all the Old School Presbyterian churches of New Jersey were originally Congregational in name and polity, and remained So' for many years. Some of these churches did not become Presbyte rian till Within the present century, At the recent session of the Moravian Synod, in Germany, representing the churches In Europe and in this country, four Bishops were elected and confirmed by lot, and one who had been elected was not confirmed by lot. ' Dean Stanley, iu sermon in West minster Abbey, on the Fourth ef July, spoke against the disposition to keep up old animosities with America. "Final. ly," he cried, "woe tcithoie who by act or word strive to. p ut asunder those whom, by,blood,, speech, race, and the grace•of Ells Gebel, God hath joined to- Maher." • The Methodist' Protestant knows 6f a case where sponge, cdhe and wine has been need instead of bread and: wine at the Cominunlon Table • • A correspondent .or the New York Evening Post' suggests to- the Young Men's Christian Association of that city, to.charter a steamboat and give re-llef to the overworked poor and give them a ride . on Sunday. ,liiuggestions of this kind il lustrate a species of false philanthropy that IS dittqaglrg to Christianity. Tke Baptists in Philadelphia are organizing such elements in their Chiming as can be made efficient in lay preaching: This is a step - the right dlrectiOn,, and worthy or imitation by all bodies 'who' have not found work for laymen. According to the latest official :letting of the iota on _Lay, Pelegaticin in the Church, districts,. Mietliodiet`Epiecopal. ,by' the total vote ilf.'neatir ode A'andred and twenty are thplocuaqi not tinite mite -third of Which is against the measure, being more than two out of • threfivotes in favor of the refortn. These returnit, are from one hundred and sixty-ning , districts. The whOle, Church embraces three, hun. dred and elihty•nine districts. A correspondent of 'the Advanoe,' in an articie .onPatholociam Anierles,, represents that , an American saw, two years ago in Route, a better map of the country west of the Mississippi than ever he saw at home—upon 'which the line of the Pacific Railway was traced and every point particularly marked where the 1111, creui of ncity 'Wait 'likely to gather. He odds:lnexion Biota lanais being obtained by CathoUOB for future usP-- • • This week's issue of tbe American Chtfrolßpsort vompletea the first year under f onri'' P iiil s e .i+ 6 A *.ll# Re cslie4 gi", • . • -' (EU-the Old paper, and now, after the lapse of a year, we think the promises of the publishers have been faithfully performed. We hope its conductors may be favored with tut increased subscription list, and lat it may grow-better every issnehereafter. A writer in the Baptist Tidings, a con- Nerted Catholic, Eiays five Baptist churches have been orgaiized froni converted Cathotcs by:the labors of Mr. Drarochea since :he came to Detroit, twelve years ago--two Michigan, two in Ohio, and one in Cariada. , - The last United Presbyterian Gerieral Assembly appointed the • third Thursilay of August, this year. as , a day of special prayer in all the :congregations for light to guide in deciding • the grave questions now engaging the attention .of the Church. The United Presbyterian of this city reminds its readers of this duty, arid urges that the occasion be faithfully ob: served: It thinks that they are not quite ready for union with other Presbyterian bodies and that they should seek for di rection and strength to do the work com mitted to them as a branch of the Church . . The Trustees of Tarentum Camp. ground, with a view to prevent • Sabbath desecration as far as they have power, have specially requested Mr. B. Pitcairn; the • g • entlemanly Superintendent of the Western Railroad. Company, not to run any passenger trains on Sunday, which he has kindly consented to do. By order of the Trustees, the grounds .will be closed to all public vehicles on that day. Per sons desirous of attending the, camp meeting will govern themselves accord ingly. • Red River of the North. Mr. C. C. Coffin,Writesiri very enthu, idastic terms to the Boston Jour, from the Red River of the North, five hundred . miles nor th east of Chicago: ' • One of the most wonderful features of this region is its climate. Here we are in latitude 46—several degrees further north than Boston. but the summers are longer than in .Thissachusesta, and the winters, though colder are lees severe than' in that State. The. air is dry, the days calm, and the hundreds 'of men that I meet, who have come here from Milne . and New Hampshire, selecting this as their future home, say that. this climate is. far preferable.to that of New. England. Yesterday I saw a Scotchman, who lives five hundred miles north of this point hi a straight lin*, on the shore of Lake Winnipeg. !the winter there, he says, is not so severe as at Chicago. Scientific, men have speculated on -this phenomena, but we have seen no satisfac tury explanation. Doubtless it is due to a combination of causes—the influence of the great lakes on one side and the Rocky Mountains on the other—to the Missouri and Mississippi- and Red rivers, to the currents of air sweeping up the Missouri valley from the dry plains of Nebraska. : Be the cause what it may, the fact , re= mains that here—reaching from Chicago northwest.beer a' territory embracing Wisconsin, Minnesota, Dacotah, North ern Montana and a vast region in the , British Possesatons—lie the wheat lands ' of North Amerlca. No other country has such a domain. The plains of Bavaria and Hungary, upon which Central Europe relies for its grain, united; would not exceed in area a single county in Minnesota. The fine lands of Frossialiave a thin soil, :while the wheat fields of France have been cul tivated for.centuries, and are only kept in heart by constant application of fertil izers, bit here the soil is in its virgin state, yielding such returns as are not ob. tamed in any other land, unless it be in the San - Joaquin and Banta Clara valleys of Cidiforgile. - ' The west fertile acre of the. Ganges - Valley in India will not_ yield a _greater return than these of the Northwest. The Nile and the Yangtze —the fertility re newed . by each annual flood—May vie with the uplands of Minnesota, but there are sections along this Red river of-the North—along the Cheyenne and Mouse rivers of Pacotah, which are not sur passed by the riohest in the heart of China or on the Delta 'of the Nile. Allot this territory lies harth and east, • of the Missouri, - and, this side of the Rocky Mountains. We - have spoken of it asa wheat field, and have said nothing of Its other resources; but here are the supplied of timber from which the mople of more southern sections are to receive ' their fa - - tore building materials. Looking out from my tent %ward the northeast .I can see, on the horizon, the dim' blue.ontline of the timbered region around the streams forming the head • waters of the Misals.-.. sippl. if we travel , west we shall. find exhaustless' frapplies of coal. Between the Red river of the-North and the Rocky Mountains, lies flap : eat coat field of this granary of the Contiment. -On the streams that find their way into Lake Superior, and on the Mississippi, are sited for man ufactories, where, in coming years, the hum of machinery, the clatter of the shuttle, and buzzing of mill,whecda, break the, stilineas of the primeval soli- Is CimpampUon Cop' taigleust • Successive obserrations and expert. ments with reference to-consumption, af firm the belief that it Is contagions. Prof. Otiauvenau, - of the Lyons Veterina. ry School, bae-made some important in vestigations on the subject. Tubercle, it willpe remembered, is a peduliar forme., thin, which,. being ,deposited in the sub stance of.the tungs, like millet seed, grad? ually enlarges, by accretion, to its like, into ?Aliases of • various. sizes. , While this proce.se, is going on, the: sy i np . toms; of , pulmonary consumption t with its cough, hectic fever, &c., show themselves.--How-and under what conditions of.d the animal economy is tubercle - formed; has been. a question not yet satisfactorily -solved. As a gen eral thing• we' can say, .that. whatevt tends to weaken the body by interfering with;healthy digestion and thelnaking of good bloOd, predisposes' to the formation of ttdiercle. - It is only , of .late,tibseslhat this sabstance)is . sbeen admitted to-he, propagated, .on eccaidonsxby tentagion, and. inoculatiOn... Per a/long time." how-, ever, the people of the south of Europe entertained the belle: that consumption is eenteSteeei and thdt , lbe infection -Wight extend to thettay;itherf sad , bedding of the patrentOtrr4eiree after hie death Mimi 11 02 1 we itc:ordeirecrp tie ;171knAeal= ‘4•—• IPOTirciJnfAiiDlll~(i`~tiefiest;y Pall Mall Gaulle, the greatest activity.ds shoe: n in pushing forward the structure erecting in St. Peter's for the (Ecumeni cal Council. The architect, Signor 4 b Vespignani daily in attendance and he is kept at , pressure by the Pope, A. circular s been addressed to the Bishops, enjoining them` to , choose coadjurora to &charge their duties dar ing their presence at the Council. It was to give facilities for such arrange ments that the Pope nominated so many- Bishops in pre:gibes in the last o:Mats tory. The Council will suppress several: religious orders and uselesS congregations and many communities 'ofwomen. It will also forbid relfgietiz to accept the fUnctions of parish• pilesis . reQuiril 2 g. these last tei bp secular Scholars. Cardi- \ nalliettet Dean of the: Sacred College, is dangerously . 111. ,He lately made his will,hequestinghis immense fortune to his near relations: 'He leaves a million of francs in gold;.and half •a million in no t es , • , -. .. ‹, • - . - CUBAP Lrvitio iIPMx nsatsar.a,-4 pri fate letter from St., Minnesota, dated July.llth, gives the tolloling ac count of the cost of living: - "Beef is not very good here, but there is an abfin dance of other kinds of meate'-to.make up for the deficiency: - 'Game. is (leap; venison sir cents a pound in the season, and bear's meat ditto. I don't. suppose you will believe me When I tell you I bought peas on Saturday last for ten cents a peck, and young . potatoeitWenty cents, per peck; strawberries ten and twelve cents a quart, and , , big ones at that. I find that I can save more at the end of a week than - I could on a salary of $25 in New York. Board is high—s 7 to $lO a' week, according to room—but a single young man could get board in a private. family for. about $5 a week." • Philadelphia' Press says of the late . internal revenue decision relative to base ball clubs: Base bailers will scarcely learn with pleasure that their clubs are. organizations for the purpose - of mating - money. by, regular exhibitions, • and as. stick required to pay an annual license Of., $lO, besides a tax upon receipts. Yet this seems to be so. We shall now hear of suspensions infinite. The impecunious clubs will disintegrate, but' the stronger ones will become stronger. The sport of play will become a-business more than :_People always dance the heartier when the fiddler has to be paid. The. club has at , last found its status, It is in_ the eyes of the , law as fully recognized as-: . , a circus, 13,race - course, or a theatre. Providence, R. I. LB/ Telegraph to the Plttsbscrel Gazette.) 'lltovituntus, R.: 1., - August 13.--A: fim• this . afternoon destroYed the two•story wooden building on Westtninster street,. near Eddy street, occupied by stbres NEWS abd shops. - Loss from /45,000 to , $20,000. and is pretty - well covered by 113. , -" , soreness._ This is the first fire of import- twice which has occurred in•thieolty fort seven months. , - • —A. Denver dispatch says: Gov. Mit chell, of New Mexico, has issued a procla— mation declaring all • Navajoe and Gela- Apache Indians outlaws. whenever found , : outside of the limits of their resermtions,2 and authorizing the citizens of the Ter— ritory to kill every such depredator. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cares Diarrhea. • DP r KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Dysentery DR. KEYSER'S ROWEL. CORE • Cures Bloody Fitz. Dr.. trrisrai.g toyED Cures ottronle Diarrhea. .DR. _KEYSER'S BOWEL CORE Cure3l3lllns • .DR. }IBISES:8 BOWEL CUBE Crazes Choleto./ttrautzun..• DB KEINFE , S BOWEL CLrBE Cares the Worst case of Bowhl Diseue. • • DB. KEkSER'S BOWEL CUBE: : • Caree Cholera 3fortrns. ps. KEYSER'S BOVV.Eb CUBE, Will cure Inoue or two doses. DR. K.EYSER'S BOWEL CUR E - • • tptght to Do to eier9 DR. KEYSER'S ROWEL GLRi Is a sure, cure for Griping. DR. iS.E'itiER'S BOWEL. CURE. Will not Mail in one ease.- DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL cuins ,• , , cures Dlceration. DB...KEYSER:B BOWEL.CUBE - ' Caine Stimnier.Comp:aint. KEYSEIi'IS BOWELORE" eareiratery Dsicluirges- DR. KEYSER'S - BOWEL CDYE - 'Never fatis.:' DR. KEYSEE'SDOW*.,RtiIIe, Ls a valuablessediCnie. Dr. GEYSER'S B - I.IWELVIURB • I Drinettion Cbolera. Icitysitt , s BOWBL CUBE - Will save btu/Sind' of vsanable lives If early, resort DR, KttYBKETif-BOWEL Cll_Eit. le ono of the . _ most valuable remedies'ever dtseevered ferStf.. aseaies Lueideni t0..5 iti season - of. the year.; Hundreds_ Of sulterenidould be relieyed hi less, thati' S. day by eilpeedi remit' to this most valor'. ble medicine, partietOarly valuable; when the system is sit to..becolue disordered by the two, free use of unripe's:id crude yeiretableS. P;lce 'Dente. Scild at -DB.• 8EY9E.13.11" GDlCA.V2hiprorkiiiivi*uri Lib e rty mud biallfirugitsta. - .. ' A-LIVE.SAVIRQ A R RANI GEII2EN r. radtcal change riti i t.Sen in - traduced In she' practice' t medicine. 'Prosident have ceated torture andloottriite their:Oatientr. :Instead of • . palling down, they op; 'lnstea d of islet:lt-- ingnature; theiritssittlier: i cttupp(t, tee e ht ee , bllste inf. Wittimunr:: • eiptsfy eareotics, and 'resPinit rurgatives,J mire auer :avarice treautwoes- CI the;fecu ty , are. new rarely rviorted to even by the mostdogmatic , members ol,the:Proft'saion. 'The old creed was t e st . dhleses was sometbinc which:must bo nailed sr.idelti meanie, irrespective et. the wear ant tear , of, he vitat.Orgal 'ration Sts., the Otocere. • The -new creed ree"errizee teelm ptoV,eruellV of the general health eit'eseential to take/cure of ullocet stitnentee.,Elenee It Is th at ; HOSTETT BTollla.Cil BrIVE.II".. t he. e• a t 'patent vegetable -tonic that pharmacy has ver bronint- ro -the 'exustatiee of - nature In her: struggles with disease, has been Cordially ap proved by practitioners ox the modern schoo2: - . ttt pleasant to reflect that reason and philosophy bevy ..st-.last beets victorious over the erros of • the ass. and; that thousands and tens or Mon- sandir Lp ot human being!. arneilvo and well to. dan - - who would andutiably:Asr.ntoulderlng in their. maves_htid they been subjected to the Paine anti penalties which were, deemed orthodox and ta... dispensable thirty or arty years ago. : Xreveutive meuicatioawas Pear:air ttioutht of, then: but now it a c eonsidered. f peregiount im vrotance, and the ebrity of the SX.awDael) YIIOQII4IXT. AND BTOILAVIVA of the age, te title which IiQiiTITPZER'S Amy. fairly earned by , ehtir long etrterof-sue-t ems); suately:drie to•IM eltletedef.stil &M..; SlCClarla,ParrilOttliret.• - 'r- - {< - • retie of tae:s wipes' tenrsetut men ad - st=thisisatoelo thh) ear. leasers mid , conga gorAotts&i.amolas, madame ititallotOons t *Terri illerrileattlyis.:. toitar iota - ' • t Enzon I c : , I ME