The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, September 01, 1869, Image 4

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PIIBLIBABD BY •
PENNIIIAN,RIED &CO.Proprietors.
r. B. rßßlnatual, aOSibs SING.
T. P. HOIJSTON, BEED.
• Editors wad Proprietors.
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GMT BI3I4DING, 84 OD 86 FIFTII AV.
OVFICIAL .PAPER
. _
Of Pittsburgh, liAlogneny and Alio-.
isnot)! County.
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WEJINESDAY, SEPT. 1, 1869
UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET.
wrAwr-
von ciovExmos:
JOlll4l W. GEARY.
DOE or sr KLEMM COtrla :
HENRY W WILLIASS.
CcitTNTIL"..
AS SOCIATE TUDOR DISTRICT COUR T,
JOHN M• - I
SIBIEPATBICK.
ASSISTANT LAW lIIDOZ, COILIKON PLEAS.
BEED,K. H. cow;ura.
STATE SENATz—THODIAS HOWARD.
issagsla —IDLES S. 111JIMIBBY 13,
• Alltals.NDEß MILLAB.,
JOSEPH WALTON.
JAILEd T &TLC%
D. N. W
-
JOHN H.
WWII KOOK B. namrse.
Trausussa--$O9. B. DKICNISTON.
CLERIC OF COURTS—JOSEPEI OW
E.
Brzososu—CllolWl H. lIIINTE.B.
ColOnsssowso—lßLADNOßY B. BOSTWICK
BataisTra—JOSEPH H. GRAY.
:CLURu ouraeNs, Comm— A.LBX. HIL ANDS
DlEscrou or Poor.—ABDIEL IdoCIIBB.
-WS _Pm= on the inside pages o
this morning's Gemrl"rs—Sechnd Page:
Poetry, Ephinterie, p y a nt Lincoln.
Third and Sixth . pages: Finance and
Trade, Markets by Telegraph, import'
by Baaread and Ricer News. Seventh
page : The Art of Sleeping, Whittier on
Woman Suffrage, Cost of a California
Trip, Peaches, The international Boat
PBTEOLICIIK at Antwerp, ,
B. BONDS at Frankfort, 88i
GoLD closed in New York yester
at 184@)133i.
•
TEE Tuults-Lous of railway have be
gun to "cut" faxes from New York west
ward.
TEM new XVth Article presents the
leading element. in the Legislative can
vass in California. The election, this day
week,' may astonish our Democratic
friends.
Iris stated that the ,new bridge at Bell
aire is 93 feet 8 inches:above the level of
the river; its longest span measures 350
feet between centres of piers, and there
is no span of less than 200 feet.
SinscATon I ids:di:row arrive here at
Wall on Thursday.- His speech at the
City Sall, On that evening, will draw
out one of the largest crowds ever col
lected in tIM I t edifice. The arrangements
are _complete for a good time.
•
ik.u. is not' yet peace in the anthracite
'region of the Commonwealth. The aban.
donment of the "basis" has not been
acquiesced in by all the miners,of LAl
zerne. The operatives at. Pittston. and
Wilkesbarre still stand out, and, avow
their determination to 'use violence, if
necessary, to stop the miners at Hyde
Park. There is Intense excitement at
Scranton, and some talk of applying for
military protectiOn.
BM
Tnri Paris PROJECT has been defeated
by an overwhelming majority. A small
-vote was brought out yesterday in the
election, and but little interest was muti
lated. The negative majorities are so
heavy as to fully indicate that the people
are perfectly willing to forego, for the
present at least, the luxury of a public
breathing spot, and they are so decisive
as to deter any.from again 'attemptinge in
the near future to feel the popular-pulse
in that direction.
.The affirmative vote
might have been ranch larger had the peo
ple been more intelligently informed as
to the plans and prospects of the Com
mission; but the heavy debt of the city
and the constant drainage made on the
treasury for improvements, rendered ae
tuhliy necessary, by the enlargement of
boundaries, are pregnant reasons to be
Designed for the overwhelming majority
by which the measure has been defeated.
E
•
'
I
- 1 -------- _
IA DISPATCH from Nashville `
certain
Louisville Journal states "with
ty" , that Gov. BETE will not assemble
the old LegAslature of Tennessee, "
things it very probable that the new one
will ratify the Xsith Article." It is also
suggested that ho is apprehensive that
other things not in the programme might
be, attempted if a Republican Legislature
should be again convened. If the Gov- -
- 'nor really believes that the assemblage
f; the rebels just elected, in October, will
o
rtaify the Article, he has a surprising
amount of credulity in his composition.
Ilis'fetirs of other action by the Republi
,
can body, are quite unnecessary, since
maple asournicea have shady been even
to him on that point. We judge that he
. •L
bas been, and is p be
pronally, Mowed to
tilieyfoielAisipi.#tlhbi timidity itiay
. .. '
c. •
:-",
E
Alarmed by, the JnisieUresentOons and
appeals of the Conservatives.
The Philadelphia. North American
thinks it "far from clear that the next—
the regnlar—session would not copy the
example of an Eastern State and repeal
the ratification." Our cotemporary for
gets that New Jersey and Oregon have
been adilsed, from Secretary SEWARD,
that theo is no warrant in the Constitu
tion or iin the prece.dents, for the with
drawal bf an assent of this sort, when it
has once been recorded in the archives of
the nation.
FOR , BOMB TIME, now, our city has
been !decorated, here , and there, with
startling sentences printed in chalk in
prominent: places . Some of, 'these sen
tence are selectd from the. Bible, but
mostl of them are by no means of in.
spired origin. Pittsburgh is not the first
city which has awakened of a morning
to be startled by this singular irruption,
but tinder whose auspices the work is
done we are unable to state. That the
mind of the disseminator is eccentric,
and that this eccentricity is in the worst
possible taste, we think most persons will
agree. It is barely possible that some
unwary soul may be reminded, by these
peculiar means, of the necessity of pre
paring for a future state of existence, but,
for one person who is benefitted thereby,
scores will see only the ridiculous side of
the affair, and indeed that side is by far
the most prominent. The person who
has so officiously displayed his handi
work seems to have had no judgment as
to the proper places to display certain sen
tences. For instance, on the top of a
board pile, on Duquesne Way, he has
placed the sentence, "Come to Jesus,"
and we venture tomsert that nine out
of every ten pens who eaw it
there had all the possible good
effects of the suggestion smothered
by the ridiculously palpable idea that a
compliance with the i n vitation, neCessi.
toted the scaling of the lofty pile of
boards. Again, he selected the side-walk
of the Allegheny suspension bridge to
point the question "Where will I spend
Eternity ?" Nothing could be more nat
ural than that the boys should at once
alter a sentence so easily within their
reach, and the result was that the ques
tion was changed, by the erasion of three
letters, to the assertion, "here ill spend
eternity," and many more saw this ab
surd version than were at all influenced'
by the first. Instances of this sort could
be greatly multiplied, but we do not think
it necessary, for we have no desire to add
to the ridicule which has been already
the chief result of this new city decora
tion. That any one desiring to adorn
the city in this way can lawfully do so,
there is probably no doubt, but we think
that all good citizens will unite in en
deavoring to prevent such desecration of
good words and such a disfiguration of
our, not tco beautiful, city, if they at any
time find it in their power to do so.
------
A STAIN UPON OUR. FLAG.
We spoke, yesterday of the abuses
which are believed to be practised upon tile
seamen, by the officers of our public ships.
This is a subject which begins to attract
general attention from the press. There
is no use in disputing the fact that a good
deal of cruelty is systematically exhibited
in the treatment of enlisted seamen, and
that this is true, to a greater degree, of the
officers of our navy than of any othe r
service in Christendom. We do not care
to speculate upon the causes which lead
to this pre-eminent disgrace upon the
flag of a republican and free people. The
fact itself is not to be disputed. On for
eign service, in foreign waters, lying in
foreign ports, side by sfde with the war
' ships of England, France, Sp
\ ain and even
Russia, it is notorious all over the world
that an American man-of-war is, nine cases
out of ten, deserving of the name It bears
1
46 11 -,. I,
~ as a he auoat. The arbitrary and cruel
tyranny of the lords of the quarter-deck ,
republicans and theoretical believers,
every man of them, in human equality,
have blackened for fifty years the honor
of our armed marine, with the most in
famona name, in that regard, among all
Christian nations. Here, as we write,
comes a paragraph under - our eyes, from
Wasliington, which speaks of the great
difficulty in procuring seamen for these
vessels. It is part of Jack's gospel in
every port on the globe, when looking
for a berth; to shun a Yankee frigate ex
pressly be use she is almost invariably a
floating he Of the crews of our vessels,
nineteen-twentieths are always of a foreign
nationality. American sailors shun our
men-of-war as they would a pestilence or
Davy Jones himself. And solely be
cause of this notorious cruelty of the offi
cers who carry our Federal commissions..
It is well that Secretary Rabeson has
taken order for a rigid enquiry with this
alleged abuse of the SeITIC 43 .
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TIIE CUT WATER SUPPLY.
We have often, heretofore, expressed
our concurrence in the preferences ex
hibited by our best engineers, and espe
cially advocated by Mr. ROBBBTS, for re
lying upon the Allegheny River for the
future water -supply of this rapidly in
creasing city. It is evident, therefore, that
we shall heartily concur in the decisive
action of Councils, on Monday last, in
selecting the site of the new works which
are to distribute this indispensable ele
ment among the vast population of our
Pittsbargh of the future. The unani
mous concurrence, of all the members of
the Water Committee', in the Report
which, we print dumbers* and of a ma r
jorify bf the poitob!, irt this reconmon
' . •
.4111 t -'t i •
:JJW:
PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : WEDNESDAY, SEPT
' - 7 ---- --- - . -7---,
dati,ort of a specificfite lot the new and
capacious works which a e to supply the
wants of a vastly inerease.d population in
the coming years, ii probably to be taken
as a decisive indication of the settled pol
icy of our City government
In quantity and quality, as well Bain the
rellahle permanence of supply, we have
long since expressed the public prefer
ence for the wa teth ohheAl p g a h c e t n ic y a , b t l o e
betaken up
Point on the stream. The facts and sitg
geltions which have been submitted to
the public heretofore, seem to have settled
that question conclusively. The Commit
tee have recognized the logic of the situ
ation, and report conclusions from which
they saw no escape. Their recommend
ations are not let definitely acted on, but
it is clear eno u gh that Councils are pre
pared for a eclrresporiding decision.
E l
The new *water-works thus contem
plated will upplyl .Pittsburgh for two
generations td no more. The quantity
is not likely' to fail, materially, in any
year of the coming time, but the quality
of the water, which fifty years hence, will
be pumped from the Allegheny river,-at
so short a distance beyond the present
verge of the city's population as will then,
quite certainly, with our material growth
be 'within the contaminating !nfluences of
a dense suburban life-will then be so
deteriorated as to require a far longer step
up the'valley. Let fifty years hence take
care of itself, provided we can be quite
sure of the intermediate supply. And of
that there appears to be but little doubt.
OUR DIPLO3IACY AT MADRID.
The Cuban question comes up in a new
aspect. We have now a denial that any
proposition, official or unofficial, has been
made from this country for the guarantee
of Cuban bonds. It is however admitted
that we have offered, in case of an agree
ment by Spain to part with her sovereign
ty for any, specified sum, to present the
United States as a trustee, to receive and
hold the revenues of the island by way
of security for the payment. This pro
posal was declined at Madrid. Our Min
ister, Gen. Sickles, is now, it is reported,
about to make another overture for the
adjustment of thiS question, as follows:
First --Spain is to grant to the Cubans
all the rights belonging to o
he Spanish
citizens, with full representation in the
Spanish Cortex.
second—An amnesty as general as pos
sible is to be granted to those who have
participated in the insurrection.
Third—=Spain must take the necessar
ony
steps for the suppression of slavery
the Island, and afford protection to those
released from bondage..
With the acceptance of these proposi
tions the United States on her part will
give assurances to Spain that she wintry
to have peace prevail on the Island.
This would be mediation of the right
stamp, conipromising neither the dignity
of Spain, nor the neutrality of our own
government, and involving not a dollar of
liability upon onr Treasury. Moreover,
the assent of all parties to the programme
would go farther to secure the loyalty
of the island, as a permanent dependency
of Spain, than the most thorough and
bloody repression of the present revolt by
her arms. The propositions faithfully
represent American ideas, are believed to
be acceptable to the discontented
Cubans, and . cover the only practicifi
basis upon which the Spanish Boyer
eignity could be maintained.
In the pledge of onr sincere and active
efforts to secure the ultimate pacification
of the revolted people, lies the only dan
ger for the American Government. The
assurance must mean something or
nothing. The insurrection evidently
leans upon the. American sympathies, in
which its material wants have been sup
plied, and without which it would have
been terminated six months ago. Can onr
Government take, legally, more ffective
measures than it has already, for e cutting
off these supplies? If it can, its pres
ent neutrality may be impeached for
permitting so many extensive ship
ments of men, and material ; if it
cannot, the pledge of further efforts
in the interest of .peace may be an illu
sory one. In• fact, we have probably
done all we can ever do, for the mainte
nance of our neutral faith, and for the re
pression of these hostile irruptions into
the territory of a friendly power, and
we can do no more; except in the way of
"moral suasion" with both parties—
which woint count much, unless they are
equally inclined to peace. -
Nevertheless the three points of the
new proposal are creditable to our (M
a
-
erriment, are deserving of fair consider
tion at Madrid, and are not unlikely to
cover the actual basis of the final settle
ment of the Cuban question.
Wasbtngton Items.
At the Cabinet meeting on Thursday
the conduct of Minister J. Ross Browne
and the Chinese treaty will be brought
up. The President is known to be very
much disgusted with the conduct of our
Minister.
It is anticipated that the Pressident ent
, on
Tuesday next, will make an appointm
to the mission at China, in place of Mr.
Howard, who declines. The persons
whose names are prominently mentioned
for the place are Gen. C. M. Dodge, ex-
Congressman, and at present connected
withthe Union Pac Ballvray , ex-
Congressman Jobnific
D, Baldwin, editor of
the Worcester Spy.
Congress will be asked, at the next
session, to make the Pekin Legation a
Ministry of the first class. The Admin
istration is understood to believe it to be
our most important embassy.
day, Mr.
In conversation, the other
Delano remarked that his most earnest
wish at present was to send an InsPector
or two to the Penitentiary. •
The greatest activity prevails at the
Brooklyn Navy Yard, and District
torriey rierrepont says that the Govern
ment will Soon make e a that
in the dila
tion Cabs chat will satonialittis usto4,,
,
public In Qin.Stia _ .'` "
_ _
The other - day the Annexatinn
meeting at Quebec—the first demonstra
tion of public feeling in that direction—
ti
was held, and now one of the most in
tensely British papers in the Dominion,
1
The Toronto Telegraph, comes out
"The more one re ects," says The
Telegraph, "on the s gestive observa
tions of The London S ndard in regard
to the present and pros tive relations of
the British American ,Pvices to the
mother country, the mo r r o e reason there
seems to be for coming to the conclusion
that they are really getting tired of us on
the other aide of the water. They say to
us in a l a nguage which we can hardly
misinterpret : 'lf you can only set , up for
yourselves, we shall be happy to gis the
give all
the assistance in our power.' That
admonition - we received - from Sir John
young in his . Quebec speech. It Is not a
pleasing admonition, because we have
been as faithful to England and to Eng
lish interests as England has been to us
and to our interests. We—speaking for
the people of Canada—also remember how
the sentiment and soul of our people was
stirred up during the Indian mutiny. Our
kindred at the heart of the Empire could
scarcely have felt as we did here. Ten reg
iments could have been raised in a month
in the Province of Upper Canada alone,
to avenge the massacre at Lucknow. We
were more British in that fearful crisis,
than the British themselves. Throughout
the miserable Trent difficulty, out of
which grew the 'Alabama Claims, '
we
adhered to the old gag with a stea dfast-
ness; which, considering our exposed
condition, has, probably, no parallel in
history. In view of all this, it is not
pleasant, certainly, to be told that we are
an incumbrance. It only shows that
communities, like individuals, get old and
get lazy; and that Englana is beginning
to feel that New:, ZealandAustritha, and
Canada, having 'had a liberal nurture for
many years, must now look tor them
selves, and that She be relieved from re
sponsibility. Be it so! If Great Britain
desires to resign her dependencies, she
must be content to resign her Empire.
You cannot eat your cake and have it.
Universal power and universal empire
mean sacrifice—heavy taxation, heavy
burdens on the minds of statesmen, strong
endurance—a pluck which shall not suc
cumb to anything or anybody. Yon are
either, to continue to be a power, and a
tremendous power on the earth, or you
are td revert tothe condition of Venice
or of Holland, and ask younger nations,
like that , founded by Peter the Great, or
Frederick, or Washington, to come to
the front, and take your place. So soon
as the Stars and Stripes are hoisted over
the citadel at Halifax, so soon departs, and
departs forever, the-glory of England.
It is extremely painful for us to be com
pelled to write in this strain, because we
believe that a close and intimate connec
tion with the mother country is our sal
vation from misgovernment. But it is
perfectly clear to any one of commonin
telligence, that within five or ten , years
after we are cut loose from the parent
State we shall be absorbed in the neigh
boring RA:e bli ,
The Maryland Democrats.
Democratic journals have been, for
some time past, wasting much time and
space in efforts to prove that the Republi
can party is so disorganized that it can
not hold together much longer, that in
fact, the work of disintegration has
eaready commenced. The D much bet
er off, to say nothing about Ohio, and the
effect of the Rosecrans letter. The dis
sensions in the Democratic party of Mary
land, although they have not yet come to
an open rupture, are so great as to alarm
the old party leaders, and to threaten the
loss of the State in the ensuing elections.
Within the Democratic organization andf
constituting almost onehalf its strength, is
'
a party known as 'progressive Democrats,
who come very near the recent profession
of faith by Rosecrans, and who are be
ginning to make themselves felt in the
inside workings of the party. It is well
understood in Maryland that one of the
most prominent and trusted Democrats
in the State is but waiting a favorable op
portunity to come4aut in favor of the Fif
teenth Constitutional Amendment, and
that he has a by no means. insignificant
portion of the Democracy with him.
Movements are now making which will
be found to be of considerable importance
by-and-by, and which, in their results,
will be as far from whatthe Blairs expect.
ed politically last July twelvemonth, ash
is possible to imagine.
Providing for Ex-Presidents.
A: New Orleans journal deplores the ob-
scurity into which our Presidents fall as
soon as they are out of office, and argues
that it should not be thusly. "By all
means," it declares, "the man who has
one won the supreme honors of a nation
ought to be allowed some shreds of the
mantle to carry with him into private life,
and we, for one journal, would rejoice to
see an amendment to the Constitution
adopted by which our ex-Presidents
in be entitled, during after life, to
seatsn the United States Senate, as Sen•
ators at large," Amendment or no
amendment, A. J. has clearly no inten
tion of going into obscurity. On the con
trary, he proposes to continue, as in. the
past, one of the central figures for some
time to come
Biz vans AG() a young post office
clerk in Cleveland, Ohio, was arrested
for breaking the mail. His father re
fused to interfere in his behalf, and at the'
preliminary examination the array of
evidence was so strong against •him that
his counsel advised him to clear for Can
ada. The young man did so, sending his
wages home to his wife, a lovely and
highly reps womark, to whom he had
been married but a year. He afterward
went to Leavenworth, Kansas, where,
under an assumed name, by industry and
integrity, he arose to be Mayor of the
place. He sent for his wife and lived
happy, except for the fear of having the
old case trumped up again. The other
day he_returned to Cleveland and gave
himself up, but was assured by his old
prosecutors that they would not further
pursue the case.
Tim question, is a Jewish priest a min
ister Of the Gospel? came up in Hustings
Court, Richmond. Va. The civil code of
Virginia requires that before a minister of
the Gospel can solemnize marriages, he
must produce to the Court proof ofis
ordination as such minister. The pas tor
of the , Jewish Congregation'came into
Court, declaring that he was not a minis
ter of the Gospel, and could not comply
with the law, which Ids counsel denoun
as proscriptive, illiberal and intoler
an. The Court held that there was no
difficalty in the Rabbi's we t as the stet
nte
WU general, and intended to *dude
;Rory fapilend form ?1' rellglow s " ---
r 1. vri .l i
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BER 1, 186'
The Prince of Wales.
"His Royal Highness Prince Cham
pagne Charlie has an enormous fortune
for an income; but Parliament is to be
asked to nay some of his traveling ex.
penses. He also married a lovely Dan
ish princess a few years ago, and all the .
poets sang in her honor like all the wed
ding chimes pealing togethe.but s
now whispered that 'a lady' of r 'title, who
recently disgraced her family, owes her
ruin to her future king.' That he is fond
of cider cellars, and the songs that are
sung there, and the people that congre
gate there, is also subject of common,
rumor. That he is mentally a dull young
man, of whom no generous word or ac
tion has ever been made public; is not
denied. -He seems to show all the quali.
'ties that are most to be deplored in the
worst of his ahcestors; and a more hu
miliating family for a royal family than
the German kings of England it would
be hard to find. There are many private
gentlemen who already avoid the Prince
as much as they can. It is unpleasant to
have to deal with a man who insists upon
playing at cards for money, carefully
shil
takes all he wins, and never pays a
ling he loses. This is no meaner than his
great uncle Adonis, Prince Regent; but
now all the glamor is gone. The wig is
no longer a halo, but a wig. When you
believe in a Pope it is very well to hear
ot the Holy Father that be commits
crimes as a man, and not as the Pope.
But when yon believe in a Pope no
longer. a cruel and treacherous pontiff is
merely a bad man. Prince Champagne
Charlie's great grandfather, the dull old
George, was as little royal perhaps as
Charlie; but people believed in royalty
then, ad they do not believe in it now.
"While the poverty and suffering of
England increase so rapidly that they
leave the strongest and most painful im
pression of all upon the minds of stran
gers; while the problem of crime becomes
more pressing every day, and there is a
general feeling that the country is moving
before the breath of an undeclared revo
lution; while the House of Lords has but
ut
to take an attitude of opposition to
popular will to hear the universal growl
of displeasure, and the frank declaration
that it exists only by popular sufferance,
it is not to be supposed that the follies of
a Prince Champagne Charlie will be
tolerated bepond a certain point. If the
House of Lords,
how much more does
'
the throne survive only by-popular per
mission? And in b Englandne the question
has very nearlybecome o of e
merely. Is a permanent executive prefer
able? Is the pageant of royalty desirable,
or even longer practicable, for such an
executive?
',Champagne Charlie had better be
satisfied with a salary of seven or eight
d
hundred thousan dollars a offensive f
doing nothing in the most v
manner. There were Englishmen living
in America who asked, 'why should we
b taxed without representation?'
ar e e
Englishmen living in England There
who
ask, 'what do we gain by paying such
enormous' sums to such a Champagne
Prince Charlie?'"
Mt
superstition in Spain.
The London Daily News says : Some
few enlightened individuals are innocent
enough to believe that the days
passed when ordinary human being r s
should be mistaken for sorcerers and wor
ried to death for witchcraft. It is a great
mistake. We know that in many parts
of England the belief in witchcraft flour
ishes among the ignorant people, and we
now hear of an Englishman in Spain
being nearly 'butchered for his supposed
complicity with the Prince of Darkness.
The event took place in a thriving com
mercial town, numbering 20,000 inhabi
tants—Lorca. The peo . ple in this neigh
borhood firmly believe in the existence of
certain wizards—mysterious beings with
pale faces and long ite beards, who,
hunt
hid during the day, hunt at night for
children whom they devour'. The fat ol
the children they are said to keep sacred
ly for two purposes —first, as a sovereign
cure for small-pox; and secondly, to
grease the wires of the electric telegraph,
which is in itself a satanic invention; and
would not work at all were it not' for the
lubricating oil obtained from the bodies of
innocent little children.
"It is natural that the populace, enter
taining these views, should give vent to
their feelings on the first fair opportunity.
This opportunity presented itself in the
appearance of a stranger, utterly un
known, walking one evening towards
the fields, with slow and solemn strides,
his white beard floating in the wind, his
face pale in the moonlight. His presence
was soon rumored abroad. Arm,ed with
stout sticks, the fanatics took him una
wares, craftily surrounded him, belabored
him with their cudgels, and would have
soon beaten the life out of him, when it
was suggested that it would be prudent
to drag his inanimate body to the town,
and obtain official authorization before
proceeding to administer the last' and
fatal blows. With shouts of triumphant
joy the half murdered Englishman was
carried to the seat of justice.
"The local authorities, though they
knew him personally, had great difficulty
in saving him from the Infuriated mob.
But save him they did. Perhaps we
have no right 4o hold up our hands in
pions horror of these poor wretches, who
are not more ignorant than some of our
own people; but at least we cannot
let the event pass without this formal
record."
BAIT Fn o ne believed, in
a few years, become of the most im
portant fur markets in the world. The
natives of Alaska are at present exchang
tng seal skins and other fur
of rood, s for whisky,
and
guns, ammunition,
articles
trinkets sent from California, and the
State of Oregon and the Territory of
Washington are sending' skins to San
Francisco. In 1868 the fur dealers in
San Francisco sent more than two mil
lion dollars' worth of skins to New York.
An extensive business is
forswearaso carri
nee.o
in manufacturing .skins
The furs are mink, marten (sometimee
called liable), squirrel, beaver, fox, otter,
bear and wolf. One hundred and thirty
men and one hundred and twenty-five
women; mostly Germans now find em
ployment in two or three ' fur-sewing
age
es
tablishments in San Francisco. Carn
robes, made up of patchwork, ate near
cheap as blanke and the miners
near
buys
them for that ptt,
urpose. They can
be bought for $l5 or $2O each, while on
the Atlantic side they are worth at whole
_sale at least $BO. Sable collars sold in
New York for $5O to $6O each, bring only
$25 or $BO in San Francisco; and muffs,
cloaks and other far goods are sold at
proportioaately.low— Prices-
IT is stated on good anthqlity . that
Gen. Phil. Shedder. hnsProPle d to. and
leap :been lICCOPte4Pit fah . 14 4 Y0f
ingtim. ,
t '
t.••
Pst:,
. ,
..4.;
A CORBESPOVVEn.,9II.I4e Bad9n Post
writes as follows: -The Empress of Aus
tria is enjoying
the Tyrolese Alps. Herh to
the invigorating air of
he raestablished. A Rus ea sian lth
ladyseems
be
longing to the household of the Czarina
has just related to me some interesting
anecdotes of th e Empress Elizabeth,
whom she used to see and conversA3 with
daily, keit year, at the baths of Ilissen
gen. The Empress is averse to a Fiat t
he
alliance from a fear that the
Emperor Nupoleon may prevail on Fran
cis Joseph to depart from the liberal poli
cy of Von Beust. She is naturally joy
ous. But the misfortunes of her bus
'band's relations, the political perturbs.-
dons through which Austria haapassed,
and an intense sympathy with human
suffering have infused into her a passive
strain. She has a keen sense of the
beautiful, and paints and sings like a
poet and an artist. The personal
apptarance of the Empress corres
ponds with her delicate, loving,
high-strung nature. Her tall form is
beautifully molded, her eyes are large
and expressive, and speak often things
which correctly, etiquette forbids her
her tongue to utter. Her complexion is
exquisitely transparent. lam assured by
her Russian admirer that her rich brown
hair sweeps the ground when she lets it
fall over her shoulders to dry in issuing
from the bath. Last year, at Kissengen,
a Jew mistaking her for somebody else;
as she was walking in the environs of the
town, after bathing, offered her a large
salary if she would go with him to Paris
and London, and let him tell his custom
ers that she was in the habit of using
some capillary wash he sells. Bavarian
girls, whatever may be the reason, have
the finest hair in Europe. There is in
the town where the fair Austrian em-,
press passed her childhood the monument
of a girl who died of having too much ofl
it. It is stated in her epitaph that the
nourishment of her body was absorbed by
the capillary vessels, and that her hair in
the short space of ten months grew, on
its being shaved, to the extraordinary
length of three yards."
THE Independent du Centre, of Cler- •
mcnt Ferrand (Puy-de-Dome), contains
an account of a singular occurrence. The '
,
diligence from that town to Bort
. was
three days back ascending a steep hilteide
beyond , Tarves, when it was suddenly
enveloped in two clouds, heavily charged
with' electridty, coming in opposite di
rections, and which met at that point.
Suddenly , a flash was seen, accompanied
by a loud detonation, and thelposti
and the five horses by which the vehicle
was being drawn were all struck dead.
None of the passengers were hurt.
Item. SHORTCAKE is made after the
same fashion as its predecessor, strawber
ry shortcake, with the exception that the
peaches are pared, sliced and well sugar
ed before inserting a layer between and
another on top of two not very thick
pieces of nicely baked hot pie crust.
•
CUACSE.D WHEAT boiled and cooled in :
a large mould or in cups, is a simple •
dessert, anda prominent dish for tea with
some, to be eaten with milk or cream and •
sugar. If it is difficult to obtain the
cracked wheat, it is even better cracked
in a coffee mill as it is wanted.
DR, KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures Diarrhea.
DEL KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE
DU. rEYSEU`B BOWEL CUBE
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures Chronic Diarrhea.
DE. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
cures Bilious Colic.
DR. REITER'S BOWEL CITRE
Cures Cholera Inrantura.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures the worst case of Bowel Disease.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE ,
Cures Cholera Merbus.
DB. lONISER'S BOWEL. CURE
Will cure in one or two doses.
DR. 'KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE
Ought to be in every fareily.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Is a sure cure for Griping.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE. , •
Will not fail In one case.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Circa Ulceration.
DB. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Cures Summer Comp:aint. *
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE
Will cure Watery Dalcharges.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Neverliails.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE
Is ..a valuable medicine.
Dr. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURB
Is a protection against Cholera.
DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURB
Will save hundreds of valuable lives
). - If early resort is had to it.
iDR. KEYSER'S BCiWIEL CURE is one or the
most valuatie remedies ever discovered for all
diseases incident to this season of the Tear._
Hundreds of stifle/en could be relieved in less
than a day by a speedy resort to this most valua
ble medietne. particularly valuable, when the
system Ls apt to become disordered by the two
ree use of unripe and crude vegetables.
Price 50 Cents. Sold at DR. KEYSER'S
GREAT ILEDICINE STORE. 157 Liberty St..
and by all dragsists.
---
PAINLESS DIGESTION.ought to
"No man," says EU Astley Cooper, "
know by his sensations that he has a stomach.' ,
In other words, when digestion is perfect there
le neither pain nor uneasiness in the region where
it takes place. Nausea, want of appetite, flatu
lence, oppression after eating, shooting Pains in
the eplgastrurn, a flushing in the face at meat
times, and a furred tongue in the morning. are
among the direct symptoms of Indigestion.
constipation. biliousness. hes dache, nervous
Irritability, physical w. akness and low spirits,
are its almost Invariable accompaniments All
these indleatians of DPSPIPSIA. whether
by
or secondary. are usually aggravated by hot
weather,
The close of summer is therefore the season
when the victim of dyspepsia most urgently neeus
a tonic and reAulating medicine.
One Of cou
friend
rse,
every invalid has many advisers.
recommends one drug. another another; but in a
multitude of counsellors there is not always
safety. The STANDARD lIEMEDY OP VIM rust •
/NT AO2 TOR INDIGESTION, in all 11,8 stages. is
HOSTETTER,tI STOMACH BITTER& • Time,
that proves all things, has established its repo.
tat loa on an impresnab.e foundetion.—the spon
taneous testimony of millions oldritelltgene wit
nesses. No acrid oil or acid &files Its stimuli:.
Ong principle: its tonic constituents are the
finest that botanical research has yet discovered;
It combines the properties of a gentle evaenant,
a blood aepurent, and an anU-billons medicine,
with Invigoratingnualittes of the highest order,
and is admitted both by the ,III)110 and the pro
fession to be the surest protection against all
diseases that are produced or propagated by pea.
Warne, air or unwholesome "Pater. -that has
ever been' used either in.. the tinlied.Btates or
Tropical America.
In cuss of constipation, resulting Ire= a want
- 01 Muscular tone in tile - intestines. the Mat of
.the BlTTica is parfeatly osarvalions;. a
re the du:perdu sentence* oi l inerctirr, n t*.
- guess the ,11 , 1a!ir.lired• iliartto . 11 Wring onot.
Ithan: . ~. -1. 1 ) •---. ~,.:,.. . :-., ..,..,,,A.I•
Ell=
ME
Cures Dysentell
Cures Bloody Flax.
II
=I
111=1
I
BEM