El rig gifttsbuto &mats. PUBLIBBID BY . ENNIAIAN,RKED&CO.,Proprietors. P. B. PENNIMAN. JOSIAH KENO. T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. HEED. Editors and Proprietors. OTTICIS: GAZETTE Bg [XING, 84 AND 86 FIFTH AV. OFFICIAL PAPER Of Plttiburgh, Allegheny and alltr gheny County, Serkw—Datty. 18thsf- Weekly. Wedgy. \ One year...6&oolone year. 12.50 Single 00py..01.5 9 One mon th 75181 x. mos.. 1.50 5 eolles,enck 1.Z5 By the week lb Th760131°5 75 10 " 1.15 Or= curler.) . =done to Anent. SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1869. -UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE. FOB oovEnnos: JOHN Tr. GEARY. .TIIDGE OF Or FFIOLE 001IRT HENRY W. WILLIAMS. cotrryr - r. ASSOCIATE JUDGE MUSIC? COURT. JOHN M. EIRIEPATBICK, ASSISTANT LAW =DOT" comma FLEAS, BREWS. H. COLLIER. EITATASIstar.-THOHAS HOWARD. ASSlorator-HELEB S. RuntemuzYsi, A.LEXA.NDER IdILLAB, JOSEPH WALTON, JAMES TAILOR. - D. N. WHITE. JOHN H. SERB. BEBRIAT HUGH B. FLEMING. Tusksloultit - 308. F. DENNISTON. Claps OF COURTS—JOSEPH BROWNE. Wouozn-v-HoDies H. HUNTER. COmmlSsiolora- IHAUNCEY B. HOSTWIOI Runirrza-JOSEPH H. GHAT. WIRE Oaramts , Comm-ALEX. MANDE DIRscTGR of Pooß-AZDIEL MCCLURE. WB Piairr on ,the inside pages of We morning's GAzzyrs--Seeend Page: Poetry, "An Autumn Song," Down the Ohio Ricer, Antidotes far Poisoning, Banehdte, The Time to Harry; Clippings. Third and Sixth pages: Finance and Trade, Markets, Imperte, Neer Needs. Seventh page: Interesting Jfiseei/any of Reading Matter. 0 Pwrsoutint at Antwerp, 55i f. ILI B. BONDS at Frankfort, 881 Ow closed in New York yesterday at 1i364@1861. Tint acts of the Rebel Congress, se questrating the property of Northern men, as that of aliens, during the wsz, havC been declared by the Supreme Court null and void. Tam northern trunk-lines of 'railway, beaten in the present competition for speed, are now talking of another ached nig for next week. of ably twenty-four hours from New York to Chicago. hteassama pongee wear a very prom ising aspect for our Republican friends. The opposition are so bitterly divided that their reunion seems impossible. Their 'quarrel is c4l about the colored question. PUPIL Is educated in the Pittsburgh High School for $4O per annum. The expense,at Cincinnati 111 $40.10; Chicago $56; Louisville $75; Cloveland $lOB. The grade of attainment here is quite equal to anything reallied in • sister_ cities, and at this very favOrable showing for coot, Hop. G. A. Gnow has been mention ed to the President as the proper man for the Chinese mission; which is now ta cant. The Administration 'could not make an appointment .for this place more ac cepbible to the Republicans of Penniyi; wits, with all of whom Mr. (sow is deseivedly, a avorite. Tux California' election results in the choice of-a Democratic legislature, which, will reject the XVth Article. The pre cedtng 'legislature had six Republican majority in the Senate, and a Democratie majority of fourteen in the Rouse. GRANT carried the Presidential vote by 514. The , regular opposition Alcket,has probSbly'been defeated in San Praicisco. Ili ,TUB forthcoming! National Conven. tion l of the • various municipal Boards of Trade, to be held at Keokuk, lows, the people have much interest, as some action will be taken concerning river navigation between the ports of Pittsburgh and New Orleans, a subject of vital importance to our own , community. Yesterday the Board of Trade of this city appointed the following gentlemen, who fairly re. esent the ,marine and general interests o tile city, as delegates to the Convention: 77 on. J. K.l.lsishall. ',Joseph Dtworsh, Esq . lion eflis. S Neer!, , loud V. Dravo, ; , Hon. Enbest Knight, Joseph Walton. Ron. 's bon. HOward. Wm. H. Baum, C o . J a me - ilinchmore, Vln nolemen, ol sK. Kers, . Geo.ll. Anderson„, at; Wsn. Brew, 'lobes' Arsnurs, ILK., Caps. M. W. Belts- it, B. Smythe. n .„ 0 „ 4 . James Reese. C. W. Batchelor, Esq., , WE Eiamt-frol WashhigtoE =port that, in the recent Cabinet Meeting, it was stated by Secretiryllsh that twenty. one States had filed Official notice, In-his Department, of their ratification of the new rfth Article. We do not entirely credit this report. A recent publication in 8 -W as hington journal specified bdt, twelve States as having; lodged!thilr,eir 4 eaten., We should like to Lses ,tal list; exhibiting precise facts. tis Sanely 'posifibittaitt so letrge num,: of thii StstElllllll4 already taken per ' ICAVTIHIII‘ 'TO 'THE' DEHOCRACI. We give our Democratic readers fair notice that, in supporting their nomina tion of this year, in this Commonwealth, they must not rely too implicitly upon the defeat of Equal Suffrage. It is true that your State.platform denounces this doctrine of equality, and you would very naturally take it for granted that this ex presses the National sentiment of your party. In tkis you reckon without ac quaintance with the facts. • \ Opposing colored suffrage in Pennsyl vania, your party, in Ohio, stands ready to adopt it/as soon as circumstances , may warrant. The Ohio platform of this year ignores the question altogether, except in a few words of twaddle about State rights.. The Democracy of that State are all ready, in light marching order, for a "new departure," as soon as the word is given by their leaders. In New York, says the World, "the Democracy never harbored an illib eral feeling toward the negroes of the State. We are willing that they should vote, as they have always voted since 1821, on a moderate property quali fication." The Louisville courier says: "Is the Democracy united on the negro question ? In Mississippi, Mas sachusetts and Tennessee, the Dem. ocratic or Conservative elements are 'committed to negro suffrage." ln Virginia, all parties are alike commit ted to the same doctrine. The same is in deed true of every Southern State, where your Democratic friends thoroughly corn prebend that they can never, whether the X.Vth Article is or is not adopted, abro. ,gate the equal suffrage which now pre vials in all of the late rebel States. Perhaps you have imagined that this new Article has been expressly leveled at those States, in order to ensure the per petuity of their present doctrine of equal ity at the polls. Not so. The, Article, if it may be supposed to have one especial intent more than another, is intended to reach existing' institutions in all those Northern States which at present repudi ate this principle of a true Demo. cracy, and in the three border States of Delaware, Maryland and Kentucky. You will observe, if you bat keep open half tin eye, that your friends throughout the North do not agree with your Harris burg platform. Pennsylvania alone stands squarely in Democratic opposition to equal suffrage. .0)do is now com mitted, and your party in every other Northern State stands today as dumb as oysters upon this issue. _ How is it in the border States? The Louisville Courier, whichwe have quoted, speaks for Kentucky, and significantly. In Maryland, more than one Democratic journal unites with the Prince Georgian, one of the ablest newspapers of * the party in the State. in appealing to their and your friends "to admit the colored popu lationto the suffrage," with or without the XVth Article, and "to welcome them as men and brethren." Delaware is an In eignificant element in the question, at any rate; she will follow the crowd in either direction. Your party is on the eve of what they style "a new departure." This means that you are about to turn your backs upon Issues as to which it is better for you that they be dead than living; your leaders are today in council upon the need for a complete revision of your po litical policy, a prominent feature of which concerns this , business of equal suffrage. Here, in Pennsylvania, you cling to the old exploded ideas which, again and again have misled you to disastrous de teats, and will do so once more, four weeks from next Tuesday. Thousands MORTON'S SPEECH. - of you imagine your party to be united and sincere in its hatred The Republicans of Pennsylvania, and • for the negro, and its contempt all the friends of an honest government, for the negroe's rights. Don't deceive of an unbroken Union, of the National yourselves. In the very hour when your good name and of the public repose, owe leaders' made up this plalform for you, at their hearty thanks to Senator Morrow Harrisburg, they knew that the Demo for his clear and; xhaustive exposition of cratic judgment in nearly y 'other the merits of current political questions. St a te contemplating;!s ever point,wa an d that w ithin. t wo y e ars , that- e v to the diet • - • • 111 " you, too, must follow that lead. They guiihed Senator, on Thursday evening, an audience such as *ea not once have delibeinte i ly premeditated . a tread'• gathered into the City Hall' during the cry, playing upon your old.time preju . dices for to-day, to get onomore vote for sharp and exciti n g canvass of 1868. In numbers,- in Intelligence, in patience and the negro-exclusion which they and you alike are soon to desert forever. t h e though, concord, with the 'speaker, audience was one as ivorth of our y Says the Louisville , paper which we" have already quoted: "The Democracy cities, and of our Republicanism, as of the Speaker. We need not add that he has at the Prompt time nocommon ground was equal to the occasion. to stand ou, no policy that can be _called We need not indulge in any extended national." Neither on the negro nor on • review of the address. Heard by so many the linancl i al question!, ,can they agree. thousands, very many of them have again "The Eastern wing of the party is com read our faithful O t her? , r which has gone milted to a financial policy which is ab to the friends of thousands of the solutely rejected at the West, whilst at people of the Commonwealth. All these the South repudiation outright is the pre will mark well and_ digest the matter ra il ing ,sentiment." Nearly all the spread before them, and gisei their opin. Georgia press, conspicuously the Me lon of it five weeks from next Tuesday. eon Journal and Angnala 17onstitu- Why and when the friends of the lion,' dematd a new, declaration of Union reshaped their political Ideas upon Democratic since "the South the status of Southern institutions, the feels no initrest in the effort to galvanize noteworthy statement in relation to the the dead ;issues about' which Northern Winter, bill, the reference to Proir- Democrat' choose to fight." Bays' the identiel guidance of the reconstruction Chicago - ,nes: "There is no victory is matter, , -the merits of 'equal suffrage, the dead At. • .ilve want fresh ideas; we can clear exposition of sound financial ideas, not ie stand - still." And so the operations of the existing system of thr"mle "nfon except among the taxation and,llnally, the interests of public deform de racy ex c ept am virtue andsopial morality, with the result- .milnat d issues here, if you ing duty,ot the intelligent friends of true ?nal suffra: .Us better. Fight and - valuable progress ' in the path of re- /Our psyri If yPtC.fire Nina form—theeemre matter, so. Well handled tiettline at reedY to de line the Sanaa., : that anywords-of our&l4 you that rc„, he tap of a drum. would but dhlainhilt.tlia force of whatteriparo:UU' the fr ac 1 11111 " t 'Y CIth said.. His address will tell with pawoCka Mips fig effetiVuti6tepolithial :opinion iitokediz„ tot**ikir4 VA-4 f i 3 1/i loose dommonwegth. 4.11.1;+'4; OV-V4P.tr-AS: -; .11; .bi; • , fected action' in favor of the Article. In view of the public anxiety on this head, it is somewhat remariable that no entirely authentic record, up to the pres ent date, has yet appeared from the De partment. Tim Columbus Journal devotes four coltimns to the official record of Mr. Pen. dleton, the present choice of the Ohio Democracy for their Governor. Mr. Pen. 4 eton is another of the P's, a particular 1 friend and fellow-politician with Mr. Asa Packer. The only difference between the two candidates is this—that the. Ohio man has the intellectual - capacity, which our P. has not, to write letters and make speeches. This capacity he has exemplt. fled by eight years of disloyal talk and equally disloyal votes, while all the other gentleman could do , was ;to pat Vallandig - ham on the back, and sap "ate-boy." IR fact, however, the Ohio record shows just how the millionativ monopolist of the Lehigh would have talked and voted, if his education and opportunities had per mitted it. It is a lone and dreary and humiliating record of d ughface subser viency, partisan maligni y, and hate for the boys in blue, and foi the old flag for which their toil and blood were given on hundreds of battle•ftelds. \ AxttIIeLLY, in SepteMber or thereat bouts, a venerable citizen of Ohio, Hon. Times Evirso, is impelled, "by the present disturbed state Of the country," to print a letter, ostensibly addressed to a dozen or so of his octogenarian friends, and covering usually the broad side of such newspapers as are rash enough to print it, in which the Melancholy fact is stated that the Republic is fast galloping to the "demnition bow-wows" under Republican rule. Mr. EWING'S latest periodical visitation upon the patience of his ruined countrymen appears in a Cin cinnati paper of the 2nd. He declares, in ponderous periods, that everything is all wrong, and getting worse every day. It is said that Mr. Mmenn Ftmstonz agreeillvith him in thisi saddening view. If the latter could be induced to say so, in ten solid columns of a Buffalo news paper, it would afford s unerring an in dication of another Re blican victory in New York, as we gather, for Ohio, from Mr. Ewnto's recent jeremiad. The mighty current of events rolls on, over these venerable fossils, boulders of the glacial period, fast anchored to the bottom. I KNOW a man by the company he pre fers! Mr. Asa Packer, whose cordial , libspitalities were extended to Vallandig-• ham in 1.662, had also another Ohio friend by the name of Pendleton. The latter i was in Congress in '64 and voted against a resolution introduced by Gen. Smith, of Ky., and which expressed a terribly Radical idea as follows: ~A THEREAS, A most desperate, wick ed abd bloody rebellion exists within the jurisdiction of the "United States, and the safety and security of personal and na tional liberty depend upon its utter and absolute extinction; therefore, Resolved, That it is the political. civil, moral - and sacred duty of the people to meet it, fight it and crash it, and forever destroy it. Mr. Pendleton was one of the sixteen nays recorded against that resolution. HIS friend Packei would have made the number seventeen, if he had been a mem ber. These two men are now candidates for the highest offices of two great fhates, put up by the same party, and standing on the same platform as in '64—one of op position to the duty of the people to meet, fight, crush and destroy a wicked rebel lion. It was crushed, but without the aid of either of these gentlemen, who now propose found° as much as they can of the nation's great work. 'l\ "rITTSEP.APIfifTr*ZEM t .!.. .PAMPPAZ.Vis, §P76irIT,BIM.-.i. ' ...,-;*, .;T:-. , - ... . _ der your Copperneadiam; accept resulis; march forward with events and present to the people a Democracy which TO'cog. nises equal freedom and equal rights for all the liviag citizens of the Republic. Then we will meet you, and per haps with an universal concord. But ,so long l as you reject even the least of the legitimate come { qriences of thel" great struggle which finally blotted out slavery from the Con stitution and gave to the world, for the first time, a Republic in theory wholly free,—so long al you persist in standing on copperhead platforms, in nominating candidates whose records are all over bloodshot with } their complicity in die. loyal opposition to the Union cause, and in boasting of your fidelity to such wretched remnants of a lost cause as this hostility to the colored race—so long, the 1 dead will issues 19e, to scourge you year after year. _ . But don't think, when October comes, that your votes w ill count, as you are led to hope, for the permanent rejection of colored suffrage. Even if you car ry one electi4n, the Democracy of the Union are more against you than for you, and in another year or two you will have to - undo all you could nosy accomplish. We warn you, honest Democrats, that your anti negro plank is intentionally a humbug, a delusion, a snare. The Democracy of Pennsylvania will throw it overboard in a year or two, and you will uphold the equal suffrage of ail men as heartily as we do to.day. Can you do a wiser thing, .han to'come with us now ? RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. The Presbyterian urges the Board m Publication to issue a series of uniform les sons for the various classes and depart ments of the Sunday-schools under its care, as the Methodists and Baptiste have done, instead of using those prepared by private publishing houses. While it questions this mode of imparting instruc tion, and assisting teachers, inasmuch as the plan is popular and generally intro duced, it thinks the Board of Publication should • provide for its people suitable uniform lessons. Ministers are frequently blamed for being too censorious in their feelings, in regard to dancing and such amusements. Richard Grant White, quite an authority in literary circles, comes to the aid of the clergy, and pronounces dancing at fash ionable receptions as "an empty evolu tion practiced by young - gentlemen and ladies whose scarcity of brains , forbids . their being entertained in any other way." Centenary Methodist Episcopal church, in Chicago, • has inaugurated a series / of organ concerts on Saturday afternoons. a exceedingly low rates, fifteen cent a single admission, or ten tickets for a l ler, It is thought these Saturday aficr noon matinees will benefit the church, and cultivate a healthful musical taste in the congregation. The two Ge.neral Assemblies of. the Presbyterian Church at their meeting in New !fork, reccommended the churches throughout both Branches of the Presby terian Church, to observe the second Bab- - bath in September, as a day of fervent and united prayer to Almighty God. that he would grant all "Um spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord," and in the new relation contemplated, of the union of both Branches, to "reeP the unity of the Spirit in the bonds of peace. f Sunday afternoon last. Bishop Dome nec, of the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese, .preacied in St. Andrew's church, Alle gheny City, at the close of which he con. firmed eighty-five persons, including a number of candidates and converts. Dr. Franklin Moore, formerly of Pitts. burgh Conference, - now of the Philadel phia Conference of the M. E. Chinchillas gone to California for the benefit o his health. His throat is severely affected and disables him from pulpit services. Pittsburgh hospitality will be taxed to a considerable degree to entertain the two. General Assemblies of the Presbyterian. Church and the American Board of Com. missioners for Foreign Missions, but, we I think the good reputation of this coin• munity will not suffer in this respect by , the pressure.- The Board of Commission ers will meet on the sth of October, and the General Assemblies on the 10th of November. Dr. Plumer, formerly of the Western Theological Seminary, whose home Is new at Columbia, South Carolina, has been supplying the First Presbyterian (Dr. Varo:/yke's) church, in Brooklyn, this summer. The Presbyterian repre sents that Dr. Plumer's Commentary on the Psalms has been - so'acceptable that it has reached the third edition. At a recent camp meeting in St. Mary's county, Maryland, several Roman Catho lics were among the conv'ersions. At the recent consecration of St. Paul's Episcopal church in Erie, Pa., - 131shbp Serfoot and. Rev. Mi. Scarborough, Rec. tor of Trinity church in this city, preached, and Revs. Eger, Hartman and others of this 'Diocese, participated, in the services of the occasion. It was stated at e annual meeting . of the General Assoc tion of Congregation alists of New il pshire, some days since, that former one-third to. over one-half of the mites of Dartmouth College entered t e ministry . but now i not over one sixth..' Reporid on the state of religion aregen rally favorable. t - Dr. - Alemany, the Roman Ciatholio 4,rchatiabep of CT faro* saya-ilit Ini4; , ~. 1 14 0 844 0 10 4 1 ns • I ! l ?Dcoleur. - . 0 . 101 . _ , . the Sunday religious services of the Ro man Catholic children in the Industrial School at San Francisco, on the ground that two-thirds of the children are Catho lics. The Protestant clergy oppose it, affirming the present religions services are "broadly liberal," and that the pro posal would convert -the whole into a Roman Catholic Institution. Dr. G. F. Davis, a Baptist minister, preached on a very stormy Sabbath, in South Reading, Mass., when only eight hearers were present, from 1 Peter, 111: 20; wherein few, that is, eight souls— were saved by water. The twenty-third annual meeting of the American Missionary Society will be held at Mount Vernon, Ohio, Wednes day, October 27th. Sermon in the even ing by President Sturtevant. Reference was made recently to hold ing a special service in Christ Episcopal church, Allegheny City, for the purpose of devising means to provide services for Churchmen from the ofd country. In accordance with this request, an im mense concourse of people assembled in that church on Sunday evening last, in cluding quite a number of persons edu cated in the Church of England abroad. and also visiting strangers from other re- _ ligious bodies. Bishop Kerfoot preached an able sermon bearing upon the interest in hand, and produced a fine impression. It was announced that the further con sideration of the subject would take place tomorrow evening, by the Rector, Rev. B. F. Brooke, at which time it Is expected those interested, and for whom these special services are designed to.reach, will be present on that occasion. A correspondent of the Presbyterian Banner condemns the practice of select; ing ministers to take charge of schools, when so many parishes need pastors, and there are so many laymen well qualified as instructors. Vine-street Congregational Church, Cincinnati, under the pastoral care of Rev; H. D. Moore, formerly of this city-, has been undergoing repairs for some time. The church was re-opened last Sunday with suitable services. Bishop Kingsley, in one of his graphic letters from Salt Lake City, says the Mormon preachers take no text, but preach about keeping up fences and other secular matter, and the beat way to get along independently of the Gentiles. . A Methodist attending a Presbyterian, Convention, out West, was asked what he was doing there. He replied, "When I get to heaven I expect to find so many Presbyterians there, that I would like to get a little acquainted with them before. hind." The First United Presbyterian Church 1 is Boston, Rev.. Dr, Blaikie, are about to lay the cornerstone of a new church edi fice. VI asttingtou Items The following changes of Postmasters in Pennsylvania were made : Plum, Ire nango county, J. C. Crowthers, vice J. M. Newton, resigned; Conneautville, Crawford county, J. D. Van Tassel, vice R. B. Heynes, resigned; Dawson's Sta tion, Fayette county, J. B. Snyder, vice J. Newmeyer, removed. The question of the authority of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to order the transfer of a Supervisor to duty from one district to another is the subject of discussion here. It is held by legal authority that such a right does not exist in law, and that to secure a transfer it is necessary to first dischargt the officer, and then to reappoint him to another dis trict. There is no impropriety in stating that the basis on which 'General Sickles is in structed to offer the mediation of our Government, is that Spain shall so knowledge the independence of Cuba, with the understanding that whatever compensation she may consider herself entitled to, is to be determined by a corn mission of disinterested parties, but in no case is our Government to become re sponsible for the payroent of any sum agreed upon. The coir i ensation is to re imburse the Spanish Government for Online buildings, forts, and such other public property as may be surrendered to the Cuban authorities. . Governoi Senter. in the course ot_con versation on the Fifteenth Amendment, said he has no - doubt the Legislature just elected will ratify it. The Legisla ture elect convenes by law on the first Monday in October. and Governor Sen ter is of the opinion that he has no au thority under the Constitution of Ten nessee.to call together the old one. Mr. Senter intimated, although he did not say so in so many words, that he would not call any extra session of the Legislature. There is a diversity of opinion on his le gal, right to convene the body' some legal-gentlemen maintain that he has the cower to do so, and his opponents say that he merely wishes to dodge the question and escape any responsibility on the suli ect. • • Troublesome Youth. Yesterday Charles B. Taylor, a some what eccentric character,Nade informs, tion, before Alderman Shore against Thotrum BarbLu for assault and battery. lor is ,an old gentleman, and from his peculiariti made the sport of the youthf ul'f ra ter nity who reside near the head of Wylie street, in which locality he stops. He seems to have no home and occupies an old board pile as a lodging place, getting his meals it is not known where through the day. He alleges that Barbin struck'• him two or three violent blows with his fist without cause or provocation. The accused was arrested and gave bail fbr Couit. ' Poplar Alley Troubled. There is , trouble among the denizens of:Poplar alley. Mrs. Barney Mills and Elisabeth Brown, tansies of dusky hue, are the aisturbers of the peace of that sequestered locality. They had a little difference arising out of the age , of a cer tain lot of shingles, which each claims as her own. .',-The misunderstanding led to dettiOnstrative actions on the part of Mrs. Brown, which , • caused her more pesopfal oppOnent to try a settlement of the *Mr in a suit for disorderely cot.; dtlot beibre Alderman Shore, Elizabeth - being' set • downp deg:admit.Alder. , mints wisdom wtliendfrOg tataOdate atlO•tolia. • 4 re;:ef. • - Methodist Conference, rittaburgh Dl trict. (Correspondence of the rittahnrsh Gazette. FAIRMONT, W. Va.; Sept. 1, 1869. The members of the Pittsburgh Annu al Conference of the Methodist Church, convened in the Methodist church at Fairmont, W. Va., to-day, to hold their Annual Session, . James Robison, Presik dent, in the Chair. The session was opened under the di rection of the President, Drs. Brown, Springer, Ltushly and President Mahan, of Adrian College, participating in the devotional exercises, which occupied about two hours' time, and was truly a precious time, and a good preparation for the bnsinesi of the Conference. The roll was then called and nearly all entitled to seats, about an equal number. of ministers and laymen, responded to their names. It being nearly twelve o'clock, the session adjourned to meet at half past one o'clock. Closed with prayer. Half past one P. M., Conference opened. Religious exercises conducted by Dr. Collier. Roll called, minutes -read and approved, and business resumed. Quite a number of ministers from dif ferent denominations were introduced and voted to honorary seats. _ Several committees were elected. Sat urday afternoon at three o'clock. was set apart to hear President 'Ashen on Adrian College interests. The present Secreta ries, Colhonr and Patten, were re-elected. The President read his annual report, showing • the churches throughout the district nearly all in a very prosperous condition. • Wm. Collier, D. D.. after a tie vote with his predecessor, Rev. James Robi son, was elected President of Conference for the ensuing year. J. Robison and D. R. Helmick, minis ters, and John Croft and G. W Pogue, lay men, were elected Committee on Pastoral Relations, and Rev..l. L. Simpson, Con ference Steward. Adjourned for the day. SECOND DAY. Session opened with religions service conducted by Rev. J. L. Simpson. Roll called, and minutes of yesterday after noon session read and approved. Minister& gave brief accounts of their operations during the past year, and the conditions of the churches they served. After' hearing from a number of the members, the President announced the usual committees. "Adjourned with prayer. Provided with. Domes. Yesterday two children, sisters, named Felzer, who have been inmates of the City Poor House, were bound out as to the stipulations provided. The youngest, aged four years, found a home with Mr. John Arlig, and the other, six years of age, was taken charge of by Mr. Samuel Neely. The stipulations of indenture in cases of this kind are that the children shall be taught the mysteries of housekeeping, and in all respects be well cared for, until they reach the age of eighteen, when they are each to be presented with a suit of clothing of the value of forty dollars and the sum of seventy-five dollars•itt lawful money and their freedom. —A terrible tragedy occurred in the town of Orrwell, N. Y., Thursday after noon. A farmer named Join) Reynolds was stabbed several times by a neighbor named Rnssell Woolver. Reynolds ex pired almost immediately. The diffi culty arose from alleged trespasses and other-land trouble. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE DU. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Dysentery DB. KEYSER'S BOWEL CIIbE gores Bloody Mx. KETBERII BOWELoCURE Cures Chronic Diarrhea. DR. REIBEIVB BOWEL CORE Cores Bilious Collo; DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE • Beres Cholera Infantsue. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURT Ceres the worst ease of Bowel Disease. DR. Kmyszws BOWEL CURE -- "Zores.Cholers Idorbus. DB. KEYSER'S BOWEL. CUBE Will cure in one or two doses. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE Ought to be ln every badly. DR. SZYBER , S BOWEL CURE Is a sure cure for Griping. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE. Will not DM In oneesse. - DR. GEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE ~ DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE Cures &limner Complaint. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Will cure Watery . Dadaism,. BR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE _ . , "Never fills. DR. kEYBEIV 8 BOWEL GIME Di a valuable medicine. Dr. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBA Is a protection against Cholera. DR. KEYBER'S BOWEL CUBE - W ill save hundreds of valuable lives DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL - OHRE is one of the most valuable remedies ever discovered far all diseases Incident to this lesson of the, year. Hundreds of enterers could be relievedln less thari a day by a'speady resort to this most velum. ble medicine,'particularly valuable, whelk system is apt to become disordered by the two ree use of uniipe and crude vegetables. Price 50 Cents. Bold at DR. KEYSER'S GREAT MEDICINE STORE. 107 Liberty St., and by all druge lets. ' A REGULAR HABIT OF MICIDY k - • Is ibsointeli, essential to • physical health -ann. • . clearness of intellect. Nor is this all. Beauty of penon cannot coexist with an nnnataral eon - • ditlon of tue bowels. thr o ughe or nature fuse miller of the system these waste pipes, IS as necetsary to t e purity of the •dy as the tree passage of the anat. of a city through its sewers is neeessary to the health of list Inhabitants.• • • • r Indigeel lOn Is the primary cause 'of most of the diseases of the dlachargion organs stud axle of its moat common resultel. CONSTIPATION. This complaint, besides being dames:rout to itself, has many disagreeable concomients—auch as an on pleasant breath, a. sallow skin. cobtanituatcd olood and bile, hemorrhoids. headache, - loss 0f,. , melanin. and general • • HOSTET UN% isTOMACIU-DITTNIV3 remove.. all these evils by removing - %twit immediate cause in the uigestive organs and serrating the !: action. of the intestines. The coMbination of properties la this cdebrAted .treparatioa is one of its chief merits.; irisltOtmerelyastimulant, or a tonic, or ao anti-bilious agent. or a riervine. ore depurent. or • cathartic. but all these .1• curative • eltmeute judicionsts blended in one powerful restorative. • It tends activity and vig_or to the Inert and enervated stomach, relieves tab alimentary caner of its obstruclious, and gives tone lit the membrane - which lines it. gently stimulates the liver, braces .tho nerves. and cheers the an mu salts.' No ot be, rrepletiY nes losses such a • variety of riValetua virtues. It is - these characteristics that It owslyits pre,. 'Use as a househo.d medicine. Nacherlence bas Droved that it is as harmless as tt is etileatioms. .and hence it is as popalarwlth the weaker sex as with the so rooster. • • • - , ' 110•TXTTICIVEI •14TOXLCS' BITTNICria geld th bottle.. only . . ' L tda. trade.markriblierant st Z' Anew and- engraved en- the Mete With bar t e e n s it t r o a f n gde revenue. Minntcp.rabseaWa • .. • ,13 Cures Diarrtires. Cures Iricexatlon. If early resort Is had to it. E