The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, September 11, 1869, Image 4

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PrcriTT a f?,.-3 . pages of
772:3712 17321:—.Secop.d Page:
Poetry, "A:liCkni7ill Ct,nLcan - >," Relig
-17018 and G , ncra , : Infel:f'genee, Per.so:
27vird and Sixth pages: . Fiaance and
Trade, Harizete, T:Pports, G-7id BLer
'26l . .mth page : A Swim 1:(2, 1 .! Lake, i7;e
R0T!(712C6 Irqeki;igGrJaiim Brown'
_Dying Spreel,, and - og:,:r flue:es/A:n:7 Mi.!.
,:erany, AM'a.3677157112.
MMEll==lll
f)Erao.tErmi: sl Latlvcr;.±,
U. S. BOND' st Fraillzlort, S
Ck:LD closed. in New York yester,l,ls,
Dior. Jouii BELL, of Tennessee ; died
-At :his borne yesterday.
REGISTIZATIOTT of Venango coun
ty foots up 9115, e;-- - ceetling the Presiden
:ial - rote last year G 12.•
L PuocLimwrioti: from General Canby
anuounces the results of the Virginia
eleLlr . .on. Governor Walker is to be in
st.•;.':.4.A on the 21st, and the new Legisla
tut will meet Oct. sth.
--.7:urtorTAN Ilt3ricr.inoN has been very
large during the two months past. Over
forty ships have sailed from Liverpool
sloce, for car portsl, among their passen
ger.: were a large number of puddlers
from the "black country", with spinners
f.‘.,.m?. factory operatives from Prezton.
German-exodus is equally extensive,
much larger share of this than hereto
for being directed to our southern ports.
Ir surounn not be forgotten that all
city, - ward, borough and township officers
are to be elected at the fall elections.
None of these offices can, under the law,
filled next spring. All offices which
expire next spring must be provided for
in the corning October. But little
time remains to make the needful nom
irte".ions, and our friends, in town or
country, should a once take due order
for setting their tickets in the field.
7.1:s opposition in - Ohio are again at their I
ob.l7,ame. A majority in the nest Legisla
ture world be worth far more to the party
than the mere election of the State of.
ficera. We learn that they are concen
trating their efforts upon the close and ,
"doubtful counties, colonizing largely from
other counties where their majorities are
large, and keeping an eye single upon
the purpose of securing the largest num
ber of legislative districts. The Buckeye
'Republicans should attend to this matter
beibre it is too late.
J..;TENTA:TioN AM) MEAMi F.)4. S.
W hear, from Manch Chunk, that the
;s generally conceded there that Mr.
Aso Packer did endow Lehigh University
7-7Stil a large pecuniary gift. We have
also the true explanation of the milk in
that cocoa-nut, at* the matter is understood
by those who best knOw him and the facts
in the case. This Lehigh University is
AO institution for the exclusive benefit of
such families of affluence as can afford to
pay about 000 per year for the education
of a EOM It costs at least that sum an.
malty to get the benefits of that excel
lent institution of learning. While Judge
Pacter was found willing to attest in
this splendid style his interest in
the education of the children of
the . _ wealthy, he has positiv_ely repu
-7 dieted his obligations as a citizen to con
tribute to the -school-fund for the educa
tion of the poor children of his county.
Sued for his taxes in '67_,by the,_Demo•
cretin County Commissioners, Poor Di.
rectors, Borough Council and School
-Directors, he paid for that one year, and
has Dot paid a dollar there since. If he
had bestowed a little less upon his uni
xmityoutd a little more upon tire schoola
GM
of the people, he would have better illus
trated a poor lash's Idea of Democracy.
W HERE THE FAULT LIES.
It is said that • they are disputing, at
§cranton, upon the proper responsibility
for the present imperfections in the ven
tilation and mansgement of coal mines.
Fault is found with the miners for their
readiness to work in collieries where life
is manifestly unsafe. Little know these
carping critics of the necessities which
too often drive husb,ands and'parents into
the jaws of death, seeliinz. limed tor their
families dependent upon the avails of their
daily labor! As little do they reflect upon
th:3 plain duty of government to proVide,
as it does, for the public safety, in
numberless ways, against the cupidity
or nil'. essuess of individuals or
of cot•porations, and • against the
.11 - 441 411: tO
reeklas3 :atilt:en:nee or ignorance
tiv.) itself is constantly
lity. In neilecting to surround the
:: , ierground labor of the Commonwealth
- • , .1 - .11 the safe-Friar :1s wilich public duty
:eqUires, on: Legislaturl , has ignored one
ple,i , ,est of their first obligations.
:nal:or no Clarence -,, - :;ether, or not,
miLers nra, - ; 11::cc11•2 . ;s of their per
safety. It is the Insiness of au
yto restrain hccilessness with
11.r.ry li nit ne .7.3 to enfor c.e a
mition upon employers.
Tressly for .1 - ach rzes that gOv':l2l.
2 - r;
)i, ~_-_„
-L-IL:14)1711 ACY 11r."i71)t-l3t (7.ll(liiN: - .*.
The spirit, of :... genuine democracy 1
7i'lthrully Reeks the *realest good of the 1
lad avoids need!ess in-_
~ u p to the late' ,2sts cf those few v:ho
g1—•.:137 e7:periar e some clegr:::e of in
dividual loss from the applicatim of _that
democratic r?i , lciple. "When a Demo
cratic 'Senator 2rom Luzerne, in the last
Legislature, v..ith the aid of an uttbroken
vote from alt the other Senators of his
4 - ‘. , at in their seats, sue
-..,atirg the legal enact
1f..,
ievised and compreh en
the reenlatio i n of mines
7 .of.life therein, the
• I •
IN li I
C
AND 3
- uP.I;.
party then `•re'
cecdc•:i in de
i:_cnt. of a well
syst;:la 5 r
Intl the pr:.4,
quavdort Lizlli
--did he a - id li
l' le: ..., •
"l. situ-:_
1 - 3: -, .7. - atl,c.:l , f , 13y w
Tul
doomsday, against a wearure of wh:en
he knew only enough to know that Its
operation would cost the coinpaniessome
thing and the oberatives nothing; he might
have irotesteci all summer—until the
Avondale holo l caust would have con
founded his tonigne—against such "rough
I
treatment" for the corporations as would
j
have raved :his terrlble slaughter, and he
would have ben blessed with never a
word of appreivM from the people of Lu
zeros, to who that kind of "treatment"
would have beet jt , stly acceptable. The
miners of his istrict would have, been
thankful for such a law us that which he
opposed--and' this ho must have known.
Probably not one citizen of the Luzerne
district now reels keener regrets for the
failure of that legislation than does Bina
tor Turner. Unnappily, his regrets will
not avail to reanimate this small army of
the dead whose lives the proposed law
would hive saved.
This is a very proper occasion for the
Democratic masses, in the mining coun
ties, to ponder upon the proper explana
tion of the fact that every vote, cast for a
bill whlCh would have subjected this Av
ondale Mine to a seasonable inspection,
-was given by the Senators of one party,
while every Senator present, of the other
party, voted against it. These facts are
too striking to be overlooked just now—
especially in the A.vcrulale neighborhood.
ISE
0i)V1011°, one
b
'
1111
,Lly of the! fe
C i f filee °Jere 2mpievcd?
1 -.1: !.lived
THE RIGHTS OF NAVIGATION.
The public.spirited gentlemen attend
ing tin. Commercial Cronvention„at Keo
kuk, have done wisely to confine their
deliberations to topics upon which they
could rely on the hearty accord of their
constituents, the business men of the
great valley- an its tributaries. The
question of a tariff was not one of these.
The day has not yet come when
that has ceased to be a political issue,
and its discussion at Keokuk would have
fatally embaraesed a nonpartizan Con
vention.
The meeting presents a well•considered
and comprehensive plan for the regula
tion of bridge-construction over the navi
gable streams. No hnpracticable or un
necessary restrictions are proposed for the
railways; indeed the navigation interest
carries concession to the utmost point of
safety in the Keokuk programme. But a
single span of four hundred feet is
de
manded for the bridges 'over the Ohio, all
the other spans being one hundred feet
less. . Other details of the measure pro
vide for points of less importance, but
which experience forbids to be over
.ooked.
Taken altogether, the bill now recqm
mended presents a fair basis for an ami
cable and, just compromise on this
bridge question. If it be properly
presented at Washington next winter,
and adequately supported, on the floors
and in the lobbies of Congress, there
'would be little difficulty in securing its
passage., The Keokuk Convention must
have some influence in consolidating the
navigation interests of the West, for
greater efficiency with Congress and with
the public, we presume that action was
had, l before the meeting dissolved, to se
cure ‘a united and vigorous support of its
recommendations.. It may be too late to
undo the existing mischiefs, but not to
gtiard atainst their multiplication for the
Lure.
ITTSBURGR GAZEITE,: SATURDAY, SEPTEMB
HENRY W. WILLIAMS.
Two years have elapsed since the.an
flexed declaration was made, by leading
business men of this city, of their confi
dence in the personal and profeSsional
qualifications of the Republican candi
date of that year fur the Supreme Bench.
In the ensuing October, he had a majority
of the legal vote of the Commonwealth,
but was counted out by Democratic frauds
upon the poll. Subsequently raised to ;
that bench by Executive appointment, he
awaits a popular re-election now. His
judicial career,
.for nearly a twelvemonth
since he became a member of the Court
has subjected those qualifications, of
which his neighbors spoke so kindly in
1567, to the critical scrutiny of the pro,
fession throughout the State, and the
gentlemen who signed the address_ have
the-, pleasure of recognizing the universal
approbation by which their friendly judg
ment has been so conclusively sustained.
The vote of Alleghany next month will
show that a distinguished public .servant
has gained still greater'strength by trial.
Perrsiatnoir, September 2d, ISO 7. •
2'e, the Merchants and Business Men of
Eastcrn Pennsylvania:
The undersigned, repronnt:ng
v rions branches of entorpriF.e, iu Pitt , _;-
burgh, beg leave to press the claims of
Hen. Henry W. Williams, ea - Alt:ate
for Um Sniu,ae-e Judgeship, upou your
notice.
Matte Wil:iams has sat upon Ihe
mete el Cur Dr , :rict Court for nearly
.cep years. The eases whi , tda have
hetore hint have beo:t as various
and inlricAte as are the exigencies wnicir
give rise to dispute in a Cl`ll l . I'D of traO
so iargaly interested in Mining, manu
facturing mercantile, and marine pur
suits. xis dei_dsiens NUT. Leon rteapted
IV Siepteine _Neel< a,t , tit,: law, Mad
have commamled more gem•ral satisfaa•
lion among business men than those of
any otter judge in the State. His van:-
od judicial experience, his extensive
legal. acquirements, his sterling integrity,
and his . great ly
qualify him Par the h:gl.3 noE.4ition of the
Supreme Court.
Judge li ,l!iina recer eou;:leatnee ,l or
favored - the repndi 7fL,7t of coun!y, 'Slate
of
71aio;:ul
* *
E
'We earnestly urge you, therefor:, not
on:v to vote for but to throw the whole
Nveight of your ihtinence in .favor of the
Hon. Henry W. and' help 113
elect him by a majority so emphatic as
docide . .lhnt hencerorlii the national
credit shall be Sustained, jrislica vindica
ted, and the lights of citizens fairly and
',carless : ly luaintaincd.
•
-•rin tie
r. - lasi ,- ,•F. ~-,.‘..!.;1.,
.. .
C.:0w1 . , .11, A. l'allnestOck'sSon
P. , ..1..r0t Dt.: .4.._0., A: C,..,
. .1.'r..!:.:, .4. `3,•ris'. .4pAuv.. CllA:f.int . 1 / 4 Co..
1 17,11. !;......n. , y, ,1.: - . Cu.. ..N. , .,1tr,u11. Cook .4 1 11 ••
z l, :zni.ll!. .t...; :IL,. - r Akr.,,,1. i'clrn A Co.,
.1,1:n :-.,,.... - •T:on,i, Mar
I. P. .r!....Na A C,. , l'. 11. Nt..vin . 1 / 4 . 1.' , ..,
ca., mcc,,,nl., ..; ~, ,'.... .Inmvs MoAul.y.
J. Iltro. 7, I.l.trt, CAligt.....y .4 C:,..
N. Ilv:Ine, 4: z'cr.7.:. Thowas M. tio,..e.
C. G. ilussLy.
___.
~re. ' 1..
Wits:: all the traveling that was done
was-over the high roads, by means of
public or private horse power, the firth
quency and boldnets of highway robber
ies
wero notorious. _ W 3 have since been
in the habit of congratulating ourselves
upon the utter decadence of that science,
of which Claude Duval and his cotern
porcries were the most illustrious pro
lessors, since the introduction of steam
traveling conveyances. It appears, lii)w
-evor, that we have been too confident;
highway robberies have been of very
frequent occurrence throughout the mid
dle and southern counties of the Com- '
monwealth during the past six months,
and now that the winter is approaching
we are beginning to bear of them taking
place in the streets of cities and towns.
It is humiliating to discover that a crime
prevalent generations since'and suppress
ed by our fathers should spring up again
in alarming proportions in our own day,
and were it not that the country seems
to have more than it can do, with oven
greater and more heinous crimes, we
might hope that some effective means
might be devised for suppressing this
re• uvenation of an ancient evil.
AT LIEGE, in Belgium, thirty thousand
Belgian sharp shooters will compete for
prizes sometime during the present
month. The cable informed us', a day
or two ago, that a•British nobleman, who
has long interested himself in the volun
teer ino - , , emtnt in England, was anxious
that a competitive shooting-match should
take place between Englishmen and
Americans. From these two items we
are led to think how do Americans
stand as marksmen? We have been in
the habit of depending almost altogether
upon our immense wildernesses and prai
ries t 3 furnish us with all of our sharp
shooters,- but, year by year this source
dwindles, and the race of woodsmen and
trappers is dying out. It might not do
any good to hold an international shoot
ing-match, but we do think it might be
well, in some way, to excite a general in
terest in rille.shooting. Excellence in
that exercise can do no harm in, a Coun
try where every man may be a soldier,
and to attain this, it might be well to in
augurate something similar to the .vr4l
- movements which for years - have
been so popular both in Great Britain
and Belgium.
IN sprrE of tho spread of. Liberty and
Liberalism, there are still great countries
which know almbst' nothing at all of
either one or the other. During the past
one hundred years all the civilized world
has changed the various governments
from Absolutism to positive or cornpaila
tive popular. forms, We have seen
1 .
Franco, Russia, Italy, Austria, and even
far off China and Japan, yielding to t e
march of prOgressive ideas and the for e
of ciroumstandes, but we see Thibet; a
country a quarter as large . us the United
States, with six millions of inhabitants ,
as benighted and exclusive as ever. For
an unprotect . ed foreigner to penetrate
this land is almost certain death, and
even the inhabitants' themselves.. wlp
are abject elaves of an arrogant theo
cracy, are said not to be aware who their
sovereign is, the Grand Lama being sup
posed never to die, although he we*.
atonally changes his physical tiody. We
call attention to this fad for the bettßat
MINOR TOPICS.
1: ~ .
M , Z
b } 'i.
L ~
~'yr
~~
of those ardent missionaries who
go abroad, but express at horn:
thanks that the millenium is .
hand, because Christianity and C
tion have, hand in hand, perinea
whole world. It is a sad fact, roil
still remains, unpermeated, as a l
bling•block in the way of the mill
of liberty.
THE: CE.L.NE... , _zr. seem to havE
sorry prospect before them if th•
,
to this country.! At the best, t:
receive but a cold welcome fr.
' white citizsns, and the colored
.
jmany portions of the country,
clared, beforehand, war to the ti
toe-nails with the yellow, oblic
strangers. And, as if this W
already quite sufficient to pr
I:wir utter discomforu., we rca. , in
en
Oregon paper, that the origins posses
sors of the soil arc tilled with .n especial
grudge against the CeleptiellleW comers.
Among it:: local items is a noti e of the
capture of a Pi-ute, who had been in
dulging himself by 'killing a Chinaman
tbiulc, that a collection
of a few such facts ne,:tiy prihted iu the
Chinese end "Pie4:eon' i,ffiguAges:
might, if - vridely circulated in their Own
country, act,as a wholesome check on
the de'6llo o CiiiaaiO CIl to jOLF.:III3y
to
forein parts.
•
D l'A r. EITIST OY, r),
T'111!01.1 and Lord Deri , y,: Lad
ericcee Europoan
than any other man
7tairki occupied F ome r,f h:
time h, -writing A, diary of his
manueript, which but race
discovered, is about to be
either bodily or in - copious
If what we have a right to
bo more interLsting and it:
than any book of a similar nal
has3:evor written. poßsiW
unplit,ftz'Ailq
in length of ex - perienc , s and la mviodgc
of the politics and lent cro,
Seward is the American Prot >typo of
Lord Palmerston, and it is to ie hoped
that, before his long dull xi - set 1 nubile,
lif6 closes, he will furnish the World with
such a volume as can be e.xp,t , cl from
no other source. 6
I=El
Tut - new Dauocrri:ic catechism in
Tennessee makes - very interesting, r,ud
infz lit re is nn extract, from the Mem
phis Aral.adwiii, f r viiich its ctlitor, if in
Pennsylvtinia, would Le read out of the
party :
Recognize the rieg,ro's right to vote;
cease to abase and `veer at him; treat
him as a human being, with a soul in his
body, and as susceptible of the sensibil
ities, the resentments and frailties of hu
manity, and he will at once emulate the
magnanimity of, the whites, endeavor
to rival them in industry, enterprise anti
thrift, cultivate amity, educate his chil
dren, acquire homesteads for hi , family,
strive to deserve the confidence of his
fellow men, and above all, he will never
cast his vote to the inj-ury of the white
man, who he has learned by kindness is
his only friend.
0 -
OF the 'Avondale disaster, the Pottsville
Journal says: '
This system of ventilation, by means of
furnaces at the bottom of the slope, is
very generally used in the Lackawanna
region, and, until lately in _England,
where it was used for ventilating the deep
est mines. Had the system of ventilating,
now very generally in nsein this country,
and which has been adopted in England
with success, by means of faus stationed
on the surface and near the mouth of the
shaft,heen used, the ac2ident, in all hu
man probability, would not have occur
red; or had egress been afforded by means
of air shafts, or otherwise, we would not
now be called upon to record this lamen
table loss of life.
31ISCELLINE0US.
COWPER, the Cleveland bigamist, has
been held to bail in Erie, in the sum of
$6,500, and has also been sued for $50,-
000 eamages.
Mr. ROBERT SELLERS, aged eighty
five years, residing in Franklin, Venango
county, died suddenly from apoplexy
on the oth inst.
THE uneasiness in New York c:ly
- concerning the water supply is wonder
fully exercising the Fire Commissioners
and insurance men.
CLEVELAND has a breach of promise
case. , The parties are Nancy Sloan vs.
Wm. Pender g est, he nearly sixt% and she
not far from fifty-ars of age. Damages
asked, $3,000. -
TILE Massachusetti supreme Court has
decided that a non-resident bank stock
holder is liable to taxation. The clues
' tion involved was the constitutionality of
the act under which the tax was assessed.
TnE wedding shoes of Cotton Mather's
grandmother, with the original publish
meat of her marriage pasted on the sole
of one of their, are in the ppssession of
the descendants of the Winslow family in
Duxbury, Mass.
PERPETUAL injunctions have been
granted against forty.elght
at Cleveland,
dentists and
others in the 11. S.. Court
for infringment on the Goodyear patent,
and a commissioner appointed to take ac
count of damages.
Tam application for the pardon of
Daniel S. Curtis, imprisoned in Massa
chusetts for assault and battery, for pull
ing the nose of a Mr. Churchill in a rail
way car, has been 'Unanimously refused
by the Committee on Pardons.
AT TILE Union Depot, Cleveland, 0..
a day or two ago, in the handling of bag
gage, a revolver fell from a satchel to
the floor and was discharged thereby, the
-charge taking effect in the ankle of John
-Higgins, a brakeman, Inflicting a serious
wound.
At New Derry, Westmoreland county,
on thelLth, Timothy Conner cowhided
Elias Huntzberger, who retaliated by
,shooting his assailant in the leg, inflict
ing a severe wound.
A little boy, six years of age, son of.
David Hart, of East Boston, was run
over by a horse car Saturday afternoon.
When his father arrived at the scene of
the disaster, the little sufferer said,
."Don't whip me father, I will never do
so again," He died in about an hour.
Near -Port Jarvis, on the Erie Rail
road, on.the evening of 9th, a locomo
tive; exploded, killing the engineer, fire-
Aii4 br.eOUWIDA
11; 1869.
THE COURTS.
never
their
Quarter Se.ssions--Juece
FRIDAY Sept. 10.—The.case,o
!ear at
S ili za-
rnonwealth vs. 1). O'Neil an4l L. W.
Rool:, indicted fo - pril
ported, was reson;c .1, 1. tla.
wealth offered te,Lii‘t.nl'. to prov: , ',hat
the defer.dants dle
Pittsburgh Daitc /icy attar wldch
the case closed on the part - 4 the rros.c
cation.
A. M. Brown,E.r! then o,rencJ
case for the defoic...,
proposed to offer in the cnt , re
article in the Di:sprach, which contained
t idle6edlibeloi.s c;?.::or. •
Mr. Swartzweid.ir -Thje .t i, holding
that the rev:minder of the wa , nat
reiavent testiincny - .
The Court overrule'? tiic oiljection and
the article wa ,, reqd in ovid3ll'.:`,l.
Mr. liamptcu, foT tlfo dc.fen(lants, thell
proposed to read tl - e renor: of the
proceudiucs to .'cc ire:
case, pUbliiinci the 1:h..71) , :trh
day prececih . ;:*.no iic lice.th,n.of :h. - . „ . ..1-
leg . c.ct a , ch tldtLlitted, uir.ch_•,l)
objccAcd
!dr. Prctr3. f Ihe defendeuts,
in .3,:hle•tc:p±hc ict••:;•::ettt cf
•- " ' '
lad the
Thibet
etum-
MEM
but a
MED
ey will
m our
ones, izi
ave de-
MEM
co•ey ,d
re rot
• Je for
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c , CCI
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n
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MC
ENE
EEL
. _
Mr.
jutstificati.'n ,;;;
: that. I.
had. pr.:.-, - .tlF
PUblie'?.tV;:l ,
lished a
Mr. Sv ,trt
oblection
Mr. Stv•trt...tvsl;l2l
- 11
timer*" anntint , I.tic
trial let n
to the
.hry
Lion the _curt
Mr. tirown instru
the jury the if ictt:r. I the allez , :
libeion.;;;-.!:rrcfi. to the of' i
aetiot. between D. O'lti•ti
and'.!.."... P. I.: Nri:, et al., they must r.;•.
turn .t not gullty. He though
the C.;:trt ',alto the matter fro.h
the jury and decide that there was n
cause for, 'action, Out he would nut. insi.,t
upon it.
Mr. Swertzwelder held that the Coa.. - t
could not so instruct the jury. The in.
dictment does not allege that the defend
ant charged the pro , ecutor with the com
mission of any erirriA)
Mr. Hampton then argued tie case at
length., and was followed stemlz.
welder for the defend, who ma le a most
ingoillbus and able argument.
Judge Mell , in then deli zs...:ed
charge of the court to the jury
The hour for adjournment having ar
rived, the jury were directed to seal
their verdict. if they should agree before,
court met..
Court then adjourned.
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LIST FOIL NOND:s.".Y.
- No. 160. Commonweal-1 vs. O'Neill
et al
414. Commonwealth - vs,
Markey.
Commonwealrib 73. John An
derson.
" 45. Commonwealth vs. Hen - 7
Beady.
, r 33. Commonwealth vs. P.o bort
Earley.
" 63. Commonwealth vs. James Mc-
Kinna.
41. Commonwealth vs. John Mc.
Nervy.
" 10. Commonwealth vs. John Jay
and D. Ludwig.
TRIAL LIST FOR TI:E. ,, DAF•
" 305. Commonwealth vs. \. 4,_4•eorge
Folmor.
" 42. Commonwealth vs. Lorin
Kohl.
" • 72. Commonwealth vs. John Man
ning.
" 73. Commonwealth
Stewart.
" Commonwealth vs. John Key
ser
<c Commonwealth vs. Patrick
Daly.
14 Commonwealth vs. John Pow
ers. •
" Commonwealth vs. Bernhard
Marks.
Commonwealth vs. W. Green.
" Commonwealth vs. James
Friel.
64. Commonwealth vs. Samuel
Martin et al.
4, 67. Commonwealth vs. W. Woods
. and B. McClintock.
TRIAL LIST FOR WEDNESDAY.
" 61. Commonwealth ,vs. Geo. Har
rison.
4 ' 68. Commonwealth vs. Clara
• Williams.
" 46. Commonwealth VF. Frederick
Weir.
cc 36. Commonwealth vs. Nary A.
.Alexander.
" 415. Commonwet - 41th vs. John A.
Goetz.
" 396. Commonwealth vs. Stephen
Albright.
From the Titusville Herald of the 9th,
we learn that the petroleum production
during August was materially _enlarged
by the finding of new wells. The daily
average, as• shown by the shipments
during the month and the stocks on
hand on the first days of August and
September, was 12,157 barrels of forty
three gallons, or an increase of 460 bar
rels over the daily average for July, and
of 176 barrels over the daily average for
August last year.
Total production slur° January Ist 2,632,861
Averag per day fur 243 days .10.843
Total proottettnu s.ave nine last year.. 2,892,E
J
per day same time last year 42-14
eaysi 9,506
Ave:age per day during Aug. lastyettr.. 11081
The largest Increase took place in the
Church run district, where the prod no
tlon, as obtained from the deliveries and
stocks on hand. averaged 750_barrels,
against 600 barrels during the last month.
On Upper Cherry run there was also a
considerable increase. At Pithole, and
Bean Farm and vicinity, the enlargement
was ode hundred aud ten barrels, and
along the Allegheny south of Franklin
there was an increase of about sixty bar
rels. In the Pleasantville district there
was no falling off of importance, as the
daily average during the month under
review as shown by the shipments and
stocks, was 1,120 barrels, eff.ablat an
average of 1,200 barrels for July. On
Cherry tree run, where it was generally
expected there would be an enlarge
ment, there was a slight decrease.• On
two or three of the farms on the Lower
Cherry run, the product fell off about
seventy barrels. At Parker's Landing
there was an increase of about two- bun.
drod barrels in the estimated product on
September Ist, over that on August Ist.
The stock on hand, as compared with
that on A - tgust Ist, shows an increase of
about 25,000 barrels. The total stock on
the latter date was 332,129 barrels of
forty-three gallons, and in clu ded 249,829
barrels in iron tankage, 7/.84 2 at the
wells and 10,395 in wooden tankage, on
the heads of refinera, pipe Companies and
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—The
let at To nult:, Delegat \ ,a
• re pr-_ , :ie..at fr,.:ra ell parts of the Domin-\
"on unit also from the -American Medical
AsicciatMo. The followinr - „, not resi
dentg, were electad lic,nore.::;. - members:
Dr. T. Davis, Chicago: Joseph R.
Barnes, Surgeon General of United •
States: Dr. M. T. Greas, Philadelphia;
C. A. Lee, of Buffalo tiniv::nity.
3:301 7 811INGEsT 3:E LIFE—
LZJ Vi T
One or at , trle3:: ar.e. most :iggestive Ideas
cam 1:12 0t:.:..11vd from the caption at the head
of :his art cle; f.): of 3.11 dt, azes which impair
hunaa health an:: Lhor ten Inlrr.an life, nose are
:cure prevalent tit 'no :hose which affect the lungs
and pulmcnar.ti:zEues. Wl.,ther we regitrd lung
ills , 2r.Eroc , in t'a light of a increly silglit cough,
e :ore• run=cr of a more Eerlous
Wl/:(11is b%t,
deep lesie% corroding and dis-
malalv. or :Is
monary structure, it is always
sol Ting the p
al and fcri boding of disaster
,le rant -.710
ILaolodi :3 Elltlald the physician or
la ao clase e
famtly cf the patient be more
the frianls a
1
larned than la those of the lungs,
Seriously fore.
In that early and emelent treat-
for it is in th
iratile, and it is then that danger
eiT sue a care erected. In DR.
mentlz mo3t
can be warde
NC, CURE you have a medicine
KEY3ER'S L
value in al: these conditions• in
of the grate
drac. a nntrient and resolvent.
altzratl ce, a
re and sustaining the reel:Term-
SUCCOTIW . T/1
f the system, Its beautiful work-
0.7 e powers
ny with the regular functions, can
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erred by the use of one or two bot-
l readily ob
con break 1113 the chain of morbid.
Vag: It
at dlF.turb the harmonious work-
I=
Inca of the animal ecoaomY• The barratslng
cough, the painful — respiration, the sputum
streaked with blood, will soon give place to tfie
normal and proper •sorkingp of health andvlgur.
An aggregated ew.nerience of over thirty years
has enabled :Ir..l:eyser. compoundingof
his LUSG 71RY., to give new.hone to the eon-
utnptic e invalid and at the same time speed;
relief in those row prevalert, catarrhal and
throat affections, so distressing in their effects
and E. almost certainly fatal In their tendencies„
ualcss cored by tome appropriate remedy, DR.
KEYSER'S LENG CURE is to thorough and ef-
getent, that st.y one who has ever used It, will
never to without It in the hense. It will otten
cure Wien everytbing else fain, and In simple
C33 . CE will cure ofteutluses lu a fc*.v days.
Tie attention of patltutt, ai well al ttedleal
me 1. 1, respectfully invited to this new and
va.uable adeAtion So the pharmacy of the coon-
Dlt. KEYsEP. ruJy be consulted every day
unt 1l 1 o'clock r. 31. at Ms (ireatlgesllctke Store,
107 Llbe:ty strcat, end from 4to 6 and 7 to 9
It nigh.
THE VEVER AND AGUE SEASON.
When the leaves begin to change, "remittentand Intermitter fevers make their appearance.
From the surface oi the earth, bathed nightly in
heavy dews, from marshes and swamps sur
charged with moisture, from the dying foliage
of the woods. from festering pools and sluggish
streams, the san of September evolves clouds of
miasmatic vapor perilous to health and life. The
body, deprived by the burning tenwerature of
,Tuly and August of much of its vigor and elas
ticity, is not In a proper plight to resist malaria.
and hence aq diseases that are produced by a de
praved condition of the atmosphere are particu
larly prevalt in the Fall.
There Is nd reason why the health of thousands
of people eh uld be thus sacrilleed. A. prepara
tory a:turas o HOSTETTYR , S STU ttO Ctl HIT-
T e.tcar is a cer lain protection againtt the epidem
ics stud endemics which Autumn brings lu Its
train. Let all dwellers in unhealthy localities,
liable to such• visitations, give heed to tie warn:
lug and advice conveyed in this advertistment,
anant they may bid detlance to the Joules halations
which are now rising, night and day, from the
eNt around them. No farmbense lit the land
should be without this invaluable exhilerant and
Invigorant at any period of the year, butt eipe
clally In the Fall. It Is not safe to so forth into
the chill, misty atmosphere of a September
morning or evening with the stomach tin fort Bled
by a tonic, aura of all the tonics which medical
chemistry has yet given to the world, =STET
TER'S BITTERS are admitted to be the purest.
the most wholesome and the most beneficial —
Let all who desire to escape the h'itons attacks,
bowel complaints and malarions fevers, take the
BITTERS at least twice a day throughout thev
present season. It is as wholesome as It Is In
fallible. Look to the trade-mark, "BOSTET
TRH'S 5 tOBLACH BITTERS," engraved on the
label and embossed on the bottle, and their rev
enue stamp covering the cork, as Ornate:felts
and Imitations abound.
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