11 0 tijt .15,ittsbat.gt ex4iittz, , PUBLISHED BY PENIM,REETI &CO.,Proprietors. Y. B. YENNTMAN, JOSIAH MHO, T. P. HOUSTON, N. T. HEED. :Editors and Proprietors. OIFFICTIC: LiZETTE BUILDING, 84 AND 86 FIFTH H. OFFICIAL , PAPER . , Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny !Lied All.. gheny Cotuity. l'erass—Datly. Itiensi-Wsak/Y. WaNY. One year-416,00, One ye.ar.s2.6o Siagle copy-61a One 1:1101:1111 AI SIX lime.. 1.60 5 coples,e,7l o o . b 1.26 16 ItatAirreek BThreemoo 26 10 " 1. carrl62.ll rad one to Agent. TUEBDAY, SEPT. If, 1869. UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. liirrAa'E. • FOR aovErwort: JOHN W. GEARY. .TUDGE OF St FRENE COURT HENEY 'W.' WILLIAMS. COUNTY. ASSOCIATE JUDGE. DISTRICT COURT. JOHN IL KIRKPATRICK , AJ3SISTANT LAW JUDGE, COMMON PLEAS, • -FEED'S. H. COLLIER. &TATE SENATE—THOMAS HOWARD. AssanolLx—VELLES B. HITMPIIREYB„ ALYEANDER MILLAR, JOSEPH WALTON, JAMES TAYLOR, D. N. WoitE, JOHN H. KERR. Bazarir 13.11GH B. FLEMING , TAAstrEs.r.—JOß. F. DENNISTON. CLE.Eur. or Coma's—JOSEPH BROWNE. \Brcospr.s—THOSTAS H. HUNTER. CobassioNzu— fIi.:UNCEY B. BOSTWICK. Rmourrra—JOSEPH H. GRAY. CLERK ORPHANS' Cocar—ALEX. ITILANDS. DIRECTOR OP Poop—A.l3l)lEL McCLURB. W 3 - PRINT on the inside pages, •of this morning's GAZSTIS--Seeond Page: Engagements, General Intelligence, State News. Third and Sixth, pages: Finznee and Trade, : Markets, Imports, and River Hews. Seventh. page: Farm, Gard( n and Household. , , • • PETROLEFIti at Antwerp, 55f. 11. B. Banns at Frankfort; 871 GOLD closed yesterday in New York at 1.851@136. -A. curl' Jorrsser. avails itself of the occasion of the Presidential visit, to ventilate its ill will towards one of the Senators from _ Pennsylvania. Since the President is not likely to see the journal - alluded to, its assault' upon Lis friend will be as unprofitable as nits taste -was questionable. • CPUES JUSTICE CUASE very pointedly si►ys, in a recent letter ostensibly declin ing to take any active interest in politics, that he is "not at all satisfied that, if in a higher place, he could do any better than those now exercising executive functions do." This tribute to President GRANT ) and from that source, is equally unexpect ed and complimentary, TitS Nashville Press devotes daily leaders to the political situation in Ten nessee. Insisting that the recent election resulted in a decisive acceptance_ of the situation, with the addition of 'an unre stricted franchise, the Preis protests against "the strange cry from various portions of the State," for undoing all the ly,publicau work of the past three vars. tWe .are afraid that its remon strances are all too late! I iOS BUM S , of the Emperor Napoleon's intention to abdicate the throne in favor of his son, has about it an air of strong probability. The dynastic 'succession would be rendered vastly more secure, . • With Louis Napoleon living, ithan with the present Emperor dead. The one, although an invalid and in retirement, would be worth a score of the other. This succeition is all that remains for his ambition to attain, and, Emperor or sub ject, he dedicates himself to that end. Mn.PENDLETON, the Democratic can. _ . didate for governor ,Of Ohio, relieved kimaelf of a very ill-natured speech 'to a ,select party of friends last week. Itwas _quite too much to expect • a cheerful ora tion, from a gentleman who realizes that he is the B.ol , on's choice of his party; the pis . alter of a demoralized faction, which tried ineffectually to escape . from his- nomination, even first tendering the unsolicited honor 'to a . distin , gushed soldier who has denounced Mr. Pendleton as a traitor. \ liaiurally, the latter feels the antic:l ances of his position, and scolds- every body and everything. Beyond its bilious fault-finding, his , speech has but two points in it worthy of note: the flyst, that the XVII) Article is objectionable, not be -cause of its extension , of political rights to the colored people, but beCause It eratze as an 1111,n81011 of the: Democratic idea of State siavereignty;-the second that he takes declirediground in favor of in - Aging the currency, in effect to flood the countr,y twain" 'with, the "rag.money” r which Democratic policyhrls so long and • faithfhlly, denounced. . 'When the letter of Gem Rosucmarts, declining the first choice of the Ohio De inocitcy, denounced, as,traitors to .the illeptiblic, those Who : bpposed the war for the Union, be could not have.been ttn - mindful of the fact that Mr. PENDUILTON oppsed that war in '6l, and reiterated, . the BOZOe unpatriotic sentiment in 18 anti I TIM PRESIDENT. I - General GRANT, with his family and a portion of his staff, will visit Pittsburgh to-day. Arriving at the Union Depot,. from Altoona, where the party rested last night, at precisely one o'clock this after noon, he will be received as the guest of the cities, and remain here until to-morrow morning, when the party proceeds to Washingto? county. The President will be received and honored as the guest of the people whose Chief magistrate he is. As such, no politi cal differences will . mar the harmony of he occasion. To this end, the Commit tees are judiciously constituted, and we are quite sure that our citizens, of what ever political opinion, will heartily con• cur in performing the hospitable duties of the day, with a becoming respect for the E i xecutive of the whole nation. The Committees are requested to meet at the Mayor's office at ten o'clock this merning, to perfect the detailed arrange meats for the day.. Each member is ur gently requested to be punctually pres e i nt. In the evening, probably about 7:30,- the President will receive his fellow cili illens at the City Hall. The scene will be worth witnessing and to be remembered. The President will have there an es ‘: client opportunity to see the people who make up "the State of Allegheny." THE .AVONDALF. RELIES FUND. Contributions from this charitable corn-1 inanity, entrusted to us far remittance to the local Committee, will be acknowl edged in our local columns. We have evidence already that those widows and orphans do not plead to our people in vain. They solicit still ! THE BEG►NNING' OF THE END The strategy of the Phiadelphia roughs which secured the nomination of Mr, Asa Packer for Governor, over his distip nuish ed and capable competitor from Western PellßyjValia, was also successful in ac complishing the choice of a city and coun ty ticket tor Philadelphia, so scandalously and irredeemably bad in every respect, that the decent elements of the party have absolutely revolted from its support. U l'he better class 8f Democrats in that city were content' with the situation, so long as the pending contest - between the respectable men and the blackguards of their party was confined to general State politics. The iron entered their souls, when the 'Dead Rabbit' mob, headed by the fellow, MCMullin, who menaces their city with riot and wholesale murder on the elec tion day, took possession of the local conventions, and forced the selection of piccisely such a disreputable ticket as best suited themselves. Even the Demo cratic stomach revolted from'the dose; protest upon protest has been uselessly multiplied; the McMullin gang would not relax its grasp.upon the Democratic throat until, at last, forbearance is no longer a virtue, and their medel set of candidates have the option of walking out - or being.kicked out by the indignant decency of the party. out; beat calm on the ticket withdraws, and advises the other candidates to follow his example, a recommendation which they will find it rodent to follow. The same rascally ii fluences are on band, to insist upon nominating a ticket still more objection able, if the old one be abandoned. This is a beautiful state of affairs for the Democratic party in Philadelphia, only four weeks before the election. It shows such an utter demoralization among them, that, evidently, the leaders of the party no longer retain the faintest shadow of a hope for electing their State ticket. 'Philadelphia lost as it already is, and the anthracite counties lost as they surely will be, colonization - played out, bogus naturalizations and Snowdenizing generally gone up in a balloon, not even I Maluilin's premised murders will save them and their tax-dodging millionaire . candidate, from the worst defeat ex pt rienced by them or their friends since ! the war of the rebellion. This business in Philadelphia now is the beginning of a very bad end for the Pennsylvania De mocracy. —Since the above was placed in type, we learn that the candidates on the old ticket,* the regular choice of the party in its Conventions, - have all withdrawn from the canvass. This is done to avert thti dangers bf the situation fdr the party. A new ticket has been selected. Whether_ It be of better or worse material, Rakes but, little difference; it is sure to be dlatisteful either to the thieves or to the holiest ele ment of the,party, 'between whom the feud cannot be healed. op- - , • Tun Memphis Post, thoroughl y tinder standing the politics of Mississippi, has an appreciative paragraph upon , re cent "National Republican" Convention which nominated Judge Dent - for_ 'GOV ernor of that State The rebels of Mississippi meeting, at Jackson and dubbing themselves “The National Tinton Republican party!" Nut a score of : men amongst them all but who have and are still, though covertly we. icing a war to the knife and the knife to the hilt upon &wiz Republican princip who l and upon eery mania Mississippi e dare avow such principles! It was em: ,convention s of magited men: Thes& rebels - Cha ntinga Itapnblican platforM acid Satan' sibging paaliAi were a tit accompaniment. , PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1.8F59. HU M803..DT. Countless victories of peace have ex alted the Christian world since an nun dred years ago, and it has honored each conqueror with an immortal fame. To day, Civilization, all over the earth, crowns, with grateful tributes, the memo ry of one among the most distinguished of all the illustrious catalogue. HUMBOLDT, dead in the material presence, lives, On this centennary anniversary of his birth, in the undying annals of Science, which shall perpetuate his name until all knowl edge shall become extinct. FREIDfiRICU HEINRICH ALEXANDER von HUMBOLDT was born at Berlin, Sept. 14, 1769. At the age of ninety years, he died in the same city, May 6,1859. Liu cated.with special care in the natural sci ences, in mathematics, philosophy and politics, his first essay in authorship was upon the Geology of the Rhine, in 1796. His tastes led him to engage in practical mining from 1792 to 1797. Then, he entered upon a long career o travel and scientific observation, in Europe and upon the American Con tinent, the results of which he has 1 given to the world of science in forms which will be imperishable. Geography, geology, chemistry, meteorology, dims iolog,y,. botany, anatomy and zoology— all these science have been wonderfully enriched by contributions from the wide experience and discriminating observa tions of this remarkable man. Drawn later' in life into the more pressing duties of European statesmanship, in the great international convulsions which at tended the - decline and fall of the. Ifirst French Empire, ithe diplomacy of L the Continent recaguilzed the splendid qualifications which science had not al together absorbed. His last prominent ! part in politics was as an Embassador, to I bear to Paris the Prussian recogni tion of King Louis Phillippe. The re maining years of his life were devoted to the revision of his already numerous literary Works, and to the preparation of his "Views of Nature," and the world renowned "Cosmos.", Dying, after twc weeks of illness, his obsequies were cele brated by royalty itself.. It is not Prussia, not Germany, not Europe, which alone claims this immor tal philosopher. An ienlightened world possesses and revereshis memory. Amer ica equally vindicates her share, in the general title to a name which has contribut ed so largely to the illustration of natural science on this portion of the globe. Wherever knowledge has votaries, in every city and hamlet between the Arctic and Antarctic Oceans, the mem ory ck* Humboldt is here to-day grate fully but rrournfully cherished. The citizens of ,Allegheny county :Are not forgetful of their part, but, themselves by birthright of all- nationalities on the earth, come to-day ,in a common brother hood, to invest the living remembrance of the greatest of cosmopolitan philoso -fixers with the visible initgiiiit of Ameri can citizenship. PENDLETON AND EQUAL RIGHTS. Occasionally, very sound ideas are ex pressed in the Congressiona l Globe's report of Democratic speeches, if you look care fully for them. To illustrate this, we annex an extract from one of the reported speeches of an. Ohio repredentative in 1863, Hon. G. H. Pendleton. His friends insist that this gentloman always stands by his record: There may, therefore, be some basis for current rumors that be looks now with a kindly eye upon the proposition to throw the ballot open to all, irrespective of race or color. Mr. Asa Packer takes so much pleasure In concurring with his Ohio friend in every other political question, that we must re gret,'for the sake of Democratic harmony, his disapproval of the doctrines of this speech. It is plain that our coal -mining, tax-dodging monoplist has not yet packed I his carpet-bag for the new Democratic departure. When the bill was before Congress for enlisting negroes into the army of the United States, upon the 81st of January, 1703, in a speech reported in the Gills gressional Globe, Mr.:Pendleton spoke as follows: "If these black troops are:to stand tin an equality with the white troops on the battlefield and at every point ot danger, and in all the other relations of asoldier'S life, and at every other momentthey are to be marked by a degrading g, minions isolation, how long will you ha able to maintain discipline and order in your army—l do not say coutentrue4 and zeal and alacrity—among theid troops ? . '. ',And what do you propose to do wit t li, ) these black soldiers after they shall h C• returned from the battlefield? Gen e. men have told us that these enlistini i are found necessary in in order that- e• army of the United States may be a sufliciAntly strongpaocontlish the Work I it has to do. - They tell us we are in the very crisis of the War. They tellllitit -ve now la the time to pnt forth oar le power. or else the result of the We isle in doubt. They tell us that the whi Tem alone, so far as its strength has yet been developed o is not entirely competitit to render to the Union and tho. Constitu tion an secured victory. And they tell us that these Colored men are,reads , with their strong arms and their brave'lleerte to maintain the supremacy of the Consti tution, and to defend the integrity; the Union which in oar hands to•dat is lel' periled, :, - ‘ I -; • "What is that Constitution? ~ It pro vides that every child of the BePubilel every 'citizen of- the, land, is before tne law the, equal of every other. It pro vides for all, of them trial byjurY, free speech free Press, entire PreLO c " / f " life and liberty and property. , • • eiti- A god• further.. - It secures to every eit the right to .hold office, Of right to lispfro„to every ores.Qr Itidntrill y id to Government to carried on. 7 mare called upon to do military duty, every man required to take up arms in its defense, (shy t7s provisions entitled to rote, and a competent asidrant for every office in the Government. "You now say to these black men, 'come to the defense of this Constitution. Come aid us to maintain its supremacy. Come aid us to uphold a Government which is thus beneficent to all its children.' Suppose your utmost hopes are realized; suppose they come, and that by their aid you are successful. They will comeback with your victorious hosts, following the banner of the Republic, battle.worn and maimed and scarred. What will you do with them? Will you consign them again to political inferiority, to social isolation? Will you again deny to them those priv ileges which are guaranteed to them by the Constitution which they have helped you to maintain?" MINOR TOPICS. Tile WORLD may have degenerated and the times become common-place, yet the past week: has produced a pair of heroes before whom the Knights of the Round Table would have bowed, ac- O h knowledging them -as their peers at least. When the phitic vapors were still rolling up and destruction from the mouth o the Avondale shaft. and hundreds of . women and children weeping and waitina for the news of their widowhood and orphanage, Charles Var tue, of the Grand Tunnel Colliery, a noble -looking young man, full of life and vigor and hope, volunteered to be the first to go down to rescue his com radOS. Perfectly conscious of the danger, he led the way, and so performed a deed deserving of immortality. A few days later, Albert G. Decker, keeper of the draw- bridge[crosslng the Passaic river, was about to close the draw for a coming train, when his son fell from the bridge into the river. On one side he saw a train coming to certain destruction if the draw were not closed, on the other his boy drowning in the river! With a more than human steadiness of purpose, this modern Brutus sacrificed feeling to duty, and secured the draw before he sprang, too late, to the rescue of his son. If any other age can produce two nobler men, we have yet to learn their names. TEIE DEmeN or CHANGE, which wag invoked by Mr. Andrew Johnson, re quires tirre before he will be laid again. Change and re-change in ollice—change and re change in naval nomenclature, change, with a prospect of re-change iu the postage stamps. Concerning the lately adopted designs for these latter necessities of life, we have beard not one word of objection; everybody with whom we have discussed the subject, seems to think the new designs area marked im prevenient upon the old distorted heads. Most of our exchanges which have ex. pressed any opinion, have also professed to be pleased with the change. Yet, in spite of what we believe to be a general feeling, we see it announced that the Pus: Office Department is about to change , the designs on the stamps because of the general dissatisfaction expressed con cerning them. Appreciating the willing ness of the department to bow to the wlsZiefa of the people, we think that the cause of dissatisfaction has been misun derstood. The designs are very satisfac tory, but the paste is not. Moat of the postage stamps have not enough adhe siveness to assure that they will remain upon the letters. Let the department authoritatively repeat to the postage stamps the historical remark telegraphed to Mr. Stanton by Mr. Sumner, and we believe the only change that, is desired will be thus effected. They will then stick) "WHAT a change there is, from the days when "little Tommy Tucker sang for his supper," to the present time when Nillseu reOleves $600,000 a year, and Carlotta Patti has saved six millions of frailes t We wonder if the most ardent musical enthusiasts are not struck with the idea that' these famous human skylarks are a little overpaid ! It only lasts for a few years, to be sure, but oven when the novelty has wornand the furore has subsided, a popular singer still receives about five times as much repau aeration as the most popular, best paid, minister of the gospel, or the most emi. nent statesman or official of the United States. Which is the most important and worth the most pay—to sing the ballads or to make and enforce the laws? Of course,there can be but one answer to this qu'eatlon, but judging by appearances it is , very inconsistent with the existing state of things. INDIA is emphatically a land of won- ders, a country where Nature has lav ished her grandest, her most valuable, her most beautiful and her most terrible gifts. A land from which comes the Cashmere shawl, pepper, rhinoseeroses, camels, indigo, opium, slik, elephants, lions, diamonds, cocoa nuts, tigers and other similar, products, where the moun• taips are the highest, the forests most dense and the insurrections the most bloody. To all of these things another product has now :been added. Hereto fore the luxurious princes and merchants have been obliged to smoke the oriental bookik or ohibouque or else to use pipes made and, handled by the unclean fin gers of infidels. Now. however, meer schaum, beautiful foam of the sea, such as has heretofore been found in perfec tion only within the limits of Asia Minor, has been discovered in Hihdostan, and it but remains for the Hindooi , to take I advantage of another of the superlative I gifts of Nature to their wonderful cone ® try. IT Is stated by Hayes, the Arctic ex plorer, that in the Arctic regions mos• gutless are numerous and remarkably vicious. Pleasure seekeri who swarm to Lake Stiperiq lind that the mosqui toes swarm there too and are even more indtistriOns < than the far-famed , In sited New-Terser. At first thitt seems anomalous, arid is oartala to surprise the neophyte, but upon ref:sea pear that in those regions the summer is short, but genial and warm, and these carniverous insects, like our friends the Copperheads, endeavor to do all the harm they can where the Fates permit them for a short time occasionally to obtain positions of power. I 2 is some time since we have had a real President of the United States, elected by the people, as a welcome guest of our city. Mr. Johnson wxts here, but he was not the President of the people's choice, nor did hie visit to the city, judg ing by our recollections, give unalloyed pleasure to either the guest or his enter tainers. Mr. Lincoln was here before he was Inaugurated in 1861. Today, Presi dent Grant will arrive, and will be, un less we are misinformed, the first duly elected and inaugurated Chief Executive officer of the nation who ever honored Pittsburgh with his presence. Such au event is worthy of special note in the History of the Iron City. ARCTIC EXPEDITIONS may be relied upon to depart about twice in every three years; money is raised, vessels equipped, and generally the expedition is a failure. !Sometimes they succeed, however, in getting the vessel wrecked, half the crew killed and the rest disa bled, and prove, perhaps, that there is a northwest passage, which no navigator can use, or an open air Polar Sea, which no sail can reach. These are the start ling successes of Arctic expeditions, and like other startling successes, exceeding ly rare. Are they sufficient to satisfy people who are not enthusiasts on the subject that such expeditions pay? STATE POLITIC& --- RIDGE PACKER spent the war-summers among the rebel sympathizers in Europe —Geary among the rebels in the South. SINCE Mr. Packer bolted a Democratic nomination to support a Know Nothing, there are a good many Democrats who don't know him. A NEW Democratic paper has been established at Ridgway, Elk county, in the interest of a faction of the party in that county known as the Ridgway rang. t THE Mauch Chunk Gazette "has it on the best authority that Judge Packer re marked the other day that he believed his chances for election poor." Packerq opinion on Packer's chances ought to carry weight. .GEN.z.D. B. MCCREARY of Erie, late Adjutant General of the State, and C. 0. Bowman,Esq., of Corry, have been nominatd for the Assembly by the Re publicans of Erie county. This will give that county an able representation in the Legislature. Tns Lehigh Register says: When Dr. Cattell, the energetic President at Lafay ette College at Easton, sought assistance from the men of wealth of this valley to save that venerable institution from ruin, he appealed to Asa Packer, but got from him no assistance. He next applied to Mr. Arlo Pardee, of Hazleton, whose generosity immediately responded by a handsome endowment. The personal pride of Asa Packer was aroused upon this, and then he endowed Lehigh Uni versity. 11 , 1, s confidently predicted in Carbon county that Mr. Packer will run behind his ticket. He is decidedly unpopular with th 3 workingmen. He has never, with all his wealth, done aught to allevi ate the sufferings of the poor. Wheree he is best known, people laugh at the aof his being charitable. His corruption fund, in this canvass, is to be used in buy ing up men of supposed influence with workingmen. The bone and sinew should be on the look-out and distrust all who suddenly become convinced that Packer is a great friend to the cause of labor. PEBSONL GEE. SIIERIDAN is not engaged. STANTON and fdaily are in Boston. JoaN TAYLOR, Jr., was committed to a hospital in Washington recently. T. C. DURANT is Miffing up a monu- ment in.Greenwopd worth $51,000. "LOVEICI3 NEST" is the name given to one of the parlors of a Niagara hotel. CUIEF JUSTICE CHASE has been visit ing ex Senator . Foster, of Connecticut. R. M. T. HUNTER has discovered tha he has retired from public life forever. GER. W. S. iln.vrEn. proposes wri ting the life of the late Secretary of War. W. D. GALLMMER, the poet, of Louis vine, Ky., has a clerk's desk in the Rev enue Bureau. BONNER purchased the, use of the New York park fence for one day for 000, as an advertising board. CRICAGO paper says the Springfield Republican has hired a man to be face tious, who fails to earn his wages. Tern recent proprietor of the Galt Rouse, Louisville, was a Union man, and the fact is mentioned in connection with his retiracy. .• PRINCE ALFRED la very severely, can. sured bymany journals for his scandalous conduct at Tihiti, Society Islands. The boy only danced with barefooted yellow girls, wore the queen's "pupepu ' and crown, and afterward entertained her and her handmaidens on board the Galatea, and drank and ate quite heartily in honor of his guests. Witautno is reported as saying at the Chicago Woman's Rights Conven. Lion,that "she would like to appeal to the Legislature to make women inde pendent -in the :maternal sphere. Now she depended entirely upon the husband. A fundamental revolution was wanted, and the mothers baud be independent in heir labors." t' MR. W. 1. TIIAFTOII, of Manchester, N. H. who has already made one mina. tore siesm . .engine of great delicacy and beauty, is about to construct another. He is to make every part of the engine ' with the boiler, from a single silver half. dollar: When done it will be placed un= der a glass case three•quarters of an inch in diameter and an inch and au eighth in height.. The boiler will hold about eight drops of water, but one half that quantity will run it sevetai minutes.. It will have all the parts of an engine, and the'boiler will have two' minute gauges.• 'Some of theimaller Parts can only be madebY•the aid of a powerful magnifying glass, ..iNER.4.I , XI.LIt, ENCE. on it will ap An exchange declares "the woman is evidently the coming man." TEE Massachusetts labor party will nominate candidates on the 28th. HUMBOLDT was an honorary member of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Near Port Jarvis, on the Eric Rail road, on the evening of 9th, a locomO7 tive exploded, killing the engineer, fire- than and breakman. • NELLIE MAnsrtALL, a seamstress, from Massachusetts, now of St. Louis, whete she has resided since 1867, has brought suit for slander against Joseph and Susan Mulhall, asking $25,000 damages. Jon JEFFERSON has about forty work men engaged on the grounds of his villa, twenty-five miles out of New York. As the great-actor is not troubled with re hearsals, he goes out to his country litime every day. He receives $5OO a night and half the receipts of the matinees. IN MILWAUKEE, Wis., the widow of a Capt. Crozier, of the Union army, at tempted self destruction, having been impelled to the act by the representations of a fortune teller, who aggravated her previous mental prostration, from anxiety for the future welfare of her children, by advising•her that she was surrounded by enemies and that a horrible death awaited her. This Information, obtained upon the payment of fifteen dollars, so preyed upon her mind that a few days since she committed harikari with a pair of scis sors, inflicting three frightful gashes in her abdomen. LOUISIANA is being colonized rapidly. The Iberia Times, of a late date, says: "The Messrs. Van Slyke, who visited ns last spring,_ and purchased land on the Vermillion, below Abbeville, will soon leave Indiana on a steamer purchased for the purpose, and bring with them a large number of families, who will be landed either here or on the banks of the Ver million. They will bring along a house for- each family, already constructed, which can be put together with little trouble; also a full complement of agri cultural implements and stocx of provis ions to last them until they make their own. The steamer- will afterwards be used to navigate the bayou and carry to market their surplus products." CALIFORNIA CLAIMS to have, in the Buena Vista estate, near Sonoma, the largest vineyard in the world. Some of the most noted vineyards in 'Europe do not exceed twenty or thirty, or sixty or seventy acres, The Buena Vista has 800 acres suitable to the vine, and 450 acres actually covered now. There are on the estate some vines planted thirty years ago, but the bulk of them were set out from 1854 to 1858, and additions have been made every year since. This year the grape crop is light. The vintage season will begin in mid October and continue nearly to the end 'of November, during which time this estate will employ about 100 men; Chinamen, of course. California champagne is the principal manufacture of this vineyard, and the inventory of last November showed a stock of 126,000 gallons of sparkling wines, with 40,000 bottles of champagne, ; on hand at that time. THOU BRIriGEST ME LIFE LUNG-1V ORT. One of the truest and most suggestive Weis can be obtained from the caption at the head of this art cle; for of ill diseases which impair human h.:al:a and the - ten hum : lllWe, note are iuore preva:ent thin those which affect the bungs and pulmonary tissues. Wht ther we regard lung diseases to the light of a merely slight cough, which is but the fore- runntr of a more serious malady. or as a deep lesion corroding and dis- solving the pulmonary structure, it is always pregnant wish evil - and foreboding of disaster• 1, In no class of maladies should the physician or the friends and family of the patient be more serionslv forewarned than in those of the lungs. . _ for it Is in them that early and efficient treat- went is most desirable, and it Is then that danger can be warded off and a cure effected. In DR. KEYSER'S LUNG CURE you'have a medicine of the greatest value in all these conditions. as alterative, a tonic. a nutrient and resoraer.t. Succoring nature and snstaluir; the rectipera ice powers of the system. Its be autifrd work- lugs, In harmony with the regular functions, can be readily observed by the use of one or two bot- ties: It will soon break no the chain of morbid sympathies that disturb the harmonious work ings of the animal economy. The harrassing cough, the painful respiration, the sputum streaked with blood, will soon eve place to the normal and proper workings of health and vigor. An aggregated experience of cycr thirty years has enabled Dr. Keyser, in the compounding of hie LUNG CURE, to give new bone to the con- • • - - sumpitve Invalid and at the same time speedy relief in those now prevalent, catarrhal and throa . t affections, so distressing In their effects and so almost certainly flits' , in their tendencies, unless cured by some appropriate remedy. DR. KEYSER'S LUNG CURE is to thorough and et- fletent, that any one who has ever need It, will never be without it in tie house. It will often cure when everything eVe fails, and in simple eases will care oßeuttraes in a few dais. The attention of patients, as well as medical men. t i respectfully invited to this new and valuable addition to the pharmacy of the eonn- DR. KR re 7.7. ratty be consulted every , day until 1 o'clock P. M. at his 8 reat Medicine sute. 167 Liberty street, and from 4to 6 and 7to 9 at night THE FEVER AND. AGUE. SEASO , When the leaves begin to - charnee, rentlttent and intermittent fevers maketheir appearinee. From the surface Of the earth, bathed nlghtlyin heavy dews, from marshes. and - swamps sur charged with moisture, from. the dying foliage of the woods. from festering boolsand sluggish streams. the sun of September evolves clones of misate.tic vanor eerilous to health and life. The body, deprived by the burning temperature of jute and, August of much of lie vigor and elah deity, is not In a proper plight to resist malaria, and hence an diseases that are produced by a de praved condition of the atmosphere era partice tarty prevalent in the Fall. There is no reason why the health of thousands of people should be thus sacrificed. A prepkra tory course of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH TiIT TEIV.i is a ceitain protection against the epidem les and endemics which Autumn brings in its train. Let all dwellers in unhealthy localities, liable to such visitations, give heed to the warn: tug and advice conveyed in this advertia'ment, ant they may bid defiance to the foul es halation which ate now. Atlas, night and day, from the tent around them. No farmhouse to the land should be without this invaluable exhilerant and invieorant at any period of the year, bet espe cially in the Fall. It isnot safe to go forth into the chill, misty atmosphere of a September morning or evening with the stomach unfortined by a tonic, sun of ail the tonics which medical chemistry bas yet given to the world. HOSTET TER'S BITTERS are admitted to be thepurest. the most wholesome and the meat beneficial. ' Leh all who desire to escape the blious attacks, bowel complaints and malaripme fevers, take the BLTlltltt, at least twice a day throughout the present season. It Is as wholesome as Rig in fallible. Look, to the • tradedioark. STET TRIPS tuRAOR esiirsvedou the end-einbriaßed. tin toe bottle: alldthlerree one stsmiti covering the cork, as counterfeit& arid Imitations &Denali.