El Eljt littsburgij GDl'jtttt. puBLIEKED PENNlMitlCßEED& l ...i o . , Proprietors. a. B. PE101131,01, y TOBIAH SING. T. T. H01:111TOA. It: F. REED. ismors szva Proprietors. !apnea: SOME! BEIVDING, 84 AND 86 FIATII Otr/?'lCli►Y.' I'AIPER Pittsburgh, A.U.egh.eni and dlls. gheny. County. \ , Rang. Illoni-Wastly: Weskit,. .:year...Wei Otte year. 12.60 Single n0py..10.20 e Meath 75191 x. mos.. 1.50 5 coplea t esch 1.2 5 6 the week 15 Three ntoa 75 10 '. " 1.1 . .... curler.) sad one to A.lttst. FRIOKY, SEPT. 11. 1869. 'UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE• E . POE GovF.Bosor.: JOHN W. GEARY. aruDELE OF St FEMME couRT: liltlV - 111 . W. WILLIAMS. CQZJNTY. .LBSOCIATIL =GB DISTUICT COMM. JOHN H. SIRKrATIIICK, ABBISTAITT LAW •ftfIXXVCOMMONPLILAE. FRED'S. H..DDLLIER. STATE BANArx—THOMAS" HOWARD. ASEAKIna —MLLES. S. ItHALPHRRYd, • ALEXANDER - MILLAR , • JOsEPti. WALTuIt. JAMBI TAYLOR. • D. N. v 7 BITE, ' JOHN 11.'1RWL , • 13..71:rwr ,70 . TaxastraKaJOS. ,14-DEDINISTON. MOM OP Comas—JOSEPH BROWNE. itscoaDEß-1110MAS,11. HUNTER.. Clairmssiolum— IHAUNDEY B. BOSTWItaI. BscusTra,-JOSEPH H. GRAY. CLARA 01128•1410 Coma—ALEX. HILANDS. DLIMOTOB orPooa-n&BDIEL McCLURI. Wm PRINT - on the inside pages of this.morning's Grarrili--Seeend Page: Rate :Items and General Intalligenee. Third Page: Petroleum Market, Markets TelesrraPh, Imports by Raitroad and - Rite? News. Sixth page: //name and Tiade and Pittsburgh: Markets. Seventh page: Election Proclamation and Reg istry Law. PET/MIMEat Antwerp, 56 1 f. , U. S. BONDS, at Franktort, 871 GOLD closed yesteiday in New York st y 186. ,• • 'FILE Chinese Mission awaits,.it is said, thq_ azeitPtance of ex Senator Monoen, o New York . _ . Vracap&,lol Oect jtol3enators ttnti atte~ het CO th 4 o~ r has the Congres sioritil pplayn.4 ',--hit-caltf:aven*_iqige\--tozi-as7-,-"Na be found the tien**oeltunstion of,E3hertir chilii;l.oB4f )3 viih ‘ the zew•: reghitrY laNit(fuil; • • 'raziarr.scsus of our Federal tfovern :rnent havebeen strikingiy, reduced during the fiscal year ending with June, 1869. Forty.five millions - less in the War De partment, five millions less in the Navy, seventeen millions less in the civil, do mino and foreign service, and len' mil lions less for Interest: Ai Increase of eight u4ons on the pension list !sill 'not be'disagreeable to the people While our outgoes are thus limited, the "public revenue increases. 'F'rom Ater& to, September, 419,,,tke,recelpts, of 'internal revenue taxes showed a gain of , $8,357,-, - 307,25, over-the same period of '6B. Alere lit can see irhy is thit the. re duction of the public debt ep steadily on. Forty-nike,pillionsibaye been paid 9ff from MarchtoTgeptern.ber lst,,.and the current-Aonth wili,:addabont;eightinil lio4oo‘to this .. 1 • 1 . t A t ll 1 YOU REGISTED I I - dikes km know(tlkt yo -dame &OR the lisk - gO. td4,,fieSNlt—Plaeid there. Don;t. &Kay t--.74lEarnititklhe list for the namesofelrtepublicazt, whorl you . , knoyioft . ist., Tour-4;0 cinctl; if you find any omitted, iee.thatrthk otniseion‘ls sup: plied. .- Your --AsEcessor - luta 110 list liiiotittie Is - posted ' . up - to'' pnblic rig( at . your usual , place of voting. More n one of you will be surprised'to find that .his name is not there. Now is the time to make the cfrrection, Y'on will . find difficulty in voting urileis you are thus _registered in tinfe. THE GREAT AMERICAN DODGER. ; We take •pleasure in doing justice to a pOiltiettl opponent. Here; for' example, is the Democratic candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania. Heffiould be credited with absolute consistency in his dodging. Never has he once violated the unities in `this direction: Beginning, long ago, with dodging ,iegular Democratic noint -nations and giving his vote to Know Nothing candidates, his ability and sue cess-as'lr lattice' and financial dodger have been.:l4llllantly illustiated by his subsequent career. He dodged DouoLt, s for 13nEcicearunae, loyalty for secession, the cause , of the Union fot ` VALLAxnio max and,treason: he dodged olt- to Europe when, pattiotisni should have kept hini'at lome:' as a CORRIVIAPianI, he dodged pub licity so well as never to Open , his mouth except to vote, and not , then when he could avoid it:;dnrlng the;wari be dodged &lithe high responsibilities ofi his wealth and station: when the §tate was in peril at Gettysburg, he' &Aged IOW:Ellis own Vine .!iajetr • Ilehing - tya, Railioidttlig that corpoPluOn forward "to pay_thO'daeniea of its' Olin leering worknian. ''Sinee the war ended, his dodges have succeeded. Since Febru ary, 1868, this Artful Dodger has dodged out of the payment of his personal taxes, dodging from Manch Chunk to PhlladelL phis and back again, until his juggling dodges cut down his payment from thirty two thousand dollars to less than nine dollars per year ! The history of the Commonwealth does.. not present a more brilliant record of consistent successful dodging than this. By all means, .Tddge Packer should have the credit of being the retiresentative Dodger of the Period! But he , can't dodge the people in October WRY GET UP A PARTY. ROW? The Commercial, in the lack of any ex isting internecine war in the Republican ranks, seems determined to get up one on its own account. The recent visit of Gen. GRANT to the western end of the State, is seized upon, by it, as a fit occa sion for sliowing its disorganizing ten. dencies; and although all-the other Re publican papers in the State can - find enemies enough in the Democratic party to fight, just now, it,can find no foeman worthy of its steel except within the Re publican lines. Thelelection of a Republican Legisla tire, ot a Republican Governor, and the surrAQ of the Republican cause general-. ly, are nothing in its eyes so long as Mr. J. D. CemEnox exists undemolished by its prowess. He is the Mordecai sitting in the King's Gate. who stirs, up all the bile in the breast of the Haman of that sheet, and for several days past it has been superlatively busy in putting up a high gallows for his execution. The offence of Mr. Cemxitos consists in the fact that, being a railroad Presi- dent, he has shown to President GRANT the courtesy becothing a man in his posi tion.' This ! and nothing more. To be sure, the> Giommercia/ attributes to him bad motives for this, and abuses him without stint, throwing all sorts of mud and filth at him for some wicked schemes he is supposed to have in view, which exist only in the imagination of the editor of that parie l t . ; but not a single fait has been or can be adduced to justify this abuse, beyond the single one of the cour tesies properly shown by Mr: CAMERON. to the President of the United Suttee. We submit to the Republicans of West ern Pennsylvania, and partieularly to those of Allegheny county, that there has been something too much of this. The President is abundantly able to take care of himself, and the concerns of the nation, and does` not need to be uphe:d by any such attempt to create a party broil. The duty of the Re publican party. , at this crisis, is to reelect Governor Geary and secure htmthe co operation of a Republican Legislature. If the Commercial does not want to take a hand in that work, let it say so, and be classed as a Democratic sheet, if it chooses; bat let it not •pretend to be a Republican sheet while directing all its guns at the Republican lines. We do not step in, here, to defend Mr. C P ameron. He needs no defence. He has done nothing that any other man would not have done . ; under similar circumstances. He had treated the President with due courtesy and respect, as befitted him, and has been guilty of ,nothing else. If that is a crime in the judgment of our neigh bor, the punishreent it attempts to finale is far more condemnatory of it than o him. What we,object to is this effort on the part of a nominally Republican paper to breed a fight in the party ranks on the eve of an impoittint election, and without the slightest justification for it, except the dreams . conjured up by an addled imagi nation or a mind diseased. We observe that: our Republican ex changes are already noticing , the extreme readiness of the Grotittnercia/ to kick up a shindy in the party it nominally belongs to, instead of fighting the common foe. Their continued attention to its aberra tions will do no harm. IRE SINKINIG FUND. • The Harrisburg. Patriot, Mr. Packer's central organ, came out With a flaming article, not long since, Charging the Re publicans of this State with having squan- I _dere4l aver twenty-three millions of the Sipking Fund Educe December Ist, 1860. The figures in this article were very plausibly grouped, but so many essential figures were . withheld that the: conclu sions drawn seemed too ridiculous for even a Deinocrat to believe; get, as it is barely possible some of them may be misled, by thils dishonest , array of figures, we think it may be worth while to expose the de ceit, especially as the exposure shows how low a Packer organ can go in trying to mislead the public. The Patriot gives a detail, from the law, of the several items orrevenue set apart by our statutes ,for the Sinking Fund, which iscotrect. It - then proceeds to state what the annual, receipts of this fund have been since December Ist, 1860, • ivhichis not correct. In the table below we give , In the first column, the receipts of the Sinking Fund as stated by the Pa triot. and •in the second the actual re celpts of that fans, for each year, as ob hgned from the books of the State Treas. 'ury.. 'Year Ending Receipts as Stated Receipts es ob- Jlec. by Yetriut. tared from ' btste Tress , titer's bOoks. IE4I. . . ........... ...:81.774,002.88 52.101.5=.77 Ist= 2 432,430.46 • 3 471,0011.57 Jew. ..... 2.601,182.0 .Z 90,018 .25 1864 • ' 3.097,973 CO• 3,489,309.94 186,5 • • - 4;231.06376 - 3,922,175 90 1900 4,137,915.64 ' 3,40,05144 1337 ' 5, Cat =Ol 3,309,315,54 .... 4411416.521.4! 3.433.12411 34 Total 27,94227,58 20019,474,52 • It will thus he seen , that while, in de the Pidriot 411d 1 ;not silenced in get . _ prnswitut.- GAZETTE:: FEIDAYi .-SEPTEZBER. 48.69, . . . tang a airtgle figure Tight, in the aggre gate:it was in error to the extent of only $1,686,153.06. This is probably h . near as any paper of that class could come to telling the truth. "i t After giving these details, thus inaccu rately, the Patriot proceeds to say: The State debt on thetrat day of De cemuer. 1860. Was 827 976,181.7 8 Lin Dec, 1, 1868, It was 33,W1,94 6 13 Total debt paid 0ff.... . , Tvtal receipts Sinking Total dellet In that Lund......... 216,987.91 In other words, the Patriot would have its readers believe that the Republican State administrations since the election in 1860, have received over twenty-three millions towards the extinction of the , Public Debt, whicht sum hainot been ap ,l, plied to that purpose. - We have already shown an error of over a million in these figures. Let us now see the chicanery with which this deficit is manufactured. - _ The law 'creating the Sinking Fund provides that the money received, into it shall be applied first, to the payment of the Wardle on the Public Debt, and second to the extinction of the debtitself. The Patriot, in its calculation, leaves out of view, altogether, the interest paid on the public debt since December 1, 1860, amounting to an average of two millions yearly. This would seem to be a deliberate fal sification of the record on the part of that paper. With the Sinking Fund law be fore it, in making its quotations, it could not possibly have overlooked the provis ion made by It for the payment of the in terest-on the State debt. But more; the State, in 1861, contract ed a temporary war loan of $475,000, and afterwards a more permanent war loan of V 3,000,000, thus adding that much to the debt. This important fact the Patriot also suppresses. We have thus tha following slight corrections to make In the Patriot's figures: Error In receipts into 41akIngrond.. 1 1 1.084 •• • interest pald.outhted by It.. /7,151,673.01 •• •• War debt. contracted since Dec. 1, 1960, and toultted by It 3,475,000.00 a[lstakeor the Patriot °NIA W 1,716,131,10 The true statement of the case is es follows: Public debt December 1. 1500 1 8 37.937.847 50 War debt contracted lu 1861 3 475.0uu ou .X 41 441.047 50 441"39 Total Pu..ac uctit December 1, MS 'raid at' strce December 1, 1860 $ 8,155,6e1 37 intere.t, 4t.c., paid lance %but date. 17 154,813 0: Total payments from tinting end.* 35 310 774 3) Total receipts, correctly stated... V1,r10.474 52 Balance In Sinking Fund Dec. 1, 15688 1,501,1T0 13 This is the correct showing, as any one can ascertain by applying at the State Treasury, or .Auditor General's office, and the attempt of Mr. Packer's central organ to create a belief by concealing the important figures in the case, and hand- Lag the others to suit, that twenty-ihree millions of the public funds have been squandered, is the baldest attempt at po litical fraud we have witnessed for a long period. A WASHINGTON despatch makes a very interesting statement, thus: Commissioner Delano has appointed a number of Assistant Assessors in the principal cities to secretly look over the returns of income with a view of aster. taming and correcting fraudulent returns made by private individuals. WASUINUTOS, PA. PreaTient Grant and Family—Their Reception—The Procession.—The Chil dren of the Public school—The Ap. valiance et the Town—Where the President Stopli 7 —Generous Rivalry, dr.c., Se. 'WASHINGTON, PA., Sept. 15, 1869. The coming of - President Grant to our town lo.day is an event worth recording. We feel proud to have him in 'our midst for a feta days. A telegram this morning from your city announced, that the President would reach here by three o'clock, r. n. An impromptu meeting was held at the Court House, atiehich it was arranged that the Burgess and • Town Council, together with a Committee of fourteen citizen ;in cluding the resident ministers, should do the honors of reception. It was also pro vided that all the scholars of the Public School should be put in position on Main street, in front of the Court House. At two o'clock the Committee of. Re deption, in carriages, accompanied by many others—probably forty carriages in all—started to meet the coming President. About a mile and a half out of town they did so. After being welcomed by Mr. Boyle, i n a very happy little speech, the Presi dent took a seat with him in an open car riage, and followed by the procession, entered town. The •street along which he was conducted was lined with eaget ' and pleased spectators. Flags were float ing in all directions, and the town wore quite a gala appearance. The President, as he passed along, bowed right and left. When the carriage reached the place where the children -were congregated— some seven or eighthundred of them—it stopped for a moment, and the President stood up that • all might see him. He passed on through town, escorted by those who had gone to meet him, to the residence of Mr. - Wm:' W. Smith, where he and his family; are to have their home while they remain here, and a delightful borne it is, too. ' A committee of two, consisting of Maj. Ewing -and.l-Col. Hopkins, was charged with the duty of making some arrange ment, if possible, with the President by which all of our citizens who may desire it can have the pleasure of a shake of his hand, and• to show him their personal re gards. • It is gratifying to , state that political distinctions were lost sight of to-day— both•parties showed equal respect to o It ur noble Chief Magistrate. ' This is right. augurs well. , Aurcue. • Jour DEAL Chairman or the RePubil -can Committee of Blair. county, has flounced meetings at Tyrone, 'Dl2l(Pns vine, Ptankstown and eight other places. At Tyrone on October .Bth,. Gov Geary and Wm. Kelley are to speak. Other SPeakers arta; present ,at the *et =tangs. MEC 1111COR TOPICS. Ix SPITE of the reiterated reports of failure by the various managers of opera troupes, there seems to be a fascination in the life which renders those who once come witliiu its magic influence thence forth totally indifferent to mere pecu niary losses or embarraasments. Mar etzek, for instance, is in a constant state of complaint. Judging by his statements, he always loses money, but he invariably comes up smiling again at the beginning lof a new round. This year there is to be an unusual , number of travelling opera troupes, in spite of the long pro. claimed fact that nothing bat legs and , tinsel will now draw an audience. On . the 20th a newt French troupe com mences a season\ of legitimate French opera in New York. Maretzek is organ izing a troupe with Miss Kellogg—who doesn't seem to be able to leave her native land as prima donna. Then most of the members of Grover's favorite German troupe have again united, and besides these the rival English opera troupes are in full blast. Out of all this musical melange, we shall have a fair share in Pittsburgh, and shall doubtless enjoy it as well as we always do. 4 US.= 65 27 we.: 27.58 ONE of THE most popular English pe riodicals has, of late. been Dr. Guthrie'a Sunday Magazine. This publication has been almost unique in its nature; that is, it has had a religious vein running through it. Evincing the very highest ability in its editors and contributors, it has been neither sectarian nor mawkish. The trouble with most of the so-called religious periodicals has been that they seem to be prepared for aclaaa of readers to be found within the walls of asylums, for weak-minded persons. , IsTo one ddubts that this la whOlesome subtle' -food for babes, but as we grow up we like to have something a little more o 1 the nature of roast beef. The Sunday Afagazine sup plies the heartiest food. Messrs. J. B. Lippincott & Co., the Philadelphia pub- lishers, have made arrangements to issue an American edition of this magazine, which needs but to be known to be at once accepted as filling a void long felt in the ephemeral literature of the country. PITTSBURGH is Dy nature and habit quite undemonstrative and 'reliable. President Grant has the same Character istics. On Tuesday they met fairly and squarely face to face, for the first time. The President, saving a slight flush or occasional smile, preserved his self-pos session, but the city for once forgot re serve. Everything but the fact that the hero of Shl lob, of Vicksburg, the man who had led many Pittsburghers to final victory at Richmond, and who is now the people's President, was in the midst of us. Our bid smoke-begrimed city couldn't stand that; people who pride themselves upon their stoicism fargot their pride, and the result was an ova• tion as spontaneous as it was hearty. They say, General Grant was pleased, and he may well have been, for we doubt if he ever was met with a welcome which came more trim the heart and less from policy and pockets. • PEOPLE say that, if we wait a little while, royalty and patrician rank in the old world will have ceased to be. In looking about us, it almost seems as if the time had come already. Formerly trades ; people were• trades people and nobles t were nobles, but now we find dukes, 'earls, barons and knights direct ing insurance and railway compahjen, presiding at banks, and in more than one instance keeping books in wholesale houses. Add to this the fact that Napo leen, Victoria, - the Kings of Sweden and Sazimy, and a host of leaser sovereigns. are authors by' profession, and the King of Denmark depends for a large share of his income on the profits of a beet-sugar factory of which he is senior partner, and we think it is almost proved that the days have come when the lion and the7lamb are to lie down together, and the com mercial equality of man acknowledged. WE STAVE just passed through what might be called a "real old-fashioned summer"—plenty of 2 4n111, plenty of grain and immunity from disease. In most cases, where our harvests have been as plentiful as this year, we have had the drawback of an overpOwerlng heat, acoomppnled by prevalent or epi demic diseases. But this Year bee .been a model one; less sickness than venal is reported from all portiOns of the country. New York has escaped, with a few, isola ted oases, from the plague of cholera,. which was feared. New Grleans has au knowleged but a single case of yZllow-, lover, and the country at la rge . has been _more than usually blessed with health. What with peace,.. plenty, health and Grant for president, we think we may congratulate ourselves and the , world! Hort. G.. W. SCROFIELD is stumping in Erie county. Hon. DANIEL Mumma addrissed a Republicrin meeting in Union Hall, Johnstown, on Saturday. THE Bucks county (Pa.) Republicans have nominated for Assembly James Stinson and Hiram 'A. Williams. Doss Asa Packer endorse Alderman 14 1 Mullin's threats of club law and mur der? The people would.like to know. JUDGE PACKER spent the war summers among the rebel sympathizers in Europe . —Geary among the rebels in the South. HON 'ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY, nom inated by the Democrats of Armstrong county for Assembly, refuses to accept a nomination from that party. IN COUNTIES whore the Republican par ty has control of the , county, taxes have been reduced since the war, and in Coun ties under Democratic management the same have been increased. Tzar. Republicans of Pevoleran Centre have organized a club, with J. M. Dickey, Esq., 88 President. They belie appointed a Vigiisnce•Committee for the,carapalgili sadiare red to do their duty. ME STATE POLITICEL THE COURTS. Quarter Sessions—Judge Mellon. THURSDAY, Sept. 16.—The first case taken up was that of the Commonwealth vs. John 'Jay. and David Ludwig, indict ed for felonious assault and battery. The _ defendan J ames it is eged, shot at and woundedMcCombs while he was picking blackberries near Turtle creek. The jury returned a vordict, of not guilty of the felony, but guilty of unlawful cut ting and wounding. Mr. Schwartzweld er, counsel for defense, stated that he would move for a new trial and in arrest of Judgment in the case, on the ground that the trial bad been conducted and concluded without the presence of Lud wig, one of the defendants. The case of the Commonwealth vs. William Woods and Brinker McClin tock, indicted for aggravated assault and battery. McClintock. was placed on trial and plead not guilty. It appears that McClintock and Woods caught Morris Hunter, a boy, and one of them held him while the other cut him with a knife. The jury returned a verdict of guilty and the defendant was sentenced to the work house for three months. E.EYSER . I3 Dpo. The next was a ferocious dog case in which Mr. Keyser was indicted for keeping an animal of the canine species of a ferocious nature, in which John Schneitzenger appear - ed as prose cutor. It was alleged that Keyser 's dog attacked and bit the prosecutors daughter, a little girl ten years of age. It was ascertained from the evidence that Keyser did not keep the dog but that it belonged to another man., Jary out. The case of the Commonwealth vs. James Anderson, previously reported, was submitted to the jury at eleven o'clock, but had not agreed upon a vir diet when Court adjourned. The Infant of the Period. A few evenings since a waif of human- ity was nicked up on the steps of a man sion in the First ward, and thereby hangs a tale. The little charge; a blue eyed,fair haired female of some six weeks age, was taken in charge by a hospitable lady until some further disposition could be made of it.. _The lady tired of her charge in a few days, and yesterday it was banded over to the kind care of Alderman Humbert. This tact became noised abroad and was the occasion of an excitement in the precincts of the genial magistrate's sanctum, only excelled by the fluttering of Tuesday. Visitors to the number of one or two hundred dropped in during the day, mainly of the male persuasion anti with singular unanimity were struck with the beauty of this in fant of the period to such an extent that a contest sprang up between them as to who should have possession of the "somebody'a darling." The contest nar rowed down to the official and a well known gentleman on the South Side, each of whom declared it should be his at any cost. Aidermanic fervor finally reached an intense pitch and incited its possessor to bid twenty dollars for the child. Gentleman from the South Side was not to be beaten in this man ner, and be went thirty better and thus the conflict began. Finally it was knocked down to the Alderman for the neat little sum of 11150. The fortunes of the wait , however, stopped not here. Further consideration evoked the idea of again disposintsof the coveted prize, and an arrangement was effected whereby a second sale Will take 'place, the money realized from which is to be placed.,,at in terest and allowed to componnd until it shall be of age, when the dowry thus se cured shall be handed over to it. The time of the second sale is fixed for next Saturday evening at eight o'clock, and' the place the Aidermanic sanctum on Fourth avenue. The official ants his determination to possess the prize, while the South Side gentleman and another from the Pith Ward are equally wriest in their declarations that until their pusses are completely exhausted it shall not gags thelegrasp. In ftlenitirlam. At a meeting of . the students of Curry Institute, held September the 16th, 1869, the foildwing was unanimously adopted: Wm:mks, It has pleased our Heaven ly Father to call One of our number. Miss Mceleais', from the scenes of time to the realities of eternity, In the morning of life; and, whereas, our hearts! prompt us to give some public and. for mal expression 'of our feelings in view of this-providence, *therefore be it Resoked, That while we bow in h-! ble submission to the, will of Him " who doeth all, things well," we cannot. but be painfully affected with a Sense of our loss In the' removal from uti of one so lovely. , Resolved,. That we, the members of this School, - have sustained the lass of a true friend and loved • companion, whose mdmOry will ever bWoherished and re vered by us all. Resolved, That in the 'death of one so young, grave, thoughtful and conscien tious, we recognize the bend of our Heavenly Father, transplitiating a floWer of early promise to the garden of eternal bliss, and that we are thereby reminded of uur mortality and admonished to early make our peace with Gad. Revolved,That we extend our heart felt symp athies to the bereaved family, and fondly hope that what is their loss is her gain. - , Resolved, .That these -resolutions be published in the United Presbyterian and the daily papers, and that acopy of them be given- to•the family. of the deceased. SADIE NEELY. • lideGlll. Bows, 13sosix.Sualusavmt.z , Committee. Grand Fall Opening of Millinery Goods at Joseri Mcrae & IT and' 19 Marketlitieet. , Our renders will bear- in mind that during the present week a grand opening of fall millinery goods has been made at this wholesale and retail trimming: and notion hoube,. and special oOportanity Is presented 'for Wide selection and choice.'. Au the new novelties which have appeared in the .eastern markets will be found in the stook. A CENSUS taken last spring in lowa by the'issessors and reported to the Secre tary of State, shows a population of 1,- 033,175. It i is supposed that the popula tion now is 1,100,000. In 1836 whet is now lowa contained but 10,000 people; in 1846 it had only 97,000; in 1850, 519,000; la 18 probably 567,.920,000; now.the census of 1870 will how 1,200.000. In 1867 there were in the State 6,127,380 acres of land inclosed , ---this year 8,294,476 acres reported. In 1867 there were 155,758 dwelling housedain the spring of this year, 175,820. In 1869 1,075,177 fruit trees in bearing—now 1,509;270. It is very probable that lowawill blithe eighth State of the 'Union in point of population eceording. to the text tensne,being,sur plased only by Masaacbuietts, Ziew Ohio' `Mis souri Peruaivania,_ Illinois,. :Indiana, and The State last year cast more,votee thi nWlsq)pairk or, Kentucky, an d, nearly as . many Masischusem 10W11.6 Republic= tu. the core, and sure to. nada iO. Additional Malicia D 3 Telegraph CLEVELAND, September 16.—Flour steady and unchanged. Wheat opened heavy and closed with • better feeling, sales of 134 bush No. 1 red on spot and seller September at $1,31@1,32: chiefly latter price for No. 2. Corn held nomi nall at 97@98c for No. 1; Mixed at 95(a3 96c. for No. 2 Oats dull and held nom inally at 500. for No. 1. State rye very quiet at $100©1,05 for No. 1; 90@95c. for No. 2. Barley without report, move ment nominal at $1,22@1,30; state and Canada rather more inquiry. Pet roleum; refined a shade firmer today without quotable change and the de mand from the west active at 26% for prime light straw, and 29@2934c. for standard white in car lots, and rather more inquiry from the east, but no tran sactions.. Crude a shade better • with fair demand at #6.45. CHICAGO, September 16.—At the after- • noon board transactions were light, No. 2 wheat closing with sellers at $1,27%; seller the month, buyer the month sold at 51,24. Corn quiet; No. 2 sold at 84V,c, seller the month; 83340 seller October; closed at 840 seller the month. In the evening tim market was quiet; one sale corn made at 84c seller the month, at which price the market closed. Lake freights and provisions inactive. NEW ORLEANS, September 16.—Cotton in fair demand; sales of 960 bales of mid dlings at 2914 c; receipts,6Bl bales. - Flour lower; superfine $5,75,--double extra $6, treble extra $6,25. Corn; white $l,OB, yellow ;1,10. Bacon scarce, 16 1 A @We- Lard 19•Wg22c. Whisky higher 51,32%. Other articles unchanged. Gold, 135%. Sterling, 46%. New York sight, par. MEMPHIS, Sept 16.—Cotton inactive and no buyers; middling nominal at 2,7 e Receipts; 114 bales. Exports 156 bales Flour firmer but unchanged. -Wheat $1,15®1,30. Corn $1@1,05. Oats 63@6.5c. • Hay $23%, Bran $2335. Corn meal $4,25 @4,65. Pork $.34,75. Lard 20 1 4@21 1 4. Bacon - steady; shoulders 16%, Bides 1 9 35, Na.savinr , E, Sept. 16.—Wheat firm: red at ;1,20, amber at $1.25, and white at $1;30. Corn at $1.25. Oats at 70c. Rye at §l. Barley at $1,20. Flour at $B. Ba con at 1914 c, hams at 20c, and shoulders at 17c. Lard at 2134 c. Man Shot—The Perpetrator Lynched, (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.l PORTAGE CITY,WIS , Sept. 16.—Wm. H.Spain,a well known citizen, to-dayshot Barney Britty, another well known citi zen, who expired almost instantly. Spain was arrested, and while on the way to jail was taken from the officers by a mob of infuriated citizens, a rope put around his neck, dragged to the nearest tree and hanged. Both were members of the Nineteenth Wisconsin Regiment, where the enmity first com menced that so. tragically ended to-day. Ohio State Fair—Republican Meeting, (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh 6aseite.l TOLEDO, September 16.—The weather to-day has been favorable, and this has been one of the most, successful days in the annals of Ohio State Fairs. The at tendance is believed to have - been but little leriis than fifty thousand, and the receipts up to the present time are large ly in excess of those at any similar ex hibition evergiven in the State. The fair closes to-morrow. Hon. John A. Bingham addresssed a mass meeting here to-night. • THOU BRINGEST DIE LIFE-- LUNG-WORT. One bt the truest and most suggestive ideas can be obtained from the caption at the head of this art.cle; for of all diseases which impair human health and shorten litunanlife, none are more prevalent then those which affect the lungs and pulmonary tissues. W huther we regard tun g diseases in the light of a merely slight cough, which is but the fore-runner of a more sellout malady. or as a deep lesion - corroding and dis solving the pulmonary structure, it is always pregnant withevil and foreboding of disaster. In no class of maladies should, the physician or the friends and family .is; the patient be more Seriously forewarned than in those of 'the lungs, for it is in them that early and alleles:it treat meat is most desirable, and it is then that danger can be warded off and a cure effected. • Ds DR- I KEYSER'S LUNG eIIRE yon have a me 'Hams ef the greatest value in all th,ese conditions. .An alterative,, a tonic. it nutrient and resolvent, succoring nature and sustaining the recupera tive powers' of the system. Its beautiful work ings, in harmony with the regular function's, can be readily observed by the use of one or two bot tles: it will soon' break up thichaLeof morbid Sympathies that disturb the harmonious work ings of the animal economy,. The . barrassing cough. the painful 'respiration.. the anutere streaked with blood, will soon give place to the nermal and proper workingsOf health =dilator. An aggregated experience of over thirty years has enabled Dr. Reiter, in the e,ompounding of his LUNG CURE; to give new bone to the con ' iumptive invalid and at the same time speedy relief in those now prevalent, catarrhal and throat affection 4 so distressing in their effects and eo almost certainly fatal in their tendencies, unless cured by some appropriate remedy. ' DB. KEYSEB'S LUNG CURE is so thorough and ef ficient. that any one who hae ever used it, will never be without it , in the hotise. It will often cure when everything else fails, and in simple cases will cure oftentimes In a few days. The attention of patients, as well as medical men. is respectfully Invited -to this new and valuable addition to the pharmacy of 'the conn- Yr. DR. Sri* may be consulted. every day until 1 o'clock y: M. at his Great Medicine Store, 161 Liberty street, and from 4to 8 and to at night. A DEFENSIVE MEDICINE. "Try time of peace prepare for war." is a sound military maxim. "Let not the sickly season fina 3 on unprepared," is an Eckii, hy good rulein medical Juriaprudecce. The man must be made of iron who duds himself al the *lose of summer as 'trot g east its commencement. Such a phe nomenon is rare, even among the most robust of , the bunion family. Musettlar and constitutional viger oozes out of us iit the broiling weather of July and Miguel. and few of us, at. the opening . • of the Tall, are in the best"possible ,condition to defy the unhealthy influences of the season. Fever and ague and bilious remittent fevers; together with a variety omplaints 'gnat effect the dig.stive organs, the liver and the bowels, forma portion of the autumn programme. :Bear in mind that exhatutioa invites these di orders. and that starritaat vigor enables the system to repel them., Met be vesicle to be millet able," says Satan to hls defeal ed. legions, in •raradise Lost.' " led the axiom is correct, tuou,th comes from an evil source. lio 1 then, ye weak and foeble,‘ fortify your- - selves against the invisible enemy that- invades the Autumnal air: The best defence against miasmal. a count of litgiTE iTitso.lbTO BlTTstlib.- This rare vegetable tonic will im prove your 'appetite, stimulate your d'irestion, give fleetness to your merves, invigorate your muscular fibre, -regstiatmlour secretions, eheer - your, n spirits. and put your entire physinub la perfect wonting order. It Is early clone. The Wind •rd tonic and alt tine which will race. peseta and build you up. ,is sot "bad to take; , s bat, on the contrary, a pleasant mzdicine. See however, that you have the genuine arti cle. There are imitations and counterfeits In the market. and .they are all worthless or_ dale. tenon.. Bear to mind that BOSTETTBM3 ISTUM &BB BI MBAs is so d only In gloss. In Ter by the gallon or may, and *attach bottle bears a label surmounted by a vignette or St:: ,tkorge end ape Drawn, sag Our *relate storopOtor tft ME