~, "yf , V mai* "' ' . ' '-' .- - •' - ' iit 1 kip '• f l i - . Y DOMitritaollll, ' Frederick iffassiturek, f lit id IYalloV Wit:a ',editor of the Votkablatt, 13 e , __, _. !t iticiari °Prot% pp ‘ o t: the newicatnnovel: merit on the groeutina that it ialntheinter - 'est of reform in politics. The principal idea of the uew cou n ty officials is to -replace enor mous fees of county officials with reason able salaries, and let the surplus go Into tne Treasury. Not a bad notion certain ly; but stil it was the leading resolution in the PAO blican Convention in elm:in „i •nati. A howow matter by what party 'advanced, it fteatatt pay' in Allegheny wiunty.7 Co nunerciaL , On sev a). occasions, during the last six months,. vita have called attention to the disorgr. nixing tendencies of our neigh bor, and, in some .cituirters, have- been -thought uncharitable. The deliberate -suggestion, copied above, ought to lea lican ve no doubt. In the mind of any Rep, as to whet that neighbor would do, if it could. ---.....-+.--cw-------- YUBLIBIEFD BY 112111 - 011,141,1 33 EZD &CO.,Proprietors. rFiraligAl4,, aostral SING, • T. ri,i:!.outmoti, " f. BEND , .tdtors and lioPrietorge carroas IllorlollllolNG, kliD 86 FIRTHkV. ?AREA or vittibuyn, surgueyrr and any .. ighway Co_vinty4 • . reigsr-Datly. =Wag% iferetaSq OneOnATraoTta"7s 2111stoslt BO 5 eoßtesAa l:2s /I t Al7,4 l fer i l e REPUBLIC AN ' • 6•17/7.--irr-•. YOB aovr.Bsols JOHN W. 'GEARY. - JUDGE. OF sr ?REISS COURT: HENRY W. WILLIAMS. Co - P:14:7 4- • ". ASSOCIATE, JUDOS DISTRICT COTIST, JOHN R. NIRSPATRICR. AASSISTANT LSAT JUDOS" COSESION PURSE* ' YERD,R. HA COLLIER. Was BRNATs—THOISIAB HOWARD. ABsslrouv—MlEVES R. HICOSPIAR EYB. A.T.SRANDER MILIAR. JOSEPH WALTON. JADIR3W TA.YLOR, D. N. BITE. JOHN H. KERR. sssimarr 'stroll s. imssage. Tssxstrasa—io9. F. DENNISTON. Wass or Cotars—JOSE,PEL BROWNS. Rar.costats—THOßAß H. NIINTER . Colonsuoicas.—JßAUNCßY B. 808 seeprrsa.—JosErs H. GRAY. MISS CO 08r EtAlcs, catT—ALER. RILAND B Datscroa or Poor.—ABDIET. HcCLIIP.S. ----. Ws Pao on thi inside pages of this morning's Gear:Ms—Second live: Poetry "Ng •Wife," Gentraz sante, State Items, Personal. Third and krizth pages: Finance and Trade, Markets, .Imports, RizerNews. Seventh page: a ssts, y Baying Gloves in GOrcatar, Demo tic Comedy, Amusements, Directory. %%out= at A.ntiverp, 561 f. IL B. 13oxne, at Fankfort, 817-1 ---0,0011111 Gorm closed is liew York yesterday ' tt 137®138 ?nom. To.-sto'nnow.onward until the Bth-of next month, GOVerIIOT GitA will ire devote his attention almost entirely to the canvass in the western counties of the State. fir/mg sends large reinforcemen her troops to Cuba, by way of response to the little "suggestions" of our Minis ter at liadrid. American diplomacy at ihe Escarial is not yet to be c omplimented upon its achievements I • ppoixforvcoxra"ry is ae! Octr 'Republican , friends here understand themselves, and appreciate the responsi bilities tot the hettiCs Oaf -toter& will at tend at the. bctobef polls with their usual punatuity, and in their usual force. We feel.quite safe in the Predic tion, that they will count out as good an average for A , llegheny in comparison withthelastgresidential vote, as in any otiMiOmitY of PellßSyliltailt. Rpmem ber that c , - .. -. Tan Curtin xiterrimacrroit will be peoit4e4- to 'won't **lf through, to whatever lama feW ' iil4 *Cm • for it. The Arner!ce . govertirtwat will avoid aniinterVention which could embroil ns outlaw side, and 019 t wo land ma* land and time ,Oi - powers of Berr.:, --,ag Prance, will follwr , our, example. !Ann of all, do ,the latter propose to infinite Ameriourylpatiiies, by any overt dem onstrations to sustain the Spanish author iV. They are too wise to. fell into fleet trap. rAttoerr-17:-....1.,-...., Wn rums alfeady announced that the Democratic City, Ticket for 'Philadelphia, Which was first nominated . Created so mph dissatisfaction among reputable members of thepartp, that all the cand dates were constrained to withdraw. A fresh list of candidatelrlaa brought out; but table these seem to be no more accep than the others. Thrdd of the Democratic thuiday papers of philadelphia opened simultaneously upon the'new candidates, and this appears to be only the prelimina ry display of the internal opposition to be encountered. Tun Snutcr "macs of the City Conn. ells did not concur in the action of the lower body in granting to the California Pioneers the hospitalities of the city, be. 'fug restrained from so doing by the im poverished condition of the finances of our municirdity. The Pleheeie will come neVerlimiess; and should receive some welcome from our people. Will'not our manufacturers and inerchants themselves see to it that they ase:,hospitably enter labia? Let our energetic citizens set abott.t to at once prapge for their reception in a litllng and becoming manner, for we cannot afford to give them the "dr, shOsdder" tbe4., Savant among ruv Who 'will move ? It WM cerildray 43smaSin,g to our own interests to permit Dui ;Visitors to enter: depsrt from our' eatWitliout any: • sign et recopitioa or f 441.0a6CAt 111tiCtli A Cincinnati >are "catty ottetriatteda The sorehead Be. publicans and te reSocrste united on a county' ,hide ßerwide VOPlelit in opposition to, the regular Beptibucon TELE CONTRAST. Eight years of Republican rule our Om 30, 1860, to Nov. 80, 1868) reduced. State debt 0,170,061.16, paid war-ek penses, during therebellion, to the amount of 0,087,056.76 more, arid, off in the, last three years of the eight, took 0,240,6'70.09 of real and personattaxa -lon--a total of fourteen and a hau• lions of dollars paid off from our debts, or awed from our resources. Tlaree-yeara of Democratic rule (June 'SS to Jan. '6l) sold the public w orks, re ceived amillion and a half of dollars in those real and personal taus, and yet in creased the public debt 11,092;122.41. These figuresure officially correct and speak for themselves. TELE SECURITY OF M 1 Notwithstanding the existence years past, of schools of mining, l Gershon States, the sckentifiiin ed. thus afforded has not suffacedto exti . gni the risks of calamity altogether. T school at Freiberg, in Saxony, is ine the most thoroogh in its curriculu ~ rat largely atteln: led, and is regarde as the highest repute •upon the Co tine Yet the recent wholesale destrn :•rt life, in the oolleries near Dres. • : r •sents a sad'commenter i upon the d ;•ciencies of the practical educati. . wh \the mining-schools afford, or mu tbe cepted as proving that this inst ctioi not yet universally popularized It wouldbe folly to deny the ado has, on the whole, contributed vasti the personal security of min - ain 1 ;underground labor, but it h: • not deeded, and perhaps never wi in t -pressing altogether tlae t,mptat which.const aptly impel the -rativi take the risk. of disregarding 1 : teach' For example, every modern • y it gent miner knows that the d• ger explosion of the tire -damp w 'clt ht counters is reduced to its - ..tnirata the proper use of the Davy amp, w is eo constructed that the •- orkman is faithfully warned of the en .tence f Yet Y the peril which it protects h ~ fro mining experience aboun. : withm . cases where &e most fearful disa ters have been l , directly traceable to thi recklessness of the-operative in uncov#ing his ight, that he may the clearer ;see his work. .Continned impunity encotUages him until, at last, a blow of his pick releases the deadly gas from its contiPement, the fire touchesand death flasheslitrough e it, very avenue and chamber of the pit. For Vichlitelrigiasnkss, no extent of ticientific instruption cap supply a reliable remedy. The legislatike authority only can supply the folit4estrictions which ntay yield a more coMplete protection. These restrictions should be so framed as toreachkie individual operative as well as'ihe li Seprietary Vich • employs him, since by far the laritst percentage of underground calualties is to be attributed to direct causes for which the former have been alone responsible. , The Prost= laws insist on the em ployment of all the precautions which science hai yet 'discovered for the protec tion of miners, and yet nearly three hundred lives were lost in their collieries in the single year 1867. It is admitted that, but for the use of these precautions, the casualty lists would be very much larger. ' The Prussian system of compul sory insurance for the Workmen has a direct and potent influence in diminishing t the hazards of under-ground life bu restraint that fails of a 'complete upon individual recklesiness. , , sion Oar Ilgilisture, at its nat session , is siscPectek!p. wed* the Whole subject carefully, and to provide effective regula tions for Abe business of milting. We' trust-that this legislation may not be lim ited by the experience of other countries, and but that it shall successfully meet provide`for contingencies and hazards Which no laws, at home or abroad, seem let to have touched. - _ COROSIC GRUMBLERS. AT POL. anus, , The speech recently uttered by Prince Ii sroLsoll in the Corps Legislatif of Prance has resounded throughout the civilized world, thrilling and reassuring the friends of representative government everywhere. Yet he gave utterance to no opinion or sentiment of superior sig nificance and force to this one, that the duty of, every good citizen requires him to take an interest in politics; indifference in such matters being dangerous to the country." In the 'United States it has,unfortu nately, become common for large classes . of citizens who.' enjoy high social rank ands eigatid moral character, to sneer at icallics and Politicians, as neee l/ '' 414571441#440 1 1 11 d devout,Theifs eoplemikAddifeMllVMl deepidtri:Sß`tifb, rMOBWP44- being politlclima, sad would feel need for 'washing their hands I RGlF•tillarrrE"lnini SDAY' -arrEMBER 22 1869, active thoroughly they had -taken an • vigorous part in any movement or and transaction distlnctivelY political. 'With them the Word politician is synonymous with 'scoundrel, and p olitics with chica nery and deceit. It must be confessed t politics, hat some politi cians are not stainless, and-that applying to all sorts of men and pertain men, and in all conditions of life, has cert repulsive aspects. But, pray, are all re puted saints entirely amiable and enchant , lug, either in themselves or in the rei ,a, tions which they sustain to the masse A cif \ mankind? Are ,there no "black st ,nne among merchants, manufacturers, , bank. ers, lawyers, doctors and cler 'amen? Many such, first or last, fall into the clutches of the law, and mar eir clearly ought to who (its not, but mar Age by wit or guile to esape. Among th men of this' nation who properly rep Ut- themselves s to be politi clans, and whe• are necess• frily so reputed by all others, are thousto ole and tens of *ou-saaids who have no sttiseriorsniitur either_ as respects moral chst:actee, "or al endowments, or range slid exactness of culture. Take these men out of the com munity, and the nvz!rsge of morals, in telleet and learning wot dd be largely and lamentably diminiined. Group the na s mes that are illustrious in the political annal of the republic, :aid you have an array that cannot be suipas.sed,.even if it can be matched, for brilliancy and worth, in any other department of activity. . , The reason is obvious. Politics being the science of government, touches next to religion, the highest_ possible human for inteests, and this perpetually, and in a ,he may to insare contentment or to ce ef t - enl on unspeakable misery. This scien L ail Pities is at once intricate and fascinating. -91 e Suited to men of the largest grasp of of mental powers, it attracts them by a spic iest cies of magnetism too potent to be resist s of ed. That there are pettifoggers among Mt' lawyers, qnacks among doctors, smatter % of ers among scholars, bigots and hypocrites pre- among clergymen, bummers along with ley- armies, the whole world knows fall 'well n ; hicki and these will ever be so long as huma °°' nature remains what it is. So there are in la demagogues and pretenders among poli ticians. °flee But, this is not the main point we had t° in view when we set out, which was to their approve and enforce the doctrine of sue . Prince NAPOLEON that every cal. ! I P - zen ought to be a politician, and that °°° ' s for any man to fail therein is of dan res to gerous tendency to the nation. The darl ings. ger to the State does not proceed so much ate/11" from the bad !or incompetent men who of an push themselves into the management -of te en- politics, as from men whose morals are by - pure and whose abilities are unquestiona e po b. hie, but who refuse to discharge th litical duties which devolve on them ' as members of society. It is not the self assertion of the profligate, so much as the remissness of the othe sort, that de generates practical politics. Do not the declaimers against politics and politicians comprehend that a sin of omission is just as much a sin as one of comm brush issioupn? If they do not, they had better their ethical comprehensions. 'Nay, it happens not untrequently .that a duty omitted entails as great disasters as any crime actually consummated. The great er part of the grumblers against politi dims are in this very dilemma; their re fusal to do their own manifest duty, fur nishes the men of whom , they mplain the opportunities whereby they co thrive. Who, then, are , chiefly responsible? If a man's field is destroyed, will he discrimi nate between the,offender who letdown . the bars slid the'clther offender who drove the cattle int. We trove not. • There are many men here in Allegheny county, as everywhere else, who are staidly declaiming against parties and grumbling about politicians; but they do literally nothing to make the,case better. They cast off and contemn the responsi bilities which nature , anirithe laws lay upon their Shoulders, and then set up continuous howls about the way in which their neighbors dispose of their respective shares of these . same duties. Especially is this true as to locale municipal affairs. Fall upon a chronic grumble, and you encounter ordlluuily la man whotas done, nothing towards cor and means to do, recting whatever disorders may exist. fie has his ownkviesita. of 'what Ought and what ought not to be done, and these are so sharply defined in his mind as net to ad mit of codradiction,from any dills peers; but he will put forth no suitable effortis out by to have his own conceptions carried those who occupy positions of legal authority. Theie is decidedly too much of, this; and the sooner ever Y swill citizen reaches the cCin elusion ', that' .he has something to do of more 'consequence than growling, both in municipal and 'general politica, the better it will be for all concerned. If a people tan be named who have suffered the loss of liberty or any minor evils through the exertionniof small and de basing politicians, we are confident that many have been vitally. injured by the sickly sentimentality of classes of popula ough tion too fastidior . to perform the r work inevitable in this world, and who preferred the :.immaculate whiteness and delicacy of their-hands to a grand cause energeticaly pushed - , and the highest re sults heroically•schleved. mos Tates. VVex vr far of the publications of the past year Wire been more popular than the her .ada of Sans Breitmann. No Maeear .onic author has ever, to our knowl edge, approached Leland in ability to min . the German and English languages naturally, and at the same time to se V yew with such ..accuracy the broken fragments of both. According to OUT n om, as well aS the popular jud gMent, Bans Breitmann is one of the funniest jolliest, most laughable creations of the literature; Of the present decade, 'full of suchgems, as none but rare wit could conceive. The critic of liarpet's Maga• sine disagrees entirely with this, and un able to appreciate the admirability of the broken English , used, ranks him in the list of -,mis-spellers below Artemns - Ward and Petroleum V. Nasby.' This, when there is not a word in the book mia-spelled, any more than there is in the Scotch poems of Burns': but there is a rough beauty in the rich dialects of a country, which it would be impoasible for a cock. nay to - enjoy. This same critic says: "In flans Breitmann there is n Tate othing funny but the. grotesque dress. away his pipe and his lager beer, and he is as stupid a dolt as you can And of ." a Sunday afternoon in any beer garden The man who. wrote that is evidently a Sabbataxian, who is not to be found in a beer garden on a Sunday afternoon. When "Hans Breltmanni solves the ust as in finite as ono eternal spree," it is j funny as if it still wore its German trim ming..., but it is not so.appropriate to the character, lust as in some of Barns' poems, the fun remains if the poem is stripped of its broad Scotch, but the identity of it is quite lost. Some months ago the two publishing houses of Bar per's and Lippincott e, Breitmann's for mer publisher, had a quarrel of the "heftiest" sort. Can it be that that is the reason for the apparently unaccount able lack of appreciation in an ordinarily just critic? • miry rg BOSAl e *WA UniOn Oaf' Iteillnktreelaing in that cotuith. owe te el x children, three bail tt Tee Elirlltlmtbsoradblrbf the Ith lust 'The mother *4 fire 4. at last accorints wete doing yea, fetter Is told to be operfectly delighted." ----7 1 THE light wine queition is getting to be of more and more importance, ev ry year. The yield of grapes this year it California and several others of the vi , n( growing districts is very much la e than ever before. Every year large tr ct of suitable lands are planted with gr p i for the drat time, and as but few viney rd which have once produced are ever a at doned, before long the native it party will be a prominent and reap ct i•le opponent to both the whisky an tl total abstinence rings. Of the man ti prejudiced or intelligent persons wh have examined into this question a real. we have yet to hear of the first onewho does not report that where wine is grown in such quantities as to render it po rti sai- ble for the people to procure a pure a cle for a small price, intoxication is r ar er er than it is common in this country England. Dr. Holland to be sure, has written a series of letters containing i r statements exactly contrary to this, but he must have traveled with hi eyes sodrunk- e our closed that nothing but a case of eisess would open them; for denier selves, without having paid p attention to this question, are, able to contradict almost every one of his asser tions from personal observation. But a few years, however, will have l _elapsed before we shall be able to study thls im portant question without going-abroad. ----- 1 THE summer is about over, the people who were out of town are in again, the warm weather dof September has' lasted nearly its accustomed time, and the equi noctial storm is anxiously looked for. We hope that the complaints of hard times are over too. These II complaints beim been wide-spread, but everything seems to show that they have not been justifiable. In our own experience we have never before known so many of our citizens to spend a portion of the sum mer away from home and business, nor have we ever before known of so large proportion of that number taking the. pensive trip to Europe. Prom Ne of w York and. Baltimore a larger number Mass passages have been take; to Europe m this year than any be fore s .a d sus the cry of hard times has found Its echo in those cities too, we may well consider whether this constantly increasing journeying to Europe and the consequent increase of purchases by private parties there, has not tomething to do with It? But then again, on the other hand, if times are hard, how ifs it that the number of tr It av is - elers is so much larger than usual? a questton that has two distinct sides, and admits of two antagonistic answers. FEw tags have been so unfortunate as Lord Byron. pull= his life time be was pressed by enemies and (=lace, and twice at least since his death he has been exhumed, merely to be weld as a target at which literary sharp-shooters could practice with their poisoned arro ws, and now, as if fate sought to keep thi unfor tanate's misfortunes always before the people, that reckless Bohemicnne, Mad ame Ratazzi, has written an opera with . Byron as the subject and the name. If this work proves to bo as successful as the brazennesa of its authoress and the fever ed_ notoriety of the subject would seem to promise that the unfortunate Eng lish peer's descendents, to the tenth and twelfth generations. may enjoy the pleas ure of hearing the misdeeds of their an cestor squealed in tenor and roared in bass, while the goodness and nobleness and beauty of his life and character— and there was no lack af .all these qer il. ties—were burled with his bones. Vito • wester parch - Bpril3 '. booora bolsi would' ways: and ---------- when it le Inn' it needed. 'Every year, from some Pints of the country, we are now certain to 'near these doleful accounts of the ratan lof clay to dust. Every year that for sier stranger, drought, is now sure to visit this land, where once his ad" vent Was shoot as muchas dreaded, a nd,he as fteanently avoided, that of t choiera is now.'And as long as millions of, trees are chopped down every year, 1 and no new ones planted, this annual 1 , scciarge will continue to increase until some day we may come to rival Sahara. ---- A GOOD deal of amusement was occa sioned some months ago by an article by one of our modern humorists, of George in the Galaxy, upon the body•serva nt Washington, whose oft-rePeated deaths have become proverbial. This ancient pegro has not, however, attained the boveted position of champion dier of wit but h out vigorous rivalry from a man little less fame, and also of but little less 'shill in this specialty. We refer to ilast male. descendant of Win. Penn, who for a score of years has been periodically dying in both continents; and in abject \ poverty as well as in comfortable cir cumstances. He died again a few days ago, and will nowe, we hope, rest In peace. ___---...a.--o ---41 P -------- • - -- - ------- - - A _Remarkable- spring in Meagan. The Lansing (Lich.) _Republican says that in attempting to bore a sal t t w ell a ell at St. Louis, Gratott county, in tha, the spring of fresh water was tapped, at depth of a little more than two hundred feet, which throws out water at the rate of two hundred gallons per minute. This water is thrown some distance above the ground; and the first thought of the peo ple of that village was, that if they had failed in obtaining a salt well, they had secured the means of providing pure , soft, cold water for all. The diseovery of its healing qualities was the result of accident. - Three traveling agents went down to the spring, and finding the water Old, it was proposed that each should hold his n h of physical and in the water, to test the questio endurance. One of the party had long suffered from rheumatism, and had been unable to open his hand lot many years. This hand was placed in the water, and a \ when compelled, after some moments, to le i withdraw it, he was able to straighten his ?.r fingers, and he exclaimed: "My Godl I is I can open my hand, and have not done it g before for ten years." This marvelous is healing caused great excitement among the inhabitants, and further experiments 1- ' proved that the water was nife blades filled with to electricity or galvanism. K a- held in the current flowing from the pipe ie became sufficiently magnetized in five 7,_ minutes to lift a tenpenny nail and retain the power as if imparted from a loadstone. to The news of its medical properties ol spread far and wide, and those suffering 1 1 from chronic rheumatism and neuralgic I diseases came to drink and found restored health from the waters. The analysis of Professor Duffield, of Detroit, provedthe truth of the assertion that the wrovisi o aters we ere charged charged with electrieity. n been made for the accommodation of pa tients and the furnishing of baths, and St. Louis is reaping a golden harvest. The village is constantly filled with patients, and the cures are almost as re markable as those performed in days of when the old at the Pool of Bethesda, angel stirred the waters. A few days since 'Messrs. Christit.aL-n and Patterson, of Lansing, went to Suis to try the virtue of the waters, and were greatly benefitted. An old man who had -been unable, from rheumatism. to walk for more than three years, hobbling about as best he could with crutches, his feet especially being in a terrible condition, he took two baths and drank freely of the water, repeating the same on the day following, and on the third morning hwithoute walked ten rods and back crutches, almost entirely healed in two day's time. d Christian have Messrs. Patterson an ben hemeans of making another dis- coverye t in m relation to these waters, which will excite a profound sensation through out the State and country, The water had been conducted through a six-inch tin pipe from the mouth of the spring. For -some purpose, a portion of the mouth of this pipe had been cut off and allowed to drop upon the ground, where it was coner stantly kept wet by the flowing want. Upon the surface of this tin had accumu lated a galvanic coat of metal resembling burnished gold. Mr. Patterson, who discovered it, pro posed to bring the entire piece to Lansing, but was told that others mightlike apiece as a curiosity; and a couple of pieces, each about three inches square. were brought to this city, one of which is in our possession. An examination shows thatthe coating is as finely placed upon the tin as if done by the best galvanicprocess. and a test of acids made by Prof. Crane, of the Lansing Museum, proves the metal to be -chloride of gold. The water holds this valuable metal in solu tion, and it may turn out that the spring is not less valuable as a source of wealth to the owners than it is conducive to the health of those afficted with rheumatism, parnlysie, gout, sciatica, dyspepsia and neuralgia. The test of the strongest acids do not destroy the metal, ittion remain ing bright, as befcj e ! /e spl)Uca. But NSIDE DOES A GOOD Dasp.—Yes terday morning about 10 o'clock, a labor er, whol was at work upon the new pave ment at Fifth avenue and Twentieth street, therostrated by the heat, and' fell neacurb stone. No other work men were n Burnsided. Major Gen. Ambrose B. of Rhode Island, having seen him fall, hastened to his relief, and had him laid in an easy posi tion on the sidewalk, after which the General stopped a passing cart, tained ice, which he applied to the pOor man'shead and hands. By this time a multitude began to collect, but no police man was in sight. After putting the sufferer In en easier position, and request ing the throng to stand back and give him the benefit of what little air there was, the General himself went to the Union Club for a physician. and return ed to look after his charge. Our report er knew the modest gentleman who was taking such interest in the laborer, but the spectators did not dre e am d that tinguishe the gen erous stranger was thisd 'citizen who led Rhode Inland to the war. Providence Paper.• - .•_ . . every district of the northern, and border states comes the cry of the farmers for water., that were called unfailing have • dust heaps; rivets that carried • mmeroe upon their.' WOW' , now hal .11:4PriM ',lll/111111- if ,they:,, wont , insoodsztaodf inter . atand idle, to; to miumilhotare Ow *Act Volts on the Dauphin cpunty Soldier's Monument has been suspended. A. rreAvv rain and thunder storm passed , over a portion of Lancaster county ore Friday of last week, doing much damage to property. Fences were swept away, barns struck by lightning and burned, and cattle killed. The storm raged with great fury in Marietta. The streets of compelledleave their bonsai and seek refuge elsewhere. Dn. Jonm RENBBLUT, one of the oldest and most respectable citizens of Harris burg, died at his residence in that city on Saturday evening last, of paralysis, In the L seventy-fifth year of his age. He was a soldier of 'l2, and was wounded in the battle of Bladensburg. From the time - of the erection of the Smithsoni Insti tute,Washington, up to a lat day, the Doctor furnished meteorological observa tions for that popular establishment. He was also a regular contributor to the Journal of the Franklin Insti ologicatute, of l data Phil adelphis, famishing meteor fortha ia, that work, and was generally regarded as the "clerk of the weather." Ix DAUB'S, Delaware county, there was considerable excitement last - week over a case of bigamy and attempted suicide. James Dougherty, of that borough, mar ried a young woman in the employ of Mr. Piney, and some three weeks after the marriage he induced her to give him $5OO, on the pretext of buying a home. Getting the money, he eloped - with a -wo man to New Castle, Delaware county, and there married her. sego gal wife learned of this, and took antity ot corrosive sublimate, - with a -view to end all her troubles. T e dose was too large to operate with fatal speed, but first in flamed and then produced naortification of the stomach, from which, at last ac counts, she was slowly dying. Dough erty was arrested. Ix Washington nay, last Thurs. a the y, a negro, who lived in a low part of city with his wife and mother-in•law, vented his drunkun rage upon themsby chopping both to death with a hatchet. His wife had that day arisen from child bed, and when her husband came home intoxicated her mother ordered him out of the room. He returned with a hatchet and deliberately hacked their heads to pieces, while they screamed "murder I" until death hushed their voices. The negro expresso no regret. Another double murder took place at Union Hill. "N. J., Friday morning. A. German who had besotted bimselt with drinking until natural affection. was gone, resented the attempts of his two sons, one 21 and 28 years old respectively, to restrain him, and Friday morning took a carefully sharpend knife and desernbowlled both bed. the young men as they lay asleep in Then apparently horrified at what he had, done he cut his own throat. The sons died,_but the father did not succeed itli taking his own life. ~ .. , ... . , . . Derciliontas, a noted , pmbler etc., `Whosslastexplolt is saidito have been in I. ,connectioiliwith the Doll bond roblifirt,' wu arrested at Tamyra, .N. Y., a few 4sys ago, and taken to Oswego,. - ii • A coatriarr has been organized in Michigan for the manufacture of gas and water pipes of wood, varnished with Irma and covered with composition. THOU BRINGEST DIE LIVE.— • LUNG -VV ORT. One of the truest and most suggestive ideas can be obtained from the caption at the head of this art.ele; for of all diseases which imps* human health and shorten human life, none are more prevalent than those which affect the lungs and pulmonary tissues. lightther we regardlung diseases in the light of a merely slight cough. which la but the fore-ruiner of a more serious malady. or as a deep lesion corroding and dis solving the pulmonary structure, it is always pregnant with evil and foreboding of disaster. In no class of maladies should the physician or - the friends and family of the patient be more seriously forewarned than in those of the lungs, for is in them that early and efficient treat. m it eat is most desirable, and it is then that danger • can be warded off and a cure effected. In DR. LIIN9- OURS. you have a inedicthe of the greatest value in all these conditions. vent, An alterative, a tonic, a nutrient and resol succoring nature and sustaining the recuwrs . live powers of the system. Its beautifillwork.,;„ Ingo, in harmony with the regular functions, can be readily observed by the use of one or two hot , ties: it will soon break up the chain of morbid sympathies that disturb the harmonious work ings of the animal economy. The harrassing cough, the painful respiration. . . ihe sputum streaked with blood, will soon give niece to the normal and proper:workings of health andviger.. A.n aggregated experience of ?Ter thirty years has enabled Dr. geyser, in the compounding of his LAING CURL to give new bone to the con sumptive invalid and at the same time speedy '1 relief in those now prevalent, catarrhal and throat affections, so distressing in their effects and so almost certainly fatal in their tendencies, unless cured by some appropriate remedy. DR. YLESSICIt'S LUNG CDRE is so thorough end ef &lent, that any one who has ever used it, will never be without It in ho the use. It will often cure when everything else falls, and in simple cases will cure oftentimes in a few days. The attention of patients , as well as Inedleal men. is respectfully invited to this new and valuable addition to the pharmacy of the coca-. try. DR. RM•reiRR may be consulted every day until 1 o'clock Y. Y. at Ms Greet Medicine Store, 181 Liberty street, and from 4to 8 sod I to 9 et night. A DEFENSIVE MEDICINE. "In time of peace prepare for war," is a sound . ~.. military maxim. "Let not the sickly swoon find you unprepared," is an equally good rule in "•,•• medical lartsprudence. The matt must be made - r •-•, of iron whit finds himself as the close of summer ~_ • as strong as at Its commencement. Such a phe- ~:. nomenon is rare, even among the constitutional rour the human famtly. Itinsertlar and • vigor oozes out of us in the broiling weather of ; of and kugust, the be st of us. at the opening of the fall. are in the best possible condition to , defy the unhealthy influences of the season. . ,- _, Fever • and issue and bilious remits that ttent fevers ,:._. - together with a variety of complain at the digestive organs, the 'Pier and the bowels, •,- -,, for min d pottton of the autumn programme. Bear In that exhaustion Invites these ditorders, and .thati staminal vigor enables the system to 1 ,- repel them. "To be weak misetable," ••,,:,„ says Detain to hls defeated le g ions in 'Yeradise ~..., Lost,' "I and the axiom Is correct, though it. -• , I comes from an evil source. : Hot then, ye weak and feeble, fortify you r ',.- selves against the invistble enemy that invades- i--% the Au umnal alr: The best defence against mitt's= s a course of HUBTF.rTien.'n tiTO *Loa =. ' BITTg . This rare vegetable tonic will im- '..•-• prove y r appetite, stimulate your digestion, Rice A nets to your nerves, invigorate your ,‘ • muscat fibre, regulate your iteAretleall, cheer your s lilts, and put your entire physique be ,T.,.. perfect working ordtr. It la early _done.. The ; stand. tonic sad alterative cion will teen. perste nd build you up, is not "bald to take.** but, the contrary, a plessaut medicine. Bea cleaver. that lewhaill the . genuine ern- 1: ale. ' There are imitations f and counterfeits In , . the market. end they are os or dale- • „ :-"- serious., Bear-la stand t JROSTETTER4 ',--. STObt*OUITMPAII sol o ill..Wdi tt itni vett •,. by tar "gluon of cha, and es= bo e bears a labs. surmounted by a vipnette of Bt. tleorp , - atil the Dragon. end Oar revenue amp OYU She H