4 Abu PTIBLIBBID BY EigNIKAII,REED &00,Propristor8. T. B. PENNIMAN. JOSIAH gme. T. P. HOUSTON. N. P. BMW. 'Caton and Proprietors. 077101: "BETTE BIIIIMaiG, 84 iliD 86 FIFTH AV. OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh. /klieg hoar • sad Ans. abeam County; raw—Daily. On Wedgy. mak., One ye/1.7.43,00 One year.s2.6o Dingle c0py..g1.50 One month 75 BM mos.. 1.10 6 CODIWI3II4II 1. 16 25 By the week. 13 Three MO 15 10 (D'm earrier.ll 3 end one to Agent. SATURDAY, SEPT. :25,1869. UNION REPUBLIC. N. TICKET. OZSMI FOR clovEraqrou: JOHN W. GE M. JUDOS OF Elt PRIMA COURT: HENRY W. WILLIAMS. COUNTIC. ASSOCIATE =DOE DISTRICT COUNT. JOHN M. KIRKPATRICK. ASSISTANT LAW JUDGE. COMMON PLEAS. FRED , K. H. COLLIER. STATE BERATE-THOMAS HOWARD. ASSZNIILE—MILES ALEXANDER MILLAR, JOSEPH weimm. JAMES TAYLOR. . D. N. WRITE. JOHN H. KERR. REDIRIPF HUGH B. FLEMING. TaxAstraza — /013. F. DENNISToN. CLERK 01 Comm-JOSEPH BROWNS. Itr.coaDER—THOMAS H. HUNTER. Col ssumEß-111AUNCEY B. BOSTWICK. ItzeisTsu—JOSEPH H. GRAY. CLARE ORPRANs , COURT—ALES. HILANDS DIRECTOR OP POOII—ARDIKL MCCLURE. WS PRINT on the tiliSifle pages Of this morning's Gressirm—Beeond Page: . General News, State Items, Foreign In telligence. Third and Sixth pages:. Fi nance and Trade, Markets, Imports, River News. Eleventh page: Confessions , of a House/weaker, Settling ProPerty on a Wife, Whittier's Tribute to Humboldt. PBTROLEUX at Antweiv, 562 f. U. S. Bomi at Frmillion, 86 Gorzo closed , in New York yesterday at 133.. - A ItErtnnageli Illwarrta will be held at Freeport this afternoon, which will be addressed by Gov. GEARY and Hon. Hen Low CHAIiCE. Let there be a full turn out of all who desire to hear the issues of the hour ably and intelligently discussed. • Gov. GEA.IPt will be in the city to-nigh at the Monongahela House, and will re main over until Monday. Hox. MARL= CliexcE, the gifted orator of Ohio, will address a Republican meet ing to be held in Allegheny on next Monday evening. Lit Trims from officers of the 11. S. Ship Sabine deny the reports of a muti ny, and its suMmury,punishment, among the crew of that vessel. HON. W. D. Emma, of PhiladelPhia, has accepted invitations to address a Re publican nieeting to be held at City Rail on Tuesday evening, and at the Eleventh Ward School House on Wednesday eveningt- • Tnn Avondale Belief Fund already ex ceeds $200.000, and continues to swell. If divided among the widows who were bereaved by that shocking calamity.'over $B,OOO would be given, to each. 'lt is very properly suggested that this division would not secure the charitable purposes of the Donors, to the more 'effective and permanent advantage of these women and children: A large responsibility .rests, therefore, upon the local Commit tee, in the adoption of such a scheme, for the appliCatlon of this large fund, as may provide the most enduring advantage to the beneficiaries. ' . - Tim New York Democracy hive disap pointed the prophets : The expected new departure has not ben taken. They - cling to the "dead issues"- Of the past, with a tenacity which cannot fail to dis ' gust the friends of live men and live principles for t h e Democracy of, the Union: The reaOlutions adoided 'at Al l bang on the 22d, sing the same old son: widch,has Or nine years been the , invariable prelude to Democratic disaster'.' They can: no loniedenotince a war which was ended four years since, but they go as far as they can in dericiuncing all its legitimate results. A party which was crushed - nearly to the verge_of ex tinction britsTolly In opposing thiiiine sisal:de progress of American liberty, in the events which culminated in 1865,, is merely exhibiting its hopeless Insanity when it pretends today to deny the le litlinitte fruits of the triumph of freedom. It will be crushed, finally and ere long, • in the old rut from which not even the councils of its wiser friends seem to avail for its timely retreat, • - ONE WEEK moss: The registry of motors in thl county TM. close on esturaar nezioOtober 2d. Atter Thursday, nitYr assessment or Tees- Aration is prohibted by law. And, i con no citizen who has not been reg. istered and assessed, will be allowed to vote, except upon other legal proof of his residence, to be offered to the electiOn officers. These proofs will occasion vast ly more of delay and trouble to the citi zen, as well as to the officers, than will be found in timely attention to the matter during the coming week. We again urge each reader to see for himself that his name is on the list before Saturday next. In the cities. the;asses sors may be speedily and conveniently found, and the country townships are not so large as to put any citizen to much in convenience. Remember l But one week more AN EJECTION FROM TIM CUTTLE. FISH. The Commercial delights in generalities so vague that it i is difficult to tell with tol• erable certainty who or what it aims at. It more than intimates that there are very bad men on the Republican_ ticket, and who consequently ought to be put off. It urges us to help in that enterprise; but fails entirely to particularise who ihe bad men are, and in what consists their bad. ness. We cannot act upon sitch in definite suggestions. We •havll with critical exactness examined the names of the candidates that stand at the head of our columns, from Governor down to Director of the Poor, and have not found one that we believe ought to be stricken from the list. Perhaps, if we had been consulted, and our wishes had been followed, the ticket would not be exactly as it is. But many men are required to form a political party, and no oie man, or journal—not eve* one of so mach self-sufficiency as the Commercial—can have matters his or its own way. With due humility we accept the fact that we are only one among many, and that one, in large movements, seldom counts for much. Now, if our neighbor really believes that there are bad men in nomination on the Republican ticket, let it have manli ness enough, just once, to come from the underbrush of general accusation, and state plainly who it means, and by what specifications it justifies the arraignment. It ought to stop skulking, first of all, for its own Own sake; next for the sake of those can didates, If any, which it may concede to be honest and honorable; and, last of all, for the sake of the Republican party, if ,indeed it has any regard left for that or ganization. Who do you impeach, and with what show of evidence? Now, let us hear you speak exactly to the point, or else forever after hold your peace. WHAT COMES OF TALKING WITH THE 'PEOPLE. -- - Since the Spanish Regency has de clined to accept the proffered mediation of our own government, to secure peace in Cuba, it is understood that our 'Minis ter at Madrid has been instructed to with draw all the pending propositions in that direction. It is also clearly settled that the Administration will not recognize Cu ban belligerency, and our neutrality will be faithfully enforced, upon the basis of an absolute non-intervention, unless, as IA very improbable, another policy shall be suggested by Congress. Under the re cent agitation of this matter, and the pressure of enlightened opinion in this country, the Cuban questio4 has found its proper level at last, and will no longer have the prominence which seems to have needlessly embarrassed the Cabinet councils. The country has cause for congratula tion.,, in the wise conclusions which the Administration has reached in this mat ter. When it is known that a - marked change in the opinions of prominent °A dais at Washington was observed imme diately afte' the return of the President' , from his tour among the people, it is n ot difficult to conclude that this tour has itself contributed very power fully to the new phase of the question at the Capital General GRANT has availed himself, evidently, of . his widely extended opportunities to ascer tain the sentiments of the people at large, concerning the Cuban revolt and our own duty in connection with it. Looking outside of the narrow circles in which a few professional 'politicians and a small party of noisy eastern journalists, who " have hitherto contrived to represent their own interested utterances as being the actual sentiment of thipopu lar masses, the President has, we are sat isfied, found, in mingling with the peo ple within the month past, that the prop osition to intervene, in any , shape, in the 13panish•Cuban quarrel, comprehended in l fact a fatal blunder. He has taken the Viebiseitum, and finds the country.to be solidly against either a foreign war, or, any addition to our domestic bnrthens, in behalf of an insurrectionary mob of Cu ban slave-drivers. Thci President has returned it, the Capi tal, thus instructed by his popular obser vations, and loses no time in offic!ally re sponding to the 'almost universal senti ment of his countrymen. He will not the len regret the death of his friend and late Secretary of War, General Riwtins, since he: is thus precluded from convincing )iim, as he would be if the Secretary had survived, that every consideration of public duty, whether to our own people or to the in terests of a humane civilization, hea re quired the immediate and complete re vision of those opinions, and of that pol icy which found their potent advocate in the. Cabinet in the person of the late War Secretary. . The Priaiderdial tour of this summer Minot been ;lute_ thrown away. Ita ftrat = PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : - SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1869. fruits, which we see iu thiabetter phase of the Cuban questioneat Washington, give a grateful earnest of yet other results for which the people may look to an Execu tive who knows how to hear and bow to comprehend the opinions of the people. AN INTERESTING STATEMENT. It is stated that, after the refusal of the Senate, last winter, to admit the Senators claiming seats from Georgia, on the ground that the Legislature of that State, in expelling the colored members "had failed to comply with the Acts of Congress and therefore bad no right to representi tion," a resolution of the same purport was offered in the House by Mr. Bout well. The passage of this resolution would have also unseated the Georgia Representatives. But, while it was still Pending; the Georgia Legislature, doubt ful of the prudence of its course, - was considering a resolution referring tb the State Courts the question of the right of colored' members to hold the office. At the solicitation of the agents of the Legislature, General GRANT persuaded Mr. Boutwell to hold his reso lution in suspense, until the decision by the Georgia Court should be made, upen the express understanding that all parties would abide by the decision when render ed. That decision was delayed until after Congress had adjourned, the Georgia Representatives still holding their seats by sufferance. It has since been pro nounced, its terms fully confirming the office-holding rights of the colored chi-. zen of Georgia. The conclusion is that Georgia must now keep faith, and restore the unseated members of color in her Legislature, or the Boutwell resolution will be pressed, as it should be, at the coming session. The public may differ in judgment upon the policy or impolicy of the sus pension of (proper Federal action until the opinion 1 of a State. Court had been takeri upon the rights of the State to dis regard the plain intent of Federal legis lation, but there will be an entire una nimity of ()Pinion now, especially in view of the curious statement here made, upon the obligatilms of Georgia to accept for herself the decision of her own Court to its fullest e tent. or to abide the proper consequences in the further discretion of Congress. IWe.attach importance to the facts now shaosed, since they are doubt less true, and afford a clear explanation of the mysterious delay in eecisiveaction at the last session. Wnirrnimn it is due to the logic of Sen ator Sumner's speech at Worcester, or to the very hard fact just revealed at Wash ington, that the revolted slaveholdera of Cuba have practiced the most flagrant de ception in order to enlist American sym pathies, we perceive that even the New York TrOdne, which has been heretofore clamoious -for Cespedes and his slave driving guerillas, begins to take a differ ent view. The annexed paragraph, from the Tribune of the 23d, reads very differ ently from any of its previous utterances in the premises. For example: Buz so far we have no buaineas to re-_ cognize even the belligerency of. the in surgents. This is not a matter of caprice, bat of fact. Belligerence Is a state of af fairs to be attested by evidence.' If it does not exist, there is nothing to recog nize, and we certainly have no proof that the Cuban insurgents, without forts, tribunalspf justice, or established gov ernnient, have yet reached that point. Until such proof appears we cannot re cognize them without a plain violation of International obligations, however much our feelings may be enlisted in their cause. Tan Cincinnati Commercial has this pointed allusion, to existing difficulties in the way of the complete usefulness of a gentleman. ho is not wholly unknown in this vicinity: We hear: The report is credible that Bath. Cary is organists secret societies throughout the State, while in the pay of the Dom anado State Central Committee. Sam. has been in that- business ever since be was old enough to drive oxen. He never could resist the temptati when he heard of a secret society, fo rapplyingy for immediate admission. There is a roes. zotinSengravW of Sam. in existence, in which be appdirs in all the glory of the regimentals of a Patriarch, or something of the slut, of the Sons of Temperance. It is a wonderful picture. Sam. has been, perhaps le, an Odd Fellow, Red Man, Maso Know Nothing and Son of Tem perance. n, He would have been a Daugh ter or Rebekah if his sex had permitted. ANoTnEit shining light in American diplomacy is forever extinguished by the subjoined note item Secretary Fisa to the Brazilian. Government. Under date of June 18th, our Secretary writes: giSrn:on are aware that Mr. J. W. Webb, U nited States Minister at Rio Janeiro, has thought proper to demand his passports from the Government of Brasil, In consequence of the unfavoralge . interpretation which he has Out upon the answer to a demand which he had received orders to address to that Gov ernment on the subject of the , 40anada." But as he had received - neither orders nor authority to act as he has done lathe circumstances, the. Government of the United States hopes that his conduct, in which it has taken no part, will not be regarded by . the Government of Brazil as interrupting amicable diplomatic rela tions between the two Governments." CITIZENS of Pittsburgh, irrespec!ive of party, will derive but small satisfaction in noting the scandalously false insinua tion of an opposition print in Philadel: phis, as follows : The city of Pittsburgh is now borrow ing money in New York and Philadel phia to meet scorned and scorning por lions of her old loans. This Offers,. we do not doubt, an `excellent investment. But is 1t not a ground for some disquiet that the old repudiation party of Allegheny county now furnishes the Radical (=di date for Judge of the Supreme Courtt— Agee kkg. 22,1869. ,/OWA expects to gain three Represent& the; by. t h e . mut ~a ppn,otoprnent. • • - . , RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE It is a singular fact, and one of rare occurrence, if indeed at all, for men not engaged in unlawful pursuits to beat off the tax-gatherer with a bludgeon, or cause the assassination of honest revenue officers, whom they could neither bribe nor frighten. The shooting of the Philadelphia revenue officer is a case in point. There is much truth in the view of the _Advance, of Chicago, that the man who will go into the whisky business will not scruple at any crime in carrying it on. This is pretty severe language, and yet the 'course of many en gaged in manufacturing and speculating In whisky, juitifies the view taken by-this- Chicago paper. It haiThan-ascertained that fully fifty churches received damage in New Eng land, by the storm week before last. It is stated that sometimes persons are elected vestrymen in the Episcopal Church, and trustees of Congregational churches, who are not religious in the strictest sense of that word. But the Dio cese of Tennessee not only requires all vestrymen to be members of the Church, but all those who vote for vestrymen also. The noted Malcom case of communing with other than Baptists, came up for re view recently, before the Warren Baptist Association, Rhode Island. It was re solved that while it recognizes the entire independence of individual churchei it does not sympathize with the open com munion practices of some of them. Considerable stress is laid upon the modern mode of teaching in Sunday Schools, by uniform lessons. Two or three of the leading denominations have provided for this kind of instruction, and the Presbyterians will do likewise, we presume, from the statement of one of the papers of that body. The Advance thinks a school should have the directness of a rifle, and not the scattering qualities of a shot gun. This is all very well, but, we think, there is danger in abrogating some old time features that are essential to the epiritual success of a school. Nothing should interfere with personal conversa tion, by the teacher with each scholar, in regard to their soul's salvation. This in timacy between the teacher and,, scholar, has been the means of the salvation of Multitudes. The spiritual results at the . Eastern Camp Meetings this season were remarka ble and more than ordinary. It is con ceded the order and respect for the Sabbath showed a marked improvement over former years, owing, no doubt, to closing the ':gates of the grounds: At Yarmarth Camp Meeting, on Sabbath evening, sev. enty•five to a hundred were forward for prayers. Whole seats of young ladies and gentlemen came together:to the altar of prayer. At Sterling, one hundred and twenty-five were forward at once. At Hamilton, it was estimated that five hun dred testified to the power and fullness of saving grace. At Machias, Kennebec, Hatfield, Willimantic and Martha's Vine yard, the same display of saving grace was seen. All these meetings occurred in New England. Quite a stir has been produced by the editorial of Dr. Gilbert Haven, of Zion Herald, published at Boston, on "Secular Colleges," which app aced just a ft er Dr. E. 0. Haven had rsigned the Presidency of the Michigan University, a State In stitution, to take charge of the Methodist University, at Evanston, near Chicago. The position assumed was that institu tions of learning not under denomination al control, with scarcely an exception, were to a considerable extent a complete failure, and that they were hedged about with difficulties which prevented them from accomplishing as much good as they would with the same sources under the direction of a religions body. Dr. Haven says a secular university educa tion is as impossible as a completely de veloped mind without religion. Thirty-four Presbyteries are reported In the Presbyterian _as having voted unanimously on the Basis of Union of the two Presbyterian bodies. According to the Presbyterian Rev. James M. Platt, pastor of the Leetsdale Presbyterian church, goes to Bath, Genesee Valley, and Rev. J. Henry Sharp, of Valley church (Wood's Run) accepts a call to the pastorate of the Wharton street church, Philadelphia. The AlleghenySy - xi - lid - of the Evangel ical Lutheran Church, convened at Bedford, Pa., on the - 15th and ad journed on the evening of the 20th. ,There were thirty-six min , isters in attendance beside lay delegates, commissioners and -visitors. • Many of our readers are interested in the "Ministerial Vote," by the Annual Conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and we shall refer to it from time to time. Seventeen - Conferences have voted, 1,089 for 826 against—total U 415. This is more than three-fourths majority: If the vote maintains the same ratio in the Conferences yet to vote, as the Seven teen, the question of tip introduction of lay delegation is virtually settled infavor of the measure. According to the Catholic of this city, "Archbishop Manning has declared that from a Catholic point of view, the United States Public School system is the worst in the civilized world." The public achoole in this community are conducted in a way that does not justify such a se vere view as the Archbishop has ex-, pressed. The ICentral coogregational church, at Brooklyn, Rev. J. 0. French pastor, during the dozen years of its existence has grown frcom a membership of twenty r Berea to the aggregate of five hundred. They have twice enlarged the house of worship, and next year will begin the erection of a new edifice to accommo date fifteen hundred with sitting room, at a cost of one hundred and fifty thous and dollars. One of the churches in Cherokee county, Georgia, propose to exclude all female members who wear hoops,,paniere, small hats, or use cosmetic paints, or other ap pliances, to make an extended show "for man's illusion given." East Genessee Conference of the Meth odist Episcopal Church, comprising about two hundred ministerial members, re quires each person admitted to that body abstain from the use of tobacco in every form. • It is stated the following days of the week are those set apart for pablic wor ship in the different nations: Sunday, by the Christians; Monday, by the Grecians; Tuesday, by the Persians; Wednesday, by the AssyriaBs; Thursday, the Turks, and Saturday, by the Jews. The following "Vinegar Story" is vouched for by the Christian Witness, illustrating the kind of liberality that sometimes prevails among Church par ishioners: is still living?„ 'Mr "Oh! yes; one of the best men in the parish; not very liberal, bat a good man and very rich." "What does he do for your support?" i "Well, not much, but he pays his pe*- rent." "Does he sell vinegar now?" "Oh! yes; he has one of the largest orchards in the parish; and is so con scientious that his cider is all made into vinegar." "Does he give you any of his vinegar?" "Not he." So it was in my day. His vinegar was made to sell. When his daughter sickened and died, I went the're almost every day about five miles off. When she died sh had a greit funeral, and I sat up most df the night to write a funeral sermon. I called the next day. Then a few days after I went, and thought I would carry my vinegar j lig, which j net then happened to be. empty. The jug was filled. I did not like to take it away without offering to pay, for it, and so I said, as meekly as possible: "What shall I pay you?" "Well," said my good parishioner, "I generally charge twenty-five cents a gal lon, but seeing as how you have been so kind to me in trouble etc., I won't charge you but twenty cents." • At this time I had eleven children and was living on a salary of six hundred dollars per annum." -- Death in a Sleeping Car The passengers cn the Saturday night train of the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad for Cincinnati were startled from their slumbers attan early hour in the morning by the cry "Mother's dead!" uttered in an agonizing shriek-from the Year end of the car by a woman who af- terwards proved to be the daughter of the deceased. The circumstances attending the death were these: The old lady, who was quite an invalid, had been taken on board at the village of Jameidown, New York, where she was met by her (laugh ter' her daughter's husband, a merchant in Cincinnati, and a grand-daughter with whom she proposed to spend the winter for the benefit of her health—The old lady, though quite cheerful, was too feeble to sit up during the day, and one of the sections was arranged for her to lounge upon till bed-time, and her chil dren were unwearying in their attentions, watching her with such tender, thought ful care. -as to attract the attention of those about them. In the evening before they retired, the young people sang a beautiful hymn in an undertone, while the old lady sat looking out dreamily into the purple twilight with an expression which seemed to tell of yearnings for the spirit world, which was so soon to be her home. At bed-time-she-was placed away nicely in a section all to her self; being vis ited from thus to time by her daughters, to whose tender inquiries she replied that she thought she would pass the night as comfortably as though she were in her own room at home. The last time her daughter spoke to her was at two o'clock in the morning. When she went over at four o'clock again the spirit of the mother had passed away to the better, land, ap parently without a pain or struggle. It was a strange scene, that of the bustling, talking crowd of e arly risers, crowding thoughtlessly about the car getting ready to disembark, contrasted with the other, where the corpse was laid 'out in the cor ner section, with the children kneeling and weeping at.the bedside and refusing to -be comforted. The old lady was a general favorite in the village whence she came, and • was escorted to the cars by quite a number of friends and acqutint ances, to whom she said at parting, "Tell tem all if I slip away on this journey hat I was ready and willing to go." WALIIINGTON PA. (Correspondence of the Pittsburgh Gazette.] WASHINGTON, PA., 8ept.,.23. 1868.. Thousands of people are crowding our town to-day. They come in various ways—on cars, coaches, horse-back, and fn carriages and wagons, and not a few on foot. The report put in circulation that the President would remain till the fair, has had much to do . with augment ing the crowd. Bome, it will be presumed, will feel bitterly disappointed. No one, howeverblame,- as the President was oalled.away sooner than he expected to Igo. The receipts of the Fair will be large, but a very poor compensation is given. Exhibitions are comparatively few. Oar farmers seem to think it does not pay to bring their stock and the products of their farms. And the fact is they are not much mistaken. The iling" has mo• nopolized every thing. Fast horses win —win attention and the lion's share of the premiums. This error' must be cor recttxl else our Agricultural Fairs will have to be abandoned altogether. The display to•day of fruits and vege tables is uncommonly good. Several very fine carriages, manufactured in our place, are greatly admired. There are horses, cattle, sheep, hogs And fowls, but none of them attract special attention. It le worth more to see the people than anything else. They are *di dressed and -well behaved. Sobriety and good order prevail everywhere. Fair closes this evening. Mums. THE COURTS. Quarter Laesaton—Judge Mellon . — FRIDAY, September 24.—The case of the commonwealth vs Conrad Schusler i indicted for felonious assalt and battery. reported yesterday, was resumed ant occupied the attention of theicourt dur- ' ing the entire session. It`was submited to the Jury before adjourning, bat nel verdict had been rendered when the court adiourned. JUDGE STERRETT In the District court room. Judge Sterrett presiding, the case of the com monwealth vs James Smith indicted for horse stealing, was taken up. The ac cused was charged for stealing two horses from James Kelly an account of which we published some time since. The defendant declined counsel and plead his own case. The Jury returned a verdict of guilty and the person was remanded foneentence. TRIAL LIST FOR MONDAY. No. 61. Com. vs. George Harrison. 126. s. Frank Kitilsby. :ohn ann ng. Wm. Boyd et al. Isaac Williams. Richard Bennett. W. W. Wilson and Geo. Myers. Mathias Prunckner. James Wright. Charles L. Hall. Christ. Bradford and - Wm. Richardson. WM. Einstein, 11 cases. IT FOR TUESDAY. . Daniel McCoy and J. Jordon. Richard McGovern. John Hellman. Joseph Hack. George Dickson. Georgians Boughton. John Boots. Samuel Rill and Aug. Rill. I John Graham. Win. Thompson. Thomas H. Oss. FOR WEDVESDAY. S. Wm. Moore and Chas, Baugh. " 254. " 1. Thomas Whittaker. " 182. " " W.J. Robinson 5 cases " 153. " " Thomas Barbin. " 154. " " James Davidson. " 155. " " Patrick Gelston. " 121. " " Thomas White. " 116. " Christian Michael. " 118. " " John Ryland. (1 75 4. 218 .0 96. at 122. " 117. gi 129. " 212. " 211. TRIAL L No. 157. Com. " 158. " 160. " 214. " 215. .$ 216. " 217. et 218. ' ' 219. sg 221. ~ 241. TRIAL LIST`, No. 253. Corn. v " James Dillon. Nida Kirk. " John Wittinger. 99. '• 81. •6 . 6 74. " The Boulevard pavement is surely gaining favor and will ere long doubtless supercede, in a great measure, the old brick pavement, for certain purposes. This is no :lap-trap invention, as any person may discover by calling at 65 Ohio street, or examining it at other places throughout the city where it is in use. Messrs. McGowan tiz • Co. are the sole agents for the Boulevard in this vicinity. Ix is discovered by a physician that the celebrated fasting boy of Fontein bleu, France is secretly sustained by ab sorbing soaps through sponges placed against hiEr person. The boy's proprietors have claimed that he has tasted no food for three years—and maybe he hasn't. THOU BRINGEST ME LIFE LUNG-WORT. One of the truest and most suggestive ideas can /, be obtained from the caption at the head 1 of this art.cle" l for of All diseases which impair human health and shorten human life, none are more prevalen than those which affect the lungs and pulmonary tissues. 'Whether we regard lung diseases in the light of a merely slight cough, which is but the fore-runner of amore serious malady, or as la deep lesion corroding an dis solving the pulmonary structure, It is always pregnant with 'evil ai d foreboding of disiste.r. In no class of malaes should the physician or the friends and family of the patient be more seriously foreivarned than in-those of the lungs. for it is in them that early and efficient treat ment is most desirable, and it is then that danger can be warded off and's cure effected. In DR. ' KETBER ( S LIING CURE you have a medicine of the greatest value in all these conditions. An alterative, a tonic. a nutrient and resolvent, succoring nature and sustaining the recupera tive powers of thesystem, Its beautiful work ings, in harmony with the regular functions, can be readily observed by the use of one or two bot tles: it will soon break tai 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:Nood, will soon give place to the normal and proper workings of health and vigor. An aggregated experience of over thirty years has enabled Dr. Keyser, in the compounding of his LUNG CURE, to give new hope to the con sumptive invalid and at the samb time speedy 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. DB. KEYSER'S LUNG CUBE is so thorough and ef nclent, that any one who has ever used it. will never be without it In the house. It will often 5 cure when everything else hills, 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 coun- DR. KETtsER may be consulted even , day =LUIS. x. at his Great Medicine Store, IsT Liberty street, and frCnn 4 to G and T to 9 M night. . • KEEP TUE BODlrtill GOOD RE PAIR.. _ It is much easier to keep the system in good condition than to restore it totbat condition when shattered by disease.. The 'Sense of pie." like other houses. should , be promptly propped np and wastaleed,mbenever it. thews algae of giving way. The Ant iryntotom of phyitcal de bility should be taken as a hint that a stimulant is required. The next eneitton is. "what shall the stimulant be Pr A wbolesome vaepetabletonic. the stimulating properties of which are Tandified by the initee and extracts et antl•febrde and laxative. roots • and berbs..-something lArblen will regulate. soothe and WIWI. as well as Invigorate—ls the medicine required by the debilitated. There are many preparations whist a e claimed to be 01 this co lireffig°tWebelgirteirvlereigletiii:e.ivlttrandirel; ratite that has won its way to the conedence the public and medical profession by a quarter of a century of unvarying success. stands pre.emai nent among them all. To expatiate on its pope. 'mite wonletbe to repeat a twlce.told.tate. It is only necessary to coweo the records of the United Stites is avenue Department to learn that Its coneumption Is greater than that of any other Preerletady reledy of either nativeier foreign ce, • As a means of snstsining , the health d an strength =Leer eery temperature. the BIT TESta have aparamoutit claim to consideration. •It has the-effect of fortifying and Drafting t h e nervous and mneenlar systems against She ordi. denary consequelicee of sudden a nd violent changes of temperature. and ill teeretbre peon. 1114111 L at ttbts season. when by day and tee-cold dews by Light e alternately heat and chill tnehleoll of those who are eT.Pnana to them. 110eTlItTTILIV8 grOhIAOS BIDDIES are sold buttes only. To salad being dteelaed by wan tertt Re, see that tad Dam t article Is on tbe wad. and madame cet lbs glop of the bottles. sad eaz MMus Kipp net Oa 004. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers