F 3 I CyD littsinagt Gaidtt, PUBIABEBD BY PIENNIMAN,REED & CO.,Proprietors. P. B. PENNIMAN. 39E1A8 T. H. HOUSTON, Editors and Proprietors. \lan\ OFFICZ: TTE BEILDIN, 84 AND 86 FIFTH AV. ' OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pltieburglz, Allegheny and Alle. gheny County. . . Teress—paity . 1 tielni- Walk ly .1 W•skiy, , - One ye5k...55,03,0ne year.. 2.50 ', Single copy ..$1,50 One lomat 75181 x mos .._1.541 5 coincs,esch 1.86 HT the week 15' Throe moo 75,10 • 1.15 Mom; curler.) I Ise d one to Agent. i FRIDAY, OCT. 1, 1869 • N REPUBLICAN TICKET. lINI ~ 6T"ATE. FOR GOVERNOR : JOHN W. GEARY. .I:tiDGE OF sr RE!E COURT: HENRY W. WILLIAMS. COUNTY'. ifIROCIATS JUDGE DISTEICT COURT. JOHN M. KIREPATRICK. ASSISTANT LAW JI:7DGE,CO3I2ION PLF6AS. FRED'S. H. COLLIER.. $r TE S sNATN—THOMAS HOWARD. Al L rami — MILE S S. HUMPHREYS, ALEXANDER MILLAR, JOSEPH WALToN, J D A.ME N. W ti ITE,s TAYLOR, JOHN H. KERR. • r HUGH S. FLEXING. THRAitra.r.r.—JOS. F. DENNISTON. CLF.ELE OF COM:MS—JOSEPH BROWNE. Escor.Dr.r.—THOSIAS H. HUNTER. Coaxissioxrat.— :HAUNCETH. BOSTWICK. RzeisTER—JOSEPH H. GRAY. Cizas OBPBkNB' COrsT—SLEX. HILANDS. DIELCTOE OF Poo'—LBDIEL McCLUBE. Ws Palm' on the inside pages of this morning's GerarrrE—Seeond Page: Geniral Intelligence, State Items. Third and Sixth pages: Finance and Trade, Harlots, Imports, River New. Seventh .age: Grand Rapids and Indiana Rail road, Maximilian and ,Taurc:, the' Statis tics of Immigration, First Declaration of Independence, Amusements. U. B. BONDS at Frankfort, 8711@87; PBTBOLEIThr at Antwerp, 561 f GOLD closed in New York yesterday t 129@134. REGISTER: REGISTER : The registration of voters in this coun ty closes this week, after which and with dut which, the citizen must prove his right to the suffrage. Every reader of this paragraph should therefore attend to n's duty, and go to his Assessor at once. ATTORNEY GE.NERAL HOAR is of opin that the provisional Legislature of *rginia may elect United States Sena 3, "such action being essential to the completeness of reconstruction." Find ing nothing in the text or the Acts of Congress to support this opinion, he up holds it with logic which is, on the whole. rather adroit. But, not even an Attorney General is infallible. 1 1,1 to: TOILORROW the Republican primary meetings will be held in Allegheny, when candidates for municipal and ward offices will be chosen. Every Republican voter who desires good and true men at the head of the city government should cast his vote between three and seven o'clock in the afternoon. A nomination in Allegheny is equivalent to an election, which makes the primary meetings more important than the general election. - Let every Re• thia fact, and do his ONE LnMtis, representing one of the rival Cuban Juntas in this country, ad vertises that the insurgents have but one Constitution; that this decrees an abso lute emancipation of the slaves, and that their immediate freedom has everywhere followed the flag of revolt. The state ment is so completely at variance with other 'and better information, and espe cially with the tenor of all Erevious re ports from the insurrectionary districts, as to convince us that Senor Lerhus feels a profound contempt for the truth. AT THE RATE for the current quarter just closing. of the fiscal year, the receipts of internal revenue for this year will ex ceed those of last year by full forty mill ions of dollars. This . proyes -what sad work these "rascally Radicals" are ma king of the public interests ! It was high time for Mr. -Packer, and some .other Democratic millionaires, to do what they can to stop St, by virtuously declining to contribute more than $8.95 apiece to the swollen coffers of a Radical Administra tion. They have done what they could in that way, and an appreciating people will - know how to credit them for it. A LEADING REPUBLICAN' JOURNAL 0 New , York insisted, the other day, that our - only question with Cuba' is:—"What shall we do to promote her emancipation? The question of annexation is not pend ing." This was a well-intended sugges tion to avert the odium with which the people regard the current effort of a small but noisy clique to involve the country in a policy of annexation. at a large cost, incidding, probably, a foreign 'tar. But the Repriblicitn CoriVeittion of the same State declines toimitate the dodge. They declared, In thelaMe breath, at Syracuse, on - the 29th, that - they were for 'recog nizing Cuban belligerency as soon as possible, and for the annexation of the island when its people have achieved in dependence. TUREE THOUSAND. CHILDREN, the pride and hope of the city, assisted yesterday at the ceremonies attending the perma nent location of the cornerstone of the new High School building. The edifice, which in due time will crown the work of yesterday will supply the needful ac commodations for that advanced grade of free public instruction which is, itself, to crown our municipal system of po_pular education. Each bright and happy face in the Army of the Innocents which yes terday stormed the busy city and led cap tive every heart was the hopeful represen tative of a popular attachment for this; system so deep and ineradicable that we may safely cdunt upon it as an institution to be fostered and protected by the citi zens of Pittsburgh as lone as one stone stands above another in the foundation just dedicated. • H. E. REED, THE COMING ELECTION. In eleven days the people of Pennsyl vania will have made choice of a Gov ernor, a Supreme Judge, and a Legisla ture. As we read the portents, these are all predestined to be Republican, but not without the continuance of proper exer tions on the part of the advoutes of that political faith. We know the difficulties, such as the r y are, in the way of the con summation, and we iealize the powerful inducements to such efforts as shall tender the triumph certain and conclusive. The re-election of Goy. GEARY is a necessity to the party. It would not add a particle to his personal aggrandize ment or to his place in history. So far, he has, in fact, no need of the party. In the position he occupies, the party has need of him. Indeed, it cannot do with- outhim, The great struggle that has convulsed this country for thirty years is not closed, though we are thankful for multiplying indications that it is drawing to an end, and in such a way as to console and in spirit the friends of personal liberty and representative government, here and in alVparts of the world. What -re mains is to secure the complete recon struction of the Union on conditions that shall obliterate the 'old causes of contention without implanting fresh ones. To this end it is essential to 're•admit the white population of the Southern States to a full and unconditional partici pation in all the rights and privileges of citizenship, but only. when the equaulal rights and privileges of the black pop tion shall be effectually secured. Univer sal amnesty, coupled with universal suffrage, wilt meet the exigencies of the case, and nothing else will. It is folly or madness to urge an adjustment that shall deprive the, blacks of that political power which is the surest, if not the only defence of all their interests as in dividuals and as a race. Such a settle ment, it could possibly be made to subserve a temporary purpose, would remit the embarrassment, with accumu lating evils, as a baleful legacy to the next generation. It would inevitably fall into the category With all the other compromises of inherent and vital prin ciples which were tried in former years, to the disgrace at once of our statesman ship and humanity. • The Democrats of several of the Southern States, enlight ened by the stern discipline of the war, are taking sensible and wholesome views of the situation. They have reached the conclusion • that the whole solution had better be made now than be postponed, and they shudder at the suggestion of sending the most intrinsic and weighty question of all down to posterity, with - ue certain to follow in its train. We have, therefore, no sneers for the readiness with which they now covet the political co operation of the blacks, but reserve sneers all for those northern Democrats who have learned nothing though they haire been brayed immortars, and after succes sive defeats have nothing animate remain. ing but undying and persistent malig nity. But more than the re-election of Gov. GE.A.BY is 'required to enable the Republi can party of Pennsylvania to perform its whole duty. It must secure the reten tion of Judge Wimums upon the Mach. It is puerile to declaim against what is denominated the intrusion of politics into courts of law. . Where shall politics make its presence felt if not in the judiciary ? The judges have the laws to interpret and apply. There is no higher function in politics than this; and none so high ex cept the co-ordinate functions of making the laws and seeing that they are faithful ly executed. , , • Judgei have political opinions. They who have none are unfit for the magistra ture. The two political parties into which the people are divided represent two different political conceptions, which they respectively endeavor to have illus. trated in the practical operations of the government. As well talk of keeping these two opposing conceptions out of executive chambers and legislative halls as out of the courts ofjnatlce. They must and will enter into every department of National and State organizations. Of the four Judges of the Supreme Court of this State who hold over, two are Republicans , and two Democrats..eacir two sharing in and striving to give effect to the ideal of the party by which they were nominated and elected. There is notbingsnonstrourk ir# Improper in Ablefi PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, ,1869. but simply that wbich is natural and ben e • We want the Republican party to be in the ascendency in the Supreme Court, for the same reasons that we desire to have the Presidnt and Governor and working majorities in Congress and the Legisla ture. Without the concurrence and help of a majority ut the judges, the Repub lican party will certainly be impeded, to the great damage of the people. Mr. Williams is the right person to de termine which way the balance of political opinion shall incline in the Supreine Court. A man of the strictest moral in tegrity, instinct with the deepest reli gious convictions, of large mental powers which have been carefully and variously trained, experienced in the subtleties, and the solidifies of thelavr, and in the very prime of life; he is pre-eminently qualified for the delicate and arduous post for which he has been designated. Tbis is not a matter of inference ‘ or conjecture. He has been triedis in this very service now. The reputation he carried qpon the. Supreme bench, when he took a seat there under appointment from the Gov ernor, has not merely been sustained but enlarged. In that position he has impresied most favorably legal gen llemen from all the counties of the State, and of both political parties, by the na tural force of his mind, by the nice bal ance of his judgment, by the subordina tion in which he holds passion and preju dice, by hie extensive and accurate knowledge of the laws, by the supremacy he allows to considerations or justice and equity, and by his personal bearing and demeanor. • In view of the case as thus presented, we appeal earnestly to our Republican readers to make no engagements that shall interfere with their attendance at the _polls on the 12th of next month. Let there be a full vote, which means a crowning victory. A SWINDLETR OP &ND ITS CATAS HE. The story of financial experience in New York, for the week past, is a short one. First, a gigantic swindle was en gineered, then two or three days of spec lation run-mad, a dead-lock in the adjust ment of the vast and complicated transac tions, the failure of subsequent expedients to relieve the situation, and then, a panic in the stock market, and the final ruin of a large number of dealers, the suspension of one bank and s sharp contraction of kusiness by others, with a general appre hension of still greeter embarrassments and distress to follow. At this writing, the crash of speculation seems to have been general, and the condition of legiti mate business in New York has been made decidedly unpleasant. We must, however, adhere to the opin ion that, while the ruin wrought by the excitement of last week among these gamblers, whether' in gold or in stocks, promises to be vastly more general and disastrous than when we adverted to it a few days since, it is nevertheless confined, thus far, to the business houses which either speculated for their own account, or as the brokers for gambling principals. The failure of their own debtors, the losses made directly by themselves, or the inability of these principals to make good their margins of los3, and, withal the locking up of so large an amount of solid values in the choked and paralyzed clearing-house, then the fresh panic in stocks which came to deliver the coup ,de grace to so many dealers already tottering on the verge of ruin—these are the causes of the present crisis in the financial metro polis, and which, fortunately, mark as clearly the limits within which the mis chief is confined. In this position of affairs, it is but a small consolation to the au rr..--re, ur to ux.r......-cry whim noes not fail to realize a large temporary embarrassment from the existing panic in these financial but spec ulative circles, to know that the handful of men, who have engineered the opening movements which have resulted in such general disaster, have themselves been, nearly every man of them, caught and crushed by the fall of. the fabric which their canning cupidity had reared. These reckless and disreputable adventur ers have coruscated through a dazzling round of apparent successes in the railway and financial world for two or three years past. They have fallen at last, and with them collapses the great Erie "ring," and, if we are not mistaken, its very menacing and influential coali tion with one unscrupulous wing of the Now York Democracy is also blown . to fragments forever. That infamous part ndrship will never again carry the States of New York and New Jersey for Sey mour or any other Democratic candidate. The Gold Exchange Bank has failed. And forty or fifty brokers and financial dealers have also "gone up." Perhaps a still larger number are soon to follow. The legitlite busixtess interests of the country sag quite sound and will not, suffer, beyond the brief delays required to clear up the lately convulsed atmos phere of Wall street. Holding this view, the country will not regret the explosion which promises so to cleanse and reno vate the purlieus of the money-changers, as to expel, for at least a season, an ele ment which never has been of any benefit to the splid interests of the people, and which, of late years, has really threatened the moat serious mischiefs to the country at large.. . We perceive that the R roporition, to give . to all tone transactions in gold the legal effect of contrasts for an lntitedhtte . GAZETTE Of"MOlldfty last, finds very gen- ' eral favor not only in New York but among Senators, one of whom, Gen. Wilson, of Massachusetts. designs to lb troduce a bill 'to that end at the coming session of Congress. There is no doubt that a measure of 'this sort would effec tually preclude the recurrence of such events as have marked the last week's financial annals of the metropolis. , In this connection, it is proper to state that as4xisting law of Pennsylvania for our ow people provides precisely that reme dyl t which we have urged upon, and wh ch Gen. WILSON will preserit to, Con gress for adoption in the Federal law. All time transactions of this sort are here legally regarded as cash contracts for im mediate delivery. Let New York copy the provisions of our law, or let Congress apply them to the country generally, and the New York gold•room will be closed in an hour. . FOREIGN NEWS AND RUMORS. - THE Prussian Bible Society in Berlin has distributed since its foundation in 1814 more than three millions of copies of the Holy Scriptures. In the year 1807 alone • the number was 90,000. A SEHINARY has lately been founded near Berlin to educate preachers and ,teachers for the German emigrants in North America. It is called the Merv?, haus (star-house) after the banner of the tutted States. THE cattle disease is dying out fast in Prussia. In the province of Bradenburg special precautions have been , abandoned in the districts of Lebus, Landsbere, and Sternberg, with the, exception of two or three small localities. In the province of Prussia proper no new cases have ap peared for weeks. A NUMBER of submarine-sweet water springs are known to exist along the coast of Istria and Dalmatia. As the coastal districts of these provinces suffer, from want of a sufficient supply of water, and as it is possible by means of the Norton pump to save much that is, now lost, the Austrian Ministry of Agriculture has published a book on the means of find ing and utilizing submarine fresh water springs on the Austrian coasts. PRINCE GOIITCHAROFF is surveying the political field in England and France be tore returning to St. Petersburg, and takes an especial interest in the progress of the Anglo-American complications, as well as in the Americanization of Cuba, the Emperor of Russia being well knoVrn to sympathize with the United States in out claims against Great Britain, as well as with the progress of American suprem acy in the New World. AT the meeting of the German Evan gelical Kirchtag at Stuttgard on the Ist of September, Dr. Schaff, of New York, as delegate of the American branch of the Evangelical Alliance, invited his German brethren to the proposed meeting of the Alliance to be held in New York, assuring them that their Christian friends in North America would do everythingin their power to make their journey and their stay in the New World agreeable. He considered that the necessity of .n iin timate union between the evan blical Christians of the . two hemispher s, es pecially at the present moment (ref rring to the coming Ectufienical Council) must be universally admitted, but such an al liance he believed to be still more requi site in order to present a firm front to the unbelief of the times in which we llve. BRIEF TELEGRAMS. —Bishop Lynch. of Toronto. leaves for Rome next week. —There was an immense crowd of vis itors at the Indiana State Fair yesterday. —The distillery of Powell At Atwater' at Canton, Ills., was destroyed by tire on Tuesday. Loss 120,000; no insurance. —F. M. Blair, editor of the Masonic Home Advocate, and formerly Grand Master of Illinois, died in Indianapolis Wednesday night. . —The Memphis Board of Alderman adjourned last evening till Tuesday, without action in reference to the sale of 'the city's railroad stock. —The planing mill, with two hundred thousand feet of lumber, belonging to Charles Reuter, at Omaha. was burned Tuesday niche. - Loss $2 5 5,000. —Two oil cars on the Hudson River Railroad ran off the track at New York, Wednesday evening, caught fire, explo ded and were burned. Loss, 15,410. —A collision on the iron Mountain Railroad, in Missouri, on Wednesday, resulted in the death of one engineer and the serious injury of the other. —David Williams, Baggage Master on the Lafayette Road, was knocked from the train while passing under a bridge, and instantly killed, yesterday morning. —John W. Moore, who killed Mrs. Mc- Adams, near Greenville, Illinois, last July, after attempting to outrage her, has been tried and sentenced to be hung, October 22d. —The latest report from Fort Buford is that the troops were building stockades and considered themselves safe against the Indians. The Fort has been fully supplied for the winter. —The frame building, No. 78 Sherman street, Albany, New York, occupied by Michael Sixt and Mrs. Sandlightner, fell yesterday, and two children of Mr. Sixt were fatally injured. —The Examining Board at the Naval Academy, Annapolis, admitted as cadets yesterday, James S. Negley, of Penna.; George B. Way, of Maryland; and R. F. Nicholson, of North Carolina. —The following additional cadets were admitted to the Naval Academy Wednes day : Wm. A. Talbot, of Pennsylvania ; David Peacock, of New Jersey; John B. Nichols, of New York; and Wm. Duna luck, of Illinois. _lsooprnanschoof has appointed John. Ainslee, late President of the Memphis German National Bank and business manager of the Appeal, his agent for the South. Koopmanschoof leaves Memphis for New York to day via New Orleans and will attend the Convention at Lola ville. —Chief Justice Conner, of Honduras, was one of the p 'Ay with Capt. Morrill, of the steamer Trade Winds who were picked up by . the steamship Clinton. They were three days without water and their sufferings were great. Some of the men became delirious and one jumped overboard and was drowned. —At a meeting of citizens of Cincinnati, Wednesday night, to take action for the relief of the orphans and widows of sol diers, speeches were made by George IL Pendleton, Job. E. Stevens, - Judge Lea vitt and others. A letter from Governor Hayes was read. A committee of twen. krone was appointed to take the matter in:: 4th power to act. e . • NEWS - BY -CABLE. Speech of lion, Edward Cardwell—Be I Gives Ills VieWs ou the Proper Policy of Governing 'Coloaies—Rt. Bon. Jas. 1 Moncrief Appointed Lord Justice Clerk of Scotland—The Empress Eugenie Gone to the East—The Suez Canal. ;By Telegraph to tbe Pittsburgh Gazette.] GREAT BRITAIN. LoxpoN, September 30.—Mr. Cardwell, Secretary of State, in a speech to, his constituents at Oxford last evening, fa vored the confederation -system in Can ada as one that should be encouraged in all the English colonies. , He said the general policy of governing colonies from home was a total fail ure, and there had, consequently, been substituted a policy to encourage them to develop their own power and resour ces, and stimulate them to a spirit of self-reliance. He showed how successful this policy had been in the case of Canada, and briefly reviewed the progress re cently made by that colony. She had already an army of her own, and such a merchant navy that, if her people chose to adopt the act passed for the pur pose, she might become one of the first maratine powers of the world. This, the speaker said, was, the true policy to pursue. If we ben efit the Canadians we benefit our seltes. Also, by this policy our colonies have become sources of strength and honor; at d when the time comes, and • England calk for the support of her col onies, there will be a confederation such as the world never saw under a single sovereign. • The Right Honorable James Moncrief has been appointed Lord Justice Clerk of Scotland vice Hon. George Patton, deceased. FRANCE pants, September 30.—A late dispatch from Bordeaux states that only fifteen vessels wore burnt there at the recent fire. They wore all French vessels. The fire was caused by an explosion of petro leum. The Bank of France to-day has 9,200,- 000 francs leas than last week. The Hippodrome in this city was burned last night. Loss heavy. The Empress left Paris this afternoon on her eastern tour. It is reported the father of the murder ed family whose fate is attended with so much mystery, -was strangled and his body has been found in Alai3oe. No decided action has been taken In regard to the convocation of the Senate and legislative body. EGI PT. ALEXANDRIA, September 30.—A. dis patch from Suez announces that the bar riers against the passage of the waters of the bitter Lakes have been removed, and M. Lesseps has passed , through the canal in a steamer from Port Sill to Suez in fifteen hours. MARINE NEVI QUEENSTOWN, September "qo.—The steamer Virginia, from New York, bas arrived. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. LONDON,' September 30.—Ft:ening.— Consols for mousy 93. Five-twenty bonds at London 83T-.; '67r, 82%. Ten-Forties, 75%. Eries 227,;; Illinois 933: Atlantic 6: Great Western' 7. Stocks quiet. LIVERPOOL, September 30.—Cotton dull; middling uplands 12!,'• Orleans 123,4;,5a1es were 5,000 bales. California 4' white wheat 10s. Bd.; rod western-9s. 4d. @As. sd. Western Flour 245; Corn 29s 6.1. Oats 3s. 6d. Peas 44e. Gd. Pork 1 110 s. Beef 89s. Lard 735. Cheese 635. Bacon 65s Gd. Produce. unelcanged. .I..oNnoi , r, Sep - ember 30.—Tallow 475. and dull. Calcutta Linseed 635. Rain. ed Petroleum Is. 7 1 0. Turpentine 275. Ad. The specie in the Bank of England has decreased X 353,000 sterling. PARIS, [ September 30 Evening. Bourse doted steady. Rentes 71f. 27c. }JAIME, September 30.—Eveizing.—Cot ton dull at 144 f. on spot. ANTWERP, September 30.—Evening.-- Petroleum quiet; standard white tells at 56' francs. FRANKFORT, September 30.—Ameri can securities firm: Five-twenty bonds 87!-4@8714. Mississippi Republican Convention— Ticket Nominated, and Resolutions Passed. My Telegraph to the Pittsburgh 6uette.l • JACKSON, Miss., September 30.—The Republican Convention here has made the following additional nominations: Auditor, H. Musgrave; Treasurer. W. H. Varner: Attorney General. J. S. Morrie. Superintendent Public Instruc tion, H. R. Pearee. Resolutions to the fol 'oaring effect were adopted: First—Union, first, last and furever. Second—Freedom of speech and of the press. Third— universal suffrage and universal amines-. ty. Fourth—free schools, their benefits to be extended to every child in the State. Fifth—opposition to that un just system of taxation which dis criminates against labor and unjustly bears upon the industrial classes. Sixth —revision of the conditions of free labor, with a view especially to a more summary process for the recovery of debts. Seventh—adherence to the Thir teenth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. Eighth—The exercise of the whole politi cal influence of the State with Congress for the immediate removal. as provided, of the disabilities imposed by the Four teenth Amendment. Ninth—The raid.' cation of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Tenth—A new Constitution for Missis sippi, with the disfranchising and pro scription clauses left out. Editors Nominate a Candidate for Gay [By Telegraph to U e Pittsburgh Gazette.] NSW ORLEANS, September 30.—A special to the Times from Brenham, Texas, yesterday. states that the editors of the Democratic newspapers, in. Con vention, have nominated Hamilton Stu art, of Galveston, as a candidate for Gov ernor, and he has accepted. A full straight-out Democratic ticket will be put forward. Forty newspapers are pledged for their support. Much enthu siasm prevails in the,Convention. Vf holesale Poisoning. tBY Telegratib to the Pittsburgh Gsrette.l BOSTON, September SO.—Considerable excitement exists in the south part of Boston froth the sudden deaths of Mrs. Hartington, her little child, and a brother o f. Mrs. Hartlngton. Mrs. Dumpily wife of the latter, and Harting ton, husband of the pois oned woman, are under arrest to await the result of the coroner's inquest, on suspicion of pois oning the deceased. Secretary Seward and Party. (By Telegraph to the moth:rek tiasette.3 BAN FRANCISCO. September 80.—The Seward party, consisting of the Ex-Seo retary, Frederick Seward and, wife, pond Fitch and Albert S. Evans, corres ent of the New York Tribun.4, do. Parted to-day on the steamer Gdlden City' tbr the ciW of Mexico,bianzille. Colima, OnadWjara and Tuertaro. [By Telegrarh to the rittsbcrgh Gazette.? WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 30, ISM SATISFACTORY INTERVIEW. Senator Spencer and Col. Jno. 6%. Stokes, of Alabama, had a lengthy inter view with the President this morning, on the subject of the complete restoration of law and order in the South. The re sult of the interview was highly satisfac tory, and complimentary to the people of the South and their intentions. The President hopes to visit the South this winter.. A large number of cases have been pre pared by H. F. Sherman, of New York. soon to be filed by him in the Court of Claims, for the recovery of bounty mon ey, 'of which he says the soldiers have. been defrauded. He claims that the pay ment at the Sub Treasury, in, New York, was illegal, as the soldiers have neither endorsed the checks which have been is sued and intended for the settlement of their - claims. nor given to any one legal authority to endorse them. The case will be heard at the December term of Court. NEW HALL OPENED. The new Hall of the Young Men's Christian ASSICiatiOO was formally open ed this evening with a variety of exer cises, in the presence of a very large au dience. Chief Justice Chase presided. Addresses were delivered by Gen. 0. 0. Howard, Rev. Dr. Grammar, of Balti more. Rev. J. T. Duryae, of Brooklyn, and Geo. H. Stuart, of Philadelphia. The President • has recognized Caspar Ritchie as Vice Consul of the Swiss Con federation for Ohio, Indiana and Ken tucky, to reside in Cincinnati. Also Peter Staub as Consular Agent of the Swiss Confederation for Tennessee, to re— side at Knoxville. OFFICIAL PROCLAMATION. An official proclamation has just been issued by the Convention between the United States and Hesse Darmstadt reg ulating citizenship on the same basis of naturalization as with the North Ger man Confederation. Secretary Boutwell to-day received a letter from Assistant Secretary Richard son enclosing his resignation as Assist. ant secretary of the Treasury. CUSTOM RECEIPTS. The custom receipts for Se oterhber last, were $3,310,198. —A milk train on the Naugatuck, Ct., Railroad was wrecked last night at Platts Mills four miles below Waterbury. Fourteen platform cars were smashed and piled up twenty feet high on the track. One trAkeinan was badly hurt, hut the passengers are safe. The cause of the accident was an oa on the track. A NEW Youx speculator returning home last Friday thus announced the re sult of his operations to the family group: •'\o more silk dresses this winter, my dear ; no more balls and parties ; no more opera boxes ; and then, warming with his subject, "no more infernal win ings and dinings, and no more nonsense of any sort, Matilda," Surely; the most uninitiated would have known that the man had been in Wall street that day. FIFTY thousand pounds of brass are annually consumed for shoe-String tips in the United States, all of which are man factured in Waterbury, and most of rt consumed in Rhode liland. can be obtained from the caption at the head of this art.cle: for of all diseases which impair human health and E bonen human life, none are more prevalent. than those which affect the lungs and pulmonary tissues. Whit ther we regard lung diseases In the light of a merely slight cough, which Is but the fore-runner of a more serious ernor. TIM CAPITAL. BOUNTY MONEY =1 RESIGNATIOIi THOU BRINGEST ME LIVE- LUNG-W CWT. One of the truest and most suggestive !dews 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 int, gs,f for it is in them that early and effielent treat- • merit is most desirable, and it is then that danger can be warded off and a cure effected. In DR. tY.YBER'S LUNG 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 live powers of the system, 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 no the chain of morbid sympathies that disturb the harmonious worl4- logs of the animal economy. The harrassing cough, the painful respiration, the sputum streaked with blood, will soon give place to the normal and proper workings' health and vigor. An aggregated experience of over thirty years has enabled Dr. Keyser, in the compounding of his LUNG CURE, to give new hove to the con sumptive invalid and at the same time speedy relief in those now prevalert, catarrhal and• throat affections, so distressing in their effects and so almost certainly fatal in their tendencies, unless cured by some appropriate remedy. DH. KEYSER'S LUNG CURE is so thorough and ef fleleni, that any one who has evei used it, will never be without it in the house. 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, it respectfully Invited to this new and valuable addition to the pharmacy of the coun- D R, KyrytiLE may be consulted every day until 1 o'clock P. x. at MB Great Medicine Store; 161 Liberty street, and from 4 to 6 and I to at night* icOliti IS THE TIME To repair the inroads made upon the physical strength by the bested term which has closed with September. The vitality that has been oozing through the Dorms In the formof persp". ration, for the last three months. requires to be replaced, as a preparative to the cold lesson which makes such disastroui hivoc with relakt d and untor.ed sytems. The reverse of vigor with which the stoutest M 313 commences the Summer campaign is drained out of him at Its close, and unless by some means he acquires a new stock or vital energy wherewith to encounter the shock of a colder searon, he may droop and wither like be falling leaves whose life-Julces are exhaust d. ill Is Pius with the strong, now sauce more per us Is the coudik on of the weak and a,llng. Their reason must suggest to them, more forcibly than these printed words. the necessity for in vigoration, and the world have decided, after an e 'patience of nearly a quarter of a century, that. HOSTETTERS STOMACH BITTERS emoreee such reetorative properties in are not poasessed by any other tonic and alternative preparation rtance of resorting to In existence. The Imp° that great KANOVATOD AND MOLL AlOll OF VIZ RUYAN XACIIINS, at this Critical season ig MI Ob vious as the light or day. Let all who desire to escape an attack of chub, and fever, b lions re mittent fever, dysentery, dlarrhcea, diapepaht, rneumatism, hypochondria, or any other or she disci ea of which the Fall season Is the ,prollec gr ent ' iate3 lri e notr; to o. "le ortrentlal o.g II