.... , , II - _ _ thttsbutti etkEttf. t; • orrioz: ,E', ' OMB iHaDII( I , 84 In 86 FIFTH AI OFFICIAL, PAPER 01 .e. _Of Wittsbargb, Allegbeny rad Ally. Fi="ll'-entrastrAir, OCT. 21, less. 31 'i ArriTICA for lova t , Reptil>. • Nue majority will exceed 37,000. Ysi another Mustering expedition, width notedly left our coast for Cot*, bat 0. ; 7 „ returned without a landing on that island. framrdiasensiaas of U. leaders and the v...01010411941tde Mitintalned by the Spanish 44011Vi1a ended as the MUMS of LW, abut* , (-I!tfilinieta tin enunPrific • A uscrtaoa, by thefitti Kam:, `4 . 44 4 0 i ll4ll .,__thed Bye 31Ondil• ROl nartM % Nat ea pe,etV#P l 4.*taitutionallty at to thiterbj.4o.. The minority Mitain4 . l . tAo deny the jurtadte , 0 . 1p.r . #9311 in the premlern The 'F whteh includes there thou the Southern 'whites, are hap `Sftaawasp:a. PtegL. te rumored that wall arca le .;eln plotting to engineer Secretary Tlftitrzta.out of the Treasury. The ,", , pettictder *Moo proposed to this end Ls lobe mod= mammoth operation in gold. those 'engineers have been already once • by.their own petard, and will akow monrcoureptban wisdom If they try it again. The world explosion Ls :ttiptettotiali 'unto(' to be flied for about ' the end of November. 74rte sailed meeting of stocklicddere, e t ' Olexcland, to page v i p r ... the arrangement * 1... Etas between the Like Shore and the ...toledo and Wabash railways, kas been "' indefinitely postponed. The Herald tn fers'thkt the Vanderbilt influence stow predominates In the former Company, tbitifir policy will be carried out, and . that the agreement for consolida : OM, which was modified by the Vander. tilt party after it had been originally made, "la now kicked to pieces," and -probably the arrangement with the Pale Bur, the United States te not etloPosed to knoW either Awe the States ratify. nor ltry what majorities. The State. can either pot the matter to • vote of the wepte or'ilknr the Leklalature to peas upon .It. and one vote in either cue will decide whether the State ratifies or not. e••• • The Dispatch has fallen Into an elm. A rticle V of the Constltation Boys "Atosaidrapnts shall be valid to all le. tents tad Tamales, as part of this Coe . atltutkah when ratified by the Leoda. tares of, throe•foarthe of the several - Mains, or by conventions In tbres,hanrths -taereof, as the one or the other mode or rati4eation +nay be prei:esed by the Coe levee." CosrcLarwrs come from the Democra t. the oil regions thee they have staked and lost thousands of dollars, to wagers upon the result of the recent elections, on J: the , staingth of the sastrrances to the Vittsborgh Pail. The . amount of herd Perm Mao swearing nu m among Mader. - ricks is imid to be quite karfol. Indeed, pum maledictions are not, contlnedto that region. For the same abundant amuse: the opposition here, in our own cities end ,mix4yi t Fe,complaining of the journals which hove misled them to each unfortu nate 'peculation/. We do not eym • •patM=e with them, ler we have repeated waned thein to beware of the Pod's rooster alter an election. It has gaffed its Own Mends llxrfully int more than one --.Sation, snd we are tired of our own amiability, In constantly volunteer. Eng our wiser admonitions to a foe which *awe willing to chastise, but cepkr to r . ,,,,1ate piked.. It gives us no pleasure to reaUtethat the Pittsburgh Post Is thus far more dangerous to Its own Mends alter an election, than to its oppo• tab during the preliminary canvass. In this connection we may remark that by /U mlestatament, no doubt uninten tional, of the state of the poll, the Ohms, if* of qatarlay last is said to have caused still deeper depletions of Democratic pockets, We see no other help for It than to renew our ,advioe to the other side, to rely only upon the Gaterni for their election returns, when Deemsa to a question of investing their money. • THE vorriim pearNsirivintA. All the , mantles but five have been • ~ officially reported to the Secretary of • State. Zsilmafirm for the counties yet to come la, we 'have a majority for ••• Gnats 0f.4510 and for Wiwi's• of 0,00. The total poll for Governor last. 'Wes& was 5601,669. The vote in October 'BB wes 658455, befog the largest poll 41.1Weriude In-this Commonwealth: _?The rlpposithin rote has now fallen off 4,088 ItEd.thia Ileptibllcan poll- Is 45,105 less !up Ips year.. The Tay slight difference 'As r the diminutions of the poll by each perty.thls year will strike, the ruder—u cerieraty with which a more ',,yistsrotts rally of theit attebstb by the ppposltiott would bale beaten as, mks" r 144 ,discovered and matched their aorta:, NOiWi THOUSAND MAJORITY 41 we • are to accept the Democratic journals es• authority, Honest - Joan Co• rcrranz is s, very - poor orthognlpbei.;: auet apellworlk a cent, but MA how he cat Stare! On election night the Mie r . graph ides lashed from one end of the . - ,:,,eruntrrio other the encouraging news, . . oPensaylinnla aafe Gnl3eary. Majorfty four thoctiand"—algned "John Corode." , AU 04n7.teleznuns =Mood wAh aithnate;- ind la a fool," .„irse - Am Sepremlon which Demo erste,_.; and, sot s few Depobllesm,' Next day th e molt 'or the elect millealmosn. The oppositioi ewojabgant; their Jamul, meal dort . lcto•.the-barn•Tad far the leek ge44 mak bird, to help In their Matllal 081 , wets sad in gsrlc ' and awe at %east. 'Tlettlek sitong- the wires again speaks obj. JOHN ;11140,00% .aging, " POT kaldarity,il kW ;thousand I" The dila day relieved inethne some, and once more the ... • - , okfiteui Aelegrerho. "I stiek•to lt; Re hirre ciirtrid the Stash, tour thatuunoi" - rani i. third arenuance was doutted, ALs .. peaches were hourly.aent to the oath! *o ascertain if no blunder - hal beer' wide; hat his Ups refused to aay but 'lour thousand I" Now, Tefterabe clouds lien rolled away and the rigida returns have been thrown Into the „pilule*, and theflgures Counted, old Joan groom telegraphs, "Official nujorlq , orar four thousand I" Who will not o4rlook the orthographic:al shortcomings Wontzt John In the consideration ,of Wil - artitidertur Arnmledge of L f!guris Orritivitlines four thousand greenback dollani would. bave lined Den inknoeavened Bypath:an - wades, had the mathematica of Jowl cop.olibeckbred Xtik =lre creclit POLITICAL TREACHERIES. The peimbiletun of Westyligtinik ate rf , , f , litt. continued' hethefr .mke - tif the political - stains of their esteemed 4:ttlun k )ir.. Jew; 8. p,nciata, iilifiChign= fit + the +Wheeling the loading onanitton jt,unel -Etta 'editor, -iittO* the +theirivo of the Damn& 81 le i vow. matee, entuirmices that early In the a. tume of '6B, ..belore engaging in t cullvasu , for Grant in thin State,' fib. John S. Ovine tendered hit servieee Mr. Johnson N. Camden, to stump :t State for him and the Democracy, a that Mr. Camden declined to empty him." Upon which the latenitic pithily submits that. .dd Under all the clrenmetantmari lug that Ur. Carthe was generubg the DUI of Republican Lunde tor p i m . the 'for Grant In tide Stew ; etneenism i n , consyleotty be km alone k no deals his ' terybesd and fro t cerium all round Wed Vtridnn:l. .. fall to recogtuze j ju thundarbottkoU j ave _thi e , la a d i p ; arari),-anAt i i , : him- al . I ",,,riiiititd is quite right in r , r 6 , o.'x',, Ike treachery, which was 0 0 ' , ~g " TranAlabonOrable that its prof. pe A re(iniothy. a higher toned op• ..... cl us altileratiga rag exposure shall be itip*llly Er. Ile himself, his Re it: ttiliten'teltoW . cannot but enter , Maths ,Itautimd. ntempt for a politician who has demand , and has doubtless ilitpOised to dem d again, their cond. deuce In the sincerity of his political faith, and in' the consistency of his entire pub ' lic record, in a canvass during every hour of which his written offer to sell out his natty was quietly resting in the posses sion of an opposition Committee. In partizan politics, we could imagine but one depth of dishonor more contemptible. Hatlir. Cultic, holding, for example, some place of public trust, under the ap pointment of President Johnson, secretly contracted with certain well and publicly known supporters of that adtnirds Madan, to divide with them the of tidal emoluments of his poet, in order to retain his office, —then ascending the stomp and, by his ferocious assaults upon Andrew Johnson, and by his clamorous insertions of extreme Republican princi ples, earning a cheap reputation for polit. ical and personal independence, while thus secretly relying upon the protection of hie private compact with the enemy— had Mr. Cultic been guilty of a trick so disreputable as this, he would perhaps have earned, when afterwards exposed, a still deeper public contempt, among all honorable politichum. But we do not hear that charge laid at his door. ills ease is bad enough, but, as we have illus trated, it might have been still more Inex cusably mean. He has, it seems, done quite enough to destroy his Republican assumptions forever, without descending to a yet baser offense against his political associates and against even public de. cency. The Republican party will profit in availing itself of the earliest opportu nity to be purged of Its "soldiers of for tune" who may be convicted of either sort of treachery. Fortunately, the party has wit many of such Arnolds. CONIITTITT7IOII*L AMEINDIIIIP.NTS Four years ago certain newspapers o Western Pennsylvania, professedly Re public). In politics, but whose repute• lions for reliability needed fortifying, set ups prodigious clamor for the immediate extension of tbst right of suffrage to lb. blacks. As to bow this molt was to to accompliabed they were in profound ig norance, now insisting that it could and should be reached by a simple legislative enactment, as If a statute would entice to set aside a plain requirement of the l u stitation, and then demanding that the Legislature should submit a special con. stltutional amendment to the people au thorizing the blacks to vote, though amendment Is. that manner was precluded by the Constitution mall the lapse of three or more years. At this point, we Interposed with the suggestion that the period reasonably assignable to die. evasion had not expired, and that It would be unwise to preen the question to a rote anti! irldiCalLlOMl appeared that public sen- timcnt had become w far corrected as to afford assurance that the measure proposed would carry. Thinking it safe to take shelter behind ns, those jot:ism:di instantly applauded our moderation, and have been dumb as oysters ever since, en this vital issue, The last general revision of the State Constitution was completed in 1835. In soma respects the time (or that work was unfortunately chosen. The pro-slavery fanaticism was rising rapidly, and the Democratic party was striving, by the most unscrupulous means, to intensify it. The right of the blacks to vote, which had existed from the promalgatlon of the original charter by NI/muss PENN, was challenged in different counties, on the ground that they were not citizens within ' the meaning of the constitution. A test cute commenced the conclusion of ,wlsiels was retched Wltlle the .Constitu demi Convention was in session. The final decision was pronounced by Chief Justice Unnow, to the eNCI that black men were not citizens, and hence could not be invested with the elective frau. chile. The Convention conformed the I new Constitution to this decision by re- ' I striding the suffrage to "white freemen." Net long afterwards, the Democratic cru- 1 sade agsinst equal rights seemed to tri umph in the Ifirmorable decision of the Supreme Corot ef the United Slates, pro. -nounceskisy Chief Juttice TAXI.; to the effect (hat blacks, not being citizens, could not institute dults In any of the national' Courts fur the obtainment of re. thus for grievances of any kind. This decision Was made the more remarkable and moiling by the dictum that the blacks, by reason of their non-citizenship, had "no rights that , white men were bound to respect." The decision was .weiceonedwith an notbustof Dernocrstio applause, 'which was not)thiated by the consideration that If blacks were not ea tified to the peeped= ,of tith .Issyss, be cause thug were not citizens, iitiltecwho ' had not acquired eitizezurblp would have to fall Intel the pmt pralicament, unless extremest violence should be done to logic and etthelyteney, - The rancid= of the XVth Amend ment.to tholifederSi Constitution, Which thrinyand popular veidictin Ohio seeders, Limblible, if '. mit certain, will override' the firstsectind Of the third article;'M the 'prewar Lientaltatiori of Pennsylvania, which prescriber who may vote, andthui Milks the qtamikin in this Commonwealth, and that Sas effectually as the XlVth fiountiment invalidates the decision of mei:Wl:dime Court, rendered by Chief Justice Othacs, to the effect that bi,eks are mat citizens. If the Slats Cowan- i Lion abotila l ber allowed to stand precisely as it is, eller the ratification of the X Yth ' Amendment, the Legislature would doubt len feel warranted In amending the elec.. don lawn suns to enema blacks the right to vote at all election. But a necessity may be felt for changing the State 0 outltution, in this particular, so as to maim it, conform to the National one, on. less the view should prevail that no such Slide action la required to give fall wind ily to the ll'ederal obligation as amended. Pennsylvania has given Its indent to the Nirth Amendment, and that assent having been duly filed in the office of the Seemtuylof State at Washington, cannot hit . be revs If the last Legislatnr% which Ws question before it, instead Of' Balk g the Amendment, lied rer. „tent a t :i ed lt, at decision could have been remould by the next or any setae- tore, until affirmative veto . aid dilly flied wlih the ties. This accords not only onnyraettce hitherto, but elementary principles -anon. case. quent thoua be Patna at with the . with t cable to t 1 on tWa ~indeed,. pre perplexed • c .In tide I3texp i ,7 weer—that Idler assent Ur - his been formally erne it cgue4 I°- -w Legislature; may be revoked frAotthwid that when a while, ,a ob i c , been withheldlt can assent .ed. Thin diecrepancy o pt,VeT N . they are not anchored by , 0 ", but are buffeted about by tem• d I pr y, expediency. y I . seems probable that•as soon as the „alit Amendment ahall be ratified, s p,,p• ttlar - demand will arise fora Constitu tional Convention in this Common wealth, not merely to conform the exist ing instrument to the Federal Constitu tiori as it will then be, bat to subject it to a general revision, so as to adapt it more completely to public sentiment, thus at fording,correction for evils of serious magnitude which have grown up. The ltre of each man is a development. What IS suited to his condition at one period is not at another. The life of a nation Is a few yews. The et reatn of events flows on, and nothing can resist it. Hence, arrangements which are beneficial to one generation became a hindrance to an other. The Medea and Persians did not know this. Their Idea of the highest dignity and grandeur of a nation was Immutability, and they tried to realize it by providing that none of their laws should change. Such an attempt to frus trate nature could not do otherwise than fail. The laws mere changed, and the realm experienced the fluctuations which are inevitable to political societies, no matter how organized. Nay, the usual oral ellort to provide for stability, cm questionably-hastened decay, as such at. tempts always must. Immobility in the laws always creates a wide gap between them and public opinion, upon which re liance must be placed for all efficiency imparted to statutes, no matter how salu tary they may be in their provisions. These considerations/predispose us to look with favor upon a proposition to call a Constitutional Convention in this State whenever the question of suffrage now pending In the XVth Amendment to the Federal Constitution shall be finally dis posed of. Two efforts in the same di rection are not.. necessary or desirable; aria might interfere with each other. Meanwhile it may not be unproductive of salutary consequences to suggest some of the particulars In which alterations in the Slate Constitution are needed. If the suggestions which may be made shall evoke somethariike general acquies cence, It may be Laken for granted that the Legislature, upon due consideration , will provide for the convocation of a Con vention with full powers over the whole matter. To the mass of suggestions we propose to offer our contribution, not In a precise and consecutive way, but In de. Lathed articles, written an opportunity may offer, and as event, may stimulate. In so doing, we prefer no claim to superior intelligence or comprehension, and shall defer entirely to the popular judgment, which is necessarily the arbiter of politi- cal questions, sad especially under goy ernments definitely organized on the rep resentative tussle. Nor often much opposition In made to the receipt of • bequest of nearly a mil. lion of dollars, but that spectacle may now be witnessed in Philadelphia. By the will 01 thm late Dr. Rosh funds were left with which to erect fireproof build. log, upon a albs to be chosen by Ll 4 1.t..• tutor, large enough to contain all the hooks of the Philadelphia Library. This, with some other property. which as In vested would produce but • small In come, was to be transferred to the Li brary Company upon its acceptance of certain stringent conditions. The site chosen by the executor, and as he says by the verbal direction of Dr. limb, Is at the corner of Broad and Christian Streets, •t present • very ont of the way and ineligible situation. This, with the objectionable character of several other specified conlj o ttions, and the fact that the income would for year. sicareely equal the expenses of the new building. has induced . great an opposition to the acceptance of the hey tleSt. among a large number of the stockholders, that • vote to accept or reject has been ordered and was to have been taken yesterday. If rejection were decreed, the executor ha authorised try the will to founds large free library In that city, to be known as the "Ridgeway Library," and subject to the conditions of the w 1 IL THE fear of premature burial la s wide. spread one. Among all people. we find it areomparded by startling legends of hopeless victims of a too hasty Inter ment. It In not at all probable, however, that many such cases occur. Al Frank- Dart 0. M. there ban establishment where bodies can be kept for a time 'a fore they are interred, and where every Imaginable appliance to discover the faintest sign of life, is In constant use. Sixty thousand corpses have been re. wired at this house, not one of which has been known to give any sign of re turning animation. This Is very antis factory to the surviving friend. of the Frankfort dead, but it does not relieve the popular dread. So long ne i single cane of premature burial la known to have taken place, it is natural that every one should shedder at the mere thought of an terrible a death. That men of the kind have occurred, Is an undoubted fact, and should serve as a powerful pro test against a tingle burial taking place until not the faintest shadow of doubt exists as to dissolution having actually ensued. THE propriety of late hours and day. light partlea la again disowned in society, as fora score of years peat. Men cannot be attentive to their beldam and to their social duties at the same time. Since the find monopolises the daylight, If the lat ter are to be attended to at all, it most be at night. It is hardly to be expected that the ladies Will entertain at an hour when the presence of both sexes cannot be relied upon, but a partial reform la.l evidently neoewiary. That this IN prao ticable was evinced last year by the pop. clarity of those private entertainments Where the cards stated the hours to be from Bto 12 o'clock. With such hours the bbetnees man beta enough of rest he fore the beginning of the ensuing day to justify his acceptance of the invitations. This was amity iMpossible when partials began at ten o'clock, or later, and con. tinned until dawn. Mexteo la building a monument to The Germans are no. scat tered over the world, while still pre. serving Intact their love for the Voter. land and things pertaining thereto, that when the time mines for testifying Shea& proofs of cosmopolitan respect, they are certain to be nearly univereol. There probably nave, beforelived a mere man so nal versed ly honored a bandred years after Ids birth an was Humboldt, and this not merely for tits matchtertelairns, but be cause, perhaps the Germans bed decided that it sheci!d be so, and the German peciple abroad can be 111311111M01111 It those at borne can not. In many countries natives have J 'toed with the Teutons in honoring an ilinstrions memory, but we cannot easily Imagine that the Mexican have aided much the band of (Intimates. tio compatriots of the great philosopher who may be living in the land of the Montanus's& New Pone is fall of rumor* about the doings of Fere Hyacinthe. Some of these say he is to be the gnat of Father Morrell, of Bt. - Albans, others that he is to preach for Boy. Dr. Ewer, who be. reoently genleved ritnallatio notoriety. The general Idea seems to be that the recalcitrant Carmelite most noceisarily have much In common with those others who are. also Just outside of its pales previous to entering. There i!rootiii to be,4 sort of idea prevalent that . ..this French print, with a not altogether In , ' sighillMat• 'body . of ilissatlidled"Aomall'i catholleallt France .and :9erroaily, will . 0 1 0 YrAtiAl: l tiitt*Titgaliatic • Eplaca. 'palling of England atia , Ameriet, forming a Catholic Church iodepeuddnt ennl3l:lltGH DAILY GAZETTE : - THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21, 1869 Of Roma and of the Holy Father. The Idea sounds sensible, but there es proba bly very much mere of sorted than of substance in lt.- Ma. FIERon and his Society for the Pre ventlon of Cruelty to Animals have un dertaken a great work In New Nork. and a similar society is doing a similar work in Philadelphia. That the latter is really In operation Is evinced by the recent ar rest of the driver and conductor of a street car for cruelty to animals In over loading their vehicle. Such Isolated in. stances give on hope that we may yet ap proach so near that state of perfection which the Rev. E. E. Hale stylra Sy harts, as to ensure that all our animals, both within and without the can, may be thoroughly protected from either indi vidual or eorporate cruelty. Funs INDIA come the tidings tin Idolatry le on the wane, Juggernaut can no longer number victims by the hund reds, suttee Is falling Into disrepute, and the worship of the sacred monkeys has, of Isle, been almost totally abandoned In the Southern provinces. The Influence of foreign mlestonart. Is not so much reersmaible for this, but the constant con tact with English civilisation and Eng lish commerce has resulted in a wide. spread native infidelity and distrust In the old religion. UENERAL A DA/LY Itepublican newspaper is about tlbe published at Louisville, Ky. Turns are indications of the revival of e hog cholera at Peoria, Illinois. Tux buckwheat crop on the upper Wisconsin Is not worth harvesting. A Diaatoa., weighing three-quarters of a pound, and as big as a lemon, has been found in Australia. Misr:limns has produced a beat this year twenty-seven inches long and weigh. log thirty-three pounds, FoI:RTKI:N thousand three hundred and sixty emigrants peened through Cleveland during the past three months. TUN taxable property of San Frail. disco amounts to 4100,000,000, and pays nearly hair the State tax. Ii E.VITCCKY distillers have an agent at Washington approved by the Revenue Commissioner, who represents their in. terests. A sins named Costello, a farmer, resid• ing in lowa, was arrested recently for a murder, committed thirty years ago in Ireland. FOUR women were elected members of the School Committee In the town of F:astford, Windham, Ct., at the recent tlection. A (1111. LIAR has been issued calling for a convention of real estate brokers of the United States, at Cleveland, Ohio, Nov. 2d. A Idnitrt..orn judge has decided that a law prohibiting a turnpike company from collecting tolls from funeral processions is unconstitutional. Duiruxo last week eight vessels cleared from Philadelphia for different European ports, carrying In the aggregate 524.3.12 gallons of petroleum. DALILVIILIL, the great Minnesota wheat grower, has finished thrashing his crop or wheat, which this year amounts to over 50,000 bushels. Tux arrival of Immigrants at New York, from the lit of January hi the 3lat inst., numbered 216,410 against 172,141 during the same period last year. Ton explosion of a gasometer in the St. Charles Hotel, at New Orleans, a few days ago, caused much confuaion and damage, and several persons were atm onaly hurt. Iwo fat offices that make her 1 1..1 electit , ne lot,-rem: og The C. ant! Clerkship is said h. he worth ;34 500 annually, and the Circuit Clerk ship 365,000. Tue. late henry Keep, of New York, intended to ,estahlish a magnificent pic ture gallery in that city. at en outlay of nue mail/ill dollars, and had purchased site for the rd.fice. THE Jewish Muunger avow. the be• lief that the eatatatatiment of the Sun Canal it another step toward the fulfil. nowt of the citrate prophecy that We Jews shall return to the land of Palestine. Tu F. Boston anthoritita propose to close the public schools on stormy days. A certain number or strokes on the fire alarm bell will announce to all school children that they can stay at home and poiy. Ina Elgin (111 Association of Con gregational Churches, numbering some fifteen OrguntraLloos, has psesed s reaoln. Lon endorsing t►e chancier of Rev. I. Smith, indicted for the murder of his wife. A. T. STEwAirr, as a beginning of his Hempstead Plains improvement for the benefit of the working men of New York, has contracted for five hundred miles of streets and roadways, and the construe Lion of tire hundred dwelling houses_ A r RkT1911,7111 has been filed with the Secretary of State of Ohio that the Cleve land and l'itrahnrgh Railroad Company bad increased da capital stock by the aunt of $945,048 75, making the total capital of mid Company, $7,345,373 75. El:011101 papers nay the wheat crop there, and also the potato crop, have been the heaviest known In this generation. The value of the wheat on one farm Is mentioned as equal to Aileen years' rental of the land, and that farm Is said only to to a sample from many. 'tlonrie consecutive decisions In the Massachusetts Courts in the some Cale seem to make the law pretty clear, that It the owner of a horse with the glandevs permits him to range to u to Infect other horses, the owner of the diseased horse Is liable for the damage that may ensue. Ovuonn, Tanta county, lowa, owing to the similarity of lta name to Oxford, a neighboring town, Voted to change it to Stanton; but this latter name has aim ban dispensed with on account of ha resemblance to Scranton and Stanwood, two other neighbors, awl lila now name less. ON the Industrial school (um grounds, la tho vicinity of Cleveland, Sunday last, wu found the body of a man who had committed suicide, haying shot him. self through the head. He was unknown, and the only paper found about him was the Hamilton county (Ohio) Democratic ticket, printed In licrman. Tore. procession of the Grand Corn mandery of Masons In Cleveland, Ohio, on Tuesday, area the most Imposing ever witnessed in the State. Fifteen hundred were in the line of march, comprising also the Commander,' of Erie, Pa, and Detroit, Mich. The city is crowded with Masons from all parts of the State. Timor Virginia ladles, ineldulng the wife of Robert E. Lee, have pub lished in Richmond papers an appeal for aid to remove the Confederate dead from Gettysburg to Hollywood Cemetery. They say General LPG approves their plan to remove the bodies of those "who borethe flog of our nation's trust, and fell in the cense, though lost, still Jtist." Two New Orleans citizens, said to be Aldermen or Councilthen, saw a neat horse and buggy standing' on the street, and seeing, look It. They discovered their "mistake" after driving around the streets half an hour, and surrendered to the owner his property. A local paper remarks that had it been a steamboat the tame natural mistake would have been made. CELICAu o has another broach. 01. promise mati. Mary C. Roberts claims to have been damaged to the extent of $20,000 by George M. Chamberlain refining to fait[ a promise, of two year,' standing, to make her his wife. She charges that be entered into the contract fin the impose "of get ting all the money he could out of" her, "and never paying bet, and for other dl,. honorable purposes." A Mn. Bowates, of Harrisonville Cass county, Me , was arrested and charged with abducting and murdering a young lady, and tried before the Justice of the peace. While the trial was going on the said young lady appear( d before Abe Jas. See, but ho refased to take her evidence whether die bad been kllltdor not, and committed Bowers to Jail for murder. Bowers was discharged on a writ of habeas corpus. Mn. D. F. Flat!, of San Jose, Cal., has given 1,100 acres of land for the put pose of founding an Orphan Asylum In Lee Angeles county and lent the com mittee his pig, an animal three and a Ulf years old and weighing 1,100 pounds, for exhibition In San Francisco, the proceeds to be devoted to the same chartable ob. ject. The owner claims that his pet is of a breed that don't get . Its growth Until ft le seven years old, so' that It has. yet 4 chance to add inettypoliads to,ltx weight. A FORT WATT; Ind., gentleman re. aptly threw out &let of brindled cheerio; :which hittepelled. Ilhithictena ate them' 'andipparently'dletL Vheyweit *kW, and their bodies cut forth as. worthless. The next morningle heard a loud mow• lug, and looking out saw every hen and rooster, young and old, grave and gay, marching round, eyeing each other with suspicion, many of them entirely naked. and only a few with wing and tail feathers. The cherries had made "poor chickua" dead —drunk. Tux late W. B. Stearns, a prominent lawyer of Sprnagfield, Massachnsetts, left carious directions, written a week before Mr death, in regard to his burial. The body was to be clothed in linen, then wrapped in a sheet, a paper collar with • black ribbon taped around the neck, and laid In a coffin made of plain boards, without paint, stain, oil or varnish, but covered with cheap black cloth, with black handles, and no silver headed nails. A cheap plate and some !lowers were to rent upon thu top. He wished to avoid all unnecessary expense, for he says in his manuscript that any funds remaining would be needed by the living, and the good clothes had better be for them. A CITIZEN of Knoxville has invented a steam . wagon. 0111 the Voter says. "Mr. Savage, the inventor, has a practi cal working model under way. As he showed it and explained it to us, we think Bone of the most ingenius inventions of the age. Mr. Savage proceeds on entire ' ly new and original principles from the very beginning, boiler, engines, frame work, and all appurtenances being of his own design, and perfectly unique. The principle of propulsion is not by wheels, but by driving rods. Mx. Savage esti mates that the locomotive, when complete, of three horse power, will cost about the same aa a good team and wagon, will run ten mien an hour on common roads, and be servicible for all kinds of farm urn& , lie expects to complete the working model during the present fall." A HUNAN form, of tinge proportions, entirely petrified, has been found In the town of Lafayette, Onandagua county, New York. lira the lath Wm. Newell, a farmer, began digging a well In the rear of his barn, and about two feet and a half below the surface struck what was supposed to be a large stone, but which proved to be the perfect figure of a man of giant size, and solid as though chiseled out of the rocks, The total length from the top of the head to the tower surface of the Instep is ten feet two and a half inches; across the shoulders the width is three feet; across the palm of the hand seven Inches; the large Unger is eight Inches long; the thigh is twelve inches, told the leg below the knee Is nine and half inches in thickness. The figure was found lying on the right side, one hand on thaabdomen, the other upon the back, and the left leg thrown across the right. The features are decidedly Canals/Ilan and well defined. Dr. J. jr . Boynton. the well known geologist and lecturer of New York city. who has visi ted the spot, inclines to the opinion that the gigantic figure Is a statue, but this seems to be a matter of Weld.. As may be supposed speculators are already on hand, and sums reaching into tens of thou. sands have been fleeted for the figure. THOU BR I AGENT HE LI PE-- LU VW OR T. One of the truest sod moot surreetlv• %dela cam be °Melee./ teem the caption at the head of tbls amtle; for of w elloroae• •NOlcti tropali bursa. o.lth ....Lone. liorono lite. non. I=l and putt:lunar, Llsoltee. NV he ther vr• regard I.tus dl•eat.e. 1• the 11.1.1 of • merely .11,01 nttigh. I= mals47. ur aa • derp lesion corr.:llns sad dl. I= pregnant •4E evil sad I,rt.Wina of dleasLer I=l the men. and .razally of the wu.nr be more po.TionalT forewarnetl.loap la of It bur It ls is Lb. m Ina e-arly .11• Wist treat- =I I=l =I of the •aloe In all the. rootlltlnne. As •ther•thre. • lout, • •utrlent hatt re wlrenl. 11=I I=l I=l I= ties. IL .111 ettum !trent NIP the chal• of otortld evcortathlee te.t allatotb the lettretttolau or the utimal ecouttuty. The harratetott woe, the palatal reaplralimx, the •Patas str.alt .1 .1 tb Wood .111 soon glee nlakce to the I=ll =I booestatoest Di. Key., la the comp .:motto, Cl his 1.09(1 CUltlt. to give rum hope to the Co.. sumsaSse Invalid and al lb* same lime spaesty tellel In Mom sow prtealeal. catarrhs, and =I =I obbyas van, b 1 wybe pproprmie r•eurJy. ULL XZ) 3E1119 LUbit) Ct,' la r o {borough and et tlebeni, that buy any wbo has seer used It will I=l =I eases vill nun ollontico. ma r.. days. =I a• 1, rittpectfully 1.1.4 to tato sem sad valuable addition to the pharmacy of the ma.- =I until I o•clocl r. ■. at bla Ora. Medicinal atom 161 Liberty atraeL and fro= 4 to 6 sod 1 to 9 13:1=1 MUE EXIIAIIviTED Bummer is. del Mating season. and i be sad- I den r bane of teethe remote which takes Place at the. period of the tear /gods the healthiest hf as 10, idembly •norrated by the once...as beet. and the weakly and delicate airnoet prostrated. This Is not • (aeon... coadillou In whirl to en counme ths raw alt`. of October and Its chill ing fogs sad night dews. and routerioently Inter tuntant fever. ovalotery. billions attacks, aad rheumatism are tory or Ira Prevalent eeery- I where, hot especially In localities where the at ' Crlttrs ' l s sa ' e . e ' % " a ' r ' ialliVr.ts ' iti n.. e L s a n ' ee lTder . h tasted •Ittetn •honio pow be renovated_ tee igorated by • couesr of HU ••[tarp 11.111•1.7 Thle ettrest and woe , p,tent of ail vege table tonics aed ex nneranta regulates thy Ftlons while It mires the rength. and ye SSSSS the gelds of th• while It ghee drinneaa and Tiger to the nervous tb7, °,lf IT the ° 7. 1 7. :, - g:l:7`. cadtspood of palmate end 311ews of too cholreat getahle Levis tr.. tad ouervellves. otlngfed WI. • measly. still:Wight nem which creel box /we element has Owe. expelled. I t h e nesowhed awls Ito eh:e." awn,. yeah Is the opinion of dlatilthe . ated lie•wthe , • of h- goatee profession. had the gen- I real ...edict of the pahlia. aft- I ea skY • rt•ec‘" twenty years. whit h nOnTETX.XII,I of BIT MIPS heti aetalned a greet. , PaneteiritY see MOM cue .Ive Sail then any aprela etreradeer il.ed In the .lunins of the •611, wan prose. PRINT CAN TOPS. h.SElff` L....1._8EL1.NG • - r - F.IIITIT 2 CAN TOP, " PA: per. Dhed glee ' e cis ,se chine as th M. bp, Myths the s thud*. d um of thefr olla r h ilita stamped epos t owes, ea . 11 . 1= r p Oz Ito rantrelt MU'he " It Is Clearly, DisUnetly and Penaanaft T. A TWIMIAMEa. Ist Mem . plmlas Ramo or Ma Mat t eee ormWm antmelte4ha_ painter w4 Ateallax Is lb. easlmonry manner. An pn.ene. of ,T" or Cane Mame/mem nna w seeing t. NEW ADVER'iII3-EIYEEINTS. fa`DIVIDEND 1110TICE.--Tbe Dlrretore of the Lfbatoebstre and Lew. rencerllie Bridge ComP•a7 "+ de elated • dividend of YIVL Prlt CINS • for the hod .le month, payable at the odic. of the Tresearer to llliarpertnre foramlth. J NO. IZUD, Tleguarer. Itmornotran, Ott. 7, las. 0r.13p7i 'THE BOARD OF DIREC TOR., of the COLUMBIA OIL 001IPANT Have ads day eeclared • dividend of 7IVILTBII CENT. On the esottal mock. mabla3lo.daY. 1110 tn.,. A. P. 1141)11EW, Beer. Prrreounou. wore D R. ANDREW • antuumw rani Cares W moaner of 41sessa that the system la aub)eet to. Oellat No. 641 Eula strut. Moe hours foam t Ull 18 h. N. ao4 from 61111 oe.10:06 _ - pe SALE. 1,000 FIRST CLAM 11111BELS, bultabitto bs used for Yaeger.. Ms, rider or Usss'bob 08. APIA, as 69 end 69 Water unPet oc111:1018 r 111l3TICSTEII 6111TH• VIROPOSA LI WILL BE HE. atived akin • link; November, lA, at II O'clork L. for to. tarplttere work awl to. the beet UV! WON Work orkbe Central High School Building. Flans •ed rprutalcattas• may be reenetumenee of Barr & kw', ale. a tqath ann, earn. all armour loarroal 101 l wince. izalre i r:4 l,e-b• On tee ol4caof Oestril B B By ogre of - ittVglialteftgaimittoi.' \ JUBM a. suitimairr, et?; • Bients4 lekuestionL ELiIIIIL..111:111, bids. , Ferguson assittes etudes ) ( watts")tn. , argsuu at. asmated , equal 'day as. Oz. ads, suns laddlag from auriMir t va a co. 10 31',WW.1 lies at ;V 10 cli al a aßki 01 NEW GOODS WILLIAM Nos. 180 FEDERAL STREET I=l AT 25 CENTS, Double Width Alpacas, BLAIL K ARO COLORED. AT 87 1-2 CENTS, WATERPROOF CLOTH LT $l,OO, Waterproof Cloth. EXTRA GOOD BARGAINS Heavy Country Flannels, White Country Blankets, Grey Blankets, Shirting Flannel& Heavy Colored Bed Coverlets. Cassimeres and Jeans, Table Linens, Towellinzs,&e..&c. AT LOWER WILLIgM Nos. 180 find 182 NlgW GOODS! YOPYJLAR BATES & BELL I= Prints, Gingham, Cassimeres, Blankets, Flannels, Waterproofs, Cloaking Cloths, Linen Goods. TIIIs W 1 I Ii 62 I-it. Heavy Corded Browa Popli■ cheap at $l. 6t 1-!e 4-4 bilk Finial Black limit; great bargains; worth 97 l-!c. 17 I-h. fixed Poplin; worth GP I-h Black MILE cheap Kmpran Cloth cheap Black Poplins drop. ONE SIMADIZED NEW ARAB SHAWLS. tic Heavy Plaid PlaaaelL be. linty White Flannels. Ilk. Beery kd Plainle. Ile. Erin Beni dray Twilled Thumb. WILL OPEN ON MONDAY. • L•1B1 STOCK Of Simples, Wraps Walking Coats, DROADNITAT LACK ?e, •L ewe Styles et very L Tyne.. PAISLEY SHAWLS. DIRT 17166 ATLAS 11 , 1 TUE MITT WHITE BLANKETS / 1-4 ALL WOOL, 3.60 Tu ial.oo, . B•Ro•nr. 11.30. GOOD IICIII4O AIM. LIMO WIDZ WZAIII2II TICIUNG K R. GARDNER, N 0.69 Market street, Went Ginter luta and Fowl. OCIrTTELS lif . z ..r I 1 g co got M If P i t w. 11 2 1.9 cm• gel, 01 ..- 4 4 l i ogri:e 1 g .roplo A t ma w z. i . 4 1P! ' 6 .71215 511 Z r co 1 0 IX 0 1 g 1 5 1 2 1:2I wo rill l a E ' 4 1 e d Oil r 4 a i d '4 ... A V. A t 41 et&wsocumums & co. ..1 1 Wir . OLEATaraalgrie riOgirialialffetlearretipai j . ! • - et=" . .gralter. Mid 111111/11110111 MikErneis 11% NEW ADVIIR NEW GOODS SEMPLE'S, and 182 FEDERAL STREET, STRIPED WOOLEN SHAWLS, Arab Sha tele, Woolen Shawls. Children"' Shawls, Pal: ley Shawls, Ladles' and Children' Underwt ar, LADIES' & CHILDRENS , STOCKINGS, Knit Ifoods, Phasels. and Gloves--all kinds KENS' LNDIRDRIRTI AND DRIVELS, Mena' White Shirts. Paper Collars and Cuffs, Mena' Gloves, Socks, eh , Ladle' . and Maildrens HATS, BONNETS. RIB BONS & FLOWERS WIDE SASH RIBBONS, Silk Scarfs and Ties. HAIR-SWITCHES, &c., Le T PRICES, ANTI) El M Mit 1 0 ' r_. M'EA , Federal Street, 10113219 MEMO FRESH STOCK ! • I-' Et ICES. BATES dz BELL; =1 Dress Goods, Merinos, Plaids, Shawls, Cloaks, Mourning Goods, Silks, Fancy Arabs. R&MALEY'S HAT PARLOR, No. 22 Fifth Avenue. A FULL STOCK Of All the New Styles OP HATS AND OAPS O y F a E SEASON. CHESTIVUT & TWELFTH STREETS, PHILADELPHIA, BAILER AT. AT °wale:fret. GRAND OPENING!! idartirieVierMlMilhatritri: Waidet:/nreiry and Iliverval. PAINICIT GOODII, ea Bridal Gina a Specialty. BAILICT !Mk have the It swamis* Maas ill Um World, am/ will all all limas to plaasca fa -0111,•1 15114 ORM visitors throafb their esSabllal. ma al. dt B Tr MARBLB Bross, CHESTNUT AND lan/TN STREETS, Philadelphia. ae7:a as Tina THE Bu num ORGAN. 42: =11 1M ealitthttlIg Clirmit e rg Inm Toles Stop-th HILIIIMIL Nmestliest Tamed T. %LI r": 1% Or a a.,:"=. nest Or r a nr 11111.1 e, ThltClWrysrest,Ortaak Ala Liu (limal.ll 7 . a Is. BURDETT ORGAN. e4=l.nrir, n 4,=, =LIZ LI. Il tr ai EMU, ail Wm Agnate the this Itard.:=. ROCK THE BABY EARNEST'S PATENT CRIB. LEMON & WEISE. Midi=lll'6nd:we lamdlietonny bin us irottivril ALIMPIWIL ',Ewe awe la ginaelsaal asaleaste(rm er.Clboatagmad landutm SWEET POTATOES. - • • 10,buttis ibetal Jaw Armes rfo, oval kir sad Airlisti irr the birre orat T iplAll. Al Ifamity Groan, idoas at JOHN A. ILINIMAIV. oelt Claw Welty mad Math BIA NEW ADVERTIBEMINTS. I`AILAL. TRADE. New Goody! New Goods! NAOMI & CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fifth Avenue, rww DREeN TKIMIIIINos, EILINGES, HIM!, ENO BVTTUNS NEW sA.H BoW ILIFIRONS THE LATENT NOVELTIES IN HATE. NEW STLYIts Elf HotoloEßlls. NoVIELTIEs IN LACE 00000. GLOVES AND HOSIERY I= YEALIIIO AHD WOOL Shirts and Drawers, ALL HINDS AND 817.12.3. ZIPHYILS, HAI SIDRA!. •ND Pit Nil' Y RN. NiT SHAW - Li c LDS is. iTIONe • N D Ye P, 1 1.411,, rrtmats .0.1 De,. regiplicil At lee prices ILAORITM & CARLISLE, NU. 27 JIFTH AVENUE_ JUST OPENED BY JOSEPH HORNE & CO, =I ARAB SHAWLS, IN WTRIPILD •ND SHAM SCO ESTCH PLAID, ALL Reversed Satin Pleating, The Late.% Novelty le Deese Tr l Motl.g. Quilled Setle Trims.... U rtrO I . ..u n d : r:l•l Hercule Neu Ws, MI). Both, sm.? Ituttoue, brace Pla 1i... It ...„11.obelt sad Cotored Velvet NlOlwas Lams end SUL Merino and Wool Underwear L all e1tee . •11 . 11 „ 11: 0 11y , e r i1 , ...... thlpl•• e g"'"Sk 6anl. e .r.le V.ll HOSIERY Le Unsarpassed Assortment Yana° and St oat 11.101.41, Fleeced Cotten. Plato /drrina, Tartan. Pa Islas Striped, 1117TORIA AND STUART CASHiIIICRi MOOR, la all sizes. Dente Half Hoae la Wool. Harlan sad taper Stoat Cettott, AT VERY LOWIST Ph ICES. 77, and 79 MARKET STBRET .00 DAILY ARRIVAL NEW COCOI)S4 Fine Silk Rows. Wide Sash Ribbons, Ladies' Silk Scarfs, Roman /laid Ribbons. iryINSIVIC LINT 0/ HAND KNIT GOODS. Ladles' Wool Shawls, Ladles' Wool Vesta, Childrens' Knit Saeques, Infants Knit Hoods. REVERSIBLE SATIN PLEATING 1311tek Silk Fr ill g . ,e,;, Pull Ltne C,l)r,. LADIES'. AND GENTS' HOSIERY ♦ Complcte Line. CHILDRENS' BALIJHOR /IL HOSIERY Gents' & Ladles' Underwear BERLIN & CLOTH CLOVES, =I Boulevard Skirts, Gents' White Shirts, Paper Costars, Handkerchiefs, Lae. s, MACRUM, GLYDE & CO., 78 & 80 Earket Street. -13 FRESH CANNED GOODS. Tar sol.serlher I, o trthe le et ra large Gluck 0r5r...., ra• lee deadly, e anrgo elelly ried • •r.t rte. [wally trade. d would call •1.4[01.1013 to the "COOKS'S PATOItITE TOMATO,. I=l Winn!owl and Yarmouth Green Cern, Raiding's Fresh Isparagns, Pine Apple and Strawberries, forte's Golden Fennel, Pelee wttb lbe Kreate t ore for oar On Wale sad warrant-4 gi•• sena:acme. Is the Wel. hall wad Dealers vtpplled by the ease 51 wholesale pm. by JOHN AI lIENSIL&W, Corner Liberty and N Ira t b Streets. winos) SUPREME COURT PENNSYLVANIA• Law Books, Legal Books, Legal Stationery, OF ALL limns. KAY & 00XIPAliY, 65 Wood Street. ee:o MiIAT6I7I. BEILDINO)_ 1881 T ED THI6I DAY. LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE. THE NOVEMBER NUMBER. Ink Tie hie WuII-Pate lapsing', c.,sraiN,Ra 1=ff1:1M:1= air For arab Uoll Use Root and r1e1r1.310,111. .Trarlysabscrlptlone. Oa. slog. NororsraS mot, arICCIAL PRZIIIICII ounimrs of I%y Ltpp lo m•nNscaeos o ß r T m oos•• n o u M mallow to our party mooing ems subsenollo. I WOO• to lbw Ilmr•slse for laGLl,beSsoso tab doss sod Daot Won Id. Ltoommott's 'nth amens, aloossistr. t a.Z.1 .. ...4 .1 2 . 211112; Wig2l Good Words far t.• amens Snorlunr, oat. Prosaism; Last. PM{ to say madras. Gros, on soplicorloa J. B. ILIUM 'SCUTT a CU.. Publishers. TVG sod TIT Karim street. POLartsuals• ALPERT & KOHLER, Nsaarsotarere sad Dealers be 80018, IMOD MAD °ArtaNZ, N. it Mutat Stant, Mie n ft sr attention Etyma to Canna Wort. Vi Wave to erect the atteitlon of trie Wee to the WS Onto* are one reopered maaalactani Boots led film es far- Dermas troubled egrik Conn, Bunions. or detorined bet, eader tem pertanal ntams eloot Nr. ALL 17 , r e /rg . 1 44 1.11010.101.1 . M . W1T r ra: adopted Nr. Moen , . mode , of oteardrlng the mot.. by whlcb Ire naz be safe in warraattat etd7 sad coateetable Boot. and races ter las buds. eel bet. Glee as a Ina! and be ceartneed. . . ALPIST k011it..31, axstall ilsrlot street MAOluilik.l.• J. W. BAR 59 MARKE Bargains . . I Bargains Bargains • Bargains Bargains ' I Bargains Bargains Bargains Bargains' Bargains 1 • ' A I a.. , . 69 MAMIE. • • DRUGGETS, CRUMB cLoTp[s, EXTRA QUALITY, BRISSELS CARPETS, Direct Importations, MULLER BROS., Xo. 51 FIFTH 4 rayrrs, ll= ELEGANT CARPETS. Th.. latest and mast bountiful dorloologuoi •Tonf shown on TAPESTRY OR BODY 13.ELUSSELitigl. Jost reeelveal try arat tttt;ntt.ttm I:Min 7CIFIACTCM:3IararI'ES Of the :au. glTiou In large quantlth. OLIVER ffieCLINTOCH ' do CO: 23 Fifth Avenue. ocz CARPETS. NEW FALL STOCK. Oil Cloths, Vrmdow Shades, DR.IIGGETS. DRUGGET SQUARES, Ingrain Carpets, At the Lowest Prices Ever Offered. ROVARD, ROSE k VO., SI FIFTH ATZ:Mit: nil AL? NEW FALL STOCK. CARPETS, The First in the Market THE CHEAP E BT. CHOICIL PALTTIZILATS nl7O-141/ and Three-ph! CHEAP INGRAIN CAM= TES 71:1911:131 4 LINKOP BODY Bari Erver Offered In imAriar a i. .fro Una sad moan by bg flan WARMED Ea n .z Y 3 nrrß £VXZ 1=733 DR. rIOITTUOIJES TO TREAT ALL ea= L o l. Its froits. •14 conapretery raLabod: bgermabirliele eat Wombat. sad latiantorer. r•••lgara WI-abase or arta. entrees, sag mate of taa fralootag aerate. m blotetese WAIF ereste.s. reeterettoe, ecossuravtl.„ arrasfor le =Malualudlsem. druid or ra . rm n e armon, hideliroa• aoetaraal sad Mull/ tur,rsnglag ta• mita •• molar marrlartactorr, tber•Sej Improdone, an penal -.ratty eared. dieted tette Yeats or isal . other