II • 2 . ,c 1 Gairitt OPTIC?, OHL 86 HD 86 FIFTH IT oFOILTILL PAPER Of ptu , Alleghina7 Au. === ♦ THURSDAY, NOV. 11, was U.S. Boman at frankfort, 814 "'"* Pxasouctru at Antwerp,lirm at etir. GOLD closed in New York yesterday 11 127. - • ThsYerges , csae Is likely to Swett the Won of ConiTess, with the full Consent of a Coast which finds itself in sytty with an elephant melts hands : •IT Is understood that the SoPreme Court is quite equally divided In opinioa on the, legal-tender questions before that , body, and that no decision will he made 'Until near the dose of the present term. - EINS 'TelatE will be such a muintudeof our wthey-ithkerieg ProposlUous submitted at qbas coming 1119111013 of Clongismils a 4 quite . - qcsertainlyto preclude may action-which bs not . suatidned by the earnest ntecoinnea of the Truman, officials.. - . reeent letter, Mr. O. L. Vallandig... hem "doulne whether a single secepted t:14440e day will, at least in the pres aafehape, OXlllstitute any part of the rub fence of *canton to 187/ It teems eiblerd, too. that the petitions of public men will be greatly binged." lava so often heard the ay of "Wolf, Wolf," from the Revenue Bu. , 411 „rein, that each clams ea have made fait rota= of their Incomes for taw lien, seem to entertain no more fears that the, krone:al,: thetened investigation by:the . Coeitaissioner hi ever WWI to be, ;rode.' • Yet possiblj the wolf Is really . Crrednk at but It Is reported froze Weir ' , York. that these inquiries have been Ornmelyaet afoot la that city, to the tn .- Sidte diamay •of the .ftandulent. Yet *hips the wolf will luat cross the Alla &Weal !SECTillEtLta HEilroustmiLSTlM, - 'Preseugang yesterday to oar readers cotipiebuitdve femme of the history of • : • theme poweribi rellglobs denomination Whit* Is now engaged In this city in the consummation of a final reunion, healing the lamentable schisms which have for ,44.1ty years dlvfcled it apuinst itself, our - , ....apace did not then permit no to allude to titirtatt -. Conalderations which this event . • - .. - 1 1 =11420 101gpeln to a reflecting observer. Atkin whbsh prOalms the attainment of ilia iaiiiiitoiclidirtey of a 'pact beaming • of over four - hundred thousand American S,ltitnbera, and claiming to Asp° the rel . .... ,ghtua °PIM= of nearly if not quite . millions Of our people, Is an act 'craicii - tar.reaching Import that It could riot fall to arrest the attention., eibiebeltengd. the milled conniderathm -..:i,";;.04,,bn1y, of all Aliglonists, but of the 4,olitldan,lhe publicist and the pattlot, have neither the InCilietioe, rim cautiwelbid any sufficient data, for any ' , drape:am - ea of the purely religions Importance ~of imposing event. . ..z.; Igor doom cm/province of secular jammed. - .. tert lay at all in that direction. • Recog rZ,,,, 124ing the immeasurable public coma , Omar of movement which arms it porrerfol element In American eodety . '.with:ralonblett ability, and, inns hope, ' , eritb a etuttlrinierged itiaMICES we And ricough the social and politico• economical aspect. of the businem to 7, , • t.eaappyall the time and apace which we • tan care fm its ditameion. • , Great ban are impending—and not I fir MeV—which shall leave • well-de. • cpcedllnsthrongh..tbe midst of • frke, reptibilesii= and . enlightened people. Iterefilld ploughibare divide tbe 'dela iy stem sharply-,eat ihnow, bowing 1,'"; *Milo the right hand and that to Melo% thut will those probleths,—which radi• indly concern the more complete vindlcar eild,religittes libertron his continent, and which already begin to `Mee thenthelvee upon the clearer Ad& :made of ourforecesting stateathen—thive • themselves • Irresietibly thieugh the compelling over, kax annum of people to stand ' squarely on Ilivlde or oit,the other., The edicafed intelligence • has always clearly seen Abet poldles, in the ttigher ainatetif theterin, shottld be but -7, `' '! -filitstisticen of Atte religious" 'faith. No irberebtalldstmdtheenmorecanyincing- ; tyleir - evident. than thishanetcan field. ..!Tbentit draws- on width shall equally es. • teblNtl { lie' reflex.operstlon ,af I living 111 faith proved try, its • Works, upon thepolitleal and scelalstithe I..,y.;:fif this ~.. - g ip broth", In that 1/01%diAlf Annie which, es, we sincerely telieee. Asa nee our contlntmt the cboani Fagot _Otani* and .advandrig chilisatlcet, .theietmtral empire of all an enlightened. -;;;;',„... ' • ~-Between- t hese two coma. exPanda '- ,, 7llLitt*S theatre which every preb. thin otaftheiviing the polltlcal and religious ; ~ condltlaili,sepandely sn'd - together,, of the ifith approximate If not attain, "• ;Initiated(' goltdlon., There atm ba'.llo giro. L.:. grew ter eltherelemca, witt"Filinanm. "I bs°.. ,Tf. ' iae Dial . = of acaught and the .; '. , wieted- liberty m -'of its .....rantAnd , MUM' ' 'with the moment of WM* li ijll-111.1°Zt 51°1-21r /*at that we laVkibili: 1 ' 'j ' Ills thiatmedmo ~-ut ....• untrammelled birthright of .-,rl-.-i- thedom i all "Arunth. Republic . 'That boast .• ,`"4 4Arrell7cP,!...n.,^' of the BO. far from th at 174 r :1 - is net Pi* 'AO* . 16L • '''''''. ouSAL that we can therein nice ....vv. - . lie, Um_ r the .great problems' i -4 ~,,`',.`: 40 steer P utiln e s ' 9 ; whi ch a , ',.; which we have alMdedv ~,,. ~ ._ --‘? absoloul rellgiccs and P6iluciliree. , z ,'i ~a.....u. every ; human ,beh lg lifts our '-' ' 'sroidara, -- - to Protestant and ' Catholic, Jai_ 11 '.. , . '' _ , a li k e to ; all who accept trip ', • '7.' itiglßO l l l, " - - ' ' ' .4101 ma of "a .-- 1- 4 . 4 :Salary . thndamental_ '':'2:-:.'l:4,theanb Supremacy - •.i..p.* Ilm,Siationi-• ''' " `oireldalone - 641100-6). theft tine soludcra. ' - L free . empire of Mt" individtal Con' iih)uxi in ign tac thank, Or leliatiel larc‘"? .-- to.dsi Pleas % ,•kt, staieas4, bat is, -- - Amadeu every '''' ' ''' 'C' . - wady defiled ' fa' Abe itetatee or = -I ',' _ . / ilia enforce any Pm/ - . 7 L 'I:;•::' Ar a g i l: li n 1141411 "._ n w id er the naval= (1 ..- at sellitostimweese— a is one OW din Indltbri,t.T.- i i . !!! 1 . berc el h ss this of :ha Impending. '.° g i ng .ostrua. people.' Bowles shall`sell ''' " :' ' - nie4a. Ito* closely , tkin.or eay soft. no , , . _ psn - ,i. ;.,„lzeitirkica lo Pal tu u 'L.,,,, . - it/I as ere agreed. ~, .' .- whrma. O. our "4,1553 itithNtri ~., be required_ 'the of.. popidir 121;t ol In tile sidan r- ft..;,,...„.4 1 4 _______ .... , th at ooToor.etowe !..' :_-' ,:odkowiloni_,,., whic 2 l .,, 7fabd,t 7Tblii . Ie ...41i. : oUr -Pwl4"" f' =Widows cones: ' 'A° v be ' s ' ttueitical o not @brit our ere ' ' to Jilin:am= when the ..... , .-..dther ~_ , alms _ • . Awd St iblt A ular ..„,_ , Tat link' pooweetln .. - .. r watierers.. bit ~,,,,, dips power th 4 4 l, burcb. 11 .. • tiTi'renstoos.lik 41.11:14Tpihs;:it.ie;rudblml' - the Otivid' ' 1 . 1 of. raw& iii teraim2 ..„... ii , gm ~ rwr47l,- ith . - mid, bear ~.•-rt•-• - W:Aka up '• '.4;euilrgtv, -, -; --- ? .., ' . - onward. : liell' Illrd and forire4n increasing in' •,,.' - f r..,404. ir. - - boootatelged -of wor ld taille4,ll vide ------.q410. lobo'reArd-th°ll° '-...'ltittltmore 0114°21 reilgiottr, which se of livint di pi piened eau= - • effective methods than hitherto for awakening the consciences, purifying the perceptions and fortifying the hearts of the young against the perilous tempts, tiops which threaten now to overflow the social order with their deadly tide of sin. LegislaUon can do much to arrest this fatal flow, but religious education, such as we bespeak, can effect, tinder the Divine blessing, far more to save this land from tta t itispendlng deluge of moral 'death. This problem Is also one that must belliOn - b/Merit Wine too - late for any other solution than through sums convul• aloe rending the &vie order to its lowest foundations. Sere the Church has a work before it, which must be done far more effectively then - it has been. The Presbyterian denomination in this country has ever been a powerful one, in its numbers sad resources. Its revolt. sibUlties have been in the ratio of Its ca. parity. These responsibilities are now to be redoubled. Much "Mat branch of the Cheryl may have accompliebed, in the religious Mid, sail greater achieve. meats may Justly be required from it hereafter - . as the legitimate results of the present re-union. To whomsoever much shall be given, from_ them much shall be expecteclin return. UM IV- union Maga Presbyterianism fine to face with tttura Viresh.tY obligations than it has yam& Its strength it reinforced, ' Ite resources are more compact, Its morel 'power le redeemed from the scandalous weakness of schism, and it must go far wad to kinder undertakings and a clearer usefulness, In that moral and re ligions field which beßeige to the Church alone. This field is world-wide, but Its caltivatirm should begin at home, ex. tending therefrom only in breadth after breadth shall be thoroughly subdued. Ira culture will not consist in dealing with mere forms, empty ceremonies, verbal technicalities or nice violate of abstract diseldne, but sacrificing the practical in. Wrests of a visible and elevating faith— quarrelling over email tithes and ignoring the weightier mitten which concern the Ameriam people in this day and genera. instniction of the distant heathen tea commendable illustration of it broad Christi= charity. but the relig ions elevation of forty millions of our own people seems, to the philosophic ob. server, to heft far more pressing duty for thi hone. Tha intolerance which eat:wadi the denominational strength itteembatting schisms may be a conaclen lions duty to rellgioniets. but it leases choking tans to grow in gelds which shonld "be made ready for the rever— end It must cease at the grave. For ho w simply contemptiblemust be the religious Influence of any creed, in either domestic or domestic fields, which disfellowshlps other creeds on earth, and yet concedes their ultimate Inclusion in the great plan of redemption! Bow much of true catholicity can there be in a creed which thus loses all its just types at the grave, to meet those whom It, excommunicates here one wholly equal footing at the Judgment Bar? The . question of religious union or dia. union here is very raids found to repro sent either a faith in the taw damna tion of its non-believers, or a flagrantly mitutellgions intOttrance on earth. The tendir 4 ncies of she age; towards a more close cementing of the bonds which unite altreligioudtaithe fa hainony with each other, encourage a delightful hope that the old intolerances of mere schism are not mush-longer to lend s shoW of pod. dattloniO ttie too of a sincere faith, and tarnish with a boundless scandal the .prOper glinizi Of the human todurdasion to the Divine Will. ft Is a conclusion to which the Arnett _can people are certain to come, that what ever lingering relics may yet attest an Illegitimate donor Church and State in our polltioo•rellßious polity, shall be torn gilt kythe roots mid extirpate forever, le - vindication of that free empire of the conscience which forbids every form or :proselytism by the State ;mkt& should forbid , every form of religious in stnictien by public authority, which de. mands, in more or loss a proportion of tur youthful recipients, a humiliating confession of the Mal inferiority of reli gious beliefs which have come down to them and their patently through all the gauerallons of antiquity; which forbids anything like an established church, so ailed irhdttiez It be one, establishment like that which totters to the dust in the English blonde, or the Ore end' forty entail establishments which will follow the gm: sorcesafnl posh of any creed in securieg State recognition and aid for the religious instruction of its youth lii our Owe *public? Tite.,AMeriant system of a popular and wholly non-religious education of the young will be always, let as hope, under the protecting care of the Stale. • The reiponsibtlitlea of their renegue instruction will always restproperly upon the parental authority, pc:we:fay aided by the neon! sectarian organizations - These optimizations will be far Utterable to maintahr their _own positions Teepee= tively when they shin be willing to forego indefensible encroachments upon the equal privileges of the;belleveva in other creeds .. When the Chtinth.:-by which we 401- E 7 all the eidtde forms of an enlightened religions frith—eta be purged from all the Unarm:aces of the Slate, with all creeds alike respected and alike remitted purely tOlielr own individual and m added resources, we hope that it will be peepued not only to accept' its enlarg ed Anna, but to execute them Alliduily. Thom great. bathes of the religions whose remswitatires are noteassembled in our city. have no doubt committed vital treks to competent and faithful hands. It is in the interests d society, of hu manity. of- republican freedom, of the ;Lmitricen Mum, and of the future of the rete,iliet we express our humble hope that these good men appreciate their in. resionsfrdiltles, and comprehend the wending vista width unfolds the future zesimnsildlitlet of their,derucabia-. trans, .fu the talents conweltted• to their stem 'ardslitp. Let us hope that this very respectable branch of that true vine of God upon earth, the rid. bin. body. of Bis billerent, will mingle- with their natural felicitations nine reiriiiig end eights temporal pros 'Per- SY, some clear perceptions and frank ackstowledgments of the weightier work width biretta them. The tioie is et baud when the anirch should gird op its loins thrthe more el:halve and eating nem. Lion of ditties In 'which the State has heretofore shared its respokbilittes, and 'idth neither Church nor State has yet dlacluirged with that faithful thor littihtint 'needed for the redemption ,the Mini= people from the deadly , inductees of religious Iglus. kitlialiul \ Social fromerality,. • Let Pre ittteliiniarargrerihe obliges example to other religionists, of a powerful denoml. ;natldiothlch ashes Ha& malt to alp. pie with, and do lisped in resolving, the momentous questions - which concern the Peodoin 'eVevery 'cortacience, with the twita`ieUgiouainslrud ton ad the deeper moral purification, of Americus society. -. Taristelotpodagebetweenths trailed 8 t0M1N44 1 44 1 , 1 41 1111 itrY shortly be tedwai by 440—otaiseente, Tice new tate will eorbwlnbveffeet on the levet Janney next. Poor ignnignens vii be the first to bend; by the wiaq policy of the tWO GlemonsilnlA STATE ITEIIB. Rummell trains now lull to and from Mercer over the Shenangoand Allegheny Railroad, Tat - Llngletown (Dauphin county) Soldiers' Monument was dedicated on Saturday last. R.. M. Jones, of Cambria county, an employee in the Treasury Department at Washington, has been arrested for illegal voting in Cambria county. Mr. Jones gave bail and will test the question.. .. Tue Dauphin county Bible Society neid s meeting Tuesday night's's& dis cussed the question, "Shall the combined forces of Romantsm end Infidelity break np our noble system of a general Educe r' Tan Governor has appointed as Nota ries Public George Barton, Smith Erle, Erie county; Samuel P. Keller, Monon• gahela City., Washington county (reap pointed); Henry A. Front, North East, ate county. . SEVEN BOYS, between six and twelve years of age, ran away from their homes in Wellsboro last week, Intending to go to New York, where the eldest designed robbing a bank. They were captured before getting a dozen miles away. Tim Harrisburg Telegraph reports another colossal fortune to a unison of that place, a descendant of the great Hyde family of England, but says it is a matter of grave doubtwhettter the young man will next season build a new hones with any of the money. At onaw ATIII2IItOIPO hes brought suit spinet the publishers of Rsther Abraham, of Lancaster, for libel. The alleged libel, we believe, consists in charg ing Mt. Armstrong with receiving $9O for mileage, when he was a member of the Legislature, whereat he • was anti. tied only to $9. A tarran bas been received conveying intelligence of the killing by Indians of Joseph Whlteeme, of Ifethanicsburg, a caivate in the Bth 11. 8. Oevalry. He was .murdered at Ash Valley, Arizona, while awaiting authority from the War Depart ment for his discharge, having some time rtievious lost an arm in an encounter with the savages. Tug Lancaater Examiner estimates the colored vote of Lancaster county at about 1,000, bead upon the census of 1860, when the colored population of Lancaster was 8,490, mil the Lancaster Enquirer calls upon the Democratic politicians th make their peaee with the new citizens, or they will be defeated in the only dis tricts in which they have a majority. Ott Wednesday last, as Reuben Hodk was engaged, in Slippery - reek township, Lawrence cpunty, in heeding grain to a threshing machine, a fork need by the person pitching came off its handle and stuck to a ebeaf, which was put Into the machine. The fork was broken in the machine and a piece of It rebounded, striking Mr. Hoes In the forehead, penis. %rating to the brain, He died in about half an hour. On Wednesday of last week a train of forty cars containing petroleum, on' the Flttaburgh and Erie Railroad, while near Irvinton, was discovered to be on fire, and would have been consumed but for the prompt action of conductor Metzger, engineer Deerfield, and passengers of the express train, which opportunely arrayed at the locality. By thelfefforis thirty of the forty mini of the oil train were un• coupled and eared. Two onions, grown from the seed the past season, weighing one and a fourth pounds each and measuring fifteen and three-fourths inches in circumference, have been presented to the a editor of the Bradford Reporter, They were produced In that county by a farmer Who says he usually sows his onion seed the first new moon In April or May; after covering the seed he tramps the earth down solid, ano he never fails of getting a good crop. 3EITS. Tim President h said to hive declared himsell most positively skiing the move ments to.repesi vim tarlff on bituminous eoeL BEcncrenT Borrwann fs still unable to secure a successor to Butterfield u Bun,Tressurer at New York, all persons offered it basing deellned it. A menus dispatch, announcing the death of Ms. Peabody, says the Immediate cause of hie death was congestion of the lungs, and he pasted away without stiffer. ing. A max who saw Hajar Andre eiecu• ted, and witnessed the capture :cd West. Point by 'lliad" Anthony Wayne,, is living at Hanover, Rock county, Wis consin. Tun Cleveland Board of Trade Las ap pointed a r‘vpm trP-‘ to confer with the_ City Councilor Erie, on the subject of .theship canal connecting Lake Michigan and Etta Tns firm of A. Blaney it Co., the _oldest liquor house probably In New York, bee failed for a Urge amount. They sew that their assets are donblethelr lisuilltles, but their Inability to get paper discounted forces them to suspend. Tats ptisoneßitregg, confined In th e Hlngiroodjall - (W. Fe.) for baiting the Preston county court ham, emir senten ced to be.bung neat January, eataped on Monday night of Jot weelt, by digging out under/pound, and Is now at large. Tut. Clarke institution for Deaf Mutes, at Northampton( Massachusetts, will de rive $215,000 from the Mote bequeathed by-the We Mr. Mak, the founder. New NO:lLnp are to be erected on the family system. The precept number of pupas Is to New n4V/111 Paper complains a recent acts of vandalism and malicious mischief on the part. of Tale students that would better. become Comanche In. diens. it thinks that of Jailor Webster's treatment would haven healthy effect, and is what is needed." An eccentric capitalist In Buffalo offered a num, presumed to be lazy, $l5 and some groceries if he would wheel a bar row cordial:ism one hundred pounds of stone a certain distanco twice a day for twenty-four days. The offer was accept ed, and the contract falthfuly executed. Tim erne of the brakemen on-the Erie railroad le of a formidable character, but it is mid Fisk is determined to squelch it, and he® been scouring New York city for employes. A riot was reported es immlne.nt at Port Jervis, Flak having gone there with a large crowd armed to 'the teeth. • The engineers on theroad also threaten to strike. 4 cuss occurred the other day In Day. import, lowa, in which a Mrs.,louena Freud, who has been 'figuring in the divorce courts, by due process of law, found herself' legally separeted froeher buten& She waited .not a moment, but •paued out of the court room down inane, whore a bran now husband wan awaiting With a license la hie, pocket, and they were made one. In a Tillage of Medina county, Ohio, recently, a child Wm born with one of Its bands shaped like a dog's pavi. The arm from the elbow down .le much smaller than the(other, and the fingereare webbed about half way zip. The child holda the. hand sea &pion its paw when hurt. The mother was Iliedened stew mouths ago by seeing a wagon. OTC 7 a dog, and one of nee calla= was ma OM at the same time. Lam Buenos Ayes pipers., received at the State Department contain the state. maul, which is sustained by semi official advice*, that Lopez has . entrenched Wm cell so advanbrgeottsly as to be able to hold out easiest the 'allied army for an other yearcif not longer. There Is dud• ler authority forythe assertion that his army has received numerous accessions since his retreat into the npunlains, and that his supplies, which he receives front Bolivia and the wonderfully fertile coun try In his rear, are almost inexhanstible. Orrin:ea of 'Newbury/xi - rt„ Mau., were mach excited' by heavy firing on -Friday and Saturday evenices a week ago„ but were relieved from their Bore henelons when they learned that a real dent.of Salisbury thus celebrated lds ac• rodual„ at, a ,coon; in, Lawrence, or 111 ammo of biry, ,Whiete was preferred inedrustlbn y q ` orthy; maiden lady, who tedded ihe same house with . hlm,. and who felt scandalized at hie Waging home a new wife in the place °tone who tad deserted-111m,- she not being lOW that ho had previouely,obtained a divorce. :durum December let the President is authorized by law to appoint the nine .new CireOltJtulace for the nine Judicial Districts of the country. There have been nunaciotur appliestione' madeJudi reetl7i in Ina cusps, by State Judges: lawyers, ex Judges &a; residing lkthe variousCtrenits or . Dieriota, and there le .nottadaythaa 'the President Is not kw portuned in babel! -of mime of thew-Ap plicants; The %81101*Me ,Cobrt Jeuirra,: who nnw sit on life Circuit, which the new Judges will occupy, have, as a gen• nntl thing, refused to Udeum the mars PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE: THURSDAY MOiVING, NOV k..MBER 11, 1869, of sny of the new applicants. The President promises that every ono of thestlife appointments shall be made the subject of careful,Cabinet deliberation. Cum Stacey says in his newspaper the ht. L'inis Westliche Post, that In a ll our great cities the German Americans constitute the mass of all the reform parties, and may be steadily railed on to break up corrupt rings and combinations. The claim is e righteous one, and will not be dented by those who know the character of „these unselfish oltisena They follow ne TalrunanY, anetectio!. no cry of the lenders of the mob. Lot:nexus, 14., It is asserted: hex doubled in sfresinee the war. The news lifers of that city state that large lam ii' of buildings, many of than very costly and elegant, .have been erected, that the boundaries have been extended until the municipal area is twice as large as formerly, and that the population ban Increased in like proportion, while manu factories, established many years ago, but never attempting competition with like manufactories In Cincinnati, are tlonrlak leg. Tnt North German Navy,- since the acquirements of ports on the Seine, bee been rapidly increasing, and greater in terest Is felt among the people in maritime affair*. The ()truant Society In aid' of the ship-wrecked is constantly receiving additions of members and contributions, and the operations of the Azeociation are becoming more extended. The sym pathy with the ehlpwrecked tailors is not confined to the coast districts, and the Society recently received a donation of 118,000 from a resident of Bonn. THEODORE & Corrow of Blackhewk comity, lowa, committed suicide by taking a dose of laudanum, on the night of the Etitli ult. A memorandum book eras found in the house, in which the de ceased had made the following entries. "Hest in Peace—Died Oct. $4, 1889, by his own hand, T. & Cnie , Reasons, because he wiehed to destroy himself." "Sunda y morning, Oct. —Kama time to-day I will take two (mums of lauda num. Hit fails to kill me,' I will cut my throat. Bend word to my folks at Butler Center, Butler county lowa. Bury me anywhere." " My dying love to thee, darling wife. I purchased the laudanum of Forty, last Thursday evening." "'Tie almost sundown, and I am almost ready to take the poison. It 7111 not be dis covered until morning, and then it will ble too late tobeip me." What Are They Coming To t A New York tanrespondent writing to. the Hertford Tim+ says: "The vulgar desire which exists arnOni women of fashion hero to ape the man. nets, dress and pretensions of women of rank and title In other cointles and other times, was never so couspicuoas as 'now, 'when fashion itself has revived in acme measure the traditions which belong to a past, credited alike with the telly of reckless extravagance and the license of undistinguished immorality. Vauxhall and Ranelagh are reproduced in their glory (or their shame) In the fain hair, the powdered hair, the painted cheeks, Ito exposed bosoms, the bunched up grids, the affected walk, the monstrous airs and affectations, which are pert and parcel of every fashionable assemblage. We out Herod Herod. Noting like It wu eter seen in Paris or any other city to thiWorld; for the recognized leaders of faiihion abroad are few, and their noto riety, gained chiefly by the record of their achievements In the newspapers, IS not coveted by women of really high character and position. tat DAILT TILOWKRADE. Aingricia visitors to Europe note with great satisfaction that there are more els. gently dressed woman to be seen in the streets of flew York, and proportionately In every other American city, than in any other country In the world. The spectacle, on a clear, bright day, is brilliant In the ettreatel but to me it Is a sad and sickening sight. There is as little Waco of,gentleness or womanliness about these daily promenaders as among the painted but leas bedizened creatures who walk.there at night. They are bold In look, load In speech, obtrusive in man ner, and measure every woman they theet by the cost of the material of her dress, or the number of yards of trimming she wears. They are oonnoisseure in every. thing; and like the fools of every gene• ration, "rush in where angels fear to tread." Len preparation and care expended on the street, and more ripen detatla at home, which are now wholly given over to Bridget, would be Infinitely more credit• able to Mt Some Idea may be obtained of the money expended on street and visiting dress from the coot of some of the street salts exhibited by the large houses dar ing the present season. I= One of :bele' was composed of blue silk and blue velvet, and was trimmed with sable. Its value was one thousand dollars. Another was of silk and velvet, with a trimming of the silk. This was three hundred and seventy five dollars. Another wa of black velvet trimmed with thick corded silk; thhi was three hun dred and fifty dollars A poplin suit changeable green and black, rather elab orately tinge . and-trimmed with Mack corded eilly.not at all ems expensive look ing dress, was two hundred and arty dol- Real... Admiral Charles Stewart Bear-Adadral Chariqbfitewart, U. S. N., died lest week at Bordentown, aged 91. Huovu born In Philadelphia, of Irish parents, entered the merchant arnica when. oe.ly 18-years -of age, and steadily rose from cabin-boy to the corns mend of an East . Indiamen. In 1798 he abandoned the merchant service, and was corcualnioned a Lieutenant in the navy. In 1800 he commended the schoon er Experiment, and In 1802 Joined the frigate Constellation as Pint Officer. Ha was appointed to the command of the brig Siren in 1808, and took part in the amps didon to destroy the frigate adindelithisi and afterward in the siege and bloc kade of Tripoli. At the commencement of the War of 1812 ho was placed in command of the Conatellation and wanted In de, fending Norfolk and Crancy Island. In 1818 he mimed command of the Constitution, and during a year's cruise succeeded In. capturing several British ' vessels. In February 1815, he foil In with the British eitips.of-war Cyane ofBl gene and the Levant of 21 guns, and captured them after a sharp combat of forty min. ides, having three men killed- and Mir. teen wounded, while the British vutoels lost thirty-five killed and fortyswo Wounded. The Levin! was subsequently recaptured by the, .British Squadron, but the Constitution Escaped with her other prize. On his return he Was received with. the highest. honors. The Legtala. tore of Pennsylvania presented him with a sword, and a gold medal commenters. live of the capture of the Levant and Cyane was ordered to be struck by Con: grear. He commended the Hediterni loin- Squadron from 1817 to 1820,*and was afterward transferred to the cont. Mend at the Pacific Squadron. Atom 1820 to 1838 he served as a member of the Bond • of Navy Commisslonera at Washington, and in 1847 he succeeded Commodore Barron in command of the Navy Yard at Pniladelphia. Upon the death of Commodore Barren -tie became the senior officer of the naval: rarvice. He was placed on the retired list in 7801; after an eventful career of shat three Bereinienlce. Re has since resi d ed. la rdentown. specie Payment, .• A Washington letter Eays — : "The story of a plan In contemplation by Secretary , Boatwell to resume specie paymenton _ January,lst„ is a pare brunt:ion. Seem tart' lioutwell said this eienthll that such a step was not only impracticable,. Int impossible; that he never talked.on there., sumption of speciopsyment to .any one: Re had ertough , to'txxamy hts attention to see that the levitate to collected, that the Interest eh the debt blprtunptly and regd. tarty paid, awl' that the. filanew of the .11overnment see kept In a healthy condl• Von. ' Thojnveutton in quecion hector: Waited so &digit' nbaltrdi and sena tionallyenanufklered out of whole el silo further said thatit would require 'tome iettlabstionon the part of Congress to ex tend his power ta,withdiew bonds over a ocrtain amonnt,and even lilt were pout. ble to come back to , spechs payment, , It could net be done hi the time stated; Bolt w) 11 fhrther be seenthatthe statement is also. As to the anticipated - decision of the Supreme Court, autt the JeltaLle zk .ndet acne unconstitution4, it>i,noul, w i . "",-. colt to sty on :what llrotostt. any .:; nu. statement can befounded, In ativancerof way-actlon or.Aher court ,In 'the matter. The 'whole eubret wasso utterly without foundation that the Secretary considered it not worth talking about. • The Great statue or Herrmann We And In the DrawAs dirstrinitim. Zeigusg the following particulars regard ins the history of the Hermann Monu ment in the Teutoburger Forest: -The project was formed at the beginning of the present century, when Germany war pining under the yoke of a foreign op pressor. Ernst von Bendel, born at Arifsbach in 1800, conceived the idea when a more lad, but it was not till 1834, when the artist exhibited a figure at AY' minim' four feet high in the Berlin Art- Exhibitien, that the matter wits taken up by the public. In 1837 Bendel traveled through and-examined the lealobarger Forest, the scene of the defeat of Vertu, and fixed on the Grotenburg near Dot mold, the highest peak of the Teutberg, as the site of the monument. The orig inal intention, however, of placing the statue on a projective cliff could not be carried out, as no rock of sufficient balk could be found in the moun tain. It was consequeutly resolved to erect a huge pedevtal, visible from a great distance, and by means of voluntarrsubectiptions it wag .completed in 1848. Tales, great mare of masonry contains 160,000 cubic fad of the hardest freestone. and 'cost 27,788 (hiders. be -1 aides nine years' ,1111101' bestowed on it by Mandel; for the patrioticarthit refused, and still grimly refuses to accept any re -1 maceration whatever. It war not 15)1 1807-that the gigantic statue Itself could be commenced. The figure, when com pleted, will =ware 55 feet to the top of the helmet, or ed feet to the point of the raised sword, so that adding five feet for the plinth, and 92 feet for the pedestal, the entire height of the monument will be 182 feel Handel has &heady com pleted the bead of dratirdus, the arm and , sword, the Wald and the feet, but &great iton cylinder, which will cost about 9000 Oaten, has still to be procured and Intro duced into the statue to strengthen it against the violence of the wind. It is expect the figure will be placed on the petal within a year." Env. H. W. litsdoargn, during a recent talk at his Friday evening prayer meet ing, compared the conventional religions phrases used by some people to the keys and pennies and sliver pieces—ln the days of specie payments—that he had beard well-to-do business men rattle com placently in their pockets. As a boy, he used to admire such men; but as a man, when it °ernes to rattling the round shot of pious, trite sayings, like, "How is it with your soul today r" he is disgusted Arid well he may be. I=l May be eaustated •ven dly ..41 r. r. at la groat Medina° Mom 167 %Abell, •od Croat to 6 554 Ito ive. Dtsclargs ttom lb. lE= Buzzing .ad Singing Nouns COMM 122=1:19 CEM B/Indzien Catarrh al tha Bud. LinlailUk linehltLx. I=o3 === I=l I= 1021=ITI Apparatus, bibrammts, Ulcerated Limb. I=l end the r•nou. 12=111 I=l Pr. 11/11781E4 would re/Intl:WIT Waltt lb. , yaw have failed to OS 'Bella trout atttat oval.' to inantre Into bla mode al Mamas, THE SHIVERING SEASON. Ito Unpoulbis to tepeeet that any hymen be teg eon eoWdtr an attack of Wooer and Age. • la•bt Ilittlitlon. And yet Wotan& •m as If ouch • rolabutty tras of no cc:maestro.: irbila tsaaosadt who en actaally eolleelos from the dletreastag complacit negloot to adopt the W hale means Of ens. It ought to S. known to .eery localtly enklect to this reverie, or obkli Is Wined will am:MUM toyer on arm mbar epi demic mrabseed by tealalla. that EIIbaTIETTLILIS .TOIE/WU DMZ= Wuea to ear anoe or at the eoraltranoernent of the unhealthy searon, ortu fortify too mama ago= the atinoirpherle polron which mambo than diatempera. Thlc e4us r•ble Inelgeraat—tiannleu. nameable. and Doe ecoag [•tar eitedltinal•irutee Mae any other Wei, at Descent known. will break up the par. =gyms Of Intermitter= or 111311lblar fryer la tuna torty•elghl hours to tan 4670. bet(U the tottuoeu.l UM...1 Ooze dletrieta .bare put odleal Otters hags beta annotated Dab this powerful 0500001.1. Clualogogna. La a third& eatabborbbod Irtaa torn hae their doors and Tab labellab t 0 ne U the war WO. twerlimel happus to he pertsece by sertel pa mos they ealdo• talc the trouble to but thole (odds la notate of &fen. tetanal Itot subtle MUD. latryeltits vletigua gadearorlag la gain So mum Taut Cane bawls over the bre, or tan allealltg Willem firer shot I.llooa ths Oda, re member that 11138TZTTLFtlb BlTTilth 1. an ab eam, •915dy and talalllble Otago far emir Ma. tremberl NOTICES bract CTITZIMI TlAltw •er Cont,arly PlitSbeinibe sor. 411,,1409,10 tar/PRE ELEVENTH ANNUAL 111131PIS6' of MVO to,kholders o 7 the ‘291 4 2. 8 b_ I =ll - 1 . . - Irg a „5. °4 41 ` 4 7 - 71 " Co et, on . MOND/. , 1 9,4114.v01ea r: at übleth ea Wu. Sovdot Directors sill be elected tor the ....MS Veer. tad Isocb a , h.s businean unmet • ted we mar come beim. themm Wm. awribblLl • D. P. CORWIN. 13.0.7. PAISZto at. Eenee•T CONPABT. Pittsburgh, Not. Gib. 1.611. jar/ME SECOND ,AIIIIVVAL MEICTIND of the !Rockhold., of the Poottlem Pannaser Beltway tionnonty of the City of PittalMali Intl to [skid at hi. htetkoler'e, 16 idteiDA.l. Nonwhite Ma. at T, o'clockr. .t which t .nd Bites . . Boa ar Dinettes Wilt be clotted for lb. CS 1111111 Old neb other Irosktess usurer-tea I. may OA. ?Watt the mentos 8041011 D. P. CORWIN, Seesetasy. BaX.WorPtissoc•au. oPS, CURD AND TAB. BDTTONSMAIDEI 414. 3.11:W.Nr-TrY GOODS. NIL VZL ivrirko. imrATI 9EM ISA TItrArTLLS 6 a niuttga T.,..t7a77,44/ grA Boirs, BniAti tar ° Intorezals and Setae, 77 and 79 11.MMT STREET " q 4dgr .04 A.ct HA ` l: ' ( v g , z g i i i pi 4 /1 41 tti B ... dizosag v ,m ' 4 41 8 g t _ r 'A 1 . 1 9 a , 2; o it 0 =l2-1 5 0 1:0 14 40, 2 0 01 9 :2- 114 : 1 1 t 6-4. ' el l 0 a et z . A .t• 41 DREU Importer androtoll &Marta .`, , wrera Ermaernoorxanaro.. wEsome, VISITING. PARTY :OD; 133SINESS CAKO EXIMATJAU. KONIDGWOs, mum, zungniAnrie N Orden by toati mozetroprmacm. lead ramoptcs. ~x.c. L:T~ ~.~;_r.f ~tif~ EXTREMELY For EAtirOly Hew D ia Eliiilsl uqlM .; INABKET *'_-' NEW Al)v-mitm. POPULAR ATTRACTIONS 1 1 NEW GOODS! Low imriaea 1 BATES & BELL'S Dress Goods, Cloaks, Shawls, Suits, Yelpts, Ilerinoes, Linen Goods, Blankets, Flannels, Mourning Goods, Cloaking Cloths. ELEGANT CA Tao Latad and man baantlfal ananrsln TAPESTRY OR BODY 13PLUSSEL.S. alsbi iteelyed by and tmmettlios co. /Si. lax& 3 1MELT71311431.31P1N1S of tb. OLIYIKEt IieCLINTOCIE . CO. 23 31fth Mains CHESTNUT& !ULM MEM PHILADELPHIA, 313:411-111.41By dice 43., ITerairelerab. GRAND OPENING!! for the PALL sad CIRMISTMAS bans of . masatncsirrerrocx or an tiviserratiles to Watch; Murky and ll*lime. resin cianns. ao; Bridal Gifts a Specialty. Itm l =l i ed e tlll s l72 4 ol76 . 7la s dL I V calm awl OKA 'Ulu= Walla War it&T.L.EIe m 21:B W" 3142,8 LE 800 BA maim AID Min unlit ..imssiur l P &de4 P hisb DR. WR/TTIRR i —,,, qty ,tAla mit, Maa= t i m;. daal27l . oakum* aadrara as Mar Viatiatea, mbar. stalasadnavaaaa moor madiardvlaaaaaaa, voctarsal aad Maaly do m- lio,. ma ournal iii : dander a..m ammutaalorr. yank.. =dVik ' Ta l e= : 11" Sor •,. 'LI. Or taadatadardeal ad Ors as Dom? a 0, t gred i z .b atummArsj•e „, e t = aasUos or Ifloarsaosi IWakd. I= . AM=iieutig'doinanAVara MM. ae . Ire rie, w . aa l e ill talL11141“ = Tia a raesor,aa im adaboa vi r a galadaal: or 0 ....apr ae towni e ja .um tilAcau e ...ar i . ... s. Onaadat Am tda ~; o aaa. a . Alaaaand. - .. .....aalasameani baTiT i teil e arsittaa ataiolltialaar, ad mate 4ir . . 1112nni " .a."=1 ' u t,7 or sx -1 .C2B a VreMa OA .azawasaaawalwaa sae oaks= , UM la Mk t j a I maVir • • la r o ja aaa I ao 'T"'. L: I x. "iti m . 7r 4 '.‘ • - A . ' i LOWE''PRIQES slid: Fashionable Gaon ON, Mitt 's 4 , 00 _ . • Na I=== r 4 _'~` dolga, me EIMMI EMI