xi -I et phi* &a . r emus: GUMS infiliDlfflit 81 MI 114 MIR IV OFFICIAL PAPER P 411 . 4 0 1 ."- Mr** AnCarIMMOW aadl (hear Gouty MONDAY, NOV. ILO, 18430 Minna= it Antwerp, 50jr. IL B. Board id. Prankfdd, 85K..484 43oLD dosed In New York on Saturday at 1141. tra , b, the Wad rumor from Wathington, Uulthe Supreme Cloortbu not only not yet emillitirciditotaterticra atm) constitution• allltotthe legaLtender Act, but will not take wp' the subject at the present term Tat e ‘ wrintran character of the gee annm% of Japan may be Judged from the fact that the Mikado has sent one of the minces of his empire to Ban Francis co to - inquire Into the welfare of the num erous- Japanese emigrant, who have nettled in Cellfontla. A rairruointLt. has been 'track by sat I oq went= in Cattarangus county, N. Y., about .ten miles from (Mean. That county, and our own county of McKean present, fps WO, very promising surface indicallons, which the discovery above *Mien of:goes far to support. SznaretcursL New Yerk journals, of the,Trhaine type, announce . the probable arsinal of the Albany at Boman Bay, with Senator Cole and Kr. O'Sullivan, Ocamnissicrnent of the President to Ban Domingo, as passengefs. As those gen. Sew* were in Washington all of hut most infer that the element of Add maw as to pointaof fact is not asiplisi So/metropolitan journalism. It Mk= that th e President hum pensaM himself as decidedly opposed to the animal of the treaty of reciprocity withesmila, and we think the stationing well founded. In Canada parties are di vided on this question. The Tories, or those who desire to perpetuate the British rely are warm advocates of the renewal of that treaty, while the I f iberals, or those *Loma annexation, do not wish for ratetral of the treaty. We think the people of the United States, the Presi dent among them, will agree with the thetaie, and say, "If you want to trade tejilLata. without restriction, coma in." Whtr,should we and the Canadians be one optumerclaily and two politically 7.4o;losolustPosstmarr of the Zanesville Owsekie 'mourna.the likelihood Mgt the ridliiky Ikea' °male to liflamaimgh is tesbeexteuded to Mt. Vernon, instead of AcriisthaNualcingius valley. Had Mmes. *Me taking a tithe of the active Interest f 4 lamina by ldt. Vernon. In securing the control of that enterprise, she iFivA. pot only have amazed her own eonsetkin withthe Pan Hindle, at Dres• deli, long 'ere this, but the tilling of the thirty-eight mile gap thence to Millen yd igh - would have followed, almost as a matter of course. They talk in one cola womityrbut do in • another, and each seems to rely upon Its best hold. That's what's the matter I Even Row, If these fliOtici were reverted, the Motivate Jere- With might discover more than one gleam oreninfer i.,. in the possibilities of the future. tinsaricas, at Washing ton. the Income-tax Is regarded as one of the most equitable forms for the collee glein of our internal revenues. If the matter be referred to at all In the reports tobs"eson* kid before Congress, its re ' taidien will certainly be recommended; and, miss/Xi with some modifications, ;Wier' Agreed to. Whether the limit of exempffile shall be increased to $2,000, as taxilled-Aby the revenue-officers of Illinois, or whether the present limit be reteired, and the tax reduced from five to three,. per cent. upon the excess of Mains, are the questions to which die. mission 'is likely to be confined, with Yentitsitiont which it would be Idle to speculate now. Upon a proposition to ,twityt down the range of Internal taxa 11a, ai the earliest day possible, to incomes, tobacco and spirits alone, re nd/dug all the present forms of excise tiother taxable articles in the e -- ire dull be prepared to see Oannieg very general, agreed. II I II IT XII 1114.210100 a tabOtity that cannot be al* tted, that over two hundred New Xo,4lnttrthants are implicated in frauds . P. * uporkthe revenue by means of false la -1 Wan dining the ad ninistratlon of Pres !. lthrOSJosintow. Inveatigations are going t - fareitud. and fir the present the names Of il lee glnty parties are withheld from the z . Walls :': There is wee talk that thasqlswrver ".. ea c Wiottedrele, who are guilty 'of-both - frith! and yerjury, will be allowed to i 4 . Op Mat by making good the amount out :. of tad& they would have wronged the •. gelferethent bad they not been detected. 1 11 ''.llnalt.th,„te but compounding felony? 11-06 We would like to knoW where any ... . , (dean, of, the law or of the customs and ssahrellY to make any such compro. it No worms form of villainy is otieellt trisideed. or one which 'emcee inkuions baths pudic internal, or more demorallz. • itit tcipublie and prlirate diameter, than „Sithsloooommern one of false invokes yet tittle that sharp and serum punish. *Mt will be - visited upon every man - tilisirly convicted of this double crime, siitutatter what bat modal position may be. Poor scromdrels and petty thieves are sharply dealt with; why then should thee° wham misdeeds are• tenfold more aModons_and. injuriousbe more tenderly destisirithl , 2 : TER BPAFIZEI 003-BOAT B will be re. leased. The legal proceedings for their ' attention must tat upon legal grounda 1 It b onlythe Peruvian objection to their ; - tele*, Which appears upon the recori. Samoa Government has official est *nes supplied to It nearly a year since • by, the Permian authorities, that a state s i ''ol' War nu not then orbiting between / an ntra a nd ysii Er m . r 0111 1 .4 no such ng of evideo i ce ue4 of thlipiesif will be offered at the hearing, sad decisive of the ease. The Federal • et;:iertit, In these intentationsl question; sestrettgribe no other political relations 0 than such eit may base the afield Iwo. toi'or the Ittecative and legislative t. amairtmoso of the (imminent. A data f -5, eof wss estisely editing between two for p) elgriliriwers. but of which no official .no , aciltaa been given, by either party i'.;; ' thereto, to the AEllOl{l2ll GOTeMalellt, is , t 1 0, of feet entirely beyond th e cog. 1 .." ''''.. or Federal tribunals. The courts as praised by the mond as it stands in 31 , the Whim of intr State department. It g. I. eftat,thendate, that the libel,' lathe tilii ift.i.real'ef Peru. 1 P be eueta t bled ,;. • I_, - agantatibeso mods 4MO l 00, hi , ttle ,Istpreetc of the It;or eittlesesof ttteesisietto, I orbit emit p stutter of iset, eon be .^' - willatabia by a Federal Court. Neither - 1. -Osiris par 1110 UsgalTe Ann yffi , . recognized the faintest shadow of a claim for a Cuban nationality, Lod the Court must be governed accordingly. It can not itself haunt to recognize an !iambi dons' statues which has not yet been admitted by either the treaty or the law• making • powers. . . Nor need such a recognition, from either of these branches of the Govern• meet, be looked for in time to affect the case now pending at New York. Neither the President nor the Semite are prepared to commit themselves so unwisely. Joint resoMtion, bolstering up the Cuban muse, will .be sprung upon the house very early in the session, and may pus that body. But that will be the end of . It the Senate will follow last winter's wise precedent, and send that bit of btriti combo indefinitely to the table. With the re'ease and departure of thy* Spanish Teasels, will open Me final chap ter of the Cuban insurrection. That island will be surrounded by a Beet of . guardseoems, effectually cutting off e men and material sent out by our I- Mastering sympathizers. Without lb Se supplies, we have tlivolemn assuran of "General Jordan . almself, that e revolt will be speedily suppressed, d then that exemplary warrior, U be get away from Cuban soil, will bed b' I' arty to return to his native land, to settle his own little prime account as a de faulter to our Treasury. PLAYED OIL? The Gould receivership of the /atlantic and Gnat Western Railway will termi nate on the let of January next, the pres ent incumbent than giving place to Judge .Hitchcock, of Painesville. We do not understand that the arrangement takes an earlier effect. It is understood that all the parties to the recent hearing at Akron were In favor of giving to Mr. Gould a little time to turn himself about in, to prepare for the accpunts to be then taken. None of the counsel seem to have been disposed to take the respoaibility of driving the Gould patty sharply to the ' wail. It ini not improbable that, with more than one of the Interests repre sented at Akron, there survives a hope lof being able to make private terms with the Erie clique, in. I aide of other competition. Before 1 the same court, a petition in pending for the foreclosure and sale of the road under !its defaulted mortgages. This petition will be heard, and perhaps finally adja ! &cited, on the. 24th of January. The interval of time will be busily employed, by all concerned, in negotiations looking to the future control of the reorganized concern. How far the Erie clique may succeed in arranging terms favorable tor themselves will depend upon circumstan .ces. The general impression, at Akron on Saturday, sustained the public convic tion elsewhere, that the Gould and Fisk party is permanently "played out," as a filibustering element in the railway world. THE ONLY WAY TO PAY A DEBT. Lower and lower, day by day, sinks the premium on gold. The supply Is in ex oess of the demand, and speculation has been beaten out of the market. Pot this gold there Is no foreign demand; our ex ports of material , products supply already all the needful foreign exchange, and, when the new crop of cotton begins to go forward, thesupply will be so largely in:4141101f the - current dentandsto meet maturing debts on importations, that it will take gold from Europe to meet the balance of trade In our favor. In Janu ary, the Treasury will also pay out $25,- 000,000 in gold Interest. During the winter and spring, we shall find that the South has made a cotton crop of 3,000,- 000 bales, and every bale worth $lOO. Nearly one-hall of this cotton will go abroad, netting us nearly, if not quite $158,000L000. Instead of the bul lion-currant setting against us, It protases to be steadily and strongly In our favor. The advocates of specie resumption re. gard it as almost Providentially in our interests that, the South should supply, at this juncture, an element of such mate rial value, for the repair of the flnanckl mischiefs which originated in her political errors. Resumption may need to be deferred fora while longer, bettit is clear that the day of a high gold premium has gone by. Our paper promises to pay ars appreeis• ting In value, day by day, and will be soon made worth their face, not through the virtue-of spy coup do finance, but simply bet use, day by day, we are gaining in our ability to pay our debts, as we have promised, out of the swelling resources of our material wealth. Re done, like individuals, ere made solvent by their earnings and their savings. We are now learning that lesson, with the most gratifying success• CUBAN INCENDIARISft That the cause of the insurgents of Cobs is becoming desperate, they have themselves proved; for they arm to have thrown away the sword and grasped the torch. When men professing to be snuggling for liberty transform them selves from soldiers to incendiaries. they must look for sympathizers to a world worse than this of otus, bad as It is. It cannot be urged In extenuation that the late acts of Incendiarism were com mitted by • bands of lawless and irre sponsible marauders, far wo bays tbs or der of Quesada, the chief of the Insur reeikmnrY par,ty, and Commanderin. of Its armed men—ft would be ale 'gird to say armies—to burn the town of Gagmen). Here it is: “Immediately you will burn the town you oommrusd, so that one stone does not remain upon the other. lon will have enough tar and ram as combustibles. Inform the foni lies In the town two hours previous to commencing work. Patria y Liberia& The condition of Cuba under Spantsh ride has been a hard one in time past, at least it has been heavily taxed and sub jaded to severe commercial and political restaletions; but no teen who wishes well ljtAtut human nee would desire to see such a wretch as the author of the above ferocknur order get the control there. There are people so morally degraded as to be fit for nothing but despotic rule, and this Cabin chief has done what he could to convince the world that he and his luildyrers are of them. efestrainlou of the town of flail mero ls but one of many similar stroci. ties. Plantation after plantation has been laid waste by the torch of the Incendiary, And the MOOT acts of hartorous cruelty have disgraced the name of liberty. "Pdfrii ALThertad!" (Country and Lib arty) exclaims the insurgent chief at the close of his ferocious order, bringing to mind the exclamation of a French lady on her way to the scaffold, "0 Liberty! what arlmei iiie'carreatiled Id thy name!" It is very remarkable that so many peo ' yobs fling out their sympathies without check to any set of wretches who may take It Into their heads to raise the stand ard of revolt in the name of Liberty. Mien our @lmbedding rebels, who did not dimple, thafact that they were fight ing for the perpetuation of slavery, prated of liberty aid independence, and found plenty of -sympathisers on both skies of the water. _would be wiser to look a Hale ortl!!irftMly Into the kind of Li berty these fellows in Cuba are fighting for, so fir lathery arefightingat all, which eery little. PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE: MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 29, 1809 Coal and Iron—Verginta and SS est The Iron deposits in V irginiaariti Vt tat Virginia ale equal to, if not more exten sive than those in Pennsylvania. Along the line of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad are found inexhaustible dos site of superior iron ore From Stanton, \ o , to the White Sulphur springs in Woo Virginia, a distance ni 1.0 there are very large quantities of valuable Iron ore. Also along the line of the •Mmes River anal, west of Lynchburg, is lOULIti superior Iron ore in great abundance. In Ism., Use enure range sal tile Allegheny Mountains in both Virginia and West Virginia. extending MO miles, front Mary land to Tennessee, are sided with iron ire in quality and quantity equal to the moat valuable deposits tonna in Pennsylvania, the largest quantities being found east of the main Allegheny range of Mountains, and west of the lime Ridge. West of this vast area of Iron ore de posits Is to be found tile Appalachian coal field of West Virginia, which, in ex• tent, is greater than the coal fields of Penn sylvania. For the coal field of West Virginia is estimated to contain 1a,006 square miles, while that of Pennsylvania is estimated to contain 12,1150 square miles. The coal area of Great Britain is eatima• ted to be 11,859 equate miles. The Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad and the James River and Kanawha Canal (when completed to the Gni° River) will pass through the very heart and center or the coal and Iron deposits of V irginia and Westuufilula. These improvements will peas through the New River Valley and the Great Kanawha Valley to the Ohio River, a distance of 200 miles, cutting at right angles the most extensive deposits of cannel splint, and bituminous coal known in the world. Coal remarkable for its superiority in generating Aeon, in smelting Iron ore, and in making gas, and unsurpassed as fuel. Thu■ In Virginia and West V irgiroa, and especially along the line of the Choe• apelike and Uhl° ltolroad, and the line of She James River and K anawha Canal, are to be found in great abundance and of superior quality, two great elements 01 a nation's wealth—coal and iron. Not long since Mr. Gladstone, in a speech delivered in the English Parlia ment, said the commercial prosperity of Great lirtaiin over all other countries was attributable chit fly to her coal deposits and their location near iron tire— that Niel and iron ore In slow proximity to each other constituted the substratum tat Eng land's commercial prosperity, The same may be said of Pennsylvania. It is the development of the coal URI iron of that State that constitutes the basis of its wealth and power. And what has been done in Pennsylvania may be done in Virginia and West Virginia, and even to a greater degree. For the deposits of coal and iron are more numerous and varied, and more favorably located for a thorough development by means of Vir ginia's central water line and railway uniting the Great West with the Atlantis seaboard. Pennsylvania capitalists have already commenced investing 111 this coal and iron region. In the past few weeks Hinder Clymer, W. Pirmatone, and others of Pennsylvania have bought very large tracts of iron land In Allegheny county, Va., near both the canal and railroad. The Impertauee of Trar. It the theory of denudation is correct, of which there .etlltilt to he little doubt, and if the plain. of Northern India are really becoming bare, of which there Is considerable evidence, the evil, nobs,, checked, may go very far. We have no wish to speak aLsolutely upon a subjitt which coquina much more inquiry, but there certainly I V.'s a strong and ar:c• cedent probability that the striping of a country is meat lajOrtorts to ;t, prosper ity, and may. reader certsie circumatan. as prove al.-oh:IMM fatal may. to 4,m, k broadly change it into a a.elee= de,rt. to be revived, if at all, only by ashy works of artificial Litigation. It I.+ nearly cer tain that the desolation of N ambits, once a granary, now a air sea, is due t, the will. ful destruction of the tea s by the barbs, name; that the Babylonian plain ha. been desolated by the eimealll2o, and the Fuca Jamb was, when we conquered it, rapidly becoming a desert. The trees had been cot by successive devastator., RnuJect Biegh himself being the worst, until the• kingdom was as bare as a baud, and Lord fAwrenee was compelled to undertake planting as a political duty. The dewier Lion of Judea, once ao thoroughly maths,. led, is In all probability due to the same pose; and the Arita, of all the mien ot rac -a the one which best keeps its tradi tions, so dread it, that for fifteen yes• to spare the trete his been the one "Inter national" law of the tribe., and the mis time of Malaommed's conduct in twice breaking that law is always accompanied with an excuse. The French begin to at tribute the Increased kiwi linty of their southern provine s to the same cm,,, which is felt, though in a lens degree, In Lombardy, and, above all, in Spain, where, the 7 loam i s accurately informed, rapid and as ~'emetic felling la destroying all chance of a lulnre agriculture. No Industry can stand against a certainty of "drought" In the tropicril sense, that of a total loss of crops once in every three years; mad as the progress got. on, the proportion will become much greater than Bst. Southern Rahway Cotmertlotis A. Ripley correspondent of the )11i0 &ars Journal has this to say about the prospect of a new southern rsiiroad, which Pittsburgh is probably intertsted to knowing about The necusary papers for the Incorpo ration of the road hiding trots Wash ington, Fayette county, to Aberdeen, Brown county, have been prepared, and attbscriptiona are being taken up along the line. There can be no doubt but that the stock will be readily taken. The line passes through a rich country, is of easy grades, and In the event of the com pletion of the road, cannot fail of being one of considerable travel and trade. The towns of Washington. Hillsborough and Ripley, through which It passes, are all flourishing places and do a vast amount of business. In anticipation of the road being built from Newark to Aberdeen to connect with the South at Maysville, it is stated that Pittsburgh has subscribed a quarter of a million dollars, with the avowed pur pose to leave Columbus to the left. The cattle shipments for the Eastern markets will be no small matter. With a view to this it is also stated that the largest pens in the world arc being erected there. That a Southern connection is going to be made is beyond a doubt. The pro posed line from Aberdeen to Washington la the twat practicable, the shortest and best in every respect. The advantages are all in lie favor. Although ,notifying its termination at Washington, the name, under the incorporation, will he the Co_ lambus and Aberdeen Itmd—thus look. lag to its ezteneion to that city, The citizens all along the line from Aberdeen to Washington are determined to hav e the goad, and will be present at the sale o( the Zanesville road on the let of Decem ber, with a showing that will win. Monument at Girard College A beautiful monument, erected at Gi. card College, Philadelphia, to the memo ry of deceased graduates of the institution, Who tell during the late rebellion, was dedicated on Wednesday with interesting ceremonies. The monument conalata of a base of granite, a die, and a Grecian canopy, supported by four pillars, of Cleveland sandsume. Beneath the can• opy and resting upon a die, is a life-like statue, In Italian marble o f ? a volunteer at parade rest. The en tire structure Is twenty•four feet high and ten feet equate at the base. The four sides of the pedl ' meat are highty embellished with de signs of the coat of arms of Pennsylvania, Science, Literature, and the emblems of war. On all the sides of the base are marble shields, on which are the follow ing Inscriptions: "Bscacially I desire that by every proper means a pure attachment to our republimm institutions shall be formed and teetered le the minds of the 'choler.. Will of Stephen Girard. Erected A. D. DM, to perpetuate the memory and record the service ot pupils of this Col lege who. , in the then recent contest for the preservation of the American Union, died that their country might live. For. tonsil moues grille dies =quash memort yes etimet tore." Than follow tho names of the deceased graduates, nineteen In number. Ouro papers are again urging the pur chase of the St. Clair papers by the State. Mr. IL St. Clair Graham, the present owner, brought them to Cincinnati, ad. vertised them for sale, and declined to give the State the refusal of them, where. upon, at tho histince of a descendant of St. Clair, the Superior Court of Cincin nati granted an Injunction restraining Gratoun from nailing them, and appOint- Mg the Sheriff of Mandloon county re so to old the papers until turther proceeding should be bid, UNSKUIFUL TFAPEE HT HENRY u Attli BEECHER. , ne would think that there non , ii be no end to the rerionecea of anger. Alen use it in so Fqnnudering a way that one is that the stock does not run out. But (Nen (Isis wastefulness of the precioun c.npno.l)ty is not s. censurable as the want of skill and good taste with which it is employei.l. It is not doonomised. It Is not pot to -‘. - good purposes. It is squandered. It is not skillfully shot ouc, as • marksman I shoots at a target. Indeed, men show clearly enough that they do not know the value of anger. A good article of anger is worth far more than Hazard's or Du. pant's beat powder, and ought to he used 1 with an economy at least equal to that of the sportsman, who never burns powder needlessly. What should be thought of a sportsman who should go on firing his gun out of the window, without aim, In a general and universal way' Or what of one who should go about the yard, the garden, exploding his gun every hour In to the air, hitting nothing? Yet rm do men let off the precious force of temper I —the invaluable treasure of anger. 1 Is anger a virtue 1 i y i ertainly. Or why ' should tt have been la' , "Be angry, and sin not?" One who cannot be angry can hardly be virtuous. "Abhor that a which is evil, and cleave to that which lis good," is a oomplete account of moral existence. Tont love of good la to be suspected which has no hatred of evil behind It. Like a coin, Virtue should havelove of good on one side, and hat red of cell on the . otter. Dr. Arnold, of rtugby, used to ay that he was never auto of a lay until he found that he istifej wickedness. II is for thin that anger in given us. IL is not a pup gun for eminent. or Ohinessi cracker for holiday Se. IL I. a weapon carried about the person, in dangerous times, to defend one's life and honor with. It should be u.Led sparingly, and then al. way. with an aim. We have seen sportsmen, young and green, who carried their gun oortked, so that In getting over a tepee, or rushing through tt thicket, they were liable to have It discharged unawares. dust so we ace men carry their tempers. They aro tired oil for them, and even upon thus., flut a man's temper should he like the trigger of a Western rifle. There are two triggers. Until the forward one Is drawn, the other is unclean. But as soon as the forward one Is drawn, the second one le at so delicately that the touch of a ! hair will discharge the piece. Men should have a guard trigger to their tempers. No matter how easily y ou go oil when the time comes for It. Bud every man's temper should tee on Cr ranged as to remain firm until he sett ti, on purpose, and takes aim. And when tee Las fired, he should, Ilse a gun, he tired all over, and all through, ao that nothing is left to go fill it Is loaded again ' —New Vert Ledger. The tatty Female Mason. The lion, Elizabeth St. Ledger was the only female who wee ever initiated Into the mystery of Freemasonry. She has had two degrees—the first and second— conferred upon her. Ai It may be inter esting to the general reader, we give the story a. to how Mlni St. hedger obtained this honor, premising that the informs von corm from the test sources. Lord Demerslle, Min St. Ledger's father, a very sentries Munn, held a warrant and mem. etnosily npentd lodge at Demersßelit - wee, les.ons and some Intimate friends assist end it is said that never were Me.nnic duties more vigorou.ly pert', rructi :uses by the brethren of No. lab the DIM, r•e t hen • arrant. It appears that previous to the Initiation of a gentleman to the Sr.? degree 01 Ma sonry, M St. Ledger, wiz. sell. a yourig girl, happened to he In no apartment adjoining the room generally used so a todge.ruom, tint whether the young lady was there by design or merely accident, we =snot coofelmitly state. The room at the time was undergoing some alters. hoe; among other things, the wall wan considerably reduced in one part. fur the purpose of making a iothou. The young lady having heard the voices of Femme. eon., and being incited by the curiosity natural to all to one tln• great el f Irene and sn secretly inked rap 'root the public view, had the courage In pick a brick from the wall with her scissors, and the. witeess the two lint su p. Of the err mime. Cariosity grahfied, fear at once took prise...ion of her mind, and those woo understand title passage well know what the titling or any pethon mart be who could unlawfully behold that ceremony , ht them judge what were We feelings 01 a young girl nadir Ouch extremilinary c'acum.tencia There WWI nit mode tot escape, eztelit through the vary room where the concluding part of the ...cond step was still being solemnized at the far I end, and the room was a very large one. MUM St. Ledger heel resolution enough to attempt her escape in that way, end with light and trembling writ glided Slone I unobserved, lald her Land on the handle of the door and opened It, but before her abiod, to her dismay, s grim tiler with his long sword tinabeathed. A nitridk that pierced through\lik;apart. merits alarmed the members of the °dee, who, all rushing to the door, and finding I that Mien Si. Ledger had breath the room I during the ceremony, to solved, it is .del, to the paroxysm of their rage, to put the fair spectator to death ; but at the moving and earnt.st aupplication of her youngest brother, her life wits spared, on condition of her going through the two remaining steps of the solemn ceremony alit had till• lawfully witnessed. This she conainted to, and they conducted the beantifal and terrified young lady through those trials which are sometimes mare than enough for masculine resolution, littlo thinking they were taking into the bottom of their craft a member that would reflects Mater on the annals of Masonry. Moat St. Ledger was a cousin to Gen. Antony St. Ledger, who instituted the Interesting ram, and celebrated Doncas ter St. hedger statue. Eventually she married Richard Aldwortie Esq., of New. market, a member of a highly honorable and ancient family. Whenever a neneflt wan given at any of the theaters in flub, lin or Cork, fur the Masonic Female Orphan Aaylum, Mrs. Aldworth walked at the head of the Freemasons, with her apron end other Insigne of Freemasonly, and sat in the front row of the stale bur _ . The house was always crowded on occasions. Theportraltof %hit e s timable woman Is In the lodge-roe;,. o f s h m , s i, every lodge In Ireland. I:=E=Efflel Tin WINNTrE O P.ZULLIJON. -The &XI River settlement '.n the Hudson Say Ter ritory has reef:oily been transferred lathe Domini:a/ of Carbide, and constituted in to lf..e Province of Winnipeg with a Gov :m.3r and Council. The inhabitants, about 15,000 to 20,000 in number. emits eluding the Indians, have, however, re sisted this new jurisdiction, and on the approach of Governor McDougall turned out under arms and now hold all the roads In that wild region, so that be can not enter on the duties of his office. The rebellions people of the Red Riser settle. merit demand of the Dominion of Cana da certain goarentees before becoming In. corporated wlththatGovernment. Among them are: let. The right to elect thel... own Legislature. 24. The Legialattr f s to have the power to pass all laws of a local nature, by a two-thirds vote, r,s es the veto of the Executive. ad. A pas homestead and pro emption law similar to that of the United States. 4th, A por tion of the public land to be sot apart for the support of schools and the construc tion of roads and bridges. sth. Treaties with the several tribes of Indians calcu lated to secure peace and quiet on the frontier. A. RINGIILLB case has arisen tinder the law of the last Congress atriking the word white from all laws relating to the District or Columbia. The Rev. .1. Bella Martin, pastor of a colored Presbyterian Society In Washington, obtained not long ago an order for the admission of his daughter to the New Franklin school, Tllecia being oghte • ng r is eir t mudsomunito. and blonde the the father n m dna e ou g tb ro gh bl r ocal be vux, : e n 1870. 1870. In disc asses thatr some time it was ' igs k ß: th o e tiweed post hite t t i nth on ha s et alui rnface igt: Th ho oe r r HOUSE AND POCKET, d he belonged , negro nace. Upon the facts „ m i n a i; the attention of the teach.' f . /be girl refitted admission to *.:„ e d ame. au d though she attont c ei regularly Inatruotlar was denied her, Tho father ,nppealed t , 3 the the laler has called uPw n the 'oaperiiitendent of Schools, to see* at 40ItthettethigliMdmian4r1)"41hilioditar:Hntatettioti:wthcoltdowredth7tanithrair:La3Lif:ligril ers.dree;tery after diligent search, tusee coTaT %Om. db. =ID O=I2IIIIM Tb•L might.. be r•ase rtrop time loom. man wag..., eta aw 1.... Colo sad.... Wllt.nams . claupb . loog tally .Ito, ilalati • Be. to. 4. oft Ix,. h.... " • "*. f •41.10 ft —elk I. AMC of ct•O tt, hrt ". ull.. "[la. K••Cil ide .11a. I ...tar may Is...en, h. ea. net 141,1 • v yle.cre a) gut 11 1 11801 He %eel nee wee.) . Were h.at. nnuel • heg. , UnY. , •' , I T e- upeltle tl/.12h • • ran walkee ' •010 wean awake! be • • Blew be lain cum, An can • et Bel. awl water. welly whir MP Krt. ad mt. eopaldt - 'Vapid! le Pleb ! • ' Sl•h-ronv, • one Diu 'all Pr What 1. • ••N nth•r t 11,13. A. mat. pkvety ely, Slubaat, all& an wallm• plant • tip ==Z • •T•k• rarer that layllatt, flue, 1..0vv man •• •• Tait rare that ter' Le uo matt. That o tal mallrchln rhlu K ... 1 n . 01• ToS,LIII4.I:t. Jose oleg omat( rhon no I,ls, florolog (nee (hal .10e/ (ebb obis xee ea, me, he picot( fee, ( sole .one tom( 1•111• e. he e•is he Tu,(l(le lialeh • T woo opikee Oir one l•roi, ileog roc Tiro eelwAo. rt. Iloilo." b.. HoOd Hro moot,. eoio. loalOr cap slot , - • Ha •atue piti•er Dey. et I ebop • Tun lawyers, and that means the great body of Congress, and the leaders of parties are earnestly discussing the ap pointment by the President for the escan• cy in the old Supreme Court, made by the death of Justice Wayne, of lieorgia, and the nine judges for the nine circuits prodded for In the act of Congress which takes effect on the let of December. The retirement of Justice Drier is again ru mored, which would necessitate two new men on the old bench. No former Ei• ecutt ye has been called upon to discharge a deity more solemn. The gravity of this questions that have been passed iu review by the Supreme Court, some, Indeed most of which await decision, and the new and dangerous assumptions set up by the maJoriq of that body, will require tried capacity us lawyers and as patriots in new Judges. The President will have the whole Wu of the nation from which to choose. lIIMI=I May be atoorulted ev.y day uutll I u'cluct r I=l =I E:1=1213 GZIESZI2 METE I= lEl=2 CZEIZZ! =ME Ml= V. I= I= I=1:1 =I CIE=2I I= I=l I=l @Mil I= I=l =I I=l =CI Zones. nor lild•summert Sr. torrid. stud uar solstero.lcnost are. , their frigidity Tn.. change, Loot Isind •satiation at from elorlo 1. uoe hundred degrees of Fahrenheit daring the reer. are ode, ilte mono, crostuelv• In ~.11n sod long life, hal then od coull epos as dome .I.Lresalus eons. fateb .bleb tan onto U. recant, VT 1.1, eat, se of Jae cart sad he our of. properant. , le .Use the ~itemto ors. 41,, 4.1 to coo rrr rr U 1/4. ch.( and moat S °slog of those disorders I. dump... .. do mepeo rd inc o 0 ran.e. WWI welch slots 1.1. 1.41,Am...t0 of 111 , ITTLIt'S 81.4.1•1.11 HITFIIIS, oust attoul tomato /tors •gam at. taver.l o. o fo erectly Lo•norreel.J. dueaor. to th• ow.. sad Yolk. net Inor• ••,CIALD, IL. the rail los symptom) of leopassle are /cart stirLesrat etc, Thc was.. co orte.ltiono e , oair., do, under the nitro., oon W Maw loos, is apt 1.. 1..•• tn. ...stone .eat tmd lode feed ltb bargy brae. abet •Ifger•ba. Ir rrl. 5a a.inr TaVl r hu la ...env rt . ... 1 br• pr, all whine ha 1• • grra , all . pi • PSI ferammtll er../.16 1 11 , Mt med. r ter Si.,/ lava Uai tee dlaordrr ..la we b. ...Wavy rurad Tb• ear beTICTTILIt libtrYL l / 1 le ell tb. warialle .I••prt bad ac•te of chfuelc. has 11...1a• ba • bel• fallacy, It l• nee tercel...l , a. • . varier fer ibla4.6lleu bf sued af—th. wee,. larbelbera er efebeebbea• NOTICES t4r NO TIC E.—The P.NNEAL )114111kll o • the stock4elder. the 1•E1) NOY LI Ab I/ Wisttlt rttrcNiAtk t c, eon be hold at No. 334 Walcott tittect, Phu.- dolnb oo ICSLIA T. December 10 , 66. al I o•clocA es. •ISO 14 le. N. £Li.fl. fleet. Ot •f. •”F ith,11,1•44 • lIRL • I•OCR•aa CO,. VI Water Stmt. l'itmmlomr It 1109. r4rDIIIBBIIIO.—The Board of DIRIVIUM. Of Iftl•Cestpai• •••• 111 , dretamn 41vtJtaa of 'MIMS DOLLAR I R MAIM a. the l'avl,6lSto.k. oat of ltm Of Viz 1•S, Periele Oro of Uovortoosat fSi Snood Net Om 50th lea. aol4-010 JOHN H. CIL•NLY. roc, Orrlct or H oeo.auttti lo NCR , 9. W.,' nnrt, I'lTent woo, N.ronaher 11%, 1/99 RT ' AN ELECTION iron Fir. TeLN DIRECTONS of 'Ala Compsov. Olin. o N 0 , 9 0 VobO.o r og s rsT TN ILAY o center Ith. MUM, booral Li V ers ioe of II •. -.2•.1 r m •I•pH JOHN H. CLAlll7.T.9peretary. 0771.1 rlTTarinlCka ,r tir t 1411.1i0A igarrrrreine• G u Awn CON NILLLOVILI.7 Mill"°'—"".. • bomb,' Ina that tit. As a.l 1 1 Malbe al . ew•tob•ltteirs of the MU b:rob sae Cola r Itallrowa ttk•,..101. fur it...... --•, .eetlogr a Ileartt of TOttolt_r_. tor e 500110$ 1r wl I be We at tb010yb.....• otw' • tier et an?. cp...1. 71 , NIONEra ir, six ur %, 13,24 , & A IL ra i.'" P. roe net•lT. CM= 1 s 2 : = IndEN'TS WHAT MORE ACCEPTAMLE Co,Sataos• p ete•t to • lovtog •rtfe, slothe g {Lau • Polley of Lira lam... Is THE PENN MUTUAL Life Insurance Compan Or rUELADELIPUUL Tke Italy Truly Natoli Compaiy II Qs City et Stele. AC 0 UJIIAILATAD CAPITAL 1131.1300,001:1 A flew paying logo,* to lhe as 't el $1.900.010 The. Is • ebeelal adeunteg• In • pollen no, ee these who get that pollele• r a 11... Janeery gal will have the benefit of the 9u -p., teal. dtvldend of teat. . JOSEPH S. TRAVFILI, AfAmt, Dines-at nrni Iltos - 7 :OS 3 , 1 Flout. 6a !to 30. 3.. OS NEW TOSS B A LI K rn A lariostook of GOODS FOR THE PiOLIDA VS4 WATeIfIN, 061,0 VII AIM. FINK JEW 11.1ty.. FANO 1, 6001)., In even ..rie4, neap , for lEn ;1. 1, el WATTLES & •l EB EArta, 101 rrirtu Arrai I , A ~,,,,,,, mitl,ll•l4 greet. ir iii k.octo . a 02.7 of Hair Jewelry mode to order DMill9 TtPll. ISAI.N BY W. S. HAVEN Sr, CO., COW 111041 ltrut and Third MEM WRINGER& THE UNIVERSAL CLOTNES WRINGER I. tt. I.erst y es. For ..ff. wt 010 nit. a. .4 No.. /Maud Sextb .tweet. bY J. H. ril/LLIPIL 1111 . Wr 'Arm of all Wad* rp.i..4 NEW ADVIIIITISEIIIENTt3 SPECIAL BARGAINS WILLIAM SEMPLE'S, Non. 1M and 152 Federal Street, ALLEGHENY ern At 12 1-2 c„ 44 Bleached Muslin, extra good. At 12 1-2 c, 4-4 Unbleached Muslin, ex tra Heavy. At 12 12c.. Dark Debanes. At 18 34c., Striped Poplins, an extra bargain. At 25c., Double Width Black and Col ored Poplins. At 18 34c., All-Wool Scarlet Flannel. At 22c., Heavy Barred Flannel, At 25c., Heavy Bar'd Twilled Flannel. At Vi 1-2 c. Plaid Flannel. At 87 1-2 e.., Blank Waterproof Cloth. At $l.OO, Black Waterproof Cloth. At SLOO Brown Waterproof Cloth. At $2.50, Gray Blankets. At $3.00 a pair, Gray Blankets, extra size and weight. At $3.00 a pair. White Blankets. At $4.00 a pair. White Blankets, ex tra size and weight. WILLIAM SEMPLE'S, Nos. 160 and ISt Fcdend Street, =I A LIMITED AMOUNT OF THE 7-40 GOLD BONDS, t am CHICAGO, DANVILLE AND VI !..( 1.14 II A I I.ROA1) are offered ur sale by Allmam N. ISAILF.V 13=1 111113 The) are •1,00) Rood, issued upon • Railroad nearly tme-half completed tarting frvort Chicago mad trai ends% sr' au ntry nn.rpanned Et any In the firs saential• of • larirr and prodtable Dual Thes •re see cared Dy b114..T MONT (01(.1K un 140 wiles wl MIA find -4.1.1. road, lta outfit and all prreent and futurr acquiribi proper - I) DI the CoserolMl The) bear high rata of listerral Air loos period of thee —7 per trent. geld lo ; 10 yeam—aud • mall ratio to the al 'slim et the assn ) up., übleb they re The, 'teeter •• Inteere , 4 listalit) el the l'orapsor et only 111.140 PK MILK, or le. than sue—third that of wale Vest ru.d. 01 am routstrs tot.* uom. have nWd sen hiCt. Ties. facts, melded ta the wt'-,~+rd• l'Arown amend earls and event Baud combine to imager we.►, UIIECIA:4LI.- ED tECERITTEN, ■ed many the must dealrable In the market fur Investment Pries OS and accrued luterect In cur- leery. the tight beteg reserved to al. open due VaimpfList., with map sod full Eaten wont Fred on application to out agents In INtlebtargb 8. M'CLEAN & CO., 75 PUUtl'l'll AVENUIP. /fully per...all, srasiebud (AO mare list f ',art, /Imeohod old P•J oral, or ro ll tr Ur an. age, tiorrotet iodde4 u rams, toe tbe 11.4ds _A every aimfidene• 'IA lade fell ..044 =off= W. BAILEY IL&NO & CO., Agents for the Sale of the Bonds. CARBOLIC'SALVE. The Important 'discovery of the C-AUDOLIC ACID as a CLE sIIIIEING. PUIELFYING, and lIIE , OLING Agent Is one of the fEw 4 remarkable results of Madera medical research. During tbe late civil war it wits cseenelvely used hi the Hon/ tants, and was found t 0 hen at only a thoroug s h daWn. ell ant, but at the mint wear de? Ifni and speedy DEALING 11 . 0111 EDY ever LDOWU. It is now presented In a scientific combination with other soothing and healing ngenciese in the form of a SALVE' a id. havickf been al ready used in numbeeiess eases with most satisfactory and ben. curial results, we hove no hesi tation in offering it to the pub lic as the most certain,. rapid. and effectual remedy for ail Sores and Ulcers, no nuttier of how long standing, for Burns. Puts. Wounds. nod every ABRASION of SKIN or rtmin, and for Skin discuss , ' generally. 5..1,1 by nll DruncimLn. Prie: 23 cents. JOHN F. HENRY, sole Profr, NO. 8 COLLEGE PLACE. Now York D IABLE§ t DIAIAIESI EC= 1070 1 Romwa Diaries I. tow sample*. mantas 'ryes prin. 3O um. to SILTS. Mafiosi oyara i n s f pries Mato tM 1.111120• T of days to Pairs Ve 1,11.1 all ordaf MEM day nealviaL Jo lIEPH HORNER, jr o . 120 StaUhfield Street XTALI3 ABLE FIRM ♦ND MILL V PICOPIRMY I,ol.ll4LlL—OlLasio4ls prer toorbabit. Woablogroosati, 11/01Zros, TO or i lfttrireisaYeil Witisrig I.."=?Trfts..t.tvg=trt• all tba sow Ls: oaf gr:XILLIon. Also CottaiMoo. • Vie, 14a••t Boa" and largo ora. SO 60, Ida stablilig; • ►oe Or.ard Waring; lba tom L. Ire' 0ra1.... located to a rt. train MArdporooNelino=l pr oso,.rato NEW ADVERTISEMENTS ALT WILLIAM SEMPLE'S, NO.V. still and 15 . .! Federal Street, I= LAM AND COMPLETE STOCK Latiteh' end Mleows Fare Lars Collars. Lace and Embroidered Handkervinefs Broche Scarfs, Plaid and Striped Scarfs. Ladies' and Children's Woolen Hoods, Ladies Gloves and Hose, Misses and Children's Gloves and Hose, Ladies' Fancy Bags and Satchels, Misses Bata Ribbons, Flowers and Plumes. Embroidered and Hamburg Edgings. Ladies' and Misses Underwear, Men's and Boys' Underwear, Ideles and Boys' Gloves and Socks, ..adies' Long & Square Plaid Shawls, Lathes' Long & Square Strip'd Shawls, pltiliPS Shawls, lireaktruit Shawls and Sontage. WILLIAM SEMPLE'S on. 160 and 142 Federal Wee ♦I.LI[uN[MY 4 ITT - - _- JUST OPENED JOSEPH HORNE & CO Woolon. Goods, Hoops, ISACQVICA. ETEEII MEM CEM I=ll HOSIERY All mixes 1.4 yuailitr. WOOL. AND WIWI° WOUND AND FANCY renii r L LNYIToN. oiNte. WOOL AND 1.11111.1N0 tlutlE. 161.1 A K is KNIT 140,C2CM CLOVES. PKinALk !Writ o t. IV AM) WPM, r TOPPLI , D. woo, gun . AND 4 . 1. , TH, P 6 RI.IN LINDP•SILK MA/VW. or-Pore , DUI VINO 01.01(11. 4•1.16 b.. AND Bol(H . 040 VIES all klu4s, AT LOWEST PRICES IThulesale ROIIM3 up Stairs. 77 snd 79 MARKET STRENT WOOLEN GOODN. Hand Knit. Shawls, RAC(,)If FS and HOODS atitl tiloVeS, to salt all. =I BLACK SELIE FREEIGES 110111 VILIIGU, all all Ink colon. 'ttoktt mono t•toorfoo, 1 .moot• I 'olio.", I .stor Ito nal k crottle Cod. 1.1,11,1 Collar., Iltobrllterloo. Itot o lona. 1t11i1t.... fit We Lrr no• oar sioct or ARABSHAWLS at Ralf Prlee =I Blue awl Grteis Aid ifillores. BOULEVARDS SEWN Fli A VIILI.I N !IA '11111_.131 ir Mere-ha tas an.l Dealers 1,0 yylled GA 1. RASA s. MACRUM, GLYDK it (X) 78 & 80 larket Street. DRUGGETS, CRUMB CLAYrKI4, EXTRA QUALITY, BRUSSELS CARPETS Direct Importitious WCALLUM BROS., Xo. 51 FIFTH JIVILXVB, ABU V a WooDirrliZlT oaSl ELEGANT CARPETS Tao latest cad most semmfal delays. attoma la TAPESTRY OR BODY I3rtUI@ISVJETAS J..t Yoeelyed by 41reat traporMito• 6Y.• E.S . Laza. Eil=Co - 434. 4 C51-3EITEI Of the Waft styles In ImoSr gaurtlliffs. OLIVES HeCLINTOCK &00. 23 Fifth Avenue. T: 11.114E SHIPMENTS OS' ♦LL Ito& of feta lake WI ere receivedoll , ~letouedOm' gaZgettri..,:',42, Atria Auem, 117 i =4.Z. 1 1 . ,V. to al iirayehavooli bawl a ern rri t e_ YA._"l3l.acsir Oar aird " W V ACtr prtees. to as &call vo will mom a Ise article. iNboltaala or ragall. All onlaca WM protoOtit. DIARIES IMEMI SHAKER 1)11.IE.1 3 cmioUN Of pond< rJest r• salved sad for sale by barrel or as mall: also Maker . overlsed Here. cos w oo:Fare, eoeps sad W.A NM liao. lt.• /welly Elrod", Ware of JOHN 1. HISTeI&W, sari Orsour Mom ud Male eUvetr. NO._ NOTICE. (ITT Conesottstre OFT tua riresstnoor. Nov. if. Notts* ts bnen, glees Mai $6.000 of tee tn , star Jratensles LANA Bonds of UPI pint If presented at tale nem an Deeslttser ht. MIL neaten gJ. NoGOWAN. Coaixollet. PlT+3d#litilH. e► NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. LOWEST PRICES! New Dry Goods! $lO.OO per Yard, 4-4 Black Cloak ing Vel ets. 50r., one ease Enipre.ss Cloth, been selling this season at $1 per yard. 621 e., Silk Chain Black Poplins. 50e., Heavy Black Carded Poplins. 23e., Plaid Country Flannels. $6.00, Baigain in Collet) Blankets. 50c., Strip Silk Mixed Dress Goods. Good Bargains in Paisley Shawls. Good Bargains In Black Thibet shawls Good Bargains In Clich Sacques. Beaver arid Chinchilla cloths. Velvets and Velveteens. 8.-4 Country Blanket Flannel. Cassimeres, Tweeds, Coatings, Pupil' Plaids, Medinas. =LEI Bargains This Week Nr7.l l V (44)(>1)P4 K R. GARDNER'S, West l'or. Market SL and 4th Ale NO. 69. ntl bfw • : i n c:57 a 0., z 041 0,0 w n t x , p g co gi ,2 Z b . 5 ,2 4 '& E Z 14 : 4 41 PI w on I .1 t 4.7 ;4 g P cl , 014 z ° l2 dct ..ti 2 (A PI I* 6 b 4 Z E —:- 00L a 1 1 c:::: , ''-'(..) .. B E PO: PO "' Eg r4 '2 :=3 , i ;4 0 04 ' l ,O ici , 11 1 w 6 '4 ae, .. g A Z : F 4 IP 41 I= CARPETS NEW FALL STOCK. Oil Cloths, Window Shades DRITGCAETS. DRUGGET SQUARES Ingrain Carpets At the Lowest Prices Ever Offered BOVARD, ROSE & 00 21 nrrß *AVENUE. =EA WOOLEN DRUGGETS FELT CAItPETN, 1, 14, 2, 21, 3, 31, 31 and 3; YARD WIDE BORDERED SQUARES Suitable for Parlors. DINING ROOM CRUMB CLOTIIS, Woolen, Linen and Cotton T LOVIR PRICES THAI LIST BILII I.l.mithstaedlult the esulitaintatke4 tariff olt these fowl. MTIBLINII & COLL! 71 and 73 Fifth Avenue CLOSING OUT SALE! los to the death of the Yalu Mr. .11 HU IICH11111.1.1) •Me rullv to. it sto Po ck of good. .111 be gold ILEOLKOLINS OF MST Iha Stock is New and Complete I= Elks, Black and Colored, alpacas, Valencia Poplin, l►lsk Poplins, Black Clotis, Cloaklots, Broths Mavis. Plaid glawls, Cossimercs, ad a Full Line of Domestic Goods, a J. t BURCHFIELD & CO3 l 6'2 SIXTH STREET. Foreign and Doniestit Dry Goods a N WOOD eIM INTBEZT. , uus.R. pa GREAT BARU' J. W. BARK MARKET NEW AD VER TISEM EN TS r; , :37 paorosA LS FOR MAIL LOCKS. raorv►•ia for foreasidOg .1" .e.. 1 Is,' of pro lltppipp. to IPo ButParltotod pr We t, M k . ood 1... tioo e.. 4 dm the Volteil be re n•A al OPP. n. ppo.lp • ...of .11 U u cl. cl • ta , the as, of I EO - • KY. 11110. It le de•lrstfl• to etb•al• I•• Lod IlLef , of • ee• ooffstru• ~ /r ate 11•1•• hr lialted4•aies mail and. I' onkel, ade. ea ez pr.., for that purpose. A. the en • of a model idaet tad key to paid. • lam. . If sod It• e malls, the Llepartmeol Orrserthoe as far bidder. bat relies for Its ...ion ea CISOS of mechanical .hulland inr•ou ty • (air contra It on,` en/ ...or. here . ned inar ile•vinp. It Ist ufncirist tad.- the nr.nr.pal nnitietee or • Wail L.. k. P. Lock., ablfortn, 7, ea. a Mr. • et, st routip. durabilitr. ao•elt• ...- we and fur lIIT uirar. 1 'ad Of •I 1... one of bra. and the other of to ...triter fors and erica r ••••ntrtcreel, are nr,tr• 11 led rea1...1.01d .1/rt.:try separately the nitre of Irra • Ltd, •arb ley for the sano . • non Lout and warn K.. for taloa It. rale :r. or earl, trod larks and It. • • pro r2===l .ay Imslly Lan F y T , rrr, most b• aaaaaa rd trot ro,n, or eorrilict *tar any patent...l d: Lb. tr. 41. 1, a r t.l W. Irrer.r. , Aro ii•rell to • Lock. lb. Kr• of oArr. bornl..o•ra r.• ..a . r pu .IrAcrlArd. diadem. d o , •00err A drr,...a o Me I arrorr• pos., ' , tit Ito mstic on ea ti. roar ti 3 1 I. 41 . Mt UCH. 11110. ad pies. the ito•tnts t r • 1.. oral bail da. mltto Po tb• idoc• f lt I Irciaartma sit to rcject a I the Prop.. st• •t.. 1 snobs submltted rDdal this &doers,. ocot. to right hereby •apratroly rsaarvad to blue .0 tracts VIII Po • stared i•to as SOI tLarr-artar practicable. with ha armee. ill bidder • hos. Loots ab• I be adopted. fur rarslablaa rtiutior Leek. wad Ka). for four fit are, Iv titer mot be racy...aid as ardoirid. atualif tcreed .. 0 ”1f '.l Itrecoctractor ••,d ituatm•stri r ci Ica the time tre Lug. out ti 11.,N3 = 'room But•nd srlar Me • • tou I Leanlib• ca•Mte, tor au Awl altar M/1111 •itypa•t, t•• rarm.h 1, taste. lather tied .a I au, if ha I= ••• nr delne cos. r•. L•.r •i 1 I. iwnad Xeme sant tlie 11. im nal mr•rt• • anal...sate., for. •an m.l el ir•n.te• aul gm, •LiLcb . ti•t.e t•• gn•t• "acs •pd Ke , • , let tue poet, ..r b contrite. , mho, after time, •urreeder lo Dens ...tent ii be .14 for the. ame... inny uncruined by re,i Thecr ma•t. at re , tad be far ca h. If requlrr rod and ordered. ,10.000 Brett Locke /and 1 000 Bra. •y• within th,pe months from the time of entering Into cuutract. end 140.000 leas Lock• and 80,000 Iron Erre wl L itt ten stool!" f ant such time. Del the Post master the acre • lit renerve the rig lit to Increase or diminish , Si the wait t s or le tercets of the ser vice m r de mend, the paantiliett of the trerrati and ae r above epecided. with a nropartionate allowance of time to tarnish them. All the Locke f by the eim rector moot be will ranted to keep Ia rood wort ins order for two rears In tit, ordt eery tier of he eereee, when alt entiecte.d to uhrloue to core. augh x• betCol.lltlit/C.O within to•lIs replaced with perfect L.,cte without Hamra, he All the Lucia fortalehed under contract are tun•, each. distinealy "11. 8_ hall." to either mob or sal ed letters. end all the Keys ere to be com b, red in the natural order: each Eel berth( It. app °oriole num., distinct! , stamped apace wee aide of the bow and •• U.S. Mall - tat the opposite side. The eostrsetor Will De required to ,I••leett the Locks ad his t pease st the Past/Ater Depen d... 1. W•dtatat.st It. C.. pat up Past/ t er sepses e handles al Ere Lo.-l. each, sod se surely pecked le wooden b.rt eontstulad sat more the two head •ed Lott" stet, The Keys , • are to be delt•ered to an au et of the Department duty and modally authorised In each rue, to tate cb trite of sod centre) the sense from l b . ,ntractors manufactoryto the Department. ssbere bJth 1...e1ts and Kers ere to hr torPeehtd and approved before they Mall he paid for. the contractor will be retro red to glee hood with ample security lo th e torn of Fifty Tli.- satto Dot en. be forfeited to tbs flollowntetaa u li/oldated e•mages. le !Ill , ' of bit f.linra to faithfully 1. , Goan the (Of ettner u v. for 1.5151 the soap.. ordered wltt.ln seasonablet Ilea, or to guar 11.1 the maahfu‘nre of the Mall Locks and Ley. with doe Pri , nrY. itttelfritY cad care. . . No proposal will therefore be ace nted if not accompanied with bond of the penal aim of Tesary Tboutand ollus. dolt executed by proposed enrettes, hose responslbility Soot be stated by a Jadge of IL Court of Record nearest their place of residence. attested by the 1. rk of su h Court under the seal thereof.) sad °edition. d f r b•tr er. to re reap - m.lbl* as ntie. os requind hood for the fuilllimatt f the contract. la ease ou.ll Prorasal than be arc. pita. Th. manatee ere of Mal.. Locke wad toll to. of sally. • high') Important ad delicate troth which the Department will toe dde to no bid& r whose Proposal. are not also accompanied with testimonials of good atone- to dreidlog on th. Pr0t..... mid •Pzeiffie.. be P.Mmater tieserel ma, deem It eaPedieat &Merl the Bram IA el of one bidder and the rou of ...be , lie. therefore, r e serve. tte of rou rartivent‘a differmit Individ am f.r such different Linda of Locke as he ma, MEI Pronnrat. •• tad camyrullc sal. .1 mad • drts.d t...• a dor e d •••••l.t•ak l'oaldnaster I.rnr••• • ad endorsed oo en•elopa ••I.ro ponall for K• 11 I •oe •••• JOHN A. J. CILLISSW XL!" a. • 11•0311 RIESICK & SRO" FIRE • BURL/LAE-PROW, SAFES AND VAULTS. ENGINES AND MACHINERY, BUY:NI - MUT WORK. REP►IIIINU AND PUT TINU UP MACHINE:II, Cor. 1711 and Pike Sts., Pittsburgh. Pa. DE- :* 1 : CONTINUES .TO TREAT ALL / n lvt du.= szastlx . , flu forms. aH ail eahapletely ensliratcd; Elp.snalrattgnritraskr sal Wealth.. sag Itopotaney, regoltist fran tett-abase or other caasec and which producer some of Oho followlsm edents. blotoues, bodill wesk.ness. Indigestion, comoimptiou, aversion to society, unaasallooag. dead of Mare agents, Ica- of memory. tndobsram, :mammal =lase:ma, rad Dually prostrating the mutual rystom te rendez mu mac umalsractory, .of therefore Imprudent, arc porambently cured Parsons al , gloat woh Mew or laz craw dellasta, Intidespe w long tweimg ceustittalonal anal 1..t•a..24 eve pas Doetor Dial. he eeve, A pat Dr 011... tau athaa even to all art•ls eons pleats, Leas o rOtea r White, ng, Inflame station or Wet ration cr the otab. Orstittar prvnitls. Arctuo.Thsea. Meocorbagla , liratwo• neon:mese tad ...glib., or Barrenness, ma treat ed what Um grealtat soma.. lt doff-trident that avblydu.m contra. himself exclusively to tbe Wade of • cartele clam of dt•omm and treats thousands of ewes well mat 0 000 a0.14/r0 Creator OM la that rpm:Mite than at. In mocial practice. Mybe t h at . lslor.• medical vempgjet of pages s a tall azpoattloo ay/harlot sod ',Drat. diattagra.ll.at can be had trca ttorte.l or by vast , for too Memos. In waled a/metopes. Every sentance °entaiu instractlos to ho al. (let. l. of eratang Mem to demoralise M. Prw else nature of Muir complatats. t o estat4l4.grrist eozapcleng tap ample wawa Is ...mai. th Lea it la not war rateet M ratt las dry, th e Doctor'. opinion on be Me taincl tm giving • arnica atStelocat of Ito c.f.. sad mod taraw eaa be forwardsd by mall or n orms. Is soma Instant., bonder, • IVlmota _examinpUon Is absolater tivm.7. others flallypersong attention I. not Ind. for the aocommadmina petla eta Ulm. ata a t t=o t ts s estasaasted u a Ith tt h ortatg=Set = 4 . Bre•rei77oltiallaft mad Mated vapor gal prweriptiorm arc groaned Ix Me Doctor's own laboratory, ander Us persosal sty h. WAWA' pamphlets at oval Bra of tr i•U' rall for two tamps. No saner who bate [WWI, read whoa he says. noun 9 tat. to Vi arter.tondantll 0. to Id r. Me*, so. t sew Omar. gnaw.. I Iltlalogrob • SPEC lAL. NS IN BLANKETS eels. at This NAT ER & CO'S, No. = I=l STREET.