THE DAILY GAZETTE PENNIMAN, RKRD L 00, Vsce,B4 and 86 pi e Avenue. P. s.rsinmus, T. P. HOUTON. I. • Y• IEED. 11=Eil tint OW WEINI DULY. if =WI, per year I== FIRST EDITIOI JefIDXI6HT. NEWS BY CABLE. The Suez Canal—Meeting of the Frearb Legislature—The New linistry —The Trial of the Bar derer Traupmann—Failing to Secure a Ring, Spain will Be come a Republic. Telegraph to the Pltteburgh Gazette.) tiREAT - BRITAIN lasnos, Deoembsr 29.—A. Suez letter in the NEWS says that work on the canal ha been stopped, an the passage is still quite hazardous Ifor vessels drawing more than twenty.(qur feet. The Times' correspondent at Rome writes that the Popn'a Influence over the (Ecumenical Connell la vlsibty grow ing weaker. • • FrItATICE. !O l Pants, D mbar 27.—The approach. lug eessiou of he Ciorps Legislatif le fixed for January i 10th. M. Rouher will be named se Pre; , derd for 1870. es "Ilse Journal Oifiria/ publish • letter from the Ern rur to M. Forcade •Laro. quette, saying that he accepts the rasig nation of the Ministry' with regre4 and it affords him pleasure to sckrfowledge the services which M. Foroado has ran. dared the country and thkEmperor, in the faithful ear:cation of recent reforms and maintaining publie order with • firm band. MEM;C=2II _ . Count Napoleon D'Arn and tool. Jo seph Buffet, Cldefs of the Le. Centre, Lave refused to enter the new ' Ministry. It Is reported, Talhonet and awns, members of the Right - Centre, have also refused. It is certain M. Magne, the present Financial Secretary, M. Lebouf, Minister of War, and Ad• miml Rcgault, the Minister of Marine, will retain their potations. The Dial of Tniuoman for the murder of the Klock tamity wee continued to. day. A number of witnesses were' examined. While feauproan admits his guilt, he persists there were mown. plioen in the crime, but refuses to give their names. The public interest In the result has by no means abated. VAIN. NIA.DI3I DOCOMber 29.--SOITOr Zerllia; Minister of Justice, rustle a speech at Albecta yesterday, wherein be declared that. If the tiovernment cannot find a king, they will throw themselves Into the cram of a republic. • SWITZERLAND ,LuzEnrrE, December 29. —Victor Rally, of the Province of Vend, President elect or Switzerland, died yesterday. MARINE NEWS BOUTIIAM PTON, Deceintier 23.-Ar rived, 'steamer Baltimore, from Baal more. LONDONDERRY, December A.r rived, Nova Sootlan, from Portland. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. Lonna, Dec. 29.—Evening.--Connole for money 92; account 92g. American Secnritios quiet and steady: '67s, 8470 86s, 83%: '62e, 86%; 10-4 Ca, 8t• Erie 17%; Minch. 99%; Atlantic and Great West ern. 25 %. Penn, Dec. 27.—Bouree firm at 72f 860. LIVERPOof, Dec. 29. Cotton heavy, with sales middling .uplands at 11%d; 'Orleans 11%d; Wes 12,000 - bales. Bread. waifs quiet. California white wheat 9I 8d; red western Ito. 2, 63 3dggBs 4d; win ter 9s 103, Western Flour 22a 3d. Corn Mo. 2 mixed 293 6d. Oats Its 9d. Barley Es. Peas 363. Pork 106 s. Beef Isis. Lard flat st.7ss. Cheese 68s. Bacon 6.7 s eict BEV& Petroleum Is 4d; relined la ,`all ow 44e 6d. Turpentine 27a 6.1. Lou Iv; December 29.—Tallow 455. Refined Petroleum la &pgllall%d. Com mon Rosin tid. Petroleum at Antwerp flat ats3%f; at Bremen firm at 7 thalers; at Hamburg firm and unchanged. Hama, Dec- 29.—Cotton quiet. FaAffsreoirr, December W.—U. B. Bonds 91%-. BOSTON Lecture - by secretary noutwell—The Transition Parted ortne Unltal Mateo. ury Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Glasette.r Banos, Dec. W.—Hon. George S. Boutwell, Secretary of the Treasury, battered before the Mercantile . Library Association - this evening on the Transition Period of the United States. A fair audienoe was present, comprising many of the principal business men, par. ticularly those Interested in finance. After a rewlew of the cause. and . re. aunt of the war, Mr. Boutwell said the great events of the decade have furnish ed to the people, north and south, white or black, equality of opportunity. The southhad been opened to a system of pub. Ile instruction, the advantage of which could not be adequately estimated. The public sentiment of the south, aided by the memillesnoe or the late Geo Peabody, was opening schools which, by their edm cation of the masses, will prove, in after years, the sustaining prop of the Repub. Its. It matters not if the rich do with. draw their children; It will not .prejudice the - system. - The labor question had been agitated recently to a great extent. In the north something had been done for it, by opening up the south. Rich agricultural, min ing aud river resources were already revealed, or their use made possible, by the events of the war. It was impossi ble there should be equality of condi tion. though something had been accom plished toward it. The revolution of 1774 broke the chains that bound us to England, but It left a subject class. The last revolution elevated all. It was true, the events of the past ten years had left their difileultlea to the loss of commerce, the creation of a vast 14a. Lionel debt and a system of taxation that was deemed burdensome. Placing whatever estimate you please upon these difficulties, even the largest remount, there-la still upon the 'ledger nbalanoe to the credit of the nation. If the coun try remained at peace, and there was no Indication to the contrary, the public • debt would soon be considerably reduced, and Its final liquidation not be very remote. It had been asserted that the Americaps, as a nation, wan , grander& anxious foe extension of territory. This he desired to emphaU. sally contradict, for within the past twenty tire years the government has repeatedly rejected proffered territory. He instanced Maxie.), which was once In the possession of United States troops, but the government accepted only a few outlying States and paid f,r them liber ally. The Sandwich Wanda, be had 00. C 341011 to know, - bad been tendered year. ago, and other islands have from time to time been-offered and rejected. We take nothing .by oporealon. Other nations take by Ores ol arm; owl by force of Ideas. If by such force others &sire to join us, we will consider it Proposals. There should be not gin our public debt to prove s an ex tension by peaceful means. - e should erveduce it in peace that in the evert of another war our credit would bold good. Taxation be an evil that should be re duced as quickly as posdble. In alluding to the destructing' of Amer ican commerce by the war, Mr. Boutwell said none doubted what the remedial course should I*, though no platfbror could be devised to accompliati its resto ration. In clo big he said there was a future for America that could no w be better comprehended. Eng land's American colonial are yet to accept ;he American idea, which has-spanned the continent, bring ing the Pacific, under commercial control: which has conquered the worst and set up the better. The disband ment of her armies when the war ended, was an important proof of her stability, as was their assembling when ft line be. gun, and the world will soon learn that a government by the people for the peo ple la far preferable to a government of the people against their wishes. Mr. Iloutwell was frequently applaud. ed, though some were dleappointed ap. - welltly at his avoidance of the special financial topics now generally discussed. • • " -. : (1... - - - ....ii-ie...-:,..),,..0_itt,%..-.2\i•:.ix.4-„1...: - : - . - . - 0.„:,-.: 7 ;i.#- ES VOL. LXXXTV. NEW YORK CITY. The Merchants Exchange—Bent Defalcation—Oman Mail Ser vice—A Swindling Merchant— Railroad Receiver Arrested— Drawback Frauds lnterna• tional Yacht Bace—ll2o,ooo in Bonds Lost. I Ely TeicgTeph to the rittebtrati Ov.tetti.) Rive team, bee. 29,: 18 Tits EANK DEFALCATION The investigation of the defalcation In thehierchante Exchange Bank has gone ea far as top/silly the statement, on the authority of Mr. Coßender, the National Bank Examiner, that the lost to the bank to less than $lOO,OOO, and may not exceed $.50,000. In any event, ho ova, It will not exceed one-third of the surplus of the bank at the last quarterly state• ment. It le asserted on grad authority that Cornelius Oakley, brother'of the 'cashier, was a large depositor, and at times largely overdrew his account, the speculations proved unfortenate, and he recently failed. Partof hie overdraft the bank will recover by means of securities held by them. Oakley. property and sureties will aim go far towards making up the loss. Oakley to on duty at the bank, assisting in untangling its affairs, and It is not .probable that criminal proceeding. _will be taken against him. The easertion that the peculation' have _been going on for four years is opt]. tradlcted, as the bziaka are examined yearly by a competent committee, and at the laat examination the affairs of the bank were correct. TEX POSTOPTICII COMMITTEE. The Committee on Postal Laws and on New Poetoffloes met this adernoorfin the Astor House. The pardon is private. P,oetmaster General Cresswell, it Is un derstood. Informed the Committee of the reeult of negOtiations entered into by him with the various competing train- Atlantic line& for the carrying of United States mails. He eanlalned at some length the different often; made by the companies represented, and stated that the beet interests of the government would be &observed by the employment of the North German Lloyd. It is re coned ho has ;Concluded contracts with the Williams and Union and North tier man-Lloyd tines. =I It is alleged that In November Jut Samuel Oppenheimer, claiming to be an Ohicvmerehant, obtained IW,K3 worth of Roods from Simon Mack do Oa. and other firms of New York, under faiew preten see. Subsequently a check for one thou. sand dollars, passed by Oppenheimer, was proved worthless and led to tho be: lief that he was a windier. Detectives traced him to , Philadelphia and Balti more, and two days ago Meek et Co. re. calved a letter from him, dated Hudson City. N. .1., offering to compromise for 130,000. Detectives were sent in pursuit. RAILROAD DIFFICULTY. About six this evening A. o.',Daugher tY: receiver of the Atlantic. and Great Western Railroad, uuder an order of Judge Barnard of the Supreme Ji.burt, attempted to force his way into the office of the company on Broadway, and was arrested. He was subsequently released at the request of Judge Birnard. =I Terms have been- arranged by means of cable dispatches fora race between Mr. James Gordon Bennett, Jr.'s Alfieri. can yacht "Dauntless," and Mr. As bury's English yacht "Cambria," for a plate of two hundred and fifty pounds, from old head of Kinsale to Bandyhook, New York, to start July 4th, next. TEE DKAWELCN FRAUDS.. Col. Whitely, Chief of the Secret Ser vice Division of the Treasury Depart. sent, says he has no instructions from Washingtoniooking to the - employment of S. T. Blatchford as a government wit. neon in the drawback fraud CMOS. Mr. Blatchford has shown no inclination to turn State's evidence. COLLEXIIII PIATERIttTY • Toe annual Convention of the Zeta Fri fraternity.la in session at Cooper In. statute. Delegates from all porta of the country are present. After the Conven tion the delegates will Indulge in the an nual dinner. The proceeding' are' of course secret. DI119)168CIED HONORAIBLY Robert Martin, accused of having a plate for printing Hub-Treasury checks in his possession,' has been honorably discharged, It being proven he wail em. ployed by the Treasury Department to ms&e the plate. The cane of Rowena Lawreneeva. Gen. B. F. Batler bee been removed to the United Suttee Circuit Court. • Gen. J. C. Fremont appeared In the same Court to. day against the Kenna Ronk Railroad Company. MIT OF XI:WC/1210N The Board of Education of Ude oity report 'their ,expend hums . for . the year ending September last at 42.961,361. Es. thnatee for ensuing year g 2,882,000. LOST OR STOLEN Coupon bonds valued at $121,000 were lost or stolen on Christmas day at Jamey City, and ■ reward of ;moo Is offered for their recovery. = A Tammany Society la to be formed In New Jersey. as an auxiliary to the more celebrated one of' New York. =II Steamer Chi of Washington from Liverpool, laws from Glasgow and Cella from London, arrived today. XEMPHIS. Comaßies on ■ Siteasaboat— Negro fillosin to Pieces by Torpedoes—Selz. are or Distilleries—Railroad Accident, (By Teloom& to tho Pittabotyll 6asetio4 • Mammas, December 79.—Henry O. Baker, an old citizen of Arkansas, less f ound dead In a stateroom of the steamer Ozark this morning. Two colored roustabouts on the same steamer while wrestling Yeaterday , foil overboard and were drowned. ^ . . e deck-hand on the same steamer, while handling sixty , torpedoes today; exploded them, tearing him Into frag ment% Gen. Pattersonreollector of this Me trict, noised. two illicit distilleries near Randolph, and captured two of the pro prietors named Dickey . and Stinger. Dewitt. .another, managed to ceoapth. The stills and prisoners ware brongbt to ibis city, and &begetter held .to ball in The western freight train on the MOM phis mid Charleston railroad ran off the track near Corinth yesterday morning, smashing several cars, killing a brake man and fatally Injuring Tim Enright, the conductor. the Bth lost , young Gifford,oontin • ed in'the Ozark, ark., jail, on charm:. of complicity In killing young West at a Party some weeks sines, was shot through a window by a party of ruffians and killed. During a dlfilettity between two ifient. en ,named. Elkins mod blear of `Pike county, Ark., Elkine shot Nub three times while running, killing him in• atm:My. Elkin, °impel: Illnceita!sty Concerning the Result of the Election. My Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Oszetee.l GALVIMPOPt. ' Peoember 29.--The result of the election Me elate — raft Is.ll4l . tiA: certain.-Davis is about - 'Sys , hundred a head, with twenty•five counties from which no official returns have been re. calved. There are no returns of the vote on the constitution, but It has probably been carried almost unanimoualy. If an eh:Won- was held In hithusw Yarre =nide* Itierthought that-Remit. ton will be elected. Otherwise Davis will be elected by several hundred ma jority. The result of the find Congres. atonal dietrict is uncertain; -in the S.. cond. John C. Connor Is elected: In the Thlrd„ W. auk; id.the Fourth, Edwin Degener. As fares heard from the Leg. Islature stands about as follows: Senate, Conservatives, fifteen; Republicans, four teen, with one to near from. , Rouse, Conservatives, forty•ilve: tZti-six aan i i t 4 r i Lll te ltile As i o l anin dou t ot onni . w o ; by • large msjorlty. BRIEF TELEGRAMS. - , The regular Nossion of thn Louisiana Leghtlature begins Monday next. —George • D. Prentice continues criti cally ill with rheumatimm of the heart. —The Congressional Postoilice Com mittee ate at New York pursuing their —The Einhoharle Calmly Rank, In Saha hark, N. Y., was burglarizod yesterday morning -of f • • —Mrs. M. Regnoy has been awarded a $20,000 ocular/tot far macadamizing streets in Ct. L-uis. —Tbe report (bet Streeter '1 Strickler, of Junction City, Kenees, have failed and gone in bankruptcy le untrue. —The Savings Bank at SockVllle, Von. necticitt, waa robbed on Tuesday night of WY/ In bonds and ;150 in bills. —David Durkle, a well known butcher or Memphis, Tenn., wee thrown front Isla wagon Tuesday evening and Instantly killed. —United States Senator Pratt, from Indiana, has decided not to resign at present, as he had Intended. His nealth is precarious. —The completion of the first section of the Oregon Central Railroad was cele brated on Tueeday by an excursion to the end of the track. —Gra Nolan, s retail grocer of Louis. villa, Ky., sulcided, yesterday, by Jump log from a skiff into the river, drowning iduraelf. Canso, 111 health.' —A heavy. Shock of 'earthquake Is re ported to have been felt at Bey Sc. Paul, forty miles below Quebec, some daps educe. It only lasted one Minute. -The three hundred Chinese brought from San Francisco, and now en route for Texas, are under contract to work for twenty dollars a month and boarding. —lt Is rumored that Southern California and ArisOna are ta be made a depart ment under the command of Qan. Jeff. U. Davie, with headquarters at Ban Diego. —The colossal statue of President Lin. cole, modelled by H. K. Brown, and to be erected in Union Park, New York, bi now ready for transportation from Phila• delpbla. —The pork packing amnion at Lards villa has closed two months earlier than last year. The total number of hogs packed Is 186.600; au increase of 13,000 over Oat year. • •—At Cleveland. Ohio, the jury in the slander case of Rosa Be nton: against R. P. Wade, rendered a Verdict for 15,000. The plaintiff sued fet 116,000 damages. A motion was made for a new trial. —A large number of vessels from for eign parts arrived at New Orleans yes terday with cargoes; Among them was the new steamship Statesman, of the New Orleans and Liverpool Company's line. —The freight agents of * various roads and fast freight lines at Memphis, Tenn., have formed an aasociatlou r vrith Enoch Taylor as President and AM. lialthevas Secretary. The purpose is to prevent cutting down rates. —lt Is officially stated that arrange ments have been perfected for the com mencement of work on the weatarn division of the Memphis and El Paso Railroad, between San Diego and Fort Yuma, early the ensuing spring. —The English pepere say a Russian expedition. numbering 1,64./e men. -has started for Balkan Bay, or the Caspian sea, to attempt the discovery of means of connecting the Caspian acd Aral seas, by the bed of the ancient river An:oldie. —Three steamers arrived on Tuesday night from Rundout and report the Bea son river nearly clear of toe. They left yesterday morning with a large tow qf canal boata. The high water and lee have done considerable damage to boats. —TheTreasnrer of Sfassaehusetta, Hon. E. M. Bates, will remain la New York city during the month of January to pay the State-Interest due; also to take up the refunded stock called In by procla mation of the Governor, payable. after 1869. —Mangyironmanufacturersof St. Louis and other places In Missouri are signing a memorial to Congress not to reduce the present tariff on pig iron. They have oleo invited Dr. William Elder, of Phila delphia, to deliver an address on the interests Involved. —About three hundred canal boats are frozen Rion the line of the Delawareand Hudson Canal, with cargoes of coal ag gregating thirty-seven thousand tone. ' There are nine thousand tons on the Rondout docks and frozen in on boats at that place are four hundred and tiny tons more. , —Foreign advlces state that the Deisti cal Convention which met at Naples on the Bth Instant.. In apparent dellanos to the Ecumenical Council at Rome, wee dimolved after a two days' session by the Italian Government, the ostensible rea. eon being that the delegates shouted Eocura lairuncia Republicans. —Jostles Daily. at New Yorki has do- cided that steamboat companies, common carriers, are liable for baggage of passengers left in state rooms, not. withstanding notices may have been put op that baggage will not be allowed in cabins or state rooms, or when placed there last the risk of the owner. —ln the Criminal Court at Cincinnati, yesterday, John Cottle, a polloesuan, was convicted of manslaughter, in kill ing John • Bebb in August last. Robb died of Injuries received by blows of a mace dealt by Cottle, who found him drunk In the door or on the pavement of his boardAng.house. —A St. Paul (Minn.) dispatch states the down stage from Red Wing broke through the bison Lake Pepin, three or four miles above Reed's Landing, yes. terday. It had ono passenger and an express agent aboard. Both got out oafs. Both wheel-borers were drowned, and the stage, with the mail, lice in thirty feet of water. —At a meeting of the stockholders of the Lake Hhore and Michigan Southern Railway Company, at Cleveland, yester, day, called to consider the question of oonsollaatton with the Toledo, Wabash and Western Railroad, only a small In. formal vote was cast, the consolidation project having been practicallyabandon• ed some weeks since. • —Albert it. Hatch, a lawyer of Porta. mouth, N: EL, has instituted a colt for libel against Stephen S. Scanamon for publishing an advertisement charging that several notes collected of him by complainant were forgeries. Also, against Frank W. Miller and (Roes° W. Karsten, publishers of the Chronicle, for publishing odd advertisement.' The trial is aeslguts2 for Monday nazi.- —A Leavenworth (Kansas) dispatch says : The Missoui i Piscine Railroad ap- pears to have rellnqulehed all claim to the Missouri River and Leavenworth and Northwestern Reads. The latter to now running al: trains daily. between the State line and Atchison, having ee. cured aniticlent rolling stock from the Vanderbilt and St. Jcaeph road. The Missouri River Salina Ul9 Pacific owes them a balance on contract of J 300,000, and steps will be Speedily taken to. re. cover It. Curtin. American Ambassador at St. Petoraburg, writes to the Commit tee of the Louisville Commercial Con vention. that the Russian fair is to no national and only for the productions of Russia. Several of the crowned heads of Europe bad accepted invitations to he present. The Committee appointed by the Louisville Convention Will therefore not 001hPot specimens, but devote their whole attention to the question of ImMl gration.-aa devolved upon them by a revs. °lotion of that body. —The trouble between William Horace Lluirard, the "Copt. Jinks" of the Grand Opera Harass, New York. and his -wife, Alice Dunning, was ventilated be. fore Justice Dodge, In that city, on Tues day. An amusing squabble between the parties took place In the court. The feature in the case la that it InvolVes the reputation for chastity of James Flak, Jr- Mr. Lingard was required to give bonds to observe the peace towards Miss Dunning, and the affair was settled. The parties In the evening appeared together at the Grand Opera House. --Colonel Whitney, of 'the United States date:Bye force, has received a tattersall from Montreal, announcing that , Richard B. Caldwell, ' whose connection with Samuel T. Itfatchford In the Custom House frauds has received such widespread _puttUcity, -haa been committed to prison to await the arrival of the necessary papers for Ms extradi- tion. The appeal to the Court of Queen's Bench end the two writs othabeas corpus bare became aside. It Is said , that the Secretary or State at Washington has already forwarded the necessary papers to the Governor General of Canada, and the two Caldwalls, father and son. may beano:tad at New York very soon. . 1, • PITTSBURGH, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1869. SECOH EDITIOI. FOCA O'CLOCK,. dr. AL THE CAPITAL. Public Debt Reduced About $3,- 000,000—Colored Men's Organ —Routine Businms Only in De partments—New Year Calls at White House—Monthly Report on Agriculture. lßy Telegraph to the Illistnargh Gazette.) WASHINGTON. December 29, 1869, PUBLIC DEBT STATEMENT. The public debt statement will not be published till next Monday. The prat. out Indications are that the debt will not be decreased over 13,000,000. the receipts from • customs and , internal' revenue having been comparatively light. Those from the tatter today were only 1820,600. COLORED NEE'S OROAN A newspaper is to be •published here under the auspines of the National ?zee nttve Committee of Oolored-Men, to rep. resent the political and Industrial Inter ests of that race. I=! 'The announeementie officially made that the President wUI receive calla as naval on New Toar's day. ACIRICOLTtIRE REPORT The report of the Department of 'Agri culture for the current month will con. lain a detailed review of the crops for the paid season. All to corn, the only States reporting an increase of quantity are Minnesota, Missouri, Florida, Ne. breaks, Kansas, Texas and Cali fonds. • Louisiana and lowa give nearly an average. The ' princi nal corn growing section of the West will average a, reduction of fully twenty per cent. in yield per acre. With all the increase of farmers to produce and population tb consume, and with an actual enlargement of the area under cultivation, It Is certain there la actually lees. corn produced this year than In 1668. The cotton crop is a little inure than ten per cent. above the yield of 1308, or, ilsont 2,700,000 commercial bales, or fully three IlitthOU6 of bales of 400 pounds each. The potato crop Is very large. The greatest lucre... is respectively In Ksu nas, Nebraska, Illinois, lowa and Mis souri. All the eastern States, New York;" New. Jersey and Pennsylvania, and all western, except Minnesota, home advanced In production, but 1,111 south. ern States, excepting only Florida, Lou- Jalapa and Texas, have reduced their sggregate. The sweet potato crop is somewhat lees than an average. Tobacco—The latest returne Indicate a redaction of one third In Virginie and Maryland, one sixth In Kentucky, six teen per cent, In Michigan, with a alight decrease in Indiana and Illinois. Maw sachneetts, West Virginia, Michigan, Wisconsin, and the States west of Minnie slept have somewhat enlarged their pro. duction. A fair luminary, of returns would seem to indicate an aggregate re. ductionof about twenty per cent. The apple crop was more than an aver age one in the west, with the exception of Ohio, where a reduction of twenty per cent. is Indicated. Mains, Massachusetts and Rhode Inland made but a half crop, Now Hampshire and Connecticut three. quarters, while Vermont ei:Doyed nearly an averages told; New York and Penn sylvania suffered fully onelenth lion. New Jersey, Delaware, Mary land and Virginia produced crops from (nil to large, and the remaining Southern States report generally a small yield. In Calhoun county. Michigan, 100,000 bushels, one-third the crop, were frozen. In Athena county, Ohio, many , thous , ands of bushels wore frozen on trees. Similar statements 'coin. from all per. (MDR of the wait. I=l Very little besides routine laminae% Is transacted at the Departtnente. Three or the heads are at present absent from the city and the offices are ebbed at noon. EZUMMX! The United States steamer Lancaster, Admiral Laurena' flag ship, arrived at Maderla November 21st. It would pro ceed, on the :WI, to the coast of Brazil. comxirrms nasnizie. The Comiatittee on Appropriations We. In session to day. No other oommittee met. There are now about fifty Senators and sixty Repress:Mali/ea to Washing ton. ECM! . The statement that Senator Pratt, of Indiana, has realigned, la denied by an therity from that gentleman. lie has not reaigned, nor does he Intend to. =! 'The Prealdernt, es a rale, during these holidays, Aloes not generally receive vialtors. - A few only of his most Ira mate friends Omantonally call:. - MEM= Dr. Jams! Dove, a well known 'Opal elan, tiled to-day. CHICAGO. leucite Infleiroutie Coilecttoos—A Mar rho Wanton Rebuked a CatomialeM RS Notary Public—Prom the Winneprs Country—Pew Presbyterian . Organ—. Deaths from Trichina. tar Telegraph to the Mist...rah Garotte.) CHICACIO. December 29.—The total col. !actions made In nibs district, Chicago and Co& oonnty, by the United States Revenue Collector .during 1869, foot nip 47,670,190;TC farn" ofirMPtlrOvir the previous year. Governor Palmer declines to commis. sion hint. Myra Bradwell, of this city, as Notary Public, for the reason that an of. tidal bond would be necessaly, and being a married woman the Is legally Incapaci tated from giving the bond required. Congressman Hopkins, of Madison, Ms., who hot been serloualyl.ll tiresome weeks, is still Ina critical condition. A special from 161. Paul. of this date, says the cause of McDoogalPs retreat, from Wlnnepog is the result of an Inter view between McDougall and Donald G. Smith, of the .Hudson - Bay Company, and the colony will for • time revert to the control of that Company. TheCana. diens claim that the insurrection was In. cited - -by Antietam% and . that. the half breeds can give no reasonable cause zor their revolutionary acts. The steam flour mill of Gideon Trump. dale, at Kenosha, Wis. was burned early this morellos. Lola 117,000; In- Bored - for $lO,OOO. ' • The director, of Lhe company recently organized to get up a new Chicago weekly Presbyterian organ. say It will ap. pear on the that of February. , A special from Belvidere. lila, 'say. that three persons belonging to a family of Germans, Ilving twenty miles south east of that city, had died from. eating trichina pork. Eightothers &recreates. ted from the same cause and will proba bly all dle. The trichina mut be Seen In Immense number. In meat, and also In the flesh of those who have died.. '.- VIRCIIIILI. • Another Project for iltate Adria/ski Tax osiortacen end Whiskey Destro/Id or. Lost. Tottrtspb to the Mttaborge easette4 .. Rtexteoxn , Deoember 29. --The State Central Committee of the seceding wing of the Republican party have prepared • bill, to be submitted to Congress, provi ding that the Legislature shall meet, to take only the oath prescribed in the lath Amendment, and go on to elect Sate of Scars and judges,, after which it adjourn, and its work be submitted to Congress, and if approved the State Is then to be admitted. The Chamber of Commerce to-dai adopted a petition to (kingtem to release from the PsYMent of revenue' tax whisky or tobacco which may be des troyed by fire or wrecked. - A u' linottnae sliver Batten. ' • (Br Tweinath to tee PlUsearen Gannet GEOROZIOWIr. Colorado, Deo. 29.—An hrUnenee button of silver was finished to-day by the Brown Sliver Mining Co., weighing six hundred and eighty three pounds troy; currency value 0 12 .• 700. It Is the largelir shipment, ever made from Moos CINCINNATI. Meeting of the Benet and Der—Memo.. rim Concerning the Late Men. R. M. Sightoll. (By Telegraph to the Bl.ttaborgt alette.) Clicctrr:lvrt, December 211.—A. meet ing of the Bench and Bar Of this city was held at the United States Court Rooms thin afternoon, to take action respecting the deathof Hon. Edwin M. Stanton. Nearly all the moat eminent members Of the bar of Cincinnati were present. Judge Learnt was Chosen President of the meeting and Lt. Miner, Esq., Secre- tary. 'A committee of five was appointed by / the chair to draft a paper expresialve of the fooling of the meeting la view of the event which had celled them to. gather. During the absence of the Committee, Judge Leavitt and others addressed the meeting. The deepest feeling prevailed. 'The Conimittee returned and mama ted the following memorial, which wu adoptedi let. This bat has Molted with-pro. (mind sensibility the annotincenionc of the death of Hon. Edwin bi. Stanton, one of its members, who at the time of his decease was one of the Justices ofthe Supreme Court of the United States. By hie qualities us man he had attached and held the affections of many. By the' Constancy and clearness of his courage during the late civil commotion he had become a pillar of strength to the'. Fed eral Government. By his sdministra. rive capacity 10 Secretary of War ho had largely occupied the attention and in epired the confidence of the country and had earned for himself an uncommon measure of fame. Id. Of illustrious latayere and patriots who have held places at Oda bar, enrich log it with' Inspiring traditions, not one has left a more secured reputation for le gal abllitiesomone him had the fortune to render public services so arduous, trying and impressive; no one has achieved re noon more broadly historic; not one has left • memory more endeared to his private friends. 3d. There is no choice hut trustingly to remit for history and posterity the axial appreciation of mocha life ; yet his tory can never reproduce, nor posterity D 06110131103 through which he lived. The peace and power of the United States, now so noobecured as to almost seem never to have been shaken, have within • few years been redeemed from im measurable 'dangers and confusion, in part by his great efforts, witnessed and shared by his cotempor aries, who owe It to their own generation and to the (Mare not to withold their testimony, nor to al low In death his name to be diafranchls ed of its honors. History frequently fails of truth and perishes. Traditions of great and heroic public services do not perish. Mr. Stanton did' not have the government of the United States, nor did any man. The Government which can be eared by an Individual. or few Individuate, la too narrow to be worth raving. lint he was one of the chletent among those who wrought magnificently for 11. When the feud between liberty and slavery in our affairs had plumed quite beyond the range of peaceful Ms CUPIIS{OI3, and bad become a thing of force, he affected no useless ninpirsge between them, but threw his whole weight without to serve, on the aids 'of liberty. When public opinion need ed courage and comhdency, be wee. courageous and conelletent. -Whim the government needed i !strength, le was strong. As Secretary of the War -De partment he controlled unprecedented expenditures with Integrity, not enrich- Jog himeelf. He thole incompetency and lack of faith with consuming grand rage from his preeenoe. Ile wielded with coherence,of purpose, on a level with.popular . aspiratlone, the im. mans military reecances of the coun try. Be organized, fed and moved armies, which once within the inspire. tlon of his invincible seal, neither rested nor turned beck . any" [Dore. His great labors. his fixed will, so upheld the Union cause, that nittrill mingled cororywhere with th tuneoefthe deg, sham everywhere t hrightnees of its glory, and seems d ed to same its i t Immortality. ... It Is the desire of the bar to place these memorial expreetiona on the records of Court, and in respectful sympathy with the family or deceased that copies of the record en made be sent to hit mother, his widow and his eldest eon. ST. LOUIS. The Burned Steamer Teemed—The ChL neee—Humeno Sockety of lledided. (By Telegreen to the Ptit.bergh Ourtte./ Sr. Louis, December 29 —The steamer Tempest, reported burned at Trinity river on the 27th, was valued at $16,000 and insured for PAO or 15,000 In St. Louis and Pittsburgh offices. The Chinese were visited by a large number of ctiaeo• today. The Humane Society of hilesouri was organised to nistit by the election 'of oaken. Hon. *Geo. H. Partridge was elected President, with a number of Vice Presidents and other offloera, selected from among-the very best and most Prominent gentlemen of the city. Iron Rallcsnd . Plg Iron. It appears from official return!, pub. 'hind by the authority of the English House of Commons, there were exported from Great Britain during the ten months ending October 1, 1869, the following weight of Iron rails, to wit: 793,619 tons, against 509,698 tons daring the same pp: riod 161868, and 513,071 tons In 1867. Of these amounts doting the ten months speciftol, there were exported to the United States 262,E29 tone of rolls, during 1809, an increase of 734,738 tone over .1868, and 117,663 tons over 1867.. The exports to Russia during the ten months specified,.were 247,277 tons of rails In 1809, an Increase of 146,724 tone over it 69, and .1.2.1 4. 7 .. 63 tone or pig Iron exported to United States amounted to 118,297 tone In 1669, an fn. crease of 42,783 tons over 1868, aad 11,. 778 tons over 1867. With all duty removed, at , tins rate, what would become of. our iron manu factorlea, who now ethaetimee difficulty in paying their employes living_ wages and keeping their etuabilehmente In operation.—llarriaktry Tdegiaph. A simple Onminesl. A' very pretty mantle ornament may be obtained by suspending az%Worn, by a Piece of thread tied ar d It, within half an inch of the enrfa of some water contained in a vase, tumbler or issuer, and allawing it to remain undisturbed for several weeks. It will soon burst open, and small roots willseek the water; a straight and tapering stem, with beau. tiful, glossy green leaves -will shoot up ward and present a very pleasing appear. ance. Chestnut trees may be grown in this manner, but their leaves are not as beautiful as those of the oak. The water should be changed once &month, taking cats to supply water of the same warmth; bits of charcoal added to It will prevent the water from eourlitipAt the little leaves turn yellow, add one drop of am. monis. into the utensil which botch' the water, and it will renew italuxuzienotx —Private advisee front Washington city represent that the adJaatMent of the Alabama claims la to be made there in stead of London. The Dokeot Argyle Is to be the Ambassador of England, g l o a ted with authority to make a settlement upon inch terms as may be speed upon. It la likewise said that the apology which Senator Sumner insisted that En gland shall make for Its course during the war, will not be sanded to on the part of that Governent, but that Ju lie of this the British Go m vernment will pro n . pose to transfer to the United States all that territory In British America lying west of Lake Superior, including Britlah Columbia and all their possessions 011 the Pacific mutt, in comdderation of our pay. ing a large sum of money therefor. —United States Marshal, Harper has reported to the United States District Atm o, at New York, that Charles Augustus, itlason:lesils and Thomas N. Riley, against whom bench warrants had been issued for their arrest on a charge of attempt to defraud the rave. nue, could not be Round in that city by his deputes, and that he bad good sewn for believing that they had all , Iled to Europe. Government offictida have evi dence to show that they hadentered Into an enormous conspiracy to defraud the revenue, involving the stun of over one million dollar; by manufactormg and selling spirits In an Illegal manner.. CITY AND SUBURBAN. THE JUDICIAEY. Meeting of the llembora of therMar— Propomd Additional Judge —The. Su preme Beach—Toe Salaries—Diversity _ of Opinion—Tim Matter Referred to a committee. Pennant to adjournment, the mem bers of the bar met In the District Court room at ten o'clock yesterday morning to consider and take action on the report of the Committee presented at a previous meeting, relative to an additional Judge for the county courts, and recommend. log an iuereaae of salary for the judici ary- On motion, A. M. Brown, Eeq., wee called to the chair, and the reporters of the press were appointed elecretariea. Mr. Bruce, from the Committee refer. red to, waa'called upon, and stated for information, that the Committee recom mended the tipper ntment of an additional law Judge, and .net the salaries be In creased to six thousand dollars per year, The report was accepted, when A. W. Feeler. Fag. said he hoped soma gentle man would al re him same reasons for the proposed change: R. Woods, Eq. , said he was eurprised that the gentleman should ask such • question. Ile said that he thought the necessity for an additional Judge was apparent to all. Be was opposed to the overworking of any one man, S and he said that any member of the bar could see that the Judges Wore growing old therapidly under the . labors imposed upon m. Mr. Foster said he could not see that the wear and tear was very great. The Judges appeared to be very robust in mind and hotly, and showed no Niguel of giving way. There was no difficulty, at all events, In securing persons to accept position■ on the bench. He thought it better to try the present number a little longer. Ile remembered the time when one Judge Old' all the business of the county, as well as some of the surround. icor counties. He said be was afraid the people would have something to say against the matter. An additional Judge In not only asked for, but It is suggested that the salaries of all be increased: lie failed to see the necessity 'of another Judge, and thought the busineaS could be expedited if lees time was taken In disposing of causes. Mr. Patterson said be did not feel pre pared to vote for the question as pre• ',anted. He thought it should be divided, by first taking the opinion of the meet ing as to the necessity of-an additional Judge, and then on the question as to which court each Judge should be as. signed. The question was on motion divided, and upon the vote being taken as to the necessity of an additional Judge, it was adopted. Tne chairman announced that the next queetion belore the meeting was as to tne location of the Judge. W. Bakewell, E.g., hoped there would be some discunalon on this question. He was not prepared to determine the ques, lion, sa his practice in the State Courts had been comparatively limited. He was in favor of returning to the old prac tice of conflolng the businesa of the Court otCommon Plane to Its old limits, and If Bat were done 'he thought a great Im proVement could be accomplished. B. F. Lucas, Esq., was in favor of the appointment of a new Judge for the District Clourt, and stated at length his reasons therefor. He said that the cases on the argument - lint could be more read ily disposed of. and in various ways he thought the additional Judge would be beneficial. It in well known that in various cases there is a divided court, and the opinion of the Judge who tried the cause the judgment of the court. If three Judges were on the bench the maJority would decide the question. He thought if there was an additional Judge he should be asaigned to the District tkm.rt. J. Cohen, Esq., was opposed to the additional Judge. He thought the people should be consulted in the matter. They armless deeply--Interested -es theater - nays. Ile ate° referred to the fact that the Judges of the District Court state that they do lain need any assistance. T. M. Marshall, Esq., did not roe that an additional Judge was needed, but if such should prove the fact ho thought the Comotom Pleas should nave the Judge. He referred to the business of the Court of Common Pleas, Quarter Session., etc., and said an additional Judge in that court could be made very • fitment if the work was properly sys vowelized. But' the matter should be carefully considered and such 'Whales procured ma would demonstrate the no- ' amity of an additional Judge. Major Brown said be could see some advantages which would arise froth time appointment of an addltlocal Judge for the District Court. It was not the num ber of cases that delayed the business In the Court, but it was the character of the cases. Frequently one cause would oc cupy eight days or two weeks, and the trial of those cases neoseascily delay the other causes, and parties wars held in suspense from day to dal awaiting for the calling of Weir caeca. Boma mem bers of the bar would not be benefitted if twenty jury trials were continually In wogrees, as they had all they could do. But other case, would be expedited, and it was in this view that he was In flavor, as the majority of his fellow members of the bar seemed to be, of an addition al Judge. He referred to the statement that there are now two cues pending In the Common Pleas to one In the District Court, and stated that every member of the bar nodentood the reason. Homo times the issue docket of the Common Fissile overcrowded and a rush Is made to the District Court, which has concur rent jurisdiction. Then the reverse is the case when the District Court Is over; run with business. He minim favor of • Judge for the District Court, if an ad ditional Judge was to be asked for. Mr: Bakewell said that If the reorgani zation of the Common pleas Court was Ago, __ 031onel Bayne wan opposed to limiting .tbe jurisdiction of the Common Pleas. Court. He thought it would be eviscera ting the Judicial pride of the Judges of that court, and besides It would deprive the attorneys of the • option they now have of bringing their muses In either the District or Common Pleas Court. He was emphatically in favor of an addi tional Judge for the District Court. Hem. T. J. Bingham thought the mem bers of the bar did not know what they were liking for. They had not only asked another Judge, but proposed to Increase the salaries of the present Judges. To go to Harrisburg with both propositions would be sheer madness. The question then recurred on the motion of Mr. Powers. to lay on the table, when it was decided in the affirm ative by • vote of tweuty-three yam to thirteen nays. Mr. Powers then moved that the vote declaring an additional Judges necessity be reconsidered. - The motion r's iadopted when Mr. Marshall moved that 'committee of five be appointed to consider the wants of the people of the county in regard to the Judiciary. to prepare statistics of various Courts of the county and report in writ ing at in adjourned meeting. An attempt was made to adjourn, but the motion was negatived, when the mo tion of Mr. Marshall was adopted. A. W. Foster, F.aq-, offered the follow ing. which was referred to the Commit tee created under Mr. Marshall's mutton. Resolved, That the Senators and Rep resentatives from this county be re. quested to procure the enactment of a law providing that in actions hereafter brought in the Common Pleas and Dis trict Court of Allegheny county no jury shall be called, but the same shall be tried by •judge only, unless the nista. tiff shall endorse on his nary. when thing the same, and defendant shall enter of record, when pleading, a demand for a trial by jury: and that the tame shall be tried so as to preserve to each pasty all right to exceptions to evidence and opinion of the Judge. J. S. Slagle, Esq., called. attention to the report mainlined at a previonsmeet. ing, recommending the appointment of two more Supreme Judges, the increase of their salary to 1 7 , 6 00 p er year, and that they give to An ts teiy „ minty ogee., four weeks instead - 6f two as now allowed. Mr. Bakewell Mond to amend by re. questing the Supreme Cotirt to imams, • ' the time of taking up the Allegheny county canes, an not to interfere with the BESSIOCIS of the United States Court. On motion, the whole matter was re ferred back to the Committee, with ln. struction to rersrt In writing. The Chairman announced the follow ing as comprlalng the Committee, pro• pOsed by Mr. Marshall:—Messrs. T. M. fitanthall, R. B. Patteison. A. M:. Brown. R. O. Powers, Jos. M. Gazzem. On motion adjourned. TEACHERS IN COUNCIL. Westmoreland Teachers'. Institute—ln teresting' Ererchce—Two..llays , *es elon—Reporte, lifocutalone, Adareuees, The Westmoreland Teachers' Institute commenced its annual _session at Latrobe, - 'Monday atternon .In the Lutheran Church, J.. IC. Steven eon, of West . Newton, presiding, and about forty-live teachers being in atten.; dance. After the opening devotional exercises, Rev. H. M. Davis, of Latrobe,. delivered an addresa of welcome, Mr. J. Walth our delivering the response. All the ministers in attendance were elected honorary Members, and various commit tees appointed. Mr. E. B..Sweenoy presented a paper in relation to the Bible in Schools, a dis cussion of which. occupied the remain der of the session. • 4 At the evonlag amnion President ate. venson delivered an Inaugural address, which wan followed with an address on Primary Education, by Prof. D. McKee, which contained a great many practical thongtaa, which received the sm.:water the audience. "School Exhibition's" were next die• cawed by the session. I= The morning of the second day wee occupied by a class drill is grammar by Prof. McKee, and another in geography by Mr. J. G. Francis, followed by criti cisms on the methods premnted, Messrs. Jones, M'Ket' Spreigel and Solvely, tak ing part. "Are District lostitutee bone. tidal," wee next discouled at lengh by Messrs. Franks„ Runt, Lowe T and Rpro'gel, when the morning session ad journed, Prof. D. F. Thompson °petted the after noon's excercisea with Some remsrka on methods of teaching Arithmetic. A choir, agreeably varied the programme at this point with vocal music,—"The Old College . Bell"—which was warmly applauded. Select Readings, by Mr. J. W. Smith were followed with mere dis cussion on ' , District Institutes." and the afternoon session clotted with Mr. Ells worth's Illustrations of teaching Penman ship. The exercises of the evening aessiErn wore enlivened at intervals with excel lent music from the Litrobe Clarionet Band. An many wan rend by Mims A. J. Fortune, of Pleasant Unity, on "The Present Age," and anathefon.Contlict". by Miss M. Akers, Mr. S. Singleton de livered a lecture on "Education versus Scholarship The remainder of the session wasoccupled with a discuselon on the question •Ought the State to enforce the education of the children within its Jurisdiction," which was participated In by Messrs. Shaner and a number of others.. strange. Discovery or a inunier—The .. Resurrection" Nen In the course of bie long professional career Sir Ashley Cooper was at least twice instrumental in discovering mur der. The first was a curious case enough. A Mr. Blight, a ship•brokerot Deptford, was sitting in his parlor, when the door soddenly opened and he saw an arm ex tended toward him. The band held a pistol, which was fired at him,and he fell wounded and the wound subsquently proved lataL The only light he could throw on the matter was that hiepartner, Mb. Patch, while sitting in the same room a few days before, had heard a gun fired outside—and the ball had . entered the shutter. Cooper seated himself in the place where Blight had received the wound, and satisfied himself that to have fired and also to have concealed his body, the murderer must have been a left handed person. He now noticed that Patch, the partner, was a left-handed person, and he became convinced that he wag the murderer. Patch was at liberty after the poor man's death, without any suspicion attach ing to him, but on the inquest many damaging facts came out, and he was con victed and executed on the strongest ch eumetantial evidence. On the second oc anion, a rich merchant, who was Coop er's own intimate friend, was assassins. ted. A servant brought the news to Bir Astley in a strange, confused way, and Sir Astley immediately was convinced that his servant was the murderer. The man afterward cut his throat, but being cured. He was fully convicted, and suf fered on Pennington Heath, near the scene of the murder. There was a re markable statement in the man's conies. sten, he said that as he was going up stairs, poker.in hand, to ward his master's bedroom, he said to himself: "Nicholson, what are you going to do ?" and he heard an answer 'nada to him by a voice at his side, "To murder your master and mis trete." In both these Instances Sir Astley said that he could not ,explain the peculiarity of manner. in the criminals which made him form such a rapid and, decided opinion of their guilt. In the life of Cooper we Had the best amounts with which we are acquainted of the formidable resurrection men. Many tales of mystery and horror are told of these men, but it is hardly possi ble that the fictions ever come up to the facts. At the commencement of the sees. skin there was no proper provision for quite m ,much as the murders of Barka and Hare, in Edinburg, induced the Government to bring forward what was properly called the 'Hatomy bill. Most of the resurrectionists came "to bad ends for other violations of the law. The popular indignation against these men was very great, and several of them were beaten to death. One ofthem Is known to have accumulated .E 6,000 out of his horrible earninga. One of the least horrible of these narratives may be mentioned. A "subject" was brought to a medical man as usual, tied up In a sack. The doctor paid some money on account for It, and being In a hurry kicked the parcel in the direction of his dissecting room. op stairs to bed he heard groans In that direction, and going to see he found a man standing upright with a sack by his aide. The fellow, in a sup. Nesting tone, said that a trick had been played on him when he was drunk. The doctor bestowed a farther kicking, Which sent the "subject" through the door into the street. On turning the matter over i n hi s mind, he was convinced that the resurrectionist was an summed charac ter, and that a burglary had been in tended. A Female Al The life history of a female miser has just been collected from the private papers found in the house of the now notorious old maid of Poughkeepsie, New York, Lochy Ostrom, who died a few weeks since, leaving a fortune of $60,000, and apparently no "next of kin," at the age of seventy.seven years. Idles. Ostrom met bar first and only love at Pough keepsie, when she was but fifteen years old. This young man and Leap were affianced, but the girl's parents would not consent. The lover went to Cincinnati and there married. but his wife lived only a few years. 'lWlosa of her "nice young man" made Loch y a miser—pro during in her an • avaricious mania. In 1848 the "Ant. lover" revisited Lough keepele, a wealthy widower, and offered to - marry Lochy Ostrom, but,sbe refsed, and so she lived an died In sinugle blessedness. The clothing she left at death In an old braes mounted butte, was all of the most antiquated pattern, and little better than bundles of "shreds and patches." NO. 307. IiENERAL NEVI& A woman at Vinton, lows, the other day, got divorced 'from ~,one husband at three o'clock and married anothei'it five. Soli noar revives an 'old saw to show that there will not be good crops in 1870: ••Phoold , ectinber be cold with snow, On coots height, (4, crops will row... TOE City Councils of Omaha, by a nearly unanimous vote, has prohibited all future exhibitions of the leg 'domain that city. A Gasman astronomer suit that we are soon to have another moon, and that it will be nearer the earth than our prem. eat satellite. ' GEORGE FnArias TR.= says he learned Italian, Spanish and French In six months; but does not promise to quit talking English. INDIA rubber is the lateit thing propos ed for preserving meat. The trouble, If any, will be to distinguish thrbcef from the gutia.perelm. • Tunas are 12 monasteries in the United States, where men live under vows of celibacy and poverty, and 300 nunneries of various grades. A BABY has been born In Detroit which Is marked with the Image of a spotted snake, extending from the corner of the right ey6 to a point on the right shoulder. A men in California was bitten on the lip by an insect "black In color and .re sembllng very much an overgrown bed bug," and 'died three days after hi conse quence. MAICTOit MARBLE, of the New York World, has presented to his Alma. Mater, the University of Rochester, L. complete file of his paper, bound in thirty-seven volume& - Tux weather wee so mild in Oregon during the last week in November that strawberries and peas were ripening, blackbeiries in bloom, and oak buds bursted Tne, Treasury department will adhere to its determination not to encept pro posalsefor gold which vary more lean one quarter to one•half of one per cent. from the market price. • Oust hundred thousand dollars, gold, is the price asked for a genuine painting by Raphael, now on ale by a Neapolitan gentleman, and it is , considered a fair price by uropuut,contioisseum AT some of the , fashionable boarding schools, it is said, in the East, young ladies are taught the "art" of refusing an offer, so as to give the victim little or no pain, or a! perfect avalanche of agony. AT Indianapolis more people die of vaccination than from anall.pox, and they are discussing the question whether It is not safer to let the prevention alone, and stand their chances wittithe disease. A taus child of Zacharias Hosts, of Allentown, was attacked by rats, a few nights ago, and bad part of his knee eaten away. The infant, which is nine months old, was heard screaming daring the night, hut no one thought that any thing so serious was the matter with it. BTOBICIL College, at Harper's Perm Va., an Institution of conelderable pre tensions for the education of the adored race, is now so far completed as to be opened to ahmited class in the higher de. partmente, while the preparatory school is full to overflowing, of both sexes, all ages and colors. WE fear that the prospects for the American and Rolland Cable Company are too brillliht. The rare luck that has befallen the enterprise, la the accession of the killed and celebrated Wai. Cornell Jewett, seems too good to hold out long. If the admirable Jewett could only have come in at the end, instead of the begin. ning--1 Ix Salt Lake City, mys Anna Mau l oon, a man leads to the wedding altar half a dozen women, calls them his wives, and lives with them as such. In New York city a man does precisely the same without any preliminary exercises. In Salt Lake they call it religion: In New York city they call it a youog man sow ing his wild oats. A FLonmA paper owloits that a steamer with an exploring fluty- has as cended the St. John river three hundred and seventy-five miles, one hundred and fifty miles further than ever before accom plished. The lakes through which' they paned are said to bo Indescribably beau. tifal, and the country more diversified than lower doivn the river. Tax Minnesot ermers have rallied this year 6,600, of corn against 4,807,477 hat year, and 12,000,000 bush els of oats against 7,582,461 last year, and both crops command better Priem than last year. They also raised 20,000,. 000 bushels of wheat against 15,250,000 last year, and although the price of this is low, th e four crops will realize nearly . , $2,000,0001 more than last year. IT is given out by his friends,. that Attorney• General Hoar will remain in the Cabinet only a short time, and will then tender his resignation to the Presi dent. The prevailing opinion is that Judge Strong, of Pennaylrania, will , succeed him, it being known that the President tendered him the position when It was summed that Mr. Hoar would resign'to go upon the Supreme Bench. A. WOOD sawyer, who was piling wood near the railroad track at Edgerton, Ohio, one day recently, noticed, while standing on the pile as the lightning train prowled a large Mick lying upon theist,. ' Without a moment's hesitation he leaped directly before the train and grasped the stick. At that instant the engine struck •-• and hurled him some distance for ". fell to the ground mangled . he had saved the train, movement on foot, to be loon as Texas shall be ad- Union, to create two new are two bills now before instruction Committee for One of them proposes to is Colorado 244, sad t" at Lincoln, and a"ther provides Ro th e States of Honeton ' Lin coin and Tea= to be caned out of the present State. _ Towns Is ample authority for saying that negotiations for reopening the A.4ba,. ma Claims question will not be definitely eettled•nnUi after the assembling of the British Parliament in February, - it, being uncertain whether the British Ministry would be sustained by Parliament bi corn milling itself to any definite course or change in the policy as punned in the past. An exproadon .of opinion is de sired from that body before dull agree. ing to the proposition made by Minister Motley. Tart Nary Archimi, an Austrian periodl• cal, contains the statement that a new invention has been proposed to the Ent. peror Napoleon which greatly dhninuhes the deleterious effect of projectiles. The material employed for this purpose is a kind of felt, the composition of which Is the secret of iv Italian named Muratori. This felt, preyed by powerful engines, is cast Into moulds like melted metal. When it gets cold it mists the effect of btlls like the bed steel. Used for mid terms, It resists blows by • sabre or the balls from &revolter. treed as enamor, It raditithe ball from a Chassepot gun, if it _is - fired at one.half Its range.,: and it considerably diminishes Ito effect when fired at a nearer distance. In the New York World's report of the recent French ball in that city, mom the following Nader elands in the middle of the floor and shouts to the mu sicians to go on, for it is'nt sate for them to atop. Whenever they do there is a fight. One stalwart beauty, In bus arms, has knocked down a young man in the entrance way, and left the marks of her high heels oft his face. She would have kicked the life out of him while her bully held blot down, If a still stronger policeman bad not flung her like a maw of offal into a corner. There she is pick ed up, And, backed by a - half dozen of her associates, pushes and strikes pmts. cuously, and the datums crowd about her posh also end strike, and sway tere and there, and yell and hiss and come, until the entire police force in the piece drag out a Bowe of them, and then the rest go on with thedaneing, between which and the fighting there le so little dfilbrease." THE WEEKLY GAZETTE Is the Net uld 'cheapen commercial and Many simspaper publisbed to Wesless Pilhaelhuals. So Ander, neeetwele or =enchant should bee =3 E=li Slagle rebeerlbere Clubs of gee Clubs of sea Ml= • Dopy teMsfelthed ersteltoasly to the getter ap of a elabor tea. Postioastars an Itqwei4led to as as wit& Address. • ,PERRUNLAN, REED .11 =I! Aadltectiall Market. by.Telegrapti. Cnicaeo, December .29.—At open Board this' afternoon the Wheat market was weak, but prices easier: sales NO.lr at 78®78t4c, seller January, cash; closed dull at 77,4;®78e. Corn dull, with sales at 69(36fq.,0, seller. January, closing weak at Inside figure. Oats dull but firm at 44c cash. In the evening grain Market inactive. Pmvisiona quiet, and on Pork market weak and lower, sellers caah, mess appearing at p 28,50 and Lard 'clear ed In small way at 16%c; sales Hem Pork seller ..February at 130: do de' at WOO; buyer February at 130. Green. Hams 1414 c. New ORLEANS, Dec. W:--Cotton active with high grades scarce and drm at 246 24 , 40 for middlings; sales 5, 6 80. reell l Pia: 2,956, exports 4.318 bales. Flour dim at 15,25®5,90®6(46,25. Corn dull at 81:41 gOo. Oats—stock light; ettolos 680. Bt. Louis 70c. Bran 11,15. Hay 7124. Pork 130@30.25. Bacon unchanged. Lard 1814018303 for tierce, 20(4210 Itir keg. Buhr and Molasses quiet. • Whisky IL Coffee unchanged. • NEW • ADVERTIBEMIM/1. Or/166 Roust or Ilist.:6l. WzlTasw ro.trtl. oscuo Pl.tibo.•b. • - Dscsaissa 1.9. 11169.! rarTHE ANNUAL ZIEE'rIRA of the Contelbators to the Hones of Refuge fur Western Peansy.vahla, ',FBI be bell at the office of the Innßutton. Ne IT rettetit &venue, rittstrargh, on MONDAY, the 34 day Of JaoltarY. 1110, between the hours of 10,aal DI o'clock. noon.' to hear the Baton 'o f the Board of Ifanstrers, and to elect Mean, sail Yu ur the entelOg tart. • Br ceded of the Board, delleaW JAMISB. D. YEED.S. eftwataz7 GriCIIDEINY OF MUG POE ONE VIE= ONLY, Commencing January 3d. GRAND COMBINATION. • The World.lienowrmed Tifylesheatie. THE HANLON tROTKERS. .Tbe 111011-provoltbarg LIM* HANLON MIDGETS, The Wonderfis Little ,Bob, I=l NNW GREAT ART, • • Led other Attn.:the Novolll.. Th.l7 1911 M. acronspaaled by • ALF. BURNETT, The Malta*. Auerkm% Huatori.to Miss HELEN:. NAS4. The Versatne Oeameelrnne angi -•- SANE:B . 7% SHABPLEY; Proneanted the Greaten Ilvtose ConeertMlat s the •h ola 'arming • .mblustlon aacqualled la the Carts. and In the Interest./ and anareopti&a. able char. er at the performances. _ Dots. , bstandleg Megan. esmensa attanellf this Octal he prime of ashalmlet bare heah fixed at Ms rationing:slam Yareasata • and Dress Lamle, 73 centa• moored Poet- Si, Mandly Mete s 73 Dents Gallery 33 s;1 1• • Beats Mr any treein g may be steered an and , eßes 73day ...Me. beftmDcr 31, at IMP& - & Gros , iliP Wmi Meet. . defy - rIKABONIC HALL. FREE PUBLIC POPULAR LECTURE Thursday Evening, Jan. 6,1870 . Dee. 30th. 1389. PROP. Z. 8. 711A336-81e: We. Is elder. ' slasM. %setae men year hlghteallmoulalit aa a - Lewin,. was ()Wales, will esteems foes Mar , dellverlar a Lecture on the Anatomy and nye- , lelozy of the Itemsa Eye, sod on the thef sad Abuse ot apeetaeles, la Plttabargh. It will be of Minty to the community by Inetraet'ait et the datiyer of using Improper Spectacles. and the benett of wearing prober oats; at the eem • time Drosealgatlea laftwalattoa and Inetnalloa. on the aonstroetion of that delicate orsaa.the. Lye. JOHN DICKSOH.II. D.. 5173 run IL S. ►. 517.11.RT1T, N. D., Ocullot, Pena St. H. DONENZC, Elalop sr PlHtisnsl. L. K. BOTE&II, M. D., MIS Pans H. D. CORLKY. N. D., SIP Puma. B. 7. D•lte, M. D., 310 Peas at. J. 5. NANKIN, IL D., 191 Peas St. J. SYKES. Y. D, 191 Pena at. ' J. B. MeOLILLAND. Y. D., Pais pc G. M. BURNS. M. D.. 11111 n Ave. L. H. WILLARD, Y. D.. TA Mum* A. J. P. COOPER, IL D., TS DumasA, A.' WY. WILSON, N. D.. AB6 hota Ot. N. COTE, N. D.. ABS Pail Et. • J. C. BURGHER. IL D.. Ocollst., rase 'IL IL W. WALLACE. IL D., VI DIGHGad. £4 Mosul:mon. Dee.alst, 1 1 1 1 111L- , .h. OZ 11=11)1111.: I feel honored DI Yonlave/Can to Lecture. Ailey laity In Pittsburgh Is Itudted.' g can denser • lire* Lecture es Taarriclayinn. tug. jecusry 9th. at Masoalc Han. %be .111 be !Untested by means of Dlagrias,Notals, ustillegal ryes. te. I an t utualenes. loan obediently.. • . EDWAJID B. /SAAR% . Oculist load N. 11.—DoCors vlll be amid u Vli - ceeliati" LULU'', to tamable Si 11. , SEATS WILL BE RESERVED FOR LADIES. , : Children snider 14 yam of age will netts 1116 mated waren sonershasted by their grarieds ADMIEION BY nagrONLY. Wilett may ho °Noised away rata clown. Rom say of the Ante] aas traoie ass es mat, tutted to Utts circular, sad at Um oatter Of tiorP 4 Dotty Pool, CiAritas. Evening Mall had inns ') Jams MB.= • Co., Drogglata, carnal Fogs . • sod moth streets. ad hoot the Lecturer ►t bbi oleo at Um Nobloaorafoaoc. ' NI Collection, aed not any ipettatlei be bold in lire lecture Wm. 4•llTered with • wit* cl la- ,; This moil tn.:lmam D. ift." — A72l=l z/Arrzwgr- - ; - t arrAITACLIS (a MACK of whist ea has fir NOV to the eltisessiaf 1%40=0. At Ile tenatnalleAk of the Leetere, r itocep-o hreeke t.Dttlee we GRAND OPTICAL ESTERTAMIi!M:"' wlnelk cu•atata of • •ombef'of woos Antotitil 1111.1a1 are noreoptlcon rictus, asiDlosolt/Off." Vlowo. bostdos • 'alloy of ' Comic and Other Beautiful pahltan - 74, magallod many thousand tines their :alas lir Maw of an Immense large Achromatic UM. ; and re/.aloe on • Seml-Tiansparant Wenn* : Illasnlastad by two pswerfal Cateluso which will be Anon and explained at. 134014 of the Inhibition, Dn. YRANICO lit .PATENTIII . aski er .1.7 'SIMMS Improumuts fn She ocrissroos um of SPECTACLES AND:LENSES, la 1111101/4961t of 'Ma he has for Moth nth bosthsoStb• Romirsort zioFsai, tat. Diqueute Way aid Welk itno, BOO' No. For s eftiort Maze Onlir. -' ' Dr. /RANKS gl , e. tPidal ~tantlo~ to 111 DISEASES OF THE immix BIL 5; STolleo Howl from 9 o. 0. to 6 r. QPEEIDE ALLEY.— Notice . " hereby glum that at .110. 11. Dissater eu r i on a of Quarter Hanlon. court. a rale .. Kflatea to Wow fano why gala alloy, frost . Saavaiittana to lb. River, Stottld not be Vacated and Closed Hp, I.l'lo ..111 be =de abtaluta mauls crinclaus are lied la pTeper Ibiza. • • JOHN O. sucoisk. I=ZIMI . , 4110/1111ET WiLLOWL-4.tibi1a1..4._ LP is tni . c• ,* rm ! I WIZ ! A I al g r 41;xq, , -- 4 - - -4. latarrurr.-Tersicks t•-arotly t ,. _,,, ..1 - . far 0" kg' ' • maninagn a 00:W --,,,k,•'1.'-tif . . . • „ , . '.~X.