E/ littsbut aisttt. OFFICIAL PAPIII. Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny City sad Allegheny County. 0711 CR: - SMITE ICILIIIS 84, ulBB Pinit H. FRIDAY, FEB. le, IMO Farms= at Antwerp, 6014 U. B. BON= at frankfort, NI GoW closed la Ilex Teat yesterday at iii}. Tot gaol beidp over the Ohio, at Leedatne, la to be foriodly dedicated to the 'public to-day. Tun rchool4mateee or the Seventh wad, In Raw York. recommend that the ancient titan tenseeite be taught In their public . schools. • vacant.: hu been made in the Board of State Chuities, by the resignation of one of its members, Yr. F. B. PmIMAN, the atato of whose health has made hie rssignagoa 'necessary, from a position of such active duty. Tin KermaMe Library, at Phtlidel phis, Is bereafter to be open to the pub lic, on Bundays, from 2 o'clock to 8 r. Y. Its manners anticipate the best re. suits from this experiment, which in that way would be commended for imitation here and elsewhere. Tan appropriation bill contemplates a reducalon.rof over $lOO,OOO in the expen• sea of our Legislature. If the bill should become a law in that shape, it willfinalal a very comfortable proof that evict a Mallon majority does lot wholly dia• regard thertagent public demands. Luenimarr 13wmthrt has at lad en franchised her dissenters and Jews. If we are right In the presumption that the former class Includes all of her non- Lutheran Christians, thus removing the &mobilities of the Catholics, we must re gard this act of wins toleration as a long step in the advance of millulstened ChM- Mien. Tint "National End:divs Committee of the Union Lague of Anutrica" did • very wise thing, the other day, in re solving to "wipe out" the whole concern u It now exists, building up a new fraternity. It ',high time for something - of this sort, when the present organiza tion has nothing better to do than to rant about Cuban liberty, for buncombe and bonds. Thpy did IL noticeable thing, when they invited Governor Geary to retire from the Presidency, replacing hire with a sincere and respected Republican. Eke Governor Newell, of New Jersey. Tacna is no idea, in any well•inform• id gamier, at Washington or elsewhere, that the existing tariff of duties upon ha ports will be chin& la any particular at the present sessioa. — Tne prospect le so discouraging to the freatraders, u to have led to a public meeting of their leading men is New York yesterday, at which one mom effort was resolved upon "for the acceleration of the zuovernant for a reform of the ball" It is under . stood that a fresh campaign is to be open ed La the Washingten lobbies, and to be condurted on the Harrisburg plan. - This will not encored 1 PUBLIC IZETLIMINT is unquestionably averse to any sort of official intervention in the caw of an unfaithful ollicer,who o y • en y pithliFied for his Mason during the war. The cou.rt which convicted Pits John Porter was nand. stonily in favor of sentencing him to death, for his perxerse and fatal dlsobedi• enoe to the orders of his commander, Pope. This sentence wan not found, and the milder penalty of expulsion from the service which he bad dishonored, was substituted, for the sole reason that Pm!. dent lancor.s intimated his purpose sot to sanction the severer judgment. Not until that fact was known, was the court agreed upon icy milder verdict. There is a sublimity if assumes in his present applladion to be relieved from even that. I Ws oososartmarz Ileprewmtative Warm upon the wage, through the House, of his tin relating to the State Treasury: We fear that this will be the end or it If It should also get thew* the Senate in its present form, it will be by a miracle. No sensible outsider sup. poem that the two Rouses will be agreed upon asy measure so effective as this, in covering the present situation. That is not the arrangement, as the Coalition un derstands-it. A report Days : Te bill as pawed requires the State Treasurer to give Ewell& to the amount of 1150.,001, increases his salary to .8.000. aad,prorldea further that, until a proper treasury le provided by law, all public moneys not required for immediate use shall de put out at the beat rate of inter est which can be obtained, and no money to be deposited in any one banking imdf tntka to a greater amount than one fourth ite capital dock. It allows the Couuniudonem of the Sinking Fund, at certain periods, to pay reasonable pre miums on State bonds In proposal form, for the purpose ofliquidating, the debt. and binds the Treasurer up in such a mina& that there appears to be no possi ble chance for him to make anything above his salary, while In the faithful performance his duty. Semmes sass ham been iatroduced in either branch of Coigns" for the en. forcemeat of the XVth Article—one, in the Senate, by MU. Monson, and the orb. er la the Home, by Mr. Barame. These bills differ only In the greater precision with which the Idler defines them equal franchise of the colored Toter, sad the greater minuteness of detail In its prod"- ion* of remedies and remittal for say dental of that right, In any mode direct Of Indirect. It is "mistake to suppose that a manse of this character can old, 'be knelled against the readlonary obeli mai. of Kentucky and Maryland. It will be qv:o4 epplicable to thesnushon c as it isi.ln numberless cts, a rea of Republican States. w partisans might otherwise be foetid blind ongh in their Democratic prejudices to unlawfal obstacles in the way of our newly affmn abed ahem There're wards In Phil. adeiphia and many a township In other counties of our own Commonwealth. which, in October, will stand as much In need of a stern and resistless Federal control as st any poll la the three "hbr. der" States. o' 4 . . ii ti 1. Tan proposition to area tie latoraal • itIMMVICI Bureau into a separate =eat, siring its head a seat in the Cabi net, oantsteplatea an expends° and • wholly indefrodals superfluity. The • *, people isatedaht an aimed and not tiaras. *mans hope that this Bureau, and the - satire sebum of Internal taritdon, - %dors many years, 'hart booms no kilter tintelnary. Inlets or tnilveyears, lithe titan; we shall kin made the mead dollar of tandkut from thls IsPoPtilar source, the other rem; • nu being the. adequate to mast - • count aspensab, with the largely di• shahs& dos to publientsators. Thor neither Thum nor Dipuftwit, will be -.. required , It will at any time bs ea seq . . matter to abolish the first, but of the latter, with-its AmlarTed patronage and political power, we could never be free. The politicians of the day would find someway to keep it alive. No! Let it stand as a simple Bureau, and the boner we can be relieved from even that, in jna• tice to the financial necessities of the nation, the more we may count open the popular satisfaction. e S Schoeppe, once m re l Once, the Supreme Court, having en no an. thority to review the "widen in his cue, has dismissed his appeal for Its deficiency of merit in legal points. But now, by the special Act jest passed over; the Gover nor's veto, the Court is failiempowered to review the evidence as we as the law in cases of a capital natant. Ina result will be another writ of mot, with, per taco, s dedglea granting anew trial. The Memoslos In the lime, upon the Executive veto of the Act, was very dra matically brought to a close, as narrated In the following extract from a report. Observethe effective grouping of the three precast:at figures—Jerry Eaton, Bun Josephs and Y. B. Lowry 1 Bays the reporter : Mr. Josephs produced a letter from the wife of lorry Eaton to Senator Lowry, which wen read. It was an affecting eldstle, and urged Mr. Josephs and oth. ere to do all In their power to suable Dr. Schlepps to toe case to the Supreme Court. The writer stated that eke did this from sympathy with the accused, who might be an Inm:eta man, es she knew her husband to be. At the conclusion of the letter the members manifested much feeling and the bill was Immediately passed over the Governor's veto by a vote of 62 yeas to ZI rugs. I= Fourteen years ago them two great na tions entered Into a treaty or reciprocal free trade, ander which the commodities or each should be admitted into the other at almost nominal rasa of duty. The arrangement resembled the reciprocity treaty we had fora few years with Can ada. This treaty is about to expire by limitation, and in France a powerful party has arisen in opposition to its ro. newaL la the Corps Legislatif the debate basbeenlonsand ardent, and has led to a free discussion of the principle of pro. tection, and the deTelopment of national industry. IL Tams, speaking on the abstract principle involved,-remarked : Well, gentlemen, what nations are those which meek to develop Labor with In themselves? They are the Intelligent and the free nations. The nature of • free sad intelligent people Is such that when Say product—for example, a woven staff—ls brought among them from an other country, after using it for • time and proving it, they endeavor to imitate It—to produce It among themselves. What nations are they which never feel this desire? They are the barbarous and Indolent nations of the East. Did any one ever hear of Turkey er Persia creat ing manufactures to rival the products of France and England? No, never! Oa the contrary, it is the first Instinct of intelligent nations to endeavor to make for themselves that which comes to them from abroad, and hot to buy from strangers what the nature of their cll. matedoes not prevent them from making for themselves. BASTE OF LABOR The indepnclent of this week, in dis cuming a great navigable highway from the Missisippi river to fake Michigan through Fox river, remarks: "The cm. nomical interests of the American people demand that he corn of Illinois. and the wheat of Miniasota shall not pay as much to the railroads for carrying It as to the farmer for raising It." Carrying it where ? To Few York, of cones. Those people who live and breathe, make their money ana gather their ideas In that all-grasping city cannot conceive how bread should peas from the bands of the grower to the month of the eater except through their hands. To their minds that order of things is as flxel and irrevemible artnerrxw mgmvrtatich: ----- Bat that which the Independent says the American people demand is what they cannot get, simply because it re quires as large an amount of forte, esti ' mated in money, or labor, if tho term is preferred, to carry a bushel of corn from Illinois to New York, or a bushel of wheat from Minnesota, as it takes to raise We know that the railroads are car rying at a very small profit; and we know that the - farmers away out beyond Ohl =go, so far as they raise corn and wheat for that market, are doing so at no profit at all, but In many csausat a positive but what out be done about It ? Bring the consumer, who now lives more than four thousand miles away from the pro ducer of f•od, and set Ida down, and set him to work at whatever occupation he is skilled in, and save this enormous cost of carrying. It is labor lost; It enriches no body. •Uhl" rays somebody, "you are pushing your favorite protection hobby." True, we are; and until it Is adopted as the settled policy 'of the government way Interest will be out of joint, and none more so than that of agriculture. CBE rfineasYLvAsuk CENTRAL. The annul report of this great and prosperous cmporatton is published, and shows its affairs to be in a highly satisfy,. tory condition. As many of the details are only interesting to stockholders, and to sometalocalitme distant from this, we prefer to present the report to our readers in a condensed form. The result of the operations of the Pennsylvania Central for 1860 are as fol lows: Xilt.X• XOl. • 1 . 884801.84 , a . a 1,171 Emlam pa ge awsn....B z,s 111.1115 81 CS YWI 118 NI 111 lizarese matter5..........313,11311 II tiuteril 18 , 44glita . nocci us as illatellasema &maces— 481.401 41 j17,3i0.1111 13 EEM=2 Costbsctinig ttaimorta- Wass'. • 11112.751 S 7 VIM pontr ..... LIMP I* IS . .. OMMammon of eari:.... 1,4111 San Kalnternee of t 0041...:. SALMI 10 • toUMW expearro 211.03 II - -7---102.=1.117 110 Leostai not oantlnips to, UN 0f....$ 1,017,1141 13 The totalamoant of revenues compared with tut year le Ust Ust 17.1111:1 The changes In the sources of revenue are shown below : I=l Isere.. -- - - leash. fr 0141121 - I K 11.4. Estigral4o 14•111, M ill 110 Of ltaprso4 1422142.....•-- 10,172 ZI .133.0 it 21 Deana/s. rltliAll•ll•llaasntrels...s 11 CC SS lilacslimo. sources.— is en 11 =1 The MAWS''phis and Erie Railroad, which is under the same management, earned In 1869; 83,262492 20; the oper ating expenses, during the Name time, were $2,868,209 13, to which the report adds 8956,069 IS payable to the Phila delphia and Erie Railroad Company, welch made in the segregate 0,8%. 219 93, leaving a 100 to the Pennsylva nia Central on the, year's operations of 261,512 96. Rot • bad exhibit for the road, 'Mimi thiCentral did lcise a few thousands. Dining the yaw the number of tons carried on We Central road wu 4.992,035, slam& fire millions; the number of pas sengers, 4,229,863. Of tills rut mass of freight 2,829,338 tons were coal, both sat thracite and bltumlnous. Thls Item 6t-its bealsess le laeresslng rapidly. It In cu. stet at raterwhich yield • very small pont per toe, but on the lugs amount transported the net menu* from It la of soasiderable Importance. The report treats at length of the sego. tiallons which malted In the Was of the Fort Wayne road from Pittsburgh to Mato, and of—the loin by the Plttr +d t. ERE burgh, Cincinnati and Bt. Louis Compa ny, Ca which the Pennsylvania Central Company holds a majority of shares,) of the, lines owned by the Columbus, Chic'. go;ind Indiana Central Railway Com pany, and also of the Little Miami Rail road, through which the connection between the Pennsylvania Central and Cincinnati is rendered complete and un broken. Of the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad the report says : Alter a lengthened negotiation with the directors of that company, a lease wax agreed upon, and this compa ny entered Into possesidon of the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway on the Ist of July last. The terms of this lease, which gave to the shareholder* 12 per oent on their capi tal, were at the time considered very onerous, and only justified by the etc cumatances already referred to. The remits of its operation, however, for the first half Year, notwithstanding a dimin ished revenue of 1301,59.5.90, compared with that of the same months in 1868, have, through a vigorous retrenchment of expenses, left a net profit of SAM 48 over all outlays, including the semi anneal contribution of $52,050 to the sinking fund. For these favorable results the company is much indebted to the energlitteand economical administration of Its affairs by J. N. McCullough, Esq its General Manager. Of the contrcting roads still farther west, the lines to Chicago and Cincinnati being complete, the President, in his re-- port, remarks. - The connections of your line with Si Louis, the great city of the Mbodesippl valley, are now complete by way of Crestline, and nearly so upon the shorter and more direct route through Columbus, Indianapolis, Terre Haute and "Vendetta. With these arrangements, all of which will be perfected this year, we will limit our extensions, unless some overruling necessity should require us hereafter to go farther. We have no Interest In any line beyond the ralialnippi river. Unwilling as we have been to enter upon this policy, a careful review of the subject since its adoption leaves no doubt se tolls wisdom, under the circumstances that have been developed within the putt eighteen months. This brief synopsis of this Important re port embodies all that the majority of our readers care to know of the - gigantic operations of this company. Never, probably, were 'Halms of such magnitude conducted with so little noise and com motion. It ha been involved in no Wall street equahbles, and its stock is above the reach of bulls and bears. It is well for Pennsylvania, and equally so for the More western States, that this great com pany had the courage and the strength to go in and grapple successfully with the opulent gamblers who manage the great lines of New York, and who would, but for this strongest of all the railroad cor porations of the country, have clutched the whole of the States west of Pennsyl vania. By the matchless skill of J. EDGAR Tnoirreon and his:associates, the railway system of the county} is in as satisfactory a condition as could reasonably be hoped GENERAL NEWS Tax authorities of Utah discouraged the women from voting at the recent election, but some half a dozen of them voted. Both tickets were Toted for by women. Wires yoncome to look at it properly, there is nothing strange in the fact that no citizen of Chime° has ever been con verted to Mormonism. A man whci can't live with one wife six weeks at a time naturally stands aghast at the thought of living with fifteen or twenty.—Loginufs Couriet•latin4a. Ma nuns is tincerisdit In New Orleans. se elsewhere. A year ago there was a romantic story of the remarriage of a man and woman who bad been diverged • long time before and had each married, and become widowed in the intervals This couple are now before the court. again Baking for a divorce. Trnr. Doylestown Dtmserst, one of the best Democratic papers in Pennsylvania, gives up the fight against equal suffrage. It bas resisted this progress movement as stubbornly as any other Democratic Jour nal, but It now recognizes that its party 1 is bestial on this issue and proposes to accept the situation "aa gracefully u possible." Dn. CUOAT, Superintendent of the Maszachuseetta Lunatic Hospitalotays that the excess of insane woman over insane men le becoming more and more marked. He attributes it to the fact that more tuna. tic men &a. lien ans made insane b physical causes, while women sum=• ' to subtle moral influences, not threatening • to life, but intractable. A. Nzw Tons I arras says: "The most elegant dress ever seen - In America was worn at a late disreputable bail in the metropolis. Twelve hundred yards of delicate white illusion, forty yards of the costliest gold curd, thirty-eight yards of salmon-colored satin, fifteen yards of white satin, and eight yards of thread lace, were used in making this beautiful pattern dress. It was made by an Amer ican moitiste, alter designs by the wearer." F. T. Waztacz, charged at Cleveland with committing a series of heavy forge ries, pleading guilty, has been sentenced to the Penitentiary for ten years. Before passing sentence the Judge took occasion to moralize at length on the case. The prisoner was unmanned, and had nothing to say. Previous to Mr. Wallace's arrest he had been looked upon as one of the most respectable citizens of Cleveland. lle is In delicate health, and there is no likelihood of his surviving his sentence. A MAN in Londonderry, N. IL. had a very fine black Spanish rooster, which z. , ser manifesting singular symptoms, sod denly died. A. pea merlon ersthination was made of the bird and all parts sp. peered to be healthy. It was discovered that a string, several lushes long, had passed into the gizzard, but was not di rested. The operator, taking the cord, found 44 it Weeded to the crop and continued to the mouth. It bad become so twisted around the tongue as to pro ,• duce death by drawing the tongue into the throat. Ma iONATHAA /Kerins& is. of Nye, N. H. who died on the Ist Inst a nt, aged 77, was In some respects a remarkable man. During Ids lifetime he bad never been over laity miles from home, never rode In the an but once, never missed a a State or National election since ha be, came a voter, and never mimed winding the eight day family clock every Sunday morning for more than forty years. The Portsmouth noes Bays that he was con. eigned to the grave wearing the same pair of stockings that he wore when married, fifty-four years ago. Tag Courier Journal says that. the negroes of Kentucky have decreased from 236,168 in 1860 to 140,445 in 1869, and .that the adoption of,the Fifteenth Amend ment will not make the slightest change is the political status. It estimates the negro vote at 88.000, and says if they vote the radical ticket en masse it will ecarcely alter the result even In a single leglelative district. The principal black vote will be in Louisville city and Jeffer. ' son comity 5,800; Fayette, 4.000; Bour bon, 900; Christian; 1,700; Logan, 1.000; Idsdison. 1.000; Shelby, 1,500, and War. ren, 1,000. TAP Melange troupe has not been dis banded, nor is It to be—although mis fortune has befell them at almost every step on their western tour. Arrange. menta had been made for a dissolution at Pittsburgh the coming week, and Mn.s Bernard would have returned to her Ps. live city, if such an event should have occurred, wily reduced In means. Her prospects have brightened the past week, and success promises to take the place of adversity. She has accepted an offer of a very llberal character from theproprietor orone of the New Orleans 'theatres, and company will go there at a very early day. pr.im,eu 7~ .. u,tat~vr ~~ ==2=l IMMO Tan Ban Francisco etUrs arfif ean i. says "Through passengers say that the overland trip Is made with more comfort now, even by delicate invalids, than in the mummer dust of the plains. Pio trouble whatever has been experienced from snow, and railroad men say none will be ; even on the Union Pacific line, passengers In the sleeping care eleeperlth their windows partly open, and few use • esti& clothing. Passengers are not so much crowded for room an in the Sprinn and Stubmer. They all say- that the prevalent impressions about the danger of the trip at this Beeson in cold weather are hfultins l 7% Is it , tetras, es Is alleol, that the Dinomeey. hate captured the hero of Leokcmt Mnithttn,hasepOsseisioa of the PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE: FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRU ARY 18, 1870. keys of the Treasury by the election of the recalcitrant Irwin, and will through the disgraceful decisions of the Election committee, in a few days ha control of the senate, and with the aid of Lowry's Toto--vdready pledged— elect Wallace pf coffee pot notoriety. Speaker of the Sen ate, at the closet of the session; then the Republicans of the State can judge in advance of their ability to elect a major ity of the next Legislature, on whose ac tion will depend the control of the Com. monwealth for the next seven yearn. Tut Philadelphia Ledger says Legislative Committee appeared In Phila delphia on Saturday , to inquire into the charges of corrupt use of money to influ ence the action of the Legislature on the Metropolitan Police MIL If money was really used on either side the facts ought to be brought out and the parties expos• ed; but there is reason to believe that the majority of the committee are not very anxious to get the facts. They came to Philadelphia to examine witnesses here, the principal persons being the Mayor and the Chief of Police, yet they' went away without examining these gen• tlemen, on the pretence that they could do nothing because no subpoenas wereissned, although both these officers Informed the committee that they were ready to appear and testify without being subperhaed. Tim new Senators elected by the Geor gia Legislature are not up, In point of character and standing, to what was ho ped for from the regenerated Legislature of that State. It looks now as though there would be a great muddle in the mat ter. It is not, at all propable that the Rolm will declare Georgia entitled to representation, except 'upon conditions such as have been Imposed noon Vir ginia and Mississippi., The Judiciary Committee at the Senate. It is understood, will hold that a new declaration of the right of the State to representation is un necessary, sad that the credentials of Gem and Itiziasn are properly before It for consideration. Should they be overruled by the Senate, and the House proposition be concurred in, then the whole question of the validity of the old Legislature will _come up for decision In this case. There would seem to be no way out of the ques tion, except through the position of Gen eral Tama, that the act of Dec. V, taken In connection with the previous acts or reconstruction, placed the GOT. eminent of the State on a pforistonal ba ils, with Its action wholly . subject to re vision by Congress. • • EUROPEAN GOSSIP., Louts Rosen's will shortly return to Hungary. IN Roumania twenty per cent. of the population are Jews. A FACULTT 'Tor the 8140000 of Jude ism" is to be founded in Berlin. A "LYCEUM TOO LADIES" ha e been opened at Breslau, in the Russian province of Silesia. MULL EN has SOW over seven hundred thotutand inhabitants, and Vienna six hundred thousand. lONATIVIS TOR DOELLIPMER, the great leader of the Liberal Catholics of Europe, was recently elected honorary citizen of Munich. Tun Brussels Assizes recently sent to the House of Correction a nine-year-old boy who had attempted to assassinate his own mother. Tax Parisian Cocottes have again made their appearance at the Bois de Boulogne and at Longchamps, with their hair dyed green and purple. THEE say in Paris that recently large sums of money have been invested in United States bonds in the name of Emperor Napoleon the Third, the Em press Eugenie, and the Prince imper ial PAM. DE CAREAUDAC urges the Emper or Napoleon to make the Idarsellaise Hymn again the national air of France. He says that II that were done the revo- - lutionists would soon cease using its soul stirring strains for their purposes. TILE Prussian Government has military maps of every foot of its territory, so complete that every hill, ravine, brooklet, field and forest is delineated with perfect accuracy. It is a common boast of Prus sian military mee, that within eight days ,848,000 men can be concentrated to the defence or any single point within the kingdom. IT is -related by a French paper that Pope Pins the Ninth said the other day In regard to those who preach the infant , bility of the Pope separately from the church: "Bo It was not enough that St. John was decapitated; you want to de '..capitate St Peter?" Pius the Ninth' in tended to say by these words that he re gards as a d-upitation the infallibility dogma which separates the head of the choral from its members. Paorr.ssoa Von Gust; the celebra ted Berlin oculist, was recently Lilted to visit Vienna for the purport's of performing an operation on the eyes of a wealthy banker of that city. He remained dye days on the banks of the Danube and re °rived from the banker Live thousand florins, and from other patients who con- suited him during his sojourn In Vienna as much more. Chaffs is in very poor health, and it is feared he will be obliged to abandon his practice entirely. The famous Pastor Knead, of Berlin whose protest against the astronomical theories of Kepler and Newton, 'year or two ago, escited so much amusement, seems to have found imitators in the petty German principality of Lippe. Boma time ago there was Introduced in the pub lic schools of that place a reader, which, on page 160, contains an article headed as follows: "About spa&clini large ce lestial orb and the daily revolution of the stars, the sun and the moon around the 'earth." _ . Ter. Count d'En, who married Don Pedro's daughter, has been declared heir presumptive to:the Brazilian throne, the Emperor having no mile hone. The Count is se Orleans, beteg the eldest son of the Duke of Nemours, second son of the "Citizen King," and his mother was a Princsas of the SazeCoburgh family, and nearly related, therefore, to the royal houses of England, Portugal and Bel. glum. The Count, now in his 28th year, commanded the Brazilian army during last year's campaign egidnat Paraguay, de• fended-by President Lopez. Taxan is a genteel vagabond In Vienna who manages to get drunk every day on the best of liquor. He feigns to have epileptic fits and falls down . in the street; ' and when charitable passers by open his coat and bathe his head with water, ae suddenly opens his eyes and whispers to them, in a piteous voice, "Oh, that will not do me much good; but please pour glass of cognac down my throat,-and I will be all right again in the course of a few minutia." This is done, of course, by the unsuspecting victims ote sharper, who repeats the same mane f uve h r every day at dozen different places. Tax Radical papers of Paris still Imp up a fire on Pierre Bonaparte. Some of them compare the Prince's crime to that of the Duke de Poulin. "The peer of- France," says the Breed. "escaped the I scaffold by suicide. The Bonaparte must be at least attired in the galley slave's dress. To thegalleys, miserable wretch!' The Reform insists that Prince Murat, accused of having had M. Comte beaten by his servants, should be sent to join Pierre Bonaparte at the Conciergerie, and ! maintains that until that shall kayo been done "It la therightsnd duty of ail honest men to kilt him like a dog wherever theyd meet him." A BEAUTIFUL EAOLISITLADT, residing. at Toulon for the benefit of her health, received numerous and devoted letters from an admirer who signed himself "Abel," and who could not be traced. At length she became quite interested in him. Boon after a police inspector pre sented himself to the Lalr lady. - I , , Ma d . am," said he, "among the effects of • per son lately deceased, • letter has teen found bearing your address. It is sup posed that the deceased, who died sud denly, had not time to post it. "Here it is." It was a letter from Abel. _The la• dy recovrized it at once,. "And who was this Abel who wrote to me so doter said the fair English woman. "Madam," replied the functionary , "lie was a con vict at the dockyard!' A narrozsoue not broke out the other day among the convicts -at the Bagne of Toulon. - Troops had to be called out to quell the disturbance. Next day the ring readers bad to undergo the terrible pun ishment of the hulloed°, In the presence of all the inmates of the _Signe. The first convict to whom it was administered I bore twenty-five strokes with the utmost' fortitude, but then he began to writhe, and finally broke out in the most heart rending screams: He had fainted away long before he received his hundred strokes. The firmness of culprit No. 2 I gave watatter the tenth stroke. Na took thirty without wincing, and moaned but very little up to the sixtieth stroke. No.- 5, the most desperate of them all, fainted even before the cudgeling of No. 4 wan over. Eai l irtheif Me Fifteenth Aigesminien t. With a view to enforce the of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Co-e' stitution' of the United States, ,To.'ige Binghata bse prepared a bill to enforo the right of citizens of the United States to vote la the several States of the Union, who have hitherto bean denied that right on account of race, color, or previous condition'of servitude. It is intended especially to meet the case of such States as Delaware, Maryland and Kentucky, whirein it la feard the Fifteenth Amend- ment will be disregarded. The Ant section provides that from and alter the Penne of the act all colored citizens of the United States, resident in the several States of the United States, shall be entitled to vote at all elections in the State of their residence, subject only to tke lame conditions which now are or hereafter be required to qualify white ta t- Inns to vote therein. Section two enacts a penalty of Ave hundred dollars Ana and one month's im prisonment, against every assessor or other officer of-a State, who neglects to assess the person or property of any colored citizen of the United Stites prior to an election. . The third section prescribes a similar penalty, to be enforced spins% any of the members of any levy court who shall commit a similar offence. Section four provides that any clerk or other officer required by the law of State to register, record or transcribe arkv list of persons against whom taxes hasty been assessed, who chill wilfully refuse or neglect to register the name of any colored citizen who has been lawfully se amed to pay any tax, shall pay a fine of $5OO, and be imprisoned not leas than one month. _ The remaining sections provide penal ties to be enforced against other State, county and ward officer who refuse to receive the vote of a colored man. The Circuit Courts of the [Tilted States are given jurisdiction tn all cases arising under the act. TICE night preceding Traupmann's ex ecullon, Capoul, the tenor, occupied a cell In the prison end slept th ere. Other Parisian celebrities were also pres ent, among them V. Barden, A. Wolff and Maxims du Camp. Since this, a lady, in what is styled high life, has written to the inspector of Traupmann's cell to ask for notes, as she proposes to write hie memoirs; "would like details of his private life, his tastes, religious prin ciples and morals in general." "Sts," said a veteran digelple of Tam many, In *recent grog-shop discussion, "I would have you know that I have voted there twenty-seven years, and always the regular Democratic ticket!" "The hell you have!" was the contempt uotts reply:-"l've voted the same ticket twentykeven times isf eel station." Tke old fogy knocked under at once. VARICOSE OR SHOWY-al VEISII. Thousands of persons suffer year la and year out with a broken down condition of ;be reins of the legs, which in our times arm easily re lieved and frequently linscepUble of cure, and snQes oa. cooly because they do not know when and Lo whom to apply for filler. Irow, Mojave the needr..l isformatl on la Canes like this, teems to to a proper duly es part of the . newspaper P.M and It elves as great pleasure to he able Lo recommend all surf to I , r. IZTEIIIB. Of HIV WOOD ISTREIT, whose vast number of appli ances. ad his great skill la chronic diseases, Odra him to afford the craziest modal or Ilet that the present stoles( science on Alford Seel.. these TillidON COndiUollt to which so MM=l:: aadeas ad sulfaad,_ada asswalllap d abnormal growth., which the Doctor, with en applaseees, bare to alien. Then win the obi0;0W weaknesses .d si olio( feelleg peculiar to hassles. Is • were° of terrible suffering and . edict}; for these the Door Ass bells sad supporters oldeh are so soostzsetad as to lessee at lesst Iftemallf troll solrerlsg Visa tbey do est promise •astslat7 of cora Tim Doala'l eipesieaa rovirra • period of aver thirty yrus, besides. 11 Itatsral aptriaaa for this ileparta•aill of kir profession. stake. bhp thirtiethan old litarily %knits]. TIN serf= lay that I=l sleet of the proper owns. to comet the present ern*: °eight of Itself be • articles{ tease to rolls( not only we attegliel• or Perron. thees•' Ile. but tbst of &II lntelilery t rbttlelue. Amer. 11410. sad Xe4lcLoe Mom 161 12=11:12 ll= A TORPID SINTER ISeetellsosO. , slaesot soy aostgostds cause, the pbriiCai etersillk awl ...Mil spirit. ales way, sod ► sitar'', torpor falls Wt. oo the body sad listened. Then is little or no pslo. pot otsh bet lbo sidatal vigor sod elasticity of the nrr• yOull sod otsscolat system seen to bars departed, sod It. lodlfferesee to the Slum. of We, sod • wren of ita grave responelbl Mee. takes lbe place of tint enfant Interest Is both which chew. torten every well Ulnae. Wed whes in • healthy neditton. This mate of pante! colenew le oft. the tow monitor? Symptoms of soma *egoist mai., It Indlcates eamistekably that the .1101 powers are langulebles and need • .11..1.1. In seek nee. the effect of le few dome of If reetattern Stomach SI it on la woedertully benegelel. The great toule wale. ep :hearten from Ifs drown. The seers. lion. and the circulation receive • new Impetus. The relaxed serves recover their elasticity ceder the operattee• of the encl.. like the elect.ed strength of • musical inetrestent in the proem of teeing. Letbtrgy on debility are replaced by energy and vigor, the spirit. rise. and that almost seem.t borate while the nelson of arorassion listed, comeeoece more splash!r. That tech a red!ca cheese ehoeld be produced by a remedy entirely devoid, of the payment al katoldi and mineral. to extenstrety ..ssed In preen,. may sr cm leered:ltd e to thou, who pl. their faith on the medicine/ eMner of entire Pone., but it them ...pelts will Lehe to teatenntre of throe Who h.sTe LaStei the ertlftfet• and silently, •li two of the Bitten under ti.e clreumatanne dnecrihtd. •111 led tee Btateilitnt lobe tree. • NOTICES Iar'OFFTCE OF DIOIf ONGAHE t.AantnuL 0011PARY. — Ae el.elleo fur 1.1101.0,0 a (13) Yeeeeete or ~1 1 01 win be bold At th e Toil Howe. 710.00.. 11170, JAMES II W111(111 . 7, Treamn.r. Pltubersl. Web. 3. 11170. lard?' BLECTION FOR PRIM. IDlter. MAIIAGEBS. 8 to:am - nun . sod TlthArillittlft or the Illrertughsta sue beth Temple* tined Copp., win tut held et MoLtreENII HOTEL. le Blnitlegtuus. • the the VILUST NUMIJAY IN pl•Reit. MIL be. Intel the hours or Si stilto , dook C. H. Perissunan, 'l t 9 " t , . winTrieT"mtrirarli 711L4IXIIMITE1111W.061111t0T0111.1 , 1 , ANIILY. ."THE 11111EHBEIIS or THE WASMNITTUN INPA PeritY we henna mottled lo • mavlail of tan CoMpan I, to be held THIN BVININCI. In W. II ha Ara rgrtiggra;: u tlall. corner JIRb ...... and A fall attendance to reontalml. as Col. David Campbell Will bold as elecalon for Comm:Monad Ualeera.By ord. r, MIT:on JOHN C. APPLZBIL. Secretary. A.4l.l4lllLlfir VALLIT Samoa" CO., I PltUburgn, January 101,1910. IarBTOCKSOLDEIII4 • • ANSUAL ruse The Warder Anneal Melting of the liteekbold ere of the AlleghearTslley Railroad Compels) , oat to held at the OPTION or THE COM PANY, No. SO Pike street, Pltteheralt, 01 WEDNIBDAY. Telmer) 43d. 1870. It n o'clock A. K. tor the purpose of eleetleg aßoard or Manatees Ibr the gondol lea , . sod for the treasaettag of such other badness as may be preheated. .. . 'NOTICE.—To the Citizens or Tot CITY . 707 TlTTrllltlltUlt: Complaint. havlag been made to me concerning easonnd meat sot l from CoaatrY Wagons, end others. to private tamillca. MU la to slyes nolino to all porwme who have been. or may be. victim lead bY snob ontecupoloat dealers. that my odes vrtlibi at the *Moe of the hoperlatercleat of the Ifartoto. Ile. EllgorCo, w►are all mat cams Omaha be resorted that Judea may be ratted out to loch offenders.' THOKAS R. LINDBA74 . [a17.04 1 Yalt impeetor 10317a:111:10K-VyKil- TO THE 15th Penna. (Anderson) Cavalry JUST PUBLISHED: "Leaves from a Trooper's DWI," Narrating sm. experieneas of •member of the slrove 'rimed regiment In Fanasylvnals. Nan- Tannatase. and Chionilth • WITS Arc orroirsoz, ComprUlas as aultnnUa jtooant of tho Ima rnis ••YaUnf'! la Mo./Lamm 0.11117. Ad or the slain that led to It. 111 ese eletuli volume, coiseed 'cloth. with etfirtnal denlo on ths OaTa; reivE, ;Lou. • dint by 12.11, post-pgd, as reestvt of ode* .&ddress. I. ♦ B. wILIT&, B. ilia, ranadootia 1=1:3 A.DITIIRT MED/ANTS NM DRY GOODS WaLIAM SEMPLE'S, Nog . 180 And 182 Federal Street, ALLICUILIFNY Orrr. N.M DRESS SILKS. At ALP; Colortd Dress Mika, worth . A 1.76. Al .SI.AO Colored Dress Sitio, worth ALPS. At ALSO Wide Coll Do. do. $4.00. AMERICAN BLACK SILKS, I Mxtra Quality. American Corded Popilnk Black lad Colored Empreu Clothe, Black and Colored Alpaca Poplins. Spring Beldam in new alpha I SSIIIERES, JEANS & TWEEDS, Table Limns aid Linen Tor6ings. Back Towels aid Table Napkins. netting Sulks, Shirting Scalia and Irish Linens. Plain and Erab'd Skirt Fronts. WILLIAM SEMPLE'S. Nos. 180 and 182 I?ederal Street, ALLZOBIRT crrr ALT HORNE & CO'S Second Arrival of New Goods. NEW. BHAPEB HAT AND BONNET /WU& • rum FRENCH 'LOWERS. ' Extra Quality BONNET AND TRIMMI NO RIBBONS. I= IM =I 1:1=1=11 . , Breen aportnient of LINEN COLLARS AND CUTTS. LACE TRIMMED COLLARS, LACE TRIMMED LINEN SETTS. ILLUSION WAISTS. (JMENIZETTES AND LAPPETS. TUCKED SKIRTING, TUCKED MAINSOOK. • ' TUCKED CAMBRIC. ORLi AN DIE SWISS. AsoUtei Lot LADIES& 0 'isms REATT COTTON HOSIERY ►t the new prices. ►LiEANDIti MD GLOW= in Blank sad Colors. sad all else. IT A '79 Ard/RKET STREET. fee 10 BOXES BENTS PAPER COLLARS For 60 Cents, Good Stylo and Make Lidles and Children's Best Qual CASHMERE STOCKINGS, 41 Oise-Half Usisal Prices OPENED THIS MORNING NEW SILK BOWS AND SCARFS. Merchants and Dealers SUPPLIED AT EASTERN PRICES, AT NACRUM,GLYDE do Cos, 78 and 80 Market Street. kit PIT ItiBIIRGH IYIITE LEAD AND COLOR WORKS, J. SCHOONIANER it SON, P-11131.R1Z1P1D1131119, Dlssistscivrers of WRITE LII•D;'RED MUD. BLUR LEAD. ZINC% LITUdItIII4 PUTTY and W colors DRY AND IN WI. OTFIOB 4LTIID FACTORY 60, Si!, 411, 466 sad 465, Rebecca Street, =l= We call att 'taloa to Um imamate* Peeled 0 5 one MAW, PareMblta Lead. and laben are asp a ..porer carbonate of 1ca41, ,, we “ehend calif pare." that fa, free from Acetate and Hy drate. and thereto?. la 'dater and anpertor, bean In color and earning Property. OtTAIIANTELD to he ► come Carboa►ti or Lead and orbiter than ,sny In tho ma kat, and 'mu hams the mica Or thls package If contain. log I W lout adoltarallom • • JOHN 11, WOBILICAN ...H. ILICHLRO DAVIS WORKMAN & DAVIS, KVCOXSZIORB 10 Workman, Moore & Co., Bu i s Itsaafactoren an Daldentin CARRIAGES, lIGGECS, spring and Bui k Wagons, , Nei. 41, 44 1 46 ud 48 er 88., illeghady. a B*P itrAVVTAVo t a: tiTr. t if:l2llfie li : Ti ...mad to eve satbfac on to area portico. la. Mr rat i l l e a rg 'lll . lar a r g arjageli (nr.viurdorsatii elta " Qtl ' ek tja r n3 Anti Satins . tot Staat‘s, SICUARD DAVIS harts, purchased the lutereet of /Doz. sad W. D.moon, hi t h.l., u fue, ar ert,sKidaN, YOulilb • al., she busi ness will hareems be couttuued as the old sieud i under the mane sal ffityle eI WORKMAN DAVI& Olden solicite d. JOHl Q, WOIDUI AN, H. RICH AHD DAVIS, LeVe atisens• llstsolial Sank. Pittsburgh. =as° SPLENDID . AIIBORTINENT OF SILVER-PLATED WARE - rroevavviraraavitram*.wna. T it:Mtn - 13. -°1 11FI I T Si' 8 1 1 . 171) ". 3, PICKLE STAN. S, 118/0/Y BO N WLB. NIT KUP - tIVON HUI,DIC6B, snICYAB7OB7IIB, "P (INS . PORK% KNIVES. &a. - ream taR aad as betata panfuls'' elsawana. vernal, & samarziws. nrrif Lvs., Opporli• CiAzzris Orines. ftir *WAND LISTOIB7O. ?lONS to Noll Liquors. Fled ills Owlet rinsbursh. Andrew/40ot 6th rollick rms. tairt 6 .lll, 0 11411 r egamm4 ek "Tr:m a 1111 irk ""h Temealblph - trues' Plume. Wane, teen: .. aeeeigt BMA. • Tbe Lkasse Wore erai bear ma ellestleu ••• ea WZDNI2III.IX, the 23e Ille`e44‘ rostra asowsz.aors. AthaBARRELS CLEVELAND =Oat Mae. %Oil WWI* Lim. Ist W e i In' J. B. CANTIELIN POPULAR -PRICES WILLIAM SEMPLE'S, Noe, 180 and 182 Federal Street, . Marseilles Bed Quilts.' It $1.60 Honey Comb Quilts, • It $1.76 Heavy Bed Quilts. It $l.OO a pair Beal lid Glarea—a great bargain. AL $1.75 Ladies Embossed Felt Skirls- 41 extra bawl,. At $15.00, Infante Robes, lorin tno.oo. WAThTS, Bambara Edgings and Insertions. Loom Edgings and Inurtions. Lam Callan and Handkerchiefs. Ladles' Plain and Fancy Linea Collars and Cuffs. New Spring Rats and Bennet•. New Spring Ribbons and Flower' flew spring Shawls. Paisley Shawls, open centre. Paisley Shawls, filled centre. Black Thibet shawls, WILLIAM SEMPLE'S, Noe. 180 and 182 Federal Street, M== SS GOODS, MERINOS & PLAIDS Nainiooks; Jaconeth, Swisses. Fresh Goods BELL MOORHOUSE (111lieeessers to Hates Elk Bell.) I=l NEW STOCK lel4 BUYER FALLS CUTLERY COMPANY Are sow utowltuf their full MOrtiCent of BLE AND POCKET. CUTLER In their Retail Department, No. 70 WOOD STREET In consee lion with tb elr fall line or CIARVZIIB, BUTIMIRS, HERALD IGNIVIR. le.. An, they offer VNI HUNDRED AND EIGHTY' WI.RMTH:O or Table Ealyze and Forks. and over ONE lITINDRILD AND Witt! different parlament Pool et Naives. All goods warranted and wines to retell nu cleaners very low. ftl lEI2 LG & C OGIN, RUG _O., HARDWARE • 52 Wood Street, roar doors abovii It. Cluurles Hotel P/TTSBIIEBH, PA reemalles Norehasta are Invited to earl sae ewalue our stook when in Sheerly. . 6 %sr l g i fg . t i terso r. z Mites sr, A tali sleek of Maehtaltha Mask. smiths and Carpenter's Tools. Span. ewes Tiles, Leather Belinns, Urge Leather, always on lulus/. 0.11336 Murray a, Lanmau's Florida Water The most celebrated and most delightful of all iier fumes, for use on the haral kerchief, at the toilet, and in the bath, for sale by all :Druggists and Perfumers. Jastirwr ca fvfx PROINII STUN BREW Y, SPENCER, NeKLY & CO., Matesters and Wavers of 4k, PORTER AND BROWN STOU PITIISSI7IIAM. ?A. ROSIEST WATSON, Illastager neva L. B. FULTON • FULTON 8. • r nAcrricA.T..pi.varßiniugh , GAS AND Snail INTERS, - rush Avemea. Near Bilk atrell. PITTNISTINGH. PA. Lead Pip.. Goa Has, as. illturss. Stabs. Zs* TRW eel Wsab Muds. trot Plpe awl Matta's. AU and Beer Pampa, sad Mom Costa &way. os Bud. With BMX dna Susi sak Etat Om Water sad Beatias APParstu. Jobbtal Pr=tn, Mi.sasel to. KEYSTONE POTTERY. S. M.. KIER & 00., Yillltactuars of Queenesvare, Bride& Ware, .1* gallwarekom. Kassa. Tem= •sirqui orders plontooftended to. FlVAnwh In; g~,LY r uy 3 lLse,kerel—all 11ses Dtp '`" 2 , 6l7!lG l ia r ti a la IfTits L=i . PITTSBURGH. N ORDINANCE fixing the s - A :salaries of Road Comansionrs. hi Mon I. Rs it ordained and ranefoel Ds IS CUp of Pitt...mega an , in Select and Covorilerst Cons cite a...ernblect. d U ft lierviar ordained and of thereon, That ram lhe ant fy of Yvonne. lin% thecompena lion of the Road Coernlssinairs f the First, Second and Third u re a.+ shal doll a rs est at the sin of Elan Ilulithooi in a. - 1 4 ILC. A. Tint say ordinance or part of erill ..“..picung with the WWI. of tin ordi nate at the present time, be and the sane Is hereby repealed so fern the lame affects tau or dinance. Ordained and enacted lan a law this the alst day of Jaaniffe A. Ws 1870 . JA Ea MLET. President of bent Condi. Mint: ffe hinitaaar. Cleft of Select Connell. W. A. TOMLINSON, Preadult of Common Conn. Altut: hiCklAsTaa. Clerk of Common Council. tell NOTICE. Wine Natter of Opening' Lincoln Bleed. Notice Is hereby given that the aisminnent for damages made try the Viewers fort's ovenlas of Lincoln street has been died In my oflee for collectioa; that If sold esseirmente are not held within thirty days teem the date herbal. Lens will be Bled therefor against the inneerly sa lensed with interest, costs and fees. and the same collected by legal hloeeas. . J. F. 011.41(11.Z. City Attorney, No. 106111.0 110r1Snisou. J*o. SI% 1610. J•=:bb CITY' CoarrhOtilit i a Orrid PlTTalidinan, P.a.,gebruary 9tlt. 1010. • DEPOSITARIES OF CITY TUNI)B.—In parsnatee of an ordinance of c....0f the City of Mishit° h. eattlltd ••An Ordlaance to Provide for the gate-Keeping end Cuatody of the Sonde of the Chg.' , _maned the 7 th day of gebruatp. 1870. Sealed Proposals will be received by the undersigned from the Banks and esrings leatitutloor of the eft', set ting forth the rate of tuterest each Be. ka or. Baying. institutions will contract and Wee to pay to the city for the ate and advantage of the deposit of the city fund, or money ...siding to the tennis and co-diticas of said ordinance. .All bids to be needed la to fore 19 °Week on YON DAY. the 11810 day of gebruary, 1870. fell R. J. Neill/ ve ALL tiontroller. Oman or CITY ratoittass s Boavirroa, t Prrramtson, Fab. 1610. 1670. NOTICE TO CONTRACTOR/I. Sealed Propene. will be received at thin °ma • mall FRIDAY, Febroan 9504 1670. for the eunatruction of a BOARD WALK on Write Kirane and Sommers sueet, from the earner of kpatrick I Tees and Wylie Mantle. 0006 Wylie avenue to Summar Clint, thence norm aloes Sommer street to the old township road, 'Wank sato road to trances street. and .1005 France* street to Centre avenue. Operideatioar ;`?M=FZit)M!!P, rpo CONTRACTOBL—Propo- BA.LIi will be received at the °thee of the IS etre Works. wnere plane and nymetneatlons can be men. up tlll noun. alw co 31, 1100, fur the excavation and erection of a fit and found.- lion for Bootee and Pomp. at the Water Works on Bedford avenue. Bidders will state the peke of cot stone, sublet and common mason work by the perch. and excavations by the cubic yarn: si SO. for the erection of an engine house. feta JUSSPII FRE heli..nupezintentlente m M i Z 4 .ka gi 1 1 P C A AA a . 11 ; gi r. g z 1 4 W Pi t 4 al ca ....I.l . opiri = m Go 41 cta pitplp, i z... 04 '8 ra fl 11 ta 1: 1 1 0 4 0 i i gQ 0 PI al pZI 1 1 IA ago - , 1 g A z 12 o - 4 CARBOLIC SALVE. The imp^rtant discover, of the CABBOLIC ACID as a CLEANSING, PURIFYING, and HEALING Agent • s one of the moot remarkable result, of modern medical research. During the late civil war it ores extensively med in the Hospitals, and was found to be not only a thorough disin fectant, bat also the most won derful and speedy HEALING ftESIEUIV ever. known. It is now presented in a scientific combination with other soots' ins and healing agencies, in the form of a sa Emu; and. having been al ready used in numberless cases with most satisfactory and ben eficial results,welbaye no hesi tation in offering it to the pub lic as the most txstain, rapid. and effectual remedy for all Sores and ricers. no matter of how long standing for Burns Cuts. Wounds,_:and every ABRASION of SKIN or FLESH. and for Skin diseases generally. Bold by all Druggists. Prioe2s omit& JOHN F. HENRY, Sole Prop'r, No. 8 College Place, New York. • DE.. lIITHITTTER rIONTIII I / 1 113' . TO TIIEAT ALI l a ry ,tv d saatsma nt laphllla W i t Its forms, al W=noted; Ilperrnstoittla snood Rai WMII3IOIIII sal impotency, mullion rule milf-atme or other muses, and widen prances same of the following aka*, an blotch., bodII) wealinem indigestion. osusoothUon. mean= U anthem ansuddlarsa, dread of num event& lan of memory, bidolenee. nocturnal coalmine. am finally so promoting the .smut nolo= m render monism tineMstectery, and thereto:, th g I=4l ee P •Tity 7ii i ge7d " l4 cm - ti . := or long standlag centalsotlonal somolaUit Moult give tho Doctor • trio% he never fans. A particular attention given to all Female com Olants, Loam :bon or White*. 7.1110 E 12.00 motion or 'Ulceration of the Womb, 'awing, Proalls. Amenorrhoea. klenenthign, pleats. aorthoea, and bterllity or 13111143/lIM, an tnef al with the 'restart sus. It la eelf-ovidentthat 0 phydelaa who emilna himelf moluirlvoly to the =tidy of • torten elm of disesees and treats thousands of ewes .= Year Mast Wilda Voider WWI la that to a one in geosrol prectica. 4 t he Doctor publithcs • medical pamphlet , ' of afty psgesthat gives a tall exposition of entree and private discome.fthat can be had fine at Una or by mall Mr two stamps, in ended aseelotes = sunta= cantatas lannialca to the al and enabling them to detenattelhe Pr► ass name. of their amnia:Ms. _ The establishment. onearleng tea mithio nom, Is aratraL t'n It le not commical U Malt the My, the Doctor's oplakni can be oir• n ttlj i ng=v e l:ig • Ir . rl i t to=t i en d ,; . fah l e , r4t . tella soma inamees, hemmer; a perusal tio. ls &Moisten ineassry, le 'rt . - dolly personal attention is remind, sao ibr the accommodation of inch palling, there an 4=r i ti t is conneetedwith g o m=rt "Vcillog' =a lluded ram Mrs ° . "' All ."'" mon7Aptlons are areerod In aa. Motor's own laborston, ®dos ale IMO." aa' g r rutiTior K t:rr i etans P li. Ph rirsititsrl.Vral nal what he eine. Dome 9A.ll.thjVA: 1831 READ: READ BEAD: Aar . CORN/ Ileinoved In one minute, without Weddle/ or lensing eorenese: Sento./ and flawed Nalls Beinovad In a few mlnetem• All opoas per lonned without pain or blOodehed , Perfect condole Immediately! No *ohm:nous mediclueusedl No sore feat after operating* Rellarsed and BIM Join treated sinneufeily. Trost-Bite and. Chilblain , . cured Inn few dam ' seugeetwe, aloe. or money re , usideds Good City Bafereocee erre. Mice Boers from ■ A. K. tollilit..lo4 1 to T. N. Bandar.. 9tollA. 9. Semembel ins M.o. No. 49 Math street, old It. Clair. op Ware* M;UaZi==l THE ADENISTRAT .a J. xnEtiNsr 74C10. 59 1-AlitliC Every article hp reduce 80 day. Oak etoci pier cr `dd a''~B"l# : " ~e:L.Li~ ' ~ " x;;, 15 ' k~+sd~v ..' r'ar K : ' t~3k.+``"9~~ WRWM .4 LLEGHRNY. .A.N • It. ORDlNANCEusinessan &menet, l levying P or. Bd b, ft, e year 1810. e ettatatemgr the Mee et Water Rests, an d approvilattag the artsPe therefrom. rafT 0 • I, Be SI enacted do., Fliat Mere wit be mem. d, leiled emu reheated Rom the per• sOns, prolleashms. times and mammy to end Merit/ millilesheill, Made taxable, *Ales Metre n the annat• salaams* Mr the ••• of the Ws aforesaid Alas, elf milts «. the nicely esiteatlen,brekstesef inlionmemente f.r also. three mils so Ms dot. lar for Me Nippon °Ube hoer of the city* at.,, then is *damned and levied for the present tear atm. clots Milian the dollar for the me of mid city on Iles .meant of the anaell salmi of all lauds, buts sad matchanolm. mid mum all amides of trade and maimerre so'll It the OM. hether Sold hi linetion or otherwise* .1...4401. w that all venom when salts do not .Monte lit Oh, gull tai et. enc. 2. Aad ISIS hereby farther enacted that the ordinmee amendlon the iserenteratit mama , of chapter Beventeen Increasing the rates of aster mats (wrap am per