M= EN MI E taittsbut Gait*. OFFICIAL PAPER or Pittsburgh, Allegheny City and Allegheny County. 042ZETTE 13171.L..131N0. Car. Math inane tad dailtkfield street. /1111:1811A1r, APRIL 18. 18TO. Mil IM Bonne at Frankfort, 94. I'3 , mm:um at Antwerp, 51f. 00W closed in New York yeeterdsy atllB. FOtri Meal 1111/S, and Olrar flimflam hundred primate jobs authorised by law! This Is the record of our but winter's leitsbM . ion. II Tax Lake Shore raid the Fort Wayne Railroad Company is under argil• meat before a Committee of the Ohio Tan Renee' Committee of Way" and Means recommends non-dial:a:rem In the Senile amendment to the resolution extending the Income tax. ,Tag proposition to put the business of telegraphy into Government hands, con necting it with the postal system, is quietly poked at Wubington, ..It is a very nice sebeite to saddle the Govern• meat with depredated propertratsnecohn live TO MS * !MI not . - The theldna-hind thieves !deeer,ve credit for their audacity. Thej frankly dentate that they will try it against the next melon. They expect to !mid tile balance of power again, with meinbeXtt elected on the .trefonn and honeltr' dodge, aa last year. but they will, be die. appointed. An important lake connection for the Connellseille Railroad will be affords under the new Act authorizing the Erie Canal Company to coustnact a railway from Pittsburgh to Erie.. Negotiations are stated to be already on foot, for com mencing the work, and prosecuting It suceessf ally. The Erie Gass44l speaks *A confidence of the feasibillty of this consummation aZ in early day. It L. of very great Importance to the =Wan dal Interests .of Pittsburgh' that these anticipations shall be real. lard, so that we may be able to se._ cure, and at about this . .. name period, a choice of routes for our liflatness to the seaboard and to the Lakes, as well as competing railway connections with the central and writitent portions, of the Con. a nent ' Mr Tag open and ahafneleaaly avowed conniptions of thi lite "Befoul:o3,4;es. lag= have awakened an universal pop ulas lisAiinlittaiTha. tads ware nem concealed, aa ire within the cognipace of all who were at the Capitol.' The Untqxdown Slanetard nukes thin gave. mat: Whether, the bribes amounted: o • half or a" `whole tnillion, or to i few thousands or • few hundred thousands to individtud members, La not and never will . Tra, Theulosing sone in the LdN•tut*ben the Governot'a vet& of the bill win sent to the House, am de. witibed by leidinjecitlastia of lids town, lane .wam id Harrisbunrg at the tim e, wens sublime in their ludicrousness and valaillyi"'Ati an Minutes. one member who had agreed to swept Ilya hundred dollars for his vote, refused tomcats it by the hands of a certalepureon..and demanded that It be pat into the bands of another. Beene it was paid over to that friend the Governor had vetoed toe bill, when the member demanding the 1500, he was told It was too late, for the Governor had vetoed the bill. HARVEY J. VANKIRL Yesterday we erroneously registered the name of this gentleman, late • Represeitatlye from the Washington • and Beaver district, among the Rs - publican renegades who were elected on thepHonesty and Reform" .dodge, and then betrayed their Republican constitu ents, and made a scandalous record for the last Legislature. lir. Yanklrk was always true to his party obligatloss, upon every political issue during , the sesion. dad *swam Dr. Sherlock. It was* J. • &Illation. the third Atiembet•AW-lhat district, whose name should appear In the Utak list, of Walesa Representatives. Riireonst Is painfully in contrast with that of his two worthy suociates—as his constituents already know. I AIIERICAA INTILRESTIS At a Chicago feels-trade meeting, the histtioru mule, bold and square, against any protection, whstever, for industrial in taws to this country, which mutt cot be supported without It. We have com mented upon the Issue, as effectively one between the ill•redd labile of Europe and the well paid work of American opera tives. The National endorsement of the Chlengo theory . . Practiesikk, pond our own industry In many Import ant branches, and especially the . menu- . • facture of Iron. To this, the Chicago .2 7 ribuu replies that our protection of pig Iron was as great Under the 24 per. cent. Impost In the tariff of '67. as under the BO per cent. tariff of 1848, and .that our, 'workmen. were u well paid in 'BO, Under the tariff of three years bell:mg-414w- What of that? If It proves anything, it, ' would show that the six per cent. recta thin to '67 was rendered maids. elble by the condlthm of • trade which a higher rate of duty had strengthened and put fairly on Sege; that protective do ties will and do hare. the Met ao to 'establish' an Industry, which ;odd not be ropportad without, it, as Wenn In due time to Ito ability to compete with the for ego labor upon more equal term. %Ida II .peeMeely what the friends of the protect. lye principle always claimed. On the other hand, the beta Cited by Use-21416n1 do of show that the home Industry, which Was . enabled to, lin by 24 per cent duty upon the foreign pro duction could have ventured upon any competition without a support wbicia the Chicago doctrine of Wiley would deny lo b fa (Mo. • Because, at the various periods, the American loon-trade .has been more or lees adequately protected by a very slightly varying scale of du. Masi and has been thus slowly-tottered %Pi' strength aid stability, it . hy:tio means follows that the production would still ham augmented, or that it could Lm been maintained the mme, or that it would not have rapidly dwindled, with an entire abolition of duties such u the Tram, and Its class now call for. There wee i period when the cotton Exanufactarers of this country all needed protection in the same way. It given to them, and oonunued, now n ow the cotton•apiuneea of New England ar e snag - enough to are little for the sup part, which, in forma years, was vitally necasery to their enhance. Sera b a loafing, rerun of the beneficent. opera llob of the wreathe principle, Ingle so developing and firmly eitatalshbig a leading industry that, at /an, It is alai? rule its own domestic manna We nail do for iron what we hays done in agultaiplaning. We mean to put it on SL yep, to Rapport It until It can stand alone. We mean to do the same by every other pen Industrial inbred o' 1-- .. this people. We ' ma n t o command our own markets for our own labor. We Intend that,* far sta.posele, America* hands shall be employed on the American raw material, supplying American cue= tourers, keeping American gold at home, consuming the bread and meat of Ameri can fallWirf.l, and developing in all direc tions American wealth and independence. of the foreigner. When that shall have been accomplished. It will be time enough to talk of tariffs solely for revenue, or of the absolute free trade whsc.h has now a Specious but able advocate in our Chicago ootemporary. —The Tramps sneers at the apparent ly listless apathy of the operative class, the trades.unlons and laboressociatimis, iu this matter of a tariff for protection. It "has seen no resolutions from that qurter in favor of high tariffs." We big the 211inthe to deceive neither Half nor its readers. Our operative industry deer recognize -its own deep interest in this question. But, at present, it sees It. own battiu well fought by the employing. cuss, which has no stomach for the costly experiment of an entire change of policy-- no matter how well it might pay them, when It should at hat coma to be fairly emabllsbed,—and so labor is content with a situation which iqdces sot yet see to be imperilled. - Bet the Tribune must not, for all that, under rate the Intelligence of the operative, or teo largely discount his Indifferenoe to the ranits of every lathe between free- trade and home industry. Let- the Chi. c2go demand prevail, for the withdrawal of all Nailonal support from indastrles Which would fig without it, and the Tri. OWns school of political economists would Dear more popular thunder than would Mit their navies, and be hit by more lightning the any man' or set of men dyer yet survived. HE GIOVISINTELLIGENCE.. The events which transpired over elgit teen hundred years ago, observed with so much solemnity by some Churches, are of peculiar Interest to every true believer of ribs Lord Jesus CUM; though the manner of the observance of the occasion may not be equally the same. - Holy week is observed by the . Episcopalians and Catholics with special melees, and, we believe, the Morafliun, Reformed (Dutch and German) and Lutheran caurches, pay particular attention to the liaison, while the other leading Evangel ical churches make reference to the °cat. lion Easter Sabbath. Wednaday Tamale Zommenoed, and the next day following is Holy Thursday. Good •Fraley, the day on which Christ died on the Cross, Is regarded with solemn interest, in which the State Joins In paying tribute with the Church, in recognizing the event, by not transacting Lusineu in public institutions. Sunday will be a Joyous day, the festival fg Easter, when Chriscarose and Joined the heavenly throig. No doubt but the ministers of all the churches will refer to the event to-morrow in an appropriate manner, and worthy of the grand theme. I A "Society for Promoting Life Insnr ance among Cleigimen," bas been pro posed In the New York Legialatnre. The chief officels to be at New York, with a Capital of two hundred thituund dollar& Bishop Potter, Episcopal, E. E. Puncher, Idethodlet, Gem O. 0. Howard, Congre. ' gationai, William Adams, Presbyterian, and representatives from other denonn. Nations, are named u trustees. An elegant new structure, of ihe Rog znanesque order of architecture, costing Over one hundred thousand dollars, has jest been dedicated In Brooklyn, N. Y., by Bishop Simpson. The church has been named after the Bishop. Such hai been the power and Interest felt in the great revival at Joilet, Illinois, week before last, that - every 'saloon, Ist. Sant ball and other public places, were closed at six o'clock, on one ocaudon, so that all could attend church. The General Assembly of the Southern Presbyterian Church will meet In Louis villa, Ky., In May next. The opening sermon will be preached by Rev. Stuart Robinson, Moderator of the last Assem bly The Dmikards, nye the Cincinnati Conmseread, believe that baptism iiagood thing, and therels no danger of getting too muck of it. Hence they immerse three times, and that face foremost. They are also clostiommunionists. Rev. E. S. Wright, rector of Bt. James Episcopal church, Cincinnati, Ohio, Sun day afternoon week, Immersed two per sons in the Ninth street Baptist church. The use of the church and baptistry was granted for that" purpose. The Churchman, In reply to an article in the irvaso/ 1 4 (Preebytedan) thig the Episcopalian Sudsy Schools are the poorest ha existence, and that Episcops- Haas are waking up to the fact, which is prindpally owing to their having stood aloof from other "denominations," and not co operating with other associations, Milieus, etc thinks that the manner in which denominational Sunday Schools axe conducted is solacing of itself to throw the greatest doubts upon the entire sys tem. The character of the' literature it bas developed is questionable, and tend s is demoralize mid lower the - standard of Church distipline. The Grind Traverse Congregatioul Conference of Michigan hu taken salon against Masonry; and, In retail/glop, many of the masons have agreed not to g ive aid In support of Congrepticssal churches until the action Is rescinded. According to the / I ndependent, since the great revival in Cincinnati, the First, Third and Fifth Presbyterian churdtes In thaVeatY, have adopted %heave seat eryitun. Woman suffrage seems to be groWing In favor in the churches, at leis; if not politically. We see that the Second Con. vegatirnal church in Greenwich, Con- necticu; and the Fourth, of Hartford, I have decided not only to allow women to ' vote for church officers, but minors. j The closing exercises of the Western Thectingical Seidnary will take placeneat week, consisting of • sermon Sunday evening, the 17(11, before the t3odety of Inquiry of the Seminary, by Rev. F. A. Noble, in the First Presbyterian church, Allegheny; Tuesday evening, the Alumni will medal the First Presbyterian church, Pr this city, to take action In regard to the endowment of the academy, and on 1 1 Monday evening, the graduating class will receive Diplomas and Bibles, with an address from Dr. Hodge, a Valedic tory by 7. Roger Robyn, and a response by McNary Forsyth, le the Fan church, Pittsburgh. ' The exemlimUons of the classes commence Monday morning. The Presbyterian Banner of this week contains a lengthy , moue; of the "situation" of the Reformed Pros. _ _ _ ====ei a notke of the retilgiati9n of Rev. Joh* lfdtlg of the pastohOs . of 'tie Pint Wormed Presbyterian chinch, AUG giumy oily, clang with the remark that It Is now evident that this branch of the Church consists or three putts' : one degree to unite with the Presbytertan Church; another seeks nidon, with the WWI Prestirerban Chureb, ;Ind(third, cecuponed et Dr. Steele uull hyrechgre, II anxious to retain the old organization. Et•the bist - inolathly einu fi of the AliwiricOn., BM!. Bocieti. New Yorb, aril new Ai:Li:Diaries were recognized, nicely organizations in Southern State, 'tiny will regret to hear that Dr. J. B. Dickerson; the excellent and laborious Tutor tithe First Eimilit - Chnich of this city, tiontamplates •-kisving our city, to tam clutrgari a *Wm churchinßoston. HIS removal decided loss to the Baptista of this community. The Baptists of Pennsylvania have increased during the last eleven years from thirty-seven thousand five hundred filly-four thousand one hundred. Bishop Mcilvaine Is to administer con. firmation to a class that has been await. ing the ordinance since December, 1867, connected with Bt. Pierre church, Col. iambus, Ohio, because' of the ritualistic practices by-Rev. M. Tate, the rector. The Jews of Cincinnati 'reconsidering the question of having divine service in their Synagogue on Friday evening, thus observing the !Sabbath front eve to eve, according to ancient usage.. Easter Monday quite a number of delegates-leave New York la a special 4r for San Francisco. to attend the meet- Mg of the Episcopal Board of Missions at that city` in May. On the Tuesday after Easter Bishop Littlejohn expects to hOld Divine service in Balt Lake City. This meeting will be one of peculiar interest, and will be eftended by all the Missionary Bishops and the clergy on the shores of the Pacific. The services will he as follows: Sunday, liay 1, evening —opening service, with the Missionary sermon by the Rev. A: H. Vinton, D. D.. Rector of Emanuel Church, Boston, Maas. Monday, May S.—Meeting for Informal discussion. Subject, ' , Active Lay eo. operation In the Missionary work of the Chtirch, under the direction of • the Parochial Clergy, the' unceasing demand of the Christian profession." Evenbig: Missionary Meeting. Tuesday, May & Morning: Making for Inform' arm sion. Subject, "The mutual connection and relation of the work of Chrishin Education and of Christian Missions, especially among the Africans of the South." Wedneslay, May iliMoroisiz i Services as may be orderedby the Bishop of the Diocese. Evesing: Omicludlng, Missionary meeting and services. , The Ave Western Missionary Bishops—Clark. eon, Randall, Tuttle, Morris and Whits km=stris to attend this-Delegate meeting. First negro Jury In Michigan. Yesterday sou a day of extraordinary interest In the police court proceedings, the occasion beteg • trial for assault and James in which three white meKama James McGuire, .Thomu O'Br ien ' i, and Albert Black were defendants and a black man named - Ransom - Nash was complain ant. The latter's attorney was also a I colored man named John C. McLeod, and the Jurors, John D. Thcbards, Alex ! ander Moore, 8. C. Watson, George De- Baptiste, James H. Bias and Richard Gordon, were all well known colored residents of Detroit.' The court home was crowded, and bun drets of people, many of whom had never before visited the police court, and were consenuently not postal as to the best means of mowing an inside position, stationed themselm on the sidewalks and eagerly questioned every person whose ear they could reach ooncerning the points' in in the case and how it was go. leg. The jurors; although evidently •p. predating the delicacy Of their position, ! and the fact that they were for the nonce the "mark of every open eye," took the ' I seats assigned them very composedly, and went to hardness with the air of man customed to that sort of duty. After nearly an hour vent In asking questions by th e oomplainant's counsel, and in objections by the legal reprceenta. tins of the other side, Ruh inlay sue- needed in telling his story, which turned I out substantially against idmielf, and In favor of the accused. Several other wit- flames were sworn on.both sides, and Mc- Leod proceeded with • long and rambling harangtlis, in the midis of - which he was cut off by one of the Arms, who very sensibly informed the coat that they were theme as an Intelligent jury, to try • case, and that they were not dispased to listen to sentimental platitudes concerning their race, color or condition, whereupon the court called upon an officer, adminntared the usual oath, and directed him to escort the jury to their room. They announced, however, that they had already determin ed upon a verdict, and that they could render it without retiring for deliberation. Mr. John Q. Richards, as foreman, then, in answer to the usual interrogation, pro. nounced the verdict "not guilty." As the words were uttered, the crowd„ 'with one accord gave • tremendous cheer, which no attempt was made to prevent, because of the unusual and Interesting character of the case Jost decided. The prisoners were then formally discharged, and Judgment rendered against the de. fendant ror $lO costa Before the trial commenced, beta were freely oScred, but none were When, that, no matter what %heftier° of the evidence, the jury would find a verdict of guilty; but those - who knew the men comprising the jury expressed the conviction that they would determine the case without "preju• dice, and in accordance with t evidence whatever it might be.-Ilidroit Free Pres& Twin Malice of Barbarism - - - The'Republican party. at its gat National Convention, In 18t1, at Phila. delphis, declared the true doctrine on polygamy, as follows: 'Resolved, That the constitution con. fen upon Congress sovereign power over the Territories of the United- States, for ' their government, and that, in the ezer. due of this power, It is both the right , and the duty of &ogress to prohibit to the Territories those twin relics of bar. barium —polygamy and slavery." Blaveryorhtch had Mu times the strength of polygamy has thousand been ob. . litorated in the Territories and In the Stelae. The overwhelming Influence of this. emanapation has gone forth upon the world, and has moved forward by long strides the ante ot reform every. ' where,. In Russia, England, France, Spain, Cuba and Brezd. Through our coact not only will chattel slavery soon cease to exist in the world, but millions will gain the ballot who lave never be. held our flag. We are new coming Into moral conflict with* vast eeml-barbaroim polygamous cider of society in China! and Japan. They must have no advance guard In the centre of .onr host, in the form of • endemic barbarism in Utah. When tie attempt to assimilate. and con vert their polygamous hosts - lo monol gutty, a; they Ind un our * shores, and at least compel them In practice to respect our deification. whatever may be their theories, we cannot afford to leave. a whole Mate open for their occupation as polygamists. - • We rejoice, therefore, that the Oullom bill, as passed by the House, has been re. ported with strengthening amendments to the Senate. We have done everything about polygamy except to punish and destroy It It has lluived and grown, like slavery, under .mere mob violence and ;popular Indignation. Now let It feel, like slavery, the crushing hand of the government. let Its pitlleas despots bend under the lash of power they have so remorsely inflicted on their dopes and victims. We would not have them hon. mably martyred by being 'shot or hung. But let them be made to feel that Se country and the world look on their lying, their blaspheiny,' sod their tasting lose with unmixed contempt and abhor , rence.—Oikago Traunk Te lawyers engaged in. defending McFarland have privately stated that they will notlet Kra McFardlatid-Rlchardeon testily beforethat th ur e C o and the probs. es are Judge and will ill Min them. The prom:Mims call a her among their eartlw witnesses, and . It Is among thatshe will testif y-t o Mr. McF's brutality, beginning within one )ear of their Insarlare, sad - lasting op to the time or the separation. Shewillex onerate Richardson from • all complitiltY with the separation, and says she did not leare her husband one agnate earlier 'Man If she had never met Richardson.. • • Tan action of the Holm thecentaated election cue from the third Louldaaa disnirtOtecides the Poore Principle In 111 the other warfront that &ate, Inceud y . that *here an eleCtion = by dad fra u d and WM:cadet:lon, it Is not vaILL . Than are four other cues front that fitats, tor to most resPecta to the one tiler4drod, and the indications szethat all the. &pub• lican contestants will bit -admitt•L was clearly shown that the Democrats carried the State by fraud and fathead& doe, creating a redgn of terror, which kept the Republicans away from the polls. , PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE: SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 16, 1870 111•1111.11111111161 B racw ESS OF WOIEL One of Liss oddest things. In this stranee .contradictlotuillle of ours is the dleagree meat continually occurring between ma terial tact and moral runty. ',Things are not what they seem" in very truth; and we should seldom be far out if we took appearances, as the witches of old used to say their prayers, backward. And foremost among these "contradictions are certain circumstances touching the writ tea and actual conditiot of womrn In England. By law awife Is nowhere. Ranked with Infintelind idiots, she is the property of her husband; her rights are vested In ; im, her vary Indivldualim is merged in his; of herself, and disallow ed by him, she can do nothing either to defend or maintaii herself; all of which la bad enough when the marriage is a wife hulle home the falls asunder and thee ho leeru brunt of two ' evils it once—fetters on the one hand and want of protection on the other. And yet what is the moral', reality in• ace t im es oust t o iv e ly legal o f m a acnt r That nlne6 is the mistress and the man walks in leading strings; that the law assigns her as property Intl Society her possession • and that gar d e g more exclusive. more jealous, • more arbitrary, and narrower than be, •is able to im pose her own will and coder on him, and to make him accept her will nacandition ally. The man must be very hard or very sharp whom a woman cannot-sail around as she chases, and manipulate .to any form she taken a fancy for. She has but to adapt her battery to the character of the cltadel—surface submission for the blustering, coaxing for the soft-hearted, flattery tor Mende, deception for tho ob ttse•—and she gains the day on her own terms. 'Enforttmately for herself, she generally-galas it by something lees than the rigid truth; for though Merlin and Vivienne represent an extreme case, still the type is true, if exaggerated, nature, *blob denied woman strength; • having made up for it by a double share of sub tlety. It all comes to the same thing in the 'end; and the end it mastery. The sum- Issues &mum of life, the thing for which all nations, all religions, all men have striven since the world began, that desire for supremacy and master ship which Is to Inman history what iron is to the blood and lime to the bones, is by no means a specially masculine characteristic, still less a specially masculine possession; albeit compassed by different methods anu exercised in di ff erent ways, It is as much the central desire of women as of men, and the sumnium &mum too, when they can attain it. And they do attain it, -in spite of Blackstone and the laws touch ing and regarding the rights and condi tion or tam and fens In nothing do women show their mas tery over men morethan in the extent to which they carry Webexclusiveness. No women in the world, not told off Into castes, are so exclusive as the English, none, so Jealous of sharing their good things. It is not in one thing, but in everything alike—dress, station, domes tie happiness, the companionship of men; they would, if they: could, keep all they call distinctively their own, 'rigidly to I themselves; they would suffer no long ing eyes to look over their palings, still I tees allow another to share In their fruits and flowers. Ai a - rule, It is not the man's fault that the Eullsh home Ls go dull ere it generally la It is the wife whO pre sena all eas intercourse, all ample friendliness be tween her husband and other men, and yet mon between her husband and other women. It Is she who I bars the house door, and 'forbids it to be opened save with inch pomp and cure- I mony as makes the opening a weariness to all concerned. The very women, who, as a spinster living with her sisters, is gild to have a facile unceremonious society about her, as a wife acts her face decld edly against that kind of Neill- Mity which lets a person feel at home in her house ; and above all things she fears and dislikes a female friend who admires her husband, though in the most innocent way, and who says so. The profound moral skepticism which has penetrated society, from end to end has eaten away feminine trust with the rest ; and even pare and virtuous wo men. Inosuble for their own pans or !anything like immorality, are not ;ashamed to suspect their sisters of int m:Ter feelings and naughty pnctices, land to think themselves safe In their :married homes just In proportion as they are isolated. Especially are happy wives suspicious of those who have - made ship wreck of their own venture. Unmarried women and contented wives may be, if • rarely, admitted 'into the heart of the charmed circle—if the husband is con spicuously indifferent to them; but an unhappy wife Is held tro he a hind or pirate in ' II J/raise, a rival, who will steal away the husband's affetione if She dm, and on whom it is more than probable she will bestow them unmukcd. Very few women have generosity enough to be friend one of their own sex when in mat rimonial difficulties, if their Inendalup is to include their hushand'a. . Of all things most abhorrent to women we may count quality. under any . name and aspect. Only a man and a masterful man, could have written as Coleridge did about the "two beloved women" in his "Day Dream," with Asra's eyelashes playing on his cheek and Mary's hand upon his brow. Mary's lsprlus pillow ol the two love* aid her bead leaning on the tree where the, two names were carved: This sharing of a man's sae. dons, though in.widelrdifferent prone:- dons and In quite distinct spheres, is thing no woman could be found to praise, if even she forced herself to endure It. It Is not generally teen. ;however, that women - are u rigid In their excitant:l or male friends from their own beast', most women having set op a tame cat of their own some -time or other in their lives, though not liking -tame mice for their husbands. The •fact Is, wife In Eng land claims to be her husband's all. tsbe Is not content to possess the whole of such love NI rig htfully , belongs to a wife, but she must also possess the whole of his sympathy, his interest, his admiration. line must be the only.woman in the world to him; and the rest of her sex must be -.man nor woman.—klarsirday Duriugair War. The obscure hamlets, ' the old WWl= sad court houses, Um towns, riven, cross roads and muted" of Virginia becam e names that thrilled the heuts of millions with triumph or agony, and are now isit4 scribed on countless gravestones through out New England and the. West, u the mine of their ebildnen's martyrdom. The lonely swamps sheltered hordes of fugl• lives, the tudiptites rang with the . tread of winks, the woods shadowed the sharp shooter, the earth win honeycombed with nflepits and billowy with ramparts; lag::Of threes 'transformed into ;deism; old family mansion, be anie military headquarters; signal/made the dumb air wilt:elate; tobacco ware houses were converted into foal prisons; the ground shook, beneath „heavy artillery, and the winds were laid by the echoes of cannon ; rival banners glowed In the dawn, and the stare looked down on myriads or fresh graves; the grove, familiar only withthe sportsman's solitary step, was a hospital where handrede of pallid aufferen were ministered to; the mournful cadence Of a negro hymn, the quickly-uttered. pus' , word of the sentinel, the whistle et ve ' bullet, the shrill bugle call or the drum- I mer's rappel, were the accustomed sounds which broke on the soldier's reverie; where once blithely rose mud sang the English lark, carrion innards darkened the air; bivouac and battle alternated; Wares of public documents warmed the veteran, and the smoke of the consolatory pine rose from the trenches. The some of tiornwallisi stuvender, which glori ously closed the dramsofthat Revolution that made the colonists free, became the fortified arena where, for weary weekr, native citizens of an Independent Repub. lie confronted each ether with the wail. nets and implements of organized war fare. The campaign and the skirmish usurped the place of sport and hospitality. . nairMan. Ptitnigni'S Aka- SPURIOUS TZA in, urge; quantities Is compounded In China by parsons skilled In the manufacture of imitations. The ingredients of this fraudulent compost. don are stated to be of the most dls Leg description. A tea sold as • "scented caper," "gunpowder" and "sittings," is I merle up of the excrement elf silkworms, dust, dirt, extract of 'guns; with a irery minute pirportlon of the genuine/styes This "China mixture" Is saltt 'wholes,* I at twelve cents a pound, the same amount of deity. :It iaeslert that woolen wane than the one men ".ned. beltur rated by the brokers at lye cent' a pound. Recently a large comfits'. meat of time mistimes was wee rejected Elteetia, and it is belltred that the cargo was TOCIPPOd to the ucluaStates. THE vEro-rusuc °Pun"' There mai net deo to gather tip a two. third vtesto panes hill over the. Gov erner's lied; and that Intoottyhae r been delude& Chwenalearplieraid. For tide noble , aet of aelfaaaddateg publtecondttet will Governor Gear,' re ceive public anprobattou. Unio*oson Standard. The veto Lan able doonment.—Gentua of Liberty. • The Governor het abutted himself ma solid footing, end the people rejoide ID the defeat of perhaps the greatest place ,ofrs oesilly-porpetrated by the Leittals torejost adjourned.— Bedford Inquirer. Governor try veto elves universal lettitreetiOn to all the poo who are not dhe ecidedly Itereatedln t rim plundering StateTreunity. The Ple through. ut the State most be cereal who they lent to the neif o Legtalatore, otherwise they will attain b the Treasury of those bonde.—.2ifirsers Journal. The 'veto fa very 'generally sustainedby the pressor both political Parties, and by the people of the State.—JUniata &a- Tax Select Committee on the Postal Telegraph authorized the chairman to report his bill iiie•stablish 'postal telegraph Pnes in the United States. The bill aq , thorizes the Postmaster General to pur chase ill Uut telegraph lines now In ope ritm in the United States, after they shall have bear appraised by a commis sion specially appointed for that purpose. The lines, when mirditused, are to be under the control of the Post Office De fortlnent: and to be operated by pergolas atipolnted by the Postmaster GeneraL The Government is to have precedence in the trammislion of messages, and all messages ' are to be sent in the order in which they come. The bill has many friends in both houses of Congress, but not enough, it is thought, to secure Its pinage during this nation. Paarzays Lave come in from Balt Lake amdnst the passage by the Senate of the bill to abollah polygamy. It is be. lieved they will have no;eirech The House Cullom bill bas already been re• ported to the Senate, with , iromaterial amendments, and such as will be accepted by the House Committee. • NUR SQUIRE GENUINE?, ENGLISH .• • riteenßATioNs. arrzavzsorwr .0-FAhrILATED RICA= PoTABRAt . UWE% IMPORTED /OA :8, la 3 pound nod Doted ban; LOW Vt. LUBIN'S and RIMMELI.I3 (WARR &TED PER/17/4X4 or eve. deeerlpt.a. Al., 11. Me&terratte. Same.. WI Ma.. We by the Mein, alas te pound or olagle spoage, at Mat eap lave. prlc.. at JAJILIZEM E 1 3311T/11‘111 Or. GNO..el - - Doti° nTORIS, Amur PIUS uaa SW BOW*. OM at. Ctofr.) Ennetebor. the place tirtitro you wish to purely may of the abeam aisle.. at • aaal la. IRETETION IR THE AIR experimental chemists have repeatedly mu' Irmo the air at e Blatantly names, In the brae of dftecUtui the invisible TV.. widch produces f pl desal a disease. They have not pet dlsoovered it. and acareZta any two.( them agree al 'Otte nu li ., tare. This a of Ilttle ntealtace , it it tail cleat to ham that title polanon. principle ti r late, and the a ssfecaterd sealant Its Intidkots lolosnee has ett provided. la the aprlag and early entetairc what (tier sad acne. ralitteat f ver, and other period.e.l Musses of that this art prevalent. It is only aermary to fanlfy tee entem trite a came of Hostetter'. Stomach Zit. ter. toga...a $ Vane. U this penaation On beat aectected, which it never °nett to be la arty Me l:net liable to seat Visitation.. and If the pane- yonsof asalarkoas fever Lam actually annannterd they sty always be chocked and brokra op by • aerator that nowantleegaratnetsnlaud ande -1 ulna gala. wan oa ea ambient!!! the *ale :t ' y di admitted et i. ing:Tai :fTe t i: i :/ Nl w orl ' l:7 deuteron. aodiana, awl that Its standar; et. net* are Were to We de.adell than Say lora of latenollt”t fever. It Ls snooty • tremeedtree tortslageat. In gees not touch SAe disarmed liver. or or escalate the bawd., or la say way We the of the ana ld.. r tatters Retail, oncondition the ether snd l& , la ai additi on, additi on,t/10e, to betas • better Red Safer limn than inept...lb Wanton of ealalne. Ita. • baleatale elect awe the whole "tram, nit sport d entObllloas a well a• directly Owl/orating. and parte.. the intirettOsul ea Well sr rerelaies ate increLly• orgus. It stimulates the appetite. Exatitthal. the wouteh , seethe. thenet Tea ptomain bealleful penetration aid Inatome q Wet elo.p. Ara votaseldc Ups. tie rival. eneeet lantern Una theta. rrrrr tab seems capable of &nevi &WlZ axe cured la a few wet ka byls. reenter ea. NEW ILDVEB77B H. FABER & VAN DOREN 367 Liberty Street, IPITTSBUSGI a. ra. STEAM ENGINES, Iron and Wood Working lii ALEJEI irsm - Fe - y. STEAM PUMPS. &Owen' and Machinists Tools. ERN FMB MM. BELITNO. Woolen laehluery,Nseldne Cards, wmantretearin• and Zlll saga A emission& supply ■n band sad /se. malehed *ban motto% . ORDERS SOLICITED. rXiilllrtisalli 0 oi :1 Is hereby, item that tb...4"teeor of the led Colleetlea Dutrler or Debasylnala lap attend et Me Mace, TO. ea FOURTH AYLICUL. IC the City of Plttebaral. to TUMIDLY, •prtl Itth, 10 10. betereea the boom of ler AL' 0. wad a Y. a., to rattles and depilate,/ appti4 relative to abr sem:eau se Or ezeteelre eh/t:clic 41 , 4111.- mint'' or stoaterellout by the LitelbororM.DY eat Aspen:. betztraett La Me Annual Lid Dry the year 1010. Butazta, IMMUITT: eptlllrler Learner DIM District, Pa 1:1. MAL La 3EL 85 Acrespf . ._•, Ygliable Coal and Fuming' Laid& 'poi torn or con?. Eta, blkh Perroto towrohlp. Ashcan sod . muto north of Ela Ciao Elsa too. IL " Wi trg•acitro roc Gash. Tor farther la• Blg Elm • thienli must,. Offe.: E'ELEID '3ILATTICTJEt eft Ike opeoissir or WOLTIRS' RESTAURANT, IL 4 Stith Aventte, AZ2NDAY, April 18th. Corner . Penn and Sixth- Streets, Wilier!, !it. tnalr.. rITTABoROII, PA. con: The moat Wu - Minium Oolleifi la th e United Utiles. " ': OPEN . ALYAND.ZYZNING. r. !ek ate eau ail:stem al say tame. , fietirelanTlP "I,',l"mu tun P r i " 1 " 1 ?' I rh"4 " WITH •CO bltP, • - sustititi.l7. : . • 14th:burgh. W. A- A — IR • IC • We ban Jon flannel non thalanar 4fettitibnitietoTa Vrnlittlo'regor!. 445 E , TUT...tonna anon. Osee boni,-FIFX-Mtna klg u tira Tr d :4 4 orbr , Llors an • b•rgaln, for we _in th =IL% 15127 2 . fitllFArr l _U oada °gran Litany and Din iti Stroh. ID B ODUCE. huh Bona. Muir Has Potdtooo, t= ink 11 VonMaw do., *14 .4 «W""lium"_"rZ 11:1411=4"4"B..4142 , AP 4 • I"itedraniq4. DISSJLIPIII62I,-Noticelahere- BY ere. thst, hetet told *II or my In terest to Owens of PAGE, ZELLERS • purr, Glut Itenareeser, not Plttebereth 1 Gat. otazed to be •Deana of eattl SARUM I 0 April IE, lITU. pli la=! p EBIDFA— FREDERICK 11.1190 E1Z01DT.9. Mornbant Taller and Dsa'ar M Einaliencon'a Tancladna Good': also Nontlo• men and. UM' dialling on hand and made to *Oar at MI Morton ammo. to. removed from Ultimo stand, No. 9 tonna moue. to No. al w9O9STRT. corner of,Talrd manna: ' enIMMe7O.I ENDERSON .11.4. BROTHERS Llber i ti * arc al .% Deakr , Litt Sa4 R ass UM Le NEW A.DuaTisinim— irCORD &CO. Wholesale Dealers in HATS, CAPS AND STRAW GOOD 131 Wood Street, _ PITTS/3171168 We Dave in our SPRING goods nought for Cash, and at GREAT RE- DUCTION INURED:3, ILEIVIEWiTS are cordially invited to examine cur Stock which is very large, embracing all the Late Styles in FUR BATS, WOOL wen, LADISW BATE, WISLKEIS VATS. SUN SWIDBIII. ETC OAPS in every variety, ands gen. eral stook of all kinds of STRAW GOODS for Men, Bop and Children. We are daily receiving FRESH GOODS from the Manufacturers, which the great decline in gold makes our goods as cheap as before the war. McCORD 40 ON .A. 1 20 WITH GOLD. OUR NEW STOCK OF DRY GOODS NOTIONS Feyrrs Should Call and See Choice and Attractive Goods EASTERN PRICES nBUTANOT, SHANNON & CO., No, 115 Wood Street. THE BEST BARGAINS OFFERED Max 1131eiusc21. AT SICOMITS. Ladisr Ires 7 British Colin Itteckins. AT 98. CENTS. Ladles' Heavy Battik- Cotten Iltaekiags AN ITTRA BAAQAIN. AT 11 PAI3/1 701 41.00. - Ladles' laper Britlik Cotten Itatkiip AT SO CZNTS. EMI HELP! lIITIIIE CeTTOI SOW. AT As 01f.1121A NEIPC LUNCH COTTON NOVEL LADIES. AND KEN% I MERINO GAUZE UNDERWEAR AT VIE? LOW PllOll. - • . . =sea, Bore ANDcurcausum COTTON STOCKINGS NICT1111•1[11 TRVelltill ST MORGANSTERN dc Co's, =1 ILiCRUL GUDE &. CO., Nw. 78 Lad 80 Muket Street. AT HORNE & CO'S. Hosiery ! Gloves 1.118118111 AID CHICR /1111111M1111111 Prices Unknown SincelB6l 'ALXXAIDILX.B KID OLOTZIL - • tall auoitimemt a& AL Tit NIL% Al ALTO. . • .. LONG TOP =DC elogroi aloolae. AS WLOI2. nantrun lIADX slim= NOM Heavy, WS PLAIT AND 111111iD COTTON NOON. . ' mats sag as. DOWNSTIO 00770 X HOSITNT. By Case or Doan. thENTili SOPER mu? HALF non, ns Oaati. - • sum. INITXR snug num noon. 1111 prate: AWN apleadil usergoaalita CASH *AD sow tHiIIOAp, LARGE ADDITIONS .TO STOCK Stet arriving. to Which wairoilio Um giantism Of Wholesale and yetis Oath Wpm. 7.!8 STRZEIF. WM • ; / UP` .ro. 87 ran* .411mour, PITTSBITAGS. PA. • • , Ste ebbed MbretbatUe Dollar a abbyrty‘ alb W. 4.0 ono la which Rook-Ibaynay la aU brabobes tay►t frau Ilaryyr • Brother , ' New =dos of Days Look Xeeplas by too►srs of 'Nubbins esporleabb pany taitnetlea 1a Pessaishly es WILLJAK a. 1713/7. For our baits IS op. quarto (Itientar, eoutatirt In[rap oarttoel►n. .ddru. . analts.aa Oolloke. Wu Ciao thou T to fo'clock. LEGHENYCOUIat MIS= BONDS, pair Lag THRICE I 71 , 12 YEARS to nix from 4,14 I47o.bmed ko eatatglak a Work 80.4 sad lastOsta Aglcq .. taterr.st BIM= MLR ClNT.,l ll 7tbb , st all -00 ittally. Rea troaktlata and tonal/ tax. them !oath ate etroldeatly reeametharlett ea a aratthbus wealth, the object ter ww, Wsara imilw lawsuit the hearty 'support o r a., .1,4. TOR LALE AT T.HR 1711BliS' Windt BOK• _ FISH. • '17117 CODINSN_ , . N.l. II arm, mAkozzar L , --- e 110N_, BLAA-TNN A allaut ON. 'a bores, 100 sad tgfilllNDDßEjjkitakall, SET blielleiNGe. la ball bbla yes WI; HITE a / 1 111. la bait W alai /lab. aAjr,Dram. N la. axe 3( lb. clew For We at low rabla b 7 • • - pl!igigEg;pl • • 'MOTU AND 213111/4112, 1/27/DZED. OVAL sox Mt mon. 113. DVITT.II. = 111 anal strool6 WILLIAM SEMPLE'S, Noa. 180 and 182 Federal §trect, I= MANY 600)1 BARGAINS, At II Lignt and Dark Cantos. At lle , Doable Width Poplins. At etc,, Extra Wide Double Warp Poplins et 0, Black Silks—a decided bargain. At 6 1-4 e., Good Calicos. At Be., Fast Cslored Calicos. PALM FLATS, ll tic„ Gran' Limn ilandkerchiefa— • a gnat bargain. At it., Ladies' Mara Handk.rahlata. LATEST NOVELTIES MioEt,l9c)3a. Hats and Sonnets, &Mots and Flowers, Handkerchiefs, Collars, Hosiery, Clover, Parasols, of the latest styles, Wholesale and Retail, WILLIAM SEMPLE'S, Nos.lBo and 182 Federal Street, = THE Mutual Benefit LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. ORGANIZED IN 1845. Lows. paid 411 limos of de- maned member.. 11,A64,613 Dlvideide of It.toula Pee. slum.