The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, July 01, 1870, Image 1

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ttit; DAILY -04ETTE: .
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• ..• -‘ ~..'- PENNI3IAN, REEL, &CO
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ce ... a.oe Sixth ATE. and Smithfield St. id
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.e. B. imiestmes, JOBIASI LING,
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T..P. mahnow, N. P, AMID,
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_nn EDITONIAND pROPIIIIITORIL
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On :- TEEM/ OP Till Da ILT 7. .l 7\
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BY Mali. PP Mr
l*llyebbl by omblib. Per k ....
THE DAtlrk - GAZETTE,
r a
•
GENERALITIES.
/ -1
Tin triune crop, of France has tailed.
it SAN ill ANCIACCP iS troubled with organ
s uTTHE iw r prepared a lecture upon Gin
and Milk: - • •
g 20,000 i / said to lee what PTharaeli will
make out of Lothair.
• TUE Philadelphia Irtiger itan a -new
'stock c obituary poetry.
St; persons were by the sun in
Philadelphia on Tuesday.
'Pee Rev. Phillips Brooks has gone
" Europe on the Hammonin.
' • A bOME for Invalid elergymen in to be
founded In South Cemlinn.
PR.I:6IEV for rain were recently oilered
up in thetehurches in England.
Fit.4lttroulge -are received as well an
Freshmen at Indiana universities.
A unroolsr in Sacramento is hatching
out a quarter of a million silk worms,
Cassmr.i.'s Magashis is to 111111. a Hence
of articles on Fenianiant, by Garabaldi.
A. T. STEWARVA inmate for 1889, as
returned by him, does not reach $lOO,OOO.
Tim White Stockings of Chicago- beat
the Haymakers of Troy 2.1 to 21,16) Tues
day.,
EART ttAGINAW, has 8 new
Sphitualletle magazine ca led the Reo/n.
ton.' _
•
AT Ettugham Palle, N. H., the Dear
-1 . bent flour mills were burned down on
. f mii...ILtROARET RIIITII took laudanum
t• : and died In Woodside, New Jersey, on
' 'Tuesday. . .
• ; - I.Alber LrrTON has returned to the charge 1 -,
, 4 • and written another novel, against her
' • A., imam of black eriellere, ~ e .m if
nr . e id...
! :I ' _
_. - - and or unknown length, can lie seen near
r: '—"" Elko, .Nev.
i... . Altinrr RED -VON, eleven years. old,
...
was drowned in the Ohio at Wheeling on
' . Wedaesday.
;
i • - • PLEienrof street fountains in the latest
remedy for relapsing fever suggested in
, . ..' .
Philadelphia
, _ .
1. '-- Rokon nave the English mission has
I ' * be= tendered to ex-Governor Morgan and
.... , that lie will accept. . i
....',.. -," ' Vniaksz junks ate now t being built in
',, • i ; this *Mary and in the British Pacific
1, , .- - Province for China.
• - ON Tuesday Secretary Robeson deliver. ,
ed an address before the literary societies
of Princeton College. . 1- - , • • ' I
IT is estimated that the Dela Ware peach
. crop this year will ancient to 1,333,33.3
•• basketn of marketable fruit.
.. Tug value of real 'and prTnntud proper
ty In Charleston, according to the • returns
--Of the assessors, in ir.30,590nm , : :':
.:- , t,fwtoo PLY In said to have almost totally
red from New York. .Even the
. red from
have abut:bitted it.
CITICAGO editors return large Incomes,
anule by tolvertining bankrupties, di- I
Tomas and delinquent tax, payers,
"Adam and Eve" han; Wei - plinitteed
•._ . upon the boards at Munich. The ton .
tumet ot. the leading parties are not given.
_.•
, IP Chinese people' an disagreeable I
art. ,
i . as Chinese fire cracker: we hope Pitts. ,
nrati may long be deity red•frorn them. '
. „ • Taktirstmos ARNOLD, f Shirley, Me.,
r, alatot himself through the eart lastrreek.
'.;..' Ifealousy was the rams , and a funeral the
. ,
INDrass women have elm° to uniform
,. I,y decline all Invitations tb distant visits
tft ribtf , lt...essior t of the Court of COW
m
, .
mom Pleas, j . —.
•, Autrey nit, jolly a bit ef cheek en see
''.. have seen h the assertinin by Canadian
••• ' ~ - omtorethat . 'England In a clog no the pro.'
' . geese of Canada."
, I
, = ...'A COITERREADjournan nava: -Ackerman
..:.'.
Is said to have "an expression of deep med.
. Y- .
nation." He Is only trying to
think why
he got into the Cabinet.
MIL Tows WaLatt, of Philadelphia, ltss
• . presented to' the Episcopal Hospital in
- . New York city a check of - $lB,OOO with
which to cancel its debts.
Lim.. 'him:woes, commanding the
- Darien Surveying -party, thinks he has
. discovered gold In the streams on the Pa
chic slope of the isthmus.
ON Monday Charles A. Handwerker
killed himself with a pistol In Louisville.
• tie was dying • of consumption and very
much depressed In spirits.
ext_uuma libanc.ern, third mate of the
steamboat Palestine, fell overboard and
was accidentally drowned between Tell
...
City and Cannelton, below Loniscille.
• ' • ..-Tug way' New York' 1210theie get up
"-. fashionable babies is to rouge the cheeks
..: . of the little things and sew blonde curls
inside their cepa - Then they '. look
A rot-Timm witneav on being asked In
the 3feriden (Connecticot) Police Conit,
the other day, where he would go If he
told a lie, replied, "To the Reform
School." Re was sworn.
Tax poem entitled "The Children,"
which has been going the rounds, credited
to Quirks Dickens, turnavut to hare been
written by Charles U. Dickinson.; a- law.
yet of Binghamton, N. 1".
CUAR: . Bki - DE thinks of coming to .
America to rend his own hovels. If he
reads with as much - power and originality
as be writes, ho will be far better worth
hearing thin was the late - lamented.
Tag New York papere say that nitro
glycerine hi usually sent through that
city kacked in carpet-bags, and the care.
lees nawun g of one of these bags on a
cat might at any moment cost a hundred
Urea.
• . .
The New Yore World says: The ese of
sewage aa ea external application will be
put in gratattoun operation this week In
-public bathe at the foot of Fifth street,
„ East Ricer, and Thirteenth street, North
A cane--; insurgent, (inmates June*,
who surrendered to and was pardoned be
the Spanish 'government, was laid •
tried, convicted and executed for. crime
committed while be win!, an Insurgent
leader.
A nos at Hurch's mill, Michigan, on
the Gratur Rapids A Indiana Railroad.
, - June 25th, destroyed the saw mill of New
..non & Co. 1,200,000 feet of lumber and a
number of dwellings Loss, $00,000; theta
: *. tante. $B,OOO.
A Rune rat. Ins been opened. In New
York especially for sunstrokes, where
• medical attendance, nourishment and care
will,
• will, be free; and a number of ambulancee
den ellldent ambulance corpe will be
. meted with It.
Tgit Boston Transcript say' the Clapp
c• Y. Will Lave a meeting on the 24th - of
at Northampton, Mum A. M.
i • f i reshingtot will prelati, and the Bev.
4 . v. CUppot New 1 ork, will an d an
.S !marital address. -- '
. .
i IT I. rather discouraging to young
:. .. others to be told that Dickens,notwith
..' :.- standing the enormous amount of work
le dld and . the unequalled position he
i 'Achieved . iii the world of lettere died
.c :.werth only $400,000 .
,
` Pekin i.
? Tin t .- m —.o% &sister learns that
, lite Caton Pacific. Banned Company has
. ',patd.to the widow of John lit urdevin, de
...,.d, of that citY, 'the such of $5,000„
- • Mr. S: was ono of the victims of the late
' disaster' n that road.. - .
.-
R.vist CRANDatJ., eighty yews of age..
' . thing bear Corydon, Harrison . eaueoo n .
dlaart, committed suicide . on the gist l ast .
by. hanging himself .. The - dud srs ' s
caused by Intense suffering, resulting tram
[ , mysdpelas in the face.
A Torlmaron.AßTaays theqtrect of wenn
, weather on the feline cool organs !smart
I Wonderful. 'lt adds a fullness, strength,
I
and endurance which nothing else (unless
it be a boot jack or brick-bat) appears to
be capable of conferring.
• 'GLUM preparations are being made for
• the."Tromsn's Beffrage Bazaar" which is
to
.be Judd ,in Boston nett fall. Its ob
ject is to raise $lO,OOO for the furtherance
of the QOM ill New England. and the
;women feel mire of the money.
•.
-
Turt"seaside drowning meson has been
lioniirusated this year by a Mr. ' Hoidthw
. f . % Ineaand, who - went in to bathe at
:
BB
Cape May at nine o'clock in th e evening,
and wan dmwned before a lifeboat could
be launched to go to Ida rescue.
Ina driver of a carriage in which an
Indiana woman wan on her way to file a
petition for a divorce had drunk rather too
much, and, overturning the vehicle, threc'
the woman out and broke her neck and
the bond matrimonial at the name time.
A BRIDEGROOM interfered with a par
son at Ringgold, Georgia, who, in accord.
aura , with the usual custom., &aired to
kiss the bride, and assured the priacher
elicit as he had paid for the ceremony lie
was not going to have any of that fooling,
A 1 HOU. \ND Turkish ho'neett have been
thrown ripen for the "accontmodation of
the Chriatians tArme,nianal and others
who were lately burned out in the great
lire at Constantinople.i And, bealdea thin,
the Turks lime subscribed,?nrge autos of
money bit the relief of sufferers.
KAN,.
.CITI,MO., hair had an orti i mace
enacted against liuhlieg an a
moans of attracting people, tLe law being
employed to suppreca a noisy auctioneer.
Sufficient care MAP not taken In arranging
the enactment, 'arid the beThimite auc
tioneer hem now cuppressed the church
bells.
Tug lead tnines in the vicinity of `Lo.
rust Mound, Mo.. are just now receiving
great attention. Many leads are yielding
from three to four thousand pounds a dal'
to the hand, and the young men of the
imuntry are giving up farming for min
ing. .'hie lead furnaces-in the vicinity
are in full blast. • . •
Tug poet Longfellow was, on sue ocea•
sion. at a dinner party at which Nicholas
Ismgworth was also ',resent. Some one
rtmnrked to Mr. Longfellow that his
name and that of Mr. Longwortlea started
out alike, but made a very disimilar end,
ing. "Yes, ".replied the poet, "and it af.
fords only
Ma another proof, I am afraid=
that worth keii the man, the want ot it
the fellow."
GEOIIOR 11. STEWS or. in his spvecil In ,
too- ctn. Clarnointi IsSo patron nt Indian.
upon's, said thetuost interesting sight he
saw in London was not the, Buckingham
Palace, or the Brent Exhibition, but two
feeble Christian young men, with stam
mering tongues; hat heirls filled with
lore, preaching to an audience of thieves
and pickpockets and drunkards and fallen
women, at midnight, in a part of London
where - they could not go in safety without
two policemen.
WHEN Thackeray was• buried, his'
friends, and among them the most noted
of English authors, carried hint to Kensal
(preen. There had been some estrange
ment between Dickens and Mark Lemon
and as the coffin was lowered into its
place. Dickens stood upon one side of the
grave and Lemon on the other. As they
raised their heads their eyes mot and in.
stinctivele patting out their hands. they
clasped them In forgiveness, and their
quarrel was buried in the grave of Mack-
A Citteano paper Willi thin 'dory of
Boston : A young lady of one of the most
arintoemtic families of the American
Athena, went to her - physician with a
complaint that her earn were too large,
and, under her instructionale carefully re
moved a delicate crescent of pink gristle
about an inch and a half long from each
.arotubenuat. li sewed up the wound.
nd the maiden. e
previously all forlorn.
wan. delighted to behold two "pretty
ears." mall,. graceful and genteel). tight
to her head.
THE Jacksonville. Illinois, &Wind says:
"We learn that. during last week, a child
of Air. Abbott. aged about 18 months, was
Ituried, having come to Its death under the
following circumstances: The mother
had, a short time piimiously, given the
child a drink tireold water, out of the
spout of a tea kettle. The child. 'unbar!
()mutat-. found the kettle when it eon.
...med. water, and applying its
and swellowerethe belt water 'and steam.
Death ensued In twenty four hours.
Is Chicago on Tuesday Tim Edwards, a
brick maker, was killed by lightning.
Dr. I). E. D'Evers, an apothecary, was
crushed gat by a barrel of wine, which he .
was lowering, to the cellar, falling- upon
hint. 'lie died In great agony. The roof
of the pavillirin 'Dexter park was blown
nil', and a part.of it struck John entice.
aged sixty, and killed hint; the same atom,
blew down the pigeon cage at the park
and allowed ten thousand birds to escape.
An Irish laborer, name unknown, died of
sunstroke, all did a teamster named John
Artie.
.- - PENNSTLYANIA
' ll 4lllllKll,jlUlta Kanta s.public La
Lour,
Tun Ebensburg Alleghfnion says that
Mr. Joseph Richter, an aged Citizen of
Carrol township. in that county, was
killed by sun stroke on Monday.
Ma. nEOROF. 31cHEzinc, while fishing
at Young's Dam. Indiana, fell into the
water, and hating a false leg had difficul
ty in reaching shore. Mr. * Jaa: Rees while
hastening to Meffenry's rescue fell in and
was•drowned.
COL. Jour TAYLOR molding near
limolsville. 311 Min 'county, while recently
engaged in digging out out an old cellar,
came upon an old spoon, which he threw
to one aide. In leaving the place, the Col
onel mechanically picked up the spoon,
hruahed the dirt away, and discovered
that the aniclo orax something valuable.
On having it examinetLat Lewistown, it
proved to he, a silver spoon, with the
name of William Penn neatly engraved
upon it, and bearing the crown mark of
England.
, A Terrible - Crime.
There would seem tole but little de r alit,
Rays the Eastern A ego.. of, ye..terday: that
a most shocking crime was perpetr*d
in connection with the sailboat dlatuffer
whir:hot:cornett in Portland harbor on the
20th inst., by which three men lost their
lims, one of the victims 'being Mr. ./.
W. Ritgers, of this city, This gentienfan
WAS known to have on his person finite a
large sum of money, a gold watch, valu
able pin, etc. Lie was found floating on
the surface soon after the accident by a
Loy in a wherry. Of course the lad could
talse hire into Ids frail craft, but at
tached Ili n
."De loth° body andltowed It to
the 3110fe. 'hooo of the property was
found upon the pensai. and the boy avers
that when he first • diatov e . r ed hi m h e
ehowed 'lgoe of life. It appears that a
schooner in the vicinity:hove:3o and a
boat containing two men ptit,-offt they
reached the drowning man, partially rale.
'ed and suatained him for some little time
and the y dropped him backed into the
water, the boat returning to the schooner,
which.,immediately mailed away. This
transaction was not only witnessed by the
boy in the who bat by parties in a
boat not fir away. From thew premixes
the unavoidable deductbin is that Mr.
Rogers was picked up in a half-drownid
condition, robbed and thrust back to Me.
The Argua farther states that the affair
is being thoroughly investigated and that
officers are upon the track of the vessel,
'which Is known. If such a tei:rible trag
edy was enacted, the fiends should be
brought to speedy and condign punish
ment.
Tar: latest foreign mails bring the de.
bate In Parliament, an the motion of Mr.
Barton, that an address be presented to
the Queen, praying her to Invite the Pres
ident of the United - States to concur with
tier Majesty in Appointing Comtnissionent
to revise the authorlosl version of the
Bible. Mr. Buxton, in his Addreati,, ex
preescathe opinion that the work of re
vision should be of an internatiohal char
aaer, and that thi assistance of scholare
in Europe and the United States should
be obtained, nod that for the translation
of the Old Testament„t he aid of the Jew
lib scholars, who were• the greatest living
roasters of the Ifebrew language,shorild
be Invited. Mr. filadstone, in reply,
stated that the revision of the Scriptures
would be most safely, most satisfactorily,
and most effectually performed by per who cannot pretend to have any pub
lic and civil authority. Ile also expressed
the Wien that though President Grant
and Fish would receive with the
utmost Fish
any representation the
British Bovertunent might snake, yet such
an inritatlon would carry the President
late a sphere which lie excluded
almott by the re letter, certainly by the
spirit of the Col. States Constitution.
UZI
W.M. HALL, of London.
died on Tuesday aged :rt.
Toe celebrated Almanac •de Gotha
sold, last year, an edition of 1,120 copies.
TIIR women in France, incited thereto
by their English sisters, are about to agi;
tate for a repeal of the French "Costal
gious Diseases acts." .
AT the recent sale of Dr. Todd's library._
Wace's works. with his manuscript ad
ditions, fetched £4544 the highest price
ever given for a booktin Ireland. ii •
riSsrise's DEBI-TS STOEI has not only
contributed $500,000 to restore St. Pat
rick's Cathedral, but flow gicco $250000
for It winter garden tot he town..
AT a recent sale of autographs in Paris,
were lettort front Parry, ;the avigator.
Bulvror (Lord Lytton). Sidney Smith, and
one in French from Lord Paimerston.
PROFESSOR Stuwtegmt, of Hungary.
in organizing a national church Indepen;
dent of papal infallibility, lie hasn't
yet got further n paper see. blue
PTPT.
IN Hungary the arreat has Itren made
of a band of robbery, cot throaty, and in.
eendiatiett. ntinibering no lean than 1011,
of whom fifty will N. rondenined to
loath:
( . 11AS. it}:Ant calla the play founded
on hie new novel . Free Labor," and the
Athemeum calk it ronintonplate. • Real
anvils and real hot iron form the 4.1d07
attractions.
"idOTIIA111" it lllVntm: will have ti, u
dergo the fate of other names that nr•
often on pimple's lips, It IMP been renig
tenni an the name of a new perfume by
an Irish tirm.
Ida. J. TOWER 9 ie preparing for publi.
cation anttemoir of Beethoven, bawd upon
Schindler, Ries, Wieseler and Thayer. to
which will be, attached an exact chronO
loixical list of Ida works.
dress n sr A m n
n t en pteltal cards, to hea letterr an ad.
ate nide and all Opell on
the other, areamong the novelties of the
English postotlice, and eveqbody ie in
venting ciphers in consequence. -
Sum.: workmen, of a town in Hanover,
tiermany, amused themselves by stripping
a tipsy companion, and fastening him in
that condition to a tombstone. A few
hours later he was found there, dead.
THE Danish government is devoting
mreat attention to fortifiadion. \ The
military measures taken by Prussia oil the
island of Aisen, have fully aroused tli.
Danes, and they will prepare for posSible
war, cost what it may. .. I
KRAUS is said to have been en.
gaged by M. Perrin for the purpoor of
appearing at the Grand Opera in M. /der
met's •'.leanne d'Arc." Personally:at least,
she is well suited to the character, andshe
has much dramatic energy.
A. PORTION of tlle MS. of ..tilivorl)viirt."
which originally appeared In &Wiry..
I .11ixyllerity. is still in Mr,' Bentley's pos
session. The British Museum might
Ht
tingly place it by the side of the MS. of
Sterue's nSeniimental Journey."
BOSSACIII is the ParialaWfumr e
just now. She is a 7Elansetow of sixteen,
possessed of all thepemonal and domeCtic
virtues, and received a diamond ring in a
basket of Hewers on the occasion of lot
debut In the ballet of Frelschutr"
•
"LaGEND:xsts," a Catlinlie elergyniao
resident in Dublin, and once a — weir,knon
n
contributor to the Cehliteiaio'n
is about to bring out a volume of 'Old
Folk Lore; or. Traditions of Ireland, with
hunoirous Tales. ke., Popular/old last rat.
Mit. United 'Stat. Consul ~r
Dublin. has in the" preen "Patrick rill')
land: - based upon manuscripts and origi
nal authorities. Much of the material
used in the work, has been obtained from
roitjity. •
Tuti , is Erigenir'n latest dinner toilette':
—A plain tarlatan, - white, over a whitii
taffeta; nothing but ruche and Bounce for
ornament. in her-hair a bunch of white
Millen of the Talley. with a tow black anti
red cherries—a moat striking combination
for a blonde.
• AT A ulonye, iu profitable usti
has been found for the slag from the
large iron winks there established. It i
cast into slabs for pavemunt and paring
purposes generally; into garden 'idlers,
posts and pillars; and in venue of its forms
is described as artificial porphyry. _L_
TIM late Dr. eaharrus, of Paris. _was so'
unsentimental as to dispute the existence
of "trim lore." When his friends men.'
tioned all the duels fought by Infers, to.
contmvert his opinion. tho Doctorebutwer
ed, •'Exactly: that is what I say. To lore
well is such hard work that it takes four
of your dandies to loge the same woman."
CERTAIN 'medical men have recently
asserted that drily work at the sewing
machine is injurious to the women em.
ployed at it. But Dr. Decabine, who has
thoroughly. investigated' the subject, In
an establishment containing between six
and seven hundred workwomen, hats prov.
ed that the occupation is in no way inju
riOna.
Free number of the famdon police on the
January, 1870, was 8,t357, vie:- Four
district superintendents, 211 superinten
dents, 246 ituipectom 034. sergeants. and
7,648 constables. The number in less than
on the first of January, 1860, at which date
there were 7,603 constables. The cost of
the Metropolitan Police in the financial
year 1860-70 was £818,316, but this In.
eludes a contribution of £62,000 to the su.
perannuation fund. There ele - 2.1430 men
on th e auperannuation listr"
Tog Tablet repeats Monsignor Capon;
contradiction of the report about the Mar.
gala of Bute. and adds (referring, of
comae to Mr. Ffoulkes, but without men.
tinning him): "One actute' of this kind al
ways appears to tempt people to spread
reports of other.. They seem to think
that each defectionn as the ono which.
actually' took place the other day are a
great loss to the Catholic religion. Thev
apparently regard 'the Church lisle club
which can be injured or •diabonored by
people taking their names MTh."
A usurer, murder Into been committed
in Dublin, apparently with great delibera
tion. An unfortunate girl, Margaret
Murphy, wan found lying dead in a edam
which she had occupled,her head having
been severed from her body. The ap
pearance-of the room wan in keeping with
the wretch of thehouse and lamb
ity. Not a vestige of-furniture was in
the apartment, and the only approach to
anything.lik e a bed was a heap of straw
in the opposite corner to . where the body
lay; Another girl had been murdered be
a jealous lover in the county of Tyrone.
The head Was covered from the bate;
and found ono hundred and fifty yardn
away.
•
TIIE Period, a London quizziatteid
lleation_of more wit than wisdom, porP ,
trues a etevoreplgram at the expense of
Profeasor Goldu-in Smith. and apropos of
his recentletter:
A barbed arrow In Ito random night,
Seems. to hnve sought the shore, on which
Yon i r a7tre point Witte less—whit then write
To let the world kaoit that the shaft, went
home?
After/ill, Prbfee, eor Smith will he pox'
led to answer the oneetion; hie unfortu
mite letter having disarmed bin friends,
who might Imre fought out the battle
for him • and put:weapon* Into the hands
of enemies who are'only too happy to use
Ahem.
TnE strike of the iron founders contin
ues In Paris. The masters were under
the idea that' they' would be able to get
their castings done In other chief of the
Empire, and also In Belgium But the
founderti of Amiens, Toulon, Hamburg and.
Belgium hare refused to execute the or:
dent sent to them. In addition to this, the
founders of St. Germaluen-Lave, Caen,
Mans, &c., he., hare .sent carious sums of
money to the men on strike hero. Engt,
Bah workmen, members of the tnulel
unions, hare, it is sald,-roted the sum of
£l,OOO to sustain the strikes in France,
and the greater portion of the money will
be banded to the foimders. The German,'
working societies also Intend coming for
ward with subscriptions. The master
finaglers In Paris hare made several at
tempts to induce their workmen to return
on the old terms, but they hare met with'
no success, though the men have-been out
for three months.
FORFIHN
FIRST EDITION'.
X LIST CONGRESS.
oiEcolvo ; HESSIO2II.!
SENATE: The Tax-Tariff Bill Sill
trader Consideration. HOUSE
Amendments to Indian A pproPria
lions NoleCoaenrred In—The Bill
to Fund, and Vototolidate the
t lonal Beht Taken Up and 'on.
4idered.
I 'rel..gripl, to the Plitttbutglik (I azett
WARRINOTON. aline :11,
SENATE.
•
•
liouse amendments In the Senate bill to
prevent the est eriiination of for bearing ',lnl
and, In Alaska was concurred in.
Mr. BI zMNF.Rp from the Committee on For
eign Relations. reported a Joint resolution
authorizing the eiploration and survey of the
Tehnuntepee and Nicaragua route fora ship
canal between the Atlantic and Pacific
Oceans.
The same Committee wrre discharged'frem
the s h ipnsiderati. of the joint retion fora canal survey across the lath.MU, of Darien amd curious memorials on the
subject, all of which were indefinitely post
poned.
Mr. SCOTT, from the Committee of Confer
epee oo n joint resolution for the relief of the,
cabers of the nacy.made a report, which was
concurred in.
'Sir. TRAVER Introduced a bill to amend'
the homestead act. It allows soldiers.sallors.
and marines who served one year in the war
of the rebellion to receive patents fur home
steads upon two years' residence.
Mr. FOWLER int:minced a hill
coon,authozin'
the adjudication by - the United States
of Mexican land claims not passed upon by
Land Conimi.sion of 1051.
Mr. POMElitiV Introduced a bill authorizing
the Alabama and Chattanooga Railroad. the
Vicksburg and Merldan . Railroad. and forth -
Louisiana :tial Tesas Railroads to Mnumlldate
for the purpose of forming a Junction with
the Texas Pacific road at Marshall:and (Taut -
hag mid ronds twenty sections of land per
Mile.
At one o'clock Senate went into executire .
session.
At the doors were reopened and the Sen
ate proceeded with the tax-tarlff bill, the
question being on amendments to the para
graph relating to Itewsemer steel. to reduce
the duty on steel railway bars one cent per
pound, nod also to strike nut the entire part
g . r
V b.
. EDMVXDS was in rarer of giving the
Interest auflicient protection to stimulate It
to compete with British manufactures.
CA-NI - MON opposed the reductilm. re
marking that so far not one dollar had been
realized upon meet manufactured In thin
COMltry.
Mr. Rxrr, in correction of the statement
that the, least mean,' paid for the manufac
ture of Bessemer steel rails was hen dollars
In gold per ton. stated upon authority of Mr.
Mon-ell, our of the trustees of the patent
prn
eels, that clue. February last the royalty had
been reduced to one dollar and Ofty cents per
ton.
dutMry.. DAVIS favored the reduction of the
Mr. Pomeroy's amendment t reduce the
duty
no steel railway bars from o n e e
and one
half to one per rent. per priund wile agreed tn
to It!
Mr. WILSON moved to make the duty one
cent and a quarter. Agreed to-al toll. •
The rate on all railway barn made In part of
steel way then reduced from one and one
!nun h tonne cent per pound.
Amendments to 'metreentv 14r rent.
du on slates for es( was rejected-lit
to
Mr. MORE ILL t Vermont. mortal to Insert
sword blades thirty-fire cent. na robOrtni
on tenrds. forty-tie per cent. tot nn wa jewel.. ten per cent. of nil. , rent."
Agreed tn.
Mr. WARNER offered 111111CMIIIIPMQ
allwc
~,in machinery manufactures! , expressly for
spinning cotton it: yarn to be Imported free for
one year. Rejects:K4llly twelve Senators
' Ve n . g SlL ' i ' ll i N e Er ti sn n o ' v v eti to; place on the free Ilse
.books foreiguor dead languages nf which
no Mittens are printed lathe 'Fluted Staten:"
rose - books with illostrattone relating to
swarm, we d lets:. Selected.
Mr. SCRUM" offered An amendment -that
tor A inerirnu artists, now held forPaYosent of
dutr In any custom hong, nhaff be surrendered
without duty on proof of Pr0t...17 br the
owner. Adopted. . •
The Senate took a recess.
Pratang Srann.-The Conference Commit..
tech report on the bill to amend the act
granting the right of way to ditch and canal
owners orer public lands wag coacuerNl tn.
The tax Lill seas then prrceeded with.
3lr. SCHKRZ, in behalf of Mr. Trumbull.
who was absent, offered an amendment to the
bill allowing. transportation of Imported
tro.ln In bolt from poil of: entry to port of
delivery, dues to be paid at the latter places.
the operations of the prorlsinn In be confined
to cities of not less than liO,lod) Inhabitants
and to be ander regulations prescribed by the
Secretors. Of the 'Trei•ury.
be M ende M m E a M d M e A d ` b
rsa nth ethe
amobpos itooCmd
mece of nearly all the' interior cities. The
present system wan sublet and lady a monopoly'
to
the city of New York, an all the goods had
tn opened rind examined there. anti special
rarer wan given to direct importation to New
York. The bill hod been an d
Prepared
by the l'lnanm Committee and Treasury De
partment. and contained every guard and
chock against fraud that could possibl ybe
devised, ife believed it would increase the
revenue andencourage direct trade between
Interior cities and European countries.
Mr. CONK LING denied any complicated or.
Mutant nebeme touching the Custom RD.,
regulations could be appended to a tax hill.
e thought the bill to prohibit tbe enforce
ment Of Chinese coolie contracts would be
Thla'nrll7nfaerffiT-Itee'rtu'at'nlegintehnetr.efore altered
After discussion both amendment, were
withdrawn.
. .
Mr. SCOTT offered a section providing for
nem executive department entitled "Depart
ment of Revenue," hot finding It would ores
vino protracted discussion withdrew It.
Mr. (X/LE moved to Increase the. tax on
whisky In one dollar.
Mr. THURMAN stated be bad heard the
"Ring" had bought up all {he . whisky In the
country with the expectation of making for
tunes by the Increase Of the tat.
The amendment was rejected-12 to 31.
On motion of Mr. PATTERSON the free im
portation of household furniture for Individ
ual use wee allowed.
On motion of Mr. FENTON, the duty on
oats was reduced to five cents per bushel.
Mr. HAMILTON, Md., , for Mr. Ilayard.
offered a new iectinti Imposing n In of dye
per rent. on goyemnent bonds. Yens 11, net's
qimrum voting, the SevalendJeurned
HOUSE OE,DpPRESENTATIVES.
Mr. UPSON introduced a bill to change the
times of holding Circuit and District Courts
'of the United States In the Northern District
Ohlo.
SeaateTn u e7d r rirgt i rt t o t Pe e l bra d ig=rlV
Don bill.
The report of the Committee ow Approuria-
Dons. recommendtog concurrence to some
And non-concurrence in others was agreed to
as a whole, except where special votes were
called for.
Mr. FERRY asked a C ommitt ee on an
'Amendment, In which the recom
mended 110, COMCUTrellee, approminting 133,-
7 5 3 for Payment to Italians In enigma for
the difference between cols and currency
paid to them in 286a.4 under treaty stipule
tior. with tire per cent.intetest adted ttre
' ame ndment. to SlT l MlM l T l6 o f ppos avor e , dqlte_x en
as
establishing a molt dangerous end costly
Precedent, which would apply to all soldiers,
sailors and pensioners and other creditor, of
the Government.
• On a count by the aellers there war—our
twenty-one yeas, and no further mnint leas
asked and the amendment was won-concurred
in: . '
Mr. .BEGS naked fora separate vote on
amendments, In which the Committee on Agi.
prep cottons recommended noo-eonennence.
making lare tome° nations under Indian
treaties of { t
ea: m which treaties the
Fortieth co refused to ratify._ He
said t re , Iteenortwenty amendments,
X ESOO,OOO. and he wished to Dave
lionvote of the House upon them an an instme
to the Committee of Conference, to
which the bill would be referred. These ap
propriations, If made, would run thirty yews,
and cost the Government between fifty and
sixty millions.
Mr. PAINE hoped the recommendation of
the Committee on Appropriations would be
adhered to, and expresses' disapproval of the
entire system of Indian treaties.
The amendment. were ail non - concurred fn.
Mr. AXTELL asked n separate vote on an
amendment increasing the appropriations for
the incidental expenses of the lodine service
in California, from $7,500,000 to $10,(00,0(M. lie
opposed the y amendmeritas Intended for the
removal of eaceful and 'industrious civilized
Mission Indians. who are citizens and voters.
ton reservation in San Diem county. Ile rep.
resented the movement as a' speculative one
o secure the (anus of those Mission Indians.
Mr. SA EGENT endorsed the remarke of hie
olleague.
The Senate hmendment wen non -concurred
n.
I Mr. DEGENER naked a separate vote on the
irmoepnrdamieons
rn
c w ommnd e d
z co mm cu t rr e n con, Aop
!Ming deductions from Indian nanuitles on
account ot depredations. He argued against
the arneedment, taking the ground that the
principle thus abrogated was On C." . ." an d
common seum way of nealing with Indian
deer . datlons.
.3fr wrmuNsoN argued in the same diren•
Mon.
Mr. SARGENT argued in support of the
amendment, contending the existence of each
forstem stimulated the getting. up of. claims
Indian depredations, and illustrating by
citing the Cue of a Texas "Greaser." who,
not eg r al ug it fit::
lodinel
~% r cattle, drove
the Indiana to drive them off,lnTtlieVetil
to Washington and made claim before the In
dine Deportment.
Mr. PAINE argued In support of the Senate
amendment so as to avoid allowance or un
just claims.
The amendmenXwas. concurred bor dere d
A committee of conference was on
th .l.h d P= l e a disagreeing v s bn.iniis of the morning
MIDNIGHT.
Mr. UROOKS IN. V.l adetwatml tl4 bill In
he belief that the loan could be effected at
I reduced rate. .
Mr. KELLY opt , o.:ell Mr. Males .atnend
neat no unbecoming a great nation.
Mr. JEDD argued that the amendment Wan
unitive:eery. a: the bondholderklatrcheeed
through brokers thoroughly familiar with the
American dollar.
Mr. SCHENCK took the .eame grolind add
remarked that the general rate of interest
geld by the people would fall when't he Gov
ernment red hoed Its rate. ,
Mr. Otilit , RN PIP , ' advocated Mr. mate,
nosenditiont. eferrlog the moony be obtain.
ed ip or,. that .linerican Peolde tnar nee
their ow a tu.doy Litilithig mills. brniree,
road+ and railroads.
Mr. Male, and Mr. Davis' amendments were
rie:med.
YTIEW °red 1 o
emoting bond and e mount from all taxation,
bat suintequectir withdrew It.
. Mr. wooDwAltll, howprer, reneited!.. it.
argliinjo thin Could nor restrain nor
future Congress fr. m the 'exerefte_ of that
nowt,
Mr. 11INGIIA et opposed the amendment
and denied the earrertnenii of the legal of WorawL
posi
tiMr . HMLMAN e l e m tined and Mr. BROOKS
and Mr. BUTLER /,,00sed the amendment,
the latter elnlminit that .while. the L-20 botilit
Were liable to Federal taxation. Congrea:
could exempt four pee rent. bond, from all
triation.
The amendment wa: I rtectial by a lams: tun-
Mr.lth Yen, and
Inuredg. refaced.
INGERSOLL to make he bonds
and eOlifiOns letrable in lawful Money Int tend
c f coin, ntileh wan rejecte..Ll
Mr. hf ANNUAL!. mused the bond, be re
deemable after twenty - yearn Instead of thirty..
Rejected.
Mr. COBURN moved to make the hoods OR;
Tear bond,. Rejected.
Mr. VAN TRUMP mooed to make them
one thousnnd year bonds. Rejected.
Mr. HOLMAN moved to prohibit the em
ployment of section Rejected.
The second was then read.
Mr. WOOD offered an amendment Prohibit
lag the payment of nay enointiPsloll Oh broker
bille.SCC sold Paymentsg nothing. it
the PUtlwl7.lnif thet of any bro
kerage
Mr. RANDALL atmpoited and Mr. A LL.
ri=tip_lTit:dotdr amendment, which was re.
The following Committees of Conference
were announced:
_On the Indian 4porr.ipr4tio.n Metter.
'''t)ftelq'atilgglattiVeartekye't?ltlik, ' M ' ern . rn.. Judd.
Packer and Knott.
Adjourned.
San Domingo Treaty Rejected—Whis
key andTottieee Tax—Grand Army
Rennlon—Revenue Receipts.
• 1
[Hy Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.]
VrAtifilnerOx, D. C.; June 80, 1871
SAN DOMINGO TRUTT. •
On going into Executive session this aftCfr
noon the Senate resented the consideration qt
the San Domingo treaty. 3fr. 31 °Mil, of Ver
mont, concluded hi. speech against ratifico- .
Oen, when the Senate Proceeded to vote on
the amendment. proposed ty the President of
the United States, soap of which were adopt.
ed. A vote was then taken on the-ratifica
tion of the treaty and resulted, Z 3 Swan
against 28 nays. A two-t hints vote being. re
onired the treaty WAs rejected. 4 mi4mber of
Senators were paired and others absent. The
opponents of the measure say they could have
rejected it without the aid of the Democratic
vote.
treaty doeshe rejection of the San Domingo
not Melrose of the Protocol foe
the lease of Saniana. although If the treaty had
been rattled the &mane question would have
been absorbed by it. The project of annexing
Dominica by &joint resolution does no
to be regraded with suiliclent , • re
a majority In theltAtv i. .- .A
nn.t..
Nierllartg bill Sidloßi dloR guis t did not
lection of taxes on whtskg toLaccil. ' b o ut
will probably do so to-morrow. While the
bill will not pamose coy change in existing
rates of taxation on those articles, the mem,
berm of the Committee will advocate nn In
crease of the tax on whiskey.
GRAND m em b ers
REUNION.
A reunion of members of the Grand Army
of the Republic and friends was hold at Sev
enth street Park to-day and will continue
through to-morrow, Senator Thayer made
the hmugurul address. •
RIVILNUE RECILIPM. ' •
The enstoms receipts last week were/3,001,-
RK The receipts of Internal revenue fortune
were $:- . 5,448,750; for the fiscal year.
•
New °uremia, June 30.-(olton quiet and
steady; middlings Inc; sales 4,000, receipts sa),
.exportsa,Sail bnles; stock na,9N.briles.
Oats dull and unsettled at OCialtle . . Bean
lower at Sedhsl,os. Hams Mia..Mc. Lard arm:
tierce .154fsItI7(e; keg 181i(619.10. Cotree
gn l cha nAedr.total importa (or the y%r, 141=1TcrltTidb8glgirs t year.-
o ratkenchraged. ring
Philadelphia. • '
PHILADELPITIA.June 30.-Flour is dull and
quotations are barely maintained, Wheat I.
very dull red - western vi,toatia. corn dull
and more offering: yellow western 1 , 1,0 e:
min
,ed sl,oollsjil,os. Oats dull at ale. Provisions
held firmly. ;fees Park 5i10.50. Lard dull and
tinchanged. 'Petroleum held firmly: crude .1811;
refined 27.2.173,i• Whisky nem nt #1,03 for Iron
bound western.
IturraLO. June ao.—Cattle: receipts fm
this "i t am cars; market quiet and us
motored, with sales of 4t bead at 117 ,22 .14110.
&l eap are lo fair demand and prices ower on
nil kladsorlth sales to-day of 1.318 head at
WO for lodlans.lB for Ohio, i,3418 forSan
ada and 17.75'38.75 for Canad a l ambs..Ho n
quiet and easy. •
—_ •
Detroit. ~
Drtildn.Jane4lo.—Flour firrn With a light
atoll( and a moderate demand: eholee 1740.
Wheat opened rather quiet and closed hther
and firm: extra white gLaget.air, No. 1 141:
amber glArd.l.3l. Corn firmer at Ode. Data.
State and Canada MOW: tendert:7se. Barley
r,Do per eental. - '
•
ittLermedir, June W.—Deers" are tolerably
active et a decline of and offerings of
about 1.160 head. Sheep amp full sepals...at
4C051i0 for fat 5e4e4, 3 .lieft.gs per head for
stockers, and • for lamb... Hogslower,
sapvly large; corn ecl lirKettXc, stockers-1E
612,103; market dult.-
34'71
hoar, procee , ed with the consideration of re
ports from the Committee of Commerce.
Mr. O'NELLL reported a blirmaklug Jersey
City a port of entry. Passed:, •
Mr. DIXON reported a bill reciting the pro
ject of building a ship canal arras+ Cape Cod
at an expense of seven million dollars, ;and
pledging the 'faith of the Government to eon
ctexct a suitable breakwater and harbor of
refuge at the eastern entrance, the expense
not to exceed two millions. • •
Objection bring made by Me. BENJAMIN,
that the bill mode nn appropriation, it was re
ferred to the Committee of the Whole.•
Mr. SAWYER reported beck the Senate bill
to constitute Omaha a port. of delivetT.
Passed,
Impro
AlR%ve ment n substiof water to for the
conina Senatelleate billtlon e
for t
b he
tween the Mississippi River end Lake Michi
gan,
soby of the Wiswonsln and Fox Rivers.
The stitute was agreed to and the bill
paRROd.
C'ONGER reported a billtgra r, t t ing the.
Evansville Southern Illinois Reil ad Com ,
uy4 , ll3h i t ti : r huild a bridge rots the
.1180, n bill to amend the net aujiin ring the
construction Of a bridge arena. the lissoUrl
River on the military reservation at I.eav
enwOrth. Kansas.
Mr. PINKELNREIift offered an am invent
requiring the span. of the draw, I be a
.draw bridge, to be not leas than two i tired
feel In the clear on each side of the etnt ral
nivot• -
The uniendilient teat lkgreed in end the bill
Flumited.
Also, a bill to amend the net of Judi' 15th.
Ikeiraprevent smuggling( resat log to
ship purchased at Canadisn ports.
Pae
, INKELNBERG reported, a bill creating
a port of delivery at Du Lath, Minn •
Tbe morning hour expired and e . 6111 went
Mr. BENJAMIN, from the Cent nce OM.
trainee on the bill defining the d• of ram
ekin agents made a report. flee .isiined that
as to teee of petition and claim exits they
' were fixed In this report at ten oilers. ex
,,rcpt where written agreements Made and
Sled at 'Abe Department, is whir. 'Case the
tnaillnuM fee Shall be twenty-oWe' • oilers. -
Mr. LAWRENCE opposed the ft •rt es al
to fltioalf,efleoen7,Ct.ot it was ZeeleMns,
—reported In the Kentucky election ease that
I thee, sitting member, was avail ed under
, the fourteenth amendment. that th Governor
:be notified of the vacancy, and t• t Zeigler.
contestant. be allowed expenses the eon
, test: .
s[r.' RCllli Presented the vices of
minority. declaring Rice justly eat tied
sent.
The resolutions will be called up .n Pei
of next week.
(ha motion of Mr. TAFFY.. t he Sea
the relief of pre-emption settlers of P
ei i ra
arm taken from the Speaker's t able
passed.
The House at 2:15, proceeded to tb eon,
- eration of the bill for the refunding and
eolitlation of the national debt. •
• .On motinn of Jalt, SCHENCK. vet
amendment was made striking out a• the
of section four the words .. at any tlm tel
the end of notice provided for I sec
section." He expressed the opinion that
Gosemment should offer a Poor per c t. I
at par. •
• Mr. BLAIR moved to amend the rat
lion by inserting the words "the •torn
Interest specified In each coupon sbal be
pressed In dollars. and the erotical • there.
In English sterling currency and In f
Mr. DAVIS, of New York. movE p t amend
ro
the amendment LE adding a ps' that the
Secretary of the Treasury shall re power.
'ln his discretion, to make the Interest or cou
pons on part of the bonds, not exceeding
tal),000.000, payable la any foreign country he
may deem advisable. [Murmurs of disappro
vitL]
Mr. 111.AIIt advocated tdsproposition,
showing the advantage to &erne from it In In
ducing foreign Investment.
Mr. WOOD the opposed bill. 1.1QC141110 he maw
In it danger of disturbing InDnionstr bus
iness interests and stability of trade, without
effecting negotiation nt the proposed rate,
anti for other reason.
Mr. BUTLF.It iMass.t opposed - 111 , 111nir's
gelgsdl't'rt,eat otl'iteOdnilicrnoltngue:ei rneicrtnsrtsoulrb
thing.
T.4li CAPITAL.
1=122125
EIIZT!
C*.
I=
SEC ONO OMR.
President Broune•tollarralatireate Addreu
• Address or Re.. R. 11. Pollock, ate.
The closing ex, nisei of this institution
commeneed on Sabbath. June Mai, and are In
prorri s. The weal her being cat remote warm
TM einaled rather d suit, tune. but as the ex
ercises were In the evening things passed off
quite pleasant It . 1 I
on Sat lied NV. the %Soh in.t.. Wilmington was
gladdened by Ihe return of the graduating
class. The members having passed a credita
ble examination on the studies, embraced In
the College course. during the last of May,
had returned to their respect Ire homes to en-
Joy the pleasures of friends and prepare their
commencement performauces
On Sabbath evening, at seven O'clock, the
exirrelses were opened with the bare liniment
sennon,,deliveted to the graduating date by
Rot. Bold. Audi, Browne, P.D.. President of
the inst hut inn lie Um listened to by a loran
and Interest.] audience. The subject was
happily t onct iv eit for the occasion. After a
voluntnrr, consisting . of the WM it Psalm, anti
exercises% er prose Bv. T. 8. Kendall, of Oregon, the
ded with President Brovene's
Baccalaureate address.
silk - re-ear or moans= smote:a:a LAMA
LA
The se e not
,it Its of human knowledge and the cure
of human ignorance are themes stilted to the
occasion or the graduation of a class of young I
gentlemen and ladies with baccalamente hon
ors. You have completed the college carricu- 1
lulu and time made n fair lleol,iiilog of your
education. If you have implored well the
years anent within these walls you have
M u ni ' erh u o ' srl r gi t h aUfrerTili c c h an ru b ' t? ?Palm to
1, 1 1
Man and it has tough) you h milky. The full
ear bends to the earth the empty head holds
itself erect. Let me there oak you to study
of the prover of Cahn: "Wlont 7 see not teach
Thou ms:'
Let ns speak hret of the limit of human i
knot ledge.
1. Human knowledge is limited by the con- I
statittion of things. There are spheres of fact
and thought so different from our own that
we cannot comprehend them: and if we did,
could not communicate our knowledge to
others. Paul %%as caught up to Paradme.
There he honed things unlawful toUtter-that
Is en different from the present laws of our
thought and speech that though he bad wit
nessed-them In exalted or bodily presence,
which he knetv not, yee treasonwrles to
deseribe them. 1% - e bare to believe
that, eren were the facts nod principles pre
sented to us, there are vast field^ of koowlr
edge for the proper conception of which we
havens vet no tidequate powers, Yet the
vanity of the human mind too often has led
men to%resider utterly lost. though uneon-
Odour of the fact, Into. tracts of knowledge
which It ls not competent to man to explore.
2.
ligation:.spiMatnadloeeneont esrHenu nkt
ntno w ou rh im m se e l s f - .
Yet an absurd philosophy undertakes to dic
tate laws to the attributes and Operation. of I
tither sidrits. Man, who cannot explain how
even the grass grows beneath bin femtiletutes,
a pt l i
lili,e lf o, I. regarding , the taws of the being of
11.0 . 1
.1 The In der, it world presents vast tracts
tankful, n to man. The philosopher, with hi.
microscope, inoks into a drop of water and
finds it a peopled globe. lie turns his tele
scope and sumps the expanse of space. sew
worlds look out upon him from the distant
depths. He increases the power of Ida glass
and vet other worlds come within the range
of his video Ile In lost in 'mvement . he
inquires what may. possibly lie farther back,
or how far beyond the nanined limits of ho.
moo knowledge are et en the borders of the
material universe.
It is so Thell the departtuente of physical
science. ch timing boundaries of human
knowledge are el,ninUllr reminding us how
far the miknom n Inn:emends the knou - n even
In those sciences easiest of human acquisition.
I know that the subtle intellect of man has
made wonderfull discoveries In the fields of
science. Newton Wind the laws of gravitation
and emedructi .1 tle tins system of the starry
universe nerves discovered the circulation
myth e Mood. Patton applied steam to the
irntro "‘ lZl?t f ' ire TiZtliilrungu,filiTian heaven
andidentified with electric fluid, and Morse
[ought it human language. Yet it mar humble
the (wide of sciollam to remember that only
two and one-half centuries bare elapsed slime
Hertel made his great diseovery, though the
blood of Mauna veins has flowed almost 13,U(s)
year.. it is similar with these other discos.-
ties and Inve idiom. Their recent, humbles
the %tinny of man. Itreminds us of the %tini
ness of the system ofwhich knowing so Much
see set comp trOsseiLknoo so auk..
Let on then in the rained place consider the
mire of human Ignorance.
Prellminarj to this It is to be noted that
.fight I. coutradlstinguished from faith. Sight
by meronomy means the knowledge gained by
eight : faith the bane lege gained by filth or
belief In the teaching of other*. In a wide
nense. s.3ht is applied to tho aggreeateknou l
edge of our race • faith to that which asp re
ceive by belief in't he teaching of God. To this
distlnetton the text sPidion-"11 hat I ere not,
te .. 1 4. e1l Tana enc.
et God. van aid the student even in smiler
stmt... Si can lie aid all minds byllls spirit.
Of the husbandman It is said. "111. God ;loth
Ina met him to discretion and doth teach
him.' lb.ttS, di. And God gave the spirit of
los ention to Bezaleel. Er.ll.n. It Is wise to
recogillSe and imoite the Divine aid In all de
partments of intellectual labor. It Is true In
ROSIE
~,y,,,inLiither testified-"&nr tunnel., bent
&ha... 7400 -, - NoLwitbltanding the sari - But bey ond Oil h. nsetled al this point where
as m.itements nbout the delay In the woe of Liman IA liciotn utterly. falls, divine reselatlon,
he proclamsliun of the dogma of infidlii.Lity. accompanied hr the old. of the divine spirit
it was confidently- expected. In kirk ecelrslas- to enable Ins to comprehend and profit be
deal circles, that this Important ehurch paper • its august teachins. Creation. Sin. Itedemo.
would he published to-day . This belief was lion and a Redeem who I, the Son of Pont
based upon the sentimenti..expressed et the nod the n otterino-or op
t; and
CA - moisten. held by the Pope on Monday last. teacher as w ell an our priest and king-ail
There was a magnificent display rester - MM. these unknown whol.y. or partially, with=
in honor of St. Pet,. ProcessiOn. RCM - revelation are unfolded to us la its pates, and
vlew. lasted all day, with flee worke at hic a. God waits to tiles. the teaching* of these to
Weimer, tone Mi - Inspatchen from Itn e. his
at
who aincerely utters the prayer,
dated the 21/th, announce that the repo of - What I see not tench thou me."
the immediate vote In the Ecumenical Co n- The subject was then applied by the exhor
f
MI On the infaillblllts dorm. Is untrue. he Raton;
discussion of the project continues.it Is re. Ist. li math . to seek Otter yet more wisdom.
ported the Pope has ordered the Card.nal to lid. To recognize ths need of divine Md..
oppose any proposition to net aside the i is- ad. Not to rest satisfied a ith nier, secular
cession. A colninlttee of Bishop. of all non'edge, but seek th•
it whieh makes %else
[lona, including the Archbishops of San I a -,unto salvation.
ciao, - Mexico, Baltimore. Quito and oh r On Monday evening al the same hour the I
American. have addressed a request tot e nnniversary exercises of the Society of Inquiry
talthfial for subscriptions for the Cathol c took place in the cottage chapel, In the
prey-
Church at Constantinople which suffered o cote of a very respectable audience. The ex
terribly In the recent conflagration. ercises seem opened with enact by Rev. T. S.
- ..._-- Kendall. of Oregon. After m Melt Rev, R. 11,
FIBS. Pollock was Introduced, who delivered an ad
%dress, of whickthe following et a brief syn.
HAVANA, June 30.-The Detre; states the I - "6 :
magent Dembetta, with six hundred mann" , “The Relation of the lewe to the Ev gel;
invaded the juriedietion of Santa Espirlt o merino of the %odd." This orld is thenthe
foil the pa-pose of Melting the Inhabitants .f ter for the display of dirinjgrac and mercy:
western departments to rebel tipsiest t o Ia
mb the world's redemption. 'fidg e t! In a s
Xenolith authorities .- authorities. Finding the holism d .- nt sense, the end of Its exintence In tho
stetted and the peep!! flylne from the luau - !Litt of this truth the seemingly mosediscor
gents. his forces became demoralised. Th dint occurrence, perfectly- harmonize. To
cholera also broke ut and Ilembetta RR Oda end
nee
all divine Providences. When
compelled to return o nano Principe r j o h or m, „ tor , f ort h h i tho m o m , of
the
Mons. Colianne of S anal; troops wore sea power %iii "Shake terribly the earth and the
against Reitibetto f m de:forma points all
return o
He cosines "for the salvatiou of Ills
are how punning hi .
people, f
will be
his tuynoMted."
The Spaaish guuboat'Crilln captured th th nd result will be the uiv reign ei .
En wrecking elotm John rey. from Nas Kt e ngJe-ele; His reign over o u teliling and lor f .
sm. The °notate and crew were amens nu Mg people, Language cannot be plainer than
the sloop without papero.
nation, prophetic writings on this eubjecL All
—as— shrill be blessed In Him, and ell on
rm 4AcE. lions shall call Him blessed . The inetrumen-
Pau, June 30._5,,,i,,. k ' mil rh, tn . lion s shall
of God. be which ails Is to be
tic. Ile takes his regular . walk In the garden accomplished Is the Church. She is recognized
of St. Cloud. He risen early. audiences cant as the co-worker 0 itk Jesus In building His
ten and afterwards works a little. spiritual house, In extending His Kingdom,
°Wrier informed the Pope last Nay the till itahan au ~,,, whole earth,
It is but natural for us to expect of film as a
France was resolved to maintain an attitude
of abstention and expectancy, mane mmter-builder , n revelation of Ills plans
--se.--
and specification.. Title is necessary to the sue
-101)1.1. eese and efficiency of the church in her work.
The careful student of prophecy „will find Boosnay , June al.-Ileavy cotton frauds exeetntfone fully In this respect re •
have been disemered. Captain Teisa signed t he lat is necessary to I he t lapin-riA .
h e a n i e t y ,
bilis of lading for MOO beim which [ on that of church In given her
were never shipped and n.n lending full length . cm races purposes of
merchants obtained I,Bfelo it pounds sterling. God mince n cleat people. their re
,. rid their part in the world's even
lee,'twit The great difliculty which ember-
PGRTCGAL.
~.......ritati;
toes the into of this eubJect Is the
LIM:IOS% June 30 . - Saldt,ylb4.- amcc mac cm. lisPositlon to spiritualize the plain literal
merchants of Unbent-. angunge oy. Promises mods to
." credit. develope con, he seed of Arnhemafter the flesh a re co o
h¢----- the prosperity of the men- molded with those made to his spiritual seed
tjx.--- -- 1_ _
till all proemy on this subject is little else
, pg.i bun ioe T t u t o . : b e h m i l a. e e v i eu r "
br
reference
e r,.e ° way
ric r
o u e fora right
.; i t
he,.
tjh.a wt t 1
a l l t, d hi
se e r s citi t n n etr d -. 1
rh I c e / rir i k c e . fil l i b e ' t .inp n f L thr ri e
on
gr tt
n e t r g o a t tZ l
~psag . . " . .d e t ret 1
mostl world. ' ec t pen.
° MY P . ro d phecy dechlared:
Pam's argument
pearl....shall
well a . lone...nnd sha o ll . tint be
R reckoned among ...
1 en trd t . l grs . beg' This
ou r ak
I ey have been scattered among the 0511005
" s earn le sifted in a seem," there has been
o wattle amay of this people; no obsorP
tint-of them by the most powerful natio.
a one which they base gone? Neither op.
p togr . t . h e one band, nor h 01.11 privilege.;
t destroy th:l e r ' Alro.% ° ,, ° least a
B I t
7, e r l! ' n u l l j y e e u t 'be' preserved
U 1 unto ugspuesugtera`.
T ley Shall acknowledge Ulm an .heir Prince
a d Messiah. "Their seed shall he known
a cfng the Gentiles, and their offspring among
t people. All that asp them shall neknowl
e ge them, that they are the seed which the
rd ban blessed:'
hat the protnises here and elsewhere la the
fil4Faie I tgn u 011
betweenkl reasoning ,the rir l "alTl er,
L I
n/
their
i tiii a 4:l•ViViti and
& n :s c e u rngs ed ;;',:t A
bo l t i ti
0.
que-ition more curious than profitable. If It
ham-reference merely to the year In, which It
shall occur. It Is vastly Important, however,
If we propose to Inquire as to the time of
their conversion In Its relation to the time
when
pointentiles shall be conved.
The here discussed was the fact that
niter some succes. In the missionary cause ot
the church. the Jerre shall be reamed to the
divine favor -exerting the Maumee on
the mlceleuary work la farther premien
among the Gentiles, For If the =Myth=
away he - the reconcilin gof the won , what
shall the receiving of teem tro,latt life from
the dead.
iv.
employ C e o d l ne o r t t h d :M G r o e d m h s e i M o n P a e r e iPeGhoadl w l b
tale of these and send them "to Tarshias
Fell and Sud to Tubul and Reran. to the hoes
afar olf-that have not - heard my fame nor '
s ciln7nT y t V ire7gl.'llutll declarex
;ILI! k g
men ant of all thew. league/fen WI natio ' .3
take hold of the eitirts of him tha t Is a Aar
Hying, "Wo will go with - Too for we have
heard that Gal Is with You. •
In the light of these prophecies, In which
God read. GM future meows. we can better
understand
Gds remarkable and serere provi
dence. tO atm. In thin e ley furcate rte I.
Vel.r4Piallng, i r s h o em atilliz he t= le ig on iv o i
work.
rgAna! trim of our salvation ;cast made
tfaist us ten47cltrei ce tor norissi
rs'ilrere:lll4":4:B4l°Maldthrtirtr
FO - LTA O'CLOCK
NEWS BY CABLE
Fresh Inon(ry Into Capt. Eyre's Case
Iterased—llevislon of (he Scriptures
•
by the Protoitant ConneilL-Itritish
Oppiedtlon to the Anglo-French
Commercial Treaty—The Linea-.
Multi queSt lon In (lie Englis h
Noose or Commons—Contradictory
Reports Concerning the Infallibility
Doglna--44reat Cotton Fraud at
Bombay.
By Teler•rnph to the Tlttgbttrgh (laze t t e.)
GREAT' BRITAIN.
June /..--Calptaln Eyre.. of the
Peninsulnr and Oriental Steamship Germany,
non written to the Board of Trade of London,
asking that n freak Inquiry be instituted into
the causes of the disaster to the United States
corvette Onedia, which collided with his
steamer, the Botnbay, In the Ilay.of Yokoha
ma. The Board of Trade refused to entertain
his proposition. •
An English Church paper, The Mel:, state=
that the question of a revision of the Scrip
ture: will be brought before the coming Pro
testant Council by an eminent clergyman.
IVisetelly, the artist. wan drowned to-day
at Margate.
A large and harmonious meeting was held
In this city by the opponent, of the Anglo.
French commercial treaty. Joalant Pidden,
conaervative member of the House of Com
.- mons for York West Biding, delivered a via.
lent apeech against the treats, Himself n
the cotton manufacturer and mercant of- Shin
to n• chest., he was able to ahew th e unfavorable
effect of the treaty on the cotton trade et.
.„day Great Britain. After speeches by other per
denouncinguion was
an th e
adopted
II fur the treaty an the cause of Was
aska trial prostration, and calling the 3flnisteni to
and account for denying an investigation of the
subject.
maid- Sir James Stark, n celebrated Physician, is
eon- dead. He was eighty-two rears urn.. Jo
siah Forester, uncle of William Edward For.
clod ester and patriarch of the Quakers, died yes
end terday.
fore . The Prince nod Prince. 6f *Alen attended
nand the opening of the public school an Lass Lon,
the don to-day. •
oan Lessees In to hare a grand reeept ion at Crys
tal P alace. Sydenham. on t he 4th of July.
cc- In the Commons Mr. Otway. Coder Hevre
ut tnrr of Foreign Department, declined to nay
r- at present whether the gurernment intended
to ratify toe new China treaty. Sir. stonsell.
Under L 4 ecretary of Colonial Department. acid
I it wan Impossible to tell when the Lords' bill
altering the representative }Comm of Wilk,.
Columbia would reach the ons; The
Rouse went into, Committee on the education
bill. There was a large attendance lboth
at
members and spectora. Mir Stafford orth
cote offerml nu amement eXpengln the
clause prohibiting thee,ching of religious
sentiments. He supported the amendment in
speech. declaring the sentiment of the coun
try hostile to such provision. Mr. Foster op
posed the athendment IV letting In an endless
sectarian controversy. Sir. Slope favored the
amendment and was followed by Mr. Dixon
In opposition. Mr. Gladstone defended the
clause as it stood as representing the will of
the country. As the Bible could be read and
expounded without regard to any particular
doctrine. the plan placed the smallest possi—
ble restraint on religious teaching. Mr. Lis
a:wed said the clause would not exclude secta
rian content kill, as designed. lie favoredf he
election of the board by rate payers. After
further deb to the Committee divided with
the following result: For the amendment, (Cu
acalnat 2:12. Sir J. Parkington proposed the
remling of the Bible form part of the daily
exercises. Messrs. Foster Red Hartle oPPos
cd Lt and the amendment was lest.,-81 to rad:
Jacobliright offered an 1 1 1 11Ct11111100t that teach
ing shall not be directed against the tenets of
any sect. Mr. Gladstone thought the idea le
seeable of enforcement. The amendment
was rejected by LI! majority. Adjourned..
The Madrid eniTespondent •of the (31.1br
vrrttes that Isabella'. abdication Is Ireearded
Important an rendering the cnndiacy or
Prince Asturias posalble and the alinlce.of
peace; throun.holit
rciand twee:, next Sunday.
the quarterly revenue
thirds hhoW'n tho
celjdo Orteen and one nillll.l itchiest
nineteen million. for the °or:responding period.
Last year. .
Errenetancone HO--A public. meeting was
heist t MehtV, tyor presiding, to pneurde
the New York Christi. COllnCli. The atten
dance tras large and influential, and the inter
est In the object of the meeting profound.
LOsnoxiirmtv, June :Xl.--At a large meet
ing last evening the government bill 'regard-
Ing public proceo,low, won strongly condemn
ed.
MARINIC
ha re
Lcurods, 36 .—Noith German Lloyds
at for a steamshle Ilne from
doutbsunpton to West Indies.. The steamers
are now hmlding. .l The nest reseal will snit
In October.
FINANCIAL AND COMMURCI AL.
LoNDON. June, 201 .—Cerninp. Consols • for
Money MN: account WU. American securities
Ur. " B . ttc 4 ;:s )j 4L ifl.;
Western,BS..
FRAN icrOnS, June3o.—Bonds quiet. • •
PARA June ;D.—Mourne :Inner itt. 14 francs,
DS centimes.
Livritroot.,Jeue3o.-oatton quiet: tniddling
uplands WO; Orientln /o%d; sales of 10.0 LB
bales. Breadstuff, firmer — California white
wheat lan Malin Id ; red western No. Go 10d:
winter Lls &KIN 'id. I Firmr aultit; Western. Ma
Cd. Corn:No 2 mined 30561.1 w Outs 25 sd.
Barley i.e. • Pens 370,6 d. Pork lies 6d. Beef
ills. Lard firm at Vris Od. Cheese 6fB. lia
corkNis for Cumberland cut, and its for short
ribbed. Provisions uhehringed.
LONDOO. J 055 30 . -- TallnlE w y . !:t. at ICm, Au
tar 31,16,1231 e Pd. Mips ' sd. Refined
Petroleum Is Td. Limieed 01 heavy. !billion
in the Bank of EngEind Inerenged =LOW.
Bullion In the Bank of iFrance decreased 21;
BOUM francs.
DAME. June 00.—Co ton Oat at 116 francs.
Aavwstir. June . 1 0 , —Petroleum tint,
Fluirscronv, Jima 30.'—Bonds closed flat at
lallf(290.
IfAvite. June 30 .—C8tton closed Leary at
115 S. francs. I
—Reports of drought and grasshoppers In
Kansas are untrue. There tom been plenty of
retuned no grasshoppers. ps through
out the state are splendid. Thee wheat'is gen
firally harvested, of full average and the
quality exceeds that of any previous
year.- The • grazing ranges near Obelcria
and Salina are Covered With over fifty thous
sand Texas cattle that have arrived thin see.
son, and over that number aZon the way tin.
The Kansas Pantile Railroad as commenced
Tmoving these cattle east by t stock.tnsins.
h r r k a LW: g 4i o a road, iVirdvgarlig FlaWinrlrto.r!
Ilve miles west of Kit Cars° , and the road
will be completed to D ean rby September
first. , I
—The President bas nnt set abandoned the
Idea of sectniug the ratification of the San
Domingo treaty. It to well known that the
time for the exchange of the ratification ex
pires on Friday. July 11, but he stated Wednes
day to a Senator. that it there was no chance
of considering it before that date without an
tagontslng it with other Important. public
business, he had assurance that the time could
and would be extended as long as neomesar7,
to order to meow, the ratification. In fact.
herbed taken the necessary steps to that end.
. .
•
WESTMINSTER COL LEG E
. I
Price.
Dunileen Law DictionatT,D 612.00
Sharswoil'e Blackstone. role 10.00
Ewa'. Commentaries. 4 vials 20.00
Blun's Justice ...... •
Dunlap's Forums
Purdon's Th 6.ollreat 8.00
Parson
Parsons Laws of Basin°. for 'fastness
Men
Crosert, Ifyeryucely's Lawyer..
Baeson's links of Court,. .
Brewster's Digest
Stephens' Pleading
Bunco on Bankruptcy
Saandars on Itaakrupter—, ..........
Bawle's Equity In Pennsylvania.....
Rules in Equity tanpreute Court/
Sharawattl's Laical Ethic.
fituatowoara Law Luctures
Trouliat d flaly's Prattlce
stew, paunsylyanla Bata ItePorta Par
yol
Wallace'u 11. B. DePorts. for VOL.
L I,ST OCTETTERS REMAINING
Armatrose John Finch Edward :MeGrunahart L
Adems P
, PleCormlea mere
'Amon bra
'Gaffey Edward
Antal. firtmes
W ' • I linft;
eittreT,Vmf" '14147 1 7,1"'
oerranl 'rhos Illughez Chas :Phllllrejtbd3lA'
Bailey Alm J It
Border Mn N Johnn , John D iheese Evan
IgKarnes John Tl:Johne !Rose Nicholas
ar tou rr =hael i Jentalaak, M rs C A I=
nrevi3z 11r0.1 u" - !Smlth J a ohn
CAmwn Dtowa
• 1....31122 ,Ltrilllftfretr"
Craft Thomas L . Shalt. Daniel
Campbell Mrs It , Leals J , bldelds Thee A ,
CAl.6l,phell Kra NlDewle fl ;Slitter Peter
c(?CadmleJanme 'Lavelle John - :811eler John ~
mminell K immi , ;84eera J/.A.1
CinnonEg'r" Illeer'fref;7l
CarnelhP illoHey]fobett ITaylor Allen '•
.R . ntr ands iidarAT rig tf ClrotUthrrl't
C117.4'11Nt.. I M man rran.4' v e!" A
Campbell A Doman D. iWeatepet Sohn
D.i.-.7!),1m iitlirr BL_A"lllaMttea"L!iF9.
Davit
YettW Mgr;
H. !McAdam. WatT.Walter John
Er Ts ft r ali r T E S
-Wood
Frees Peter
IfILIr DERR. P.lll.
Beetpo m
R ebo An<
REDUCTION.
Regardless of Cost I
BARGAINS !_ BARGAINS !!
T
Morganstern & Co's,
MAORUM. GUDE & CO..
Spring and Summer Goods,
yvcu as
Shetland Shawls:
White Skirts,
Parasols, ".
Sun Shades.
GullYare Laces.
Hambur EdN eck Ties,
• ,Ladies'g gir
Ganz,
AND =Mr.
TRllninsT
Nos. 78 and
ii:ZES
HEM
9
thilj trials and whatever' is recognized as
el ento of success.
Among these were noticed—
I. _Their zeal and enthusiasm.
0. Their persevering energy.
:L Their knowledge of ahnost nil languages
, and dialects In the world. When that nation
shall be counted. it will be its on Pentacastill
dny. 'when every man shall hear his own
fatigue and the wonderful works of God.
On Tuesday evening an audience consisting
of the citizens of Wilmington. a large number
of the Alumni of the Institution, qultennum
ber of the visitors attending the closing exer
tines of the College, were highly entertained
with select reading lAt W. M. Ilvans, of Pit to on liehalf of the Adelphkt and Philo.
male Literary Societies. The Professor has
read here at different times with eminent suc
cess, and his readings thisevening, consisting
principally of selections from' Sitakspeare and
were,dilly appreciated.
On Wednesday afternoon the examination
of the competitors for thestrild medal award- '
-ed by C01..1. 11. Findlay, of Aittanning, to the
person of the Senior class standing the'est
examination in philology. history and English
liternture, took place. Also al contest In the
ladies department for a prl4e awarded bY .
James McCandless, Esq., of Pittsburgh. for
the best essay. in the evening at 6 o'clock
the business meeting of the Alnmal took
place, and nt an address was delivered by
Rev. D. S. Littell. of Alumni Association.
On Thursday the commencement exercises
will take place in a fine grove near the village.
opening at 10 O'clock l a dl es . The class, eonsist-
Mg of gentlemen and , numbers twenty-
Live. from whom addresses and essays are ex
peeled; and If the weather is One will yield a
pleasant anti interesting entertainment.
These exercises close the _eighteenth year of
the history of _the institution, and we are
happ we sny it has been 011 e of prosperity.
end, trust, advantage la the cause of edu
cation. The number. of students In attend
ance during tke year wits two hundred and
forte-six, the greater number of whom were
In the higher classes. A vacation of two
Months now commences, and we hope It may
be one of pleasure and relagution to the stn
&Ms, and that they may reffarn Invigorated
for the duties of the ensuing year. • X. •
1it3 ,„ 7":14124 , i1ei , % . 6s ' ;
irt.FOURTII OF JULY. i
YOUNG :UMW SODALITY PIC ND
cnovE.
• Tickets of nOn3l.nion, InCluding 01. or,
•
Omer rgrreurnon Ann Bogrog airsmin Co., t
Prnrournorl. Juue 2:101;11S70.
ar SPECIAL MEETING OF STOCK
UOLDERB.—There will be apeclid meet
ing of the Steekholders of the - PITTSBURGEF
AND BOSTON lIINLNG COMPANY OF PITT&
B 011011.” held at the Mace of the Couipany, in
the City of Pittsburgh, at le o'clock P. xi., on
WEDNESDAY, .271 h flay of July, proximo
BY order of the flonrdof Director,
THOS. M. HOWE. Secretary.
R
NIOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT
.1.1 a theccllat aon roofe Made et the next meet.
las of Legislat Pennsylvania for the let
corpora. lon of a Hank In meordaneetrah the laws
se the Commonwealth. to be totalled "The Berndt
cent Saving Fond of Pittsh." to be located at.
Pittsburgh. with a Capital oftn. lasodred Thou
sand Doiletrs. with the carnage to lnereeee the
tame to There Hundred Thotamid.
A DMINISTBATORN NOTICE.
Whereas. Letters of Administration have
been {Mllfltf,d to the undersieded on the estate CO
O LOltter. AIINISTItufiG, deed. late Of Hampton
ho e . : . Thig. o tA.rxri o s . leebted to said estate are
herbal Maims to foment thTnit'.4ilte'rithAUttitetted
for se tt l etzlik&the_tindersisned. I
1. re. !MOWN. Administrator.
Ilasteros_Tr.. qeghen• Co., t
lone Stii, 1810. f JuLY
Dlssoil7l - 14E - )Y.
The Pertnernhlp heretofore ertstleg r oteler the
'firm melee of
T-T. M. .11.()N(14 -- €V
I
F:aplraA with clay day blidadlaooa.
1.02441 a co
rr. et , ft,. t[ . Jll/10 30th:1870
D ISSOLUTION OF
THE FM OP
AL LON - tt , \CO:
intatuoud Oil worts) k Ihi 4ay
itation.
•
, •
JOAN JAMES W. POBTEIft
aud =LAS. L.. CALDWE4 are authonu4 tiaaatr.
tie the out.tandidy boulnenu , and to utelhe arso's
name In liquidation.
Prrrsnuno u. Ju1y1,112_370. pat4ll_
STANDARD
LAW BOOKS
FOR SALE
(AY & COMPANY
65 Weed Street,
ommm!
Lae,
-
THE MMMY GAZETTE:
Ls Tux am AND CHNAPINT
Commercial and • Family Newspapet
Pannier= IN WRNTIMRSPE.NNSTIMANIA.
No torolor. =cotton*, or..norrobaat . oh 0•10 •
i.ttllootlt
Chad of tea •
A 000 y la fail:dolma grataltooAly b tb•goitono
of i, Club a Mo. Protmogon. aff. it y
art a. Annan.Urns. •
ENID dk
PROPRIRTOM.
C lr -VEMICEs.—.I4Lrf.“ Fbr Sak,'! "Lost'
crreedisq -
'urn LINZ'S...O6o lainini la test toil! Meal*. la •-• '
DIrEIIII - -r7I7S ..EXTR; nvk adelltionol Unr
Firs CENTS..
WANTS.
TASTED.—To parch/is* a Mow of
4or 3 Rooms. Aubittlemr..Pavr
WV.
u.,qc-rne *Elm
j4TANTED.—it 13 Tunnel Stint,3l 4
11..Operstolnk. Plidaben, sod Batton lido
iiTINTE - D--- -- NTORi ROO 31.—i good
V • rent will toe paid for a rentrany loealed
li.li. slare. Rom. Pommes*oo ranted noon. Aditolika
9.A 2 .1.711L0. •
WANTED-An ORPHAN BM and
v WILL of 9or 10 years of nee, to tire •110
• Mnple. CompenSitloa, No th ing...whoa.
Inn. ar. Berl of reference M.
two dam 3. e..o2tzlerre owoo. y ,
Addrees tot.
ANTA NTED.—A Situation-is BAR.
dr e s s oon, Hem of rennonlerelaUon•glren. An
dr IL D. M., Plerborgh P.O. 4.3:1
UTAxTED.— RECRUITS.--SCirral
moot, able oaeQ, ofirood reryll4ll.,a,
',meted t o ell np the I. UttUTH 11:0XCAN1 • •
tWElT(9oeltaallni.r: ATl:4TtVtell'ee'ref the
Yost Jeas:e.,
liIrANTED. , -.Several Men rot rarin,
Wort. Garden[Mr and 1ng014.2 Aln , , tor
or
Brittrard Wk. &mond (Arlo minte r nor.
a cl i ti ii ` N Hch rev b rrr on' gralLir
pension /MU°
WANTED-NORTGAGEAI
30.006 w Losn In maul
=:=l
Trtomas sr, privy.
8111. Bond •nd Real UMW thole,
No. 170 Elmlthaeld
ANTEX:MORTGARES:
Thirty Thousand Dollen to Loan
!into or man ma oun is on prolnni7 in MinitainV
nty n bar rate Of intern..
.CHAILLICS JlLll.l2lfr,
RotateAsent.
O.I.IIDING-;-To4ebwith Boarding,
?NO SECOND BTOltr 11001113. futtlahed.
103 Fourth avenue. 11-=
LOST OR STRAYED,
LOST.—PROMISSORY NOTE.—The
Pu nuts n hor•by notint.l not to omlotlate
&c00p..10.8'2794M. parable to thlfentikor
J. W. 7 dre.d.SLlN. dated 31.7 IYYltb. IN7S. and
drawn' by MeCaslin. as payment batik; •
'topped on same. . • - .1.045
LOT—On Monday ; evening butt, it
iintonAnnum BOOK eentalning • mesh
emoting of Portia Currency. A Wien' reseed
: 74Y
piel
be to the person returning It to . .
' HP&NCER. hIcKATA CO,
G.,si Coe. 'llthsold gmallsosn Ate. 12th sm.& ..
TO-LET.
rl'O-LETA comlete. WELLING •
110889, with Stoopsoam attacked;
atm on Wylie ay.., For
189 WYLIN AVE lerema, de, WI at Nn.
19.T1L
TV-LET—ROOM% with BOARDING.
.a. -. 6 R. 4 of ntglatnal Rooms eareoood
TLET.—STOUE ROOM.
A Bret-class FITORR ROOM and teller, No.
IMte /Abaft? Walt. einoldefely Rated UP VII
&belying and manners. 'WIII be rented clitap
called for
I. Inquire
' • , ' • t i
-4 T'r `tiro-g.?Z;i
ward, near rats/
street, o"nt Serveotb .avente.
14,0 U SlLE.—That well•kdown
&darribirisM;a l Viditi r'"T ill !
Tt. a proper ' , a . m. dashing to k•• 11 • bateau. la
* ''''Pa't "Y.
T Y11 74 7 §& Tit• l get ' fir •••
•: • No. 11 Banint V militant ..\
'.
trOdnnpalinn Intraatillart on Sabi-
Rolle
.4
FOR SALL — Engined and Boller% ~ --- , 1
Nast and liertrind Rand. of all lands. statria dill , '--
on band.
1
amen rrinn all parts of am mangy Pinntoilial.
Canard to.
k CO,
Corner llarlod " Are i nt ant P., Pt. Tr. AC. R. W.. 1
learbeny. Pa
—4l , -, ..—...=
FOR SALE.—STOCK PAR / I[:-.Can.-
TAINS NMI ACIM. roe hundred and Matz
r.afrg...tr arialrldn ., 4balt.an: w t =a.lelL t " . ,
and sheep halm, orchata and mph .aired by It ,
mall creek paantsfe through Um place. Illmatd in .. ,Al
-reminds amt .11....35. =LH hOl2l VertILIM
... .
tad Loubmine ;In ;axing! mishbothooli , .._
Tu. t o .Mate rhumbas. dn. ram eatt b. ,
cr.A A to.. Nn. W pnatth Am
,t
Fll
OR SALE CHEAP J OR EXCHANGE- ,
A: POE CIIT PROPERTY. —A One COUNTRY ,'-' ' :.:
IMIIDENCIS, containing 90 name alth 3 bonne...
thenenn: one. ai1.:41/6.71.4:7,..b.1".n0tA00nran1en! - ;..,..,...'
eninti =e 7 rirehnsylvanla r for a inllar4,-4_,,-„:„.:
Irmo the der, on the anent of Tarn* Roan. ..,-
..t . .i:: ,- ;.
oor a lathe 11901 Rowan's Stan on. Central Rail- -.'
Mal. Also. eeveral (004 Parma In 0.1 lonatlona , , •;. ~
mat house, for sale. Malqulre of
m. 11" N . . 110 Orant SL. WI LLIAM WARD.. • i'. ,
pt:agate Catheand. '' ---'
_ .
--------
1340
tl.OO
I 3.00
14.30
1000
3.30
3.00
1.30
OR BALE.
*OO
740
24.50
• :...
,
A bandsotan_presse4 Beta bum
SWIMS, onetMoleg7 tooniatoe 48 - ti Fie .92 ,
ate ou 44th Meet. Mu Butler street. - l ot .
Z.Vll=litleretlraggraraZ Lbn'tbdiV "".
' :
Mull. UTethaMiiittn4Wroliaoaenaa."U"""Me ':
.
lour time riven. -
c.c.„ T. fl. 1 ...1. A ....J. 80N a"
R ON VAIN LSTratET.-An eletantile ' .:,
use, aflame on leans strut bear toe liners - a., :'-.
hot.
ii;lts4orallopLa room; Lot 341171 M. ;, , .
all I moderate M ' aoe ore Vit h L t-.. k n raol' ' '
O. 44th lIITAIWET.-A beauttral lot near lleile"'
Arose. 60 be 108, aka* to tha eltleess'P. a. a_ .• '
Aar Oa. wishing a pleuant spot on which to Della -
cannot he batieraulte4 T. It. BILL 4 BOR.
_Wet:FM Paretts• toe Lots near the Pam= . •
It jt.....41 . ,1 v 055 r 1i sua tallanosla four vlaunn.j
innnel
orMortatilty elre tr. Th e :4III M OT 3 1
tolenutaaeou. T. A B tatlarAtber
jam ~,...”.. "en and SW K..,
Wafer.
ens back 240 feet to
Wawa. There Is erected thereon salon
Dwellhur. with 11 room...tame, b oth ortable
eeaf, house,.
leWte &C.; WWI Ude.' use whole house lee •• .
eprlos Uwe*. wasb house. Woe cella 4
These le mho • Lam Inlet Stehle on the
to
.'
of We ; /04. with eyerivllwee.cofor
Ti at a ts — Oar4oartit' cub; it -
two And
- -...,
.. . ---._, „..... ••• .....,-;-...„,.-:
• . PI TTSBIIIIG/V -,,, :••,- , -.: -, ;
BANK FOR. SAVINGS,,' . . ::" -, - S ",_
NO. iii roviern ArprugPrrisithir:' ..:',..:..''':?-14
cumrrimm IN 2 94,:: ' '. , i . . . '..
..
'...
, .:'..:
yam MIT 'At iangluttit-•:•---.
akara.zralivirdor.4. grzarh!'i, --...----
naa or Ms poem:Lanni of UM. Sad ...Oft "-.. : -, 1 -
till‘drarn coo..nqdx_ senuannuannts 3•41.10-p111;i.
,;-i.....,,:,:r.5..
. co_ or 87-/a , n4 ite, M0JA . 1144. ... -. ... ,, . - ..'1 , 4
nuoint-lt-'-. , Fr'.:: , :il
3%T; jo"
a14..1ig.7 ri,l*. giL 1
'; '1- ::'---':''4
10. N . AA A. Zl4 . 'i tiell.Pril. lathes, .
WJA - KREBS
ICE DEALER • ,
. .
a 5 Rtver Ave"
BARNES
Sealer of Wtights.and Meassre4;;;l4.
orrlcr ::
FOITIRTR I 4TE.,
lloglcysis mine tototTelatioil3Wflup
11T11217. =ill Jul,- MX len, for tn3,44x,c4,,,,,--5-.-
tILINNT to let C 1.....) .` '
ME
%I
-