J AMES P. BARR, Editor and Proprietor. Medical. Dr. floofland's GERMAN BITTERS. PREPARED BY DR 0. Di, JII.O.KBON, Philadel phis, Penua., IS NOT A BAR ROOM DRINK, SUBSTITUTE FOR RUM, Intoxicating Beverage. • BUT A 1:114311LY CONCENTRATED Vegetable Extract. A PORE TONIC Free from Alcoholic Stimnlants or lu~urloax Drugs AND WILL EFFECTUALLY CURE tAli vet . ' UOlDDl4 l lillit t Dyspepsia and Jaundice ROOPLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS WILL CURE EVERY CASE OF Chronic or Tier' otut Debility-. Illmease cf the Kidneys. and IlOseases rtritstug. train a Visor dered Stomach. Observe the Following Syulpttai Eeulting From Disorders ot the Digestive Organs : Co-sr r,. Lldn, .inviadd Pies, Failure , t.r te t co Bead, of the ston:. h, Nemec - am Ilettrtburn, f reed, Ftt:tuo ,,, c _at n mar w,s_ brinttettr.e at the Pit r I the btert.• adh, bwitaating Cf the Head. Earned ar..l D.thcuit lireathiaz, Flutteritg et the Heart. t_hoting or Suffocating tleasatir,n a hell In g attire Dithtte.Fe of Vlaion, Dot; or Webs he tore the bight, Yever had Dui; Phil, in tt e Arad, Dattoleaoy of Pereplrhtion, Vel .c.wcess of the Skin at-'d Erea, Pain to B the bide, ack, Chest. Litubs, tiaddenFlusittee of Licht, Ji urn - Lag in the Plertik, Courts! t I.m.2gininz:,. of E , and crest Den: os- Rion of EIODFIAND'6" GE3MAN BIPTERS WILL (uvr: lvi A GOOD APPETITE. STRONG NERVEs, HEALTHY NERVES, STEADY NERVES, BRISK FEELINGS. HEALTHY FEELINGS, A GOOD Cts.NSTIT UTION, A STRONG CONSTITUTION A HEALTHY CONSTITUTION, A SOUND - CONSTITUTION WILL MALE "fiiE WEAK STRONG WILL MAKE THE WILL MAKE THE 'WILL MAHE DEPRESSED WILL MAKE fEE SALLOW t COMPLEXION WILT, MAKE CLEA IL RRJGIIT DULL EYI Will prove 0. 1 - ,: e6.5:i:k; in lezi..l"Nl I 1,1" Aa Cast bb ise2l withperfect s tfe'y by MALE ()LI) (Ja FEMALE, IUUNG 0 1 0 Ci.VII PARTICULAR NOTICIr% There are many preparattons cold under the name of Bittere.put uy sn quart bailee, compoundea of the cheapest whisky or COl7/171C71 rum , coetinp from go 41) cents per gai . r. ,41 taste dieoulAed hy An ne or (Iniander , . This oletee u/Buters has cowed and tnill contin ue to COLL9e, as tang as they can be notd IldredA to doe the death o/ the drunkard, By their use the VP Bief3 so kept anntinuatiy under the srannenee of Al coholio Stimulants of the wore hind, the destre Liquor is crewed and kept sty, and the result so all the horrors attendant trprm a drunkard's life and loath. Beware of them. For those who aeslre alvt will have a Lisiuo, Eis.itera, we pubis/IA the/a/o-wow receipt. !let Otis , Bottle Moorland's German Bittern, end wiz with Three quarts of Good Brandy or Whisky, tire: the result trill Lea lir eztar tz!zull that !trill tar excel le medicinal orritses and true excellence any' of 0.6 , numerate Liquor in Ike musket, and will coati:ranch leffli. Yon trill have all the mince of lloolloititi's }littera in ocusectwit unth a good arttule . NLiquor. n soma tear price than these gliferx,- preparaft:liyirw ?1,/i &STU' CEMEIN T . A T tit ON, 'SC IC WO it TK. , I, prepared to Cement the exterior cf building's with improved Maati•.: Cement, cheaper and an rericr to any done heretofore. This cement has no eTia.l; it forms a solid and durable adhesive ness to toy enrfeoe imperishable by water or frost, and equal t^ any duality of stone. The undersigned is the only reliable and prac tical workman in this cement in this city. I hose applied this Cement for the, oLlowing gento,u,n, whom the public are at 'inerty to re. far to: J. Bissell residence Penn street, finished, IS pre Jae. McCandless, Allegheny, no IS yrs J. li. Shoonhergor, Lawrenceville, do 5 yrs J. D, McCord, Penn ttreet, do 4 yre A. tioeveler, do 3 yrs Girard house Pittsburgh, do 5 yrs St. Charles - do do 5 yr, _Address Washinzton Hotel Box /306, Pittsburgh P.O. I,L PAPER., fOR ALTTUNIN OF 1868, A complete assortment cf beautiful PAPER HANGINGS Of all styles, at prices lower than can be again offered. For sale daring the sewn by W, P. JKARSILALL UST RECEIVED- Laird's Bloom. of loath fur the complexion and skin. Drake e genuine Plantation Bitters. Ayer'.3 Cherry:Peotoral and Sarsai,arilla. Mrs. Alien's Hair Hai torer and Zylobaleam. Wishart's Pine Tree Tar Cordial. lingan's Magnolia Balm. Soaring 4incrusia fur the Hair. ilulioney's Family Itl eti,cutcs. Lindsey'sluipr6ved li•ood Searcher. All 01 Dr. Jayne's Family Medfcinea, Pure Glycerine and Honey Soaps. U.yeerine Cream and Cold (ream, for chapped ti ands, taco, at .) A. KELLY'S M holeaale and Retail Drug Store, 002.1 N. u Federal et., Allegheny WANE YOUR GAS BY USING GLEA son's Anti-Flickering, American and Imper ial Liss Burners, a sure saving of twenty-Eve per cent. The Anti-Flickering is just the thing for the Office. Call and see them burn at the Gas Fitting and Plumbing Establishment of WELDON & KELLY. nog • 164 Wood street. B UTTE 3 bbls prime Roll Butter, I bbl " Fresh Packed Butter 4kegs " " ' Just reoeind and for sale by FETZHat di ARMSTNG. aoBo corner of Market sad Mutestreet.. FIRST NATIONAL BANK TREASURY DEPARTMENT. OFFICE OF COYPTROLLER OD THE CMIIIHNOT, Washington CitY. Aug. sth, 1883. WrlassAs, By satisfactory evidence presented to the undersigned, it has been made to app_ear that the FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PlR're- BURGH, in the County of Allegheny and State of Pennsylvania has been duly organized under and according to the requirements of the Act of Congress, entitled 'an Act to provide a National Currency, secured by a pledge of United Btates Stocks, and to provide for the circulation and re demption thereof," approved February 25th, 181 G. and has complied with all the provisions of said not required to be complied with before commencing the business of Bans ins, Now THEREFORE, 1, Hugh McCulloch, Comp troller of the Currency, do hereby certify that the said FIRST NATIO NAL BANK OF PITTS BURGH, county of Allegheng and State of Penn sylvania, is antoorized to ccolSbencie the business of Banking under the Act aforesaid. In testimony whereof witheas my hand and seal of oboe, this sth da,y of August, 181'3.HUGH' MoCULLOCH, 88 } Comptroller of the Currency. The First National Bank of Pittsburgh, Pa., LATR PITTSBURGH TRUST COMPANY. Capital sllo.o,ooo.ortth pwrellege to In crease to $1,001%000. The Pittsburgh Trust Company having organ ized under the act to provide a National Cur rency. under the title of the FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PITTSBURIIII, would respectfully offer its services fir tLo cpllection of Notes. Drafts, of Fxchar,io, So., receive money ou dePosit and buy and sell Kul:Lange on all parts of the country. The success 50'01 hss )t'endiat.the Pittsburgh Trust Company fir oe Its organizitOon iu 15,`,2., will we belivo bo a eufficient guarantee that buionees entrusted to the new organization will receive the EOlllO prompt &mantic) 1. Having a very evensive correniundence with Ranks and Bankers, throashout the tonntry, we believe we ran offer unusual faceiides to those who do businesa with us The biviness will bear. y the e.al othurA awl iirecitorA Jan, 21 Laakt!in. 1 1. rn. K. 1\ tr.rdell. Rebell 6 Lays, i A 1ex.v.51e...9;.ee , . Thntna.m Bell. Yranais G. Bailey Th,d Wieltmen, 1 Alex. Bradley, banuet Kea. - • - • JAMES LAUOiILIN, ProPidera. JOHN D. SC'l7 LLY, Nahier. Angnst sth, KOUNTZ & MERTZ, BANKERS, No. 118 Wood St., Second deo above Fifth Street, I la EA ERRS 13i FOREIGN AND Domoettz Fmchange, Coin, Dank Netted. and flovorn• ment becurittee. Cullve.ti.,ne promptly attenled to. dot oLO, SILVER, DIIIWAND NOTES Certincatea of Indebtedness, Quartermas tars Gertific,,t,s. 7 3-10 Bonds and Coupons, Ind nll otherovernmen' W, 11. wi Ammar. tZ , o.. direct. corner of Third, PLANTATION 0 OFF E.E /11111 E EF.ST 110tELS, lIENTAUR- Il ar,ts, r tempers and Pr - vcc Yulnilies are saving near'yftfip per cent. by using (Mlles' Old Plantation Coffee, o.il Plantation Callen, Old Plantation Coffee, In place of other imported Coffees, such as Java or Mocha It has been fully tested side by side with the finest J sva, and pr,nouneed fully equal in uniformity of ftrength and richness ol flavor, eu that we can. with more tOan usual confidence, recommend to our iriends and the public our fine flavored As our late invoices an: by far superior to former ahipinetbi. the bean or kernel is lull, Omni , . and very nit , h like the eltcha or Mountain Cof fee in shape, .11:11 when MRS, ufac , urcal by our new Promiii4 is dotided.y prefer lila to the best grades Mend Cieticei a rvi we would advise ail who desire a really reliabie and healthy beverage, to Drink Wailes' Old Plantation Coffee, Drink Willem' Out Pl.niatlOn Coffee, Ortnis Willem' Old Plantation Coffee. It i+ packe•l only in ot e pound tin foil pacS"'- ge , :Xi and 60 pounds in a e,++e: each package having a tan-sin:dip it our signature. the Old Plantation Cottee Is for sale by nearly all the loading grocers and country - stores tlroughout the 1- cited btatv. at Liberal discouc t to the Jobbing Retailer Trade The old Plantation Codee should be prepared the same as any other pure coffee; good cream, with the addi t i on of an egg, boiled wan Lho coffee will add Lunch to the Wright ig Hies de Brother, ONLY MASUPACTUnKRA de4 2:3: 4 337 Wns. Ington et , N, ST ERANCIS GOLLEGF.::, 1310 EN CAR OF PI FRANCISCAN BROTHERS 701 HIS INSiTritUTION, NeriIATED LW - CET/0, Cambria county Pennsyl canto about for. roil , n from ,Cresson Station, on the direct route between Philltdelphia and Pitts br.reh, was ohaftercd in 1858. with priviliges to oonfor the usual Collegiate lioncys and Degrees. The location of the College is one of the most healthy in Pennsylvania—this rortion of the Alle gheny Mountains being frcrerbial for Its pme water, bracing air. and pimaresque scenery. The Scholastic year commences on the 111.11,81 MONDAY after the 15th of AUGUST. and ends about the 28th of TUNE following. It Is divide I Into two Sessions. vitidonts cannot return home Setweon the Sessions. All the Apparatus neces sary for Land Surveying. Entineerang , gte, wtll be famished by the institution to the At/dm:its. - - - Lgtrumentel ana Vocal Musk forms no extra enarge. Students will be admitted from data years to tha age of manhood. Tsmc—Board and Tuition, Payable hail nardi in advance-- —.s 65 Surveying aria use orinatruments, per an num . .. °lassie' ar.o Modern Languages, extra..... IO Students spending Vacation at:the College. 20 ILefertnce can be made to the Rt. Rev. Bishop Domenec, Rt. Rev. Bishop Wood Philadetpleda. Rev. T. B. Reynolds, Loretto. Rev Dr, O'Hara, Philadelphia: Rev. Henry McLaughlin. Phila. dmphia:ktev. Pieroe Mahar, ilarrisbarg. N. B.—A hack rune daily to Loretta frcm Ores sen. sepli AMERICAN HOUSE., BOBTOX. as THE LARGEST AND BEAT AR ranged Hotel in the New England States; is centrally located. and easy of access from all the routes of travel. It contains all the modern im provements, and every convenience for the com fort and accommodation of the traveling public. The sleeping rooms are large and well ventilated; the suites of rooms aro well arranged, and com pletely furnished for families and large traveling Parties. and the hou , e will continue to be kept as a first a first-class Hotel in every respeet. Telegraph in the house to all parts of the coun try.HENßY RICE, Proprietor . 87 Wood StroeL Boston, Sept. 188 t Ari AS AND STEAM FITITING.—THE ILW order ivied is prepared to execu.e all or for Gar and Steam Fitting, Also, for fitting MEGME=MI Mr. W. 11. L.RAUMEIt is foreman of the Oaz Fitting St..); . FOLDING IRON BEDSTEADS For sale; e!so. TWO LATHES. W. D. KET.CENBURG. Locksmith and bell Hanger. de3-Imd 926 Penn street, EMOVAL OF LIVERY STABLE,. LL The undersigned having removed his Live ry Stable from the rear of the Scott House, to near the corner of first and Smithfield street. W. C. ci onn - s old stand. is prepared to furnish Carriiijob. buggies, and saddle horses upon the shortest no tice. Also horses kept at livery at reasonable rates. Undertaking and all arrangements for fu nerals will receive 61=1 attantai ikirD Bag Banking Houses. OF prrrssulteu =IBM EINEM GIIALIES' 0 L. D Old Plant . ation Coffee, Old Plantation Coffee, 01(1 Plantation Coffee, 30 CentA per Ponnd sell.Tuad OIL REFINERIES. For Sale, LIOUR A CHER OF GROUND FOR IL' SALE—A comfortable and conveniently ar ranged dwelling house of nine rooms, large barn, well of excellent wator, fruit and shade trees. strawberries, raspberries, grapevine. , and shrub bery; situate X mile from Wood's Run Station, P. P. W. C. R. R., ag od road ant pla - dt walk to the station. three miles from the city. For Price and terms apply to S. CUTHBERT & SONS, 51 Market street. 7ALIIABLE FARM FOR SALE—SIT• hated ;at Lorimer's Station, P. B. It. 2) miles east of Pittsburgh, containing 111 acres, with atone house and bang born thereon. 25 acres are excellent bottom hind, and the balance abounds with coal and limestone. A coal pit is noes in opera tin. Possesion riven April Ist, 18q. For further particulars, inquire of WM. WILSON, at Lorimer's Station. or ( A.AltuN HOWELL. Jacksonville jans-ltddt3tw Lt. J A 'l' Improvement in Eye Eight ( ,- 4. p = , .4-- -- • THE RUSSIAN PEBBLE SPECTACLES 111110 YOU WANT YOUR EYE SIGHT IILY improved t Try the einsslen Pebbles. They aro warranted to !STRENGTHEN and IM- P AOVE THE SlGHT—this fact has proved al ready to hundrr de of people what was salferins from defective sight. They are Imported direct from Russia, Which can be seen at my office with eatlafaction Purchasers are entitled to he euppiied in fiatiire if the fret should foil free of ch.rg., with those .SF which will always t4IVE SATIACTIOIsh .... - - J. DIAMOND, Practical Optician, :i.J Fifth ,tree , , Bank Mock— ET Beware of impostere and cutinterkitors. ero9-1,4,4 A HAPPY NEW YEAR, lI➢ECIPROCA/E THOSE WHO RE ooived nresen , s iron their friends on Christ tnas nod better return the o,uai liment and cal AT 78 MARKET STREET, WLere ttFi FiC tiod T.euital,e aric;€, tvr a handeoule New V ears' Present We enumerate Enly a kw artm!ee, VI Ladies and Oenta' I):assiug Fancy ,I &wary Cues, litosewooil Work Box ?a, set with Sheila, Jet and Steel Brelstpina and Ear rings, Splendid Photograph Albums, Ladies' {raveling Satchels, Pearl Portmcrivale , , POl ,a, .I'rfualery Cases, Lace and Embroidered Coliars and Sleeves, Head Dresiioe,3, SkatiLg Caps, Hoods, etc., etc., Wholesale and Retail, MACRUM GLYDE7N, 78 MARKET STREET, Between Fourth and Diamond Wholesale and Retail DRY GOODS CLOAKS. J. W. Barker & Co., 59 MARKET STREET, PIATSBURGH Goods by the .piece or package, or in length to suit, at Eastern prices NEW 'WINTER CABS. VVE WOULD ('ALL THE ATTEN tion of buyers to our stock of W INTEL?. GOODS. All the'newesst styles of fore:gn and domestic ASSIMERES AND COATINGS, With a large and choice so'ootion of ILK AND CASHEL; VESTINGS, W. U & CO., 143 FEDERAL girREET, Cornet Market Square, Allegheny City, Pe. A'E THE NEW CARPET STORE, We eikall pall during the present month, at WHOLESALE and RETAIL, Without any Advance In Price, A fuU line of CARPETS, FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, In eheets 3 to 24 ft wide Woolen Druggets end Crumb Cloths, WINDOW SHADES Table and Llano Covortsi Rags, Mats, Stair Rods, .tc. These goods havn advanood in first hands from TEN to TWENTY-FIVE PER LENT walairi thirty days, and are now selling at LESS WAN MAXLVACTURERS' PRICE Our stock is almost entirely new, all having been purchased wittin ninety days for cash, at the ve y lowce,t prices of the year. PA'FARLAND COLLINS & CO, Nos. 71 and 73 FIFTH ST., Between Postoffioe and Dispatch Building, nolo t i MIES MeLAUGHLIN, DE 1.98...1N OYSTERS, BUTTER, POULTRY, GAME and EGGS, NO. 860 LIBERTY STREET. del-dtt Down stairs. DAILY POST. DAILY,POST-ADVANCED RATES One year, by 118 00 Six months. " —..•••••••••••••- 425 Three " 215 One " One week, delivered in the city.. Single copies . To agents por handrod ........ THE ROMANCE OF CRIME Au Extraordinary Trial—A Modern Othello—Love, Madness and Murder —The Penalty. The London journals devote much space to the trial of one George Townley, for the murder of a Mies Goodwin, to whom he had been engaged to be married. The theory of the defense was that the crime was committed while the prisoner was in a paroxysm of insanity, and the theory was backed up by some of the most emi nent medical authorities—that of Dr. Forbes Winslow among the rest. The circumstances of the case bear no remote analogy to that which Shakepeare has immortalized : From the London Times, Et h. Dr. Winslow was actually brought for ward to prove insanity, and did, in fact, state opinions, in the very words we have cited, which would have tended to acquit Othello. The trial to which we refer is that of George Townley for the murder of Miss Goodwin, which took place before Baron Martin, at Derby, on Friday and Saturday last. The prisoner, unlike his prototype, was described as a man of very quiet aund refined manners, a good lin guist, and an accomplished musician. But under this gentle exterior there was concealed, as the event allowed, an im perious will and an inexorable vindictive• pees that might have belonged to a hero ,ef tregety. Though in a somewhat lower station of life that Mies Goodwin, he had formed her acquaintance at the house of one of her own relatives, and had become desperately attached to her. She return ed his love and they remained engaged, with a short interruption, for nearly four years. Townley lived near Machester, and Miss Goodwin with her grandfather, Captain (loodwin, at Wigwell Hall, in Derbyshire. Letters constantly parsed between them, many of which have since been destroyed, but are proved by second ary evidence to have expressed faithful affection on both sides. The prisoner's want of means had always been recogniz ed as an obstacle to the marriage, but in the course of last summer a more formid able impediment arose. "A clergyman," whose name is not given, the Cassio of this sad history, bad been staying with Captain Goodwin, and there made propo sals to the grand-daughter. He was accepted, and Misa Goodwin, who had al-eady spoken of him to her be trothed an the most delightful of man she had ever met, wrote at. last, on the 14th of August, to beg that the former engage ment might be broken off. She does not appear to have mentioned the true cause, but, ou the contrary, attributed it to her grandfather, and assured Townley that she would not marry if she could help it. "That letter seemed to have turned his brain." He had always been reserved, but he now became moody, sleepless, and nervous. He replied, however, to Miss Goodwin in two letters, which betray no trace of excitement, but are composed in a very natural tone and with much self command. Nubia , In these he pleads for a last interview, and there is evidence to show that she at first consented, but immediately after ward wrote to stop his coming, saying (with little regard to truth) that she was about to leave Wigwell that very day for an indefinite time. Townley went, never theless, the same night to Derby, and on the following day, August 21, took his ticket for Whatstandwell, the nearest sta tion to Wigwell. Thence he walked past the Hall to Wirksworth, and tried to find out from a friend of the Goodwin family whether his suspicions were true. By the advice of this gentlemen he returned to Wigwell, between 5 and 6 o'clock, and a.keci for Miss Goodwin. The servant showed him in and he was left alone with his victim. His manna: was then cool and collected, and "like that of other people." What passed 'between th:s time end nine o'clock, when Miss Goodwin was brought back a corpse to her grand•father'a house, is no mystery. The two remained for an hour or so in the garden, and then walked out together along a high road and down a lane. It may be presumed that the prisoner now ascertained from Miss Goodwin, for the first time, that he had been deceived and thrown over in fa vor of another suitor. A laborer saw them in close conversation in the lane about hall past eight, and very shortly afterwards another laborer heard a moan tug noise in twat direction, ran forward, and met Miss Goodwin with her throat cut in three places, "guiding herself along tLe wall" toward her home. The prisoner wan some seventy yards beLin - 1, and as the laborer was supporting the lady in his arms, came up and assisted him. They carried her between them for some distance, the prisoner confessing that he had stabbed her, and reminding her that she ought not to have proven false to him. At last they had to lay her down, .e hen the prisoner asked for something to stop the bleeding, sect his companion for help, and was found on the return of the latter binding something round her neck. She had still strength to pay, "take me ho m e." The strange scene did not end here. As they bore the body, now stiffening in death, to the gate of the Hall, tae prison er bent down and kissed her, while he re. eponded again and again to the questions of the neighbors by saying that he did it and should be hanged for it. On Captain Goodwin asking who was the murderer, he answered in the same way, and added, "She has deceived me, and the woman that deceives me must die. I told her I would kill her. She knew my temper." He requested the policemen to let him see her once more, and on his way to the sta tion he said, "I am tar happier now that I have done it than I was before, and I trust she is." Othello himself, it he had not discovered hie fatal error, could hardly have used more characteristic language. The defence was, in substance, that through clever, self-possessed, and amis. ble, Townley had been from early age "somewhat peculiar," that this peculiar ity had been aggravated into intellectual derangement by the blow his affections had received, and that when be revenged himself by a murderous deed ho was not a responsible being. Some of his rela tions had been in confinement, but he had exhibited no indication of mental weak ness, except that he had not a good head for business up to the time of his disap pointment, and he bore this shock as calmly as most sensitive men would be likely to bear it. The proof of insanity was almost entirely ex post facto, and rested on the testimo❑y of Dr. Forbes Winslow. That gentleman examined Townley for the first time some three months after be was imprisoned. He found that he denied the existence of a ESTABLISHED 1842, God and of a future World; tht& he Woitld not acknowledge that he had committed any crime at all, that he exhibited no'oon• tritium, and he repeatedly maintained that Miee Goodwin', being betrothed to him, was his property, which he had a right to retak'kzet any cost. Being prem. sed farther, he asserted that he h.ad tbc same right in the case of any other prop erty that might be stolen from him, and denied that any one was entitled to sit in judgment on him. On another occasion he talked wildly of six conspirators whom he knew to be plotting against him. These exTTesitions led Dr. Winslow to the conclusion that "his moral sense was more vitiated" than that of any one within the Doctor's ex. perience, and, combined 'with "a wild, maniacal aspec - ," convinced hilist that Townley was of unsound mind in Novetn• ber. The surgeon of the jail deposed that the prisoner was in a similar condi tion in August, And upon this an acquit. tal was claimed. Baron Martin ruled that "if he knew that the act he was doing would probably cause death, and that the doing it would subject him to legal pan• isbment, there was criminal responsibil ity." A verdict of guilty followed. Dr. Livingstone's Expedition in The Cape Town Mail contains the la test detailed accounts of Dr. Livingstone and his companions, and the history of an auxiliary expedition that set out from he colony toward the close of 1860, with the deaigu of penetrating to the interior trom an independent point of the south• west coast. Mr. Chapman and Mr. Baines built two boats of copper, in oompart• ments, to be carried piecemeal and put together when wanted, which they took with them to Walwioh Bay, far beyond the bordere of the Natal territory, and about 900 miles north of Cape, Town. They made their way tediously .through the land of the Damaras, and got together a large drove of cattle, sheep and horses, after a few months, They journeyed pretty successfully until they reached the neighborhood of Lake Nga mi, and then made northward for the Victoria Falls, on the Zambeiti, and ex plored that river for some distance be low them. At one time, in the Hottentot country, their cattle„were attacked with lung sick. ness; at another time they had to leave them behind as they traversed on foot a region known to be infested with a fly called the tetse, the bite of which is fatal to cattle. Then the country south of Zambesi was so rocky that the wagons could not cross it, and they bad to march up and down in an intense heat between the wagon Station and the spot on the river where they resolved to launch their boats. Bat before they were ready the disasters came thick upon them. The raiay saason set in. The country around the wagons was swamped, the servants were laid low with fever, the cattle roam• ed about unattended and were maddened with musketoes. The unfortunate Mr. Chapman was confined with raving deli rium. He got better at last, but many_of the Damaras died. The boat had to be given up. Chapman and Baines made for Lake Idgami, leaving twenty two.invalfda to follow them, who, all bat four, were murdered by the Matabeles. The surviv ing adventurers were left in a moat peril ous plight. It was doubted whether they would ever get back to the, colony, for a war between the Hottentots and the Dam , eras had cut them off from the coast. Such was the deplorable end of the last expedition. The head pioneer himself is surrounded by circumstances which most almost have induced him to despair. Letters written in May and Jane of this year describe him as being in the Shire country, near the River Zambesi. It seems that the country has been depopulated by famine and slave wars. "No words can convey an idea of its desolation." The few gaunt skeletons who remain 493 slowly dying in a strange lethargy of -Of -- the few Europeans in the expeditiott..-- Thornton and Dickinson have died c . fever. Kirk C. Livingstone, Mailer and‘, Clarke have to return home invalided. If the missionaries do not get to the hills, we are told that the gravest fears may be entertained for their lives. Dr. Living stone has stationed himself on the highest ground he could find; bat the last we hear of him that a fortnight's dysentery had taken a good deal of the "pith" out of him. Still the undaunted doctor, rising from his bed of sickness, set himself almost single handed to the teak of get ting his boat overland to Lake Nyasa& CHRISTMAS AND NEW PRESENTS. Albums Holding 50 Pictures, $2 90. Albums Holding 40 , Pictures, *2 25. Albums Holding 24 Pictures, $1 25. Albums Holding 12 Pieter.ll, 50 Cents. Call and exanotine the CHEAPIN and DEBT STOCK of Ai•3U/d2, In the TWO CITIES, Photograph Cards in varietig. A largo:am:talent of- Books,llla Istes,,Vapeurs, and Its irnery. for oats at JAMBS T. BAkEPLBS Book and Periodical Depoj, delis-Imd 85 Federal aL.leeltrait pKIYATE DISEASES DR. BROWN'S OFFIOE, 60 SMITHFIELD STREET; Citizens and !giantess in needed moll* ad. vioe eh ould not fail to give Ni Dr. Brown's remedies never Jail to ue rides, scrofulous and venereal affections—Ala. - hereditary taint. such as tatter. georigaistitstzgli er skin .'iseases, the origin of which the patted isigziorant. - BMW& IfildinllCHS.- Dr. B's remedied for this Motion. hronsht on hi Eatery haft, Rd the onlY medfolnes mamma in this country whMh dreads and vriD , speeditY restore to hesith. 11101UiLVEIBM. Dr. Brown's remedies; ewe in ahw anthill Infal natation. Heelso treat Piles, Bleat. Elonnorrhoe. Bretluti Discharrae. Beautle Diseases, Palm in Um-Back andum Kidneys. Irritation of the Bladder. striat- ONE eto. A letter to be answered must contain at least DOLLAR. Mali mloneinee sentd 'lri to any address eat % am p illvate roo bM,MT. Pittsbareh. ms. Fa BO OWEIEBS OF PEOPIERTY HAVING dwelling booms for nut toaanta -to o notified, ategafortned that we attend - to all blob b u siness. *nips 111)1111e8. oolloottogrenta, attn. d ing to bionritace t tat asitalts, a. (loam, mods:Va. " UUTEMERTAt FON'4„ dad - 61 Market Week Africa tolad;tv