t , 1 - URGII - WE - DNESDAY NING NOVFMBER 30 ''lg64 1. 114 POST - OR , J 4:: L'ri;°7f:Jig ff CI t:2f'ff'.; „.. • .. -.. e....4 J . `.',56:4a,k4 . 1.4•6:1 :4“ . .ittirind father; day by day. I spoke to a I Secret Political Organizations, doctor . a friend of his,, about hi ... but I Several of our conteamo'wleigliiifttC I ''''' ° " l. -1 '- f ',.* , ttted that nothing really ailed f .'i ~551.1..41 . .t...... - - !! .• • 1 New York TiM4B es*gitly4, finder I ---„,!,, I longed, almost to pain, to as •:,,:, A ; _„ 1 . the impression that grate it*itiptto - more about Marion; but he neve : ka _v.... .„c... i'vz, the ,4_'Ji , _,.;;,. more an opportunity. If I approach?, e. We'Rolaw . .vf.5A7 w),.., EF--4g7"P' a . ilift - t tigli 4 i4 - -...i g4b4ieg tilie„ ,tiirn. ed the talk in anoth -+ '.i- I ker _,,, , ttalpigtnization. par 2Ymes .:1" , ,,,,_ - ;' , ? l - :'- do oßbßaylii g iethat suchiii a he rection, and my old habits of submi , g n .... L , • , ''' i `f n 4 .. - ' , .4 , 0 ' 0 ' ~m to him prevented me from going f/0 1. -,.:= ' ”sod .4, - -- outilistimre and in every huge town Then came my wedding day. ki SteAn -..., • 4_,...-, , e the yalStat4ii:there cad:lie:no-man ' u'''' '• • . gave me away, and sat by my s .. e , 1 ,,f , ;-, a , .. i , ~ „ breakfast. .14 seemed to hanpoveetne 1 Wof Aonhi,,"ltitl that it is to onuor - ":' '''-' ' 4<' .. "More tendeilY than ever, as he put me I other of them that we owe this carefully. ---, into the carriage and took leave of me. matured plot to burn, pillage and ,mur t.' s " : 'l. ' ' ''' '''' - The last thibg I did as I leaned out of 1 1 4,.._ ~ ,,..L 15. 1 7, 1 . ,_.„ ~,,,,,,,, th e esrriagsnviindow was to• tell him' 44,. , der, indisermivately throughout the 4 be sure to be my first visitor in my own ! city, is equally beyond dispute. We ;,,...-.....,t &,Si - -.4i.fi .../ ...Z.4 ..1 •-• house. ie . ' • i know, moreover, "that some :of these .01- : , C- ' 4, 110 Margplet,'! he said„with a sad my I ant:throat societies "exist under names '''liFilile:'"liiay goodlbyillrine irow; :rgt”: -ft 'r 4'" Ji ''',WOrk is A title," • t ".; , , , which bait heretofore excited no sus. i ' ''' 's 4 ""d 'l ll "- ' '" .'"!..''''" fildeitely'tinderatindiagoliet he said, . Ipiciori;;affil if we are to reach the bot -1 45. -'C` C. 1 •%' } M - :"? ri * tl' '' I tailiS Val 'good"-.l4e;findlit was not tilltom of this conspiracy, we shall have `,1:. - .3: - ,7. - 11";;''" ' t'-"liiirikiiil3o4,asked mu whit he meant, f : 75.2 " 1 '. .' l'. '.. ... ittitl. remembered his strange look to keep sharp eye on sundry associa rlf.„si 17..1! '-. ' ' 'A I4 'Ont tt w , ;To 1" ''r°,theri felt ' 'half frightenedd (v.l .14- irons which haNe thus far been consider r, ..'- , t' , -' i '-' -i itholitiiiiiebitt themovelty of my , first. ed harmless." kii-naii-: , '"iii'll . 11 J bd 5-sl lfitiOdkairlNl,de me forget my fears. We trust that Pittsburgh is an excep '':"Z -14 r .."' " a r e::0114 if( soon told- The first letter tion to this, for it is awful to contem- V.% ...;,'“`e . ,..' ' ..- , nr '''''" 7: ' j'itO*ed from England.saidAhaton the plate the existence of secret societies in Pc , ,•: l Alir ' , i l .*;-` o ''' . -itlA 'itilincirniii*after ray marriage he had every large town in the loyal states, '=.' 4 -k"' 3-44 -';'' -t h "'l i o 'tiben , &hill dead t and, cold in,: .his. bed 7i..,),ft. 0 .!.. '...: '-' ':,:" , Ifir haildleOlthout 'pain, the doCtor whisse purposes are to "burn, pillage and "' ';irli . , - ;-, 1 ; 1 - 0 •i; , ''-'- said; Witlibia - right tend clasping his murder indiscriminately." In alluding 1 ' left r atnXibrive the wrist, and holding to these dark conspiracies, we trust '" llithlY','Eiviiii in death, a circlet of Mar that the 2Yrnes had no idea a implica r.io g o. 1 '' - -' ' ' t ting the Union Leagues, loyal combine ' tions which abound we believe in every large town in the loyal states. • - -;ifr 7 .--: , - - -g, , , f......n - - - 1,:-..:7:, 4;riff , ....5-kFi 11."4 : .. i"-% • 11„ . ry;...,:, ~-,.. ilt,:! •ti. 3 511:.-i . :5se4c1 " , 4 -- - n . t :t..,;-.,;--. y.p. 1.- - = • • ' ', V -P-1-I.fIKP.. - 4 . s ~..„,, : :•,,, A3.5.;_,21: :;, ; :i., .5., it # ai :. • . , _ _ , . i,:; , ii.:,..! • ";,...,;,11 i!.tse...tTe:..p, - tlii,t ,gliinifl: MEE . - ;,1.c.;;; - 7177 ~4= '•.+ lasi k 4 wiM)NESDAY MORNING, Nov. 30,1884. 'lt le amusing' - and at the same , ; time< provoking, to see the course •< at present pursued by a port:ou of - the' Abolition press, in- its en __ .4eaVors to convince the Democracy of • ,„:the s propriety of our joining with it in ;support of the Administration. But a " 1 ew weeks ago the Democrats were de outiced •as being disloyal, but now ,i 2 : n joy, areas true as "any other men." = While the Democricy of the country . • t l;'•ii.e.:. " t : L:: ; ,.. i4.1- - PF:, r . t: f'?; ''.l','.',',,,i, - will not 'offer any, factious opposition to " the - Administration, it will, at the •saine time,be watchful and vigilant; and itwill-hold Mr. Lincoln and his party - to a strict' accountability for their pub ' Ito procecdings. In the language of 13"010,Atie" himself, as applied by the NeweYork World we say: • gentleman of the Administra .ltlon7l"lve traitors" and copperheads ~..propose to stand aloof. You have got theinae.hinc Now runit. troveiyour 7 own 'capacity as engineers and- omit_ ' ' your lecture's on engineelinge- - Ton ; „{, • „ discharged us 9,C.,responsligEty by de •f featiligojporaefamiqg us. Our, schemes f~s= t r Sfi. ~%i'r 7.: r~r at fit^'.'= <:it~ . ...., , :~J ~~.' '.SR!. . r: mg the 'nation, you. with the power .and authority of the Govern ! meat at your back to make safe, hooted as "treason;" now goßn and see what. • 'you:Cando with your"loyalty." There 2dt -"= atisoititoly nothing to be done by a .vi, dir:: P'.9 l!Puple• 0 F a4-ITY •in sustaining an rza. ministration which' we have not shared • j , in the liberal doing of. We have help ;fl4l'' 1- ' , Ott with all 'the men and all the ; .43Z0 0:0 51,1„..-t1 ~faotlaY, /mire to 'Much asked for . , - 371 . - 1 , 1:;-.5 .(4 . - I ;We hate "assisted" at an elee .. 6 P 3 4r. ''''jtfoit-Ntiliithgives yeti the,control pf the 3 tdde 4 , ri itl'ad'aboutall the State Govern - mtzt:am ' L^. ;Sri; W. 14? Tliat =Mies our capacity to Kilsa .1i a.. '31., cl - ,helplyotri,- Don't - I:latex now about our , sx - FgEl ;qty AAtteliti-teyOur own. We are at 161°112/t t t I Al pfice. The Union is los .rio tile 11. n y, pg e oittlocte, .11 ; ;; „ &it ~ a,t• Er, NV:I.A the Telegraph furnishes us daily yflith pyauc, lile rtunctra of peace, becanee - ,of the-exhaustion o# the rebellion, we cvx , • .seel , h6iSigne of it,, whatever, in the cBbeljournals of Richmond. On the • d s , u,7 , •=nn:n n • r , ti od,„ c94prary - .4.hey are not only defiant but ft va n :1•1.:, , , 1n501ent. • The . Richinond Sentinel, for Eeflltl I,:l!rf , r l v :q! • .eksibtple4nd long editorial commenting , 10". n!i ' ' ilpotiithe report that President Lincoln n • ,a • sr „ I ,d i,:„ 4 ill.Nttae , 4 appo43l commissioners to negotiate peace, and, if they failed, 'ole l / 1 1,1 7 'N- the' to induce' the Eknithera people to .45 -; / c • ahhiuldit their leaders, remarks: ~1 117 .. : 61 aita ( ,:yfiL(ti:lll:llef,ll:ealanOnttlZB and - do d o is e t r ur e b o eep a Bi ndi. Valuable as they are to Us and formidable as 1.0 !hey ere to the enem_y, our wora la independent tit ft the/Pillar an We Will nit others. Vivian' is about lc( try to separate the t " t o:4 i,A 0:t;:f:14i tasanotopie L mot from their leaders, but ygom. eta ;J:hisits too stapld 'fip under "'..q ":redlliabjeciniffi 8 h less a nocessful, dfisitim haartele is proclamations he has tried r; ,s)baromqttili - Antiabt, , yfeid him enqugh to pay for printing. 11the o n lyderates . Were fat dulls than they ate' litr.4cold would himseii sup ply surfleienewslii against his :IA -15; •:•• Patriblgand Daffigrenleanin With great Packages Itg e t=ti n ertrvr li : n O; a :n B t B ll l ll ; . Wh ilV i r ,4• ,714 • 'the-flatting ilibbh*ltlc orders in their pockets for sacking, butiffingededroying Ilichmond; for kill , ing the President and his , cabinet; for turning Xodsolini tlionstindimen, without offiders; to do b t vall is 1 4 -.1 tries' w4Cupon dawned peotle of all ages and • t;s4 owe ve ry t'th ;t a u n t .zatria.,,new ~* ' , l• ,, cmisittk in , his . wficilhg,'find , how - I . Mr. Llndoln .. in bi..tr, • titt',, , t- 1 4 0 wiPteD, arloPullifor tOO reception of a forth. Ara - 11 i u ~„. ~ , ai rM g _e e tttlfielb.fl i t is o to d etach ua from out OA t ' spread out his at .atip.q...B.p„i :i....1 0.1 -feettolutte Aran and we are expected to hurry .40 a. 4 . 3 :ca- 2 ,1 3 qm p r , 111, 1 -for-etb i e t e tte A r g00,,,!,,0w la he wooing fr4fifil '-' re • r, cr e# d P 4ll4 l lWhierfii i g g rti r l rl h vi e 1 Liah valley: w 3 P 4 I li l e s a Heat ju'ril r ' c_i zr.f.) 714 ?.4theift Mt wraciay mills they have destroyed; ..113,atir. .: a it•• • ••ti • •'..kirviV 3 4 11: 1 11 ''lrgrtin a sti, eoraaelcht; how. / - 6 -IT'''' I ''f'; tr' / ` / tafititt deri,l)de-7:*atihtrotlltiooifilriliv. ...t..... 1 ,..„:„, i .;,:, A,.,Afecenjlaste; rtso(slisctr Lk= :promoted to • DIN Z. .. t ~ , . ..: ~ . illdlatra ~, hpriona—Sherhisa . himself, acting ' - tindit orders of , tienfroanit 'General Grant. ••••` .:.: 1 4ilead , the!iteatiioit, ". ttiti 3 Onhe burning of Rome. , . ... . . '-• in f.i-liestr the how that Sherman. is matting his i-,-;:,• : -,. 0.,1=1 9 1 4 tik,194 OPer.dll Bo 4•4 l m 4 , After , this .Proamarta t cm,-- • biter' thee polite sourteidesc, these We a r ! • . 1 wing F'dttehtlikaii thele'seductiVe Reims; 'Mr - r. , 5... ,-. ;I ~ Abraham liintollt boto: 42111MA:us lo tivavisis. hzp t:,3 - :',..311.-. , .. ti 'eli t i s gr , 4 •4 o & 9l # 4 A.Sesaaft .QrProP.4 l t4i. - , - ammo te i)4a..lr , •'.' F . 4 ' , till affeditinskte , iMitlinents towards us: 'We: Et , s'2,o ..".F3 ~: ,:i 171 f i Ztolattamade..tocr o ~ f.ree an exhibition xif , • his , l ' ' ,l r -1, lz inidi z iri r i b ge 4 1r:to -I V:y e it ' ll:4 c of the ' 'fiTic to .tei.r.,- , i- ~ ;!v.ouirthetsbw, Wet *hall, of' course, be:y.6y much , ~ .„,„ ..„- -,.. obliged to him.for any kind word* tfr-,' Tei.-1 F , - , ."' 'tei us,,paid'istrate wafting to hea r ' till the xna k aP rt, tafc , tAd 3. Sift oils itegido'llol's•niktinirdtin' -*in* ive have emu .l4...atill I f,,,,,.,,, , yi i„ingtimd . ofrongimg,,,,, and are scarcely dhsposeitto tke. Ti. ',. t'it I 'i-tit 79 ' ' MACtt ir sr l ive 'h itilltro r = Tin y 60, 1? d „,„ ~ ;,,......„ . , . in the tettrnas we nifty maim die-.IM 01,,, , , , k. • 1 7F..? 7 i". : a t Ntallo. ~atiPtii.-111 1 6 9 01 and. goodness. We , 41481P1 unroosonable enough to •c on ' C••i tt . '',' rric (•, lc ' 7 , sit Adm s'AV'h Bing Committed new tmPortt it I . : till >. T t. i. unice,--nnirtrecinraildiAnew insult to - thelong iltid ..!. ', - ;ii :. i.ll - 'ettinktglie ;et digotaireme Injuries. , • But 0.111, , ....ie ,Alm.,th .m speak., q , vedley says this is "the ~.,1 _i al ..-:• _Nit: ,„1 - ‘ , ..,, .ttl i t, a, t :-~ ^3.#,i .x FS.- , i'7.l 1 !' .' .. •, • ' '.. ... . , • r : , r , • :V.449 0,t,0140--Oftlaiaß 111,triot: - :! ;,-; eclared - to!lx, the bag •-gWc" ''s'iiftlpisitlirits:ti of 'Oh* ati,heTio ;), -sv State a r ea rtz. , . - k".G. .*:Cvi 5414E941 Vag. a,4 .17,,t mix,* :id , " 7 -44#1i1 • " 4 * •• t ,i77 - 41 . W 4-1-I,V :3'¢'O o` f If4,s ban - , 7 4. De m odr a tiligratrlintryr • \ -,,L r - L - A - i e lk T i ll ry.? tra:g...lt)l:SMll a:945k 7 . ,..f3 I" , tr • 14141441.,iki 4 c(F?Mil#4= , . . 19.11 q agr" ar gy 1 , 24 4 1- .450/401 3 • . . ;,- 1.14 :ru duo tf aid hid ;6frii lgss ns bltscs e . PiTTSBIIKG/le The -May of the Minority. ,;. keace: Question. The Attempt to Burn New York. The rebel papers and especially the Richmond Whig, made a great mistake when they advised the burning of large northern cities, in retaliation for what they styled Sheridari's outrages in the Shenandoah valley.. The Whig said "notli lug would be easier," that "the men to execute the work are already there;" that "twenty men, with plans all pre concerted and means provided, selecting some dry, windy night, might fire Bos ton in a hundred places," and "if the Yankees retaliate, it is a game at which we can beat them. New York is worth twenty Riehmonds." The New York News strongly op posed to the war and in favor of peace on almost any terms, commenting upon the attempt made to carry out these in-- cendiary instructions pointedly remarks that if the attempt to destroy that city had proved successful, by the light of that conflagration the Southern Confed eracy would have seen an uprising of the Worth, and oat of the vast ruin would have been engendered the spirit of in tense hostility to the South. New York in ashes would have been more deadly to the Southern cause than New York in the fullness of her strength and grandeur. The Election in Pennsylvania—An Authoritative Statement of Re sults. To the Editor of the World : I have a number of letters of inquire from various quarters, in regard to tie , late elections in our state ; and am in irtrced mainly by considerptions of con venience, to beg your inoitlgence in g:v ing a general answer through you: widely disseminated columns. I undertake this the more freely, per haps, from having seen the strangely ab surd telegrani of General Simon Camer on to the New York Evening Post, claiming "from fifteen to twenty thou sand majority in the home vote of the state," for the abolition candidate for the presidency. Allow me to premise A. recent amendment of our state con stitution, gives to the volunteers in our army the right of suffrage, while thus employed. The legislative enactment in pursuance of this amendment pro vides, that where "ten or more" of these volunteers are together at any point, they may open a poll on the same day of the election in the state, under given regulations, and subsequently make returns of the votes thus given to the Sec'y of the commonwealth, and to the prothonotary of the respective counties. In cases - where "less than ten of these soldiers are separated from their respec tive commands," they are authorized to place their ballots in sealed envelopes to be sent home by mail. The provis ions very - similar to your New York ab -I.surdity on the same subject. These -proxy votes are required to be offered at the proper polls on the days of electios , and are entered precisely in the same way on the poll - books as the home votes of the same town or precinct. It will be perceived that it is almost I impossible to ascertain, in any subse quent inquiry, exactly which are the home votes, and which came through proxies from the army. In my position, however, it became important to ascertain, as nearly as pos sible; how many there were of these de tached-voters, where located, and their political preferences. I have notes of some'six thousand, and, I assume, at least that number of these proxy votes were east at each of recent elections Of these, not less than five thousand were given to the abolitionists. They were chiefly from the hospitals, which are governed in a majority of cases, by old women of both sexes, of the abolit ion school, who could stop the grog or 'the gruel of any recusant, or even send him to- the front. In this way, at least, five thousand of these proxy votes were given to the abolition candidates at both the late elections, and have been per sittentiy counted with the home vote, in the statements of the abrilition press. But in the October election, counting even the army votes given by proxy with the honseliootes, there was an acknowled• ged Democratic majority of some five hundred and fourteen. So that all --those wagers which predicted that the Democrats would carry, or had a major ity of the home vote in the last October election in Pennsylvania have beeen won. In our state, as far as 1 know, such wagers have all been paid. There reallytindlonestly was a Democratic majority Of some four or five thousand in the home vote at'that election. In the vote given for presidential can didates, in November, so far from there being f•fifteen or twenty thousand abol ition,majority" Of the "home votes" in Pcuutsyltrania, ea stated by General Dinnerem, 'there will nat. be two hun dred, counting even the proxy votes as be forelvitejecting these proxy votes in the estimate, I assertthere would again be found &cleft' Democratic majority of four er five - thotimuid of the home -votes, and my , belief ds :-that ~the majority .against General McClellan, taking every thing inloFoccorinf, will be found to be Jess than that's° counted of the abo:it. innistit :in -:Pennitylvania in October; Mark the prediction. • . I-had writtenAhns far,; when I met with the statement ofthe Hon. E. Slifer. publishes in the New York Tribune. I see nozeasoreto , doubt his estiinate of -the what, October vote of the State, showing a- majority of ,some thirteen thoutsind infavoref the'abolition condi-- ;dates for Congress. I note the difficulty - , littpresents in reference to his ascertain inginfßoiallythe home Totes, as distin -guished from the army votes. Plac4p-- llyphtrwenr, thtr-Firoxy votes given - at heihOuieolls'imintieascertained, and 10 . ..ectli*:tilectuately- gixen in what I -1/. L. Patin_ 13 .3 ObinfaridDeilp %de sit f7opj:ofPad .olf i rceffiticfmONtrfAzikbeil 22 . aaslva ,9VIt itq 91:217 :1011 - Burning of Some; dOgicio ! • As I write'the:lfetwentiMillitailiniMd with the blaze of . - :the ;bpruing buildings destroyed by Gen. Cortp,:#4;-oliudientet to orders from headquarturt44 : TiMlor, to our evacuation of this once -protlefous and pretty little Southern town.- TO day ' orders were received to carry , into-..eze cution the original - orders. The lurid" air that tills the sky : reminds one otothe" burning of Chambersburg, Pa., but when we consider that no private property. has been molested by our troops, notwith standing the soldiers weli remember the infamous treatment that Colonel Streight and his command received when they arrived as prisoners of war in this ' ittle rebel city, it stands out in strong con trast with the burning of . Chambers burg. Owing to the great lack of railroad transportation, Gen. Corse was obliged to destroy nearly a million of dollars' worth property, among which was a few thousand dollars' worth of condemned and unserviceable Government stores. Nine rebel guns, captured at Rome by our troops, were urst, it being deemed unsafe to nse them. One thousand bales of fine cotton, two flour mills, two roll ing mills, two tanneries, one saw mill, an extensive foundry several machine shops, together with the railroad depots find storehouses,and lour pontoon bridges were destroyed. Recollecting the gross outrages which I alluded to aoove as being perpetuated upon Col. Streight by the Romans, our troops as soon as they learned that the town was to be abandoned and a portion of it burned, resolved to lay Rome in ashes in revenge for insults offered to our prisoners. Gen. Corse, however, had taken the precaution to station guards through all parts of the city, with orders to shoot down the first man caught firing a building without proper.authority. Stringent orders were also issued to arrest all citizens or suspicious persons found on the streets after the confiagra lien commenced. The roaring of the flames as they leaped from window to window their savage tongues of fire (fatting high up into the heavens, and tlwn licking the sides of the buildings, presented an awful but grand spectacle, while the mounted patrols and the in fantry men glided along through the brilliant light like giant specters of hor iid war. The citizens were terribly alarmed, expecting that the high wind would st t fire to the hundreds of old wooden build ings with which the town abounds, and their rears were increased by the inces- I sent crackling and roar of the flames, which resembled in sound the near ap proach of a long railroad train. Rome was not evacuated by our forces until the Etowah House, a respectable three-story brick hotel, was consumed by fire. Stragglers managed to ignite a lot of straw in the building, and there being no fire engmei in the town, it was impossible to subdue the flames. A block of four brick stores was also wan tonly destroyed by skulking stragglers, who are always in the rear when there is an apportunity to plunder and pillage private dwellings, but forever absent from the front' when the musketry rat tles. All the barracks were laid in ashes, and a black veil of dense smoke hung over the war desolated city nearly' all day, arising from the smouldering ruins. The British Peace Address-800'y Seward Refuses to Receive It. About six weeks ago, Mr. Joseph Par ker, of Manchester, England, arrived at New York, bringing with him the "Peace Address of Subjects of Great Brjtain and Ireland," with a letter from I Sir Henry De Boughton to Governor Seymour, who declined formally to ri:- ceivedt, assigning as a reason that it should be viten to the President of the United States, the latter being the only authorized channel of communication between other nations and e citizens of the United States; and besides, Gov ernor Seymour said his official position did not authorize him to accept the ad dress on behalf of other States, and that it would be better to withhold the doc ument until after the Presidential eke. tion, so as to avoid the appearance of in - terferring in the canvass. Mr. Parker conformed to these suggestions, and having arrived here last week, address. ed a note to Secretary Seward, stating that he had been deputed to convey to this country the address to the people of the Un:ted States, and asking the honor of an opportunity of presenting it to the President. To this the Secretary replied - that before answering the letter it was desirable to be further informed whether Mr. Parker had the authority from the government of Great Britain and Ireland for the purpose referred to, and whether his mission had been made known to the diplomatic agent of that government near the government of the United States. Mr. Parker replied by saying that the address he had the honor of being depu ted by the parties signing it to bring to this country; containing the signature of some three hundred and fifty of his countrymen from the peer to the ant zap, was not from the government of Great Britain, nor from any political party. It was simply an expression of the earnest desire of Great Britain to see peace restored to this continent. The correspondence closed by a note from the Secretary of State, in which he said the government of the United States could not receive the address, and that the request for an interview with President was therefore declined. Thl address has already been pub lished, and is signed by many Southern sympathizers, who ask the government of the United States to cease hostilities against that section of the country.— The intention now is to present the ad dress to Congress at the approaching session Indians Poisoned by Strychnine The St. Paul (Minnesota) Pioneer re• ports the arrival there of Captain J. L. Fisk, who commanded the Government expedition to Montana for .the protec Lion of emigrants, He reports that the expedition, in going out, first discovered Indians while passing through, the Red Euttes. From that point the savages began to follow the train, rapidly in- creasing in numbers and boldness, until the,) were about 300 strong—the force of armed whites being 168. A. continu al skirmish then began, the Indians pressing the train closer and closer as it advanced, but quickly skedaddling at every discharge of the howitzer which the party fortunately had with them. On the second day of this running tight, some of the emigrants poisoned a coup le of boxes of bread with strychnine and' dropped them on the way. These were quickly devoured by the Indians, and the result was, as subsequently ascer, rained, that one hundred men, women and children were killed by the strata- gem. Finally Captain Fisk found a strong natural position, halted, and ..fe mained there ten days when relief mate from Fort Rice, to which'point Captain Fisk had despatched a messenger, and the Indiana soon afterward disappeared. In these skirmishes eight soldiers, three guards, and one emigrant were killed, and tivo wounded A YOUNG man and a young woman went-after . ehestnul.a-near Wheeling, one daY last week.. The young man fell from the top of a-yee sixty-nine Jeet in height •th the ground. The. youttg,lvill au .pielted him tip, and Tarried - 11bn a mile; when he recovered Ids senses. Nobody hurt. • 31 Ety. vgt4n Pew York. Gra! ANIIOOD -d,SD TUX •111•GO.11.- OF 1 OUTkraaESTUßEDialtiaitgOta, thuiltitfits of the inhabitants by DR. itICORDWIZsENORDFISIFEit. live ? Let -444 -and - figures show. t i t l*g i , r t r....... 4 ,r t or tur earitest ,Three-gtiartefsoFa millioiLlive in tens - 4 .suest Of the %gl e pnblicit 4it urgent t i . it meat houses. Of1.1.6;600 families in thft-,- - .Al ei z g t in N, ; for the sala city, only 16,000 have an independelir a nd - - WY: aaa k if k ThilcWon d agen atfil Isidore Illanhbj*Ao the most home by themselyet, 14,862 families live - ' .votaildttfittons in foneNreaks ;fit*, two in a house , 4;416 live three in a u - heedrdWtommed instruetinis. failure is louse. 'its the 11,. 1 964101ms not inclu- t hsr e nkr fil?pryothoutii:t=r ,, dedabOve t 71 i 33 8440eu live, or rather Lif lorellanentittitoess, in every case,rirteertain. stay; -7 families;•-• - te. - 85' , Itollis, in eacfit" . .4Mr• f ßiotlars Essence of Life is sekLte eases, house. This is the average; while in qwtutaintitlea ull l i rl e r e ne e f tt one l , fe an r d u n the Eleventh Ward, 113 rear houses, or part carefully peeked, on receipt of iemittlin in ce the back ends of lots reached through to 1118 accredited agent. - Circular sear free on alleys, contain.l,Ap. ' l e t t , t or o fou y r fam i lies iv ta . re:gpt f in of itt ata ,e m n p e a. doo P r Et w lLF o TO l AM sr, house. Other‘litive 80, anti some 95 N. Y., Sole agent for United gates. persOns living in them. Ili.ont ward 29 sele 2o 2md hOtties hold 6,449 souls---187 persons in ' • a single house.• In tie - Muse there-are rofiwsa PRIME...POTASH, 112 families. In another tbere,are 500 PuLtsx ProTaslii; Irish and German persons huddled"- to- rip a ge r e n i , ) , Le k e i n n e g en s t od rat a ed Lye and of the wk.. gether. Packed into asingle block are having advanced 1 / 2 so attention is now turned to the old stand in some cases people enough to make a bye. city of the size of Utica, New York. -- - To call these barracks by the name of houses has been well described. as fol lows:—A structure of rot brick, standing upon a lot twenty- e by one hundred feet, from four to stories high, and so divided internally as to con tain four families on each floor—each family eating, drinking, sleeping, cook ing, washing and fighting in a room eight feet by ten; unless, indeed, the family renting these two rooms takes in another family to board, or sub-lets one room to one or even two other families." Of course, most of the rooms are so dark yqu can scarcely see in , them of a cloudy day; and as to ventilation, water and other closets, or any , of the comforts and conveniences of a home, they are not to be thought of. Stench, indecency gloom, demoralization—these are the atten dants. Is it not strange that children and adults can live while crowded into such places ? And is it strange that vice and• brutally rage rampant ? Contrast this account from a New York city paper with the accommoda tions furnished the population in the city of Philadeldhia. With 21,616 more families than Philadelphia, New Yore had, in 1850, 23,601 fewer dwellings to shelter them in. There is probably no city in the world where the working population are so well housed as in Phil adelphia. Each family has its separate house, and the houses built for laborers, though small, are provided with gas. water and bathing houses usually, and are as well lighted and ventilated •as houses of loftier pretensions. The num ber of houses in Philadelphia in 1862 was in the Mayor's annual message es timated at 94,000. If New York, with its large population, has but 116,060 families, Philadelphia must have a house for every family. There is one thing which is highly creditable to New York. If it has public evils, it is diligent in seeking them out and trying to correct them. The tenement-house system has probably not grown to sogreat an evil as to defy Improvement.—Phila. Ledger , Death of a Desperate Man (From the Louisville Journal.) On last Saturday six Confederates were executed at or near Osceola, Ken tucky, by order of Major General Bur bridge, in retaliation for the murder of two .Union men. One of the number was a most desperate man. His name was Lycur gee Morgan, and while being conveyed to the spot where he was so soon to be. ushered out of this world, he cursed the guards and himself, one black oath up on another coming from his lips until the moment he died. Upon arriving on the grounds he coolly walked to his cof fin, cursing all the time, and heavily ' dropped himself astraddle of it, looking boldly and defiantly at the soldiers be lore 'him. The others were moved to tears. They seemed to feel the awful and sad situation in which they were placed, and of the God in whose pres• ence they must soon appear; but Morgan was careless as to his rate. He seemed to defy God and man. Four men were to fire on each of the prit•oners; and three white ;soldiers and one black were' to fire on Mlrgan.— When the word was given, all took de liberate aim and .fired. While all the rest fell, pierced with bullets, and with out a murmur, strange to say, the caps, snapped on the guns pointed at Morgan, with the exception of the negro's, and he missed his atrn At the report of the guns, Morgan fell back on his coffin as if he had - been killed, without a murmur, and none suspected until the Lieuten ant in charge approached him and ex amined his body closely, and, finding that he escaped being shot, he drew a revolver and shot him In the breast, the bail passing up hiaribs and lodging in the back of his neck. When the ball struck Morgan his whole person sprang three feet above hitt coffit, upon which he was lying upon his back. Thus clos ed the scene, and thus ended the life of a bloody, desperate person, who seemed to be unacquainted with fear. Back Woods Eloquence A lawyer of Milwaukee was defend ing a handsome young woman, accused of stealing from a large unoccupied dwe ling in the night time; and thus he spoke In conclusion: "Gentirmeis of the jury, 1 am done When I gaze with enraptured eyes on the matchless beauty of this peerless virgin, on whose resplendent charms suspicion never dared to breathe—when I behold her radicnt in this glorious bloom of luscious loveliness, which angel ic sweetness might envy, but could not eclipse—before which the star on the brow of the night grows pale, and the diamonds of Brazil are dim, and then reflect upon the utter madness and folly of supposing that so much beauty would expose itself to the terror of an empty building, in the cold, damp, and dead of the night, when innocence like hers is hiding itself amid the snowy pil lows of repose; gentlemen. of the jury, my feelings are too overpowering for expressieh, anal throw her into' your arms for proteetion against this foul charge whielfthe outrageous malice of a disappointed scoundrel has invented; to blast - the fair 'name of this lovely maiden * whosesmile shall be the reward Of the verdict which I know Ow will give." • The Jury acquitted her without leav ing their seats. dx engineer on the Cleveland, Co lumbus and Cincinnati Railroad protest ed against starting his locomotive from Cleveland, because, it was unsafe. He was compelled to do so; and after mak ing part of the trip the locomotive ex ploded, killing him and scalding two ohere. Kir TO CONSIIIIPTIVES,;--C N - SCMPTIFE SUFFERERS will receive a valuable prescription for the cure of (lon gumption, Asthma,Bronchitis, and all throat and Lung afinctime, (free of charged by send ing your rbirme_ Rev.' EDWABD A. WILSON, WiPoinstdirith, Kings Co. ? N. Y. • serdediniditer - • . SOLDIERS' SPECIAL NOTICE. Do your duty„to.yourselves, protect your_ health, _use HOLLOWAY'S PILLS AND OINTMENT, For Wounds, Sores, Bowel Com plaints; • and Fevers, they are a perfect see guard. Full directions how to use them with every box. ~ If the reader of this "potice , ' can not get alxix of Eillaor Ointment from the drug storein Ms place, let him write to me, 80 Maiden `Lane, Mielashic the amount, and I will man a boicfree Of . expense. Many dealers will not keetimYtnedies On band because they cannot mails asmunhprOlt as on other persons' make. T INF tt, BBoe and 111,40 per box or pot. ----QA *VALLS iiTOCI.IIFOR Latisturedtil the. ymArES zo" ak., by NA las wood KPV POTASH, POTASH, POTASH. A most excellent articleavhiik can be had AT JOSEPH FLEMING'S DRUG STORE. Corner of the Diamond and Market st. Where, also may be had, Soda Ash of the best quality, the Pasts,o White Lead, Oils and Varnish, atrates, Superior Fruit Wax, Superior Fruit Wax. Remember the place to procure anything in the Drug and Perfumery line is At Joseph Fleming , s Drug Store, Corner of the Diamond and Market street. nolf CORIMULL . 841/lIIIIL IarCORNW ELL & IMRE, CARRIAGE MANITACTURERS Silver and Brass Platers. And manufacturers of Saddlery & Carriage Hardware, No. 7 St. (Asir street, and Iniqueane Way, (near the Bridge,) lua-Iyd PITTSBURGH. IgirßlL4 N DELETE'S PILLS, —THE WEAK, the Consumptive, Rheumatic, Costive, Bilious And Delicate, after some days' use, will find renewed strength and life pervade every organ of their frames. Every dose makes the blood purer. The nerves commence in the arteries and terminate in the veins. These pills, as a first .feet act upon the arterial blood. Increasing the circulation, by which impurities are deposited in the veins, and they throw off such col lec tions into the bowels, which organs, by the energy derived from Brandreth s Pills, expel them from the system. When first used, the Pills may occasion griping, and even make the patient feel worse. This Is an excellent sign, and shows the disease will soon be cured. No great good is often achieved without some trouble in its attainment, and this rule applies to the recovery of health Sold by THOMAS IiExtPATEI, eittsbarsh, and by all resgiestable dealers in medicines. nol4-Iyd&wo arRICVOLUTION IN TUE DRESS ING ROOM ! by the almost unani mow action of the parties interested. CRISTADORO'S HAIR DYE lies replaced the old worn-out inventions for coloring the hair, which the better experience of years had proved to be defective and deleterious. Unlike the compounds that MARE WAR upon the health of the hair, and dry up and consuite the juices which sustain it, this mild, genial and perfect dye is found to be a vitalising u well as a coloring agent. Christadoro's Hair Preservative, A valuable adjunct to the Dye, in dressing and promoting the growth and perfect health_of the hair, and of itself, when used alone—asafeguant that protects the fibres from decay under all cir cumstance and under all climes. Asaufactured by S.CIiiiiiTADORO No. Astor Roue , New York. Sold by ail Drug , ELM. Applied by all Hair Dressers. nole-iyektra aI...DR. TOBIAS' VENETIAN LINIMENT.—A certain cure for Pains in Limbs and Back, pore Throat, Croup, Rheu matism, Colic, sc. A perfect family medicine, and nei et fail*. Read Read ! I Read I!! Livonia., Wayne Co , Mich. , June 1., 1863. Thla la to cerlit y that mg wife wee taken with Quinsey Sore Throat ; it commenced to swell, and u•as as *ere that she could not swallow, and coughed violently. 1 used your Liniment, and made a perfect cure in one week. I firmly be lieve that but (or the Liniment she would have lost het life. JOLLN H. HARLAN. erlce 25 and 60 cents. Sold by all Druggists. Office 56 illortlandt street, New York. Bold by THOS. REDP,ATH, Pittsburgh. nol2-1 ydfr. we Iliar•A PACT. • • - • • Is i t 2 Dyo. • • • • In the year tS&S Mr. Mathews stet prepared tne VENETIAN NAIR DYE ; since that time it has been used by thousands, and In no instance luta it failed to give entire satisfaction. The VENETIAN DYE la the cheeped in the world. Its price la only Fifty cents, and each bottle contains double the quantity of dye in those usually sold (or al. The VENETIAN DYE is warranted not to in sure the hair or scalp in the slightest degree. The VENETIAN DYE work" with rapidity and certainty, the hair requiring no preparation Whatever. The VENETIAN DYE produce* any Made that may be draired-one that will not Mde.croak or wash out—one that is as permanent as the hair Itself. For salt by all drtricts. Price 60 mate. L EdATILEWS. General Agent, 19 Gold at. N. Y. Also manufacturer of Illemiarws.Asnwe HAM aLoab, the best hair dressing in use. Price M canto. jaultard 'ILT EN E TIAN lIA IR DYE, VENETIAN V LINIMENT and UR IST ADORO'S RAIN DYE, bald at JOS. FLEMING'S DRUG STORE, Ilor. of thobicztood mut Market at . RAI'ITRE'B lINTAJITNG REMEDY DYSENTERY 13 LA. It /1. I - ICEA A. Di~Goa'a► Bromeatic BLACKBERRY CARMINATIVE lathe only safe and sure cure. It contains no opium or deleterious drugs, no mineral or otter injurious compounds common to remedies gen erally sold for this Mass of disease. It is oe efficacious that Physicians very generally use it in their practice in all chronic !Mai dangerous Cases. Ilse no Cholera mixtures or doubtful compo sltions, (many of which undermine and ruin the constitution,) when you can obtain an unfailing reinedY as - sibiple and safe as Blackberries themselves. Ask for DIXON'S BLACKBERRY CAR MINATIVE, and see that the proprietor's name is written on the outside wrapper of each bottle. Prepared only by W. F. DAVIDSON, Sole .Froprietor, For sale by all respectable druggists Price, (old style 35 cents,) 25 cents, 60 cents, and *1 per Bottle. 1311333 IT, And he Convinced 08 THE SUPERIOR EPPICACIt oP RAN N'B,. :EXTRACT tIJOEtti. ..sot by ail Dini g igta, at One ilollar;. • -*tt, IJIMIG GUAGIES.—B A ft, Id IL 4. ~ .W0,444 id , ;* row SIMI= CAogeLjOet — r& t . • • 4:TA --Bowr i-non " 185 Wood strect *ars_ yi ft: G LAD TED o GENUINE MIMMS PARETIW . 11R-ATiA iiiiiiietience of many years in private practice now offeri it to the afflicted in a highly coneentratedlorm. What is Pareira Bravo46BB It hap been recommended by the talent of the Medical Profesaion for dearly two centuries The Fluid Extract of Is nose-ofitted to an 'afflicted world in a shape WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL. For all diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, Gravel or Dropsical Swelling, - no medicine In vented can cope with this compound to its power to literaliV All bad properties in the drug are removed by he process of its compounding in the shape el fluid, leaving its 14 I *I V :TM ;i WV VI ;1 ,1 / 1 11 FA 3 Young men who may be suffering from the many Ills consequent upon early indeseretiOn or abuse, should try one bottle and be relieved. The symptom. are INDISPOSITION TO EXERTION, NERVOUS INDISPOSITION, LOSS OF SIGHT, WARM HANDS AND LIMBS, FLUSHING OF SKIN, GENERAL LASSITUDE, By pot arresting these signs, which as unerring ly point as the needle to the pole, to Impotency, Epileptic Fits, Fleinixture Decay and Death, a crime against nature Is COMERS tted—a practical although protracted SUICIDE is being commit ted. All medical antherittaa agree that were the .eitreets of Removal, that 'then would be far less me for AA the records of these lumunie institutions prove that a very large proportion of their pa bents owe their reception lied detention within them to early habits of indiscretion. ==!!!!!!EMI Gilson's Extract of Pareira Brava Absolutely cures secret diseases, of no matter what length of standing. No change Of diet is raViired, emtsation' from busineii. Soldiers Home upon Furlong! And Who may perhaps hare unfortunately con tracted disease, will find the Extract of PARIfi- RA BRAVA the specific for their ❑ls. By its peculiar action upon the Kidneys, it causes e frequest4thfire to urinate, thereby re moolng Obatructiona, and securing the sufferer agaiestall fear of stricture of the Urethra. Beware of the numberless/ quacks to be fonndlo I/ large eftlfe. 'Many in them know " Nothins of the Practice of Medicine, And yet they are allowed to deceive Lid decoy' "X'lllEl 11:71\1 - 1171i7 . 4213=1.'irr Until oftentimes after a lifetime ormisery, death Wildly ends their enabling. Gilson's :: Ohbtine !aid," in cezeiectloa with the Extract, :is a epode° for the tionnorhea, or protractedlileet. Syphilitic pat„ienta, cipeolally caeca of old' atending, would do Well to try JprLa_.s. A Medicine that has STOOD THE TEST OF YEARS, end( in connection with the nee of the EXTRACT OF PARESEA BRAVA, will effectually eradicate any osie r no matter of how long standing, J. 11. FUL T;O . N, OINOID!NATI Dispatch Building, Fifth Street, C A U T i(3 . , , .41N , 3102i1DAYi , NOVEINDER Slat, %R.. Ma, a InlinhenerfrotaJw M. LINDSAY, of Hollidaystaitholight to inanufsetpre , I ll i i iSk i dalreledl3lool/Seareherf ~ - .., , ... , :(1- t. ^L, ~. and have neminninuertoirtHilir it since that date. j Thleright Dintedditiiftiairoats, , and nivel:Kith:cr., to theLehllolthattpon - -erork bottle thalami of , J.l ll,, hVirTOlDlihOwldla • All others area It yplicil_w;l44lfor I glee. notice that eferY =MUM ofany um& will be prow:‘ • ec I 1 44**ft?:0 1 1 1 1/eht:A . F;Abeti to , Xi ....,...„.-•,-, Atea diraa. f , ~----.•,-.--c.:.4.3b, 1 % ; - ....: r .11V1' EJ iIAPI ' . ',., _ .'" '.:- ?..zikt , 'is Rif ziiti, Pittibmw t - 2 1 4 i P irre i dient,lo -whom_ all iordefwattud be ad .MeOnethorniseilousn on hinder and for to the trade, at lowettlinuea thiurany'othar, house mthe fifty. -:~ »,~; -- `o , h--..;:'-m , . .... , ~. FORItrATAI IP - ,--- - - ~- ' GLIMASOBT'S' ffiMME Tie frivol:o43i of thj), of It Ma, since MS, been a specific far OALGtLOUS AFFECTION S; INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS ; INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS 2 E9 0 9 3 4 1 5CF-A, and Jili diseases of THE URINARY ORGANS. PAM/MI:RA. 131-LA.V.A. ANNIHILATE DISEASE, EARLY INDESCRETIO.N Pnrstuie Asylums, It."oUNGi.l3lfE7ti, DRUGGIST, PITTSBURGH. 47"-T - r*Tra, I. f-1 Tt • • El= _ • I PROVED BY THE THOUSAN fions, : tistis Aleubrated to tim. l i oncert - ' -11 0 11- Sh oe .f When they towut elegant SWIV AND 61E4 Selling at half the pria.aaked tor tnbt where:- Elegant Christmas I For Boy,. Call early and make A GOOD SELECTION NO. 62 FIFTH STU] CD er e l • 0 o . ir g .48 k , 44 7". C C • .2 (15 t;ir•PITTSBURGH THEATUJL Lessee and W. ThiltDNIU. FOECON NIGHT ONLY TIO.KET-OF-LEAVE-MAD The utterlyUntrelf - C2 edented popularity wkket-01-Leaviii-ssEa which was per, over NO nights in London, aoo nights i Yore, and in Boston played at three Thes the same time, constitute it beyond a dou THE GREATEST DRAHATIO SUOOK 4 ' t THE AGE! THIS (Wedurtaday) EVENING, THE TICKET-OF-LEAVE-MAN. Time and Place—London,. the Present The entire Oompiny in the cast. Seats can be secured for the OOTOROO In rehearsal— _PlßATES OF SAVANN Star . ells Oil Company, lIIISCR.IIPTIONS TO TMt. CAPI STOO.S.tof this Company we now received at the stare of Elsner, Phillips corner of Wocal - Untrqlf s th street s. amount or thisidocip. willtmost likely he up in a few day's. This Company la no calving autnaient,follo to pay a lame Mt from the start. J. X. FAA. nosOatd ---‘• Treasurer pro 1 40- • " IV COlir I COM . 17.11SONSITIMBITO TUE STOOL, THE "1114100 LIMBIC OIL *ldated to pay the amen their subscription, jah4he office 411 WAI te HMG, 1if0733 Narket street. musum Treasurer prof n0804t4 PANlSaitruPlinslarPtil, ,2110 Wal.is 6 sitidrlol First Straw iIatINDIRONFOUNDE .11/rAlirlatilliSTUßElßS _•4:1 P BEM , GAS d STEAM FITT OtioDS, VIE 1 USING of all b , ,114045, (limps, Tom', BBASSIIIISTINGS — cir all kinds. SOFT 1 OASINQS , Irtr intaPinists, Plumbers, Stesin Fitters, Brass and Iron Globe Ve SteamMidstles,l3tinefiells, Steam, Wate Vacuum Gnages,Attatkand Gas Cocks, al Binds of oaa :FiIiTISARDAIRASS WORK Babbettalil iniiTAltifilon Metals, deale: Woodwrde. itharthingten, and other S ps. A general aseo#ment of Pampsal , orrtuind;:. Aftentiorilsail to repairing St Pumps... Steam, -11a4-41111iii sad - Plumb: For liineries, .iStwabsats, Public Bulk and PriVate DAVIS 4 , RIEILLIPS, Nos. 110 • Witeieuadi 104 First Ste SoiNaissi , ow $26 400 -w°Rlll micrlrWaricrireN, TOY PASUY I 2IOOtiti,ANOY-GOODEI • vAiticiii6;;VARIETIEC - ' oreeioTHS, versTropyr. 8.13.41133m€1, VAIL_ ROTA., WAII. PAN InCelved, and are offend WHOLVAA.Ua 411 D RETAIL, dt.F,OLETAB & SCHWARZ'S, „ tilt Smithfield Mite 1 .. .. ~._ - fiii , ' ' Goods'' ~ ICIT. y . EjkOodi WOW , Ift 6, TELIfP TIME To MT AM I have a sidegidfd, stock of. TRW ITEMPikpf al l dellga. New Style PLAT] poparts - ,witarpiii °Longs, 8. 4 . 9 =BMW Pbtatrittl'lNlAWlCEM Nab i 0/110a.,..-.43UOMD:- 74144112,14‘ °LOA. ANR B 4 o q: l 44ol4b‘iiiast stiles. Lad 44'.WAre..4_!iisVgi,,,,,,ripma AND SQUA] TLLiffeSILLWIO. • in Nate Kea ahasP• 111 4 1 *IidaiddaiiiiliU s illiel' Va s at • - 4r. 4 . 1- t'4l* H.; li•LIIMPA, , No. 98 . litarlatt sheet, Between litthanntisporti td - czi w• cp Ixt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers