I*- ~~ J fobney on fobest. on a regularstage waa Tn NovemW of “ l&lfOXAf. ' Farr * rt * h^ et a f>mSS^ « *fcl. W^ e ? 5 e . ha ? * * ye s* °? 01 .CHICAGO RAILWAY.-On and after Oct reception; that he had to play in Cincin- srth, isra, trains win leave stations Mfoiiowa; natlin the tell of 1823, in very ordinary • ..• j u characters, and in taulsville in the low* >»»»'. it ,wfB of ex- est comedy—in thJlltter even assuming *«wk , a all been snc- the character of a negro dandy; that he j ; „, M a and criticised; and •“* iofered mwy privations in hit on the historic man who »•«>course-havinghai»>»n coin tu M morningj hecemher 18, bard«»a Pb»mohbbmrt,«.toe|>iiplir e i ' £ 9 r . - in fats native citv of week for twelve months having afterward —- mms native cuy oi . t- . .. - -TRAINS GOING bast. - . or dead, have pawed throngh the character of a vaulter katiohb. mail {asn*a.in»'s. min* ; AK , Avnflt . at the Pearl street theatre, in New York —-— - -- -—r~ - i.j—J all tKa mWjl OhlClgO. S.ISiX aXMI S.B&PX JW® erved —indeed, going through all the snbordi- P1ym0uth....... «.» laospu .240imoa* r tnali- nate parte precisely as a real mechanic ** 5 j> or mast begin, at the foot, whether he ;be Bftf y mahhfactnrer orjournalist, untll finally .chop saw he appeared at the Chestnut street tbea- btb' Tack tre, in Philadelphia, on the fifth of JUly,. : 1826; Nothing so much hardens a man r T an as the consciousness that he has risen to .. , ; —p.». hv*to, T ’ high position by himself alone. It re- General Passenger and 17c*e« Agent. 3Ce quires a supreme philosophy to .forget the ~ v ... • lTe reproaches and roughness of early days. ' i-. \-;v. v-,T, m . Your philosophers are, as a general thing, / CLEVELAND & PITTSBURGH R. R. those who have grown to an appreciation on and after Oct. 27th, 1872, trains will leave as . , . . - ,• . - • , stations daiJy,(Bunflays excepted) as follows; id of submission to taw by an easy life. Ed- goraa bootb-maim linn. "T , 0 win Forrest must be accepted as one who -- BT i TIOs , - i£ zvb'«. icc« t owed obligations to nobody but himself. -- —f —Tn — TTT" lf Herein consists, casuists would say, the !!!*..!! H'ss** B.^i P * 5.28 f weakness, yetit was at the same time the S S 6.45 a strength of his character. He depended Bayard.... i j ii-B9 ° _ , . , Wellsville i I.3Sfv 6.00 > upon nobody. He drew upon no brains Pittsburgh . 8,60 8;S0. : v but his own, except when he appealed to going north—MAlN LINE. t „ the great leaders of literature, open to all stations. nzpa’s.! nail, kxtb’s, acco*. j the world. He created many glorious il- Pittsburgh..” *p"~' 6.80a* i«pi lustrations of these mighty authors. He jg fg , 0 _ 0 . was robust, Titanic, original in all things. MUance 11.35 5.17 7.35aji He did no. licpsonicncec that were writ Sr* » » | s , hftftrt foil o ten by the great minds of the past to be Cleveland 1.55 7.80 IC.UK a ° . , h .- s cohere * spoken in volumes to future generations. GOING BAST—RIVER DIVISION. .from the stage of life one of He thundered them in hie own American mnom. keep,, rue, max «« .tiafaaAfftve viaot Awn, hffai*A its hni tongue. He invented wonderful situa- Beijait 5.45 am 3.4opm •*haracters that ever bore its oui- © . . Bridgeport 6.55 11.00 5.50 ino- iPt n , . . Fast Line, 8:50 p m delineator oi the stage. T be cartel* Ball, on Edwin ([From the Philadelphia Pres 9 -] Seward the statesman, Meade the aol- M Greek* the editor, FotreM , be actor-each eminent m IBs day and jegree, and, at characters of ex- Ordinary interest-nave all been anc cessively eulogized and crmcised t and none more than the historic man who died yesterday morning. December 12, ,872. about 9 o'clock, in the «* jrarof bis ace St nls residence, cornet of Broad and Master Streets, to hts native cily of Philadelphia. Pew,Jibing or dead, have passed through an experience moreevent tol, and none have bo weli preserved from first to last his marked individuali ty. We have known Edwin Forrest for thirty-two years. Our special Intimacy with him began when, in 1841, we saw i him play Robert T. Conrad’s "Jack Cade,” at the Arch street.theatre in this city, under circumstances that indelible impression. Forrest was thirty six, Conrad thirty-four; and the audience were more than ready to greet the native artist and the native author with a gam ine enthusiasm. "Jack Cade” itself was we!) calculated to arouse enthusiaspa and to live long in memory. It appealed so strouglyHo the popular heart, and struck so many keys in the popular expectation, tha? itJiyes to day as one of the finest of oar modern dramas. Represented by one of the most striking young men of the time, and the work of one of the most cultivated and refined of our rising Phil adelphians, it got a start in the general-es teem which it still holds. Conrad died in 1858, before his time, aged fifty. In his grave was burned a brain full ol gen ius and a heart full of love. /Forrest fought bravely in his 1 sphere till 1872, passing from the stage of life one of the noblest characters that ever bore its bul lets—passing, let us say, down to his six ty-seventh year, and dying literally with harness on his back. To the last he was a worker. He loved his art, its studies, its excitements, its activities, the changes of scene It afforded, its pleasures of travel and acquaintance, its rescue from the rust of idleness and the rack of private troub les. In many respects most reserved, he was at times a fascinating talker; and withal a rare listener. Never eager to thrust himself forward in social life, he was never an unready guest. He was so conscious of his superiority that he never allowed anybody to ask his support at a convivial patty as an actor, and it mat tered not whether he talked politics, or religion, or poetry, he was the peer of his associates, of- whatever rank or sta tion. More than once in days gone by, when statesmen in Congress of both par lies visited the editor of the Washington CArontVfrand the Philadelphia Press at his old rooms on Capitol Hill, Forrest would come to us after he had acted Jfac- 1 beta, or Othello, or Richelieu, or Jack Cade, or Ooriolanus,' and at a word forget the fatigues of night, and startle the dig nities by appearing as a French critic on Shakespeare, a Yankee in the South, a slaveholder on a steamboat, a negro in the pulpit, or an interpreter of some old ballad of the fireside affections. And all this till Cold Pitt Fessenden, of Maine, or grim Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania, or reticent Joseph Holt, qf Kentucky, would be convulsed with laughter or drowned in tears. It is too late in the-day to discuss Ed- Forrest’s gifts as an actor, but if there were any doubts about them, no better tribunal could be found than the best of Judges— the members of his pro fession—with all their envies and their jealousies. He has been at issue with many of them, for one reason or another; and yet we think ‘we may say that E. L. Davenpoit, Barney Williams, John Brougham, Jas. E. Murdoch, J. W. Wal laek, E S. Connor, William Wheatley, 1 S Clark— even Edwin Booth—are proud ot him, and so of every manager tbu he ever acted for. What better Mge of a lawyer than lawyers What better judge of the monarch of the stage ■ ban the men who played with him? Forrest was a hero to those who saw be hind the scenes, and an idol to those who studied him before them. No man of his profession ever had more compliments from scholars, critics, editors.and .states men. He offended many of these, but their early verdicts stand in stern contrast to many of their later criticisms. Of Forrest as an actor, a student,’ a traveler in his own and foreign lands, a collector of pictures and photographs, a delineator of men and manners, we must M historians, volunteer and otherwise, speak—expressing the deep regret, that he, has never had a sufficient Boswell to take down what he has seen and beard; to em balm his ten thousand anecdotes and memories ; nor yet that he has made ho fecord himself of what would be an un* fe sampled book—an autobiography of Edwin Forrest, as full of interest as that °f Pepsy in the days of the Second Charles, 0r Crabbe Robinson, who furnished l be last generation with his reminiscen -068 We propose to speak of Forrest; T HE MAK. Edwin Forrest was in every sense self* Pliant. -He seemed to be conscious in even earliest hours of his triumphs l bat he had grown to greatness without adventitious aid. He seemed to recollect bow, in 1817, when he was a boy of thir* te en, he had appeared at the old Apollo theatre, in that city, at the corner of Apollo &nd South streets, as Lady Ann, in Hume’s "■a?edy of “Douglas,” and how, in 'lBl9, he hlayed as an amateur in the old South s treet theatre; that his first appearance One thing must be said of Edwin For rest, how that he lies cold oh his bier—ha never courted popularity; he never flat tered power. Importuned a thousand times to enter into society, he rather avoided it. The few friendships he bad were sincere. He never boasted of bis charities, and yet we think, when the se crets of bis life are unsealed, this solitary man, who dies without a single known living person of his own blood, will prove that he had a heart that could throb for all humanity. Having known him and loved him through his tribulations and his triumphs for more than a generation, we feel that in what we fiay of Edwin For rest we speak the truth of one who was a sincere friend, an honest citizen, and a benevolent man. The Will of an Unreconstructed South- David Deshler, a wealthy German citi zen of Tuscumbia, Ala., brought suit against a debtor in this. State several years ago. After remaining in a lower Court for some time, the case was Anally appealed to the Supreme Court. Deshler died not long ago, and in his will, writ ten in his Own band, 'in Philadelphia, March 8,1870, he designated Gen. John D. Rather as his executor. His suit in the Supreme Court was suspended on account of his death. In order to revive it, Gen. Rather Was required to qualify in this State, as Deshler’s executor, and to file a certified copy of the will, which should alrfo be recorded in one tit the Probate Courts. Gen. Rather complied with all these requirements yesterday, before Judge Forriss- The will contains the following clause, which, it is said, will not hold good in law: “Making the exception, however, that any of my said nephews who may Jiave taken an active part, voluntarily, to carry on the fanatical, barbarous and unrighteous war upon the Southern States of the Union, by serving in the Union army, so called, or by aiding and abetting with their personal influence, or money; said unholy crusade, shall be utterly excluded from any benefit to be derived from my estate, considering, as I do, that they assisted in diminishing the value of the same to a much larger amount than would be their legitimate share, bad said war, in which they may have participated, not occurred or been carried out.”— Kashtme Times. A barber in Titusville, while catting the hair of a Jural customer, ran his shears against some hard substance, which proved to be a whetstone. The old farmer said he “had missed that whetstone ever since haymaking v tlme, last Jnly, and had looked over a ten acre; lot for it, and now he remembered sticking it np over his ear.” enter. TRAINS QOINfI WEST. STATIOH9. \ EXPU'S. *An.. EXPA'i. Exin’e Pittaborgh. ,1.48a* 7.10 a» 9.10a* *-00f» Rochester....... :|M 8.85 10.28 tMV-, .Alliance ........ 5.10 ! 7 11.25 l.lOwa 8J0; Onrvnio.V 6.48 1.451* 8.07 7.96 Mansfield....... M 6 4.23 &09 9JB; riMtHnii - 9.20 - 6JO 5.40 9.66 Creatiioe.. f De #4O gjoui e.OO 10.05 < Fareet.:........ «.« 7.58 T. 86 «.» i Una.......... .. llMt* 9.05 9.15 WSOA* Port,Wayne.... 2.90 u,85 11.56 Plymouth.. 4.45 9.86a* %*&** fSLi. Chicag0......... ;S0 6.80 6;60 j BJOWI r;:. -TRAINS GOINO FAST. ' ■'"vf;, ■' WATiOHS. ■ MAIL |E9>B , a.|EXra' , a. *»* *« Chicago. 5.15 ax ».90a* 6.8&m 9Jftf» P1ym0uth....... 9.16 :s.QSni 9.10 s 1M0a» Fort Wayne ... 12.90r* 9,90 11.45 8.28 1ima............ *»■'. iicrr i.6oae «IB| :•. P0re«t.......... 4,00 . 5.08 ; B.CO :? riving at Hairlsbnrgat 11:40 a m: Philadelphia 3:80 pm; Baltimore3:oo p m; Washington 5:40 pm. New York 6:B4pm. Cincinnati Express leaves Pittsburgh at 1:00 p m arrives at Harrisbntg 10:25p m; Philadelphia 2:30 am: Baltimore 2:16 a m; Washington6:ooa m. New TorkticlUam. LOCAL, Walls No 1, 6:80 am. Home’dAc.Nol 7*loam Walls No 2, 10:20 a m WalVs HoB, 11:50 a ID Home’d Ac No 2 2:30 p m Walls No 4, 3:20 p m Johnstown Ac. 4:00 p m Brin ton AcCom- modat’nNol, 4.50 pm Biaddock’s Ac. Nol, 5:80 pm Walls No 5, 6:05 p m Homo’d Ac No 3 7.20 pm Brfhton Ac No 3 9:20 p m Wails Ac. No. 611:05 p m Philadelphia Exprosslcaves Pittsburgh at 5:20 n m arrives at Harrisburg 2:55 a to; Philadelphia 6:W am; New York 10:03am. • Past Line leaves Pittsburgh at 8:50 p m arrives at Harrisburg 6:20 am; Philadelphia 9:80 a m; Balti more 8:45 am; Washington 11:15 a m; New York 12:24 pm. • The Church Trains leave Wall’s Station every Returning at 12:sSp g mfand*airiTO Station at 1:45 p m. Leave Pittsburgh 9:20 p m arrive Brlnton’s 10:30 pm. CITY TICKET OFFICE—For the convenience of the citizens of Pittsburgh the Pennsylvania Railroad Company*bave opened a city ticket office at No corner ofSmlthfleld street, where- Through Tickets, Commutation Tickets and Local Tickets to principal stations can be pnr chased at any hour of the day or evening at the same rates as are charged at the depot. Baggage will be checked through to destination from hotels and residences by Excelsior Baggage Express Co „ on orders left at the office. i*or farther information apply to THOMAS E. WATT. Agent, m 78 Fifth Avenue, or W. B. STOREY, Agent, Union Depot. „ A. J. CASSATT. General Manager, Philadelphia, Pa. Y Y ALLEY RAILBOAD NEW LINE TO BUFFALO VIA. THE OIL RE- On and after Monday, .Toly 15th, 1872. Three Through Trains daily, except Sunday, will leave and nrrivo at Pittsbnreh. city time, for Franklin, Oil City, Buffalo and all points in the Oil Regions, and Western and Central New York. ' „ _ Leave. Arrive. Bay JBxnress 7.10 a m 8.86 p m Night Fxpress 10.40 pm 6.15 am Mail Train 10.50 am 4.45 am Ist Holton Ac A4oam 6.80 am Ist Soda Works Ac 9.80 am 8.05 am ParnaenisAc. ....11.40am 2loam Brady e Send Ac 8.25 pm 10.80 a m 2d Hu 1 ton Ac 5.00 pm 8.55 am 2d Works Ac. 6.00 pm S.«SS Sd Holton Ac 8.60 pm 7.20 nm Spec ills unday train to Parker leaves at 7.10 a m and arrives at 8.85 p m. A special Sunday train leaves Pittsburgh every Sunday at 7.10 a m, arriving at Parker at 11,25 a m. rffiXTe * t4 ' 4op * nd *’ Tlw * “ _ Chnreh traUitoand from Soda Work* (Snnday) ?r , « eB Sr Pltt#bu, at M® • and leaves at is.oo pm, , _ „ J. J. Lawrence, Qen’L sunt. J. H. BRAY. Ticket Agent. v a. w. srxir. jaues osßntx g EELY & O SBURN, . Successors to H. W. Seely, BR ID G E STREET® . ROCHESTER, PENN’A. i Sealers in GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, QUEENSWARE and NOTIONS, Cash paid for Farmers’ Marketing. Jyl9-iy. • GIONS. ,i V ■‘i ;; | t f -V.\ *'r * *-■ r %• '•:•?> i'y / sju\i c y . - .40CBE8T1QL PA. ; L 'V S'■? Fire Life aii AccUeit lammce. •-* T' ,-v " f 'ey* t* C«?‘ M ' , Flre,Ufe and Accident PoUcleawrlttenat fair rates and liberal terms. Deeds, Mortgages, Agree ment#, *c., correctly written. DepoMtlons and Actoowledginonte taken. Passenger* booked to and from sUparte pf England, Ireland, Scotland, France and uenaany, Sfoneyand goods forward ed to all parts oftbq UnitedStatasand Canada. /ETNA INSURANCE CO.. OF SASXFOBB, CONN. CASH A55ET5,.........58,000,000 BBtahlfrh** ia IW9—Wealthiest andthostrellahlo : Company, to the World. “By their Finite yeshall know them.*’ 1,08868 Paid to Jan. jet, 18H........... .$28,000,000 NIAGARA, OF SEW TOSS. CASH ASS£TS(«t«*4fsl*soo,ooo ANDES INSURANCE COMPANY, OF OISCINFATI. CACH ASSETS ........................ *1,600,000 ENTERPRISE, OF PSILABELPSU, PA. CASB ■ $600)000 • LANCASTER, OF LANCASTER, FA. CASH PAID ASSETS, -... *840,000 ALPS INSURANCE COMPANY, OF ERIE, PA. ' SASH CAPITAL. *250,100 Insures against damage by lightning as well aa fire. HOME LIFE INSURANCE CO., OF NSW YORK CASH V.'.i... *8,500,000 TRAVELERS LIFEAND ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO., OF HARTFORD, doss. CASH ASSETS, *1,500,000 Paid losses, since its of over *7OO a day, for death-and injury, v ; • \ 1 Representing the above first class Companies, acknowledged to be amongst the best in the world, and representing a gross Cash Capital of over Six teen millions or Dollars, lam able to take Insur ance In departments, and Policies issued wit boat delay. Losses liberally adjusted and promptly paid. Insure to-day. By onedayt'negUti or way you may topee the savings of years, Delays ate daneeroas, and life uncertain. Insure to-day. One to-daytoviorth two to-morrows. Quality also is of the utmost Importance, The low-priced,/ worthless mode always proves the dearest.' Therefore, Urn to Quality a» the paramount Consid eration o/jbsurpnee. Look to worth and wealth for Indemnm(. Ihe See tie the Cheapest* “As you eo* thatyot&hal! yo« reap.” Grateful for the veiy liberal patronage already bestowed, IflaUter myself, by strict attention to a legitimate bnsinese, not only to merit a continu ance ol the same, but hope, by the facilities and Inducements 1 am now enabled to offer, for a large increase during the presentyear. 1 M&. 8. A. CKAIQ is duly authorized o take applications in adjoining boroughs and townships. CHARLES B. HURST, Insurance and General Agent, - jeKTTI Near the Depot, Rochester, Penn's. LANCASTER . INSURANCE COMPANY ! LANCASTER, PA*’ HON.THOS.E. FRANKLIN, Pres. B. F. SHENK, Treasurer. EDWARD BROWN, Secretary. . DIBKCTORS: THOS. E. FRANKLIN, JOHN L. ATLEE, Physician; JACOB BAPSMAN'PreB’t Farmers Nat. Bank; HENRY CARPENTER, Physician; JACOB M. FRANTZ, Farmer; JNO.C. HAGER, of Bluer A Bro. Merchants; GEO. K. REKD.ofEeed, M’Gran & Co., Bankers; A. E. ROBERTS, ex>Member of Congress: F. SHRODER, of Shroder & Co*, Cotton Han.; B. F. SHENK, of Slunk, Bailsman 6 Co.; INSURES DWELLINGS, MERCHANDISE, FARM PROPERTY, CHURCHES, SCHOOL HOUSES. MILLS AND FACTORIES, And all other FIRE RISKS taken at as low rates as any first class Company can afford. LOSSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAIR. Term Policies issued on Dwellings, farm proper* ty, «kc.,at LOW RATES, • And Policies liberal in other terms. Apply to CHAS. B. HURST, Agent, ROCHESTER, RA. apr29’7o:ly. rjiHE ENTERPRISE Insurance - 00. OF PHILADELPHIA. ■ ! F. RATCHTORD STARR, President. THOS. H. MONTGOMERY, Y.Pres. ALEX. W. WILTER, Sec’y. JACOB PETERSON, Aas’t. Sec’y; CASHiSSETS, 9200,009 ABBBVB Fejh. lst, *TO, *530,8*314 FIBS INSURANI^ISCCLUStVELT. Perpetual add term FoUdes a eiy liberal rates andterma.Applyto ! j - CHAS. B. HURST, Agent, ROCHESTER, PA: aprBmiy. » PITTSBURGH MARBLEIZED MANTLE WORKS! JAM E 8 O LD, 193 LIBERTY STREET, PITTSBURGH, PA. i jkiao, RANGES. GRATES. X> S. The undersigned ben leave to inform his friends and tbe public generally, that he has Just received a new stock of goods of the latest styles for Pant and wnnxp. wear, which be offers at very ladder* aleMtes. GENTLEMENS’ FURNISHING GOODS CONSTANTLY ON HAND. / Clothing maide to order on the shortest possible notice. Thankfhi to the public for past favors, I hope by close attention to business to merit a continuance of tbe same. DANIEL arrri.iro ! deed’fiSrly Betdob Bt., BBjpeEWATXRTpA. . JjWABLISHED IN 1838. The Largest and Best STOCK OF FURNITURE West of the Mountains, Ofonr ownmannfacture. will be found at the Mammoth Furniture Establishment of C. G. RAMMER & SONS. The newest and most approved styles of Pine and Medinm Furniture, in auger variety than any other house, at very reasonable prices. Persons famishing houses would do well to-write for oar new circular, or when in Pittsburgh we respectful ly solicit a visit to 6Ur warerooms. Don't forget the place, : 4«, 48, & 50, SEVENTH AV., PITTSBURGH, PA., We challenge tbe world in prices for tbe same quality of material and. workmanship of onr goods. CUT THIS OUT. ang9-Bm. ; Q W. TAYLOR, JUSTICE OP THE PEACE ■ AMD SEAL ESTATE AGENT, BEAVER FALLS, PA. Agreements, ArtidesJLeaaea and all Instrument* of Writing promptly attended to. Beal Estate bought and soidon reasonable Coa wterton, DyyWktr JQ WELLING HOUSES, TENEMENTS, IMPROVED AND VNIHPBOVE REAL ESTATE, HI AND RSAB THBT BOROUGH OF ROCHESTER, FOR SALE AND RENT, BY S. J. CROSS. 0c27’71.tf J. PETTITT, SMITH’S FERRY, BEAVER CO., PA., JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, NOTARY PUBLIC AND SPECIAL COMMISSIONER FOR SALE OP LANDS IN EAST VIRGINIA. aprl9’72-ly JOHN PECK, ORNAMENTAL HAIR WORKER AND HAIR DRESSER, NO. 53 MARKET STREET, PITTSBURGH, PA. Ladies waited on promptly at their residences by experienced workwomen. - [febS’Tl-ly Q W. MASSEY, CLOTHING CLEANED, DYED AND REPAIRED AT SBOBT NOTICE. NO. 74 GRANT STREET, feblOTl-ly PITTSBURGH; PA. P M. ELLIS, * architect and designer. OFFICE! SAMMY’S BLOCJ BEAVER FALLS, BEAVER CO., PA. Plus sad Speciflcallonsjfol psblic bnlldlngs and private residence. Eetlmates of the cost of pnUd fagyand all boainees connected wjtharcbitectnre, attended to promptly and satisfactorily.' febW»;iy. J JT CONCERNS ALL! LADIES’ ANY) GENTLEIOtN*^ HAIR DRESSING ROOMS, And Matmfactnrer of - 1 Bair Work ef Beery Description! Children's Ralr Cut Neatly. felMy ;47 Fonrth Ave., PITTSBURGH. HOT3EL, COBNSRMABKBT » orlro^?feTAd 0 Gom“““ “ d s * le : BRADY*CO. . 6. B.IUBXn> F. A. BABKBB. C. A. n^nxrtnt Q. S. BARKER & CO., Ksw Bbishton, Psss'4-, Q. 8. BARKER &CO., Bsavxb Falls, Pxnn’a., BANKERS DSALEBS tH EXCHANQE,COIN, COUPONS, Ac. Collections nude on an accessible points in the United States and Canada. 1 /Accounts of Merchants, Manufacturers and Indl vlduals solicited. Interest allowed on Time Deposits. wiUreeelTe prompt attention. JJOCHEBTER SAVINGS BANK. JOHN V. H’PONALP, W. J. SWtTBBBB, gbo. c. Brnnra, a. a. spbykkke, Cashier SPEYERER & McDonald, Dealers in exchange, Coin, Government Se&tri tie»,nake collections on alltacceasible points in the United States and Canada, receive money on depos it subject to check, and receive time deposits ol one dollar and upward, and allow interest at 6 per C£&t* flt ßfckwßand Bales famished free by applying at Bank open daily from 7 a. m., till4j».m.,and on Saturday evenings from 6to 8 o'clock; BBXEB, BY 7£B>ISBION, TO L HO&tman A Co, Hon J 8 Satan, Algeo, Scott A Co, Orr A Cooper, S J Cross A Co, Wm Kennedy, Snieder AWacks, John t harp. B 8 Banger, RB Edgar/ AC Hurst, Tradesmen’s National 8 . on Bank, Pittsburgh. Pa. novll-TO—jeBo-73 JgTNA Insurance C 6. HARTFORD, CONN. PAID UP CAPITAL, - 13,000,000 CASHASSETS, - $5,549,504.07. TOTAL LIABILITIES, - • . $356,068.89 NET ASSETS, - $5,293,436.08. CHARTERED IN 1819. “BT THEIR FRUITS TB ENOW THEM losses paid in 51 years, 5836,058,647.18 Look to wealth and worth for indemnity. Loo to quality as- the paramount consideration oflnau ranee; for too frequently the cheapestlrate is only the index of the poorest Insurance. The stability* wealtMiberality, and straightforward character of the Aetna, and jlta promptnesa in the payment (t losses during the past Slyears, claim tneappreda tlon Of all business men. Applications received and Policies wrltteo at ft ratesand liberal terms, by* . PHAS E. HURST, Agent, ROCHESTER, PA ENT EBP BIS E SALOON AND ■ RESTAURANT. OPEN DAY AND NIQHT. MEALS AT ALL HOURS. No. 19 SIXTH ST., (late -St. Clair.) .. , \ HTTSBCHGH. feblO’Tl-ly -r NBAL McCALLION Q. MAHHI, P BARE SAtOON, 17 SIXTH BTBBXT, PITTSBURGH, CHOICE LIQCOBS THEDAS. 70-iboi T? V; *C.^BOI7«ai < • «• 3 - K ■»/ 4