VttisinutirriAnzok 8. RIDDLE & ` Co,. [mitt/ Ala. PEUIRITTOWL —TUESDAY IiWILN/NG:;;:nalil4Y. Mann Prisoners In Richmond Via COMM.:in of the Union prisoners in the Richmond Jena must be changed. and speedily, else such a history as will par allel that of -the Brick Hole of Calcutta, or :the horrors of theconqueats of Timour, or Genghis Khan, is now in the process of making, and rill be bequeathed by the monsters of slave-bolding barbarism to the 'ages of the future. But the United States Government itself cannot escape some of the responsibility for this horrible work, unless every possible exertion shall be made to de liver our suffering braves from such cop el& as theirs has become. The exigency will'justify any resort—even retaliation in kind, to some extent. We are not, therefore, surprised to see the statement made in some recent dispatches from Washington, in such a way as leaves no doubt that is a semi-offi cial announcement, of the War Depart mant having "requested the authorities at Richmond to inform our authorities what /ire the rations served out to Union prison ers at Richmond, with a view to serve out to the Confederate officers on our hands similar food, if it can be found." —We have heard of movements on the part of Idr.anx, within the past week or ten days, bolder and more promising than could have been hoped for from the General whose excessive caution lost the never-returning opportunity, of Williamsport; and, as if in concert with these; we have alsdheard that -our forces in North Carolina are threaten ing the railroadcommunlcations of the rebel capital with the south and south-west; and, sti ,, later and nearer, we have reports of an advanoe of Union troops to a point Within forty miles of Richmond by the Pen intmla route;—all which we interpret to mean that the President and the earnest minded Secretary of War are and have been spplying a very considerable amount of pressure at all points from the headquarters on the Rapeahannock to the headquarters at Newborn. As we have already observed,—in some remarks apropos of the dispatches received yesterday, in which we could find but this one painful exception, (of the condition of Union prisoners in the hands of the rebels,) to the general cheerful and hopeful char acter of their other contents,—if fighting our way into Richmond, and so relieving our captured soldiers from their cruel op pressors, shall be the way chosen to accom plish the end in view—that is well—thut is best; but if this way is blocked, be cause we hare no general with the requisite ability and courage to find a roadinte Rich mond,—then,, indeed, we are bound to re sort to retaliation, or any other means to bring the oligarchs to terms, and to deliver the brave men who are now the hepilesr victims - of a remorseless and desperate set of -defeated conspirators, from a condition that AIiC , CI:3 aml outrages every nentimentof humanity Improvement of the lo Inver On Saturday morning we published Mr. Coetrr's introductory communication. dated January 1, 184tl, to the Pittsburgh Board of Trade, on the subject of the improvement of the Ohio river. We now give the original an-I principal paper, in which the subject is more fully treated. The writer suggests no untried experi ments, such as artificial lakes or reservoirs on the head branches of the riverir, nor does he advocate any half-way system, such as wing dams, which experience has shown to be useless, if not worse; but he merely pro poses to apply to a large river the same thorough system which has been applied to many smaller ones with such eminent sue cess. Since this communication was writ ten his mind has undergone no change as to the feasibility and utility of the proposed improvement:—and very many otli;.rs, as well as he, are still fully persuaded that the work can be done, and that it ought to be done. Never has its necessity been more keenly felt than during the present year. The following article, prepared by a gen tleman formerly of this city, but now raiding in a neighboring county, was read at the last meeting of the Directors of the Board of Trade, and attracted the favorable attention of that body. This paper was considered by the Board as embodying many valuable ideas, on a subject that must receive a rapidly increasing share of- public, interest. The thanks of the Direc tors were unanimously tendered to the writer, and the p ublication of the paper was author ized, and its 'trivia earnestly commended to public consideration I wish to offer a few thoughts upon the sub ject of the propored improvement of. the Ohio river. There is no avenue of internal commerce in the United States, or ocrhaps in the world, in arhieh so large a number of people are Inter ested, se the Ohio river, whether we regard It in reference to its length, its central position, the vast productiveness of the region it tra verses both in the fruits of the soil and the products of hi mines, or in view of the nu• morons railroads that connect it with all the great Atlantic cities, together with all its natur al connection with the great rivers through which its commerce may flow, without inter ruption or transhipment, to every part of the volley of the Mississippi. To render each a ricer permanently navigable, so that its com merce may not be subjected to those periodi eat interruptions to which it is now liable, Ls a work worthy of the best exertions of •grest, wealthy and growing people. Be vast is the exchange of commodities effected in whole or in part through the medium of this river, that at !lost ten millions of the American people are directly interested to it; and the inter ests of more than eighteen millions would be favorably effected by any improvement that would render it a more reliable channel of trade. If, therefore, any work may be called national, this is the one. Already, in Its natural, unimproved condi tion, the tonnage of the Ohio Is immeasura bly beyond the capacity of all the railroads that traverse the Middle and Western States from East to Vi'est ; and to keep pace with its regular increaser would require an annual ad dition of one road to those already existing. On the sooreof economy, it is well known that freights on the river are far below the very lowest paying rates by railroad. It is not the object of the writer of this article to give a statiathml detail of the trade of the Ohio. This hue recently been done in the Interest ing and important memorial of the Board of Trade of Pdtzbergh. They have well stated the amount of businese done on this ricer; but neither they nor any other man can esti mato the amount of lose occasioned by the frequad and lone interruptions of its riariga- Bon flout want of water. Could these be pre vented, the trade of the rivtrr would soon be vastly augmented, and the interchange of cennineditiew be carried on with steadiness and regularity, to the great benefit of all con cerned. From.Pittsbargh to the mouth of the:Ohte, is stated by the beat authorities, to he 977 'miles, with an aggregate fall of 425 feet, di vided AittnOWll: 6111 x. In text. litlochn Pita.t.uttl W Whieue;" 38 ru 10.77 Wheeling to Cirkinnetl 374 183 6 4:3243123 4 1 02 L0nini115.....1641 66 4.2 LoolndleloPertland,24.ll2, g 2.5 130 P0r113213 to Znarrate.......ata aa aa.s &amino a C14120'..-......1117 f 6 2.0 A 977 426 nk*C.4l. Tia convert the entire river Into sleek water, wonid minim only fifty leeks, orletire of Inc ics, • of an zverage lift of 8M feet, ,which would er•.ate'•Eaole of an average length' of— 'Between Pittsburgh ind Wheeling 10 mil••.. •• Wheeling and Cincinnati_.... 17 " ' Cincinnati and '• - -. 4 -- -Lowirrilleand Portland•falL. Portland and Evanarille 42 •' Eynon - 111e and Cairo :s7 Tho average fall of the river from Pitts burgh to Cajpi. is a small fraction over 44- 100 of a foot to the mile. There are few wialti in the . - World, of any considerable length, with so email an amount of lockage, In proportien to their length. From Pitts burgh to Jihnatown, on the Pennsylvania Canal, 105 miles, the lo2kage is upwards of 430 feet, being ten times greater, in propor tion to the distance, than will be required on the Ohio river. These facts cannot be too distinctly or emphatically set forth. THE TUVE •ND POOLS At the lowest stage of water thero ought not to be leas than fire foot in the navigable channel at the upper ends of the pools ; nor ought the lift from ene pool to the other to be more than eight to nine feet. Thin would require the dams to be from 11 to 12 feet high trout their foundations, and would =use the water of the pools to rise about two or three feet upon the dams immediately above, thus obviating to a great degree the necessity for excavations below the locks. This would give a series of deep pools, affording a safe and easy navigation for the largest steam boats, and the heaviest barges. I have said that the lift from pool to pool ought not to exceed eight or nine feet. Lem than this would be to multiply dams and and locks unnecessarily—more would add to the height of the water during high freshet!, and eause the river to overflow its banks more than it now does. A rise of water equal to sixteen feet in the natural channel of the river, would restore the inclined plane corres ponding to the natural fall of the river, and cause the water to flow on a level over the crest of the dame, except a slight depression or trough just below the dams, caused by the accelerated movement of the water over them. When that is the ease, the height of the flood ie no greater in consequence of the dame. The incased plane being restored, the volume of tooter is the river w urged forward with all the velocity due to the natural fail of the riser, be it six feet or sic inches to the mile. The dams occasion a momentary acceleration in the current and nothing more. This is sound theory; and experience, in thousands of in stances, has attested its Faun/noes. All fears, therefore, of an inereaeo of the disastrous effects of high 11.1. , d5, in consequence of such dittos, may be dismissed as groundless. The Ohio river, so deepened and slackened, would be concerted into the most stupendous and capacious canal in the world. Forming, as it does, the principle, link in the chain of communication between the Atlantic States and the Great West, andstrayersing a, it does, a thousand miles of country of unsurpassed fertility and productiveness, it would be folly to attempt to assign limits to the amount of tonnage that would float upon its bosom. Certainly nothing lesithan double locks ought to be thought of; and they ought to be of sufficient capacity to admit of ',town boats of the largest class, or six coal barges. These looks need not be raised more than 16 feet above low water; for before the river should rise high enough to overflow locks of that height, the dams would cease to offer any ob struction to navigation. ECONOMT or raorzu.nc POWP:II The resistance offered by water to vessels moving through it, Is in the nal., of the squares of their velocity. Thus, if it requires the power of one horse to move a boat one mile per hour through still water, it will re quire the power of four horses to move it two miles per hour, and soon. But we will ,put it in tabular form: per hour. the 1..4 wee of 1 b or .., eullex 4 hon.,. Of course the same rule ar.1.! . ... the force of natural currents noting upon vess:ls : that is, it requires four times as much power to 13,.n. a ourrept of two miles per hour as it does to stem e current of one mile, end s ..n, not above stated. Prom I hi, it will be seen what a vast saving of propelling power is secir o d by slowness of movement. We see thie prac tically exemplified on the Hudson river, where from twenty to forty heavy bargee, schooners, sloops and canal boats are often attached to a single tow-boat, and the whole fleet creeps along at the rate of from two to fire miles an hour, according to the state of the tide. Thousands of tons aro thus propelled by a single engine at extremely low rates. Now let the Ohio be converted into a deep slack water, and we should witness the same thing upon it, especially during low water. In fact, freights could be carried cheaper at such times than during high water ; because, owing to the gentleness of the current, tow-boats could carry almost any - qoantity of bargeelor canal boats either up or down. It is not an extravagant estimate to put the aggregate saving of propelling power at an amount more than sufficient to yield a handsome ronumer ating dividend upon the cost of the improve ment. Bnt other most important advantages to proprietors of boats would be gained. Their boats would not then, as now, be compelled iie idle during most of the summer and fall months for want of water. Neither {VIN, they be obliged, as they now frequently arc, to start with half a load, and grind th bottoms of their boats at that. Neither would they be liable to stick on bars and ripples, often at great expense . and damage. These advan tages, In which the whole business community would share with them, would render steam boats a more safe and desirable species of property ; and if from the reductions of the rates of freight, they should olear less on a single trip than they sometimes now do, their earnings would amount to more in the courre of the year. But it may be safely assumed that a sure navigation, and a uniform tariff of rater, would bring a three-fold greater amount of . trade to the river than would ever seek it were things to remain as they are. pia bat a few years since goal in any con siderable quantity began to be chipped down the Ohio from the region around Pittsburgh ; but now the shipments roach millions of bush els annually, and the quantity is rapidly in creasing, and must continue to increase in definitely. The region to be supplied is ca pable of sastaining many millions of people, and te increasing in population at a ratio that has no parallel in any other country. To pre tend to estimate the quantity of coal that the people of sub a region will require, both for domestic and manufacturing purposes, would be folly. Suffice it to say, that in twenty years it must exceed what is carried on any other channel of conveyance in this country, or perhaps in the world. The supply is inex haustible. The Monongahela, Youghioghe ny, Allegheny, and the upper Ohio itaelt, all traverse one vast road field, and every tribu tary, every ravine, may be made to pour its tribute into this great centre.: artery. bio mach as to the supply and demand. The usual method of carrying coal to the lower markets at present is to load it into square, flat-bottomed boats, generally a little over 100 feet long by le to 20 wide, and about deep, known by the various appellations of arks, fiat boats, and " broad-borne." One of these boats will carry from 8,000 to 10,000 bushels, or from 280 to 330 tons. They are run In couples; and from 'twelve to fifteen men are required to manage them. They are rigged with several pairs of sweeps to urge them forward, and steering sweeps fore and aft, to keep them in thoschannel. But in spite of all these, they are often stranded and lost; and the loss of the boat is not infrequently attended with loss of life. , It is only in times of high water that these boats can run at all; and then too much coal is often thrown upon the market at once, to the great inconvenience of wholesale purchasers, and often to the serious detriment of the shippers. Never, perhaps, - was there a great trade carried on more irregularly and fitfully. All parties suffer. Sometimes there Is so much coal at the wharves of the larger cities on the lower Ohio that purchasers cannot be found for it ; atother times the supply is almost exhausted. Tn the course of a single season thepries; of coal in Cincinnati has varied from 10 to 40 cents per bushel. These boats are never brought back. Latterly, however, barges are coming into use. They are about 100 feet long, 18 wide, and b deep. Ono end has ,a long and easy W rake, the other is square. When ready to go out, two of them are coupled together by the sqaaro ends, thus forming one long double boat, having a rake at both ends. They are thus attashedio steam tow-boats and taken down the river; and when the cargoes are discharged, they aretewedbaek. This, in the preseqt condition of the river, requires a large expenditure of power, owing to the numerous rapids they have. to contend with. These, too, require high water ; but not quite se much asittio "breed horns." Were the river converted into a slaCkwater IMRE tiaTigatlOn - , Mesa bargea t Ototdd bo tho'Verj. thing ; 'Mid then low 'wait '. would Too better than highwatar because tow-boat could govern downwards arbors backlit-a times so many as it now can. And, what is still mate important4the trade could be prosecuted with safety and regularity; and much less capital would be needed in proportion to tae amount of business done. Were it possible to esti• mate the advantages that would aecruerto the immense population directly interested in this article of prime necessity, both producers and consumers, in rendering its transit regu lar, steady, safe and cheap, there in little doubt that they would be found great ,ugh to warrant the expenditure, even ,1 nu other interest wore to be beneficially affected. • Upon the setting in of cold weather, large quantities of ice form and float down the Alle gheny and Ohio.rirers. As tho water falls and the ion increases, it grounds upon shoals and bars, and against the shores, and con tinues to accumulate until "the ricer eltl - sos, - to use a popular phrase. Whatever floating ice comes down afterwards, lodges against the barriers thus formed, and in this way the river often becomes filled with ice in hoary, confused and irregular masses, far exceeding in thickness what WC , 'I.I form upon Dull pools. Before it gorges, it is often so heavy as to put a stop to navigation for several days; and afterwards all navigation is suspended until it breaks up and runsoff. On the Monongahela slackwater the case is altogether different. The pools become sheeted over like ponds. There are no floating or moving masses of ice, and it is easy to keep a channel for boats open during the continuance of frosts that fill the Allegheny and upper Ohio with ice. J. K. Moorehead, Esq., btates that for several consecutive years the average interruption of navigatign from this cause was only 153. days. The Otio, if concerted into a series of pools, would be affected by frost just as the Monongahela is ; and as the busi ness upon it would be vastly greater, the fre quency of the passage of boats would keep an open channel all winter, and the only inter ruption would be the running off of the ice after breaking up. Tho quantity of ice would he far less than now forms by aggregation; for when water is once CON elicit with a sheet of ice, and that generally with more or less snow, congelation goes on very slowly, com pared with what takes place on water fully exposed to a frosty atmosphere. It seems paradoxical, at first view, that less ice should firm upon a slow moving, stream than upon a mild one; but a little reflection will convince any one that it is so. ." , to far, there fore, as ice is concerned, we may confidently expect that it will not occasion use-half tb' obstruction to navigation, when the river shall be converted into a slackwater, that it now does. Much inconvenience is experienced nt Pitts burgh for want of greater depth of water during most of the year. The channel of the Monongahela along the levee has a pretty good depth, but it is as narrow during low water. The Allegheny Is shoal and the cur rent strong—too strung for tho advantage.us ore of tow boats. A darn that IVO uld raise the ureter eight feet at McFee's Books, two miles below the city, would swell tt nt six feet on both sides of the city, backing too Monongahela against dein No. I ut the slack water, and rendering the Allegeny a sleet:- water of good depth to some distance above sharpsburg. What a manificent harbor for the commerce of the three rivers would such a pool afford! It would ho worth more to that city than would pay for three such dam.. The length of the Ohio is, •:11,. one th,usand miles. It follows, therefore, that the improve ment will cost 115 many thousands per mile as the entire work will cost millions. .Nicn bet le- qualified to jurl7.• of such matters than the writer, have estimated the ',pens° at from seven to ten millions of dollar,. Tb. g•;• i s LOUJ seven to ten thou-a:id dollar , por mile— about half this expert, an ordinary or about onr -thico tge coat of a rail road. :Now as it wilt ho of ten times the ra pary of either. and prince mmodat, 'en times the RMOUTIi. s that a r,.•. soaaoly roiltablo canal has to do, 0 (01 osrn th.st the tolls need not be our-tenth a touch as those assessed upon the tonnage of ordinary canals. The toe upon the business of the river may therefore be vely light , and vet the work may pay good dividends upon the stock. On n work of such magnitude we can only arrive at proximate estimates of what the Leta of tolls ought to he to make it pay, by compering It with similar works already ex isting. both in reference to its length, its rel a.:iee cost, and the probable 11111.111 of as Lust ness_ . . . But the lees the to laid upon •!,e ,t].. merco of the river, the hotter ler the country at largo. = ' " ° ihr Pituhurgh Board of Trade IitIITLEIIEY : As you are pleased to give im licit) , to my former oorumuukatton3, I bog kayo to offer a few additional facts and thoughts. ==! In order to show the relative expense 01 keeping such a work as the Ohio slarksrater in repair, as eompared with teat required ftr first class railroad, I stihjoin, in parallel uturil, the annual ro. t of keeping the Moron. gnheln Slocktvater and the Reading Rail- , .3 In repair during peiirels of eleven y rare ten years, respectively; merely premising than the amount given for repairs 0 e the Itralling Railr tad are exclusively for keeping the on,. T way in good order. and include none of the cost of keeping up the rolling stork, or oper ating the road. The length of the former i# :4 miles. of the latter, Men. Nat. ites,hee. It 0 10-1 , ."1.11 , 7 $121,,... , 1 , 40 7.770 I 1411,./00 2,111 4 . 0 104 1 1 ..... 2,r4:4 14.1.8 , 0 ot 103'.0 4,2: , 7 1.1.0,0 1,42011 , ,7 , 0 .5 , 1,51.. ..... 4,0 01 101001 151 11,.1:. , A 1 10.53 11,17-1 11 rtt 2.12. 2:10.2.1 0 1, 1 1,.15:.1 M.. Nal g I: Average ON penge per aunom...t , G , eZ 02 sl' l1 1 15 . !. Average yr Iy •xpenve per aide 7:1 GO Both those improvements aro principally used for carrying coal; yet we coo that the ex pense for keeping the Railroad iu repair vr., more than keenly-aro and a half titnew se heavy per mile as that incurred upon the Mononga hela elle-An - ate, The works of the latter aro now in as good order as they ever wore. The timber used in the dams show:no signs of de cay; and for many years to come the amount of expenses for repairs i• not likely to be in creased. Tho floods of the river keep the channel clear, so that the heavy expense in curred upon artificial canals, for koep.ng them at a proper depth, is hero avoided. This oxhibit shows us how it is that tho Monongahela navigation has paid hands/saw dividends to the stockholders at Tory low rates of toll. In fact, nearly all its earninis are clear profit; and so would the earnings of the proposed Ohio improvement be. ♦ serronsp DIfFICTE.TI Apprehension has been felt and expresnod by some persons, that in time there pools will All up more or less with mind and mud, and the channel be rendered too ehual for naviga tion; but these fears are groundless. In my communication of March last, this appre hended difficulty is incidentally mot, in that part where I speak of the effect of the pro posed dams on high freshets. On the Ohio, the inclined plane will be motored whenever the water rises to a heighth of about eixteen feet above the ordinary low water lino; and that being the case, the velocity of the cur- Melt will be the came an if no damn existed ; for the water will be urged onward, in obedi ence to the law of gravity, with all the speed due to the natural fall of the river, just as It pow is. Thie being so, its power to sweep its Poole will be unimpaired, and consequently the debris cannot be deposited any more than it is now. In their natural condition the Al legheny and Ohio aro but a long roles of al ternate dams and pools—the ripples, as o call them, being nothing elm than natural dams. Tho interveningpoeis or .‘eitlien," as they arc generally though improperly termed, are fre quently thirty feet deep at the lowest ,rota-; yet the 11 , ,tis tromp them out, and they indi cate no appearance of tilling up; It I, only on stream' it small that no flood can ever restore the inclined a broken by dame that we find pools filled up with debris. They ',Orel' rise sufficiently high to restore the original velocity of the water in the por tions of their channels occupied by these arti ficial pooh ; the consequence is that whatever rand and mud are carried down from above aro deposited in this 'lack water, and remain there. In time the channel becomes so con treated, both in breadth and depth, that the stream in times of freshet", acquires its original velocity. After that no morn acdi meet is permanently deposited. Tho Monongahela pools tarnish a confirma tion of the truth of the position here taken. Very Rospeotikilly, Jan. 15, 1850. JOOLUI COPLrf. i- - JPI7 - 13%/C - 4•0 - TXCESc - 7 Jr.E.Yr „ II) ) -r,„..131 -- iiikEg -- NOTWE.—Tkr.t3lrommii•CUßE i i t tato4ers, and nibiee c:estrnne - of hum; a t_) ! . ttel444C built corer the nattentptneln Mee_ at the utnntn of rittebury.h, ar , earn. 'y :0 pit. i to mrel At HARE' , 11( 4 TE L , an TEL Tlif R-D 1:41.11. nt _G. In. By ordor n .17 ~r,:......nrrary or • nor. •TLIE NEW GYMNASTICS AT 'NEVI L I.E BALL.—Thy - fla.an , are nr , an n..w tzsr.who-rs ear!! I r,.. La.nn and Cinntlaman. TCESDA L LArliar and ThUdran, ' AY and KA TUILI , A AF-TtiIiNOONS, T 9.1131, AI, AN, Adult.a, mum , of twroty lo.rnn For LIAIS and.Minule, For rblldrro, 1107:if iIF.AT NATIONAL Rata OF ) ,Lev PauLin-oh Mid Compeep,) Pittntonrgh, Noe. 2,1863. I'HE PRE9IDEN'r AND 130 A 41) of DIIIIiCTURS hare this tiny declared a Inriciend of ONE DOLLAR AND TWENTY-FIVI. CENTS per share on the stock of tho Trust Company to Jot of Au.„-unt, and TWO LARS per oho,. en the Capital St.in of t. hoot National Bank, out of lie prnfits b thu lot in s t., payable on or after TUESDAY, tho loth loot. Tim Stockholder are hernbe notified that the tuned payment of the tubseription to,theCatotal eteek,l.r. nenttiveliore per chore ndi ho requ.red on er before tho Ist day of Nay next. nn3lm JOHN D. SCI'LLY, Cashier. COLLECTOR'S NOTICE. e Animal Asnesement Lint, fo- 1563 containing taxes on Incomes, Silver Plats, Carriages. Lc., and License Duties, In the Tali Penna. Collect ion District, comprising that portion of Allegheny county soot:, of the Allegheny and Ohio rivers, has horn rewired from the Marlowe. Payments for the First Sob-District, comprising the Ist, 241, 4th, .'nth met 'nth Ward. r 11:tts lndith, and the adjacent Boroughs, moat be made a: my ^ince, Nn. Fourth etr , •et, on or before th. - DAY OF PECtIIIIER NEXT, after which time tLe penalties prencribed by the law will be exacted. Other portions of the District may make payment at the same place, until noticed by their re pt-otter Deputy Collector,. JOIIN all EA, Collector 7.241 Penna. District, Oflke, No. G 7 Fourth street. Fittut•nrgh, Non. r, 1863. TO STUDENTS AND LOVERS "" OF CHURCH MUSIC.—The coil-knotrn .mitrotor, Mr. JOHN ZUNDEI„ Organist and Lt rcotor of Music of If eury Want Meet:bees Church. Now York. a ill sisr :his city duriog the aext month to glre a short course of Instruction in Harmony, •bc Organ or Mel.l“to, and Chorus lunging, eon nit, d jib public I:trauma:welt no the Org.rn, and Sarrrii Converts. eirrulat, stating tcnnt. ctc., may be oh taincti at the Mmste blouse of U. lit totter di Um. aml O. C. prrh_ C L szoNAL s. A. Re crnl:ing Station attrn.•to•• branch ot Re— the army tin., boom r•ren..l to this Th • ti .•1••••• of tho Itnui tt, in.tucens,al • iirrusi arc. smut, this • ••1•portIIII•ly t ott•I In.: most • 1i.,11 . 3bh., and taw that may not againl...,fterod• Fur forth, pax t 1,11.4.1. mgt., AL Ikl.ll/ I t tioc, Filth etre,t, 1.. .11. J. R. Dri-F. or N 1 ,1.1.,. I Pkttaloirgin 17111, c ; 4 1'ECIAI, NIEF.TING 14v.chlIOLDF:ItS of tbe Company !Pr 31,h1g - to 1.•• toI.l i.t tio 111!),.. Flannel, Hort rk,lir,,h, on 7'VE,1 , 11. del) f I ,, rmtwo . . c!,l. r. hg Mil ti , tgr , g , rg y of 1 gonigany and fggr th. nit,ntt ggf g Bg• -1.:. uggltft:lt M. 11.‘ Nock. ..rE -ID 'ERT 18E01 E.r7'S OH ) nit3llV ill. I I .7; k 1: - 'I %Y.:A nor CUAT:7 , ! GUM 1.1)AT: k_A,tork ,tier rro pie! an•l I r •nl•• at tb•• Ir• IM=l 11 It/1 r 1/ ///t !Int L.cai La tia D. WALL , O I N... Lthorty cl\vErr l'orAToEs.-20 Slrttot rotat.l-3 jaAt 4,4 .t 1•.1 Ca•ond ocrft , t. Flt VAS t. stv, s.:r w BClt n WT I N.t.N. ( 1.11 KE: 4 1.:, 1,, I ) , ?1111 atz ,. .. pr. -•-• - .1:10e. Lr • li=f3=l 200 Api•ies .1 , I : osI• I v 1T R r; I.\ ..XSF,EI) ( )I'. --\\ ' . k6ll tso•n. sav 1 ipppp P.rr ptt .16111. , , k ,.. for aa,l =MEE ISA 1/111 :,ICK 1:1' • • 811 WA V1 . 1.:1) --Tho vr.t yiti.l B.r ry Lard, at .1 . ; AS 11.11.Z.C1 L oe2l . ftrld 70 Warr 111 ARIIIVAI, hrty.• pr.,. tarp , * Gooh , n, it lo*. el, As. W-41, C. , c o, HERR.t WI I.K Wer.wri 200 4.. Ham burg; 110 do sr.., nod hr J. R i• k r) Lb S 1•::` (31 - ea , ..! . 171EMOIMMMffISI n ell ISAIAH . (ILYCERINE CREAM, COLD k_T CRFAM, end highly fx.rfutned (MITI [LINE ROA P, f hand., I. and lip., for Pule at ()FO. A. KELL t"d Central Drod - StAro, n•A 1.. Mark. Hon, 11 AGA VS MAGM/LIA BALM Li tllti• rl BLt 0)1 ItV 1 , t7T11..L. only la, Inal•le arncl, no in 11, ..,.1 w r; A ELLS', raf I , rng orn: an , l Perlory , n.l In DI arl,..t Alle7h.`ol )111 Nti 130ARI):4! Prime Inch Flooring floor.li 1 , 1 tn.•t long, n.r 10.0 n - nlthA, f , r male by ETEME BoYS WA.NTED TWO BOYS, Retweee It: and 17 year. of age, uhe .erie kte .•.1 4 .;•• of the torallig bealatea. Coil at 131 CI % ..)._ 1 - 1 k:IICHANT 1..3. 91 SMITHFIELD STREET, will soli 11.. rip f, club a ata a l 1 . 911 , 9 SUIT 1011 *). 4, C 31 i:11E ar.a., ttn rrii sit IT. A 0.3 num% twohe hoar, at G. W. DASH'S, TAX NO'FICE.—AII person. in the Second Ward, Allegheny, a hate tdd pad their County, State sod htdmity Tits., b. the I. u ,,,y Tremincor for tho year 1663, will fond mt. n t 0... st. to of W. .1. rilLwon. No. 161 recletal xi met, evcry • • • Mg from G to 8 o'clock, to recoil,• the iss T ~.. hay must be paid Immodiatcly, as no birth, indidm•rs, ran he risen by said Trensures. nolSdit 3011 N RA ItSET. r Mortar, M{ SALE—Two Blast Furnace En- I: gin., Bloom CyWolof', IP inch, dlsmotor by four toot aryl,. Blowing Tubs 3feet It inches distn. Eder by Use foot stroko. All In good otdor, boo ing boon used but ..hart titan. Idanufastorwl 1.7 Bump A Wet* Pittsburgh. Apply immediately, to WOOD, MORRELL , CO.. Johnstown. ra PROPRIETAItY AND REVENUE STAMPS, of all denomination.. A foil supply kept constantly on hand, at the Internal Iterenno Office, No. 67 Water street, next door to City Tress ory, Allegheny. DAVID N. WHITE, Collector of Internal Revenue, "31 DSO. Pa. MEiiiMEMEi3I DEN!ITS-rR Y. DR. W. F. FUiDENBERG 13as rammed the practice , of his profusion, at No. 142 PENN STREET, two doors loktow Pill l'lttAlkureb, October •/,'„ tBGL ,ocat.ltn TOTICE TO CO NITA Cit /H.S. —Pro .l_l p.m!, will b revolved by tho ondorslgnod. Pt No. roi Fifth strost, until NOVEIIDER 17,t, for the Grading, Re.rot•lng and Setting with Carl, eon, so much of Poon str ,, t u LLa between the crossing of the P. F. W.S: C. R. h. end s point leo font west of Stevenson's alley. The proprwttle nlll elute how ml,l mlll be allowed for the stone and dher materials In the ('anal Bridge. For turtlow intrtlonlsre •ouniro of JAS. D. REED, Chairman St metre. nittl,4%. null it NT EW 1:00ES1 NEW BOOKS! 11 Daring and anfferng. A last,,r 7 r... „ Rallrnad A ./ranturn In Georgia, Lima. William t•ituager • I . . _ . EIMMII Ike Marren, New Book-•.11y Ferro of Edgen, e l . • 1 velurne. The LAM Time, by Ssdee. Wendell Phillip. Spewcher and Lectures. Our Sunday &boot, and H. we Manes,. It. A now supply Jug received. J. L. READ, 70 Fourth street. F j i/ES 2LNDIAR. DR. BAELZ Paye particular attention to the treatment el CHRONIC DISEASES, the EYE and EAR ; operuuu, on CATARACT, SQUETY ETES, tor ARTIFICIAL PUPIL, Inserts ARTIFICIAL EYES; and ircut‘ nti INFLAMMATORY EYES; also LUAU REARIttu, and all Maass.* atiecOn4 the Ear , and leading' to Deanne. mac.. 100 rnrrn warm aryzaart. D t .11 1..1t N rty opp :•• .‘ t. -A 1)1,1.1.1NI, itUl =F In 1 i 11 1 II 131111 113= IM==l • 1 1 izi, , ,, TIN., fill. _,,,. :‘,.. itulti I-4 .....llttt: rt pnre -V. i", I. ~II,'• ~.,,,i ... N. ~ Ls,' lii i .1,11 i L1..1 it :• I, Mill rh 1,1 I.''' . t I Il'; r 1r.... fr,Jrn •.1.:..' J ',.. o % LZF:I I. S,N, J A Hl' lf!.. i t I==ll=ll9 OS('.---Al",.t. t!,, 17,h if 18,t mowh, t., ;..• ii• nr the ry. , N GOLD UtIA IN WIT II TW, Lorl: ETA 0, 'mall and anu aim, r c ,T.ta Ina ill, Dv, fxA ItLaral 10 1,1,1 1,. the , INy I..aving th.• z at th- Wt .D. IWATTIIEW S S I c,.. 114 Witt, •tr.. t, A4,(I)I.I.IsTER liA I=l At th• i..r) Ilgort.• All union promptlyti I tyndytl to. 11.lt eIAN( h /iiTEZ 4 . --Jon: rbeel, .1. a very CIII/iIV SO -I.IAV.S• - .an) Ettat•ltt Antrlttr,. by 11. Ix letatr, apt( mr a.ttletl l'lANt.t, mad, in 11l I. country,— DI,III li. unnitiort,tt "ITEIN‘I by PI A NI IS, t•ittt..ttt •// Tlllt,EtAttyll fr.ro t'2IP upward , 11. A LEBER A BILlt., N Fifth tit••••S, Sple , Ats.blit F r thentwtt,y'.; I ; t:Yott - t 31.. tutu t.'n t lrrtcn. Ittat'r, Ps., Fourth atrpot. Plttrbargb, Pa.. Sr..t X:E M I'TED FROM . I)i;AFT —ln ae- Nrtth ord• I, I pp 1.1141 t`la :,.‘ ~.Ip•rabosrxempt•tlfrnot draft by tip , ft. , artl Eb.•.l!..t•bt 11,. Ittoricl to Eh, Pl`llo , l, (110ir to.l.t•mptb.n . ttnt• net, 1 a ch, • ' laPtab.y., r a. F , lle‘, 131rttaiu:h..., 11 . e. nvs-.... b .1• , 11. 1. hurt. 1, , • 1,/ 41 int in NA, IVilhato I Ln V:. .1. HERON FOSTER, t' and Prornot Narwhal , V 41,1.4 Pa. ♦PURE 1.1(401 . 14.5. &c l 7 NVELNESDAY MORNING, Nor 16t1,, at 1,11 h. eq:.•. 1 filth h Bun , h J.. n" A.. F:n111:11 1,11, 111* , /11.14 1 ,, tru. lil,rk T.,. 1• h ni.r• Ja• :" Fat ln.l,:ud,h • pure Ir• nen 8, - . .1. P. do Frvocl. 2 Jerxy r 12 rnodl, 011 Ity ,, pureltand 01n, baa Caen., 5,.a.1.; 1 , do Pal. , .:.) n.,...0rte.1 Urn, of otl.•r .t 1‘1 , 11.W Al N}. incero - _ I THECI)I . ON' Cl /MM( INeet ALL./.41 `s" , Orr , T•rru, . 'lt tt.• r vol• uutary nR4u,,,r,” ..f illuuu .11 Arilpt., 3J .•' R n.. H Arthur:, nu•l NALgi Antlzur rrrnented I.twn U7t n. 1 11 IS 112, .•.”. Iris, the Wt lul ..Iw , l .I.+lgtm. 111,1 ran I r Fehr _ o.anlutrly , and .I,lKnew h.o Mal,pt Iv* •ztr”.. .1 flied t.. - I • 4.1 71 .d. of 1,, talwl, 16,1, t ht. ran, will at”.•,tll..*t. And .a 3.1 1.., dlnchartted Inm tha tzurt h: tv. 1.7 him 1.101.1,1. f I/10 1 1 / 1 13/g. al Paid and applle t , all part t tut-re:led_ an the L.,,,z1 and lay puhil , at I , thr garnr, f r pr..rhavt t a; - pl)ft three-.t,ry, ttl ft.oa, Bro k IlLohnug, n. , ir Dunlap S Luker, dry ~o,do nwrrlsot, Arret, moir the Morkrt, :ty, I.ling a !rout a font, mod ll° feet in der - dh. Ft, trr.o., Ac., inquire or Mr. SALLIE Had , c, sorer . or of Mr. JvIIN 88. Jr . c..rner of Federal ,Irrot nod the lharriood„klo, Iw'w! If u l wwld boron, th. Myth 1,1., it w 111 h .fl. Pul.l, NA ~..tintr, It. • , ...11thilta front t L-rii y mot .‘l* ,, :t thret, it.innte• walk (rote h Yittxbhmt,, Fort Wayne t CLhn.,;, U. U. with • modern rule I...hritui.t, nrie,r faom, nnJlarge .4i/witty ..f Leering .. , ,attNerrit, it..rtictibtre nt. F.•r •.: ..n 1.1,,n, 1 •• • •of lwet.11:0 ~. 1 ~,burgh. ,‘ ay 2... ...111cAgo R. H., en ;he honk ..f r 1,., Torn). ..my. Enquire eodlo _ I 1 11AS EQUAL—The immensesweep,. which far the moo eeven Tenn hal l• Plit , Y. M \I/NEVI In the alley la th. awl cure of pain, embolden the proprietor to state, ,und challenge contradict ion,! That It hat cured more Itheuni.et That It ha, mired more SO, Throat, That It hat cured gocre Necculcm, That It has urcd more Weak Joint, That it has cured more Ulcerated Sure.. • . • . That it has mired more Burma, That It ham mired mum Frosted Pmt, That It haa oared more Brotaten, That it ha. cared more lierootta Affect Mee That It trio cored more Stiff Joiota, 'I" ban all other Pain Curers, Pain Killen and LIM ment • , ntu I, I n ed. Tor sale by Druggists even :there SIMON JOHNSTON, Kole Agent, milt Corner Fourth and Smithfield furor.. _ . B — (MLA ND'S PRICE:4. Ilonblo Solo Balmoral,. e 1 60. and doubt o oppor 8 00 ,. 4 00 . Bowed Dont,la bola Brogan.. 175. 1 00. Il l on,o's Sowed " " Kid Ilwel Bouts, 150. pegged Morocco 1 00, Congrom. " Galter• 95. Ilnye Balmoral. 1 00. Youth's and Chlldron • ot very low r 10,.. .' largo a•sortrneot of Gun., of alt kind., bawl, riot. wal he .old cheap at JOS. U. BORLAND'S, 'S MA ILK ET STREET, 2d dour from Fifth it)L NTH. Y RESIDENCE WANTED. —Watirvil to purchase, ti small FAILIi, of VI TO b 0 ACRES, more or le., witbin St mike of Pittsburgh, directly on the line of a railway. :n niil,s, on good carriage road, would answer. Th. hob.-o buildings moat be good and stylish, ad. b 7to 10 moms. Aloe, the neccesary stable and loan Loadings. The land most be of good quality and well watered, improved with fruit, Ac. Any person having a ant table place will find a purchuer by ad &rasing " LL. D. C., Guests Office, Pittsburgh," rat ing size, location, prioe, number of rooms, and par ticular, PA to impmrementa. N. B.—Would be willing to leave for a term of years, provided the owner wu not disposed to sell. no9:tf ITsaTED BTATES OOVERNME3T StrIVEY MAPS, Of tit. following Important localities Eu.tvrttVlrglnls, PT . :, 7' Virginia tin The Mountain "Legions of North Ca: ullna and Trniina, ..... L0111.14Y111% .11t1 Mitaimpht Churl...tan Harbor .t appr,tar hue. V.:r NA CO non No. L 5 Wood etro.t. _ . . ~ 0 l'Al'Al..i.l: HOHOUSE:WANr °,OO l:l)..—Tho under - Mauro vrlll purobruo, In upon mor,ket, CAVALRY 11. , 11SES P.,. tho 1:::!tell States orrMro. Tim Ifororr to bo from tlfloru (I.t) to itiatron (1 , 1) Immix blab, from (nor (I: to oino t'n seam of ottro, compact') Lunt, ::.. gmnid r..,., orol fro., (roll, oil dolio la. • norm. v. :II I, rt.t.ived, ta: o ect to Inspection, at rltho ,;11. P.,.,from the Is: lo MO 1.111, Of 11.. co ber; •nct at Colanzham, ;lout the Itth to the Mt! of Decorr bor. - Fl FLY/ LNG LOORY, Capt. It A. Q. M., nol4 , :aurTtf . earalryltrean. TA 1,1; A til,F, r•EA iN ST. 11Z( )1 , 1., H y TY AT LOW PILICES.—Ttro comfortable thre, atory Brick .I.Pytllliug lieu... In good location, be twat. Srublaleld and tlrant mreeta, each haring a hd 20 feet front by HI loop, to an alley; ball, path - (+anthem, bath room, dining root°, kitchen, cellar sod yard; gas and tenter tlatnreet. For pH, end term. apply to 8. OCTIIIINJIT h 811\q, 0012 Commercial Prokers, 61 Merket at. TNIVER6.kI. I .;LOT/I.EB ANti ore ackonwltw3ged to be the very boot In ma. Call and me them at the India !lubber Drpot, No.. 26 end 28 St, Clair atreet. J. k 11. PHILLIPS. nol6 Solo smite for this county. GLAZED WALL PAPERaC2TCentec per roll , fbr ad. by W. P. MARSHALL. ,rE Pr -111PERTIsE,71EXTIk FAMILY DYE COLORS. —The 1 c eaF•h \I , I t I I ila I - Or= 1:1=MIMI Ur ee, Ribhow, Gk . a, Name.. Hal, Feathery, Rid Glue..., elliltlF , ll . B Chth,,c. and all hied. of 'Wearing Apparel. WO` A SA VIE Li OF ej PER CENT . Fe: y4•U can color . tna..y !+.4 nI hero iw (O.rt nye tine. that Tant. Inrieus Thad., • .tn be pr.he•ei fr. la the eat. dye. lhe pee,.a ane can nye the dye with perfect a, ...et, lltrettlen, in h and 6,14.41' FT farther inf,rienti• in Dyeing, and giving a ' 1,0 i,2-; tlaurs, With nisto • recip,s,) purehia.• vin Dyeing and saaii i•ii i.f by J 1 , 1 , 21.1.1.1 11 , 1 um] 7o I.IUNT6 PITTSBURGH ALMANAC, aruly to-alny. Containing— liaeful and I;At :oath.; REA DING al ATTER Mr hhe FAMILY CIRCLE. Nearly a hundred Valuable laud Profitable ior making many of the moat Popnlar PATE IT MEDICI NY.S, FRY, HAIR PY1ki,..40.,.tii. WAR RECORD. ECLIPSES. ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA. RECORD OF EVENTS. ANECDOTES AND INCIDENTS or TII G RKAT REBELLION. THE UNITED STATES PENSION LAW. THE UNITED STATES BOUNTY LAW. TERM DAYS OF TIIE VARIOUS COURTS DY WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA, err., rr• - . caleulation.i by + Brae. A.M., Prinriv.l f llittaLtirith 1110. , ~ and Author of “Imiatea Arithmettra. - A Now Comore of WI. Number it the TWELVE SIGNS OF THE ZokilAc. Mailed Ernmt-pai on r , Opt Prsce n,13 !tmet L , 11111 Prints, Muslins, Ginghanu3, &c., =CESIt3== MTLELLAND'S AUCTION HOUSE, cad IREE' E CA RD PHOTOGRAPHS :inwi PIS (_) - 1()(41t_,X.1 , 11 A I,TII-INIS ALI:111NA Fra Ox. I nn. ...... ..... .01 Haring accepteLl th - ',•,,yascy for the aale of the dhM 1'1..1Y, r..:ned near St. Louts, Mo., I in • vile the attention of Want ani Steel I.l.llufnc•utent 1...1.• Ana alasve, m report..l by Pri,fe. A. A. of Roston, midi. C. Booth, of Philadelphia, 'stitch, together it lilt the test of actual nutoinfartitie. • in Pittsburgh, noctutuiti and di. 1.....11.7erm1nee It to be th• purest and moat at Ic Clay now ki.iro, \\nether Foreign or Amnia an. Pot, needs ftcm it hare stmdl the Gl/0111 Furv.tee to nft!sst In of the Clay no Laken fin, the c 0 ,,, without any warping or preparation whatever. I, p‘eisteses groat adhcaleentwa sad plasticity quatit.es, which are not altown by the Analyais, and which ad mit of tb• mixture of • large proportion of shell or i.ormei clay. I tan now prep:tr.' to fill oklere for the abov a Clay to Lo th!;qoel fn on it. Louts or delirored here. 1111 E Sri SCHIII-1-:11; John Marsh & Co.'s Soda Ash, I. constantly receiving the same, which he will sell nn the moot levureble term.. Title Aeh is rartirn larly wtspeed to the manufacture of Glass. C. W. CHT.TRORMUN, 22 SOUTH FRONT STREET, Philadelphia nol2:teneed G EE' :RAIL FOREIGN AGENCY. AUSTIN BALDWIN & CO., 72 lIROADWAF, NEW TORR. Rl:mitts/wan at low rat. on Grant Britain, Ireland AT. pnwloo from id, - wpool or Qoatovtoawn. Par: karat toraral,lial to all pent, of tn. ocTl:lneod AcXxes• Express 0111,,, Plueb^rxh pull VIANCES PHOTOGRAPH BOOMS, COltlalt FIFTH AND MUM= EITILRETS, (•d and Sti stories, over Richardson% Jewelry Bftre,) Of every else cad style, plaLo or colored, from the rwruler Carta de Ylotto t Cabblot end Life sloe Mr. PURVIANCE wortidi particularly coil I.bo at tenth. of Cue AGED AND TNFIRII to the easy ea of ilk cztabliabalcat, being reached by a stogie abort flight of etehra. Priced moderate, nod • satisfaction guaranteed. nty2fklysitalle m AN - HOOD ! ROW LOST I HOW 111 RESTORED !--Jnst puLliehrd, in a saaJea =- Worm. Pri:e biz Cents. A Lecture on trot Nature, Tecktnioni and lladlcal Cure of ti_wmatorrtna, or W(1.1.1/033, Involuntary .isatons, F‘exual cud Impedlanct4 to Marriage generally ; ki,,,,,otneini, Consumption, Epilepsy and Fits; 31m. '.l and 1'h7311,11 Incapacity, molting front B.ib !.hoop. dr., by flour. J. Cta.vxxerxxx, bt. D., author of •n-• eon Book, do. -A Po, to Tbortcaufle cf buffema," sant onit..r i.e., in a plain eurelope, to any acbtrosa, poat-paid, on receipt of idx caul.. or two r ty DR. Cll. J. (1. 127 Bowery, Naar York, Port Wins Box 4586. sel,...kmdawV-it f i altiff.SiONNATl 'SY I LLE,—The One new etc:attar LEONIDAS, Cert. John Anntrolt, will learn for the oboe. and all intermediate pone . NYEDNESDAY, Dith toet.ent, at 4 'ask p. tn. Tor freight nr paesege nppl r on board or to J. D. COLLINOWOOD, Age nolr, tt a. - JOHN FLACK, VOR E VASVILLE.--Thuj s air new and light draught P... 4 4 . et.pr IeaveSTARLIGHT. Cnptola J. A. Hegton,j *ill leave ea itbotre, on TUESDAY, the 17th hitt, at 4 p. to. For freight or pump. apple) on Nord, or to , nolo JUHN SLACK, Agent. I ,1 , 14 3f I ...no MICIZEI /10V - 17 t , Ull y by di-13;40.1r and kaler. krel.rmfly 7;'• JPriues. I IluJat rated Gl= JOHN P. MINT, Publisher, HOSIERY, SUSPENDERS IMES PITT 0 CK'S, I.\ll GEf A US l' OF II IS 1:=1 HE OFFERS AT LOW PRICER. St LOUIS, NO, 4 4" () -t. A ALEX. GOUDON No. 121 SECOND STREET, PTTIV3r4O,I3. PI WILLIAM 81N0T1A...11, Jr., Agent, Pllmmwt, P•. PH 0 T 0 (31-11A_I.H.S. sTE.f.m.so:tifs. 1311110 . 0 - ODS, icu J. M. BURCHFIELD'S. CLOAKS, Sllnxv :a11(1 Circulars BLANKETS. FLANNELS; Satinets, Kentucky Jeans, Tweeds ; NI IF, It. CLOAKINC:- CLOTHS; FREgoil la:maws, .11 EMPRESS CLOTII, t01..r. PLAIN AND FIGURED POPLISB. T IN 114 )LF.....11,E: 500 doz extra three-thread Blue and Grey Knitting Yana. 1,4500 doz. fine extra do., All colorer 500 doz extra heavy Wool Socks 50 doz. Knit Jackets 60 doz. Traveling Shirts 50 doz. Drawer@ 60 doz. Atkinson's Patent Stee Collars. 10,000 Paper Collars. VERY LOIA MACRUM & GLYDE, 78 Market Street, ECM - ZEN FOLT:rii &.\D DIMIOND (Ii001)1.1.--We have now in store e complete stock of FALL AM) WINTER GOODS, most of which were pneettwaed lofor, the Into ail Vl2l. lv prkes, and will be sold at low rote. CLOAK OR V A MENTS,GrIPURE LACES. R AID AND BINDLNGS, COLLARS, cdNEli COLLARS BREAKFAST SETTS In new styles; LINEN lIANDKEIICHIEFS;oId goods at old pricso; SILK 6 CASII• MERE NECK SCARFS, RIB MINS, FLOWERS, FEATHERS k RUSCIITS; SF , T RATS, BEAVER RATS, SILK RATS; lIEAD.DRESSES & BE n•NETS, in emery style; IRKS SET WEL • VETS, BONNET SILKS, SKATINO CAPS, HOODS, LOLA FE JACKETS, BRE kEVAFT CAPES, PONTAGS, BAT MORAL SKIRTS, entirely ncw r'yits (it AKER, an d other now ROOF SKIRTS, FRENCIS AMERICAN CORSETS; BAL MORAL STOCKINGo, Breton Rae bed, Shaker, ELI; and other kinds, Or AM and winter; DROVES, In every et 310 sad qaallty; good pairs KID GLOVES, le dark col ors and I,:ain block, 'Sr 51 Ou; good ulna KID GLOMS, dor $I no; Mon'. SHETLAND won I. SHIHTS ANP nr A WERS, real Scotch, nod 'Si lino of other Undergarments end S .waning Good•, toe Men, Wome. and Children. mar NV h0101.1d• /WORM np .t.ln Boyom from COUtary, and city desli,m, wW told .r amt. at 101 limos w.II nmeort,l, ...lyrical oe lov as any other Louse,. .TDSKPH HORYE & CO., oc-31 N EW AND 6EAStiNABLE GOODS I Hosiery, Undergarments; MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS; Gloves, Suspenders; TEES, SCARPS, WOOL JACKETS ; HOODS, lc SONTAOS FLANNEL SHIRTS; Trimmings, Ribbons, &c The LARGEST end 110 ST COMPLETE assartment THE LATEST STYLES! Call sad examine our .tack sad compare qualltla and coot. EATON, =CRUM & CO., Nod. 17 and 19 FIFTH MIITIET. BARKER & CO.'S, No. 59 Market Street, FILENCH NEERINO33B, it 00 YZR YARD-ALL COLORS S I LK. 8, AT The., 27344., ¢1 CO—TTEBY CHEAP. DRESS GOODS, AT 1.63 i, 20 ASD 250. ME YARD. CLOAKS, 13=== SMA.WLS, EVERT STYLE DT THE MARKET, CRUX EVERYTHING CHEAP 1 WY' CALL AND SEE.rnall nod - STEEL COLLARS EATON, EWEN & • Nos. 17 AND 19 rum NTBRET, PnatanisOil, PA, • Bile Agent' ibr Atkinson's Steel Collars and Oafs, Roantolied White, 'having the appeanume tad taw lon of Linen. To military nen and tweeters OW ere IntalooDla NATAL RIM OP MEL OCILIAIi LSD Gent'. Blanding each. " Tom:Ter "...... Ino . 4 I 450 per per. Ladles' Harrow 1 00 each. Curs .---- 130 per pen. Boni by poet on resrlp 041 IS. Steel Collars mensroolled o,r 26 cents; or we will aid:nage a NEW COLLAR for ari OLD ONN, pro. riding It Is not broke or boot, for 2S cents. The trade soppllal et the New York Agent's prim, Tor price list edam. EATON, DIACRITN & 00., orlitr Pittsburgh, Fs FALL GOODS NEW GOODS!, Just received at LANE, WA_BOY .& COM No. 140 YEDESAL EMlXlMAllegtrit% mitga f COLLISTER a; BIER, Haney turas and dealers In al kind"' of ,TOBACCQ. EINUFT AM? c 7.514.64 NO, 108 T9OOll finlibtre r , T 111,2 !" 4- 24 " Keeps ecumantly ete hand'i brim Tiitetyofif awl looking Tobacco. cart. 37