• •'' ' - 1;i . ' •, • - .1 ~. Aldik .•,..,-f. i . 0"; ' - : `:: -'. - C - 4° '' - '.: •' " t 4 1 . : .-,...............'.' ,-•- . . • t' - -"- - ^--- --"--- • - S . - - •••••. 7-tl , - 4, -;:-.-.. , -- , - ..1 . 7- - -5- 777- , =',--•,- &tat ~ -,- -- . ;anostarldOMMiltE=DEQ. ma •7ltupwgilmLrApiciL4,l TwasGwi l jo BEREINI Delivered by Rev. X. W. Jacobus, D. D., in the Central Presbyterian 1 Chard, Pittsburgh, Nov. 26, 18133. - "Tbo book of 'Cloths., XXSpilb , chapter, sad 94th venue, Tit t .And thou 'butt Mum 4 0.0 ' Alton itforooks of et, first fruits of th a t Malta. • • Zit I yin out out the tuttionstoforo • thee sad e Terre art:orders. Neither .hall way man dui thy laud;"otiteu thou shalt go up to appear bolo thwtard, thy God, tubs to the Tear. The three Annual Festivals of the Jewish ' People erere intended to promote, notionly 1 ' their piety, bet their nationality. Thtivery I , warb ling of all the males of the land; from --- - Il.wilireleara old and upward at the nation's .. ~,„- capital twice every year for publiigratufsUon ' and was calculated ee strenethen OM na - if • tlinal tie which booed every Jew to 24 Ju ' -. ” - dee and liii Jerusalem. It wee under Melo e -.- trainiegthat thasweet singer of Israel could exelahn, "If I forget thee, 0 I Jerusalem, let - My right- hand forget her crooning." jaw • • - - himself honored, in his own ease, thatilofty - spirit of patriotism, by bristling team shed on the slope of Olivet, as he looked epee the min ': ' Mal city that ho loved. Aml David zings in his song to a God who values nationality, and cherishes the sentiment that it Inspiree. How -striking the restage: "He ruleth by his pow '--iiir •feemer. 'His eyes behold the mid... Lei ' •...... -.. . leiMerebeffieno auk annoloct." And God ' in the.text !inside guaranty to the favored - . lead, that ho will drive out the nations before 'theta and enlarge their border, and 'memo than' !rani the invasion of avriricions iired . ~ gratping kingdorm—reeoguising them as a 0...• :.. , c, - . reward for-their reeegnition of Ithe. Is only- : now, for the dist time, in ens Nati Onal - ' -, 'ltfetnryithat we seam to have entered ?ate " . '.,this Original idea of the liravera Festivakby ' 'a Hallam' PrielmosUosi ' with a view to foster • , - the orbit of a true Na tionality. We blear GOdttsedllY. find of all, for a National Thanks "..gtring. Enough of Blau Rehr. 27maloricive _ ..., . . „ ,-. ~- tit the ,separate Proclamations and divers &yet of different Governors with a remnant Agouties the occasion alto gether, as though ' ' Wm were not lone land and coo people, and as '.• ' - .' - - thoughtheee commonwealthemust give thank' to God arart, as the families andAribes of Is-' : ~ . reel bewailed apart.lt is only another step Mania the march of4ational ideas and Na- 1 .' Mead greatness, whim the Hallort's head 1 predates a Alain! of harvest for all the land,and calls upon all the people of all the 1 ' -• Enda and territories to unite in the' offering , c of thanks to God. !God, we trrat,will smile - - •_ upon the Nation's festal day, and crown this baptized Rationality with his bloater, i - The eared Festivals of the Sarah people had both en agriculture! and historical refer , ' , - enato. As they ware a religions rumple, so ~ their agriculture Mil a religiona vocation, and farmed an important Item in their religion' history. • The same God, who led them out o. Egypt, clothed their fields with plenty, and accordingly they celebrated history and bar . - vest together. The Passover which brought ' to public notice the ripening of the test barley 01111, as wave offering to God, was the season, " ' ,too of their first steps of Exodus from Eyp - Mei bondage: And so the Pentecost lad a doable reference and a double commemoration - • It was the.festival of wheat harrat, when the great Maple of bread was ingathered end the i est twoliaves made from the new grain were • - peemented beibie God. And what was a re markable coincidence in their hlimry, the 04.iag eerie foe at Sinai, was on the same fiftieth day, i out is the wilderness ; and so , tale day was celebrated as the Festival of the - Giving of the Law as well as the Festival of . ~ . , the Harvest. ! We. have need, as a nation, te- • day, at this National Thanksgiving, to ass*. . , ' elate the joy of onrharrest with the joy of the giving of the Law. - •, , yhen•yott eonsidei howl impotent are all f., - ,material reenacts to elevate and bless a p.- - • phi, without sound and goal government,— when you look out upon the nations ; and see - . • the *titan& of gold - and sliver zulnes—dlexl , •: --, co mid Pets--degraded and desolated by the lack or law and order, you will see how no ' "•,,-. ' riches of the soil, no Inotmtaln ores, no boun • . . taw harvests us gompensate for the absence of 'good goirernmeat. Sinai, therefore, wee She fleet grand delireranre of God to the cov :sinant people, alter their relief from Egyptian _ . -.-• '. . • *penmen. . There, in Me sobnerigreadeur of that mount, amidst unwonted exeitementa, ---..,. „, that made Noma himself cry .ont,," 1 eansed 'lag; fear and quako"—there, rooddst arfplin ' stries Withdresad tempest, and clangor - . . • of trumpet', Si if all the elements,-of the mania *Mid were In deadly conflict, God fare the Laws which was to be the nation'e' • ' guide and tafegtutrdiand the lash °Vatter'- ', 'al liberty. ''For law ' Instead of restricting - "liberty , la the lawlessmight allege, establish . -. ea its, guarantees it, perpetuities it. What .- .• • would Israel have becurovrenin Canaan--even ' -• '' . lathe land- flowing with milk and honey, frith- . , Wet the national eode In the etatuto-book of : ' the nation—Written that on tables' of stone in I' , -- . led great elementary artistes, and thence en- ! )., - •. - tarred into all the detalla of the ritnal and . • ".-., tdidial economy? - God Himself, very well , e* 'that more than harvests, morethan. ' - gold, More than the. iichvalloys of Eharon ~- .. - . - sad Esdraelon, and the Jordan, with waving l.- - '',-,-.- 'Wain and , bluslaing fine, they needed raw as ' -„, the bids 0,211 social order, and true individ- . - nal and national prosperity. ..: ._ ---;_lfis sander then if .4ed to ordered as that .' "Oaths ow/ Festival day of the wheat harvest, r i '' Whiwthe nation was brought to celebrate • . l ' . ..With jubilant praise, , the ingatheriag of the ...,, istalr otbread, they ehonld have the Nation. :lair delliered amidathe lightnteg and smoke ; --• ... andlbunder of Steal! -All the demean:m.- 1 - ;' , . dons of Ostler? peak ht -11te wilderneso,whcre :fled Steamed to come:down to mon upon His ~.:,-;^ : liiihanal; of dame ' would only make the. occi• -aloe-:more , mem orable, only engrave more I ~- -,disePly the words of the statute upon the ta `:2liles of tide Nation's heart.. , And so you will ..-.- - Madill ea, *crown Nation is called to-day to • ..., assimato the celebration of the Iran oh with - -,, the oommemoratlon of the giving of th e Law; . I 'is on the awful Sinai summit along our wit '- 'l' ' ''dinten Inuirelt.'"Wir mild /hew you that her - 1- —Waste waddle little without Law, far they wield oily ihredsh a resource far national lux • nry and public hamerality. The richest gelds upon which the inn eyer shone, are cursed by peer theurder and vice, where there ill 110 pa law well istabliihed as the seem/Myer ,life androperty. . And so, we could show i'• ' th at Nati onal Law May, in certain -cheviot , - Tk " - etenees,be impotent, and the best Govern ...--, ~,,,,,, , Mont maitre at. the feet of bilibernes Mar . ;,..,.'-- . date, if , them n boe adequate bonnets to Cu,. -' '---.--• ' ~-. Win the Whirr,, straggling for their 'very ,»": - " : . 7 1 . ''' , etillteremagainst the most powerful. combl- I, `We bless God then, filet oral for abcmdant fumigate in the - interest of Indiana late. - • - •• id, 611 Irani lately obtained Irate the De , . putatont of Agtieulture tells stor y which the ..... wont would do, well to consider', '.,"Oar total - , ...,..- . igricalteral exports (oiclualief cotton, in ' ' •MI - Sai-arlsn. we were yet at pea c es-were $OO,- -,- ' 819,556 , of which . Southern ports exported :- - .Anyrais,g6. In teat, with holt o JIIIIBDA men a; 1 'ill Wag, and ; :no . South e rn aerate; they' amounted to V 37,0513,504 amt. in. 18 1 2, with a million of men in the field (cteedielf of them them the rural districts) and no -Eoutite,rn ex 'parte, theyantehed the int* of =5L52,14...,07a. f. law arnewntiof wheat and Sens alontosported in the yea ending September lst, ISO; ek -.-,•'; ,•'. '',..'.2'ailoded Giant Shi_prerlone iliAr s by orerseren . •sailthurbtudteb. ---/Sitheating the force of oar firstiy (*.edits eniployeee) in the laid at ono , •• •- , •IMOD. of men, andibe rations per diem to " "Nub mat at tin su aty,t wepply ounces of floor, it bush -- •_,.. „; ~.-,..., minim [Gilts lti ear 12,800,e1s of *heat. 7Wgi, for A ever • are eeet • taunter - In the - .midi one-half of which could feed i'fiatlien ansiy, largely made up•from its Bpi '. A -'1; : aultdralpepulatlon, and' so' .vroiderfally in iiressi It olporte of breadetuffs I".. .! ,4 '. :• ' - It is may to gee what a ofehht is aim turn tutu uho-seale by an invisible hand, ~.„. . i.,..•. . . whore:the' destiny. Of a goreriniont -is at .. ..... -.. atakeruot only - or our own woven:tont, bat •-•;,-. .. •,.., I may soy of ••all gorernMents.. how pus '- • '•!*".- 'Flue. -ebb. nation must have': been to make good Its claims, Said to. Carom Its antherity ~at a gigantic tube/ Son,, If; God : had AM .-, •-•-• .: -- - blig hted the givatnerthern gestundlds—Lt haircut given a.comideslon to the nth' and; ' ••-•. imnsitime: and gentle dew,i• to being pee' the bounteous mph', as te 'defy all the most mighty combinations, and to falsify the most t propheeles:" /t was Predicted that without cotton to Shirr from the seaports of the - .... Nierth; imam . wauld,giori - ln the strata - . of. our' grad coatoutreist marts. Bat when. -• , , inur industry ear more amp 131 rewarded—or when Were the Chief commercial cities ever ..L , ',.. toos• ov e rflowing with wealth — et gitrinelere r - - been. toevery it:duettist pursuit/ .. - ••- ..'. 'lstria prediete.d that for tack of cotton the ;::greet:foreign stationanould interfere in oar - ,- -.- .straggggle, and Maintain. the I=l l of the Cot . - lion . t But this prophecy also bair --- -pram odic)._ It vu Pret. ,l that for lank e N ,. •"' • ---,.... 441/a /tinkle' our : national .weelth, our em. .......-.e".. , :. - , ~*: Anusgm molded be regulated, and the means ~ lIIMIIT ow ithowaiwould utterly tali. - Bit it - . ': ''.--.': ,-'•,.'• 7 ". * :' : • - • - giiiiishsulogiurhielstrbankhaPt — Thilz. o ur wideasil ' Amuse - 4t. 'sustained- oar meal ,''' ',' '• '-''' - -----,- :-'• - -• 4W4:astraitokett lb, Id.',iodallthi , b doe. , .7 f;.' .::•.:'±:":'--- ,f,... ti0 ma , 63 _,, a i iiv i gio nc i s t iff1wa* , ,,,,, , . s ' - : - ' .!..,..L-,-,,Woi l ivii*Wwwit of Cho Italian .dovidg4 ," 1. - ''''''.'...,.. ,-, , , • ' gis4l4. 111 1 101 11 141 r . " . c .T . iiidota.likOdrithill# l , 3 Frl i..i'.• -, , - 1.., - ......1r05E1d:: , ,, , - - ri.fi . .44<541. :.,..t.,-~.-4, . ,., , :g. • . • ...,, ~ ., . :- -' -.•- , •, -. ......-, : iy. ' , ..-• . . ., . -- - -...-;:.- ~-:.-, . ...- ; ;, . .,,, , , ,: f;•.- ( , .. . - , - - ; .,. ; '- - . 77.. t.; , V f :..o '.',"•:-.:;-;-: , '•, ,. ....' , .'-'..-- -, :. , i, - r. - :;,.. • - 'N'• -=1 ; , '0 . ..§ 3 . 4, : c . , ;::' , i 4,-. ;, -- t...).:,.....;;;4• - rvt. , Ot • ,tg - 3 - -z,,4-.•?., - .A. -, I A-.7.„T..,..05. , y..0f , x4.ci4 ; *.:ir.i:-::'-4!,;.Y., , .. , - 112 - I!t,* -- ,A l "*'tviA.Sl4'4l' - .M. l os:izf'jV....4. 7 'V'K l -...ziztly , 2f . :ftra4 - -ii-.0--c,,...4,54A44, 14- •!.i,gl l. l=s• - . -1 '•: -- - -- ' '' 1 - •-' - -' - - . . ebsiiiiels of wealt h. it: Is Ife 'She lithe nrithrtilfaxtremiq has opened tleturewls of;-tuna of. on—trop is Our coal beds and ircatfields at I a hilterlif, beyond the grasp oldie rebellion, has made an exhausting 'war minister even to the national enterprise I and thrift, until weber° to fear lost the tempta tion shonld be rather to protract the war for the aggrandisement of the masses, and for the greedy , cormorants who fatten on the publio Item And here we are bound to give special thanks to God for this overflowing plenty through all the loyal States. Ito forsine,:nor broad stole—but ebtordonoe for mon and beast —while gaunt hunger stalks through the rebel districts—end this Itself may achieve more than tho power of our arms, to bring about subordination. And than see what a now en terprise is already going forth to develop the immense resources of our territories—to open up the pinta to the Pseiflo—and to boy the Atlantis telegraph. lint If we interpret the National prosperity the busts of which is in the manifest bounty of God's hand in tho harvests of the year, we understand all this to be Ills decree for the maintenance of Low, setf is imperilled in this mighty atraggle. If the harvests had failed, and the nation', resources had thereby been crippled to as to be Inadequate for the enforcement of law and the maintenance of Government, what should woltave seen bet a triumph ofrebellion and a riot of anarehy and oppression such as the world never saw I' Butsecondly, as with the nation oflarael, so also with our nation, It occurs that the festi val of the wheat harvest is also the festival of tiw delivery of the law. It may be seid that'' law Is always the result of conflict. Great national statutes are graven with a pen of iron and often with the point of tho bayonet Mcie MI Marta the sheet-anehor of conidity- Lionel liberty, was the grant of tyrants as the price of blood. It is commonly on seine limy , peak, some Sinai of our history, where the nation is drawn tip at the foot of the smoking mount, along their wildcrnme march, and made to tremble at Gars thunders, that the law 13 delivered to them at by the ministry o fennel. and through some:hereto deliverer of the peo ple. Human life to infinitely precious, but that vast generation of 000,000 fighting men— representing two and a half millions of pee. plc—perished In that wilderneis, in that fear- Eat discipline, and for that very benefit of national law, just to establish that covenant people In their Promised' Land. under the salutary training of these Free lostitutioui. Weahadder at the heaps of dein, which ite. Matta/in the battle fields of the Republio— which make memorable and glorious the names cabiteh, and Fort Donelson, and Fair Oats, and Antietam, and Vicksburg, and Port Hud son, and Gettysburg, and Obleamauga. But look at posterity, and ask if the blessings of countless millions will not be pronounced up on the gallant braves who hare harm In the cense of law, and nationality and government. I have stood on the solemn manna ■t Wat erloo, crowned by the statdo of the - Belgian Lion, keeping watch over the promiscuous dead that deep there. And I read only the verdict of history that God sot there a bander against the reckless and rapacious ambition of a Military chief who weeld found a mire, eel empire on the corner stone of personal am bition. I have looked out from the heights of Pentoteeus upon the mountain of dead at Marathon, where Asia and Europe came into deadly collision for the mastery. and I read only the mighty wrestle of brute form for ter ritorial sway. But stand now in the tared, newly eonzerritad cemetery at Gettyaburmand ask in whet cause those patriots and heroes of the loyal States perished - , and if I understand the history and theprinciple, there is no an swer so brief and at once eo comprehensive no the monosyllable--irw. Them tarot ho law in Hosien 1 It is wholesome ana just law that estardishes Liberty on earth, and secures the blessings of Peace and of Prosperity. And far back in the ages when there was war in Heaven—wban Michael and his angels fought agairizt the Dragon and his angels, it wan about the body of Mos.--it was a mlgb'y wrestle of angelic principalities about this Mosaic body arise:se—about the tree Import of that Theocratie Constitution—whose true end tad elm was to set Men free from the go of sin and death. And thie aintest pleura Is' a battle &pad the cloud. Wo storm the .Lookosire" of the Dragon and his angebs— and it is in erect the old dispute revived about the body of Moses. And I ace, in all this, (LA's retributive hand in history, wiser, I remember that -.Missionary Ridge" tales its name from the early missions among the CAerokpa in Georgia, where the holy mission ary Worcester and his eo-laborers wore impris oned by thef tate authorities for their Chris tian work of giving the Gospel to the Rail Man. Now that Ridge is reddened with the blood of her citizens and stands a monument orthe crime. know there are other views of this con test. I know itisregardtd by some, as n po litical Partisan war, in the !aerator a Dina l eat thoott, Ind to snetala a purely fanatlft end redical cause. I know sumo regard a even as lawless. Bat far above and beyond all party questions .looms up the majestic form of theriatton—suaulted by some of bar chor. Isbell" children ' and a deadly blow aimed at her life, And this beeomes at ones the all absorbing question, Nation or no Nation ? Government ar no Government! Law or no Law!? And it would seem that there MOM be 'but one ?espouse from allparties and all razz es complexions, just because all in terests are vitally involved in this ono inter mall the Nation's life. We bless God to-day, then, that the 1.4 w has been delivered around his burning moan- WA, along our wilderitess march, on tho way from oar family estato,to oirr fall privileges as a Nation. And to-day, wo keep this festival of harvest, as a festival also of the taw. MMEMIE=I The baneful heresy of. State Rights, es !Tams: - the • national supremacy, has, more than' any other Welty, poisoned our body .polities, and brought on this fearful rebellion against national authority—end everywhere the perversion has been met—and everywhere the true dectrinemust need be en notmced andenforced—that thiais no group of Confederate States without a nationality, but a nation composed of Suttee, hiving a gov ernment for the whole and over the whole— while there are severa l and separate govern: meta% anborclinate to the national authority. . Who over believed that this was only alamily of smell Republics butead of one Republic, ont of the whelp? The E Piewilow- Maw 'espresses it, wee out of many. And if this be not so, then there can be no supreme law in the land. Then 'the people' of the United Sista must be without law, ea such. The right of a State to secede when it pleases, is simply the right to revolt and defy . the governinent when it pleases. The doctrine boa ; been fairly broached and fiercely fought for. It can never again be propounded as the monetroas anomaly of our Constitation, if It now be settled et It must be, fa blood. It had . been darkly hinted, threatened, proclaimed, boasted. But now that it is-thrown into the terrible crucible of awry it toast be tested for all futurity. And the test already brings forth the Aligns truth in the taco of all nations, that a nation with out nationality is only a headless trunk. And it is not sc. tench • the prountlgetion of this law of nationality by the national head, si ittho striking and solemn utterance of God Mini& In Chia artefact our history. All those 'esenti have - brought forward this vital ques tion. Tho times have boon such on to test the troth or falsity of the principles on in a last analyst'. 'The baton of Republican Govern a ment, have exulted beforehand in• the 1441- JenSotto:men of our. political ryttem. Add until we heard the truth of God out of thin whirlwind, we ineiv not whether we had a. government or not.. Bat Dow we know thataltiddenstningth, which ethane, and even trunielini had not, nagined, lies in this very_ doctrine 'of ourithpubliwin Nationality. God plainly designs that we Shall bo a Dawn, and that we:than be a great nation, and afroo na tion and a ehrbtlan natant and that with all eurifocial and political end material rennin% we shall do lltm special service among the nations of the earth. . And this development of the national sentiment, and tae Cadentl strength in the direction of mighty armies and navies as well alit the power of tho na tional will, and the .Natienal Union, he has ordained to operate for the good of mankind. Arid no with that : kin dr ed form of their Shan herimy—that - thetigh Recintsion is unauthorized, by the . Constitution, and wicked in itself, yot,that there is no power granted to /he Governmedt to put it dowel llotthia leknale widch. the Gevernment eon- ask no grant: Of whom ehould it be asked/ '., Of . the - Rebellion 2 /t ano.osts to tidal Dora a man who is sassulted by an n saisin ask of him the right to strike him down is self-defonel? Done ho even ask it of the &Media th e'form civil Miut he not:ether strikaandstrikeat once by the very With:tot of self-preservation? And so another phase of the saineheresy; is the monodic= pretence that the oimal Gov ernment has no powerto draft the soldiers it requires for thesupprisaion of rebellion. Yon had 44 well say it halo no power to take the 411411 from Its arsenals, nor to oommiesion the ships at 114 nary. yards. Bat it has. And it must equally have power to wield/he strong arms of Its titian*, whether they ho State ' militia or not, In the terrible exigency of in surrection and rebellion: Shame that men of ' the law, should apply; their :legal 1144=011 to Mike void the law led to make out • ease against law, so , se to rob tin law of its inhe rent idea of eovereiguty and self-defame. See, far , inorinteit, what s Inv _ai*airat Ads nation Inuit b bath; besd r undo , e 492 ! a thepry J~ if ;thir c Gtgeral Corenustbat I inuitingtowthefls4o.,o4.oo3itigs for mot, - OM; I . 4l COMS. 6 , o Teiner.oo*. r ...44 6 rln f +siiMll n, pr l Eatetitheisr - Sphot this srar;'lble , would bo most effectually:SO override and defyull stational lagbdation, and natidnel sovereignty by reftishlg.tbamen and denying the ;implies. This would have pre sented to the ,world the fatal If:vouch, of a rebellion at home, end of virtual accession in tiro North, on the •same- principle of State rights as at the Beath., We may bless God to-day, that this restful - complication hes not °scarred.. Difference of option mast always exist among us, enough to furnish salatary checks and restrainth to party polities. Mon may overtire their right to vote for opposing candidates, in a emirematious halal that a policy which !Meta! to Other] to be disloyal, may bo moot loyal and desirable. And so we rejoice at the ample proof that the heart ;of the nation Ie true, and intent on self-defonro, and not on solf.destruction. And 2d. The Law of LOYALTY has been laid down. It is not thot a man mutt approve every measure of a given Administration, nor even in such a crisis ea ads; most hold everything which Is done by the Execu tive or the National Government to be rightl much less the best possible. We all complain —and we all-feel it to be our privilege to corn plain—whoa we coo, of think we see, manifest wrongs in the heads of Departments. In other times, when, for example, it was the question of the Mexican War, come of us op posed It, and opposed the policy . which prompt e d it, because wa believed it was dam aging and wrong. Nu one would hare called that opposition to a Government measure die. foyaity. tint now, when the question is of sustaining Or opposing the Government., In this great straggle for Its very existence, there can bone neutrality. It most be Aye or Ney—Fos nr Against—War with the rebellion or peace with the rebellion. Then it comes to be the question of subjection to the Aferber powers, or =Wee! ion to the lower powers. And whether the higher powers be my candidates or not " if they be the powers that be," not the powers that falsely claim to be, that is all for the present. The adorable Godeouns honored ibis sentiment in Ilia ease on earth. Though Be held that Rings should not dais tribute. of /1103, beesose he was a Sen and not • stranger, yet, Bo says, lost we should offend them, let the tribute be paid and the majesty of the Law and of Loy. ally be honored. • So wo say, let the Government be sustained until it Abell establish itself and give as a conquered peace, and then let us elect whom we will if we Ma by the peaceful operation of our free suffrage. But tilt then the tangled thread of politics must be let alone. And 3d. The law of American Liberty has been told down. Our symbol has been the empty Cap of Lib erty borne high, foe a token of our doctrine and principle, as enunciated before the nations. how henceforth the Cap mart be worn upon the nation's head. This to the utterance that peals out from amidst the lightnings and thunders, and tem pest, of this wilderness commit, amidst the terrors of lawgivers end the quakings of the people. It is not the Presidential Proclama tion ea ranch ea•the Providential Proclamation. The former without the latter were indeed, • hrtatim fith w ea. You had ea well have stood on the thereof the Atlantic and cried "Eman cipation" to:the deafening iturf,for alithat the mere Presidential proclamation would astern. plimh, if it we:isnot the voice of God. If this word "Emancipation" Is lair, &a snarls it so ? Not the Constitution—not merely the Execu tiverPnoclematlon—not any uor.all the groans of the stare, nor all the clamors of the people , —not anything if God gives It not the force of 1 law by virtue of His Divine de- erce. And if thin bo the will of God, then all the powers of oppression in the universe., if they were leagued tic prevent It, would ho impotent! And if we rightly read God's will, in Seripture and in history, this is-the mandate which has gone forth from the top of the old Slnai, and from the summit of our dory mount, and no govern ments on earth, nor all together, are strong enough to prevent It. No matter whether them has been our plan or net—re matter who have favored it, or who hare opposed it—tlo matter how much there has been unworthy ' in the human coneeption, - er the human meas. urea, at the outset—rhea God is seen to Le riding upon the whirlwind, and directing the storm, we adorn Ills comosels,‘ nod !Pinke in ills wonder-working plan. Is not the tag consecrated by the fact that now freedom fol lows the flag, as it Lover did borers. If, in an honest, patriotic effort to strike away the corner etoneof the rebellion, four millions of human beings are set free, who shall soy nor, who loves his country ? If we care not for the freedom of the slave, we care for the free dom of the flag, and of law and government, and for our own freedom and that of our fam ilies and nation. Oh I this is it. That God makes as achieve the deliverance of a nn of bondmennanong as, In th• not of achieving our own deliverande. This Is the condition of things hithaProridenco of God—ahat wo cannot any longerlo§ a free people without being all free, and free eltalsoirr 1 This is God's Lena of Estroseipution ! And if thli be the work of God, then all the world's potentates cannot prevent it. I shud der at the awful processes by which this Is effected. Dot ifall the rebel dead, who have fought under their bloody banner, were gath • erect in one shocking pits, what epitaph mast history write a:re--what inscription mast be graven over that mound of the slain? Simply this—They died la an unholy attempt to found an empire on the corner shone of human bond age. They died for lawfsessessi while our noble, loyal braves sleep on a hundred battle fields of the Republic, and their Abel blood cries to God for Liberty and law. And what now? Can the Nation atop hero? Is this ell—that these helpless creators, shall be eel freer Wemen and children free to be turned out to die, while the men fight the battles of the country? Shall this, now, be the shame of our Republio—blacker, fouler than the shame of elavory, to care nothing for these millions except to looee them from their bond age? hay, my brethren! We may n ot have thought it. -We may have scorned the ques tion *Ant sce slash( do with them—es only sew preiciel, in the light of the greater question of )rcedou. But let La nee to i tAtlat theword "fre.- dons" be well understood, that we bo not lied astray by sounding terms ; and let os go on In the good work of carin g for there poor, helpless millions till they be free indeed. IV. And besides all this, (4th,) the law of o:tried. Patriegiam bar been laid down. The Latinpoet could say "sweet owl decorous is it to die for ace's eo.try"...- "For on .the Scaffold h!gb. Or is tie bottls'e ran, The noblest place for mart to die • L. where he Wee for mac" Arml this is no mare heathen sentiment. Christian parents hare given up their sons, and then hare gone themselves to the battle : fur dearer than home and ebildArn; and life itself to them, has been their country I Min isters of our religion hare died on the battle field, baring their bosoms to the enemy's blow, while caring for the wounded and sons forting the - expiring soldier. Alas I how many of them have contracted the fever of the camp and died. And the law of cur Chris tianity boa been laid down ass law of holy patriotism Its old and young that will give op property, kindred, children end lifeltaelf, fur country. Was them OM a War hawbdeb the Christian membership was so largely repro- , canted? And then, in manifold .ageneies of providing for the sick Sod wounded in hoe. pits's, end for the hungry troops on their passage through our cities, and for the Chris tian instruction of soldiers in camp, and for the starving prisoners in the dungeons of the enemy—Oh 1 what a flame of Christian patri otism hoe glowed as in it furnace, has hallowed this war, and has made Rama tocombine and concentrate in itself every sassed and holy more. How female patriotism has shone in examples that rival the fair came of Florence" Nightingale in the Crimea. Mew the all drone' offerings have poured forth in a-eon. eccrated stream I Mow the prayer" of closets and families and obnrehechave gone up gain a aloud of incense to the throne forth, bodies and souls of our 'Alien. - And the .efforts have been witnessed in revivals of religion in the army tents, which have made the tent a holy tabernacle for God, on many a • bloody battle-field. And those aro only a few Items belonging to • • r Psalm of National Thanksgiving. We 'leas God also that amidst unwonted perils ta have maintained peace with foreign ne on.. When rapture has gamed's° ent—w hen England and Franco Wino eagerly atched nay °pension to interfere; when we • re humped with new complications, and • ur 'atomic! •wcre jubilant at the tbougnt of Foreign Intervention, it was plainly in accord em with tho guaranty*: God in the text, that en the most grasping and avaricious nations hould not deslro oar lanai, in the time of Its •• oat perilous exposure, because in it was hoard the voice of Thanksgiving to God for he mercy. The impression made upon these • Wow, by our resources and prosperity in the Ida of this moat calamitous war, appears om the atoning. Immigration to our Shores. Sine. January 1 the total of lagolgraats Is ,140,566, scant 69,294 for thallium period n the previous yeas I These lgira, which em 1:10t able to OttiOntitO verify, are foind in the Brooklyn Union, editorials. Wo blew tied too that the loyal States have been at peace with on much iollamoniablo us erial, audio much at home.and abroad to fan • e flame of riot among oar iio nlatlon. . Ws *cognize thltutirrellous chain of• Providence • y obtotilthe taddiavooloo of oat Stotimultod • a crashing &feat te-thalatadan. daddeo, • at OTtii, one Mt b4WthO , L dtkiniiiin of Wto • re:, • ' jr:stassarail? 4r:4 tov " °Aurar4liN 6aisitasiOala vatted to , arthelibtin* • itO tattieltirointa , 10 411 41 4 * - 1 4 oteri g g li t a t t r rf , TA ,ar .. - ;;; 4 •!: •g - 4- ' • , —•• • s e { Fll irstret. - Itamiiilidhelantith.lnninatitThher r . diamphis t ,Pert,lindemi,• and - Baton Ileitis:Sind - Sea °Mini ' They held - the sea-coast from Norfolk teem Rho Groteh: Bit new we have.ralaken all the porter of en try, 'imprint Xehil"!..tital Wihningtea.. Now they cannot claim a solitary State wbere we have not a powerful foothold for speedy emu. patios. Audit would seem that one sweep' of oar great armlet; must speedily finish thi mighty work. Al we enter the sanetner/ th morning, the tidings come to us of signal s - tory, "above ileekaele" Who can toll bat da God has shows our:Nation's sacred miniver eery, for givieg us ouch such splendid succeis at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, as turned the tide of the war, so he may choose to make this great National Thankigivingara memo rable by the grand triumphs whose joyous shout just now greed! our ears. "No bunion counsel bath devised, per bath any mortal band worked out these great things. They i are the gracious gifts of the Moot lligh God, who, While dealing with us in anger for our silts, bath nevertheless, remembered merry." And when we turn to the menifeld social, spiritual and personal mercies of God's hand, how shall we redder a return , tor all Els benefits t We might have expected the pes tilence on the heel of each carnage. But it has been averted. While many a - home has been desolated by the marsh of the embattled hosts, oar homes have been left in quiet. While other cities and districts bare suffered for lack of - fnel, we have hod an abundance from our own hills. Our ehristian privileges have been retained to us, white many Sanctu aries, even in oar loyal State! bare boon des ecrated and despoiled. ' And then, each one present here, can record private blessings, for which his heart'. thanks are due to-day, to Godxf—or temporal prosperity, sash as has flowed in upon our eity,and enriched so many branches of trade; for domostie mercies rest-, log on the heads of the thildren, in health' and happiness; for friends and home, and means of grace, and hopes of glory—aye for affliction. working oat oar goodoee gin Lioakt to God to-day. Great ea are our orensee, and eliameful as is our public and personal ingratitude, we seem to hear thy benedietion upon as, fell from the lips of the dying MOIOP, upon the lot of Joseph: "nosed of the Lord ho hi. land, for the precious things of Henson, for the dew and Ibr the deep that cnruchsth beneath, and for the prwrionsltnlta brought forth by Om atm, and for tho precious things put forth by the moon, and for thochlef thing. of lbe an cient mountains, and for the preekruo thlam of the lasting bills, and &be procious things of tha rrrth, and the falcon thereof, and for the good will of Ulm that dwolt in the bush. . . "Lot the blessing coma upon the bawl of .lotepb• and upon the tap of the head of biro that nail eeparsted froiL a be brettarn." L do not forget that this mottoes' Thanks giving Day in Drool, when the people came up from all their fields and from the in gather ing of their corn and wheat, auembled- at Jerusalem to give thanks to God, was the glorious mansion of the Advent of the Rely Spirit. We seldom think that tho Pen tecoat was a National Thanksgiving Day; And what amazed the multitude, was that thou. Galileans spoke in jubilant strains, and In OTtly foreign tongue, tie to.eferfot work" If God—celebrated the bountira of the harvest and the blessings of Gospel grace, In every language under heaven. And our Thank,. giving enthertasm will go forth to all the ton gue, of the earth. God makes he a specter', and an example to the nations. Ile demand, of us a fitting recard of thankful grateful, cok bnation o f . his favors—of hie divine and gra cious intervention in our behalf, of his won derful works in the harvest field., and on the battle Geld--and so If the nation is rouged to the true spirit of Thanksgiving, this Praiecoofol feast of harvest, may be airmliacd as rat Jerusolem by the glariom, admit of the Holy G3est. I have teen in the studio of our own loyal Powers at Florenee, his model for the status of America. The perfect female form draped in beauty—the bead erowned with a ehamtet of eters, and the right foot treading mislead- Bally, and with queenly port upon the roiling aeopent of Despotism. Rat not *may tramp ling it to loath! It was the despotism of mon scot'', abroad, rising again in the despotism of slavery at home. But, bleared be God, It le ooi , vfoo,, though writhing in its death agony: Beyond This terrific Sinai, I see a Canaan for our nation. This hind, as an eminent Jewish Rabbi hat remarked, answers even more strikingly than Palestine itself to the Biblical descriptions of the Holy laud, as "a land of brooks of. water, of founteius and depths that spring out of valleys and hills— a land of wheat, and barley, and vines, and fig-trees and pomerranatoe—a land of oil olive and honey—a land wherein thou shalt eat bread without atiamenam thou shalt at lack anything in it—a laud whose storm Cr. iron, and out of whose hills thou mayest dig bram." (Dent. 9:7). Ino it again a land of peacefal and happy and united States, under one good Government, when Ephraim .ball no longer cat ,hadsh nor Jude* rex Ephraim, end ben "In the name of our God ww will setup our banners:"—no "stare and hare any long. to bar our national prugress, but the glorious old flag "bearing evcrywhero on its ample folds, Lamy mid tition, oos osoi in- Arepererle, mos andforemr." Professor McCoy at Lafayette Hail. Lafayette Ball was pretty well filled hart night to bear the Address of Professor IleCoy, of Washington, on "The alstne Inetitistion of Slavery." The Profssior got off a good many "him" against the copperheads and conservatives, and announced that the prodlntlon of Toombs, tbst he would tall his slave roll on Banker Hill, was now fulfilled for all Jeff. Davis b ad to do was to say, Copperhead No. 1? And the response was Here! Copperhead No. Ac. We were sorry that the Professor dwelt so long on the mere political aspect of slavery, that he had no opportunity of giving some ar guments against its being • "Divine fneti o • tion." We wool.' suggest that the address suns snore than an hour too long, and eery often in audible, both from todistinot articulation and too great depression of the velem The effort was, perhaps, in tome Instance. too great. The Professor will deliver anothor address this sequins at 11,0 IMMO plaza on "th, Anti. dent'. Proclamation of Einanciposiom" The Draft-22d Dhdrlet—Appllesttons for Exemption—Election by Parents. The Board of itneoltment, (224 District,) meets at 10 Velvet, examines eases of Mani fest Permanent Disability ; (they do not ormolu* eases of oossinition, diseases of heart, liver, kidnap, em., until the person Is drafted.) Aftor these the 1111112811 of appllounte for alienago, non-roaldancci and unsullablo ago, numbered from 1,000 to 1,100 will be called— none over No. 1,100. At two o'clock in the afternoon disability_ cities will haws another chance, so orates how high the number of the epplicatioa. "Election of Parent" - applications may be filed bat will not be beard until Wednesday, 234 lest. —No numbon over 1,100 can be beard until be parties are drafted, unless the Department extends the lima which expires to-dos. SIPECIAL LOCAL Noness. TIOlta" PAM, Plain and Ornamental Slate Roofer, mid daalar to Pennylminiss and Vermont slate of the but quality at low rates. Otto* at Alex. Laughlin% afar the Bator Works, Pittsburgh, Pa. , • KIN•111-10-00-11f—/NDLaN SMOILIM Tomo co.—This Tobacco, need by the North Amer ican Indium, is manufactured from the linen quality of tobacco, and commingled with - the most healthful and odorous Roots, Bake and Herbs, Indiginous to the Hooky dionniains, in such .propertion, as to Impart to its dis tinctive character, and secure for It wherever it booomes known a hearty weleorrie. d long residence among the Indians of the Rooky dioputallui, insured en acquaintance with their habits, custom,, and modes of life, and among other things, an insight lobo the com position of their molting Wheat*, and a knowledpi of the means by which the edged nita aroma is produced, Alai random Ilse pleseing to the smoker, and so acceptable to these who are not. Smokers who once be come acquainted with this tobaao will never be without It. Sold by all tobacoonists and by the manufacturer, E IL. Hunt, ell Ches , nut area, Philadelphia. deithlm Au. was Pumas Earnax Wurun, Re ligious, Literary, Pictorial, ate., etc., received launlidiately on publication, by express, at J. Pittock% Yews and Periodical Depot, 'Fifth attest, opposite the Post-atlas.'. When the visitor has selected one Cr two of these excellent jounutis,"The Independant,"”Har. Cr's Weekly," "The likstrated •News," Frank Leslie,".cdo.,llwro are such pleasant Damp as .Comta-Movithlica,".. , Jahattiaal Gtm-Cracb," and more of the tame sort, that may. coma at "the fares 'dots aftar the play; :or** ihaivan• after 4iluiai; Cal4ad sae. Now m Oil • TurceASqbspeptiou tseatred fat aU magasines atat'pail!" l !Isamist micaat Frank Caaslol4l9l part,' Citadels, - ' ,'". 11 • ' • i Buror~t Et is Atillittilki tato.E•AutWatisfilb..,„ . , ... /itt Art l t7r 4 ::::,:ltratP lily zl k -.w.x., : 1i..-,--,t , Tex Dearr.— We de not mesa the 'battled. raViei - obiiitedin this state by Mbar'l'ettb , ecilitionite , the bounty fund, but that more isiteraiing draft that la now taking place from thirpeeketa of oar citizens who aro buy ing,gifts Tor the holidays, Thoseles of file Witteldr A.Wliscn Sewing Machine, for this purpose alone, at 27 Fin street, daring the fen month, from our own positive knowledge, oot up a fabulous corn. Wo rejoice to know that it is so. Thousands of the most sensible ladies in the land to-day bless the name of Wheeler d: Wilson for the benefits delved from the use of this superior, inimitable, and In all respect unapproachable Sewing Ma china; and, from present nppearances. the number of wives, mothers, daughter, sisters and others, that the coming holidays will add to this happy list, will amount to thousands. This universel prefercnee for the Wheeler Wilson Machine is based upon the fact that it is a great living reality, and not a dubious exporimeht, a. too many find other maohines In the market to be, to thef t sorrow. The . permanent supremacy of this great Machine could, in fact, no sooner be supplanted than you could supplant the North star, or upset a mountain. Again To say to all, oall at their sale rooms end coo the variety of works which eon be done on Ileac machines. Bon POLL AND Wirvta WaAa.—The Sam meri I past, and by the morning's frost, we begin to apprehend, that fall and winter will shortly be upon as, and no most provide our selves with the matcrtal to keep WI comfort able. A nice fall suit, or a good sad well made overcoat are the osry thing, aid' we do net know of any place where our readers would suit themselves better than at Messrs. W. 11. McGee & Co's clothing establishment, corner of 'Federal Arndt and Diamond Square, Allegheny. They have also received a com plete assortment of gentlmaen's furnishing goods, and a great variety of new patterns for waist:wain& an. Gatertittra, bare you examined tbe fall and winter stock of goods at tbe Merchaut Tofl loring aetabliebteent of Som. Grab= d Co., No. tel Market street iremb Ptlpply of pools erery week. Have you examined the pricer of goods at the Merohant Tailoring establishment of Sam. Graham dt Co.. No. 54 Markot street; if not, it it pow tiac you would, and 14,0 20 per eemt in your clothing bill. Every garment warranted a perfect M. SAX= filantat, Sao. MoCsant.lar. EDTTORI AL Orrnrox.—ilie following wo take from this week's Caked l'reskyreriwa,one of the most inflacntia/ religions paper" In !ha Wo..t. Speaking of the Wheeler Wilson Sowing hl.hlno it toys a nbi.i is unquostionaLly the best sewing machine for family purposes Win In the market, and Is mnro in demand than any othor. It is tho ono which We con most unqualifiedly recommend, and for this ICA,OII have selected It an a premium." Ural ad. PCITT RICLIVILD ASV tuner PPM SILL—Tee fine assortment of Fall' and Winter Clothing, lately received by Maur. :oho Wier k Co., March Ant Teflon!, No. 1.16 Federal street, Al. legheny. The stock of clothing consiota of the finest variety of gent? pantalenns, roots, costa and overcoat.. The et,hl of patterns is tasteful and fashionable. iVe would invite .r. or our readers to give the shove gentlemen a call. It any of our readers have net yet deter mined on what to buy fora present, all we have to may i• go to !Wittman, Meyran fl Sisdle's Jewelry establishment, 42 Fiftb:mtrnet, agents fur the rt.lchrateil American Watches, and our word for it, you will find some art:- ciao! gold or silver to curt. Their assortment, is one of the largort in the, city and their price. eery moderate. Below we give a list of prices of carpets at J. Finch's, corner of Grant and Fifth streets: Extra supereale all wool carpets at F 5 rents per yard, worth $1 IC . wool filling at 59 rents worth 75 cents; sentry mode rag at dj and 50 cents; fiwlrs and hemp at 71 nem: ; cur. tag. at 51 cents and pan"), stair or In ant, and up. • SPCCIV. Norice.—D, your duty to yunraelses, protest you: health, t.c Ho loway's Pills and Ollll=tlA. For Wounds, Sore., Bowel Complaints sod Lever., they are • perfect safeguard. Fe'l b un t o use them with et ety b. A. Only cents. Till :•CC Ea./ le the title of a s uelr ttnry bJ Dr. J. U. liebimoa, publirbe.l to the ,tie• of •'Mer cury Merles.' It i . for exit. hero by J. P. limit, 49 Fifth carat, and by .1. T. tinnaple, b) Federal etreet, Allegheny. Priee,fls eente. A answerret. present Is an Alban, tall and see our Large end elegant stook of .)1. betas. We can tell them the lowest at the price.. Call and see them at Pittork's, err site the Post-otlace. Jrnsr Isatutrocl card pboto graphe have jast teca treof rod—et 111,10 dollar par doyen. Call and see thorn at Pittaeles, opposite tho Po•I -0 Ger. Ilem-oe, Potereou, Leetie'e lierper's Weekly, Independent, Leelie, Clip pare a d t Vi l „t e lc'e lat o e p P r..7s7t7: 7111.!1".re Cht.tr eau (Dealt/COS.—Photograph Al bums, holiday books, diaries for lel4, hew books, sto., at Frook Case's :Cars Depot, TO Fifth street. Omen sod carnage ctalla wit; Le taken M the Omnibus omoe, No. 410 P.ll street, day er night. All orders lcf: et the ebove place RIM be pm :aptly attehdoti to. All Naha moot M paid In advance. DCAZaL lernmrra, No. 251 Penn larva, 1. the place where you can get the beet cheap dentletry In the city. Don't LiAct the place, No. 251 Penn :Erect, near Ilanoook. Fon Cuccna,Cottn, Lao TUIVUT DIiORDEZIR. rte"lirotrn'o Bmolchial Trfx/...." having prorri their egi.ay by a te.t of oany year.. cinx Tots Mt auction, ut Di nods . ). evening, at level, o'clock, at Weeltlland's Auction ❑aune, 55 Fifth Wool. Ilors. an Loy rot SALR, cheap for each, in the Sixth Ward. Sea adrertisewent. Dudes for led' coo Le had et Putock'e, oppoolto the Poet-olhee. Girt Boutwell's complete T.. 1.3 w, .t Pit took's, opposite the Post-oGi.. Foa holiday presents, rail M Nitwit's, op posits the Post-ortet. LADITS • and childreste Balmoral .11notio, et McClelland's, .5.5 fifth street. lloor Scrs - rn for ladle., mi.aca and chlldzen at :kleClelland'o, Si Fifth street. - - 0. Sas, Dentist, 248 Pomo outset, will at tend to a b00tee...,/ Ms ororaestoo. aitZ/T bargain* In ladies' 'Farhat J. Finetie corner of Brant and Fifth Fox cheap dry goods go to J. Finch's, cor tier of Greet end Fifth streets. MARRIED t3ETPEL-411tArN.—At the rbeldenee of the bride. father. Dozertb•r 18th, 1863, by the Ike. Illgby, MIL, Mr. EMIT. SETTEL, of Clocionett, to blies CSILOLINI Ld LIANN BUM'S!, of thle city.' STATE OF 01110.—IttnntsoN Couxir co?ta 01 Colima* Ft.us.—Penetylvorila R. R. aad itobt. Gaston t 80121 ot. 80mb...01e t Indiana 11. R. Penton to tondos, Mortgage. The anderrigned hos bees sspointid Special Com. mien:tun in this ease, to midi% the quints against said Oamparty; therefore wilco Is hereby given for the holders them( to present Rho nom to me, at my °Oise In thenhanaille, on or Define tho 11.11111 LAY JATIAAity, ISO 4 ; and the creditor. of raid Com pany t i ro ny farther notified that a deems far the rah. o mortgage premien of said Galiroad Cern patty was taken ea, tee ttorember tens of said Coon, and. allay of enenUonnf the sale thereof marl the OM day of tannery, 1814, wee granted to onablo the 'antihero of and Ilompany to ogre, moon the plan berektforo enbmitted to them for its reorganisation, as an order &sale orlll certainly he Lund miter the sold lint day of Jannary, 1284, rosins Strckholders sad oneiton by that time hare eigtonod, la treeing, their assent to dm serrender of one-half their .toot, and theft interest on their claims against the Com pany moor.d therefore, if poulbist, to amid said sale sad to dm Stochholders one-halt of their neck, and the unsecured creditors their debt, with. oat Interest, 1 orpntly earl noon you le forward to JUSTIN' (1. toumn, Secretary of this Company et Otenbentille, Ohio, your tertinenn of ruck and esideusee of indobtadnosa. with authority to him to accept tit plan ofredma, reorganisation on your behalf. T. 1.. JIWETT, Reosiret and Special Commisalener de93.lsi. 11..V1. U. R. au. CENTRAL DRUG BTORE, Cbmer Ode dad Nera am*. Ilkotesus GEO. A. EXALT. Proem:on. lIPAIIIILItiG SODA WATER, PATZ2ZI precortpliona cmcdhlts cos pound. .4 , NOTARY PUBLIC, •Na. tal DIAMOND MUT. Prrroarsan .z.lictigindatgaretts of Deeds, _Depotltlota and WV* Wm. Also, Deb. got tgo.po, Artlolot of Ai 6Leaw.wd Lripd Pivot of *Tory Mad written. - seI.BOOO pHOTOURLI'IIti CAN HE xa ut flu) istainnzuP , - - • ••. °mato the Oat= /Food iltiplUMOnnA Otic,lptaLty. 1-'4llrirril-iii#l,lt.ol,-cl2!**)s6; - ~,~ ..~, .~.. --.,~ _~_ _ g_-m.._ ~~,~ .. a ~9 THE LATEST XEWS BY TELEGRAPH. FROM PRILADRLPEEL Great Fire in Philadelphia—The Ne+ gro Pilot Robert Small—The Gale in Charleston Harber—Deep Snow. Dinxtch to the Pitt%bm - gb Gau•tt. Punaputrau, Dec. is; 15.63 The wires are now working again. Shober's store houses, in Almond street, were burned down this afternoon. Fifteen hundred bar rels of coal oil were in the building, and were owned by Forsyth,ltrothorn i Co., Pittsburgh, and other parties. Total loss, f 50,000. It was the moot frightful tiro of its dimensions ever soon here. The horning oil ran Into the river, covering its surface for ocres. The report that the negro pilot. Robert Small, and Mk vowel were captured, is not true. Dispatches received tonight contradict the statement. The gale thnt tank the Weehawken monitor has cleared out the Charleston harts-r of all the obstructions, and an early advaneo is ex pected. Hundreds of torpedoes and obseeando friri of net work cense ashore. The work of Beaurogsr ct4quiring monttu of lobos, was destroyed in a single night. Snow bus fallen in Kansas fourteen Inches deep. In the mountains it has fallen to an incredible depth. Cattle are dying in anm• here. Great fears ►re felt for the overland trains, they not haring been heard from. The Conscription Act—The 8900 Clause Repealed—The two Classes put into Ono. WsaRTNGTON, Dec. 18.—The Senate Milita ry etll3l,l2illeti had a loug session to-day on the Amendment to the Conscription Act. Af ter en animated !lobate the $0! exemption clause was stricken out, and the-two classea put Into one. These are the principal amend ments to the hill, which will be reported to morrow, and an effort made to pus them at onoe, se that the Howe may hare the bill on Monday to go t,, work on, and e4replele It be fore the adjournment for the holidays„ The abject is to present the postpone:mot of the draft on the sth of January. Charleston Harbor Clear of Obstruc tions—Reported Re-capture of Pa eblit by Juarez's Forces--Comon ford Advancing Against the French—The French Besieged in Tampico-800 Deaths by Yellow Fever. New Pone, Dee. In—By the steamer Amigo it is stated that the :onset heavy gale swept away nearly all the rebel. °lair . ..Lions In Cat lex ton Harbor, and their remnants line the shores. The entrance to the harbor is now believed to be Mean, and it is supposed that our navy will take doe advantage of the fast. The new Orleans Ilropme, of the 9th, has news of the recapture of Puebla by Juaraa's fin..., and that Comonford was advancing spinet the French. The Yveneb In Tamplei. are in a stale of siege, and have loot 400 mon by yellow fever. The Rebel Reid on the Irange and Alevandrla Railroad Waenicorow, Dee. 18.—Tbe Bring ex tra has th• following: Liens. Peck, of tbo r.?.d Regiment of the Dictriet of Columbia Volunteer., hits given ne the particulars of a bold raid trade by Etta eree Carolry tact night, on the Orange and Mexandrin Railroad, about a mile and a half beyond Fairfax ntetion, by the rebelfl beet fi , to ,trong, v , corepanird by the notorio. Moeby. About six the, rebel, attacked the guard on there at that ruin!, whlch conflicted of co. I. of. the 155th Now York regiment. The company made a brave refliztenet, only being cantered by the cavalry forming a hol low ~ q oare around them. The rebels had provionsly rut the telegraph a Ire., but word wee conveyed as quickly MI 1.035 i :Pie to C.d. brew In Command of a bat talion. of four companies of the Secondbistriet of Columbia volunteers at Fairfax Station, and he started with hla command to reinforce tho attached party. The progrese of the train area @topped at Hop sun, where the rebels had idarnedahe bridge amatory Alp Ow track for about two miles. When Col. Drew arrived at Hop flue It was extremely dark, and the rain ponied down furiously. lie fired several' volleys at the rebels, which they returned. None clone men were woanded. It was evidently the object of the raiders to capture • railroad train from Alexandria loaded with a largequantity of provisions and forage for the army, which wee due ►t the time. Tho train happened to be in bear and • half late, and consequently escaped capture. It is quite likely the rebels hare com mitted turther outrages on the railroad, be yond Hop Rap, of which we have not been Informed. This raid retires eery forcibly, the maser, of the former exploits of Stuart's. cavalry. WA,RINOTON, Doe. lb.—We learn through dispatches received at the lleadquartera this Department from Gee. Corcoran, that Jut night Co. 1, 155th New York regiment, at Sangster's Oration, in the midst of a terrible storm Com raging, were attaked by a Lady of Stuart', robed cavalry, about 1,100 steringAndm the command of the rebel Ben. Rareer, which left Fredericksburg en Weetneaday nightlaat. Contrary to their expectation, the company on railroad guard dote there made a gallant, and its it turned out, a successful resistance, having beaten them off four times before tieing flanked and haring their tents burned by the . enemy, who gin in the rear of the company. The company was then forced to retire, with the lose of two men wounded and one prism:lee. The rebels attempted to burn the bridgenver flop Run, Mat took a stampede before doing It any damage to speak or, as it was repaiied In two boom this forenoon. Pour train. are now running again. On moving off again the rebels sent back to Frederiekaburg three am bulances of their wounded, and left one pris oner in our hands. They then left in the di rection of Centreville. As coon 1113 deo. Corcoran in command, rent cavalry In, pursuit of the foe, and bas einee reported that lu advance came up with the rebel's rear. Late Southern News---Terrible Explo. 'fon and Loan of Lite near Etta mond. Foarstust !Soutar, Dec. I7.—The never truce steamer arrived last evening, and brought down from City Point a frarnegro who was captured at Gettysburg and recently liberated by the rebel authinies, and two sur geons who had Loan come time in prison at Manta, Ga. While the latter wore in Rich mond, the rubel °Ewers showed them there all the prisons In and about the city. They report they found our prisoners quite earn fortable nod well fed, though they were partly , furnished from provisions sent from lota }' State.. The Richmond Wkig, of the 15th, says on Thursday lasi' an explosion took plus at tbe Chesterfield Coal Pits, from the admission of. gas in Ramoon Pit, neat Clore Hill, twenty.' nine miles from Richmond. Sixteen men ware killed and three Injured. The accident. ooessloned a' tremendous explosion. This flames from the biasing gas asoended coma • hundreds of feet above the orifice is the •It. From Charleston. 117.1somorox. Dee. 18.—The following Ii from the eorrerpoodent of the Dilamer() CAerteston S. C., Dee. In.--Gan. Gllbstoro again shelled Charleston on Thursdo night, and throwing a number of shells into diderent parts of the elty,-and it is believed that there was oormidsrable damage done in dlffaittnt parts of the city. All the rebel batteries opened and a hoary bombardment ensued for several hours. The storm le washing away the rebel ob structions, and yeaterday ca large number of beery timbers, bolted together with iron, , came down with the tide. Thor were secured and towed ashore by - our tugs. The amount of timber that came down, le ect lam that it ie believed the obstruction* melt bo aerrionsly damaged: There is no other news of import &nee. . Two of Morgan s: °Altera' iind Thirty Men captured—General • MOwarit's Cavalry In Pnrontt of Morgan. CHATTASVOILL, Dee. 18.—Gen. John H. Mor gan escaped across the Tenneene 'at :Giles.: Dies' Landing, sixty miles above has on Bon, day afternoon. Captain William Cuttorrinfg and Hobert Canuninge. who eteaped from Ca luntbas with him, were captnred, jogethai with an aeon of thirty men. : On, ' , reaching the neighborhood of the elver. 'they. peened' arm citizen to prevent . puma; An attempt was made to enns - on afte'st,ihe month of 31110's Creek; and while- doieg eo, it PiIIPISn. "vim eluded their pteket 7 - pie the alanoisnd the attempt wee warty Instated. '''Merges . escaped ones cap*l* caw bean „ a notated " , I V ,hilvii.Ettitt: - - - - 1 , 0-- -0 :6 1 2::1( 1 1. - - "liii ut.147::141114 lb. ' OattlVili .7,060:1M1.Y1! '~Y~'e+~' n (as~i-lg~` LLITM CONGIO3.-ITIM EE EPi rs-licaurisrtrom 1401abgr 15,1863..1. " Elawams-!-Bir. 2 orimil aakolitri bdrexc i. from forthezaelitice on the Committee of-Hiei rnl Afistre. After ajw:efwenTorEetilo egalwak 'granthsit' 'the requeit, - the ihitritign of tboi Naval Committee sayiog the esroi.*3 ofikef vintletian were my tomsortab, !his tline when reform In the . 1111,21 Depart meet was 4d . nocesamyr further monsiderationj noon the subject was postponed until Iftindes: Mr. Howe presented s memorial" from the citizens of Wisconsin, asking action• to be taken, with a rico to en nmendment to the Constitution, to prohibit Slavery in all the States and Territories. • Mr. Wilson, (roma the Committee on Milli tar] affairs, reported back with amendmonts'i,: the bounty law. Also, a bill amending the enrolling act with esnontimeritr; one of them repealing the $3OO commutation, and as to that he had eery serious doubts. Mr. Dimon offered an amendment, catempt leg clergymen from the draft. Tito amend ment was ordered to be printed. ;Mr. Sumner's resolution • fur anew role, requiringSenatera to take the oath of allegi ance, provided by act of Congrsu,•btfore en tering upon their duties, was taken np. Mr. Saulsbury said his colleague, • Dayard, was the only Senator to bo lefiscted by the order, and he had a right to nob that the question involved should bo referred to the Committee on Judiciary for their action and opinion. Mr. Saulsbury then made a motion •to that effect. • Mr. Trumbull opposed U. motion. Mr. Johnsen cud be could not see any evil in eonsequeme that could result from the reference. • Mr. Bayard said be wan uawtlting, without the deelslon of the Senate, to take the oath. Ile wanted their cistei•ietiou thiasubfect. lie had views es to the constitutionality of the oath, but be could take the oath as readily as any member of this body. Messrs. McDougal and Powell advocated wjth reference to the committee. Mr. Ten Eyck could see no good to arias frooi the ref erence as the Judiciary Committee ire af the same opinion as when they reported the Act. The Senate refused by II majority to refer the resolution to the Judiciary COmmittce without considering the subject. The Senate then went into exectitive sessfon. Adjourned Additional Foreign Pin CITY OP TAIMI2IOIOIf. New Tete, is reported an un doubted ram was fatoly Monaca at Dull, with steam up, and immediately pot to sea, with sundry Southern , looking gentlemen. It is also reported that there is danger of complications between I ffrance and America, owing to California and Sonora supplying the Mexican. with arms. The three war steamers recently sold by the British Admiralty, in addition to the Victor alias Rappahannock, were the Phoenix. Cy clops and Amphloit, the latter a twenty-six gun crew frigate. It in feared they are in tended for the rebels. Austria and Pencils hare offered fo abide by the treaty of 1052, as regards the Crown of Denmark. Great Britain will advise Denmark to make concession, and thereby remora all anger and hostilities. Denmark will [nerd the entraTee of Fed i oral troop. into Dela, es a declaration of err. The Federal Diet; however, in not yet deter mined to carry oat the coercive measure. Cotton closed with a decline of ley2d. • no STeleen ArsTIULEATILN. New Tote, Dec. 10.—The steamer Austra- Iranian from Liverpool, Deo. eth, arrived at six o'elook this evening,. She brings the fol lowing additional Intelligence. A great storm of :three days, had proved most dis estrona to England, both on land and sea. The damage to property Is extensive, and the enact Is etrown with wrecks. At Hollyhead fifty-fourbodies dosted into the harbor. • A letter In the l.endon tAtily News, rays it understood that the now rebel privateer Bap, pshannock t la still bolived to be at Cellals. I She is very fast, and the writer shpts.,e that it in well understood at Shyness what she was Intended for. The Popo of Domes had received a deputa tion from the Confederates, who presented letters from Jeff. Davis. (Ha! Ha. that's a good one; geese its for absolution for past sine.] it le hollered the reception had no offi cial character, and that the Jotter was merely complimentary. The great meeting et Preston has pisied ro solutions In favor of continued neutrality. Pould's financial statement shows that. the Immolated detleits new reach 027,000,000 f, and a loan of 30,000,000 f is proposed. The Mexican elf males during the year will roach 210,000,0001. Three ships ere fitting oat to blockade the western coast of Mexico es for as Acapulco. The Paris Bourse is firm at 7€410. The aspect of the Dane-German qnestion is unchanged. England and tussle arwarakinginoreateuts Ter a paol6e adjustment. Lend., Dee. G.—The British Crowe lawyers have announced the condemnation of :the British bargee Sprihgboke by the Nee York District Court is illegal and vexatious, and Lord Lyons is to remonetrate. 'lb° Gioite newspaper CS/Italnc str,..ng ealTimenis are the Springbok° condemnation. It is tits Goscrn meat organ, and the owner at the Sprlngboke is a.. Northern partisan. From Cairo. • . CAIIIO, Deo. 10.—Ilemphis dates of the 76th have been received.. The force rent out against the rebels who have been bring Into •steamers at Water Proof, found them and 'killed • 10, wounded several and took - some pritonen. The steamer Mars, from New Orleans, ar rived at Memphis with nearly-200 baler of cotton. The Des Moines, !rpm Priors' Point, with 200 bales. The Silver Labe , with 220 baler, end about u mach from White ricer. - • .- • - . There. is slim ixtefisers dolngin consequence of eonfuelon truing from soldiers who liars. not compiled with orders. dales of -235 bales middling to strictly middling; e -'ti• 3s c.; good middlings. 61@,1390.. • The Silver Moon . from • Rfeteiphis and-Cin cinnati with h barge of cotton ; airived.• teen bales were - added here, being pert of lot 917 baleslitelssd ben) on the Crest-wet : City, n account of Charges against the owner for vio lation of the regulation of ;the Treasury De paitment. The drama Albert Pearce, with a tow from Slew Orleans * iarrrod with 150 hluis. of sugar for. s*. Lids, Tho gun boat convoying her was Seed Into frem Abe battery, near Rodney: The main toot, near- by, moved down and. C 01111130014.1.11 vigorous. alarm. The Effie Deane .collided this morning with &gun boitS in sight of Cairo, sunk low, it Is thought ate can be raised:' The Capture ottlact Cheaapeake:—Thh Slaverr- fihneatlen to the Union Viz - gluts. Senate. WMIELTSWION, Deo. 18..—Mnttutlly, friendly and eatiefactory explanations hero taken pima to-day, between the Baeretary'of State end - Lord Lyons, eeneeraing , the- recovery of thellhelapeake and - her esew 'within the Bret inh.juriedletion of NolaSeetla.. The Senate of Virginia in session at Alex andria, passed a bill ti-day ?or. the election of delegates by the potpie to a Coarentioalo useable in that city on the 25th ofdannarY, to alter nintnmend the StalaConstitution so as totilmolvd slavery in the counties of dam sel; Nortiuttopten; I . .riricesaAnne, Elisabeth City and Turk, and including the cities. of Norfolk ad Portsmouth: By the President's Proclamation ofJannary last, all Blares in the nrantin'te; of the State ani•free. 'The Art aets'feirth ea`-the reason for the 'timings the, without lt, the Execatiro and Judicial oaken of the Stattyin the tas:notion of laws betvreen' master ad 'elefee. will be brought into eon tiefirith the nallitsaY authorities, of Atm Uni ted State' -- : .11 1 1.1.7r0S.AtIA EMU,. ATEW TESTIMONALS:--f Y lid t 'The limiest Hasten; o s ftli tart . apialind eat In favor" of DECKLE'S .4411 Lati After halms eitaalnal lite Plano 1 Msoun. DECKS.O BROS. eery careful coma to the col:Anstalt, and cheerfully di.) ate is every resimi imparter Natal time b pure.aleh balhout, ray distinct entirely muskal eleulteser. Their aura of the ~,r7 beet, Plainly domausaulina that ary.bark-austerlaii aro rad, and llts eseaseas and quality of tone throughout comps of tha.Ber beard; oasorpunad by Plano heave has yet aft. F. R. "Theedont Thansa, SIM Chas. radar Theo. 'Biwa,. editor Barielead ,Woridt Cal Anants, Diratot Gamin Open; :tatin Zundel, alter .ferraiii ile-Weratp ; P. L. 'Utter; OLTi IPoltiohn, P' • A. ihdoilot of these marior In.ftninee It4EOI.O,TED:OXYGEN, ,p4 . . - WOODWARD Cbaultini rb plum or the tate Twat, Nur Tort bu opened bu ceoi at' No. MILD dITaIAt. ban tbspapui of mum and' Um blisterthr_9XXUEN.. ust,ULTI °STUMM - AM. at's muds* arms Mouth Chuido C 4 mrliiint 3 •zia' 'ear tto blood' Churl mmlatm " CM'" 061#;Artayrutur,..tap , . '?ctitsi rigs Arkpip_zi WOTLX-1110 ' SAME TOT ALrAND ' 4loll l ll k fthn . * 11, " 01 Y ,14 t..1 4 777° '-:VAIS444III4O.O**ICIM rl4 c re~`z~' 3~r Y":~t y . i`~Si) arms unstnaratcilb ---:;.o.. ii• W k .....„.--en - - , Ac ial ... 4 ,7 4 ..thed,v404.!0v0a 1 e cau ar firtaeni-42403i0444 ,l'OW3t pler marks indicited ten fret thre 4-25 , giaing,— them bee ee/destithe4: Wattle, both the AthlitieltiSi d . ,I'. 7, U both wuv ritin,gleat eietibi....S h. „,L—Ni . le . "l *1 1,1,114 4 tfitP,..'!::'.,:::.a".i. - ...'fil D ";.-wiTA- ---- , Tiro weather maierday wee trite aeldl,thd -034 5F.H_. with a light anew falllsit ilittle.sua «riff the "Wrist= meet lal'i laisirrt. l " th *n time forth. river to fteeitcuP,ter Weir.. o2 " ml , - :-:-.. liminess cent tenni4lllM imilWiti' tbi.e ,lNn . ' 1 ,ritb at, ~•4ph, th`t ialii.eidi'iottliii , wg" I* rata or freight hue both redtterd illieperb lt . l3 ,, , e stay to avinsulk,V we are told th at ithipments !tam . „: ,„ e" Yesterday at Me per one handtvglam2 . 4 l l C '" 7 1 "; materW drib The sni,e, bedroll th:Ydli'fridn' - ', emik,:•:' Starlight from Evansville, and the Velda MO . _ . ,vu , " einnati. The Crabs oarne np to the- WV - wharf, and after dischar g ing,conansa.cc4le ki n ".: „ 011 City, for which place she wilileave thia ava 6 E', There wens ro darer -tyre-3 atidi.freut the Male,. t . pukm. • < , -• =- The Le/claire erring! hem Oil City, yesWNW 1 , did also the Dame from Wheeling. The Leela l brought down a. considerable quantity of pette4ae4'.. No more boats exoTpt those, catiYing Ciorenoro-MY, . Oates, will be allowed for the prevent to go uP tit . Cumberland rim, The order to this eTect le sup-- lawal to hare been prompted 4 the encodagement - which unprotected boats glee to prirrillas. ___ • alarms:so, Deettuthet 10, ISC, '.• . 7 tio more prienta atenriners or.boat's hot under a 4.-- eirlannut dilater, or carrying Government will be 11CMItted to enter the Cattheriand riverunti/.. /lather notice: LiatIT . FITC II Lieetenant Cinsmanding. The popular and nett Tent. Capt. - d ert:-. - kir. Jas. C. McKay, to th‘7.aneseine , ,packet ter W. , : day, leaving promptly at 4 p.m., The new and commodiLw . steanier ,Finfe gobinson.;„. It Capt. . Iloblastin, ithnenniedirt fesielor nett and Leniseille this avenlng. ".Ig.i. - YohnWhelm gsrmariy of the liaatinga. Is the s;erk— A-Litter appears in. OSw of the Cincinnati ptpere." ef Monday. concerning dialed Pokier for nor clear, ing Lower of the rations inetrialW bands which have fg, the past two months infeetnt the llanks of the Ayer- TrittightikliLUO wammted, es. Itflet Lo esperted that gunboat'::. ran climb the banks n of the rivet and , follow three grarriglat into the wood,. The principle °bier* In • placing gneboate 'along the river mile prevent the rebels from again getting tiposiLinen Meat hold, by„, placing , Permanent, anent, batteries &L.; the bent - sof the neer. and for cleating the Mire of nay rebel and steamers that might in any way i re:fere with •". oar„cemmerea, and ihm Ince - been de,..esuccessfully. ,, ^ Vosta trtion. - • The Jeanie. ilabbe. Capt. 4. ll.UcvJeacyorili positively have kr Claciaaati and toulevilla this arming. We Lep° the .Tenalei .m receive, assbe ye*, .m. 3, a pod trip. The She steeiiir la'anale Byers _ Capt. Burk, will leave Lie St. Loan thb motairiat.!l' althea, Lai4 bbe will,bakliewed caMottda7l-. 1 / 7 the Starli•iht, Capt.l. A. Movement Tee f.llowlug la the number ai coal haute ooa bot• L en that hare paned through Lock 301: on the re cent rise, commencing on the faurtcanthinstent, tee gether with the number - of bushels or coal. It mast . be borne to mind, howercr, that e Lrerttf three Moto 1_ how man:, en hare pa cora. of 4mi - 9th:du& Ala' • nut. get oC, as the rfier foil too mace to admit Of • them making the attempt r im aarerybe r thri envy rould.' , get through the look. To counterbalance thht. her-• enr, Blom were quite a onmbor of boats that through the lock on the rift. prior to- thla loot ono. o that the whole nnmlar that left, Will In all pral;Y:.. ability, be equal if not In oacrei orosto !Ivrea : • :"...., Omani. ' No. Ito to. .. . No. Buakele., R &J %Callao 1 2:000 : . .11clieongh--. 1 , 3 • IMMO -L , J CelfelL..— _... 1' - ' ' 6,11005 , Wll Itrown-,..r...—. to , 110,000 , /I IABXI--. '. 111 j 11e B rTaiir. - .1: ---- : ,:. , :18,100......: , ... Farrow, Galabort& -- C,I. 10 , 10.1,..100•."," RII 31cQuirtoti - ' ft - ' : - 113,000 1 . -..-; . Walton .1 . rawcatt"..-. • 3, . 61,002. , :? - '? .. A J 8.k...."............... • 8 " - tzooo ..:-.1. Dobhmon, Allah 4, c 0... , 4....-- 61;900 .;•'',,,: ' . 10,000:',. Thos Pratt Ttrea Payroalt...-.-•“;—, . 2 -. , 11,090:%,,, Jos Lran.... —. W ' 24,DXf7i,. Saab Sertuedy ...... . _;'2 _, f ' 41,410'4'4; Lynch 4 Pattorron-.......„ -2. 2!..,. 01:10'., - : .5.,tk1if , ... , 0 . Wm Williarns:.-.-........ _,.... 21 .. 10 .r: - : Dappold .t Porter.._. _. 5a,anc, , ,.,, 800 Mill, a C0..._,..... .4 ~ j , 22,11(10... r l J Penury_._.._.__.__... .'53,000:;', ,, . '.V .O OO : -.'; ',,, ; J C 11.1.her.:....:-....--, 2 ..,, '. 20 1 356 ft'-' - - • r i.' B B Cworata------ 4 ' 214t0fe , t: ',.! B D WRki s nr- ... 1 ' ..-. • 17,Stm - .5::r;: , . f. IJX & IV CrlVoil—_z - •.2 „:, , 42,11):04 1: Ilu m r.. B r t n.kli.3 - t;iii --- ::: —e: . „ '1.5 1 ,114 5 g Dromellk C 0—........—. , 2 L . _ 121,711), , ,..1 , tll l Coolter.....—___.—.: .. 2 2/1,01.,54, - . - Sam Clarke. --...-:—. ~ ; ' , ' . ..0. ,4 21,2120`...... Al. 1 11/3inclair--...--, , - ,- ,!.U-- .., 42 5 000 e 3" . 8 P lialgb- ...----...; ,'. •, f •12--- 7 ". ' / 0 3,40) ,- • - , ., 6 ' • •••, l'asith..& Fiu1ay....J............ 9 ,04 o ''' -,'- z- , -- - . Esb!avn.t. itztkirv-..« 2 -='.` 4,200 ~, •'", ra '' '. ' isAce -'..:,4' -- Mark eta by - Ye .134zromar, Dee., 13.--riaar • Wheat declintar, and laxity: Pinr.anktretta. Der; eWheat doll ; V..darkidt jacar; /1,06.11,12 OVA Arta t . holdertaaktar, W."; . Star Yolk, Dec. cbance. • Firtsr.s4lo6 better ;1 a. 11. O. ; ;dada teas& 57;Edirs' Sm. Whisky a ilatde firmer a we:dam sad clotang gem yt batter Aral fa fair demand- Si, Syria& tralde trice for infarior; a - aakee Club;:$1,100.1 45 for old 'Misr asoberlills - aukee, *slat et,54 for whited red Weatl better. itad a fair 1III:11R at 'V In arra, and atoetrm at alxr Eye MOM artiro sad' lover, at glade firmer at 810,920 for actieasad firmer at a 17,23 far oa.. for 1 88:, tad e 14.11 for 1883. 814,13 a,. $10,601,18 for *llford tan, prime ea: - . to mitt a destand. Lard stray, at .11;,7412 , /od . Now York Stick . and Stoney grirket., • . .14rn' Tom.. Dec. IS.-3L3neinct.tro lan ill fair nand at 1"0 - ennt. ' Sterling Armor but.qulnt. nt 3.41&,a 166 , t a =tnsetlled and 4rmer, °parting at 52.3 i, GirrermVat, Wan- Sant co Wm': 1.10, 743's UK - A. - • ' Stocks better -: d.d.B. P.ll. W. 84.4.13 L :•-'; A:6T. II & T . c 1 , •••, - .! -- 74 /13 - 1 31 * & Int . Me, • • - tide PHO~`OQB3 II ~00318, - 00ililar17/711 ANA MATAXIT'D -(fd aad &I at c*.f9ess.7tudes Jniery Insllo N ,, noVotTlc.,lanats, Of ever W:1. es L cdsce, from 06 :- p2palar Outs de is Cabinet alid /go shm. dr. POSPLANCIa 'goal jos_rtAmlArkr call th e at. teallosi or the AGED AIM LEIIRBE LW, seepic. , :-. ars ibillty of Mill estAbllilmuniti beiugmcb.d itJ..ba Mgt% at ,i,gr0..71,111:•" madarsl/.alailc7 *uarlateed. - .... ; H. USIi. respectfullr,„: J3l. !aeon the ettiXol/1 cdPlttabtergb,, tbat be hatir-,T7 bent roainted amt tio aalaerictrana • SON,a oal,atratasyr-aNtr.oonnosivi Tbe3r ars erstaththade4 the taegtet fiouteF~ t'. la tba canal:MON( rbleb ens_ • , U 0 GIAI7. 0/, ,Bleunba,kea, nOORXIMILDItO.,Qtri UM' 4 try, Parma it C. . , And ottani; ji, i••••• ,14 . 1 C•Ukir.. M COLLISTER BAEicr . mano.cu_Birk : 444j IFpli,kana. TODAGOO, MiLIT AND.g.ICYLBS. NO. 103 WOOD Bran% itrasesextP.a.; ...,.......4 , it. , r 4 , r - r, ,