,:.„:„..,... .. . .C-lir..10:0#•-eilitir - -RDDLFg 00., MOR ......... 26.1;88 Wendell Pt PfittllPee 13 1 ) cre • W t'ir Atatimily Proclaims , On the P1.e3113m f gill oda re l - ' ti., our own views, rind, thoso o . -- h u , we have hitherto quoted, , -. v. noted from tome copperhead 1. , - , 3: ;whoa _ are q hTo been rtnellinT° •I,wrailid or er4t O'S a that ..,A. aeltifavcrrable. The first diszentieet -- - Ith any ' pretence ofright ' t 1437 e IP'cen w ' erable azoatit of '. . ° rePrulat "7 e la m tl u i country, is this ~, intellignt ' 'P' lan 0 lic,tten, wrhnera '--- lug-114 Idisi f found a par - 'IOIITLIIPI few days ago WO ' —'-- I . one of our exchanges which vi z' ' {graph had• delivered tome. '' t r!rV n elleeCh he bj 7. ' ' ,n w Now England on this suet, and e ak t clearly*4 enough dAeat edtlat he re garde4 thewetewettet_withA......t anddislike. 7 1,1 agree with us will robs y On remkr4 11' have come to, In ref. '-r', te the conoluaion i vre are .t ere to the 'possible dangers pointed on k-rf-T- b y n hi n; " pntrope, and some of •11. which Zoom our. path oven to-day, that Lilo Tin -kEto—wledga ef tic s6 br. men a lic iwyegui h° will r n '---- the advance, must Itself I e en • , , 'of sec tir lty against they . mewl „. .well, foreseen Ter: eta"' that can wl. 00 read lir. Pant , '-':'•: ‘ Mtninsspttech—eY Overtake tut. We nd we doubt not nianeeliTusetheemthat, 7"I I,..wite-. witli the f , atlllrelldlt , -•-• taking ueetrity ,i' ,7 1 i n th e act, we arc - _ Oren- dai.....is which he area in ~. - lii n the very V our way. Iglu its. Biotin& of Wilmington Not In -- edicie‘Eildence of the Intercepted ROO- ileapontience.• late Ind eptei rebel cattespondence, y ? which fell into die Ii do of the Nary De pertmentlast week, throngh_the capture of bloCkide-iminer Coil; has been pub. The Cerfr, it will be remembered, eeladre near Wilmington, and eat on 'fire by rebels, to °seeps capture Ttif ohr docybut. , the floated of again and was boarded by a hears crate from 0110 Of ,:.*oll'll,lllipS tiara enough to secure the baggage A;Y• Lists, general rebel agent in Europe for the purchase of war material, before the fire -- hati:eanintitied , :them. Bcreral interesting it portent matters are brought to light lit fhb, oraiimporidenuo-eunong them, that ;Adis . niements were mating to purchase the = - printaloatuers r A. Per and Margaret and --'7eter,' - Willi the %intention of again employ ' Initiate in running. the bbxkatio. There sire . also several . letters asserting that. the - • ,-'l"tench.r : .mierrorconients to and patronises , ethe Matsu:loin:3 bloalcude running. There ireialsoiliselornres made ineotne of the let • - teeni",which- arc Said to iris •wcertain •t - . parties :kw fork, i., • e •witness of fur day : • rt to the rebels. - But thejnosl 'ienerestiag point that the (correspondence Seitles IS respecting the eE... latency of the hlockade at. Wilmington. At brief intervals . dating the Tut six months, it'itlemportry y . referring to this cor. ~ respondence, the English and colonial jour hJ with all the secessionists entails aides • of the Water, joining in the cry, have spread reports Of thisnmessei of blo eked e-ran ners - Wilmington, inaisimg that tho South 2 1 1coiTed;.itapertaat totpplios through that channel, and that. the venture was Safe and -';'profitable. I nde ed,recen t - a di spatch re - calved. by way of Richmond, announced ilia — tTarrmiiay as thirteen steamer, had ar rived,and that Wilmington - was glutted with marketable goods. Now, however, th. roes . ., , stato of the ~ . p 490 appears. Mr. ..„,T.Lurarfa-correepondenity who shonld be in niejoieing frame oft =had if rebel reports wore true, tell a tiorry story of discomfiture and lom. — Under. date of Liverpool, October 19, J. Illaffit,"latet Captain of the pirate Florida, apprises .I.insar _that i 4 the news from the - blockade runners is decidedly back" that wsiz of the - last lboats have recently bean caught,". end that "nothing has entered' - Wilmington for one menth'—ih* too, in „the best _season of the year for maritime , e5.-',..",...z. , ," - ;iirtventures. Bo lately ' the 2d of Drr... OM ber a British agent of the rebel,, one Campbell, wrote from Bermuda to a house in Charleston that the Wilmington business was extremely dull; "the oniybosts that had - .come in from Wilmingtorvin a_ month were . 1 . .: the Flora and Gibraltar." For the gratin cationof his superiors, however, this zeal . orts;Englishman'-added - that 'several more Mikado runners were "expected from Eng _'. -lend?! to,try their luck. • Testimony like this, miming from tswil. lingwitnesses, establislies',the fact that our • -blockading fleet:off Wilmington is doing its duty as well as can be expected. The reb. Uls derive no material : advantage from the Yew vestals which happen - to run past the blockaders unde r ii cover Of a fog or a MOOn. ',. leen niglt4,,wh thelr. English eympathi r. ..:41711h. who hrvent onpital in •s/tips which we 'Ural into prises by the dozen, are very •likely to come to ruin in consequence of :their ventures, no Mr. Z. C. Pearson and ..others have already done. *astral teeitho officer in command of ther-,North Atlantic' blockading squadron, • has already,. told : us I that the blockade of • . Nibningtozzlitf - mbrti effective than ever be 'ti all reports •to the contrary notwith standing, and that no: vessel, has got into Gott pert foe a lentf time. l Fronzbelltaidea therefore, we have strong testimony; giving -reason - to - -doubt hence forth all Contrary' retorts which come tkeroUgh rebel sources. '1 Freedom Convention at Louisville, -. • , Kentnellti Uppon with a large ,aumber of the Mends. of Freedom ip 'the Slave States, it Anaheim considered that the Sth of January, the day liedfor the aiiemb'lldg of the Free domCOTl,ool/011 In the city of Louisville, Ky., tea early a data to obtain that general at.- .., -tendariert and.conferenee !which is.o 'sired in eider that : harmonious nation, maybe theroferi announced herebj that r the intenthlingef..the Convention will be dc-,, tevred to - luime timirin the month or February' or MFOle:rthe time to he specified and -the preliminary 'anongetilints to bo announoed by AltelleneralCammitteo, cons i sting of the fol- • •.; - . louring named gentlemen: lares Speed, James:Theinsson,Rentsoky; ;Emit Pretoria,, Charles E. Moir; Missouri; S. • Bieeetee; Zloty WA' Koffman, •Meryland; A. Catopbell,l Ilerrison West Vir-. Tolle 8. Biotite, W. Gantt, Atkin, 7 4144 Gee.' 8: 'Dennison, Lordsbuiar J.-IK. , Temeney, L. C. Honek, . Assmtnoss !Irving' been made that Clan. ileeker neadlaslr eaotineeci a thousand men in the the ilubt'asilinguoldi Ga., it may be well ',to "Stets chit In the late Oen; Zook commallkfonght four battles beside Rev. ersdiskirialsbes, captured over - two-thirds of ttli,tbil:pris - on ors, Anne and otimp';'equipage Aalienistut uvenliims of the artilim,nith 4,o:malt/Ink not exceeding one thoneand men. Boson: iitingrindeol that that city i : drat Alll;kinn smitizt, of hie eifbrijPd• birk ds6n, ta.,; and Ate op*, to ebaCiavi ' - "Asia hard . o Ftianly vri! 'of ria , • r-',. • ~ . .7. ~, -' ~......s tt ipabi 1111 oitqlrs 0 414 baxisiltidgc Le - the ,•.-,;•,:. - 4:,-;••'• ,: -,-Tikil,..ll,ther•e!citittio,„ana.,.wia at we tint— Di/w att"' • itelnidgel.-.-.- . , •,, a th e ".. - i . i. , .-.:',. t,,_0 - . L* 4 / 1 451., hob,_ . 4. ..,..,,,, ..,.. ~ , i _..t iii4 ,l l2 ln —wa .....xmloissulELpstat 4 ;41 S., ' • --„ '-•_'. '' , : k * Prs,ZlO':r. '". • .-.- - 1, )-',.. 4 .4 - - -',',' ' - r - - .'' = - 1,, • ~,,, - - . _. _., • • ... - c::=:.,. •-•-• ",-.•,=:::•.?•,•-.•-'-'--..•=1,7; '-_,..-•,:::-.:;.•••::'' - , • • --, ..,iir-Attt.t..,_,. ..,... ~ ; M==S=INME maw _ . Wadill lll 4l24ll.oaktienlliailialOyPsese;e : '.l...ths President SIM gorererticattedged to my npatknyi stde, glra no rest until aeo„that the, 'The nail' of the 'Cooperr oGtufi Nirr ntaes *rid Stripe, mean unconditional, inevi- Tort, was filled 44.aa early hour on Tees- rabid freed°'' lay evening by i'select audience of ladies and gentlemen, to listen to an address by ffsworts. Ptrax.rrs. Joss E. Milano eras caned upon to presideiatia in nt r eirifistrilitk remarks introduced the orator of the even. ins. WENDELL PLIILLEPS, after the applause with which be was peeled had subsided, said: Lintrs AAD GFITLEVEN Four roam ago this month I had the honer to assist In giving the body of Tohn Blown to the kesoinS of the hills he loved. Selfishness, which calls itself Oonscrvatisro, sneered at Millie as a ridicu le= failure, and some men who called them- Selves his friends, excused hie attempt on the grond that he was a lunatic. We know bat -ter now. The echoes of his riles had hardly died away on the banks of the Shenandoah before South Carolina prepared for war in de- Cense of her system. Pour years rolled away. and on the exact fourth anniversary day of his burial the victorious President of the Ration offered eleven Rebellions States per mission to return to the Union °reconditions which John Brown would gladly have oe oepted after twenty pure' hard fight. Mar velous proguess-Jor fear years! Well might he say, at ho did to.Theedere Parker, "I may may expiate my rashness on the gib bet, bat I open • terrible phial." But the tams which would have been gladly accepted In 1859, naked, bald, technical liberty tor the negro, are not to be thought of for a moment is 188$. [Applause.] Let me remind you of the trite legend of the Roman Sybil. She cams. to Tenpin with her nine volumes, and offered them for a thrinsand crown". Turned - away, she same back with Fix books at the same prioe---a thousand crowns. Refused, she came a third flab with three books, still for a thousand crowns. So the conscience of the North in 1811 would gladly hare granted pew only at the price of the freedom of the Territories. In 1831 she deinanded Immedi ate and total emancipation wherever the tiag floats. Both were contemptuously refused. After the gun at Sumter, followed by throe years of bloody and costly leer, there is no cafe and admissible condition of peace bat the substantial, practical protection of the freedom of the negro, and the elements of national life so arranged as to guaranty peons and democracy 'daft the borders of the nation. .13ESICITT raCCIANAMIUS It Is In the light of this reminiscence that I eball criticise tonight the Messes. and Proclamation of the President of the 6th day of the present month. Some mon say, "Why make any thrives criticism of the Proclama tion? We know very well that Mr. Lincoln does not expect that it will be accepted." I would not Insult the head of a great nation lay judging tho act of the most mementoes hour Of his life, to he in such made and pur pose that he Is not willing to have it accepted. No man who tenets either the sincerity c; the houses, of Abraham Lincoln, can look on'that Proclamation in any other light than as a de ; elaration of the terms open which the Prod dent is willing that the -Union should be re constructed. Dot apart from that, no matter what may be our individual judgment of the President's purpose, every man knows that the masse have • right .to take, and cannot avoid taking that decimation of the Govern ante:Lent v ahnianible and wife conditions of reconatraction. Every, man looks up to the President a. acquainted beyond any 'other in dividual with the difficulties and the details of this question. They regard him as "arraying it from a loftier outlook than is permitted to any other men. And we should do him an injustice which the mosses of the nation will never do him, to lay that in his deliberate judgment, in tbo full knowledge of the tads, that proclamation does not contain pos sible and secure ettarentlee for the future peace and integrity of the Union. Others say: "We knew very well that the President is a crow ing mon, with his face Zionward. Wit know very well that In the S'pring of 1682 he said to the Staterm-Rmanciw.ion bolero it la too late, while you can make a ood bargain; that in the Fall of that jeer h ead traveled on to the proclamation of September, and one hundred "days after to the great proclamation of the let of January." I know it: ail honor to the growing man. [Applauee.) All honor to the recipient intellect which lives to learn Sea grow hotter. But how did' he learn Why did Le grow t Because we watered him. (Ap plause.) Why did ha advancer Became the nation pushed him on. Besides, 1562 is not 1863. The terrible exasperation of the battle urged him on. The bloody months that fol lowed, and the sore hearts of indignant rail lions demanded more; and the President, at the head of the notion, drifted with the great national purpose. Bat we toerb upon the Let ter half of the war. We mime to tit. work not of battle, bet of polties. come to this civil str ife where 1781 and 1782 found see ie the Revolutionary straggle. Now, as 'Wash ington said, the spirit which was ready to Rao- Mace everything tor the safety of tho country had gone ,and in its place every low and selfish pamon claimed ha purpose. It took ell the popularity of Washington, Morris, Lee, Han cock sad Adams to hold the people up to the terrible osurestneas required by the itevolutionary straggle. A compromise I. offered at that era, terms of settlement are proclaimed to much • people, divided, one half of them anti-Administra tion, ready to sympathies with and stretch• mit the hand to the Rebels, and the other half supporters of Mr. Lincoln, proud of sue ceu, magnanimous in strength, feeling that the game is in their own hands, willing to he merelfel. At the head of such a people, pact wearied, part corrupted, part over-confident, the President lays before the nation terms of reeonetraction, and they mean infinitely more than his groping footsteps in 1861 and 1869. We stand here to-night with the acknowl edged head of the nation deliberately assur ing the world that a certain proclaim will eon tent the North. If he wore a leader it would be different; r should go to him, and not to you. With all merits, and they are great— with all his cervices, and theyare memen torm—the President is not a leader, and never prefeethd to be • leader. The President is the agent of public opinion. lie want. to know what you will allow him,what you demand that he shall do. Acrd hers let me correct the cusp geration of the press in reference to my inter view with the Preeldent ImtJaticiary. What be really said was thatthe viewed his September and January reclamation. as one set, and that, judging theta by the intervening-Mor eton. he doubted whether they had done moo harm or good. This he raid not inciden tally or carelessly, but discussed It at length. And his state of mind is sufficiently indicated by the sentence in his resent menage where, in reference to the reeentEmancipatlon Proo /smitten, he says : "Then followed dark and doubtful days." • Bat the President's anxiety is net South, over the battle-field; he believes la Northern mono.. His anxiety Is North ern opinion, to know hew mach he may tenet himself to ask. Chattanooga weet • brave Mind at the Whits House, and gave rte ten ant wand sleep; but the election of Schuyler Oath was ten times braver, and made bike sleep ten times better. lie halm that Grant could go to-the Half when he obese; but he d not knot, Whether the Northern people, - .culminating in thirolection of the Spea ker- Ship, Meant to saystien to the mostradleal 'dream of the North. 'When be beard of the - veto of the Rouse of Representatives, your attorney at the White House dared more than be ever dared before. It is in that relation .that, as one of the people, I undertake to en ter my protest scathe! the Proclamation, and to ask of you 10 - 1101311144 more of the GOTOIII - than that document coven. Say not that .I am doing injustice to Mr. Lincoln. lkly' old Plate - Amor at the Law College used to say, "Gentlemen, I know my profession so - well that I need mgt, brash when I may no to a question I cannot answer." Bo Mr. Lincoln .fias done such se lies in this Rebellion, has tarred for himself a niche so high In the world'e history, that he can well aitord to hare all his faults told. There era Ill* kinds of men Its stasterman ship. • One Is the servant of the people and the other Is the molder of the people. To the first dm belong our President and his Cab. leet. The hut claw Is made-rep of a difuent malarial. Andrew Tachson wee one, when In datums of • profits . . and merchants he flung down his gauntlet of Democracy and waited a vail the merlon : Indorsed him. Butler was another _(applause,) when from the Day of Chaespeoste he thundered the unheard - word "Contraband," and walled until the nation Indorsed him. -Fremont was. another (load applause;)' when In the Sommer of 1801 be gave the nation his .watchword, and breathed into Missouri the breath of a righteous ozifati My epielon is that if that dais of man had proadad over the &stints, of the no. ,tlon the - rummer. . of . D3Ol, we could - hare fibbed this wad in, two Poulin with'. all the - advantages that we /hall pt out of a war of Bat •Preridonee. placed to es we are, -and all it Ideriuwedeof ue I. - I/Pm% The timitire‘of - . Demireirithollbarty-Ls to be - worthy - of It. Why millets* the 4WD:dation wheipSilarary is deadanrife man earrthlre it/. In DB; the Booth - said, and the -North bettered, that Slavertbad ;mini Its `death blow. 'die wet suppowtd - it 'weld 'not breathe. ho the piny mearatiii.• of ,- rireolistlonary diti6rty' Sal lt Veit Momentthe devil hores. ed aver Bbarlesizon setharadha of . -cotton Weed thearghtei,) , Eind Dis.Bortb was. h Deksv, - the. South -from forwist"--Ikatir 'bard that'etnry - tee lobv and - Berilk Darer boners it's SIA I flth.ll4lo/.'114414.4:-;.-.174 MU= The rinestion is here at the North, how far we will go. All civil warn are ended by com promise. There never was a civil war in his tory in which one party - gained a clear victo ry. The'only question is, what shall we cone promise out Onee launched on the stormy, turbid waters of polities, you cannot tell. To day the holm is incur hands, and you and I, if faithful, can say this to the Nation, and the future. You may compromise when and where you please, with one exception, and that is, that the top-root of Slavery shall ho cot. [Applause.) Let thirty Senators and Representatives enter Congress under the Proclamation, and what will be their first at tempt ? It will be, Gentlomen, fund our debt. Your Representatives will want a tariff to pay Mr. Chase's interest. The reply of the South will be, "Granted; provided that you twat on to it, by way of rider, a tariff that will pay our interest too; only upon that condition shell you have a polioy that it Out (a nteanouot toi i reydiation." Do you say that not 1,06- Let me coo. The builders of private ships In England hare some $10e,000,000 of this scrip. Suppose they come to the door, of your re-constructed Corr,ress and ray. "This paper is not worth five cents on the dollar . , but we will gist, you $20,070,000 of it if you will meta the °tilos $i:0,000,000 worth par." Did you era? know a Congress that could not be bought for V 0,000,000? Do you ever hope to ova one t The first item of 00m promise, then, will be three or four thousand million dollars debt. Ido not object to that particularly myself. It is the atonement which God demands of this Nation for strrenty years of sin. No sin is washed out In words. You cannot cheat the devil of his due. Our fathers sinned against that victim rare, and God mortgages the hand of every living man, and every child that is to be born for the next half century, to intone for the nation's Iniquity. TEE SUPRLUE COVET There will be other compromises. One t, the tint element of Mr. Lineolu'e project of reconstruction, which I. this: Be puts hisown act and all the acts of Congress at the feet of the Supreme Court, and says the South is to swear to eupport the various act, of the Gov ernment so far ea the Supreme Court holds them to be valid. Ido not nay that he could say anything else. I em only telling you what he Soeisay. What does his Proclama tion of .Tentntry lel, 1863, mean? Some members of the Cabinet say it means that nay negro that can get hold of it le free. Mr. Chase says that every negro down to the Gulf that ever sees the flag is free. I naked the shrewdest member of the Bottle of Repreeen- Retiree what he would give for the Proclaim-e -llen before the Supremo Court? "Little or nothing," ho said. A prominent New Eng. land Senator raid to me the greaten danger to the Proclamation was from the Supreme Court. Loading Republican. In my State say there Is no law in it, that it is not worth the paper on which It le written. Mr. Lincoln says, as he ought to thy, nothing. Ito can not say anything. The meaning of that Proclamation nobody know. until the Su premo Court has decided it. Io other word. the Proclamation of January let 1553, to to be filtered through the Seceesion liceet of • men whose body is in Raltitooro-ibut whose saul,if be has got one, is in Richmond. [Laughter.] It ie to pate the ordeal cf a Bench of Judge. who made the Dred Scott decision, end aunetuseed that a negro bee no rights that a white mania bound to respect. It ti to pare the ordeal of • let of judges the majority of whom came out of the wickedness of Polk, PierAi and Bu chanan ; and of the only two who refused to sanction the Deed ceott decision,-one in in his grave, end the other has resigned. tied help the negro if be hemp on Roger B. Taney for his liberty. [Seneation.3 I am not here to speak of the portantone piece of the. Supreme Court. You know what it 1., the Gibreitor of our oyster's, the point where or: Democratic machine touches nearest to deeputiem. Taging our system el bowing to . precedents, RI: a system in which the opinion of the Felten day is checkmated by the prejadicee of moo who were appointed riny years ego, and who are pledged to respect the prejudice. of men who have been in their graves a leindred years. That is the meaning,ot the Supreme Court of the United States. That is the only hope that Mr. Lincoln's project hold! net to you of the validity of the sets of Congress and cf proclamations of September and January bat. As Commander-in-chief red author of these two instratment.l, S am not doding fault with Mr. 'Arcot', Suppose you are a tenant in a house. Your chimney einokes; bat your loath Is out In thirty days. Yen throw up the window to =the a draft. Rut the landlady re models the chimney. Mr. Lincoln ie a tenant at will, and goes out shortly. RI. proclamation le throwing up the window to create a draft. As the landlord, let the nation thy we went him to remodel the chimney. We want a platform which the Supreme Court cannot touch. [ Applanso.] As the geld pro qw, for this war, I want something el which I barer the rain° to-day, without consulting Judge Wavle, Judge Grim., Judge Tens" - , Judge Clifford, or Judge Cate's'', Seectelonists from I the ter of their heeds to the noire of their feet. (Siam) If you don't think so, go ' and examine them; that'. all. [theses end applauee.j If they hare reformed and TO pcutod, I shall be glad to know it. I judge them by their record—by their Jet-Diens. The N. r Rees sok. tee to-day whether I weeld not trait the negro where all whitemen mon have been trotted for the last eerenty years. If I hod no protection but the bond of the Supremo Genet, I should have been In , jail three years ago; and at for the negro, that Court hoe announced that ho has to rights that while men aro homed to rompect What I nob of Mr. Lincoln in his behalf is, an amendment to the Constitution, which his advice to Congress woad pane in sixty days, that hereafter thorc should ho neither 'Lavery Oaf Involuntary servitude to any State of this Union. [Prolongtri apples:me 1 'mantes or USCONWITCCIIOIt. Mr. Seward wants the Mississippi chairs— the Senate-chamber filled. So do I. lie is for having them filled as they are. I 11473 for making them so hot that a elareholder cannot sit in them. I want the States bask, and epesdily book, in their full arousal, that wo may say to France, "Go home and take care of your own tottering throne; leave America to herself." Dot before we receive those States, we will provide, either by parchment guarantee' here or by national law, there, that there shall be peace andd emocracy for ever when peace is once declared. Mr. SUM aer has a theory that the Stateasto all gone, and there' to nothing left but territories. Robert Dale Owen has • theory that the States are only dormant. hir. Seward has a theory that they are areas much alive as ever. only kicking on the wrong Bide. I do nor know whether they are territories, or States dor m ant, or States In :siwroog condition. All I know Is that the house Is 'MIDI, and I mean to elean It out before they got back. [Laugh ter and applause.] I mean to make the plat form inch that they may come safely beak and soon back, and back la their own natural strength. I do not acquiesce in Mr. Sumner'. theory utiles. I am obliged to. I will take Mr. Lincoln's Procla mation, if I cannot got any mole. But I think three years of maiy and bloody war entitle and ovoids co to get a grbat deal more, and rdo not mean to glee as until I em con vinced of the eentrary. .Wg-Sumner's theory has one exceedingly bad feature. The strong est cord in the heart next to the love of the Union is State pride. I want the old Massa chusetts, the land of Endicott and Winthrop, and the Pilgrims. So does Andy Johnson in Tennessee, and so do the speechless raionista of ItlLieeLtelppl. I would cave the State alive for them by action, that would enable them to bring it back in their own method and "in their own time. We have reached that ;point where to save the nationalllfe—we must 'abolish the system which trios to eat the jug ular vein of the nation. The lion'e bloody jam give evidence that we have a right to shoot him to-day ; but there Is one man who .advises you to wait until bepain his own claw: end pulls oat his own teeth iu 1900. The lee , son to-day Is the Constitution to be thrown up as a barrier. And cocondly, which bring. me to the second point, Is the proclamation, Mr. Lincoln proposes to set aside the Con fiscation act, and allows slaveholders, with the exception of • few hundred men, to return to their estates, end to coma back, by a vote of one.tentit, into the Union: Every if known that land dictates government. if II few men own the territory, it Lan oligarchy. Thirty thousand families own England, end it is an oligarchy. Every Massachusetts (armor owns hie farm, and Jeff. Davis Multiplied by a million maid not make it other than a democracy. Let tae confiscate the lands of tho South and put it into the bands of negroes and white mon who have fought for it, and you can go to deep with year parchment. • I have got the Union down thereby a natural root which nobody can ever change. You do not make Government; Ski Belapboard llousey yon plant them like an oak. Plant Doe a hundred thousand negro farmer, and - a hundred- thousand white sol diers by their aide, and I will Irish the South, Davie and all: William the conqueror divl dedEnglmad agion; his nobles, and they hold it to-day: :Divide the territory a the South among our noble ., blacks , and - wbifte, that -hare won :le, and then we. are Eireiy• Union man.. at the :Settth-"says the perterant4ii cart: safety,: comet back): keep from ;'nr, and ,:,,ww-aistatz. °Mier or humg.ti-, - lfri IduaelniatiOn sires to the olkilare-holdurintidetethe. new guise •OUlakowtortai 414, erg of the:B tate. TbleLplart his 'tie and '..foutortrazting. 4;83403048 attindpiitail th e dam - , - ... • =EI in Oa . areO, aad' co an appreatkao p sit fear!; two years the mistersha be hoved sollto demons Slat the'Earliatnent in— terfered, probe the coot act, and est thorn free. Yet in 1841 I heard Lostingtan, a ra,namt of Parliamen t , ea t , tbet 5t.,,z 7 ex isted thereat much as ever. That we, seven years after England had given tier Mick* In to the hands of her landowner!. We have laid 250,000 of the noblest lives in the Union in the grave. We hare mortgaged theindus try of the future with $2,000,000,000. It Is my eocopenslalon money to the glare master; and I for one demand that. Government that means so hAantial, practical, common sense protection to the men whom the Government has freed. [Applause.] I am to he the fool of no lezal terms—the slave to no lawyer's prce.lent, The Yalion has r.libed font mil lions of men sod their ancestors for seventy years. We might hare been contented once to burn clutched them, homeless, poor, and naked Gem the jetrs of the lion; hot Co * have ...round the lion to powder, and to the slave belongs the lend he bail redeemed. A PICP.IiCII from Halifax announce: that the autheritieo have made co =Mu of these who rescued the pirates of the Chesapeake from tho ot➢cers. P 'Jame .rtji.ICES. ON CHRISTMAS, 04' Post Office 11 1. be open between the horse or r 4 and nt. e nd 6 and eclaek p. de7.4./t NUTICE—The Allegheny Poet om. win he open on GlPlstatas Day, between the how. e and 9 o'clock a. m. and band 6 °Went 84/1UNI; RiDDLE, NATIONAL BANK OF ALLEM:MN T.—The litookholdato of this Ratak are botchy outlaw:l that the Board of Directors hato odled ou the wood htstalbutut of 60 per cant. of Ow TufUta! payablo J LIMA ttlf 2.u, 1864 th , 23:td T. H. !MVO". Proullunt. NuTiCE,.-1 heroby notify my Mends in Allegheny that I am not a candi date for Dlnntor of the Poor. The &din of the vould require more time and attention than could poiniibly devote. Mr. itOBEILT WHITE, of the Ptret Ward, Allegheny, lea candidate fat the aloe, and If elected grill make an emcdent OMeor. O. W. BENNET. d. 2411 =MEE= ElititlLY t'utt'l'A.Nl"ll.l U ERRS-- 1 1 R r thsllll7l 01 JABITAET NEXT, tha only 1. ninty prerolad,by law is tbt one bonder( dollars authorise:Ay act 01 Jail 112, U - An who desire to aurora the present bonutlsa 11 SSW paid to new recruits, or 1402 mid to veten.4, mutt enlist honor January 6t/s, 1441, Recruits will be earned for the 42. ad Regis/int Nnosylranis Voinutaera or any aster Petinsy/vania llou,itn.nt. at tbr Girard Betas, Rmithffehl street. Si! leonine onarantred, snd the rocrnit credttni 1., the nute..ll•tria to which thy, belong. EDWARD 6. WEIGEIT, tic2:cni Careoin leJ N Teta.. Recruiting Officer . p '-- -- , , •=MEHCANTI LE LIBRARY ASSIJ ,,r CIATIoN L1.01E14E9. Pins. c Ronan VANDEICROFF I I Lc; erly WWI MAKKAH, wilt give obe EVuling under the en vie. of the Henault}, Libnu7 Aso elation, a, Lafayette Hall, ON TUESDAY,' EVENING, Dec. IlOth, Zutitled, "ill AL ACTEBISTICB OF WOMAN.. trill mad "The Balcony Scene from Romeo and JoCei,•' ',Baud Muller," •Oeinie Broom at Lock not. 'The Sentimental Lad,." " 7} '^ cot Valentine," .A aman'a *con " "ZelteCti Courtin'," le., cm . ..kit:or with Mehra* sketch f liornSie'• Wool., of Mr.. Corney. Omni eitim at 7; Beading, to c =memo* at A. Ticket, term. Boieeri,ei .eta, emit. Lairs.. he *eh ef ieteryml *eats eotruittenot at Om Library Rom,* on Uondity morning, at 9 o'clock. lloidera of Ticket. an me m, odes - oil *eats at the rams dot, Cu yrimcntattoti Melt' tlekots, fry:twat ~..dro Auer. W H. Kro. LID, .3 EOliGt W. Wrralx, 6.......... A. Loan, Taws. ItAs....LA, Jr., AVIA/AA 11 B. W. An, n=6l M. Anorooa, 4,24.0 Lrerctr• Committee. ~,Pl' r irrsist:Rott linitAkE culli'A ,,,, NY —The lita - itholdoni to said Company an hereby net !ETA to meet mail orgerata mid Cettiptiey, at II l ItZ'M HOTEL Liberty rtnek, Pittebergh, ...ci the r Mel' AIONDA If OF JANIittRY, lefit, between the 1.. - . tire iir 2 awl A o'clock fa m. cif bald day, and ore. I if Lslint, by • inalority of tbe meek thw arid that. aot.ea, ore Pr chleat ate! ala Director., inee Treaeocer, aril sorb other °Moen . they cosy ttilek reersiart, to coritnet the btalne. of the Cee/faipy anal the next roglitat electloa. Janice Week . elitist!. Zile% „U. B. Brown.Bcibert Woods, Job.. r. dieker, Eitals Drell, lease. a .etaft, l E. J. Drc,ka, Bari:ewe Ilartiriati. 1 !. 4 .41. ".. = ,. Ileri A. }lslay, Alex M,,J,.., ' Rod, Pattie.. liebert Steltrti, I J... Trunick, lat. Walker, ! O. Y. C.lll, . !low Citeet, I Thi.inv fibiel delikte flocrinaisalota.. EiMaMilit= O and !Nimr...tor,, Ml 9 Pon&lb i• ==! ercarr.. 7 -IV6trn 11. QCWTLG Gotrttrat , ens r .7 and Scams sent to .1. part. or the army lotoroution furnished la rolottaa to .kk 4114 th. Campy awl 11,opitaka. Thr telo4bt 4ottst.4l Is pekl.f tor*. .I.l4inna, TIT79I4rIIGII SA:MART comurTra. dcaNiti CM s PRIM KY MEETINGS. —Tho Velcro totersof the city of Allogiarty aro bolted C., meet at th.lr reopootivo plow for holding elections, ou Inotant, %worn the Lot. and 7 o'clock y. gm., aud oe to by ballot for— ohm cttitra G , r 7 , 1 ay-, . • , an 4 ajpo fur randa_letrs - tac nes ps4 tire Ward otPcen • Judgie of the Pruner) glectlone e W mats at thr TOW it TIOUSH, on MOSDAY, filth Imt., it 11 o'clock a. re., and sum up the tots 01 the Imperthe p... Inds, the person haring the highest rote to be incisurri the mutilem of the party. Orimera cf Mmition are Inetimited to refuse all Tot,. start by Pima nisi rated agZiDll the Ilnlen Mere Ticket In October last. Or ordor of the Eucutlr• Comm ßbu J. U. CO//[N, ettereritri. J. Itrraelary. der.la to g . " . ..7?Tf1E NEW GYMNAtiTiaI AT NEVILLE HA LL.—The Clasen lam open for co. mambo= .t awls taw of tesatbsr. UAW asd Goolla wen, TUESDAY uttl FRIDAY EVEN INGS, at T. L and ettlanos, WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY AFTERNOONS, at 3 o'clek; ram, ta ADVAMZ: For Adana, mama of toasty levaton—...—fia 01 For Lista and Nines, 0). rocßlldiso, " a 03. 0r17.:f 111.41 . 1425 a& llama or / 4 11 - tallcallal (L4sts Pit4•Steral Teas Cempany.) Plttoborib. V. EY, toil. 1 . 17 - AN ELECTION for Nine Directors 4 of this nook will 1.6.14 on no. SEOOND Tr ESDA Y, 11th de] . of Jancsis next, betwerit tbo hrmsa of II a. m. and t p. D. SCULLY, Cnabkr. Slob Sooalou oft coma:moo on .110.5D&Y, itn.1864., and coutlonn tvralro watt, &got TIIID ST, StarchSUS. For tormi, ao tall 'at Om Infitituto, cmroor of Poon and St. Ma. 'trier, or add.ors. ID,. W. S (MAY, Prinolia. MIZZIS U L —The . . will moot ‘.=: ti G C ).. at WILKINS HALL, In Pt burgh, DE CEMBER 214 d, Instant. Ea It Loral Council la ea tlthd to sand three delrgate, B 2 order. 11 . teher t th, Lee. 21, 1563, c.a.rnmamir: --7 77.TH1: MAYORALTY OF AUX.- GWENT --Copt. &nos Dszta, at QS MT.t solicitation of many cube., boa conscr.ted to tarinit Ws cisme to be usal as • ca.niticisto for ths fitarciraliY of Ai:ogle:my City, at the carting calovicipst lion. nolieto . _ _ kr. —J s. o tLe First Word, Alloolonly, will be a eindl dote for Cornner Allegheny Gmuty.madoot to lb. docloloo of the onsulog Cooly I:niou Clot 'Potion. dol4:te an VIER TlSEart.rrii. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTlCK—Let tore or Mtalttlatratima upon the cetate of Cclab Ft:Mar, late at Lower Pt. Clair tp , Allegheny man. ty. Pa., deumed, having Oran banal te the mocks. Mood, MI pampa Indebted to mid eetete ars re. queened to make Imtardata payraent,end those hav ing Malmo apple; the Bald twat.l.lll prmeot them, P" .llS l 4 l .l "'"'" lti r ltrtM)l7Xlt. Adm'r . 1 HOGERIES. X.A COS bap Dbo Coffee ; bbds. N. O. Sup+ ; • 60 do P. A. do; 115 bbla. Refined do; WO do N. O. Molaeses ; 126 du N. Y. Syrup 140 Pleats Y. N., G. P and Imperial Teas I 50 (do Black Tau; 1/0 bozos Dark, rt., oinl Spit 801 l TebaNti 40 do Natural Lett do; 28 kop Then is' 6.Priat do; 100 do Dl. Carb. Soda; WO bbh.lis.l Estes Salt t In More mad fur tato by n11.1114E11 C LAZIAB. PRAYED OR tfrOLEAN--From Turd KJ oar's 'raven. corner of north sal Ferry sta., e LICBE CILEaTNOT 00111 ILL 1305.9 E, about year. old. brave tart , and about Ulundi to;b. Had • eh..rt rope around tds nook ',hen last !mud cf. 10 7 LK Tro o fah; leforraatiork that will toad In tile ranner7ofeeld bongo, will be liberally rewarded by leaving word at .14.511.9 IIZA2COR'S HOTEL, Ith . street, between Market and Ferry etreete. 8.0 MOH. ". -I A NES' ISATLittLS, .VON.TEMUN. IS, irritfh• Deets Pocket Knives, Gold Pons, poonerapb Abeam 're7 Woks; Anna "1""'" of Gan" (1010 OM Books, ructxt bc•b• Abintuusoula • put ratitty ben:Win saids anapead to Qs sewn to !Jo pool at NO. 101 F.A"AI f at ' • .VlOOO . 1 3TREWPWARIMiSE FQB _AiVitts No. 40 1- Woodet.ttarlei Kong.b'dos TV Nation* MTh lot Mot bow otetiptut bytintow, molds a be Rix:rent tbiat bit pi , Riliamlitil iiiiLKTlsiak•si, 111113dreins HOLIDAY GIFIS! WE INSIST UPON IT, nal the zocat.amaibla present that • avotlaataa ao trate to a lady la a WHEELER & WILSON SEWING MACHINE. lib rot an es rimer which, after a trial, any dbutppotat, bat a ftsgolf.cont arid sancerladgol sac hem, as machso as s Oolt's Itarolsor or • Hoes Press. So 1ine11.1.13L03 era would say, thrrefors, &so yt ur %Us • WIIEELIta di WILSON It MILAdd parcto ber lifo. To FATHERS AND MOTHERS, the Ingl, - .sOnt 1 11101$ opproule, give Tour daughter. Wheeler ct 'Wilson Sewing Machine It Cabo to therm • oercr.fedling &load. B/10T11 EBB, who +lab toccanplhbout their datarc In • mak tom at once creditable to tbdt heads and hearts, to them soltat for that purpose Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine BONS I in no way can yaw hotter expraw ya • Mial lava to being who bola you, than by p sestUng to taro Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine. It ...al cad with dtoroulle auallglat. her deellehig yam. LOVERS! would you demonstrate to the ob. put of your tiffect/ous thatyou woo lotto and worthy of her confidence sad resat* toad her • Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine. if yoo.dealre to compltziont ems amly married bride, make her the happy rec4leat of Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine o .llwitetlone are now rwderlog the WRIZLEIt W /Mull SKWING Ainellltilin for their pawn's vino. Let those who have not yet done ea, ea and do o 71111.2fD9 Or WOMIN, 'hole our eiocertty the lateraiu of the en by otabbigeffort to place to the hag& oterery wring Ironwl a Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine. A. elaly for it lila !Winning advantages °Tar any tad all .thetr Se.lOZ 1. Beauty and tastollenca of I.lltch .like upon Loth shin of the tatnic awed. -•. Blmagtb, traninee end daraldlity of seam tha arlll get rip or yard, .d madewlib— S. Enenotry a thread. 4. Its attaehaernti and arida ratty of app-leattu. to peurpcoe• and matortale. L. Campbtmase and rW{„mr of 1r.d../ and ULM 6. B.plicity and thorm.hzers of t=l.lstroction. T. Eye., ease of opersa..ud mana.m.tut, ant quietnar. of ITIOTOSTM t. OVER 130.000 HAVE BEEN SOLD KY tSII sad examine. Insinactis. given at the • ar..• of W purchaser, a lirenut charge. Call d • Kennel, we. I=2 da25.t.f4. Tbre., 41.nr• below Dank Ellot.Y. EITBIi E OF TA81501.1.A. 1 ft.SYINII3 DANK, far roteitt.• ending S ftrobtr YOtb, IbC3. Tlhitil.l7TV. Amount dm Do !tors Jour I. 1ad1...1 Amami risselssd atom Lem. Ilan arsenals/a six sort! -V11,367 hi Amountpaid to Demssitoms doting last sit !months._ I,lp,oca wi • • Vontla:ent Fund, June 1, 'C3 1f,314 Interest. Dieldende, Le., fur 11.4.1 x 31.4 Y, 1,5 IiETS. Batobr wet Murtispo. ..... (4 Heel Estate ....... 11,163 36 8 6:1 le Pittsburgh Barite_ 75,10 A (.3 r. 5 porreat. eurttaretre at 131500 , 41 ms . :05,10.' 17. IL 6 ppr nat. Ooupon 50,043 :5 L. O. MO's, 6 pur rt. 110 eds. 375,400 SUL Raeobrable :1,500 00 ----t.11.3.20,311 natTrattalw bare thls bay dertarwl a Dlriarad of TEll: ES TES CENT. twit of the prAta at Or last matttba, ^t of aawartutitnt Tat, paratt . r forth. with, if oat drawn, vrtil boar late,. tr,,pit. ‘ " a her Ist CH U. A. COLTON. /ref...we, rtosbargli, Dec. 11th, The cadent; rad, rter/ttle; Corarrittee r reepeet• fatly report Abet [bey have 1,1•11.112Cli the Tresen• ter's Report fi , s the et: meethe ending Neve.- bee rrhh. 124, ead that they have exastatal the karts of the Dank—sotroisiltag of newts sadENO- D.'"ve, Deaf, ot Beet Eras., eartifteatra of Dank *lleveivaLle. D. 0. levtatlttee, mad Ceoh ha hand--and Sad the sem. to be eormt., tad to ecr rtepend eith the told &Tort ISAAC WHIITIVI, C. YEAGER. J. G. IthCISOYEN. Flusher(la fa, lett, IW, deg, , ,2tdaltif PA-TENSION OF TIME.—It haying been announced through the pre that • the ountrect foe oaring the Illdre nod Tallow of animals slaaghtered both on Ocrerement scsount ham been oecordolto the NI. parties 'rho here had It tram the beartenLog. of the sear," and no etch award hay tag been made, and the time for roof-Wed propoerds not having yet artint Dolma Is hereby Veep that, la order to correct any tsialanderstandlng that ally aClot, and to ne.:11.• for the Government the .41,12. =l.ll de= t ll ' T=, ' ( C. b oot at ?' 4 2 4 , 1 721 ' thee thr aeries proponthe extended until a - GCS. DAY. Denember dttb, ISCh al 12 n. No s rethl meth be opened before that time, end no bid will be cathatdenedettlees bet+s[ll;4llle3 hp the rune l anuses tesh and the Others aro prolong to respond to thole Md.. GEV. SELL, drith id Wool.. Cot. end r. 9. GOODSI LADIES' 4 /AI II I7D ICIV A.L3I 7' ORAL DOOTS Dade do 00N0RL14.3 do, • Do MOROCCO &GOAT BA L SI'L do GISTS 711RXE 80LE DWAIN & CALF do Do TWO do CALA de All of the brn clatata work. aed warranted to at entiro doisfactlen. 080. &LBRall, SON & CO., No. 71. cot. of Wood tol rnorth etc "fiXlll THE HOLIDAYS.--Spicod Mince A: Muir of the toot quality, to glut Jae or by the pound; Maltby's God;canned Onset", Eaticra Cranberries, DrlrJ Corn, Pearl lionuny, Green Peas. Oreen.Corn, Lima Deans, Asparagus. Ton/atom, Soc. retook, Froeb Peaches, Pi. Apple. and Strawber• rim to ca., itermethally waled; Goebel), Sap Sago utd Pine Apole Char; Smoked Dart Songhoe, Cur rents, Citron, Orange and Lemon Peel, Al mond.. awned Candice, Re., for sale et the Pair.:ly Grocery Store of 'OLIN A. HYtifillAW, rieM corner Liberty and Eland ;Smear. ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS TIIIIBTEES.—NotIas Is hereby given that any pagan or parsons basing in charge or treat, a. Administrators, g.cutoni owl Troatoo., of any log s . dew or distributive sham arising from rersoruil properly, of any kind what...or, whim th. whole amount of nth property la aforoaald shall exceed the sum of one thotwand dollars to ern., of any per eon deoemed, on or doe. the list lay of Jelly, will lank. 101.1diato return to the &salstant Mae. sore In Owl/. respective ilub-Divilloas, on or before the 16t h day of January, 1014. Thom, who fall to Ebefore' thh doll will be robjeft to all th e the mad. sand provided in eon rase. told.“ the Law. 1122112 T A. W CA VIII, 11.24.12tdaltwT Asseesor Z 261 Distrist, P., VALUABLL I'RUPERTY roil SALE. oy•r for ..le a mall parcel of land In Wart,- legion county, Pa., situated oa the mot bent of the /llonongehels, river, I calks above Brownville, exa ng ZS 0r.., tmderiald with coal of • superior quality. The improsemoute are • Dwelling wilted twins, Urn and Stable, and a large building suitable fora machine sbop, dl substantially bollt of .none; Dolt tree, An. A Ylooring eitillo lOU yard. the &hoots, Chord..., go., very 111.111tenlin11. Addres., Oa the pm:dam, BOIST.B, Frodeskgtown, deghlwdoliwT Washington county, Ps. FOR THE LIOLIDAYS. Troab arrival of Hoots, hboes, Gaiter., Balmoral., Gum. Blacking, Ocirk Soles, At EASTERN IMMO. C. ma; cone aD . t. J. IL BORLAND'S, US 31Arkat arse; B,ood door from piny. pUit. SALF A —Three Cast Iron !Stills of 1 . 18, 30 and 110 - berrels aqui ty, In 00 .00 o rder. nu.. tom of Plana* Convolving Phi... TWIT lamp Crude 00 Tankt. 00000, emond land Bricks A lot of RoollAE Iron . Om 011 Pomp and Pipes. • One 13-Itorm Dorm Eagtole, with boiler sod Slack. Lot of Gat Pipe and Coots. Lot of run and moosul•hand OR Barrels. For putlcalan Inquire of E. H. !saw, Meat. Elne, Ward lontidry. ITPTioL6Tkatuiu.—H av i ng purchns ‘..., ad a large stook of goods for CASHI am ably to offer_ great bargains at emetanly lon Orion,. FEATEDER BEDS; Bahr, Hoak and Bp ring. HAT TRASSES • a treat witty of SHADES. TABLE A FLOOR OIL CLOTHS; CARPETS; EMBOSSED WILE COVERS; Adflald Gram, Cocos and Ida. nllla Bontelid MATS, of 01, 1 tent Inallty; andel:rap. nest nasarpeed. • MI orders leery attended to. Holm No. 11l FEDERAL STREET, AU ghtn - F. (formerly oncupf Jos. enb i ro i ) 443 T 0 AS BARRER. - - - - C.QOOed tG city, and r,...naly the Th =Oars, g Is suss ibisdasoi *bss he coal raptor his time, or wit! Las chahre ota so of /Soaks, Addrefl "J. 4. Alloghsol P. 0." dc64..11 OW NKRB OF YROPERTYnic derdllair bonnet for tent, - or taxi= to to be noel= fled, are ballmord Matta littered to ailateb tnonaoa, leartzg komp. vollortbri nuts artarellog tO haat. Lace tater, Tomboy te. Charged moderate.- dal 8. 01 .rrellIVATtr.drdiE,bl Market al, ESTRta YOH , i t/44T ^ UN':Men~ - 1ZT.,...5h0 bottom Ito" hoot, Igo. , S atzliottAterdoorixat. Bohm 4•• now, Is et krollbrrolO;OVltproi adderJoiLlf WAIT 'lt rum„- Imikklutrilly 7: to. - , _ BEAtiT Iftf . L ehD.-Avi7TRASTiVi GUTS FOR THE HOLIDAYS. PHOTOGrECAA.I3 A.l-.33IIDPES. TBB arzr. clwto, !Small goarut, Oblong, C.v.a he ULU. Pad" TILL STILLY. ♦aloof, with Eton; Swirl Itoroco.a., panatflod Entlgtto morrow. Ettasootol Motors. Rosa Loath a, Cloth. Ae. The lAttoot variety In thy city. En WEE; at 1101../SA LH PEICLE Bibles, ALI tires, bocnd In VilTet, Tarkry Nonce°, Ceth clasp and TIM,.) Prayer Elook4, Bound to Iforonn Veiret, *Q. Jurenlie Books, In pet varl•cy, cc: uprising ncstly crury non and cundard u orli potlinincl In Ibis council, and In cluding • g‘,•l ninon cacti of Englnn Juvenile B.A. Toy Hooks, Printed Is, cll c,lort, on thited peper, nod hdro Oath. flees /13.1. Ives - rent and doserrucl Lowlts. with the " rec hate c.a." .11'etc. Books, Jitst yu141..!.1. A large mood:twat o band. Games and Puzzles for Children. Ma )I.I..PILLDST, .a 4 tb. Babtat that Ilmt la tat Gaza. of I'loana THE S MGM Or ENGLAND ..d THE norms THAT JAPE DLILT, rpm ftty-tyro Monts, toa dying Way Gado aad nine Puzzles. Alm, a te,a aaaortenant of CA RD oattro, DM. ZLY-9, ka. Fancy Goods. WRITING DESK , . PORTFOLIOS. r.insa Med:mit POETFuLIOB. BArEGAMIGN BOARDS. OLINCER AND CUSS HOARDS. OPMS. AND CHEQUER BOARDS. LADIES• FANGS' PCBSEN. TINE POWAET DOVES. GOLD PENS AND CANES. LADIES' COB P ANION. PDXES OF PAINTS. TRANSPARENT SLATES. And ♦ rest vorioty of other =urn' nal fumy. .Kt• dry .Itable for thy Qolldnp W. A. GILDENFENNEY, So. 38 FIFTH STREET, 0 rPORTTX rtrz TTINATILY. FOR FOR GENTLEMEN POll CHILL/88S FOR EVERYBODY. comsrus AND NEW Yin OM= PRESENTS! The noti4uye are fat approaching, end ever3lwdy will be on the lookout for lannothing good and est , viewable Or pr --Ant. Nothing can kis more eppro guiatc for • preawat thau the following articles PHOTOGRAPHIC ALBUMS ALL mars. ALL Prar", ALL MATERIAL. Over NO k.thste of the elthrent mart. Mut, th. irsaa PITILADELPITIA ALBUMS, with znads, couslJarcd the ben made. Cif" Oar Pri e.t.a DN ., " A.11.11:11 Ws Lae. alsoa largo variety of Porte-Ifornsalse, W r«ket Boots, alleta, Pocket Sabres, 1•11111-1 P 1211124, Toy llooka, Cent I botognspki. Pocket 81. hies fir Contra Tables, PortSalkm, Marks, Chocker Bawds, Checker., Chau, Game. WWI Mod; Holiday BoAts of all dowd Luna.' West Gassy, Card Case., 10 rUrtannat dadaf Game., awl other artistes too tosseerotts to tame on. WHAT I/3 NICILB TOIL A PIIIISITT 'MAN TEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION TO A MAEAZIRE OR PAPER Wo ftraish ttrzo. et Patnotion' Estes, J. W. PITTOCKI ALBUM DEPOT mit !reamer, °epos= TUE P.O amt. pHCYrOGBAPH ALBUMS! AND CARD PHOTOGRAPHS! • PULL. 1 , 1111.11111 T rtstcsivap. Ard .m be void at LOWEII rsicr44 dam any othar EIMPLCTABLE 110 USE In the Wed. Books, Papers and Magazines A1..7. cni band. LAMM AND GICNILLNCN are comital: la citad to call and carolna O. stock and priora, al JAMBB T. SAXPLEI4, XJTETLLBY LlfPoB7t'll, 96 F•derall Gt., Alleglienr. 1.12:113. -•- HUNT'S GAZETEER AND ROUTE BOOS UT TUX Southern and Border States. With as authentic de•crlpt/en at the atlas. towns, tllmoontal., vallayt, 'ewe, ridings. All the railroad mate% turnpikes an ataca tads, with dia. taw. tram pla. to place ; slim and tcpo graphical idtuatkua. By R. LI. eg tits of Ma l/. B. Arm). Wtth a Pb. 81.1 Plate Yap. na..111 b. Could a valuable work lbr refereme, coutsluhvg a 1.1 amount or Informatics mot to be had to my other wen*. It not ordy has the camas and looation of platy, but gives • full dveurtptke of ell place. of any Importance to the South. X 72 PAGES. Priet l / 2 50 CZNTI9. Sand fn clnth, 7n arts; In pant flam, Melt man. it m Sold b 7 oil Dookocibmi.limnestoni and Butler. PCBLIEBED BY JOHN P. HUNT, 50 Fifth st., lIABONIO 11.11L.PItt•bargh, P. pUBSLLNCE'S PHOTOGRAPH ROOMS, OOHS= MTH MID DUREX! STELII22S. (2d .ad 34 Irtarim, a r.r Itichardaces /miry Ilton l / 2 Prrnornair, PA. PHOTOGFRAPI3I3. Of mom mul rfola or oalond, tram the PrrOorto d. Thu. to CaMmot aid Ufa abm ftiraLlliCE.