..; • 77 , ; ,- 2A - - , , I•; ,.. j'," s i. ' :.--; •'+' . - 11 -, s - s ,'*- - i'...•‘,2, - A -. : 4 'ZX ' :,•-: ";' 2,' ' . .f;:•`'‘ ' " Z" 4 ;'... : ~., 7 .... ' +'e . t ., .) S. ....,, -'... ... ...". ' . , ',,' ~ .;4 1: 07. : :#!: 4 7 ~. ' - ' '',,x , .. '..-; cr. C't ..1 .. P . ,.• 4 •' ' ' '' t - ' w .... .'.41.....4:.f.‘ ‘.• . t.i. ,..4 1...f.1i . r . %. 74,;',..c 4 ,:",‘,,,,,,,.z'it, sk , f,, , ,• , :,„:t . ~,',4 , e. tb, er,,,,- , ...,.., . .. . . ~ ' # ..,,' .0. , , , ..V! , N., '..",...; ~ ,- ~ '.• ': ', - .... • ... :,.. • - ''';:., 0" ,1., ..." .' r.: ... ' -• , .:' ^'•• <- : • ~,, ; ..... .... :....V,O "' , „..-, - - '• ... •. , 1 . ; • ~;„A- • t ~ . L 4' 4 4,, ....1,:"re 4 - ' ''`‘ 44141 ?4 4,*, ' 4. 4 .- z• . e . '. - • ‘ %!-- ' . ii , i. , * 7 4 ' ' 'irtf- 4 i' ''4' '. p": '•' : • •'. ), 7 ';'4.....- , •• ii as• - " ei,,,4"!' "a„, t. !-." a',' 1 . C .Ik.i. A.' , 4..* .-..A44 1 1-011 3 %. r,,V :- '' 1 .. 0. .. 1 . ., • .... # r '..*'• '''. V i "tkt . ' 45.'4 '.4s .. ''§'‘ P. " !: " . , v k ..''' '''' '. 4 i ~...7 , ''' 'C r 4 . 'A...J" *4 . , atrt,' . ..l- .• - ,-.- .., 4e - ZY,2!,, , ,- :' 4 ' . ",.'''. ' '' ' ' 'La..tr,..: - .- s '•':.'.' r ,' V'f . ..' - ''''x: • '' 21,V P , t *. '' , • ,' ' ',1, 24:" ., t-r l,'-- :rip, - N't -::.•,..:,-, ', ...::- : 4 ' ;.',..: - . 4 ,,,,-.... 1 1:i.„4.44:. ,, . 5 , , ,,z,.::::, h. 111 " 4 ":`.... ~; :'4`.:•.' 1 . ":-- - 4 "' -',- 0.‘4 a --. Nvc - 1 44 ,.....„;:-..*; i :-...„.. 4 .• . , a „... , . . ~.....••, t . , 4 1. .... 11 "...4.• ~ t... , V't ' i- ' 't '..'""..%.% or 4 r ," '- • 1 ~ ..r. ~---... 4- i 4 1 .4 O.' • ~,r ......"0.7- '.''a 4 ~ .Pt 4. ",, v- fk.,„'' -4.1' 4 84% '4.-' 4 ' - ' - •, - ., 41 , 11 5 ,`:!z, 4 1 / 4 . '. ' V'j> . ..., ..f •,•; t.te4l`o . /' , ..• - . 1"... '''' ,••• .c.. 7 N e5 1 '... 171 .;: t t„.4, % „; ...0 ;• 4 , 73f teV •4 .! , ....... --1 ei . : ' ,.A......,:. , :,.. 7,:'4...,' . 4.. .. `.....,, L 4...t".;;;,''rol'iN . :• 7 4 f .r., 4 ':.., ;- . " 1 r....'''';'''‘' .• 't.' .• • 1 tv.% , ..'5411,4.i0. e•7'..'is. , 4:i• 't"L E t*i-;- . ; ~,. Iv .....„-.-?.., , 4,...a...,.., 4 4, e I ..•;., ' ~" .4- 4 . ..1 4 .- ... - 1.0.-4 0 .„', 0 . 4. .k. 4 Ir.,'ac ,--- * -1 7 1 .40pr.5..4. 1 •. t •"' .' t 4 • '.' ~ . .t *.0... it:* 4 ...44' , „ . 4 .t. ‘ %"? . ;.0 . 0 44e".. ... .... ' • '..... kt ." : *z ,, *•••'',.. f . '.:,... eV) k * ..:',, 1. .: ' .T . , ';',":.., ,:, _ ... e , ~,.. '764 d. 't tirt 3' I'. " 4: 4 .!' '' .." 4.... 4. ' ` ' " ~. It . :::, ' t. t5'n.....1., ' .:' ' I t - ..,,' r . . '1 i''', • '.t.A. - 3 .'''%` - :` (' I." .1 "•:".t 'lf. 1. 4 / . ,•• " 1 '''. .. ~.,.;', ..- l i.tk Pt.. C * 4• V ic k it 4ltr "Vi l '•••N•r4 i i ' • ;".. , •t! x'•••:: - • ••• ~..,-4 .1 . 4 `.t;z: 4 '"P' '....Pt it '''..•- 7 C " t +•';;::; A : '.-.,': 't• : '.",, fl , r , : i *re i ' •- •4 4 ' 4 . 41ti.' *4'1 " 1. 447`r - -• •':', ' . *, e • 4 V' - 4 ,. . - 44. r'r '- - 4,..**4' , 40 . .". e•:. ~ ..;. e .4•Zii...4 4 4 . -, ,; i * 4 00 , 4 t,..,, * 4 1. ~,,.L t, Z.‘';',- ; 'ol 4, , ~.., • y'..., ,0 IF * •..i . 4;4 ~ ..4 . , x * 4 • l ,:t.ist , * 14, -4 ; „..,:,, Ir* v. t ? 4,, t> r t. , e.t 4- 1 . 1 % 1 .1:',* s ie " ' 0 o e.! r#t ret 4 ar /I 4; *, ;_t. .e. • , ~..;.....> .. ; •:, ~, ...-,,,•'.a. 1 11, . : .„,'.. A,' It . 1. .0. 0 . 41 1, 1, 11' . e ~...,.. elk ....*" , I /. ~;,:4, ~..." ~ ,•,'.., t.,-/ ..e ~, ,: +0, 4" ., ' 1t.1 . 0 • •• (~ ,t. . 7.. i . Il *eets• ev:44 .; t, ea, 4 , e• L. ' ;,;, • ',:-. -..,y., ,-...- : v . .e . , - J , c e e - e .1 e• -, , L - - 4 ; 1 4.4., ~-4;14'414,r4f.,4"1'L,4 • ; . ; :..` •• "... j'ee' . .'.,' . ;. - ,•'' ' r ' i• s - ro,sii,Sr 1 ' i' k d N , 1 i, N1,.. "•, ', , t ' ,. ' ‘ ' ,,i..... -, ,, .. 4 .' , .;, ,',, r.• 4 i , n 4 u, 4,..L.0- 't* , -; 1- - . 4 • t r. " ' 1 ' ' 4' `' ' 1 4, , ,t, , ~.:, ..1 .0•. ' 0.:. • 44 t : Z r i ,f cr/4tP e.;' , :',f-:,.. *: 4d •L,' . 1 ' ~ ..--5:, , 05*;„ 4 „,.. t . , ...t„, k' t •,,, ~,,,:- ~ :;.,-,.,. -,',.;- ,i:- ' -'"'",4',,•L piliti:',„-V,i'ct:.-`-',l`l.klt-'-'„„.2:.;''-''...4 • A ,e,„ LIVT,„t4•Vr• *4 O :- . 41 . ,,; A , ieffil .., . ''' , .'..:-. ''. ' f• ~ ," ' 1.. '' " ltr e c tke„t er-rt i ''.. e .`' s , ee PZs 1 `,,. e s 4- , -.. .e' * .14 ° P 4 .4c74t f e t ` 44 4* ;, :1.,;,5i i '. e 4 :l , : s t ee l -fe .t:e'."....;•/ ' •„V 4_4ettAtireetr.e.le,Va",s-eA,f*,'' :'`: .n.: - . „,..41- , fik os ttifr e."4- erat.c'", , sks:', 4 . ri d ' ...';' *.C' •tr eb . 4l, 7 wie f 4 ::;'.. 1, " kt -.."' i,'', .i... ..:4-, ,y., ~,z, I . v. 4- : 0 . •96. 44 , 1 Al" ".„4-i.4,11Nr,`.-'tr,.,,4 t 4 .-0,0 ~. • , , t . ..4„,..t...t. „ ,..„,„.. , ‘„,-, , .1. , '4 tr e t.e.'„. •4 e.e,t.,4,...„ - .. - 4 4 , .** it, „,...-"t., 1 ; c .. - ., e` •": , ,-.4,_ CAt esh4l 4•- eie. s e'L` t Yr. 11„„, 0 -r .., Ed. ,, 4 1 -. .0.„.... , 0. 41 p:1 4 , ~......t, . ., 00.4 ..3' , .ej `..i.,i . .”- t ,. '' s•O ' .. 1 ' 'le* i#, 147,71 , 0,-": k' 4.... " ~,,,...'' , sl +%.,'", , 4:„ ~t ;-1 -,‘ * 4-, -'. 4 -. 4 .r.e. 4, V'e ',, --. -e, , •• 4%ithr Alyti7.-0I „, - .. ,1 „. ir,„ , , z...f -,„, , • ,. ..,k!;• , ,.4 , 20 it 1.,... ... 15. 4 ;{ % , We ' * tt i i. l qii ' N 't -• *.. 1.. ii ' .. ' o.l l ' < .." . ..... ' O' .. ;Zd•M...e,-;,F....,,,,,,=4...,.,:f.,-,=„.r4.4...-i.,,,. 1 I.+ ':_ * ,w e . • i &L iN ks4 4 t l , k2 y A 1,,4 1. tT••,".,t,i,Vftr/0:44.1•,'4, 4, 4 P44r,r-.tl i. t4 lv t24j, , 4NJr4 *t *.- e 4r,, t iki,‘e 0 .r 4 i.44%',1, !, 1 , „ :, . 1 Co 4, 4.l*4oeti l i4:ktpr,4V4tl.zte,-,,„.„ , ilt,tAk i ' 't 1 4 ' -..-.v ,iDe t Wajt. V ! ...0 4 t 0'46- • 4 . t3:l l ' L,4 4 4 7 .1 . F"V 4 i 1 .4t, L i t i tti t ez. -0 1ykkte.'ilii.i.fi,e-k*- 4 .e g ,04 4 1 ei ' 44 %0 • Prw ...4 v 441 ,1 4 ctr, 4 4 :s7ifil%: . t:!qee 4/44.0v. 4. t!„. th ' 4 ' 4`' 54.7 titer ''',4 r 4: '. rc: V.- t , ...,.. 4-.. i. k I.t,L, t.v... • - A <-. e- •, , t•''' ‘ L't , . . 1.. .. . , 4- t 1 ,,..• • • 4.6 0‘ _;et,*- :` Cr'-',..1 „ iNae , •e• -, cf - „ Veil ''.,- ^ - - fr. '4144)' d.," . ...ty , -'......3".. ..,.." 4. ' , l 1 , I, .*.F , J•ka `Sr I ,\ , g• , .;• • .."--t!;t7e 1 11 T1 * * ,, te - :l..i r k,?e - ti r " i" ,-4 : 4, ,..et-ef r iQ" ‘ r -e'" tr • 2' .. '` i , . . 4 4'4- ~ g e •' 4 , ,04to i t . , ov , , ,•;„,,,, ~,,...,,,,.„*„e11.4.,-.1,?,,,,,,,;,;,,,,.<,;; A .,zul, .: -.Ner 40-4 6 • Cm" , - Cilkly I , r , , , -eZ,-41 .0, r , --- -- , ~1,, , ~,,,,-re,1,, „ ',--. :.---4,.:. 4 . 1.,.. - , ...1/tfell4l 04 -e-.....1 ; , --I,. rd -,-, , . ~.„ - • ~,-4 , :i . ,::. F , .1 ,- , .., or . 0. 7.1.......... -2 ,t.......,.... i.',l ~- t - p r it : 6-, A'7 44 ,, 'WA L T 3 . 4i .. ‘ , kriu , - iit , 4-,Vor.V.t- g& ii lid 4.--.1 ,_ IteVIF .7I N.,4,Vn• . 4 T IIB , .- . Z. 4 ` -. 'c, , ,Vti t :l-'•':'wct. i 1 ;iFytt4to s ,i'4l!itp , r4l f , i:,e,- - : -. ,., 1 i 5 7-0 ,;:,._. 1,. .., ).= ,l ;v:i..c ,„, :t 'Vat* 4 eat. A ...1''',`,>?,,..= • F,;,er1i , 1444, t 4 - •" . . , r , ; ;, ...i.. t- z ;tr . I . i t+ ~, ,,,;,,, , ..Lk.i.0...0e, . .Ngt-.3• • ••- 2 .- . .? ;- -i• - -• ' l ' ' l . • .. to .....-= ... - ;:14.'-.A-' ,- ••‘: 4. , . -;:,•, ~1,- ,-; ,, it .1-V , • m,e, .t... V.-e - -.4.4. , .. ; ? 4' . 4'.15. tt . ' ..... ~ n; - •,:...., , .r. ,"..',.(- -,„. 4 !•t!s 4, t rA !' '- .. , 4 .. - ` , :t - ' 1 r • .1 : •LF: v , :!,: - " , •, L .,-. - ! - .. --, 1P,4kr.14. lf•:.1? ,-",' 4.1.'r,',-pi-L;.2",:.5,;" . , .° ' di'7:;,4' , t!,fil. A:4, Nik t.. . e. 4 ,. - to:. 4 f0t t e..1,,,_. „..,,e4t. , r ,,,,,,t,„.„,,, ~,,,,t4ik - ' -'ckk,44:.;!:'!'b ''''l 1 4.&. t , t ri l 0 • ~g1 0 1g p . .. ...,, , , : ',::::,...;:4, -: 4- , 4 4 ‘ . .z„,-4 - . 1 ..,..- i tsp, ,,- -‘ , ; f. --p., ~.4%,,-,,, v :::, , w, _ ,..:,, , gc.,,11.1-77.0-i f , :4,.. -4 ,, ,,,,4.... , -, ,,,,, T:.. ,, .. ''' `T_Olitep, 4 '•Pl! , ! . ..:Nilkgs: l ' l r '-''',!. - i i ,, - - ;,rA 4 .7.tp, ~,,ei4 o ,,: c •- • i ,, , :., A , 1L...-. c't6...14:1 0 ,,:t..;.' - ; , * .....tr . - _.,,, -, ; - :•:..'i .r,., 1, - .44 , Kr ze,, , E!...:. 1- --.... , e1 6 1 / 4 „, , i-,r, - . "'-igtie' '‘see ,.r .. , .`,".: 'r P I • t`94::4l.C:'t" q411 . 0-;4 - * ' l. , I • -..;''. '.. t.k.iftk -' i*Vili ' t.A . C? 0 ~,,:.% llP ''," 4 4h a.Al W . •:.. t 44rt . ,t , , r,.!4•4e , ‘ riliSPk,,Y.;„,4 4 -j ejtj i 4 , V,,i . f . .',i,.. elt 4 gkalg!!:-:44,1, ,lo 4s.toio-,:".,;.r. 44-.4 ,1 s, u fiZlW:l'asAt'v 4 , - q j .: V.'4• - •. - ,' - 1 ' li 4 0.4A, 14 1 .1V, 9 00,4V 4 RY 4 f . l i. 1 40 ` . 4 , 4 45tk i ti&Lt.t", 4 4,ttre,44, s • t it, 0_ 4.. ;•A ' 4l V.e, t i.C•s•ii t A, 4 , - P , 4 f 4 t.1.t. - . ; ‘''l., -.k. eV t t e ; p. - 4 . k A,a ,4;:4V, z NV 4 a P t wee . ol , ir e ,,, f r 1 4 : . 4 4,04 4., --../.., : ,....0. , ..1 cvw 4 .E., _ ~. t 46 4 t -,,_,,,„-: l'et e r?„-7 'te l l' , 4 n v • - ,',F; _.,4, .. ~7 ...Po . - ,Fef • ' , ..mt - i...„. . % -;,,, - 'l,,s , . - 4 1 - , 0. ! ~ 1,4 -,,,,4,,,,„ -,,,,- -. 4. , :41 - • f... 7 .1 ' l:l 4l : ' ,f,' .1 ittiee . ./4 1 01 .. 4 ,j i ': '' : : t. : .1, 7,'•1 -4 m 4 .• • .. , . 0 . e."- - , . 4; ,.. ~ I. dt...4,4 . 1!t tt i .r *. .4,4"...;`'i 4t . ', F . * ..i . e rl tt7:4 4-4I C 4 1 "; . i.4 11 ` • %' . 'l:; t.' tt :l , ' • ' 't• : . 1 .7 . ' o,*•tt - 1ti,..41t 5' I "....?. ..',.... , ..4., 41 e _~ r,441-,.t. , .1.t . ;;' , '''' 4d4 :=ilr.•7l, , f l P , OL it ' . i4 1." 1 4. '4'e;:tt . :". .4 -, ' •,.,.. • ..st<4l,...ttlirtp- .4,.,,. 6 ,, e, ~ • • 1, ; 1 1 la 4 , kV` .O- ''`i,i.t 4 . -t li i f " - 45 4141 1*.v,' , 4-, 4 si. v 0 , 4 4 .4:,.N.. I. ~ . * 1 r i5. ,1 ,44., ,, -*0 • pri,'" o.- Ar V. `, ' , -7, ' t.--444 .' ‘A„,. ' ,4 6 ,, : k4 4 . 1 ,4 ~..rierr- P f4J O .4 " - . ;1•1 . 411W4.,4 ,- " It iiW74 l -•tpiVi,,, l 4 ,4 k- ,11 ' , .1 44e' *%447i;6*--......01.41V:0t14.71t„,‘,..4j-.55;;41 rP0Niktf n i..14. 6 4,7e44 ,- V , S af :i t ;: , 1 - is -1.4,--.., ,, A1r k , ,i, 0 . 4 1-0,,54.4.0,.. , ---1 * / * ... 4t; trife , s 1. TY?. il l tss7 l P4 /Zr ' 1. 3.: 1 1 ,. -. w.4..t . .0.. , 4,rAtf , J, ,1. , .1 4.,ltii , .:, 474:54 - ,4.*S it i"tiozret.ol, - ..; 1 ;.,5 3 .;; •t i,t 1 40 .4. ii.lop * Jet ,„„ .11zi,.i "ofr **o 4 .,P0i,- 0 - . r ...#4 .'ositieilltiZtte P olrt , ' , / sr aliftiZqas-tk:r:11., 4 11 Ll,, , l 2 4ltV . eitlitt ,, , d't 41 7 - 0 6 - Itilitait* twl‘r l ' kr47 . Dr' ;,., _ . ..... a tick , ' -, .. i ttipti.% .4. ..,. v e st -t v ie ..., ..e.....4,F5. , :34 , .. ' '' 'A re.•!',.514.1. -, =1:,.'• ? '4 • V ' ! t ii 'T St r- , 11 7 0 4 +nt ,e,• , ,0 4 ,•.i ya#4. ng,,,..e. ~,,,F h-, „ r - ' ,44•Iji. Wit:OAV irk,4 , •r - , . - E,`-' s .'' . 1 t 4 1)1, 4 074A 444 -4 . 4• N t r; - :.; 1 7 , -,:;#,-.. - 2 1,4 t • .. .' 1 4 ).4 , ' ..{...... e,„41.g 1 .'" - ,,k-' ' 4 '4 ,,, -11 - . e.gr...,,.. - tala i '' ~‘ 4 ".1 4 •\ii,11-itrikri4 k , " e4 . - . ,e, • :e i i,,t, , ,i , .„....4.,..v..,...„....,.:"..,. ." * * " o 4r 4 q4, 4 : 1 4, 4 ,4 14 0Att 51, k ti i i o,,' Bl-6 ' 0 4 ro g) cli 'P ,t, 0 "m‘ ,- hits 4 b,. i , .. ct 4 ' k, ..=. 1 . 4 . i t: , V, i• - ,* , 4 1 , -.o,,eitat eL lF 4 0 v,4 4 4 "'r ~. ,t 4 ir 40 ,1 W% 7.t. r......,.„,. ; t , -I4 ... r 4... ~ ... alt 441, I i 4 vs e ILq q ivi 4 ... V14 ° , 0 4 N4.,, ,- *4-72.,(; ,, i . • fr. .4. v. . 4 "... r 0, .... .. 0 :',... , 0.01::. PW . h illt• ..,it N , V. .-01." , . 0 ,Z70,,,e0 4.2 c 4 5, e,:„ - .', g i, ,klo .r 4A -L riC) „ tit Fig '..; fe l t.. ° f 7 4 4 . 1 - l e 1 Iv" ''Ar`t-4, -0 ,- •;. . 1 44,- , ~..0rt,i..., , t2 .... - „,....4:4„4.; . 4.4 40 - `1,7 -, t4 P.t , :r.f.' 4,..,,,V.4.4tf..,4n4e,,,.t.r. •x, , ,,ht 1 , 1 -,,--,- , %--.1,,,, ,,, ,, , -4, , , , i , !-0 , 14 . ..fti" , • , !0 ~..rV,r,'.V...„t.N . ~,,,i2,..,:,.4... 44 1 4 ; 6 46 ••• r; . 4 3 .- V .Ztllt t ., - 7:14 , -. z. ..a 4-;;;I.:4`' ' A v.. ...e.--).1 , ..-7...„. 1.-..:-.1,„„;. , -,,t,-,: z c.: ~..4-‘, ,, ..t v .'' , ,•,' Nt el' . ., . 4 - .1 .7.1 4 4 '.4.t . Fg Al A'''' ..,..4.4l4V4i4.tigtN«" , tte . . :r . .- v.' Pt iN.ei: _-• ' -4.,‘,.#1.,,,r_.#1 ,, A , ,q ,-4 , - - .Pvi - k - , I F ... 'a l t 4 ''t ""?';',,!, •,, 1 „ 4 ' , 1 4 , - * , 4 , ei,:. s' t Zr..... ea , " -- I t,. .t i t . ' , ...h 't!.. 4 ... , c , -` ,,, C - - ,,, , =• , 0. ,, ;„:„,`,7s 0„., • '.:;;‘, # "Pri . i.T.P4- s. ~ ., Z e` , 1 1 , , r, 0 ,.0"-! ,, \ ; 4- :*-.4:-!" t.,-,, , Is• ... 1,4 ,7,.' 4 ,. '413:r 4 ; , ".z. , . - 4 , liff ; 4•:: .4.".L.J,,',. 4 ::4 1, p - .'",.,;: , .. •.. ) :.r.ap,• , „. - ...... tr -e nike ' 110 '0 4 1.'"“./X.:1 ' ' e.• • •••J. r• - ',.tt .1 . .41.2 / . - t • .‘"•-• .'' 4 .. ' I ~ 4 1,*..4 0* ;..;•!'-hr•ik ,,, PE;f'—'cr' - cptuiz........‘•;,-;,-;N:z.. ,, , al,. . , _ .., ~,,,-.1.- ~.., , ..;-4 . ....Wr..24. 4 .,r0....., .. 4 .---,..„3 ~,,*....;„,.' - •i , ,,e 4, A"",L. , 45. r , , -t- .7.5,2 _lri - N.,: 4;, - .r.:%.,„4•,j , \N,4,1,: t•1V,., 1 ..,f°5 , :'. -:;,,,` v' 4 104 • - i ' R. ' ,.{.%. t a igZ V.,' z,-,.4,7•4,;7,-...,N,„1.-,,,y3,24..z:.--„,„:!:1,4..;,.:111.1.-„,.„ totetv . X. 4 4 - ti r J ctis'-' , iorAtgliiii..l •••--• , ~4.0 t2O - f i 4; ,'"j ' 4 :4 : "S .. , •;:r 4: 41,41 -ktr'''' ~,^6 l -11„. ' 1 4r4" 4 .itl4l4la V 1 N•- , ...r - -..:,- 4 '' . .4 , r4c - -etfir- 04 4 4,...;..t.. - .4 6 , 4 ..164,,A4,, ,•;,,,!..` 4 *...., s-i 3 - kW.. IZ'W,Zha, . :-$Z 4 . 4 1, 5 3.e., - u f , ':;nW'r'..,, , Z, . I . - - - 4,'' - ' ,--, , 4 ...re.„4,....._....f::,_.....,,,.,,,,,.....„,.„ti ...0-0 .. .e..,,...., ° C. ~...- e s't-, Iv- 4 , , ,, ,..z .-'-.. - .i - -7 4 ,- fr , ,,,44 --,.....-„,....., 0. 4%:,,,,' . ..! ~ --.2.0, .' ,3 , , -- 4 ~ • ,-, ~.1, ..,,.,-,, -- ~ v„. 1 .1. v-, ✓ *Zltli;• , r Ce ,?. ~, , ,, ..ri:.. ~.e..... z-,, .7. ..•,...'„, . #2,1;1' 1 / 4 -4 1.44 4:-...4;7 1 .; 7 . , ..X...'_. , ~ t; . ".,',:', ; ,.......,!:,.....1, .'' :4:5.74. ~;•:::, ../.4.' , ...:'..... , .1 Weil h i 1-.:' 1 ..:/tfel . : l i;'''..;: . .: f . 7,:.*... •:- ~. e ' t. ' 1. , ' . ..: 1- .' ,1 ,,,tr;',.. ;};:•••-..:st . ',, ;......1;'.. , 1 ~.....,ri., i lvt, P ,:''.il., -_ , -,' , . .., ; ‘,.- -,. ... - -7-;-; 7 :f.,7' , - 1 / 4 -z,v ,-- ::;',;,•=.-' . :": ~, : : , 4.144-,4,- , Yri,4.- -- ..7., • ;- ,n , - , ' ,.,-..,t. . .- ' , 7. ,- . 4 1. , . ',.;;,--71?;.t.,,t,-.!:.:,-..-..f :', ''',' 4 f 2 :P4tlit , r;r4,, t : ; / „ tl .,4 ' ',', ' -.; N0 1 4V1 4 . 1 Nj.: :. ; .:5 i -:: " !1 1 . - 1, 1,Wi . ., : :_. - ,^4, :,,,:",-,;:-.:* r::,, , 1 i .• .4' . 4' . ...„::::,'"--,Z-- , -.-!!,,N,. , 'P- .---',.1 * 4 ;F 4 1 1-" , :+. , •- • -•%:f ° Te t, lt.' 4 i - "r , :,`. 4 " 1- ist "i' - '',." - s‘ , r ~ 4 2- 4 .- - t.7, 1 . 1 4...,:,..,., - izat-...,-, .1,,5;,:..;.•,,,... , ;' = „7,i;:.... - -ti','"• - ',!i '''.. 4. 'l . ..1 4.-.411h,!' , .‘4 , ..-441;v41-• , - , i , -;.. , ,.. ,,- .• , “4_•) .. , • 7 - ,00... ~,,- Or"" t- it *.&,•142 . 4t . V71, 4 ehr: 4411{1b7r7,..T4r.....•;...r7 7 7*. 4,e7t7 .. .."',7 -1 t " s ' . " i. '‘: s ' 'r - - .=*--','. T_'-",_ • -'' c e ' ,-.0.41944.' l ' r ''.4 9 i-s1 2 ::; set 1 4 4 ~,,:k„ if. "a.: - 1, •; 0 , t..riNi ~I, ...4.(+.p r ~-,4 f -.,,;.,..; ;.: , i,, 4 ,...• ”, • '. . ~ , ~ . li" 70.4 4, -4. A .10• t0...,t , 4e`er , ll l 4 . "., ..,. •-• ..T. . e ....lre t4. l, ' c 1ti..4 , ... f. , ~-r, , •h % r . ,'' - - . . , ~ , , , 4 0. 1.... . 110 t - • :1 4 1 je..06 0 . 0 40 ,40. 4 _ .* 44 ,„ t . i f,,,,,. 1 0 .40- ~ r „. eds.% settrietet. 1, a o{, . ..,'' c., - v -.. .'• ' - • A - ..• ' el i tl i‘l' llitt it ftiV.411411.-1"."44\w"`";`,5ti1n%44.14: i r l ri ew . ett ,' 74"} ...k r -I , ,"& t i s r ' ''." .. ,f4 - " 1- „, f4; .*'`' :1' -,? 4 . 4, . •-• ,-' ...-'.-.:.' :t, ,: . . 0!,477. 1 ,,..t. k •0 -1 1 4 - -''' f" IlittiS t ft 0 41.,6%;* 1 .I- I,', ' I,' '',' . t .1 . ,' "VS; '1 e : 1- • 4 •' - ' , -," ..o:‘,i 7, i• - • - : ? 1 - Z- • i, : Velv 1•. -: : - ~.- ; . '2. •• ' : ~, .;. '• ' " " .4 '' e.....teilf' ,:`, ti. S ‘.+.,.'"•'-• ,;" ''' ' `' ''..," 4 ` ift al °•P b ‘ 1 1% t . 13 V. . . ,-';'. ‘.:o4 . tt ls in * ‘t '. '.' --' ' :. -`-' e- , b.-' 41.1RaI * 4111i•i„ .. t' * 4.- N . _ I , - ,`,,, P., ....= -,-..!-. 4 . f ,' 4.4 4 ' "J ' t0e .41 . :. ~ ....1... . . •,' ' ' ' ' • --.-. r,' .oe.P‘it 4. • - , - - . ' - t*t. it. 1 4.' .4".., 4 " '', ''. et • : %. '.. • " .*- +.,.: - . ~. P!", e - - , rtr.-.. ; 0 -,...; •:: . ~ .. --,,,, 4- .„,ki.t., , •Vt.." --. .- 'ii % ALt....6*, , • .• t 4F '''•• , .:l. 4 6:it'''' •-• "" - . ''PV ' 1:'••-r . N. ifi ,t + ..• ' 1= ..1... -a , ,,,.‘,„,,,,,, ,,, T.,1 , .. -;„,..: , , .-ket s, '... + 4 4 . 6 4 • '.. : J ""' ~..441-Al r -•• .0 '' &- ' - - fs~ t , V , LvVit.l- 10' i;'s ' 's • - • imit.rCe...7,- ;,-;; w~ .p.• • "A A • • k - . ", f 1 • I ' 7. ' .... f . 1. ~ ,S ` > ti,{ K' .„ ,#. Vaitg 411unting FITTSBURGII: FRIDAY MORNING IttORPOLDIff; POST JOB OPPIOSI. We would call the attention of MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS MEN to the fact that we have just received from Plihelelphia a number of fonts of new Job Type, and are now prepared to Ell orders for Cards, Circulars, Bill Beads, Paper Books, Posters, and Programmes for exhibi tions. All orders well be promptly filled. THANKSGIVING DAY AND THURSDAY. Misses. Gammas AND Motthoonsar t—Gentlentent I am a modest man, (I hope/ may thy) at least a man of mole, ate pretensions; and yet, some how or other, but certainly by no fault of mlne,‘l have acquired among my acquaint. antes, the reputation of knowing everything, and being title to solve all kinds of difficulties. Thu., a few even ings ago, I dropped suddenly into a circle of friends, who were evidently engaged in the diecusthon of soma knotty question, when several voices exclaimed together 0 Au ! here comes Mr. X; he can toll na all about it. The question was then stated for my consideration, thus: Whyte it that Tharcgiving day is always mad! to come on Thursday t It has been so In former years; and this year while the Gov ernors of tome of the Shiba appointed th e twenty-third 01 Novemzer„others appointed the thirtieth, but the day of the week in nyl cases is Thursday. • This was the qnsation, and it raised a point I bad never thought of tefore. After making sundrydespentho mental efforts to conjure up soine - planslble reason, and save my reputation, I wee obliged at hats/sly to own my ignorance. To complete my discomfiture, another member of the com pany now aimed a similar shot ett Met Can you toll us, sir, why men are elways hanged on Friday? It was so in the case of Webster, at Boston, Jewell, in this cite, Johnson, recently at liarrlsbor4 Langfelt and Spring, at Philadel phia, and, In short, itela always so. These coincidences could not hart happened by Mance; but what I. the reason for itelealug that day before any other t I was here nonplussed again and being greatly mortified, seized the that oreasion to take French leave of the com pany. I vent down town, but what narrow alleys I threed ed; what to stairlass I ascended; and what tdsarra ceremonies 1 teased through I shall not herevelate. But te. it to say that "rhea I returned to rest that night it was to dream that my pillow was pressed by the head of a Know Nothing. Now, you gentlemen of the ;KM are aloe copular imp posed like myself, (or rather as 1 used to be) to e very thing. I have therefore concluded to submit the obey e In ' sries to you ter solution. My chief object however I ) o- Ices in all frankness, (you will perhaps calla it no is, to ascertain weedier your reputation on this score Ls not as great a humbug entity own. And yet as a lover of know lither-which 1 protege to be—l should lite much to hear a Dniistuctory answer; but this motive I am afraid (curt so strong ae tee other, she:seethe old adage tells us, "misery b ten company. Young Moat Ignonattly, X. Oar friend X has placed us in a dilemma simi lar to his own ; for whilst our good nature would induce us to relieve his feelings by coming down to stand on his platform, when we think of our reputation, we feel that we cannot afford it. Awl, besides, for a lover of knowledge, (as he professes to be,) we think he leeks heroism of spirit. The genuine 'student will not shrink from a little mortification, where knowledge is ta ho gained. If oar explanation, therefore, shall make him a "wiser, though a sad , ler man," we trust on reflection we shall receive Ms thanks, rather then his envy. Let us, home, lay aside this spirit of levity. The custom 'of an annual Thanksgiving day arose, we believe, among the Perihelia of New England. As they were a Christian people, end about to establish a Christian festival; we may suppose they took the history of Christianity for a precedent. If our correspondent will read over the twenty-sixth chapter of Matthew, be will see why they considered Thursday the ap propriate day for this purpose. The time tit the Je.Oth passaver depended on the state of the ' - •moon, and so astronomy was then bat little cul ti,stc,i, it could not always he fixed with seen ; r.cy. Hence it is a disputed question whether our Saviour ate the passover the year of the irre:ltitiod or not. 'lt is certain, however, that on the Thursday evening before, they ate that mem lorabie supper at which the Sacrament of 'the I lEnchariat was instituted. Although the time of the possover in that year is involved in Log,;cal, chronological and astronomical diffie al ties, the time of this Supper can be easily flied in several ;rays: Ist. The reason given why bones of those win were crucified should be broken - and the bodies taken down, was that :the next day was tho Sabbath—that is, our Satur day. Thevaucifixion, therefore, occurred on Friday, and the time of Hie Sipper being 'the evening before, was Thursday, according to Cur reckoning, but the Jewish Friday, since their day began st sundown, instead of midnight. But as to the other query: Why are men always. banged on Friday? 'We shall give such sper,tdations on this point as occur to us, and our correspondent must take them for what t'uey are worth. We suppers, then, that the i•.nmediate cause of the custom is the well knovin fact that Friday has long been reckoned, 1 - .1 popular superstition, en unlucky day. iVe, will venture to say that there are hundre ..15 of people now in this city who would not ‘Jommence any important undertaking—not etatt upon a journey, or change their residence, for instance—on Friday, if they could help it. And so it is throughout Christendom. A day thus accursed in the public mind, might natu rally be considered the proper day for the die cation of criminals. But why is Friday thus frowned upon? Beyond all question, because on that day the great Redeemer of the World was crucified. The tokens of divine displeasure which attended that event—the darkened hea vens, the quaking earth, the torn vail of the Temple, the rent rocks and the opening graves— would seem to have impressed a terror on that day, which has spread far as Chriatiauity itself, and continued to the present hour. But if we are right in this, it follows that men are hanged on Friday because our Saviour was crucified on that day—a conclusion, we think, from which most mines will instantly shrink. Perhaps those who appoint executions on that day look only to the secondary cause—the fact that it is counted an unlucky day—without ever considering the real propriety of the custom. Our present impression is, it would be more rev spent in a Christian magistrate to select any other day in the week as kangman's day. gar We admire the wit of the Journal editor, but are eorry we cannot commend his honesty. When he says the Journal has published news eo long in advance of the Pool " that we cannot name the day with certainty," the very absurdity of the statement would be a sufficient answer to every person who had reached years of discretion. As he has produced a single in stance to snppoct the assumption, (in regard to cheapening the price of aodl'n Louisville,) we will show that even in this solitary case he is mistaken. The paragraph that appeared in the Post was suggested by seeing the proceedings of a Coal meeting, which appeared4n the Louis ville papers throe days before our publication. Hence the Journal lies under a mistake when it claims having published an article " on that sub jest" previously. However, we have no dispo sition to rob the editor of any credit due him for discovering stale items, but he would have made a better argument had he produced six, instead of an imaginary one. We found half a-dozen in a single issue of The Daily Commercial Journal; he fancies he has found one. In conclusion, we assure our neighbor it was neither envy or an unkind spirit that induced us to call his attention to the old news published doily in the Journal, but from a sincere desire for his own improvement. Need we say, then, how grieved and disappointed ye were to find by yesterday's issue of that valuable paper that our good intentions were thwarted ; for "Item the Seventh " appeared in the Post of Tuesday, and "Item the Eighth" on Wednesday. The Masters War. [Fratalapaleon's conversations with Saion O'Meara] In the course of o few years Rania will have Constantinople, the greatest part of Turkey, and all Greece. France, England suf .. Prussia uni ted cannot prevent it. j We would call attention to the advertiee ment of M. F. Eaton, who le agent for the sale of Patent•Hights and new invention'. He is authorized to sell a number of articles lately patented. He devotee his time to that business; and those having each articles or rights for sale could not do better than to ware hie denim. „ 4 14 P'""ttl 1101 PR • 44, eft . • ' i•or • • • 4' 4' «t » . • DECEMBER 1 . 7-7 4 t, SIMON :' ,::- • ,-,:!,;;..,: 11 . .... ' ' ,—; w. .. ' , b.... 5, , New. le the Day John M. Claytoa; - the Cincinnati Gamtaide claree,lwe not in that city daring the meeting of Marti Nigt44P- a , • An Important dealeion,Vating to Common Carriers, and what cepetitutee the delivery of goode, will be found in another column. Judge Durkee, of York, Pa., died in that through, on Friday ism, after a protracted M Oar government publishes the official informa tion received that the Allies intend to keep up the strictest blockade of all Russian ports. A magnificent private residence is being built in the city of New Ysark by Dr. S. Townsend, of Sarsaparilla memory. It ie to be 56 by 90 feet, and will cost $200,000. The telegraph yesterday etated that Its,. Theo dore Parker had been arrested and held to bail iu $1,500, but did not state the offence charged. It wee for inciting to riot, and aiding In the at tempt to rescue Anthony Burns. Capt. Luce, of the steamship Arctic, it is said, intends to go to sea no more. Ile will engage In mercantile business. Mr. Collins, it is also said, het; refused to glee employment to any per son that was on board the steamer at the time of the wreck. The body of Wm. Whitley was found last Sunday evening, at the house of Wm. H. Howe, on Neil's farm, a mile or two north-west of Columbus, Ohio. Both of these men were of intemperate habits. Howe has been arrested for his murder. A number of members of the New York Bar are taking vigorous steps to have the Arctic's die. aster undergo a legal investigation. The Tines saps Mr Collins, and the owners and managers of the line, are throwing obstacles in the way ; and that Mr. Dorian, the noble third offizer, who stood by'the ship to the last, has been discharged for giving ... So truthful an account of the calamity. Mr. Aaron Dunbar, a respectable citizen of Marlborough, &Stark County, Ohio, aged about forty-five years, committed' suicide, by taking a dose of strychnine, at the Blind Asylum in Co lumbize, on Tuesday night. Re was engaged to be married to a lady in that city, and be arrived there on Saturday lest, with the view of eon eumreating the engagement. In the Q aeon's County Court, New Tork, on Monday, the cam of Samuel Drury vs. George Wilkes and others, for trespass committed in 1849, was tried. The jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff of $40,000 damages, to which extra casts amounting to over $2OOO are to be added. The defendants, it will be remembered, entered the plaintiff's bowie at Astoria, in his absence, rr.nsacked D and carried off many valuables, a large portion of which, it is alleged, have never been returned. MAIIRL4GE DI CONSULS UNAUTLIOILIStD.—At torney General Cushing pre a decision some days since, pronouncing marriages solemnized by U. B. Consuls illegal. He says, however, that " in those Mohammedan or Pagan countries, in which, though a local law yet exists, yet Ameri cans are not subject to it, the personal statute i.caompanies them, and the contract of marriage, like any other contract, may be certified and authenticated by a Consul of the United 6:Ates." LA PIERRE Roust, PINTA DILPITIA. —This house, located at the corner of Broad and Ches nut sireets, is a model hotel, not only in archi tectural beauty, but also in the splendid and complete manner in which it is furnished. It is, too, one of the best kept hotels in the country, being entirely free from the noise and confusion so generally attendant upon large establish moats; sad it is hence a desideratum for per seas visiting the Quaker City, but who wish to live out of the eternal din of a great city. SPIRIT or AMERICAN CITIZENS ABROAD.—The London correspondent of the New York Times writes that pending the Soule difficulty the Americans residing in Paris, numbering from 1800 to 2000, declared .that they would leave France with Mr. Masan, it he should be com• pelted to do no on being denied the aakod for apology. [Pion the Canton (o.)Damocrat] Surgical Operation. We witnessed a surgical operation last Friday, by Dr. H. M. McAbee, of this city, which re flects credit on the Doctor's skill. He was 'w aisted by Drs. Wallace and Hatep, and Dr. Hard• mau, dental surgeon. The subject was a little girl of eight years of age, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Martin, of this vicinity. The technical term of the trouble was, caries of the alveolar process, and the operation consisted in the removal of all that portion of the lower jaw extending from the second tooth on the left side of the middle line in front, to a point behind the last tooth on the right side, leaving a margin of bone along the under side of the jaw about half an inch deep ; The operation was prolonged, in consequence of an effort to avoid making any incisions upon the face, which was snooesstul, as the cutting was all done within the mouth. The disease was of about four months standing. The patient was a tine subject for chloroform, and to all humane appearances suffered none during the operation, being kept under the influ- ence of it all the time. We learn that the little patient is doing ISDOSTIIIOUS HABITS Or 0178 OBKATUT Ao raoks.—it would go very far to destroy the &h -our,' and peruioioas association of genius and idi,ness, by a historical demonstration that the greatest poets, orators, statesmen and Malaita's —men of the most brilliant and imposing to —have actually labored as hard as the makers of doctrines, and the arrangers of indexesi and that the most obvious reason why they have been superior to other men, is, .that they have taken more pains than other men. Gibbon was in hie study every morning, winter and summer, at G o'clock ; Burke was the most industrious and indefatigable of hums n beings ; Leibnitz was never out of his library ; Pascal killed him self by study; Cicero narrowly escaped death by the same cause; Milton nos at his books with as much regularity as a tnerchantor attor ney—he had mastered all the knowledge of his time ; so bad Romer. Berens lived bat 89 years, and in that short space of time, he had acquired hie art so far beyond what it had be fore reached, that he appears to stand alone as a modeito his successors. There are instances to the contrary, but, generally speaking, ,the lives of all truly great. mini have been lives of intense and incessant labor. —Sidney Smith's Lectures. The following from a late Cincinnati pa_ per is a warning to all boys In the habit of car rying or in any manner using fire-arms. Oa Saturday afternoon, a German boy aged about 17, the only eon of John Rent:, a baker, in Newport, Hy., was killed by the discharge of a double-barreled pistol, which he was loading. Both barrels were discharged, the contents en tering the abdomen at the lower edge of the stomach, tearing that organ into shreds. He was in a room of the Bakery alone, and did not live a minute after the report was heard. Dr. Foster, the Coroner, held an inquest over the body, and the jury returned a verdict of " Ao• cidental shooting by himself." WABASH Intrraucrintis.—Au individual was brought before the Police Court this morning, charged with assault and battery. He frankly admitted.that he had struck his antagonist, but said in extenuation that the man had called him liar, "and" continued be, "may it please the Court, I was born in Livingston, In the State of Now York ; there, shen a man says you're a liar' you call him a liar back and there's the end of it; but, your Honor, I have lived for fifteen years on the Wabsah, and there, when a man calls you a liar, you knock him down at ones -1 only obeyed my Wabash instructions." Fined $1 and costa.—Cin. Corn. A Niw Ism IN THE MRS. ROBINSON CASE The Albany Transcript is advised that thin mnr dereea, now incarcerated in the Troy jail, on Wednesday night presented some person with a baby. Mrs. 8.. has been confined in jail over a year! "Hier Dens." The Albany dada etatee that a snow Nothing lodge of colored - persons was organised in Elmira, New York, last week, being the eight of that completion In the Nate. They take " umbrago,' it eetnns, at the 'petit *Om cf fon:Jaws. Dull Children. The following, the last paragraph of which our readers will find to contain some excellent advice, is going the rounds of our exchaugee , Without credit: No foot can be plainer than this,'lt Is unitnw• siblntojudge correctly.of the genine or intellec tual ability of the future men by the indications of childhood. Some of the most eminent men of all ages were remarkable only for dullness in their youth. Sir Isaac Newton, in his boyhood, was inattentive to his study; and ranged very low in school until the age of twelve. When Samuel Wythe, the Dttblin schoolmaster,attempt ed to educate Richard Brinsley Sheridan, he pronounced the boy un "incorrigible dunce." The mother of Sheridan fully concurred in this verdict, and declared him the most stupid of her sons. Goldsmith was dull in hie youth, and Shakepeare, Gibbon, Davy and Dryden do not appear to have exhibited in childhood even the common elements of future success. When Berzelius, the eminent Swedish chem ist, left school for the university, the worth; "Indifferent in behhyior and of doubtful hope," were scored against hie name; and after he entered the university he narrowly escaped be ing turned back. On one of his first visits to the laboratory,,, when nineteen years old, ho was taunted with the inquiry whether ho " un derstood the difference between a laboratory and a kitchen." Walter Scott had the credit of having the " thiokeet skull in the school," though Dr. Blair told the teacher that many bright rays of future glory shone through that same thick skull. Milton and Swift were justly celebrated for stupidity in childhood The great Isaac Barrow's father used to say, that, if it pleased God to take away from him any of his children, he hoped it might be Isaac, as the least promising. Chivies, the great mathe matician of his age, was so stupid in hie boy hood, that his teachr could make nothing of him, till they tried him in geometry. Carracci, the celebrated painter, was so inapt in his youth that his masters advised him to restrict his am billet; to the grinding of colors. " One of the most popular authoresses of the present day," says an English writer, " could not read when she was seven. Her mother was rather uncomfortable stout it, but said as every body did learn with opportunity, she supposed her child would do so at last. By eighteen, the apparently slow genius paid the heavy bat in evitable debts of her tether from the profits of her first work; and before thirty, bad published thirty volumes." Dr. Scott, the commentator, could not compose a theme when twelve years old ; and even at a later age Dr. Adam Clark, after incredible effort, failed to commit to memory a poem of a few stanzas only. At nine years of age, one who afterwards became a chief justice in this country, was, during • whole winter, unable to commit to memory the little poem found in one of our echoed books. Labor and patience are the wonder-workers of man—the wand by whose magic touch he changes drone into gold, deformity into beauty, the desert into a garden, and the ignorant chili into the venerable sage. Let no youth be given up as an incorrigible dolt, a victim only to be laid upon the alter of stupidity, until labor and patience have struggled with him long enough to ascertain whether he is a "natural fool," or whether his mind is merely enclosed in a harder shell than common, requiring only a little out ward aid to escape into vigorous and symmetri cal life. [From the ItaWoad Adv...te.j Manufacture of Itrilrond Iron Since 113-18, and in the periods of greatest im portation, the following new rail mills bare been started in this country : Annual Capacity—Tun, Lackawanna Mills, at Scranton, Pa. 16,000 Cambria Mills, Johnstown, l'a 16,000 Console Mills, Newcastle, Pa 12,000 Besides new mills at Piitsbargh, Wheeling, Portsmouth, Ohio ; Richmond, Va.; and other places. During the name time the Massachu setts Iron Works, of Boston, and the Troy Mills, long idle, have re-commenced rolling. Belflden, also, nearly all of the following works have been enlarged Phmuievtlle, Montour, Safe Harbor, Trenton, Mt. Savage and others. The following is about the present number and capacity of American rail mills : annual C.lparity ran, Montour, Danville, I'a ls,ooo Itougb and Heady, Danrille, Pa .1,000 Pineal: Iruu Works, l'hornilvtile, Safe Harbor Works, We. Harbor, Pa 16,000 Lackawanna Mill, Scranton, Pa 16,000 Trenton Mill, Trenton, N. J Maneachusetts Mill, I:0,ton ML Savage Mill, Mt. 6sTage, ML l'' 000 -, .Cambria iron Works, Johnstown, Ps 10,000 Consolo Mill, Newcastle, 'Ps = - 12000 New Mill, at Pittsburgh 10,000 Great Western Mill, Brady's Send, Pn....12,000 Pottsville Iron Works.., 3,000 Tredeger Iron Work., Richmond, is 10,000 Washington Mill, Wheeling, Vs 0,000 Crescent Works, Wheeling, Vs 6,000 New Mill, Portsmouth, Ohio . 6,00() Troy Mill, Troy, N. I 15,000 Siach is the productive capacity of this inter est. It to an interest which now employs over 20,000 men, sapporting over 100,000 persons, and involving a permanent investment of $12,- 0)0,000. CARLYLE. Friend Ayer :—ln this age of quacks, charlatans, and mere windy, gaseous pretenders to heal, who blow at every street cor ner, and in the face and ears of all men, their loud, blaring Jericho trumpets, and other noisy boisterous wind instruments of marvelously twisted braes, in such a wonderfully iiham.ridden epoch as this, I say, it is comforting, nay even cheering to the earnest well-wisher of hie race to know there has arrived in this world it genu ine Physician—to light once more upon some thing besidea mere Bangradossnd Don Mercurial Jalapa with their phlebotomies, poisons and warm water. • Your Cathartic Pahl and Cherry Pectoral car ry us forward to halcyon days—to millenial Pharmacopooaa, when Science, deep diving down into the principles of things, shall, with infinite cunning, bring out the genuine Elizir Vito); for of a truth there is manifestly enough somewhat of that same Life Essence in your subtle vege table distillations and compounds. . . You realize to us the visions of those painful est, smoke-dried Alohymists—bootless seekers —dreamers among retorts and crucibles, touch ing the Quintessential hiddon Virtue of the . Uni- Verse, which should antidote distemper, and break for man the Wheel of Time. Axuruza Vicrut.—The Coroner. leld an in quest at Louisville, on Sunday last, on the body of a beautiful girl, named Arminta Jackson, who had poisoned herself to end a life made misera ble by seduction and ultimate prostitution. The Coroner, in his report of the case says, "she was an interesting young woman of great personal attraction, and a well cultivated mind. Her history would be interesting to every one, but prudence precludes it from this connection. Suffice it to say that she was the victim of a heartless seducer, and for some time has been leaning a miserable life, with no one to comfort and console her but a little brother, about eight years old. After spending, the last dollar, her troubles increased, and sho L It once resolved to put an end to them, and, on Saturday, went to a drug store and procured eorroeive sublimate, which (as she stated herself) she swallowed on the same day, and died on Sunday morning." LOBS AND FORTUNATE RECOVERY OF RAILROAD BONDS. — In Cincinnati, on Sunday afternoon Mr. William McDougal, broker, in the Mechanics' In stitute building, let fall out of his pocket into the privy vault, sixty feet deep, and which is connected with the institute, eighty•four thou sand dollars worth of railroad bonds, the num bers of hick had not been preserved. The bonds Ore in a large pocket-book, together with several deeds, mortgages, etc. Mr. MoD. offered a large sum of money to any person who could save the bonds and other papers. TIM janitor of the building, Lewis, attempted the undertaking. A long chain was fastened around hie waist, and he was let down into the • vault. The papers were all recovered, save one, with out being materially injured. Lewis received the reward. VALVE GEAR TOR LoOOMOTMI ENGINES.— James Freeland, of Allegheny, Pa claim the employment for the purpose of transmitting motion from the eccentric or its equivalent to the elide valve of a rock•ehaft, carrying the ec.- oentrio arm, which is connected with the valve arm, on the usual valve shaft, by means of a connecting lever, an arc formed slot, a rocker and links, all arranged, - combined and operating substantially as herein described, to give the vane the whole or the greater part of its move ment, during a comparatively small portion of the revolution of the eccentric or iteequivalent." No Mora Lumasas no Cinosao.—The Common Council of Chicago passed an ordinance last week, by a vote of 12 to 8, repealing all enact ments authorising the issue of licensees, and leaving the penalties for selling without license in force ; so that persons continuing to itmatsc in the ardent in that oitydo it not only without the color of the law,‘but at the risk of Ming punished by the authorities. t , • ..;; 1 P . MEM" ••• ; - • I`. , r!_ [prom the Chicago Prooo, Nov. 26.] Glitionsion. Carriers—What Constitutes Delivery of Goods. , We this morning publish an opinion recently delivered - from the:l3oprante Conte oflinoia, biladgeCaton, in an appealed ewe of Clark and Gilbert, or. J. 11. Crawford et al., which, frommerolelly considered, is one of the highest Importance., The questions involved are discus sed by the learned Justice in a moat lucid and comprehensive manner, find the conclusions ad duced place the relative duties and responsibili ties of Common Carriers and Consignees in a I very clear and intelligible light. This decieion is especially important, not only to carriers and consignees, hut to the commercial world general- inasmuch as it holds to a different construe tiOn from hat which is acknowledged, in for eign uommerce, or upon the the high seas, and which we believe has to a very great extent been tacitly euffered upon our western Lakes and Rivers. The Plaintiffs in this case claim pay for part of a lot of iron delivered to the defendants as common carriers to transport from Pittsburgh, via Cleveland and the Lake, to Chicago, 111. It appeared in evidence that the consignees at Chicago did not receive the Iron, but that ! it was taken away from the wharf by other parties and lost to the plaintiff. The defendants admit receiving the Iron, and prove that they brought the same safely to the port of Chicago, and put it all with other goods en the dock, at their usual plated unloading, and that Dole, Ramsey, et Co., the consignees, were notified and came and took part of the goods away. The plaintiffs admit the above facts, but claim judgment on the ground that putting the Iron on the dock was no delivery—but that it was the further duty of defendants to see that the proper person took the Iron away, or that in case of their neglect to do so, the carrier should have deposited it in a warehouse. The case was tried in the Circuit Court of Cook County, and, the Court entertained the same opinions In re gard to the duty of Com Mon Carriers as the plaintiffs, and so instruoted the jury, and a judg ment was rendered against the' defendants for the value of the Iron. Exceptions were taken to the instructions, and the case was carried to the Supreme Court held at Ottawa in June, 1854, before the Hon. Samuel 11. Treat, Chief Justice, and John D. Caton and Walter B. Scales, Associate Jus tices. It was there held that the ruling of the Court below was correct and the judgment affirmed. Camphor has been discovered to be an anti dote for that terrible poison, strychnine. A man who had been thrown into convulsions by two doserof the poison--one-sixth of a grain each, administered for the rheumatism—was relieved by twenty grains of camphor taken in 'fix grains of almond mixture. Dr. Suddock, in a lecture to the London Lancet, claims to have made the discovery. Tho August wen has some, A slumberous silence fills the sky, Thu &shim sro still, the sr male err dumb, In glassy sleep the enters Ile. And marls yen .11 clouds that rent f.ur role, a movote. throne' The asttl *Pe tho molt elate* tree. Eejpy the wattle! pleplee tong. Oh how unlit, thoo merry boor, In tw,O J oto wh , wa twrth Noah,. not, When (rob wields make Woot to flower, Awl woodland/1 Witt, and 'rate. rhoiat. When In the mos sweet voices Wilt, And strains of any mu , ic swell kram every smelt cup of the met. Form every PIMA blnsentn's bell Mit DOWa n o too deep for mood, A pram no other reagort knnere, HAW+. the iirSTOOP and wraps the ground The blowing, of eupretee repoor. Aisne! 1 aria not be to-la. The ...II algae et and tare, Away frnm from tle,k and duet' away am the air. li•math Am „ t ,, the p ivot. aml ttresthlru;thin The du10.5x,14. , ( 111 werl, I'll share lb, calm the 0,,,,11 le thou, ID Nrbrrr• roll r ye, I Tho moatalngo of thy heart, One :Itty at the WOOdF with ral.. From men and all their esrva apart Ate! where, upon the meadow'. 1 rest, The Fbadow .4 the thicket The bine x itd firmer- , thou gathereet thud glow yet deeper near thine eye: ek,m, triwn thA ettim rrofmtnd I turn lI gentle .yra to s,rk, rimy, Me thr I orrly iand:cape mond, 0( innocence and paare shall airak. — keit Linn: beware Ur t shade, And nn the silent valleys is., WI nding and widening, tin they fedi. In yon PM ring of sunnier, The dlinge treem th,tr Pualudt renr it% anti yonder flock At mkt in thom minx 0.11. $4 A. rhiNlled from the ithiera rock. One iranuull mount the neetteoverlooka— There tow hoebei viola their eabbeth keep While • near hum from bens erel brook, Clowns faintly Ilte the breath of !deep. W,ll may 1.11. Baser deem that when. Worn wjth the atru=le and the strifo, And haar.airk at the w romp of men, The good foriako the nem aco. Lik.e this deep quiet that awhile, Dupers Llie lovely bindle:ape o'er, ehall be the peace whose holy smile Welcome hint to a happier shore. 441-Nledleal Testimeatyll l l lo i be Con troverted.--One of the meat atartling eases L narrated of Da.M.I.ANE'S VElLltllklitn by Dr. John Butler, of Lowell. Trumbull county, Ohio. The cam wits that of a yousg luty who had been Very Fick for eight year, and had milted n number or phyriclani, who 1.1 treated It one of Prolopous Uteri. Dr. hotter wan then called In, and for s time believed with hie pp:doormen!, that it was a me. o'Y Proforma lie wan. however, soon forced to the moth, riga that hie patient wan aullciing from Worm", nod, after much perouaolon, prevailed upon her to take two doe. of Dr. forLanen Vermithga.. This medicine had the effect a, removing from her a rouiltlern number of the largest elm. After the Fused than hir health immediately returned. She fa .ateen married and continuce to enjoy exPellent health. • . - Purchissers will plum lie careful to ask for Dr. bl'Liwou's celebrated Verioifuge, will twee now, else. All othur Ver. mirages, lucomparisou, are worthless. Dr. Lane's gen ulna Veroalloge, is/ so birwelabretwi /Aver Pills, can now be hW at all the respectable Drug Stores in the - United Status 8.1 Caussils. Ala., for solo by We isobt propittotora, NAMING 88.08., Itodeossono to J. Kidd .11. 60 Wood Waved. nov4kdaw Thie la the itemerlysloll.SN'S INVIOO. ILATING ELIXIR UK CUlttllAL—lf there be "a oriental providence in the tall el a eparrow," an In there also in the plucking of an herb. What now would be the condition of thousands, it Dr. Morse, in his oriental wandei legs, had not discovered the phut which give:. to his isonforating Eibrir or Wrdud, ito extraordinary potency in functional diseases? Lie found the {mann:Lion growing and in We among a race remarkable for longevity Anti tor exemption from the tiarrionting 7 dbwines of civilized life. le made many inquiries as to the effect produced by Ilia itte - rlb and the replies minvinced him that it posseaded restorative and vitalizing properties heretofore unheard of, except in fable. Having ooncentrated the jaunt Gl' the plant, and combined It with other vegetable extra!lti . 3, he comm.:mod experi menting with the compound th.ionn hitnolU and other.. Finally, be presented to the watt the Invigorating lillolr ; and what is all his fan, as i! philosopher and traveler, compared with that which he uerive from the intro duction of this rejuvenating ItrApstaLiOn? Age and de crepilude loot new life barrigft iritbin them, under the !Minuses , of this unrivalled eishilarant. The trembling, 'halting, despairing, strengthless vial ims of nervous disease is enabled to throv.ofr the incubus that was pressing him to the earth; the dyspeptic patient heels his appetite re turn, ind the power of digest:len with it; and woman, suf fering, under the tortures of hysteria, or any of the debilita. ling vomplaints or disabililles wlahla belong to her sexually, experiences iu every fibre of her shattered system the restorative effects of this peerless remedy. The Cordial is put up, 1,14h1y conoentrated, in plot bo Priee time dollars lam bottle; two for Pre dollars ail for twelve dollars. C. 11. JUNO, Proprietor, 14. Drowiway, New York. hold by Druniets throughout the United States, Canada and the West Indies. AGENTS. FLEIIING 111t0.4., No. 60 Wodl street,burgh. Dl t. GEO. U. KEYSEIL, N 0.140 Wocid do It. E. SELLERS A 60, No. Si Wood streot. J. P. FLEW tN G. A Iledheur City. /a-Palpitation of the Heart, Nervous Die. eases, Liver C,ompbint, Neuralgia., Dyspeptia, Costiveness and Piles, ere all relieved sad cured in an incredible short space of time, by Carter's Spanish Mixture, the great tonic and purifier of the blood. It contains not n particle of Mercury, Opium, or any 1201.100.3 drlig t It is perfectly berm. leas, and has cured more than live hundred eases of disease. We can only refer the rester to the certificates, a few of which may be found in another column, and all of which are detailed in full around the bottle. It is the greatest of all hpring and Fall Medicines, and rweeewee an influence over the blood trulirenteshalde. Fee advertisement: oct3l.lna air. To nil Wallas it any want a splendid fitting Solt you can get it at GBIBBLWB. If you wont any ateltallitaell Striating Goode, in all variety; why GRIBBLE'his 'ren. If you want the bog .fitting Pante you ever wore. GRIBBLEII is the plate to leave your measure. He wen itrrat. Umbrellas, Carpet - Bags, 'Trona, Whew, an, at prkee to omit all sorts of 240 Llberty*.....t, bead . of Weed. 0006 • B. mums. - IMI=I - - A SUMMER RAMBLE ." Pwrossakowitly LowistoolL 66 1 TILL VIA! 0011111V—I1 ?ON illillini --- I t u n Writing and Book- .. Ammer. lye A CAR U .--U ,.. . ..- ...... .1 FlTt'it, of New j dal " nation, lehyette Toot, would swim..., to the ,o i, . - i - —vs ProCIMILLAR a 880. tooth, tom. who to Pennsylvania that he le at mesh,. ali,v. 3, 4 , 4. I interline" M nail and ww ova Lioaro =oda in lACTURSS AT FITT-aII:MU 11, where be .., . t ... . ,:.I willing by thslir plis hi this Ali. - ~.. December 38th, during which period be m..) 1., ...it -t inrUeomr ettentl le pow*, the Bee daily, at his , rooms at the City Hotel, censer ut 1...., ....d ouch b theta dlstimiabwiTnareeser, 111= Ig H= Smithfield streets, for ~cti Ir- delletwil deity . • PULMONARY coNsumpT , , ..".. warranted. 14,e4 from 8 .t. ill 1010 P. lf.„ their. 1 . ' ASTHMA, CHRONIC BRONCHITIS, . , bit. 1 ,04 I,lt.opp tiers for young mars whom booboo, DYdPvvstA, YEKAza HHINASZS r win ism illti Atli Of their ureesinm, desisigline day, to remilre and ail others oternected with or prediepoing teCenersitie thole ',ion et night. ___, novAl Hon, in the treatment of which his ample extreme:* and unrivalled opportunity for obeervation hare gnat him the moot marked game.. Or. Fitch Metres to see his patients personally, In every intense, where it Is possible; where it is not, a =rein' statement of the case may be sent by letter, to which a prompt reply will be returned, giving his opinion of the cane, and when he is willing to Midertaao the treatment; will state the expel. of the remedies requisite. freaslaw SPF.CTAT., NOTICES. ffs Pittsburgh and hate Railroad o is hereby given to the Stockholders or the Pitts burgh and Rrie Railroad Company, that an election will be held at Weet Greenville, Mercer county, Pa., on the FIRST MONDAY OF DRCERSER, et it o'clock. A. M., for Direc tors to serve for the coming year. nur 10 TltuaLkil J. ROWRR, President. Life, Fire an Marine lasurazwe Company; OFFICE 66 FIFTH STREET, DI &SONIC HALL, PIT AS 8. BOON, TSBURGH, PA. JAM President. Cntaus A. Carom, Secretary. This Company mates every insurance appertaining to or connected with IJ_Fit RISKS. Afro, against hull and Cane Rieee on the 01 %1 M-1. edscippl rivers nod tributaries, arid Marine Risks rally. And agaimit LOU and Damage by Fire, and against the Portly of the Mao and Inland Navigation and Transportation. Policies Issued at the lowest rates consirhant with safety to all wile. James fi. noon, Pacounl 2d'Clarkan, William Phillips, John Scott, Joseph P. Oamam, )f. D., John Welpirt, Wm. F. Johnston, • James Marshall, George &Belden, my2Jx.ly /ETNA INSURANCE COMPANY, HARTFORD, CONN. ..._ 3 Chartered 14ljg—capital stock 5'00, 000 % THUS. K. BRACK, Peaklent. THOS. A. ALEXANDRE, Setretary. DRECTORS— Thome K. 1471014 Samuel Tudor E be rteser Rower, Ward Woodbri dge, Y. A.Balkeley, Joseph Church, Roland Nether, Frederick Tyler, Edwin G. Ripley, Robert Buell, Samuel S. Wall, Dales A-Tuttle, Remy Z. Prad,' John L. Boswell, Amide Dunham, Gustavus P. Darla, Junius /3.lktmgart. Alp Policies or Eire and tabard Maks lamed on Wore. ble Lerma, by . GEORGE IL ARNOLD, Ai% deally No. 74 fourth street, Pittabellth ifs CITIZICISS , immix - ranee Cosaiii . g Pittsbaxgh.—H. D. KING, President; .eAN. DEL L. .0 alt,' kg tet. , Secretary. Off.: 94 WM, Slrret,tonance Nerrkel and Wooddreds. Insures BULL and CARGO Risks, on the Ohio and Kind& nivel Riven and tributaries. Insures agentet Loa, or Demme by Era ALSO—Against the NAIR Of the Pea, and Inland Neville. fionand Tranaportathn. KUM= Wm.Larimajr., Samuel ht. Kim William Sighs, John S. Dilworth, Primate Wien, J. Schoonmakirr, William B. Hair. amt. • dec2ll H. D. King, Willinnt Bagman), Samuel lion, HobertDenisp,jr., lan= M. Pennock, 8. klarbsugh, Walter Bryant, John SW WASEOVIATIaII Firemen's 1.1111111121111C0 Company of the City of Pittsburgh. J. rt. MUOitlietAD. Peeddent—BOßEßT FUNNY, Bettie t.ry. Will insure against FIRE and MARINE RIM of all tirade. 'Office: ho. 99 Water street. OIJE .1. K. Moorbasg, DISOCR W. J. Anderson, IL C. Sawyer, IL B. Simpson, Wm. K. lidkvir, 11. B. Wilkins, C. IL Paulson, William CollingwOod, K. It Roberts, John M. Irwin, Jump Kaye, Wm. Wilkinson, David CarapimlL jal2 A LARGE LOT FOR-SALE. Ll': l tn'trri ajPUir 2th llA..,?feg,attt=bourti ' l be .old on rueonable term.. It is nee Bakuel A On.'. new glue works, and searal other =nderlining 'dab. lisitmente. It is the largest and Gat lot ntm to be bed to Birmingbas for manutectruing - purposes. YIP* perfect, and dear of incembreare. inquire of - a B. IL SMITH, at his Lew Dila, jsZli Fourth street, above Smithfield, Pittsburgh. Weiterti Pexnsylvuala Hospital.— bits Dee. L. tiCLIMCC, &coed, between Wciod and Market ncreeta, and J. Rao, North-eut corner of Diamond, Alia giony oty, err the attending Phyekkans to the above NM4 totion, for the Bret quarter of 1061. petiolate... for edmirston may be made to theater all bourn et their akas or at '..he Hospital at 2 o'clock, P.M. Recent cues of accidental injury are received at all bone, without forte. ie. C. 1 SAGICH, 410 MARKET street, Fitts. burgh, Importer and 'Wholesale Dealer to FANCY Al) STAPLE VARIETY AND DRY GOODS, offere to city eat country dotterel ets large and-well selected Mock of sus Butern house, nod same prime, Ulna paving might, time end expenews. ME3I f .i. : o -..11. O. O. le.—Piace of meeting, Washington Hall, Wood street, between Filth street and Virgin alley. eressumn.o Lows. Pi 0..3315-.-Msets every Tnesdayetrening. MELCMSTILs ItiNCLMIIIILIT, ho. Si—Meets nest and third Friday 0! each month. inntr2kly r•t i.. - Wt Di atice.,- , .The JOILKNISYM.F.N TPLORS go MTV, of .11thnurgh sod Allegheny, meets on the nr,t WF.ItNE.t+DAY of every month, at tiOIIOCULLITILICa, 'u the insmnnti. By miler. asp. W. SZESS, Stlettiteer 1. W IIIMSELL " -- L t' • teener of Peal TILLY; IL A. U.—Poi are *Leahy notified to at e- altyottr Amory, on MONDAY'S, WEDNIL4 !Void alid FILIDATIL l r arm, amt to tralliitt moth bud. a... may come :Afore the Company. P. KAN It, ruar29 - .11.1 Becretary pro Ona. DIED. n peace, at the reeiderme of the R. L. O. LiSly, Tamps., ~ November Atlas ANNA J. DONXXLLY, of t.horgh, pa., aged 19 years. When blooming youlh to snatched away, - By death's mambos hand; Our hearts the mournful tribute pay, Which pity most demand. `Tampa Herald. NSW ADVERTIZEIMM3 Lecture....Yousa KW. Enema= Lomax Uri ADD ilowAxwst Ixannuria—GEOßON W. CIIKTIN, KN., of New York, will Lecture on next MONDAY EVE NING, December 4th, at MASONIC MALL. PC - 11.1 ler-- Succe.u. Mr. Curtis is the well known author of "The Potlphar Papers," lloweidje," "Lotus Eating," de. Doors open at 6.4 o'clock; Lecture to wwwerxe at 134 oclock. Tickets of admission 25 cents; to be had M the principal Music and Book Store., lioteLs, Library Boom, Lecture Committee, and at the door.- Jowl N. KITIKPATRICK, ELIAS' 11. IRISH, JAMES B. lIOLMIO, WM. 11. KINCAID, HENRY WOODS, - deed Lecture Committee. tcrFranklin yawns Fund and Loan Asmoallation, Ornery No. tt7 FRONT STRAIT. D6CDULIt Day—MONDAY. Notes offered on SATURDAY to the Secretary, at the atom of Joan R. Mellor, No. 81 Wood .tree[. Weekly Dues received at the mime time and Niece. [decirStml J. WHITTLER, Secretary. Statement. MILE Commissioners appoleted by Act of Assembly to I oroot buildings for the support and snaintslnance of th Nor of Allegheny county, respectfully submit theibl lowing statement: Commissioners purchased the , Fl3lll of Jeremiah Druals ry, situated to Beath Fayette township, and ochtalning acres, at $9O per sere -leas $4OO. ALLEGHENY COUNTY, DR.. To price of Farm,2os scree at 590 per acraslB,4so 400- V:8,060 00 J. A A. Patterson, for Wiling per contract__ 23,26 e 00 Famishing Poor House with furniturii....- 2 4 350 113 J. W. Kerr, Architect- ..... -.....- ..... ...... 160 00 Maintaining and clothing ..... 1,100 56 • ltobert Woods, Heq„ comae( bee 40 00 Meat, Old & Co., for lead pipe 412 60 Sundry miscellaneous expenses.- Commimionere' fees and expennes....._ 1853. CONTRA. CR. May '2.l—By ash PAS Dunlayy ou acc1.45,000 00 18.54. May '23— " of Dunlary for carp of farm 600 00110,125 60 Nor..l—By cub 01J. • A. Patters= per eon• tract - - • - - 53,31511 00 Hills forfurnishing J. W. Ken, Architect..—.... Maintaining and clothing !ann 1,155 55 Woo,ll Emu, counsel lees- 40 00 '• Kettle, Ol Co., tor lead pipe 61280 " Sundry miscelleneorm exp's- 003 50 Oom're Sees end expenses.— 2,297 22 Balance due Ottawa on Farm 7,924 44 $48,826 41 The tax of three - mills amassed on the county in 18611, ruined the nett sum of $.34,300 99, and presuming that the three mill tax levied for theiter 1864 will raise a like sum of $84,360 99, makingin all 488,721 98, will leave a balsam is favor of the county of 420,098 57--aftar paying halauce on farm. All of which Is respectfully inabmitted. CHRISTIAN SHIVELY, JOHN OLLFILLIN, JR., Committee to audit Poor Howe account IN TUE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STAINS for the Wo.tern District of Pennsylvania: JOIINIiIELIT TS. Steamboat James Outhrin In Admiralty. . - - To aU persons interested: Take notice, that by virtue of an attachment issued oat of the District Court of the United States for the Western Dtstrict of Pennsylvania, dated the 2Jth day of November, A. D. 1854, and to me di. rectssi, I attached the Steamboat "Active," now lying at the wharf of the city of Pittsburgh, to a pleaded et ass: Wiese, wherein John Mcllahey is libellant, and the owners mai Master of the said Steamboat "Jamea Outtuie" are respond ents, and that the Court have appointed the firramorti nar or Decennia eau as the time of hearing of acid attachment. deal WESLEY FROST, Martha A Bargain THZ eubectiber, Intending to retire from brudnems, able ilia stock of GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, &e., for Bale at a liberal discount. Persons indebted to him are request ed to make payment, and thoahaving claims against idea to prepeot them for eettlement. JOSEPH MAJOR, November 30th, 11154-0nel:1w No. 4 Market et. /INGE STUCK, FIXTURES AND GOOD WILL of a Book store and Pedaling Offlos, in a good location, and new doing a fair bunions, for sale on easy terms. This la a rare chance fora young non of amail capital. Apply today of B. CUTIIBEWf t BON, decl N 0.140 Thini street. OLD REDSTONE, or Itietorkal Sketches of Western Pre b y , A , e i e eism ; its Early Minister, its Perilous nines, aDI Its First Records: by Joseph thalth, D. D.; price $1,76. For sale by JOHN S. DAVISON, deel 65 Market street, DMZ Fourth. GBRAT WORK ON INFIDELITY —PRIZE MEAT: Its Aspects, Causes and Agencies; cheap ed. from the fortieth ("40") London edition, by Pearson; O mots. For sale by JOHN IL DAVISON, deal 66 Market street, near Fourth. FAMISH PNALMODY—For sale by • JOHN EL DAVISON, deel OS Market street, near Fourth. Q Seel Cll.ooL .1300811—Wor We by JOTIN 8. DA - VLSON S° rIUMAIINGEr WORKS—Fur sate by decl JOHN S. DAVISON. WILLIBODPS CATECHIPM-051y 25 cents; for ad. by decl JOHN B. DAMON. FrprEEN craiTa—Jlerpwell /IdlW , Min., for Deco s er price /5 cent& Pm eale by RAUH= 00, dog at Paalt2o44, WM. 11111 AGAZINSB.—Paper's Mai mine, Be December; ID rents. Putnam'. Di:garble, for December; 9D aunts. Dod,y's Ilagartee, for December 90 ores; new emptily. Orabaut's Baguette, fee Decemb er; ID cent.. . • Peteren'. Mentrine, for December; 17 cents; n ow surPlY Blackwood'. Itiscartne, for Iferember; 96 ante. Brother Jonathan, for Christmas end New Year. Joet received by express at =Una Mee of LAMINA No. BT Weed street. AISPARII MAGAZIN II POY Dl6llllMalr-4minnrs: Virginla Illustrated: Nopolean Bonaparte; no Alli gator f Bon Juan De Niesurapla; The Ninreontors; A Bur don itendobstance; Um sod 011 n; Mt Balßtlit Drabs; What do Young Men Marry; Adams Iltionet's B.Ws; 16^ntb ly Record of Ourrost Events; Idiom% Table, eta Price lb cent. Jost readved and f A. or sale by W. GILIBINIMINNNY A 00., No. 76 Pewit' street. Tax RUMEDY FIXI TifTESlPlB4lll7l3,prepared by Dr. T Cook, bar been suconedel in • number of onion It is • core cure if used according to directions. It credos a nausea and dislike to liquor, and can be dirribrideired se cretly If desinaL There are persons in this dry who have been cured of their desire lbr strong drink by daddy. Prior $1 per bottle. hold by B. L. OtrITLEIRKT. nov3o l4O Third street. - - VODDSK (XTMU-40 of the orlebratret Maher Oule r tern, Ibr hand end hone • • or. n0v.30 Er AY PRESS.—Peerinem liorlsomal LOW. Pres s lot sale by tem% JAI( WANDHOP, Itfdistreet. Junes D. krGill, Ale:andel' Bradley, John Fullerton, Robert Galway, dhuander Reynolds, 'Ann. stnmg County, Rondo N. Lea, Kida Rini D GPuol lowa. CIORN 1111.11LUMB--26 Iscipeorsd.WartianghearOulad sad.horse power. ncerllo . JANIS WARDBAP, Muth Zest- T - NLOWEL hOOTS.-Elyeedothe. 0100111, U.. The r Wore of my hock of Patch Marva Boots, fix epeing or sinter blaming to glares; tor ode st cost nor - JA - 11.18 WABDROP, Illth street CZ ILK MOHAIR lIKAD DORAHIia--Just mein& Imp sisortsula of now &ll* isshioaable Hod Dram. novBo A. A. MAKIN & Oa. wOOLIN BRAWLB—.I sat ratedvad now than 1,101 Windom, Long and &pars Shawls; Itmph• Maw, Bay State, W tut footett, k - nov3o A. A. misox t 00. wOOLIKN FLANNYLS —Milts, seiniet and yellow plain end twilled Memel; to immense now3o ' A. .L=N A CO. - . , .„,.. INOII NH-20,000 yards, ecouprbing mon $b 1.40 dermal soles of fart colored Ologiounkjast n• raved. sort* A. A. ILIISON s 00. P AMON. hIWAT—A saposior pa up In 6 lb jars,jart remind try nov3o W. 1 1313L820. A. MILD ATOM ma nxirsikr. saidnigaarraat., at -1!17.23; Lemon kw* AA, to mais by ., A OLL BIITTNE-20 bozos exam roll this d* wished Elio by ralksed,Varl hr oak by • • • nov3o EMIT OULLINIL YW lelT.—Just readral by Adams t oo.'t krprmw, from New York, a laarrgges lot of A.G. Begley k oel norated Gold Pens, anknowi.dp4 by .11 to be the beat Pena tondo in the oat:Nary. Among the blare unions now styles of Gold and ether Cam. All .ho wont a good and chomp Pen, awl booldm warranted, mil itxm at BOLL B. LAIIIIPIRII, 87 Wood drat. TTILBINSEURIIII PROPERTY FOR tlfrlth.—Owe and • qparteworerew, with a comfortable Dwethag of live rooms and cellar; a Frame lamp ; good We= Pomp; a large Stable, ke. This Property hos a front of 99 fat on the turnpike by 484 to a street, also 284 Bet on another Area, and would &Ode well for boildlag lo6. Price, poo. Terms, $llO In tap& the remitedor at one mid two years. 8. CUTHBERT & 8011, et or2l 110 Thial street W. D. ilavoia. TBE OLD PRINTING lIITABITABANNS, (lots John ston & litoeittao.) otol Blank Book sod t iw ort= It pretend to ozoonto ovary style or Osnal sad Btoraboat lottPrixdieg ant kiwi Bladiag, sod fond& every tirade ha do Blank Book, Paper on& Stationery Dao. ot the tbtfted Ded`• I '4 . 011 tesoosablo tams. Blank Book and Sistkoary likadaam Printing, Mob ad Back airkry, cram, of Markat and So ett Inovls R. 411 , A. C. Donseesa, UV }NUM* GROONHES, sad Draws la Prodoss, No TV r sign Wawa uld Liquors (HI Illobslasad Huai ow Whisky, Dia ni übertii Pta.ba Pa. rw2sk7 E.E - iIIifYLIT/I,IIIA MLAALROAD FREIGHT TARIFF, Desambow Ist, 1854. ' FI RBT C LAM—Drams, Codas and Woad= Ware, Naar itimitwv, wool band, Para, Plano, Poultry Winer, is badtata or bozos: 90 coats , 91100 Ma. &rod Ciaar--Driad RIM, Sanwa; Dos Ebbe., drys, and Timothy Mal, Glantarare, Hardware, lap, Wool and Stump Nita, Eggs sod leather: 15 cants 11100 Ma. This-1-Ciau—!Loon and Pork (loony ) Eutaw, %island, kap or bbl., Hemp, Hides, Soap, WlndOw Glass, and OA; tow=omprossed: 63 cents 11100 U. 611.0—Alcoboi, =c a mas as bora%) Bark, and Malt, Deaf and Port - , Mow, lard and lard 011,WIda17, Cotton (corapreased,) Tobacco, 33 cents 31 100 Iba. Ylour, $1 Plit bblr OWN= 0.11 ht UNCLI3OI9, Frig • pet. 'and Macbant, and Irwin eta, Pittibutsk. 1,91817 MANINAOTUTUREIIB 07 CIIIISON FURNACE* AITICOODUS DION TUBING, sal Wing vnerally, tot 7V warming and rentilstion of bulb:Dogs. A. I 17. trill miaow:l for warming and ventilating, by shwa or hot voter pipes, or Cblhoo'o Pomace; Churches, School; Hob. netorioe, Green Hooset,Court Houses, Jaroo,Hotols or Dwelling. No. so Market at., Pittsburgh. Notine—Steamer Navigator. ALL PERSONS bevies aommuts against the steamer NAVIGATOR. are hereby notified to Dave them, pro perly made out lad anthentkated, for oettleseent, at the Rost Stara of Long k Duff, Water street, near Market. rtoeWat WILLIAM O. HARRY. pLITNAII, FOR 14011811)11R—Oestnin r. Portrait of env tributary author of .Ilomehead Journal; . the Wind. harp; Ant Wledierseberr; Palinode; Omit Btelingt; the Art of rating; Israel Potter; rambles over the Realms of Tarte and Babodantives ; In the lane; Amur= Wines.; Llrtng in the Country; Forty Days Ince Western Hotel; To my lieclalrm Oar Parties and Polities—a lboa th erneds Visor of the S ubject; =bottom's ripselaelia; Plra Msesha. um's BM; Power's Greek Nave; See; Itlitodel Notes, list Jost received and fir sale by W. A.-O, nov2B A VALUABLY KEDICINE—Dr. Lament's Juno Olorthal tR. or Prcoreattre 8188, a certain remedy la sll mess of Impotency banmmess, sod all disease. arising feem debili tation of the sperm, where an impulse or n restoratila 1 0 required. Ree given to perms who bawl Rawl th Cordial with para.. soccer. It !Ir m a , * ada% and , sigetr—s3,oo pit bottle. Beware of .h The ipesE- Me can only be obtained at Ila IRS Weide , Smithfield. Said, whoissale and rem% by narZ3 C. L. CUTHBERT, ISO IV- - ..1 street ORN POTASH-4 costs retTW imp" rdZsfi P. . by met, recelmd rurr2B corner a On .. a nd. Market Amato A idaNDINII-791. bat, hands. *a; r 4 vr - w 7. in nil, t". • noTA ....tved by _TOR. MEI IiONII dramas,. =_-_..- A same en . eeiTetby Day,2Bl ____ _ ___ Arla ar :___ 15 COUGH BYRUP— r of the vexy best Onni ."%gediee now in we; o lugs meaner band et _ lO 7 :4213 YLBIONEYS; HOULDBII. 1311.1113111, ISUPPOETZIUS, hu—l have ir k, ailed a large supply at the above ardales; those On want of • good antale, and cheap, um &hug.= in.; timd. at [ncrllN JOIS. l i kAD-477 pigs Galena Lead, received LW" .. and 1., 6/ AEAINCE. If OM Y. EATON, No. le Sixth street, agent for ..IEL and buying PATENT REHM is now antboar a isd lb ro soli the folkwlng lately palmated articles r ; Trout paint 011 Globs, Ite Steam Engles.; Dean's Rock Milling ligarldncs; - Coe's Want Drill, for Drilling - Copeland's Stationary and Porta licon bh Saw billtc Cracrford'a Steam and Water Chugs'; and, Orillith's Wrought Don Railroad Chair Nachinaa. These arthles hays been exeratead by practical and machinists, and promucoad suptrior to any In n o. He la abo.authorhod to mil Bights to sake and tad the articles in any part albs country. 1 He has also for Nan balanced Naas and Weasec, slut 'finished Ream Work. ' / He to also to talcs Agendas Or the pole a caw patented B to and new Invondona, and giro to the ha id new Slithfal and constant attantku. 1 R lie s refs to the lollowlio& RD. 4 1. 826 u The substages* luxe lmg teen acquainted with 1111 r. Moses 7. Eaton, and hays no hentatkin In rusiwomoninis g him, to all who may wish to anploy his melees, as a 0 A tleman of untknabtod Intopity and Indoltdindde bolitiata, In whom ezettions own 7 »bum any be *NIL Novato B. Midi, W. tobbnoa, Jr-, Wm. Latimer Jr., John enamels .s.. . . W. H. Denny; H. all& 4 On, James Wood, L. IL N. Hohnes a Sons, • P. R. Prised, - Stamm 4 Whim, P lit=rade, Willhust=ne, William Phillips, dwirew Mutton. wemed i Prnsomton, November 27th, Md. Hawse 8 • lidelialr. TrliLundersigned bring susemdel to tke beard of eers. Ralph and John J and kora • if next door to the Livery Stable of IL . Patteresnor mood atr, et, near Grout, is prepared to do the work d HOINSIOSHOSING, to the brit rums/ aud with tha d moat promptitude. Having hod large inidneur In ui • tourer and pomemiog a thorough knowledge of t a te r s tore and ehararker of the foot, end an luthnate t are with the draw of IL be Mu addklence in hie y to give satisfaction to all corer air Obeene—the Shop to sent door to the Lheei Mehl et of Robert B. Yattenon. Dkin=d amt. nonrated to pram autinnen. nor27:dlat W. S. JACKSON.. ~ ~ q ~~~ .'~ t `, ~ 4T4... .Y. ~, MEE ebole• 'wisdom thlB-dor reabed by - HENRY IL OULLINR. vri -• No. 76 ibtorth apoot. Voter'lump' Bargee's. ax enterriber being thoroughly acquainted with ai I diseases incident to the Mna, iespectially cders Ig to services as a VATIOLLYMY 011110 NON, to all who y have oceadon far them. He may be found at We Shopl Diamond sheet, , near Client, next door to IL H. Potterer, 's Livery Stable. DareiffillnO W. & JAMISON. Second Eland PilaillOS. . 09" FIVE SECOND HAND FLAMM, Mr as 1.• at very reduced prime, rht: I One Emewood, 6 oetereozade by Sale it Savory New York, nearly new. o t One bandemee Idebeiproy, 6 octave, made by Dank A Mambas. j , One klabogray, 6 *entre, made by &Wart, Worcester rk One Basswood, 6 octave, node by Modart, wady now. I One Mahogany, 6 octavo, made by F. Blunt. One Basswood, 6 octavo, mods by INtiduchgt, athmt year. old. • ma above will be wild Mu mob ady, at very low plow A new lot of Clakketingh Piano, will be toodval by Mc tn. day, the 19th that. Por Ws by JOHN H. MALLON, norlo 81 Wood atteet. Unonanboat rearmlmre awl MudsSe WE ore eanutemAtir ologood U nunateetars of -MAJIBOAT Qua =Anis ind 1131111=111, of iron 6.niption,ondEpoettealsr atteolkea to the mannAletote of the best Of =Any lb, of Btounhoan. On 'newton* in Womb of the beat. sem =eines us to war nun ustialeetlen, es well with tbpo prone:node to which adore moaned, an in the owl*, cot nen pommel atteenten /pen to /be M m ims i. rlO 3 4 1' ,1 ntatated landshigg At" wilt IMO 11 to tin* sanation iv giro Is WM& • VW A!:.*. ~' ~ k .X t-- =r- ~ ,::::f:, -;,r '- . .'_ "'..i.N.•if.,l:i. Effi ~,,...., - - - 1, 1111114, lams [WlLdiumm-ittli anat. leore breal-bilew lidafta-Parassad Propene rue;raltato bow, leap, ar bk &Lim IMEA $ ll 4 &kat lierAlleM befit ibr reliend= am, 10s. Peerale, es= Sidi will be earbresteski eirdeesta - Dooreepea st Matellnert =l"to etwasinee et TA erelelag. .10, will tz li Mardtl a gjaa r = of Chi 0013Wr 1101(Tt Merles Postal Mem* laiter.-:-.la telsaweel, tbr me& 'mob Pk/ " "wawa; as wee:teed la Pule et bar tboties cm th e sane - • • CL MitAtnin, barbs arri Oa 07, WO JJ.atatbal arinforanas las M ae Vat& _aid MOO Oat is On_ boa ilk DLNCf3U AIUDIOIT &Oat OdUbibli w i ta.n6PIM6 ahas, at NE I 9 atilidah nor &TM - 1 1=1 tels aligalo 'arca ihsets& emahmicefttrine., akinottik ibe. His tar& win be k moo lent aids Ono abar is woo &pear atin toff *IF tad hoodild dames boar balm intratheed bide rig.; lad& aa&Chilareml staal &Oar dsei, at 3 &la*, P. ,&iso bar &h. Oasts: daaa, &Way sad &anal aiii&Or at 1 34 o'clock. The alms ow Ilbradag Iv AllObsay dam, win mg at POWs& &Boa natarday, navarabar Oftott 3 Ono*, Wz. .=;* bs ask it Aids' iffisti4 Zia* aa Market Moat, above &La, ca Naas" Wadarderre sal Rio" froar9 &b at, A. .1f 12 dabdtomao and Om 2 tab oxeledr, Alach, at limas& Han. Allastray airy, aa Tasabaos, ThataWli / 3 " 33 d#P0 1 al ' s*" hours.sovl4 gY. Lowers ef Dansadadi At00d1..44. stand ' NANCY MUM MILL will b. - shun by 7id.111 ULNA% on YIISDAT k11213N0, Norazater kiak as Wrlb. GALL. laded= TO ends, kw Gat mod lady; Gent. abano $l. Two Mon win b awaldad to tka ban Janet and Code. hoses& Mohan aan bib ensared at B. Y. Oars* .1t oo.'s Do g onssas Woos, No. TS ozwator at tam door of ha 1411. Nub by hank Cargo's Band. monk Lend for Sole: 18(X)LORIS or LAND IN num couirs' libel:button rteeL lila land Lbw* timbensa., bag an entellent aollvead ia.eid tooontaln anabeuteme two ore, and. thka vein of blldadanos ea& lie-Ifenan• sgo .oed.orldelt will undoubtedly be buil= iintre:7 rto It, If not directly moo It. Thu 1, 1 0, tom through It. ALSO,ieesatseb cointy,wark thaberelan, mad Wog soar the mate oh be 131nbari and Ma Whoa& No better bmntnient andd be nimbi toms them Nada The entapkition of the Sunbury and My** AliebbW Valley, end the Yanango raneoada time* that rerkin Ida reader the teal, bunber, hen are and Nog. at at false_ noqulre of O.E.M. ANortayit Lew, itidlbeeiadf No. la North east. Oremberg ivideoce; . Whaztou's Digest, hue 44 • - And other Revert; amintOwy Works, ie. 4120. t. aaamozw 44 at abeam of ilandog Pat. flll7Pllll .rr iZllUl 7l lrl . . . ALM 24 hot find on WYLI t, old stardbog beet 109 lotto Wids olloy. Oat 1 bna girt of goo Lot bas Odlor Welt, boat fte two swat arum Aldo Lot Y in a dooteablo loodion in a roddanoogood ; , and sill boo odd low, and on Womble term. Tale and dreg= hoomodowoon. Enquire of 0110.7. 12 at 011 ea of Mambos POOL Lot for golo. A 43CM LOT, het front Cu °arm grist ,101. 100 test In depth, In If* be mein cheep. Enquire of CUM R. OMLIWILIL. iYII - st aloe of the Matatag Rot fl • 1 ' B 1" 'BIB IN Au.sia . •IA if. /web, A 100. A •• • • • can b• had by applying akin et Threes Houses mull Lots for Sales WlLLbe sold at prints - sate,. TIMM H 00111116.61111 LOM One Brkk HonmeiteatedooPmy - betweate fourth and Liberty* strobe; Lot SI bet heatby tack. Alm ons Lot and two Hansa% on Lope Omsk MAI Ward- One Home fronting an Logan stratcandtbtotbser on Carpentars alley; Lot 9a bet by 100. Also, the stand 1 new ammyon the carat at rim . and Water West; the lame rues reneyearedialettefs4o% 1865, with the nodally, Badding. As. Tbilsf. lol PM` ent is dabs a geed Menem, and Isplementr!deshol. For terms and farther partial:Um awake af AUX. CH ' and Wsra srati: t Go wad Soo. ,- , . 0 C►sOO takes Ira elms PICTI7IIIII et vier n.onnte loins, at_ Ida new *and wonnaditan 0•11.17,140.18 Poarth ifteattebtirgh. LW . nows eat ha theee,Loaketa, &wafting, ha, with atstateh;in the West @Weigand to lay weather foe very yonng pawns, clew weather, from 10 to 3 °Wolk ta pothered- Boom open to fil l = fins 7 o'clock, L. It, 9:1 io 'fetlock, P.M. notZt • .111 W BOGhti—Ama piddlthett madam sale by B. MN= & CO., No. 32 liwithileld street— mn Ida Nay, *Story °Misty Artist as Tamilds. ID sod Out, or Thera hum thaelthemayoerair, bl Oliver Optic. , ileartamp or TM Brothet'a Alb, by the magi of BM , of Redelyen 2 *PM ChtbDoors at Idiewild, or Ths Fhaphig ot a Hum es tye $ Oaate of - the Halm, by N. 1...W1111a. Southward Ho! by W. Gibmar. Symms, author of Ttp Scoot, M. lred.Teroom, ar me Vhthm of Muria, s *egad to Wit tam sad Mr bluter--uml&de. Wood's Natural Thtory, with 450 illtutradom& - , . Prided Th e Life, a warei,lor lady Scott. ' Tballetottial Brother Jamthan., Chrlatem. sod New 1. Year—mittel234 amts. tiodoto lady'. Book, for Deomber. Grahames litagadme, for Deatadar. Potoinneli Ilsgadaq far December. • able 47.0 land - 7!PerTl • - Iseafteartegait... /Os SALl2—Tbixtrfam arnsiat44.- 4 otarldch timUtrarbothiMoimpladar moot mytymd all MOP; Most. twurtimateittm caddraiMp.batameeift prime timing, OWE tem ma*. zed madomMa goadNetat• ling Bossy , &WM, Cora Gap da.eibout - thrma himired Fruit Trees, Of good quality, a good Gardammilag tillud Water, Ls TM ahem - Tatmfs ath. , at. the point of NM creak sad the O river,bto at Bearimelagaba Ohio. Pries 11,1100.—onuthird la lagod, Maidadar is ms nod Mumma S. °UMW= movrt Beal Notate ApeMl4o Third Amer. TRAMWAY unsni lUUNITU&B—We an eamartir 0 inanntaaturhig Fornitaza and Tanks, of "my dass-dtp--• don, saltabla br Staantast. Csbisll4 and dattar ouashas- tact we tan pkg.* both in theicamptitoda mildiarbia vs I ILI anions and thatarias anon arblekt Barr T. B. YOUIIB 01:1.,18 donlaidaid stand. friBRAYBOTIO 011d1B11—Anotier la of than earyler,r- 1.. elinlng Cheice, so enitabb for bendlda, or than Amy Mitioa Ina lounge; finished and Ihreale at the bounkof [noo7l T.-B. YOUNG 00. Dr. IPOrdlia Calltermla Lew , Ate;CESTAIN, safe andaelid reseedy k. Alio" Acidity Btemeaeli, or k -11°•••. = system in a beelthy er- ...sertlimant adl dined nat. at the bowl' And:or addlemolOg form oft:medicine to nee, nor••• n • nonrell . administered to de/leir-- -ean Untidy and wavesindly 10011101 aadahDftlaa baint, trelludi ma hi 31e • et tm. doll- deiessla andandikehf • JOUR mem. % dole agent for Dr. 8.. J. la a - Zki.l4l Wad itmetrilide. - Tee , alme Illetetteera dad Cfsimmestedtbs , Weide Pftlinbetrgb. T OMB myself se an Independent CoadidaleroMak. - DMUSS for the Tided Wolf 011ie dry of per, at the ananins_eketioniinJonnaz7.lBll4. Haring in the TWA Wad fer the la/Jain pony lead in Pittsburgh from my boyhood, a pedal of fifty-two years, themetem I _ would met empeetially ndictt the .a/ages of my 041.0- • Anthdlo. he.as nnaing election for Alderman. meld 010.1101VAITION. rural tar U. ANTON..iimor A • ra ' to mune ids talohiag on tha Ist of August, tot • tra• fortunately taken m at Inma i Tts. ll l! WILL Beeisable to reach the atty for nose days. ~moan will be Or. _ to idejap H. ST ila of his arrtraL Ingo:trio maybe nada ar. f AILIM cWL MILOS FIIIMITORM of 0007 Ofisoiption, on r band sod mods to order, of the toot nottorintsproOtit• swab* taov27l T. B. YOUNG .11 CO. Nipuprnio PAP.IOI-140 moo Manz Swim. rare; 140 rem= 11114114.04Y444w Y 4 4 ,44, 1104 44.Y 400114,44 by t. EMILY H. COLLINS. MO OuiLDIAL, OA • •• 1.1.371:111.;-41.es. tala reselly la all team of weakatee Wein eat tortsrasir:MCV: 11%* be dashed at No. 140 Ilbted Atom - novl6 000 D BUILDLNO LOT, as Ili, Washington, lie 11. trout by MO deep to a aids *Dry; valet $ll6O. pa la bead, betaate at Dar jrearly f 3. 411301!, No. Winded abase. TIGABILIIMI-6 6 MASON t CU. invite Wog= to KI their superior satorttnent of Blanket;of more th an 600 pairs of th e dillerene trades, lll 2l =a o 3 0 Per anti. lass then Hat riatram-lOS Woo prime Otesa Moss ibrata i. C Twrie SMITH LARD -11Y3 bale far sok by nevl6 IaNCLOSIL barlbraide s a a " ' SVIYI. - - OLNDLYS-74 bars ILAN sa&VI Csedles; ad= KING & " ' Jung A BOOBS ABED LAMS 1010445W0 ' 11 Woolosirsoko Mm. entoisiogibsseussess i rod • Isitzboa, with Lot 80 hot hoot by 140 deo% sitaatel i ea Ory's Had, South Pittsburgh, fro which Ur oboe low ; Trim is mks& This is n good dorm ibr pesos. of soul! mom to promo a Douro of their own. Yes Ea by . 15. MIME= & SON - nos2o Haul Lasts Aguas, No: 10 Tbiol ast- Sere - It 18—/iir 1855; fiME GMAT rake dolabloabeet mono& :TONA- L TEL&B, for Christmas and *cr. You, a fanr ready sad far ads by MNISB. At CO. Now, boys aad~try, bars al rare fan—ftal from New York, fan from - faa from at part• of tbs warbi. nor* Blew Paper Haas NO. SO - 4 NUNS PRINCE AND AMERICAN PARLOR PAPER; I' Pend Deeerstiow, la gad, oak and marble; Hal Papas, of warm Arse: Pled sad Plan Popes, far dialogue:sr sad eheiaberel Cheap knr pried Well Pawn; Borders, Ceillap, Mores, Melo. Medea A larde sad 'Couplets sewitossot of the, abow, eekildsd fer the essos, will be sold a the real kne pious oet3 mALIER P. Ida lower r ACOMIC, OIL, YOB DiA/Nl2lB—Dr. Larnelfile NEI, is - the wont auto of Tissfutes, larmiahly given raid la seem where the seam to *manually tiowbiel with noises, monads like the falDng of water, and the of Insects, this ON will glee homedhitesod effect a sure. Child= or adults, habitually troubled with serashz, will lied a cure by the use of this 011.. No deaf Woe should be a day withetit IL It has cured deafness of ts many yearn y litandllqg. Moe 111 a Usk. Bold Duly, in Pitbarsb, b as a 6 & 1.. CUTIOUIRT, MTh/A street- . NA4 doo too kr..--Just eired, by &prom, lde Pb- CWol 1' . 1•..30)141T1La1t, Ire Cluisteas sad New Year—one of ;the Ina ambers ewer tweet ms It,, Point sagas of Neer =worth, *fa, LW, °lota - Rockwood, for N - London Quarterly. • Galen Ibr Detember,lo =dad . . For We at a. =es . - werrNt - No. IT Wood stmt. iLTZW BOOM—Jon rosetrod—OubDoekei at • ' IT _LI N. P. Nmetemo, *We. or The Itrotbor's W%I, by Ur weber K Nob grammes modeolebbeidbly, ler Neensber. Brea Verson. or The Viethart knees, mid *We. • • • sod be Norirri, IT J. Y. NoltL Libe la tie Oloarbege, by Yrs Needle, Iftb =play. Modal Bratbra .I=edhom, ter the Sol drys. Jilt rewired sad ler ado • W. .Lows.. mat 80. TO smut amt. ,SAINLITINIL-01 bar 111beinsts hrestheley . _ _ Riv=ME!! 2~ \~ ~~w /~ ~ ~ \ \~ ~ .:~ : 3~ °~,\ ~\~ .: . ~ /~~~» - - ~~ « ~~y~~