The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, July 11, 1866, Image 1
7 19 1 ,PAIIAV GAZETTE: : MR iy IS INe:uth:=4 Reed & Co, I. ...... swfmks • . tievoftburs t ia~ • „. .!•' , " - -WiIIYNEI3I),&Y; JaY" 11,"1866 ',. ,:...,. ,Inasa • BoWax+,* . --, .". ant .pro tem. Of the'LreilitiStrite Ceti; cation, Wei boated . -blit.: Proclamation...for . ,!. reassembling of e that•bormiytel dr ead the COllSa,- - intionnf that State , o bring it into harmony with. the nimil Government. establish impotia' lj ~insule domestic tranquility, secure . blessings of.. liberty to all alike, aid r estor e the State 'to a . proper and - pennan t, -.position in the Union, with ample guarantees against any fartheidistruieuicee. 'Also With a - view to the ratification, by the State, of the proposed amendments to the Constitution in the shortest tinie nnicticable. ,Governor WELLS • invited the movement , ami. it is expected lie will issue writs for election to fill vacan cies. The supporters of President JOB:NOON in Louisiana. are highly indignant hermit, and protest thc.eonVention his expended its authority, and has no right again to con vene. .BENATOR COWAN. in conversaVon, a few days ago, with a distinguished and true Republican of this State, did not hesitate to declare it wai lila intention to oppose Gen. Orrsarr and do ail he could to insure his do lma: We faidio doubt, months ago, where the ntamL Mr. COWAN was leading, would bring up. Fortunately, he has so deported himself, lie has the road pretty much to himself. Few Republicans are inclined to follow him into the Democratic camp. AT PILILADIMPMA p society has been formed for the care and cure of. the inteut. Deride: The plan enibraceir - the' erection of cottages to be furnished at low rates to the families of intemperate men, and a hospital for the medical and moral treat :meet of inebriates. - Thiee hundred thous and dollars are required to complete the prOgramme, but operations will be cum =deed when fifty thousand shall be ob tained. . • AT Salem, Illinois, on the. ; lthinst., Gen erals Shqman and Logan were : present, and General Logan, in concluding his speech, said: , was a,Whig,. but - I have great affection for you loyal Democrats, your fathers, who sent your sons to support Gen. Sherman, who, I believe, Is a Democrat. • General Sherman promptly interrupted General Logan, saying : "I never was a Democrat/ 'I only voted once in my Mb." ruou January to July of the present ,year, Y;926,870 tons Of anthracite coal were delivered at -Philadelphia, being an in crease of 1,420;823 'tons over the corres ponding montint of last year. it must be a wonderful combination - for high prices that thus seeks to overstoctithe market. SPRCIAI, \Vinslnw sooth ing syrup Las become so popular that vari oas varties ,have put out articles calling them Mrs. Winslow's. Please take notice that the MO-. iuslow of the soothing syr itpis iiot onnected with any other article. jyll:4Avr • CITY ITEMS Opera Jiouse Shoe Store Le no robbingebop. • Second to :tone GarttliioVspro. GO Fifth strtot. ' Claltdresti, Shoes AL6 (anti at the Opera House Shoe Store 110111' !Moe. do Ircents.atlhe opera House:Shoo Start 0 0 940 t 04 0 1 . 0 !! At loii - prlceliof it'd oOerdlionse Shoo Store We Adiertise Nothlus That we cannot fnlBl attire Opera 'louse boo Lab 11.,beWient Cream For the hair. It has no equal for !trembling the growth of hair. Per sale at Fulton , . Drug Store; Corner Fifth and Smithfield streets. Lefton Male, A. splendid KOSewooa. Plano, of n celebrated and .11enfinconely. no -Ssflod; -Defeo 4 very' low; Gardiner's great Boot sad tit!tio , 'tour, Zia CO k IRb street. , DOW!. 1\1," 'that Connumptlen Cannel. be Unlees yon hive used the ilev..E. A. ilinamtle GintAi •Itrinmr Fon CONSITIISTTOS, and all ilaorrakmr. Arran - none. It hoe eared the intl.:lvor/a melee; and - Wl:nay ettre.yonrs;at all events, don't despair until you have tried It. SMo ammtlbr ,PittMhurgh, Jaeopb Fleming, 84 Market Street. Sent by Mail aPrifkr-Tet S3M- 11lelling of lints Wa are nog belling off our Stock of Lien and - 13crYn* Bemilter Ilats, - nt u great reducUon, order to close out stock, which consists of faildonaldeline of Alen and goys , Straw lints, ken's line felt ilitts,lden's soya , . itio# mi. Ana wool Bate Ladles- flak tentuied and tint:rimmed, Sun lints, hesuddel Thisict who want anything In the abovi % Up%k/0 wolt ntalithcraseivne of tads op pfirtailltifffinyhtg to n supply. Wat.Ptutrao, first; Clang list and C'utillouse, No. Wood Stviet. - ' , =I Whileunder-thhnlnflaenoe of Laughing Gee, by ' PIMA . rgh Dentist. of tit roue Oxide Gas no- AThipeteh to thocitteln nett Cbonner - aka.: or,4uty AtO, stoles that a'well-known Den- Wit orrltteourgh giro Laugh lug Gun to s . speebtattennteriedWY, and took =warranted ilbertteit . riOr herßeriOnishilo tinder its lode. eneo4,whieb bee alveoli rise to mueljgoesip and atandary Gad knowing not the omits spectuo-L, VOn iris Azad upon whomiit fancies to tel tad. vetty.. A Dann eifilettrOi/s64 , 4tliere ' ii , aniii to tbniolloiiing: Ire Wench daises to woad ~.41 2341. ProroliW o Pul.ii!t 4 loo7 - 44C. - tO . PO.unwillP4 to •.hity,O . enob'henadel +Lathe abcanyieiniled In ' 4 °Piran "aßlsiii.A.:2"uner. and enter our PrOte l 4: l 4 6l ot , Rsocteted bi Annelid° with - We nngnnlSfledly 'otitiden r ideneh condect,'and - have no words to '-nipieti: our atibortaiiOtf . of a liian 'who - woad . . , beg UiliT Or, PO bag/ // Iket. it<tk et:e am 'wen out "PtOfesstoo ar:i last to 5.11 serum or _honor 1 / 4 1 a° °o4° Y ' l3 t o : b° iC/9 tr: of Lb° .00,0 . .abarge,wo 2/ 4 14, reakm wb7 tille.Yenbeld . their crime, at or laom, , 0r51 , 16 "uakii;!thtire.tyro we high all to unow that tbo olio° whore dam outrollo w.o, * cow. -. .mined Wig gWr 2 - 4 it on?ogee, 20 Fenn etreet; . , SILL a Gussers.e. i .. , ,;.?-14 , 644ifia l or:Dielieastarecinialitatlepit , .. '..--!., 4 firatlincOrtaln health are, strenuously advised' . ..j . :,.: 5-• 1 491-m*4ml/de the lii,llitiOLlS and tisalankprega'• :„...i?!;:rsigsts. forlthostaelstliciartauxunitomOdiodrag. - .-.igatnap Iris, mid, tout Ltio..bilielitzt, b0gY". 41241- ' • f: oktiod.iit*olitt.;"l ' vinous Att lloitirtiat4i aiasrso:fliroitaeu Ittrrossi. -In all tha . Di Atoutglarita:anil 'iltabllithis ottani Vont ici., - , :jrle.uk-, uses - thus will Awl- this cheering, ro• 11 peahliaganit,4lrrigopitiiiis *flotation of ox- -i: ...40 1 .tilleY: . Its , repaialist tropor;- ' NrktErDiulottil, apt . as' a 're.0 3 0119 for the • .. - 1,;„* A ", trezwind, couYiusitpui i hypo. orgell , .otten elionnputy the decolop7, '„_iteiiuSglitafai:lt; has io °gnat. impair, , "won, ortbi - faculty or iuliorttood ' ' 'If 9 T the 1 4 t Y,d44 1 ..,ipg- tAfellogn . .'hi, - iata Often Aglow trustaisticia of •d alili '-'io* , t41 . ..17 , 0 , 4 , 0 154 diiii: ' ' . l , V 4 ah..aumiltimieS -aPeOltli'. ".Z6, ‘.:.5.17 _ 4SPS 7 .-aitoe2N lArmilkik i • .2iiothar twa t - paths eonstitralOra . Aefo 'r e4l4 ' 4: 'tf 4. o tiff C, Where Uteri, in i24)l "* 1 1 3 ' i , ,s ib , r tooorol 1 5" ' giolligoiti- EMI • ; e.—+s~~ VOLUME _LXXX.--NO. 162. SICOU IBITION, FOUR OICLOOK, A. M. VERY tiTEST-_TELEGRIIIIS. ADDITIOXALi T OTIiGN ADVICES. 1 ll3 'lie Late att,les. Mr. Trumbull canal up tint House bill to Us the number of Judges of the Supreme Court of the United Staten, and to change curtain Juillalal circuits. The bill wits passed. It pre. vldwithat no vacancy In the valve of Assocl ate Justice Shall be tilled until tile umubor of Associate Justices shall be reduced to sly, end makes certain ehanges ls places of holding the Circuit. Court ol the United Status. I • • UNRELIABLE PRUSSIAN AND AUSTRIAN NEWS. . DISPATCH FROM VICTOR EMANUEL. Military Activity in France Kea Sons, Jnly 10.—The following addition al 'dead was. brought by City or Loudon, Fronkfolfein, Tyne itigh.—The Fed eral Diet today apixdototi Prince Charles, of Bavaria, cotuattualer-ltreldef of the fedora: arniy„'with instniettone to conduct operation," under the direction of Benedek. Florence, June ttill.--11te King has whirr's.- el a i'llspateh" to The President of the Connell, saying the battle of the 24th wee neither lost nor won. lie adds: "1 have ordered the con conflation of dl our forces to resume the campaign. Our army is he excellent spirits and is anxious to He led to Berlin. Juno . :7.—Priissla has replaced the principal functionaries In Saxony, rind the Electorate of Besse anti Unilever. Prenkforboro-the--ifoira, Jima 27..-Austria has proposed to her confederate allies that mil their plenipotentiaries at the Diet should be recalled, and a Committee of pletilooton tie ries ho appointee in their place, under presi dency . of Austria, this Committee to luny power to decide upon matters without roter ence to their respective Governments. This has not yet been agreed to.• A very remarkable increase of activity i. observed in the military establishment of France- Uniforms, arms and ammunition aro got ready in the greatest lue.te, and to a suet. cleat amount for the co tapment of the army tit its fall strength. Tile reserves only have, ua yet, not been called in, but these are always to lie obtained at eight or ten days' tunic, A St. Petershary . dispatch says Uencnil illreigh, Englishmitu,.tornierly au oce the Imperial army, a great famulte of thffie rof Em peror, has been attached to the Ministry of Finance. lie is expected to 1.343 nominated shortly - es Minister of Finance, anti 11118 sub mitted a financial phut to the Emperor by which the English would be attracted to the country. NSW Teak, July 10.—A Darmstadt letter says: Nothing cut be more prernasterons than the news sent by the Prteoslitu Telegraph Bo man to England. There never was so much as a Fllcirto I,h at. Friedberg. The Third Darm stadt regiment, said to be destroyed, Is quart tered In this I.OIIIM. The Prussians havo not burned Zritmt, and the order of the day of Benmleck is a Prussian lorgery from begin. Mug to and. lam In a poaltiOn to state that a forwar.l movement of the Eighth Federal Army Corps, and a general attack on the Ito. herniae frontier, are not to In, expected for live days. Thu Austrian auxtliary corps, twelve thous and strung, 003 now arrived, and la quartered Bathe left hank of the Main. the troops of den are m movement, and will join In two or thrutedaya. The over-rimming of barony, Hesse and Hanover has no importance what ever. The Electoral troops are quite safe at Gehl.. lionsen. Tim utmost stwresy is k opt up snout tho movements of the fedetal army. Vienna. letters also eay that the Austrian 'papers make nn mention ot their owh mile. patches are wi th false and distorted patches from Prussian and Italian sources. 'PIPE CONTEMPT OF COURT CASE. General Sickles' Endorsement on the Welt for Ills Arrest—Secretary Stan ton Approcres Me Action, Orders Wm Not to b. arrested, and if Force Was Used to !Leming it with Whatever Force was Necessary. AvorsTA (U..) July 10.-1 n the return to the writ of lialmus Corpus tel by the States District Court In the case of Michael Co , stello, contineal at the Charleston jail, the offlwr ut command refused to obey, saying that the prt.bouer Wm* held under the Presi dent's proclamation of September lath, letL lie also produced an order from the Secretary of War instructing it lot not to deliver up the prisoner on the a tit - of Habeas Corpus. The Court grunted n °oedema:tee of the ease (or another day. General 51cklcs made the following endorse ment on the writ OS attaenment served on him by the Culled States Harem' at t;harloaton, summoning himltor Contempt : lu oomplitinee with orders Irons superior authority, I decline to be arrested on this pro mo. Denies. E. Stest.., Major Geneta I Commanding. General sickles received the Marshal cour teously, am! told him be had telegraphist to Wsshington for instructions. The reply of Secretary Stanton endorsed Gen. Sickles , course, and ordered him nut to be arrested, and if foreo was used, to rest-1 with what ever force won necessary. Thin action is titaCrt in accordance with President Lincoln's Proelnmatnct of Isr,d. Judge Biarjen has ordered all the lin bt.4,4•,1 togs to be laid before the President. Norniesetiova IteJeeted—ltetele 11414Urd I. the Petal: thallreett —Pay mnater• Ue 111011,K1 and le be Nanetereal Chat. Wassuistros, July 10..—it is understood that the Senate to-day rejected the nomination 01 Mr. bloanaker as Collector of the First Dia triet of Pennsylvania.. The fourth emetirSa of twenty miles of the Patine Railroad, eastern division, having been completed, the Sedretary of the Treasu ry bas ordered the issue of bonds to the amount of $320,000 to the Company, pursuant to law. Bonds to the amount of ioi i,eoo have also been ordered to issue for the Central Pacific Rail retul Company, of Cal forum, one quarter of the work on a section of twenty miles having been completed. An. oraer has been iffsned from the War De pertinent relieving Col. UM . . Dodge from duty I n the preferred - Claim division of the Pay De partment. elk, W. R. Jameson and G-11. Ely. They are' to be mustered out on the 90th Inst. These paymasters stet° be mustered out, be cause, on the trial of Col. Paulding they testi fied to having transferred funds deposited to their credit from ono hunk to another, thus tending to justify Col. Paulding. Col. .1. L. Hodge, who has been serving as chief pay master in the District of Washingtoe Col. Paulding's arrest, has been assigned to ' that position. Col. W. It. Gibson takes Col. Dodge's place, and Lieut. Col. Taylor relieves 1 Col. Jameson Success of the Liberate—A Town Taken Storm—Toincea, Within Thirty Willem of City of !Mexico, In ti of Capture—Anetriane Deserting the Ink . periallets. _ !Gov Vona, July 10.—A Vern Cruz letter of Juno GLb soya General Flguerra bus taken Tellis= by storm. Tolucca, only thirty miles from the City of blexico, is lin peril of capture by the 141.,1118. Coiotpan is to be boon evacuated by the French garrison, Who will he sent to reinforce Tampico, the latter being seriously threaten ed by the Bcpubileans. Tabasco the Liberal,. disabled a French guladxSat whlleattempting to go up the river TrOntera. - „A.Wasitington City dispatch says: senor go. .teio-Its.information that on the 10th ultimo, resident Juarez and his Cabinet loft FA Peso tot Chihuahua. It Is mooned that the French troops at Durango ware under orders to move against Chihuahua: . I,ettera from.tho City of Mexico state that Gen. Boslineis concentrating all the available "Ma, troops in. San Lots Potosi for a now :Thos unmans captured at Camara° have been released and scattered Into Tow. Irlte'Letibilitatie—mere will be w QUO . 1111111/111b0110111111MT4Sr — PlayllriS at e r4. 8111 . 1 ..111.10,0111 Loonivtata,-Julk-10.—Ttio Senate took up the Metropolitan Nashville Polito bill. • Governor Brownlow , s nominees wore elec• led lanr eightkettegainst li.lc (as knoWn -there will Do a etiortint in the Homo to-morrow: " "Partnaster itentington , s; Safe, brills omen, wad broken open last' night, and' tin alp; stracted. Some nienthentor. moth fantry tire enspeoted and el els watched. Major Rowans oil, well at eMilnirille, loo, c tire on - Friday evening and burned all 'night, thwarting alietrorts to extinguish It. , Film' Total ' Oases of Cholera.-" Head Cooter.n. tepbena:preparleor an. Ad tatiltne•Brotberhood. • . 10.--Itiv awes of cholera arettirecrortfidin lirooiclyn this mon4ng. proved fatal. • • AtetatLieuter - Stephens Le preparing an to. drew" to the Ocalazi.firotherhood of America, "and in all, Mends, of the Brotherhood hero. Se, receives. maw. InvitatiOnw every day, to lecture in tee country. " The` IPreaffloniCand Compress nod :Ap ' potatzweitta fa :wake, "ronie,' Joky_ 10:—Ytellik. - gives grominenoe,to 'a wastitagion totter, onion 41' pants - of err interview M 1 =2%. 111 1; :c 2U.d tt , 1 02 7 tho..Allegbanst and 2dr. Randall, of Now' York, on Vie ontdeet or appointments to calm 'rho latter bs repor ted to kayo ihst 2lita "inal,ter law 'got to 12e fought out between Congress Wilke Pres ident. Ile also gars ;Mr. . Ward: natio° .that Snore was lobe a general removal or all Post- Insatent *fa, , do. not favor. the, '..Presldeat'S . . .F ,1 14 11, 0e4r L, , Liriyourwoirra.tiCaT)Juiy goon fl .5 1 Burt1104ittaveru_ectuld dui% the lAA° hove. forTuatcW,l4/Mi x pto_ ugh:: he may poi!mit!ut 04.6.4:44441r.."t ES extEgi THE PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. FROM WAORINGTON. FROM MEXICO. , FRODUTEIVipdt3 FROM NEW YORK. MEM CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS. Intereatlem Direaomfon au the Tariff-- The HUI Palmed in the iloure—Caoten. of toloo Members and Senator,. Poxt poned. WASHINGTON, July 11, 1666. EIMEEM Mr. stjawart submitted a resolution request hog the president to interpose the good Mikes of the United States to secure the-release of persons held ae prisoners In Canada and elso where for participation in the Fenian move meat, welch was laid over till to-morrow. Mr. PolantLintroduced a Ad] to extend the time of the Alabama n• - ' .•;orida Railroad for tae payment of a duty on the railroad iron, which was referred to the Fintince Commit tee. r. Poland introduced a bill to extend this c to the Malnuna and .Florlda Itallroad to, • out of duty on railroad iron, which was •rre4 to the Voditattine on Finance. Mr. Trumbull called up the hill for enlarg ing the public grounds around that Umitol, which was passed• it provides that the nubile grounds shall be enlarged to a plan approved by the Cotnutlttee on Public Bindings, of the Senate amt House of Representatives - inspect, holy, w Men plan is hereby directed to be de posited in the custody of the Secretary of the Interior, burn con First street. east and First Mt reefest, tile folloWing Wanner : North wartlly In the south stdo of North 11 street, and 'a/Waiver:lly to the north side of South B street., Inclultrig, in addition to so much of the reservation avenues and streets as are Iniees. nary for such extension, the twonquaree desig nated In the plan of tile inty of Washington its toidiers as? and GSS, rrspectl rely. Mr. Wade called up the hill to repeal the act retrocmling Lire city and 1,011111.). of Alexan dria to the State 111 Virginia, x niCil was dis missed by Mussrs. Wade, lientlersou, Stewart, Saulsbury, Mower.' and Harris, after which IL WAS llonLpUiicd until to-inorrow at I o'clock. Mr. Conner called up the bill to tillit land titles in the State of Colin/rola for 1,114. 1,50 1,000 of concurring to all hot ono of the Mouse itinentiments. The Senate non -concurred In the last amendment of the House. Mr. tloward tattled up the foont resolution giving the right of way to the 11111011 reeler Railroad anti Its bran,lies through reservations, stitch altn Oil notion of Mr. Brines, reterred to the Military The Senate a vitt into executive 502151011, anti soon after tulJourued. lIIMM The came first, an the unfinished business of yesterday. Mr. Wentworth addressed the 'lo.lm-in an hour's snatch, In which, speaking Gum an ag rieult oral point of view, he favored a change of the present tariff. although he did 1101, pro. Tess to be strongly in favor of the pending bill, lie feared that with the high pricy ill' gold, it would prove to be prohibitory. Ile deprecated the mixing up of a tariff with indium Ile thought that Congress should Os the amount or revenue to.be raised, and then that a Com mission, compoacd of line farmer, one MAlM fricturer and one inerelmet,shonltlappor,loll a Dug mteresis represented. lie advocated especially the grain, WOOl, fan, t n %tuck growing Interest 01 the West. Ile had not ex clod that Congress would be called upon Inert-use the tariff, except upon wool, tont It should be merely compensatory Keen weelete , Un the other baud, he lead Mimsd tor sonic re auction upon many articles nt foreign growth or production, but the twt lon of Congress In. terdieting any ente.Linfres for reducing the re dandant paper money, extent to a vet y amount, and the nuetlasnettly rot uetati t action of the Treasurer in exercising even allai power be had, had enunged the whole aspect of financial affairs. The rates propos ed In this were net neon so Men us therm pro posed by the revenue COMILLIPOOGI. red - in stance, the commission propownt it, Vesta per pound on bar iron, a bile the committee reported but one and ono-fourth cents; three cents on sheet iron, while the committee re ported but two and one-half; eight cents on Chains less than a quarter of an inch tn diam eter, while the couttnitteo reported but, live , cents; eight cents on galvaniecsi Iron, while the committee proposed only four and one half cents, and so on. There was tile usual amount of hue and cry from the free trade quarters, [rem mtillounnen enriched by for eign trado. aired tusekslrtve. were particu larly astir in this matter. New York appeared to be the centre from whence most of these de ouncintious emanated. That city was the prolific mother of free trade pamphlets; but that city had other Interests than than; of For eign commerce. it was the *eat of great diver-ity of manufacture_-, and of the men:battle arts. lie would glad ly do nnything to rester." tee +hip owners of the country to their framer pun, Lige, but they ought not to red ulre tarn for their exclusive benefit, and to the detriment of the whole country. Let all parts of the country prosper, hut if one part of the country wail, gros at the sumo time, should not a new State he Preferred wsth half a million of people, tate• or than add that number to a city 11.11 - 1.13 - swollen In numbers, that sometimes threaten, to withdraw that fealty which le due to Ito own Stay,. lie bad no doubt tho Howls soo' rtx. the duts or. rutin:nut Iron itratlistacconly. There wax no limo now to prcoonl, no* bill this etre Monad be reJectml. The Senate oubi without doubt stomdily remove the o- Metlens to the bill, and with .ocrie little pru ning, it the corveney remained In anything like its present proportions, It mould yield as much revenue or more than the existing law did. We must not be too eager to Man ter the Geld of politica. One subject more demands our consideration. Its difficulties, though great, are far from being hisurmount sble. The Interests of every seetiou of country commands equal regard. Congress regulates commerce. Westover their wants may be, the Mates can do nothing. fa ~r four hundred millions In our currency, Oscr et.: hundred millions of foreign goods . - were lit•t year purchased by our people. This unusual trade absorbs the means core] need ed to modal ti national debt, mow rapi dly 11t1v, Knit tizroatens to paralyze the chief Yin wOr M. 111 t trd revenue. I..et us, then, shirk no real Ii 111). and be frightened at no unreal obstacle- li c cannot hope, O3CllOf us, to II Mph [limit leant , to any tariff hill. Much of tile bustitee , ot lite IA it ebbiltrotnieb, but let. tie stiffen, to too. worl. Pk,. yoillant ch iuftaln, li ruu t, tf I. tutu. MI llto trttner, until e hay, moltubt .titt t.ttutoltthg that .t offillity Life Just oxifeoLutouto of 1.131: poopto and tizoo, cougroGulutifol uun•el flifno !for montolis action al last, we shall jot (oily quit these heated hall, and depart sure of a Wee. 501110 lonno. Mr. Monti' next :addressed the 1i0n..., de. fending the hill generally, but asserting that the demlinil fora higher tariff cams less front New England than from other onarters. The lAD, if onjectiouable In canna points, eould be amended in the Senate, and, In all events, IR:aigrettx should not, and he hollered would not, adjourn until some „tariff hill woo passed, even It it hail to tilt till bueember next, Ills own Wes was theta moderate increase in duty on Iron, would have been the wisest course to adopt, but others, to who.: prudence and judgment he had to deter. thought differently, and he trusted they would now stand by their opinion. Mr. Delano was the next speaker With all the imperfections of this bill, he thought It ought to be passed. It was the first tarif 6111 that approached anything like a Just prole., Don to the tagrteultural Interests. lie hoped that the tepresentattees of New Englund could stated by the bUI, and not. turn a cold shoulder upon it, as there seemed to be some Indication of their doing. Mr. Bouts ell intimated that If thorn was any difficulty ill New England on the subjeut of the tariff, it was not bees°. Now England's interests were not considered sufficiently pro tected, but because a hitter warfare nail been waged against New England In other sections of the country on the subject of prow/Awn, and New England .11,1 not ormt, to be held re. sponalble for this tariff bill. Mr. Dawes Mail° some remarks of a simile! purport- De declared that New England dht not want the renpuntsitillity for this bill /OWL-. ed from the shoulders of the people of the west, who had undo interest in It than NC% England ever had .0 any tariff Mil. New Eng land was content with things an they were, and did not wain it understood that she win. forcing taus tarif on the country. Mr. Delano asked bow long It was since New England had demanded a turilf,ou the ground that without It her manufactures would go to ruin. If New England did not stand by this bill, It would noon Dad there was a vigorous west which would not fail to recollect toe act. Mr. litibbard, of Connecticut, declared, no ills hello(, there was ono-Mate iu Now Eng land which' did 'want this MIL He f enured that all the mterests of Connecticut, =Ulnae tunng,commurclul and agricultural, would ho promuted.by it, and be intended to vote for 16 Mr. Delano continued hisvrech, oral:deg a that this bill protected the cultural toter /oda, and appealing to New England members 'not to vote agMnst it if Western members There were two or three hundred thousaull voters Di the west who would oppose it. Mr. Hooper declared himself in favor of aro. tooting domestic manufacturing, and of en couraging the development of all the great protive retiburees of the country s ory of protection did not differ mate rial ly from tho. practice of the 'English theory et ,free trade, Iniapplled to tho,interesta of Brit .lsh Industry unit otanteerce. That was to en courage free,tradeo.n all. raw ataterinis for mannesettan.. - -wideh , eannOb be produced in Great Brittdri *beeper .. th ital any other coun try..." That British ideaor (fee trade was Woo tton' with tits ides.of whnt tb proleetive policy of this country should be, •as applied to the ' . T i ra reat' t witi Of t ' o am endO enaa4 tirag in ef d rite tua rriul an e d ih w th W o m m e a rec t‘ :WS . for Manufacture, .-rwhich ewe , &mid not troduce, or Which WO 'ctinld".produce 'Cheaper Limo any other country, and to iMposodutlea .for the yrs:amnion 01. - Americant labor l abor] competition - of the cheaper . labor of foreign contrics on aft articles which we could not produce; nod for revenue alone on these other orticles which we Could 'not produce. In re gard to the Tariff lit% he wannot aware that hewgland• had asked for anythlag The change. It propoiee did not generally fa vor her Interest& He should, however, vote for the bill,. because other., portions of thO country than New Englund said it was awes. miry for their protection, and because, lie be lieved In the theory of protecting the labbr and-.encouraging t he developments of the great tomerhil resources this country; but be „wait . t H a mosed :thavelt.: high ;reties of duty .as this hoposcal.,•exclept ea a temporary measure to meet the(extgenolea of : ae 7.1 It . . 0 70:1 :14:by Kellen ne t 0 , too 7 . i : a oo.lm botb bi ll thuoppositionw tto yp t the Slalotht: fr ill, tdosaitxts of:Divine Provident:re from being ea • ate attomp ie e •countrytepayhigherfor . witat they need than the lawerot• ProvidencaV. requital" , The-bill be: rnottuutdttedi Sad ltalundametdal • pkirieltllerelattigett'atnotithe AMMO:lan they iro IXOO PITTSBURGH. WEDNESDAY, J ULY 11, 1866. be able to buy a solitary fTlbtg that is protect ed. Ms objection to the bill was that It was an attempt to legislate for special Interests, and balance the good done to one try the In jury done to =Meer. llc gave New England the credit of not being responsible for this hill. She should necessarily be moderate In her tariff and views if she Where,' to her gen eral Interests. She built ships and engaged in commerce, and therofote should not be in favor of a rvaubatory tartly. Mr. DR., asked to whose interests was the Mr. Kasson replied, in the interest of every manufacturer whose Interest was honored by IL lie parried several thrusts made at him in reference to his being nn oMeer of the United States free trade league, and argued strongly against the passage ol such a prohluitory measure as the pending hill. Mr. Wilson, of lowa, commented on the as. Renton that New England hail nothing to do with the origin of this bill, and did not desire it to pass, Mr. Dawes remarked that the Now England members were willing to vote for it or against it. • Mr. IVilson, et lowa, interpreted that as meaning they were willing to get Weston, member, Di go for .the bill, while New Eng land would take Its bunetits. The gentleman from tqdo (Delano) had got frightened and went his knees to beg Now England to vole for this tariff. It was u most singular spectit ele at d one which lie had never expected to wits as In the tiOuSe. lie had no doubt t h e gee lonian would be imeteratful In the plea tel. hhe had made. It was still there was an a. - oigement between the wool growers and wool manufacturers. as a wester man, ho ,cw nothing of such a, bargain. 110, us a lies .usentative ' did not favor any such bargain. .le proposed that the bill should be recommit ted to the Committee of Ways anti Means, with Instructions to report a bill eminslying the firm section of the pending . hill, *Melt wan the one protecting the great wool interest, for which the gentleman from Ohio (Delano) had no ably pleaded, embodying the sixth sec tion in reference to liquors and alga., and the twelfth section, winch protects agricul tural interests; also the amendment 341011- ted in Committee of the Whole, re ducing the duty on tea and coffee one half, I educing the duty on railroad iron from . one cent per ponnd, to 70 cents per one hundred pounds, embracing the provisions of the pend ing bill In reference to flax seed, linseed, hemp seed, roue NOW, and oils manufactured therefrom, reducing the remaining Maim, embodied n the bill to not higher than the actual neeessitim of the particular interest required, not exceeding in any ease ti per cent over the rate now fixed by law. That was the 'Wept - wit:on he desired to submit, and he hoped the members from the west would vote for it. Mr. Dodge said he telt bound, ',Mere voting for the hill, to slate slistinelly, us u represten• tativst.frstm a great .•nuttnereial ea s y, that. lie belle ri!,l t lin gnnatnt, Ofeoutmeree dependent on the pr.np.nrltV of the nation, and that cont. Inerve prospered In prossortion wall the man ts texturing nail agricultural interests. There were portions or. this hlli which he thought slatulst Inn much Inestitiesl. samt therefore he au , sit furor of the proposmion to postpone lib Iml till December neat, because the ea l iterates tit the country did not require an iLL wnauoa of Lau twig . eiutln Lim next four months; bet If sins hill came to It vote, Ise .shoulet VOW for it, proteeoinr ar'antst certatst partzi Of It, nun! anuho•lying . mist Lb," i"1 , w us for the nun, fit or inn unglue coun try, mut that the, prospersti or the ennui ty was thv prospertty IL the city - of N In lark. Mr. tinrcleist elosett the del,,Le.. tyoking 0 strong argument 1t /01 or of the ermetple of no tut ahotraet gonfalon. Very lit tle 0001.1 tot ml.l again., the Ilectrthe of free trans, not It 0 1. only applicable to Mom of tfeat 0, :ma a inire on the nnme _mole of mature_ War, whom' s., It tame, fwerparnefl the duet rine of froo trade In Ito track TM at 'limn. of England, wisteh Wad for centorler Mom protected to • the en- Ora of prohibit/oh, 1111,1 w loch WWlnow free t note 111, likened t. to that of a .(Loot, an :alltete, or ter, aft, r mouths of traloton, elialleuge a youms aheop boy to coon out and fight with It lm. lie hoptot that the propooltion to mom.. it, anfl the magowt lion to tostapono, 0001.1 hoth lof vote.' Uon n, an.! flint the tall 'cretin tot amended 111 n end par Lima.. and 111.1.10 olultable na soon ie. tertialtdo. Ile lailleveil velieu the cottiV ry came really to understand what hull Mien he er) atralutit amol.l quiet down lie closet the debate, though Megan.. Steven. onii ramouar lug promieuil to submit Nome arguments. but do t:Mutat doing au, In view of the imidilfeeted by the Moue, Mr. Morrill moved to till the blank lett in the Second section taring eotton with the word ••threv," so us to Make the .111ly on rot-on, raw tuatiuMeturod, three cold., per pound. this waS 3graw.l to, Mr. IPtheru, of lowa, offered are amendment iu redoes) the duty on railroad Iron (rout one iota. per pound to seventy-five cents per ley ounds. Mr. laninliar moved to amend the rtmend• Envoi by resit/clog it to :.t curds per ha pounds Mr. 'floe moi to to reilnee duty on salt in packages, (rout trot;42 to Strot;And so.ll io Ik, front :in to 24 evilti. per lee pounds. Theme amield Men having been Wrens', the pt cv tons .tuvAtion a.s 1110,,1 and ey,x4pntlro tbe perwlimir Arnetaiirrieuts, thus proven ling others from Wing offered. senor:Ate Votes were taken Ani the amendments report ed front the A mum Mee of the Whole on the -tow of the l i ntel, us follow!, For inertitunim the ditty on pig iron from ot to twit ton. Disagreed twttliont division. For striking out crush from the article, on Which a duty of . emus per yard and thirty per cent. nal valo nun wt. imposed. Agreed to. For strikingotit leicritnination Made. in favor of crud from the iirdish Provinces. limey to, so that all linnorted coal is to pay' tad ton. The rote -tood 76 yeas to Ts nays. For allowing the Flt , riile and Alabama Itniirnad Corapany to ins:Uteri with live yestriAr disagreed to. All itmeniltituntil inert...Mt ; the duller on agricul ture were agreed to. Making the lowest tax 'ill lumber two dollars per one thousand feet, agreed to. Iteduelng tile duty on tea to twelve and a hair cents per named; agra,ll to—) bstm, i 6; nays nit counted. Itvrtclellig tile duty on coffee to tuo tint! a - lOW tents per pound, agreed to without division. .111 the other tunerniments reporttst by the t:tontalt.t.ee of the Whole stmt.: consldured anA Itgroed to. The next question er. on the 2.1103.111111... ~tiered by Mr rarourtbor to redutse the duty un railroad. trot from ono rent perpound tt arty coots per one hundred pounds, n It tub isas duatgretst to by a vote of 37 yeas to 'JO nays. The amendment 4,1T,Tre.1 by Mr. %V them, 01 Lows., to reduce tile duty on railroad troll to surenty cents Ito r one hundred ISOIllidS, woo ftifrvol to—yeas, lee; nap., LI. The amendment of Mr. l'rlen to reittlGe the duty on salt to packages from forty-sla thirty-tlx ants, and in bulk from thirty to twenty-four cents per one lotudred lenteds, was agreed to. Tbelast question Was on tbe motion of Mr. Las rsacse, of Ohio, reserved yesterday, to st.t lee twenty-01rd seetton organ., tt•e I.lt, of StatlMAC.s, and It was dbl. - greed to. All the al u din„uii. ifelna been thus dia l...fel of, life bin we. open fin further action. Mr. Wailiburne, of 1111100, moved it In, re committed to the Com:entre of Wit) a find M O .lll, wit it Matt Urtlftlm to report at the neat - slut , snub unstinted 10011 anti ehangen as WO ertlntilit tee May tote hi to make. Mr. Wilaun, 01 - 100, 1110,41 an an amend clout that It be retaintun WA, with inatruo- UM. to report a hill embracing the Coo be, t ton of t 130 pending Mil, the sloth cod twelfth .Idiom; an originally reported, including Ills amend..lite reducing toe duty on ten and relief, the paragraph in relation to hooded, flaxseed, Innupeeed, ropeeeed, and olio mango- factored thereof, as provided In the bill, rode clog the duty on railroad iron to seventy cents per hundred pounds, and reduce all other rates to is utandard not higher than tonna! ne °malty require, not e%Ceetting twent).five per cent. above the rater now fixed by boa. Ehlrhlteu toured to lay the bill on the taint. which true negatived, kr. ' llotenkhis moved to reconsider the vote agreeing to the amendment removing the dis crimination in favor of coal front the ltrltieh Province.. , . Mr. Latham moved to laythe motion to re- COlldltler on the lable, which was weed to. TJ, env] 71. So the duty on all coal Imported remains at 31J!il per ton. Mr. Eldridge again moved to lay the hill on tan 18,1,10. Zicgtittvetly yllllll 24, nays 72. Mr. W nuintattnent to the-, motion 10 recommit was negatived; nays 131., yeas not counted. The question recurred on Mr, firanliburne's motion to recommit the bill to the Committee of ways owl Means I•, report next December, a etch was negatived; yeas id, nays 87. The bllt was Lb(3l passed by a rote of ill yeas, against hi nays, an f, , lewd: Yros—Me.srs. ,Buss, Ancona, Ashley, of NOVIItill• Baldwin, Bunks ' Barker, Boxier, Bingham. itontwell, Boyer, Beek land, Handy, Clarke, ot Ohio; Clarke, of Koine.; Colfrutli, Davis, Dawes, Daw.n, Dean, Dixon Dodge, Briggs, Ethics, {slam, Ycrry' , Holmes, Motehkiss, llehbard, of West Virginia; liebtaird. of New York; Ilehbar,l. of ConneCticatillubliell, of Ohlo; inbert, Jencks Johnson, Kelly. Kelso, Ketehein, latille, Lath.. 11112, Lawrence, ul Ohio; Long, Marston, Marvin,McCling, Notice alcOrler, Noreen, MOorthetol, Merrill, Morris, Moyers, Nowell, O'Neill, Payne, Patterson, Pe; ham, Pike, Plants, Price, Randall, oluon, l'a ; Mee. of itice,ot Maine; Boltinu, Sawyer, Schnook, Schofield, Shellabarget, spattling, Strouse, Thayer,' rratteLs, Themes, Trowbridge, Van Armen, San : JilOreg, of New York; Wand, Washburne. Of ilasaittlituietts; Welker. Wel. thy, Williams, Wilson, of Pa.; Wood tiridge. and Potter. • • • Nays—Messrs. Alllson, Andur on, linker, Benjamin, Bergen,. Broomall, Cobh, Cooke. Deimos, Donnelly, In Eggleston, Eldridge, Fartnairorth nrquabox, *k, idlosibrunner, Grider, Barring, Llunkly, Binding, of /Minot', Harris, Hogan, Humphrey, ingorooll, Julian, Kunsan, Kerr, Lo Blond, Marshall, MoCut lough, Moulton, filblonk, Orth, Itiolall, of lienttinky, hitter, lingers, Bose, Rosneam nitgrenves, Tabor, Taylor,' John L; Thornton, Trunible, Van Horn, • iita....ohrisetts, ban. •of Whims, Wushburn, of Indiana, Wentworth, Wilson, of, lowa, Windom, The following members dlil not tMtei hi 0193111. .Youteroy and Winfield, Innhui and Raymond and' Broomall. • -• •- •,- • A lt e r S PAIL kilo House adjourned. •• ', • A. adjournmunt, It was 'immune - ell that tho caucus of Union -'Brnatortr and members: cdtbslforAble afterna o nrWiiii.digntihinr‘t Unlit 70) tatlorroWycytnlag. , f: • ~.11aftt.:Robberyjatlustni*- : • _ - -130STON. July.lo.r4nt oilloo'orveo. lug broket;lef State 'plieet, - "whe-rlrhmu last' 'night of about $17,004 Opel/lett 'amount - coo(); Were Inßo lit, , anti the remainder-In 'Ainttetl' btateli and other lICOUT/ORlff;', ulon'oy was taken from a auto %%telt:was hauled into .tbo intattle Of the ilOor and gutted; - X- - Pon 3 ou neatly praptiset£ to rout part OC-140 °Mee, tont sttrasy Wu engaged th:PuPerinit tins rralle;' but as ho has fallen, to • make .hi & UPPC4rOOCA7 to•daY, to 'enspeohni Or' battCH i the robber. Thoreb 3 been ruearreetyer;,-; Altirket: .Alumqux.i.t. July' 10=Plotedal. WhixiitAt w. A lc sl,allgu,no for No. L . Qorp.gopl afta 114' IMM=M2M Mei 4:111 :1u Additional Local Natters on Third Pogo Npeciel Meeting of Councils. special meeting Of Councils was held last evening. in their Chambers, in the city build ing. There being no quorum present in Select Council, that body Waco forced to adjourn without, transacting any business. In Common Connell, preset: Messrs. Beck, Boggs, Ford, Hare, Killen, llittivhinney, More land, McClelland, McGowan, MeQuewan, Og den, O'Neill, Paitchell,Roliman,Sunpson. Tom- Torley, Weldon. Wright and President Stec . The minutes of the preceding meeting were read and approved, after which Mr. Ford pre sented the folio% lug ordinance. Section 1. Ito it enacted and ordained by the Mayor, Aldermen and citiaens or Pittsburgh, to /Select and Common Council ussemblial, and It Is hereby enacted op the same: That the privilege be and Is hereby grunted to the Pittsburgh d Connellxville Railroad Company to extend their track from the lino of their property at the toot of Try street, (across se "nni Street,) at Its Intersection with Try, to a point on Try above Second and south of 'third street, street, to be designated by the Street tif-amit tee, to connect with the present track of the Piltsbnigh & Elteutsinv file Railroad Company. Seetlou i. That the Pittsburgh and Councils villa Railroad Company, fol . the pnv doge hero in granted, pay the Coy Treasurer .or the use of the coy, the annual ones of live hun dred dollars. Section S. That all ordlmmees or parts of or dmaneei contheting herewith be, and the same are, hereby repealed. Idr. Moreland spoke at eonsidentble length on the subject, and said he had been In formed that the °position [nude to the switch laid on Try street by the Fort Pitt Coal Com pany wan causal by the wish of the Connell. vino null:tad Company to lay a track along Try to near Pennsylvania Avenue, whore they have leased for n coal yard. A motion was [mate to cut aside the second and third reading and have the ordinance passed. Mr. Killen moved that the ordinance be lint over until next. meeting. Mr. O'Neil urged the immediate passage of the ordinance, be noving It to be nott=inat an act of Jest Ice to ill the ConnellsVe who h .ve been sob 4ected to persecution without ant. 31r. Ford spoke at some length, sustaining the view of the ease taken by Mr. O'Neil. It was then moved teat the rules be suspend ed rutil the ordinance read three times and passed. After um animus t i debate Mr. O'Neil moved for the calling of the yeas and nays on the question. A vote - wins taken, resulting in it suspension of the stiles, by a vote of 20. yeas to 4 nays. Mr. Moreland then offered an amendment to the ordinance that the point of connection on Try street, between the Pittsburgh and lani nellevtlie and Pittsburgh and Steubenville railroad cotenant.es be designated by the un gineeraof both companies. Mr. o , :ieill said he was In favor of leaving the mutter In tile henna of the Street Com mittee, having as much confidence In their in tegrity as he bad in the probity of the engi neers of either road. After an unheated debate a vote WWI taken :end the amendment was declared Iced. The following items of anguished business, rota/rte.! front Select Council, for coucerreace, wore then Mime up. An ordinance for the erection of a gas lamp nt tbe corner of illuir and Miltenberger streets, in the Eighth ward, wits concurred tn. Thu report of the tins Committee Wits re- . . ~dyad and acceptcd. A renolution transferring $l,OlO from San itary tom In Infra ApprOprlol.loll, SO. 10., to flat iloara of Health Appropriation, No. 14. Utainurrtsl fit. Au ortlinunce (or the widening of Webster street (ma Arthurs straw to the city line wee concurred Mr. Ford presented the following, which was adontell: Ruoided, That the PreNiderits of Councils be ndn,•A to OM cOmMittee , appointed to attend to the Preparation of a city digest_ ortilliaucp granting the Port Pitt Coal GuiniNuty tlioright to construct a switch in the vleinity of their property on Try street, and which had been tail over at a former meet ing, .Was .0.41.1 Up by Mr. Moreland, who owe. mi Its pan s. Mr. front iteLanuleti the niotion, and spoke at mushier:digs ledgth In advocacy of the ordi nance, stating that the Fort Pitt Coal Cbui.. patty were atjmne-h entitled to the privilege of occopying thillatreet at any other corpootto . Mr. Moreleint Moonlit there was some utisapprehenattio resting In the minds of the councils rugarding tide question, which he was de,,ltttus of dfnalhating. In the tint place Ile awl hoard It alatel that there was u Collinet ;micron tin Pennsylvania Central Railroad company nod that of the Pittsburgh and Con uellsv Wu Company This he declared to ho in iltely fallacious. There could be no conflict. rho state high nature granted the Councils v die road, In-Welt charter, certain rights and privileges which would enable them at any time to connect with the Pittsburgh and Met. mebic Railroad, provided that they comply with the provisions contained In the Leguila live enactment This matter being made elver, he hoped that the Port. Pitt Coal Com pany would be allowed to resume work Im umitinte/y. After some debate, Mn. Cord offered the fol lowing amendment to the ordinance, which alts aocepted _ Provided, that nothing heroin contained .11.11 Ins construed so as to prevent the city from revoking the privilege granted by this ~n illtanee at any time upon sixty days notice lining given. • The ordinance win; [hen passed. Mr. Killen pronentnil e(conuunfeatlon from Kromer a. Rail M. In rotation ton tlio annosament of their property on Bedford street 'taloned to Petomee Committee. Mr. MOM/I.d 114LMIC1.1 In his rraignatlOn as member of Connell from the sixth ward, s tat- Ina that hu wa• about trt remove to the coun try and would thentforo bo Ineligible to the "Inca Mr. O'Selli hoped the gentleman would not -ever It., vonneetion wan Connell for (ho pro soot, Av, him uervletts were very valuable and eoutd not well to diagnosed with. Mr. Moreland expeCased bin regret al being 001.11101e.t1 to part with ussOnlatas Cowl ell, but prealtal bin rosignallon, which was no eepted. It owl moved that the President of Court- ett 'wonted to appoint ottattuttletto to the vari ous Wants to colloot funds for the mho( of tho . . . Portland sufferers. several gentleman expressed Llicinselves tie 0 grilling to take the responsibility of collect ing funds on their shoulders thinking fiat other parties loW as meek right and more The motion being lost, Mr. Robb offered the following liesoltal, Thal the sum 01 rive tlaousand dol lars be and is hereby appropriated in aid of the sufferers by the recent fire at Portland', After u slight debate, the resolution was lost by a vote of 10 tut/ On motion, adjourned. rr on Fifth mimes—Arm.* on =IMMa 'Noe tem. Mg, annul one o'clock, an alarm of Ore was sounded. and on Lnvestlgation It was d Lscorered that the photographic gallery of .1. U. Van l'elt, situated in tho fourth story of the Brewer Building on the southwest =I s. tire. The Fire Department was promptly ow the ground, and the thaned were extinguished without doing (Wl' material onetime. The proprietor of the gallery, Mr. % au Pelt, who nu.s sleeping in the gallery It the time, was arrested and taken to the May or's office nn ousplolon of 114,1 , 111 g net the place on tire. Mr. Van I'. had been boarding in Alle abeny, but some three weeks Since 1* wife went to spend a len weeks with her husband's friends in the vicinity of Wheeling, 'since which time ho Ins slept In the gallery with an .merntor named .1. A. Pyle, who wee also ar... 51r. You Pelt states that ho had boon spend leg the evening at Dupree & Benedictla Mlu strels, and had just retired but a few hours previous to the eland The only motive he could have In destroying the build i ng would be to recover his insurance, which Arnow:ditto #3,000. Ills stock he alleges to be worth a moat. twice that amount. The gentleman Is very respectably cenhected, and we sincerely trust the matter will be made clear to-day, as It doubtless will. "fitment Cloth Blau" In Limbo. We noticed a few days since the arrest et ono David Wallace, on complaint of Constable John Lutz, and his committal to jail by Alders man Humbert to tumwer at:II:ago of gambling. Lie was la some way attached to One Of the circuses which recently exhibited here, and during the performance catered to the etilaY _ moot of outsiders by affording opportunity to indulge In the "ten die sweat cloth" Or "Chu eherlook. game. On Monday Sohn Coyle, Leg., obtained a writ, of habeas cosplis, with a ?low to secure the lacharge of Wallace. The writ was returned yesterday, as directed, •Distriot Attorney nun' and (lea. F. B. appear ing for the Commonwealth,. or respondent. After bearing tho evidence upon which the waiglstratu based hisiiction, It appearing that Wallace was arrested in the act of IdaY)ug the game, the court ordered idarelonze r wion oatlufaetory bail in the sum of for his. appearance for trial. in default o was re mantled to prison/ : ilefeeted to Pa the Ceete.—Edward Cos. grave entered suit against his two daughters, yesterday, before , Idermsn Jiumbttrt.. The gide were &eels:. butliftera . hearing were i discharged, the e deate° exculpating them iron} all criminall • in the premises. Coe grave NllB ordered o pay the mets out rotas. tug to comply . wlth .0 sentence, he was .cent Copal for ton dues lie was anbeequently, re leased after paying the call ti:i., ; 1 +r::::: , ..- • tired With tenths a tio It. ' • r .----- I ha h Ma atibefore labirmtt Atlanta, the i reettl r day, n ct n .r7led.with the larceny of a tight linen coat Irma boardlogibonatt.oVJecob Peters situated - o Mc- etreety4a.the Fifth ward.-Christopher mitted tho coat watt net, his own, and being, nable to stathilatlafactor. Lip "how ' it . had Am e Ants - lilt. possession, - be was required to sty ball tattle amount Of .500 for his appenritnou Court: -,-.....-='.,-.,..::.. - ... , -... Arm peaked,— noweber rodaed Yatrhilr Barry, took ;Lewd oli:a dear Yesterday for the purPesell , t tilling,ro.hosylvaaut Avenue. AL ttko comer o f c.tue urat /WC over a Junto hodider. titn) hig , the lair - to the:ground *area,* -violence to bank his arm, He enekitakon to -Lho reddened otthkr Mother - on Websteestroot i to tho Buhr - 1 :wool, , andsßer -4eoo E;Deasell •• _ . Hill n end Zero...kaki: r ad, wee killed stew the .(101 fl3r• beldlrelltue/t.eit the bead wile: 3ketunliete'eteriprldisd'.edder ildide ' r.++a~..~..,...., :.y PRICE THREE CENTS. The Portland .Conflagratlon—Desertp• lion of the City—Chnrehea and other Buildings Destroyed—SWlring of the Intuablhants—WW Plittsbutrithers do their Fail Duty? At the meeting Of the °Muhl of Pittsburgh and vicinity, held at the Maypr's office On the 9th last, to consider the castbof the sufferers by the recent terrible conflagration in Port land, Arsine, gentlemen present, formerly res idents of Portland, were requested to prepare a atatoment concerning that and the ex tent of Ito recent devastation, to be published for the information of our Masons.. The gentlemen referred to are of the opin ion that nothing they• can say will convey a more vivid and painful inch= of the clesti. Indian which now reigns over that city, once So UM:MI.IIbI, than has already been couveyoll, by the telegraphic reports which have reach• ed us and all parts of our land. his not, there fore, their intention, In the following brief sketch, to do more than to speak of the city as it was, In some of its respects, width Wen., tify the locality and territorial oxtentof the ravages of the devouring the, and to confirm the estimate already mottle, in the minds of tinsernonmults, of the loss sustained by thud- - lies, merchants and manufacturers, and by the whole people, lu the cheek inevitably put upon the material prosperity, and upon Ch.M. social, cducatioual and religious institutions. Portland, from its location, was a city of rare beauty, as admitted by nil who have seen it. On a tongue of Bold on Casco Bay, with its clusters of Islands, surrounded on three aides by water, in length between three and four tubes, and in -breadth about one.tlard of a rnu e rising from the centre to either extrem ity like an amphitheatre, it presented to the observer from the bay an object seldom seen. I it tasteful residences, its numerous spires, ita abundance of large shade trees, Complete ly bettering many entire streets, and rising above thedwellings and giving to lithe name of the Forest City, have beet( the object of re. mark by all visitors. Its harbor, perfectly safe and easily aimroaChed, le one of the finest and best In the United States. Pounded in 1632, It has previous to the 'went most disastrous tire been destroyed three, times—in 1675 and 100 by the Inthans, and 1775 by the British. None of its former losses will compare at all with the last. Indoesijit- may be questioned whether any city In our land, compared with It in sloe or wealth ever soitered so severely. It is only about eighteen years since Portland begun to exhibit s of energy and growth- Previous to (that time the .loss of her West India trade, on which she had been - almost wholly dependent, had crippled all her activi ties. liar stores were closed, her streets were silent, her avenues were deserted, and her young men, on numbing their majority, at once left for the West or South. The opening of railroads to different parts of the State. and especially the road to Montreal, at Once save a new Impulse to trade of every kind. Manufactures were establiShod, ships crowded nor Barter, and lines of British steamers connected with the Atlanta° and St. Lawrence Itsuiroad. The growth of this city since that time has been constant. The population July was but 13,00(k now 53,000. The fire of lth and sth has icsolated tract one and one-fourtii miles long by one. third of a mile wlde—two Immlredand fifty acres of the business part of the city. Many entire streets of stores art, gone. Manufac tories, hotels, churches and 8.311001 houses, are swept away. Very many long streets, with tine residences and rows of stately elms, are wholly destroyed. Wood's white marble ha tel, live stories Ugh, Is with the ruins. The Catholic church, valued at fifoo,lloo, is burned. The Payson church, eunnected with which are so many sacred memories, is swept away. The Atheneum, with its large library and °once eion in natural history, is wholly lost, The elegant and spastic:is city and county build. Inge, with a hall unsurpassed In the country, and which cannot be replaced for less than 1030,003, In also burned. The burnt district Was the business part of the city. There were the banks, the lawyers , °Mess, the jewelers, the book sumo, the printing °Meets, the dry goods jobbers, the shoo dealers, the stores and shops et every kind. In all, seven churches and elght hotels were burned. The estimated legs of $10,006,000 will be seen to be too mail, when the loss of Brownie sugar refinery and the city and county Milld ams, with their contents, will be fatty one- Mtn of that sum. Eleven thousand people are homeless. The rapidity of the names permitted but little toile saved. Mon who wore imiepend mit a few days ago are beggars to-day. The beauty, comfort and arcalve of the city are swept away. All local, and It Is feared many foreign, Insurance companies will be unable to pay their losses. Sugaring and want übouniL la a few months the rigors of a northern winter will be upon them. Shelter must be provided soon, or greater suffering be SeldoM has there boon a atron ger claim on the sympathies and charities of our people. Central Itatirdlof lidneatioa. The Central Board of Education met Toes• day evening, June 10th, Present: Messrs Crawford, Getty, Lowe, Marshall, McAuley, Nobus, Sergeant, and Brush, President. The manatee of tilo two preceding toOettnie ero read and approved The monthly reporta of the Principal of the linrh School, Principal of the colored School, and of the Secretary, were read and ordered to be filed. Mr. Marshall, from committee on Teachers `Salads •, presented a report authorising the appointment of termini= for the ensuing year, es follows: Cirunsnuar int'dle Primary Pr. - warmly Teachers Teachers Teacher. Fin{ Ward.-- £ ..... 3 3 3 EMg to do "." tit do I th do High SeJami-1 Principals; 1 Professore( Math ematics; Teacher of Book-keeping and Pen manship; 1 Teacher of Drawing; Assistant Teachers. Cbtored 6ohool-1 Principal and 2 Assistants. The salaries to be as follows: Ward &Mots —Principalsl,32o,• Grammar Teachers $52 iii In termediate Teacher. sin; Primary Teac hers "125. High Sehool—Principal $1,640; Professor of Mathematics SI,4W; Mule Assistant t 000; Fe male .11/1818tArtt SW; Teacher of Ikak-keeping and Penmanship $.45; Teacher of Drawing (blared Elcdsooi—Principal, sl, AaSistantb $125. Janitor of High School, /Hat Janitrix of Colored School, alio. On motion, the report of the Committee was adopted. On motion, the Uoan.l proceeded to the elm- Hon Of Professore. Tettellure n and Janitors of the High and Colonel r. , choola, whlell resulted as follows: . ugh &hoof —Principal, Philoins Dean; Pro. fesemr of Mathematics, W. W. Dickson; Assist ant, Joe. 11. Montgomery; Teacher of Book. keening and Penmanship, .1. C. Smith; Teach er of Drawing, A. Vander Naillen; Janitor, Boat. ilolco. Entered SeJlool—Prinelpal, C. Sackett.; As sistant, Mrs. Emily Burr; Janittlx, Mrs. Sarah Ellsbury. On motion, adjourned. Need. lienovallon At the meeting of Councils haft evening Mr. Seibert; a member from the sixth ward, in the course of the debate on the Board of Health appropriation, made a strange argument in savor of a total renovation of :the Council chambers. Our attention belrigthusattracted to the matter, we took a glance at the inter ior of both chambers, and from what we saw we fully coincide with Mr. SelberVa views. The walls were oevered with a bright grained glazed paper, but time has had Its effect upon them, and they are now of a leathery hue, with groat blotches hope and there, while in one place the plastering is discernable. The furniture ISM - an antique style, and as one looks at the ancuentialeces he cannot forego a feeling of veneration tor them{ in factthoylook as it they might have, and mayhap did grace to the chamber of our town coma ! in the dapps when we 74 7 hopeey to 'tit ' a take the hint so 'kindly tendered to them hy Mr. Seibert, and have thesol l Partmentsrlaead in such a condition that atmugerslimy Visit them without being reminded NO fOrcibly of the somberness of that dingy Venetian judg. merit hall in 'which met the dreaded "Connell of Ten." • Itemlt of the Investlgottoia,—The vetUgstion by the Porttnapeetera of the air. etunetanoes uttendhor the ;recent eolifalon be tween the steamboats Chieftain and PaPette; In the Monongahela, near liaxelwoodi has ro sulted In the exoneration Of the ofneerent: the Chieftain and the suspension for-nix:monthil of the Menge of Thomaallupork pilot of the Free FlfilllL—A free night was Indulged la last night, about tweliredolook,in a tenement home on Webster Oreet.', White eight of.ten burly Iriainnen participated -in It, not forta• nately thapolleli put la an curb' it 'and arrentol atunber "al the, errata. Noheada:morthy of report were broken. Ilardr-,Two negro waiters reareedind tolt. adhawara and Addison Thentaa, had a eatarrek od-htonday at the IdeLtirtr.lionee, wheeltrer,-whert they . were•bottremployed.. ,Thomaio draws revelyer,and• snot Ratans= tar Ide,Who rollover andexidred;Th e :reeldedlnWashington,l's . .' :r-' droased: Liao of elturks..-Tholollowhig 'were • the, Priem reallzeet last evening at the reftaarsalo of stooks at tho Common:del Sales Booms of A. 31.11watne, Ancitioneeloo6 pmtthtleld Moot: , • 4.ltegbonv Itiangurated.—Tber early -'elesing mcnne=. went. was Illworanlied 7 i - yes l entay, by Marke t alma , ' l32 dlebiote, :nearly ; all:bee - bee Mooed' their en:medal, oNsiockp,m.. 'Many Mei% ly • street, nenthenda ere understand,. : design, , 18ndo , ae 7 Oakland 'Petelk—At : Oakland Zark, yeatentay, a Wall of epood..SOokldgee between "AloagnaveAs - mare and a hone owned by ble: - .ll.uele-mlle beide, best thrOa in The'matewodld Odeo Idreliitkwate., _ . Choirs* oerniad.,alderi' nazi utler, Corday, ooduatttod-JoaeyrrLaooy forli•tar.' .char hearing oua obargo or fraud,..prorerrod The CousiefeCildeferitlnuai session • ,yeacerlay,, the enteteent ust,:-Npteing or general important. ; Inns*. lare&; • ' ' /Oxen .1 . 61416 in OlovaszA. :_ate Who la4horse TilattitWuitrP"mi.""Ozetft h 1. Seeoa mte., .o dPostoon t e Il ment of the alted Braley Prize neert at Chicago. • The manager of the United States Prise Concert of Chicago, which was to have taken place yesterday, announces a second postpone ment. He states that It Is absolutely neces sary to secure toll and satisfactory reports from agents, in order that the registry of all tickets sold may be correctly made, previous to drawing. Special agents have been appoint ed to visit points from which local agents have failed to make proper and' reliable re ports, and as soon as all the ttchetro 'disposed of are properly registered, (as they only can be on reception of full reports from agents,) the concert and drawing will take edam. Circulars were Sent to 'all the local agents expressly and • earnestly urging them to report in time for the drawing on the sth of July, but hundreds of these agents failed to report as instructed. • • When.the reports shall have been received, and a correct registry of tickets made, Ten 'Dap' Notice of the Concert andllrawing will .be published In. the Chlcsigo papers, and in the learlingpapers throughout the • United States. CoL. Block's. glenuillas.—A meeting of members of the late EiLityeecond Pennsylva nia Regiment h"aa'been called for tomorrow evening', to take action concerning the °ting ing on of the remains of 8. W. Black, their lamented Colonel. - Provisional tiorersuoent Ofikers stint' vestals. GatvarA.ron, July tn—The Sohretary of State and acting Governor Bell, officially anuotmced to Chief Justice Austin, that the (Alcamo( the Provisional Government will continue to dis charge the duties of their respective offices until orders are received from the President to the contrary. GRP_GO—SMITLI—On Tuesday afternoon, at Lb , residence of the bride's parents, on Western eve mult: the Rev. Joseph it. Kerr, Mr. P Gil Jn., to Miss 110 !MARA W. SMITH. .I of Ibeny city. No cards. NEW ADVERTIMECIM'S, 11ILLDAL,E CEMETEIIL—The beautiful "tiod•s-acre,” the largest suburban place orsepulehre. except one In thls county, sit uated on Year Brighton road, .immedLately north of AlleithenT. For burial iota, permits or titles, call Cl Central Drug Store of COOL ULA VEY, All, gbeny City. FAIRMAN & SAMSON. UN DERTALIKERS No. 196 SinithUeld St., con 7tb, ClCntranee (rombevenih titreet.) 3 przugrimpricrisscarmr, AND 133 BAN DUSNT tiTBEET, ALLEGHENY, PA ALEX. &I EN, lINaERT Ito Elf Fourthwee; Plttaborgh, 00171N8 of a.ll kind; CRAPIC.B % OLOVE73,!ood evert , d of Funeral Yon:owing emus rorrasnetL • • s MV:lsitt " nit; r n . Irs7l kr 'th elt ft iter ig r, Jacobno, LLD.. Thomas JEA rr ii. lfq., Jacob kJ Miller. Etc'. JOHN CROFT, BEdL ESTATE 4 GE.TT, Mee, No. 139 Fourth Street, Pittabarri, Ras for sale the following Real Eels Le. A large th ree -toy Brick Rouse, containing ten rooms, larg halls; front room on Met floor need as a Drag Store; hot and cold water , and gas through out the house. Lot 7.1)1 by Ed feet. Situate OD Chest- V-VMe t Jf b v . .zenht... LAND, sit ate at Edgewood Station, on the Pennsylvania PZlread, 7 miles from the city, on which there I. beautiful new frame dwelling, and a large number or be.aring fruit trees of the best quality, and a good supp_ly water. The dwelling and 7 acres of ground win be sold separately If desired, and the reiMust inlets Cl acres each, or larger ifrequested. The above land le admirably located for bushiest men. • ALSO.. 36 ACRES UV LAND, wrath:deg about It Acres cf Brimstone, of • named quality, enders? of an cesao The soil Lot the glass, suitable elthe for lambi, or gardening purposes; good flume dwellin,cand berm and a good suppl y of water_,_sit. este Smile. from the city, on the wealth:upon Pike, In Union township, being_ part of the Cartergarm.' ALS, 37 ACRES, well Improved tr , andunder_a high stale of cultivation. on which their ant 1,706 bearing vo mit babes. MO bearing grape vines, 100 itandsr.. pear trees, and a page number of peach, apple and taunt trees. Property ethane on the old Washing- Mu road, In Scott township, Micelles from the city. for further partimilara inquire of theabove agent. MEACHAIIITS' HOTEL, Corner Smithfield and Third Streets, 3PXTTES.II3I:IXLCir..I3. THIS OLD FAVORITE HOTEL haling boon thoroughly renowned, repaired NOW OPE' FOR TIM RECIIIION Of 81118 E. The proprietor (formerly of the HT. CHARLES.) ...Deets from its central location, his expedenee, determination to please, and by MODEUATZ CILIAMISS, to deserve and receive a liberal Pat ronage. 8. H. RIAI., Proprietor. ll= ALLEGHENY TAXES. CITY ALLEOLIENY. TIZASIMiII'S ureic; Juno 71h, i 6. S Notice la hereby raven that the Assesson have tiow placed In the Treasurer'e thliee, the POPGUN , of City ._Poor, City Business. School, School Building nutlßounty Tutus, and of Water Bents far the year LOS, and that sald Taxes .111 now be received in pursuance of the Acts of Mutably of February Wth, UM, and of April 14th, 1961, subleet to the foltowing regulations and allowance.: wire per cent., if paid on or before the drat day of Jolt. Ei=ZZIMIE=M Tnu pgr cent., ti bald on or befdte the first day of Septelnber. If paid after the drat day of September,. and on or before the Pm day of October, no deduction wilt be made. If paid after the Ant day of October and on abbe fore the ern demo iNo fember. en addition of nee per cent. snail us 541.11160 •1111.0.11.71101 e 0010$ CMS. a.. 1. tut nest ea november. warream will. be 1.1113.1 to entoree the orniection of lii Soon remain ing gantlet. togetner "mu tue percentage steeped 'thereon, and tne costs fe: D. biLAWF.E.B.Itebt. City Treimebbr• FURNITURE ♦ND Oak AND WOOD CHAIRS, Nlanulloused sad Amalie., Wholesale or Retail. JefIQES W. WOODWE LL, NOS. Ti N TIONLETELEE. Opposite E. Edmzukilson /10.:01. mgl babs NO. 1 FOURTII STNEIVE. S . 8. BRIAN, Broker fa Stocks, BONDS AHD REAL ESTATE, 57 FOURTH (Burke., Italldlog,) btipi and sells ;.on • tola BANK: ,BAILBOAD: .INI3I7BANtif, PILTHOLEUX STI)010, a ni:l UOVEENMS2M. ILMUCIPA t i I , RAILROAD "AlNtiOTltgilliqN*4 Orders exeeskted e 7 Ulegraptiat the. NEW ItOitK' ilTOoli 110613 Di at the. rite; otconualuslon cnarn4ln itiose cider. . pr4dica•piimthiro..lllitiOtittitei,s, COL PENN Went sjytes . OT44 NITUAIC6Y4tantIy bald.' JelAle.ls . .'7 t. LA PIERIIEBOUSEi,,' . . PliUad.lpMu The zuthictibera . haming leased fade llywrite H Itlss been itHWITTICH AN XIiKUANT'hILANNISH.,•and /a' ' -.taw atop% Amu ow ilow.,,prepszed -with u euIC AO{ inerreeepliort ol e neat poiltithi:anufllll/Felsasliotels hi c the l'uterw,:.as the past. . RAMOS VAHLKV. . 0...A441,31 - DELTA2r, ir) 81 0% Afeaitgae:iituk irmaso ALLY6BBYY CITY, 'PA: TACKS OF pviatt - ti. • '.....:;corrick, =tamp Ail"' -'I3OI)PL)Eu*: - .tampurrinvp , 'Aiwp'ci Agril4OOllW.Fll;;..A4O: coma *oat amtrlkrind 4464 intspahitk;:' ~-;,-AGENTSII3Ik-FA.Miwisz• ZIATiONAL b 4 tz - or I.IIIBIIDIGH, 1. - e • Mr razitatan, P . A.;•July.l . l,ltos. 14,Voitimewr o TEMBOARD Or t m.pisseross..ouccurk6rtbr 14t11: that Om '-,I42PITUDIAL imiliOrinujibMl4,4l4 ll raitheinouce. grabgerlbers sbe nit4ornlXTY-811/N.LUA*4 formica' eltarou ArtmeilditAt. Casbler. 7 ' e- DIIIINIST/Li.TOWS —:- Irtitl £.a. imArlAumigastmoza bier ' bum Las day ~ m wm; " rx.—tr. b egrp.mreg,..wt - c '...: ils ' : worialitaave.e, _thde aco aald.tate - ' ma nmagat. ,4 d somata JunacuLace duet,psAkm . , •' ' - '., ".. mlitor's „aro tequpssed - tortmat ecount tOZ• . _ ., ii. x. ital.,. : ifttat.r . LUCSOChL. -; ~ ~•'..' - . , -rAlivili. XYATIRV-., 359 Libert*t.iimM kittabonitt.L , "-......-"r--.1.1?-....1.;........,—; ' - • ... grallsastaator. KENNEDY;= A. -Lol""err." - rzo - Att n. Ig tuict i MI L TINIUc . - 1 7,1 9 1a ll Et' a ttAritOdP,;;VAL'lrt,igklitlf".. r ."! ,, trunwll•Atafti,:vitliati. , .:/..“,..:_ i. 112,1=„„,,...0ww.,„.......:,,,--..:..,., ,-, ,„, p., ~,,,,,, bayin ,,, 0 . 4 ' , .a.,......Ykw_rt . !k0 ..,10..., i'lXi' twlr'lai.V.'-:.,: tn=rty,,,1R:44!..7urin.,,0*,...71:: 7. ..-.1 , .... 'a— k,,,,-- jz ,• 5 .,,,, , , - „,--- -. ...:.;.:: ,- ~ '“, . ...lll 2 iP,r,.wrm.""*YA"so'ng-1:-' Ji..W- 4 `!. -, , ,-; '• : . .01,14:.:451000*,'...,.=4.1r11,-,::-:,:,:::,-.,,-/,.!. '.'• r lY. '' 114, f 4 5U t 1 .. A , ~,,.....Y,fi...:;L'T4;';''''''s,.-;;4i:‘444,..,!.:;".'L ~,:::..;4,,,,.i.,.,:..,;24t,,; ;',iil4l--:::Z---.1''qpri,?i-4?1-?31,,,,,''''''',4'...43,,V4.&-'11.-'41,2141:12itiettii:A.,iliPai..d.X.tfi.,;S.,.-..t.4.:06 :pa : RALE, ,1 RI 'MAW' Liwa isselevumz- rtiquis. Ja141.43, THEWEEKLY GAZETTE. TWO, EDITIONS ISSUED. . OR \NEON/tie:dirt% AND NATIOIDAYS. The edition Is forwarded WcbwtU reach the sub. writers soonest al the =slime. IVENS •••••-•:. .'• • 00P/1121, Pita $1 10 50 UL1311311 OF /IS AN D • • *ii• uLulis or Ttr.N urwTali: • • imN DUNSEATH & CO., 0 13 . such lEiltreat.l =t3 Wa;tolies. CLOCKS, SEWELIIS, Silver aid Silver Plated Ware.! We are in ancelpt duty _new style. Jat;UoLD OHAlian, 21NS, Call and see our at oak and get PM. , se - - LADIES , AND WENDS - NA7.4101 1 C,11311 , 13. - ALL BTYLZS, AT GREATLY REDDENED PRIECEN, EZE;M ==! FOR CHEAP. 66.1P3R/VrAX:01.2.111,3, 00' HAS L'E,TT 00'. 11 13, SS% SUITIIFLELD EPTUSET . . ILT.NNEDYNS OLD STAND CLOAKSS CLOAI*B I NEW cl,timcs JUST RECNIVED AT TILE PIM ST. CLOAK 40118. ELECIANT CLOTH SACQUES Selling at ,/i12,59, MEM New Cloak House, 49 Flith BL, tnyb Opposite Old Theatre. DOLLAR. SAVINGS BANK, • No. 65iFourth Street, . • q/fIaITERED IN '1855: ..711 1 ,24"reV. 0 1,t)„?,°4 — e,i:,! - :.TITV:211: Ist, from 7 to 9 o'clock, and from November tot to May Ist, from a to t o'clock. - Deposits received of all mouse( not less than One 'Dollar, and ÷nd of the profits declared melee a year, to Jane and December. Intereetcliss been: declared semi-annually in loon and December Smolt the Bank non organized, at the , Me of 'taper cent, , • a /Merest, If not drawn out, It placed to the greed' . of the depositor as principal. and bears the same . Wrest Loom the arm days of June be; compounding Inlet a year it troubling the de positor to call, or even to present.s pass book. At Into rate money will double in less than twerve years. Books coat...bang the Charter, By-Laws, Miles and 000,furnished gratis, on application MANI Oath. Puselnstre—OP.olloE ALIIBICE. • . Vick nErstostaTaL John Backefen, M. yolloth; ILD.‘ 'Beni. L. Pahnustock, Robert Robb, Jamul, Bertha., John ELlilmenberper. • James; McAuley James Biddle. • • James.B. D. :141..1i5, Alefauderliteerj Deno M. Pennock, .. I Chrlatianienne7l 7 . Vairartne, ' • • Wm. J. Anderion. ) 11r D. itgly g3 . .tialotri Adam., John C. Medley, PetTr Y i. ltd . :lre. kitvege.Black, John Marshall, . Vilingrr6trri... Atilyiritriug=: Mules A. Colton. Jahn Orr, Wm. Douala., • .urnL . i3,.. 11=r411, John Evuut, •Jobs J. Gillespie. Alexander Tlndle. William B. Haven, William Vankirle, Peter H. Hunker, Win. P. %etyma, • Illebanl Ray; hone Whinier. Tazneuluni--CUAltt, -A. COLTON. liscurrAnY—JAß. B. D. !SEEDS. lylile McCLELLANWS AUCTION EMPORIUM, Nos. 55 and 57 Fifth Street L4RGE STOCK OF • NEW GOODS. • Hoop Skirts, all sizes, Hosiery and Gloves, Ladies, Gent's & Children' Cloths,„Dress Goods, Bal moral Skirts, House. Furnishing Goods, Umbrellas, Parasols, Men's Hats, Straw Goods for Misses and Children, and the usual• large and elegant stock of BOOTS SHOES AND GAITERS. & HAREEM SEEM MCKEE& Rave been ..aided the ran.ia following Vein for the year MS • • • • ... F== M;= • Flrstrreraiwn for Mach er-itigh . Wrl in:mina for best nairfacturlig mw sane rur. rintyremi forbesVlGuantle6tkF3 * i l Argarnirr . bet. AtannisetkiriniMilei,triF . . first Prom for twit Manithetaulug *edam - • tuornextee County Pair, . • Vint Premluni fur be. Machine for Epee la yet penes at Lawrence Canny -Yu% First Premium for best Yumilyiteeltine at. Buck First Premium (Ur best limiiireciirrisif Blueithio First Premlmahr beat idauutseturluii:wit kisehlue at UprlngUeld roar, Obio. • - - Pint Premium for beet IdumfeeiFilid =La 'Aiseidne Yalta/ill Muir. . - Firit Premium curbed kLutubetunns hiecbine at -Suffolk County Y.., • r•-• First Premium fOr beat llamulhsturiu_it and, Yuidne ailietturier Countyymr, N. ..11rst Yrimilniu fur hest:dtaeptnaroryt ynrpisea tihany - • Nina premium (0, beniamatiam;tulwr.,l4rAdW Allegheny County falt, •-; •- • - h Yirst Premium for w rksiAllegiUM: - enemy fair; Pw. I - - - . A. P. uarroNEY; M=M rum strait; ktitiboite: ASSESSOR'S OFFICE; VITERNAL • Noilce:lsliireby glidis to jll , persorta lnterettod that- , the lista of income Tee, Licenses; -th-: for; thatportion. of tbefrdent7-titlid .embraced to the county of Allegheny, - tr hi -be ;open. ibr examination et, nay Odic, be, 0. Water street. , Allegbany, on thhisit h -and nithrlayipt July, at whim time. , plate I. edit beer , ' at appea ls pre seated to roe relative to any erroneous o excessive ' - valuations, assessnieura or Crannoliktions rnaqe . She nashdant Assessors for the. said county.; - , Ail •Pireals toast be 01540 . 1 n 'writing, awl' most apeclfy irtrtleniar:cause: Wetter or thing re cpectpla-srhfeb a decision is requested,. and-shall :; tutu Mara Inn grOtand or principle oferror eompfaln ed of No appeal con be allowed. tunny parr, ate, the ihrt ,bas- been transmitted to • the Collector: Al- Car tnu abuse date ell_ persons subject Solar who , hero negtected to mate returCsarld he subjected the penalties provided bJ Lw. l". B.keries sAlll sor4.ls 2"11.1 9 1 - . s. Allegdeny, daly a, ltieri: ARCHITEMBILIM.' Bair& MOSF2,.III(OITECIB,; . :'.' - nile.r v uove4 in the itrnia'Aiseciatioit • Nos. 2 and, 81..61air Street, theZetill be pleeiet to immetbeleebiLder.ile 'fnG WIWI, desiring teeireerirleal. NirlClPWlllereall' : ':-Alrettelir .- Of .Adtrdiastratioutut the existeor..LAWIt&NAJE; .rritiotauE.A., lateor Reserve tewustowAilegtotet , .31Y tenet,. deceased. ban,- been granted to it 6.10 scritr,r,artzuquous tUdebted stdd elms . art,: requested to pnyinent.: and ttardtg xistate or demsadf updateste , uVut•AdF presenttbetu; 0/ . . uperir setbeutteu_oub yr . 19 . 2._t • bky. -:4‘412 , 1 " i/Pribg - • 4.