ili - ')he ..ittbilleito...6.lllt.t,•! NOVEMBER 16643 iIuDA = Th ' is gontieman stands alone. 'With natural abilities as Fornarnents of culture fitting him to be the leader and Idol of a great pasty, he remains solitary. He ex cites admitation and wonder, Mitiosity and hatred, commands resp - Fet and stirs' opposition, and still few are found to ceptltis inculcations and yield to his guid ance. Despising all glosses, striking With . keen analysis tbro ugh subterfilgcts And il lusions, contemning arnbltiOii-fOr personal popularity, or official position, he carries with Kim the aspect of the old : Hebrew phophet . who so 'constantly said hard things of tbe,great men and the dominant -party in Israel, that they came to hate him with a perfect_ hatred. Yet, no thoughtful man will venture to decide that. hp isnot useful in his clay and geuerAtion: It its'often:needinl iu this • world to have . unpleasant things i s ..air.d, and tity! . re mast ~t 'vnd one to say them. The living subject on a surgeon's. - table finds no . pleasure in the skill that 'searche-s d e xterously to the scat of the hurt, and carefully remove• the diseased portions; but he 'derives incaleu. bible benefit therefrom.• An unsophistica ; ted looker-on instinctively' fancies the surgeon's task to be rest repulsive, and marvels any man of ordinary sensibilities " coo give himself up to it; but the surgeon, conscious of his skill, and kn.' wing the advantages whip]] it imparts, takes more thau'a grim pleasure inthe exercise of his 'function—it tills hhu with 4 cal La but over flowing contentment. In a speech-Mr: Pan-Lies made in Fan elli] Hill, the evening of the ,;'). tit instant, he said: "Nilson says to his' constituents that two thousand 'five hundred negroes been killed, in a single city in .Texas Whose blame is slid Congress. If Union men in New Orleans are murder ed, why does not Congress usseirible and order grunt to stop it; or, if the President refuses,itupeaph [Applause.] Had the long Parliament heard that the'•Pro tee* wai iu league with the Stuarts, thm it was not safe for an Bugli,sliman to visit Bristol, would they have adjourned? To , blood of•Dostio lies on Congress as well as on the Whitelouse. What it can prevent it is respoosible for. One mati 'mule Nea Orlsans safe to live could not emigres:. make the Sundt so? [Prolonged applause. j One soldier left to himself, with not enongi, white troops to man his forts, calling b. Africa for assistance. wade the first cud 'worst great city of the rebels ; a'mre ground 'for a Northern 1111a1 to live in and trade in Bstmed New Orleans uutil it covers test States and the problem is ended. The bomb must tat ruled by the iron Laud us military despotism for some years to come: The tact shut Cougrees could have preVent. ed the danger that threatened Baltimore made it responsible for it." Pardoning scimething to the enthusiasm of theorator, there is matter here worthy or coasideration. 'oneres.: , , at its late ses Finn, made - mistakes I•d:11 . of i_enimisfiou and omission. It i, w.t L,. hays the mistakes pointed nut in order th‘t they ,uray he rectified at the approsehinz session. •Not a few of the members who held back last winter, and down to the day of ad journment, are now dm ouzidy cousin, ecl the policy - they pursued was wrong in prin ciple and detrimental is its conser i nences. Same of them have magnanimously area-. eel their changed ideas on this head. But, 31. c Puar.tes went: on to-say. "Tu.:: only tray friends or the Snub were the AholitiOnists and r.re now the Radicals. Congress wasted seven ruoirlis trying to protect'the negro. During ail the war our only friends were the black race. Wow do we now propose ? to proteCt them 4?omf - Framt the ittbel frith the hot-. ter sound his neck? No: We raised the Rebel, Wk. the halter from iris lieek, gave him Lis estate, a:turfed lion rii tanden Cu, and then we go to wee.: to protect the ne gro. Give the hay it Men all tile rights that belong to loyalty and then pass laws to pro. tent the Rebels. Now, the boot id on tio. wrong leg.. Instead of having a Civil Rights bill,lo protect Robert Small, we rtiould haven bill to protect Governor Ad ken from have natle..the.Rehel, 'tyrants and then talk idTiro - r e ad zi til le gro ,from the former. This is au • impel-- taut question for State and ',Vali streets The crisis which restore us to a healthy currency can only be kept off by;making the fire milltens of negroes large construe ers of Northerh fabrics; restore the Union so as to Make all their rizhts not depend cut ent on Rebels, but secure, and titer: IViii be 130 tl3O - 111( . . We will escape the tr hernise inevitable Catastrophe. The Soulth IMS al ways Wits persistency carried through its financial bills, and if their power is not re strained-by the colored loyal vote we shall have to'Pay the Rubel debt, and our Unss. cial ruin would be the result." . There is some exaglzeration in this; but there is more hard fact and plain common sense: The vulgar prejudice ngaiust the blacks so swayed even Republican . 131e111- bets of Congress that they failed to-dis cover the real nature and extent of the evil . for Which they were called to provide a remedy. TA development of the last Aix months tbgoughout the Southern States, have been 'sufficient to correct all misjudg merlin on this head, and to ihduco abetter' methdd when Coilgress_shall reassemble a month hence. • In the iaii number of the Ante-Slarery Standard, Mr." Patudrs discloses his iteafty.auspicicts of Lieitenant General SnzumAs, and says A. good many things we are far enough from endiirsing. Take a sample: : • "Sherman can hide under no such ex 'cue:. There is no •tloubt he has- genius. Emerson tells of a; Colonel Buford, id w e st Point, who struck the trunnions of a Lannon so many thousand 'dews with a 1 hammer that . at last lit broke them. Just so Grant broke the relVical. Sherman conquered with hisbraius as truly as with nis sword. lifo will never be a King Log - It is vitally important that his atop, to wards the Presidency theuld be vigilantly. _ scrutinized. Long time a resident of the I South, he has all the narrow preiudices and absurd opinions of that section. hates. New England for the ideas it repre. tents.' Ile has authiug but curse and Lem .temptuous criticism for 3lassachusetts; not, of course, the geographical State; but the prir.ciples, ideas and purpose which that name stirs in the mind of every man who bears it. We fear he has learned little from the war. Bigoted, half-informed, intensely sectional, the moment armed re• ristance ceases, lite in just the mar. to sorvc the South in her effort to segailit by iatrigue what she lost by arms. If he is earitexttPresident. he willtcarry out in its fulfillmenfj on a national Scale, that disgraceful and wholesale. turreadel I to Johnson which .only a Northern .groityl, • that drowned even the thunder of NM:rata, j Ton POPE, in a recent - conversation w i th , frightened him and hismiturades froracqui- Rufus King, the diplomatic agent of PielAna- After nvi rg for twenty y , tare at the United . States at Rome, •made tom.. the South in -intitaatet relations -• ith pier ; declarations touching Ferdauinnat leader', ttfier sweerutlg through her tdrri- t- " lie had no idea that the movement tory at the head ofriet,,itimi, anti 4vould affect British rule in Ireland; for the taking the latest:survey of tier mood ocean which rolled between the Uuited resources, he prop{ sal to treat the war as States and Great Britain forbade the idea a frolic, anti let 'Ali seetions resume, sub- , of invasion. But Canada, with its eaten , etantially, the relations ditty held before ' sive and-exposed froutier„offered an easier the Rebellion. General Shitrmhu ii too prize, and thither, be thought, the Fenian shrewd and capable it man to allow of our ; miht turn their arms. - It would be for ex pl a ining this on any ground of eiedulity !the advantage of all parties, the holyor misapprehension. Such an otrer multi . Father remarked, that the United Staten have come °all - iron mind incurably elieuttl take Cd.tiata and incorporate it into Southerd in its • 1 ins and opinions. not; tile the American littiou, rather than allow the turdi hot flies Ors civil war emild burn; Fealties to possess the part of ihe possess themselves of it." . Wit lolly and wickeducss out of him. he in Sensible , o past : cure, His clear, . coalition t • 'sense taught hitit"'What honor and fair play? —A. few days ago a young man residing '.dernaraddd t While be, had no relish for the at rsyetteville, Onondaga Comity, orstroug „plan of ,dewing Lie:4mo to fight, and flung muscular frame, dislocated his lower Jaw his inflaenho against It, be - yonfessed that -7 !In the act ofgappliig. A doetor was called 'to admit the negm to this struggle for any to his_asastaucc, who found his patient un ..nnrpose woe to giVe hint a Agin to stay In able to close his mouth; became incest 41 for all, and that when the fight is over, wiry to put him entirely under the 'ado thetaad that drops the musket utunot be euce of chloroform before a sethicient red s, denied the no man has since ation of the 'muscles could be . Incluerd to heard oho:word:from idle In- 01;frort , oclzestop the jaw, to Its"natural position.• ' " . MM that rule of justice and fair play. Ilia flat- raw, sectional bate bas smothered Ids logic. old, bitter aristocracy of the Skin still clings to him." TRINITY CiIIURCII- llep +As have recently been put in cir culation to the effect that discoveries had been made - which so greatly invalidated the,. title -of the Corporation of Trinity Chttich in the city of New Park, that. the Trustees thereof kid subMitted terms of eorriproraie4' Tlicsc rumors took as - tive a form that the Trusteasifelt constrain - - cd to . issue Reard positively contradicting the:Whole of them. Its it they say, that they Lave never offered or agree'" to ac- ; cept, nor even taken into 'consideration a compromise of the ally proposition for .n claims now talked about; that the title of 'he Church has been fully adjudicated and Sustained by the Courts, against this very claim; so that the adverse title can only be sustained by - a reversal of former decision; and that there is no dispute with Mr. As- Tort or any of the tenants of the L'hurCh, growing out of suppoSed invalidity of the title on which the property is held. St. Paul's is a chapel belonging to Trin ity. Oa the :10th of October, the Rev. Dr. Dix, rector of that chapel, delivered a dis course on the financial conditinn and future work of Trinity, in which he brought out many facts of great interest touching the value of the trust-- prciperti and the man agement of it. Of the pecuniary value of the trust he said : "The lots belonging to the Astor letve, which has just fallen ILI, have been letised again. The Corporation is now in posses Sionof all the property it can ever bold. The current financial year, which will end on the 31st of July, ISO 7, w ill barely leave -es witliOut a deficit, and its entire re venni!. tio.i.:;-fter, with the addition Of the income of the Astor lease, will not equal the int erestMf $0,000,000. Deducting charges on real estate, expenses of administration, interest on its delii, allowances anti dona tions pledged to other parishes and institu tions, its available income for Church pur poses wilDnot much exceed $'250,000." This plain, and doubtless, truthful state ment, takes the romance out et the popu lar hitias of the faVons wealth of the Corporation. In tiomparistin with some private fortunes in New York; the wealth of Trinity, available for purposes of rev enue, is small indeed. At least four citi zens of New York are reputed, end no doubt truly, to be possessed of fifty.- mil lions of dollars each, while Trinity, be yond the edifices of worship, of eduaation, tud of ciaarity, which it has erected; in whole or in part, has only four millions of dollars yielding income. There must, be tiny New Yorkers, each of whom can show astuuch actual wo:king capital. As to the future appropriation of the rere noes or the Corporation, he prolutuncled his plans as:follows: WiS 4 -1, with GOD'S help, to devote; if Doi the whole, so much as. I can, of cur in come, whatever it may be, to the spiritual and temporal good of the population that part of the city which other bodies have' forsaken 'and left to take call' ofitcelf. To that end, I ....mild in the ill,: 51300. rtsiolve never iii_teafter to corAir.tit s dollar of debt for any purl,' .:ad .ieLond plae I would nev , .: noard a dollar of income, but speed it freely as it comes., Now, as to the plan o: expenditure. Beginning at the forthei point south, see have Melly Church, which needs enlargement so as tt make it capable of accommodatiuu the srowds which "so often turn iu disappointment from its doors, unable to get in. Next la order comes.this church, and after it, 1: , - dining Westward and nortb.Ward, reach st. John's: these. our OWE' chapels, :11116t 11, IllailltlfUed. Beyond St. John's: ott the west h 1 of do to , k nr.i dot tun far alVly, a foultic chnrci .is quipA t .. .just where St. ground and don so Emod a crock. posit:. . that point, to the extreme e 4 s:, cnnewb,nre near .tho bead r f Enst Broadway, we should hare a fifth cUuren., Ind midway between them, near Broad. way, on the line of Canal strut, a sixth.- I cannot see how one of those clutches eau spared, if we are io keep up any land marks of Religion itt the wilderness and, taerefore, those six, at e very least,. ; _ be maintained. But in the next place, I would not think of working them, or any of them, as mere parish churches. Each Itpulti be a mission statipn ; each should _hake attached to it a Clergy House, with men enough in residence to do the paroch ial work of a large district, to preach, ii aced be, in the streets, to visit from house to house, to keep up that incessant and un tiring pastoral work by which the poor, the careless, and the vicious ran be reached. But also in connection with each of those mission churches, I would Intro parochial schools,for,NoYs cud girls, furnished v: tilt all that is required to ake schools desira ble. Then, in some central place, or at sonic suitable mud convenient points, I Would have Houses of Charity, like S. Barnabas House, or St Stephen's in Bus t-ma, at whiCh the homeless, the ,poor, the unhappy; land the unemployed would be always sure or a lodging, a meal, and a wet- Coble; and of such information and counsel as the case requires. It' the City Hospital should he removed,l wOuld put an Infirmary of sonic kind In its place; and at any rate them should never be lacking physicians and dispensaries in connection with each of our Mission stations, to meet and take care of the sick. The churches, one and all, should be rendered as attractive as a suitable ritual, fine music, amt artistic em hellishaient could make them; while in the work of teaching the, young and adniinis tering to the sick, I knots' that I should find the devoted women who, assuming the state of life and -the habit of Sisters of Uharity and Mercy, would enter - with en thusiasm on this field of labor, and give themselves up to Christ therein; while I would'employ in the clerical force a con siderable number of young men who, free from family ties and domestic cares, ,And tilde to live together in community, would constitute 'associate missions' in this mural and spiritital - wilderness." There is certainly much in this to awak en admiration not only of Christians, ab-- sotbed in preparations for the life totemic, but in philanthropists, who are concerned primarily in the well-being of men and women whit., they remain upon the earth. PILLAGE or TEE SOL'TITEEN MAILS The Boston Joriknal says that a letter was recently received at the office of that paper front Mississippi, complaining that the JOurn,a does not reach its subscribers in that State. The writer says: ''Our Irian and postoffice arran4cments are et perfectly loose ends; .no postmasthr —and if one is fund who can end will take the oath, each are the feeling.; of the people, generally against him that. 110 one i dares let him a room, to keep the office in, - I and his litc even is threatened if he at. tenants to take charge of, the mails. Only those who are Southern can have anything to do with the mails. Oar letters contain. ing money fail to reach their destimition, and . we have found our letteks tentalning drafts opened. MEE= follow "Clinnuct:y Di.pew, late Secte. tary of 01 '.is io brought forward for ]yes: roused to ai- Lietitcwint Governor during the last can vas?, owing to his receut.i pecuniary mis f pur trttines, He is soli n it v. of ciriracter, his ; accomplislitneuts ns 1 3 ;0 ° I u i ' tie g iati n : a h n i's ii-clia,te tutu (o,,, q uelit. .Speaker, and the coMblen,e 111)1VCI - 50i1;y felt in his personal and poliUciil integrity, :ill marked him,out for a successful and prominent man in bus iness and political cireleii On bib retire ment from the office of Secretary of Stai . e, he entered into the banking business. iu 11 ,II street, in partnership with a Mr. Pot ter, and the new firm of„Dep , !3v b Potter were fast' winning their way to public trust and favor. Sintimle, by the crime of one of their clerk?: all these promises of success were dashed. Three hundred thousand dollars itt money and bonds were stoleu from them by au employee. Not only all theif own binds, but large sums deposited with [bent by. others were lost. utterly overwhelined by this sudden ruin, Mr. Potter couldm,M even bear up under the shock of meeting with the creditors, but went home to Pennsylvania, content •dult down and glee pp all,' a ruined man. Mr. Depew met the creditors, but the mental agony of the struggle nearly overthrew his reason, and for weeks after ward he seemed to verge on insahity and suicide. When asked to participate as a candidate in - the State canvass, he declin ed, lest partisan feeling should drag and distort his p - ccuniary misfortunes to the Injury of his ticket. Mr. 'Depew is still one of the ablest, most patriotic and most accomplished young inedbethre the roan try, and notwithstanding his severe mis fortunes, has still years enough before him to attain to farmiore than lie has lost. Llis misfortunes are ofa character to re ceive the sympathy of the entire country." A conuEsPONDESI-T of the New Odoans Tfetet furnishes the following history of the family of our treat Admiral : "The Farrsg,ut family was originally Spanish, natives of Barcelona, Before the Re'volution the grandfather of the Ad. Miral emigrated .to the 'neighborhood of Norfolk, Virginia. Saortly ;titer ward„the Farragut family removed to Tennessee, where they found William C. C. Clan borne just elected to Rpresent the State in Congress. He was shut after appoint ed Governor of 311ssissippi Territory, and thence aransfcrred to Louisiana. Subse quently the Farragut •family removed to this city, whete..lm father clf•the Admi ral anti ti ,, e of bis brothers, a naval officer of high standing, died. Here he pasiied his early. youth, and here, a me fifty years since, he received his appointment in thiC navy. of the United States, on the appli- - cation of Governor Claiborne, his steady and devoted friend. In this city the Ad- ntiraChas numerous relatives, honorable _and -respectable men, who, in the late , tillagle, shared with the masses of the Southern people their notions of duty and patridtistu Their,illustrtous lumen:in fol lowed his own opinions, and maintained them iu a career &stint:nisi/ea no less .for personal gallantry and pre-eminent pro ft,;ional ability, than for his g e nerous a nj humane conduct to the nuforturude.- CHOLERA:: CHOLERA::: xvith the altantt crrooln advent of cholora 'with cotalt 01" ttot aprt thoughtfkg pervou 111 unptoparri tt IV,otrr 01,0: viut.rtent, bar .o,oo.drat,tl t , hlt , h ha 3 ravod fen .0 cure 'mr.olo-ond never r ttet, OEO .I,l,l:Ankle, wLen Aural Alla artont• ran o,had . • tht 0 0:0d, uo t -r. form, 0100' . It w.t. th.l e. l / 4 ,-rich,t, that. tNti'S `.ltohiLlt, :6113i 11. 7. -- Ci".•- ,13rgL. at• = lora,: I.l:h< Puctocol. near Fourth ~.trrtt 1%;111.11111E1:1RE I: E M=l . . 3Sartt.et Street. t;y ra.gi anyrrht-te VII tcia ipt nl ltif A Heautifal Head of Hair: =EM= MEMO ... : I" s us.urr us' It nsursr: - u.son• • rto: I.leasing , •`!f3ll-1 - nior ....Cr {. %111 szravl,,,r :t the tt KUMMER! . . ,7 % , :OIL. glo; rand :14,1.14. 4. P .• - •141, •. •..1.,14, - 4. 7. 1•••-4 r: I .4 • • It - wili ••••••• v..t•1iat.444-4ortiwsca.p. ••••, bott.44. 41... . 'Ur N ;i7; • Nor:a - • 4,4-04 VlO4 4, I 4. 11 . 4 .1: - .44 dr••7 , 14.14. ari.l it toilet or !I• -nbt`lp IicOLAMIIaN N 11,1 i /13 Nrs.r• "Kt , . A. nELLY 37 Wowi eir. vt, au.l Slarlicrt street, 1 litsburgts. • • sta~c~;~o ens TßUTH.—tionie medical men Insist that It is undigulned Inadeirtlee a trineals. bower, entente!, It may he. Queer rest suhlkir this. It le like saying that au article t..r world need. should be kid Ina corner—that belt cilia and blesslnfs may he too ' , Weir diffused — ilia:. :he means ofpretertin a and restoring health should re a close troteimly. and nut ante , h 311, The argument le bsa. It le puree th sr, that: It le 111- nut,. IFILTTEIL I n elks - .lull: hi/ ride far dyspepsia. Utile . ..- ha as and leered - re deallity — ua I keki r bee, le Mewl! oaimid the repertoire of Elle faeihlty, weal weuol ~ ke - rt ale. equence? Irtetem I oteitrlng and ink Ira/rating mllltut”, the Kettle treht+ of tie pre p eratkou ataint hare liern Voltaic% to a curnpsra- Ire,: leo . . 'I h re 1a the Mgt..: aitihu:try for 3431,14 that light out be hid tinder al uslit tr.; lea:ever e t should be Mete :d as a rity au a 11111.. meet all men ota t . rogitte earea of It. It Is upon tide principle that the stir TEO° User been advertised and contlkue cu be sitrertised to every adaretiaper of ally promlathee lu itle avaleta hem anl that the sit autkurent to stiterintrale to Its (sear Lure uetn trall3l3trol alto MOrletes:_lan guarks. Itottaaints solo) perfect health er to- ti ha Wtothl he linghl3hlllsas tied. of aleanes• it the 11, aespaper, laid hot sprrort the &rah, tc.l4 regard In this unedurtfed toriporunt n u ll corrective tar and Did, maw,- moat hiss l - co reaaed from tote hunlelty. 1. thqt any argumet t again.. lir If the putellc health eat keen It, needs du if nee , hate been atTCG: If the lentil, hare lierit'at.enattiehell IMO the .Ilk rest. ed great good laza tern uneonepitaird; and whoao mean as to grudge, to k r Ilona tut. ht thettothur tilt resew or NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. BINGIIAM, Jr., Adonis Expretz Office, Si Fifth Street, is an authorized Agent to recnee Advertieensents (or the GAZETTE, and att other paper: throughout the United &Wee and the Canada:. BALL NAUSEOUS 31EmitEcts • • taken without taste or amell, by tieing InAl. DICK I eon . sui..r.s. bre!. in nee, hold by Drugglets generally. uon:061 TEM ng ist7i:Grt PERANCE LEAGUE.—A me of tbe PIT N'l le ANCF.! fillff Y. Will be held In th C e h.N'en AL , PIiKe.IIVTKIsLAN CCU Tit .6 yridaiy LVEN. 11(i. at 'Pi o'clock. when nu • woke,. 10411 Ov deliv ered by Capt. ca.m.en w. }tell [.... , 111% • fly order no9:nr.2 It. C. er,lhr/". HARNESS b.; ]111: Cli. bliotspl bee the Grover & Baker No, 1 Sewing Machine or buylcg 4 , 1“, bt re. it I. thc 1".,t t or th e ir rot n.te.,cNtt..ic Flynt n'ria:tt-t. LETTER CLIPS, E= I= I=l I=l = MEM W. F 9. Corr Wood sad Tblrd rittitill-r0 vt , 4 . • iOEi SALE—One Brick ItChip& anA,Lot. on Webster Ptrret, Allegheny, lawde tno Col:Orton, Tao LOLISC 11. a live roman with fol.] tells, wad lan:abed garret. TI. no .t I. :4 w 0 7 i ett.aelth &aleph: 0n he alley r t haekend 6: lot; all lu good order, and for tale cliesp. ' E n. of ItA5lOg.Y a 1.1,, 14,1E,Late ArO3to, No. 3t ISe•"er •trees, Allrgl.ray =LI LAUD OIL. lAA, Extra lieLae , l attil'axrraattql Mater ttrottoe , l, for hate by =9 ===l N A:lot of Iket tea Tetidr:• , l:llolce i.anl, Ir tlertey to arrive t.rr Lmte. I• 7 =9 ~ua~isv lot lA,. Inw o.llz, :Al, Ili • tdb,rly Efaal :Fe bo:‘,3 Goihtn. Vanory ilaunliuTg for CILAULES'e. BAL;ILEY OEM= - ri ll=l CLIAIME'd C.. PALSLXY. =M!aIM %,;;C di OM AliEUdoLA.NG,Wholeßxte kJ dealers loteroceries. Fluor. drain. Produce, Pro swops. Flab. Cheese. Balt, Carbon Oil. Ni.o 172 and 17i Wood dlreet. near Llberty. Stave; pittebersh, ra. . . no,aS: NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ...... JAMES T. BIIADY tt (buCeresors to e. Donee Corner Fourth and Wood Eda., BANKERS 8 BROKERS, • DIULICLIS IN ALL KINDS Or - Government Securities, Foreign Exchange, • Gold, Silver and Coupons. COLLECTIONS made 1131 ccersible vitae It the Limited State. and Cene4.. Interest ralowed on Time Deposits. 'TIE GIROVER & BAKER • SEWING &1-ACHINE • • is the 171 tt 11111 'fl, le utSfeckaulsm. rleue c.II end Xa Mille it at NO. IS FIFTH SIRE FT. nissoLuTloN OF PARTNER. par.nurshtp heretofore 'existing between Sine. TICAL'Etts ANN„SI Alt):4 Ahti tl end W. 11EN UY.t4ltlN 13 ill isotved as of thts day. ell buslneaa of the firm vslll be ,settled by the undersigned. ' 801.. TR kUrAMANII. ptitsnt.. - rtcrf, Nov. 6tl). Iss6. n09m7.1 RUODES' PITTSBURGH BREWERY. CARSON, DARLINGTON .& 00. Suoceit.nrs to JOSHUA. RHODES ,tt to.. BREWERS, MALSTERS & HOP DEALERS, Corner of Duquesne Way and Barker's Alley, Pittsburgh, Pa' BREWERS' NOTICE. 'FRE UNDERSIGNED, BREWERS rrrrsßuitott, renolved. at their lait •nerting, that ~tt!crucuts with Dealers shall be made cm toe FIBS!' OF EPEAT-]MOSTB, tom menclug Nc.ember lit, IY.M. • SPENCER & MeRAY, U. kAWCETr & CARSO'. DARLINGTON C 0..& Z. WAINWRIGHT. MICHAEL THIERIN. ro LLOCK. ICALTENHOIL,. 8 CO OEM FRINKLIN COTTON:WORKS 9 WEST CANAL STREET. E. HYDE'S' SONS Are now prepared t 3 mannfacturo COTTQN YARN, CARPET CHAIN, COVERLE I' TARN, CANDLEWICK, TWINE. IiATTINiis, • COTTON WRAPS. &c., Ar. WEST CANAL STREET. between Robinson and Laeueli, Allegheny City. Pa. P. S—All or lei, or mall attended to. non nil SALE OF CONDEMNED , ORDI- U AND t/III111:ANCE he k at Apetln, at Vu a 101.4 HOF. Alt -$S Al.. llldlot Comfort, Va ;on 'refl.] UPI/ •Y, ti. :hi liar of liorember. IFGEI, at 10 o'clock A. N. a large quAntltv of St urea, conslating to part alba lf roowlnd artleles viz: 2 , 1 Yield 1114 .Itge. Cannon, east Iron, of *art otr calibre.; 1.1,C1U I:kw,Sberleal Case, fut nhoth . e and deed gri ear.: 70Murrill - a earldom new callrehalred; 5 n Enflord 11111 ed tloeketr, cal. r 7:: u rres anl:pencer'x Itepeatlug ft Ikea: hu Foreign 111.1,... al. 111. , Smooth Ciro Musket., real. 1 4 1 2, cal 0; do du altered to percotal:n. .14: 10 Smoot! Bore tloalt,te, Clot lock, cal, 49; :I: Pet ofrera l•Wriftuct's and Benda/steals" Nat'l, cal. 3.1: LOD C‘ralry and Artillery Sabres: :II root:1r, 'dual lan, and nuo-coutmlsidatltd dr.eers. tonna r u wilt he allowed for the remora! of Tafttts _ . •. T 0. BAYLOR, . . ram.. cf Qui. aa4 Itt t, C" , . U. B. A. Corn'g. • GET ZONE RUT A GROVER & BAKER For a .110114.5 y Glrr. It Is r.I10:e. perkrt and thr,iore tu^ b,,t. WI to call - and see It at len=l2 FORT PITT FOUNDBY. CP,ARLES IiNIP NEPHEWS aLkitCl,ll4:7C4llO3 0/1. 0111.DXANCE. AV I AL!, It INlta ALA LiTT CA t aptuti attenUou pahl to I:OL,LINIL.a.II.IL.ra e Z. kST af.4l.llltit.ltV at 4 ItY.T4)III - a. att.:lacy! to proloptir. • As La rt,..IL L.., ',tat mattrials will - 1014'6ft to atta at tate Futuary. as lux 41:aut...a our old patztaats, pore - . 1. :Ai,' ANL, S111 , 1:41i ED p.tar,l, pre pore un•ltt •1, Mt. to ALI. 11A UtILN I:a at thArt 10t1,e, pITTL.III.7IIGIi CUTLEIII7 47031- I'AN Y.-11'e hart oh latal toe Guest mock of POCKET CUTLERY = HollowGrounc3.Razors In En,llegsVarlety 417312 - . C:r 3=o ENS Agent ettesfiurgtt ender, entpeny, ~Vos. 67 and 69 FI/Th Street e I , 141 . ATe 11(711.01 NO.) BUSINESS .MAN , S COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, Nos, G and S St. Clair Street. Look-li:telarttr, and Arltbm,ti c . f. On.r utohuttril 340 00 rithmettcr.lad I . eunooll,lo per •przrter of • . tin . " Izonl.ol 20 00 month- S 00 ter Are', iotdrcos • SIIA/VEII, or o•=.8 F. McCLAIIWY.,II.4. 13 uw TUE BEST. PETBaLIA BLUE LEAD, 1:13=! Itututactu RA only and fot sale by T. 11. ..11•E: MX A' CO., o or X' s...A.ratl2l74arlms IV. W. Cor. 3d said Market 86., Mi= BOOTS AND SHOES. J. WILHELAI I No. 34 Market St., : Pittsburgh, line Walt received a tor, large block of alb kind, of 800T73 EiNDB S sziA. in es, \i'hlb:e attached preferreq. MOIASTER, GAZZARE & CO , , Jiro. 98 Grant Street, no; • AGENTS WANTEp FOR A I% F. W NUON., NOW UCAUx. . WOMEN OF THE. WAR. By "RANK 310()11.8, antbc 'MI. .114 curd,.• the object of this wink to t collect awl pretrial narratives of the services of the Women who ,hared the perils° f the war.and ought to Inherit It slot ' v , Attrue COLLULIIIII about 000 o , t co :pages, and to Illustrated with steel ptatoportralt s„ -esubscr ip dngrave In the most improved /style., Sold only by tion. roe Circulars, address or apply to lio._6F Fifth eaten. Plttatough • A GENTS WANTED BY TIIE REZA. titi.WINU MACHINE COMPANY to .11 their NEW 1.25 3IACUINE. Wt-1 sew from Hama paper to heavy beaver cloth or leather se ith• out change of feed :needle er tenet... nei6shisti reg. pressure Toot an 6 newly designed tune mutiont4. srugargan. Address, enclostrag atamp, .1 It. HALL a. CO, 68 Fifth Street, (Seeon.l Plo.r, oca Pittsburgh, Pa. M 1 WANTED, • TO ACT AS .SILESMEiII Either permanently or temporarily, Wto lir. pe tent to engage to Grzt-c1.4 relent:sta. Apply In person or addrets cel3dhS W. 1). tiLKEIt, Grant 79 street, Pitts uurgb; rt: ITERCHANT TAILORS HENRY lia; HA.1.01, • MERCILAICP. TAILOR, Northwest Corner of Pepe 6; St. Chili - - Desiree to return thanks to tel the lie for the many neht f,vora, ate! rot Its s him -re of tlaetr frAllre pecror... lie Wen! ' ' nickeled to toweetlem eYealar, Large and l'arefnlly Fine Woolen Goods, ParUenlarly adaytea to 11\16E11E5'3 d&18 FOL TALL AND IWTIC. selliJCS MEM LAIIGE STOCii OF 130Y' r i g S. I rir • AND OVERCOATS;_ • Of the latest,stylea for Wluter Sess q n, now In store, ZY GRAY & LOGAN, .Yo. 47 St. Clair. Street.- FALL AND WINT I ER GOODS. ;,. • .370.10 St. Clair Street, Would...all the attention of Wirers to Ills slues at GaAs:which has been selected with Great e•re.llld contains alt the latest style,' of bloods to Ire found Its. a 111111.-C-i. LOU.. • Gent. VISUULte a SUIT OF CLOTIICS MADE TO ORDEIt, Will please call and examine oar goods and prices. Also a full and Complete stock of I'UNNIekIINI.I . IIIeDEE, • itEtteLLINT TAILOR, No. 10 at. Clair Street. Vlttsbnellit. SEWING MA HIGHEST • PREMIUM LOCK-STA - ITCH Wheeler di.Sc Wilson • SIEWINGIIACCIINE. , . Over 250 . 000. Now in Ilse. • —. . PALES FOR QUARTER EitinEtit. June 10. as per sworn Stiteineni: - WHEELER WILSON 113.0113 SlNekkg eme GRUVER & BAKER &TO - 1i FLUUIINCF • .4PS Showing Wheeler & Wl.SOn's &Writ to be root elan double those °ram , other Company- winch eh re- elation of the public Is a certain erldeuee of Ile u perforlty. In parchastaxone of these .Meehl nes an IntUrred. lo.truotloo giVeb , and M. ehlues kept In order without extra charge. vtrna. sarernammaza. No. 27 Filt2i Strevt. ofiderr 1866 . FALL. , - 18 66. CA.ll.P'lErf-S. We are now exhlbitlaw for FAL!. TRADE this most extenelve stock otgoods we have ever WW the pleesere clattering to onr patrons. English Brussels and Tapestries, Of our 01•13 Importation,om • prising many new end choice petuerne never .before In QM mute:, Beg TITO] All VILTEI eIUITSAID BOGS,:. EXH.IIOIOENSD- SW/SS . L &CH COUTA New aid 1:141a1 tatter:sof Side.dt Centre Tassels, Loops & Bands, • Choice htyles NottlniOurtehes. • lerearam & course. Nos.ill end 13 EITILENT. Next Imam tot. B. thistom House and Post I-Mee Second Floor.: • . se= - CO - PARTNERSICIP. Tim- .UNDERSIGNED - Argaigl gglVaUringillig l " . t dar of October. MG6.-estlered into, partnership cos der the style of DAMPER. GLITDMi as CO., for the manoracture or WAGONS. le., at the old es- Dolirbad_supoor of Fredemck Atelacrosan cod Thomas liar Der. on- Beaver street; Manchester. and would reeneetenny WWII &contingence Of the patmuille biLArru , *liberally toostowrd. • .11.111411(INTRAMAN,; orM:l4t- ' ADAM Anne F.L.MAMM. MONEY LOAN OFFICE, ,1110. 151 ATRTXT, cornor of !Sloth, • Money Loaned On Ellvar rt.tettiams4l.lsto:h ry t frobription, The /mode vonnotlon !n[, nodsaloa66oa deilveredi witat • ticket. Not oceonntablo lo ease °titre or robbery. • floods or tram deserhobton for we at to ell SWNK— • ;11.11srliilel,1: $a 1 111111 CANBIATTHIVS9 00 For Tivo-viteeica Only / Sin Ilefiblit good inWiteli au." wan 800 a. t r i n al:TriM47.s4.9ltes ?Wu. Dul. 395 BXM . BOTTLE CM AETILESiIFar '• G g u 4t , o4l4lllmilit. ra =I EMU