_ _ D uS,TRIMMIN BAIIGAISS I,N EAMIZA.N7i7I-391. BA I 7ES t t BELL, 21. Fifth Street, -• -- 07, AT REDUQED ITLIOES, ON£ LOT OF • Double Shavvvlsi, • . Ineduced 20 per Cent. .07 lot ; of Brodie . Shawls, - - 4D-33x4.-sz- 40..5.r.a.w... • TWO - LOTS OF SMALL SHAWLS. I 1 '7oe. and 91,70, Very-Cheap. New - 4 Cvracoclisc. , • Real 'lrish Poplin , . Gala Plaids, Merinos, Empress ClOths, Cobures, all colore. noll) SELLING AT REDUCED - PRICES, .LINEN HANDEEILOBIEFS. Icc. ■ud upwArdi BALSIOICAL 8K11.8.1'. from Auction; Yr 1 ,if Elf-STITCkIEUIIDIII4, 2.1 c. and upwaN+ = LATHES', BACQUE AND.DRESS BUTTONS I= And CHILDREN'S 11NOITON CHAINS UNDER WEAR IN HEAD NETS tiIIEdi' , VAIIIFITY HAND UNIT SHAWLS \ INFANTS' $ ACQI7 ES .4 CAPS; SCARFS NEW STYLESFANE.;Ir 110619.' . ETCq ETV' il. 17 Filth Street. IvIACRUPT, GLIEAIE & CO.. • I 73 and 80 Market Street.. • • • RECEIVED THIS DAY. A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF - • ' - Applique, riti4' • lencia Lace Goods. . • • _Laces and Edgings, • • Insertings,' Elandkerchietts, Collars and Meta, ' CoWtettrs, tte. • ' "Tegaber with a full and complete line of •'^ 3EI IME j:3 Co X 1:1 Mt M OPT. M. for tt e rotstFix years Islth myton. aisaum & • havine made an arrange ;W en t ds. irlth Die above, wilt be happy to see his old no,a tinV }&Lt GOODS. MACRIIti & CARLISLE, 19 Fifth Street, ate e lost opened en Enter' slve and splendid dock of DEESE AFL) CLOAK Tltlll MIMES, E1f.!,11 BONNET & '2111.11.611Nti BUJ BON , 7.21 EIWIDEIIIES at even clescriptioq, 1.11011 AND ELAWANT LACE twill" REAL LAIJES orall•kinda, - 1 , k.A.1. LACE Tit.alltr.ll GOODS, LAC endld ilne, NA1N13 4 4.1.EQ-EiVISI3, JA. ept O , NET..IIUIBLIN; J.INE- LAM E s AM:5111111C, 1111511 LLYEN; tiLOV Eb- : w and attractive stales; complete usortme..t; !AMES , / CBILLIEENb , MEWS° VEETS. and jfANI.I. Os6 CY C 1. 0 ,%; ZEPICE ARTlCLE".3—ziplcildld etylea IJ.V.D.LA:f ••• NI) AMEIIICAN ZEPHYRS, tiIIETLAND WOOL. UENUINE CASILSIEEE colon iiitAULEVIS ItTe °revery etre, • NCI ACT ..Eti Alit NuTiosy. • Merchants and Waters will find it to their advise. ..‘ge tech and ermnitfc our present extensive s.ock before purchasing elsewheri. All etc guods tjaie purchase' direct 'on thrlbert tenon, we Ere tio,d at 411011 make a low prices. as arty East. .fhtshing House. MAORIMI d; CARLISLE, E1V.600D8 , 4118T RECEIVED J OS. EIORNE & CO. (1 0 Jr dll" 4 .1"./i 114 itha leldlng 7/91 13 tyles. 13=111amem - y ;413frOcoclass. Cr :nee and Framer, Fade Taney nod Colored Silk Ce. it. la moat derfratne shades; Plain Fancy Bon net and Trimming •thabonr. new and rleh color.; Flcrwers. aboloent French and American; Feathers, fa cy bat and.thlrgr. • , .FEJ 111[V-13 il:3 1 M rt 3:1381, thunbrie, Hamburg, Bldg*, Loone, Cluny, Veen cantle 'Edgings and Insertinge ; Ftronnelem Bands and /Ludli ago. Kinbraidered and Plain Leri Cot ters, Colts, - Beta, Lates and Lace Goods. Diens and Cloak Trimmings and Ornaments; Bail Fringe, Gimps and Braids; Dress Trtmenings,_Bogle Frames. • • WM FE GOPDS: • ft most complete stock of jaconets, Cambria, Nulls, ec., go. • Handkerchiefs, Plain. Lace, Hem-stitched, IHni mtd, Embroidered, Tape bordered, etc., etc. 'Hosiery and Glover In every variety and all idles. Ladles , ' and Gent's 'Underwear., ? • •• 6200d8: . • baspendens and Heck-Ties; Heavy Shirts and try '? 7 "r" lra7r WIFIIIIIIT 'Buttons—the Latest novelties. all kinds. *"ards—ilreatest s lety, Cashmere, Lambs Wool a d Kul • ,gin the various mixtures, plain colon and renders. • env. r.pcn (whim 'and eVer)ibing the &d -il- lige.' • MEd si low as &astern Jobbing Douses. Nos.ll' and 19 Market Street. NEW FALL GOODS, , AT .1.0 lON NISON'S, FIFTH STREET. ESIBEOLDERIEBIn new and eleaaal patterns; PINOT and PLAIN HOSIsIPP. In twat qualltlna: DARROW PILED upiDazaccasni; H . do I IMITATION and REAL LACE do VALE NU IGNEB LACS. BEAL THREAD LACE /EIPA PION do do , IMITATION do du outrum LACE. CAPS do GUIPURE do tit l W 1 1 11 E 11 1 1117.trragd f la b ; l : WHITE OCTS NECK-TIES, PAPER .114- EN CULLA NA ZEPHI DDB, SLIPPED PATTERNS, SHELL ND WOOL i.`IATS, TURBANS, RIBBONS. FLOWERS, And a fall lino of 1,4 Or.I'IONS.; .&513. tour (foods ate sopi at Writ 10504 , 11.11:1. X 31100111: 1e2w1711 1 .6 7 811, RICCANILDESB & CO" • (LATz Wrr..soN. CAUU Co-) . /-- WUCITAYSALIG DEM:KAN IN tilEl DOMESTIC DRY DOORS Mg 0..94, 1i79 ooci rd Mite r.tmne IaIDOII .YMTO3II= 4B4I . PA . THE TII 11 - CELEBRATEDerta STEEL TOOdY !LAMES. ••erat awl La t• • are manufactured WV at the DUQUZSIta. WOlllO, ncattne Fenitentlall. dlin -stll9gric, spring and Plata Witten. 4 beelb"" notes and Truelt I et ever, avid. made ' of the beat .d l a a er tat : at anon untle eM d ,wBrllaB t4ed. 0A • i .•• :REMOVAL. -TIES UNDERSIGN... HD DINA' tomored the office of tho Aorz OIL wo RIES from 33Market street, I'MM:stroll, tot heir Worksop WIPON PREMIX Brownstown, where they eon neresfter be found. Postoktee Address 830. PttUborgh. ....zits nut:ems MONEY LOAN. OFFICE, N 0.131 fiIdITHPIELD BTY,KET, corner of BIzUL Plttabargh. • Money Loaned ouldiver Platen, finns,_Pistola. Diamonds, Jewelry, (fold and biker Watches. Clothing, sad valuable artielea °revery description. The goods allll2ot be delivered without & ticket. gut accountable In cue of are or robbery. °t-41;1724 Pur. ROOMS , ' ALLTERItALS. • Cosent, Pitch, reit, Pifrattine rarysiteis..and Algae:Paint iiintbeitr4old "4" niitaa lwharf. "'JaaliAZatue ..'"' =EMI EXEMBI I^a = =1 (Well assorted.) CITY AND SLITIABAN. (LDIATIONAL LOCAL YEWS ON HSU PAGE.) The Gieneinl Conference • The General o:invention of the Si. P. Church rmss o'clock."' e terc ri t a b y . morning, aihalf-past transaction of some eight 'preliminary busiaess, the President announ ced that the next Mminess In order was the t second resolution of the Committee° on Union, j which is as follows, Resolved, That the Constitution and Disci : ;dine agreed upon at the aforesaid Conven ' 'lon, be and the name is hereby adopted; to take effect immediately after this General! Conference adjourns; and the style end title of this denomination from anti after the ad journment of this Conference 'shall he "The Methodist Church," and so to be represented in the General Conference in Clevelaud In May next. After some diseusiion the resolution seas amended and finally adopted arfollows: Resolved, That the following Constitution as adopted by the Convent lon in Clneinnati r and the discipline prepaied by the Committee there appointed and amended by this Conven tion, be and the name is hereby adopted, to take effect immediately after this General Convention adjourns, and the style and title Of this denomination, from and utter the nil jo•trateent of this Cent mitten, shall be "The Methodist Church," awl so to be yepresented ut the General• Conference in Cleveland, next Muyt Provided, nevertheless, that these An• nnal Conferences which nave not yet elected their delegates to the General Conference in Cleveland in next Slay, shall act under the Constitution and Discipline of the Methodist Protestant Church until that time. The third resolution of tee report was•then taken up, and on motion it was laid on the table. , Dr. Scott submitted the following as a sub atitute: ' Besotted; That all independent churches, • who were such at the time of the Cincomati ICOnVentiort, numbering fifty members,. and atilt> all union members of etturches in Con ferences which have taken action adverse to union, who may associate themselves togeth : er to the number ,of three hundred, shall be entitled to minister anti one layman as repre sentatives of said church or assoclatioa to the General Convention in Cleveland, in May next. reeding the consideration of the resolution, the hour of noon having arrived, the Conven tion adjourned with prayer byltev. De. Flodtl. On the assembling or the Convention In the afternoon, the consideration of the substi tute was resumed, and after some discussion. Dr. Scott's resolution was adopted. The suc ceeding resolution occupied the attention of the body until the hour of adjournment. ,court of Commoin Pleas. • In tiro lCourt of Common ' Pleas yesterday, Judge Sterrett on the bench, thejury returned a verdict in the case of M. Mullen yd. the Pennsylvania Railroad Coinp . any. 77drt code has occupied the attention of the Court since Monday, and was a suit to recoVer /lA* dam ages sustained by the property of the plaintiff from the break in tic State sewer near the mouth of Tunuell street, in the Eighth ward, in August, ISd. This was.near the point of connection between the sower built by too State in Mi. and that built by the city along Pennsylvania avenue in 1554. At the 'time of the:tweak a remarkably heavy rain hail fallen, and the water was foment through the drops. The question to be decided wag, whether it was the duly of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company,-its the purchaser of the Statesewer, or of the city, by reason of having connected the city sewer with the other, to keep the State sewer in repair. The jury yesterday re turned a vernlct for the plaintiff in the sum of (ii 95.00. Several other suits of a similar char . - timer are pending. , The next case taken up wilt that of Frank fdetZ and wife vs.:Reph ea Walker. This was a suit tor slander. Thu parte, t aside In Low er St. Clair township, turd on the 1 - . AI of April, • 1%5, the defendant. as is alleged, asserted In the presence of several witnesmts,ithat Mo. I Ml4Ol - potty of lot tery. The jury found for the plaintllN In the sum of SSOO. Thorns., of Jas..a. Speer vs. the Cleve.htnil and Pittsburgh Railroad Company was next taken op. The plaintiff resides In Manche,— ter on the line of the Cleveland and Pitts- Itrilroad. Directly In front of his reel :dere° the Company have laid a- switch, and 'ills trains shunting on this switch area source of perpetual annoyance to 101 family of plaintiff, oiling the Min , conunually• with smoke, Sc.. and In various ather ways dis turbing the faintly. • Hence; this out was brought to collEct damages. The case to still on trial, Fitt%burgb Frosperlqy Eront the Matting nod .3fadolucturing Journal of this,city, e extract the following ill/ires relative to Put Isburgh progrms: The following tate° shows the buslness.of the city, based oh actual sales, at the two pe riods mentioned, with the amount of increase in each department of trade . Yen March. • Protium., IBso. ' Iron and steel ' 61DA . 0,(0) 4r27,121..932 CHM] Braii, copper, tin,i,Xe SIESIEMEMI22 6,611,000 11,6:41,104 965,:i0J 3,813,271 . • Glass, off, coal, Comblutld waterl:o 1,101,151 1,085,000 2,Z1,Z1G x.OOO 503,045 Lily:flu nature ..... Cltemfcal.• - - - From vegetn.l,l3 matter.— 8,6,000 1,163,9:6 TrrAlle.lnbrico 3,950.000 4,65u,W1t • . Animals and their rfoa , ct 6,-233,0v) ' Total. 0012,500 V 1,212,157 table for Ma is Moat actual returns o sates In possession of thel l lnternal Revenue Assessor. While the estimates then, for 1001 represent actual sales only, HMI as these Weald not, in the general course of trade, exceed 00 per cone. of the total . manufacture, It Is sire to add Xper cont. to the estimates of Iy;,which would bring' the value Of our salable, Inttatif,tetureer at title fully up to .71,(rJa,e0d. Add to this our coal trade. 510,000,00 e, Bud a large Class of manufactures not taxed,and Our total manufacturing interests represent a value of 'fully Ikloo.oed,OA or a gain of over Se per cent. In aye years. Some 01 our interests that were settreely alive in ISA are lisle COO d ed by millions. We instance the oil rellniag Intslitelim that, five yours ago, was absolutely nothing. It now tiarkoUhto to $9,000,11 , 41 la year. Our glues ithomfacture has liearly doubled since Ittlet the iron and steel business has in creased nearly otie.third. Trial - of the Squibb Marderers. Our readers undoubtedly remember the atrocious and , mysterious murder_of George Snuibbon Warrington township, Terk coun ty, last Summer. Several arrests were made and the trial of the case cause up In the Court last •veek. The-York Brpubifcen thus men tions the trial: - • • ' , The trial elf William Donovan, indicted for the murder of George Squibb, of Warrington township was continued through last week until Friday night. The .testimony for the prosecution was altogether circumstantial, nada large nuniber of witnesses were examin ed to a variety of facts and incidente, and to the deeltultuons and statements made by the jrisoner at the time of his arrest and while In ail. ft closed on Thuraday, when evidence was lidrodueed for the defendant.' We do not undertake to give ally part of the testimony, which was verbr,voluminous, and could not be safely and fairly oompressed Into moderate space. Friday was Occupied until six o'clock p. m., by the argument of counsel, all the lawcers concerned having addressed the Jury. The Court took a reccse s until seven o'clock, shortly after which hour It proceeded to charge the Jury, who retired to their room about eight o'clock, and returned into Court between eleven o'clock and midnight with a .verdict orgui/to of murder in the fird 'degree, the punishment of which Is death. A inotion for a new trial has been entered by the prim counsel and remains to bc disposed of: Three Mhos, ileyie and his son, who Is a boy, and IdoGrantgan, remain to he tried on the same charge, at a tutnre Court. Brown's Challenge :The Clipper, of tht week, pribilsheS the tot lowing decisive answer Irmo Jimmy liar/1111 to the chnßetrge sent him by Wetter Brown some days ago: oln your Issue of /1111 date there is a coal 'epee purporting as coming from Walter Brown to, me, but maned by Wm. 11. Clark. it may be that Win. It. Clark is authorized to eLpeak for Mr. Brown, but I do not know him; neither do I know that Mr. Brown authorized the challenge, but should he have done so I t! won' like to know it over Ids own signature. It Is rather late in the season to make matches for sculling; races—besides, I have not row so any since I came from England. and In fact I do not know but that. trip to England may hare knocked all the rowing out of me. and 'may neveaknowuntli friend Brown or Mcii let, or some "other man" convinces moot it to my cost. But should either or both wish to con. vim* me they will have to come to me,vr matt me at. such a place that they Will show a disposition to do the fair thing. Besides, they will have to put up such a deposit in your hands that will make it certain that they mean business: lam now engaged in the tiro alarm telegraph business, and do not wish to he answering challenges unless they are bona flan. Hoping this will be agreeable . all around, I remain, yours, respectfally, _ r - "JAMES LIANIILL.." Felonious Assault and Battery. • John U. Delamain appeared before Alderman Humbert yesterday and made ante charging Adam Morgan with "felonious assault and bat tery. The prosecutor alleges that on Tuesday evening lint, as he was returning to bin home In Brownstown;and while in the vicinity of the Town liall,in Birmingham, be was accost. eil by Morgan; who with a party of young mon, wan standing In the doorway of tho building tamed. Not understanding the. word^ addressed to him, Dolan:lain Mika' for a repetition, when Morgan told him to go on or be would "bast hie Jaw for him." Deeming blmmill !Pewted without arty cause whatever, Delamain retorted by calling Horgan a loafer, whereupon the latter rushed forward unit stabbed the former with a email pen=knife twine In the arm. Atte: oerpetrating the as. sand, Martian and his cOmpanlnan ran down Douman street In the direction of. the Menem. Kate a river. A. warrant ha, been Issued for too a rest, of the accusal. As atilt sod Ilattery.-11enry Harkins ap pear d before Alderman St ruin, yesterday,. and Dude oath against William Wilson for assadit and battery. The prosaention alleges ttustrilson did [maliciously, and without just cans or provocation, strike him ' a 'marl blow on t o br.dge of his nasal organ, between his optics, with such force es to fell him to the ground where he beatAntl abused,ltim in a, sharneful manner. Wilson was arrested and held to ball for trial. Both parties reside In lit .'Second ward, where the'offense Is said to ha 0 been perp ,tritetle. 1 , e Protesetonale. BA:Mart Gillespie, John Bird and John. Young. the men arrested i tt u wo r r at the Irwin Rome recently a charge of preifoda being professional thieves, it hearing be fore/farm bieCarthy,laat eve . The hear ing roe/Bed I he discharge eepie, and the commlt the other t en forninety daye eac Enid and Do rty had been rxrpgarammirmumr, 1 , u,r.) El OM) 4 MOO FROM WASHING FON lietivol of Weniani , an—Troops in D.- wirlinent of lanatiluxton tfeasy Droll, UpOn Notional, nook.—The &lexicon question—rontal Service .in - - . riecedea States. NEW Thom, November 22.—A Herald 4 - 'ash- IngtOn special says: The friends of General George 11. Nety have united to press him for tile position ot-United states Marshal for the Northern District of Ohio. - - Fenlati.in appears to Mt reviving in Wa,n ,ingtor. Considerable - sums of money have been faired and forwarded to. New )ork. Meetings are being held in public and in pri lAate, and are attended - by many _of the lead ! era of the'brotherhood. - Taken together with We asSUrances of those who pretend to know We nature amid, eitent of the present move ments, the indications would seem to-portend unl vigoroeg uctioe to come direction. Tile upoointment of Mr. Harrington as Col -1 lector Of the Third di-trtet of liebanu, It la said, IS, to be reeonsidered. Another uppit- I cant is here urging his claim to the position, and tile matter is now under consideration by the President and Secretary of the Trees- ...145ays there.s.relsg than 15, I Time, si Gaya OM troops In the Department of Wasnington, which includes the , District of Columbia, Maryland, Delaware, IN'est yirginia ,and Vir .ginia. Tno Secretary of the Treasury. is making heavy