TEE DAILY - METE, _ .TSIBLI6aLD triurr 909141:99. • . • - Oman 13marnio.i_ tiEririvutarr, REED &CO., • • 71Ea:2,73r19•94:rram, imnirtlux .2011Lter lax°. . T . r.i s v=ar, .................... OTPICE, OAZLITT. 111111,17p10. 'lmo. s4.u. Se 111741 STROM, Whir tritlikaa Pam -of Waders Paulhiali arrow, p A imairMl3loH .turp • z g l i n a.GLlVA P aini WI tmt irsiuts or Till DULY: ...... ......... • Nan tiatiscriA.l4 . 7 pOf .3= k .. ltddrau. 43 Azziorr.. • • . • TII7BIII7IIGLI. tttrEittsburgij Gagns Tmt New York Bole of Health base attempted to remora the 'slaughter houses be and the at limits. The butchers hareappiled to the 6apreme Conti' for an Injtinction to restrain tte Board from interfering with their ,bnariess. and it has bpeift granted by a fall bench, 17_1 which the Court takes ground that St •laoghter house in a ;city is tor a nut tang% and many people will Inquire what is. - Tim galleries were so crowded on the morale; of Congress yesterday that bun• dreds were unable to gain admittance. The new members were sworn in, and Eldridge, of Tenneesee." objected. to Stokes on account of disloyally. Brooks, of liew York, objected to the entire Teuneisee'.delegation on the *same ground and that of no Republican Gov ernment in the State. Two hours were spent in the discussion. Messrs. Birioks, Kelley,' Logan, Dawes and Marsluill made speeches. The_ case of ft Butler, of the First District., was referred to the Committee on Elections. Tirr. London Times, of the 6th, eon— eiders that the defeat end imprisonment of Garibaldi has settled the troubles of Burnie, and says: - "Garibaldi is again in durance. Anin therein allence if not peso:tin the Papal States—the, men of action are oft the field. It is for the men of order to re- , &mart, their ascendancy: The defeat of Garibaldi h a s smoothed a whole world of dillicultice The return of tranquility In .the Papal provinces has doie away-with the necessity for the presence of the Preach troops in Rome. By withdraw ing his divisions from Rome and limit ing his occupation to . Ovine Vecchia. the Emperor Napoleon will enable King ' Victor Emmanuel to ?perms the frontier without too groat a sacrifice of his dig nity. There seems every probability that an arrangement may be made on the. footing of some such mutual con cession. It is not imisnalble that the good °niece of the friendly powers may have averted the worst consequences of the untoward position in which the goy. ernments Of France and DZ . have placed themselves, and sane what ought to appear the most obvious sad aatisfacony compromise upon e mere escape from Imminent collision a bids for final settlement - of the question which so nearly-le4 to It may easily be mold " '"\ NEWS BY TELEGRAPH: —A Porto Rico paper of the Oth con tains full particolareof th; great storm In the West Indies. ', The hitrricane ini malted a multitude kof victims, destroy ed bonsai, - desolated plantations, swept away Beide of grain, and deprivedthous ands of poor in one ellght of their means of livelihood. At St. Thomasthe seas very great. In. the Island oft= the. destruction was lamentable. Not a single house is left sitanding.. Hundreds of lives were legit -'The same may , be l e, sold of the Island of,.Vieques; in Chitin ninety-six ho esweredestroved, and several lives lest; in Louisa, twenty seven houses and Bev lives lost; ev ery hbuse, with sore -lives , _ were des troyed in Aguislaun • in Rio Grande, forty houses and eleren persons; In Cor ti; oral, forty-lbie ho '. - -,,. 1 —Tho Japan noses, of October lth, says:' Statxabaahl funny resigned, and Silmgesmatl, Priem f Os-ar, has been nominated to the Digni by the Mikado.. This was `die result o the , prohncted negotiations between th hales of Sat anima, and.,'"lsersenas. T nhd States bashi himself. The t was hastened by the visit of Sir ' Parka awl Ad mite Toosaka, who come to investigate the Nagasaki murdsri. The British minister and a party of friends ascended the Runlets& ben. Vsavalicenbarg visited the porta on the west coast on board the Shenandoah. The English -minister and Admit* visited some of 'the ports and returned via Hakadodo.. - Nagnialll and Osika, on their arrival at :.!•lagassakl, learned that two warrant MR sxril Sof Her Majesty's steamer Tarnus had been murdered by the Japanese- The ..Govermturat: of the place was re moved on account of their failure to bsing the perpetrators of the murder to jlis Th tice. • ~ , - - - —e Annual Convention of Ilse Fenian Brotherhood of Californiaoacting in voriocrXtrithl the Irish Itevautionary Brotherhood, and zrgeiri c ng John Say- - Ile Chl er ef a Ex s tu r t t iv f - .A.m . arca, adj San. urn Fran cisco The afEdra of the organization 'are represented* in a satisfactory con dition. They endorse the policy of the, Irish Ttevolutibrutry Brotherhood as' enunciated let Thomas J. Rollo, of - Ire land, and John Savage; ofAmerlcal , A re 'solution expressive ofsorrow at the death of Thomas Francis 'Meagher. was adopted: - - . . - --ChledJestioa chase styes considers file attention to financial matters: He thinks the time not far distant when the Government willhaye returned to epode payments, taken he considers all the United States bonds will bo redeemed in specie. On the subject of a `uniform currency the world over, he is at present much' Interested. He also thinks the banking system of this country will be adopted be the rest of tho•world. He considers the experiment beeches provefi Its practicabßity. .—Tbe export often from .tapan to New York this season in 10,000,000 pounds in im tise . excess , of last ear, all of which woe shipped direct, cent 100,000 pounds via San Francisco.. The Otractius, with n4OO pound., ho,.Pauline with 00;200 Pounds, wailed or New York, leaving four ,vettaels hind to, carry 2,100,000 pounds.. The el ng market quotations worm common, t) 0221 medium, IC7 .to PIS; Soo, az r 2 035; choice, 1140 to $l4. ...The Gemmel mblyof the Pres. byiirian Church in the IT. S. convened intittabville, Tennessee, yesterday. Ito Y. D. Moore. of Virginia was chosen Mod -crater. The opening sermon was deliv ered hy Rev. Dr. - Kerr of .Phillipsburg. The Baltimore Presbytery seas admitted and accepted as o part of the body. There to a Mil attendance. • . . --The 'Emperor OrFrance in his speech anticipated that of the (loam of England at the opening ol Parliament on Tues day. She hoped that Napoleon would. withdraw his troops from the Papal ter ritory, ond be promised to do so at no late date. a ..-The Queen of I , igLaiad has awakened to the necessity of Worm in Ireland and Scotland, and has promised that billy to that end shall bo introduoed bythe(lev ernment at the present session of Por liament... The Fenian movement may, after all, be productive of some good. --One of- the rcealts of the lat.; clectlon In Massechtusethi Is peimleston granted by the State Constabulary •to lager beereaL3ons to keep open ti ll 11 p. m. trusteed of P, as heretofore. Panuna4ctler say, the ° nary . moral Soy Ilerraza,urhe has been the past and pillager of the country, has been - bung by the populace of the town ctf Hottsea. Kelsey, - one of the ablest law _ Yens In Congress, hits prepared a bill to Intlnduce, the effect of which Is to (15 , penld omelets while being tried for ha- =titter having indulged for a mouth or. two ha the most scandalous and offensive, reports or Private and domestic rota lion" of Senator Stirover, the newepapere have suddenly diecOvered that there fano foutulation Tor them whatever. Why would it not have been ne well to Inquire into this matter at the cmteett The recto.. leanness with which certain zurwspapees fall Into the habit of dealing with prl• Tate Mut:rector, and the Indifference with which they pabllab the most cruel and infamous emactols, reflect ditcredlt on the whole profession. There seems to be not the slightest wise of propriety or re. aponsibility In their' management. - ' Re have been flattering ourselves for the last few years that agradual and decided im provement In th is respectsma going on— but the lust instance does not ELICOUMP the hooe.—.N. Y. TYmea. —A lad yof . property recently applied to the autbantlesof the Bull tranzland): :York's:rase for Admission. She saul that the guardians should take ponanalou of ber property; receive. the Income, ttc; and although told that she could rot ex pect any treatment dlfferunt.from that of an ordinary pauper, she pershaed in her B opueatkm. She . bad, she mild, lived 'alone for many yeses, and she felt that she would be much better taken care of in the Workhouse than outside. Her to. quest Wee granted.; VOLUME T.ItXXII. FIRST EIIITION. MIDNIGEET. FROM WASHINGTON. The Tenure _of Office Law. TheTream=yßeport. The ii.dditionalßestion of Congress. Employment on the Government Works. j Telegnphto the PltubwahliWtte.i WAsuirtoTox, 26v. 21,.1 = Secretary 3lcenlloch having 'called on Solicitor Jordan for en opinion on the Tenure of Office 11111, as it relates to the Treasury Denartment, the Solicitor states ho Is of opinion tha law volicahlp to that Department commences to-day, and not pt the next session of Congress, and the names of narttas designated, together with the evidence and reasons of stisperision, melt be sera In within the next twenty days. The temporary Commission given during the recess of Congress will, by limitation, expire at the end or the present session, namely. 30th insatnt. . - Secretary McCulloch stated to-day that his report will not be sent to Con gress until the day after the President's message, in Detannber. couirr OP CLAIMS. The list of claims pending before the Conit of Claims up co July .17th, was about 1,.500. The number of Judgments rendered since March, 1953, three hen dred, of which ono hundred and ninety were dismissed. The claims allowed amount to over - one and a. half million dollars. will b lt la general . believed the cotton tax e ccrr EMVLOtITO OQVEII33II:ST W0111:13. A petition was preaeuted In. the Sen ate to-day, by Mr. Sumner, of twenty six white &Varna, asking that an equit able proportion of employmentupon the Government works in the District of Columbia, bOgiven to colored laborers. The petition was referred to the Com mittee on the District of Columbia. (From Our Regular Correspo ndent.]. Tine testaresa-Tbe Addl . Goma tle.elea-Wbas wUI teavre. De-tbe JPeibito Debt am* le• GeV. emu:seat Boarule-tvamenlisee•fleay• and MI esai-The Itllluary..itta Gay mimosa. - WABAUNGTOX, November 19,,186i The fine weather at the capital brings a vast crowd of strangers to see theopen .. log of Congress. This spectacle, Which has hilt nothing a form or ceremony, ands asthatingnlshea the opening of the .British Parliament, nevertheless each year attractis people hem abroad; and, from sesalontonesaion,lhe dwellers hare count upon It as'a great occasion. The ollleries are grawded always, as soon as the doors are open. The bearstymad fash ion of the city, and !dreams not a few. are there. At hour of noon in the • House of Represe ntatives the Speaker ms ate to , rape with his gavel, announces t e hour as arrived for the opening of the session, calls upon the plain to make his short prayer, and tel the machine starts off . 111 It bad been going :from am beg - tuning- Very nearly the same formula is observed at the other mid of the Capitol in the Senate Chamber.; There one sera' more quiet, I more of the dignity of a grave ,delibera tire - body,thutin other respects the ba ldness of Camden, moves off from the first like 'some matestie ship with full sails. And yet to see this, always scarfs together a crowd. This is accounted for on the ground that man is always a sub- Jedt of interest is man, and especially so to ircumin. To see the Representatives of a groat people, whose territory !stretches from theAretic Circle totheTroples,and from ocean to ocean-thisisasigkt,indeed, interesting because of the vastness asso ciated with the specthcle. Then . you see men so variously cultured, so diverse. There is the scholar to whom the lore of all ages Is tributary; fog whom Demos-, thenes and Cicero spoke and the schools of Athena were founded,_ and Socirstets died. Rat ho may be no more truly a representative man than the Honomble - Huta, pogeem himmdf—as much the ad mirationof hisconstituencv asanErskine or Mansfield of theirs. Shall Beaton he heard in' our Congressional Rails while Buncombe sits by in silence? trow not"! . • ?DE ADDITIONAL OF:ONION Itself is an object of peCullar Interest. The "crown lawyers," Hinckley and Stanabery, as you have learned, consider it an anomalous creature. 11. B. denies that ho snots the article mentioned in my last as having appeared In the Intel lives-Leer. Every body bas a right to be lieve this. Your correspondentdoes not doubt the statement of Me Attorney Gen eral, who is not Juntas, no not fie. but only Philo Junius. Ile throw no brick. It was his. man Fridsey., "Data" of the Baltimore .an. who has a key to the back stairs of the White House, says that though not written by , Mr. Bansbery it expressm his views. 'Data" in Mr. Warden, formerly Washington corre spondent of the New York Tones, and the- same gentleman who sent to that paper ' in the summer of 1E46, extracts than Gen. Sheridan's letter from New Orleans,eharacterizing the riot there as a massacre. Your modem-will cement ber,the circumstance, owing to Ike fact that there was a charge that -the Times bad garbled that letter, and the charge made much Excitement at the time. What Mr. Warden says about 'things at the Execntlee Mansion may bit very safely relied upon mien opinion founded noon fact. IcUem are suppceed to be written from there, so te speak, and with° outgivings of the oracle. Thopob- Ile pulse is feltby the telegraph nod the prescription given Just as the syneptoms would seem to require. If the people RCM to accept the doctrines of the puta tive H. EL as put forth, then the real. Ju-: plter Touans will. sum* Olympus and thence give an opinion that gods and goddessesall shall realm= as the owe prams wisdom. . WHAT WILL CONGRESS D. Meantime it bowmen a question of vast interest—what course wilt Congress pur sue? This correspondents has ventured the opinion that them . be no impeachment. That opinion is now' restated. • There lea differeneo irrecnn ciliablehetween the Republicans them selves,on the Judie-Wry Committee. Mr. Williams, of . Allegheny was right last emotion. • Tha case was then ripe. What was the tide— . sWritch totals, .a /he ;Oast leads as to tartans". 'lt It wan "omitted" 11114 it new remstroo to be seen whether the poet was not prophet too. - lied that. Congress, fresh from the peo ple who elected it, with the question of impeachment before them acted bravely and whoaly, the obstructeon of the no: m tlo o n v 's wo ws have been wisely re. ed In the way mocked out by the Constitution. Even If on trial tha President had not been found guilty In:manner and form as indicted, the question would have beensettled Aileen. Iladimpeachment been effected. the ntiminist ration of af fairs world' have been in the bands of 1 thew who carried on the war to what' was supposed to be s sucenarfoltermloa lion. 'named of adopting the way, ed oat by the charter, they attempted to avoid the Immo by leaving. he President in his seat and throwing a fonts around hitn,ei legal barrier.' But What law was ever yet made which nalirs.Punning evasion could not get through arotutd, particularly when place and power aro In his band and a se t ollinckley ! eand other Fridays, wiser and more learned than he, to lied "ways and means!" Yea! the day of impeaching-1a taasts, Not much time will be used Id talking about it. Family quarrels are not pleasant to air before the public. • The 'Phliistines ate in our camp. They are lloshedwith4lo , wry. The Republicans may . now 'swell sawyer look the fact Milo fuze that they must close up their ranks; stand, should er to shoulder for Judie* and thenigida of man; stick fast by the mace In which they have conquered. 11 . . then they nre beaten in the coming contest, so be it. The cause is postponed only. ===l *Maw demand much attention. Tho paytneut or the bonde—how wad when— will be, upon the Congrem at mice, thought that the Republican party will unite, upon curb a tariff en will truly hater home Industry and soon bring us back to a specie basis.. Once there, the queetlan or bow the five-twenty bends shall be paidwbother in gold or cur. • . .. , .. . t• ... . .. '' \ • /N ' 1 1 _ '`.. -,,.. I ------ ' I I st lll Ilti J - ' ' 1 i ' 1 4 , . . rency—a qnnition In which demagogues begin to ace kit. ofrims and turmoil— cmoses to be practical... The public , cred itor eon take his s choice when a paper dollar to as good us a gold one. As a dis tinguished political economist remarked Ute. otheeday—lf.we could bring the na tion to the policy adopted in every well regulated flintily, to live within means, and dress even In homespun till Its( debts ern hold, financial problems would Winn erase to trouble us. In this connection a le Well to state that contdd ertible feeling Is manlfestod as to the Chelrmiurship of the Committee of WATA AND MEAN& Mr. Met-rill, of Vermont, having been tratuderred the Senate, Mr. trooper, the wealthy henkor of Bostni is next. on the Mai gni thereon, tuanyln the Commit tee;who prefer another, though ho may not be in the regular , succession, on the Committee, and that other is Gen. Gar field, the brave member from the Re serve: The objection - to Mr. Ilooper Ia that no ono ever knows how he will vote until be votes. Ito gives no direction to any Committee by his taking the lead of it and suggesting* course to be pursued. The Ways mid,Meane La amnia*, a most laborious committee, and itslauler is the 'hardest worked mon in the !Rme. Be should ho such a man as will come to the task; armed with all his facts, willing to m a ke a stand and prepared to defend it. It la probable that Gen. (laz-field will be the Chairman..!. =WEED • To-day has witnessed a review of a portion of thetullitary stationed in tide District.' The 12th, loth and 44th Infan try and a part of tho sth Cavalry were out in all theintrappings. .Thore are be tween three until four thousand troops hare now. RI DicHenry in Baltimore harbor is also strongly garrisoned. • Notwithstanding the confusion in affairs, and tho,uneasy condition of the public mind, the gay season opens with unwonted promise. -Hops, balls, lectures and receptions promise well. The new Peruvian Minister was received by the President to-day with the stereotyped epoch, and General Carey of Cincinnati by a crowd to-night with a torch light procession. John B. Gough lectured to night on "London" before an immense and delighted audience, and the Rev. Newman, of London, is to speak on Fri day evening, and will probably preach In the Hall of the:Representatives on Sunday. , VIA ron. RAILROAD ACCIDENT. Colll•to• Between an Wayne, and }Weighs Tesla—Four Woman and • Elan tt•r•N Ls Death. . =1 et:mm.lw'; Novemberi2l.—A terrible accident occurred on the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton R. It. this morn ing. The broad gauge express arrived here at six o'clock s. 0., was dotainod at Dockland by an extra -freight coming south, and while waiting; for the freight train to .take the aide - track, a ircight train that was following ran into the real of the express train before a man could get out to flag it.' Four women and 'ono man were burned to death. yearly all the train was burned - to ashes. The rear ears was a train from Toledo that the express takes on at Dayton, tho last ear. being a sleeping car from Toledo. The names orresidences of those killed have not yet been ascertained.. YUECTUMU,PARMCVLA.W4 CUMINNATI, liqvember 21.—Three . oi the ladies killed at the collision at Lock , - land this - warning - were sister., named Morgan, and had tickets from Detroit to Loutsville. The other was a very large woman, about thirty years of age; lived at Detroit.. The name- of the man was Jackson from Boston.. Several others were quite badly injured by the shock of the colliaion. The burning of the hind most car was occasioned by the breaking of the lamp on the locomotive which ran into the train, the oil spilling, and the fire aprruding rapidly. One of the sis ters Morgan reached the door of the alceging earand broke the window, but was unableTto obtain egresa. While cf- Mats were being made to release her, a sudden burst of flames etruck her and eh° fell dead. • = . 111EXICO. QbiIEY: Troops Toodsrod as so Es. ears so Nostoulltssrs Mbar —lllsetior or Congress—A Woroistlosk Probablo —wart Mariam Oho'. • ===il Sztv Vous, o;Joxiber 2L—Tbe E'er. aid's Usianti 'pedal /gays: Admiral Teg ethoff bad. received a very polite letter from the Mexican Minister, tendering an escort of Government troans for Maxi mitten's body to Vera Cam at the na , tional expense; but all public demonsu tion, however, both on Maxie= soli and within Mexican maritime jurisdiction, were forbidden.. • .• • Congress convened on the •Igit.h, when there^wan a quorum of. representatives present.. President Juarez was prefer ing a defence of the discretionary power. It had been stated that ho asked kir the formai belonging toEseobeiltes commend, which are to come to the. ILlipitel. The reasons of . dila demand are left ones pinkie& but It in aarmlxed that it Is owing to the large force, mid to be 14,000 men and 300 pieces of artillery, which Gener al Dian has at het command. A Gillian, who has been montetime a - - • • resident of Vera Crum, says ho foresees . revolution soon again in Mexico, probe blv-about next January. Gen. Merkto was assassinated on the Coaleaudue road. I:= [Special Dicpciabea to ilia iclitsbarab anew) -3.fer.aizrrown," IV. Va., Nov. 2L Sever two net In the channel. Weather mild and smoky. M. Gai=iiipoiso, Nov. 2.—River two feet six Inches in the channel - and falling. Wenthereool and foggy. • Briovrivivna.n; Nov. 21.—There is about form feet six -inches of water here. The weather la foggy Ithil warn- LOI:IariLLY., Nov. 2l—River station ary; three feet ..we inches in the canaLby the =ark. Weather mild and misty: - - =I (117 T•legrapi te, tire , Ittsbalftl Ua.1411314 CraTELAND November 21 Weston expects to resell Toledo to idea; thirty adios trav4l from belt' pow four o'clock P. x. He is In lino. spirits sod tvmdl don. • Rough tried to jump upon him at Fremont, but were prevented by the pollee. ke endundsion 1s Incrouno& • arm. ins itmama Take3 , lo, r." ,11 .. 5 0 ...114N/11.11 In % .Xo*lfllla . - Last nlghtltio notorious and barn-like theatre Wan the 600110 of as lively it row tOuld Well be got .up *nett 'small apace. A' French' eompatry advertised . . with the pretensions of a troupe from a first-elms theatre in Now York,-and last night the house was connoted from the family circle to the pit—tho Latter being particularly crowded—to witrusa the performarwoof abeautlfttlFrerachdrarna as the opening niece. The curtain rose and the perfornannee wont fm., A vary! ugly fenuile acted - In a *till morongly manner, and a Vep , young man attempt ed to act the part of an old man, with au immense quantity of deur on h 1 head and emmrod OYU' his Awe.' To crown all, another actress made her appearsnee, rattled. oil a few words in bad French:, and Rotuma to have the one desire to get off- the stage as niekly ae posaltd/ The drop prone fell on l 4 a chilling el lenee, and the wound act began by t it audience gradually reallaing that the had been completely "sokl," A Magi was quickly followed by others, an yells and hisses were then given with might and main. Tho performers looked terrified, but still went on; but the erowniwg ! act was accomplished. An actress fell on her knees and-in execrable French, cried out to the young mon with the Ammon his tired. The ondienco were furious. Yells and boons - ifiled the air. lloquote made from the shockingly . printed programmes worn thrown by downs at the playert. This was quickly followed by a lobster thrown In the same direction, and nibbages, pieces of stinks and cloth were vigorously thrown at the, stage. The performers Ina terrified manner flow from the &ago, arid:amid a storm of yells, imprecations and hisses, thadrop fell. A man attempted to apol Nits for theacting, but was glad to re. !Tli}ecewhltt,,pitwhtillr frlnomdu the l i.family circle wane two or three soda were tom up and cant 0 crashing on the stage: The house Won ln an •upruir,' and the ladles were quickly leaving in terror f or their. safety. The pit then sung a mpg and indulged in another free light. At length the green curtain fell, and such - a storm arose as would be bard to describe. It - was well the performers did not maketheir appearance again, for the rage of the audieneo was tblrsting for a vlelitm, and the. first that came would surely have been _ served. At last the house Irv:gale:gal, and the stag° was left; ornamented with the lotelter and cabbages sticks andbrokon eoshithrown on It. There seemed lobe a general int, preesion that anotherpertbrinence 'would net. be attempted, and If the manager halt any 1,40wd for the headelif Ide troupe he wilt not permit IL Ile will not forget In a hurry the reception! he met With hurt eight. SECOND EDITIO THREE CPO LOC K A KOMisMitHIMOO Full Attendance in bo Houses. Public Debt Resolution in the Senate. The Tennessee Members Objection to their Admisiiion Eldridge and Brooks Prate About Disloyalty. The Test Oath Administered The Impeachment Report. Proposed Impeachment of Minister Adams. •dlournment until Monday El= WAsantorox, Nov. 21, IEII7 SENATE. Senate mot nt noon, and opened with a prayer b. the chaplain. The following members were present : The President, Messrs. Anthony, Cameron, Cotten, Con ness,t Cole, Corbett, ,Chandler, Crugiu, Davis, Dixon, Doolittle, Drake . , Ed munds, Fessonden, Fowler. Feeling huysen, Grimes, Hanlon, Johnson, Jor dan, Morrill, •of Vt.., Morrill, of Me., Morton, . 24 - orlon, Nye, Patterson, of New Hampshire, - Pattenson, of Tenn., Pomeroy, Runner, Ross, Sherman, Stewart, Sumner, Thayer, Tipton, Truth bull, 'Van Winkle, Willey, Williams, Wilson and Tates.. EQUAL BIOETS IN Ynn DISTILICT. Mr. SUMNER asked unanimous . con sent to introduce a bill for the further security of equal rights In the District of Columbia. lie stated it was. an exact copy of the bill , rat'd at the last erasion, bin not returned by the President. It, therefore. became necessary again to pass it. ' The bill read as follows: •llie it enact. ed, Au, That the word 'white,' wherever tt occurs In the laws relating to the Dia. trict of Colunibia, In the charter onllnan• nos of the City. of Washington or Grare.,„ town, and operates as a limitation on said citizens to hold any office, or to be solemod and to acne as jurors, be and the wane Is hereby repealed, and It shall be aid:ra ta for any person or officer to enforce or attempt to unwire° said limitation after the ¢aomaa of thislOlL" • .Mr. DAVIS objecting, the bill Mid over. COPET OP CLAIMS. Mr. WILLIAMS intiodnoed a joint resolution, amendatory ofjolut resolution apprcoved June Mb, .1866, authorizing the Condor Clotting to rebeax and exam ine for get adication the claims 'of Richert! W. M r ead, deceased.. Referred to Judi ciary ommittee. rAMICNT or roman DMIT. Mr. EDMUNDS offered the following Joint resolution, which wee read, laid on the tallle, 'and ordered to be printed. , lie would call It up at an early day,.and hoped it would be : peesed with =dire unanirnity. - "Wrimuraui, The public debt of the United Stales was, except where special-- ly aNersrlea . .proyidad, Contiacted and Incurred upon the faith and credit of-the Ftt States that the same would be d'o redeemed in 'coin, or • Ito equire ; erefore R eel, By the Senate and home of Rep ves of the. United States of Amein Congress assembled, That the p bile dett of the United buttes, ciao In the l-ces wherein the law &li tho the tame other provision was cxpre y made, is owing in colic or ita mantra ent, and the 'United States. Is hereby, pledged in payment accordingly. THE COTTON TAZ Mr. WILSON offered the Salo:sing which was - agreed to: • "Readmed, That the Seeretary of Om Treasury be directed to communicate for tbo Information of the Senate nay facie or reports' In the possession et the De partreent relative to therepeal of the tat on eitton." 11 aruoustaxastr.._ . Mr. EMIMES moved that — Ashen the Senate adjourn. itbe to Mondayr - eurieff• ' • ccas ot. xi:grow, Os mot! n Mr. monTox: it was or dered that e Sennto meet at 12 xt-. ILLS rOSTPONED. OD m orMr. WILSON, the bill for tne call ng out of volunteers, to sup press I: and the bill vaca ting certain municipal °Meets in Alexan drle, wore indefiniteippostponwi. AdJourned. HOES lA/lets hyrAn.) ES4 , T e HOi i 3asetatled lit , nrion. • • The attendance of members wee unusualtv, large. The galleries. were crowded b 5.- fore eleven eleven o'clock, and many halos were accommodated the gentleman. ttallery.ar,Nr. •• -Eitarette, • . - vanla, was in tie seal; apparently In its good phyalcal condition swat last sessioni The proceediugs were opened. with Prarglir Chaplain MIZI11:1=1 , ; Messrs. Woodward. of Peraurylvanfa; and Carey, of Ohio, members elect,. took tha pith proscribe by lair. , , .'. ' trzz ii:NNEAsiE TO TAIXIS 31/1111t0 SWORN The eight members elect from Tennes see having been called by the Speaker to take the oath, Mr. BLDRIDGE objected to administering the silt to Mr. Stokes, and moved that Ms credentials bereferod to the Committee on endentiols, , Mr. BROOKS, of New Xork, objected to administering the oath to any of the Tennessee delegation, on .Um ground, dent, that two, if not more of thorn had teen guilty of treason to the goSernminst end had taken the oath of allegiance te" the Confederate government and Jed. Davis. andoooond, thero quoit not now let istin iheStateof Tonnossee a Republican L of government. .(langhter o the .114ublican side.) Mr. Brooks a r gued audit'', electoral law of Tnnnessoo die. franchlom a majority attire white cinema. The whole vote of the Stn was ono hun dred, soul" forty, thousand, and yet one inandeed thottaand voters had controlled the election, fifty-Ilya thousand of whom were erousrom controlling the forty-five. thousand ' white voters who were not disfranchised. An oligarchy now oxist, °d-and reigned' in Tennessee, and the franchise law there nom a disgrace to any iron form of gcrecturnont, n dishonor to Olvillastiors, and a reprobation Mull forme of Republican selflovernment. Mr. Brooks then stated oils riveted 010 pallor's - to the swearing in of Mr. Butler, bemuse, an a member of the Tennessee Ireglelaturo, before and during the rebel lion, he had introduced, enpported mid voted for resolutions end monnuros prov ing ils disloyalty to the United. bake (incrnment. Among throe were row- Innann to reject tho confirmation of may mat to office who indorred the Helper ; hook condemning the appolnttnont of of fr. Seward in Prositiont Linooln's Cs snot as an actor hostility to thotloutb, - nnAfor calling a Convention to take Tr empire out of the Union. Mr. Brooks quo, eel the precedentestabliabed by the Republican side of the Boone lost July, In regard to the Kentucky members, and erg rod that they wore now Irrevocably boded by it. - " , Mr. Brooks then objected to the trwear. ing - in of Mi. Mullins, on the ground the ho had given aid and comfOrt to the ns Is; had made speeches in behalf of therebellion; had 'lent his aid and sup. po to 0; bed attempted to raise troops for It, and made ,s; speech in Bedford . ce. nty, In 1801, in which ho urged young men to cutlet in a rebel company and do te d their homes and firosides. gr. Brooks also objected to the owcar. in* of Mr. Arnett, - on the ground that he bad entabliohod in Lawrence county. Naumann a tannery, which was devoted to' sopplying shoos to the robot soldiers. Mr, Brooks Also objected to the swear. g In of Mr. Trlmbell, saying that his 'formation was that If ha voted atoll on as question of secession, ho bed voted I s t i , r,lart i rmo n u l t ;i t i s i f the Unte i n r . od , .. Brooks be had not done so.. tfr. BRDOKS accepted the denial and i i, d.reW all opecisl objection to MO ring In of Mr, Trot:libel'. . . r. ELDRIPUE. then stated to the settle ground on which he objected to swearing in of Mr. Stokes. It „,, • - 442fAuk . ) . , '('CZ.",:t ..-.--.1•1' • - . - 4. - - ''''..-.-- -1 ' • , ,•••----,•4: . -.... ,- 1, ' ' _ ~ ,4 ,4. .. ., ,, -,..r • W.... ..-,.....” ~. ' , , ._•'7l.,ll.rtlriky ' , - ',::,-* ' .... r-7 . -. ..:, . ~ x -•,3,.-., i ,at-,-.-‘- : , ~.1. . .4 - o . - 0 g _1 _ ~', _..•. . •... • . •., c. . .I. a r. , "y*„ .i.,n„,,„:_,grti P 5,. ,' . "i , .45. d.... . * ,:.. ,--,. ,- • .374 ,i )•- \. - -, _5 , -..._,„. _- ::,+__,.,..- .-_,,. ,__-_-, ~__...--,---_-'• zr.-....4f7= -7 -',-----,--=---:. I , -----:4-r---------:.__-,-=---- Ar= • —•-/ 7 -- - - - ~ - . - - • • -• Lints - do's uninipations. Mr. butiAN exprcssed gmtiflcatioti At seeing members on the MennicratiCalde sinning up to the stork.. Ito was willing to hare the mritterofMr. Butler referred. but,orto Mr. Stokes, ho thought that if ' any man midd wipe out a wrong, that noble man - (Mr. Stokes) had wiped out the wrong of that letter In lighting for the Union, while some gen gonna wore publishing treasoonblo ar ticles. Mr. BAWLS,. of Mass., moved 00 substitute for the pending motion, that tho credentials or Mr. Butler ho referred to the Committee on Ekelions, and• pending the discussion of the question, he be not 'worn in. Ho (Mr. Dawes) any ikrstoal the gentleman from Now York (Mr, Brooks) to make hLs motion in good faith, and he assumed that that gentleman had-: made wonderful orogress since last Ses sion, when he put himself on the ground that no charge of disloyalty, however flagrant and palpable, was mill dent ground fur the exclusion of a mem ber who bud a certificate of election. He congratulated the country on tiths'won denial conversion. He trusted. Mr. Brooks would eelltinne the journey until lie saw more dearly even than the mem bers en tho Republican side what did romtituto loyalty and disloyalty. Thu gentleman tad also taken ground to-day that it waaproper for the House to look into the Constitution of a State, and de cide 'Whether Ills republican or not. Ho was happy for Mao to be able to stand with the gentleman from New York, one vote with him. .hie welcomed him to. a now convert, and expected him, like all convert., to take the lead ;Intl do works meet for repentance. Mr. It ELLEN - , of Pennsylvania, op posed all tooth,ns kinking to the exeln *ion of any of the Tennessee , members, rutiloulogired the' Character and services of Mr. Stokes. lie wished the members of the South to know that it watt the par ty on the door which did not acknowl edge any place or time for repentance, which could not relieve them of disfran chisement, net for rebellion, but for the holding of opinions, in !SM., which they held to-day, on the subject of States rights, anti the ilogredrit ion of the colored peopie. Atter some further remarks, be Mr. Dawes and Mr. Chandler of New York. Mir. MARSHALL, of Illinois, eicpress ed his conviction that the 1111allikatibbil prescribOd In the Constitution were the only tests that could rightfullY be applied to members elect, but since the Rouse Ins established a different low. for its own Wet, it shoMd be governedby It. He described the State Government' of Ten nessee as a disgrace to the country and civilthatimt. He said that P. was -noto rious fort that Union soldiers. Iry Tennes see had been then-am:hived ander Brown low's Government, simply because they would not put their heads over their mouths and their mouths In the dust and kneel au ppl 'ant to the novo guiernment there, which WAS lording it over white American freemen. ' The atuendmont of Air..itaarm,•to refer the en:demi:di of Sir. liCtilar to the Com mittee on Elections, wastatureed to. This was a. aultatitnistituthoorhtinal motion of Dlr. Eldrldge,"tba effeet of it beintr to refer Mr. Dozier's ease, not that of Mr. Stokes. Ttle•Wnemats senerally Voted ono," nu egmclugitO resolutton to amended. Tito netrativo vote .of Mr. Brooke was re.cm'atod•wit h.• laughter: and : remarks that heivotacrlorie - tube cot, vernal again. • • . • ..11femrs. JligLib Axial', and Johnson, 'of California, and Wretlatiuma, -of Illi nois, appeared, and were avvorn =I Mr. .•ELDILIDGE' than': lenewed ;Ms nn !list tio-'erederitisenerhir:Stokee. be referred to the" Uma nilttee en . Elec tions, together with the Duncan letter. Mr. SOLIENCI:, of Ohio, said he want; ed no more of' this sort of thng. The member from : , :ow York 'Brooke) boat just shown by his onto that ha Um* trifling with the /louse; proving his Caret • wm to set mine party_ trap„ I which sap,. however, 'Meting and caught himself, not for the purnato •of;• V 2": inquiry Into the right of a member to take 'Ms sett. lie wits glad the House; in the atm of Mr. Mullion, carried . out: the Ilr,sledent established in the Ken• tucky ewe, giving credit to: the - ntele -Itnetd of a member (Mr. lirookar to which his own ravultier 'Mowed him net entitled. as Ito had voted against bin own proposition. Ile watt (dimmed to the ret erenee of Mr. StokFa' Uredentialii, as that gentleman has shown his lordly by fighting under the dog.; Mr. 31011 C lAN enquired if Mb fact that Mr. Stoked bath- faught.vallaritty tinder the Federal ring entitled him to take the test oath • Mr. -14CIIENCV. replletl that he teas not the eou,,ienee keeper' of Mr.• Stokes; that was a Isultter endrily, Vol himself. Mr. it.tsl3.s.r.r. metro/tied the ttetion of the- itepuldiem member), in the lion lucky esso"with their proent action, and askeZh how they weld reconcile their praetieal ineotisodeneleo. Mr.: 'DAWES - clOsed, the debate by moving the premotet question, whit& wa. seconded, amt. the rointatlon of Mr. Eldridge rejected, so Mt. Mike' eredon, aid. Were not referred. - =l= Mr. 11ISK.Si.3.tbeneutunItted.t tesole...l lion 14 refer tho credoilthths orMe;:Mulkt, tine to the Committee on Election; end Pent to Clerk'. limit ottd ~had read • I loser field Ltroitenttrit fn the l'lth U.S. Infantry eupport log the stetetnent made In re epeet. to hie Cale. :Mhterthg 40$ ft: mod{ (A . Mr. heton. ho onol tho only difference betwet.n Mr. Logan nod him.' Pelf woe, that et • tho leigtuning of the warldr: tAlten vteaeLe.flibliewireltene end maim:lr t!nlent men *elle now Mr. Logan we, terrible menu, unit and Jeoehln and hild eel( .fllll. dilllloll than. Atte tho tetnartutof.Mx.Seheuqlf, Sod geht.leert was . not et very amiable perepg, LlebtallOt Slot attavlty of num tier oto - dent n;"(7hoonernold, hennithf.te low& /le on% Alm motor ' , weld* , of notion.... .Iklr.oltrooks thon defended We MU roe ilVregsrl..to the nob. Joet boron. the Iteuee,'• -•• • , Mr. }XII laid he would not illseura the pride/3100n whether the Howie tithed tlitatgand the rettulreanenta (tithe ten oath tow. The Ilona( _would • be doing a meet dangerous thlriet It let down the /tighendlmeuelantlalultic inmate of the twit %mill Tor the :members on either aide. • It eittiuld hold up itilbe uttuaot good faith the idea - lent to whore law bald flared It, alit reipaire Lowe' Clint! lie trrought to lan. loreeo, that no one 'hall be 'MOM/ in who. could not properly take It Mo lantlll lint cots.' cent to Ida . 2'elitague'a (Mr. Sclicnekrai ropoidtion, (hot Mr. Stoke. aliould Judge forhetnitelf ritritopc 110 octopi' take the tau oath. Mr. tielllttleQll explained end Jit.U- Iled itht remark, end ftt•lng.-referrcil to the (ane of Senator Pottemaicyalrl he would havepermitted hter..lo lake the atilt, Mlit would thottext eionient moved hioxpid him - for inenifait perjury. 'Mr. sitr.r.r.AitAttoult,. cestantlns, the that o retole (hie to refer MY. Mullion . credential. eltould be adpted. • Mr. of Mtaitachnotetta. ori poriell -the resolution, on ,the ground, Unit the *largo epithet Hr. Mullin? , wen tondo amply elyi 'mom atatailent, contained ltl a letter of 'a -pea eon enentiched for: r - - Mr. IthWlt.s.4, in behalf of Mr. .111;11- line, entertals fell and uomplote denlal by thet gentleman of ell motley (illegal Inthe letter hubfhltted to the Maim. The resolution was Nadal Litnacti tnionsly. . • •, • • . 'one 111111! The Tonnmees triidtboro, exeopt Mr. Butler, wore rolled Id front of Um Speak. or's elddr, and hod tho.test onth oolemd Iy adudnlntotod to thorn. OZVI OOXICO IMLEOATM The SPENCER 1511 hams the House • letter from the hoerotary of thalwri, tory of New itfealeo;ratatlng that be was forced to almi a certificate of the elenthan of Mr. Cleaver oe delegate; but his tip parent majority wee made up by framL. Mr. Cleaver woe fairly elected try a me, jority of 1,103 vote,: Tito paper's wore referred to the CounrillUM on Elections; and neither claimant was .sworn in as delegate. Who delegate, (rum Mualana and Mtablnfitten were-sworn. ItEPOUT OX arrzaonintrit. The SP.SAKER announced the next business In order was the execution of the order made on the Mtit'of July; that the Judiciary Committee report forth. with on the ryttietten of Impeachment. Mr. WILSON, or lowt, A:Warn= of the - Judiciary Committee, stated, by di rection of the Committee, that Its report was not yet completed, but would be on Monday, at which ' ti they- Commit tee designed to submit. to the House the caned, together with the evidence end *Jowls of tho minority-7 In making this thwitb, to the end that if such into, articles of impeachment J gtrosented against ban by the • lint Senate; also renuinting the to telegraph to Mr. 'Adams to 7ils passport to return home; :tract the Secretary of State to leant all. oorrespondeneo of the pertinent on the • subject of the • prisonment, trlal, or conviction ins tieing or claiming -to be citizens, in preat ItrltalAor ."ito be considered In secret seis e Ilonse, if necessary. t' EAKER held that as the - •roposed the Impeachment of an t was to privileged question. ' tODINSON procetded to delude of Cols. Warren and Nagle um t Ireland. • After : peoceeding. • e nine ho yieldwl for a motion to . . odor' of Mr;WASEIBLIRNE, of unordered that tho llouso adjourn = Tb /MiI:AKER stated he would, on Mon unieee otherwise directed by the r.use, - announee the standing com mit', /or the Present Congress. o of absence won granted Mr. Sch..eld, on arpount of ninon' of his fend% . li. L CONCERNINCI IRCILICILILENT. KELSEY asked latve to Introduce a bill fleclarieg the effect 'of Impeach niece be. the House of Representative's of the President, 'floe Presicent,. or coy etvilasfilose.tta. Mr. ElLMr.lprir. objected nesattrrioNto , pt , Grovinr, &C. motion oilik:PIKE,.-the Secretary 'or the Trettenry.rtai directed- to report the number of employees employed ea agents, nr detectteea. compensation,_to' entity, ST. . - Ott nugion ofldr. BLAIN, tho pom tnittee on Ways and Means was - directed to Innuirobato -Iteekpedioney of repeal it he tax on cotton. Mt.. COBB askedlenve to offer a moo. lotion instructing the Joint Committee onAletrenchment to inquire Into the whisky frauds, - Mr. SPAULDING objected, Raying the rewolution woo too long., Mr. FA RNSWORTII asked lease to offeror resolution for taking the census in She rebellious States. objectetL ' asked and NVIS exemied from further eervice on the Curntnittee on Retretichment. ' ,• . uturptkriyou MU. MULLINh.. % Mr. MULLINS, of Tennessee, nado sOlne eetnat,ko dada! of , the letter wldch had ISeetertad against hhh. The Ronne, at four o'clock, enljonrned WEST INDIES CALAMITY. remitter Pao fiesta.e of temp flurries.. • #.llitand,Tcrsola submieried by so /Isaibqnsile. (ft TWerr.pla to the r(ttsballeb Ululate.) • • L• Ninv Yong, Nov. tff.—llartme letters to the 15th state that tiny towns in Porto Ijico suffentd from chin late hurricane, and to addition to the loss of two hundred I theno thousand- familial- were rendered houseless...:Tho'itece of ilre in St. Thomas • will exceed ono thousand. .blmen hundred and nixty-three b6dies Mivelxort washed ashore. Many bodies lad in be burned to preventpicarofaefion. Several vessels were wrecked at Mar ttnimio. . letter adds that the Inland of Torto la suffered severely. Not a honor re *sin, Trees wore tone. up by, not rota, and the crepe destroyed. • •Later advice.* state that It basheen • visited by an earthquako and ortiopletely Butane . IL If this IN true . the loos of r hire!! ,M•s.ffultt The Wand has 1 0,00 inhabitants. ti. LOUIS Isdigtureal• tee Trral—tteemoilwitelAso. nekourgai tasa•ruusgos uSults.l Sr. Loots, November gratul jury tooday found two indictment., aiming &meet Myers, Inifillcated•le the robbery of-Taussig, Gempp K Co. one for receiv ing. atoten Kande , the o th er for grand lareeny. 1.. R. Stramo, _mixed up In the name matter, surrendered himself to illy ion wan religion In tt3,000 bends. Altar several daya' effort a jury has been empanneled in the cane of Dr. W. P. C. Itesdington, charged with killing die barkeeper at the 'Ran, Howl°, named Wallington, k R .feat Doceniber.. eading ' ton is a Kentuckian, wan a surgtoin to his 11,11,1errily, and has rich friends. In ISM the steatitem Desmoinan and Katie minded near 'Nashville, end the latter wan sunk. .lltram K. }fasten and Adana Weover, 'owners of the Ratio, most Peter Conrad, owner of the Dew mottle., for 1,40,000 The ease no. taken up In the Milted Slates Instrlet,Court to- CANADA. tarp-Coleasal 111.111remmi !royalties arg= 7 1::." fey roißaivdpli LIG Vltisbarth . thattic) " Ofvottro, -November L'l.—Resixintablo poetic,* to the motif-line provinces hove oriole d propealflon to the Gdrerninilht. to bond ntid ran' an Inter-Colputrit Rail road for ti booms - et it Vi tOSlllone a dot. , . In, the - eienato Mat night Hatt Mr. Campbell stated that the 13owornment had not tho power to initiate or maintain negotiations with - the ttmertents Gov ernment In Agent to the renewal n( the Houlproolty treaty. Such Wegotlstiotta could.bo approached through the lust ru- InontalifY of the: British" Minister at Wouthlniten. • • • • • • • gram:, N0v.21.----Laran Mlinhors or tile laboring classes are lensing for the UMW! Statm,, owing to the ecarclty of employment. _ TEE PACIFIC 114•1/0/11‘..016 Offrefl.••-reoimi ■lllOl% 1 . Cu, valernoblo tbortsubaroh:owts.i • Sam Fitancineo, Nnyemher 21.—The steamer Montana, from the Northern coma, with one hundred and thirty thou awn!' litigant In treasure, liar - arrived. The views hum (IMO:MI1M' 'Britlah Co. tumble to unimportant, ' • The preyed tbrmniwrsltu;Nottheni Ida ho end Wimbloglou territory is &grail.- lug attention. A ecautnitten was an rainfall to prepare a tnetnnrial and o tote eignidures irk Int; Congrati to annex. Northern Idaho and Winillington lord tory preparatarartutheadmission of the latter into the Union. ettiantito of nitiont brought by itto t 7 rent, Republla LM been ecizM 'for On nttootitt to tiefrtutil lhn revonno. leharelh Colt t the rtttailingb watt% 1 Pont. ,Waynr, November Thn Grand' Connell rie the Lutheran' Churph 01 North America, which nw sembled In tide .alty, yesterday, lo still eng.trod In ennaliloving - tho efinatitution prepare.] by committee. appointed tiy.litin'Cotiventlotilmi Badding,- Penn sylvania, lost year. 'llia debates aro lining carried nn in a klndend.ehrlathill . Wharfs is groat unity in-the body Gina air. Dr. 'lCreiuth; . delivered an ahhsdlinAtlrse lanL evonlng, on the great work of' tho Church and Convention. ' Soeort o 4;'. a tii t entir'veiy 4 ra n re ru tran ''' t., P ho l" ln * nerve Mr tha It venv of the woudorfut In 'minium. Madame Sindneki, from !Mania, with a value of nurpasslng vol ume and tIiTCOLOCBIS.. will. gleo }elect mitotleal eolnie thlmovening, Uennrni. Klebor manta ZOOMS. Mar per formnnon on the flute aro ante wonder. MI. In her execution of•:Yrlpn, abakee and rune, unrivaleddelicacy. 'aweetneno and exprowdon ate exhibited.' She will lie anointed by Mr. and ?dm 11. Metier, Mr Downing Oa Ulna Hank) Jones, nekets to be bunt during qie day at Kin. Dead.—Capt. - John P. Thninpeon, tor. mercy proprietor of tho Logan House, Altoona, died Ityftt. Paul; Minnesota, a short ttmo since.. , The Fayette County Poor nous* barn was burned on Wednesday. niett. -It-Is supposed to hare been sot on Ilse by nn Joseph Larnlll, 'end of tha orlallial t ropriatorn .WQ9ptc,r,, Ohio, ' dlnd' tut End: &devil* 16otures in; EMe t o Aqtycinqroilui Ls proposed In Erie Y AND SUBURBAN. OESTION. D lna si M oti on tor „ u p l r l e n m nteiM Con t n , on in janettOn—Tbs Injunction Mttnotal. In the Supreme Court; yesterday, Judge Thompson delivered an. opinion refusing the preliminary iujunction prayed for to restrain election officers, from holding Die election on the second Tuesday of •December next, under the net of Assembly of April elth, 1667, by 1 which the district designated as "Cori ,, trot" is claimed As consolidated with the city, a majority of..tho electors having voted in Giver of the same at the October, election. • Following Is the opinion t - W. If. Ratith cf.. al. .. Then. Inn. C Ma- Clink, Ce.• al. la ' ' , qui t y-7701 Opinion of the Court DcliVcred .eiron• Olaf, '1867,• by Thompson, J. We are askiorto enjoin the defendants from holding an election for members of the Councils, Mayer end other city ()M -eers for the Oily of Pittsburgh', on the second Tuesday of December next, which it is charged they th reaten to hold under the provialone of an Act of Assembly 'passed the nth day of April, A. 1/.1867, entitled ....e.• fu?ther atippletnent to the actsineorpondingtheCity of Pittsburgh," I'. 1.. of 1867, wain • . • Tho net provides for ineeirpordlng into the City or Pittsburgh certain territory therein described, outside the ihnits of , the city at the.tiuse of the passage of too I act, leaving the question of cousolidation to the people in the districts intended or designed to km consolidated. Atthegou oeal election in. October last, mid pursu ant to the provisions of the art, a vote by the qualified voters of the several dis ' triets was hod, and the Central District . alone gave a majority for consolidation, , the other two against It. by the second I section of the act, only those sections whlch should cast a nunjority of votes for consolidation were to constitute • the city. It is plain that es the Centnd District alone voted for consolidation, it 1110110 I *ill le entitled to elect the Mayor and I other offbeat aimed in the. act, end the other districts will have no part In the matter. The bill tiled by the oomplainants elute gets that the act in question is uncousti tutional, and no election can or ought to be held under IL Woare not able from anything that has berm shown to soy that this Woo, ao far ut least as the proviairms for consolidation are concerned. It is not unconstitutional to submit such. goes tion to the people. We do not reread it without the principle which, forbids the delegation of legislative power; That is applicable to the =allots of law,,, which the law-making power pies ideal by the Constitution roust not. delegate. So far as questions I'l4 the present are concern ed the ConstitutloOtaclf furnishes a pre. redent, in the division of counties; so doi the acts of assembly to regrud to the di vision or establishment of new towisniilr mooted nut of old. In these ease. the votes of the district. interested are taken. to lodicate the choice orthe people on the subject. We need not discuss this, how ever, for it was not inalal.l on In the ergo meu tby the pla int [ff.' counsel. It. Watt id upon been in Yalu If It had been. 'Where in otherwise the net is llrloelistitutiouul, :to .far as it provides for consolidation wu do not see, and hare not been shown. The Legislature hail the undoubted power to tools an act for consolidatient it may unquestionably enlarge, dlvikle and change the boundaries of tuttoicipal corporations, and may do this without referring the question of choice too pits of the people. The nstance of Des con aolislation of a nuinix.r •of independent outlying distrlcts'elth the City, of Plilla dolphin, by the Act of Isll, Is but are of the numerous instances otttte exercise of the power in this Stateesothers need not be cited. Of the same character ham been the exercise of toe power to change county seats and county lines. 'The tog islatort•,. as said,' might hare proreeded as it did in regard to tin .City of Phila delphia, wousolitiantig the whole torrito ry in question withoot submitting it to, a vete. of the people. Dui it slid not do so. And we think no breach of the Con stitution; was btrolved in the method adopted.. • Thornily qunstlon. therefore, now is. did the I Cr.:crust. Desrater, in which the clot:don ht, propcsed, to be hoiden. and which Is toug h y [ to biS prevented - under this bill, agree by its 'toter to the plan of consolidatioh It This Is conclusively shown by reference to the vote, which was largely in too affirmed re. ' \Vhat is there, therefore, to prevent au election at the Woo epocificst in the act of the con , noildatraleity! We know of no reason, and none has been shown. That, por thole of. the act of Assembly in question May contain unconstitutional powers, may be true; and they may. be so de clared when they come to be applied, but that this utay be so, does not render the ' entire Ott unconstitutional. it would not render nitgatory the provisions ap plicable to unisolidition. If that objee non cannot be mule good ea to that por lion of the net, no appeal to this court to interfere, amsposting we had the power, , would avail on grounds non involved In consolidation. the question hnutediately connected with rho question bolero us. It strikes, me as 601110WilattIOVei to ask I the interference Of the Court to prevent what ore are lelvtlareelcd tO regard se only triable in come of the modes pro vided for trying the result of an election by the poopis.visi either by txmttsting if before the proper tribunala or testing the right of the officers •eleeted by Quo irorrom'o. We think this being the remedy the law provides, most be regarded :ea the true remedy to redress wrong resulting front an election. The power •ought is, I bo plain, indeed, to authorise 'Courts to'' fOrbhl ntunielpal elections when Ordered by the Legislator*. It Is not plain, tier do ten think it exists. Whatever may be , Um right to interfere to restralli Meer , porsted (snip:odes, it has sot been shown to exist, or has ever lasot exercised in a case, like the present. We are not able to sign the • mammas on Which the oomplainauts ask all inter , ference,,even se ppealllg we Nold - act in the premises, They allege nee private, or individual injury, nr. "Irrepantble . ridasthief" impending. Even aupponiug the act tube as alleged, uneonstitutiotml, private 'patties eannot interfere by bill to ask It so to be so declared, unless 031 emeralul of some apes:lel damage, or in jury to them In person or property. They do not protena this. without this they have no equity. Injury to the pill,- Ilepeace or Ink:rests of the territory . to be inoorporated Is not suflielent , Indeed au attempt to prevcut An ele - lion by, Injunotion against the election. officers Would (mount to nothing—it would 'l., *minim fedmen. -If for any reason, nn account of on injunction Cr othenylec, the electimt onlenrs failed to attend the plate appointed for the elec.- tion, . the etcetera would supply their ploooo, and Duos would the clettion le gally proemed in despite. of the shorties, attempt to prevent it. On the whole, we are eallsileil thntWo canna Int er fere, anti the opplication for . prelindurtry. Injune , " lion Is refused. The Perormed Preebyte•y f PUS barel-Itotioneeteme. of the Pbtl esthete Preebeterlati lthrleatht. 'rho l'lttaburgh Presbytoiy of In Re!brined Prosbyterlen Church mot it tholoint Itufornunt Pre,byterion Chnrob Allohone, on the _let The Ike:. John Bledlllan and Thmme, Smith, ISeq., who hail boon appointed at a prelima timeline to represent title Presbytery In tho Nalional - Linton Pro - byterian4;oriventions held In Phibutyl thick 'on tho 'fib, 7111 and with of this month, pm-amt.d a written report of Om action of that l.'intveution,anctsitlntillttol to l'rmilvtiity Orr consideration. the Basle of linion adoptial Ity.the emnom tion and recomtnended to the various churches., whereupon the fill lowitnctuttion wan token. by the tottothnout voto of the members ptesent - ftwietemythat Proebytery 11/115 beard with catisfaallUn the report ot the dote. gales to the Union Notional Pnotbyferion Coneuntion anti cordially approves oft do course pitriutml 'by them In that Conven- - • Iterrotreil, .That revebytery rtooltolro with profound gratttudo to Clod thospt r It Of Wledomend Runway which Ile imparted to Ilrla Convention. . Remokod, That Praebytory troehi that, Oho Goneraltlynod,,at the next .11leetintj, will fallow tiro recotittriondatton to ap point flee determine to enrry.not the pro posed roOrtilllerl (or Union. Bielsko Thieves Arvesiee. Jacob Lougee:id Jacob Ilestett, ebarg 7 , ed as the parties who robbed 'tavern! att. . bias hl Allegheny oily a short Unto Shw, have been arrested by the Allegheny andeller n hearing before A.lder *man Mullen, hug evening, they were committal fir trial. Sig saddles and several sole °theatres stolen by the par ties, wore rocovored on Wedneatiny by of ficer, Solider, assisted by flasiott, ono of the neensed, who made fulloonlession of his .It appears that ho 1., 1110 own. snots horse, and having hired n buggy, in company Long went on a plundering' expedition, They "railed" at several etabloc tindltiklag out saddles and. tar nese, placed' them Id the buggy, and drove off Without attracting. suiptclon. rouirris PACE—The conns; Police Tag PRESI/14 . 6111 1 111 LIMO, I Sho Prorated rodeo on • raellehuill BASIL The project of forming an •ortratile union of the several branchns of the Pretbyterian Churnh, tipAr 5 doctrinal basts, which has been more or Ides Agita ted throughout the United States, In pro greasing slAwly but surely to a consum mation of that end, and. If the proper course In rumored will doubtless be Per manently established erithftia few years. A Convention of delegate*. from the different branches of the Church - In this Stale was rocently held atiflriladolPhla; at which the propoSed Union met 'with .general favor, and the Convention prim, ithously rmoininended Union PrdYer end' Conference Meetingstbroughout the Sukic, In nrcler to bring the matter prop erl'Y before the minds of the memtmv. ship of the Churches, so that they might see the importance or it and (hereby hasten the devoutly wished tor consnnb =gam of lhe , project. Iu accordancewith this nicommenda- . . . tion n meeting was held to the First 1.7. P. Church. Allegheny (lir. Pressley's) at 'seven undo ludf o'clock -seat evening. Dr. Pressley, who presided et the meet ing, stated on inking the Chair, that It Mai been called for the purpose of afford ing the brethren of the Groat Presbyte ritm.fitunly au opportunity to engage in .devdtlantil exereism, thus showing their loco for our resumes Savior. They met, he said. to talk and May over the pro posed Union of the Presbyterian Charch es into one organic body, upon a &Mad- nal bask. The cserclsh were opened by reading a portion et the .9criptures as recortled Sa the 4th chant, of the First Epistle of John, 'after which the congregationjohted Irisinning ats 1024.1 l'salm, commencing as follows: oCiort tents aloryahall appear? after which Pee. Dr. Elliott was call ed to the stand, and offered up a fervent and eloquent prayer. The Epth Psalm Was then sung by the congregation, and was followed by an el oquent prayer by Rev. Mr. 11.'31illan. llev. J. B. Clark said that as the meet log had been palled in compliance with a recommendation of the Philadelphia Convention, and as some of the brethren who had been delegates to that Conven tion were present, the audience would like to bear from therm Rev. Mr. Allisou, being one of thedel eget., referred to by Mr. Clark, said that It had been Me privilege to attend that Convention, and he was pleased to nay that he bail never seen so much harmony and unity of sentiment im any similar !nesting. The whole assembly, he said, nppeared to Lie imbued with a spirit of WI len for C,LtrisCsstake that Mankind might be saved; something must bedone to revive the work of Clod in the hearts of the people, and to thakend a union neeetsary. Rev..F.3le . liiillatt paid he had been a delegive to the Convention, and had nev er enjoyed a inee ling of any kind an much 09 he did that Fallon and communion at Philedelphia. said than no matter what a man's views were before he wept these, he did not think. any one left there without being 'firmly convinced that n union of the church wits poteible and should be effected. . . ftsc,s, C . Leon. was also a' member of the Philadelphia Convention, The delekottes, he said; had all gone there with a fooling of fear or jealousy for the cherished doctrines peryeding them:but It was coot, dispelled; and. It reminded him of , roasting old friends. He never expected to see such another meeting. The time had. come; he said, when the Whole scheme of shlvation must be pre scatcd, Ile hoped the brethren would meet mgcther.often and discuss the sub ject of Colon, which, he - said, was a znatier or great importance.. . A prayer was then offered by Rev.3lr. 31441 inney,aller which - the meeting was addreAseif by Rev. A. P. Chappa, a mis sionary, .who had been In China for the pa4ttwo years. He advocated a union of the &needles In a' forcible argtiment. The 07th Psalm was then sting by the , vOligregutlon. . . Roe. 31r. Seovil addrMsed the meet- ing. Ile was o delegate to 'the Conven tion; the delegates word warmly In favor of union; they. appeared to be holding to, and were hold together by the cross of elitist; the times in which wo live call for more exertions. on the part of Chria tines. The day hatlarrlVedwhetioldlined 'might be obliterated, and the time was thr dision: when others would bo erosied. - • . , Roy. Dr. Williams offered Up n touch ing appeal to the Throno of Grneo, in which he asked that the people might lie Guided and directed by an All-vrise Providence, and brought to seethe ne cessity of a unity of action on the part of God's people, alter which the 1334.1 psalm, commencing: .glottolci bow good a tiling It I. boar bolleving well Toratter such u brethren are In unity to dwelt ! ' nor; Dr. Jacobus nort addressed the mood ug at enasiderable length. and WWI by Rec. Mr.*Me3tlllan, of New Coatlo, Pa., after shish Roc. Mr. Swift led the meeting in prayer. Rev. J.. 13; Clark that another meeting should called; that there had been no expres•don on tho subject of radon front some branches of the church, . _ and especially from his own. For Ms part ho was in favor of union, but be was not prepared to admit that the churches were separated by usages alone; if ho thought so ho would take hli brother by the hand and heartily woo with him in all things. Ito was, however, in favor of a union upon a fixed doctrinal basis, and thought that by meeting together they could bring about that devoutly wished.' ler consummation. A union on paper, he said, would not only be tem pdrary, but would be Injurious to tho IMMO, but a union in spirit would be permanent and bencticial. 11ev. Dr. frinisley atildthat ho suppos ed it wan the , modesty of the brethren of his branch of the church which kept them hilpnt; but he knew that the church eves to favor of iTnien; it bad beedfound ed in Union. The Associate, and Arm- date Reform Presbyterian church°s had been United and - formed tho United Presbyterian Church. .- • . Dr. J am m u moved that the Rave. Clark,nivill and McMillan he appointed a Committer to ' call another meeting, which svneeinreed to. ' • • toe. Mr. Scovilrecommondell that the next meeting ho hold at itev. Dr. 'lron , - ard's Church. Oa motion, the Convention adjourned, and the exendsos cloyed by singing the 72d Psalm, and Deuettletion by Rey. Dr. Pressley. - A Nam Passenger Railway Is proleeted from the Allegheny Dios 111 , ,1111 to it. Union and 11111 Dale Ceme teries. A meeting of patties interested was hold Wednesday evening, Mr. W. MoCroorypresidia-, at which several routes were discussed". The ono adopted was to 'tort from the Diamond, proceed up. Federal street to „North Avenue, thence by North Avenue, Monterey, inelison and Fremont streets toSnyder'a helloes, upper part. • Committees on right of way and to wafer with the lialiclerder Pas...aneer Railway; Com pany were appointed. Suisicriptions to the capital stock were invited, with the understanding that no subscription was to be binding noless throe-faurtbs of the itroulrod ninaunt was secured. Ten thousand deflate (otteshalf the required amount) was subscribedon the spot, after which the niceties arkloorned till Weilttroilay next. • =T=li A. cutting affray °courted yraterdarat the void works on the Panhandle Rail road, botween Edward libanand irtiohaol Diughurty,, in which the former at toiuptod to mit rho throat of tho latter. Daugherty. is Superintendent of the worimornd it appears that Kane appited to hint for work andwas refused, when he drew a knife and struck atitangherty, out t in• • through the cotters of two shirts which' he end on at the tiara, and altghtly Rating tho •hook. ' Dough= ertv van to' ltfaypeer oilleo • and tivido information against Kean, and a warrant waa issued and.• Naomi.' in the hauds of oflinor •0' Marra, who arrested the rammed twat evening ou the •Illasb.: ington pike,' about seven' miles from the city, and brought hero to the lock•up, whore ho will remain mail after • a bearing. .• fared by a 11n11.--Exahoriff Allen, of Fayatto minty, was nearly gored to. death by 'an inforlatod boll; a Cow days ago.: the animal was Laing taken away to suffer the penally, it broke loose and attacked a shiackamith who .was atanding. in his. shop . door, and carried him on his horns for noarlyone hundred yards, without, however, seriously. In juring his rider. Ills liallahlp was shot a few it - dilutes aftertvards, with the mild, idachsnitth'a apron over kb, oyes., which ho had carried away with him in his at tack. Mr. Plunfockla enorind reading before the Young Mon'a Mercantile Library Almeida;lon, last nigbt. at the Academy of hitudeovarrattended by one of t h e /atticst and most fashionable rindlownes which has evor onsciutiled In Pittsburgh. • The course of lectures of . this praiseworthy association has been ausplelously.openo and we treat that the future oemskass may be as pecunlarly successful an was that of lust night. • f. NUMBER 271. IZ=M When Walters and Xohnsou, the recap. tared Jail misoners, were being brought to din city. Johnson stated that he wish- ed to go to the browse of a colored woman on the Smith side near thebrfdge,' where he sold he hod left n pair oftolgtoloons. Be dhl not go, bat officer. Dressler did..l and made a Mail, finding thirty or forty pales of socki, 'chisels. planes, 11 lot of bake pans, a pale of drawers, a shirt. and a art of dominosji;: all of which had been left there by Johnson. 'finery were taken to the 'Mayor's office and. placed Frith the already scr-rlMolsted stock of stolen goads.. Officer Moon made it visit to the scenes of a. e operations of the par ties on the day of the firma, and learned Mat aIPOMILD named Morrow had pnr e a pair of oboes front Winters, for w l tiVirhil pay) him 75 Offies - Cu- ples ' on Vag day of ths nrrest, waft stop ped by a widow residlnp near Otety a 'tun, who Bald that she had been nabbed. She stated that she had, a day ttr two before, passed the day at her sister's holism, some distance away, whejo theta NVB3llqttlltlng party. When she returned she found that her house had been entered and rob...—. of four handkerchiefs and fivo dollars in three and five cent- pieces. The thieves bad also eaten till the jelly and other good ; things within reach, The woman's sus nide• 'reefed upon a negro in the neigh borh. but subsequently the money and handkerchiefs were found in Wet ton' possession. -Among the goods found over the river wore a hammer and drill belonging to Mr. Schultz, wheel, - shop en Wayne street; it will be remem bered, was robbed some time since. Waters was originally arrested for com plicity in the burglary.. The tools were left at the house by Johnson. Waters . Is very lame, having hurt himself se verely in getting over the Jail fence. Officer Dressler is still suffering severely from the injury -^-11vcd on the arm from the Injury he reeel Irtmaking the arreti. Deities at atm Rsllroodi Depot. Thursday morning a - young woman named Buchanan, aged about eighteen - ' '. yearn, da'ughter of the Register of Wash- ' ington county, mho had arrived on the train from the -East, was taken to the ladies' waiting room at the Union Depot, In an exhausted and dying state. She was afflicted with consul:notion; and last summer was taken to New Jersey, to a brother's, with the hope that a change of air would be beneficial. Recently she grow rapidly worse, and her early death seeming inevitable, it was determined to bring her home. Rind friends started with her on Wednesday morning, and upon arriving at the depot, as stated, she became prostrated under the fatigue in cident to the journey. A physician was called, but medical aid was of no avail Death rapidly approached, and at eleven o'clock the vital spark tied. The body was combed and preparation made to forward it to the friendsof deceaaod, who were advised by telegraph of what had transpired. Flre--A alight lire occurred In lb collar of a house occupied by Dire. Rob inson, op Harrison street, near Penn, between four nod live o'clock Test even ing. no alarm NVIIS sounded from box 61, andthe fire department were prompt ly on the, ground, but their services ',ere rotitietlo3,as the Pretwhich was only the burning of some rubbish In the col lar,had been extinguished - by the appli cation of a few buckets of water. ATraloWrecked.—Abontilareco'clock yesterday afternam a coal train was wrecked on tho Pennsylvania Railroad, at Swissvale, by colliding With the Johnstown freight train. Tho engine attached to tho coal Wain was completely wrecked • and some of the ears badly broken, but 110 person was injured. Erie has n pedestrian who says ho can walk an hundred miler in twenty-four hours with ease. Re has walked three thousand mil e r in seventy days. Tbe Butler County Republican Execu tive Committee has declared for Grant, and have organized a Grant Clriti. CITY rtEras. Dry Goods at Who's=lo,—Ws in vite the particular attention of bayonet whole-ado to our complete stock of alike, dress mods, and all kinds of fancy and staple goods, and to the fact that a - ascii at the lowest eastern .prices, and out goods to suit purchasers. • 58 Mark J. W. Itimsza & Co., et street. Call and Examine the large and com plete stock of Ladies' FILM, at William Fleming's, No. 134 Wood street: tf famettdo . g Good.—The 'boots, shoot, gaiters, de., for men, Isdlos and children, kept at fib Market street, Me made of the very best material, and sold= low as the lowest. All goods are warranted to give satisfaction. If you wiu3t soma thing good, and at gold prices, call at Robb'a Shoe House, eS market street. lieutdc►y State Lottcry.—The only legalized Dmivings In the 'United States. The Grand Holliday Drawing will take place December 31et. $2:30,450 to be dis tributed. Capital .prize tt,50,000. Com munications strictly confidential. Cir culars sent free, by addressing MunnAv, Emir Co. s Covington, ky. Pool,—Efow often do we hear the ex premien, "What a foul breath that, gen tleman has." 'To all each we say nee Ward's Fluid and Powdered Dentifrice: Sold) wholossle and retail by Joseph Fleming. No. S{ Market street, and all dt'lliighlts- • • • Got, to Wm. Fleming's, No. 130 woOd street, for humans In Ladies' Furs. tt Lrotts , BLACK Stun Var.vsr von Ctoans.—ltenatifial goods, subltmequal thee, An all widths, at less prides than cut be found In the two cities, on west cor ner of Market antl Fourth streets. TM GARDNER A STEWART by . Ear, Throat, Lmcn, • Oil= DEISELM and DATMIME, atccoldtdly by Dr. Aborn, l34 Smithfield lel A book by mailso maks. T7l Constifrition Water s, certain cure lbr Diabetes and all diseases of the kid neys. tor: ale by all drugtlats. Bargains in Ladles' Furs, at WWl= Fleming's, No. 189 Wood stmt. tf , IlABRIED; IILAIIS—CIIII9ON.,Oe. Wednesday, the 13th Cie Peeve' Presbyterian Church. Mts. - Ithrth.lny the Coe. Dr. Howard, EUI3 S. CLAW., of ristlaJelpitio, 33d MART C. GIB SON. Or ri no township, Altepbenp county. DIED: I . llr/KII;I . Xii 1511 . :61 ittaperia..s.d - Yneekal from the reAldenee or his parent.. Sixth A'Aen. Allegheny (Illy, en raway,A Std. ntnA•elnek 'The friends of the family re respectlhlly Invited to ettend. WenneAley to p SW lenient, t hall-nut eve o'clock; AILANDA lx the 'Altn year or her age. _ _ Th. 1%1.n' ni take ta.. from t h e of her father, Ira Etna. sonar. =I instant. at: o'clock/. N. The frletrala of the family are 0- spectfrally inched cocoon!. Thursday marelor. November 2lti...lll.laNtir, only Pon of James and )Loretta ktekee, aged 2. years and a months. • The funeral will tare plus Iron% the nat.:Worn of D. Trirehic, /con atonal, TO-VAT. Nor. tint. 012 o'clock T. tr. The friends of the really ore reaper ttrally Invited to attend. lelh tcov Tra l c ia te on Moods•. E of ti t; l iMo. and Ca dghter of 11,1 Thom4„of this city. vaiu lierteratral mill ttie place from the minute Of her father. No. tette - aced ntrect era Me ad e r the:hi Inst., at Zr. preelsely. The ad' ergo family are reapeethdly Invited teattcrarl gEveree WARDERS, ATTEN. !"°. VON:—The Craton llepubllean voters oCtlte ilereath Ward are requoted fa meet 0 tact[ aCHOOL 11 - 005/C. qn IiaITIRDAT EVEItBiO, - (beadlntt., at quarter pasttrerea o'cloek,to uetrauate Wart OCUcers, - to qe rotel tor at the earntif eleolo. ROL DI V 4B r!• I- .P 04 . AidiorfottonMasoritisionr" m...0,.........ri1eur,MNAb0t and 'List AzaarAn4llWAUA • , ISHEINIIKON AND SANYADO HERAT Q. lIAM,V, Merchant Tailor, Cur. Pena and Weimar Straits, PITTIBURGRi:PA- TILE WEDGY GAzorn.. TWO LC,l7lotia. WEDNESDAY ARU SATURDAY. ' WV , amt. iostAtatir rota * S' L L 'o: WIENS of o:westing readlelkialtae. lazdedlast lesdlaa Editoril, lateet Pre** by Teleurapb a‘a Yell. valuable llea.kur Stetter for the raw', and (Unita amassed ratable Vtoaautat and We. • marrW Marita Reports even al eor *Per is• th e Mi. Xo 71111101% aleebardo ordlegokaa, should be olthout - mime TaxTl>t Incsiax oxicerx, Meetr Te b ` ... ...... -***— ci,b, o n . : .... . .4% t. —lad ore rep,. of raper so due parrot , rettlor eptat club, Addltloed to elute Can WI =ad..: =I daub. at dab Tat.. • Series To BausCaddrlA—la order alt Tour Pekes. be .b. l °I P ° 7" "'sot. vre Wee a Viodateday edltk, lab terthere bovlar but one utak a +ter. I • • air lloaaT bv Dow, taigas', Mooed' OrAerd4 • or la Reglatered Letters, may be sent et; Gerais:l. Address.. PITTSI3IIIIOII. /11%:e.u. RODERT T. RODNEY. trader- SAM' AND ERSALXZL Nf , 0 01 110 St••, Allegbenl. 0bd.N0...*0 Diamond 59. 1 .brb (" • • John ll'llson*Bona.o keeps always an Tam! best Metal. ItosawsicKl.. lama •lsoltstlon Es eebood Coillns...W.lnnt Coffins Item CS UP vrartl, llnn,tood ICO npsesedlli all Wit r Cnnlns In ptobpetlosh • Cmerlakes 06af.6.6 JUR:Mnt no low jatei. Ulores. Nolo and EngtbrafO grlitsbedirklts... 0 Wei ore!. 41 1 1" - A Lax. MIELIEN,IINDIFIRTAK En ; NO. 100 Foneth 0000. rlttaDvit (lti' PA. corritip. of 01 kinds: CRAM. okerk eleserlptlan'of Yvver.l , Yarnlsbinl l Ibrolshod. Itcronas open day .11 algid. 111$11k , and Coirloges furnished. : ItzTr...kneoo-1100. /Mehl Ma, 1) Thaler. • At. 11".I.Ineobus, D. 11.; non. JoeohlV.sllller, Esq._ • J . G. • BODGEIBM• UNDEIITA— • KEIL AND RAIDAPIER. late Paranel K. llochters,) No. M Ohio elneetr. three doors from Roarer. Alleahrtii C/tis 'tattle, Rosewood; Idebogior. Walnut add ROW. wood Imitation' Coeltas, at the lowMe rrentiO i prlses. Mootsopen at alt boom dap idahtra' Reuse ltd Carriages thentshed on shine na, and on most reasonable terms. ' =1 ED WARD CZARDRECiiiit, ON-. DILUTAKEII. Melee, N. 1:114 . 01sto fltteels Allegheny. Metallic. Rosewood and Othe'r cola_ Ana. with • complete Mock of Dottrel liorotalstme Goads, otiliand and flaraltzttad .t aliens at palm, at lemma prlcei. eats Cod ldtery . MAW.. cOM per or first and Middle Sheet , OOORAIIYI Bareuchea, • Boggles, gaddli RR.; ITMETER 'IIIARTIVEAV,OfIIIII.• A. J. If ARBIIUOII, at. tba OaaarnaT 4l .... Lawaancoatile, Pa: ORNAAIEZPPAHAIASILtaa • aad STONE•IVORKS: aroxznutiLLlON6llll-1, WANTS WANTED—A¢ rExper:Le:aced SALESMAN, In the Erman Mit end La dle,' kur Enslusse.- Address A. E.; ltraTlM Oriscr. WANTED—AL IPAVITNCte, Ilre er silents with Irlre to Tee Tb owned Dollars Cash'. to forest ton well istabDilsed wlsulesale mid retail Drug Douse. Tlie /oesdlon curator be excel ed. I:aeries of 4. D. DAILICIC t DUO.. No. KC .11 , aurth Weer, Pl3t.4arAL. . WANTE;II4-311 want !Agints " le every county to Pe onsylvaura waif:halo. to fell three ludtspensahleevtlelea,.wau. 041 in every house. Thla Is no 10040`. par.areohe are making tour to etxteee cleOtaraydrday, Gall, on or address CUSUING,i LOCKILLET, lea= la. It. pair Ilottl. WN £ D :GlllllB^- Ar.ur P. a • car Mks or Carbluess . 4l to 17 cask f . r Sk,nrn'• Eines or Carbines; $5 o Gl.o.Afor Go.t . • /Way or Nary Itryoir r,. coati ps - P7fort every . Ale serlytion of giri-arinf. persona laarlnt..4ol re abort anus eta send the br. Expre . e. o t, J. 11. JoIIYIBTON, Great Western Goo Works, YU Penn streat, etinaer Wayne, rlitanuret. • . WART'EIII44IIYtdi 88EQN, ~i ale Axel Female. The Doak iorAe MDIon. TUB NOIN IN FLUE: or. HEROES or CAIM MANIC AND FILE. Uy Mrs..A. 11: lloae, of the U. S. &sultan' Cooss!Won. IL Ls not • hls terror the war. or of coy CoMP.IL. 4.? Ot oer eats Ohl sad xat'anirecor4 of the ser.rince saltettelts of the .rank sad die. 1011. tatihe territory addre;ss or spray to A. 01141. C....,), CO., thdlarket otO•et, Pittsburgh.'. - .• FOR RENT Ro B RENT- , OFFICIES.—The rooms now occupied by the Secretary of the ' Union Railroad and Transportatioi (Meipanr. No. *3 SIM street, over O. MeClielook • Co..* Carpet Store. Timer room. are veer dosing/e for offices. bele: loomed to the emitreol bust. nes.. and on Fifth street. no. beilkirioldwiil.. the Rloolood pevemerit, rendarled thorn tree from notsc. etc. -front room comtalsis larked:a. ' proof caulk P.M:don can be hail on theists / proximo. lowlife of ,OLIVE SS kIeOf•NTOCIS C0..7 fifth street.. FOR SALE FOll SALE.=-11ARE CHANCE. FEED STORE tar sale, aoloS l a :good b=l nese for retails, A. Ezo to at OR a Teen street. FOR SALE-340 ACREI . GOOD , - lairallNG/ LAND, In Taws:. forme ears% Good tltle. Taxes all paid. wzr - •.. ue lorelltr property. • For iretlionlarn'lnqn*, D. 90IITU. dio. 33 .lluket stave, 1 - FOR SIILIEN.-- , BRICILI VABlar, Tba mdirslgneg TOO sell all et one-halt it • • Brick teed, to any perionorlahlag to e•R•gb lo the busbies& The yard to nor. vlth All the males ern Improvements. Lellte rims to:1nm: genii• need apply bat those •rtto mein badness. AO. dm. E. T. C.. Allegheny C. O. FOR BALE—EIOnor.s.—AT, HOWARD'S Lieu''' eld Safe Stahl ,e Ons' Eve raimy RORER Olaelf three QUET HORSES, we. LARGE DRAUGHT GORSE: Ran BLACK MARES: tee UREIC. KAMM rnisr 'mu l e/so Mandela. bets 113 - liorses booed and sold odelevideslos. FOR SALIE—BABEV.- . 74 goat{ &dog's business of Ooto ZS told barrels of four a week; siefeltested at 2i0.11 PALO evro srazElvenegbenT Ort.idut Del sold =treasonable terms.: Th• abate tatLerg • doing a good bosloess..she - doing • much larger Ow APT Ipetlll erlebtorto Ind god thls ntre orlmel Isontlra et the DAIWAIT. FOR BALEL-STEJ Aa s Inch crlladar, rd lad). II (bet long. with iw Stack. Grate Mars, all sort up. The engine Is ousel: order, and %intro sOld vet. Oasts: use for It: it eau shop or W. W. WALLA For pries sut terms. atzpl street, rut burgh. • ' I FOR . SALE.--Bot corner of Manhattan sear reasenger Bo11..7; Bova frame, containlat well improved. !lowa iad . Bidwell 10001. Allegbeire halt bonze tram. contain good cellar; water...! to!. Bonito and Lou la good to BUM Ben , n , Ualichertes. • ' Fos rALF.,—A is oTareato an attire eaald engui of crxo, to Po crest lnl well eatabllahr toicattog Beanory: . To' trrtrallog, 1121,11 a rare Hon to Ws lotereat per moettl,.d copra/ea. mason for prcseut owor partlealirs erololro of I 00,1 lataae Broken. Lot FOB BALE-81 tors.—WWximr . oller terms e eer plan of 1=12.: leg part of that valuably the help oil.: C. I. htel. ender Sesrpabstry, .e. the West Yams. Itallres4 lets treat the railroad ea - Axle street oe'the teeth. The tote ebiltetees; with vlithehreets rumsteg ayb the attars, h t l property. _These , or gardsetee not be seemed; wed for beauty of lorstlei and Recess hare no e;lhhi: Per dthdr thilse Plea sad farther Infermstloa .11 et SILL A SIIUTTish... • LVA Itdilithete Agents. Seiler shred. taw.", TJMTED iirrA7rEs WATCH COMPAIVII WATCHES. We hw, Net Lieleed impeller let et them . eel' PIV.:ll"grilMT ;UV:: h iktav_ thls mate& beteg Jeweled erlth.ClLletadail, Ci11101g0211C71716 BALANCC. nte 3,1 , 11 ileum Agent., DI:WRATH. ar. da rum BT1118T; oPecertz w.uositr HALL. ' win7rt NVI4ON , A A 1711311183 COltrAltr. IkNG luctanza iiatoh, and an'tike cbasiysi, Salenees.. No t sir /i7= 11170,•:rt • NEW BTORE Aft croons,, , ." , R.BirrniMeraant lenaw j ' AI t.A I C . D Vila= „ • 411173.1.1 -^:". • ' 147 / 1 3 ' rt F 4 I 3131j Fnli , • VIST/ 214, ' - • '.kga eiE/i H =ME