0 HE DAILY GAZETTE, PUBLIMED LVZRT MORNING (MVOATII XICIMIX/ PENNIMAN; REED & CO, F . rcbrorlotcorso r ►. O.•rlpftulV T. P. nnuovtr, rom', Duane.. o)l..ager. ratit EIMM=I=I I= litrblicut Pipet if Uteri Pnu IT it !IT! Pl i ra u lf ff Mr r y URGE AID L 4 . 40 1 711111 . ?Z' M.1.11.1L1 eopy Add.eas, DELI CIAZETTIG PITTSBUIIOII. PENN•A MT EDITION. I MIDNIGHT. TILE MILK% HORROR. Full rarlienlars of the Accident on the Lake !bore Road. Forty Forme Boasted Alive VeseriitionbyanEyeWilmess iosv . Ibe Accident Occurred A . Terrible Scenci The telegraph on Wednesday night • gave on meagre particulars of 'a terrible nee:Went .on the Lake Shore Railroad, . ' 'whisk occurred on that day near a place •, ' called Angola, twentyione antics from Buffalo, the train from the Wes!, duo at Buffalo at I:30, running off the track: i nt that point. We have the following" ad 1- (lanai particulars: Tho train was the New York Expreas, from Cleveland. It was detained two hinter, by a broken bridge on the Cleve land and Toledo roadand was compoisell Cl three ; firatsclaas' coaches tilled with passengers, a smoking tax and two Rig : gage caerc under the conductorship of Mr. 11. Frank Sitcrmem, ofilutralo. Sager. Creek was the last station stopped at poor , • to the accident, and Angola was' bossed • about three o'clock,'Ute train going, as it. its Stated, Ma epeed of about twenty miles an Wier front Angola to the bridge over Big Sisters creek. flowerer, thorned is a down grade, and It is posaible'that the . train was ening et a greater !rimed than theabove when thocasualty occurred. Be that kiiiiit may, everything was apparently all right when the, bridge was reached: nod I when the train had crossed half may, over, a fearful jerk was experienced by, those un board, and the next moment ' the rear roach was detached, and went 'Merging off the bridge and down the abr..-to the lee—o distant* of some • thirty or forty feet. The brakes were at ' onceppplied, bet before the train could ''lo slopped, the coupling of the second . coach had become broken, and It, too, ' got elf the track' and rolled down the embankment. So suddenly bad all this happened, that not ono of the Inmatee of : either of the two- coaches had time to • make his escape, and without a momenta " Naming :onto fortiori:ray persons were hurried into the presence of their Maker The scene which was presented to the icy., i f the inmates' of toe other ears„ : . e nen the train was stopped, • was 1 a fearful '-one. • The ear which ; hest Layout ever the ',recite,. took .pro instantly, and before any.• persons '" amid get to It, the dames made each : ninth headway that in a few momenta it ' wee till Meese. Threes persons on the spot proceeded to render all the assist ' acre they amid, but only some four. or rive persona were eared from the burn. IDE ror. 'flea remainder, some forty or : : - ,iifty Men, women end children, were eanatimed with the ear. While that per ; tiog of the passengers oho Mel escaped . Injury gore their attention to the hurn• ' leg Cur. the balance attended to the oth er, vinelt had also taken tire. Forte . nately.the dames in the latter Medawar, ' wern extlnguletted before they bad made ; much headway, and ns apeedllyma pea, elide the Injured, dead and dying Nero .;taken front the car, , and with the few ; reireseel from the burning coach were eoeveytel. to residents. near at Land . Bow mane perished In the burning car • nis itnneasilde as Set to say, and very. probably will not be known for some 1 .11111 P. The place' where the lint, car motet, utter bring precipitated oft the 4,r;dge, was ilitlicult of accts., After , re,e,;lng the half dozen or.so of persons hetet. the flames had made much head , way; no attempt was Made Wednesday • night to ills•turb the remalne of those who perished in tbs . burning ear. That was - attended roTkineedasmawmaing. - THE DEAD ACID wOTINDED. . Following are the Ulnaes of the dead , not.( wounded, so far as known: . . lik I !rd.—Joseph Feller and wife, Sear , tansEnnr, I'm; '.fir. Graven, W. 11. Rev, North: East, Pa.; E. 11. Forbueh, Buffalo, Patent agent; Mrs. W.. Freeman. Nor : whit., Delaware; -Mrs...Maly Shedden and child, Corfu, New York; J. H. Hay , wend, North East, l'a.; Frank Walker au his sae .fulit. Walker, Buffalo; two me I, names uukeown; Mr. John N. ' Stram, Buffalo; Mr. Buhl:aril, St. cab , erir es. I'oot:dui—An Unknown woman badly Injured; Itirs. Christiana Long, of Minn esota, injutril about the hoed and body;. 1V.;;. Patterson' of Oil Creek, Injured, an t ot recover; 'Mrs. Flatter, of 3linner • note, badly injure} and insenelble ; Chu.S. . P. Wood, of Baffin°, seriously injured; 3t. M. liusiell, of Trenton, Tennessee,: • Melly hurt in the back, and also leavard , ly; .lira . Mary 51161,10.1, of Corfu, badly '• Injured; IL E. Fisher, of Minnesota; In dangerouscondition ; 'W. H. Moore and wife, of lowa, nerilmaly injured in back , and:head; Mary E. Saylor and. Maria Sayla4 both of Corfu, both seriously In jured. Mallet dangerlausle; ifewJack.- son,,of I.lllnols.4erdlv; Miss 1.. 31. Bab , cock, of Syracuse, ii. Y., bruised, but clot dangerously; a middle aged man, un t kaovre, Ovie; Robt. Steward and wife, of Oneida 'county, N. Y., slightly ~• InjnetSl; W. H. Moore, of lowa, badly breetea on head anil;body; RobL Rol ' benmg, of Albion, eerioualy injured; M ee. T. Hamlin, of Buffalo, slightly linjureI in jure ; Eugene Howard, , of ButTalo, eligh iv. . e • Arow others were iu other houses In BM neighborhood, Injured, but tho nein : tier as not great—probably eight or ten In al . -. Th following persons were taken to Buffalo, all slightly' injured: C. W. Lane, c r esew, bead and aleca Rudolph Lane, c e ,..4te. lowa, head; ;Garret Hurdle, : Corry; l'a., head and internally; Michael copetaa,:l. alionmpollaj Ilium., head; W. I'. lregs IT,' Svnicarre• chest; Isadore ;tiny r, Now York, agent of Madame ' Itistoel; Mari and heck; H. 11.,Themaa, : ItorherMr. leg broken; It. C. Morrie, • Newll.ondon Crufm,head and back; Sr. IMeefirtflv, L owell, heal and aide; W. 1.. , .Peltan. New York, laud and body; Mrs, , I. Ty'nerison, Kenosha, Wisconsin, badly ogt about the head; W. IL Teller. Utica, • bead' nd body. • . " In Addition lathe above, the following • received alight Injector: It.. M. , Itussell, Franklin, Tenn.; J. Brown, B a lihic; jr. Coyer, Now York; J. C. Erild, Salon, ' 'Masa; flea. J.:31. Thomas, Kerma., Wis.; alary Moore, Brooklyn; Daniel . Carr, Brooklyln. . , ' Among those on the train were Staple. : en Stewart, of Corry, rn., President of • the Off Creek Railroad, who Is missing. • George Blenheim, of Buffalo, ealweted ant the train, has not been heard fn'so, turd teen. aro entertained for Ms nafety. Frank Sherman. ea:Wm:tor of the train, , veer intend In the that:drier and en the bead. The list below Memo the lintels - iti Jinni° to which the few seriously in : juro&Who arrived Wednesday evening were artedgned, and the nature of their. wounds: National Iletet—Richard C: Aforrts, Nee - Loudon, Conts, alight cut on the , forehead and coutused; ;tire. jam, M. Tynerion, Kenosha. Win.; alight contus. Salem, ion on left temple; John C.Crlpp, Sal pa., anghtly oontimed oft the back of the Lead; JrtIUDO Widnn t Brookly n ... 0 4, wound nod Cut on the wrist; Wrillam B. . Feller, Utica, slight wounds on the head and tot on the left arm: P. Oregory, 5h,,,,,,,1.1.T. N. injuries not knows; Mrs. rerkure, Canada, Whirl., nut known. ~ Tint, House—Mb and-Mrs. R.O. Stew, • art, Oneida. ellebtly injured; W. T.'Pet toe, New York, bruised. Mauston House—L. I. Lombard, New "York, : bruised on the head and cheat, 'CAUSE OD TILE. ACEIDI:AT. An examination of the track showed that that disaster could not have lreedec ' metered ft om It, and must have been luau a defective Wheeler axle. The mimes.) 'will probably hover he uscertainesl. ' , /41DECIONAL PARTICELAIL. . A dispatch from. Vuffalo ettates'gratt . depression is felt thaw over the fearful j eadarnity. F. 11. Ferbert, er Buffalo, ' wee &potent agent, and was juat•return- Ing front Cincinnati alter a anceralei suit. Frank Walker, a young civil oneitterie, killed, was dm eonof Julies Walker, jeercler,Of Beath". Joseph Lewis, alas. also graduate of Wilihmet College, wee also ktillist. Francia 31.0u1t and Robert Ifiekamc - ef Buffalo, were boll, slightly injured. .AI the United= States klatpl aro litehard lined, Sinclair-Title, New Yoirk, hurt noveroy la the apitut And aide, and will Probably , yocover; 1,.. O. .Chatie, o Ark.w right, Sew York, eoverely, hurt. - At ten thirty Thursday robe:loon a gratin arrived at Buffalo from Moment, of else disaster, bringing fourteen colline •raintaing Ilfteen Wailes—care ,ft - Mother aneleklid; also seven Imam .contalnleg else remains bf about twentysfour ,or, ewent,v-rtes parsons. • , In Ore car _that was cominguel :were' seats for "forty-eight permute, all filled; sad a .netoker elendlujo proballij not ioLmE , less than fifty persons In all, of which on ly three are known to have escaped. Theo, are a few mom that may be rec. agnical, but the most of those in the consumed car were burnt to ashes. The ---- maM thoselustds could be • baud* , or fifteen minutest' 1110 . NI AN EYX-IVISNLI/3. Ml= Ere the Erie Dispatch we obtain the folio :Mg exldilonal particulars:.. . . • • , , Th , train panned Angola station on a speed of twenty-five miles an hour, and Upon caving the "frog" which connect ed th double tracks - at the station, the last t ick of the hat car Jumped the rails and , • ended along an the ties. The sig nal be t'was sounded, but the train- was on a d.wn grade, with snow on the rails, and b fore any perceptible e ff ect could be p need upon its speed it bad reach ed the ntro of a high embankment lo aded . few rods east of the station, and the lay car wee, running wild over the ominui meat and: bridge. Within ton seam of the timewhen the entire trairi might have gotten entirely over the bridge and embankments, tide last car among around so as to leave the:end bed en !rely, and at the most precipitons point or the embankment went over, on n bleep slope, baton gulf forty feet be low., The actienisf title ear caused the ono ahead Of. tt , to: lesvo Tl.lo:track anti rush madly down the opposite side-of thu embankment, a fair rode further along, t at least wenty-fivO• feet below the road . . . . Now cornea Olio: horror fat the scene. These t -o cars having parted with the train, which couldpot be stopped .lu4ll some tilidance had:been made, the last' one of the train, and the first to leave the track, went over on its end • with a three which caused every. pasieuger,ahe stoves and all -the-seats --ofthe air,' ha• sink like a dead weight in the tower end. It turned a ennitileto somersault, and atopped.on its eraol near the bottom of the precipice, forty feet below the track. Theother au- rolled, dawn and rested on side., The alga*. of . ..down - breaks". had attracted the attention of the people at the station, hut..none of them were able to mach the scene soon enough to render efficient nahlatance. We gather from what we soon afterwards haw and from the, lips of •those who were first present, the following .ptuticitiaris of I Tilt. 'SCENT; 'I The lost tar of the train bad ne mere than .stepped itasomerenults before. IT Was 0.11 - TIOL. The nattre 'of the' ein= bankment, together with the ice upon the steep declivity, mould not admit of immediate assistance, oven though loath weds of people haglifeen at hand, for no on° could go down the _hank hurriedly without I fear of death. The men who were first at the scene managed to reach ;o car hy .irtg down, oneholdlng upon other, I thus forming a . line from the t ank to /he can l But they were TOO tire. The men, women, and children in the car bad been so. severely injured by the fall and fright that they were alarmed and helpless, and before the feeble assistance which was hastily or ganized reached *them, the car was on. far ' enveloped • in , tthtnes I that their rescue was Impossible. The scene ut thin time cannot be described.- The ' voices of men directed to heaven for help, the shrieks and powers of women asking , for assistance, and the wailing of chil dren, was the ntostsoul-piercing and ag onizing sounds which ever reached mor tal ear. The Mimes ware gaining rapid ly, had arms were protruded through the shuttered windows, heeds were ex tended, and the cry for help was lutenist• Pied by the increase of beat, of pain, of agony, and the certain prospect of ' denruction. The reader must picture this scene, we eannet describe •1t..,0ur ears will never lose the Isortud -of the pleetive walla, the lx.eochlthr; for help, the hearf-rendingshrie - t battery scene and the last, • last look: • few • men who could,•who were not dumb, worked manfully. They seem...sl ed In taking • out three, ..-per sons, who were removed elsewhere to die, but they could Oct subdue the liamea which wets roasting' their fellow, beings alive. They could . not-answer the prayers of the aeodized 'victims of Death. They could do nothing but look at Mena roast, listen to them shriek, sicken al the slaht, and pray Gehl to de liver them from another such scene. As the odor of burning flesh, human liesh, arose upon the air, it seemed as though the spot anti turned into u. vary hell, and when shrieks came from the flame& and orooke, hands were bell. rdott Li lough the grim •otmoophere, tho world and - - • • seemed mockery and . worm. in lity. Lettucelosetbie horrible scene by mnyiog thatfrom the last iniamcition we could obtain, but live out of forty DI the passengers in this car escaped: The east—fully forty'—terre burned' • Meanwhile the other car was more for tunate. It did not take llre. The nest man out of it was the conductor of the train, who was severely injured. Others came out, and when' siedeaneer arrived loony-were found injured unto death.' It was soon cleared of its mortal can ter ts—much soonerthanther flames could consume the other car and its contents: As the injured ones 'crept, or _were •brought forth frobt this car„theiy.yrere removed to the residence of a gentleman near by, who threw open his house and dispatched messengers for help. At one time we counted twelve Weemided - man and women in this house, who appeared to be dying. A little distance off there was another house, where several more were as badly injured. that owed be done by the assistance at hand wits donr, with a will, buttbere were uophyalcians, no stretchers, nothing to afford anything Ilk. what the nsture.of the case de manded. inaide of two hours from the time the accident occurred physician ands core , nor arrived from Buffalo. madei coder of the ridittad , company, and the Piltla elan' initakilately. set to *OrirAviux a will,' May srhat.wasin'theiviltedted. power, but Altair assistance avalledtbut tittle, except in cases of trilling injuries: Most of the victims were beyond the help of man. Then came the frantic inquiry after frignds, the rush to and fro of passengers who baas been saved - and had friends or re!atlres oath. trath. .12111 lippeabr,and. Icuilortuniffea . of raany_or ahem , wwWilF never forget. Shock/Xi a) moat beyond endurance by the scone passing, they could only tusk for information fn that feeble frantic way which cannot bo ans wered at such times to their.aalisfarti on. All of them titand that: some c herished .one was missed, but whether dead or dying could not be inamxilately sneer . .At the bet ..el neat the . eitalien'W‘B . s .man' named Hubbard; frotn!lik..Catria rinse, C. W., who was one of the few taken from the burning car. His feet arid legs were burned to a crisp. His body was blackened and blistered to the waist. His right arm w 4.7 lorn from the body, and • remained' attitatuat Oply by the skin. lie Inv there two long . Lours in agony, and at last death came to, lila AMONG TUE DEAD. Tho, dead n from the are, and those wluiffled Pow their Injuries, Wine removed to the freight hoesoof the sta tion. At the time ol . f.mr visit tberowere sixteen of those bodies laid along dose together as they had been brought In, presenting aghastly and sickening sight. Some of them ware, burned,' The atnatisl. phero writ loaded with the Odor, of paru tng flesh. ' Most of th em seamed to have been killed outright by the concussion of the rolling car which was not on floe. - •Thore were fifteen of them we have mid but three of these, no (area wa could die carer, bad bent bunted. The balanoehad bean killed or died of wounds received In the ear which did not burn. And ac cording to the host estimates there were at lesst thirty-two poisons who. went to mhos with the ear which hurped. We looked along the line. Wm. ff. nom; of North East., was the only face we recog pips", But the Coroner was ready to eowsmappsajl examination. The Claim Agent of the FPO was also present. A Buffalo pipadclap proceeded to divest 'pockets •of their aoatodaa, which ho beaded to the Coronet, who GssMsped ttswp and called them' aloud - to OS xis pones*, eller which they were delivered to the recelygr, • p. Was a OCaToirfal task. TUE CAVE of 7 ,Acc;DENT. When the train ran off the frog, near the nuttiest, ate appeared by the rail and the gutter caymi4 nu the tire by ,tho wheels, a brokeisitecegn e.aosed the wheel' to mount the rpil, which, pf course, threw itia trunk off the tritek. Thii tor Oeeta. to bee VA pp./tiled over the road nonce 'd lanai In able oteaccor, .unl.ll lt 'Steered the orodie pf the bildigc. gore, by some, sudden (tenon, the pie was atycitt Wide' from the ;trete, end immediately Pots% thole.? to tho abyss War 4c it in• Atilt around In the air it threw tlii ningrid car pITIn a contrary direction, and ttisenup lipg cif the second ear buying, hrn, ken that.,..4*41.g the kayo together parted; leacing onenaf pa the north and the oth er on the mecd,h.eklciiof the track. ATRAT- (3 7 , Pgo l 4Vlt,!, • no strangea part Of iiia 4.044,, R t hp the! Jt. !Mould occur at. Ude resummu ploce awl kt euch mariner um come the greatest ded,ru4op of life: • If the halo hid rub (CO eoooodo top2or before the *ewe had left the treele - thgy ,teo l klLl Mop rolled tiL-er'a ricarly Med groded eittu out prqbal4 doing muck chimeric.. t o Or if the find le ft th e track ton tiocoink fooger . dirmstorcouldnot have hove rot rorom; , The care leaped' the' precipice et its Id • tilod?t, Pi* •t•4B one which took lire 7 1 4 .. do elde . the le ant 'seem: * ' - .'"C . " . . - 4,.. • s . . . . . . ~:. . . . ;; , : ' ,,,7 . ,. .-1.1 ;„,..:_,: ' i,. • ' ' .e..„).140 .e:\ Vk i., ::11 , 1 : /// ... :1 ,. . 11-li t ._._._..,_". _,' 1L1.:, - 1 ._,,, . . . . . - . . . . . .. . - ,•:-... . . - 't"• . ',•."..ii 3 0-- • . • . . ... , . , . . .1 . 1 , 1 it : ri ... • . ; _.... . -7 , i • : i : 1 ', - -' - ipi t 6 , • p1i...::: - ..., ,\ ..• . .. . ......---• ...,.. ;i, . . ... t.F L.....• ,: Ica -- ... - * - 7."::...:- .. ~.. .:. , • _ t` .. k .. t s , , ... l': ! ... 17 , :-.; ... :'7,.. , , , , _ MEW ' .. . 1 1 .. 1 z- \ C ,. ..7",_ . y . • .i.31:%1.. ! •:, ' ." - i. .:, ! . , '-'-'7 ,' 1 :... . 1 . • 1 1 I / i I I A \ ) 1 1 :_-,-__',- ~:_„:_,, „ 0 1....w.,,..-,ro-1 -,, ~ .sii.s4.l,----:.7::, . .-&---_f, g 4g'-,t-, • • - ".' •.- ~,z ... . ..5b -- 4 - w). - 'i . , . ...—_-- _ , . , .. ECM EDITION, THREE O'CLOCK A. M. FROM WASHINGTON The Assassination of Lincoln North Carolina Freedmen The President and Stanton. 29 - eis Orleans liots. 'Sy T 014,10 to the ritiebor,th ii.ette.l W,esnixtrroN, Dec. 10, 1e177 ASSAIMIINATION LTho President sent to .thei Rouse pis, atliernooit, i communication .fiont the State Deptutment, relative to the visit of one George EL Sharpe to Europa, under orders of that Deportment, td ascertaint whether any citizen of the united States" in that quarter, other than time° hitherto iddrik - itad,' Is charged with having been concerned in the a.ssatilinatiiin of Presi dent Lincoln and the attempted asses aination of the Secretary of Stole. Mr. , iblharpe's visit ' tte• /Aro been • for the purpose of Identifying persons connected what Sarratt, endea r:en:du whether the latter had dealings with any rebels either in England or on the eentitiont r whilo- on his way tothe Papal States: Ile.asenruinedattheßrit-' lab Foreign 01iLice that on tho 13th of October, 1515, Stirred obtamiod a pass port through the Influence of -leading rebel - sympathizers in England to NUR the rood States. Mr. Sharpe then pro ceeded to ROMP, where - be had been In formed Surratthad left many important po.pera. • Lie foetid nothing but SurratC. passport, which it SOCCIS had been ob tained from the provincial Government of estuada, and had elite received the NiZI) of the United States" Conant General them After • detailing Ms re searches at length, Mr. Sharpe closet by saying that in lain opinion ten legal or remionable proof existed of the prtim pailim of any persona In Europe, who were former citizen. of the Millen States, such as to call for the action of this Gov eminent. p=EDX= 7s zroarn-cAmotncA. Mr lilies,- the Freedmen's' Burean Commissioner for North Carolina, has written a strong letter to Gen. Howard, urging that the Bureau must not be dis continued until reconstruction is fully aZeompltshed. He says. in his Judg ment, at no period since the close of the wir has the Bureau been of-muster ad vantage than now. A very large pro portion of white voters to the State St tho late election, either voted against Conititution or wilfully remained away , so that their absence might obetruct the work of Reconstruction. ' At present there ila strcmgpolitlcalforce o.rgantting and =missing for the solo purpose of voting...down any Constitution the Con vention may adopt, thus defeating the reconstruction acts. This opposition le controlled and led by men who have been notorlously.antagniustie to the Govern ment for yeabc and spared no efforte to effect Gicir object—lf the*are stumeasful to the design, it is possiblethey may be in • the condition of the blacks.- which • wdold,bo horrible. He argues that the civil courts are, as a general rule, in the lands of men who ire opposed to recon struction., The report of the dismintinu aneti of the Bureau created a feeling of ids= • and sorrow :among the colored .people and..their Union friends, while 'great jot- is expressed by their enemies and the etieltilin of ; the government. 'lllighTT.ll ETUADOII. It Iv said Hid President has tendeird the eominatlon orifthrlater resident to Hettador.to Hon. Thomas H. Ford, of Ohio.. - . . CAW O ur Regular Correapon4ent.) elaraepetamil Wittlase M. —riot - el War sad the !ha Cinema. Mott—The Diboll I.t. tar—lroe Private latter to she Pratt ' deat—.llr Sharman.* tilt. WAIIIINOTON. D. e. 17. 1g673 There In already evidence that General Hancock will find itexceedinglidlfticult if not Impassible to do the bidding ethic would-be masters in New OrManx From private letters received from that city by a distinguished member of COn gtoil,whfuktYciurcorrespendlut bki. been permitted to read, It rippears that every .menus have been used by the rebels there to appropriate the General. It Is also Vrellundcvstoodthat.liciivent there-al*- . lons to please the President, If be could do it and at the came time retain his self. resbect. , ' .conntlnviipon. this anxiety— or ne'rlulps willlegnessis thri bettor word was dcrubtleas believed by. the crafty rebels that he would easily . fall into their toller. Between the hours of six -and, twelve of hie first. evening in the city be 'had one hundred and twelve mils-Mom leading and Influential dlidoyal peitone.- On hi. first appearance iu publicbe was greeted with storms of applause and the rebels seem even now to scant upon him as a poissesalon with Ude - undisputed. This opinion seems to be shirred • to a great extent, too n bythe Itepubllerm press. Both may ha true. Yet there Is good 'ground to hope that Gen. Hancock, like .his predecessors, will soon find there is but one path for the true soldier to pur. This rush upon him. by the rositimlt rebel. was not made solely or principally out of courtesy. Tory recommended' him to remove a large number of present officials and appoint' in their places men who had bum active in the .Confeder soy," assuring him that th e teat oath could be moneyed. Then he tow at once the animus of these men. Ile told them he would not hurry in the matter; that he would take his own time , but would appoint,to yuadionable men under any ctrmonstanees. May coo not hepatica the President may even yet be disappointed in the meridian, of his Lieutenant Gen. Sheridan and Gen— Mower also went there with all the susceptibilities and, leanings ut the reghlar army. They had no -niotive;and An impairs to do anything but_thelr duty. 1 et:they were, as were, driven' by the energy, the despe ration of the Masud fiery spirits which rule in that community, to plant them• solvenwhere we have seen them finally standing, and It looks as it Gen.Hancrack will be pttoitpd into the same position. But another mattes usurps public at tention here APT, pp 4 Plat. the matter Of .711 E SECRETATLY OP WAR AXD THE NEW = Yo , u Late before this poblbMed In your minions the special plea on the case of Johnson vs. Ms Becretary of War, lion. E. 31. Stanton. 'Pleat pf It where the President sy~ or his remanded dignity—of that ,i h position which this loonor)ast Sum • • regards to, little—ls rather •ming from a man .who yeas Vice President an ger m pbeullar c icunstancos, and after. wards "swung round the oiscft", sod Made speeches! One might think Mr. Stanton excusable for not gliding a very large S,-siiir" of dignity left in mid execnUra t Pey Amu before. And secondly, as to Mr Wan,bin'g being op posed to the enactment pith° / * Marro of °Mee bill—that Is surely in proof that ho didn't anticipate being in a. position to Wee pal vantage of it. But nfter t re's enema, is ft p,g4inst 31r. Stanton that be claims his rights" limier it? Those two clones In 11 40 Ut‘llldent'S message aro therefore merely sigleful and will carry Just an much weight as reader may choose to give them in lihisegeg grind, and no more. Tun sue Upso, ah hlruicked Ihrount" against your former folinw-clirsetilA lo and, however, In the dreadful intimation (LbS Pregident does not openly allege it) that Mid 14. !!srtiton called "his (the President's) at teutic.n jo General Baird's dispatch to him !M r. Swaia,v) on the gerth of July. then "the riot wonfd 'flare helm averted." This dispatch washed.° folloWing WOrgal • Nine 011LEA11,4, July 0 , 1,1813(1. To Iron. .11. t. ZlaaLon, Secretary of War: A Convention Loa been ealled,withthe A:potion ar Governor Well., to tweet here Nothtay. The'LlOuktnant 4. ..1aVer 3 0r aturctik tuditoinog think it uniawirl, and pr.Optgo be.tak.?,llp by . 'arteating the deleotes. I hay° yen no orders op tLo sablitti t ba t hico3,WailalliritirtOr that I could not oountanance per such action without thstruetions to that effect from the President. Plesse instruct me at once by telegraph,.• Pinched.] A. Ramo, • - Major General. That, is the telegragn. ?jaw, why did not .11r,Stanton answer it? "ktoblial4llP self, In a letter to the itritetigatiblY UOOO. P.ocAlated Jantutry 31, lotl7, answered j we quastiop. Thus: l On ' b e f"nliwxml orSundny, the =lt of July hist, I received at my reaidence to this, ail y (Washington) a telegram from Getteratllaird--(gloon above).• nil tit. : egrainwaa thefirat istintation to 'we that a Convention was to be held at New Or. leans, or that there was any difference or controversy on the subject of a Conven tion or assemblage to be held there. From Geberal Baird's telegram it ap. pettred that the Convention was to meet with the sanction of the Governor of Louisiana; that Ito legality wee quo, tinned by persons who proposed to break it up by arresting the members, and that General Baled had warned the city authorities that he would not permit this to be done without Inatructlona from the President, and he applied to me for in structions. There was nu intimation in the telegram that force or violence was threatened by those opposed to the Core verition, or that It was apprehended by General Baird . Upon consider Lion- It appeared to ma that his warning to the city authorities WWI ull that the man then required, for I saw no reason to in. street to withdraw protection from a Convention sanctioned by the Gover nor, and in the event of any attempt at arrest, General Iloliars Interference *mid bring up the cane with all the theta for such Instructions as might he proper. mato the, meantime under hie general atithoritthe would' take meal. tires to maintain this peace within his commend.; On. Tuesday, thealat ofJuly, the morning papers contained telegraph ic diepatehes in respect to the occurrence" at New Orleona and off the someday I ient informed of the coMmunications that hail passed between hhe Prefident and Ger. Wells, Lt. Gov. Voorhees and A - -homey General Herron. - • • !ilers, thou, In a full and direct answer to the evil Intimations which from time to limo have been thrown out against Mr. Stanton In tthunectlon with this or der, and whirl now hive been brought • to a point over the signature of Andrew Johnson. But now, In the interest of justice and fair dealing, let us look at the man for a Sew mammas. The telegram &Gene Baled, cat a matter entirely new to Mr. Stanton, reaches him at his real &lumen Sunday. A convention is to be held with the sanction of n loyal Govern or; an. officer of our army has declared ibis Intontlen to protect that gathering unleds other Wise ordered, i. e. ordered OM to protect it from arrest I Why should Mr. Stanton, on Sunday espe cially, disturb this which seemed a per fectly just and fair arrangement as it. atooa? Should he order Gen. Baird to be ready with troops to aid In the arrest? On the next day came the riot. So well lied the secrotof klunroe'a preparations been kept that "the slaughter came un expectedly," oven to Gen. Baird, for, as lie testifies himself, he had no thought that there was to be riot or blood shed, and that thapolice would 'Rhin; but only that there - anwat under civil process." An °freer on the ground, whom, busineestelt. was to know all about what waelo'be expected, did not anticipate what. Mr. Stanton is biam• oil Lir not preventing, though the whole matter was to' him entirety new. And this leads me to•aay that It secs. clear that the whole matter - of the pending trouble, whatever It might be, was stu diously kept with the President and his friend.. What are the facts! Mr. J. A. Rosier, n , prominent lawyer of New Orleans, was tient to Washington by members of the Legislature to advise with the Exec utive relative to this Convention. Be arrived here - on Friday before the note. Ile states that "the Prealdont agreed with him that the civil authorities," 1. 0., Munroe St Co., "sheath! be supported and maintained" Even an early:A. March, ISktot corn mitten from the Louisiana Legislature one hero ln . relatiott, to th e Convention, then only talked of; and they telegraplipl to New Orleans, on the Bth of that month, that "after an interview with' the pre/44 dent and the Secretary of State we ad vise no action favorable to a ConVen- Son." So that the matter whicOlai. Stantonfirst heard of ox the day before the riot had been-before the President morel/Mu/our Inman. • But the Secretary, ears tho message, was to blame for not bringing to the President's attention the fact that in structions were asked fur! We arnica to Infer that the Executive was in dark neon as to what was going on, becauer he failed to Iwo the one solitary telegram which Mr. Stanton received! Andyet on the :Nth of July the ---rsieweiiortao graphed to the Lieutenant ,tisivernc , r of Loulainne—not to the Govenuir;observe, who was a loyal man; brit to a personage tbetereowdly out of tho robe( servloe, as follotrw • !Mk, milt anrindalies,7o,.• . tern and not to obstruct or interfere with the proceedings of the Comte." This telegram WWI in unmoor to I long one at the name date from Voorhees asutHer ron—the-latter State's. Attorney then, and recently a Brigadier General in the rebel army—elating that "it will be impassible to execute, civil process" • (armst the tnembers of the convention) “withoat tt riot!" We thus learn that President Johnson was perfectly . apprltted. on Saturday, be fore the Monday of the slaughter; that there Would be, In all probability: a riot, and`that hesont back such an order—not to loyal Governor Wells, the proper sin ter to ho addreescd--but to the two reb els, „Voorhees and Herron, as assured. them that the military would act alih them in the course they propoSed to pur sue, out of which the -riot really came! Is there, then, a Man In his senses who suppose. that the President didn't know the character of Voorhees, Ilerron and Monroe, which last he had pe,rdonell that .be might become Mayor! that after four 'months' talk arid discussion and delega tions hi didn't know that a riot wan ape prehended! or that ho did not fully ap preciate the effect his advio. into the use of the military would have on the men it, was directed to. On the night of September Bth, HOU, Preskletlt lohnson made hia famous speech at St..lionis, In which be said you will take op the riot at Bee Orieans and trace it back to the radical. Gangrene, you will find It Watt substantially plan ned by them." lie had not then discov ered the culpability of the Serrano-3%mnd In fact natantil a year after the slaugh ter alsd arterials dbo, very' that the tele. gram of Gen. Baird had been withheld from him by Mr. Stanton, does be dls wver• that 4.4 a poi and anilicient emu% for his suspenston It is stated that on Mr.. liliantin'erre. turn from Ohio; he will vindleato himself from these asperdeion" He needs no vin. Mention, Mho record Is his full, ample avid overwhelming vindication 'new, as O has ever been, against rebel attacks. The Senate will see to It, too, without a word from him, that his fair fame does not suffer. So much, at least, I feel male to predict. Oen. Grant's opinion of Mr. Stanton appears in the noble letter Just now published. . = This stipend, additional to- the regular salary of clerks In the Departments, wee yesterday defeated—finally, so it Is to be hoped. Tito clerks had got Gen. Grant on their aide. They published their plea le a nice pamphlet, the last pekoe( which had a neat letter . from Gen: O. endorsing fully their claim. Oneof theisepamphleur lay u pon each mentberladeak. But right in Ow criedeor the battle the.. General mader..one of his Ask zuovoineate; A letter trout him of alater date than the putlished ono, taking back 9 11 Bo said in k the former, and withent expilmo don or explanationovas read from the Clerk's desk and twenty per cont. stock went down like Confdderate betide after the fight at Appomsttex: This was hard en Clip nlorks anti some of the members Bald quietly tkat after be had deckled to write the first letter hti otfgpl,pt kayo re fused-to write the setrond.---!;-.'• TILE DENT r.ETTED. Tho sullen Icily of this doeument. pro. Httelliz to give the views of General Grant, aid/ purporting to come from • . Ida • • inlaybiotlitud , Ip . ex plicitly dented by kerne*, who claims to speak by authority. Though this denial DElf been made again and Mahe, ace popperhends cling to It. The fact is the letter Nat written by .Conservatlve” who wail here walt ing open the President, and who wham' to put the General In a idea pcliltiou.'' • After hearing. the i'privids! letter. of Goners( ',flrsust on the- rensoint . pt • m,r, Stantoli,Vtish wry,.-peal before the Hattie today, lobo Pen deaf that be $ In tuit sympathy with the loyal Sentiment of the country. and that lEo. hs. worthy of our confidence?Au endoreetnent of the name in a .letter In reformat to ,the con dition of affairs In Tex.no lad :winter I. not less hrhilsib pad General Grant ban President and latedm ho inly,sea another toad, whet more could them,* decided Republican have aakedr, •• , • The Delilah Commiselonors for' the' tranef- ar qt. Thonias, etc., to the Uni ted kiWes, ivera Io cI iy onaseeted to the President. The eters , fil4}. &Wife , bee also bought Cuba Is dente end denial generally believed bore. Buchan z u nit ,po lo i n e. would uiut b i e very s gl it e s h 6 like iAa'ere4itor." 2 `'‘ wayef payment, ogrmiag to buy the' s uit:deter Eng47...' TikOS•Vitfii2 put f gt . Senator A/wpm ttractaadejd op MN fldarlefors, and -4 Goa UM," whl4o )0/1 adopted. It watt mid Wire the Repent to-day. VIATOP. FIRES AT TIDIOUTE, PA; Wahl Da lid lags lbe.tribsa4l, nig lt a kr d lEle=2ll= Tentra t wernmble Os lite lb esust..l OIL CITY. December 10.—Two largo fires occurred at ThliouloThls morning. Eight buildloze were totally destroyed, Ineludlng the Postotelem,l3ooctTemplar's gall end Cahill Holm. Lou forty thou. mid &ALF", Supposed .incendlattsm. „ • PITTSBURGH, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20. 1867. I FROM EUROPE. Gladstone on the Fenian Qtuntion. TheNitrWGlyeerineixplaion. Italian Itestrves Called Into ,ervice. I dy Telegraph to the Pllteborgb Ussette I 1U) :I=lll d:,,, NM. MAX...TONE ON THE FENIAN% ,- LONDON, December la.—Mr. Clad s ono male a speech to the miners and o her o - .relives of Welrnith, In Cheater a nty, .e.stertlity,trr the course °COOL b rovl ed the Fenian qieestiore Ife• d not ealtrito tb aderiba the existence o , Fent Mom to England's 'tomb:had ratan. °meat and, mMovernminftt of Ireland. , . I FSI!IIAN PLOT. - Tiounoir, December 19.—1 t la rcrOod a paper hits been found In Welyerpit OP' ton which shows that the Eentatii!ln England had organised aplot, to phinder all the armories of the militia forces: • TIEX 80IILIO4W10 QUEeTIOX: Lutenex. December 10.—The reps the revival of negotiations betifriem Prussia and Denmark, In regard:to Schleswig, is doubted, bat_ It In said ac tive negotiations will • be reintmestbs January. Nrrno-otycsnms ExrtoslON Le:staN; DoeemberlP.—The expiable:to of nitro-glycerine at New . Castliwat- Tyne was more serious than reported. The Sheriff and town Surveyor, who wore badly iujured, hove knee dled,Wnd eight persona all told have lost their Ilya, by the ecplosiott. mon D.Z.ERVES CALLED =TO SERVICE. FLORF.NCE, Doc.l9.—The Government has issued onicra calling Into active ser vice additional military reaerves. PkndIE.TH CONGRESS, . nights sr - Amerlima • MINIMS Altighil —Degleisses Appigh ses4. to nave Tgkenti Ch►toe d thugs g esereasy, Insis-111111 tor it ligsssigirs—tisheral Neater.. Milne Dahl..., as. &a. • Telegraph to Qs Plit•boill Cialotl.) WAMITNOTON, Doc. 19, DIOL't MEM Tho House hill, amending the euppit mentary reconstruction noisome referied to the Judietare Committee. . Mr..SELERMAIi presented i Monet from citizens of Cincinnati, including It members of City Councils, asking Athr the adoption of measures to secure the rights of American citizens abroad frtuitt fbrciirn aggression, and also tusking for sumo explicit definition of ..stmerlcan citizenship. The memorial, after considerable die cession, was referral to tho Committee on Foreign Relations, Mr. MORRELL, of Maine, reported . from the Committee en Appropriatiuna the Defieiency Appropriation till, - with amendments appropnatlng ter the des ticiency in extra pay or clerks of Senate committees, pages, fix., i1.33,4:0). "tacit was agreed to. Mr. lIUCKALEW offered an *Mena. merit striking out the proposition Again* members of the Senate -and Mouse re ceiving more Ilan one hundred and t*enty-five dollars per annOmTor news papers and stationery, And nude It Andy only to members of-the Donee. Aber debate Mr. Boobs Jew's amend meat woe miected. Mr. EDMUNDS MOVed to add at Vita and of the amended proviso,. as followas "Provided further, that no newsmen periodical, or ncialooory shall be ordered or paid for any member of ellassr.Alonsit by antroftMer thereof." • At (our o'clock fir. J 1 lo call up the hilt to prevent the farmer to. tiremerit of currency. Mr. SU Elt NI .N inoTed to maims Uo eonxideration;of us:gird...bed business; lb. cotton tax bill. The Clerk read, nt the Irmancieofr. Sti ERNI AN, a letter from the Secretary of :he Treasury; stating it was , no,•kits intention to retire or cancel any 'More United Statue notes this month, nor will the oondition of the dunncesjustify him In matting the usual contraction In Jan uary. WWI° still entertaining the opin- Mn that an early' return to specie pay ment in indispensib o to the national prosperity It will beimPosslble, without •the curtail ment of Clrculatkra; Be will not continue to extrase his power of cur tailment until he has mason to suppose that ho will not be sustained in dolsg so by Congress, nor until Congress has de• 'ermined the future flnantlat policy of tile government, There will, therefore, be no Contraction during . the present month or the next. Mr. ANTHONY movcd to adjourn Agreed to. HOUSE Op REPRESENTATIVES. On moth - Mot dr. CULLUM, the tory Com in Mee was Instructed/011101re into the expeditmcv of amenditigthe law for the settlement .of military- bounty claims so that all cialMa for addlakbeal bounty under the act of July 2s, 1916, shall ho settled oradjusted by the emend Auditor of the Treuury.- Adepkid,' Mr. BEYER asked leave to tatrniiittee a concurrent reeolution of Marks to Major Oen. Hancock for patriotki exer cise of duty, and ford& timely vindica tion of the supremacy of the civil law ea guaranteed:by-the ConsUtution. Mr. SPALDING objected and insisted on the regular order order of business. The noose resumed the oonsideration of the bill reported . yesterday by Mr. GARPIELD In reference to deserters. Mr. BENJAMIN moved to amend the second neetlon.by editing a proviso that it about(' not be ounstrued se relieving from tho nominee and disabilities of the tiventyitinet emotion of the act of 1843 any penion who bas deserted from the army or navy and went over to the enemy. Mr. 'I3AIiFIIiLD eboorfally nectipted tho atneadment. • - Mr. PILE gave noble statbitles an to desertion,lncludiagantatoment thatooly doncrtOrn had gone over to the 'enemy, and- moot of then° from rebid pillions. Ile advocated the plumage of the MIL holdiag that It win; wrong to disfranchise front 170,000 to 200 000 mon,. recorded nn deserters, lbr the Rake of panlablug thosn other Aria thousand men, and thaw who had at the outbreak of the rebellion aban doned the flag and took up acme against it. • - ' Mr. 011.11tFIELD, _referring to the re port of the nevoid Alandud. General; re. marked the ;under the annitlon of the law which It sran now proposed to repeal more Wan a quarter of a million or citizens were distranchlessi, and that. nooonling to the name report twenty-tire 'per mot. of that number would be a very small esti.' mate of the proportion of that vast num ber who were.true mad faithful soldiers. It was, therefore, necessary to provide a remedg by conic genrril leginTatirm, en there woe very little hope to get a morl. manna ewe through under theErecut Ivo .head of the 'Wilton Staten., If that motils rious cane happened to be a person of Ida (Mr, G+arjleid'al party Aner-further' debate the bill was re committed.' • , Mr:WOODWARD, on leave; Introduc ed &Join; resolution directing the Some tary the Tyenstiry to adjourn the sale. of el itis t inquired strafes or so* owned -by t e United Stakes in MI Dismal Swamp Csnel Company, from the Id of January till the Bth of February, 1868. Mr, 71f9PER, from rile Committee on fora /Ir a . fleeter, a bill mutating ' that' 'all tr nited Statue and National hank notes shall be subject to taxation by et-.under State authority lit the same tnahner that other monies -are taxed, and et noy i barrateo. lleferfed 'Me' Contrail of the Whole on the State of thd V on. WAIRIRLTILX.E, df Wisconsin, offered a resolution requesting thetPres 'dent to communicate copies of all the porres. ppice,wl instructions to the finited ltdin cbt In core stenoe • tlia • imq letßon of tßessian Amorioal also, all the oorrespontlettoe with the Reardon Minister at Worthing ton concerning tho lakkyeaty . 1 with Auer and OR the tn .- (0 - - of the Etiecutive Department In • refer- TriTtp4P2T"trFP;Pril tO b° . We+ - .ULLOI Introduced a bill $o amend tljo jaw relative: tri 'Mentions, by pleb ing them date tram ftte day Of die. eliarge,'ho. Referred to the Committee on Invalid Pensions... . Mr. PAINE offered a resolution in structing the Committee of Ways and Means to report whether It Is expedient pro permit any bonds in which the United St debt may be runded. to beentalled Ibr charitable or edheatlonal purposes under suitable regtdations to• interest and esebeate. ••7 " • II " liftitO3:3 offered a'reeolutton . caUrng on ttte tiori?tary of War for nuormitton as to army officers employed in initials Departments of Washington.. "' On motion of Mr. WASHBURN, of Illinois, the resolution was referred to Military Committee. On motion of Mr. PEBHAM, the Com mittee on Military Affairs was directed to inquire into the expediency of alien ing to wounded soldiers and sailors the vnlue of artificial -limbo or surgical ap pliances to'which their wounds entitled them. BURit otered a resolution calling on ths Secretary of War to furnish infer motion in reference to the discharge of employees slaw his taking charge Of the War Department, and the amount of Government property weld within the same time, end as to buildings mold, lo cations iorrner/Y :hold by the Govern ment and surrendered or returned to owner!, &e. ' " ' On, meting, of Mr. ,QAIthIELD, the retulthttbn refs to' thtMllitary Mr. JUDD Introduced a bill to amend the act of the 17th of Juno, ISG4, to regu late the furnlgn , coasting trade on the northern, northeastern and northwestern frontier& • • • The House went into Committee of the Whole on the slate of thelhilon, - .l3fr. BEAYNARD In tho Choir, and eousid end the deficiency of the bill, reported yesterday. . ?sr, BUTLER explained the Items of the bill. He oleo said •in reply to a re mark of Mr. Brooka, , that he hold in his hand a paper showing how some money spent in reconstruction bad been' need: It was a bill of Thomas' Adams. Chief of Pollee in New Orleans, one item of which was as follows: "For eashpald for haul ing forty-six loads of dead and wounded from Mantua:ice Institute, to Station House, ono- hundred andlidny-eight dollars," Another was for cab hire for the Chief at Polloo and his aids, so that while the - dead and ' wounded were 'carted to. the station beam and hospltaland work house the Chief ofPolloe andltis aids were riding iticorriages. •Iteconstruction measures were proposed as a measure of economy, to get rid of a standing army in the South and put into. loyal hands the bal: lot; second, to relieve too Southein • Nes- Jle - from sash • bills as the one he had ust • read; and last, as a 'great finishing of the rebellion • which bad - received the aympaty of thous who had been acting with the gentleman from Now York air. Brooke). It was believed that, when the negroes of the South got the ballot they would be able to protect themaelves. - He bad listened with. perfect, contempt to the taunt that the ballot would bo taken from them. Men might talk about that, might plaS.for it, might scheme for it, with the aid of all the power,' of Hell end death, but the ballot once in the hands of freedmen, never was, and ney er could be taken away. Who ever ex pected such a thing simply butted eta heal against the wall. Whenever it wea attempted be trusted his friends on the other aide would go down and lend the army Of nullification, and they would be welcomed in .way that would make them underetandthat them:gee harteonte or the attributes of Men, to wit: The kanwiedgo of their rights, courage to maintain them, and steadfastness never loAltrld them. Mr. GETZ Inquired whether Mr. But ler meant that they would be "welcomed with bloody handato hospitable gravest" air. BUTLER said be did. not mean that the begrowas not • kintiperson, and whenever the gentleman eh:old fail in such an unhallowed content, they.would be kindly eared for with tenderness and mercy. The negro had fought for the country and would tight for himself, whenever he wax attacked: and hoe until then. It was mid them • was ahem to be a war of races. Why shotild the nmroyise, if, as the gentle man from Ebw York -contended, they were on the top. They could not get env higher. Ile hid listened to all each Mee prophecies, but be would say that the party -to which he belonged would take nostep• tart werde.' Mr. RANt/iILI. - would like to know I the gentleman's own plan, for hp had seen it Intimated he had a plan to Intro duce negro voting hi Pennsylvania and other Stalest Mr. BUTLER declared hi bad no such Plan, and he never formal anything up on tusybody that did not deserve it. IILr,RANDALL remarked he knew he • • • • .1 0 4.4 1 114:1tMILAMBOI FIR • Me..WOODiasele some remarks which ho wound sap bysaying he bed risen for lb* porpoise calling Intender', find, to the wrong mutual or appropriating 111011 e, under the pretence of deficieeelea; Second, to the great mat of reconstm lie on -nteeanccv; third, to Ike fact that -these expenses were yet in embryo, and that to sway them out, tho system of re mnetnact.ktn. ea initiated by . Congress would ant thegovernment twenty time the amount already appropriated. , . • Mr. LAWRENCE, of Ohio, o ff ered an 1 1 amendment atuhoriaing Sae 'Conven tions in the South to provide by taxation on property for the payment of the ex penses of reconatructioa. Mr. BUTLER claimed the amend ment wept not in order, and the Chair ao ruled. Tho Committee rime sled reported book the bill without ammidmebt. Tho bill then pawed—yeas.ninety-wren, nays My. lie.zr, pm DOE .gure notice that, be would lo.ttiorroir introduta a Joint rot ol uUmi otthanka to Major General . Him. Mr. KERR' offered I resolution the-CamstlAttos on Military af fairs to Itintilltiltatill the expediency- of retaining in ibilk,serfice the veteran re servo-corm' as stew organised, and ma king.rth.needfulyeanCtion In th e army to effect ed. other branch of the service. Adopt Ur. COVODE outkod leave to offer s restointkrn dltsenng the Committee on Bnbllc flutidlugs eotantine into the al leged fraudulent letting of the contract tar building jails in the District. of Co lumbia. Mr. COVOdO stated one of the party had confessed to black mailing. HAYTL Awisabutiloa of ions• ConUrtdld.• it t• Tins Illtarved, ten r.lt••ad, swat Nousiberad. sad small, *511151.5. =I asvAnr•, Dec.lo.—Adv ices trona Ilayti to the ith confirm preyleas accounts of the assassinatiou of Monter., and give further particulars cf the Weir. Atter starving hint for four dam as tneffee• teal attempt wee made to complete the work • pawning him. Solneve then orde redhim to be smothered, but this attempt also fulled. He wee finally stabbed and his skull pierced with a chisel.. - Els body wile delivered to hie friande; bootless and shirtless, oil boards, end eanyeyed to. , the cemetery.; Ills friend° -isolated on burying the body without "dining it in a , rotas. Infest eating liquor. were freely supplied to the people to - induce them to cheer thr The. revolt in the Cairns la dead sad Solnare hractlyellimppgged in suppress ing the revolt at klaPtlen. • 'l'hb brother or antes' waccaptitred and clothed to the bltx°V bed of his murdered :brother ;son; .14.011 tee int ents are eritzsd - by, ittlatiOn.. The eons have Matto jl6lninlca. The report that the -Dominican =My was nibrehlog towerd the Ilitytien fron tier is odufittned, _Dares, Insurrectiona ry leader in liotnining, ts stilled to have been shot by order of Osigral. OLIBVEL6ND Tim namaniessmine • illoevemioo— *o°ll4 0 104 I tualor — rimit AO. • fry Tale/rapt to tbe - Plllo.preh Gueltr.i Maya:L*4E4 Ilteember pj.—Tho tional Manoqokurere Convention roils nernbiod lids morning. A Committee woe nppolnied to' proceed .tq Washing: ton and lay before Congress the wants and wishes of the mnnufncturinq inter est,nit spawn thenattinfgs of the deans sery legysla4on looping tb the removal of all Internal revenue taxation from manufactures, consisting of .1111111 m Park, Jr., of Pennsylvania, representing the steel, cotton mod nipper interest; Thos. S. FILXIM, of New 1 ork, woolens; V. A. Word, of idichignn, IX anus , . of machinery; (Marge W.'A.lllfr, of Wiscdrudn, leather; 'George Johnson, of Massachtmetts, oboes al . lenther; - tleohre P. Tiffany, of Maryland, cotton with Giles it: Stebbins' las SOcrolary A'OeWmlttae reported a constitution for the Orgnidzallon. of the Notional Manufacturers' Association. w . d./ 3: 6 110 0112 . a., the - offiCers of this .... n. .svention were. appointed °Myers of the National Assoelationi nntll Um nest annual cling In May next, " whieL wggns'odl. to Ist hSld IP Cleveland. Thq Con n kin then adjourned. • Q. 41.11 FORMA . . Mr.. Dare [or Welted ileum sestater—Elir WIMINs• Yu: Talursal. b t..bsPlUita7lllllliiliatS.l Ban ItztAatct, Dec., 19„..—,The Lee& Into taballouid uturvalllngly far the past three, days inlolot convention,. tor g:lit oc rr .tra. to ho ;a ratio taap Osumi cannot agree apona - candidate, although a swam has' , an hhlC nightly alocalhal2th Oak • NEWS BY-TELEGRAPH —Advices from Mexico state that . the national Congress was opened on th e 4th inst. The hall was crowded. Juarez delivered the opening speech, thanking he United States for the friendly feeling hewn and moral support given to Man i o during the war for independency, d Justitied the executions at Quern () as necessary acts of Justice. He ro t .rned into the hands of Congress the mordinary powers which ho had as a mad, and before the time had expired, p • mixed that foreigners ehould,be pra te ted whether treaties were made with th-ir governments or not. *Senorlisquel Montez, President of Congress, replied, thanking the people of Mexico tbr their conduct during the war, and declaring that the United States Was their only ally; denying the accusation that pribonqs . of war had been ill-treated; pronithn clog the recognition of the Republic by foreign governments unnecessary, and concluding with the thselaration that Mexico MIA fully able to defend herself. • —ln the Virginia Reconstruction Cori ventlen yeeterclay the Judtaiari Cona mince reported adversely to declaring void all debts contracted since 110) for the purchase of slave; On the ground that the Convention had no power over Civil Courts. Tho report was tabled. The report of, the Committee on Print ing, giving the Convention - printing . . to the proprietors of the Neu. Konen, wu wielded. Ordinoncee establishing Houses of Correction in elites of over 10,003 Inhabitants, establishing prb mary schools In districts where !Me children can attend, clothing the .10i ernor with power to remove pnl Meld dlwbltlUba when he pouter e a erlicinal, requiring all voting to be done be bal. resolution requesting Geo. p•cbo- field to abolish distinction on annount of color In public conveyances, con is pe tition seeing the scow Winger the Oon• vetatlon were relhrozet. A resolution, to require the Legislature to Impose a top- Ration tux of two &literal:Mall persons over sixteen years of ago for educational purpous was laid on the table. • • —A Consorgallio nioefing at Mont gomery, Ala., bast night, was addressed by Henri' C. Simple, James H. Stanton, Joseph Hodgson, and other., all strongly. opposing the ratification of the now Con stitution. • ',otters were received from Paulo' Pratt, formerly a Northern cid 'sou. the Pioneer Cotton Manufacturer 'and capitalist of Antonga county, and 'Samuel Raid, urghify the defeat of the Constitution and denouncing the Con- —The . Goorghs Reconstruction, Con venklort ap petite:tent of It. It. Bullock. as Previa kraal Governor, and passed several Measures In regard to the per diem and Mileage of delegates.. At a caucus of members of the Convention W.alnesday night it was resolved to support Chief Justice Chase for the Presidtmey. —The Committee on Forogn Relations has decided to report to the Rouse of Representatives a resolution asking the President to interfere in ; the claw of le liltihnra, a clergyman from Indiana, who wan arrested in Canada last year during the Fenian raid, on auspiclon of being connected with the organisation, and since then kept In close confinement. —Addispatch from Indianapel4 (lud.,) stabs that theldoisan Raid Commission, having visited every county that eutrered ream the invaders, held a final mon. leg toprepare their report. The claim. audited amount to 4415,000. It Is thought that the next Legislature will order the claims to be paid, and the Gov ernment will re-fathom. the Suite, us all the captured and abandoned property of the raiders was sold on aaeount of the Goverutnerit. • , —At Cincinnati; Wodneaday night, an attempt was made to rob mho jewoiry Moro or Duluune Co„ by a man who entered the atone, and w hite miceting diamond., threw snug' into the eyes of of the clerk, and then eimiped with it tray containing $12,000 worth or dia monds. Ho was pursued and arrested, but some fifteen or twarity' diamond rings ware.loat on the street. • —At An:gust; Seine, &large building, ifs=ttOo " tartar P r and oecupied secaral'lltra: for the manufacture of easb, blinds awl doora, I forulture and other wool works a grist mill, salt manufactory; So.„iivas totally destroyed by tire yesterday ) afternoon. Loss $00,000; no insuraucb. —The extensive Kerosene manubteto ry of Ward &C 0.,. Penhold village, a few miles from lefacy City, was destroy ed by an explosion sod tiro yesterday morning. Three men were badly burn ed, one of whom was smoking a pipe when the atonal ty occurred. Loss 000. Partly insured. —lt has past been dlacoyered:that the sate of John S. Sittings L Co„ In baltl more, rabbet!' d fortnight since of hoods and sown-Wes to the amount of fifteen or twenty thousand dfdlars. Meantime the bond* have been negoti- 1 weal throngh.a respectable, baulang house of Baltimore. liturrPit flour Willa Peartucket, It, I„ wait destroyed by Ilre early yeater day morning. Loss estimated at too,oeo to $70,000; Insured for 1M,040. —There were two more firm at Alcks• burg, Mississipi, Wednesday night, ono accidental d n o on le trilling, %heather the work of an incendiary, loss $18,000.• —The Radical delegates of the Georgia Reronarnetlon Convention have adop ted a resolution-favoring Judge Chaco Jri President. .. The New York Board of Fireltjader; writers have reduced their rates to the figure they wore belbrethe February ad vance. —The residence orlitinry Rotten, nt WUllamsburft,,N. T. was robbed Wed needarnight of $lB,OOO in bonds, stocks and money. —Tiro President has decided to appoint Win. D. Button,: Ex-Covittessman from . Connecticut, Commissioner of Patents. —Lamaze, Thomas Is to be roll:ridded an Adjutant Gemini of the Army, In tr few days, by orderaf the President.., —A locomotirdsixplettled in the Union depot, at Chicago, yesterdaY, bat fortu nately no persona were lupins], seriously. , ‘l . llO Bank' 'Now Origins boo dis coittlmied business on account of the de pression la tride. ..—john Mitchell has declined the Pecs idetioy 9f the. United Fenton •Bruther hood. • • —Earthquake aboeka atilt continue. at St.. Thoma■, Jn tho Neat Indies. • I:lasuum Cimatir . . Tho attention of our readers is directed to the busluese card .of Mr. P. McArdle, fashionable merchant,. tailor, Smi lb- Sold street, which appears An another Althifoghbutreeettily Waring the huidithee, Mr: liferi- L bse Inid !argues patience and in thoroughly acquainted with all branches of his trade. < A vary. complete and Judiciously assorted stook of-winter goods , has Just been opened, and °infuses* all the recant styles and pttorna introduced In tbe Mut, together With the most recent Parlelan cute in gents' clothing. As Mr. hloA, l.urchases oxclualvely for cash, and salient the low est marginal pronts, we can aafoly com mend him to the patronage of our read ers. Cloths, thimintems, silks, nod every other - imitable style of piece goods for gontlemon'a clothing on hand for those prelbrrlng custom work, while full lines of manufactured mats, pants and vests, for mon, youths and boys, will be found at the cheapest of prices Pita and filth tenable cute . guaranteed. TAO othitom 'Week 0 119 trig Otitfunt only to icon qa tn . duentirety by band . sew frig.. A full lin of gents furnishing goothilrepteouritantly on hand, together with umbrellas, linen goode,•tmveling suits, de. We earnestly , commend.Me, hicA Idle as a gentleutan in every way worthy the aaruldenoe lank patronage of our readers. - • . , Akomiatinal 4 j.. .c11114u4 lmaßiytp and wo, beluititel op.wc*Wkila that, tk pair one r a rlan Itahluettee, a set of China or Bo: heminu vases, an olegunt bronkfest, ner 9C tea sot. Stich" presents would „. prove not.tinly ornamental hut lllmirlyy, uueful. No whore (illy - to the oily nun a floe; of. lino by select ed that ht the Old establ bawd and popu lar house of Mr: Henry IBgby No. 1.1.2 Wood street, The ossortineut is large and embraces so rangy. MIN, 044.. ins and rootlike that it to p e t yle tatter for the most ntooM eu 14 rea li ty make se lections,. We obeervo in n•suleoLlou ft choice owortmeot et deooratod English sand French toilet sets of nowpatterns, which ore of the direct Importation or this bouse. o llr. Bitchy to ono *of ons boutknownund most boaoraNe and fair dealing morphonts, awl we bespeak for Full shalt of the holcdoy patronage nire?tre . gov B el LIT/era/IS the %Vin e' recolved at their hands during the ses ton of the Afanufncturers' Conventleji. CITY AM) SUBURBAN. Meetlise of the Monumental nmeetn-. An adjourned meeting of the Monti mental Association Was bold yesterday afternoon, at the rooms of the Young Men's Christian Association,' nth The meeting was organized by calling Mr. Preston to the chair, and appointing „Mr. Cook as Secretary. The Secretary, Mr. Cook, read a cora mustlention from - the Secretary of the .Cemetery .t.statelattors, which Is In sub utheeas follows: . , The mrusagers of the Allegheny. Come , . elegy by resolution' have tendered to the Isfanntnental Association thelarge lot on Ridge avenue, occupying one of the the most conspicuous and beautiful Nitta in the cemetery, and being in their esti mation more suitable and appropriate to that noble and patriotic purpose—to erect a monument thereon to the memo ry of deceased, soldiers from Western Pennsylvania who have fallen In the late war—than anyother in the neighbor herd. This is so, not only on account of the tasteful surroundings: 1A from the fact that 80 many of the valituit • stead in tended to be honored already. sleep with in the same enclosure. The Association Is also requested to appoint a committee to visit the cemetery and docldoae to this or any other site. - On :notion of Mr. Park the communi cation was received and the thanks of the Association tendered for the offer. • Mr. Park moved that a committee of five ladies be appointed, as requested in the comes aniestion. . . . , Wattmovodt amend by making the committee eon asst of three ladies and two gentlemen. ; The motion was adopted as amended, and the following persone appointed on the committbm Mrs. ee,.Mrs. Watt, Mrs. Itobinson, - . , Elf. Preston and Mr. Park. . On motion, thlf - Onto 'fixed for ready deolgus • Yr the monument was ox tended to the Ist . l March: • On motion of Mr:. Jennings, the Atom elation•resolved to pay tiffio - for the de sign adopted. • by them, end $lOO 'for the see nd bed. _ I Mr. Park, on behalf of the Park tin provernent Comniimioners of Allegheny City, tendered the Asseelatiou• the privilege oforecting the monument on any portion of the Common grounds of • Mr. Cook 'tooted' that:the ofrer re celved and the thanks °Mlle Aesotiation be tendered tty the Ceminisoloners, and the lkimmlttee on Site be authorized to take the °harlot° eoruddemtlem's On motion' of Mrs: Watt, it was Ter- Rolvecl .that the. monument should' be constructed of stone with marble tablets. Ou . ,motion;adJettrited, to meet Thum day, January 2d, 1848; ' .' • Tim Illlitealan Tableau= of Pallidlee I.ext —Atacma) . - Seat • Thin great :exhibition opens at tlio above popular hall next Monday ir•en log, and we hOve no doubt ft will meet with tho um° anccesa that invariably at tondo It...elsewhere. TO . giro our readers an idea of the popularity of this exhibi tion, we copy the following, said by the Wcwhlngton Intelligeneer while the tableaux worcon exhibition there at Odd .These tableaux have drawn large crowds nightly. So great indeed has bees the attendance that the proprie tors have boon obluted to turn the pee ple away. . from the doors nightly. Al though last night the weather was very disagreeable, and of ouch a threatening character as to keep 'voile at hems, Odd Fellows Hall was crowded to its utmost dimensions. Every seat was occupied, and no standing room was left in the aide aisles. The attractions that Induce peo ple to crowd themselves as they were crowded there last night, and to taco such 'weather as that last night promised to be, can be of no mean order. The tableaux is the living picture of the creation of the world as. Miltoiabt genius conceived it.. Some of the Baena, indi cate a high order of talent in the artist, and the manner in which the machinery is workedexhitilts great .ffitsbeitrearexper tram antrattinaonaidatitaldiornalty on the :leo,: wore propriatpn. "°w Worda . constantly heard in the aedienee." The sale of reserved sesta—hut without extra charge —will commence at nine o'clock on Saturday morning, at C. C. hiellor's Hush, Store; 1 4 in.. 81 Wood street. The price of admission has been put at such an exceedingly low rate for the Academy of Music, that it, together' with the character of the entertainment, wilivindoubledly insure the most crowd ed house& Tim real Apse...ly Neal Staosito avestims.,llse.24. We wish our readers to remember that this singular exhibition opens at the titmice place on Tuesday evening of next week, In this country and in Europe, wherever it has been exhibited, by bish ops, primes, pesters and laity, the pram nod people, is rmanimouslyprononneed• the most sublime and chaste entertain tient ever put betore thopublic. . Every . tonere It has filled the largest halls with the moon relined and wealthy in the oorn. sunnily, those who very rarely attend as exhibition of 'anv kind, and the great mass of the people, regardless of age or sex. seem never to weary of the geor *sourness end purity of the scenes It rep. resents. The vLsions - wherein Saint John saw [leaven opened, and the new Tesusalem °descending out of Reason - from lighfened by lilts glory, with its- jasper walls, its poorly gates, and golden streets, tho Christian's -future home—this - single scene, which leads ohs to remember the words or (lust ancienti song, Jerusalem I Jerusalem I . tied grant joy. may see Thy saglessWig of the same, l'artskor ayo to be. Thy iralliarii tilde of precious stems% • Thy buisratirs diamonds square, Thy gates arbor right orient pawl, Exceeding rich and rare. . • -• Thy gardens and thyollact watts • ConttneetWere —• Mere greer - ireehseweeLlin4 pleasant • rui stoirtierirehoteri pep, leowerej There Thar lint inefkeri +Weed d.W•II. T re 7:11'Nr,"%%*;3; oa But pintreewetry • - aldiflSls said to be Worth the. edinittauce fee.. Timm are,abacet man, berlesa other subjects cohntetedwlth the, heantifid exhibilles,wAdelt *Orb:rad/4d• ed to hereafter.. Remember_ if 4.9 en Tuesduy evening tacit, et At a:MIL The Peel StaTei r . ~. .... • 11125 .1.1147.0 or• - .MM. • • • • At two o'clock‘yeiderdayaftermixtritba Coroner's investigation in the matter Of the death of the young man Kenkorlitet resulted from a jinni/Mt ISP,,,lnvolitt burning or the rrofdriirod4 stoiallowsw . et the corner of l'enn andNti,ype st :reSs., Arum resumed at the M sayor' tilillea "" -, i'• ,Gen, Whitely, commandant of" 020 leghen,y Arsenal, was examirted,-W! stated that ho did not knewor suspect that the guns stored In the linumidakdOro house were charged, else butreublbrigs‘ ordered their luspeellan ...Sieversl otbriu. witnesses were exaratnekiXito threw additional light on Jim mull vet, Artut duo deliberation the following venlig was rendered: , • , . ..,. r.: " That Antoine Kek came 1 , 0 M2,1441710' on Saturday, Tieeemlicr 14:1SO; (Mu gie, etrems of a gunshot wottu sustained by the disci:urge of seve ralhundred guns, width were exploded by fire, h . papsequegeo of rho burning of the Goo. oremelit• warehouse,'' at the corner of Penn and Wayne streets where over 06,000 guns had. beentorel While tba Jury du not deem .it roper in censure any particular. indiv clima be the m.,e, i . they would txtingst/ydirect the :Wonting et of tLe government ollieers, generally, to . Ito dialyser of storing arms- in populous' . digtriritheut first subjecqrs . tbm, too rig uxaminetlgt to .i 2 laterOker aro no laidell " _ ..; Vire it lilsismetas—:inutte, , Waeleis& • 00,41 at i,l Saaned.. , • The rolling mill and nailjaellorr of Martin,. Sickle & ce., ef:-En4, . V: , Armstrong county, was de504.16 .b tiro 'Wednesday B'l;s4. The fire bioe out al 04041 0 ( Cqook, la the rolliiii lid% and rapidly communicated to the - nail tioitery, both of. which were entiggi destroyed. This foundry out coo building, connected wit,b, sue Mill vete hot injured, :1,4,?.05ik1t was feared that they 'vould • also be egusumod. The Origin of the tire 1. not knoion and as yet no omit:unto of the loss has been made. The firm have a warehouse do thin city, at No. so Water etrect, and the damage to the works will la no manner interfere with Ste tilling of orders. The - works Will he rebuilt as soon impossible. Fair and Itestlcal.—The ladles wader whose auspices to now being held a Fair andFostival at .71M11.1" Chhrell Six& street, inuell eneormigedbv the large nt tondanoe last night, hare determined tck reopen the Fah. at ten o'clock thin after noon and cantitme thropugh the evening, with supper from slx tonlrtereelopk, • C. Il l a,xtojialP evening, at Layette Hall, Mr. Vincent, the great English Orator, iven one • of the most humorous staining lectures ever given in enlitled”Social Foibles in Fam e," in which to treated all the dlf- Masan of character as found in Mr Vincent's keimtation -no a to second to none, and the Her. I ti braty AmOciatlon, under me the lecture Is given, have en fortunate in effecting an with him. Saturday even- Milton" will be 'the subject e, and it is mid to be one of orts. Tickets for both or ling can be proeured of Mr. t the rooms of the Associa. • of Penn and St. Char streets. = rzfl etthe tion,APP 'Westishd,—Thero will be a and Festival:held in Mission creamy city, commencing on ening, December 2tlh , and no every attarnoon and even the holiday A large a•- n•efnl and ornamental aril he on hand, together. with and New Year proaenta. ed up daily. The proceeds to to a praiseworthy object. come all. " OP ABItANUHYaNTa—Mrt •n, Mm. C. A. Prime, Jackson, Mr. Geo. D. Ware. man. .Chu Ta • will d aortal elm Chris Immo , be a Come L. A. Mr. C will La profmalottally at Ills .11.htleld street, home Jao • .41,1. • . waNV Ei ' NW2.--The Carta and nu . er Local Wien= of lateral. ITT ITEMS .11 ri.• iartc of the I , 7eui York Berea Respect .g tho relics of porcelathwaro (wind in into axiinmation at Herm . lanoum, w . eh have . been forwarded to the Soviet • of Antiquities In London r . whereof y. ur correspondent says the bottle .mbllng !Drake's Plantation Bitters w undoubtedly placed among the ruins y the agent of Dr. Drake, we desire to :fate he is Incorrect In every reipece. I a bottle was found there bearing our lettezing, the language of the Ancient Romans was different from the accepted literature of that day. Our Agent has other beanies than this In and has not been In Italy at all.Ne=ibt Americans carry Plantation Bitters to Rama but' trying to impose upon a society of Antiquarians in this way, seems quite melees, and we do not appreciate the joke. •• It to unn far us to spend money. In Ectrop=ia . we are unable to supply the demand for these celebrated Bitters hare. Reepeeffully, • arse7th" P. H. tours di Co. Beautiful Toye—For thimillion. Sev eral large ooPurnenta to arrive and will be disposedof at auction and pig veto wile during this and the coining week at the mammoth Anetion House, 55- and 57 Fifth Ereot. • Co to Wm. Fleming's, No, 139 Wood street if you want to gal bauwalna. • ; Mrs& Ovenheem.—Always on hind at the Mainmoth Emponom of Smith eon, Palmer it Co., 55 and 57 Fifth Jared, Sosiething Handsorae.—Rome of the handaomeet Jewelry, of the very latest panerus surd Rudd quality ant be bad at Relnemart, bleyrau &Saddle's fashion able Jewelry store, No. 42 Fifth street. Empress Cloths, (12; colds, real good, at Barker's sale. Blaek filUut, extra wide, $1 25, at BarkorsSale. Auntlon Sale of Tay* ebb Events, -- Al seven o'clock, at Dissents Hall Auc tion Rooms, 55aud Fifth street., &Live pasortotent of toys, ; comprbdng every style, quality annul:dab in • the.. goods. Serrusos, P.ntatEn RCo., • Auctioneers. ISeleattkinkatlng at the Rink to-night. Crest iffeeters , Hand.plage .ell -aeon az and , every evening. Ice in beautiful order. /At' of Fust—Po J0'4'611.1131E. e at Monday, Carpetl i34l 4 , it 10 a. tn., at , the . reeldenoe, 196 Third stzeet,, above Graat street, will be sold the entire famishment of household (family leaving' the city). Salepositive. See advertisement ord., I!: d r Co. in nue lima column. ". For 1100 por pair, ,yery heavy, all wool, Blankets, at Barker's sale. One Caveat beautiful Garnet Merino■, 01,00, at Barker's great sale.. Just the Tblog.:-(Me - of those baud some Ladles Watches. -Fhwer Rings, or a set of tbelr. beautiful Jewelry, Is Just Mang for Christmas Olt. Call at Rehm. man, bleyrsu &- Eisidle's Jewelry store, No. 42 FMh street and get them. Shetland Peale. at Auction-43n Sat urday, December 21e, at law. tr. See advertisement' of Smithson, Palmer & Co., in auction column. White Country Planseds,. ell wool, See, Barker's sato. 7 • • The verj. boat Dolan:tea and Arsoutrea Sc, at Barker's. Ow. IC ItilraUlt• laeMegralc Sirs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup is the only thing that mothers loan rely . ..ll*m for their children. It connote acidity of the . stomaeh, regulates the bowels, and givis real, health and comfort to mother and child. During thepromas of teeth ing, its value le Incalculable. It softens the gn u reduce, intimation, and allays all path, thereby giving rest to the child, and comthrt to the mother. De sure and for Wlnalow's Soothing,Synm." havLog the foc-ahteilie of Cuwriss m Panaa'. on the outside - wrapper. All • 'others* are base !mita rudebeargoes to the Ethic. • sod parchato a aloe Set farm at Wm. Fleallng's,No. 139 Woodland. . Fars, Itianheta, Caws. Chitidue, dr.e. Ak . plasm sale at' auction price; at r t the lalumboth Emporium of Emlthson, ex.& Oot, sr, amd 51 Fifth street. 4 : I Malt' DePartment is supplied Nvi :the Utast stiles, materials and' lrhemings, _. The eupodoettr in Lama ;itidtreerkmanshin of garments made by out; hams is established, - mid 'we are (41 , 24; groat ...hemedux In readz made . ta To IY. BARIUM & (A,' ' • 59 Market iamb • *Mild Mustang at the litnk cliky and us ions. ry ro4uood to 73 ,conts at or 4 Silo, - • • Gain west!ra Baud at the Mak. , • - ASSlThslealle Boyers at bey Good e we :seisatteringspeetal Intlaseinernts , -Job lots iknk DSOs the Emus= duotionHousekeepinp Sales—Shsels,. goo* g Gklais„ kistee'Wear, itheetin, Shirting*, Pilling, dtet.J.W,BARKES 59:Market street. linen Towel•, 121 c, tediFed from 25e, it Barker•e. • iii r u m o u e ti(Ll it arred Flannels, ,3) cents -at Just —The finest and tad se lection openedlry cut brt seen , It Reins. men, Dray= - Seldliee, No. 42 Irifth. awl, tPXk be. bre selecting else_ 341im AVan Sad Etamthe the large and eons sts stoat. el Ladles' Fan ,ll .q.Ukus ming'l,'No. IBS Wood street, t.f Ilan:wins in I.sess• Vs" at. WElllam Menlinfre k ttilreed street. a W to the Rink. ConctltnUes Water ie a eerteht cure tor Diabetes Rea diseases of the kW,. tleya. Peva]. by all druggists. WPM.. 'Alpaeas cheap at Baikal's pea* sale' • Ear Matra—Cbeatkoa Wm. Fleming's', No. 139 Wood street. 110 .11 411 4 00 .—A liorY ilLiff•exiimt mat of every quality Maas sod prim, at dm Emporium of amittisoo,, Palmer Co, 55 and 57 FOOL atroolk:. • saakikea,sionalaltDartrir s9me'hing Fite is la d i es ' nut , chtnu, tit Wm. FimikLlMO. 11p,,W001 Wbbe Flab*els, s:lo,'xi• bx M:44ln ußaat cheapat INgta! ,. al)i.!t . lin WEEKLY GAZENE Two sonless,. ArEDII2DAX LVD EILTURDAY, • mils doss. *stasis+ no xi Cc L tours of sks.rosoas..aiss wrests:. I~el4dly uk.asiesauidds, latest News 04 la•tt. wa5.51.114•41.4,114"bY mad tallest .4 west ratable 41.441.4 444 c v ,.. menial Mutes 114port4 ifbrab bY ...y p.m So pie dlr. No Omer, 1144444. 1 4 Or Kora. t .4414 to without It. +Ea= 70i =I xxxcLlf OAPPIT•I V al . s o ntrcriber ...... .. . .. cub. of T:::= :::::::::::::::::::::::::: —And