El Itttanttgt &Of, l'llll=l DAILY, BY • PEN rnali RXED & ea,Proprietors. •1. B. . JOSIAH ZING. T. P. Eiotll3'lo7s. N. P. 3131 7 ), Editors and Proprietors. - MICE: OSIETTE BUILDINS,4IO 3 . 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. • CIAIL PAPER b, Allogbasy and AUe- Riluay County.. = L \ Ifirme-Dnitg. dendoWees/11.1 Maki. _ One year...lAle One year. 52.5 0, Single copy ...id) Qua month 75 13Lx mos- 1.50 5 eeples,eacti 1.25 Dv the Oder.) Three MOO nlO " " 1.15 Worn . and one tangent. FRIDAY, !WARY bi--1869. Ws - 111/71 on the inside poges of -.'flu surniag's GAzETTz—Second page: poetry, Ephemeris, The Con'neitirvills .Rait -svad, industry, Miscellany. Third and Sixth pages : • Commercial, Norenntile and Biter News, Markets, Irn , porta. &lona page: Yet° Publications, afisseibneoua, Amus ement Directory. U. B. Boron at Frankfort, 80. PErnoistras st . Antvrerp, 59if. Go= close 4 yesterday in New York. st 1851. TEA Petroleum Inspection • bill, which s'+'"0111 by our Representative on secure the support of • 'I laid aside lathe Com • -, on Wednesday. 3TATZ CEN. ting at Hex . • - ... o .oo n an tirotnoo,k %ion ttaha Conventi on, toto for Governor and • Pyreine Judge, on the 23d day of next Jane, at raidelphia. ON Drr, at Washington, that Senator BaNDEIISON'S journey to Cuba is for -diplomatic purl:lose% since Mr. domusort - has charged hiin with a commission, the —details of which have not trauspired, but which is understopd to relate to the gen es" movement foi West Indian annexe. lion. COAPLICTTNG REPORTS from Greece novrclose with a distinet statement that tate Ministry have resigned, rather than to alga the Protocol of ;Paris. , Their ne m:lsms will have no embarrassments in !.he way of personal or official consisten cy to preclude their prompt acquiescence in the adjustment decreed' by the Confer , Circe. A. Ministerial crisis of this sort affords to Greice a sate recovery from a positiori which she finds untenable. - WE BAD the pleasure of receiving in (fur saictum yeaterday Dr. J. G. HITBBB, of PIEABLICR dt co., the well-known New "York advertising; agents, who is in our city, at the Monongahela House, on busi ness connected. with the, firm . Dr. Hussy is an officer of the Rocky Mountain Press -Club, and a dignified and Courteous gen tleman, with whom it is a pleasure to 3mve business. His stay in the city will be necessarily brief, having engagements - whichicalle him elsewhere. Tnn Lnainwenvn interposition, for the protection of the Fort Wayne stock . bolders, is received with a general public satisfaction. That such action was im peratively needed, was so plain that we gave it expression - 1n this journal on the SOth nit., remaining then that the Legis lative authority to prescribe the needed regulation's was not generally questioned, nor would the justice of this appeal for its InierVosition be seriously denied. The Action now taker), as then anticipated, is fully sustained by public sentiment. Tug General Judiciary - Committee of - the Souse at Harrisburg .has reported 'with a negative recommendation the bill embodying the proposition of the Pidla= delphia Mork Leaps to put the primary elections of the p.ilitical parties under the authority and impervision of law. Some isi*h enactment is greatly needed. In Citilfornia the • theory bas;been found predicable and satisfactory. No solid reason, it seems to us, cad be given why , matters so important to the public interest should not fall under regulailon of law. ACcoBDING To. TU last annual re port of the Directors , of the Eiie Mill -way Company, its capital stock paid in •smounts'to $46,802,210, of , which $8,586,- 9101 s preferrid, and is all that can r possi lay have any , intrinsic vidue. The Fund debt is $22,429,920; and the Float ing debt, $4,893,735. Average rate of interest on the Funded debt, seven per cent. - The cost of running the road mu, $11,716,168; interest on ortgage debt, $1,687,265; rent paid for roads le4sed, $703,892; interest on tenfporFyloans , $247,376; making a' total outlay of $14,- 354.200. The total receipts, other than from the sale of stock, were $14,376.872. Excess of receipts over - expenditures, $191,671 This gave neither the pre ferred nor the' common stockholders any dividends. • Tireltzeirsucans of Connecticut again nominate Idetneasm , Javanz, their can didate for Governor, and this time hope to elect. him. The resolutions of the Con- Tentionexpreialv6teed Republican sea- - F4 4, 1 - •••V •r •-'f-,••=•••••,,4ip' -,•,1,--y•-"..,• rk sr ' - • ...• - • ------------ 0 timents, being especially note -worthy for their prompt and unqualified endorsement of the proposed new Suffrage Amendment of the Federal Constitution, and for their opposition to all subsidies or appropria tions, by Congress, to enterprises outside the indispensable machinery of Govern. ment. People who understand the local politics !of that State are aware that the suffrage' issue is one upon which her people tare by far more sensitive than In any other New England State, and that. the Connecticut Republicans have taken a contract which will tax their utmost capacities to fulfill. If, in addition, their demand for economy and retrenchment, at Washington, shall be denied by aro Congressional surrender to the gigantic game of grab now going on, it will give them a double load to carry, and, we fear, heavy enough to submerge the 8,000 ma jority giyen to Guam , last autumn. BEBE are facts itiout fires and fire de. partments, which will hear turning over in the minds of members of the Councils of Pittsburgh. Chicago, .St. Louis and Baltimore have paid Fire Departments. Philadelphia an unpaid one. In 1867, in those cities the cost of the departments, and the losses sustained by fires are repre sented by these figures: CoO.. LW/. Chien° g"8,73:1,43 14,215.4r. 00 ttt. L0n15....... ..... . ..... 122,734.00 2,155,9230 0 Baltlm..re 75 513 52 793,045.C0 Phlladelpkts 113,414,67 719005,00 From this it seems that the more a ds-_ , paztment costs the less it saves. In 1869 the figures stand thus: , kz . Cost. —Mow CO $2.954.230,00 . 134850.00 1,647600 0 144 352,95 N 70,244,75 EIMM Philadelphia 118 8 - 913 -7 ,6 i 17c; Baltimore has a much larger popula tion than either Chicago or St. Louis, and yet its losses by fire and the cost of its department sinks almost to nothing with the aggregates of costs and losses in those 'cities. THE RIGHTS OF NALVIG TION. 'the Ways and neadation, anent of t Much. We implore members of the Committee on Roads and Canals, and of • e House at large, to heed the earnest and most reasonable remonstrances of the great body of the people on the Ohio River Val ley, against the further multiplication of existing artificial strustures in the chan nel of that stream. In this matter, the railway corporations are on one side, and the popular masses on the other. The first can do vastly more in the lobby, but the last make theinselves felt at the polls. Let members be assured that the day is not far off, when a leading issue in the popular elections will be upon a line drawn straight and strong between legis lation for the lobby and legislation for the people—between the special privileges of the few and the constitutional rights of the millions. THE PEOPLE VS. THE RAILWAY RING. The decisive vote by which the House last week referred the bill for an addi tional subsidy to the Union Pacific E. D. itailway,. to the Committee on Public Lands, was in no small part due to the able speech of Mr. LOGAN, (Ills.), in oppositionto its passage. This gentle man traced the history of the project, ex plained the exact bearings of its pending application and pointed out the results of the passage of the bill upon the Treasury, Incidentally, Mr. LOGAN proposed a policy to be applied to these roads now asking to be subsidized, which would be free from many of the objections made at present. He demanded that the na tional planate° of the interest upon bonds should be itself a first mortgage; that the charges for all public business transacted over the completed road should be reserved by the Treasury and applied to the Boni - dean of that interest; that any necessary balance to meet the inter est should be regularly deposited by the Company in the Treasury, at least ten days before the coupons became payable; that upon any failure of the Company to perform these conditions, the Govern ment ehould at once take possession of the' road, &c; that the 'lends donated should be put into'the market at $2,50 per acre, with the coMpletion of each twenty-mile- section, and that the pro ceeds should be devoted toe sinking-fand a the re lemption of the bonds'Upon ' which the interest bad lx4an so gtutratt teed. This • proposition would be in all re spects a meritorious oneo except that it would not suit the Companies—which proves that what is good for the Tama ury is not what the speculators .want. Now, which shall go to the wall? PITTSBURGH GAZE,. Tt: MAY, ISBRITAILY .6; .1869 VIE SENATORI it SHAM. The Senators who propose to distin- j gni* themselves as fire-eating champions of the National honor, in this Alabama business with England, display a remark able delicacy of tactics in their treatment of the main question under the pending treaty. They at present sing very small upon the, point of wounded honor, but industriously manufacture objections to the details of the treaty, as not really mak ing good any of its ostensible promises of pecuniary satisfaction. We have been overreached in the bargain, they say, and must have a new deal. They 'think this a safer line df opposition for the present, than to go to the country at once upon the question of vin dictive reparation, , which really un derlies their opposition to this form of 'adjustment. This device is per baps creditable to their shrewd apprecia tion of the national' aversion to any idea of War, but it is not the kart of dodge which we should expect from Senators who are in earnest in theit tender solid , trade for amore complete satisfaction. The Captain BOBADILIS should have the cour age to speak out; let them forego this pol idy of stifling all Congressional discus sion whatever, or of contriving or elab- . orating petty objections to the details of the treaty, and hotiestly declare to the Country their determination, not -only to latetal payment for the ships actually destroyed, but to seize upon Canada, Ber- Muda, or JaMalca, or all three, as alone ' affording to us full reparation for all the insults which England has heaped upon na-in the eight years past. If Senators will persist in the discreet concealment of their true purposes under the false cover of these paltry issues con cerning the Commission, the umpire and other details o the treaty—we know at least one jo , and ifortunately there are many mo at its aide, which will be faithful in k ingi its readers and the i 1 public plainly and - promptly advised of 1 the exact sit_ ation. ,If the . Alabama treaty be rejee ed, as now seems likely, the people s at least know the real motives Nyhich , actuate the Senate, and which are precisely as we haye std them. , I THE WEST INDIAN MOVEMENT , The question of Doniinican annexe• tion will come up again In .the House next Monday. Its friends declare that the proposition gains in strength every day. If .it bi true that the Democratic "members agreed to oppose it because, in acquiring that magnificent island, we should alsaget too much of the negro, we shall find them opposing ~the annexation of Cuba for the same reason. The final success of this proposition is only a ques tion of • time. Each of the Dominican rulers is in favor of it, while our new lad ministration seconds it, and the people will soon be unanimously , on the same side. ' The Island of Hispaniola, 4comprising the two Governments of Haytiand San Darning°, has an area of 27,690 square miles, and is nearly four times as large as the State of Massachusetts. Its popula tion exceeds 1,000,000. Atter Cuba, this island Is the largest, richest and most beautifill In the Westlndian Archipelago. It Is situated between Cuba and Jamaica on the west, and Porto Rico . on the east, at distinces ranging from 54 to 116 miles. The climate Is hot and moist, the soil is rich in every variety of tropical produc. tions, and the earth abounds with every known form of mineral wealth. A coast 'ins of more than 1,200 miles presents everywhere capacious and safe harbors for one of which, at Samsun, our Govern ment has been negotiating the purchase for naval uses. We are now offered the ' whole island for nothing—and sooner or later the offer will be accepted. APPRENTICESHIP. In the State Workingmen's Convention at Albany, New York, last week, a step was taken which was emphatically in the right direction. A restoration of the ap prenticeship system was recommended, embracing five distinct points: 1. That the apprentice shall be legally bound to serve his master at least five years. 2. That the master shall be compelled to teach the apprentice in every branch of his business, and give him such day and night schOoling as may be needful to fit him for carrying on his trade when free. 3. That the master shall he responsible for the tippet as well. as the mechanical training of the boy. 4. That severe pen alties shall be enforced upon a master who harbors or gives employment to a lad apprenticed to another, unless his in dentures shall heve been cancelled. 5. That upon the expiration of his time the apprentice shall receive a certificate from his master, stating the number of Years he has served, the trade he has learned, and lus qualifications therein. Bo far, well. But something more than 'this is required. It is necessary, in ad ditlon, to secure to boys the right or op portunity to learn M a de. A good deal has been mad and written flippantly about the unwillingness of boys to learn trades, and about their anxiety to crowd into em ployments which are falsely reputed lighter and genteeler. There is very lit tle truth in these imreachments of the sense and discretion of the present genei sition of boys. Blame, in this matter, rests not upon the boys, but eliewhere- It &hundred boys were deeply solicitous to-day to enter upon regtdar appientice ships to different mechanical einploy meats, they would find insurmountable obstacles across their path. They coubd not find places where they could be in structed. All over the cattail', in the logger towns, the difficulties besetting lads who want to learn trades is the same as here. - It is easy enough to'demand that boys shouhrvacide the positiptis they hold, be hind counters, and go at trades, so as to let females have &chance. But the boys, let them try ever so niuch, cannot get into shops and ' factories , as apprentices. The fault is not with them, but with the arbitrary rules by which they are ex clude& . r True, boys could, more generally than they do, find employment n farms. The marvel is that they do not turn their thoughts ' in_ that direction. A much larger proportion of those who start, in their youth, as farmers, and stick to the vocation, arrive at handsome competen cies at middle life, than of those who fol low any other calling. Besides, there is more solid satisfaction and contentment, for people of good sense, in agricultural pursuits, than in any other employment whatever. The prizes may not be as tut large as in some other departments:of • ~;'~i.. . activity, but there are many more of them. The old law of this State defining the mutual relations and obligations of mas ter and apprentice, is still unrepealeA3, but it has fallen into almost entire disuse. But this law applies exclusively to minors under the care of executors, administra tors, guardians and tutors, at the request of either 'ofl whom the Justices of the Orphans' Court in the respective coun ties are empoWered to put out minors of either sex as apprentices to trades, hus bandry or other - employments. This law is excellent, so far as it goes; but it does not go fax enough. What is needed is a law covering the cases of all children, and then, which is of greater conse quence,i a public sentiment high shall require of , all youths, no atter , what calling or pursuit they may elect, sod, application to it, and for, so long a period, as shall render their proficiency reason ably certain, The welfare of the boys and girls now growing up, and yet to come upon the stage of action, as, also, the common welfare, demands this. The existing system, or rather lack of all sys tem, is the worst possible that can be conceived, and a remedy carrot too soon be devised and applied. BALEFUL LEGACIES. War necessarily tends to the deteriora• tion of public and private morals. Nor does it matter much, in this regard, whether the war is a just or' an unjust one. Even when Right is clearly on the side of one of the contestants, and Wrong as absolutely on the other, no material difference is observable in the two parties as to the degree of demoralization. Who evei considers what war is, perceives that from' the very nature of the case, this must be so. Yast masses of men cannot be put in military array, and employed in the work of destroying property and slaughtering their fellow men, no matter what the cause of quarrel may be, with out having their sense of the rights of of ownership and the sacredness of hu man life seriously impaired. In strict accordance with this view, it is susceptible of the clearest demonstra tion L-nay, it has been demonstrated be yond disputation—that crimes against property, chastity and life have largely increased, ratably to the population, all over the country, since the war for the .preservation of the Union began. The statistics of criminal jurisprudence give testimony on leis head which is appalling and admits of no refutation. A whole generation, at least, will have to pass off the stage of action before the moral tone of society will be restored to even the low degree of purity in which it existed before the Rebellion. The infection of dishonesty makes its presence felt in the Presidential mansion, in Congress, in the State Legislatures, and in the tribunals of public justice. Bribes are shamelessly taken. Laws are enacted to promote private advantage rather than the general good. Places of trust are bought and sold. The revenues are plundered with scarcely any attempt at concealment. Men go into office pooh and in a few years come out rolling in wealth and luxury. Many people look on in astonishment, imagining that the mis chief is confined to politicians, and that if the present brood were swept away a wide and wholesome reform would be inaugurated. Never were any men, more mistaken than these astonished individuals. The politicians are no more corrupt than the mass of the communities to which they belong, and to which in due season they will return. Consider the brazen And gigantic swindles, which are constantly coming to notice in railway management. In these culpable transactions are involved thousands of the moat eminent business men of the nation. They hold the Judges so completely in their grasp, that they snap their fingers in defiance of the laws, and feel an unshaken confidence that both their social' and financial posi tions will not be disturbed. Consider the multitudes of first-class business ulen who besiege Congress and the State Leg islatures for enactments prejudicial to the common welfare, but out of which they can make* Inordinate gains. Having resolved to make money in defiance of right, it , follows naturally, that they do not hesi tate to offer bribes for compliance with their designs, and votes to carry them through. Consider the thuds upon the external and internal revenue, perpetra ted by thousands of merchants, kmanufnc turers and capitalists, by which at least one-fourth of the just income of Ithe gov ernment is stolen. Consider again the adulterations and short measures resorted to ahnest universally by . dealers of all grade'', of which terrible revelations have recently teen madain New 'York jour nals, and which can doubtless be matched in kind in every other city and town in the Union. Pure whisky, or even whisky at alli - has become literally unknown in the retail trade, a decoction of poisonous drugs taking its place. Most articles of food are subjected to fraudulent manipu lation. Indeed, dishonestY wears so many forms, and has become so nearly omnipresent, that it takes the mask of virtue, in innumerable instances in which clamor is raised againit sins of omission or of commission „by politicians. Busi ness men are exacting a degree orunself ishness and purity in r public men which they too frequently do not exemplify in their own dealings A great war nece gance. Vast expo able. • Find result the economic details by which they are arrived at. Vast sums become as com mon as petty ones were before. Con tracts for warlike supplies and commis sions on immense public loans, with the plunder of conquered districts, afford op portunities for the sudden acquisition of fortunes prodigious beyond the earlier precedent& The inflation of the cur rency, and the consequent enhancement of pricesraggravate the social distemper. Profusion becomes the rule, and economy the exception. Nor is proftviion mani fested on only one or two points. It runs into every department ler life-into dress, furniture, food, drink, houses, equipages, stores, school houses and churches. Each child in each opulent family is brought up as if he or she were to be sole heir to the whole estate. Expensive tastes are indulged. and permanently ac quired, becoming: as inexorable in their demands as Nature itself. Children fail to acquire the habits of industry and prg deuce which their fathers and mothers practiced in early life. In large numbers they become drones ; not unfrequently, profligates. This is why so many wealthy families disappear in the second genera tion,, and are not found again. Is it to be wondered at, in view of these I facts, end many of like import, that ex- 1 travagince creeps into public bOdiest As a mass,. the people do not practice the Spartan parsimony and self-deniaL Un til they do, it will be in vain for them to I attempt tO exact it of their representative& What is in the atmosphere will pass into ' 1 the lungs.. What man of us all, here in 1 1 Pittsburgh, can stop inhaling the omni present smoke It is precisely so with 1 distempers in the political atmosphere consciously or unconsciously, all shire in them, though possibly not in the same de gree. Nor is there any essential difference in these matters between ,Republicans and Democrats. Few men, if any, are so self poised that they can altogether withstand the influences by whisk they are sur rounded. Search all history, and it will be found that the best, wisest and strong est bear many traces of the impurities peculiar to the age in which they lived and wrought. We see this in them, bid not in ourselves. Whether we dis cover it or not, the fact remains. The nation has a serious task before it; which is to eliminate from its conuition the baleful legacies lett it by the great Re bellion. This cannot be done by flip pantli declaiming against special mani festations of the presence and power of the evils which we have portrayed; but by each citizen, first of all, delivering himself and herself from the contagion to which they have 'been exposed, and thus setting themselves systematically at work to help others.. Perhaps it will be found that they Who declaim most against the prevailing faults of this country, will be slowest to amend their own conduct, while those who most heartily deplore what they witness, and most , effectually strive to lessen it, will not be found most censorious in their condemnation of a common crime. , AT a meeting of the Republican County ComMittee of Huntingdon county, a res olution was passed submitting to the peo ple the question of adopting the Crawford county system of nominating candidates for office. The subject is to be voted upon by the Republicans of the county at the time of holding thelocal elections in, March next. TUE INCLEMENT SEASON. AND ITS zPrzers ON IllE WEAK AND JUMBLE. The drafts which searching cold makes upon the vital powers of the debilit.ted and delicate are not less severo than the drain upon-their strength caused by excessive heat, The vast desparity between the temperature of over-heat ed rooms and °dices. at this season. and the frigidity of the outer air, is a fruitful source of sickness. To fortVy the body against the evil consequences of tn sadden alternaon or ga nis a tion and cold referre4 to. the vital suould be strengthened and endowed with extra resilient power by the use of a wholesome lasts- Mat: and, of alt preparations for this purpose, (weather embraced in the regular - pharmacopoeia or advertised In the paella Journals.) there is none that wtll romper° In purity and excellence with HOEITSTTSSAI ISTOSAIDEL BITTSIIB. Acting directly upon the organ which converts the food into the fuel of life, the preparation ice parts to it a tone and vigor erbich is communica ted to every fibre of the frame. The digestive function beteg accelerated by its tont:operation, the liver regulated by Its anti-bilious properties. , punctually waste matter of the sy•tene carried off by its mild aperient action the whole orsaiiisatiosi will oecessarily be in the bestpOe- Otte condition to meet tee efteeke of winter a nd the sudden changes of temperature. The weak and sensitive. elmelaily. cannot encounter these vicissitudes with safety, unless their tender sys tems are braced and strengthened by alrfAilelal means. Seery liquor 'sold as a staple of trade is adulterated. and.wve it otherwise. mere alcohol is simply a temporary excitant; widch, when its first Wrests have suhilded. le the physical Dowers (and the mind as well.y in a worse condi tion than beton . MATE* TAWS BITTERS, on the other hand, contain tbe essential proper ties of the most valuable topic and aikrative roots. arks and herbs.'and their active brutel ls Willowut, least exciting and most in bonou of WI dinette stimulants. TEM SOUND OF THE LUNGit. One of the most aecurate ways of determining whether the Wagger° In healthy or diseased con dition. Is by means of listening to the respiration. To those experienced to this practice it becomes as plain mind= to the stele of the lungs, and Is as well known to the operator as are the voices of his most Intimate 'acquaintances. The belief that long standingcoughi, and diseases of the Mugs upon which they are dependent, are Incurable. are fast becomine (insulate. One greattdrantsita to be gained from this advance in medical know)... i edge s tt e earlier apPU4tlon. of those who be• come afflicted with those diseases to some one competent to afford relief.. 'I he error which had taken hold of the public mind In regard to the enrsbilityoteoneumption, or rather nim.curabil liY, is fast becoming obiltingted, and It is well that It should be so, not that persons should lose that salutary fear which would make them sop', for a timely remedy, but thit all might be indu ced to use remedies while there is any hope. It is the delay in these cases that We us with ap . Prehension and slum, for if every one would make timely application of DR.. KEYSER'S LUNG CURE in the beginning of acold or cough, few cases would go so far na to become Irremedia ble. Sold at the Doctor's great ;Medicine Store, No. 140 Wood street. -WILL SHORTLY REMOVE Te HIS NEW STORE,* NO. 16 LIBERTY STREET, SECOND DOOR PROM St. CLAIR. DP. KEYSER'S RESIDENT 'OFFICE 'FOR LUNG EXAMINATIONS AND THE TREAT MEN rOP OBSTINATE CHRONIC-DISEASES, No. AEU PENN BTREIrr, PITTbBURCIII, PA. Ofdce HolusTrOm 9 4 tf. Until r. K.. aid from 4, to Eat Sight. ' • ly begets extrava &lnes become inevit• areyegarded, tuAd not " " WIE farUEPIIIIIICAN MEETING. A Eat Meeting of theßepublioans of . - SIXTEENTH WARD Win be held at 7.161.13201011:13 HALL, as tyre Ureensburg At To'clock. to mate nominations to 1111ther vacancy caused by the death of A. Boeveller, Esq. A general attendance is requestad. ies:es EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. PVILDING AND LOAN A 8110.• CIATION OF FRANKS OWN No: IL— lies is hereby riven that sh application has been made at No. 442. March Term, 1869. for a ehaver of IneorporatLai for the above named Policing and Loan Association. which will be granted avnext term of Court, unless exceptions thereto are tlled. - JOHN A) Met I tjags, feb:el4-r Attorney for Applicants. Co°l J.LV/11. COFFEE. Fifteen bare wry choice EloorTrunent Java Coffee. met received and for sale at reduced prices.. wholesale and retail, by JNO. A. EXICSHAW, feb Corner ; Liberty and Hand emcee.- EXECUTORS ) 8 4 1 LE. SHOE STORE. ' The stools, good will, lease and fixtures of shoe store of the late J. F. McCall, Esq.. 33ii Liberty street, Pittsburgh. Best location in the eity, and doing a prosperous business. For farther parti— culars inquire at 334 Liberty street. EMMA. U. MCCALL, J. D. It/MALEY. Execators._L PRICES reukuiEn DOWN. ';, ~ ,;:~~ r INA EVENENG NEU. I= : IA ALMOST MMMMI. MAL ERN STITCH. all HAMMICIR CHIRPS. Ale. _1 ASe and np_wszds. TAPZ 1100.LIBBLD WREN BARDMM• MILTS 114 e _Se to 60e. 2._ All oar id ATs as o•te•Aslf rendar_prloes. All the new BALMORAL isEtimi and Bred lers latest stiles of HOOP at the Lowest Prices In the Ojty, *HINTS , lILICRIYOVEnT and RAWER% 40a to WOO. • . AT EATON'S, • N 0.17 Fifth Avenue. pISSOLIJTION OF PARTNES-• 8111F.—Tbe purtnershin heretofore exhtt us between J. B. • antbld and A T. Canfield, under the styte and arm name of J. B. CAN. FLEL.D A SON is this day dissolved by mutual consent. The business of the late firm will be settled by J. B. CauFeld, whn will continue the Dullness at the old stand, 141711 MT A.vEIIUZ. J. B. CANFIELD, A. T. CANFIELD. _ Firrimunert, February 3:1849. B. CANFIELDL CORMS SION 'MERCHANT awl WHOLZEIALE. DEALER In Gosben,Factory. Hamburg and W. B. Cheese, Butter, Lard, Pork, Eaton, hi i ll . Irlsh, Dried Fruit, Grain, Pis Lead. Pot, Pear and Bode Ashes, White Lime, Linseed, L Coal and Carbon OIL. No. 141 First street: Pittsburgh. festel WILLIAM FECILE, Iduccessor to WILLIAM STIMBNEON.) ' dAIittAILY Itith, 1569. NOTTC3.—Having this day disposed"' of ml" large and One assortment of Jewelry, &e., to WILLIAt MORE, and even lease of my store and dwelling, No. 320 .Liberty street, to him, 1. cheerfully recom— mend him to.my former patrons - All persons indebted to me wIU please pay the same to my nephew, JOHN B. OBAWFORD. at 991 Liberty street, is the oaken( John B. Her— ron & Co. fes:dra WILLLUL BTEITZNSON. RIIERSHIOSEN PROCESS. The Trustees are now *repaired to grant 'teen- - see for the use of the ELLEIII3IIAUMN PRO CMS. The superior quality Imparted to good it a, 4 the great imp. in 'Latrine trop. and oe reduced cost,commend it to ali manufacture of Parties whiling to nee it tan obtain ucense by applying to . JAMES P. SPEER, Attorney for the,Trnitate, OFFICE, 860 PENN STIIkET. Parties intemsted are invited to visit the 13110ENBERGER WORKS. where the process 15 nuw in neeesst operation. fe5:0:117 WASTE OF L HYDRANT WATER. - I 'l he undersigned deems it his duty to inlbrus consumers of Hydrant Water !tithe city of Pitts- burgh that extensive SO highly imgOrtant changes in the machinery at the Lower Water .Works will require. the the present. careful use and strict prevention of the waste of water. • Hailr3ad companies and miter large consumers must use strict economy in dais of water for all I purposes. and the use -of all street washers and ere plugs, except in case of Are, more be ins- . pea ded until farthernotiee. JOSZPH PRIHOH. Ib3 - 7 Superintends nt Water Works. REMOVAL. - • -- . ! The Oakes and Warehouses of 1 , PARK, BROTHER & CO. 1, , , H.LVZ BIEN REMOVED TO THEIR wonxs„ Coro Tidrileth and Railroad Streets. • • I Orders left with PAWL. 31cCUEDIr Z CO.. No. 1911 IN:cowl Avenue, wilt realm prwstiptalp XS: WESTERN LAND AGENCY. 70,000 Acres of Land for Sale • In lowa and Minnesotat' pries .from $3.00 to $3.00 per acre. Land bought and sold on cum. t; mission. Taxes paid; Titles examined; abstracts f; tarnished; burtreying and Plotting dime. • ; luiternation tarnished in reference to locality, ; quality and valuation of lands. General coned- iiqt business done.. Address B. TOONGSON SvCO4 c CAP • -+; jrAp gam semusay. cobursarioN.A.RY. icor •CREAM and DIRLER. SALOON. SE fenftbdeld street, corner ot Diamond alley. rl riusourgb. sr Parties and families supplied 'with Ice Cream and Cates on abort notice. • SitEED. sioo Du. caoznz °Lovas, soap. S5O bathes choice>Timoth7 Sept. In stare and tot sale by Nr.kaioll I 359 Liberty meet,. .9121 rittsb • b. -;-.1 ~essaos~. Tor We by the Nuadiett Bette. Esqulre a No. GS VI/TIN AVENUE. PINE CHARCIpA.I. MIMI TIM. COOPER, WALL SCE and A- , WILLARD, , „ - • - SIONIEOPALTHISTS - Wll . l remove their OPlce on the Tint of April a ' - ;7: - , next to to o. 1511 Diamond, Alleaheny laity, rear ;Pis N ,' of City. Hail. }moo GBH / OILCLOTH NOR WIN. f t ; -- -.3::T. DOW SHADES-We uP now manufsetu.q.l7:-.. this' *rude of a quality superior in finish, and at prices lower than can be bad pi ezy East, ern manufacturers. Dealers will find it to their Interest to examine our goodie before pit robasing elsewhere.J. 1 H. 'PHILLIPS, SO anti Sixth Ilt. formerly M. Oar • C. C. WILT, ZLLINGTON. lOWA. Vt MI ■