The Daily Pittsburgh gazette and commercial journal. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1861-1863, December 05, 1861, Image 2

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    THURSDAY MoKNINO, DEC. G. lbtll
Foe Uot«l Arriraja aee fourth page.
Cempromiiing with the Owners of
■ Railroad Bonds.
W* ate ptpR4P-l to learn tiiat there ia a
growing senLiiueut in the cities and count;*
-| n favor of some coraproraiae with the Rail-
U voad bondholders, which.wi(l forever re-
moro thiajlieagreeable matter from litiga
tion and politics.- We hare no doubt that
if the bondholders, will evince a liberal
spirit, that such a compromise can be ef
fected, and that all parties will bo greatly
the gainore thereby. If, on the contrary,
. ‘I 1 ' bondholders are contumacious, and re-
Wdire a suhmission which the people con
ir tmjust, viewing the case in all its
aspects, that it will be long before they see
their money, jtnd they probably uever will
*®*o it: We (tdmit that they can greatly
I annoy us and put us to great trouble and
1 expense,and cause immense irritation, but
it is impossible to coercetwe hundred thuu
‘ - sand people to submit to what they believe
to be unjust. We most earnestly advise both
parties to approach the subject in a spirit
of candor, forbes'rance and conciliation.
By so doing we hYve not the least doubt that
ait arrangement can be made, which, while
~ • ,'it.wl,U-.be immensely better lor theßond
• -holdere than to attempt to wrench thepound
.-oftfleah.from* the peopln~will at the same
tiuie inflict no hardship upon the lax-pay
‘.era which cannot be borne Uy a prosperous
: ..aud.enterprising community. To the tax-
" Jttyefa, therefore, we say meet the crisis
1 • Hire men, tithe up the burden and bear it,
, ** w ‘"K row lighter every day; and the
• c Bondholders we adyiae to forbear threaten
.. ing, and mUhe such speedyarrangemeats as
■v;‘ are in your-potrer, to resliro immediately
rS aitch an amount as we can bear without op
prestion, and such as can be paid withont
inrolring hardships such as men will nerer
. ahhmtt to. Meet in such a spirit, and this
;i ' “ ral disagreeable controversy will be ended
. forever.
.Them will be discontents on both sides.
. Some Bondholders wilTdemand the lost
- farthing; and some tax-payers will not
- consent to pay one cent. If the authorities,
however, make an equitable arrangement
with some of theheaviest of the Bondhold
ers, we havo nq doiibt them will bs a gen
eral acquiescence on the part of the people,
and the tax be promptly paid, while these
Bondholders who etand out will soon see
how useless the struggle will be, which will
. only postpone a realisation of their money
to tbeirheirs. Bet us then have an equita
.blt compromise immediately. , .
■ r * [■* ■ *
The Associated Press
I* a great monopoly, and wo are bat one news
' paper; it is a combination of the' principal
HewTork dailies, who havo formed a corporate
_ association, in Order to facilitate end cheapen
the cost .of collecting and transmitting news
by Telegraph. The Press of Pittsburgh, like
- that of all other leading eitiei and towns,
, are assessed by tfcls assooiation pro-rata to
;; ' fhe camber of papers and their circulation,
- i whieh aSseesment entitles-it to all the news
famished by the Association to any of .he
' ‘ jJttrss of the country.
Thi dfcmtt* paysa doubt « e hart of this tar
- iff—just twioothe amount paid by any • other
SW?- i Hence wo expect, always,
fair, and bonorabie dealing on behalf of the
. A® MIU °? Associated Press, as well u
■ of the Telegraph lines.
> to domestic affliction In the family of
the Agent of the Associated Press in this city,
!:*• to hare any converse-
• •'tiQn In regard to the Prajident’a.Haaug*, but
took for granted that t document of io
* imeh Importance vrpald br trenemitted by
as the yirj essence of item# for
which we pay the Association a beany assess-
'meat. • _
. Oar readers c/trlm*fin* out chagrin when
• wt wort, that tha Assoda*
t#d fretshad declined transmitting the Ues*
1 , ttltgrtpb, and that themanager of on*
,of lines had effected a priiat* arrangement
. onß of the city papers, to the ezolmion
of all the others, without any opportunity
„ for competition or remonstrance t
■r- . ‘We.would oheerfally have paid; treble the
j . eu» named for. the "monopoly” outaeivei,
and did endeavored purchase the Joint use of
the copy for_our afternoon-edition, Tuesday.
bat felled. -
1 - With this plain statement of fact*, we de
aire to pat on record an indignant protest
• against the shameful breach of faith on thV
part dtUie Associated Press, as well as a rery
nnbntiMfi-lUre -and partisan trade An the
9* ! tke«anajei|ofone of our Eastern lines."
We are not to wellj assured that the superin*
tendent here hasjujsaerved that impartial and
.t *oo*P*i tfe should like
*° coa*end.v If Important hews for 4bieh
** w# have a contract,/rid pay a double share,
; h hereafter to heoffered for sale es a "monop*
' we ahoald like to here notice of th*
fret/that ere might become* purchaser.
—Despite the efforts or the Asspdate Press
to prevent it, we were enabled to give to oar
reader* yeiterday—as early as the earliest
—this Important document in full. We cleim
no Mpeclal credit .f«r enterprise. Tor the
aaUqfaetiqn of one of out morning colompo
-Tarim, we. will state that, at an early hour
r Ik the morning, We phrchased twocopleaof the
: message from a newsboiyon the street• and
• a- llttleUter had a copy handed to ns by a
fHand, who had just arriyedTfVom the east.
The President’* Message.
Thie anxiously*looked-for, and: moat im-
portant state paper is now before oar read-
er*. We are lorry that it is somewhat marred
. by .the mode of itd reception by telegraph.
../■FMagreph»«re uh io tb« middl. of «uy«ti,
m>4 their salty tha* dmtroyad; ~sn<l where
. there ought to bo pusgreph*, there I*’ ioth
ln, t»m*rk r tfm i el»{ig»of tobjoot. Iheiede
feetsjeem to be inie^hmble'ltbtß'm tfesemii
eion b, Ulepephj end the hute with whleh
inch doeomente on-printed.
The lleiugell opldlo, bdeincn-like doca
- meat, end eoeil, comprehended; exoept in the
, one moet importent pirtienUr on whieh the
people wer. molt onxioue to horo en-.
„ li,htehment.. It oleori, oeeerte the doctrine
r- <,ut 7 of enxehtng ont the reheUion. So
, “fit ,wUI moot with nnironal epprorel. We
- • mint now look to Congrae. for o noliej wiiieh
. we ehonld hare been glad to bora receired
. from the Pniiilest. Ve hope' Congreet will
.. not dleoppolnt tn. • : ; .
0 [onion ,Kow« ,EOii Ititr Vo or Cirr.—
.. -We orn highip gratified, nt -'the re*alt' of tho
• eleetloh for Mayor iiuhe ci ij of yojr /Tork.
. George Opdyke, tho Repobllean candidate, ie
elohted by a im.il majority over Genthw, tho
Tasman, candidate. .Fernando Wood, the
Motari:nall: candidate, who hai eo long
oareed nnd dlegrawd that city by hie rale, la
’ : the laweii on tho lilt. Feraando can now go
to Europe, which ho eaye he ie eoatemplatmr
• ofito hke eeceielon friend*, where he will ni’d
mo**eongonialeoclety. 'Hit powerln Maw
,T«k il broken forcrer. Tho New Fork Btr
f, 41W he* miuedits mark for once, having inp-.
ported Jfenuhdo with its dcriilsh ! ingenuity
\ »nd noklMi&ess. - 71 •
Mattsrs and-Things in Washington.
iWf'nrc ilm HejKirt* ~f t3, e
Departments-nn-J dan only conjecture the
policy they may recommend. Ft has been
very evident for some days, jhnt there was
some hitch in the Cabinet machinery, that
the parts did not run smoothly together,
and that the Chief Kngineer was going to
take the matter in hand. We think this
has delayed the reception of the Reports of
the Departments; We know it has in rela
tion to the Report of the Secretary of War,
for we received a package containing this
report, direct from the War Office, on Tues
day morning u and should have glTen it to
our readers this morning, but it was re
claimed by the Postmaster, in pursuance to
a dispatch from the Post master General by
the direction of the President himself. We
infer from this, that there was some change
of policy, which required this 'document
to be sent back to be altered, although the
following dispatch to the New York World,
denies that the was for that
purpose:
There ia much speculation in regard to
the recalling of advanced copies of tho re
ports of the War and Navy Departments,
which were sent to the northern cities for
publication; but it is believed that this fact
indicates no alteration of them, and is only
intended to prevent their premature pub
lication: It is now fully understood here
that both Secretaries Cameron and Welles
maintain the same doctrine in their reports
that has been evinced in their letters to
Generals Butler and Sherman, and-other
documents, so far as they relate tp the
slavery _question.
We have no doubt the writer of the dis
patch-was mistaken. It is very evident
from the following dispatch to tho New
York Hmu, that there was a. struggle, and
that it lasted until Monday afternoon or
night, and that the copies of the reports
were reclaimed after tho struggle had
ended:
The deepest feeling, und almost excite
ment, prevails among the Union members
of Congress from Western Virginia, Ken
tucky and Missouri in regard to the future
policy ot the Administratiou. The most
prominent among them, and those who
hare labored meat earnestly from the be
ginning against the Southern rebellion, de
clare that the inauguration of the Aboli
tion policy of the war, and a movement
looking to the arming of the slaves, will
instantly throw tho three states named in-:
to the Soqthern Qonfederoy,. and annihi
late the gifeat National armies in Kentucky
and Missouri, ip fact all National organi
zation. West of the Allegheny Mountains.
Several members of the tiouso of Repre
sentatives belonging to the Democratic par
ty, on learning that the Message of the
President ia highly conservative, determin
ed to call on him in a body to-morrow, or
next day, after the message had been de
livered, not only thauking him, but express
ing their admiration of bis firmness in
standing' by the Union and tho Constitu
tion. and refusing to adopt the radical ideas
of the Abolitionists in regard to arming the
slaves.
Twelve O'Clock at Night. —I am eaa
i bled te state in the most positive manner
, that the struggle is over, and that the
President's conservative policy is sustain
ed by his Cabinet with entire unanimity.
Tho message will go in to-morrow in exact
1 accordance with tho foreshadowing of your
correspondent. There was much less dis
sention in tho Cabinet from the President's
views than hos r been supposed to exist, and
now all difficulties are reconciled, and the
Government ia a unit.
But the following special dispatch to tho
New York Jlerald, of Tuesday morning,
shows clearly the changes which have most
probably been made at the hist hour, and
1 indicates tho policy to be punned is future:
A great deal of anxiety, mingled with
gome astonishment, pervades Washington
to-day. People eaunot understand > why it
is that the President's Message, which waa
understood to have had all the finishing
touches put upon it,* and to be ready for
delivery, waa not sent in to Congress. Of
course, all torts of rumors and specula
: lions' are rife as to the cause of this. Some
of the facts connected with it. have got
wind, and their discueeiott adds totbs pre
vailing excitement Ar there is nothing to
be gained by concealment in such matters,
and as I am informed of the state of4be
’case;-I “propose to 1 enlighten you there
upon.
First, then, you know that the clos
ing portion of Secretary Cameron’s report
takes very definite and decided grounds bn
the sdbject of slave property. It goes as
far in that direction .as did John Cochrane's
oow famous speech to his regiment, and
goes farther than did General Fremont’s
more famous proclamation in Missouri.
• When Secretary Cameron endorsed the sen
timents of Colonel Cochrane’s address, he
did so understanding fully its import.
There was no mental reservation in his ex
pression of approval. The same views, I
understand, he put forth in an official and
clearly expressed form in the report which
he had prepared to be submitted to Con
gress, and which was to. have accompanied
the President's Message. He there-enun
ciated the policy of the emancipation of
slaves In the rebel States, of the Converting
to the use of the national government all
property, whether slave, or otherwise, be
longing to rebels, or resorting'to: every
military means to put down the rebellion,
and even of placing arms in the hands of'
negroerfor that purpose. ♦
Whether it was that that portion of the
report of the Secretary of War embodying
these views- waa not completed last night
when the Cabinet had settled up everything
pertaining to the Message, or whether more
mature consideration on the part of the
President led him to appreciate moroclearly
the danger of these extreme views of the
Secretary of War, 1 cannot with certainty
say; but one thing which I do know is, that
it was on account of tbisYeport of Secreta
ry Cameron that the delivery of the Mes
sage has been delayed.' I believe there are
some objections! also, on the same point to
the report of the Secretary of, the Navy, and
both those documents will have to undergo
-revision and modification before they are
presented.
An important Cabinet meeting has been
held to-day in reference to tbeso very exci
ting matters. The President seeaadftqrm
ined to adhere faithfully and unswervingly
to the line of policy which ho proclaimed in
his inaugural/and on which he has since
conducted his administration—that is, to
put down the rebellion by using all the na
tional resources, but at the same time to
maintaininyiolato the constitution and laws
of the United States, Between his policy
and that of the Secretary of Waur there seems
to be a wide gulf. -One or tho 'other must
vield. and I need aot-eay that it will not
be Mr. Lincoln. Ho knows his responsi
bility to the nation, and will hot alio whim
self to be -turned.aside from the straight
path of duty by .any crotchet* or views of
policy that may bo ontortained by any of
his subordinates.',. •••
The Secretary of War ia not only at vari
ance with thePresidentin regard to the
policy under which the war.ia to be conduct
ed on our side, but is also, ! havo reason to
believe, at variance with ihe. Commander
in-chief. In regard to the disposition to be
made of the slaves in the regions that may
be or have been subdued by our arms, Gen.
V view* sown to'coincide with
thoseof the President . McClellan recognises
the necessity of adopting, come well defined
and-uniform mode of treating, this- subject,
but i* deoidedlyopposed to that proposed by i
Secretary .Cameron. I understood that he ,
hu It in .contemplation to tissue a general ;
order, in a few days,'tor the commanders of I
tho several military 4epartmeata, enjoiiing •
uponthein thiL9&ferwncs,o/tA« course ofpofc j
ire'wx&rd«d ( tti prcelamaticn]^
'QttL DiXj Ond aUo m thtU o) r Gtn. Bai&k. 1
iiy ; xtfenpt' to cigy 'lm o operation lUblixW' ioff
«at,n,Oßt» fStaanto. *l,l, A><L .g, soldierJiL n,t§f
.erenco to.arming the stores, .would bo iubt- 5* Sp
itxbly attended with uum disastrous con=e- r a P un Lungress to (.at*
qtiencea. 11 would probably leu,l r» J, ' w " suoh “Ji.turben «i Uh.ii.es Smjii,"
sigiuuioti d/ Gen. McClellan and the yt-nlrol thaae ho hang upon'hia that
*iiidTgaiiization oj the drtnjf. ' This danger iri i fa the great inasi r uf'lha R«publieari‘ party>.
well known to the PreKident, and i- one of It most inauhingly say* •
Til* • BCtUal i n l S im •“ 1 I -Uatbering ebnGdeoce. the-notion
disapproval of the views which Secretary I has tolerated their foltles, has passed by their
Cameron desired toeuunotate in his report t wiekedness, they now pre«nme to trydt.-pa
and to make prevail in the conduct of the tience still further; to make themselves ne
war. Mr. Lincoln a own views, lire ilocid- . re« 6, if ponsiblo, where :lhey !bare proved
edly averse to the extreme measures propo*- ; themselves Uttlelese than idiots anderiminuU.
ed by Mr. Cameron; but, if there were'uu hope such, iu the cotniug session of
other cause to lead him to set his face oh- ( ' un g r « 8u » «<»y &• drier* te the trail. The ua
atinately against them, their exiremelv : ,ion h^B no lia l®. for their one ide * harangue*
dangerous effect upon the army would be - „ with their fooliah.ravlngi.
it ia »»,. ,t *• i Uno of thetwo extremes that have brought
th , ' . .' .. eretoie, i unnambered woes upon the nation, better and
that there ia anxiety and trepidation among ! wiser men should o?ly be heard as its advi
mombera ot Congreas, army officers and the sera ; wAo hate prated themeehee
whole community, growing ourof tlie non- pofeeted uf an enlarged patriotum tkould be al~
delivery of tho Message to-day. I believe lowed tu dictate the course to 6« jmnund in deal
that the moderate and constitutional viewj* ing with the rebellion.” .
of the President will prevail, &n<|[ that tin*. Such patriotism, for instance, as Baltimore
ultra extreme measure, of abolitionist, in ha, .viced, whieh i. only held .to her all.-
the Cabinet, in Congress and in public life k v .
will meet with failure and discomfiture k l *”™ *>? “rth"™ bayonet,. Remove the,,;
T , „ j ... .. . ' a °d »be would burn the bridges, tear ud the
Thus stands the matter at present. We . F ,
. , , r - railroads, and admit the sesession army in d
have made the,, long extracts for the con- B6ok r , , ook . w ,„ a pnb , ilhed
Bideration of the reader A few day, will in . city und „ r law accoan , of hor
develop how tho question stands, and wlmt treasonable propensities, talking of driving
shape it is to take in the future. Under all Charles Sumreh to fie wall, with his noble
aspects of it we must sustain the Adminin- baud of compatriots, suoh as glorious old Ben
tration in putting down the rebellion, trust- Wade, Wiltnot, Trumbull, Wilson,? King,
ing and believing that the Providence which Fessenden, Hall, Wilkinson, and scores of
has hitherto presided over our destinies
will out of seeming evils deduce the great
est good.
“The Rejected Slone.**
We find the following extract in the
Philadelphia JVbrfA American. It is taken
from a pamphlet bearing the above title,
written by a ‘‘Naffi'c? of Virginia." The
writer, the *VbrfA America;! *aya, is a man
of singular powers of intellect, and is gifted
with originality in thought, stylo nnd
diction. His object in submitting Ins re
flections on the crisis to*his fellow country
men is to prove the absolute necessity there
is of proclaiming the immediate emancipa
tion of the slave throughout the length
and breadth of the land; that the present
contest is the legitimate result of previous
legislation and compromises ; that the
South is consistently adhering to its old tra
ditions and feelings and working out its
destiny ; and that the North is now in an
essentially false position. Wo think this
a good time to present such glurious
thoughts ou a questiou of such immense
importance, written, doubtless, by a man
who has felt tho iron enter his soul._ We
hope it may strengthen the wavoring •
“Behind the national army now in the,
field there stands iu the shadow another,
silent and waiting. As yot it is refused.
Not until other deleatH and an exhaustion
of othor reinforcements will these reinforce
ments be called on. They can calmly wait,
for they are not three years men—they are
eternity men. The south already soes them
behind there, more terrible than an army
with banners; they desire to settle the war
before this second arffiy takes the sword.
For they know that really tho revolution
is on our sidf, and that as qoon as the na
tion feolß that, and acts upon it,
of the south is gone, lxi that moment they
become the Pharaohs and taskmasters, and
America the revolutionary. Israel, bursting
their fetters, scorning their flesh pots, and
going forth in the strength of Israel’s God
to inherit tho land declared unto their
fathers.
“We xbe the RtvoLYiiortiaia. It was
the revolution of the American nation that
made this war necessary,; the south stands
relatively where it always stood, end whorr
the tyrant has stood since the world began.
This is true, in any fanciful or strained
sense,* butin the simplest end most direct
sense. Slavery has always ruled this
country. As soon as a seat of power was
reared, stevezy assumed it. Its red wes ex
tended over the lot of the righteous, and
they put forth their hands to iniquity. It
ruled commerce, it expunged the truth of
history, it brought iu index Expurgatorius
on the page of school book and prayer book.
Scholars wrote for it; divines preached for
it; it clasped the Bibles with handcuffs and
festooned the Cross of Christ with chains.
“IU tyranny was over the north. In the
south was iu throne; the southerners were
its royal family; on the north waa laid its
rod of iron. Under it their great men bow
ed low, licking the dust from i the tyrant’s
foot, and -getting jin return his imperial
kick. Did a minister plead ifor liberty?
Slavery commanded that he should be ex
iled from his pulpit, and his family live on
a crust of bread. So it ordered when Dud
ley Tyng ‘stood up for* the Christ of.to-day
with the scourges on his back, and sent to
take his place in a northern pulpit a South
Carolinian, to plot against the nation rtbilst
in that pulpit. Did any Senator speak for
freedom? He was avoided as a leper, or
stricken down in his place. The north was
made to plait the lashes for its own back, to
forge die chains for its own limbs; the men
whom she furnished, and who were called ;
Presidents and Representatives, were not
Presidents and but min
ona and crawling courtiers, sitting under
the fooUtoob of slavery. None could be
trusted. Head after head even of the no
blest was laid if there were a dry
rot among men.. The dog star reigned and
raged, and the best man could tell
whelher.he would not be a slave hound be
fore night We had no country. In pro
portion as we were real men our country
sank and hardened about us into a cold
dungeon, where we lay chilled and chained,
with vermin creeping over us.
“Against this tyrant America at last in
augurated* revolution. Slowly and with
many disparagements the feeble cause of
liberty prepared for a final struggle. Her
pulses beat low, her heart throbs are faint;
she is only not crushed because purblind
oppression imagines the life already/ or
nearly, ebbed out. But an old fire that was
in deep alliance, with the -central beats of
the earth, and under which old wrong had
again and again shrivelled like a burned
scroll, yet lingered in her hearlL j Ation the
flame leaped at eye and tongue, and de
spite the play of the engines, deßpite the*
cold water jets sent from ’pulpit and.press
and sooiety and olfice, the winda of "heaven
fanned that flame until the parties were
consumed, the political elements, melted
with fervent heat, and slavery compelled to
begin the world over again, and rebuild its
throne over those ashes if it could. 1
“It was the noblest resolution the world
ever saw that placed Abraham Lincoln In
the White House at Washington—the
noblest,; because tho first ever. known
upon this plaQst where the legitimate wea
pons of troth were alone, used. These
ffiighty strdngholds' yielded to the voioos,
the persuasions, the reasons of earnest and
justjpen; they were besieged, with the ar
rows ef light, shelled with the bombs of
free schools and-free thought. ‘Lovels the
hell-spark tbaV burneth up the, mountain of
iniquity/ stud Mfihommed. * So also havo
we found it; betides those*who truckled to
slavery jfith, mean motives,, th'ere ' were
many. fond, and simple souls Who could
‘think naevil/were it of the devil, and
those yielded ioslavery that vast extent of
rope wherewith, .when attained, rogues do
proverbially -hang themselves. : And thus
the retoldtion/Without the firihg of a. gun
from, the, side of jtbe revolutionists, had
gono ou until the sleps of freedom were on
tho threthold of a liberated Snd redeemed
hew world.’ - L
“The Southern movement is, then, not a
revolution, bat a j rebellion against; tiio
noblest .of. revolutions. It* is. 1 in league if
confederates against the peaceful - and; legal
evolution ofliberty T on thiscontinent. :it is
an insurrection against a resurrection. it
is slavery, hoary tjryani of the agcs/stani -
log beforehumdnijy’s morxling, p lifting ii s
bara agamst ths oay streaks, and cryin g
acentsed dawn, lftto"the' chan -
ben of night.’ ”
others in both Houses. Slavery has tried its
hand in driving Charles Sumneato the wall
before this, and' wfiaie now ia his would-be
murderer, and those who coolly looked on and
saw a helpless man stricken to the ground in
the Senate Chamber. Charles Sumner sur
vives, aud to-day has the respect and sympa
thy of the boat men in two hemispheres, and
he cannot be driven to the wall. The crack
of the lash has lost Its potency.
JTEW JtnW'ERTMBSMEjrTH.
jyj’AUVE INK,
VBOTOGSAPB ALBUMS,
DIARIES FOR
\V . S . HA VE N ,
Wood and Third Xtnefr, Pittsburgh.
\ LLEUHJSNTy COUNTY, S3-rm
XJI CotumonvrMltii of Pumuylvania,
heiro and all other* iotureeted in tiiu estate
M. Trail, late of tho city of Now York, deceawd. In
pursuance ot the fifteenth section of an Act of At-
Bentbly of a*ld Coiuaunuoalth, entitled “An Act to
create a Sinking fund, aud to provide tor the gradu
al and certaiu exliAguishuieut of the'debt of the
AjpnimoDweallh,'' passed the loth day of April, A. l».,
l»<9, you are. hers by cited to be and -appear before
mr, Wl*. J. UicuAao£ox,.Rcgieter for the Probate of
Wiiti, Ac., in aud lor said county, on or before MON
DAY, the 6thday of January, A. D., 18U2, then and
Iliere to show cause why the collateral inheritance
tax upon the following Real Estate aboil not be col
lated uuder the provisions of sold Act of AewmbJy;
her< iu fail not. tiaid Real Estate coasiils of
3Tiouw» and Lou on Wood at rent,
•’* , ** “ ** Hand ••
I Vacant Lot •• “ “ »
1 “ “ r«an “ 1
1 Home and Lot *• “
l Uotuaa and Lota " St. Clair f
Given under a; hand and teal of office at Pimlurih,
this stb day of Sccamber, A. D n IB€l.
dcO:atrtd J. KICHA&JSQy, Eagiater.
IVT UKPHY & KOUNsJ,Commission
MmuJbast*, and Wholeaala Ptalen In 3IACK
tiALMON, till AP, U'EtUNKO, CODlltill,
-tc., No. .I*6 North Wb*D'«s, bttwwn Ban and Arth
strf.-ts, PafLiottrir. \
“ s *> barrels Him Mackerel—Jargs, tad medium
li 2 tad 3, In assorted packages.
M barrels prim* No. l H«m. T Btlmca.
11M> do tcOUOBjT Mhnft
40tw do superior No 1 Herring,
Consisting of dlderoct brand*, Labrador, H-difax,
B*y of Island tad Eartport, Ac.
»>oo boxes Scaled tnd No. l Bmakod Btrrino
qoiaftllo tnd Grand Bank Coutuh,
which *o now. offer at the lowest cash nrlCoe, »*»■*
-solicit t c*}\ Jwifore buying, i -
. ' MCBPHT A KOON3,
' **°' h’orth Wharves,
|\JBKUJLNi’IIib LOMKAkh! AsSS
, -f. 9. ,All _Sa'' MSTCBES.-J. HSRKY SID
bSQre will girt his last a&tartalnmutt belbre
to* lUrcautila Library Association and tbs public
generally, on TBUBSOAY EVENING, Doccmfaar
ath, at LArATETTE HALL. -wxwmusr
Si?>j«*-->AnET«ntng with tho Humorista.
, wS?™. *n °‘ c fe ck ‘ to comsisnco
at V&o dock. Tickttsjp cenU,*to bahadat tbsßodc
and HuWe Stan* and 7 Library Rooms, and at ths
door. v •
■w.lLlnzuß, i. B. Bmti,
f ■ B - haneor, w. u. ITOowni,
Joa tumi, Ucfn Onmiam.
Ijt LECTION.—An election of the St
J-i CUir QU Ceiapuy for 00. PrMl6«nt. fl v .
innKton tor tbs a«m suaulna ysar, will bs bald on
J^ Vt ’ ABY SUx.mitBENJAHIN
SAJiSBUBY’S hoaso, In South PUUburgb, Utwsah
th# hours of 12 tad 2 o’clock. , *
By order of tba Board.
dat:ltd«wtdy
Orrtcc Giavelaioi akd Pittsscmm Raiuoan cV, V
T ~, Clardlaod, Noraabar 87th, 18tfL j
IE ANNUAL MEETING of the
SlockholtUrs.pf this Compauy, for the elsction of
mrocturiaad tranaactlod of other. buSlmsds, will b*
J 1 ™ InCUVeUmi, on
WEDNESDAY, tb. Ist day of January tiexi, at 10'
u clock tu m. ■» ;
The Transfer Book* will be cloesd on I he 23d day of
Docembar and ope 4 on the 6th of
u030.30td ! ! E. BOOK WELL, Secretary.
rpHli FOUKTU WABO kICOUTIOS
A CLASS will gl*e an Entartainment itnOONCERT*
UALL, on FRIDAY EVENINO, Dec. «th. Thaex
creuea eabrace'aalact and original Speochee, Comic.
Dialogues, d*. Yctwo’s Baas* Bias will be in at*
tendance,- Doors open at 6% o'clock—to commence
iLlai noatrdtd -
J ti 1X501) SI
rt S
M on hand and for eel* at low pritue by tp'
r* «>
i "
w CIM.UN JOllN'dToN, Barooiar,
a - 5
o . ! £
Aud Dealer in Choke Family Medicines, o
g . Cui-/t/tr un.i t'untdt £&rt(t jj*
FINE B-ftINCES. '
. . j FINESYBINOES.
The subscriber has a large and complete assortment
of One Metal and Glass Syringes, embracing every Va
riety and for all purpoaa*. Also, a fine assortment of
Gum Elastic Self-Injecting Syringes.. Them Syringes
are superior to any now in use fi>r couvanUnce, disa
bility and cheapness, and well worth the aiteqtloo of
those haring use for them. ' . ' '
. „ . JOSEPH XXEHIXd,
Corner of thrDlamond'andhtarkefstrvst.
de2 .
—The membare o/ tha At.
J-J legbemr County Agricultural'Sodsty will meet
on WEDNESDAY, January lst, 1902, At No. as Fifth
•treat, at 11 o’clock a. n>* for the purpose of electing
a Board of Manager* and of the Society fcr
the ensuing year. i
W. 8, HAVEN, President Board. ■
8. SCHftTtrt-Jr., Secretary. ds3:ltdiwtdF '.
ok. ViLvULiIS H. si'oWfi,. ;
rnxsioiAS iSD nuegion, ' .•> I
Office, Up, 38 FEDERAL SXHEET, , 1
(Opposite Colonnade Rots, hear Suspocsfoa-firldpL.)
JyiMp ” Allegheny city.
OR.*MrO. '■ ?■■■:, ' ;
103WYLJE8TKEET, V ; ;
PJIXSBCBOHi >
rjUMoTU V TKL'uuMirg A’EWkkjK
LESSOKB IN Lin. ■’
■srlss of Ltoilisr E»ays, hT Tmrrtrr
author tT “Ocld S oil," VLrtlori to* TToting' Peppte,o.
“Bitter Street,'’. v T ol.,litme. 51,00/ :
GIII COUNTRY AMD TBI CUUKCH, bj San;
L. BjevD. D., 1 v«|. t Flexible Covers," STceat*.
lor eels by *~ ft; 8. PATH), 03 yobd htreet. ~
r ■ x> THK CITUSbSbop i'iW^kCktiH-
X I mnooncn, mywlf .to you u. * candid*!* tot tLe
for ib* pfficu of CUXOONXBOL-
I»EB. 1/ along oxpvrikaco In- varied aid 4xt*ctiVa
basim**, aperfcd ttoxulUurity wlthaccodntsi abd tie
l<loutmc*Uqo or a 11*Mima irtth.aU.tbo ltttmnta »f
my native cl ty t . entitle mo to yoor. confidnx* and
«uj»jwrt,l w-lil confidently hope for yonr an (Trace*.
; •{ . .WIIiLIAIt tiTTLE.
lior
l cLmellia flowers, ti;
SIERDODH’S GBEKNHQUSI,
‘ • . - . ao2&d*ttf ■
To'cfrUcra,!
Oakland:
UulbUiki' L\I)U kUBKuH-UUIP
KETB,of4<nmiiu« qtuUitr. Anotiur lot Ja»t
rreeirfcJ it un fidi* Katoer l*pot f 86' T «nd >£S gr
CUlrrtmt. ■ 6j\ t J. kIL PBIM.IPIL •
* V.wwyuid dejaeftl® **«•!• it
vhoOMktadntairtiy 7 ,V. P. UASBBAU,.
»030 No. 87 Wood ttmt.
jne§r »«»ri!KTjiß»E|ra. j
/"AAK3.AN I) ,SELKCrlcH(Siir3rho
S' rxaad S~loi. of 511- MARKHAM'S SELEIT
bCMW.IL, at Oakland, will commence on MONDAY.
D*ertnb*i‘ Vth. ■ Thl* School U ee*y of Vrcsw. behi*-
hut **w .taps from p, e Oaktand lUi|iT Railway
Station, while at Urfsame Umeit £ in runlet, nitr
ed situation, entirely Amoved from those Influence*
andeurronndings which w often of the
pupil *
turn or tciTiojt.?jra tuui or nmr< wick*:
PrfiMryitehola»/flnft > *cUM::..;r-:.;;...„;;...;.;..s SfiO
do do second clam S,t*)
IntcrmedUta, arifrcpmmdu Eugitah branched 12,0 y
♦I, "* EuglUb or Languages I&,UU
The School y<«rwill, comprise three term* of fov
teen ween eaeh. "Further Information may be oh*
l.lnsd ftvoi 511 m HAItKHAH In p»r»n. altlttr .t
tho School or at 142'Fenn street, Plttaburah
del:3td * '
/AXIDE Ob' IKON PAINT,
best article, for the purposed s known for pre
serving IRON AND WOOD WORK FROM RUST
AND DECAY; for BRIDGES, ROOFS, BOATS,
TANKS, OIL BARRELS, or other work exposed to
the weather.
A» a FIRE-PROOF PA IST, It i* luvalnable, and
la warranted superior In body,, permanency and cheap
ness to any other Faint known.
Made aud tor sats by the ton or entailer quantity by
the
PENS’A. SALT MANUFACTURING CO.,
d<?3-3rmig 24 Wood street,Pittsburgh, Pa.
A I) MINI tO k ’tTaALE OP
a 1 STOCK AND ti<HHP.—On TUESDAY EVEN
-I>G, December 10th, at 1% o’clock, at the Commer
cUl Sales Room*, No. 64 Fifth etreet, by order of
Jernee P. Sterrett, Admlnletrator da bomu non aun
UtiatmtUo am/wo of Frederick Lorent. deceued. will
be sotd,\ -
<*&- r eharee PitUborgh, Ft. W./ne aud Chicago R
B. Company.
$* flO-100 Scrip of the same Company,
tl-shares Ohio and Penn'a R. R. Co. Stock.
s'<#) Scrip oft ha muds.
dafrftd J. G. DAVIS, Anetioneer.
1801. HEW QOOD3. 18CI.
I ''
1861. SEW GOODS. 1861.
NEW GOODS.
£0 dozen WOOL SLEEVES, for 12% cants par pair.
WOOL HOODS, for 87%e., fiOc n 78c., fl and *1,25.
ZOUAVE CAPS, for s7%c, SI and SL2S.
NUBIAS ANDSONTAGS.
75 down WOOLEN HOSIERY.
SILK AND WOOLEN GLOVES A GAUNTLETS.
WOOLEN YARNS—aII colon.
50 down FRENCH CORSETS, for 62%c. per pair.'
BALMORAL SKIRTS.
BALMORAL HOOP SKIRTS.
And everything tuually found in a flr»t<L«a
WHOLESALE AXD RETAIL
TRIMMING STORE.
CHARLES GIPNER,
No. 78 .Market Street, I*ittsburuh.
no26iMrwT
FOB SALK BY
a. K. y. UVTfJI TAn.ua.
rpAYLOK & BROTHER. Commission
J. Mkbckant*,
No. 45 STREET,
Cincinnati, on 10.
®3" Penotui attention given to the trarchaM and
eale of PRODUCE and MERCHANDIZE janonUly.
Moderato advancna made on connlcnmenta of itattlo
article*. *
’ Mean. TBOMAS ABBUCKLE A CO., Pittaboreh.
“ KING, PENNOCK * CO., do. *
JOSEPH C. BUTLER, Etq., Cincinnati, .
And. Cincinnati mere ban te generally. no2:3md
L Agent,
PRODUCE AND*COMMISSION
fc MERCHANT. -
And I&oleaala and Retail Dealer in
WINES, BRIDIES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS;
AtSO,
RECTIFYING DISTILLER.
' ■ I
No. 6 Wood Street, PliUbnrgh, Peua’a.
: noS3rntapl * ’ >
gQ DOZEN HOoi> tiKmiy,
- f' all n«w atylee and ahapee.
the Balmoral, ob
Vada with Cord mid Tagas.
WMircfaioU. ( *nd Dealer* supplied tt low prtoo,
nbia RATON;UACfttJH* CO., if Fifth*t.
75 'JtIN 'l'd' J?AMy i'iiAVJlLlN(}
\JC ■ - 1 1 aprnra- ‘ ■-*
At&T BOCKS AMD GLOVES,
wnrriß undershirts
*t-a "
>v:aND DRAWERS—t!I«U«e.
tto» RATON, MACBDM 41 OP., 1 IT Fifth g.
KU NEELD
BYTHESTEAMSHIFASIA.
ANOTHER NEW LOT IN ,CHOICE COLORS,
Rewdted thUdey bj- • 1 1
nose • EATON, MACRUH ± CO.. I? Fifth it.
yTEWfiOOIW iA'bykATlStitiAfd,
, : NEW COMPOEJB,SCARFS AND MCPIT.EHS,
NEW SONTAGS, SLEEVES AND NUBIAS, ~
WHOLESALE ANIJRETAIt.
,'***■ EATON. - MACBUM A CO.. ll'yllA ,1.
JLf SHIP.-lit. Arm of B. '* J. WATSON A CO.,
Ul.lj an,.Awl 15 th« Grocwy and Buat.Btora"bDal-
M>, n d&aolnd oa lb. eth daj of Noiambtr, 1861,
1? tin arlthdranl of E. B. ANDERSOX, tad Ih.
buaiaaaa will bafcloaad <nt by JAB. WATSON, of th.
-Ana of LA J. WATSON, It thalr onoa, wbo alooa
baa authority to aattW thabwiDeaa of Iba lata firm.
' JAMES IVATSOIf, Ja.
Plllabtintb. lB6l,—ma&Smd ~
pARTNEKami' NOTICE.—The part-
X aenhlpbetaofcreexlstfajrbetweea tha under
signed, uader the Arm of GRAFF, UEEBE A CO.,
haa bees dteolved, JACOB BEEBE baTingtrarchM
•d tha teUrestof CHRISTOPHER ORAFF. The
ttwtaMi will b»adttled by REESE A ORAFF.
1 MATHEW OBAFF,
! JACOB BEEBE,* • .
11 CHRISTOPHER OBAFF.
PUttborgb, Bor. 30, 186L—lwatewT
Hl/riCt.—The lately oc*
wtpied bj.as haviag been destroyed bvilfrvw*
harereißOTed to No, t&i Liberty street, a lew door*
below our fenaor location.
We Me BOw recelTlnx a choke lot'of; BACON
'SBOdIiBEBS, SIDES' hod HAMS direct Icon the
Smoke House, and- Ihall be pleseed to see our custu
m *r»- [eeWritf] WM. B. HAYS A C 0...
fIjUTOS.
p RISfCE r&" ™ ■ U II | - ]| |k|
DtFBOfEB PATISIuU K u 5
• ' MEt|€)ip;E'o ,; N g
Z i WHiissxb sos irni •izjiiis,
: In th« tolled 3tn<», «m
-ploylnt S9o : mm, inj Jnlihlog 80 ioitnimansi p«r
iretk. CHAfclOllTli BIMCE, L"
Ifo. 62 Fifth etnet,
Wholesale and Bcttll Ajiwt'Jbr J>Ittsbarpfc '
-deft y-H ? 1-< i Weatenrl* nnyyfraali.
ruiICKEBING & SONS’ PIANOS.—
A n.w, fail ntjiplr, <Unct from tU Xranfretory
«B«*tw,-.ofiW4lHllTOcUT*N*ir.'Beata CHIC&
KBIMSf lASOA lapMimd «d cured Bwnrood
farnttur, Jut ncairadaad ferula by i
JOHN H.-MILL6K, 8! wood ttroet,
Bold J :-b«t»««n I>l«a<Md«n»T«nddih iit
\J ly dirnd n*w* Kowwbod' Piano, with JBU into
tyr «a»oftbo.cUfe*t Anns: la Xiw, fork,
wt ~ —:——
A n»m 7 ocUriEo»*Tro6d,' 170
Anw?- « '**•* • •«''•" : Tt 4..„.n M ..T^Q
.Far sale by JOHXS. JOiIdLOB,
QQtS wood #fc, I’otywn JMandod ml 4th tt;
iXKl>._Tilp ild rp-
_—Tha respect-
V/ ftiflj In&nQ thiJmblic tKat&bfe b unr ibllßg at*
» fraction »t>OT» COBY, h«r eoaprehwtflr*
ttOCfc'Of*':'-' T,; ” 11 +
mworOBTM,- ‘ *•»' . .
- r . ; . JiBLODEOire, “ ' • ’
V''' L:U;r -
A*lh*»ffl«aujTiM>PATrKHSo3rd3?E\>'BUlXru
11W»
1 - OHABfiIWTI'BtrME, JTo: (3 flfth
Ag^U^KpfcWaytooi
L>EACHEfe.—3O ~ ftuah. lined
L, Jtntuclqrlialte* (a state «od Ar «!• be \ -
•poa iratah picxbt 460;
piUNOK AISEB!pPOTAIt)fi!S-M3ne
'X'corloadfoitoivihil^raßtrb/ T '
dgg . ~. „ i«. 0,. TOWfc’* CO. ‘
■A-PM-Kai r
'xv;r:« «•*'..! -
i ~••> -4fpr.TAn i
mi.t.imi ’
hhLL^a
sJ article te adity ' J. B. Jfo.
KiriHixcn
CBIMiOIi AND BLACK SKIRTS,
HORNE’S TRIMMING STORE,” .
1 's^i'i*. Vi.'*.,
WOiTT Market Street.
;ri .-Mr-, 'V-'.' ~U ; .
**®etre4 tMrwiek larfaqoa&tltiwGf
TYOOJjy HOOM. SONTAfIa. SUfiIAA, fiOAETS.
r~-*Jra, AND VIOTOBUTES:
BOCKA ro3t 80LMKEI, InSuro ASD^
: - ■ WOOS MBBIDBBBB, rLEIOT HJT. S’
v* —*a COTOW FOBB,Ayi>»AHCT /
.' .• ai- -: £WOOIi BOSS.’”-'A' iptondM : «.
c ■
; GLOYZSand GAUHT- ■ ■■■■■•:■'
....... --iZTSJorLAMES ••.-.■•■
-4 '<*
KID GLOVE*
, HZATTIobBT7CX i'* '
I QhOYXSj • flrft-z»u article ./ J.
fcrtheaoldMa.., GOUJtTBT '
MKBCHANWA3O) BILLOIEa
will find per Meortmu t of BIBBOK8.:
- BCCHXB, FLOWZB& BOMSrraTHAm
AKp IUBBAK8; OIHVXBtIIS'BOMBA- ,
EKZ&XBOUra CHATO, Afc,
by aayia l&edty, either ia price, orSaallty.
■aoMnnwT JQBKPH HORSE, nilarfcatrt.
TNJHA "IIbjBBJSR IXiUR BRRIf/od
Ajt.lnctlroiMlb.taU. Bottom™,. 1
tif ••;. >'! '■' t. kh. Ttnuittn.
Tl/fJUJi ukttAHKin «tow mil for nle
IXLbr tag OAIAH bicot * 00.
! Jjrt goods cheap fqr cash; 1
T. M. BURCHFIELD'S
PiOUREp CASHMERES.
do MERINOS for j?sc.
CASHMERE PLAIDS. |
BLUE CLOtH, for Boys' Wear.
BOYS' CAS3IHEBE3. I ;
BLACK CLOTH, for Ladiei’ Cluaka. %
WATER-PROOF CLOTH. !
SUAWL3, CLOAKS.
FIGURED DELAINES—new style \
EMBROIDERIES—haIf price.
tST*C«U and exainine baftnv ptirrluMitig ei*ewhnt.
NORTH-EAST CORNER FOURTH A MARKET
STREETS.
GOODS FOR CASH'
.I.VD CLOCKS,
HANDSOME !
Dress Goods,
Flannels and Canton Flannels,
CHECKS AND TICKINGS.
. /
Prints and tiinghnms,
FRENCH MERINOS AT 50 CTS.,
Castimerti, Satinetts ud Tweeds,
Hosiery, Needle Work,
<fc., Ac., Ac.
C. HANSON LOVE,
No. 74 Mamet Street.
no3o ! ■
CLOAKS,
Fire Italian anti Upwards,
PRESS GOODS,
FROM THE
NEW YORK AUCTIONS,
‘ •• /. tl'- ■ i
J. W. BARKER & CO’B.
NO. 59 MARKET STREET.
GREAT ‘BARGAINS
gILKS,
1 SILKS, ‘ '-’i- • •
. ANP OTHEH
C3-OOISS'
J. W. BARKER & CO’S,
NO. 59 MARKET STREET j-’
f *IApST IBS
NEW YORK AUCTION SALES, i
Great. Bargains.
',nogi:M»wT ' ? .■. . . . ?
U si&CIM JTOTICEB.
GEORGE H. KETSER,
Wholesale Druggist
M EDI Cl NR DEALER,
no. Jiu wool) STREET, PITTSBUROH. PA.
???? ? ? r t
TBUS&ES FOB TUB CVSE Oi'BEBNIA OB
RUPTURE. -
MARSH'S RADICAL CURE TRUSS.
RITTER’S PATENT TRUSS.
FITCH’S SUPPORTER TRUSS
SELF-ADJUSTING TRUSS.
DR. BANNING'S LACE OR BODV BRACE, Ibr
the cur* of Prolapeu* Uteri. Pike, Abdominal and
Spinal WeakneaeM.
DR. S. S. FITCH’S SILVER.PL.ITED SUP
PORTER. , , ;
PILE PROPS, Ibr the aapjaji taod i*un* of Pile*.
ELASTIC STOCKINGS, for treat and mfeo*»
rein*.
ELASTIC KNEE CAPS,, for wk kii#» Jvlot#,
ANKLE SUPrOaTJBBS,for weak ankle joint*.
suspensory bandages.
SELF-EJECTING SYRINGES; alia every kintf of
Syringe*. <
DR. KEYSEK h«4 «Uo a IRCSS Wbkb yill radi
cally euro Hernu or Rupture.
tf**Orrics it Hl4 Dftca more, No. uq Wood
STKEZt, Sign of the GoUuli Mortar.
DR. KEYBER prescribe* tri cases of Chronic Di*-
eftsea; and has Inainttuants for Doa/liws and aim oat
overy disease requiring mechanical support.
GALVANIC BATTERY ok ELECTBO-MAGNET
IC MACHINES, for medical purpose*, of a x«*y supe
riurklnd, will be sent free of expruw charges,, wher
an express runs, upon a remittance of Tan Doi-
Lir*. Address DB. GEO. H. KEYBEB,
140 Wood street, Pittsburgh, Fa.
DIARMHEA CUBED BY SWAYNE'SBOWEL
CORDIAL. Every bottle vrorranted or money re
funded. Sold at DR; REISER'S,
No. 140 Wood street.
BED tiU(*3 1 ROACBESt The Hotjsskeeper's
Btfie. Sold at DR. KEYSEB'9,I4O Wood st.
BATS AND MICE.r-S uxe destruction to these
Vermin by using TAR NELL’S EXTERMINATOR,
an entirely new preparation, and warranted to re
moT# those pests frbm every house. Sold at
Dtt. REISER'S, Ho Wood street.
EXTRA RAZORS.— I' have a few KrTka RA
ZORS, which! will close out at coat. | A
ti£o. H. XEYSER, lib Wuod 'aireet.
BEAD A CUE CUBED.—A n Ui&uikte euro for
Headache will U» funnel in PItAZEK'S HEADACHE
PILLS. Try them. Price 25 ceuti, at j'■
jy3o:<UwT KEYSEIt'd, Uo Wood ttnset.
*atr®
__ 'o Horse Owners.—Ur. Sheet’s
INFALLIBLE LINIMENT FOB HORSESIU uiri-
Tt»U»d by any; In all cases of Lament*,, Arising from
Sprains* Ur ulsm, or Wrenching, il* effect isnugical
and certain. Harness or Saddle- Qsits, Btfatchee,
Jlaugn, he.,it will also turs 'speedily, Spavin and
Htugbvne may be easily prevented and cored In their
incipient stages; but roptfrmodcases .are beyond the
possibility of a radical Cure, ifo case of the kind,
however, la so desperate or hopeless but it'mhy.be el*
loriated by this Liniintnt, and,its fluthfnl applica
tion will always remove Die lameiwaa and enable the
hone to travel with comparative ease. . . *
Zvery horse ownerahouldlmve this remedy it hand*
for its timely use at the first appearance of Upmms
will effectually prevent these formidable dlaeuie men
tioned, to which all home are liable* land which ren
der vj many otherwise valuable hence nearly worth
less. . c ;/j.• s _ ''t 4 3
K. E. SELLERS 1, CO., .Agsuts, corner Of I 'Wood
and Second streets* Pitubtirgh. , i ; ai»i7JydawP
jpjpTßlood good—Attentim ii nwlf.
CLOAKS,
•d to tha mart moariutlc and •deatiflcprapdration,
sdrertUsdin another coluiu'o. It is ahcntlrafy mi
disco Vary, and must oat U confoundad with any of
the muneroas patent medlcinoa of , tbs’ daj. It is a
cart*iarani*ly for all ths .diseases * pacified, and n>
fscialijr those of a chroninnatare-r-uf long'atkndlng
of weeks, month* end years. Saderani, try It. .
Htssu. Cacscn I Uproar, of; New Tori, are tb*
sols agaats for it, and also proprietor* of the-world*
raqowncd Us. Eeros’* iSrexmE Cotntax. an ortt* '
cls wUshertry Blothtr should bar*'in harnodidns
dos«t lacataofiued; tad containing, as U dot*. no
paragoticOr cpiaUof anykind, Hcanba radedopon
with tfcs utmost coofidanca, and will ba Jbosd an in*
veluaM# spacific in. aU casta
—Okie &o» /caraol, Colambtu. -
- For p*J* bj GJEOU6E H, KPYSfcB, Aftnt,-X0.140
-Wood ttreot, PitUbcrgh; PA : v y d*TT-,djwT
tort, flow
, In■» Boal*dL r EaVdop#,
.Prices c*ot«. : .j, ~ ■•. , r . x*X^
AXactumjenfibatfatnri;imimant andlladkal
jaroN
notary Smlaiona, flagoai DabiUty;inA TmpaAi
meat* to Harriago geaarmUy, Narrooanim, Ocnsamp-
Uaa. KpU.pay ani FJ$ Jtantal and Physical laca
paolty, matting from Stif-Ataaa, Ac.. £7 BOST. /.
CULYKBWILL, anthor of tbiOunßooi.
4e.»*c.
.“A Boon to Xnocsaxna of Suva iacae." 1 '
i-SentiiutUraeal, In a plain eimlcpe, frr injfrfrtrwi.
pMt-p<ld; oa receipt of iix"c*»t* or two portage
•Umpe,bjr . .DB. CH. J|. C. JtlM,
’-Ic. N*,t.VPbirt-6fflceßoi iie.
eefc3m<Uwt . T .; T^-
JKjC*Lake Superior Copper XiUuil
WOBBB, PiTUßcaoir. - ;Q
_ PARK, M’CUEDY & CO,
MamiLctumt of iSHEATHIHO, BRAZIERS’ ASB
BOLT COPPEB, PRJ&SEO COPPEB BOTTOMS,
BAIBEDBTILL BOTTOMS, SPALTEB SOLPBB;
tiso ImjKwtsii lid iladin PfcATB,
SHEET IRON, WISE, Ac. OonM sally on hnd,
TIMBERS' M ACHIbRS AMD TOOLS.' '
\Vi»luocil,No.lU'yirat»BdlM«<<Wd ««.!«,
Pittsburgh, Pena's. •• .
- order, of Copper cut to toj deslrtd p*t«
i—he l '' • ’ mrZfcdswlrT
maiw ixri&i&i*?™*** 0 -
UEhinioLD’a extra^^ 1 *I™*™- 1 ™*™-
_ •••-.. IHK GJU£aT DIURETIC
HELMBOLD’S EXTBACT SuSu.-f v W AiU
' the,great diubCtio,
AndaFoniUreoiid Specific Tlen^jjEbrDiaaaaea of
, Qnrcl»
nett, aodall riieeeeaa ofthe Urinary Orgiae,
Bea-advartiaunentia ''another Column. ontf
and'Bond for the thodlcihe. at , 'bhce» '*BrtrjJUt Of
CoCTtJtnrana. •,>
WM, C. *OWanox..„.. r ■ 0,1,0.
- viTanov »oi;aun.^. M ..:.w..s.trxuO]i nuat
£=jr bobutsoit, hihis m.
l.E,u*, rorot,tst oxo MAcaixms, ~Wasri»tor
Wo as,, Pltulmrgh, Pane's.
Orncs, Ho. 21 Maiut Bibut.
MsauLcturs all kiodj of BXEAM ENUILESAKD
MILL HACHIMEBY, CASTIHOB, HAILBOAD
WOBKISTEAMBOHEBSAKD' SHEET JBOS
WORK. f ,S J '
•arJOBBmj 4-KD BEPAIRIKG dous oi ‘short
uotko. ~.-,AvrTf-u -bm,. ahgtdlr
SefJOHH COCHEAS * BBO^
Manufoctnror* ofIBOBEAiItKd^IBOJfviirLTS,
akd vault looks, wixdow bourses,
WEOJOW QUABLB, Ac., Kot 9t Second atreet tad
W Third vtmt, between WobdotfHidSi. V
: Koto ou hod •'‘variety of iuw Fattarna, itocy
and pWn.vui table .; j : 1
;' attention paid to OrardXots>
Jabbing dona at abort noUca. ■ v .
X3C*ttttibiiigli Hteu Work*.
neac a. s'cruovoß.
JONES, BOYD & CO,
Mthulheiuisw of CAST BTEEL; tto,'S§BlS9,
PLOW ABB A. B. STEAL. STEEL SPBPHIA s »n
AXLES, corset if 80. tatf YlotsObeis,' PtUshegh,
MAh mr ACTtJKEItS sttd doslns hi BOOK, FBIBT
CAP. LETTEB ASD ALL JUL'M <,» WBAP.
tiso>am.,,;; *.• fr
list* rsmond from Eo. S 7 Wood strsst tußo.
31 SmltjiUdi stisat. Pittsburgh. Pa ir s ; .
»»~CABH OB TBADZ FOB BACA JL
pya. HoYJLka ± ftOHffvssfe
io POBEIGIf ASB Bomwno BILLB OP BZ.
CnAXOEI CEETIriCATES OT DEPOSIT. Bin
BOIES ABD'SPICIE, 80. 67 Bsrhst stmt, Pitts
trorgh, Fa. ~ V'- ,'- s r •, , : <
•V^Oolfectiooa. autib. on tQ th*'pdncte2ctt»
tteoughoul ths Eaitod Stsu.-;: :
p-rntY SI i-uIUM, 15^
WABDUfp ASB COMMISSIOS HEBGHAST»d
ia CHEESE, BCTTEB, SEEDS,
iJ~P< ea Product gonsrsily,; So. 24 Wood stnot,
J?ltisbiirsh.PA i ■’
liixTUs,' Usrch&ntTir
LOlt, Ho. H Sr. Cists Snxn.Br. Irish’* BußA
te*,Pliiiimgh,Ps. spso