The Daily Pittsburgh gazette and commercial journal. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1861-1863, December 06, 1861, Image 2

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    FRIDAY MORNING, DEC; 6, 1801.
Poe Hotel Arrivals Eee fourth page.
- The Message—What U Said of It.
7 rfSe Chicago Tribune interprets the Hear
' tag* by whatit knows of 'the ■ opinions of
-'“the-President,-rather than by- wbatjt says :•
"Tjte cautious-language' which Mr. lan
- cola employs,' doer not hide from as, who
/;. know* the deep moral convictions of the man,
-the-purpose .that he has in Tiiw, nor the
v hSly hotc, which he most feel, of that giant
iniquity that has at last brought war and
desolation into this land. He has come,
. .-—lf not fully up to.our advanced position, at
least within easy hail of those who have
.. been looking anxiously back to see what
progress, he would. make. Congress will
' take himat his word. The members of that
Zr-ibody, if we may judge by what has trans
tr/‘ pired already, will interpret his meaning
. *’ in a way with which we even shall be con
' ’ * lent. :: We know not what.form their legis
,-<v lation will take; but of this w;e are assured,
' and'the Message is a warrant for what we
■, say, that in the deliberate action of the Re
. presentatives/of: the People, the President
*•' will gladly acquiesce.”
Cincinnati Commercial is only partly
pleased. Usays:
r 4-: ; /‘lt.is not a great State paper. As for its
style—enough is said when we observe that
Mr. Lincoln certainly wrote U himself.
%.V;‘.The"homely honesty of the President
never appeared in more rugged form than
• in this'Message; and there are not want
... iug evidence of that singular combination
of straighuforward indifferent obstinancy
'• 'and almost tlitioroas indecision which markka
--his'Character.
M, i ! upfae omission to disease the- “domestic
controversy.” Out "of which-the'war has
c . Bprung. and Oie quaint Lincolnian“phrsse
ology with; which, he takes leave of that
'Subject, are charming. In brief, the Presi
dent ha»: evaded the nigged issue, and
w leaves the everlaSlingslavery-question still
- ‘ adrift in the terrible rapids of the civil war,
. with the roar of a political Niagara nigh."
The Cincinnati Qazet(e~is veryjieTere in
its criticisms. The Philadelphia Bulletin
says.;../
.* : On the topic which excites so much in
. - terest at present—the disposition to be
made of- the slaves of rebels—the Presi-
dent does not come up~to~the wishes of the
people'of the North; but he probably thinks
' ' it is, at present, better to consult the wishes
[ of the people of the Border Slave States,
~j> —who are the most nearly interested in the
' matter.
. .. • .
The New York CbmnerctaHs warm inits
praises: . •
,This admirable document is all that could
be expected from the drank, straightforward
.and honest pen of the President. It is
Abraham Llncolnm every line, ingenuous,
direct, unqualified, cautious, thorough and
.'. .loyal to the very core—not merely loyal to
.to, the Stars and Stripes; but loyal to'the
znost sacred principles of r tbe Constitution.
is the work of a clear-headed man, sea
** ‘ jible of the gravity of the' time, re
. . sponsive tothe vast burden of trust de
volved upon him.
“contraband’* ‘question of course
/ merits the consideration of the President.
»■ -.. It is. no secret that he signed the confisca*
lion actiiTAugust, reluctantly, and it has.
’ been evident that he would lend himself to
none of the schemes which are foisted upon
■ . the ; public,and to which the passion and
. the imagination of so many respond. He
: discusses the question from his old consti*
tutional stand-point, and suggests the rem
. edyby colonisation for these waifs who did,
-“owe labor or service,” botrwho have in
“7; “some way- lost the means of meeting the
obligation. , The colonitation scheme is
similar- to that of Henry Clay. At all
1 evanta, the President desires, to get rid of
the blacks : freed by the war,' and erect for
them, somewhere, an empire of theit own.
Tho New York Evening Beet speaks in the
kindest manner of the President, as in fact
an ‘ the ‘ papers do, with one or two excep
; . tions. •It says: •• •
The official paper just transmitted to
-Congress by the President is not socharac
. teriatic in manner as his former messages
'r;' - have been.: There is the same tone of mod
‘Wration, the'same embarrassed sense of high
responsibilities, and the same fixed devotion
‘ ' /: to the- great fundamental principles of our
. popular theory of government. ,
On the question of the general policy of
* in the father conduct of
the) war, the Massage seems to us to want
Velesynessl We have read it several times
.with all the attention that we could muster,
bat we confess to only a vague apprehen
sion of what it'means. Sir. Lincoln is evi
• dently not yet decided in his own mind,
' »*- and he communicates his hesitation to his
' words. -- He asserts -his anxiety to con-
the war to the simple issue of re*
storingthe Union, which is the object
.J.of.sll He deprecates any. hasty
or extreme measnrea of a radical rev
olutionary character, in which he only ut
' :'ters the sentiments of all parties. His ev
’ ideut eagerness to dispose of the slavery
question without provoking any violent
convulsion is-honorable to his feelings ’of
' humanity. But with all this, it will be felt
unlversaUy tbat he does not meet either the
necessities or the difficulties of the case
.with sofficient determination.
• That something must be done with the
7:.,negro population of the insurgent states he
'[ ' ‘ ■ is/painfuily aware, but his view of practi
" ' caf solutions is limited and perplexed. He
hints at a possible colonisation of the Afri
. . can race, bond and freey-but in the same
V breath' he tells us of the importance and
.dignity of labor. But if labor be so im
portant and dignlficd as he represents, and
represents truly, why. seek to banish so
much of it from the nation?. "Our great
want in. this country, at all times, u of
-strong arms and willing hands ; we en
- courage immigration from abroad therefor;
, and it would, under all the lights ot politi
cal economy, be a suicidal stroke to dimin
ji; iah 'The southern sums in
particular are absolutely deficient of-labor,
so much so-ihat leading men haye thought
"'V of introducing it by force from Africa, and
. , • we: do not see the propriety of rendering
that deficiency larger.. Besides, if the cot
-ton and rice plantations can only be worked
' by blacks—as the southern statesmen al
most unanimously assert—why resort to a
scheme of depopulation which would leave
' r them ultimately ; abandoned and desolate?
• 7. Barely our fine tropieal districts are deserv
- Jng of a better treatment.
' The Hew Tork World is 1 delighted with the
Message. It i*j»:
It probably suffers somewhat from Us hasty
•' by telegraph, but its language
;it clear, terse and intelligible, and it is ftee
. from the wearisome prolixity which has here
tofore made Presidents' messages 10 heavy.
The President assigns to the subject of sla
very Its proper rank end subordination among
the questions relating to the management of
tho war. It la pot, In his estimation, a great
; ? question, but a minor question.
The Hew York TVwes seys: ~~
1 ' President's' Lincoln's Message is precisely
■ u sqch a document as any.one fkmiitay with his
character, would have anticipated. Jt is clear,
unpretending, frank and perfectly loyal to the
declaration and acts of.hu whole political life.
In regard to the question of slavery, Prcsi
. ' dent Lincoln spci.ks with firmness, but marked
* and oonscientious moderation. /With regard:
• to the negroes whoa the progress of tho war
~ sots free and throws \upon our hands, ho sug
gests tho propriety \of providing. for their
. eoloniaatio*— and alsdof accepting such slaves
as may be freed LyTSuteaotion In lieu pro
lasto of‘ direct taxes. We apprehend that the
project of colonising the negroes will be found
open to more objections than occur at first
sight. They wiU be imperatively needed to
cultivate the coil, and the expense ’of the
. scheme would be beyond any direct benefits to
/Wexpected^frbm.lt, /We think thf Govern
vk«t *ill . find it . necessary to establish for
' them some effective police government here,
- tdhowie, and retaining their labor Instead of
■*' seeding them out of the oouatiy., /-.
•The New York Herald is delighted. It
»7« : : -v.-ift
The first rogulur annoal;-Meai»ge of Presi
dent “Lincoln to th<riwo HouSei'of Congress is
before oar readers. ' They will find it a plain,
concise, unpretending, baainets-like- exposi
tion of our foreign and domestic afikirs, and
the reader will lay it d«Wh r satisfied from its
intrinsic evidences that Ihe aothor of this
State paper is fully entitled to his familiar
designation of “Honest Abe Linnoln/*-
The New York lW6»*e draws a contrast
between the Message of Mr. Lincoln and that
of Jeff. Davis. “The latter is quite com
monly presumed the abler of the two; he is
certainly the better- grammarian; and he
knows how to use the English language with
decided perspicuity and force.” tin temper,
however, Lincoln, has the decided advantage.
The Tribune says:
Mr. Lincoln placet the duty of preserving
the Union abore all conflicting considerations;
and thefrih he is clearly right. He defers to
the judgment of Congress, and will doubtless
abide by that judgment. It is a very open
secret that he was utterly averse to the Con
fiscation Aet, and signed it with great reluct- j
ance; but be now intimatesno Ungering v doubt j
of the policy or Juetloe of-that aet. He may i
be late to realixe the necessity of still sterner
measures aimed at the source and mainspring
of the rebellion; but he will not defeat the
. will of the loyal people, as embodied and ex
pressed by their representatives. Hand in
hand the Executive and the masses have en
-tered upon this tremendous struggle, and they
will not, they most not, Cell out by the way to
its triumphant conclusion.
That the integrity of the Union should be
the paramount object of loyat' Americans in
this contest, is on all ~ hands conceded. The
practical question is—-Can this end be promo
ted by farther deference to and .bolstering np
ofSlavery ? While rebel corsairs are sinking
and burning our unarmed merchant vessels on
the oeeao, shall we recognise and uphold the
claim «f rebels to property, in human beings ?
We say; No-r-it is dangerous, fatal to do so; it
is siting a foctious and unjust strength to the :
Enblifl enemy; it is cherishing the viper which
as its fangs now fastened in the National
breast. Notify the slaveholders frankly that
they may have thirty or sixty days more in
which to lay down their arms and return to
loyalty; but if they shall continue to defy the
National authority and menace the National
existence after the expiration of that term,
their slaves shall, as a matter of inexorable
pnblio policy—nay, as a means of saving the
National life at a cost less than ruinous—be
proclaimed free, and invited to make their way
to the Union lines, and there be recognised
and treated as freemen. Such is the policy
. which we believe most effective and most mer
ciful, and we trust it will yet receive the Pres
ident’s hearty concurrence.
Sewardisms.
A correspondent of the Standard, .writing
from Washington, gives the following as
the most recent declaration of Mr. Seward
in relation to the war, which, he intimates,
he heard from his own lips:
“The effective part," he said, "of the war,
on our side, is over. There may be more
fighting—out the Uu of it the rurer tee are of
tpeedy peace. Every battle saved—which
can be honorably avoided—-is a gain to the
cause of the Union. The real danger is
over. If we escape danger in our foreign
affairs,.all will be well"
This is as oracular as the brief speech of
Mr. Seward in acknowledging a serenade
on Monday evening, that “in two days the
country would rejoice in great news. w If
the Secretary is truly represented by both
these reporters, then the great news would
seem to be peace and not a battle, os battles
now stand in the way of a “speedy peace.''
We don't pretend, however, to explain the
words, bat merely to report them.—-V. Y.
Tribune.
#s this the reason why there is no fight*
ingon the Potomac? Wo do not pretend
to understand the mysteries of diplomacy,
nor why -it is necessary to keep near seven
hundred thousand men with arms in their
hands, if the less fighting is to result in
the more speedy peace. This is a new way
of conquering a peace, which the soldier
will scarcely apprehend, though it may be
perfectly clear to our astute diplomatists.
It is an old saying, that the way to pre
serve peace is to prepare for war, and pos
sibly it is in the light of this adage that
we are to solve this riddle. What about
that “irrepressible conflict?"
The Temper of Congress.
Me. Forket, in his "Occasional’’ letter
to the Prat, dated the 3d, says:
A single days observation and inter
course among the members of Congress has
the conclusion that with two or three
insignificant exceptions, the Senators and
Representative* agree in utter detestation of
the whole rebellion, and in the uncompromts
ing spirit , of putting it down at Whatever cost.
Among those most urgent and -resolute in
taking these positions are * Democrats.
There is, indeed, a good deal of difference
as to the means or manner of giving effect,
to this policy. Some are for a declaration
of the slaves of the insur
gents ; others for the confiscation of slave
property; and another class for levying a
tax upon the slave holders, -so that they
L may by such a process feel the heaviest
burden of the war. But on all sides , as
well on . the pari of Thaddeut Stevens 'in the
House, and Lyman Trumbull tn the Senate,
as well among the ultra Republicans as among
the ultra~Democrats, .there ii an open expres
sion that the property ofthe loyal slave hold
trs shall be protected or paid for . A good
deal of unnecessary clamor has been crea
ted by mischievous men on this subject.
The friends of the Administration and the
war have only to keep their eye on the is
sue on which they really do agree as above
stated, and they cannot divide. One great
truth stands out prominently, that the prop
erty of the traitors is forfeited by the acts
"of the traitors, and that it would be unjust
to ezeept-property in slaves from this rule.
All our loyal people ask that the hous
es and lands, and gold and silver, and
stocks and securities, and cotton and pow
der, and cannon and ships, of Jefferson
Davis and his robber associates should be
confiscated, and, rather than it should
be used to d&mage~ond destroy the Union,
should be annihilated. Would it not .be
monstrous for us to except from this rule the
slaves of Davis and his-followers 9 How to
dispoae of the slaves, whether they, shall
be liberated or armed—whether the owner
ship in them shall be confiscated or taxed
—are matters wisely left by the President
and Secretary of War to the military au
thorities. No doubt Congress will pass
some law by which these authorities may
be guided in the disposition of this vexed
question.” ...
The Proposed Redaction of Civil Ex
penses.
Mr. Sherman's proposition to reduce the
civil expenses of the government is.a radical
measure. It redaoes the salaries of- mombers
of Congress and all clerks attached to .the gov
ernment who hare salaries above a certain
amount. If the bill passes lt'wili save the
Treasury tho expenditure of millions. But
already tho opposition to the measure is very
powerful. . Members of Congress, clerks, de
partmental and otherwise), are pecuniarily
interested in retaining the old “salaries. 80
strong is the opposition that'it is dohbtfui
If it will pass. Mr. Sherman contends that
tho ordinary exponses of the government
must be reduced. With little rerenuo except
that, received from direot taxation, it has be
comb.neceisary to greatiy curtail the national
expenditures. By tho exercise of a judicious
economy “twenty-fire millions can .bo : .saved
from tho average expenses of the government
as they were before, the rebellion broke out.
This, bf course, does not includd tho extraor
dinaryexpenditures incident to the war. It
is belierea that ihe: Secretary of the. Treasury
will recommend some sucluaeasure as imper
atively necessary.
The president and^eniCamerorii
[Froni tbc NMrTorfcTritiWH'.] _ o*
The our dally of yesterday 1
morning" may have been surprised tC'fii»d
no allusion to the topic which excited ;
most interest at.:the Federal Metropolis— ■
namely, the reported disagreement benveen'j
the President and Secretary ot' War, with 1
regard to that portion of the Report of the !
latter which treats of the use to be made i
of the slaves of rebels. Other journals had •
information on this subject; we had none;
simply because, while their Washington
dispatches respecting it were allowed to
come through in due course, ours were sup
pressed by the Government censor in the
Washington telegraph office. Having re
ceived it by mail, we give as a part
of the history of the times, simply remark
ing that we do v not understand that it was
suppressed for lack of truth, but rather for
excess of it.
THE SUPPRESSED DISPATCH
Washington, Dec. 2, 1861
The call of the roll had scarcely ended in'
the House, when the temper of the people
was strikingly manifested by their repre
sentatives hastening, without delaying a
moment for Presidential or other message,
jp pass a resolution emancipating the slaves
of rebels within the military jurisdictions.
Before the vote upon it was recorded V
painful -rumor pervaded the Hall that
the President had taken • open issues j
on this very question with Secretary
Cameron, and had recalled from the
Philadelphia Post Office the undelivered
copies of the Wir Departments-Report
which the latter had mailed yestewlay
for,theuseof the newspaper preaß. The
city was filled with rumors of a break
ing up of the Cabinet, apd the influence of
the revolution we are passing through, in
attaching men to principle while weaken
ing their hold on laws and forms, was ev
erywhere strikingly and most suggestively
conspicuous. The excitement occasioned
by this Executive opposition to the neces
sities of the war and to the popular will,
to-night sways the hotels and p&ttors of
of the city. The history of the difference
between the President and the Secretary
of War has at last taken shape. The Secre
tary presented his report to Mr. Lincon on
Saturday. On Sunday afternoon he mail
edit to the priucipol papers of the North
and West, as is customary on the day pre
ceding the reading of the Message.
On Sunday night the President, hav
ing found time to read it, found it not in
his heart to agree with tbp Secretary's doc
trine of the right and the duty, to make a
military ÜBe of the slaves of rebels—to arm
them, if necessary—and in all ways to use
them as we would any other property of
the rebels to suppress this rebellion. He
sent for Mr. Cameron, and required him te
suppress this whole portion of his report,
on the ground that its recommendation was
premature and ill-timed. The Secretary
promptly and resolutely refused to suppress
a word of it. ’ The discussion between them
was protracted. It ended as it begun, the
President insisting upon the alteration, and
the Secretary respectfully but firmly re
fusing to change a syllable of his recom
mendations. interview in
the afternoon had a similar conclusion of
debate, but a new and strange conclusion
of Executive will. The President announced
his purpose to strike out the entire passage
about the emancipation and arming of the
•laves Wore sending in the report with his
Message to Congress. Mr. Cameron de
clared.he should not recall or suppress the
document in the hands of Northern and
Western editors, and that the printers were
at liberty to do with his report what they <
pleased. Which of the two copies will the
people read and army prefer?
The above statement Accounts for the fact
that Mr, Cameron’s report was reclaimed by
orders of the President himself. Tho re-,
port, as w« have published it, is Mr. Cam
eron’s, and the ono he stands by—tho ap
pended short referenco to the slavery ques
tion is the President's addition, after having
struck out what. Mr. Cameron said about
slavery. It is a strange story altogether.
The statement which the Tribune makes
in relation to the refusal of the Government
censor to permit his despatch to come over
the telegraph line, is startling. Every
other New York paper of Tuesday morning
had some reference to the troubles ou foot
except the Tribune, and we could not ac
count for it. Now it is plain.
The Enemy in Missouri Making
Prograss.
A Cairo letter in the St boute'Repvbliean
makes these interesting statements :
“Five hundred negroes are at work throw
ing up intrenchments at New Madrid,-Mo.,
and heavy huns will soon be mounted upon
them. Precisely similar news came from
Columbus two or three mouths ago. That
place wah then, as Hew Madrid has been
lately, entirely unprotected, and presenting
a fair field of occupation for Union troops.
The latter had to remain idle in their camps, ,
while a strong position but a few miles be
yond and directly in the path they would
soon have to pursue was being rendered as
impregnable as aVt and labor could make it.
Now, Columbus stands a formidable barrier
to any descending fleet, and will, in the ca
rnation of military men, be won cheaply if
costing only a couple of hundred lives.
How that that place has been made so strong,
Confederate attention is directed to another
point, where they can also stand behind
batteries, which strengthen spots already
having many natural defences. And then
the Confederate labor Is performed by
bondsmen, while the Union volunteers have
to throw up their own breastworks.
"Price, with a formidable army, is still
active and unharmed, while the forces(gath
ered at Columbus and New Madrid cannot
be met successfully by any insignificant
army, The foe is increasing instead of di-.
minishing in numbers, and simply because
he has so far in this section experienced but
little reverses, and, consequently, no demor
ilisation. These are unwelcome truths, but
still none the less apparent, and the sooner
government wakes up to the task before it
the better. In a few weeks New Madrid
will be among the Confederate strongholds.
More men have got to be placed in this de
partment, or the Mississippi war on our
part bids fair to be a failure.”
Five hundred negroes throwing up iu
trenchmonts ia all right among rebel*, but
we keep white men to do that work, and
. send the negroes bock to work for' the use
of the rebels 1 That is polity for you.
What is Done in the National Cap
v ital.
A Washington correspondent develops
the cause of the movement in the Senate,
in reference to imprisonment of negroes,
asfollows:
SLAVES IMPRISONED
"Two or three Congressmen weut over
jthe city jail this morning. They found more
thsn'fifly slaves confined there* twenty or
thirty of whom are tho staves of rebels now
in arms against the government. One of
thenristhe slave of Capt. Dunnington, late of
the Capitol police. The boy is sixteen years
old) and he has lain in this jail eight months,
on do charge but that of beings slave. His
bid master now commands a rebel battery on
tho Potomac,. afld r rewards tho government
for its kind care of his slave property by
firing shells into Federal vessels that attempt
to pass his battery. There is one boy only
- too years old there, a slave; who wa# brought
in from Minor's Hill by our pickota. His
master is in the rebel army. Another fel
low, John H. Parker, is owned by one David
Hone, a rebel* soldier. . He (the slavo) has
been'employod at the, government stables
in this.ouy, and Was suddenly thrown lhto
jati oriuo charge;- the goyejmment, still
owing him for one 'month’s ‘work. Robert
* Vi ;j'; .* S C • 4/ —.*••+
; Pnineds owned’bj’ a (rebel former oil the ;
OWoqtoh former being in the !
Boberkescaped within out
"’Hnasj-ana was'employed for some lime, wi
: a dollar and a quarter per day, on the for-
I tificaliona near Fort Corcoran. He has.
,:been in /ait eleven weeks. charge but
•f ihat of being ii slave.” "- r - -' : •*
Aiding the Enemy*
Tiro paragraphs in our speciaTdispatch from
Cairo, in Monday’s Gazette, are a suggestive
coincidence. One states that three negroes,
from below, presented themselves to the pick
et guard, at Bird's Point, and were taken be
fore Col. commander, who order
ed them to be sent back-through the lines,
apd not to roturn again. This is supposed to
be according to General -Halleck’s general
orders.
The other paragraph states that it is con
firmed that Jeff. Thompson has four hundred
negroes working on fortifications at New
Madrid. So we suppose that by grace of Col.
Ogelsby he has four hundred and three. Per
haps it would bo just to include them all as
retained in the rebel service by our policy. In
the same paper a Southern dispatch stated
that Qov. Moore, of Louisiana, reviewed four
teen hundred colored soldiers. The blood of
Northern soldiers must be ebeap in the valu
ation of a Government which furnishes the
labor to bnild the fortifications by which they
are slaughtered. Our suicidal war policy is
like tho code of honor of the Japanese digni
tary, who takeß satisfaction of his enemy by
committing hari kari.—Cin. Gazette.
We commend the above to all those tender
hearted people who aro.so dreadfully -afraid of
injuring tho rebels, and whoso conscience will
not admit ,of violating the Constitution by
emancipating the slaves of traitors, but had
rather sond them baek to work on rebel in
trenohments 1 Gen. Halleck should receive
the thanks of the rebel Congress 1
The Report or* the Secretary or War.
—Tho Philadelphia Press says that the
“Report of the Secretary of War. is one of
the moat ably written documents that ever
emanated from Washington.” - This is
strong language, bu« the report is>a master
piece for style, vigor, force, and distinct
ness’. There is a genial warmth about it,
and a directness of purpose which com
mands attention and respect. There is no
mistaking Mr. Cameron on any subject
touched upon iu his report, and he bus
shown that he understands the greatness of
the crisis, and that he has the courage to
Scuker on Halleck. —A despatch from
Washington says that Senator Sumner made
some severe comments in the Senate this
morning upon General Halleck's reefirit
order forbidding slaves to enter tho lines of
the Western army. Mr. Sumner censured
the course of Halleck as a mistaken and
mischievous policy.
Mr. Sumner Ui right. Halleck’ a ordor is
mischievous, impolitic, unjust and cruel,
and the President, whoso promptly revoked
the eminently just and politicproclamation
of Gen. Fremont, should restrain liis suc
cessor from carrying out his reprehensible
policy.
Rumors. —A Washington dispatch to the
New'York Evening Pc*t says there ar,c ru
mors of a change in the Cabinet, but they
arc.Fithout foundation. Wo hope so. It
would bo a calamity to the country now,
and rr sec r.o g.Sod reason for such a step.
jrEir +id rERTistLUEJirrs,
ink,
PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS*
DIARIES FOB ISG2. •
tV . S . HAVEN,
qf Wood amtt Third PttttfeargA.
AN ORDINANCE repealing an Or*
dlnanc* relative to City Warrant*, paued June
*7th, 16511, and section sixth of chapter twenty-wren
uf Revised. Code, ordained' and enacted Oct. 6th, 1&9.
Bo It it ordained and enacted by the Mayor, Aider*
men and citizen* of Pittsburgh in delect and Common
Councils aMembled, and It ia hereby enacted by the
authority of the came, That an Ordinance relative to
dry officer* and city warrant*, paesed June 27th,
WAtl, and ecctlun sixth ol clupter twenty-seven of
Revised Code, relative to city officers and city war
rants, ordained and enacted October 6th, IMO, bo and
the uni a U hereby repealed.
J. I. BESftfETT,
Prwideut pro tm at Select' Council.
Tbeasuhir'* OrriCE, AlleoScht Co., Pa., >
Pittsburgh, I>jc. 5, IWI. /
PURSUANT to tho provisions of a res
elation of the Legiilatnre of the Commonwealth
«t April 10,1835, notice U hereby given to ali persons
desirous of procuring copies of the Acts of the next
Legislature, to subscribe at this office for tha same.
A fow copies of tho Acts of the last Legislature re
nfain for those subscribing, and others.
dcC!lawd3w Q. V. COULTER, County Treas.
Oirici or tul* Crmxss’ Ixburaxcx Coxr'aNV, j
Pittsburgh, 'Pec. 6th, 1861. j
AN ELECTION for Fifteen Directors.
of this Company, to serra during the ensuing
year, wilt he held at this* office, on MUNDAV, 16th
tint., between the hours of 11 a. m. and Ip.m.
defcdtd SAMUEL BKA, Secretary.
kuouOjs— . , • ,
FLOUR—BU bbls. Extra Family Indiana select
ed White Wheat.
BEAKS—2O bus. small White Beans.
EGOS—IO barrels fresh Egg*.
CHEESE—3OO boxes soft cotting Cream Cheese.
Received and for sale by . jn6 1L RIDDLE.
IN STUKE— ~
1200 bbls. all best grades Floor,
000 bbls. Apples; •. ~ .
800 lbs. Pecans, good and_ncw;
400 Flour-Barrels;
WOO Seamless Bags;
2UUO Gunny Bags, old;
10,000 lbs Bacon, for sals low.
deti HITCHCOCK, McCREEKY A CO.
WANTED—
-5,000 bushels Corn, shotted;
.. 20,000 do' Oatr,
t 10,o0u do Bye;
10,000 do Barley, spring and fall;
' 25,i*«) do Wheat.
deti HITCHCOCK, McCBEKBY A CO.
RUDE OIL WANTED.—SOO bbls.
light gravity, vrantod for cash.
HITCHCOCK, McCREERY A CO., .
' . de6 122 Second, ISI Front streets..
VTEW ORLEANS MOLA2&E&—IUO
-,1, i bbls. prims Now Orleans, Molasses'receiving,
and for sale by JAIL DALZELL A SON,
deo t ■ ’ i O and 70 Water street, '
(“IAKEON OIL—
J 12a bbls. Reilcod Carbon Oil,
100 do Crude do
For side by doe -n, K. ROBISON A CO.
VENISON —i 2 saddles choice lat Veil
isoo just received by Express and for.aalo by
JAMES A. KETZEK,
de6 . .Corner Market and’ First airc«»t, ■
BOICE ARfLES—I6U bbls. choico
St. Louis Apples, Urge barrels, foraale by ..
- JAMES A. FETZER,
dot] Comer Marktft and First streets. .
PUTATOES —300 hues. choico. Fink
Jl' Eys Potatoes in. store and for'sale by
JAMES A. FETZER,
deg ' Comer Market and First streets.'
/ tAfiiiON OIL—SO bbls. beßt No. 1
\j White Carbon Oil for aale.by
deG J. B. CAKFIELD A 00.
f UIiKIIIJATIMi 01L—25 Tibia., an ex-
Li tr* article, for sale by
tleO J. B. CANFIELD A CO.
NAFTIIA —50 bbls. Fainter s best Nap-
Hill, a substitute for Turpeutine, for *ale bv -
• ded J. B. CAKFIELD A CO.
BKOUM COHN HKUbH—4b baleß
prlinu Brush this day received by..
UmT . HENRY If. COLLIKS.
UGAK—2S hhda. N. O. Sugar,
• ' X 5 do ’F. R. J uo
■For sale by >• deti ■< . B.i ROBISON A CO.
/''lOi’FEE—loO baga Kit) C’oiiec in store
\j and for sale by . B. ROBISON & CO. ~
bbls.-No.i-to arriveun<
IBAIAIIDICKEV A CO.
VfKW DkiY FKAUHKS in Ktore and
Xl fcwMlabr . ISAIAH DICKEY A- CO.
rf FALLOW OIL in store and tor saio by
X dec ■ ISAIAH.DICKEYA CO.
UKEAriE in' store unit Jot. sale
da) IBAIAII DICKEY A CW.
m ibs. in >tore and tor ■
ISAIAH PICKEY A J CO.
TjIEATHERtt
JC sale by deC "
OLato.. ;s —3UO l>bl*. 14. • O.Holasnes
.ln«tor»Mdlbr«l*bjr R. BOBISOK 4 CO. "
jtEvr .i» *'EitTitif^wEjrrs.
E MfiKO.DEKIKS,j L
FOE THE
~ : ; a / 3 ' , '
H oil days, r
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS.
E.MBBD HANDKERCHIEFS for 37, 75,1,25,1,60.
do COLLARS fbr 85, 37,50 62,75., ■
do SETS for 75 and 1,00 and upward*.
LACE COLLARS,
LACE SETS,
LACE LANDKERCHIEFS,
JACONET EDGINGS AND INSERTING*,
CROQUET FRINGE,
GUIPURE LACE,
THREAD LACE,
VALENCIA LACE,
WOOLEN hoods;
SONTAGS, NUBIAS,
r SLEEVES AND GAITERS,
Selling at Greatly Seduced Price*,
CHARLES GIPKEB’S,
No. 78 MaBKET STEEET.
A/TURPHY & BOON'S, Coiuiisaios
i.TX Mwhuoti, and Wholesale Dealers in MACK
EREL, SALMON, SHAD, HERINRQ, CODFISH,
Ac., No. 146 North Wharves, between Race and Arch
30U0 barrel* Maas Mackerel—large, and medium
else Noa. 1,2 and 3, in assorted packages.
50 barrels prime No. 1 W«lifnT Salmon.
1000 do Economy Mess Shad.
4000 do superior No 1 Herring,
Consisting of different brands, Labrad* - , Halifax,
Bay of Island and Eastpoxt, Ac.
6000 boxes Scaled and No. 1 Smoked Herrings,
1500 qninfails'Qeorge's and Grand Bank Codfish,
Which we how offer at the lowest cash prices, and
solicit a call before buying.
MURPHY A KOON3,
dct:6md No. 145 North Wharves, Phil’a.
LLKUiiKN Y COUNTY, 53.—jggnM
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Cornelia* W. Lawrence and Elijah Purdy, exocuiura
of the last will and testament ot David 51. Prull, late
of the city of New York, deceased; also to the heirs
aud all others concerned. In pursuance of the fifteenth
section of an Act of Assembly of said Commonwealth,
entitled “An Act to creatoa Sinking Fund, and to
provide for the gradual and cextaiu extinguishment
of the debt of the Commonwealth, ’’ passed the luth
day of April, A. D., 1840, you aru hereby cited to be
aod appear before me, Wat. J. Richardson, Register
for the Probate of Wills, Ac., in and for said county,
oojor before MON DAY, thotilh day of January, A. D-,
IMI2, then and there to show cause why the collateral
inheritance tax upon tho fullffvnhg Real Estate shall
not be collected tinder the provisions of said Act of
A*r.ouiLlj; herein fall not. ' baid Real Estate consists
of
3 Houses and Lots on Wood street,
5 •* •* •• Hand “
: l Vacant Lot - “
1 “ •* *• Punn ••
1 House snd Lot “ “
5 lionets and Lots •* St. Clair '*
Glvcu under juy hand and seal of office at
this sth day of December, A. D., 1861.
dits:ui:td W5l. J. RICHARDSON, Recuter. '
OAKLAND SELECT SCHOOL.—The
second Session of Miw MARKHAM'S SELECT
SCHOOL,-at Oakland, will commence on MONDAY,
December Bth. This School is easy of access, being
but a few steps from the Oakland Passenger Railway
Station, while at tho same time it is in a quiet, retir
ed situation, cutircty removed from those influences
and surroundings'which so often lead the mind of the
pupil away from study.
RATES or TTJITiON PER TERM OP FIFTEEN WEEKS;
Primary Scholars, first class .. $ 0,00
do do B,OO
Intermediate, or in common English branches. 12,00
Pupils in higher English or .. 15,00
. The School year will comprise iur**a terms of four-'
toon weeks each." Further lufbnnatioo may bo.ob
tained from Mia* MARKHAM is person, eithar at
the School or at 142 Penn street, Pittsburgh.'
do4Jtd .
MAKEUAL’E SALK.—by virtue of
a Writ of bale, by lion. John Cadwalader,
judge of the District Court c-t the United States, io
aud for the Eastern District .if Pennsylvania, in Ad
miralty, to me directed, w ill he sold at Public Halt,
to the highest and best bidder, fur cash, at DUTILU,
COOK A CO.'S AUCTION STORE, No. 124 South
FRONT Street, on TUESDAY. December 17,1861,
at 12 o’clock 3,000 bags of COFFEE, be the some
more or Ims, being the cargo of the berk MJSACO. —
Samploe can be seen at the auction store, and at the
•lores of BUTCHER A BKO., New. 146 aud 118 North
FRONT Street. WILLIAM MILLWAUD,
G. S. Marshal, E. D. of PouiwylvanU.
rtntAbELFUIA, Dec. 3d, 1061.—<IcG:3tii
gQ DOZEN HOOP SKIRTS,
THE BALMORAL, OR
FOR SALE BY
Made with Coid and Tapca.
and Deal ora supplied at low price*.
n 026 EATON. MACBUM * CO., 17 fifth «t.
GENTS’ FANCY TRAVELING
SHIRTS,
WINTER UNDERSHIRTS
no2s EATON, MACBUM A C 0„ 17 Fifth wt.
jgALMUKAL SKIK'I'S,
BY THE STEAMSHIP ASIA.
ANOTHER NEW LOT IN CHOICE COLORS,
Received this da; by . .
n 026 EATON; MACBUM A CO., 17 Fifth st.
HOODS AN JL> SKLA-lING C
NEW COMPORTS, SCARPS AND MUFFLERS,
NEW SONTAOS,. SLEEVES AND NUBIAS,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
no2C EATON. M A CRUM A 00., 17 Fifth it.
I>Sriljtfl6T 1 H-ATOB’S SALE OF
STOCfc AND SCRIP.—On TUESDAY EVEN
ING, December 10th, at 7A£ o’clock, at the Commcr
dal Sales' Booms, No. M Fifth street, by order of
Jarooa P. Sterrett, Administrator d* boaui non cun
intancnlo annexe of Frederick Ldrenz, deceased, will
be, bold, *
(529 share* Pittsburgh, F\. Wayne and Chicago Ik
R. Company. _ ’ ' ,•
88 KHOU Scrip of.tho same Company. *
21 sbares Ohlo.and Penn's R. R. Co. Stock.
‘s2o Scrip of the same.
do3:3td J. G. DAVIS, Auctioneer.
XiDK OF IKON PAINI',
The best article Tor the purposes known for pre
serving IRON AND WOOD WORK FROM BUST
AND DECAY; for BRIDGES, ROOFS, BOATS,
TANKS, OIL BARRELS, or-other work oxpoeed to
theweathcr.
As a FIRE-PROOF PAINT, it is invaluable, and
' is warranted superior in body, permanency and cheap
ness to any other Paint known.
Madoacd'for solo by the ton or vnallor quantity by
tho '
PENN’A. SALT MANUFACTURING CO.,
de3-3mifg • 21 Wood street,’ Pittsburgh, Pa.
1 QftO —DlAKlkb ANDALMANACS
AOU/W. of all Idnda for sale at HUNT’S.
T LOYD’S LAKoi”MAP OF SOUTH.
* J ERN STATES,' colored in States: Only 25 cts.,
at "' ' HUNT’S.
T ADY MAUD, by Pierce Eaoen;
JU LAMPLIGHTER’S STORY’, GREAT EXPEC
TATIONS, CECIL DREAM, CLOISTER AND THE
HEABTH ond aS other now books con bo had at
HUNT’S.
BOOKS FOR HOLIDAY PRESENTS.
—A Urge and complete assortment of Gift Books,
Juvenile Books, Annuals, Albums, Ac., Ac., now
opening at HUNT’S Book, Stationery, Magaaiho and
Newvpapur Emporium, Masonic Hall, Fifth street.
' .
.L. .ALLEN, Agent,
* ' PRODUCE AND COMMISSION
‘ . merchant,
And Wholesale and Be tail Dealer in
WINES, BRANDIES, 'LIQUORS AND CIGARS;
v RRCTIFYIXG DISTILLRU,
- Nort) Wood Street, Pittsburgh, Fcnn’a.
no23:«ttapl \;. ■ : - •' -*•
PAHTNKiWIUF WOTlOK.—Thb’part.
nerahlp'heretofore existing: between tbo under*
•tgned, andorlhe Arm of" GKAFF, 'REESE A CO.,
hM been diMOtred, JACOB' REESE having parchM*
ed tIM Interest of CHRISTOPHER GRAFF. The
biuitittt will bo'Mrttlcd bjr REESE A'GKATF. .
’ MATHEW GRAFFi
: JACOB REESE,
~ CHRISTOPHER GRAFT.
Nor, ao, iwi.—ltntiuwT
PUtsburgUj
mo THE CITUSKW » ort’OTSB U KUH:
. JL l anboonoo myself to you aan candidate at the.
issuing ejection for the office of CITY CONTROL*
LIB. -Ifu longexperiencein varied, and extensive
business, a perfect umUiarity tvith occoants, and the
identification of ailfo-tfane with aU tb# iutcrest* of
my native city, entitle me to your confidence and
support, I will confidently hope for your suffrages.
tn4l;MKtf WILLIAM LITTLE. J
X> : CAKSLLU TLOWKBSi 4c.,
loorittni-'J' '-.iiCA,.. . ;
A i( ,t ; ?r ... wntDODITB QTTftOTOtTSfc
OAKLAND. ;■
JJUY GOODS CHEAP FOR CABH,
J. M. BURCHFIELD’S
NORTH-EAST CORNER FOURTH A MARKET
J-JRY GOODS FOB CASH.
SU.i IFIS J.VI) CLOCKS,
HANDSOME .
Dress Goods,
I ' '
Flannels and Canton Flannels,
>
CHECKS AND TICKINGS.
Prints and Ginghams,
FRENCH MERINOS AT 50 .CTS.,
Cassimern, Satinetts aod Tweeds,
Hosiery, Needle Work,
Ac, dc., Ac.
C. HANSON LOVE,
No. 74 Slaeekt Stbeet.
0030
pLOAJtH,
all new styles ned shape*.
CRIMSON AND BLACK SKIRTS,
army socks and gloves,
AND DRAWERS—aII sixes.
oar hoods.
FIGURED CASHMERES.
do MERINOS for 75c.
CASHMERE PLAIDS.
BLUE CLOTH,- for Boys’ wear.
BOYS' CASSIMERES.
BLACK CLOTH, for Ladles’ Cloaks.
WATER-PROOF CLOTH.
SHAWLS, CLOAKS.
FIGURED DELAINES—new stilt.
EMBROIDERIES—haIf price.
ffTCall and iucamins before purchasing elsewhere.
STREETS.
CLOAKS,
Fire Hollars' and Upwards,
DRESS GOODS,
FROM Till
NEW YORK AUCTIONS,
J. W. BARKER & CO’S.
NO. 59 MABKET STREET.
GREAT BARGAINS.
gILKS,
AND OTHER
DRESS GOODS*
J. W. BARKER & CO’S*
NO. 59 MARKET STREET,
--L fkom'thb
NEW YORK AUCTION SALES.
Great. Bargains.
»iogS:WEwF ■ ■ . , :•.....
HORNE’S TRIMMING STORE,
No. 77 Market Street.
We have received this week large quiailtidfcs of
WOOLEN nOOD9, SONTAOB, NUBIAS, SCARFS,
HITTS, AND YICTOKINEk Also, WOOLEN
SOUKS FOB SOLDIEBSThERINO AND
WOOL BIBBED HOSE, FLEECY LIN
ED COTTON HOSE, ANDFANCY •
- WOOL HOSE.-- A splendid a*-''
.. ' Kstment- offnU’ldnd* of :f ’■
. GLOVES and XJAUNT- ' '
LETS fori LADIES
-, and -MISSES. -• • r -'
ALEXANDER'S
:■
toth.K*ll,r. OOUXTBT ..
KERCUAKTS AND StHLINEBS;
. Jffl fad wuMuitof BIBBOSA
RUCHES,ELOWEBS, BOIOIETB, HATS, .
: AND TCRBANB; SILK 3, VELVETS, EOMBA
*IN*S, KNQLISH CRAPS, -fas fa:,. manrpiMd
, by.any In the city, either Itr prtceor quality.^
noSCntryT JOSCTH'HODKN. 77 Market it.
QOLDIEkS' 'iNDiA KUBBER UtlA&
inai
Ntidred at tholndk Rubber PfepbC, 26aadltt St.
Pair ■treat. deS i ; J;> A%. PHILriML
pEACKm.-»36 Dnad^aa^i^i.
L’ Kentucky halm, in store sad for aak by ■
ISAIAH DICKEY A CO.
\ speciaZ JTOTICJES.
ityPAGEORGE H. KEYBRR,
Wholesale Druggist
MEDICINE D,EALER,
NO. .140 WOOD STREET, PITTSBURGH, PA-
? ? % ? ? ? J f
TRUSSES FOB THE CUBE -OF HERNIA OB
RUPTURE.
MAKSHS RADICAL CURE TftCSS.
RITTER S PATENT TRUSS.
FITCH’S SUPPORTER TRUSS.
SELF-ADJUSTING TRUSS.
DR. BANNING’S LACE OR BODY for
the cure of Prolapsus Uteri, Piles, Abdominal and
Spinal Weaknesses.
dr. a. s. rrrcH s silver-plated sup
porter.
PILE PROPS, for the support and cure of Piles.
ELASTIC STOCKINGS, for weak and' varicose
veins.
ELASTIC KNEE CAPS, for weak knee joint*.
ANKLE SUPPORTERS, for weak ankla joints.
SUSPENSORY BANDAGES, j s
SELF-EJECTING SYRINGES; also evury kind of
Syringe*. * .
DR. KEY3EK has mlso a TRUSS which will radi
cally cure Hernia or Kupturu.
iWOrncs at uis Drvg Stoke, No, 140 Wood
strut, sign of tho Golden Mot Mr.
DR. KEYSEB preectibee in <«m of Chronic Dis
eases, and has Instruments for.Dcalbearaniljalmost
every disease requiring mechanical support.' '
GALVANIC BATTERY ob ELECTIiO-MACNET-
ACIIINES, for medical purposes, of a very supe
rior kind, will be sent free uf express charges, wher
ever an nxpreea run*,-upon a remittance of ;Tcn Dol
lars. Address DU. GEO. XL KHYSER,
140 Wood street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
DIARRHEA CURED BY 6WAYNE'S DOWEL
CORDIAL. Every buttle warranted or tneuey .re
funded. Sold at DR. KEYSEB’S,
No. 140 Wood street.
BED BUGS, ROACHES, <£c.—TheHousekeeper’s
Rifle. Sold at Dili KEYSER’S/ l4b Wood at.
RATS AND MlCE.— Sure destruction to these
Vermin by usiog YARNELL‘S-£XTERMINATOB,
oh entirely new preparation, and warranted to ro
move those pests frum every house. Sold’at!
DU. KEYSER'S, 110 Wood straet.
EXTRA RAZORS.—I liavo a few EXTRA RA
ZORS, which I will doss out at coat. . ' (?
GEO. H. KEYSES/ 140 Wood street.
HEADACHE CURED.—Xn infallible' kxm fox
Headache will be found In FRAZER’S HEADACHE
PILLS. Try them. Price 25 cents, at
JySfcdawT . KEYSER’S, 140 Wood^strcct.
gsjE"i'o HorseOwuers.—Dr. Sweet's
infcALLIBLK LINIMENT FOR HORSES U onri
vnllvd by any; in ali caxw of Lamenw%. arising Rom
Sprains, BraLtca, or. Wrenching, its effect.!*'magical
and curtain. Harness br Saddle Gails; Bdrmtches,'
Muugo, <fce,, it will also Vuro speedily. „ Spavin and
Ringbone may bo easily-prevented and cured ip their
Incipient Wages, but confirmed casus are beyond the
possibility of a radical «nre. ;No . : kase of tho kind,
however, is so dasperato or hopeless but itYaky.bc al
leviatod by this Liniment, and Its fiUlhful 'applica
tion will always remove the lameness and enable the
horso to travel with comparative enicv -
Every horse owner should have this remedy at hand,
for Its timely use at the first appearance' of; lameness
will effectually prevent these formidable diseases men
tioned, to which all hone* are liable, and which ren
der so many otherwise valuable horses nearly worth
less.
CLOAKS,
1L E.-SELLERS <k CO n . Agents, corner of Wood
and Second streeu,-Ptttaburglu. : up27HjdswF
jpjCßlood Food.—AttMitlon U call
«a tu the most remarkable and scientific preparation,,
advertised in another coiuma.~~lt R an.entirely new
discovery, and must not be confounded with any of
tho numerous potent medicines of the day.' It is*
certain remedy for all the dlseaecw specified, and ee
pedully thoee v of a ctrooic natoro—of kmg standing
ofweeks, months and years. • Sufferers, try ft.
Messrs. Churcu & Ddfobt,- of New York,are the
•ole ageui* for it, and tiled proprietors of the world
renowned Dr. Eaton's InfaNtilb CoaniAn/ an arti
cle which every Mother should have in her lrfdlcfP*
oloMt in caeo of need; and containing,' as if doss, no
pareguric or opiate of any kind, it run be reded upon
with the unmet confidence, add will be found an in
valuable specific in all caect of* infantile complaints.
—Vl&&tiuAour*a! t .CotitTiibtu., : 1■ A
Foraaio by GEORGEH, KEYBEB, Agtnl/No. 140
Wood.xtwot, Pituburgh, Pa. ' delTidawT 1
Kr.al’OßKD.—Just published in'a Sealed Envelope.
Price-C cents. *
A Lecture on 'the Nature, Treatment an 4 Radical
Cure or Spermatorrhoea or Seminal Weakness, Invol
untary Emissions, Sexual Debility, aa£ : Impedi
ments to Marriage generally, Nervouenres, Contump
tlon, Epilepsy and Fits; Mental and Physical Inca*
parity, resulting from Self-Abuse, Ac. By BOUT. J.
CULVERWELL, M. D., author of the Gnxu Boos,
Ac., Ac, .
“A Boon to Thousands or Surriuw.?’
Sect uhdar soul, in a plain envelope, to any address,
post-paid, op receipt of ux cents or two/"postage -
stamps, by DR. OH. J. 0. KLINE,
. -127 Bowery, K. Y., Puet-Office Box 4680.
acO:3mdawT ‘ /. • ; - '
gyXake Superior Copper Kill uni
hMNLTING WORKS, PmsßCßUii,
PARK,. M’CURDY & COy
Manufacturers of SHEATHING, BRAZIERS 1 AND*
BOLT COPPER, PRESSED COPPER
RAISKD STILL BOTTOMS, SPALTER SOLDER;,
also Importers and dealers In METALS, TIN PLATE,.
SHEET IRON, WISE, Ac. Constantly oi h~>«ty
TINUKES’ ILACHINE3 AND TOOLS. .*
Waxshocsx, No. lid.Firtt aud Second streets,
Pittsburgh, Pcsn'a.
••“Special orders of Copper cut to any desired pet
tern. . ..... mj^riwlyT
.Extract JBD.ohu,
tue : 6bSij Diußsna
HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUOHtI, 3
THE GUEAT DIURETIC.
HBLMBOID'S EXTRACT BUOHU, •-
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
HELMBOLD S EXTRACT BUCHU, '
Tllil GUKAC DIABETIC.
And a Positive and Specific Remcdyfor Diieaaee of •
the Bladder, Gravel, Xidnoys, Dropsy; Weak- -
ness, and all diseases of the Urinary. Organa. *
Seo adrortiscment in another • Cut it out,*
and send for the medicine at onco.' Bnrau o»‘
CoVßTiarott. i : rw26.-wl«a*wT
wa c. nuaiNBON
WHUBOW DOUaLAsa —i-.urtijtny kru-EM.
jpat-BQBnrsoy. nuns ttmuL
■ LKttS, -FouncxAs and MachuoaTb, 'WiioDcszos-
Wunsa; Pittaburgh. Ponn’ft. .
Omcr, No. 21 Muttf SrcrcT, '
Mahofitctnre all kinds of«Tl=;,vM AND
MILL MACHINERY, CASTINGS; RAILROAD *
WORK, STEAM BOILERS AND SHEET- IRON
AND REPAIRING done dm'abort
wticp - . > . . nh2B:ftly '
£SSTJOHir COCHRAH ft 880.,.
Manufocturera of IRON RAILING, IRON VAULTS,.
AND VAULT DOORS,' WINDOW SHUTTERS, •
WINDOW GUARDS, Ac., Noe. 91 Second street and
-80 Third street, between Woodland Market.
Ilavo on hand a variety of sew fancyr
and plain, Iraitahlo for all purposes.
Particular attention paid to .encloeing Grave Both*
Jobbing done at abort notice. .'•; . ' - phO.
Pittsburgh Steel Wprl
ISAAC J05U..... M L. a^fflLOCOH.
.. JOSES, B0Y1) & CO.,
Mannfocturen of CAST STEEL; also, JSP2UNO,
PLOW AND A. B. STEEL, STEEL AND
AXLES, corner of Rom mid First streets, Pittsburgh,
Penn*a.'‘ /odp
KCB- & ft V. P. MABKBB, Paper
MANUFACTURERS and dealers in BOOK, PRINT,
CAP, LETTER AND ALL OF WRAP
PING PAPER., i V-- : .r , . ; .’ l-v < V't ‘
Mrilate removed from No. 27 Wood stredt r to No*
33 Bmithilold street, rataburgh. Pa.--
■OTABH OR TRADE FOR RAQB. • f
HoLlm & 80BS, l«3OT -
lfl KUUEIGN ASD DOMESTIO SttLS OI KX.
CHAKOE, CEEIinOATESOr DKPOart.DAHK-.
VOTES ASD BPEOIB. No. 67 Xukit ItnaVDlttV".
-burgh. Pa.
tWTCoiloctkas made on all the principal difca*
tßiydchotU the United States.. - . '*p23
SE'HJBHBY M. COUUQIB,. Eor,
DAKDISa ASDCOM3HS3IOS KIBCBAKIuid
whohMb daUv li CHEESE, BUTTER, SEEDS,.'
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