p^bjirult SATURDAY MORNING,. DEC. 7,1801; Fos-HotelArrivals see fourth page. The Weekly Gazette, For this week, is Issued, and for sale at our J, . counter. It confalna the President's Mes sage';.Late “News Bead; *“ r 1 Groans of the Rebels: Tybee Island and ■«/ XefgbWrhbod Reports; The Irish; Famine; Latest from California; .;V /Commercial Reports; Sews from tl|e Upper vb and'Lower Potomac; Kentucky, Missouri, 'r and city and cbiintiy-news; 'etc. Price 5 i The President oiivttier Slavery Ques •. •. tion. . - . A WaßiiingtoncorrapondenTof the N. V. Evening Pvtliiys -...... •>,-» *: - ,; Tho passage in the message*, which refers —to the slavery question will nut produce ;.. any division In Republican ranks, as the president evidently refers the whole mat* ■ttj&'V ter to Congress for its careful consideration. | n private converration.fhe President ex ‘ presses himself ns undecided, upon the ;•* / •; question. • He says ‘This it a great queV - ;'o'ne > l i dq'.hot feel competent to. - : ~vSetUe. Lct Cdngress consider it, not pas .tr s sionatelyr-not with reference to any former f -;.;. . political issues—but seriously and prudent ; i.. v A 7, and thus give, me its advice either in the form of a resolution or a bilL' This is ciscly what Congress will do, but the ques iionwill not be hastily settled. 1 ' ' " . Ko one.doubUlhc patriotism and honesty ■ w-‘ of the He wants to do what la. . right. TA trexnoudoua. burthen rests upon , .his’shdulders, and ha may jwoll desire to 7 /have the counsel and advice of Congress on a subject of suoh vast moment. The Presi dent’s instincts are all right, and we have - -- no doubt; that some plan will be devised by . the collective wisdom of the country, con .n • centrated in the Cabinet and Congress, or v : : acting through those bodies, which will be satisfactory to the President, and receive ; ' the general approbation. The logic of v - events,'under' the rule of Providence, is working out our destiny, rapidly and sure- '■s ly ; and we’do nothelieve that thatdesti ;■//• Tiy ia that we shall continue to be cursed : U’ ** have been with the tyranny of sla s-.‘;... very... look for -any general /. ? *®*®cipation immediately, and are hot sure S'! woul(1 be desirable. What we hope -to see,-and what wc. expect to see, is, that ' ‘ " '' slavery will receive in this conflict such , a deadly Wound, that its fate will_be certainly and ; swiftly sealed. Having, waged the war, let it bear the burden, and meet with * a justTetribution. Let loyal sUveLolders eiyoy their constitutional rights undisturb- •d, but Emancipate the slave of every rebel, • -hud slavery will never trouble the country 'mj. with its impCTious demands - again. It will V. ; ! hide Ha head in obscurity, and soon dwin i~. die away. As the President has deferred to the wis- dom of Congreas,and throv&n the responsi- . bility of decision on this momentous que9- >- tion upon that august body, let us await with calmness and r patience its delibejra- tions, and in the meantime yield to the President ahearty sympathy and cheerful ,-•* i support while he prpceeds.in the herculean .: . . suppressing the rebellion. He has r ' : b - enough on hand to tax all- -the- powers of one man, and may well wish to bear a di - Tided responsibility where he can do so ‘ with due regard to the public~welfare. What Is Before Us. • A writer of more than ordinary force, • sitting in the Reporter's Gallery si Wash y- ' fngton, during the reading of the .Presi v • * dent’s' Message, writes as follows to the New York Tribune: 1 . ’ . j [WHewT concentric arcs of grave and seemingly oppressed law-givers, facing this •'. . . Reporter's Gallery—they go through with ■* a forth now; Buthow evident it fin to all •„ ■’ beholdersibat there is stormy debate brew :->j lag below here, 4id that the resolves which aave nations, aa Franco was saved by ayes and noes given in sessions that were, sol > emnly voted to. be permanent, ore silently taking shape in the hearts of the People's , . .representatives. If the army of the Poto mac be marched, and a great and decisive battle be won, this session of Congress gratefully and necessarily will bed short ‘ ond. It will be long and passionate, if the President, as Commander-in-Chief under the Constitution/doics not see to it that the * r.'VVolnnteera, who volunteered to fight and ■ not =to hybernate, erebroughtfaoc to face .• with*he enemy. HHose quarters/ and not *winter quarters,’ is the- cTy.in the camps, cry will•> find ftdl echo inthe popular *, „ fuUer echo in the conservative ■ - Senate.. >•', • . M A speedy batt!% and an Austerlitz vic tory, willl cave us from- much in au -early adjournment of the dayß of quiet, or of bide that' good-tempered men. are glad to , ferego. Otherwise, there, is immediately, upon, us discussion of resolutions to eman-' clpatfc the' slaves-of rebels—to emancipate the slaves in ' rebel States—to; emancipate ■' - : \ x the slaves in the District of• Cohi&bia—to aitn the slaves oCrebela—to hlre the slaves in rebel States to cultivate the soil and gather crops of cotton, rice, sugar : - • hacco. oh Federal account— -77 bills to. confiscate the land in the rebel States—of billi,to give bounty lands to the soldiers—and locate the warrants for them . exclusively south of the Potomac—^to colo- ntxo ihc Tank and file of the army through* oat the ilave States, sod to hold the theatre . of the rebellion under such political regw* erntion as. Cromwell's. Englishmen held confiscate rebel penonal prop* "7% eft] jhrodghout *the t North—discussions about; revenue, taxation, expenditure, and . thercoot, before the end, a savage demand for rcirenchmeni and econdmy.' t - TSX SXCBBTABT OF TSB TRBASOBr’fI Re> •yoßt will not be delivered before Monday. It Untried that he will present thebank- ing system, the paper money system, and the Government policy in respect to them in a light that wiU fasten thoattehtion' of 'the country upon it. The claim of .the. .Government to supply the circulating me dium of aU .kinds will be. presented, inu 'pressitely, on the ground of both principle and expediency; and on constitutional right and financial necessity. Np report from that or any other Department of the Got* eminent in the last half century has been mo.repautlously siid earnestly elaborated. Camebos Coxqbatplated.— -On . Wednesday evening, says a dispatch to the Tribiiiu, Secretary Cameron’s house was the eceiw of an interesting interview. Hav- log. entertained ilr. Bussell, of the London . vftm/i, With * few friend? al dinner, a Con -1 ' deputation, ri, thy head of which *: '-‘.Was Vice President Hamlin, was - intrp duped; IThe £«retary was congratulated his .pwition upon the slate ' Mr." Bossell-probably learned in these few moments more of the real sentimentiof tbs - country than he erer knew before.. ' ':f :■? :JPsi& rtTtTixtATßoqrs »oa;3&WMV--It * r : \ is reported in Washington tJuthre *enu«yh- | Florida as the . Xlonie of the Black**. ..Russell’* Lust Letter. .. .Tl*® *l ueslio n of blnck pop- w . .'jjhejust let ter of Mr. JhiSßell tu Uie J.au- : 4iltttiou AvliicU wiU be throtvu upon nur (.don Timcs ) Is betore Ukc j war > haring been raised by ibegreatXaval Expedit iou"w t The statiaics.'of the census of 1860 show that such a revolution could be effected in Florida with comparatively very little dis turbance or suffering; The State has an area of nearly“6o,ooo square miles, being twice as large ns Ireland, and larger than England and Wales together. It is capa ble of sustaining easily 0,000,000 of inhab itants, and yet its whole population in 1860 was only 140,000, of whom but 79,000 were whites. It has less than 20,000 white fam ilies, nearly all :of whom on the approach, of the - United forces will doubtless take refnge in Georgia and Alabama. In a country thua thinly peopled, and~on the foraakeu plantations of. the traitors, thous ands—and, if necessary,' hundreds of thousands—of contrabands could be settled at slight- expense for transportation. The steamers already ou the Southern coast could carry them by tens of thousands to their,destination by short voyages fi-ora any of the rebel ports. The climate of Florida is peculiarly adapted to the negro, beyond any other part of the continent,.and the soil, though much of it is light and sandy, is abundantly productive of all that the slatea Save been occustotocd to require as the necessaries of life. Cattle and swine are raised in imueuse numbers, and so. cheaply that the average price of cattle ia_ less than five dollars -per head. Fish - and turtle are found in the greatru profusion, and the bananu, the arrovr*root, the cassava, and other semi tropical productions, can be cultivated in all the southern part of the peninsula. There is, in short, no part of the United States so suitable for the negro as Florida in climate and soil, and certainly then is no part so well situated for the purpose of drawing off the black race from thereat of-the coun try and_concenlrating it in a territory by itself, out of the way of the whites. For a time the Territory might be governed by martial law until the restoration of peaco and ofder in the Soutb.would warrant Con gress in devising some plan for its perma nent regulation. In the meantime, the con trabands as .they, accumulated inconveni ently in onr camps and fortifications, could be carried by. sea to the nearest Floridian port, and land assigned to them in sufficient quantities for their support. Apcrioanent and accessible asylum for the .fr&e negro would thus be.. provided, far superior in jovery respect to Hayti or Liberia—an asy lum sufficient, in fact, to receive our whole slave population, to which they themselves would gladly resort, and in which; freed from the competition of . the whites, they -might develop whatever capacities they possess for improvement ami self-govern ment. At the same time, the Territory or if it should be deemed advisable to preserve the State organization, would be open to settlement by'loyal whites to whom the presence of a free negro population was not objectionable. Those who have preju dices on the subject of the_eolor of their neighbor! would, of course, not b&compelled to reside there. Stunner on Hallcck. In the“ Senate, on Wednesday, Mr. Sum ner introduced a.resolution coUing upon the Secretary of War for copies of any general orders issued by the ' Commander of the Military Department of Missouri, baling Particular 'reference to thefirat general or er issued by General Halleck. In allud ing to this order, Mr. Samner said it was of such a nature that it to speak of it and keep within bounds;* that Gen.'Halleck Had the- reputation of being a good tactician, but the act with which he had chosen to inaugurate his Command Was not calculated to giro assurance of his' suc cess hereafter. Beside being illogical and inhuman, it contemplated the surrender of fugitive sieves beyond' any Constitutional provisions -Genu Ualleck has ordered, as it appears -from - the newspaper report, ■ not only that no slaves be admitted into : hl« camps or within his lines while the army was on its. march, but that those"already, within should be thrust out The very strange reason he gave for thiar order was . that these slaves would convey Information to the enemy. This order of Gen. Halleck would cover him with a shame which ne victory he might win could remove. " No comment on this conduct of Halleck’s is so ‘ sever* as the logic of; facta. It is stated In the Western papers thatsomeof the slaves thrust back by Gon. Halleck’s order, are now employed by th? rebels on their intrsnehments. The debate in the Senate on.t£e atrocious treatment of the free blacks and slaves in Washington jail, was a Very scathing re view of the manner in which things are conducted there. Mr. Wilson, of Mass., in the coarse of hisremurks, said: - “And I hope, too, that, although we are in time of war,'-and are making large ex penditures, that prisbn, now standing in this city a burning shame and disgrace to our country, will b * leveled wWi.the and that a prison fit to keep'huntoh beings in will bo erected. The. other day the French Legation carried With them to that prison a gentleman who had traversed the civilized world examining*' prisons. The jaUorsaid to me yesterday, that that gen tleman stated, after he had gone through the jail, that he had never seen such a place in all his observations with ohe exception, and that one was in-Austria. If Senators can bear to. visit..this jail and acts with their own eyes, what I have seen, and ’X advise them, to do so, I think they will at any rate be disposed., to liberate those poor creatures confined theft’for no-jofenee what ever” , .! Aboutiov or Slatmt 27 rtrcijpjsTßicr or - ColvußU.—A movement for tjiif purpose hu teen made in the House of Representatives. The general impression is that ‘it will pass, with ißek restrictions, and modifications as are necessary to protect the owners of "chattels,” 270 aet ®eula wire greater' pleasure to the country.- It' has been a National. disgrace permitted to exist rigbtundcr jho nose pf :,.Tho_ cruelties andiqostue ifhas committed in Washington,’ ***a dnrin#dhe last ten month*, ha» r excited the indignation or Congre23,ond is sufficient to mntfe cilUen TIHQOBiTIOX OF NEUBO EMANCIPATION’. The North may profess whatever it pleases, its statesmen and Generals may write or say what they like; one thing is quite certain, — the inhabitant* of the Con federate State* to a man believe the object of the war irernancipalion and the destruction of their peculiar institution. The common name for a slave is now changed; he is no longer a “nigger,” he is termed a “contraband.” No one % can think that thedifficuky of dis criminating between slaves employed by• their masters against the Government of the United States and slaves the passive property <-f rebels will, not be found in superable. The process at concentrating the slaves from the neighborhood of hostile armies, must produce considerable' evils before it reaches its limits in the South; it will derange labor in the districts where it .has been adopted, it will cause inquiry and agitations among the slaves themselves. Their concentration inside the armies of the &outh will show their numerical strength compared with that of their masters. As yet, indeed, the North lias not been able to pierce the shell; but, if the Federalist columns advance, will the men who now burn and destroy the property of . their en emies, who lay waste the houses and farms within their Hues, respect the orders of their Generals in reference to a chattel property which can moVeltself, and which, in the eyes of the soldiers of the volunteer regiments of three-fourth 9 of the States, is .the sole cause of this pitiable strife ? The Democrats accuse the Kepublicans for hav ing caused this war by their fanaticism; and by their'essaults upon the rights guar anteed by the Constitution. They joined, Indeed, with the Republicans in the fight for the Union, disclaiming any participa tion in the designs of the laUer'agoio9t slavery ; but if the Confederates persist in rejccting-the Union because with union they can have no safety for their domestic insti tutions,* it is difficult to see how the Demo* crats can continue to fight for the Union without making’ war against that institu tion which is made the excuse-and the ground of secession. It may be easy to say this in ft war of tariffs, of opposing inter ests, of free trade against protection; but, after all, the tariffs, the interests and com mercial policies of the North and of the South rest on the. difference between free labor ami slave labor and their products. It is supposed here that the Conservative iu England are disposed to sympa thize with the South, if so, it cannot be ■ because the South has adopted “Free Trade" as its motto, so much as that the "South, if sutclaj»ks, aiitfthe walls aro built of thoSC. l>m r • ;r Auofcher Test Vole in Congress, i« Um Housc of 'Beprescnuitivts,.d<ite- *'f 4tli iflsL, Mr. HouAx. Democrat,'of (Sd,r sM§2Lu»„, ti offered the following' preamble-hod vesolu- HEBISBG, OODKISff, ~ 'r .. .he.,**©.l«North wb*mO»t«eaL£«»iad Afth uon, aud movid the pretious qutihou en l/ie itreeta, Puh-idclpqia. &:> iu WT ■■-:■ aJoulia,. - ’ *' 3flOo l*rreU Mast MadSret—Taf*e, and medium : aaophOH . .«u* Xo». 1, 2 and 3, in a4aUt*d twcka^aa. “Wmhkas, This House, ou the £M day . b " r « !,a Kha* No 1 UauiutSalmmi. of Jul}-lust, by «n almost unanimoasvMv; : JgJ fc »Sl“ J 1 adopted the following resolution, submitted Consisting ofdiffemjr hrihita^tkhfa.iof, nilirai,' to the House by the Hon. John J. Critten- lsland add Raafport, ic. ,i„ n rt f ir M »ifnkv . , J***> bows bcakd andAo. 1 dutoked Herring*, ' S’j»° V ? U i? ky .u « 'r n ~ Bank Grijlb. u ßtsSlvtd } By the House of Represent)!- Which iv* u u w offer at Ui« M!«*t «A*h prices and tires Congress :of the United States, * caiw»fo»ouriug* _ - • - that the present deplorable civil war has dMCn.,I , Ko. iMN^vvhirS^Phtr. been Caned upon the country by the di»- - uuibriWw of the Southern States now in re*, volt against the constitutional government, and ifearnis around the capital; that in thin national emergency, Congress, banish ing all Jeeliugs of mere passion or resent- will only recollect its duly to the whole eouutry; that this war is not waged upon onr part in any spirit of oppression, nor formally purpose of conquest or subjuga ; tioD, nor for the purpose of overthrowing or : interfering with the rights or established rnstitutionn of the States; bttt to defend and maintain the supremacy of UitLConstitution and preserve .the Uniou with its dignities,- equalities, -and the rights of the several States-unimpaired; aud as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease* “Jnd whereas, Since that time no event has occurred to change the feelings of the government: therefore, • “Jlesolved, That the principles above ex* pressed are solemnly re-affirmed by this House. 5 ' Mr. Stevens, of Pennsylvania, (Hep.) thought the resolution ought not to be de bated. The Speaker replied that the gentleman from fediana, (Holman,) demanded the previous question, so that it is not dT LIST OF APPLICA JL TICKS* FUR SELLING LHIUOBS, filed in the Clerk’s Office up to December tkh, Idiil: DciLUin Theodore, tatibg hotiep, 4tliw'd, Alleghany, Bower*Frederick, do ’ ' Lower St. Clair Tg. Cbertle ClctueDt, tavern, do' Philip* Thofuae, other.goods, Chartierv da lUrtunton D.; tavern, ithy’d, Pittsburgh Schuller John, ' ' do r lst' do do Solgrfat George, isatlng bouse, 3d do do Stewart A Brother, tavern, - Uth do do Slocum Salvador, do .sth do do WiiriAmU, . other goods, West do Werner Adaxd, tavern', ' .Ist ward, do v TheComtwinincrtonMONDAY.Dvcemberleth, 18GJ, at 10 o'clock,' to act on ths abotfc hid. daedtd ~ W. A. HEBRON, g«rt, JIiUN CITY COLLEGE, Comer Aw and SL Clair Streets. OPENjDAY AND EVENING. 'Students enter at any time, and receive instruo tion ln. . • BOOK-KEEPING, ■ penmanship, * arithmetic, ALGEBRA, - GEOMETRY, , SURVEYING, ENGINEERING, DRAFTING, «*e., • J 8 Dressed Hogs, .... . <5 bushels Hltkorj h'uts, 100 sacks Pea Nuts, r ’' 10 saddles choice' Venison, Jiwtmpivod and Jbrsala by ; JAMES A. FJCIZER, • de7 , , Corner Market and >’lm street. ITELMJbOi.Ua IiE.NULNKX’iUiI'Ak- XJ. AXIOM. ... IiELMBOLD’S BUCHU for tbs. Bladder. HELMBOLD*B BUCHU for ‘the-: Kidneys. UELMBOLD’S BUUUU for the Gratcl. ' IIELMBOCD’H BUDHO for tho Dropsy. UELMBOLD’B ItUCUU for Narrousiiees. HELMBOLD’B.BUOHb* for Dimness of Vision, v HELHBOLD’S BUCHU for lUpfoult Breathing. HELMBOLB’B BCCIIC for M>dt Nervts. HELHBOLD’B BUCHU for GeWal Debility. UELMBOLD'ri BUCHU- for tlnireraal Lassitude. r*r sale by * j JOSEPH. FLEMING, - 'Corner of the. Diamond and Market streets. 4e7‘ • " ~ \_/ DJU bW*>,Ore«o Apple*; Kjbbb.,l)ry Peachcs; ■ 50 bbla;fresh ground Bye,Flour; ■ • 160 buses E. D. ' Ittl boxes W. R. Cheese; -60 bbls* prime S. 0. Molasses;- sUdoz,Kxtr»Fancy Brooms;•• 7i>boxe*Wood*\-fl larch; . . . 60 doi. medium Fabcy Brooms; • • 60 bbls. Mecca Lubricating Oil; - 1(D bush, prime Htckory Nuts, new; .-Just received and for.sale.by - . FRANK TAN GQRDEBi - AeT " . No. 114 Second street. • i nnn i?AiKis : &L£xm ,iop sole low IvUUbi • . jjown atexlet, ~ . de7„ , , , 136 Wood street.^ f j»Olx ; six lnch aui, shot ke- V> VOLVEBS.-r A freA'stock .fast received and for sale by 'BOWIf.A TETLEy, LwWbodst^^. LTOY'S ANU MEN'a akiOWforSf. . >yood u. , .jfll'iamjinKiTjr. .raft - ALi AI I N is>Tit AT u K's-mi.h uF STOCK AND SCRIP.—On TUESDAY EVEN IJiO, December loth, at 7*>£o’clock, at the cial Sal 13 Roums, No. £4 FMli streat, b/ordsr of Jtuue* P. Sterrett, Administrator IUO Scrip of the same Company. 21 shares Ohio and Feim’a B. It: Co. Stock. S2U Scrip of the ume. de’fr.Std J. G. DAYlti, Aoclioueer. N OKUINANCE repealing aii Or dinance relative to City Warrants, patted Jon* 27th, 1H5)), and section sixth of chapter twenty-wren ufllevlsed Code, ordained and enacted oct.‘4ih, 1859. Be it it ordained aud enacted Jby the Mayor, Alder- Won itnd citiziuis of Pittsburgh in ;sol*ct and Common CouuciU assembled, aud it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That ou Ordinance relative to oily officers' and city warrants, passed June 27th, lSo I .*, ami sectiou sixth of chapter iwenty-soveu -of Revised Code, relative to city officers aud city war rants, ordained aud enacted Octobur 6th, 1859, be and the same U hereby repealed. Ordained end cuected into a law in Councils, this 6th day of December, A. fj., Itull. J. I. BENNETT, _ President pro fern of Select Council. Attest: B. Mofikuw, Clerk of Select Council. " A. U. M’CAKDLESS, President ufCotnmou CounciL „ Attest: Huon M'Masteb, Clerk of Common Council. deC:3td MARSHAL'S SALE.—By virtue of w Writ of hale, by Hots.' Jonh Cmiwalader,. Judgo-cf the District Court of the United States, In Sd forthc Eastern District of Petmsylvania, in Ad raity,:to me directed, will be sold at Public Sale, to the and best bidder; for cash, at DUTILH, COOK' 1 A :CO.’S ■ AUCTION STOBE, Tfo. 124 South FRONT Street, on TUESDAY, December 17,1861, o’clock 3,000 bags of COFFEE,’ be the same Wore or less, being tho cargo of the httrlr MEACO.— Sample* can be wen at the auction store, and at the stores of BUTCHER A 880., Noa. 146 and 148 North FRONT Street. WILLIAM MILLWAKD, C. S. Marshal, K. D. of Pennsylvania. Puilidclthu, Dec. 3d, 1001,—defied Atlantic monthly, ; OODEY’S LADY’S BOOK, HARPER'S MAGAZINE, PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, ■ KNICKERBOCKER MAGAZINE, BALLOU’S MONTHLY, ECLECTIC MAGAZINE, BLACKWOOD AND THE REVIEWS, And all the other popular Periodicals can be had at J. R HUNT'S Hook, Stationery, Magazine and Newspaper Dopot, MASONIC HALL, FIFTH STREET. fiSf-Bubscription* received at the very lowest rate*. NnwT» the time to anhahrilte. ilpil:sjewT uVrn-c or tub Citizens InsuiUnce uimi'aai, i Pittsburgh, Dec. 6th, iNil. j AX ELECTION for Fifteen Directors of this Company, to'«-rvß during tho ensuing year, will be licld at this office, nn MONDAY, ICth lust.. U'tweon the hours ofll a. m. ami 1 p. m.- dcoidtd . ■ • SAMUEL REA, Secretary. urncE Clevclsm) asd Pitthbueoii Kailkoad C 0.,) —• ; Cleveland, November 27th, 1661: j THE ANNUAL -MEETiNG.. of the Stockholders of this Company, for the election of Directors and transaction of other business, will bo held at the Office of the Company, In Cleveland, ou W'EDNESDAY, the Ist day of January dext, at 10 o’clock a. m. The Transfer Books will be closed on t he Aid day of December usd open ou the atb of Jauuory. no&hHOtd E. ROCKWELL, Secretary. ; ; Theasuami's Orrict, AllEohext Co., Pa., i Pittsburgh, Dec. 6, 1861. j ' PURSUANT to_ the provisions of a res olution of the Legislature of the Coznmenwaaltb oi April K), 1835, notice is hereby given to all persons’ desirous of procuring copies of tho Acts of the next Legislature) to subscribe at this office for the same. A few cojdos of - the Acts of the hut Legislature re main for thorn subscribing, and others. de&lawd3w . O. Y. COULTER, County Trcae. Allegheny countv, si—msa Ccuumonwralth of Pennsylvania, Cornelius W. Lawrence and Elijah Purdy, executor* of thc'last will and testament of David M. Prail, late of the city-of -New-.York, deceased;-ahibfo tho heird end all outers concerned; In purßoancsoftbe fifteenth secthin of an Act of Assembly of Laid. Common wealth, entitled “An Act to create a Sinking Fond, and,to provide for the gradual aud certsiu extinguisbmout of thudebt of the Commonwealth,” passed the lbth day of April, A. D., 1640, you are hereliy cited to bo and appokr. before me, Wsi. J. KxcicutßSOX, Register for tho Probate of Wills, Ac., lu ami for said county, oujrir before MONDAY, tii* fithday of January, A, !>., ltltfl, then and there to show cause why the collateral inheritance tax upon the following Real Estate «bnll not be eollttcfcd’ under the pruviimmi'of said Act of Assembly; herein foil not. Sold Beal Ertale’coaslsts of •' 3 Qonses and Lots an. Wood street, 5 “ “ “ Hand **"’ _ > 1 Vacant Lot •* '•*’ ♦* ’„U M •* .*• Pena “ ft House and Lot “ •• * . fi Houses and Lots “ St. Clair “ Given under my hand and seal ofoffice at Pittsburgh, day of Dooember, A. lB6l. tc. . . C. HANSON LOVE, ‘ No. 74 Masset Street. . now " eWwoGLW Gopm , HORSE’S TRIMMING STORE, No. 77 Market Street. We hare received thti week largo quantities of WOOLENHOOD3, 80NTAGS, NUBIAS, SCAMS, MITTS, AND VICTOHINrSi AUo,' WOOLEN BOOKS TOR SOLDIEBSj MERINO AND WOOL BIBBED HOSE, FLEECY LIN ED COTTON. HOSB.ANDJTANCr - { WOOL BOSS;. - A'MlsAdU u> . MRBWOt of .«U klnds ..of QLQTE3 andaOACSI».--\,. - ..LBTSibr LADIES 4 . . mod MISSES. :„\i - ' . ALEXANDERS KID GLOVES, . . HEAVY LINED BUCK. GLOV?& *Aral»ntfe article. . furthaeoldum. COUNTRY . MERCHANTS AND :iULLINERd will find our assortment of RIBBONS,• : RUCHES,. FLOWERS, BONNETS, HATS, AND TURBANS; SILKS, VELVETS, ROM BA ZINKS, ENGLISH CRAPE, Ac., Ac,uwurp*«fd by anjr in the dty, either In juice or qiudltjr. • - nSaiiintT ■ JOSEPH IIOUNE, 77 Market it. /TAN DLKS—JO boxes Star Candies. " ■V/..-.: .’i: SO So Mould do ‘ for«Mebr ..■■■■. J. 7 It- BOBISOK A CO.- - 13 KOOAlii—-100 dozTCOrnßrooita, plain &ttC7. hr ■M.by . It. BOBISOK A CO- ACON—7SOOO. lbs. nice ISacon dhoul dor. Bt ini. by J. B. CANMELD A 00. riIOKR—IU barrels in Btoro and for ’ del ! J. 3. CANFIELD. A CO. pHOIEOPI and foe aaloby rXiHHON:UHr-XU bbia. No. 1 for sale V> tT' ' d»7 ’ ' ItEKBr H. COttlSa. AIMES' SKATES for sale by < *?_ ■' ; • BO'VK t TEtunr.'Bii Woad»t. vQ£Ai< S—ll bags White Beans for sale -X> tn~"r -. -v“-''■■•*-- ■»•*■„. K.BOM»s*ob. SPfCIJX. JVOTICES. gSF PR. : OEORGB H. KEYSER, Wholesale Di*uggist MEDICINE DEALER, HO. ;i«0 WOOD bTKEET, PlTTfUtmaH, PA. f ? r ? ? ? ? f TB USF-X3 FOB TBS CUBS OF lIEBXJA OR BUFTVBE» : MARSH’S RADICAL CHRS-IRUSai RITTER‘3 TATENT TRUSS. . . FITCH’S SUPPORTER TRUS3. SELF-ADJUSTING TRUSS. DB. BANKING’S LACE OR BODY BRACE, for the cure of PrcUpeua Uteri, Pile*. Abdominal and Spinal WoakneNve. DR- 3. S. FITCH’B SILVER-PLATED SUP PORTER. PILE TBOPS, for the mpport and cure cf Fill*. ELASTIC STOCKINGS, for ireaJt and varirreo veina. ELASTIC KNEE CAPS, for weak knee joints. ANKLE SUPPORTERS, ( for weak ankle joint*. SUSPENSORY BANDAGES. SELF-EJECTING SYRINGES; afoo every kind of Syringe*. „ DR. ILL VSER Los also a TRUSS which will radi cally euro Uuinlu or Rupture. <*9*ornojt at ini Dat a Stork, No. Ho Woo* stbekt, sign-of the Golden Mortar. DR. KEYSEB priaeribes in caws of Chronic DU eaacs, and lias Instruments for DeAfhesa .and every disease requiring mechanical support. GALVANIC BATTERY on ELECTRO-MAGNET IC MACHINES, for modicaJ pur;>oees > pf a vary supo rior kind, will be tent free of express charges, wher ever au express runs, upon a remittance of Ton Dol lar*. Address DR. GEO. IL. KEYSEB, HO Wood street, Pittsburgh, Fa. DIABBBEA CUBED BY SWAYXE’S BOWEL CORDIAL. Every bottle warranted or monej ro fimded. Sold at DR. KEYSER’S, No. 140 Wood street. BED BUQBf RUACUEsS, Ac.—The Huusekeeper’s Rifle. Sold at DR.* KEYSER’S, 140 Wood st. BATS ASD MlCE. —Surf destruction' to n»f«t Vermin by using YABNELL’S ENTERMINATOR, an entirely new preparation,' and warranted to re more these pests from every house. Sold at DR. KEYSER’S, 140 Wood street. EXTRA RAZOB3.—I hare a few JKXTRA ZOES, which I wtU dcA out at cost. GEO. H. KEYSEB, 110 Wood street. HEADACHE CURED.*- •At 1 fnfalHi.fr* Headache will be found lu FRAZER’S HKADACHB PILLS. Try them. Prlco 25 cents, at Jy3o:il4wT • KEYSER’S, liOAtuod street. ESTTo Horse Owners.—Dr; Sw&et’g IN»aLLIBLE LINIMENT FOR HORSES ie unri valled by any; in all cases of Lomenesßi* alisiag from Sprains, Brubes, or Wrenching, ha effect is magical and certain. Uarhess or Saddle' Gao% Mougo, Ac., It will-also care speedily. “Spavin aud. easily prevented and cured In their incipient stages, but confirmed cases are Uyond th*» possibility of a r&dlcld cure. No case of ths kind, however, is so desperate or'hopeless hilt it tnay.be al leviated by this Litilment, and ita foithful applica tion will always remove the lameness arid'enable tho hone to travel with comparative easo. : ; J - EvWry horn owner should have this remedy at hand, for its timely use at the first appearance of lameness wUI effectually prevent thesafortnldable djemsns men tioned, to'which all horses are liable, anti which ren der so many otberwfoo valuable hones uearly worth less. CLOAKS, it. £. SELLER 3 A CO., Agents, coruer of Wood and Second streets, Pittsburgh.. ■ ...ap27:lydqwff symood Food.—Attgntlon i, nnli wi to the most remarkable'and icientiflo preparation, advertised in another column. Tit is au entlrely now discovery, and must not be confounded with any of the numerous patent medicines of the day. It Is ■ certain remedy for all the diseases specified, and e»- psclully thOMdf a chronic natuxe~of longstanding of weeks, months and years. • Sufferers,-try it. Mxasm. Cuuouu k Dctont, of NeW; York, are the sole sgiuib for it, dml also propfleibra of the world reuowued'Dn. Latus’s iJfiAtrraA COxniAl.'an arti ule which every Mother should Kare-ln-her ttvdicina closet In case of need; .amt containing, Jm-:4| dosa, no port-goiic bt opiate of any kind, it can be reded upon with the ulinuat confidence, aud will be found au in valuable specific ImeUcaMe .of infantile cctuplainu. —oAw> Bbiu Jo*rmU, CoUiubiu. Fcrr sale by GEOBSEHi KEYSEB, Agent, No. ItO Wood street, rutiborgh, Pa.' ,' _ del7:dswT jy-MAMHOOP-How loit. How KKaTORED.-Just puhlisbed lu -a Sealed Envelope. Price Cceuts. , : r . '• AxLecture-cu th*N*ture, Treatraaat'and lUdicai Core of Spermatorrhoea or Somlul Waakaaea, Intel notary Stuiaaiona, Sexual Debility, and Impedi*. meat* to Marriage generally, Menruosnoa; Con*ump« tion, Gpilopay and Yit*;M*nialaud Physical Inca pacity* retailingfraaSetf-Aboae, Ac. ByROBT. JL CULVEBWELL, U. D. t aiithor of tfr* Gun Book* ACn Ac. - v . . “A Boon to Tho caavds or Sctnut&i*.” Sent under *6*l, in « plain envelope, to any iiHrci poet-paid, on reoaipt cieix corn or two poataga a tempi, by • i)H. CH. J. 0. KLINE, 12? Bowery, Box 4H&. *e€:3md*wT . , V: . gylakß Bnparior Copper Mill nni AMXLUSfi. VOBKB, Ptnama i 'v, PARK, . M'CUEDY & CO., Manufocturcn oi' SHEATHING; BRAZU6BS’ ANT> BOLT COPPEB, PRESSED COPPER BOTTOMS, raised still bottoms, spalteb'bolder; alsolmnortaraaiid.LaUruln beta fJt J Tyy w.ito SHEET IRON,'WIRE, Ac. Constantly on TINNERS’ MACHINES AND. TOOLS. ? - silks, WaaMoce*, Ho. 149 Ftm andT2o Second atreeta, Ptttabnrgh, Pcxm’a. AW'Special order* of Copper cat tij any daaifed *cnu • .. tnyftftdewH jpyHelmbold' Extract Bni3lm f . THE GREAT DIUBETia HELMJBOLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU, . THE-aBRAafiaUBETIO. HELMBOLD’S EXTRACT BXJCHU, • * • THE GREAT DIURETIC. HELUBOLD'S EXTRACT BUOUU, ' THE GREAT DXURETIO. And«PetiUv» and Spedfioßem«dyfor2H*e*#e* of the Bladder, Gravel, Kidney*, Dropey, dfniii Weak neaa, and all disease* of the Urinary OtganL . See advortiaemant In anolharcalamn.. Cat U out, and send for tbe madlcina at Bcwans or CooMinnrora. ■ . . . no2&wafdawT^ wn. C. aoeiNatJM..—. j* WITHBOW BnmTiM-.. ROBINSON. MINIS ft MIL. LEAS, rbuNPiaa amp: Micimarr*, - WAunxoron Wonxe; Pittabnrgh, Penn’a.: -j T- Orncx, No. 21 Mammxt Stmxxt. Manufacture all kind* of STEAM. ENGINES AMD MILL MACHINERY, CASTINGS, RAILROAD WORK, STEAM BOILERS AND SHEET IRON. WORK. - rv>- - W-JODBIKO AND BEFAIEIKO iviem .hart notice. * •>-. n^9>trfiy JC3T JOHN COCHRAN A s BROT, Meua&c turer* of IRON BAILING, IRON VAULTS, AND VAULT . i>Q9B3»V WINDOW SHUTTERS, WINDOW Nca.’9l'Second rtraet and 6C Third *treety between Wood and Market. Hava’on* hand a variety of new Faltorna, fancy and plain; vnitable for aS pdipoeea. Particular attention peidto enclosing Grata Lota. Jobbing dona at abort notice. ' nh9 jCSTPittibiirge Btert Work*. _ ISAAC J0N18... L. M ,CCIKrCa*. JONES, BOYD & CO, - Manafsctuien of OAST STEEL; Ebo/.-SPRING, PLOW AND A. R. STEEL, STEEL SEKiNafIAND AXLES, corner of Boa* and Firat rtreeta, Phtabnrgh, Pehn**. * • •'•• ••’ cels issrs. A A ft RjeifoaA. Hp«r MAN PPACTUBEBBanddeaIenInBOOX, PRINT,. CAP, LETTER AND ALL KINDS-OP'WRAP PING PAPER.' SSPHaye removed from - No. 27 Wood (treat to No. 33 SmUhSaUl (treat, Pmaburgb,Pa, MM"OABHj)R TRADE YOB RAGS, v. m y 4 fa fOBEIGN AND LOHESTIO BILLS OP H. CHANGE, CEB7UICATE3 Or DKfpSI?, BAXX NOTE9'X2n> SPECIE, 7To. ST HtzLet burgh, 49*CoU«ctIans Btada on. all tbo principal citba throughout tha United Statu. - : > gp& fl. COLiiSa, Por- WAHJUSQ A}il> COMMISSION Vl»Mict..i| .holing ln CIIKESE, BUTTE*," BXEE3, Tl3H,mjiPio4aa> pmcrill,, Ko. 25 Vfeal Pittibarfcli; Pn.. ■ <.■,.■&. nol j^i.M.ia'frtlSrllereliantf LOi* *“* '•• •’“ ••■■■'■ ’ -OS, !fo. S 4 S». CUli Slain; Dt,‘js4» Ban*. lx* BttiiwjsJi, Vi!:.* V-V V'V-i. •*»