- -*A IT; 10.11;,, TIIEOAY MOlMliCi r - MARCH 11 Mr. comas oa the Staireso.Oppor. Itlbmearreat ehing.inridr. ot,oes late, wia 16 fling ai the' negivea. He :7-iiitraliiisdiettiftolentlidlitrigliioliell him self, in slid:sense; I/ other parte of that , , elaborate production, but,here he rose to a tilisuai of lidly'and lidiehood. &adios isi'ltself; and disregard:Of 'all - eviden ce and all justice, could not go farther. Read ir - Ortis attributed to him in the-report . , we copieq a day or two aio:' Your. billions of elms are held in_slarery ' this country. .Mhat are the signs of their issauseipation 1 How many hundreds' and ' thotmands of them hen thrown off their chains to the last few months 7. they lavilual *Teri, -opportunity secure their liberty and come to de r armies, Have they done so? If not, Union force them to excbangetheir voluntary "servitude fin involuntary freedom! thought the world was old enoughto have:Learned. long ago that those who were entitbsiito free don mnst.themselves strike the blow: What blow has the negro etruck, in this his bright est. hoar for - freebie end when his master, fry 'bisection, has tacitly invited him to assort hit manhood? How has he availed , himself Of it! In just the way we might have AN plots& Knowing nothing of liberty, and car ing nothing for it; he has remained inactive like somedoutestie animal, or nearly so, im pelled by.somiblind, unconscious instinct to depandenee upon a muter wiser and stronger tharthimself. A child in growth and decd . opulent, can be, like a child, have bade some . :inialuet that the boon so proffered to hbir by overeasions friends would preys sitar:al to Mar , is the box or. Pandora or the shirt of MOMS There seems to be no stronger hope , for the hem at present, though I would have hits free even as lam myself. 7- , - What;does, Gowan 'Mean?' 'What does he assert, what does he deny, in the - , above? Besides eleteriCal effeit, what de* this irray of interrogatories euggest .Dl)es he suppose his hearers so ignorant of the funs of the past and of the present that those adroit interrogatives must fall with the force of indisputable and unanswerable arguments, to silence all dissent? Mow could Mr. Cowax, without blush ' -lug, assert, "They hsve had every oppor tunny to, secure their, liberty and come to " our armies," and as if he had the • power to stultify the senses of his auditors to reit his own prtrposes—"llare they done ?"' • "How many hiedreds and thousands of them have thrown off their chains in the list few monther - Did Mr. COWAN forget • where he was, and to whom he-was speak, rug? Did he imagine he was addressing en extra-stupid 'Greensburg' 'jury in a ler . duty muse,' where slew bold assertions and si few coirespondingly bold questions *tight be declaimed with - overwhelming Under any other view of the matter than Ohl last supposition, wecannat account for the almest sublime audacity of Mr. Cow ax ;n asserting thst-the , slaves " have 'had , every opportunity , to - seenretheir liberty . and 00MOi0 our armi es," when every Boa ster, as as the,` honorable gentlexhan himeelc knew. the exact. reverse to be the 'tinth,—knevi - thatthe Poor, wretched fugl; tives very had been denied, by full •'''ibur-fit,Wniti,llenervils; in their orders .and proclamations, anyword of encourage- •• Meng, or even anyadmisilon of their right, to we their present "opportunity" for free , •, : iltr_ra. Far from encouragement to use, or even admission that there is, any opportet, *ratty for freedom, has not every organ of the Government; from the President down. 'to the General in the field, iiiscouieged • every hope of 'the slave, by, the most em , • ; ipitatic !insurances, that, in case of a rising ~-lagainit, their tyrants, "the wh'ole force of the goveinmeat would.bit used" to' protect the masters and to'cnish the slaves? Bat Mr. CORAZI says they have had "every opportunity", and` s Mr.,COWAN is, Brutus, "an ltonorable man," there . foia,-." 'Marc Altoriy-wise, let us, blunt men, and undsentsters as Mr:Cowax t. 4 to believe'; this ‘4tion, and admit they "have had every op -. iportunitY." - • . - Bo be'it,.thert,But about the time Mr. - ICOWI4 vas this speaking in Wishington, General Its.M.sii- was -thus writing, to • I,Pro-elavery editor in 'Missouri; I?dopt your suggestien"—whiah was "to issue general order for an inspeetiOn•Of aU troops . !for asiidiscoOdy,of fugitive slaves, and for a, notes rigid enforeeesent of the order. heretofore made 'ndlitary - "eonunanders- : --not .allow • ; 'slaves to enter their lines, and to . eielude all = Who had hod entered." flo they lave' had r . "every , opportuuity,' , as you say; kir. COWAN, and even while you,exult - 11'0g it, cleneral.ilau.aci is thus giving them his views of..!cipliortu : nity'-while they, ;blind, stupid wretches; . cannot ' see it' in Order .No. i s . or. iu this . promise of a'More.iigid enforteiMont there • ,of I 'Every oPportunittit Oh,' just , lifieVen t itg there' no' rebuke -• of shuttle, of-' tamerse, of a self-accusing Conscience, to overtake the, an' who.. thus insults,, with the cruelest of satire, the unheppy elav•?___ L Mutthe audacious assertion thus furnish-. od by flepersl'fisatsca with a timelyrillus ---- tistion, is , -not. the end of Mr. COWAN'S . piendo-Danionian _virtue : An we have al : ready intimated, the . misstatement; in it, whose g rossness outrages all mederstion, we -; slue - 014 to aay, all decency, frill of par tisan advocacy, fe but the approach to „hie Trend tour-di -force, interrogation :—"Have. they :"secured their liberty, and come to our armies? -Mow many hundreds : and thorie:: ends:of them have throWn off their chains *Ake last few months? What; Mr. Ponatoi cowmt t Did you not 'know'even' while you thus pretended to • sore • the fact, - that,. spite of - tite. scant and narrow opening or tfie door of *Ppm-. ".- tunityito. the -slates, hothAtundreds' and, Veousands'-stars othrown of their chains , - II the last few months?" Mawr hundreds, „MAST thousands, too, these - fi rst fruits of • 1 ' - God's halves! of freedom already number; - , but more, far more, there would have beeni ; -r.Wlsown,with sorrow and shame, had better; eittrthier and'honeiler'inen helm sent to the Aleuts of the United States , thin some who , • .:'sonisaged to - gee there-ea the pirate Nash. miller lately-, gotlieta Beenfort—by flying 'fake colors for ii , while. . . .-_ , liossetro , a . fruott-r,lii cts.tar, 7Usf;;Dir*lttiii94,=..tiel'•ilimiell; the .Oor '.thei " • idea ? I iris letter . _ ontili7th* : . , . ga l ttion iiii'iogiii4 Jed for4quls ' ritiliq riteF; A i --, ,liftoffs: for Its . 1. lilif" - ..10r: the "413 litarr.Movestients and 4rnsx?fews. A #lle4hles , ctliii *lS*debt:lE itrOlont sup- *e "Idie quite a considerable stackbf good and promising news both from the east and west I The late movements on the Upper. Potdinati *lll chiefly £ excite attention, as indicating 404 ihetgoisl time of action, so long desired, /gating delayed—lutanow undoubtedly ooze at lasL On FFiday , night Col Cleary put ble iiirc es' 'ln ,"un)tbcn; left Leyte tniiillo, marehedtriumpbantly, .through Wheatland and Waterfor4, tookposoession of Fort Johnson; one of the etrongest defenses- , of the town, and about -sunrise on Saturday morning, entered Leesburg, with fixed bay onets and Bags flying, driving the rebel General Hill from the town and surround- Ing'forts, in full retreat - tabards Middle: hut. • Though the manceuVre was.brilliaut, and the - result gained is valuable, in refer enosto 'future operations; it was accom- Rushed without any severe corttlict,--the rebels themselves having despaired , of _ mating any ~puccessful resistance:. We trust the advance on the right wing has sow Made a sure thing of the, ground es far as Leesburg; and that no centre temps willow again:displace the stars_and • stripes new floating there: • Another' item of army news from the Potomac IS equally interesting, and per haps quite as significant of stirring times being at hand in that quarter. We refer, of course, to the division of thelarmy into five corps cr cures, commanded respectively by-Generals ,Duntner, McDowell, Heintsel man, Keys and. Banks. It has long been in contemplation to carry out such a divis ion, and now that it is done, webelieve the final arrangement fo r all that is to follow • •. las been made, and,the last step necessary to prepare' for putting-thi columns in mo tion has lien taken-:-io that the movement itself and its sequences may be hourly looked for,ithougli as yet, with the excep- . lion of, CoL,Geary'ioccupation-of Leesburg, . above•mentioned, it- may-still •be said that , hi quieit along the - Potomacl7 • In the. West, we, have evidence of condo nous active preparations= - for the' deeisiire businesithat Commodqre Feer,S; and , the mortar and, gunboats under hie command, are about yeady tenridertake down the :The, gallant General Fork is just now in need of his assistance, at New -Madrid, but,: with or without, will make as sure and clean work with the rebels in the southern, as he did lately in the north ern, part of Miisouri., Island No.lo, where the runaways from. Columbus and other fields of fame, have 'congregated' for a final stand before giving niMemphrs,*will prob ably bo evacuated, if GeneralPora's attack on NeW 'Madrid shall result in the capture of that stronghold. But whether or not, since the rebels would not venture to make a stand against'the redoubtable gunboats of Commodore FOOTE, at Columbus, a much stronger place than Island No. 10 can be, it is by no means likely that they will do any better at the latter • place— when, besides the gunbc'ala, of whose quality some of them have longaince bad a taste, at Forts Henry - and Bertelsen, they have now in prospect the still Moro terrible mortar boats, each with its wide-throated iron monster reposing on its bed, 7 -ready, at a signal to turn its head, already uplifted, in a -Most perilous and every way disagreeable direc tion. . . • . It may be thst the telegraph will bring us the expected news from the Mississippi, even befote we go tO press. The Exploit. 'of the Rebel Steamer We need not.direci attention to the impor tant telegraphic' account,' given in' another cold* * , of the attecit on our blockading *es sib, at the month of James river, by the rebel iron-armed steamer Merrimac: , It irsis fall and olear as could be erpeoted under the sir etimitinices ; bat s of course, it. it no more than a mere whetting of our, eariosity to keener eagerness, to hear the_ detailed accounts, which are now oti:theirwai, and which, as soon as A bell. hasten, to Isy before Meantinmo, ecinotr7 , iiiot fail to note the sininlielitdifriiibln. 'which this' airair of :Ppliesz of the truth of Mr. EtantOn'a remark in reference, to the true source of victory. From all the facts yet , re ported, we are bound to judge that there was tie pan', either in „the land batteries, or in any form of craft afloat; to step the ,progress of this iron monster, till tta ram-like 'prow lic:M.l47e cloiep asuitder, or its gone have shatt red , MrlinPtoilli 4 sds. ,The Mamas, indeed, might have wed them-' sitivesbut only by inglorions ilighti• As for the sailing oreft,,large and - enall; 'the com plete destradlieb. of ,them all was only a quo' Mon of time: , 'The ate of the Cumberland, or of the Congress, was beftitweverjr one of them withottteren;a,porsikility, of oscatio, so .far Laws, c a n see from the stato of, the feats repotted, ap to the aprzersuce of the Monitor on the : seen, o'f ,^ ' ' Thai,. Mr. ,Stanton;, it: . was. ; no Generare work tOYorgaalze.victoryl , in this instance. Ryury syllable - in that now famoaa Crom, wallliu Jitter Of)otiri,a iu hero bilail:rerliSed. The: , Loin Goo Of. 8.0/4011y it wee, who here - aorgsuisal - victory." The appearance of the ktokirei' .. ti )lauiPthn Roads hut E , 3 at intbnato as ranch—arid,. if there wan then .any Am for, doubt, that fought oonfliet,'6n Sunday skornbig,rnide the prOefofl . l4c - seblitne propeiftio# molt oom ;pleie.; 011 . 81 0 14 i. Dr. . Itusselk the London . ..Titsgs• cone b3l7-6eou4'of kulooT, badly of Ister-polimps be4use his evii r boiding cies hate not been generally °regarded as true prepireles by the people,; MI, what. ii, worse,'still.ave -been. utterly , di/reseeded by deletes, yridellare ordereillets so ae to pay thp fill Ailment of any single one of them. lint :thengliDr• begins to . which his testimony: he, never been doubt ttil--that' s . iwritry. = lit *sr, to . chi 'nue, le writes What may ' even. be a rebuke to some of the eontridators to that .lol;full;lfho 1 ! )-0 . ,Youtu°,ll4 to 4 n4 '-,'Peoudolhifo sophiear!, treatises, and dissertations, very iike.spologies for,elavery; during the past tewTtamithei in 4,r:columns:: We make the ' ' " ~Eliseriis to, me .detWitehie: •:ihestMse I saw•ef.ite the less X liked ' -It is painful' • so ono.who has 'seen thesystem at work and its. results te reed is English journslt phi , lesiThfreal:.-1 . sieudo;philatoplkieg triatit thGettesubjeet;" lissereitiettiCon - e "eithl4';and'ittatthethie of the curse from whloh rte Bht 4 .4 tifse l i# frf4 : 7 2-**:;# 1 1 0 idikall;4loo•94o ourown consciences ''ltha a world. c: Oorilklfoivnot.s4l4l6: $11::,. Mfmrunderitut tees of ,the cry ondiebems:wouldlnosst litectmittlisind In places whets Its appals sit p romises ea :1) • «;. ." 111;w:rfill.eriland dead:-!!:17:11:1Ma decided on 1. - • its Mitt tootle , siditt(itillitary oierstions '-.‘----;;;,----. ------------,----- - 1 --- ,. ,- cannel—at liieseziey...fiimii, if nLall intim,. t V-SHLECT RHADINOS BY :*-f-liti . , Alt'Alq szab. sliced by the questions connected with els- I :,... 11, May - be that another moith will suf fiSe tiTistitiary - Dr. litissell, that ihis last its. 1 aertlon is another of the many ill-cOnsider- 1 ' ed one's, he has 'ventured to make in his letters, white discussing subjects which he is bold enough to refer to without under standing. The Exchange of Prisoners of War. The public has had several tariffs before it of late, but here is the very latest. It is a tariff to regulate the exchange of prisoners of war, and appears in a recent order to General Halleck from General Mc- Clellan. This tariff was adopted between this country and _England during the war of 1812, and is its follows : General, commander-in-chief, or admiral —sixty mon. Lieutenant-general, or vice-admiral— forty men. - Major-general, or rear admiral—thirty men. Brigadier-general, or commodore with a broad pennant, and'a captain under him— twenty men. Colonel, or captain of a line-of-battle-ship —fifteen men. Lieutenant,-colonel, or captain of a fri gati:—tep men. Major, or commander of a sloop-of-war, ,bomb-ketch, fire ship or packet—eight men. [ Captain or lieutenant, or master—six [ men. Lieutenant, or master's mate—four men. • Bull-lieutenant, or ensign, or midship man, warrant officer, masters of merchant vessels, and captains of private armed ves sels—three men. Non-commissioned officers, or lieutenants and mates of private armed vessels, mates of merchant vessels, and all petty officers of ships-of-war—two men. Private soldiers, or seamen—one man. The San Juan Difficulty In the Eng • The following is a sufficient hint to the Gregnries in. England, that that Govern me4 will not- listen to any suggestions likely to "create trouble" with ours, on any subject, at present : Mr: Haliburton ("Sam Slick,) in the House of Commons, on th? 21st ultimo, asked Lord Palmerston in what position the question of the occupation of the Island of 'Juan now stands. His Lordship replied that' here has been no alteration in the ar rangement madebetween General Scott and Governor Douglas, three years ago, the island 'being still occupied by a force of one hundred *Americana and one hundred British, pending the decision as to the country to which it belongs. Negotiations on this head were carried on until the oc currence of the civil war in America, when they - were' suspended. Meanwhile, his Lordship considers that no useful end can be served by discussing the question in Par liament or producing the papers connected with it. Another instance is thus furnish ed of the desire of the British Government, (whieb is also shared largely by the public and by a portion of the press,) to avoid creating trouble}:tr perplexities to the Cab inet of President Lincoln. Merrimac. ME=lll!=M=. Pattiament. Tin Louisville Journal, of the Bth inst., clues a rather depricatory article on the Pre sident's special message on the subject of gradual emancipation, in these singular words: 'r Amongst other good effect, that we may promise °tundras from this important feature of the menage, (the feature which thelour mai says' recognises the right of the slave States to deal u they moo fit with the subject of slavery)—ls a prompt, and general, and savage howl from the whole abolition pack." And does it then rosily give the Joentol man satisfaction to bear the abolitionists "howl?" This is certainly • quite different froth what we had heretofore 'Opposed, judg ing from the way that paper has always con demned and denounced the howling of that class of 'Yankees 1 We very much doubt, how ever, if the ifo . ornal will be gratified to a very great extent in the manner indicated. The "abolitionists ". are too well pleased with the message to set up very much of a " howl " about it. The Opening of the Nashville Post In a recent letter from Nashville to a wee ern journal, the tenoning Thongs occurs Opening the post ;Sloe here develops the anxiety to communicate with the North. Not an hour posies that scores of ladies and gen tlemen do not call to , inquire when the first 'mail from the North may be expected. Swarms of persons crowd up with letters, nearly every one of which Is directed to some one in the Northern Stites. Well dressed and intelligent gentlenien Come up with open let ters and ask to have -them , read, evidently supposing that there It to be as 'thorough an espionage over , the mail, as they themselves have had. Mothers come in with letters to sons, from wham they have not heard for eight months, and ask with an air of distrus ted uncertainty whether it is really true that they can write to the North without Interrup tion. "I am lorry to i.e you here at all," said a young lady at the postale* this morning, 'and I hope you'll have to leave soon again, but Oh ll'm so glad I can write home ones Mere I" "Are you quite sure you can got a 'letter all the way to Philadelphia without 6011141 Lineolnite's destroying it remiss in bld, white-headed man, ail of whose friends and relatives - retained in the Quaker City. "Will you - look over.this, sir, sou to be sure there's nothing wrong in it, that it may go on as fast as possible V' asks a young lady, dressed in deep' mourning. "It isn't n y at all, madam," replies the oMoer. "They go just as speedily. without examitustion." "Oh no., air, I'd lather have you look at it, to be sure that It wilily." The . POstusester inns .his eye over ike letter, and finds it, is piteous ap rat to a long unheard-of mother to oozes' down and oomfoit her. Her husband hasgone with the army, her child lies dead inShe house, her Aunt is at the point of death, and she yearns for sympathy from home and kindred. And so they go. A. lileiaession.Letter. A. correspondent of the Cincinnati Germs writtrifrom Nashridie Among the letters found at C o lumbusou was one of which I copy thefollowing extract. It is froma young-man : named James G. Rol— lingstade, of the 'Tenth Louisiana Regiment,' to his father in Beton Runge. I quote only the portion of the epistle which relates to mil itary snattets. , - Its date is-Feb. 27,1862 : ' 4 The 4—d Yankees are whipping us, or at least it looks so. General Palk says Tilgh man always was an Abolitionist, and that Bucknei , was • a coward. As for Pillow and Floyd, the dirty thiwies, I hope I will live to as. either of - them; and I will not want to live • another day I:don't sheet them on sight. The Yankees are coming - down to Columbus . aftar.us. - - I am afraid we will have to gke in if the, 'bring all their gar:beats to 'hoot at us with. % ,, Anything but the interns:l gunboats,'. sayt Gen.. Polk. But `I bear that we'are to laave•Ceitunbusin a fete diys. I don't know wheneare will go.: - I think we hadlettat. go I some plate where the:gmboats can't reach' us. • Bunke of our hoyeatu getting discouraged; but 'still feel sot we' can't be eonquated: - At laud I want to by it again before my-tlme is , out,..which will be ' next month: • go back to thastore after that; beaturollion't like soldier's life." • t.rr r-. farrheConfadais and Experience vr • Oil ina • iiesitittoti iitifigfisitxitP:!zirrff - 00 ./4 11 f.,Piti* - .0 6 44 tint' P 74 .f4.:!tut alum, gm. flu moo 91 4•11-Clars. H 7 cot who has cited Limwlh attorloing put mtt rpm! vegtt 2FiSttst !Fruition and quack._ olz , 1 7_ 03 4 0 "g: 6 . it 1 4 1, 44 1 4 5 1 1. kiplkod of the ti . o.thEt:, fiAlt#4lt: PiP4TlfAfic 71,4,144114,111weaufi. A A' erchant Wig% &vitt: cum vivarmivi.4desl'. by Mem*. . xorrefEsli ,THS TYP9GB.AP,IIIOAL Ittketrilessure annoto;clnig to theptiblic of Plttil bulith - sod ytelotty, illat the citlebrsted — Lotetiimut Poet, T. BUCHANAN READ, , Esq. Author of "The WiLI Wagoner of the Alloihoutee •"The New Pastoral," Sc., Will deliver' ONZ HEADING In tills city, on. THURSDAY EyEIZING, MARCH 13rn CONCERT Ifd LL. AU MR. READ will confine Weasel( to ids own poetic production., allording an urigloalandswrisereks entertainment. His proramme will WAR LYRICS, LOVE SONGS,g Mein& PICTURES OF ARTIST .LIVE IN ITALY, ato. . , tarFo! details Mt small bills., , Tickets 25 cents. Doors open at 7 d'cloek: • Read ing to begin at 8 o'clock. mhll.td LECTUIiE CObIiiIITTEE. . rr NOTICE.—A. Y. 1111..—A Special Meeting of ALLEGHEHY LODGE 213, will be held ori WEDNE6DAY, trl2.th h ataht, at (heir Hall, in Allegheny City, a 6 o'clock. mhlL2taie BY OB,DE OF, THE W. H. CliciTOlL ROUSE, t Pittabargh, March 6th , 1662.1 EDITORS.OF THE GAZETTE:- GUM:MIEN: I hate' been instructed by the Treaanry Department to see that the law lurefer ence to carrying Gun Powder and other exilic:elite materials on Ps-wager Steamers_ is enforced; and, for the information and guidance of alt concerned, I herewith tend, fur publication, the 7th cud 6th sec. does of the Act of Congress of August pith, 1862, In reference thereto. Reepectfully yours. CHAR. W. HATTILELOR, Surveyor ACM OF OONOUES) Or AUGUST SOTIL /SU, RELATING TO STEAMBOATS. . - Stc. 7. And be it further enacted, That no louses hemp Omit be carried on board' any each vessel; nor shall baled hemp be carried on the deck or guards thereof, anima the bales are completely preased'aud well covered with begging or n similar fabric; nor shall gunpowder,oll of turpentine.oll of-vitriol, cam• pheoe, or other explosive burningfluidi or Materials which ignite by trirtion, be carried on bowl any such vessel, a Geight, except in cases of special license for that purpose, as hereinafter provided;:and all such articles kept on board so stone shall be ae, cured in metallic Teasels; sad every person who shall Lkaowingly violate any of the proehdons of 'this ea& tban shalt pay a penalty of one hundred dollar, ibr each offense, to be reouverid by action of tiebt.in any court of competent Jurisdiction. Soo. S. dad- b it further goaded, That hereafter all gunpowder, oil of turpentine, oil of vitriol, Cam phone or other explosive burning fluids and mated . els which Ignite by friction, when-packed or pot rip for shipment on booed of any such vessel, shall be ne curely packed or put up separately from each other and from all other articles, and the package, box, cask, or veinal containlog the same, shill be distinct • ly marked on the outside, with the name or thsrde• scription of the articles contained therein; and every parson who shall pack or put up, °rause to its pack • ed or put up, for shipment on board of any ouch vds sel, my gunpowder, all of turpentine, oil of vitriol, cemphone, or other explosive burning fluids or niece. HO* • Which Ignite by friction, otherwise than ea aforesaid, or shall ship the .same, unless 'picked and marked so aforesaid, on board of any seam - vessel carrying punt:lgen!, shall be deemed guilty, of a mis demeanor, and punished by a flue not exceeding one thousand dollars, or imprisonment not' exceeding eighteen menthe, or both. mhtSiltd Orrice or THS If ANION.. 21111112404:soffrANT, PrrnerolLOll, February, j • O=DIVIDEND NOTICE The Di. rectors of the NATIONAL MINEKO CoMPAST hare TILLS DAS declared a Dortnrun or Two Docceits (52.00) rot heist on the eskplua Stock, payable ut the Office of the Treasurer ou and alter TrssiDAT, the 18th bat., to Stockholders, or tbeirlegal repre eentatiree, appearirg to each at the elm) of baskets. 00 SASILTHDAT, the 15th but. Eastern Stockholders will be paid by dleasre. J. W. CLaan /2 Co., at the Transfer office of the Con= No. 21. State tercet, Boston. B 7 order 'of the of Dtroctera. JABILS M. COOPER, I Sels:lm (key and Trwter Nat. Mining Cod 11.0111.SEZ. I'tl., %Ob. 27th. 'set. UsAN ELECTION for President and six Directors of the MANCHESTER SAV INGS BANE will beheld at the Banking House, On SATURDAY. the 29th of March, 1862, between the boors of 1 and• 4 o'clock. Amendments to the Constitution of the Bank will bo submitted to the Stockholders at the same. 'nest ing. tea:imam THOS. B. UPDIKR, Cash's.. MAUVE INK, PITOTOWLATE-ALBUMBi TITARTZB FOS 1862. W. S. HATEN, arr.. of Wood ood Third Strada, NO. F IL`IT Ili AND CH A I WS SELLING OFF AT HEDHCAID PRICES, WHOLESALE 011 RETAIL. • • JAS. W. WOODWELL, 97 mid 99 Third street, and 111 Fourth erred , mhlo N THH MA I.E.H. Ur' THE ' - cation of the ...LID lktaliTY OP THE' BURGH ANNUAL COPIPTAPKNON" to aniend shd alter Ito charter. . No. 390 March Term, 18821, of the Court of (Joie mon Pleas. Nolte° hereby given that appilcaticin bu Bern made to the Court of COMMA] Piste of Allegheny county. Penna., by the members of .thiv Aid Soddy of the Pittehurgh Annual Gonferenoe, to have their prevent charter amended and altered according id • certain arcaychnant and alteration. which is flied In the Prothonotary's office of 'maid county; and .tliat sppliostion will be made at tholune Tenni of c ld Court to have mid imundisient end:alteration - tinned and mado.part of their paid charter. COLLIrdI Attorneys fur Petitioners., mhl Latwl ISSOLUTION 0 PART E , .LJ—The partnership of GREGG it TAELGE is this day - dissolved—Mail GREGG b vthg sold las eritlre interest to DAVID GREGO, who shine is sii thorlzod to settle the bushier of Arm. • DAVID GREGG. • Pittsburgh, March sth, IW,I. , CO-PARTNERSHIP.—D. GREOG "has anociatep JOHN RICHARDSON with him, and Will carry on the Wholatels DRY GOODSIrasi.. yeas at the old stand. No. 99 Wood etrest wheal they have Just received stall and. °mephitis sasottniantiof wants, which they will sell FOR CASH or on shoat crsdil to .A No. Luton. The old customers and all wanting goods are in vited to call sad examine the stock, as small profits and quick returns Ls our objeot. . We have retained the services of Mr.*JORN DUN: WOODY; who will be glad to see his old friends and customers, at his DIM Pace, next door to his former place of bustnesa.CO., ' No. 99 WooiTstreet, DBB 0 L 11, !I! 1 ,--The part4e p heretofore exlsitei between the udderalgnid. ruder the firm of J. L. CABNAGBAS ft CO. to this day &oohed by mutual cement: -Thibrudnees edif be mutinied es tenet by -j: L. OAILNAGHAN. , J. L. CIARBIAGILS.N; B. B.:NOARLL L i tff T. •LE . NO. ISNLI." • RIELD STBEWl.—llaving leased. the Mims Idvery Stable, occupied by, Wm...Trevino:ooM ria- Urged Improved the above establiihmeat. rhyme foratthed et short notice for rtlteribi; XV.III. log Partite, Theatres, Goncorte,' 'Railroad 'Depots, Charges moderato.- nurses .takercarsor r.opt - la the beet pacibleo rammer. Please leave:our , orders for midLgerd r oiL VOWS: TioN OF ..tUrtNEII23I3 —Tbe partnerablit.botween 3011 IN A. JANA.: boN andlAlllll.s A. . the Bait MADAIC.' taring baslhese under the style uS lA11E80211&• TWAIN area dhiolioxl ou tbelStli day OVlrabraev;: 1502. The Interest of daises A:lrwin la thi•Wd .arm havbsg been levied ea andaold by the aberlft,of Allegheny county and ptarehseed by th e suriandgadd, the other ruirtner„ on that day, erhairill, paved to the thslitei s of theistwatid. , • inhidairc • • JOHN 'A."JAIIIbSOI2/ 3DPAlFW4MlNlT'Aimedfilirpriro, MAGNOLIA 'BAL3L Needed. by every lady. , Useful and ornamental. It removes freckle., pimples. ronsloons giving the face and bands that prterance q Lavl•lng mod • -For gab, by sisoN-JoaturfON. we And Dealer In thole*. Slimily , - ,•:n •, . , gonitir emi th bald and Fourth 'trate Marn.fall aopertmadt ortilonint (Uri Md. Pearl Ponders, Chalk Bat*gqt a _'4 ll k 1 / 7 ° 'Tun; Ulm or Demi, Re., alsayn • hand. rah I r ri • ri .61LAUAZ .L Tax DAILY AIM was Liq PAPitis. rHa NEW BOOKS, , THE. NAPS AND CHARTS, " • TUE PORTRAITS OW THE OMNI% 8 adihogrsPh and Steel Plate) and other distisignlshid pnosiuma'rn Aistrms,' • PHOTOGRAPH CARDS: • -THR MOP BTATIONIIETVORTIOLA PAAIIIONABLZ.Lirrraz-PAnit. worst.- OP 4/09,,1 . - Can ba Rad st: : - • - • 40115 Yronfe Ea; 'PORtadib; earner bath Clown= Bad , tad ikw. .Pipar. Call slid Obi 140 1 2 111 . 4 . 6 L „..iv a t ig gptpl,lo.4';pl.44-4/11 ,aay. D/4.M.T. i 00. I lain 7 -'77 7 ; : lrg . _ 414i)0411;11" DR. HALSEY'S E - •,,,„ , AV, GUM-COATED rqRIiST•PILLS. 2 . 0 .9 00 CUES 9 ,PI. 9 1 %. TEAR. DR. HALSEY, of New York, hae invented a pro cess by which erlikeidluiiithsnt WIRE is produc ed from certain. plants of great medicinal virtues.— This delightful } P ine cambium:ail the high medicine! properties rif the Dassirsi Sarsaparilla, Yelrese,Dock, Wild Cherry - atittairtath attar plants, wheel virtues arch fireerresore:Ohelistila medical touts. So pure end concentrated arethe medicinal' properties of this Wine; that it km teen found the moat effective med icine-no* in use.. Frequently', leas than a shigle bot tle restores the - lingering Patient from debility end sicknetta to strbbg and vigorous health. Every does Viols It& goodeffecte the oonstßution, and im proves the general health; and with Dr. Halsey'. celebreted GUM-COATED. FOREST PILLS wan adjunct, all the following disorde.ei are permanently cured DYSPEPSIA AND INDIGESTION.—A boo of the Forest Pills, and 'a bottle of the Wine. will cure the most distreming.forms of this complaint. AGUE AND FErElhk-Ofte or two doses of the Pills, and- a botGe of - the Wine will break the ague and care the Patient in ell meek When the direc tions on the bottle Ire adhered to. DROPSICAL COMPLAINTS.—From 'tine tO two boxes of the Pills, and three battle• of the Wine, cure this obstinate disorder. DISORDER OF 'THE KIDNEYS.—The Forest Wine and Pills have proved highly eMcedous In this disorder. Oneer teahouse of the Pills and throe or door bottles of the Wine are suftlelent amonaplish a citie In the of. DEBILITY, NIGHT, SWEATS, EItIAOIATION AND.WEAKUT.STATE OF THE CONSTITUTION. —The Forest Wiee is -a popular comedy for all these complaints. One to three bottles care the worst cases without the use of the PI/119 bat when the com plaint is accompanied with some other disorder, the rills arli/ be required. • RHEUMAT LiM.—The efficacy of the Forest Rew stiles in ithetlMltleM 4 very singular.• Some of the met diets:rim calm X ever sew have been cured by them in ten or tweive,deys' time. BILIOUS DISORDERS AND.FOUL STOMACH. —One purentivedoseaf the Forest-Pills will cure any bilious disorder, orany complaint striates Irons Foul Stomach and morbid condition of the bowels. REVEBIL,Ontser two, purgative doses Ash' cure fever*. • , COUGHS; COLDS,tut. , ..,Onsiook - Of the Pills and *bottle attar Wine' .. breakhp and ca theramt severe Folds, Meese, cud pain In-the re breast. ULCERE,IIIMIS,BI•OTUSEStSGARDED HEAD, RINGWORM, ERYSIPELAS SALT RHEUM, SORE EYES oya.XVERY !CND Qf These complaints all arlie Dein One 'efonanioti own— teleran sumo. Generally %tenthly but the Plibrue required for - the Cute of mat of theirs diserdere; but if both remedies are reed; two bows of the Pills and two or three bottles of the Wine will Mfrs the vety worst oases, and' frequently by less than half the JAUNDICE.—Two bottle, if the Pilst and as many bottles of the Wine mire - the worst can of Jaundice. " ' Fs:SALE RUCTIONS, produced from bad colds or weekly conntitntlatut. A few dues of the Emelt Wine coma the most distremieg farina bf these complaints; and if the -Wins be -followed up • few weeks, them derangements will not occur again. The Wine exactly spite the female conatitntion, and gives strength, vigor, and blooming health. Over a million of boxes stud. bottles have been sold within the last two years, in the United States and Canada. Letters and certificates to the amount ofmany thous -am* have been received, testifying to the.cures and good effects of than remedies. , Forest Wine is in large /square bottles, one dollar per bottle, or , six bottles kir live dollars. Forest Pills, twenty-flie cent* per box. Genes* depot, fa Walker street, New York; : and. kept by one or more respectable druggists in almost every city and village 'n the Union and British Colonlea DR. GEORGE H. IfiffiSEß, Agent. A . DMINISTRa'rUIt'S ISA.LB TliE .P.F.StelylisTATH of WILLIAM CHESS, DDC'D. —47'v - trine of an order of the Orphans' Court of Al legheny county, I will Kit at „Public Bele, at the Court House, in the city of Pitteburgb, oil,the FOURTH MONDAY OP MARCH, 'A. D., 1602, at 10 o'clock, a. m, all that valuable tract of land of which William Chen died:oared, situate in Union township, Allegheny county, Pa., on the Washington and Pittsotergh turnpike road, about two miles from Pittsburgh, containing 295 =ea and 142 perches.— Said tract of land to of excellent 49=114 mod in a high state of cultivation; has been used for a number of ,yearsas a Dairy Farm. The lame heal:San %tided by en Impugn into eleven purports, and will be bold in parverts according to:sold divbkm,. apt= of which tray be seen ten rile, with the proceedings, In the Orphans` Court, .t Na 1 of October Term, 1259, and at the offices of Charles Shales, B. A 8. Woods, C. Hasbrouck and. T. B. Hamilton, and also-attach ed to the bill. paged fig this oak: On Purport No. 1 thorn are • Cottage Dwelling Floopeatarte and other tmprovementi. On Purport No. 5- - them . are two Dwelliug 'Hooks, BeYu, Stables' Building. for Dairy 'porpoise. On 'Purport NO. 2, the' Dwelling House occupied by William Chess at the time of his death, Barn, Stables lied other -improviemernta. On Purport No. 9 there, ire five Tessier. =Houses and ten Housed under ground rent. On ?expert 10 there area Log Cabin and Bars. 'Purport No. 11 . tourists of the Coal under.** said tract of latad;with the Privileges of right of way, do., as set thrill by the Inquest In said psititlen. bald Oral Is tinselly sons able, A 11¢ quality and convenient to market, and is very ea:Labia. . .. - ALSO—The one undivided half part of a certain Tat of Oround situate on'the south tide of Robinson street, In the city of Allegheny, commencing Meet from the interitectlonol. Cosy and Robinscee wrests in a seaward', direction; thence along Robinson street 30 feet; thence exteding back ectuthrordly, 'pieservlng the tams width, 100 feet. . A 1,904-2. Lot of Ground in Thos. Samples'plan of Chatham, bounded on the cost by lot No. 19, takes, on the south by let No. 21, 193 feet, and on the north by • 24 foot alley, 26 fait; being the same lot Jidda Wm. Magill, Sherilf,,by his died dated Augoitt 12th, A. D. 1.20, convoyed to the stid.Willism Chess, FOE taLt 111. Trans or litame-44nwdourth ash, and the residua In equal payments to one, two and three pare, with Inhunet from' dial of otadlrmallon of.Walm . The said reddue to be esoureci by bond and seostind the paymantot the same on thi liett sofdt It0311:8:4*ZI8. Adte'r Of the Estate of 34nu - Phea - , &27:41dadtwf 1 c -r -p 7,/, -- , . ..--, • ~ • 4 ..., - i , 4._ ~ • • .e:::,) COMER PENN AND ST CLAIR STIERTS, pirraaukas.,,ENici., OPSIUDAT -AND• ILVSNIISIO. Student' eater oil any time, aad 'rricelem' Lion in Mr Mancha's( a Prectimhis BuMases Edw . LADlid• IYIWASTWINTveimmee tad *patty. For partteulars call at the °Silage, or emigres' tbe. Principals: • • • " •• tahlteltam . , JEKKINS 1•811ITH. • UYEILIUS 4#,14"3 . VWES. DIL. O. elm N fr DSLAWARZ, ANNA, ALLNN lIIBBID, DIANA, CONCORD. DITYAHOCIA; COLEMAN'S WHITS, CASSICIAT,OLIMA, autriaairaci, aeitTroao, PROLIF IC, LINIOR, 'armour, Loom% LOQISe`, ZL ;BRCOA, PAULI= TON , k lo *. DRUM • ni,Lacrs, a as z leo T,' ',-lii,kaawrika. TAILOR oa larimar. • %ALVES% ind - DOPININO'd BRAZING DULDERRE TE.ZES. For sale bythe Apra: QED. E. REED, mh.tled ea Mitts street, Pittsburgh MOMISOr3 PATENT wA.lignm TR CHNONST:AND BEST WEN= IN UN " utartimid aid fa sale mind 1 by , n°‘MAU, re Y DIAMOND, pnwirfarm. B rosi 2 beRI 3 br dm& )fichuo. Townahlp,thanti minas mots, 00 aptinto,o ist alaszall 'NeilDulmir:Phitootuß BWermidfoithirn States; td pecketi brim Prim ottly ffi tenth. ,Tlitels the ma IKCUTZUI end doetprehenstie Map P ublia r' 4 , shWWXS." °7 City't4'T'FA'filhg° • Also, tbe Bed,l Whit* and Blue,BopiN Book,,coe- Mini,4 * lth tr jk 9° R lll O . , . JOIMP: Wbolesslo • sod lEstall Bookseller, . B, rod Nova Dealer' - 11Litobla KO; it r 64- Fitta ; borghistid H. F. corner Battik CSIFI4I3,4R:ILIVI red erfildreetrAninthett .01 . =hit 4.13-1 L jUrAIRI , h'.l - • •: • .".• new work, allowing briw either 'sex ins* be , 'that ateirleartYreetWAlee'ef..eiteer Polities, Pre , • " " • . cirtliereflee. Yr4fiA.ttrltrieketi•ifierfirr of OiteillAUSE EDI Mm= yft ADmirieli. A carious. scientific experiment whkb write WOW . Flee far P. 5 cents. Addles,. T. Wl-1414.11 A,Co.,:Pubttehe Box 000, Minds •bls: ' - - 2 ": k_ rablla T • QUO 03 -TY: ', • ave two , p fl re-woof Nottikplioitosif 9p tbi censor of Elko street end WWI, capabls'ot bolding:ooot Iwo.= poltoto ormost4 The.. siting to boot to rmotoolln ollotr la toloom diriattlortumtner okomi ^-, • 1 `r•-in ` - . • • . 4 .?• 3717 4 , -••••,—• ••-• • t• • • • zWittniTrAs GORDIS. . 'US esamid.apnit. MESiii= • fitiTEENA-TiONAL HOTEL, 5C6 Lin) 367 BROkDWAY, qiikssat OF FltkliKLlti, ST., NSW TOM - 41khilist•chas house—the meet quiet, home-like. end pleasant hotel In the city—offers mpalor duaments to three visiting NEW YORE. 'hie Mud. Oslo or ... . 4 .4,51i4m1 and:. lladP KAN PLAN, inanimation with TaIfLOWS 4, Mi• 4X . where refreshments can be bad atoll bouiri, or Millall.beir.oste rooms. The charges are modem/4 . 1M irooni and atteadauoir of the first order—baths, and all the malem coMtim -lenonisttached: robB:3md FRENCIUS tioTEL, SINGLE ROOMS FIFTY GENTS TEE ,DAY City:Ea/I , Spere,' . n74,iir Frankfort fltrOL, faßllleale am they may be tmlerei In the 11116COUR Refeetory. `Than Ls a Barber'. Shop and ldith Roam attached talitaltotal - 4110rElelrare of lIIMINERS and ElAoEldtp:ar,tio lay we are toll. - pOWERS HOTEL, 7 . 4.IVD 1 . 9 PARK RO W, This long eetildlihed and Pointer House boa 're neatly been rebuilt and greatly enlarged by, the ad dltlou of over 100 rooms, and now has acconnnodo than for OM 300 persona. It' has also ben, thor engtdy renorated and rofhnnahod. and to HE=LD DT STLI ARD LIGHTED WITH OAS TISSOOOIIO4T . Thla Hotel has one ache beat locationsinthe city It olio of scone from all the Steamboats and Rail roe& leading to the city, and Is coorenient to MI MI city conveyances. It hes now al, the relpilaitse,of FIRST CLAWS " ROTEL, ensuring the comfort edits Inmaten. The patronage of the travelling public Is respect folly solicited. - IlltlirTzniss, 81,60 roa Dar, feneßmß 1k Li..POWRIIS, Pro 'char. WESTICEg 'ROTE:L, - • • Nos. 9, 11, 13, 15, 17 .CortlandE St, Nut BILOADWIa, is! Cm. This old cutsbilshed . and . favorite resort of the flusher Community has been recetali refitted, and to Complete in e'er; thing that can minister td the comforts of its patron. Ladles and famillece are 'potbelly and carettgly prodded for. It is centrally located in the bushiest part of the city, and Is contiguous to the principal lips, of sleigh boats, cars, omnibuses, ferrite, rSo. • In' consequent° of the premium mowed by the hellion, prices hare been tedocod to Oxs DOl,llllilA. PUTT CLIMB Ma Din. The table to amply sciopliod with all the luxtuiee of the meason, and la equal to that of anyothar hotel to the country. Ample scoommodations am offered for upward of 400 guests. 1301 r Do not believe runners, har,Umen, and others, who say "the Western Hotel is ' D. D.-WINCHESTER, Proprietor. Tins. D. Wrsoucwrsa. 0114:3m AMERICAN HOUSE, BOSTON, iethe largest and best-arranged Hotel. in the - New England State.; is centrally Waited, arid sag of from all the routee of traveL contains all the modern improvements at may convesdence for the comfort and secommodotioa of the traveling public. The sleeping comas are large end eel' ventilatod; the mites of MOMS age well arranged, and completely throbbed for feardlicaind large traveling Perrietband the home will continue to be kept se a ant elate hotel In every - roepoct. • • • jelt:lyd - - EICE, - PrOpriatoi. 1101tAILEY, FARRELL & CO. J." Earsou.himdrfall apwr,tinent of all Wilda aood for :OAR OR SCRAM, which ate . for Ws on oiceedinkly low, te rm s. • . • aarapida attentioo glum to the IfITTINCIAJP Olf OIL 1111112MIX*3 AND tin the pur pose of relining Oil, lined with load. without the use NEW CARPETS ) Oil Cloths, &c.,, AT 1111'CALLUIVI i S, .ro. 87 Fouith Street, lkltuelairi=rAh• - - UAPPINESS 01cMISERY7; - s`gxr A 1 J-1. VII Ilussuon.—Tbs Protirintroi . td the ,PAIL., InIAN CABIN= Or vtonntasaalrATosx sin dINNIQINE°, hrre determined, Rewinding. int. irx. TION4 te 1. 6, 4 Root ten the 'Wheat oR Ofifforthe litr asilit) POURsof char most intsinsstbig antiostsve4 tin, Lecture. on Marriage sad Atalniquaudessinss,, Nervous Dobillty,Prepoituro W e ft, of Manhood, /O Weelmore Or riehressiOn, Lessor Nueva, dltertterk. and vital Power. the Quinn dckint 3NM.60 those Ifoloateo I'M& rell4tjbor;O ilroOthfutr°Pirri m " It A tu rit'b or 4wiroaco of Phlitolosl 0 No- ItoVo Lore."' elmooloOrdnablo 'Lectures WV' teen the "' ma OeughtSottigotutsisind Thonestukc and viilln fomet. , .re'snionxecetpt otioor fito/ b/ iuldniodng OrkfalSTlLlVli•Poritian Cablart 'of Wile 0 4 7 and tr.edietue.: bas BroadonTs.New,Torh^ Yr• .IcPrE, ON THC EtIIoPE7.4 PLAN; CITY OE NEW YORE Opposite City (Tail.) (FORIdERLT EARLI'S,) Opposite the Aetor House and Perk, IMMILUI Pities or 5ii0,111,50 rut: Per. PLUMBERR, GAS AND STEAM FITTERS, No. 929 /fourth - gtrost, Pittsburgh, Poona. We Lars alp on lands large &isoclinal:a of !}AB IXTITRES cf maw •atteide. rdbd • ISAAC "TAYLOR'S - NEW 1390K.-- - -' THE SPINS! Of HEBREW POETRY, by Tallor t _ArAbor "Soturday.Evening.' r ' , • E.ooosEve ItHWROOK,TRESUPERSA.T. MAD 'IN =LAMONT° „TEEM NATURAL. by. Ft , names - *RALPH, by Dr. John Brown, M. D.,. author of !'!ElparoNours.S i • . % • • OLD FRIENDS, b A Stroklund.. A • - HISTORY Of ,I.ITERATURT, by W. Y. Oellke, LL. D. THE BRZATH : OL.LIFE, , by Geo. Catlin. FOr polo b mbS ..;.. E.S.DAYAS. BE.Wood'st. CONSI a • 16'eailit Dll,l Peachai4ptptio ?!avOsi' r. ' • lad kidtboldi'Potatoo; ' ' .200 pounds gorbas feathers; ' • 15 sacks prAme Two' • -25 cads Esimi - ' Itreired and for ads ••-• . ••••., 84.SX 'VAN 43031DX5: . • 'Meal :14 Weald . . Na. I I C,b,--1 1 I , ble. Extra . too bbia.laxtrs. riusityr.toar; -17 mete Dried Poiebee; -- 96 Ude'. Mild Applee;- : Xlbus. Clow Seed% • • • .4 50 tk7, 14, T4 TIMo toruah - ti* • •-- ,•-•• • mbE •- - 4-14:BILPAID.D31.8. . r vtiovis.; SPRING GOO, 'W.''''& D. HUGUR : Eiereitia,CceAl4lll/111,1110drati. S P 1 , 111161 , •GO 0 Dlg.. .'441A:14....r-OtliayE46 Aims: BEDDAD F . roma.. - PLAID PA wOmmtossizruk,te.i . l - f, , •; - !i , .,..?. ) .i*i..4i.i:i1)!k.1.4...::.fi-..:'::::::;,:v..:...:;;.:-:. %.fi ':l!l_ , lt,i4;4iiiiiiiti.:::i Dienownqk s t imam AND'irticii4eiverrstp: `. ll DZST ,YAK umi cations Li" Frio. pot - Yard.. i) ed: - ErSti corner • ~ Eftii Rldo dow,s4 ,511...9..t01L9K-rm.r.501 Pwri . ,•• auctierk a CO., mi.upthoins.: 421 s. ERRIMILM'ESZTS, I2 } con* CIA.CRECO PRINTS, 12% tents; ENGLISH PR1NT5..1234. ts; is4,;:n• • • Bll lt ALL 71 D; 02111. li qQODS,JI7ST OPSSZD. ' :GOO nserr. D it AlKanAitsi usirg. ;&; Rn iernizas, per:yart , . T6IID WIDE BLEACHED .1/IDELIa (itxrd) tYjS mat; uaavr oNsuaLanin m DUCIID PRICES; usi.fiLiki' AAD,SIIIRT BOSOMS; nEw tapiqxo DRXISS 0001;31 zrzw srms• SPRING DE -LAMA; rarA fall stock of ISTW GOODS just opim4 end idling vary low TOG CAUL C. HANSON LOCKA 74 - Market Street. REMEMBER CLOSiNG SALE. 1 19311 V. DAYS, J. W. BARBER & CO: S, 59 Market Street Their antfro .be otoued: ItEGARD'LPs:Bg ,ok;dOWT. COME 'AXD SEE TEE GREATEST BARGAtErB syzu•OTFfiUED.IN TIIJ,CITY N. 13.--Paiittrolf no 'eduction in prime. LA_DIFAi RIBBED kit)S.E.' .We base just reetivea tram Batton, slangs import - MOW of Ladies' and- llllssoa'../tibbed Merino: aqdjtib bed Cotton Bose, which we, aall, at, ilia ; vary loveirt Pries. • LIVEN - - 'Latta' Linen HullYen/1116U 76 cents per imam Ladle.' Hem Stitched Haab at 16 team each. Hera. Malwi, ItabrtdderaN llarea•• taut ..oprdod LAters .Hati:itittliattlatt . gout romanatHytlow IMLLAR B A,N7, S To make twin for (tar Near ,gooda, ne haTo itakin• ed our Plalliina ran Linen Bets TO percent.; Cam bric and Balsa Bata rrdnad, and Late Irtte atq*). nurrtit» LINES cormsas-4iPtirsa , Oita. CAIIIBB.IO COLLARS .TUBT ABONTTIp BY Expnoss: • • MEHMO AIM WOOL ITNDIMOLOTHING of all kinda aod prices miltablo for oll,claws 0! lIALIIIOI . I4L . roll SOLDIERS . . WOolaltuli Els, Woolen ,Rtvonar. Cape., Duckikl# Gloves - and Ilinintkati Wholewik. ensiomeiii will I;*iilliorWl4/1114111dle JOSEPH: HOHNE4 ' 13turipHYLEL,p's CLOSING OUT SALt. , 'DitiB4 010011.... - 000 AID - • 110HATRPIGiGINDTBAifiLINGIGGraiG 4 i 0 D 13 ; pg.Aw7.5.—8r0ch94 , 41. 1 starer SUNG 1741 .cnitet; . SILKS 'I!LALON. .1210113 SOS YOURNING:- ••_ 4.ooirrtiotriro;x6;: - " , U$FPc) .. •IGNIT,Y LONG CLOTH,' 'N.oith*e 'CHARLES lJ 78 Mirka , floe mit misrare-tinDei X6L&ROIDSSILD -INFA,NTV EMBROIDZIULD CAP* , ; •001.1.41 P),, 'DIEBB TB110171106.: • •', TIMYST BIBBO7iBi " • ' niveykria , siassOittraim RA.1313. - LADISW lIIMBILOWILIIIDNURTSI 1111121140111.481Dr_ ArLiOtTS(ANG I I. 4ACON4T AND 11W165 EDGING - LAC!. COtIAIIII AND 'LLCM ECANDIZROHTIMA, ' - - YALENOHL'AND THEEKIVILACI,'i " MECHANIC COSSETS A.ND - i 3 GIITIPCEE TAN LAOS, - ' ' ' P lIOOP BEINTIR, -` • 1 - 7 , '• CA •,;.;,17/ WECB, ~lILLKAIIvIaIiZN SANDS...i/Mti • ---- • 211106TUCK•118111111ric '.• A EtEAR . .Pc.)lVd: Aiii3}3F felt ";-k 1862,,--6.,1 , 4 /WORT* into*: r* Apo. 17, and 19 Fifth street, Aro moorxecoltiPli "1"a ;rideltlltOr.litiiti at4eailooor - ----wsouze4r. 1 D werp BUUBB. '11111,7401A.1... MAD NJI ÜB2 81:12011 AD5 toaklog Colln. A law lot malted to-doi. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers