IMABLISHER IN 1786. PlectrOS. e li i MEW • lANlsB.iir:i Am'oohlag. a *ow supplysot Yll3l NONTICAtww. Chteltoying At Sono, - Boom ppimataa arotherai Noir York; N aHa t, Da oh AO It lbw Boston i Georg* Stock. New York, and ad0..1 . DasUsti St _litwo rj ;ltorlr. ..,..A , lll ., l r a j kloi, will bo • JOHN 11. MlLLoa,ii Wood . , :._between end Oar and Fourth at. A • 1., KING RUSE -11 !Oar, ram 634 ocuii.: in was worentba , gatta* andprice to par*. order, 11 4 4 ' , Sw : tarsals by _ :JOHN 11SSW. 1 . Mit LOIL 8 Wood Woof. ; PILEUINU-WAND PIANOS ' 5.1-111 VA, SM. SW. EP, SlaN 5 . __8i3144/80.4**101bY __ . ~.; to a r. 81- Woad .4., . - JOHN El MA. L. gLX Y 1 I I Air 4. P. II and 'ES per moot ap3. . , , 131 Wood sifted.. N*o IV AHit 1 V iN 41.—A choke enpoi, of the therividhid KxAßi PIANOS, warranted for are yeas, and pronounced to bangnaL U not ' to any in this caustry.;. The Pianos now arriving were personally selected by the sabscriber,nt tie new nod ; swims &dory of ;Wm. Shaba Oh, Baltimore. Mass call and examine before purchasing elmewheni. CHARLOTTE BLIIHE, 4B Fifth street, ; mit& ,Iluto;A • for Swabefe unrlndled Plano. QkPi, N iSOOkb. ThA*4s7thari, by J. 11; Woobbury—perdos...SB T Lute Of Zion, by Woodbury do, ... 880 $ " Vb. Aftti. by Dr: Lowell Ileum, do 860 • Diapeeos,by Geolge r.aeot, do —8 50 The Sabbath Sell. by George F. Groot, do ... 860 TM Jubilee, b William B. Bradbury, do ... 860 The Chrlit/an Jdiustrel, by Aiken, do 8 60 The Sacred Star, by Leonard' Marliall - , do ._A 60 JUTZNILE .SLNOIIiG BOOKS. The Golitett-Wteeth, 100thedition—per dosen.-$3 tai , ._Tares Fitzl7. J. A. Detre. do —3 00 ... ..:.TheNicht npie.(now bwk) _ __..do —.A Co gaidxiih 1 , B•11. .., du , -. 1 180 TheOolden Chaim SorSabbatb Schools, do ''... 160 All the above for sale to quantities or kingly by JOHN H. MELLOR, No. 81 Wood et., A • ja2o between Diamond alley end Fourth st. ;OWN" VOOKH. BAY 44" TAYLOR'S NEW WORK, AT HONE AND ABROAD. • Secced al Yoe - mai by I . apt K Y CO. 55 Wood et. A 1413W1sliS TO ESSAYS AND R Jo. vigws. ,51,11113,T0 FAITII- - kaanito of .Theok,gtad Loath braaverar•wrlters, beluga-reply to “Batays ;ant I{. stem." WalitedjOy William Thompson, D. D. ! 111011TKOUStilitBa Blf FAlTH.—lthistrated by a manpartion of thidiettilis of tho Oxford Tracts. By • Waboo 311cIlvalne. _ Y. Itiat miabod and pm sae by .„ ...... _ • tablT e. S.—DAVIS, ft Wood •treet, AHD 'A LOR;t3 NJEW WORK. AJ At Home end Abroad, &mod envies. L John Brown. • " tb " Zil ni' 1 11 1 . 701 m: • The Young t3teVlottrer.• Y. Young. Slwithrth•rUndia. Thitriatkrciarielkti alliraltBireet. Thincliou "ThAliplatleeln the Seven Chnroltes of . x‘y 00,4 66 'Waal otteet. 11“... I.; 'NU'S NEW Alytni— s AO ?WI is• to rev. • •Itbaltaamkg Bupauaber. By Xis Tonga. ' Th. Sathariaaaa. , Gads iDatranta of Wall Strad. ' • ;iiippespakona pf a Oaulltry-lanson, Lu and 7d •erka. Bow la Nan* keys. By Holm'. Mara OumpUtstiosal Mowry or Engund.. 7bg)g.bitttoc, Hitard, lit and ATZe WinthroP , . brirood street. B WIALICIVALDITIR EDITION: li The Works of Thomas Road. In tome end Irene. SEW by Epee &mut, Illustrated with ettiel 'end mend empravinip, elegantly printed 0.4 tinted peplum, to smell octavo. To be completed in do. monthly voluinee: Throe no. BAY LilD TAILO . IOI Wildißll-41Rlide Mormon. l''''l2therriiiilifritings of llipir4 Taylor, In 16 email - en volumes. ;21411PLIOT 01 HREIREW POETRY, by Luc 1101311/3 IN TOWN, by Th• Cow:MT bpayo Douro, by J. Drown, IL D ; and rook; by L. Hoot; -21tcostbs Books; - 'A Goal/lett; by O. Ronde; Pooloool Iliatary of Lord ,Bacon; ILdWof alb PkWp Sidney; &op DI Many fry.—u. W. Dolmas; • • . _ Llborty.sod Blaverp—Bledfoo; Lostointo on Apoodypso— But ler, IJllo sod apricot/1 of Douglas; *fair IlLaltigiotoe, etc., etc. !obi - J. L. READ. 78 Fourth inset 4 1 ;14P*14:4 - dr4eo. CARDS- 'FOR , SAT& VERY Ote:WAtIONS, 011. taAdONg 4114 Vistas ll A t i ta"ll2l2,Vratiani S AMSElit t : 411C1 . 1:1X - AND - STONY IIdASOWS ill made of thO bart dry timber aleo all attended - to. to : promptly: Apply to HAILE, wiaoi Ratak,' 11•MiCotfoieral SWAMI 'Allegheny. • . .. . .-tpylucw, /ND . -- LipitrAANlSTlLtitit ,&-.... I. I ' ... i . - 1,,,, in ii* . .:"/Fc ; I ' hm , a inf• 'A IN Lill `I IDA AXA. C'lGA'StfAi ..T..da r qn SNUFF,' TAS CY ' i.4 f.. :AIM COMM.} me. . at.... a.:;iti• great ,-_ 3ni r xiCll A UN IM` TIIEIPXBr ST : ni ,,,, HOTEL , 'vim 6 4 ; ri- 44 •. ub.,,, 1 ...5. , ...A. Ir iv T -4r. " 4 " a PP II " ' mai, 'UUV( 1' U 'it.-4A8:.11 •ENS, ' ' *Ma:o' Jam .HASTIC woturrit; 4'14E6 • RAIGIUIAND PLASTERS& ' • ' QUISARRATS ot all Mod. • ..faroMbal'oaabbet aotica. AD order" tortat No.= Gaa 5ire:4 4 4 4 .... frosaMyllo, or as Palmer', l pier Store, No. SI itreor, - winte promptly' attandal to. - — total *"Vt: :Joao CA . B6L (0411 L L & 13_4 T Aaro - orablos - norMANILIIA - , MIND AND TTOTWORDAGR, OAKUM, TAIL PFDRI, .1108. AMM OILS; TM:DM:MINS,. DUCE; :LIGHT .AND MEATY DRILLINGS, Ac., No. 6$ Water sod v II •• t Pitt. .h. .• . a .:51 1 . to YU .bill , :snoottssor • 'of '• • allq, Molar ia kIischroCCGTIMIST, ' - 'JUSLES,RETOINERS,JUID • Aciza;.iauss. ac, isegn 0 1,01 . 0 * ,- 441 _ , the 1 above swab oortetantlicos -ToWN OsIIS - 11111.11, LAUD, sum AND RUMP FQ.R.E.,NO. 12 Toortbitnat, near -I.d; - Ftrtabotzh: i Akira 4.3"fria.i. lv,doa !poet', „ hour" M 0 Do:AKA TRAW DONN MODS 8, RAMS/AW TRIM -BioadAS ( . .., 7 _4llo.lg.L.LENtfir We. •Alt JE 00., 'Jamaica= . .mat STA "oe l door to t 4. Tr u tZ E l m . fhtitit " .*. W.llooll.stoosteatly :" • / %IL .14.11iNS7'Oki SurioN ; `l/311.:BLANZ 1401 . MM41117416 AND JOB . • No. el Wood Aden, Pittetetrah. xe3O • 2 ,1 s , JLEAD; ItocivaiLtim arm ft.. • "ioivajecla 701rtAmMetre. - Apotio swinge. y. 0111$X711-Ya - Nilwavonnid. ttscttlen or . Ude lisettleutbleoM-autitioa -DI to meantind. • Without thdairhrt•liiitait the 't 4 11 . *, lll lgrig Oecouffili the ooxioot qualm. or tbe 'at tobethreg,tuires, m Eli ' coocorosi • Gleam , - g= xm atfecti.. l 34l4 ,4 1 , ! J 0 t Z d • adittlono4:birr7lia 4 late i t • oottly or , •headscho.- The* Mad. whet pre-tedaeah la the het ttoperiareeid Kai 1:14.., D. At D. DADDIC Drat. Our 111.1411e2m*,-3avaark. Yio h 7 A-, 7 4•Eg ar A CQ. P as " - Wiaiet4 Dtheisl.o o-0 Kon:- .1,021/41T-Ider /tEML: Esr-lerg.asts-A-roh: —'lll ll l4Wil ABA, Dausx. ri r Paom -- Ascii Nevis, toxin, Mortsaus, ims# ••• Appro. hasiprooure muff' thi,nsicrssy awmol term; _ '-' l =ibilivimbiag to We* i7rd-ref,.., 'ma Ark Ina rilmos# Pow • i u mt Gnatlfzenc,".9o6i. at— Tsars _, • • ' MAZE loft war arra. Air A I"; pittsburgh , einatttl. S. RIDDLE- , &-CO., ZDITORRANaA PIROPAZETORB, Publication Office,. 84,iifth Street.' HORNING AND EVENING EDPTIONS, DAILY, OONTAINING THE LATEST NEWS UP TO THE HOUR OP PUBLICATION. i . ?5 1s . . . Mounere IComos-16 p& gyanom to Menace, er 12 cents per week tom curler& Zemmol; Roinow--113 per annum In 41444 . orb mots per week from carriers!. ADVERTISING AT:REASONABLE RATER SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 6 REPIJBLIC#NiSM,NATIONAL POLITICS. LETTER FROM MR. FORNEY Mr. Fowler, in his letter to the Press, of date, Washington,,April-2,. refers to the ha portant speech of Mr. FtSkl[NDiS, a'syrtopsis of which we gave yesterday : •-• At laattliii Reputilicana in Congress are la zinning_to shape_and_oettle_ their polit7_fer: the future. The speech ottion.William it: Fessenden, Senator in Congress from theSfa e of Maine, yesterday afternoon, on the bill abolish slavery in the District of Columbia,. was undoubtedly the key-note of the Repub., ikons fortimeemingeampaign. 3 It was the centretpletsalot a really great- debate, and was characterised by lofty independence, deep thought,•,andai comprehensive - view of theta. tional exigencies. Mr, Fessenden is 'a thor ough statesman of the Clay and Webster school—recalling much of the manner of the one, and the solid judgment of the other. He is never out of his seat. Watching all the de- Odle of legistatiOnj freekthe ;Epithet - bill that relates to the District to that wttielioontem plates a million appropriation, ho is perhaps the most severe - and just man Of the• Senate. Eminently fair to his adversaries, as they all admit, he. cannot be excelled either in his courtesy to them ' or tip tearleie °ldeation', to his own,party whentris • conscience .demands their utteranan He is probably lowa a par tisan theta. 164 - :ntimber =of the Beira — ter and I yet his r ho!e s o ul is inspired with the purpose of niacin* the Republicans upon each a plat form as make them successful by.shourieg rheas dose to deserve success. He is not in the 'habit of , mingling in political debates. As Chairtrioner. the linence. Qeminittee, a post w!y,l sl l ottelpensibility; and - stoir , anota than.orer to. difiltmlt to 1111.,' because of the no- . : Gond ebrigenclea, bep . tefets eather-to watch' nd limit. the pnblic az . ti irritiare party-haran events in exhrting-eoinfillatitiottiris fellow-Senators against extravaganco—%sirds every appropriation not absolutely necessary, and,poinu to the eeormoqs. debt awn heavy tixadon we 'are' accumelativig."'Nrcrecom mendation, no matter by whom made, whether by friend or foe, but is sub jected -,.t0 the -_most seareldnu. airqisis ; and If 'wrong; I(mi - eta hie prconpreppiiiition. When a man steps oat of his ordinary path to , talk on a measure lika the abolitipn of slavery in the District of.Colit to 6fa; itlasonly because he 1 - i ` ready to` throw `upon the subject new lights and new thoughts.; 'Of all men I have lately met, 'who are neeeepted as the oracles of the Republicans, Mr. Fessenden is the man who has the most contempt for giving too misch,of ,the public time to the slavery question; tend 'you cannot hale Tailed to ob serve that he haat:lean -significantly silent in the midst of the tempest of .discussion which thatinexhauitible topics hattproveked for four months put. These facts render his speech of yesterday a most important demonstration.' The first impression it will make upon the public mind te its Manliness and moderation. He goes out of the sperdepy to disavow every rash and radical measure that has been attributed to the Republicans, and in his ap peal to the Border Alio States; he makes the powerful point that it would be better for them to adopt the liberal tone and action of thenew Senator fronaMiuouri, Mr.. Header 1011 who classes fidelity to the Government and to treason among the first of our piddle duties. Mr. Fessendetramphati catty objects to Mr. , Sumnir'aitilf for reducing the seceded States to Territories, as in din.e gard of the avowed' objects of the war, and takes grousid in favor. of the bill to abolish . slavery In this District; reining as powerful. parallel between the prosperity of sterile New England, under the influence of free :institu- Ulm' and the .decay and proetration of Vir ginia, surrounded and oppressed by slavery. That part of the speech , in . defeace of the, President's recommendation as to emancipa- tion is full of foams, while the vindication. of the mission of the Republican party will gti far to dispel falsehood-and calumny. It is an effort which will be read with pleasure by every patriotic citizen. ... - If the Republicans can close upon the pot icy foreshadowed by Mr. Fessenden, that will he theionquering party of the nation; and that, in a great degree, they will do so, Is my fixed and Arm belief. Republicans: extreme opinions will yield something of their own theories to this great desideratum. -TherianieseieluXf national pewertied respon tifbilittelihays liad i tomederatimilm the part of those who have these burdens to bear; and Ifessenden la one of .the men who feel this troth, he proposes frankly to act upon' it.y What is most Inexplicable to me, how ever; is the conduct of many of those whose hostility to the traitors is, or ought to be, ado-. sere, In the face of such proffers as that of Mr, ressenden aad other leading Republicans,; at the bead of whom -is the President himself. Refusing to - entseede anything themselves, too many of the Border State leaders and too - many Democrats who are anxious lobe alms adivisllfa hip% (mast that Ilistr'peculiar Ideas shall be accepted K and that nearly everything else is revolutionary and cruel. Has the Be hellion made slavery stronger and more sacred lin their eyes Shall every ether, description of proper(, be depreidated and 'distroYerl by the reibele,leaving lnylobible the very initi tution upon which they subsist? Are tho pubikaus to berated out of.power, to be as; sailed and misrepresented, to be muscled and threatened, when they .propose to do that in thliDlettlot 6? Coftinibbi, the justice and pol icy of which have been frequently admitted by Democrats themselves Thera should be at lealt - an nutel , -41LAi,prirt of these Border State politic ans al there sl on the part of the Repaidi n leaders, or %the Country will relapse into the very hands from which we are trying to rescue it. The exam,. •Ineet by,Alma like .Ressendea Rust bafollbir ad 0y s toliticiaac or khdy t before : their constituents. One mole thought vxours toms at this point —vie: that sines the Reinthlleans came Into power they have repeatedly shown their anx iety to take by the tend loyal DlllllXllllte and Americans; in fact, men of all parties end ' nationalities. I do not speak of Mr. Lin coln's selection of hundreds of Democrats for high positions in the army, nor to the liberal manner in which such citizens were treated by the late Secretary of War, General Cameron, for there were, probably, military reasons for this course. Bit look et Mn, •Neassuden's own State of Maine, where the Republicans Jellied bends and put loyal Democrats into °Mao. Look at Massaehusetts, where at the late election they did the same thing, or ofer ed to do it... The cases ot New York and Ohio, both Republican States, are still strodger proofs of this generosity. In Pennsylva nia the Republicans aided to elect *any' Democrats.' In' the State of Indi ana a Republican Governor appointed a Dembetat to the United States Senate. • In lowa and Wite9atin iholoWe. 11 , 14.-og r erili g was pedertd. 'Han /Worst mini;4 regular Brookintkdia DonloOrat",rolP°Ptht Witte "' (m 11114400? : Plowed.:, The era 'le was crewywnere pralnutelthattke bitterest assail ants of sitikewerecosaitions, of 107111111Utfi. orate deli from the folletiers of Dreckliaridge in 1860,4mi-thisyrniiiitcdirtni, -ma - angers, and dictators of the ao-ealled Democratic ap pellation. .111asthni . are dc4 o l now L 1110# 11 /17 - e - Or 0 7- TA/ Sill - 1 0 . - SAMA pima meat lo rlccentort* moriy_tlit the Itepimb. liniatriautifenthe name titawaw, is led by Ihet•widt:kloWiti ilifTniliMiligham, of 0610.- . . an 014004 thiiON fakt)te late amen! that - 1 0 0040 UK. Oleo •01'ead the reso lutions wlien financial w milled. I lesve the septa Sitick,, , show, in an: oti*Setfiriliowenre nblichni oast triumph , .. /144. 'P H A A ' lr gic ' 1 ihapvi 4' , ~ , ~-. , t ,- ,' , 1, ..--::,-,‘ j'::,,4 :11- o ___ .‘"rxkl. , ,i. • lielEll er- 77...:!* , : - -.!:',. , :'..'- comm • - _ L^ B _ • s PITTSIATRGH, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 5, 1862. iiiiimlumuseußG Comspindamomf aw.rittidrorgh &ante. ': • '.",• -- ;:.;:,.111,1141:81021Ri, April 2, 1862. • ihi/Akrnits,.tnoinj) end • palmed the new Sehooll4ll''ivittionly a few and not very im portant rimurndnents. . This bill, therefore, is part iiid'parostAls Common School law. . Sbmbilipreinirtbes that twenty-two days shall Siteinth, to fir reports are con- CerhealitheW'Wheit the engagements or cities and boroughs, are by the zees,' the days are slot to. apply. 'The „time-when the school year is-to commence clittlged` to the first of April, because the management of the schools thei , par, are the ones that, ought to make out the reports.' •2n Pennsylvania the third - Friday hi March is the time to elect the; nelt Directorir: Tbelindltairs who now set tle the sehtes . l'aeoaante-for the preceding -year, meet early in April—this, therefore, seems the natural time to close the old, and begin the new year. The remainder of the time of the Senate was spent Id pluming localtills. One of them was thapipplement - to the East Liberty Passen . ginszold. Ip ahe House, the whole morning was spent On a queer bill gat up for Schuylkill county. and only applioable to some five eastern coun ties. This , allows, or did. allow, miners workmen in manufacturing establish ;manta tp issue a landlord's warrant and de eitiali for their. woks. whenever $2O was rl leged to be-incurred.-In various other .waya it . sebat dollanee all our preconceived notions on law; liens and tics relation of employerand employed. The discussions on the bill wore a Iniaturis.of fun, folio and argurnent..One half the law was strieken out.and the rest left in •• - oonditbin that its own fathers will not know their ',Ofspring. • In the afternood, the House allowed replorts from committeos, including the new bill to reorganite the Court - of Common Pleas of year county-' It allows an additional Law Judgo, and makes. quite • *umber .of changes in its orgaaisation. • •The bill -wilt probably pass next week. ' The House then toolt . up the new Congres sional apportlonmetit: act, and then com• menced the first political:fight the House has had this winter. The Democracy feared that they. were likely to be defeated, and they be came indignant, anti charged everybody with cheating. Now, between the two bills, the Senate bill's undoubtedly the fairest and best bill. Perhaps both could be improved if the House had time, inclination and patience to go - into, the - Nebel° Subject anew. This, how ever, is out of the : question. The discussion oocnpied all the •afternoon, though on several votes had the friends( of the Senate biltproved in a rasjprity of train I to five votes. In the evening, the private - calendar of Tueedai was finished. it contains the Pitts burgh and Allegheny comity Whisky and Oil Inspection bills. • 'The City Ganger is to {lO ill the city liminess, end, the county ono all out side of the city: . Kora to pay into the County Tree:tut" one-third. of all received by him. The.most of the evening session was occu pied by a replier Philidelphia dog fight, over aamenger railroad bill. • . Sanford's Ow*ldol:teal' in full blast now, but, will have tastes., if the evening sesaions of tho mouse continues, and such fleas con. stiletto the evening amusement. The Rouse amusements are•not only cheaper, but funnier then anything Sinfordcan produce. Rumor says that the Tonnage Tax Commit tee are -obtaining very important informa tion, showing how the act of 1961 was rimed, and the means now resorted to, to prevent a full investigation. I ant not at liberty these times of giving details. Little doubt romaine on the minds of any one about the means re sorted to be 1861, td secure the passage, and in 1862, to the repeal of that act. FORT PITT. The Tennessee River Expedition.- Lines Appresehing..itebei Forces --Been Coming Near. . , . SAT/3114E4 Tenn.., April I.—The expedi tion has neeninplietted nothing as yet that tan be laid before the public. Beauregard's ad vertent camps _at Corinth are within sir miles of our advepee from Pittsburgh Landing, and the rebel advanced camps at Purdy are within five miles of oura in front of Crum p's Landing. At Parity and Bethel the rebels still have -only en Outpost of four or five regiments, with it Small force 'of artillery and cavalry. A t Corinth they may bare sixty thousand, in cluding the ten thousand without anus. They claim a hundred - that:mend, and from that on up indefinitely - . - There seems to be no doubt that they mean to maker; stand it or. near Corinth. They cannot yield that without yielding their whale Alneof , defensed along the.uerthern_borderof the Oalf.States. - , ' • 'A poilidn of Gen. Buell's army was on Sun day morning last within a day's march of Sh . vistinah. Gen. Grant is understood to outrank Gen. Buell, the latter having been confirmed Major (feelers( torn,' weeks after Grant. In 'this Cieseottetercite, Gen. Grant will command 'As entire remit. ...TEnire are remora however, that Gen. Hod ' Inek filalhe AOlO here In , person, ae coon as th n Island No. 10 agony is over, and that there will ha 'four or five corp. Worm,. or ganheed, ,Potomac army fashion, with the Msjoe Generals, Grant, Smith, Wallace, Buell and MoOlernand as commanders. Take them (the rumors, not thsGerrale) with a die - wont. The wooden gunboa continue droppihg - occasional shells into the rebel batteries 'at and above Eastport, Miss. Little importance is attached to their river defenses. General Grant is to take'tho field in person at Pittsburgh Landing to-day, wiled( the plans should be changed. I The weather is sultry ; delightful morning s' and evenings, but decidedly too hot for Norrili em constitutions at noon. Tho roads are admirable, and the country toward Corinth, is a high upland, about half under cultivatidn, the rest wooded, through which there are ihw obstacles to the easy movement of a large army. Some cotton is being brought in from the . eountry, under escort, of our troops, to pre vettt klm_rebelcfrom betajpgit. Seventy-five bate, came in time way yesterday.. Briefly, theta lakthourwo that oughtAto get into print. Vveilltit it 411 byle!egraph, but think it as. likely u not. the dispatches are still floating around . ht laovernment steam boats, on. their !ray to Cairo. We's't having tilegreph — built from hero to Nashville, across the ecluotry, that will be done before long, but it is exclusively for military par poses.=Gtusefte ASSCiat CbrresThimadreee. 'Newspaper Correspondents Prohibit ed from Accompanying the Army. A reporter sent to. the other side of the Po tomac, assured is Chid morning that Secretary . Stanton hadderned an order. forbidding news paper . correspondents, as well as 'all others not an ..donneated tn. tunad.way..or other With ji, the s ice, from accompanying any of the corps d'armecs. Very many correspondents are now with the army, and it is understood here tluit an order .w,aq dispatched yesterday, `that 'ain't/hole Orthim be cleared out ind sent "ma, under the penalty of immediate arres . and confinement if they attempt to stay.—Dispaich et. the N. V. Tribune. L,..1W• shall bet. sorry if this is true. We bo- Have that newspaper correspondents have herei m f , ore be very discreet, and have been of, at , lbserrice to the ‘ country. They are the . Only personsa who are prepared to write de aeriPt.lve arobtitits• of •battes. If we are to 1 I!Pinfi- uPoll..lFtlifist,rei arts, ,we will miss .mnellof , theeintareat ,of :.these , magnificent . . . - • ..:- pa L - Sastritit,,silta ptir Ihmuce.To.Ssevz 134'6 . Fissiown—Csrl . Schap is , is :have :darn - .'dipa rent : ilia POMP) s iiittl: Will - be ~princii i : Tally Germans. Gird t litenterilurith his divis. ion, busies bse - iiisissiiiiis4 to Fiemolit: ....1/141...3Ehiriiiianata-Ce+ree.—lt is stated by the igent 'of i*Eir i sii*zin*isiing:/ltin of ithodeistand, that method has . been devised foritotton. L'Asirarsiidsxs.u,s. zs ?s w iss. ilo,,,i,24o`;.iiiiteik *thp - Tipftessee " • • ' ;. 7firxtli tti eas PITTSBURGH RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE A correspondent writing from Naples says four thousand six hundred Italian priests have formed an association, in or der to introduce a radical change in the institutions of the Roman Church. The main points developed in the programme are the following: Abolitiott of the temporal power, and restoration of the merely honorary su premacy conferred by the ancient Church upon the Church of Rome—representative constitution—abandonment of all the su perstitions and pagan excess of the wor ship of the Virgin and of the Saints—in troduction of the common tongue into the public prayers—matrimony of the priests, &c. —The London Record says the Pope has announced his willingness to contri bute to the forthcoming Exhibition his missal and crucifix. • —We learn from the Pittsburgh Christian Advocate, that the Ross Street M. E. Church, Rev. G. A. Lowman pastor, has been favored with a very gracious work, daring which time forty-nine persona were hopefully converted. Manchester M. E. Church, under the pastoral work of Rev. David Hess, has also had an interest ing work. About eighty persons professed to find peace in believing, and the mem bership were greatly quickened. —The British Wesleyan Missionary Society, according to recent accounts, are •succeeding well in their new mission to 'ltaly. This Society have dispatched the Rev. George. Alton as s.missionary to Spain. With his family, he arrived in the Pen insula on the Ist of January. Nearly forty thousand dollars were contributed for missionary purposes by the Wesleyan of England during the mord.h of January. —At the last annual meeting oral') English Baptist Union 898 Churches re ported a net increase of 14,000 members. The English correspondent of the Christian Chronicle mentions the remarkable fact that there is not a single Baptist Church in York, the capital of the largest county in England. The Baptist Home Midsion Society have hired a hall for the purpose of holding services and organizing a soci ety. Rearring to Baptist matters suggests that the statistics. of Mr. Spurgeon's Tab ernacle for the last year show that the large number of 397 were added by baptism and 42 by letter. —The vote on lay delegation, by the ministers of the Pittsburgh Conference, at the session of this body held recently in this city, was 33 for and 142 against. The vote reported for the members of the cir cuits and stations amounted to t;,187; being 1,930 for, and 4,237 against. —The death of the Pope, says the Catholic Telryraph, is an event which may be anticipated speedily. Independently of his advanced age, and infirmities which. have notoriously •haunted him through life, his symptom; now indicate disease of the heart; and the medical calculation is that, while he can scarcely last a year, the catastrophe is most likely to he soon and sodden. —Bishop Clark of Rhode Island, says of Gen. Burnside, that he is a regular reader of the Bible and an observer of RE era prayer twice a day. —The Boston Tract .louroal says : "Probably a larger number of conver sions have taken place among our solff Mrs during the present. season of inaction, than among any equal number of persons else where in the country:' —The Presbytery of Allegheny City (Presbyterian) will bold its next stated meeting in the First Church, Allegheny City, Monday, 21st inst. at 10 A. M. The Presbytery of Ohio will meet in Dr. Paxton'', Church, Pittsburgh, Tuesday, 22d inst. —The first organ ever heard in this country was sent from London to King's Chapel, Boston, in 1714. —Commodore Levy of the U. S. Navy, who died at his residence in New York week before last, was an adhering Jew. i —The aide correspondent of the Pres byterian Banner says two Sunday Schools have been established for the purpose of teaching the children' of Jewish parents the times of the different festivals, the rea sons why they are commemorated, the principles of the Jewish faith, and a gen eral knowledge of the Old Testament Scriptures. —At a meeting of the Philadelphia Sabbath School Association, held in Feb. nary, it was unanimously resolved to bold a State Sabbath School Convention is the city of Philadelphia, on Wednesday, May 28th, 1862, in the church of which Rev. John Chambers is pastor. • —The Presbyter says the editor of the Preskyterian Herald, Louisville, Ky., after diligent search has found but two Pres byterians in Kentucky who wished that the churches should go in the Southern Assembly, and that these persons are pri vate members of the church. —A correspondent of the Presbyterian Banner says of Ibe Presbyterian Church of Sew Castle, Pa.: "God has been pleased to awaken more than sixty souls, The entire church is re vived and quickened into newness of life. 0, sir, it is another token of God's favor and willingness to bless and revive the Church, even in the midst of years of trial. Of the sixty inquirers, many are indulging a blessed hope.' —The deaf mutes of Boston and vicin ity a few years ago organised a Union for religious worship. Some weeks ago they formed themselves into a new body, under the name of the Boston Deaf Mute Chris tian Association. Each retains their mem bership in their respective churches. —Rev. J. M. Pherrin was installed polar of the Pine Creek English Lutheran' Church, Allegheny county, Pa., on the second Sunday of March. Rev. L. G. Bell has taken charge of the Lutheran Congre gation at Tarontum, Pa. —The Evangelical. Lutheran Synod of Pittsburgh will hold its nineteenth annual convention in Allegheny City (the charge of Rev. IL Reck) on Wednesday, the 28th of May next. theological.Atudents belonging to the Passionist community, established in West Hoboken, N. were ordained some. time since, by Hiskop Bayley. The candi:r dates ire all ltalliaseffest - the:)Eingdom of /41031!.- —ln a sermon preached by the Bishop of Gloucester in aid of the fund for build ing a Protestant Church at Naples, he stated that during a recent visit through Italy he had found a strong spirit of in quiry among the inhabitants for religious reading. The natives were not onlyjoin lag the Established Church of England but: o the Dissinters ; and in one town he and no less than eight different sects of those who had quitted the Churoh of Rome. -,--Recent intelligence from Europe states that six missionaries of the London Missionary Society were to embark for Madagascar at the end of March. —According to the Methodist Episcopal Sunday School Report for 1862, there were 17,498 conversions in the schools during the past year. —The Lee Avenue Sunday School of Brooklyn, N. Y., is said to be the largest iu this country, and probably in the world. It comprises no less than 1,5011 pupils. Hostility to the Administration 1 r he signs of a furious was upon the Admin istration by the pro-slavery men everywhere are daily multiplying. • The Vallandigham dinner-party caucus is the first move prepara tory to a public demonstration. Meantime the preen of the pro-slavery -- interest are throwing out feelers in every direction. Bu the boldest indication that has yet been made is found in the Washington correspondence of the Baltimore Clipper of yesterday. The writer, one Henry Hardy, an attache, it is said, of the Notions/ Intelligence, offuso f altar gee upon the President and his administration the design of revolutiOnising the government, and converting it into a comsolidation ' with a President for life, who is to be Mr. Lincoln himself! This same writer, charged upon General Fremont and the Republican party, last fall, the design of seizing upon the gov ernment, turning Mr. Lincoln oat and con verting the government into a.military des potism. Of lute ho and his employers have been threatening Mr. Lincoln with their ven geance if he shall dare sign the bill abolish ing slavery in the District of Columbia. Or such stuff are most of our border state Union lots made. Mr. Etheridge lately said in a speech at Nashville that it was as natural for a Breckenridge dumocrat to turn rebel as it was for a tadpole 'to turn frog. I would add and for a 801 l than to do so too—in other words, for any pro-slavery man; for this is the touchsttine.—Corrisrearleut of thr N. Y. &V -ain Post. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad r and its Bearing on the Union Cause in Maryland. The Union men of Baltimore and vicinity anticipate a strengthening of their cause by the opening of the Baltimore tod Ohio Rail road. Certainly most people in Northern and Western Virginia are interested-in having removed the "locks and bolts and bars" that! have destroyed trade and intercourse with the 1 commercial :cities for a year back. Moneyed Secessionists at Baltimore hate this aspect of things, and freely predict that trade on - the road will be constantly obstructed. Such per , sons have given material aid to the prisoners taken at Winchester with such zest as to shoil that they might properly exchange places with them. There is, perhaps, no objection to prisoners being overs;helmed with good things by traitors in our midst; but allowing this by 0130 military authorities, is in strange contrast with the conduct of the rebels, who have fre t qfiently shot "our prisoner for looking out "ol windows. Brutal treatment of prisoners ! aught to lee a subject of inquiry by the Senate Committee who are to get facts as to rebel ! maltreatment of the dead, I:c.—Phi/a. Preis: The President's War Power There was a very interesting debate in the House this morning on a Senate joint. resolu tion giving the ,Presolent the power, wren two or more officers are in the field, to ap point to i service Without reference to their rank. Much speculation Was indulged in as to the particular necessity of the bill at thin time. It wan s tated ,kl 3 the floor that the passage of the resolution would permit General McClel lan to command at Fortress Monroe over Wool, and In ease any dispute should arise between McClellan and Fremont' hereafter, the President could instantly settle it. Mr. Olin, of the Military Committee, said that he supposed there could be no harm in alluding to the fact that an army had passed down the river to Fortress Monroe from this vicinity, and that the provision in the reso lution migttp he of use at that point. Outside of the Mall it is said the new regulation may be of service in Missouri, as it may be neces sary to appoint Major-General Sigel to the command of the army in Southern /Missouri. Mr. Roscoe Conkling opposed the passage ' . of the resolution in a short but vigorous speech, but it finally passed by a small majority, apd immediately thereafter' the house went irtto Committee of the Whole on the Tax Wash. Coy N. Y. Eee. Poet. SOBICS SIWOND TIIOUGHT.—John Janney, President of the Virginia Convention which Pretended to take that State out of the Union, is reported as having renewed his oath of al legianoe to the United States. Air. Janney is a prominent citizen of Loudon county; a Quaker, always a strong Whig in polities, and elected to the Convention. as a Union man. How he ever came to allow-himself to be dragboned into treason is utterly incom prehensible. He has doubtless suffered more during the past year than any inmate of; • State Prison. His section of Virginia has bean fearfully deiastated by the rebellion, and the end is not yet. • ABOLITION BT THE BOOBS CONSLITTISIL—ISis understood that the Senate bill for the aboli tion of Slavery in the District of Columbia has been informally considered by the Douse Committee on the District, and will be speed ily reported by them when it roaches the House. Unless the bill speedily becomes a law, it Is feared that there will be no slime to free in the District, as they are bei ' ng carried into Maryland very rapidly. A Pianos.—ln the course of his speech, on Wednesday, Senator" Sherman. &Rutted to the case of the iter- Mr. Gordon . ; !of Cleveland, Ohio, who is still confuted in prise:l on the charge of aiding the °nape of a fugi tive slays. It is said-that the pardon in . this ease has been directed to be issued by t,he President after an examination by the Atlar ney General. SLAVENT IN 01I10.—'llio almost incredible statement is repeated by Senator Sherman, ;of Ohio, that at this hour negro slavery Is roc = ognised as existing at Columbus, the slaves of Rebel officers being thore held at involun tary ;orrice in attendance on' their' masters, now Rebel prisoners at that place. - CAPTAIN %LEM, of the Seventh ; Indiana Battery, has resigned in .consequence of un gentlemanly and tytunical treatment received at the hands of ITAPPINESB OR Miamlat s THAI' I 8 .1.1 Tile Qui:rms.—The Propriatoreretibe "PAR DOAN CABINET OF WONDERS, ANATOMY An MEDICINE" hove delerinined, ragweeds of; {C pence. to bone free (far the benefit of 'suffering inanity) YOURof their meet Interectingand thstrnoi tire Lederer on Idarringewndits Tilopudigentistoli Narrow DobUity,.Prealitene Decline of Mamboed, lioilciction, Minims or Depoimiloo, Los of Energy, and Vital Sower, the Greet Social' EY% and thew Malailiee which moth Rocs Youthful Follies, Um lei M Kotarity, or.lgnmaom of PhysiolOgy'abd Met tare's Lox. - Thesenralonlile Lectures ambeert. theemeoneof enlightening airiscring-Tbecumndivend will igiforwooloc Frio inc eiceint of kourStEal" b, addroming SECRETARY, Parisian Wallet of A. 114• oily sod Kedichie, 6)3 Broadway, lON. York., , x , .-_M A .: 7! : 111: -' 4 . I. ; . . ' • VOL N AVY SUPPLIES-1863-'63. Nary Dxrurrxmcr. Barran of Provisions and Clothing, April 2,18 Et, ). SEPARATE PROPOSALS, sealed mid Lendoned "ProposaLs for Navy Supplies," evil be receivedet this Raman until 9 o'clock m., on WED.NESDA"f tbe 30th day Of April next, for furnishing Ind de livering (on receiving ten days' notice; excepekettie oak, for which live days' notice shall be elan for every.thirty thousand ponds required) at the Until Stater navy-yarda, at Charlestown, Mauschnes ; Brooklyn, 'New York, and Philadelphia, Pentieylv - .nls, such quantities only of the following articles u may be required or ordered fro% the contractOn.lly the chief of this bureau, or by the respective 'oriul mantling offieers of the said navy,yards; during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1963, vim Biscuit, flour, rice, dried apples, sugar, tea, CO se, beans, molasses, vinegar, and whiskey. The biscuit shall be made wholly nom sweet super fine flour, of the manufacture of the yesrlB6l or 186. but shall in all cases be manufactured from flour made of the crop immediately. .preceding the dates of the requisitions for the same; and shell be fully equal 4o quality, and conform In sire and shape, to the mini - pies which are deposited In the sald navy-yards; shill be properly baked, thoroughly kiln-dried, well pu el, and. , delivered free of charge to the United Sat , in good, son d, well dried, bright flour bairels, the heads well secured, or in air and water-tight whbdtey or spirit barrels ' at the option of the Barest. The Stier shall be equa l to the best Richmond arid Baltimore brands, and of the manafacture of wheat grown in the year 1061 or 1063; but shall in all 611.18 be mauurartureil from pure, sound, fret& ground wheat of the crop immediately preceding the dates of the . nquisltion fur thr. some; shall be perfectly street, and in all.nepects of the beet quality; and .hall to de liverol in good shipping order. free of all charge to the United States, in the brad new, well seasoned, sound, bright barrels, or half barrels,as the mile may be—the staves and headings to be of red oak Of the best quality; strong and well honied, with 'latent hoops around each haul, and equal In quality to eaM. pie barrel at the laid navy.yards; two half barrels to be considered es a barrel, and not more than one. third of the required quantity to be in half benefit. The rice laball be of the very best quality, and of the crop immediately preceding the dader of the 4 quisitions for the name. The dried apple. shall be of the best quality, and shall be prepared by sus-dryfag only, and of the crop of the :autumn immediately preceding the dates pt the reqeisitions fur the same; and shall be delivered in packages containing not more then three htmdred peamis. • The iron hoop. on the barrels and half barrel. con- . taloiog whiskey, nmlarslea and vinegar to be wedl painted with red load. The sugar shall be dry and fit for packing, and equal in quality to the beet Uavatia sugar. The tea shall be of good qnallty Oolong, aqua] to the samples at said navy-yords, and he delivered in half eat, quarter chose only. The coffee shall be equal to the 1-net Cuba, accord ing to sample. The beaus shall be of the very beet quality Ishii* beans, and shall be of the crop Immediately preceding the dates of the requisition for tiresome, IA pounds to be taken as one bushel. The molasses shall be fully equal to the very best qnallty of - New Orleans woolens., and shall be deliv ered in new, well seasoned red-oak barrels and half barrels,and with white-pine heads not leastlan inch thick; the stay. nut Lan than % luchthickii,the barrels and half Lancia to be three-quarters hooped, and, in addition, Where four Iron hoops, one On each IS loch In width and 1-Il3th Inch Hack; aid one no each chime 130 inch In width ands -lath frith thick, and shall be thoroughly couperedand placed lu the best shipping condition one-thin/6Am quantity to be in halt barrels If required by the Ithienu. The vinegar shall be of the best quillfy, equal to the standard of the United States Pharranooptelsiatid shall contain no other than acetic aci4, and shall lro deliyenid in barrebi and half barrels at dln er all re spects to these required for mollies., w th the camp tion that white-oak staves and beads shall be-aubsti- toted for red-oak stavm and white-pine beads, and shall be thoroughly coopered and placed in the best whipping order; one-third to be to half burets. The whiskey shall be made wholly from grain, riblind and merchantable, and be full Bret 'proof w ee:ding to the United States custom home etandanl, sind shall be doublareclifled. It than be delivered In good, new, sound, bright, three-quarters hooped, well aeamoned white-oak barrels end half Garrets, with white-oak heads, the heads to be made of throe pleat beading, and well painted; the Mares not to be lees thair94 feel, thick, and the heads not less than % Inch thick; and each. barrel and half barrel shell be cooperad, In addition, with one throtepisony iron hoop ou meth bilge 134 inch he width, mid 1.16 th Inch thick, sod one three-penny ho on each chime, inch In width, and 1- 10 th loch thick, ad pm- dho gram. The whole to to put in good chipping order, free W . . 311 charge to the United States; one-third to be to hull barrel, All the foregoing described articles, .embracing ranks, carrels, half barrels, and boxes, shall be sub ject to invective as the chief of tho Bureau of pro vislous am' Clothing tiny direct, the luspectiogpfil cer to be appointed by tho Navy Department— .11k herpections to to at the place of delivery. 'Biscuit may, however, be inspected et the plate of manufac ture, but,',, ill iu all cases be subject to a final inspec tion at the place of delivery beton, the bills are signed therefbr. The prices of all the foregoing articles! To be the main throughout the year r and bidders may offer for ouu or more articles; and his offer Will bo accented fur that yard for which his proposal may be lowed. and when more than ono article is awarded to a bid der the articles will he embraced in one or more con-. tracts, at the option of the Mimeo. All the casks, barrels, sad half barrels,'bozes or packages, shall ho marked with their contents and tho contractor's name. All the barrels and halt bar rels of dour and bread shall bare, In addition to the above, the year when nitusufactunid or put hp marked upon them. (The samples referred to In this advertisement are Omen selected fur the ensuing fiscal pier, and hare so reference to each as hare been pi...timely es/Ailed.) The quantity of these articles which will be re quired moue/ be precisely elated. They will proba bly be about— Biscuit .3,coNooci the. Flour 4,000 bids. Rim.- 6151,.00 lbs. Dried appled 300,000 the. Sugar 600,000 lbs. Tea 75,000 lbs. Bean s 15,000 bushels. Molasses ........... ..... 50,000 gallons. Vinegar 50,000 gallons. Whinkey...... ...... . 150,000 gallons. The quantities orally or ail may be increased of di minished. The contracts will therefore ho made, not for specific quantities, but for such quantitlen as the eorvire may require to be delivered at those navy yards, reApectivoly. Contractors not residing at the places where deliv eries are ,required must establish senincial at such plams, that no delay may arise. in furnishing what may be required; and when a contractoi hills prompt ly to comply with a requisition, the Chief of the Bu reau of Provisions and Clothing !Mall Ira authorized to direct purchases to ho made to supply the deficien cy, under the penalty to ho expreesed in the contract; the rtrord of n requisition, or oduplicate copy there of, at the Bureau of-provisions and Clothing,•or at either of the navy yards aforesaid. shall be evidence. that such requisition has beepoiede and received. Separate offere must be millab for. each article et each of the aforetudd navy,yards; and In sue more than one article is coutidual in the offer, the Chief of the Bureau will hero the right to accept ono or more of the articles contained in Leech offer; and re ject the remainder; and bidders whose proposals are tornpted (and none others) will be forthwith notified, , and u early as pmetlcrblo a contract will be trims. mitted to them for execution, which corifract moat be rotureod to the bureau within five days, exclusive of the time required for the regular truzumiLstion of the mull. Two or more approved enrelles, In • turn equal to the mtlinited amount of the respective, contracts, will be required, and twenty per centaur in addition will be withheld from the amount of an 'payments on, account thereof 'as collateral security, in addition, to oecure its performance, and, not in coy event login paid until it iv in all respects complied with. Blank gums of prop:wale may be obtained on ap plication to the navy agents at Portsmouth, 'Noe llampethirm Breton, Now York, Philadelphia, Balti more and at that Boman. A record, or duplicate of the /atter informing a bid-, der of the acceptance of his propose!, Still be &anted • notification thereof, within the meaning of the act of 1848, and his bid will be made and accepted in con formity with this undentandleg,' ' • • • ' livery offer made most be accompanied (to directed in the act of Congress making appropriations for the , naval aervico for 1846-'47, approved 18th of Auguat, 1846) by a written guarantee, signed by one or more •responsible persons, to the effect boor they undertake that the bidder or bidders will, if his or their bid:be accepted, enter into au obligation within Ilveldays, r . with good and zufficieut sureties, to, furnish the snip plies proposed. The button will . not hi obligated to consider any proposal union accompanied ,by the guarantee required by law:, the ompetenci of the guarantee to be eeetteed by I.he nary agent, district attorney, or collector of the Customs. The attention of bidders is relied to the eanoplee, and. deseriptios of artielaregaired, as, in the herpeettoo far ' .reeeption, just bat rigid comparisca win be sande be- times the , articles sprat and the sciegie read. coated, receiving acme that Jail be thew sae opfir:ossearka is nits penitents* dirededlo the joint of .270 March, 1864, mad to aloud of lihktAlgehelo3 46, ap4:lawd4w . • JOHN P. KELLOtili /Ic 00., No. 44 Wok+. kW,. Her Torii.' owes FOS IlWritolletrltrekD RATO illain)lLß late- ROM4OI , TN= 'WV UMW!MIEN, • COGNAC BBANDLEl—Otard.Depay t 0o.; Pinot twain= d CO.; and other brendeotearionsirintenee, dark and pede,'ln bikes, quinteo end •Watui. BOCHELLY HIIIIIHHEB-4 , aewoWn, %hp netts, awl other brands, dark and pale; In the nsuel Hi Pack r) LAND HolloaltOo.'s &beldam, and Wee Drop, r. Voce, thrso•qr. pipes and awe. HIM—St. Gratz and Jinntleted *auk WElSlClrtalunkliftlettendllatneey's Wile; WNW-Port, !berry; Madeira, Dordeetr, Hoek, aad ethers, of tarlaas grades. 014-11ine,tonleann Tab% ht ;nisei ljukeds„ DEEP TONGU ' ups Cured Beef %metes . iteeieed 'en 'aiatel,l?"4 per steamer Sunny Poutli. sel• by • .; , • sp2. ISALLWZHOKIT 4,C0. „ 0200 PL11 11ZAZTrielrili4200 OCTAVE 198, !01l Iron frame, and .warraatad larllve para. CIDLALOTTX ELME, DID NNW tiTUCIE "MN 4.3oelebrited Vold Medal Preinlabe WANK Wm: edaatetred by WM. SWAMI At 00404 tleateelL - apl OMASLOTT2 MAMA 43 MUM and. .141pcy-_ -7,l\T - Q. 119. COMAIR7?ae(4 11.qC04.P. ooinirrras oreoiMt, , trrom - or,tionhi) 1 - 1 'll " 'i:: 1 f 1 • WIG IfcCasza, V. P.; Y • J.J.I Gal„. J. , Braurrrr, plAirca AZICIC, B. Piaarox. rItTSBERGIJI Eqwwwwisurft , W piaarroli -Daito TWA.] FRIDAY, April .1A11,11388 ptocra-„TLS market continuos gait' and.dell, lath . inclatlon In mice.. The dermuni and the traamactloni, general', are of 4.104111 char :. ICter. GROCEGLBS—There hi more ioctivity in the Gro cery Maxitetineithint; however, any admire in rate% aide of L 5 hhli Nolassie at 43©44c; 2O tiagie prim;!ltio Coffee at 21o; 5 !Ada COL . & Sognr at BX,c, and 5 do prime Porto Rico at 9c. BACON-1n better demand, with mica 4 4.3., 000 .1ha Shoulders at 4%c; 1,000 do do at 4%c; 2,000 do Plain Hams at o%c; 1,030 do do at mole figure, and 3500 do Plain Sugar Cared do at 7c, PlBll--etesd7 but. unchanged; sale otls half lib's White Fish at sl;lolibLi Pickled Herring at $4,50: and 12 bids No 2 Mackeral at $10,50. BUTTER ram EGGS--Butter le firm at :nit ad- . vancs of fully lc per Pound for" prime Boll; mlei of 6 bble at 17c; 6do do sll7O, and 7do do at 160. Eggs dull, with sale. In lota of 9 bbla at:7c per duo. • OHEESE-Oran aaleo of 20 boxes W.8.. - at Sc; 30 do do at 6®B,lce; 10 do do at 90, and 15 00 Goshen at 10, GREEN APPLES—in good .apply; sale on wharf of 230 bbl. inferior at $1,25 por bid, and 10 do do prime from store at $4. POTATOES—duII; oak In lota of of 155 bush Tint Eyes and Peach Blow. from atom 400 per hush. SALT—SaIe of 40 Ws Na 1 Extra at $1,65 per:bbl. BEANS—SaIe of 10 bush prime White at. VA° per bosh. SEEDS-Sala of 15 bash prime Cloys, it $5. Tim othy Is 'steady at $1,8702, and Flax $1,75:' - ' DRIED TRUIT—SaIo of 20 bash chola) Apples at 1,50. and 20 do choloo - Peaches at $3. ' - -.- . - • OlL—Bale of 10 bbla refined Carbon at 250. i • LlME—gale of 25 bbls Louisville at $1,25 per bbl. ' 111821 Y 7 -quiet, with small soles of poolustei at per gait. L. 'lmports by River. rOHEELING—ma Joan T. ' McCoirs 4 bales ' A .. I, Clirke A co; 100 IMM.flour, Gralutindt:Thnitaz; • , oil bblib . lliewer, Sill & co; 11X1 aim 'malt; A",llone' ." rem co; 1 bid 'Mgt, 111.mina et Cott:CM - 30 aka - corn annoate, McDonald; 22 tados hif, W /1 T . l4Mirill oil . . bids, owner. ST. LOUlS—rza Lialem-110 bblaopples,,T, II Voigr & itm 03 tee-lard, Jae 4161mea . 4 - cw; .2. homed, ..Chem, Smith & CO; 141 hides, 8 Illibitugk".9. co; 60 "bbli apples, Yea A Fetaieri .40 die do, Itoymer 4. lam 44 do de, Culp & Shepard; 62 dides,l7 Idularlobacco, Clarke & co; 2250 bgs, 271 Lbli apple.; Yl3klaiiiii: CUMIN. NATlrca Clidd No. 2.4.40 . carbOra vit riol, Hackett, McKee; & co; 20 Izige tobacco, 20 ,boll soap, JS Dilworth & co; 100 I.,l,4l.ilekj;Littudert & Shlptcm; 43 dodo, Jtwltoduk;. 20 do do,. li II Myers ,t es; -50 dodo, Geo H Loitman; 49 do do, S McCrlck ert ,trol 50 do do, K-4 .A' C Duncan; 03 'do do, A Guckenbeimer & two; 172 do do, Wm: Carr &, no 37 oil bib, Reran& Graff; 204 do do, Join:l_lll=k & co; 40 Otte lard, Edgerton & Stewart; 16 Iddi6qr aka" gime ware, Cunningham. 4 co; lot Itimlture,.Meyerk eau; do du, A 11.1111 kin; do do, T B Young; 109 this dour, S Wallace; 50 boo map, Bead & Metzgar; 100' bre nap, 25 do Wank, W Inu,ca; , lot furniture', Jo* W W00dyre11;26.4% bulk hams, no cutuslgueo; 10 bide egg+ J Backfield; 100 bbl flour, IF Wallace; 6 bids eggs, lot h h goods, Clark• S co; 1 truck, Illiclicocki 61c ,:ceery a co. Imports!, by Railroad. CLIITZLAJID A Prrrasorian Iten.koan, April 3.- 6 tells rakes, Jr. WOodirell; bbl, 2 eke onions; Jae A Fetzer*: 10 bgs aced,-Jos McCullough A Cce 3 bbla awl, 1 do butter •J lillaynoibs; 6 am- Ice, Joe Lo link; Ido 12,1ter:k 62 bar agricultural implembhts, W 8 Lavely A 0o; 2 lads 2 half bids butter, Wra Beck a C.; 1 bbl maw, Beggs; 12 half bids - flab, Wm }linage; 2 hhdi ccllett, McKae dr Co; 2 ; . bones af crickere, AUrickhart; 46 bbl, *pike*, J Fi-Day a Co;10 bble eggs, John Crazier' 1 car potalon, J II Volght A Oa; • 9 bbl, green toile, seven hbbralover end. Frank Vangurderr 30 boat barley, !a do oats, Hitchcock, 11cCreer A Ch; 1 bbl. butki. 2 oh. haue. I.du.peacheuAtwell.,LasA Cp; ID bus eiooot. seed, 4 kegvof . lard, J S Dilworth a Co; 300 bbls of flour, Jar Cardiier; WI do de D' Wallace; 100 do do Shoe maker, 'Lang. PITTIOUSOU. FT. Warns d. Plll.OlO R. B. April 4. 104 oil Solar Oh Work - art box buten .1 B 1)11- sixth, 10o; 95 do do chetwo, Shover and Lauer; 1 demijohn molmei L B Voigt dc Co; 15 boqes cheese .11 Riddle; 2 bbb butter; Little 8; Trimble; 100' LW. Hour, Jones .Laughlin;: 1- asek rivets, 3 Imam do 311 lane wire, B P . Townvend 4.0 o; 89 bills imaer, Jae Orant; 35 ski rev; B B Owlfrey; 7 bge clover seed, Brown * Kirkpatrick; 8 eke seed, 3 Lbla . tallow Bead Metzp,r; 20 boxed ink, 0 Johnston; 30 UV Lbls fish, -filmmaker it Lang; 36 do do-Mankind Connor. • River News The river was about. stationary at this point yes terday, with eight feet Ms Inches by the:marks last evening. • The weather tontinu-s warm and &Maud with indications not unfavorable for rairt..—...4hisi- nee. continues quite WITe at the wharf; with • fair amount of freight shipping and dlschaigitig:l- 4 2he Ohio No. 2 (rots Cincinnati, and Linden friel Louis, both with fine tripe, Constitute the. arrivals: The Benton from Louisville, and lowa from,2Liamis are doe, and will doubtless arrive to-clay.-.,...,-,The • Hastings for Louisville got off shoot neon piefeiday,, with all the freight she could possibly ' Tarry..'-The Argonaut for St. Loots and the Upper Mbinissippi river, with a splendid trip of both paasengsrs,emd freight, would probably get off butt night—if not,, sho o WM leaniairly this taornitig ..... -..The tug '.Lioness" wse bought by , the Cimernment yesterday, brit at what price we were unable to learn We Mall, in all prohabliity.liave a boat for Nalhillle - before long, ea there is a considerable quantity of freight here for that point. The Louisville Tfamderat of Wednesday earl: Business on lhe levee was not veribrisk." The ar rivals and deprrtnns were the • Bodine anii.C. E. Hillman to Barbellle, with army. Stores; the Lady Franklin from Ctosionati, •Adriatic from St; Louis, Fort Wayne from Pittsburgh, Key Wept to Pate burgh, Empire City to Nashville; J. W. Hallman, to .Pittsburgh, with.tobscoo and grail, good trip. Foe CISCUTIATI SNO:LOUUrVILIX , -11 and shippers should remember that the 'staunch steamer J. B. FOrd, Capt. Herr, tearer as above this evening, posittiely. Mr. W. H. Bryan tio the clerk. • ' ' ' Woe fle. Loris SSD TUX UPPIUL NISSISSIPPT/UTIR. -The JiLaresigh.S.lspt. McCallum, la announced to Wee as. above forthwith. Us will. be followed by - the harem; CaPt. 'Dalai. ' • " • Foa Wairsosse-The CaPt. 4 iicrarmi la the regulas.Wluselhn packet .to-day, testing at noon. . OWITERS OF DRAYS 'WAGONS, Naas, .RAGES, .0311NIBUSIS and Brij do scripticm.of CARRIAGES, ate =eared to call at the WS= of .the City Treasurer and take out their licen-. ma, on or before FITGIT DAY - 01 . MAT NEXT. For each and every, wagon cart, car e dray, 'Mew or Mrriase, draw n by one home, the snot oLi. 4 00 For each =Celery. one oLthe abort.ed vehicles, drawn brtwo horses, the sum 6 00 For each and-every ane - of the above named vehicles, drone by liar helrees,lhe soma— 8 00 For each and eeery - back drawn by two hones, the in= .. . . 10 00 For rich andevery owenibosand timber, wie;els, drawn by two horns, the sum of-..... 12 00 For each additional home attached to therahovl . named vehicles, the nun I 00 somas 4g - a. it shall .be tim duty of lirery stable keepers, in. Mad city, to make ,a return to the City .treasurer, Within twenty days Vier' the passage of this ordbmnos, and annually thereafter; en or before the first- dei„ .. 11 431;01 each sreAsTerllear.tli tbe , number, of remcfm. of every description owned and mad by Minn lh their 'besdnewg - atul the tindlhareof, 'end quk sasarsturn shall be mods under oath. MA- All.olM4dreirsubssdilk74 Wigwam and gdher.eenigles, who shall neglect or refaskto, procure define; hesamiaild, shall be subject to a penalty of .tiot law than tan7per soot: or ibTery thirty &ye the Mak triaAlTha =POI alter first day of , May of seek year. All bray made falling,to make the' return required' in - tba 4th seethan of Ude ordi. name, shall; in' addition twtheluregoinib besubject r . tznalty of shall borket teoo r. before =allot; which the Alarmed — or MI - ditty; by mmaar co r n ° w r g e o: r , and it-shall he thitlity.at thaCtit at:roliseioseek ant all persons who bare tidied to comply withaa7 of the provisions didinanateated•repart umlaute to the City Tressurerg.tor which lerriceta ihn/1 re. Seise the sum of lay cents In each ease,' to be and collettad he pert of the costs, opodefuggiction as The penalties' Ibr' ion-compliance with the anti- COM *VW borstslaily enforced alter do stare data t. , ', NAHUM LONG, High (Intuitable. 000 s. usual, orat.mennia irromm, wwitm• Nis. 41 iNdsend 4 1 .wo • T:_ci*? k 4. -INo would ofindidert int! Ann tonar larp trottedinv.ot:oollll.oN 'ASS NUNS =lt BD OfL4TSNSONTB, IJUNDSRS,Se.; An, toot new COOSMSLIIGEN)SainkUre to Weed ottnalMbliik 'tontnarinliiiii Wrenn. moots not found _in any other range. rr CUM DlALBASSlLmicans.isios ziatallo, kial.hAlik&STßaarld•Wirdter..- -•' • aim a • - -•- • - New hisrhatmailiog