“I”' ' * - '* 1 ► 'l J- ~ ,i* ’* , l' t , i '.yl ',i‘ , ..[.- - • , ; , ;=. , -.... i.*,:. ,- ;: , :::.:-:. .7.,1:..i:•;!:•:.:!•t:---.!.•.::,'..:.: 't :t<;<7 '^ff;:;”; 1 ";:;:;'? inf f; i s. -1;;*.- : \*;7'*>-yr-o-7"" Z ~ a..... ; .!T^:y::: .v i>«: ; ?i . ! ; :> j ; v..: KQB6fc£vS:3»)iat,;l! i ;:i w r ‘ rtipsteii fagftpfs« imamm i r-, ft,-, t'TJ.'^. , i-J.A‘ , J^^'?fc2•^•^>Y' : \C^•** ; ?-.;i I :;r ;>*? *>•• •* •*;•;••..•.•' •. -> ?•• 3-*.«2* , . / ‘»'-.- vV*-, s-l'sVsVr'-X-,*'*, * ?'-- . ■ ’* >;' i:' :■;: •; r ’.: . WEE V- ' . -\ ■ \ • .« • •* A & ‘J , . t -r;' ’ ’sri" y? . * ' fc. /? T’~ , f L . I ' •. ■ ■ ✓ . * - fiMrorgh teffy |IY HOENINO. 25. .. fIOESDj A f&ttarf from Cton. Leeto Gem oral Halleck. v The New York World * Washington cor respondent speak* of & formal conununica- tion from Gen. the rebel army, to , Gen.4laUeck, on tife cubjeotof the Eman- ProclainaUofcAccording ’to an abstract giT6n’hy th&lwriter, the general first argues and then threatens. He founds his argument upon ihaagtnm|>Hnn «w «?»> f ' of the elates will servile insurrection, and contends that in -Wifarfc cwmmUjy-fr# Ifths Instigation i V." of a eervilo war recommended, or SY.euaaentioned, and that the threat of-ter vltiTwer or insurrection is clearly not a proper military procedure; “that, being outside of military law, the Southern peo 'r- -pie, 4re justified in regarding it as coming ’under- the brutel and sayage.expedients ofa-barbarous people, and reaehting Such.” ! v So much for the argument, whioh U baaed • f entirely upon too assumption just mention-’ ..■a. ed. Ho next proceeds to threats, and if ~ correctly to.say: ;T-' J’n case the pro&lamaUbn is not ’ , withdrawn the Confederate military au ! v. ; v 'tfiorities, sorely against bat :.. in ths justice of their position, irill be compelled to retaliate In the sternest : ' ~ - - 'Tnannerupon all the Union prisoners, that fall into their hands. It is hot Specified what punishment will be infllotedj butyls 4 .distinctly intimated' that If, through the instigation of-the Federal troops, any wo , men or childreiL are murdered by-inforia* - -ted. negroes, aft' equal number of Union , wiU be promptly put to' death.” ~~. letter shows how greatly alarmed -li the rebels are at the impending blow which • ‘ will descend upon them ia oboont fi?e weeljs. ; As for his threats, they will meet with; the contempt they merit The rebels dare not do any thiag of tbe kind. ■ Bat the‘logic of Geihleeis the most.in —--teresting part of tho whole matter. The ". proclamation gave, the slaveholders one' hundred days in which to come back ..to their allegiance, with their “horrible privi . lege”' of buying, selling, whipping and working human beings as they would brutes,.unimpaired; but they do not seem inclimklto comply with ito terms. If they, •being thus warned,’choose to persist in .. their insurrection against ths government, -:dthen the government deems that they /• mustcarryitonwithout their bondmen, toA man, ars loyal, and to’tfcts end decrees their A wiser, - . juster, fairer act of war cannot be imagin ,:,:S4 j and the President -would hare been ex* 45 derdict 1 in hisduty to r the coun - fry had he longer suffered those four mil •'. iiOuo of. loyal people to .be compelled to their labor and strength to the ene mies of the government | ‘ But what about the “servile inturreo tioV’ It is simply - absurd/ The history of the world does not afford an examples! any people rising in insurrection at,the -very moment of their emancipation; and suppose that the slaves of the Bcjuth would do so is as illogical as it is contrary to the teachings of experience. Bat let the slaveholding rebels beware how they un dertake, to stop this work; for If they do undertake to stop it, they may rest assured that they will have trouble, Hot a servile ,insurrection, to bo sure, but a rising: of mUUons of colored people in defenoe of !the boon which their lawful government has just'proffeted; them. The edlot hasgone forth; and while we know that the Presi dent would not; recall /it if he could,' it is .true )U :caitld.;not. if he wvU. ' The' eiaveholderSj by their wicked and un provoked .Rebellion, have,brought this ca lamity-i-if . calamity it is—up on themselves;- and now, if they are not utterly mad, they will acquissctj in U; for the legal and con stitutional right'la fairly on the side of the black man. *; ... .. ? .., ; The Wsrf. . One of tie.main oaimsof onrill-iacceM in'thiawar haubeen Out wo lure made it, at the earnest request of Southern Union ists, a war of occupation, rather than of cofigt it gutrrt, for tho re-ealabiishmen t at . the Union and tho sapreinsor of our laws . in the Southern Bt&ica. Wituourimmonso toots, are might wonpy wholo States, and yet not crash ths'rcbellion; and the rebels, continually gaining, strength within-their .* little territory, could hsrrass our armies, until, one after another, they are forced to v fall bach., For the aake of baainesa inter ests inthe West, wo prepared a grand plan - to opening the hfistisslppl riser, and after opening it, we" found we had not troops enough in thefleldtoloccupythe territory firtoallyin oar possession—thy rebellion ’'was growing upon ns, and we had done hot V little toi crush it. This plan of carry log on the war is partially-laid aside; at least, ; It is stripped of its erlls; and in grappling with the esemyin future we shall bring all of onr immense power and resources into play wiLh a doe appreciation of their ralue, and with “an.economy which, we hope will render our efforts rery encesssful. • iSo says to Philadelphia Peat. We have .longsince testedhyuhoitcotflyexperience occupation is not cmqatit; and we hare presently our operations in the Bonth ' west, between February and October, that the-oocepation of the rebel domain by onr' armies only gare tha rebellion rest, and an opportunity to recuperate, while itaxhanated much of the strength of this gorernmont. 17s suffered more than tbs rebela did by Buell's; occupation of that eondiry' as the protector and the guard of rebel “proper ty.” A fins crap of corn was mado by the sUVes of rebels for tho future support of j 'rebel soldiers, while ho stood by with .his j iaigs army.. To conquer that country re. - quires more than" occupation. The rebels laugh at such wares Bncll gate them, and disregard oar arndea. of soldiers, while we i leaTe'untouched their army of laborers. It Is idle to talk of putting down this rebol- i lion eo long as ilarery is suffered to ex ist. .It. is at-ones the eource -of - their passion,'their pride, their, strength, their courage; and their hopevoferery thing, In-short, that-inakst~Ui«h what theyare. ! It xi a little carious thavaot a single journal of the “ Pemooratie’< stripe, has yet, so &r u wo in » n y way to the feet that General Casa has writ ten a letter to thr President cordially ap proving of the refajiyatetOsn. MoCtsiitAtt. Doubtless it would b* rery to those journals to. lay: snob a feet before -their readers. - •; Tui Sisk» Exnroiifo*.—The No* York Herald BAjn: “In tho Banks expedition { Non Tefle will coiUlnly. iaTo' fir*- rogl | Bents, Connecticut flro { thjree 'iuii • HiaaahautU eight ■lao^aient*ofinjkntry, «a* of e«#l»7 wd IthreehiUeriei of «tillor7 f • ‘ V. : : The Cost of Peace--Letter—from Robert Dale Owen to Secretary Chase««The Conditions of Lasting Peace. k £The following-J« the concluding portion ef Bobkbt DaVU OwEir’s letter! to Score tary cement of'which will be found on oar first page:] Bat we need emancipation far lessfor the material aid it affords—great, even tadispen sable, though it Ue—than because of other paramount considerations. •Wo fcavo tried the experiment of a federal Union'with a free-labor system in one portion •f it and a slave system in another, for eighty years; and no one familiar with ©nr affairs for a quarter of a oontary past is ignorant that the resale has beoaan increase—embittered year by yearin ever-acoelerated ratio—of dis tentions, of sectional jealousies \ of national heart-burnings. When, eighteen months since, these.culminated in war, it was bat the issue which oar ablest statesmen, looking sor rowfally into the fatare, had long since fore told. . But if, while yet at peace and with all tho inflaenoe of revolutionary reminisoeooos pleading the eaateof Union, this diversity of labor systems, producing varianoe of charac ter and alienation of feeling, proved stronger to divide than all past memories and present interests to unite, what chance is there that its banefal power for evil should eoase, now, when to thoughts of fancied injuries in other years axe added the recollections of the terri ble realities enacted on. a hundred bloody battlefields, from whloh tho smoke has scarce ly passed away ? None—the remotest I A suspension ofhostilltios wo ban purchase; a few years* respite, probably, in whloh to re tarn to our money-getting, before the storm barsts forth anew with gathered foroe; bat if we lookbeyonct selfishness and tho presont; if oar ehlldren are in onr thoughts; if we are suffering and depending now, that they, in a land of prosperity, may live and die in peace, then must we aot so that the result shall en dure*- Wemustnotbsoontent to put off the evil day. The root of the evil—the pregnant cause of-tho wai'-'-tbat must be eradicated. -Report has it that a western politician re cently proposed, as the best solution of our dlfilonUiei, the recognition of slavery in all the States. Such an Idea has a basis of truth; namely, that a state of war is, among us, the necessary result ef conflicting labor systems. Such an idea might even be carried out and lead to peace but for that progressive spirit of Christian civilitaLloa whloh we dare not open ly outrage, how imperfeotly soever we obey its humane behests. ■ There are a thoatand reasons—geographi cal, commercial, political, International—why we should not consent to a two oonfedoraoles; It is a contingency not to be thought or entertained; but \f look inertly fo cAs condition* 6/ touting ptae*, the ohanco of maintaining it would be far bettor if the Independence of the South were to be recognised with her negroes emancipated, than if she were to return to her alleglanoe, retaining her slave system. Bor in the former case, the cause of dissen sion being uprooted, .the Undenoy would be te re-unite, and a few years might see us a single nation again; while, in the latter, a constantly aotive source of irritation still ex isting, three years of breathing time would not elepso without bringing endless quarrels and a sooond rebellion. Conceivo reunion with slavery still In ex istence. Imagine southern aympsthissrs in power amongst as, offering compromises, suppose the South, exhausted with military reverses and desiring a few years* armistice to recruit, decides to accept it uuder tho guise of peaco and reconstruction? What next? Thousands of slaves, their excited hopes of emancipation crushed, fleeing across the bor der. A fugitive slave law, revived by peace, demanding their rendition. Popular opinion ih the North opposed to the law, and refusing the demand. Renewed war the certain oonse- qatfles. \j _Ortok©,OTeo,thaalteniatifaof reco J,. >! OtOQ, iae SlWiUBMiw V. ... —recognition of an independent confederacy, still slate-holding.- Are ti, then—becoming the solo exceptions among the. nations of the earth—to make ourtelfes alders and abetters of the slate system of a foreign nation, by agreeing to return to her negro refugees seek ing liberty and an asylum among ns ? National e elf-respect imperatitoly forbids this. Publio sentiment wonld compol the re jection, as a base humiliation, of any propos ed treaty stipulation, presiding for rendition of rnnavay slates. Yet the South would re gard snob rejection in no other light than as a standing menace—a threat to deprire her of what she regards as her most taluabie prop | erty. Coterminous as for hundreds—possibly | thousands—of miles onr boundaries would be, 1 must not the South, in oommon prudence, maintain all along that endloss.border line an armed slate-policef Are wo to consent to thia? And if wo 00, shall we escape border raids after fleeing fngitites ? No sane man will ex pect it. Arc wo to suffer thiie? We are dis graced. Are we to resent them ? It is a re newal of hostilities. Stata eleotlons may go &i (hoy wiU. Their results ean never ohange the foot that any party obtaining tho control of the government and adopting tho policy that the settieoent of the emancipation question is to bo post poned till the war shall be olesed, will never, while it pursaes that policy, see this war per manently dosed—not even by aoceptiog a shameful dbraption of our country. But if emancipation is to avail us as a peace measure, we mast adopt it boldly, resolutely, effectually; It must be general, not partial; extending not to the slaves of rebels only, but to every slave on this continent. Even if it were practicable, which it is not, with slavery non-existent in tha Northern States and abol ished in those which persist in rebellion, to maintain it in the narrow border-strip, it is precisely there, where negro fugitives can the , moat readily escape, that its maintenance would the most oertainly lead to war. Can this great pcaoa measure be eonstitu tlonklly enacted f A proclamation or (the more appropriate form) an act of General Emancipation should, in its preamble, set forth, in substance, that tiie claims to service or labor of which it de prives osrUin persons haring been proved, by recent events, to be of a character endanger ing the supremacy oMhs law, Jeopardising the integrity of the Union, and incompatible with the permanent peace, of the country, are taken by the government, with Just compen sation made. Under circumstances far less urgent than these, the law or custom of oiv- Uiaed nations, based on considerations of pub- Uo utility; authorises such taking of private property for publlo use. We ourselves are , familiar with iu operation. When a confla gration in a city threatens to spread! far, houses in the' line or its progress may legally be seised and destroyed by the authorities in order to arrest it j and the owners arc not held to have been wronged if they are paid for snob losses under an eqalUble appraise- Slant. But it is not the existence of port of aolty that Is now endangered ; it is tho in tegrity of one among the first Powers of the world that Is menaced with destruction. The truth of. the preamble suggested hss become, in my judgment, incontrovertible. It will receive tho assent of an overwhelming majority of the people of the loyal Slates. The public sentiment cf Europe will admit iu troth. Lot as confess that such a preamble,as pre face to act or proclamation, oould not hare .commanded the assent of more than a small fraction of oar peoplo, only two short year* ago—two years, as we Teokon time; a genera tion, If we calculate by the stirring oronts and far-reaching upheavals that hara been -crowded-inlo the eventfal months. In such days as these abases ripen rapidly. Their conseqnense* mature. Their ultimate tend encies beoome apparent. We are reminded of their transitory character. We aro romlnded that although far the time, addin a‘certain sage of hnman progress, some abases may hare their, temporary use, and for this, un der God's economy, may have been suffered to continue; yet all abuses hare bat a limited life. The Bight only is eternal. The rebellion, teacher and -creator as well ai jennrge and- destroyer,- by -sternly laying bare tha imminent dangers of slavery, has created theoenstUutionaUty of emancipation. It has done more. It has made emancipation • a beandon political dnty, as well as a strictly .constitutional right. Gaii'We, In declaring emancipation, legally ayoid the payment, say of two hundred mil lions, in the shape, of compensation to loyal Notlf •slaveholder's right to serrioe and labor from his flares, when not forfeited by ■J*** o ®# f* legal.. On hnmanitarlan grounds tiw legality of that right has been denied. W^ 011 of constitution advene aa * “‘PJeeced in by the nation mjnghoat mora than two generations; is mo«t ata tab. m»on nfflalaat whj tbyrightMqaettloa tboald bo ngtrdad u J>roj»rty. If, it b« prir.to property, then, cxMpt by TiolaUag. tb. fifth artiola of tho oßsenamantj to tho coaitltstioa, it ooa aot bo Ukra forpnbllo um withootjoit oom poatttlOE.: XavloUU -,i!s-. cost a nation more than • few hundred mil lions of dollars. The risk that a future decision of the Su premo Court might declare emancipation without compensation to be unconstitutional is, of itself, of the President’s policy,corresponding to the above suggestions, in this matter. Such compensation will be unpopular with ! many* Wise and just acts, when they involve sacrifices, frequently are. A wrong long tolerated commonly entails % penalty, which I is seldom cheerfully paid. Yet, evenoo other ] grounds, wc ought no*, in this case, to be- | grudge the money. Who deserve better of their i country than those brave men who, in the herder and other slave States, have clung to their loyalty through all the dark hours of peril eves to life ? Precautions naturally suggest themselves' against false protences of loyalty. It scorns expedient that ho who shall have proved that he is the legal owner of certain slaves, and hlso that ho has ever been loyal to the Union, shonldrccaiva atertifloate of lndebtednei a by the government, not transferable, to be paid at some fixed time subsequent to the termi nation of the war: payment being made con tingent on the fact that the claimant shall not, meanwhile, have lapsed from his loyalty. Every such claimant, once recognlsod, wonld feel himself to bo, by his own act, the eitixen of a free State j one of us, detaohed forever from the bouthern league. A govern ment stockholder, he would become pecunia rily interested In the support of the govern ment and the restoration of peaoo. Even if the legislatures of the border States should not initiate auoh a polloy, the loyal men of these Btates will aeoopt it. Suoh a measure does net involve expense in conveying the liberated negro to other coun tries. It has hitherto, Indeed, been the usual poiioy in slave States to discourage, as dan gerous, the residence there of free blacks; and hence an idea that oelonliatlon should be the concomitant of emancipation. Of general emancipation, there is no need whatever that U should be. Thoee who take up such an Idea forget that the jealousy with ■ whiob slavehol ders regard the presenoe of free negroes springs out of the dread that these may infect with a desire for freedom the slaves around them, thus rendering them Insabordinkto. But when all are tree thore will beuoslavos to inolte, nor any chains to be broken by re sort to insurrection. It Is no business of ours either to deoldo, for the liberated negro, where he shall dwell, or to furnish, his tnaveliixig expenses. Free men, black or white, should select their own dwelling plaoo and pay their own way. As to the fears of oompetition in labor sought to be axcited in the minds of the N orth ern working man, they have foundation only In case emancipation be refused; for suoh re fusal would flood the North with fugitives. If, on the contrary, emancipation be carried out, the strong local attachments of the negro will induoe him, with rarest exceptions, to remain as a hired laborer where he worked as a slave. Xhus humane masters will not lack •uffiient working hands, of whiob colonisation would deprive them. And if, notwithstand ing the'probable rise of Southern staples, profits, at first, should be less, tho security of the planter will be greater. He will no longer lie down ai night uncertain whether the morning’s news may not be that his slaves have risen against them* This is the paper view of the question. But all edicts, ail proclamations, how wise and righteous soever, are but Idle announcements now, if wa iaok courage and oonduot to en foroothem. Courage wo have, ' Raw levies have behaved like veterans. The skeletons of regiments reduced to one-tenth their original number, attest the desperate valor with which they oonfronted death. Not with tho rank and filers the blame 1 The leading 1 There has been the secret of failure. With all the advantages of a just cause over our enemies, we have suffered them to outdo us in earnestness. We laok the en thusiasm which made irresistible the charge of Oromweil's Ironsides. We need the in vincible impulse of a sentiment. We want, above all, leaders who know and feel what they are fighting for. This is a war in which mercenaries avail not. There must be a higher motive than the pay of a Swiss—a holier duty urging on, than tha professional pride or the blind obedience of a eoldier. By parliamentary usaga a proposed measure is entrusted, for fostering care, to its friends. So should this war be. Its oonduot should be confided to men whose hearts and souls are iu it. Again. It has long been one of our na tional sins that we pass by, with searoely a rebuke, the gravest pablio offence*. We utter ly fall in holding to a strict accountability ourpubiio men. The result of snob falluro, In peace, had almost escaped our notice. In war we have now beheld its effects, flagrant and terrible. It was not to be expeoUd that among so many thousands of oQoers suddenly appoint ed there should not be some hundreds of la oompetenU. Such things must be. No one is to blame if, in field or garden, weeds spring up. The blame resU with him who leaves them there to ehoke the crop and cumber the ground. Accountability—that should be the watch word— accoobtibiutt, stero, unrelenting t Office has iu emolumenU} let It have Its re sponsibilities alto. Let us dntand, as Napo leon demanded, success from our leaden. The rule may work hanhly. War needs harsh rules. Aetlons are not to be measured in war by the standard of peace. The sentinel, worn bjr extreme fatigue, who sleeps at his post, in curs the penalty of death* There la mercy in eouru-martial—drumhead oourU martial. A down officers shot, whenever the gravity of the offense demands It, may be the saving of life to tens of thousands of bravo men. Eighteen mantbs have passed. Eight hun dred millions have been spent. We hftve a million of armed men in the field. More than a hundred thousand rest in; soldiers* graves. And for all this what result T Is it strange if sometimes the heart sinks and resolution foils at tho thought thatfrom sheer administrative infirmity, the vast sacrifice may have been all Is vain f Bat let the Past go I Its fatal faults, (diffl cult perhaps, to avoid, under an effort so sad den, and so vast) can never be recalled. Doubtless they had their ose. If needed the grievous lnoapaolty we have witnessed, the stinging reversej we have suffered, the inva sion even of free states we have lived te see commenced; it needed the hecatombs of dead piled up unawallingly on battle-field after battle-field—tha desolate hearths, the broken hearted survivors—lt needed all this to pave the way for . that emancipation which is the only harbinger of peace. The Future 1 that is still ours to improve. Nor, If some olouds yet rostupen it, Is It with out bright promise. Signs of nasoent activity, energy, and a resolution to bold accountable for the Issue tho leaders of our armies, are daily apparent. Better than all, the initia tive In a true line of policy has been taken', the twenty*-third of September has had its ef fect. The path of safety is before ns; steep and rnggea, indeed, bat no longer doubtfal nor obscure.. A lamp has been lit to guide oar steps; a lamp that may burn more brightly before a new year dawns upon as. The noble prayer Ajax has been vouchsafed in oar cate. At last we have light to fight by. We shall reach a quiet haven If we bat fol low faithfully and persererisgly that gaiding light. There Is, at this moment, In tho hearts of all good men throughout the leogth and breadth of tho land, no deeper-feeling, no more oarnest longing, than for peace; peace not for the day, not to last for a few years; bat peace, on a foundation of rock; for our selves and for our children after as. May the hearts of oar rnlers be epenod to the oonvio* tlon that they oan purchase only a shambling ooun terfelt except at one cost 1 - God give them to see, ere It be too late, that Tax rates or is* DVKiso rsici is asvaaai. xifascimiov! I am, sir, your obedient servant, Bossar Dabs Owia, New York, November 10,1802, , LECTUIIEB. fra*LKOTUBB AT THE IKON CITY V'v COLL COR. comer of Fean and St. Clair sts* TfIIfI(TUESDAY) KOBHIKO, at 11 o'clock: STOO& INVESTMENTS. irs*PATKIOTIC LECTURE,— ..PBOrWSOB WILSON, by special request, baa consented to repeat hla lecture on ‘'Tea Times." on THANKSGIVING RVXMNQ, la CORCXKT HALL, Fifth stmt, the proceeds to be appropriated fur tbe benefit of the Pittsburgh Babelitence Com mittee. C'xxsepea at o'clock; Leetare to com* mtnoe at ?X-- Tickets to be had at tbe ptlodpal Book, Uouu and Drag Stores, ofPitteburfh and Allegheny. noSfttt > Fmsscxotti Nov. £oib, uea. J The Menoagahela Insurance Company of Fitts* burgh has this day declared a Dividend of TWO AND A HALF DOLLARS FXB S&A&X on its Capital Btoch.out of iba earned profits of the last fix forthwith. Tha Company assume the payment of tha Gonnusest Tax oath# shore dividend. Ulfifif Xt- ATWOOD, M&d* t . ■ ... r ' . ;i.4 < PUBLIC JTOTICEB. .Onto* Movokoxhcla Pltt«i>arßh, Bov.-SOlh, 1863. f ELECTION For fifteen Direc “V of tMi Cempany, to wits during the oocuieg year, will bo held at tho offlas, No. 99 Water >ireet, oD TUESDAY, the 2-1 day of December, 18G2* between the boon of 11 a m. end I p. m. ne2l:td HENRY M ATWOOD, Secretary. JT^AGRICULTUR^L— A meeting of the Board of ulamgers of the Allegheny Agrlnliurd Sicily sr!l! ix>h*-!d*-o WEL‘- NLSDAY, K v. 20th, 18*52. , A full attendance ti ro •larcted, a.l imp-rtaat btuiiwna will »e presents). •W. d .HAVES, Chairman. 8. BCHOTER Jr., 6ec*y. ' ; no2l:StdeltwY nS»i’UOKET iiOV&ti, for the new Postage Currency;’ DIARIES, 4 to 8 to. and 19 mo.; LAWYERS NE\V TIB ENVELOPE; SLO COMB'S INKSTANDS; PHOTOOBAPH ALBUMS; for e&le by W. 8. HAVEN, oe£o corner Wood and Third streets. JirmW* TAK— 2 barrels Allegheny Tar in etoro aod for ealo by ; li. DAIZELL A CO. C'TKAB OlDiSli.—2s bblß. and 12 half J bbls. pore Crab Older tocel«cd thl* day and for gale by BOBBBT DALZSLL A 00. SALT.— 600 bags ground Alum ralt; £OO do Dairy do; In • ore and for tale by 1 no2A WATT A WILSON, iAB Liberty street. BAUuiN. —50,1100 pounds new emokei Shoulder* on bond and tor aale br LITTLE A TBIMBLE, n 026 112 Second street. MV CttOF ti. O. MULAWtiKg — i< bbit. Jast arrived and for tale by LITTLE aTBIJJBLR. Hj Becond stiaet. NifiW RRAUttKS—IOO bags bright helrei Intfoio undfor tale by , LITTLE A TBIMBLE,' ll2 B*coad street. rpAK-h isCMluK.—Lr<ed men, whose A circumstances will not permit them, without groat sacrifice* to go into service, can be (applied With substitute*. £ly charge ipccifled. Enquire of J. £. MOBAKGE, ocJLeTPtfKa No. 107 Fourth nnx.t \[ UTIUL.—The Kiut-boit “U. K. 1 ’ will X.V be told for wharsege and cost’, on BAXUK DAY, December 13. h, at 1> o'clock, at Ibe Alle gheny Wharf* unieea told wharfage aod- costa are liquidated b:foa» that date. Paiti-e Interested will take notion. celfciw JAMES ALLCK, Wharfmaeter. K] OJ'iCh.—Booza will be opened at «Lv the office of B. McLAIN A 00., 10* Fourth •treat, TQ IS DAT, (Monday, Nov. 17th,) and eon lino* fur one week, to secclrc to the Capital Stock ot the Pittsburgh A Cleveland Transit Pool o»'tnp«nr. nol7:jw YTuTKJJS TO EULKUIIU FtiYloi- Xl OXANA—Any good Kcleouc Pbjtid«n, with a capital oi two to four hundred dollar t, desiring a good country practloi, can bear cf ore by addr*talng BuX 800, Plitibor.h P. 0. m22:3t To AND OIL. DIhTTLLEBS —TLe Cjtedj of Books and Blanks re quired ond,r the National Tax Law, for tale by BQIS Kay A CO., 66 Wood at. ViLKN Ajj KL ViloN (Jfc).—Aii persons later* t ed ort berebj notified that 1 bare receiv ed from the Collector of the Twenty-eecosd Penn sylvania ColLctloo District the Hit of raxablta sub let m Uceoae duty ander the Licit? Tax. for the Second Sab Goliectlos L Isttlet, embracing the t..wo ehlpe cf Creao*nt, Moos, Findley, North Fayette, Boolnion, bontk Fayette, Uf.par fit. CUlc, Stett, Union, Charllerv, Ne\!Tlo, Loner Bi. Clair* ta n, Baldwin, and th» of T«ai;eranceviU«* in tha county of Allegheny. X will receive the taxes u a'creeaid at my office* 00 thv bWuhvtaviUe Turnpike* la the borough of TctcparanooTille, Fa., dariug the period ot t«eatv five days, from iheidth DAY OF NOVEMBER au tll the Sitb DAY OF DECEUBEB, tncludra, bo tween tie hoars of 8 o'clock a cl anA-3 p m. AU pe:oont oegiectlng to pay tdelr tax within (he time specified, ofe liable to an a’ldliion of 10 per cantam on the amon t thereof. All taxes must be paid In Oovercm nt fund*. Joseph b Lawson, Deputy Collector 2d Division 2'-d Collection Dbtrict, Penasylvaala. Po2V.lawdqnwT PITTS HU KGH A STEUBfiNVILLE BAILBOAD.—TO OONTBACrOBS.—feasd propoaalt win be remlved at the office of the under aignad, in Steubenville, on FBIDA V, the 6th day or D.cuuber otxt, for the grading of Sections E and W* of tha FJttehurgh * Steubeavilh Bsilroad, com prising the appro*ch*a at the east and weak *Ld« of the Ohio Bivar Bridge at Steubenville. Said Sec tions will contain about 140,1X0 cubic yards of em bankmont, and are favorably ettmted fer prooecn ting the work duriog the winter Profiles and ipecificaUoa* cai bo seen at tha Ohitf Engineer's Office, at say time after the first day of December, and mors detailed loforuatlon obtained on application to the undersigned. J. BUOKKN6DEKFE&, Jr., -Bc2s*td ChUf Engineer. TiiITKOUTK ull, WUttiLS, PITTSBURGH, VA. REESE & GRAFF, Proprietors. Oapecit? lw* ib?cttnrl barrels per week. €9"OBlo», KONONOAHSLA BOUdX. SUNDKIKS.— 90 bbli. standard crosbcd Sugar; 80 hbdt. prime N 0. do; 40 do rorto Bioo * VO do Cota do; 10 bbls. Now Orl'aDs Molaaa*; 100 do Baltimore Golden bjrap. 46 do JiCrering'e do; 76 bigs prims Bio Caff*; HO boxeeotooMwl brands T.baccv; UO do groand 8pie»«; ' 60 do do Coffee; 800 coils Manilla Hope, osourted slors, 100 bolts Navy Oakum: 60 boxas Oanosatrsted Lys; For sola by WATT A WIL9ON, n 026 I*B Liberty street QUNDRIEd— iO 176 baits W. B. Cbteeei 1 k*g No I Lard; IftObbU. prime Applas, auerted klarfa, 5 da prime Vlasgor; 6 do beoet Cldtr; Jut received and for sale by FRANK YAK GO&DBB. n 026 Its Secoud streai. THE OLD PRICE. HUN T’S Union stationery Portfolio , Coital nlng 84BBRTSPAFEB; £4 ENVELOPES; ; 6STEEL PENS; 1 ACCOMMODATION PEN.HOLDER; 1 LEAD PENCIL; AU of superior quality—warranted. ONLY 25 CENTS, VST A (fetter's wort* (taiionerg for a paarter. *VU erdsrs, to Insure prompt attention, sh*Qld JOH3? P. HUET, ao2l Majonio Hall, Fifth £tbeet. Medical card.—w. buden- HAWEB, M. D„ of No» York tcutemcUtea betne In Plitabatgb ra the (to Of ClOKußlfi NEXT, vbo*» he will derote, si rinul, bis BIVK- ATTENTION to tbe Mtdletl end fiorg'cal treatment of OenONIO DIBEASES, erpocTtlly (boss of the Lowvi Bjwel, «acc as Pits, Blriotme of the Bowel, HletraMon of tie Bowel, do Aia-> tbs TArlouiObmulo Dieestce of tbe Womb, the Kldnete, tbe Bladrer. Aa. Bis deuce will Lo at tbe MOSOKdAUELA HUCBE, wheie be m*j beeeenand ojcea'ted from «o'clock a. a. to 8 o’c.ock p n. dolly. He will rult patients In any purt of tbe city, I’desire). EoftOSw rpi GLASS MANUFACTURERS.— Findlay llio demand for DITHBIDGE’S XX FLINT GLASS PATENT OVAL LAMP CHIM NEXBmach greater than oar pr. teot capacity to •apply, and wliblaa the pubUo to be fully ropplied with thaw UnBIYaLLED CHIMNEYS, we hare ocncl tided to grant the yrlrllege to manufacture them to bootee of readability. . This coone hu been rendered nee«trar7 since oor pr«Mnt prod actios U tat FIVE THOUSAND DOZEN Ffitt WEEK* while the demand la almoet wholly for the Patent Oral. Thoeo of oar own manufacture will be diilln* gnlthed by oor trade-mark of XX FLINT GLASS, Which all others ere cautioned from oslnf. All package* of Chimneys made coder onr Ueeeaa will be marked wllb the name of patentee and date of trace of parent; • Jot particulars apply at fori Pitt OUu Work*. n»19:la B. D. DITUUIDOB. IT O. KNIGHT b 00., ' i WHOLESALE GBOOEHS, fl. B. eonw W«t«r ud ChMttmt Btraots, -. ' j . i ■ ■ TaiLAmn Afttta forth* Ml* of the prolncti of SOI Waul BU6A& urifixßT W tb* qboc tUQAtt BOPftS. of Philadelphia. - astt JFEW JVDVEHTMBI ?TQ COUNTRY MERCHANTS AND DBALIBS. EATOJK, ITIACRUn & CO., No*. 17 and 19 Fifth Street, Jobbers asd retailers .fTBIfiIHINGS, EMBROI DEBIES, UOBHSET, GT.OVEB, HOOP BKIBTB. BIBSOJS&, SHIBTB, COLLARS, TIES, UKDEB BHIBTSand DRAWERS, WOOLKi, ROODS, KC BIAS, BOABrs, ZftFHYB AND* SHETLAND WOOD; 6,000 tta KSITTIFO TABHB,oa haul asd to antra. Oar. stock wu purchased bafor* tha last pwt ad* raooe'ln price*, and ve offer great todooameata to OITT AJ?D COOJtTBT ttIBORAHTS, KILLS BEBB, PEDDLERS, aad *D »bo buy to sail again. H. B,—A oho too laortnmt of Staple Dry Goode, At wboleaalr on It FULTON’S VEGETABLE ( OUOH BYRUF, Which oarer tells to cor* rhen used tn Urn* and w- oording to direction. ■Wllead thateUovlng ificatee, published Aron aaong othan recalrad vt h(a lb* pact three 7can :*» Cuxs, Jan. l, U6O. *l*. J• M. Triton—Mr Btr : Tor y»ars my wife has been suffering with a very riolent eough. At night ihi would bar* to gat out of bed nrj fra. qoeatly to got her braatb or heap from snfbcailng. Bearing of your Ooogh Syrup, I determined to try it. I got a bottle from Xuao Lewis, and cted ao> eordtng to directions. It | are Immediate relief and acted like a cLana oa her ooogh, producing the greateet change on her in one week. She has no more of the hard oougbing spells now, and In feet X may say >• entirely cored. Brsp^tfally, ALEE. HANNA. Pmonu, Deo 9, 1860. J. M. retro*—Dear £*r/ For sometime X ktn been raOsi tag with * imn toegh and bold In the bead, and ceroid net Bleep at night tor oooghlag. Bat alter cstag a bottle of yocr Vegetable Oeogh (Jrrop, T vu entirely oared br It. [ B«p**iQlly, Q. B. W. 00MB8.; For thie remedy we have the of all who hare Bead ft, aod the >— tlon of cni* of the oldest pbyslslans Is the coon try, who hoe seed it In hie practice for ytaro with the bjappiret results. If yon are troubled with a Ooogb or Cold, Infloeoaa. Bleeding of the Longs, Qatnsey, Pbthtsio, Bronchitis, WeaknMt of the Chest, see rm/ron'B oooqh sybcp. Spitting of Blood, Asthma, Oroop, Fain la the Breast, HoareeatM, Catarrh, loflamatloa of the Liver and XHptberia, la all its stages, FULTOZTO OGUfIH fiXBOP will ears sooner then any ooigb nitton In nee. We do not eay that In all cases It will core Can* rampticn. Ho medicine be relied on to do that. Bat ws do allege, and stand ready to prove, that by the aid of this medicine, stapled with proper sanita ry regmlatleest neh m regular hoars Sot Bleep, re straint rpen appetite, aad avoid exposure, some dee perete cases here b.en eared. Da not neglect this timely admonition. The Ooo£t fiyrnp will ooiw yoor oold ; keep • bottle la yoar boose constantly, end take a does on the lint sympton of a oold. 00 will save a heavy Dcotor’a bIU, tf not yosr life. Don't CtO to give It a trial. Use a remedy In time. Sever cease trying ontU yoor oold la better. Prepared and told at 91 per bottle, by J. JL FULTOH, Dbuqout, FIFTH STBBBT. T\ELAWABE MUTUAL INBUR* XJ AHCS OOMPAHT OF PHILADBLPBIA lbs (oliowlsg Statement of the attain of the Com* la pabllabed la conformity with a proriiloa of in Charter: Premiums received from Hovembtr L 1181. to Ot> tabor 31.1863: On Uarlno tod Ultod 8f*kaJ226,806 II On Hr* Bisks.. 90,821 £0 9828,830 U Pr»mtuJXi* ea P»Mci« Dot mwkod off Hot. 1. Mfil Pnmlasu marked eff as aanud from Her. 1, l&Jl, to OUL. 81.1882 : On Uarißoaod Inland 8Uk8.9215.1i9 82 On Fire »*■*■-- 100,000 a Intern: dariocMaa period, —anlrajw, se^ — |318,1U 07 Lisn.ttt i 7 Harlaa ud Inland Barlga* U-b Leww... | OJU AS Fir* tnasas 184(0 64 Bet urn Pranlctni. B6 Ba-larormaote —19,140 79 &»ancy C bargee... 14427 OS AdrsttUlng, Filntlng, ba.._ SJUL&B Text* —. 6440 it Expcpaae, Salaried, Bant, to, 20408 SI 1 ■ $216404 48 Serplai~. |lgB,oflo ftfl amkm or rsa oompsxt, wriua LI M 3. 1100,000 O. fl. 5 per cast. Lots 9 33000 0) 2\o 0 " 0 *• “ 30,700 00 89,000 •• a “ Tras'y Hot*# 41810 00 ** 7MO per ct, • 38,000 00 ICO vOO BUU of ft. ft per c*. Loss &&80 00 «4 000 •• ft «« »• 87,100 00 123.080 Phils. city ft M " OO 80,000 BUte of tens. 0 *' •• 13,000 00 vO.COO fuuii;lmii B. B. lint Mortice ft per ct. Baade 22,800 00 , 60,000 Feastylrsals 8.8.9e0c0d Kortctf* ft per ct. Bards 68,27 ft 00 8,000 F*. 8.8. 100 ehereeetook. 8,800 CO 16,000 Otfotalowa Gee 00.. 800 ehme stock, prladpalaad la tenet nsxa&teed by the city ot lB,BOO 00 118,700 Loess oa Bond sod ttort* B»fe,tat!y Moored 113,700 00 Per. $089,760 Oeat, $868,74# OS Mht TaL$6S3,l7B 00 Bod fcatate.... .—.. 61.869 86 BIIU Baca! Table, for laiaraneea m*de~_ 91,288 fit B&Usoli do* ob A frncles.—Premiums od ÜbHbo Policies, accrued liWrot, tad other debts doe tba fcrtp and Stock of »uadry Iniorance and otnor Oompaalea, $lO4 > -t, eet’d raloe.. 4418 00 Chsb. oa deposit with United Bieiei Oorammcnt, rotyeot (0 tea d*jo call..—...———sBo,ooo 90 Qub In 8anka.,..—... 26,727 94 ** la Drawer..—.———. 280 74 •» ' 109,006 6$ HOTXMBBIII,I6B3. of Directors bare this day deo’erad a caihdlfldead of TEH FSB OJUT.oatbo Capital Block, a&d UX P*U OhfiT. taterestoa tbetortp of tho Company, payable oa a&d alter the first Da* camber tmalma. They naroalao daclarod a sorlp dividend of FOBTT FSB. OSNT. oa tbo Famed Prominms for the year aadlafi October 81, 1661, certificates for wbicb will bo iuurd to tbo parties entitled to tbs sea* on a&d afar tko first Decon>bar proximo. Tb#y bar* ordered also that lha maalalaf oat' standing Scrip of tea Company of tho Usa*s of tbo jean prior to 1668, bo redeemed la cash on a&d altar February 9,1868, from which date all Intenst theta, on sball cease. occHJleato of preJUa itmtd mdm S3O. Bm Ao Act qf ineorponttoot omtijlmt* tkoi mm m»* Um daimtd vitkin ttooftanqftmtkoAoeionHomcfAo dmdtrni nUnaf U it nidmco. DIttEQtOBS: Tbomu C. Hand, Bobart Bor too. Jolma Bitli, . Samos! B. Stout, £dmond A. eoadar, J. Jf. P«aUton, TbeophUa i Paulding, Henry Sloan. Jtbo IL Psnroas, Edward PaningtOD, Jamti Traqnatr, H. loom Brooks, William Ijw, it., Speacsr H'llraloa, Junta 0. &aod, Jacob P. Jon**, WllUaa 0. Lodwtg, Jamas B. tt’YaxUsd, Joasr-hEL StaU . JoabuaP. Ejra, Dr. &. M. Huston, J. B. Sample, PltUb’gb, Gaorso O. Lelpsr, * D. T. Morgan, ** Hogb Grab, A. B. Bargar, H Charles Kuly, ?HOMAB . BANS.Pnildttt, ’ /AYIS, Tlm Pnwdnt, itary. A. MADKBA, Agent, Filer rt'tet, PttieWgfc. Joan c. b. Bust Ltuvsv, Scent JP, ' DOOKB JUbT HEtiifciViSD— JJ Oppcxtaaltleo for ladoitrr, ud tbt Bah la* TMtmeat of Capital; or. 4 xbiouaad Ghana** to Uake Money.- Uy B. T. Treodley. $l. Tbt Law* of Borises Tor barinan moo ta all the State* of th* Union, with tanas tor Mercantile lojlrtuneati, Deeds, Lhm, Wills, 4e. By Jsdg* Panose, taw Proflstor at Birwi $3, Sloan'* Bosstead Archlteetara; UlotlraUd with opvanf •of £O3 •Dcrarisca $3. no2l bTsTpa TIB, W Wood rtraet. '055805050X081 l.'.OOOßetmlMi Bap} 6,000 Oonoj Bap; 1,000 Bomba/ Backs MOO larp, kmrj, Ltpaa Backs 6JXO Army, Oate and Com do: 600 Salt Backs; Fotaalsbj HITOBOOOK, fCoOBUBT * 00, L AKi> barrels 01 i*ABD OIL, winter stnlstd, rsostvid tad ftmto by »ox * raxo, .?<«*»/ toSta***. DRY OOODB. JJIGHLY BK3IRABLB IfEW GOODS, Macrum & Clyde’s, From th* New Fork and Boetoo Markets. Latest sty lee of Trimming*, Embroideries, Ribbon*, Biok-Haoki, and Fanoy Goods. We would uk especial notice to the great extent, nrktj and loss prices of cm stock of JText England Woolen Good*. HOOP 8XIBT8; PATTERNS; FURNISHING 00008; TARNS; HEAD-DRESSES; . And a fall Una of rmaO articUt cad aodiom. MILLINERS ABO OOUBTBT MERCHANTS Wfll find ft grratly to their advantage to make selections from our stook. At w* bay moetly from flnt hands, wt can oaU at u low prices as the Phil adelphia Jobbers, tbns saving the dealer freights and eaeterzr expenses. MAQRUM & GLYDE, 78 MARKET fcTBXET, (Between Diamond and Fonrth.) rooms op stain. gALMORAL SKIRTS, An elegant stock. For sale at wholesale and retail, eieop for eufc, at HORNE'S TBIMMIHO STORB, /COUNTRY MERCHANTS A MTLLT. \j HERS wfll find an elegant eoortaent of BOH* BITS AND BATS, RIBBONS, FLOWERS, BD* OHM, VELVETS, SILKS, PLUMES, DBMS TRIMMINGS, EMBROIDERIES, LINBN HAND* KERCHIEFS, HOSIERY AND GLOVES, FANCY OoODfl AND NOTIONS, for nli cheap for cash, at HORNE'S. TBIKMIHG STOBB, Q.REY WOOL UNDERSHIRTS AND DRAWERS, TRAYXIiINO BHXRTB, GAUNT* LBTB, GLOVE! AND HITTS, for Soldiers. A large lot of the above goods at Hew York pricee to wholmale buyers, it HORNE'S TBIKMIHG STOBB, QREATEBT SALE or ran SEASON, J.W. BARKER&OO.’B, 09 Market Street, Commencing Monday, Nov. 94th. SILKS, BHAWLB, CLOAKS, and DRESS GOODS, 1 Lent Year’s Ator-rson, iHirruroa, idraoi, oxnrs ABD EOT*' WBAB, BOUSSIXXPIHO o*wp. OBSAt. bcM SASA.ea u J)RES£? GOODS, AjfD BA&BED FLAHKELS, AT J. M. Burchfield’s. BABBHD COUHTBT ITLABHBLS; WHIT* do do; GBST TWILLS!) do; BATDTSTi AND KSSTOOK7 JXAKS; Vf OOTOTBT BLA2TKCZB; SUPSBJTIT* do; SHAWLS AHD CLOAKS; BHAWLB k fIi)» old fttjla, it half prioa; DBSSB GOODS, in gnat varlotj. bti ia O L O A. KIS V ASS S BAWLS, JUST OPUID At W.&D. MUCUS’. poll i_ tsre.naie OUKAFtI WOOLEN t WOOLESBII OOUHTBY FLAMHITA pTttrt! whttah tanadi PLAIN OBIT AND TWILLS!) TLAHSAIAj Do BSD O -to ' 1 Do TSLLOW do to TBSHOH FLAHHILS.ef *0 ibsdts, both plain indUmJ; OOUBtBT BLIBBSTS, boat tnada, an nod* lent article* LADIST LOBO WOOL IHAWIA* Do SQUABS do to KIBBKS do do to <7HIbDBIH*B~ to ~ ~to WOOLBH PLAIDS, beaott&l bright toon; PIGUBSD LAXHZLsft&mtioi WOOLXB DBAWSBS AND MIMST BOBISBT, Aas AQof the abort foods aft a varymall advanct ca last •etton't jrloa, far GASH ONLY. : O.HAHBOH LOVE AGO., ■uii u tcmttt sraxai. gXKiIL BKLT CLAUm—A choio. lot c, Uum featnU. BUICLADSof GImI BrUUutt, AhUftcaUn lai>ert«w, wctroJ «i 4 fcral.hr MAKa,tucwu»cb„- : adl £8 ELEGANT LOT OF FLUSH SLIFPIB PATTXBNB received by mftm OH &Yfl How Is the time <0 make selections for tfat WattdSTS. IATOH. MAOBUMBOOh “DABGAINS FROM AUCTION.—Bu* J 3 a fow of those bargains la Linen BandkstchJab remain unsold. Those who are not yet inppUed should do so Immediately. Pore Linen tsa-edtohed HVk'fo, at 850. worth S3oj ' “ •• tucked * 60 * HOOS “ " tacked e stitch'd N 65 " ISB Onecr more at the abers pcfcea, tfil all an aoU. * *ATO¥, KACBtJM A 00. DQ’» St IT Wit* K. gALUORAL SKIRTS.— - 1,000 BALMORAL SKIRTS, lo bright and bean* tlfol colors. Merchants end desists icpfdlod la IJWTHB TRADE. JOSEPH HORNE, b now reoelvlng bis third large stock of goods salt* Able to the jetton, to which be Invites the itedit attention of dty and ooantry Merchants and ftlUll* ners. New supplies of DRESS TRIMMINGS AND EMBROIDERIES, WOOL HOODS. NUBIAS, BONTAGS, SCARFS, HITTS, BLKEVXS, Ac.; UNDSRSHIRTIA DRAW ERS { KHITTISG YARNS AND ZKPHTB WORSTED i BONNETS. HATS, I FLOWERS, BuGHESTbON* 1 NET RIB BUSS, VELVET 818. ' BOHB, FEATHERS, BONNET MATXBI. ALB, Ao, Ac,; FANCY GOODS AND NOTIONS. BALMORAL SKIRTS; HOOPS, Ao., go.; THEATRE. Lean and Kaugir..., WMnmn ,Wa. Hnsnaoo. Trcescrear. —Zona. G9*Secon4 night of the engagement of Mr. J. H, ALLEN. Hasarthy, or the Peep o*Dav Boys. THE MAOARTHF, * Oept. PEEP O‘DAY, I -*•- •••—-Mr. ALLEN. NELLY BRADY ... - Mira qm.TT MARY KKLLY Mrs. MYRON! ALECK PUSOALL Mr. CHAPLIN. Nos. W end 1> Merket streeL Bj Mr. JACKSON HAINES, the Psrior «ktftr UDBEOM OF THU ABTS, iWAX BTATDABT AHD COSHO BOBOOPS Of TBS WAB. T 7 and T 9 Merket etreet, At MASONIC HALL, dally, iron 10 a. ca. to 10 p. m. Admltiion,UOEHTflt Children, 10 CXHTL ooUtlw SECOND LOT of HAND PIANOS AND XUOJPPIV BARGAIN a._A{| 8 |D9 Boaswnod 654 octave Kano, round coraws, mafi bF Ohkksring A Sons, only i% yeais bU, am to imwßwt— -- ft*f Noe. 77 eed 78 Merket street. A Boeewood Plano, same astbeabova’so A Bosswoad ocuvs Plaao,Chidtartog A Sool abont 4 ysars old, In flnt rate ggg A Roerweod 6% octets Plano, made by SAo* makar.Pnilad*lp>>U L mgara«.Pl«*w* ABoeewoodO octave Piano,-trea frame, by Hallet. Davis A 00., in good M HO A Rosewood 634 octave opright Piano, madrbv Gilbert, n — I, , 1 xss A Mahogany 8 octave Plano, made by Stodart Sfla. T »rarT |Md • ISO A Mahogany 8 octave Hew York makau. 15 a a wi."**, 7) A Mahogany 8 octave Plano, Lood A 8m,..—.. 45 A Mahogany ocuve T im .i.i.m tt A Mahflgmnw A ogjarm FUwa go A Boeewoods octave Plano style Melodeoo, made by Maatm A Himiln, «a grab *m. n«.— r ,, 70 A Rosewood 5 ootare Plano style r 0 A Boeewood 4 octave Portable efoViV’n. made by Oarhardt—ccvt atb : , u Far tale by JOHN B. MXLLOB, nod gi Wood street. KXHiDmuN.^ggSMH PRIZE MEDAL PIAHOfI, Made by Stxixwat A Sons, New York. They re* calved the first prise medal at the ties this, rammer, In competition with two handled end eighty Pteace, from all parts of Europe and Aoariee. and are thtu pnrredtobeOebart'Ffoaoeta tee toortd. A frash sapply jnst receiving by B. KLRBEn a Baa, 68 itoh street, DoB Bole Arvots lOT Bt>law«y*e Pto>. rpmJSuSiJSEFAiuTJnTFSABV X VOLCBTAMJD AHD lETIM.ODXS, far tb. (toguarXilodm. 6v jobs ZuH anM ad ooodoetor of onsio Is Ptytnontb Chnrcfe, Bvookkm. New York. Prtotsl6Q. . .... 008 OHABLOTTB BLUMS, No.43Ttflhtft. riTAiifi cofloodba ot tito X crtdKjtioi arruMdis theta tad (oumM. PrtotWcanU. CHABLOTTB BLUMST ao» tomhetmft. BAtitS AM) THftOH i>KUM» iutt tto towd by JOHNS.VSILOft. TJUBS XT AUCTION.—On TfllB J} (Tuesday) AYIHBNGON, November ffith, at t o’clock, as llatonio Sail Auction Boon, 66 fifth street, will be aold,alarga assortment «f Ladba* Poet, oeapriflßS Otpet, Yiotodnra, Mnfl* tad OoA, In fltofc, table, rock martin, la. Salt poalttra. Tba ladfta tit respectful!/ Invited to call and examine the roods on morn la/ of ails. Boa - . . T. A', MoOLILLANP, Aaot. DOORS XT AUCiiUN.—A* now lot XI eptstd TBIB DAT, at KeOLSLLAHD'B. Ho. 66 fifth ttrtet. Sale at T o’clock. aoM DUORS XT AUCTION TONIGHT, at AJ KeOLKLLAHD’S, 66 ftfih street. A new as sortment opened this day, nerfs BOORS ANO i’HOTOORAFH XL BUSS at Auction, TO NIGHT, aft MoOLHL LAND'S, 66 fifth street. apt? JJAILEY, FARRELL X CU. Its Toms Brasr, rxitntßK&s, HTJfW, laltoM* ter t im* uA'otte had ad tar notio*. OAST 1809 AKD pql np la ik» moct OAinzrxmSSon A. Ui*» MKrtDcai of B&AU WOBK os •adfcr—tooawMOMblotwua. «s?i isOlAiiUt, Ao’c' PU HTX TXT-Stß] piTrsausoß.rA. MgSSS^SSSSSSSSStSSSL " w tiS.T l0, "“**- *» J^UJUa 1 KAilotf it jbcr Uu pofc oi'UM tod tor Ml* ftt . . ; - a ° l *nn i h °-^ wo °p«t»«- S'XXMIikUiU XAHN. “ MO t*. cool coomtrj WOOIIH :K»niTnw TABS, put op (acetate thli mihi,«. „y. f „ •mancrlwptuatltiaa, JOS. 80888, lf»u I>AX.—uSa. DRY GOODS. Ha 11 TWO, rtmL A No. IT Fifth meet. Nos. 77 sod 79 Uarket Street, as low as any Eastern Jobbtag Hoorn, : • - • «4JWS£/KE*4YS* THIS (Tnesday) EVENING, HOT. 26tb, 188 R WQI be pretested, To oooedndo with SCENE ON THE ICE, PUTOA AUCTIOJT j9«|JL£S, of mij 4«orfpUaa of. »0.4 S 02UTH7ICLD 6XBXBT, OHItBBBK’S JASCY rUBa; ” GEHTSIOBCAPB, OOLLABB,* QLOYXB; HATB ACT) OAFS. ' ■-* kocobs & oa-s, '.;•■• i : ;' .;"• '^-• •r.