" v.i,.r; .; ; ; :,'V r ~r?i ; ' ■'■'.■';.■■» j ' V-.:; :j- -- '• ! . ! ] . 'V; jf[| : ... | ;; ■ : - V:^ff ••••■y ->• ■ „ 1 - : - •' • i -j " \/ A ; " !•' .!fV |' ‘ji • ! | .■■ .• *T v. ; w • "} • : ~:;r^;c;€i-M^.^.,,-..,:. „ » , ~ ;Q;ygg^?ii3^teM^iiliBS%^SKSi F THE LATEST NEWS V-A-W > (■ t • V., ' \ - v';:f . ' r* | f 'T ' *..•; ;*••• ; -;g W^u m- • : *.*y -jj.- «v- jJ.!?,',:,'. * ->*'*'*l :*:’*-■• ?$ w •Vk : v.v'«. •y’.v.^vi'~ %■% • •: •; •:• ;•< ':• :;- y.-'vy,: ■ • : -ff *■; £; - :• :S|Sa@SliaSsK#:o iiiPiiill &■=■. CS' i «v*<"°r • j;‘?■ ifflilSill: -jy ivv'! . * » •;• !'£.■< ;i, V \ , . il, _ V ' ‘"l- ■ . i 1 i •* f i-*, ‘r *■ • : VV.y.... '_ &%.■ w : Aurora Flotd. A Doxkstio Story.:— Messrs. T.. 8. Peterson, of Philadelphia, haire jut published Miss M. B. Breddon's new -hovsl, “Aurora FloJjrd," whisht she hu boon bontribnting to Temple Bar for several month* put. , The onterpriiuigPhiUdelphiA publish er* hero printed their edition from advuiced r proof iheeti, teeured in England Immediately on tho tho completion of tho work; but wo hero hoord *o s much in it* praise—praise do? oldod end un too, 07 competent and oritieal wo oennot donbt they will be amply repaid for tholr outiej to bring it before the American pubtio, bj a largo and immediate demand. It i* described bj Dr. , Shelton Mukansia aa “one of the Tory beat > of modern novels, full of interest and Inci dent, and with a muterly development of character.” 1 It ia for aale in Pittsburgh at the atoro of Mr. Johjt P. Hun, Muonio Ball, Fifth street, and that ©l Mr. W. A. Quiirunr, 46 Fifth street, near Wood. “ Durait Lscrunss.—Tho course of lectures for this winter 7 will be opened by C. B. - Guthne, M V D., of New Yorkdty. Dr. Guthrie hu resided many year* in tin South, and hu enjoyed great opportunity* for ob serving tiie oondition of the negro race'in that put of the ooontry. He hu undertaken, -and carried oat to inoeesafol -completion, a eeriM of azperimeate with the slaves. The result* will lorn thp subject of a lecture of i great intercity a*, wail a* instruction. Dri G. £» will lector* nexVThunday evening, January l 22nd, under the ausploes of the Library As sociation. ?■■■■ . MMIE I' •'* l ■•:•-• « V T7 T- V- : : .'BATUBDAT MOHNIHG, JAN. 17.' CITY API AIMS, mrOTTIOIAL PAPES or TUB CITY. KanouuwiuL Omsrxnon totti. hrtlijb, 0.1. Bh»w, OptteUn, No, St KKk itmt wiißiUjarilyi un r “ « . ' OB \ « ■ BMoyUr a«S-» The Contested Election in Allegheny OsoociU nut to Exetblor HaU, AU.gh.ny, on KUigr olUraoon, punnxnt to nwntjfor th. purpow of boning taitbaray lolnttro' to tho eontfeted oloetion for * bob korof Oobbos Oonnoli’froß tbo Zhlid Word. Tho Choir lUtod ttit Oonnoilo Toro no* Eg"**?. “Mlao tho orMonoo lotbooon toited oloetion onto of Lh. Third Word. W * U * t * 4 ® 4 bo mi nntboriiod bj nSf’ ?,* 7 .V “ »ithdr»*tbo roßonitrnaoo. Ibo objoetion wu noordingly withdrawn. Wright morod thot tho moßbort oloot 2*. Common Connell* from: the Third Ward be qualified. Thn motion wu agreed to. The member* were then qualified and took their seat*. . : Hr* Atwell moved Uut • committee bo ap printed to procure Exoelslor HiU, or some othor room, in which to hold tho election for dtp officers bn next Tuesday evening. Tho motion wu agreed to and Moo in. At«r well, Francis and Dunlap wort Appointed tho Committee. On motion, Council:;odjonrnsd to moot on Tutdij, tho 20th iniU, for the vnrpoio of electing dtp officers. The Criminal <}ourt. On Frilay evening, the cue of Samuel Mo- Muters, eoniaotor on the Birmingham Pas senger Ballwej-4ndict*d for an aggravated assault and battery on Morris Kelly—wu brought to a elose. The. jury had not agreed upon a verdict when the Court adjourned, but they subsequently agreed and sealed their verdlot. We learn that they found a verdiot of not guilty, and that the defendant pay the oosts. Major Fudiuck ItavuiT, ofthe 79th Penn'* Begimedt, CoL Hambright, 'gained froth lanroli, at tho battiei • before Murfrees boro. He waa in tho thickest of tho battle, -where tho conflict was most fierce; and whore tho hilling of shell, and the whlitle of 'bal let* were the sounds moat common. vThree hone* wore ihotnnder him mno of them was killed bj a shell which literally blew the ani mal to pieoei, bat the gallant yonng hero es caped unhart. Wo have private information whioh plaoe* Major K. inthe Tery front rank «f the heroes of that hard fonght bat glorious encounter. . Major Kennedy ia the son of R.T! Kenney dy, Juq., of tho Pearl Mill, who nut hare a parentalpride in hearing of tho gallantry and heroism of the yoathfol Major. Thi Piotoieal aso orqu Nrw Yoik Pictorial and all other East ern Weeklies will be found on the waiter of J. W. Pittock, at his News and Periodical Depot, Fifth street, opposite the Pbst -Ofioe. JVoaJb Leelia and Jlarper'e Waeilg are par tieniarly noticeable among the illustrated papers, oofitalhing, u they do, aererel very effeetive iksitrims by clever artists, of striking scenes of current bistory. WHkeF SpirUcfGu Timet is also a good namber this week. It ooiuias a vigorens dissection of the sham •democracy of Seymour, which we cordially Commend to all wko have read tho Insidious platitudu of that gentleman. Tnxxsu'a TAinms.—This afternoon at two o'clock, the fourth matinee of the season will be given at the Varieties. Bo far the af ternoon perforznanou, at the Varieties, have been very suooessfnl, add to-day several new lieu wUI appear. Don't frit to take the children. Admission to all jtArts of the house only 10 oents. . [For the PlUtburgh Gexstte.] A Card. Ed*. Oauttet I proitnn*lt to .known to •cnu of, poor mini thatlhhpo boen dlr hoaerablp dioohargtd frolnth* rolnaleor oop aloe of tho United State* urn;. Inn no longer Lieutenant Ooloatl of tho IdSd.Bogl moat Penn*. Volunteer*.' Maop with whom X ho to boon acquainted, and other*, will nat urally aaktho muon off old diicharge. 1 will etate It In brief. On the march from Skarpebttrg, while, wo Won encamped at Balnktr’a Oap.-h pjinng nion in tho regiment tooarod and garb to mn a black mart, belong ing to a paroled robot. I-oood the animal for one.dap. Iha Weond dtp I .waa notlSed to Vto ap tho anl aal to tho Dlrlilen Quarter Matter. So too aa* woeama to a halt for the wight, Iwent li i learuh ofaaid Quarter JXae tor with tho lot I IntenUoaofgiTlngap tho aalmol, bat unfurtunatelf for me Copt. Mor al* eouldnot boUauod, boiagabaoati at Iwoo laformed-gottlng agoodltapptr at a farm bonoo. Zhoaehtdap IdoUroiod np tho an imal io toon at we nadhtd White Plaint. Bat Ota. Humphrey ordeftdi* aadtr unit, lip otto waa triedbefor* a oourt martial. Hot. 15th,whlltln damp, near Wantnten. Oa tho morning of Doe. 11th tho dtoliioa la aj oaoa roaohod mo, whoa, to mp onrptiio, 1 found that 1 had boon \ dlihoaorablp dla ohargod. Tho abort itetement I am pttparod to ottahliih bp, II bellere/oyery 'officer In tho iWißWtw- ■ ■■'] I loot that I kart booa najnitlp dealt with. Ska oonrltp of theeentenoei* far groator than mp crime (if crime it waij merited. White aooaoo ato,allowod to; pilfer namolootod tb* fund* of the government, I am dltgraoed for teaching an artiola of robot propartp, of Tory tmallTalßo. Xfool that I tua an honost man. Before I loft, ortrp Cnptalp of tho Boglmdat ■lgaod a papo* exprtulng tholr oonftdonco la mo, and tho hop* that X map on|op the ro •poot of mp former frltadt at homo. I know •ftt that Lorjoyth* rorpoet and eympathy nf 'o*l Clark, whooo rlowt far' regard to tho .'nardtag and proteetlngof robot property wUI botadonod bp every true and loyal man. I aomd weep at mp parting from tho Boglmoat aad It* btlorad commander. lam proud to know Oat I waa trtr oonnoetad with aßtgf.' Mat of noh aoblo men--men of whomj Alte »»U ftolproad. I with to e .. ?**• Utu * thlo eonunnaitp, and ahall' P®»«» to merit the ooafldonoe of alt who know at*. Paaaaatoz Out. Jbaltwlomii otepwmoin,; - ■j.-Z’SHmJ}. i?W to tti thlt fry *Kvt |oaiU4)*bMn dif• V*"?*!* wSted?iS!“ ▼i««f UfgOßltM BM«| |kl TTitrtni ha haothat b*o» dleadeted btoaaee ho wao find frdtta without; the ported to a* ao a ptroioi robotS'wMlUt 'SiK? laUnu uU litonU OoL iSfSwWMh-MiUw udnpn-oh, thanfm, asscflwn of said nglment, without (•Jpyriag nay views in regard to the justice -Uujatiei of said sen ten oe of dishonorable ®tehuge Jtom the military service of the j Baited States, do— ; . "tr Khprw* our sineezeremt that he is no ***!•* » ihhre with Us the honors and pri- asoldisr in the army. j We hare confidence in him u a man, had do not think that he would deliberately ur 'lntentionally appropriate the property riinyloyai ritissn ef these United Btates. • S. Weenreu the hepie that when he retires te the discharge of: his duties uacitisen at home, he will prosperity and the re spect of all good men. - ’’ 4*‘As military ofioers in this army, we pledge ourselves to resist no lawful act or or der of any properly constituted military au thority, and will do allin oar power to pre serve add maintain tree discipline in this . . • - :; .Davn> B* Adams, Captain, Co. C. v Honano K* Ttuie, Captain, Co. D. 7 Jon* S.Bkll, Captain, Co. £. '1 o*asum D. Wmr, Captain, Ce. A. Joe* Botd, Captain, Co. F. v Bonn Hunts, Captain, Go. J. ; Bnco*Dttnr, Captain, Co. H. H«*»y MazwSu, Captain, Co. K. Dattu, BoisoLj Captain, Co. Q. H. B. Captain, Co. B. BPJBCIAJL LOOAIi NOTICEB. a*n Mamiii, for butte ue JUk&^etvla <“• A. F- Cxavomr, Central Agent,. . No. 18« Fifth Strut. Bitliot Diwlt—Junoi Wisilt.—The following hu In it the germ of a great truth, and people in general Would do well to ponder seriouslv upon It. The lots ef health is not the work or a moment, or thelmmediate elect of disease upon the system, for nature mu not. by - sudden revulsions, or shows conse quents without an utire cans*. A few months, perhaps a 'tingle one, may tufflee to lay the foundation of a complication of disor der*, for distuo is as seoret u it is insidious in Its operations. As the ivy entwine# the oak for protection, bat eventnally destroys its stalwart so diseue gradually un dermines the Constitution unseen and unfelt, till the health ia irretrievably lost, or rained .beyond redemption- A. flight, insignificant bold neglected at : the eommeneement fre quently ends te asthmm, bronchitii, ooninmp iion,or some other fatei .complaint, whiotT will defy the most' skilUol_prMtitioner. ■ In thisolus of diseases Dr. Holloway, the re nowned traveler and physician, hu had the most extensive practice In this or in any other age, and consequently his Fills and Ointment have had a-greater success than any other medicines in the annals of seitnoe. Dr. Hol loway does not users that he cores easts of confirmed consumption, though hli remedies will give relief after all other means have failed, but be confidently etates that in incip ient stages of consumption, asthma, bronchi tis, diptheria, and disease* of the throat and ehest, his Pills and' Ointment:will effeet a de cided and permanantcute. The Pille act on the blood and neutralise the vine whioh? de praves it, ud at the same time they revitalise ‘and invigorate it . The Ointment, absorbed through the skin as meat Imbibes salt, pre vtets the progreu oi diseases of the lungs In ,th* early stages of bonsnmption, and also re movetltne phlegm which qbstrnets respiration in asthmanr bronchitis. Thousands In every part of the civilised wbrld hare been cared of these diseuee by the Pills and Ointment after all other means had bore exhausted without 'success^—UedWjr Ohriitim Watchman, , Foa Fall zip Wiitsa Waan.—The winter Is upon u, and we most provide ourselves With the material to keep me comfortable. A •good and well-made overcoat is the very arti cle, and we don't know of any place where our readers can get one that will look as well, and at the saute time withstand the most se vere weather, u at W. H. MeOe* A Oo.'i, corner of Federal street and Diamond Square, Allegheny. Their stock of overcoatings, business, and drees clothing, pantaloons of all descriptions, are well usorted, and of the latest style. : The gentlemen's furnishing goods department is all that h purchaser we ala wish. Cell on. MoQee A Ce. if yon desire a nice suit. Surtu Sum, merchant tailor, would most mpeotfully inforin hli friends and the public generally that he hu returned from the But with Us new stock of fell and winter goods. His atoekoonsisU of the latest styles of cloths,-eutiaetee and vestings, selected from the latest importations. Ceatiemen de siring a neat fitting garment, and at'prices lower thaw at any: other tailoring establish ment in the city, would do wall te give him an early call* Samuel Graham, merchant tailor, No. fii Market streets one door from Third. Volumturi, Amnnonl—For the derange ments ef the system incidental to. the change of diet. Wounds, Eruptions, and exposures, which every Volunteer Is. liable to, there are no remedies so safe, convenient, and reliable as Holloway's Pills and Ointment, 26 eents per box. : 209 : Oaozo* Houoat Passim^—J. M. Bob ierts, No. 17 Fifth street, is now opening the i mast choice stock fine Gold and Stiver Watches, Jewelry, Silver Ware'and Fancy Goods ever displayed in this city, and is sell ing them at remarkably low prices. Norton to the property owners of this city is hereby gives, that any repair* needed about their house* will ibe done promptly, if they leave .their order at Outhbert's Carpenter and Joining Bhop, on Virgin alley, just above Smith field street.; 7 PHotoORATHic copies, ef the finest engrav ings and paintings, can be had at Pittoek's, at only 12 oents each or $1 26 per dose*.; also, portraits of military men, prominent men and women. Retort and actresses. You eannot.help ' losing Postal Corzaney by carrying it loose ini poor pookets, so call at Pittoek's, opposite the Post Office, and ted his large asiortteent of Carrency Holders, and save money; ■ • Omsoui Galls will be taken at theOmnibtti ofloe. No. 406 liberty street, day or night. All orders laft, at Ins above place will: be promptly attended te. AHoalls aust bepsre la advance. |\ V . • t ( ! ; emf-'j JuiTlreoAveiliat the MAsonio HaU Hoose,2fo. 66 Fifth streetj a large steel boo ts, balmorais'and gaiters for ladies, geh missestod ohiidren. , i j ' - ■ f. ■ * . ; £ f\\, - exutdoilnf irat ul. of book., phoU>? Husa'i Lu txmsd laelol oompUt*, .nl/tl 60, .t Plttook’l, opp.ll thg roit OfflOk.' ■ Zunfxi Aufiuii.o. b, tb. d«m or •IdlhS .t Piihut*., oppcm tu. Put OOu. ON FlBifr MoKTGAO£| n> b. uptlmtadiu tU PItTSBOBOH DOLLAR SX.TXHOS BXJJX, Jto, R fODBTH BTBUT.mt# burgh, oft brofibU tcrxu. OUNDEIKSv— 1088 hop Otedo Butter, pot Bp ferfcmOy a»t * 8,000 &g. tosh 801 l Batten 80 bbla. fresh Bjr'n: B M do Fichtes; • - 52 * ,o ‘* e l* D‘W Appl**; »k*p 80. 1 Urf: - > 100 bftehste atoll white Boost 'i. 7ldoft*aUrf* huej Broom* '* Jbctfod sod ter sols bf a. tinm.i ! ! : 80. in LSbmif wtimL, .♦ U. A. QOLTQH, Tlurami NOHCR.-I hay* V tbudarMNeiatid with ise in tbe Whokeeb Groeer* end Boat filoie Burin— wnd, OltlTBB B.JOHSO, under the firm Style of GBO. B. JOXW *K>H. •.■ ; OKO. B.JOMB& Pittiharib, Jea. Ist, 1883, . 1 TJKtfAKFAST HOMINY.—An extrA JJ ertfclref ,Bieekft«t Hominy or Own Orita just r«o*irtd; also, Pearl Hominy and fihaker Drfed Coni, for sale by JOHK A. UXNiiHAW, - 1»16 - • corner Liberty and Band itmh fANOHISHJUAIK Y CHJSHSK.—A su£ XU plrjof Bngtlsh Dairy Cb*— jeet veeetred; alee, urine Qoaban and Plat AppU Cheeee, tor eele by : r : 4UHHA. BEfififlAW, , J.XS corner Übtrliy and Band anew. \li£W tsUUAa CUHttU UAUb, (Mr XI brand, always ea haadand for eels atthe Pen-, lly Grocery Btore ef i JOBS A. BMbHAW, ..i ■ faXO oorew Liberty nd Hand rtr—te. pOKW Mu.AU—lOO bti»hel» .(ueaE VJ ground) jorirecelredby' .i- '/. Jaia J.a MeYAT. Bo. 1 10 Palthflrid itrwt' UIOnOuY JiOTo—lo bbU jurt;*o - eeind end for sale by •/>•*.. '■ : lalO HMIP4 MBTZOAB, S4O Liberty at.- !•** HJUBTH.OOLLIHB. BY TELEGRAPH. PROM WASHINGTON. OUR SPECIAL DISPATCHES. Special Dispatch to the Pittsburgh Ouette. Wabhuotoh, Jan. lfi, 1863. lsttib rao* thi raisiDur to x'glklla*. The following important letter from the President to Gen. McClellan, which forms a put of the correspondence between them, and for whieh Congress hu called, wu brought out to-day In the MoDowell Court of Inquiry. Its importance Is se great that we transmit it in foil: Washugtov, Aprils, 1862. To Major General McClellan: MV Dun Be*: Your dispatches com plaining that yon are not properly sus tained, while they do not effena me, pafa me very much. Bleaker'# division wu with drawn from yon before yon left here, and you knew the pressure under which I did it, and as l thought acquissoed init, certainly not without xelnotanoc. After you left I ascer tained that less than twenty thousand unor ganised men, without a single field battery, were ail yon designed to be left for the de fence of Wuhingion and Manutu Junction, and a part of these even were to go to General Hooker's old position. . Gen. Banks* corps, oOoe designed for Manusu Junction, wu di vided, and tied up on the line of Winchester and Strubnrg, and could not leave it without \ again exposing the . Upper Potomac andthe Baltimore-and Ohio railroad. This presented or would present when Mc- Dowell orj Sumner should. be gone a great temptation to the enemy to torn back from the Bappahannook and sack Washington. Mj explicit directions that Washington should, by the judgment of all the command ers ef eorps, be left entirely seonre, had been entirely negleeted. It wu precisely this that compelled me to detain McDowell. Ido not forget that I wu satiated with your ar rangements toleave Banks at Manusu, bat when that arrangement wu broken up, and noihing wu substituted for it, of coarse I was not satisfied. Iwu constrained to sub stitute something for it myself; and now allow md to uk—“Do yon really think I should permit the tin* from Biohmond via Manusu to this city to be entirely open, except what resistance conld be prevented less than twenty thouand unorganised troops. This Is a* question whieh the country will not allow mo to evade. There is mys tery k cbout the nnmber of troops now with yon. I telegraphed yon on the 6th, saying that yon had over 100,000 men with yon. I had jast obtained from the Secretary of War a statement-taken, u he said, from yonr own returns, making 100,000 then with you, and en route to’yon. Yon now say yon will have but 76,000 men when all en route shall have reaohed yon. How can this discrepancy of 26,000 be accounted for 7 As to Gen. Wool's oommand, I understand it is doing for you precisely what a like number of your own .would have to do if that command wu away. I suppose : the whole force which bu gone forward to yon- is with yon by this time; and if this is so, I think it is the precise time for yon'to strike a blow. By delay, the enemy will readily gala on yon —that is, he will gain faster by fortifications and reinforcements than youoan by lelnforoe ments alone; and, once more, let me tell you. It is indispensable to yon that yon should strike a blow. lam powerless to help this. You nill do mo the justice to remember that I wu always opposed to going down the bay in seareh of a field, instead of fighting at or near Manusu, u it is only shifting, and not surmounting a difficulty; that we would find the same enemy, and the same or equal intrenohmenta at either plaoa. The country will not fail noting now that the present hes itation to move upon an intrenehed enemy Is bat the story of Manusu repeated. I beg to usore you that 1 have never written or spoken to yon In greater kindness of feeling than now, nor witb a fuller purpose to sustain Jou, so far u in my most anxious judgment consistently can—but you must act. Yours, very truly, A. Liscols. COUantBAtOEAL. Mr. Hutchins made, apparently by author ity, a defenoe of Secretary Chase to-day, against the eensure in Gurley's speech of yesterday, for not seUing bonds, unfler tho law of lut session, to raise money for paying soldiers. The snbstanoe of Mr. Hntchtai' dofense wu that Mr. Chase did not Interpret that law u giving him power to seU the bonds. It required him to sell them at the market value. He could not have tbrewn so large an amount on the market without producing a panic, and allowing the bonds to go at a sacrifice. This, Hntchlns contended, wonld not have been selling at a market value within the terms of the law. , Mr. Gurley demanded if the market value wu not what it weald bring in the market, then what wu it? and further Inquired whe ther any loyal man would have objected if some sacrifice had been incurred in raising money to pay the soldiers. Mr. Hntchins thooght that there wonld have been muoh fault found, and that it wae better to do u Chase had done—leave the army unpaid rather than open this door for oavelling against his illegal actions, Mr. Van Wysk and other members recited cues of suffering from the failure to pay the army, and the difficulty they had experienced in getting any pay at all for regiments that, in some cues, had been In the service five and six months. Mr. Hntchins wu badgered a good deal with demands for an explanation of such oo enrrenoes. The debate developed a deep feel ing over the failure to pay the army. BSOIKTAKY STAXTOM'S Letter to the Honse and Senate Military Com mittees urges immediate steps for the accept ance of Qlus, Elliott A Go's proposition to lay a submarine cable around the coast to New Orleans. He gives the facts for the estimate total expense of the projeot at two and a half million dollars. The Secretary's plan is, to run a oable from Pensacola to Galveston, direct through the deep waters of the Gulf, and to lay a branch Une from Pen sacola to New Orleans, i There is little doubt that the enterprise will be speedily under taken. THI FITTBBUBOH AID GOSIELLSVILLS BAIL- Tariff Andy Stewart, of Pa., and other*, in terested in the completion of the Pittsburgh and GonnellsviUe Railroad through to eon* naot with tha Baltimore and Ohio Railroad at Cumberland; are hare lobbying on a bill for thatpnrpoienow before the Military Commit* tea. This read; if completed, will shorten tha distance from Washington to Pittsburgh fifty nine miles. THI OUST SHIP OAXAL mu On motion; to table the Great Ship Canal bIU, in the House to-day, which was made a ■art of test rote. Tha House refused, £y a rote of 42 to 93. The friends of the bIU were jubilant orer this result, it in dicates the absolute oertainity ef the passage of the bill by the House. Of Its probable fate in the Senate has, of course, been no tush decisive indication yet. TUT pv loons. The test of 11-inioh Dahlgren guns, with solid shot, yesterday, at the Nary Yard, suc ceeded in shattering a wrought iron target lb inches thick. It was not penetrated, bat was much shattered, and area tha stone wall against whieh it was placed was knoekeddown. The distance at which* the firing was dons, hbwtrer was only about fifty fast* COL. OAMSOHS'S bixaixs. The Remains of Col, Gare*ehe,lateebl«f of Gen. Rosecrani* staff, killed at jMnrfrees toro,Arrived herej to-day. The fhneral ser rices areto be bold to-morrow In the Roman CethoHechurehof BUAloyiui, of whU& he. was*devout member. • tbiTimer nr tbx ronre* cousr The verdiot of the codrt martial in Porter's cue, together with tho President's derision thereon, is expected to-morrow. Nothing farther regarding the nature of thb fortheom ing decision hu transpired. ; • • ! FIKSbXAL. Hbraoe Greeley-had an Interview with the Presidentyesterday, and with Count Merrier to-day. He wu also on tho floor of the Senate to-day for a short’time. THI E'IOWILL COURT MARTIAL. Major General Hltehcoek’s eyidenoo before the ‘McDowell Court of Inquiry bore heavily against Gen. McClellan. Washikotor, Jan. 16.—The following hu been received at the Headquarters of the Army: * j Fortress Mokroi, Jan. 16. To B. W . Balleck , General-in-Chief:. . The Biohmond papers are boasting that General Pry or repulsed oar troops, hear Pro videnoo Church, on the 9th. : • The following dispatoh, of the 10th, from General Peok, gives the tras version of the affair: His attack wu repulsed by ear mounted, rifles, under Major Wheelan. Itis dne to the latter, and to our troops, that the truth should be. known, and if yon see so objections, I would be glad to have the dispatch .published. Jobs A. Dzx, Major General. Suvfolx, Jan; 10,1862. 2b Major General Dix, Forirtee Monroe j The enemy crossed the Blackw&ter in con siderable fore* and attempted yesterday to drive in our right at Providence Church. In fantry, cavalry, and artillery were employed by the rebels, bat they were repaired by Mej. Wheelao, of the New York Mounted Rifles. At dusk the enemy's advance Has charged andjdriren back upon his support. At inter vals daring the night shells wete thrown from tha rebel batteries. [Signed] John J. Pick, : Major General Commanding. Bargeon Sim, Sargeon-in-Chief, of General Blokles Brigade, recently dismissed on erro neous information, has been restored, it ap pearing, from a communication from Medloal Director j' Letterman, General Sickles, and' other officers, that no Surgeon in the army hu a bolter record; . FROM HARRISBURG. [SpecUO-Dispatch to tb« Flstsbargh Gustt*.) Harbisburg, Jan. 16,1863. The Wuhington correspondent of the New York ZWittne says': It has been shown be-: fore' the House Military Committee that a railfoad from Washington to the Point of Books, and from OomberlandtbConnellsTiile, would shorten the distance from Washington to Pittsburgh and the West one hundred and. ten miles. The Misoellaneons Appropriation bill ore ate# three Auditors for the Quartermaster General's Bureau, —salary, three theusand dollars each; and one Solicitor at a salary^of twenty-eight hundred dollars. JChe House Committee on Elections haVe to any conclusion touching the right of Flanders and Kahn as members elected from New Orleans. Probably the Committee will report against their olaims. A reaction hu set in against Vallandig hate's speeoh among Democrats—even in tjon* grass. Outside of Congtess the oondemnation of his speech amoug strict members of- the party is common. Ii I s not impossible that the Presidents of the principal banks of the country will be tarn-' moped to Wuhington far the purpose of con sultation, very soon. ; The bllLautboriiing the issue of a hundred millions in legaltender'nbtes hu been signed. The notes a:e lntended for the .payment of tho army; Arrival ol itie l!Unois-»*ParUciilars ’ of the* Galveston Affair* - Nsw York, Jan. 16.—Theateamer'Itiinois, with New Orleans advices to the Bth, arrived at this port to-cUy. . Tbo rebels we^t^wc&ohtef-open -the tines of the United States army, in the neighbor hood of Donaldsonrille, but no danger Is ap prehended. ; General Banks had been in command for a month, bat none of his plans have j#tran spired. It wu known, however, thatbe wu not Idle. The most of his troops had gone to Baton Bong*. Z 7 There are rumors current effeot that the battle began, at Vioksbnrg, on the 30th, andjwu continued daily, but nothing very definite is known in New Orleans u to the result. The affair at Galveston, on the Bth, earned a general feeling of gloom, both in the army and|navy. , Admiral Farragnt had sent the Breoklyn, Beotia, and half a dosen of the best ships to reoapturethe Harriet Lane, at ail hoserdi, and; if possible, destroy the rebel gunboats in the tiayoh Buffalo.. Of this expedition, nothing has been heard in New Oriojsns op to the Bth last. The following are all the details of the Galveston disaster, to be found in the New. Orleans papers: At two o’clock, on the morning of the Ist insti, lour rebel gunbeats, lined aod fortified with cotton bales, emerged from Buffalo' Bayou into Galvesten Bay, and moved dlreot iy td attack our vessels. The Harriet Line wu aground, but suooeededin getting several well; directed shots ioto one of the steamers, sinking her in a few minutes. Tho sharp shooters succeeded in killing all the gunners and CspL Wainwrigfat. When the latter fell, the Zexu boarded the Harriet Lane and cap tured her, meeting with a heroic defence from her officers and men. Lieut. Lee and nearly oD of her crow were killed. The rebels next attacked the Westfield, which wu also aground. After' ineffectually attempting to get her afloat, a'oousultation of the officers wu called by Capti Beusbaw, and it wu uuanimoaily agreed to blow her ap. | Most of ‘her offioer* end orsw esoaped, but Oapt. Bonshaw, Lieut. Zimmerman, En gineer Green, two quartermasters and feu firemen, together with a boat’s crew of fire men; were blown, up with; the vessel.' The gunboat O wasco had two men killed and eleven wonnded. The rest of the fleet escaped. The rebels tamed the* prows of all the vessels shoreward, where they were anchored ait'the latent advices. On the steamer Cambria, two companies of cavalry, the horses of the 2d Vermont cavalry, and a luge number of women and children, bound to Galveston, had a nohow escape' from capture on the 4th, but she Escaped and returned, meeting the United Btates frigate Brooklyn on her way "to Gal vestdn. ' The Rebels Whipped at Springfield. Brl Loujb, Jan. 16.—A dispatoh from Gen. Brown to Gen. Cortis, dated Springfield, Jan. Bth, tays that the battle at that place lasted thirteen hoars. The enemy numbered 6,000 piokdd mounted Infantry, with 2 rifled gunsi. The expedition wu 'fitted oat on Arkansas river, and marebad'at least fifty miles every twenty-four hoars, . skirmishing with oar scouting parties most of the way. The ene my opened fire on the town without giving notio* to remove thoisisk, or; women and chil- ' ;/’ ' Our foreas consisted of detachments of Mis sourifStata militia, lowa troops, enrolled Missouri- militia, convalescents, and strag glers; numbering 3,600, with 3 old iron how itsers* 1 iron 6-pounder mounted on wagon wheels, 3 brass expounders at Ffirt Lyon. The enemy was badly whipped. Gen. Brown was treaohcrously shot from a seoesh residence while leading a charge. A dispatch from Gen. Warren, dated Hous ton, Texas county, Jan. 14th, says the enemy are in full retreat towards Arkansas; Gen. Mermaduke's foroe at Hartsvllie numbers between four and fire thousand. Their! loss was about three hundred killed and wounded. The famous Emmett McDon ald was among.the killed, and the notorious guerrilla Porter bdflly wounded. Official. Order .Was Ditaatmivt, ) Adjutant Gixsbal's Orrxox, 1 Washington, Jan. 5. J General Ordtn ifo. s.—By dlreotlon of tito President, the treops in the Department of the.Gdlf-wiU eonstiute the 19th Army Corps, to dat4 from Deoember 14ih, ;IS62,'and. Major General H. P. Banks isasaigntd to the Com mand. By ordtr of the Secretary of War. ;,B;P.TqWIBI>P, A. A. Or*'-. BhipFiiedlnto. J Htw; Yobs, Jan. 16;*—The barque Morning Star, arrived attblsport to-day from Saint Jago.i She rsports that she was fired i*to ana overhauled by the British steamer Plever. mraw m grauos. Wabbikot**, Jan.l6, Sxsat*.— The Vico President presented a communication from the Secretary of the In terior, uklngfor an appropriation of $500,000 for the capitol intention and $200,000 for the new dome. Mr. Harding presented a memorial of the widow of tho lato 001. E. D. Baker, uklng for a pension. I • Mr.‘Wilson, of Mass., from the Committee on Military Affairs, reported back the bill to snsrmnd tha sale of lands •on the oout of Georgia, and in and about Port Bey al, with an amendment u a substitute.. - Mr; Howard, from the Committee on the Jndiriary, reported back the bill to amend the aet amending the Judicial system of the Uni ted Btates.' ]•• " Mr; Wilson, of Mass., offered a resolution, directing the Secretary of Wu to inform the Senate whether the limitation in the aot au thorising the State of Missouri to raise ten thousand men for loyal defense hu been ex ceeded, and if so, by what authority such ex cess has been allowed. He said it wai re ported that a great number of men had boon raised in excess of rhe act, at a great expense. The resolution wu adopted. Mr. Bice; of Minn., offered a resolution di recting: the Military Committee to inquire into, and report upon, the practicability of widening and deepening the Fox cnd Wiscon sin rivers, so u to inereue their navigation- Adopted. Mr. McDougall, of Cal., offered a resolution instructing the Naval Committee to inquire, into the efficiency of the constrnotion of Iron clad vessels constructed for the government, 'the power of their machinery, and if defective, the cause thereof. ! Mr. Grimes, of lowa, sold the whole matter had been referred to a Committee of oompetent engineers, j • y Mr. Hale,/Of N. H., said the Naval Com mittee wonld not have time to make such an inquiry. After,further diioussion the resolution wu rejected. Yeas 18, nays 18. Mr/Trambull; of 111., from the Committee Wthe Judiciary, to whom wu referred the 'message of thi* President, uldng that author ity be given to the heads of departments to appoint persons temporarily to discharge the duties ot the Secretary of the War, the Navy and the Treasury Departments, reported a bill for. that purpose. 1 Mr. Csrtil6,:o! Va., called up the resolution offered:by him, yesterday, relative to the in structions from the Postoffloe Department, concerning the transportation of certain news papa: e .through the mails. The resolution wu adopted.. Mr. Fessenden,of. Me.,: ealled np the bill making appropriations for deficiencies in the civil senrloe of the government, whioh wu passed. ■ Mr. Henderson, of Mo., called np the bill to aid the State of Missouri in emancipating the claves in the said Stkte, and prooeeded to address the Senate. He endeavored to an swer some objeotions, whioh might be urged against the measure, and do all he conld to secure its success. He argued at length in favor of the constitutionality of the measure, that there was power under the Con stitution to'pass this measure, almost the same a| removing the Indians from the States. It hod seemed strange to him that tho North wonld not oease its denunciations of slavery for a time, that the Bouth might reflect, and without reflection, put slavery away, but it wu stranger atill, that the Sonth, with her population cramped and industry destroyed, should still oting to this ourse, as the poor in ebriate clings to hUoup. In these troubles about slavery, the border States had suffered the mosti . The people ef the free States wonld not set tle there beeauie slavery wu there, and the people from the slave States wonld not come because they were so near the North. They had trietfell means to be aT pesos; they Adopted air the panaoeu of Democracy—all the compromises of the Whigs, and all the nostrums of the Republicans, bat all in vain. We ere now in a wax with this institution. The border States want to JbeStjteaoe and wish to adopt measures to secure a permanent peace. : There is an attempt now to raise np a party on the basis ofxthe old agitation, bat that will do no good and sneh an attempt should be repudiated. If the objeet be to re store the Unirfk by compromises before the rebels ate beaten and lay down their arms, it will be.of/ho kvail and worse than useless for the rebels te! demand peaeeon the basis of tbefr4edependtnee. We‘have war upon us andir slavery be the cause the State of Mis souri offers to sacrifice it on the altar of her country. The bill wu postponed. ] Mr. Trumbull, of 111., olured a resolution, which was adopted, that the Vice President appoint a member in the Board of Regents, of the Smithsonian Institute, to fill the vacanoy occasioned by the death of Senator Pearoe. Mr. Wilson, of Hus., called up the bill to inereue the clerical foroe in the Quartermas ter General's Department. He offered to" read a letter from Gen. Meigs relating to the remarks made in the Senate concerning his loyalty. The letter went on to say that If the charges were made the authority aught to be given. * * Mr. TrumbnU objsoted to a further reading of the letter.. He wu not disposed to listen to a leotnre to the Senate. Mr. : ShermAn, of-Onio, hoped it would-be read.. He thought any man wu entitled to be heard when charges were made against him. . Mr. Tnunkalldenied the right of any to insult the Senate. Ho wu perfectly wil ling to listen to any respectful communica tion; and give Gen. Meigs the benefit of an investigation.! -Mr. Wilson proposed to withdraw the let teg. He! thongkt it might contain some party expressions. | Mr. Lane, jof Kansu, said he wanted to. disouss the bUL He did not want General Moigs to fill the Department with traitors. He had suspicions of his loyalty. Mr. Doolittle, of Wls., asked if the Senator had suspicions, did he think It was the proper way to proclaim them here. Should he not moke his charges in the proper plaee and way. ‘ On of Mr. Fessenden; the Senate then went into executive session, and subse quently a4jonmed till Monday. Honas—The House prooeeded to the con sideration of the bill reported lut Jane, from the Committee of the whole, on the! state .of the Union, with amendments authorising the enlargement of the Mississippi and'Miohigaa canal for the passage of gun boats, monitions of war, and also the enlargement of the Erie and.Oswegooanalsfor similarpurposes,con necting/Lake's Brie and Ontario with the Hudson river; : Mr! Holman, of Ind., moved to lay the bill on the table. Disagreed to—yeu 43, nays 93. Tho.eonsideration if the finance bill wu toenretumed; .. Hi. B. Goakling,of N. Y., laid thU origl ruiliy one half of the Houaewereoppoaedto the paper promlaea, aadtomaking thus a legal tender for debt, oad sthon beaidea hlmaelf de mited to know:,whether the Secretary of the Treeaury deema hlmaelf obit to aeoapt the ternu prepjaed bp tbo bill, reported by the Committee ofWaya ud Huai. Io other wordi, whether the Secretary can conduct the buaiueea of hit Department on dor It. Mr. Hoopor, of Maea., ropliod that the bill waa not aatlataotory to the Secretary, who belioredthat home of lta proriiioni wan in expedient, and: would cauaeaerloue dlffioultiea to tha Department. { Mr.. Ooaklißg naked the direct quoatlon, {Whether the Secretary would be able to carry on hie dopartmentunder thia i til, Hooper eaid he could not. He had, after eonaultation with the Secretary, pre pared aa amendment to the bill, whioh waa read to-day, to borrow $900,000,000; and to jiaaae bonde, payable after tweaty yeara, with not exceeding 0 per oent. internet, the Internet and principal payaole in eoln or treaaary notee, and payable-la three yeara, with in tenat net exoeedlug 0 per oent., payable la lawful money or United Statea legal tedder Botea; the Whole amount of boada, treaeury. hotel and United Statea notea together not to exceed theaumof $900,000,000. .Ztaleoau thorlaei the depoalt of ooin, for which rooeiptl are to be leaned in ernae not lead then tweaty dollara, to bo receivable at thecuatom home, and for tha payment of internet on the publio debt, i. - 1 Mr. Hutchlne, of Ohio, repUadto Mr. Gur ley'a remarkaof yeatardey,ln whioh he blamea the Secretary of the Zrauury for not celling bonda for the payment of the aoldleraeto. He maintained that the Secretary waa legally correct in hie oonitruollon of the law, ae he wu reatrloted to ealee at market nine, whioh waa what the .Sonde were celling for a Wfew .Tftklk;; . I Mr. Hooper, daring the debate, remarked that after inquiry be had aacartalned thatprb- Tialoahad heen.made for the payment ofthe aoldlera for the month* of September and Oc tober, the roila for Norember and Deoember not haring been lent In, He alluded to the dlfflculUoi and riska of paymaatereinpeylng ! : ;t Mr.Dlren, of N.Y., laid the regimanthe waa oannected.with fame Into the aarrtce la Auguit, with the pro mice that they would lie' F*M*]btttup to this time they had &ef deceiv ed a dollar. . ■ i a Mr-Noble, of Ohio, knew one lugtafcat of ; Ohio cavalry that had not been paid for *: year, and others not for six months. ~ ? - Van Wydt, of New York; said U wu not the fruit of the paymutars, wh» were; persistent uto getting, the foods, but the fault of the Treuury—the money not ‘being’ toon. Some poor orippled and invalid sol diers, who won throning the doors of the pajmuters, had fallen victims to Shjlocks. who were in waiting to fleece them. Mr. Dawes, of Mui., whisked to)know whether Mr. McPherson referred to the action rescinding the order ef Ge% - Grant akainst the Jews? • f T Ur. Hutchins, of Ohio, resuming, laid if. there vu criminality any where, it certainly’ was not with the Secretary of the Trekinry. Without oomingto a conclusion upon the bill, the Committee rose. * Mr. Holman referred to the foot that the House had directed Simon Stevens'to be brought before the bar-of the Honse lo an* swer for oontempt, in refusing to answer cer tain questions of the Committee on Govern ment Contraots. He now stated that Stereos i had appeared before the Committee, and an swered all the questions put to Mml He, therefore, moved that Mr.-. Stevens be dii charged from custody, on condition that he pay the feet Inonrrod. Agreed to. J The House then adjourned until Hpndayv Tbe Suspicions Steamer, Princess; Royal-Loss of Horses. > Bobtoy, Jan; 16.—A -letter-from. Halifax gives the following description of the British steamer Princess Boyal, whl3h sailed thence on the 12th Inst. for -Naisau, N. P., with :* valuable cargo, principally consisting ofpow- ; der and munitions of war. The vessel is bnllt of iron, schooner rigged, and is propel-- led bg a screw, making on an average twelve; knots. After coaling at Canard's , wharf, sbe'< ran into the stream, and for the! last two days : the painter's, brush has been transferring herj hnll, spars, funnel, Ao., from a black to; a lead color. Her captain profestes'jto belong to* New York, but it is oertainly his real inteh-v tton to ran the blockade if be can. jßeing short of one : cr two hands, he engaged two young men at Halifax, to* whom he premised' a handsome bounty if he should sueched ih getting iato Charleston. The Prinoess]Hoyat has ten largo guns in her hold, but'has no guns on deok. Her cargo is represented to be. moat valuable. She wae built at Creedooh itf 1861, and is a beautlfui model... 1 A private letter states that sixty holies of the battery, died goring thapasiage to Portress Monroe, on account of thorough weather. The vessel which con- v veyed the battery wae detained In Boston harbor for- two or three days of unpleasant weather, waiting a clearance from the Custom- House. . • 1 » • From Fort Henry, Tenn. I Poit Hxybt, Jan. 16.—The steamer-pantos Means, which conveyed commissary stores for the army at Corinth, has returned; She reports that the rebels number twenty-fire hundred eneaaped in the vicinity of Ba-' ▼annah. Pears are entertained that the train jrhioh left Pittsburgh Landing, on Sonday, for' Corinth, under an eseort of sixteen ' hundred men, would be attaoked and captured by the rebels, as thsir presence in that vioinity Would* be entirely unexpected. - They ware receiving' artillery.) for: the purpose of blockading the river. ; It is believed that no steamers are now able to go up the river without the protection of gunboats.. Forrest oroased the Tennessee river, 6n his retrest, at Clifton. ! The Harpersville Accident; : Bihqbayptov, N. Y., Jan. Greone County Awtrscaa says: We learn that on- Friday last as the scholars In a sohool at a small village some two miles south of Lanes-' boro. Pa., were on a .mill-pond, the ice gave way and 31 out of 38 of theta were drowned. At our last advices ail bat three of the bodies had beea recovered. • j « The Binghampton BtpublUa n, commenting on the above says: The above reported aeoi-- dent was first located at Harpersvilliß, but nothing of the kind ooeurred there or in that vioinity. Now we have the aooident to ooour' with increased loss ot life two miles from Lanesboro. We hope it is a fabrication. Freshets in Eastern Pennsylvania. Mauch Cbuik, Jan. 16.—There is a freshet here, the river bring eight feet on tbe dun At; Six o’clock this evenings. The wagon bridge leading to Bast -Mauris Chunk has' -been' washed away. The Lehigh Valley Railroad, bridge, below here, has been injured, And the trains will be stopped for several days; The water is now ever the wagen road below the Mansion House. It is reported that the turn hole bridge, on the Beaver Meadow BaQroad," bus beea washed, away, but as yet theroporfc 'looks confirmation. - , ■ j. ; ; 'Babtov, Pa., Jan. 16.— There is a freshet' oo the Lehigh and Delaware rivers. Ne damage to the canals has yet been reported.- FromCaUfornia. Say Feaycisoo, Jan.ls.—The steamer Golden Age, from Panama, reports that the' United Stotts steamer Ssranao and coal shin Carlisle were at Acopaleo on the Bth. ;Bome of the Fnnoh fleet had arrived there,4ht the balanoe were hourly expected. ■ ? < m lathe California Legislature seven * mire ballots have been taken-for United States' Senator without a result. On the last ballot,' Phelps reoelved 37, Bargent 34, rand Cdnntsi -24. All parties stick to their candidaie| with the greatest stubboranesi, and! there is, as yet, no evidenoe of any intention of yielding' on any side. • ■■ ■ >•- .1 - From Fortress Monroe, ; Foxtrus Monoi, Jan. 16.— The stouter Thomas A. Morgan, Capt. Plummer,! from Yorktoyn, brought down two rebel prisoners —cavalrymen—whe hare reeently deserted from General Wise's army, which is at White Home in force. These prisoners reparlthat Wise is now stationed with his ieommahd at White House, and threatens to hang all of the Federal offioers he may caplore who wdre in the expedition which recently made the sho eessful raid upon. White House; The goods they then eaptured were brought to Fcfrtiess- Monroe to-day., . > The McDowell | Court Martini, Wasbiyqtoy, Jan. Ip.—Q«n. Blcketts was examined before the MoDowell Court of In quiry to-day, testifying thatitha roid by which he was ordered to marsh, by Gen. Mo- Dowell, on the morning of the 28th of August, was so obstructed by wagons in; his front, as greatly to impede the progress of hid com* tnand; »• •; | MsJ. Gen. Hitoheook, was next called* Ho testified at length illative to the forces which were lefft for the protection ef Washington/ when M'Oiellan's army itartedibr Pennsyl vania. j -,-i jr: Emnndpnuon iu Missouri. Jivnisox City, Ho., Jan. 15.—Ben nett's reiolation, sustaining the President's Emancipation Proclamation, offered day, and Allen's substitute, were to-day re- , fared to a Select Committee qf seven, . \ \ : In Senate, a resolution was adopted that the Selset Committee on Emancipation be re quited to report what amount of money, .should be appropriated by Congress to com pensate for slaves, provided they shall nil be: emancipated by an aot ef the legislature.: The resolution was passed with a view to fadliafe’ Congressional notion on this subjeot. Serere Snow Storm throng host Ohio andladiann.. ■ CxaoiaaATi, Jan. Jfl.-*-Oat-door buiinaia wm gonomllg auapandodyaatarday on oeodnnt of tho anowatom. Tho atrnetroilroodn Worn oompnllnd to atop. Ibo atoning troati on; nil rondo landing to tho sity wan behind time, nadnnnatbar didn't arrive at alb" Thereof of tho bnrracka on Tint atmt fall in. and niao n portion of tho not of tho gaa wbrke. ’ nnd auroral ■ other building!. No Uroa Oart loot. Aa Ur ula known tho atom wna gon arnl throughout Ohio nnd Indiana. Snowfall tothodopUf of from alx inehee to two feet. \ From SnkiUle»Btaii SgpeMed by kongatreet—Rebel Conacripta ‘ Deserting, etc, • _ LoDiSTIUJ.Jen. 15.—2fa*li9ilU. —Ganeral Bragg haa Man anparesdad by i Gan. Loog atxeat. ThalatUr’a army oorpab at Shalby- TUla. " ' Forraat la aUll naarHarpath afcoalt. . A flaat, undar a oonroy of gunboata, b .oa~ tha way. ./ Gbnaerlpts an dsaarong tha rebel army and fleeing to theelty dally. Tharlaar U tan feetonthe ahoala and thing. ;,l . snow Saona ii Cutd* ntib Toronro, Jnn. M.—A jgwit V>o* itoim pr«T»Ui«U oTtr Owl«U Wint. , ,1. Qr»*t «cU«mtn« pronOi »l Jtnalitaßla inMiMum of th» tuddon *Uipp»*» orti« mgiitUi 54pftluufco«a*MS*»intS. , : I , ! Boaro»T Jnn.^l6.—The khoeur: Unlcm, - from Baltimore, anted atPort. ItuttlijJf: • malea, on Mi* Bth, hiring onboard tht cap tela and crow of the barqueParkerOobL fromßoetonfor Aux Caret,eapturedia'Ube- Mono ppeeage by tee pirate Tk* v Parker m lubreqaontlj del trowed. Ik* U. abambe airo captured the eehooner Union;' bat bar cargo being owned bj Brltlib nbfeote ehorwaeallowodto proceed, miter giving bond of $1,600 for the TeileL ' Tie btw Yoik dnißtir, Albaxt, Jen. 16.—The Aeeeahlj wee a eoene of excitement, oeeaeioaed bj tbe neml- r nation of Ur. Calioott, a Democrat, for Speaker, bj tbe Bepnblloane. The Toting ie going on, each Democrat making a rpeech ae hianame la called. 1 Axmaari2l.lT., Jan. 16.-—The Qonae ad. Jonmed to-day without taking a ballot for Speaker. I '■ ■ ■ . p , ! Prom New York. Now Toax, Jan. 16.—The rojal mall etepmer Alia • ailed from the quarantine at noon to-day, for Liverpool. The eUp Twilight arrlrod from Baa Bran dioo to-day. : v -£- : 8 »a Jwiato coaled it St. Kitti ob Dee. *Sih, and tailed ca a crain. I Chicago market. , » for round lot* ofchoica wintu: and «priug extra* vm ; perticnUrly bcUto, mil the market c;m» Sartor wiiAro, a.dlogood demand br ihlppctn— cboloe aellioß at $1 bQe. jlberewae an attlre inqulrr fcr bleb, wloee. and We note an uruce olX&lc pernillen— .. erttb miceOf abbot' 1,700 bble M the talk.- uptciji jroTtvE&d £3£TTo Borrow Sufferer* of Both. reverend genUemep baring been re* < •tored to health hi a dayt; after u&deigolag’all ■ • the.eial rbutlnß and irregular expumt?* nodee-wf; < treatment,.Wthout comid—« U hia uend , duty to communicate to bla «« tallow cgaatuNa - the acxlxs or evil. Hence, on tbe recefptjof aaad* '* dneeed ehvalope, be'wiU eeud (free) dccpy-oTthe pnneriptloa wed. Direct to DzvJOHJf M. DAG KALL, l&aiuUon etreet, Brooklyn, H. T. • ■■ t .< •. mhll:lydawT ■ .. . ■ .. ,i tyiftkc Superior Cooper Hill and BMBLTI2JG WORE 6, ftjttWSga. j - , PAM,, M’CURDY,.& .C 0„ Mannractnrew of SHIATOISa, mtAHinnn* aflo .. BOLT OOPPXB, PBBSSBD OSPFBB BOTTOUS, BAISSn STILL BOTTOMS, 6PiiTBB SOLl)*Bl al»lmpart4t.anddeJenlnU*TaiA,TlSPLATS, BHSEZ IBOB,: WIBB; An.’ Jiaod, TIBHBBS'iUAOHIIIBSAin) TOOLS. . Wanapodat, 80. ItD Tint and 120 Second itaitt, ' Pittabrnrh. Penn'a. i a»Bpedal trdere of Ooppm mt.toanr teatied tom. , ■ 'mr»AawlrZ ; WX.C. aoaiMikw - |l| w.- |n| m MlUin, i wiroimti WTHttl jStTSOBIHSOB',: XIHIB * XU LESS, iroqmtu amd Haomiim, Wannmron Woxu,Pitiaborgb, Pmm*a. : Omos, H«ra Hunt flnxn.: .- . Uanufimtore aUJtiade ofBTXAM fyn HILL HAOHHQEBT, CASTINGS, ft*TT.Rft»yi WOKE, STEAM BOILERS AMD SHEET -IBOV ‘ WOBE. ■ • •9VOBBXHO AHD BEPAIBISG dose on abort; notice. ,; , . ... . mha&dly »• BUEKEdfcBABHES, FIRE-PROOF SALAMANDER SAFE,; BABE VAULT 1808 TAULT DOOB," ABfr/i [BTBBL-LIBXD BUBQLAB.PBOOT Un ’ I HABUTAOTUBBBS. Boa 12* end 111 nu wat Mwm. m»d Wad . :S»hVWdWrn* r l’ert*Wda LOPES adware on a«nd. ' . ewt I *. -: a sebb, ; CABRUQB MANDFACTOKBBa, At the old eitabUihed Coach IWotoir, • DUQUESSB WAT,(aanBT.GunBnns.) flliipeli lug dona iogwab i st««l Work*. •• 1 n.i„..,Jing La WtPtaMwafa I’muonii JONES, BOYD & CO, SUaatßtnnt* of - CAST BTKBL; abo, SPMBfI, PUJVf AHJ) X. B, STUIi, smiIEPBDIQS »m. AMLM. ognatcf Boa and lint aliaala lHnalnnply * >mll> »- I j ■'. ■ OOft jggTJOER COCHRAH ft 880, Huuiutann of lEOH BAUIBO, JBOB VAQLTB AMP YAPLT POOBB,' WIHPOW BHCTBQS, WESDOW QUABD6/A&;Mod'9l B«obnd atraat and befrapKoodandJUtbat. n- Hon nmiband a.vatiatjof n , AXL KnrDB 0I TrtUPi' PIBQ PAPSB. . « -v" v . SV*Har« removed from 80.87 WoodßtzNttoJfei: 83 BtallhAeld | ftfMit r Pa* t [ •'" 1 OR TBALB FOB BAWL?. im4 - ; 'B3F®Vj r&OUCEB. ft 80V8t Itaalm: In jTQBXZQS ASDDOKESTZO-BILLS 07 XZ* OHASQt, .QKBtinGATXS OS DEPOSIT* BASK Sona IiHD BPx6EB;Ho.fiT Market •trwrt.Pltt*- taxgh,sn. * f *a4a on «D tb» |fteciptt«tttalr Cbroogbont th* tfnliad State*. * Aftt, MU.ITMV Ac. S°£SF^',!s2s!£ SB ’ rmfBloN8 > /OSr OLAIMB AQAIBBT MM • !;s ' •.APWfj*P,‘.Ht» ivD» H iHiKiW ;auibM > attlrtlolfcwio € sl«rTrt7pS2i!SS all otbat tuEa, S 3 Jo* of o. tailobl** ■ £»®i r *-■ atoM^nSbuA,it i Stdnwt anmadalf tbaeUfanXnw&a : earned, art an £taiiiabgit«i grata, ; £2«s* ! DBNBIONB, BOmn*y*fiAGKiEa.Y. -n'. i «?tf**oEwtu k ..: ,; r __ IVnatfotii SoldlMV Olalau'flf every : tnl !*■ faubM. BODHIUg pul PINSIOBS IbTSt SS.'■ Sbs®S»SS!SSr^?f^SS2flsS U ch«g».ftomtleeMe comraam WrUadanw oial ctala collectl. end~ill. ** *—’ ~T~nr fr'tfnrlhaoil; —ve‘«^ : ■ V'- e t. yy ANTISP—At th 6 Herrm Aw • MAUI TSAO3TO*■ 4ftluy 1875*»lrfl *& ' : AffUQAtloa to ti/loik Xolfi>it, J*a. r lSU>r J 'Hca» : n«id I’weanat^tdirf~V* ,< .'. l : , ''*':*H--*;' i w UiiLS^lS^S^ ;TP»r«.»pPS|S^S'