Vittsburffit Oakettg: 8, RIDDLE & IMITO. Ado ircorucrotta. I MONDAY MORNING Judicial Nullification We return to the Chief Justice. not forhis own sake, seeing thathe has been dismissed by the people, bet because "as the r-..:18 that men do lire after them," his powers of mis chief as a judge may unfortunately extend beyond the period of his commission. We could scarcely hope to convineT, although we are very sure of eon , . icting him, of error. If he could have profited by any lesson, one would sui.poso that his recent experience would have borne bettor fruit.. It might have taught him at least, that there ware other modes by which abuses 'of power In a public functionary could Le reined/ed. that by annulling an ez.r,ess grant. His logic tvovl4 ninny prove that his own Court has no power, or ought to bETC no existence. Most people would think under present auspices we were as well, or better, without it. The people chose how ever, to reform rather than to rl,gtroy, and they have entered upon the work with a will that bodes no good to his colleagues of the Triumvirate--the residuary legatees of his patriotism on that Bench. After emleacoring to short that there is no authority to use the means of coercion ! for the purpose of mowing an army, even , though all others may have failed, the Chief Justice proceeds to say that even considering such a proooss of rocruitment to be admissable in any fon; the question still remains, whether the particular mode of coercion adopted here is constitutional? And this he answers in the negative: be- I Cause lir:l.—The power is not expresly dele gated, toad cannot be implied, because it is incompatible with the power granted to call out the militia, in case of to rebellion or in vasion; and with the power reserved to the States to keep up a standing _force to acme I domestic tranquillity, suppress insurrection I and repel invasion. Second—lt is inconsistent with the idea of a State Militia, because it covers its ! whole rang; and completely annuls it by converting it into a natio;ull force. Third—lt violates the State systems, by incorporating into them every State and Social officer, except the Governor, and de grades even the militia generals into the ranks, thus leaving the States, and the po litical part of the minority, defenceless against the General Government; and Fourth—lt confounds the regular army and the militia, in allowing the President to assign the soldiers drafted to any corps, regiment, or branch of service he pleases. W)ton the Judge remarks that the power is act expressly delegated to pans just ouch a law. he ignores the general authority "to pass such laws as may be necessary to cr emate- this power, and merely intends to say that the precise fore, of the enactment is not marked out in the Constitution—or, mother wordsthe instrument that which con fers this power is only a COrldfilfaiOq, or body of fundamental principles, which cannot ex ecute themselves, and not a collection of statutes. But as he insists that it cannot be implied, because the power to mere , a part, at all times i de incompatible with the power to coerce the whole, in case of a re bellion or ilavasiov, let us look into the ques tion a little, and see whether he knows what he is talking about. What, then, is this power •-to mist; and sapportarmiesn - is there anything extraor (Unary about it? Is it trum as Judge Low are supposes, that it :•ests solely upon an express grant in the Constitution, and would hate no existence withc....t. it? No enlightened publicist will say so. If the Government of the United States is a sover eign—and that it is so within the range of the ruhjr , t9ennlmitte.l to its jurisdiction. no lawyer will deny--its power to raise armies for its own de! , .I.,:e—for the a.,sertion of its rights—and to :see that the la tv, are faitlftilly emeouted—is a necessary resuli of am'. 80T ereignty. That power i - . it - !•—d. one of the ewritial a:l:Mates and elements of Boyer- eignty. which inheres er ne.tyasita: ',l every government, and is inseparable from the Idea of an indepeident political State. In this respect it may be likened to the taring power, or the right of eminent do -main, of which it is perhaps a part. It e quired, therefore, no constitutional provi sion to auaorize either of them, although it would and did, to Wait or abralg , them. Thus the power of taxation, not granted ex pressly in our State Constitution,...i..-o ulated in that of the United States by a rule of apportionment. while it is declared to be arbitrary here. So the right to take private property for public use, not expressly - thorized by either, is qualified by the -principle of cosipeo.totim., while the power to raise armies is abridged by forbidding any appropriation for their support beyon4 the duration of a single Congress, which 'was all tho check that was doethed necessa ry against abuse. But for theselimitatione it is doubtful whether they would have been mentioned at all. If-the property.of a cit.- isen may be taken, however, by any of the former modes—and in one of them without any compension whatever, except the pro tection which-the Governmout or the ag- grcgatol force of the community, extends to ui in return—what is there in principle to prevent the coercion of military service? Without that power, a State must be defence less 80 long as large masses of its citizens Are governed by the counsels of patriots like the:triumvirate, who advise their friends that involuntary service is on abridgment of their liberties, and that a war even of self-defense is an unjust one. But no no- Lion has found a place in history where this power has been successfully questioned, though some have,undoubtedly perished, as consequence of turning over their defense to mercenaries, as these gentlemen would apparently have us de We have already shown that the power to raise armies by draft or eoeroion, referring obviously to the maintenance of a regular standing force for ail the usual exigeaciev of a State, is not incompatible with the power to call out the militia in the case of a mbellion or invasion. But the Judge in- sista that the mode adopted here la further incompatible with tho power resorted to She States to keep op a standing fore', to secure domestic trenquility, suppress insure section; and repel invasion—upon which points we Ilse sundry things to say, that will reguire'giii further attention of our readors cte_ ..p. „ shF~. .`f'-u::d04,,-F.'+'x°.;,~S:r:.r::=~+ ~,. ...~_.. ._.~.~r.,.,. .... _ _. _ _~. Henry Ward Beecher's Impressions of ' opinion in our favor than ever before. And Eng/and..Hls Account of the Sentl- when men nay to you that they doubt this melds of the Differetit Classes there English feeling, I always bring this fact to Toward the United States. them that the English Parliament, as it is now Of all that has been written or spoken re- known to be adverse to the North, dare not spectlng England and its people, and the pact cr:o" against the North for fear of their own, pie. nal and present tone and temp B er of feeling towards of four I or fiveallege this additio hundred public fact, that out meegs that this conntrys since the war commenced, we have been held in Great Britain not tin more than twelve or fifteen of them carried resolutions have met with nothing more admirable, more worthy the subject and the occasion, wherein against the North—that out of eight or ten puli meetings held in Liverpool, there has the friendly relations and common suscepti- not been one that has ,be en carried against bilities of two great and kindred nations are the North. And that at the great meeting which it was my privilege to attend there— in the Brooklyn Academy of involved, than Henry Ward Beecher's speech [laughter)—the vote was five to one in favor Music on last of the North. The noise and tumult with Thursday night. We make the following ex• which it was conducted would have given ono tracts an experts tion of a vary different result, bet when it carpe to vote there was but ono in five against us, and the mon who were there for peace and quietness were four out of five for us. I hold in my hand a letter from Eichard Cobden. [Tremendous applause.] Ho says: "You will carry back an intimate acquaint ance with a state of feeling in this country among what, for a bettor name, I call H: , class. Their sympathy is undoubtedly strongly for the South, with the instinctive satisfaction at the prospect of the disruption of the great republic. It is natural enough. But do not forgot that we have in this ease, for the first time in oar history, seen the masses of the British people taking rides for a foreign government against its reboil:au, citizens. [Tremendous applause.] In every other instance—whether in the case of the Poles, Italians, Hungarians and Corsicans, Greeks or South Americans—the popular sym pathy of the country has always leaned to the side of the insurgents the moment the rebel ilon.has broken out. In the present case our masses have an instinctive feeling that their .awe is bound up in the prosperity of the States—the United States. It is true they have not a particle of power in the direct form of a vote, but when millions in this country are led by the religious middle class they can go and prevent the governing class from pursuing a policy hostile to their sympa thies. [Tremendous applause.] Inn FRIENDEI IN ENGL....NIL NOV. 2:1, 1863 WAY aucotco WAS PISArrOINTED IS FNOLAND. ) You are aware that the general expression of our people was almost universal that in Great Britain we should find a sympathiser, ready and prepared. tine thing we counted sure, and that was, that if all the other na tions stood aloof there was one that would stand by us in the hour of our poril,and that was Great Britain. And the sharpness of err re taliatory complaints was acuminated by that , very disappoiiiiment of a very confident eon ' riction. When I was asked in Great - Britain why the American press so severely inveighed I against England, and mat almost silent in re- I 'pea to France, I said, "Because we, in our deepest hearts. core for England and not much , ..ence.' (Applause.) ''Becao,o, under ' sager, and lower down than prejudice whoa I you strike the deeper feelings, the Americans know that they have an English origin, and they ar- proud of their history; when it .gets back further than the present generation (laughter;) and it was this growing affection and sympathy in the best natures and in the best parts of the best natures—it was this that made the disappointment of public expecta tion so sharp and so hard to be borne when Great Britain foiled our expectations and gave us no sympathy. We never asked for help. We never asked that she should lend us anything or stretch out so mach as the little finger of her right hand. We did ask simply the generous con fidence and generous moral sympathy, and that was all, and that we did not get, and we felt sharply the conduct of Ragland. The expression of public feeling had an effect of throwing her moral weight against the North and for the South. •So I told them. I care fatly discriminated between the intention and the re - kilt. What town intend has much to do , with judging of their moral character; but what a.ta do dons not depend always on their intention. And when, therefore, the British people disclaimed sympathy with the South, orn disposition to go against their own prin ciples as represented by the North, I said to them, "What your intentions are you can best judge, but what the effect of your attitude is ' we on the other side can best judge," and we I know that the moral influence of Great Britain has substantially gone for more than twolears to help the rebellion and the slaveocraey of the South, and to hinder the progress of free ! institutions in the North. And if there is rescue or relief—if there is redemption finally, Great Britain must stand aside, and it must be said " The nation that boasted of her free institutions and her sovereign sympathy with I the wolfaae of the common peoples has had no part or lot in the great work. The denial of moral sympathy in Great Britain was only interpreted by the motive ex ertions of certain parts of the British people on behalf of the South, so much so that it, I think, will be scarcely denied by any man that if the shipyards, and foundries, and looms, and shops of Great Britain, had refused their career to rebellion, the rebellion would have died out in the nation 'engage. I said in p: irate what it did not seem altogether judicious to say in public, that in some sense I might , bring this war and lay it at the feet of the Brit ish people, and say, not that you intended it, but that the course of conduct pursued, legal or illegal,,was such that, but for you, this rebel lion would bate perished almost In the begin : ping of it. [Applause.] %HAT THE HERKI-4 tire DONE to ENOLAND. I forma the most active and unscrupulous efforts made by Southern men to stir up ani mosity towards our country. And let me say that the bad cause w...s better served than a good one there, as to some extent it has been in our tivn land; for I am sure !bat the South, for a tad cause, has more nearly put forth I every particle of strength that it has to put forth than we hare for a good cause. And as it is at home, it was abroad. Where we sent one man to England to influence public opinion, they sent a score; where we touched one spring they touched a hundred. They seeinerl to pervade England, and they seemed, with the unerring instinct of selfishness and despotism, to know just where to undermine the generous and better feelings—just where to invoke the influence of ignorance—just whelre to touch men so that principle should fall, and profit take its place. (Applause.) You) may then imagine the surprise and skep ticism with which, under these circumstances, I received the assumeee of friends on every side that the great heart of the British nation was on our side. I hail found nobody vxcept unconditional friends of emancipation in whose society I was thrown—l had found al most nobody that spoke kindly of us or that seemed to he in sympathy with us, and yet my ears were filled with these assurances day and night. "Yon are mistaken, you are mis taken, this great Eug,.eh people are wend at 'watt." 1 said where under heaven do the English people keep their hearts, then (Laughter and applause.) And if I had spoken in my only visit to England in Tune, I could not have spoken as I now do art shalt. Neither on my first return from the continent to 4 .-ntember coved I have understood and felt what I understand now, in some measure, and entirely Lee la , . that they were right; and thdt, after all, the great heart of the British nadioa- is with us °Lithe North. (Greet ap plause.) Mr. Beecher then took tip one part of Eng lish society after another, to show the feeling of different classes towards ns, beginning with = First, there is the great commercial ohm of Erzland—those that are making money, and those that have made it ; if you please call them the Plutocracy. They are against us. In the first place tare is a largo class of mon ! that are actively employed in supplying the :south with all its necessities --except priori ple—flaughter]—and they are making, or 'appose that they are making, large fortunes. We cannot d.)ul..t which aide they take. The rest is a very large class of man who, for pre cisely opposite reasons, somehow are opposed to the North and in favor of the South ; name -1 ; y those who hare beeu accustomed to make money. but find this Interrupting war has stopped their profits ; and men that want to make money, but do not, they are opposed to I us. And between these two classes lies an in termediate one of men who are bewildered and perplexed, and see that business is more or less affected, ae it is over the whole conti nent, by its sympathetic relations with this continent. They say when will this war end; and as the offensive in on the northern side, they feel as though whenever the North will step aggressing the South the war will slop. So in the main they are against ne. It may be lowerid down to this : that while there are very noble exceptions hero and there all through England—men that stand out of their clams, above it and against it. not speaking comprehensively—the commercial class of England aro against the North and in favor of the South. Mr. Beecher then epoko of the feeling of the religious class and the nobility, showing how and why both have in the main thrown their indoenco against the North and In favor of the South. Bat of Queen Victoria and the late Prince Consort, ho says It Is the impression throughout the realm that the sovereign of Great Britain has been from the first our Judicious but oar steadfast friend. [Prolonged applause.] It is believed, &adze represented to me, that her never right ly estimated consort was our fast friend, and that among the last eats ofhis life were those which erased front docnmbnts presented to him sentences which would have inhumed the growing anger. [Renewed applause.] Be lied with the blessingupon his head, "Blessed are the peace-makers." [Applause.] Of the present Adminislaation ho says : Alrthrough in the British government, as at present constituted (and I shall read you their names by and by,) there are several that aro known to bo warm and disinterested in their regard for the North, as there are oth ere in that government who, it is known in England—at least it was Co represented to me by those who ought to know—who, would not hesitate to plunge the continent into a war for the sake of disrupting this Illation. BICITKIt YEZLING. There Is a growing enlightened sympathy in our laver, also, throughout the realm. Thera aniinore publio men, morn pupil° leo turers, and more publlo writings influencing And now let rue give you some reliable in telligence. Lot me read to you, citizens of the United States, the names of men—mem bers of the government and others—and papers known to be favorable to the Federal Cause. Among the members of the government known to be favorable to the Federal cause ore the following: The Duke of Argyle ; who married a daughter of the Dutchess of Suther land), Lord Granville, Right Hon. Charles Villiers, Mr. Milner Gibson, Mr. James Stanslield, Mr. Clagles Gibson : mem bers of Parliament Messrs. Joh., Brigi.: [cheers]..-LI told him it would be just so. Richard Cobden. [Cheers.] You know your friends, I see—W. E. Forster, less knicivq, but just as firm and sturdy a friend E. A. Leathern, Guildford Onslow, James Ii bite, P. A. Taylor, F. Doullow, W. Williams, The O'Donoghue, F. Barnes, Thomas Barnes, W. E. Baxter, James Caird, Samuel Gurney. George Hadfield, Grant Duff, James Kershaw, Wilford Lawson. Among the newspapers and magazines favorable to our cause are the fob lowing: The Morning Stur—the organ of the advanced liberal party—managing proprie tor and editor, Mr. Samuel Lucas ; the hiri/y Sews, another liberal ofgan, edited by Mr. Walker, a paper which, if a man wants to take the Times without its venom and wick edness, he can take. It is just as able ns the Tialea, end a thousand times more principled. The evening editions of the above journals are respectively named the Evening Star and the Leper.* (a queer name'; The Speet,tor-- weekly—edited by Mr. Hutton, one of the oldest and most influential of Gm weeklies, and distinguished by its calm and philosoph ical tone ; Lloyd's Weekly Neva, edited . by Blanchard Jerrold„witli a circulation of four hundred thousand weekly, the great hebdo madal organ of the weekly dosses; the Bee hire, organ of the Trades' Union, non-con flirmists tall sorts of dissenters); the Standard. Dr. Campbell. Congregationalist the /retsina., Baptist: Muczeittan't Mogn.rine, edited by Professor Masson, of Cambridge University ; the Dial, weekly journal of the Morning Star: the British Ensign kl'ongre• gationalist.i the Wes:mimes-, I:reriete, the quarterly organ of English liberalism the Uhrerrer the ministerial organ the Reader, one of the principal literary journals. Tho most popular and widely. circulated journal., in both the metropolis and the country, support the northern cause. The aggregate circulation is at least a million each issue. Among the leading provincial papers may be mentioned the following The Manchester Erasniner, circulating throug'h the manufacturing districts: the Newcas tle rhroniefe, Liverpool Daily Post, Leeds Mercury, Preston Guardian, Dundee Ad vertiser, CoteeterSion Mexury, Edinburgh; Northern Al ily Whig, Belfast; Carlisle Examiner, Kendall .114chry, the paper of Lake district: fforopekir, fridelsoident, Southampton; Bradford Advertiser, in whi c h Per o net Thomp son write. weekly: Bedford Merestry The frithsean, as organ of the Meagher and O'Brien party in It eland, and the Bucks Arinertwer. Among mon distinguished in science and literature are the following: Lord Carlisle, Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland; Lord Houghton, better known as Menckton Milnes,author and poet [applause;) Sir Charles Lyoll, the eminent geologist (applause:) John Stu - nit Mill, the greatest of England's philoso phers of the present day [tremendous a, plause;] Sir Stephen Lushingion, judge of the Admiralty Court and OLIO of the great leaders in the English struggle against slavery and the slave trade, Lapplenfe Gvlslivin Smith. profestior of Modern History in the University of Oxford tapplacise ;j Professor Cairnes, pro fessor of Political Economy in Belfast l•ni veraity ; Professor F. V. Newman, the emi nent professor of Latin and English Literature: General Peronet Thompson, the founder of the Westminster Review, first Governor of Sierra Leone, and author of Ike "Anti-Corn Law Catechism , ' [applause;] Dr. Chapman, editor of the Westminster Review; Mr. Thos. Hughes, author of "Tom Brown's School Days," the most popular work in England next to "Uncle Tom's Cabin" (applanse ;) Mr. Ed ward Miall, leader of the - English Non-eon-. formists ; George Wilson, chairman of the And-Corn Law League ; George Thompson, fellow-laborer with Wilberforce, Clarkson and Brougham in their antislavery struggles; Professor Nichols, of Glasgow University; Dr. Foster, chairman of the Religious Libera tion Society ; Professor Beefily, Professor of Political Economy in University Hall ; Jas. Taylor, founder of the freehold land move ment ; Dr. Lees, the eminent temperance lec turer; W. J. Fox, the late member for Old ham ; Washington Wilke and Henry Vincent, well known as popular lecturers or writer.; Mr. Scott, the Chamberlain of London; tbe Mayors of Manchester, Birmingham, Roch dale and Faversham. Clergymen and minis ters are as follows: Dr. Trench, dean of West minister ; Dr. Candlish and Dr. Guthrie, the loaders of the free church In Sootiand ; Hon. and Rev. Baptist Noel. Rev. - Newman Hail; Rev. Wm. Bruck; Rev, Dr.lialley,president of New College; Rev. Dr. Angus, president of Regent's Park College ; Rev. Dr. John Cairn'', Berwick-on-Tweed; Rev. Dr. James Begs, Edinburgh; Roy. Dr. Lindsay Alexander, Edinburgh; Rev. Canon Robinson, of York Cathedral ; Rev. Professor Maurioe, of Lon don; Rev. George Giliillan, of Dundee; Rev. Dr'. Anderson, of Glasgow ; Rev. Dr. Camp bell, of London; Rev. Dr. Hamilton, of London;. Rev. W. Batchelor, of Glasgow. These are only a few of thousands of names of men who are our friends, but they are bet ter known, and have signalized their friend ship by literary services in the cause of the North. TI PVTL al It has pleased Lord Brougham—who is not, I think, any longer rosponeible for what he says—to say that the American people are a mob. Lot it be oars to show that an Ameri can mob is more decent than a British aris tocracy. [Tremendous applause.] Wo are proud of our common schools; wo are proud of our citizens they make. Lot It not be pride and mere vanity on our part, but in all the attributes of fidelity to our conviction at home, patience with our enemies abroad, let us show to the world one more thing; that while, with free institutions, a self-governing people can acquire wealth from the bosom of the earth, as no other ever did, and white they can maintain a government MOM cheaply and more fairly than any other--while they have power to put down foseign enoMies and subdue the most terrific intestine foes that. ever afflicted and tormented a poople—while we are exhibiting that, let us also show to the world that under crowns nor coronets, nor under any educated influence, is there another class of people on the globe that are so tem perate, so self-restraining, so just and so generous in their sentiments toward foreign people as the great mass of the common cit. teens of America. [Applause.] The 'day is,cominit when nations are p:1 feel each oth. er's hearts more nearly--when more and more themes for national discussions are to be those that turn upon the moral sentiments— those that are allied to common ideas and , . common feelinge--fol f .tie need no other. We do not need Great Britain foe any malarial reasons. For moral reasons.we need her. And I nay more than that—for moral reason she needs us. For the sake of man, and for the cense of God, for the ho roof Uivilization, these two nations of the - earth, carrying a ciriliza (ion which is derived from ant which carries with it the commonpeople, and they are uplift ed in civilization—these two great Protestant Christian nations all forbid that we should ever cross hands in strife and struggle. But while other nations are beginning, though with slow step.. to leek to the rising sun, while even in Russia her frosts begin to glitter in that light that ere long shall melt them, let not these foremost of nations that hare Stood in wa llets for liberty, and all other blessings of free governmebt, fall out on the way but shoul der to shoulder, heart to heart, bearing and forbearing with each other, loving, or hoping to love by and by, let them stand together to bear out to every part of the earth the in fluence of Christian civilisation and human liberty. [Great and long continued applause.] PUBLIC .NOTICES MAYORALTY OF ALL'K CY&stow ,se e solicitationClll:7 :t, of many c,o, hasDaux th consented to ter nrgont mit his nameto be toted as a candidatol- : ILlttorslty of Allegben) City, at the ensuing municipal elec tion. 31:!^ OF THY, DEAIE).—AII penums Interested are heeby nutihed that the moo, of all humen re r :S'I:11 r new In tio- Free byterian Burying Ground, on Juniatnetreet, Beton,: Ward, City of Allegheny, to lilildale CemtLary, nil! Le commenced on the 21th of this mouth. lly order of the Board of Trueteem. nolAdd AI. hIcCONNIGLE, Sony. • NOTICE TO STOCKIIOLDE R.S.- The Annual Meeting of the' Stockholders of the Pittsburgh Connolleville Railroad Company will be held at the office of the Company, Baildingo Fourth street, ha the City of I inniargb, on the FIRST MONDAY (7th day,{ OF DECEII• BER NEXT, at it o'clock m., for the PuePevlo of electing twelve Directors for the ensiling year. nt,311,1 W. 0. 11WC:IA RT. Secretary : °THE NEW (;YAINASTIC,-; AT NEVILLE RALL.—The Claues are open for new members at each time of meeting, Ladlet and Gentlemen, TUESDAY •r,l FRIDAY EVEN INGS, at 7X. Ladies and Children, {WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY AFTERNOONS, at 3 o'clock. ',MX., ADVAJICZ For Adults, course of twenty 00. For Lads nod Ft lean, " 4 00. For Children, .. nol7:tf TO STUDENTS AND Lt.)% Crlt:ltell Nl:llr.—The wull-Lnown 3to. 7.t Organo , and f,l - tor of Music of Henry Want Beech, Chord:, New York e.tll ri•i: title t.ty clurittg ‘.A nth to per n eltort ronrw. ot tnetrnot ion to Harmony, the Vegan or Ilolodeou, and thorns Singing. 0,110004..) r..4..r0t0t0 on oe tlo Ory,a, nnJencrod l'1111(3,5. (lreular., eteting tenon. etc., Ivey ho at the Motto if torus of H. K He, .o NI,. tt. Holk, note,lt.ri _ (1)1{1'S. U. S. A.--A He cruiciog Station for this attractli• branch of tar army ham born (*oiled in tn. city. The list ore of the, sort - iiea nil the inJ orcnomri offo rod an, ruck as r.nder this opportunity of enlirt•nx molt &curable, and ono that may not Arltill henfhm.l. Fur furthor par ticulais inquire at neer tilting Sta tion, No, YB Fifth stmt, rittxt , ttrgb Lk,. J. LI, Dry Itocrniting °Moor. IMES Ilrro-r or Morol•iNIII LA INN? “ kNol Pittsburgh, NOT. nn h, ) 11l VI DEND.—Th, Directors ‘ , l t Ottmitatav has, this 4INy di,larrit a of TWO DoI.LAR4 upon curb sharr of Caplta ntot t r tro el•ptt.'d to thr mitt, lan tho titxlo. Don 13111 s. n 02 ., totel H E. DAVIS. Secretary . Use, s or Hosimualtata I system Noe loth, Dori. AN ELECTION FOR FIF'T'EEN vcr IIIELECTOIIiS of Ibis Certain ny. n..erne for His ensuing year, eau be held at its alike, No. Si W ater street. on TUESDAY. her 1.1, 4.terovi he hours of II a. M. Lad t p. ni. 11. E. DA V IS, Secretary. Iran NATIONAL BAN. or B . i rrauu.n. (Life Piaabsiegh Treat 00171/.4.41.) NT/JiII:MEL, NUT. 2, liar. THE I'RESIDENT AND !MAD ' of DTRECTOIIS have this /la; lare.l DirlJend of ONE DULL-\H AND TO f:NTI.: Imo: F CENTS per share on the stork of the Pittsbural. Trust i ornpany I. Ist of August, and TWO DOL. L.klIS per share Oil the Capital Stook of the First National Bank, outof the p.rollte this Is: Inst., payable on for after TUESDAY, the Intl. inst. The :Stockholders are hereby notified that the final payment of lila 1 , 111barllpl."11 /1/ /h. t 'motel st,,,k, isetity.fire Dollars per share all/ In required .s before the Ist day of May neat. siva Ins JOHN U. SCULLY. 1...w...iri5. COY ATTENTIO_ 01,CN I A few ryrnritit are welted far 'Battery L. :td Penna. Artillery, Col. .IoSE:PH ROBERTS. This Regimentis permanently etatin..l at Fort .1100000, no garrison of the Pont. By •id...ting lo It, all tap., sure, long marellee and pritotlons of the Avid are •rlded, an.l men non 1 , 00010..1 with .-L.L.rtahle quarters In Ch. largyed and m... 1 important h.:* Con in the comddy, and are 'thoroughly instntctod In all the duties of Artillery and Infantry Sal.liers. All thn Bounties paid-412 to •ateran, and Mt: ro new voluateera. Apply, for further inform:4,n. la Lb. narrating kende:arm LAFAYETTE HA LL, Wood Alma, b.- lOW Finatii. JOSEPII P. natiery L, 1 retwo. Artillen .-PE If" D VIER :LEM . EATS . _ . p FMK.; FOR Harge.+. .I.J/ fat long, n‘i t.. deett, Jr g..od order. lie.. beer need once fur oil. F.I.I.:RT,JN A .TEWART, no'2l.ln. 11i; U-0.1 pi 'CF KEG I'INIFIEIZ —4 000 feet 11131111 MEI fortolm at ' , IS I.lnti:TY STREET. rm , ur g h T I„: - J LINE I.gl btIL..II-ah Kit na ‘ll,llr for gale hy n. 4 'Enka H. COLLINS 250 PHIS GALENA LEAD, In store and for rale by I= no2l:ht 18l Recon!! ntreet. Trq(A ist) Olt STOLEN—Frini the S corner of Liberty and St. Ch., streets, un ne•day averting lasi, n BLACK MARE, attached to cared spring wagon. V ie. • .tgen con,* tned barrels of apples, a boa of chem., a bas of sorer and souse other small articles. Any one giving informs tion that will bawl to the rt,overy of [hem, be lilmnlly rewarded. fittTLEP STARR, nie.t!-.3t 761 Penn Nowt. iIIEAP 1 i Sr. ad door below the F. 0 Publo,loal by MA.1 1 1% . IYA IN. Towtnn. • 31.\ mON BROTIIIIII-1, T UST REC,Toi VED.-I'6o fine s t and .a.1.:11 7 M.ro•r strro. New York. tJ tangs,[ SW[l. of • _ . LT P . n . IJ II I.fI:4EILING, IN ALL, rrs lIRANCIi- Perfumery and Toilet Articles, for CASEY, we ere offer ' Er l. ca r r Ze.tin ° h l r l t i r tretoely low- prices.• Evan Ilroukht to tilt city, such to. YEATIIM: BEDS; HAIR, 1111011 AND SPRING AIATTHASSLO, . 0 .11 lIATTRASSES, re-made the toel wanner, and IKATIIP.D. 13F.11S re,.. , a1r4. A great v.rit•ty of IIT•IN DS, TABLE & 011. OLOTH, TABLE Cue - EH-1; A 1 ,- I.ADE GRASS and al Ahl I. L.l. /.11111.ur.KED MATS, CAli 1411' 11/NDINGS, end every variety of Goo, kept in that Hue We Melte the attention rd the/ pmerady to our WELL ASSORTED STle 'K . All orders promptly att. odcd t... I`l•'ase eus a cell at ITE.Y . , FEDERAL ETRE/7T. AllegteLy, (house formerly occupied by Mr. Ewmpl,..; BARKER.. NIEL°. CILEA • i'HAN EVER. BOOTS AND SHOES -A \ V hole titt I o I.ricom We are note rlneina ttut our large and well ettlett.4l stock of BOOTS AND SlioLN at erltttien.b e and will continuo to do t t nttt ,i•.. E t , ,,t of Docen t . bar. Deno. totaling BOOTS AND SIiORS erttl get bat;11.4,11 by .1114; Lute art k at JOS. R. BORLAND'S negl SIA RR ET STREET, 24 door from 34h. iveNTED.-I.4ur g eons and As.istetnt j I T Surseem• for Colored Regiment. In the E A . partments of the South, Gulf, and TOCILI.AIaIIe. All smodidatee must be examined before a Board , •f Medical suss," Boards are now In ecesion Ihoton, Kew Yuri:, W.hlogton, Oillfll/ 4 / 1 141 and lit. Loeb, and at the headquar , , , of the Armies of the Potomac, Comber hidd, and ekeerhere, Applications fra or essttistlou- shonld made n the Surgeon General, U. S. A.. Washington, D mail =Mat be accompanied with one iw snore tratim • 1,1.1 A •rr60,41 mural rhanict, mrsin rivipectsble - sons. lb.. Board erill detern....e whether the rnndldat• le gnni.B, d ror Surgeon or for Assietnot Surgeon. The candidate roust be a gnerinate of eenz. Ft , tilt al tollegt.; nor..graduntes •tli not be east. J. K. BASNICS, Acquit Surgeon General. Surgeon &mere'. Office. Nor. lb. 111,Z. , T HE BUGLE CALL .1 colt., totn of nearly fifty of the frtabost, epic:eat mid lo.mt nmelng Bongs, Trios, Quartetts and Choruses Evt r put/LW:led. Ibis llook should la. In ...eery loyal la.rn,, In ,ery I,npue, nod around tamp 6n•.—hv it VIII help the right, while it •row.n+ I=2=l=l BY GEO. T. BOOT t0n15,1 on roc , ipt of 35 cent•. CHAS. C. MELLOR., I= AT 01.1) PRICF The PuL4l.l.ur of atArs PITTSBURGH ALMANAC Desiree h• Ow public bat h. HAS NOT RAISED THE PRICK But sells theta at the old price, F - IN - .F.:•ciczsT•rs A. covv! 30 CcuU p r Due., .."1 On per groos Fi•o gruo, or more, 152 T per tram Trt., grott, or mono, S 2 Lk, per frogs airAtik for lIIINTS PITTRILReiII ALMANAC:I, if you trent the bat, •od take no others. Mailed poet-paid cal mc.to of to o rPti stamp.. A ddres9 .11 orders to JOHN P. HUNT, Publisher, . race .treet.. A t TEM NICW CA.ftPICT We final 4D , during the present month, at wholesale and mu'. WlTilorr ANT •DTANCI IN PIIICE, a fun Ilno oT CARPETS, Floor Oil CinthS., In .beau 3 t 3 $1 feet wide. WOOLEN DRUGGETS AND PLUMB CLOTHS WINDOW 811 A SABLE AND PIANO GOFERS, Enz., 11.!.1 4 3, STAID HODS, tx. new goods have advanced. In lint handa, from TEN to TWENTT-FIVE PER CENT. within thirty daya, and we are now selling at LESS THAN MAN. UVAOTITRER'S PRICES. Our Week I. almost en tirely now, nil having been purchased within ninety days, for cash, at the very lowest prices of the year. McFarland, Collin' it Co., Noe. T 1 AND T 3 FIFTH STREET, Reigate, Foot OM. awl Dinette-4 Building. noz9 fiIWELFTII LIST OF APPLICA TIONS for willing Liquors, Mai to the Clerk'. 0111 co up to Nov, , mber 10th, 2803: Catharine Daffy, other goods, Ist ward, Pittob'gh; Harry Sheer, tavern, 2d ward, do; James O'Rourke, do, do, do; Maurice F. None, eating hone, do, do; Wm. Longdon, tavern, do , do: Won. Bechtold, do, 3d ward, do; Pot, Dean, do, • o, do; Sloven:. A Billows, otat'g Was, 4t hward, do; Rudolph Honegger, other g'de, do, dm Miller A Itleketson, do, do, do; Danlel Herwig. tavern, oth ward, do; A toirew Ikage, d do, do, George Wibner, t o, do, do; - John Owermalr, do, do, do; Wm. A uth, do, do, do; Joho Rochrelger. do, oth ward, do; John Waison. other goods, do. do; Berman ilebold, do, .4;.1, ward, du; John Pletcher, eating house, do, do; P. L. Johneton, Caorfla, ash ward, du; Hugh Callahan, do, lat ward, Allegheny.; Mary Owens, eating house, 2d ward, do; Gottlieb rue, other good., 3d ward, 4 , .; A othouy Beroinger, tavern, do, du; Jacob Jost, other goods, do, do; Leeds Cesar, tavern, 4th mud, du; R. &A. Canon, other goods, do, do; Wm. Deoney, eating Mame, do, do; Georg° Garber, tavern, do, do: I'. R. Bustunaun, other goods, do. do; Jos. 0, Schwind, tavern, Blrcohmkant ; Henry !Vera, do, Nut Blrmlegham; Margaret Fox, do, lawronowille; Jacob Waldler, do, - do; P. Miller, do, South Pittsburgh; Wm. LAPPS, eating bonae, Sewickley borough; Jos. Phllilpie, tavern, Elizaboth fp; John Sorb, do, Miftlin tp; Jacob,Frey, do, Mmen-vo tp; Maine Froelich, do, Row tp; - Dennis Heator, eating house, fibaler tp; John Buchanan, tavern, L. SL elair tp; John R. Davie, dee do; Frederick Rant; do, do; Ann M. Miller, eating home., dm George W. Boyd, tavern, IL St. Clair tp; Ann Thompson, rating house, Colon tp; The Court will meet on WEDNESDAY, Demob. 2d, 1803, at 10 o'clock a. in. Remonstraneat must be Bled on or before that day. Applicants will bring their bond, to myoMeo before, the day of hearing. 0021:ltd W. A. EfERRON, Clerk. NEW PUBLlCATLONS.—liontwell'a United Stater Tat System, Mille' Political Economy, 2 vole. Thackeray'a Roundabout Papers; • illustrated. lilatory or the Mons War of 11843; illustrated: Ile Dlarvol's New Work—My Farm akEdgwood. Th. Headship ofEbriet, by Hugh Miller. Beeves our Homo. Bivouac and Battle-Field, by Capt. Noyes. Plower, Fruit A. Thorn Places, by Jean Paul, 2 vas. Than, " 4 2 via. Leven s, or the Doctribm orEdncation •• Bayard Taylor's Now Work—Hannsh . Thurston. Broken Columns--a new navel of great power. Peter Curradina, by Caroline Cheieboro. Arthur Hallam's Literary Remain. Zehokko'e MOditatioll* on late. For outle by EAT SCO 66 Wood Wooed. kPEIM RAFT.—Peraone who are draft ed, who ate entitled to exemption for at UM laid • down 14 the Notomilptlon Act of Narch a, 1863, or Who wish to be relieved by the payment orb= from this possat &VI, or wbh to procure a eubetitate, to take their place &wino the em, .will find It to their advaotagebt ma, se ma y Erepered with wnk , ac• J. N. NONAN_ 432, No 107 Fourth street, near amithdold„ IL I LIME I just , received by MIT H. OOLLENB. I= J. M. FULTON, Drzt-GGisr cf C FIFTH STREET EXT. WHITE POW LILLY. AXT. OF r.lTCltut X. BAZI:Vb J(.I7E. LT ! ATI - 1111"8 FEANGII',\ NAL ntZl.`i'S JOcKEY ~111 SOAP. PURE G I. TtLitl-SE N coSS I:uS A P. I Anti 0— 1.17,8 t ant ifftwi c..l.ll,lffte e....0rt,•-nt 0 )31 KS, LIA lii TUUTII DifUSIIES„tc A nut. 1.. t a LAIC4IIIs. .•,•h aq BRANDT and WINES. of ail deocriptlo.. fowl.) .0. MEER= J. It FULTON'S DRUG STOB..R, 47 AND Gt. TI till Pr F~rT. ..,zi LINDSEY Improved Blood-Searcher, For the cure of nll jjeeteeeea-u..mgfrom all Impure I=l ‘,.• I I OFULS, t 1•41.1, Ilt 41•• • DI.- ,••••, erred I.e. Bun.ri. pintos •• 4 the r. , c, Sore Eyes, Scald Heat:, Tettor Affect iiin. Old and s Stubborn rlcery, Rheumatic Disorders', Dympetetia, Coetivence., 'Mercurial Disc...re. General Debility, Liver Com pi,. int, Lon of Appotii, Leer Spirit., Fool Stomach Irridaie f",eli".iiiitx, together with all other di, orders from an iinpriper condition or Mho circulatory eyetem. An a general Ten Li, it. effects a moat benignant, end cant,: 1.. .. to Irene, ti used pereacoringid anti ac , cording to direction,. TUB SUE AT J. L FULTON'S DRUG STORE FIFTII STREET 2,ol“A sk eli estfre,mlu,m, Bturii AIVAr.LLD TRL HICHEST PREMIUMS nr TIIE IN TERN kTIONAL EUISITION, LONDON. 1 S 6 Industrial Exposition, Paris, 1881, 10 competition with all the leallng Sewing 31,,chirsul in Europe and America, and the laltevi Staten A rieultund Armcietkei ; -Metropolitan Me chanics' 'rennet°, Washington; Frankllt Inetitaie, Philadelphia; Mechanic? Aesociation, Borten; American Institete, liew York; Marylandlnaticute, Baltimore; ?decimal.' Ameelation, Cincinnati; Kentucky Wilted& Louisville; lifechanies' lean tete, Ban Francisco; and at * every State and County Nair where Exhibited this Season. UPWARDS OF 125,000 OF THESE MACHINES HAVE ALREADY BEEN SOLD, A fact which etealur louder than words of the "mem and pJpnlarity of the celebrated M. - HEELER. & WIL SON.TAMILT SEWING lIIACHINT.--lho cheepene Machine 10 the world, BECAUSE IT IS THE BEST EVERY MACHIgE WARRANTED FOR THREE YETIS. rn'xrn PM NOTHIIIi IX PrIICILLILVI INSTEIICTIOSS 'BEE. HAM, TO ESMIIITT AS, ISPLIM Ikar'Circulant, coat:dairy; an orpLmstion of t 3. marittn... !th tostimoui‘i. from ladles of the high rat aocial n;__. F , given on application, either to I= W)L BITMNEB. & CO., I.,:rnte f.r t 6. Western Slaten.d Wutern Principal Officc. Iliad Wholrani° Sanporiumn, No. 27 Fifth Street PITTSBURGH, PA Pike , . Opera /louse ....( - MCINNATT, 0 Allasonle Temple._ noZt2w LOUISVILLE, KT T 9 IS.- ...... ALL Attu .. ......91.60. saw's , m Peu '2,90. Lam-- /1 -Oh 0 r . 1 AC51.1.14.. ... .01 0% Bayles accepted the Agency fbr the tale of the SliliPLl: 014. T, mined near St. Lords. Mo., I in vite the attention of Glom and Steel Manufacturers to the Analysts given abcr^, os reported by Profs. A. A. Be m of Breton, d ad J. C. Booth, of Pldladelphia, which, together with the tent