the ilDaitp- post. JAMES P. BARR, EDITORANDPROPRIEVFOR PITTSBURGH: SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1862 IDENT ON NBIANCI PATIO N. T.darslaib of President Lincoln to C6):l 4 ;ra on the question of " gradual eirbiPation," contrasts strongly with the hirling, wholesale theories of Sum ner, Lovejoy and their phrenzied fol lowere.' Apparently, fearing the Aboli. 4ion .s maiority in Congress, as indicated VW* vote the other day in the House of Representatives upon the intention of the War, the President timely comes forward with some moderate and prac tical suggestions, keeping in mind throughout the restoration and perma nency of the Union. The President's recommendation is contained in the foL lowing resolution : Mao/1)a, That the United States ought to co-operate with any State which may adopt a gradual abolishment of slavery, giving to such State pecuniary aid to be used by such State in its discretion to com• 'penis;te for the inconvenienoies, public and private, produced by such change of sys, UM. The following paragraph contains the 7 . prlricipal reason set forth by the Presi• -.dead for the adoption of the policy he recommends -4 Theleaders of the existing ipstirreetion entertain the hope that this government wlll*ultimately be forced to acknowledge the independence of some part of the die. affected region, and that all the slave Statue North of such parts will then say, the Union for which we have struggled being already gone, we now choose to go with the aoutherr. section. To deprive them of this hope substantially ends the rebellion, and the initiation of emancipation corn. pletely deprives them of it, as to all States initiating it. The point is not that all the States tolerating slavery would very soon, if at all, initiate emancipation, but that while the offer is equally made to all the more Northern, shaft, by such initiation motto it certain to more Southern ; that in no event v. ill the former ever join the lat. ter in their pro, , osed Confederacy. I say initiation, because in my judgement grad nal and not sudden emancipation is better for all." The President proceeds to impress upon Congress, that the annual expen ses of the war " would purchase, at fair valuation, all the slaves in any named State;' but, notwithstanding this, we have not the remotest idea that the Ab. olition majority will adopt his sugges tion. It is not sympathy for the slave that keeps up the Abolition excitement #i the United States. Hatred of the slave owner, and partisan profligacy have far more to do with feeding its infernal cauldron. Destruction of South erninatitutions of all sorts in the name of *482.13i011 faethe-slave,,,jerlfich deitititton, desollitien and ruiiiiity be spread throughout the South' is what the leading minds in the Abolition ciru sadnliave been initiating. It is not posi , siPikthat Mr. Charles Sumner, his col leagues and his echoes, will ever be con tent to adopt the President's suggestion; :they are too mild, moderate, practical and sensible to attract the favor of deal ers in abstractions. Besides the adop l tion of them would materially lessen the Abolitionists' stock of buncome ; their vocation would be too much inter.' fered with, and that can not be thought of, even though the Union and Constitu4 tion were both to perish. At all events, we take this message of I „, President Lincoln, at the present time, .a a substantial evidence of his opposi-i tion to the schemes of the extreme con-; fiscationista in Congress, indicating, to our mind a Presidential veto of any bill which they may be able to adopt. He is not to be-driven from the constitutional course which he marked out at the bed ginning of his Administr• tion, though: fanatics should howl, as wolves do in hunger at the brightness of the tucati. For some mouths the AdministratiOX and the radicals have been approachin an issue; the President has foresta ll e thoitAction, by, modestly suggestingfbis plan for, the amelioration of slavery; i t,iti now for them to suggest one cafe slated to serve the bondthen and 4il A l the raw ; time cripple the rebellion. , hundred and fifty resolutions, by Sum itCr, , crammed with latin quotations anal stolen extracts from the classics, willno answer the purpose. "Old Abe's" plani is Ain and Simple, contained in aixl lines, and easily Comprelientled by the. dullest understanding. Let Stunt erl emulate his example, andtor once abanl dim the pedagogue, humbug and dema-j gogue, by acting the part of the statia4, man and patriot.—Although the descent; is , g iiudden On&L"but one short step from the sublime to the ridiculous, " pie; cannot conclude this article on thel President's message without introducing: to our readers the following ex tract front, yesterday's Gazette. The policy of skil-i fill conductors of dramatic entertai n ments, is after a serious performanF,e al= wayii to oodclude with something fare! cal aux 4 ridiculous. Imitating that example, we-direct the jocular portion- of our readers to this ixuagraph, Allowing - the point and force of the similitude—our Union compared toilet boats laden with black diamonds—• will our neighbors tell us what is to bth come of, that other black cargo . to which; it alludes, after that cable shall be sep mated? • We pausefor a reply ; but :here 43 :44e• ParagraPh ' • ISHALL THE CABLE BE CIIT?" "Alai/ daysago a steam tug was towing *pair of very large coal boats down , the Ohio. They had got along safely several hundreds of miles, when a furious storm insme - mv. It soon became apparent - Sat the flat boats, with their black cargo, were •doomed to go down; and then the question -arose as to the expediency of cutting the •cable, for it was plain that, unless it was outrtbs : must go down, too. In , inatat of that kind, men exhibit a good deal OCOMmon sense, and not an ob)ection wss 'AIWA even by the oirners of the coal ; *wit is true that "ail h man bath will he Otte for his file." So the cable was cut, the der wont to the bottom, and the leg, With sU.on board, me saved." _ PO/PPKallni,!From theNalonal Intelligeneer. A special correspondent at Washing- TIN AMO3 Hai:oat irlitit 4, ton, in a letter published_ in the Post, dated March let, 1862 , aria - ill:1g of the debate on the Armory .question, saysl 'at lip: Delano:Mut .116'. Moorhead en deavots to haveit referred to the Ar- Moiy Committee." Our correspondent wsa Mistaken in - one part - Willer, it was McKnight and not Gen. Moorhead who voted with Mr. Delano on the ques tion referred to, CHANGE OF WAR POLICY. The recent rebels' disasters have very much alaimed them : - theie newspiipers are loud in their complaints against those whose councils have thus far pre vailed, in the management of the rebel- lion. It is now asserted that their poli cy is to be changed from a defensive to an aggressive one, and that Jeff. Davis himself is about to take the field. A correspondent at Washington, of the Baltimore &n, corroborates this report by saying that it has been rumored there for a day or two, that the policy of the C3rifederate States in regard to the con duct of the war, is about to be changed, in consequence of their recent defettts, and that they are soon to concentrate their entire military force upon some one or two points. The message of Mr. Dtvis itself indicates such a change as having become necessary, for the reason that they had attempted too much.— The next campaign, according to some intimations, will be directed toward an invasion of Ohio and Pennsylvania. GEN. M'CLELL&N. - Some people have thought that the 71-ibune's persistent slander and abuse of Gen. McClellan were prompted because that paper appeared to think that he was, in 1860, a Breckinridge Democrat. This flimsy excuse, however, is no lon ger left the Abolition hero. The Provi dence Past alluding to this matter says, we copy the paragraph for the benefit, of the Pittsburgh Gazette, a paper that has said as many mean things about hio- Clellan as ever the Tribune itself: ‘ , ./t is not true that Gan. McClellan was a Breckinridge Democrat in 1860. He was known as a Douglas Democrat wherever he was known at all; and we have the au, thority of a Western Democrat, on whose word we are jastilled in relying, most im plicitly, that, though by no means a wealthy man, the Genei al contributed $OOO in the early part of the camps:kn. of 1860 to assist tne organization of ponglaa Clubs in the State of Illinois. Re was not then a Breckinridge Democrat, but a true defend er of the Democratic faith as it was receiv• ed in the section of the country to which he belonged; and the imputation which is now sought to be fastened upon his char. actor has no other foundation than a man. afactured falsehood." lair A letter from Paris, dated Febru ary 14th, has the following allusion to Mr. Slidell, the rebel minister, who was not received by the Emperor as such, but who, notwithstanding, seems to be getting on very well at the snug sum per month below stated : 4•lds. Slidell is living in magnificent apartments Champs Elysees, No. 30. He pays 1,800 francs a month and assumes all the importance of a regular envoy from the United Sams. He is not, however, made a lion of, though it is said his taste would render such a position agreeable to him. He is doing all in hie power to encourage Southerners to take up their quarters in Paris during the season." The New Orleans Press and the The New Orleans press is fall of fight and defiance under the late adverse news. The Delta has a leader headed " The Only Issue," which talks very plainly to men who feel shaky about their property. They must defend it with the sword, and drive back the foe who is now waging war for gain, or they will be reduced to a condition ten fold worse than slavery. The Oresomt con cludes an article on the state of affairs with these words: “Weareg'arc to note that the disasters, instead of dispiriting our people, have aroused their to—the _highest pitch of warlike excitement. Our whole popula Lion are eager for the tray, and all they want is a leader and. arms. They are resolved to defend their gloriously beau• tiful band to the last, and they will do so. The. same spirit, we are sure, ani mates the entire people of the Confed erate States, and when they turn out en mane, as they shortly will, the enemy will figd an unconquerable foe to en counter:” The pcissession of leading points will not give them the country. The occupation (*the principarcities of the South willpventuate in no lasting advan tagea.to4liena. ••.• "Our people will retire into the interior, and in their mountains and swamps they will maintain a warfare which must til timately,,,pEove successful., The reat Napoleon - held, through his maknificent armies, every leading silty in iSpaisti ;for a number of years; yet the country *ha by no nits= conquered. The 'guerilla war the Spadiards waged atainst him was nothidg In comparison to the war we van wage. "Therefore, let none be . downcast. We must expect reverses. War is no child's play. W'e cannot reasonably lot& for success. all the time. But, if we all turn out as one man, animated by one spirit as we ought, we shall win the victory and establish our independence on foun dations that cannot be shaken." The Storm in Northern Maine A coqespondent of,the Boston Journal, writing from Bethel, Maine, on the 28th of February, sayer. "The snow, in many places, is higher than the tops of the oars for thirty or forty rods in a place; and as they only cut a place through just wide enough to 'rub end.go,' , .thepassage through them seems much like going through an un. dergrotind tunnel. In two places on the road the snow was actually drifted sev eral feet higher than the top of the smokegitacks of the engines." On Monday night, of last week, a house occupid by two families in the town of Mexico, Maine, was completely buried by an avalanche of snow.- the morning the neighbors, on discovering the disaster, set to work to release the buried ones. By tunnelling forty feet through the enormous bank, they BM • 40 0340 in reaching the front door of the house, which was immediately opened, and the frightened occupants of the dwelling were released from their pre carious situation. '6y-The Philadelphia , Board of Udall!" have declared the Xemngton Water. -works a arabianos. Northern u/traists, like Southern rebate, hostile to the Constitution —No States are lawfully out of 06 Union, anekino,ack necessary to restore. - them but sUbrniatio' n to the laws —As individuals, the rebels hare forfeited property and life —How far the forfeiture shall be enforced is a question not of conetitittionaft, but of expediency.— There is now a negro colony around Port Royal which may expand as the Union army advances and the masters fly, becoming in the end an organized community —Fourfifthsof all the slaves now subjects for confiscation, and may, if deemed expedient, be set free.—The time not arrived to decide how far confiscation shall be carried.— The North now united to put down the rebellion.— Let it not be divided on guestwn of right or expediency until that job is done Then we may safely decide upon the question how far confiscation shall be carried. To ABRAHAM LINCOLN,- President of the United States : RESPECTED SIR : In my last I endeav ored to show that the cause of rebellion in the South " is the pride of wealth and the lust for power" fostered by the cot• ton monopoly ; that the abolition of slavery could not abolish that monopoly, which depends on principles beyond human control; and that if cotton were - - produced by hired labor in the South, as it is manufactured in the North, its profits would be as great, if not greater, than they are now, generating the same antipathies in that section which have produced our present troubles. There is a party in the North, come paratively small at present, who, for the mere purpose of abolishing slavery in the South, would sacrifwe a hundred thousand Northern lives, and a thousand ma tions of Northern money, without even the hope of any advantage to themselves or the people of the States in which they live. Like tne Southern rebels, they assume, in substance, that the Constitution no lon ger exists, and talk of the reconstruction of the "Union" on other principles. These men cannot but know that this is not the view entertained by the govern ment or by the great mass of the Northern people. These believe that we still have a Constitution; that the governmentat Wash ington is not a mere provisional govern merit; that the war is waged in defense of that Constitution and that government; that the Union needs no "reconstruction;" that, if it did, it would be unwise and dan• gerous to attempt it until the rebels are oom pelted to submit to it as it is; that no act of the se coded States, not even a repeal of their ordinance of seceseion, is necessary to restore them to the Union, because, being unconstitutional and void, those ordinances could not take them out of it, that., as the armed resistance to the Constitution is pat down in State after State, they will stand in the Union with all their constitutional rights unimpaired, and will successively recognize their obligations and resume their duties as members of our great Clone federacy. But the position of the rebels is very dif ferent, and nothing but punishment or pardon can restore them to the rights of American citizens. They have forfeited their property and their Three, and there. fore to confiscate their slaves and thus set them free is not a violation of the Consti tution. H,w far that process should be carried is a question of expediency and not of right. And it is in this point of view that I appeal to the advocates of emancipation in the North to be content with the progress which their principles, are making ; not through the subversion of the Constitution but under cover of its authority. The leaders of the rebellion announced th or determination to "conquer or die," ant the principal slaveholiera in the South act as if they were in earnest. Look at South Carolina. In the violent portion of the S A:0 the planters to a man dy on the approach of the Union army, burning their cotton, 1117.1 in many eases their build. ings, and abandoning their slaves. There are said to be now about eight thousand sieves thus abandoned in the vicinity of Port Itoyal,in South Carolina, every one of whom may be oonstitutionally set free by confiscation as a punishment of their mass tera' treason. As the Union armies ad• vanes into the interior, other thousands will be added to the number by the dew. tion of their masters, and finally there will be no resident population in a large por. Lion of the State but deserted slaves. In short, If the masters persist in their mad Bud causeless rebellion against the Constitution, the end will be a negro com munity along a portion of the Southern coast, under the protection of the United States. If the war is to be protracted by the ob. atinacy of the cotton planters, this is a re sult which the United States cannot avert if they would. By confiscation the slaves will be set free, and, through the same process, the lands of their masters will be surrendered to them for cultivation, all without in. fringing upon the Constitution. Even now there is a negro colony around Port Royal, under the protection of the national forces, and its future expansion into an organised community depends on the ob stinacy of the planters and the events of the war. Alat this is not all. Probably four-flfthe of all the slaves in the United Mates are new lawfully subject to donflecation ac count of the treason of their masters.— /low far the forfeiture of their slaves, their other property, or their lives, shall be carried, is a question of expediency only, and involves no constitutional vies tion of power. Four.flfthe of all the slaws may be thus lawfully set free, and the emancipation of the other fifth would soon follow. this view of the subject what motive have the abolillonists of the North to vets their Government into an abandonment of the Constitution, by making general eman. cipation, instead of the prefervation of that instrument , the direct object of the war, thus giving a color of right to the re bellion, and in a measure paralyzing the arms of loyal men, especially in the South ? Patriotic men may well differ as to the extent to which the punishment of treason shall be carried. Toe extreme emaindpse tionists may, if they'choose, insist that it shall be carried to the extent of confiscat ing and setting free all the slaves of rebels. That they may do without assailing any principle of the Constitution, and surely they would be much stronger on that ground than any other. Why,then, should they abandon the Constitution and place - themselves on revolutionary ground?— Why not act with cordiality with those who are striving to maintain the Coned. tution as ii is ; and, that being accom plished, seek the consummation of their ant. by means of confiscation under its authority Whey may test assured that their object, iP attainable at all, can be more easily at tained in this mode than by any revolus tionary proceedings. Th.e time for considering how far it is the interest of the country to carry the punishment of, treason by confisCation or death has not arrived. When it dose lir. rive the question will doubtless be decided; not so much by the glint of the traitors as by the interests of the loyal citizens of the Republic. Not all the wealth and all the blood of 4asisimuling rebels can atone for a thou sandth part of the destruction of life /and propertyi - tita sickness, privation, and #411% ery which their profligate ambition hat LiVeroffdfr faniy may be a severer punishment for' them than the bullet and the halter.— What shall be done with them or their I property will necessarily become a subject of consideration when tibe rebellion 4its kWh wit down and,the Goveinment shal t ' titus hive ,seqttiftai the rower to punish.' ! The North-wasfifevet more united than it is now in the determination to suppress the.rebelliou, at whatever cost of treasure or of blood. They look upon it 83 , 43313011 - Ufa to their future polio.) ..nd stfsty, and the only means by whica the nation can recover the lostregpeci of foreign Powers, maintain and recommend republican inisti• tutions, and resume that career of peaceful progress which made our- - country the won • der and.admiretlea_of Jae world. Let no revolutionary spirit l the North inter vene to strengthen rebellion or paralj ze patriotism; but let 'us, wth one voice, sustain the Oonstitution as it is ; under it punish traitors as we list., and, whin peace is restored, amend it if it needs amendment I am little disposed to enter upon a gen• oral discussion of the slavery question, but I propose in another letter to touoh upon one branch of it which more than any other makes it a dangerous oue. ATAOS KENDALL FEBRUARY 25, 1862. lion Reverdy Johnson. Hon. lieverdy Johnson,'Who has just been elected United States Senator from Maryland, was born in Armapolu3, Mary. land, May 21, i 746. He was educated at St. John's College in that.city, at the age of 17 began .to study law in Prince Georges county, in the office of his father, who was chief id"doe of the dis t. iet of which 'that county was a part. In 1815 he was admitted to the bar, and in 1817 removed to Baltimore, where he has since resided. He has devoted much of his -time to the arguing of cases before the United States Sulireme Court. In conjunction with Mr. Thomas Harris he reported seven volumes of the decisions of the Maryland Court of Ap. peals, known as "Harris and Johnson's Reports," the first volume of which ap , . .eared in 1820 and the seventh in 1827. n 1821 he was elected a State Senator, and at the expiration of his term in 1825 he was reelected for a second term. In 1845 he was chosen United States Senator, which office Le resigned in 1849, on being appointed by Presi■ dent Taylor Attorney General of the United States. On tkie accession of Mr, Fillmore, after the death of President Taylor, Mr. Johnson resigned that of fice, and resumed in Baltimore the prim. rice of law. From the commencement of the rebellion he bus been a consist. ant advocate of the Union, and he will rank among the ablest members of the Senate. (From the Richmond litrandner, March 3 The Draft , --11,iebanond Yankees' , The Yankees in Richmond, who have been tritling and peddling in the neces sities of the war, are showing character istic acuteness in eluding the draft for military service. Their management is to get some contract from the Govern+ ment, no matter how petty, and then to plead the exemption of public con.; tractors. Of course these creatures are close calculators, and are quite willing to take petty contracts, even at losing prices, to save thereby the unpleasant. nesi of fighting or the cost of obtaining a substitute. We can count on our lingers a score of instances of this management 4 well-known Yankee merchants and tradesmen in Richmond. We hear of a Yankee dealer effecting the exemption of himself and workmen from military; service by some paltry contract for of ' tidal upholstery; of another, a ooach4 haversacks or getting a contract for or some other trifle ; and of a th " son of the Puritans," a bonnet-make or man-milliner, notoriously unsound o the Southern question, who has screwe himself into the employment of th Gavernment as a traveling agent, to' purchase leather. RIAU RIBJD. On Octobor 1244 by apv. C. J.gobnan, s. FETj TERMAN and Stine E. J.. DOUGL &S , S, all of AA& gheny city. DIED : OD Friday 'mining, March TM, DUET T. di' lokaill.EK, aged IN years.l r .., ) . '1 he funeral AO, take place Ulla (Seatudaty)moriki in,r at 10 o'clock; torn the realdenos of bet mother{ on Fulton street. ~ _ On the 7th met. at hia 'residence in Upper Bain Clair Tolmantp, , KEER. Ills friends are inv.ted. to Wend hie funeral on SabOath afternoon at two o'clock. • , At Aidemeadrio, Huntingdon Clonal, Penns, on: Thmodoy morning, M e3i dolook, Mrs. BAKAH A.' LOWRIE, wife of Hos. osmnel T. Lowrie. i Her funeral will Mice pisoe from the residence ; of H. Childs, Al egheny oily. i atiTua,!'on.,—rag. GAZATE ft PAill Curer of the eget TEX E,E,NI4'B MAGNSTIO TAY REEIY6 hi.A.UNET/0 OIL, Warranted to cure In every ease, or money re funded. For Rheumatism, Sprains, Brains, Pains in the Lambe, StIS Joints, hp. , It never falls, II used as direct& L fki l by all cespeetablo-Dvtkualsts,at 2150. tit bottle. For sate by • SOWN JOHNSTON, Druggist, and de der in Choice Family Nadu:tines, mh3 cornetSmitaffesd aid Fourth Create. 4111. AMOS 3 SKIN, Attiolli Baal, A saperior article, A. superior article, A. superior article, for bale low by For sale low by, Por eslelow by Joti FIAMING, u:dai oorner of the Dratikoild and mak et; ItHEIIStaTISM. NO r anASE IS SO ILLS AIN OF OOkiloßY.lianNO.WirOd PILLS aticuhas . Vi'll he u p o aw a i k h aupoif nl d h e e pendosd, the p the patient. is cured. Mr. T. M. Adame, 806 Twelfth Streit, New York, suffered with Rheumatism ior a long Period. He auended try able physmans, bat tnelr phseintp. stone were of no nrall•, he wig Unable to More without assistance, and forlonr mouth! Wile iimaist entirely confined to hie bed At this period of his sickness, when hope had tett; and he expected to be a cripple for the remainder of his lira he was recommended to use BRANDSICH'S The first box evidently made b in better; the ita. provement was more decided fro.n toe mooed box, and by the time he had used eighteen boxes, be was entirely cared of - rbeumoWn 2 , and Ma strength and suppleness of his Mobs were restored. It in now over etyear that this mire ass been etre°. ted, and he has had no mkt but continues the enioyment of perfect health. ath.lbel. 8014 by THOS. IiSLOPATH. Pa And by aff respectable dealers to mod' , mlahlmdaw OZys , Id 19 , 01.0 g L W. 110119ENIIALMBIR 1 M. I) ., OF NEiir YORE OITY, Haring arrived in Pittsburgh. will, as usual devote his exclusive attention tethe Medssai and Surgical treatment of Caroni° Diseases, especially those of the Lower Bowel, such as Pittm, tbwitaiPtiii o b , Fl - tole, Fissure, Falling of the HowW,Staleture of the Bowel. Cinema= of ths‘Bowel. Hs will also treat ' the I' Illiolle Chronic Diseases of the Womb, Hid- ADDY & EWERS, nays, Bladder, to. Hit rearm' :Meet the MOM* thiaocLAl . HOUSE., where he may beseen and 04 PLUMB:US MID GAB FITTERB, milted from 9 o'clok a. m. to b olooh p. m. dily. Patienidl they desire it, will hei MAW Wirt 129 FIRST ST 1121 ET, PITTSBO Bea, of the city. BED . --- Illf OHIO IFELUSEIT, 4.IaLBSCIIIMNY, MONONGAHELA. 13BIDGE 00,1 MI manaroas 0/001. Pittsburgh, Keen Ist,-11369. I . rfe THE PRESID mitt orii Akiiitaiit , S 40 DUMP% HYDRANTS, LEAD PIPE, %PO" the ocalfl o 4l' for snlogikelEldewler okio JL Sheet Lead and Plumbers material humeral MC . Lffill riVer, opposite .PMMui At the , Aril B,—tat cordon proullit4 wended to. county of Allsghsay hive ttns dir dealizeds , femu r ; ‘ dividend otTEIIi9SH 'PEE CENT. on the 1000 M XfiiiKiiiaia,--V. 4,000 Broom Stook, wtach will be paid to =ildt t iga= rg ea representatives,a`, 1116' Of 34 ;Handles i .., atomanti fo .a's by 9181016.0 n nadafterthelllitrir gem C , ii ii 4 ; l 4 mter , Mail. AKI 'LEH addlitid NaHOLIEiIi thait*EfiOnte! , 1A140104 Stitri , 1 - -St l, -., 41'3,2 'I HE c HIAIdteS-7110-MALEY, x-BLISH. SONGSTER , Containing all the ElOpular Irish Bongs and Hee.- cations as sung andgrfen by J. H. Ogden, the cola baited truth longer; .pride 1@ mots. *Rd. Idny's Comic Irish -tiongster, costa mug Haffnost popular Itishtiontsilta , sang by J. H. lig densuid Fired. May; price cents: 'Vac book con tain.; toe words and music of the celebrated bong, '1 likes a drop of good beer." The Florenceo' Insh Boy and Yankee Girt Soo*. ster ; price AO cents. Woods blunt - re' Bong Boon ; price 10 cents. Bryant% Bongster, from .I.hxie's Land; price luc The Tedv Regan Songster: price Pi cents. Sadore's t imitation Me odies: price 10 cents. Mr. add Mrs. Barney Wllliame Min Goy and Yankee Gal Gangster price 10 cents. Dizefe 4Cdpkinoe of Burnt Cork; price 10 dents. Lover's Irish !longs; price 10 The Shilling Song Book ; pnoe 12 cents. Boyd's k Ilmoch's Songstm; price 8 cents. Fox's Ethiopian t.oinmilltn a; price 10 cents, I . Xteadle's Di r e Bong Books, Nos. 1,2, 8,4, 6,8, 7' and 8; price 10 cents. Beedlde Dime Union Bong Backs, Non 1 and 2 price 10 saints es .647 of the above popular Bong Books will be, BODY oy mail free of postage, on receipt of price. If You Want One song Book, If You Want a Daum Bong Books, If Y6u -Want One klundreo Song Bowie, If You Want Five Bunlred Song Books, If Yon Want a Thousand bong .Books, call or, send to' HENRY MINER, NOS. 71 AND 73 FIFFS STREET NEXT DOOR TO THE POSTOFFIDE SPRING GOODS. IV, & D, HUGIJS. Have )net opened a large and beautiful STOCK OF DRY GOODS, Plain Black Figured Silk BROCADE POPLIN, PLAID PARIIANAS, Embroidered Limas, SHEPHERD'S PLAIDS LIMAR LU6THE 3, Embroidered Mozambiques FRENCH d N D ENGLISH CHINTZ ES ft.litiot makes of 00100E8 at 121/0 W. & D. HUGUS, 001LNIIII FIFTH AND AtAILK ET BTREETB mhB JUST RECEIVED- A Urge and jailed eitcak of BOOTS, 8130E3 dN D liAl PEWS AT IW. 15 FIFTH STREET, D. S DIFFENB&OHR.F. 444 4 4 Merrimack r riatil at 12i.cents iJoalseou English Spraguos BALL FRESH NEW GOODS,-Vii (fit OD 2iRAVY DASK GINGEL&MS 63 canto per yard kUP.VI UNBLItAUHRD hiU3LINi at reduced prices, IRISH LINENS AHD LINEN SHIRT BOSOMS, NEW STYLE SPRING DEM GOODS. ALL CHEAP fOR UAtill C.IIMISON LOVE & 74 Market Street mllB 41hr BY VIRTUE OF AN ACT "F AB. cE111.131.Y of tee Commonwealth of Penn•yl- , yenta, approved February 6,1868, I will expose to public sale on the premises, In the Borough of Sharon. Mercer it:o, Pa , on Tumidity, spni 16, um, the property' of THE SRA litt) • /Run 00, conenstrtig of one Rolling kW, Steel Works, a large Wide Bon e.,40 Dweuing douses and 40 acres of land. together with' all necessary mnehinery for Manufacturing Iron, baits and &mei. This is a desirable property for any party wishing to em bark in the business, being located on the Erie Extension Pennsylvania Cunt, rn the °entre of the best (pal re on In Western... Pennsylvania; conve nient to foreblast furnaces, ke, good prospect of the Jibe it , Pittitbizrer prefidogthrough it. Tweet—One third In fiend, the balsam in two equal payments of six and nine months coon. M. C. TROUT. Trustee. mhB Btw &w an, Feb. 15. DM MEM ...0. P. Dili= ROBERT DALZEILL & CO., EtaIMOIS 811.1 N WHOLESALE GROCERS COMISISSION-nDfORWMIDIMSINEACHANTS Dassaiukto Prow:main Perntstatan NtAsuslormia NO. *ll Y PEARL HOMINY -8 barrels choice Kiln Dried Pearl Erclikip just received seadlierliales by JAM ES;A.. FICTIOR, mhB corner Market and irlrqeireele, CHEAP WALL PAPER, grig andOin for as b_f mhB W. P. MARSHALL 87 Wood street, WINE WALL PAPER, arriviiivand .A. 7 for aale by mbB w. P. IikRBHAL4B7 Wood strets.•: WINDOW CURTAINS, arriving an for aa.e by robe W. P. MARSHAL 87 Wood Htreet, ODD FORKS, ef various swles, for gobs by BOWDI a TETLEY, 186 Wood street. TAILORS, TINNEBS, AND SLR BEES BELBABB. for sale byJ mhb BOWN I TETLEY. 186 Wood street. iiII.IKNIVES for sale by tJ SOWN t TI MM, 184 Wood wed. TABLE CUTLERY ". A new etoek jam received and for sale by mbe Bowl* if XitTLEY, the Wood atMet. PRUNINU. KNIVES AND E ARS for sale by mhB BOW Ai i TETLEY, lAll Wood street RA ZOILS-' —Wade kßutcher's Hello Ground. for Barbersuse, for sale by innB BOWN-k TiraL&T,lBll Wood street :b1 tat.:l 4 s <..V JUST OPENED liiiIMMI for 124 cents UREY LUBILLLAS, NNW STYLE DELAINES. TRUSTEE'S BALE FOR HEN T- THE 00UNI1tyag951 Plitsbargh Dilly M.orntugyost Office 1.4 1 0 R SA I. A;—The new t and fapt running packet JUHN 'l. McCUMBS, now running in the Wheeling and eittst,urgh 'irirde, and connecting with-the-Parirtmobarg. boats at Wheeling thr ee y times per weak, and two trips with the Law and Saute List fiom Dieeinnitti. 'I he only reason for selling the boat is the lose of my health. It the boat la not sold on the let of March, she will be exposed to public sale on. MON DAY, the 17th day oil March, 1981, at the wharf. For farther Information en q uire of JAOICEION Dift4o4al New Allegheny Braigis, or JOHN T. .hioCOMfid,Oaidafth oahl-ta SMITH & PITCAIRN, MERCHANT TAILORS No. 4$ ST CLAIR STREET. F AMILY COAL DEPOT— WM. M. STEWART, DBALER IN COAL, -Corner of SOUTH 001ithfON AND BAN DUB• KY STREhiT, A 4,EGREN Y CITY. ' ace. Families tripplicel w.tn Coal at tow rates, on ehort notice. mteS-Ilm R OBERT AUITHIIRS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, AND COMMISSIONER OF DEEDS, tor Ohio. MIL soon, Texas, Wisconsin, Virginta,New Turk. Louis. fan* 'Smola, lowa, Florida, Inoiana, Kentucky and Michigan. NO. 136, FOURTH STRECT. mh6.6m. SPRING GOODS. 1 86 2 . CLOTHS, CASHMERES TEISTITCi - S- WE HAVE NOW IN STORE A compete stock cf SPRING GOODS, efi new and desin.b'e styles, which have been oarit. fully selected in New York, with a desire to please the most faatideoua, and comprisins in all the nous new fabrics and novelties of the season. • We would respectfully smicit an early tall treat our patrons and the public, to test the merits of ice same for themselves. fiAnuEL GHAT Si. SON, MERCHANT TAILORS rfo. 19 Fifth Street. JUST RECEIVED- A large assortment of LADIES, hilt3SE3 AND Ca.T.LDB,EN'S BALINORML BOOTS, of the latest style W. E. Schmertz & Co., No. at Fifth Street. WI REAL LACE COLL MIV3 E SETTS, A few choice styles of those • ki?AL LACE OOLIARB LIID CUFFS, opened tills day and for pale by EATON, DIAGRAM a CO, 1.1 and 19 Fifth 'treat. J 0,11,11 81,0 °UHF...40) 0 , 4 soMMISE3II.O'NIERegAter /OH 11116 Lo. or Flo METAL A.. 1 1.) MAX)3I?, W. if W LTER grosaz BEL 17 OW 41ii:t* TI'S B d GALL AND EX Allll N 'THE iITDDAE. CALL AND EX:A.MINE THE STOCK OF BOOTS AND SHOES Wtheb ell be sold tor math either, Virttolegate or Retail, at a very mall advance over 00IT, at the store of 'JOS. H. BORLAND Merkel St.. Sa door from-Fifth. c. & co.,' . litiustorszsta C A FL A G Es. IioCKAWALE,•BLIWIES, SULKIES A SUM _ Ak. fteet,..o . 4o,olitt, air sadr warm:lied to be ot the beat s )- 404orktnesebtm- AIRERIC- WATCHES FOR AMERIOA.NS. No more English or French rub bish, made to sell, but not to keep' time. WHY SHOULD AN AMERICAN buy 's foreign Maori, when he ean - gei • better one at hostel Wpy eh01110;4101 Aelarteell imodleosly en;ioh foreign Wateh eidaufecorere at the expense of onr ovin tatisau.'t Wny should ao American mid gold to England and nano.% our covert brittditer anon:ilea, erten gold ie BO much needed it home Why etamiii an American bily Watch, Which, In nine oiaee oat- of ten, linlfixist more to keep ,in order fur one year, onotnal price, aid which WAS carer LlALgridii(p keep time nnaer any errenMatanues Why /Should Amencenetnat patron* more gen . orally America n taannfAniMes, and thus e r aumel- Ar , pale themnetnejtwn the thraldom at Eniglush ti-salauit sud , CoMinental gow. '1 to American WMah Compaq's Watches - , are particulart% adapted for soldier's use, being-moat substantially made, and net liable to get'oril of order, either in marching tiding or fighting. Sold by all raspealolle Jaw Mars fa Ilia loyal Wholesale orders phonfil be addrelead to ititsmil4.: & APPLETON. .Agente of the Amerieen Watch Company, - .. taidnap •182 1,500 LBS. in" SALTS, ipoo Lim CREAM TARTAR, 50 5E9 BI COSS SODA, 160 LB& 00OHINEAL, 10 BOXES OSWEGO COBB @TABOR Jtiat for sal ti EA. ..s. TIERNAN & tarrSW, Wholesale sad swill ewe% 80V1171111 . 111D 211110:11115 IS "RAS, WINES, LIQUORS, Rm., North-bet cornor of OHIO EMMET AND MLR DIAMOND, seißly IMMINENT arm 'UNION sTA2I6I:TAST ViEtilfirpN Are sappll,4 ta Dudes isi 01, 50 PIES DOZEN% 61. 1 - • .o.2%lttir •t - - BURGH TEEHATILIL r' ; ' , 7lllool.uans----WM. HENDERSON Pisqle'l=limmi.—Prltate Boxes, $6,00*, Sing)" s„„vin Box, $l, Pero m uede end DIMS area: dad* 60 oent.% Fondly Circle, 2b cents; ooibted Gandy, Si *sour, Colored Boxes, 60 canto Gallery , I 6 coma. realdTel y omechtn, M 5.,.. the Let ••ppearanEAßLeE8 Be e of the mist :sled c ta To oommence with B 0 if 8, 0 Y BeittriNtettoi Liana (guar...., To conclude elthl -GE‘ntrilnr, Stew*: !WOK SALE WHOLESALE ANDHE- A: TA 11,- 100 teasels WhinlitY 60 bags Gaffes; 60 eheeneres,4oo llo 4aoa6 o6 4 4 l 1b boxes Tobacco; 2f4 bOZABi Ie s t l q , /O a keg" N Ri th 60 barrels edßognr ; WO do N. o,6lolosses; 10 do deldiaßirnip; 360 do Soli; 26 boxes Candles. 600 cans of Wilcox Wheel Gratia.„ TIE NO. - 56 01310 , I (f ormer of Diamond Allegheny city. $260 PIANOS. .264?), , Two ELEGANT ROSEWOOD oi OCTAVE OBICICER.II4B 114009 1 ` With bill Iron ennzahnew wale. rimb*l#l24lo to s26o,inat received ana for sale by LANDRETH'S WAREANTfra GARDEN BENDS• For. aide BECKHAI•I do LOl/0, ,„ te.s 147 Liberty WWE L.1 4 LUtt3 &OR Vlt3' li -:' ..4 ~,. UNEQUALLED DOUBLE THREAD FAMILY 8 11*(11870kr ES. PriceplitiislMikNutht -• • 0 . Eels So , corner of htartst: , P. • .017. Theiti Machu f _ With camp WhiaMukeyOuitium4ll , 'Rpm, k req of a tilObhilf.e , % la st othernnehlkOSyr4le:'4ltiffit have nu aur Machines *Pea Muir an• year free of charge. , - LILLEY & (mum, EolteAptnits for Western Penna lia. No.litirifth atreetoorner of Market, PEW. burgh, . LiLLEY & STRAIN, Manufacturers of and have tMACHIor aale, NE Whe h lesaleturdE EDLllM EntaptEktAllni SAWING " mimirs WANTED. ' -hoe. sod DEACHES AND VINEGAR-, r xmo 6 00 BUSHENS . DRIED PEACHES Li BMW PURE GIDE' 111111110,D. SOOTS AND SHOES - - J. of desirable 'pods olievithibilittia Na 62. rum sirtaxr, nest docile. the Express Office, %use are custom- matte eirpteeeir Ihr Rtitied,o • tltt KUM WARIWO gD, and will be sold ty the Angle pos. or by the ease, at9NE HALF . Tit& USUAL. A • at a barg*in. tt )44,12, rft H E JEWELRY - 1LA.17 4 M; sEes , Ati9OolArlori in: chi? wont offer ' PLATED "& OILSIP STAMINEIir PACif-th*'C.,f . shaver then-any HOU.Se in the, Weiet—e - J. it. GAIWINER, tezr HOgiltir M t2cieir 81. 7 4. OFT -77 tioseigiirt :4 s-dite u ink 87 sw4mplitgx: 6 . aLtwarrwil'-4'44,-010,1 di By'olooll4olll , of -;sus-1 fiWiedialiaiCrida, 1 " -, - ~,, t. 7t7 421010 MINIV:IU4 newtlon. :.,•,IM -_,; yaq,,..1 . Lino retlmajoirgl 2 colored; " 'MOW fitedWAbb , otanVori 9.10 Gem gs*ienti. , Vra 0 :do O . 'flad * 4 ,S! ...II!' ... ,L2,i 1 6 , _. z 1 tut Solid . MUFA. 1 Oar,. .. ,. Aka! 04 ; 1 Flo Olf .! ' V. ', Bads; offirrilloth kinds of ' 1 , r . mines for OndegkX 4 ol l . l laTY fu/16 / 4 11111 4MW gkOPP InanTititreglierifigef :air V 1404 4 04 .1'• ORMI- 1 514*-Ai 44ViZi inagmle ',..., i ' : : .-. ~ i lain4l m*"'"°""fiketo 4 i over, •orhos/ of Gas Rot - C2ll "Vgli"s te lli tanett al. - °ISLIP 1111 1313'rrriA "73! A 134914a r t * Hir _ , WitI7IIOTIMICIV IPP.„ . o `.!zr. , irsuer to LAIN' T-113 No. 4 klutillabela _ P ikitcAtig AFULL AS SO Wi l la N- 7 --70, Pittsburg& ihaufathiristitillaK Ckumaatly oa which wa wi ll aall at the linnet. micas far Ma- Druggiet, 11121:211 -PE.TRONA waikw . LONG,NILLi e t 4,00 worts at illuirpitintrgitaliti US ~ . 41 shaurrYe+4lrca,s l road.-04 *Office aid Wareham* P Bsbs OU iedHe m .oie 4 , a- Z - guidro-44.. 4111.1 It= 11:41 .. , :7i-Ytt Laitak,l,4v.- =ME ti an Ot .6:Da THIS EVENING _Mr. Henderson SepdMita Jqg& Mgl.4 7a, p in More an I foe page by WILLIAM -iwd ZLitoodrifro* 200 OASES 3,000 lbs. OF COFFEE NEW GOODS AT 11011111- BUN -114 No.ll7llEurketareet • Ladies White and Nide liibbed.Mesino Hose; do; - tdo 7fddl,S doilogg cai Ladies aitOliatinntitHaltnondliold; ni- Keilif lf WbsdAkOra dad,- .a sad Airy do&tatoidaj Pi 11219383 do d 6 do dcr. Black Kid Gloves, all Apes; - Gloves and Gauntlets ftirall hinds. 411 " Er I 41aqikrip DlTQUiltp* 1 , 4 4 1 i i; 1 , ,A1l ekak4,v/ LANDRETH'S & • weitaelvrip vt GARDEN- BENIZYS, FOR BALR BY _ tatinum A. NE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers