DAILY POS The Union as is was; The Constitution as it Is! See First Page for Commercial Dailyalarkets-atot River News. THIIRSDAY.MORNING, JAN. 22 OUR NEXT ,GOVERNOR The conrse - of the!DemOcrats and Con servatives of-New York, in'the selection of %Governor_ Seymour to the Chief Magistra cyofotkeir great Commonwealth, seems to impress the memberti of our. party in this State with the necessity of presenting to our people, at our next Gubernatorial election, a candidate possessing more than ordinary. public virtue and ability. We have received several letters from friends in different Western counties, making in- quiries upon this important subject, and asking "whether Gen." GEO. W. ekes is t" the man for the crisis?" The.question be .ing asked, and without any desire or in tention to chathpion any aspirant's cause, simple justice compels us to answer, that, r.! in every point requisite to make an hon -I'eat, faithful and high-toned Chief Magis ri Singularly. Gen. Cass ife thoroughly qualified. Aingularly unobtrusive, Gen. Cass has not, perhaps, made so much figure as one of his sound judgment might have done were he of an aspiring temperament. 1 1 This, however, is so much in his favor, and . 15 is the real cause of his strength with those who are most intimate with him. In, the 5 late convention in this county, he would not permit his friends formally to present 1 1 his name for the nomination for Governor; this was proper; because it would imply a necessity for endorse ment.from those who were nearly all his personal and political friends. Gen. Cass Lame will be prdsented and sustained by the delegates of Allegheny county at the approaching State Convention, and, if he nomiliated tor the important position lof Governor of our great Commonwealth, we .can assure our inquiring friends that will be elected, And that he will nobly nd faithfully sustain the honor, the aigmty and the rights of Pennsylvania. ~' is. ~.,~: I ;Y~ p ; OBSTACLES TO PEACE. Irl Thebhief obstacle to an early.peace, and • the restoration of the Union,- either by 111 ,„force of arms or compromise, arises from IC I ta fact not often referred to—the multi- A 11 tide of persons • dependent upon the war li 1 or subsistence, as well as the thousands il',;•rlic.are accumulating collossal fortunes, 1 , 4 various ways, not entirely apparent to , i h '. he people. It is perfectly clear that our E thousands of officers of various grades, ;i l Vroin majorgenerals down, are not disposed Ili' 'o curtailtheir own importance and income; !! 1 1 ; , they could, by bringing hostilities to a 1' '' ose. Then we have members of Con ,' 0 c r ess,lr who ,because of their position in the party in power, have secured for worth •• ; less sons and relatives snug appointme nts the service, which takes so much burden . ha their - paternal shoulders. Other men tn Congress are up to their eyes in con ''tacts 'by which they are "lining their ' l i eevert" with the finest material. Then a cme the hordes of sutlers, con , tiactors, paymasters, assessors, and tax therers, who, when added to the *fits alluded to, comprise a multudi 1' tilitui army of " war patriots," eat -1 iag out the substance of the Union and ifit i more terrible to our people than sev e. ' I rebel armies with flouting banners. ese are the prominent patriots of the 4i ctinntry, who proclaim no peace with the Oath as long as we have a dollar or a 141; no peace with the South until every lave' is basking in the sun of freedom- Tige persons have many powerful reasons Icji their booming and glowing hate against et erything and everybody not absolutely sabgninary against the entire Southern Hi 1 perbs. ' It is their vocation, and they are tailoring in it. Should peace take place **would starve. iiiAn other class, let seen anywhere, bat alihse influence is felt in every locality, is ;:*orking cunningly and effectively to Priilong hostilities. These are the Re pailican and Abolition editors of the I catintry. Forney, in his Washington 6*onide, the organ of the administra t4, in view of the tone of the Southern press upon the President's emancipation pra r alamittion, which was and is con" tetaptuous and defiant, speaks as follows: iri t g*h never, after this seventeenth day of! January, A. D. 1863, whispers the witici peace, or allows himself to breathe otter counsels than time of subjugation, ant,[if necessary, extermination of the rebOts, should be written down, not a -traitor, but a coward:" the author of this pleasant paragraph is liMuself Secretary of the United States Senate, a position given him by the con. trollag majority of that 4iody,while he haal:two promising young men, sons, luau riatOg in gay uniforms, much to the ad miration of their doting parent. In order to 4itp these two young gallants in pleas ant aces' the solicitous author of their bei , advocates through his two organs, (the Washington Chronicle and the Phila. t delikia Press, yit wariof "subjugation and eirtignination I" This is done, to be • surer tin the name of patriotism, but that do d 0 is no longer attractive to our inquir ing! rtax-payers. The North American, the 4jamin g Bulletin, and the Inquirer, of Philadelphia, have, like Forney, repre sentaives in the army, or occupying places untiel the Administration; and thus the / entire of Pia' to Pit, the 4:13 1 part la the MSS 1, radical press of the great city ladelphia is directly interested in Siag 'the war. Come out here :burgh, and how is it? The Gazette, 'y daily of its party in the Western the State, was well thought of in tribntion of favors. It has a Post ! in. Allegheny. City; a Paymaster army;' a. 77. S. tax • collector in a • ring Congressional district; a Wash. correspondent wbo can afford to ing letters to it for nothing, be- I f holding a ladiatiVe sinecure from ministration The reader will e from these facts the many reasons cal .coternporaries have for sus the extremejcleas of thei;leadeis,. as . far. insisting upon a war, not ne g ingto." write caus the 4, pereef . our r: as we for the 'Union and the Conetitution but, for the "subjugation and extermination" Of the Southern people. "It is an'ill wind that Plows nobody goodi" and this is aptly illustrated in what we have writ ten. While the blunders of the Adminis tration Laing about startling massacre of the poorsoldittra at Fredericksburg, the predent. eople to whom we have alluded are luxuilating in the salaries and pick ing, belonging and incident to their count less positions. INFALLIBILITY It is often objected against the adherents of - Catholicism that they allow the claim of infallibility of the church, speaking thro' the Sovereign Pontiff. It is a well known maxim of English law that the "King can do no wrong." But the supporters of the federal administration want some peo ple to go a little farther than the Catho lics, and quite as far as the most loyal Eng lishman can possibly get in unquestioning submission to authority. We believe that if the Catholics claim that the church is infallible they do not especially complain that those not of their faith should deny that it possesses that at tribute. Nor do Englishmen complain of "the Pest of mankind," because they re ject the notion that the King cannot possi • bly err. But our Republican friends outdo all these in the claim they set up for A bra • ham Lincoln, Esq., late Attorney at Law at Springfield, 111., now, by grace of Acci dent, President of the United States.— Neither lids deeds nor his misdeeds, his short-comings nor his long-goings are to be canvassed or objected to by the "base, common and popular"—especially if they happen to be Dem;aerate. These Repub licans assume that while they know he is fallible, we must look upon him as infalli. ble I It is not, perhaps, asking too much of our Republican friends, if they determine that we shall look upon their President as one incapable of error, to set us an ex , ample of meekness and uncomplaining trust. Have they done this? Are the doings of Mr. Lincoln universally approved by them? Let us see. • If you take up at random any batch of Republican, newspapers, dating at any time or times since Mr. Lincoln took office, you will find them fall of censure of some tqt that he has done, or of blame, because of some act that he has left undone. Delegation after delegation, some of them very pious, perhaps, and many of them, we greatly fear, very profane, have gone to Washington to tell him bow he might mend his ways. He has been besgt by preachers, politicians, contractors, Jews, Gentiles, bankers, brokers, rail road' men, generals, colonels, butchers and bakers, (and perhaps candle-stick• makers,) all fully possessed with the idea that they alone know "how to do it," and anxious to impart their knowledge to Mr. Lincoln. Then a large majority of the Senate, com• prising,of course, all his own party friends, squarely told him he must change his cabinet, for it was not fit to advise him.— And now a large majority of the House of Representatives are caucusing with a view to instruct him farther in the business of his office, because they think he don't "know how to do it." Now, in view of all these circumstances, the following considerations have pre sented themselves to our mind, and; like the intruding ghost of Bauquo, they 'will not "down :" I. It is plain that the Republicans do not look upon their President as infallible, else they would not have such a laborious time in complaining about him and thrust ing upon him all sorts of dictation on all sorts of subjects. 2. If the President's friends do not look upon him me infallible in his office, why I should they ask the Democrats to consider him so, and why should they say that it 1 is "treason" and "disloyalty" for a Dem ocrat to hint, in the humblest way, that Mr. Lincoln is not as wise as Solomon nor as just as Aristides ? 8. Each individual voter in the loyal States has as large a charter of personal rights as Mr, Lincoln has, and as enduring an interest in , the government of his country—and thousands and tens of thou sands of the people of this country, we modestly submit, are as capable of gov erning the nation as Mr. Lincoln is—yet, any one of these, if he happens to be a Democrat, is threatened with all sorts of punishment, and visited with measureless contumely, if he suggests that any act of the President is even slightly erroneous. Against this we protest, as being not only tyrranical, but as unmanly, and base, and absurd. Do the President's friends not see what abject slaves it would make of us if we are to hear them daily and hourly assail him on all manner of pretenses, I while we are only to listen and be silent ? Bat, objects some Republican—you I are always attacking Lincoln's true gov ernment, and have nothing to say against Davis' pretended government. Exactly— and it is just because that Davis' gov ernment is but a pretense that we have little to say about it. Besides, we can do no good in discussing Davis's policy.— He is out of our reach. He can never get to see our paper; and nobody who renders allegiance to him can see our paper. We expect to put him and his false government down every day, and are doing our best to that end, and there is no use to waste time with it. But the government of which Mr. Lincoln is just now the head is the one that we were born under, the one that we have lived under, and the one which, with the blessing of God, we expect to die under. We have an abiding interest in it—we are anxious to have it as pure from sin as possible, and the numerous complaining demonstrations of the Republicans have taught us, if nothing else would, that Mr. Lincoln is a fallible man, not always sustained by Divine wisdona, and that it is an old-world piece of nonsense, to say that "the king can do no wrong." But we will make a bargain with our Republican friends who see "treason" and "disloyalty" in any strictures a Democrat. ic editor may make on the federal admin istration. Whenever deputations of Re publimus shall cease to visit Washington to tell the President his duty about the army, and the negroes, and the finances —when frowning Congressmen in scores shall cease to wait upon him and demand that he shall dismiis . his Cabinet, and whenever every Republican whipater shall forbiai 6- thrust his idiotic Advice Upon' the chief magistrate, we shall intermit our oppOsition, and try to think thal the President is "The wisest, brightest, vireo/ of mankind." Till then, we ninst be perthitted to have our limited say in mattniii', that so nearly concern everycitizeM [Bpeoia4 Corregpondenee of the Pos F.llolli HORIt3BITIL.G. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, January 20th, 1863. Ma. EDITOR :—The House met at 11 o'clock, and after the usual prayer . , the clerk read the 'journal of yesterday. The speaker then went through the regular orders, and bills in place beiing called, Mr. McMurtrie, of Blair county, offered the following joint resolntions, relative to the payment of the interest on the public debt: Resolved, That so much of an act! ap— proved the 12th- day ofJune A. D. 1840, as requires the interest o n the public debt of this Ccimmonvyealth to be paid in specie or its equivalent, and also the 3d section of an act approved the 11th day of April, A. D., 1862, be and the same are hereby repealdd. ' 2d. That it shall be the duty of the State Treasurer to pay intereiit-falling due' ' on the public debt of this Commonwealth, on and after the lst diy of February, A. D., 1863, in such notes as have been or may be issued and made a legal tender by th 3 United Stales Government. After some 'discussion, participated in by Messrs. Kane. of Fayette, Pershing, of Cambria, Vincent, of Erie, McMurtrie, of Blair, and others, the further consider ation of the subject was postponed until Thursday next. It seems rather rough to pay forty-eight per cent. for gold to pay the interest on our State debt, and is rather humiliating to acknowledge that the great State of Pennsylvania has been' so reduced by this war, which the Abeli• tiouists of Allegheny county said they could crush out in three months, as to require this extraordinary legislation.— The commissioners of the Confederate States, who are now traveling in Europe, might, too, point to the fact of the Legis lature of the Keystone of, the Federal arch being compelled to resort to this shift, as an evidence that our cause was sinking, and a reason that their confeder acy should be recognized. Either horn of the dilemma as bad enough, but as the wise men are paid for arranging this, and all other matters, I need not worry my liish noddle with it. On Thursday it is likely Several:gentlemen will enlighten the House on this delicate and interesting question. The following preamble and resolution were offered by. Mr. Wakefield, of West moreland WHEREAS, It is of vital importance to the perpetuity of our free institutions as citizens of Pentifiylvania, that our electo ral franchise be ipreserved inviolate; And Whereas, It has been exten sively . reported, and if; believed by many, that unlawful means were employed to secure the election of a United States Senator on Tuesday last; .And Whereas, It is due to those on whom such suspicions may rest, as also to the citizens of this great commonwealth, that this subject should be investigated.; therefore, Resolved, Thad. a committee of five be appointed to examine the feels in the case, with authority to send for persons and papers, and that:they report to this House, The yeas and nays were required by Mr, Vincent and M. Moore, and were as fol• lows, viz: Y sa.s —Messrs. Alexander, Barger, Ben edict, Boileau, Royer, Brown, (Northam berland,) Camp/ Craig, Dellone, Ellis, Glenn, Gruber, Graham, Grant, Henry, Hess, Hopkins, j ( Washington,) Hoover, Horton, Jackson, Jecoby Johnson, Keine, Kerns, (Schnilkill, ) Kline , Labor, La porte, Ludlow, McCulloch, McManus, McMurtie, Moore, Myers, Neiman, Nel son, Olmstead, Patton, Pershing, Pottei ger, Quigley, Ramsey, Rex, Rhoads, Rob inson, Shannon,' Smith, (Philadelphia,) Strouse, Trimmer, Wakefield, Walsh, Weidner, Wimley, Wolf, Cessna, Speaker. NAYS—Messrs.. Barron, Beebe, Beck, Bowman, (Lancaster,) Bowman, (Tioga,) (Tioga, ) Brown, ,( Warren, ) Champneys, Cochran, Coleman, Foster, Fox, Free land, Gilfillan, Gross, Harvey, Huston, Hutchman, Kerniii• (Philadelphia,) Lee, Lehman, Lilly,' McClellan, McCoy, Maeyer, Masseldian, Noyes, Pancoast, Slack, Sutphin, Twitchell, Vincent, White, Windle, Young. Yeas, 54; nays, 37. So the question was determined in the affirmative. Messrs. Wakefield, of Westmoaeland, Pershing, of Cambria, Keine, of Fayette, Brown, of Warren end Beebe, of Yenango, were appointed bylthe Speaker to act un• dersthe above preamble and resolution. It will be observed that Judge Shannon differed with his four colleagues, and vo ted for the investigation. Dr. Gross called up, out of order and had passed through, the bill changing the time of holding the annual elections of the Alle gheny Valley Railroad company, Mr. 'dutchman, from the committee on roads, bridges and canals, reported a gen eral act in reference to roads in this com monwealth. Mr. Cochran, of Philadelphia, from the committee on the ;judiciary general, re ported a bill, extendidg the powers and putting fees into the pockets of Notaries Public. In the Senate, Mr. Penney, from the Judiciary Committee, reported a bill au thorizing the issuing of attachments against municipal corporations the same as against other corporations or individuals. On third reading. The State Agricultural Society met at its office to-day andolected the fallowing officers for the ensuing year: President, ThomaS P. Knox. Vice Presidents, Ist District—Dr. Mc- Crea; 2d, Frederick A Shower; 3d, Chas K Engle; 4th, Robert M Carlisle; sth, Adrian Cornell; 6th, William H Holden; 7th, Isaac W Van Leer; Bth, Tobias Bar ty; 9th, Jacob B Gdrber; 10th, John H Cowden; 11th, John B Beck; 12th, Dan iel G Dreisbach; 13th, George G Jackson; 14th, Amos E. Knapp; 15th, Christian Eberly; 16th, Daniel Gehr: 17th, Thad• deus Banks; 18th, B: Morris Ellis; 19th, James Miles; 20th, Michael C Trout; 21st, John S Goe; 22d, Jolin Murdock, Jr.; 23d Moses Chess; 24th, Joshua Wright. Additional !Members of the Executive aontinittee.—William Colder; J R Eby, B G Peters; James Young; John H Zieg ler. Corresponding Secretary. A Boyd Hamilton. Chemist and Geologist.—Samuel I Hal deman. Librarian.—John Curwin, M. D. The society selected, Norristown, Mont gomery county, as the place for holding the next State Agricultural Fair, without designating the time. The re-election of Col. Thomas P. Knox to the Presidency of the Society is a well deserved compli ment to a worthy and efficient gentleman, who takes a deep intetest in the agricul tural affairs of the State at large, but more especially of the garden spot which he rep resented with so much ability in the State Senate. A telegraphic dispatch has just been shown me, (7:30p. m.) from which Ijudge there must have been 1 some fun at the election of delegates to the Gubernatorial Convention in Philadelphia. The dis— patch reports that Wittie ettrried seven teen out of the thirty-one delegates, the other four being strongly in favor of the Allegheny county candidate. George W. Cass. I 3 Many other items that, should be noted will have to go until tomorrow, as `I am tired. Yours, it.s ever, Cuesmtoo. FROM WASHINGTON. Mr. Greeley inWashington.-- Plots of th e Radicals. There :ht anOtiet --',.conjortiWmt7vernellt on foot for a teorganizatiOn of the cabi` net;:anCto diatate 'the policy bf thO ad ministration. !Horace ' , Greeley ' , .ilavid Dudley Field, Mayor Opdyke, and a num ber of other prominent radicals from the North are in the city, and the recent in terviews with the President, as well as the caucus of the Republican members of the House of Representatives, all have refer ence to a removal of Mr. Seward from the position of Secretary of State, and the ap pointment of some other person more in accord with the views of extreme Repub licans. Mr. Greeley and Mayor Opdyke are _particularly busy. Their call upon the President did not result favorably to their views; indeed, the report goes that they were received with as much of a show of temper as Mr. Lincoln could afford to exhibit. Mr. Seward's dispatches abroad, and the nn4avorable comments of the English press upon them are urged to his discredit, and toprove the necessity - of a more discreet Secretary of State. The programme of the radicals looks to au entire recast not only of the civil govern- ment, but of the army leaders, with a view to carrying on the war entirely in the abo- lition interest. It is farther believed that Mr. Greeley and his friends have another , object .in view, which is the composition of our national troubles by the interfer ence of one of the states of Europe, probably Switzerland. His recent 'con ference with M. Mercier, the French min ister is supposed to have some referenco to this matter. It is not to be disguised that leading Republicans are heartily sick of the war. They foresee that, if the South is conquered, it will not be by their, but by conservative methods, and, rather than that the South should come back with any portion of its former power in the councils of the government, they are ex ceedingly anxious for a final separation. "All the Brains." The Cinncinatti Inquirer, in reply to the Gazelle of that city in an article combat ting the assumption that the New England people have all the brains in th e Union, makes the lolloWing points.npon its neighbor: The Declaration of Independence was written by Jefferson, a Virginian. The Constitution of the United States was mainly the work of Hamilton a New Yorker' ' Madison a Virginian, and Jay, a New Yorker. The great General of the war of the revolution, and the father of his country, George Washington, was a Virginian. The heroes of the war of 1812, Jackson, Seott,Harrison and others, were not from New England. The great orators, Patrick Henry, Wm. Wirt, Wm. Pinckney and Henry Clay were not from New England. The great novelists, Brockden, Brown and J. Fennimore Cooper were not from New England. New England has not impressed her views on any of the great national transactions of the Government upon the country until she thrust Abolitionism upon it! She did not take the lead in the adoption of the Federal Constitution nor in any of the Administrations under it for sixty years, The great controlling men of this country, the men with big brains and great hearts, who have guided and directed the desti- nies of this nation, have not come from New England. At present New England brains and New England ideas are in the ascendent, and see to what a strait they have brought the country ? Charles R. Buckalew, the newly-elected Senator, is a lawyer of eminent ability re siding in Columbia county. He is about fory-three years of age, originally a Whig and never a Jackson Democrat, but choos ing the school of Democracy as opposed to the fanatical course of the Republicans. IV. 1. World. The World is mistaken, Mr. Bucka lew has always been an active, consistent, radical Democrat. Besides he is only now in his fortysecond year, and there fore could not have been much of a Jack son Democrat thirty years ago, the last time the old hero was a candidate for the Presideney. Distress in Ireland. We take the following from a letter da ted Dublin, Dec. 30th: "The weavers in Ballymacarrat, Bel fast; the operatives and room•keepera in the poorer districts of this metropolis; the laborers driven into Drogheda and Dundalk, and other places for want of employment, and the multitudes in the South, West and Northwest that a late and insufficient harvest and a severe winter have reduced to miserable destitution, are all raising a simultaneous cry for food, fuel and clothing that it will task our in genuity and resources to the uttermost to satisfy." DIED On Tuesday evening, 20th inst., at 9 o'clock Mrs. MARY ANN, wife of liugh Carroll. The funeral will take place from the residence of her b ushand, No. 118 Market street. on Thurs day at 2 o'clock p. m. PLANTATION BITTERS. Holland Bitters: Oxygenated Bitters; Hoelland's Bitters; Hostetter'e Bitters ; • Ayer's Cherry Pectoral; Boofiand's Balsamic Cordial; Roger's Liverworth and Tar; SPauldineo Throat Confections. Lindsey's Blood Bearchert Voweh's Celebrated Rat Poison; For male by SIMON JOHNSTON. / 111113 corner Smithfield and Fourth streete, LOSING OLT SALE OF WINTER GOODS. EATON, MACRUM & CO., Are desirous of closing out their entirestoek of - WINTER GOODS, p.r.evious to making their ANNUAL INVENTO 114Qietfunt day of Febar nezt. Win have the advanti l u l tes m or the Retail Buyers R EDUCTION MADE IN• PRICES. EATON,NACELE * CO., ianlo No. 27 Fifth street. 'GUM OVERS GIE-Thi SANDALS, AND . GUM ARTICS, AT W M. E. SCHIti.ERTZ & CO. NO. 31 FIFTH STREET, ianl6 UROPEAN -AGENCY, IVIIOBLIIII RATTIGALN• EVROPZAN Agent. 115 Wat er street. Pittsburgh. Pa., Is prepared to bring out or nand book passengers from or to any steam or s part of the old country, either by SIGHT Da Weh ta it SALIN. PlJoklo In any Dart of Europa Anent for the indlanapolle and Cinakuuti Ban rout. Alen. Agent ter the old Meek Star Line of Begins Packets.d for thelinee of &Ammerman ina betwtxur New an York. Liverpool. EllisioWaid Irnr • A zmicii(o",rocitoi t.OTTON -.4 tail 'MEETINGS :„: —,,, ...., SHIRTING MUSLINS. SHIRT FliOlf TS, COTTON and LINEN TAILNDIAPOIS, LADIES' SHAWLS, MOURNING GOODS, VELOURS AND REPS, CASINETTS & CASIMERES, -1 E14.4LNNW:1403, BLANKETS, &c., &c Wholesale buyers are invited to call and examine our stock. at WM.' SEMPLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal Street, ALLEGHENY. GREAT CLEARANCE SALE OF SILK SHAW LS, C.L;OA.ILS, DRESS GOODS, AT it BARKER'S, 59 MAT, SET STREET, TIN WET BARGAINS MR 0111110, CALL SOON. N B. Only one price, WANTED Pour Carpenters Wanted immediately by CIIST.III C. STEINMETZ, • Shop on Virgin Alley, bet, Wood and Mart, streets. Ityan'e buildings. .km2l L 0 C 8-5100 BARBELS • TAMMY . Flour just received and for gale b , Liti. corner Market and Filet streets: , 111,117TTEH-1,000 11 CHOICE loACK. ed Butternut reel and for sale by IA& A. FETZER. corner Market and Pftet Strada. EGGS -5 BBLS FRESH EGGS JEST received and forple by - ' JAS. fatal Corner Markatino Myst sty... HOW. POLIRA-10,000 TIGHT 'AND Sleek Hoop Poles on wharf and for tale 14 JAB. A. -F lan2l Cornablifarket and Paptitseite: • - IIiaONSIONED AND FOR RALE raw* store and to arrive 1.800 Peeks . White and Yellow.;oora, Shelled and in gunnies. Elilltdre • • a. W. CRAFT. ian2o Office 185 Liberty street. ' BATHING SPONGER, BATHING SPONGER, Alen, a Ruperlar artlole of SURGEON'S SPoIaGE, SURGEON'S SPONGE, At JOSEPH FLIIMINS'S. Corner of the Diamond and Market Streets. Superior Soda Ash and Potssh. 4tioles that may be relied on at all times , and at tffe lowest _prices. The beat brands of Carbon Cil—lioeseo. Arles_ co and Lilly—is now retailing at 50 cents per gal lon. • -Jani9 LADIES , ' ILLOSEAI AND 417 / 1 1LNDEN , i; GOAT BALMORAL'S of a very superior quality, just received and for sale at W. E. SCHMERTZ & CO., tanl6 8/ FIFTH 81.1111 E T .• A BALMORAL SHIM I e. At Reduced lortoens To close out onientire stook on the lit of Febru aryMake your selections before the choice col ore e ra all gone. . . . EATON, NACEITN /kook; Na 17 fifth street 4 03 ,1Ta ih N ki .. 11 " 1 1" ISS48 e SO " Loyerines Syrup. 10 " New York In store and for sale by_LER k 11101011%0N; f - a' YOU= Ri2One Wog ig Impe • Gun* f rt. 100 hit ehegt In'stolvAnd-faksals xmliNfira al N. WO MgW, • STANDING TOP iIIIOOIIIB. w h om , formai - pries was P ' wilt be sold WiT, for $O, at iffm JoSEIPiff WHITM se2o Cowbell Boocoitors Two:litho Rs& 50 n A nn :11 . :dzi k " * PUrral so la ses a main j a c h C ue. Pain% - In store and for wek_ RIOIDITEION" /DOLT% REV°, Esp-oim mu now model. all du& for WO • nob ul B ll /PZ lgrii strest:'- IRISH' LINEN, GFinghamia BALMORAL SKIRTS DELAINES . Pan ADILPHIA. Jan 16, 1883: A N ADJOI6BNED MEET of the Stockholders, of ;the Meitern Pennolvania 14je.. company, will be held In the building el - the Penbsylvatdajtailjkiad Compa ny,__ , Dt_o. 934 . South - 3d Street. Pkitadelphtit. , on TuKSDAY, Febrzukry lid, , lBBE,.aE2P when an election will take- platiejor President and twelve directors to serve the, ensiling Year.; ,A report will-be. submitted' by the 'officers ot . the Company, and such other business tranam ited &may come before the meetina. - • N. W. 4AILKNP;sa. . WORSALE—THE DESIRABLE ES;: AV Jaime now oeentiier by G. liir. - 1 1 1ttatsort. Eaop Ridge street.= Allegheny. - - For termsaloa scum. etc., apply at the Lumber office,: Rebecoa street, near the Gat Works, or to the. Iron- My , Trust Company.' WET. :rimm - DT itoirEL: SrosansaLy stoma' muss), NO. 422 PEN3I - Birs*L4. - TAOS. nal%hicpl4 10 4 t ilkiruite ENTEISEti, REFITI7ED .2.2. the bons% I acepreptireeito ofer,evary,ao oommodation tkiraests at a v moderate There Is a pad Livery stable 4:hallo:late claim szcHrixiiisllEW 'ALL, :V.lte : ILA tuna for ale by BEIOICHIaI &LONG. 3a47;dAsfr ,Ig7 Ltber . ty street. t 017rTZ11 - 8-( /Lone Power) for sale by BEOKHABfAc :LONG I lIT betty stre94 BOTRIVIV OELEBILLTEIIr FARM Mille Lunde by .I:I4OKHAM &LONG Ann dew 127_Liberty street, : : a • : • • ..kktede, hot, reasiyed: and-for sale BgcxuArit &LoSo. Jaml7:der , • • ' 127 I..4:lirtl_B.lreo, asiPADViii SHOWELS;:.IIOI4B.!,If.AIt and Manure Farb, PrutrumSheantand,trt erjthker in. the krienlttital Itatetfohleaultyl 'eff hand and lor, late' by DISOILITABIkIONW ianAdaw ' J27 . ldbertratreek 1 1 LIIIVEWALL PAPER kr .1.0 wineacm. .I.‘ or side - • • IV. P. ?Lumina : j& 17, :'.. No. .wood anti! 11-11880L11711:011f CO.P.eltlgt.ifilat.l Stl.lT.—Tbe Calpaitnerilditiheottefonr,'ex? Istingbetweenthe undersigned' under , the' name and style of 4ing. Perfnook ds , Co. was ved by mutual consent, on the IStit dar D flioventberi a/D. 1862. John ArbuCtie rethingfromtahl Arm.? he having sold all his interest in-thtoseniefo deb. King.andlsaao Id.Ponnookorbolie authar•i had to settle the bnsiness of eildligm. r ' • .JOSlAlilltliE4 ; PENNOCK." JOHN - ditßilolllll, • On retiring from the late firmitf.Eing...R*lnochi &Co the undersigned recominends•hte iurites-1 sore to the patronage oftbe cutoff* a of the oldi 40_ •.11N-rd,RDUCK.IIII. ,40!..A.,,,Tifirq.5...._", * : 0t..... , no zglanigt;:z,,,,n - vivi.l.o._ets it 1. Co.. and ha:ingformera_pattnembipmnder the, name and etrie of Rini .t Pennock will amlinpe the manufdeture of Cotton' Goods 'at the 'Euro Cotton Worke. Warehonee'No..29 Wood etieet JOilAti KUM' ; ~:I .l', - ISAAC M. MiNtiCli,. , Janl6:l3td _ : ! . . , w .. cl Fara*. • • -- • ,- ; 9 41•if:V , F 2 i "--, r . ) .• r.,5rg50....., o ,_tome..; • • g wp, ,g, imo .t ;I 41o.: riz....iiitt:,l...:J ;Is. .P . ra -M.p2 ii .; .0.60 ZP 14 :... x ... 10 ",:q. ... W %lir ...,:,- 02 21171" 5 t M a lifovr., 55,..1-Kr., a ... G W 11 ..wgig P.,,,m,... gl m , to t g oo4illoV - i . , --.'' Alk . T.l l• ~ 1 4 4-..... 5 - „, . •As Iwo, 0,44.1= 1 : . .....„.. , , , ,. 4 tr . , 416,.::: .1i - Gm.i...: P ' ll 4... inre 2 Tn. ti -,11 ” -.• 3 1*_:. , ' ~ .114,1 0 g, . bp! g 4 PRrl.or4i-:'. 1 ~ , f. © , a . ° a T 4C, 6; . . , . ' h O S A2 . n V . Dbcs"l 1 4 e i . ' ' . .. ~-.. ' r,! ,•' 4 ' To 13tretuttheiti and lmprove the-Birhk The : IW** i l f elible:4ota* Ai' - leatiVtillighCailsbir &Magri drilakerlans, es. eon be.relieved by tuber the l velio' ble fifinteeelen. which have beeuxellizial by nuts* respoiudbli eitherzurof .Pittsburetk and 417; they have elven perfect 'Misfile- Oen/dm, The office. certificates of these persons ': can • •• ~••• .111 - All who Inircimite one - pair the *lttisdaci Pebble Spectacles are entitled to be supplied in, fututofreeaf chatismith those which will'alirem "Mindoro. if .10tfideli enure .an .improve- nientinyour sightnallon " J DIAMOND; Practical• ' " 41 ' ?-)2:3! fifinufictinsr dewily:4w Wilif4. _ • 12116 ' " No sSpifthsf ast • .-vmeseu.apie 0111OLDIEB/P BOIJX2111:8;c1511=10111:- ItYLOZ / 1 4.Y..14 4 ,f CLAIMS AGAINST THSLOGITNIMINIert • , wounds piocoredafreanuabuttarar to 1 01111parth 011hatus O. Wu . nolams ST BEWNO VITAILL PAPER viola at IT Wood atcwEby '- ' ll6BT*- 4,i: NTO Ifflp .A.‘ Monday. Janaw ^ - for transportation wilt y from Pittsburgh to Chit lit elms. WA= PO S lOO lbg*too p O VW; Coal Oil Petiiilanon loads 40e per per IWO lbs.. .4.1 i, Pgehrlit w Ar Jan2243t Gen. Pr, COAL. KEN TAME, NOTICE—A Meetins of - Coal men , aid all - others - inter ested, will be hell at the Board of Trade Room& 011 Useday.s.fani•N7thint-10 ceolbolON Ira - fog th. 'lmpose Of takinirmitiod referent& to the present unreasonable - and exorbitant dentand.nf Coalllimirm - ALverse stet - emir ottani - AU Islisf‘ rable that thews may, i t ., -concert of aetion Mat - • . MANY-COAL MEN. IMASSENGEIRS AND MON THE OLD COUNTRY-iParttei desiring to send for their friends in the Old Deanery aim have them hroturht out by the Orisinal Star Line, of L varpool -paolnits.' or reinittemee' s for warded to.them. bye_pi. ]. 14daiur-Bxotes Office. X 114 4 P 41.40.9331.1. e s . oool ttraiWl=,,-,,t a th 000 to . 1 5.000 , 0111 1 v. slt -4417--77.1 °b ale . anneal in fii. - - JartM:2td a _ - ... VOrktiritii-4,roatkaT Acrit -v V - Boyito cam ptCokairbir: "Eniiittire at L • • • • • imigaigr wrlvElinf i • ianZlai— - • and - 73 FifthltrAet. . T E S REX !RESIDENCE u FOE ItEST—No. 142-Itebesea street, , eorn' bf Sturgeon, street. Allegheny. on the (line of the Manchester Passengerittilway, a briokthrelling of rtitreseoms. gal. /ItartVl#PreateSet. us carriage hoe, extensive niern; groun tutefel 1.7 arranged withehell'and• paved walks: %rail hely. arbork , and s'grest' 4 vaziety 'of late° shrtde trees. du extensive Heir of the river and Cow, try mammy. Apply to" , ; , 6. CUTHBERT BOSS. f 511di dr siteUtrOet. .11•"--/ MERCANTILE. Tabsaar,Al3!§o,o-IA-,' we' 'ZION LBBTLIMII3. • s C. M. 110..,- of New York City:will : deliver the Mat teatime of the e • u se before the Young Men's Mereentile Library association: cn Thursday. Eveningigan. 22, • AT i i iiseimi'arid 'Attar« of the Michaippi Valley-lta Climate. Produete and Labor.- - WE- Ticket" 'lll'Oenti• 2l to be bad at the Maga and Book Stores, Library Rooms a nd at the deitcrltr dt l LU :ob ft inatg eifla Vlbrf 1 W. D. Moßaran. TB. Hubby. Saha° W. Weyman. ianD -Leetnre'Comraltteer, ... • - DRA.Kers PILANTALTION:bITTERS. aim rebeipte of a large surefili of tblise oelebretedMiiters i also .Hostetter's BitteiT; j= licerhavela Holland•ltitietre,c .Hoofiandls Gennab B.ittera, i Gieenlat , Oxiginatod=Bitteis. A lame and complete eisariment °feminine Pit • opt Medicines embracing every :valuable medi cine now in nee at • • • TeiIEIPM PLEMINCI'M. ianl2maser Market street and the Diamond.- isal7;dkw -DAUM= • .j4iaonio Amnion. ligft For few dan 0ni,...;-/-ww io of Mr. Pratt s tawat ob. Paper:Gold rms • -Bib et . les. Print-tita Call aoon it want T. A. NW D. Meet MARKED DOWN :.7.; " ; =.7.lZ A a T „ 1:4 Q ,4 1 05,414,11 11 tolair - 'IW. -SOH - . 1 I va . 62 Fifth Stk'3et,, iit'44T" A - 7 iVitEteitalitittuati : ••• 4. • ALt'THIS MONTH 1° 4 7 TO 0 St 0 PERSONS USING i BERMIUDA 44. w row Root, should always use a fresh article, eau ou prolusro GEORGE A. KELLY. No. 69 Federal West. Allegheny. R 1 64 -111.10 A - 16 Plastgrir.anikaGiipariorriany. now be Me. Jost roomed by _• - - GEORGE A.49IIILLY. Janl7 No 69 S - 1 1. 09WM10, ..lipleabea. ALARGE suppLy statikriv Standard Proparationainst " reeetv.d by NO.N.t 4No4I426tWaSC /rung PAIN TEMP EY EIiiDLIKEMI • Mirck 11171711474117111d4tara04, - ga:"69Fedirastreet. Minima 104 t.. r ,i t V ,...-. r cum Za tiai W t t L r i j , s •,N0.6 .., C Itire • 1861 • DEC . , • W. 0.-* H. - • k fit ZlOURlSzatinsk AL1661 AE 41111tE having a ainitolight -, plAviiiiis . *pia of advances, and;now' ra Plantaatdilatal mats Se lAN* actiralicarof the eleason_LaiitA heviestaer simia,Car p at klYEreleths;Wiiiiitiw,k,'lguiAls, &a. A frOorable roft p sirtin gtili s AlMCP — ttlahmars at t " dttilt !M i t te fkaaPta.atltillhtktitalitat dean' Mnlo4'j-)VATOBI'S FOR litetDlEß4 , At Re ft dueeiPrioesi, American Wadies for Azderkithit: --.- -4E4: r i r cienauchAriveditiiilivit*, gives notiyu rhl4:the,y,haya lateliiisintid a new style ofWatoiwaxpretudy dindffinted;fielitol• diets and others who desire' ijtto iT crate pr ce These watches are .in' _ irikotl4*d itiiiee tie weithleaVaiiiiiiiitelefelirliileLh and Swiss ma rtt aoture with whioli th a epee is flooded. iind.ishieh linttoiltert thei itera'nfailk,iethtialrAt taotnres sant to this e3untri.siiaaaa aaaralita at home andVe4kerititilitoWeasiri'deUttostad thiipiiio4iu. !)4., r, • o‘a We offer to sell our w:4O. WkiAtal:ttakaant substantial I nitttsial4k aeontiv t . • flankaaSeriMid . irtOterdistSifor nitant • pitain, at BB lOW a price att askidtirritrish• Aneecsland lepiats of foreign make referred re. - • ` - ' 7 l haYanama lt i ttlalraartaa9EFAeltelalk EL:wkitlra*4 man.. txlikh - Attße 0 1 1 11 10 daRld librplarte6446 , iiatelt,uf ihie;.igoialtraotare, F 44449 of our tradenarks,l Sold by allreepeotable Watch dttnl:4linthertf4... hates. Wholesale order. ahonldbsalldra d u.dgentsiCor-tho Aritqleari Witch N.Y 7 . ....:3 .:...1i '....) .t• . ~-1 - ... ....1 e. -_,,,,,,, z , _." , Artl,llo.l6iTotitedi , ,"I C.a - aP. , ... ,, t: 4, •,-:-- ..,-.- . .-.-- - -..-:t IA :3;1....:! za. - ArLzr, 1 ii- •I zr .1' :. ' I i .. ''s ~." ' ".. L. , - '-',"1.7. a....:.;, t , f .'• -*1 1,411,. ' -,.': ', :h - ''' r ~1 eit WI- ..ra• atOALS. ~.. , ,; ',-. .m....., sayiss ~., ...,..., ...,..„. .....„,"...,... ," .0 ...,.„,............ ..• r -- .. 40 :o. ill .27 l' , ~ ...yi,111,, ~,,,, .• . , , ' , l 1. F-...i . ;.,-. 1,-. 3.111. , i I 1111 -...9 j 6 OSIVAID,ItY RlENlKavaistpt 1 1 ' --'' ~ ,es- , , - ----=•- 1,: - , . 1, .....,.: --..7 , :--01l ?..:44 - SE;4I. X4' ....i.Tt.r.,'s * ' .' '- '',. t) ..1.,:.T. -, -az....1 , 4 .172 , 'HUNDRED PLECya - -- -, . 4. .„ . t t ..... 1 _ s _fx st e : , :•-•; .A., - - -:, '4.l. - .:,-, ,z . I s, ~r,i• : ;7..-z.;_.:1,; - ': , !:1".. , %;.;,.n.; 4 14;f.:1 Atte , 0 RABSte.'.--.Welft'• 9, 2 114, Le." .. - 7 1 ~..; ~...,..., i'... .t....,-11,12 ''.,. ...c.r,23- 4 1. v.44.1'.1i1?-%,gre'; N. , , kic i 'siliffamal ? -',l, 7. ".;,•,..-• i., r 1 4' tg S. 4 .,,. ,- , t 1..:4-Ittit . Z , 4 - .;,, , :: '4' 4 l - 11 4 , =. 1 4.C. , 7 ,,, :v . S:= 1 ... ,1 .- - ...1,4q. ,11:i itt; ....,..,.... '3 ,e /". Ist2:" ', •'' .-, ,-' f- ` - 'l , - , i , 4aCIA- ...rti IrivP coaxERFIFIR4 ablamilit-t ...., ATroz .. -7 - Is , TE $ --- ' ' ' 1; .. :-.',,,.....:'- - ---,- - ~,,' '...`!:' ..r ;' ;;.. ~, :..„ _.4y71:;11::It. fr , - I , -'..- = , :2;' :., FOR ''' ,- 4 .- 14j IZ2'.:: 7.. , ..cA 5 ''' +' - ,• .- 4 r; '' . 1..4 e 4 *di .ai 7 0' '-'-!tia.#4.#;*i4ltonntii.::. . -;--.. f. , ...1.,..- :f..: ; ... . ...-;- 7..4 ) , ie!"...1; sal Pei? ' or U:tial AituSt,, t 4 - g , evili.E: tv:: - .1 , 2 .:.Siititimeni• Lawyers and . .. , J Prominent : Foreign Ttittnueic-,:...,01144.1 : g iciniin eAC . Actids . snCeLetriiiiii7l-li-lk,:a4 Promir it Operli Siugor4, -'" --4 :L'''''.i . . ltdtteri!simat-W ma 445, Engravmgit tf•! 1 ,47-, , - -,- - -,:= ....._.' l , 1..., , , ink -,- .. -i.-.. i4rEv---..iirhi,-,..:f eszjosi:_l,-, , , ..i ~..,.., V; . , 0 - ,,i',C: 4 , , : 3 , , i . :!..,,. iii . .. 4 ,4 7474 1.:4; .111 41 7 - 0 1 0 1 1:1 • 14 4ntt .r i -,,-: 95105ik, , 4444 ,. .,: - .4 ' Sinop erorOdostkiet, 1 1 11 -0 - A. -! - .1 2 1 11 4.4 .43L 404 1 .4c; - ~..._ 1iek...,.---...,1 1 . Ilr ip ti a 1 - lip , !Zpat,ed, witli tr ritten` 4 to- - 'ft-Bronze, sad molar Steamboats, Ohaadalimrikitoitotsaiarnat Arkitt i r tho u t - i i iiiiittiittet'atifrAllarfok Ipes to 117 Carbon OiL Atso zintain ....4tolursish net/rouse 'tli t n i h l t arttellOpl-GO I 04 store 44 woods ' near ' WELDON. JR -==faigs ,7 , ..;1. 1 , 1 ' ilri CS kV SAY Vfi l l:Wltii. ~ f .. A .* . ' ? ~.....' t ar .. ' I `. 4 rOsed . * liredni t taftl ito . - ?To. M . oila rty..lll2omiN TO, TAT , o,tAr.rn_ kuM r taaßnaw.-:. had.linflordtid' =4114. i,,OST-wa Rant $2OO INF Year ~":I; j it _OO2IIIIAutioNEL mai Aims and amend aunts.' 'IA **Alit MOn- ....,, . e T aii rtIEEDIVZ AlrAlWi.;111010011Writ„::<,-. , mw,hrosido, , Cdred. itacip,etait ‘•!--s•• And for Bale lo?' ; .4_ l lUllmmumayw :1 4 .to - lf-4 t vno _cr basalts liolnio' rat t 't'f , - 4 010t02 1 .4.011,41 - 4" gounourriakkik*, Sint trash ' -.."-.. • no-7.44 +oo Imo b.4.p...--,•pdt.tx.i ----- i. f.,; . ~ .? ..., ~
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers