The tholes as It wag 3 ;•• The! 9 0 . 1 / I gOn "SR' See First and Third Page for COllll. -'reif►t'DA/lyillwrYets 1111111121relrNEIWIC IM'EDNESDAY MORNING, JAN. 28• ANOTHER;: CAI7CITS. {Sword Presentation to .1 Oh: • n c-1 Corticie. . . ~; ph Saturday last there was a Republi- Ua caucus held iirthe Avenrie tionsein 1 ' hington, at which many leading men 1 0, that party were present, among whom were Simon Cameron and Johri Covode, rePennsylvania. The principal object of this meeting appears to have been to for really bring Covode before our people for n ext e Governor of our State. Gov.. Curtin ielnot considered quite sound upon the itinatincipation polioy of the administration, !lid he is to be pnt to one aide in order tg lolike way for that , pestilent demagogue, 4.lin Covode. - Mr. Owen. Lovejoy, the hmy abolitionist of Illinois, was present liatlthis caucus. When his time came to mak e It Speech lie proposed the health of "John ,Tecit vode, the poor boy, the honest man; 41, - 'pity he be the nest Governor of Penissyl .nia." John was too modest to , reply to ..,; 1 J 11,13 himself, and he called upon that im riniculate patriot, W. B. Mann, to doit for 1 1i!tn. Mann talked a great deal about 44r, aliont traitors and treason, but never ;a lluded to Covode at`all. _ ''' ' 1 ij The queerest incident of this gathering l -- fr i bf -politicians -was the presentation of a I 111Tord to Covode. If 'this was intended aa ,s. '' bit of iron • it-was -ve • ood • but i !III ) 3", TY g , 1 1. ., if„J i lin seems to have taken it as a serious' ii oceeding. What has he done to'deserve #fit - sword? and now that he has it, to what I Ili fn e will he put it ? It is notorious that he ; , Till not fight. There is not in-Washing - ii n City a gentleman, not even Forney, Ij o entertains xi livelier sense of respect ;:i ii I' or a whole skin than be does. Last fall, l , t 1 1 n. John L. .Dawson, in the town ofi iIJ I diana,in this State in Covode's presence 'denounced him as a _coward and sooun ' el from-he stump, but instead: . of his 'atiii,g these, little pleasantries he en t t i n ured• them w ith'_ _ much christian - res. L. I wiation, and avowed his anxiety tcrbe -liiii terms' of friendship with their author. 1: , ,i, I sword being presented to him is the {loudest joke of the campaign. ,1 Cameron, too, made a speech, in which 44 alluded to the fact of his having saved the government about " forty or fifty per tent" while Secretary of War, by the economy, of his purchases. This bit of information was received with applause. Simon was for punishing traitors, and ' turning every fellow in'office out c who is • i#l , a.Republicail of his own stripe. , ' lii[,Becretary Usher closed the proceed .-- Ogs by toasting the President,--who but -- alifew Weekiiidne`e Mae hint' Secretary of t4i; Interior. In his , speeilkhe gore utter , ' i,hrt !following falsehoOds : ; fit . 1. •." [,„ w7.--7Awieist` organization against us , 1 4Vartheir alt upon the success .. t • V* iebeilfiA, but he did not believe that the petiole would ever give up the court _ 144 _Me .Delnocrats demand that .... t ' - . -..... , ~ , r_ , ,i i i ov.._not runt ,-- high - viiiyta . the sea; but there , are wore dbo- lttiOniite-in New York gain lit New BnOcswl,afid the West is' rifildie rip of people Wha.wereborn, reitedand -brought. npan New• England, Can 'you 'separate ,thOmpther from her Childr l en? rill i 1 '‘ , .... 93 QUEA- 11 :49PIESP."- ' jhe Fittabargh , Gcsilte- appears to be aslittensible. to ahanteealt is to decency; ant ponsiders the ihst, entirely too esq, — r l. 6.m . iSh in relation tcvobscene publica tiootl;. Every gross blackpard and de balril ee in-the community will, probably sa il • ' with it in this imprellisionf but we ispii; hand that the parents and wives and darig I ters who peruse that. - Paper, ' will dire from those ruffians . in : t heir eatiinate ji .of c'tl t r i being too squeamish about the puldkation ofjmatter too disgusting even for itie habitues of a bropeL..theannals :.of crime may be searched in !In -for a melevelting'recital than that we'com. pkti` ed of, and because . the - depravity it =l.pictitiled happened in a Southern State, the l i els'iiitte considers it, a fit subjeetr for liubliiticin. in Pittsburgh , this is (parry ing iikaticism to- an alarming etent.--• We,i ir ember, not many years ago, of a ruffi `lmeinber of congress from . 4 South it, ern S' , i ' referrieLto:, o°4 criminal eaten -der ci ' e eity of New York; 'ivith Its eight thou' , ' 42 , ,foiaiiiiIii i OtIpiostitufilial, asp an sa f ili4tiOilit,piNcl:thera'VCiao;:,ihis man was st.*.enater,-, iert no' more than another . ruffumiitcie .. i gresSeriiiipetitee induce him - " fopirldieli such-vile'reeltals: We may be, ''- in tiaiillagant language of . the Gazette, "siluTrlish" Upon this subject, but we cannoyhelp it,and thismay very-rntrph:_de pend iinthow a man was brought np i lkut we sutailit 'whether it Lis the province of the press, more especially that portion whicli;Ypires to a aemi-religious °twee ter, tlirpread before the public thajtdia' gtieti,details and debauches of the eor- rapt a i o infamous, even if true, There are . dimes which are nameless in the, familicircle—nii publication or comps°. 1 ionshikis permitted by the parent which might taint the "tinnocence of •his house hold. fret all the efforts of the most jetdonKvvatelifitleess are destroyed by this resp44s,/e journal. We are glad to know . ei are "squeamish" on this sub ject. I id. i I; i . Iv The Llverpool Journal of Commerce - says:: "We are able to state, on the best au thority:4l44Captain Semmes intends to ked ety.Or the East . Indies. The Bail . 4 4 - e h a n ge ot ern isin g ground, on -eaalet Alabama has known thfore -th by the initiated, and is only ' im t e . Captain Semmes, original cartYi pro e. Seora*ries Tacker and Watson. The eeeretary of War has concluded to disimui l ei with the 'Aseistant Secretaries of War - alli reorglituise his department. Messrs nicker . and Watson's terms have expiredl7' Mr. .Tucker gave a dinner to some ofibis frier*, on Saturday, and will leave fogl4iiladel&a tomorrow. • . ltPstal Correspondence of the Post, BROM 1 HARRISBURG. • Rona. OFRETREAtAIiTAMFB, Jaartist, tiB6B. Both bronchia of Legialtiture met thillosiAkips 4EttY:BQ, fit the clerk read the 00iatiil of 'ThortidtiOnitti ! Petitions,memorials, &c., being called for`i:',Julge Shitimon presented a petition -froniVii3 MayoKPoliie Offihirs and other citizens of Pittsburgh; praying to extend the provisions of, an act referred to in a former letter, in relation to the arrest of thiniesi to the county of Alleghehy. Also a remn ‘ natrrincq..signed ,by , onel William Wilkins, and other, citizens of Allegheny county, against the bill introduced by Mr. Kaine, of Fayette county, in relation to the Monongahela bridge. Bills.; inplace being in order,Judge Shannon read an act providing for the relief of banks in this Cortunonwealth, and enabling' the State Treasurer to pay the interest.on the State debt in gold. • Dr. Gross, a bill providing for the va cating of a certain portion of the Penn township plank road: Charles - T.-Houston, Esq., a good look• nig editor .from Lycoming county, who had been appointed Assistant Postmaster of the House, appeared and was sworn into office. L Joint''resolutions from the Sdnate, in reference to' the establishment of a navy yard-at ',League Island, in the lower part of the city of Philadelphia, were ta ken up and passed unanimously. 1, In the Senate very little business was transacted, and none of it is of l any in terest to your pepple. As I am tired, having just got; in from Pittsburgh, /Will subside•for the p resent. Eight o'clock and twenty-five ininutes— the House has adjourned. Yours, as ever, 5 4 ':f`i NO MORE STATE MILITIA. The attempt of the Federal authorities at Washington to usurp the functions of Governor Seymour, through the military commander of the East, Gen. Wool, 181 I - viewed with alarm by the citizens of that 'and other States. If the reportl be true that the militia of New York will report tcwand through Gen. Wool, and not the oi:institutional, Commander in-Cgiet, the Governor, then, indeed, has the lira step been taken in the bloody drama ;of civil. war in the North. To this the New York World says: "Were such, an attempt to be successful it would go far to consummate that fatal revolution in the relations of the Ameri can people to their national executive Which the radical faction has been labor ing do assiduously to accomplish. To the national strength and unity of action against the public enemy of the Vnion nothing can be, added by the consolidation of all the military power of the nation in the hands of ad administration which has proved itself to be incapable of conduct ing a great war ; while it would remove from that- administration one serious and important cheek upon its possible and even probable thsposition to end that war by an ignominious peace. It is through the State governments and the lower house of Congress alone that the will of the people can now impose itself, consti• tutionally, upoa the executive and its par tisans. The reserve of the nation's mili tary force, held within the grasp of the States, is an element essential to the prom ecution of the war. To surrender that reserve into the hands of the administra tion is to make the administrationot prac 14.ical despotism, and to leave it at liberty either to carry on the war in a spirit and for objects wholly foreign to the disposi tion and incompatible with the convictions temipate4kciitilitie4 Woo concliffens ruifibtre to the opee' and disgraceful to the honor of the people." PROM WASHINGTON Well informed correspondents I from Washington inform us that feari are felt and expressed that the war eipenditures, at the present rate, cannot be continued for two years longer. The two atio three quarter millions it day now required will be enhanced in amount every month by depreciation, unless, indeed, the war in its progress should be attended with all the particular successes desired for thelpres• eat campaign by Mr. Seward in his letters to Mr. Dayton. Heavier taxation must be resorted,to in order to sustain loans, and it may beceme imprissible in some parts of the country for the people to pay the internal tax a ts.--- Those imposed' 'in John Adatas'• ad Intim' have not been entirely paid up. Many are beginning to assume an early cessation of active war, and the consequent limitation of the amount of the public debt, and a termination of the crisis. Notwithstanding the vigorous resiit alibi offered, as is reported, to the French arms in Mexico, it is believed by military men'that the French troops will enter, the Mexican , capital bylthe middle,of Febru ary. If that should be their chief success, it might beinconchisitel of thiresult of the invasion, but it is well known that they have taken measures to secure pos -1 eession of all the main stragetic pointi in n! Mexico. They have the command , of States in Northeaetern, Western and Southern Mexico. They have the ports on the Gulf of Mexico, the Gulf of Cali l'ornia and the Pacific. They have Mazat lan and Acapulco and Guaymas, and iPiil loon,it,is supposed, take the important . poiteof San Diego. .They have now pos sessinn of ',the - Overland communication across NortherntMexico. The Tehuante pee banns is intheir halide. :fit they have completely-enveloped the'Ms ican States, by land and sea, and are now about to seize upon all the stronghholds in the interior. • I The war department have sent out arms and officers perfectly military, to enlist, drill and put into action all blacks who may rally at the new rendezvous to be to be opened at Brunswick, Georgia. In a few days, the House Committee on Territories will report a bill for the aion of Utah into the Union as a State. ' The bill provides for the abolition of, polygamy and unless the delegate from Utah should give this consent to his provi sion being inserted in the bill,it will not be reported. A bill will shortly be reported in the House for the erection of Shoshone Ter ritory; which will include within its limits that portion of territory formerly belonging to Oregon and occupied by the:Shoshone Indians. I ' Why is a bird like a geedy creature? Be came) rt never eats less than a peek: _ ' • ." For the Post. Ho* A PREE . -. PEOPLE . CON DUCT! A LONG WAR. A Chapter 1 4 oitEnglish History. ;il-4-a , ":,,,:. -• A BY CHAILis r e ' ' . , - -;.-.; .I=l , p t er les. ~ ,,,' ,C 71 .- 4% . .....,, Y tfi . This is theild ei# , 4 45 .Vattplet, .004 has been disiarsialArOldatf,'anffiNhisffi ~i • • has been reprinted„ in line of our Pitts .... burgh journals. We doliidt Arnow who Mr. Stelle is, and -for aught we know, he pay be , a very-harmleas or, a very ~..exem•• •• - ••!:!,...-• .1. .I.s :i• n ..'t ' very' pier?' persotr-inl• private' life--tner soul of-rtanugAittle , ina.party—but-•he led refreshingly innocent of an enlarged ac 'quaintariCe with our political affairs, or with public; affa i rs of any . S ort . It is inti mated that Mr. tills is a youthful lawyer in Philadelphia, if this be. true, he will not probably, f some time to come, add any thing to the sum of proverbial astute , um, which has always been accorded to ] the Philadelphi , bar. But as Mr. Stine's neat pamphlet comes loudly heralded, and as it has - been thought worthy of reproduction here, it is evidently lookeupen as the beat that can be done by th ose who believe that the war has been pr P ro perly conducted, or con ducted as well it could be, and that it should go on for an indefinite period as it it it now progressin. In this view, per haps the pamphlet should be noticed. The writer of 'this pamphlet has evi• dently read some history of the Peninsular' War, (or several histories of it,) and'; of. other wars besid with severe 'attention, and he has discqered•that "the dentinci i ation of the government, so common amongst us of lath, end the complaints of the inactivity orthe army, have their exact counterpar ' in the history of the, progress of all thWars in which England has been engaged since the days of the t l \) great rebellion.” And he discovers that in all these wars E gland was "triumphal' ' except as against Ithe American -Revolu tion. If, as the Whole world has long believed,' England'first and greatest pur pose was to put own the Napoleonic fandly and its ide , we would suggest that the war was not "triumphant." For the heir of Napoleon reigns in France, in spite of the thousands of lives she. sacri ficed to prevent it, and the crushing bar , den of debt underW ich she bends to•day, caused by her &nide s efforts in that behalf. The assumption that England saved her own freedom b . those willful wars is worthy of those pre osterous persons who utter the sublime n osense—" if we do not conquer the Sou h, the South will con quer us . " 1 Of course, the paMphleteer takes for granted that the wars of 'England against Napoleon were necessary, useful and en tirely just , and as ohr war with the South is of the same chareter, he thinks it could and should be maintained as long as the English 'svara, and' at as ruinous a coat. We should be very sorry to think that the contest we e engaged in had not more justifiablefoundation than the wars waged by England against France. The whole civilized i world now believes them to be causeless,' as they were cer tainly barren of good results to England —tor though she coniquered Napoleon at Waterloo, she did not conquer his opin ions, nor drive hint { and his from the hearts of the French nation. But whatever was the declared purpose of the English Ministry in fighting France, they did not insult tb i b common sense of the English people by wholly and openly changing those,purposes. and still demand the unconditional suPport of the nation, as has been done kyle shameless usurp ers who now prevail t Washington. In July, 1861, three mouths after this war begun, Congress, by a Vote of 166 to 1, (or almost unanimously,) parsed the res-, olutiona of Mr. Critten den, declaring that the purpose of the war was not the subju gation of the South nor the overthrowof the institutions of any State. Remember that. the programme of Jett Davis, as then promulged, was know to Congress when it voted, and has not been changed. He holds to his purposes yet, as at first : and in the Crittenden Reablutions the whole loyal nation of all • I pare r ."t"rY, the and for nothing elic restore months after, the redieat majority in Congress falsely and tr acherously repeal. ed that resolution, av wedly prosecuted the war for other pposes, while the ti. people never did agreelto; and never have agreed to—and impudently denounced as traitors those who wore bold enough to say they were deceived and defrauded I They now wage war avowedly for subju- gation—against the 14a1 institutions of the States—and they have even gone so far as to cut a State in two, contrary to the exnress provisions of the Constitution. The pamphleteer finds- in the two na ticins the "same factions and disloyal op position on the part of ajpowerful party ; ' the same violent attacks, upon the govern•, mont for its arbitrary decrees, 4.tc., &c., but he does not seem tol realize that the most daring invasion of free action, free press and free speech, resorted to in mon archical England was far exceeded by the , incapable usurpers at Washington, ' Mr. Stifle wisely intimates that we must not "sneer nor cavil" t our administra tion for its mismanageme tbf the war, be cause the English .gester meat was short, sighted and impraetica e in its policy ,. was ignorant of war, c mmitted stupid blunders, and issued ab urd and contra. dictory orders, dp., dre.l,--just as our selves have done. We begleave to be ex cused from taking the adsfice of the oracu larpamphleteer. ' Now we come to some withering inuen does about thohe whose "factious spirit" is intent on paralyzing the " energies of the I government." Opposition to a ruling ad ministration is a "hideous moral leprosy." [There's a stunning phras e for you], and much more of the same sort. But our pamphleteer should haste a better memo ry. A few pages back he' lled the oppo sition a "powerful party 1 " nowEina-note, he calls them an "insig Meant, restless faction," and the, fact o that "restless faction" eipionget ourselves is decided in edvance, by saying that 'of the great party who opposed the w r 2 no one ever after rose to office or powe in England!' ' This is very discouragin r---but oh I Mr. Stille, why did you not rembmber that the 14 a, opposition (this 'restless filetion.") is in the majority hero at this.. vary: -moment, and that Seymour and Parke/ave just-been elected Governors of New • 'ork,arict New Jersey, and that Bimini-Cameron- was-de feated by a Democratic the other dayi ' • "wil. Pill him foiled and:4lloring bAk; For all Lit Lags of gold" • But our pamphleteer is a financier as well as a historian. He confesses that the thousand millions of debt that Eng ! land incurred was "appalling," but he don't seem to have any fear of several thousand millions for the United Statbs. Bat he gives us thiapiece oil information, which he out to lay before Mr. Chase im mediately: That the troops of England' were paid in gold; from which we are to infer that the English ministry paid all their 'war expenses in gold, and that they did not corrupt their legal currency by making bank not a legal,ltender I. nor pay their bondholders in gold, while they paid their soldiers in depreciated paper: But we should be unjust to Mr. Stille if we did not give him credit for vindicating the American character against a fling of Prince de Joinville, who said that they were in the habit of allowing golden op-i portunities to escape them. He also,.not , having the fear of the radicalls before his,' eyes, suggests that our military o ffi cers , should have an "early military Attention." Stille, in despite of the wretched radicals who control the country, and who openly seek the complete subjugation and uncon• stitutional admission of the South—the only "sort of subjugation," he says, "that limy 'sane man thinks of, is to ldeattoy* (ILsk.wAcio „ - military power.' Undoubtedly true, but)c?lirtavit-vmt AncriezmunavrizArma,..o,auara how can we confide 4 baguette like this to the people who no control the govern ment, and whOttre not nsw fighting with any such purFise? We truskt-he means th people end tbeir,..adhergista,Aen Hof 'til!pestittaitfribilif..donsestic ' nt •r. . e arti'sonfto * r . cb)ititilte that we think littnifitillit7:willliot succeed in making thisco Sunday Deo 28th war - es Napoleon's nisi in strityafroa:tibiritibseriber, a youni small red pow. vrhlte fatte , horint turned in. A ny uniting all the people on the side of those inCcr who are prosecuting it for the purposes Tilutreogrerg*.'llll3.brtigr.s,:ffeßfitatll: they avow. The people, he must remem- lowed. ^. R. nODGL.S, ber, have been betrayed. They went into it-dk w Ohio St., East of Diamond Allegheny, the war , under the Crittenden compact-- thatcompact has been daringly rescinded by tyrannical traitors. They went into 'the' war to preserve the Constitution—that Constitution has been repeatedly outraged and defied by those same traitors. All the resources of the country, its dearest blood and countless treasure, have heed put into the hands of the administration with gen erous trust. Let the sad condition of the country, at this hour, answer how deeply that trust has been abused ! No I No The Democratic party cannot be betrayed twice by Lincoln and his incapables. We believe that the government is good, and will maintain it—we believe that the ad ministration is bad, and we will remove it from power. Perrsaulion, January 26, 1863. To the Editor of the Post : Deep Sin—ln looking over the Chroni cle of the 24th inst., I see a communica . tion over the siznature of Capt. Palmer, of the Anderson Troop. In that article the Captain seems to think had he been with his Troop, the trouble he speaks of would not have taken place. He (Capt. Palmer) Leib us he recruited these men mostly himself, and that said Troop he trained well in Maryland, but censures them for their conduct in Tennessee. Now, if Capt. Palmer was the persins- and the cause of .those young men enlisting in the Buell Body Guard, and he has seen proper to leave them s so much, we, ac the parents of these boys, would wish to know why it was that he left these young men to act in the capacity of a spy in rebel camps, where he would have nine chances out of ten of being captured. If the Government had engaged bun as a, spy to leave his men in. this way, we wo:d not have trusted our. boys to his care. If he has taken o himself to act as a spy , and leave the boys without a leader, we twould hold him for all the troubles occasioned by his absence. We see by his first epistle from Baltimore that he is still living, and in hie first breath censures the very men that if he had been with would have beed all right. Other wise if he hall attended to his men instead of taking a wild goose hunt through Dixey all would have been 'right. When the Captain will explain and justify himself for leaving the men we entrusted to leave this county under him; then and not until then will the public relieve him from the terrible responsibility which he has placed himself and his men before the world. Yours, dtc., B, THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC The able correspondent of the New York Times, in commenting upon the recent failure of the army to make a for ward move, says : "Thus ends an enterprise which had every human promise of success, but which has been baulked and brought to naught by causes which mortal km could neither have foreseen nor prevented.— The fatal part played by the , elements needs no comment. Whether this draw back might not have been overcome by [ vigorous e f forts and hearty co operation on the part of the military leaders, is a [ question much mooted here. There ' are those who assert that. had it not been for the apathy of some -in high places of military command, we might still have carried the This question. however, is one more fit to be brought to another bar than that of these columns. "There is however, anothet point on ; which "I tannin forbear to say a word.—' One of our Washington telegrams, refer-' ring to the causes of thelllte failure, says, "The Quartermaidtar,:stinPpart.ont. my - - n , - mr - un pu t' nt rap... 4.-6 • being , executed, was behind with its sup ' plies. ' 1 have not scrupled in this cor ; respondence to use the privileges of eriti cism to its fullest extent, and can the reader say, therefore, that this is a total misapprehension. Abundant supplies were on hand, and there are at this mo ment more than six million rations stored here in convenient depots. Our chief lack is not in the material, but the moral order. We do not fail for want of food or clothing, of ammunition or arms. The army was never so well supplied with all these things. No! The disease is of a more subtle nature. It is in the blood and brain. We want energy, capacity, faith, devotion. ' 'Tie lo:f , of laid' our veins are sent." The only compensation left us in the face of the failure of a movement, which, if made a week ago, would, in all proba .bility, have been successful, is that we did not succeed in making it at the present tilme. If the storm which has stopped us on the. North side of the Rappahannock had embargoed us on the South side, what is today only a misfortune, might have been a sad disaster. Wes tern Hog Trade. The Cincinnati Price Current of the 21 8 t has returns of this season's pork trade in Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, lowa and Miseuri, and sums up the result as fol lows: The number slaughtered at Lhe date of our advices was 338,947 greater than the total number last season, and the whole number slaughtered and to be slaughered 752,924 greater than the total number slaughtered at the places specified, last THE Internal Revenue Commissioner at Washington, has recently given the fol lowing decisions:—There can be no doubt that newspaper publishers are liable to li cense as dealers—whether wholesale or' retail is a question for the assessor to de termine. News agents, or persons acting as agents for several newspapers, selling and distributing the same, also making collections for subscriptions, will require licenses as dealers only. irflows whose , business it is to solict subscriptions for newspapers, &c.,• will require no license unless they make saleS. Some curious genius states, as the result of an estimate, that a million one dollar. Treasury Notes would weigh over a ton, and make a pile as high as the Washing• ton monument. This will give you some idea of the labor of preparing our Treasury Note issue. V OWELL'S EAT POISON. 'lnstant - death to RATS, , MICE, ROACHES, &c., A quaint old farmer speaksuf yourms ; "DEAR r RuGS, send Me.another box of Rat Poison. The box you gave me killed about 7.000 rats, and I have abott.3.ooo more to Ityleases me to see the pesky critters eat it, and then resign thtmvelvei to their flue, Yours respectfully. D. H. C. Forsale by SIMON JOTENSTON. • inntt oornes Smithfield and Fourth streets VOL CARBONATE OF SODA PILLS, •-.11 1 from the Laboratory of Prof. Brookedon, L ra don, CORRECT ACIDITY OF THE STOMACH, Produced from whatever cause, and removes the effects of Dissipation and late hours more speedi ly and effectually than any other Pre.koration- For sale by r I n ON JUKNSTON, Jan 23 corner Fourth and Smithfield streets. TWO NEW STAMENS TOP BUGGIES whose former price was $125. will be sold now lor s9ooit Mrs. JOSEP H WHITE'S, - mai Canino RePadlocr Two/Milo/tan. 77FYOC WANT A C L 0 A K ., Yon oan gat it at the P ITTSIBURGI , U CLOAK AND MANTILLA STORt, REMARKABLY CHEAP, NO. 78 MARKET STREEIV] lan23 M. J. tiPENCio LANDRETWiIe BARDEN ANI) F ELI)* Seeds. warranted frees and genuine! f reale BECKHAM% •• 127 Liberti! Ornate Jan23:lltw . _ _--7-,-- .11WELLINGfil FOR RENT—E.IIIT 41-F Common $350; 24 'Fetid street, 200:";.ti Perry str eet 200 11 Ross street. 22- ;44 Ulster oa street 300; 77 Chatham street, lea ; 76 First Ares', 10/; 78' First street, 200: 45. agan Street 225; 25,Locus street 170, 72 Reoond atrett: 325; Water street, 350; 23 Ferry 'street, 200; others in various locations Apply to CDINERRT & SOAR, Real Estate and (}snare' Agents.-- 51 Market streets, AJI BELLING ALL RINDS OF • Boots; Shoes, Biogans and Gums, at the old prices, alai - ankh g3ods have advanced 20 per cent. East. Call and examine:nay stock as they were purchased before the advance. ' Coun try merchants supplied at Bastera•prieis.at 4, BORLAND% , Cheap Cash Store. 9$ Market • st r eet;. 21 dots. from llifth > Istat OPPICtB OP PITTSPIIRGH * Rosana m tatstriCti..} Pittsburgh, Jantiary,24th.l.B63; DIVIDEND NOTICE—THE DIREC. rectors ot the ?Mato:nib and Boston Mining Company hare this day decl ared aDirldend•of FOUR DOLLARB per . sharti on the Capital stock. Payable on and after Thuraday ,the 29th insk. to stockholders or their legarepresentaelrea TROIKAS M. HONE,' • President. ian.l43Ld CONCERT JRA-riL GOTTSCHALK THE PUBLIC ABE BESPECI'FIILLT. informed that. L. M. GI)VI'6OE/ILK. the eminent Pianist and Composer will havetho hon or of giving in Pittsourgn, wo grand ,c oneerts, on Bitturday, Jan. Monday, February gd, 'whim -he- *ill .newfurNt some oihis latest com p ositions;whichhave area* ted so great a sensation In New York, Bostone Philadelphia, and all the Western cities. The celebrated Prima Do-na, • MISS CAB - LOTTA PATTI, Will make, on this occasion, her fareweil appear ance in Pittsburgh. previous to her doper are for Europe. whore she is engaged at the Royalltalian Opera. Covent Garden, London, Mr. Gottschalk and Min Patti will be assisted by the diett,ngnish ed Tenor, Dig. COBLO bCOLA. from N Y.Aead emy of Music. and the Pianist Mr. V. De RAM, Musical Director and Conductor, r, 8 Behines The programme will be changed each per.orm-' aace. Admission N 9 ceirs. Reserve seats .2ao extra. Reserve seats may be secured for either of the 'wo Concerts at the Music Store of Mr. John ii. Mellor. commencing on Thursday at 9 o'clock. Doors op. nat 754' o'clock. :Comteence at 9 o cloak. • jau2Vid --- Househ old Furniture at Auction. y THURSDAY 31011.14aNG. OFA/VV.A -r w il l oolock. at' madame No. 77 Fourth creel , be sold Household and Kitch en Furniture. comprising walnut and Ironwood cane sett chairs, walnut sofa seat rocker, walnut and cherry if and L post beadeteads, mahogany card tables, side do. small b ok ease. walnut: en closed wash stand,, sew tis stand& lampa, veni tian and transparent bhnes, fenders, parlor, din- , ing room and chamber carpets, oil cloths, stair carpets. mahogany and guilt frame mirrors, oil osdntioAs sad engraving& mentleornam irati, Bu reaus, minin g tables, large cook MOTO. wireluide s • ishmand wean utensils in nan. : ALIO a OWL de Terms oash—par funds, ina3 A. M'CLELLAND. Aue't DR.& HZ'S PLAJNITATIO • - DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS For sale.bY JOSEPH .FLEMIIN For sale by JOSEPH PLISMING: corner Market street and the . Diamond, Corner of the Diamond and Market Streets, TRUSSES, TRUSSES TRESSES TRUSSES. TRUSSES, 'TRUSSES, A large and super'or assortment of Trusses all sizes, for adults and infants, for sale at very low prices. Those wishing any thing in this line should cal and examine my rock. as I- am con-: lldent the prices and quality diny_sooonetitlor.., JOSEPIII.rxxxiMEI , , JOSEPH FLEXING . Corner of the Diamond and Markat-Streets, g sir Superior No I Carbon .011 attO cents per ollon Mn2t.i L A DINMUSSES AND (AlitLl!RtNill GOAT BALM-ORALS of a very superior quality, just received, and for sale at W. E. SCHMERTZ & CO., 81 FIFTH STREET DOORS AND ALBUMS AT AIICTiON Prices at Masonic Hall Auction House. 55 Fifth street. For a few days only. I will olose out the balance of Mr. Pratt's great annual-con signment of Hooka. Paper, Cold Pens. Photograph Albums, Family Bibles, inn. at private sale at Auction Prices. Call soon it you want bargains. laa'4lwd T. A. MoOLELLAND. Aue,t.) RAISINS Mil 300 boxes, 100 hali and 100 quarter boiea new M. R. Raisins. 100 boxes and 100 half boxes new l allr 25 F Ralsth rails n a nd ; less Raisin* 25 Rea do do - • 24 boxes Smyrna do ' Now landing and for sale by • REYMBR k DIVERK Roe: lan andll2sl, mid 'street ' 'NTERESTING TO CITT A COUNTRY: 'DEALERS • IitILLIkE ELS lin) "PEDDLERS During this month. (January) we will close out at our entire stook of the following seasonable goods - • Reduced .P.H.e34313, TO MAKE ROOM FOKSPRIMO GOA 4 1 8 i Dealers will 114 our assortment of these , tile& well suited to their trade, both fri.prioe_and .alai' ety, the prices of many artioles being lewer:than they can to-day be bought in the 'New. 'reek or Philadelphia markets, 1.141/ Germantown, Boston Ribbed and Knit' WOoleri Hadery; • Gloves, Gauntlets, Buot ant Voiol GlOirea and Woolen Undershirts and _Drawers, Wool ItoOda. Comfortit,Bcarfe. - Also, of TrimmingeL2Fsiner Gook Bittent Threads, Braids awl .Nottone, our olio lot Is. not gmspeesed - ineheapnissi hirany in the olio.. we ask special notice in our etdok•of. HOOP SHIRTS, as welaave facilities for ationlYner the best and moot reliable make at very low rates. MACRUM & GI;TDE. N 0.78 Market Street. • isinll3 Between Fourth and the Diamond; /Mama IsEED-20 B U SHELS mew, ver teed RIM received and to. Well JAB. A. corner Market and Mut &reels.- BAJ1164LIB! ROO* CONCERT 62 Fifth tre very pair warranted and The best goodiiir' town, ani loweat. erkea. , . _ . , .. PITTH., Ft. Wtrasi kOniOaortitanwAi Co. • } .... porroo 'VP THE gI_yI*ETAII.T. 1 ,,, ; _,' . 1 ... ttfolorirk Pa;. Jan.-M:1863 I.fr, yruxi ANXUAL..IIIII:B2ING-';11# TaffE • . - I'Stook ,arid - 43endholdire of thisAtiompav for the . toeistitui 'of Direotora ant el/ohs:di:tat batt-,, pees al, com e -before it will - in held at 'lbw Office 6f Skit Compensi in the city'of Pittebtritt on -the •To eels ' , Wednesday' 'of February. A. 1).. 1863. -The Stook andon er oo of the if a viaiiii Tie iz: Comp I.t their Office in Pthe: City 6f ?ittsbargh arid at thew transfer Agencyln Ibis City of New York, Will hot eldeed on Ahe2aoth 'ay of February and remain °WWI - until- the 28th rof,flebruary thereafter.._ '''',. ' . W..II..BARNES. ~."' 1 sanlEith td_' , . ....,; ...; . '.---- r'`Secretary. • ..... 2-Eixo.xvs,,,- HARROWS . ; SPARES, shovels. hay, and manure farks;;hay. knives. Pinning inilainnents of allkinds.for solely OHHAM & LONG . 121 LibeztrEtratitl. ianf B.daw- FODDER ,CIPTTERI9,--001111C MEL -KY lers Farm d ' n , Horeertmereati thrashers , oonetantly hand'and for ask by 131 14/18 - 4-414.L0NG1 : lan23:de-w • _ • • , •-•l27•Liberti tared. _ - . 212 Ecii HAM at lAMB. 197,L18 Ty street- Wholekilivand retail dialers-Jill gricul I u ral tuld lartoirs Jaiplemezitai -4111 'kinds. - wheelbarriiirs: Ant Dorn, okurns. fruit ani kbadejfelea. , , 'ian2Sfurw. , - .S4TrAV 131..StEit coy . - - To Strengthen and Tiniiiove the Sight. PEBBLE`""` Russian • •-•- 'Etpactiieleki";" msBonB-,6111F - PERMS fritosr feativesight, arising from ego or other cam as. eat be teheved by tfehurtha RkOislan Feb. I ble Spectacle*, which have been well tried by "matirrtspoitsibla cititens of. gittshurgh: and vi towhomlleithave'sairemperfecreatisfao- tiou. The. certificate!, of these persona can be seen at inc Office. pi. All who ureitese,one per of the Russian Pebble' Spectac l es are entitled to be supplied in flame fre e charge :with there.which wilt always give satisfactinn. • Therelore. if you wi.h -to ensure an improve ment in your sight cation X. DIAMOND , Practical Optician bfanui -Th wit' are!. of the It nastan• Pebble ,Speeacles. aulfi N0:39 Firth airoet. rest Buildixte. N EW FRUITS A.IITD RUTS 100 boxes prime ()xao_ggts• E•. /001. c 2. ; do ~I terneeir" t 2 0 Bles Dew tft lis2l.lVilnuts: 20—do doxuberbg_ 20 -do -do' - Brawl 'Nutt 20 do EstesE.Coeos Nutt ' '5O --do.Auxonds:Bordqouxt'lxica: Jot 'readied spa for Hale Int EYMER - kisitOT, Noe. 128 e n d 1.22-Wood,skeet, S0ABSI• ' ' 200 bblt Reftned Coffee &maw no-in store and for.sale by . RHYMES. kB110 . 8.:—.. San 26 Nos. W . and 128 Wood lava. M.,/ . AP: E RA L C 1 1INTlier RE denee for sale—Tea .aeres of exeellernClOd wall intprOved- and, in goodM~ABE~, ,~,: - -,=-:'cos:::;, '' , Oankrit9AkattOgiii ', , PAO' .:- . :4:4114_1 - .,:a 1 =EMI