Capri as It woo; Co tattoo so 11 Ist girSee rst and Third Page for Corn meretai • Markets and River News MOlil DAT MORNING, FEB. 2 TipIRY ARRESTS. The C''i!, or the Philadelphia , 11 . Journal. The liT onak , Intelligencer says - the • cause of M .-Belileauts arrest is stated;to• be the'liiblPati4ii bf an editoral article on the, me ete4 of . General aefferson Davis, contrasting it w#h the message of Presi -4 dent'Lindif to is the prejudice of the lat ter. Can i t is be possible? Has President Lincoln 'd d a for such a paltry cause as this, tO viE ate the sovereignty and the laws of pdynsylVania? If this be so; and the outrao3l is' not resented and avenged by the Ex 4 nave and the Legislature in• a manner lid owing the dignity and inde pendence' 11, the! State, there is not a true '' man withib her wide boundries who will not bencefp th tilbsh to own his nativity. —.Exchali . We ha '' no idea that the President I knew any , g whatever of the arrest al r lnded to,li ut that does not lessen the enormity-: 'f the outrage committed.- 3 The Presi itnt's dog, Forney, 'we appre hend, h 3 invisible. power.which directs these outrilies iu 'Pennsylvania. He is just the nill3 for s uch petty malice, provi ded he feill II irniclf secure from detection i l and chastis men t. Last summer Mr. Inger soil. of Pit adelphia, made a speech in it which he3le xpressed his anxiety fur "a change in e administration," but honest ,I Zorney pr ted it "a change in the goo - erninent,"l: nd npon this he was immedi ately arre: ed. 1 Little - tie we. think of , Prsident,' I nioles resent performances, we do not ,hink ?lira capable of the con temptiblei , at in question. To arrest a citizen.becait - se lie considers our President the inferto , intellectually, of Jefferson Davis, see 1 s absurd. It might as well be done 4 ause of pronouncing him in ferior to tti EMperor of the French.—, ill Nobel 4 lit an! ignoramus would make , such a Si! parison ; but the towering intellect 4lNaPoleon nor the ability of Davis doetenot excuse either for the crimes they hat 4, conimitted signing their f i L re spective, trice. If Jeff. Davis was not a m ' !of extraordinary powers he would not; where he is. The leaders of such a stuOtadotis rebellion as that of the South would setticely select a fool to direct their operations; and the most prejudiced amongst nii mmit acknowledge that their choice haCnot as yet proved a failure. Had the rebellion a less resolute, self reli ant and sag! cioutt head, we might, ere this, have scattered its armies to the winds, but the conspeors knew in thean of men to lead their urpa:tibn, and he was the iron willed andi,rfar-raching Jefferson Davis. PrettideUt'!Lincoln's intellectual qualities can not: tliiffer, in public estimation, by acknowledging them equal to those of, the rebel chie# t 'n. I This era!, tion, of our President's abili ties and delflieciatton of -those of the lead ing rebel i i -•but; a continuation of the blunder committed by the radicals at the beginning'' f hostilities. The power, re sources an 'endurance of the South were underrated! land t:despised; the personal courage oi #s men doubted and our own exalted, unit many were led to believe that the reellion would prove a passing spasm. T fatal delusion has been the ir s cause of o i !;disasters ; and, notwithstand ing the te ble lesson it teaches. we find I those wh should profit most by it tt ri arresting an imprisoning a. citizen be cause he 4 s evidence of more intellect ; in Jeff. Det!ia than he does in President Lincoln, at this is all sham; Mr. Lin coin: never Ordered an arrest for such a cause. Th ' ntrage we believe to be For ney's worki ! t ecause of the frequent casti gations wCS , the Evening Journal in flicted flicted --nrid the' and pestilent renegat The , 7 , , _ 4 show Washington have of late been sug gesting coutliiimartial, and manufacturing reports to sten t heir own blunders, must place but al 'eery contemptuous estimate upon the cOmuloa sense of the people. .114 1 These WashTgton strategists have induced Gen. Pope thi make what they term an official repo4 of hifi campaign in Virginia, which is evi4ntly intended to impress the reader with th l e absUrd idea that the cam paign alluded 10, iustead of being the most disastrous ofi' il he War, was, in reality, an l absolute stW as. , 1 This new report is i; 7.1) dated New Y ck, HO Jknuary 27th, , and tills, in amall' l e, nearly ten of the ample columns of t 1 u Tribune. It bears upon its face, to• ti . i , nothing of the notorious character of 1113 author, the palpable evi, deuce of an ort to not only bolster ttp, Halleck and',. l 'e War Department, but to! censure tliosuifpon whom the country has looked as th' jr ablest defenders. This report of Poy:', upcin the heels of the de. cision of the ,Oourt Iwartial of Fitz John Porter is but hit elaborate effort to further prejudice pub 8a opinion, not only against that officer, 14t against all who thought as he did, ini l Ogard to the proper persons to lead our ar4tes against the rebels. An ,official report'!" riow, coming from Gen. Pope, relatin *hat took place last July, is but another at lking evidence of that unfor tunatef o ffi ceri 1 !' riblime audacity. It is, as we have state „ an elaborate attempt to bamboozle th,,, people, by falsifying the well authentic "fed history of Gen. Pope's disastrous callikaign in Vt' • • rguna. il. • GICREL** PROPOSITIONS at PEACE. i 1 , .Horace fill Feat s on the ti IS not la - thir have been so 4 conservative o , :e author is mat temptibre. I, awaylis prev in 'Friday's hilifi ing. The thi ,. ,l Bunab,r s "if im Lincoln's platii • ig ley's late propositions for fit of May, if the rebellion itime utterly demolished, mercifully handled by the 'b. of New York, that their • to pear utterly con• endeavoring to explain 4s absurd propositions, he, is, flounders in ti 4. 4of these woitiky i man can he "or i tide that "it is easier to the ~ r `• pay .a small sum nIL s'to i a urger .one, , and easier still f.d.pay nothing than itrfikomething." Ent saySklteilley We believe that= the *tie for the has , now; entaited upon a phase *hick in alliptobabili'lintot prove final— thifinsare on tfttieve, of-tut:warning-corn binations, attacks, battles, Whereof the result must be well nigh decisive. 2. We-believe that the rebels are about to be badly whipped at several vital points, finTdthat their 'defeats will be so conclusive thaffinyitnPartialumpire would thereupon advisethem that their enterprise is hope less, and that they ought to give it up. 3. We believe that, if our armies do not whip theirs, theirs will whip ours. .4. We believe that, should they be suc cessful and we defeated in the general re sults of the campaign now opening, im partial third parties will say that we ought to consent to peace op the best attainable terms. Whether we shall take that coun sel or renew the struggle, as a united peo ple who have come to understand and tr accept-its real character, the cost and suf fering involved, events will determine. 5. But we believe that the time will come—we do not say how soon, as that must depend on the results of conflicts yet future—when the Great Powers of Europe will mediate —not by blows, nor by menaces, but by representations— against a continuance of the struggle, as fruitless, wasteful butchery, and urge settlement in the interests of Humanity and Commerce. We hope to see this in terposition take the form of an emphatic protest against farther persistence in the Slaveholders' Rebellion; but to this end it is probably essential that the intervening battles shall result differently from the re cent attacks on Fredericksburg and Vicks burg. In short, we believe—and would thun der it into the ears of, our Union St stes men and Generals—that speedy and deci sive success is essential to the' salvation of our country—that the Union will be lost by anothet campaign'as dwadling and in effective as those of McClellan and Buell during the year of grace 1862. We fully believe that our country may and we trust that it will be saved —but to this end our statesmanship and our soldiership for the next four months must be an improve ment on the average of those of the last year, In our view, the life or death of our country is no longer a question of years, but of months, and it is imperative that our rulers and our Generals should realize and act on this truth. i;. FREEDOM ON TRIAL The New York World in an editorial on the Philadelphia outrage on the version of the Press says : The administration at Washington have deliberately undertaken, in their course in respect to this affair, to browbeat and in sult the publiccpinion of the great central states to which they owe their own exist ence. The arrest of Mr. Boileau is not a blow aimed at one particular journal in one particular city of the Not th. It is an open, and audacious 'attempt to meet the expression at the polls of the will of the American people by the last resort of s laveholders and of kings. It is the crack not of the "plantation" but of the "offi cial" whip over the necks of the free states. In this sense it must be under stood, and in this sense it must be met. The basest of the partisan organs of the administration, the Philadelphia Press, has already undertaken to justify this in solent invasion of the rights of American citizens : and its justification provokes notice not so much by any force of state ment or of reasoning which it possesses as bytle fullness with which it lays before the public mind the only fallacies and mis representations which have or can be, pleaded in extenuation of these subversive and revolutionary proceedings. The Press is not ashamed to print in the city founded by William Penn and made famous by Benjamin Franklin these words, worthy of the worst days of the Stuarts in England, as a commentary upon the course of .Judge Ludlow : "He must know, cs a lawyer, that in times of danger from civil war, rebellion, or invasion, it is the right of the executive power to place in custody any citizen or person whose liberty may seem to preju dice the public safety. It makes no differ ence whether the citizen or person has been charged with crime, or even committed crime, if he is regarded as an enemy of the country ; if his being at large at all affects the public peace or safety, he may be taken into custody until the danger is over." It is hardly possible to speak in meas• are& terrne of such language as this, used by au American journalist and addressed to American citizens. If Philadelphia were this day menaced by the victorious armies of Jackson and of Lee : if the gov ernment of Mr. Lincoln' were this day fleeing for safety to the hilla of Berk shire: if the Alabama and the Florida were this day bombarding The navy yard at Brooklyn, we trust and beliet'e that American citizens enough would be found in the metropolis of Pennsylvania and in the metropolis of New York, undebauched by office and unpalsied by the cowardice of conscious political crime, to maintain the ancient liberties of American men against such hideous l extravagancies of administrative paltroonery. But what is the real state of the case? The loyal North stands today twenty millions strong, in arms against five mil- lions of rebellious Americans of the South. Our fleets so command the ocean that in spite of the inibecility of our naval administration no port of all the Southern coast is free of ingress and of egress to the Confederate government. We stand to-day, in relation to the rebellious South, where England stood in 'relation to the colonies when the precedents vi hich are to-day alleged in defense pf such infamous assaults as that of General Schenck upon the most sacred rights of thought and' speech were tolerated by our beleaguered and over-weighted ancestors. It is not to the history of de colonies, but to the history of England in the war of 1776, that the administration must look for an tecedents when it dares la dream of sub jugating the citizens by virtue of whose faith and confidence and loyalty alone the government exists to-day., The article which served as-a pretext for this attack upon all that makes the Union dear to us, and theeetution worthy the precious blood a spilled in its defence may or may not have done more than justice to the mere ability of Jeffer son Davis, less than justice to the adruinis tration.of Abraham Lincoln. But what ever the opinions on this point of any man may be, he . would deServe the scorn of honest men of all parties who should for a moment pause from his contemplation of an atrocious wrong upon all that makes Amerieat freedom real to criticise the phrales or to rebuke the spirit of a pare- graph. It is no question Of "loyalty" or "disloyalty" that is raised by this matter. It ie a question of the value of loyalty.— Men talk of "preserving the life of a na- tion;" but deeds like thi• 7 7? Gen. Schenk followed by applause like %,:ts of tyt Phil. 1; adelphia Press, mean 4 rnit - 4 liftitiiiit, tlfir death of the nation. ''_ - 6 Cf. gi If things like these;',canjt do tekt,i the United States with ilisaptilit,i4o:-.hation. has already ceased tKlixe. in in all that makes a nation: in iinkfiritellnet and in the will, in the faeuliies that insist upon truth, and in the elnyttgn. which, maintains the - results of ibotle4aditltiiis. -:.' • I What.profits.it4o ainanif he _gainAhe whole world and lose his owlet soul? And of what avail to the nation of the United e tt States will be the emancip tion of three million negro slaves and tit subjection of twice three million white r bele if in the process every spark of man ood is to be trampled out of the •Am4iettt breast; every sanctity of law to he overthrown in American states ; and the irresponsible will of an accidental admintration to be substituted for the deliberate, free, and untrammeled judgment of a great and in: tellieent people ? Thurlow Weed Retires from the Albany Evening' Journal. His Valedictory . Patrons, Friends and Readers: My interest in and connection with the Albany Evening Journal, t ias proprietor and editor, terminates wi the present sheet : and, but that custorb sen'atiorni;if 1 it does not call for parting words, nothing would remain but to say—Farewell I This word, when it suniiers relations which have existed pleasantly for nearly thirty-three years, cannot bq uttered_light ly, or without emotion. During thatlong term of years, I have in soMe sense—and I hope the comparison may not be deem ed irreverent—occupied an Fditorial Pul pit, speaking daily to a large Congrega tion, for whom I have come to feel the re lation of Pastor and Frienld ; and from whom I have certainly experienced all the benefits and bounties Unit a generous flock bestows upon its shepherd. Though but a few hours' have passedi since the transfer papers were executed memory has been busy T ammonia back the dread past, in the up of .uthic i ecil and good are necessarrily mingled. The friendship, faith and fraternity is hioh have so long bound men to me with "hooks of steel," through'trials to tri umphs, burdens the memory and the heart with a profound sense of obligation. Nev er in the history of our State has an ed itor enjoyed so long and in largely the confidence of trose politica ly associated with him : nor in no other edittfr's expe rience have political and peksonal rela tions been more happily blended. But we have fallen uporf 'evil times. Our country is in immediate and imminent danger. I differ widely with ray party about the best means of - crashing the re b, Ilion. That difference• ii!! radical and irreconcilable. I can nether impress others with my views, nor nrrender my own solemn convictions. T e alternative of living iu strife with those horn T have esteemed, or withdrawing, • presented. I nave not hesitated in cho sing the path of peace as the path of duty. If those who differ with me are right, and, the country is carried safely thrqugh its pres ent struggle, all will be well and "nobody hurt." 1 -_ In approaching the end of ney, when one of the party ( membering how pleasant it only thinks Of it to.itlark his worthiness of his compauio tinue on, and to wish tht whole grateful heart, endurit and happiness. ' It is fifty-three years since I was first introduced, as an apprentice, to the "space-box," and forty fiveears since I became an editor. During ore than half i a century of toil and care, I ave experi enced so much that is good ;I,nd bright in life ; partaken so richly of i s blessings ; have found so many of my race to honor and love, that this hour of i4olation pros trates the heart in thankfulneSs to Man for his support, and gratitude to God for Mill abiding protection and mercy. Since the Evening Journal was estab lished, in 1830, Time, in Its resistless coarse, has swept thousands f its original' patrons out of existence. The - names of most of its original city subcribers may be now found inscribed on m rble in the rural cemetery, where also rest loved ones whose presence once gladdened and bright ened my own home and h'parth. And here, again, while the grave has taken much to afflict, it has left lunch to con sole. These thoughts, out of place, per haps, will, at such a moment, find utter ance. I leave the Journal in the Mande of my late partners, who have purchased my in terest. They are eminently worthy of the I continued confidence and suliport of its 1 friends. Mr. Dawson cameth me when T a boy, and has, as apprentice, onrneyman, foreman, partner and editor,b een associ ated with me for thirty-six y6ars, during I which long period there has never been a jar or an impatient word between us. Mr. Parsons, under. whose anspices a small job-office (started in company4with my late and only son) has grown in a printing house, has been for twenty years pleasant ly associated with me. The Messrs. Teu Eyck have grown up, from their boyhood, in the office, more like sons ' a than mere business associates. F. W. S e ward, tem porarily absent, with his high cultivation sad amiable character, completed our charmed circle. In businesii matters I have had no concern or anxiety, leiving all in their hands, never lookidat a ledger for an account And in now offering to sell them my interest, I asked them to i de termine its value, as they did o my entire r them, as Dr. Franklin says he did for the -young printers whom he brought up I and estab fished in business, the solicitude and affec tion of a father. If the country was not in a Condition to awaken deep anxiety, I should look for ward with cheerfulness and hOpe to that condition of life which, . - : . I - "Exempt from 'public haunts, Finds townies in trees books in the running brooks, , Sermons in ~t ones, awl good in everything," But for an infirm leg and fli broken arm, 1 . would go into the army, for the country is entitled to the services of all fts citizens, , and it is more a privilege than 1 a duty to defend a Government under whose benefi cent sway and benign-rule we /Lave enjoy ed protection, prosperity and 'happiness, and in the destruction of which the best' hopes of the highest civilization perish. So far as all things personal ate concern ed, my work is done. Should the occa sion to serve my country, wit i head or hand, offer, it will be gladly embraced. And now, with all that relates . T o material' wants in life abundantly supplied, with no personal interest or aspiration tingratified, with an humbling consciousness of having experienced through life mor l e benefits than I have deserved, and vdstly more than I have been able to reciprticate; and I with a determination to deiote finch brief time as may he allotted to me to the prac tice of Dr. Franklin's golden recent of ' doing "as much good and as lit tl e evil" to others, as possible, I come to t he inevita ble--FAREwEi.r.! WEED. THIIRLOW JAN. 27, 1808 Nominated. . The President has nominated ate Andrew Wiley, to be Judge o Thal Court of the District of COI . place being vacated by the dea Crawford. The Importan. e Or the ISBOO I Ai sit( oian.2Bth, WPM Thenitkariratilf "Air. Wetly= Fthe tlitorial ' charge the' . Eveniniliou4a/ hill forms an imp_ortant feature in gossip 714 theltate capita.. , Thei t gloinny boding exhibited throughout his "fare well," in regard to the future of the nation, and the fate that awaits us under the negro ROJipy,,has made a deep impression on thi citablidmind here. It is' useless to state-thatlhis feeling is fast taking poa tiession, of all classes here. The recent action of the national government, in re ference to the old and tried generals of the army, did more than most people im agine to increase that feeling. The idea that slavery is no longer the real issue of the hour, but that we haie reached the point when the Bole question is, shall the republican institutions prove a failure and tire progress that has for a long time been made in liberalizing the policy of kings E4O monarchs , and the weakening of the pa,wers oftyrents throughout the world. The radicals are keeping up an incessant clamor abontthe negro for the par pose of blinding the eyes of the people to the real issue, but there has been exhibited during three or four days a strong feeling that broader, higher and more extensive issues are now at stake no one can deny; that with the divisiod of this country and the failure to restore the Union in all its parts will be seized upon by the, crowned heads of the Old World to tighten their reins and diminish the liberties of their subjects, with a return to the tyranny that existed before the formation of a government here, based upon the rights., of the sub jects insteidotApen„.*The,;ot: . the royal circle. Thatthis is ap,rgrAbe4,4:cal issue, and net,that, of slavery t :.everirsev . eprl of the radicals freely . admit. The • signs of the times strongly indicate that the clamor of the Abolitionists, through the Tribune, Independent and kindred journals, will not much longer be able to divert the pub lic mind from the great moral issues af fecting every nation on the face of the earth by their continual and incessant ap peals for the negro. Shall the freedom of a few slaves of the South destroy the liberties of mankind throughout the world, is likely soon to become a question of no minor importance. ddress. pen. Burnside and Gen. Hooker. /he New York Herald has the following Vzshingtotttrainor : ".Among tie on dips afloat in this city with regard,to the change in the command of-the . Artni of the Potomac. is one that Gen: Burnside insisted on being relieved •o .zn his command on the ground of a .difficulty between Gen. Hooker and him self. It appears that when General Burn side discovered his artillery, &c., stuck in the mud, he proposed, in an assembled council of war, to leave the artillery and make a bold attack with his infantry, on the ground that the rebels would not be more able to move their guns than himself. General Hooker opposed this, and said he would not go without the artillery. This caused the expedition to be aban doned and the-army ordered back. Gen. Burnside then came to Washington and resigned.". Burnside and McClellan The editor of the Times writes to his journal from the army of the Potomac apropos of General Barusida'a resigna tion: If the President declines to permit him to control the army which he com mands—we are in chaos again. Under such circumstances, Gen. Burnside will unquestionably retire. The first question that will arise is, Who shall be his sac• orator? And the next is, Is he to be ham perad in the flame way? If he is, it mat ters very little who the commander may be. His command will be only nominal. If he is held subject to the caprices of the President, and exposed to the machina. lions of his subordinates, he can neither act with spirit and energy himself nor can he infuse energy and spirit iuio the army under him." la long. jour rope out, re has beeh, he 'sense of the !•11 ,who con- Lai, with his g prosperity If this be true of Gen. Burnside and of his successor, R byy is it not true of his preciecesior also It was a confessed Trtprice of the President," a caprice •• under pressure," which surrendered Gen, McClellan's heel laid plans in hi: most important campaign to the —machi nations of subordinates." This "caprice" cost the country a year of time, millions of money, thousands of gallant men's lives, and the golden opportunity of end ing with credit and success a war which seems now to be degenerating into an end less and aimless system of massacres. Will the Miss do justice at last by this new-found light of truth to the commander whom it has for months past been steadily and persistently holding up to the passion ate hatred of all the unthinking and ma lignant among its readers? Murder of a Catholic Priest. The Catholic Telegraph states that Hey. John T, Hyatt, formerly of the 4,rchdio , cese of Ohio, but for *last year or so pastor of the Catholic churoh,pf Chatta nooga, Tenn., has just died at that place, from the effects of wounds inflicted on him by a party of three ruffians, who waylaid hint on the public highway, and having cruelly beat him, then shot him With a re volver. He lingered a month after in great agony, when death ended his sufferings. PRENTICE says the New York Tribune and other papers of its stamp, by giving countenance to the idea of foreign media- tion, are doing nearly as much wrong to the•caaee of the Union as they did by their advocacy of the Emancipation Proo twation. Banking in 1882. The number of banks in 1862 were 1,• 492, of which 511 were in the New Eng land Stater 502 in the Middle States; 147 in five Southern Atlantic States, 142 in five - Southwestern States, and 164 in the Western States. WE have seen it somewhere stated that the word "skedaddle," from the Greek. This le confirmed by a writer who says it is Irish, derrived from sgedad, scattered, which with of added, means all scattered. He quotes a passage from an Irish New Testament,.thns—"Yor it is written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep of the flock shall be sgedad•ol." AN editor says that.the only : reason why his house was not blown away during the, late gale was because there was a heavy mortgage upon it. On Sunday evening, Feb. ht, Mr. C, L. MAGRE, in the 55th ear of his age, The tuners!: will take place on. Masada,. after 'noon at 2 o'clock; from his late residence, No. 39 High s'r•-et. •••7 . --1800—X. - BANE'S PLANTATION BITTERS, D They Purify. Ftrauthen and invigorate. The crea t e 'healthy appetite. They are an antidote t o change of water :ad diet They overcome the effects ot diaipations and late hours. They strength the system and enliven the mind. They They prevent miasmatic and intermittent fevers Puffs the breath, and acidity of the stomach. They cure Dyarepsia and Constipation. The cure Diarhea„ Cholera amiCholeraMorbus They cure Liver Complaint and Nervous Head_ ache. They are made of pure St Croix Bum, the cele brated Calisay a Bark, roots and herbs, and are ' taken with the pleasure of a beverage without regard to age or the time of day. Pertic; lllo, - Commended to delwate persons requiring a gentle atimultmt. Sold by Fourth and JOHNSTON. feb2 corner Totuth and Smithfield streets ~ theSen tbeqint• 1., bia, the of Judge DIED: TR-D.,: : MINTS. MtALtEtt y cogltry DEMOtR kTIC mite" OrrlEß—Ahtatedruestfur r orthe AlteginnlY County Dlenocritio ClubrArill he held at the Hall. comet of Guint - indlUth streets. on Tow daxerventm, Feked, at 7,:freelook. Persons de drots oymni nt .:,th e organisation 11- e requested tositt BY ORDER 0E l '; of. . . Corner of Penn & St. Clair St., Pitta'n THE LARGEST, CHEAPEST AND best of the United - States. $35 pais for a fall Commero al course, including Writing and Commercial Arithmetic. Bo extra charges for Manufaotuers. steamboat. Railroad and Bank Book-keepirg, • • Minister's sons at one-half price. Students en ter and review at any time. This Institution is conducted hy. experienoed Teachers and practice( business men; hence the preference for graduates at this College. by busi ne t s men throughout the country, as well this city Pr. . of. A. COWLEY. long known'as e•e• beet Penman of the Orion. teaches Ornamental and Rapidßusiness , Nrittng. Sir For specim us ofProf. Cowley's unchained .Writing, and Catalogue containing full infornm tion, enclose twenty-five cents to the Prinepals. JENKINS dt feb2:ltawdstrtf. BOOTS: AT M'CLELLAND'S f UCTION, ian3l SHOES AT Masonic Hall Auction Rollie istn3l BALMORALS.. AT NO, 55 FIFTH STREET. EYE AND EAR AND THE ORDANS of Sense Medically-and Surgioaby treated for all the diseases to.-.which they are subjected by . , Ds. Joangii ~. 1 ' .of New York. who h now practiting at the ' _ . ST, CHABLIS. Honk Pittsburgh, Pa.. where he will remain until Feb, 22d. .18t33. Cr oas EYst - ; straightened without !ail • , --- 4 in tw., minutes; Art:tidal Eyes inserted to mote and appear nattrr.al. with cut pain; Cataract operated for. _gra all other deli-ate operations in SugerYrtrformed. Dr. Jones is a grarivate of a nowt pathia, Aleapath ic. Eye and Ear College, turria hospital higaplo-- mas from the same ate suspended in his office,- Room OS St. charles clot el, httelinrgh. ka. Dr . . J. gives medal &gentian to all those difficult die* eases that are not understool by family 'Wiled, clans. jan3l;lwda2tw • GREAT SALE OF BiTOTS.SHOEJA. and Gams to elm oat Fall stook to make room for spring and Summer Giods at JOSEPH H. BORLAND'S. Cheap Cash. Store. No. 98 ftfarke4t.. 2d door from Fifth. lan3l PHRENOLOGY IS A. SCIENCE. O. S. FOWLER Is its Head and Father in America 13OR REMAINS AT TIIEST CHARLES u fro lEL but a short lime longer. where'he' Is giving those RELIABLE CHARTS which are the Bey and the Outdo to a ancomaftil and true lifo. His 3 001118 are crowded every day. and some may delay Ins ONE day too late to be benefitted by nia SCIENTIFIC ADVICE. jaral:3td /110 LET OR FOR SALE—FOR REST -111. wish privileges to bay, that fine two stun , brick Tavern tta• d, with out buildings, stabling. . and about 10 urea of ground attached. in the. viPage Railroad, near the station. on the Pennsylvani 12 miles from Pittsburgh; Th is a first class Hoel, and will be sold or tent ed ccc acoomwodating terms. Also, at the same Place, in this lovely valley. 100 a-res i f Land fot sale, all together or divided to suit purchasers. For terms empire °ID. 21.10 M F. for three. days, at St. Clair Hotel. .ian3ll3td To }left. id mem ono Proiumo of Orude Petroleum. tn.A N ADJOIIRNED MEETING OF those interested in the "Pittsburgh Oil Ex change." will be held at the Rooms of the Board of Trade, on Fourth street, on MONDAY. Febru ary 11d, at 10 o'clock a. m. Matters of vital im portance connected with its existence are to considered, in which every person in the trade is interested. A general attendaace is ho,:ed for. and urgently requested. By order of the President._ ian3l,2td R. O. EiBliMF.-ATZ.,Fec'g. t n . -1 t y i . 0 Po l. 17i iv w :,-.• :td iz: Pl> i.. d t gi i M-1 a' t-1 ut b tTi c. • '2. 1 ; rAil I% l A"''' c> .. i .1 r i, cl ,t:=l ti rQ - ii 4:1 tit 1-3 (2) rt a) 2 or g g m ' T 3 o rl , ft _ .2 _ . 7,, 5 PI r x H. t. t 2-' 0 r 3 K MI ti: VC/ . .a U 2 NOW Is YOUR CHANCE TO GET barnains , 3n Boots. Shoes and Gums at Call soon. .' BORLAND'S. 98 Market Street. jam% GARDEN filEEDli.:2l,o=l,ani 64 . Ens A kers and complete 1000 i laßdreilis New Crop Carden 'Seek' Alao a /arge Moak of • . Buist's Celebrated Garden Seeds. .hatti reeei red anal for sale by GEORGE A. KELLY. bias° No. 439 Federal street Allethem NEW larscov.E.Rlr To Strengthen and Improve the Sight. Rnisian -° •"" r- -I "' r. SPeotales i lISERSONfiI SEFFERING .F.R9s A . D E ; JL feotive sight. arising froni ate or ' Aber mu* , es, 011.12 be reliervid by using the asur A b ui Feb . lue spectacles, which have ber A , wen hied ti, many responsible citizens of. - -134 V..eburah ' alld' vi , chitty, to whom they have inTrn perfeot.numaer Um,. The certilleates Of ' "tese persons canto' seen at M 7 office.. ,-- . . SUL All who purchase one p e r of the Italian Pebble Spectacles are al sh fotnre free a chime elt h those whic h .titled tote. lnit upplied' atriui m give satiifaotinn . Therefore. ity . 011 .isit to ensure ay improve ment in* your mg* '138.11 on J. DIAMON7 I ), Practical Optician, ' Manufacturer ef f he Rusilan Pebble Spectacle,, Jana ISIf OM Filth street. Poet Bandit% RAjoslor erloo half and 100 etutrter boxes new M. RiltaisAnt. 100 ben et and 100 lug boxes new layer ; Ref 25 Prallegosedleal 25 Ker do do boy aenmynka do Now Jana ag and for sale by RIMIX6 & BROTH:Ka% n 022 Nos. US and 128 Wood need TODAVI3 NEW B.IPRI vELQUits 4 k,SEESVA:e4 clitAP,lo: F==i - , WHITE QUILTS, MOURNING.DOODS, IRISH LINENS, IiIENT'UCKIC-JEA 'NSF &c., &c., &C., &c. A Ve.r,3* - 88 stook as low•as eau befoimd • : • r 111.4wEu3re Whidesale .an ,Re tail' WM. SEMlPpit.io 180 and 182 Padang Atreet, AI,4dEOHENV. feb22 DAVIOVarPHILLIPm 9 BRASS FOUNDERS & FINISHERS, ISRIANTFACTIIRERS AND DMERS INN. in Iron Pips, Pumps and ,Brt Was,— Particular attention Reid to the Jibing uP,and repairing of Oil Hednenes. ac. .Oass Fitting and: Plumbing hi a!! its branches. 'Also. Agents 'for Hutchings dr Foster's ExceLior <Pump 'for Mind and Power use. It has nosuperiori •1 jari3l;3lnd No 110 Water sndlo4 Rea 5L i DRAIILE'S . PLANTATION BITIEERIO4 BRAME'S P.LANTATiOiIif DRAKE'S PLANTATIOII BMW', • For sale by JOETEFH nEmprit: For tale by JOSEPH , FL MING. • • corner Market street asd,the Diamond. • Corner of the Diamond and. Market Streets,, TRUSSES, TRUSSES TRUSSER. TRIREMES. TRUSSER, TRESSES; A largeaud super:or assortment of Trusses - all sizes, for adults and infante, for sate at very low Prices.. Those .wishing. any -thing, in •.this line should ca 1 and asalzdne my mock; as I am con• Meat the Prices and qualityalemoomnistitlorT . _ wiz en slacanroN • 1 Corner of the Diamond andlitairket:StreEts.__ The beat brands ofNo l Carbon Oustso4 per m gallon; In quantities of IlversaUotimt Efic:7 ai iiiirglaz MIN —The Ifacelsior. Pump for numPing, Crude and Refi_ed Oils, Water. nq in- perior as a Pump for hand' and power use; Is very simple in ocrustruotion: has no -velvet or I3Olfs' to get out of order; reluires but little we n 1 to drive it, and will discharge fr m2O to 1. 111 gpi - • ions per minute: will force any distance reqr4i ed and will take suction from fl) to 25 feet v 4 rd eafly through almost any length of Rini: metal pipe, This pump is now in We . sev eral men eries in this licinity and has 'tiven'-unbr pueded satitfaction in all eases" • - Prioe two-tM than any steam or hand. Pump of sitenrolp a nitt Call and 'see one in opLiration- at the A, gene, 'for - this district -DAVIS 2 dt:Pll7ll,X4Plik • 1 4 0.110icater . and • Ytittit?ritti, jun , RECEIVED LADIES' E. L CONGREn GAITEUS Ai' D. i, DlFFE'sjaAairkirs.' IN , BOOTS And SHOES 4 sew !rah atoc s.:: srrinng daily at CONCERT - STOW • 62 F ifth gtreet4 at about Half - Pricej - The beat g beds in town, and lowest prices, ran2B • - • , Pzszpi Pii* t's. Wiria I . oli WA - GO 14/Vti.er Co. ' • '.. - "r• Anoleinit'oll TEM gIicOILWPAIkY. , •• i . Paiaan. 11th:11363.- . - ..., . - 1 ' Pittaburghi-. ' WHS. ANNUAL MEETING .4)lP,.,ni* :N.: Stook and:. Itondholdere,t4 ..th* - Compelme for the election 'of Directors and'etteh other besi..l nen as" miy come-before itwill , belield at 'the ! OM,. . if said C0AP1337 in , the cite of, Pitteberth 1868. . n tha Pdarth WOUISUY, Ot`irOrtit:l4,4cl The Mock and Bond Trawler: ;Bo o k ! ) i i t t he - Comp any, at their Office* the City of Pittsburgh , and t it their trinefer 'Animal in 'the _of lifine' Yorl e; will be closed on the loth de,. of Febetiary and remain' closed until, the 2fitir! of Februari ther man :W., % , • -21 -#O , IgNEIS* , . ha 11.18 th td , _ Secretary. . , . . . . NOILBENT—&43IOOIITIII3IOaRkSTORT ." DWELLING. earirarShhd rild.asrde !treats In *dr.o of §.,9 n thbert.k Soes, • •W. 11: satrririi!faci:. IIS Baborid ',treat. 1 STEW WALL PAPZ=ATLOW VILICE - 1-W• or Webs - w,Wo. p. dit mhufwAT4,3 Wood dr ed. :;':: .;..,, ."..: -!! , :i._ •;"..,. ..tl'. ,BALMORAL SKIRTS, : .. .... ........ SHIRT FRokSi TABLE BLIP:4Bj "N 0.15 Fifth stmt. - :00! 1 ,*.tYlpht . ,:1::::,i: - ,1 - i.:;1 MLR LIBRARY. MGM& 'ALDO luszastii Loiters bef •re the Ycnieg Mat's vary descreistiom. and the publie Tuesday, A T t,t,LEZ cs.oAretrairliri 13:Tickett 95 eents-1,0 4 SadriftiS Moto and Book Btoresl4brariaoass and at tire door Doors open at 6)i o'clock; Lemurs bMJat7M. _WrikiLlCllosid. Jana :Aikrserint.i V. D. MoGo wan. JB. 'bibles. Boone W. Woman. Lecture Dommittee. ise:Jta' 31salBEL3110r - --ii 1862, 87 FOURTH STREET, • LARUE Po= qratlErit STOCIi "iitevidlis to a series of advances, and now replemabed(hmt before the largest advagaeof thesermoolwillt:Oß almost de eisna4Carpf ta,'.oll Olethstiwthades, ho A fa; °fable opporttodi7 is o e,edd *lzabal= at moderate rates, as prices will be higher. deol7 ,_ _ • A LAUGE SPOON OF CLOAKS AND' 'SHAWLS Juirtitickitzli iii-mipitim ALso jr .• torcrwstrtmwmarrinuEs. D E L:A Il'E S Fine lisle a UMI= W. & IL,HUGUS. CORNER!fIa &..MARKET. - - Tea& - - ootraii 4;. __bums. -- g Foriale • • comer of Ohio Oreet s'aulDjszaand. - Allegheny at,. EUROPEAN'. E N C Y. rrurolus assizeEE, EUROPIUM JIL la prepared to king out or and book, from or roPart th r e l ol4loountrn either br *earn orii. . ;Nana j/0 :1 1 4..LIC:PaTaao?bi pare o[ - - Agent for 0 Infilanapoltiandl2dnatitsll - _ Aloo; , tfor , the old Blaek-Btatliino of • tqlinellualieAraigtforthallualof Stearaoresail betweort Bra York. Liyarpool. Glam.* and Young arum, G on wrier ° 100111f-cherit in strte and-for'salelj , • 4 ' • ' 1111 LEAR Iat.I.OSETSON -iyiy ,Aorzsvitubsszs-Aimpisiikezips GOAT, 'CALF & 1111-IfALYORAIrS, 13qttonritice 'Congrepi - EIIGENIJE, ViIAITEW andvariety of 'Other ityles atict. "1"1"Ww . e! " - are'selling i - ery low price . -1 w:._E• SCHMESTZ & CO. "" • VM4 - MES , FOR 1863. . stmiL.Es. saw - PRICES . - The-lit meet sescrtment in the West now reed: Trad. s sue cited by p*T•yroitill;"'lt Opppiite the-Po:tads. Cg'R'YE ~ D~ VLS I~°T ~S fihelasreatuwrtmentin the Walt. w 4 klia TrisininentAitiortro Adulates, Also .coPi 4 4.4'f Pid tila a tin g a l ' tvi f.lVl and StAry• r 's" . _ Among thin . ' 1311111 e found pstos oflho lots GEN. - C. F. JACKSON, MAJOR-FRANKB. WARD, COL. S. W. BLACK, ``' , • PITTOCK'S Jan3o Gtisis For Cients. LadlV l / 4 Boy,, **la aluitillifirta at I§ , CiA . M.ERTZ E3O. No. at FIFTH _STREET Jaz% - tillukAT'eLiatharGEOVlM 3:,., t.; a wti .. :,....,.„„ i.an; ,!, - ;., , i. , ~, ::, 1: :"i . .1: .. - •::11 . i::,, ; f1- .f: , . , ,f,,, , .. i .9 CLOAKgu.. D-R . E1311 IPIIS-41:,11., r , :g . T7,4744 111 0 1 0; CALL - 9 9 PA _ N B galyineprieek, AIfi'%DiOITZNED ,ANNuAIr. niG of the Stooklegdat , ofL.t>td Weetsta Peemerlyania L B.,Oompany. wilibehtlittn.the btuktinroe the Peorrsvlvalds #4.llRoadcorbooa m,_ No. nu Booth BdS treet rbitadolt ble: on TuNtllllAlf. Februstr7fta.MlBll. 1111.11 t. when a* eleetbin trill tyke Dleoe for=Awideat aluttwelyeehreotoksto,seree , the,,enonin t veer. A nein Will be aubmitte4V lbo cams of • the Couvarly, and snob other biu4estrabuoted NI Ma owns before the latak • • .7319td. No W. Nif3B. ! 'L;~ j {j OPmito tfip o. .:,. .•:-7K . :7±-i - i:i: Orlgt-
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