DAILY POST PITTSBURGH FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1864 DEMOCRATIC I , IITATE CENT RA L COIL. M tTTEE The Democratic State Central Committee are Y.eneeted to meet at the MEEI.CUALPITS' H TEL, in the City of Philadelphia. on WEDNES DAY, the 13th day of JANUARY NEXT. at 4 o'clock p. m. CHAIILE3 J. BIDDLV. Chiirrnan, ITEMS. The number of troops in Ohio sinca the war began, is 200,671. . Gen. HANCOCK is now in active coat maid of his old corps. ••- - It is reported that GM Et£INTLELMAN 18 to be given an important command im• mediately. G. CANNON, of Delaware, announces MTh:jelly that the enlistment of negro troops has been authorized in that State. A. National Bank, with $50,000 capita hm been eatablie bed at Parkersburg, Vir The Masonic Grand Lodge of Vermont will hold its annual session on the 14th o February. A. Western editor says if anybody im imagines we are opposed to a draft, let him send us one for a thousand dollars on some good bank. A. delegation of citizens of Arkansas are en route for Washington to make arrange manta for Arkansas to resume her position in the Union. Such is the wretched condition of the contrabands-50,000 or more between Memphis or Natchez—that half of them will probably die of cold, hunger and filth this winter. Gee. BURNSIDE will probably be assigned to the Middle Department, headquarters at Baltimore. He has expressed a wish for some post that is administrative, not military. Before Knoxville, General LONGSTREET gave characteristic advice to McLiws : "Please impress upon your officers and men the importance and great safety of doing it with a rush." We see by the Tribune that the Masse• chasette Lsgialature is going to have a negro chaplain. After that let the Massa chueetis people elect negro legislators, and thou the Bay State will ha an abolition paradise. The U. S. District Court for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania has made a final decree in the case of the steamer Kate Dale, giving to the Treasury the bum cf $856,708, The costs were $lOB7. The harbor of Providence, K. 1., is closed by ice. The P.,dst of Monday, says : The river is frozen over as far as Pawtrixet, about four miles below the city. Vessels bound up or down the bay will be obliged to take the aesiestance of a steamer. The second congressional district of New Hampshire has filled its quota of troops under Its last call. The town of Greencastle, Pa., is clear of the draft.. A bounty of $2OO was offered, and the quota was raised within ten days. The quota of troops for Niagara county, N. Y , and men cont'nne to come in in greater num berg than at any time before. A good story is told of a member of the 84th Indiana. His Colonel cbserving him one morning wending his way to camp with a fine rooster in hie arms, halted him to know if he had been stealing chickens. "No, Colonel,' was the reply, "I just saw this old fellow sitting on the fence, and I ordered him to crow for tho Union, and he wouldn't, when I confiscated him fora rebel." The snb•committee ut the Committee of Ways and Means of the House ❑yon the proposed am endments of the Tax and Excise laws are busily at work. Nothing authentic is known in regard to their ac• tine,-farthar than that in most instances the rates of taxation- will be increased to the extent recommended by the Secretary of the Treasury and Commissioner of In• ternal Revenue, and on some articles will, it is believed, be even in excess of their recommendation. No less than twenty five different prop° salons to amend the Conscription Law were submitted in the Senate on Tuesday. The bill before its Military Committee has the approval of the Secretary of War and Provost Marshal General. It will retain the three hundred commutation clause, and among other things borrowed from the French system, such as the require ment that the conscript shall be responsi• ble for his substitute's service and fitness. A. widow in Western New York, whose husband was killed in the war, bad lett her by him a note for about five thousand dollars secured by mortgage. At the same time she owed in Canada a debt of less than $4,000. Under legal tender law she is obliged to take greenbacks for what is doe to her in New York, while she is obliged to pay spiecie or its equivalent for the sum she owes in Canada. Tho widow don't clearly understand it, and has lost faith in "Old ABE'S" proposition that it is easier to pay a large debt than a larger One. The Washington aronicle says : At a late hoar on Monday evening we were in formed, upon what we esteem good au• thorityi that Gen. B CrTLKE will be thor oughly sustained by the Governmont as sole commissioner in the important busi nen of exchange of prisoner ; that all the rebel prisoners in the hands of United States authorities have been ordered to be sent within his jurisdiction s at Point Look out, with the understanding that not one of them shall be exchanged except through the General named. By virtue of the statements above recorded, we predict the early resumption of an exchange of p_ie• oners. Some excitement was created at the Jersey City Ferry the other day by an at tempt to kidnap a negro. Two colored men came from Philadelphia in the train which reached this city at 8 P. m., and were on their way to the Boston boat when the younger one was seized, in West street, by four or five "brokers," who at• - 'ted to take him away for the purpose dug a soldier of him. Not liking fitment, he broke away from them, Ito the ferry-house, where he by:his' traveling companion. -otected them from further s attempt failed, although Nixtts have been made where cceeded inikidnappi n ne- Tay, - . 14xilistrokort Pposit FR : IDAY MPRNING, JANUARY 8, 1804. AN IN TERFATING HISTORICAL PARALLEL The North American Review, in its present number, contains what the Abo• lition papers style "an interesting histori cal parallel," between King HENRY Of Navarre and President psooLs. It ap nears from this that American parallels for 4BRAILAM the fleet, such as Weep'No- Tar and Jecirsos, are growing stale, and that the history of the old world must be searched to find his equal. The similar• ity which the Abolitionists find in the character of the dashing and aucceesful Frenchman, and that of the Illinois joker is thus alluded to by the article in ques• tion. "A curium, and we think, not inapt parallel, might be drawn between Mr. LINCOI N and one of the moat striking fig ures in modern history—HENßY IV., el France. The career of the latter may be more pictnresnue, as that of a daring captain always is; but in all its vicissitudes there is nothing more romantic than that sudden change, as by a rub of ALADDIN'S lamp, from the Attorney's office in a country town of Illinois to the helm of a great nation in times like these." By this opering paragraph the reader will at once perceive, that there is no analogy whatever between the characters in question; comparing the sudden transi• tion of a third rate, village Attorney from his office in Springfield, to the White House in Washigtnon, with the career of a successful soldier, is rather heavy, and only proves, the anxiety of the writer to say something new and intensely compli mentary of his probable patron. li the ef fort, however, should secure its author something handsome at the hands of old ABE. Alluding to this parallel of the Reviero's reminds us of another which was suggest ed to the writer, by seeing represented SIIERIDEN KNOWLES' fine, historical play of WILLIAM TELL. The comparison is not between the Swiss hero and Mr. LIN COLN, but between the latter and the ty rant GESLER. We think the parallel far more striking than the Review's and so will the reader. Here is au extract which we copy from the Philadelphia Age. The first incident of the play remind icg us of our own cond4ion, represents a squad of the Austrian tyrant's minions marching off to prison several citizens whom they have arbitrarily arrested. Who could avoid recurring, under such circumstan ces, to the fact that; under LINCOLN'S sway, just such scenes have been acted and re-enacted time and again? Our in dignation is aroused at the mimic display of such cruelty ou the part of the oppres• sor of Switzerland; can we sanction with the smile of approval just such traneac tione by an American President? But still GESLER had hie myrmidons, as LIN COLN has his tools. GESLER sought, through the energy of his measures, by the use of the sword and the terrors of the dungeon, to stifle every tree aspira tion among the Swiss: LINCOLN under takes, through the dread inspired by mil itary Bastiles, by banishments, bayonets and confiscations, to control the ballot box, to suppress even the whisperings of disapprobation and to coerce opinion. GESLER had hie caprice; LINCOLN has hie "Necessity. But the parallel is most strikingly exemplified in the scene where GESLER'S cap is put on a pole, and all the people arc commanded to bow down low, to this emblem of the insolent tyrant's authority. Now if here, in our own America, we substitute LINCCLN'S test oaths for GES. LEE'S cap, the parallel is complete. GEs• LEE demanded that those whose fealty he suspected should bow to his cap; LINCOLN demands that those whose "loyalty" to Abolitionism is doubted shall take hie oath. Oa the part of the Austrian Vice roy the demand was without authority of law; on the part of LINCOLN the demand is an invasion of Constitutional rights. If newspapers had been in existence when GESLER ruled, he would have suppressed them had they dared to question his mo• ayes; newspapers are in existence while LINCOLN reigns, and many of them have been suppressed, confiscated, and their editors banished, for daring to question his infelibility. GESLEE pet oat a man's eyes and then thanked God; LINCOLN sends men to dungeons and then cracks his jokes and goes to the theatre to laugh. Now so far as any natural or legal right is involved, Gxeuta was as much justified in demanding that the people should bow to his cap, as LINCOLN is in requiring an American citizen to take hie oath, and not a whit more. The bow was demanded as an evidence of cringing servitude; the oath is required as the evidence of an ig noble fear, the surr ender of that dignity, that individual liberty, which our Consti tutions, State and National, were Intend• ed to secure. It, is predicted upon the idea and•implies, that to differ from the Administration and to disapprove its pol icy is a criminal act; that the right of opinion and its free exercise are inconsis tent with the general welfare; and that the only judges of that welfare are not the peoplc who are most affected by good or had Government, but their adminis trators, who though chosen as the ser vants of the people, insidiously and craft ily adopt this and other means to become their masters. It may be said, ho we ver, as it is ofteti said, that taking the oath is a small mat ter. And so, we may reply, was obei• aance to the cap a small matter, so was the tax on tea, which our Revolutionary fathers resisted, a small matter; so was the ship money of CHARLES drHE FIRST a small matter. Bat the obeisance demand ed in the first instance resulted in the en franchisement of Switzerland and in the death of GESLER; the tax on tea insured the independence of the United States; the ship money brought CHARLES to the block and erected the English Common• wealth; and it LINCOLN were not incapa— ble of instruction, he would certainly profit by such examples. Nothing is a small matter which trenches upon those rights which it was the primary object of our whole system of Government, State and National, to secure. And as Tura concludes the play, after slaying the ty rant, so we conclude: "A country's never last that hath one man To wrestle with the tyr ant who'd enslave her." ' The statement that Gen. RoascsAss has been assigned to the Department of Mis souri is a pure invention, end what is more, he will not be assigned to that De partment. Abolition Cruelties upon the Ne From the. Now 1 0:k Ifiprees oar Washington correspondent, the other day, d7ew a picture of a black con• script and n white conscript in the Wash ington conscript queue; bound up to the offiice of tha provost marshal. White man lectured black man for this conscript r ouble u,gro bed got white min into Negro man well replied : "Massa, ['he a tree nigger in Washing• ton when Meese Lincoln came here. Now I'se a Blavo Ligger. You white folks did it all. If you'd let us poor niggers alone, we had all been better off—white folks and black folks both—none of us had been here." A letter from Chaplain Fisk, dated the 14th instant, to the Springfield (Mass.) Repub/can, presents some facts which are new. He says: "There are, between Memphis and Nate& z, not less than fifty thousand blacks, from among whom have been called all the able-bodied men for the military ser vice. Th:rty-five thousand of these, viz those in camps between Helena and Natchez, are fnrniehed the shelter of old tents and subsistence of cheap ration by the governmeht, but are in all other things in extreme destitution. Their clothing, in perhaps the case of a fourth of this number, is but one single worn and scanty garment. Many children are wrapped night and day in tattered blank ets as their sole apparel. Bet few of all these people have had any change of rai— ment since, in midsummer or earlier, they came from the abandoned plants• tions of their masters. "Multitudes of them have no beds or bedding—the ci_ayey earth the resting place of women and babes through these stormy winter months. They live, of necessity, in extreme filthiness, and are afflicted with all fatal diseases. Medical attendance and supplies are very inad equate. They cannot, during the winter, be disposed to labor and self-support, and compensated labor cannot be pro— cured for them in the camps. They can not, in their present condition, survive the winter. It is my conviction that, unrelieved, the half of them will perish before the spring. Last winter, during February, March and April, I buried at Memphis alone, out of an average of ab- - nr. four thousand, twelve hundred of those people, or from twelve to twenty a day. One day we buried thirty-five. Those who have been gathered into camp this summer are quite as destitute as those who were in our hands last winter." These are the fruits of a system of vio lance and agitation, anticipating a result which, in time, would hove been devel oped under the natural order of society, and in the progress of civilization. Remains of Archbishop Hughes. The body of Archbishop Hughes was removed to St. Patrick's Cathedral to day, and seen after an imposing catafal que was coratructed in the centre aisle, hear the high altar, resembling aa ob long canopy. Nearly all its appointments end decorations are 01 sable. It rests ou an inclined dais, veiled with (+e-ape, eleva ted sull,eently to permit the living to be hold the form and features of the dead prelate, in the expression and propor tions of life. The festooned curtains, pillars and roof, are all black, and mourn ing is seen everywhere about this tempo rary shrine of the dead. In a contrast to these outer semblances of woe, the inner walls of the canopy appear in white, re- Iteving the heavy monotony of sable which first strikes the eye. The Arch bishop rests prominently on this dais— his head elevated by a pillow. He ap pears ovary inch a prelate. Not one vestment of his sacred office is he divest. ed of. He is robed in his cassock, rochet, amice, alb, cincture, stole, tunice and maniple. On his breast are seen his own gold cross and pallium. The mitre is on his head, and un his left appears his crozier, and rn the right the Episcopal cross. The emblems of Redemption are also seen at his feet, in the form of two Camelia crosses—the figurative foundation of the illustrious Prelate's past and future life. A beautiful border ut japonicas and ea mehes ornaments the catafalque, and thus surrounds the remaine with flowers. Every part of the edifice is being dres sed in mourning—the organ chambers, pillars and columns being covered with crape. The body is to be placed in a rosewood casket, lined with lead, and elaborately mounted. The cover of the coffin is formed of three heavy panels of glass. The final disposition of the body, which is to be temporarily deposited in the vaults of the Metropolitan Church, is not yet known, but it is considered probable it will remain in the Church till the new Cathedral is built, when it will bo remov ed thereto. The Cathedral is now open, and thou• sands are viewing the remains. 'They pass up the main aisle, where the cat• afalque is surrounded with lights, and depart down the side aisle.— Y. Y. Ex press, Tuesday Evening, A NEW IZILAND IN TES MEDITERRANEAN. —A new Mediterranean island has come to the surface off Palermo. It is a volca nic phenomenon, and was taken posses sion of by the Neapolitan Government and darned Fernandia, but disappeared one fine day and sank to the bottom. and has just come up again, to the great de light of the scientific world. An English vessel, with several members of the learn• ed societies on board, has anchored off Palermo to take observations, which can not fail to be of great scientific interest. 11Qel READER I If your Hair :a turning Grey, Ir your Bair is biouning Thin If your Hair is becoming Harsh ani Dry Use the Ilejuvenator, Which is the moat satisfactory HAIR RESTOR ER over brought before the public. Price, One Dollar. For gale by SIMON JOHNSTON. dell Corner of Smithfield mid Fourth sta. 1:1: - . THE BEST No. 1 White Carbon 011, 13 still retailing at 60 OENTS PEE GALLON, AT JOS. FLEIIING'S DRUG STORE Coratr of the r_ , iamond and Market street. Also, may be t.btainel a large and superior as sortment at L,quora for medicinal purr.oses. con 'listing of the finest OLD BRA/NUMB, a superior article of II OLI,AAN D PirriT and CtiEktitY WINE iof the nr.ast descriptions. Inose having WO for these articles cut CODStlit their own inter.. 051 by examining my stock before perchming Oitnltheru taxa ..nd ;ioda Ash that cannot he excelled in quality, always on hand. Patent alodiennes and all the new Perfumeries and Hatt Preparatihns of the day always on hand. Afso, Dr. blardoch'a Burn Ointment, a most excellent article for Burns of Frosted Limbs. for anything in the Drug lice, remember the plane, JOS. FLEMING'S DRUG STORE Corner of the Diamond ani Market street. ran4-tat =l3 fr&CORNWELL & KERB. CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS, SILVER 43: RB.ASS PLATERS, And mama/Auras of Saddlery it Carriage Hardware, No. 7 Bt. Clair (near the street k:fal Duquesne Way. BliditeJ mho PITZSBUSSIL wTO CONSUII PTI ,EB.-THE Rev. E. A. Wilson's Remedy Constunption, Asthma. Bronchitis. ConstuN.Colds, and all Throat and Lung Affeethnut. Together with a pamphlet giving the protonic ,- bon and a abort hletory of hie 011110, can be ob tained of .TOE.II - .1-1 FLF7MING. Gor. of Market it. and the Diamond, Pittsburgh Jatt7.2md LONDON AND INTERIOR ROYAL MAIL COMPANY'S CELEBRATED REMEDIES BLOOD POWDErft AND BONE A certain cure for Dieeasee of Horses and Cattle, known to and used only by the Company in their own stables from 1844 until the opening of the Railway over the priiThipal routes. After the gen eral use of these remedies in all the stables of the Company. their . annual sales of condemned stook were discontinued, a Raving to the Company ex ceeding £7,000 per annum. In 1853 the London Brewers' Association offered the Company £2,000 for the reoaipes and use the articles only in their own stables. BLOOD POWDER A certain care for founder, distemper. rheuma tism, hide bound, inward strums, loss of appetite. weakness, heaves, coughs, colds, and all diseases of the lunge, surfeit of &Abbas, glanders, Pell evil, mange. inflammation of the eyes, fistula. and all diseases arising from impure blood, oor recto the stomach and liver, improves the appe tite, regulates the AWL corrects all derange manta of the glands, strengthens the system, makes the skin smooth and glossy. Horses bro ken down by hard labor or driving, quickly re stored by using the powder once a day. Nothing will be found equal to it in keeping horses up in appearance. condition and strength. London and Interior Royal Mail Oompany's CELEBRATED BONE OINTMENT, A certain cure for rpavin, ringbone, scratches 'mugs, tumors, sprains, swellings, bruises, foun dered feet, chillblaias, wind galls. contractions of the tendons, bone enlargements, ko. Blood Powder 600 per 12 os. packages Bons Ointment Eoa per 8 os. iar. No. 320 Strand, Lon don. Mcßeason & Rorblus. New York. Frenoh. Richards & Co„ Philadelphia. TORRENCE & MeGARR, Pittsburgh Drug House. luB:di re* Corner Fourth and Market street fl Editor of the Daily Post.—Dear Sir.—With your permission 1 wish to say to the read ere of your paper that I will *end, by return mail to all who wish it (free,) a Receipt, with full di rections for making and using a simple Vegetable Balm, that will effectually remove, in ten days, Pimples, Blotches. Tan, Freckles, and all Impur .tes of the Skin, leaving the same soft, clear, amoott and beautiful. I will also mail free to those having Bald Heads, or Bare Faces, simple directions and information that will enable them to start a full growth of Luxuriant Hair, Whiskera, or a Moustache, in less than thirty days, All applications answered by return mail with out charge. Respectfully yours, THOS. F. CHAPMAN. Chemist, 831 Broadway. New York.. a:::,DENTISTRY.—TEETH EX tz acted withcAtt pain by the two of 14 Ondry'm apparatus. J. F. HOFFMAN. DENTIST. All work warranted. 134 Smithfield Street, PITILIBURGH FLOURING MILL FORSALE. The subamjber offers for sale tho AL- L 6GlitoNY CITY MILLS, situated in the Fourth Ward, Allegheny City. This well known Mill has been rebuilt lately, and contains four run of French Burrs, with all the latest improved ma chinery for manufacturing the beet brands of Flour. Enjoys a good local as well as foreign Custom. This is a rare of sacs for beeline s men and invite Lay who wish to engage m a profitabe business to call at the Mill, where terms will be made known. oc2l-3mdatw J. VOEGTLY. L' Improvement in Eye Sight THE BIISSLAN PEBBLE SPECTACLES Imo TOD WANT YOUR EYE SIGHT NJ improved? Try the Russian Pebbles. They are warranted to STRENGTHEN and IM- PsOVE THE SlGHT—this fact has proved al ready to hundreds of people what was suffering from defective eight. They are Imported direct from Russia, Which can be seen at my °Mee with satisfaction Purchasers are entitled to be supplied in future if the first should fail, free of charge , with those which will always GIVE GLTLSEACTIoN. J. DIAMOND, Practical Optician, 39 Fifth street. Bank Block. IBeware of imposters and oonnterfaitors. oce-ilkw A HAPPY NEW YEAR, UIwECIPROCATF. THOSE WHO RE -11-111 , oeived presents from their friends on Christ mas had better return the compliment and cal AT 78 MARKET STREET Where they will find a suitable artiolo for a handsome New Y ears' Present We enumerate cnly a few articled, viz Ladies' and Gents' Dressing Cases, Rosewood Work Boxes, set with Shells, Jet and Steel Breastpins and Ear rings Splendid Photograph Albums, Pearl Portemonnaies, Purses, Lace and Embroidered Head- Dresses, Skating Cape, Hoods, etc., etc Wholesale and Retail, MACRUM dtc GLYDE'N, 78 MARKET STREET, Between Fourth and Diamond. PURR Pia HOUND AHD IMOD $25,00. EUROPEAN AGENCY. TOMAS H. BATTIGAN, EUROPE. H AN AGENT, No. 122 Monongahela Rom Pittsburgh, Pa... is prepared to bring out or son back passengers from or t o any part of the old country, ether by steam or sailing !makes. bIGIIT DRAFTS FOR S.Ahlf. Paiablo in any part ot Europe Agent for the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad. Alto, Agent for the old Black Star Line of Sailing Packets, and for the lines of Steamers sailing bctween New York. Liverpool.' Glasgow and Galway. Jantl-lyd THOS. H. RATTIG AN. SELL Tors Old Books and Papers. The hisheat price will:be paid for old books with backs removed, old neampapare or other printed paver, at our PRESr er and Bag Store, No. .38 SIefITHFINLD S ian7-Imd S. B. k C. P. MARKLE. .BAM'I... Kill BIRD NATIONAL BANK 0 N da. PITTBBIDIGH.—The first hrtallmaid to the Capital stock of the Third National Bank, of Thirty-il Per Cant., will be peeedved brtheun d at the office of the Dime Ba P vbs_rs In street. malts Vie__ostof See. an AY and BATITEDAY bMXT, be tween the hanzeoflB and 8 o'elook. ian7-td ADAgswilLim pro tam New Advertisements, ORMSBY IRON WORKS. Wharton, Brothers Si Co., A REstowPREPARED TO RECEIVE orders trom the trade for all silos of Guide, Hoop, Stake Bank and Horse Shoe Iron OF THE BEST QUALITY, Pittsburgh, Jan. 7.1864. lea-61nd WANTED— Employment by an Unmarrld Man, Thirty-three year of age, who has been aeons toned both to book - keeping and the sale of goods—a Peranent situation either in town or country desir ed-can. if nreosaiy,deposit money as seeurizy fer Hdeli y. Address T. B. Post aloe. jsa-Htd I Po L S O V I TILY ONLY ;ONE WEER L. HIRSHFELD I No. 03 Wood Street, Wlll continue to olose ont;:hli stook. consisting of FINE LINEN SHIRTS, UNDERSHIRTS, And DRAWERS, And a complete assortment of MENS' FURNISHING GOODS,. Cloths, Cassimeres AND VESTING, In great variety, Sold by the yard only. Remember this Is your Last Chance and Last Week to Buy Great Bar gains. Jamb Fancy Jewelry Cases, Ladies' Traveling Satchels Perfumery Cases Collars end Sleeves AT THE NEW CARPET STORE, We shall sell during the present month. at WHOLESA.LE and RETAIL. Without any Advance In Price, A full line of CARPETS, FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, In sheets 8 to 24 ft wide; Woolen Druggeta and Crumb Cloths, WINDOW SHADED. Pablo and Piano Covers Rugs, Mats, Stair Bodo, &a These goods have advanced in first hands from TEN to TWENTY-FIVE PER,AJENT within thirty days. and are now selling at L E.4.4 THAN MANUFACTURER.? PRIG& . Our stook is alracet entirely new, all having been purchased within ninety days for oath. at the ve'y lowest prices of the year. M'FARLAND, COLLINS & CO. Nos. 71 and 73 FIFTH ST., Between Poetoffice and Eispatoh Building. n 0.6 CHRISTMAS AM) NEW YEARS' PRESENTS. Albums Holding 50 Pictures, S 2 90. Albums Holding 40 Pictures, $2 25, Albums Holding 24 Pictures, $1 25. Albums Holding 12 Pictures, 50 Cents. Call and °gamins the CHEAPEST and BEST STOCK of ALBUMS in the TWO CITIES, Photograph Cards in variety. A large:assortment of Books, Magazines, :Papers, and Sta tionery, for Rae at JAMES T. SAMPLE'S Book and Periodical Depot. dels-laid 85 Federal et.. Allegheny City. NEW WINTER ROODS WE WOULD CALL THE ATTEN tiou of buyers to our &took of WINTER GOODS. All ,the'newest styles of foreign and domeatio CASSIMERES AND COATINGS With a large and choice selection of SILK AND CASHIIEH VESTING W. 11, M' GEE & CO., 143 FEDERAL STREET Corner Market Square, Allegheny City, Pa. . 0 Z... .0 ... .E el m.i ._:. . . 1 . 0 me , tt .4 pm di '0 C.) Ik-4 %if 44 4. 1 , 4 _cn 0 4E , o .2 IA - 46 1 P.T4 tzi up 7'l • , „ g 0 a % 0 - o C) di ii Ag irg °,14 `A 7-' 1 ill 3 c ,f 4 T. ci Ai -4 -40 ci ,.— .. m Z i 1 2.t. i . 5 1 10 EP - ..' .4 0.3 ~cd t ra v . d __.d glq 2. . 6 7s . . p, z ~.,3 8 S c t Ad W z A,2.2g .. - E -0 41 O2 rjr ,,, .. 2 14 I 0 a 0 mi gr. ° Eri!= As .' N Q 0 c , : g 4 !1 tmVa g e * 1 ..., A il ,in Z a32:1 9 0 :: <1 ... .4 <I al C 6 w:. ~5 1 . 1:, :- ;? • GD • • AFRESH STOCK JUST RECEIVED for the HOLIDAYS OF BOOTS, SHOES, Gaiters, Balmorals, AND GUMS, Which will be sold lower than ani holm in the city. Groe me a call before purohasing elsewhere J. if. BORLAND, deZ5 No. 98 Market at. id door from 3th. LUPTON, OLDDEN & CO., GRAVEL ROOFERS, OFFICE, Cor. Wood & Filth sta., Second Story Manufactory. BEAVER GT., Matches:43r. j ant WALTER R. LOWRIE, IBRlMsamanorse THE PEAii- I I OP TEE LAW. is the same hotels. tonnerly oocaviedisitlitin on Fourth street, above Smithfield New Advertisewn Photograph Albums, 30 KINDS OF 200 KINDS OF Pocket Books and Wallets, 1000 HINDS OF card Photograps, 100 HINDS OF Diaries for 1884, Pittock's Book, Stationery and News Depot, OPPOSITE THE POSTOPPIOL anB B BABST BEET'S COMMERCIAL REPORTS V OLIJ4III 14 OF BILIDSTRIBI'S GOIMBROLit RIPOIVIS Now In Prue, will be rash for delivery, on or about the 10th of January, 1864. Special pains have been taken in the prepare• lion. ontreetion sad revision of the present vol ume, and we offer it to our Subscribers, and to the Mercantile Community genera/IY. a a the best, moat reliable and most convenient book of Commertial reference in existence. It has been the obieCt of the Proprietors to in clude within it, as many as possible of the Traders in all the CITIES, TOWNS, VILLAGES And CROSS.JOADS In the United States and British Provinces. and to obtain the most reliable information in every instance. Our facilities are now unsurpassed, and the ratings given, are from such sources that thii may be confidently relied upon. The work will be found invaluable to all those who are giving credits either upon a longer or shorter time. It will be furnished to suboribers from Janus ri.loo4.to January. 1865 for $lOO per annum.which will entitle them to the present volume (10 and vol. 15, whi h will be published about July Ilth, lEf 4. our Weekly Eheet of Corrections, and the privilege of making inquiries conoeining the credit and standing of any traders, with whom they may be transacting business, and receiving toll and special repor's in writing Bankers, Merchants and Manufacturers are in vited to call and examine the work, or obtain fall particulars by sending to cur address. Box. 12'.9. J. M. BRADSTREET It SON, 67 FOURTH STREET, Pittsburgh, Pa. Notice hi hereby given that all that portion of ''BRADSTREET'S COMORO' AL REPORTS" including Distrist of Colnnnbta—lllinoia—ln• diann—lown—Kaneee—Kentucky Maryland —Michigan —Minnesota— Missonri—Nebraska—Bew York (not City) - 01110—PellusYlvaitts (not Phila ) —Vermont—Virginia— Wisconsin— Canadas, New Brunswick and No va Scotia Has been bound in a separate volume, which, to these who are not selling in the larger cities snd the Eastern States, will be found equal's , as val uable as the full body of Reports—this will be furnished to our subscribers, Including vol 15, in like manner for $5O per annum, entitling them to all the nrivilegts of subsoribers in other respects. an6-St SITZTABLV Holiday' Presents Embroidered Piano and %able Covers, Mosaic and Velvet Bugs, Velvet and Brussels Hassocks, dm. etc.. .ke., • AT lI'CALLIIRPS, de23 No, 87 Fourth street. IHRISTBILAS PREVENT.—A MAG- W 1 nilloe4 Rosewood 7 octave CONCERT GRAND PIANO Richly carved. made hi lii. .N,A.13.F. /It CO.. Jut reoeived CHARLOTTE BLUME, 43 Fifth street. lIAPPY NEW YEAH. THE BEST selection of Fancy Goods &Toys For NEW YEARS' GIFTS, can be found at FOERSTER & SCHWARZ'S, JAMES IncLAVGLIILIN. =EI OYSTERS, BUTTER, POULTRY, GAME and EGGS, NO 360 Down stain. BOSTON ORSIDILIER BASEST. S. S. MARVIN, Manntaetarei sad Wholesale Dealer In all Made st Crackers and PUOinreads so. as Wotrwritariiiiirr, lifityreen WixKlialMigiret - • 7----_Pinellqw4n. I • ,/ 1041 '; • " **Zeta fiat Advertisements IA A WELL ESTA.BLUINERD WAVE thattre sell the Al] the Ladies' know that at No. 82 they em but AT LOWER PRICES. AT LOWER PRICES, AT LOWER PRIOR. ' The Men know the Boots ate Ctincin and the All the work is warranted consequently kis la GREAT INDUCEMENT, GREAT IND UCEMEN), GREAT INDUCEMENT. BOOMIIIe if anything a0f1; wrong with SW work Yon see there is no place In the_eity like the Con )BA6cert Hall Shoo Moro, 64 Fifth street. piusTs, Hugus & Hacke's, Corner of Fifth and Market ;treats ianl EIMMIMI PIANOS, HARMONIUMS, MELODEONS AND MUSICAL GOODS GENKRLLLT. NO. 2 ST. CLAIR STREET,' Near finspeasiot Bridge. 111. A LARGE AND SPLENDID STOCK of PIANOS just received from the odor brevet manufactories of W. B. Bradbury New York. Schomacker & Co., Philadelphia. Boardman & Gray, and Cleo. Stook, New York, and others Harmoniums & Melodeons. A complete! assortment of Sheet Mail° al- WWI on mina. Tnning and repairing of Pianos. Melodeons and Musical Inatraments done st diortriotiee. de3o-tf LARGE STOCK OF PHOTOGRAPH ALDUS BELLING AT GREATLY REDUCED RAT% TO CLOSE OUT THE LOTrAT CHAS. C. MELLOi'llti , dell 81 WOOD STREET. A LOT OF Manufacturing awl Cigar Leaf/mid . WCOLLISTER dr BARU. 108 WOOD swum Have received on eonsiimicut s lot ofllfglititegk and Cigar Leaf. winch-they anronteledth sell at very low figures foreaah. Call and gee the amples. .IXkh FOR MALE.- The Lease and Fupetnnee Of a MALL HOUSE. containing ait r ialgm . s tuatod on Ferff street. between Fourth streets. Furniture eseroodeenelf. further particulate inquire , - W. cruimairam i 0.109 Water*: lanF-lvd 164 Smithfield street. Grow; Tarn Vialt-viaaa,Bazt4 ASBlEETTalr s igliva. trokhole L ra of this Baakiiiii , be Nitta the Banking nOuseo Yakima. at 2 o'olook thhtnethtithit PraPiistriala" areaainathe Capital Stook. laas-awd. ORO. A. END4.ll..Cailiar,;-', A L T arier. IS IFERERY OWEN V&A* N under an_order of Court, the partzerattip effects of "Bo 0o consisting of sPAINOR- , AKA OP TilP WAR, ace,. will be eidelaiir' Wm Owen__,s Jr., Receiver. on the 9th DAY OFJAN LUDY, at 2 o'clock D. m.. at aFt g l i f . the zucceiv er„ No. IQ Fourth street, Pitts burgh. iszit-fitd STREET, AL N ELEGANT comma's 1111116-7 r. 1/A DESCH FOR SALIL-11 ling well built brick house cuuteinlmeten - one acr e et around attaettad.rre! etrebeikvitit choice fruit; pleasantly sibittalselbevUll Itoehestex. overlook's g the fleki.Meera,..._;eild in five minutes walk of Ie H. R. . •:: Particulars iminirec . t - at ati nit uti i =ifir: • .z , f !Abider. Pa. _._.....,. Jims-Imd hum t timuureaA: BTaci 111. • 6Dat. 251868. inatiniciat tWiaz ire, a a. . a.Omblift BEST GOODS, BEST ,200DS, BEST GOODS. MOST DURABLE, MOST DURABLE, MOST DURABLE REPAIRED FREE, REPAIRED FREE, REPAIRED FREE. Prin ts, Prints, Chintzes, Chintzes, Chintzes, De Laines, De Laines, De Laines, GI nghams, Gingham's', Gin ghams, NEW STYLES, net cpened at co 02 LC) LC) 2 0 GCE rt:3 135 0 P ...CHAR, B..B•11.* Wamelink viz Barr, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In We are also agents ter S. D. & H. W. 15,1116 TH'S
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