PITTSBURGH: ' FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 18(14. TRES/DENT LINCOLN'S illawr OATH. In Tuesday's Post we commented upon Dr. RRONSON'S late] review of President LINCOLN'S mode of restoring ttke Union, by allowing one•tenth of the people of each rebellious States to rule the remain der, provided that tenth take the oath to bootie Abolitionists. This Dr. BRON sox, the reader will remember, 16 au Abo litionist, himself; and a supporter of the Administration; but the late proclama tion of the President is so outrageous a blow at self-government, as to arouse his apprehension, and be condemns it ac cordingly. His dissection of this alarm. ing doctrine of President LINCOLN Is per fectly crushing of it in all ite aspects. He tears it info a thousand ehiede and Patches and scatters it to the wind. The idea, indeed, of one-tenth of a commu nity being empowered to govern the re Mail:Eder, merely means mili tart' despot ism; because without the aid of a standing army, the thing is impossible. Hence minds of the power and independence of Dr. Baossores although partizans of the Administration, cannot bat repudi ate it. Oar opposition to this scheme the Ga zette accounts for by what it terms our de sire for the restoration of our "old mas tars." Oar neighbor is old enough to know, that the constant repetition of the finest impressions, will lose their power and it ought to be accordingly admonish. ed of the weakness of a cause which can not Suggest anything stronger to sustain it than the stereotyped and worn out scivil ity and twaddle about Southern masters. It ought rather to attempt to answer Dr. RaoNames objections to the President's plan of reconstruction. Su ch a course would be more becoming, in an Admicis tration organ, than the parrot-like repeti tion of garalous stupidity. Reasonable op position to a scheme, which is subversive of our entire Republican system, is not to be b:ushed away by slang about" Southern masters." But sucWeervice may, in the es• timatton of the Gazette, be more accept. able at Washington than decorous and se rious argumentation. It is partly in the line marked out by the head of the Ad ministration of the Government for his own public performances. The only difference between him and it being that the one is generally smutty while the other is always stupid. Besides a paper like the Gazette, which has at the present time, some half dozen attachees living off the bounty of the Government, aught, had its conductors cheeks at all sensible to shame, refrain from allusion to "mas ters" of any sort. It occupies the position of a pamper, living on alms, being mean enough to applaud every utterance of his benefactor. The only point in the Gazette's obser vations worthy of serious attention is con tained in the following paragraph "Bat will the Past tell us why any man in the South except a few officers of high grade need be "excluded by the test oath?" Is there any thing in that oath of ? 311 91 saes Vier We might content ourself by answering this silly interrogatoiy. by asking the Ga• zette what was in the Fugitive Slave Law which caused it and others to violate it ? With our own impression of matters we might, perhaps, if living South, not hesi tate at taking the oath in question ; but our convictions are not those o 1 the grea, bulk of the Southern people; and it is quite as reasonable to ask the Abolition ists to favor the slave trade as it is to in sist upon Southern men becoming Aboli. tionists, as a test of loyalty to the Con.. satiation. Bat the President's scheme is not intended to restore the Uni on ; it is but a device to subjugate the Southern people, and perpetuate hie power by m itary organ izationa lINION PRISONERS AT RICH/1110ND. The special Washington correspondent of the Chicago Times, makes some awful revelations of the sufferings of Northern soldiers in Richmond. On the evening of the Path inst., he writes that he was called upon by a gentleman who had re cently effected his escape from the prison at Richmond, and who had jest macre ed• ed in reaching Washington, ef.er incredible suffering and endurance, such as only an escaped prisoner can undergo. I knew him in former years as a hearty, robust man; and it was difficult to recognize him in the pale emaciated, and wasted being that stood before me. In reply to my expressions of astonishment he said in a hollow voice, broken by a dreadful cough,—the sure indication of settled consumption and speedy death,—"As I am e so are thousands of others, who, a year ago, were as strong and healthy as I was. They are dying there, like rotten sheep. Bat lam happier than they, for I shall die at borne." And for a moment his eye brightened with some of its for mer are. Poor fellows he is at home now, and he will close his eyes in comfort, and surrounded by the ones he loves,— happy even in that fate. Before he left he gave me a roll of paper, in which are recorded the names of those prisoners at Richmond who have died there since the first of October, and whose names he could obtain. He kept the list posted up every day, and his comrades, knowing that he was doing so, brought to him the ^ e and regiment of every man who have sent the list to New York. it will be a fearful 1.NC01..N, "Honest ETA NTON to contern A,t, in the abort space ne hundred and sixty have died at Richmond. de poor men Ilea at the .4 LINCOLN and Mr. STAN. ould have been exchanged, ave been at their homes t it had not been for the ob wcoLN and STANTON on the 4oldiere. _amemiecrincilinPknock ortuziate gentleman, in le sweep of tier skirts. the Curbetclne, and tha ere that he died in a is deserts—why did he middle of the street on Jack!. AFFAIRS IN, csEonfillA Drsperatton of the People--Hcw the aebeh, Treat OnlOn Sympatbixers— Witco/Ito the Last meet' or the Con federacy; The Boston Traveller pabrikihes the nar ration of two ladies born if;l, the North, bat for several years resideritkof central Georgia, who have latebileitaliit'Boston. The stories they tell of theattffaring at the South confirm the reports of other ref ugees. They came to escape from starve tion. Provisions are not only h4h but they are scarce, and at times cannot be obtained at any price. At Augusta a sufficient supply of corn meal can genera ally be obtained, but occasionally, when soldiers are passing through in large numbers, the mills prove insufficient to grind what is wanted, and the supply runs short. At night the whole South is in darkness. The supply of kerosene at Augusta has long since become exhausted. A rest dent invented an oil similar to burning fluid, using turpentine in its manufacture, and the citizens congratulated themselves that they were to have lights for their houses at a moderate price, when the man was conscripted and sent to thearmy, taking his secret with him. Tallow dies, the only resource left, are worth one dollar each. There are in Middle Georgia large num bers of refugees trona Charleston and Savannah, end from Tennessee. These are hospitabl; received by the residents, who look upon them as martyrs, and spare no pains to make them comfortable. The people seem willing to make any sacrifice in behalf of the army. When troops arrive the wealtby families bake bread and send to them. Many have sent all their spare quilts and blankets to the soldiers, and have cut up their carpets to be used as a protection against storms and cold. It is anticipated that the. Govern ment will seize such of these articles as are not freely contributed. The citizens talk freely of the Confeder acy as "the Land of Starvation," but still refuse to hear one word about yielding, and say they will die rather than submit. They generally talk confidently of success, but at times their faith seems to be shalt en. The papers talk about suffering at the North, of business prostrated, the cit• izens voting at the point of the bayonet, and the Government seizing horses and supplies wherever they can find them. The people implicitly believe this, and our informant, although much better informed of affairs here than her neighbors, was surprised to find these statements al together false. Although the soldiers were all tired of the war, and do not hesitate to say so, there are but few signs of Union sentiment in that portion of Georgia. But one citizen of Augusta, and he a native of the South, was suspected of being a friend of the North, and this ho denies. In the early cart of the rebellion he remarked that he did not know what the South could do without the North, on account of the number of indispensable articles manu• lectured here and sold at the South. For uttering this "tresonable sentiment" he was fined $6OO, and forced to sign a per mit that his son, a mere boy, should be enlisted in the rebel army. The son had been killed, and since that time he has been regarded as a Union man. In consequence of the crowded State of the hospitals, cases of gangrene were Ire quent. Medicines were scarcer than ever before. The apothecaries could not sup ply their customers much longer at any price. Our informant paid $lO for what quinine she took in two days, and the do ses were very small. Homeopathic physi cians are the most popular, because they furnish their own medicine, The ladies do all in their power to give aid and cora • fort to the soldiers in the hospitals, visit ing them daily, and supplying them with soups and such other delicacies as their scanty means will allow. The rebel Government keeps back the intelligence of bad news a.s long aa posti• hi- I- -I AU_ ..1 -t I,_ I__ burg by seeing an account of it /El a North ern paper, which had been smuggled through the lines, and was handed to her 'in secret. The next day the news was published in the local papers. The importance to the South of the sup plies received by the blockade runners, can hardly be estimated. Without them the rebellion would have been crushed long ago. There have been no outbreaks among the slaves, but fears are entertained that there will be trouble with them before spring. Complaints are heard that the domestics are getting uneasy, and do not work willingly as formerly. They are not allowed to visit from fam ily to family as heretofore. No festivals are allowed them, and they were at all rtimes watched with suspicion. There was a decided repugnance to arming the slaves to fight for the Confederacy. Augusta is regarded as the "last ditch" of the Confederacy. There the Confed erate Government has stored immense supplies of cotton brought from Charles. ton and Savannah, from Alabama, and even from Tennessee. Important facto ries and an immense arsenal are also lo• cated there, and the people declare that if Charleston and Atlanta are taken, their armies struggle. will concentrate there for the final At Augusta, the exchange of Confeder. ate money for greebacks is not permitted. At Atlanta, one dollar in greenbacks was worth ten in Confederate notes, and a gold dollar was worth thirteen of the Con federate rags. A gentleman at Augusta Paid $lOO for a slouched hat, and the poorest negro shoes were worth about the same. The Shakspearean Per. Cen. tenary. It Land appears by the late news fng- notwithstanding all rom the E talk and writing about it, no definite arrange• ments have yet been made for the oele• bration of Shakapeare's three hundredth birthday, on the 23d of April next. The Stratford people wished to have the cele- bration there, but the literary men who undertook to arrange matters decided to have it in London. The people of the provinces, however, insisted that Stratford should be the place; and a seperate com• mittee was formed in accordance with these latter views. This committee is try. ing to raise money first, for the endows ment of one or more scholarships to the English Universities, open to competition among the pupils of the school of King Edward VI., at which Shakepeare re is education; and next, the erec tion of a monumental memorial at Strat ford. The entertainments proposed are a banquet on the birthday itself, Saturday, the 23d of April, presided over by Lord Carlisle and attended by many men of mark in literature and art, and by ladies; and in the next week, excursions among Shakspeare'a haunts, reading of his plays, a concert and a fancy ball of Shak spearean characters. In none of this, how ever, will the London committee partici pate; and by this absence of concerted ac tion it is doubtful whether there will pe any really permament memorial of the event. Shakepeare died in 1564, In text the Eogliah were too busy with the restored king and the down-fallen Puri tans to think much of their great drama• tist ; in 1764 Wilkes, Clive and Lard Bute distracted public attention; and the first centenary occasion which can be duly improved to Shakapeare's honor is itt danger of being frittered away by local Jealousies. The sympathies of the world at large will be with the Sfratford scheme{ for the Avon and not the Th ford and not London, is identifiedame s, Struts the name and memories of Shakspeare. _ THE PRESIDENCY.-- The democratic county convention cf Huntington countyi Penneyivania, met on the 15th inst., and unanimously nominated Gen. Geo. B. Mai Clain. as the first choice of the detho racy of that county for their Presidekial candidate, Th,,,.......P1TT181TRGE POST! P.L‘IJA.Y xourse, Aft I* g 9. 1804. Our TerritorM Letter from Governor Brovniette to a Negro Recruiting °Weer. - • His Excellency, Governor Bramlett°, having been addressed by a certain person who either is a negro recruiting officer or would be one, responds to the individual as follows ColowNwilALTEi or Ky Exictrz.vil Der r. t Fliihiroirr, December 14. lent. aptdin Edward Cahill, Recruiting Colored Troupe--sir: Ycurs of thellthinst, informingnie that you have been ordered to Kentucky to recruit "free colored men" for the Arm) of the United States, and asking my consent for so doing, is before me. You do not inform me by what an• thority you come to Kentucky to recruit "free colored men." I know of no act of Congress requiring such service, not have I seen any order from the War De partment directing it. On the contrary, I am well assured that in deference to our picnliar position, and to avoid unbecess fgefnaffiNNW,hteu e t raghitie f e laae ington do not contemplate recruit ing "colored men - in Kentucky. We are ready to till our quota from the " tree white citizens of Kentucky. We will unhesitatingly comply with the requisition for men to defend our Government. We claim the right to fur nish from citizens, whose duty it is to make that defense, and who are ready to comply with the requirements of duty. the duty of defense devolves upon those who euj_.y the benefits of our Government. From such we will fill the call upon us. We presume that while men who owe the duties of allegiance to the Government will be accepted for its defense. Wewill furnish them. If, therefore, you came to recruit "colored men" for the benkfit of Kentucky, we decline your services. If you came to recruit for the benefit of another State, we deny your right to do so, and forbid it. No State has the right, under any law or order, to enter Kentucky to recruit either white or ''colored men." We do not intermeddle with any State that chooses to recruit "colored men" within its limits. But no State that is not willing to meet the measures of duty by contnbniing its quota from its own population shall be permitted to shelter from duty behind the free negro popula tion of Kentucky. We shall meet the call upon us without enlisting colored men, and your State must meet its call from its own white or "colored'' men, as it may best suit its people, and not assume to recruit either white or black in Kentucky. Yours, & c , THOMAS E. BRAMLETTI, Governor of Kentucky THE LATE COL. WM. McNras..—A writ• .er in the National Intelligences, noticing the death of this gentleman, says : The deceased was born in Annapolis, Md., in 1798, and was a soldier of the war of 1812. In 1822 he established a news paper in Annapolis, entitled "The Carroll lonian named in honor of.Charlea Carroll of Carrollton then the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, and conducted it with ability for sometime; was elected printer of the Senate of Maryland in 1823, and re-elected for twenty-six sac ceasive years. In 1856 he received an ap• pointment in the Interior Department and removed to Washington, which position he through the administration of Mi. Buchan an and for some time after, until from age and infirmity, be was compelled to re linquish all business. In politica:Colonel McNeir was a Whig of the old school Bowe SAILOR LOST A LEG, BOTH OF HIS ARMS AND HIS BEAD BY A SHARE.—,A letter from Aspinwall gives the following account of the death of a seaman belong ing to the West India R. M. steamship Solent, at that port: A sailor going ashore on a hawser from the bow of the IC. M. steam packet Solent, was seized by a shark, which took off one of the sailor's legs at the first bite. The next attack the man lost his left arm near the shoulder; then the right arm at the shoulder, and last his head was taken clean off. Th • trunk, with one leg attach ed, floated, was recovered and buried on the 7th by the ship's company, AN INTERESTING FAMILY -A New Bed ford(Mass.) paper, in referring to a family a that place, says: •The o.ld patriarch, Peter, and his oldest daughter, Margaret are dead; Torn is in the Suffolk jail, awaiting trial for forgery; Kate is in our house of correction for keeping •a disorderly house; Tom's wife id ly and Isabella % ere sent to the workhouse on" Tlntraday one charge of being idle and disorder • on Friday the over, seers of the . ,oor 04' charge of the old lad Ktes; alinghter "Pot- vie, " and - the Morrison baby; and Elizabeth has eloped. Few persons in thli section of the country interest the-it:46es stiffetiantly oar territories to cOmpretten 4 or apiirecia* their extent and 4boundless-r maces of mineral and agricultiFal wealth: - TheZ do not realize that, starting from the point where all railroads to the westward terminate, one can travel by coach in a due westerly line, for sixteen days, at the rate of over one hundred miles a day; before he reaches the western limit of our great domain. If we look at the most westerly of our railroad•traveled States—Missouri—we find an amount of mineral, agricultural, and domestic resources unequalled in variety and richness in any State in the Union. Kansas, commencing,wehre Mia• souri leaves off, also, possesses fine lands for agricultural purposes; and although some of the country beyond, known as the Plains, has the reputation of a desert, yet the bottom lands are rich and fertile. The discovery of gold near Pike's Peak (one of the Rocky mountain range) first drew many away from comfortable homes; many, disappointed, retraced their steps homeward; but they failed, not for lack of gold, but because it was chit fly found in such conditions as to require machinery to work it successfully, and furthermore, it required capital,which the poor emigrants of 1867 did not pos. sear. The tide:of emigration still flew 131 ead ly end increasingly thither; capital has been sent out there, machinery introduc ed, and great improvements have recently been made for extracting the gold from the solid rack, so that one may now find a flourishing city situated in the heart of Colorado Territory, at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, at a distance of (more than six hundred miles from a railroad or navigable river. Here is a settlement or city (as they style it) of five or six thousand people, with more than one hundred steam mills in active operation, busily engaged in crushing the gold.bearing quartz From this region alone nearly $20,000,000 of gold has been exported east to fill the gap created by foreign export. Nevada etas furnished about $ 12 ,000,000 more, and titer() is every reason to believe that this will be largely increased during the present year. We can see by these facts that the Territories are not unworthy our attention and study, especially as Congress will, doubtless, convert those mentioned into States either at this session or at an early date, judging from the rapid increase of their wealth and population. The Pacifie Railroad, too, will aid materially in open. ing up this interesting country, and those who have been the pioneers towards-the western mountains will soon witness the evidences of the highest civiliz ition; where all a short time since was but a "howling wilderness." General Seat on the War. A New York letter to the Boston Joule , giveA•the particulars of .a. recent wI in- . ternew th Gen. Scott. He did not (gays thelvriter) regard the future pros . Pe_ate as Very bright. Indeed, he said he did not see one bright spot in our national horizon. One thing he thought very re ma,rkable—no war of any magnitude had ever been prosecuted anywhere before this one, without throwing to the surface men of marked military genius and mark ed virtue. But this war has been fruit ful of no such result so far. Those who had inspired a momentary confidence had disappointed the public expectation. We have had some splendid fighting, but with no marked results. Our generals seem to - save no ability to reap the fruits of well fought battles. To fight the enemy, to gain a decisive victory, and then let him escape with his men, gang and bag gage, is simply to make t he war endless. He considered the President's amnesty proclamation as impracticable, in con seqtlence of the large number of persons exempted from hope of pardon. These would be made desperate and fight to the last. If the large number exempted from pardon were in the hands of the President to day, and under lock and key, so that he could, if he would march them oat to death, he could not execute that large number. Hun.anity and civilization would revolt at it. In the judgment of Gen. Scott, it would be better to offer pardon to the great mass of the rebels, and reserve severe punishment for the leaders only. More than a year ago General Scott sup posed that Corinth and Richmond would both be taken, and taken at once. He not only expected it, bat had never seen any explanation or reason why it was not done. Confident of that result, he sent to the President a plan for the settlement of the difficulty, North and South. A basis for the reconstruction of the Union was sent in. It was made the subject of one or more cabinet meetings, and Gee. Scott is confident that when the war is over, the plan will form substantially the basis of a final settlement. SACKETT—On Monday, 25th War• Ironton Junction, Cant. J. B. SAO:MITT, in the 83,1 year of his34e Funeral at the First Prestirterian Church, (Dr. Parton's.) at two o'clock this afternoon. The friends are invited to attend. 1~ ~THS lIEIgT No. 1 White Carbon Oil, Is still retailing at 60 CENTS PAR GALLON, AT JOS. FLEMING'S DRUG STORE, Corner of the Diamond and Market street- Also, may be obtained a large and /lupin iur as ' sortment of Ltquors for medicinal pi:ll . l,oBes, con - &biting of the Attest OLD BRANDINS, a ea error article of ROLLAND GIN, PORT and ("MERRY WINES of the neat descriptions. Tame baring nee for those articles will consult their own inter est by examining my stook before pure-bluing elgewheria P. tasli and Sods Ash Mat cannot be excelled in quality, always on hind. Patent Medicines mad all the new Perfumeries and Haw Preparations of the dig a/wayi an hand. 11/SO. Dr. diurdocla's Burn Ointment, a most excellent article for Burns of Frosted Limbs. for anything in the Druz line, rremember the Place, JOS.FLEMING'S DRUG STORE Corner of the Diamond ani Market etzee .A PA la It a Dye. In the year 1945 Mr. Mathews first prepared the VENIsTIAN lIAIR DYE; since that time it has been need by thousands. and in no ins•ance hag it fai , ed to give entiresataltaction. The VENETIAN DYE is the eheape t p each t wol Id. Its price hi only Fifty cents, and litttie contains double the quantity ut dye in thee. ually sold for $l. /be VENETIAN DYE is warranted not to in jure the halr.or scalp te the 'lightest degree. 1I 1. ....Jai... and certainty. the hair reQuinne no preparation whatever, mayENETI DYE Proclaim ellY shade that be desired--one that will n lade, ernes or wash ont—ons that is as permanent as tee hair itself. For late by all drogg , sta. Frio° 50 ciente, A S, General Agent.. I. MATHEW 12 Gol Also, manufacturer lilaratters'd at . ARA ie.. Y. (knee. the hest hair dressing in as°. P 1:1•111 rice 1.15 8011 CP . lanl6-5,d HERNIA OR RUPTURE CUHED.—W e are prepared to treat successfully all oases of rapture in young per sons, most oases in middle aged and in some cases of old parsons, having fitted up an exten sive trtablishment for manufacturing • Improved Trusses sad Supporters. In peculiar cases or where persons desire any stile of truss not on hand we will manufacture to order. Having the largest stock in the pity all Persons requiring trasses will find it to their ad vantage to call. Dr. M'CIARB will attend personally to the ap plication of Trusses, Supporters kn., &a. Besides our own manufacture we have a large stook of Ritter & Penfield's Celebrated Trusses Dr. S. S. Fitch's Celebrated Trusses, Marsh & Co.'s Celebrated Trusses, French. English and German Trusses, Supporters, all kinds, Elastic Stockings, Bandages, &c. At the Pittsburgh Drug House TORRENCE WGA RR, APoncsoAxxxs corne7 of Fourth and Market au., Pittsburgh sel2-/sPd-o Or TO CORA lIIIPTI VER.-THE Rev. E. A. Wilson's Remedy ! Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, Coughs. Colds, and all Throat and Lung Affections, Together with a pamphlet 'thing the presorin ton and a short history of his case, can be ob tained of a CItIRIE.I.I.I lo LEMING'. Cor. of Market st., and the Diamond Pittsbnrgh. lan7-2ind J. M. 00HRWILL KrCORNWELL ft KEBI CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS, SILVER & BRASS PLATERS, And manufacturers of Saddlery d/ Carriage Hardware, No. 7 St. Clair street, and Duquesne Way. mitt (neat the Bridau.) PITTSBURGH. IWDESTISTRY.—TEETH EX. °wiry's app traoparat tecl without pain by the use of Dr, us. J. F. ROFFMAN, DENTIST. All work warranted. 184 Smithfield Street. PITTSBURGH. REMOVAL 122 Wood Street,} TO 1 122 ) Wood Street, Our present location on Fifth street having, of late become more and more undesirable for onx business we beg to announce that we willremove our fell7B.lC :STORE, on the IST OF APRrr. next, to 122 Wood Street, Pour Doors Above sth at.; Nearly opposite the Pittsburgh Trost Company. 41" The exclusive agenoy for STEINWAY'S PIANOS Will remain in oar poaiession as before. !, isin23 H. WEBER & BRO. -• Adverii naents. THE traniintinexED OFFERS AT Privates-ale a lazgeliul valuable Clay situate and lying on the National !toad, in Hen ti tp., Fayette oo , Fa. known as the "MOUNT AUGUSTA PROPS/ST eighteen atilo3 Ea3t of Uniontwn. .. and fens miles West of numealleld, Pa , until when, if it shall not have been disposed of, it will be oft ed at public sale or out err, on the prem ises at 1 o'clock, D. m., of said day. Said tract contains upwards of all adj pining, about three hundred awes of which are neared anti about dkr acres In meadow, The improvements consist of a large two story well calculated for a Public. Hoase, large and commodious stabling, sheds and neorsiary out blinding': also a good two Story FRAME TENANT HOUSE, BLACK SMITH SHOP, eke. There is also on said land a young ()Tabard cf a ntedgrafruit. and a variety of other fruit. There Is undance Gt- 0 0 D W A T .1U it near the house and stables, and I.lenty of never failing spriogs and streams in the fields. This is arare opportunity for a safeinvestment,, as the property will be sold at a great bargain: Any information Concerning the property can be had by calling on me at the Sheriff, canoe. in Uniontown, or by ealLnit on John Oldwine, on the premises. Albert G. Meek. Somerset. Pa., or Nicholas McCartney. in Wharton Tp. H - Title good. warms moderate, Po:union given lit of April next. THOMAS BROWhTFIELD. laa22.Std w. D. PITPJtBIOH ....... .......... . 11101. PATTIEBROBI dk. AFARION, CORA AgRAPION BICIERCHANTAiI, Floor an 4 Grain. and (Wend Produce Dea l -. era, zio. 8 Wood at. Pittsburgh. Pa. We take pleasure in refining to the following Pittsburgh Houses : CllOBB, Smyth 1 Co., Zug & Painter A. Bradley, E, Edmondson A; Co., A. H. Dacia. P. Woodwelt Jas. Aren't) , & Co.. J.W. Spencer, O. A. Love & Co., R. A. Jack & Co. N. B.—Will open February 15th, 1864. isn2A-tf MERCANTI LE LIBRARY ASSOCIA TION LECTITtEi. PROF. LOUIS AGABEII2, Ut Harvard College the eminent Solana° &hol ler. will deliver the kighth and Binth:Lootures of the course, under the atteDiots of the kiereell tile Library Association, AT CONC.Etirr (In Monday and Tneaday Evantugo. FEBRUARY 18T J./) 2D. Sourscri--TRE COAL FORMATION." Doors open at 7 o'clock- Lecture commences at 7id. Sumee Tickets SO cents. 'Pickets for male at Satiwarts'a and Kelly's Drug Stares, and at cothrane's Book Store. Allegheny; and at the Music, Book and Drug d'ores . Pitts burgh, and at the Library Rooms. W. H. KINCAID, 8 1/ONON W. Wanur. &non A. Logo, TOOL ft 4 Lswzi.L, WILLIAM W W•ED, LUNDY M. ATWOOD. an4i- td Lecture Committee. EIGHTY ACRES OF LAND FOR SA LE--E 1 testae four miles from Allegheny city, on the New Brighton Road. 4 good dwellier house of sixteen moats well arranged with ban "Aginiall47"Lalttibierliskwiftelignzettrail and 40%w-oat-hens/I_ tenant house. at tern. wen and excellent sprint/. all in eemplste ardor. For prim) and tarma apply to S. CUTHBERT . iaxit V Commercial Broken. titl mote t st. VLOVR—ioo BRE% EXTRA PAJIELLY A.' FLU Wl )ast received sod for gale 4 . 7 FISTZER ARATROIVU. corner Market and nest streets. CORN -8130 SACHS PR I ME EAR CORE- in store and for sale Jan 2S NXTZ RR it STUNG. corner Mar et and First eta jur FANS— 0 BABAUELS OF PRIME BANS—Jost received and for eale by FETZER k Atutterit.ONG. corner Marto and Pint sta. VENISON -8 N ISO N— 6 SADDLES VENISON— v hist recd and fur Ws by FRIZXR dr ARMSTRONG. amain Market and Pirat stroata. NEW SILKS, PLAIN SILBS, NEW! FIGURED SILKS NEW 1 BLACK SILKS, BARKER & CO.'S, 59 Market Street Wr 04, 74 . , 3 1 ig 6 o „pq 0 gg4lg. , e 6, 0041 m I ; •2 A i1*14.43 3 0 ito ct A A 7J:11 g"4 g 0 w 02 '..1 Im 0.b4, W k:A 4 1 0° ..9 M M 4t1t.421 ~44;g 04 pi o° 4 ocs.s g A .423 y4go, tu) 0 - c.v..— 0 • OA-g r a m 4g Mb..a2 ;14 .111 4 PH 2:OTi: 0 445 g, .mea46 0 1=2.4 as. ''...r2Aa4.9 ;14 44 IZ" tdvml m 0 44 11 122 I°o 471 g gii ; t c? A 44 1, 1:4 E0r410,7q taittB it: 4-4 mtiA2A(to 2 .BAICL. KERS E 4 a Uzi cz, o g.. cz, 272 , '2 g 4 11 ES H. HOPHLNS ..................... THOMAS a LASMAS Hopkins & Lasear, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. NO. 108 FIFTH STBENT. PITTSUGH. PA. C-lleetions and other legal bus: into attenled ing to in Alleghemy,Washingron..Greene.and counties. Jan2s-and Lupton, Oldden & CO., GRAVEL ZiLOOVEREI, 051701. Coe. Wood dr Fifth sta., Second Sitoryj Manufactory, BEAVER BT.. Aisseinater. Repairs to defective roofs laid by other partleri Promptly attended to. lato eau - LT 1-00.000 BALLS OF Mil/ WALL PAPAR4niaRB. Ao. to sold infotesptinsottrdid W..P.AIAURALL ion% * Wood street, .VALUABLE PROPOITY FOR SALE FA.EVA AND DROVE STAND MONDAY FEBRUARY 2AD 1864 1,000 Acres: BRICK DW ELLIN° OF COAL AND LIKESITONE Two never failing fountains o _ _ __._ .. D Th e subrunles .7 aliess ;$l. esle a th dwell, house in which he now lives. alteutted e an —. Avenue. First ward. Allsetheer, The lot ..k. feet front b y IfiOtleep roommat w ie k to ji „, alley. 1$ a - The""tw-eted - ,- Ftieh; et fti , , rooms and eau- t n.. • . house, stable. goat hunnietibi - eratew, , . , yard intro= dint the d . . , manna. nientelieeee, re wider all tea swims ot thedinalui; , - ''--- , ": .• , I 11110 Cattle? all 0 dedrable m i thmea in Htediertie wnaldn 'Beaverco u n t y Pa.. cont. ter - leehic' e ' I am. iaa-neer-two-s alz Vi A - I•42lll4*.iiriaan, 7 ~ fl i t m ltlinett,- no Tlierils good • . , gas b eut a., 1 Por Jan tenns, BOLES. :17-tf &us* Avenue, Allithena dio. ' New Advertfse; onto. . ~. BA N amp Tcf' :f-',.. - I. ~7 .f, Cloaks, Shawls, L 0 T-11-14 BROM NBW YORK. AT iII'CLILLANDI AUCTION HOUR No. 55 Fifth Street. Tale LARGE AND miazarez stook ( Gloats, o Shaw!. end 2lotbs t insurt be itors and be Y sold in TEN & for the Benefit of of the Ore& Sold Regardless of Cost. Price will do wel/ to oall N. B.—Sales now going on. Ari RAND /LARS BLERTIND TOW vILW Z ENB AT CONCERT HALL, PRO MOTE VOLDNTbIIIitING. In purtmance of arecolution of the Meeting of Citizens held at the Board of Trade Rooms. Thursday afternoon, we invite the people of Al legheny county to assetalre in Aims Meerng at OuNOEhT HALL. on B ATURDAY EVENING January 29 lhAt 71i o'clock. toYorward mewmres to raise Volunteers tont' the quota of dlieghent county under the late mall of the President. and thus avoid the draft. Nei. Gang. Hanawk gad Brooks are ezeoted to be present and address the meetteg. There Is no time to be lost ff the County is to be saved from a draft, and we urge every geed eit:gati to be present and by his in' finance strengthen the movement. Hon. THOB. M. RGWE, non. Wfd. F. JOHNSTON,II WM. LYON R. B IL RUNOT. JO Maz• ELXILMINBERGBR, ian29-it W. IL. rumlol/.. 1000 Ibe OLD TYPE F` OR E 3 A IL. .S. AT THIS OFFICE "The Best are the Cheapest." Wan. B: Bradbury Bohomaoker & Co.'s, CELEBRATED PIANOS s Biker kledalsreosi P ved *Ain a ffi oa iOLD t st ZD State Fairs. sad Pair af Amick:ea ' Lndh:la. Fier York, in I 8 3, by Wm. B. Bradbury far the Best Plano Fortes. soIiOALICKia t eo.. Philadelphia. received the Crystal Palmas Prise Medal .at London, be- sides havontunaroas Medals. Diplomas and ape dial reports from Mate Faits and Institutes. Both have a number 01 letters ofrecommanda tien mom the highest musical talent, einitmg Gottreholk, Boraskosch. Wm. Mason, Grobe and Piothanos ers. made, sa Better d and cheaper than any other Warranted for Five Years. WAIWNLINK BARB, dole Agents for Pittsbargh and Westin Pa . Jan2s No. 2 St Clair at . near tbuiDeadba R. P. BARRY, (Date Cashier of the Merchants' Bank.) Commission Merchant, No. 11 SOUTH MAIN ST., ST. LOll3l O l, Mo, InRT/CIILAS ATTEMTION PLDI ning orders for the purchne of Cotton, Hemp. Tobareta. !lour, Pork, Macon Lard, dre., dto, dt. Lords Rama ro—Danks, Bankers, and Merchants of ier. Pittsburtl4 generally ; John D. Sonar. am. Cash- Orden and cools:manta respectfully solicited. and prompt returns made. 11)11214o J. EI:MN ............ ................ J RANDOM HERNAN & HANCOCK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, No. sl Brio STREET. PITTSBURGH. Are prepared to attend promptly to all business in their profession which may be entrusted to their eare. jan26.lw lORMSBY IRONWORKS. Wharton Brothers * Co., A RE NOW PREPAY/&B TO 1124021ETTi ordere from the trade for all aka of Guide, Hoop, Stant{ Band and Hors. Enloe iron OF THE BEST QUALITY. Pittsburgh. Jan. TAW. JanB-6md CHINTZ HS, CHINTZES, CHINTZES, PRINTS, PRINTS, PRINTS, DELAINES, DELAINES, DE LAINES, DELAINES, DELAINES, COL'D A LAPACCA, COL'D ALAP&CQA, POPLINB,I COLD ALAPACCA, Just rayeived at MMUS dr HACIKE'N, COB. FIFTH & MARKET STS Jan 27 To ilinceEol:l7 FOILOIDIS MIMING Wholesale or-Retail; CHINTZES; GREATLY • REDUCED HOODS, SONTAGS, CHINTZBB, CHINTZES; PRIN TS, PRINTS, NEGLIGEE SHIRTS, U NDERGARMENTS, Ds abort all WINTER GOOD& We continue to keep a well unsorted stook Of' TRIMMINGS, EMBROIDERIES, H ANDRERCHEIFS, HOSIERY, GLOVES, NOTIONS and NICK-NACKS, In treat variety. Also. a very lane supply of xorrnwe YARNS, of most any color. ZEPHYR WORSTED eat* , shades. DON'T FORGET THE PLACE, :713 MAJUIET SITIMST MAG'II,II2I & GLIDE, Janos PRINTS, DELAINEB, POPLINS POPLINS WALTER. IL Lowitis, Minsc amsoui tura iruitt pit.tio nuo Lew. in the sum Wass. termed:, otetteied ty him on Fourth Street, above Smithfield. eou.axo 111PCOLLINZER *Anni •Olgar Manufacturers, An dirbolooledsidosin Toaicco, oNtaw and CaGARBi 108 WOOD Oram. ithArgetstoes t ot PIPES always cm haa t : , a* s. s. uviry4tag. Broker & Insurance Agent, 59 101 MITH M. (Bathe.- Belfdfit3 aritarticisiar attention paid to the nifecdukso an i gal% .(on oonontegion ozokuireis) of Bonds, !Raab. Maltares and Real Salta ieals-tt 1 / 4a , A to, "' Li Elements. RE METBER - . NEXT' *tllks Trig GriateS 134,44 n ~ 2vskozes. Ili ma arra Aro tb be 'Lund at cottcEii*T 44L SHOE STORE, 02 IPTIr STREET, , - Boot' and Mee of every deserietion. at tte root netonk Driers to edema the Fa and Winter stook. 14E29 sffitratii Or Photograph Mbtima SOO WENDS OF Pocket Boolm „ and Walialai /000 HINDS OF Card PhOtograpa, 100 /MiirDlS OF Diaries for 1864, Pittook's Book, Stationery and News Depot, IwB OFPOSITS THE POSTOFFICE. WELL-KNO WN FACT M'CLELLAND SELLINO BOOTS & SRO OF THE BENT QIIA:LITY ASTONISHING LOW paicEil. Look for 55 Fifth Street, IV EW D RY New Blaek Silks; New Dress Goothi; New Spring-Shawis; New Cassluteres; Linen Tabling, Domestic Goods, GARDNER & SCHLEITERTI Bumeasors to E. R. GARDNER & CO., MARE:ET STREET. BM/GAINS. LADIES' WOOL VESTS, A lane quantity of HEAVY WOOL SOCKS, TRAVELING or PRICES,