~;, ;. riEE Ektaasit Lei ` Tuns. •.,,. , I°Th • NO•s!ather iin•2oir Saxon bards, .g haspis and Marts be 'strong, eciebrabithntriumphs of Our own good Saxon tongue; ‘Por.stronger far than hosts that march. -, .l4ltdbattks-flngs unfccrled, It ems with FIICIDOM. TIiOCCIUT, and. Tann', To rouse and rule the world. 'Sf.nut,Albion learns its household lays `On every surf-worn shore, /aid Scotland hears it echoing far As Orlmey's breakers roar; Tram Jum's crags, and Mona's hills, It floats on every gale, And warms with eloquence and song 1., . The homes of Innisfail. 03 . 13:may a wido and swarming deok . It scales the rough wave's crest, Seeking its peerless heritage— The fresh and fruitful West; It climbs New England's rocky steeps, As victor mounts a throne; Niagara knows cud greets the voice Still mightier than its own. It n spresula where winter piles deep snows o_l2 bleak Canadian plains, :Ana wheie otiEssequibo's banks, 'Eternal summer reigns; - • It glada Acadia's misty coasts, ''.4ssnaca's glowing isle, And bides where, gay with early flowers, Green Teins' prairies smile. It lives by clear Itasca's lake, - Missouri's turbid stream, Mere cedars rise on wild Ozark, And Kansas' waters gleam; It tracks Om loud swift Oregon, - Through sunset valleys rolled, And soars where California brooks Wash down their sands of gold. It - sounds in Borneo's camphor groves, On seas or fierce Malay, In fields that curb old Gauges' flood, And towers or proud Bombay; It - wakes up Ad:la's flashing eyes, . Dusk brows, and swarthy limbs; The dark Liberian soothes her child With - English cradle hymns. 'Tasmania's maids are wooed and won In gentle Saxon speech; Australian boys rend Crunoe's life By Sidney's sheltered beach: It dwells where Afric's southmost rapes Meet oceans broad and blue, And Menetld's rugged mountains gird The wide and waste Karroo. it kindles realms so fur apart, That, while its praise you eing, There may be clad with antumn's fruits, And those with flower of spring 'lt quickens lands whose meteor lights • -Elaine in an Antic sky, And lands for which theHOkithern Cross Hangs its orbit fires on high. It goes with all thst prophets told, And righteous kings desired, With all that great apostles taught, And glorious 'Greeks admired; With Shakspeare's deepand wondrous cease, And Milton's loftier mind; With Alfred's laws, and Newton's lore, ,To cheer and bless mtinkind. Mark, as it spreads, tfitrit deserts bloom. And error tires nway, A. ..swathes the mist of night Before the star of day; But grand as are the victories Whose monuments we see, These are but as the dawn, which speaks Of noontide yet to be. Take heed, then, heirs of Saxon fame, Take heed, nor once disgrace With deadly pen or spoiling sword Our noble tongue and.race. Go forth, prepared.in every dime, To lore and help each other, And judge that they who counsel strife Would bid you emite—a brother. Go forth, and jointly speed the time. 'By good men prayed for long, When Christian states, grown just and wise Will acorn revenge and wrong: When earth's oppressed and savage tribes Shall cease to pine or roam, All taught to prise these 'English wonls.— . FAITH, TTLEEDEM, HEAVEN, AND HOME. THANKSGIVING SERMON. SoowoEo Tr. Dec. 14th, 1S O. Tr, the Her. Georg , : Marshal/. Reverend and Dear Sir—The undersigned be ing present, and baring beard you preach n ser mon un Thankiriring Day, and Ixliering - it was very appropriate to the 0CC3.91011, and that it Might be a great benefit to community if it was widely circulated, we would, therefore respect fully request you to furnish a ropy of it, for pub licationin the Pittsburgh Garet.. and such oth er papers as will copy it Respectfully Yours, WM. WILSON, Sit. • HUGH McELHENY. JOSEPH MILLER, ANDREW TIDBALL. ROBERT JOHNSTON, • WILLIAM DONALDSON, HENRY POTTER, T. P. ADAMS. • JAMES FIPFE. Bernet., Dec. 25th, Dl5O. • r Merv, Irdsore, Sr., IL .11cE0o-ny. O.? Jfiller. and nf6•re. Geittlemen—Your note of the 14th ult., re questing, a copy of the sermon preached by me on Thanksgiving Day. for publication, has been duly received—end in reply. I wish to nay that the sermon which has met your favorable regard, was preliaTl in great haste, and preached from short 114 , 2 Ci, without the most distant idea or de sire that it shoul4 receive a publicity wider than the - circle of those who beard it delivered. And ,I fear that the impression made on your •tnitels from the circumstance of delivery. has unduly .enlioneed iL import..lce and given it a value, ,which, under other cireum4tances it is by mean , entitled to. However. as your request is enineet. and the hope expressed that its publi city might he productive of route good. it is hereby, eti far us it eau be recollected, and with all its imperfections put at your disposal. 1. remain. Gentlemen. with the highest consid eration. Your humble Servant, GEOWOE . MARSHALL A SERMON Preachtd-an Thankfyiving dry, Dee. 12, 18.50, in Bethel Church, by the Rev. George Marshall, and .fublithed by requeet. • ..ittel vbs. tba Ypnt cif the Lor4 Went h Liberty wisp• lib. part Of lab verse_ It was the feeling of a pious heart that led the • Psalmist to exclaim ; -• Bless the Lord, 0, my semi and forget not all his benefits" And again. 7..0, that men would praise the - Lord fur all his .7 goodness, and for all his wonderful works to the -children of men." And it is elsewhere said that, ••. It is.good io give thanks unto the Lori, and pay our vows to the most High God." It is. good for the soul itself, by calling forth and cherishing a feeling of dependence on God, as well as gratitude ~ for every mercy received. It is also the right wily to secure the protection and gracious favor of the InOtti Governor of the Universe. And it is ' *pleasing to see those invested with power, and who are responsible to God for their official, no ',well as private conduct,—who are ordained of ,„ • iiloilto be a •• terror to evil doers, and a praise to theta that do well,"—calling the attention of ` . l.be the , to remember lied as the source of every good and perfect gift. Such a call reeog _. nixes God as the ruler of all nations, and who , holds in his hoods the sceptre of universal em pire.:lt also shows a correct' moral sense on the • 'object of human accountability for all mercies - : . .received from Ills munificent hand. We are -called together, to-day, my hearers, to give thanks unto the Lord. And for what 7 ' ' For every blessing, tanipond and spiritual, gen ' Tend and particular. For life and health, food and raiment, homes rind lands, - friends and friendship; our advantages, civil and religious; .:.. oar liberty, intellectual, civil and spiritatil; - ilir -our laws, to for as gri; , e, scriptural and good.— In a word,-for ell that Soaker us a peculiar and distinguished nstiod. These are all in the hands • :of God—all urider i his control, and can only be "7-• ' retained so long ad we retain His Savor. -. ,Our text declares that in the number of our blessings, there is one peculiarly dear to the ' hearts 'of God's people, and the existence and happy efiects of which, depend on the presence .. . and influence of the Spirit of God. This is •-' 'JAberty, a word that calls forth' a thousand-ten `:der recollections. The Apostle, we suppose, an ,- der this term inciculed both civil and religions ' lißeity—embracing- freedom from the curse of '-- the moral law, from the bondage of sin, the fear -, of-death end helli - freedom from all despotism - raid iniquitous Lewis; joined with the:privilege of : :::- • -sshiping. and serving God according to - the i i an enlightened conscience, and the His {Ye . yrithout molestation or - ... • ' ' !' sion we \ *alias. it as cam -o==i, d religion- k freedom. And, ~ • . upon to pros ci God,for&lX, as . slap, it rosy Pe profitable and • . l it the exercitml of this day, to 'limo arartTitaatka in a natiop, depend tist tktisiriserter and .;ni4darning and sane /own' of ther .$ raj God. .• remark that civil and religious manor be M '11,41W/tell and promoted ,simply by ! the diffusion of knowledge among the people, and the presence of commanding intellect, and greatpowens of elymturtMe; on the part of rider,. It hos been said, Mid jiiitly;te r that knowledgo is power. But the power of knowledge may be n power for evil as well as good, if the Moral main: which that knorlege is planted be Mania ken and uncultivated by the sanetifying'inflience ,of God's Spirit. Let us, for illustration, take a ease 'Here is a watch. You examine it and find that it bath wheels, and , barrel, and sockets, hair-spring and chain, dial-plate, hands and case. All the parts requisite to it, as a piece of machinery to mark time, are there. You' pro i flounce it a watch exhibiting greaten!' and pol ish, but it moves not. You examine again, and find that all the parts ore not only there, but each in the appropriate place. You are sur prised that, when wound up it measures not time. It is still silent. A closer inspection results in the discovery that the mainspring is broken and that however well made and rightly fitted are nil the other ports, the etetential element of motion is unfit for action; and without it noth ing else Can be of any avail, so as to reach the contemplated end, -And is not this precisely the moral deed in the constitution of mon': lie ha' intellect, will, nod affection. Ile can think, and choose. and love. I.:nos - ledge can expand the mind-s.throw operative Motives before the will. and attractive objects before ths. affections. Bat the heart, the mainspring of tha cr.oral ma- I c hinery, is broken, and totally unfit for all right moral action. And no power of education; no I arousing influence of oratory, no motives of hen no,e, interest, or happiness,—no exhibition of God's terrible wrath against sin, or overwhelm ing compasebon for dying man, can ever restrain. purify and ei t eginet this depraved heart—can change or it into Jove rued real for Clod no o k his Flu ry: make liber;y, eird sndreligiou_t, to be to the heart a blessing deargr kiqu lite, without the etn,ythty and all purifying agency of rine Hely Briej.t. Can knowledge and elo•lueucc ir,ake love *hot which is good and hate that which is evil! eetxild the knowledge of 3 Bacon, or the eloquence of q Pitt or Chalmers. mill the dead to bfe,—nialte the Mind see, and the enemies of tiled love virtue! the voice of history on this nubjeet Lou) , at :47tleei at' the her bloody revolution- And pas net., no knowl edge and education maim! , er.r) ur spas,ing mental etter,,c atel elo q in lice nueitig . , her ytatettuen! None will se stet yet Were knowledge and eloqueure -hail they within them the elemeats of iiati - a. live power an to hold its check tile witkeit„..,,, of depraved humanity, and prevent the taltiL3l.• o f the bloodiest Mama that the pen of the La,- I ionise' has ever been ...tied to portray. Again contemplate Greece and '1.4,qt., in the days of Demosthenes and.ricers. Thu-. Were doer el wide-spread knowledge. and tirtint• C 1... quenee.—days when civil liberty. at lea,. sysel Lanny friends, and the least encroachmeat an Ler hallowed domain was riewej with jealousy. and the note of alarm sounded by ideny no earncyt worshiper at her shrine. But dui knowledge and eloquence prevail to prevent the tide is; hu man depravity. earelle.l by Eastern luxury and profligacy of atallnert.froin breaking over creep harrier and inundating floe lands, where limner Ding and Virgil chanted the peelses of Liberty • And what became of Grecian LltnlCVgind Roman Independence! And where are the 4.lfienian and Boman Republics! And where that litceiy the rem boned of which once arroused thousand's end summoner! then; to the field of deadly con flict in her defence! Alas' they sank into the shades of moral gloom hi spite of all that knowl edge sad eloquence could do • to be succeeded only by despotic tyranny iu slavery. , and mental imbecility in the people But we need nut look to lauds of sonic is..te fur proofs of one position. Contemplate our own courctrst---the laud of Washington and Frank lin,—and whet* has knowledge been more wile. ly spread. or elownee more deeply -tidied and effectively diSplsyrd t We have our COMIIIOII ,:nOOl.. in Irbi:h the clinic-tin of the high and low. rich nail poor. meet togotLri tins. also our lligh Schaub'. College,. and Mier i ties, superintended by 4ael, of loch inteNe4goil and moral worth—taco itatesn.,,,r to none of a past or living generation. And at ti, tar.iii the Legislative Hall, in the Senate Ch.oni,gr• and at the tlacreil Desk, there is perhaps as constellation of talent, literature. Cho/pellet,. and high Weald character as has eve; near ill thy political and moral heavens tie need but retet to a ('lay, Wiehater. Coy*, soil Belnan, I r the Senate Chamber: a Crittenden. Sergeant. and' Loomis; ai.the Bar; or to a Breckenridge. Plum mer, and Bice, in the Pulpit. as proof of this. But can all this wide spritted knowledff , the people: this pre-eminent fakvt. elotinettec• and literary distinction among stateru,sen and divines. control, purify, and hold in humanity!prasrd Can the mighty power of thisrketsial and moral worth create in the bosom theliear and love of tiod—rsigard for and rightemassesti--the hatred of all oppression and selfishness! l'ao it calm the troubled waves of passion,—cause the ijurry surge, of 1011111311- Otal commotion iu the Luny: heart. to fall hack into on unruffled and pleasing arram. flowing quietly along in lore to civil sad gels oustiler ty, to be 'removed only front their accuslomeil channel when the dear idol of the heart is as sailed: If so, why have we jails tool penitenti aries. almshouses sod tillaJ with un happy victims! There is eunetbiog awl out of place. The life-giving :and moving prin. - C.ifde of moral action in society, iv ruined. The heart of man is deceitful. above all things, nod, desperately wicket - The disease is ii deep and inveterate. the prison so deadly and vetted, extended, that all the arnmoutative power of Paul. mid MI the eloquence of Gabriel, real.] not reach and operate n curative effect. To this evil. to reesedy this defect, to make the fo, telt. or moral virtue send forth healthful and re freshing streams. we need n power no leas ener getic than the Omnipotent Spirit of God. In His power and presence. we have a curative rem, aly for all the cells that athiid 4,4 idiroi And it is high time for man—it is bado rims for American citizens and American eltriidione. to feel this great truth, and whilst the ark of myil and roligious freedom iv - tassel on the beistrous Ocean of excited passion and angry piditical fac tion; to Doak sway from au arts of flesh. from all human )inowlislge. all Legislative - tars. a nd all human eloquence, to that gracious Spirit who brought light seal darkness,. and i rhurd chaos to order and (wools. . . Cud. I remark, ayxin. that the enactment and promulgation of gnnd will not of theue.elvee prevent the 4,..---trto.tion of . it the roooroattro eriflttev, the :itarit of God le: wanting. • What is the power of ill low, civil. political. and moral, "Tarlac from +1... bpice meta iti the heart of a rigid raipr,nciple. di, I , t law-!whoring. law-fearing. lawdoviog. awl law-abiding! It is the prerogative of Lass l” pre the or prohibit a certain cum, of :lethal, under 3 penalty. Ji say, to the -uhj,,,rl do this and you shall prosper, tut lie derilict to May - and pan-led/went await,. you. It , oldr , s-e, the uudrtwmdiug mid heart, under the ...five- , of happine-, or misery, aecortioe to the conduit shall be in the line of obedience or di-obedience. It hos, however, no power lo let the ...xtbe-^1 'cc and feel the good, and shun the evil. It courant change the heart, turn darknets info light. and depravity Into purity, In order to the effective ness of law. tire thing commanded mast he ',- wetted and loved ; the thing prohibited, disrel isked and hated. Axel where this state of heart is not found, the law 1611 rot be respected and loved, though it may he feared: yO,l i., propor tion as the restraints of fear are removed, will the pent up depravity of the heart seek grata', elation. Now We principle of all rigid action in this case, lies in the heart. And thin being al togetkey depraved: in a !state of entire, moral obliquity from God, it most and will in its emu ral state set All law at defiance, except so for ns restrained by (vgr of the law's penalty. We have good, and wive, And salutary laws in both the Hook of Heaven 644 statute hooks of our Commonwealth, respecting the tlabbath. proper ty, the duties we owe our neighbor, apd the .a cred character of haunt life. God •ay, . He memlxr the Sabbath day. to harp it holy. - Ife nays, Thou shalt uoi_steal, nor hear false wit mesa &gains/ trey neighbor;" that we "shall do no murder," by Lege our neighbor as ourselves . And all human 155 V., So far no good. and hearing an these subjects, is but re-enactment of the Divine law, and receives all ,thaauntroling power from the sanctions of the latter. and net how are these laws of thin owl man regfuleP What influeuce have they upcn great numbers to soci ety, of every age, chin, and aca 1 Have they pr.olosatl the fear of find, lore for virtue and true regard Inc liberty? Ilas the power of jaw held iu check the flatness passions of the-nti aattrillied heart, and made 111011 tender of the reputation, interests. ate) life of his fellow man, as he would have his own 10../e,PY rhetiehed 'pa : guarded'? Let the history of pLoriety, in our uwp awl other countries, answer this qukstion• we have, moreover, lawn regulating the tratlic in intoxicating drinks at all times, and especially on the Sabbath. I will vat say that these lows were either Orion Or good. hot respect for the dead and those of deptirttsl worth impels me to say, that with the light they then had en the morality of the subject, they judged them wise and beneficial' to eorlely' But have -they beau! observed! Has the letter or spirit of such laws been regarded] Has the sanctity of the Sal.- , bath been kept untandshed from the entrnnce of the foul Demon of Intemperance! Hostile law'. penalty been, with undeviating certainty. visited upon the head of all transgressors? 'Who can give an affirmative answer to these questions! ,And what Shall we say regaiding the law regu lating the license system? The very frame-work and Jeatere,of this law, were based on what may be called read, though unintentional, error. At its+basis lies Ale p.:cognized principle Ulatnico. Ladle drinks are marl!! - S9 man, when taken in moderation. But to guard azainst the principle of selfishness that would leap, "P 'hen ' over every barrier, it wan deemed ,nesdful in or. der to gnarl the intcresta of wociety, that these into whose hands Foe pt tho comminionto.* tail the intoxicating beverage, should Conte be -fore the liceivithiectiolverv• Well recommended for inrifility; ghodieputtaihrt. sober habitsouid as' Persons well provided with accommodation for man and horse. 2, Such, la the course , prescribed by law. Now, that this law was either right in Itself, or ever wim'and salutary, we exceedingly doubt. At the same timeSre should be sorry to impugn either the motive:tor altruist- of those who framed it. We are of opinion that they thought they acted wisely, and in this matter an puhlic benefactors. It ens an attempt•to hold in check On the'one hand the principle of selfish ness, and on the othir that of uncontrolled appe tite. The defect of the whole system was this t j It legalist,' a hasiness at warfare with the low 1 of God and the hest interests of society. It was I putting ihe covering of human law between the I ronscience of the rum-seller and the moral law 1 of God, so that, the light and burning power of the latter might be broken and neutralized, be fore its re,istle, energy could reach and tor ment his spirit. Who min say how many rum seller: and detinktinl-matera have spent-days and nights in their destructive business, Enema , parativc mental pence, whose very consciences would have tormenteilthem with scorpion power, awakened by the slanting sound of Sinai's law, but for this shield of - brass fabricated for the protection of conscience by legislative enactment. But suppose we admit, for thesake of argument, this law to be good . the beat that could be framed in the circumstances of the case, how. •let me ask, has its provisions been carried nut! Ilan the irit and intention of the law been met?— ! , Did tine law contemplate that the real wants and . rise, -Iry erunforto of s ociety ' , o w,' require li censed ffnggerie: nu, oimel ell street, and lanes of cities, nod within -light or oach other ta.e q uen,_ ly in the public highway!, of the country: Do travellers in the cnuntry end to nor cities need such multiplied inviting. catch-penny ,roncerns as ties? DOI the law contemplate the open ing of such hot-beds of vice, not for a traveling public, but ns haunts for the youth of neighbor hood, and the liemls•of females t Whore young men might lean their first lessons in the r.lllll : tt . , Infamy and ruin, on.' nttlietit :111(1 1313131111dS 1 be'441,..1 of parental affecioin on& conjugal tentlerneoe'l Mho cap Itea..itt.. saelt in horrible design : And yet are iint.'' the, the paiidul re calls 7 And who is t eti" Ilea her 1110 taw thrown the bed possible safeguards around the y.tem : lbe it not 00 otind the certifieite of twelve la-poet:Ode men to the lienor-seller's Ivlinrieter ..01 p•emotaht•htionq' Yes, but what tio.i., it •It 01... L , • time lIVVI, Weil always cel • titi) to sites they hot e co°. 31/•L-..1,13.311 7 Are thew . tor • let , es t- 01it.,. -0,-1 tint tgitt in - ico n, I pe n ult trait way ittote t over ibr. the Lamas ttl 3 103, 1.1 4prt,3;l'llli'ir:ll4-,' , :rrrei , • , ~.,...1 d e ath in th- ,otoniiitiit , a. they' tlaiold 60 it c•teted,,,,p;,:: tltt• piatham under •t rolemn appeal to Goa for the ii„.k , -1 - their a-severance to 3 es... of life 311.1 deaf% 7 4e, leant . petition ; • =timed I.) men who never think - ',rimy 4.ey ate doing, ~ . .-,, p i l.• imtily the wilt of One ;s lime g•00d well they d.-h 0 t. tertia" flow nitsw,s„,',.;:it.l ity men who ‘31,- ..Irately hare no moral ,C. 31.3, 3 .L.t.j '. , 3 . 1 0 . I for the wellsre of tamp ilies and society ' lies. :„... the difficulty that I',urt, of do.tice hate It, 3litC. 1iii3.1t..1 . i:;', 3 “ . come up stating that sorb F33l3ll - 4 • 7 hob s ' • ' , ii re „,,:s.dfid, .311.1 th 11 ,11.-11 petitions have all th e clorne k eei'”, ne g airo,l li, law. On these peti tions ore roans .1,,, ,inn.,.. frequently. of respee• table men certifying, le ..4 . 71ia faAlt” , men who in nil other tanners would ' Viriciti ..., 4.. le one seemly act And what can court , do '''' The law y•rescritic. 3 COW,' —that course ha , be. ~..44.lied with-- and -hell the ramp t .et aside the t.„...t.iai„ a ., 4 ! i i e., re,peomble certifiers to this re,pectatde petitions. • 71.31 E 333 r hard indeed. Where, then, lies the evil" soil,' tram of the' , certifier-. They .1.. ~,, deda, iiiint tiit:. ',.....:, ki.oan. -tad te.t tt) t.. 4 Jr t I• , I, , ir , met, IT i, matter of form. done without redaction. the ghost evil, thep dint cum, -se let - in tit. mat ten b, that the Lean of Toth i• ail wrong , too Cdt'ci. ,re,tie,t. of IL , tear nod love et God, and without , yratrals) I, , Lan Donn woe .and -sot - rotr• In th e midst. t hou. ~ r ',.,,,,,, ~,,,,. ~1 , od run. tic.. such awful atteratmu from ilt.if and r.i.. i• 115, what cam human law do tuward, preen tug men in it •tate el friend•ltip mei lore La liberty, eivil :,..a nvit, i i..- • What l.” - • elti-h man ~re for ti... 1 or .ultei ing Lil/111.1). 1,3. 01,..1 he rot e• em. :he law • pOnAlty ` What' .10 thott-inds 0 tho-e . unk,;•inled keep,. of lon and polluted doggrries, c'did. r u ;. t u human or divine:—for the .Heine Chan:ter Ind ~- 4 1.- ,. . well-Leing. ,tui mei th At the fear .4 - puttitlnffeta oh.; :?ern' The to'..;heu It:ailed node, beggnred fill I ill'n'ala -ed, .101.1tin,-iittmeent mi tin, to a father's ititenteratote -•lnag ~1.31i1 A.4 . l all.l nhireeilre, plead - al; eon Cad . sake to willthuld the intoxi icatiug 'up try,M the almost rained father and husband—and yet, it Lie * ti.'l gill Ito - .otoe but an additional .inuture. the gram, ann.( r(snul. Glae titre:A.l4le: eye, and imploring lia,ks of the al nest iii.itiring mother and wife, surmounted by her gpoth of faiiii , liitie children. will pass by Atdgm led But •••• there i- a righteous Cod and a thr,..e of impsrlial Justice. nob eonduct trill to:mt.. . A 1:,..,,, re , 'mime-, These ithupyrcs and inelti- 'la -do. eth•kutg out it. besot'. blood will toll aliiiit s oot, .4; in !slide awl At a tely indifference. I hdi e 111 I,`.td ‘ ,1„.1 tAtilitti human le,i•latoot may rite them I.ower:'hiti.... iv-tilt• to e.,1--- ..•.. -...• and nit continually.— , yet that min letn•lonott ent• theta not loose ' from the gore moto or lid and the terrible ' denunciation. uf bi. law Three is n day com ing whsh they wcotld t:oily liner the rock; and toolininie , to :AI on them an I o.ter them from ' the winch of 'the 1.......;1• • tut the ..13.31 4.13 y of his wroth i- c•one. :net wt... c i•-ill Ile Ode to sta..; • • What nun-seller nod druntits,,d wisher can then grct the numermt • 14tirf1 1 . of Tics cm• h•dloand sole-bar., with noblonclieti cheek, and undismayed e•tuntenzucc ' in let snot rather su.k into alitail.;l3ll.-n that west •-mals ruined by me thnutfli the intortesitog'lmal nrfieolie har del.—We remark that to maint,in ond perpet uate civil and religious Move, we ingot hasp il ium,' lute the masa, of soriery, the tsar nub love of lied. as the rim' elements of this bluety ?tun l now eland, related hi his M.,ker ill the chat-set, --f ti rebel .1, one who 1034 vio lated hi, law. common:lml hi- authority, end re fithed obedient , su his hole will A state of o p en lumfflitr e x i s ts 1331,(31 6'31 and the erea tine, teen. This ho , tility 033 ,•nlv ereane an the rukaaierwa, of the latter In heart and life. to Divine antilmt•itt hail if we search the rimordh of the pdst; add taken tit...icy of notion• liow existing, we shall till l the tin:; ,iril,le 0.. noon day, that just in proporlion'ml tie lon, inc). love of God, were or are the con'trolling de i sth.,. te the human / , 311. in the -aloe I.r.tporii. n 11 - .11 they been prepared lel. awl lint actually ,cljoy emit awl religious freedeus. Look at rwattriea now where the-e Jolla- eiveleul. hair hat a lim ited ur sickly ext•teuee, and you will li e d but I little rathmul fn m•lona whether 01.11 or roligious. You may bud in the pahlic 1313 , 1 3 nag., `Won,. of the want of -untethittu. .11.1 that •mtnothing City ittay call 'deity. hat ot it, true nature 3131 ./331iii,.. ' WI the proper node I f 116°y - tarot the .. masses .. Li, t e,e..-: d hoi alemlute tanorthe v - TM, to VII.r to geartn w ,t?„ eel , a' , 40in and Airtria, and to a cart tun esteht %ker . of Fran, With nll her boa•ted love for, and Ithisttntit lifter liberty. why P it that the French Republic appears -0 t cot) ditlereut from our own, in char lotte: and stable tuandation - Why !Vas she re pentedij, since the ot.rtitne• of the saonarelly, It g. rl ,. r f et.l ., i , lLli; ; l i l . l , A g g 1 , 1 1„ t1 , 1 . .. , C , ,1g: , ;' , 01; ,, 01 1i e ., ILer n tiz tad an: akettey?„l by the ton - ellts of bulldog Cora' The farmer ii, ill/in There is u (cartel and lamentable Want of the hoot cuq fear of God in the hearts of her citizens, which MAY eau tar, be them rightly to appreciate. frilly to protect, rind healthfully to enjoy that frenaloni which God has given n 0 mans inalienable birth-right. flow vast the difference in principle and character he- I veva them and the Pilgrim Puritan, who first eunuch: in these western wilds. in house of refuge f or P.... 4 ° 6 ' 1 - 4 d Wrq , These men had 'quilled deeply, and with sober nue reverent lasi,. the word of God, to know the 'that, 'of hutuati rights anti obligations The precious and panfying truths of 1.10,1's word, were to their souls, life and peace. They loved and feared Clod And to enjoy without interruption that liberty which hod': ward proffered as the rich Inherita n ce of the Jammu family. they left the land of their Ala tiviu, all the endearment, of chri.dinu and Clil -111431 era:lag, oil the hallowed aesamation. of friends and fileMlehip. I tithed the storm; am/ perils of the ocean, Planted the' sthittltird! amongst the wild beasts of the forest, Wad In the proximity to men inure wild and entitles. still . And when the great day lir nullict came, WilPil love for religion. anti Oil Il freedom was to Inc tested by meeting the mighty and well trained armies of the Mother country on the tented field, their courage athl patriotism awoke itt mighty streugtf,, rirytal 11.• an unyielthog nod dentin like eleaggle, I,:y 'Go! ,f., , , , .311 born pi nociplea of divine love mei only feat, , feeply r e cd imli,truct ihly imbedded in their hearts. Timer *OOO $ll principles which grew with their growth 1331 M creased with their strength, enabled them to fight for their althea, their fireside,, and their country. here lay the secret of their w.tler- Ad heroism. In this, the canoe wily one could chase a thousaild and two put tau thousand to flight it was theT.the spud Mar of God that raised them far above all 'Unman fear and all earthly foes. But are not these the elfects of . the .spirits pres'ence and influence over the heart! Can they be attributed justly to any other ugeuey! The indwelling of God'a spirit in the heart, prepares man to brave every danger, fearlessly to encounter every foe, manfully to °white every trial. It makes him love liberty mare than lice, and hate tyranny worse then dent h. Ac a r.rt It o.exemplification of this great truth, look at ri,lancriii her nortlNnt intelli gence, love of teeth, zeal Mr frCedint, induetrY,_ and increased worldly resources and hoppiness, .uipartat with Ler southern portions. And why such comparative - order, •prosperity, , and free dom, from the galling yoke of a • spirithal, nod d'radl l gmentd" l uti' r Willyousalt l' l t heliferenciattrbutabe:fertllity . oi: eti geaidaa ; ,i l ,atici : teA..atlh l facts of the.casa precisely. In the • reverse - eider! In all Gime respects the zenith of Ireland Wtandi , A in t high,Vantage acig,' 'Thedifferencespringi from tho high mental awl spiritual cuLuito or _ .. the former, eetaPOed , l!ith:',..the .laiter.: . The I read Of 41 - the'Sdrildniel..biiiiiesand to•brilLi moulding and contrrilling...prioriplms of God's 1 i'hiinir World, 'mad just landed' on earth, word, for ages, lit - roleen felt to 110'1014h,- and i . n .h„„.,„,• .: E 6 stood braying in eurniiie mid in- exclude.] finuttheXnuth of` - ilie' :- Y.meirdect Isle. where a • ‘ , hase oce ,, to w hi c h h e And who are the iiamigriitdatltatere nithonar to I dignation at the use" to our country; :showing a laW loving :and` abiding ; hid been turned. I saw the gigantichtera., spirit? Aredhey not Scotch - frith int- I ped move with a power that made the earth migrants! irien who hare been trained rip In the fear and lore of God, Meh.who rov.re hie Word. ' man bet a r s cherish in solemn regard his SaLhath . and sane- ...i. ,i't I tremble for miles. I saw the army of hit -1., gliding with the velocity of the., tuariee• And men, toe, whose love for civil and .!..i.s'r - Iti track and droves of cattlti over t e , religious freeduin in the days of. Mr revolution-, traveling in their stables at the rate of ary struggle, was setasin the North and Sotlit twenty miles an hour towards their. City to be stronger than death. And why L+ Scotland eleughter-house. It was wonderful.. The though compnmtively r,flgged. bleak, and sterile, like a garden, in all things, illustrating a high • estate of mental growth, rind - civilization; comma, into little busy bee-winged machinery dwindled insignificance before it. Monttrmia . ell with the sunny; vales of Southern - Europe?— beast of passage and burden, it devoured the Why does she so far exceed in all that may con- interveningalistance, and wedded the cities etitute human greatness and glory, Italy and together 1- Bat for its furnace heat and iron i Spain, with their fertile Soil and pietist= rc cli mate! it was nothing but a beast, an erne- ; mate? I ask, and let Ahi.„Bishop Hughes, sinews, ughes, who,in the pride or his heart and moral obliquity of con_ mows aggregation of horse power. And I ' science, unsurpassed ever in the dark ages, could went bark to the forge with unimpaired proclaim protestantlsm Mite In it 'dying condi- reverence for the intellectual philosophy of ties, like an expiring , man just papilla for life— my hammer. .1 let him answer this question. The latter coon- ia • tries with nll that is fertile in Boil and delightful , assing along the street one afternoon, .I in climate, are, inhabited by a people ignorant, ! heard a noise in an old building, as of some dews trodden„and until recently, without knowl- one puffing a pair of bellows. So, without edge of the &titans blessings of civil and religie more ado, I stepped in ; and there, in the Os, freedom; just because God's h,ok of life and corner o f a roo m , I saw t h e c h e f x ot - u , of peace, was kept from the public mind; and da the natural . and inevitable consequence, Goers all the machinery that has been invented Spirit in his life giving and God loving power, I since the birth of Tribal Cain, In its con- Los been grieved end banished thence. For ! struction, it two al simple and unassuming where the spirit of the Lord is, thces is liberty. !RI n cheese-press. It went with a lever— I Happy is that people whose God is the ber4. yeti, 1 w ith a lever, longer and stronger than that happy is that !ample who Lear the joyful sound •.- • . with which Archimedes promised to lift the a a pure and untrammeled gospel. 4th.—To promote and perpetuate these peat world. . blessings, timf o word most be circulated. read, " It is a printing prate'," said a boy and obeyed. The Ilible is the revelation of God's standing by the ink, with a eneless turban I . : will to t hit and perishing world. It shows • , man what lie in, what he must ho by grace, ahu •of brown paper on hit head. "A printing whet is to ho his La' destiny, according to the P'''''"---- P' I gneried musingly to myself.—• I character he is nand to poseess. It slimes us "A printing press! what do you mai r x i what true rational liberty ts, portrays its suites, , asked. "Print?" acid tip boy, staring at excites within the heart love for it, and presents i me, doghtcgily ; 4 , why, we print thoughts." ! me means and "Pk" f° , "s d , reir" .‘ /514. 1 il A•lri t thoughts '" Islowlyrepeatedafterl it,. . taith,a sui Itibio 'ovum non., Olt ti.it) arm i Inn . A •, stood looking . Iti the laW-, of liberty"; dill tileet the wOrlt as a , , and vs, stood looking for a moment at I foe. and throngh the blessing of the (del ~f the i e."(M other in mutual admiration; he in the I Bible, reach victory as the result. What Made • absence of au idea, and lin pursuit of one. ti o Moir! , to , joyfully to the stake, sealing I But 1 looked at him the hardest, and he left their moteesi..ns with their hearts' blood, rather ; another ink mark on his forehead, (Tom a that, forsake their God and abandon their reli- ' pious freedom! It was the Bible: the Billie read .' pathetic motion of his left 'mud,. to goicken and i..n.d. It wet the Bible, viewed as the voice i his apiachension of his' menxing. " Why, o f heaven, the charter of human right", qt O" '• .Vtgo" Lie mitetratntio in a tone of forced °on }:.°l'lr 5 °" . • iK;!'lilllg the sPitityli tn...tillct %., . I hdence, as if asserting an idea which, though i imd'bri rest a tilpininferrupted happiness. {Shore ' i y i n , did our rev'olutudiary l'atriob , obtain the vital ""••-. . b,o. osaTen t, a hundred years, might ~,i„,,,10 „ f . t h e n. ~,,,,,l e d ee i n , ntini , of rights, ; still be counterfeited, for all he could show that oil men were born free arta equal, sod just- I on the spot, "we print tboughts,, .to .be ja" fal:lled to the 9,134011400 possession el life, sure." But, 0.,y boy," I asked in honest obeli). um' happtues±: They found It in mines ! sobe r ness, ~, ,,,ha t are thoughte, and bow do ~ ,r o l u . t:11„ e „ 1 :, - . 17, ,. /. 1 Te rztt a lt i :O i ca , dil i te w ilt aria pray.: ....' 1 ,,, ) , gel 1, eld o f th em t o p r i n t them ?" i sideratiou, that they .set upon it a value so pre- " Thought,. are what come out of people's 1 eminent It was this that made them clasp it to., mind," he replied. "Get hold of them, I their bosoms and hold it fast Onto death. If the , indeed ! Why, minds ain't nothing You little '.",'"f,l!" i 'Ff'ailt stilfwed. llOd , 01 A ° L 4 ,l '' i Call get htd,d of, pm thun t atits either. All eu.: count •Liespotiern •aau oppre.. , ion, thmstice 1 :,- _ • . , , cue nuoua that ever t ought, and the ! 111,1 cruelty arming men stiliprevailt Would we • have million. under a slavish and degrading Ms thoughts that minds evee made, wouldn't I alage to the church of Rome! Would *we hare :Make a ban as big as your tilt. Minds, i jails nod prison houses filled with culprits lost I they say, are just like air; you can't see i „ filen+, sad their country. nod man! Perhaps them, they detet make any nolov, or !taro I lost foe time and Eternity? Would we hart the i oo „ coo ,. 4 . weigh coythitig. 1 demon ..I Intemperan& walking through tile! .T ' 1 ' , key! {lull - land, ski lo s e by ,hey and night his 'thbusands ; 13111 Deepest, the sexton, says that a man i and tot,. ,d thoumnds of mi.erable hum. bit- I weighs just as much 'Telieit his mind has imp! Would we have men by that/raw], and • gone out of him as he did before. No, sir, I ,r a 'wallow. wearing the galling yoke of a per '04,„,,,, sad ,, 1,04 , , , ~, ,, , 4at.. ~ , Ichi.ng 444 nry.nt :,!11.the nii . u Pl di . that ever lived wouldn't weigh I with unavailing regret for liberty, the rich Loon • .TI °I me '. of Ileaven to fallen humanity'lVisald ther'e bare i .., hen how do you print thoughts r I beet, a hog nod painful conflict in the Lulls of : asks . ”If minds are thin as air, and i our National Legislature—and one which for a , , thoughts thinner still, and make no noise .... time .....ed to stoke the foundation pillars of 1 and bare no substance, shade or color, and ! Nis mighty and widely extended Republic-- ! are 11 ): e winds , and t t co , t h e ; d a d s .„-,,` .1h•o r . .hfort.ia +1 , a11,1, a, the result- of her a ' e , 1 e the . -'" ---`- - -. ' oWn - jhoo ..; Woiapple.stion, be receiv e d into the I and anywhere in a totimetit--,sometimeti in sister-hood or •comid illelependens State.! No.. heaves and sometimes cm earth, and in the '.., all :Mai e.aithet achl:agitatha, all misery, ant op: waters' under the earth—how can you get Rro" a,. '" I °- “'"g. '" ad i "j u " i '''' °'•:°l4 60 hold of them ? how can you see them when ' drilen from thalami and the world. But if the Bible be diffused sod read, it its controlling and . caught, or show than to others 1" lien.etda Lutluettee he telt. thou most the Spirit . Ezekiel', eye grew luminous with a new from on high. be poured out to give the disposi- ; idea, and poising his ink-roller proudly n ''" ""'l relish th""f°`' .tad do " ”" the ' tat ' zer.oei this luel_ale page of the newspaper, ~,-, egg V.atirtrry suiv call loudly for active nod . ' . " Thoughts work and walk in , lgo ' t : ot" , 4 , at that the Bible be circulated, the he rePin‘i. Gospel 100.64. the misers node ihrougli the 1 things what make tracks, and we take them - Me giria t , ~ ipirit to feel Sri raying', Enos?. Is • traeksand stamp on paper, or iron, wood, not its nanalattoe rapidly increavdtte- 'and in ! stone, or what not. This is the way we •cressing by more aim. huh' 3 . million annually,: t lion ~„dent.,irt from, other land•': And what is the character, print{haughty, .. lilt Pt It: . intentience. ant beddis of a large mer,ortion of ' The pr.' , Ul.7tilla 4r go the lever, and oak them? to they all come into the midst at us. '. ed intermatively at 1, Ezekiel, begirming at with that mental culture. that true perceptiou . the pate!) on his stringless brogaos, and (pl ot the right and good, with that Intelligent love l ow i ng tip with his eyes to the top of the. for freed., that tear rahl love of Gml, whith ho c ' s 1 ,..,.,... ~,,,,,r coo. E ze ki e l c . w . 0 ., , alone raw make ,Lem gaud cititeus and.au o * rna. , ,r,' - of r r , m00r,,, the land of their adoptiout 0., th a t . nefidetwe felicity his illustration, truth would allow us to make the affirmative an-', wiping..vs hands ou his tow apron, grade. I enter. But the case 11 for otherwise And what ' ally as:Aimed an attitude of earnest exposi- ' no,,t he their influence on our civil and religi- • wen ti ona t i a ve hioa an encouraging wink, ',ills' Inaittoo.t.,, Oilttont i IL . °l;kliaZ "n O. ow ra i and s I]. tmi - - transformatlMX of stirs.; meting.. and eimiorter .'" L • • ' to a, safely and honorably to coalesce with the f " Thoughts hake tracks,' he continued holy. moral, and politic. Willthat influence be • impre s sively, us if evolving q tiew . phase of t, good! Are were no steno to indicate danger i the idea by repeating it slowly. Seeing we Is there sio allegiance on the pait of many of .....,,, .. 1 t this proposition inquiringly, he ! thew, 4, a power necessarily and always, &sante ' a- - "" • - with his to free government , and liberslinstitutional i , sl i t d el o Pt. ,,n 'd isi l i t i l u l g h l e y t u yPe pon e u a-7 . , ni ,, th Thou ' s .gh e L e m fi a x k c d , I nth.—Did time permit, we might farther argue I the vital connexion subsisting between civil and I trucks," he repeated; arranging to his left religions religions cseedem, and a proper and hallowed I otAcrrence ofthe firibbath. TO Orr the power 1 hand a score Ur two of metal slips, " aral i vith the'''' • here letters we can. take the cl ot this connertion , we can only refer you to land ' ' ,b,„, the 5,bb, ) , , ,,.. hea ,.. ;e i n _ dnen , le sat yo- i net Impression of every thought that went cognized and felt: and ask what is the condition : out of the heart of human man ; and we of freedbm there! ,Look even fit the Land of La- ! era! print . it too,' gqing Ze inked form a the, and how is the sanctity of the Sabbath there' blow oftriumph with . his ' , riot cap print reveriat slid eheristied! Ant/ are. the bleating. ; . t t ~...... ~,, paper anti ink enough, till of freerlora , civil and religions: there enjoyed as . 1 n " — e. - "` l a r - r . . God proffer; them to mon! Look at history t the great round earth is blanketed around of Ancient Israel: What brought on the Baby- I with a coverlid of thoughts, as much like lavish relativity. and the lona and dark night of I the pattern 'as two pos.', Ezekiel' seemed o lonely exile icon a fondly loved country: It 'to grow on ineli every word nod the brawny was the forgetfulness and •Imiceration a Gcsln da y; - 1 1 A hi m a n d 1 t pp:yew:in h ocke d fi rst at anu tuen at ~r ,acrid rest And will civil nod relignine lib- 1 ens out l u st the sanctity of the Sabbath hero: I the press, with evident astonishment.— n 0... the voice of history declare in load nod ' "Talk about the mintlii living forever:" solemn tom , . that load Ina always put the seal e_xclohned the boy, iointing patronizingly , "r hi, 'lll'i"'are en °°4°.l4 "* l '' "' lnmiti ". lat the ground us if tuind were lying there I , and nation, which have lightly. 'esteemed his I . 5 „, A .,,,, i ,.. ! . ‘„,t Anal n „ pees en in the I incapable of immortality until the printer I,,im, al liol,l, o th deeocrliti,ive an a nation, reached it a helping hand. " Why the ef;aiitca;.wsa obi atter , rled 1, .e tdtaurtY nom rmrld is brim full of Use, bright induotri. in authority, mid yet expeel to prdsper Snell 1 sus thoughts, which would have been deed, no oh -, .-. ari,°"ron" and '. l " . •'.°d .1°" but / dead as a c lo ne, if it hadn't b een fu r toys] th., :ti.irit.,,f God, eau so arouse and purify th e i ~,_ p „,,,,,.,„„ a d euce , t h at t h e ! .. i n t,h nt i, may be ~,e - 1 11£0, me, who have run the ink rollers. Ini- tined. and as the foundation pillar in a Repub. I mortality, indeed ! why people's minds," licon Government. tiny rennin firm and un- ' he continued, with his imagination elimhing broken to the latest gencration'! - I into theprofanely sublime, " people's minds I n canelueins. Lot me ash, do we love liberty. w I uldn't be immdrtal if 'twasn't for the ant are we thankful for this inestimable gift, as' ° 1 1 • D .i•I I I t neither m e -. riutere—at any rate, in this here,planetary web 11, Gt. zere 0o e , Jot e, a_ .., lino among the masses of the people, our great burying ground. We are the charm that intellect and eloqusuce aura.: rulers and setts, , manufactures immortality for dead men," men--that c eithei laws wisely made and dearly• he subjoined, slap p ing the pressman 'gruel propounded con preserve mid perpetuate' our iih- I • l on the shonfiler. The latter took it ernes, civil and religious" leo we believe nod • °°°,• , • • • 1 • I t i t the l e y and! ~,- G od moat .as i dubbed a knight of the legion of hon fev. eons - Hier, vi e eenv he infests' into the hearts or the children of men or, for the boy hid but the mysteries of his —that the Bible must be circulated, rend, and profession in subliine apocalypse. "Give obeyed—that the Sabbath must be cherished I us onegood healthy mind," resumed Ere. 1 und sacredly guarded , in order that the tree of ' liberty, which has struck deep bee nets and i kiel, "to think fur ua, and we will furnish aPreau 'Oast?, reher brunches, may be kept livin g 1 a dozen worlds us big as this, with thoughts and heoltlifti , Coved witty green foliage, and to order. Give us such a man, and we will laden with precious frititk . If 40.• th'en let Oes : ermine his life; we will keep him ai x e for cry unto God day-and night, for the entpouridg , a his Spirit. In the language of the Prophet, , , , ever; among the living. ITO 'can% die tio I way you can 'fix it; when once we 'have l e t us cry, uOlt: Lord revive thy work—in the . midst of the yearn make known—io wroth re. , touched him with,these here bits of inky I member mercy." lathe presenceand power of i pewter. He shanit-die nor sleep. We will Gael's ?lilt. there is that conservative influence .. which S "'" u "" 1 . R°l'.r.''' Judas, Hiri°. *' m e i i s k h ee arl coma i t i o ld li ll y t e " he r t k e o 4 4 lo ll ag t4 4 l4l t i h il e ds w t o 4 r a ld t People all need. It in the i nf luence and',. e i I . j „ , • ustr influence that can nave us. Let us, thn, I ,4 °•°°s• pray for this, and then on children and child- i s " Ezekiel," I asked in a subdued tone of ren 7 , children. to the litteat generation, yen all • reverence, " will you print my thoughts tritioni shall rise up am! call u, binged. too?", " Yes, that I will," he replied, "if you will think some of the right kind." "Yet, that we will," echoed the pressman. And I went home and thought, and Eze kiel has printed my "thought-tracks" ever since. WHY I LEFT THE ANVIL I sic you would usJt doe what I ;lave to say for myself for dropping the hammer and taking up the quill, as a member of your profession.l will be honest now, and tell you the whole story. f was transposed from the anvil to the editor's chair by the roles of machinery. Don't smile, friends, it ie even so. J bad stood and looked for hours on theyo thoughtless, iron intellects, those iron fingered; Aober, supple mitmna tons, as they caught up a bale of cotidn, and twirled in a twinkling of an eye into a: whirlwind of whizzing shreds, and laid it at my feet in folds of snow white cloth, ready for the use of our most voluptuous anti- pales. They were wonderful things, those looms and spindles ; but they could not spin thoughts ; there was no attribute of Divinity in them, and I admired them, no thing more. They were excessively curi ous, but I could estimate the whole compass of their doing and destiny in finger power; NO 1 mime away and left them spinning-- catti One:day I was turning my anvil beneath a hot - iron, and busy with the thouliht, that there was as much intellectual philosophy In 3 6- hammer. us in any of the enginery n-going in. modern times, ,when a most un earthly screaming pierced my earn . ; I step.. ped to thadoor r and there it was, the, great Ifon lloisel , - - nut i be had come, looking frit. oil OM Wend like thn' great 'Dragon we BEIffM!E I'IIENO3IENA ATTENDANT ON TAMER ,4INO THE HANDN IN MOLTEN METAL.- Mr. Corn; in a paper submitted to the Pa ris Academy of Sciences, says : - Having determined on investigating the question whether the employ-went of liituig sulphurous acid for moistening the Lando would produce a sensation of coldness, when they are immersed in the melted metal, I immersed my hands, previously moistened with sulphurous acid, in the melted lead, and experienced a sensation of decided cold, I repeated the experiment of immersin4 the hand in melted lead and infusing 'Cast iron. Bcfore experimenting with the melted iron, I placed a stick, previously moistened with water in the stream of liquid metal, and on withdrawing it found it to be almost as tTet as it was before=surcely any of the Imola.: ttre was evaporated. The moment a dry piece of wood was placed in contact with the heated metal, combustion took place. M. COvlet and I then dipped our hands into vessels of the liquid metal, and passed our. fingers several tunes backwards and for wards. through a stream of metal flowing fUnri the furnace, the heat fixon the radial than of the fused metal being at the fame tim6 almost unbearable : We vativrthese expetiMenti foi upwards ef &wire; .nna I Madame Coolet, who bsiOted at these ex perimmits, permittO - her a little girl of nine years of age, to dip her hand in a crucible of red hot tuctail with impunity. We experimented on the Melted iron, both with our hands quite diy, and also when moistened with water, aleoliol and ether. :The same results was Obtained as with melted lead, and eaeh of us experienced a sensation of cold when employing sulphur ous acid." num is smarm litor FICTION. The Pennsylvania correspondent of the St. Louis Republican relates the following occurrences : "A yopg man recently made his escape from the galleys at Toulouse. He *us strong and vigorous, and soon made his way across the country and escaped pursuit, He arrived the next morning before a kd tage in an open field, and stopped to beg something to cat and concealment while he reposed a little. lint he found the inmates of the cottage in the greateat distress. Four little children sat trembling in a corner, their mother was weeping and tearing her, hair; and the father walking the floor, in agony. The galley slave asked what was the matter,and the father replied that they were that morning to be turned out of doors bceausc they could not pay their rent.— "You see me driven to despair," said the father, " my wife and little children with 'out food and shelter, and I without means to•provide any for them.' • The convict lis tened to this tale with tears of sympathy, and then said: " I will give you the means. I have but just escaped from the galleys; whoever se cures me and takes back an escaped prieon er, is entitled. to a reward of fifty francs. How mueh do , 2s your rentaz/mum tor' Fr , t.tv franes," answered the father. " Well," raid the other, put a cord iiround uay_ limb-. I will Mllow you to the city, they Will recognize me, and you will get fifty franc. , for Lringiug me back." No, never:" exclaimed the astonished listener, "my children should starve a (Me ru times before I would du co base a thing." • The generous youth iusizted, and declared at list that he would give Limseltup, if the father would tea consent to take him. Af. ter tt long struagle the latter yielded, and taking his Keterver by the arm, led him to the city mid to the mayor's office. Every body was i:urprised that a little man like the father had been able to capture such a strong young felhivr, but the proof was be fore them; :mil tifty francs were paid and the prisoner seat back to the galleys. But after he was gone, the father asked a pri vate interview of the mayor, to whom he told the whole story; the ?layer was so much affected, that he not only added fifty francs more to the father's purse, hut wrote immediately to the minister of justice, beg ging the young 103111 . 9 'release The minis ter examined into the affair, and finding that it was a •Auparatively small offence which had coudeinued the young Ulan to the watels, and tinit he had already served out half his time, he ordered his release.— Is not the whole incident beautiful"! 11/WIT KIRD OP A WIFE A New fork editor says he had nn introduc tion IT, wrck to the heroine of the following sketch. Mr.—a merchant. ROW re.dding in Philadel phia, who formerly lived in tether an extrava gant style, was in the habit every Monday morn ing, of giving Li wife R ceitaiu ~, u m of money for the table and other honerhald 'enpenses of the week; he never mentioned his En.,ine, to his wife. and she deeming him sufficiently capable of attending to Lis own Affairs, never enquired into them. About fire yettra after their mar riage. through soma slight mismanagement, and the-rascality of his cohfidentigl clerk, Mr— suddenly t ) rulte, and . his fall W.l. mentioned , eympathmingly" on change, and, like all ouch matters, there ull sympathy! rudest. The mon. chant kept the affair A worst, and the first inti mation Ids lady had of it. wain news paragraph in the "Ledger. - Shortly otter dinner WRIf er, ou the discovery of the etartline fact, requested her husband to remain in the parlor a few moments, as elm had something to oy to him tilte then left the room, hurried up stairs, And shortly after returned, with a splendidly bound Bible in her hand. Handing it to her hnaband, she mid. I ''tieargc. the day alter nor Inas-nage you gave me this precious hook as a token of your love, and as a rich fountain to look to in the day of trouble. Its pagea have heen pie...Aqui tome; and en your brow boles sad to day. I acne return it to yam that you may glean from it some con sultation in the hour of gltrour - She then left the room. The merchant opened the book carelessly, and bank bill fell out. He picked it up and. gland ed at Ito face—it was a $lO bill. fle opened the book avant. and another note of the same amount was before hint. Ile opened it at tintllret page, and continued to lind an :S. between every two leaver, tittle arrived at the commencement of the hook of Revelation., He'vens saved- eonld commence businos3, and had a capital of $9OOO. He rang the bell--+e servant appeared. nßequest your mistress to come to me home diately," said the merchant. Thj lady obeyed, entering the room nitit mune thing between a tear and smile. ••Kutt , . Katel where did v e t procure all thin money:" ..Thin is the weekly caring of our household expels e. tar the Ingt flee yeari," we, the lewdest reply. "Lorry week I put ten uut of the ttrenty dollar, which you pare me into cur yabke bank, that when n ilay of trouble came upon no, we should Imee Bontethin4 to 611 VJ its front the wulf " ••Itut why put it into to Bildt, Ko u it 6 o good' one which will 1114 suddenly break," replied the Indy. ••lou ore nn env!, Kate." cried the delighted husidaul, clasping her to L 6 heart. And iv she is. Does any one doubt it: The iliunan Body Must Perspire,. ‘ l ,O SAYS NA'rratth t have a healtkii ap kJ P.m: Ana wrwas •ha tut INa on, arc t o the No4,4;,rupttalo 341 a 1,,50kn0.. itralisu tao.taleal Soo, ...al a Are pirsirLrot.... 0.r.4 al the Awl. l. tpe 4.1‘4.e.is W( It the tuatara of alt tilf4lll . S. • Soon y. Ithount, owl Yurts, en not I.nly healed. but canal hi tt. as beet 7 phyticiont In lata !rho uto tu au. c.a. and nod it twfulling-1.1 alah to Pimping. Blot.. Prankl. oran r altin4lanatth Tho reshot Is amt.. that thlt tau wok , . pullett mot• trah ea One trial will trove. enumerate at kart eighth , ar.lllcUred of turn heath tore logo, and wary Want buy It—autt the trader L. agoin etatunq t moult octant '1 417 4,1 1W: ;12 atatn will tiwif not only a rum hut nOlnyonli7n anti ean Stonly with that .y ono ell.. with rtia °c.o. alto., or tintil. iliaoartah tylit toils int.l ayou att. nal. , robin In Ito plotolalw/ hint`` stotee iyol. - 7/ut, Hader. tho tin t aro flooded with kultatio. ate l ho tn. you att. lire Jut.' ItaillauChouiloal Cul It only of Wsl:.7.atilLSll7:. OnlY 'Atfout PpttiTulg hest of Wand. .• , • Pearly White Teeth, and Pate Breath, to Le ha 4 fur 115 ottota.—Perooto whet 11..e=itra boats blf wurodtt.hat If their yrt . ttth itt ttr tbUr 'htth Itatth 7 nlTTa r e teath - as whit...l show, tu.l IL. Loath utiorlfrettutly s eat. Sold ottly u JACKsON'tt Ithor, rNI LiLtatir at, heal of • A Scientific Hair Tonic. Restorer and Beau- IlLcr—Trial Bottle, 37N. rte. now alba hate wed JoaSI (brat lllle goatoror. k now Its eactlleut attalltfre-e gavot' who hare uot, we araure It to pretras IN, tolloulttit qualltlea—lt will !ono the hair to grow uo auy part where nature Intended hair to Igor; goy 11 dalllny riot... Turf dutidnal awl wake Matt. rod, or gray hair gnus dark. For mattering the halt son wad ruablut: asn robed thla—it Stakes It truly beautiful, sql Celia it S. It lc in th.mat mmoulirq-let purilyu,rtl6, fur lb. pa p . ouly at M*3l . , J.aeN.SON Nlore, 2.1 t) Liberty stivet, head ut 'Rood) Flttobuagh. r. Prlturo-alg tarifa:W.l4a, and St. 0 JONES' Solution ur Jed, a Liquid Human Hair No, for the chuoutou of while, red, or urey hair, fo beautiful brown, or black tot color, in few minutia. Prime—ld ("prim wad $l. Pitt.b d ollu r by gb. WIL JACK:4_O;4 !Abort ,Arcot, !Abo, Arcot, heal Of Wood. JONES' LILLY WlllTE.—Lwlies are'cuu tioncd against untoo the common hrepayett . They aro not aware bow frittbttully noun.. 4to the ihnt! /Poo come, how I , llllrh. how nottnntrollthy Mine *Text, after to. , tatt htophoJeholith• Ineithititto F, o l! ;l7;c l liFt i a ”.' "llPP:o Aft rta l i " Al calf.lottr tl ' holanh1111 " ; ' -It ... bring orient of all deleterious q""1"' " b"P T4I t e e. Tt o tt l e h n&Vlr l e ..on am lonouth Sold 19 - the Awont. WU. JAC,4 . ri, 2,lllt.lotrtystmwt. limn] 01 ,:ii: • Pelc2, then xt . Military Bounty Land Ageny, :11ATIIEIV lIOSEI, would respectfully iota= owe Intervened then he has 141,010etl iu ene curiae Bounty Lend. under the merle low cif einiere , .. Or Met Law. ell who here tweed in erir tOc were shirr 1;111, their willows tir miner ehlidn n. arc en. titled to Bounty f m atal, trout 40 to len ere.. levuntlue to the lams of MINIM, and ex the Ito I.rue:sir:rout« agaitirt the trenskre. nu 111140; Nu corelle trtti. until his YR,' I, ',Ailed:" IT it itiertfl.rr " 1 1' `' . l`,;" 44, e , In4ittililelettinletits mutt sleet their lend caller . re er ur Agents. Thu one Pill tn found too ertenti_277`,2,, nth. to he eitlet requlree 1114001 iurrop~r notuperrtition. Atteirinte Ivo mi., to W nem: In the end eborUre. To.urlitr , dere tho entLro banner. of the by the erswmlrs epiritxunitetopleted DT Oill,lFTr iq,i' e poee. therefore, at cleferunent: utTntalo On, A L ., entutanttleulf trifling e, Icemint fur mum entiio d' rii ll mat tram. the teatlty wurrant „ lobo; in UK' Tel Zaticr a tk,nl a ciesSrutisu . _,,et east:Mae taus so Om sr, GU itifine Wien. (wet A. MATHITA:!I.I — T - Efirt; t Y ln.tym. 7v01'9 11 _ • • 7:llslffifffi ITapIE UNEQUALLED SUCCESS whih` h .tended L MyymeND ARD O n f rear% BTIELMILT: It, to eß ietuWr s i ttallytio reivoried short bud Ideeterde ours of .I.3l.rsonta 081 AND I . IIBONIC lIIIEUMATIS3I, •••fiklent tUrattor roommeedation try irdup oho ....01 11 1*" ; tool with tbla d maul cliscup to try Its •Irturee: Hundred.. of cum ono of them ritleena a Rt. Lou ...hos Dan aort, My torn enrol widths the Ler of In the city orloolip whik Were fol. : , I=l: g tirood doer mho Odd It to portionlug the tame trk~terror tar thee were Ono& ewes of loner MiTroihrtrt l i te 4 e ntrer: 4' "" V "4, Ms git:lrl= totory Lout irri priori. All. hewer r >ohne the oo" &Mt editors of ltris a mt 0 000 ddiiirt.p. who hare Dialleed ID Motto, aol am... the en/or - cunt of holth can but Mono the original ditrovore tool noptietor, • benetor of auntie& It I,well known frum the expo/once of the put that no outward applkosion oporpibly penn not cure of this dusty Dello.. ;By the opplillthot eget...Whig Unitunts. portlal'ollet Latour owe, may be obtained for • short ilme. 01l the while this Drove is 11•Ing 00.17 Mom POMtustillo theMotent. al wont, or later wl again developer itself l n a more dreadful Mein, and atter •f W fortiodical Maros. it mottles into • dollar 'phial. If rot tom sirrected , ruho the Ludilldu Par Ilfro— Thl. Ls rentled by Liteltletory of the put ho . 11 1 l countrieL end more follydemoneriztal by the bbtory fornDbot of betatron.b preptieter of h a re tPotood. as hie by sound of them wive pawed miler hie hinnediate collo nod treatment Molar the lost De mouth.. MORTIMCKU klilli(33LOT/C COMPOUND oil BLOOD 1. o Intermit remedy—ownmenrea its orrery Done where the Moose Ltst originatee, opt in par/Ding the bleat Laura through the whole allow, nentrallses the impure or cant& sedlsonit, ahkh boo !Puttied upon the cumbranc.s, modes and tondOnt—rremomer it entirely Dom Ne yrt and restores the lodleidul to urfect badth throe oho ore, afilicted Mt deceive themulre• .04 put off the toe of ibis medicine too long, or thetr limb* ore illtlectitni or contended to, nub . degree that they ore cripple4for life. TM experienr• of heincleede of thousands doing the past as well u a multitude at the Present day, demonstratearthe folly of expating Pomo mot rellef loan external applications. . • The pormicto of this voluable niolicine•lotows from ex perience, that amentwani unlit:at/on can iusalbly e(hret a permaton i t i cnre .2141 this dhow. 1 1 l firmly fixed It! the trial . ooo;acoort orent, ' lfrcirtrili c itirc t r r et r f liTotte hose. Untc, tut this trill 'not effect • pmunent run. The ne tt. of MO 11.1.3nte it rxtk thal ft rosufttt Wax.. f.1.tt!,,,11ei en into.. retroly, to twalcio. the ileelred effect, and mu/- timer. s filieumartr Componnd end Pnrißer and the otily reined) , the toot over loon discerned. either' In Murrill or my other country, that will effect:wily care ails ritewse. --This medicine ran bo Dad. wholentle or retail, at No. 73 Third tismt. toot to the Pot La. Pitteburtdo AL. for pale in Pittsburgh, by It . oper, Wm. Thorn, .1. D. 31orro. S. N. Wickersham. tool .1 . A. Jonas. hip." SS yes bottlevals Lottks P.m t 24; of $55 per foutplarta eau be huh grativ of Lbw nvnt. mr..l • R. IL WigIART. Arent Murphy's Self-Sealing Advertising Envel opes. - IVO. 263 31.1.DISITN ST., NEW YORK.--, •rbe sot.rrihrreio rulleifing aw1...M0.00 a ..1/ me, s, odvertb.outetzt, Sack ar.ne of that baba:it-Wu vnth attarla sue,. art br.ogla 4.1.11-c tbe llte ex,rw I.Ars stipert,..tity Im rend all qurvtion. and 4r meit•lt.4tl, - rttna to ths, 1.-111.... taco rho bare uscd I.4a.ctivelopv.. r0111[1,1.2,413g c..alr. at pru.i atLe.r.ml. be 1 , 11,...nt, are a kw of the rre...u. f..r their pop.. Ist OD pima umuisiftd by the real. a pansm mar hove hualnofi., and ad rowylcuouil; beautifully - tzuhnmtl. colarrd or pl., thus alhaqiita fort gaxurity a{ l op fraud. Thr rurelop, rartfud be opal.' without befog de ern, ed. Ncuher mot nor warer• rcnulro.l to neat &hera— ld, 11t..5a reizrarrtagv of a lat.,. he 'kat Int.Uredts Immediate return to Ilarnetuto.r, lust:D.l t of lagag tourfotl mouths In th. , 04.3.1 Lothl.r 0010, :r.th. The Euvehpet fortuthel at aim , At the :40 prier es plain Dorn.' Lth. Each 1. ttrr mural L.• mast ellecthe eartrax..nient. Bum to attract the attention of all through whom hnnds It The Lal.lug L 1.1 of psi., f,r Ora, etbrra , al on Cron, mad obkb ws-illaAl for Searr, lasi of of Atbr, esas, icbtl.• yr Lull, of g pupa'', .lal loiole babwrivlll,,, Priors 4/ L i u PK,' 4 AWretoyes snade ILII(111.1 4nb‘b., tal to 10 ICA) 91.Li+ .I‘.l to 14i . . . • 1L.41/ fAi to 1.. . .. , . to.uli .10G0 .13.1.411 E. tr, lod I . ..(Prauu .... 16,00 Wtona It le root .uletat..l. to forward ...int a crrder pa. weal cr pls... a ts.r.zrenee to a r.q.clude Nov look It :la us..lll Pe suarl.ut. Ali urd.r. wid meal ulth prount att.t.., a add.... I. . wn. liukpily. • . . 26.3 rtraet, Nta. rot Orden ta attar...led tu t.rutatAlt. if latl at the floral tpf Al-,0r,. tell t Molt, atraet, Graf Iltagro. H. Jartalinan U Co., 151 Uinta= •t. 11.-.Nalta,a eanta rtabu.d iu attars. (rum ma. Die.. at 1110,W pet thunaatai. ==l.la IMPORTANT TO THE AFFLICTED. D R . O J S , L o: S CELV3I.I.A dwo ,TED atr ..!lENEDIES. rthcw rob Drvyrlutur pvulsr ravt 114 Jonathand Ile. .ead Instrontent kir indef.:, the tinv In cow of Ch un k dlseasek w as at stu deot of that eminent pbvskiate. Motor Physic, and I. a endued."ty of to , adnr year. vitae has twat engaged in the thvestigatlceda r.a that aohlleattoo of renuatim• thereto. • Tb es.. ehogh the ow ta . hie Matta: tube, to nentactkns with ht . ProPtaa W to t run and other of hi. laded he b y eons, auto dteadfW and Waalltetivet Tutterentar IYotensopticet, nuatila Me nia m:ulnae. detain.. Fever end Ague. rent e"' ; '" . al kind, Chunk Ensiled.. t.v..1 all tie.. Utah:ate die• ewev peculiar td fetaah.s. Indeed. every liana of disease Lout: awn onda the ow of hut re. ..IW, to which hunisol- I, 1. hole—tnd hr the no, ci one ...tumid only. ha that It atm:amnia+ tenth Yb.cadoilcal law. tut fa the woo of his ermettlea aluttal to. viol perient.l for, reeh haulier SAlirl of dlwww. . Lt Lot An. rant, Piltr. when tared. are arkoariladio .1 to •t 1,110( to all other's, am a porg. ure or by" bill. Loasiourb as airy hart tau bolerila pat (reds l'osi Masi . aim/ ids Collett an: arl• rulttrdi taw trieulty. to !up.. pirctillar proimillca, iftrl lir/eta/ale iti.veria., but bow; ralaslard In. a tam trial It intaleilsotto what humtrundsof lard Pkepro-111 Ilia anti...led asa iuritcri to call upial tbc arid pr cure ontirratir r.a. tit lAxt.rs banaphla.i airbag a detail. oriaittrit tack rroarily. and Re apallatlost. !'or rate l)) tbs Llbisrina iesilasidtvratdruir. thmuabout tits t o o. Sabo...Let er 21. AVorat at, Patsliurah- J. 11. - Torsorrnil. birtialitst, alailtat rd., la , lairikbara. Equicilst. oaar rho Post (Millea.Ansgbai ov tit). T /Hazer. Allegheny c'op.nty, SS: . W:II3IUN 15 EAT II ol l'etutiwltoitio. the , h•-nn' L , r wun , /,Kte-litur lib.rvaa an t.ri , ',Law . Court. bail at Cittouoruh. ace.l to Raid esuLty, wa alp :Art Aar boceoahor.l•.• totitbn of D..ul;J Adnonletrator of all sod tidy-.W: the goulu - Catharl. MoCulau, .f the nt cut.latrula to ...I r-atnt...lou , aeLtl. at Uwe a her .Imth. oh:. J W .utu.tat, .I,ult, that the aUsl Intensta left w ts,tul 1,411 e nor ture.malostato•tt ti. Tarrant of her .1,1 or. lkut toreOrmes. of f,e. of rarl to u r,rtatu ctf •a•routul . alto. the Sixth Want of ale CU. of Vittehurgh, baring • Rout on Ira , hitrtmt auuo,4 of non, Lot. auJextentling buck of oatte.l wrath ca a toe tareltel with %VOW ttrevt Oft, taut iahlti Is. rtelorl Ithay hoax", nut. ' lnicton ' ttl:i d a r 4l.l. 4 ot a tylVl Catbartar atot,uart, Itannuulf: by oe..lua l'eth of cotober, A. G. lull. Th, tafrrest said tra,ututl thing the unlividttl one half part of odd 'prong. tln that were are debt. rural the erta la es follow. to vat laulym,t.te In the Dittrict Coon Said Countf mate ef Jam IlaaUtt. for My hie &am, with Intercut date July Llth. wad eats amt dust lo probably 12Oni , dullata,..l the eat. , enu: ...pro, mkt trust will probs. tly front fbrty or thy a , dLtra Ands , r t •yz the Court to ul ~rxwt him tiVlil; to ‘&nt`nma * l tor lb, pa . saatr tra,at c O r f aferruall debts. .• • . Now. thercfbre. ae ecartuattl and each of you. the heirs and legal c•bresentatisos of .14 Crathortne *Nub, .111 0 11/rsjr i tti: r l .l.l to end i arar j tejore our r nt. to show case. it top ydri ' ;:!.%f V . reje ' r7tElly i r: thirster thou) tot be rrbuthn. WArbora the Ina WA; .11 . Clunr, Psababoss Judge of A. sri t .l Court. et Pittobargh, thls 24th day Cf I/member, AttestDA:NIEL ACCIAZDT. Cferlt. And Ow Court br.hr tuna. or dm Laming of this boson b. 41ver.. by publican^. by the Pittsburgh Weekly, thrown., fw thw., wocty. 13- the Cburt besS7ro:rt .1.\17.L M'CrAtiV,CterL O ...PECROLEIIII, OA ROCK OIL. .Tlrt are mon. thinge 10./trarett mai earth, 'Than arc Unwept of In philruoplay." • . viitTuEB of thiA remarkiblo roe o. ani tb, et - natant application far it, to the mai! ar. ha 11,1,10 , 1 Lao to hare it put up in hall% Qua le• Iris and gip:rano, ar the benellt of tio• 00410. o l'hE l't. - ftuLLl*sl it ova:an true/ a coll.'. this route at. at a dutch of four hcalrol Loh 0 a row. nnalultera• thl mita°. althea) ant' ch. maul shompe. but tust 111 11 1110-110. nran Mace. Orlon Let:roar, That It contains prop aril! , matting tmb!! .4 drew, is off 10e000? mane unteruunt , . Tiara ore maul thlrop, Cho ttr. C,OO maw,. which. it kat no 1 / 1 10111 bo at tat vpiub Los.-1.• all-:, autos suiTsrine. end traor-p e ts the Moore rA .0111. aun riu , ..r to tam, al awl r.,r. Lona hlten the pro. Tauter thuscrist of putts., it a , in. Lon/. e. It hal n ref/1/11.• Con for 11, • 5ur,..1,1; , ..tue. 11,,,s , u , atnt andnally torrra , ..tto t ti• fur lt awl terlral altartable cures it has per , i alnt It. future popu/anty nod cueol ova/cafe. it, the eon. of a 1 011. 0 e. 11 . e te. 100 1.11.11. •alke o Lou Pareneat eallannar. Ire Ite 001001011 , 11.1 the us , null, an ama amt. Pa elat ion, the l'orot of thu who attar. und aish to 140 141,11,1 we do not Hata for it utslreetalapplieshon it, ev ery ,Ilhos,e tutitetstantely sete. Cant to number of ebroolc a IN curivalle.l .oroan t s thew map be ett .lo umeratud—hil dieentar of the 11111100101 tasuoth salt rt. ittlisoEllft taNtill5ll . TION. (in Ms ratty end all tit...ants att.. otriuscaos. 1.11• ilttsl PLAINT. DYSPEPSIA., leerier. Eatr,fas orthe 1/laller o,llil,looSe 1 4 4111 11 Ilk/ !Peke,: Foie, Ileasotfot ' Manta". hetoat s -bi. Patti. Ithruptatir Entate 't la , . Tetter, itluueso , a... Euro.. Sall, Causer, 01 , 1 eye!, cr. a, 16111.4. retultinu fn. cap, ure, or bap 4101 er0110.1.1 thie =lenitive rill ATl tang relief It will owl u , taterel Ttilllt/ anti ALT tit- E in tech ape, Imparltua tune and !nerdy to the whole frame, natant., plerturtha, operilng the awash fuoctiou., which roar! att. c end a Won.; constitution, and valug ineresseeaunn renareJ carp, - to all thy turau of life The proprietor Latour , of 4.t 21 cure" that re 00•10.1 ever, other 110 . 111110114 eel well under Olt! re a the PETECLEV3I La 3 Almal 411.1 - ket,4 0011 he 0,04 10.1 nerson 'rho Jonas. it. None penu 011/1001 the .Itratust, invytnr.— °Li by the E. 51. 01E11, Cana Ilatin near sterenth areet. by o, ort.r,lo.e. 47 t ntol 04E4E11 t Iti'DOWELL, • •-• oororr Went !that end Virgin Alloy. alp 010 norltally . his regularly appointed amts. PROCLAMATION, N'OW nil men who'nre atet Arni - nffUeted tries JIMMY Of weel, wag lAklneys, eau, Ttf're7tilt .y, o! i ' mVAVVel i ntr a t, • " Paa LEI:e. you . efaVSAM. ' ..I6 Ml noarnaaam to re s tr,AV au 4 r 'l',ll4.",rtr,Tri" widen alb not =MOE./ to any o ther wet 'IL man oho Ls racked with pe suffering front disease. awn, OW Le med., get refit( hemany of Ihe ill, enumerated above • heater It meta Very Little b make • trial. Th 4 Petro J leum Ca o mixtUre—. mirtipullttd. Pot UDR., U. DM.. f tipufweUtit au the community; but It fa a ot=edrelotemo ' red hr Iha enter gb'f. tgitetr?Vfoilt fen to oudelium humanity a ready reormly. p a refialu mut chrat. cure. It ham our,' Dthr. aher other mollcicre ttnie f,.1401Y) matt way relief It We cured 410017.k:4: OV '404 hm co „w„4'", I giti7,=. l-1 1r, - ruled old mre.n et.a, r Lear 0.16. ITToteh 'trery other motets Z.r to ' r tfro i lal " l ' e?trag or b' Airgc ‘ t , that tre Mune of It Atli mare chtlblatto and fretted 1010 Irt • foe at ail tooloubted teetlotouy bafarMah ed of the truth contained tu the shore Mateo:era. by cull log on SAUD Et IL KIER, Canal Bodo, eereoth often; or either or the moo.. here, A IleDmeell. comer of Waal arreet Vir,(4l War; I. h. &Pm. CI Wool street D. A. hIlSa. sal Curry. Allerbour ettt . are Me' Nre.. I - in OF LETTERS nquainiug it Dort ?n. A AtAPAL .0101.10 11'0'„ Drurk DlmDoutoE , D'ak love. ";%14'6,VP: IhnuthOlo tier- If Ilealcou Jetta:ban Johotton 3 . .31, 33.411, , Chute eht. Ktlame l!totert Croirhoul John W. Murdock IL j e {nary Corr thtrou Dos y vhn .i 9 "" o ' r I. ‘” - 1.11 • C -Ii. DAVISON. Preimieter. lahotaS -kru-teLefi'LY'e.trEleelll 13:1 od ..;ita lb b,..i.'"V;lo7.4'ttfATni!°';.=TtVitUi.t,„ =V: ar date of Wu ettement. hare cut ratter u s, or eltruthlthm rah the 141:2•P of the deprajus, data &poen. gore mad. Or kolAttetet aceUrd, 110911. the am lade thetrf. atatemem "triodes ei deposit. ',Lyn... of . 1 I f. e3,14"6 - Gave baretuta• deco Dub. s a b o t I. Imam—Ozer hating erchaarod r ‘ , the I\ ssmorilu,e,ilUY TM .... ** 154 1 s 4i 6Uti bliroar * • 'J: • -1"6 ........_Aug.- ogo ISId LILKYKI .4..sa,.,Lttr, (eater) . ..1 7 e.u.. ....... 1 461.10 wort lb. the foretintur appear o Pb. baratiordt •the, perm. ratored.-sad haring umpired to Doak au char.:Ad ter IbArr. front • , ". ',TOMS SNIVEL COstder. 211,Yik Gloi outran:4l brave Imo WI =II day of Dr remlecr iWA. ODD. WATSON; Aldermart, dollfdAtAtoltS of the City or Iltsburel; W. FOSTER, Attorney and Ono. ...11=•st.Lcor 2f0. - 1= stmsoirsils S. Au Cow-TE 4 vaLoiesea wid no. r tra a llPr tesTroagaW 2 N- rr is s =yr . • • • P—EQSS. *torney lottr. - Moo lip;ite s ' — ' ° ! thasi ' n '7l l l m ; t a i dasartruiptu.s. bngh.- worn anna—Paistraat to a acre* of the Urcult euprtkr Oautt of law mat latuttwery of ;od awriar. rotaltred whaltaingobaTwmey sag olliee dentahoita.• the Mr. ad watutinckearce, l ti . annotated for the narrow. Xweirouto.nc to *old Natoi . .. th Fut 31our cs.at Atsr.) e uun pro v. l : , 10 ako...u. tiles 4, ns mwr ..`r C hrld Rite , anomaly .the aneounsala jr. Woritalatat taw caw that.. euancycd by Kat Julia 3. 5.1 - ter and cll.. to sata Craa T. Pall.= awl other, ...Lane wig edwat ISI. acre* of Luta; where. are • Pa.. ADD, tounary. Sag D.., Driet .11 art. tatrATilg'.. l l:ll=l7; lac. raver tier{, Timber and Lime it.. Thane I. ale talualae,Eetri cruseing Chest Law, beloarioy to the neonate. Mae estate id well o f fur weitiotacturiag tgataao. not only of broth tot of Wool and Cotton. hang minutia W t heart of • sad tenancy and sal modal ..Art • about 0L miler orauth of Pittclutrah , haying ono of boo non. traits pose. la . Mt wait. arot eantaaniestion Pittsburgh told.. h., . ou them pronolaes, Wen .., re beta esnenara the law tea or the tifty thowwwl &Ham in the Omerof the rutting milt, .11 11.1 m.), 044 farawa, and other bildings.- The trucae ate now its tolerably goal one. igatannow -Iy:coca:weed lb* mills .or souse fear or fire hundred sen. runctior fanning It.. vow are or tit curdle* ther with sin c elghti dwellnig The sate .111 on vc.;.Dt of caw. two. via three I1=4; thellardwer Oft g b.! 2.1.1111 tr Er the feriftweatr . , Those ' , rho may ba thalami to tasks laiestsosatts rt;ltl export • ma; Dash= ht the netball, sr this ratter*, Cra'zil=%/ la'sl;ll.'fAVli°,l7: ther dercelptioach inforltion which Mac l IS by leetlOta wlchnte to rumba.. TitgiAlt C. MIXON, IT. Ti•ITILLLY, Ocouninleucrs. lionniatown. Doe- 12. leaU--.101 ;IT IN THE AtATTER L OF 'CLIP. ACCOUNT ,j_ of Thoinaa ilibtou and Aleyaiater Ililiteisoidanirdattn tun of Crel l ibion Sthwart, deceitioil. An i l r ,, c., wit Lie