The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1851-1861, February 10, 1851, Image 2

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    S.BURGH GAZETTE
,PUBLISI!EV'iIy k CO
1: ---- PITT . 11811 ZO M.
MONDAY IioastNii,,FEIIDURAY 10,1051
•
, The lq.c/ioy Gc:eiocoplea at :length, into .
r;litorial Colinas the article front the Colimercial
Jountal of 11;14 city, in relation to , the llctepfiela
project, with the following introductory
• ,
The followieg article from the Pittsburgh Jot"
nut is fair; true and . just apostlittit of the
ensrailroad interests as conneeted with Whe
men
el
, ing and her location,
as
let-not Wheeling
judge from the. faet that they can , fold Weir hatfila
and sitdown.
1 The JOltellal is assured that it is in no error
in relation to the Wheeling, 13ridp, except that
it may rely on the fact that the fastenings, tow
' eta, and cables were put into it of full strength,
1 to num:Antedate railroad .trains. It was never
1-. indeed anticipated that locomotives would pms
mver it; but it was: adjusted 'to the paseste of
'1 any number of passengers or freight cars, by
horse power, from the outer depot, as is ustud
with enstern roads, The bridge will, susiain
110,1.0,1fi10 Ws. at its tested strength.
The Wbeeling paper does not do us the jus
tice` to publish what it calls our Nrather feeble
reply.".. Ile *lnes not let his readers see it, lee
. Lie" an it is in his estimation.
-Inux.s.:-The newly eke led Senato ,
•..Rhode Island, turns out to be a IV big 'after ab
that is, if we may believe Mr. Jotta Homes. on,
of the, whit members of the Aisembly who voted
for him. Mr. Golden, in a letter to the editors
•
. of the Providence Journal, say
'The result, we believe, .will be favorablwhig
e to
- the ring party,; and to the promotion of
• ~measures in this State, and in the. country. —
. • General James our new 'Senator is s Whig. lie I
Sand for General Harrison for President in 184,01
—he v ,t.tsi for filr.Clay for President in I 814 he was
. In
1848 at the election of the lute President.,
absent fiotri this State upon Late Erie. lied he 1
• 'l,boen.here we are
:assured he would have voted
• -for thmeral Taylor. Ile voted for his pliment
•
excellency IL IL Anthony: for Gan ovenrnorman of
give
this
'State. What better aksurance cay
of whig sentiments than these votes reaching
hack for the last ten years?"
- • ' The result will prove that G en...lames is whathis
votes prove blotto have been for ten years past—a
whig; that he will givein the United States Senate a
cheerful audetrougsupport to all theleadingmeas
. tircs of the Whi g party, and particularly that
thictive prinfitPle of oar party, a tariff adequate
protectivh of our home industry, with which
' ell General James's individual interests .are en
tirely identified."
- This will do ;very well. We thought it very
.. Ana/age that the; Whigs of Rhode Island should
vote fore simonintre Demoerat It turns out that
' Lisco-foeos •Of that State unable to elect one
•
'of their own creed, took Whig lees exception ,
"1113e 1 , to them than either of the two Whig condi
, dates ; sad the ' , :Whigs, unable to agree among
themselves, helped to elect him, and this has
•• been eleimed as a Loco-fern victory.-
• PII0(1005,OF Trsirramsdr..---lt is gratifying
to see the progress of the .Temperance cause:in
our city, anti the proclivity of its spirit to goal..
At wmeeting,.of the Board of Brokers at their
zooms this morning, a ',solution was offered
and
arid
unallimousig.Mlopted,. that each and every
bet. of the Mini, on Monday evening next, at
. teid - the lecture of Mr. Gough, at the Methodist
Yeetestaut Chureh, on Fifth street, and in a. body,
nip the pledge, to abstain for all time hereafter
from the,use - of wine; spirituous, malt, or Gr..-
mented liquors. The action of this highly re
tqlectable body of gentleman in this matter, is
mucli , to he commended, and their example Coo
. not , fall to have a Salutary and beneficial
des effec ir t in
comumcommunityof people like (Mill, ever dus
of being and doing,good."—A memos.
This is certainly very gratifying intelligence,
and Shows the powerful influence which Mr.
Gough is exerting in this city, and which is fur
' tber evidenced by the immense audiences which
. attend with lffeathless interest upon his lectures,
and crowd in thousands to sign the pledge.
okieciao SLAVERY.
• Ear' ly in OW sixteenth century, the Spaniards
baring ramified settlements in the West Indies,
redueedAlMlatives W bondage and sereitivic
The tonstitiitions, tempers and habits of the In
%/lan% llottCrer,'. Unfitted ttfenr
,for such a condi
tion.'' •
The aystern 4.9 consequently cruel; fati
.~
~•;':
me) unprofitable. •
About the year.lsli, Las Comm, the Spanish
Bishop ofichiaps, a Man whose character far be
nevolence Las been generally admitted, with the
tiew of relieving the poor Indians from the cru
elties to Which they were subjected, and after all
other expedients had failed, proposed to substi
tute Africans for Indians. The suggestion was im
, mediate!) , acted upon, and tb e Emperor C hart. t
granted a patent to certain persons to supply the
Spanish Islands with slaves. This was the sum
Charles whom Luthermet lat the Diet of Wore..
It is said however that negro slaves bad bee:
imported into the Spanish Colonies. as 'early al
• 1501, and that Los Cases oulymhoSe one of-. the
two existing mils. In tholle days, and, long af
terwards, few appear to have thought' it wrong
to kidnap, or Ourchase fromltativerldefs,,the poor
Africans, and the salvo to their conciences was
• thatthey were heathen, and of course accur4ed.—
This applied to both Indians and Africans. So
to, the Confessor of ,:Charles, a Dominic., had
more just-afikr Misiatent views, and boldly at- .
JAW the African Slave Trude; and his influence,
Motagit pot euffi Mint to' put - an end to it, se-
Uuretran edict tending to mitigate slavery in the
adfoniel. This was in 1543.
• . •
In 1501, ihe English entered into the trade of
,supplying the islands ; but it was not until 1020
- that the first cargo was carried , into these cola
. • nies,'lmil these were carried in a Dutch vessel,
and landed in Virginia. At that tim' the Dutch
• luul poasession of New Amsterdam, (now New
Tork,) but the records of that colony make no
mention of slaves until six years afterwards. --:
, "- • -The records of Massachusetts make mention of
slaves as early as 1630. '
• liTlittlrwe find that from 1620 to 1808, period
- of 188 years, slaves continued to he i ported
. ft+m Atli. to them colonies and stater, d until
near the'clese of the last century the , Inds of
• Men seemed to be insensible to the eno ity of•
tie traffic.
,Now it is almost universal! human
• horrence.. Such are the revolutions •
s4ntiment ; and it is very manifest at that
sentiment still 'advancing. mad at r 'With
slavery wLereter' found,.; .
• . _
4 ~ :..
. K
~~;..
:~ `y
^✓~
_ „~t~`:
~:, lir
1, 4, \
TIJUSET—EYTRAORDINAILY ADVANCE. Tilofol
loßiTli article will - be read with , equal plensure
and astonlshitsent.' Who, a feir years a o, could
Ihise anticipated that Protest:a-nth, as sue ,should
do t.qnlY be tolerated in Turkey, but that the
.
Government should grant them' an imps al char
' ter, securing them in their rights and.pvileges?
tit is one of the most . extraordinary events of
'I these !.iiiioidillsi7 ti.Dt. , . , •• •
8. ii Stratford Cumin M F I I Imam
sl i m, one sof the. most -excellent oftlisi g men,
' has long had almost unbounded itfflut nee with
'.. the Ottoman Government; but it is . no' ear e
red-11
Gable to the wiadom.and liber;dity. S
of the ultanl .
that he has taken such a man as his adviser and
:, guide. . The generous conduct of thet govern
' mat to,Koasuth - with, his companiau. is , yet i !
fresh in the .re
collection of our evade . ,
L.
• . .
• ... At the monthly meeting of the American'
IBegird -of Foreign ldimions, held in Gen York
an Monday, stetter wain read from Mr. ..Dwight
' at Censtantinople,..dated .December.4th, commas
.- Mating the important information, tha t. through' ,
.the nuremitted efforts of Sir Gtmtfenl„ Canning
a lirman or imperial charter: has been - obtained,
- .regularlyincorporating the Protestants of TM.-
:-key to a distinct community, entitled to all the
.
priyileg*and' ini . Munities of any other nati&;
• untlesstrib.Nlosselnua.domination. ni..i4 e0n
,... ::•.:itideied an hope Ate stip: a. , affecting their ei
• • . -xi; elation in the Empire. .Upon the reception.
.ii.of•this cliarler, the'Slissionaries .repaired ill il 11.
--!!...-bl:4 to the palace of' the Grand Vizier, to tender
~".itinitheii thankii'or Ho high a ,fainr.. Thirteen
3
--..ef the leading members of the Protestant , edzo
,'. noway also . called on Sir Stretford .Canning 4 at
r, tee
.hin request' when they Were addressed for. th
t , 'quarters of an hour on their duties and lu
. _sibillties in view of their advanced position', in
the Empire- The meeting is represented as, -
• iring.been a very affecting o n e.- The .Atabsi;sa- •
'', doe` himself betrayed. evidence of deep e o
- ' It is Ira that the Protestants hare . been! re
-1 cognised as a distinct community for three yinatri
past;rind.their complaints hare slime received
, ", rev entful consideration by the Porte-. bur use
1 'regular imperial act of iocorporatiou bild biken,
• place; and ?to pledge , of 'permanent. prof Bo n - .
i.blialmen extended . by .: tho -govenanent.' Me.,..
--Mlfight• 10311: -' " -•-• .•' ' '' I ''• •
r ; '..The present Cniightened, , administration of
.110they,stimulated by, the energetic' intitteno - of s
• ISir Stratfor d
. !Canning, his been wagkien.
1 to . secure. to the Protestants their civil riihts
Lin most cases; though a change of. admirdems.
I.,:tion might at. any num have turned the e ea l e ,
and thrown Picini' agai n into th e power ef t.hcir
11
::_:.
~;
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~z>~:=.
-
.
V .- i
\\...,
...._.. 1
i. : - 1
s-s;~„n
~,..
'
- ':::;.ii ..:! :r::q : ' ' .1. ,---,,'
~~
~ ,ra
enemies.- The finnan now obtain*
the Sultan himself mid pt
PIM hands, given allthe stabilit
cy to their civil organiiatiot
chrietian communities enjoy.'s.
A Turkish Pasha has been ni
-to their affairs, and they are to
from among themselves, as their
acting, butancan with. 'the governMent.
grtmkroblem of religious toleration in Turkey
as it ects the Protestant is nol• considered
as Bid ed—Lta.result little expected a few years
ago!
Vi call , the , attention of the s,liter of the
Phis nrgh Ossette, to a gross mistake he has
made in setting down the population of N Lis-
Tioq according to the census lately taken, lie
gives in Ids tables.lBs as the num rof inhabi-
Wits of this town. The btars a l l' s returns
shoe, that were 1785 residents le Facts have
shown that a number of - Camille • ere omitted
to he taken by him, and aur rids . -are at pre
sent engaged raising the
to
means de TO
thke it, in order that we may ace nitely ascer
tain the actual number of' people c mposing our
population. The children in our c*smon schools
alone number seven hundred. e ask those
who have published the table placing New Lie
bon at the foot of the column to correct the
error.--Nrw Listion Palladia'''.
• We publish the ribose as an act of justice to
- New Lisbon. We found the table going the
r- rounds of the Ohio papers. Where it originated
- we do not know. 'We thought there wll,, some er
ror in the ligrars set down for New Lisbon, and
r s are glad to base dame totiectOd,
anal, ROAD TO ME PACIFIC.
We pare before ms a letter from. Mr. Whitney,
addressed, we may say, to the American people,
onahe subject of his great project of building a
Railroad from Lake Michigan to the Pacific,—
•Mr. Whitney's teal and perseverance are certain
ly tolniirOble; and rie think his plan in itself, well
enough, provided it were in llie .hands of a hotly
Torporair instead of a norporral indi6idaal, sub
ject as the latter it, to death arid a thousand
ether accidents and vicissitudes.. Mr. Whitney
says:— , , .
• The rood from the lake to the Pacific will,
ake
not
exceed .2,030 miles. For 800 miles from the l
the lambi are of the very best quality; then there
are poor Inuits too, near to the pacific, wh re then,
ere, say
there are one hundred .11r of pod; he
are nine hundred miles of goal land:atboth ends
together; and thik nine hundred Miles, by tfi.f•Y
t o
wide, must be SO managed as to make it produce
the means to construct I, ' miles of the road
the building of the road ugh the the
lands
will, beyond a doubt, bri g a sufficient amount
of them iuto use and value for settlement to fur
nish the mesas for the other two hundred and
thirty miles, of the road.
d itiow, to effect this ab-
Wject, and guarantee to nation its successful
accomplisthnent, the bill vides these gopdlands
into sections, earl, of ten! miles by sixty—each
38,4,000 aercs• I comment* the' work by locating
the route from the lake to a bridging place on the
Mississippi, and as far be, ond, as mail. neces-
envy to s conce the lands. I then commence the
grading of; the road for one or mine hundred ' 1
miles; thLs:commencemeu will require an outlay
of several hundred thousd dollars. I then com. :
plete a section often mil '.s of the road, conform- 1 ,
Able in all.,i•mpeets, to thff atipidationsof the bill,
and requirthg ay
- outlay og $200,000 more; and I
t..bd
if to the full satisfaction of the commissioner, 1
and also to, /1113 astisfacti u that the work is being
continued beyond, for construction of another
ten•milekeetion; then I m permitted to sell, not
lobe, five Miles by sixty 19'2,000 acres; the one
halt, the lands of the t n mile section through
whifb thefroad shall h ye been completed, and
under the _ certificate satisfaction, from the
Government SOILLMiSbiII e, th e
Land Office will
grant titleHnot to no, ntt to those to whom I
may have'vontiacted A le, as actual purchasers
and settlers; and the overnment still holding
the land 'Pr the other half of the'eectio, as a
fond to c ontinue the ro through the poorlands,
and also holdg the tul and all its machinery.
Suelswould h o the operation through the good
1
lands thatithe building f the road would increase
their value for settlem nt:. so that the one half
of the lends would f rnish means to build:
nine hundred miles p rand, and the other half
rontain c'on.stantly an daily increasing in val
ue, a sure fund ,to onstruct the .other nine
hundred:imiles of th road. And the bill ex
presffly Provide 4, "th t instil patents elan have
issued from the Geitentl Land Office, no titles
from or Onntracts made by said Whitney, shal
so
t be
considered as binding on the Gorernment"
that the lands remaining unpatented, would.be
-t ab
tL
We same a,
solotely •
. The sample optunti;
after I elmll have cult
mil. of ;road, then
sales for one half of
bond—asy five mile.
nod, under th e ce •
' titles Win a the Ge
grsnted directly to i
will enter into pos y s.
chase Sad been m
mcqt, and they
of
cisely Sis oil who p 1
ernment, and as
which) I may be c
overthem; morthe
and parcel, a of the
located, subject on
selves' ate lieto m
would be in the
der,i;y taltitig th
tollall, It was thi.
theta; to marches
interest will cans
theirlhopen rind
el from imprope
by the root. 'Th
any Mintlid Mind,
proposed to apers
dends, can never
plc On its line.
s
Mr. W. then proceeds io make his estimates,
ma J ,th combat lb idea th at his plan is a scheme
•
of immense peso iary speculation. Thin he dia
!
tares, saying .• have no object, no delis. but
thelcomplete an successful accomplishment of
thi, great work, rol ans. willing to devote my life
1.
to it without ho of gain." We are certainly
no6tuthorited, or disposed to call in question
the sincerity 'of his declaration. Rumen amid
[l4 sometimes kes this turn, and it must be
admitted that it is much more noble than some
other forms of dilation which receive a large
mensure.of pop Inr applause. But admitting all
ths, would it 14 wise to entrust so vastan under
' taking to the Management of a single individual,
~
of', whose.capacitrthe government knows nothing
u i ther dor that he is a most
d perneverut .l ' i g tourist.
h
tZe7n u s c t word-
Others
?' "".---'n
we
'"
give
IM
Others may dud will no doubt, make fortunes
y it ; but money is not my God, and will not
satisfy my desire or ambition; men do not under
lake such works for matey; if they do, they fail;
ecituse such a'work requires the sacrifice
eed.
of the
whole mind and body, else it cahoot succ
Mere it my =bine° to pin wealth, then would
I l t. be my best interest to continue and complete
I he irork, even to the end, where would be found
Imy!richest reward in money.
1:! I have studied this whole subject lons, and I .
think well; with the bill now before the Senate,
rl Mil accomplish this great work without insole
-1 i ti g- titn.l tit.oinaiinontiniyodt,t,.%
amount
burdening nz e th d er: -
PIT; wit h 'r,
and give to the nation a free road, which will
, u
, make le commerce of the world tributary to it.
bt
But, if the people refer 'heigs involved in de
; fur ; lita. of -millions, and fore:ver taxed to
tpaythe interest thereon, nod then not gain the
' objects sought for, let them order sur
the veys
money
and
explorations of routes, and appropris
to commence a Government work, whichwi cal ll
bankrupt !the nation, and build itp la politi
.machine to' control the whole Inurno ;sbut the work
will never! be completed. I ask for yat
Government expense. I wont none; and amres
dy to commence the work at once, and go on
-ithout delay.
OHIO !AND passaveste Ransom).
Thin road seenii to occupy; an iteportent place
in the public eye, nod the securities of the Com
yinnY command higher p
tan prices inhe eastern mar
ket an those of any other sim ilar kind.
'the entire length of this inilwny will be 185
les--extending from Pittsburgh b Beaver
Salem, Catkion, Woo st er ,' Loyudonville
itMansfield, to Crintline; near Galion, where
it i ntemecm with the Cleniteland, Columbus and
Cincinnati r0ad,,,, ,
From ten it is contemplated it will bo con. l
tinned to Fort Wayne, Chicago, Peru, Rock Island
and Cotmcil Clara and to the South Pass in the
ItOcky Mountains; ,
on the direct route to Oregon.
and California.
.1t is also exvicted that the Bellefontaine; end.
Lathan, and Ohio Itallroads will connect with
this; at its termination near Galion. The work
on the Ohio and Pennsylvania road is vigorously
prosecuted, and large quantities of the- iron
purchased.
It is also slated that this road 'will over the
shortest route Om New York and Philndelphis
Clevelund„'Sandusky City„ Toledo' and, Chi
cago." A mill en of the bonds .of the company,
have been Sold on favorable terms, an d the etiam
of the Company are ably managed at home and
sbroad:.--4in.
Our, pi vi tern Tani does, as the Cincinnati
seek. larval°, "Pealll.an hope 't place in
the inutile- eyes,". and deszrvedly so, ea it to
tniniontioUtlie.bnlt lines to pay well the
country.o nod
is :ng:4ll4OOV end prudent-,
V• mensged;. lnk "to a .com
pletion with an enele aSt:„P,llPleaedialteCt
bad erinel'otte of the t built railanal in the
•
Tex wino PAHTif is NNW YORK.
The dissension existing, in the Whig party in
New Turk haie been .viewed - with' priin, and
watched with anxiety, by their Whig. hi-ether's
all over the country. There has been a strong
hope indulged that the breach would soon be
healed, and that men irhose viewsi arc eff3oll
- the same on every subject' of greafttational
interest would awn be found, shoulder to shril
der, in perfect harmony, warring against the
common foe. Thin hope has not, as yet been
realized, and we have now to record a must dis
astrous effect of that want of concord which
now exists. On Tuesday last, the election of the,
regular Whig nominee fur United States Senator,
Hon. Ilaxtt.roz Ftsu, was defeated through the
defection which has groWn out of the difficulties
which hove existed since the secession from the.
Syracuse Convention.
'The way•this defeat was broughtmbout is as
follows as we leant from the New York Couri
er. The law of New York requires that each
Howie shall agree separately upoit its candi
date for Senator; that they shall then meet and
compare nominations; and in case of non-eon
currence,.proceed to elect a Senator by joint bal
lot The Assembly, on Wednesday, agreed upon
Hamilton fish, as their candidate, by a vote of
78 to 41. Sixteen of the seventeen Whigs in the
Senate, in like manner voted for Mr. Fish but
one Whig. id. .I. W. Beekman, from New York
city, proved hintself treacherous to his political
principles, his constituents and hit party, and vo
ted for Mr. Seymour, the late Locuffico candi
date for Governor. This made a.ris, 16 to
16.
Of course there was no nominations by the Sen
ate; attain consequence there could he no joint
meeting, of the two Houses, and no election of a
Senator A motion was then made to adjourn.
Sixteen Whigs voted in the negative ; but ag a in
Mr. Beckman voted with the opposition and pro
duced a tie; upon which the Locoffice Lieutenant
Governor voted with his party, and the Senate
adjourned. If Mr. Beekman had iteettaroc to
his party and his own honor, a ‘ joifft ballot by
the two-Houses would have followed, and Hamil
ton Fish would certainly have been elected U. S.
Senator by at least 95 votes out of the 160 of
which the two Houses are composed—being a
tear majority of thirty!
Whether there will or will not be any election
of Senator by the Legislature, depenas now Sole
ly upon Mr. Beekman; oud as we presume, sap
the Courier, his treason was a matter of well
cotmideted deliberation. we are bound to sip
posebe wilt persevere in it, and thus defeat the
reasonable expectetions or the entire Whig part)
of the State, and cover himself f ,revery, with the
infamy which such conduct most justly entails
upon all who practice We have no language
even of censure, to waste upon such treachery
and destruction.
As this matter is one of great importance, and
has produced immense excitement in 'New York;
and as many have been led to suppose, from the,
course of certain papers in that State which
claim to be the 'organs of the ndminiatration, ,
par erceihairr, that Mr. FILLMOU£ and his cabinet
- were Opposed to the election 'of Mr. Ftsn, we
copy the following remarks from the .y. P. Com
mercial Advertiser, in which the reader will find a
vigorous vindication of the administration, awl
firm and manly assertion of its devotion and fealty
to the great Whig party. The Advertiser re
' marks as follows:
With deep mortification and, regret, auch as
we Cannot find words to express, we recorded
yeatenlay the defeat for the present at least., of
the 'Whig inominee for United Stems Senator.
and the accomplishing of that defeat, by a
rim
Senator, lie. James W. Beekman, of this city.
We had supposed that the humiliation inflicted
upon the Whig party by the reduced majority
for Governor Hunt, and by the defeat of others
of its candidates at the late election. would hove •
more then satisfied the most aggrieved of its
members, who still retained sufficient respect
for Whig principles to desire to hear the name
and reputation of Whim, In - this it seems we
Were mistaken. Perhaps the Gme has come
when it is expedient to inquire how far any gen
tleman, or number of gentlemen, can frustrate,
designedly and systematically. frustrat
e, the
wishes of a political party with which he or tficy
may claim to be identified, and yet retain, a Immo
and standing, and right of action, in th party ;
in other wordit,arlusther-men.nan.baWhiges and
yet:repudiate the obligations mating upon 'then:
iu Whip.
At any rate a calm review of the facts con
nected with this mortifying failure cannot but be
serviceable, and may lend, to such an estimate
of men and. VlitablarBfl AM We us from such
contingencies in future. We *Mild much rather
have had a Whig minority is t h e Legislature,
and have been honorably beaten by our politico'
opponents, than have been thus betrayed
itie al
and
humiliated by those churning to be pul
friends and co-workers. Ndw, what are !helm
facts?
First, Mr. Beekman, a Whig Senator from this
city, defeated, of purport aforethought, the elec
tion ota Whig Senator. All the Whig Senators
brit himself voted for Governor Fish to . His vote
was necessary to give a majority his party's
nomination. He deliberately pce a Reottering
vote and negatived the nomination. find this
'been done under any iniaiprehensinn, ocwithout
knowledge of what would be its
oneffect, he had
the power to rectify his mistake a second bal
lot. From this, sad from any possiblity of re
versing his vote after consulting with other IV
he voluntarily excluded himself, and his, fellow
Senators, from all chance of going into a second
ballot, by-voting with the. Democrats for in a
he
d
journment, in which vote, as in the °thee,
stood alone iFrotiposition to his ;IYhig brethren.
The first fact is, therefore plain-abut Whig
Senator Beekman defeated the election of a Whig,
United States Senator. The Assembly gave the
nominee.; a majority of thirty Rix—Mr: Beekman
preveuted-a co-operation on the part of the Seln
ate, adjourned that body by his own vote, and
thus cut' off *I 'concurrent action of the twa
Houses expected by a joint resolution hereafter.
We presume that he weighed the , whole matter
before acting, and is not averse to bearing the
responsibility which he must have forseen would
log to the Governmen.
,
43 cif,Ali46 would be that
ted
Spletaajteaclit section of ten t
that s tep ' miles by ' aisty of ,
by saty-1§;:000 acre,:
tate of the commissioner,
nil Land Office irould be
the actual purehasers, who
sawn precisely ssif the por
e directly from the Govern
° land owners the saroepre
rchnse directly from the Gov
*tally free from any control
arged with desiring to hold
I and their lauds become parts
tl State or Territory in which
s y to.such lows as they them
'e. Their interests in the road
at benefits which itwould ren-
I .L
ir products to market at low
consisicration which, induced
lauds on its line; and their
s them to watch 4.4.1 see that
pectations are not disappoint
management or high charges
i least reflection must satisfy
that a railroad operated as is
te is, with no tos for
ar th e any control ov er d the pee,
this ittate;itiel that thel.reeiden't andliis.Cablnet I
entirely approve of the nomination of Hamilton
.Fish as United States Senator. .This we Wert,
and to set the matter at rest, ce challenge proof
to the contrary.; 'ltis enough to meet assertion,
by asseitiOn, and '.there we plant ouraelies for
the present. Bat we aid, that sihaa.,ealeaes is
givin on one ride--wheti direct proof is adduced
that President FillMor boreecretary Wsbar, or
the Cabinet generally, expreased an teytliatip
proliatitoi .of -the-nomination of- t 'Mr. Fish, or.
have claimed from the state Legislature any en-.
dowsing resolutions,. then see wilt produce Otte
proofs on the other side—which perhaps will for- ,
ever settle.that point:.
The fourth fact is that there wee nothing to
justify Mr. Beektaan'scourso_oothing t o excuse
it. The Union Whip, with but trifling and nn
important ells:tail:us, voted for Mr. Fish. Mr. 1
Beekman had equal opportunities with the rest
of . his friends of learning the facto which justi
fied their decision, and be might have ktoArrt
tad probably, did know, that Hamilton Fish was
is goal a Calve man ns himself, as. thoroughly
nation], and as decided supporter of the consti
tution with nll its obligation.
And now there remains a fifth fact which we 1
pen with no little pain, but which it is becoming
evident must be fairly and earnestly considered
before long. All things considered, the course
of Mr. Beekman amounts to a virtual opposition
to or abandonment of the Whig party. We say,
nil things considered, because we sincerely wish
to give the gentlemen the full benefit of whatever
may qualify the condemnation which the Whig
party will assuredly award to him. But it can
not he forgotten that be.has thwarted the all but
unanimous purpose of the Whig members of the
Legislature; practically voted against the elec
tion of n Whig of known political fealty and
high personal character and - an earnest friend
of the National Administration, to the Senate
of the United States, on the first opportunity we
have had for years. of being represented in that
body by two Whige:• and, let it oat be forgotten,
tar it is the feet , that he has , done this in oppo
,ition to the expressed wishes of the National
Admirdstration, We C.mfest that we cannot see
in this anything short of abandonment of the
Whig party nod joining its opponents; and this
we n constrained to my, in spite of any per
nal re
esteem and respect which we may entertain
or the gentleman wholes thus excluded himself
vet his Whig constituents and fellow Whig leg
deters. Ile first placed a weapon in the hands
I our opponents, aud then deliberately assisted
neon to use it to their own advantage.
And it must also he added, that this is but the
aturril result of those excessive personal jell
,usies which have so lung disturbed the harmony
.1 the Whig party—a result to be sincerely dep
,cated by every one who is really rind in nil
,rrity, a Whig. To this must all discontent
to the,part of minorities tend, when that dis
c.:went is reshot into apt:oat:tic disagreement
ith a majority, without reason or justice, as in
to opposition to the nomination of Hamilton
When this discoutent is thus
nospertins
;ly persisted in, the minority lose the power
ad influence which, when composed of such
cspectable gentlemen as the caucus absentees
, the Syracuse secessionists, they may always
.sert with salutary effect Fe long as they give
:rerlit to the majority when it is due, and. co
operate with them its far as they can. i.ks en
illustration: We have :dicey., contetided,tantit
is now admitted by a paper professing tole con
servative, thni Hamilton Fish &served thnenp
port of every . Whig—was a man-Amon ihons all
might "compromise" with muthel honor and.
good will. lied our conservative friends cheer
fully :trailed themsebrea of the k;c:casiou, and
-cordially united from the first in his support,
they would not only have eased themselves from
open hostility to the National Administration,
Ibut they would have vim respect fur their views
1101 ell necessarily thrown into apposition, nod
would hive dune' much for the harmonizing of
the party.
We would fainlope that the error may yet he
rectified; that a joint resolution will open the
way fur another election, and that those' who
have pushed their opposition to the majority of
the Legislature to the verge of anti , Whigism,
will retrace their seeps; and that the past will
i.he forgotten 3111.1 peace restored. ..
follow.
The second fact is that this course was pm
sued in opposition to the almost unanimous wish
of his fellow-legislators, and against the wish of
all the Whig Senators. Of the Whigs in the
Assembly Messrs. Blackstone and Oreem from
this city; Backhouse, of Kings county, and
Anthon, of Richmond, appear to have voted
against the nominee, and Messrs. Harris, of
Chenango, and Sherman, of butchers, were ab
sent. We once heard a would-be reformer
nhe
pub
hely assert that all the world was wrong ad
only was right, but his hearers doubted both his
modesty and his discernment: and we can con
ceive that to a gentleman of Mr.- Beekman's
shrewdness and intelligenne, the very fact that
almost every Whig In the Legislature 30 far op.
proved the norribiation as to be able to concur in
it, must have presented a fact -deserving of some
*mount of respectful attention. Still nit might
not hers been powerful to control his own ac
tion, to remove such scruples as had taken pos
session of his mind, and if so, then he could not
cast his vote with them. Thin we fully concede,
and WOuld honor- the man who thus far did his
duty, even though it cost the dicomftture of his
friends. ,But having done this he vrouldthave
tlischarged laistiaty, owl other obligations would
rise up claiming consideration at his hands. It
was no pail of Mr. Beckman's duty 4. nor War it
becoming in him, to shut out all the rest of the
Whigs, as conscientious, as intelligent nod as far
seeing as htmself, from all opportunity of doing
that which: after no little reflection and discus-.
siou, theytkati,almOst unammeusly resolved- to
do, as deferable to such a degree that to accom
plish it all minor differences had been buried.—
- Mr. Beekman seems to have forgotten two things
—that he represents hut a portion of the Whig
constituency, and that he is muter obligations to
the whale Whig party, whence be in reality
derives_ his - position to a member of the Leg
islature.
The third fact is that by . his course Mr. Beek
man has; so for as he could, deprived the Na
tion/ft Administration of the support dile to it
from this state, end acted- in opposition to the
known tristieh of the President and his Cabinet.
It 0 of itoportancts that this; matter he rightly
understood. A journal in this city. which has
done as much to prevent the election of Hamilton
Fish and deter the heating of differences in the
party, as.vrith its • profmsion of being a W
ertehid
g
journal it dare attempt, has repeatedly ass
that the National Administration approved of the
licy which instigated idr.:Beekman's .course.
When the thirty gentlemen alwented.themselves
ft= the 'miens!' at Albany, it weneso far as to
say that Vt were the special friends of the
President- his Cabinet; and that the seventy
Ifel'e l implPition to tics Natkural Whig Admin.
ideation. -it more cruel injustieetras never per
petrated:tinder. the gaise of professed friendship.
This manteuvre is Mr. Fillmore and his ad
visers. in altogether a false position before the
Feast Whig party of thin state and the country.
There can be little doubt that . many Wbign
have bad their . minds unsettled by:the nitrated
asstesertdians that the portrou of the Whig paity
represented by the absentees trap stile tate can-
cus, cad now ocescentrated in Sauter Taikixtan :
andffsve or nix mamba's of the Assembly,' itre,tho
especial friends of the Administratiti4 and Butt
their opposition to the Wiehes of therrajoitty
of:the • party is approved by. the President mat
his Cabinet. We therefore think it,higif Cato to
say what we know upon the trubject,tom% that
the Adsainistratto' n earnestly' desire - in entire
gad cottßel-rcoonciliation of tho Wl* party iu
°The New York Express.
SOUTH C.stunaha.--Advice. from Chat-Ireton
state that the correspondence between the GUT
«rour nod the British Consul has been referred
by the Legislature to n select committee, chosen
from the Charleston delegation, with power to
sit (luting the recess of the Legislature. The
same advice: state that it is believed that the.
olmu.ions low will be either repealed or modi
fied, ,o nolo conform to 411 rtinnetnient in force
nt Wiliugloci, N. C., which requires all free
edema in ' sailors to be on board their vessels from
sonset In .. suuiire.
..,_
We take the foregoing from the NortlAtaeri .
can of Wedileaday. W. hope it may tarn eat to
be true. It ;will evince on the part of that State
3 returning sense of justice and right. Ills a
drawbovh, however, to our gratification to reflect
that Great Britain has obtained, on er simple
demand, what our Government seemedafraid to
ask for, and what was denied to slns.sachusetts
under circumstances of contumely and insnit,
in the pet wort of her cotatuis..ioncr, Mr. hair.
- -- - -
oIJ BOOS ',ABLE.
"Me Fkodprinto of Mr, Crrator ; or the Aster°.
epic of Stronaes, Ilytugh Miller, anther o'
`The lila Red Sand9ione,' etc. From the third
London edition ; with a sketch of the author's
life, and an elf.timateNl his writings. by Fir David
Brewster, Bern., F. It. 8. .Cincinnati
Wm. 11. Moor• & Co., publisher."
This is one of the' most interesting books of
modern times, evincing rare nbibtj, profonnd
lemming in the branches of human,knowledge of
Which it treats, a lively and vigorolis piety, and
n warm but chnatened imabnoatiou..•- It informs
and astonishes the mind fly its deeply interesting
diecos•eriev, and relieves a dry etady from all
tedium by its plmming and at times brilliant ob
sersations and deductions. The work him had a
wide circulation in England oud 'America, and
we are gratified to find a wiiitem publisher ven
turing to Inlay cut so handsome an edition, Tie
ing iu esemition with the best class of books in
the c•.tst hoc aale by Mr. Bosworth, ou Market
street.
FATAL RED CONTEE idtiD A BLOODY HISTORY.
The New Orleans True Delta of the 27th nit.,
describes,. follows, a tragedy that we have al
ready hail reported by telegraph:
..lifetween two and three o'clOck. on Sun
, day ulterior., a difficulty took place in the Ver
andah bar-room, between T. P. Byrd and Wm. 11.
Essington, in which the former received two stabs,
and, one of the wounds being mortal, he expired
very shortly after. The• affair is reported to
base grown out of domestic trouble. There are
various statements as to who was the agressor in
the reheounter; which it would be improper to
publish, as Evington was. immediately arrested,
and will, therefore, undergo an esamination. ,
ZlOne of the parties who were pres.ent at the hom
icide appearing against Essington, yesterday, Kr
eorder Caldwell ordered subpaquiti to be Issued
fur them. lu the mean time he is detained in
Prison, on the 'affidavit of officer Phillips, of the
Second Municipality police, 'declaring that from
information he has received. he believes, the
.wOunds of which the deceased died, were inflict
ed by the ptisonqs"
this account we append thetrollowing rec
ord of bloody deeds connected with the history of
the 13yrd takenfrum the Delta of the 28th
nit
.
"The history of the young Byrds, the youngex
of whoiii FRS killed on Sunday, bits been marked
by scenes of bloodshed, violence, and fatal terl
inifistionp, winch are not exceeded in the most
I'sariguinary annals of the South and West. ~ The
family, we u nderstand,: is a highly respectable
one, iir.tugusta, Georgia, where the father and
mother of these unfortunate young men stilt
reside. Certainly, we desire riot to add a sine.
but there
yang to their already heitcy atfiktions,
is, in the history of their, soits,a moral, lI EViCS. OII,
which is too valuable to be lost. Mr. Orran
Byrd.
years wh oit, cwamtse, to w etub
l c i i e t v ys otmhee
ten
eostr twelve
e
brothers. lie woe o young man of must pleas
ing manners and address, --of feminine, delicate
aspect, and of elegance and refinement of dress
and a ppearance: He would be the last man in
a thousand , who would be selected no a miwc - of
I desperate, revolve, end, whem'aroused, of most
I blood -thirsty character. lie bad not been here
long before he gave proof of his qualities. A
row occurred at, the Lake, in which he shot a
man dead, S t ough it gas gtne_relly conceded that
he did it in self-defence. ~ -
After this o ccurrence he left Sow Orleans,
and was absent about a year. Shortly after his
return he WWI involved in a duel , with a well
known citizen. who was regarded ns'one of the
best allots in the city. They went out, fired at
I the word, and both :were struck, Byrd but slight
ly, his antagonist dangerously. , The femoral ar
i.tery of the latter was severed and it was only
by the greatest skill of one of our most eminent,
surgeons that he was rescued from death, though
mutilated 'for life. The same gentleman° had a
feu rears before, been shot in:the face and had
hi, carotid artery severed, which was also tied
' up
ate
the same distinguished surgeon. lie of
terwitrdskilled the man who thus wounded him.
We next hear Of Byrd as engaged IA • desperate
bend-Wham' fight in bib° office of 'the !hated ,
StateiComMiersary Inthia city with a well known
citizen; ho harry killed several, men,
tilto w as famed for his great proWeSa Tke
'result was, that Byrd's entagordst 41•• 141T11117
cut and niutifitted,,and for sometlmehe.rm be
ii,yed pilte mortally wounded. liya l 4 : I.o3ped
u ninjured..
.•. . .
-- . 7 ' -- ,
. .
Al: last, hoverer, fortune turned against him.
About two years ago, on affrayoccurnal between.
him And a young
. lawyer of this city, near the
corner of -Camp and Common streets
t;
he in which
ityirti
,parsued his. antagonist ' '
scrodsstreet,
striking him with a cane, until the latter succeed
ed in disengaging a pistol, and shot Byrd three
times before he fell: Ile Vas mortally wounded
and diedalinostimmeillately. We saw his corp...
lying in an office at the cornet of Camp and Cann
mon streets, about one handreilyardm from Where
his brother lay yesterday. ilis delicate, hand
some appearance, served to add to the horror of .
the scene. Stich was the history of Dann Byrd.
We state only facts, and we desire to he under
stood as expressing, no opinion upon the infer
vices which may be drawn from them.
About one year after the death of Ocean Byrd,
him...brother, Dr. Byrd, then resident of Baton
Rouge, was an actor in a tragedy of fearful in
terest and agonising character. A young man,
who was universally respected and beloved, ho
neying that Byrd bad dishonored his name nod
family In an affair of themost delicate
brace naturof
e,
attacked him in his office, discharged a
pistols at him, and then rushing into another
room, was met by Dr. Byrd, who stabbed him fa
k
tally in several places.' Thin occurrencediffused
universal sorrow thrii gh a whole community,
and involved a most in cresting family in a grief
from which
gro v e. sevral me bers thereof found relief
'only in the v Byrd left Baton Bongo
immediately after this occurrence, and has nut
been. seen in this State mince.
The last of the broth , a small delicate, youth
ful looking person, was killed in the Verandah
on Sunday atternoon. When this young man's
brother was killed;he wan greatly affected • by
the occurrence, and we hoped that it would he a
lesson to him, which would forever prevent his
indulgence in practices leading, as they inevitably
do: in this city, to the same tragical mutt..
We state these facts 'Remise they embody a
wholesome lesson to our young men, nut a few
of whom are becoming too prone to encourage af
toys in public resorts, the carrying of danger
us treapons, and their too frequent use.
Per the Pas/nog/1 Gazett,
WHAT OUGHT TEE LEGISLATOR* TO DO I
The Constitution of Pennsylvania'(art. 9 set
2) declares that "all power is inherent in the peo
ple, and all free governments are founded on their
authority, and instituted for their pram safety
ems,hppin For the advancement of those
er they hove at all times an unalienable and
indefessable right to alter, reform, or abolish
their government, in susll manner as they may
think proper." This gives the legislature full
a uthority to regulate or prohibit the traffic in
intoxicating drinks, without infringing on any
constituted liberty. What is necessary fo bidone
-The pence, safety, and happiness," of the peo
ple; of the vender and the drinker, as well as of
the good and sober, demand farther legislative
enactments. The interests of thousands of grow
ing youth of our Commonwealth demand legisla
tive interposition for their. preservation. Past
precedent justifies such interference. Legisla
tures regulate lotteries and suppress gambling es
tablishments, and the sale of numerous articles.
During the time this commonwealth was a colo
ny, and ever since, it has legislated, on the use
of wines and spirituous liquors. Let us not
tow he deterred from taking an active, decis
part by the cry, "you infringe our liberties."
nal will be done? if the people are united,
in petitioning according to the form recently
adopted by the Convention in Allegheny County,
they will be regarded. The principles of tem
perence men cannot allow them consistently to
ask for any:law, that would authorize a certain
number of persons to make drunkards provided
they pay a high price, for the privilege. The,
Legislature may see fit to du something lees than
pass a law prohibiting the sale of intoxicating
drinks, except for medicinal, sacresland mechans
ical purposes, but. they aught not. They
will not, if it be fairly presented that all the
Wards inthe Cities of Pittsburgh and Allegheny
and twenty-one townships, and nearly all the bo
roughs voted "against the sale of liquors,"ex
cept for these purposes. Let then, the friends
of the cause be united andpersevering, and they
may cause the legislature, the venders, and the
manufacturersof liquors to feel, that te inter
ests of all concerned, (and every one is h
concern,
ed) demand an arrest of the fiery floral It would
be well, if the addresses of Mr. Dough could e
beardirt Ilarrisburgh.
. •
Tu. STY...IEn ATLANTIC.—We were quite pre
pared to tired the public mind more or less ex
cited in consequence of the Canada's trans inginger
no fritelligence of the Atlantic.. We, ho,
did not expect to bear from her by that steame he
r,
nor do we think it scarcely possible, that t
next steamer will bring un.any informatiou.
decline, therefore, giving place to any of the
communications tient WI, lICCUUIi 110 matter how
well intended, their publication cannot fail to in
crease the alarm and pistol anxiety alreaily.ex-
Liting, atntas we believe and hope, without Buff,
•
dent - crease.
That there is cause for anxiety, we will 'not
pretend to deny; nay, even we cannot restrict an
anxious feeling upon the subject, at the same
time that our Letter judgment constantly assures
us, that there is no good ground for alarm; and
certainly, none for the despair' which has seised
upon the minds of some whoth base ve y g
sr n hi e p. ara T.
nd
dear relations on board e missin
allay, if possilap this alarm, we would repcatour
conviction that the Atlantic puttk , from vent
of coal, or possibly from injury r machinery.
if from the want of fuel, the probabilities 'cer
tainly are, that she run to the westward at least
twelve days before she put back. Then, all fa
miliar with the subject, will readily admit, tSat
with - her small;sails and largt hull, sh. would
certainly reguiie at twist twenty days to get,
back, if she had steered ten or twelve days to
the westward. Under these circumstances, .she
could not reach Cork before a bout the Ist of
February and having taken in coal, would prob
ably sail far this port about this time; or, if not,
be reported by the steamer which will leave Liv
erpool on the Bth last—next Saturday. 'lt is
barely possiblethat e steamer of the Ist, due
on lZe itAli, may th bring us the desired intelli
gence of her safety ; but, most amiredly, we
shell not despair of her until after the arrival of
the steamer of the Bth 'of February, and if we
should not then bear of her by that arrival, we
admit, that there will exist but little hope of her
safety.
We made a passage in the Atlantic--the most
boisterous and roughest we have ever experienc
ed in eight that we have made in all kinds of
craft, and at all seasons of the year—and we
had forced upon us the conviction, that a strong
er, safer, and a more buoyant sea boat never
floated upon the Ocean. If she has gone down,
we shall ever attribute her loss to one of two
causes—fire, or a collision. Evan a Collision,
except under very extraordinary circunistances,
would not endanger her safety; and we should
therefore, incline to attribute her loss, if lost rho
should prove to be, to fire. Such is her strength
and buoyancy, and though—and yet, she is said
to be no stronger then her sister ships,-that, in
our Judgment, with her rudder carried away, ber
engines not working, lied williorft rig of sell
to sternly 'her, she would drift oboist the Atlantic
in perfect safety, riding oat any gale that ever
disturbed Its surface. Let us hope,. then, that
ebe hes not•suffered from fire or collision; and if
CO, there need be no anxiety in regard to her ul
timate safety. At all events, there is not now,
nor will there be any reason to despair of her
safety, until After the arrival of the steamer of
the Bth Febraiary.—S. Y. Cour. ,j• Eng.
Zip-Avrrert Woititai—This is to certif.! that • man
eatue to my boo min We fan artists. by the nano of lien,
Els, in • very ba.l
mod
and SIOS •Intosi totally blind.
-Ile hat bemes soldier in the British service. Ile was then
taken to one of tie beat 11 talc In Londoh, nod had the
ben treatment London could allorit, Imt could not he re ,
s tored to night, mal was disehagl, m Incurable. I had
heard us nitteh'aboot the Petroleum, I thought I would try
tome of It on LIM , mm, I got hint • small bottle of the
Petroleum Oil. which roust his eyes . well and roundin the
mu ne of`ne month.
I a u, lling to be qualified to the (fib of the above
of the ahose etetemeut at toy time I may be called upon
!OW do, awl some Of my neighbors CAI. teal* AO the worm
IfUSIPIIRV JONI Co .
Croon Bottom, Reaves Co, Pa, Ohl 4. l!: o. ..
For sole by lie) err I McDowell, .71 Wool Arra: IL F.
baler, 57 Wood greet: B. A. Estmeatork, A Co. corner
Wool and /Front street.; D. SI. Curry, D. A. Elliott, JomPh
pares., And 11. P. lichwatts, Allegheny, also by the say.
ietor. . , P. SI. KIER,
Ai pr
fehlteltw Canal twin. Seventh ot, Pittsluinth.
Citizen's Insurance eozn --7- pany of Pittsburgh
KNCOURAGE HOME INSTITUTIONS.
Na 41 Weleestreet, ha the warehousw of C. N.
NT.
C. G. Iltren:President......A. KUM Peet%
This (Amman). sewn'
pew prepered to Incase all mercivallte
In ewe, end In Watteau, vessels Be.
An ample gusranty the Ability and I.uivil.7. of the
IrAntution. allord•I In the ha 'ter
awl f Cirertore.
who are ell citizens of Pitisteceb. well awl fetnewhit
Loop the concnunity fur their pruden, Intellittentw.
1/14g. O. 110 Wm.
i ßate. . Letnnef.
R.Ert".lgor ElnullirlEgO‘Di Ele!'r." %VA'
Domr..tib and Foreign Exchange, Bank Noks,
Bad Saner, Bought;Sold Eschansad
AT T.
EXCHANGE AND BANKING 'HOUSE
Or
NV M. A. HILL iSr. CO,
' No. 64 Wood Street, Pittsburgh.
.
•fir ERTLETAT ALLa., as Tin .3.eirta }1.1611
10PARTNERSIIIP—We lane associated'
v./ with WI TH... 161., Lae Cutler of ttse Farmers ,
twpostte Bank. who will devote him personal attention to the
burn.. " elt.. yle of the Ana rem es herr NS n: Aim.
is Thu A. WILKI• CO.
IniCIIANGE ANDItANEING HOUSE
. OP
• A WILKINS & CO.,
Corner of Third and Narket
_eta Pittsbgh.
Foreign and American Hardware.
InG ANNO:I2-Tlwrisoc.islet CO.,
NAN'S NOW IN SNOBS
A tall aid ampleta Mat at FOREIGN AND AAciarAN
HARDWARE ,
,3ft zf1yz ........t, =m it a %1 ,.
srombo , Emmy of the oasis
rfar-Tni. number fartnldable charm Mr
of dlaear•••
origiu.dlti,tin s dbteaa. , i - date of the liver, ha,
levgd the attention. of medical men: Some of them. di.,mace, elaMml under the general t.ertn'of eMmumptiont hare
imm ouppomd hariarable. and the tirthaPPY Patient war al
• lowed to die. without medical being enabled to offer
him a hope of rorovery. Happily thia ran on longer I. the
ewe. A remedy kas two found which will ail thew
entoplaiole, of whatever character, &Tieing front der.,
tarot of the Hoer. Theni.dered by Pr.
Nl'Lane. of
Virttiola, on illmetly o the neer. and In correcting
ttn
operation , and purifying It from dim..., CI. of mid eatir
o f complaint. that hare their orhgin In the dlw.ame
of this otgau. Itenamlim hitherto
pr
for them &sem
bare,failed to operate awn the seat of 01,0 (lima., but
Dr. ) i'Lemis Pills make llietnielve• felt upon the emus
W liver. soil lip clamming the fountain drf or Wr Our. ,
streams of illsram which Mimeo derive their exigence. Fo
mie 3. KIDD 0 Cit.
-felol4l:Attlw No. al Wool rt
the Ilex. Y. C. Jen ill"23
.1.0. ph.l"'-1-71,,Ittwv,s 4,31-111,
Ilxhomr , D. Sultreas.
Ps.
Tharodety . the CM In., br sN!,,_
Wm. Itro,, of :Mel. We.Mmoreland mum r,
g. M. Iltimmitt, of Llms
yun
COTTON TWINE-25011,s euperior
br J. KIDD (XL
tio. CO Wood Odvot-
g 1 ASTILE SOAD—'2O ua)((T----)( fur Ale by -
1 J , feta° J. KIDD 1: c..
I 411,11—SU kegs and 25 blue, fur K sale by
La frbllk lIKOWN a KIIIVATRICK.
ia E; EDS-4 1 ) Ills Clover Seed;
'" J rtao w - T 't i Nv N d 'i:KiiiolTr
il ucti.
DRY APPLES--(5)1. 1 bushels on hand and
11 jr for nab• by feblf, lIIUMN a KIIIKPATKICK.
AriERMILLION—TrieNte, Chenese, and
T oter . rleart, for nab , b)
J. SCID,ONMAKEIt it 01
‘r ''‘',
A RNICA FLOIVERS,—gor sale by
AIL fPblO . , J. SCIIOON MAKER aCO
n LACK LEAD-7(K) lbs of superior quail
LiP(... fur ralr by H. O. FELLED,
(A;bi , 57 )cadotreet.
lAMPHOR.-3 bids for sale, by •
a v..skt.t.)(((.s.
gl. i cabin I
VI - OW . ii) DA liEli.ltY -2- f; I; IFt fOr e - ale ))3r
-I- 6',..11, _ R. E. eir.sr.um4.
tioDDERAS-10 bids fur sale by
V) lel.lOU. L. SELLERS.
--_-_--. . —.--
VIAL CORES-1000 gross for;ale by ,
feblo . nkLI.ERS.
------• - - -.---
;AI -----
OUSE DE LAlNES—Printed and solid
mlorn, In great variety and at anrloun In-5m% to
-um at War of (AlO MI/ Milli U IttIRCIIVI EL UL_
NIOURNING GOODS—Murphy & Burch
ma‘•,''tf3.lllr goT.he "d:l7.=:'WC.lr.:`, Virt rm . -
, [minting-I Alpanan, acid oat , Ftylealllf 31011}11j31. Urllli.-
. hlO
r; h.
t:PFtitgliß who
could influent.
ersiewble.m..younlome,Trule. wiebe• ottun e tlon
•or i/rocory lions , Seattle...tory
Al.renee. will be glreu. Igraso t applY at thls othn,
frblOellt
• G. L B FEBILERMAN Attor-'
• my , sl Lea end Reel Enure Agra, N 0.104 rthi
burgh. '7:o°
IetQAT SUGAR—LOti Ilbs: as . sorted num
tyro, for eale by BURBRIDOE k MORAHAN,
• Mn,
No. Ile Water Ke
rA.Ai , DleK.E'i Sc CJ-ITTlCienia for Mt.
t Wade's Iron Wofkm. bay, Iron far eale of stivrrio
rbtY. Im.b.,,,^l..orrented.• Wsrcholocll2.Water
07 Frob, sbb2i,
BPICK EN
AITiN G 1 5 bales supSAlerior, forsok b 1
0210 • lAy
C
O f :l b ION —lO bales for i s q a b
/kiteAIIyDICKET t 12,4
COTTON BAGS-40 dor twilled, for sale
_.by lbblj:L_______-- ManLES 0 8001
-61EGARS.--10,000 Pprincipe, for oak by
,3 bt"bi,_ 701111.11.1$ & 8 . 00
1 1
---i---ithinistfaA tor's x.,
teETTERS of ' Aamiuistrntion to tit., Ek.-
stele of Dasid ..I:flive. Este of Wilkime towurkeP.t.l
-leg eur County. deerseod;harr hero graded to t le
~ t
Renteer. All per•ous Indebted to PAW. eytate see rogue
to make lintunliote ',Rymer. Rad rilowe laorlmt eleu .
"''''""b' '''''''
"1
Pr'''"llNTtrY'kqtag/Nli.
,c
Willtlne townehtp. fet,low6tT Adolluirte4l.o_
vk Lti-A t it. E At fis; I' AItMS. AN I.) L.O S
Ft4SA.l.sl—.Two Ivor Flour Mill. sod • ssw Milk ou
the Benyer Creek. with the neeeesm . o 7 , ker 14 , .....*,..,.T_ ,
Alto,uNlMVf 'Ar59Z.,1,17:17 ` , 9 ) V, tin, ' riarrodlee
brinw Beaver. for $l,lOO. Also, otne of 140 arrjr.... , ooithe
Ohio ri ver. 0 mile" below Delk ,, . Oar &V ppr i _ - I , ?,
WU scree for $lO per sere. Alw,._fartuk of la0. 31 :l. 1) _
erre, for $2 5 per Rom M5O. I. Mer, for .., on
scree for $lO per• sere, together with many other: of tri.
'''''
4','"A Pri''' ' N. ' 1:! " ..7...' " [.. R. FmrcitmAs.
A twn ' e " " L '" I°2 Rent. ttil,ti4lTA .-
Ban. L.
M9 th " = " t ,
Pittthurgh.
. ) °, 00 .,, 0 the
for thrsidetth
" •• Bri "Y 0,5" t l b - orAllegb•V•
C° o " 47,00• P L0 A' F ', 11M. , 15 , Is ' h. jali; y ob,, 3nt cif
JOUN IMAM
I% held 1.. t the Toll
, 11u0s.
i. Treath.,.
.
-f— ADDITIONAL SALE
Of Forty Town Lots in East Livezpoof, 0.
THE recent unpreerilented sale of 10 i n in
ti,thry'yt.!o7;.lry lej,iZt;T:b..hr,:ion:V,,,,,'.'lv.l7V,
the otarratines l hips been Indunal tu ' lay , ottt ardon p ‘ s .
tatNrg. Ps'lllacrttst..rttinbOressirt.te7tta IrlCrl.f
th..s. wowing to porch.... It l 5 tiredlem to my an, thing
of the lorstinu of th. Town and prneTa.t , (It barn. , h.n
andde..crlbrd in recrut adr.rtiaement..) nth...than
ttut over non hutuln..l lot , hare recently clomp.% twat.
and a n purehared by - thner whhint hs Proem , • elc , nr. -
Lb. laas...
Theppos e,
lot. air among the moot aced
and devirablr
In the phste, and vow principally torated su the mut, of
thoo• rc.ontly auht.
for information
_appl yto Ai. propr,ist!..l I.its.rpool. or
to Jansen fliakoly, hal. • en. 55tr. ,,, .. nn.ottrao. •
JOHN P. BhAliEll.
FaustAlvertool. FA...Z.1.1.51. -- febad.twtf.
V Correction.
N .publishing the uncalled tor balances of
ths amok of Pith.hurgh. according to Li...in ilotrula ,
1.24. a detwalts , balm([. . to Joe[ potoot.i. nude hsncro.
!
r ..a. 10.17, of Oa. wa. envravendy printed. -Jes.x.
io'grirtrill:alsTuhr IMlL.lotirzit,rg..tt..-;41,2:1
,„ ... Act of /assembly, It will cart. , " to the Co manor ,
wealth. /OLIN 1.1 . 11 , E1t. (...n...111er.
fe1....%3141. 1 . 1 t0., . _ - .
_.... . .
SPRING HEMRTATIONS.
'C. B. BATCH & CO.,
NO 79 WILLIAII STREET, NEW YORE,
111 AVE now in store, and are constantly re
the etearness , the maFt akaart.
Went. of FUradlillß 4;0‘.1",,, before offered.
einbrarlnv the 'edema and rirts,o of Ceara...Rd. , .
Strpendent, Unde . r Garnienta, Sool'o..
tee. Ilww'r
oiled Dreielng tee.. Ilandaerebiefo.
:Ain't:l4er het
8r..., Litien Cintlara. with variety hf Utheir ari
IV o ZirrAre ' :Vr t y l lo 4 ne l' : , rige gt:.‘.'irt;'W
W l o-juir h le l ~i ono
liaittd 50 e xaminee . ur!tnek.
.
• Linen awl House Goods.
A A. MASON & CO., No. e. 02 and
(11
11 51arket atreeL keep.ronatantly on hand • !arr..
anciettnent of the Cullman:lu Oeda. of the lost tuanitiae -
Wr' ir able Cloth, Datualk and Dialer.
' . l::NZlPTl=gl i!ri2ftt2ak.
Diaper, {Lena, Scotch and DI N Eye
Linen LaYfUl and Linen Canaliriet
(loot and Lanett DammlL all teliltlnc.
04 Au,. Lrtirettlai '' . ) inch tallow:Pe ' h. 5 ^ a`.
---
L
Large Auction Sale of Refined Sugar
OF BATTLE GROUND SUGAR REFINERY,
AT NEW ORLEANS. •
•
3,00Q11!!;,5,..0.,F, Sretil"ll
yes and latilied, he -old at Anetian at Ire Or
tenni, on the 10th day of V e beitare.'l.sl. by 11. TEMPI 51,
Auctioneer , at the amnia TIIOS. LIAILLY. MACH-kill/
t CO- Agent• of said ileintry. No...n(Nutom Home Meet.
tittieTert. liberal aVaale.
AL6O, on the manne day, at the =MO inure,
d o itth prfof pale and dark Delievoison aessdr
:0) do Red pa . le vintage 1,15 do do
00 do t2d " V?, do do
Itt " Isla . d,, d n
ISt Elm Notlete leopenal .1:400 „
Ali the abase am Under Lust Rowe Ley.
•
100 basket.. Oulllunlet ,
1:',0 Abllllllth
75 •• snorted ceroisis.
too unsay Ch eerier.
fAi e in tittle yule,
100 twit:eta 0110001 h
:01 not , eardlnca In Oil., In whole, half. quarter unil , tbled
Foxes. 4l'Z''Teeti:o' feb.llx
Law Partnership.
rr lIE subscribers
of have associated them
/A:3r vto,q"uvr.lo '47o., ? T'gr th
; ',47
mof :Lours. ran
Lout of ell times In tm. " orocc, co
Fomth stead, Pitulmettb. now mni t ekl , l!LLl / kt . inct.
feb.!•..1.1w WVALINaTON-:
DRIP 611i01111.51:3-.-- Intph ' i & Burchfield
nape 00 1.00 ton.r lot of wi i p*otarbotos. wbial
::1111t;Ittt:gt.!' u"th
ceirnmst:
WILE public are cautioned against negiitia-
IL nag accopted draft to . our order. drawn by t
titan, Maraud or Carissie a :drama. New loft
dated Cincinnati. December 1.th,15.5 0 , sat' payable ell
Wilesalb, date for Se - motet. Itutulred and dly ;tenet
DOW* twent't our cent, eatlortcptancr [oath.' Om
New York to our addrows,n the 141 MA CM Litt! a CV.
11 of J.usty. and ha
tailed to reach'utt KENN .
lettS:d3t
VRIES'S FRUlT—N:aclies and Blackberries
1; 1 1 7 '' pree"'"rs" -?es
~ i u i;;lll; l en t. t r aTr t Z i ll Y sit :S. .. 'ird.
AntYCnenire‘and Pumas put up sn the mune mean ., Br
plre or tart , Ors bandana fillValil . tb j
~,.
m.cLun ' 0
~ . 1 % ,
jOb.., • aw, Ltlesi , y elses-I
-iptIRD SEEDS-.7:-Curtary and Ilemp Seed:
L., a the tees quality for sal; kr
BLS . _ WIL Al. SVCIXIBPA CO.
LINSEED 01L-5 bids just received. pun
L''''''" Oil, " d s "" . 'lfulastis. LITTLE. a co.
fel,,p • Nn 2:4 Liberty elreel.
.. . .
Clll.lO AND PA. RAILItOATCSTOCR—
" • I° "" hn ' ut. ' n "" "' '''` Va i l. mu. a co, •
PBS
F 1135 Al 4 i li RAISINS,-149 boxes lign:
te.t3 do relnisisk
esitel awl Bombe by BROWN A KIRKPATRICK.
-
UOLASSES-1.1 tierces barrels:
kritietc.
LARI) QIL-115 Ibl4 best refined Winter,
tor eta b. by J. 1iCH00N3.1,14KM.1.C.0,
P A P E It 4 0 0 reduni Wrppping, W.W.I"!
11X1 do ' Itonlwary do
a owl• byfob,, J. ri.IIOONMAKEII 1 CO.
. . •
G LUE -4;0 tit& Common,
to do Bare, Go ral• by'
J. SCHOONMAKEIta. Co.
tiILDER'S CUSIIIONS—Just
tor sate pr J. KIDD & CO,
frb2l Jn . 1.Wt0.1
QIIAKER'S HERBS, all kinds, a fresh
Tauband. stul Or vale by
('*LAZIER'S DIAMONDS - -' do?. for sale
1, Fr b4B A .1 KIDD & (1).
thil------5—STC—A*l.6. A few low prieel Long
WMEN SLIAWLS—Of a in
lor quality, at Aareof
MURPHY t ElntellYlELD.
CASTOR OIL-10 brLs Blow'sbest, for Sale
Jai KIDD CO.
Temperance Convention.
)11N ADJOURNED MEETING OF THE
Allralkene Co.te Trensoranre Congeal.
twat Tr at 2 &do.. a, in the
Ih.e. of the aonnal I.m.y-tarts. Choreb. Cites
C-IbT J. J. IttlellANAN.Neey.
UTTER-1 MAK fresh Bull;
'4'4:
got nkvived aid
" IctilLLS t ROE.
,
le by N Io
ra b. 1.7 .....
TOBACCO: --E) 31 k ivaes 5 Lump, for sale by
McIALLS A ROE..
WINDOW GLASS--100 bxs "naught's"
by to, Sr WY by rel. 7 MrOILLS
'Notice to Contractors.
tIIIO AND PENNSYLVANIA. RAIL
ROAD—SenIe,I onnomab4 trill be 25...e1...1 st the vac.
.f Ihr Oblo llennAylvania RallnsulOomranY In. PM.I .
n,h. IMO Tbor.lay.. the 'Seth day or M.{{rrh ant. for
e Track term
kin Ail.lance
Z0.V,M , :,0r.
.Ltaint,rat.llte other In Ititt,ouneh, It two %emelt...prey...
i e tune. on application to Solomon W. rolrrta. Cider
Engineer. The nroverab. mart be in navordutre with the
eint.nrfortn, and addr.74. oitit.l.l=n
-111rti.l.nrgh. Veb.oth.lSol.
North Amerkau. New York. Tribune, American Italltnad
114
Sint nnl, publirlt An. Inne, .
13ATE'ST SOAP POWI)EIt-,20 boxes just.
...eired awl for rah. by R. E. SELLERS, 07
.. ,r e et. re of v. - hem the genome article may share he hat.
Civil Engineers and Land Surveyors.
4,•v01, ont sod dividing Wad Into . lots, level l ing.
iinc and littil:te'fr:nagat,Pt'l4L7o7l;:tfs'lN... ryltitr„golztkfris.:
led Vl ' oss stem, UZI 'of f ifth street, Der the
eoort Musa. Pitutonyh. l.
stor4! and for male by the sub
,riiwr. of 100 ben quality:
llLdidoste and Seetato of Morphia.,
Guns :Ihelhot
I.lps4no SalLe
'01.700 of Leal:
Gum Arabic
Cream Tartan
knll gril3l , loM ,
Flour 0011dm
Ales.no.tras Senna:
Coesphoe
S. N. inicKrasnAm.
hid corner wood .04 sloth rt.
ltr 11 IT E 11011E-51ADE FLANNEL—
.IIIIIRPIIV /t BURCHFIELD .o Pelting. goofs
ni:khoaforrl;trere no Y 3 nmtr it'raft ooho tir
of Price, and nUalltlca • ifhts
if F OOD CANTON FLANNEL—A farther
rupyl , t n a f rel.:: ruparlar ,artlcle at 1J; gents per
rx
aIURPICE.k n4rErlzux
IDE SlNETlNGS—lfoueekeeper, and
V (Woe m•rwrin , o for haoarkreping. will lila at an d
; tt":1Z..41.0, a==rar .412=4 11:7;:g
0,, to three Tanta •kla. Liana.d and unnlearhed.
Pdlowcitite Vorllna, Barb table cloth, table diaper, towel.
ling driworarwal rradi. and bounckeeplog gond+ , grarralli.
fed
TS
IVMTE: A QUM
m.r t hr Itureldflofl I,llt.•cheltrattan.i.s.of
Furaltstbnvx VEdmits quilt.
wnd odor. Alm
reL6
II AISINS—Common Bunch.
, Ex.,. Laycr for Asle low hi.be
or retail, _ fehOl_' A )IcCLUTIO At CO.
)ICE—IS tierce rs.orc and for Bale by
• I-AIVI 1011
stet 1,14!.n.i0
VIRE ND WATER PROOF MINERAL
I: PAINT. for gale D S ISAIAII-DICIIET ACO
Warr and Viva stA.
I.llR] PEACHES--179.sacks,
. I jnst e r red
sod m. ,ale er at!. J. . CANFIELD.
EMONS-14 boxes, just received and for
tale Ty 0.5 J. B. CaNITELD.
CH EF:sg:-2.50 boxes. for, sale b
fetO S. F. YON RON - M.lORn a CO.
. VLOUR--3 0 bbls extra Family Flour, for
. .t . .a.2 Ly 4L1,5 S. F. YON BONMIORST a CO.
ARD---4 bbla prime leaf for, sale by
fehs • F. F. VON RONNIIORST a CO.
I.lU'l UTTER-4
d b o bls
du kepi de For Ade. hy
Jed:s R . F. VON BUIFiNHURST CO.
"PLAIN BLACK SILK S—McentY &
H.rwtrino have received s very full euppir or 0b..,
which they esh will at lower pekes Man they he
..rlly sh, alio, Mark FiOITT.I sod Brocade do- ,
inereiit
PILL BOXES-41°
Pa
IZrkn, .
..,L. mle b,, 614 lt. E. SELLERS.
IIMP APPLES-3 4 sacks for sale by
f..ton R:DAIRELL it CO.
13EARLASII--.30 casts on hand and for
pale I, f.I.A R. DALZELL a CO.
lIIEESE--50 boxea on hand and for sale by
I i f..tAL tr- BALRELL t CO.
d I LASS—Of all sizes and qualities, on hand
It II moi Rs Ld.. ti, PLO It. DALZEIX t CO.
BIILS. NO., I. ROSIN, just
_resived
3
mid Re 4 sa le 05 B. A. T.W. ESTOCK t CO.
lrb., corr.. %Pond and F1rd.,......
1 11,1 ELIAJWS—Fine pair; of Bellows. newly
_d_d i vr, ro, .de er !CA FEEL ATKIN:WiII:. 000.1,,.,
To Gas Consonaers. •
CAUTION TO THE PUBLIC OF PITTS
) pedlar" , aro about, Intriatueing the
o
nr Ay le of ot ae -tozo L zre i t u ttenaeten;De rth o t re n t , A lll = l
Ttictfitta ore or 40 to; cod. and them
obit and $1.25.. Nor to. the hoodoo. tog to ",tale Oat
our teLaii ;trireme' Lel mut, with Ill eral dOttniatt to do
ores addling thon It them In dont and derelliamed
Itgr ad * verthoi trier. We-tberetore oath. th e DuDO
ihninet mule impotent. not t ortieularly outdo; La rod=
tootsahot 6 Indio high. hal lag WO eyes. curly
halt end hdielt erhiebons. Dater the rblargdy. Ile le ex
polite in tti, ttainern, dad toll okulated la de•
lira
teet; Te ‘ uti 6d a ' s or nlend i tt
' thekert gill be Of toe. Yowl rei.ect i Ziye,... fat . r.
111Ladiertratrog. Nor Yard. •
D e r-Tlo young out allnded to has Deter beenconnerlat
fret with the drat._
V for:Rum r f
doer , moth too. Traltere. totter. nod la mala borers:awl for
, t 1,16. a %lumber of buy,. net bang men of a s altrh dot.
eloonlor odds. boon doors dad dry nano =Welled.—
Mune, h,rronol and lent, end all Mold at adorer's Wok
it , au A neury and Intelligence ado. Oretedo PrOtitiddit'
for ten onleraterrhargok
A goner rend InteNAenw Odtre, Mint. •
fehS
Fl-11MO'rTIY—SEED--15 Kb 'timothy need,
on hind and ith. by /L DALZELL CO.
4.41 . Wort) . FtteeL
•
I.& E. 1110 ACID—L - 400 lbs, , witrrantec
run.; =ale b)
It. r sso od.ntree uants. •
••• Wt.
17—attLIN6-100 La Luitee sealed for snk
jlibr V..kIAIIDICKLY t CO.
VG A t . le*and old dileans Loaf,
1411.1.1 AMS
N E 1.01 ES. — 7 -J wit, received, a large
r,A °nattily of huff, pail white Envelopes, of
vl
° for uniamally low
at at
W 111.°V.k,N...tiihaztakt.int=st.,,,Ware.throrrmYe.t.....
1ccitc17.1pi'NgG,,,,41,,,,-I,k.rnold's Writing Fluid,
Ililderri Cl ' irmital Fluid and Itch Ink.
11w-1100n , IS dumbitea Ink—red and Katt
iladen L Thritoptartex aktritmerrinl Ink--blarkomarlet,
an i ml.I
patch Carmine ink. for wale bk TV. 5. lifikY....7.
ii,filt, SALF--liond 'White Louisville Line,
c bt the Lard or retail, 150 middle 01.1 . 1 1.011
w,...1,1 I.wlw. blank To Iwtz. 150 temperance re fasten
tau late ettonterf , it &lean, and al our duly skirt of
oar ie., kir , , and Onto 10t) illtlenmt late Lantern. Weider,
North,. rn and ti ottwin new.perern mat armall retail pup.
id,' Almanac , o L ti . da few wdmol book.; ink, writing' and let.
ter winter. quill, plit,it port. far salegr A p o ite A noani
tt tor enflame , . --
Fifth 01:rett.
...--
•
Qmut smut au; complete,
I_7 fur =le Ma by PO F. PALRELL +E CO.
I:1.114-30 barrels and 15 kegs do, for rinlo
lL D &MEL a CO.
Lab.' .tiett.._
BUTTER-SQLL bbls prime R. Butter,
1111 n hand arid fir said by M. [M
Li IZELL CO.
(A es Mr
OCOTRINE ALOLS-70 Tho, pure article,
t7l for nl.l. ho kl 5
QUA AMMONIA F-toRTES-1-51.0—E•carbos.ris.,
COFFEE—BOO hags Rio Coffee, just ree'd
and for tale hy VORPRIDOP IldilLAMnte.M,
ft hi lin 110 Water
PECANS --Just received, 3 bids
fr"h 11 0 oute for
A..11K71.11R0 d Cl).
130 Librrtr Wert
rw
-11,r.}:su FIGS-40 drums received and fot
las'e be PIA W. A. MeCLURD a CO.
Pittsburgh Gus Pipe and Tube Works.
THE undersigned 'have just completed their
IRON TUBE WORDS.
st anf
otter
all sixes of OAP , PIPE, Lo.
+motive and otter Ploy, and all ri:.<l , of
WROUGHT IRON TUBES,
Pkb tbo) off, far sae at.tla. troll prim, vt,..,-sre
0 0 nr,pared Co exacutr order., to .117 , 1;sArd, , ,tratu t
• So. fll eta R Watwr . street. •
:sin • 1171.31101L11L PA
1 lOUNTFAIFEIT COIN =DETECTORS—
`.'Thh p the only ins - Wawa yat Inrentol 13 0 1:11leb
r ror
a 4 the o t
W'an 01141.1 , arrtry eon` or.„
toroes of Market and dtbrs.
OLD LOCKETS.--Just received nlarge
sup,dy M elairant cul l
Wald , and Miniature Caxs.
fhie
.onta hie for Day uerot he,ea, to.
tr. yr. vmsoN.
QILVEtt COIN WAN.FED.-=-Far whieli
th
1.7 h101"4`lin."1"' will lu
midt'f..A. III.LL a CO.
hhd llrvter. fJ Wool Arret:
XCIIANGE BANK STOCK-750 sharet
4 1..0 sole. Loqulra of WM. A. PILL& CO.
(AdYank,. I
•
XOTXM
LL persons ittlelited to the late •firm.
Johnston Ydodt,n.
wlll ld all and .etlk
'l"'
"o—, •
'UA fel~l :I L
,
LANKETs: BLANKETS!! MURPII
nrav of
1410 0100 lra allatsa .euntr, of slats us sow offwd,
at radoctsl
It ARLET CURTAIN CHINTZ, of
diffJr
1. ant widths. and at 100 . =!,1.' 4 1 at tha store S
irLJ f
&
ARCM NYLaYKELS, Dbmestic Artie,le:
WWI, ltnrrea, Unmst, and, nazazirm Blue r to
"4 MURPHY it IIIIRCIMISLI?.
PIC
~4A DIES' FLEECY SILK GLOVES, tind
otL.r kink of Winirs marl:mad
& BEccurizi.D.
f e ADIES' WINTER 110SIEl_ti.77varipTuzl
Mods, including• s.rr wild! of To
.4
'4"'"?'"'' lwaruy a_Auncurteux
1/17 -- ERINOi COTTON . UNDERSIIIItTS
111 cons 11Fraunstn looto agoortamkt t
evds, Alno, :Ilk and Oslo , 3leshr
and Lamb's , Wool Dams. - • •
MIME
- WANTED. • A Satasmaxtui a thy
N V Ntore—hno who inn speak Germ.. andeati al
a.a]. Wareham ' None other need apply, • &Kohn at t;lt,
:
GEE& MEM= COMMIT.
Lafayette Hat, ' , Corner Wood and
gran4d th
a ster
to o f P KE3MERER*iII gire",a J
, :14 M ,:=Tatertaleuskent of talsebl ed,
fire Ititgl• S cd g
the lima street Itaptist earstay Sento: A brats buld
aeebt tbe Yount;rtasers. TP Maili, Si 73G ecica.
Adesittsore real. COM
Chtlatress ban ; prim l'a• at the
door.i • r`
•
SOELV 111 . 700W1 i . .
iIeFAaDER OVODE, \
John &
Mel C
ad. a Cal
Canal .Bitern, Perm Street.
Penna. Rail Road C7 - .--Centrid Rail Road.
IRE subscriber , ' haring been appointed
' ,hipping 'gr ate kr the l'enutylrratia or Central klatt
, inform the publie that •e at • cf. proated to r
ceive .7 mertuaseato or prulata..llll7meat mat on the
opening ''''''''"d- 111 ir• ear+ lal tbra
. c all ta.3=l..tTra;lll be forlanied f ' g• i : 0 .1 ';012,:g
6 . or came to oklyant,.
.. --.- • . ,--
i. erns Or itstiGirr arm. Npusurizeu AMP irtrilipliiii.
INS' Good% ibis. Shoa.Ltooka StatLquarTeCutleti.Crat,
dowry, liralLe. Vest hem, Bu nu ...,..ac.,r ro tkir
Saldlerr, Wool. ar- tr.
IL
Loather, Gureirswer, Groceries, rahsts •Dt• atuß4 04 0 .
Leather, Clore, Flan 01h1 Otha 011... SM.% • 1
WO* 100.
Beano, Boer, Cork, Butter. Lard. Lard Oil. Tobacco lad,
Curter, Tallow, to sad Raga We 14 WO
31arLte Bougb) Tar, Pitch, Buda, Berman Cl.y..
.Baum` e, . .50e it 100 '
.
Ana) ' . MeTADF.% .1 COTODE.
GEOME E. ARNOLD
BA NKEIIS.
• •
DEOLEII9 IN EICIIANGE, COIN, LUKE NOTE!, tC."
• No 74 Para a...rt to Dank , J Alt•thoes 4 .
Nam and Wefts collected on ell ports of the Union.—
Rod. bought end oold tosolaLewse • feb7
- -
R. J. D. VOWELL'S COMPOUND VEG. ,
p ETADLE POITD).I4 fur the cute of EIm:MUM or
AWe ami racerll renorly for that esernelstitur
LEA intoleroble &Slalom to ,, shieh mothers, In the escr
n o gV i rilVerMKgeittl miltgrotZlifitir l g
, u ,l this rod le UP. 1r scented bY A Angle
like other =WM/. for tlds painful soreot without
h•SP es ,e•pce. 117 1 ehln its It
to
be swallowed
thilif.T=lrtasticen ' re!Pes ' %ily nd Omit bfAblY
reemansendeul, by some of the meriliallaculty of Pitt.
Doarra Puked. Put mde <Mr I ,
T. 11. Iit:VIN 2 CO-.
PM Liberty street. Pittsburgh.
For sale by A. Dres.o Jao. 51perum. Doa....as,
and IL A. %WM. .1:11110.
Penn Mutual Allegheny. fcblina
Life Insurance' Col nilad'a.
GENT IN PITTSBURGII, W.ll. DAVIS,
twice J. Finney, jr, dereased.) N 0.3.13 Liberty street.
or the. better ecoarenlenee.of persons ruMihtor, Ito th y .
rearlVogllin'ddlPf.io?.TO3l Tiee'obcriltrr—aad
J. Pchoonmsker A Co- N o
vi eldest. farm al 0000 0 '
mirf Informstion 'rill be, trisect andromainnications promPP
I y attended tn. Pamphlets creaming. the , prioriPles sod
benefits of Life Insurance,. blurt forum furnished Mt
.11glV
liock ores S2OOAOO mei constn tly itietemblt. —
k tenets riddedmouslly Amongst thaw insured for lure..
Pstigmrab. Jan-SL I2S4—.IA3MIPs
_ .
EW BOORS. • • .
MATH'S CLASSICAL DICTIONARY ;
S 4rneer elawiselgitanuirpo4, Gr 7. ard.;,bg- , , i
rti"Anitgrot= and wirTnTßiiihr andllyglint
by Willa= Pnilth L 7. D.. editorof ow Dictionnic. of West. '
al letrortaiunies, arl i o t f h o7 , iek awl j!cricadilliograni
iiiTditlonet, fit r amie. An reeiteL
thern.34 IT. 'Pries... of . the
Greek. and Latin Laisenairre lis cola:tibia
h e
Life arid Curranonderwe of Robort=cy; edited
to hit twain. Rea. Marisa CuthberaPouthey. al. A.,..eth
to of Plusablanth Cumberland. , YOU cloth s with
t.
;draf
No. 0 of the Life and Come_Oen. of Hobert Rd. -
. they _ .
lases pf the Queens ofSconand. and Rnallni Pell:eelft
entaMeted with the meal irtneweiod, of Groat Etrlialsh by
/Word Etrickland. author of the "Urea of the Omani o f
' A r bril ' eellr L e ol PopiFZI: R . iCeueeiii 'tin Address della.
seed In the Broadway .on WeiltionLay ereadoo.
Den IR 1851,. by Rea. . Murray, D. D.
_,........
!glen: boob. fort I,lltbro' d t r iremay kid as,
[Mutat, Poe. out Anwrinni 097.1.
42 BARRELS CLOVER SRO;
27 bolt TUnothy Peed ; prime new non' -,
le NU and keini It Leaf Lard; ,!
M hlsle prime 14.0. Pupal
lop bole N. O. Motto . •
II
60 belt tattle ground P. D. alolsowto
180 le* 'Soar, superfine and extra Wends.
Landing. end for tie br BROWN A KIRSDATRION.
hbl • ------
ark CASKS
BRIDECLO LIME, Muspratts%
La/ as MD Carton Elwin bout
rh Ennio, armrted; , •
'??1,%Eig,... • - 7. r.
. =Ono Blue Vitriol; Fur ono by
/Al J. KIDD & CO. fir of at,
E LAINES—A large and splendid assort- ' !,,
moat of Gold Modal, Hamilton, sad Frmar* Da Ulan 74
P.
C o from Itt
too
tfo tor rod. . , .•
French all wool Do Woo son Carbmorra at extremely
low
.prlor_2,l A. A. MASON . a co.
rjll----AILORS"fk-----IMMINGS--Receivnd and
~I , a,d this dm
aneasjiaddlrign Selidas.Talst. EOM mid . I.;aiding Cog
and Coat Button , bone, Metal. and Japanned Ping and
Strop Button. Morn and .15bia Bone g. wrier Batton., -
de. teld - • A.A. - AWN 4t CO.
Sellers'. Cough Syrup.in Illinois. - -
I UDGE PIERCE, of Middleport Ir.'..aitinrise.
raM=lider,:•Vg,j,:rjr:_ 7,%1P.1.4":41
1:,,W=1114 TJ:Vottt.!°l=t,744,:i
b. got better, but sitlil thecough nontinned to distterir hi; i
lireSurtlingd'h2Lyru.. bak:holtrltligL"l'llr "a n
b [i . L , t iki s si ' ara d a
of Chapin bring ' he Irma him hum the 411 in ...Mo. Mr.
(Mayas had konni the Syrupof meat use to LP family,and
•lem moving from Ohiu. Wok fifteen bottles with him, •
=....ofaielludste PlerzatitinedakLes=attli goat
grepit;il and told by 'X. E. FEiLMIB. '
57 Moat st.
Fold by draggists generally In ihe two cities Ina eteitiale-
Ohl
-_ _
To Coal Ilea and Boat Bnildas.
n FT. COAL BOAT. SIDING;
1. 00 , 011 y *IMP it ibr bY
llCluratTy I
i"T"?'"'"'°nn.rras74, ." ""
OD.,
I 1 IDEND-This Curepry has thin day
ttY asru°!..T,rotr,..gzu,letripg
j•31z1? PRA
VsfIOTARTNERSHIP—The subscribers have
iccdend into Co-Part..gannn: Restio.
Ackilooo Otnly. JANIP.9 ATKINSON,
30115 M. OICELY:
ci a l :,..r. A - - TM, CA — SSIME — RES & N ESTINOS---
ift.a..l and opened toleday,elght mei, as 11341.3am—
.1.ri0t. &Ir a d3roarn and Emu llecodekAlu of Elm er>
' blmonEa angerier Blact.Doettino .
~,
wen or England and ALlddlesea. 433. . .
Aeldliallsond Kentnelor do-
Black gotta Fane7.sllk, Cvolatere. Morino and M S
,d Nediuga• A. A. )lAgUN lt LIU,
. /obi _ ~,,, (02 A 44 Varketat.
BUS. DRI ED PFACIIES• .
50 50b ' .• ' -",--•
a'iFi'. 111 v 2 ,..'".‘,,.,«.,L; P '' 1 ' 1 1t . x.... , :1ti0 -- -Irtr : -•
f,... Mrt;ILLS k Apr, '
-,---
YEaTING BUILDINGS -We are 'Mt;
ot to farnlyb and chat aprorotos for has . Om
am on Luildiravi by Aram ar but 'water. aut. turn dra
gagai maw... from tto. ya.ta. la Yarriateod 11l cob
atractin. . , jaa SeAlr£, A_TKINaOIi a OKELY.
rro LET—Rooms ;.iiii. - Steam ToNie - r .--- car
-IL "b ' '''''l "4r1.. FT,1431 6, - .. /c , 0 , 4, ,,. . oKELT.
ez hhds OhiW 3LI.e aLf
IhMls7raetNa.nd,
etee en f aDT
S LARD;
.1J 110 4, met el
.
.
brls Cincinnati Hominy just
I reel R•r Mesmor Muer...bleb wiU wold Tory_ko.
y DN. or Imo.. JIM WM. A. MeLIAMU W.
IlEftt4lsG- 12 kelp now, for oak ,
*lb, 141 9"31.,A. 31*CLRGI : 29,
EMOVAL.—Ew:Lisn BENNzrr,
g m v i r:4l ,
" Trier. in 51e reamed
121 Flnst 515,1.92000 Wood adz
5 4 itituDnrgßj39l.ll -
Closing out the Entire Stock. I i,
ifI.REAT BARGAINS.—K farther react, ..
P tkin 1p micro. The robot:Ober wishing_ to. close out ._
Ito
balance of hls Ozer of Fanr - end Stable Drlfi.d. tr) -
016 lot of Axil nert, souk! ecsiestfully mill theottention
of his old nveconees and the onlific. who too in want of • •
rwlettrnt:oolonr Ic 7 i ''''' frntetbgriT.Z7ol7r.`..A.. _NY ...
smith{ be • rostd on as he will dlspow of sue E.g. •;.'
asibtufeatork. 111,,,brigtzeil,. with • Icaselllbs rter e 1 .
reto family mac. , . iv e rlrga b aalacq
N...irsitili,,,t :;orot:TrwiEtent,s.:l:coltert.
.IFl bm tliktiorto minil
d, —; . i. :
OTES AND DRAFTS.—Engraved and:
sun:. In rheets, or bound In bra, Of .atom tine For ,'
rale 01 F. 0. HAT Y.N Blank Book Store. 1. -
Prat Car. 3faeltetrind liccood sta.
[Am n. Jeurnel. and Hat copra
PEELED PEACHES--A email lot receive.
eiv ivaci
WU. 4.. IIcCLULCO
`WANTED BUY—Kates the Western
Dank" sad Stook of Use Pitbkoffolon4ftgo.
.....nUTY.—It is univertally conceited that
bematp la mon. mamma Judas country than hi any
..ther. while at the None time it to Pala that in no other,
it, t. , It loot at to young an age. Now tide is true to •
' X ' releire tent, but the I.ols often /awed by neglect W• • !
my to al l, de DOI neaten your personal b0t.....• b.llOl
- the follOwinitr end you need not lack goad kokk—
Thew artirlee are orientine preparations, and Pure akiat— •
Weo:lhaberii=°Y Chine* runlet. for Itteotii.",
to uo. moat bUllecte oreoplemon a noliaet Whi I .
whineabookt a p a
be more cerefl.l tban I moof ...
wader for the akin. 0 utility of thee wild are 047 iglu*
.:. t.!I . 21 . 13: IC i t zti , == i, „,.. i. . g. . att arc; .
art/woe
Jules tt.ennneatory PowJek kie rendwing elVite
owe hide. What is more torlyttly than baklavas tkee
oe areal of a hely. 11:11 , ‘ 011/[l. will edam it In • shirt
01
. o rtiles ' ittli t."‘ LlVlPlPAMVlll • inrtant..
rwoody Impart' to pat white. or gray lowr. •b eantIINIIY _
black. lama. or auburn color. It will color the bale in •
daarlaw tlEnt.. and too. elrwtually than any other 4.0, be
ing at the Fame thee todellll.l.
Jules Moen. NitSTltig Cream.—lt Je really • 0 00100 , 0 to
n e on - t ruall th r c r rn berienn ae in ili r f a.. n.w o ... f f it' Parsit s' wV4/ 2 % .
ramtrary, Wirt... the akin ortuddb 04 ma as o.ln- ,
fe n ',
a n d
not 11.1.1. to,beenne rhapied.
Joh , Tee th How Tooth Paria.,—Next to the balk to
thlok the Teeth were loteedel id the greatest ornimant to
tan Norm G u me i Xort et,triasit=,.Lothgetla ernitiailA.
to A.,,,',Ztliti pejty wilteness, at - the may 1.1:o krePlitti
the gut. Gnia awl beslthy. ,
JULYS HUEL. Preforoar and C 10010...
=Chesnut st... Phila. -• , _.
tor mle erlealewle and Wall. by. B. It. Fahseeteelt S.Cto;i
sad IL. K. dealers, Pithiburgt4 oral . J. nitehell. 2 1,1 =ilk
eill_ _ __..2---
ji UST RECIEIVED.—A new work on Me
chsnia, r.ngi,... Work. awl Ellgilleatillialikikftrr 0
r s,' l "gord :; m " -h—k ",'..=Z,tailtAtgio'ftt
.74= lnoro
=1..., E4 4 , 1,it. 4 d 't 72 been
ooh b r a
This wait la of Wks I to. size. sontahilng =Wily atki
to don.
'''''' ° ""` b i l ls. T' p., l"' st al 11.01 liUn ' a " riPP mnt
..110
r=f2= t e L . thiwel 004. Independent of
the molt of American Ingenuity. It will eontain cOniDlete
practkol tkedisce on Mechanica, Nlachimirk ..011e work
.., : igzrodecerloar, with all 'that Is neetul Intricm, men $lO.O
4:10.io volontesenuagsdaies. and other bookk The
of thli. gebliettun le to place hegira pm-Ural
Verearttelents such an mount of theoretical mad Id
c0 . , , ,...100w1edge. to • cereleved tom, air shall enable
work to the best
ad a n
to 001. Shwa
tiTLliitkti they might °thereto ounntlt. .
The pribliphers are detennlndl. regardless of wet to
pate therr i It w i ....lialle . te th a.: reibl: h .
l and Otto hoped 0.
1.1117 utterurtuel tbo
o f
te a the er=se it . L.
'""*"
I,o4lshlg 40 nueaVers, at ka rent, per norther, to be
Ile t.‘„
ompleted this ear. '
Twenty, num mined, r Iby ,
.010 t' INS. 4th etreet.
RESIIFRUITS, NUTS, &C.--G2 4 11)%
ante cnr~u TWO 1ba'244.114+4 Itakdono2l4ra M.
11.41ndd; 2)11( b 4. do. do: -44/ or tram do. du.; 44,..4
dada: 25 drama Mama Mgr, 3 COCA Cdzon: 5 dna Lemon
B unn.. 6 don Carr* Pcorien 34 Ay. Enrdeans Pr..* 3
/Tit' 11 and Paper Edda Almonds dm .15.41 armitol.
Ma k,. Pot ago ' •J. D. WILLL&MS_
' ' • 4..tener Wcat itrth
SEIM