1 - t ' I: i It . .( I 4 I s ' i ! li! ii a , j. .( - .1 - ' I'! t: -' t! ii 1- r - THE HERALD. Somerset, Pa ru!liheJ every Tuo-Jay at 52 per annum. paiM ha!f-yrarly in advance. If iml paiJ witliin the Tr:ir 52.50 will invari.iMj bo churetl. Ac Ligonirr Dee Press. Fort liioniti'. Next week we will publish a Talc of Firt L'gmier. which we rind iu ihe Som erset Herald, which no doubt will be m terefing lo every reader, litre wegire a letter from Col Coquet, which i main ly interesting lo us mi a-4-.Mint of its an tjquity. A gentleman of this place has it in Iii possession, six! kindly handed it J us fur publication. It is as follows, iz: Tout Pitt Sept. 15tli 17G3. Sir: i received me nun inst.. your Letters of the 8ih, and i).h. wi'.li ilie. re turns of Ligoiiicr; 'J'lie King's com puny observes that you have given credit iei some barrels of flour, and a straved or. wirh will, of course, increase the loss of your stores. However, consid ering all the circumstances, it will be found very moderate. The Garrison mul supply themselves M'iih firewood in ihe best manner ihcy e'en, as the general don't m.ikj any ah iowanee. for that article. Vou mijiht have ilie trees cat now and hauled in vhrn you htve horses, yt 1 find it a bjvit(! not M cut it small in the woods. Can the iiiha'ulanls of Lignnier ima gine thai the King1 will pay fr their Houses destroyed far the defence of the Fori! At that rate he must nay likewise for two or three hundred pulled down at this post; wrieU would be absurd, as those people had only the us-e and not jhe property of then:; having never been ptrmiticd to sell or rt nllhem bu'. obliged lo deliver ihe.n to the King whenever they left them, as to their fumiiure, it is tiictr own fwiilt if they have lost it, they tnilil hate brought ii iti or near the iorl. What Cattle have been used for the p.-trrison, will of course he p-iid for, but what fias been killed or tken by the an cniv, I sec nothing It A to t.hfni but to petition the jeneral, t tnke their case into consideration. 1 a:n very sorry lor 1it tr mibfortinie. an I would asisi ihcm if 1 h.id in my' power bui it i really nut. Tiio orders fot bidding :u d impor Catioti of ; !s, are given by Sir Jeffrey Amhcr;'.: Howcior, upon sem.'iu me a li.l of h A may be kbsoiutcly wanted, I shall endemor to tram a pirmit. One Subtler would be fuili- icnt fjrthat post. W'c d i very ucll here tincc e have Iio;ie t all. I am fO;ry to a quaint you that Litnt. 'arre, and ltts are iucludrJ in ihi re iluctiau, ihoug'i all the ensigns remain. ili.til ui'.li great pleasure take the first opportunity to recommend you to the general, for some place, if t.. IT i es tablished in the gJiriions of the conli ncijt. 1 am sir your obt- hun-ible sprvant. 11. UOQUET. Coolne! Roqucl wrote i n the opposne page of ihc same letter as follows: Fort Pitt, Sept. 30, 1?G3. I received your letter of the 25th. xvith the returns for September. Major Campbell will change your gar rison, and however disagreeable those things are, you must be persuaded that we do what we can, and not what we would choose. If the Ship Carpenters row here are not sent to the Lakes, you nay defer them a couple of days lo fit I.ijrracVs for 50 iiif.i, for I dont think xv t shall have more to spare, blankets are certainly very necessary and I will ecnt them. Fuel for winter is (here the line was illegible) article. A I cannot help you nt present iu thst, you must keep two horses joing, and F1 send you some Indian Corn. I wish Major Campbell could give some assistance to cut trees, at least but I know how difficult it is upnn a march to Jo these things. Ywu will not forget to send the rice and aics, you received frora Bedford lor this Fost, Willi the seeds. 1 am dear sir yaur most ob't servant II. BOQUET. Lieut. Blank. From the Montrcul Ihruld of Saturday. ANOTHEK FlliE AT QUEBEC. There is a rumor in town to day of another fire in that usfortunale city. It is said that the flames were seen by the lusssngers on board the steamer Quebec, which left for this city, after they reached l'oi.nlo aux Tremble, a distance of twen-y-one miles from Quebec. We hope there may be some mistake, br.i we liave seen a gonileman who was on ()oarJ, and he appears to entertain no iloubt that another serious conflagration lias taken place. The Commercial Advertiser says. "II Che flarues were seen at lVmt iiix Trem ble ue fear the fir was in the upper town, where the buildings arc general I r more valuable lha.'i they arc outside the gates." Quebec Correspondence of the Montre al Ilaold. Tucksday Arrnnxoo, Nov, 13th, Loss orTnc Snip Elkopkan', I am sorry i have to inform you that ac counts have been received iiere this morn ing, from the Saguenav. which have no tlubl of the melancholy loss of the ship l'uropeau, Captain M'Kide, which sail ci hence on the morning of the 1st inst, Lr Glasgow, with a valuable cargo of wheat, flour, ashes, &e. It is siaed thai s-he was cast -shore on the 'Mille liche$ Point, during the hite le from l.e Eit, iiid wiil be a total wuck; her wails hiJ been cut la prevent Lcr failing over. Three of the crew were drowned. The passengers, Mr. Auld arid 'Mrs. Auld,"and a voting ladv (daughter of an officer of the 14th Hegiment) of Montre al, were all saved, and arc, now at one of the ports iu good health. They, will probably come up by land. The Kurope-ui is one ef the finest ves sels built t the Clyde last winter, and was only her second voyage from your :oiL fti c.il Tire in I hillicothe. From an cxlraaf the "Ancient Me tropolis, " published in Ciiillicoihe, Ohio, we have the following painful intelli gence: Cim.LicoTHE. Nov. 19. A fire broke out in oiirriiv, lal ni:ht, between II and 12 o';l ck, in the build ing on the corner of I'aint and Main streets, occupied by Douglas- & f.aii sin?. Druggist; the Scinto (JazettC Print ing office, am! Miller's ('onfectionsry. This building was entirely dertroyed, with 7 or 8 frame ones adjoin ing, as fol lows: The dry gaod stores of Sultz bacher) nnd Hern, John Ewing's saddler simp, ihe Advertiser Printing OfTice, (iibbs and Kobbison's tailor shop. ShuschilPs boot and shoe shop, Steele's tailor shop, and Alex. Ening's saddler shop. C. C. Allen, the proprietor of the Gazette, lost everything in his office The press f the Advertiser office and most of linotype were saved. The other establishment succeeded in rescuing-a portion of their goods from the flames, though in a damaged condition. We have not heard any estimate of the entire Joss. Eruption of Mount Ifocla. The Ajobcfiituisposi, Danish journal ir'ivea the following, account of the new eraption of Mount Hecla: "llcclc, after reposing 80 vears, threat en?:, acconling' to j)rivate li tters;, to rav- j ajie Iceland. In theiuglitol the 1st ol Si-ptciuhcr a frightful subteraucan groan ing tilled the inhabitants around it with terror. This continued till midday on the 'd, when the Mountain burst in Iwo places with a terrible crash, and vomited masses of fire. In former times these cx plosion8 came from the siunmit, where lleda has no regular formed carter; but thiri time torrents of lava (lowed down two gorges on the flanks of the mountain. Letters IVoiii Keikjavik. of the 13th, state up Jo that d iv no great daiinge had been done iu the Syssels of Kangvrvalla ami Arnds, fcituated cloe to the uiountain, inaMitueh n the ojeiung whence the ignited masses issue are fortunately on the North and North-west side, and consc Cjucntlv, took, that direction in which there is nothing but barren heaths. Besides, ihe wind having continually blow it from the South and South-west ha.s driven the a-dtes and dust towards the opposite o3nt. Front the clotfJs uf Muoke and vaj)or, the lop of the volcano could not lx sep.-i. fheeponthe h a;h- w re driven clown the plains, !r.:t not till several of tliem were burnt. The waters of the neigh!or ing rivers, near the eruption, became so hot that the fish were killed, and was im possible for one to ford them on horse back. Although the lava and ashes took a Northern direction, the eruption was not known on that side of the island till after the 11th, and even as late as the loth ihe people at the Syssels of Mule, in hc North-east, were ignorant of it. In the Western parts, the noise accompanying the eruption was distinctly heard, like rolling ol distant thunder, heard at Keikjavik." Nothing w as SelklrSvVs Set tlrniont. This colony is located about TOO miles above St. Peters. It consists of about 0!00 inhabitants, mostly connected with the Hudson Bay Company. We have heard, that of late years, the population of the colony was rather on the decrease. A number of our most respectable citi zens emigrated frcin Europe, and readi ed this place by the above route, though we never heard them recommend it as a very agreeable way. The colonists are mostly adventurers, of which we presume the subject of the follow ing lo be rather a rare specimen. One year ago last June, he passed this place, accompanied by his wife and others, on their way to the a bove settlement. They left St. Peters, twelve in companv, but having lost their vvav the endured almost every kind of privation, and were one hundred and twenty days in reaching their place of destination. Four of their horses froze to death, starvation stared them in the hVe, and after subsisting on frogs, and cutting their way for forty miles through a forest, they arrived w here their w ants were supplied. Our traveller then took a tramp over to the Missauri river, and on his return, fell in with the Missouri drovers, end was with them at the time of their attack by the Sissiton Sioux ln dir.ivs, He is now on his way to Scot land to see about some property which lie has lately inherited. Whether he will choose to return to the Ked- Kivcr settle ment by way of the (.'ape of Good Hope, Madagascar, and Oregon, or to come, up the Mississippi by way of Cape Horn, we are not advised, hnt it is reasonable tosppuose that a man who likes to travel so well will ! U'st satisfied with the lon gest way. Galena .ldver. Oct 2L FKOM SOUTH AMERICA. By the barque Meteor, at New York, the editors of the New A'ork Sun have received files of the Kio Journal lo 1st. nh. inclusive, nnd a letter from Kio dated ; 25th ulu, confirming our previous advi I ces of the seizure of all the principal ports at or near the entrance to the La Plata, Buenos Ayrcs alone excepted, i which the combined fleets of France .end England were preparing to attack, or to j f-eize the largo Island ci' Martin Garcia in tL harbor. . .. Impkovements at Niagara Falls. Professor Gourand has disposed of his Niagara Falls property to Gen. Charles M. Kced, of Erie, (Pa.) who intends to carry out the project originated bv Mr. Jlathbun, and build a public house at the rails second to none in the W est. From Bicknell' Kcpoctcr. ARRIVAL OF TilK Jilt S TAW I A. Thirteen Ways Later from Eu roje. We arc indebted to a friend for a copy of the New York Herald Extra, contai ing London advices to the Dd inst., and Liverpool to the 4th inclusive. The news, as it will be seen, is impor tant. The short crops in England and all ov er Europe, a revulsion in railway specu lations, and a fall in stocks and public sc curieties, have combined to produce in some degree, a financial and commercial panic. ' The iron continues brisk, and masters and men arc well employed. Iu the price of pig iron a slight decline has ta ken place; it is now quoted at X'4 15s, in Glasgow. The steamship Marmora, from New York and Liverpool, for Constantinople, put into Cove 2d of November, with coals on fire, and would discharge them. Nearly all descriptions of produce have received a check, but there is nothing so gloomy ahead, that a speedy and healthy reaction may not take place. FLOUR AND GRAIN. The Corn market continues to rise, and the averages to decrease a little; but the "jump" in the scale by no means indi cates the actual price which good Wheat realizes. The quantity of inditl'ercnt or bad grain which is thrown upon the market keeps np the averages if such a misnoni'T can be applied to a scheme which very unfairly represents the actu al price of the article. The opening; of the ports is a question so important in itseif, not only as it affects the corn trtale, but w hat is of far greater consequence, as it affects the general interest of the coun try, that it absorbs every other topic at the present number. A morning paper stated a day or two back, that a treasury order had been trans mitted to, and received at, the Dublin Custom House, admitting grain free of duty. This statement turns out to be incorrect; but it was generally believed a proof of the public mind being prepared lor such a step on the part of the 'Gov ernment. An evening paper has pul-li.-dicd a statement to theelTect that Wheat and other descriptions of Corn, are to be adulated immediately, at a low figure. Wheat at sixpense per bushel, and the other kinds still lower; but this statement although put forth imposingly, is also considered premature. A Cabinet Council wa3 held on Friday, at the house of Sir Koberet Peel, as the Premier could not leave his home, owing to an attack of gout in the foot. At this meeting the question of die opening of the ports Was no doubt disc ussed in all its bearings, and expectation was on the qui live to know the result. Another Cabi net Council was held at Sir Robert Peel's house the following day, and the result of this, as of the preceding meeting, still remains a mystery. People have been anxiously looking to the London Ga zette, expecting to see an official intima tion of the Government policy, but they looked in vain. The Cabinet is said to be divided on ihe point at issue, but no one presumes to think that the ports will not be opened. Lis the only thing about which people talk '-Out of the fullness of the heart the mouth speak eth." The decision of the government must speedily be known, because if corn is to come in duly free, every" day adds to the difficulty, as the lime of the year is rap idly approaching when not only the Bal tic, but the St. Lawrence, will be closed by the ice. . As regards the former, how ever, owing to the scarcity which pre vails amongst our continental neighbors, and the high price which grain commands there, much cannot be expected. The great hope is in the United States and Canada. The proof of the scarcity ex ists in the fact, that most of the continent al powers have already opened their ports for the self same object, and it is justly said, --Why should England be less con siderate for its citizens, than are the con tinental rulers for theirs!" The real fact in all probability is, that Peel is unwilling to act until he is armed with the strongest possible reasons for doing so; and in order to cavil out the qustion, he is said to he waiting for the report of the scientific commissioners whom he has sent to Ireland to investi gate the pota;oe disease. Some say that Parliament will be immediately summon ed to consider what ought to be done in the present emergency. A IVivy Conn- j eil must be called ere the ports can be 1 1 ! I openeti, ami as no announcemeai oi sucn a meeting has yet been made, some days,' it is prouaoie,may eiapse neiore tne poli cy of the Cabinent will be made public. . The state of things in these kingdoms at the present time, w ith the certainty of "bread stutTs" coming iu free, or at the low est nominal duty, must have a con siderable effect on the price of those com modities in the United States and Cana dian markets. As a proof of the diversi ty' of opinion w hich prevails in the Cabi net on the subject of rescinding the Corn laws, even for a temporary purpose, we may mention that another tneetirig was held at the house of Sir Robert Peel, yesterday afternoon. , , FAMINE EXPECTED IN . ENG . LAND. - Hitherto,-tlte cycle of seasons has bc- 1 friended. ir Robert Feci, Flour go,o4 harvests in succession, have filled the ex chequer -filled ' the stomachs " of the lieges -made the nation prosperous the people contented. Alas! tlie spene is changed- the evil day has come upon him, and has found him unprepared to face it. Famine gaunt, horrible, de stroying - famine seems impending. Fears liave seized the public -mind. In Ireland matters look appaling in Eng land gloom yy The granaries of the con tinent are exhausted. The corn fields of the -Vis tula, the Danube, and the Elbe, are barely sufficient for the local wants of the inhabitants. Thp nation is in coin motion; and the cry of "Open the ports and let in corn duty free!" is heard, on all sides, reverberated from every "part of the empire. The "pressure from w ith out" has made itself heard in Downing street, and faith in the sliding scale Peel's sliding scale is gone lor ever. A third of the potatoe crop in Ireland is de stroyed, The Government has sent scientficpro fessors to the scene of the mischief, and the awful truth is out that this large por tion of ihe People's food the esculent that Cobbett abhorred is unfit for use. -What is to be done in this terrible, this unlooked-for emergency? "Open "the ports," is the exclamation, and there stands the shivering Premier Kke a reed in the. wind paralysed between ahcetion tor his sliding scale, anil the horrors of pub lic famine! .There he is, balancing the pros mid cons. But necessity is superior to consistency, superior even to law. The ports must be opened. O'Connell, who assmcs to he the tribune of the Irish people, goes beyond this. He demands a grant of public money to the extent of a million and a half, to be expended in the purchase of food he calls for a tax of fifty per cent, on the absentees, and a tax of ten percent, on the residents he asks for the prohibition of corn and provisions leaving the island and the prevention of distilleries consuming grain. Large dc ain. Large mands these will they be conceded? A day or two solve the question; and in the meantime speculation will find a wide margin for the exercise of its agency . TERRIBLE RAILWAY REVUL SION. The railway mania has received its quietus. Something like a panic hxs overtaken the speculators in iron high ways. Now that the rc-action has come it brings in its train ruin and devastation and bankruptcy to thousands. But the end is not yet. A more gigantic system of swindling has rarely been seen iu these latter days, and the number of respecta ble persons who have lent their names to support bubble companies, make us blush for the cupidity of common hu manity. The Times has been foremost in this work of "fluttering the Volcians." It matters little what motives may h ive prompted the potentates of Printing-houses Suuare to sound a tocsin; whether jealousy of their contemporaries, or vex ed that they did not participate cqually.in the spoil, or a determination to destroy the game of those who did all this is beside the question. "We try the act, the motive Heaven can judge." The only regret is, that it was not done soon er. .But certain it is, that The Times, true to its character of seizing the right moment for acting upon fears, or control ling the public mind, kicked the beam at the critical instant, and to some extent produced the revulsion which is now witnessed. But without desiring to un dervalue the power and the influence of the journal in question, it would be weak to attribute the prostration in the share market solely ro its thunder. The Bank of England, the critical state in which the food of the country has been placed by the harvest, and the stale of the potato crop, above all, and beyond all, the ridiculous experiments which the projectors of the numberless moonshine companies made upon the common sense of mankind those causes, irrespective of the diurnal monitor, have forced the de clension to it3 present point. The wreck of fortune and of character which this temporary insanity has produced, will be felt long after the causes that produced it have passed away. As a proof of the extent to which . this huge system of swindling has been- carried, it may be mentioned that even ladies were not ex empt from its influence. The female friends and relatives of those who pulled the wires of certain imposing puppet schemes, were in the daily habit of hunt ing the purlieus and officers of the share brokers in the Metropolis, to watch the market, in order to turn their letters of of allotments to the best account! One of the railway papers mentions a certain ba'ch of female speculators who con trived to realize, by this kind of chicanery during the height of the mania, the astounding sum of 500.000. The appropriation of the property is others by fraud or misrepresentation, of pronounced felony by .ihe law of the land; whereas, for a system, based for the most part on falsehood and deceit there appcajs to be no legal restraint certainly no legal remedy. Now that peo ple have time to reflect and lo analyze, they find. that out of thirty-three sets of provincicl committees, the name of one party appears 23 times; the names of two others, 19 times;of three, 17 times; of fourteen, 14 times; of thirty-three, 8 times; of twenty-nine, 9 times; and of twenty-two, 10 times! ' Can further proof be needed of the systematic attack upon the . pockets of the lieges, which this cunning and clever scoundrelisni has worked. But when the cloud, which now hangs like a pall over cvery speeies of railway speculation, has been cleared away when the market has been thoroughly sifted of the -bears" and the "stag" of legitimate enterprise, the result will be better for the conn try and for capitalists. Thunder storms clear the atmosphere, and the convulsions in the physical,' produce' consequences hardly less bcneficisl than, these in the commercial world. A better class of men men of stability and substance, step in and take the place of the rotu t reeds which are now being kicked wita scorn out of the way. The coining session of Parliament .is dreaded by many weak and delicate mout hers, and their fears can scarcely be said to be groundless, for the heated atmos phere of the wretchedly inefficient and contracted committee roomr, crowded to suff ocation with the. members of the com mittee, With witnesses, with barristers, engineers and others, during the greater part of the day, is enough to paralyse sensitive nerves, to say nothing of the midnight legislation, of which the morn ing's labor is only the precursor. Upon the whole,-whether we view the crash wich is now dealing prccuniary destruc tion over the land, or whether we regard the drain upon the national resources, which the carrying out of so many new projects will entail upon the future whether w e glance at the fearful derange ment of the monetary system that must follow in the train of these adventures, as surely as the flash precedes the rolling of the thunder or whether we limit our vision to the case of individual victims, anil to the wretchedness which it has brought and will yet bring, to many smiling hearths and happy homes the subject in every phase in which it can be viewed, requires the prompt application of practi cal, comprehensive, and sagacious states manship; and it ought, nay, it mnst, re ceive it instanler, at the hands of the "powers that be." Turnpike Election. THE Stockholders in the Somerset and Bedford Turnpike road com pany will take notice that an election will be held at the house of James Phil son, in Allegheny township, on the 1st Monday (5ih day) of January next, to elect one President, six Managers, and one Treasurer, to conduct ihe affairs of said company the ensuing year. BENJAMIN KIM MEL, nov!8 President. IC7 Bedford Inquirer publish S times and charge Company. Estate of Abraham Wcabcr deceased. JET TERS testamentary on the es Jl tate of Abraham Weaber, late of Conemaugh township, deceased, having been granted t the subscribers, residing in said towhship, all persons indebted to said estate are hereby requested to at tend at the late residence of the deceased on Saturday the Gth Jof December next, prepared to settle; and those having claims, to present them at the same time and place, properly authenticated. JONA. WEABER. DANIEL WEABER, Oci28 '45-6t Executors, REGISTER'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given to all persons concerned as legatees, creditors or otherwise, that the following accounts have been filed and passed register in the Register's office, for the county of Som erset, and that the same will be present ed to the Orphans' court for confirmation and allowance on Monday, the 8h day of December next, at au adjourned Or phans' Courl, viz: Account of Jacob Blough, Administra tor of John Good, deceased. Account of Henry F Younkin and Fre derick Younkin, Administrators of Fre derick Younkin, deceased. Account of A J Colborn and George Pringey, administrators of Abraham Col born, dee'd Account of Jacob Cook, Jr, adminis trator of Conrad Beal, dee'd. Supplemental account of Redding B Conover, one of the administrators of Solomon Sutter, dee'd. Account of Redding ft Conover, ad ministrator de bonis non cum Testamen to annexo of Joshua Cooper, dee'd. Account of Joel Miller, administrator de bonis non cum Testaniento annexo of Georg Seese, dee'd. Account of Samuel Miller and Andrew Schrack, Executors of the last Will and Testament of Christian Schrack. dee'd. Account of Isacc Kauffman and Dan iel Yoder, Executors of the last Will and Testament of Jacob Kauflman, de ceased. Second Supplemental account of Peter Rhoads, one of the Exeeutors of the last Will and Testament of Caepcr Keller, deceased. Account cf Henry Walter, Jacob Wal ter and Gillian Walter, Executors of the last Will and Testament of John Walter, deceased. Account of George Flit kinger. Execu tor of the last Will and Testament of Ja- I cob Burkhart, dee'd. Account of John Neff, Executor of the lasi Will aud Testament of Michael Harbaugh, dee'd. Account of Thomas Hanna, Executor of the last Will aud Testament of Isaac Johnson, dec'u. Account of John Sturtz, acting ad istrator of Christian Sturtz, dee'd. Account of Daniel Lepley, administra tor of Christian Shockey. deceased who in his lifetime was administrator of Joseph Cline, deceased as also the ac count of said Lepley, administrator d bonis non of said Joseph Cline, dee'd. Account of Joseph Lehman adminis trator of Jacob Levii-gston deceased. Account of Emanuel Smith Surviving Executor of the lasi will and testampnt of Henry Shaffer deceased. JOHN O. KIMMEL, Register. Somerset, Nov'- 1845. Constables' fetay Bonds For 3ule , at this. Olr.ce Notice. esa ' ! Journeymen Conhvainers ! THIS 1VAT. n;3U duiiely.nnd a real .-cun-iiu- liU(Hmu!, will find constant employment; ami ri)0lj wages will be civen. ALSO, one w,, can box the craft from a Siogey Boot 0 Ladies' Gaiter, will al?o receive employ ment, at good wages. Enquire at the shoo of DANIEL E DAVIS. novlt'45 . Snvdcrs' Row. pAMK to ihe premises of the snbscri ber in Addison township, Somerset county, ii Hod Steer with some white on bis back and bfllv. and aC eli; ii: his biiskct, supposed to be about a year and a half old. The owner is re quested lo come forward, prove property, pay charges, ane take him away or he will be disposed of as the law dirdcts. nov25'45 JOHN A MITCHELL. Cumberland Tilarliet. Hour, per barrel, Wheat, per bushel, mm $5 50 a 6 CO 1 00 a 1 10 a 0 50 50 a C 5J 28 a 0 00 31 a 0 37 51 3 0 r 57 a 0 50 1 CO a I 5 15 a 0 18 3 a 0 1 3 a 0 5 1 25 a 1 50 10 a 0 12 7 0 Rye, Corn, Oats, Potatoes Apples, " dried Peaches dried Butter, per pound, Beef, Veal, Chickens, per dozen. Eggs, Stone Coal, per bushel. Pittsburgh Market. Flour, Wheat Rye Corn Oats Barley, Bacon, hams, per lb Pork Lard, Tallow, rendered " rough Butter, in kegs, 44 roll. Cheese Western Reserve 44 Goshen, Apples green, per barrel, 44 dried per bushel, Peaches, Potatoes, Mercer 4 Neshannocks Seeds, Clover ,, Timothy 44 Flaxseed Wool 4 -10 a 1 50 0 75 a 0 SO 45 a 50 40 a 00 33 a 37 00 a OO 8 a CO CO a 00 7 a 00 6 a CO 4 a 00 00 a 00 8 a 00 5 a 7 00 a 00 1 00 a 1 50 1 10 a 1 20 2 00 a 2 25 00 a CO 00 a 00 4 CO a 0 00 I 37 a I 50 00 a 1 0G 22 a 33 DANK NOTE LIST. Pittsburgh, Pa. CORRECTED WEEKLY STANDARD GOLD AND SILVER Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Banks, Philadelphia Banks, Girard Bank United States Bans, Bank of Germantown Monongahcla Bank Brownsville Bank of Gettysburg Bank of Chester Connty Bank of Chambersburg Bank of Delaware, Bank of Susquehanna County Bank of Montgomery County Bank of Northumberland Bank of Lew is town Bank of Middleton, Carlisle Bank Columbia Bank and Bridge Co. Doy lestown Bank Erie Bank Franklin Bank, Washington Farmers' Bank Reading Farmers Bank Bucks County par par par 30 par i 1 par I par par par L I I pa par 1 1 par par Farmcr's&Drovcr's Bank Waynesb'gp farmers Hank Lancaster Lancaster Co. Bank Lancaster Bank llarrisburg Bank Ilonesdale Bank Lebanon Bank Miners' Bank Pottsville Wyoming Bank Northampton bank York Bank Slate Scrip, Exchange bank Pitts., Mer. and Manf's B Issued by solvent Banks VUh. Mount Pleasant Steubenville, (F. L M.) St. Clairville par I t it pa: 1 1 Marietta New Lisbon Cincinnati banks, Columbus Circleville Zanesville Putnam - Wooslcr Massillon Sandusky Geauga Norwalk Xenia Clereland Bank Dayton Franklin Ban of Columbus, C hillicothe Sciota Lancaster Hamilton Granville Commercial Bank of Lake Erie, Farmers Bank of Canton Urbaii3, Indiana. State Bank and branches, Slate Scrip, $5's Illinois t State Bank 40 J ShwnstoTrn 1 t it it 10 )-. 4. H 2 . 4'J I 3 IF 1 1