The daily morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1846-1855, March 12, 1847, Image 2

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RAKPZRE•=ITV& AND
' PITTSIVUILGEis •
FRIDAY 'MORNING., .MARCH 12; 1847
EMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS•
FOR GOVERNOR,
FRANCIS It.-,SHITNIC,
OF osirolii.wv coi.orrr. ' •
- FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER,
43tORRIS LONOBTRETH•r
- or moirrsommtY, carom
.I_-•
-"-
_'•- .
r e
• h ave lle-gra
' i
fi cation ' o f
presenting.
—,
to
12rm d era t o d a y cop'ous 4xtractifrcmtheie..
il5 - 14/7°LD'SClOQUentSermotdeiveeLnSunde:
..isst - -We, • hope't will be elle ns l , e , y dissemin
'.'.'„6clon.ecancald It without ext end ing the
_PPen tt-P4of charty to our sureringfeii w bo•ngs
beyond the "'earl'
-
izt,Zr•Our colrespondent "P," Will find the articles
_
-' alludes published ' in the two last columns
sit-the third page f the /jest M arch .Bth d Ilth.
co im
The True Spirit. •
- .Every . Democratic paper we have received
sinie the result of the 4th of March Convention
beranie-knowii, speaks out in the true spirit, in
favor of the-election of the nominees, -There is
se hesitation-rno _faltering—no dissentioon
the part of the Demoeratic Press. - This we are
glad to? see ; and we hope a similar unanimity
will prevail in.the Democratic- ranks: 0 0Ln
•
Piscusit " comes before the People of Pennsylva.,
'lda with the -best; prospects of success. The
honest JJeuracreey of the Keystone wilt put kirth
their entire strength next fall, and poll a treirren.
- dons vote. •It is idle, and 'worse than fdle, for
the federakste to - talk about retaining the state
in their own hands for another year. They , can.
not do it. Pennsylvania is now, and ever has
• ,been,'a Demogratic State. The Federalists, we ,
believe, on.two occasions only, succeeded in elect
Thitheir men. They elected SOSSorit Rl:rtvzsgov
*mot in 1 , 835, in consequence of divisiona in the
'Democratic ranks. Our party very foolishly run
two candidates ; Worar and Menscriatne, and
bisci'doing, threw the reins of government into
Federal hands. /Milo. teas minority goo,ernor%
East fall the Federalists carried.the State,,not
becauie of ther superior strength, but simply 'for
the Mason -the Democracy were not united, and
- did not poll their full: - vote. The' . result Of that
• election 'clearly shows that there was not a gener.
•id turn out on the part of the Democracy, 'for rea.
ions, not necessary for us now to enumerate.—
_
Candid men in the Federal ranks admit that their
patty .is the minority party in Pennsylvania;
they know that they eau only hope. to. succeed
when bur parry becomes divided.
bellow Democrats! do you wish to see the Orn
Kure-rows once more in Democratic' hands? We
feel confident you d?. Then go to work and use e very
effort in your power t? overthrow the tederel party.
Endeavor. to „heat dissensions, if any exist. See
your neighbors, and talk to them in rilation to the
• dmpertence of being united and vig,itant for the
.
time to come. The period for action has now ar
rived. We must put forth our entire strength in
. . October next. 15 a thould not aim simply et the
overthrow of the Federalists in Pennsylvania—we
must give them such .a defeat as will effectually
prostrkt, them forever ! -
IMMO? -Corwin.
A. erlrespondentof the St. Louis New Era nom•
hates S uator-Contorts, of Ohio, as the Federal
, eandidate for the next Presidency. A man, who
tikes sides with the common enemy appears to
whs. fatior at once with the' Federal leaden', and is
eons-idcrud a' suitable person to be Chief Magistrate
of these IThited Staten! Suppose for a moment
OW Mr. Cowarts was President, (not a tupposa
.
• • Ede:rise by any means.) The country becomes
iniolved in-war-by the acts of a neighboring no
.
thin. President Coiwtzr would say, "My coon
.
try is wrong and Mexico is right—the Atnericans
have no business to take up arms to them
selves, against plunder and bloodshed—if they are
fools - enough to enlist in en unholy and unneces.
ear,- war, they may die and rot in the enemy's
country, but shall have no assistance from
Such -would. be "his Uteaning, if not his words.
_ What opinion would civilized nations form of such
i President?
Mr. >i o!Lwx2r is undoubtedly a man •of fine
• _ talents, but we think his patriotism is of a very
queationable li
character. He .may do very well for
.
the leaderof -a party—particularly a party that
generally takes sides with the enemy—but be is
unfit. to he—President of a Republican Govern
-nu,
nt.:
The Federal papers pretend to say that:the De.
inoeracy of - Pennsylvania are 'divided; and dissat
isfied with there-nominaticin of Governor Sausx.
This is decidedly rich! We presume if there was
any disaffietion existing in our ranks, we should
be apt,to - hear soinething of it. . It is true that a
large number of staunch Democrats in Pennsylva
nia were in favor of a new man for governor, not
because they had any personal or political dislike
to our present Executive, but simply for the rea
son that they believed in the one term principle.
'But now, that the Convention has fairly placed
Governor Sutrrii in:nomination for another term,
the iittruist harmony and good , feeling prevails in
our.ranks. We believe there will be no opposi
tion to his election among. Demicrars—certainly
we have beard of pone. The Fedefalists -know
they are doomed to be defeated—they now see thg,
hand-writing on the wall—they dread the Ides ol
OCtober
Harrisburg, March Bth.
Ewe omit the gTeater part of our correspond
ent's letter, as it refers to tbegathering of the del
notes to the Federal Convention, &c. Our tele
graphic despatches - yesterday, anticipated the news
sent by Karl.Ed.]
Both houses will hereafter meet at Si o'clock in
• the morning, and continuein session until "1 P. M :
meet•it 23 o'clock in the. afternoon and continue
in session until . 6. But•it is all in vain to attempt
to get through all he business now before them.
They must•either.continne in session until the Ist
• of April, or else Jiave a vast amount of Abe pea
- ple'sbusiness . still unfinished.
The Governor has vetoed another divorce case ;
tbepariles were as usual tram New York.
Spring has come upon us at last. The ladies
• were regular and welcome visitors in the capitol
Some fine speeches were made in the
Feriate for their peculiar betiefit by Mesita. Gib.
bons,:borninert, and others. KARL.
0:7 , A bill has passed the House of Represen
tatives of the Illinois- Legislature, 'chartering a
Railroad through the State, leading from St Louis
•
_to Tetra Rants. It is thought that it will pass the
_Senate. :
Iron - R. P. FL's/Esti:An, recently-appoint
ed Charge cl! Affairs to =Denmark,.; pain
king of the public repait tendered him by the citi
sons•of -Uniontown:
„ 4 Manta 10t141847.
In pursuance, otadjiiiirdinent, the Subscribers to
the Fund for eitablishing_a Hhspital in or near the
,Cif , of Pittsburgh; Met - at the time and place ap :
pointed. ; - The meeting was- organized by Dr. It
INSellen. taking the; chair, and John Harper and
Tb s os. 14 Howe acting; as Secretaries.
After 'tailing ,over the list of contributprsfit
was band that a majority,Wate . present, or rept!:
sented by proxy, consequently, acdording to the
condition of the subsetiptimr_ bonds, the meeting
was tornpeteniltt tratifatt
Thomas J3alcewe lj Esq., submitted the following
REPORT:
The Committee to examine.. the lot, so liber
ally, offered as a donation far the site of a Hospit
al, by James Anderson, Esq., of Allegheny, res
pectfully report:
That in the discharge of the important duty as
signed them,. although they fully appreciate the
generosity evinced in: the proposed donation, yet
they have endeavored to consider the question
withti single view , to the`. nterests of the Hospital,
and with a : -sincere conviction that its permanent
prosperity and general utility will in a great mea
sure depend npon the, judicious selection of a suit
able location:
Among the most important requisites for a
proper site may be enumerated an atrfand salu
brious position. ---an easy and convenient access—
seclusion from the noise pf business,—it level sur
face, Yet of a sufficient.elevation to admit of prop
er drainage,and sufficient to meet not onlythe
present necessities of the cities of Pittsburgh and
Allegheny, but large enough to admit of the con
struction of buildings, surrounded by pleasure
grounds, capablenf accomModating such a popu
lation as'will herealter be assembled within their
This Committee. would report, that upon a per
sonal examination of the lot so liberally tendered
to the. Hospital, they are led unanimously to the
conclusion that although it is in many respects ad
mirably suited to the purpose, yet its limited size
would in their opinion present an insuperable ob
stacle to the ultiMate success of the institution,
by preventing its attainment otkie extent which
the importance of our local poqlol willhereafter
demand, and which the commencement of the en
terprize under its present favorable auspices leads
the Committee to anticipate.
Your Commit tee, would further observe, that they
confidently belieiv that motif locations can be
found either around the Commcins in Allegheny,
on the banks of our noble rivers, or on the hills in
the rear of this city, combining all the requisite
advantages, and which, from the known liberality
of their proprietors, can be procured on favorable
terms. •
Under these circumstances, regTetting that the
short time allowed them will not admit a going
more into particulars, your Committee would rec
ommend the adoption , of the fulloviing resolutions,
and . beg leave to he discharged from the further
consideration of the subject
TE10.5. BAKEWELL,
N. 116L31.E.5, Commt!lce.
OEORGE- BREED, 4
The report waS accepted, and the resolutions,
which follow, adopted:
• Itcsolred, That this meeting, representing a ma
jority of the subsc'ribers to a fund for the erection
of an Hospital in or near Pittsburgh, present their
respectful. acknoWledgments to James Anderson,
Eeq., for his munificent offer of a lot of ground, in
Allegheny City, as a site tor said Hospital, and
that although under existing circumstances it may
not be deemed advisable to accept of - his truly be•
nevolent proposition, this meeting considers him
to be entitled to the lasting gratitude of his fellow
citizens.
Rauh* That t i e officers of this meeting be in
structed to communicatg a copy of these resolution
(duly authenticated) to,Afr. Anderson, and that all
proceedings relative to his proposed-donation shalt
be entered at large on the Minutes of the Hoipital
Society as soon as the same shall be fully organized.
The following resolution, offered by John Gra-
ham, Esq., was unanimously adopted :
nesolcid, 'That :the thanks or this meeting be
presented to Gen. Breed, Esq., for his indefatigable
and, praiseworthy !exertions in alone undertaking
the task, which 141 been crowned with success, of
obtaining from our citizens a subscription of nearly
r thirty thousand dollars,--asurn which is sufficient
to insure a Hospital on a scale creditable to the
! philanthropby of our City and vicinage ; and that
this resolution be , recorded on the Minutes of the
Association; and that a copy of thesame be signed
by the officers of this meeting and presented to Mr.
Breed. •
On motion of Mr. Bakewell it was
Rooked, That committee of tire be appointed
by the Chair to prepare business for the meeting,
and that they retire and report forthwith.
Mesers. T. Bakeweli, E. G. Edrington, G. Breed,
J. K. Moorhead and W. J. Totten were chosen.
The committee submitted the following resolu
tions, which were adopted:
" Rivard, That it is extremely desirable that the
subscriptions to the Hospital Fund .should be in
creased to the sum of at least Fifty Thousand DOI.
lars ; And that a committee; consisting of four per
sons from Pittsbuirgh, and three persons from Al.
legheny, be appointed for the purpose of effecting
that object.
Resolved, That.a committee of seven persons be
appointed to examine and report a suitable location
for the Hospital; and that they advertise for pro
posals for sites for that purpose, and report to a fu
ture meeting of the association.
On motion of Wm. Ebbs,'Esq., it was
&mired, That a committee, composed of five
persons, be appointed to prepare and submit to this
association a form of charter to be obtained through
the Legislature, or from the Supreme or other
Courts.
Resolved, Thee this 'committee be instructed to
report to an acljoutned meeting, to be holden at this
place. on Wedneiday afternoon, the 17th inst., at
3 o'clock.
Resolved, That the Chairman and Secretaries be
authorized 'to select the committees appointed nu
.
der the foregoing resolutions.
The following named gentlemen compose the
several committees:
Committee to obtain further contributions: Messrs.
Georke Breed, Wm. J. Totten, John Bissell, J. K.
Mociriiead, William Ebbs, W. W. Wallace, and
loWShipton.
/Cornmiteee to,,rzentisre and report upon a location:
Alessrs. Thos.'Bliewell, J. H. Shoenberger, John
Graham, R. S. C3ssat, I'. M. Howe, E.D. Gazzam
&nd Wm. Larimer, Jr.
' Committee on the subject of obtaining a Charter.—
Messrs. Wm. Wilkins, H.H. Sellers, Geo. Breed, S.
Gornily arid Wm: EbbS.
On motion of George Breed, it was unani•
money _
Resolved, That; in establishing a Hospital, we de•
sire to make it a general one. We disclaim all
sectarian preferences; and cordially invite all, of
evcrY sect and denomination of Christians to unite
with OS in founding one Gmcsitsr. HOSPITAL, which
shall be worthy of our city and vicinity, and of
the age in which We live.
On notionadjiiumed.
13. D. SELLERR, CuAttimAN
T. M. Hom-s,
Joax HAUPIR, Secretaries.
FADETtAL DEC; 21 CT.—The following infamous
article appears in the Buffalo Express, a rank
Mexican Federal, paper. The man who would
write and publish such a beastly piece of toryism,
would take a bribe from Mexico to act as spy:
"Our streets are enlivened with the rub-a-dub of
the recruiting squad every day, and the work 'of
enlistment goes bravely on This is well, and we
have a few more ileft of the same sort that can be
spared. Our country mutt have soldiers, and the
enterprising and industrious can do better than to
serve at 140 per month, with a smart chance of
being shot. "The right persons enlist. Able bo.
died men, who ptefer a black eye to a clean colar,
an I had rather fight than eat, are the very men
who, should enter be army of is .Rtpublie, to be.:
come food for powder:- As the army fills up, the
police.reports - ' I
=W=M!Z=
in MMHG POOR OR HEAL
Extract frora4ire Discourse
Of the Rector of Trinity Church, in this city. on
Sonday z .111Orrh .74h, ip . ernnpliance`with I.he Pdsto
rot Legtri . if the )3t:ihoy of the, Diideete sec ontritend . .
ing h roftertion'in the several parisheS; for the re•
uthe fainishingpv:orof Ireland."
"liarsirerrows JEUSlittAili Iv.
The tongue of the suCkin,7, cleiveth•to the'
rodf.of. his - Mouth for thirst ; the young children
ask-bread, and no man breaketh it unto them.
• • • • • Their skin cleaveth to their bones;
it is . withered, it is.becotne like a stick. They that
be slain with the sword 'are better than they that
be slain with litinger, for- these pine'away, stricken
for_want of the fruits of the earth."
• • ' *- •,- This picture of human misery.
is, in the inscrutible providence of God, finding too
truthful, a counterpart in the present sufibrings of
thousands of our fellow . , beings, in different eolitn
tries of EM ope, andespecially in unhappy Irel and
The melancholy tidings have been reaching us For
many months, with an aggravation of the extent
and devisstation of the 'awful"calamity by every
successive' arrival from abroad..:, -They have not
reached us unheeded. The sufferings actin trans
atlantic brethren have, called forth sympathy from
all,.and relief from many. But until lately, we
knew not the full measure of their woe. It was.
rather apprehended famine, tram an almost univer
, sal destruction or failure of crops, from which the
mass derived their chief sustenance; than. actual. ;
existing famine. Of late, however, it is famine MI
all its aggravated horrors, accompanied by pestid
lence, a natural and common crincornitant;—wide '
spread, desolating famine, affecting in degree all
classes, excepting the wealthy, and involving not
only the wandering mendicant, the intemperate,
the idle, the improvident, but the indnatrious poor,
in unmitigated destitution, suffering, sickness and
death. In many of its features thewisitation is
unprecedented in modern times, particularly in its
general prevalence and extent; in the drying up of
the sources ot supplyon which dependence has or
dinarily been placed, when us hasheretofbre hap-,
pened, particular countries, or districts of country
have failed in the production of a sufficiency of the ,
fruits of the earth far the sustenance of the inhabi-
rants; in the destruction ,of that species- ot crop
which constitute! the food of the mass; and in its
extraordinary mortality. Not only the potato crop
of Europe, but the general grain crop of Europe
have.been destroyed. Not only have fields, full of
promiseto the husbandman and alniost white for.
the harvest, in comparatively tmgenial soils, a.tid
under-imperfect cultivation, been'suddenly arrested
in their progress to fruitfulness, but in the,most
fertile districts, and under the most careful and
skilful cidtivation, the failure has been the same.
And. notonly has
It ---,,, Famine, the meagre fiend-,
Blown mildew from between his skricell'il lips, •
Tainting the golden ear:—
but plague and pestilence have followed in his
train, to faithful accessaries in the work of devas
tation and death, -
Putrirying the breath of blooming:health.”
Under these circumstances, it is, that our sym
pathies are appealed to and our afd invoked by our
suffering transatlantic brethren; and the exigency
has been deemed so' urgent, as to induce the Ec
clesiaStical authority of this Diocese, to recom
mend, in addition to contributions which have been
already made in common with our fellow citizens,
an especial appeal ham the pulpit in each congre
gation, with a veiw town increase of the fund for
the relief of - Mir famishing brethren in Ireland.
In compliance with this recomniendatiOn of Our
Diocesan, which strictly accords with my own
feelings, I would present - this wide spread and dis
tressing calamity to your consideration, and appeal
to your sympathy as men and as Christians for an
expression of practical charily in the Way - of pe
cuniary contribution ( such as the exigency !mems
to demand.
What is famine? Thank
be to God, this is a ca amity with which, in this:
favored land, we are unable, from any- experience..
to form more than a vague conjecture,—a problem'',
which, as yet, we 'have no data tis enable us to
solve. Isolated canes of destitution, occasioned by
improvidence, vice, and sometimes misfortune, are
frequently presented to our notice, especially in our
large cities. But in these instances fire suffering is.
relieved as soon as known, even in {dose who are
the least deserving of commissesariiin. There ic y
in addition to private charity promptly afforded and
extensively exercised, ample public provision or
the destitute poor accessible and available to/ all.
And seldom, if ever, are pestilence and death the
consequents of mere hunger, and the wan,t/of food,
But in the country which now appeals, to our
sympathy, isolated cases have swollen into an ag
gregate and accumulation of buffering liiihertckun.
paralleled in any former calamity / 6f the kind in
modern times. Not only individinds, but families,
nay, wholesections of cities, eetire villages, and
extensive parishes. are literallystarving. Medea
titution is gent ' classes of the poor.
It is not confin the vagrant, :slid the
vicious of citif nor the lazy and im
provident in tl ts, hut\ embraces the
industrious, the ie provident, sofas as
it is practicablr lent, with a paucity of
means barely t dinary times, and ut
terly insufficiet general scarcity stud
exhorbitant prices. A vast majority of the suffer
! ers have labored faithfully and perseveringly des
pite of discouragement and failure—.have labored
on to the ast—but, labored in. vain. They have
ploughed and Jigged, and sowed and planted, but
their most diligent cultivation has ,been without
avail. Seed time has been dilly observed, but the
harvest has been frustrated. Not vice, nor, idle•
ness, but ur foreseen, unallev iable, resistlem tnis-
Ifortune has brought them into their present heart.
rending distress. All that man could do has been
done, but no rain or art r ef-thati have heen able to
arrest the inroad of the, destroyer. It is manifest
ly a - visitation from heaven. Not chance, nor ac.
eident, but God in His rnysleriously afflictive pro.
vidence, by drought, and mildew, and tempest,
,with the devouring canker worm, the agents of
His inscrutable will, bath spread devastation, deso.
lation and death over the length and breadth 'Of
the land.
Why the . Almighty is thus visititig with it ca
lamity of such unprecedented severity that sea
girt isle, the fatherlandof many among us, it
does not become
us to inquire. It is sufficient
that we know it,is Meseta and increasing in meg.
nitude and severity everyday. And having know
ledge of ;the destitution and misery, and the means
of affording relief; it becomes us not to speculate
on that which does not concern sis, but to net
in that which, as fellow beings, some of us fellow
countryman, does concern us, and act promptly;
and efficiently, and liberally, as God hash blessed
us, and in the spirit of the great christian law of
love, which knows no distinction of name, no dif
ference of faith,-in the objects of our beneficence,
which. knows nothing, takes note of nothing,'but
their necessities rind their distress - .
The tale of woe which is, borne to us on the
wings of every gale that blows across the broad
Atlantic, my brethren, is not imaginary, is not
fictitious, but real. There is destitution in that
"green isle of the ocean," which cannot well be
exaggerated, and suffering, which if there be in
us any sensibility to human misesy, cannot but
awaken our deepest commisseration and invite and
elicit our practical charity. What is famine'?
have asked. And I have answered it is inappreci
able by us, favored as we. are in this land of plen
ty, and living as we do under the constant smiles
of a beneficent Providence, who bath, as yet, per
mitted neither "seed time nor harvest, summer
and winter, the former and the latter rain," nor
any of the accessaries of fruitfulness to fail. But
we may approxim t ate to a conception of the fear.
fulness and awfulness of the visitation, which is
now filling hapless Ireland with tears and anguish.
We may get at something like it by contrast. We
will supppose ourselves traversing a given district
in the land which is now appealing to our sympathy
and invoking our aid, in the spring or early summer
of the present year. An array of rural beauty and of
promising fertility is spread out before us,which de
lights the eye and gladdens the heart. - The laborers
of all classes and descriptions are spread over the
landscape, and employed in their several voca
tions. The ploughmen are busy in turning up the
soil; the Sower follows with the seed. ' Here are,
fields green with the- rising grain; and there are
other fields blooming like a garden with the blos- I
soma of the vegetable which iss-the looked for
food of thousands for autumn and .winter. Thera
is health on every cheek and gleesome joy ih.every
eye. Old men and children, young men and maid'
ibongh perchance arrayed in clothing scanty,
ITAIN
{ C`+S _
P!M7!MMEMMMMEMMMTMMM
v::eYi.?i<~
coarse and Worn, are- laboringtvith buoYant spt
ribs:and unwearied industry„; On every aide we
see ensiling, happrfacie:-cotintenances indicating
contentment, though it may be in possession of
lire subalstence—atul full of hope aller.rnuch that
'bas beefy disheartening.- Here is a rude hamlet, a
collection of ccittaos,,with some aged gfand-dame
at the door,:huaily plying thedistaff or'the wheel,
while;;-the motherheing in ilie field—she watches
this infant in its era le, or the Towner..cbildren
ganabbling in the,'green. There is a subdued joy
'in the countenance - of even decrepiiude slid age.
The cloudless sky above, the warm sun shining in
the field*, are indications of the serenity of the in
ward man, and-the warmth.and glee of the heart.
as Anticipations ' are ;formed from the promising
fertility.and prespeitive :fruitfulnese withbut and
around. Here ii a; groppaf youths of. either sex,
resting 'awhile frnin theirloil, and getheied under
some shady tree or hedge, in conversation, merri
ment orplay., and there are the elders of the ham.
I , t,,theltatriarci and his sons, the •fathers and
mothers, talking over their happy prospects in the
coming 'harvest, and indulging in fond imagininge,
brighter, deeper and more intense, from a previout
treason b ' failure and' scateity, and a past
wintc .of more than ordinary tirivation: i All la
now cheerful and animating and trustful; full of
promise, full of hope.. , .
"'We traverse the same distrieta few mopthsta- ,
ter, and:.-what a change! The grain blighted in '
the eat, lies mouldering on the ground. The fields
are black;with decayed and putrifying vegetation,
the expected food for many a %yew y day. Thee
picturesque landicape is comparatively a desert.— I
The happy smithng faces, - glowing with health are'
wanting; if purcriance some straggler is met, the
ruddy cheek is Ivan and wasted- In our progress
we have met many funerals, all with: an enusuali
and ominiously small number of attend Ats, and
one or more followed by only a solitary individu•
al,—some father tottering after the remains of a
wife or child as it is borne.to its dark horns, or
some.Thother bereaved .of her last hope and stay,'
weeping in the bitterness of grief and despair for
the husband alter love. Approaching the church.
yard, we , perceive groops. of people in jvarious
parts, and there is•borne to us on the brdeze, the
deep nail of the dead. We enter the once smiling
hamlet. Some Of the cottages ,are deserted. Do
we inquire for their tenants? Alas! they are ten•
ants of the grave; or inmates of the alms house
already crowded to suffocatiou.and ripe with pesti
lence; or are wandering in distant districts, begging
food for themselves and the famishing remnants tit
their families. We enter n miserable hovel, which
affords some sign of inhabitation. There is a moth
er, with an infant at her breast, and three or four
young children clinging to her tattered garments, as,
she lays on herbed of straW, and crying for lood.
How pale - and emaciated! how feeble, yet how'
plaintive their 'cry ! And she who bore them, and
who with a mothe'r's unquenchable love, would, if,
she had it to give. surrender the trust_ required tol
satisfy her own craving hunger, to thern, how like;
an embodiment of despair she looks, end what n i
1
: supplicating eye she raises, for weakness` and 'ex..'
1 haust ion hilredeprived herof the power of speech!;
We minister to her wants ! , and proceed on our'
walk. There under a hedge, with scarcely a rag ,I
1 to cover him, lays amen of gigantic. frame mull
t monk!, but reduced to the dimensions of a'skele
ton, who hai crawled , away from a hovel, all
1 whose inmates, save himself, death bath claiMed as
victims and who lie unburied within, andlin deso- !
I Whin and loneliness and unutterable angurs.b, bath'',
I covered up his face to die. f•See how , his breast;
I 'testes, and Lis limbs tremble in thi last agony,'
(.with none to wet his parched tiJs and wipe the
clammy moature trom his Intrii4. and worse thane
all to the Irish peasant, With (tone to minister the'
Spiritual consolations. to la Ilicb he has ever took-I
ted forward as his'most p re cious boon, when all I
I else is lost t—dor he is ils'ing concealed from those, i
I who thotigh.weiried cosi..with duty noil.with grief,'
are loath" to tisiniiter until the. last. Some dis
tante farther, treother spectacle of heart rending
1 1 woe is presented.' It
.is a tamale, - • - uppareidly
young, of lees/rerhaps Awn eigeteen summers,
1 btletChed 011t , bv the way side, in the last stage' of
diseases Ilex head mats mitre 'raised turf, and in I
1 her aginiyher dark tresses almost enshroud lied
face.
~ 'There is a rertinant of beauty- in -.her
, emaciated featums, and in.iter wild. lustrous eye.
She tan„ been a father's pride arid a mother's joy':
lln her eliriem she utters the most heart-pierehig
i, c 11:9 for mercy and aid. Feebler rind feebler is ;
7
k ,er wail of anguish. It is her last appeal, her last
I expinng moan. . A few moments .more, and the
Ispirit will have passed from its suffering tencment.l
1 and death come ro her relief. We 1 13 " on and
1 enter another dwelling, there is rot.; only famice,l
1 but pestilent° and death. A. o hole family, the
i aged, the middle aged, the youth. the tender illfaillt
are lying together on, the mini floor, some in the.
-last stages of rapidly wasting diseise't-Lsome des/
lirous and dying; and someifead. There is none
to nurse the living, none to Soothdthe dying, none
to bury the dead.°
This, my brithren, is famitie; such famine as is
now desolating. large portions of Europe, and is
most rite and fatal in Ireland. Such, substantially.
are the scenes occurring daily and hourly in many
districts of thatiance joyous land. Indeed.
many of the details arc more- horrible than those 1
have ventured to picture. Yet they are authenti
cated, so as to command belief, attested by men
whose character and of vouch for their veracity.
and have no conceivable motive to exaggerate or
deceive. And from one 'such scene of woe and
anguish, we may judge of the general suffering .
The government has' interposed its paternal hand.
the rich have poured out their wealth in generous
profusion, and still the destitution isianly partially
met. Private charity at home is utterly incom
mensurate with the demand for its exercise, paro.
chial relief is exhausted. the work-houses and hos
pitals, are crowded "beyond' their capacity and can
receive and support no Metre;-rantl food l—food
is still the cry from famishing thousands, solong
its they bare strength leti - to 'drag their trembling.
limbs from plac e to place, and plead for their life.
111 the south andin the north, from one side of the
island to the Oilier, in the ;cities,'an the country
towns. hi the seattered hamlets,' and in the' rural
districta r them la one , scene of wretchedness; one
voice of wailing, weeping and tuoUrning,.one con
tinual counterpart of the calamity which fell on
Judah and jerusaleim.as.depicted by the prophet:
The tongue of the sucking child clearing to the
roof of his mouth for thirst; theyoung 'children
asking-bread, and no.man breaking it unto them: -
-and of those of mattirer yearsi'visagei wan and
wasted with hunger and disease,' ,, their Skin cleav
ing to their hohes, withered and become dry as a
sticki pining away, stricken for want of the fruits
of the earth."
. ,
And as the calamity spreads and, expands, it is
not only, those - who are dependent on their daily la
bor for subsiidence who are invoked 'therein. By
the natural course of things; it is gradu'ally extend :
ing itself to those who are ordiearily above want,
and-comparatively initependeut; and. who, up to ,a
recent period have secured themselves from suffer
ing in the present scarcity. The small farmers, man
ufacturers and tradesmen.begin to feel the pressnre;
Their means, never abundant, and upended on their
Poor stifferina- neighbors and dependents, with the
characteristic warmth . Mid largeness of heart of
their nation, are well nigh exhatisted ; and the pre
vailino famine now threatens these who have hith
erto had plenty and to spare. Their proverbial
generosity and hospitality is .peritling their vitali
ty. Their houses, at meal times, are beset with
the famishing poor of the neighborhood. It would
be inhuman, as well as opposed jo all their native
benevolence and deeprooted .habits, . to refuse to
invite those, who thus present , themselves, to the
hospitality of their- table, and there are, I have ,
been informed, freqUently a goodly array of 'tun.
gry strangers, at such times; looking, if not asking
for food. And thus - their etore, the dependepce of
their own families, is rapidly wasting away, and
with their other charities, the ability to replenish,
at the present high Prices of every article of sub
sistence. The prevalent starvation, is thus extend
ing itself, and threatening, if it has not actually
reached a class, heretofore supposekand supposing
the selves to be, beYond the reach of the common
danger. This
,is not only. a supposable case, but
letters recently received, in jtis country, as
,I have
been credibly informed, represent it to be an ac
tual case, and mtiltiplying to an alarming extent.
And now, my' brethren, with these.facts of des-,
titution, and suffering : beftire us;-and they ar e ,
facts, sad realities, far exceeding in;borror, any des,
criPtion - I have attempted , which you haVe all an
opportunity of estimating by a perusal of the.pub.
lisped accounts that have•reacheit us, and are to
he found in evedystewspaper ,— , with this picture
.
*See SouthgatO.Yisit to: the S yrian Charolumi
p. 97; and nowerpitivera or op day Sam&
, =
xxr- z~a„~.. r ~.~ ~,.
MEE
, ,
ot human woe preSsote -tat, and silently but
moit-affectinglyappealing tows for aia, will any
of us turn a deaf ear 'l(i:the Atiae of wailing and
anguish that comes torus froni' these our-transat l
!antic bothren-1 or- thalt\we'content ourselitea
with an - unpractical and , barren sympathyl..fAre
we not ;infinitely , called -Upon: by every' feeling of
humani;ty,,to act, ptoarptly. liberally t and - in pro:
port ton Ao ,o ur wealth ioricompetence,nay, beyond '
our selfeupposed übility,.eveir to a denial of some
gratifications, in which under Ordinary circumitan
ces we might lawfully indulge without crippling
on charityohat , we may hare the more to give,
and may.give the more, to these our fellow beings
in teed and tuchextrerne distress? di we think we
cannot atibrd a donation otherwise, might we not
abridge ourselves of some luxury, of some costly
pleasure, of some woridlramusement of greater or
less extent, of some
,sumptuous entertainment, of
an additiOn tti oar, furniture, our equipage, or our
personal adornment? • Would we feel any poorer
at the .end of the year, if we were nowto-give to
this object, what , we may' have accustomed our
selves to regard as the measure of our ability for.
all objects? And if we have contributed` some
thing before.to' this satire - Object,es many of us
hare, under the impr es sion of.a less degree of des
titutioh than we now kuOW to exist, would it
soft' te;y impoverish
,us, Would it tnaterially,em
hariass us, were we to contribute again: on the
present occasion'?
As citizens of Pittsburgh, we - had Our share in
a serious public calamity of'anotherititid,titirrie
two years ago; native experienced a largeatnount
of 'practical' benevolence two places and persons
abroad, from stralwera moved only by their con
ceptions of oar necessarydistress under a visita
tion of Prlovidence ioleveie a r rido'verwhelming as
was the me:nth-able 'emiffagration of April, 1845.
The iyinpatti manifested weiln . itself cheering
and encouraging amid:the Sudden calamity, and
the liberal gifts that accompanied it were accepta
ble to all,. and of essential relief to 'many. And
now, when a calamity far more severe and distress
ing demands out' aid,,w °did it not be most ungrate
ful in us to refuse, or to be sparing and niggardly
in our gifts? Would it not expose us; as citizens,
to the imputation of great meanorls,and greater
sel9sbncss. of being willing to solicit and .receive,
but exceedingly unwilling and:contracted in re
turning the kind offices by which we have been,
to' say the least,all of usindirectly benefitted, when
such are naked at our hands?: . , •
The case benne us is one, eminently calculated
to stir up the ileepiountayis of the heart. It ap:
peals with trumpet tongue to our hUmanity,and
our duty.l It is= a state'of ;destitution' and suffering
which no man'," having hurnan feelings and Calling
himself a Man; cap bear of withouteinotlons of
tenderest CUM inisqra tion and resistless promptings
to: act at Once and egiciently, and to the utmost of
his ability, nay, in endurance even• of personal titi
vation!, to meet and mitigate. It is no common
catamstyitid it demands no4ardinary charity.:-Let
its all sotegard it, and though diestant, contemplate
and cornpas.sionate it as.if irwere near" and in our
raider; as if we actually beheld these
thOusands, heard , them crying ,out for> bread, aid
saw them sinking by bonitreds, victims to the com
bined deiastation of famine and pestilence:.; Let
as not coldly calculate, but warmly feel, and lib
gi% e, thus drawing, dowir upon us, .with the
apprubation of our consciences: and the,approval
of our God, the blessing* of those who' are ready
to perish. and perishing, " slain by hunger," de
voured by disease the consequent of hunger, a pi
ning away, striekedfor want of the fruits of ;.the
A gentleman of science and intelligerice and
USlWearied application has spent. a portion , . of the
winter at Jefferson City, and:feels confide!' t- thai
he -has discorerel the:principle - Of perpetual
lion, the same principle that'mores the planets on
their axes and in their orbifs. }We . intends to. re
doce bis theory TO practice.-;.;;St. Zonis liar Era.
GRAND FOX RUNT
. , .
This brilliant- affair writ 'come MT in Peebles.
Tuvroship on next Saturday. The sportsmen from
the city are respectfully - invited to attend. ,
A. W. MAIiKS, Grand Master
PITTyBVIUGAIL .
51/CSAGEII.
SrAO6.
rsttrATE. sores $5; SINGLE nckrri 75 crs.
'Orem Circle, ,00 cents. Second - Box, 371 cents
Pit, ' .25 .f . I Gallery, PO .g
FIRST NIGHT OF THE . SEASON
The public is most respexAfhllv infer:tie:4 that the
Theatre will be opened for the Spring Season, on
Saturday evening, March 13th. During the:recess
eeveral valuable additions itava been made to the
Regular Company, and the Manager has also the
pleasure of stating to the Patrons of the Drama
that he has effected engagement* with all the
PAINCtrAt. STA TIS in the linited States, who will
appear in rapid succession.
The following Ladies and Gentlemen Will com
pose the regular corps.
Mae. 11. Lewis, Arm iti c s TATr t,
'flowiawo„ " AMA-RAIN
MIAs Poarrit, Miss Aworatioit,
Ma. CX LEV, Mn. Pos-rca, ,
" 80wr.r.9, " roltratt,
IL. Lewis, " Mesrarett;
1/ore " ILT.IhrOLDS i
MORF.UOI7SE, " 111. A CITMOItE )
~ Knorr, " .ALtett,
4, LawatAw, " Dowirita l
Scenic Artist Ltwaratt,
Leader of Orchestra ..... . .
Machinist....Owsros, I Prompter.. DOWLING,
Duffing the evening, AN OPENING ADDRESS,
written by a Gentleman of this City: •
On Siatnrdny Vvening, linrelt 13,
Will be .aeted:Tobitt's Coetedy,(in 8, acts) of the
• • Ait ludo' ,
Duke Aranza....... Mr. Fortin
Latilpedo (Ist appearance in several -;
After the Coinc,,ly, Dliaa.PoßrEtt. will deliver an
Opening Address,
Writien for the occasion by argentterrian bfthis city
Arte:r whieh Miss Bertha Lewis hi the'Pas Saul
LA SAIOL ENTW A.
To conetude with the Farce of the
You'ng
Mons. Splash,
chassezi. Lewis,
Aurelia,
Deborah, Mits. Lewis,
Dept.: wagger,
1...1„ecy (with 50ng)...... .
Doors to (wen at.4l. curtain will rise at.-Past 7
The fox Mifce be'olen daily fromlo o'clock"
A. M., to Pi M., apd,ll-oin to 5, Q. where
any number et- seats-May-be secured. . .
o* - Thp Manager will not be responsible for debts
contracted or articles bonlivted, 'unless by his writ:.
ten qrder.
(l:)-An efficient Police boa been engaged to pre
serve the strictest order and decorum throughout
11:7 - No improper persons' admitted to an part of
the house. .
tXrChecks not trahsferable.
NOTICE
To subseriDers of, and adoertisers in, the Daily
Post and Weekly lifercury and Manzfacturer.
rilliOSE indebted to Bigler; Sargent and
. Bir.hr,
and. to Bigler & Sargent, are notified that their
accounts are left for collection afthe 'office of Alder-
man Johns. and that hut a reasonable' period, wi ll be t
allowed before emits are brought for the recovery of
the same.
Marl2-dlw&wli - '
Books, German Goods, Segars, dto., at
Auction.
ON Saturday evening , the 13th inst., at 7
. clock, will be sold at the ComMercial Auction
Roorns,cOrner of Wood and Filth - streetti = A,guttn.:
City of new and second hand Books In varlet-utile
partments ofilterature; an extensive- itisaittri6fat of
German fhncy goods; 5000 SpaniSh Spiattish
Segtirs; 1 gold patent lever watcli,.made by Rasri ,
son ; 3 silver do. do. do. Johnston; 1 "Iron safe ; 2
baskets chanipaigri. wine ; engravings, oil paintings,
globe lamps, musical instruments, &c.
marl - JOIIN D. DAVIS Ancer
A I,llackim:ll.ltVaii ted.
YOUNG,man Acquainted with plantation_ work
can, bare permanent employment, at good
wag9iin . tt healthy part of Northern.
For further .inro'rntation apply to :
GEO. COCH:94S.
..No W4lfitieet,,
EMI
• • .
'.e.. q t.....1}4i1i4 VM ;X:2-Atg.ZQ., Sitii•dtaNt.z4tt•ggite., A ireV it.,WZ• 9' i'.9 t Aii 4 4,
*Wit 46;
Steam Iron Irietory. • • .
HM,o7lintifizrzbottelfutionteood street, Philadelphia.
T d 'Ohl establishment may be found the greatest
• . variety 'of Plans and beautiful Patterns for lams •
RAlLtirosin the United States, to which the 'attten
tine of thosein,want of any description; uid cape&
ally for ; Cemeteriev, is particularly invited.
The principal Out of all the handsome Railings at
Laural Hill ;Monument, and other Celebented Ceme
teries in ihe city and county of Philadelphia, which
have been iro.highly. extolled by the public press,
were'executed at:this manufactory. - • • -
A large Ware-Room is connected with the ectah
lishment; where is kept constantly on hand a large
stock ofready-made laos RAILINGS,
_ORNAMENTAL
Ittorr Serrets; lion CHAIRS, nevi style plain and or
namental lam( Gems, with an extensive assortment
of Igor POSTS, PEDESTALS,IEOS AanoeS , 4•C. Also,
in great variety, Wrou ght and Cost Iron OnwA-
*twill, suitable for Railings, and other purposis.
The subscriber Would also state that in•his Pattern
and Designing Department be has employed some of ,
the best talent in the'conntry, whose whole atten
tion is devoted to the business—forming altogether
one of the most coapletemid-systematic establish
ments of the: kind in the. Union.. , '
Ridge Rood, above Buttonwood St.
Philadelphia, March. 12, 1847-d6mo.
CAME to the premises of the subscriber, living at
the four mile ran; in Pitt township, Allegheny
County on - the lait• of Deliember, • stied .CONT,' with
largo Norris, and a white star. in her!fitcei and White
tail, she was 'not giving milk, birt...wai in very" good
order. The • owner is requested to. come,foryrard
prove prnperty, pay . all charges, • and take her &Pray.
•• .. • • ' ROBERT.CRAIG.. .
.
inaillL-vr3t•-•
R. GtLIDDON lectures at •the.. LUWHERdNi
ivx CHURCH, on FRIDAY and :downy even.ga
The splendid PicrunzAL DIAGUABIS cover the Wills
of the room, and genuine Antiquities, latest Books;
fez, are on the table- . -
Svareaes— , The Penman*, Totres,.Lael Mari*,
and other vestiges:of the OLD Emerae,.being • the
most interesting and 'carions rocts ot.Fgyptologi
cal Science; and these on which:the recent discove
ries, (many yet unpublishorL) of Legging, Btfnson,
Birch, Pririe,.&c. throw mach light. • -
tnr For other particulars see PaoseziTutsa and
Single admiuion. to each lectirei adglitio 60, dent
juveniles, 26 cents.,. . toarl!*4,,
Itthe Honorable the Judges o f the Court *Meat.
er Sessions of the Peace, in and fur the Coenti ,
of Allegheny.
-The petition of Conrad Frivogal, of-the -.lRtglith
Ward, city of Pittsburgh, in the county aforesaid,
humbly slieweth, That yourpetitioner bath provided
himself with - materials for the accommodation'
travellers and - -others, -- atliii dwelling house in the
county aforesaid, and ;rays that your floniain NIG be
pleased to grant bun a license to keep a public-tense
of entertainment. And your. petitioner,is in duty
..bound, will pray.... CONRAN) FRIVOGAL. ,
We, the subscribers, citizens of the Eighth Ward,
dticertify, that the above petitioner is rifgood repute
for lionestrtenlperance; and is well' pro%ided
with house room and conveniences for the aceounno.
dialer' of travellers add others, and that isaidlasern
is necessary.
• Thomas -Dail, nenry Stinvlile,- Clemens nevelen,
C.- Bre-sseriConrad Kearber, Jacob Bycrly,-Williim
Aiken, Matthew M , Ginn, Jonathan Wilson, John 11.
Miller,J. D. W. Whim, Aea Boughner, John Aiken,
B. Flannegan. • marl2-d3t,
9110 the Honorable Cie Judges or the Court or Quer:
ter Sessions of the Peace in•and for the County
cif Allegheny:
The petition ofMichatl Crawi6b3 of the 4t)i Ward,
city of Allegheny, in the' ciiiinty aforesaid, huMbly
shevrttb,'That sonr . petititinerbkth pievided himself'
with .niaretials for tho.atentritilodation of travelt . tra
and others, 'at bls dwelling hoti4o in the borough
afiresaidi'add prays that your Honer, will be pleased '
to grant him a license to Weep a public house .or
•ontertainment And your petitioner, at in duty bound,
wilt pray. • liIICLIA.EI CRAWFORD;
We, tbeimbacribers,citizens of the Fourth Ward,
do tem*, that the above petitioner, is of good re
pute for honesty and temparance, and is well provi:
dad with house room and conveniences for the ac
commodation of travelers and others, and that said
tavern is necemeary. ' •
Charles M'Glatighliki, - Thotna's Gawliter, AndreW-
Wfienth, Alexander Stewart, Rudolph Ilunseker;
Charles A. M , Donaogh, Peter Atkinson, Valentine
Schroder, Jacob: A. Rittc!,'J. Forrester, Joseph
Call, Hugh Sweeny: ' tnarl2-dS►' .
(telegraph copy and charge this office.)
...C. F. Poivre,R;
..lA'. AI. FosTsui,
-
HP. Publle. hi most respectfully.- informed,' that.
T
the Theatre will open for the. Spring Season;on
Saturday Eieriihiltlarch 130,..wit1i a full and effici
ent Company.: •.The Performances will...ha duly...an•
nouncedin tht Bills - cif the day.
marl 1-2 t ' . POILTER, „Va.:lager:
BACON -16 Inds Shoulders and Hams, received
per "Wisconsin," and for sale by,
FRIEND ) RHEY & CO. ) .
No s.7lWater
LARD—S kegs And 1 Bbl:Ledatriiireceivea. per
"Wisconsin?. and for sale by
PgACIIES-52 Baas nail 4 Barrels dry Peaches,
per str "Wfsconsin,o-end for sate by
FRIEND, RHEY k CO.,
57 .Veldt el.
1 T COOK'S LITERARY DEPOT - 486 P!ourthat.
The Prose Writers ofAmerica,
,:with stiriey,
of the history, condition and'prospeets of - American.
Literature ; . by Rufus W Griswold.
American Domed ia.na by-S.: K., Paulding, nether
of Dutehman'aliteside," etc.;
and Wm. Irvine Paulding. , " • '
Proissart's .11allatis and other Poenisi b} J.- Peri
tiletou Cooke.. . •
TIM Slave Ring, or thea'rierephs of Liherty. , ..
Part Second.. ' I- • . _
Master Tintothrs Book Case, or the Magic 1. - arr
thorn of the Warld- , ;-PaiI L III
The scout of the Silv P4md: a Tale' %Or. the
American Review for March. -, -,-%
Blackwood's Ma,gazinc for
Hunt's Merehant's Magatiine fdr March.
- Living Age;lco,
The Greatest_Plague et Lifej theAd'venterea of
a Lady In search of a good servant; by elm who his
beenalmost:worried to. doath..
.. .. 44 H. Ltiars.
Mill. H. LEWIS,
philosophy of - • :
Taykirs Gold and Silver. Coin',Examiner, 'desig:o
to contain the 4imile - engravinga of all the , gold and
silver -
.
Tltie'abovn new Books just jeceived and for sale
at COOK'S, 5.5; Fourth
Of Second handGoJd and.Silver PaicntLercr L , Epine
and other WO, thes, Oil Tainting, and_Toys, 4-c.
- AT AUCTION. - .
r A N Saturday evening nexi;Mareh 13th,conimenc-
Ij ing at 7 -o'clock precisely, will be gold at W
lienne"s Auction Roome, N 0,114 Wood st., 9d 'door
from 6th, by orderand on account of a.BostotkPaton
broker, "the balance of his' stock on his return from
the South, of Gold-and Silver Watches.. Some are
very fine, composing in part -
1 fine Gold Lerer-18 Carrots, made by W. Robin.
eon, Liverpool; - • '
1 fine Gold. Anchor Lever, made by`Tether, -
1 fine Gold L'Epine 4 holes Jewelled 18 Carrotet
Together with an assortment of Silver Leven., Re
peaters, Quartiers,and heavy double cased Watches;.
,
l eight day Clock'and Case. - -
Also, at the same time, a few Oil Yaintingsiby
some - of the most celebrated artists in the Country,
among which in the Loglioustj a view of the Potp
mar; the Broken Bridge; fancy Sketch; VieW on
the Juniata; View mi.. the Monimgabele; Moonlight
Scene of Sandy Hpokr Landscape View in Chester
County; the Jealous Lover; Babes in, the Wood's.-
. And immediately alter, a variety, of _rani.) , Goods,
Toye, d.c. P. Iqui.ENNA, -
r. merit . - Auctioneer.
..... 111mArEn
Ereetttor , e Sitio of Property ittlll4l ward:
tAN. Satnrday evening, the 13th instant, at 7 'o , -
1„.." clock, at the Commercial Auction Rooms, cor-
ner of Wood and
_Fifth streets; will, be :soldthe un
expired term of a lease which has 3 yeara and 9
months to run fioin the Ist of April 1847 of a Lot of
'Ground in . the Second Ward of this.. City,. having a
front of 25 feet on. Troy at. and extending back to
Hill st., on which is erected_ two. small frame-two
- story, Awelling houses and "ono large frame house
with 4 iOOll3B, cellar :kitchen and eel*. Subject toa ground teat of $l2 50 per annum.
For hither information apply to Samuel. Clark at
the, glass works of Alvaro.' pakewelt and Pears.
meta,. JIIHN D. DAVIS; Auct.
00
, . ,
d '39 Boxes good !towad° apples,
... b r l tC no_sigueient, 84191914 .t ib •
P. C..
en A-TIN,
eor of Smithfield d Prom - sta. '
THE third story of a Brick Ronne, oni4e-oorner
of sth and Union streeks.' . ..'Appy to
,mar 9 • ' JexE6
.MAYII
WEll
MEI
ROBERT WOOD, Proprietor.
Estray Cow;
' NOVICE.
Egypcian JLrrologiral Lectpres
Tn , At'n
FRIEND, 11.13XY
57 Water et
The P
'rosei.irkiters of - Amir/c - as
AND MORE:NprBO.9ICS;
Payrnirrokeris -.Sale
.
aums,, Ann DZAIXILS tar
POHEIGI , r4fitii : 4IOMESTIC EXCHANGE,
'CERTIFICATES 'VP DEPOSIT, BANK NOTES,
. . 'AND SPECIE,
; No. 64 Wood St., erre door above Fourth, East side,
..• Pittsburgh, Pa.
. i rtIIRRENT.Punds received on deposit, sad cot
lictions Made. - eb all the Cities throughout the
United Stitel. :Sight check• on Baltimore, Phil,ulel
phia; New York; Boston and Cincinnati, constantly
for sale in sums to suit purchasers.
Tho paper of the Ohio, Kentucky,. Indiana, and
Virginia Banks bought and sold tajtAttsa . rijki i i.
able •terrns. • .
. The highest premiere 'paid for Fon* andilunetit
can Gold and Silver coins. r ' FA - r f
• richange - on England,. Girmapy,,,nad.
Fr:ince - procured, 'Ste. —marlo-davvy•
4Vb R A I Y""NgES
IN.uffams- E P
LATELY MITCIIq., Agents fol . pig
B
Black Ball line of Liverpchil and 'New Ynek
=has, also for a line of Anaericalf.hl4fchietskits,
makeiontinue • to. remittances E IV,G L
_WEL AND, SCOTLA:Nrf, and WALES, with "proiniit!
aegis and despatch at reAticred fates
„Appli,ateith
tr of, their otSeee • oh PEtTlV.Eit.:4llNrclbo-:Ciiial
Bridge, or Smithfield et:, near. 5.111.1 F :, *PibllBfd •
Caurpet - Attad'.
NO. U 0 BIABICET . STIVEET.':':`
-
IL 013 14.."1';..35:,..,T ito Olaf] 0 ft
_
ESPECT.FULLY b4 oll llll:hisfriendt 4 and the
public generally, he is . now. receiyigga
large and splendid'assortinent New . .Siriaa.P.4*.
errrno, OreCt.errns4k.e....,- direct from the Impeller!
and Manufacturers- ccnnpeiedAn part of' ,
Superfine linutsela:Carnets;
- :Erna do. Tapdstty Brussels Carpeting;
B ,9nr_ ll ? , Perzet
Extra - " do. '-
Superfine Ingrain , ' - 'clef
Fine , - :
Commoa *f d o;
5-. S, 3 . 4 and, 4 - 4 ."Plain;Vent 4 lim do; .
fp-S 3-4 and -4-4, Damask
fi-S, 3:4 and 4-4 Tapestry
13Ieartf-
Brown Drillingt;
- 4-45;6r414a& 64. Sheeting's
6-4 7-4 -84 Taldel.inenst,,,
Linen Napkins; '
,-. •
Crash said,Diapert
. . AUckabackgowelinul..
--•- Carpet Stripes;-
New style , Ta4le r eqvitit,; .
IN) cratbikfrprriri inches to 24' faet- istde"catito"
any size;
Rich Embroidered. and Printed Table tir4Viatto' •
Pigired Floor-61ot]*.
Chettielle,•Brussels,,TCiftedi and Wilton
and - s l reepskie - Dotladatts4`;
- and Gres - - do ' .
Brass Stair , Rods ; r 164. - -
Damask and Striped' Staff Linen ~-
Carpet' bindings; A • -.•-
4-4, 6-4 andl-4 Plain and Igared Indian Matting; .
Colored
Persons-fitting up Steam Boeits;,lleferir; ;or: e
Houses; are requested Ili feel s ed" reit'
- they Will find it to their.adrantage.to.-dn 80-"trfPri*
poxcliusingolsowhere; P.
lac would. l
'also invite , attontionoqdn'extensife
Stock-ofhNEtV: OPtaNG,DAY,GOODB4,(edihrsiciiiir,
every thing inthat,line,)-now opening ittlte=abo ve stand 01•N0.... 110 Marketst. tairSatudier
i -
As ta* !theta remo vi ng dam m y . old stand; *f;
:
GO Water st.; I take this method of retnivitnr
thanis to the pablic in general s -for the very . liberal
patronage bestowed-6n inebefetoßire; end (Amid
by strict attention to•buslimsd to merit the
uonage ) .at thb large and commodious
corner of Front and Smithfield street, diagOnally:
across from the Nonoogalleatlonse,where my stock .
of Groceries, Freits,.,lVines and Liquots; be
large and of the best quality, for Sale low. eithir
Cash or barter. P. C. MARTIN;
.
mis 9 - cor of:Smithfield and Frit eta.
I . •
. .
.
THE light draught steamer Asaesra, is
gdod running order. She carries alriii3t.;
lOU tons, has good Hull and Engines, new boilers, a.
comfortable plain cabin,- and. is well adapted for
Towing. She wlflt.be Cold at a low Piice;
sortable terms for good paper. Apply' to • '.•
tner9 • JAMES MAIN
FerY Uke Lailien..
,
1 - 1 HSSEVS Ax Marrow' Pomade; '
1:16 ! 'Vegetable Cosmetic Cream
, „Unrivalled Toilet Soap; • • "
Emtuolipnt Sapponaccous Pat* tit
' ii/hitestinglid - soUtening, the akin;
Extiacts Verbena ;F. -•,
Piratically; '
" ' 'Tobereuse ' - ,
. Poudre Superfine, nla rose;
tt, -Tooth 'Paste ;• . •
I , 'restottia Smelling Bottles, plain and cutglate: - ;"1-
Also, a large, assortment W. Cologne,' Alumina/3V,,
.and, French
Hair Brushes, Tooth BrUalies,Nailßlzshis, Bra.
MAYS IfROCK titAY,
atchell'Watches Str
. ,
.
ait
.- JUST RECEICED, • this,day,a Sue
.11 7 40. tutaortment of •• beat quality. Englishf
'
` , 7IW• ..: GOLD and SILVER Patent LEVER ,
W A•Te RES . ' Having imported 'these Watches
direct from Liverpool, ..I am enabled-to sell them at :
reduced prices, and as' low as the ante qualities can - .
bp bought. for.in the E:airtern ~cities.-. Having ileber?.
mined, by low prices and a large and well•seleetelk'c
assortments of Watthes and ether articles in my line,
to make it the interest of Western men to deal at.
home,l respeartillymvite attehtiOn to the largest.
and best eelict,ettstock of Watches ever offirodlit
..
this city. ~ ' ; -.. :; ‘-- -W. W z WILSON;. :'
mar 4 :-- torAtb and Maiket eta.
Watch aad , - Clock-repairing 4orte in the beat
- .1114.44 ,du 13401IVAINS, - '
Snceessors' to As' 13rervrthie s i
. .
- ..- -- 'aialltrraCitintita AND ratrosatne orr
PAPERTIANIGINGS
No, 87
,Wood;Street.-.." - --- • ,
r rilE , increasing demand for American Paper hat
.1_ induced them to enlarge and iMprore
tory, and •their facilities for manufactering . are now',
equal to any-in the eastern cities: flasitig adopted
the eastern scale_ of Pricee, they. take 'pleahurn in in
viting-their frienija . and dealers -- to carmine • thett—
itoak, which is now larger than ataxy cornier Period,
and may be found as folloWs
preach; AmeriCan, Satin, Glazed and Common
_ .
,Paperliangings .
Gold, Velvet:end Imitation :Cordell;
Landicapss e 'Statittes, and Prints;
Curtain Paper, yard. wide, plain green and fig , dr,
Traniparent.%Vindoti Shades;
Writing,.Printing mid iVrappingPapett
• Bannetl3oards, 4-c.. . • marg..a r n
'X N 0
NGA. Et LA. '
on the corner of Water and Sinithfleid streete s
PITT SIFITRGH,.I" a
. . . -
ig undersigned - Proprietors of the Ifotoisosas;
T LA Hoolz announce to' the 'PUblic, that Met_
House is open for the reception of Visitors. They
ire conscious of having spared no expense in bating
ant the
.Establishment in such'a style of to render
'avery cothforilo the Goesti. ' They hope by con_
stint care and attenfion to business to _merit the R..
N.onage so Liberally, bestowed, thelatelldononga.
]ela Howie. ; - •
wadi-
JAMES CROSSig
Hardware, -Cutlery, Sidlery,' Ate.
JOHN WALKER,.
-
ThEPORTER aid dealer in Foreign and Domeitie - .,7
"Hardware; would . respectfhlly inferm his friexds' . ,,
•and the pnbi ie , ,genentlly, that'll's' is now reeeising'-'.•,.
his Spring supply of Hardware at the tild'atand of
Walker &. Woodwelli No.. 85 mocid street; which' ,
he will dispose of on the most reasonable terms.' lie
will be'continually, receiving. fresh supplies direct
from the manufacturers in Europe and this Country,.” .- .; .
which will 3 enable him to compote with. any estab.".
lishment either East or .West. Western Merchants •
are irivitid to call and epinin e his stock before put-s
-chasing elsewhere. - " muds
RHODES & ALCORN, '(late of New York city,yi
No. 27, ;Fifth Bt., between: Wood and ?darket,.: :-
Manufacturers of Mustard, Ground Sp ices,Citsups,::-
&c., &c., will open , awing the present. week a large
assortment of articles in' theirline;Which-they .
wholesoleinquaiditiee to suit dealers, at Eastern:.
wholesale prices. All articles 'sold bjt thenrwarraas-'`
ted. Merchants intending to go east week:batsmen]
to call before leaving.the eity.- „Wbex may.be found'
at their Warchouse,No.,27, Ut., m Ryan'sr
- . ,
.. . _
ing. ; , . -110111,
- _ -
•• A - FARM containing two .hundred- acres 401:later
;about nine Mlles _from -Pittsbutgir. The
.
WOlllOlOl4 alargamni - 99PARItable toile mut
barn (CO rianinng,) 100 bearing spplfilrrea, 60 acres clearost Jand. about 12 of wbioh-ia meadow. Thai;
farm to • well : . watered; on - a goad .read antr be •
Muted iemarkstilylo*:-:-anolx.to - •
14;-:40-,t1r,.. trit* - 4,
re4.9F3t4,llttibur4o,.
inPlt
41; '7. 7 '4%. : - .`. 4.;,;t 4 u- 4,, •
. 4
- 2 i
-
,
MEI
A. 4,9