• ~,\\i ; . ;; v **v I , * ’ *; • ,;y v y . ’, YY-fr '<', . - *y >* *. - • v cl- " i - **iY & •» V*'*py %*• «, * *at * c to * 1 * * „ , » , - 1 i - *.*?'<■*:,tih Y*i ~v *» -* .-X\ ** X;.*Vir?'' ’ YY“ ‘’? * ’ r ~ - . -< •*, ,*, ~\ - * _..YKY : > vWV t w\*p ;,» :* - * =W * js- e , mXX-* 1 r, *-.!•- •■* > , '•it . • V** ‘- *1 *►*>■£?;!> 5 <4f n %V A. /!' 3 tofgmm fIJ fes’S^&l iM «MPM BI $&$&&% mmm *i l#wai: fepilil »m»hl if >§»&£#£s !-^-'-' ; "iT^- !; »r *4.y-'.Av-.. »>;Mf 3 .“4./.'• J7>■ «> '-<*•. V?-.• f f _ *s> «-T f-.Tii W"U-^^K®i ws^^sm v^;>;>%d^.2.j- ‘- .> - : JMtj Jftnrautg OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE CITY. Harper & Layton, Proprietors and Publishers. L. EAHPEB, EDITOB HTTSBUBGH: MONDAY MORNING: DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET, FOR GOVERNOR, W.ILLIAM! BIGLER, FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER. SSETH CLOVER, 'or ctAßios coWKXV. r:,: democratic state nominations , ■por Jaitlcea of ttae Supreme Bencli. Hon. JEREMIAH S. BLACK, of Somerset. ; <* JAMES CAMPBELL, of Philadelphia. -<■ ELLIS XEWIS, of - - “ JOHN B. GIBSON, of Cumberland. « WALTER H. LOWRIE, of Allegheny cot. BIGI*ER AND THE STATE DEBT - - TACTS WHICH CASNOT HE CONTEOVF.RTED. !Eiie following communication comes to us from ] - the highest source. The writer isa gentleman | .whocommands-alikethe respect and'Confidence •, Of bothAVbigs and. Democrats. , He- states facts ■ in regard to the State Debt, and the career of Col- BiGtKR in the Legislature,'which, cannotbe L controverted by the friends .of. Gov. .1 ohssion : An article which appeared in the-Pittsburgh I • Gazette of the 12th inat, on the subject of the • state debt, and.which ia taken from the Beading | Journal, is,calculated, if not designed, .to,make ■ an erroneous impression upon the public mind, . and to do injustice to the late Gov. Shunk. It ■ - in Substance asserts that during his administra v ' tion,' the : deht was increased $4,786,523 60. The ■ author olf this article must have been ignorant of ■ tho facts, or must have wilfully perverted, them. To correct hiß orrors and to present the truth of the matter, is my object in appearing before the public. 1 • The State first failed to pay the interest on tho debt, on the first day of August, 1842,. and con-1 ■ tinued delinquent till the’first day of February, I 1845. - During that period, the Legislature au- I thorited the issuing of certificates to the holders I - of the' State stock, for the interest, as it became I ~ payable semi-annually. On tho 18th April, 1845, j provision was made in the annual appropriation | hill, authorizing the Governor, upon the surren- I der of those certificates to the Auditor General, 1 ■ to : cause certificates: of State stock to bo issued | ; in lieu thereof, at an interest of five per cent per I ■ annuui, redeemable on and after, the first day of 1 . August, 1855. The holders of the certificates .' Tdrtbe interest, availed themselves of this pro - ‘Vision,- nnd as certificates had been issued for j fire semi-annual payments, amounting to .about, ‘ $BOO,OOO 00 each, the aggregate of them amoun ted,"'of course,~to the sum of $4,000,000 00. t The law further-iuevided, that interest on those , - certificates should he computed from the time they were issued at,the'’rate of 4J per cent. This interest, added to the principal, mode the amount of $4,666,182 15, the same which is charged in the article in question, under tho head of (“Stock Loan, April 16, 1845,”) aB part of the debt created daring Gov. Shuuk’s term. Fpr * the act cited, see Pamphlet Laws of 1845,. page 618. Comment on this snbjcct I deem unnecessary. The simple statement of the facts is sufficient to escape the falsity of the charge, and to show that this item of the debt had occurred before Gov. Sbtrnk Wus’inducted into office, and that consequently he had nothing to do with its cre ation.' Thecffect of the enactment of the lGth April, d 846, .was simply to change the form of the indebtedness;, ' Much ado is made by certain presses, iu .the interest of Gov. Johnston, about the credit which Indue to him, for the payment of tho interest of ■ the State debt. One would suppose, that to him, and to iiim alone, belongs all the credit, and all the honor of paying the interest, and that it was not tilt his elevation to the Chief Magistracy, that it was paid. A more perfectly absurd and un rounded claim was nover set up for any public main. The honor of redeeming the credit of the State belongs to the Legislature of 1844. That | body, by passing an act authoriring the levying of a tax of three miUs on the dollar for State pur poses, provided the wayß and means of paying the interest. • The first payment after the sus pension in 1842, was made on the first day of February, 1845, a few weeks after Governor Shank was inaugurated, and it has been regu larly continued up to the present period. For this, Governor Johnston is entitled to no more credit, than any other gentleman who was in pri vate life nt the time that important message was adopted. Certainly, he is not entitled to as much credit as Col. Bigler, who was then Speaker of the Senate, and who, aa the journals jj of that body will show, sustained the provision £] • for tho three mill tax, upon every vote that was taken upon it. , A brief history of the passage of this provision may not be uninteresting at. this time. Whilst the bill for the saie 'of the public works, was be fore the House, an. amendment was incorporated, providing for the assessment of a tax of three mill, on the dollar upon certain property enume rated, and the bill in that shape finally passed. ■ The word “three,” in this amendment was stricken out in tho Senate, and the word “two’ inserted, thna making it read two mills,—Col. Bigtervoting agninßt striking out and inserting. Upon the question, of the .final. passage of the bill thus amended, Col. Bigler and , other Sena tors, who were in favor of the three mill tax, vo ted in the negative, and the bill was lost. This , o te was'reconsidered, the House provision re-, ■ stored, and the hill /finally passed by a votejof 16, .. tb ’l6.' Col. Bigler’s name ia to be found in the affirmative, (Senate Journal 1844, page 829.) It would not, perhapß, ho unreasonable to olaim for Col. Bigler the honor of passing this great measure, as being the last member, who voted, it was in’his power to decide the question, cither im the affirmative or the negative. The Bill was afterwards referred to a committee of conference upon' disagreeing votes of-the two houses upon other provisions. The report of the. .committee • -WS adopted in the Senate, by a vote of .20 to 18, Col; Bigler again voting in the affirmative. Now when'it: is remembered, that at tho time this Bill was passed; the financial affairs of the State and the country were greatly deranged ; ' that money was scarce; that the credit of the State was so low Hiat her stocks were at about forty-dollars; that the debt, in consequence of her failing to pay the interest, was increasing at thC rale of about two millions of dollars a year; that the opinion was prevalent that the people ' would not submit to an increase of taxation; and-that the question of repudiation was enter ;' tained, at least, by a portion of- the community, it will be admitted, that it required some degree wf firmness and moral courage in tho Bepresen tatives of the people, to meet the crisis. It was emphatically a crisis In the history of this good old Commonwealth. For nearly throe years she had stood before 'the: world ‘.disgraced and dis -hohoted. * t She had failed to meet engagements, 'to wbiob bor faith and her credit had been, sol emnly pledged. But the crisis was met. Her aans then representing her,: nobly, fearlessly,; patriotically came to the rescue, and forgetting their own temporary interest, in that, of the Commonwealth, they passed this important -IZmre and in one short year her credit and *:£?Sstot« were redeemed. In the support Bill all party differences were merged in Democrats, influenced by the higher,.and nobler sentiments of patriotism, cordially united in ad voOntihg and sustaining it. Give.honor.then to whom honor is duo. It belongs to no party, to i no particular individual, but to.the o I the Legislature of 1844, and to no member of that body more than to Col. Bigler, who was as I active in the support of the bill, ns any of his brother-members. It was a groat Pennsylvania measure, and it is the duty of the people to frown down all and every attempt ofipsrtixnns nnd in the laborious occupation of translating the i Mormon Bible into French; and when ! tellyou i that he has been occupied four months already I from eleven to.five each day, with, a prospect of four more before the work is completed, -you must acknowledge that it is no small task.” ‘ The Pabdonino PoWeb.—lt is going the rounds of the Whig papers that since tho origin of. the Pennsylvania ■'State Government, ft,loB criminals have been pardoned, and of these 389 by Gov. Johnston. To which the Tioga Eagle .replies: ■ What has become of the Whig thunder whioh denounced bo bitterly the. pardoning power. -It appears to be all right now, when a Whig is in the Executive chair. Strange I This is another instanoe of Whig consistency. - Tirsv abe Cominq Back. —Large numbers, says the Chicago Argus, of democrats, for a time past associated with the free eoUorganiza tion,' are coming; quietly back among their old friends, weary of tho -unhappy alliance with whigß and abolitionists and anxious once- more td stand on the broad platform on which the demooratio party has won all its triumphs, from the days of Jefferson and Madison down to.the time of Jackson and Polk. ggg"-Thore has never perhaps-been amedicino before the public so well deserving their confi-. dence and patronage as Ayer’s Chary Pectoral., No family should bo without it, and those who have used it never will. See Advertisement k j. Scribblings and Clippings. Abraham thronghtho Cadiz Sentinel, J wants information -respecting Elizabeth Hagey, I of German township* ' Harrison county, Ohio, | who left her.home some two years ago, and has.J not since been heard from. She is supposed to I be in Washington county, Pa. If she is alive, j her parents are extremely anxious that she should | go-home, as they intend moving to the West, . shortly. .. . ■ ■ .c- The Journal des Debate, of the 27th ult., says that the judgment against M. Cabet, the leader of the Iscarian colony of communists at Nauvoo, has been reversed ..by the Appellate: Court, and that he is discharged. ; Gen. John M. Biekcl, State Treasurer, paid tho August interest on the- State debt on Friday week in specie. Wonder how. much of the credit. Gov. Johnston will claim. . .; Mr. John Beifsnidcr, of Euphrates township, ■Lancastercounty, while unloading oats on Fri day week, fell from theloft, and striking against the ladders, brokehisback. ■ He died the follow ing day. , Mr Bunn, proprietor of the hotel in Paxton, Mass-, left his house on Wednesday morning of last week, in usual health, and fell dead in the streot from the rupture of a blood vessel* „ The body of Ann McCabe, n widow, of Nock omickson township, Bucks county, was found in the canal last werk, with wounds showing that sho had been murdered. Tho murderer is un known. A Btorm occurrcd at Natchez on tho 30th nit., which blow down chimnics, roof 3, sheds, stables, &o. The cotton fields, whioh were in full blow, were completely devastated. In Baltimore, week before lost, there were 127 deaths. In New Orleans, for tho week ending August 2d, there were but 85 deaths, and in La fayette, 18—total, 103. Of these 12 were of cholera. A letter from Athens states that workmen em ployed four miles from the city, in draining the field of Marathon, found the place of sepulture of the warriors who fell there in the memorable battle 400 years before the birth of Chnst. A man, name unknown, wont over Niagara Falls on Friday ovening week. Ho was in a small boat and appeared to be asleep or intoxi cated, and awoko to a consciousness of bis peril ous situation when too late. Mr Nathan Kobinson, Jr., n respectable ci sen of Bussell, Geauga county, Ohio, aged 45, was killed, July 31st, by being run over by a while endeavoring to hold by the bit a span of restive colts. Wo regret to learn that the rot will destroy nearly the entire potato crop m Central lowa. ■ We Ir-irn from our exchanges that tho disease bos also appeared in the vicinity of Dubuque, and in various parts of Illinois and Wisconsin. The deaths in Chicago from Ist to 10th of Au gust, were !>2, of Which 50 were by cholera. In tho month of July there were wt deaths, 17 of which were from cholera. On Sunday evening week, James Arnold, aged eight years old, residing in the family of James McGlllcn, fell in the feeder Lock, near Ravenna, and was drowned. oew- ■'— ■-- Tbi> Ten Hour Law. The working men of Pennsylvania should re member when they-go to the polls, that Gov. Johnston is their enemy, that while be was in tbe Senate, he tried to ilcfral the present “Ten Hour Law,'* by tacking upon it a Proviso, that children under the age of H years, might he compelled t» work more Ilian tenhonr* with the consent of their parents or guardian*, and no later than last winter he got up the same prevl so. and used every means iu his power to have it passed, but the Legislature was too thorough ly Democratic to suffer mere children to be sold to the sickening and .health destroying slavery of large manufacturing establishments in I itts burgh and Philadelphia. Is it not a shame that while our neighbors in New Jersey and Massa chusetts are struggling for this glorious princi ple. Gov. Johnston who professes so rnueb sym pathy for tho black slaver, of the Month should bo endeavoring *■> reduce to tho most abject s a very the free white children of Pennsylvania. Hear what the ‘Newark Mercury' says upon tho subject: Toe Tbs Horn Law.—lt is now understood that a considerable iimntwr of tho owners of Mills and Factories in Now Jersey, are endeav oring to coerce the employer®, children, Ac., in to non-observance of the Ten Hour Law. In PottcTson, and indeed throughout West Jersey, they have determined to break down the virtual; efficacy of the law; and it remains for the friends ofhumanity to insist upon its observance to tho very strictest letter. Wo would say to tho operatives, cease not your labor, but supply the evidence when wanted, and there are those who shall see that this law shall be carried into ef fect, cost what it may. We rejoice to say that in our own city, our manufacturers have come up cheerfully to its provisions, acknowledging their justice; and we consider it u stain on the character of our State, und a lasting reproach upon our people that they could be found con travening a law so humane and just. Black-Eyed Mason, Gay wrote this well known ballad upon Mrs. Montford, acclcbratcd nctress contemporary with Cibber. After her retirement from the stage, loveand theingrulitudo ofnbosomfrieud, depriv ed her of her senses, andslie was placed in a roccp tacle for lunatics. One day, during a lucid in terval, she asked her attendant wlmt ploy was to ho performed that evening, and was told that it was Hamlet, lathis tragedy, whilst on tho stago, sho had ever been received with rapture, ID Tho reccollectiou struck hor, and with the cunning which is so often >alliod to insanity, she eluded the care of tho keepers, afid get to the theatre, where she concealed herself until the scene in which Ophelia"'etitcrs in her lnsano state; she then passed on tho stage, before the lady who had performed tho previous part of the character could come on, and exhibited a more perfect representation of madness than the ut most exertions of mimic art could effect. Sho was in truth, Ophelia herself, to the amazement of the performers and the audience. Nature having made this lust effort, her vital powers failed her. On going off the Stage, sho exclaim ed— “It is all over!” .... She was immediately conveyed to her late place of security, and a few days after, .“Sho like o my drooping, Then bow'd her head and died.” Elio Yoar Papers. Having occasion, n few days slnoc, to look in to the files of this Journal, published twenty and twenty-five years ago, wo could not but think ot the satisfaction which every man would enjoy in tho possession of such a record. A newspaper is tho daguerreotype of Us time, and in those di minutive, dingy Bheots, wo had before us our present village in full life, as it exißted a in®* 1 * ter of a century ago. Tho men of business, with their merchandize and wares, and products, eaob eulogistic as now of their stock in trado; the politician, zoalous in the maintenance of the right, centred solely in him and Ins party., the competition and strife, the fears and hopes of all were before us as in real life, Ilere was the an nouncement of the marriago of those Who have long passed the meridian, and are in the. and yellow leaf” of age; and hero, too, was the record of the departed; whose affiliated succes sors aro among us still. The newspaper itself, with its grotesque advertisements and general typography, is the impersonation of the me chanio art of those days, and exhibits the con trast between that period and this. If every young man who takes a newspaper now, will file it carefully, in his old age he will not only have a substantial mirror of the events with which he was cotemporary, to gratify his curiosity; but will havo a record of important - facta to be obtained from no other source. The , trouble and expense: of filing and binding your newspaper is slight, and will be well re-paid.— Jamestown Journal. ggy A Persian journal was started in Tehe ran on the 20th of January last, under the di rection of tho Prime Minister, MirzaTaghtKhon. It appears every Friday, printed on two sheets, and consists principally of European pews and articles on the condition of the provinces. The first number - contains notices of the establish- watchmen in Teheran, the arrangement of post stations in Persia, : and the time of de parture for the couriers, who leave the capital. The former Minister, Hadji Mirza Aghassi, at tempted to establish a journal in Teheran seven years ago, but failed. '■ * - I -- - sv.* .-.jigs ' V Y *' * *r' + * ‘ V . , '*-n *“ *V * 1 > 4 •’t -* *> , *-*-*, * , » t L ** «*• l* ,*• % 'iS‘ - * r ‘* 1 % 1 .'., .•'( ■•'»:i,M.«i *t -i ■■)■-■ ■■* The Vote for .Governor.: -In our table this morning -vre publish tuo vote of. 75 counties, nnd the reßuls is ns follows: Bison - 46,(07 Powell 44,161 Dison's majority:..-- -The votein the same counties in 1840, was: Crittenden 65,241 P0we11.;... 46,(C( Crittenden’s majority • Dixon has fallen short of,Criten-. den's vote He has fallen short of- Critten dnn’s majority Powell has fallen shortof hisvote in ■•••• In the 75 counties -C. M. Clay’s ■vote is ■ . We have returns from seVeral other counties, unofficial, making in all 88 counties, official an heard from, leaving Breathitt, Carter, Clay, Floyd, Fulton, Harlan, Johnson, Knox, Lnwrenoo, letchcr, Lewis, Monroe, Morgan, Pendleton, Perry, Piko and , Wayne, yet to bo heard from, Dixon’s .minority thus tar is yoi, and the seventeen counties above named gave Powell 1,025 majorityln 1848, If they come in now as then, Powell’s majority in the entire State will be 68, The presumption,is, however, that Powoll’B gain Will continne in them in the same ratio. „ T , ~ __ John B. Thompson’s majority for Lt Uovcm or is 0 or 7,000 ovcrWiokliffc.— Lomtmllt Cour ter, (whig) \Zth4 SoMETHma Nsw.—Galvcmic Printing Pr/w. I Mr. F Foreman passed up on the Fulton, on I Snndny, on his way to Washington, to procure I n patent for a most, ingenious and practical in-1 vention. He had with him a perfect model of a printing press,- moved and regulated by means I of galvanic magnets. We shall not attempt a | complete description of Mr. F.’s discovery; suf-1 fico it to say, that ho had the press in full oper-1 | ation, with a form upon it, from which lie threw I off the impressions upon the rapidity or light- | ning. His paper-works upon a reel, andis con-1 tinnons, like the telegraph coil. The paper pass es over the type on a cylinder, and when one side is worked the paper is reversed and the other side printed with a most perfect register, and the sheets arc cliplcd apart , as they come | from the press by an ingenious contnvanco.—-. There is no limit, hardly, to the speed at which this press will work; its exactness ta beyond anything known in this lino of .machinery,; and what is better than all, Mr. K. says he can put up the largest sire press at a cost of not more than $OOO Mr. Foreman is a practical printer, and at present-a citizen of Now Boston, 111. In 184 U he had charge of the Herald, in this place, for a few weeks- Wo have uo doubt thathis “fortune is now made, and wo are sincerely: rejoiced at it. Vurcqttne {luK,i) Jingnirrt. ' The fnvntigntnr, a campaign paper publish ed at Harrisburg, discourses after the following fashion of Governor Johnston’s Sinking PunJ : “ In 1837 Governor Johnston, then being n member of the House of Representatives, voted for an appropriation of $160,000 to the Gettys burg railroad. 1838 Governor Johnston voted for on appropriation ofSrjoii.OOi). making FOUR HUNDRED AND FIVE THOUSAND DOL LARS voted by Governor Johnston, intwoycars, to this rapacious tJpt worn of Guv. Rilncr, that swallowed np $G57,y17 til of the poepie’s mo ney, and never yielding one cent of return to the State. This in good Booth vn aSiukiug Fund.” . . - ' HlaTntabaal for »»!«. , ftS? 1 . ’ft* i»st.tojll o( ibr AIU.NA, WrlUvllir iMltNtts J* rcMit Jjf tWool’r n’t*)** t«»l ui W’rlurtlle. It wilt ’■*- tf»JKn«l pfo,, R..TOIWt wn. / ' Pl "’}W* II.AKi’.I.Y PUiabarrsb CIS* Cumpauy. * N ANNUM. MKKTINii at lite rfl.'i'ktwUlrtiofllie A iMiiljurih U»»Conip>ny,tni 'be riiMJ «b! iwoperwuatoirive isTratirre ui avid buiuyan), ic*»bl »»aMIo«ir»»F in H e term nf ihirv jinrt, w*l U hr 14 oube Ottcc »< tt'ori*.eii *{'J MSkm*” '•ik^MVi’aui.v op a iu VAlbaMi (Tarn* for solo* OtTUATHin Horn* ell io*n»htp, Bearer cesnly,near b the village of SbrßfM.enr b,, 11 * 1! | '"‘J'i’i,.? ihe Ohio Fiver, arid twenty wild Horn l raining HSaerei; 75 0r0! which i»eleaw«. the km due well limbered! in aneaecfleiiiMaie of rn.iitAtinn, and snder good tenet. Tho building* eonm» ot a l«t|t< frame dwelling tome. large flume n.rn. fnurH' catr aje ,«.l grain t>nu.r». end other obi bmlJmji, “•°. a <»•» mil if in running order—a rood vnr.eiy of find, and a wrU ©f moil rxem{i«tti water ai tne floor. The Above leone of the mint heaotitui, ferhie and pn>- deeltvo Fairo-i in Ibll vtctien 01 coanlr) , wiilu.i one And n half miles of a good ateowbonl looking on Hie Ohio Kirer-ltto Beaver bosi* pairing ronnd Irmnlwict, a day, affording every facility o ailctid the l illnUrgh martet. fnqnire of me aohirnher, oo lue prrui.reA. aolfr trow UHAMtrr. nn.ei.r TTBKifrTlitTtiiii.-ri'Kirrp.B* 1 1 j deftlfablc propctlie*. carh V*!!?! •fleet, by lift feet drep to a wiJe alley, mi wh'Mi»£ l-rtff and aaluaMc «1 Uipg aWV9* priaiM to any rttcniivc incicautifr or bo.incM They ran lie void icpnrairiy ° r miy lx de>ii. * t * dcrtritie iiui-h property willCudll m “u -tend The aboreaic ututsbri«.K3 aildJ-.o Alaipcnu ititc.a ii now "*>"* cu-fnitflrr,lici.T A.*v ■ Uor. Johnston’* Stoking Fund IfiDQAQ VHOQ9i U>. IK vtt v sicU + v 4r senabo *v„ j(| A n<». »uut, ■ lu Iff JVr*r llini itirxt, /// It j' Uflicr Ik*>»!«. l?«*us 7iO itf A \\\ PI M;l2 l« '.\ * 1 m I*.', r. M . . \U If ur i ill wl uidtdio i* ol * /fl aufft. ■ P'lu.s"" 5 *"** (TSf kss £K>mxp ffV A y co G"Unt» kmkn’s FtmNisiiiNG tio<»i» |, ' Al «TVLK» io=l bi |||NXWN 4 c<».-» Genlleraca’* Fwruuhiug: Slow,' QU IPi No. tourth»lfe«u yEAVY HII.K 'i'cS"' N Mackf r«l, (Ma»* in’i'n ) 10 ‘(<>l '~3llll.lM«rgoNo,3 -<|o IJ®! %«o« , Now 1 ,0d, 1 , S by JHCKEMON, • __ _ 0 f ,rPT:K-jSru 6 .-*■“^gTmnKi^s/.N.. |) AIM OIC-5 ca«ks'»uperiiimtlly Pit iu * | gjOCOBN *rST5 —wahRKN’B ifßAU'li ,’1 lie re is, SS^ScgjSSSi^S jSS««4'si atllicMedical Depot. Finitbfield, street. SriuiPffi.V LANDS Fan Hai.s. —A, valuable .Farm ‘nYWFacrerof fiVTi-tale land, and In a high state of l" mileslfrom the: City, and thrce cuiiivatton,jmnsie wi R^( 6 j Depot, at Sewtolt levrlh stenSSoSt l“ndt., B . A good two story „f fifteen 1001D81 well arranged, ami m dwe a U a bam. of !U byC2; a large’garde.., W 0 *' Mnn’ntlnWte orchard,now bearing; together and a young it _ w a ctderprcss, spring house, w, V V heL? «oto house, and oilier buUdings-o in .’nokehouse.store house, |d readily bedlviil.nl. Per good order, roe Farm [f hour’s ride uom the ;?l'y SillbS .?the°l tt r interest to attend to the above Price 554,000. A „ M 50 Smuhfti’Ul *1 z-MK#r» OP AIjIjI extract of . aM {jJo C voungson auD PREPARED <“iil Bold y i Liberty Blrset. are foullJ t( J , ie puration; ibe * nc '* , sj?i I Y,* T if ilie orißin»l Aipencan Oil. eight limes llie strbngtU o 271 cents, each, with full It's P»> “P ‘° r “in every disease where ihe origi "n‘ b- The original Oil in its r claims to he tUe only Proprietors, i dft-w-tf ■% 4 t SPECIAL NOTICES; •• the MoMing\\Potl. ■ Mb r.niToa —Yon wiU please aappniee'.tbe namejbf i 8 c ,™j 0 B 4 Df ffi? if elected, would muie aiir»l-raie office?. . QulSttc aswhsatjißS^iJ^st delphia, a very large stock of teautiful ,^k„-w^ow of every nze and variety lraaginabte._Theyar prepared to execute all kmds of Joa Ana Fa._- - ; Vai?rnNo,in a style unsurpassed by antf Office in tne j countr;, and upon the Pittsburgh t June 0,1851, . iry FOa SAMU—aTHor situated on Überty street, north aide, between Hay fln d Marlmrc Mreels* . Fonermsapplytov - ' ; JOHN SNyDEB, jyrl:lm - at Bank of Pittsburgh, ; in-Tus name "of WItLIART w; IRWIN .Win.be submitted to the Democratic Convention iot nomination as their candidate for tlie office of President Judge o» the Court of Quarter Sessions of Common Pleas. jy«4:ic ' Register of WlUi.-\Vu are-authorised to an iiouncu that ANDREW BABCLAY, oftho Cjtyof Al leeheny, will be a candidate lor the office of. Register of •Wills, »übject to the decision ofthe; Democratic. County Conventioa.v • LouIav»IIe ; Journal, Ma; [From the l.v , Dr.J. S.Hongliton’B Pepsin, tor Dyspepsia, '"prepared jrotJi Reniuiiorthg Stduuteh of thaOx. • On the 7th or May, 1851; Hev. M. 0, Wifham3, Pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Chureh,mLomsviJle, Kentucky, was and bad been for a Jong time ooiwued to his room, and most of the time 10 his bed, with Dyspep sia- and Chronic Diarrhcna, and was* td all appearance, on the very vetgo of the grave, amhacknowledgcd tob? no bv his physician,*wba had tried all the ordinary means in his' power, without effect, and at the above named the astonishment, frurprise and delight of all) he was much relieved the first day: The third day ; he. left bis room; The sixth day, which was excessively hot, he rode ten miles willrno bad effect *, on the eighth,day be went oil a visit to the country; and. on ;tbe thirteenth day. though not entirely restored to his natural strength, lie was so far recovered as to go atone a joarncy of five hundred miles, where he. arrived, m safety,much im nrovedin health, havingbaU no distuTbar.ee of tbosjornt Eh”r * (As firstdosec/Pepsin. These facts are not controvertible, und thut thisisacasewhich ought to convince all skeptics that .there is a pbwer in PEPriIN ” Let phyticianeand dyspeptics investigate. K&VSER & M’DOWELL.Agent*, , ■>. l«ll Wood street. . . Vi &. O. D. try Mem tlnn Board of Trade Rdomt, comet ol Thirl nnd Wood «ireel«, every Monday evening pr*i3 in- Hint* to Porenta. -- One great source of disease iu childreii is the miUeahbinesß of parents! It would be just as reasonable to expect .a rich crop froni u barren soil, as that strong and healthy children should be boru of parent* whose constitutions have been worn out with intemperance and disease. A sickly frame may * : be originally indneed by hardships, accident*, or mtem nerai.ee, bur chiefly by Uie ialter. lu* impossible that a i course of vieo or Imprudence should not -spoil the wst I oonMuntion; and did the evil terminate herm it would be 1 u iu*i puni*htnenl for the folly of the iraußgressot UUI not -o For when once a disease is eonmuMcdj nnd throbah neglect in applying the propor means it becomes nvitca in the habit, it is then entailed lipon posterity 1 Female constitution* are as capable orimproveraent p» I family estates—and ye who. would wish to improve, not i only your own health,but that of your own offspring, by I eradicating the many distressing diseases that are entoi - I ed through negtector imprudence, lose no time in ptm- I fyin* the blood aud cleansing the system. Married per- I souß, and those about to be married, should not fail to I nuiiiy their blood, for how many disease* are transmit- I trd to posteriiy. Ilowofteridowo see Scalds. Scrofula I and ti thousand other affliction*, transmitted to the rising I generation, that might have been prevented by thi%timer I Fy prccauooii ? To aewiopUsh which, there is nothlnr I before the public, of the whole world, so effectual as Du I BULL'S LATEST IMPROVE? FLUID, EXTRACT; IOF 8 ABS APARI LL A , combining Yellow. Dock and I Uonlock, with the pare and genhme Hondura*aarsapor- : I ilia For genera! debility during Ibis warm weather, it- I act* like a charm, restoring elasticity of muscle and yi- M)DowEl^ . y Wlioiesale and Retail Agents, 1 140 Wood si, Piilsbnrgb. For sale by D. M. Curry and Joseph D^ag!® s **£JJ®* , ghrtir Ciiy v atJ now prepared uiinsure all kind, t of ritht, on lloiKi. Manatact-ific*, Goods, fllcreh.n- I diMiaSlorr/asdioTran.ito VrM«l*,ao. . f Aflampletturaniyfdriheabdiiyiuiiliaicsfiryortlie I limitation, I* afforded in ibr chararn-f o( th. I'.rmm, t who are m!l citizen, of l’iint>or,b,««» on* l lavotabty I known to the comma nil, foribeiitpradctire, iiurKiflcnee I G. Hns.cy.WWßsga'ey.AVm. Lari I tner. JfWalter liryant, Hugh l>- hmg, Edward liearel lion Z ifrniev ft.iiarbaogti.t*. M. Kirr. mnrld;ti I fry Oda Fellow*’ Hall, Mam BuiUinf, h'eurih lioHf, Vtnnm Wood and SmiiM'fd «iw«.,-l*mworgh } l!iic»fflpinii>l, So, 3,meet, lti and SdTue«.t«y» of ench , J lK .j. rr( ,Lot)i;e.No -»,n!cel*'.Man;l iiUTces- I N 0.9, meow ecety Tharwiayeveti- kfvMlcmSttr Lodge, No 21, meets every Wednesday evening.- ' , Iron City Lodge. No. tSi.meets every Monday ey ng. Mooni Moriah Ixxlge, No. 300, meets eveiy Friday erfuinffe -■ , * Zoeeo liodse, No. 353, metis every Thursday evening, at their Halt, earner of Sraitbfield and r'lili streets Twin City Lodge, No. 211. meetsevery Friday even ing. Hall, corner of Leacock and Sandusky streets. Al legheny.Orty. lumySStly try Annerona Itodge, L O. of O. F.—The i Anstjrona Lodge, No. 2K),1 p. af O.F. , intern every I YVVdiuesday creninig in Warlungton Hall»>\oca itreei* i 1X7"I• U. of O. J’lttpe of AlccUng, n Mali, Wood ttreci,‘between sih and Vtrgju Alley. Ffmocnou Lop#*, No. *l3B—;Mceu every Tuesday No, 9?~Mcci* in ami 3d p.'idaY of each month. . Iy. Hotlco—TueJooß.tiTtt3t,VrwLOßsSoaifri,on v iu»’ torch and Allegheny, m«cu on ibe aeeond Monday or •very mon>b atihe florid* Hoasc, Marketm;- n67yi Jon» Votmo.jr.s Secretary. fry f.UNCH served op every day at 10 o'clock, at OWSTON'S HOTEL, fit. Clair uteeu Uc‘ it PauUm,, Wm. -M. Eu. rar, ft!wan! Ofegg. A. I*. AnahuU. Wm .ColHiißWooJ, B o. Sawyer.r.lm>.Kent,Wen.Gorman. - EJutuol Lira Inanrance Company, OK NEW YORK. CAPITAL. 0i;3HO,0OO. COLUMBUS INSURANCE COMPANY. FIRE AND MARINE. ■ CA.yiTAi*y:S3op,ooq. irr* Office for the bLovu Companies in the Warehouse of K 8. Waterman A 8..,; No. ftjWggg"-*^ eM . PlUaburfth Life Ihcarnnee Company. CAPITAL ©loo,ooo* ITt* Office, No. T 5 Fouvrn Stbuot. .CD -OFFICERS: Prcaidont—James S. Hoon; • Vice President—Somuel.M’Clurkao. .. Treoaurer—JosepliS. Leech. ■.. Secretary—o. A CoUon. [O-Sec advertisement iaanother pariol Hnspoper . inyVhJ Petroleum 1 SMrkgiburg, KuaUngdon Co., Pn.,Murchl,'SI.■ S, M. Kier: Dear Sir—Year Pelrolcum is. walking J wonders in this vicinity; therefore, we would.thank you to send uai wodoienby ihcPennsylvapia Ranroau. ] Wo arc entirely out, and ft»"being inquired Tqrjaunoit every day. , Havtsvillt, Ashland Co.; Ohio, March 10, ’5l. S.MuKier: Dear Your Acenha lew weeks since, left with us four dozen Rock Oil, which we have ,sold. Please forward to tis six dozen immediately* / < ■ Your-medicine is working bonders in lh»S_regiou.— We can obtain several excellent ccrlirictrtcsyifytto dfr» sire them. ‘Yours. ic., • W> W, isCt)TT._ | F. reale by Keyset A M’Dowell, 140 Wodd street rib R. Sellers, 67 AVood streetr BA. Fahnestock JcJJo,, corner of Wood aiid Front street*; l>.M.Curry,D A. Elliott, Joseph o6uglass,arid 11. P.Bchwart*. Allegheny. Also, by the proprietor, . ' ; . 8. M. KILR. * aprtO Canal Basin,Seventh at., Pittsburgh -- Collecting* Bill Polling, ttc. JOHN M’COUBRV |0" Attends to Collecting, Bill Posting, Distributing Card* and Circular* for Parties, Ac., Ac, - ■ 10" Orders left at the Office of tho Morning. Post, or atiloltnea’ Periodical Store,Third st.j will be promptly attended to. ; v ImySLly 10" ThK professional merits of JAMES S. ORAFT, Esq, have pointed out such general, attention to his I name aa iAe candidate moH cenaia to.be successful in 1 the election to the .Presidency of the Common pleas— that H has been hitherto deemed unnecessary to present his name through the Press for nomination by the Psmb* cratic Convention. At a practical man of onslness he has no superior In the Stale, ns raafcbe known, by his measures in the Legislature of Pennsylvania,iaihediß» asirous winter* of lfi29, *3O and ’3t. HU CXporiehce as . a mercantile and manufacturing lawyer,insurance agent,, and auditor and master in cnaacery r and:famUi&r mcr quainiance with legal practice and i ovation to Btudy, I gave him in 1846 the almost unanimous recommendation of the Pittsburgh Bar for the Supreme Court, and emL nently qualify him tor the office to question, which require his peculiar working abilities to fall. Jyl7;tf ' ALLEGHENY. IP* Dftgoen«6tyvei*«£n Nelson & Co. would respectfully ; announce to-tbe citizens of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and vicinity, that they have had a large Operation. Room, with a Glass Root and Front, built arid aTrangeoexpreisly for the purpose of taking Daguerreotype Likenesses. -The best Da gaerreoiypeSjOn foe best material, ate taken at thu es-. tablishment, under foe special the p 7b e arrangementenables them also .to take Family- Groups, of any numbet of ln foe most perfect manner. ~ Likenesses of Mck or diseased persons, fokpnip any Pt Lafayette Hall, Fourth and Wood streets. Entrance op F# , „ _ r \j, nm^ “ Persona afflieted by disease* of are refom mended to pay a visit to Aunjl,. Jjg Arch streeWabovb Third. He is a well edncffted PTO*t Sessional man,nnd having pail’ particular .attention. Itt disease* affecting hearing, has acquired fiomhts sKut and experience better means of coping with thra serious. affliction than those which ore possessed by physicians; in,general practice.?—. * U " All ciues guarantied where malformation dt»*.n.otex*i M. - • • • uvl" ; tf state BHntual'iftro InmtMM company; BRANCH OFFICE, M Smitu»ih.d sr Pirnßoto l, . . . • £*i«jburgA, fIIarUMSS!. 5 r|HlEi)e«tevldencBdf,the>MteßJofrte^iKclor H In; : I' endeavonngtO'uakeihef&TATl;..MUTUAL, FlR** INSURANCE COSiraNY” nnect/lhe wranW .of, Re, community, Id Re unparalleled amount or boßli-eBs i which has been done—having issned T,900 Pdh cies during die pastyeur, thereby addin* to the funds of the company. Neatly insuredi. oflhe safest kind,in small,risks, and alarge; proportion insured foronly oae year. WUole No Policies issued. ... do do expired,-terminated «. ' canceled. ... do do in force- —• •♦•***.• Amount of Property insured* —• • • do Canceled, termirmied ami er* ... do vtsw ' do Premium Notes do Canceled, termin’itcd.eipr dy, 0J7,1u do in force....--- • do Ca*h Premiums received-.. .*^1^7,14 do do canceled **--•■* mv ». - ■ •■-gSlff&ftO • Whole amount of lo'se* and expen- • =• ' paid*•••»»••♦*■• •'23}4|h4!> • Balance in favororthe Co , In.cosh, To city or country merchants, and owners, or d» ilt- aiiUM'solHted or country property, iM» believed ti.M company affords advantages inpomtol cheapness, Welland security, Infcnorto no Itisuratiee Company u. ibUeoimtryV • ’ - • -. / -Vi . Conducted on the equitable and greatly lera of Classilicftliei. of Risks, excluding all ap* uii ha2a.nl*, insuring only a limited amount in any cality, tiiux precluding the frequency and oeci n sf*t«v.S f liren, ftgd also, on both the Stock and Mutual pi {Hi*- it not only possesses the cheapness and accommodation of both methods, but entitles the Insured to n partleipa* "'llis oodo P r of Ihe F. ItuihefforiJ. A. J. <;>tL-u,Jo[m U. Packer,Samao Jones. Alonzo A.Carrier. l‘Ulo C. Sedgwick, Hobart Kfou.fUniuel Jones. John F Kuibjrgnl;^ A.J. UIU.ETT.SetV. A A; CA.BRrBB, Actuary. . . ' N. It;—A Scrip Dividend of Gfleen per cent, on eapi riuis rnlicies hu* been declared by tbit Directors, ant is flow receivable at this Office forrenewa?.<,or redecn Me in ea#b at the end > r myl7ui&w -1 A* Af CAfiHlhßi A^CBt«- Dtamond Sparba. % ' / RECEIVED TU'DAY.2OO Diamond Sparks* selected To, CUrs Cuuers’ b fIicFAPDEN A CO. “a. w. Footer, ■■ ATTORNEY AND COVNSSLLOtIAT LAf?/ f\W ICE, N«:'W FOURTH STREET. WoiiJßirfai V* »£s* Pbt.H.r«t, Fa. no,lS:.Uwlv Purntture and Cbair Warerooutt* ; S JOSEPH MEVKU, AZi Pea n street, u&ove ibe Cabal Brid*e, keepa constantly on band and makes to order, alike lotrot piee*. every description c»i cy and I’laiii FURNITURE, SOFAS nudCHAIH?, of the best woikraansbip aml most approved styles. . - Futebascrs would do. well to visit bis Worerooro*. wy*27*dAwty ; - r "' •'V.'.'V--'- ■ J " irioAl» HU.L PROPERTY voa siLE -- A valuable 1/ property of 6G feel from on Virginia *tr*et r by 165 fret deep; on urbioh iserected two dwelling houses, each containing two room*, a large kitchen aod a.good cellar, with a Urge gafden.-hAvtng a utiraber of apple and peach trees; also, gooseberry busies* with a varie ty ot flowers, &e; a good outroven*and a.weUofieX <£jlem wa:er at the door. Price SU)0O. Tcrms.easy. ™ S.-CUTIIBEKT,Oen»IAgeut, OU 9 V V : ’ ' *- f AU Smithfield street, ; TjOSTON CRACKERS—Buftec Biscuit aiud Dyapep |s *l3 or tirabam Cracked receiveddifeclffom Dos* «o n ,' t ort«a»(ly «n ta»a c , ' • ' / 250 Liberty vireet>- •Ti'EFINHD SUGAti*—ia'bWn. Cruftheti, Jtv ajhl for sale “rt*!«« t M«,by • «o 3 Grocer* and Tea Pcalcrg.- —“ o’D MABt>*,(SOTTHffII)K) _~r. MANWACXU kEBS of .Cane Sc*l Parlor WSJ- : Chairs; Caue Seal EDCking CbSttefjße loarßSn: ; cepiionand InvaUd Chairs jy Csne Seat aminaantrr House Stools sSeuce»jl*otm and every variety of Common Chairs. mEmlm All •of which were manufactured ucacr Mr MM 11 their personal superintendence, and & \j ’* warranted both in maierial gtitnlnferior to none in the City* Dcslcis in ifict® wti* cie« will fiud ii to their especial advantage to call ana examine for themselves previous togolng euewhere. Steamboats and Dwellings furnished at the abonefit notice. A« orders paactuallTtncndedto. ' i.: IJT» ; '"Valuable RttU Entnte tt* Auction. t THBaUBSCRIDEtt offers far anle.on hie lerun, the following properly, ui lhe Cny EfaHi 01 No B l > ~ ,? fe''e I 'valuable ibiee *iory lirick dwelling honses, on Second streets, between Warier and Kerry, street*, the lot* being each. I9.feet'frbixt by £0 deep. . No. Contains 57 feel front on Third street, adioin ing the Third Presbyterian Church, on which is erected one four story brick house, used asa printiugomce, ana one'two Mory brick warehouse. c ■■ ■ .j\ . - If the above is not sold before Thursday, the 4th day. of September, at private sale, it will ihenua offered at public outcry, at, the premire*. Ageal for Johnston. & Stockton. Valuable Real Estate to Beaver County, -- - - AT. AUCTION. - - X fpilE SUBSCRIBER offers for sate the following prop-. 1 erty.vw; • -' r - ; v •' v .,. .. ■ Wo* l.Two Irfli in. FalUtoa.Beavercaunty, being loti Nos. 3 and 4, being about 10ft feet square,onwhich U erected one. block ©f four frame dwelltugvnnd one separate stone dwelliug, all two stories high. . No. d. One lot 5a feet front on Back street, opposite the eitertding ta tfve topof ths' No. 3. Two beschlots, each 50 feetfroul, and running from the road to tow water mark, on the Bigßeaver.' No. 4. One vn'uable-waterlat, 100 feeton-Wheel Race, with ten iffiares water powiernnaefced; \ No. 5, One tot opposite the water tot, SO feet front, and. extending to the top of ibehilh on which is erected one two slory brick More nnd ; warehouse, tiSbySyfeet; m? so,one trnraedweUlhg, two-stories high.-. No. q. One largo tot in Ncwßrightpn, Beavercoanty, ,being ahont I4Q tect on Broadway; andJaboav iJGv.fect: :deep, containing 44i*cre;on which we erectedt two largo frame dwellings, and oue small framenonse,used.: a* an office. This property war formerly occupied-by , ‘Mr.T. : C • Gould, and is very pleasantly, located/ being ■immediately oppostielhtfFallstan Bridge;. i No. 7.’ One' water, lot* immediately below FalUtim Bridge/belng about 100 feet in length, and extending, from Water street tolow watermark, or towing path. If rioisoM before Tbof&ay, the Uth day df Septem >cr next, at private sale, it will then be oflerej at pub ic outcry, on ibe premi« S j: Agentfot Johnston & Stockton. . : Dissolution* . , hnilE Co-Partnership. heretofore existing -between : 1 RHODES* ALCORN, in the Mustard, Spico and htiHiog business, U ;tius «lay .d\MpWetl by the mutual consent of the parties. AU'debt*'dbe by the late firm will lie settled at their old eland, No. Il?-Third 6treei r by WRIGUT : * AtCORN. io v?l om alt debtr duetbelato firm must be paid..: . , SCSJvS*- •; PtmftsrrfVAugusto,lBsl. WSL IrVA&CQRN.. Co-Partnerahtp. ; '\XTK have this day. entered into Co-Partnership for W ’ the■ purpose of manufacturing Mustard, Spices pnd for Milling aud .Merchandizmg in general, anc shall be happy to toe the old costomere of Rhodes & Al coni, at No. 117 Third ■ FiUibtfrgft; August 0,1851. • AVM. F. ALCOR^- }TN withdrawing from the fiim;o r jßflObKs S;?Ateoas v X in favor of Mr* Jons AVaiogr,d:tatevpieasure in re commending him andtba newfirm af ,WRIGHT'* AL CORN tdi their late customers and,the. public in general as being everyway worthy of theirpatronage audeon li deuce. jautaVv ; • W. R. RUODE9. Athenaeum Saloona andßall llshment. miiß SUBSCRIOKR rcspebifally iafoTina ihe XajJics X' and Gentlemen of the cities bad vicinity* that be hasieoted the obbve splendid Establishment, prepared and will be bappy oce. ■ 1 • Atso—slor* Mat HU Paper, With soitablo columns, caps, bases and bordering, for public halls or every, de scription, furnished at short notice. Call and examine at the .WALL PAPER STORK of J. SHIDRE, - au9:2w SrmthSft\g.wi*h ta.ptfrcbaseva usual mice? Jf-soralfat HOOD’S «V. 1 STOftK. SI iUof*« s/'cei, ■ ivtodoors rnmb.of Tbild, ond. iahe_a look ui, lnVnetf R-cck.'jufi there purchn^lyatch; esor any kiud of fine Gold Jewelry aiibeir real value, and nor be charged two price* for have usually been; bureau gel the wry best quality Of goods at the lowest eastern price*. :Do not believe wbat other*, interested in their own aalrSv tell you, but come aml»e-rffor your*eWe*~ All good* sold aiihis-cxtablisb* went will be wananico asrepreoemed at time of sale— so thatall may purchase equally safe and cheap; [aolg, KENT— And possession given itnmedi- V ately,oUir« Story BBICK HOUSE, (No; 191 Third street; between Koss and Grani). Applyto Wpnßr. * . ... WHIGUI‘ t ALCORN, • - No..U2Tbinlttreet, . opposite Sl Charles Hotel. -■ Notice. 4 LI. PERSONS interested -will take notice that A. WILLIAM TAYLOR,of the Eighth Warder Hie Ciiy nf. Eitistmrgh, Briokraaketyon.ihe S9th day of Joly, 1851, eieented to the undersigned & Deed of Atttgnmenv of an hil-Estate, in trust for the benefit of hia creditors' . - All persons indebted to said Taylor ate requested to naketmmediate: payment, hnd persona haying claims svilt present them. - . d- 410 WARD, Assignee, iyi Offieedtlt at- bet. Smlthseld andOrant. . - Notice. -v::;. r TkERSONS having bills against the S.B.DISPATCiI ends. B. CHIEFTAIN, Will please present thoia-. for settlement before the lGtli instant, at onr. Office, Noi 143 Foarth street. Anil all petssns a« hereby wrraeil not to trust any orthe brews of said- boats on our ac~ count,as wc will not pay any debts,which,lhey.mgy coDtraet. wiUidntourwrlttenorder/ r. . auU:lw : ANDREW fcEECtCsJH.A Cq ProposaUXoriOoa);andSltte|(* SEALED rROPOSALS for deliveringin iheSleretf at. iho Worta of itre Pittsburgh. Gas Company, - bunhelsof BrFUMINOUS COAL ana2O,QOU b«aUetsxrf SLACK, will &e received atthe pffice of the Company, uniiV-WedneadayVthe V7 ihlns lahti at 2 o'clock* P. Mi— - The Coal and Slack io be of ade& quality and delivered *. at such times aridiii shchquantitiesas aha}! be approved , of-ami directed The standard of computation for Coal and Slack to be 76 pounds per J&dsbel. Tbc payraenuto be made monthly retaining'3o per ; cent 'aaseearuy far performance of contract, . Piopfwals to be addressed to Thomas Bakeweli, Esq., President of the Company, and -endorsed Proposals for Coal and Stack.” JAMES M. CHRISTY, J •. -Treasurer. ' Orrics ov the prrisnueattG** Comfauy,} . . . AogatHS. 1851—aiUC:ld - S: - - DOOOS&CBOZIKR, MACHINISTS AND MANUFACTCHEBS, _ . . OH/ MILts.RUI£*DINGSiiAOMtV War air- Jft na '.ef rJKavund+ intAr is*‘ OAio amf Penn- stdeania Railroad PtpctJ AU*aHSHY;<£tr. SllSisSSlUverand Land srieam Ed ffinea. Hydraulic Presses, of all descriptions ; Coppqr nlaleV Liibographic and other Presses; Gold Stamping and Refining Apparatus, togeihet with MfU Machinery ingeneral'boill uponthe most approved pious of-cou»- stroctlon, and workmanship to »lus atisfaetkm of cus» . tamers. • ip* AU orders left at Messrs. Cochran, M’Bride 2fc Co?s,Noso Wood street, Piitsburgh,or addressed u* ihesubforibers: Allegheny,will receive prompt attention/ aqlt - •.*. ; : POPPS » CROZIER. v RctaßataftoYfre Sale, y. IN EASY LIVERPOOL, OMIO. ' HAVING. MQce November -Towd Lou in the above borough—a major purtio acuraisener?,.! have been induced u> ofier an addition- - al number at private sale.undat prices and on terms of payment which wiU come under thoraCana of all persons disposed to purchase. Eaah iolco!iiains,iitr : eluding ihe streeti and allis s, one-fourth ofanacte—, being 60 fcvtfronVby ISO feet deep. Two additional PoUrriesyand an Iron Foundry, have been built during the last and are how. in succesafaloperalion The Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad, to connect with, the'Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad toßeaver, kav been located through Liverpool;A charier has aiscs been obtumed for a Plank Roadfrom Liverpool m New Lisbon. Property hasbeenpurehaied-by.aoniapany from Pittsburgh) tor a Planing Machine, Acv and a company is about being forated Uverect Glass Work s. There are place* of- worship for Episcopalians,: Presbyterians and MeUiodislsiaßomanCathoUcGhuiCh ha* been contracted for, to be finished the coming fall j. and the Unionist* are preparing to purchase,and build a place of worship; Means ofeoueat ion in ibis town are ample. Apply to JAMES BLARKLY, * ; auf cor.Gtband Liberty.Bta., second slatyL I LCHRIST’S RAZORS.—The undersigned ha* been \J appointed Agcntfor thesale of Wm. tiUchrlst’s Ra zors. These -Razor* are;mariufacturbd iit the United States, and areunequalledin quality byeltberßntishor Americanmaaufaetnre. KveryßhzOrts warrautediaud if irdoes not prove satisfactory, the money- will be re turned or tho Razor a* the purchaser may wish This artiele ha*been in tue .severaJyears,and :is rapidly superceding every other Razor, with a good i strop; they will notreqfttre hldulng for te nye&ia. - • For sate, wholesale and retail, at the Watch and Jew elry Store of W. W*WILSON, ; - tniM - ■•"'o7 corner Fourth ami Market ats^ • Ik/rUROKItr MURDER of Flies destroy-: l& edby the use afcthe ludia Exterminator, K. B. C. 'rice Scents per sheet. Tens of thousands of .Roaches, '.RaU &ncLMice have been destroyed , by Barge as&.Co’s. : Exterminator, Price 33 cents per box. There; articles ihave neverbeen known to ihil ..-Solo wholesaie'add re* itail at the Medical Depot, SOSmithfield street . UuH /. OBNOY: FOR' NEW BRIGHTON SASH FAC-1 TORY.—Onhandcoristaiiily.nllsiies of Window- Sash, furniahed ai'ritahufttcturer , 9 prices; - MetcUdiila. and others having orders utb requested to give these ISasb a trial as to quality and price,. \ • ■■ v -v c , ; anti; ; :>""• 11. O. KELLY; 4 CIKNTRAL TEA STORE—Just received l&U chests ) loose and packed; which Artvoflered to tbepublio at the lowest tiles of any thit atc ioi tWmMketl \ : TheseTcaa havmgbeeabtmghl beforethe teceAfadr' vance-will be sold lower than any can new be brought' on. Families can rely on being furnished with the fines* gradrs'of every variety. ■ aiiU H O. KELLY,Fifth at. JUj$T KGUKIYiSD-o . tsobng*priEie lUoCoffeq; . ; 25 do./LtUpiyra da; 10 do‘ OldGovernraeu; Java; ; -20 Jo' Pepper and Allspice; i '. B.lmVgoi . i- ~ .: 50 da ' da- - - small; ■ 5 do No; 1 Salmon; ,* f : . 25-do. No. I Mackerel; - ?u ■ . i. ... j ; :60halfbbis.auditedFlihv.fof ftuaar.-awt. ! 25 bis. oldatock Rowell & RobisonY-Tobacco, 20 ,EBP TONGUKB—A prune article oa hand and for iiS saJjo by. i tairlt) tWM. A', M’CUJBfr dCtl-i. HOI.I/ANU llRBRlNG—lOkegaoew Holland Her-. ring, jest received and for sale by ■ - . . ■ tall WM. A. M’CLURO A CO. :•» nhJKja .MACKEttKU—Oneorade dner than- No; t,-y WM. and the heads taken off, For sale by .■■■■■ %ull , WM. A. M’CLURO * CO. .pyOURe-loobbla Superfine , IOANCY BRANDIES— U Wild Cherry Brandy j Lavender do; Blackberry. do; i . k Barpberty : . do; , l In store and for sale by ' . FICKEISEN & STODVENEL, f aaW . irUNGKR BRANDY—By the mllonor b«Ue—uno*• IjT cellent aructe for Cbotora,;3^i?Tfb®»i* c 'j* n s “ ie r N»iiis r “!*!‘ y MCKFJBBN & gTOPVENBU J 'tjtBENCifcORDIADS-A great mutajr of the beef ir quality, just received ana for sale t>V - ; ou ff . * AOTOOTEMEtt.' ~HIriCIPE, lUgalia ana Union CigartVwiUl omei Uy : i r co., i-aaia - cor. Flta! and. Wood s|g. .. PIHITS OF bbU.for»alo bv ; na!s B. A. FAHNESTOCK&CO. ■ UP.CARB. Syr ace— 2oo y 11x1 anls is. foraaleby S. A. FAHNESTOCK Jb CO. iTtiiBACCO—3U l>is. good brands la store and for sal*;, T aa!3 KING MOORUKAD. \v ■. 1», Y v :» ~ ■>; ' • ms&lm • t 1 N StisiE -- ~ -- v. . i-Y •#;.*’.-V: L\. ••[*V P-*