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O, • , -C , F... -' ' • A'‘ -_f.44 -„,4,-, - - *-1 , 1- , -ft-1,, -, 4 ,5-..-p - v.-4 , ,t,i,-- -,,-----, -1 - ; --„ ~ . ., : r..----- -_,-*P - +-.4.v -,,, ~..I ' 4 ' . "" P;..,- n t. ' '' l • 4 ' '';'' ' tr ' '4' ..' ,"- '4 - /..."'"' -, - ''''.• - • ~.su- V 4 -4 - , f.43:5,, ,. .7. , 44:5.,04. .0,- , .0. , ` ....•-...." 7 . - -V` ~%{4-4-2 ~.,',- ..eytin,--•••- • 1,, the Landon Times, Sept. 25. Dlr GliditOU.Of Pamphlet on Neapolitan itktiGovernment has at length is sued to the charges advanced against i fi n g r . , 43la , datone's letter to Lord Aber d is nets° eyg as might be anticipated, e the t wdec - waents before us, to deliver a c fr e ju t iginerit on the main questions at : e ne e c i. us wi issue. Mr. GladstOne's charges were grave in the - extreme. Wha t -he allegia ligrffiffeithe-13fft _ernment of.the Two Bionics was nothing less _then ."incessant , systernatic and deliberate viola tietiteithritopn' wholo.classes of. citizens, .;and those "th e very classes upon which 'Minh/ solidity, and. pro ' Fess of the nation mainly depend,'_.,E tt . eliort, indeed, of such prodigious criminality could hat-alvarrantedalsiple*klAppeid from an English statesman to the public opinion of Ea - roim , Against the .:dontestio- .administratation of an independent State; , Mr: -.'Gladstone knew - and acknowledged at he had niimihion to judge Napolifan politicS by lila nitCetanditia of propriety.. It.was_only. - because'-the - offence surpassed in its :magnitude and exiniple: dinarY instances :'of misgovernment, that he; a .strangettainterested in- the Anatter,,eicePr;.4( the common .ground athumanity, ~conceived: comfelledlo - testit against 4,practices outragbig religion, eivilization, - stia.aeceney." - ..- Unfortunately; i,t_was an inevitable conse quence of ~the very theite cherges they should be, to a great-extent, general intheir terms it was absolutelyjuipOssible ' . .that under, such an Aaministration Ili..ll3ltillstone de scribes he could obtaima circumstantial authen tication of - factis insufficient - strength to estab lishconcitisions of which,' by hid- own Own observe; thins, he had been morally sawed., .Of this' weaktiMo in his case he was well aware: - some one or more particulars, "said he, “titthe,', statements I have made, error of .formslidOven., error of fact may have crept. ara;-prepaxed' for the possibility that if those should ii manner reach the persons whose coridnefticiy pringipary concern, they maybe.met by general denial, and that denial may be supported and accredited with : some instance or instances of apparent, nay, possibly, >of real confutation."' In the letter containing his reconsidered °Pin: ions he speaks to the same effect, so that hewn- ticipates, as it were, the contradictions whiCh have now been given to certain of his assertioni,; This is perfectly reasonable, and is in the natu ral course of such proceedings; but the Neapoli: tan Government is entitled, on the other hand, to argue, that if, they can upaet'or. disprove . the specific cases into which Mr. Gladstone has ven tured to enter, as examples of the testi : They have demolished all that vrasinbstatitial enough to be encountered, intithey. may claim, with some. show of reason, the privilege of meeting by general denials the more general attackii. ' These lictuoiderations will indicate_thedifECulty of our case. Mr. Gladstone admits that he may be wrong in details, but appeals for thAsubsten tial corroboration of his chf:trieirrir that noto riety of conviction which.ial perhaps, the best of all evidence, bat which it is not very practicable to reduce to palpable -form. - The Neapolitan Government expatiates upon thepbirit which is surrendered, and-eludes that upOn whiah its op ponent relies. It is undotilitedlY true . that Mr. Gladstone excited the most lively sympathies this country by his statement of the number of, Neapolitan subjects imprisoned for politirsit o cifi fences, and of the sufferings they endured in confinement. Perhaps, indeed, without these - particulars his general charges might have fail ed considerably of their effect; bat he especially remarked that, " in his own view the mere num ber of political prisoners, like the state of the prisons,.was, in itself, a secondary- feature of the case." The crime against whiCh he so indignant ly inveighed, and for which he dragged this government to the bar of European opinion, was that of deliberate and systematic illegality—a process by which the law itself was &averted into an instrumeut for destroying that peace„ freedom, and life of the subjects which it was created to protect. My main charges," says. he, "go to show that there is gross illegality and gross =fairness," in the arrests, trials, and treatment of persons politically suspected, and it is only, he, adds, "in connection with the proof of this, 'that the number of the prisoners and the state of the prisons come to be matters of such importance." This is all very reasona ble and very plain; but though the accnseapar-, ties might meet the prosecuter on vth- -r gee of prisoners and the state of the prisons;" they wereleas - competent to do so on the general charges of -" gross illegality and gross unfair ness.' Now, Mr. Gladstone, though he did not cer tainly commit himself to a positive assertion, did nevertheless pat the.number of political prison ers in the Neapolitan kingdom at the amount of 20,000, arid these figures he supported with such a general voucher as would secure most readers, confidence_ Moreover, the point was in reality of somewhat greater importance than he subse quently described it, for not only did it affe Jot the generalenormity of the transactions, im peached, but it constituted that particular grow , men by which "whole classes" were rep oesented as the object of government persec- a h on. therefore, nine -tenths of these ntr A b ers aro t o be attack off as resting solely on exaggeration; there does mine a connichrablrJ collapse in one part of Mr. Gladstonof 8 ease. The Neapolitan Government now -,leolares 'drat the number of prisoners & I .. not, at the Mr. Gladstone was .7` 1 , - execed 2,024; kilt are we at once to give credit to this. statement, in face of 'the conclusions plausibly supported by Mr. ! 'Mad-, stone from his observations and inquiries on the spot 'I doubt his informers were likely to exaggerate facts, but is a' Neapolitan pollee • Wholly unlikely to mistate :them, or &Neapolitan government to approve the expedient? 'Returns are often enough alleged to be fallacious "even under the vigilance of our lynx-eyea senators; and whatmay they be under the-Administration of the Two Biciliee what difficultpwag not ex perienced in getting accurate figures the other day from /Inrush and Ennistymon ? We do not think our belief compelled in this matter, and it is certainly not invited. • ty With. regard to the state of the prisons, we will only say that we give unhesitating credit against any Italian manifestoes to what Mr. Gladstone asserts he cam, and this is Sufficient to substantiate his genera charge, 'apart from all that he may have collected or :inferred. appears that he committed a mistake in describ ing the "Maschio of Ischia" 88 below :the of the sea, and a cell in the Viearia as .being without light. He also misplaces the soene•of! a certain anecdote respecting the_ suppression • of a prison, revolt,. and on all thele , points he is contradioted, Withpiebable justiee, by the writ- i erts of the reply. But are these• snob mistake's; as would destroy the general credit of letter?! He himself directly anticipated Such argiunentsi —" Even on the severity of these , sentences,"l says he, "I would not endeavor to fix attention! BO much as to draw it off from the great fact of. illegality, which seems to me the foundation, of, the Neapolitan system." This is Mr. Glad-j stone's one great charge. He says that men are: arrested legal . warrant, tried' without! legal protection, and imprisoned not before And! after trial, but after acquittal, too, withoutlegal! cause; and it is under these conditions of social life that he denounces the needless cruelties' attending incarcerations as such monstrous' evils. If it were necessary to add anything to ,the testimony of such an eye witness -as Mr. Glad--; stone, we might simply appeal to the defence of Peed°, who speaks to Neapolitan judges in a i Neapoliton court,, .of rather dens than places of security, where ten or twelve men are' heaped np and hemmed in like foul beast's."' Whatever may be the thought of the speaker's. political integrity, it is preposterous to imiegine, he would state a falsehood respecting the prison'. from which he had just been fetched by the goalers at his side. Into the general reputation , of this ex-Minister, or his actual complicity with, the regenerators of Italy, we are not disposed to enter. The question is not whether he was, really affiliated or not to a revolutionary society I but whether'such a trial as in his ease Mr. Glad stone describes from his ownknowledge -was not an utter perversion of-justice and a -signal-ex-- ample of " gross =fairness and illegality." Possibly the'conclusion, - of Erie COnst was sub-' stantially correct, butweinot witnesses, of the -vilest character permitted-to: 'put -in the' most worthless testimony, arid were not the whole pro ,ceedings Conducted with 4:taid_disizegaid of, ju-, dicial equity 1 , - , :On the whole, althOugh - foi the rsa:S9o , stated there - may be_ difficulty in sate hating &sum mazy decision, we are of opinion -that the gene .ral truth of Mr. Gladstone's charges is tiot:tha-; ken by the reAfrixf ittette'driqd: As the Nea-; politan Clovernmentitligi'fidi creditio :the up rightness of Mr. Gl adstone's:metivesi'arsi as as - ' body, either injtttly Britain,rbi#Mi.'M'Far-, lane, entertains a ny' opposite opinion, we need add not a syllablesnuttell appint as this. What was, required to be ascertained was simply whe ther Mr. Gladstone had not been injndicionean his application for intelligence or imposid upon , by his several informants, and we: that any such errors have been shown. Ott - the contrary, the counter pleas' of the Neapolitan Chavernment are confuted to' plinin whichz the exception of, this number :o£: .tire more or less relevant to the main -issue:. That issue is the general legality or - illegality of ju dicial proceedings as now or recently conducted is the kingdom of Naples. That the, " constitn .... ton " heßeeet u..ltiolated no one defilialtllfaCile , ?; litical triakr-he'aimen n meruv no - iit_i clete.' - '' lions„ anttrat *-- ty luut.l - Atten4e, ( C the incareplition. titOvi ' ki) cannot f° *l t Ic itruovi moment,dtalielieVe'Ont no rot ;pH 605 would, Aladertilte have spakenr:whaVhe Unmake& to die pedide of EifropaV;4l4 ,- -f.tostittifiati tilt law itself to the purposes.of political reaction; and the Neapolitan Government has replied in: a , statement which leaves this pointof the denun ciation virtually untouched. - -- -.-----:: . _ A .hrtinithir ffEl=lE ===== ,L! HrTSBITAGH, MOIINENG. OCTOBER 24. • DEMOCRAIr:WI 'MK E T , ‘“ECHL 'TREOTHENT , CH? THE UNITED STATES JAMES BUCHANAN OF PEINSIEWLYANI - A; • • iSutiact if> decision of the Denweratir General Convention. FOR VICE PRESIDENT WILLIAMKING 01 1 . At. auscsori Stitject;tO Size same decision. gar-.By ,telegraphick dispatches received in ithis gi s t derday we ate informed that Presi t Frtraioaa has issued _a Proclamation warn -1 -persons against connecting themselves with the enterprise against:a partidii of the ter ritory of Mexico, which Is said to be in progress in Texas and other,Sonthern States. Ohio and „ Pennaylvaida Rallzoad , We arty pleased,to learnthat ten miles of the above Road vrest.:of Wow: Brighton has been completed: The cars' yesterday poised" over the track, and iiVe4 thlneyiorlied well. A conside rable number of our citizens, who were invieed, were present on the ocesalon 4 :- We learn that it is the intention of the Company to have the Road completed to Alliance some time in De• camber ; at which place 'it will intersect the Cleveland Railroad. THE C A LIPOR 11 IA ELECTIONS Our readers will remember, that we called their attention, some days befOre the late elec tion State, to. the ,statements that were made in Whig papers respecting the elections in California. We told them that these statements were untrue ; that the only intelligence which bad been - received was common to both Whigs and Democrats ; that even the Whig papers then received either spoke of the election as being doubtful, or as having resulted in the: choice of Mr. JOHN Bmm,aa for-Elovernor ; and that the statements made here 'were written merely for effect, and were utterly untrue. The last ar rivals from this State places the matter beyond doubt—The-Aka . oatifortnirmta'San Frandsen Herald, and the Sactsmeute Transcript all admit the entire success of the Democratic candidates. Therefore .t•Califoltda., may be putdown among the DemocratieStates of the Union. The names ofthe,,ilentlernen elected to the respective offi ces are given below, Sovernor-- 4 Joln.Pigler, of. Sacramento ; Lieu tenant Governor—Samuel Purdy ; Justice of the Supreme- - Conet—Solomon Heydenfeldt ; Treas urer—Richard Mann; Comptroller—W. 8: Pierce.; Attorney General—S- Clinton Hastings ; Surveyor General—Wm. M. Eddy ; Representa tives in 'Congress-Joseph W. McCorkle, Edward C. Marshall., The Legislature, composed of ninety members, 113 about two-thirds Democrats, as near as can be estimated, and the . , returns are, nearly all in. Only one Nirhig is elected to the State Senate this year ; so there will be two Whig Senators in the %sem. California Legislature. The ilrilitaut Victory in Ohio. 'She triumph of the Democracy of Ohio Bur poses any thing on record ! It is complete and overwhelming ! Not only have our friends there carried the Governor and Lieut. Governor, Sec .retary of State, Auditor of - State; - Supreme - Judges, Board of Public Works, and Attorney General, but they have also secureda tremendous majority in both branches of the Legislature.— The Statesman thinks the relative strength of parties in the Legislature will stand thus : In the. Senate, 25 Democrats-9 Whigs—l Freesoiler ! In the }Rinse, 68 Democrats—=26 Whigs-2 Fyeesoilers ! tr-mman A more brilliant-tri umph,,-the Democratic Party never achieved at the ballot box. They fought against a foe des perate; : determined, sanguine, and scrupling at nothing possible to dishonest ingenuity, to carry the day against us. But the Democrats fought like brave men, conscious of the purity of their purposes, realizing the incalculable value of the issue, and aware that, if defeated, corruption and wrong would trample down constitution, truth and law, to promote their unholy ends.'•' aromas of the Woolly Heads The Miners' Journal, at Pottsville, and the Commonwealth, at Washington, Pa., are abusing Henitor COOPER like pickpockets, and charging him with being "one of the leaders of the op position against Gov. Johnston." The Common wealthT uses the following , choice language in ispealinag,.of Mr. Cooper: COOPER, although the Whig — H. - 8. Senator from this State,—although he is high in office,—has forfeited the confidence of the Whigs of Penroylvania„tmd.has proved himself, by his base and treacherous conduct, unworthy the res pect of any party. He stands before the people of the State„ convicted of one of the basest grimes—'4la4tt*Dar He has,slemonstrated that, 10 - .griitilyrt, he cravings oflAir malignant heart; he Will stop at nothing,—and' stab to the vitals the friends who have stood by him in his darkest hours !it Of course such compliments as this will please the Silver Gray branch of whiggery, and induce them to yield a hearty support to the Woolly Head candidate for President, Gen. Scott A New Coluaterfeit Our neighbor Mr. J. D. VfnuAnts yesterday showed us -a new " Relief" counterfeit $2,00 bill on the Lancaster Bank, which has just made its appearance. The note is dated 20th May, 1841, , -and is tigned byli: Blither& for Cashier. The,ongrasing and paper are poor, and the base character of the-note is therefore easily discov ered. A roll of these notes was yesterday pink ed nriby a, clerkyman near the sti3pi of one of our hotels. No doubt some dishonest scamp had accidently droplind.them . there. j ,Let the Police look out for him.- g®-'The Memphis (Tenn..) .4 4 oReal, - one of the truest Democratic papers in , the Union, thus • . speaks of a recent letter' ritten by Perinsylva nia's great statesman, Mr. BUCHANAN : The Hon. James Let no one fail to read the noble letter ,; in t - ilay'sdniper, Cf, the. Bon. rt is the production of a statesman, whose- every pulse is true tethe Constitution and the rights of the people , and the States. He has heetra tensively7,44-in,!!Or', can. ; for the Presidency. - - The.. people can cannot. -hesitateto :Choo:se •bett reen. him and a 'Beet; `Webster,. one of whobi - Wilicertainlyhe thowhig candidate.. Wcprotid ly defy the political friends of those-gentlemen r to :itradiide anything from *ern; which can parallel the heightened and patriotic:principle ' which throngtoutTervades 'Mr. Buchatutn's -liefinkF. • M.' 'sax. , Esq., the independeni candidate, has been elected Presh:tent ,Tmie pf the district composed of the counties of Botael.- set, Bedford, Fulton and Franklin cotmtie's, over his 'Wig' competitor, Mr. Lyon, by a tremen dous majority,-probably upwards of 2000. ger The Plank Road between Somerset and Cumberland is nearly completed. THE MONEY MARKET . There is a gencral complaint=, attii?,44-f:; : oar,.;, citizens in regard to the “tightziess ofthe aney market." As a matte ;of CoursetheEit aremortf . iipplioations foriki , orkit, this bOlts-Watk l __ institutions setup diiposell to accommodate }Tome of the besti'VaPir has been thrown out lately. kiecielifvery scarce, especially silver coin .1' -The-stoelennarket- 3tse tindergaber but- littler change. The stock of our Bunks has advanced, BB will be sees by our table Ohio id - PermaylVanialiallroad - stook has again de olined, and therelaa.aleo been a,derline inmost kinds of copper stock. The following items" are from the . New York Evening Poet of Oct 20: The tk hag. et been active to-day, but prices armore buoyant, ..After the general 'rise we had to notice on Saturdilytiorning, there was a_reattion on - Batarday afternoon, whick.is. not only fully recovered, but a farther advance 'has been obtained this morning.. No sales have taken place of federal stocks. Bank stooks continue to advance: Bank of Com imerce gained 2 per cent rDelaware and Hudson I, (for a few shares only ;) Morris Canal ; Syracuse and Utica 1; Erie Stock ; Erie In comes 1; Erie Convertibles ; Norwich and Worcester Virginia 6's Steningica I ; Reading t ; and Harlem The demand-for Virginia stook is- on the in crease for foreign account, The shape in which it appears as a coupon stook, renders it particu larly adapted to 'the Wants of the continent of Europe, where, hitherto, the, coupon - federal stooks have been mostly in demand. This stock, like New York state stock, is considered of equal security with our federal stocks, while it is lower in price, and admits of a large rise in price as its intrinsic value becomes more known. The aspect of the money market is very cheer ful. The week opens hopefully. More confi deuce prevails. A diminishing reluctance to discount paper is apparent; though the offer ings of first class names hive become light. The quotations is from ten to twelve per cent. The rates of foreign exchange are without 'change. From 9f to 10 per cent., the best bills can be bought, though a few ask an eighth, and one or two a quarter more. We continue to receive liberal contributions of ; specie from the south and west.. The Union 'steamer from New Orleans brought $33,834. The Sub - Treasury held a balance of $3,050,- ,5 545 90 this morning. ; The receipts from the Customs during the week, are $434,663'73. The amount of specie exported from the Ist of January to the , 18th of October, is $32,127,- 728. We stated on Saturday, that seven passengers by the Illinois steamer, had brought, each of them, one thousand dollars. It should have been printedt .one hundred thousand dollars, or seven hundred thousand among the seven. The estimate made by the purser of the steamer, of $300,000 as being,in the hands of the passengers, is, we are credibly informed, one million below the fact. The amount of United Stktes stock issued to foreigners, from 27th September to 17th Oc tober, 1851: Load Of 1842... " 1848.. -$39,000 The Rochester, Lockport & Niagara Falls Raiirnad Company are in the market for a loan of i 250,000 on their mortgage bonds, redeema ble in ten years, and bearing an annual interest of 7 per cent., payable half-yearly. The Pork Trade The pork season will be later this year than usual, owing to the drought and other causes. As yet, we cannot report any large operations in the neighborhood of Pittsburgh. In Cincinnati the "killing Beason" has also I been postponed for the same reason above stated. The Commercial states that "some hundreds of Ohio hogs have been already slaughtered by Boaas, but this is a mere trifle of a day, and but a fraction in the grand account of a season —not afall indicative of a commencement. " The mark of this season's slaughter, should matters turn out as favorably as anticipated, is set at 250,000; but we apprehend it will fall short of that, if reliance is to be placed in the statements of papers of contiguous regions, which hold out the idea of a large increase, and a diversion of the business, to some sensible el tent, from this point. However, we shall see." In Louisyille, says the Journal, new contracts made, but farmers are firm in asking $3,75 and $4,00 gross. Large engagements have been made In several of the southern counties of Kentucky, to drive to the market at Cumberland gap; price, on delivery, lif cents. In the principal hog growing counties of Illi nois, there will be fewer killed'than last season, but the quality will be fully tea per cent better. In Indiana, along the Wabash, bogs were of fering freely at $4, but packers were holding off for $8,65. There is more activity, at this early day, in St. Louis, than at any other point. The Louis ville Journal,: of Tuesday, learns from a reliable mercantile firm, that the whole stook in St. Louis is only about 3,500 hbls. pork, end 18,500 bagged hams; of the former, 8,500 are in one house. Sales of 11,000 bagged hams, and 60 casks of the same, which is two-thirds of the stock, were made a day or two since at si and 10 Cents. One of the paoking,ustablishments at St. Louis has been killing hogs already, and 1,000 "still fed" huge from Dubuque have been contracted for, to be immediately killed and turned into bacon—and an extensive provision house has the product of 600 hogs cut and: hung up in smoke, houses for bacon. Two Different Stories. - The Harrisburg American, a paper said to be edited by a brother of Gov. Jonnwros, has the following declaration: We, therefore, wish the Whigs of Pennsylva nia to understand that this State has fallen into the hands of the Opposition, because the Na tional Administration and most of its special friends, determined that Gov.-Johnston must be defeated and the Whig party sacrificed. The Pittsburgh Commercial Journal thus re plies to the above: The Harrisburg American attributes the defeat of Governor Johnston to the machinations of Daniel Webster and the tacit acquiescence of President Fillmore. This too, we take leave to say, is altogether wrong, and we consider the oriminations of the Harrisburg American alto gether unwarranted as they are rash and omi nous of mischief. The reader will perceive that these statements do not exactly correspond. Hem—Yesterday's Journal contains a long Government advertisement, occupying eight closelx printed columns of that paper. What will gra. Grundy of the Gazette say to that South Carolina Election. The Charleston Mercury of the 17th instant gives the following summary of the votes in each congressional district and in the aggregate, as far as heard from, down to the previous even ing: First congressional district Second do do Third do do Fourth do do • Fifth do do Sixth do do Seventh do do • The majority for co-operation by the above is 4,863, and giving a co-operation majority, as far as ascertained, of six out of seven of the con gressional districts. Adding to the above the reported co-operation majorities in the second congressional district, and deducting the ru mored secession majority in the seventh dis trict, the preeent popular vote is 7,129 for co operation. The grumbler of the True Democrat cote plains that as far as the support of General , Soon is concerned, "Pennsylvania and Ohio are gone." This of course is untrue, as Scorr's name or influence was not known in the elec tions just pastz-Cleve.'Herraci. Oh, dear! Beginning to deny your own acts already! ficott's name was just as much before the people of Pennsylvania, during the late, campaign, as if he had received a regular Fede- , ral-Whig4ntimasonic nomination. The rallying: ary of that party from the 8ahl:13 , 11E111 to the Ohio, was: "SCOTT, Johnston, Strohm, and the Tar iff of 1842." The Herald should next deny that. Gen- Scott wrote the celebrated " hasty-plate of-soup" letter Distressing Case or Suicide at Wellstrilie, One of the most distressing and unaccorinta ' ble cases of self-destruction that has ever come within our knowledge, and 'which has cast a gloom of deep sadness over our community oc curred on Thursday morning last. Early in the morning, Mr. Josere A. ROBITASON, the new lessee of the Missouri House, (recently kept by Mr. Jenkins) rose from his bed, dressed himself with the exception of a coat, and apparently went about attending to the duties of the hotel, which he had moved into the day previous.— Nothing was seen or heard of him after he left the bed-room, and his non-appearance at break fast time, after repeated ringing of the bell, created no little anxiety among the family to know of his whereabouts. Time wearing on and still missing, not only the family, but the neigh borhood grew much alarmed for his welfare; and the knowledge of his being devoid of a coat increased the general anxiety. One of the board ers, after spending some time in looking about for him concluded to examine his coat, and in one of the pockets discovered a letter without direction, written in a legible hand, the sub stance of which was, that " he was tired of the world and an unworthy member of society, and hoped all would forgive him for the step he in tended to take," &a. The announcement of the contents of the letter led to a general search for his body,—as it was now rendered apparent he had made way with himself,—and parties were ecttt out to reconnoitre, some to the hillsback of town, others with hooks to the river. After a search of about an hour along the shore in front of town, about 11 o'clock his body was found near the water'e edge, in the eddy of a flat-boat having committed suicide by drowning. These are the material facts In regard to this most distressing affair, and we would not even venture a conjecture as to the probable cause which lead to the consummation of so deplorable an act. Mr. Robinson was quite young, (being only twenty-seven years of age) had only been married about a week previous, and had seem ingly nothing operating ou his mind to drive him to the rash termination of life. Ile was born and reared in this county, but had recently been living in Gallipolis, where his father now rest des,—was a gentleman of amiable disposition and business qualifications, and beloved by all who knew him; and his sad demise will be great ly lamented by a large circle of friends and ac quaintances in this vicinity. Surely the ways of the Almighty are inscrutable, for we know not one day what another may bring forth Patriot, Oct. 21 $35,500 . 3,500 The London At/talcum, in an article oom• mending the public school' system of the State of New York, after giving a few statistics, de rived from the last report of the Board of Edu cation and the number of scholars taught, and the cost of each, remarks : 'The 207 schools in the-New York district, with their 107,868 scholars, involve a yearly out lay of 274,794 dollars. The year at , school in cludes a period of 240 days attendance—so that the average expense of a really good system of 1 instruction for each child amounts to 6 dollars and 86 cents a year, or less than three cents— not quite three halfpence--eday. It does not seem to us that this outlay is very extravagant under any point of view. No system of pollee that we are acquainted with is so cheap, If it prevents only a tithe of what would otherwise go to the erection of prisons and the salaries of police magistrates, it is a good bargain for the commu nity to have made. It costs our own metropolis about 40s. a week to support every thief, pick pocket, and burglar who infests our streets.— Five years' public education of the New York' urchin may coat the American public about six or seven pounds ; but at the end of that term the pupil is able to take his place in society, and repay it many-fold by. his educated industry.— In London, the average cast of each criminal from first to last is probably not less than £4OO. So that, if early and careful training when young would save even a small portion of those outcasts who now fall by a necessary inheritance into a life of crime, at the same expense as we find in curred in the great American city—the public would gain largely in the mere money account. Education is by many degrees the cheapest of all discipline." Hanging of Kossuth and his friends In The Vienna correspondent of the London Daily News writes thus, in regard to this mat ter: Co-operation. Secession 1,118 On the 22d September, early, the names and effigies of the Hungarian fugitives were publicly executed by hangbag, them' in the market place of Pesth, with all the dreadful solemnities which accompany the execution of a -human being.— Disappointed in their passionate desire to wreak the most frightful vengeance on the head of HOB nth and his Mends, the Austrian government has hung them in effigy. The Mirror, of Pesth, reports the fadt in the simple _terms which a state of Beige permits. The military were drawn out and formed into a square, within whickthere appeared the usu al gallows. The officer in command read the sentence of the court: martial, according to which 36 persons were sentenced to death in ef figy, having been-tried in eontumacion, (Anglin, while fugitives from justice, and found guilty of high treason. The sentence having been read, the hangman was ordered to do his duty, which he did by hanging up a string of black boards, on which the name of the sentenced criminals were written. .3,017 2,307 .1,884 1,133 . 1,424 715 .2,747 1,103 .1,374 1,455 Of course the military were indispensable, otherwise the populace would instantly have torn down the boards, and hung the hangman and his commanding officer in their place. PILIROBLT. —The following is a princely speci men of brevity and generosity : 0111dINNATI, Monday, Oct. la. Hon. A. C. Kbigsland, Mayor— I beg leave to subscribe to the Kossuth Fund, One Thousand Dollars. J. SMEAD, Citizens' Bank. Smead has a heart as big as all the bankers in Ohio put together. ..','''.4.-.',‘4.1,:,'.''..7Z:".;'7,-'7...7,.'''..-,-',- '', l .- -. ,:i : ;- ' :, '.. ' ' ..' ' • ',,":',,-A.:`,:. ';':'`.:'.".;!.,t:,^4 -:-':',''-Z. . ' -,, ~-.,,,.....-...,- ,Z.,,,:,,j :'. . • _ SnlbblingsVatitit;a4PPingg -__\ ~,. Ballville, Sandusky ccumry, 01,1 n, wanAestroyed by fire on the night (if thil2thoefirsnid to be from $ B ,- 00,0, 4.1 4 , 6 0,91'im wftleh4liere was blzt $BOO in „ mance. - The Gmid Lodge of Ohio meets at Cleveland on Wednesday, the 22d. Several hundred Ma sons from all parts of the State of Ohio will be present. , The Bridgeicin (N. J.) Chronicle states thht a Bank •is about to-go intaoperation at Port Elizabeth, to be, called, the Merchants' Bank, with a Capital.nr, $60,000.! '•Bagt3 • ' . Mr, J0hn_D.....,T0y,, an.,employing . printer of, Baltimore, has - presented the foreman of his :press -room, John F. Cook, with a handsome gold headed cane, in token of his regard for thirty years' faithful service. • , • , The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ; has decided 'that•the proper authorities, acting 111 good faith, and for the benefit of the schools, have a right to exclude a girl of bad character 'from the public Cohools. The Court below has 'decided the contrary. The fishing vessels which belong to Newbury port, Mass., are 'BO in number, employing 985 'men. The aggregate amount is 5012 tons, and the valuation of the yeti - Bela, with their outfits, may be set do'illEit !$211,900.' The Consul at Havana, Mr. Owen,. whom some , ~of the newspapers have temoted several times, 'still performs the . duties'ef that office, according to the Washingtoy correspondent of the N. York Courier. The Bank of England uses in her accounts no less than 60 folio ledgers, filled up completely every day ! 28,000 bank-notes thrown off daily, and all so registered that the abstraction of a single note is followed by immediate detection. Pardon'reekluibt, dged 92, a - soldier Of the i ßevolution, Was killed on the railroad track, 16 miles from Buffalo, on the 16th. He could• not get off the track quick enough, and was knocked down by the engine, and immediately killed. The ghtutiberebtrrg (Pa.) Whig mentions the failure of Mr. Frederick Roener, an active mill er and merchant of that vicinity, and states that. Mr. Lewis Denig, an , old•and. esteemed , cititen, and one of Roener's endorsers, had committed suicide. A wag who was asked' to buy the Bank Note Detector, the other day, said he would purchase it, if it 'would detect a bank note in his pocket. Gov. Hunt of New York has appointed Thurs. day. November 27th, fora day of general thanks giving throughout the State. The Albany Reg ister says that'll° Executives of the several States have agreed upon this day as the one to be ob served as Thanksgiving day. A serious accident occurred on Sunday , even ing, to Mr. Wm. Van Nortwioh, baggage master on the Pilot Line, bet Ween Philadelphia and N. York. In j umping .frtm the oars on entering the depot at New Brunswick, N. £, he slipped, and his foot falling beneath a car, the limb was com pletely severed from his body. Father Mathew preached his last sermon at New York on Sunday, the 19th inst. • 9 Eduaatlon Cheaper than Crime ~K;' > r'~'yr'~.. IMIS .;••- ' • " hterry,laerri.iittle siteaw, Tell me:;:hastAhott'iaell my dear? I let bun with as azaTet dream. • • athulf-ireeping But he tattled! " I passed him in his church-yard bed— A yew is sighing o'er his head, And grass -roots mingle with his hair." What door he there? 0 cruel! can he lie alone? Or in the mace otie,more dear? Or hides he in that bower of stone, To cause and kiss away my fear? " He doth not speak, he dint' not moan— / Jihad, motionless he lies alone ; But, ere the grave snake fleshed its sting Ttaona warm btu he. bade me bring And lay it at thy feel Among the qaisies sweet." Moonlight whisperer, summer air, Songster of the groves above, Tell the maiden rase I wear .• Whetherthott bast seen my love. "This night in heaven I saw him lie, Diseontemed with his bliss; And on my lips he left this kiss, For thee to taste and then to die." Mr. Webster Disappointed The majority against Gov. Johnston, although enough to satisfy the. Locofocos, will not come tip to the point necessary fully to gratify' . Mr. Webster. His decree that it should-reach "twen ty-five thousand,", haft not been carried out to that limit. Bue.the defeat will still prove a balm to an apostate mind, and may stimulate Mr. Webster on in his work of prostrating the Whig party. MB" The above is copied from one of "Wool ly Head" organs of Whiggery, the Washington Comnumwealth, and shows conclusively that the Antimasonic and Abolition branch of that party is determined, to make war -upon Mr. -Weseren, because he has had the manliness to denounce the traitors who have been, endeavoring to bring about a dissolution of the 'Union. We differ with Mr. WEBSTER on nearly every political ques tion, but we are Tree to say that his course on the Slavery question has been honorable and patriotic ; and if he prayed (Jr the defeat of the arch fanatic Gov. JOHNSTON, he did nothing more than a thonsand other distinguished Whigs, North and South. Marriage in High Life. The New Orleans Picayune contains a humor ous account, in a letter from Nicaragua, of the marriage of the Princess Adelaide Clotilda Louisa Squashee, sister of the so-nalled;Mosqui to King, to a sable gentleman, familiarly called "Jim." "The royal palace was tastefully decorated with highly-scented hides. Every preparation being made for the celebration, the princess en tered the palace hall unattended, except by her pet goat. Her beautiful blaok hair, greased with possum fat, hung in profusion over her shoulders, and contrasted finely with her splen did dress, which was made of coffee sack. On the middle finger of her right hand she wore a rich and costly tin ring, made from a sardine box. The guests were all assembled, but the happy lover had not yet arrived. The princess became impatient and went to seek him.— She found him playing at marbles. She accosted him thus: 'Jim, weddin all ready an you no cum!' Jim replied that 'he had cum to the elusion not to marry, cos if he did Victory wouldn't give her no more penahnn.' The prin cess was terrified ; but a lucky thought struck her. 'Jim,' said she, 'bimeby my bother die, then you'll be king.' The words had their ef fect. Jim threw his arms around the neck of the princess; their lips met; the sound that fol lowed was like that heard pulling a bull out of the mire." The Boston Post--the ablest of all the New England Democratic journals—thus speaks of our recent election : The news from PENNSYLVANIA continues to be glorious. She has acted like herself in putting down the pestilent politician Johnston and stamp ing her indignation upon the disturbers of the cornprcmise and Whig anti-slavery agitators.— With :ill the patronage of the state in his hands, with ull the arts of the demagogue, the great est personal activity on the stump, and the most unscrupulous use of party machinery, Johnston has been defeated by the young manly and un hackneyed democrat Witttms Btatsg: The high protective tariff issue was made by John ston, and that, too, is decided against the Whigs. The result will be hailed with joy by democrats, and cannot give dissatisfaction to true patriots ' of any party. " HIGH= Law" MiIIIBTERS.—AWe cor respondent of the Albany Register corroborates statements which appear in the Syracuse Star, as to the shameful conduct of a portion of the clergy in that city. Re says: " The ministry and the politicians bore a con spicuous part in getting up the recent riot and outrage ; and some of the former gentry, not sat isfied with what they had done, in the streets, took the subject into their pulpit on Sunday and not only desecrated the day by fulminating their treasonable doctrines of resistance to the execu tion of the laws, but disgraced their sacerdotal robes by assuming the character of political demagogues, and , endeavoring to stir up sedi tion against.the government and laws, among their congregations." Rey. John Little, Pastor of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, in Waverley Place, N. Y., who has for some days been on trial before the Presbytery, for preaching heretical doctrines, has been found guilty of every specification al leged against. Mtn, but one, and was then acquit ted, with a reprimand and a caution not to of fend in like manner any more. The principal fault found with Mr. Little, by his accusers, was that he taught "that the providential eris tenoe of a civil government entitled it to a unani mous obedience. " Hon. J. D. Bright was struck by paralysis, at his residence in Madison, on Friday, shortly af ter dinner. He was speechless for some mo ments. bat by the aid of a medical attendant was restored to consciousness. Valuable Farm for Sale. THE subscribere, Executors of the last will and testa went of William Manown, Sr., deceased, will offer at public sale, on the premises, on the 20th day of No vember next, the valuable Farm, containing 1001 acres, situated in Elizabeth township, Allegheny county, a' d two miles from Monongahela City, and on which is erected a log dwelling house, an elegant barn, and other improvements. There is an excellent orchard of fruit, and the land abounds In first-rote cosi. This term ad joins the lands of Ebenezer Caldwell, Esq ., James Wall and others The entire Farm is tillable, and for excel lenee cannot he surpassed in the Township. Terms made known the day of sale, JAMES MANOWN, JAMES WILLIAMS, Executors. Aionongabelo City, October 18 Washington Commonwealth and Pittsburgh Saturday Post copy three times and charge this Office. oct24:3t liffononguniski &publican. HERPFTIC SOAP —TM+ celebrated article, air mi derive the skin smooth. soil and delicately removing tan and redness of the akin, will hereafter be kept constantly on hand and for sale by the subscriber. For curing sore chafed hands, and roughness of the ,kin, it launequalle‘as all-will be convinced: who give a trial. The Herpetic Soap recommends itself. Pries cents per cake For sale only by WM CUTHBERT, 50 Smithfield street. DICTIONARY OF MACHINES; Mechanics' En gine Work and Engineering. Comprising draw. ings and descriptions of every important machine in tactical use in the United States, Great Britain, &c., i ncluding complete treatises on Mechanics, Machinery, and Engine Work. This work forms two large volumes comprising nearly 2,000 pages, and 6,000 engravings on wood. . A Catechism of the team Engine. illustrative , or the scientific principles upon which its operations de pend, and the practical details of its structure, in its ap plication to mines, mills; steam navigation and roil• ways—with various suggestions of improvement. By John Bourne, C E. Treatise on the Steam Engine—in its application to mines, mills, steam navigation and railways. By the artisan Club. Edited by John Boning. Illustrated by thirty-three plates, and three himilre tt and torty-nine en graving* on wood. General Theory or Bridge Cniatruction. Containing demonstrations of the principles of the art, and their ap plication to practice—llarnishing the means of calcula ting the strains upon cords, ties, braces, counter-braces, and other parts of a bridge or frame of anyilescription, —with practical illustrations. By Herman Haupt, Civil Engineer. Mechanics' Assistant A thorough practical treatise on Mensuration and the Sliding Rule ; adapted frr the ascot carpenters, ship arrights, wheelwrights, sawyers, t a y uter t i i i i lumbermek todents, and artisans generally. pen Appleton' s Mechanics' Magazine and Engineer's Jour nal—natural, experimental and mechanical philosophy ; The Arta and Sciences, Edited by Julius Adams, Civil Engineer. Published monthly. Terms—Three Dollars per annum, or twenty-five cents per number. • All of the above are for sale at the Cheap Publication Depot of R. MINER Jr. CO., oct23 No. 32 Smithfield street. Dr. • Maks:Mrs Foust'la Seminary, KITTANNDTG, PA., WiLL OPEN,foritsSIXTEI SESSION,on Wed- EtFr nesday, October 29111,181. Tsars—.Per Sasiim et' 22 Weass—Payable Advancs: Board and English:Puition, - - VAN Piano, with Singing and use of Instrument, • 20,00 French, German , Latin, Drawing & Painting, each, 10.00 Bed, Bedding and Washing, - 5.00 Stationery, - • - - - 75 The two Sessions commence respectively, on the last Wednesday in April and in October. Pupils are not re ceived but by special arrangement, for less than one ce s sion.. No deduction for absence, except in cases of great emergehey. NO EXTRAS. Circu.ars, containing Recommendations, &c , can be had of Mrs. G. R. W h ite, Market street, and of Mr. Mellor, 81 Wood street. LaaP29 A . l T 4i4 V: - - • ;, , - 1 - .I . 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' - jf'/'A' -P:::-''.1! -e, 7 -, - ;", , , ' -.7 "1, 1 : '7,- '-- --;-' -,-- A.-- , .' -,.'s"-",-,' ', 7:',!i„'7=7.--44: -;,....,_ , ? •`,, 1 f .. .; :` , -.`,fr , a1.64--,‘--', , ,fy - , '' 1. ; "' ; - ',"'" , ..7' ; ' - '".. -. 1 ‘-,"•,:; , ,iAf ,',; 2!".."i"';.''.1 . ...`,""!..-2,- - .. "r.,-.^., 4,-, ,":" 4 •- ,,,,,, ,.; - ;. ! 1 .., . !,, r'..-„, , „ MOE ty t _„4 Loiies taut Messageir What is •atd Abroad .•, -. .... r .. ~.,:1.,..;;;2,!.:2..•'''''';''.. SPECIAI. any I:S T rso r irde j" tee ll tin a tToytt ar r m " eli i t Wi ste li olltg 4 the i* qosi to from the doors oribtkinbisribert - - sepflof HARPER - dr Lai , • 11:T.Odt- ~adreutiweOdeon r/i " :diet, basemen Wool and Bw Feuni m Er n a th mp . ment , No. 2,meets mend Mitilieslaysillibfberlighach Pittsburgh Degree Itodgc,No.4, meets 4d and 4th Tues cloys Mechanics' Lodge, N 0.9, meets every Thurstlai even:ing. ;• ; , m, Western Star Lodge, N6:l4eets every Wednesday Iron Ctty Lodgo, No 182, meets every Mondayei'ng. Mount Moriah e, No. 260, meets every Mondayevening, uvening, at Union Ha corner of Fifth and Smitutleid. Zocco Lodge, No. MU, meets every Thursday evening, at their Hall, corner of Smithfield.and. Fiflhstrbets. • Twin City Lodge, - Nix 241; meets ' every FtfdaYiiiiiii? ing. Hall, corner . of Lennon k and Sandusky streets, Al legheny City. ' - (may29tly . LET Aactgorono Lodge, 1.0. or 0..P.....The Antenna Lodge, N 0.281,1. 0. of Meets Avery= Wednesday evening in Waxhington Hall, Weed * met ja4:ly. Mutual Life Inettrisiie• Conipaziy,. OF NEW YORK. CAPITAL, $1,280,000. COLUMBUS INSURANCE COMPANY. POLE AND NE. CAPITAL, $13011:14000. Ur" Office for the above companies removed to e Bookstore of H.S. Bosworth A Co, No: Str ?dirket at m second door from the Diamond. .The_ Offiee, N0.131' Water street, for rent, at a very lovvvate, E. BEESON, 4Bent• ENCOURAGE HOME INATrrunorgE‘ .... .'" OITIZMNS' INSURANCE, 0 04 1 PAt0 _ .! 1 ; 01 PITTIBEIT !GM. C. G. HUSSEY. Pram ..... W. MARKS. Seei Oillai—N9. 01 Waurrt.,7n Warshouss tlf C. H. Grant.. fp`Turs Com anyis now prepared;to insure all hinds of risks, on . ((Cline!, Manufactories, Goods, Marcher), dire in Store, and in Tmisitu Vessels, &c: An ample guaranty for the ability and integrity.of ttic hustitaion, is afforded in the charaeteVof the Directors', who are all citizens - of Pittsburgh,Well and favorably known to the community for.their prudence,Ltnelligenee and integrity. Disscroas—C. 6. Hussey, Wro. Bagalei , Wm, bid: mer, Jr., Walter Bryant, Hugh D.:Kitrg, Edward flertzeil-. ton Z Kinsey S. Ilartrangt. S. M. Kier.' marlYnt- nedallaWlo3oll fitatehleas Maaking.." rine, "Celebrated Matchless Bleek l agrsupertor brilliancy to any ever offera to the public., The ` „ proprietors challenge one trial, which. toilifirotri the fat: Manufactured by Iledgkinson* Co. , - Quarry streeti North Third, Philadelphia; and sold.at - - t. •-• S. N. WICICEP.SI9OII . is Wholetadelling and Seed Warehouse, N 0.184 and 188 Wood . 61, corner of Sixth, oet7:3nt . Pittsburgh. enzons itiontrisen: • • $l,OO. ONE DOLLAR.. $l , OO. 11j- Daguerreotypes. .43 LIXIMITSSEB taken at the new Dagnerreotype norms,' Lafayette Hall, Fourth street, a few doors from Wood, (or the low price of one dollar, and upward, according to the size and quality of case or frame. (Er Rooms open and operating from 8 A. M toy ly e M. Citizens and strangers are respectfully invited to call. ittep2Bdf YEIRODr. appeot Improved Extraet,or W tlie DOCK ..AND_ SARSAPARILLA —Tor ,tbe Cure or disease, or as a lifirintpariAer of the bloat ,and as a general tonic for the system, is artrivalied. The curative powers of this bziract are truly wonder ful, and all invalids should make immediatelriniof the 0 Yellow - Dock and Sarsaparilla? ft cannot injure•the most delicate patient. Then fly from Mineral nostrums to seek hi/Pa . :life, and vigor, from this purely vegetable remedy. Titelcgi fore, however -broken in health and spirits, however loathsome to himself and whers, let no one despair of recovery; let the patient only understand that the hope of his physical restoration ties only iu Gnyzott's EY tram of V'ellovi Dock and Sarsaparilla," and persuade him, for hit Itfebt sake, to try it, and we have no itcsitaf,, lion in Predicting his !peg dy restoration to health. See advertisement [Prom the Louisville Journal, May "9th, 18511 Dr. J. S. Umagistonts Pepsin, far Dyspepsia, Prepared from Binect.or the Stomach of the „Oz. fl 7 On the 7th or May, 1851, Rev. N. D. Williams, Pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Chureb,in Loalsvitic, Kentucky, was and had been for a long time confined to his room, and most of the time to his bed, with Dyspcii sla and Chronic Diarrhtea, and was, to all appearance, on the very verge of the grew, and acknowledged to be so by his physictan,who had tried all the ordinarfmeana In his power, without effect, and at the above nanura. Mac-the patient, withthe consent of his physician, corn. meneed the use of Dr. Houghton's." PEPSIN," and to the astonishment, surprise and delight of all, he was much relieved the first day The third day Ite left hie room. The sixth day, which was eXcessively hot, he'. rode ten mites with no bad effect; an; the eighth day he' went on a visit to the country; and, on the thirteenth day, though not entirely restored to his natural strength, he was so far recovered asto alone a journey or ve hundred miles, where he arrived in safety,much im• proved in health, having had nodisturbaree of the atom: act or bowels, after takes/ the first doss of Prysio. These facts are not controvertible, and that thts is a ease which ought to convince all skeptics that there is a power in " PEPSIN." Let physicians and dystsepticsinvestigate. KEYSER & trPDOWELL„ Agents, jell Il40•WoOd street. 117'i. 0. or U. V.—P , ftee orMeetlns,W tsbington •I all, Wood street, between sth and Virgin Alley. Prrrsausou Louse, No. 356--Meets every Tuesday •eening. rdestcaornts Fascastrlammr, No. ST—Meets tst and 3d Flits, oreach month. mar:s-4y li7 A Brost Remarkable CA/be or Total Blindness Cured by Petroleum.-.We invite the attention of the afflicted and the public generally to the certificate of William Hall, of this city. The ease may be seen by any person who may besteptleal in re lation to the facto there set forth S. hi. KIER- " I had been afflicted several yearn with a soreness of both eyes, which continued to Increase until last Sep tember,). the inflammation at that time having inc voiced the whole lining membrane of both eyes, ard.. ended in the deposite of a thick film, ciet which wholly stroyed my sight. I had an operation performed, and the thickening removed, whieh'sooh• returned and left me in as bad a condition as before. • At this stage of the complaint I made application to several of the roost eminent medical men, who informed me that "my eyes would never get well." At this time I could not distin guiskt any object. By the advice of some friends menced the use of the Petroleum, both internally and locally, under which my eyes have improved daily until the present time, and I have recovered my sight entire-, ly. My general health was very much improvedby the Petroleum, and I attribute the restoration of my sight to its use. I reside at No. UM Second street, in this city, and will be happy to give any-itOorrnanon in relation to my case . WILLIAM' MEL.'" _ Pittsburgh, September 17,'1851 . Fat sale by MYSER & IbPDOWELL, 140 Wood st.; R. S. SELLER 5,57 Wood street, and by the Proprietor. seplB DEAFNESS, noises in the bead, and all diaaavevik able discharges from the ear, speedily and permanentik removed without pain or inconvenience, by Dr. HART LEY, Principal Aunt of the N. V. Ear Surgery, votivi mtoay ke csulted at 99 ARCH street, Philadelphia, from 9 3 o'clonock. Thirteen years close and' almost sunilvided attention to this branch of special practice hon.-enabled him to reduce bis treatment to such a degree of success as to find the most confirmed and obstinate cases yield by a steady attention to tblrmeans prescribed n Associated 'initialed's lasurarace Conspae ay or eh* City of Pittsburgh - t W. W. DALLASi PresI—ROBERT 'FINNEY, fiee_tyi 101 - "`Will insure against FIRE and MARINE - RISKS oral - kinds. fees in tifimongailalo ireass 7 NeS.l24 wed 1 . 2 Water it. ntinconosus: . W. W. Dallas, Italy Patterson, 8 H. liartloP, R. 8- Simpson, Joshua Abodes C, faalson, Wia, A4 cur, Edward.Unegg, A. P. XnAnts, Wm..Coillxiimoul, LI. Sawyer, Chas. Kent, Wm. Gorman fhb%) Pittsburgh Litsliiiiharouso•VomPluire CAPITAL 41100,000. Er Orolcit.No. 75 Fotrani Szosirr:Zll OFFICERS: President--J ernes S. Hoon Vu, President—Samuel krelurkan. Trmiarer—JosophB.Leach. See retary—C. A Colton. - LEF - see advertisement in another part or_ this paper myter Us A. 0. D. ICS Meets above-134:4'rd or Trade Rooms, corner o Taid and 'Wood streels,everV Monday evening. pra Collecting. EiIII Poitlug, ft& /OWN WOO ÜBR Y ID" Attends to Collecting Bill Posting, Distributing Cards and Circulars for Parties, &e.; lee. par' Orders left at the Office of the Morning sr at Holmes' Periodical Btore,Third st., will be *promptly attended to. 500 DOZ. MEMO LAMBS WOOL 'BIIFRTS-41911 DRAWERS—Justrereived-br - oet23 • MASON & CO Q ILK VELTEM—tio Pieces moatittetntatilecolorettoez 1.7 opening at z toet23l A A-MASON & CLEW . IHILDREWS ZEPHYR WORETRIEGOODS.-.100 doz. Spencers, - Hoods and Comforts, 'Jun received. orb A. A MASON tr. CD. , MASON & ca, are now argVAPhput ttandfanc icflored; a i lw"lggni Ca Dregs T and areaiyrectivAg-newandfisinahxdy. - toe= T INBRED 011,-40 bile. in prime order, for tee by oet23 B A FAHNESTOCKA CO. _ . SPIRITS OF 1' RPENTINE.-25 Ws. !or sarkt by frANNEWS for' trale - DY , I ot 123 FA HN moturtect ' SSPIPHIES-5,0 Ludt chestui2 H. L. and ,(9.' P : Teas 4 ` " Colony a n d Cltalan '" se boxes Green and Black 10 bhds. N.O. Sugar; 50 bbls. Loaf sea Ormhed Sugar; 40 boxes assorted Tobareo; • 20 M. Havana and Cuba Cigars; 75 bags Rio Coffee; 25 LagayraCtffee; 20 " Old Government Java Coffee; 50 boxes Rosin Soap; , • 5 " Castile " 5 " Palm and Alniond adap; 5 " Babbin's Soap Powders; 2 " Yeast" " Born Starch; -- 5 • " Hecker% fatina; . • • 3 " Rice Flour; . •.. 10 " alienates; 2 " Isinglass; ' ' - 20 " Star Bandies; 10 " Sperm Candles; " • Cocoa and Brown; 5 -" AfrizariGlnaer; •- • ' 6 " Long Is3and Mustard.; 150 sacks fine Dairy Salt; 50 boxes Clothes Pins; • - 1 cask bladder; 10 " Potash ; 15 MAL Nos 1 and .3 Mackerel ; 20 '" N.V. and S. H.7.slolasscs ; 30 kegs Ground Spices ; 19 doz. Bed Cords; 75 ". Corn Brooms ALSO—Nails, Glass, White Lead and Cotton Yttra.l Wholesale and Retail by J. .WILLIAMS.Ik...OOI,.• oet22 North-East corner Wood and Piftii-itreets. E=l AN Elution for Preaident, Treasurer and six Direct ors of the Monongahela and Coal Hill Turnpike Company, wilt be held at the house - of H, Belattoover, South Pittsburgh, on Saturday, the 22d 'day 'of Hor en:. Der next between the koala of 10 o'clock A. ,L, and- 1 o'clock, h M. W. C. ROBINSON, 00t2b.3 .tvr• 'Treasurer, !ADM AND MANADZII Prices of Adevission-first Tier and Pasqua* Mic,;" Second and Third Tiers 2504 Reserved seats Dress_ Circle 75e.; Private Boxes 8400. • . • Doors open at 7 o'clock. Curtain rises at 71. • - 07 Second night of the Grand hi eratic Ballet:of - - - -L4.--8,1 17 51V1 4 1 ,1 ' ; FRIDAY EVENlNff,"Oithber Mb; Uie petrrpq = will commence with POOR PILLICODDY. Zoloe , Rival Baya area, 14" Lit Mtaa Tigrei .1114 Fatah:lE4 - The whole tomnehtie •+ , f, trOP4IVE„. _Da. ti • , r erand Parovestir.A lll o. o s4...TPlF - j Lij erica. t -14134bIgt,APPLUMBITI*1- , tavlngMe-ftiendlY shorei 4. NCE M ORE some otthe SMENUlP,cMk4inwfuek. lilt tofirisk, Leay. b ea aez _ceneit taking fisher way MANY -MURP:M.T., ta Spana I i tte so inc hltildricts T hre ' l4°. / 1 "-uauet had RtAlkenbt agf;''aad..ahtt::' 'F egs to azatottnee t hat ah4c1 , 44, *Wei t 9 ateurs and Public of this city afthe . _ ' • ............,.._.___ .. , i i:; .- ; i-.4: lmii ,4mxwaxitrii iati-il 1 ao, atiiigeaP:o:lltilieTL.: .iiiiiN_LP:s7eoputiri:varietan ; LYRIC ' E N.T.ERE4Viritglirri -' • . do m h inlitheanntitionief , -',', ' T .. -,..,., , • 002K/SAll• .`4.311P OPLatal , - 1. •-,, i . performances , 'which gAL*311414:13., tuts ten lea 1 In the comic efthef.'eSi;enipkt ,ittinfue.sonp, Splendid. Scenes in Dramatic cutlet:lift.-- ,---, KeDAhI.E. ANNA:111S110Pr:- Will be assisted by her TALVIVITEtrertMANT-- . • Um:4w Vie D1E.R4110419711,1012(;M4`,,,fi ' -- SaWain ” ge l ft i k , iiiliiilineeit , ;. - '' t ' ' ° 6llParikuran ' t° be Il 'ir beadhered to, as much .al, be following line of road . w 4 _,, s eireumsoineee'Will• permit :_ __;!. , iiitild .. ,,pitieli...l4 ~,. I . Harrill:GOO, . paltimgr , uu Ac. ,- , Alt Wheellii g , cineinnad;rLexington i A c., Greenwood Garden, ACHOICE COLLEuTION OB=SfIRIIBBBRV, Vi Wog Roses, Raspberry, Strawberry, Gooseberry, lihabarb, Grape Vioes,hardy blorably,Rose, aad eve plant mercenary to ornamenigarde, egack sardetur be" foettd at Greenwood: Narsety-.. .40,-.lloalbas leave, dui corner of Market aad-ElAb sweets, rtttibargit every halt hour, - tor-the Garden. - lee Creamy and: other-re. .. (reshmentirseraratup jatba:Saloons., Orders roidreitsed toihaProprietor; stblaaciieate Allytiony'eatraryiVa,oo NAPt 11raeOve:P.atteatiart-..=-2.j4.:- ' ; : AISIDIfiII I 1 j . iZeciving. . ri CARPKIS, - OR. CLOTHS AND TRIMMINGS, ?, Co_nstettngin part ziPshir Super Royal Velvet Pile Carpetti:, , Su ItopllTAtiestry,Cmpew;: English and AmeticanOnizSidg,Cdrpeir'•. - - Extra stiper three ply eirpets;mitiesfinettirdejttretz,ii pets; sapetfine legrain.Carpats;. extrallnaingnititi Vas; - le; fine- ingtain - -learpets.; cmisman Ingrain-Carnetsi mum Ingtata.Carpets ; AllO4 alsd3,3 - Tapinittr-Venb. nazi Carpets; 4 4. 3-4 and 5' B. Tertlted - Vinniaiii-Caipetat.:,.. 4 4;04 and - ,9 'llitmast .Venitian-Carpeti;'...4V34: - , end, 6-8 plain Venitiaii -- !Ctivets; 44,-7-8; 3 4;5-6 and g. 4 eommari'VesitiatCotirpetsi' Listing 'n114;241f extra super Chanlle Rugg; superfuteChattilecdolanpek fine Tuned- do common, Tifie4-40Tertilnittbniettealler do Camille° Mar slntat'Tafteddor.dplentre-'..Ertgthihi Sheepskin do; common „Sheepskin,ol6;„ - Aidetnid-Seeee,..‘ . -- 1. .. skin do;,:leinly.Lind Sheep/kin de; .4 , 3llfgaiiVeitd;W: - .J nillaSbeepekin do; Inte Coep atik,!katenireSticepekin'i -011-CLOTOS.ANII.TRIAIMINGS_ ;Sheet Olt Cloth's . ; from to 241,:terit-Widei?, eta Uralany _1 size hall or room ; 847-4,64,54,44 and 3404.30th5t,t Green Oil Molt., for tVandow Blinds:. Furniture 4)ibit Cloths; pat nt;Statr Carpet Bindingt.reash and, Lrumer ~Shaw Drop Npppp..6 king; Table Mats ; Soclabg's t 6 f, i. 1 4;0 40111114.:7 Wide Cotton Dockiag,.s4 wide; e.M- -2 Pattsitk:art!W. Table. Covens; eintiamectdo. do do;:ciefeted.doFdoiltkil Satin Dan2lllo,_ for Windoze - -Curialriiiff Mittel Chintz, do do; Turkey Chinti, Border.; WirkliiiiSktuf Buff Window Linen; - . Walden Blinds;'Darnaalt,Mifrf' l . reens ; Watered libireens. ,,, • t; if . The above -Steak - consists of the laziandbest selected taiMig market Being parcsadi - ..direo twin the importers and manntacturera. comprlstag - D M. est and latest styles and desiges, and at tire s 'salary they cannot fatlan pleasentli. eintioity taptleviasec.-.- wishing to furnish Steamboats or. Motu*, tolltiens a mill at the Carpet WarelimiteiNeBs "'earth street, and 75 Wood sweet. orate APCLINTOCKs. Fare tram •sali Old ciountrraeduM4 P ,l S , SAGitfrfiißtg6BppnLopNfto!tokdlil4BooVl: . ,f=: - ' i., NEW YORK, AN D FROM LIVER POOL ToNEWORLEANR*II.','. TibtomitosToN, cHtRLESTOWAN44. SAVANNAH'DIRECT." • "4 , s 1. Voroks;','=s, - General Emigration and' FonOra s yehaeg. _ ilitE undersigned having aestentedlfitt:Ageney okr 1 above well known Howie, is prtlftifed.lo • bOnglent ' Passengers from the Old Country,onakfavotable teros as any other Houie,ht the,Cll7- Passages can be_ engaged in : rotowing sailing punctually, on the days agpitinied:- ngrAl..l:ol , lrTAlVErdele2/teeLtvenutot on the 6th, , and last of each Mind). • RED SI'AR LINE leaves "LiVerpbol 'on the 2014. t asch.month THE Z LINE leaves Liverpool Twice a Month i ' TEE LOAIDON LINE.ot Packets gaits fr0m,1;41100,13_ on the alb, latili2Lst and orb of every. Month. THE CLYQI LINE ot-Glaagdw PECketf, GLASGOW on the )stand 15th of each otOrnb.. Atato—A weekly Line or Packets for New Orleans, (Passengers shipped from NewYotkto any part CK" the West. ' 11Y /rbe:tifemior Partnerireeidei 411 pe e n Co ntenda the embareationol all passagespassages onsaged tuntry. P.S. Per na "desirous of visiting tfie Old County ,'- can ; have ?their passage engaged 'through froutElEsi burgh, by application clihei ,lierintnilly or by ietter s (post paid) to the . ondersigite.i. *. , • ..zAssAce F 032 NEW YO_ IT'_ Eau be had at 'very reduced Mee ELivplyinglirtker?,- undersigned Agent for the" Messrs: Ta_paeott . ; .- of•Nearl , 'York. . AIM „ELAJEELYi r "' Corner of Sixib and Mad cool Putthsiiik.. 0ci.42 A . SENSERS from the ()Id Copiurnin any or TAP- E: SCOTT & CO'S Lines: will lie faredshed at sea with provislaina bt wood quality; weekly, as follows,L; without aufanlsit charge: Each_passcriger of 12 years , . of age and over ,, 2f ths beead,2 nes, rice, 2 92.1e1r.$ lbs. • oatmeal, I saga'', I lb am,' lb. molasses', sad 1 O. • pork. Under 12 years of age, 0 tbs. breadstuff*, t park;full allowance of water and vinegar, and half al. lowance of tea, sugar and moltises. - • - For passage app yi to .4 A.,-"Wke. IVFAPSCOTWOCO., • • 86 South atii_ltLir., or M . • ' • JAMES BLAJLEGY, - - • 7 . Z Sixtband - Ltbert2.llo. • ' VVALNELte LUlTElER—WiuitAdiAlinofJYiWaliipt W./kw& kukil Plank. atii.w.t. BM% *cat . ro4:4treel.' Health 01110ei , -!; t • •- stIE public are informed that the-OFFICE OF THE. BONROOF43E/sLTH of the Citrof flttaburgb h at No. 69, Grant street, between Fourth ind Dimond streets, where all Notice, end-Communications for the Ilmutt. mast be left. aILiBLFA NA.YLAH, - 03ecreutry hfutraurt _ to. atm klaheflealltabetesßaer. cf - •t , ' l .,'" •'• PitabtiviVOrtariarletArl9stri,:'. Hr AiritAPEleetlon , .for' thirteen-Dirictots of this:: Bank• attll beheld otthe'Banklog Hotta** on Mon- , thy, the 17th day of Nokomber next, between the boon oieldet, A. n, and 3 - o'clock, P M. . 4 •:,‘ • oetla THB STOCILHOLDERS of the Binnitlithetizand Fdifa betbiown Turnpike Road Company ate reptdred to pay taw tae Treasury au at be-fore the Miner of Nov., tan. An Instalment of 83.00 on eaeh share-of Slack, subscribed: ... ILAITHEWIL WEST, oettnad (Journal °oar.) 7,;Masitter, • • Excaueozikast. ov Prennitutarti. 22 741. • , u •s•Oetober 17, 101. j DI A ':Election , for thirteen Directors. cil 51hiii•Bank • Ili serve during theensuing year; shit-tut:held:o rhe, , Banking House,. on Monday, the 17th•itar of Novenatar.... next, between the hours of and. 3 .•••,•,',. oette:die - • Tlf OWLS , hf• HOWE,- Cash'il, A CARD. HAVING, after a partial abseideotikeirerainiontea, resumed the nun.= or TFIS Law,:the subscriber.- wiU now save hie undivided attention totheArideiioShia.' profession,, . • : t . Tat cuizgWed blisiocaa or Willa ACCaildivinh'clos!' ed by and mantra the attention of both, attheirerdaleOi',." on Grant etreet Unainela•etitriated, to on,ipo r it#7..., win in all cases-receive procag-attentia. '- JOHN COYLE, Att'y ectounsellor at Law, oettEhlro. No; 75 Grant • Olf : I E4itical fur Thirteen naret ( 2:i /4 lrAlr the ensuing . year, Will be held - cit the riLing cme, on Monday, the seventeenth day .of November ;lei I. [oet2o,l JOHN SNYDEFL, Cagier. „ G. E.: Atarl.Ur BANKERS ASP - - P -2 ,A R .r ExcifertiGE coil% - A • BANK biarigiz, • • • - BIGHT. AND . TIME Dtitr t taid4le colleekions carefully attended to,zatifipmpcdsA4ot.. / ted to spy port of We Uniou. . s.. jeer 52*ov/rifler - PiOtrGEIT AND eotst Off C010613510N. No. 7V,Faulai.itrast, *,-”` "' • isrtext - door to the Bank of f t _____ttsbaler t.it ,41110gbemy IN PersanteerOf-Itto Iliceetionc of. unauit OtAllseWbbi - :l, ottheAds'of. April,;(l37,siut.;_eapplesnent the 15th of April, 1811, entitled an ‘'itet for tbefocerfee•sl.• anon of the Pittsburgh, Kittanning and Warren Han -- toad Comaaarr boOka will be openeidfar, salrsitiptiont the capital stoek.hrsaia eanautuiy el ten o'clock, Al. ou Wednesday, November 19M.,11351,at &Olt. Clair ' • ;Motel ill the eity klittsbarsh,% to dotubmei open from • tto day till a sufficient number of snares mei be 10 .# 0 ' • •serlbrd'to sceure the Charter. . • Harmar Denny, Wm. Robinson, John H. Shoenberger, . Oeorge R. Muter ; • . Benj. Darlington, Jay. Gray, 4th Frauds - Rattle, ; Morrison,- - las: Hoes Snowden, Ogden, Rant. Orr, • ' ' Samuel llaird, John Freckling, " Philip Weakling, Jos- Buffington • • • • Riez:Coldiveß, - James Elatehfalm, Chambers Orr, Robt.Rpara, --- - . John thlfnn, Web- Reynobil; ' • Car Oct. IS, - , ' _ . To Builders. - • - , POPOSALS for the erection of.St,Pain't Ga‘bedrith in this city will be received at Abe boa until the 7th of November, pan/xi:data about the condt tb3ns of contract may be obtained- at the samo;plate t * where the plane and apeel.ficatinos are ready for 1 0 1, Ve tion. The work neeeseary for getting the building un• der meg siriU form the contract,rind the whole to btlet to ono contractor. The Architect wlll.ho 3ir4ll6l:l(cFarY day from 10 to 10„teeleick, ANN, during: weelttO give ezplanatictus. Oeilidt• A • A —2l) a. fresh for sale - act= B A. FAIINESTOOK - . (14111-1 AMMO'IA-2000111k. orsa _ ir iz oK ort23 a. A. FAHN ris • AR CARIO ACID-1600 s. for sale be oet23 B. A. FAurviwroct a. co. ---- Clll3--200oss plain and tenor Tabk Comb*, hi store and(or sale by ootl7 T. K. AIIKN loft? a BROTHER% '4 4: " Mit= AMUSEMENTS. THBALTIXE. JOSEPH C, FOSTER . Notice. - _ ~;.. a _ :. ` : ._ iiiM -,•fi1:.'.:....,.',.i:.7.;,..7.. , K . S _'lY: ~_ ~.... ''' !..., i. , . .1-- ,_ -- '. 1, --' lkl,rrfPlf--,,'- .. :-=4,: .. , ', ', ---":•- '. - .L, , .'.:- _ _,',.-. —. :-,:.,•- ''. ~ .: --:-,-,-,.--:'.: ~ •:----",.•: -•: - -- ',•.s --•,-•-,, '. _ ~ .-.- •-, ,' ,-- -,-,--•, ;.-':-..,-.-:_,,-:, 4 .. t.'.-: ; r - 2 _- - --7 _: z r = ' 1 -. : 1 - 1 ,•'''4.•'"... . '''''• - - - -," ' •• ::,. -", - ~,._,,,: , ‘;‘.;-• --.„"! ':': ''---. 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