, . ~. , . ~ -, - "_. ~• ...• -- . -.. •- ,;_ ', . '.• '": , - '," "•.,?...':'''' '' ,f,.. - - ._",';'"""'", „,,,,.--'' r'i,= 7 ":" 7 -I';',"F ~ 5'7-7 - ;•.:"::', 3, :'''i'''''3 7 ':"" ,;''',' 7 •7' - '''-'7"' /371: " 7 " - :--.7;3; , ' -7 , -"`- 3 ,'" ' - ' '"77 ''-' . '' " -.7 ." ,"' ''', 4, - 7i, -;'' i'' : s iT, ''' ' ,- 4 - ':'''' . ll , ,l.,'" , ;T:' -t - ` -.: ~,. e ! -7 .:• 7 '. - `,k-7 ;:*rr •-,-t. `,_-x•.- : = ,-,i_,:.,,.,A..• .. ••••__ -'- . • •7; ~.„‘,.:,,, • . - „. - . , ~ ,:. . , . -., •,,• , i ~..„,- ~ . _ ,_ • ~.: _ .....• ... . _.,,,,,nt-,-.,,;;;;;•:-.,,_,;..-2--;,,,:-..•-•--,--,,,-,,......c-,-,,:?,•,,, ._, 2, -_,-,,, , -...7._;- - ,-- , ,,-;;;: - -..---„,_-'4, -,-;,,-,,•.-.-1,4.• „ _- - ; ,- • ,-, -- - ,,i'..,-..•_.' - -:-.• •;••4 .„,-- ~t .i-- .-y 'a., .` - • ••;- . '-• , ,- ' - - P- 4•P'..i.` -- .__ 'i *- •:.'' .± : It ,-•""' ' ''-' ' ";.'"""::"` r f':''";. -- ; 7 1 [ -' - ' 7 ,.' '-, ' k '-""' .7- '-' ' .-- "''' 7 :' " - , ' -'","'',""--".. -''-.7 , ' : :, , r. ~ ..1 --7- t:?- ^ '''' '' ',. ."-J' ', ..• : ; rs :*, ' , .:-- -:- W :,: - -, ...1.- -...,---.• '.,:.',"., ,1_ ...,,, ~,".0.„ , -- , :„. - ,,. -7 "- - , -,..••:-...i.15r -.- •• ,, ----'-',- t - - ---- •,_.*', - -=' ,- 7 v ;•- , .. 7 ,„1., -- ,-.---T..! - -‘, .„- ---. ,--- ‘, - -i. - - -;----., .--.:-----.. -•-: ..-- -- • . ,:, ~.• '-- -, . -..... • •- ••-,--' . - - '.•-• • • •-- , .._.. ~•, • _ A .1^ , , --,:L .\• '' . •ti-"-/ee•-'"-----".t.4"-A,7,--7,••4,;„",tt-f-i,-"^:".- 1-:-__,-.2-,..••••,":„.-, .1.--7i2 - x."".,;,.."_.5.:: : :5:-1.- , ti.",;_i•+•^A ~-.,_ t. A .- A: -,,:, is •..., z ,s : •:x- ,;-...,;....„ -i- A 7....,., -,.,t ~• -.(•:. ,, , . ..it. .. .-:. _ _,,,, :_ •^, ,1.. A. ~,•, 1, :. ;_.",_, ~; _.:, ~ ,• ft '•.- tl• ;f •, ;:: : :: - _ , - - -:,=;',":^7 11:: ''' ' :..i '' " . .A.'''''''. -, •• '' ' ,„„*". ~,, ..,,, ~. , -', . •,- -.." '' "„-: .., •.-- At..,•:a. „, , ,-, -_-• 1..; •-..0.- '• ~, .-::. rt . 1 4 ' 4 1 41 4 '..;^ ~,:" , -,.' ' : „,.. '. ^ '-'',. ~" s.": '_"'' , ' • ‘,"•"- .' '` '^- ' ..' 1 : - " - -- •"' - ' - f-''',t.• - •:,^ '%,, - --• • - ''r;;;•^' , "'''. : ' , ' ;'''',.... 2 ' - ••'' ' r ' ' '"l'' • : • - •- . •::;' - : , :.: - .:z "- ''•` . .` - `'"J'-'•f••••i. - '4''-' 45 ' ,4 ' 2 •5?;:*Z . '•:•••a''' , 7 •0 : 1 - ' -- --,.... - '•'• - •ZF-%:-.S- . ' -- -'-‘• - ' 4*- -,---1; -- ;- :-'` -•••-...' Z V'4' ...L:=3;-;, ..;•::;`:••• •,-'-- ''• 'A,' ..,'".r . •=: -: -tY',?':(t i . E•f - , - -- ,;.-•01,.4 1 .•••, - ...11 4 .,,,„1#;.„:;••,,,,,,t 1 - , ;,,,-, - 1_ , ,4;•: -. fi.•- , ;::.;,.. ; _,--:, sak ,s,.:. , ,--,, • . ~,,,,; ~, : : -,•_,-- •- ‘ -• ,„- • , - '., ' -, --.; ; ''• '''" ~ %)-'.."1 i.-'•; .Sl,-A.41 - 0 ,:t. , "- '--•,, - . 2 ,,..,;- ti 4- 1 . , •‘4 ;•,•• ,4 -, , t • ,.,.. „.,., - ~,, ,_. _, , , . . _, •,. •-•,•,- 1 3 .~- .- -:• '--• '''-- `-- ••' - -1,, ' -.-!-,- `-‘•-• -- '':-`-', • ---:•-='"-‘ - - - • -- •;'-*--- -., •;€•-•, - - - i-- . : , -.---'4. - --=-' ;--••',•'• •••--.4;;:. - •:. - „4••-• •-: ,1 •••:"''' t;t 1 )._7,' . 4,- , -- - ! - •.i, - ,•A ~ - : - , -1 ..>; ".4 , -7,i; i -._:- '' -- ; - ...'•1.,':•'- , -1 .'•• - : •i; ` •'• --' .. -'', - r- : -,' '- - - •.', -:"•-t• 'L* '''. '''. '-':'-....., i.,....-- r '-'-,., -:.. ',-t- 4 ., ~ _,,-, ti- ._, ~, - .2... %I-- 4 r , - , , ; '",,-,• - "t• 4 "^ 4,7,.....,,,,-„.,--. 7 ~,, - , ...,,, _-; ,• , ,•,., .....,,,,,,„.,—, , .. _, ~ ~.,_. ~. , _ , ,„, „„„ ~,,,,„_,_„,,„ _.., ~,, ~,,„„.„..„.„,,,,,,,,,„, , .... . , . ,11,-z5;',, , .:. - ' - -,Y , -_ ,- - :-..?--,,, :;;'!.' z.,.".:•,i_ ' ' :-,3- 44 •44?- ' l '''.AN• : ".- - ":.i , ± A"C•i- I:''..e-•;"V"".2•ZiO-..:Z••^A:`.1.3i^1/.-.aib•";i74-4V;(,'"44!"-- ':'''''''•* : ' '1.114. 4 . ii-1 -'' '' ' ''.''-';`-';-.-''''', ' ..., ' ',:•:,.'"'-'! "--- -- ' . 17:2 1:4 - ` 1 -,,...,,,„ ' • 7 , ',. .--„1 -' • , - - '.' t ..'. f :'''. ' 1 ' '',';t l ,l`i ''.',... -." t: : .''-•• 4" ..:! ''''''' l " .; '7. . -:,:-.• [ 2 ,,'r: -- ..-_f ..,, ,- - .'-•_•.• - • .- 2 7 - . -•-':.,f/L:,4f.fr--44j::-,;;"'..,,,k;c:,zf,•-i'--,t,A4,i:"",-W • -r-4...-.±.-:,,,z----..;..,:t.-4..,,,,.„,..,„,,..4-!---z..„1, „„.,._,_-„•:•,., ~,„,-. Zi" - ...c, ,, 1,...."-vi'.l- , F1 ,,,, 5t. - -• , •1-r•,1 - ,. -.., s. t ri-"--" , ,:s ^' l !",,-.I A :, j, , ,,,gt,e..." ;Y At z;," . _, tt. ,s^ .'.-,-; t', ".^ ~. '" t t ,„' _^-'. e. 'e-- - - . 4 -. :,' , - '..,, -- ' -... ,-`, ' . -., ;.' ...-..- ,- •-;_ee-t-;- " , ' - ' . ,'-' , . .,,, -. . , 4,, - A , .,,1 1.;,. - ,- F .V:A - rf . ;;•','CL' I, l k: - .. *-4 - -1- " , %' . ;'-'?'" , ..:`,'- , , , 24:'.f., '• ": -. -. 7 ,-`, , ..;:-^':' - :,:'-',':.' ' - '• :1- ::: - ~. , - . IT', '"t••'•'-P-"'r:,•;:F::""-t'-''rtfrt'4"--'^'1-A<:li''3'''''%-'-,tf.'•:;,"•'- ::"'---::lrll‘stl;:::i=::::ll''::;'.::';';''Illf;'"''-l--:.''':::t'';,i_-.T.::;:'',"::;'.:',:lf:k:::A*.'if:•1-':'.-li:::::::'--;r:-st''''';*:'''.;"'-''.l:'tr;4L:,:''f::::::Cf':f't :,i'L1:.4".:.-::. 1::::::^.:4:11:4::::,;'',.1:,`1",-...4:::::,::1.;:':,:,-.:;:t1:11'..1;;-'-,,.„::".:"•-•.'''''....‘71-.t'^'''..;1' ' '' .*: , r7. '.:• '. 4:;' '' ' - - :':''''- s : '' , --' l, -: _ i '' '.,l 7 -.. s e , • - . -.. ,,,_ :: 1 - 1 : 1:,, '-'1.- ,,,.. : ,1_, : , :. ,1.,,•,'. tit:ei r t - rd ' : i.i . S,:^,:',-',7--4.-‘,7; .A..',-,•'vtl'''':-•.-,"."'',";..z.--;'''''''.7l,-s:'-'4l;i'.^;:".'''';';:;:,-.1•.":'-:..5-:-7,-..."-:?''.1':':'V'':'•-:tll'-",'-k:r1,,1;:::-'''':"'''':- ''':' ':".:::::'-- ' .^.':; '- ; : '.:::'''11-' - :..-'' : -C1 ,1 :- Il ' ,- - ,: : * . : S .' . ' ' :111:: - . • :'' c l .., _...::4‘•-:05e:.:,Ee.1.:.1..11:.c4)'-,:r.i.'-finvis: T.,,,..u.k.„...:a‘',.:':::::.,.:„.';--._.;-,_:,.::z-',:,'::'',.:::',,..:::i.-.:: ~„.„_: , z_N-.."1i. .? ,7 , ..r„.,-•4 !, ~., _ --,, . ...-, i , ; • ,„. -,..__;-,-.;:„=,,,.-;:„ •,..• ~. ,_,_,;•..,,,;,..,,•.:„ .-:;._--„-,., ..,-,.... 4... ~;,;. ~, --,,•4,..„,„i „ ..,c,:__; ' ...„..;• ~!.., , c,,_= ,45. , :" - -:; ,, - :s..- .... I . , ~„. - . 4. , --.• '_". • .• 0 , ,,', ;-'-', „ 41, -, i'.„,''f, -. . ,, r - :..,;." - f ,'-.-* ; ----- ,';:': , ',',,,,,-.0.1,-,t,,,:v::-....;..51i5::;k"---.7.---7-T,,,-....,..?"-'.'z-c,,t5,,,..!.,":;,7-,- -- , - .T... 7 ": - '' ''' .s - :f 7 ''3"' ..:. :77' . ' 7-, -" ", • ; ," 2 ( ~ "'' .... .- . , z . -...; .7, '," : .. '" '7'" '. '''.. •7 1 .1: - ." -, _' "- '' , " ... • '''' ', - "- • ''. :," ,- -- f';f : ' . -- 7. - ,- 3 .77 :"' - '": . "7'.. t. "Ai'" . "-..'" , 1_1•7" , ""!:,;7,\'-'-••Z' '-',`''' i':' , o". 4-'' '.',;:!-- ''.-- ''' 1-'''' ''''- 'it ; e-z' t'' -. ''" '-." 3 '''''' - ' , - - " , '. 4 '"'" 2 -.7 - *l- , -,,,,..: 4 1- ‘-.!..5.34'..44' , - ' , 7.r''' ''' ; , . , 714 .''" °- ';''." : 7 ".' 7 ':" -I'o- '' '""-•' 4 . i- •...,..,'''' - , 14. , 1,, , £ - .4 ,- .-2.".:0.7.;ti , r, , F ,47. 1 "774 i'y'.."`" 3, .5-"7'''' "F - '•% 7 4 - --, 7"" --, "`.., -,- ..,g.:( . ..:= 1 ~- ,: - : ,- -.f. -.--_-,["...`,:-,, ' , ,...., , i4 -.17...„... - r - f - ,7m. -- :"..- s-, '..-,.. ',.-• ' '' - ::" '', .3 "'• -"'- ' " .." -3 - , ' " ' 7 ., "-' ',' , •,' " ; ': : ; 7.=""' " •-c:- , 3' '.; "";.--,;,..;-,'T -",7, 7 ".,77,"..' .4',___,,,-.1,,,„,,;,,,,--?.... "L-5. , ••,,07,--•:^i,.. - ...,•77. -s.',"'" --;•^4.-,..,-i---.'",......f.--.'""--.A.5.i.„^:"A",?4,4,•4-4• `'!",..- t .,..,^, - .,, - .L-t,'"',"i',,` t •'-• - . 'g r '''bt ;' , ..,1 i' -'„ h -t, st,:x t,'„Aysti t :t . ,,; •",;.•,._,- t -•, -_ , et,"^•• 5,4:!,^„, 1.."._-,.5...,. A , ,:".• : , •• ,t.^o•"..t" - ..,•A,•-,:-t-t t --. rgr"`;'• ,•-":-"'"'-` ''.-'.'• "'''.' fv•;:-.:';'..- "".":.' " -','.. ' ~... " 77 7' .:3' ', ,; 7 ''' - W . lcz ' ttt' , -: , ' - .l"` ''" - - - - '-'" -'-''-.- ' • - • ' ' • • - .5 P- - - - ' - ' -'.. .., ' -- "r"r: : - ..,' '''..`"2 .. ; .C., -~,.,a„. -,,. -, . - • ,,-1, , , ,,• , - , * -,- ~ - .z..,--- ,4 -, , ,, ,, .. .„•, 6 • ~, -.:,-,.' •,.-,,,,, i-i.,..„--,.04,„.L.,...„. 0ri.,,,i!,;,-,,, , ..i.„&1.,,...,.. i ...,,•,•,, k ..- ;,..-. i - ft ,- .:• : :.' ), ,--. i,.,.._..77- -~,-- - - -- m ,....,,_ -..„-,4,,-7,-, ,-;•: e .,,- ..T . % • '..L.L .,, ;. , ..'„, , , ,,, :zz . 7.-_-_ , „...---,,,.-.„„ ~,-,...„,,,,-,-,,,,: •,, ..., -... ....:11, - .-.., . • A 64 ••- • ;2 ',"-,,," '' -• ."'",-...- ' --.' , • --,-''' ' ' ' . " • ''. - ' • - 'f"" c •M:-•' '.• ••• ,"`" ..":"•":"." ...; - ,._ - :•:,: - .-tr._" - t t : ?•tts "•;•:".::',',l•-"..-1"..-t ••'-e4-,,e.`,-"•...'it.••,,....,„...•A1itt-4,1,„.-...,ts ..." I ".Zts-e?" - .0, ' '. .-- - r-tile , ,t."4l ( l9 74 f ,v `=^t'i,'","i•---""..t , ", - 4--• •t - 'l . .'" _,,,S - ---- ,•': - ,.7••=-7';'''' ..,-"•••-: -• , " - r - ^" ‘.. 2 •-•••'• ,""-- " ' • ''' ,',"'- '',--- :.'" '''''''' '-' l- "; , ^ - ^.•`'''f . ' ."-'-'• - ' • • , - •• • •'--' ''' V",. e i,,...•;;;.1...„!, - ,„:",t...! ; ,..7 ~,,'",, -'' -1.,,:-;,:,,r ,-::,,, ,_,-„,-.4.,;4:&„,,:..74-is.:,z4i-4-,...,,--;-,e,,-,,,,,. _,-,74 ..!;-__,---- -...1.:',;:;", L'. - -„' ,;_-_, „ -,:'-- _-..._:', -.:;-, -,..";. ', -_ , ~_., - --;_. ~ : __. ~, 7- , ,__„,:; -- -.:,-'.- 2 .,,,,, '.:.,,;.-- 'l , - , :' '. ' , - ' .14 ---- •: „ ...•-.1.--;m•;`;',.W.46 . 7 * ,-", rt.:''s t,...1,4":"^5^4, -- s . !." , : it-2 "- - -.- - :".-,...-2,•'."-." - ',":-.';,'.j"Z",;" ,1".•":" ..":','S'lM"'-zC:4l4"":"t_s•-•"•,...;‘,_•`;.-":,.,...,.:•••"..,..'.,,-' .....,!-,;..,:•-,...,'::::•"... 'Y' - 'r v i: -.:•.....-- --- - ' _=',.." •• • , 1. --. ..' ,. ..- ' ''' •:_," . --', -. , ;:r '•--- -•• `,. -.' 2., :-.`", ~ .:: 33 . ~ •'` `f ; - . :, 'c._4 Ait„., o 4' ° l.._ - .;.. , :7 , - - 1` - 4.e 4 - - 4,-0...-t "stS"^-si.: .. 1 .: „ A 15,,1•:-- -- ,',.7.6.4. 7,:.- - " 3 - 1,..” ".•-.;---- f" - .14. , g•4=4",:,.,teat5.',,,Z1t.,t,;'..r-,-.11,;„,;,-.-1'n ..t.,";"" - ,•:;' , .'", - -,-- ' , -,'-''' '^. -„,-_ "." ,-, -•-• • ,`, - ",-"'- •• ' ' • , ,-, ''' -- -,;• ' .• ~,, ..• "--' r ..... ',, ; , ..- '_-.. --,, : - , ^ .. . '‘--' ,7. : . .At ;43-ii' l l'-"44.-.;- -:.4-. -- , .;,:,,,,,-;,-. A 1,-.. - 7114-.: "--,•;-. • 1- .:: - .,...:- -, ' - _-_F - ,.. - : , :v - - 4 ,4 4 :!.. ,, ,..;. , 5 - a - -, ,,, .'1?Xi,-;: - ...., - -1.,..;:,.-, - ,... ~ 2 -:,, -:•- 7,, _ - ~, ;, s , - - ,--,,_.,- ---.--..,-,,,, f-: • :.• -, -. ~.', • - - ~- -"- . - , - ,- ...r..i ~....-,.. -- •, . . ... .' - ••• ' . . AMUSEMENn- -- --- :--• . 4 :: - .:4 -- : . ; ,, i-, , ,•:.. 1 .s=', -- ,:-.-..',• „ -4 , • : : : foroloc4 ; e - -•, - .liel ..r.. ,, ..t.: ,:„--, ~-. .c ..0- . .... ..,s 7. -...".-- .. _o„, -7 *-NZI Cre.1 .. .. - Ltr,,lk-- 4 , 4 t'-‘ - * -:.• '- ; Aw '"? 4 4l4. ''' * Z -• °' i t;Fj - ;'-'''Vel tr r i: l4 " 4 ' 14 t - .Z'--t!k .:-4 - 't--, V' c4 i .l i t4 ! . v4} l,- ..tgri , ' ,4 ,41 , • 4 54.4,-tic.,r4.l4,rb-,4111-- <•4*.44:c.;4% , 41= V ckyv , ,_ , _ t. • --c,v , ,p,•:31.- ,t , g: - .;i. ,--- 4.6•K.41 - '1 , ...1.0.1-,0 , 4 0 -. -..!f Nu ,. I,l:Asic -, --- . • 4 4 1:-:;;', ,t - t;P - ,-,_ iFro;.„.: - "ra.f.? Tyk.'-'4v t..“.. - 1 .- ... , ..0`qt:t. - / - .1: 4 -a - 4 ..,.'.`, - p.: .,-, .t .. t;.,e-6 6 14 .. 1". p.*., A ~ r„-,ve,-, t--..„,v,,vv,:,,47.L;t,\A.-,i4---tti.,--- I THE KlDtes , o a rum ...... ......-- 7 ~. .. .., _.....,.. .. . 0v ,.... _-- • V' WI CM • rr. Ala /1 Ti , -OA 11l V' AEr Y. Al' t 1 ' . .NV11 .. ." - V, 4 4''''<:f", • - , - , .. 1 I ' v. ''' . - . . ... --- • •I•.•Alzern reantio, 'att.. ....- I Later Krona a ea.a..• t .- t.. rime Rh. niustabLo ~....------ I t ;' -c f' ti s 'lr- tit Vf•kze-'-xm 7., 0 b0-4;,-• -',A.- ~ .,,e... - ,- --- ----- :44' - c . ' 7 4.--i.,- tr 'lt-4 t-P. , t•c•J.... - 4 4t....i.. t , r-ats , rud.*--‘ . , .1;-;-41-1,vir--...t.i, v' t. ; -4; ‘ ,. .... ,1-i- itttLit . ,4 ,l, z: °l4- fiClA' l ; t i. , ,,% i t:',..l ::".' - ~,e,vltite'r t -114- ' 4 :14- i''.. e ' il`' isr-,;2 -•- $i •'O,, el- V Z ''' 4 4. 75 4; . '4 4; •-21 -4• /*4 o' . . l ''' V'w:: -'. ' 44A s,,le-eiv,,,__--•FAt.',,t -•,111,4-14•:=111,1•••;t % 4 :* . PI g.i.o - .• V`;ll.-- 17' : ) A,1-`.; '- . ki;;-&-..14.,*e:W.t.",-1,;;4.4.it-',ifF-.i..-i-_ &4 - - , ZO:ti't:t i: - ,4,t , ,Y - 41- ' , ..otrttf -- '-i- - , ‘ - . -- ; .-- iltilil,- . .ttc-', 1 . . 7 .* -- • -„1, ... - : , :c. - ‘4 -I c.-:.‘,...tv , , - ;,.\--•;>iVitiziki-•,: t ....,, , ? „--A-t.„ ".-- - -e s - ,.-,„ '‘ , l, -;!•! - P41_ 5 •:-% ---- k .. .,:; - 4•fitti , .4:.?.-.-P --,* ;,,ntt•c••• - , •-=4.t.i-_,..--•.-iterrL--17-*_ .f'z-v•-.1 _..Z.- 0?-i,--,,,_:,„lt,gW4.4-, rt '".- ?,,,,,,,,52.-z-,,,p40 9 -- .% , --- s i . ••••0:tp , :„,..4-• c,„.,•!„.„1 , ,g,„., ~„, : t...t.t(z .„ , "' i sei - •-` -, •• - f' 1 -XMcSNA .41.dst*WI't +t-ti-4,1.<-:15 1 40::-..„0. 4L4--;t:;;;;;.,:lk.,'.: 07 . 5 , t1 ---- e.,..,_ ...••• , • TY t! l' a --s t4- -- -'.Ku% - 1 I . .„1:4 - 4.-'.7 , v - Qn19!-- - ;.. g.., , v. ~,.r,,:a _...,...T,t-fi.A.,,,..--,-;-•-v:,4-Jr;.,:„,-,,,;., -,--_,•,-.4-01,1„,„,-, „.0,t3.10.-- - -"' '''' .'" ' - :: , -. - •, ,, : - '-: - : .,--, .'.".7• -,-- ... ~- , -- q ..„1--v........ ,r -k-,,,r54?-i'-z-..14.-c4-Tt- C - :C-?--.0.: 1 . ----:'-`• A 'lr.*--r-I,7ti".dt Z1.:0014.1i--!ir-AcIze• ' ~,„..'''' - Cl'S , ' 4 .4;A:.,t. t -f r -- ..t.n.--4:•"`" > dt - ...tg" --- ' rr- 7 Ctrt t} , ----..--•-• -' , ..ft,-- - 4W , F r . ( -.--1 ,,e t.,,,.... 7, ,.p,-.,,,......,....L.' .......t e r z a x _. -..r.arg .1%7;3 , • Ott ~,,; 1.c.,-1 ,-- 5 i..A cl'i, P,!,-,-,.7.-,./*ZLI,7-44,,,' 45 4 A,v,-,,, L .,,, v . '.••: 1. --. 44 -0 - ....' - ',- , --,z"...--- ,, rf , .. -1, -,--- ~,- 4 -- ..,.. P,t'..',;h .1112,4-.'1_e5qr•434:,....A,..4:714-q-,-,..v?.* -.., •• , ;,..n ' Z' 1 i . ,',,+.;.... - k - .citi,ZA 7- F,V - `,. , tt . '"',,a.÷.-I.'l L i , . .„:4 .e..T4:a. ''' - 1 -1-k , 4 c .... , 5. , 4 - I` ,, Xlzi P 1.1 *•-.7..16.1.-It,-.-Ze1.01,4--", ..,,,, • .515, v =r , " r 0:` ,, :. - ;:,_r"' ,- ,4," -- -r4.:;., ~...'-',!.'l- ? . 1, ~,..it=oc•t.,.--..-„,-,:z...g..„,...- -Vt-""z"tsK,'7.4 iJt-x"?<•-'7,411.--;;;'..f., " L . 4 ,4 , t,- - T1A.. , ',.14:2g4;;;;7...-.F'• -,',, 1.7441,.' , .- - Ad ' -1. :'l,' % . 14,P,' _-,..-,... .t.-.&' ;_4l , • 7.4 ‘-cgir, L , ,4P • tikeT, /.;,,,, P . Z., - J ,- * :!r , _..-z - ,-t - T. , al A-.4- 4 ,7;, / ,...--.4=.L; - . ,.. : i . , , ....-.;.., 1 ., 4 , , ;itmocs. ....,,,,w.vas-, -4, 2-Pasi"- -3 >jazt, u , 7 1.,,, , e- • t t..;_f -- :.W.- - - - , ....., ~.- ~.., • ......441.--.1.,,,,,,,,, ~..:„..;1.,,,,3:24 , ,,04 4- 4',1.. - * /- 4 ,, F ,0 ).- -0 wi t.q.'s 0.• 4. - , , ,,, j.. 1... - -:• - :',.- . tt . 4,,,,,, ,,, ,,,,. XI- . , ,- . , y44..1 1 „.7{--, , t- N.41......tt , , ~ i • -,,V,P4.1y:"..*--tu.1...'"f43, j. „, iy.......,. '..." 4 ' 4.41 ..'''. 4. 6. 1, 4, 11, 0: 4 7 1 4 - . .. r -ZY:r l a ' ,•• -r . i r ' , 4 ,e , F• .4' . si 'e - V . ` " '"*.lett-h-6 .,- F•ka. ..-",-;,5h,...,-,--- . -, q .. i l .Pt h ,A.V..^ . l , ',4i'''AW'!T' '., ~, - ;;Pe V) 5,, ,, ` ,.. 47 4 Pc` ^ : 1 1,,,4,6`..'1. ,, • - i - "` - -f .." - e.Aw . ' ,, ,1 4 . •- ts',,f,V Le 4 1 *. ~.1 1. 1,.... ~.\m 4;. ..,,; - .4 , ;4- -- 4 , V a,:1!,, ...4r,,,,L1tti„,, V.1.4a"..Z.-4rfrtriiATAlt -- c., ~„,_ .„„....rmtait.. . a,„----sra-- ~al. .601'1 4 1 4 , ;; . 1 -„....v4 , , ,, , t -2.;A.,...... .. ..4.,M r. ~.s h , .. .tw.-3., .. . .e....,• 1 '..* 4) l ^ r-- - a..-..- - I'a.- --- 4'411. &"-.7t1 0 - 4 4. ''-'- "k-t - •• % . , ,, :aa - ' , .." • ,„ . - 3 / 4 . 4 4 -4- * , :te .: 4 l ..ar, ,x-theara A a> O4 C4 4.- . 4i. 44 , :a....,...,t , ..f.lt-,,,. L._ lavFAll ,t - ;ClT . ..l4;tgg - ' 44(f i L -,4 ..I.',l7 ° 'iF• _.--_ " ' 4 ' 'S ' ' ' . 7 .4 ,:•' - ' ``..- A 6li o c . -- 4 "2 .1W 1- .1e...;;..11., , ,i_fi , . _ ci,„..4 , :- -- - - .Ne. - 4 • P 1".4. 1 :1., - ~..,-:''''', ' , l‘ ,,,_,JpWt-1- - - -9:t• 'f f 4- ,- -- - V,, 4...-t - --: r 7 -s, ...4,_ ~.-4---_,i4,-'t,..,- -„,.,... ,, e ... . „1„..., _ vi ,..,,,..,_....,, f-i,,..i.- , „--.. : -,-....45-i.i4,,,,,. rt , , ,,.....0 , - a r 1 ' cs-- 1 1 - e 4- 4, 4 1 - We.„44 - tv , . 4 ,,,•$ -.. 1 , 1 , ,„....,,,,.. _ _ ..11 , '4 , ,tf•z,,,,,. 7 3r1r1e _t-:: 1 Aki." - ak.„4* -- -q,t5* , :„1,..-i.trir ~....-------.,41-........--,.' *3 ii - ,,, ." . ' .-s• AO filltv 1 .:' '' Z -4- --;t'4 '.....' - 41' , 3 ~,,Et ,:. ' , * * l4 i l• 44 ,o. ° - ZP , 0 Z•fli ' eLV,;,-,-If--- ca.4_,. - .4. 1 0 .. .43 4 ,4 , a- 'rt,*•--, s 'in• • -'W 'S•''' - --- - f. - , I Sa tt.t- Vf..43 v a X- - 2t..'"P - -ik e .2 l. $4 r v.. 7.4, •-••• ‘r'•wiT' :- ' - .... -- • .., ..+:. - ':l' i•• Z' - . -r - 'ilir.V.l'i 1,44 1- 4*.: -- - ~_- , t_ ,. - ,_..„-4--,Zir0.,F5.4-E-,,,•:4-Ifkuiy---• •*,,... , -, . - 4.-c.,---...-1. -1 4. •tc..÷..1;4 , - , .. • .-- 4 ....r....,,L...„ _ ~.----y. o rr - ..k. , •,,, - , 4 .„. , TK- - - ~ =-01-otr--4,4 , 4 -4x -, , ,,-- e;.4,-..., 47. .'- t.ifr P...*,•,. - t; 4 ' 7l ' • "'%, - 1.41V.6-LtA€l:: : . YO eti - '4k,t_ti*,.,llai - -.'l*- ''. t :'0.,,.., - ,'•'-' 1 - s.t - „5'.f .,5 :-"P_ZIOZ - ,„a,,ial.n . . pov - • iPv-4-14, • - r -!=t ,- .ze-..4-z, - ,.-..- - -..12 , ...,-. t, ~o . * , -"" - ', . -1 .4 - k -a, -., : 11..i.3.7,‘.4.., , e; - 7.'.-4irs 4- % , :i4; - 0 -,c7,}->'_.;,m. -t, l I` l l - i.col-- .‘., --e - . =-ti• - ,, ,:itii. . :' ,,, w - rt ---... ...0ev , -:Er.,,1.F . ~..., ~„,/ , ,sit g. , , ..... . ----4,..-:::-.... , .-*l„e....•-4:-54-,4- , ..4,k....-.,r-,e,..F::r.:4-r-4-t, , ~,.... ~ 3 ,,,,..„..,-,,,,,,,,,,x , ,.,,,; , ~,,&, ,c ....1.-,:_t•-,;, % \ ch,' 4vi,Ll - 1z...19-a.--; , ,ls.wza, .-,- - c - -.. 4 , ~. s. -,--.34-i-,-...- .......iv r rvn_„ 7 ~ ..,. , ._44:41-,..0,7'...k.44..-4 i.',14"g•,,--r-:--.V-;--, rr, 3- , " 'l l - ,- - *35 11 34t'a-_,_' - ' 3 :_. ~.?t, ,7 - ' ''l::- ' ct, . ......- - n. -:--1 : . t.r . s .-1 ..;....,-,,,,- t .- - WW.-,F,:::,),,5•- - ..-_ ~,..,p .&.,--44,4 i ,,,- - 1 1 --1,4.,- , ... - - 4• -• .1,-.7i-4. - , '-',..'0-Itt-.-.,-1-11-4-4:4`z,:fso;-;b 41. It 4 •-•- --- ' '..: 4 10 - 4 : V. 2 Ai.. - 3 ~,,,,S ; i* Z 4-1 7 5 1 A Q .4 1 R 1 ' V 'S ..C3:..41.,.:1 - 4.% ..?vg"` -!;'11.-‘71.&-=':':-.4".e-- 444,..-I:l4.l.Vr'''4l;*shsr.,M - 47: `'f 4 .7 ' ' ' °I1P:1-4-tieN V-o: 9 olirrt e rqS t g - - "s- -; - • - A-..11 , 0:14-,t 1 ....- k :& 4.R. -11- - .!6.. ~i, - - s - .4.,t,„,..1- ' 6 ' 4, .' aI IT 3 10 - ' ` `T r e t k r• l i - „;t0 r.. 0 t. tt.S,' - - , es.. q.., -'' , Zc s i ,t-f • , t.r.fx .,l : , ' ,l 4 , v'S"li-1:q:i---t -1,T. 1- ",,, 1 Vic.r16"4-, --_,,...„.... ''," • . 4 ' 4 'o ,eq... m 4..W.t0P . 1;4,.V,41i'01.4 r 1V2 . t, I tet y , 4 4,4 1 ;,...p, - V:* 1 . ' 441; ~ ' ''-gt-t ,i - . ;:-P-''';- .. %• : eS. 41 :1:4r' , j'i,,4•4 r .,.. .t in . , ..i1i. ,,,*- '4.lo l, NVAktißt7, & t..?' ' • .`- '*,* 4„.„-dt,t4 , - ...f,„„4 , --P4- n42.*...r- .'''' ,V.:Cri'llS., •41.4,-'?-*.:xi.V.,.,':.-43.4-"' - ut 11 . .', ' - --- .0r ,7 7 - , - - =';j 7, '' -- - - & ; "•-e , "G ---1 2 - ..,. 4', - -%P-1,- - z - Vi-;'•;' - t -2 ' - 'f:3 .., - ,s7lk9ilt&FriXtjZi-.44,1i.a.344"4,4:-,llZ:f. " 3 : It --- ;4•7. ,- §r..*-I . '"'`-' 1 . 1 =?Ct1,7 4 12114. 4 ,..." -- :.- - 2_ . - _ ii,....1z,_z2......m....:04,..Afree,A;),-;-'47,.:4-;:17,-,..- ,4 .- - ,;. 1 .•-z ..,- ...- ~,,,,e.„-.4,-.i i -_ - ,-;-r - L. .... Vrw , ' ,, e. - .4,•;.. , ...--r,F2-q,,,,,,,, - - ..e..,i 4 ;::_.,?..-- - 5',.(.._-_-,,,,,- "a.‹Es. l• -..--- ~,,, n..`..c , .•. , ,,,....t...-- .I :yrf.l.-r- ~ x - - -.-....i.5-v, . ... -rV 44 /... L- IN -,,1.,„.:r.--:,-. ,-I _ - _ ,., . 5-.- .fi. , ` ,,- .5 - tiY-: - :1-'.• „ :;-'1. - st, - " : - .5.3, 4 . • ')"A.•-•”. • :....": I '` - I..V'lni - m, l O- ' 1 "!•_=• ,,, ^4,"d...1 .. .t‘ ,4 1.4 7 ,!-- ,so°-1,,:v.,.-:,...,,...,11;:--,K,=o,f,'"_;-*-,.:. -i„-bin-t-34,-Joi,...,VIP•reIP.V. 'LT tt t ' t .,c4 ~...-..-.4,------.7.,,-v:t..-1z,,--;--:4-ii,--,"-1-'-'4l-I,,':a---'4-% ' .,,- ''''‘ -4-.2 • - •- - - ,---vz-,-&-1-,"4-1--,,t,---- tl -- _ - z -----..,, •:). ----4 --‘- , ' • x o .--.4 - -- , ~ k a, ,k 1 ,7 -a,„1." 0- 4 . - ' ,- . l tr,.L'eai., 14 . ..;...- ,5:-.,r - , 4,'''' V-,--r'''''RZ4e4 itai. , .' c--- . 7- s_l.-- t 0,..i 3 V-;-" , q .4 5-,- 5 -te - hli r el ; '''..V-4.r.. -4f-171.'.-.,W4,,••_•,„1,.,,,t„p:;f•,f.;;-,..,......L4,.41,,%-f-s .._,_44- tti-Lvu'.. ..?- 1 ,-.14.----t-:-t4,...'4t--7g.---ir::--;-cTtl-r44..`/1V13;;;: ---.-'' '* • -- _ ,,,,'1,- ..; - toj -...„- a ,, ... , :y.,..1 -- -:.---:_a&-V-2.•,1 3 ,4--, 3 ..--. '3. - 4 4 .7.i-i.. 11-- -,. - :- - . - 1.-tg:; l l!‘T , --;- t0 ,Q4,.,1:4, i y-. t .- ,Z, ; , :'. ~.r,:y7e...,,,,t."4...., -,„ •;,,,,,4„, '''i'4 - "b„--,r.72 , 5. , tt'"": -, :- , V-.t .... - "t . "'-40-...- 44- . 4,--.. , ..----..,-;,... -..., ~ .„...1.A.,..1.-...., ........... 0,-. -ft-4A., ,A11. 7 "& , ..t.,a1',, a....".".7a. L '"-..,,, "'"'...-.,,Aa_4".r. ",:gatc.',,,'s •,,, ‘a• t 5.,,,:.,4 ,4 ~,a-.t. .. P ,rr•-•".,7 O e 44:';:t 4 P 4 *L'V'''c'''' 5a,40 .. ....74 .. - .Ltv g aVa 4. , :rfft ...'::: * - /."-? 0.42' !•--7-L,7,4-.1..„.- k. .. t ' ,- ;••-•."- - ... , . 1 •4 -, Lrr - v4.1t, c 4t."5-..1--"-_„ ' -•_-- - f ...'"eif• !. : 47- ' l----P - 1 " .6- ?"'N'fieN l .o.‘n,fr. , ,,r_ - 1. - -te - V - -..-- ~,;•„....,,- - -e.4 , -A.,N: ~......_ . 15 1 ' 4 . 4 , -,-*t._., 0* - ~ - 4 - -- - "4. - ....t t , -'-;..',. z l-7- -.A..z... -- .7›,,p- - Ort.„4 - --- 24 c . -•- - - ''.-7r- , -.0,4";4 r. " - "7" ar,.‹,,,Xi,e..7.rar.e,atar,„C,,, ae.a7; .. .. , -t, 0, e've , 4 ,-. 4......N. •_.4 - -4- ...,,,,,,,,,,,,zs,t,,r;ft •#..y..47.?,-o,i-'..:4"-;-,14,*•-• _ • ' - ' --, T ,1 ` ..- •C`-` 4 44""• - '4.t.4144. ' ,::: ,--,.wv-3,,y-k.,„.7.15..:2'f0,..,,-.41.1.....-0_41;54,(1-ps,•:-Z.::::?•••..t,4z4-- '..... -. _. ~ ; Ti__,-t,.% , , "'„.... 4 „ ...,e!,, r , - 2 , 4 - .-.. , --,..?.z:?;. , , - ,---. 4 .-:-v , -i-r-;,,,,-,, r 4 . .-4....,,, , c,.. ~, .0,r.: . .: V.',6-:-4,1-,:li-------,--,-"(3,,-,----,-..-;:::::4-4:,:_iRp.-,-,:v,.. .. . ..,,.. .. , ~, - -,_ :.:., -, .-, -,,-,- ,-, - :'; ~- ~ - -: 4- , r.:. - -t,f,`--.----,... n - &-_,,, , ..„.czt:', .4,,.Ti , ~, P-7 , -C 4 .- " A , A'',, , ,,,,;,t, tr,,T•NA ,' .4 ,4 . ,-. _ , .- a-. - .'''.-- i,.!4' --, - -.. ' •.: . ''' ~ .• a - _ - ",", -- na- - - aZi•-• MP ~---, .:,,„ ,- ~- - , ,-;,-.„ - ,--..--` ',..-, ~,,.' ' ,- „, , ,--.. „ :". , ..x. , - , '"'''''''• .`-",,....,,,........ -kr - ^ta-',7.7. .'''''.t.... ''..4....,1i-'---, - 7. ,- ' - b. - .7' - 'l.-i• r'1.._..4..,_frz,z2....----... . - ms s ' , -..„.., - -'2. -- ...r, - - -,.-..._.' ~4. ..` ,--• ~. - - , -- • • -..- ,- . v, , ,., - r e l-•:: •- 4 -,- 4 --,.- 44. 1 - ": ~«.-'- '''''' .. r` .- •`-‘4.4- 4‘ 7 4 4 .4.4. , A . 40.......,.., -• _ ~ : •:,_,:r44,1- 47 L. .1,....ty- , -_,_.-.. -- "7,-- , -IBL• - --.e..,-, 1 -,1,- ~ ...„,,v., - - -. -(*:- . ,-.- , ----t..- _ ~-' ' _'_;; 1- _ . - - • ' 711 .- - - - ' ..-.' - ;. -,l, :'= - 1 4 "! - ,: :.- "*''',. -:-", '-, ' -," :, - ' - • _- ~„'----_ _--,--_: -- '„ _- _„.-.„.,- ..--_,<-..- - ., - .". r .tr , ..-r.i• - ."4-'h-'7-_::--` t's-7*-_--;:k:,.-',.;•'4"c.*--s'47-t.i"-tc---4-,-41.1...4"..-:-&-iTv.if - i - Ar= '-- --- -- ---= --' ."--,' , .„7-- ...,-_-,-. .-, -- - - Ft -.- '4. ''' '.: 0 - :... *-, ;f•:--;.' .: ..f4 4.-';!. : --.'•... ` -. ,r '', "•:, ..... rt . _• L , . - .2 . ~4.,-' ...; ..4,4'•rix i:•".'vl.-4".74''''*----4-',...*': ' ',l;*--.*'A- ' '----. ' -. ' '':''A.*a*7l-t'&4.E.-a•',.4t.,""!. ,--}*'"*.t''''eL*;%,.i.-11'trk,.4- .I.j i*. • *-*B C *, '4 ', '.. 'L -r* -'-`: 4 1 ' - ~ ./ - .J . .. - -... f r - ;.,.- 4 ,. ,- .". - ,. - ,.. '-'-r -,,....‘-% ''. - -- - r-, . ; '''-'-, ,-*, ~',,-',,...,„.•,-, _''':,,,_ „ . .3.: „;44.',., --.4,-, a'"7.,_,-4.14,-,7.47,,,,"*-7,,,,,'54, 1 - 41".'" 4 - 4, ,tta, ~ a ro?" .. 4**,"._ SrtviA 111-V1.,, a . t`... s A ~ ~ i I„ ~,. , , , ~.. 0, 4 .. 7 - „' . ,,f?„ , , t „... , :: . ,z , - .., ",w; , , t:; . "4 , ,, ~,..,3,.4,„4, ~ .- , : , ef,„ „. . /. : ;,, , , „,, k„ - • :_--, _.",- '..*.-- - "-- : ' -..-"- '-r. ÷' ' 7''' , - ..- ' ... - 4.14f. ; ;;V1C4 P 4,."5;7,a'r ' -.. ri4,.t'''',..,"*.ttiVe46y--4-4;,4,4tm,t.'21:e:t,--- N.l* - ''',/,% 1. %.4 4 . • . .thier:4, 4 4 W. ''' -'' ' .. '-'' f . '*' . ; ' • 1 7_ •;4.:-„I.:4. - ~.44- 3 , _,. - 41,,,..'...., ,' 4-....----,4`2-4-40',..--:04:-.4'.4,.-^4,..'..,F_Wf;',V174!...,ti.,*4** .. r ' 4. ' ' . r• ,. ' - . • ,--. 4.„1-Pr .4=-,..-_,,, i „-* ft• - „..„. 2 1, - r.„l- , #44 , . k, „trytp _,,), .4 -,...1..... , -*, k , „,._.. ,4, i .. - s . __„_. k. f t., Jo .1' ,i , . „, 4 *. Iv V..4,; 4 4c ''',l ", ';'.:";".1.,-,-7,.:';,,i7.,-,-.7;"'-'2,7.l>ca,‘'',"-"ir",;,- W " ?':' , ..";- - 7 .."' :a.v..Vlp, Z.,4 - t,., ett -i . e.-1,v,, . 4 .,„r,, , e - r 4 t a , t.i . .. , ,i, liCif, 4 „. 4 ,.... ,i, ...,..4.„ . _,.,.-. - ..,-„,i, , -. i 4 rt , ~,-,. , i .-- ~_-,.. a E. ar, a. , re'',E; , 4 f + 4t, , 4 .I s -. 1 , W . :*. d 4: 4 - 4.- ''S ritii:•4:l3;r44:.*'::ij *-''"";4 :..... 7 .4P LP,:t i .4 4 * " .11 -t.. 4 t 51 :4 1 . 1. 4 = /_ N-4r -e . ,at: ', 4 A t_ ,, -; L r,„#- * _.. 4,-0, ..,. V -, .7 . , aI. ~* . .., ~ '..., -. ' "i'' 4 7.) --,. '. , , t ,P - - ~.,.... 4 .t„,..,-t',,..• . 0,14) 5 _ 4 --.. ...,tt , a , r,..„ - A.,47Wr4.-'''.-,11,- A- P 4 T , ,;11 , ...=.1, , --- -,re ..,- 4 ~ .4- . -v.. ~ _ ,, A _ 4:.,-,+.l.` t t 5 7.4*, ir get,' Cr' :t`, :, ..d.,'',li - -2 - . :" _.-4 .. ~.* 7 - .4 ‘'` 4; iti'Llr**,,tl:-Pr''' s- - ---,P.:; - .1-t•-cp I"' ' 44 e;Aal.a..F .**t' , . -, ia.44,lScr , "la . ' 4 1 .....i'4 '''._, trtt-fis.4t,l'V l / 4 ___ Nai,o 4 l.Pql.t.; l ,:i-:• 1 1,. ft -41. ,.."'ai"1;-; ..; • , -.• .-- 4,;;77-.1 . 4=4 - •_ - 41...- , ,,.-;,:‘ , •=- .•, •,..„.• ~ ..-, ,1 -. =-...-,,,, ',--,-,• t• - ,,_ 4 * -••,...'; '•;' - --4 . - '‘';•'` ;,--,•;.1.-,„ .. 5 ; „.141 ; .- ;s ,-i..-:*. i'lt ,„ ,' :• .; - 1 4 .= 5,15 %:•••% , .= , - - z-t,i,.1Li, , , , -,,-7 e r",` "XI 44 " "'eW t e 41,,, e 11 '.J.,.' , .a . ' , 1r,. • c.: yi .. ".. , -; 4 ' 4 X.C.4.,":„ :`, e,t. a*. ''',,,," ree* oh LY 4 ,- „ . 7,14 - 77,1- a , ,,, - . ° . ~. 4 - , ' . . , ' ., '1 q , ,, 4 , 'e", ," _ ' .t...e 4. '" , " 4 a. -- .4 ",t4.- ,';, ' ,. ..3„. eir - e --`'..,"5-f.--,,. r Z.- -/ ".C. 7 4 . ,,,-4.0.• tearrtl.4N ' ' '' '''n ,-,,,,- . ,..e..:,', , z.; 4 na , i r .e... ,, era ,, a.„.t.;a4kr arr ''' - ' ,, 14161'5* - .. - 41-4" - a.,a0 4 , ....,....5 , --,.. :„.4‘.,- .4,4r4,16,4.-rf,a7;„,** ei 7 ~- t. i.', s - ' ''4l * t ". e '. •" 7, :.- .., T -",',.. '4. .o'l .1 - ;' ) .: l'f,' - 4 ' . - r 1 1 -1 0":47.4" ..f,.' c. ir. "' '' ! I' `'.:' 7 -.* ' '''''''- • /-' '' ' . .. .1....--.... y ~.t..4.. - -.i c e, o ...ot . -1., ,, :vr.5......„--ei. w ir ,',,T,',,,,,, 5 'ig,i.:, ,fle.stli-t- 4. , " 44 . 41.,,,...- 2',' ;--/ h. 4.)• , , ..4 ---,- ,•,Lt - *.r.•et.L•fig.,...1 4 „., ~ ---' ,i - ~.t. ap " •.* ,a .. ..•,...' ' .-+• , firaV'ta_,VX:WA,,rYirg.EVA. -,5 - _,A'4' , - -,1 , ---p-f-Fs- • ---xa‘„ T:3 "" . cr '''" - -f-e-.4. iA' -1 14.' ' ' - :, , -'-' t.roi -- 4 -.- .. •, -. ... , ?.... ; , t. 1' a. 7, el. .1. a t U. ~ '' 1 ~,, A c - ,7 1 p-,,,., 4 4 - t. , . .. .-,. , ~i., 4. 4 . ,) , "•„`, , '4".z.,711 - 4 . 40.r g.4,-.14'.V.r,',C.4,1)....1.-PWAZ...ipV„,,Nfr,,k-P -„,*• ~... -4' '''V''''''' -" t -7 1. feb. ne , 4 , j," •A1,' 0 4 , i ~4- 1 1- .z N4 ,4.- .- „ ,, tk.:,4...7 .- . 0.-' , ~,,, 1 .. -,- "r.-.,„ 4- ... 7., ti.., '4' .4 ...1.-, ,- 4,* ~,„4, • .r.i , - , i' .. .,. ... '' '''' "0 ~ L4C-V M.,qt -444 t4 1rrt " ," - 4 ''`rl4 ; Viig , a 4t.4f,, , Ar tf , '4:-" , tV,tf„.. frs4, ,, ...14,'.' Y,, ,, t, - 7^., 4 I , V ' Kt., ' .',',. V, t...'' .., 4"i ~,,* ,** C ‘ ' . 4 4 * ~. - -.•• I. ' • __,.x...-1-_ce..!....P-4,!:•,6.,g gr,:.--;st,-rar-Vta-,,05,704-4,-o,leo * ,at -I;aq., 4.- 7. - '-", et - 1 ' Us g.. t e..i. - ~ „Os .4,- j.a -..e, a-rt,", ..... 4 ~ A. . ,,,,, . , , ..t. .... . .• ,. i ..1, ., ; „ 4 ~..., 4 , ~ 4 ~ ,e ; ,- " ,- P . T - P --- ':',Ffit.x.;" ~.4" ' , 4..0 - v-44g.";_tt'OA-o"z‘,, ..,)-, ~C.o44l„,tft_ .Z,t 4. 't:,..,i;',„,.,%4-,....=,5.s - 40 ,1 1 .4. ,,,,,444,,,,4;„ 1 ,-;‘,.71.4-.: . ,- -:' ~,,, ":: ,, N. • .•- .t 4 . --.- --. 1. ,. .. , .„-, ~. -,.., * -, ,, y _„..,,,,1e -,4,,1,.-1. „...'7:0..".0.-.F.-&L.E06.4--V -1.4 r, ,ile , r, "W - Air ,it - '''' '" ''''' - ' , .f ' ,- Vit , 4 4‘ gr - V. - ; +" ~ 5.,' , "... 11. E ~ „:I'. • . ~ . ~.... .- .•,' 1 , , .., • - + ~,.. ___,,,, .........„..,„.. e - t., , ,,,,i .„ 1,- -,, A. ... 4 ..., - 1/41 WWI,: r t =4„. . - 4 ,, ..„ ~ A e,..-.....„v5 ,4„4,,,..,„ arb„,...,,,,,r0„,0 , - at ... „.,4.4„ i . o, igiViti 5 4 1e1 ;1*. tPot '1;01 trit ,, f . ,I , ;' -f - r , A , • ~^.‘ ,: ~. "" ' ''' ' ''''''''' - A'_--, '-, ..' , C.V"' ...d ie *-.04 9c. Ver' - y . ~.. f.. ~i k 40 - 0, ika4. - Pri&- .4,r0,,,, ~• .0,0 - . r.-4 - -•! : .... ;,-, :',4 .a 4 , 1 , 'ti' _'.r '- 4 4 - "''''''.'''''''', ._,..'",_ ".--‘'..- .., ,."• - .. 4 'l l. r,..7 , 7” - - t 'I. 4'5 a' z. c irt - -4 1 4 r 14 6 1,4_,1....*"" f`.. , i 4 4 . 4 4 1 .- X'''''' ~'k «" ;N I , • • ''.-4,=.41',--sM:';'..-1,-e:;k3ll,Mr-Z'''''.;,ooq.lij,C*.lM*.4tl' - V ..,,,,; ' 7l /. 4 '- - - ' '''''. I . -' ' ''''-'' ' .. .. 4r ej l 4.....' , ' '- **. 4. 11 01 ' - W , 1 0 4 4.4 : 1 1 1 r 0 ';. , V , g'& . 1., , it.V. , 1 .-fib :"• -I , ~,- ' ''' ~' • , , ;i- , ta , ,,,„..,4,-- . ~' - --,„ '''''''''-• , t . ....., ~..r ." 4,• 7 1 '4 ,: 5- 4 '4, , ,.C..ii2trt.0 , „*. , :i ::, -, .,...'_,.1 . . - t , , 4... ~ , - I ‘ t- i. „; ,.. rN,, , , ,Pi , r e" 74 -• 44 . ,,,,,, .f• 4, , C V 1 , 6 ,7 4: ~,,c4.'-4---. . -0- _,--i - - = r , -. ~o. . .yeKt- 4 ,-,-_,-37.0 _ .1.,-..,--, ~,,, ~. , - 'i - e", - ....-1-- - : -.- , 1 4,', 4 .-- . 1 „=.11." - .4- . .--",e ~` •-• -i '' , , ' ''' ''' '' ."'`f.:4'. ti '44,' , '-- V O-*' 'N ' tkv- ,1P --,.., ~4. , - 4. t. - ,',%-"-.,,* - 1- ••• ' ‘...'7,:;: , ..'....!, :1: .1 , ~- :.;„-k `.,t. „. -.' . 4-7 *... 7 .' ' ' 4-4 ; ' .f,p .-- '?".k . '` •- • *•.4 .4 " '4 , t - '.;,4 .3, i, r ‘ ,. . 4 , --i..-_, .. 4 .. -4 '' . --4 ,:i., ,r ....' : {.t 7> "4„' „4: - . „ , - " _, ,'' ~i, ,'. ' ' , !t` . _ ~< , h , ,4,..-4........Lt.-t, 5.., 4 1"1". , +,..0.P.L.,1-;,, 4 '•;7.1 is p , ,:,„ . 4 .'" 4 , .„,,,,, ~,; , ,:,„ ...,„ . „ .,44 4 , , 4 ~,, =, ~.„ ..,„ , a" - - -' 4 -I:','-;:•-ta_4''.57;14" 'L,:-.4rt>4.-",:i-;3,-44;C-;',Ei:"‘--".7:a-11-41'11-4,1.- 4 " , " 1- Y : 4; r, i t - *fi :,,a4 4* .kt , ..1 %-- `,.4'.. ' " ra" ' ' .4 -4r.7 .; '''' ."--,-,-.---':',.* '' 'f"' ' ' '' , ...":7 . .. ; ' ,',: , - -• ' '-'7,' '1,**1;71.4::1:414-#'l4--7:-1!,r4-!--r,,,,1'.L.T.''-';414,....1-ri';--,,-d-;.4-t4'°,t-t.,123441-..44:-.l:zk-.'--,-, ' l ,l.: _:_- - _ 12::- - ', .'i c - : - 1 ! - Vi '.4 . t.. 'T -L- ' l, ''-`.. ' - _ , e7 - , , ,, ~,:-..7tte ,-t-if-ext.-,.efr--t,--5,,,,1-V--xt74l-"4-1-74..-1-4-or4 Vn. -,-r 5 10 , -1.- ;,+!ti: , , , ,i,,:-'„d-..' . -- 410!,-.:4,-::=.4. 0 , ,, r-----,:-.Y- ..,____., - - S.O gii - '4"- , 'T '''' -' ' - 4- ''-r` ' - - 4 4-, 4 v. ' - r--' - '4Y&S'g-- , o_;tVaw.Lte4:r7-y,. 4 !; , .-t , -- m-grA - __ . _?:;_ ,, -t'lLg_ . -__,-&. - - - ____ . r "._.O 'TTSBE THURSDM MOMING.. JANUARY _ _ 3)7114 OrGit*T.lo T asz • yba of JAKESTUCHAN ntiOM CM" SIZZ, - ' - OF ; C - - Gene sabicigg76 4gel°°Th FOE" VICE rassroarr: i IL B. KING , OF ALABAIKA ; - &004:to".0" , sraf 3 .!- d ' u "'" • trortivrali...../t. largo -number -of iteketi.to the:' , KOSSUTH 'FESTIVAL"- have been. .'disposeit_4 -though ninny eligible teats remain yet tin rold.-:-Daripi..tic.-day, Mikan may, be procured at the :-irilii.ceorGen::LiamArsui Viiarth street and, on" _to-. = morrow ATainialayr,forcniat 9 9 10. 0e k, i he - itiekits - , thca-kinteMing ousoldosill bra. Uivpoiurt tit without re-: term at Plano: Harz.. , L _ The Festival.willtakCplithe all o'clock, of the alter noon Of the day eucceeding the turival of Governor .. - gam. We;are indebtedlo J. Mrwm, Esq ~ for interesting legislative documezita. We will . _ here remark, that a• mistake occurred in the itariiSburg papets in publishing the names of the -member of the Committee of Ways and Means.. The name of another person was sub % stituted for that of Mr. Miller. The following - - zlB correct : Ways Meana—Messre. Bonham; Hart, Mc Goodwin, IlloCane, Benedict, Blair, Lilly of Allegheny. Ar3"ll'ni.G OP THE KOSSUTH ESECUTrirId COItINCT r-, Ts.r.-4he committee met. at 4 o'clock, yeater day;.:-at. Cot Sahrs-'-Th Umbstaetter. .Esq., in the dal; and John Harper, Secretary. The fol lowing risolutkin was unanimously adopted : Ra t iz i mkablitAithti E. Glass, Esq., be a com- Wiltteirtriequest the Eire Department to ring of the EnieHous:ll33.easoiVthea signal of Gov.. Soma a approach to sig nal. to - be first given by the bell of the Third Pre - sbyteieudi Church. girZPe hadthe pleasure yesterday of malting the acquaintance of tapt. Havirrisassas, one of the- private Secretaries offtovernor Kossuth. He has apartments at the St. Charles Hotel, Vthere.Gov. B. and suite will,stop during their visit to Pittsburgh. Wait to those Anxious to See and Bear Governor_Kosantn. Are understand that Governor Kossusw will, in futumfirst attend to all associations of Fatssos 4:17 - EitimeAßY, whether county associations, local asscalatitom, private associations, Mc: ies associa tions or workmen's associations, sad will receive and answer : their addresses before all others. We remind'our friends that one dollar stbscrip don, once for; all, or fottimonthly instalments of 25 cents each, make a member, and that twenty five members suffice to constitute , an association. eriggested some days since that our citizens • - viol : Lave an abundance to spare, and the ohaxl table feeling to give it, should do something to succor the poor during the present inclement season. The wants of the poor are pressing and 'beyond parellel—means exhausted ; labor, in a geeatmeaaure, suspended ; prises of all the ne _. -.= tessaties of lifeunusually high, and the season the most severe that has been experienced for the last twenty years. The, pr*ritlime iaPropitions tci do something , - for-the destitute. The illustrious Kossure trill be azoongns; the city will be full of persona - willing to spend tens of thousands to celebrate the visit:of this great man to our city, and we have not the slighteit doubt but that they would, if a proper appeal was made to their warm Seats, Spend one half the amount of their sur-- Phis funds .for the relief of the suffering poor. Will not some of our charitable, pious and patri' otic citizens, make a move to secure at this pro , pitious time, a sufficient fund to feed the hungry, -clothe-the naked and bring warmth to the hearths crf those who are now suffering ? 4BICNESSEE STATE CONVENTION "The Nashville Unidn brings us the Tennessee Dethoczatio State Convention which assembled at that place on the Bth inst. The Hon. Cave Johnson, formerly Postmaster General, Presi dent;; and W. T. Helms, J. W. Ford, Thomas Boyers, M. C. C. Church, end N. 0. Blake, were 'Secretaries. bir..Nicholson, chairman of the committee on resolntione, reported the following, which were rintagunonaly adopted : Rooked - That 44 the Federal Union mist be preserved." Resolved, That the Democrats of Ten nessee are ready to meet their political brethren of the other States in National Convention for the purpose of nominating candidates for the Presidency and Vice Presidency of the United _States to- - be supported upon the platforms adopted-I).y. our party at the Baltimore Conven : Lion in 1844 and 1848 with - a distinct understand ?or that the measure passed by the lastCougress f the - adjustment of the questions connected vrith . slaviery shall be faithfully adhered to and acquitaced - in ass fmal settlement of-those gees tions. A.' V. Brown seconded the adoption of these resolutions in an eloquent and thrilling :speech, whisk was received with enthusiastic ap plause; Non: P. Nicholson was called out, who, in his usual felicitous manner, congratulated the - convention on the nnanimkty of sentiment which pervaded the assembly. Several-other gentlemen were balled on, who •-• responded. in enthusiastic speeches. Among those,. who participated were Messrs. Guild, -Eivingrlfartin, of Maury, Dunlap, of Shelby, Spool) Miller, Polk, Davis, of Cannon, and Pick , ett, of Smith. The names of the President and Vice Presi - dents, - • , .art. 3": C. Pickett and J. H. Thomas were added to the list of delegates to' the Baltimore 'Convention, for the State at large. the " Cave Johnson, President of the Convention; is.well known to be an enthusiastic friend of Mr. Buchanan. COM=;I leit`Hoir. Fort transmitted Ids annual me nage to the New Jeipey Legialatixre on Wednee _, .dair. He recommends a homestead exemption, find the appropriation of all the revenues of the to education. He also reaommeads that allthe banks in the State be required to deposit ieuttrity for the redemption of their titlidea„, There is a balance in the treasury of $1468 and the indebtedness of the State amounts to $71,846. The school fund amounts _ 71,Q91, besides $11,169 due it by solvent banks. "The.Ciovernor expresses his unqualified '"..lappreial:Of the compromise measures, and his .erupsthy for Kossuth and Hungary. • He minks-otti..l3Viernment should interfere on her jnhis- 41 ., Breslin , Esq., the new Treasurer of 0114,ii.a13 given notice to the ‘ different county irreateastmers_throttg,hent the State, that no certify 'of ' dePeeit,.; or, drafte, upon any Banks which -have refasedto comply with the laws of taus State, regairing.themto pay a -just proper tiion of the public) tare* 141 hereafter he receiv - cwd ai_hiwoffice. _ . , , U:inc4"-4teVileuties-QllB y we troduced intolkt I v ' T wase en n ixt biCri lia t g the ewn%s;l4edgilig!' 953: • ig of thi:'s"goTeF *F p r iaideWNT:• generales t e ia o t#te to aid 7 7 of sY su depreo • wt. ---, ZUtigt- Pp. tB foxeigu toe - eesvrair -1,d0t03-,ahan OEDU Coeasntrag, TUB: POOR, A:2;004;i ta;i:4ernaiiOxgiolli;i4;." ‘-?-• Some time go ell s r2ToereNi r iltret ifenaber t xe :chronicled .the de~ okthf;yhilOelpitla;' Spirit of £heTimes, a paper th at constantly: engaged purest aidt.be ,. sf - 12einer,7 crate in Pennsylvania. In its place another rm.._ per sprung into exist once, called the Pennsylia.: nia Statesman,. whicheeon commenced the same work of slander and detraction. This paper we . never exchanged with,, deeming it unworthy of being-cliiied amongst 'the Democratic journals' of Pennsylvania. It was the mere personal or gnn of Simon Cameron, President of the Mid dletowriliank, a man who, while professing to be a Democrat, has made war upon all the us ages of the party, and has been a traitor to its principles. The Statesman, in obedience to the mandates of Cameron and his little Conservative clique, has been engaged for some time past in abusing and libeling the lion. JtjetsßucuasAn ; but its influence, instead of injuring' the distin guiehed citizen, has only increased the number and strengthened the confidence of his friends, as the result of the late Aelegate elections in Philadelphia and Lancaster counties clearly proves. 151 r. Cameron has probably learned by this time that his money cannot give permanent vitality to newspapers nor control the honest Democracy of Pennsylvania. Owners of the Soil It is a remarkable fact, that all of the consti tutional states of Europe or America, Great Britain is the country in which the people hold the smallest stake in the soil. France, with a population of 32,560,985, has 10,896,982 landed proprietors, or one in three. The United States with a population of 20,000,000, has 6,000,000 proprietors, or one in four. Belgium, with a population of 5,022,677, has 950,723 proprietors, or one in five. Holland, a commercial and ship ping country, with a population of 3,600,000, has 400,000 proprietors, or one in nine. Swe den, with a population of 8,874,203, has 80,000 proprietors, or one in twelve. While Great Britain and Ireland, with a population of 27,- 041,050, have only 683,42], or one in forty out of the population, including freeholders and copyholders, with a direct interest in the soil. MESSRS. HARPER & PHILLIPS : While the orator and patriot of Hungary is engaged to delight the audience at Masonic Hall, I am sorry to see that no provision is made for him to address the working people, whose employments will Prevent them from going in the day time to that festival. Besides, the pri ces of the tickets are beyond the reach of many. Now, the working men sympathise with him as much, at least, as those who will hear him in the Masonic Hall, and desire to give him mate rial assistance. • - Let me suggest that one. of the Canal Ware houses be got, and Gov. Kossuth address the people on Saturday evening in English and Ger man, and fifty cents be paid for admission, the money to go to the Hungarian fund, without any reduction therefrom for useless expenses. Who seconds my motion? A WORECING MAN. Kossuth mid Gorgey While Kossuth is receiving the enthusiastic sympathy, admiration, and assiatance of the people of England and America, Gorgey, the great leader of the Hungarian War of independ• mice, drags on a lonely and momentaneons existence at Elagenfurth, in Corinthia, a city much resorted to by pensioned officers of the Austrian army. The New York Tribune says : " Then he lives - with his family, consisting of his wife, a single child, now but three months old, a woman servant and a soldier. who was his attendant throughout the war. He sees little society, hardly a family of the city having sought his acquaintance. He has but one inti mate friend, and that is an Englishman. His time is passed in studying chemistry and phys ics, and his chief amusement is lecturing upon physical chemistry to a few persons. Of money, he has plenty, from the Austrian government he receives a yearly pension of 3003 florins, and from that of Russia he has received 6,000 silver rtiblea. He is very rarely seen in public; about once a month his wife prevails on him to take a walk for the sake of his health, but in general he avoids appearing abroad. The common people regard him with aversion." New York Menke 'Lod Bankers The superintendent of the banking department I reports that the whole number of banking asso ciations and individual bankers doing business in the State of New York on the first day of December, 1851, was 244, viz--chartered banks 72, banking associations 95, individual bankers 77. During the year thirty-seven banking asso • ciations and individual bankers have deposited the requisite securities, and commenced business. The whole amount of securities deposited was $3,310,284, and the circulation issued on these securities amounts to $2,801,251. The whole amount of circulating notes issued to assooia tions and individual bankers, outstanding on the Ist of December, 1851, was $15,871,004, for the redemption of which securities are deposited, and held in trust by the superintendent, amount ing in the aggregate to $16,827,714 85. Z ir It has been generally supposed that the natural bridge, in Virginia, was the only geo logical wonder of the kind in the country. This is a mistake. In Carter county, Kentucky, there is a natural bridge across the Rookbridge branch of the Cany fork of little Sandy. It is 196 feet span, 12 feet wide, 20 feet thick in the middle of the arch, and 107 feet above the water. ID the county of Walker, in Alabama, there is an other similar natural curiosity, which was dis covered in a recent geological exploration. The span is 120 feet, and the height nearly 70. This bridge is formed of sandstorA and is very sym metrical. Large beech and hemlock trees grow on the bridge, and the surrounding scenery is represented as sublime. ter A Parliamentary return lately made, shows that Liverpool is the greatest port in the British empire, in the value of its exports and the extent of its foreign commerce. Liverpool exports in value more than half the total amount of the exports of Great Britain and Ireland. The principal ports in Great Britain rank as fol. lows for the year 1850: Liverpool exports, in value, £35,000,000; London, £14,000,000; Hull, £10,866,000; Glasgow, £8,768,000; Southamp ton exports in value nearly £2,000,000; Cork exports in value above £1,000,000. A Lirras Motraran.—The State Bank of Indi ana maintains a circulation of $4,681,993, the largest of any one institution in the country, though the Bank of Kentucky and Northern Bank of Kentucky, taken together, are as large. The field of circulation out of their respective States, is the same with all three, viz: Illinois, :Missouri, and the part of southern Ohio, and the river trade. They are respectively supported - by a fair amount of specie. The Indiana Bank has $1,287,216. GEORGIA Rialto...pg.—The Legislature of the State of Georgia has just appropriated $525,- 000 to the.repair and equipment of the Western and Atlantic . 130-I,nad, which completes the very important connection of the Seaboard at Savan nah w i th T all n es s g;liu. a continuous line of road about five hundred miles in extent, and the ter` ~minus at Chattanooga isdestined to connect with all the great lines throughout the North and West. Caaroza.—This terrible diseaie is said to have greatly increased in England during -a few years, insomuch - thatn Cancer Hospital haa just been established in London, and i s e ff ec ti ng an _ulensedeelAgood., In 1850, before this Hos pit,44BB,esialkitted, no leafs than four thousand ftve7liiinik44-sa-A60.-gixl).ersims di64lliibig lata.of ttai' rJejaolll - 1 ill/0i- - 7. • - - - The 6 o'cldck train from Now York, on Friday morning. on passing Bristol, dropped one of its cars ; those having charge of the train ran the car off the main 'track into a small car-hoteie, and leftit there, hut with a degree of careless ness totally unpardonable, neglected to turn back again to its proper place-theswitch leading to the car-bottse. At 12 o'clock, the 9 o'clock train fromNewTOrkreached Bristol, and there being no passengers waiting there, was passing cm at nearly full speed, when it reached the switch, and a sudden jar and the crashing of timbers caused quite a consternation among the passen gers. The locomotive had been turned from its proper course by the misplaced switch, and ran upon the track leading to the car-house, into Which building it plunged, bursting through the doors and forcing the empty cars standing in the house through a brick wall in the rear, thence through a pile of wood in a yard adjoining, anti thence again into the dining-room of the house of Mr. William Stewart, iu the middle of which himself and family, seven in number, were sit ting around the dinner table. The whole interi or of the back -building, which was of frame, about twelve feet in width by sixteen feet in length, was brought down in a mass of ruins, the upper floor falling on to the table and stove, with the bedding and furniture from above. The passengers immediately left the cars to render such assistance as might be needed. They found Mrs. Stewart and a young girl, who were in the room at the time of the crash, were in the yard, whence they had been thrown, frantic, with ter ' ror, whilst the father was struggling to rescue his children from beneath the ruins, at which a hundred willing hands were in a moment hearti ly assisting him. Their screams could be heard, and for a few minutes nothing could be seen of them, but on the upper floor, which had fallen. being lifted off, the three children, two girls and a boy, were found covered with rubbish, and rescued, when their injuries were happily found to be but slight. The girls were slightly bruis ed and scratched, and the little boy had quite a severe contusion on the side of his head. All of them were almost frightened to death, equally - unable, as were their parents, to imagine what had happened. The other persons in the room were only slightly bruised, with the exception of Mrs. Stewart, who received a severe blow on the bead, and being enciente, some fears were entertained as to the result. On returning to- the car house, into which the head of the train had entered, the locomotive and tender was found to be driven together, and the running gear and frame of the former crush ed into a hundred pieces, being, in fact, a per fect wreck. The end of the empty car, or rath er the shattered frame of it, was driven almost entirely out of the car house, through the brick wall, and lodged on the pile of wood in the yard, between the rear of the house and the dwelling of Mr. Stewart ; a portion of it entering and demolishing the back part of which, as before stated, but still retaining its elevated position. The truck of this car wan thoroughly demolish ed between the front of the locomotive and the lower part of the wall, which, being built against a bank of earth, did not give way. The engi neer, Mr. Peter Provost, leaped off as soon as the head of the locomotive struck the door, and succeeded in escaping with a alight injury to his side and back. The two firemen, James Kluley and James laexor, both of New Brunswick, dis covered the danger of their position too late to jump, and were found fast between the locomo tive and tender; the first with his right foot caught at the instep, the bones crushed and protruding in a frightful manner ; and the sec• and with a similar injury to his left foot ; and, though not se severely crashed, amputation is deemed necessary in both cases. They wore soon rescued from their fearful position by the passengers, and conveyed to a public house, where medical aid was promptly in attendance, affording them temporary relief until they could be brought to the City Hospital, where amputa tion was doubtless performed last night. A messenger was sent by the conductor, by horse express, to the telegraphic station at Tren ton, and a message sent to Philadelphia for an other locomotive, which reached Bristol at three o'clock, and after a detention of about three hours, the train was again in motion on its way to the city, where it arrived at half-pant four o'clock. A Letter Worth Reading We will back the following piece of composi Lion against any thing ever produced. It was written half a century ago by Sir Boyle Roche, a member of the Irish parliament, in the "troub lons times of '98," when a handful of Wexford men struck terror into the hearts of many gal lant sons of Mars, as well as the worthy writer himself. It was addressed to a friend in Lon don: My Dear Str:—ldaving, now a little peace and quietness, I sit down to inform you of the dreadful bustle and confusion we are all in from these blood-thirsty rebels, most of whom are, thank God: killed and dispersed. We are iu pretty muss, can get 'nothing to eat, nor wine to drink, except whiskey ; and when we sit down to dinner we are obliged to keep both hands arm ed, Whilst I write this, I hold a sword in each hand and a pistol in the other. I concluded from the beginning that this would be the end of it, and see I was right, for it is not half over yet. At present there are such things going on that every thing is stand still. I should have answered your letter a fortnight ago, but I did not receive it until this morning. Indeed scarcely a mail arrives safe without be ing robbed. No longer ago than yesterday, the coach with the mails from Dublin was robbed near this town : the bags had been judiciously left behind fur fear of accident, and by good luck there" was no body in it but two outside passengers, who had nothing for the thieves to take. Last Thursday notice was given that a gang of rebels were advancing here under the French standard bat they had no colors or any drums except bagpipes. lmmedi man in the place, including women and children ran out to meet them. We soon found our force much too little : we were too near to think of retreating. Death was in every face, but to it we went, and, by the time half of our little par ty were killed, we began to be all alive again. Fortunately, the rebels had no guns, except pis. tole and pikes, and as we had plenty of muskets and ammunition, we put them all to the sword. Not a soul of them escaped, except those that were drowned in adjacent bog; and in very short time, nothing was to be heard but silence. Their uniforms were all different colors, bnt mostly green. After the action we went to rum mage a sort of camp, which they left behind them. All we found was a few pikes without heads, a parcel of empty bottles full of water, and II bundle of French commissions filled with Irish names. Troops are now stationed all around the country which exactly squares with my ideas. I have only time to add that lam in great haste. P. B.—lf you do nut receive this, of course it must have been miscarried, therefore I beg you to write and let me know. Tat FUTURE Or ITAIN.—We find the following remake upon the future of Italy, in the London Quarterly Review : "Englishmen, if they will, really and in earnest, give a thought to the future of Italy, must learn to pronounce not only without shud dering, but even with some degree of faith and hope, the word "Republic." And this is rapidly coining to pass. sundreds of our most eminent men, who, a few years ago would not have named a republic with patience, and who even now would resent, iu the strongest manner, as sheer impudence and disorderly pedantry, any attempt to raise is republican controversy in England, have become convinced, and daily and openly declare in their conversations on the subject, not only that a republic is the only solution possible for Italy, but that the hour is not greatly to be deprecated when all the thrones on the continent will have to bow themselves before the blast of a republican hurricane." BLOODLESS NO LONGER BLOOMING. —The days of the Bloomer style of dress, about which we heard so much last spring, appear to be num bered. We never see them any more in Chest nut street, nor read of them in our country or other exchanges. The attempt to introduce them into England has failed signally. Mrs. Bloomer herself, it is rumored, has also aban doned the costume,. , and says that if she had known the ridicule she was to endure, she would never have attempted the reform. The idea that the dress was immodest seems-to have been more fatal to the experiment than anything else.— Phi/o. Bulletin. A RABBI IN THE LEGIBLATEBE.---11 stated that _before the commencement of business in the Senate of New York, on Monday last, , the- rayer which it usually offered was made, by .Rabbi Wise, the minister of the Jewish SynagogUe.:: in Albany. Rabbi Wise is a German by birth, And thoiliqqat talented of the Hebrew Clergy • - _ wreath ; But of One plant she gathera pot. though fair it• bloc- Moms be ; Only the bride bath leave to wear buck from the orange tree. OnZ.5 only once, that wreath h worn,—onee only may she wear • The pale white wreath of orange flowers, within her kikinttig hair: They wear. upon their raft wan bloom, 'Me shade of coming years; The spiritual presence is around of human hope* and 40f1 and thOlldallt ey, upon her mirnn dwell. in that long and tender look.nhe taketh her farewell all her youth's uheon..ciousneks, of all her lighter And for acMaper, sadder life—a woman's lot prepare:" She leave, her old familiar place, the hearts that were her own; The love to which she trust, herself is yet a thing Oh- Though at one name her cheek turned red. though sweet it be to hear. Yet for that name she must resign so ranch that ha, been dear. it k an anxious happiness,—it is a fearful thing, Wit .11 first the maiden's small white band puts on the hoiden nag( She pusseth from her father's house unto nnother's core; And mho may say what troubled hours, what ISOCCOW.. wait her there? Alt Love and life are my , neries, both Weaning and both blest ; A; d yet how much they teach the heart of trial and res Sweet maiden, while these iyouoled thoughts 'mid bridal fancies sweep, • Well maym thou pensive watch thy glass, and turn aside TO weep. Latent. from Texas. By the arrival of the steamship Lousiana at Now Orleans, we have received Galveston papers of the 21 inst. We find nothing in them of importance but what has been anticipated by telegraph. The death of General Edward Burleson, once President of the late republic of Texas, is con firmed. He died at Austin on the 26th ult. The Legislature has as yet taken no definite notion in relation to the public debt. A severe storm occurred in Galveston on Sun day week. The steamer Farmer was driven through the foot wharf, connecting the brick and central wharves, carrying away about two hun dred feet of it. The boat sustained no damage except having her chimneys blown down. Nu• memos small boats were upset and blown ashore. The steamboats Buffalo and Dr. Smith were driven aground. The sheriff of Nacogdoches county recently brought to the penitentiary a man named Mar shall, who was convicted for an assault, with an attempt to commit murder, upon a young lady who had rejected his addresses. He shot her in the back as she was entering church on the Sab bath. His term of sentence to four years. Sunbury and Erie Railroad A meeting of the Committee of three hundred, lately appointed to receive subscriptions to the ! stock of this road, was held last evening, at the Board of Trade Rooms, when twenty gentlemen of the Committee, immediately stepped forward, and subscribed $lOO,OOO. This is a good begin ning. and from the spirit evinced at the meeting, we feel satisfied that nu doubt longer need be entertained of the success of this most important enterprise, both to our city and the whole Corn monwealth. The Committee adjourned to meet again on Thursday, the '27th lust. In the mean while, let our citizens be ready to meet and push forward the subscription when the Committee calls upon thin.—Pennsylvanian, 17th. Otdo el. Peansy!vanilla Railroad The work of laying the track and otherwise completing this road east of Massillon is pro gressing rapidly. On Tuesday the 6th inst., the road was opened and the cars commenced running to Alliance—a distance of 86 miles west of Pittsburgh, and 26 east of Massillon. Between Alliance and Massillon a considera ble portion of the track is already laid, and it is thought, if the weather continues favorable, the cars will reach Massillon in about 4 weeks from this time. The grading and bridging between Massillon and Stibb's Factory, one mile east of Wooster, is nearly completed, and the iron will be laid down as fast as practicable. West of this place, the workmen are busily at work, but we have not learnt what progress they are making. Seven locomotives are at work on that part of the road completed, and seven more have been contracted for, to be delivered in the spring.— The company have twelve p.cvcnger and four baggage cars.— Western (0.) Democrat, Jan. 15. Peer Negroes In Pennsylvania. The following is the copy of a bill read in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives on the 9th lost: Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That from and after the passage of this act, it shall not be lawful for any negro or mulatto to come into or settle in this Commonwealth; and any negro or negroes, mulatto or mulattoes, so coming, immigrating, or moving into this State, for the purpose of settling therein, shall be lia ble to an - imprisonment of not less than two or not more than nine months upon conviction thereof. Sec. 2. That any person or persons employing or otherwise encouraging any such negro or mulatto to emigrate info, settle, or remain with in the bounds of this Commonwealth, shall be liable to a fine of not less than fifty or more than one hundred dollars, to be recovered as other fines of like amount are recoverable. See. 8. That such fine or fines eo recovered shall be paid into the treasury of the proper county until demanded by the overseers of the pour of the township to which the offence or of fences enumerated in the foregoing sections of this act shall have been committed, who shall apply it to the use and comfort of the poor in their charge. Bee. 4. It shall be the duty of the overseers of the poor in the different townships, wards or boroughs of this Commonwealth to mako infor mation and prosecute to conviction all persons violating the second and third sections of this act; and any overseer of the poor who shall knowingly neglect or refuse so to make informa tion as aforesaid, shall be liable to the fine im posed by the second section of this act. Dotno TRY. FAIR Tama.—The following note which we find in the Indiana State Sentinel, is worthy of being placed upon record in our columns INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 12, 1852. Hon. J. 11. LANE, Chairman, &e. : Sin,—l have the honor to acknowledge your note of this date, and in reply state that it will give me great pleasure to extend the entire free dom of the road to the committee in going to and returning from Cincinnati with the distin guished guest of the State. I scarcely need add, that the same courtesy willbe cheerfully extend ed to Governor Kossuth and unite. I have the honor to be, Very respectfully, yours, Sta, JOHN BROUGH, President of the Missouri and Indiana Railroad Company. Hortairmx FFIATRIOIDE.—Death of one Man and Fatal Injuries to another.—Yeaterday afternoon, Coroner Goldsmith was called upon to investigate one of the most horrible cases of fratricide which it has over been our lot to chronicle. It appears from the testimony below, which was not com pleted until a late hour at night, as the jury did not render their verdict until 10+1 o'clock, P. M., that two brothers, named Andrew and Arthur Mcßride, and a man named Patrick Frail, were engaged in playing cards in the third story of a house in Richmond street below Huntingdon, between 11 and 1 o'clock, when the parties got into a fight. They all had been drinking freely, and were somewhat intoxicated. In the melee, Andrew Mcßride drew from his pocket a large knife, and inflicted four wounds upon his bro ther, two upon his arm and shoulders, one upon the thigh, severing the femoral artery and anoth er upon his groin. The latter wound proved fatal, the unfortunate man living but a few min utes after the deed was committed. Frell re ceived two deep stabs in the back, and the doctor attending him last evening, asserted that he thought he could not survive long. Frell has a wife, but the Moßrides have 4o families. An drew Mcßride was arrested by officer Dougherty and constable Hewston, and committed to prison by Alderman Spain to ariswer.—Penneyeranian, Jan. 17th. --- " I had been afflicted several years with a soreness of both eyes, which continued to increase until last Sep tember, (1830), the inflammation at that time having in en volved the whole lining membrane of both eyes, an ded in the deposite ot a thick' film, which wholly de d stroyed my sight. I had an operation performed, and the thickening removed, which soon returned and left me in as bad a condinon as fore. At this stage of the comp be laint I made applicatio n to several -of the most eminent medical men, who informed me that u my eyes would never get well." At this time 1 could nottftstln a y o bject. By the advice of some friends 1 tom- ÜBE OF PACKETS AND CARB YOH PITTSBURGH. Itgenishncedih use of the Petroleum, both internally and will be put on the Erie extension in the spring, to thet p arg n ea t tr,..y.13,1, --v7erereehttigtttr;ife -We are pleased to learn, that a line of Packets locally, under which my eyes have inroveddally until -run between Erie anti -New Cantle.. At New Cite- ITetrolenin, and I attribute the restoration et my-slita b ut e sand will hr . . t11tpi.;..... give any infarmatio . w3LL ' i Llis relation”to - Ale, the Packets. will - conneet by stages with. the ito ose. I reside at No-102 Second street, in this city, Itailrea4 at Dien Valley, and thence by cars •to the Irett .City. - This will afford our .-zitisens a MY ,,Zte . gh, September 1r ,_ _lB3l. . . , _.- 7 . -best Ideasallt':-611CeIpeditiona - route Le 'title. , .- - lne solo by ...,YrlEft, it. IWDOWELL, 140 -Wopd - st4 litiiet.;,:tll-ord:-Donwerig. - • • . ilit. E. szu,g.as,:p Woridstrect, and bathe Proptietat. ...- --- ;•7:--. ;~1.. ,~~~`~. .. - CIT iZE , Inutiiince:rteouiParl. of Pittsburgh - - - C. c. IIIiSSEN, President - MARSHELL,Seoretaik. OFFICE, 94 WATER STREET, between Market and Wood watt, Insures Hull lima Cargo Risk*, On the Ohio and Miseiseippi Rivera and tributaries. INSURES agaimt Loss or Damage by Fire. ALSO--"Against the Perils of the Sea, and Inland Navigation and Transportation. DIRECTORS. C G. Hussey, Wm Larimer, Jr. William Bagsley, Samn M. Kier, Hugh D. Kiug, William Bingham, Robert Dunlap, Jr., D. Dehaven, S. Harbaugh, Francis Sellers, Edward Heazleton, J . Sehoonmaker. Walter Bryant, Samuel Rea Isaac M. Pennock. STATIC MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY HARRNBURG, PA.. CAPITAL, 200,000 DOLLARS. Designed only for the safer classes of property, has an ample capital, and adords superior advantages in point of cheapness, safety and accommodation, to City and Counts% Merchants and owners of Dwellings and isola ted or Country Property. A. A. CARRIER, Actuary, Branch Office, 54 Smithfield at„ Pittsburgh. !Mutual Life Insurance. THE KENTUCKY MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPAN V. At Covington, Kentucky. Guaranty Fund 8100,000. (D -- Insures lives upon the Mutual plan, nth:tint Stock rates of premium, and UM believed, offers the most sim ple, reasonable, safe and equitable-N.l,n yet devised for Mutual Life. Insurance. Pamphlets furnished. information given, and applica tions received by J. TULLBETT, A put, 127 Wood street. SAMIIIiL DILWORTH, Medical Examiner. /ETNA INSURANCE-COMPANY, Of Hartford, oonn. Capital Stock, - - isaoo,uvo co 44 . 1, , 56 34 A anetp [l7" Office of the Pittsburgh Agency to the Store Room of hl'Curdy A. Loomis, No. Id. Wood stre et R. H. BEE , 'ON, Agent. noginf ALBlON.lnsurance N. Y. Company, CAPITAL el/50,00E4 Secured in aecordance with the General mom ranee Law of the State. T: above prosperous and responsible Company, having complied with the requisitions of the law of this Slate. In now mooing policies by their Agent on the ino , t favorable terms, consistent with prudence and .rety 0 NICHOSON, Prealdent. It S. M'CoLbunt, Secretary. Office, No 64 Smithfield street. Pittsburgh, °rent' A. A. CARRIER, Anent. --- Aesociated rtremente Insurance Comps.. ny of the City of ntatsburgltt. W DALLAS, ree't. —ROBERT FINNEY, Seey. IL? Will insure againat FIRE and M A RINK RISKS o k.nds. logic. In Monongahela Howls, No, 124 and 125 Water Si. 1 , 1118.V3 OHS : • W. W Dana, John Anderson, B c Sawser, Fr 0 "imrnfn, Wm. M Edgar, Ii B. Wicing, Robert Finney, charleg Kent, WWII& n Norman, William Collingwood A P Anahutr., Joseph Kaye, William D. Wrighter. (1 Pittsburgh Life insurance Von:iv:My. CAPITAL 0100,000. , Orrice. No. 75 FOCriltH STNMIT. XVI OFFICERS: l'resident—J ames S. H 0011; Vice Frriudent—Satonel APClarkan. "freasurcr—Joseph 5. Leech. Secretary—C. A Colton (Er See a.l verti.ement IA another part of thin paper ray:7 DUFF'S ICERCAISITILE COLLEGE, Third Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.; ESTABLISHED IN 1840. Licorporated by the Legislature of Cennsylvania, with Perpetual Charter. Faculty—P DUFF, Principal ; Audio, of the 'North American Accountant" and " Western Steambonk Ac countant " Professor of Book-Keeping and Commer cial Sciences D WILLIAMS, Proqessor of Commercial and Or namentat; Penmanship. N B II ATCH, .inember of the Pittabtash Bar, Professor of Mercantile Law. CHARLES BART it EWER Architect of St. Paul's Professor of A echitectoral, Mechanical and Landscape Drawing _ With •eVeral able Assistants tit the Rook-Keeping De ps riment. It he found. on reference to any of our city mer chan or ba iikert.te at tile Principal of this Institution to I the only practical n eel - oo:ant in this city, devoting , his whale time, totemic and about 18 years' exp-tience, (in ker.pang 1,0o1C+.) to teaching his important sedence. His Treatise upon lioni• Keeping, parasite(' by the Harp es of New York. has been sanctioned by the Ametican In• stitute, and Cnamber of Commerce, of that City. as the most ramplete worn upon the science extant. ; Mr Wit •me specimens of Penmanship boring mien I the first ;osmium: at the lust anneal fair•, born in Ape elte.;y apt Cincinnati. he is now admitted to he the best pe.man to the weal. t'rr.onsdr,irous of being thoroughly and practically ethane - led for business, will find no In.taution west of toe mouniaine odenng so many obvious advantages— ' busters. men having no cOnfideeee in any instructors 0 ; Book Heroin, but these who have themselves kept Bost. ; Circulars. with terms, mailed to alt pasta of the corm : try, on application to Mr. Dud, at the College tjab LI" nook Keeping. ae.—Tiook• Keeping, Pen manship. Arithmetic and Mechanical Dr tiling, taught at 4 , K.CitastaailLlN . l6 Vittebarelt Commercial Orate Per eons itc.tring instruction in an of the above. named branches, or any information concerning the arrange ment are named to rail at the College and get a Circu lar. Bas n,. barns both day and evening. See ad verurement 411 another column. College Rooms corner o Market and Third *meets. - _ Collecting, BM Posting, ate,. JO-11N At l; BR V Er :wend+ to Collet:nog, Bill Pastore, Distributing Cards and Cite tn ars for Parties, &c., .fcc. orders left at the Other of the Morning Peon, Or at lionizes` Periodical ttare,Third et.. will In promptly attended to. (my2l:ly •- Nelson's Dago Post Office Buildings, Third Street. LIKENESSES tasou in all weathers, from 8 A.. M.. 10 SP. 11 giving an acearate artist c and animate likeness, union and vastly superior to the " com mon cheap daguerreotypes " nt the following cheap primes Sept, 83.00 ,14.-1,00,6 , 5,00 and upward, ac cording to the size and cinality of ease or frame. tr* Hours for children, from II A M•to C P. M LI —I•IIIEIICERES of sick or diseased persons taken in any part of the city.noiss4ely Er. La calling attention to Dr DUYZ( VMS Improved Extract of Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. we feel confi dent that we are doing a 11131Viee to all who may be of flitted with fierofidons and other disorders originating in hereditary Mint, or from impurity of the blood. We have known instances Within the sphere of our acquain. mace where the mo•t formidable distempera have been cured by the use of Gicyzoll's Extract of Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla alone. It is one of the few advertised medicines that cannot be stigmatized with quackery, for the " Yellow Deck" and the " Sarsaparilla" are well known to be the most effieie ni t (and, at the same time, t nnozions) agents In the whole Illawria Medico- and by far the best and purest pre parations of them is Dr. fiuysotes Yellow Doek and So* roparilia. See advertisement tE r Odd Fellows' Sall, Odeon Bui/dirtg, Fourth street, between Wood and Smith/mid streets.—Pittsburgh Encampment, No. 2, meet, 1.1 anti 3d Tuesdays of each month. Pittsburgh Degree Lodge, No. 4, meets 24 and 4th Toe s du pt Mechanic A' Lodge, No 9, meet. every Thursday even- li/este rn Star Lodge, No 24, meets every Wednesday evening. Iron City Lodge, No. lOU meets every Monday ev'ng. Mount hleriali Lodge, N. 360, meet. every Monday evening, at Union Hall. corner of Fifth and Smitnfield. Zorn° Lodge, No. 38.5 meets every Thursday evening, at their lie n, corner of Smithfield and Fifth streets. Twin City Lodge, No. 241, meets every Friday even ing. Hall, corner of Lenceeir and Sitriduskystreets, Al legheny City. EmayWity Angerona Lodge, 1. 0. of 0. F...-The Angerona t,odge, No. 2 9, I. 0. et 0. F., meets every Wednesday evening in Washington Hail, Wood street ja4:ly IE3 I. 0. Of 0. P.-- i'mce ot Meetine.,Waa.hington Hall Wood MI ret, (v.,' sth /Ina Virgin Alley. prillmonom Lotu s, No Of --Meets every Tuesday ~lk.A!Vfll.lKmc...ftemß3T, No —Meets Ist and 3d iJ illy.. of en eh 111011111.. Us A. O. D. fp' Meet+ above Board of Trade Rooms, corner or Third and Wood streets, every Monlay eventng Cr Notlea.—.TheJouasaystasTanostsSocirrv,of rats burgh and Allegheny, meets on the second Monday cf every month at the rlorida House, Market-et. ue7yl Jona Vouia, jr., gen retn rr. g 7 Kimball's Starch Lustre--For giving a beautiful gloss to Linen+, Mustins,tlambries, Collars, Shin tio.orna, he . and preventing the iron from adhe ring,. and, also, dust from sticking to Linens. It contains noising injurious M anufactured by W. Kifllialit Sold Wholesale and {lentil by. IFI'DOWELL, Agents, 140 Wood street. ETT", • Consumption ri Ournble Disease.-- N UTALL'S SYRIA.CUrd p•oposes to cure this hitherto incurable malady. The proprietor of ibis great medi cine says that it is working wonders in the cure of In cipient. Tranen-uler and Confirmed Consumption. Read adveruseruent in another part of this paper. For sale by KEYSER & twDovvELL, . 140 Wood Street, Only Wholesale and Retail Agents for Pittsburgh and Allegheny. fia6:dtew itr A. !float ktemarltable Gate of Total Blindness Oared by Petroleum. We Invite the attention of the afflicted and the public generally to the certificate of William Hall, of this city. The case may be seen by any person who may be skeptical In re lation to the facts there set forth• KIER. • -47 AhfEETING of Directois, Teachers and Friehds of Education will Le helitat the Fourth Ward School House, Pittsburgh, on Saturday, 24th instant, at 7 o'clock, P. M., to hear the report 01 a Committee, appointed at a former meeting to prepare material for discussing the subject of.srCentrat High School for_the two cities of Pittsburgh and A4oghenY• 'A- full ittendanee.Of , eeneerned le earnestly re. quered By order of the Committe 022 " ,--JOEINfOREGORY7 Seev N'orasuasteeiraviciarrisOosonti jor3ejer(u7e7sormlavlsn:s2. mmoawealth frilaE several Corporalions,yratath isCo I. subject to theldiaterkt on their -- Capital Stoek,as imposed by the 33d section of the Act. of 29th A prtl, 1844, and being in arrears tor the past year, or previous years, are hereby notified to pay ov. rto t this Depart ment, without further solicitation, and without their respective dues—famishing, at the same time a statement thereof, as required by the authority afore said. JOW , I -DIUCKEIJ, jak/lw State Tyeasurer. TALENTINESVALENTINES:—H. Panora & I No 32 Smithfield street, calls the attention of Deall ers anti the trade in general, to their new and.beantifn, assortment of Valentines, Envelopes, &c , for this year, which for elegance and cheapness, are not surpassed by any others in the country. Dealt rs and others are re quo sted to give us a call before purchasing elsewhere. All orders. with remittances, from 81 to g' Bloo, promptly and faithfully attended to, by addressing H. AtiFfER & is.a.h3td&w N 0.32 Smithfield st., Pittsburgh. NEW RAILROAD ADVERTISEMENT WESTERN RAILROAD VEOM Ptttiburgh to Clue Cleveland; ati, Columbus and Inn iN CONNECTION WITH THE PENNA. CENTRAL RAILROAD. Through from Pittsburgh to Cleveland in lass than Ten Hours, by a continuous Railroad Line ! THE Express Train s im the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad, leaves Pittsburgh at 8 A., M., stopping at Bewickly, Rochester, New Brighton. Darlington, Eno', Palestine, Columbiana, and 'Salem, and reaches Alli ance, 82 miles from Pittsburgh, at 1 P. M. Plisseng. leaving Alliance an the Cleveland Railroad ate P. M and reach Cleveland at 6.45 P. M. Returning the pa-- imagers leave Cleveland at 8 A. M., Alliance at 2 P. M., and reach Pittsburgh at 7 P M. Passengers by thin route come from Cincinnati to Pittsburgh in two days, without night travel, and save 0119 to two days to connecting withthe Patina _con- 874.2,21- 1 5 34 trul Railroad. t.rages run daily from Alliance to Canton. Massillon, Wooster and Mansfield, and from Enon to New Castle, Poland and Warren. The New Brighton .4 ecommodation Train leaves Pittsburgh at 10 A. M. and 4 P. M , and New Brighton at 7.30 A. M. and 1.30 R. (M., stopping at intermediate stationtt. Excursion oo for two days, are sold be tween Pittsburgh, Roc hester s and New Brighton The Trains do not run on Sunday. Omnibuses run in connection with the trains to and front the station on Federal street. Fortickets apply at the . Federal Street Station -of the Ohio nod Pa. Railroad, to GEORGERicket PARKIN, Agent. . ICr Through tickets from Pittsburgh to Cleveland, price 51,00—and from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati, price 511,110—are sold at the Railroad Station and by afssiumux, 1 . als:tl Mononanhela House, Pittatitirab. L. V 41 Li I . c► HA l 4 It 0 IL Al MINTER ARRANGEMENT. , vitE eubscribers, Agents tor the Pennsylvania ROA road Company. arc now prepared to receipt freight thfOUVI to Philadelphia during the winter at the follow. in rate, : For all firet claw goods and woal• • 431,25 per 100 thR For bacon, butter, lard, tallow, and all heavy freight 1,00 per 100 Time Fiveday•. ~~, _= i U zee. — , . COV()DIi aieatrA.l, Ag , ts, InDl2 Corner Venn and Warne sta. Pittsburgh O F TIC.--fho partner.hip heretofore exising be- N tween the subscriber., under the name of Gallagby er.tmagller, was di.solved on the let instant, h the withdrawal of Hugh Gallagher. The hlteiness will be settled by the reinaming partners at the old stand. HUGH ' 6, H RR, SAMUEL A LONG, P. H MILLEIR. ARTN ERSIIIP We have associated with us John P Phillips, and the business of Bell hp d Grass Found ing and Gas Pitting, will hereafter ...hCcondmeted under the style of Long. Miner & Co , at the old stand, No Front street, between NVosd. and PEni AMUEL thfleld S A. - LONG, P. B. MILLER. N. E. The services of Gogh Gallagher Will be con tinued to the new firm lial7:lw Steamboat €ol3smunteation between .Slettr York and Liverpool, , 11111 , . Liverpool and ~New York Pioneer Company's J. powerful new Steamship PIONEEPi i. 2500 tons burthein, ASA L. ELDRIOSE, commander, will sail from New Corti, direct for Liverpool, on the 31. st day of Do re rabrr, and will leave Liverpool on the 4th day of Fel,- run ry PASSAGE MONEI FOR LIVERPOOL. First Cabin, Adults, ' 5.5.00 to $ l OO.OO do • Cull iron, 45,00 to 5.0.00 Second Cabin, &duos, 5000 to 60,00 do Children, 65,00 to 31.,00 Steerage, Adults, 15,00 .10 Child reit', 8,00 0000 LIVERPOOL TO .REW TORE First Cabin, Adults, - - - Stlo,oo do Children, - • - 55,00 Second Cabin, Adults, - - - Sim.° 1 ao Children, - - - 3010 Steerage. Adults, - • - - 30,09 do Children, - - - 20 110 The accommodations m the steamers are not excelled by any of the steamers now afloat. In first and recond Cabin, the best the market affords will be furnished. rhe accommodation, also, for Steerage passengers are On an entire new plan prrivisions are provnled by the vessel, cooked by compitteut persons, and each meal served regular. SteeEnge passengers Will only have to furnish thetr owe LedS an t bedding An experienced Surgeon is nisch - d to each ship in this line. For terms apply to JANES 13LA.KF2,Y, ,corner nt Sixth and Liberty streets, dect27 (tend story) Ptuaburgh P. S —Remittances es usual in large and ama 1 sums, paid at any Bruit in the United Kingnom Pastages en raked in any of the sailing packets at the lowest possi ble talcs, from New York to Liverpool, London and !ow„ and from thence to New York. Dancing slSegtOols 11111 E undersigned informs his friends and the public in eenortri, teat lie has removed his dwelling. from. 4. Reinhard, Third street, to No. IR Penn street IV He intends to give lessons in the art of dancing, every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday evenings., at the Vigilant. Rooms, Third street. Ile will also give lessons every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon, at the Vigilant Rooms; and every Monday and Fri.tay afternoon, at his pruritus residence, above mentioned. He also informs his friends and the citizens of Birm• illgiVatn, that he intends to give lessons in the art of dan cing, at that place, every Wednesday and Saturday at ternoon. All those who wish to avail themselves of present opportunity to learn to dance, can call on, Mr. Richter, or Mr. Holmes, near the Market rouse, Birm ingham, where they can receive the necessary inform. Lion in regard to terms, are. F. RICHTER, Professor of Daneing. NU N II OK—To alt that wish to know the time of day if you will take the trouble to call at Ht On'ti you can there get a at watch that will keep true time and' very low, say at about one half the'pride you will have to pay for the some quality, at any or the old high price shops in thin city. You can also get at the seem place and time any thing in the way of hue and fashiona ble gold jewelry, at ha real value, and not be - robliged to pay the Jewelers tea per cent- profit, (because!you bare formerly had to do so,) don't mind what they say, but come and look, at the goods and prices before you pur chase elsewhere, at 5t M ARKET STREET. LAW BOOKS AND hIAtiA.ZIPIES.—(Idey, Ura.. ham, Sartain and the Ladies. - National Elagaz.nes for February, are received at waais, No. 85 Fourth street. Dumas' New Work; Sketches in France. equal to Thackeray's Sketches in Ireland; llothe and its In fluence—a Story for the Home Circle, "or sale as above. • N THE ATIIENIgUhII3I,IIINGS, LIBERTI(STiEUT, I are al ways supplied with Fresh Oysters, cooked in the various styles, and served up in a. manner to please the most fastidious llot Coifeejea, Paitry and other re freshments, at short.notico, A Private Saloon for Ladle, ALSOL-flot, Cold and shower Baths, ready at all hours, from. 7 A. NI to tc . P. ffi. 6a2o VPROPERTY roe SALIL—Four Lots in V Allegheny City, bounded by Southamnion, San dusky etreei and (lanai. These Lots are near the Ohio uud l'ennsylvanin Railroad Repot. Terms of payment made easy—saeured by bond and mortgage. ANDRBW LEBal. Jr., No 143 Fourth !tree'. ATN EW )(MIK rlf PFLICE.—HOOD is still tell Aing all the moat fashionable Gold Jewelry, die Sil ver Spoons, , Gold Chains bold Pens and Pencils, Gold and Mier Spectacles. Also, a fine assortment of Gold and Silver Watches, and other goods at New York prices, which is about one-half leas than usual ratnit prices in Pittsburgh, and no mistake. If you willplease call in after you have looked at the goods and prices at the other establishments, you will at once seen the dif ferenee between their old high combination prices and ours Ail we ask is a fair comparison of goods and prices. Utrall No. M. Market Street. DRYttIG KOOAIS--Prit the purpose of drying Wool, Cotton, Lumber, and for Laundry purposes. Also, for Japanning Cloth and Leather; and for all purposes where a steady and uniform temperature is desired; an high s 250 degree:, Fahrenheit or tinder; constructed to he u heated by steam tubing No dust generated by the apparatus 11111 i treedom tram danger by fire. recom mend this mote of drying to public attention. ta2o Si:AIFE, ATKINSON A OKELY. 4.losling coot aisle or Winter Dry Goods i , H F. subscriber, defer .incd to cleu; out his stock of I W0.01.k.,N 7 DRESS and r that WINTBR 60005, before piling in his supply for the Spring business, will selltthe remainder 01 those 6001391 a 30 per cent lower than former wprices find— , being 10 per cent. less than cost. elifehaSer6 ill AllWool o 4 Lupins, Merinos and Cashmeres; Printed Cashmeres and filouslins ;. Bay State bong Shawls; Broche do, do ; Cloaks and Cloaking! ; French and English Chintzes. A LSO—A lot- of Plaid and Figured Bilks, newest style. Ljattll JAMES A. mqintiuirr. SAP -4 1 boxes fine Rosin Soap, in store and bream by SBERRIFF & BINNING, - -jab No. 10 Market street. CV:MN—IWO bus. of ear for sale by C° Jan SHEREIFF & BINNING. . IROOMS-400 dcTi assorted , In store and for sale by ia2o SHERRIFF & BINNINn. ~(NBGAR-90 t,M . P ja~O— —.. (1116UT-:4 gale by FEJHR AND AGUE.—Dr. Osgood ts Indian Oholo gogue; a certain cure tor Fever and Agee. For sale by JAMES A. JONES, yep comer of Liberty and Ilund streets. ETROLEIMI Oft ROOK CILL—For sal - by JA.NIES A e . JONES '------------ 71 - 46 VMS - COUGH CANDY For Cooet% Colds, ja floaroOness,Diffieulty of Breathing; ac. Per agile byWO] ED ItMES A. JONES. 141:1Sakak-S-CA-0-1-N biAfiNESIAIa -bottles,- .10L, tor sole - by - Wan JANT03,.A.:101038:,.• TEI F 44 4 : , c1 . 41i I P . 4(11 ta I 104 icor iat e: Ikt: , .5.,•.: , ,•4 :..:::,:.„‘.?.-:-..:-,..:., '.,',7,'.,,: . ,..:,:T-:',',.; , 1.:', ,, M1A147.'4..:: 9.1 g 4' ':: 7 --, '., -,_:, -:,- -- _ - '- -,.. , , ---• ~,,, -„ _„,,,,• :- -- ~,,, • -,,, ~'" -.1---;!„,lls'WE•tri„.l-1c,f`..k..--,,,±t'-:--..:-_-''',•-.„-,,,•4'.. • I.- '-.:. :, ---:- ,_. ~, ~' =4,- _ '''' -,=.--...,.,._-=-.!----• e A " 4- 4: + ',. "'"' • i-''l ' ''243, '...."'''''''‘.l.-:, '.' - ' - i, - ;; l ' A .' 4 -. 4-4 ; j r '''--;4 'S., ,, :;':,.-` 15 'g. , .. i -' •,'-' 't , - ,':.:. ,'. • - :" t'..`.'•ZAi'Vj.i'.*-V.:!'i'''''', r-'-.l.4.`‘"ft;'-'''''',Z;ZZ' 7V.f-q-Z;n;*''',7:::P.,:::,,,..' - -;Y -'- k . ** f .• " , ... @.. .. , ;7 0 ' k • ,•,-. , - ' - .=',*,..--,--.4-45..4..- , -It,-'-:P -, L '-4 ''''' : • l ' ' '' '-.'-- 4 4 Fs s- : : 4.T' : 14 ; .-:'''''''-- :.' - - ~ -" ,4 i.*: . ..._, , '4 O - -•?::,'_-:, ~ •-i , I* -- , • -=Nv -- ' _ ,—..; '-'-' • - -,. , , ~.- =-~J _-~.. T tte Saloons, ure6l. et, or sale b SHERRIFF & BINNING bbls. prime 6our Crony iiastorrniiir - -,.._ BencßC of %V. H. Bailey The performances wilteommence with C,own, Mr. Bailey Colamliine, - " 4 01(6 cleana' Magyar 'War Song, Sari Baftteit'` Song, Independence Day, Ore, Phillips• , - The whole to eoneitutaitith • • • TOM nlsi - O•JERRY,,or,.W.t.".*_;.Loistiora: Corinthian Tom, - : Mr. 0. - Pciner.: Jerry, - ; Mr Riehaetlacit Er To r morrow, Benefit of Arr. Burnett. - NEW eTrneCTltrN AT B. wiNTErs's UNRIVA LED Ex.Eriorrozeor leW OHSMICA', DIORALITALS, New Dissolving V W , W ., Glironistrope Viewss - etze„ r AT L.APANETTE, trALL, - - - EVEAS EVENING tints WEEK, (Wttil vita =COMM or 711175031i1Lt IMENINO - .) THE wiltcommence with titieries of scenes on the River Rhine, DISSOLVING VlEWS,repre, - seating Rains, ftloanlighei , Odes, Sea :Vlows. numerous to Mention (the (ogalities)in advertiaenteirt: After which, a grand dieplay of SLX etIROMATROPE VIEWS,' with a variety of NEW Metamorphoses. - 1 114 eveni nig's entertainments to -conclude with the far raised CHEMICAL DIORAMAS. illustrative of the tellistringl - subjects, susceptible to all the , changes peculiar to.,the natural day, representing nature In all its brdheneY't . ' MILAN CAI HEDR AL, is fight view/ celebrating Mid:, night 3 Mass, a • Bp p t i eu or request, the gorgeous suojeet represent. log liita,sitazzalps FEAST will be re : produeed. INTERIOR OF ST M A DELlNE,(Partal;Vlght VieSt_ Celebrstion o High Mass The (ovary. , subject of the 811171101 7 011P1D. A DAY EXHIBITION, on Saturday afternoon, at 3 , deloeit. Tickets 25 rents only ; Children under 12 half price Doors open at 7; tiotabktian commences at 7k prectse , y. La - Full desertpt on in „small bills. CONTINUATION OF THE Great Senel..Anntseil Sale. For RIO Dlepsl AT A. A MASON te CO Market 62 and lilarket street,' All their stocks of Shawls, Silks, French_ no-, Pm smettas, A IpsenF, Cathrseres, -.- m,,tlr: Goods, together with every otterarticle, marked down to still lower price- rob maxis( DAVI OM.Y. s LOT OF GROUND h klo&g'!8 Plan ot Lots in the Third Ward or the City of Pittaburgb;aear Mgt( • street, and being 29 fee, fronton PerirtaylvaniaAifortneii and running hack 117 feet. The property (clear of all incumbraliceY, except an aannal:grounfLi. - rent of one bundled and sixty-five dollars, to 'which is now subject tin the property artiseveirt.9o.lle.. ,eu..f, , ,::::;:'. meets—iive b ric lc' a 'id two ftame--ant-Wriiitortechigh,-;=. 7- T , and renting for about five hundred dollars annually Price, 51200; .8600 cash, and 6600.0. 6 atontba 7 =6y,., - ,:, ,r : good endorsed paper. Attorney - ,at taaril • No. 12) F0C.r61.1.060f;,7-- POSITIVE SALE T ISE STOCK-00.D1VE:454.900:5'., J. V. DTLIJIR South-East Gorsser- lit arXset, is Le'o • jolg A VING determined to close - business by the. firstar DK April next, wall positively sell his entire .stoeki without reserve. far A T.O 8..T,-4F2 The stork on hand is 'arse andAvelt,itooried,--being - -.L. Pesti goods of reoent,purcitase, coMprising itr fall as.,,,,tment of, DonitHtze “ciathi, Clotht4lC - assiatereei.::: • r and Vestings, I fish Ltikrnf , Linen Cusbn,ere and French Merida's; Arrotees;;Mr:Q heir L uatre; Mons de !Alps, plain end fieldi with assortment of colter new style dre:a goods, SILKS—A 'arse stock of Patin- lilaok LuitrefnuleYZ and Plain chameleon dress silks; plain black - and eltattgei;. - ,. able Turk Satins. AWLs —Broehe, Square,fartd. Long Shasvls. large assortment l,( Ray :state Long Shawls; white colored crape and silk shawls. - - As the entire sleek will be closed cult atthe time abovi named, many of these goods will be sold at prices with-, out ragani to cost. Easton:lets may therefore 'rely ortbe7 - lag offered the ' BEST BARGAINS CWTH:P'SEASON ! j ‘o:2mo. . - FESTIVAL AN:1) - SIIPPKR. The Benefit of,tho':l7.4o.43oLptllt Ohnrch' tiIHP: Ladies of the First Baltd.t,t, - Ltouelt, would . retr speettudy annoodee that.they_Naill *tire a Festiyal: and :upper on THURSDAY ENESING;,2•2II4: LAFAYETTE HALL,--1110: P:loCedEki2olloilpplied to i the payoteat of t , e debt contracted hy.the re building_of their house of worship, debtroyed by the groortte o f .• - • 1845, . All the delicacies - atls- season, insonneetion with the supper, will be.serneil up in superb: style, - The celebrated SYbkte , s Brits& Rand ~ have kindly vol. '• untee real their services for the occasion., No pains will he spared to make the eveniazpleasanl and agreeable to the company. ' • Tres ass in Supper 50 Cents—to be obtained at the-ditir; et A. H. English so Co.'s'Book :Store,: , tindTrur,a lowing committee of arrangements . Gee W. ISfeEtrati, eca.-Artbare, w. H Esenson, Edw. Di- Junes, Jacob , Bootiyer." dmissinn to Refieshment 1-fall, to those who have no tickets, to cents Doors open from 6P. M. Supper at 7. LLKOS U It —A vlendict - engraviim of . dn. Governor of litrirgaryP Lottis , KOSsolh, just reeetseil. For sale (25 els. each) • 1t10..7). - - • 110 Wood street. fiear-Fiftli::_, Proctamnitowr; cITV OF PIrrABLIFIGIII::SS:'-li.tinrstiatice , ofthe::: following Resoltitioit,,passeg'bt the Common laiiiuit.;'.;, ot' tile City of Pittsburgh. on IheSth ant Orlaithert, A. ll lesl,—"&snirefi, That theAleyor bedirietidterth - /-1 with to 0410 his Pniclatriation,:ordetlai a netveled•!:: s " tioa, to fill a vacancy in the delegationlci th - e, Cottrnon Council for the . Third 'chit 14. Guthrie :: Mayor of said City, do , issne this, my, proelamatiim:de- , c tart nn that on FEU the 311th-day cr-7.1-4 - ,..y; A. 1852, the freemen. of the Third Ward . , of said Citytquaik -o,d to vote for members of the Hottsei - of 'Represents lives of this ContOlooWOCath, _will meet at the piaci, of holding . their ,elettb-nR, and' eleotby'ballOt. one citizen of said Ward to be ti triemtlet.,OFThe.CorintionCouell of said ill , . Given under my hand and seal , of said City oftitt burgh, this 10th day of January. A, jag--3t. • 301.1 N -8.:G1.1:6.11BIE., hinterjag--3t.. . . To Prlnset clP°T—itri...4 .„zileAtalt'ot Democratic per bustuesg: rite who le the irfir c ties of . Pennsylvania* Paer'in one- of -js , ;Alseidedlr Democratic, -and N EWSPAPER A rde the is fo r sale. 'The- .4.,Cakc...equxity- patronage - 110 1' " t N 1 1' 4 "a r a p a t 6 - P"fi"ale. utdaea V641 1; r n 4n lirlebtors'itrsell.' , Address , 'e4ar •!°r- PHILLIPS' pereonalfy, or by ion.e t yosi,pihsburigli, Pa, ja:Alaf ' hallo o The p a l e l )75 r e : s g o! o . 1 . clt - a r t i O T :. 1.1 a b n i mitisii.bour!sioesesnels, Cara:LeroP!iPtcororiAL o . - -' cja s A n T , H t. je:y engagedwi 0 fo _ I 1 taking in r: u a. sar. surveys e a hy n . 1: ante.aanrd._,mating 4 Mineral "ais6 a in Class fianhed 'plint3:"ol the subterranean*,s Coal hstne-'; antediutentana:. Collteriett-43, open to an engagement at% ar's Office, svhera _ti~.aili be ' fowl to be-a.:cattlifal.atal'l7srt .. c worthy nervaut. and Wilidiakabitnacif genernitY4 l . 9 .4 ll 4,l Respectable rakrCuaakin4o.o64OL:B l *v.ieinua:7 l /?! 0 ? Ire4diretr;'• . faruithed:tna.se*Y. At.lioraCßOFt- A O /0. 4. C.5 . *: Urt- • jyreularlypitil. Appreatice-,Viraatedt .A.N pprerdire fa- Wallted.l.o lettrlL'theLlitlisirliai Of:a Number. A. boy from - 14 , to be , seats ..olti f iCgood character, lit delliNd.- floe tiomillecoordarf.mreihk .. be preferred. Eaaprirelof HATUF-X-r} jaaNitifklAr, No- V 2 Fourth street:: A. card. 'UHF. undersigded tominkhailiaj property (deettoYed 1 fire , at zesemianyvitin partiallyin-_ by the " ' e ' en' t insurance InPinTr h. A-. Bared in Ike Stttn,l4.,' huts street, feels it ni a d-P 4 y: r;t r . rg e t : t d e :t:h : m t amount ag -pee Company though, rkt h : a n y f r, L fai :b u l i a t u a: r "a os n6 Ylia TRAY.lhaoo . nn i : P E r td v. iy some t.lll4:l months to COM'. Settle . kZ , St) JanuarY.lsl.4 INVES'FIRRNT.-t-Fott 'if-ALIO.--,t•Goliud Rent 0 of Eighty I)olltteat yeat,ice.gred• - 0n ' "4114 06 tty property. AL40,0 Ground Renfor FOrtyDrOnfttnfles4'. , equally well secured. They onit be-sold - 4f epanitelY, if desired Petsuna wanting a sok - . intrpstalePt:sl- funds ahnutil attend without delay n 'FS CUTHBERT,GeneraI Agent: • _ -nO Sfnithfieldorreet. - 111NoCaPIAL, or Praaratiros )17*Eir-4a,,an effec t, tivc teninnnivn casen 07 debiligiiinpotenty and all trtegularitins of wtloTo. • Aw.o#- IDVlP7aling Medi cine it In unequalled Only "Agen c EL hi> N0...50" S cy ill-THFID ST DinitiESS' h Co', toactralat ~audA:fr. u stA Extermi• maw', prepared. 4 3, iQskilfull-audtrActical dtpuitsu Price 25er:we a hex la% NO. 50,55113111 .11411. De-ire for strong .Drink. is eared - the USea of I Dr. Cook Remedy for Intealperstace: One Dollar a bottle.. NO. 50 SKITHFIEIiti BT, IILUOPLLS - 4 1 . 10 tons nedforii Forge tindJuntam !Mamie, JUIP on consignment and for eallelle ' - - - , iten , , HMG & MOCTIFIC.ID. ClOFFlRE—Pr,raeltio and Java Coffee in. eturn and for ‘ i Kale by . o . 4 . _Zt I KiNG it IiWORELEAD - RFINELISUGA,IIS—Towdered, Cruidied,Ntarifted, LI, and Loaf, in *tore and: fur side try jl NtrA, MOOR fIE4D, SUGAIV—A •few hhdk good t ilt stow itnii for 1111 • zooby , 1ia291 KINDA. MOORHEAD. Mgood article of Plantation and Sup 11 , 1 Souse, for sale by • , ja2l iIM ec - . osuv' ata UCti A LEAVES-2 bbls.. fnr sate by KEYSER Es Iti'DOWELL, .4119 - 140 Weal street FIFTY GROSS EXICAN .NUSrADIG.LININIEDIT M —for salelrir Garai, _KEYSER & M'DOWEL3.O. Ci HOULDER 81u5.c6;9--Of on - Ports and - sizes for sale by Valli) - ERN tint. MANSWEet„ ktUSSES--For rho rawest,. mire of Hernia or Rap. . - I tore; for sale by - jal4 IOWE'd COUGH- CA.NH' --For Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, ece i for.salesNellplesa:e and retail, at. mannfactorprs' Prices; bp; - ' ACETSFaZzIPDOWELL. OnDOZ.„ TIIIIMPSONS Wiyl7.lllFor: sale j • - • Hit SP . - • • 11:KM 13RANDY AND 1 utigliq • -•- ; "31-v•P'n ca.-.4--N.tnABONL.t-tti. - RlCCl:tang LlPo N j e ibl a btlZit eLattietiV ilatt0 411 #!!! - ' 4 1, v 3 ? , v4,50,and:5561} jtgtl6 11,1111,11: NOS AND A. - MASON -111 & Co. are closing.-out aik aßit Ifteekikt:Yreeck :eitY 3 lx fitsmanzPrAllaccv 1611511 ..'F'. -..f ',.''..:! - - , 7 - $. 7 11' . ,.';' ''.':::::',...':::,' -, '. - - - :-;5;:: , N*i -- ;'3- .. :1. -',.--; ' a:...-!..': , :T: , :! , -,..:.,.,. 71,-; - .l' - ~-. ",t 0 . :--,--; •• -•:;,‘ . , ', i 7 -'', , :-: l'''''''.l,-.:' :;;.-•,!1---. ~t - ' ;',, ,, i. :.. , C ,- ';'-t-':.': =; -.. .' 7 . - .--,- 1:t- .:...:::-.: - -7:-.c"l' , ~ ''::::-,%.!"...: ;--. ., - , - .;;:i'''',';`,.: 7. i „ . , ,..2---- ._ ..., ..., —,.,...?..' i .T ,. .",. - - --,--.-„ ..- , ...;',..;•': ;:::: 7..7 ::' -- lELD ST KEYSER. M'DOWELL. - ‘- MEE 4 -,, : , ?.. ,, ::; ,,, :.1 , ,-:,.-.....,-...:-:;77,, : .,-:. MI ~‘ „ 1111 EM =ME ,-` -~ ~~._ F -7-77 • •--, , • ~~ ~~~ t> r p . ~-.~~ .... _.. - r [t `u r -- ,.':',:'.. -, ;; , ..:,',.,.4. - ..,i,',.'-', , : : r- • r ' f. • 11111 MOM t t - §fi x