The daily morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1846-1855, July 08, 1852, Image 2

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■. THGSIAB PHILLIPS
MSCSY BABrtfc •v*V****' .
'Harper & Phillip*, Editor* Pwpneton. _
PITTSBURGH:
THURSDAY MORNING.
SOttTllr SO bUUIII, NO KAbT, >0 'VKST
CNDEBTIIE CONSTITUTION’; DMA SAC It ED MAIS
TAIMaNC# OP THE COMMON COED AND TETjrDEVO
TIOX'tO TUK COMMON BROTHERHOOD,'”— FrmiXUn
Pitree.
®SttOCBATJC TIGKBT.
■ tOR SEBttDBHT Of ■ THB USTTBD STATES:
' GEN, FRANKLIN PIERCE,
. 1 , ' 6f hew- hamfshiee.
, »oa vies jmsMPSSTs
WILL TAM R. KING,
OF ALABAMA;
, FOB CANAL COMMISSIONER:
GOL. WILLIAM SEARIGHT,
OF FAYETTE COUHTY.
DEMOCRATIC EWIORAL TICKET.
. SSHAIOBUt EtEOTOKS.
“ GEORGE W. WOODWARD.
WILSON McCANDLESS.
Gen. R. PATTERSON,
‘ REPBESESTATIVS ELECTOBB.
District. ‘ District.
Ist, Peter Logan. 18th, 11. C.’ Eyer.
2d, George H. Martin. 14th, John Clayton.
33, John Miller. 16th, Isaac Robinson.
4th, F. W.Bockius. 16th, Henry Fetter.
Cth, R.hlcCay,Jr. ■ 17th, James Burneide.
6th, A. Apple. . 18th, MaxwellM’Cnslin.
7th, lioO.N Strickland.l9th, GonJos.M’DonaUt
Bth, A. Peters. . 20th, Wm. S. Calaban.
9th, David Flster. 21st, Andrew Burke.
lOtb, R. E:James, v 22d, William Dunn.
&i. 11 th, JoUttM.’Reynolds. 23d, JohnS.M’Calmont.
—12 th r P. Damon. 241 b, George R., Barret.
-DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET.
• KOR CQNGBBBB—TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT,
. 1 SHANNON, Pittsburgh.
POR STATE 9RI7AXE,
i JOHN BARTON, Pittsburgh. -
, FOB ASSEMBLY,
- SAMUEL PLEMING, Pittsburgh,
A- J- GRIBBEN,
GEORGE F. GILMORE, LawreoceviUe,
.SAMUEL McKEE, Birmingham,
.Ij C. STEWART, Plum township.
sub biff,
—CBAR-LE3-KEN.T, Pittsburgh
. COUNTY COMMISSIONER, .
JACOB TOMER, Pittsburgh.
■ . COBOSEB; ..
- JACOB McCOLLISTER, Pittsburgh.
ACDITOB,
HYPHEN WOOD.
_ . PBOTHOXOTABY,
'EDWARD McCOBKLR, Indiana township,
'ASSOCIATE JUDGE,. :,v.
PATRICK-McKENNA, Pittsburgh.
. Re-AssembUnk'or the State Democrafelc
Convention of 185»* ...
In pursnouoe With tt resolution adopted by,the-
Democratic State Central Committee of Pennsyl- (
vania, : thadelegates to the State Convention of
March 4th, 1852, are requested to re-assembte
at the Capitol, at HARRISBURG. on THURS
DAY,-the 2Cth day of August, A.;D. 1852, at 11
o’clock, A.vM., for the purposo of nominating a
Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
W. L. HIRST, Chairman.
) Secretaries.
\V>t. Ji; Wei.sii, f •. .* .
TYPE FOR SAXE.
As tvo intend to clothe.the. Post in a new dress
in the course of a few weeks, we shall then oiler
for Balodbree large fonts of type, together with
the rales, title letter, &c., Ac., now in use.
There arcabout 1,000 lbs. of Nonpareil, 800 tbs.
of Brevier, and 700 lbs. of Minion. These fonts
will be sold very low for cosh or approved paper.
Thosff Wishing to purchase ; will please apply
- soon, _
Hot.—Veetcrday was a sweltering hot day
in fact it was the most oppressively warm. day.
We ever- experienced in Pittsburgh. W. It.
Cbisp, Esq,,' Superintendent of the Gas Wotks,
informs us that his thermometer stood at 97° m,
the shadeyesterday at 2 o’clock, and at the seme
hour the day previous it stood at 24°. At 25
mintties past 4, yesterday, W. W- Wins os’s ther
mometer stood at 91°. “Oh, for alodge in sotno
vast utrhovie."
Lite or Gen. Scott.—Wf bare received from
- ' H. Miner & Co., a copy of this highly interest
ing biography. It is compiled from the most
■i-. . authentic reports that could bo found in the
C newspapers, and is embellished very extensively
by the Imaginings of tho compiler. The first
~ page of the green cover contains a very indiffer
eist likeness of onr fellow-citisen, Col. Diehl H
' which has been called Into the service to repre
' ■ sent Gen." Scott. So far as the Colonel is con
- earned, it is “ spurious,” and as to it being n
truthful portrait of Scott, we agree with onr
friend the Colonel, that it is extremely “flgur
' tsb,” and by no means like either of the great
- men whose names we have'mentioned. Mr,
■■■■Miner'jiiiff:U»e"work..for.-.sale r .'«ind we suppose
that it will go off cheap at the present time, os
the weather is too warm for soup, and feathers
. ■ are enervating.
jjjg^-The 1 only political flag seen waving in our
city at present, iB that from, the -office of the
Momma - For a Aty-W tm aiter nomi '
nation "of Geh. Scott, some dirty pieces of bunt
ing, which were once intended for flogß, were
suspended'from the windows of the .offices of the
Gazelle and Journal', but the moment the Plat
form, forced upon the Whig Convention by the
Slave-holders of. the South, came on from Balti
more,** universal warfhe disgust, apathy and
’dissatisfaction Of the Whigs of Pittsburgh, that
not one of them could muster courage enough to
say, rnGaFfiSgls'there.'”- 'When the Whigs talk
about the ‘.‘fires of 1840 burning anew,” they
meaa«4n it horn ! r -We have never known so lit-
tie enthusiasm In the Whig ranks, and so muoh
' good feeling-ahd jinanimity in- the rankß-of-the
Democracy, as at the' present time. The truth,
is, Gen. BcCtt will be the worst used up man who
has ever attempted to run on the Presidential
race course. All thesoup'inoreation won’t save
him in November!
' WHY OOS’T HB RESIGN :
The Whig party has nominated os their candi
date for:the Presidency the-Commander-in.ChiefH
of the Army of the United States; Major General
Wihtield Scott. - Gen. Scott wrote a “hasty”
letter accepting that nomination; but he has not
yetresigned Mb plaoe in the Army, It is, there-,
• fore; evident that ho wishes to unite in his own
person, the', “purse end the sword,” the very,
mention of which made the Whigs go almost into
’ Spasms, a few years ago.
jfoW, we ask in all sincerity, why does not
Gen. Scott resign Mb commission in the Army,
and doff his epauletts? If he is certain of being
steeled President, as claimed by the Whigs, he
* will then receive a salary of $25,000 per annum,
«wtUh isabontfour times the compensation al
lowed him at present. Bat porhnps he wishes
-to draw the snlsry attached to both offices! ,
The honest troth ja, Gem Scott does not ex
pert to he elected President, and henoe he oon
clsdes that “a bird in the hand is worth two in
thehnsh.”"-He.wonld , ralher'draw $7,000 per
annum ont of the National Treasury, and wear
tie Ugfeather, than have the empty honor of be
ing a defeated candidate for the Presidency.
Scott is wiwb-aud knows a “hasty plate of
«rop"j#om »£!<>«> of green cheeso! He is not
■ joing to commit the foolish<Mimder of throwing
«p Me in the ArmyV an* thus loose.
icnontweS ejeijr thing; andthen,*/-
tffwU, sea Franklin Mot* inaagorated Pres
ident! -•
r „ - 5 ; - - V „ „ _ - ,K „ ~ # ,
Y~l Y-i-*Ti% 4' v- y ( YVs»‘. .'Jf .* 1' t V -t ■*> ,*. X. - * ■- ,- ' " 1 ■* * s v} <
Y'vT* V", "■ \ y.y •” -.'„ «V-'.»'f. X.’ y ' .''*»•. < ; 4 " ;>„r' :
;'' :i f .= ' -r.;. ‘ ' \,
The Heaith of oun City, ot the present time,
is withonran example in the Union." -The doc
tors complain that it-is adull/nesson, and the
druggists growl because the peopleWiU,Dot.get
sick and allow ibomtbe privileg* of making up
prescriptions; andjthe only person who hopes to
do au-aeiivebueinesaduriog the present worm,.
weather, is the county coroner. But, notwith
standing the general good health; of our city,,
thero ib still some sickness in our, .vicinity,; and
wo understand that some - cases: aro ratber-.eeri
:;JULV 8.
oua.
Among tbe Indisposed we may mention our
friend of the QaieUe. He attended Ihe Whig
Coi
invention,: and,whilo in-Baltimore, spent most
of bis time in thecompany of .hiacoUeague of
the Journal, AtpplUg Scott soup and masticating
Graham bread. ~He supposed that the mliture
would bo wholesome, bntwnnderatand it has
quite.a contrary-effect upon. bis. system, both
i physically and politically. We are told that he
has returned home debilitated in miml as to the
A< success ofthecause.’’The soup lies heavy on
hia stomach, mid the Grahotn bread is bo indi
gestible that hia fair proportions will be wosted
away entirely before t Ue.eiection, if some chan go
is not made.
Since the return of- the editor of the Gazelle,
we look in vain over the editorial columns of that
sheet for an expression akin to the spirit that in
duced'the editor to write his “high-faluting”
letters from Baltimore. We have heaTd.nothing
'from him, since his return home, about “Whig
enthusiasm,” nor has he, as yet, made any fur
ther developments as to the coarse: ho will pur
sue on the platform. Ho has boasted. that he
and other Abolitionists cheated the South in its
l adoption, but since his return home he has been
quiet on tho subject,' aud has said nothing.
This may be produoed by a too free indulgence
in Scott soup and Graham bread, which, after
he partially recovered, produced arelapßO, which,
we ore sorry to say, has been followed by a col
lapse, and the OautU is now in a very danger
ous etnto on the soup .question. "
The Journal is in a position equally difficult,
and the most important matter it can record is
the names of distinguished Whigs who have pub
licly. declared that they will not support the
Whig nominees. AH this shows that tho party
is in a sickly condition, and we are apprehensive
that it cannot survive tho course of treatment it
-will have to undergo between the present time
and next November. Before that time it will be,
pbysiccd in a manner that will completely, pros
trato it, and it will thendie of phlebotomy, the
system of practice which the doctors of the par
ty have so long followed to reduce, tho plethorio
condition of the national treasury. We hopo,
however, that our neighbors will speedily re
cover, and that we may. again hear something
from them as to the prospects of their candi
dates. At present, a great many of their politi
cal friends consider the soup cold and insipid,
and the bread mnsty. They mast do something
to keep it in the minds of the people, that Scott
and: Graham are the Whig candidates, or the
fact will be forgotten long before the election
comes off.
ITEMS POft POMTICIANS.
' The Savannah Republican, the loading Whig
press refuses to: support-tbe.nomination of Gen
eral 800 H- - .
Gem Pierce, at the present time, we believe,
lives in Concord.
O yes,’ and the entite Democratic party is al
so living in concord,
The hoys at Dertmauth College, disappointed
in the non-BClectiou of Daniel Webster as the
Presidential candidate, fired a salntoof 100 guns
in honor of Scott trnd Graham ns the beat sooth
er of their troubled feelings.
In Illinois the nomination of Scott fell ns fiat
as dishwater. The Jeffersonian says there
were not 23 tvhigs in Galena to whom It traß ac
ceptable.' -
The Philadelphia Sun, whig, b onestly says,
that “Gen, Scott stands as little chance for en
joying tho luxury of the White House, as a boh
tailed horse has for rest in fly time."
Scott is a vain, conceited coxcomb of a man.
His brains, all tha t bo has, are in his epaulettes,
and if he should he elected President, he would
tear the Whig party into tatters in less than six
monthß. —Greeley in 1848.
It is said that large numbers of Whigs, oppos
ed to Gen. Soott, have stopped their subscriptions
to the Boston Atio#, the only Whigpaper in Bos,
ton that has Scott’s name at itshead. *■. .
General Scott’s pen,: in The language of the
Evening Journal, “dims the glories of his
sword.”
The New York Mirror, Whig, in noticing the
letters of the Democratic nominees accepting the
nominations, soys: “ They are both open, manly
expressions, every way worthy the chosen lead
ers' ofa powerful and intelligent party. The
writers of such letters have to be beaten by oth
er weapons than lies and vulgarity.” • .
An exchange says: Barnum is offering to bet
on the election of Pleroe and King, allowing hie
opponent fra par cast. ’ odds.
A Step Fboh the New Would to the Old—
. Appleton & Co., 200 Broadway, Now york,
have just published, in two neat .volumes, “A
Step from the New World to the Old, and . Back
Again, with Thoughts on the Good and Evil in
both”; by Hebei P. Tatpan. Although hun
dreds of volumes have heen written by American
travelers in Europe, we oon with truth soy that
no work that has recently appeared, pleases ns
somuch as the present. The writer gives a
truthful view of things us they exist, without
calling upon Ms imagination to paint an exag
gerated picture. The hook is well worthy of a
perusal, and we accordingly recommend it to our
readers; For sole by A. 11. English & Co., Wood.
.street.'' ;
Mechanic's Maoazise;—A- H. English & Co.
have received No. 7, of Appleton's.
Magazine and Engineers’ Journal. It .contains,
an artlole on Timber Bridges, Illustrated with
drawings, together with other valuable matter.
The Pittsburgh Post says; “The Whigs call
Gen. Pierce a ‘ third rate Lawyer,’ The same
party once styled Mr. Polk ‘ the Puokriver Pet
tifogger.’ ” ’
v Well,.and what elso svoa he? Did he notyuy
gle the Pennsylvania Pemoerats out of the tariff?
ilas Gen.'Pietoe.any better , or broader plan of
pettifogging than the Kane letter .
“The Kane letter” * Why, many Whigs say
that that letter is the basis of the Whig Platform
on which Geo, Scott now Bjtandß. The sneer at
Polk is silly, and might be agrovoting, hod it
any point init. Publish the Kane letter and the
Whig Platform together, and show the people the
difference «
Death or Gov. Calhoun. —A latter from Mr,
Weightman in the Union of the 4th inst., mokes
known the death of the Hon. James S. Calhoun,
Governor of New Mexico, which event took place ,
on tbe-SOth of Jane, on the prairies, a few Wiles
west of the Missonri line, wMleon his way to the
seat of Government. „ Gov. Calhoun was, previ
ous to his appointment, a citizen of Columbus,
Georgia. It has been heretofore stated that he
left New Mexico on account of PI health.
g^T Posteb, Botthee & Co., who are joon.-
traetbrs of 62 miles of the 'Steubenville and Ih
diana Baiiroad, have issuedon advertisement in
citing proposals, until: the 19th day of July,.for
the graduation and masonry of the fifteen emo
tions of the Steubenville and Indiana Hallway
between Cochoeton and New Comorstown. —
■Theylstate that the work must be commenced
immediately, and prosecuted with energy- _
V _r v-* - itotr- k -
g@» The fimenl of Mt. Clat is to take ]
at Lexington to-mortow. Jf
1 ■ ’
i< ' ,
*■ *»•* \ T
HEW BOOKS-
, >■ v • - > *
W r ASHIHGTO3I Citv, July 8,1852.
’.■To the .Editors ef the Pittsburgh DaUy-P<at,~.
Gf.xtusmek :. Gen. Soott’sletter of acceptance
seems to have been written with the pnrpose of
enveloping in d&rkaesß' the opinion held by the
■writer upon the important on which he
toflChes. - - '
The expressions ■■■which arc used in reference
to the Compromise measures, arc vague ami lis-
We to different interpretations. An attempt is
mado to untoh tho-votcu-of Iho adopted citizens,
hut tbp bait thrown out is calculated to avoid,
if possible, to give offence to the Native party
insignificant as it is—and still to make theadop;
ted citizens forgetful of the conviction. Gen.
Scott has formerly proclaimed that foreigners
ought not to be admitted to American citizen
ship.’ Gen. Soott speaks ■ of, sympathy, for . the
cause of freedom in' Europe t. still: ho does not
object, to, the third resolution of. the Whig plat
form, and consequently'must be considered as
approving of tbc passive .polioy in regard to tho
struggle between liberty and despotism, in for
eign'COuatries, as recommended in that resolu
tion.
The letter in question, appears to have been
written rather by a cunning politician than by a
frank and open-hearted soldier. Goaded by nn
bridled ambition, but despairing of satisfying its
cravings by honest means, ■ Gen. Scott condes
cends to play the hypoorite. hoping to carry the
desired aim by deceit.
But this was to be expeoted from him as he
had accepted a platform whiob ho know, to be
objcotionable to the groat majority of those by
whose votes Be hopes to be eleoted. It is there
fore nothing astonishing that ho is now endea
voring to express himself in such a manner as
tomako his words liable to contradicting inter
pretations—as this is the Bole means left to him
of gaining the support of men the most opposed
to each other in principles. But I dare to pre
dict that Gen. Scott will have to learn that
“honeßty is the best policy,” and that not so
many ns he hopes, will permit themselves to bo
cajoled into his support by vague and undefined
expressions. -
Wo arc really to honor, in Gen. Soott, the go.
lent soldier and the experienced general, but the
Onset of his oatnpaign for the Presidency is such
as to lessen our esteem for him and to confirm
our opinion of his unfitness for the high dignity
to which he aspires.
It must, however, ho admitted that ho suits
well to be the candidate of the most unscrupu
lous political party that over existed. It is evi
dent that the Whigs for firmneßS of i
character or stability of principles, in those they
honor with their ehoioo for the highest office
within the gift of the American people. They
do not care for anythingbut availability, Ilenco
they brought forth Taylor as their standard
bearer in the last Presidential campaign and
for the same reason, they have now rallied round
Gen. Scott; though neither of theso gallant sol
diers could claim any statesmanlike qualities or
any firm political creed—both being men of nar
row intellect.
The hostility of the Whigs against Free Trade
is one Of the most convincing proofs of the har
mony which exists between them and the des
potic rulers of tho OldWoriiL No wonder, there
fore, that at every Presidential election, wo find
the dependent press of Europe, ; in favor of the
triumph of the Whig party.
Every defeat whioh tho Democratic party suf
fers, is justly considered by the adherents of
despotic rule, as a new guarantee of the stabil-.
itynf tbs present order of things in Europe,
while, on tho contrary, overy viotary achieved by.
the Democrats is bewailed as a step towards the
downfall of the European despots.
The duty of American freemen which party
to support seems to me so clear that Icannotfor
a moment doubt tho election of Gap. Franklin
Pierce and Hon. William R. King, the Democrat
ic candidates, whoso personal merits and quali
-1 ties are such as to claim the ready support of
every friend of Democratic institutions through
out the world. : Kespcotfully yours,
• G. C. H.
Lgii of Steamboat* on the W««l*rn W*
The St- Louis llopublican of the "Bth ult.
gives some very interesting statiatica as to. the
number of boats lost einee the commeucement of
steam navigation on the Western waters. Tho
following compilation will be interesting to our
readers:
From tho year 1810 to the year 1820...,.
• :*• 1820 1880
<i . ■ 1880 “ » 1840
*• JgdO “ 1850
Boats whose dates of loss are unknown.
Total number of boats
Tonnngo of 480 of the above boats as as
certained by rec0rd5...........,.............*58,048
Tonnage, supposed, of the remaining 9G
boats. 17,210
Totaltonnago 85,258
Original cost of boats lost by sinking
as ascertained.,,,,,, $0,348,940
Supposed original cost of 102 not ncr
counted for
Total original coat $7,113,940
Total depreciation of the above
boats while in service. ....$8,005,890
Final loss, total
These statistics refer to those steamboats only
that have been snob by snags and other obstruc
tions. . ' ■ , ■ - .. .
The list of-boats destroyed by fire, consists of
106. The original cost of these. 166:Stearaers
vfiSs $1,010,854; their depredation while in
service, $1,041,434, and their final loss $1,817,-
428.
The explosions that have occurred on the
Western waters up to the present year number
209. The loss of life actually recorded is 1440.
The number:of; wounded; 888,- The pecuniary
loss in the 209 instances, at tho supposed reason
able average of $18,802 foreveryboat, is $2,-
780,118. Begatding the subject of the loss of
life just mentioned, we will addthatinnamcrous
cases where it is known that many human beings
were launched into another world, the records
show nothing. The following estimate isreason
able—it may fall short of the reality:
Estimate of persons killed, in 209 explosions,
averogingcleven persons to each ca5e,...2,299
Estimate of persons wounded,' averaging
uino io every exp105i0n......... 1,881
Supposed total killed and wounded... 4,180
The record of the boats destroyed by collisions
is somewhat incomplete; we should think. It
comprises a list ,of 46 boats, whose originol cost
was $583,906; depreciation wMle in. servioe
$163,978; and the final loss $379,938.
The ImprUpnjnentof the American Com
»ui' at Acapulco.
- We stated on Saturday, 1 updor pur telegraphic
head, that F. W.Rice, Esq., the American Conaul
at Acapulco, Mexico, hod been thrown into pris
on af that place by the Mexican authorities. It
seems tbat'tbe .American steamship Com. Stock
ton had been unlawfully soited by the Ifexjoan
authorities, some six months sinoe, and Mr.
Rice has been laboring to got her olear from the
Government ever since. The steamer was ad
vertised for sale, and was purchased., by the
Chief Engineer,, on behalf- of himself and some
others of the crew; but not having complied
with tho was again advertised, and
advertisements were posted about the city, which
the Chief Engineer tore down. The steamship
was not sold, as no bidder oouldbe found willing
to riek his money. .
The Chief Engineor lodged a complaint against
the consul, and a file of gens d’armics wero aent
who aryested Mr. Rioe and conducted him to
prison in bis uuiforjp and with his Sag. A letter
from Aeapnloo says;
<‘l lave visited Mr. Rice at the Juzgado, and
find him in full in company with many
friends. : Her -Britannic Majesty’s consul is
conversing with him, and in fact I leam that the
British consul walked with him to the prison.
- The Fnited States oonsular flog is struck, and
the office is elosed. How matters will terminate
is 1 quite uncertain. There seems jo be but little
protection to.life and property of Americans, at
Aeapnloo.
Two: American ships, the Mercra and steam,
ship Independence, are obliged to get out of port
as best they can. The Independence will be
obliged to be assisted out of port by the British
oonsul,'andtheMererawtilhavetowaitover,
aa themrfhMitieS refused to let her go until her
pSperp are endoysed by the UnitedStatesconsnV
who. of couyse,-cannot pguapy papersos tnat«
ten stand at greseni."
. . , ' r' • *
Copt. A. K. Long, S. Navy, who
has resided at Carlisle, - for two or throe
has teen ordered to the receiving vessel
at Boston,
The Wing State Convention for the nomination
of Presidential Electors, will be held at Colum
bus July 21st. A State Mass notification Meet
ing will be held at Columbus July 22.
A shook of an earthquake was very sensibly.,
felt in New Hampshire and Vermont, in. the
neighborhood. oT Claremont and Windsor, on
Wednesday.
■- We observe by the Canada papers : that ford
and 'Lady Wharnoliffe, the: Hon. Miss Btuart
Wortley, and Sir Edward Poor and Lady have
arrived in Montreal.
Hon. Thos. Corwin, Secretary of the Trea
sury, was at Cleavelanl on Tuesday, on his way
home for a brief period of repose from tbo du-
ties of his offioe.
The New Jersey Central Railroad was opened
from Elizabethport,' N. J. f : to Easton, iu .Penn
sylvania, on Friday. It is Bixty-three miles In
length. ■ ■■■
The Land Warrant frauds investigation is go
ing on daily before Justice Stuart, in New York.
James D. Potter, an ex-lieutenant in a Mexican
volunteer corps,-has been arrested, charged with
being ooncemedin them,
Mrs. Catharine Lookwood, aged 22 years,
committed suicide inNewYork on Friday. Du*
ring the last four years, she lost, by death, her
husband and four children.
Henry Lecountj convloted at Cincinnati of the
murder of Wm. Clinch, has been sentenced tobe
hung on the 2Gth of November.
Tbecitizens of.Loudoun county, Ya,, are to
meet at Leesburg on the 12th.inst., to do.honors.
to the memory of Henry .Clay-
The temperance men in Virginia, .are to hold,
a State convention at Staunton,"on the 4th of Au-
gust.
The parliament of Canada is farther prorogu
ed till August &th, and will not then meet fortho
deepacth of business.
Tho emigration across the plains into Califor
nia at last dates, wss expected to be immenso in
about thirty days.
Number of vessels arrived at Boston, in Jane,.
1,106—823 foreign, 783 coastwise? Clearances
664—foreign 280, coastwise 864,
Tho steamship State of .Georgia arrived at
Philadelphia on Saturday, in 68 hours from Sa
vannah.
C. 8. ship Portsmouth, Capt. Demin, was to
have sailod from Guayaquil on the 6th ult. for
Panama. ■
The Daily Wisconsin say 9 that tbe emigration
to Western Wisconsin was never, larger or of a
better class. *
tianal tolls collected at Albany, in June,
$80,868 44, nu inoreaseof $1,966 66over June,
1851.
Tho cholera has made its appearance in Dav
enport, lowa, and has been prevailing more or
less for the past two weeks. Wo learn, there
were four deaths on Sunday week.
At Albany and Concord, tho. Whigs refused to.
honor General Scott with a salute, although the
Democrats offered to pay for the powder.
' Fionv (•'« Philadelphia Ledger.
. T»B GPIUtAHS. _ ■
One of those anniversary festival,;, cimilar to
the one held last year in this city,'so common in
Germany, and which exhibit the social feeling
and the poetic and artistic sentiment so conspi
cuous in the German character, has lately been,
held in New York. The Germans exceed any.
other Europeans for their anniversary festivals.
They celebrate Christmas and Nejv Year. Pay,,
and Slay Day, and several other days or events,
with a degree of cordiality, of hilarity, of atten
tion to artistic details, wbich wo do not find in
any other people. The Spaniardsand Italians
have feasts and fasts and processions innumer
able. But the whole are appointed and com
manded end controlled by the Church. The;
French also, or rather the Parisians, arc exceed
ingly dramatic, and attach great importance to
epectadfi. ’BaUhtirtpidadn are mostly political,
and ordered and controlled by tho government.
The principle of voluntary association is entirely
excluded from the feasts and fasts of the Catholic
Church, and from the tpedades of the French
Government, But nil those German festivals are
voluntary and social; the proceedings of Booief
ties, clubs ahd other institutions, '.founded upqn
liberty of choice and equality of rights. The
numerous. German universities and colleges, .in
all of which festivals arc numerous, are not
voluntary, institutions. But. most of their festi
vals are,the. voluntary affairs of the students.—
Three features are prominent in these German
festivals; music, fiowors and women. Musio,
vocal and instrumental, or both, is introduced
in every one of them.
A body of Germane could not move Pom one
place to another without music. They couldnot
listen to a speeoh, an oration, a sermon, unless
it were introduced with mimic. They could not
separate, after listening io it,' without musio.—
They have no idea of. a festival without music;
They are a musical people, and their inimical in
stinot is cultivated by education. Musio is a
prescribed study and exercise, in all German
schools. Hence in the shop of every German
mechanic or trader ip tjie Statjs may bp
found some m'usioal instrument; 1 and henes eve-:
ry mechunto'in Germany, traveling in pursuit of
employment, carries a musical instrument with
the tooiß of his trade. We bavo also mentioned
fiowers as a feature in German festivals. In all
their decorations, whether of halls, tables, or
anything else, flowers appear, if they can be ob
tained; and if they cannot, artificial flowers Sup
ply theit place. And we have also mentioned
women. Wiveß, daughters and sisters, aunts and
cousins, are always present at German festivals. !
A German society "could not enter a hall for any
celebration, unless their feminine relatives and
friends were part of the audience, or sit down io
; a festival: banquet unless thej?: were among the
guests. They may not exhibit so much gallant
ry of manner to women as the Frenolior Span
iards; but they pay much more respect to women
ih all domestic .relations, and mingle- with that
respect more of what is oolled sentiment, than
any other Europeans.
The German festival lately held In New York
was a prooeeding of the various amaiure glu.
cluti or musical societies scattered through our
principal cities. They assemblcdto the number,
of a thousand or twelve hundred performers.—
Their performances were entirely vooal, andac
oofding to_ the' newspapers .and. ear-witnesses,
were in a "style worthy of a long journey to hear
them.- After performances in Metropolitan ITail
for two days and evenings, they sat down to a
banquet on the third day, in Elm Park, at which
the Mayor pf the city presided, and at : which the,
participants were about two > thousand of both.
sexes. The spectators in the* Park were estima
ted qt twenty thousand.
These features ip the German character , sng-;
gest a few reflections. Leaving their native land
to escape firoinbad government, the Germans are
coming tq our country by hundreds of thousands.
They dpmenotllke thqßevio|ims ofatiil greater
oppression, : the destitute; Irish, in poverty arid:
Tags, with no -means of-living but the simplest
forms of labor; and entirely ignorant of any or
tistio aecompUahment. ;-We; mention. thiaiure
proaoh of the British government in Ireland, and.
nbt'bf' ifa crushed and despqlled victims, whq
show by the rapidity with which they improve
after arrlved; .wW a different people they would
have been at home under good institutions. The
Germans bring money, the fruits of their thrift,
in their own misgoverned country. Instead of
loitering about oifr pqrts qf arrival in putaui'tof
employment, they come well informed about the
localities where labor of any kind is most in de
mand, and proceed to them without delay. Such
things shew general education, habits of reflec
tion and self-reliance, foresight and sagaoity;
nod all these qualities promise that success which
they so generally achieve. But one of their best
features is their love of art; and the poetic.sen
timent with which they regard all .the domestic
relations. T*t®y oro nnt so temperate as tho
Southern Europeans.- But drinking among tho.
Germans is not disgraced by the qnbrreting,
brawls, riots, beating of wives and children,
which are snob odious features in the intemper
ate from the British Isles, and, wo add with
shame, among the natives. The Germans , sing,
pipe and fiddle over their wine an& lager-becr:
But Americans, English, Irish, .Soots;’ prefer
fightitig'over their rnm: > and whisky,; : Poes this
general love of musio,.the' result of education, i
refineqand soften the Germans, Snd restrain those I
passions which ore always most - fierce: among!
people with tho fewest ioteUectn-i- Fesources? 1
We think that it does, and would therafafq re
commend,the Cfepnnu system of-making m nsj o
animpsratlve study in all of our schools. The 1
subjemhasocoupledgreatmindsinEuropCjond
is worthy of consideration in onp country |
. 37
.184
.272
. 80
765,000
...............$3,681,297
s 4
NBWSi'TEMBr
'.Cy*.
- / , . , ~
Whig UUt.
ScoU Soup and Graham Bread. —Gpodi 'P/® I®* 1 ®*
wholesome, cheap; health; and nutricihus. i ;W*
flourished, inlMO bvfiJftiTdfCidar; in 1.862 we
will mdet with equal success onScoU.Soup and
Graham. Journal. ;
What a glorious combination of principles tot
i a party to Sourish on! Hard cider in 1840;
sonp and Ghauam bread in 1852■
Should the Soottites, unfortunately for the i
country, get the control of its geaoraVadmiuis-:
tration, we suppose- thoy will, of courso, carry
out their principles ,0f1862, and eo manage mat*
■'tew that the laborers of the country Will be com
pelled to subsist on soup and bran bread ? . Or
would they, as usual, desert their principles as
soon as they got into power?
They promised, in 1810, the laborers of the
country two dollars a day and roast beef; now,
they hare fallen some.pegs, and offersitnply aoup
• and Graham bread! .They doubtless .think the j
campaign of 1840 cost them too much for what
they realised from tho result, .and they do,.not.
mean this time to pay too' much for the whistle.
They, therefore, think gar broth and Graham
bread sufficient for the labors, exertions and
votes of the People. They Will be_-rCry apt to
find out to their sorrow,(that 1832. is a different
affair from 1810.— Cm. Eng,
Valuable Autograph*
• Charles Shepherd broke jail and esoaped on
the night of the 16th nit. The .next, morning
the following notewas foundin the-Clerk’s of
fico: 4
“C. Shepherd bega • leave to -inform the citi
zens of Xenia thatbeleaveß, on this Wednesday
evening, for hia health—expeota tov spend'-the
season at some, noted summer wateringplacs.
Shepherd iB ahout-20 years of age, and was
raised in Dayton. Though young in years, ho is
old in crimes. He seema to he totally depraved
and proud of his achievements in villainy. He
boasts of having esoaped from seven different
jails, and this makes the eighth.- He is bold, ,
reckless, and daring, and well calculated to figure
as a highway robber, as well ns in midnight de
predatiuns. He was imprisoned for passing,
counterfeit monoy, and should by all means have
a chaace of doing the State some service.
The sheriff offers a reword of $6O for him,—
Xenia (O.) Torchlight.
“Slullow Cloj-Trup,”
It is by this phrase that the Catholic Freeman’s
Journal designates: the S. Y. Tnbune’s essays
upon the popular credulity, by meaaß of real or
fabricated letters; about Scott’s religion, and_
its own rigmarole replies. It says: . : -
“We-beg to soy distinctly, and once for all;
that no question of religion, whatever,.is invol
ved in the coming Presidential election. - -v. 1
* * We hope we have heard the. lsst word
about the religion of election of the.candidates.
We tell the politicians that Catholics are, at the
very least, as sharp ns their neighbors; and that
n dozen Tribunes, could not: throw- dOßt.in. their
eyes in so clear acase. Let them, discuss the
Other merits of-ths respeotivecandidates;,.
We regrcttolearnby passengersup from below
yesterday morning, that the cholera is still raging
in Jackson, Cape Girardeau county, and notwith
standing every precaution -has been taken, and
many of the citizens have left; over fifty have
fallen victims to the ravages of the
-And wo have since received the Capo Girardeau
Engle of The 26th, which confirms the: foregoing,
and states farther, that nearly all wbo have re
mained in the devoted place rare sick, and are un
able to take care of themselves A number of
young men, with a generous zeal had: gone from
Cape Girardean to Jackson, and were doing all
in their power to relieve the sick and dying, and
from the accounts sent back by-thom, more help
is badly needed. — St. Louie Signal, 29(6.
gggr* The editor of the Springfield (Hass.)
Republican thus philosophises on the condact of
a large portion of his party, on receipt of the
nows of Scott’s nomination: “The first burst.of
disappointment, wewould not suppress if we.
could. It relieves the mind, soothes the nerves,
■forma a proper tribute to the excellence-of the
rejeoted.’’- Get the camphor bottle and: the
smelUng-solts, and be.livety about it 1 - What.: a
spontaneous = -burst of universol enthusiasm
among the: Whigs this nomination of fjeott has
produced!— Hartford Tin\es.
ID* Wanted.— Afcwinco or tho-outtli. business
habit* and good address, for a aafe.and respectable bust.
ness: it r. aburinris .thotrequires no capital bulgood
'ebaracter.bualneaß faabiia and energy .. To .men. w.lb
the above qualification* a permanent hq fines* and.lne
best of wages will be given. Apply, or address No. 30
Southfield street, corner of Third V [opriS-lf
v, s. Cleaveg’i ‘Prise dedal Honey Soap.*
JD* The beneficial effects of this LcaUhtui application
during lie Spring and Summer sensonspnre: matters
which are datly nlttited . by the thousand* who use it
-113 cooling and nnodyno properties during iheee monihs
its happy effects in immediately pppniug
tile pore* o r tho skin, and-impajijng a degree r.| nlas
ticity and freshness, are so notorious, that li is now con
sidered almost superfluous to mention inure fuels.
For *ale by - J. KIDD:* CO., -
- 00 Wood street.
Wholesale Agent* for Pittsburgh and its vicinity. Also,
for Bale, at all Dispensing Drug Stores, : liya
“Ip ctlv.cn Genaral Setlafactlou.’ 1
ID* So soy aUthedealeTßlnM’Lmte’* Vermifuge, and
•o also may tbe proprietor* any.oa they are daily re
ceiving certificates *0 numerous that to print them wootd
fill a volume. Bat whatis the aee of furtherceruficaies
to n medicine that lias become ea imivettal' Let ',he
oameeof ttfewof itsapjrrovcrs-BBfficei—. ■ ■
Mr. George Maxwell, of August i, Curroj county, ha*
nsed it ia hie family with tbe best effect*. ‘
1. 11. Cutter, a-reepsctabletmereham of Loaisville,
after having Used others without effect, administered a'
dose of M’Lnuo’e Veratifuga, which completely 1 removed
the worms. ■
ii he* also been used with auccesa.in ibe facies of
(he following persons' r "
• PiiuiiWgA und Sirauon, Pennsylva
nia Avenue; Mary J. Stratum, Wary B\rftium l Sarah 1
Haubberger, Manchester; Margaret Lindsay do y Jas.
BaTke anu Agnes Burke, Squirrel Hill;
for sale by most Merchant* and Drngglsts in town
and country, and by the sole proprietor?,
4. KIDD ft. CO., ,
60 .Wood street.. '
■hftdlwflw
TJ'BESH TOMATOES—UenaeUcmUy sealed, for *a!e
Jj t>Y byq J. LAVKLY A CtK
C<OR REAL GOOD.TKA go u> : MORRIS’ TEA
X? BfOHE,intheP>amoad. : • ■ ‘ cv |jyB
Bedford mineral water—in hair busmen*
Biantty on band and for sale by
3 ys Rhvd a Moorhead?
mo V4TUUNE7S-A inpexior arU&U *f-£rief~Paper,
A rcoeivcaanUfpr talc fay- -: 4 R. WELDINr
Bookseller and uooer
BNUiNE KKttNCtt UKANI) V—Suitable for med!'
\JT cinol purposes, can be obtained al MORRIS* TEA .
MART,inihe Diamond.
Price, ULOO pet quart oyhoule. ~ .. • .... UyS 1
T>o , JTpf{ CRACKERS—O/ aU kintoiforaalewhole-: j
a»d retail, by _ _ _ _ 1
ha
’RACING- I»At*BR-Larg«ilaajfT'.r. >' r '
20 reams Wrapping, 3Gt4O m i
30 -do .do ;3l)x40do; For sale by
J. R. WBLOIN,
I : r Booksellernbd Bmtioner. -
BUKLIMiroN HKIiHING—U f- MiicltcU's Kxira,
for sale wholesale and retail, by * : v
J. LAVELY & CO. v
TVaDealers and Gwc^s,
• jvß ■ _ : £35 L\besiy street.'
TTNUKRWUUD’d FICKLES-=*Of every
U. at&otly on hand, and for .nig in--quantities to suit
purchasers, upon as fuvorable.terras as any.house vpe&t
of iho mountains.: J* LAVELA'A CQ,,
iyB: ~ •Tea ,Dealers and Grocerj
‘VTBWSPAPEIt- PiLKS—E; A: Roctwea’a:\patetti
iX Newspaper Files, the besmo win use,Tecciv£d and
lor sale by.- .* -J. R.WELDIN,
‘Bookseller and Stationer, .v;-■:
IyB >•■ __ C 3 Wood st., between Third and 1
IMNE DRESS GOODS AT REDUOED
|? A. A $ Cp. qTe row closing out at their
great sprat annqal sale; their ewestock-of
nods, at an immenserdduciton frornibnuor prices.*l
- Crape and Summer Shawls, Parasols. Bonnets >
and Bonnet Ribbons. ' fivft
MECiiANIU'SMAGAZINB— slust received ;ut. I*.
Mnun A. Co I*, 1 *, No. 3d SinltMeld inieet.rApple
ton's Mechanic's Magazine and Engineer’* Journal fir
July. \~-
A Horn an ce of J<t« in Now York, orihc Secret Order
of thevlf
The Life of General Fraok Pierce. Price 23 cen*a--'
. Tbe Lafe of General Winfield Scott. Price £5 cents.
QAltonha above are for sale atiheCenual fioolt Store,
No. 33 Sm thfield street. • ■*■■■ ' : fjyB
CUy "W* *B£& l ¥® § 0""““^
mmm
FARE TO CLEVELAND, SJ^O;
Ticket. Ihrongh icßbtialo, Dcdkihk,To!.kdo, Detroit,
■ Omc.co, MawATOre, Cotrasus, jitoCikcjiin.h.
Tie: new andfa.t running .reamer FOREST CITY
leaves Monongahelawharf.Toolof Marker.treevevery
morning, ISundaya ejteepied) at 6 o’clock—connecting
at Wel&vtlle with lie Elpre.s Train ol the Cleveland
and Pttubnrgh Railroad, leavingWellsvllle at 1835 P.
M, and arriving at Cleveland at 40 mingte. put S
o’clock, P. M .vand connecting willy Steamboat for* To
ledfl, petroit,*Oi|cago, Mii«Wikio,!Bnflalo,und flnnkirki ■,
: FasJcogeb:le»vcHPitubateii4 the faofnlßg and taka
lea non evening in Chicago.. >. ■
Paa.enecr. going to Cleveland via Obio and Petinnl
van* Railroad, are patent at Alliance, I by tbe 830 A.
M.Train,) at l o’clock, P.M.and (t>y it o’clock, A M
Train,) atSdS/P.M. where they have to wait tlll3o’-
cloyk, P. AL for lhe-Eip»e»» Train front Wellsvflle,
which take, themion to Wevclind, arriving « wrej
of"vJeUr?iUp S^ 6<faft ** »«» Wfet fob, way
, Bjggago cheeked through from Pmsbnrah to Cleve
land, onboard the SteameTFore.l City.
For Ticket., apply to JOHN Aj CAUOHE^
UyNott—Bv the’Obla and Petma/Kallrosui toAIU-'
fer
n«M IWWoudjtr^
V, . ■ . . 'r-.v.
v hTlv\ i ~ v '
j r »- /' ,t t -*£***'% A
turai Bo©l«ty*~TbeHorUculmtXi £ocleiy.'*Ul meet
at the Board of Brokers* Rooms, on Wednesday, Jaty
7Ui,*i U A.il. , " - IIEKRY WOOD?;
jys 2td * *■ SttffUvit'
0» a. to* o;
ir?" Meets above the. O’Reilly, I Telegraph Office, cor*
nerot Third and “Wood streets, every Monday evening.
■ If?* AnßeTona I»odWi,I« 0».«t O. P»«The
Anterotiii EodjteiNo-289y4. 5 0. of O. F., meet* ©very
Wednesday evening in Washington ilojf,Wood street
ja«y. ~ -*
fO*E. o. oro. F.—Place oi Meeting, Washington
Hall, Wood street,between sthane yirgin A lc>. 1
FiXiSßVXctf Loons, No. 'JOorrrMects.every. foesJay_|
; No.d7—M*t!*l*l S** 3d
Friday of each month. - mvu iy j
Otusmber lira's Uomi»iMlU!o«U«S<i cot
an or Market and Tltird streets. ; Bpokk£efin*,i’cn- ;
itgtn hip and Meicantila Computation innghl from a
A ft], u> 10 fill- Persons desiring thorough instruction
'lff apy of the abo»© named.branche#* era requeiied to
caU-and le&rn theparticulars. - -
1 Ladlesmeet from 3 to 5 p.- M».
Collecting, BIU Po«tl»g» ;..
JO UN ftI’COUBRY
JE? 1 * Attends to Collecting Bill Posting,-Distributing
Cards and Circulars for Parties, Ac,, Ac. . _ “
Orders left at the Office of the Morning Post, or
at Holmes’Periodical Store,Third at, willbe promptly
atieudedto (my2l*ly
J3TNA INSURANCE COMPANY,
or Hartford, Conn*
Capital Stock ™--saoo,ooo
•Aaaeta»—«— 1 ■ ■■■ - 489*1.-711
Office of the Pittsburgh Roosi
of M’CunlyA Loomis,No.s9 Wood street.
nov4tif . R» H*.BEESON, Agent«> -:
“ADIEU."
OoUegetv
IN PENMANSHIP, CARD -WRITINU ANlf
.DRAWING, under Mr. J. D. WILLIAMS, and' Mr: F.
SLaTAPER, and in all the higher branches of aiv’En-
Klish ahd Claiiical Education, under Mr- P. HAYDEN*
Two spacious room* have recently been,elegantly fitted
.up for their special accommodation. : Call andeee; the:
urangementi. . .. t*prs_.
- Kehou's Oafiaerreotyiiei)
Pott Office Bvilaingt, TKrra Street. :
T IKENEBSES taken in all weathers, from £A. M..ta
Xj G P.M;, giving-an accurate artistic and.animate
likeness; unfue and vastly superior to ■, the u com*,
mon cheap* daguerreotypes;’’ at ‘.the following cheap
prices :—gl,Co ( 89,00,83.00,54,00,55,00 and upward, ac
cording to the sire and quality of case or frame.' . >i
-;D3* Hours forchildren,froinllA.M;tO'BP.M.>\:.;
;-n7B—Likenesses ofsick or diseased -persons taken
in any part of ihe city, : r .|nov2&sly
intheheaa,and all disagree
able discharges from the earjspeedlly and permanently
removed wuhentpaln orincoavemencefby Dr; HART
LEY; Principal AurUt of the N. YV. Ear Surgery, who
may oe consulted at99ARCU street, Philadelphia, from
•9to3o’clOCk. •
Thirteen vcarscloseand almost undivided attention,
to this branch of special practice has enabled him.to
reduce htotreatmem 10 such a degree oCsuccttto as 10
find the most confirmed and obstinate cases, yield; by
teady aueutionio the means prescribed, , (auJn,.
CURTAINS, CURTAIN MATERIALS,
AND
Curtain Trimmings of Every Description
fry* Furniture Plushes, Brocatellesv. Ac*, -.Lace-and.
Ourtoina;;N. Y; Painted Window Shades,
Gill Cornices, CunaurFini; BumlSy Ac;Ac;*
At WsotisaLr aim Rktajl . * r.
W. IL. CARRVL, IC9. Chestnut Stj corTlftbi. ::
PHILADELPHIA*
.. rn» Curtains Made and Trimmed ?» ths Newest Trtvfik
Style, _ marSQjly*
HARRBBURU, PA-
CAPITAX, 200,000 COIiLARS.
Designed only for the aaferclossesof propertyjhas an
ample capital, and afiords superior advantages in point
of cheapness, safety and accommodation, to City ana
Country Merchants and ownersof Dwellings andlsola .
ted orCountry Property*
A* Av CARRIER, Actuaty) •
nov!2 Branch Office, 54 Smitbfield al,» Pittsburgh*
frj» Sorofala—Xt has been remarked by eminent
Inen, that in the'varied catalogue of diseases to which
man to llable, there is scarcely one of such impoiiance
and of sueh interest as Scrofula, whether we look to the
obscurity of »ts T origio; Us insidious progress; the num
ber dud variety of organsdbat itauack<,or itsyemtti*a« ;
b!e incurability andeatensiveratahiy*: -y >m v
Scrotalabaa baffled ihe skill of the oiorjemwenlphy
stolons in. ibis country and in Vorope* But tfiere.is.au
antidote in this disease, in a Dr. Guy2oU’s Extract of
Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla.’’ which is proving itself
a specific in the most severe cases of Sero ala - • .
See advertisement in another column., ueS&diw.
Associated yirsoMn , i
ay of ths City of Pittsburgh. >
W.AV- DALLAS, Pres’L—ROBERT FINNEYVSec’y.
• ITT* Will insure against FIRE and MARINREISKS
orSii kinds.• '
Office in Monongahela House) f<&i.l24 oa4 IQS «r If*
DiascToas;
W. \V. Dallai. JEatra Andersou.
B.C.Sawycf;." B.Bißimpsoi,..
Wra.M.Kdgar, « B.W ( lWr.s,
Rolieil Fmucy, Charles Kcul,
: William tioripap, /' WiU^mColbngWWW,
if. Ausbuu, JosephKaje,
William D. WrinUler. - o*9
. improved shoittder.BrscM, . i
fpr* Ladies-, Genttomea’a, Misses aiul JJ-ya Shoulder !
Braces—a large'lot received, of most improved ynd
fashionable to relieve sloopcO*houlders r
weak back*: leaning forward,': sc. 'These Shoulder
.Brakes ate an articleof grearvatoe;»ntl are vastly su*
Setlor to most articles of tbe kind in use. -.The gentle
ton’s Brace answers the purpose of suspenders, as well
osShpolder Braces;and at a very liule.uboveihe price
of suspenders.
For salens Dr.KEYSER’3 Drug Store, No: 140 corner
o( Wood street and Virgin alley* ; : !JeO:dAw.
’ Q7*Odd
ttrcsii' btiwtsiy , qnd Piusburgh
Encampment, No. S,raeeulstaud3dTaesdaysof each
month.
Pittsburgh Degree Lodge«No.4,meetsSdanddthTues-
days.
Mcchanlcs’Lodge^No.OjmeeucveryTbaridayeven
ing.
westernSiarLqdgc,No.s4,meeiseveryWednesday
evening.
Iron cny .Lodge, No* IB2,meetsevery Mondayev’ng*
, MountiMoriah Lodge; No. 3GO* meets every. Monday
evening, at Union Hall, comer ot Fifth and Smitnliela,
-; Zocco Lodge, No. 385, meets every Thursday
at their Hall, comer of.Smiihfield.aud-f'ifthstreeis* •
Twin City Lodge, No. 241* maptoey.ery Friday evens
tng. Hall, cornerof Lo&c^ckahdSavdaskystreets;Al-
leghenyCuy* . _ ■ (mayfly
Q.ITIZENS*
Insurance Company of Pittsburgh. Si-Ebb PK>a- = —
‘ ao.iroaffiTTtadfau. P
■■■■■ SAMUEL f*. MARSHEtiL,Secretary* -. do Earle- ‘'do •• 20*2:• • ■
OFFICE, 94 WATBtt do School do **l‘
. btiicun Markti onrf ITaotf stoay - ‘do LUhogranbic 28fl?
Insm-ea Oull «sa Cargo lUU$s» Da I r^> v " " v
On the Ohio q%g£Hxte*ippißivcrsandtribvt(ina. orotheu. female l?y v- feu* wjUi ag realvatieiy -
JtySyßEdaealQsCLossdr Damage btf Eire. . r - V- - •«•/•• , J. E. WE L DIN, :
ALSO— Ag&lnsi ihe penis of tue See,'and. Inland ' ■v-.vCa'-we* ■; -
Navigaiion ami Transportation. 4 jU av, between Third, and Fourth-
DIRSC?©!*^/ ' *
C G. Haasevv • Wi** r n t4 m .T Jr
Sa^lMJHer;
> - • WiUiapißmgnaw,,,
.. Roh trt.Budlap, Jr.; ■ D.Dehateu*
•S. Harbaugh, FraueiaSelleis,
Kdwardlleaeleton, ' J*Scfeoonraaker. ■•.-•>.■■■•
Walter Samuel Rea,
haao MiPennoek,,
J LAVELY A CO.,
Tea Dealers and Groccra.
SPECIAL - -
STATE MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY.
Da*
P!Uib.ar{tb Lin luQruiea '
: of PITTSBUfiQ&PBNKij *■ Tt
CAPITAL $lOO,OP'o. ’
President—JiunetS.Hoon;-' •
Vice President—Samuel wfjloikftn '
. Tteaauier—Joseph^. * ■'•:‘
Secretary—C. A ' ' ■; >■'•■:;■■
trs- T ?FoWhrSTSWr.
uK^X"?d^ k t h l i ?" R 7 3t '^“ r * neei ‘pp"-
! af^yMte«"^^u4“* oJea ?T 4by „ olher
at areiluctiort of iLe
ofthirty-threeand
t srmoally in advance.'
jj“”M. *a«civou the hves oi pcrsons.goinc (oColifti*
' k DIRECTORS*
Jaracs.S.llnon, . Joseph Sv Leech,. .-
; v j Charles A. Colton, Samuel '
William Phillips, ... John A. Wilson, - -
marurfra • JoVuScou.
A dU«iaaTisatei« .o»a*. of Total
BUndneii Outd. by invite
ibeailentionof the afflictedandtheOTbllc generally to
Uic cemficve of William HaU,of tfiia citjS The : ea»
may ba seen byany person who may beskepUcalinrt
•Wtioa Cftjhe facia there set fotlh/ ‘-S. M; K!ER; -
ii jy bad been aeveTal ycara wiib a aorehesa
of conUniifta io incrcaae umiUasiSep
• tember, (1830}* the Inflammation m that Umedlaviiurin'
volvcid-ibo whote lining membrane ofbatli'eses.'tmd
•troyedrayaighkv I,bud uu operation performed, nnd
,lhelh{ckeninsTpißqvcd, which ana left
me UyfifpadncpaUt us before,. At ibis stage of the
compvAiitJ made application, to several of the most
eminent medical meu r whg informed me that 14 my eyes
would never gct.wcp” At ibis time I could □m disun*
gmsh pay Jiy the advice of some friends Icom'-
menced the use of the Petroleum* both internally and
locally,under which my oyeshave Improveddallynniil
the present time, and I have recovered my sight etatlre
ly. My general hoalih was very mtacli Improved by the
Petroleum, and I aUTlbuteihe restoration of my eiehtt'.
*’ I Q * n’i i.l , t ,Ua nt No. 102 Second etreel, in
and will bahnppy lo give any infoUnnUon iti t«l»Uoi£
»?«»<-i . WILLIAM tfA-,:, 1 »
. PiUilurgi, September IT. ,851, wu
..Foraale by • DH. GEO. 1L KEVSEP L.m . i
R.aSELLWTWoodB^SVK^.^I
The
Btagn of Conanmntlon
Smßunl&iS: «oVe f6 £“/S3SS !
min In Alleghenyelty. iw -n
doncd,«ts mahopetMa eonSlloc ; of a
taken in 'Oonjonodon whh a^an*
newauihfcalOiyileih Lei CosimnSr^
Pamphlet, „K?Sf3ffi
_ Fiol &agc.--Ooaffh 1 paiir*» v .. «: - -
. t hreath'
asar^ascSSaiM.™
•^^ws=s£SS
ta&S&g£ggi&3hF
U«5:Mp» *
' ‘'V.-J-'.i'r'Ay':'-
' (r ' L ' \\«
v '. ? ■ r?-f‘ ‘
/> r ~ j j
T\ - " - ’
' V V i
' * 4
V , T* r ‘ , i "'■i
‘ ' . rS'^S
amusements.
tukatub.
'Liasss Ann NUfMoVft**”
Frfcu Admlule—ntM Tier and
Second «od Third Tier* SSc^tfci red ,“*«
Circle, 75 cent*, large Private TknrcJ.enllro,33,oo; * ja "'
Privateboroaenllre,3s,oo ~ , ■..... ~«» : .
Poor* open at 7i o’clock.. Certain rUee ..at t
ry Complimentary Benefit of Mr I T- BfIEL3 "
F WEDNESDAY EVEhlltfoT
formed Bulwei’seelolnacdtdnjrof
Alfred Evelyn,.. \
Clara Donglars, • - MurWheeler.
To conclude with th*pfliit«conj«^T ) o/.'; • vtf v-'-V i
THE YOUNG *■ ,- , <r
} . -JOMphi • .«■ .• .• MIS 3 WBCCltir.
) Eliza,. » - - « -
DAN RICE’S CIRCUS;
O&SAT HZ P V OSBOMti
TpHlSSiopendou* establishment, Wanted at an ex*
: l pen96ar FIPtYTHOUSANODOLLAR9,nanibCT
ing over Two Hundred Men and Hone*,and - being fbe
.firsteflon ever mads to introduce the sports df-the GEN
this country; willbeopcned $t
Pittsburgh, on Pena street, m from ofthft AMERICAN ' : 'i •
vUUI’ELi onTHURSDAY, Joly t«j for Flv» Dfty«»
-Among the truly Magnificent Psge&nt&presetitetf r nißy •
bcenameratecithegTandtcenaoTilie''^.
bedouins oyiHsoisfiat; - , - > ;x
THE GAMES OF TB£ CUBRKmUIf ;
tHBTOURHAMEBT 5 ; / r * ' •
./•, FRAIS .0? TUB GTJtNAaiUiI j
v* : ODTMPIC SPORTS ; ! r».: ;,<>
* acrobatics;
TEBBSJCHO&BA ;' ‘ " "
ThepctformanceofihecclebraieilCßEOLßSAljLgT *- ! -
TpnxfpF t htimbering:over tony members,, with all um - -
rcmsof ifteModern'Ctrcßs,J)y*rtwisr£Aupet»or,mcm . r
inrerery in»tttsce, andin BWBO.caseB.by.tho?B; v vrJio ; bAyft ; , v
° D :
0. BaASS BASD , “ ,> - ,
Lt&by Almon-Mentor, fhe Wizard BugUr* *
The IMMENSE PAVILLIONwiII hold comtorts&ly..:....
10,000 Personal, .
l aridU provfiiea with every convenlenctrof seatiiSOfti
• Tanged that fatrgne eomiotficcur.wliile.
v .witnessingthe performance.. -. •
r ln consequence of the great eijpcnse of this Com?
puny, ihepnceii 4 of admission wiil invariably be SO cts ;
clv.ldrtn half prlce. ‘ . .
; -The Day-light performance will commence precisely
aia o’clock l\M
EvenJrfgperfonnincc at 74 o’clock., .
This Company winexlublt at "' . :.:
Steubenville MondayvJane 21st.-
« Weiuville, Tuesday* . .
Rochester, Wedneadoy, done 23.1, . •,
JuufcirtUi. '
Elizabethtown, Friday,June 23Uu •. •
• Brownsville, Saturday, done 2fiib^ 1 ' •
CookaiowftyMondayvdopeSStbu..
-MoPongabelaCuy t Tucs[lay,Jufl©£3tbi
. McKeesport, Wednesday* done v it . ...
Jels:d&w CASTING, AgcHL-,.—<~,
f.C.AKDEESON .......... AS
■ J. 0. AKDBBaoM and MwasTimi.* have \J.isdaj4 - •
entered intoparmership, undertho firraand siyle of Ji .:
C, ANDERSON A CD, in the Wholesale-F/oit and*
ConfecuQnary-hoalneaa K ftt_No;.P.
bnrgb.
• Having disposed of my entire interest in the Whole- ■ .
sale Frnlt and Confectionary business KF Mews. IC. ' -
AnderionA Co., I take pteasmro in recommending them -j v
to my former .friends. and cualoraftiapand .hopo fora„._
conunfcation of tfto liberal patronage bestowed on me;- $■
j>7lf ' - JOSHUA RHODES. ,
n* aniii
(sveevsson or a w. atsotv,)
SUEQEON DENTIST,
ny3:y] . Rot lH Smtthflelft sweat*;.
Dehtal staoEaYi.
W. F. FUNDENBEBQ, M. D.,
No 151 Third ststvt, » '
A few doors nt-ove S«ithfield *ueer.‘ OffiflCCp . v 1 v
Btairi- Dr: F. ban pecn ctmnecu.d'with ihecstabbsh- fi
ment of Dr; Uuikhcn,.of \YhiicUng,.:for
years. japr
■PenniylvantaKaliroßd'Emigrft^^ivi^
• XJEJ: K erenow forwarding passwlgcM to:Vallailelphltte :: v:
k Vf ; anti intermediate points, uy&ciijjto&Hne. liauy
I through, three days/ : rtrTo.64.sfr * ‘ ■" -
myS? » COVOPS A OkAWAflf; Agents! r ’
I‘cimiylvttutn. iluUroua tjamiiaiiy.
TJtTB. aianow prepared torrceipl for
v f f.- PhUadclpMOy imnimtmiely. Time five dayjv ...y.:;.
- ' • JUTSS-OX -VRSIGBT'-OA t--.
Jlacon, LnrJ, Vail, Baer, Xax4 00, 4c, SO cents per
10U pountiv ' - •- ■>■
Cheese, CoiionjEanheiYware/I^eatfier,Leaf .
Tobacco and Glass. 40 cent* per 10U poqnds. '
UeeseraxvJPried Frunj WoolSOct* Floor •
S?t nbl.,liifrJes,CloveraudTiinoihy Seeds. Deer • •
9kln? f lJen\t) anJ Fhii,' 70 'ccnls per IlWpocnds^r - ’ •:
Eg«v Feathers,.Furs. arLd.P-eliryvrUrooinji and:Mes* ' *
chaoalze, ti r J cents per UOpounds , b ~
CUFODiS fci GKAtrAW* Agents, , ‘ '
: Canal Bo&m,.iHtuburgh>..'7;:.
IK K HOUSTON* Agent.
£7O Maifaet street. Pirtindelphiu; 1
mo CURE SUMMER COMPkAINT—Use Or. Jayne’* .
X Carmioative Ualsam. Ul< the .most:prompt*safe-'; .>
g&d efficient remedy nuhe wotUI. For sale at lhd -' : ; *
PEKIN TEA. f*TORE» , ‘
i\7 -.'No; 38 street* yi> * s
Keruncky.Mnstanl;v London Muv.aidi,
. Colman's... r do;■:• ■? <■;■'Underwood 1 * dof
- French MaslaTd; * \ *
. CorstanMv on hand and tor *a!e,vrhole6aleaTnlietail.:; V r.‘.
• Jr EAVEI«Y'Jt - eu.t , lea Pe&lerstmd.CrpcersjT".' ' ;
jcSft ~ aos Liberty street.
ItOtt-IfeOllOC* ■
• ALT t t’EßSONShnowhig ;hem»eWe3 i&debiedjto thfti...■ -
A estate « fClarfee, M’Gnuh &Co ,are, hereby aoti>>. •
fled jhat their tm placed in the band* of a. l
magistrate tor coHcCtidtr. if nntpaid orsatisfde*onfyad«-v •
Jast©d,on or bef<3re ihe nr3iiiay of Ja}y* 3SSi. ; 'i k V
m . It T. LEEOHj Jr., Assigns*
iegfcOtd : Gazette copy and charge
jOHKESE^apenoroia.Uo»heoCljei»oi-/:'.^
V/ Uft do Western HcEdrvß Cheosof -A
■ do : -new .v .da ~; .• do " <do $" ■■ v '■'■
do Fma Apple do do*;
.do ; liunljamFotmJltti*aeg,B®i,eft. :
da Sap Safa Cheese 5 <•• •,.
Now on hand. .and-atartYB. to.he-h achat - v ..,
V. A. APCLtfKG fc CO ’3,
No. 550 Libe.ty street.' - ’ - -
jeS9
iVariit of Jaiv*..
ffYHo3B4e>ftinff 10 ceJebfQAeoarJSaiiotfß Biuh,eUhet-:•-*■ •*;
r X In U*e cuyar country, by JPic«Nici Ballj Or qttlfltt 4 • •
converse, with those GtosXnear t wiUdo wait to Temem,* y ~
ber,that CHtSS'lfcß.aiGotbisho* the unsi :
tiodstoelrof tea9onableCLO?HfNtf,whu:b,fC4aaAjittf'
and workmanship, cannot be turpasted. '- *> '■"■■-• -
Ab’ivfeali > .4oa*i target he Boys. BayajfiromfiJ ve&j? >
old, Sued out in fiveimnutes; ■ • •; '■ •.
jc3tl WE STUDY Vft PLEASE, ?< \Vqq>
XTCmOK.-r'Jt' - -
*<he AVv 1 - Annual Medina of Stockholders of „
heidtu * ,neay Valley, Railroad. Company will tm
bursts **■ ■ Office of the Company, in ifceoay of Pin*-' 1
\YbSr --J 1 MONPA.Y,. August u<3, 1852,ai lOoVloclrA-My
* a President and tt* Managers will be elected, fot"'-
: .o management of the ; ffatra oftbe Coapany;• ■-!►-■■■
• Rt BRUNOT,-Secretary yro fern..
•. .Cay papers* also Free. Press Arid Democrat, KJuan* i -
ning'-Jefiersortian,- Uroofcvtile, Democrat and Register;
Clarion, Ellc County AdTocaic onJ M’Kcaji OrbH. copy
until Hay of meeting jssto >
• • • , Fine <lolong Ulaolc Tea®*':v'.*
AS/E “would call ike attention of- ourretail customers
\t to out large mock ofßladk Teas.' sdccteti'WJth'
neat care in the New York martcir •> *
Souchong* Qscs • English Breakfast,?? 6. Sfie.r
Fine Oolong. -50c4 Extra Oolong, : ' ; 750!
Delicious Oolong, St,oo
. Young Hyson, Imperial, and Gunpowder; same oriecs
as ÜboTd, pureandfragront . " *•
: Heiail Grocers aro mvilediocaU and-examine oat
stock; either packed lit qu&tler-or half poan;< ph^kaires■'
or In oulk,‘by ihelialt chest. * • '
A. Tea Store*
;v-ieB -• • > . •. ~.3.3. Fifth street. * '
Eioaais’ jtJNiC Ptrncn asks «« bast. »
Teat, Foreign -Fruit, Qotden Syrup, ic.
MORWB,-in the Diamond, ha»juei• returned from
. New York, io., where,,in consequence bribe dhll- ■ •
season, bn purchnsedfor'cash coneiueiatilybeldw the
■noiket price*, end. us he elweyn considers a Quick " '
qnar.er belter than a alow-collar, now offer* iheeamfr'
01 *„?fJSS? c U on of «J rofil - His slock compnscse ■ -
.j ; 35,0(»-Sj*FfenchCaTram3, : ■■■• * -
•,.r5,000. fca Frtbcfc Plama* • ' .
.•200 boxes BiisJiWr. t-rv; ;
:100bOle»>Fig?,
; t: #0 .bottle* ~
itiio«,‘s;r,™: cli:ivor£ii ' ohi *««*» Tea*, -
• , £OO CdooQ >utj,
S barrels Jecaey Plums, ' '
10 barTelcyraftcd DiiedAppies. .
> I 0 V «£,'n pared Peaches.
40- do genuine HononSyrop,
lo do extra Golden SvtV- * -
s do extra Ne.lMf
fit) do extra hue*' eoxerel,
'5O .bole* large H- r'lcklcd Herring,
100 do extra *• Bmoked Herrinp’,.
)o<>bag*K' -.-’0 1 Marne’- * -do,, <
10 do ' ; . t , ’ / •
4W %e^!S aaßedpwe,lu hent JaTa.r , -
Se_, jdk (teaoine imported French,ClfdWtiu
- fio °
*4.,4e,4c" pWe<t ‘ <9rn,BlCcFJw ”a' v , w ■
le Morrii>^« M a rt ,the second dow ' ' ct ' l > r «“»r
' IWIOHF
POfiWAJUUNG ANl),' .61, ft Co.'S, 7 " -
? S4Jy commission ikvbse, , ,
ions i*. iwarsm.-- v , <3* EOUIB. r . s
cowuassiesM*' Ifcm * " V
on c P«lBmMn«or Eilli- oCL?ill^ta., .. ’
.lWe Pl i«* «dtatt/KS* ™ e W*
s^sssstaiwSWK’BS';
P&fc’&n 0 " 18^ 7 '
Charless.BlowACo, % fISfSAfS’S?® fi® ■-
*,£&», PiU»bmsfc:, Marian, JHoik a!?*. 1 52*** *'’
1 ; Phaadctphu; ShieS* & bkS.a A #**■*««»> t „-
WewComV* Bt«.ri£d wb ™ , ?S el e?>»i IE *& %
- x. c.stooheil’&to-
Wnla 1
l^tricUy*toStafffp wcS^^L^,
* fte Über » l »«mn.
• IwttuT
1
* r-
. "i£f ;
• 77-'.,-Vr.;:" iM... ’;■;7-
JOtfKPH C- I'OSTfcK*
y front-Diamond.*!*
V to r \