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That the elock•was a ItringthlUg,. • • That It had a tougue that would epeak tho trait : -To tell Its tales upon truant youth, . • In the book-hiding days of spring. .- • And r wend with far azi ita chametered fare; To watch the spirit -within, That was running its round with'ee.milep... ram And beating the time with a miniature maeo, As if oredoyed at the din. . I narked Its Toted. whew the dear ones dna], . As it ticked to theft totes Hawaii, • • And when they passed to 11w hotline uutriei lirmonnl to follow witla unnwosuml 'Fheirfpitits Idler dindh. (row it ring and echoot my morrinie ehimq tht.thnt mcrriett suiutnez morn,' When the Files :were brighter thou en:A.7u cams, -Ana heurts'beitt not for the raping Chum. And the, future yet übl.)ortt!:. .. Avid:oth•in •Dl.l,l•florin sVal ulldaii , l , t wild. thitboaark nut - worming cartil, ' . .' • Thrry came - la our love a etirissirvd rhlld Its 1) I on 1 t c. r fain brauwd l‘ri!tlus• sod • :ailLsi .To s taarl: Ihr moment of Willi. . , . . • • . 'Mon ait'old.liot I love the Tery ileeny. An' thou cittc4 nu ancient mime. hen? wooden ccnt•near the kitchen teat - W for ninny a . year and ninny a dray, 'nil hale come Jo nek .. the time.' • •• . . . . . . •I:eep (Loin old horology till 0 5 ,, • Shell close thy Inre•wia cle: , Atal wben then, art leltiu.tlie lateat t.fna,e 'fa trynntle oloni., 'mid Ow ohnuente'•ra7, Oh. then run down—,am.l4k4 .. • . • . . -....• . • . . . 'THE LOVER AIip.III,I74IIIISBA.NIi. • • ".In hie "Dream Lite" Ile. lNTervel thns eletches p vleagant : vein and with --thone eeited, hiltusaizing ineideuti which leve ever gained 'the laughter ant good will of, the w,irldi the lover and the newly married man • "You grow unusually amiable and kind; you are earnest in your search of frieuds ; you shake hands with your..offiee boy, as if ho were your second cousin. You joke cheerfully with the stout vrasherweman, — and give • her n shilling overehange, and insist _ upon her keeping it, and erow .quite merry at the recollection of it. You tap your hackman'on the shoulder very familiar ly, and tell himho is a capital fellow ; and don't allow him to whip Unhorses, except when driv ing to tho post-Woe. Tau even nek him to take a glass of beer with you upon some chilly even ing. 'You drink to the health• of his wife.— Iloseays ho has uo wife—whereupon you think him a very miserable man ; and you give him n dollar:by way' of -consolation. Yettlhink all the editorials in the morning papers. are .remarkably well written—whether upon your side or upon another. You think the stock-market has a very cheerful look—with Erio —of which you are• a large holder—down to seterity-five. You wonder why you never ad mired Mrs. IiCtIVIII3 before, or Stoddard, or any of the r'est. 44 Yon give a pleasant twirl to your fingers as yeti saunter along tho street ; and say—bntnot so loud as to be overheard- 4 She is mine—sho Is ..‘s.You wonder if Frank ever loved Nelly oho half as well RS you love Madge ? You feel quite . sure ho never did. Yon can hardly conceive how . it is, that Madge has not been seized before now by scores of entmored men, and borne off, like the Sabine women , in Romish history. You chuckle _over your future, like a boy who has found a guinea in groping for 'sixpence. You read over the marriage service—thinking of tho time when you will.take her hand, arta slip the ring nponlar_fiegSr; anti repeat after the cler gyman—. for . richer—for poorer ; for better—for e. wors A great deal of worse' there wilt be about it, you think. "Through all, your heart cleaves to that sweet image of your beloved Madge, as light cleaves to day. The weeks leap with a bound s ; and .the months only grow long 'when you ap proach that day which is to make her yours.— There are no !lowers rare enough tomakeboquets for her;' *diamonds arc too dim for her to wear.: pearls are too tame. :li—And after marriage, the weeks are even shorter than before; you wonder why on earth all single men in the world do not rush tumul tuously to the-Altar; you look upon them as a traveled manwill look upon some conceited Dutch bpor, who has never been beyond the limits of his cablisge-garden. Bfarried men, on the con trary, you reg,nrd s tes" fellow-voyagers; and look upon their .wives-- . Lugly as they may be—as bet ter than none. • " Yon blush a little at first tolling your butch er what 'your wife' would like; you bargain with-the grbeer for sugars and teas, and wonder if be knows that yon are n married man ? Yon practise your now way of talk upon your office boy t—yon tell him that your wife' expects you home to dinner; and are astonished that he does not - star& to hoar you sayit ! "Yon wonder if the people in the omnibus. know that Madge and you are jut married 4 'arid if the driver knows that the shilling you hand to-him is for self and wife ?' Yon wonder if anybody was ever so happy before, or will be so happy again Y ." You enter your name upon the hotel books . as Clarence and Lady ; ' and come hack to look at it, wondering if anybody else has noticed it,—and thinking that it looks rems.rks- . . bly well. You cannot help thinking that every third man you meet in the hall, wishes he pos sessed your Rife;-nor do you think it very sinful in him to wish it. You fear it is putting temptation in the way of covetous men, to put Madge's little gaiters outside the chamber-door at night:. • _ " Your - home, when it is entered, is just. what it should be ;—quiet, small,—with everything that she wishes, and nothing more than site wishes. ,The sun strikes it in the happiest pos sible way; the piano is the sweetest toned in the world';':the library is stocked to a charm ; and Madg?,.that blessed wife, is there, adorning and giving life to it all. To think, even of her possible death; is a s saftering you class with the infernal tortures of the Inquisition. You grow twain - of heart and of purpose. Smiles seem made for marriage ; and you wonder bow you ever Wore them before !" RIVER .NEWS The wharf, yesterday, was pretty well filled with freight, and matters as lively as an old sum mer oheeSe- - -rbuzzing like a weep'n nest, and rat tling like a nail factory. Largo quantities of lry ' goods had arrived from above, in the low water boats, bestowing upon the draytnen fair hopes for horse-feed. Freights have advanced consid erably, ensuring a living business during the dry season. We learn from gentlemen arrived from below, that in a fracas on the steamer Yuba, at Hender son, the 'watchman of tho boat was killed by a deok hand. The watchman belonging in this city. . . . . There were seventeen stern-wheelboats at the wharf, yesterday, and about as many with side-. wheels. • The James Robb, under command of Uncle Berealas Carroll, is now running between St.. " Louis and New Orleans. I The Arkansas river,. as we understand froln verbal reports, is at a fair navigable -stage for boats of medium class. . The Corn Planter left for Pittsburgh yester day, with a fair amount of passengers. She will go again into the Louisville lino upon her re tarn.—Cin. Corn., Aug. 3.. We understand from the St. Louis News, that the Springfield Railroad Company design buying _the Hibernia, and perhaps Cornelia. _ It is un derstood that those who control the affairs , of the company are wealthy eastern men, yhomedn to invest largely in steamboat stock, andwill prob ably have two or three large vessels to run through from the terminus of the road on the Mississippi to New Orleans. The Emperor, Capt. Hopkins. has been sold to a company at New Orleans for $13,600, and will hereafter run as a regalarpacket to Bayou Sara, in opposition to the Gipeoy. The river was slowly falling yesterday, with . about 3 feet water in the channel. Tho weather yesterday was_ pleaaant, and quite cloudy last evening.--Lou. Corm., Aug. 3. ~,: . 01,4- A 0ki.,....- .4 Hai** Phil* j ai POoisii, ;' iliT,TsinßUMgr , MONDAY MORNING rbatiio;aellestb. I. E.g. es Rat, inda eatitttutlan tat irsiMS dft•Coomaa Ileaelous4 trot tirro4oo m We Common Dmthato<4. ~, . . NATIONg?:DEBTOWTIC TICICEt. FAR•PRESIDBSZ FRANKLIN PIERCE, OF 1.1.0 PSIIII4E r": NICE PnEsnysta, WILLIAM E. KING, 9F:ALABANA fOR . CANAL COMMISSIONER, COL: IVILLIAM.. SEARIGHT, or FArzrr_z_conTry. oiet. for Perimlnnia Datuocratio Electoral. WILSON WCtNDLESS, PATTINtSON. GEOItOE GEN. HOBE CH Es.r.qoa.s. District. .13. 1L C. Eitts. • 14. Jaci. Ciarms. 15. Dux lionmo.y. 16. 111L-ter Perms. Jams Itcarkanc. 18. )I,aircu. SlT.Ast.m . 19. Gen.JOSUR 111'Daltel.D. 20. WXLLXLa 8. C.ueuAN. 21. Alma= BOUM . VirstuAm Dort. ' • 0. Jowl S. WCALssorr. 24, litonas It. Zillarr.' =SE Disfrid. • .1.. Prrzn•Loaiic.. . GrOvne U. 14.tirtizr. • 3..Joax Musts. 4. F. W. HOCTIOS • . .5. it. APC.tr, - .lr. ' O.A- APPLE. - T. lion. N. Sni.icia.kxn SSA. Fruits. D. DAVID 10: B. JA111.3. . 11. Jonx,:Wltcrsours t -12: P. BAxoN. • Democratic County Ticket ''rm. cosaligsitcrcrxr , rnisr tawnuer, P.C. SILANNON, Pittsburgh. . . run swag szsiron, JOIN BARTON, Pittsburgh. POP. AVOIDLY, SAMUEL FLEMING, Pittsburgh, A. J. ORIBBILY, Pittsburgh, 011OIRIE Y. GILMORE, LawsuuseTille, SAMUEL BIuKEE, Dina J. C. STEWART, Plum Township. CHARLES KENT, Pittsburgh. 03CSIT (XIMIII.I9ONIIi, JACOB TOMER, Pittsburgh. conomm, JACOB 3IcCOLLISTER, Pittsburgh. /11.131702.. STEPHEN WOOD. • PRIYITIONMILY, • EDWAILD McCOVJELE, Indiana Township ASSOCUT6 AT= !PATRICK McKENNA, Pittsburgh. Ito-Acsombling ofde State Democratic Colton a of 1852. In pursuance with a resolution adopted by ths Democratic State Ceu trd.Commlttoo of Pennsylvanta, the Deletatte_a to the State Convention of: March 4t11,1= are requestal to ronssemble at the Capitol, at' lIMITUSBUIU), on THURS. • DAY, the ilGth dny °Magnet, D:1852, at 11 o'clock A.ll, for the narrow , of nominating admix° of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. - IY. I. ILIIIST, Chttirmcm. ll'auxst Cerra; 1 sem . . (Laws. -...::Wf111.01 11. Wttan, • . . ear. Jost. nrescra—es" it.c..3l.anUfiesi• ellislaeurniv Czotratilrm *ism troy JAr Oita; vie sn Polo premed lo► ds PIUNTLNU 0/ ALL ICLII)6.Ia Q. orsinor.orylo.oaa sots tho. , 000 lonas, 1.7 otoo Lad ooriosl "Po.__ftva Arty litit Inowiresio•p4oramaorlll moo Waad to oar araaoln Job wow .41re as eel% APPOIXIIIIII' DT 00V. Bzur.r.n..—Our neighbor and cotemporary iii the black G. Backo fen, got the appointment of Notary Public, vire 11. P. Mueller, Esq., whose term had expired. STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS. This "little giant," as ho is familiarly desig nated in the west; has thrown the whole of his big heart and giant intellect into the contest, and is doing good service far the democratic cause. His efforts in the campaign have already alarmed the whigs, and feeling unable to reply to his arguments, they conclude that the best way is to pass them over with a sneer. The Louisville Journal is, ono of these conduits of falsehood and vituperation, and publishes the fol lowing in an article abusive of Judge DouowLe: tinxrupvicruA little scamp, JuLlge Douglavi." This ia:" decency" to appear in the columns of a paper that is qizoted, for excellence, as one of the shirking lights of the "decency party," notwithstandineit is edited by a man who has committed - more outrages upon editorial decency than any other editor in the United States. Dot why, many Bak, are these malignant as saults" made upon Stephen A. Douglas? The answer is plain to those who read. lie has had the faticiiencience to come out and defend the right and denounce the wrong, and for this, as a natural consequence, the Whigs abuse him. '.They are . especially malignant against him on account of a recent speech he made at Richmond, Va., in which he not'only showed up the hollow heartedness of whigg,ery, but in which the truckling . conduct of the feathered automaton they desire to place In the presidential chair. is fully shown up by the following extracts, which we make from the unanswerable speech of Judge Douglas, which hasinduced the leading black guard of the party that claims to possess "all the decency" to designate the distinguished orator a " scamp." Here are the extracts : Take Fran kiln Pierce from his boylicrod up. So far as his per , onal honer end character are conoemed,even the breath of slander has never dared to speak- against theta above a 3111S- 2 pCf, turd then not without looking to aeo what honorable man might be present to ropeltho accuaatien. ' Take his pub lic career in the legislature of his own State, in the halls of Cameras?,or whergver else fortune may have taken him In the discharge of duty and we defy our political opponents i to point to cue act of in fidelity to his duty. Ile Is not an ode scare and unknown man. lie has Serval several periods in 'the Congress of .the United Stater, andveted upon all hovr tont questions which came before him. Ile has served seve ral years in the Senate of the United States in times that required the nerve and the patriotism of every man to be coiled into active requisition.. There Is his record, and we invite you to examine it. Try • him by his votes, by his speeches, by his 'acts; and let any democrat find aught of which he can complain. Upon all of the party questions that were agitated during the ntharinistration of the lamer , trti Jackson, or of Mr. %%a Buren, coming the period in which he was a member either of one or the other house of Congress, Franklin Pierce was found to be true to the constitu tion, true to the rights of the States--a national man upon all occasion, and Ecctlnnal upon no question. •[Great sp. & um ] e • • • • • • * • During the administration of President Polk, he invited Mr. Pierce to erzept a tea in his cabinet. They had been ea. societal in the Mouse of Reprearntallves, and knew oath other well. They had stood by Old Hickory in the war with the bank and the monied power • and it was natural that Mr. Polk theuld desire to avail ithiuself of the services of a man whom shitty, fidelity and patriotism be had witnessed and Men What on so many and such trying occasions. Piercer felt constrrdned to decline it from the same amp which induced hhrito resign his east in the Senate. Soon tifterwreds the -United Stater found themselves en gnged in a foreign war ; and a call was made upon the citi zen soldiery to mpg- to the scene of action and repel the insolent foe whcibad dared to invade their mare land. -Then it was that Mr. Pierce did not Mel himself at liberty to decline the call: • Ile volunteered as a private; but was not allowed to remain long in the ranks—being appointed colonel of-his regiment, and subsequently a brigadier gener. al in the army. The records of thery department and the his. tory of the war furnish satisfactoovidenee that lie display. al ability, eklll, and gallantry of a high order in the per . formaneo of his military duties. lam aware that the whigs have been in the habit, lately, of assailing the military con ! duet of Gen. Pierce. Instead of any dlreetcharge, they deal LAn that cowardly mode of insinuation which la worse than direct and open calumny; because it does not take the re sponsibility of bold and seeds accusation. They nickname him the "Feinting General," and talk about his becingfallen from his berm an the field of battle.. Indio they do not dare openly to say that these nets are evidence of cowardice on his part, yet there is no other motive for the insinuation ex cept to instil Into the minds of the American people the inr premien that ho was a coward. If that be true, why not have the manliness, to come up openly and charge the feet? I do not know how it is in - tho Old Dominion, but I have reason to believe that the mare rule applies here as in the great Northwest There we hold that man consparatively honorable who utters a calumny openly, and boldly meets the responsibility, when contrasted with the slenderer who will tmeakingly insimmto that which ho dares not openly ' ATOM' prat cheering.] • ' Now tellow eitzens, I have but one answer to make to all theseinslnnationa in reference to Oen. Pierce's military char acter; and that enswer is simply this: Oen: WinfteldSeott, in his oillebri reptetatnader the sanction of an oath, has giv en the lie direct no every base slanderer who .daree Intimate or insinuate seth an Imputation. I wish' every Whig tow,. member {LIAM ha . mter utters or repeats this charge, his Presidency has pronounced and ; and that by making the charge g : tr l also if falsehood in his cabal reports to the sun Whig friends expect to commend their favorable consideration • of the.Ameritan Mtn with official falsehood, wintst at the ht army in which he gained all his latcrebd At is unworthy of public confidence, or 'as a brute, gallant, and • skilful general: • . • • . • . ' . mkt that them Is another part of this let he matter out. Unto it Is. • Towards the Ater, he sayer. finally, for my strict ad miplcs of tho eh% party, as expresser In the convention aretterein suggested, yids nest pnrpcee t.. advance the greatness and repnbik," and no on, "I ean offer mother Mkt , than the known incidents of a long =laming the severest criticism." Ile can ledge 'a than tbe known inchhamta of a long undergoing the severest criticism" Whet there referred to as "Pledge" kw his to- Cartaintr Mit hary * omen for forty sa Dot of moll otitis life. Iteonati tn, eonotinmei yhiewbehouhlio career; and beeki, the, the severest eri tin IbinfriSMitar•theysi , his military camar to ben be Opted the kneels incidantiof Id afford a guarantee at Ids politkal prin. ;•• Tetylait, then, did heretor t safes did constitute " Incidents" in his long life Idents; trod those incidents are now under. criticism. - Renee to those lettem hemnst the only pledge ha was willing=ler KT. meat, what OM those 043 politW letters to which allusion is so drat itpledge toaapport the annexation \m roe Union; seeetal, a &dap to the •Ametican party; thild, a pledge for the gradual emancipation of slavery; fourth, a pledge for the sup par t pf the bahkroei, law; flTh, a pledge for a national bent: and soon through the whole aeries of federal /Ma nna, In stretchhag e -out and others lige Macbeth's` wisest:SA of &zest Some existenc, truppoped to have become solete ideas.' To thew Ineldttuta--to the pledges matotheda in these political letters—he mustbeandosteed as reiltrtiett as the only guarantee be will give to carry out dispels* plea lald down by the vrbig party, • and suggested la his let ter of acceptance. • We here 'find : the principles =I 'Lona upon which this ctunpldgti is to bSfought- , ' AUGUST - 9. Again, General Seott, to Gibs letter otacceptance; Mcorpee rates another plank Into the platform which wan adopted at Baltlinore And annexed" 'at Washington. Ile PMPOSC 3 "also to recommend:aid approve of a ' single alteration IXI our natal:dilation laws, suggested the rig ht ilitary eneti once, via: Giving to -all foreigners the of citizenship who shall faltbfally serve to time of war one year. on board of ottr.public - shlpr,:ar h i our land forces, regular :XL. volun teer, on their receiving. an .4umorablo discharge from the This is the str=estion of tag Military mimics me. Betel lect, that In 1841 General Scott iii.iortly hesitating between an alteration In our zusturallzation' laws; • requiring ma-est-- deuce of twenty-one years in this country as, ta,necessary Fret:tic:Alp for naturalization ' and a totarrepeafor all laws on - the o th er words, for Imopacitating foreigners from ever becontin; citizens of this Country at all—sad that 'this "mind then Inclined to the Latkr oiternatitc." Recol lect; thatin 1831 he claimed to be the or(ginafor of the great • native American party—pledged himself to its support—was 'ima 'with indignation against those foreigners who claimed to be till:rem ana to vote. and- enjoy tho privileges of our laws. Since 1841 the only Military experience of Oen, Scott has been in Mexico, thornaMas of miles Rom the sight, bear ing and influence of American tastitiations. lie meats, therefore, that MO military experience teethes him this a year's service in atbreign land„beyondthe reachil our laws; beyond the hearing of our language, where-an American -newspaper never comes, where an election- In an unknown 'and Inconceivable event, where the name of the constitution is never beard, and under the material ratio which nullifies -both law and constitution—be'eays that a twelvemonths' service under these rircumstancea tits a man for citizenship as well as a whole life spent here to the pursuits of a citi zen's Ilk and Lathe daily olnrcrvatton of the practical work ing of our Institutions. Such Is the result of experience in the Mexican war. . • But it is a subject of doubt_whether General Scott 'pro: poses this "single Alteration" s a substitute . tbr our aside log nataralinttion law, or whether ha proposes it as an addl• donut law, so that we shall have two distinct laws of tofu ruination. lem compelled, to believe that bo intrude the farmer proposition; SRI need not tell this audience thntthe constitution of the Gutted States gives Congress the power tripes:3.a uniform rule of natural tation," and power to pus" no other. • If, tbercfcce, General Scott means that wo shall have two mocks of naturallsation—one being the skirting form, and the other a year's service in the army--hls propo sition is unconstitutional, and impassible, and an atevalute absurdity. Is It passible that thin candidate for tho presi dency never owl the Constitution? lem unwilling to as same the fact, and do net like to pntupon his words such a construction. There le a.dtWculi indeed in construing them—they are equivocal , like all thereat of tds letter.. But there Ls this well-known rule of construction—that when a iacumont admits of two mange, one impossible and rdenni the other consistent, intelli le and significant, we are bound to take the latter. Now lethis clause In the letter means that Gen. Scott, desires an addition to our naturalize.. lion laws which would destroy their uniformity by giving unequal advantages, and offering different modes of =total ration to different persons, .he proposes an "alteration" whichis impcesibleundertircoustituticm. lint if he means 'that this single alteration shall be a substitute fur all our laws—in other words, if he means thato year of military or naval service shall be the solo means of naturalizathm— then his proposition, however inexpedient. is a proposition for [lunge= law; is consistent with the constitution, is consist. ent with its former declarations, and continent with. Itself. Such, then, we are bound to believe his moaning to be— namely, that by an enlistment Into our naval or land times, And one year's service only, shall an emigrant to this war try become a citizen of the United States. What a plank for. a platform! Is this a principle of the Whig party/ If It 15. the country ought to know it. Or Is It only the utterinceof a fbrked tongue—another gull-trap—constructed to catch Native votes under one construction, and the votes of our adopted citizens under a different construction. Charity, even requires this constructien, for should Gen ficott,byttny strange accident, by any inarvelloua ludunclatkin people, become the 'President of the Malted States—ohcesld. he in rood faith strive to make the alteration he proems*. and should he waved in doing eo—what results wouldemun of that event I We have now an army of 10,000 men told. But 250,000 foreigners come every year to these shut, If an enlistment becomes necessary to make them ' , pea& • citizens, our standing army will soon contain' -a million• of men. Are rill Govern/krauts to be turned into- the -army and navy for naturalization! Or Is It • proposed that they shall remain In a land of freedom, db-Annelitscsk. doptind of political rights, of all pa: Behind= in tie of the country, and reduced to a system cif ivolltical bondage MOM intoleralde than that front which they fled In their na tlve land? If our space would admit, itwould bo pleasant to us to publish the whole of the speech from which we quote, but at present 'the crowded state of our columns will not permit. Wo have given enough, however, to show - the strength of the "little giant," and, at the same time, to ex hibit the softness of the pile of feathers the whigs desire to fill the White House with. ' Wo would commend, in a most especial ..man .nor, that .portion of the extracts relating to naturalization, to'our cotemporary of the Gazette. Notwithstanding his strong native predilections, he has lately evinced a desire to effiliate with that portion of the community whose country men wore butchered by his party friends in 1844. He need not be afraid of referring to it. His party will justify him in anything he may say, after permitting blui impudently to assume a position so diametrically opposed to the ono he took when Irishmen were hung In tho shambles in Philadelphia. Come out, dear neighbor, at once; say you won't hang foreigners, as Scott did in Mexico, but let them vote as soon as . they -land in the country.. BECNIIPTS NOT INFALLIBLE.—A Clll3O was recent ly tried In the Comnien Pleas Court at Boston, in which Aett Jacobs and others were plaintiffs, and C. IT. G. Chaplin and others, ship owners, wore defendants, for the value of two barrels of pork, which, it is alleged, were not delivered among a lot of three hundred barrels. The de fendants showed, by the ship's receipt book, that the trackman of the plaintiff receipted for the three hundred barrels, and thd mote testified that he delivered that number, on the last day having delivered 22 barrels. Tho plaintiffs showed by their clerk and by the trackman that only 298 barrels were received at the various store-houses, ' that number being the result of a (want by sev eral parties ; they also testified that on the last day only 20 barrels were received. It appeared however, in evidence, that there were two bar rels left on board the vessel, which wore stored on the wharf and afterwards removed, for which there w a s no other olaimant but the plaintiffs.— The Court instructed the jury that, though great weight should be given to a written receipt, es pecially when supported by the oath of tho per son who delivered the property, yet it was al ways liable to be rebutted and overthrown ; and that it was for the jury to decide whether, in this case, the plaintiffs' evidence had been sum cent for the purpose.= Verdict for the plaintiffs Lonivn Ix 1862. 31r, lirced, of the Albany EvenimOonrnal, in a late letter from London, . " - Have yon a realising sense of what London, population and magnitude, really is? Do you know that in population it is larger than the census of 1840 showed tho entire State of New York t The inhabitants of the cities of New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore, Albany, Troy, Utica, Syracuse, Rochester, and Buffalo combined, would not make, by three or four hundred thousand, another London It has ready swallowed up all the neighboring villages, and is extending its 'lamp districts' in every di rection, as rapidly as Milwaukie or Chicago spread themselves. I have been driven five, six, seven and eight miles in different quarters with out getting through the wilderness of dwellings. The railroads run for miles, not through, but over the city. And as for the wealth of London, why, that is beyond the power, if not of figures, at least of computation." MEASMIZEI Or BAIETY. ' , ..jThe Paris correspon dent of the Washington Republic states that the numerous collisions at sea that have of late oc curred in European waters, have suggested the idea of holding a convention of 'delegates from all the principal maritime nations, for the put.. pose of agreeing upon certain rules of naviga tloti; obligatory - upon all the contracting parties. The principal article of this agreement would be ono compelling all sailing vessels to carry three lights, of different colors, at night, as is now done by all ocean steamers ; a heavy penalty to bo exacted of every ship discovered sailing with out such lights. It is said that the governments of France, England, the United States, Rolland, Sweden, Denmark, Spain, and Russia, hive ex pressed their readiness to concur in such an ar rangement. NAM FitOki TES lirre op A BNAKE.—Ort Tues day week, a little girl, aged eomo 8 or 9 years, named Livingston, living with her brother in BiagolAciiunty, Pa , died very suddenly from the bite of a mike, se is conjectured. The men were cutting grain, and the little girl was heard to cry Inn distant part of the field. No farther attention WINS paid to her for Borne ten minutes; but when found she was in convalsions, and the blood. oozing from her nose, mouth, &o. After being carried to the house, she revived enough to tell that abe had been bitten by a snake, but could give no description of it, and ceased to breathe in about two hours after eke was suppos ed to have received the wound. The bite was on top of the foot ) and supposed: to have been in' ffieted by a hoop or horn snake. Fitz,Greene Halleck has heart eeleetedlo de. flyer the poem next year before the 1%1 Bets - Kappa gocigty of Yede VoUege. MENBRESOI ENSIGN SPOONER TO GEN. SCOTT. 1 MLLEINOTTIZAST Orhatoß EEO, State of N;..H.,'Jely the 29, 1852. t'sDeut.,Onsnntan : When I glanced my eye over ..thatiyalotbetweinr.yow,and them Massisyppy fellere that waitedon you to git your real opiniOn aboutthe fugytivei kotoprcimize, I jest took off my hat and throved it slap on the floor and gin 9 harty cheers for' you and our caws— indeed my feeling was 'eposhally histed up by readin that dyalog; for it konvinced me to a eartainty that you had gin in to the argyments of the senator from New Yawk &Mt, and agreed to go:the whole Jigger in deseaven the oppersition dovidSouth. - In'fack, enema. 031138 8 nm a git tindesprate down there, and it rekwired a bold Koo Dome the Ensign moans coup (Vaal] - to set ..them to rights; and if you haie s t done itnow, iwe needn't try agin. • -• • When I read Gentry's speech -- I - .:felt bad, and when thet epeech of Town's folluidarter, Ijest abet myself np in my elialmbef tifid 'sung Bark from the tombs for about tear houri.. What With the speeches of them tovrOntracktybles, (who carry on likeitew off steer yoked On the nigh aide;) and what with the reptoin of the abbylieh nae re at year nommynaelittn, and their ' opposi tion to Frank .Pierce, which..makes the people down South feel auspishus of you; and what with the giueral nollige of the people up North, (and, may be, down South,),thatt,the'New• Yawk sena tor and Norris Greeley was your main stays and, crotches to go upon; and wilat with the rack that you didn't come rite up plump in favor of that platform'that we got Jest enuff votes with from them pertickilar chaps from the South to nom mynato you—l say, &era!, with :all these , ob [dickies and eum uther ones a- stomiln, like so many ehevvy de freezes and cottiog bags, rite in ear line of march, I couldn't diskiver eny way to git along. with our southern opperashuns, let alone the trubble that they would give us up North among all them equeemisb people who feel Bich etarnal consult about : maintainin a naybor ly understandin with the people down South, and stick up for the Union etinrin' forever. But, gineral, your dyalog with them Massysippy del lygotes has cleared the way; and I now parseave as plane es day, that you've hit on the very plan to knock them speaches.of,Gentry and Toombs, and all the slants and tusinnywations of the lo kyfoky papers about our 'CAWS smellin of abby liehanlem intew a cook'd-rip hat. Agin, I say, burrow for you, ginerall—it nev er would have entered hate* my mind, and hard ly ennybody's, that you would a' thought of in; olefin upon it (bat nobody but Clay and Foote" was ahead of you in the koMpromize I—and, tew, the sollum manner that you stuck to it, general! I. never ! if it didn't make Lae toff rite-out!—and I would a' gin 'levenpence if I could a' seen your face while you was a sticking to it, awl a pullin :the wool over their eyes. I say go it! general it Wadi—for, arter: all, we may jest as ;well, as the prophit says, die for an old sheep as lam; and if wo can make the people down 'South believe that you lust started the fugytive *Orapromize and that the stoppin' of the dain `4;erons agydushun was all owin' to your genyus :and desarment, and that the Byer-law senator of ;New Yawk, and Greeley, and the abbylishunere in ginerel, ain't for you, but rayther utherwiae, why, then, we're safe as a thief in the pennyten shaty, 50 fur as the South is consented. Now, gineral, just taw finish up ev'rything slick, we've on'y to git sumboddy to back up the Wee that you was inspyred with in that dyalog with them Mossysippy fellers; and I guees the • eenator from the aginein Malt of Connetikut will git along with that bizness, or (as cousin Ed-. would would say) leetle nasty job, in about tor weeks. But, as our skulemaster says, var Bum soppy. tiepin' to teal no was, I'M Yunen (to Bane') ZEKE SPOONER, Ensign A. K. M. N. 11. I'. 8. Nor? BENT.—Mao Gill has made a song out of his own head about the borse-and-rollin pin pamilite, and Aunt Nabby, jest to plague me, gite him to come over and sing it every ovenin' arter work hours. I wish, gmeral, you'd con. Tii"Ei some way to git him out of Amos Reg, for he's hurtin' our caws amazingly. Ha's sung that song to our house so warty times, that I've tarot one verse by hart—it goesas follers: A new (whitlow, with the intintlon To the polo Instruction tie to Impart. Li now dishiverd and likowlso By 'ltch mall la tops that wit( 511 0 cart. Octit 'tis now hT !Amen* that OUT elndan Val 'rut he t erteit hew Ohl vol., h. C. 14- • No more bawl roaditi- Ala &slates broxile, While we're the tmblo tom& sod tho trumpet LIM. I wish, gineral, you'd epenk. to Jimmy Maher to give Moo Gill a job on the public grounds at headquarters;. that maneuver would-operate well ;- for, you see, It would kill his vote min you, and keep him from ecksersizina utayliue tnflowenco in Amos Reg. Z 13. THE REVOLUTIONARY AVAIL De Bow's Commercial „keying states that the whole expense of:the ievolutionary war, estima ted in specie, was $136,193,703..—This was paid in contineotil paper liciney at vi 'great discount, the whole amount of which issued prctione to July, 1799, was $300,000,000. The same pe riodical furnishes the following interesting sta tistics: 1. The number of soldiers furnished by the American States during the revolution, and the population of each State in 1790. 2. Principal battles -of the revolution, their several dates commander-in-chief, and 10: 4 503, on each side. 1. ItEVOLUTIONAIIY. STATAR. New Hampshire.— ... . . , Massachusetts, and . Maine. 67,097 Rhoda Island •• - 6,t)00 Connectiout ... $1,969:'. New York • • : New Jersey :‘,•• 10.72 G ~ Penneylvania 20,078+ Delaware , • 2,889 . Dleryland 3,912 Virginia 0 C 678 North Carolina 7.263 South Carolina 641" Georgia 2,598 ' 1 31,971 2,820,96'J T0ta1.... t u2 g G`i •cr , us. VAN cD GO D UO oi ° ' - ~ 4 , E . " 6 0 iri . „.. 4= 4.:.-:-• , 2 0 es 11- -c ar . .e.' or 2 .44 Go 'e D e. :: c., 2 . sc. 0. pa 2 I. Et E sc 0 0 0.0 4 d C . l] .. t " O V I 0 0 U =1W4P1.P=11:Ciai54.4.4.05')U6.1(3a5 . . . .72 co c. 0 pc , c. 0 0 O.N pi pp p 0 = N paGo 3 ... co no oi 04 0 .... • , aI • 0 0 2 2 ...tit e r° bc. a° 4 , ppq~Et a cl B • 9 r t a E s e rc4 I C 1 . .4 gig 12 7S E E c.) fir-Nolro2-P-OP-c&l'<;?•,,ze.ot, •. • o Ist.. a— cy, r- co co c 0 c). top. E- t- L- a Ol 1 , 1 ~.., r-i rl r -o -I Dv.: 0.4 0.41 - , r a au 6 o .o.p' , FJ cl> co .c 4 0 1., •F 0) - 7 4 41.41.1 . 4 0 , 02 . . . . .. : : • : .::•: ii I o= mG : s Fr : tg4 "" 1:4 .8 1 g o y .4 ti 2to r.; g cw '49 . R .0 ,2 2.t..E 3 ^= . 4 92!=ks* - •• i s IEI If : 4- " ri gp. 0,02"...-P.stioo 04.,,..gpcnt,cn4 The surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown, I tober, 1781, closed theiwar; prisoners 7,073. • LODES GUANO FOR TOE UNITED STATES.—WhiIe the English merchants and politicians have been discussing the 'question of their right to carry away guano from ths Lobos blends, a shrewd Yankee merchant of New York, Mr. A. G. Ben . son, with his associates, has solved the problem in the usual go r ahead manner of his nation.— Having satisfied himself by sufficient County , do herrbY certify tin& tbeabcoo bin . true extroct tram. the roma of. the: Ming • 1 he bond amt petition of Isaac . 2d. Aims, and also, true oppy or the order up= said petition, by his Honor Samuel .A. Olimo President Judge of said COn in ' arc, %thereof, howl hereto set toy landawithe r e'eal of the raid Court, at Uniontown, theZd day. of Amp. A.1).1852. • p o _oct RICILUID HAEITURS,. PiothonOtary. Co-Partnership. CI A N" YRS roar DAY OP XULY ISST, the snincribers 1.1 formed Co-Partnership, for the purpose of carrying on 'the WHOLESALE DRY GOODS IMEDINESS, under the name ena arm of fLuteins,Witscet • Co. They aro now fit ting up the spacious Wiuthouses, No. 45W00d street, oppoci the St. Charles Hotel, and No. 102 Third street, ninth they sin °Bea muirlo Septoinber, with a complete 'avan:mut of FALL AND ISMER lAN GOODS. • WADE HAMPTON, (of the late tlrm of Hompton & &Alto') JOILY NYLISON, (of the late arm of Murphy, Wilson C 0.,)& MIEPLE CAMPBELL (late of the house of 11. Childs & Oa.) Pittivagti, - Auguot 7,1852-4 m •,• „ - -1! ‘‘. .7 1. 7 4--;" "% • . `,•' =NM EMI .~ ~~- Prcarithochleap nemoaat - DE Timm won't be good, 'tta 'Till Fillmore, is **pot— : 'Rill Pierce leedic na to wicUnz, l, Againnt old Meniral &Witt Then spread abron4llo e torfut { aneirs:' ,;.t And.uucke the aanntry.ying, :From. Maine to Teim we will - duutt Humn for 'Elena tuyl Must? . The laboring men that work ,e hard, To earn their daily tread;' - Are very mutate' for a change From tinier so dull and drtacl; They'll take' their ovules and grub and dig, . Together one' and all, And .wcirk and await and toll arid about, And vote . for Piet thin , . . no 'Reimers, too. that sterling hand. Know . bow to till the son; Their candidates are Pierce and King, Porthem hey% wail} and toll; • They'llploi , and sow and map and xdow, Andsell their corn and wheat; • . • • Alost•largely enntritieto- ' To General Electra defeat. • . . . The Blaeluuniths will roll up their. sleeve; Their sletlipts.they willswiret; - And, next November; they. vote'' • For-Frani:lhr. Pimie and Xing; • • They'll blow and strike andi forge arid WO; ..• And boat their Irons hot, . f - And like all boned, nOright ',. • . • Ile death 3..„'sZi Wood EL :I s LE uoutaatuimu,-.1 Lel,nlnd, , by fI • , "4V+244sprlikLaagrellow; . l red Moo: i'or !ale by • 2SMALL IIAYC OY DAWN - 81DES AND SUOULDM Cli msili e o curing-. In emoketaase tuml for sale by - • . SIVULLOMIII . 4r2.1 -corner IA Pent& Irvin Amt. U Ninatil'oolYl3 • • In gallons half pa. 1011.9, pinta and spar% Just received and ror vale. wholesale and tela, by au7 • . J. LANKLY R• W.,9;r6 - Liberty at .NLIV (WOW JAM. T ; SEASON2 ,2 A. A. ,Ilesow Co, 03 awl 64 Market street,. 'hate jueirt:teived the hugest and mut &oleo selection of Antrolderied over -produced la Pittsburgh, consisting of the. eleven style:tin Chnultetlwa,llabite, Band kerchiefs. Cellars, cop; • Bleeves,Ml hninewe amrtment of new. style Print?, Delaitio, SAWN :Melt lutts, Moiety, Gbwos, • jtV: :0031N iN I.IIUNT7tI• .—Fue ode, a uodratue: AllaL.oollllo, maddenoe fn 'n•heidthy tuid agreeable location,' three mike toms the city, on the Wavhlngton Oho, of ntwmt 13 acres; well improved orchard of fine fruits;'-o new. cot tage Louse, of 'Fla. room nod cellar; never Sailing aping; new frame barn and stable; carriage bonen; granite and riding house,noti other Imiltlinga; a u under gaol fence and In excellent mike.. Immediate.pomeedm if required. Peat C. 210. Terms , —sl3oo In hand, &dawn MA yearly paympta . ; ' • ff..CUTIINNELZ tieuersil "Agent,' ' VALUABLE NEW pou a Ns—ust recelvoi, E. blinza & 0a:N1:Q.32 Sixth/Mehl street: - Stray 141m14 from an Artio Journal, or VI Oita en Months la the Polar Iteglour, In Search • of Fir JOIRI Pranlaba's Y.i -pedltion, in tho years 1554), '5l, by Lieut. Sheranl &bun. Pierre, or the .axablgultic., by Herman b Iville anthor of "O moo ," "Typee," Life In tho South, by the anthor of "Abunance,” Le., vier fourteen Blustrailous, by Barley; tlve cot. The Upper Ten Thotranii; Sketches of Anierkon Sockly. By C. Astor Ihistod. Raman 51agazine for At/gust-23 cents n number, or $3 Young Ludles.fieulthary,:ALleghtny. • and airs. N. W. METCALF, wilt communes their Mi. jjj. tumnal Smdcni on_ MONDAY, August 30th, •ut their dwelling, on Federal Rtreet, " .W . Leau'a Row." Morot. P. W.. °mamma.) h 3 engaged to instruct in Preach:and ilena.'ll: P. (lengrendx., to Drawing mut • Painting. 'Scholars may ea ter at any time, and will Do chervil tuition front the time of entrance to the does of the reksion. Cases et frotrueted sick nem will be en exception to tho al;ore rule. *Txtition will ho received, ono half 111 advance; the other half at the All other arnamementalho Fame natemtorore, mbieli may be ascertained by referencoto tba clrivler , os by applyingM Allegheny, /Ingrid '2;1851—n115-tt MIXCELSIOIt PA3ELLY 80AP.-1/notorton rob Use.--Coki rj or wimp water?—clther soft,hard or salt-Linn) , bo used with perfatancome. Itub tho soap upon tho clothes and _then put them to souk—fur three or. fom 'henna; then tako than and rub them and rime thatu'init. They will require but littlo rubbing aftcksoaking, and no :boiling is required, 94 is usual with other Soap& A lar2l, 3 washing can be done In mee-tidnl less time, tioublo and expense, than with. any other mops known.. This reap to warranted not to Ml= to any way the slightest fibre, or the skin, or anything it is ap. plied to. It remove any kindle(' Groom, Paint, Tar, Ink or &aim. kr-ilk= any Goods, without -the least hajary.,-- This Soap is manufactured solely. by Caldwell, Payson !Leo, 269 Rivington street, 'Now, York. All tiniers promptly at tenths.' to. - And formlo at : MORRIS' TEA STOEE, • aus (in tho Diantand. at-12r . V ED. - Extensive. Arrival of Dry Goods. TII.E subscribers aro now opening a- large and varied, as. - sottment of EARLY FALL DRY GOODS, which have been selected with the greatest eve, by the senior partial,: now in the markets, and paiticulorly adapted to inaPitts. burgh rind. Western Mode. The following are alev of leading articles comprising our Steck: . • Superfine French and English Broad Ck.ths;, • ' • *- Caeaimcrea,l\veeds and Jeans i :, .. ', satin, Yeicet, Worstal Sind Ccith7h Vesting.; , Alp:teem Merinos, Serges,.lkasdnes; • French, Scotch and Domestic Ginkbatas; . Fancy Printed Calicos, of the newest, styles. _ • , Brown and Bleached Muslim; - • Irish Linen, Ticking; Towelling... de.. • . ' Together, with a general assortment of variety Clads,— Threads, Combs,- Hosiery and Gloves: Ril>bons,..lAces and Millinery Goods; Gold and Gilt Jewelry. In great,: variety: Brae Clocks, Gold and Silver Watt-Imi; sl'atch Materials mai Drsons, Int:rand Perftunery. • . • As we ans.detertuined to pay partici:las attention toitbo selection of our Goods, we flatter ourselves to be able to cow pcte, (In Style and prices.) with any other tionsola the city. Merchant. and Pallets are 'respectfully - invited to call and exataluelour stock..:.VCANDLESS .b isUG' • •V-= - .wood Atree.: . JUST. PUBLISHED. '• IiATIIMEIPRISES . on, SIM I.6BSDAT3 or cnsitzz's 'sag MOND; -du BirterfAxd Romano: : Large octavo ' "AO wee; illustrated. Prim 60 cents. - Thin work, which has achieved a krfut popularity land, is now Zr the dlrst time planed beibre on •Adocikan pnblic.: It haa' been - mtnixtred by English cricks with the' works of Walter Scott, and oven pronounced by. some to be the hod historiesi romance since the appearance of "Waver ly," The period in which the soene is laid is replete with Mille of the most 'remarkable personages and incidents on the pages of Eigllah history, aikmling _the richest of mate rial for romance. . The author has introduced Into •hLs work all these personages and Incidents, thereby succeed. in,g in giving, ea; a magic mirror, the very hue end form Of the the ;' the Whints,tho passions, the crimes, the anbtleties, the very personagea: r The' plot and inciarnigpnre of the mos - t absorbing .and• Intermting kind. The inlerest never tiage &nation upon situation; adventure upon adventure, crowd one atter tho.othre, enchaining Um attention, and de lighting the imaginatkm. The•readef ends in every page the stamp of tho author's power, and he, cannot rise from - the perusal of the book without admitting it to be one.of the greatest anti most powerful of modern tegoattont , . • BITNCE it BROTHER, Publisher:o34 NAIR4I3 et, New York. Coplea mailed on receipt of price as abare.• Newspaper , copying the above; (including this notiee,)'ara calling attention ailtortally to the moue/mill :votive a copy of the bSok t tree of Kfttalp. - 0 =MEE DT L. 0. 11. ...,1.,..-1.ifiri0r, 4 4,:.?:,.% 8W•e: , . , , , ...1' , .'.Z'1t:1X. 4 : - , - ,,.., , ..!,;:: .:".....:.•,...:---;.:•1'.....:".!.::.:,:;.4Y.:',!..;.A•2'..,,f.-."...-.':-.;..:..,.:; SPEOaL, NOTICES. SILLo Surgeon Dentlat.—{Buceesor of O. IV. Biddle.). No. 144 soendlol4 et way em•-• 808 BALE,--one gocd swxrcut bud HILLIARD S c TABLE, will be saki low, TOR CAM. Apply at ILRINS HALL. • avAlw ..fr"..U. • . 0. D.—Meets shoat the O'Reilly Telegraph tte)r - . Office, center of .Third sad Wood etreeta tearya day trrrahig. . • `IIA ; , ItONA DOE, trey Augment'. Lodge, No. 239, I. O. of 0.74 meets every Wednesday evening in Wallington Hall, Wood et. jyty osT.^ , -A Sects Lzvx WATC/1, In the llsre from Ureeuebuzyg to Ettaburgh. A Mend reward will be yen to the flutter, by terming it et We of I .. kiaLACH 1,./a A.—For the beatOmasteTNA In Mu •lso. 38 IM.b, nim e: b n o ta ro lia, v g eri o ta bat the B ita k a ina Tia Store, Teas can shwa be bad. • h) Cg'l. O. 0. F.--Place of meeting, Washington lbln, Wood etteet, between Fifth street end Virgin allo7. Yrrrairozaß LaDor.,llB.33ll—lleett every I t newbil ercang• Ifsectnen.a &mama:o r Zi0..117-11eete and =I third Iht4sritoitesch mouth. - •, ftwarZely. ge . 151. ' etree " lN Cm' eat. Bbcrtuuk.; Hsulthheld. Ofilee up stairs. Dr F. bas been connected with the esteldbhmeet of Dr lEtulltlien, of Mulellnig, far the last aIOHM , ItIVCOUBRY, ,Colloctliffh . Bill obtkng, Am.—Attends to OM Post - Disttltititlng rde said embus, the Pnrttce r &c. Or ders left at the office or the Rotator Poet, or at Bad It Col town Verlodlati Stoat, Third etreetothl be prompt] attantial • /ETNA INSURAN E COMPANY', of (Ivy .Hartford, Conn.—Capital Stocks3os,ooo; A* 'sets P 89,172. °MVO of the Pittebur4h Agenizr in the Store }loom of ALTsuly & Urea% ,No. 49• Vt cod street MPhil IL BEESON, Agent. Pibunberllza'S Commercial nner of Market and Third greets. 'Bonk Itrephig, Pounanabip, and Marcantlle Compotal; taught from 8 A. 11.- to 10 P. M. Per ona deaking thorough *Unction In any of the above named Intuit** am requested to call and learn the partkldave. *lies meet liven 3to6P. IL ( 1041111 , `F11 COLLEGlliwwlutalles' Clauses. —ln l'emaiansidp.Card Writing and Drawing, ender Ur. J. D. Williams and hit. P.illatopar, and In all the higher brandies of an Ihntlitda'and classicsk . oduentkm,ander. Mr. I'. Hayden. Two epeclone rooms hare recently beat ale. gently fitted up for their special accommodatkm. Call and se , ., the arrangements. . • • '• • atP6 NE art - • - atetitils, an O rC Curtaln rritaminp of tieiry &Script:lon, Furtdtete Pluatics, Brocatelles, Laco and Wilda Curtains, N. V. Painted Window Ruales, Gilt Comical, Curtain PSnR, Bands,. Lc., at wholeeale and retail. W. IL CARRY'S, • • No, 169 MAMA tared, corner - Fifth, Philadelphia. • Cartaina Mado and Trimmed in the very newest Pratt& style, traar2Ckly Us, state Rlstinal Fire • surance Campo.- _ lays—llarrisburg, Pa. Capital $.110,000. Maligned Dal •for tho safer classes of rugs. tgr, has an ample capital, an affords Impostor advantages to point of cheapness, safety and accommodation, to city and country. meschants and owners of isolated dwellings and country property. • , . A. A. CARRIED., Acisury, 'Snack case D4limittilleld st, Pittsburgh. WNELSON'S DAGIINEUEOTYPEIS.— Rkst Office Buildings, Mini street Memorex taken in all kinds of weather, horn 8 A. hi, to & P. M., giving an actuate artistic end aninudellkeue*unalui and outthink. parlor to the common cheap daguerreotypes at the to/lowing cheap . prices: $1,50, $3, g r i,g,s and upward, ace:ruling to the rise end quality of moor frame._ hours for children, from 11 A. .5L to 2 P. IL 11.—Likenessei of dirk or deceased persona taken In any Putt or thocitY, - ; [nov2sily 107 DEAFNESS, Noises to tire Heal, aid ail Ws* grocable discharges from the eary and perm* * neatly remored, without painee locence, by Dr. Irr, hind* Aurist of the E. Y. Ear Borgeryiwirs only be consulted at 99 Atub strytt, Yldfaclelphla,frcon 9 4. M to 3 Thirteen years of close and,almost undtsided attention to this Manch of special practice has enabled him to reduce his treatment o such o degree of Success as to find tbo moat war finned anaMbsUttate eases yield s by a stady attention to the, ..int pro vet d .811ouldelvairseee......uunekt ttr.Y. .tientlemen's, htissekaortZgliehoulder Bribees—e. . • large. lot =eked, of-the . most IniiiriSieCcuel.liedenable Mud, Intended to rolhle steered ebooldereeifeittlialt;lMlZl- ing forward, &r... There Bbdulder..lloleati:ore ezi *We of great value, and are Tartlfruperket.4olnost artteletedd the Idea to we. The Geutleuteu'a Dace lumen the putyckee of euspenderr, es wen se Shoulder Bracer, and ate Ivry little . above the Rice of endere. - • . • . Farad° at Dr. KEYSER'S Drug Stere,•No. 140, eornez of Wood street and VlrgltruDeP... - . - Attend o your Atormosh.w.nn. WW N rf. , t HEAVE POWDIOL—This powder.is offered to the public as a guaranteed enie far the heaves in ham; and *the only, medicine lcrovit adapted to that Orme, haring been used, in the mit ,yetetirwy_Ptedlee the PtaDate tar for the last thirty, en yam. . The utter ,lnaxmpetramy of that noble animal, the home, for Libor, when troubled with this common - disease, should induce every. one Indira such, to apply immediately fordits remedy. For J'aie whole sale and :violin Dr. FrZYSEß'B•Drug,Stmo, No 140, • jy2iislicst • corner of. Wood AL. and 'Virgin . J. O. AMEN= ' • meta 07C. Anderhon and Minas %Indio have .Ir thn day entered Into partnership, under the firm eat style of J. C. Anderson & Co., In the Wholesale fruit end Confmtlimary business, it No. 0 Wood greet, Pittsburgh: 'Mewing disposed of my entire intirud In' the Wholesale Fruit and Confectkmary business, to Alvan. J. 0. Anderson & Co., I take pleasure In recommending them to my Ziemer. Wends and eustomen4; and hopnfor.thetna continuance of the liberal patronage bestowed on Mo. • • : : • .JostruA ituot&i. tr." - LASSOCIATELI ftlremcnia • liaaurauncet U Campatty of the. City of Pittsburgh. DALLAS. Vicsklent —Ron racT N EY, Secretary. Will insure ageing .VIRR, and 3l.lltlSE RISKS °rail kiwis_ Care: In bloneagahein 'Mitre ? Nce.. 121 and 125 Water Area. . W. W..DalInN John Anderon, IL C. Snayer R. IL liJnanon-44: Wm . 'IL 8 {PUklnti Robert Yinnmy,Chirlen Kent, tiornuti, • " William Collingaix4 A. P. Anahuts.- - - ••••• • Jceepli gAye, • 11IBL5nvIL Wtighter. • qt .Tblug of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. will people 'adore plamlcs on the "human Ewe divine," or eniptions or any kind, when It is &fact 150 known, that Dr. Giurott's Yellow Dock and Sareaparilla cleanses the skin front all impurity, removing pimples, pores sat Mathes, leaving the aifreted parts as healthy, =tooth aatialt m tho dealt of a late...D.ls really Ocelots tO than who whit the rimy beauty addict:mod.' . .It cause. 11l mime and poisonous woiends all their Infected matter, and eradicates eyery.linpurity • from tbo system. • It don Ito work mildly, but effeetredly, giving coreacins beauty and blixaring health, in the thaw- of ugliness and sonleaLk.oin"diecese. - - • . See aderaleicarnt ettaburrobiccus. llYlsolear CITIZENS'' Ininouraatee Casupasy of Er,vb.&.im:4; . 4 31t11- um. Imicsny.3.4 samliazy.. • - ulcer Strut. Lama Mai street& Insures UULLiaI CAW° Elsi - ,:cas 11, MI) sal Minis. slp • • Blurs sal tribatarks. „span Las ar Ds= "t., • • A1.90-4gainst t b Pera3 Of tho. Sus, as Inlaid ilas snd Traaspatstbsa . , • C. , Wto. terimer,Sr- William %pig, Samuel M. Mar, ' . Ilux).11). - 11111Lua Bluglmut, llobett Duulap,jr., Duksvma, Et; -. Limbaugt. ' Froacla &ilea . Edrraill lleuzleton, Sehimmunker,. \Valle!' Bryant,',. Samuel Rem'. --Odd Fellows , Hall, °dem. Etn744; 4 Rank .tt,..y street; between Waal and Staillafictil otrcet.s.-1111.* burgh Encam t reut,. Na. 2,..mests fltat. dud .113.14 TurAlays Tu esda •Pittstnugh Degree Lod v, Do. 4, maketi &nand end fourth ys. . . Mechanics! Lodge, 24e. 9, meetievery Thursday evening. Western Stu Lidge; No. 24, tenet. every Wt.‘bleciry Iron Qty Lodge, No 182, meets every Monday eve , nKr: Mount Moriab Lodge; t o diA, meets every lione rty re= intrteo 'Tall, comer or 'US end Smithfield, • Late, Ink 285, :Meets every Therstry evening, st their Dail, corner of Smithfial.anti Firth street% •• Twin (fity Lodge, No. 241, trieets every Friday ertsing..— Dill, corner of .Lorcock and graidu...‘kr buret.% _Allegheny • • Z4.lttlY Pittsburgbi Iruttirsosee Vox:appal* (ivy' OF PITTSBUROM. PA—Cantu, $lOO,OOO. Prughtent: JAMS 'S & Itout4 • Vice it.da.a.z. Ramon. .arcuravoi. • Trvastuer: JOSEPIL S LEWD. • Secretary: C. A. COLTON.. - • Owes, No.. 55 Sirrta thastr, is Muaittc Bolcom ' ThlaCutopany nukes every /13.51:17 , 71200 appertaining to or connected with ,Idfc Mirka :Mutual rattly are the MEW as Me.e adopted by ether safe- Jolnt Etwic. Eaten at A reductlen of onoildr.l from the Mu tual rtde‘—eroal to a divhlend of thirty-three sad one third per cent., paid annually ha advance. Risks taken on the Urea of ParSOII/3 going to ColiforaLs. ,James S. lloon„ ..Joseph. S. Leeds, Charlet A; Oalton; .-. Eunnel 3f Chnkan, • Wfilitnn ' John A. IYlhton, truarllm . • John Scott. _ 10! . strimr .f. Toc t i t t o li a• Soap. fir the teeik , lins won Ilia =and hen • • No imp/friar for cleansing the teeth; • - Sweetening and pacifying the. breath, ' Or ming bleeding, soft and tender gaunt, •Numbers of ardatalenho or parodies- Sorrountl the teeth, taut are hurtful, To the enamel:- • romp has powite 01 removing them entlrely,nrul also • • `Of preventing tho teeth florif prove thisilet all who iloubt • Yana rteofirse Lout of the welttable • • •. • Soap prexe,.ll)y .I , ll).towsor Jotmson, • • '..•01t New - Yor k , franininterintli whose properties _ - Artfidmttted by all Scientific People to be of certain utility. Prlooll§ mats. ' Sold *bottled/swirl retail at " 00: HEYSF.R'S Drug stow), N 0.140. "Ir2Bo,tisr • eon= i); . Wpod stirectaill :Virgin alley • • Zm Kinmees yowl Bar RDER--Ccintalning full Cc laminator' on breeding. pairing, iIL ea ab and manage ment of 'DOILE3I7O insiructkrna =rem lug the &alma pine stock; mating, capon/zing, With engraving& et an artaicisUon or practical breeders. 4. Tartars branches, tu eluding a ckweriptlon of wood:cutting, coadlilydrigiarul be burning of among and coke the ;liming mat roasting of teen ore; the building and raanamccanit of blast hammer, working -by dowered, coke, or anthracite; the retlalng of. Iron, And the contortion of crude into 'wrought Icon by charcoal forget and intoldllns fartuteen Also, - a description of Cage hanortent;rolltatt blast tracbln&a, hot blast, etc— etn: to which IS Wok an may on the cossullicture of itcel. By Wiedcrick Overman, Ilhilow Ibigneer—with one hundred and fifty weal engraving.—sccert edition. Par side by ; • •C.T. C. bIORGAN, • iy2s ' • - No.lol Wood ttroet. • THE CASH IS THE OZIWYMIATE EIMER! xEs- • • ,gra timer-en:env -- ar*EDI Te:osri, 36 •Lißerty'Stfeet;.'Nowl'orle—lbilnif 0 boon znanf pare irrtheJOBBINECSILII ausurthiS, in New York,the undensigendlas bathed that to do • general Credit . Bannizi a terpiforpepro.fir .en the good" la necessary and that a 'LAMS OirTllC nerve re *thermos • Piw AirricLTES he has therefore turnmaneed dothag pri!atiPlalY to TH cocoa, and upon the Exelltsive Cash System, _ And can guarantee oral di:darner a savant ae AT Wet PLt Cemrlll:Wer vita tetM. CUNT plies]. Below ia a brief lid of Pads of which 'complete awortatent will shrkt's Lo found at Mix establithinent: • - BONNET RIBBONS, yugNou areApv, AMR CIIATAT.;_I, ULOVPB, • TAMS, DRESS-T nouxiss, wurrt: (100 D 8 , 1103rEar, L. a lIANDKEn. • CLEWS, PLAIN lußßOMAsity • : • - now Ens, Thrfloga o ren this orlon hie trial, sod received mm 0 iv M Orntgfrit 04# auh Irk", the dgned ti now. fula r oanrhand that the above la the only "termer a worm*, gma Incitog aeon honk aft dealers Tithing New art to purchase good& • JA.ll£3 OSTROM, pb ei ty. street, nett dear to the /tot 0111xs, *Mat 0 , , t• alb* amid Mea% 2tipiszta ce4 • • • • 4 - A - , Mil MEE .-, - ---- . :..,..,_ „ .......„ ....,, ........ -- '(..."..'•::--.' -,.., ---- -- . .