The daily morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1846-1855, July 12, 1853, Image 2

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Drill} Biocring I{M
Z'„ GE6ME F. QM.UKOU.
Phillips 6 Oillmgrs, Editors & Proprietors.
TCESUAT
Tdbsiodbatic NOHIBTATIOSS
’ OANAtCOIfinKIOSEER
THOMAS H. FOBSYiH,
j of PfrCa&lphUt ChuAt’/.r ! ; -
AUDITOR GENERAL
EPHRAIM BANKS,
i) fitiflkn County.
FOR SURVEYOR OpF-UAL,
J. PORTER BRAWLEY,
* of Crawford County.
>•••* PISE.' JOB J•: ' •••. ■■ ■•■'.•
.*?''nwW^watlyß^tUW^g^^7BnS^^oSSis!jEpgSS»Sf-.
■■• ■::--Ql»*ta;«a3U,...';-2j'>:•-•. ■jA'i-.WHUii.' ll . '■■ '...■■ ' .
the comaiox cocncii<
Met kßt evening and heard Mr. Stokes, Solici
tor for the Pennsylvania Railroad, deliver an
able argamcnt on the propriety of the city va
cating the use of certain streets, in the Ninth
Ward After he had concluded, the Council ad.
joumed, until Tueg3ay,-the 26th inet, Then it
will meet to hear A, W. Loomis, who will -ad.
, dress the body on behalf of the citirens, and
in opposition to the Railroad Company.
editorial change.
I hive sold my entire interest in the Daily
Mobmsci Post, and the Weekly ißsue, together
with tfife extensive Job Office, presses, and ap
purtenances, to Geohoe r. Gilmsobl, Esq., of
thiscitjywho willtake my place 'in the estab
_ Hshoient from the present dote.
‘ ' To tbe readers of the Pott, in this locality, it
K is unnecessary to say a-word-in regard to Mr.
Gulhobe. The fact of hiß eleotion to the Leg
- islatnre from the Whig county of Allegheny, is
a proof of his personal popularity; and his effici
ency as a representative has gained for him the
• . merited approbation of our citizens, and there
eneot and confidence of the Democratic party.—
To the patrons and readers of the Pott abroad, I
may a<l3; Mr. Giu-hohe is a National Progres
sive Democrat, true to hie party and Its princi
ples ; he-is a fine scholar, nu accomplished wri
ter, and'thoronghly acqnaioted with tho history,
politics and laws of the country. Our brethren
of tho Bomocrotio press will find him courteous
nnd Obliging; and both ready and capable to
sustain and defend his position os a standard
bearer in the Democratio ranks.
Some of oaf readers will no donhtbe surpris
ed that I should withdraw from my postal the
present time, when the Democratic party ie in
power, the Country prosperous, and tbe paper
having the patronage of the Government and the
confidence of the people. I can only say, that
the soldier can retire with honornfter the vic
tory; when it would have been cowardice to have
thrown down his arms while the issue was yet
undecided. Whatever my motives may be, they
• arise neither from defection to tho party, or a
want of confidence in the permanence of its
triumph; aad the Homing Pott never hod aus
pices more cheering to its proprietors than at
the present era of its existence. 1 retire with
tho liveliest feelings of kindness towards my
late partner, and on attachment to the paper
that none but an editor can fully appreciate.
'Hera I might close my announeetnent,butthere
• idgers a wish to commune a little- longer with
my old friends and patrons before tho curtain.
' falls. Between the constant anxiety to please,
• "and the perpetual apprehension,of, failure, tho
life of a publisher of a daily paper is not all
sunshine. But It has many bright intervals to
. gladden tho’heart nnd keep its pulsations true.
The release from an editorial toil of seven event
ful years in Pittsburgh, brings same emotions of
joy; hat yet my feelings are saddened by the
idea that X am about to take leave—perhaps an
everlasting farewell—of tun occupation, that has
made mo many—very many—valued friends,
whoso faithfulness has cheered and been my sup
port in tho vicissitudes of a not -uneventful
career.' Among these friends none are more
cherished than, my brothers of the Democratio
Press, and while gratitude holds a place in my
heart their kindness shall never be forgotten. In
retiring from the Pott, I desire to say to my edi
torial brethren generally, that as I bury all the
animosities which rivalry and uncontrollable
circumstances may have produced, I hope they.
> . too will do the sameand ns lforglve offences,,
may I too be forgives wherein I have offended,
LECKY HABPEB.
Pittsbceow, July 12,1858..
It will be seen by the above announcement
■/• that!. Haepee, Esq,, so long on able and dis
' £jngniebed editor of this paper, retires to-day
from that lnboriona and responsible position.
' In assuming his piaco and duties, I beg leave
to assure thepublio that it will bo ihynlm to
sustain the high character the Pott has hitherto
borne s a n leadlhg and reliable detaoeratio
journal; and a faithful exponent of democratic
. principles. .
The principles and polioy of the democratic
pprty l are nowwolt known, well setqed and de
fined. They will form the. creed of the Past
t hereafter ns heretofore: and to the snooeos and
- ", triumph of democracy, here and everywhere*
this paper will he constantly and jealously de-
Old issues, already settled by the voice of the
'people, will not bo revived for the mere porpoße
of useless discussion. The new issues and ques
tions of policy, foreign and domestio, constantly
arising ont of the rapid progress of events and
changes in the condition of the world, orb snb
jeefs of much greater Interest and value to the
1 publie: and it will be my aim to make this paper
a trafe M cord of these events, and n faithful in
dicator, nnd advocate too, of the progressive
spirit and polioy of the age.
Eighteen years residence in this oity, has made
~ - me acquainted with its rapidgrowthin population
and wealth, and with its boundless resources for
future prosperity uud greatness. Its extended
.commerce; its increasing manufacturing inter
ests ; the mechanical skill and provorbial indau
~ try of its people; its Bplendid system of rail*
4 roads, projected and In progress of completion;
' and its .advantageous and healthful position, are
all tending rapidly to make this oity ono of the
' greatest and most prosperous iolaad citieß of the
, republic, or the world. To identify this paper
with, this great movement, and this great busi
ness community, and make it a valnabie aniil
iary and advocate of the interests of Pittsburgh
- and .Allegheny County, will be the most ogree
•■=; > • obl6 part of my task ns a public journalist. , .
IS'ith snob aims and purposes in view, very lit
tle time will bo found for quarrelling with our
neighbors.
T bare “no enemies to punish.” I belong to
no faction ; bat to the entire demoerotio party,
and the great party of progress; and I tender to
’ all classes and interests, in city and country, ths
editorial fraternity included, the assurance of
good will Mid friendly regard.
Mr. Harper, in retiring, bears with him my
best wishes for his prosperity nnd hoppinees.
- And to my partner, Mr. Phillips, SO long nnd
favorably known ns an editor, I have ’only to
say, I am with him cordially for 6 long pup, nnd
a Btrong pnll to render the Pott acceptable to
! all readers; useful to all classes and interests;
- ” and prosperous and profitable to ourselves.
’ n " Craving indulgence for errors nnd short*
■" "comings on my part, till a little more easy inmy
i new" sent. I am the Pnblio’a
sincere friend nnd servant,
GEO. F. GIUMOBE,
•JULY 12.
■r o the pcbmC.
From rail ashodkcemests in the preceding
ojlumn, «ar readers mill learn that Mb. Hab
peb, my Iste’rcspecteil partner, has retiredfrom
bis position ns one of the editors of the Morning
Pest. Xam sorry to part with him, for, as part
ners, wo have had many pleasant days together.
We have, as democratic editors, fought the ene
my for many years, and I feel loth to port with
him now.
But in separating tram him," I have the pleas
ure of informing the renders of the Post that a
gentleman takes his position,.who is abundantly
able to maintain the high reputation or his pred
ecessor. It isnot necessary for me to.say any
thing of Geouqu F. Gimhoee, to the people of
our community;ythey all know him, and the
best testimonial, to estimate the confidence the
people have in his. worth isos given ■when* they
elected him—an: uncompromising democrat—to
repVesent them in ;thovlegislature from the whig
county of Allegheny-
As to the course of the Post hereafter, it will
remain as it always has, the organ of the demo
cratic party of Western Pennsylvania: firmly
wedded to the principles of; the party, and fear
less in advocating them. : .The editors will as
sure tho party thnt their doty will be faithfully:
performed, bat nt the same time, inform their'
“dissentingbrethren” that they will, in all con
troversies, observe the counti SieS of social life,
and if they meet ns in the same spirit, the. Post
will go on its wayos smoothly and successfully
Las ever. ■ w THOS. PHILLIPS.
K3EVBW AHDAHAIiF DATfSPnOM NEW
YOEK TO LIVERPOOL.
The grand-scheme of connecting Now Fork
[with Liverpool by railroad and steamers, so that
| the trip can he mode in about Beven and a half
days, seems likely to be accomplished. It is by
railroad from New York olty to tho extreme
I northeast point iof .Novia . Scotia ; .thence by
steamers to Galway in Ireland, a distance of
only two thousand miles; thenoe by railroad to
Dublin, and across tha charnel by Bteam, to
I Liverpool.
1 Thus, one thousand miles of the distance is to
I be by railroad, on which the rate of speed is
] nearly four times sb great os by'the fastest
steamers. .
‘ The New York-Virror Btates that some of the
shrewdest capitalists of ‘Wall street have tnkeD
hold of the matter in earnest at thiß end of the
route, and are pushing the work rigorously for
ward to completion, while two of the heaviest
London houses bare already, contracted for the
building of steamers to form the main part of
i this cohneotion: " The road across Ireland, it is
i said, will probably be finished_.witbin the year.
; When this line is complete, it will take but
little over Seven days from New York to. Liver*!
pool; or about nine days from Pittsburgh to
liondon; and the expense of, the trip will of
course be proportionately reduced.
■ Verily this is a fast ago; and yet perhaps wo
see bnt the begining of tho wonderful changes
I and improvements which wealth and enterprise,
! science and skill are destined to. produce in the
: state of the world. ~
Atrip to Europe will soon become a small nn*
dertaking; .and our -citizens can gratify their
desire to see tho old nations of tho world, and
our citizens of foreign birth osnro-viaU the land
of their fathers with ease, and at trifling expense
of time or money. Tripß to Europe may soon
become os common and as fasbionabls as they
now are to Niagara 5 Falls, or Saratoga Springs,
or Cape May.
For th*‘ Stoning Post.
PITTSBURGH, nAVSVIIiLE
CISSATI RAIRBOAD.
Under this caption, in the Post of the 11th
inst-i the editor saye: “We learnfrom the Steu
benville Union of Friday, that this Company hare
entered into preliminaries ttith the 41 Netr Lisbon
Union Railroad Company,” for; the purpose of
consolidating the tao under tho statute forepoh
purposes,” and remarks thafethis arrangement
trill leave SteubeariUo-ofE;tho line, and that on
this aOcdnnt it is “ duply it> bt rtyreUed by our
eitisau.”
The writer thinks differently. That Bond Will
pass through Connollsvillo, Morgan county, Cam
bridge, Guernsey county, New Market, Harrison
county, through TuscarawasnndCarroll counties,
-by way ofNcw Lisbon, the county seat of Co
lumbiana oonnty, end will intoned tho Ohio and
Pennsylvania Railroad at Enon Valley, or Par
liogton Station in Beaver county, Pa.
, Tho whole extent throagh which .this Boad
will pass is emphatically a wheat growing coun
try. It is filleil with valuable minerals from ono
end to tho othor—coal In great abundance, and
i the hills CTery where teeming with iroa orc.
i When it is considered that this Boad traverses
I a section of Ohio, and in a direction that pre
reuts any strong competition for the trade of its
vicinity,-and - especially when it is known that
I rear its eastern terminus It passos directly
I through the best Caunet coal field found in the
| Onion, it may safely be said to offer inducements
to capitalists Tarely to bo met with. a
And In this, what has Pittsburgh to mourn
I about 1 Assuredly nothing on her own account,
end as to Steubenville, it wonld be of Uttlo util
] ity to tier to have on "additional track from tho
[junction of-these roads : to .her borders, along
side ; "of the Steubenville-and Indiana Railroad.
Prom -Steubenville to Pittsburgh wo will soon
I have one'direct railroad, ondanothor up tho rlv
| cr eouneating at Beaver city tHtb tho Ohio and
[ Pennsylvania Railroad; , and now by the juno
[lion Of tho New Xißbon Railroad With iho above
1 Boad, wo wilt have tapped the trade of the whole
I south and southeastern counties of Ohio, from
| Cincinnati to our StoteTmo; This is anaddition-
I al avenue of trade of vast importance, and just
What, as Pittsburghers, wo need.
A PITTSBDBGttEB.
For tho Homing Post.
COmiECTION.
! '" : In the matter of difficulty botween tho Colieo
l tors of Stato and County tax, by which tho mo-
I pica collected, wero.to be paid to the County
| Solicitor instead of the County Treasurer, I
wish toi'Btote that tho County Treasurer, was al
ways'WilUng to receive the money in the usual
woyi bnt was 'forbidden so -to do, -by Com
missioners. Justice to WBUnm Rowland, requires
I that this statement, should bo - made by ono of
tbu COLLECTORS,
j Piliiburgh, July lltb, 1858.
f c --- < ■ ■’ tt ertr r '
n For lie Morning Post.
• ; MsBbb». : Edi*obs:—You will do quite 0 favor
to many Democrats of our City and County, by
announcing Thomas Howabd, Esq.* as a candi
date, for the oifioe of Prosecuting Attorney, for
Allegheny eo'unty.
• jir. Howard Is a man of flue professional at
taininentt—ofunblemiehed-oharacter as a gen
tleman, and of sound demooratle faith..
MANY DEMOCRATS.
Benin's Expedition.— She following 1b on ex
tract from a letter dated Fort Atkinson, Upper.
Arkansas, May 26:
'•Beale and party arrived here thiß morning,
traveling at a great rate, haring (iveraged forty
seven miles a day for ten days from thofrontler
of Missouri. ■ They expect to to at the voo-oaa
tope Pass in ten day, whioh.is half way to Cali
fornia.' Borons arrived with them, hern, not has
to. stop on acconnt of illness. He rives them
clear Instructions and directions to take a .guide
from the Mexican settlement on tho Trfnehers,
[in' the valley of San Luis, only o day’s travel
from the Pass; AH the party are well, and go
ing forward in high spirits.’* r
Hobbid.M cedes. —A correspondent, writing
from Hammonsford> in this Btate, July 6,1858,
says:
r ? «A most sbodring- murder: was committed in
i JPnltoßy, Steuben county, thin morning, at about
I half past five o’clock. A .man by the name of
i-Barnet Simonson first etrnck his -wife upon the
i temple with a bttlet'of Wood, knocking her down,
i be then dragged hor, across the floor, and selling
an axe,'with three blows almost entirely severed
the head from thebody. She murderer was ap
prehended, when be confessed tho crime, and
now stands fully committed. ,
I “The coroner’s Jury fotmd a vcrdictin ac-
I cordance with the above fecta. -r-li. Post.
| Items of Hews and Miscellany.
The -steamship United States,, of 2,000 tons, I
(formerly of the New York, Havre and South-1
ampton mail line,) and Acadia, of 1,400 tons,
(formerly belonging to the Canned line, and sold;
in 1848 to the German- confederation, to form
part of tho Germania fleet,) have recently been
disposed’ of for $120,000 to Messrs. Fritze &
Co., of Bremen, These vessels are to be fitted
up as passenger ships, and are intended- to run
between Bremen and New York,- touching, prob
ably, at Southampton.
Thousands of bushels of heated corn have been
shipped from Chicago within a few weeks. The
Buffalo market is'overrun-with damaged and
heated corn, and it is being sent to New York as
fast as transportation can be bad. There it is
used by distillers, who buy it at almost their own
price. The practice of manufacturing whisky
from damaged corn, it is Baid, is getting to be i
quite common through the country.
... The Paris correspondent of the London Times
states that the Russian fleet in the Baltic being
short of steamers, the Emperor had- sent an
agent who was in troaty for the purchase of the
tho American steamers Humboldt aud Franklin,
for whioh vessel the sum of 4,760,000 francs,
equal to $950,000 had been offered, and It was
thought tho bargain would bo concluded.
A gentleman from New Orleans, by the name
ofE. W. Biggs, was found dead in bed at Capon
Springs, Va., of consumption, on Friday morn
ing last. He had with him a very largo sum—3o
or. $40,000,-principally.in drafts, certificates of
i deposite, &o.; all of wbiah was duly taken care
of. He was buried nt Winchester.
I Joshua Harris, living on Mr. Thomas Leon
i ord’s farm,' near Rayal Oak, Talbot county, Md.,
lost his barn on the Ist inst. It was struck by
ligh-ning and soon destroyed, consuming his
aarta and other farming utensils; also a cart
load of wheat.
The President and Mexican Legation.
Senor do Larrolnzcr, the Mexican Minister at 1
Washington, having been appointed to another I
mission, took official leave of the President on 1
Thursday, in a handsome speech, expressive of I
his satisfiiotion that, peace prevailed between
Mexico and the Ifnitod States, and the hope that i
in the solution of pending questions the spirit of i
justice, conciliation, and mutual respect might
prevail. In conclusion, he thanked the Presi
dent for the many proofs of consideration and
regard he had received from him. President
Pierce replied to this address in appropriate
terms; after which,'Gen. Almonte, the" new
Mexican Minister, {but formerly holding the
same-relation to tho two Governments,) present
ed Mb credentials and delivered ati address, in
which he said:. .
■ <* Tho Mexican government, desiring nothing.)
else than to cultivate and draw closer, each time I
the good relations of friendship which happily I
exist between that nßtion and this, in providing I
that my worthy predecessor should go to fill a I
mission of the -utmost importance In another I
country, wished that his place might bo filled up I
without delay by another representative, and
upon me has fallen the lot of being selecte d for I
so delicate a charge. In performing tho daties
attached to it, I shall omit no exertions which
may be deemed compatible with tho dignity of a
free and independent nation in order to accom
plish that object; and to that end I hopo to be
able to count upon the effective co-operation of
yonr excellency—seeing that thcro is nothing |
less at stake than the welfare, the friendship, i
and prosperity of tho two sister nations, who, in
virtue of a thousand considerations, should al
ways live in peace and good understanding; for
it is only by so doing that thoy will succeed in
fully developing tho immense resources and the
elements with which Nature has endowed them
for their common good.
”1 shall consider myßolf very fortunate if I
succeed in securing the good harmony; and yonr
exceilcnoy need entertain no donbtbut that dar
ing my sojourn in this country tho consummation
of that object will be tbo constant aim of all my
efforts.”
To this address, also, tho President responded
extemporaneously, in n happy and Impressive
manner, and tho interview then terminated.
Tub Chinese Revolution. —Evacuation oj
Nankin confirmed.—Vie have now, by advices
from Shanghai to the 12th of April, a con6rma.
tioa of the report that the insurgents, having
captured Nankin on the 21st of March, had sub
sequently been compelled by the Imperial troops
toevacnateit, and in little moro than a fortnight,
vi* t on the Ctb April bad been defeated GO miles i
southward of Nankin. A letter dated Hong
Kong, April 22, says: . , ,
“The Tartar General, Heang 1 ueng, with the
Grand Imperial Army, was close to Nankin,
which, it waß generally believed, lie had taken
possession of. An engagement between the two
forces was expected to take place about the 10th
inst, and till the result bo known all will be in
tense anxiety and suspense.
There were four steamers of war and Her Ma
jesty’s brig Lily off Shanghai, nrd a British force
with guns had been landed, and an application
for a supply of anna had both acceded to by the
General here. .......
The coast Is alarmingly troubled with pirates,
and attacks have been made on English vessels.
| Trade at Canton has beengoing on in imports
I to n large amount, bat at reduced prices. Little
done in tea, only a small quantity remaining
At Shanghai bnsiness was suspended. The ex
port of tea from China is estimated at 4,400,000
lbs, in excess of last yoar to the samo time.—
The export of silk from Shaoghal is stated at
26,000 bales.
Tho Halted States steamer Mississippi, Com
modore ! Perry, is to proceed from Macao to
Shanghai on the 07th inst. H. 8. steamer Sus
quehanna and tho sloop of war Plymouth were
at ShnnghaL '
A letter dated Hong Kong, April 21st, says:
“ Thereuppeors to be a bad feeling existing
toward foreigners on the part of the rebels; the
fruitless attempt of tho V. 8. steamer Susque
hanna to get up the Tangotxi-Keong, and the not
touch moro successful excursion of the Science
toward Nankin, were not intended or expeotod
to indace the belief that the foreigners were neu
tral." • ,
Freights to England had advanced to £8.11)
for tea, and all tho tonnage in the port was en
gaged to Now York at 518. At Canton, April
19ih; freights to New York, on tea, were quoted
at $10; and on silks at $2O ■ -
Thu Accident on the Phiiadelphia Bah
noAD,—Further particulars.—the cacao of the
ncoident to the, train from Baltimore to Phila- ,
delpbia, on Wednesday night, at Grubbs land
ing; has not been clearly ascertained. Thoagent
of the road is of opinion that, tho track was de
signedly obstructed; bnt it seems that just at
that point where the cosanity occurred a road
crossed tho track, and this point is used by the
farmers to deposit the wood: that they have for
sale, and a large quantity had accumulated on
both sides of the track. It had been dumped
down very earolesly, some of it lying close up to
the ties of the road. Ono stick was found lying
lengthways between .the; rails, . and tho other,
whloh'had probably fallen, across the rail,, was
nearly cut into by tho wheel of the looojnotive
Btrlking it. The stick was only about four
inches thick, so that the con-oatohor . pass
ed over it. The engine was twirled com
pletely around, rovorsing its former position, but
removed entirely from tho track, with one set of
wheels broken off, and the machinery otherwise
demolished; the tender flow to the left side,
much broken, and the mail, express and baggage
cars wero jumbled together, forming a complete
wreck. Tho express car wosdetaohed from the
truck', and tho forward end broken out, The
coupling of tho first passenger car was broken,
. and the rest of tho train remained upon the
traok; tho passengers escaped, with the excep
tion of d few bruises, though alarmed by the
collision, which was fell throughout the train.
■ . One of the passenger cars waß thrown from the
track at One end; the baggage car was forced up
on end by the oolission, and it fell oyer, resting
upon the wreck of the engine, causing serious
apprehensions that it would catch fire from the
furnace. The bottom of the mail oar was tom
out, and Bobt Tyler, Esq., who was in it with
tbwinoil'agent, fell through without, rooemng
any Injury. Mr. Bobt. T. Carter, tho mail agent
was at bis post, and was thrown n considerable
distance, but escaped with o few bruises. John
Jones is the name of the man who was killed.
James Biddle, aged 18 1 years, was .dreadfully
).mßhed and died on Thnrsday evening. John
, jrfFrev’a young married man, was also fatally
' fS. Jd dicd on Thursday night These
■ “ert the only persons seriously injured and
they got on the platform of the mail car at Wti
: rningtoi. mOT paying « ie . f “ e 7] ,8 ‘ n l e P°; o r
l men! without money, ond amicus to. return to
• their homes In Philadelphia. m another
I warning ogalnst standing on the ®
railroad care. Tte ecrcner'a inquest Ims ex
■ onerated the company and its employees from
. ail blamo.
Ruaita and Turkey-Diplomatic Circular
of the Cabinet of St. Pcteraburgh»
A circular addressed by tbo Cabinet of St.
Petersburg!!- to---the Ministers and Diplomatic
agents' of the Emperor, recapitulates, at great
length;thecausesof the present quarrel between
Russia and Turkey. This note says, in relation
i to the exaggerated reports respecting- Prince
i Menschikoff a mission, that there is not a word
i of truth in the pretensions which has hoen fas:
‘ tened'-upon us by-the>newBpapors,-.of aiming,
i either at a fresh territorial aggrandisement, or a
more advantageous . Togulotion: .of oar Asiatio
frontier; or nt the right of nomination or,re-,
i vocation with regard: to the Patriarch of Con*
I staritinople, or, in short, at any religious Froteo-
I torate; which would have a tendenoy to exceed
i that whioh we exercise, in point of fact and trn-
I dltionaily, in Turkey, by virtue of previous trea
ties.
I You are suffioleutly aware of the.policy-.of tue
i Emperor to know that His .Majesty does not aim
fat the ruin and destruction of the Ottoman Em
| piro, whioh he. himself on two occasions has
| saved from dissolution, bat that, on the contrary,
I he has always regarded the existing ttatu.quo as
I the beßt possible combination to interpose be
i tween all the European interests! which-would
I necessarily class in the East if a void were.ao
-1 tnally declared; and that, as far as regards tbo
' protection of the Busso-Qreek religion in Tur
nkey, we have no necessity, in order to secure its
interests, of any other rights than those whioh
: are already secured to us .by our treaties, our
[ position, and tbo religious sympathy whioh ex
ists-between 60,000 Russians, of the . Greek per
suasion and tho great majority of tho Christian
subjects of tho Sultan—influeuco immemorial
and inevitable, because it exists in facts, and
notin words—influence which the Emperor fonnd
existing in fall force whenheascended the throne,
and whioh be cannot—out of' deference to tho
nnjust suspicions which it awakens—renounce,
without giving up the glorious inheritance of.liis
august predecessors.
The circular then goes on to accuse the Sultan
of acts of weakness and of tergiversetiou, and
of having broken tho moot solemn promises of
tho maintenance of the ancient rights which bad
been conceded by tbo Porte to.the Greek com
munities.
Tbo most flagrant violation was tho delivery
to tho Latin Patriarch of the key of the princi
pal church at Bethlehem, contrary to the ox*
press terms of the firman. It wounded deeply
the clergy and all tbepapulation of the Greoo-
Russ faith, because, according to the ideas
which ore current in Palestine, the possession i
of the key seema to imply, by itself alone, that
of the templo in its entirety.- , The objeot of
Prince MensohikoiTs measure was— ...
To negotiate, in place of tbo firman which had
been nullified, for a new arrangement, which—
without taking away from tho Latins that which
thoy had lately obtained,should at least explain i
those concessions in a manner to takeaway from
thorn the appearance of a victory obtained oyer
the Greco-Rnss form of worship, and whioh
should re-establish, by means of sonm legiti
mate oompensatiou,'the equilibrium whioh-had
been destroyed at the expense.of the party last
named,-.
, To corroborate this arrongoment by an auth
entic act, which might serve at tho same time
as a reparation for tbs past and a guarantee for
the fature.
A docamont from the Turkish Cabinet, the
text of which ie referred to ia the foregoing
circular, is in the form of a declaration to he
made by the Porte to the Emperor. Tho fol
lowing is tho essential passage of tho proposed
note, which it will bo seen, whatever Coant
Nesselrode may write, containing all that was
most entangling and objectionable in the Sen
ed:—
“ The orthodox Oriental worship, its clergy,
churches, and possessions, os well ss its religi
ous establishments, shall in future eqjoy, with
out any abatement, and under the osgls of the
Sultan, the privileges and immunities which bavo
been assared to it ab antique, or which have been
awarded to it by imperial favor;, and, on a prin
ciple of exalted equity, shall participate in the
advantages awarded to other Christian rites, as
well an to the foreign legations accredited to the
Bnblime Porte by convention or special arrange
ment."
Tho other clauses relate to tho Holy Places,
| bat also repeat the stipalatioo that all the
| rights and immunities, secular dignities and
funotions, shall be secured to the Gteck clergy
forever.
The tendon Hows is of opinion thot this Turk
ish question will not be settled peacefully, nnd
tho Paris correspondent of the Times writes in
tho same vein. Bat the editors of the Times
arc somewhat more hopeful.
I A letter from Smyrna, of Juno 7, in the Bem-
I sphere of Marseilles, says:
I “Generals Klapka and Liehnig have offered
I to Rescbld Pacba to form a corps of 30,000
I Hungarian and Polish emigrants; the offer has
I not yet been accepted* neither has itbeeo rc-
Ifascd. Although hostilities havo not yet been
I declared, they have in reality commenced. A
I Turkish vessel, with slaves on board, and another
I laden with com, havo been captured in the
I Black Sea.' At the departure of; the French
I packet from Constantinople, aroportw*s current
I that a steamer belonging to on Armenian com-
I paay, having been summoned to surrender by a
I Russian brig of war, which, had even fired sev-
I eral shots at her, ran into the Hessian and sank
her.”
There is nothing in any other journal or letter
to oonfirm the intelligence thns given in the
Semaphore.
War of 1819—Convention of BthJanunry
On the 18th of Jane a very largo meeting of
tbo soldiers of the war of 1812, met at our Court
House, when Judge Sutuebiskd offered tbo fol
lowing, vir:
Buvlved, That a Convention of all who served
In the war of 1812, be held in the city of Phila
delphia, on the Bth of January, 1834, to be com
posed of Delegates from the sovcral States, to
decide upon such measures as they shall deem
expedient, for reviewing nnd keeping alive the
records of their past history, and doing justice
to those who may have claimßupon oar common
country.
On the 4th of July, a convention, of similar
character to the one that convened here, met in
the elty of Hew York and resolved, ananimons
ly, to send delegates to our convention, to be
held in Philadelphia, on tho Bth of January,
1854. ■ .
Tho same convention, also approved of the
doings of the soldiers of tho war of 1812, at
their-vorioua meetingsin- Philadelphia and oth
er parts of Pennsylvania. .
They also unanimously thanked the Hon. J.
B. BcTHEBtiAKD for his ■ address, delivered In
their presence in thoCty Hall, on the anniver
sary of oar lndopendenoo,and also for his warm
and zealous support of tho ihterest of the sol
diers, their widows and children.
It seems very probable, that the convention
to be field here on the anniversary of the battlo
of Hew Orleans, will bo very numerously attend
ed, ' Where tbo fathers have died or been killed
in battle, the sons will be allowed to participate
in the proceedings of the January mooting.—ik
ehanye.
E©, General Don Gregorio Melendez, the
warlike chief of the Jaioheteoo Indians on tho
Isthmns Tchanntepeo, Is dead. This Melendez
has for a time been the chief of a powerful par
ty on the Isthmus, nnd has by force of arms, re
sisted the power of Mexico for tho last ten or
twelve years. Bomo years ago, the Mexioan
government laid a prohibition on the manufac
ture of salt in the State of Oaxaca, whereupon
Melendez put himself at the bead of the Jaiche
tcco, Indians, continued to make and convey
salt into tho interior of the republio, and resist
ed successfully tho military foroes sentthore to
stop him. Finding that-hc was too strong for
the weak forces sent against him, he established
a small republio on his own hook, kept an army
of several thousand warriors constantly under
arms, refused to pay taxes to Mexico, and from,
the advantages of his position in the gorges and
defiles of the Cordileras, defied all attempts on
the part of the government to exerolse jurisdic
tion in that qnexter. In 1851 ho mado a descent
upon the city of Tchanntepeo, and after routing
the garrison, burnt everything that was com
bustible, and retired. Ho shqwcd. great friend
ship for the Americans who were engaged iu the
scientific survey of tho Isthmns, and expressed
a strong desire, for annexation to the United
States. He was a true republican.
Teb Rnonmoir or PnnsiDmrr Pixmb ihies
Common Consent. —The Board of Aldermen last
evening concurred in a resolution from tha As
sistants, appropriating $5OOO to defray the ex
penses of tije reception of President pierce.—
There was on ntinsually large number of mem
bers present, and the’resolution passed unanl
mously.—lf. :Yr Past, Saturday.
■ Gnassaorrans.—We team from n respeotable
source that the grasshoppers have destroyed a
number of Hie best clover fields in Wythe coun
ty;'and have stripped .ths wheat fields in many
pluses entirely of its blades. It is astonishing
to see how nnmerona they are— Southern ftsftr.
k. - ■ '.
** t -t
\ *
K *> ' .
K , .
Akotheb Editorial Muss—
editor of ihe Jtjfnson (Jefferson City) InqaiTir,
relates in bis lssao ot the 26th,- that on the Mon
day preceding, while he stood near the .
holding an umbrella in his left hand, ana & |
friend’B hand in the other,: he.was clandestinely t
approached by. Mr. B. B. Jefferson, and .violent
ly attacked. The assanlter'vtk'lSned.andliUal
endeavored to draw a dirkknife, which fell to
the ground. At this stage of the proceedings,
the bystanders interferred and separated the
belligerents, when W. H. Lose, a brother of the
editor made hiß appearance, and on producing.
a pistol was seised, and his arm pulled down, in
which position the weapon was discharged; the
ball taking effect in the thigh of . a son of Mr.
Bradberry—a lad some thirteen years of age,
who was-standing in the crowd. ...The cause of
Jefferson’s attack is notgiven. Young Bradberry
is out of danger and doing well.
Tan New York Crystal Palace was closed, on
and after Tnesday last, to all but exhibitors and
those having business connected with theTsxhi-..
bition. This courso is rendered necessary by
the npproaob of the day appointed for its open-,
ing, and by the fact that all the space is needed
to tacilitate the opening and arrangement of the
goods.
On Saljtoatb ©realng, the 10th Inst, ANNIE E. DAVI3. ,
' Her -funeral will ttkeplace from the : residence of her
lather, John M. Daris, East Wborty, on Torsnaf Vossnia,
at 10 o'clock, and proceed to the Allegheny Cemetery. The
friends of the family aro requested to attend, without fur
ther notice.-- - . • - • •
HEW ADVERTISEHEBTfI.
Til© Corner Stone of CIIDI3P3 METnt> ,
DIST EPIBOOPAL CHURCH, will be laid TCESDAJ
MORNING, July 12th... Bishop Sowers.*m ddiTCT an od*
dress to the Bmltbfiold Church, at 9 o’clock; Immediately
after the address, persons desiring to witness the ceremony,,
will march in procession-to the place of building, corner of
Penn and Hand: streets. The cffidai^aad pastor* of: the
"Methodist Churchos of Pittsburgh andTidaity,are respoct>
folly Invited to bo present.
jylldlt' • • • - By order of V& BuOding Cbntrodte. ,
• “ , STATEMEHT v
Of the. RECEIPTS and EXPEND I T&RESof the SCHOOL
BOARD of fht SIXTH WARD , Pittsburgh,for the yean
appointed to adjart and settlethe AC
COURTS OF TUB SCHOOL BOARD to 1551 and 1852,.
baling examined the aame, respectfully lay before tee
Board the following Statement and Report:
' JAMES D. KELLY, Treasurer of Board.
' ancons.
John Harper, Esq, late Treasurer _.....—S 22 2*
State appropriation for 1851. JJ «“
William S. Thompson, Collector for 1850~, 7u) 91
Sixth Preshyterlsn Church • “52
H. M. Phllpot. Collector to 1851, In full 4,ISS .0
Bute appropriation for 1851.; -
H. H. Phllpot. Collector to 1852, on account.—- «
On unronted Lota returned to Commissioners— ; -5 85
xxrasnzrcEzs.
Cash paid sundry trwrants to Tuition, ImpreTe
meuts, &C« Va, no
Cash paid on sundry Bonds-. Ssi
Cash balance, In hands of Treasurer. * —
Slaiemmt of At DEBTS and CREDITS qf OtSUTB
WARD SCBOOL BOARD, as thoan 5y At Trtaiurtri
flxd-s on lie 91A day qf July, 1853.
. DR.
To Bonds held by sundry persons- *2,806 *9
To amount due D.p. Holmes... - 5 “ 9?
To amount duo John Brisbane— 20 uu
' $2,781 19
:■ CB.
H. M. Phllpot, balance on duplicate fir 1852-...-4 181 93
Taxes collected by W. S. Thompson, to L 802.-.— “ «
W. S. Thompson, halanee duo on duplicate 1850-. o is
Cuxented Lots to to 180l r .. « .2
Bnrented Luts returned to Oom’re to 1852. 80 23
Property taxes tolBsl. not collected M 65
Property taxes to 1852, not collected-.—, ®.“
To cub la hands of J. D. Kelly, Treasurer- 251 51
By Indebtedness of School Board——— - 2,001 13
$2,78119
na-Your Commlttw would further report that the
School Property, eonsisUugof one lot hunting on YrsoJUo
atreet 129 feet, and extending back to Deretur street 128 tot,
with the Buildings thereon creeled, rained togetherat
i10.000.-iJ in good order, and, In the opinion of yonr ttom
mltte*, amply commodious for tho accommodation and emn
tot of all the Scholars whostleod the School. Allot which
l, respectfully submitted. BanaL’
. ' Committee.
tra-Notlce-.The Board of School Directors.of the
Sixth Werd wttl meet at on TCES
DAY, the 19th instant, far EXAMINATION AND ELEC
TION' OF SCHOOL TEACHERS fir the ensuing year, com
mencing on the last Monday of August
By ordrrof the Board: r
jA&n> M. D&csn, fiacretary. Jylfclt
On© of tho Greatest Wonders of tho Ago l j
ALEXANDER EDMONDS* _ „ J
O-nOROLOOIC AL
Patented February 23, 1553. ■
THIS U a very beautiful as well as useful article, and well
deserve* to bedashed among the great Improvements of
tho Nineteenth Century. It is so constructed as to wind up
on tho principle of clock work, ond will continue to ran,
keeping the Cradle in motion for several hour* It is appli
cable also to Lounge*, Sofa*, Settees, 4c., and can bo made a
moot beautiful arUrto of fumicuro. ...
The subscriber offers f >r saio right* for the above in any
of tho following States, vU: Pennsylvania, Son.b Carolina,
Florida, Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi- Bi,;b-s wlll.be
sold for Cities, Counties or States, as vUI be.*t suit pur
chasers. , ... . ..
Any person wishing to purchase, will please eajl a* the
ST. Oil ARLES HOTEL, Pittsburgh, where a mode!l will be
oxbibited, and Iho subscriber may bo found, ready at all
rimes to exhibit the Cradle and dispow'of .
jyl£3w« THOS. P. LnSIHUUGn.
A HDHDEED AND FIFTY KHUCAIJsS. |
1 MACniSßhaiJiwt arrirtrf ; tho greatet curiosity as i
A. well as tie best of tlie kind In tlie world. Era used
wo patr of knurkles when pot out of tho garden of Eo*d .cou
nting of 4ln tach; wo use ISO knuckles, la our machine
Clothes ore washed os quick again anil as easy acem %i the
usual war—and without Injury to the most aeileate.. isu-
Ur* and ristands ere washed clean without using the wash
board This machine was patented la May, 18$2» intiir
Slate of Indiana. It look the premium at the State Fawn!
Indiana, and scTcral country Toirt. It obtained the pre
mium at ContcrrUlfi. Wajmo county. Indiana, oTcr a ma
chine obtained toe premium, at the State Fair* or New
York. Ohio and Michigan, last summer. This machine may
be seen at flare’s Tavern, Pittsburgh, where washing. wO)
be demo fifum day to day, ’till territory U. deposed of.
The following States will he offered for rale: hew xork,
New Jersey, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maasaciusetta,
Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Maryland aod Delaware.
Beside, I will offer Allegheny and the adjoining counties, or
any counties In the Stats for rale.' Any person wishing to
cet hold of a patent that wUI aoll readily and with great
profit! cither la selling machine* : or territory, will do well,
to call and purchase of na. • .. . .
' All the territory west haa been disposed of, in the short
uertod of one year. • This machine is cow on its way to the
; east, to the World’* Fair,ond ere longitwlllcroa the At
lantia Ocean. A man of tolerable skill la selling, can clear
f a thousand dollars or more In three months. Call at Uarwa
Tavern, ceiled Fanner’* Retreat, on liberty street, IKL
MAHON’DRY lIOIiLD*OBIfOIITH f
JOHN A. SiHLLITO. ■ ; .
Oißoe of tlio Flttibursb ana hteatoemri«le ;
Bftilmd Company. m , fti w
SPECIAL MKKTIXQ OP STOCKuOLDBRS.—The Stock
holders or Iho Pittsburgh and SteobearlUo Railroad
CoaDanr. arc hwebynotiflod, that a special meeting or the
Stockholders of sail Company v\\l ho held on FRIDAY, the
16th day of July, Instant, at half past 2 o’clock, in the af
ternoon, at the Odee ot the of said Company,
corner of Grant street and Diamond alley,la the dty of
Pittsburgh, to takq Into consideration the propriety of la*
ereaainrtb* capital stock of said Company? and ato, .to
decide upon the question of agreeing to the gubacription of
six thousand shares made to tho capital stock- of said Com*
nany, by the County or Allegheny, upon the
vblcb Budeubscxiptiojihas been made..
I*v orterof Uw president and Board of Directors. -
. ... CHARLES NAYLOR, Secretary.
PltubnTßh.JalyB.lBs3. JjM
1868. WORLD'S FATR. 1868.
Third Great Eeml-Airaual World’s Fair
AT TUB
FREHCH STORE!
jV0.103 Mzrlvt rfrerf, and 31 SL Ctmr it, Pltttbwgh.
JAMES GOStIHQ,
SUBSET STBEET.
Hi gii_M_fei Mod. A. GOSfcIKG,
fc ||3
sSS HrJ teri
icfcj
Foreign & American
2\F/ : '' f~ M »■,' BBT GOODS,
%lrfSsis4f ari LLI NEB Y,
JAME 3 GOSLING will commence his third greet semi* I
annualWorld** Fair of Dry Goods, on Monday, July I
11th, 1653., and will offer to tba public tna greatest stock of 1
Dry Goods «m brought to Pittsburgh, from 25 to 3u per I
cent below- the usual prices; . Also, Tventy*Three Thousand ]
Dollars worth of Millinery Goods, Bonnets, TUettes, Cans, I
&u, which will tarot half their usual prices, and all of which |
were of recent purchases In the East: I
150 pieces fast colored Lawns, to 8 cents. I
COO do French Lawns, 12}£ cents. ]
IKK) do Wool Bersge, 15 cents. I
000 do Mouse De Mines. 8 and 9 cents.
150 do fast colored Prints, Sets.
25 do French Bilks, as low as Wets. I
50 do Poplins, 25 ct*.: I
' And Crape Shawls from $3,00 to £lOO. • ~• • I
Also, a largo assortment) of I*ee,*Hosiery,’Embroideries, I
White Goods, Chocks, Tweods, Cloths, Cassixaores, Jeans,
Bummer Stolls, all of which will bo dosed out at tea than,
eastern prices. JAMES GOSLING. . j
No. 109 Market street. • i
MBS. A.*.QO3LKO bus also rodaccd her
among the great bargains are 500 new style Silk Bonnets,
from $1,26 to $3,00; Weareietrn* Bonnes 26 ctswrt op.
•nerd*; MuntWim os low «s *2,26 each, -Bibbotu, Floras,
Embroideries mid eTeijthlns olso np be marked do ini la
Jyte*- 011 ■ MBS. A. GOSLING, N 0.51 St. Cdalret.
BABBS HODEB,-
A ’ Philo HaU.No. "5 Third street,
’A. Pittsburgh; and eastside of the Diamond, AUehgeny.
Jylfcfim • . " -•••■•
THU Trustees of the Pittsburgh Gas Company have this
day dedarod a DlTldend of Fire per Gent. on. the Cap}*
tal Stock of said Company* out of the profits of the last six
months, payablo forthwith'to Stockholders or Ihdr legal
renmentaures, at the office of the Company. • .■ ■
...-. ..... • JAMES M. CHIUSTY, Treasurer,
Pittsburgh* July.U* 1853,—(jyl&gw) ■ r ’
■WTrESTKRN INSURANCE CO.—*o Shares of Western
W Ins. Stock for sale at No. 71 Fourth street.
A. WILKINS k CO.
inn DAND WARRANTS WANTED, for whloh the high*
IUI/ost toarkcV pricewill he paid, at-No. TlFourth si.
Jyl2 * Ju WILKINS A CO.
■\TOBTH AMERICAN MINING CQ>~IB Shares for satoftt
il Ko.nihurthrt. A- WJLKINB* CQ.
- • ' / V 1 v v> . •V- , - ■
■ « i*/> ,
\ y\ v „ • ~ -• '• ' - : r "
->•*■>• $&. i, “ i „ _ .'* *> ; y s 'v* « * ”-p * 0 *t> -r v ► * -x ,- r 5
~ -“->-*>% > ■'ff. -. ' -V/ * J *-- yr:v •:- -
- , *3^■.*...t ... i—Z -.«—■-- j — '~-Ji .
»«f v V *' *
. ■ * ",' ■•■ f " ■ ....
v $3,832 27
$3,832 27.
•
ST. CLATK STBEET,
?»>' ■ v ■
WEOUSiur m tstis.
Jkdters \n
Dividend.
■.... - r
,<? V i
SPECIAL NOTICES.
AHL) Burgeon
W. Biddle.] Mo. 144 Smithfielclrt. ■ (oyay •
V, a« O# Dr—Sleota at the .north-east comer of
and Market streets, (aboreMorphy 6 Burch*
field's Store,) on Monday qrenlngs, at 8 O'clock. cmSO ■•
(r3»ASGSBONA XODSB, I* O. O^E*—Tfca
Angeronn. Lodge, No. 289,1. 0. of o.?m meets-every
Wednesday ereningln Washington Hall, Wood st fjylzy*
TEA.—¥or the best Tea in Pitts*
cental lb* go to the PcMn Tca-Store,
No. S 8 Hftb street, where (ho very best Bl&ek and Green
Teas can always bo had- - - • fjy9
JOHN H.FOWLEE, late Fowler £ Pollis,
Boot had Shoe Mannlheturer, and Wholesale Dealer,
NoTl4 Barclay street, fire doorsbolowthe Astor House, New
; - • v-. --.--. .marltSn
notice.—The JOBBNEYMEN TAIUIBS SO
(hay dETT- of PUtehurgh and Allegheny, moots on the
Amend third WEDNESDAY of erety month, si tho FLORI
DA UOCSE,'Slarlwt Btroot. By order.- • • .
Jefcy ■- > : JOHN YOPNO. JB-, &y-
IHSUKAUCE COSIP£BV, ot
u-ar Hartford, Conn^-Capltjlfti>casSOO,MO: ; Aa.
seta $<89472. Offies ol tho • ritbborab Agejay In tee fctoro
Boom of iTCuidy & Eoomis, No. 59 \V°od s txeoL .
norttf B-IL BEESON, Agent.
jr"sS>'Silver Slcdo! avrxtrded tojrj?raaljlia
ISS? Institute, 1853—F. H. SMITH, ManttMc
turer of Pocketßocks, Porto Mbnsales, Bose wood.wntcig
Dofik-H, Dressing Ca-ses and Work Boxes, 204 Arch gtroouona
floor below Bwb,-Phfladelphia»-• ~ aarhSa.
f r ??*>l* O* Oa Pa—Place of meeting, Washington Hall, :
Wood street,-between Flflh street and Tlrgin alley-..'
Putscmia b Lome, No. 830—Meets every Tuesday evening. ;
JtoCAsmz Excinnccrr, No. S7—Meets first end. third i
*riday of each month. •■-. • -{marSSGy- ->
CornsSJ CoraaJil Agrcat jaany wr*:
sons are dreadfully tormented with corns. A certain
remedy will/be found InDr. Cornea's Conn Pzasysb, for
sale by Dr. GEO. S. KEYBEB, 140 Wood street..
Pries, retail at 12J4 and 25 ets. per box,. :>• 'sepS-
those who bay to sell again. l
Curtain Materials, ana
" Curtain Trimmings of every description, Furniture
Hushes, Brocatcllcs, A«-» Laco and Muslin Curtains, W; X*
Palutod Window Shades, Gilt Cornices, Curtain Pins, Bands,
Ac, at wholesale and retalL - , W. JL CABBYS,
No. 109 Cbesnut street, corner Fifth, Philadelphia,-
Curtains Made, and Trimmed in the.Yfrrynewest French
style. ■ " - ' , [marghly
rf-S® ; miller’s Window Shade Jlannfac*
tory f CORNER OF SECOND AND ARCH STS*
PHILADELPHIA. o or motto SaXu and Saaa
Pr&U?
Store, Chnrcb, and Lodge Room SHADES, made In ft
jqpgxiorin&nner.. . .-...• r..--
££p’.Dcalors and others ore InTtted to giveosa pall, bo*
fore purchasing elsewhere.- 0. L. JULLEE A :
• au27.*7xn .8. WVeorner Second and Arch Phils.
w~
FltUlmrsh Clir 61bok WorftDr-
W. CtTXNIKQHAM * CQ„ Manufacturer* of WIN-"
JMW GLASS, corner of 3URKET and TISST
Pittsburgh, Pennsylrania, 'Particular attention paid to.
odd sixes. Also, dealers in FLINT GtcAS3» YIAL& BOT
TLES, Ao. Two of the firm being practical men, will giro
their entire attention to the business, and-theyfceiconfl
dent they can produce an article of window Gl«l<s to.
any cithcrof.forelgnor-domesUegannfagtgre>. ..
mart^mo
DAOVERaEOTYPES*-
Post Office Buildings, Third rtrat.: Likenesses taken:
in all Mod* of weather,from 8 A. M. to 6 P. 3L, gifing aa
accurate article and. animate likeness, unllko and Tartly in*i
peri or tothe common cheap daguerreotypes, at the foTi owing 1
cheap pricoa: $1,60, $2, $3, $4, $5 and.upward, according to i
tb« ai»e sad quality of case cr frame; . -i
Homs for cmldrea, ftomll A; M. to 2 K M.
N. B.—Likenesses of sick or deceased persons taken In any
part of the city. . fnaT2sdy.:
AFNESS, Ncisea In the Head, and
greeable discharges from the nr, speedily and perma
nently remov ed, without pain or Inconvenience,by Dr.HiSfr
nr, Principal Aurirt of the N.Y.'Ear Surgery, who may he
consulted at 99 Arch street, Philadelphia, from 9 A. ILto.S
P.M.
Thirteen years of close and almost undirHad attention to
this branch of special practice has enabled him to reduce his
treatment to such s degree of success as to find the most con*
firmed aadobstinate eases yield, by a steady attention to the
means prescribed. |aug23
CHAS. E. LOOMIS,
: BTOOK AHO BIU BEOSISBI
TTotea, Bonds, mortgages, &c** Scgotlated*
. rinncmg Amsnos.GXVEr-^
TO THE PURCHASE AND SALE OF STOCKS. :
. —75 Fourth street, between Market and Wood,
opposite the Bank of •Pittsburgh. . jaalfcly-:
W. A. M’CLUEG & CO.,
HAVE BEHOVED TO THE COBNEB OF
Wood and Sixth Streots,
Where they offer to 'their old' customers, and the
public generally, at the lowest rates, Wholesale and Retail,
the largest, most eclect and-complete stock of CHOICE
FEAS, FAMILY GROCERIES, WOODEN AND WILLOW
WARE to he found in the Wert. . doofcy..
Pearl Steam Mill;
CANAL BASIN, ALLEGHENY* CITS’,
* (xsib the r.mr.n\nsrmo.r.)
FINE, SUPERFINE, EXTRA FAMILY, and EX
TRA, (of selected White Wheat,) FLOUR, roa AUB.
BRAN, SHORTS AND MIDDLINGS, always on hand. .
CSf*.Wewill deliver Flour to families in either of the
two cities. Orders placed in our borev at BRAUN & RBI*
TfilVS, corner of liberty and St. Clair streets; or, LOG AN,
WILSON A CO.’S, S2.Wood street, will be attended to.
C yl7 . . BRYAN, KENNEDY A CO. -
PHILADELPHIA CUBTAIH WAREHOUSE, -
ITI Chestnut tL* opposite tht StaU House.
H. W. SAFFORD,
KEEPSconstantlyon hand the moat extensive and
LS£y TariedassortmcplofCartainaandCnrtalnMaterhtlsto
he found In the city, comprising in part of the following
CURTAIN GOODS AND FTJRNITURE COVERINGS—aII
V-ylesof
French Lace Certains, Window Shades, all prices, .
'luslin . . M Buff Hollands, all widths, ::
Krcncbßtt>catellcs,a3lHjdih5 r GntComiees,every style and
Frtneh Plushes,. price,-
M Satin Lalncs, • Oilt Curtain Pica,-
u Lampai*, il ' Bands,
•‘ Satina, Cords and Toa-sels, .
« Damask Linen?, Gimps,all prices,—
! “ Cashmerotte, Loops, ...
i vlaln Turkey Red, Fringes, ' -•
India Satin Damask, - Picture Tassels and Curdr, •*
« Lining Silks; Shade Tassels and Brasses,
[ FarmtureGlmps, • - Hooks, Ring 3, BraActs,Ae; •
| A fall assortment of the above goods constantly for sale,
I A’bolcaale or rctalL • • • ■ - - [marliiy—a£.m;n. -
CASH KHITUAL FIRE AND SIA
RISE ISSURAKCE COMPANY, of
Pennsylvania* CAPITAL, 9100,000c> CHAR
TER PRRPETUAL. ■
JVrrufenf—Hon. AUGUSTUS 0. HEISTEB.
Rmrciury—THOMAS H. WILLSON, Esq. ••• •
-.••• -mascrTcasr •
Hon. A. 0. Heister, Samuel W. Hays, .
Wdjlam Robinson, Jr n Thomas Gillespie,
WniiauiF. Fahnestock, Johnß.Cax,
: HatTey Bollman,- . . Jacob Peters, * .
John Walker, Jr, • William Colder, Jr, . . .
Jacob 8. Halderman,- -; , AaroaEornbangh. .
RUSSELL A OAKES, Agents,. ,
; . ■ Office, In Lafayette Bußdlags,
je3 . • (entrance on Wood atreet.) r
Y'3r s >ASSOCIATI£X> Firemen’s Insurant*
Company ofiht City of ‘Pttts'burgln
f. K.MOORIIiiAD, FINSEY, Soerttary.
Will Injure agaisat FIRS esd.HAlilXE BISKB-of &B
ilzula. is Moaongaheta House, Noa. I*4 on cl 125
Watersiroet.
KJtECfOSSr '
•J. IL Moorhead, . ' W. J. AaScrson, -
' B. C. Sawyer, - - ;. B. BL Simpson,
Wm.ai. Edgar, itawnuns,
W.W.Ballaj, CbarieaKeaV
(XlLPialsoa, WlHlao OoUingwood,.
• A. P. AnahnU, Joseph Kaye,
William Wilkinson.
lnsurance Company of
. Pitt»burgb*—H.' D. KZNQj' President; SAH
UKL L. iIARSIIELL, Secretary. ' - r ‘. *->
' C£ire: 94 Hfcfcr &ree(> teftawi ISzriitcnd Trbodtlretli, •
Insures HULL and CARGO Hisis, and JilsSJ*
dpp! Hirers and tributaries.
Insures against Loss or Damage by Fire. - ••
ALSO-tAgainst the Perils of the Sea, and Inlaa'KUtis**
.• - -- ,:v
-di&ecxcbs: " ' -
lI.D. King, >. . Wn.L&riirifr t j?.»
•tnUlun.Bagaley,. - Baxausl2X«-StaZ' ■ *v
■ Samuel Rea, ..- ■ -'ffllliam Bingham,
BoberlDxmlapJr., John 3. Bilwcrth, ..
8. Haxbsngbv. Fronds Sellers*. ; -
. Edward Headotoa,- -. ■. J. Sehoonmetor#
Waltcrßryant, • 'WllliaalLHaja. ..•
-■.■ ••••.• •• •* IsaacM.PemrociL; • r :*.••
Pittsburgh liiro insurance -Gam*.
Iky pany, of fITTSBUMGB;PA. Cm sloo,ooo*
President—Jjlkxs S. Boos.
Vie© President—Sunm STCiunsAN, _■ - -
Treasurer—Joseph 8. Leccu. ■ . - .. •.
Secretary—<?. A. Coitoh. -
OFFICE, NO. M FIFTH STREET,' - .
Sail Jttutfinp.y " ;
This Company makes every InsuranEaappertalning to
ior connected with. Llfo yiiiti. ■.
Mutual Rates are tha same as those adopted by other
i ? ,^Sit o toS t of cue-third frea tho.
i Mutual rates—<Mjual to a dividend of thirty-three and ©tkk
i third per cent, paid annually ia.edvance. . . - .••*.
i * Risks taken on the lives of persons going to Calubroia or
I Australia. ■ • —•••-. •
mancross.- - :.y
James 8. noon, Samuel STClnxhan,
William Phillips, John A. Wilson, - v . .
John Scott,-: .Joseph P. Oasram, M/D.
; John hTAlpin, : Alexander Reynolds, ■•• •
Hor&tlON. Lee, Hiram Stowe. marS3
nr^s&Scrofola* —Itda.dua. to to
e*y that it has been known to. completely ewdiota
eTery Testagnof this dreadful disease is less time than any
otherrcsnedy, and at less cost or inconvcnlcnco to the pa* ,
Tha thousands of certificates in the hands of-, .the
tar, many of which ar© from well known dtisens of the city .
of Pittsburgh and its immediate vicinity, go to shew dcsrly
andboyond all doubt, that Kisa*a Ps?aoisuiils a modistes
of n 0 ralae, not only as a local remedy In ihrsfy*
sis, SActcaaitr»i JkaJneiSy leu of &glt, but as ©valuable
internal remedy, Wrong tha investigating phyriehmsf as
veil as the suffering patient, tobeoomeaequainte&withita
; merits.'- "•
Those haring a dread of mixtures ar© assured that this
i medicine is purely natural, and la bottled as it Sous from
thebosom of tho earth, “
[ The fc&xcuipeertyicaie is copied from. a paper published at
Syracuse, If. 1% and bears date Avgust 2,1852, totafooAt*
i also appended the certificate of the celebrated D. T.PsctyM.
\ qf Syracuse: ■■ ..... ■ :
This may In truth certify, that I have been obadly af
i dieted with Scrofula for the lastaorenyearsthatroostofthe
i time I have been, unable to attend to any of business,
: and much of the time unable to walk and confined to my
i bed, and have been treated nearly all the time by the best
I Chyaldans our country affords;-! occasionally-got comgre*
i Ikf, but no cure, and continued tOCTowworseuntU Dr. Foot
recommended me to try the Petroleum, or Bock Cul, as ©rfr
rythißgelse had failed. Ididsoulthout&dthatfirst, but
| tho effect was astonishing jit tbrow tho poison to the subfile©
[at once, and I et-cnco began to grow bettor,- and by using
| taven bottles Ibave got a cure worth thousands of dollars. :
| . *. -MBS. NANCY: 11. BARKER."
I This may certify that I hare been acquainted with KlexV
| Petroleum, or Bock Oil. fbr more than a year, asd hat© re*
| pcatcdly witnessed ita beneficial effects in. tha care cf indo
| lent ulcers and other diseases for which- it Is recommended,
I and can with confidence recommend it to be a medicine vror-
I thy of attention,and can safely: say that gncccfa has-atftmd*
I edits use where other modiema had Cißed.
. P. Y. FOOT, IL V.
Tor sale by all the Druggists in Pittsburgh. : faufiggi&w.
Western: Insurance Company, Pittalmrs'i.
B. MILLER, Jr, PmiitT± | P. 31. GOBDON, Sxrtixrf
CAPITA!., 0300,000.
TTTTLL Insure against all kinds of riaSs,PXBE_M>4 MA
YY BINE. AU losses arm bo ÜbcxaUj adjust*! and
.? A managed
known in tha eonunnulty, and wbn mo detomgm, W
I OoVSj stairs,) PittsWi. EorSa,
** » *.*■ *
: -••■ - ;ff' - t . ■■■>•» '• ■ •-■ •■■••.•• '
H" • ■
Jgr&r* Fo.fist V/loomls the U*
.remedy fbriha permanent euro of Dropsy r GrsT£j, 3s.ua
dice, Dyrpgpsia, jOostlvenrrs, Bbeuiaatism, Gout, loss of
Appetite, Complaint* of tbeXlm, Heart, Kidney and 8;os> °
[ aeh, Colds, Goughs atnl Consumpilro Declines, erer effised /
I forsals In thiscity. Circulars, givingfallparticulars, can •
be had gratia.
■r fidvertfsemsatlnAnotbereolmna. •
‘ Bold Wholesale and Retail by Dr. GEO, H. KJ2YSEK, 140,
earner of Wood street end Virgin alley, Pittsburgh, Pa,; al* ■
so, by JAHE3 T. SAMPLE, north-west corner of federal
street and the Diamond, Allegheny City.' ■•= jc Stlmddt* ■••■
Ttte Great Eestorattoro. ;
ffewr end Jpue Cured by Dr. JU’ZcnJt &xer K&.
. - 45?* Mr,Jonathan nbugfcam, of WostlTnio3,.Pak county,-
Illinois, writes to &e propseton that tefcadsoffarwlgreat'-:Vr~
I j from a severe and protracted attack of Fsrer -and Afljl tf
: and was completely restc:M tft health; by the-* dsa' of thtf' «■
l-Qrer’Plfla - tteso'Klla Qoiitfesttehiilypas?£S3'great' ; -<•; -
.tonicpropefties^andcanhe taken •witfc dewdod edTahUse-i 7 '"
| fbr.ttsny diseases.rcquLrlng
I Liter Pills Stand preemmaat as a nxcana of x ji». .
| organised IJfcr to healthy action? bcaeoihesxeat celebrity-
I they have attained. • The numerous frnaiJtblo tlwsascs orl* ■
Iring from a diseased liver, whnih soloes the shill of
J thamost eminent phyiicbnsx? the .
{ rendered«ay cf care r thanks toife study end-persevetoneo:••-*•.
I of the distinguished physician whose nrjns this groat mods*
| bine hears—* name d-'isccnd to posterity •aa oao ■
I deserving of gratitude.. This lavalaablo-. medicine ahosld -
j Blwayshotapt friihin reach; and on thoappearanea eftho ■-,
I carlfcaE symptoms of dlsaased Uvar, Itcaa he safely and nsorv :
I fully administered. •.
1-i Purchasers will please be eareftil to aahfor Dr. STLanc’a -
{ Celebrated take nona clso. All other Ten* ■
1 milages, to comparison, aru worthies.
1 • for gain by most:of tho J>ro&4st# aad-^lgrchant3;nßA---:
Iby tho sola proprietors.': .■■ . FLEIUKG BBO7HSSS, ..;
JyUslAw 60 Wcedsircstr »
£9- store Home Testimony, -•'iir. Soloist
Sir —I think It no raoro than an act . ofiostice to you, o» ■ ...
■well as to tbo’Amertea community, to stato that tbaSPEC-....
: TACLESI bought from TOU'Bait mo well.--1 ficd-.cyelsat
much improved- -I-cansc&smatlpriat'with thom-wT-nay. ,u.
length of without fhtlgua to myeycnr •.• Should my sight • -
continue to Improve by tho cso or them., .-bhavenodauh* .
[ but l ahall be able-to read without theiain a ahorbtlme.
hi- i ' Tours,truly, - - .T. MOCK'D£3*
i Allegheny.City,June£s,lSs3.. ...
?. JSSTI hare used Mr. Solomon* EZS GUISSSS . ■
■brief decided- adT&ntsge, and barsno hC3ltft
•tionln stating UxatadefectiTSTisicacf loss standing' has ■.
been rellSTcd, and ths organs seem ta bo acquiring Tigor ■.
-and tons, cheerfully bear-nltneffii to their es*
ccPgncy and accuracy, as.also.te Idtu-SolGmotfa g&fll-ns &--.••
: practical Optician, and tbs wonderful facility with whlehho ■
i adapts his &aa»a to tho variouapoeallaritissofTislgn..'
•D; B. ati i.'i.'ON, ; :
' :: - -:
:Jixr*a&lBs3^r
SS'HIOFIAS OPDSA Hosran
•1&7 ILL open posjarely oa MONDAY, Jaaa IStfi, 183 V -
- V? ' and continuettsuffurther nolle?, with Mens. EU
GENE XHEODONf- of tho Eoysl Opera House, -Paris/ C 4;...
Principal-TfoUpfrlt. •- .'V..-.
je9rtf ' " VB.TOSXES, afaroge?v~
fr"==s CoTfTO’ff Cotillionand Brass flif«slmTXk-2-
Bonn* can bo bad:by applying tu Wnu FraaJs 7
Cargo, at the •“ Crystal Palace Dagunresri Eccas.” of ■ ■-. ■• •■
mv2srtf. - 'E. H~CAEGO&Ca% Fourth •
rr—~3> County Coramlaaioncri-»WOB3o aathar*
-iscd to announce 0* 3. PALSIES, Ekj., as a caadS* • •
data Car the office of County Commissioner—subject ta the;
! dcdricmofthaPemocgatto Convention. •". . jcSSdc ■«•■>..
: r A . LAEGB STEAM JSNQINB FOfi SALE.—Cylinder S 3
: /51. inches: nlnofset strobe.. Tbisia an extra beaTjca-. ,
t fttnet tmd will bo sold low. of
Jyll THOMAS WOODS, 45 Hfltkat at, >
BESSONS determined to havo,a boms of their own,.will
And cn onr register a great Tarfoty«Call and obtain a • -
Ecal Estate Circular, containing a hstef
erty — -•• ‘
jyll ... .. : .. g/CDTSSBET fr SON, 140 Third st •. •
/\LD WASHINGTON HOAD.—For .sale, a*now Prana
House, of four rooms, with over an aero of ground* - •
good water,'ft variety of large and small, fruits; all.usdsf :-
g.xxl ibnqs, with paling 3 in'ftont of;the bouse; situate IH.
nulcsfromthecitj’. Price SlCGO.—Termseasy- • : - >■-•
jyll B. CUTHBE3X ft SON, 140 Thffd rirst, l
•VTEW - BOOKS!—At MoatNo.32Sffiiih£all£fc... *.
1!\ ' prisosl£& •
Yosef: aCro&adein.tho’E&si; by J. EaoErtnro.
Modem Flirtations; by Catharine Sinclair- : ■ 74:.- ■'■•
pi>»T» la tha Counting Honsai by KA. Uosidraas*-- - : -
D.D. 1,C5~
The Attorney, or ••
Ameriem Gas* in Its Seasons; by.F. F. Forester. . •••1,53 ~
English Humorists.. •.■•..• .• I*C<E
last Leaf from Snnny.Side-. ,■
Shady Sde, cr Life ia a Country Parsonage.... 73 • ;
-The mastrkod -MagasJaa of Art,Toltuaelst.-,;v;--L'r^>
.. Hi iTEsflft A Co>| ■•
J?Tq. SSgraithfloTd otrc&t..'
mm saLst - -
1; STOEE; situated em tio best part of-Txjlie street, and
: do&ff a toodGASn>udfle«. ißeasoaforfielllaa tSs mrn^-.. ‘
eris WBst' fiefereueo «aa- fee tasdeto uny uftfc* -
oeisbbCfrau.-Aiiote addressed to M O. P. Q” at tils OSee,
rerill werfre^mptatteutiaii.r-^.-.v^
A LARGE- VARIETY OF GKNXLEaiWS CONGRESS.
J\j GAITKES; .YFebstcrnod Oxford Ties-; also,soua na*r.
styles. Prices lov,. lO7 Market st •: "v- - ■•■ •',
3yl Yt. B. SCEPJEnTZ. _
ESIBHOIDKfiIKS. —A larroited fashionable stacSaf ixetr ■■•■
style: Cuf&. Eudgrsl&e
otherKmbroHwgfcjustrcceiTedfcy
, }«23 - -r ;: .A. A.MASOS k CO,£s Fifth -gfreat.
• .. * Sozas or Tcsaperaacov t . -r -
rnUB GRASP DIVISION - of Paaesyiracia win bald a
• £ Quarterly Session, 1 Jo3 y is. ■
tlie llalL corner of Wood end. Third: rfcrccti •• .. v._
jyG.iir wsn Nicholson, G 8.
■ liMici'for"Snle. ■•
rWENTY-SEYEN ACRES, ai-fcotc? Craig's (on*- ,
ponte Hay** fiction.) Earjnirocf --v V . •-
WAP. yiLSOX,
ieSoshsd&3fet?« \r - • .v—.' . % • 115 S<**iftd streefc.. - -
re;ioval.
-TOHJf'B. MTAPPESv* SOS. hsTo=r.Tsd.t»icir WATCH -
t) arid JEWELRY STORE to 62 >IAKKfcT,-tett?eca.Thlrd>: .
•and Fourth. gtroiJte*in the hocso br A. A* •
- ~ : -1 -v
EBWAHS £* GRAST,
Cdmialsßioa aadFonvsrdtsg Blerchanti
ETo. 61 Esidiango Place,
B4.LTISIOKE.
POS COFFEE? KlOi!, 4t, Coadjoaeaf*
of.Wstora Produce; rsspectfullj solicited: .■:■■:■ ■-
Btftn ti—Hessn. Kins/Frorock ts. Co.? aad to Hears.
Janos A. Hoteiifaon * Co.
JAJ2ES O. IiEHSJKS,
:: Prcdufis aJta General Comnuasiaii XiXeFohc&V-
.OIiiCIXSATI, OHIO.
Prompt attention giren to tie purchase cfpßiV*.
KUISKY, GROC£Hn»3, *3, de.;
onorders. - ...: „■
*- " for- the eaia-of COITO?f»XABD GIL,' STAB
and TAUOW CAKBLES, SIS TWIST. TGBAOGCVSALIk ;
RATOS' and. POt aod P3ARL ASQE3.
ViSrXlberal adrances -made on consignments .of
-aadSlgghimfli*** generally. • •• : •■- ■•. gy42ta ■
6 -S 8 § § § y' - ■
HEXtcau nnsiAse tunmar. -•■
THE O-HBATESI BLKSSIKG OETHEAGEt :
v
.Although It basheehbut:*
dneedto
gratpfql t/i■ pTOTo-phnt ira~gfrr-fa-> -fca troa- . . •
&O7-istnkih £ :&.£h ß ;V&x2ouir Tbnins-ihiQsrionn*- *
iagtalsf imd tote us&dthi3 IdofcgsaV
and werefcaolcd as by 'They «&;say it wasihlese*.:-'v-.
ing-fadeed : to^thffa<V.-Otteg> ;
Jprab^AmselTes,-liaTe-usedit'witi tlJfiisame-:bappyte- - ■-
jraltt ~GESers 'MTa TStdriZ :teTb^nmatism, -pains -in the
jaiats a&i Units, old chopped' hands, tet- ■ ••. -
><Tft ft*** ftga-idl iara beeniH K ALEP!- 60 nfik •.-.-
tbit gjgsaa who snared the agonies of 3. thoasand ; d«stb3 >; -'
and -could get no relief -
-putSsheus&th»lilhstangl2himantißhdEhs.'»rdlicUyea, ;..
thn dar-aha was in* .. .
. <luecd to try it- v Tbesg ojff no- iiftaginary Cigbis cl&snyy .
‘ - ~ *_
• ~- v
' Ithasho eqxx&L Is Iswnrrsiited t& cura-spliakriss-bcsas ■. :
• stasrii^- ,
' --• «.•'•'_*•’■
. * nifecig fees made a epsddealcTmci^grJag^'
jng Inm» And ■grtpjjgi bOJSaa lor a'-ssera CUjftig *hC2S : A -;.:
-•
;• horaawho bed -a.
laiCT £penis. nn:-hi% withers, iani in &ua sreeks bid bias. ; .
: cured, Tblal*afsct-AVA- i-r-% ..AA
• Htcit ?■■•■
- : <aag»gafc Hags, it srlllba a Baying of hundreds > -
of dollars yearly to ura this Xlniias at on tieir stoci. ;
' at the-pfcpri&s
tor’s prices, by H. ICEYBEH, at hi* Brag andCbemK
. cal Store, 140 ‘SToQdstrcgt, Pittsburgh, Pa.,. •. - .pyg
“ WSUUr - ;■ -
v-;- -. ; YOV
•--■ BBAJJ
j-. ..• - ’THE 7£tS7?Ht- ..
A must' hare merit, and great merit, to
rk ctaaitb® testof-pubibepinisn., No art cf man can
galTanUda worthless artido, so as to tcep it upsa a good
2feficfnr;ifitbacots«g3SO. ” ' 4
Akood «& li-ra,.bocon:o ’popular, and.extend .
its sasei year after yesr.iaspite ot T&n people :'-•.
rdsdOy usd out its 'rirtttesy'asd tin iham pars 3 -
fecuj amuQx toramthj tritbrbora rapidity tbnn sogipapeat - .
can
dlrinehas s3dgf6r J Hrjyl3 effcr-more serrico than ssy
:nfiwspsper edrertisiiig,'-' :i^xy c r
lh prod £ay abOTO, , gs ire&r -yosi . : -.'-
ygPS YE{H7TABLB-TlKgnJß2,auditsegseta. Ibprabs
months' of mulUtudss;- The bestmen iuousxounn.
' tty. give Cadr - to its woistcrfal -curcsu.-‘; : Amsns : ■'
thsm ire nomft Hon- Hcury-Qay,' Hen. Kkhsrd £&Jcha- -
stesi Yscb'PmSleat of tha'Ucited huedredaet.
sther3,^Cspt : Thomas
by tt’tf ft r
•-mroga of aoYcn years’, -staudhig, after thaihhl of sixths.
.Ihjciara ofEoropo aacbAggrigaeadtaSed -to cunv-
rich and the■ poor, ybuxtg udold, in-eroTy
: pises, in the city sal-cgunuy, find that thn same succcstssn -:
teudsitsh^*:
•: lIAHPTQyS TIMETABLE TINCTURE Is purely TeSofe-.
.Ida, and warranted free ttotn all mineral substsscox,. This .■
Endtnrej'hy.fts taffd, ngt?ao-oa the stem
afihj'lirer,l^Mjrs^langs,and the jnerrons eystesn.,cures.
; -L
Yltus 1 Lancs,Plte, r Kertnwr' gancrnDyv-yistuls, - .
MESKbfthaEB{AIiBASSEBE,Us<!Ha,tp bne »s so-..,
: R JcmMi&'i? if&iCii-jvfEc2S?svn~
ffisk-s (teKK, Ealtla=.c,aoja.n.23, IMS.
•-.■ t r i^nToiaetatlng,ttiitlhaTcgxgsiine<ias
: dsem te™ cordficatej, rsp«liß2
: j^S r Sn’« TejrtaMafgMtnri!," and mass Higa I-rttf:
' I aljocitarftiUy totitr to fca stsaaiszqi tkvbzn-zct
■ BlcrtSag.Tft arafaiy. vhc. .fcr tha rat nrartT
‘ «t«m fcoai ef os*.
, l r ~.y?nUßS& elttsemiEteeioUT. -.
, JKO. H.I. JEEO2IS.
U.S.Stn?Cras2rusi». \
.. •.. SariinJa,-Jaii'jary 12tb,t853.- ,:•■ i .•
: - Hesrs. J^srfiaer‘4 ; llosiffay
d&ffisht'cfifcajsliipj.whohas been fingeringmany yearsfrce*
Dyspepsia, asd who b&s bees nearly-resterud td.hk
health bythsTObf <*,nrunptan , » Vt^eialua-Tincture do. •;
Mrsonedozeabottiwc? tbit-Modlpc©.. -v
i‘ ■“ Xicutsnani'--, of tbo.U. S. B.y now os boata of this sh£v'
waibiacne ttajenof < ‘Haapt»s l sT*T'
’ ete3^laT^ie£s3»^ , bJ tbeStare-Sblp* which United •
i :'s3jesibct3Ti*lot- -
[ ssntnia'mj'rsciiTCd la good order, sad I tg»- pleasure la ■
tatedcs yet) that IS tax bsejj.used w**li great. rx cw, by
tasoal otosre2ans,-SacasBs<^^spops&.^i' i -':-^.',;'-'- ! '
: I«sUTesp«tfaHy*.joar?i-:'vVi:E>OH ESSSIDQS. ..
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