The daily morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1846-1855, June 22, 1854, Image 2

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■ffiailtj J&nraing IM.
Q.F. GIttMOBE, Editor ana Proprietor.
■K: ' .
>vW - * THURSDAY MORNING:;:::::::::::::::JUNE 22
: DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
,
''hsr ~ JOR OOTERNOJB,
-•@0 WILLIAM BIGLER.
?0R JCSTTCB OP THE SUPREME COURT,
JE&EMIAH S. BLACK,
Or-sBOKERftBt COOKTT. •
C’ • ' FOU CANAL COMMESIONEB,
- HE KEY S. MOTT,
07 PIX£ OODSTT.
i? r ' *
( ■ -v;- !. ns BE FOT7ND ON EACH
, PAOE OP THIS PARKS.
. ' tawyer’l Feel.
A cam oame.np in the Supreme Court, Bitting,
at Cincinnati, involving the right of how jnafih
a lawyer may hlccd.o client whom he has ren-
dered very essential service, und one who is able
to pay for it It Is a suit brought by Messrs-
Johnston- & Carrol, against Dr. Fisher Wv Ames,
for a fee 0f.52,000, in defending him-On his trial
for shooting, wilh intcnt to kill,'James C. Hell,
tsto Postmaster at Cincinnati. .
It wilt be remembered Ames was acquitted,
- although the foots of the shooting wero clearly
proven; and, at the time, it was attributed by the
press, more to the skill and canning of his coun
v Bel, than to the innooenoe of the accused. Be
this as it may. Judge Johnston, as principal
counsel,' had so much odium heaped upon him,
that ho found it necessary to publish a pamphlet
defending his oourse in the transaction. J From
this fact, and the evidence of one of the witnes
ses for plaintiff—who declared •< a lawyer ought
to charge something in view of the newspaper
abuse he receives”—we are inclined to think
Mr. Johnston felt liho patching up with a liberal
fee, any rents his conscience may have received.
But to this fee Ames’father demurred. A num
ber of old lawyers as witnesses for the plaintiff—
doolared it to be moderate, while a not quite
equal number for the defendant thought it too
largo by half. The Conrtdooided the matter by
. awarding Messrs. Johnston & Carrol $2,250 for
their services.
■ This case elioited some rather curious evi
dence. . Several of tho witnesses: testified that
they would have felt insaltsd at an offer of any
thing less than $2,000! Think of that, ye mis
erable limbs who arc content with less than half
the Bum for n whole year’s pettifogging! An
other declared that a man of wealth who engages
a lawyer of talent in a case like the one nnder
consideration, ought to be ashamed to demur to
whatever fee was charged. We think, so too.
And we also think that a lawyer who, by his
“ natural cunning,” or other endowments, can
manage the entire escape of a criminal whose
gaitt was so patent to all tho world as Matt
Ward’s, or as that of Ameß’ is confessed to be,
should have a liberal allowance for wear and tear
of conscience.
Perioual Intelligence,
Bistingtjishbd Vibitees.— The N. Y. Herald
says“ There is quite a number of celebrities
, sojourning among ns. - The summer season gen-
orally brings to our oity distingnished characters
from all parts, of: the world, and wo aro gratified
to learn that they find the. metropolis and its
hotels much more munificent than they antici
pated, Prince Paul of Wnrtemburg, Coant Wed
gentois, of Germany; ex-President Ceballos, of
Mexico; Mr. Stockel, Charge d’Affairs of Rus
sia, and a number of other distinguished visiters
. from Pern, Chili and Europe, are now at the-
Metropolitan Hotel, and their lerees in tha draw
ing rooms are quite a feature. Prince Paul of
Wnrtemburg is oho of the most celebrated trav
elers of the age. He has jast returned from
California and South America, and is now on
his way to the East Indies. He is-brother* to
the present reigning Dako of Wurtcmbnrg, and
ooasia to Queen Victoria. Ex-President Cebal
los. of Mexico, has with him abont twnntv
—raw ■«« suu 1 ut imur nutui wurfie son>. - *
. oe soon agmn in
lie ascendant. They are anxiously awaiting tlie
- oonrso of oventa in Mexico, and the result oftho
/■ contest going on tetwcen Santa Anna and Al
’*• ■ ■■ ■ Tarex.” ... .
Rev. E. H. Chopin will deliver an oration at
the Palace oa the Fourth of July.
Gen. Thomas H. Botts died in Frederioksbnrg,
Vo., on the 11th inst., aged about 64 years. Gen.
B. was one of the leading men of bis profession,
(law,) and had acquired an extensive practice,
when the calamity of aloes of eyesight overtook
him in the midst of his usefulness and business.
Gen. B. was a brother of John M. Botts, Esq,
of Richmond.
The Portland Advertiser learns that Lord Elgin
remarked to a gentleman of that city, that there
was one feature of the reception given him in
Portland with which he was particularly pleased
—that of a public dinner without liquors of any
kind.. Thiß,.he added, was the first pnblio din
; ner of which he ever partook which was slriotly
a teetotal affair, and from the' handsome man
ner; in which tbiß passed off, ho was satisfied
that, for a company called together as that wns,
.it was much better to exclude liquors than to
admit them.
■ . ■ Cliolor* Item*.
The hot -weather we havo had recently is be
ginning to tell in.a most deoided manner upon
the spread of; the cholera. It has oven thus
- «arfy to the season made its appearance in all
and in some instances has assumed an
epidemie form. There were fifty-seven deaths
from thisdiseaseluNowYorklast week, andnine
in Philadelphia. In Portsmouth. 0 , there were
thirteen, eight or nine of which proved fatal.
Cases havo occurred in Nashville, St. Louis, New
Orleans, NewTork, Brooklyn, Boston, Charier,
ton and Providence. We now hear of it in
Milledgeville. The Georgian also understands
that Cholera has appeared in Cherokee oounty,
Bud elsewhere in the northern portion of the
State. Tho Shelby Newt states tnat the Cholera
has appeared in Taylorsville, Speneor oounty,
Kcntnoky, and that several deaths have occur
red. The Lonieville Courier says the Cholera is
prevailing in Bedford, Tenn. Several deaths
~ have also occurred in Maysville, Kcntnoky. In
Litohfiold, Conn., it has become epidemic, and
• ' in many other places its appearance is noted, but
under n milder form. ; ;
The principal canee of Us fatality in New Yor k
and other vicinities where it has assumed a vio
lent form, is the foul condition of the streets and
alleys. Tho Superintendent of Ssnitary Inspco
tion visited shme tenant honßee and blind alleys
In the commercial emporium, with a view of
oleansing them, and there found among other
filth, cellars and sheds, receptacles of bones in
every stage of putrefaction, sending forth a
Otench almost intolerable; tho various rooms
. .overcrowded with human beings, covered with
vermin, and living in a state almost beyond be
lief. Is .it all wonderful a dlseasoßhould become
epidemic in suoh localities? Although oleanli
ness will not prevent the appearance of cholera,
It will at least mitigate tho evil by preventing 1
Its assnmiog a violent type.. May we not hope
that oar authorities will look after the sanitaiy
.condition of onr oity in good time ? «< An ounce
. of prevention is worth a pound of cure"—a very
homely but true proverb.
JS^Theweekly. report of mortality in Phi-
Tork city shows the oeourrenoe of nine oases of
cholera—seven of which have been fatal.
Alhitted to Bail.—Thomas Seay, who re
cently killed Dr'. O’Ferrel, at Appling Court
House, Ga., has been admitted to bail in tho sum
«f fifty thousand dollars.-
PITTS BCKGISJ
iPITTSHBUGHERts 13JPKESSIOSS OP
KItGLAHIJ. ' /
v fWoglya botow a letter from a young friend of
traveling In ?ns’.ood.vlt will bo toad with interest, aa
:tho,imprbssioDßV'inmhj upon the mind of o IMLte
horgher by the many, stmagij efgWatobeeetnhrUiilola
v:S£p''i>~ ; r^;sip :; -"
Makcbjisxbe, Jana X, 185$.
* Giwmore:—- While in Liverpool ; X at' ■
tempted to write to: yoa-.'several-,time's,
every attempt failed; so now as lam in Man
ohester, I will undertake to give yon a short do
neription of the great manufacturing city of Eng
land. Mancbesteris situated on the river Ir
in the oonnty of Lancaster. It is 188
London, per North Western Rail
: from the seaport of Liveri
:rom
and 31}
At tho last
inlation amounted
inderstand that within
10 business of Manchester
rtth great rapidity, and it is be
tho .export of manufactured goods
census, taken' in 1851,' thi
to 303,868 persone.>^^'
the last fifty yoi
has increaei
amodnt now toTio lesa than from twelve to four
teen millions of .pounds sterling per annum,
which is equal to from sixty to. seventy.millions
dollars. Up to , the end of the eighteenth cen
tury, the fabrics now termed Manchester prints,
were made from yarn spun by the, peasantry of
the surrounding districts,- the limited quantity
and deficient-quality of which, retarded to a
a great extent the work of- the weavers of the
town., Thespinning jenny, therpower loom; the
steam-engine, have since made up the deficiency
until the renowned Manchester, the work-shop
of the world, has arrived at a state of perfection
altogether unequalled .by. any other manufactu
ring oity.
Amongst the .-public-buildings, the most im
portant is the Exchange, a fine stone structure,
which I believe has been recently orocted; Upon
the site of the former Exchange', at the bottom
of Market street. Tho majority of the leading
merchants and mannfaotnrers of Manchester
and the vicinity, are members. The Manchester
Chamber of Commerce, consisting of from 500
to 600 of tho lending-men of the city, hold their
meotings in tho Town Hall Buildings, King
. street, —a largo and exceedingly handsome struc
ture —and is an association for tho protection of
trade and manufactures. The Corn Exchange,
in Hanging Ditch, is a spacious. building, mea
suring about 80 feet by 70 feet The Proe Trade
Hall, m Peter street, is also a largo building,
and contains one of the finest rooms in tho world-,
It was-ereotod during the ngitation of- the Free
Trade question, and it was here that thethons
ands of Manchester men mot to discuss and ulti
mately convinoe Government, that protection
must give way, and that a free trade should be
opened with tho whole world; This building has
of late years been occupied as a Concert Hall,
butit is now proposed to pnll it down, and erect
a new and much handsomer one on the samo
site. .
Last Sabbath I visited the Manchastor Cathe
dral—it is a very ancient structure, and a fine
sample of old Gothlo architecture. It Would be
useless for me to attempt to give yon a minute
description of it, as I coaid not do it justice; I
will give you a few particulars, however: Tho
foundation stone was laid by the Boman Catho
lics in Jnly(TB22—making it at the present time
402 years of age—and the building then cost
£50.000—-equal to $250,000, It now belongs to
the Church of England. Tho servioe is conduct
ed in a similar manner to ours in Pittsburgh—
with a few slight exceptions, viz: Prayers for
the Queen and Royal family are substituted for
our prayers for the President and Congress, and
the responses are chaunted by twelve choristers,
placed around the pulpit, and dressed in white
gowns, similar, to those worn by our ministers
during Bervioe. There arc portions of the ohurch
allotted to varionß charitable schools; such as
tho Bine Coat School, founded by King Edward
Vlthe Jabilee, and various others, (of which I
will give youaminutodcscription hereafter,) and
also to policemen and firemen, a number of whom
attend servioe regularly, in their uniforms. Tho
coming week is Whitson week, and a general
holiday in all parts of tbe United Kingdom, in
which there is ail kinds of amusements in every
plaoe, and no business done whatover. There
is a Fair to be held here, and the annual races,
and many other sights well worth seeing.
- I will write yon ugain and give a detailed ac
count of tho various scenes through which I will
havo passed. Truly youre, O- 0- G It.
Vnlturett at St. Patti’s, Minnesota.
Tho excursionists, on their recent grand trip,
complain loudly of the extortion of the St. Paul
yunkees. From the subjoined account, we
strongly euspeot these ravenous pioneers are on
importation of the Jersey yaukee, from tho vi
cinity of Capo May. It is from one of the edi-
vuouque, at every place We
touched daring this, our more than Argonautia
expedition, tho people received ns gladly. With :
firing of cannon they received U3—bat they fired
no cannon at 6t. Paul. With garlands of ever
green, and. flaunting of banners, they received
us—but there wore no garlands or banners at St
laal. With vehicles, freo of charge, to take us
into the interior, they received ns, giving ns
cb&mpaigne into tbo bargain—but a; St. Paul
thero waa no champuigno, (which wsb a eltebt I
fault,) jrhile the vehicles were charged at the 1
ff,?!'p S ., rate , S: c- a b . Ug F’ t 0 carr y tw ° Persons I
to the Falls of St. Anthony, eight miles distant.
one hoar and a half, mean time, $lO ; a stage
to convey eight persons samo distance, etimo
moan time, $26. • ’ I
Those charges were a great sin, which will be
[ chronicled against these Minnesota cormorants
[ throughout the United States. Other charges
were m proportion. A chewing friend of mine
entered a. store, ohoso a paper of tobacco—an
ordinary paper, you might hare bought it for
two comb in New York—and they kept tho twen
ty five cents that ho threw down, assuring him'
that there was no change. A drinking friend
requiring some brandy, (to .counteract the effeoft
of the Mississippi water,) having a half dollar
in bis pocket, placed it innooently on the bar
counter, and beheld it swallowed up by the till
or moneydrawer, which yielded back not so
I much.as a half dime. The Hudson river is no
whore beside the Mississippi; and even the tong
f^hnkees—who, after the money-changer
that the Saviour whipped out Of the tomple. are
greediest after lucre— must retire before the
heifirt °- f S *i. PaUl \ ° r they mU bo assuredly
beaten in tho contest St. Paul, Minnesota,
stands alono, unrivalled, unapproachod, as tho
greediest place on the Western Continent. Con
versing with a hundred persons of oar party, and
overhearing the conversation of at least two
hundred more, I found the Barno impression
eeWed ° onToycil by the treatment we had re-
The same system of extortion pervades ever?
l n^ n r S .\ Pr u- 0e , edl , Dg V„. Th . 0 lan ' 3 53 fertile, hut
very far behind the Illinois prairie land, which
best , of it > for tca Cellars an
acre. Within three miles of St Paul, inferior
land is valued at from seventy-five to one hun
dren dollars per aero. Close to the city it is
one hundred and fifty dollars Tho fact is, it is
in tho hands of vulture speculators.
A Favoeabm Stmmok.—A careful examina
tion of the Gazette of yesterday morning will
show that the epithet, “slave breeding Demoo
raoy,” does not occur once in its columns. This
shows a decided improvement in our venerable
and dignified .cotemporary; and we still have
strong hopes, notwithstanding the hot weather.
Bofore tho appearance of this favorable symp
tom, wo had serious apprehensions that the vi
rus might take an aggravated form on the ap
proach of the dog days 1
•Decisions under the Post Odloe ta,vi
A postage stamp, out from a stamped en
velope, cannot be used in payment for postage.
A Postmaster, nnderno oircumstanoes, is al
lowed to open a letter not addressed to him.
Where letters are mis-sont, it is not lawful to
.ohargo postage for forwarding.
,AU Newspapers having words written on or in
them, are subject to letter postage. i
To entitle papers to bo sent to bona fide sub-
Bonbers at half a cent eaohj; a full qoarters’ Host
age is required in advance. ■
It is improper for a. deputy.postmaster to re
hv°r^ir ap ?o a of P ub,io documents franked
by. a member of Congress.
No paper, or other thing exoept bills or (re
ceipts of publishers, oan be sent enclosed in a
newspaper withontßahjeoting the whole to letter
„ B . « fid v - absCnb J e . rs . t ? weekly papers,, whose
post office Is in an adjoining county, are allowed
to receive papers published in a oonntyin which
they live, freo of' postage. • . ■ *
. Any mark with a pen on a ciroular, snob as
date or anything of the kind, subjects it to letter
postago.
„ A On the 14th nit. Mr.
Oeorge W. Bowman, on his farm in BnlUtt odmC
ty, tty., killed arattlesnnke six feet four Inobe?
long, and eighteen inohes round the body,' with
twenty-one rattles. It is. is believed that this
wee the largest and oldest rattlesnake ever Seen
in the Western oonntry. •
•'V'- rMv'
| than —JDur^-9
1 was quietly emoblnt m 2 DffS ' lßbma el .Pasha
diotarbpd by “mo seemed aeon--
i»g e 4ie^o f m b 0 i t 0 t “o“ r B h Th!l bCen
etand, Sad bocn T' ™ Under
and was a man of some inte it«i S5 -ia army, 1
i From toe Clfidanoti Atlas, Jane 16.]
Extraordinary Case of tarcony—Trlol of
® Kentucky Lawyer*
Quito an excitement was stirred up in the little
town of Grceonpsbnrg. Ky.. last week, by the
arrest and trial of Jefferson Evans, a prominent
member of the Greenup bar, on a charge of
grand larceny. The tfWsays it was proven
on the trial that Timothy Clary, whilst using
some papers he had taken out of his pocket
book, laid it down by its side on a benoh in the
Court House, and afterwards went away and for
got it Boon after he left, the accused wont to
the spot Clary had left and sat down on tho
pooket book, and soon after sitting down, leaned
over bo as to be able to get iffrom under him
and put it m his pooket. He then went up stairs
and went into the ante and lodge room, of the
tree Masons, closing the door after him Tho
pocket book was afterwards found in the lodeo
t room with only a part of the money in it, but
more was found on tho acousod. On the trial
counsel for the defence rested their case on the
proposition, “ that lost property cannot be the
subject of larceny,” and on this point the prison
if" eIo< l ueot speech—and the paper from
which this acoounHs ; taken says “he snake as
never man spake i >f Ho was acquitted.
Tlic Manifesto Against the Nebraska Bill
—Col. Benton not the Author.
I [From the St. loots Democrat, {Benton paper,) June 14.1
the say there is to be a
manifesto issued ot Washington City, against the'
Nebraska bill, signed by all who Zinst
it, and that. Col. Benton is to draw it np. Now
| if no such manifesto shall bo issued, it will have
: J® J>o admitted that so much of tho story, makes
Col. Benton the writer of it, is untrue* and if
one is waned all who know him and have ob
served hie course, will know that ho will have
f. ‘ h . l “ g .‘°. do it. Hie ooureo was clear from
tho beginning— to do nothing to cxolte the North
against the bill. Ho kept his opinion about U
concealed from the public nnd only let it bo
known to his intimate friends, lestho should er-
C.te oppoauion. He left that oat of bie plan of
operations, which was merely to speak against
the bill when it name up. And the same! no
doubt, will bo his future oourso, taking no hand
in exciting opposition to. the pleasure*
, Telegraph Itens,
wn? 8 ??™' June 20—Information has been
received here of the safe arrival in Kentucky of
the slaves found m Ohio, and remanded to their
ovmors. •
JiTho Commissioner of Patents has given a de
oieion m favor of tho extension of the Morse
telegraph patent fora period of soven years
commencing this day. years,
[ Tho amount of drafts npon the Treasury Do-
I partmont last week wub $1,164,000.
J“:'ee Merriok, a brother of tho ox senator,
died m this oity yesterday.
A meeting of the Cabinot was held yesterday
afternoon to consider tho appointments for the
new territories.
L NowooK Jone JO—Two thousand bushels
LNorUi Carolina wheat, of this seasons growth,
| left here yesterday for Baltimore. ■
[ BAiTmonn, June 20._Two night men, named
William Beels and William Robinson were suffo
cated whilo cleanings sink in this city lastnight
The Coroner held an inquest oyer their bodies'
and ft verdict was returned accordingly.
r^ tP^? lAJ ‘n^ OSBIP ' —The Paris correspondent
of the New York Commercial gives tho following
bit of imperial gossip: 6
i “The, friends of tho Emperor, and . especially
thoae who ore desirous that he establish the
Napoleon dynasty are just now encouraged to
hope that the birth of an heir ib an event that
may possibly be oxpeoled. Her Majesty is said
tobe in an interesting situation. Still her gen
oral health is.far from good, and her appearaneo
is that of a woman of weak natural constitution
gradually sinking under the effects of tho wear
and tear of the life she leads. Certain very nice
observers, affect to discover, in a late imperial
decree, plaoing the infant day schools under the
patronage of the Empress, ‘as a proof of poouliar
affection,’ an argument in favor of tho rnmored
situation of her. Mqjesty, If that is the only
argument, it amounts to nothing.”
I“ ■ •» s *• , * ‘
.':t
\ it ia much to the oredit of. tbo nhig papers u
that they repnbliah.a biography;s&(i
ff.-Baxp, which doeß justice to his
jblSiliterary labors; '
'■ vltia Stated that tho Rev;
"MethodiSt Church Nortlf,
territory of Nebraska,
mißsioDary of that
. Jfoa of-Thiladetphiana cow.
on Sunday; but thltf'will tuft
. IK, no the Moyorof > that city, has
:o enforce the Sunday law;
1 IhedrinViD
reßtirt to\Gi
oontio
( rcß:
locusts are infesting northern- Illinois in my
*neds. In many parts of that region they cover
every: Bhrub, - and make the woods vocal" with
their singing. In that seotion they are said to
have last appeared m the summer of 1838.
Several rows and two murders are announced
to have taken place-in Pottsville, in addition to
the one wo reported yesterday; AU those dis
turbances, the telegraph says, have grown out of
ram. . . . • -
Cincinnati, a few days since, a live oaor
pion was found in- a piece of'logwood which
came.up. on tho.. steamer Tweed: It woe in a
partial torpid state, butwhen warmed before the
fnraaco'doors, it-would strike wickedly at any
• object which was presented.-
. An organ of the largest class, which-cost
$7OOO, has been placed in St. Stephen's church,
28th street, New York. Ire dimensions arc as
follows:—48 stops, 3 banks of keys, 2£ octaves
of-pedals. It is 45 feet high, 27 fcet ; wide and
16 feet deep, and contains nearly 2500 pipes,
. * By the new liquor, law passed by tho Connec
ticut legislature, no debt ..contracted for liquor
can be collected. : Thia is lavorable to the cash
Bystem. This beautiful bill forbids' the manu-'
factors and sale of hop. beer, being in that re
spect considerably beyond the old law prohibi
ting beer from working on Sunday;
- The New York. Tribune admits the doggerel of
a rhymeßter, into its; columns, - who dubs the
American flag, “.a flaunting lie,?'a “polluted
rag,** marked with “ bloody 818103,” &c. He
considers U. 8. vessels; “ pirate decks,” and
vents sundry other.similar epithets, which show
the* Want of patriotism and right feelings in the
writer. :Shame on both author and publisher!
.: A spiritual, convention which has been m ses
sion for some days past in New York; adjourned
on Monday. Before adjournment, howefer, it
organized a National Society. called-“ The Soci
ety for the Diffusion of Spiritual. Knowledge.”
N. P. Talmadge, Judge Edmonds, Juda Fowler,
and many otherprominont gentlemen from dif
ferent parts of the country aro aonoanced among
the officers.-
£xeoutlon of a Buiitan. Spy in Turkey*
The following statement appears m the Liver
pool. Journal. The same details of the oocur
rcnce ore also published in tho London papers.
They were furnished by one of the English cor
respondents of the London press at Sohumla:-
A Russian spy has boen executed at Scbumla.
The details aro and disgraceful to
Omer pasha.. The Turks are savages, or worse.
This statement is calculated to reoonoilo-Earope
to the expulsion of tho brutes across tho Bos
phorus, even by Russia. The revolting account
is as follows-Throe days ago ho was conducted
by a largo body of military from one end of
Sohumla to the other. Ishmael Pasha, with a
large staff,-led the. way. At a considerable dis
tance came a.baudof drummers and musicians,-
playing tunes more sotted to a triumphal event
than to the tragical affair that was soon to take
place. Behind them camo Borne files of soldiers;
then, the condemned man, walking, in the dreSs
of a Bulgarian peasant, biß two arms tied with
ropes, and held by several kavnsses who follow
ed him. The criminal was led out to a spot in
viow of all nrcsent. Ishmael Pasha and his staff
alighted. The preparations for the poor fellow's
execution wero very soon finished—nothing, in
fact, having been done..excepting the binding of
tbo man's, eyes, and the tying of his hands con
siderably tighter.
The Pasha-gave the s-gnal to nine soldiers,
who were placed at 25 yards from the condemned
man, to fire. Three fired first, but only one of
their shots took effect. It made him stagger
and fall. Another three then fired, with but •
littlo more effect; after which, the rcmuining
three discharged their muskets at him. Four
balls iu all seemed to have struck him ;* but as
he was not dead, three other soldiers wero or
dered.to fall out of their ranks, and to firo upon
him, After they had done so, several men went
up to the unbilled man, end stuck their bayonets
into his skull. He groaned so heavily that the
crowd-beard him. The want of precision with
which the men fired, and the tardiness they
showed in doing their work, were very repre
hensible, and gave mnch pnin to the foreign offi
cers who had seen military executions in other
countries; but the finishing part of tho business
was little else..than revolting to their feelings.
Several Turkish officers went up to tbo mutila
ted man drew their swords across his throat, and
*" *
*, , v*, t* ~ r *
•‘ •r -v#’ Vy*•-••’£i';'k *y?- k' J
.■ : ■' Xeeoliefl*
.■ <ThB roising and propagation of leeches for
many years hare been a necessity in France,tot
Ihosupply furnished of her marshes gave out 80
years ego. Out of her abundanoe-sbe need -to'
•export; tvnd nowshe isforoedto make up heri
deficiency from abroad.. Other countries hare
in: their tarn been exhausted—ltaly, Germany:
and Spain ;: and of late certain districts of Asia:
bare been,laid under contribution.
over the world, the yield - has been seriously di
minished, and prices have risen to Buch a point
that the poor canno t pay them ; and the hospi
tals oven are alarmed. The Academy of Medi
cine has voted prizes to persons who nonld dis
cover methods of propagation; and lately asum
was placed in the hands of tbe Prefect of the
Seine, ; to make expenmehts with a model leeoh
ery. in tho suburbs. A: M. Borne has just Sent;
to the Academy an account or his establishment
at KamboUillet, where be seems to have mot vrith
extraordinary snoceSß in encouraging the repro
duction of.•* his pupils,” as he calls them. They
are fed three times a year; they bnry them
selves in the earth late in the antnmn, and pass
■the winter in a state of torpor. They mate early:
in the spring—on 8U Valentine’s Day, probably
—and lay their cocoons in May to hatch in Sep
tember. The young ones are fed upontho“les3
substantial blood of calves.” They are extreme
ly voracious, and in two years weigh ten tithes
their primitive volume. M. Borne has built con-:
veniencea for the reception of the cocoons, and
for thoir artificial incubation. . By oaro and ten
derness he hassnccceded thus far in preventing:
any epidemio or sadden mortality In his reser
voirs. The leech is very apt to bo oarried off by
prevalent disorders,’:.' and history mentions tbs
loss of acolony of 18,000 incite winter, —of the
destruction of 00,000 by a hard frost; and of 'the
consumption of 200,000 in Solcque by a flock of
wild geese., M. Borno has taken extraordinary
precantions against any invasion of the sorb In
the middle of his ponds is a light-house or.look
ont, where a man is constantly stationed, armed
with guns and other means of defence; the
edges of the ponds are guarded in each a way
as to keep out all aquatic enemies, such as wa
ter-rats, moles and. frogs ; traps are Bet for tho
troehetes, glossiphonies, hydrophiles and dytis
qncs, which nourish a traditional animosity to
ward all leochss. Marauders and poachers tire
also keenly watched; Io short; M. Borne hopes
: Soon to be in a position to fnrhisb France a sup
ply sufficient to render any farther importation
useless; and later ho expects even to beablefo
export for his own account.— Paris Cots. If. T,
■ Times.
'Sofia, or the
—a to the bow
Inspßctingtooiy.aa
: [From ■ the - Washington Btar.J
TUe Prlce for Coho.
v Those, persons who are writing from Washing
ton to the press with the view of prejudicing the
country against the acquisition: :of. Cuba, nre
'horplng on a story saying that the friends .of the
measure in.public life,: entertain the idea of hav
ing, the United States - Government offer three
hundred millions of dollars for the Island;. - No
one has a better opportunity than ourself to as
certain precisely the views of tho friends of the
measure on such a point, for a day rarely indeed
passes, in tho course of which we do not con
verse with sbino one on the subject who is as
well poßted upon it as it is possible for any one
'to be. Up to this time, we have yet to hear the
first suggestion from any snob party, leading to
the impression that the idea of going much be
yond the.: original' offer of Mr. Baohanan is
dreamed of by any of them. That offer was ono
hundred million dollars, it will bo recolleoted.
Among the unthinking advocates of Caban an
nexation around ns, the notion of paying in
American money for the Island is very unpopu
lar; the belief being very; general; that if we
wait a time, the inevitable tendenoy of approach
ing events will cause tho ripe pear to drop'into
onr lap without money,'and without price. As
that policy involves tacit encouragement of filli-..
hustoring on the part of this Government, those
who value that pearl above price—our national
honor—-hbwover, listen to no snbh suggestion,
We need hardly add, that this class comprehends
nine-tenths of the public men of the country
who are for the acquisition.
Tho fact that every succeeding steamer from
Bavaria is now bringing to our shares-numbers
of old Spaniards as well ns Creoles, with their
hearts blistering with dissatisfaction with their
Government, has opened the eyes of all the pub
lic men here to the fact 'that, at this moment,
tho feeling for revolution is raqoh mors general
and ripe than in this country bn the 4th of July,
1775; Hence the indisposition of those: first
above referred to, to pay for that which they
feel ossnred we may soon easily secure through
a revolution on the Island. Men of prudence
and trnb national chivalry; however, take a very
different view of the subject,,and are willing to
have the Amerioan Government pay quite up to,
if hot a little beyond, the mark of the Island’s
true value, oa denoted by Mr. Buchanan’s ten
der. Their wish is to clear our national skirts
of the dishonor of even settling to seek to defraud'
Spain of what she has so long possesed, more
especially at a season in .which she stands, per
haps, in greater need of available meauß than at
• any previous period :of-her history, as chequered
as that has been. We bought tho Uonisiana ter
ritory for twelve millions, and if bnt by way of
a.nh.'kibg. Spain - that wo are nb.t what she may
monßly, will bo qnito willing to have this Gov
ernment pay even eight or ten times as much for
that Island, as tho great and important purchase'
from Napoleon cost as. -
. Pihno rr Cp.—At the recent tern of tbe
Circuit Court at Noblesville, Ind., tho cash of
blatr ts. MoVey, for orim. con., was tried. Tho
jury found a verdict, upon which judgment was
rendered against the defendant for one hundred
and twenty thousand dollars! The case is-to be"
token to th© Sopreino Court.
®*Dr. M’Lane’e Celebrated Vermifuge
and Liver Fills.—A singular combination, bntvery
eflectoal, as tbs following will show:
Nsw Toak, November 20,1852.
Knowing, from oxperienco, the val noble qualities of Dr
Sl'Lone’s Vermlfage and Lifer Pills, I haTO for some time
bock considered it my dnty, and mada it my business, to
make those artioles known wherevor I went nmong my
mends. A short time ngor become acquainted with the
case of a young girl, who seemed tobo troubled with worms
and liver complaint nt the same time, and had been snfier-
Ing for some two months. Through my persuasion she
purchased one bottle of Dr. M'Lane’s Yermlfnge, and one
•box of Liver Pills, which she took according to directions.
Tna result was, she passed a large quantity of worms, and
thinks that one box more of the Pills will restore her to
perfect health. Her name and residence cap be 1 famed by
calling on E. L- TheaU, Druggist, comer of Kntger and
aionroo streets.
' , P ' , a ~ Tie BboTB valuableremedy, also Dr. M’Lane’s cel-
Obraled Liver Pills, can now be had at all respectable Drug
Stores In this city.
Purchasers w(U be careful to ask for, and take pone bn*
Vermifuge. All others, hr comparison, are
wortoless. ,
Also, for sale by the sole proprietors,
FLEMING BROS.,
Successors to J. Kidd & Co.,
60 Wood street.
-f 5 ?" Invigorating Kllxlr or Cor.
‘ ln t * mo or peace prepare for war” is a sound
™“ ira! In of health prepare for aicknesa, la an aph 0 -
riOT. no leas wise. Spring, with its freshness, its vitalising
atmosphere, Us cheering influences, is now with ns: but
summer, and with lta perchance, that dread acoirge, the
Cholera approaches. I*t aH whose -physical organisation
IS Ecnjitive and delicate, fortify their ayalems against ’the
enervating heats of the coming season by a coarse of that
most powerful, inocuous and Infallible of alt restoratives
Md tonics, DU. MOUSE’S INVIGORATING ELIXIR OR
CORDfAL. As a cure ibr all neryous and functional dis
eases, in both sexes, Its fame is Co-extensive with the Union
hut be it remembered that as a pramtivt it is no less W.
ahlo. It gives to the animal powers a restorant force that
enables It to-pass scatheless through thefletyfumaceofeon
togion, or, in the event of an attack, to conquer themalady.'
Add vigor to,the frame note, for there is no saying how soon
it may be required. It is among the feeble, tho torpid, the
depressed, that epidemics reap their harvests of death. If
therefore, yon are affected with any phase* nervous dis’
ease, or with any affection of. the atomaeh , if yon are de:
pressed in spirits, or onfeeblcd in body; if, in abort, you
are in a condition which renders you peculiarly susceptlblo
to unhealthy influences, resort, to this great invigorant,
alterative and antiseptic; in which, tinder Providenco, full
ness of years is offered to tho feeble, and a “happy line»
out of their difficulties to all who suffer from shattered
nerves and weak digestive organs, . i
, 1118 Conllal is put up, highly concentrated, in pint hot-
DR E QEO < n*KOTIL , IL wjS"* 6 ’ Kttabar Bil-
JL
•CS- Oia sores, tUeera, and nil cropUona and die.
cases arisingfromanlmpureordeployedstateof the Wood.
Seo the extraordinary cure of Win .; Q. Harwood, a highly
respectable citiien or Richmond, Va, by Carter’s Bpantsh
•Mlimre. He had ulcers ana sores of tbeworatdescrlption,.
and finally got so had he waaunaMo’ to. walls,except bn’
crntchos. A few of OarteVs Spanish Sliitare,; the
great blood purifier, cnfed .hto. as has cnrod hnndreda
of others who haye suffered -with/rheumatism, M’effecta'
<£3* weii-iaown superiority of.
fitintho Garment,' heeds no' comment on his
:p^J {* -$??^ :“^owle<iged by ailwhohaye favored him
vith their orders, thatihey hare nsyer been fitted with the
SSSft coat ”’ Testa “ 4 p T’,Swk f0 '' thB
«“« j
*■; • 1- >' . . ■’ >■. :■ ; . ■;• ■ .*.
' * a • ' r -
' Y!> ''
k’i T
V;
, ?W
.V'-'.'v -i.- vvV:-
''V'iVtr*'-'--.
SPECIAL NOTICES.
Pittsburgh Trust Company •••Anjcct
ofthe BlocKtoldnrs of th« rlitaburoh Trust
Company wilt bfffcetd at the Banking House,on TUESDAY,
June 27{h{ Insfc,ntlo o’clock, A. BL. to take action on the
acceptance nf-thohlll pooled by the last Legislature fbrcx*.
tension of Charter. ~
jelQitd ‘ • ■
yrf^r o Citizen*’ Insurance Company,WTT&
lrt£r, , BU RG tl, JUNK, 16, 1554 —Tho President ana Dlrec-.
tdr* of thtaGompanyhave this day deelared.a..!H*idend of
tocee zx)iXAßa,pffP*bajc, npon.the Capital Slock/ payable
.to tho stockholders or their legal representatives, on and
after Monday, the 19th inrt. - •_
jel?:2ot BAMUBD L, MARSHEMfr-Beretary. '
\r ~it ia due to iiLEß'S^fKracum to
; Bay thatitbaa been known to completely eradicate
overy of thus dreadful disease In lean time than any
other remedy, and at less cost or Inconvenience to the p*»
tiont. ~ ■ ■
'Tbethousands of certificates' in the hands of the propria*
lor* many of which are from; well known citizens of the city
of an'lits lmmediate vicinity, go to show clearly
and beyond tiidoubt, that Kisr’s, Ptraourow is a medicine
cfno common value-, not only as h local remedy in Jhroltf*
tis, Rheumatisrn,JhnJ'ness. loss of Sight, bntas a valuable
internal remedy, inviting the investigating physicians, as
wellasthesaffering patient, to become acquainted with Its
-rnetlts. ■. .
Those having adread of mixtures are assured that this
imedicinais'- purely natural, and is bottled’ as it fibwafrom
tho bosom of theeartb.
Tlii foUmmrM certificate is copied from apaprrptibUshed at
Syracuse, N.‘ T.,and bear* date August 2,1852, f/nohich it
also appended the Certificate o/ih e celebrated D. T.fbot. 2£ Z>_ ‘
of Syracuse: ; r. n
-This may in truth certify, that I hare been sobadlyaf*
dieted'with .Scrofulafor thelastsevenyearstbhimostofthe
time I have been unable: to attend to any kind of business,
and maehofthetfme unable to walk and coined-to my
bed, and haTe been treated nearly allthetixnc bythe-best
Physician* our country affords; I occasionally; got some re
tie?, but no cure, add continued to grow worse until Dr. Foot
recommended me ttf try the Petroleum, orKock Off, as eve
ry thiug else had failed. - Xdidsa wlthoutfatib at first, but
.tneefiect waasstonishing; it threw-tbb poison to the euriace
otonee,and I'at once began to grow better, and by using
seven bottles I have gofa cure worth thousands ofdollars.
MB3.VNANOTM; BARKER.
This may certify that I have bcun acquainted with Klee's
Petroleum, or RnckOpefor more than a year, and have ro*
peatedly witnessed Its beneficial effects in the cureofindft
lent ulcers and other-diseases which it Is recommended,
and ean witkcoufldericerecoimnendit to be a medldnewor
thy of attahttonj and ean safely say that success has attend
ed ita use where other medielnebad failed.
.. . Y; FOOT; M, D.
Tor sale by all the Druggists in Pittsburgh. ; faugTatew.
if ton,.and Liver Comnlain*-
-CURED U 7 KIEK’S PJsTEol*ECiL—ltead the fot
lowing: letter from Rev. G. Dicuksow, a Missionary in
-Oregon: • ■ . .. . .
Ms. J. M. Krsn -~Dear-Bir: Myself and wife having been
greatly benefitted bytiro use of your Petroleum,*! wish to
have you send me a box of two or three dozen -bottles.. -1
am, the Congregational Minister in this place, and several
of my people are affected with indigestion and an inaction
of the liver, the same of myself-and wife, before taking
your Pr&oLsra. on. Roox Oxl; We took several bottles—
two or three each—about ayearandiahaifegoy mndwe
have nerotenjoyed so good health for years as we have
since that time. I had .not taken a r single bottle, before
that full Hess'of-the Stomach whichabdistresses the dys
peptic was rellaved,andl-havefeltnothingof it since jw.
time. , wife tra* also relieved from a chronic of
the liver,-which had boon of several years sending, by the
use of your/Petroleum.-
; Sold by S; Bf. KIER, Cana! Basin, GEO. H. KEYSEB, 140
Wood street, and Druggists and Medicine Dealers every
where. ■» - •• ■ o ct2s
Itife, lnguranco Company;
’ OFFICE 55 FIFTIf sr&EET;
MASONIC UALL, PITTSBURGH, PA,
• JAMES 8. ZlOOlf, president.
Xsißirs A. Cohos. Secretary.
This Company mikes every insurance appertaining to or
connected with LIFE BISKS. >
AlFo.ogalnstUaU and Cargo Rieka on the Ohio acd Mia
fiispippi rivora-and tributaries, and Maxine Blahs generally.
And agalnsf JuOsß.omlDainage by Flro, and against the
Perils of the Sea andlnlandlJaTlgaUon and Transportation.
Policies insured at the lowest rates consistent with safety
to all parties. .
JamG3 a TToon,
Bam uel M’Cl urkan,
/William Phillip.'?,
■Tobn-Scott, V.
Joseph?. flazzam, 11. D*
John M*Alpln,
.TV’m.F.Joljnstea,.
JameaflTarshall,
GoorgoiLSelden,
my2s:ly - -- -, ;
r)"S“ - Strange Developement.—Scientific men
tH£r nrodidly bringing tollght now Inventions, and the
march of progress if onward;; persona Bald, or becomiagso,
will be pleased to learn that science and long research Com
bined, hare brongbtbefore the public the greatest wonder '
of the age, ln the artlcls of BM£BSON’B AMEIUC4S HAIR
KEBXOBATIVE, u.sare care .for Baldness and, to prevent
Hair from failing., See circular to hoibadof the Agents,
firing fall particulars. Price $l.OO In large Sold'
by - ' 0. E, FISHER A CO.. Proprietors, ■
. ST Superior street, Clerolend, Ohio.
For Bale in Pittsburgh In the following houses
. . Flemingßros., L.WUcoxftCo„
K. E. Sellers, G. If. Keyser,
Joel Mohler, Benj. Pago, Jr,
' J. 1L Carsol.
otECTSeny city.— L. A. Beckham, Pressly A Means, J, .
Fleming.: ; . . ’
Birmingham.—A. Patterson. John G. gmilh ■ raprd'
Flremen J a Insurance
IhSr" Company of tire City of Plttaburch.
J. K. MOORHEAD, Preddent-rIVOUERT FINNEY; Secro
tpry,
. TTTII insure against FIRE: and MARINE RISKS of all
hinds.- Office: No. 99 Water street.'
' ptatcrons:
K. Moorhead, W. J. Anderson*
B.G. Sawyer, . R.B.Bhnpson,
Wm.M.Kdpuv IT. B. Wilkin*.
.C.H.Paulson, ~ WHlmmCbUingwood, ’
R. B. Roberts, John 81. IrwiD,
Joseph Kayo* . Wm. Wilkinson,
- David Campbell. jat2
i, iTS*CI'fIZESS» l ßßawmce CornpaaFof
! I>. -KINQ, President; BASI
i tJEL L;- MARSHELb, Secretary.
OJJiu: 04 Water Sfrtrl, between Mariei and Woodiir&eU
Imum HULL and CARSO Risks, on the Ohio and Missis*
rijmi lUverß and tributaries. . -
; lnsura against Boss orjDamage by Fire. ;V
.. AESO—Agninstthe Perils of the Sea, and Inland Navhra*
tlonandTranoportatlon. •
• r - : - ; • • ’ . niszcroßs:
BUD; King, ... Wm,Lar!mer,Jr.,
William Bagalej, Samuel M. Kler.
. Samuel Rea, . . WllUam Bingham.
;; JohnS.Baworth,
Isaac M. Peacock, Francis :
. @ss».
_ . v ■ ' - JohnShiptoa.' •• •- •
,KF"
FirA^i?^£ OAMTA^3ioo > oo «-™
Pr'nd'ni —Hon. AUGUSTUS o. ITEIBTEIL.
■Sccrctary-THOUAS H. WIH.SON. &nT'
■•' v- 1 0IMCI0B3: :
' SamoßlW.nayßi ■'
William Robinson, Jr:; Thomas Oillomlo
William F.FahncsW*, Johnß.Ooi '
' Joh^wsl iln T' Jacob Botew,
Eaiss&g.
. (<mtrancaoa Wood atyeat.) ,
!DS^^ ed o tcrn Hospital.—
b passes. Second, between Wood and Market
streets, and J. Reed, North-enst corner of Diamond. Alla*'
gheay city, are the attending Physicians totheabove Inatl.
tution. Jbrthe first quarter of 1854. • ' • ;
c * \KAGJfia, 110 MAERKI street. Pitta-
VTX Importer and Wiolesalo Dealer inFiSr?
B B I ' I '^ T f RIL ’ Ti : AND
and country dealers as large .and well selected stock of
S.°l^M_°rimV. 5r *“'f torn h<raa(i > ani “®° P ri «si time earing
relglit, time and expenses;: . ■ ... - :
gTrratmoii Lodge, No. 336-Meets oTcryTacsdSfo^fni,
87 - >gtS S^
WmUnston HaU.WoSIS.rM^T
NEjS^Vh Oll ° r U>« Classen in this Institution, In JULT
i OUI S N ?,? I “ N TAILORS SO
sjW«tes3 c %sss^®' i ™ i ® E
jeL-y - , JOHN YOCNO, JlUßecmta™.
G *™" Kou are hereby notified to
ms
_ - , ,
2 n, y true and eennlnt
; tlyer PUIIo-HKAtt WHAT PHYSICIANS Ba£
, r . '*• * l 2„i^ en^^ Bh ! n B t< ’ n »,■ reb.24,1548.
iStfi ■ ■ s ?ff KS: ~I Jrilljuat add.that jonr liver Pills
Rt^' r t par 'i?f “ ld b £ ®* B -
street, and for aale/by Draggfsts generally, \ je7 .
Treainrer’iii Office <rf the cKortlers Valley
YSnninDTDpft^ - ', *
-Sy aboyo. Hood are hereby notified that
kj of Directors havo called for a second ihgfiit.
• lmv3o:lf AI.TAS WHKINS. Trtaaarer.
the gles hotel ~
gSlSffifW- n*-w^- ! wS?SSSw
log at 9A. M., ana 6% p'm. • M '> “ nil 6 ?• Mg wtarn
' ja!2:6m' •■
. 3. A. HUTCHISON k CO.
A *AW — wu COSOS and pwkiwm or ih»
's•>“» "0-1, lor EaJo ly !
' • ««TTH * SDTOtAIB.
IYI A. MASON. * CO. have now for m 'i.
iTj- more ttianlOO latest styles of MimtiHai. (mv22
iNSE£I) Oli—lu bbla for lalo by
j. a . w - HENEY HOLMES.
L ~ lbrfiali; Oj
SnSKAiUb— lu PaiTcnwa
>ir ” 8 Md:t>ou^l WP«Mw «»*
k!>B8 fresh Faxiin Batter,'for salt br
. . . .. _ HENRTHOLMES.
OD ‘ S 1,12111 tUs toy rewived, and for sale by
_ henry HOLHja,
bbia received this day by
V. : ) JOB. KLESUNO,
corner or the TOambnd abfl Marketst.
I Wf. • .
AJ mm JOEL MOHLER.
IyTACKMEU-iO.btls. J.rge No.’s Slacker*!. 18sCf n .
i 7-> pKtlo1 '’ j“'t received and for sale It
g J ENGLISH * RICHARDSON.
£rouh~Plne Apples, xoar
. .■;■*■ ? ■
.-...: V J. a ANDERSON A CO-
No. Woo 4 Btr^gt.
*' ■* ■
' s vV,t, r '.u‘ :;
r ». ...
; -v /; ■*•;,
* .V i.
■■. i . *Y..- I
,v: '
. .< <v
■\ i"
JOnN D. SCULLY. Cashier. :•
nmccTOßfl;;
Wo, S. Ijevoq,
. JamesD. Brail!, -
Alexander. Bradley,
.John Fullerton,
Robert Gal way, •
-AlexuDdftr Reynolds, Ann
. strong County. ■
Horatio N. Lee, Kittnnnlng,
Hiram'Stowe, Bearer. -
J- 0. MARTIN. Agtnt.
lrTl( J H E><»rno - of orant and Fifut
££*&?*** D 0? on -hand 10 cases hleaehed ansiin
*lS!j%£ «0‘»1'P; 60 pieces Irish linen: -25 pieces nrhitg
mnlls, lor pieces UnehteotfonaSarortm
S O7 ? , ws “; « few pieces flne.hlach challer blsclL
r m U
.'PAKAaOLS—AT A. *IcTtQU&»B, nf «„1, ■
.Jr Kflh Sstinj 160 'filmSwi “¥}
colors; 75 figured.nd lined; 75 plain Oroada'N.WiPJlf ’
100 pl&Jn dnw de Naples,,all colors;
fo B r U^| l^ ,taOd ’ ttUCo,ora ' "tT^SSib?ai&
- jelO -
HENRY HOLMEB.
Baleratna, In quarter,
sby . ’
HENRY HOLMES.
a^mwetghe’s,
comar of.Crini and Fifth gtreeta. :
elegantly illustrated paper for the
io ,y »la » most superb pictorial double ihcei
printed os tbe flnrat rrhlto paper. It is the beat Jonathan -
tf h ‘ masoms P 7 ® B ' ll * to young and old.for
• - • .... . ielfl • i
17UKKY-13 k<& Knofy. “Sgrtoj, to Jtoro «n<T5fW»
-M,j7 TLEiIDm BaorHJERS,
4»H euccmora to J. KIM t Co., 60 WoodStrcet.
' '' *' ■ .V, : "'■•
■ ■..*‘ .' ' v «<' ■* -i '■' •*
•*. VS** ’'-■
■.'-> ':**->.*■*:■■:
-■:••*', -
v',^
" ~' f v., ... ; -■: : >.-■
*» .. .
.. {
HEW ABVEBXIBEHEHTB.
" Fourth of July ColehrMtoo.
.TloOTi following person* metot Stephenson’*.Hotel,Konh
■el.. Fwette township, on JanelfHvlBS4;eri:.J; A. Ou».
A.Diotson.Wm. to’.Oanaiess, Matthew uail,
Poo.M’Farland, 8. P.Uetay, Wns. fluj, Jr.. A.J). Burns!
Wm. Irwin, Wm. M’lhado, Br:0. Bobbi'andorgntttad hr
calling M. Short to the Chair, and- appointing Dr. 0. Bobb
gocretarr. -
i The Chairman stated that ottfert of tho-meeting was to
ttaSesoltable arrangements for eolebratWg tho J«th Annl
teersary W Amedean InJepenclehce,: ion tho coming 4th of
Jnly;„ when the following Committees of Arrangement
were appointed, Yia: “ ■ “
Committco on Plaee and Dinner.—S p- Mbtav' « r»
Barns, Wat, U’Candlees, A. IL Burns, Robfc.'Glcno *'
Committee on Speaker*.—J. A. Guy. A. D. Bornn *7m
Mcßride, WmelrwKJ.W. Stewart. : " arBB, ' 7m *
. on And .Erecting Stand.—Geo. M’Far-
JSfJi’.f *£*£2*** WntGuy, Jr, M’Candle*v Alex,
M’FarlandjWm.M'Farland.
Committee on Programme.—Dr. a Eobb, J. A. Gay, A.
Dickson, Matthew Mall, Cant. John Yonng* M. Short;
?? e Committee on place hare made arrangements to hold
said celebration at J. Stephenson’s Hotel,, (formerly M’Fai
land’s Stage OffleeJ on tho Steahoatllla roaiLat loVcloci.
on said day. 7 '
ThefoHowfogpersona areexpocted to deUreraddresses:
CoL JTilsonhrCandleai Col. Sam. W. Black, Jacob H. Mil
ler, John M. Kirkpatrick, John-IL Hampton, Hon P. 0
Shannon, o.o.JjOomls,Robt. M’Knlgbt, T.J.Poi Alden
O.BQBB,Btc wtgr^. RagAL SHOBT, Chairman.'
■VTBW,BJOKg JOB BUMMBB KBAJuSSTS MiNFIT*
1Y CO % No 81 Smlthfield street ’ “ *
Money Hokor, andother tales; by Jane 0. Comp
by Maty Hassell Mittod; with nano portion
Tho Dodd FamOyAbroedlCh&rleS Loror’slut book, and
humorous as Charles O’Malley; 76 conta. :■ ■ -
The fiftieth thousand of this popular
an Aotress; by Mrs/MowStt; *1,25.
Kero uay'e: by Fanny Bern; *1,25. ’
t’&GraeeOrienwood; *1,23.
, We end gaytopi or'Mrs. Partlogton; *1,25. ; ' .
h&5; »«n£ ** tho author of lady Hoe’s Widow-
Tankee Notions, to July; 12}d cents. ’
All now Pocks as soon es published, for sale at Tow prices
7 |.o* „ H. MINER A CO.,
No. 32Smithfleldstreet :
l iy OKB >,i'-J U YA Nii- i iK Nimo.NH, l?OH JULY
-v..;^l?-^‘"- 8 -: Mlk ' r ’ “ nilothßr **»: if Jano 0. Camp-'
raß3V&aaßS3Qtt*
Gleason's Pictorial, for this -week. • n “*
Kecelred and for eale at the cheap Book Store of
- ::w. A. QILDKNPBNNEY- A CO,
. 7<V Fourth street, i
■yANKBE MOTIONS, JOK JULY, r
i ArtJouratl. Tho P»ti»h Sldo.
ma n i^pnshte ® F “° APortr “ U °:
Ch»mlwT«’ Journal, for Jano.
Korth British Review;
The above juot received and for eala by : -
BAU'L. B. lAujnSK,
> tU ' ■ ' ' ' - 87 Wood etrret.
V h * ni ’ 8 “Wessonth of Darling,
ton, M ccnH clewed, good Orchard.' a" cood Rfmi*
House, large Bun, two Fcame HoueeiVftll In first rnte’nrl'
der, and offereiatiho low Srlce^T^^ 1 ? 81 *%" " r
_ Alro,OTe*alr«ctB Lot In OeMend, dn7Cfiri{d{te' s lreet'
l? lprtpt M* Ogden’sftiedmpro™:
naent, and Is offered at the low prira- of /,*
g °l mj
yarietr of property. T1I01TAS: WOODS*
Jsr?.- T 5 Fonrth: street.
Ki . ?o on ‘‘"unsylwnl.ATenne.iD front
at lio junction of Eer
rttf 0 ,? 1 ’ 4 Also, a largo rarictr of choar
I? t J wd 'y- I f ,yi>o wot unyWmlor proper
tf fm ahomejost onquiraof . TUOMAS >VOOD3, > !
, ■- .■ • •■ •■■•■■ 75Ponrthftreet -1.
T ln , _. . Imnortunt Notice. — :
aecUnal th 6: BookseUin-tusi
nesj, hereby notlfiesnll subscribers to the raiions Moe
ozidct,Newspapers, etc, that hie subscription list has been
traDSferral BP39KLL 4 BSo/liferaty ®ratwl
? v ll4 '^' rt ’ Tl! s r Market, who -Brill supply them rS
galariy hereafter; and who. we also authorise all
foonlea doe on raid list. coueesnu
< i r J 3w Third Street literary Depot
are cordlally'recommended to th • establishment of the
farnM i them with all the Books
and Periodicals of the day. . • {j. R. PE^RSOV
; Successor to IL i\Cal!oV.
■Pittsburgh, Jana 20.1854. : • ‘ uw '
_ An pWFons who IniTo rohucrtbed fot Sl«EMlnes or News,
papers to JJ. Callow, cr G, II Poarsoa.wUl bo carved rt
gukrly hereafter St tho Booi Store, No! lS Finh street, nest
rad tip public (seneislljribre liiTitea to call And «.
tock cf Magazines, Newspapers, and
general AU the American. and British Ma"d
-*lnea and Newspapers kept on hand. 1 - '
" KUSBEU, 4 BRO., '
Booksellers and Stationers,'
EUlh street* near Market
Kiecutor’n Snle or Valuable Korn Estai.
|~JONBISTn.'G OB A_J.OT O* GROUND; fr6ntlh£J“thi‘
.V (Bear the eonth-ircat earner,) unit ailjoininj
the property nr the Jate John Seatin, «ith s front eta
! feet, ana extending .back to-Decatur afreet 100 feet, Oe
' reC l^„ t ”i?J ar,l ' J J !rlck Hearer. With cjtcnsiv,
"eapM as the City HolJ, aiid.NlcholsoiA
AlM,orrlendia Brick Houae, with lot, btlihafrom
fhoßeaTerHonse! ‘ Dd “ ,endin » b#tkM
indisputable. For particulars apply to
w. n. LOWittE, ;
. H. CHILDS, or
B.IH’LAIN. No, 31 Fifth street,;
_ . •:••• Aotftce. . !” V •••••• • •
A *L* a ? now itiDding up my burtncF* at tho corner b?'
** ■ ®°* nnd Wster.Btreets, preparatory to reajonns to
••“7 n J w 4 «or« xm Firth street,!, would hereby! noUry mv
iT* 1 , 1 nave placed my hooka in tho bonds of ft K
NBAL, Em von Third elm*, between Mood and Market;
f°r_the collection of all debtsdacme upon ih^ru!
Those knowing thea selves indebted to mo will please call
as above and settle. r v .
I JOHN CAU.AIIAN.
WJSUUNCj' HOUSE SiLB-SuiWin Tdlra >t
aboToanlthfleld. Tho Honk lj vail arranged, Willi
®K l utcllcn > 4 Cambers
’ "““f raW water; good cellar, gaeSr
i w ihS A.*”' 1 telM at Bral *“** «
_js2l
lOiruui JlAVjfi IHVti xhJ
can lure a one BoUdlne Lou
teep, fiituato onMt. "Washlnzton.l
n. band, balance &t $5 & month,
i good Lot on easy terms; . -8.
0»w mjfIUiUSD AUD THUIS
hajf mil© fcomtfac Ohio Tiv<
Jw acyea trader cultivation, with «
Improvements;; onivhalf the Coal
offeroa at an extremolj Jew price.
Vje2l“ ''i V.-;/;
A COUjNTBY: SKAT O VI
±K U acrcsof lmproTJXj Land
—a beautiful epot for little mcmd
Suwak— 40 anas prime n. o. St
. • _1 do Clarified do;
, l«d P« : pteamboat Jane Fr
by ; f je2fj > -Tjf*
• J. a. inratnasos a m.
Snqabe'oM
—- '•••-••••■ * 75Foorth street; ,
«MomW o K,isn,hS’i,S Cl a!'P dia M“'-to^,
: E*S^aSiiS^S.
S"«lwSa?At;ss
ggaanMS^Baaiasg
£ll§Sps
1 ■ Jon-N yOQDSOS.Pronrt.fo.
—■ ' '' ' ' • ■ v "i»gl-l.r
———r: 64 Wood street.
A J^^ ebta ’ * “"»«* f 0 «i d V
l£te£sssj.‘ tt « od w^^.l
*">*■* Bto «-.^
- - - fifth ttrvet, near flW*
! I BUKKWOOD’S BOHXOH MSMON EVHTJp.
U Chanvan'a Philadelphia Syrap- “ UP ’
HnePppV. do-.
Do naapbenr-vtocgai^ftraalahT
- v - vr. a. M'nLTmn.
*“*»*■» Jg«?»Jgisß&i*
lt^-
jlgo ' THOMAg WOODS, 75 fourth at.
,UOWN AND WHJTB GlkOh£m3; — -
ment of th, oboee Good^t
• A. MdIQHK’S.
corner offlr»Bt and nithttrwta.
'V- II
L *1- '
Museum and Menagerie.
WttfUf on • ••■'/.
aiohdny andTnoad«y,Jtuit!3oUi4t.»'7tl».
FOB TWO DATS ONLY.
Xhs poeuUnrfoatnre of Uawnm's Mammoth Mnsotna tat
Menagwie is the combination of o grcatnombcrordiKimt.
rnr attractions fa ona mthfbltlon, and for a ilnirta nrfco of
admit'-rdon. 1 Tb* ejtablUhHMnt'toelodoa a groat display of
UVIKO WIED BEABTS. COBIOSITIEB, AND
WAX- STATU ART, ;
Ibe rcrformancos °f the ORIGINAL TOM THUMBf Mr.
l 910111 Mr^l/KNB2lr,tboUon
MONSTER
EIGHT ELEPHANTS*
will taira placo on MOIJDAT, the 2Clh lust‘d' ■ -Vi »>•<*“;
SB- A MORNING EXHIBITION arm lw dren „„ Tnua
BiT.MOßNlNO.faoJßtb.coniaieittfaiMToWoWMk.® 8 '
*S-Admission far Ihe-Khole.pcmltrtely oMy SpSnts
OUltonunderO cents. Boom
and from 7to nVJncfc, It M. • jWost
TWJBI.-VH. * HihSTKiUTICEI
I/, CLARK. :
BIIL POSTER AND DISTRIBUTER.
» ** :Cv ' ;'A / ,
CONCERTS, EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES.
• •S^SSB9W9 < ®®~ » '*«n or Teletjnpb, 0* Bill*
atUnttOT ly A4am!i;4 C°.’n Ejprra, will rocnro lamaJUlo
KereitotblaofflWjtbe.TrijtelaimaMnrioSlorM. 1
„ , cmcca and MENAOEsn:
.posting. faithfully Attended to,-
applytaßto -ffM. KUNE CARGO. U tho cSrttfS.V.
togueman Eoofa»orß.Sl. Carp* ACo., Fourth rtreet, or a t
ine iiaiu - . maSl
Djff'i OlercantUeCdUeae. Plttsbnrah. p>,
INlB4o—lncorporated by tlifi Legljlfc-
J2j late of PcnnaylTimla, irith perpetual charter. ■ - •
' • - VOSMB OF SIKECTOKS: ■.■'■ '!
Hoa. J»H»a Bcctasa.l, I Hon. Waitd H. Lowu*
“ SffßEs*. I go 1 ;. •
i -}f^SJSSSSS£,taa**
*tai “ a «-
«» to
By=e« B ; o f.thls lnT«tlSn r jn
SSSV 1 !!^* I *?' study, the real practice of
impazteil.-.«►* dpgrco of perfection nsrer
bobra atiainM In &e United Slates.
■f jfe for btt£ine#a ccmprehcrndß ppwarta of 400
tromcU . o ? ss i 5OO commercial cwnpouttoia!"
~ conwcofburinesa Pzsjussmp, • i
. paUr Xectmreff-.oa Law and Corotaertfal
' Mtfe CC ‘“ d ““P^MiTal/th.
it ????•;SteambciiSook Keeping, price sl,portage 0 c*nfc.
Bookaand Accounts.” ••■■■' *
CbmmercUVCalcaUUonn, price $0 cento.
for ft drctilflT.by maU.’ - ' fjulfcdiw
; VlaxU** Hftnio.
A- ATxfT4iofHDNN3ACLASK'S. ■
/V celebrated PIANOS lua
by the imbscriber. : They ia,Ve been’niideflTWPWS:
aud carefglly selegted elprgsJlv fer thf« m«*M J p- If If
-Ketr gnd unequalled for fcwoettMaibd
“' 1 ImproTemont or two
tta 5 tr >ngi nmningoTerand' aboVo
tho treble. J&ey arrfun/ warranltd to stand any dims to
•!™ ‘ i'IS'P” for Blooding In tone. Prices rango
from $250 W_gBoOv Also,* finnlot of Hanes from thomana
4nfi t irnußv‘ v s‘y l A !?J;* ,1 iL 41 *?3S aims ’ newtoh
“■ T ' All thoaborowin wsltftolv bo mid
rtVk^'Snf^i P? -“ 8 ’ * thD ~ oddltlnniil ebnrgo for freight,
risk, ota, eta ■ lIEHOT KLIfpER,
•’■ Bo* 6 Agent ftr Nonna A Clark'a Pianos
' So,ioj,iHpa
jb3 1 1 1 tt, Sign of the OdlJto jgMr
/ P.
ofchlcbcrine’* pVanoaT^
Mbt BiVood^t,>iik
ton t!i • “ u taonufoatory of OHIOKEEINQ AEONS, BoS
■ ■ Tiroampetbly c«»«l 7 octars Pisnos.
Foar plain Bose wood 7 ** « . .
Three carved do .*■ '&£ " : <-•«*'; '•■•■.
One extra carved . j>V « */. u r
One plain .Rosewood Gsz u * . « .
i Poor do do '••«« ■r.., £ -
I - Three >Wa)zmt ,'fl • w • v u
j' All the above initwments have been fished itnrloKihn
Inst raonth.aod are of the latest styles of famitureT Inv^
| rlabjy at BOSTON PKICEB/ and every Piano warranted?
JOHNHvMBIiLOIL ‘
• • T • • •« 'i, NtyBl Woodstreet.
_J* J Agent for Chlckeripg & Bona, Boston.
_ . H. KKOEBBb]
, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER
■55W5.W? B '' watches,: a BTratnr, and
1/ FANCY GOODS; Not S& DuiKOss Aiur, bttVMBHTii».
ket nod Vob* MrwtsVpitts^
caUWUfimentwilt tewftrranfM;
.Wat.chos And.Jexrolry promptly executed afrthe'ghertrnt
notice. All done I win KwmtSrf.
... A> A. DIASOIT A, CO.. *
. KSiW&flhtlrul.
1™ °F=n grrat SomriAnnual gala of
T„ r „ „ 0\ THURSDAY, JUNE IS. mi.
H SBAUU.mboYOuoato amJmoill
a'/r.irt'TQ til..? hnyo rvoc hpia. * jel 4*
Jr °“ i»dy« Boo^-iot.
Pyterwa’aMogaalne, for July. • '
SlwaiS.^ Jn ' iW3, ‘ 0, ’ I’“' 1 ’“'‘ eM,nao **“*MU*V»)r Mr*.
N5 b BS^ Dl ° 8ht " : a noT ° l ti mdi b T
££° feW 11 ' “»*>> « Ib» Eelwjril f .f CS»d«Dbt»J.
, o' 318Mo *« « *&° M&* lates”SEsth
• lltwi’a Liringjge. Sfcrsaleliy ' ;
H. MINER t 00,
-. ■■■ •3gHminril»M'«».
CtrrHBKRT A SOY.
JLCAKB you'
tl of CO: feet front hy- 23C
■ IPrico, £2so—terras,. £2C •
Pro* - Is'thetiine tosecurt
|CnCTHBERT. & SON,
1 -140 Third street
AsaassKSatswsti'sss
All peKoas aro hereby-warned not to - bnv gabr not«
-, Thompson bull & cq,
■' " araer Third and ■Woodata.
g ACBKS Oi’ LAM) ► ono-
W near. Baker’s .Landina;.
[Orchard • and. other gooc
II rx&dor It resorted. It b
Enquire of .
THOMAB WOODS, -
75 Fourth street.
PJSKBD l?OIt BALE.—H
f» on the HlnersTiUero&d'
r. Enquire of .
THOMAS WOODS, :
I 75 Fourth street.
fcj ’ ' T "-
D' "" EtniftTfll. *. l ■ ll -
BTEwABX has removed his BRUSH Mfflvmv
. a..oa rtjpj, No. S 3 Knh^l.^N^a
on tto oitarormexly Occupied bv'tho
nate '> »*>«» liowM bo plewed tOBofS cL“
raera, oiid a. m»ny nerr ones »s 6el disposed to pteSxe.
hiL'.SSj“ wltli ffio m.
ppSSSIiISgCSS
lodlano, «na Jeffmmn oouiSX Armstt4D &
3«17-d»„M JoUil H ’ M'ELHIW, Brio. Insp’r,
jel.-dt.M First Brigade. 38tn Hi
iklin, onconaiffoment:
Hutchison a cn.
I>'VUHNI2I,I'& -WltLOCffi
bankers •
A 1 Orta and Mtot
»t »ny point it> tho United gtatai .uouecuooi lands
» r
' PITTSBUHOH, PA.
PtkUTea Store; 88 Ptfth *t
■•XjL.'Strwff wlilt. Railroad !ftMV:-R*M»v . *
p> ' In » ul “^uw E *» I **|ja«*
4psps333?^l^
—, LcuTHgMt *
■|nvo BWOK HODfUSS ON iOUAN BTKEET—-WelTar-
■ rt nsssss^sfe?**:
and om«s deamtsd in latest Parisian BWe. c-SaJ^JiS. 1 .
asreat variety alvajrg on band. -?■ fcasap Papers.-
£?S" r iuog WW?<«*rtf taata iuia axmomr. .'
- J,r6 ■ ——: ■ WALTEBP.at^&nar,,
1\T V/ILU& TU jrAHMITK? .
H&^& rtpittorn:
40 dozen liay Hakes;
20 do Hay Forks; ..
- 3° Qran’Orediosj ■
-» do Scythes and Bncaft»; .
jel7 d 0 Hors 9 Muiiloj fiJ' »t strml, by
JAMB3 WARDItnp. ’
H A ?o V £ BT UIPUSMESTB . .
m £E; B,lto * toproToi *“«■,-
2ft. do .do- Forks; ; •. •'••-. •
& da Grain Ctadlea:
-u'j® ao Bcjtfc**ndBneaths. •' ,\
a 0 u.
JAMJBB WARPBQP./
~ L 1 ~ JAMEB ffimwm,
JAWSS/“A. A< 3L150N A rft , ■ ■ —
J ttan 1000 plows floe XaSjMtifS
™»! sty* .ad -Sill bo
Ai , *raKgEasigg=s»
«
MHicrea if J2f? T ‘ w SM? n * e 4 tat from 38 to is
"92- _ mirar * ftessntw.
BISW Oz/rru~ii!jo yaWi*.' « H
._•*■, tharnngincfrom 33lo40.Inches.brula
mvT “ 11:0 ofi
—° ■-•— - J.tJL PllHa.tp»
-- 1 - - ■ 1 > n^MIKQBEOTURna
fi’SKsrwTSisggf
AMUSEMENTS.
'• T f BAKNUM’S
fIfiAND COtLOSAXi
SEMI-ANN VAh SALE.:
'-.'ijV'j a^'.
-': \ ‘V *f
• \ it . ' " ’
•/, ; • .''
'."■■■■ VT ;
-MV iM/M'?'
: .v;''V;M''.-