S-.: a'' S- ■ s*ts»v \ r "* • r ..*•• ?>?;£’> * v *■- • *,'■ *''.'v , ■'*•• •\iv-f.-'-. •' 1 «■ - ■ V'Y -»'v v ; ili- V,*^> Tr' : ' v ::% ’-■.• S? I £ ,f @4l£#pSs&fiB3S(S*y v "VJ ;&?WvV\ £*- * v* jj; *£"2; j»V:£‘£:** *. «**‘ **' : &- »JV H ' igli|ll« ■pggfss&aaate SsssSl! *S*V lteSli®lBli|§at j v * m fearful mixture of lore aodbeauty, and rage and What will he the fuie'of tbu till in the Seuate j despair. It was well that she did return to her & t thia session, we cannot tell. It oay be lo6t, sister’a house instead of her own home, for her Qr p oBt p one( j ultimately, sudh a bill will husband, enraged at her persistence m visiting b , bor brother against bis consent, ordered the ser rants to refuse her admittance should she pre- ; We hare only to .add that Senator! Brodhead's sent herself, and to'open the house door only 1 objections are fairly and forcibly slated in his sr with the chain across.” , ; able speech ; bat,.after rsading it, we are still fTO Bl- COSTISUXD.J J r . ' ? • . . , , . L : : of opioion that snob a law would work well; ; would speed the settlement of the West, and the formation of new and opulent States; and wonld greatly promote the general prosperity of the coontry. * Jailtj Bunting WEDNESDAY MORNING::::: FOE GOVERNOR, WILLIAM BIGLER. FOR JUSTICE OF TUB SUPREME COURT, JEREMIAH S. BLACK, Wo would call the attention of MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS MEN to the fsrt that we have juatreoelTed from Philadelphia a number of fonta of new Job Type, and are now prepared to fill ■ orders for Cards, Circulars, Bill Hiids,'pApur/Books, Poaterv.&nd Programmes forexhibi. lions. All q/dera will be promptly filled. j f For interesting foreign', and other news, see telegrapbio column. , New Orleans is exceedingly healthy forthis scison of the year. There were bat one hundred ami ninety-one deaths for the week ending 9lh Inst., which is a remarkable decrease. It appears from acommanicatioo of Hon. Jas. Cooper, President of the Suobury and Erie Rail road, that the fuilute of Elward Crane will not eause a suspension of that work. Tbe Board of Health of Wheeling report six interments from Cholera sinoe Saturday last up to. yesterday. The general health of the city is good. Monday’s Chicago papers announced no dimi nution in the epidemio in that jcity. On Friday there were twenty-eight deaths from Cholera, and eight from all other diseases, —making thir ty-six in all. In another part of our paper we give a copy of the Japan treaty, which Was communicated to the Senate on the 18th, and ratified on Sat urday last. It will be found an interesting dooument. HggjlJ A destructive fire occurred in Syracuse, N. Y., on Suoday. Four buildings in the western part of the oity, together with four thousand ooids of wood, the property of the New York Central Railroad Company, were destroyed. Lose, twee ty thousand dollars. SENATOR BRODHEAD AND TBE HOMESTEAD BILL. We have received from Senator Brodhead, a copy of bis Bpeeoh in tbe Senate, on the 15 th insL, on the Homestead bill. While we differ with that gentleman in his views on that subject, we can willingly accord tojhim great .credit for the clearness and ability with whioh he has presented all the main objec tions that can be urged against the measare that is how exciting such general interest. Mr. Brodhead sustains the President’s veto ofjtho Indigent Insane and thinks that some of the President's to that bill 4 apply with equal force to the! Homestead bill. Ha considers such a disposition of tbe publio lands as giving them, awsly without any equiva lent or compensating benefit, which Congress has ncj power to do. He considers the bill unjust towards the old States whose! population, he ar gues, will be drained off, and whose property will be depreciated in value by the operation of such a law. He considers it unjast towards all classes ofl the people except tbe agriculturalist, who alone would, under the law, take possession of the lands which belong to the whole people; while all the other olasses would lose the benefits of the revenues which may bederivodfrom their sale. The bill provides tb&t only alternate quarter sections' shall be given free to actual settlers. The settlement and cultivation of oao half, tho public lands in alternate quarter sections wou Id certainly enhance the value'of the other half, and the government could fiz such prices upon the last half as it saw fit, withhold it from sale, if it ohooses, until double the present prices oonld be obtained. The same revenues would thus be obtained from the lands ; nor is the time distant when all the lands will be want ed for settlement and cultivation. ; The settlement of onr Western domain, and formation of now and populous States, would necessarily inoreass importations, and the reve lines derived from that source. It does not ne cessarily follow, then, that the public revenues would be diminished by, the operation of the Homestead bill. Frequent grants of alternate sections of the public lands are made by Congress, to Railroad .Companies, to aid in the construction of their roads. This is justified on ( the grounds that such roods, and such'disposition of the lands, encourage settlement of the wide regions of the yet unoccupied. Will not ibe Homestead bill equally encourage each settlement; and pre sent by that means the strongest inducements to eonstruot each roads.' They will all pay good dividends when the whole western regions are settled. . All classes of the people are benefitted by the general prosperity of the country. And those classes who would not avail themselves of the benefits of the Homestead bill, by taking up a quarter section of land, will yet be benefitted by the general increase of public prosperity; by the increased production of food, and consequent diminution of price; and by the increase of en terprise, pablio works and commercial activity; and the increased demand for the manufactures of. the older States. It is argued that offering land at the West to settlers and cultivators without price, diminishes the valae of every aore of land in the older States. Would not the same argument have had equal force fifty years ago, before Ohio, Indiana, Illi nois, Michigan, Wisconsin and the other western and south-western .States were settled? Tet who doubts that the wealth of the old Atlantic States has been doubled by the settlement of those western States? Snob, at least, is un doubtedly the truth in regard to snob of the old States as have engaged in oommerce, manufac tures, and nearly all other occupations. , Shall . we retard or obstruct settlements at the West for fear those settlers and cultivators should oome in competition with those of the Atlantio States? - Do not the farmers at the and of the whole country, now find ready markets at high prices for all their surplus products ? What more can be demanded ? The details of the Homestead b.ill it may be difficult to adjust' But the principle of the bill we believe is right, and its polioy sound and safe. That feature of the hill whioh exempts the lands, and improvements thereon, taken up by settlers, from being seised & D( ] Bo ld for debts, is objected to as; unconstitutional, it i a argued that it is in effect a bankrupt Law, applying only to thoso lands, and the improvements made upon them; whereas, Congress has only the right to •j establish uniform bankrupt laws. Are all exemp tion laws, then, bankrupt laws? Is the three hun dred dollar exemption law of our State a bank nipt law, or unconstitutional, on the ground that individual States cannot enact bankrupt laws? We do not think so. But if this objection "to the Homestead bill is well founded,, let that danse be so modified as to meet the spirit and letter of ." the constitution, and the requirements of justice. The whole bill need not fall for want of one tri fling amendment s . *,* CT.” f ' PITTSBURGH: DEMOCRATIC TICKET or Boxxurr cookty. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, HENKY S. MOTT, or PIXt OOCHTT. MORNING POST JOB OFFICE Newi of the Day. je 'I t. Doctors Disaouesiuq.— The New York Po*t has an article on cholera preventives, and in the course of which it expresses what la well known, viz: that in times of distress and anxi ety there is more necessity for - amusement and recreation. It says, further, that a well-con duotad and woll-ventllated theatre m&y be looked upon as one of the best prevent!* is of Chole ra. This is no donbt true; if pare | atmosphere and good ventilation in a theatro is possible in the dog-days; but these we have found —and the reverse is surely anything bat bene ficial to health, even if Cholera not pre- :JULY 19< Tailing. j We notice, on the other hand, the editor of a paper in a Western city, where the disease has been very fatal hitherto, some Iweeks since recommended the Board ;of Ileaith to prohibit a oirous exhibition; as, arjgned the eqitor, it may superinduce Cholera, by causing; nhnatural ex citement! He spoiled his argument the next day, however, by publishing a call a meeting to get up an exoitement about an .imaginary po litical evil, and was only thwarted id his choleric design by the difference of opinion between him self and his subscribers. The meeting was a failnre, —no and no cholera, —but whether in consequence we will not say. After all, we are rather inclined to the opinion of the New York man, that harmless reoreation and amusement is a preventive in. epidemic dis ease. But exciting political gathferingg—par ticularly of the anti Nebraska stanip, where ill feeling is stirred np by demagogues for a bad end,—shoald be eschewed. ( Tell toe Truth, Neighbor.—' ihe editor of the Gazette says “the iW designates those members of its party who ?annot| endorse the Nebraska bill as ‘sore-headed Democrats.' It will be obserTed that the Gazkte uses the three lost words as annotation from our paper. We would thank the editor of tho Gazette to tell us where he finds those words in ouf paper, ft e have used no such language towards those Demo crats who do not like thq Nebraska bill. Demo crats hare a right to think as they please on that sobject. Bat they have no right toj distract and injure the party, becanae.the great mass of its members differ with them in opiniqu on that or any other single question. Neither* have disap pointed office-seekers a Tight to divide the party, becaoso they were not snooessfnl inj their appli cations. If any coaid be called “ it is they. But wo have not used ths term. So, th a Gazette editor’s “ democratic friend" will have to find some other “term of opjjrobinm ” to complain of. We belong to ,no faotiou. The entire democratic party is the only we be long tO. ; j The story is a sheer fiction of the editor of the Gazette. No democrat would i9e such lan gcage as that editor ascribes to h a “friend.” Does the editor of the Gazette wah to know wliat a whig said to us about his paper, a few days ago? Running it into TUE GaorsD.— f-For several years past none in New York have seen makiog money more rapidly than the b itel keepers. This being the eure way to wealth, a succession of palatial bouses, certainly not exceeded and perhaps not equalled in magnificence by any in the world, sprung up as if by magic. The St. Nicholas, Metropolitan, La Farge and the Pres cott House, were all erected within tbe last three years, and owing to tho Crystal Palace exhibi tion and some other nnuiial causes, for awhile did a paying business. .But these causes have evaporated and consequently we have the report that they are now nearly* all losing money. The truth of tbe matter is New York Went ahead a little too fast in tho hotel line, for some years past, and she will have contract. People will only indulge in the magnificence cf her hotels while money is plenty; whenever tbe market becomes “tight,” or there Is tho least commer cial depression they will retrench, and hotels, will be the first to suffer. A “ Dibtt Dog.”—lf any mau in the U. 8. Seuate deserves the epithet, it is Senator CUy, from Alabama, ;we believe: ft'ohavf no sympa thy for Mr. Sumner's nor bis manner of urging them times, but when a man uses such undignified language is this Clay his Senatorial peers, he deiervesto be considered notbiog more than a “ d rty dog.” AnoTncn Novel. —Sir Jatptr Ccrew, Knt. ; His life and experiences, by Charles Lever, aathor of a great many humorous, elegant and laughter-provoking novels and romances. Le ver’s writings are very generally rejtd and ad mired ; and this new book from his j pen is spo ken of as equal to any ofliis former productions. It is published by Harper & Brothers, New Tork, and for sale by S.'B. Lauffcr, [bookseller, Wood street, Pittsburgh. j .Franklin House, Philadelphia. -j-Io our ad vertising columns, this morniog, wtjl be found the oard of this hotel. Messrs. Parker & Laird have recently refitted it, and it is now one of the most'elegant of the Chestnut street hpuscs, with out charging'Chestoat Btreet prices, ijor business men, too, its location is one of the very best, be ing within two minutes walk of the! Exchange, and yet sufficiently retired for comfort. We commend it to Pittsburghers. j N. Bowditch Blount, District Attorney of New York, whose death wo mentioned yesterday, died of Cholera. He was a prop) meat Whig politician, had been a member of Co lncils, and frequently before held the office of District At torney. fgy*Gov. Mattisou, of Illinois, ban commuted to imprisonment for life, the sentence >f the three Iriehmen, convicted of murdering a contractor named Story, at La Salle, last fall. A portion of tbo preßS severely condemn the Governor's oonduct, while others give him credii for acting with upright motives. There were eight cases of oholera in To ledo, and three in Sandusky on Friday, the 14th. A Census of Dnboque, lowa, . ust taken, shows that town to have a population of 6,635 persoos. Col. Dastin, U. S. District Attorney of Minne sota, died at St. Anthony, a oonple o: days ago, after an illness of a few hoars. John Bmith, one of the Mormon patriarchs, brother to the celebrated Joe. Smith, died at Deseret, on the 23d ult. - j The celebrated trotting stallion Cassius M. Clay, died on Thursday week, at Montgomery Orange eo., N. Y. j John B. Sheppard, a well known land highly respected oitizen of St. Loaie, w&4 attaoked with oholera on Friday, and died in hoars. Judge Conrad has sent in his resignation of tbo Presidency of the Hempfield Railroad. A meeting of the directors takes place 'on the 20tfa, when his resignation wili be acted upon. We bavs seen, says the Albany Atlas, a one dollar bill on the commercial Bank, Glenn’s Falls, altered to a ten, whish ia the tjest paster we ever saw. The genaine one’s have a team of horees with a load.of barrels, for the Vignette. The Albany fN. Y.) Register, of a recent date says:—A wealthy gentleman from western New York, died in this city, at one of the-hotels. An only son, and the only relative present at his de cease, while the corpse wae warm, offered to sell the boots of the dead to the porter of the hotel at whioh they were stopping. j - -A .1 ; ■r / t- - '■ ; -'s a l ,. 1 -- , : JAP A Washington, Julj v j *— The following is a copy of the Japan treaty, communicated to the Beoate, July 13th: : Between the United Stales of America and the Em pire of Japan, done at Kanagawa , the 31i< day of March, in the year of our Lord Jesue Christ, 1854. and of Kayic the seventh year, thtrdmonth and third day. Tbe United States of America and the Empire of Japan, desiring to establish firm, lasting and sincere friendship between tbe two natioos, have resolved to fix, in a manner clear and positive, by means cf a treaty or general convention of peaoe and amity, the rules which shall- in future be mutually observed in the intercourse of tbeir respective countries, for which most'desirable object the President of the United States has conferred fall powers on his Commissioner, j Matthew Galbraith Perry, special ambassador : of tho United States to Japan, and tho august Sovereign of Japan has given similar, full pow ers to bis Commissioners, Hayaahi-dai-gar-ku no kani, Ido, Prince of Taus; Sima Izawa, Prince of Mima-Baki, and Adono, member of the Board of Revenue—and the said commis sioners, after having exchanged their said full powers, and dnly considered the > remises, have agreed to the following articles; — Article 1. Thero shall be a perfect, perma nent, and universal peace and a sincere cordial amity between the United §t.ates of Amerioaon the one part and the Empire of Jtpan on tbe other part, and between tbeir people respective ly, without exception of persona or places. Art. 2. The port of Simoda, in the Princi pality of Idzu, und tho port oFHakodjde, in the Principality of Matsmai, are granted by the Japanese as ports for tbe reoeptino ofiAmcrican ships, where they can be supplied with wood, water, provisions and coal, and othsr artioles their necessities may requiro, as far as the Ja panese have them. The time for opening tbe first named port is immediately on signing this treaty; the. last named port is to be opened im* mediately after the earne day in the ensuing Japanese year. [Note. —A tariff of prices shall be given by tbe Japanese officers of [the things whioh they oan furnish, payment for which shall be made in gold and silver coin.] Art. 3- Whenever ships of the United States aCe thrown or wrecked upon tbe coast of Japan, Japanese vessels will assist them and carry crows to Stmoda or Hakodadc, and hand them over to their countrymen, re ceive them ; sod whatever articles the shipwreck ed may have preserved, shall likewise bo re stored, and tho expenses incurred in the rescue and support of Americans and Japanese who may thus be thrown upon the shores of either nation, are not to be refunded. ;Abt. 4. Those shipwrecked persons and other citizens of the United States shall be free as in odber- countries, and not be subject to confine ment, but shall be amenable to just laws. JArt. 5. Shipwrecked mariners, and other citi zens of the'United States, temporarily living at Stmoda or Hakodade, shall not bo subject to such restrictions and -confinement as tbe Dutch and Chinese are at Nagasaki, but shall be free at Simoda to go where they please within the -limits of seven Jspaneso miles, (>->r rl,) frqm a smallisland in tbe harbor of Simoda, marked on the accompanying chart, hereto appended, and shall, in like manner, be free to go where they p£*ase at Hakodadc, within limits to be defined the visits of the United States squadron to that place. lart. 0. If there shall be. any sort of goods wjiutod, or any business which shall require to b$ arranged, there shall be careful delibcra. tfon between the parties, in order to settlo such matters. Art. 7. It is agreed that ships of the United States, resorting to tbe ports open to them, shall be permitted to exchange gold and rilTer cpin, and articled of goods, far other articles of goods, qnJer such regulations as shall be temporarily established by the Japanese government for that purpose. It is stipulated, however, that tbe ships of the United States shall ha pertriitted to o*rry away whatever articles they are unwilling to exchange. Art. n Wood, water, provision?, coal, aad goods rtquired, shall only he procured through the agency of Japanese officers appointed fur that purpose, aud in no other macacr. Art. '■}. It is agreed that if any future day the government of Jspao shall grant to any other nation or nations privileges and advantages which oro not herein guaranteed to the United States aod tbecitizeos thereof, that these same privileges and advantages shall be granted like wise to tbe United Status and tho persons there of. without any consultation or delay. Art. 10. Ships of tbe United Slates shall be permitted to resort to no other ports of Japan hut Simoda and Hakoda-le, unices iu distress or forced by stress of weather. ' Art. 11. There shall he appointed by the gov ernment of the United Status consuls or ogeats, to reside iu Simoda, ut any time afeor the ex piration of eighteen months from the date of the aiguiog of tbta treaty, provided that either of the two governments dectn such arrangement necessary. Art. 12. The present convention haviog been concluded and duly signed, shr.ll b- obligatory and faithfully observed by tbe United Slates of America and Japan, end l>v the citizens and subjects of each respective Poxer; and it is to be ratified and approved by tho President of tbe United States, by and with the advice and con sent of tho Senate thereof, and by tho august sovereign of Japan ; and the ratification shall be exchanged within eighteen months from the date of the signature thereof, or sooner if practi cable. In faith whereof, we,the respective pleni potentiaries of the United States r of America, the Empire of Japan, aforesaid, have signed and sealed these presents. Pone at Kanagnwa, this thirty first day of March, in tho year of our Lord JceuaChristcno thousand eight hundred and fifty-four, aod of Kayei the seventh year, third month, and third day. M. C. PERRY. Atmospheric J-gxEUBAm rou the Transmis sion or Packages;— Some time ago considera ble attention was directed (o an ingenious inven tion for the conveyance of packages through a tuoe, of any length, by the force of atmospheric pressor*. At the present session of Congress the inventor, a Mr. Ithiel S. Richardson, pre sented a petition asking on appropriation to construct a line between Wnshiogton and Balti more, to test the value of the indention. A special oommittee on the subject was appointed by the Benate, which, after duo investigation, has reported a bill autborizing'iho construction of a line of this telegraph between the cities namod, under tbo supervision of the Postmaster-. General. It is now so late in the session, and 4 there is soimuoh other very important business before Congress^'that it is doubtful whether this bill can meet the consideration whioh it deserves; but the experiment is well worth trying, as the plan has be'en examined by scientific men and prouosneed feasible. The electro-magnetic tele graph'was tried between Washington and Balti more in the same way ob is proposed in this instance,-.and its usefulness being thus demon strated, it was immediately extended far and wide over the Union. Properly speaking, the new invention is not a telegraph, but a machine for/the conveyance of packugca The plan con templates tbo transmission of tho mails, and should it bo adopted for that purposo, it will render tfae government independent of railroads, at the same timo that far greater speed is at tained and all danger of mail robberies during transmission avoided. But Two Great Pauties.—The Washington Union says :—There are but two parties in this country—the democratic party and the opposi tion to that party. Tho present is ono of those oocosions when the whig piriy passes al moat out of men’s memory. Other names su persede the name of whig. Other influences rise above it. Some are for giving it up because it has an odor of suspicion about it, others, bo cause, liko an old garment, it has served its day. Every little section, heretofore banded under the name of whip, is dow setting tip for itself; and there aro almost ns roauy. names as there are organizations. Meanwhile tho demo cratic party and upwright, and no body thinks of |he overthrow or of tbo dooay of the democratic party. The odds and ends of faction, however, like the little peoplo in Gulli ver’s Travels, who bind this bago prisoner with multitudinous but tiny bonds, think that by one common attaok they may crush it to pieces. We*, shall see. ' Cuba and its Wealth.— Cuba, at this time comprises a population of about 1,400,000. Of this aggregate 800,000 aro black, 600,000 of them being slaves, the balance free ami com paratively a nuisance. The whole island con tains an area of 32,000 equare miles—equal to more than 20,000,000 acres every three of whioh are capable, with proper cultivation, of pro ducing one hogshead of sugar annually. In 1838 the exports of Cuba amounted to $20,000,- 000 ahd e , her imports to $25,000,000; she yielded a revenue of $18,000,000 and the property of the island was estimated at $BOO,- 000,000. And yet only about one-fifth of the Island was supposed to be under cultiva tion. The Directors of the Baltimore and Sosqne hana Railroad Company have removed Mr. Win chester from the post of Superintendent, on ac count of the late aooident. i'i'V'vV *■ Si ** T hi* it:*-' ' ■•vvi \ rV’vV>‘ w ’• .> .. u?* ►' l iv *■/ •* \ , '■*. «,V, t. • J » / '*■ K' ' * A’• %' • . ' " ' I -* ■ **' i .vSefelnJ tbe Scenes. An LCfijimu liw Was lately tried id cue of tbe London Courts, in which Douglas Jerrold, the nav«liit,was'defendant, and whioh has giv?n rise to a little gpsaip,' Jerrold, It appears, is father-in-law to Henry Mayhew, the author of V London Labor and London Poor,” and in con sequence of having introduced Maybew- to a tailor, was summoned to pay for eertain gar ments obtained by Mayhew from the “Knight of the Goose." TREATY r '• - ' l . ±'A<i+*-*/". Mayhew is very extravagant, and at the time be contracted the debt, be wa* engaged on the .Morning Chronicle, furnishing articles on “Lon don Labor and London Poor," for which bo re ceived from thirty-five to fifty dollars per week. This waSrnot sufficient for bis purpose, and in 1862 he found bimselftn Queen’s Bench Prison, for. not paying his creditors. This did not hurt his'feelings, and he consoled himself with tbe reflection that nobler and better men than be had been there. Jerrold has paid several hun dred pounds for him since, and vows he’ll pay no more. In this oase, the defenoe was, that having paid large sums of money for Mayhew before tbe debt in question was oontraeted, he was not likely to assume the responsibility of this, and that he did not pledge his word, (os the plaintiff swore,) to pay if Mayhew did not. Here the issue turned npon a question of per sonal veracity, and the jury took the novelist’s word in preference to the tailor. In the course of the trial; Jerrold was Bharply cross-question ed, and gave some pungent answers. He was asked his age, and stated it fifty. Mayhew is hot eight years his junior, and is generally be lieved to be anything but a chicken of a son in law. He is a portly bald headed man, and evi dently takes the world easy. A person looking at the two, would be likely (if he did not koow to the contrary) to take Jerrold for the son in law, instead of Maybew, and such was the de termination of the tailor. This makes the sec ond case, in which a noted literary character has been in a Westminister Court, in a suit for money, during the past three months. [From tba Washington Star, 14th.] The Homestead qnsatlon la the Senate* The friends of the Homestead principle were very sanguine last evening that there is a ma jority in the Senate dispoar * to pass the bill to that end now being considered by them, with amendments which shall not violate its main feature of accordlngland to the landless who will work it, on easier terms than the Govern ment will dispose of it to others. They certainly regard the vote of eighteen ayes to thirty noes on tbe motion for the biU’s indefinite postponement, as, in considerable; measure, a test question. Few of them seem to believe it possible that the bill will pass the Senate precisely as it went op from the Houso] the prevailing impression being that an Amendment oharging the actual aettler perhaps thirty oents per acre, peyabie in a term of years, will prevail. If so, the bill will still embraoe the distinctive feature of makiog favor able a distinction between the laboring settler, and the person baying a portion of the pnblio domain for speculation. German Emigration.— -A writer in the Paris Pairie, discusses at some length the subject of ;be Otman emigration from Earope to the Uni ted States. At first, he says, the German States saw with indifference the departure of the peas antry and mechanics; ere long, however, the municipal authorities and governments became alarmed, and soon it was seen that labor and cap ital were moving off to an extent which must be seriously felt at home. “In 1818 the German rulers thought of diverting, and thus lessening the current They looked to Huogary—to the Moldo-Wallachlan provinces—bat fonnd invinci ble obstacles.” The writer in the Patrie, believes that it is possible to reoder Algeria attractive, aod tbns secure to a colony of France tbe benefit of that v&at tide of emigration which now sets across the broad Atlantic to our shores. Thieves ox the River— Daring the last trip of tbe Highflyer to Louisville, on Friday night, a passenger named M’Knight was robbed of a go! J watch, $4O io cash, and a draft for $6,000. M’Knigbt in an agent for a banking house in .Philadelphia, aod was traveling oq busioesa con nected with the bank. His state-room was en tered by means of an “ootsider*” On the return trip of tbe same boat, a gentleman uamed Smith, from Vicksburg, and traveling cast, was robbed of a gold watch aod $7O in American gold. It is thought that the thieves left the boat at Law rccceburg.—Cin. Com. Embargo ox Bibles—Trouble for Naugut. —Recently tho British Foreign Bible Society went to considerable troable and expense to have \bc Bible translated and printed io the laoguago of the Mongol Tartars; but the Czar of Russia, who is the master of the Mongols, having, in advance, forbidden its ciroalation, the whole edition remains useless on the Society's shelves in London. The Ctar evidently does not want Christian civilization among .bis Tartar subjects. Religious light Is ho’part of his system. The Sale or Russian Vessels Nugatory.— According to a statement made by the French Consol at Baltimore, it is the intention of the French Government to treat as nugatory all sales of Russian vessels to subjects or oitizens of any of tho tbe allied or neutral powers, during tbe pending European war. Notwithstanding Buch sale, tbs vessel will still be treated as belonging to the enemy. P3f* The distillation of spirits from Mo lasses is now carried on to a considerable ex tent in the northern part of France, where twenty distilleries for the purpose have been es tablished. Ai-T;ili la the Remedy.—MOßSE'S INVIQO. RATING > «XIR OR CORDIAL —lf ti« (v be special provUnonp in lb® fait of a sparrow,” so Is there also In the flocking ol an herd. What oow would be the condition of thousands, if Dr; Morse, in his oriental wandering*, had not discovered the plant which gives to his INVIGORATING ELIXIR OR OORDIAL its extraordinary potency to func tional disease#? lie found the production growing and in use among a race remarkable for longevity and for exemp tion from the harraering diseases of clvilUed life. He made many inquiries as to the effoot produced by this herb, and tbe replies convinced him that It possessed restorative and vitalizing properties heretofore unheard of, except In fable. Iltvlng concentrated the juices of the piaot, and combined it with other vegetable extracts, he commenced experimen ting with the compound upon himself and others. Finally presented to the world the Invigorating Elixir; and what Is all his fame asa philosopher and traveler, compare 1 with that which he will derive from the Introduction of this rejuvenating preparation? Age and decrepitude feel new life stirring within them, under the influence of this unri vallrd exhllerant The trembling, shaking, despairing, atrongthlese victim of nervous liUeeesw is enabled to throw off the incubus that was pressing him to the earth; the dyspeptic patient feels his appetite return, and the power -of digestion with it; and woman, suffering anJer the tor tures of hysteria, or any of the debilitating complaints or disabilities which belong to bar sexually, 'experiences in every fibre of her shattered system the restorative effects of this peerless remedy, Tlio Cordial is put up, highly concentrated, In pint bot tles. Price three dollars per bottle, two fbr five dollars, six for twelje dollars. C. 11. RING, Proprietor, 182 Broadway, New York. Sold by Druggists throughout the United Plates, Canada, and the nest Indies. AGENTS. FLEMING A BROS., No. 00 Wood street, Pittsburgh. DR.GKO. 11. RKYSRR, N 0.140 Wood street, do .1. P. FLEMING, Allegheny City. jyl4:d*w 49* The Great French Remedies ! I—M 1 BALLY’S ANTIDOTE AND LOTION.—Those persons who wish for a safe, speedy, and permanent cure, should uso the above celebrated and unrivalled FRENCH PREPARA TIONS. Tbey have now been in use for five years—have been thoroughly testod in thousands of the most obstinate cases, and invariably have given satisfaction. They are not composed simply of Balsam Copalva, but are entirely different from all other preparations, both lu the nature of thuir ingredients and the manner in which they operate upon the patient Hence tbe wonderful success attending their use. A gentleman connected with the Western Railroad says: “ l have expended for other people during the last three years over for remedies of this description, and have never found a single article that gave such universal satis, faction as your Antidote and Lotion does. Ido not recol lect of their ever falling to cure Inaslngle instance. Many have been cured in two or three days.” Price, Antidote $1; Lotion 60 cents per bottle. Invented by M. Bally, Physician to tbe Paris Hospitals, and prepared from the original recipes, and sold wholesale and retail by DU ROY’ A 00- Sole Proprietors for the Uni ted States and Canadas. Principal Depot, 468 Broadway, New York. Sold in Pittsburgh, wholesale and retail, by FLEMING BROTHERS, (Successors to 3. Kidd A Co-) No. 60 Wood street. Wheeling—J. H. PATTERSON A CO., and by Druggists everywbero. SylpHHls, Scrofula and Diseased Blood.— For those terrific diseases, Carter's Spanish Mix ture is the only specific. The proprietors have In their possession ever one hun dred certificates of the most extraordinary cures effected by it. We refer to the certificate of Richard Adams, late High (sheriff of Richmond, Edwin Burton, Commissioner of the Revenue for Richmond; General Welch, of the Mam moth Circus; Dr. Headley, of Washington City ; Mr. Wm. A. Matthews, and C. B. Lock, Esq., of Richmond, Mr. F. Boyden, Exchange Hotel, Va 4 and a host of others, who have seen cases of the worst description cured by Carter's Bpacish Miftgre. They all certify that it is Urn greatest purifier of the blood known. %*Bee advertisement. jylftlmdsw Worm* lit—Aput many lai£rawi.ii»atfcih* vb bestu written, expUiui’ % the origin and elaaeifyiag (be worm.? generated in the hu man system. any topic of medical science baa elicited more acute observation and profound research {anl yet physicians slavery modi divided in opinion oa tke subject, v Jt most be admitted, however, that, after ill,* mode of expelling them and purifying the body from their presenetisof more value than the wisest disquisitions as to their origto. Such an expelling agent baa at last been found. Dr. M’- Lane’s Vermifuge proves to be the much sought after *pe dfic—its efficacy being universally acknowledged by the entire medical faculty. As further proof, read the fellow* ing from a lady—one of onr own ritixens: Niw York, October 15,1852. This is to certify that I was troubled with worms for more th&n a year. I was advised to use M'Lane’s Celebrated Vermifuge. I took one bottle, whieh brought away aboot fifty worms; I commenced Improving at once, and am now perfectly well. The public can ls&rn my name, and further particulars, by applying to Mrs. Ilardie, No: 3 Manhattan Place, or to E. L. Theall, Druggist, corner of Rutger and Monroe streets. P. B.—The above valuable remedy, also Dr. M t Lane’s eel* ebrated Liver Pills, can now be had at all respectable Drug Stores In this dty. Purchasers will be careful to ask for, and take uou* hot Dr. M’Lane’a Vermifuge. All others, in comparison, are worthless. Also, for sale by the sole proprietors, FLEMING BROS;. Successors to J. Kidd AOo., *- 60 Wood street AS - Pantuloone.—The weil*known superiority of QUIBBLE’S fit in the Garment, needs no comment on his part; it has been acknowledged by all who haTc fevered hhw with their orders, that they have never been fitted with the same ease and style as by him. He begs to inform hb pa* irons and the pabUc, that his stock Is now replete with the newest tty las for ooata, vests and pants, suitable for the present season. E. GRIBBLS, Tailor and Pantaloon Maker, mart-t 210 Liberty st, head of Wood. SPECIAL NOTICES. -It is due to KXER’B Frtro «eum to : B»y that It has been known to completely eradicate every vtsuge of this dreadful disease in less time than any other remedy, and at less ooe( or inconvenience to the pa* tfent. The thousands of certificates fn the habds of the proprie tor, many of which are from well known eitixens of the elty ofPittsbo~tb and its immediate vieinhy, go to show clearly and beyond ill donbt,that Kim's Pxraoucic is a medicine of no common value, not only as a local remedy In Rnralf su, Rhnanatim, Deaf next, lost of Sight, but as a valuable internal remedy, inviting the Investigating physfcians, as well as the suffering patient, to beoome acquainted with Its merits. Those having a dread of mixtures are assured that this medicine is purely natural, and is bottled as it flows from the bosom orthe earth. it ootnedfrem ajxnxrpublished at Syracuse, If. K, and bears date Jugust 2, 1852, to whieh it auoappmdeddht cerUficaleofthecelarratedD. T. Foet,M. D n Of Synxcute: Thismaylntrnth certify, that I have been SO badly af flicted with Scrofula for the lastsevenyearsthat most of the time I have been nnable to attend to any kind of butinem, and much at the time unable to walk and confined to my bed, and have been treated nearly all the time by the beat' Physicians our country affords; 1 occasionally got some re* ilex, but no core, and continued to grow worse until Dr. foot recommended me to try the Petroleum, or Book Oil, as «r* rythingelse had failed. Idldse wlthoutfeith at first, bnt the effect was astonishing; it threw the poison to Che snr&ee at once, and I at once began to grow better, and by osing seven bottles I have got-a core worth thousands ofdoDara. Mpjt. NANCY M. BARKER. This may certify that I have been acquainted with Kiirti Petroleum, or ILoek OH, for more than a year, and hare to* pestedly witnessed its bedefida! effects in the cure of inde. U&t ulcers and other disease* for which it U reoommended, andean with confidence recommend it to be a morildD* wor* thy of attention, and can safely -say thataneoaas tiissttsm) ed its use where other medkine had failed. a Y. FOOT, U. 1L for sale by all the Druggists In Pittsburgh. faagalAw. - Notice,—Thu Partnership hereiabre existing U-eV’ and doing husioe«* under the name and style of BENNETT, MARSHALL k CO, was dissolved on the 19th inst, by mutual consent. BENNETT, MARSHALL k CO. Pittsburgh, June 28th, ISSA Copartnership. THE UNDERSIGNED hare entered ioto Copartnership under the name and style of GRAFF, BENNETT A CO, for tbe purpose of manufacturing Iron? Nai s, Ac., at theCtinlon Rolling Mill. Sonth Pittsburgh. Ofllce at pres ent wUh EoglL'b a Richardson. No. 116 Water, aod lot) First street. WM. B. ENGLISH, ROBT. 11. MARSHALL, JAS. J. BENNETT. JOHN GRAFF. i*itM>nrgl». June ?Sth. ISS4—jegHf PITTS B HUGH Life, Fire and Marine Infnranoe Company; OFFICE 55 FIFTH STREET, MASONIC IXALL, PITTSBURGH, PA. JAMES & I10Gl«, President Caiurs Secretary. This Company makes every Insurance (pp-.-rtalnlng to or connected with LIFE HJpKS. ADo, wasast Hal! and Cargo It!A.< oo t!i* OLio anti MU-' sisslppi nvrr> an<l tributaries and Marine Kink* geoerally. Au i aralust Loss and Damage by Tire, and against the Perils cf the Sea and Inland Navigation and TnoapftrtatioiL Policies titled at the lowest raW consisli-ntTvlth safety to all parlies. Wm. 8. IX*voni Jama D. M’Giti, Alexander Bradley, James 9. Unon. Samuel M'Olurkso, William Phillips John Fullerton, Robert Galway, . Alexander Reynolds, Arm strong County. II iratlo N. Lee. Kittanning, Utrxm Stowe, Beaver. John S-'ott, P. Uexixm, M. D., John U'Alpln, Wni P. Johnston. June* Mwsba'), Ooorge 6. Sdlen, m;25.1y Strang* Develwpcment.—Scientificmen LS£y ere daily bringing to light new Inventions, and thy mnn-b of in uotrird; pernon* Bald, or becoming so, win be plt'KMhl to leant that science and tong research com* lined, lure brought before the public the greatest wonder of tbn age. to the article of EMERSON'S AMERICAN HAIR RESTORATIVE, b «ur« cure for Baldness and to prevent IUIr from f&luug. See circular to be bad of tbe Ageotit, giving fuil particulars, Price $l,OO in large bottles. Sold by C. K. FISHER k CO.. Proprietors, t>7 Superior street,Cleveland, Ohio. For sale in Pittsburgh in the following houses Fleming Bros., L. Wilcox k Co., K. K Selters, O. H. Keyrer, Joel Mohler, Benj. Page, Jr., J. IL Gasset Allegheny ci'fy.—L. A. Deckbaip, Presely k Means, J. Fleming. Jimuat^a.—A. Patterson, John G. Smith f aprS Firemen’s Insurance Company of the City of Pittsburgh* J. K. MOORHEAD, President—ROtiKKT FINNEY, Secre tary mil Insure against FIRE and MARINS RISKS of all kinds. Office: No. W Water street. mmctom: J. K. Moorhead, W. J. Anderson, B. C. Sawyer, R. B. Simpson, Wm. M. Edgar, 11. B. Wilkins, C. U. Paulson, William Oollingwood, K. U. Roberts, Jobu M. Irwin, JoM*ph Kaye, Wm. Wilkinson, David Campbell. ja!3 tr7> CITIZKKS' Insurance Company of ik-y* Pittsburgh* —lL D. KING, President; SAM* CEL L. MARSH ELL, Secretary. Office: M Water Market and Wood strut |. Insures HULL and CARGO Rinks, on the Ohio and Missis sippi Rivers and tributaries, insures against Loss or'Hamag* by Fire. ALSO—Against the Perils of the Sea, and Inland Navies* lion and Transportation. UMcrojL&l -v H. D. King, Wm. Larimer Jr., Will Ism Bagalvy, Samuel M. Kler, Samuel Rea, William Bingham, Robert Dunlap, Jr., John 8. DUworth, Isaac M. Pennock, Francis Seller*, B. Uarbaugh, J. Seboonmaker, Walter Bryant, William B. Haya, John Shlptott. dec2B ITS» CASH JHETDAL FI&B AND flA* RINK INSCRAKpE COMPANY, of PennaylVOQU. CAPITAL, $lOO,OOO. OSAR- Tttß PERPETUAL. President— lion. ADGDSTDS 0. HEIgTER. Secretary —THOMAS H. WILLSON, Beq. niucTou; Hon. A. 0. HeUter, Samuel W. Hays, William Robinson, Jr., Thomas Gillespie, William F. Fahnestock, John B. Oox, Harvey Bollman, Jacob Peters, John Walker, Jr., William Colder, Jr., Jacob S. ilaldtrman,. Aaron Bombaugh. RUSSELL k OAKES, Aren!?, Office, in Lolkyette Building*, ti (entrance on .Wood street.) Western PenusylTanta Hospital.** Dn». 1,. Scuinca, Second, between Wood and Market streets, and J. Ku2>, North-east corner of Diamond, Alle gheny city, are the attending Physicians to the above Insti tution, for the first quarter of 1854. Applications for admission may be made to them at all hour* at their offices, or at the Hospital at 2 o’clock, P. M. Recent cases of accidental injury are received at aU hours, withontforn- JaKkp YEAGER, 110 MARKET street, Pitta- burgh, Importer and Wholesale Dealer in FANCY AND STAPLE VARIETY AND DRY GOODS,offers to city and country dealers as large sod well selected stock of Goods as any Eastern house, and same prices, thus «avlng reigbt. time and expenses. ja&yj O. O. P. —place of meeting, Washington Hall, Wood street, between Fifth street and Virgin alley. PfTTsnoaou Lonaa.'No.SGG—Meets every Tueedayevenlng. Msxcamllx EacaxntMT, No. 87—Meets first and third Friday of each month. [mariftfly LODGE, I. O. O. Fv—The Angerona Lodge, No. 250,1. 0. of 0. F., meets every Wodncsjfcy evening In Washington Halt Wood at. f jyl:y Notice.— The JOURNEYMEN TAILORS SO CIETY, of Pittsburgh and Allegheny, meets on the first and third WEDNESDAY of every month, at the FLORI DA UOUBK, Market street By osder. Jel:y JOHN YOUNG, Jit, Secretary, attend at your Armory, on MONDAYS, WKDNEB* DAYS and FUlDAYftjibr drill, and to transact sueh busi ness as tpaj cotge beforirthVOQmpany. P. KANE, maraOifimd Secretary pro tom. Cargo’s Dagnerrcotypo and Art Gallery, Apollo Budding, No. 76 Jo vrth itreet, (nexf to Lyntft Carpet Ymnorium.) R. M. CARGO k 00. baring fitted up the most Vml ample rooms in the city with mammoth sky and side lights, offer First Class LI KRNESBBB, in style to suit all, varying In price according to and. quality oftcase, Ac.' Superior Oil by the beet artists, for sale, and on ex hibition during the day and evening. Oitixens and stran gers are Invited to call and examine specimens and Paint ings. *pr3T FOR SALE VERY CHEA.P. A BUILDING LOT IN ALLEGHENY CITY, 24 feet by 100. A good bargain can be had by applying soon at the office of the MORNING TOST. jyllfctf Lot for Sale. ' A GOOD BUILDING LOT, 24 feet front on Carson ttreei by 100 feet in depth, In Birmingham, will be sold cheap. Enquire of GEO; F. GILLMORE, jvlB at office of the Morning Post BUILDING LOT FUR SA£e7 A LOT 24 feet front on WYLIE street, and extending bark 109 feet to Wide alley. On the back part of the Lot Is a Cellar Wall, built for two small Houses. This Int Is in a desirable location for a residence; and will be sold low, and on JkTorable terms. Title good, and clear from Incumbrance. Enquire of GEO. F. GILLMORE, jylg At Office of Morning Post CHEESE— 200 boxes prime W. R. Catting, for sale by jyl HENRY H. COLLINS Cl ALERATUS—4O boxes fair, in quarter, Iplf end pound O paperii, received and for sale by „ jy{ HENRY H. COLUNB. >. jtt a^g*3Sggga FKAIrttLIN HOUSE,7^ CHBSTNCT BT&SCC, FfttItADEOTU, FAIIXK)r*<LIm4/r»iifl«ion. 1 *. s : jyl9i»] PER DAY. ”~ Fag lala. '*: • ' A LAMB NE# OOUNttR, SHOW CASE, and eib«* (ton fix torn, Cheap* for sale -at Ho. 71 FOOBIO ■Street ..... ~ ■ &l+X9z T \XSIRABLK BEAL ESTATE FOR BALE.—Thirty Build -1) In* Lot* lo the borough of Manchester, each 24 feet .wide by 100 ftet deep; part of the estate of the late Jsmee Adame, Ejq., dee’d. Thnss lots fronting on an avenue 90 feet wide, and extending to an alley in the rear 25 feet wide, make them desirable property for a suburben residence. Also, a lot of ground on the coiners of the Fifth Ward Market House and Penn street, 85' feet front -by 100 feet deep, to Spring alley. Also, too lots of ground on Liberty street, each 25 feet front by 160 deep, to Quarry street. Apply to . JAMBS BLAKkLY. : jyW BealEstate and European Aggnt. L'CCHER BTOWK AGAIN received and for sale ntMJNER A 00/S cheap Book Bton, No. 32 Smith field street: Sunny 'Memoirs of Foreign lands? by Mrs. Ilarrlet Beecher Stowe, author of Crude lvofe-eloth, illustrated, $2. - . Sir Jasper Oarew; Lrvet’s new novel; 60 Cents. Fashion and Tamins: by Mm. Ann 8. Stephens: *L For sale by H. MINER * OO , jy!9 . No.S3 Smlthfleld street CONTINUATION OF THE GREAT SEMI-ANNUAL SALE OF A. A. MASON A 00, and still farther re duction in prices, commencing on Thursday, July.2Qth, and continuing through the month of August. ’ jjlg SUBLIME OLIVE 014 IN MIALL FLASKS—The finest quality just received fresh by ~ jyl» ■ W. A. ITCLPRQ- UILLOUX BAKDINR&—IOO half boxes Sardines, of the JT celebrated GulUotix brand, just received by jyip w. A. mvlcrg^ SUPERIOR OoD FlßlL—-I have jast reovived a few bun dred pounds ©f Block‘ltlmtAOod Flab, said••to be the best ever brought hare. . • ■ Jyl» W. A- M’OLUBG. SPICED SALMON.—I cue .Bpload put up in tin cane of 10 pounds aaeh* jostsabsiredby --* •• Jyl» . ..., : ♦ W. A.M'CLPBfi. S&tOKED Halikiit—-u*» t" flue order, just re _ odeedby .j [jjHj r , :W. A. M*CLUBg;' DGOTa AND SHOES.—Those who wish to get a usat and well fitting BOOT, SHOE or GAITER, . will call at . AI'LAUOHLIN’S, - j, - .95 Fourth street. PUBLICATIONS—Just received by Exprem the following new and standard Books, ahead of an cotem porerUM: Wood'* Practice of Medicine, new adUkro • ! ! Sir JaqvrCarew, by C. Lever, new wet*; Fashion and by Ann B. Stephens, new work: Juggler of Nankin, by S Cobb, Jri; Western Scenes, new ■ a ppiy; Dodd Family Abroedrky Q.'Lerer,new shpplr; FanorFern, second mrim, new supply;' Festos, a Poem, by P. J. Bally, new work; Chambers* Pspen* for the People, new edition, in 6 “ Priset Writings, •* “ in4vol»4 “ BQseetlanyj in lOjfohL; “ French Bevotutloiu; ' “ Stories of Irish Peesaatry, . u life and Works of Burns; 41 German Literatures . . . . Bsncbw's Reid Books, new tatf&ji Trautwine on Corvee, Shuuk oh Curves, new woric.^ rtHRAP HOPBES—fSSO, $lOOO end SIJOO—FOR SALE a \j Frame Hooee of 6 rooms, wril arranged and in good withe k< of 22 feet front on Clay alley, near wash ington street, and not Car from the Court Pause. Pria ssso—terms euy. Also—A good House and large Lot of Ground for $lOOO and a Henae weU fintahed for $l,lOO. Terms of easy, [jylg] 8. CPTHRBBT A SON, 140 Third Sreet 1 ELEVEN THOUSAND ACHES OF GOOD LAND Sit -2j uated in Marshall and Wetxel oonntim, Ta, for sale in lots te eirit purchasers, at prises from sl£o to $lO pei acre. [JylgJ fl. CpraßEßt t SON, 140 Wiird afreeL RKCEIVED BY MINER a CO, No A v irnttiineßj street. JupwCiM. Knight, hi. 18. .iti, foufo account of his overreachlngVAtf: brcbarlea Lever ■author of O'Malley, Ac 4 prise fifl siiliie Fesh on and Famine: bjr\Br*. Ann B. Stephens; com plete in ene volume, of 435 pages; dotbrs£ 1 TbeMaster's Uooae; atalet^SonthernUfa; SL2S. Aubrey: by Mrs. Marsh, author rtf Emily Wvndham Castle Aron, tc* M cents. - The Andcol Kfyptians; an account of their manners and customs; iUuatrated,with 506 wood ents'; $2. Chambers’Journal, for July. The Iron Cousin, or Mutual Influence: by Mary Cowdea dark; $1,20. For sale by H. MINER A CO., • No. SI SmitbflflJ street MCCORD’S COMPOUNDFAMILY SOAP-aw boxe.* foi [3y171 HENRY n. COLLINS. T.'ViGe—s bbls this aay rvceived by JCi Jjl7 IIBNRY H. COLLINS. LINSRBD OlL—s bbb received tuil for sale tij l7*l BBNKY U. COLLINS. CIIE iaJE—3OO boxes extra Cream Cheese for sale by JJL HENRY 11. COLLINS. IjHcll—ld*? LfbbL White Fish; ~ X- 19 btiL - do; 64 hf bbla Trout; 11 bbis \io; 10 hf bMa Hrkerel ; for rale by JJ 1 ' ' HENRY n. COLLINS. •T AltU— No. 1, in krg*, for rale by . GOTLIIC CHIMNEY TOPS—SOU of various patterns, fox fj/IT] HENRY IL CQLUX& IN TliK MATTER OF THE EXTENSION oP'iiANccCh Sl’ltECT, In'Clty of Pjaaburgh. No. 78 of October Term, 1854. July 12tb, ISs4.—The Tlewera appointed by tbo Court, in tba abo>« case, to riew the ground oyer which it was pro pose! to extend said street, being of the opinion that the proposed increase of width ot ««ld street is expedient, and baring a*c«r!aiued and determined the damage likely to bt done to prrrate property by aaid extension. Notice, iu pur suanoe ot' the directions of the Act of Assembly, U hereby Siven to all persons interested in defraying the expand thereof, tbafsaid riewera will meet to discharge the further duties of their appointment, at tha E£UUY HOCSK, In the City of Pittsburgh, on WEDNESDAY, August 2, IBM, at 2 o’clock, P. M, ot sail day. BODY PATTERSON, THOMAS STSSL. C.X. MAGAS, JAB. W. TTOOPWELL, R. E. APGOWBN, 6. H. KIXR. View«n>. Dlvldead Jfottoe, Pimscaoß, July 13,1854. r TITE President and Director* of the MOKOAGAHELA X NAVIGATION COMPANY* have tM« day declared a Dividend of two hollas* a*x> nrrr can per share, being five per cent, on the Capital Stock, oat of toe profit* of the past six months, payable to the Stockholders, or their legal > epresentatlres, on or before the 20th iuL, at the office ot the Treasurer of the Company, Novelty Work*, corner ©I Grant and first streets, Pittsburgh. , , _ W. B. COPELAND, jyls:t3oth Treasurer Horn. Nar. Company. 0“' --- DQLLAK. +KD AURK, foi _ go<xl land situate cm the waters of Big TlshiegOrte* Vft. Several tract* of 1000 utm each, will be K>ld in IoU to salt purchaser*, at the above price; also, some at $3 pei acre. About 1000 acre* on fish Creekr, within from 2to •* milee of the Railroad, at $6 per acre. Also, 100 aeree about lu miles from Moandsvllle, and 6 from the river, at $lO per acre. Good lands, good iltln, and ea<y terms For foil particular* call an, or address by mall, post paid, 8. CDTHBKKT & 80N, Jjl* Real Haute Agent*, 140 Third, et. BUOtta.—Fashion tad Famine: by Mr*. Ann i. XI Stephens. Welter Warren, or the Adventurer of the Northern Wilds woman’s Lore; a tape swy of the Hart: by Eugene Sae. Prank Leslie’s Ladies’ Gaaette, far Jnlj. RuickerhockeT Msgsslae, ** The New York Journal, ** Gleason's Pictorial, and all the eastern literary Paper*, bare been received at . . PAUL KLEINER'S Ltteeary Depot, Jfla Fifth street, opposhe the Theatre. nn a. ancpiutko l uukax «nd Famine: by Ann 8. Stephens; eomplete in 1 volume; price $l, Fashionable DieaipaUoo: by Metis V. Waller; 60 cents. For sale by H. MINER A CO, ifl& No. $2 Smith field street. ORTH’S CHEMICAL WHITING ITLUJLD—EquaI In bril lianey of color, floidity,aad in all respects, to Arnold’s or any other Writing Ink. la feaa severe on Meta Uta Fans; Is entirely free from eediment, end is cold at very moderate rates. Warranted to give satisfaction. For sale by , W B. HAVEN, Stationer, _ Jjl4 Market street, ooroer of Second. IVORY JSViSK-PUINrKD PICNCIiA—A few Oosen jvt re oelved and fbr sale by W. B. HAVEN, Btatfoner, jy!4 Market street, corner of Becond. PRATT'S NSW PATENT PUN HOLDER—Bailable for any else of Steel Pena. It bolds the Pen firmly, which can be removed without any difficulty, and without soiling the fingers. For tale hj W. 8 HAVEN, Stationer, Jyls Market street, corner of Second. \i AKTiN’B AQUATION TABLES—A few copies for sale ill by W. S. HAVEN, Stationer, Jyl4 corner of Market and Second sts. FOB JULYl—Just received and for sale at No. 1 15 Fifth street, near the corner of Market. Abo, all the Mags tinea for July, which are offered to the public at the itH TttahHsbfj 4y3 BU6BKLL A PRO. 1' SUMMER DRESS GOGDS.-A. A. MASON &CO ; are now receiving another supply of Sommer Drea- Qoods, comprising some very rich new etylee of figured Be regen. Silk Tissues, Ac. Abo. a large assortment of tb> moat fashionable eoktra in plain goods. je7 A VALUAHLB QRJBT MI LL of three run of stone, cans hie of turning out 60 bbls. of Fleur In 24 hours, for sale by f. CUTUBERT A SON, J*™ ' ' 140 Third street A FINK COUNTRY SEAT OFFERED FOR BALK.-H is 12 sene of Improved Land, on the MlnemUleread —a beautiful spot for Utile money. Enquire or . THOMAS WOODS, . J**« . 76 Fourth street. REAPING MACHlNES—warranted to i»yt fiTwr) iq jfi screft of What or other small grain per day, with one span of horses and driver. Forealwhy—- - _ E. K BHANHLAND, P?SO 19 Wood street ONE HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS—Frank leeUe’s Oa **tte of Parts, London and New York Fashloos, tor number has one hundred Engravings, besides a pattern for a Mantel*, dust received for sale at the cheap Book Store of W. A. QILDBNFENNEY A CO., * Jyd • . . -No. 76 Fourth street A BUILDING Lor FOit SALE—Of 24 feet front on Cook street by 156 to OUT street; price $400; terms easy. Also, for sale, a «aun Farm, near the city, of 23W acre*; 12 acne in Coal; with a Frame House and other improve ments. Apply to 8. CUTHBXBT A SON, JylS 140 Third street A GOOD DWELLING HOUSE, ot 11 rooms, wdl finished end in good order; situated on Hand street For sale by B. CDTHpKRT A SON, jylS . 140 Third street TO LET—The second story room, large and convenient well lighted, and good front entrance, of No. 140 Third street, poueesion given immediately. Apply to 8. CUTHBKRT A SON, jy!3 140 Third street. ANARY CAGES.—O do* fancy Bin! Cages, new styles: pilcefrom 75 cents to $6; for sale at 47 Fifth street jy!2 ; JAMES WARDRQP. CHEAP PRESERVING BDuAKK— “ White Soft Crashed at 8 and 9 cents per fo: N. 0. Sugar, 20 foe for $1; for sale by i" 2 * [ W. A. M’CLURG. ClUxema* Imuranee Company, TWENTY-TWO SHARES of the Stock of this Company, for sale by WILLIAM A. HILL A 00., j„gk3tdew -64 Wood street QQ ACHES OF LAND FOR. SALK—With a small Frame House 12 acres in coal, within 6 miles of the dty. jjll 8. CUTgBKRT A SON, IAO Third »i IJ'OR SALE—A beautiful location or site for a Bolling Mill, Glass Works or Foundry, situate in Temper an oe ville, Allegheny county, Pa. fbr terms and price anqufre of Mr, J. Howard, Fourth street, or JAMES G RICHEY. je2& Reel Estate Agent CHEESE— 24 boxa prime Oberne. just rvemved and fbr sale by ]jy4] SMITH A BINOLAIR. ■ V--: TtV--. K_ : < , -’’l' r ->. ,'vt > . *«V? % 'V'* r - , *#. ,lT V * > '?■ r .< " • v-V ' iSuSEMEsirs. titm ‘ JOSEPH c. POSTS* ..LaminSuuß PEICD OP ADHIBSION : utd PMwitti .Me I s«xmd Tfar «. g<W»Bom,hri..„._s»jio- Bemfcr Mfc»»aino t l«je. Prirmto boxee, axaaU. 6,00 J • l *»-P«f»iii»ct | riD S , M t , 1 riUb«tlnrt«ll»Jo«rtl certificate. . _____ ■ ■ iVDoon.open at 7>< tfcloeJt at 8 o'clock. * jgr idjht brt Cowdlesm and TpealUd, Ito. UHAREW HOWiED/ This ErcirtPf, ~3n\j Ifch, the perfcrma&eet win commence with' the new. drunk Of /WWSTMBS^tt. Matthew W. MeFariand.' . Lean Leem, (with «mg« 1 >~;. t ~..llra. C. Howard. X i K. Wildtpaw.; To condodc with the drama of • TM WtTßt'fiT fgl IfiHintf " ■'?r. Iradore 8. JL By m. Mart00—.......... 0 ._..,.. w ....‘..5~w.Mr«.C. HowariL (In which aha will ring •* My Normandy,” and IttmGpok'a celebrated long ** The Old • •. .. TWELtE TEASS PBACTICEI I Lm Y. CLARK : BILL POSTER ABO DISTRIBUTER, COICS2TB, Kx&umon AHO LXCTtmXS. A“n^s£SS* , ra^£?^s:SsSfiS attention. .- ,r - ; r Eefer to this officer tb»llotd»*i4MfbriaBtbm.’ ' r . cutccs *sn> attendedlu~ '■ CIABOO'6 HALL,X***B«**y WillcWshaUj) finrtA ttreet. / near SmiiMfidd.cxn be obtained for Partin, yortiralf'. Concern, l*»itol*c Meetings. Ao. ■ Also,' Cargos GodUen an j Sax llorn Band can be foupft hi: nadineas st ell times, 1 y applying to WSu at the CqrrtalPakc'- Ekagusrrean Bofcms of B. M. Cargs 1 Co'., Pohith street, or • l the Ball. surSl KOTICE .To tlie Cretttora apoiLthe Main Liaeaf Psblle : r |'IIE GBSDQOB& ; uppq the Mate Use of the Pnbtis JL hereby notited, that portoaei to -an act, entitled “An Act to provide fcr tba ordinary expan ses of Government, tbe repairs of the public Canals and Railroads and .other-general.and ipedeJ. appropriations,” approved the;9ih dsyofllajiJ&M, thaOaomiigtottSEi ap pointed to examine all efeftn* forMOITV’B POWER snt) - RKPAIBS, bearing date prior toiha Ist day of December.-’ 1358. will meet at the following places and periods, for the 5 of the dotfeis iiUigued them, vis: • > J HclHdaysborgen..... —..——-Monday, duly in. " “ -...Thursday, ** 13. JenrwtOWn, “ »« it. MatnvUK « “ 21. « -Thursday, “ 37. nuMfapkm, _ „.„Thutri.-,,A, 5 .X licwlstoifp, ‘ * •«* 7 liillerstbwa,- u ..-Thursday, “ io. Harrisbrirg, . “ Alooday. “ 14. Ooinmbia, « .—Thursday, “ 17. Parbiborg, “ ———Monday, “ H. • Philadelphia, “ Thtttsdsy, “- at iyiatgth THOMAS K. MAQUIRti, Secretary. LU.xU WOKTH’b LABIJOT tfWHttT WlNE—Very whole some; an excellent artiela for atteraßteartal inrpnaiii. for sale by D. PICKJnSBIt; •ftld- - ..... : 13T Liberty «fA C2_tstUlAi«, Jfreoefe, port, Madeira and Amerioan Wince, X fox sale cheap by D.nCKKKBIf, . Jyl3 r , 137 Liberty at rLXPAJfynsS, Whisky, foeedi Mustard, Havana Bagars, JZy handj et the lowest prices. W • >• ~ D. FICSKieRg. AMD FU&K CLARET— Aaexe«n«Bt *ntel#tor / rommcr by iyia »*T CttJUEaa-Imported'dirtet fnmdwitasr land, for mle cheap by w* -,:- . • a ncKDgis. EXTRACTa FOR TUB iuiim ; hate thisday:>uodVßda:large amortaeatuf Borin’a aoeßxiraott, among which art Ms celebrated Oriental -Drop&seld to bf the finest perfumery in the world. *»-», i hU celebrated Extracts of Upper Ten, Joctor-Clgh,*e,gc. Those wfehlog fine extract* can always p'roearatbemat Jos. Fuanso’s, jyli - corner oftha Diamond and Market rt. liTXTKaUI OF VANil<i<Ar*l grots of ttlulninfj £i flarcring extracts of Tan Ills, receited by JrH- JOS. FLOHSQ \EAGIC.POUaHI3ti POWSKit—One of the bwtartkOM iTI now in sse for polishing fins brass, Ac; 1 gross re* cuired by {j/131 JOS. FLEMIKQ. bOAP—An excellent Soap for the toilet; JL r. gross reared by fjyta] JOB. FLEMING. J \f ORAh’tS INVIGORATING CORDIaL—o doa raoetraii -i -m by .[-jyU] JOS. FLEMING. j BUWBfi— lfcu tons Lake Champlain; . „ .50 “ Juniate,iGaploxgeJfbraalaby . jyt2 : king a moorhbap. IG lttON—lwJ tons Forge, Anthracite;., 100 “ Foundry, Coke; for sale by jjl3 • KtXQ k MOORHEAD. DIL CO Aiill.NOd’jrogK*-American editfcfr 71 crate per toLi new Apply’ by express. Church Before the Flood. Scripture Readings onGeneal*. The Tent-and the Altar. Lectures on Miracles and Parables, or Foreshadows.’ Pruphectie Studies on Daniel. . Lectures on the Apocalypse; Ist and 2d seriea. .? Vetoes of the Day, Deed and Night. Benedictions.. . The KasUsh edition of the abore also on hand, at £1 per roL; former prices $2 and $2,30. For sate at . Book Store, J* w . 65 Market street, near Fonrth. HKXBY n. COLLCfS. \TEW aX .hXPiUCiS, XX MAVISON'S BOOK lx STORE, C 5 Market street, near Fourth. The Pilgrims of Waftngham, a Ule of the Middle Am • ■>y Agoes UiUa, Lakes, and Forest Streams. TraTehi in Armenia, Russia, Turkey, ami Persia: br .urson.: # Owi Creek Letters. , Menifee on Lords Prayer. Christmas. Holidays is Rome: by Kip. jyi» |V* t'llUmCKi*.—W Wrwiusiorr.conwOfM*rke»and L Fourth street is opening another lot of those Terr a ”irk* p V 1“ PitciwM, for fcmUr •a those then m any other Pitcher, and. they are of a nod »Kern -for constant .use as nil Masons. Jtrei? fanlly. nardiog boose, sad hotel, shooid be supplied with them; ,irke so. Call and examine them at 67 Market at. jy|o WANTKD-j-A rituation, by a Young Man, as HooST- or Salesman. Apply at ' * FRANCISCUS’ Agency Office, jylO__ . 66 Fifth st. near Bat Office. . paper—Assorted ooiot*,for Confectioner's use, at low prkxs, by j. & DAVISON, iJ™ GS Market-ft. r AKIJ—6 kegs No. 1 for eaie by J jylo HENRY n. COLLINS. I > ACON—SOB Bacon Bides for sale by O JvlQ HENRY H. OOr.T.tvra C'UitLisB —aw boxes prime cutting, for sale by ' J JfM HENRY H. COLLINS. by i" *- HENRY H. OOLUKS. PIU IKON— 6O tona-Ko. 1 Anthracite 10* No. 2 do: „ 100 «• No. 3 do; Good brandy for Bale by WSI. BINGHAM k CO — y yS - Canal Bufs. }r\l | BBLS HO. 2 Ko. 1 BilHmtw Hffring; for ml« fat -J* 8 - GBP. MNQBAM A CO. BlKi> SEKD—ICK) lbs for feeding daring the hot mason for sale at 47 fifth street, b j j? s ; JAMK3 WA&DRQB. UBfiK WAfittlMhit thatia yonngaad *>»aithy. \\ Apply »t V MtAJfCISCCff Agency .«* No. o 3 fifth street, near Rat pace. sttaatten for a farm Hand? tjwn«»wm. who has been raised to the bostnesa. Appfriit _ JKASCXSCW AgeneyO«e*, jy. B . No. 06 Fifth street, near P«tOfrce. R~OJM. TO —ln the neighborhood of thaP^Qf. flee; suitablefor a store ok an oOee. Amt* at TR&NGIBCUB' AgwOflßie. No. 66 fifth street, mar fr-t Ofiee. > D n^i? J t 6uV ’f <«*—# **** at the pnreTSSS O OUre Oil, for table nee, received this day These fa want of a very excellent artlele cu procureSßt . _ JOS. PLSUISS’fL J? 7 «>rner of the Diamond and Mark* trt u *«* OTL-*y irthebeware tidjurf the kind now in oee. Those using Ucd Liver ii* would do well to rive this %triel, and beconrinoed of ts superiority over £ others; Odea received by 137 Joa. Fleming. “* rrnb ■wpplyof OmtfMOS ebrated Hooey Soap; Low** Old Brown Wind**, and * of other kinds, received by * \ ilt • JOS. FLEMING^ BB AfKS—A large lot ofexcfcUent Shonhw O braow received by [jj7l JO& FLEMrxQ ST 1 ” ""fist- 1 «-■ "■ntreasa* nUBH Moaa-IQQ Me, very superior, revived this tort} L J> 7 • joa. imroa. VkB. OaHBONATM BODA—I6.OOO As on band end for O.sole by FLEMING 8808, . Dbwwpi to J. Kidd AcL ■u* No. ao Wood street. • 'LOVhd—looo fits oa hand and for sate oy •- j JfT FLBMINQ BEOS. PAN IbH wmmtg-iO bbls on hand and for Hi, try j}7 - » FLEMING BBQfc \XT AKANTED PPKK Ulb ORIGAN SM—&Q ftw a,: >T and for sale by fjy7i FLEMING BBOfl. » faBFINEDTSALTPISTIUi—aoUHbeon , 0 -l for cafe It by J. fjy7j ' FI«gMINQ BROS. INK BOOT—I6OO fo* on hand and ibr aalaby ii! FLEMING 8808. EMKKV— 2000 fos, assorted noiabera. on hand fa-. sale by £jyT] . FUffIHQ BBQ^ A atthe FUIs °f Pish Creek,.Ta- with 100 acres of land, for sale by S. COTHHERX A BON Jll 140 Third street. tCtUIiANOB.— Tea acres of land. with a «wwi i»JStCI f u vs/CtsSSed w Property. 8. CCTIIBKBT A PON,^^ -ill 140 Third street NEGOTIATED, Bents Colieeted, and BuioM* iuirdeSS* VncmA * UQwnl Agency Offle^ldO hPHANb’ COOHT BALK Of BUILDINQ the Property of David Oner, dnreaead iltiated in tha- Kighth Ward of this efty—tenting on Pennsylvank ave ooe, forbes street, Loeast street. Yfekxay Blnff ' •hreew—WHl be sold on the prraLJses, os SATURDAY, the 29th day of July, at 2 p' M. Terms to aceoauuodate pnrehasen. Partfenlari known at sale. JEDHOND fitUß,) jvfotd SOPHIA Gttwwn, |Adtara. pKlukh iutmjcJtt*—frank Lealis’e LadW Qendta.ior .t Joly, j oat received and fa sals at 99 cents per cony Also, a few copies left of Harper, Pataam, Orahasr. Godev* and the Knickerbocker,ibr July; all for —us than can bo bad elsewhsv— notwtih«t««^ n „ weather. Bemsmber, the plaoe is 87 Wood stneL & BAMUBL a LAUiryCT hALK -A. A. MASON A CO. will ofler v, thelr immenje stock of Kmhroidariea em whit* at from 25 to 37K per oent less than prirev Jyd Waw i*.t»-A pwenaaerfor the handsomest Moose end Groands on Troy Hill—it is a home. Bnqntreof . ~ THOMAS WOODS, l 6 ?* 74 Pbnrth street. CttIUXCK hITKS FuK OOUNTKY BKhIDSBOf 8 —five / acres of ground in a heaatifol location, sitnate at Boor Mile Kuo, at $125 per acre. Also, 5 seres at $2OO. and Q aeres at $350 per acre. A good reed (plank) to above tron. erty, and pleasant sitnatton for raeideaoM. Xxaintne for yourselves, S. CUTHBES? « oo« l4O Third wlreet. . a * a j kips uf *Sa ii • latest and most desirable styles of Dry Goods wilt fa*, opened <m tb« 29th,-80tb and 31st of May. m.v27 AhfAit kurt JULY.—Harper’s fr r 'iT,>y just reodVM and for sals by 8. s7 Wood streeL li> QlXJVJ^—bafon*a black ann itw Also, Ud finished Bißr Gloves, at j«24 TRANK VAN GOSDXK'S, - , v ~ : f' r C‘* #£ ft 5 "V. - ¥ ’ll * V< *: ' i,'*■ ' ■ '-/oM£?t>" . ; .^ivJgfsfi '•*■ v rye , '/-«!' 4^ ■■ ■?■' «- * * -s' -» ' -■ -•- H. 4 „*• -. *‘ ',- . : • * '■ i *L- ,i ' # _^^Ko ; <*r* »■ * » D. nCKETSKH. J*.****/’’"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers