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V u - y ' w* 7 •?*',•* j*? r,l*‘ *« >».}. ■*' :*. i'- .r- =sto -Hl' *«t ’•■ > .■■ ~ , ; «■'?. f **•.-» • -"- :>.- -■" ' - ■■'"•■■ - •■■> '"jVit -■•';■>■:*:; •=* .- ■ -h> /. - 1 ■~ ’ t >•*■.. ’-■•-.■■ '■■ V . • . %V‘ ■•;‘,-. i -"i,i,>t.' ■ V : y.;v : .w■;.. ■■:■ -.TV , w v.-:; ; c ' •’ --" '•■ ‘ f ‘‘v4?l ’■' 'fit* V* r- i »c-t s. *■ t W, ... ■ -'i JT V ... . . .4 L. ' •• \r • ' ' - fcJ'Ll: * ,*. • * 1 a t-* V v 'f'lf* U ■ i * '■ * •*’ 1 : -'a‘ •' V. f *y-**:\ ’* *• «•; ■» > *r ..s 5 ,* w* v- ;• t*:-. ■ M- v ’i ; ~ . V * ». It '.- * **%;■-[ o *;.**;;» Diiltj Jttoraing OFFICIAL PAPER OF TEE CITY. PITTSBURGH: SATURDAY MORNING: Reading Blatter will fee found on «ach Page of ibis Paper. M. PETTING ILL * CO., Jfiiotpqpar Advertising the Agents for the Pittsburgh Dally and Weekly Poit t and- aio authorised to rocolre AnviSTisorcirrj and Sjjbscbiptiohb for us at- the same rates as required at this v office. Their receipts are regarded os payments. Their -offices are at New Yoek, 122 Nassau street, Boston, 10-State street. MORNING POST JOB OFFICE. We would call the attention of MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS MEN .to the fact that we have Just received from Philadelphia a number of fonts of new Job Type, and are now prepared to fill orders £r Cards, Circulars, BUI Heads, Paper Books, Posters, and ’Programmes for exhibi tions. All orders will bo promptly filled. Oar Weekly of to-day contains an unusual amount of interesting news and reading matter. “Living in the Country;** the Ojtond Confcr enoe: the Beport of the Officers of the Pittsburgh and Steubenville Railroad Company, and various other matters of interest will bo fonnd on the first page. On the second page are- editorials that ire want our friends to record; a letter from Minnesota, and three or more columns of nows items. On the third page is fonnd looal intelligence of interest, telegraphio and foreign xttws, : and commercial and market reports got up with great oare. On the fourth page are ed* itoriala, numerous news items, city intelligence, &e. The Pozt shall not be beat in the West, as a reliable and well filled newspaper. Call and get'one of our weeklies of to-day, and judge its merits. > RAILROADS OF THE WORLD—KOS SUTH’S ADVICE. .TVs don't like to boast too much about the enterprise and wealth of our country ; but the simple statement of one faot is in itself a boast. There are more miles of finished and working railroads in this country than in all the other countries of the globe together! ! That is a faot, surprising as it may at first appear to tho admirers cf the wealth and civilization of £o ropean States. And we have now more new railroads prqjeoted, and in process of oonstrno tion -in this country than in all other countries together. In railroads, then, wo beat all the rest of the world combined. Another faot is worthy of notice. In all oth er countries except England the railroads are built by.the governments, and owned by thorn. In thiscountry private enterprise, and the asso ciated wealth of companies, build the railroads, with very little help from tho national or State governments. We have now finished and in operation about 17,01)0 miles of railway, while in all other nations there uro loss than 10,000. Franco, with thir ty-six millions of people, has but a little over two thousand miles of railway. Germany, with orty millions of people, has but 'six thousand sand miles; Great Britain, seven thousand miles; Russia but about five hundred miles. Cuba has three hundred and sixty miles; while old Spain has but sixty miles. Altogether the foreign railways do not moaßuro over sixteen thousand miles, being a thousand less than in this;conntry alone. Kossuth undertakes to sneer at this country for its determined neutrality ; and its refusal to become Involved in the politics and the wars of Europe. He Bays America has lost character and power by this policy ; and has no national position among the great powers of earth. But if Kossuth will measure the railroads of this country as faithfully as he measured our hospi tality, he might possibly discover that a nation can be great and prosperous without fighting for a Turkish despotism or an English aristocracy. If he will count our Bhips, as he did our dollars, he will find we have nearly as many os all the other nations together, England nlono oxcopted. If he has as much sense S 9 poetry in his menta' constitution he could easily discover that we need no wars to give us national character ; and no European alliances and battles and victories to make this country 11 a power on earth.” Kossuth evidently thinks that the people of the United States should stop building railroads, and plunge causelessly in the present great war in Europe, in order to gain “a position among the nations.” Yet that war has already cost more money than would be required to build our groat continental railroad connecting tho Atlan tic and Paoifio coasts. And Lord Palmerßton proposes now to raise a loan of $120,000,000 to meet the expenses of the next campaign. That sum alone would build and equip the Pacifio road. Yet with all this enormous'expense no satisfactory results ore yet obtained, and none will bo probably for the next twelve months. A | quarter of a million lives have been Baoraficod, and hundreds of millions cf money expended, and both parties would gladly accept peace on any terms that would save their honor. Tho ad vice of the disappointed Hungarian to the Ameri cans is sheer folly, and not likely to do any harm. The cation that has more railroads than all the other nations of the world together, and more ships than all the other cations except one, and more food to sell than any other nation, and cot ton to supply to all the eotton manufactories of Eirope.jis not likely to be without "a position among the nations,” or fail to be “apowerfon earth ” The war in Europe will check the building of railroads there; while tho prospect is that with us railroad building will be urged forward faster than ever; until, by 1860, we shall have 80,000 miles of railway in operation; being nearly doable the number of miles of each roads now existing in Europe. Political writers and philosophers say that one of the sorest indications of the prosperity ol any nation, and of its advancement in arts, civ ilization and intelligence, is an’excellent system and condition of pablio highways. Judging by this standard the United States will soon sur- pass all other natione. In 1860 itß 30,000 miles of railway, and moro than 80,000 miles of inland Lake and river navigation, will supply all parts of tho conntry with means of speedy and aheap looomotioa ; with roiiteß to the best markets ,- and with sources of intelligence abundant and universally diffused. The efforts of jealous mon- archies to cheok the oareer of Booh a nation are as idle as the advice of KoSsnth. Should the European war oontinue for seven yeaiß wo ehall have twico the number of milea of railway of all Europe combined, and mace shipping than any other nation. Wo shall be exempt from na- tional debt, while the government of Enrope will be burdened with debtß beyond all possible means of payment for all time to come. We need plunge into no needless wars to gain a posi tion among euoh bankrupt governments. Let ns build railroads and ships and oities, and extend fruitful farms over our wide western domains, while Europe wages n bloody war, and fills nil its nations with mourning; its hospitals with maimed and crippled soldiers; and destroys all the elements of pablio prosperity. It is cheaper and better to build a railroad tbaa to win a battle; and we have wide and rich province;! to subdue peacefully by the axes, the ■pa les and the ploughs of tho pioneer settlers; seek no glory or political position by arms or foreign alliances. Bsvoldtzohabt Soi-dieb Gone, —Mr. M. Davis, a soldier of the war of independence, died at his reßidenoe in St. Clairsville, Ohio, on tho ISth Inst, at the age of 95 years. Martin Van Buren, formerly President of the United States, has arrived in Paris, from Italy. « - **►•••**£ r. rc*;' Ait- vi- \ ' " -*•*> : v '.•••. vm*w :.’■•*■, • -a r -J . ••• r. ' .'"* T ’ » . -.-'i-*—'Y- «-fU:, .. ■s" •• *. 'J" .1 :• V*' .. .. .i <5 -.f. ■ (> :MARCH 17. OUR WEEKLI, f ‘f? *•*'•' <'r: ■ ‘‘sv *\ . . THE NEW?. By the last steamer we learn that Hon. John Y. Mason Is recovering his health rapidly. Joseph Hume, the veteran reformer, died 20lh February, at his estate of Darnley Hall, Norfolk. Ho was born at Montrose, Sootland, In January 17/<, and was consequently seventy-nine years of age. . • . Three men, named ‘Keefer, Madden and Ro mine, have been , sentenced to be hnng, at Fort Wayne, Indiana, for tho murder of a Mr. Dun bar, The'two former are to bo executed on the 27th April, and the latter on the 15th June. In the Now York Councils on Wednesday night a resolution was adopted offering a rewarj of $5,000 for the arrest of Louis Baker, the mur der of Bill Poole. Tho New Yorkers seem de termined to make a great fusß over the notorious rowdy and pugiiißt. The California Chronicle upon striking a bal ance in its homicide calendar for 1854, concludes that one person of every six hundrod in Califor nia will be killed by his neighbor in 1865—that in ono-half tho cases the weapons will be revol vers, in one-fourth knives, and in the remaining fourth guns and miscellaneous weapons. The prospeot so mathematically set fourth, must bo a comfortable one to CaUfornians. The bombardment of Sebastopol was to begin as soon as all the guns weto plooed and the am munition ready. It is said that the English lines alone will fire away 420 tons of shot in twelve hours and the French lines nearly 800 tons; so that any one may calculate tho amount required for an incessant bombardment of fifty or sixty hours. The English have already about 1400 tons of Bhot and shell at camp, and when about 600 tons more are added to that, it was expected that they commenoe firing. John G. Brcßliu, Esq., Ohio State Treasurer, and Hon. F. W. Green, clerk of the H. S. Cirouit Court for Northern Ohio, had a narrow escape from drowning on Monday last, while crossing a stream called Big Belly, about twelve miles south of Columbus. They were in a two-horse vehicle, and tho stream having risen rapidly they soon found themselves hurriedly floating with the eurrent. They both jumped out and swam ashore, but wore so exhausted and chilled that it was with Ihe greatest difficulty they could crawl out after they had reached the bank. One of the horses was drowned: the other, with the vehicle, was reoovered. A Fugitive from Labor A fugitive elove case, as it is termed, occurred io Columbus, Ohio, on Monday last. It appears a colorod girl named Bosetta Armstead, who was the slave of a Kentucky clergyman, was taken before the Probato Judgo, and on de claring her wish to bo free, she was discharged. From the Slad Journal wo learn that she origi nally belonged to John Tyler, cx President of tho United States. Mr. Tyler gave her to his daughter ; tho wife of the Rev. Dr. Dennison, an Episcopal clergyman, living in Lonisviilo, Ky’ A short time since, Mrs. Dennison died in Louis ville, leaving a young babe ; and Mr. Dennison requested a relative of tho family, Mr. Miller, then on a visit to Kentucky, and who was about to return to Virginia, to take charge of tho girl Rosetta, whom he intended as a nurse of his little girl. The Doctor ncoord.ngly started with tho girl In his charge, bnt the state of the Ohio River made it necos-ary for him to take tho railroad.’ He reached hero on Saturday, bat was compelled to lie over. Tho new soon spread through onr city that a slave was in onr midst, and the Rev. Wm. B. Ferguson, a colored Baptist minister, made complaint before tho Judge of Probate’ and the sheriff was dispatched at 12 o’clock on Saturday night, to take charge cf tbegirl. Mr. Galloway, Mr. Carrington, and Mr. Taylor were employed as the counsel of tho girl, and Mr Heath Ware, in behalf of tho ownor. Dr.. Miller staled to the Court his agenoy in tho case, and asked as a favor that the oase might ho over until the 14th inet, at which time Mr. Dennison could reach hero, and he could take such measures as he might deem advisable. But the girl declaring that she desired to remain iu freedom, in Ohio, and the legal question as to her rights being eouceded, she was, as a minor, permitted to choose a guardian. L. Q. Va"n Slyke, of this oily, was seleoted, who gave bonds and took charge of her person, to await the trial. Our Present State Treasurer. Joseph Baily, State Treasurer, has writton a letter in which ho says: “ 1 ha,B Deri - r received one cent Trom any individual or corporation, during my term t f office, eicrpt the salary al lowed me by law. My whole time has been unremittingly employed In the service of my deparunenq In collating long standing claims, and urging dellr,punts to meet their engagement*, and In paying the money received to the cred" itors of the Commonwealth. I haTe thus been enabled to pay off the largest appropriation bill ever parsed by the Legislature Of Pennsylvania, from the ordinary resources of the Treasury alone—lnstead of Hoarding iho public mo* ney in banks, and speculating iheroon, as charged. The la' borers on (ho public works, instead of laying out of their wages for months, are now paid promptly at the expiration of each month. Tin whole of ttem have been paid to the first day cf March, instant. Icm not aware that this ayg. tem wax ever adopted by the Treasury before I assumed the duties of the office.” The abovo wdb called forth by the appoint ment of a committee in the Honso to investigate certain alleged illegalities In the Treasury De partment. Ho says further thero is no aot of his, while State Troaenrer, ho would dread being made public. Carious History or a 81,000 Note I { From tho Baltimore Patriot ] We understand that the facta elicited in refer ence to this matter, are anch as to preclude the supposition that the old oolored woman, who otaims to have found ond passed the bill to Mr Cobb, has any right to it whatever. Mr. Ro gers, who, when a boy, passed the bill to Mr. C in payment of groceries that ho bought for his mother, in his testimony before tho Committee of Claims of the City Council, corroborated Mr. Cobb’s statement, repeatedly made. He stated that the bill was passed to his mother, a milliner in payment for a bonnet; that, for the purpose of getting the bill changed, Mrs. Rogers sent her son to Mr. Cobb’a for some groceries* that I Mr. C. retained the bill, remarking that it was of tho denomination of $l,OOO, and that there jvas Some mistake or something wrong about it • that his mother and the oolored girl (a mulatto i returned with him to Mr. Cobb’s; that the girl was quite young, and did not, he thought % z . oeed 22 yearß of age. Mr. Cobb testified’that when he questioned the girl as to where she ob tained the bill, her manner was exceedingly con fneod; that she soon after left the store, and that he has not seen her since. Mr. Cobb it will be recollected, advertised the lost note’ in Bo7eral papers,fbut no claimant presenting him eelf, ho deposited it with tho Register of the City, in whose custody it has been for the last 17 years. It has recently been claimed by an old black woman, (now abont seventy years of a B®») who alleges that she found it in the street and that she, herself, passed it to Mr. Cobb, in’ payment of sorao grooeries. This olaim having been proved nntenable, the Committee of Claims we learn, will recommend to the Counoile the keeping of the note in the ouatody of the oity until the real owner substantiates his olaim to tho same. It may be as well to remark here that, some years sinoe, Mrs. Rogers instituted a suit against Mr. Cobb to recover the amount but she failed therein to establish her olaim to it' and, consequently, the Committee of Claims oi the Councils do not regard her as its legal owner They have a giantess in Maine. She is seven feet, six inches in height. The Portland Argus tolls the following anecdote of her: 11 While she was passing the kitchen of a farm house one day, with a large pan of milk in each hand, her hair caught upon a hook which projected two or three inohes from the ceiling, and held her fast. She could neither stoop to set the pans down, nor raise her hands to disengage her hair, and was compelled thus to remain, until her ones brought others to her Bssistanoe.” Advices from St. Petersburg, of the 17th an nounce the war is formally declared against Sardinia. Notice is given to Sardinian ships to leave the Russian ports. The has been withdrawn from the Sardinian consuls and the Russian agents at Genoa and Nice have been reoalled. The property of Sardinian oitizens is “pla'oed tinder the protection of the laws." W. H. C. Moreland, of Bonrbon oounty, sold on Saturday last, to Messrs. Arteburn & Burks of Louisville, a lot of four hundred end twen ty-five head of sheep for six dollars and twenty five cents per head; also a lot of oattle at ten dollars per hundred net, they averaging one thousand eight hundred and eighteen pounds gross. •. : ■■ p :‘.‘- '-J u - **! ■ : -' S’,. > ' * * 1 :i'»* * ,'-S v;.i . !><•»> S **"*'*' * t " 'A * . , r . , .... . Tho others became tired of wailing for the promised signal, and tho whole party entered Lhe house. They found the entry and parlors in darkness, and they groped about the house for some time without the inmates being aware of the intrusion. It was finally discovered that something was going on in tho book room on ite 8 icond floor, and timber tho forco proceeded, taking caro to place guards at tho front and rear doors. Upon entering the room referred to, it was found to be occupied by betwoen twenty-five and thirty poisons, all busily en gaged in playing cards. A Faro Bank was in full operation, and the implements of that busi ucas, hnd fifty dollars in cash, were seined by the officers. Tho party at the table worn gene rally gentlemen who occupy respectable posi tions in the city, and their oonsternation may be imagined. Some made an effort to get out of the windows, and othors made a bold dash for the doors, but at every point they wero headed oil, ami cot one escaped. Bribes ranging from ton to fifty dollars wero Treely offered to bo allowed to ran, but the offi cers wero virtuously obdurate, and the entire party was compelled to accompany the police to the Bocond Ward Station House. Each officer took a gentleman upon eaoh arm, and in that order tho march proceeded without stir or ex oitement. The visitors to the houso were fined by Alderman Enuo, and each was also required to give bail to keep the peace. They wero then discharged. The keepor of the Faro Bank was neld for farther bearing this afternoou. The house in whioh this arrest was mado is very elegantly furnished, and is quite a fashion able resort. It Booms that a supper is given there at 11 o’clock each night; those familiar with the establishment say that had the police postponed their visit until that hour, the hau would have boon twloo as heavy Field Marshal Raglan and bleat, General In contrasting the operations of the British general in the Crimea with the sucoessful move mento of General Scott in Mexico, the N. York Courier and Enquirer remarkß: When the time for action arrived, the Ameri can army was debarked, stores landed, batteries were planted within nino days after machine V era Crnz, in spite of a succession of violent ■‘northers,’’ and eight dayß afterwards General Scott despatched word to his Government that the ■■ flag of the United States floats in triumph over the walls of this city and tho oastio of San Juan do Ulloa”—the same wave-washed and battle-scarred fortress whioh in Enropo had been deemed impregnable. “To operate on tho Gulf ooast” in this style was not sufficient for General Soott. He scaled the Cordilleras, boro the eagles of his country in quick succession through the streets of Jnlapa, Perote, and Pue bla; with 8,600 men swept, resistless, through the pass to Cerro Gordo, defended by 12 600 Mexicans—with tho Bame number of men’ de feated 32,000 at Contreras and Chorubusoo— with 7,190 men stormed Chapultepeo, defended by 20,000 —with 6,000 men took the city of Merioo, occupied by an army of 35,000—and thus accomplished tho “objoots desirable to ob tain." Ho did what Lord Baglan has not done • ho did his “ work.” He did what Lord Raglan has not done ; he saved hie soldiers. Ho threw not a life away that could be saved, and applied every possible means that could secure the health and oomfort of bis men. Performing his campaign at the sickly Beason of theyear, penetrating into tho very heart of tho enemy’s country through crowded oities and over mountain acolivities he yet subjected his men to not one-tenth of the suffering and lost not one-tenth so many of them by disease as Lord Raglan has done whilo en camped within six miles of the sea. He poured ont no blood for a froitless viotory liko that of Alma; he annihilated no regiments of hie own by a fatal order liko that at Inkermann. Ho did not leave his soldiers to beeome tattered like savages, or famished like dogs. In fact there is no doubt this side of tho water that the Ameri oan Commander deserves his guerdon quite as well, to say the least, as the Britieh, and Con gress but refleots the sentiment of the people in reoognizing this truth. There is a differenoe between a trained administrator at the desk and an able General in the field ; and that is just the difference between Lord Raglan and Winfield Soott. Presidents and Governors.— Five of the Amerioan Presidents tad been Governors of States, and two had been Governors of Territo ries previous to their elevation to the Presi dency. Jefferson, Monroe and Tyler were Gov* er “°Jf of Virginia; Van Baren of New York, and Polk of Tennessee. Gen. Jaokson was Ter ritorial Governor of Florida for a Bhort time, and Gen. Harrison gained great applause daring the long time he wee Governor of the Territory of Indians. ' '-.T Kiooia BtaoLEos coins tq 'the l CRIMEA. . V- . {From the Tarts Correspondent of ihe London Economist] i „ Pams, February 22,4855 _ The Emperor’s project of going to-tfie Crimea ' is now openly avowed, though it has not been r announced officially by the Moniteur. All his i ordinary councillors have represented to him the dangers and impropriety of such an under taking, and he does not himself overlook them • ■ but he has given orders to prepare everything i for hisi departure, waiting for the heit report! , from the Crimea before taking a decisive resolu , lution. It is reported that Lord Palmerston has sent a note to the English ambassador, who has made representations in the name of England t declaring that in the abßenoe of the French f monarch it waB impossible to open tho confer onoes at Vienna, and then Lord John Rnsßell’s mission would have to be postponed. General Eiel, the same who commanded at the i taking of Bombarsund, and was sent to Sebasto pol in order to survey the Btnto of things and make a report to the Emperor, has arrived in Paris, and was received on Monday last at tho i Tuileries. His aooount is far from favorablo • and it may urge the Emperor to depart. * The general health of the army was indeed improving but there were symptoms of insubordination and discontent among them. When the Imperial Guard arrived at the camp they were to toko several of the positions which were ocoupiod by the Zouaves. But this corps mutinied, and de clared that they would not abandon thorn • that they were a choice troop, and would not suffer themselves to bo superseded by a regiment who had jußt como, and had taken no part in tho past trials and dangers of the siege. It was tho oause of tho sedition which was reported by tel egraphic despatches, and in spite of the Moniteur oontradioting these reports, it is quite true that about ten Zouaves were condemned to be shot and a certain number wore Bent to Algiers ’ Besides, there are general complaints that there is jealousy between the commanding gene rals Canrobortand Bosquet, and a want of unity in the plans of Lord Baglnn and General Canro bert. The Emperor thinks that his own pres enco is mdispeneabto to give a direction to tho operations of tho war, and to inspire the army with enthusiam at tho decisive moment of tho general assault on the fortress. An aid de camp departed on Saturday lost for Marseilles to preparo tho steamer which is to take tho Empe ror and tho troops who accompany him. C 000 soldiers of tho Imperial Guards havo received two days ago Minio rifles, and they depart on tho 27th instant. Tho departure of the Emper which was at first fixed for tho 22d inetnut and afterwards for tho 26th or 26tb, is now put off to the sth of March. Perhaps the advice whioh is given every day will at Inst prevail upon him to relinquish his project. The Emporor intends to take with him Prince Napoleon Bonaparte, tho Bon of Jerome, whoso condnot sinoo his return from tho Crimea has given him groat displeasure. He was recalled op aoconnt of his assumed ill-health, and since his arrival he was every night at balls and soirees, as if to imply that his health was not tbo true motive for his return. Tho Council of Regency has been appointed; it consists of Count do Morny, M. Troplong and M. Barooho ; but it will not bo announoed in the Monittur. They havo only full powers to act in caso of ex traordinary events. Tho Emperor’s departure is almost tho only topic of conversation in all circles, and it has superceded every other ques ' tiyn. It seems, however, that Prussia is at last inclined to sign the Boparato treaty which has been proposed by England and France. I from the Philadelphia Bulletin. lSih.i Descent upon a Gambling House—A Heavy Haul I Between 9 and 10 o'clock, last night, a party of the Second Ward police made a descent upon a gambling house in Chestnut etreot, below Tenth, and captured tho proprietor and some twenty 0«e or thirty of tho visitors to the estnb. llahment. The circumstanoos wero briefly as follows : lu the course of the evening a stran ger went to tho offico of Alderman Enue, nod made oath that a certain house on tho north side of Chestnut streot, bolow Tenth, was kept as a gemblmg house, and that he had been fleeoed of fr P ,ght P rc,ioQS at the establishment. Upon this information a warrant was ieeued and placed m the hands of Lieut. Wood, of the Se oond Ward. Lieut. Wood and Sergeants Toy and Whartnaby, with a posse of men, making in all fifteen, repaired io tho place indicated Two men were tent ahead with instructions to give a concCTted signal to those uprn the ouside when their services wero needed. These men found tho front door unfastened and went inside without hindrance. y--'. : Reported Expressly for tbe Daily Morning Post. Baliimoee, March 16. —New Orleans papers of Saturday havo been received. The Isabel arrived at Charleston; eho brings Havana and Key West dates to the 10th;; There is nothing important from Havana. The trial of those oon* oerned in tho late conspiracy is about to com mence, and throngs crowd around the oourt house all day. When the Isabel left, the pre sence of the steamors St. Lawrence and Pampero at Koy West, had given rise to fillibuster Btories, but their business there is satisfactorily explain ed. Thero are no additional arrivals, distressed vessels, or wrecks reported. At Norfolk, tho Board of Survey to examine tho Jamestown, appointed her hold to bo broken open, docked and thoroughly examined. Her orow is temporarily transferred to the Pennsyl vania. Harrisburg, March IG, —The House went into committee of the wholo on the bill to sell tho main line, whioh was debated by Messrs. Frai ley, Simpson, Strong, Smith and Smith, of Phil adelphia. At 1 o’clock tho committee roso, and the House adjourned. In the Senate the following bills were passed: Relative to the termination of tbo North Branch Canal; Supplement to Liggol’s Gap Railroad Company; Pittsburgh and CouDelsville Railroad; relating to proceedings of landlords ; purchases at sheriffs’ sales; to recover poßßession of lands demised or purchased; to ohango the time of meetings of supreme court. Fonml Guilty. Yi ashington City, March 16.— 1 n the case of tho United States vs. William F. MngraW\,for as sault aDd attempt to kill William Hope, junior editor of tho Star, the jury found a vordi'et of guilty of assault only. An application was made for a new trial, on tho ground of newly dlsoov vered important testimony. \ Washington CiTr.Maroh 16 —Tho Senate, in executive session, beforo tho oloso of Congress, passed a Resolution advising tho President to gire Denmark notice of tho termination of the stipulation for the payment of Sound dues, and it is said the notice has already been transmitted. tSj-So Family abould be without them. —We speak of ITLano’e Liver Pills, which have bocome an Indispensable Family Medlcino. The frightful symptoms which arise from a diseased Liver manifest themselves, more or les*, In every rimlly; dyspepsia, sick headache, distraction of tho menses, ague end fever, pains in the side, with dry, hacking cough, are all tho renuUsof hep ,Uc derangement and for them Dr. M'Lane's Pills are n EOT ereign remedy, Uircctioik.—Take two or three going to bed, overy second or third night. If they do not pnrgo two or three times by nest niornlng, toko one or two more. A slight tmttisrisr should inyarlobly follow their use. 1 he Liver Pill may also he used where purging Is simply necessary. As on nntl-bllions purgative, they ore inferior to none. And In doses of two or three, they give oßtonbh Ing relief to sick headache; nloo In slight derangements of Ui.* h-Jomach. P. S.—The above valuable remedy, also Dr. M’Lane's col ehr.al.Hi Vermifuge, can now be had at all respectable Drug Etorcs in thin city. I'lm-huOT sill please bo careful to ask for, anil take none but Dr. M Lnows User Dills. There are other Pill ,rmr portlue to lie User Pllln, now before the public. ’ P Also, for sale by the soio proprietors, mhlCMiw euralgla.-*Tlil>j formidable disease, which forms to bam* tbo skill of phyEiclans, yields like maffic to Carti-r'n Spanish Mixluru. Ur V Borden, formerly of the Astor House,New York, nn.l Is o proprietor of the Exchange Uotol, Richmond, Va., H one of the hundreds who hare been enred of teTero Neuralgia by Carter’s Spanish Mixture. Sines bis cure, he has recommended it to number* of others, who ware suffering with nearly erery form or dis ease, with the most wonderful success. Ho says tt is the most extraordinary medicine he has eror seen used,and tto best Hood purifiLT kno^rn. *** fl,lrerCl - t!n]oDl in another column. |mbls;lm Beaa'\t're"t I " !It ’ 111 tb " 4Ta MKSBTTISBIAS CHURCH, in YU “ D * <*<*“ >» to tpir- Middl. 11l net of pews re? erred for yoongmen. KKV’i, htOUtlß «-jU duhrer n Lrcrrat on 8r Patbi r’a Par, SATOitPAY EVENING. March 17th, at v 2 o’c “k in Z Cb“ ?1CL '’ Cira,B “‘ 1 ’ th^Ee^t’of of tht Chm\. A kmn pas. topardr mm prr;mt ciramitanau." l.cteu Jbc,m*-iabe had al the Catholic Bcod Stores, tv.M ? ‘ 7 ' I,r L‘ opposite Post Office, and al,ror B 0 1^^";‘:fre:o S ral“eL S ' r ' Ct ' Y\to A ?^£htz££- A, “ an »"*'»•*»>»■ ThH Architect; 2 voluiues; by Sloan The CarpflDttr’s Now Guide; do. Aj puton’is IMctionary cf Mechanics Do. Mechanic*' Magazine. Prurttcal Mrchanlc’s Journal. Downing’s burn! Essays. Do Country House*. Stuart’fl ArchiJeeturo. Allen’* Kurai Architecture. Field's Ciiy Jo. Kud. merits of t] u . and Bonding. Ru ilmemary do. by John Bullet*. ah” iS™,-u“ al "****• «“W»- The Uinrinrert and Machlnisfa Ai.Uiant: Q vola . , d,v Mechanic’s da \i s Mechanics and Engineers; 2 rols. Muhun s Citil Engineering, Knapp's Chemical Technology. Co■ r l r VL? , “f Baoi f ° c L P om °«''a Engineer! and Mach'!. Co.hum on Locomotive Engines. Uaupt on Bridges. Timj.letou s Mechanic’s Companion Scribner's do. do llaswuir* do. do' Henck's Field Book. Bjrne’a Pocket Companion. btmnj! on boiling; rutiled by J. n. Alexander « , , Mathematical Instruments. Borden s Formula for Construction of R Road*. Trsutwlne on Railroad Corves Sbunk do. do Mifflin do. do And numerous other practical works P ale by B. T Q MORGAN, No. 104 Wood st. Tho petition of William fieaoor, of the Fourth Ward oity of Pittsburgh, in the county aforesaid, humbly sheweth’ That your petitioner hath provided himsull accommodation of travelers and others, at his dwel* iln™!l oli m S l^ S w '^‘ aft > r esoW. ami prays that your m?hi? * Ui P leMed t to gnmt him a license to keep a dJfvhcuTJfi entertainment, and your petitioner tuta duty bound will pray. WILLIAM hrimob c , Uizcn " of 1110 tify, that the above petitioner Is of good repute for hones tv and temperance, and is well provided with house remind convenloncesfor the accommodation of strangers ™dtsSr. elcrs, and that said tavern is necessary Ilenry Kano, Uuey Durningh, Ithnniar Blasdell A. Jack °f Alexander Turner, of Indian* townshln in the coun y- aforesaid, hutnblv shewnth TKot 5* lltioner hath provided himself vfiuTnSlria^fo?tha modaUon of travelers and others, at his dwelling house in pk™°rd ll nd pray V hat Jour Honor? will bo pleased to grant him a license to keep a publio hooso of an. tortalnmont, and poHUoner £ wUl tv' «v . ~ ALEXANDER TURNER, certify cl . t, ' enß of U» township aforesaid, do enrt f J „ th 1 Ul * “ b< ’ T S P o tltioner Is of good repute for honesty and temperance, and Is well provided with house rwm and conveniences for tho accommodation of strangers and trn velcrs, ami that said tavern is necessary uick^' N EW rnY 01II£ I’APERB l ’ APERB FOR THE WEEK— Tho New York IIoraM; 44 11 Tribune; %l “ Home Journal; M 14 “ Pollen Gazette; -,, '* “ Clipper; Ballou s Pictorial; The Philadelphia Saturday Post• anJNo^plpiX^or' 0 “ lh ° O^PBook,M, g . 2 | n . drawl "« drills of roriou* »Ving *,s£Z 9 ‘° F £ ™» ‘ -mpW W» mhl7 JAMES WARDROP. J VIDKJU HUKif OJf 0 * \PA. li. K. BTOOK bo'iint at °n 0 l>°Uar. fmMTI WTLltraa * B co. , Dl ° f MerehantTSd IOsWJJu 1,‘,, k ?“£> 10 ““P 1 ' 1 ” “P °"ler. Alto. iu sowed o. to store and for sale by J. W. BUTLER A CO. W “T%f- 01es ' Bieefl, la .tore " —and for said by [mhl, j j. \y. BDTLER A CO. KKbWa f or sale by - 7 HENRY H. COLLINS. r , iiU i7, ls Ko - 1 Lard for tale by mh - 7 HENRY H. COLLINS. 'loimsu-** o lb* CoUdßii ror sale by RENKY 11. COLUNS. 3 for tale by HENRY H. 00LUN8. dozcn for Mle by hl ‘ - lIENRY H. COLLINB. ALGVERSiIED—23 bbls, prime, for sale by U mhl ' HENRY H. COLLINS. nniiiOTIIY SKJiD—6O bushels for ealeby A ° bl7 : UKNRYH. COLLINS. ]y Y P-EACiiES—£oj buhteifl, for sale by mhlB HENRY g, COLLINS. MAWTILLAB—A. A. M * HON » nr. —tifl—,y, th«lr first exhibition of Summer MantfliaZta SS grenadine, orape and «Uk, on Monday, the lOthf&t [xahlo JJ'. * + 4 r- ** i^V-’ ;hk. » t, Southern News* LEGISLATIVE. Uncle Sam and Denmark „ PLUMING BROS., Successors to J. Kidd & Co; _ CO Wood strep! HEW ADVERTISEMENTS^ w. A. GILDEJ-TENNEY 4 CO., Fifth eL, opposite the TTeatre. REMOVAL! REMOVAL ! ' _. FROM THE Ist OF NEXT APRIL, TO 53 FIFTH STREET,^ HELBBER respectfully Informs the public, that on • .tho Ist nay .of April next, he will maiorf jzis Mdsic AXD PXAKO Wi&XSOOHS tO Ho. 68 Fifth street, next door to Masonic Hall, And a few doors from the Post Offer; The New Establishment will be fitted up in the most ele gant manner, and the Pianos kept on tbs second floor, in a richly tarnished and spacious saloon. A SPEND® NEW STOCK OP GRAND PIANOS—FoId Qeand end SEMI-Grand, FULL SERPENTINE PIANOS, SERPENTINE PIANOS, LOUIS XIV. STYLE PIANOS; —AND or— ALL OTHER PLAIN STYLES OP PIANO 3; MELODEONS, SERAPHINES, etc, etc, Ison tbs way, and ths public are politely Invited to call and examine the premises, stock of Goode, etc. H. ELEDER, mhUtlml No. 101 Third st, sign of the Golden Harp. Tho Great Revolution In medicine It is accomplished I The want of centuries is supplied I In Moasa’s InviooaiTjNQ Euxm oa Cordial we have a medicine that destroys disease, without weakening ihe system; that exhilarates the spirits, without entailing sub sequent depression; that cures indigestion in all its farms end consequences, that restores tho shattered nerves to full vigor, that regulates the bowels and the liver, that canom the constitution itself to recuperate—and that in fart an swers iho purpose all stimulant!, all nervine preparations all cathartics and all ‘aleratives, without producing any of the unpleasant after offecta which flow from the use of ordi naty medicines. Tho Arabian herb which forma its basis seems to be the very thlog for which herbalists and physi cians, chemists and pharmaceutist, have rearched in all ages, and, until now, searched iu vain. Lathe sick rejoice l The Cordial is put up, highly concentrated, iu pint bot tles Price, three dollars per bottle; two for five dollars • six for twelve dollars. 0. H. RING, Proprietor, 192 Broadway, New York. •iSwMt In'dl!f! StS lhr ° Ugh ° U ‘ tha onlte“„ b °Sn^. t n S d UP y , SS 0. V. CLICKENER A CO., For sale by Dr O. 11. KEYSER, ISd by ed StotM U “ d D,aleri ‘ D Mrflllll “ throoghont the Unf i ! . mhS*d*w2w «r The Pleasure and Comfort of being wm virrm in a EDIT OF CLOTUE3, Is greatly enhanced by having them noon, and scitamx to Tas srasox. ORIUBLE has got all that Is necessary to effect that great consumma tion, both as regards fit and quality of goods. Persons wishing to experience all this, end be only moderately charged, cao do so by caliiog at 240 Lmrarr sraxsT head of Wood. P. B. Pantaloons, In particular, U ona of his ?rI liu B now RU ' foil Supple of their siltST fl ir e .fn tJ , LfAVK FUiiTBS. ,“u, all the ■He and valuable lmprovouenta—also. of their plainer and suiUble for tho«„ho requhe a cheap but good lostrmoeot. All the Plano Forleefruia ,1, * ' b ” SOW OLD PlAXo3.—Several second-hand Pianoa In trood IiEMDms 1 in 800 d nSSSSKSSgsass Agent for the .ale of “S, *“* ad obl6 I r |K) tne Honorable the Juagusof me i-nntt r>< ~ ~ Ajicg Q he^: r Se3slonflof the «f^?. l^U^ n . of i J lafftl,lena Wilhelm.lof the Filth Ward Th!f tobUrB V? county aforesaid, humbly ahewoth That your petitioner hath provided hmnif km>« . Hn» h h n “f° ,I f ntK i ali S? of ‘"“'eraand others,*herdwep ling house in the Wart aforesaid, and pray, that yonr H??™„} b ° Pl 'f s f d 10 ***** hor * B«wS ke?p a pu" is°of r:=£~?!££2 »»>»». “S' 1 °“ l ,aU tflTorD Is necessary. 8 “ Dd tra ' Th B o ‘.fk“ e N- Ur Thns. Landrf,lty.r, j D o. Bloon. n. Whiteside fm hif*7.' _ StX Cents JtlCWaril J ? IJZABETU haring left my bed and board i" T , ) ual cause, this la to caution the nuhllo •gainst harboring or trusting her, as I wlllnnv L P h„k, contracted by her after this date. pay n 0 dobUi mhl&3t* HENRY BMNCKMAN. T°BKlC?nnu » April th “ commodious sSS^ssr or rirar trad., or for manuf.cturfog purposes 11 N-SSSif^SiS^s^sa. erac,, „„„ *'*■ 0f Llftf ' or Ufe *Dd Comfort amid the sha- Ca^!?ter S! Jeremiah Chaplin. Stfui?l“ re feedings on Genesis, Exodm, St. Matthew and Benedlcttoos, or the Blessed Lire. Voices of the Day. Voices ot the Night. Voices of the Dead. b Lectures oo the Miracles sod Parables Lectures on the Sevon Chorches Minor Works, Ist and 2d Berles, ic *?“■ Watches. • 7 of MorniD 8 and Night __Mlnd of Jesus; by same author P' ,KK3BKTKIUAjrHKIIN BUOKH-TwTTT— to'day, a large assortment of Psalms Rn rt it 1033 alt Hires end styles ol binding, at d of ... BOOK STORK. 05 Market street, near Paurth. D M " or lhe ytr *t The Mysteries and Miseries of Hsn r v .t>.i 8 “ n °.l ß pMlf P I HOaM (from Dl “kw„od's Magatinp.) By Imp^ bJ Joha SaXe ' edition—enlarged and L» L Ser a “ 0 ‘ * kw * F «"‘- SMi^L^^-eßonnett. Conoltn’B New River Guide. “SfWg^" ,^BSSJoS Ita 1 tar r “ ef ,ho ou ° anj nies of the Odd l Fe“to«f ““ A ' rtul “ ll Teerifyiog Ceromo- J?or Ea leby W. A. GILDENPENNKY 4 CO., Wo. 45 Fifth street. ESF^^l^t^oNTconsr, Rich Plaid Pilfas; Colored flg\i Silks; w, l ] 1 d*?geable Silks: Kg d Cballi Berates; French Chintr Briiiiames- Splendid English Can*™ ' J D aa T d &*B&ssßsak A. A. MASON 4 CO. baßh °'* C, °j'n? r **w bj — JAMfeS WARDRDP aM m U hl*'i« 2l,_:S bushel» for sale by mhl63tß * JAMES WAHDROP. fcrar(arargS” TgaSessssssaa^. as,s w ■ ■» *■ v £*: ' -11 ■; v SPECIAL NOTICES. _. PITTSBURGH Life,, a° i Marine Insurance Company; • KABOS' 8 . STREET, MASOSIO HAltl., PITTSBURGH, PA. ; Jas. D. M’Otu, Secretary? T aALWAT > Prlsldent. connected wlthilEE f” ®018008 appertaining to or °? a- 8 Ohio and Mia- And sJpUnst Loss and Dam«e lne generally. PerUsofthoSeaandlnland^vi { rnf! the names of the donors, bnt will he glad to receive their gifts. f«MO AKnuiiD «fc WitjijiAnia, ITAHDPACTURtBa OP Chilson Furnaces, Wrought Iron Tubing, and Fitting Generally, FOB WARMING AND V.KNTILATION OF BUILDINGS. . * W; will contract for warmlntr and venttt&tinp b J “SZ h ff ° r ®”®n’ a lurnace ; ChS ? Stories, Green Houses, Court HtSeh 12 ’ orDweillnga. No.M Market ei?eot, * *' jan2s NQBTH W£BXjbfiH Mt,rt E”B« nod Judgments,** ’ in cash,’caah'Si' iiemZ:;;;;;;;;;;;;; fmhls:lm President. 6". H. I 111 3i"l"" 8 ecre ta^ ®ra““ s ' iDe a “ 4 Inland Tran T cr t<“loa riaka, taken REFERENCES. tr . „ , PIXTSBOfiOn. Curling, Robertson k Co., N. i Sons, Wm. Bagaley 4 Co., J. A. Hutchison 4 Co, D. Leocn &Co , Murphy, Tieman 4 Co. PHILADELPHIA. Wainnght, Huntington M. L. Uollowell k Co .. n . David 8. Brown A OoL ' O. A Geo. Abbott, Wood 4 Oliver, • DenckJa Caleb Cope A Oo- w eg W f Ca » »fexel A Ca, Bikers, u!?ri W H| D A K^ ey ’ gcott, Baker* Co., Harris, Hale k Co., Deul, Mliigan. k Co. w KNUX, Agent, No. 115 Water street, Pittsburgh Idy%»i J A T i ZEMS ’ lniurai ‘co Company ol IKS’ 1 BiQALET, Insures against Loss or Damage by Plre tlon^^SL,^ 180 ' tt “ 6 “° 4 I^N.Tlg.. smovoBB; William Bagaley, Hichard Floyd, James M. Cooper, gamnel 51. Kl er , BamuelEea, William Bingham, ?“ b f‘ I> “ lla P.3 r -» John B.Dil worth, leaac M. Pennock, PrandaSellera, wfff rb l“ Bh >. J - Schoonmaser, Walterßryant, William u. tfayj, John Shipton, dec2l RiS'" iri '?“ , “ ylvaala Ho.pitaiV— fution.lor’Ztat qnmi^/n";? I ™ Bl ° tt Ji3lt3 0. K, Consulting rhyelelnn—F. iEran, M. D. U»J-MONDa’y. Notes’ offered on to the Secretary, ut the store of John 11. Mcllor No ftl SS **""?"* « the Bamotlma 0 and 1 -*“?• [dixhita} J. WHITTIER, Secr^birT Q. et S. JrClarienV, No. BS Wood street. JOUIINEYMEa TAILORS sn. h,:v . GEO. W I SEE?E. Secretary Hwsdomh Lor>a£,.\'o.3o3—3l ee La every I'uesJavevenim* »°- s 7 4Bir &L. G.—You are hereby notified lo attend at your Armory, on MONDAYS* WFi»jk<£ and FRIDAYS, for drill and totWae! such W? ness *l? ay come befo *e Company. p my _ Secretary pro lera. To dinners, Gardeners anti Nurserymen- F n i™ h ' ra! ?^ <1 buahcls P° r « HO.NEDUST, fine ground • i ushl i la puro coarse ' AA C lim'vEr vn nt me J !ettn PEKTILIZBK. sssaff»*asrS Uis?#w llonedurt per acre will so nourish the I*'"f* ‘ b “‘«»g°ol effects will be realised from theflretyenr or J-OSM after, whereas the good “KTr guano are exhausted in on, fear. Those who ho““mecl tam'tr ta V? th f, h , I S hMt tel “ 3 »r the beneflts de rirea from it. It is suited to every variety of soil * m i «ii hTJ? 6 ? 1 ? 1 b J and Ueamorfrarticular! y* The patent American Fertilizer possesses essonMnl n~v pertles necessary to stimulate the growth of plants amt green vegetables, and destrom insects. As a Ss S S °nls ll n2 ’ lt “ Dtlot *» excelled. Directions furnished’ ** mhS ! »wl UStl>eaidr «- win P sol“o°n goo< f,’’ ( ° W *“ S t 0 ‘“W reX*JQSEPH P Win P TE profits! * on monoJonl J.«““»hiea,lh. n “he «-C.rri. g aa repaired iathe hart ,.v 2“ «to*ng'WpalnX^? B * “**««•*»» HnniS ftltent Brick Machine: Hopper’s Patent A eneer Plane: Troths patent Oil Globes, for Steam Enrinea • Boan'a Rock Drilling Marines; K ’ Coe s patent Drill, for Drilling Iron; CopoW B Stationary and Dorlablo Saw Milla vrawfoni’s Steam and Water Od#»oq. 5 ' T^ th rtM r °S ght bon fiailto “ wtt i * or The subscriber has b£>u MMlnt2l^ aoufa ? l arera * " Btaes,ftrtto n»;srissr Hon. Wm. F. Johnston, President A. V p p . W. Milrior Roberts, Esq., Chief Ena a* v p^t> Larimer’, tcnSt Manful! A Nicholson, tbe p 4 g — decl9 JAMES*. LEDUt, Z4«dlte & VI ANCFAITDIIKM CaAMout)^ dll9 ' ) i-Vl and Fancy Colored BD d Plain, Flint kind, of Window GiMTpia S kf S^ Bl!l 1 D « <>“'>’« •« hooso comer of Market and w*’*.. £ 81111 Bottles. Warn mbA-dly “Stand Water streets, Pittsburgh. j[j|thTpnbtoittM^Ti w.; ,lten ft“*° f our frfond »- “"4 SbaßEbuTi ?‘y of Bt y‘«- Also, our Celejtlll and Plush Capa at cost^ 0 * 1 “® tbB most fl P lecdlJ of season. J. WILSON A SON, 91 Wood street. BUILDING LOTS—Only twelve lor sale, at $2OO S. CUTHBEBT 4. 80N. " iU4 No.lWlttalk •• -:J&: theatre. PIPTff SIMM, DIRBOTLT ABOVE WOOD' J. C. FOSTER, l.e»»»e ond SUm* Boxes for. colored per50n5........ **** 46W forT 9 «SS! oriDB^ t ' wm ' „ j63* ANOTHER NEW PLAY.-sa «S-Hr. T. B. JOHNSTON in ihna urSt 0. FOSTER ana OLD BAILEY in great clSStai “ U n ®f™,5 iDAY EVENING, March 17th, IS5™ ttopctfcnn. ance willoommcnee with the * orn MAINE LIQUOR LAW. Tib. aPDtU”^a & %!, , ,” gtoo - condu^wiVh—'''“ U *“ M“ry Partington. Tom T'ptoD, NT ™’jJ- h ™O C fANO, MILLINERS. AngelinaTodd, Mrsßreisford B *I I '3r - (S-tar' open “‘To’doolc: performance commence, 7*. EisipgSßSSiSias DAVID COPPBBPIEI.D, • et ™ D S t £‘ of *6o present Uloottd Ojm p»ny—with oaerEntoitalDßiinlt*, -which win ho dnlyim popgced in the I Ilia of the day. Box Booh nog ppoig fttSr CITY HALF. CONTINNED SUCCESS «S-SANFOIID>S OPERA TROOPJB.-®* TjyVEBY EVENING UNTIL FUETHEE NOTICE. Monday Evening, March 10 th. GB&ND GOLDEN GIFTS . Will be given to the aaOlencp. See thoQifbi in n.a Doors open at 7; commoncosat 7££, Cooking Stores, . Coal and Wood Stores. Parlor Stores, Hollow Ware, • Sogar Settles. Store Kettles, W_ Mantillas. tuiTh onr '‘<« k of POII3 mads MAN TILLAS, to which wo woull call the attention of tho "mhis HAGAN * AHfi, m “ l6 91 Market atoot. Pl*All> 31LK8—Just recilired, some era PJaiii SUkjTat unusually cheap prices. A. A. MASOX * CO? “ bIS & Fifth street MOUIE ANTIQUE—A. A. MASON 4 CO. „m exhibit fcr tale, on the 14th ln»t. torn* Blub Sfolre ■unique, ■Blth a tplecdia lot of Plaid 811ka. mhlh A. MAHON & CO.Will neBday ' ,h ° 14th intt ' f 100 dolen »»» etjleSllk, * : _mbl£ /^IOSISN^API'USS— .&0 bl>la Jiomaoitea lor salts by \ f mhlS JAS. MctiATJGHLTtf. OJSANS— £> mhls D“ w! MKlgtr'"* : F«smKVu Crow, for tax*" - ...t B “?‘S 5 oO 8. J^o I n? ,B^o" e “ Urer M4OO ,M.(wteui,whorfsia 3 tor......:;:::;™" aS Tax torn Commlaßionors’ rales •‘ii XX - CAPS. : [^3 . OUB PBIEND3 AjiD Cnoxens - JsMiuHi OT ‘f 1 . IW °CmJs AH» Vicnat?-<®ft " opened a HAT and CAP STORE , J No. IG4 WOOD BTBEET * Ncii Hou is to tho First Frtsbyt/rrian from . , . , mxtn street, • ■ ffi purchased our Goods for cash, we irlll sell aa good an articte on as reasonable terms as any other hone, m the city. The public would do well to give ma examine our slock before purchasing elsewhete U d Tihll tf MORGAN A CO., — U . Ko. 164 Wood it. T o- RANT f' — . Tba UDllo r»lgncd haemadoar. nhSSn?S5.fe w 1 ? 1 rom P etent “Od responsible goatlemin to oolnin Cerii&catea or warrants for Soldiers. their widows or th l « n i^B» h H dri!n »'? ho , are ehHtled to Bounty lands; also for Warrmite 011 of Ua4 '* sni 1116 *»«*>»■* and Bale or Land "SJ „ JOHN B. DAVIB __mhlXtf Corner of Wood and Fifth strwta RBttDLE ROBERTS, AITOUXT AT tlw, (DUtllct At- ■ Vnhrth y £ r Allegheny Connty,) h« removed to No nmr P iu Blrf,t > t»tween Smlthfleld and Wood—th» OlHrca Uitely occupied tyßamLW Black. Em. . I JL m the Britfsh Cabinet appears to be, that Lord Nqt^Fa J"?, »«*U«*-• Thi“a. a lfaa noVli t eertito" Whether hovill or not, one tMaVto nerpeth Seap will do Urn Mowing d ssr reronBhh “ d *“* r&. mhlil B. L. CUIHBERT, 143 Third «t S2(JOO aOOU BUIUa I>WJiIiUMO HOUBK 'U' :VV U or tlx rooms, end a nood coll.r „ 5 H TbSigs»af *■ 0,4 140 Third street. _ J "'“'“'“‘ of the As.eti °p TarrsiiiiD states IVMtTT * REINSURANCE, ANNUITjr AND TEBST COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. \ . January 1, 1856. _ . i REAL ESTATE, is. : ' I BnmCl,ra --£oANi-fc-- -••-• 3^MT Cnited SUtej loan, vataCf."’ - ?h?t n ? I ,’S la l ,? lTe P" cont - 10an..’.’.'.'... Philadelphia BJx per cent. loan New Orleana Branch Offi«>7&t Bper lnterest, * Qimr 6^,. Temporary loanaon Philadelphia ■ sylva&la State 5ecuritie5................. Us an^ua i bonds and mobtgAoig, £T‘ 1 U9 >™*: o9 Bondj and Bond* nmLMortjfajjeß, ■ PremlumaUoe from * Present valueof all the Annual fraittUß*»- ’ “ tCertoJcKl ■ , \ CASH. Caan oa hgnd and In 8ank.......... nhlSailfr S ISnterprlae Gau'Worlri. "—~ —— HIT 1 * TKTLIS * oontlnoe to aeli RIFLES cheater than they can to bad either East or Weet. and io“g7ffd|e n b«cSS. 800 D y °“ Wm * arthey S mbl3 JHlu Aqu 1-gawal-LVAMA KAimOAD-Wnnted m 6hatrajStock, to complete an orde/. won tea,2o mhl3 j B “ kera ani Ccmmlstoa frotoi, —*— _____ No. 71 Fourth 8 treat. D' l mhl3‘? :ACm:S ~“ I fes rortttabT SMITH. MAIB A PPSIEB. SMITH* 31AIE A HUNTEB. nfhfa 1 ® 411- “ I>l>ls ,or “ lB b 7 L l 3 i,. SMITH, MAID 4 HDNTEa I J^^lH 21 **'.** o ** 3 ior«ale bv “ - 1 SMITH. 21 AIR k HOTTER. I# Alalfta-Uo boxta tur aatoby A.y mh!3 j SMITH, MATO*- Bounty the tsoldiers, Chaplalrs, Team stora and Flotilla man, who bare, served the United owies In any of her wars, their-helm and widow?, are anti* Ued to Bounty Land, by a late law.. Any such who mar wish me to obtain their rights, by famishing their claim, can hare them promptly attended to. Information riven gratis. THOMAS WO JDB, mhG Bounty T.and and Pension Agent, ?S g. nrth st> NISIS AUKisa Utf oaoiog LAND JQit BAI.R—AH iy t |j fenced; with a good Dwelling House of four rooms— portico in front. A stable, coal house and other oufc»bufld» logs. Two grape arbors; also, apples, peaches, pears, quinces, Ac.—all healthy trees, and of good quality. Good water, and convenient. The above property ia situated In a pleasant anil healthy neighborhood, and- about three miles from the city. a. CBTHBERT A SON, mh2 ; Beal Estate Agent* 140 Third street. •JOSEPH J. 01A2L CO All* SEALED PBOPOSALB for supplying the Pltb«Vm~»v, Water Woikt wi,h Coal for one yew, the Ist day of April next, will bo received atth, tbo Works until tho 20th inst. ot mh9:ltr an amar-isxiLlaAToliY mh.b ond parallel paae»ges la thu £lbl o n, ,SS? a. A. 4UBoN*oO,»llftli*t amusements. 4USUTACTUJJUU Of Fancy Grates* ~ Plelaand Fancy Fendara, , Bad and Dog Irons. •• ■ • • • Portable Porges, - • • Tea Kettles,' - " Wagon Poxes, Ac. 10 bbls.bmoll White Beans tor sale by JAB. McLATIGHTjTK. eme 20 co 2300 —. 28 66 .........70 fO —..49 00 ■ ...15 00 . . - 7 50 6O CO 67 00 2M 6q 80 00 ./ 20 00 fi 00 1)31310 13,000 00 1,875 00 9,225 00 224,500 00 10,661 83 11,167 05, 703,032 Ift .. 21,212 ia $1343,629 ii 130 wood amnirc^ JAME 3 KELS W. a M] '\/r $1,84033