PITTSBURGH GAZ PUBVISUiD lIT :SPIgTE TITTSBIJEFIE -.,',7,,,111!JR5D/tY,-310RN1340,-*FEIV .200851 , , ehii.lianowleilitr.etits'irio duo .X.r.Fs7.ll.,foreopies, inhandsome p Wet JOT., of hisparrespondence Withtbe Auitrian Minister, and his eloquent speech celebration, last .11ecenifier, of the New York New England Society., Both these admirable documents l i mn been pub lished in 'our columns, and our +den can join with ur thf' - -Imarkable rk for the equals in Srzrii- congregae tiii.hai been orgat—._ _ ath ward, and a ;Pester called, to be known as t* Sixth Presby terian Church. or Pittsburgh, (6. 8.) The trus-• tedv,.as will be seen, have advirtised to receive ;pro . posals for the erection of a.lionso.of worship fpr, the congregittion. Ctomvormser.—A few dayalrefore the tICITS of the safety of the Atlantic reached our shores, an article went the round of some of the public prints, purporting to be the reirelations of three several clairvoyants of the city of New York as Thy to tho fate of that vessel. stated that she hind gone ashore on some co t, and that very -few,. and they •badly frozen, ad escaped. Of course we did not publish the y rtiole at the time: because we bare little dispostion to sped with Store feelings of sympathy which were to wives . sally and so plinfully awakened. liumbuggery - • likly be tolerated in many things, and may do well enough to laugh-at; but When it is converted .• into an engine of torture to 4ready overburden ., ed hearts, no language can odegrultely express .• ' ilieldnimirenco which it eselies. : ' r . .. `!HE QUINCY 26113DE8 LAD SUICIDE. • .'The Baltimore San of yesterday - publishes the ' 1 follewingirtiele, which app ans to, identify the • . .parties Of the , tragedy' at Q ey,-Itlass. record ..cif tltht.week, and known ere as John Green • Viand George Sands. The da 'of disappearance • - from lanisvGle, Which we suppose from the en ' ' Mact s to ho Monday, the 14 h of October, accords ', With their. appearance in this city, on their way • to the East, which according to the memotnn dam found in their room, pas about the 22nd of October. • Wo were yesterday tall on bye getilienian, Who informed us that h fully recognizes the 1 . parties lo this mystery, having been John Grieve and his wife lianiah—the first the son . of Mr. Peter Grieve, of onestalle, Ohio, and - the latter the danghter-o Mr. John Banks, of -.- • the:same place. Ile etales that they were not , . , ted for their romantic tricks, and that the wife ' . bei, been ilmownio Omni' lectures • dresed in maleattire, where no out but males were admit - toe.; and that they made practice of gOing dot in a boat in the Muskingum river, she attired as n male, for the purposel 1 sailing, bathing, &e. • The following, publisked in the Sun, of the 24th • of (Atoher last, is the last that had been heard •''' ,',Uf the parties at Zanesitille:— ' .;-- Imam!, DT Dnuicarsla.—, The Zanesville Gazette • reemds - the death Of 31r.iand Mts. John Grieve. Th 4 were, in the habit of rowing and railing up the'lfaskingrun, aftertio ~ taking their even t ing:Meal along.--They o took books and read , f... us they floated upon the waters, ruatil twilight. . Menday night they I did not return. Ting taheir boat was found- b ttom . side up, . shawl a nd basket of Mrs. Grieve. Their bodies -had not beers found. . • le ras also stated, in more !detailed accounts. published at the time of their asappearanee,that she was- dresicil in male attire, and our inform ,' ant farther states that the eription of the tl ' . _parties:published in the Sun on ' Tuesday and '.'itt ~..- ' , sti,iday ill preeisely.that of the missing John I f L.n,, ...to- 1: •.1 rieve and his wife, Men to the wreath en his „in the centre of.tss ieh it wasvilid was the 5 t ,' re of Intel:scale, wide he had often seen. 4 ; 7 .- Mrs. Grieve 1111,9 yon dg and :very, intelligent: , t Wrettiboth prose and Imetry, .with considerable 'merit, but was of a =trued-romantic disposition be sninnek no that when generally aupposed to _ drowned, those who Mew them best believed ?. -that it was but another romantic freak, an ihat -tr, they would again he h.'s , ' from. st,, Melon was a boot m#ci, and had also acted - tAi an engineer on the issiorippi, which corres ponds with the statom nt made by the parties to the tragedy prior to t eir disappearance from ...• tfininey, where the m a n had been working at ' • oot. =Mug, 'They. were both of respectable ;had wealthy families, and were well provided for before their mysterious disappearance. - -,Our ihf.ormant alaci :states ,that, if the man - „should prove to be John Grieve,other m co arks will be found on his right arra, he having m menced:do print his name on it in India ink, but . ' after' geiti•tig, ns for ad "John Grie,” ceased op . ' emotions. If this is found to be the case, it mill settle the point as to, his identity. IXENNTION OF PHOITATT IRON TAXATION. The question of the exemption of certain pro perti from taxation,l is 50 under discussion; and sir= efforts arc made to show that much property now exempt ought to be taxed. This kind of propeVty may be divided into four classes: 1. Free School Hpuses, the propertyof Fire Conipariies, and such Hospitals, anill other institutions purely benevolent. tkij Chir.rehes, sail other rueful end religious institution's. , 401. Colleges, and oth institutions, the ob- Xcf of which is toihnp instruction. ' There mightbe lother astitutions and estab lishbients spocifierl; bathe foregoing are suffi cient for our present p ose. Of the. Propriety, of crampting the two firsi classes, there is little difference of , opinion The third class; embriicing 1.19 . it does a very'. large .amoun%of property, is that which is most in dispute. A fow l leek!' ago, we gave our views on this subject, nhd frOra the grounds we then took, we hare since Seen no reason Co swerve.— The' P,hiladlphia! Evening Bulletin takes the other side, and bases its chief argument upon a sin : Tiler !vas. • Its soyl: “If we mild hare 'our own way, we would tax all churches, rich or poor, on the ,Broad ground that the State has no connexion with i.eligion, but ie purely and entirety la dna institution!' This Is rather afar-fetched argument, and if it could prove any thing, It would prove too much. We admit freely that the Stont*GorernmCnt was tiot.estoblished to propagate the Christian reli gion, neither weskit es ablithed. to put out Brest nor to curs broken bo es. But how the exemg clue of the property, necessary Lathe pronecutioli of these things, from hi-ration,. causes any neces sary "connection' of the State with theta, sur passes our compredension. Now, as all admit that the extingdshment of coutiogrationts, and the amelioration of bodily affliction, are good ob jects, -so with almost'', equal unanimity are the benefits Slowing to the community at large from the christian religion conceded. if the camp -631 were delinell by 'one particular sect, to the exclasion of all others, or if it were claimed by l'rotestants,,,V, the exclusion of Catholics, It would be a very difiefeMt question; but-as it stands, the exemption is clitimeti on the broad ground that Christianity lls an clement of inestimable val ue in the great racial system, and that its pre servation ax4rpropagation are eminently worthy of the foste 'rig care of the community, both in. dividually : collectively. t This wo loiow to be the,sentim ''t..nf the vast majority of the people of us ac, L. a- Churches, therefore, rtmangst us are jusil 1 reganfed os belonging to the sate gory' of ben ficial institutions. This is the idea of those,w a O payl.for their erection, and throw • them open to all who please to eater. Those, therefore, o oak-that church property should bee...pt. , no taxation, do, not ask to be "con-' nectar Ili tin; government; Luc they do ask . what has , ways. been conceded,-that.the great Forgone fo which they aro instituted should be rer „,,g o niied j? 3, (Image as a public blearing.— This let! General -Washington "claimed in his Fare Well Address, endless than this no good cit. 1 I Um' would wish toaccord. ' Tacso 01(.9 are sustained by an able writer in the .1' • delphia Ledger, who contends ear, neatly tha 'douches ought to be exempt from - ts.sation. i,fle speaks' of some chanties, hon. . ever, hi : possess large property, independent ' b l • •of their ,c h. building; which, he says, otight not to ' he I lempt. .So say we.. One argument i; confined s yto the henget of Worship, and not to any other onwrato property of the congcega!,lon, Ifis rie Sof the beneftdalamicansernillve in fluenceso churches thus fonthly expressed:" ix "Look: t this! Why: is it gorem ment 'to .books, and All kiitdi a - sgparstcui, 1 ------------------- bemoan:to furnish our colleges andliterary in- I_. FROX WASIIIDIGTON. , . •-• t ,ititutions,"lto. be impiOrt id tree oftinty! Simply iscrmepoiceatvat the Pittsburgh OareetSl ': ' liset4e, In the judgmeut of our law makers. the - -- diuntiy is mildly benetitted by the infloenee and Wasterworox, Feb. 15 1851.' 'rt.hetirostructihit imparted in these institutions.— t s.pmrytois of the Rirer and harbor Appropriation ', The government think it unwise to tax an agen cflrhieh they regard as influential and effective • pip—Dehate up. ii—Hr. Crotrell'lSpeeeh. in . promoting - the best interests of all classes of The debate upon the House bill, making appro agency. - 'The arpment is still stronger in its priations for certain harbors and rivers, contin day, the same subject having been under discus rettplitatitin to churches. They do more to pro - nod with great animation until four o'clock to. vent pauperism and diminish tax.es than all other instr.umentalities that are employed. They en tiSuce the value of real estate in the neighbor- sten from seven to ten o'clock last evening. 'The hoods where they are located." bill seems to have great strength, and its chance Colleges, and other literary and scientific in-'I of success is good. Though it was published Xtitutiims, are also involved in this controversy. 1 several months ago, there will bo no liana in The prop of exempting these will depend I giving the following synopsis of its contents. It .altogetherupon drcumstanees. If they are pure- I provides f0r— .,,, 'Plattsburgh, ly or mainly benevolent institutions, yielding no lireakw'r at Burlington, L Champl'n, pecuniary return to the founders ar proprietors, we think they ought to he exempt; but not other White Hall wise. 'This brings us to the position we took in Dredge Boat, at our former articli—that any institution, the ob- Harbor at Fort Ontario, L. Ontario, ject of whinh is the g eneral good, whether moral- ', Oswego, ly or physicralit .0 which was never intended " Big Sodus Bay, to be profitable, in ins sense, to the pro- " Little Sodas, prietors, ought to be exempt from taxatien• " Oak Orchard, • A corrtspondent, writing from Harrisburg, Dredge Dual, suggests that the people of Allegheny county " Bliffalo, - ought to be heard,•either by petition or remqm " Dunkirk, . - - strance, on Lida 'Dopoytant question. We agree " Cattaraugus, . - with him, and hope 404 the voice of. this and " Erie, Penns., - other interior counties will be suffictsoti; peter, .. Conneaut,' ' Lake Erie, ial to keep throb's s they are. " Cuuninglum Bay, " Asotatols, " 0 rand River, '• Cleveland, Block fiver, yermillion River. !baron, . . INTILASAPC7.I6 BELLEFONTAIKE RAIL. ROAD.. This is the fourth link in the great chide of Railroads connecting Philadelphia with St Louis —the first being the Pennsylvania Central Rail road, the second the Ohio and Pennsylvania, the third the Bellefoutaine and Indiana, and the fourth as above. We have just received the third annual report of the Hon. 0. U. Sumac, President of the In dianapolis and Bellefontaine Railroad Covany, and are gratified to find that a work in which Pittsburgh has so deep an interest is in an emi nently prosperous condition, and we condense some of the interesting items of the report, for the inforateldon of our readers. This Company was organized in 1845, under - . a liberal charter, for the purpose of constructing a railroad, of about 83 miles In length, running frOM Indianapolis to the Ohio state line, North East of Winchester, in Randolph county, there to connect with the Bellefontaine and Indiana Railroad, which is an extension of the Philadel phia and Pittsburgh road, West to the Indiana • line. The road runs through one of the very best.' agricultural Sections of the State, including the Fall Creek, upper White river, and Mississinewa, valleys, with no other thoroughfore for the trans-, porintion of its products and merclunadise, and' abounding in water for nutnufacturing purposes. ft is located on the low grade of 30 ft. maximum, to the mile, entirely above the reach of high waters, with only six small bridges on the whole line of 83 miles, 76 miles of which ore straight lines, and no curves of less milt. than 5,730 feet, pertaitting the highest rate of speed, and the largest amount, of business with the lightest practicable motive power, and the least.possible cost bf repairs. The cost of the road will not exceed $lO,OOO to the mile, with a T rail of 60 pounds to the yard, ready for the motive power, including depot buildings, turn outs, tables, wa ter stations, and every thing complete, ready for naming; while the average cost of 4Arnerienn Railroads is $32,574 per mile, The New Eng land roads average $36,760; New York, 64,806; 'Pennsylvania, $38,605; and New Jersey. $ 30 1. 75 Z , ,, and yet these roads are dividing over b per cent. on their. heavy cost of construction. Our road of 83 miles, has been divided under the charter Into three general sections of about equal length; 'the first extending from Idinnap- Otis to Pendleton, the second from Pendleton to Muncie, and the third from Muncie to Union, at the Ohio line. The first section, of about twenty eight miles, has been completed in the most permanent man ner, with a gravel ballast; oak continuous super structure; 'l' rail of sixty pounds to the yrd; fountain water stations, including tbe right of way, nt a cost of only $5,350 per tulle up to the motive power, composed of the following items; Clearing, grading, and bridg ing, $1,732 00 per mile. Superstructure lumber, 740 00 " Gravel ballasting, 382 00 lion rails, 5,518 00 " chairs, 274 00 " " spikes, 185 00 " Turn outs, tables. and engine houses, 38 30 Fountain water stations, 26 25 " Cattle guards, or pits, 12 00 Right away for road, . 40 00_ 41200 - , ott track, - 412 00 Total, 59.,359 65 " The second general section hes been prepared for theiron, from Pendleton to Anderson, about eight miles, ineludingthe bridge over Fall Creek, and-the iron is ready and will be laid on that part of the road Co soon as the ground will per mitin the spring; the residue of the section of about eighteen miles, will be ready for the iron by the first of June, and will-be completed and put in-use as early as possible thereafter, in time for the fall business: - thus extending our fond this season to !Muncie, into the very heart of the White River country, which must increase very largely its business. The clearing and grubbing of the third gener al section, is nearly completed, and about one third of the grading is in progress. I recom mend the letting of the grading of the residue of this section immediately,. so as to here • it read be y to receive the superstructure and iron, and to put in use neit season, as we stand pledged to complete the road to the Ohio line in all next, season, and it can and must be done. The depot buildings on our road, have all been located on turn-oats, so as to leave the main track free from obstruction. - The building at Pendleton has been completed, add is in use; the cue at Anderson is nearly ready for use, and will be finished by the time the care reach that point. The brick depot building at Indianapolis, 376 feet long by 60 feet wide, will be erected this sea son. Other depot buildings upon the second sec tion, are yet to be provided-for. The report infers that the road will be exceed- ingly profitable, owing to its extensive local trade, and the comparatively smell amount of its original cost; and it refers to the remarkable, success of the Madison and Indianapolis road, •as proof of its positions. The section of 28 idles of the road which has been completed, has been open for business since the 11th of Decem ber, with one Locomotive, one p*enger ear, and four freight care, and the gross ireceipts for I seven weeks, are s3,B3o;ol—total expenses for naming, $1,645,38; Net profits, $' ,185,53—0 r • u i at the rate of 51 per cent. per arm on the cost of the section. When this road is nishel, to, gether with its east and west to ctions, its profits will be enormous. The same may be said of all the roads on this great line. . , The benefits of Railroads to the ountry are • well set forth in the f ollowing extr et from the report:, • • „ ''fhif effects of the road upon he country, towns, and villages, through which i passes, bye already been of the most gratifyi .; character, giving life and animation to all th t are within the range of its influence. Flour t Pendleton is worth 37i cents per barrel, and wheat.some ' 10 cents per bushel more than the; were when the transportation was by anima power, and ether products in proportion. It 1 estate has already advanced fully one third value, while the business of the road is daily in casing. In deed, it almost seems as i f the yo possessed the powers of creating its own bus ness, and yet this is but the beginning of the en ; each addi tional section will more than doubl the business passing over the preceding one, ntil the road ' shall be completed, and the imi ensc through travel and business shall he thr wn upon It, when it must become to road of th trot Inapt tudC foi its length, inliusluess, .1 of the high eslirates of dividends. i gaRECTIAa. — W r e observe an i va ling in some quarters, that Mr. be ugh; Who has become tamest 1, th arrest of Fogitiregloft, is I E. dors, of the Mashie u Ito 1 pies.sion 13 arrOUCOaat am calcuU ryi. to the Colonel, we deem it I should be corrected. The perso n engaged in this business, is al • bidisiduaL .., The Coe d finds .'. . . by end more agreeably employed thaspetite and taste of the ant 1 a Ida excellent hotel,—mar. A ._. , The. TTorkTs Fain---We are gratified to per its that the Commissioners a the London In . •• 'al Exhibition have deferral •ed to interdict sale, an tbe Fair gerunds, o all Intoxicating drinks. Nothing bat light and •• • scent refresh re arc to be permitted, and these will be di into three classes, which to consist of wi, ches, pastries, jellies and ices of all kinds rpm team lemonades, &c. The ontractors hare stipulated to supply glasses of water, gratis, to la; Tigtors who may apply for • tat • 16,000 15,000 10,000 9,000 15,000 40,000 10,000 10,000 10,500 0, 0 90 60,000 20,000 15,000 40,000 15,000 ' 10,000 1 5 . 00 0 15 ,0 6 , 2d,000 10,000 lo l a* 6,100 30,000 Munroe, 20,000 20 IaKI Dredge Boat for , Michigan City Harbor, Lake Mich. - 30,000 Chicago, 15,000 Waukegan Breakwater, " • 15,00 0 St. Joseph, 20,000 . Kalamazoo River. " 10,000 Grand River,. ' f• 10,000 Milwaukie, ' ~ 20,000 " 10,000 Racine, Southport, - - 7 15,000 20,060 Dredge Boat for Lake Mich., - Surveys of Nortb-western Lakes, - 25,000 Dubin'pa Herber, M 143. i7efl ' 20,000 St. Louis " • - Aiooo Havre De Grace, 514., - - 20,000 ' Nantucket Breakwater, - - 20,000 New Bedford Harbor, - - 10,000 Provineetown...Mass., - - 5,000 Wilmington, N. C., • - 10,000 Bridgeport, Conn.., . - 10,C00 Savannah, Ga., - • 50,000 ' Eastport, Me., - - - 20,000 Falmouth and FrofhleTlFF, - 10,000 New Castle, DeL, . • 15,000 Newark, N. J., - - - 15,000 ' Delaware Breakwater, - - 60,000 ' Various Seanll Points, - - 15,000 Baltimore Harbor!! - - 20,000 Various Atlantic Coma Horbors, - 20,000 Overslaugh, Albany, N.. V., - 75,000 SL Clair River, Detroit, - - 40,000 ' Ohio River, above the falls, 80,000 Below the falls, and below Ark. riser, 240,000 Iled River Improvement, • 50,000 Rep'r CEmberl'd dam, Ohio river, - 50,000 Standford habor;Ct. - "---.- 5,000 Hog Island 'channel, Charfe;tou, S. C. 25,000 Manitowoc, Wisconsin. ' - - 10,000 - 10,000 Sheboygan, " - Upper and Lower Rapids of the Miss. 50.p00 Hurlgate channel, N. V. harbor. - . 30.000 Pembroke. Me. - - • 1000 Saginaw Bay. . - . 10,000 Bayou La Fonche, Miss. rim. - 25,000 Lake St. Char.' Mich. - 10,0110 l'ultnep - ille, Lake Ontario, - 10,000 Harbor of Black river, Mich. - 10,000 Surreys - - - - 7,000 . Survey of the Delta cf Om Miss. . 30,000 Surveys James river, 6.c., Va. - 25,000 Snag and Dredgaboot for hoboes of Texas, NCR Haven harbor, Ct. $1,883,500 It the bill is destined to pass, considerable ad ditions will be made to this list. And thisris the great danger. Its good features may possibly be smothered under the caresses of Its friends. - There was some very interesting and eignifi coot speaking to-day and yesterday. Mr. Crow. ell, of Ohio, made a eery excellent speech list night. It merits attention from its original and manly tone, and from the clear and able sieve which it embraced upon several of the most im portant questions now occupying the public mind. But Mr. Crowell represents, also, a district in which your journal has an extensive circulation, and the reference which I shall make to the re marks of Mr. Crowell will reach a large number of his constituents. •, Mr. Crowell said that thmigh he had been a member of the House for four years, and had voted upon every question which hod come up during that period, be had never occupied the time of the House by speaking upon them. He alluded first to the proposed•modification of the tariff system, and he woo in favor of a change which should confer upon the labor and skill of the American people, that degree of protection which won required to guard them against the competition of the capital, and the half fed and' ill requited labor of the monarchies of Europe An to constitutional difficulties, he would, only nay that he had never experienced them; and ho should look upon our constitution as unworthy of our patriotic tires, who.framed it, if it were impotent to this great end and object of govern ment I submit that this last observation is as sensible and practical a one no Was ever made upon this long discussed question. Ile applied the remark to the constitutional power to pass this bill. The sagacious and experienced men who framed the organic law of oar system, could not hare left this obvious duty of a government unprorided for. The power to regulate com merce necessarily implied a power to facilitate commerce. lie adverted to the expenditure of ' $10,000,000 for the encouragement, of foreign commerce, and yet the members were hesitating. and faltering over the appropriation of a million or two to aid in bringing down tot the sea those products of the teeming West skid the vast inte rior, which form the objects of that same foreign commerce. Now be thought the power of Con gress to protect internal commerce as clear and ample as any in favor of other descriptions of commerce. In respect to the fugitive slave law, Mr. ell thought tt was needlessly harsh and severe. To rxforce that law to the full extent of its principles wonld'be to violate all, the principles of the common law. Ile believed that the pro visions of the hill would take away the great privilege of hobo; corpus, if they were rigidly enforced,and ho was,therefore,in favor of so mod ifying the law as to bring it within the bounds of the constitution. Ile would avoid, with rai -1 gious care, ehockiug the feelings, or oven the prejudices of any division of the countr J y. UNf Ca. WIZ 114170 n, February 16. Speeches on Internal Improvement—Critical Condi tion of (he Alproprogion Dill--Immense Crowds —Lerees.--Costurnes—Joyful Exitentent at the • Theatre—Charge to puma, Ayres. I have never kaolin a more various rind sug gestive discussion than that upon the River and Harbor Appropriation Bill, the character of which I was prevented from Commenting upon in my last by theiength of the analysis it seemed necessary to make of the bill itself. McLane', us the Chairman of the Commit tee reporting thehili, made a speech upon inter nal improvements, in which he acquitted himself an well es he could do of the task imposed on him, which was to reconcile the former repudia tion of the policy by the Domoerats, with the present necessity of r eadopting it. This brought him to a definition of-what Democracy was. He made, emphatically, "a bad fist of It," and the amount of his definition was that d ro emocracy con- sisted in sticking to the party thugh thick and thin. He enlivened , the matter somewhat by poking fun through the widely gaping ribs of his awn explanation, at n little terrier from South Carolina, Holmes, by name, who kept worrying him Into further particulars. He said a good - Democrat was the opposite of Mr. Holmes. The most elaborate and useful speech made upon the direct question was delivered by Mr . Spaulding, of New York, who hadisidesdly stn. pression pre -ISanders of our at notoriousin :'ol. William T. t. All the im ted to do bin. .roper that it who has been !gather another . time sufficient !in catering to ;roux sojourners her. died .the sultjeck.withi profound, attention. It embraces li , .sery able , review or the historical facts and Intl:mesa connected with the Subject, and is well wirth publisldng in any paperwhose readers are batercsted in the class of works pro posed in the bill. I presume it will have a - sery extensive circulation, and will do mach toward settling the public mind in favor of such appro priations. Mr. Clingman, of N. C., who enjoyed a short I lived notoriety fur on _incendiary speech, deliver ed a year ago, made another one on this ques tion, in which, I believe, lie took ground against • the,protective policy as generally tinderatood.— Iledissolved connection with any notional party, by spealcing of himself as a rimminr of the Whig party of the South. George Washington Jones, of Tennessee, who is*most as great at watching the farthings as Jogl flume himself, but who goes it strong for lactic and his attempt to plunder the treasury on his scandalous printing claims, took occasion to issue a grand manifesto on the finances, in which he proved to his own satisfaction that there would be no deficit Under the present tariff, and that he was a far more brilliant and sormd fman ilex than Mr. Secretary Corwin. Mr. Conger, of New York, made an excited speech against the fugitive slave law and the Congressional pledge. On this same subject there was a warm passage, at arms between Mr. Conger and Giddings, on one side, and hlr. 'Jokey, on the other. . Altogether the most able speech against the bill was by Toombs, of Ga_, who made a strong argument against the constitittichalita of appro priations for Internal Improvements, but es neither you, nor your readers, nor I, have any doubts upon that point„l need not recapitulate his objections to the power. I think the bill will certainly pasalhe noose by a large majority, but whether it will pate through the ordeal of the Etat:tato with* amend ments which will be• made there, I am not so clear. In the mean time, the session varies.— But thirteen working days remal, including the whole of the day of adjournment. And not a single one of the appropriation bills have yet passed; and not only that, but not a single one of the regular annual supply bills have yet been considered, have yet been touched, have yet been read.tnd not °° . l J: 4 °0.. P l Od l4l.ft of these supply bills, but they have been, and are still kept-back by interests and influences which are at this very moment engaged in the hottest strife. The north west combines with the east ern and middle state tariff men to postpone ac tion on the appropriations till after rivers and harbors and the tariff have been duly attended to. The hours are getting a little sparse, the times are a little critical, but the appropriations will be saved by the skin of their teeth-- They must go through, The town is excesslvely3 crowded, as I men tioned a day or two ago. Additional crowds are arriving every day. The rooms of the White house and Mr. Webster's spacious aparments wets quite incompetent to receive the manses of well dressed humanity which precipitated them selves upon the President and Secretary of State, on last Friday evening. Trails are coming into fashion again, and many of - them were caught at the President's levte under the . splay foot of some Yankee, Hoosier, or Tuckahoe, like a fox's tail in a trap, to the etenial milked' the body 11. c.. the dress) whichit was meant to adorn. It is said that. one lady who, a moment before, was rioting in the promenade of the east room in all the glory of . tive surplus yards of lace:end bray code silk,' - hva-s seen to be carried into the ante room In the strongest hysterics i=cause, green one bad bereft her of the 'same five Y ard.. • Last evening the new; of the safety of the At lantic arrived, and was given out at the close of a brillart performance, at the national theatre, in the hearing of a densely crowded auditory The joyful intellig,encowas received with deafen ing, shouts of delight The news of a great vic tory could not have been ?caved with greater e nthusiasm. For several minutes the Al.cidlersce remained on their feet, cheering, clapping, wit sing hankerchiefs and hots, as if each one of them had been assured of the Vale arrival of a friend relative. It was a gratifying end exciting • !MI 6 . It is reported 'that Honorable John Pendleton had been appointed Charge to Buenos 'sync :qr. P. wan a, Whig member from the-fieighbor ing district of Virginia during the last Con- gem , I do not not know what is . .the autohrityf or the rumor. What particular claims Slr. Pendleton could hate for the appointment I ran not stare of. The chief distinction he earned while in the House was by defeating a worthy Whig candi for poet master. and electing his democratic op ponent. Mr. Morris whom Mr. r. m-11181=00 111113 also a member of Congress from Virginia. lie was appointed by Tyler, and Lae held the ap , ointment eight years. JU111... PROM EARIUSBMION, excrmp,mclnsre a the FitUburzb linualseuttuu, Feb. lith, 1851 WIIITZ Dear Sir—There Is a matter before the Logi. Wore in which the people of your county a terested to some talent. Petitions have been presented, asking for tht repeal of all laws exempting certain property in the State from taxation. A few of • these have come from your county: but by far the greatest number have come from Philadelphia city and county, where it is said the property there ex empted from taxation amounts to many millions of dollars. Would it not be well for the people , in your county to express their virwa by peti tion, remonstrance or otherwise, So that thew representatives may know whattheir wishes are in regard to tho twitter? • You will hare learned before this reaches you that the bill to repeal the 2ti,•• 3rd, and sth sec- Oboe of the ten hour law, as far as relates to yeah - county, wat lost in the Senate on Friday last. All the self-styled democrats who were in their scats voted against it, together with th e Whig Senators from Philadelphia city and county, and Mr. Brooks, from the vicinity. I have often heard it remarked here that every bill must point to the interests, of Philadelphia In order to obtain favor. How far this may be true I pretend not to say, neither would I im inn the motives of any member,.but you will agree with me when. I say that this vote was a death blow to a vital Interest of your county. There Is a feeble hope that It may be recur sidered and yet pass. Yours truly. ,row- SPRINCrIELL AND 11IANNYIELD RAILILSpOAD.-At a meeting of the Stockholders of the ringfield and lilansfield Railroad Company at klechanie , burgh on the 12th of February, agreeably to no tice given by the corporatora, the necessary amount of stock having been subscribed, the Stockholders proceeded to an election, and elect ed Joshua Judy, James Turner, Reuben P. Mann and Win. Gabriel, of Union County; Obed liar, of Champaign County. and William Whiteley and Chunk, Anthony of Clark County, Directors. There was only one ticket, and it received 762 rotes. The Director' being all present, wore imme diately sworn, and chosen President, yin C. An thony, of Clark. The Board appointed John Newton, of Clark, Secretary, nail Wm. Whiteley, of Clark Treasur re; and Wm. Whiteley won also appointed as act- Mg Director. Tho Board resolved to proceed with the work as fast no practicable. A committee was ap pointed to employ an engineer, kc., and the Board adjourned to meet on Thursday the 87th /of Febrile!". The proceedings of the meeting of the Stock holders and of the Directors were conducted with entire unanimity and satisfaction. And a high hope was inspired that this important link in the direct chain from Philadelphia and Pitts burgh . ..to Cincinnati will be made in a short time. —S,ringfirld Gan. • Intelligence from China.—By an arrival at Bos ton, intelligence from tho CO of October has been received, which represents the state of things as quite unsettled and threatening. The rebellion was by no means suppressed, but rather gaining ground, Julditional guards were consid ered necessary for the factories at•Canten. The United ignites Charge d'Affaires hod ad4ised the commander of Marion to shift me position of 'that Tomei, from the lower part of Wlnimposh Beach, as high up as possible. The Phlegethon bad been moored off the factorise, and altogether matters were maiming a serious appearance.— Piracies -continued to be perpetrated with the utmost boldrwa, and contributions were levied on the boats ..going up the river to Canton.— There was a rumor that in hiperial , edict had , been promulgated, 14,014410ra toaAera are threatened with decaplt&tiea: after= the"rantim - grace, It they contlaue the habit. - advice/ from Tv , encoarsghae. ...Theta° finest Ilanzemacos, and the Chimal. rotted hyiarge ,vessels to points -six miles apart. The moun e pierced with gorges, along the ood roads may be made, or they taro the water which fills them s of the year, and they become r. The Ltaliary say they pass Ivery easily, at isuch times, from -V. Y. Part. Pros Taiga ; him:Open are v 'rivers in Mexico' npa, can be ne . s only, abontsiliirt, fain between sides of which maybe Inadeto IA certain amen.; ' navigable canal in their canoed river to river. - From. Rome. We find a letter from Rome in the Evangelist .1 this day, which says that there is considerable lk of making Bishop Hughes a Cardinal. On to oth of January the Rev. Dr. Bacon, of Now Haven, preached to a full, audi ence at the • • •rican chapel, and on the next day Archbisho Hughes made a short address at the Propagand . Col. Beekmith, the well-known friend of the „ yaldenses, has succeeded in ob taining from tie Piedmont Gus...moult permis sion to build a 'rotestant church for Italians, at Turin. A fine site has been purchased and preparations are in progress to erect a suitable bidding neat summer. The Mozart Musical Society of Louisville, has just completed a hell, which is reprmented •by the Courier of that city, to be one of the finest musical rooms in Atie country. It is well lighted warmed and ventilated; and the architectural proportions are in strict conformity with the In Ohio they have, a literary gazette called the Buck-eye Blossom; in Kentucky, the Rose of the Valley; in New Jersey, the Belvidere Apollo: in Maryland, the Kent Bugle; in Ohio, the Toledo Blade; in klississippl, the Bowie Knife; in Dele ware, the Blue lien's Chickens, and in South .Cnredhaa, the Hornet's Nest or True Southerner. Large Land gals.- , —The Ilagerstotrn Bank, on Tuesday last, sold at private sale the Montpelier estate owned by them, lying near clearspring and containing about :WO acres of land, fur the sum of $31,000. Purchaser, M,r, John Ankeny. ..Vetra. . Irsvoa or D..Mit.siit's Urn FILLS— It would lei en, lo 1111 • volume with eertifleates of }ht" medicine. Wherever It has lade trial It No mode itself wont... We have in - uur pusseihnion hundreds of ordi , Ilke the followinm .Y•1aer.1.14511, N. Y. Dee. "]!Sure. KW a Co—Your Warding ..Kett kft With me a abort time aloe, a ahehtitt of ICh.oo', Weer INlll. TN' whole 11l Pohl very 1.00110. and ,0,00 the hhthest otdittat tion. ludeed It le eontiderod tho lon m,ellclll of the Mod ever offend for vale. Plem , ered Ile mother ...110 1 0 soon a! 1 W. 11. AINSWOIITII." 'or tale at J. 0100 k W. lel:1104,10110 Nu. CO Wood Ft uxopean Agency. Th. ntbacrilier Intends abating the principal cities of Great Britain. France. and iderroany.Anri the month , of April, koy, and Jana nett. leaving Pftt,borgh on March ondwill be pleased to ottint,l to any ..CLlCietll of a ter Itch ennui character which test' be iOnilded to his care. jantiduarl: JOHN D. DAVIS. BGralrrOca• %Canard—Tido la to certify tlmt man come to my house In the fallii . oll9,by the name of Ileum' Els. In aver,' hod audition, erld wad alnowt joVollY bliud. Ile b bren's soldier to the Uritt4 orvlce. Ile welt theo ed ' 4 " ° of 0. Uorpltats 1.0.1., und bed the bent treattucot trent. could idTord. but could not be m otored to' sight end oar discharged li/comb's. . I had. heani to much et.. the Petnileum, I thought Mould Or, sone of it on this mao. I lan him a adu bottle of the Petroleum Oil. which [Ol.l hca We. weU mond; to the WATS! of one month. I am. willing to to otmliSed to the trSth of the :there of the above marmsent at soy" time I may be . eolled 01.0 sal w'for of my .6cbc.,,, H can to U otify• to the now. • EMPRY Crone Bottom. hearer Co. Pn., Oct 1. Iffou For vale by lieyorx McDowell. lot I.t.cod rover. It. E. Boilers. 57 Wood .000011 B. N. Vaktr.oet.. a Co. emu , Wool .04 Front .trtME 11. M. ermsy. it A. Elliott, 4fiorph Daoulnot and li. I'. Schwartt alleghcoy. aloo by tliP pro prietor. 0. N. KIEIC. • f a Calm! Benin. Seventh ot Pittoliurgh. Domestic and F reign Exchange, Bank Notts, Gad 4. Sdria., Bought, Sold j Exchanged EXCI/ANG E AND 'BANKING itOUSE Mr3l. A, HILL & CO, No. 64 Wood Street, Pittebtath. ACV,. or Tufa ncrmars. Citizen's Insurance Company of Pittsburgh. ENCOURAGE HOME INSTEITTIO:iS. u /C. OM, No. 41 Water 5tr....t;10 the .arehooss C. It. ' I ..... A. W. Mat.. Coo,p,n, Is sros Ids, to lusuro all la ch:. - tulls. , In store., and a. ln,L.,nritn, sts.sele, An Worts varanty tb . ar,,l halsselly of the oututso, all.rtled In the t-baractsr of ths •ts. ars all rinurna hlttshur,h, ,ant Us. *Mr S. sown to Ito. mtnnlnnlty for llonr siudeneo,latelliOnt , and lutryalty JOiln ILasort4.l.. splattf • 1427118Y1,VA1R4 amaxon. SPItINU ARRANGEMENT. 1651 Forty-six hours to Philadelphia- Forty-four hours to Baltimore. 7 :LS 0 iM3Iot Railroad-103 miles Canal: Two 'Daily tines Paprecs Packet Boats. (EXCLUYICALT FdR PATAtiNdiIIIS.) "M2.--,-,....-7— for - TO PHILADELPHIA. BALTIMORE AND il4 ROOMts.4.oozon o . Sale by , ;; NEB' YORK. , _EJF Ts. g W. lIARDAL GM tk.N.,,,,LA.,,G21 Z I NES F 0 R MAR CH, nt J. B. maw.," ITterarn'Dep.A, Third stmt, only:adz the JQNmt4euoLenNir.ngt.:o‘foZantwalk.h:as.vir .I.laelni::.Tll7, .13.15, then. br h.., Railroad to ddier. I.if a Reek for Mar ch, HOLISBAYSETINGH; I .p. ,, , , hr;._5t5 ,,,,,,,,,, rs.,,,ULlnr, the P W Modittine Ri rsro ,... ;e i o i . . 4 . tr;lleMr"rophthe4', An. ~.„, Dy Major NEW PE-.NNSYLVANLA RAILROAD. Too duratral amt Forty.dre miles Airy. to Dirtlouary nr alerhattk., No. CL,;•• Stanneld Mall: a Ilistorical Rote.. r ECELADELPECLA. , ' "^' , 1'.r.'° 1. ,,bY1,,.. 1 11,.,: h. w . -,.a, =''....., nOvel. by Mrs Bouthword.. Time through reerv-st: MUM., Fan to Philadelphia. Ito . Tare to Ihtlatuory, r.:s. /1 ., („,,,.„ „„,,,,„ „,„,. „„,„,....„,,, o r ,b, ..,, „,,.. I . pXTR A. liOllNti IIYSON TEA—Ju-iTi e ' d ' ......w” 1 " '''''''' "" "" 647. " T .i, ...a., i ennftli.te'rwientAlljklre 1;; e::. 0 ... 0 7. I. oo l.l. loll e7oillt u nee o 0 k m! e very 0" " ;4;;;'6"rd'a); ;" 4" ' cannot be 5u..... st the price In Plltsburah. • Veer I{l.' km! every orttl..ll. at the sittne ott, Vet the lower grades 7 5 tants. AT. trots. on cents, and Passengers for . Baltimore. , 1 MS. per lb. •111. Ise warrant fully equal, if not superior On arrival of C." ... 119 Trd b9111. •••‘, 111 ' To ok .. ‘ l4 C.m. • ';;;lr.l..T.tttiil'inteh;ini ..dr,7,t,:i r a. all grades, for tar's.' 1.111.1. (tin. (inhaled) alma to that city. teighty ~,,,,,, .;; ...; ..;„ „; . fsir ..., thoy win , foe iles.) Time. POCK hour.. . . ; novel (heaped.. A liberal Alwoollnt made to integer. No charge far handling Baggage on this route. ; ~„,,, ~,, i ,„„,i,,..„ ~,,,,,,, by the quantity: ; Thad.. .....1 mates this the roost oornfor.l4o, ; WM. A. 31TIXIIII A CO, st'r'and deelrahle route now to the Tastern: Mks. frlds Tea Dealers anA drawn% • rc;.; Pw;';;;";''' t"'"l.l' P. gaSiEs. A gen t, i ; i , LOY Elt SEE It-1 blas in store, and b. do. . . Or Id Motwoashela 11. s. ; 9, -; InTi, se. Tia sale by 1). LEECH & CO. ; WM. IL JOHNSTON. Canal Dada, Penn street ; COI -IN--TOO btimil. for sale by - ........• N. On the lat of Juy. the Pardayisanla Railroad \ • Yet,. . al b ILJOENSTON. 1 .rIU ben ' l;"PU; bc;10P"' " .kkb .;i4 th"'th. th'. rttOBACCO LEAF-4 lihdx. for stile LT through MIX T.... Pittaburgb. Yet...Ty 19, '5l. .1 fehl 5 WM. IL JOHNFTON. . . (10PARTNERSIIIP—We have associated ( LIICKLOIVF NUTS-151),bl: for lade by Ai with us Tn... RDA, late Cadder_of the Fart.. 1 JII a febl9 FI. 11. J TONSTO. _,. Depaite Rank , who will devote bl• persona. attention t the ; b44'1".:i3 Th. 411.;" the t";'"mI"TWAVS a CO. EXCHAN BP. LITD-11ANHING HOUSE -.A.. W ILKINS & CO., Corner of Third and Market sta., Pittsb'gh Foreign sad American Hardware. L'OGAN,''' WILSON & CO., No. 129 Wood Street, lIATE NOW IN FFTORE A full anA cornplete stock of IVREIGN 431 D 430:RICAN HARDWAVE , Bailable No the spring trade, oral whleh ; they an prepared to „b e -0 :...7:. .e. r r-w l : r : ::::::ad J.L. EL. ,: j .s .l.ruittlilyd .: , ,, aa taartal and husked partner, peal anntlaue the Wholevalo at the Way lately caroused hy ehreekktt a ll hite....101 Wool .teret 4411 II C. 1111AGEIXIT1 I Nfld. PAINE. 1 VLW Ml:SlC—Where are the 'we friends of 1 LI ray Yo u th: toy M. auk. ..I Something hweet to tell You. The !W h in . ~ 1 I'm W ole Enlandaking o er the Day, Mary - Mt , llama ant. Nag- dellcated to the Ladies of New kokland, ' rh. I Lave it f a r awe. Wu ..et ow on the titan . ..theme (iii Mak , . 1 rily " litr '' f , 7 S ti' l P re , tt ' r l.'.--W°c4L'" !'r. leit ' m ). l ,•SEITeI illage, b) ll Barker lb. l.trat Dove 1,111, i. the Ithwk Shafer's' Sung ....spoa. Would I were with thee—far Guitar Les Adleur, by Ilore An ertrastre colleetion of Den Polkas, Wahwat, Yana- Mon, ...,- r I AL.. a. to. Mal' of "New Carsalas t am" Cantle Lan ics, and an exesl eat new wort, rolled e "Ideloelste a .11..1. b at popular and aerial aortae. harmanked amok errautted yII. S Vi ebt, and ii. Masota—conaktered ohe 01. the Le. wort , r, er publishel. IL. hLEUI.II. 1 tibia holden Ilartn.hc,lol Third at. 'LOUR—•nI hbLs superfine, in atom and for I r .do by *ma RfIEYJIATTIIEWS L 03 _ ; GREEN APPLES-30 bbli - for sale by fall RILEY: 3147111EWS 4 CO. rOLL BUTTER-1 Ltd freiti, for salo by Phil KIEV. MATTIIEWS b CO. Ct STOIIOIL-9 bbiigvsgr,loa o , y,,,4 ti .:igrl'' ca AFE IN vEniirsT—.)x)o in Aleg -1,7; ny County Coupcn Bond, bar ...I. by W.M. 4. lIILL a CO. febl4 G 4 War.l 01. above 411. ao ,,r, r()us - - Allegheny City Coupen ..11 Ji j GA. Interer4 payable in New f ork, will be i :cp - rd Ty febl l NV.O. 4.111 LL 4 W. Net.,EW BONNETS--MurPhr & Burchfield have open U.& morning wevand Cow of New Spring .voeigi f En,sl4/173hton Chip, Ilungwian. Mow Prarl nod Nspien inabroroll C hip, Jenny Lnul. end Allnon. Coburg and =ad. Alnwino Ontage. Cldus Pond, Enthroidernd do. Aswendut P• 1171. Vandyke, yodel nut Fowl. Engll...b Ltd., chip and Dorddabln Alto !Wow and Enrt h s.a• Torielr of Winn, !trdolgrro.l.ll4 as ' 3l l ); centnnislnVr sat tante 11.14, Collard, Album, thins Pearl. Leghorn. We. rfiE HISTORY OF PENDENNiS., No. 8, by W. ?d,Thorknorry and the QUCri. Neeklare, or w lrerrt llistory of tbotyturt of Lorna ttiwreentlt. , by At. eTer Data., have town redd. and for see at 1101.411:3 LrttltYpot.ho. 1 4 Third et; febl3 VATER CURE WORKS'--11i0 Water ` ‘.-1 Coro 3ladual. by Jog Sbeu. 31 rt. rater Core ip Atorrieatudited by aWater Patient. Hand Doak or ilydropathy for Itrofctaional asultinweatie at, by Dr. or Liontrwic practice of It ydrop‘ttbr. 'with' tintwn angraw.l I 'Migration, or Ica:want:A tubdtwtE by Edward J0i11151.00, " Tb.or mut Ptactioo of!roma , . b• the lam IL Fr.c6,lolmml Dom Me,Gerganlldo, . .., i DRIP GEN- CiliklS , -.lkurplifit Burchfield.'.. 11_, bv . .3abind a lama lot to Drip ghat.. which am xri hug At arratlr reautt4 hrims, nor 0004 Gernt 4 , 4th. (:tti.bli-PAIITNERSIIIP—We have this' day ..sa .start:t ptiss,t, • - .. Snit - t wsociated with . In tho COAL 111:SLVESS. flotort . sty will be knowo as tadirse. VRESLI FRUlT—Peaehes arid Islaeliteriies D ' . Zira: Tier - . I.' A:Vitt:MlN' LEECIL .ht...p cn.' . I I: Du, .p in apt that ti.oi..- end 1.. .... 0 ' .41 3 . Malethl tuereby preversi heir anginal favor atthltuduts, . ACERTAIN CURE FOR ALL PAIN may - Ai.. Cherll2a and l'huns put up in tbwessar.wsamser LA Le found In the use of l'emr ands'. Vegetable Pain i plea or tart,. On bantland inr, , stale .r _.. _ j er. Opinion of the roost PK.lnent Drags.. and 1 VM. X. 3CCLLCG ft CO ' 'Merchants of Chi...that:lW Its far= fail o ::1411,,herty grect. Oct. alb tits. c ' 4 ' -'"'" ' ' ' B IRD SEEDS--Cana band- Ileinix.Seeds' We, the ututeralanad,DruFgiz. and Merchants of this ity. have limn amnaintal wih. aml sold fur tt year.. two of the b.t nonlitl' Ow . past, nrticln or Family . Medici. known 3.1. MTV 11.1..... faS • .. Wr. Alollictcmo - co. Thp.t,sble Pain Miler, and . would swum the Pattie that , -,17. - t - - ' in evory Instance, NO far as ..a htow, it h. Rimn the h, ,, !.. . 1.41.1./.1,111.1 to the purchaser. Lilo can rT4Tenettd. It to rho voltaic as an artide of great merit and in: in 414 ,1 . 4 . never knot, an article of Medicine boar, so 1,.. rta t h . lic , i , p c nlar 4 t . n so short a time, altiott is pro_vli_hT t og tar . _ or to h . .. mt.. null c...11t , Y roar.-,.:,,t an. 6121.1 , 4 ity II of thr loath.. prunists Yete oat, by It E. nELt.hh.L. itholest4e. Agent , r !tti 3 s7 'Moot etreot • __. . . 4 SECTI6.):—B-bat—S—The Tauaeharison au. d I:chmes. lring atColaabis:liinat,.. Freeptrt A n bnrt. at lltLbut6L. wi1T.1.147T! 1 1 ,0 A 5. 6,.a f 0,13 Canal 11aA:23, Piitsporgla. la . t XCHANIIE E.A.NR Sli.i - cR.A. 'feu. r 4, thrm Po sale. A 015: to -...y .. N .:it!: M. D. Tbn abnyr woe,. fur , alc . by P.. C. STOCKTON. Dont...riles and :itatswer, corner Ntark,t eta Tian! Ft. AT ERMICELLI A Ni) MACCAI{ONI y In.oll Itnllnn Manesmal aml irrmkeN, on tutra aril for nate by the Lox or trlail, tY, Welly st Loxes 'fresh, of article. crleLrated s• dirt gar Invallio re.. frx BlancliosuOt I',lll'o.gr.l or Soup. Coo "" " tl" b". °W...l.'rratT.G VOX'S STARCII—LV boxes ftOn )il=.tiAco: RP ANP 1104e , --I“bbli Laid; tr&a:os .x 4 "teTif,ro " 1° b ' DICKEY! CO. /00 Bigg Superfine ErAlr.,p%ifivr.ly 500 BUS SHORTS, fur male, by • Obis • , - PAM. P.l3Puttria. ()()L S PEACHES, for !ale by ." f l iota3 PAH. P. SITRITEIr. - a l iAn .IvZ CORN BROOMS, for sale by 74._113 4b13 SAIL p.SEIRIVER.- IIBLS SENECA 01L, for sale to. t,t, - • - P.'B RICER. Partaar - Wented. . A PERSON Th Iwwing a orough knowledge' of the Illafaery Mumma -la on Ito broad" ...a log to bemo a hortter ati astablithed baohoodo. h 9 c f .:ZtatrlrlZgag.V: 114 '43'?"JghLW A bbls Sheep and 3 jahls Beef Tallow, for j.Ur ode 6T H . tx443 • BAIL P. 411111T1111. x! IE Fonndri conne . cled . with . our ieoika Iwn partially dentnoynd by bra on (kw night -• Inst. we ilys notice that Ire am slaw lammed. to exams. order. nu! taus(, for rosnadyy murk sal iambi , I.l' pets lableh barenosollaned th• eta" instrontkna Qt. Antr-nacksonll please vargenL (Blinnla , . ILIAP *CO. Ten Yin Wadi, hb.10,111. tothnir BiLS PRIME ROLL Burr': br &IA; A .14RD 4r .DAt'. 1. - INDOW GLASS= -00 ale 61 'fi•br2 .OPPERAS—'2.S bbls, tih . e. bj - &bl 2 J. GIi.E.EN--3 0 cans, for (412 " SCHOONNI I itt • A ll YS —for *aie Oy 0,12 11111 lIEESE-I;t3 Las, in more al 1J OM Isill,All. at'ore a - PLII NAIL-150 - bbls, in store) VRIE. CAN4L COMP NY L' boklefe of tbeyaw li nod that tbetinnal election of lir,see year will be ben at their 4flo Ite bete, i day n March next, at_ oXitalf.e.lit. by order Yieeldent Canal OM.. 5.11 rritE LADIES all say •'lf you want red I'o.l Tea , ro to horrid a llm,wartlit Tee Store in the Inamorel for n. The Tea ther eel at W. meta pee petrel 11l really eery wonf, and Mom at Theeote and 'Lam deb eioll.. LOW prevk. damaawkl. or ilk ( eriOf V... are never kept at MIA emabliehment. au; tbej tIOW IrMall all their Teat direct from th e orLeleal ettrew. Melee tweed tut Tea will . 3L 3b,.,1 ',moven, 1/) laoldle3 WP O. els will and lot ite pee - .. a 11.1,1 e tell: febll 1" FAD imtroyed patent _LA Lead Pipe fur flydrmilw, • fur ea A n .4"as handr ikut ui jr/2.5..dtf _ tiEFINED BORAX rem_ ANNER'S OIL-W. 14 ~ , £.12 QUNDRIES- 0 : 10u bush IOX i‘ott'im • IT , i. do l it h it= wsidur: 00 bbYt: extra ramilT Mixt; • 3O •10 Stowe* skt Wu dexelt ext. 04113 Lamm • 'Mx. xxxott.l, lo fito. 1000 box. Wind , / j oim wATT A CO.. ond fox .1. by febll I • Libertr ft'' ItEVOLVERS—Just iecehied, nn addition- I ssotilne Coles OLL BUTTER - 7 25P1418 Prime, for sale by • 11.111BA000, ll Nol4ll' and 110 Smond Ft_ ILIIC7T? OIL- TALLOW -10 Ws, prim BROOMS -40 dozen for !tale by fubll s.t. TIMED APPLES-150 1,4- fehll TIRIED BELF—C, wle ram. TINDOW GLAS4-1100 assorte V V .1.... I , S . A eW. Ittltrf ,5 bbls, 100 1: -- r,;s ,N 6.1. for mi.by fetal I S. W. WAIMACGIL - - ' LOVER SEED-4:31 . bbl prime 011ie, fur /ale I, - febll lIAIL9/0411. PpACIIEEi-15 _r ntk - • POTTON TWINE:I-PO feLlUlbrule Lp . ASTILE SOAP—• 0 e. Lain -40 .kegt L • .• s_4) bbls Clo , Tr r t- E a r :; 1 0 ) T t CR. APPLES b,O rER3IILLION—' irems. n, for lute by' TARNICA — FLONIIRS— D LACK LE.4I-700 g..s of superior kDIO ale L, . Ir',WifsodLizE"rate.- tiA3IPIIOR-3 14,18 fo pale by Li feta° E.SYL. LARS. JOW D BAYBEfLRY 4,1,10 VJOPPERAS-10 bbls mao 'I,II.'COILKS-4000 groeo forsal r.toto .S . . VII . OIJ,SE LAINES--Printed and-sOad IV os, great Tarte/ and at vartraut vibe tto own at cold Mee of &bit/ /113/111tr 111:11XL1). ,MOURNING GOODS--Marphy & Rural- . ' nelit bare on ban} an annarlsurnf d'lliask &lobo. ' nnk• Can Cloth .110uni de Labun. I 11..0ba. Jim, nnialand 41.1paen% ann. fiber Mica on=li inob. feblo I. • . , . I rt OAF SUGAR-LlOO lobs, nesorta num-. yak for by ' StRIMIDGE INGRASIAM. .1 10 240.116 wawa-. ISAIAI.I DICKE): & CO, Agents for Me elwAe's Iron Work" hava irm far :de of wayerior ger" MT. "aar AT Vg . 075 Ti . OTTON - 1 0 btles for sale by . %_1 fetal/ DICRET CO (l 0 ON ZITAGS - 40 dor. tsrilliALfor V) lip feta() P1e01.1.4.5 k ROY QEGA.Rs--10,CX) Pprincipe, for sale by }Ohio:_ menus I Bbs ' ! t' Law Partnerelurf. ' •' - HE subscribers have associated Slain ,o,.. to unprmalee of Law, ander th e Irma Blatt THE Go eor the other of them, whei mot es• pigeet,ll,lilarti tzttejl . mg:t all tlrm is the- off., me. '''''''' ILKADE W .Miell•• • Etnic.W. TIL-4.64 . ASUMITON •- 'IIIIiTER-4 bbla roll i• _UP 1 aao F .ted. g° t.". VONIIONNII r OtI.42 *CO . TII SIN BLACK 'S IL K S--Altrarar ' P.. 84.7. hare marked i yrry' s rupply of she,. poeati 71141f1)=.fr:IIVADV7i,.- =est, rzyles. Ja9 Large /action Sale of Refiaed,Sugar; - !. OF BATTLE GEMINI! SUGAR REFDARIr,.. ,-- ; i 1 •AT NEW 011.LEATIS. i. .-- - 1 ma BBLS OF REFINED . SUGAL Double Loaf, • Crushed, Pa Mlited. • sea d o . t gaiesrulYlaridnt, still be mad at 4ertiou 'at Nee On Imo. pa the 19th day of labrovy , 15.11,0 y It 11111 PIN. Auedmmer; at tha mos of Illt.M. IfAILLI - . BLANCHARD. a c 0.4 agentx et mkt Itellmrs. No.t.lecurtoof lOrmossreet.- ', Wrenn liberal at sale. 1 . ALIO, on , the . • day, at the moo AM, '. .."" . f . '' ' .. ' -"i .;-: ..i.,ol , yckes 41 preof pate mad dark . f . '4leNolmo Itostel • .. ~-, 50 d o ' sed .- pale Motage 15, , rdo - do- d o ' pa =ss - - 151.5 Ido lr. ... ... 21' do lst ' . •• '. 11/0 ..:. do. uo .. . f ... 1.1:1 Ipm Notlets Imperial toile Glm • All a above are =KIM Cost.= llotke• Stmt. e . . . ... j 100 la tete Gsdenolek . , _ • 1 150 Abdatb; . &mated Conlialk lon .. • Brarely Cherriem ... • . 50 . fruits In theltjuice: . . • 1M 'baskets Olive Oft MI . and , . cams Pardines in 011. at dtole. half. ' oisarel ath b..... .4arotm.s., Moro] &t Jodo. . febolw. 1N5EF,15 OIL-5 bbi„N just received, puro Camera' or, and for WA br 11.0111.50 N. LITTLL L CO, julo 114111.KUSAD STOCK* lJ isillakuenta all pall un fur nal+ by • 11 M. A. tau. a C 0.. ., 0.1 Stock awl F,aluaga Brokana ft FIGS AND RAISIKS,-1-iii boxes wa: sga do }lain", Lund and for sale br =OWN aKM ISSantler. 012 feb .ILIOLASSES—ii4-tiereeß and i3OO barrel Bi. IVY prime moyerage, 1U Mile S. 11., fur rel. by BROWN & KIb.KPATRICK. LARDbI.I% best refined Winter, i.for sale Li scuotos3r.utru. a co. • elk WOW/nett. VAPER-1.00 zrams Wrapping, nssottedi' 100 do llsobraro da l or Al.B SC11001:11ASE1t CO. bbls Cammon ' Afißon, tar risrale br febl J. soloontn &co . lIILDEWS SIIIONS—Just receivede43 : o r , 1, KIDD I. OA. &M. • . No. U 1 Wood newt, ' SITAKIER'S IIERB8„111 kinds, a fFeek I .ot on haul, and far tale by • • • J. ATM it' co. IILAMER'Sf)I ‘ft by frAS ONG SHAWI,,S—A few 'LOT . pna . f . 4 — , Long lkitb:SES WOOLEN SHAWLS- Of lenor, qualltr, sc more of - • 111.18PflY a DV aoineux lASTOR. 011,--10 brig Inovesluest li for Bale B UTTER -7 bbl fresh S do ; solid; kegs dc. 71p0BACCO--45 bars 5 bump, for solo by faa " - IIcOIIAS t WE. AVINIJOW GLASS—ViijT x ,7 7 qt - T i av i ii. 814'10.571 . 7g* by 7. 1 1 bIeGILLS ettox. PTENT SOAP POW DER-2D b oxes i m t. end sad tor ra1.14 azunts, Li. wd auoet vb.= Um. gamine ruck a 177 017 .0 be . 14 . • NOTIM • 4, 1 10 - 11%-1,10318-BIADE TLANNEL--, IF v - RICRPII4 BUR Bak at abase knr as 4.ktrasatiV"an,Tdki.ig Late ~Lq oa bassi. Xasasta• Rasa, sisa a al - jia Thu Insaksts rarbservlats aret goaUttles. ttlsa , r eceamer LL. 1,0.nr I t I . ofar DA LULL. per liwag .,l'ul'." 1 b 4 Wood st. C 1.4 eeht PAPER I,IAII.9IIALL d for sale by CKET Alk CO DICKEY.I W. The 'Stoe .- betrbr noti • h. U. ettuillli Um tuAt 11... r REED. B.T fvb 1 en, for sale by :MAKER t Co. or sale by 01%31AKER t Co. for sale by w.iiminALTEL s .prime; for sale 4. W. WARBArOIL- ugTl. ;Cured. foi . ntrawa.m. bad for sate b d: umtpxoti: bs sujicrioyAua.l of for sale br J. KIDD k co. I.)ble. for sale by .e KI 112:1•STillCb: shel4 . ou hand an '3 d KiLKPATIIICK. , (It:nese, 'luv ==l or solo EIII CO 2. LW for Pala -by P.. E. SELLERS.. r'sale 'kr • rt. k.. snLeaa CEM=M 411 1 / 4 71)=Toa. or.ea►o - 7 3. KIDD co. jud vwtilted mid 31KULLS t ROE..