PITTSB GH GAZETTE punusn T : BBURGB TittilttbA.fit RHINO; MARCH 18, 1851 To ".• • of Pennsylvania. • ArZ - A.NlAiil . OOlO - P—N111)11 till 1* held In the Chi f Lanai...ter, on TGENDAY, June 2,lth, 1151. fur the put pt.op of selecting' candldanie for the anicci of Garernor and Canal COMialnletter. and al. fur /nun. or the Suprem e Culat. ILENILY M. VELLER,Chairman. Jorictib fL Fl.. ~1,,. I Samuel 51cMenamr, F. hincr Mc MOri. I C. 'Thermion Jon., IVm.ll. Nlinglal, Nianu.lll. Thom.. rused Itoth, Jur. N. Brawn, hathanl.lEllmahm, I T. Taylor Wort. Wet . J. holthutin,, Alentuulex E. Ewer, • . Warden E. Printon. ' Wm. rll ` k. ' r. %home E. Cram, I Wm. M. Matta Menu J‘ihnson, James Clerk, .., , Cluirhis B. bondman. Sherman D. Pith" llcur-e Cm, I Rhein C. liaison. D. Ar FinneT. I John Alllnth I Daniel McCurdy, Joni, Darman. , 1 ror4^ Meat., W...X , 1.A. i Aleslr Ti. McClure, John C. Neville, • Francis Jordan. U. 11 I NDLE NMITLI. Necretary. I The Post publishes some letters to disprove the etatentent tbat } pen. Case said, at Cleveland, that tbe "noise antleonfusion" was so great that he .could not then give his views on the river and harbor improvemeuts, &c. le this as it rau9, it is gaite . certain Gelt. Cass could have secured the passapor the lath bill in the Senate, if he had desired it.. The bill was killed by the Democra liaparly, Gets. Cass consenting thereto, and no doubt rejoicing thereat, and especially graded that amid the .noise and confusion" he was not roMPelied to record his'vote upon it. It is very singular that the Democrats should labor so strenuously to make out that r their favo rite candidates are not opposedto this and that r measure, - which the . paitY itself r e pudiates. The Democratic party, as'eucli, has bitterly opposed the iriprovement of our rivers and -Lake harbors. -and yet there is a great effort made to show that 11r. Casa is favorable to such improvements.= . The whole object of this is to obtain votes on false pretences, and is wholly dishonorable. It wan the plan resorted to in this State to secure it to Sir. Polk. That was s most vile and pen:d eicers fmud, which has worked immense injury folids State. IrGen. Cass is really in favar . of Improving our Inland' navigation, be would not harp beenVound voting with the enemies of the hill in the Senate, for amendments which were fatal to it, and he could no doubt have brought it to the test of a direct vote, which would have eared it. • ,It is unquestionable, that the Locoteco party is accountable for the defeat of the bill in the Senate, and the people will-to decide when they coma p vote. "Sramon" as.P‘Dtror."—as we are soon to become familiar with railroads, it is not altogeth er unimportant to pay' Came attention to the tt•ehnical named that will, of necessity soon coma into common use among us, and we there fore venture to put in a plea that "Depot" may be banished forever and ever from our railroad terms, and the plain English word . "Station," inserted in its place. We Satter ourselves that the. best arguments can be brought to sustain this inOation. Whea a word is adopted from a foreign lan guage, the presumption, is that it suppliea a dofi •uiency. The word ennui has claimed a place in one mother tongue on these term!, end in return we •liave given the French its very oppoeite— rain/enable. Gentleman; that noblest title of hon or that can be betowed upon a mortal, is now in every Frenchman's mouth, and the magic word home mast soon be adopted also, for the French langdage does not afford its:equivalent. Bat &- potties no such encase for thrusting itself upon es. It was f,rat applied to railroad staiionsin England end was then adopted in this cosdetry; but in France aiiion is the word. It belongs to both langnageS, but is more usedsin English, and thus vie may almost be said to have exchanged terms: Tire'Englieh now eleraya say etatian, and we are • alone in the use of depot. Shall we cling to an ugly looking and vile sounding word when our own Itutgunga affords an acceptable equivalent? Plain spoken people, each as the majority of our citizens, are constantly complaing of the common affectation among literary fops of stuffing their writings. with Preach words` The complaint is very jolt, and these same plain !Token people should not fall into the error they are so ready to denoudee. Let ne therefore Lave the word eta- Lion Cased in all ollicial documents concerning the railroads, sad it Will soon displace its ill-favored eadintesding foreign 'rival. The Loan= Tnent.—The Allegheny and But ler. Plank Road Company advertises in our pa per for,two million feet of plank. Four or five 1 other Plank roads are either commenced or will be soon, in this neighborhood, and we may soon expect to bear of a dozen new projects for there is a Phxik. Road Mania here as well as in other parte of the country. These reads will create a great demand for lumber and we may expect an activity in the business of sawing and bringing to market, hitherto unknown. Should there be neither a ruction against plank roads, nor Ray plan discovered to eupercede them, there is ample reason expect that every common road in the count7will be grodedand planked. • Our forests are already going with fearful rapidity, but this new market for lumber will swallow them at a rata which will make all former consumption np peer trifling, for each road mast be renewed es t"- few years. We most add also the large amount of timber:used in railroads, which are now building more rapidly than ever. It is pro bably wseless to trouble oursldves with the affeirs of coming generations, but If the "anbern mil linen" so often spoken of could be addrened, we would warn them that they:will have to manage in some way to get along without timber, for it will not require a century. to exhaust all the net uralloreste that are accessible. lisitusavuon Merrmts.,—ln Smote, on the Bth inst., nothing of general interest took place, • except the following: On motionof Mr. Crabb;,the Senate resolved itself into Committee of the Whole, on the bill to provide the mode of giving out contracts on railroads .terminating at Erie; and, after some time spent therein, the bill was reported with stmdry amendments, and after it had been read a second time, and die title amended as as to read thus: "n Portlier supplement to the act to 'lncorporate the Franklin Canal Company, and • the supplement thereto relating to the Pittsburgh and Erie Railroad- Company," the bill was read a third time and passed. We think it prebnble that this is some tion on. present the right of way across Pennsyl vania for the hew York Railroads, being secured by alraud upon the - In the Hinue, the bill to compel the Harris buigh and Lancaster Railroad Company to fence their road in Dauphin-county, and the hew York and Erie Railroad. Company to fence their road 112 Susquehanna county, was taken up. The question pending being upon a motion to goiuto Committee of the. Whole for the purpose of amending by inserting "The Pennsylvania Railroad, the Cumberland 'Valley Railroad, the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, and the York and Cumberland Railroad Con:Tani." This lead to a long debate between Messrs. Kunkel, Penniman, Steward; Dobbins, and 01. wipe, and • Mr. Kunkel moved the protons question which was seconded; end• out off the motion to go Into Committee of the Whole, :and the bill passed finally—yeas 114, nays 21. The bill to incorporate the city of Philadelphia with =Urged boundaries i come up in order, .andwas debated to the close of the session. - intim on Eamises.—As Mr. Emerson wilt neon commence his course oneettnes in this city. we have thought it would not ho out of place to copy the following fromback number of the llome Journal. Mr. Willis is petal:kip expert in aketche.s 'of this kind, wad the one before us will serve as an excellent, introduction of the disc tingaished lecturer to his 'Pittsburgh audience: Sits' Millie begins by saying that be had never iseenMr. Emerson to kuovc him, and that when he reached the hall the crowd was MO :great that he was farad to stand with his bank. against the farthest wall. At this point our gurttioa corn : mantes Thealagle look we were enabled to give Ifr. Einerson, as the applause announced that he had come into the palpi; .revealed to us that it was a man we had - seen o thousand times, and with whose face mar memory was familiar; though, in fthe sidewalk portrait it.st - i,v by which we had treasured his physiognomy, there. was eo little resemblance to _the, portrait taken from reading hlm, that we should never have put the, twri geth4; probably; except by personal identifica , ton:, reinember him perfectly, ,as a boy . Die playing about Chauncey. Place ad Summer street—one of base pale little moral iiablimet with there ' :shirt Oollaritarnel oveiatibti are '.. -.grazed by the Boston selinol liejs asliating i fathers that are Unitarians"—, and therigh he c me to his first 'Mei-Chair about the time that wi came to our first tail-coat, six or eight years • . hind us, we have never lost sight of him. , In the !hits see have made to Boston, of Late yenta, w. have seen him in the street, and remembered hti;i n g always seen him as a boy— very little nape • g that there walked, in a form longlamiliar,!tire. deity of an intellectual altar, 1 upon which, at that moment, burned afire in our ' boson Emerponas vo els up to his reputation. It ic has a carious • contradiction, which we tried in 1 vein to analyze satisfactorily—an outwardly re. ' pellant and it madly reverential mingling of qualities, which a musical o:imposer would de- ! spair of blending into one. "It bespeak: a life I that ill half contempt, half adoring recognition, ! and very little, e tween. But it is noble, alto gether. And a at seems strange is veneer eruch a voice proceed ng from such a body. It is a voice with sh ou den in it, which•he has not—`nth lungs in it far I rger than his—with n Walk in it which the publi neyer sex—with a fist in it, which his own hand a Ter gave him the model for—end with a gentle nin it, which his parochial and " bare-necessa es-of-life" eort 02 exterior, gives no other betray I of. We can imagine nothing in nature—(whit seems,-too; to have 1 type for everything)—b -e the want of correspondence between the Emerson that goes in at the eye, and the Emerson tat goes in at the ear. We speak, (as we explain ,) without having had an oppor tunity to study hi s face—acquaintance with fea tures, as every ode knows, being like the peeling of an artichoke and the tore of a fate, to those I who knoWit, hag eery unlike the eight or ten I outside folds t at stop the eye in the beginniug. But .heavy an v ase-like blossom of a magnolia, ! with fragrance ough to perfume a whole wil derness, which honld be lifted by a whirlwind and dropped lia is branch of an aspen, would net seem more as i it never could have grown there, than Emerson' voice seems inspired andloreign to his visiblel a il, natural body. Indeed, (to use I . one of his o similitudes,) his body seems " never to has broken the umbilical cord" which held it to Bost n, while his soul has sprung to the adult stm t of.a child of the universe, and his voice is th utterance of the soul only. It ; is one of his fine arks, that "it makes a great difference to e force of any sentence whether a man is behin it or no"—but, without his voice to make the stand surety for his value, the eye would 100 for the first time on Emerson and protest hii on admiration, as net "payable at siffit."! dit The first t eaty sentences which we heard, betrayed one f the smaller levers of Emerson's power of sip which! wo had not detected in reading him. Ile works with surprises. A man who shoulde a visit of charity, end, after expressing # proper sympathy, should bid adieu ..1, to the poor W man, leaving her very grateful for his kind feelings, but should suddenly return, after shutting the door, and give her a guinea, would prodtte; just the effect of his most electric sentences. 'You do not observe it in reading, because you 'thhold the emphasis till you come to the key-w But, in delivery, his cadences ect. tell you that e meaning is given, and th e inter est of the E tease bail over, when—flash t— omes a singl word orphrase, like lightning after , listened-out t under, and illuminates, with as. ' toaishing vin ma, the cloud you have striven For the Pittsburgh Ga z ette. to see into. e can give , perhaps, a partial exem- . IMMORALITY Eft mon PLACER. .plification of it, by a description rather than a ' quotation of droll and graphic sketch, which he ' Ma. Eorroa.—On board the canal boat, in drew in his ectere, of his first impresrion of travelling from Philadelphia to this city, a few Englislurieirio the road. The audience had al- t days since, among a throng of passengers I oh reedy laugh in two or three places, and—With i servedthree members of Congress. One or more tile intent:irk to be longer attended to on that I point quite gone out of his eyes—he was fumbling ! of them were accompanied by highly respect, with his mantecript to look for the next head— I bin families in appearance. , The practice of when the closing word, just audible, threw us all , members being accompanied to the reticent cap into a fit of laughter. " The Englishman," Of : ital by their; families is commendable, serving see may parap hrase rather than quote, for it is ; to break down to tome extent local nrejuilice, impossible t recall the subtle collocation of his ( and to cultivate and elevate social qualities., r f . words,) ti f. lie puts on j Distinguished marks of favor and attention were as many co its, wrappers, and trousers as he , givertthe members of Congress 'by the urbane. likes, and,.wdle be respects °liters' rights, is I captain of the packet. This I was more than unaffectedt „ , and unconscione of, the observe• delighted with. When I see the representatives lion of those and liim. Be is an island, as of ray country honored. I consider My country is England is. He is a bulky and sturdy mass , mass , honored, and I feel myself bemired. Early the with his .ClO e 9 buildup about his body, and he ! morning after, passing from the! cars to the pac , lives in, thnak.s in, and speaks from, his---- i ken, Judge B—,one of the meinbery alluded to building." ''.e the listener, this last word, which j procured et the bar u glass of lirandy and pas was dug out, smelted, coined, and put away to ! wed among the passengers, in vai .soliciting some be produced and used with cautious and artistic ; one to join him in drinking is soend glass. effectiveness, seems an accident of that momenta , Never was I more delighted ban to see him suggestion—rya new a' thing to the orator as to j completely foiled. No one o the passengers himself, and which hh came very near not heir- I would drink with him. The J dge, sobs is pie, ing. as it came very near not being said. ' I belly more faretious than bee rocs one of his We are gorsipping only—not trying to estimate r position, was unusually silent and looked Much or criticise. What our readers might not other- ! like a man who hail been rebuked for a wrong. wise get at, is what we aim to give—in this as in I It was noon or afterwards before be repined most else that we describe editorially. Emerson , his vivacity of spirits. Next jamming he and is too great is man to easily or triflingly up- I Hon. ll—were seen very quietly.elbnwing their preciated. he more studied us well as mare' way to the liquor part of the boat Besides properly deferetitial views which we entertain of those two members no one else was sera to go his nature act power,' we leave nnexpressed, be- , there. cause others are likely to do it better. end be-.: Ano th er mortifying eironalitance 'was wit cause we t o &tons in ono pcde, nod can let the' nessed: An effort WWI made by these represen ink dry on nothing. We can only say of this . ustiees and their friends to get up a gore of Lecture on ugland !lint it was, as all is which , cards. The beat was ransacked but no cords he does, a c pact makes of the exponents of far- 1 were found. This was creditable tin_ the Mat. reaching th ughts—stars which are the polo! But the project was not abandoned. at the blest points of u verses beyond—end at each close of ! opportunity one was dcepatched to procure the I a sentence, ne wanted to stop and wonder at desired object on shore. but this failed Then that though before being hurried to the next. the Coneressional party. oft down and apparently ! I . Be is a sug estive, direction, giving, soul fathom- : abandoned themselves, to ennui Here nee defin ing mind, a il we area glad there are not more j sing corrupting. immoral examples that ought to such. A fir Einem:lns would ma" the every - !be censured by every loser of hie country !and day work o one's mind intolerable. lof religion. I was pained, moreted and di, Let us cl se by giving our renders an advance . gusted when 1 saw th e repriseutatives of my taste of a nd similitude with which he closed . nation acting in this mermen It is devoutly to his lecture, d which we see isl not given in the •be wished that it will not be long till all such g i , newspaper eports of it. It its one ot •tho.o I members of Congress. will be left at home by a , Titanic tho glits that would alone make a repu- I christian and patriotic nation, otherwise , ! Lotion, an a prophetic metaphor of England's 1 our federal Capitol will be in dsnger of becom. power for which Victoria should, name one of her ' jag a sink of v i ce , an d our oofjpoo) re p resent , annual bob; s Emerson. After' some very bole , tines so many sewer conveying this corruption and fearles comment on the croaking that pre- : through all the land. Washington, the Father dicta the sp edy downfall of Englund, he camper , I o f his country. prohibited rep p ro p ane v ,,,, a ( ag ed her te th banyan tree, which, it will be remem- I in his army, was seen in prayer at Valley Forge, bered, send up shoots from its roots that become, I and received the love:tent when his army lay themselves., huge trunks of parent vegetation. I at Norristown. • How different the conduct of "She has p anted herself on that little island," I these would be patriots in qUestion i One of 4 1 2 he said, "li e the banyan tree, and her roots ! these representatives is all the time boring Con harespread der the sett, and come up on far away ! press with lamentations about slavery. I do, continents, a din erery parr, of th e teort . d, flower- i like him not fir his principlesor politics, but for rag with he language and laws, and forever per- ! his immoral inconsistencies , :net public corrupt petuating h r, though the first trunk dismember I ing examples. and peri " In his own words, this thought I I love my country, I love our Union, I honor will have as banyan an eternity as England.' ' I our public men who are worthy, I lose religion ' ' and morality, but hate vice and bad examples —• , wherever Been. , TBAVELLIS. TER FROM CALEFORIILL OF THE NORTH AMERICA .teamship North America, Captain ii. arrived at New Turk, on Thurediq She brings 16 dayn later intelligence Tho new ! 11. Blethea night last. from Calif. The into gene from California . is not of ape- i . The election of U. S. Senator was. take place in two or three.days . at. • •arture of the steamer. The choico en CoL Fremont end Mr. T. Butler Et was thought that the former was ! ,L bluff excitement still continues in all • ity. The accounts published, sup '. davits of those who have been up end watched the different appear t• beach at different seasons of the !stirred up a spirit of adventure to hardly credible. Vessels of every are carrying crowds to the new El expected to ter the d , being bets IGng erld • Pinang The gold' of :to inte• Ported by on the epo caeca of year. hare an extent description Dorado. The Alt• there is m. Californian expresses its belief thnt ,re reason in the reports concerning I. of these sands than in those which ost of the adventurers originilly to the richne.: impelled H. California the best standing among us," it says, to the spot. examined the locality, I sand, submitted it to the examine oxidic, and to the assays of the most hopest chemists and miners in the .1 have published the result. And some persons who come thousands .on indefinite information 'respecting I and have made their fortunes by so lily ridicule those who see fit to oat se, and go for the black mind and up the coast, but as conductors of I.es denouncing all those who, In the e risked their money upon an un /, the purpose of exploring, arrant ~itere, end swindlers. The same, aid strike at the reputationZof nearly Imileent men of California All we I. neither° is nothing unreasonable in at ass Immense quantity of gold has the bluffs by the operations of the °wands of years. The rail is known i.och of the fine gold, similar to that g the beach sand. The Pacific has .Idwastier or. cradle, and the spirit of has been Irocking it for limitless "Men of 'thrive bee. collected .i tion of the eminent an! country, a.l yet we find of miles a. the placers doing, not as they ple' yellow gol I public pres, first instan I certainty f cheats. Wu criterion w all the pr can say 19 the files .1 washed fro ocean for' I to contain . found MO I been the gI the storm ages." The s.. re paper states that "ti grimt many have been kept secret by persons eel; for tome time acquainted with tics, in order to coo what wilrae the engross with regard to them, and selves of the earliest information to posses7sion of these fruits of nature. at large hare but little idea of their ! secure the 'The peep!• richne-s." The S I Francisco Herald of Feb. lot, for following summary of esOnta since the of the previous stesmei: lushes the departure . gnation noticed in our circular of the unary still continues in our market, . changes can be made from our last During tan past week a alight ad been made in some few articles, as 'a by' our detailed review, but there e little reason ta expect any very ma . .yemant•for some weeks. will be a seems to terial imp The nn seartity of rain up to this time .. • . has very materially embarrassed the operations 1 niThrsiztvANDA RAni t o AD, WO., "dry diggings:* The miner§ have Dees-' • pied themselves thus f in throwing up dirt, I ig s.. , - ; ; 7•.- --,.....-Et..-^ .---. .1 lffsl. SPRING ARRAME3IENT. 1 , 51 ready to take admntage f the first. rain that els- Forty-six hoar, to Philadelphia_ reitspdthrtgent,;„fstpnedrsiofiLewlianloc , , c e ina ..t, he i,, p l ia th ced at p on art th o e f 1 the country, a few days ,, rain would enable them! .Forty-four hours to Baltimore, to collect an immerwel, large amount of gold, , 280 miles Railroad-1103 miles Canal. which being immediatelY - thrown into the hands 1 of traders, who have givhn credit to the minera l Two Daily Lines Express Packet Boats. for stores, would have the effect of at' once re- ._ v riving business throughout the country. s __,. - II •-.. , — . , t• ' ' ' • 1 . , r.,_____,.___. ~.. -,........ A Sege number of men are engaged with great ' (EXCLUSIVELY OR PAS2EN4ERS) success in the country adjoining the Klamath' TO PHILADELPHIA BALTIMORE AND river, especially on Scott's and Salmon creeks, , NEW 'ollli. ilal tributaries. This prtion of the mining re- : N the opening of (lanai Navigation, TWO &II has, as yet, been b t little explored in com- . l t ) natty Lin...N[ Kap, + Papket Boa. will leave fur orison with - the mom', Southern parts of the J. , 3 1111{0.111, thPlx, .o Porta.: • Railroad to State, andwill doubtkiss be found to nhound . HOLLTD4YSBLIRGEL - . in "in placers" fully equal to any hitherto --- 1 . , as the worked. NIIIV PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD We mentioned in our last circular the report Two Itundrvd mud run y..fire !mile , ,meet ! . ' or very valuable discos ies of gold on the sea ; , 1 _Time through Fr:Tv-viz fours. the richness of the depo its, but also discover ma- PELLADaPIIIA. coast, near the mouth f the Klamath river.—' Further investigations c nfirm, in a great degree, , r ,,,,,, to phile,tehdan, SIO tare 51 11.......0....,.. 1 - 9.7 ,1. ny serious obstacles to rendering theta available i ~4 7 :1C , 14,„t hi 1 '1 . "",,,1,,.,"'„,;•:. " ..„",7 • zz , ."1. , .. , .•l sm. , - at the present time. The "Gold Muff" is about :_swiets leave every moruininmisehi at Debt weio,k. thirty miles from Trinidad, the nearest safe I '''d ,eery """'"“ ' 5 0 " . '''''" Lose. point for vessels to discharge their cargoes. The Passengers for Baltimore, . road between is of an almost impassable nature, On ntrintl of Can at Ilanishurg. !Ike the fork .ad Cum: terriwad Itell-,rl. (now finkhed, duvet to that cat, teighty only practicable for mules. four miles, l'lme. SOUR hdure Considerable difficulty also exists in bringing ,No charge for handling Baggage on this route. into operation any really efficacious method of 1 .1b:. 3 ,1';;;,.=; , ,,,.. , ;; ^ „ . ,, , ,,,..,,, , ;;;.t;„ t, , , :1: , ,, ,, ..0rt e ,, , , f ri.:,...b... separating the gold from the sand; the weight of I Coe tins, VT intalliatits morn, the latter, which is in n. great part metallic, pre- ; J. P.i HOLM ES, or to I Agen D. LEECII & Cf t, venting the ordinary Virginia rockers from , 3 1memnabela if ee , ' r.' working successfully. Experiments have beer, cant Emirs.Pe etzee• tried to make the extraction by fusion, but a. nq e the let o t jov th e t.,,,, e 0.,,1 . ,,,,,, r • r r. a I whether they can be carried out on a sufficient- ,74 ro n r g V i tt,t ^ r .L.''' ,. ..l: ".,, nil! .hurt.en the Um, ily large scale to be practically useful remains to "Pitcsbu,h. lebrnnt y 19..41 be seen. PENNSYLVANIARAILRTAI). TILE PACHECO MINES—A NEW DISCOVERY: . • MONTEREY, JunuaTy 26, 1851. Editors of the. Poetic News: • It would be fain in me to attempt a descrip tion of the excitement which has prevailed here for the two preceding days, caused by the an nouncement of the discovery of a ?let gold mine in the vicinity of " Pacheco's," county of Mon terey. The facts which led to the discorery are as follows: It appears that some six days ago a Mexican who had been sojourning for some weeks in the Mission of San Juan de Baptista, started from thence on his 'fray to the "mines," hilt when adjacent to the mountains, near the rancho of Pacheco, it struck him, from his past experi ence as a miner, that the clay, or as it is better known by the term of dirt, closely resembled ',that of the placers. Ile accordingrilialted' and bommenced to "prospect," when in the space of an hoar be extracted something about two ounces lof pure gold! The lucky !iambi?, after staking , out a claim, returned once more to San Juan, for his mt.*, and to purchase provisions. The facts soon got wind and rush took place among the mission inhabitants that would almost rival your "black sand" mania; horses, mules, and even the ignoble tames were pressed into service, and San Juan stands now 'almost deserted of its ' male inhabitants. The fever his spread to Mon terey; companies are being ,formed, animals bought or chartered, and nothing thought or spoken of but the .-Pacheco • Market Street VOR RENT.—The E 1: street. the mrsaid dear frog sad Liberty •tr 0,... next. Inquire or mehl3 Attention ' R 7 Artmeman ts moat rreicctiony 10iitl4 to the plait.unearedahed statement of John Watt. who v. cured .of an o/d Cough by the nee of the Petvourv: . Tbis may certify that 1 bare ~,b re ..n cured of an old Cbtordn Cough. by the um of Fa so me. of Petro... The cough attacked me a ye. ago 1. - t Divember.ltatt I hod lent .11 hopes of getting srell, .1 bad taken Cured rice of mem.' physki.o without any benett. 1 vu buneemd flaunt Instantly by the Petroleum. 1 &wheel up. durom the nor of the Petroinm.ohorisubsteassrysesoiliner tow —. I make these ltatti.l2l.4 Viliagnit any r.olfeltazlon lento kny one to do ro. and solely far the porpoise that others who may be autlrring may be benefited. You axe Ai liberty to publish thi. certiE.M. 1 am so old citizen of Pittaborgh, hoeing resided here thirty.thrre ye.... Sty reahlcarr, et this time, le on Second stmt. JOIIS WATT. Ptirsation. February 'deb 1P51.• For gala by Keyser A. geD;rell, 140 Weed gybe., P. E. Seller., 57 Waal alma: B. A. Fahnestnek. A Co, mnxer Wand and Front Meet, D. 1:. Corby, D. A. Einot,, Ja.wph Danglaas, and 11, P. Schwabe, Allegheny. also by the pm- Irriator. h. Id. KIER, • feb=blerff Gerd Bag,. tieventh st...Plttobargh. at-Parma:Mt Aar, ern ItturmiCaltrurns.—Although' lona knretrn M a amereign mmedy for ebrordc cases of Hu patbi derangement, the proprletma of Dr. McLane', Laver Pills were net prepared fur the follnakug gratifying eel deem of Ite capacity and aurally, Got.. to Agee and o.' vet, and Baia. emoplalour lentiaPtrar.a. Noe. 2, ler. Ileker. Kidd d. Co.,—About one year am I am laboring under a very severe atteet of Ague and Paver, but by the me of 31clant's Neer Pills, I am soon rentomd to perfect ; health. I behave them to be the best medleinsdor 111bor. ' camp:slum that has ;rota born oCerad for ,ale Iu thin wo- Lem of the mentrd. JAMPS Formle by- J. KIDDI CU.. melattdtalwdi 'No. Cu %To,' et. _ _ Foreign and American Hardware. LOGAN, WILSON &„.CO., No. 129 Wood Street, WAVE NOW IN NTORI: • - A full wad canal:Ult. atock of FOREIGN AND AMERICAN HARDWARE, huitwlaw fwr the orpring and which the' sr* prorwred to Offer to purstutmen. - wt maws that will nitapart fwvorrably with why of the twatiwo . ° C i r—l i'SE,O ca F ra i n -'I,S I ' : fl i rA rT tor l ) ° ; ''', ;rltlng, Arlit; i &atom Intr...,llria-rTfirre .arid Mental - 1 1 Irsil;:mh - Ir6sLet , r., . Ithrtorir, kde . r for ,ale s., mar ~,,,,, d b', ,i,,,--m, ll e imbrute the urinal glurlita.' • w9tls In.truttldn9 in 0. , kstntit Lana-nap. 14 1- E ATEIEBO - 60 sacks Feathers received nod or sal.by mar 9, 8. d W. II \URA I'I.II. lERJ.fsc , l 41 - Alizt , „l.l 10' __ ...-,• -.-- - . _ 1,,,,, p,,,,,,,,,,, .. . ..,5L.* 1,•,..1.., !I j)OLL 11l rr Elt --;7, Barrels reed per S. B. ' ' ''' L ' .. ..;i ' ', l" • ' • `'' ' '' '''' ''''' in,r,i. .... i ' I t Te'""" ' smi for "d° by A. a W. it AtnAutin , uanr h, at,. ... '"'r tnifll ' t ‘' ' il„ Alt1)-20 Ids. dr 100 kgw. No. I Lard in 1(1 - ELY ERIZE 11 clillS--Rolined nail Presl.l-.4,'"." an, fee rule by , ,u, Aw, Haim ,t,,,, so, b e Tft 'i lfl i r l ' ir " tle .. .l. 4 l: " .: r treed F'" ln -- I T y l' h i elt i rlsr rn or.r b le:L ) 9, '' fnd ° ;" pii',3l ,--- s___3 bbl. for rule by ram - nu:cal. Pudd.ouw, Cakes. estatanla, d.,... Le.. Inatl., 1,9, 4 neh , NI SI If. 7(IIINFTON. lb. dlreetmnt stc.tapan; to each package, will tat fasted .-- - ' too!st usr.ttbrd- 1 . I;tul Per.P.' l9 fl , o s .nt 9 . I A.RD - 17 . kegs in more and tor Bale liv 1., ~,,ti 1, mthl. IL s. St,LLtItFl. F. 7 W..,04 R. J m ..b.. W9l. 11. JOIINSTs./ri . _._, 11 . INSEEO Olt -20 casks Linseed oil, - C . , lIEEN AI • i'LES-31i bbl. fur side by ip A ret'd and Yd. nab" 1.,/ 19 AA ., It'll. II JOI IlssTO mt.' ,t. E. d IT. IIAIIIIAIIfI 11. .'- 111IIIILI 11'PLIIS-00 baekti receivc a and I kill' APPLES.-2.iu lei. for sale lit ALF for .10 by mg , 12 0 wale . ITAILBACIt If. I_, a, atm ii..niflNsrov. 1 AIID-20 Wilt,. NO. 1. - Lard ree'il tied ftir lClioltY NUTS-17 libl. fur sal 1y La tale t ty mar 1 . 2 Y.+: W. HARILII2II 11. li r ...h . li b( 11. JOIINST4 , 9:. . . w ilouw ti L.A SS-2 1 )0 boxes Window 0"r ~1 0 LEAF TOBACCO - 2 Mal. for sii.lC E nets , ' WM. IL JOIINST , 0N T Illa , s, to Leer and earunn..brando, reoW and _ -,-,-, , / - - --- for ,ale bya,r, mar 12 ''' ' S ' • "&&" 6 " li. i Vik Jtil. 1 ED-A SALESM AN in a Dry iliTitlT E WINE VENEtiAII, of asge ri or rn.,..",'9',.„:„1.4,;,,)..X°1%,1,7,1,tr:11:11,L701.9,,,n„,...., will &bod ,LT, , , s e tale , 1 .., r r " ' lo' q r ' I A. r,;t:air6;',v,!'" - -cia __ natlil2 -.,.; '''''''' '''''' T" '''''''"r' lIITA TCIIES, J E W ELRY, SILVER FOR PIES ANL , 'I AIITS-Frcsh Cherries T WAAL', 're. Ware, Britannta Tea !wt.. twat . titter aid Plum, put up as their ...Inlet, mu.serrlna the , Plattgl Fora,. btwont . Jull butter ittr i os a Table ,i t..l.•ll ; brudnal darer ol - the 11,1 t. Atgo--Ctopee, „ 1,..1, A t.ed irai.a siisiiii , •• , o '.' ' a2d Inwellitcr ' 7'sta ''' , L it. " .- I , htet awl thou Itlngbom and EIVII , II th !aline. 1.1 Jelllet.. : n`''''-'" • :• .--° ''k newt...hal e , .,,. . ~,,, - ~, .. et n il Maur , lanue, dr fbr mi./ br ' b ' '' ' ''' ' "'' I' r' '" ii;l7.re • ‘ au " rOlaet. =rs . Vta'usond. , usthlt - 4‘' W. A. Ma:LI:Ili:A CO-.121.4 Lattt y . i 1itt11.,, 6 ` 44 ''... 6 . ia UNDRIES .- 1 1.1n,1e Gum Shellc: i ' 4 - kill - tile ow ' , ore la underculng reps]. In front, clue tom , ra esti nn I we us the rear bf Ulu %tore. teutramt let I-) 1 bbl ?User Eand, irout,t with a ißrifir ktilfi, of the abou t ~,,,,d,„ AAA A , AA I .• Cream Tartan met. I bale net. l ee Curio I u l: s jltr i A ls..7h l' rem.s. strip ahoy on th, woad story. 1 [WV Lbunarler Halt ,sort re.uired W. W. WILSON and for salt by h. li IVItrItt:Itt11:01. , A ,..,,7 .. corner Fourth and bfartel A. snrhl2 . eurner Wood brut Math .t.i. - •ABOOK KEEPER, who can come well IJIA G El) BLANK BOOK . !.. 7, ;lll . e , Si f ib m s e e , r b i: 1 ~.... ~,, Ti . ,:. :-..,, i w . ~. bee '}L•°7.ktll,lZ:=l.l,l!l;TVlli w ho U,., blank Ikaska, 1 AYAIT:-',,--,7---:::,-.7".1"V''''''''' '',' n .u.7.-1 - Si i lame m'. alta:le of Mauls Stork, whsrls I, allrade of the teljl ' E A ' ''' ‘ . ' ,."lr -. ' " t1;,c,.., ~ - ' t /..,,,,, ./b .er, end bound in the [melt aubtanl2al man bidl i'betti&l ' el . ,llo " l ISo.IOO. t '' '' r... 4. . rujilite : n '''' ,. “ , w ' th the 1.1,...1 numbered In tvautlfurtire. All who - 1 - 1 1 1./En P.E/AC, -. /lE - S-- . 1 - 1.8. - k, ft7l . s ' alo by I;:iriarVit'iriVi'''sallh,.wlitc°l4."VlVll7elil,7.llst''Yloctlielirojrsis'":t'lcat't wiehll W:Ch A 31c , A9.111,1.:58. . Yrtl 9 ' 9 . ~ No. 47 Pdarket et. 1 liilEil APPLES-r+ I sacks crow sale by '-- — 7 --- , , 'i • 110 AYER lIANOIIsGS—SPRINO SELEG. Inehll Il 11l A sIeCANLII.J.Sb. ' a'F --- 110"S.-IIIII be .tensed. by brat canal arrival., a "A.TS---iv4 backs I ., st t.ttlo liy 13 mehll - new and thrice amaOrtiuent of craneli atid ilasteru /t4PX/: II 11. i J. Iltt A Nisi._-__ , HA NbINGS. In gold, donut, temlet . and glaia ratter - as, together with • largo lot r i f v e A lr i tr a tap m an Ai tyliaiton rat ()ORS -2 libl.. Cwt by Pev , metal W it-I( a 31lot6NaLtitt. i ma: ES Wood at WIIFAT—`2.I bble: for sale I.v luau WWI{ MA'AM/LEO: • UVINDOW GLASS-2.:',00 boles. embra v), eine ail tbe Ait, In general tlae, now. IT . Fere and for attic be In,nbtt I RoBERTSoN klt I MIT. SIIIRAS' ALE--.llXlVaole and—llE*Dbli). in ante. arab nonatkotarrivals from the yre.ery. arrarstell fleet quality, for gale by =lOl 11/lIRRTSON I REPPV.RT. Q TRAM , ' `WRAPPING—From the Virginia 17 Mill, emt.tattUy in kora ROPIRRTSIN and fur< at ntantartn -. • „ rm .... ~ k RiIITLIIT iI . ''' torttll ' -- -- -• •- - - -•_ - - -- • Q.CYTIIE RIFLES-15_ gross (warranted) I.3 m lrt h altre .d fur sale by •__ T. W - 1t . 1 1.1 t 5 .. ,, XN., B EANS, tb. li s ;: i t t. S.7 i. ,.—.l . - ":" . • lOU bo. bliellod goes; 1 ,, r rain 1 7 mebll T. WOobe a SON, fit Water at. 11/RAPPING ,r.PRITING PAPER— Y Front Le s elinton Milts. ntrobenville , for stem by mchll W. I'. 3IARSLIALL `TALL PAl'Ell—Prices reduced at the V V Enatlrti Paper Hanging" , emr , No. S-5 W O .l at. whit Wl'. MARs.nALL. 11;i1.1tE BOARD PRINTS — For sale by t :nett I W. P. MARSHALL. WINDOW •BLINDS — For sale lit melil I W. I'. MARSHALL. -- 1 1./ ACON--5 etl.sktl reed and for sale by I_, mehll J. S. DILWORTH A 30. 1 FLOUR—M bbls.ree'd and lbr sale by wadi J. S. DILWORTH A CIL ill OLL BUTTER-;-10 bblo. for sale by . ;IA mehll. • J. FL DILWORTH kCO Two Tharulred Carriages at Auction. l'ifth Semi-Annual Trade Sale nt Philadelphia. Tills SALE 'will take place on IT E.SDAY, the day nf at Mt_ CHINES): JICSEUM. and will excel all others In ex tent. The reflection will embrans at least tau hundred 'arriseen. a parttmx of atteh allEbelleemad.hatitt. of a su .lwrior make and In gurel onto The Nen Work. (nun , of which will be 'warranted.) will he from makers of aeltnow iniged eolehrity throughnut the stut...t., Danitir , riwiee co.. .1. D. Doughty. John lertick and otinTs. It ennui in all ooto-000, Oregards styl e. Habil. and durability. to any made for customer. or to ord.r. rir-Pnrehruera from a till:so:mean. Informed that the sale eritf porfriee/y take ylu.ar u the tars day. without regard to the weather. ALrltEll M. 111:11 . kNr1.9. , , rachn:bt utter Hosiery, Gloves, Mitts, &c. '11.11:P 11Y BUItpIiFIELD hare now iete,."..';r: 2 7".ffriVn i o l 7l`cn i itt;ii.V ,n 1. In eninred Lucian Ao., unOnnutml cotton Loh, nod bark ova 10. spun Silk 4 ... • Sal, mid Lulr . . . . Comm. and and F:lk Mrrrt. Colton and 31,81. n Uoth•rxhirtac Infao:s . ke =tall nt rashat North Es q. corber of Fourth mud Market or.t. mean iy OST—d BRASS KE Y.—A ov Ina it von 0.3. . leave It at tho Lita. , tte hula dr SALE—'2o bhh. White Louisville LitotT purple and now Carpet Chaln: • dosnUtY of ...and cheap Family I..hclor. 0 doz. 1... ad Pend's : and pourer. "role ,Ice Marriage tam bitkott's lat.e.st Cotattertat tar, nll our In.mlng, and rho moot of our wevkly, bud quilt r..Aer of thatat, rho Nvlr.rpers... MAC HAI:HIS.. gents • mclll.(r.:it . 6rnmilllion llriChant.-I^Kill •5. fICM OPIUM—I ease for sale by tft m.-b;0 J. KIDD A CO.. ill, Wonl st. Q,' curcit SNUFF—SOO lbs. (Garrett's) ftir C . 7 nle Ay tochlo J. KIDD * CO. 1) R1E , 1 , / ,,, i1 0 'il ACII ES— , :it ,, (o o l , lu. , f(s7 ,l ( , :Ab i ! .. by t i10c ;, ,... ? Ay 111 , UT S—Tl t gl i, f i lo: , grA . , b r y , CI . REES APPLES-100 bbl. b.r sale by k.., weblo SAMUEL P. SIIKIVER. V I! EST St 1.. TS-20 LW. for sale by IL/ mrolo f: AMU EL P. stlarekrt. t it oL d L JiLl' , 'l;k: . R-1 i i bbl prime lust reed . . s.saleEL P. sliders. ri. , vhlo pItY APPLES—aI sacks reed'. for sale by y mcbtO SA311.1:1. P MP.IVER. Qilolcrlie--3..70 bu. for sale low to close con c sbremest.. to SAMUEL P .!!PAVER soma HI ICE-10 to. ((real!) b•r• sale by L meta° ,ANICEI. r SIIItIVV.II. S "-.• No. 3 Ma.Aerel: it ar 4i4-1n; pnma N•alunnrot Potatrat. ki :4 "Iltarn Araks. nu.. Ear Corn; :41arta: Oatt: " l'ond A'Pl" 'T '' (Vl.l l ;ll t i. T 4 SON, Prt4ore Dealers an 4 Cormalation Mrrcbar.l.. ' nt. di Watts atreeL OLL eurrEit, bbl. just rec'd and for T. WOON 4 tO:N. v 1.14 1I Water V. .%Rl.) OIL-26 bbl. No. just rac'd and L/ na1e;1..... by WALLINtirIYAD & 00. 1..1611bL-15 bblludo by • J IPI• Cll . . at. . • itr EMNEEL.---1:, KM. for mak ior J. RI CO.. a:. , V:tal et )1 I )ILACEt Iv A NTE F.r I•everal good raliatin. K.-.+ ra B.4.haLat: man. !a- • .4 Mati.• 441: and l•ra,men. Iltatlrramat Ma... a 4...4] PulLr, ea..l llaar. mat a l'neller from En.: It tat Alto—:S•larea Pr a nun. bar of 1.,a. of all asta Ilnum chstnlwrtnal..l., •at sad dry mar , .. aml atanen mad airla ptmairti far lamllaa. or tiaMLy. on. rt a • 1..,.. 4d. ant att., dr, toat Al., nut., 4 11.110:1 , kn.+ It. Agvne,kkut k . Large Salo of Valuable Household Furth. ture. ON TIItTIZSDAY. ?IA !ICI] 13th. lit 9 ki . . .1/. U. S. the restieurs. Wlf LBWS. sol tas Illnk. in 11. lltr cf AllOght• ny..l,etutuir. the htrr dttrs. wf Lot:to - sp. Lwow .111 4. orlm.st tor.t.le Ii v .Mir • f hl. Ilttuswlntlut i °mann:. rftmistong to p.m )latutel Old r .rasa.. Mat:tsp./0' frenea t Cam,. Center Ts. 1.1.111. I,rr and l'lrl lothrst Work stand: silt 4 St. of toe moo t5...1 Ingoad rder. si.r. Lai. girandwlrs. lard and crt: lore ar pste mot ruM.. 1 large el,ht day o bete hr rts - m. mr.th mots' rettretary, / matuttmtnt I. k at.e. hAt.rult. umLrell. Iran& oil sloth, .3.1. twsl. sterols, 51100 J) e-nct walnut. wahlrot.s. I mazflue.rwnt choral dress - mg Klaus I t - oSr tmt.tr'staft)tilttlniittades tfM -1.1 Iss.f., sits tloe marl supply of iltatniwr arri Furstlittrs, (rib. raltd's w to Ti, prtneirwl P.M.( the above lllnaweany Furstlturs WWI made the cel..hrated White lts Walnut :treot. and Is in 'dal onlerrse or it -a recent much/ow. (slag ;Ls tlf FunAtufn ever offer, west of tbe mount... at ituhltr sate • There .111 who be madwd is tbe rr.let a era raU ramtly Crtmisoe. Lane sad In mud order. nth farts suet a vamety articles pertnaulm, to the rahle. IF.Lars d COYLE, Cm. Match F—ts Aurt'm NOTICE.—The steamer ASIA. in July last, Lrouglit truth awls/Lath II Patent Cburnr: and I 4.h.so.musleurd tw Jaw:A homt. of UM p 1.,. Not.ll. ' , rat mveu. that tf the said Chun.. sod alt. are not • • .` -•• • L • ' • E XTRACT INDIAN ILEMP—Euglish im " k by H. A FA II N k 9_l I Ain' tiCA UM—Engl . importet, - tr ma kby meh4 It A VAIINE.STuCK A y Jour' Y —ln bladders, in inisurteol Nized -L- grtir ''s lur B. A EnnsEstocx a co. WEN'S P L AST fill.r.nrize and • ,anall. YJ f. oalc by A. A FAUN ESTIX.7i mehS DRY, Wo.yl sic iTIES-100 DR A Y 111 . 1!E * S w. received 4A. AFETY FUSE-450,000 feet Bacon, Rick-' forl Co.'• make. warranted. foraale ' Each: J. &DILWORTH k W. 1 L CLOT I IS-- 10,000 . yards fl6or Oil Cloth, If beery arat medium, fr..rti .1; to 6 'spin wide, of tbr neseet pattern, • reta ilill Lo ra ma ny! w at wholesede eastern make. and ower th other houne In the city. We Invite the atuntion or ntirchaort• to thr above stork. at our .are moos.. !it.. 7 and 9 Wotel L toch7 J. a 11. PHILLIPS. ARICIAGE OIL CLOTII—On hand, !arev, a.eortsbent of 4. 5, and 6 gr. Meeting. and Figur,..l Rack. Patent Carriage Oil Cloth. a ',detail , ' article. for esde • bolenale ao low as eastern prices. mch7 4. & 11. PHILLIPS. 7 and o Wood a. I UST REC'll FROM PHILLIPSVILLE of Facinry—t,ooo ;dr. 4 and 6 qr. Oteeooll Cloth, ar tuAr sale and retail, at Na 7 and 9 Wood at. .nr.h7 J. & 11. PHILLIPS. ABLE OIL CLOTHS—A very large at. vortatent of Table Cover., on head end roe We et 7 and 9 Waxl ntreot. roeh7 • -• , e LONER bE.1,1) VTIMOTY 's' closer just end and for nal, by mcb7 ' J. el. DILWORTH CO. RIED PEACHES-150 bu. (prime) for 13 sale by f metal 1. S. DILWORTH a CO. 110110TASII-:10 casks No. 1, for sole be .1 Inch? J. 6. DILWORTHk _ T OBACCO- _ _ 00 , boxes extra Ws and a'n .• e, ,men "Y ). P g. u lVERTat D. KING danker and Exchange Bra n!, ? kner,,,n= 4 -64e`er.T.w.,ZrgliAT"git',I went at ‘ ,pw ratee, an , Ls now paying the hiabeat mtrket pr.llll um In par DJ for Amerman silver. mei) F~?"f'~A r HE largest Stock of Blank Books, of .i r tiolrge i Vtrs n bthdfi'" . W. 8. RAVEN'S Blank Book Stare, corner dlarket and Becond R. Merchant+ am mdamted to call and exam!. our Modi ntn and I)rmi Blank Wort, which art offered at /mom prises Wan they hare, ever beet sold in this city. [Pont and AMerloan ropy.l • meltd H ARPER'S MAGAZINE, for March, ro il mired and for sale at J. B. tIOLIIPS, Literary Depot, Third grind, mend nliPscite the Post Odle, FOR SALE—Exchange Bank Stock, by mews n. D. KINO. Fourth st. ATTENTION!—Was left .aorifce, sa the osruer I, an Noel 194 72 re br m. wh in n destitute. and whkes to obtain rm.. to take her to leer family In too State of Indians. J. LI. PHILLIPS. niche N 0.7 and 9 Weal rt. PARPET—Received this day, by Leech it-pont,Otr.,-Toew`ti7,boir m ori_lvt.e TlLrittel , Drulteels, Tapestry, Imperhs. .b•v. P l 7, Tapestry Venitan. Plait Vealtsan and supsrtna lagralt Carpet, of the moot modem styles. ' yacht OLASSES-,200 bbl. N. 0., for sale by mess s. a IT, lIARBACO 11. CANDLES—MI boxes Mould; s• at: e mess/MA CO. I LOVER:a:ED-50 bu. ree'd, for sale by rncht3 8.. 0 W. LIARBACGIL OLL BUTTER-10 bbls. fresh Roll Butter i3~'led and lot silo hi ch•l H. a B. IIARFIAT.:011. fv REEN APPLES—SO recd, for sale br mr.116 S. A' W nu-mu:on. 1110.-40 bbli No. 1. in store. for sale by I,s akch6 8. It W. lIAREADMI. ,E 4 INSEED OIL-10 bbl. reed, for sale by tncb6 ROBISON. LITTLE d CO. ' , LOVERSEED-75 bu. for sale by recle. ROBISON. LITTLE & CO. URUN AICIP ES-50 bbl. (in fine order) oit au! fur rale by mchn ROBISON, LITTLE 0 CO. 1139 N--1 Lars , New WaAon,qsuita.ble Q CO. AM-) 01L—IA) bble. Sue Winter Strained, o f +r ule L> J. KIDD A CO., N 0.50 Woal .trept. ir '0 PPE bbls. tin good order) for wit. by J. - KIDD Co.. EA.? W cod stn-et- Dissolution. rrliE PARTNERSIIIP heretofore existing twayek the goeberribers. under the etrio of -rm. ,a1c1.," Mooing MI le tbie doe diseolYed bypuut...) rom-et. tinEnlshed buelnen a the atom. nom teil/ by Vt - JONES. •he motto. the btk. noes, at the old stood. J. G. SAINT JOILN W114 4 1E. Sot...mono, bob 20, mrht:tf UG AR AND MOLASSES— i7 se! bhls. 0. Moloner. w • . -• . " r w visloc. ! Bale by mmeter. " utTLE t CO. VINI:GrAIt—LO bbl. receitir.g for sale by In ch& ttonte.oN, I RIED BEEF-5 tc. S.C.. for sale by mchtl HOBIYON, LITTLE C CO. lOLA SSES- . .5 2 ....on and to arrive, and tro. tido A. L. S. WAtgft.).[AN a SNS. mob:. su SI irate r. and M.! Front at. F isu —4O bbl. prime large No. 3 Mackerel 11.e[en Inypeetion: 10 " Balt:roc, I ferrinc. - . for sale by L 0. cc ASERMAN d SON. lIIRIED FRUIT-725 bU. Apple: 1 , 75 Prsch ff.r by et, L ICATERNIAN, bbl. for .le bP . RemisoN. LITTL} on rr: BS & BUCKETS-60 doz. Buoket3: 10 - Tuv for sal.by L. S. WATERILAN d SONO. 4 I LASS—::SI. I boxes W. G., ::'d. City arid Comary brand., to •ale b. m.bs ATEP.3IArA n [ROOMS--I_'t) dos. fanny and 'good corn JUP mon Corn Broome, for pale tm ma.M5 L. el. W ATI:RM AN QaDSZa) bbl. strictly prime Clover Seed; 664 ' LO. WAIL - FULL:I%3 * claeo CUTTER—`_'O bbl. Rell Butter 5 and 5 kes, Packed Butter. for b t I. S. WATERMAN A SONS. .scU SI A St W.:, .4 CI Vesta sr _ _ B ACON -4 casks liams; 3 elder Ebouldem purl r.ed. kr No by Inchs %VALLI NU PiAlb LttD OIL-10 bbl. No. 1, on hand and p. br WALLI"4I°.:, ZIP_LACKWOOP, for February, and """"'"' " ""` nni.3108.. oppasllo lb. Pot O. rrAB-25 bbl. recd and for folk by tn