• • exceeding in the whole the amount. herein lir:nit ed: Andprovided, further, That the compensation for the send -monthly, Service already performed between Panama and California and Oregon, and for such s.ervice for the coming year, ' , shall not exceed . three fourths the usual rate at which ad -. Silional service-tray be . ordered under ex ' isting lava and Muall be paid out of any unex pended balance' of money ,berefotore appropriat: • aid for Mail steam terviee: Piverned, That when ever a better route between the Atlantic and Pa _.elfre."nOcitia is established. the Secretary of the Naty midthe;Posimaster General are authorized to agree with the presenteontractorglor the Pa cific line to change the terminus of thelfddition ' al semi-monthly service hereby authorized, so as to secure the advantage of increased despatch and economy; and in case the reduction of coin . _ pensation for the change of service be not agreed . , on between the parties, the same ghillie refer red to Congress.. Amid Postmaster General is also authorized to make - corresponding arrange ' • ' meats With the present contractors for the trans portation of the mail from New York to Chagres for the change of the terminus of their route.— • •-• And until such bitter route ho established, the • l'ostmaster General 5411 be, and hereby is, au • ' therized ttrenter into Contracts or to make suite - • hie arrungenfents for transporting the mails be tween Chagres and Panama with regularity and • despatch: Provided, The rate of compensation - shall not excess twenty two cents per pound, and -.shall cease onthe establishment of any new route . between the two oceans offering grcaterdeepatch aißlectinomy. For preparing for publication the American • NatitleatAlmanae, nineteen thousand four hurt ' tired dolla.r.s. ''For construction, exteoaion, and completion of the following objects, and for contingent expen. ISCS at the several'navy yards, viz; At Portrinouth, New Hampthite. Toward the construction of quay wharf across too bead of timber dock, filling in amend walls er floating dock basin, pavements around timber • shed, magazine wharf, and filling in low grounds; • engine house, wtairf, and filling in east of warn . bek four, repairs of all kinds, thirty one thou sand sip hundred and seventy three dollars. Bastop, .11tatattchtuat.t. Fee Completing sail aloft and cordage store, grading and paving, for completing store house • number thirty six, paving, grading, and filling in between numbers twentyeeven and twenty eight, twenty nine and thirty, grading yard, paving getters, drains, rain water .cistern, coal beam near ropo walk, dredging slips, for cora. pleting steamtng and water tanks, repairs of all kinds.difty thousand dollars. • At Nets York. • Fora araithery, raw mill, number twenty four, qua, wall email:died, cob wharf, dredging chan nels, one timber 'shed, pacing, guttering, and nagging, cisterns, gutters, and leaders' to ship houses and timber sheds, filling timber pond and low places, - engine bones, dock gates, &c., repaira of all kinds, one- hundred and fifty thousand dol lars. A: Philadelphia. - slip of ship houso 0, addition to wall of basin,'and filling in old timber dock, repairs of all, kinds, twenty fora thousand four hundred ' &Mare. At IT'agingten, D. C. For filling up timber :dock, saw mill, and ma chinery, ordnance building number eleven, corn pied:lg wharf, and slide lathes, completing cop per rolling establishment, to convey water to the yard, reservoir, pipes, &c., railway in ship house paint 'chop and - wharf crane, brass foundry and tank shop, (raising one story) repairs of all lands, one hundred thousand dollars. At Norfolk. 'For a sea wall at St. Helens, brick saw shed, cylinder and exhaust pump and apparatus, wa ter tank and capstans, repairs of all kinds, fifty thousand eight hundred dollars. At Peztacola. • • For Permanent wharf; paint shop, and cooper age,- completing guard house, wharf near store house. number twenty six, tar, pitch. and oil house, , store house for shells, house for boiling tar, pitch, tc. , gum tug water tank, rail tracts in yard, fences, and outbuildings, for outside . . hundred thou- For removing - and rebuilding stable, 'drains and tenter to stable, eicacation and grading *al on auntie side of Shipper street, curbing arid pacing along Shipper street, painting house, iron railing. ac., repairs of all kinds, thirteen thousand eigbt hundred and thirty seven dol lars. - • • At Norfolk. • For general repairs, frog thousand dollars . ' At Pensacola. • . ' . For wall around hospittil grounds, drawin and filling ponds, repairs of all kinds, four thonsand ,- four hundred and fifty-dollars. . • . • . nuance coops. . . For pay of officers, non-commissioned office», musicians, and servants esrving on shore, subsist ence for officers. and pay' for undrawn two hundred and twenty-one thousand four hun dred dollars. For provisions far marines serving on shore, fifteen thousand dollars. For clothing, fifty-six thousand six hundred and one dollars. For fuel, ten thousand dollars. For military stores, repair of arms, pay of se muses, accoutrements,' ordnance stores, 'flags, drums, . fifes, and 'Musical instruments, eight thousand dollars.. , ' For transportation of officers and troom, and expenses of recruiting, nine thousand dol lars. . For repairs of barracks, and rental temporary barracks; and offices for commanding officers, six thousand dollars. For contingencies, viz : freight, ferriage cart age, wharfage, compensation to judges adeocate, per iffiem for attending courts martial, courts of inquiry, and for constant labor, house rent, in lien , of quarters, burial 'of decenaal marines, printing stationery, forage, postage, puninit of deserters, - candles, oil, etrawr furniture, bed 'sacks.-apadea, axes, shovelii, picks, carpenter's tools, keep of a horse for the messenger, pay of matron, washer-woman, and porter at hospital headquarters, twenty-five thousand dollars, For aerearages of pay• Which accrued toi John Rosh, late sailing master, from thirty-first of July, one thousand eight hundred and thirteen. to ninth of August, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven,, six thonsand arid ninety-five ' dollars and seventy-one cants. • Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That, in time of peace, or while war is not threated, the steam ers employed in carrying the United Stated mail between New York and Liverpool shall be placed under the exclusive control of, and of ceteil by the contractors, 'E. K. Collins and his associates: Provided, The same shall be done with the consent' of the contractors. Ste. 3. And be it further shaded, That if any assistant engineer shall have been absent from the United States on duty at the time others of his date were examined, he shall, if not rejected at a subsequent examination, be entitled to the same rank with them, and if, from nay canse,, his relative rank cannot beassigned to him, he shall maintain his original position on the register. See. ,4 , .01nd be it further viarted. That the role establishedin, the preceding section shill be applied to the cases of Joshua Follansbee and F. Isherwood, - who - were prevented, by reason of their -absence on duty, from being present at the examination ordered for officers of ;their, data , See. S. And be it further enacted, That for continuing the- preparation and publication of the works of the exploring expedition, includ ing the pay of the scientific corps, care of pro perty, payment for printing and paper, and Other contracts under the law of eighteen hundred and forty-two,' authorizing - the preparation and publication of, said works, twenty-five thousand dollars. Sec. G. Andilia it enatted, That the Sec -- rotary of the Navy be directed to cause the wreck of the 'Ammer Missouri to be remoi.ed from the harbor; of Gibtiffiar, in such mode as he shall deam.itxpedient, by contract or otherwise ; and: that eighty thousand dollars be, and bete appropriated out of any money in the 2 ..:. ..`rnaktery,• not oiberwite appropriated, as may be **wiry, to defray the expense ofremovinisaid Approved, Mareh'3, 1851. Ihiklrev York Post of Friday afternoon nays: FAIMItAtt 'Torres, the English poet, . landed front the steamer Asia this morning. and has takett.lodgings at the Astor flouse. lie has • been 1 . crittutatt enough to make such a passage as Iftmicg , irished Tor Virgil, when he ~called on the tutelary goddess of Cyprus and the twin star, brothers uf _Helen, and the father of the windi„to send favorable breezes and restrain all others,,ititil his friend thinkd bare. landed on , the shereint Attica. . - • . , IPITTSBURGA GAZETTE IM WHITE' .1 CO RBDAY MORNING MARCH 20, 1841 our first page will bo found Daniel Web great letter in behalf of Kossuth am! his • .• ions; also, an able artieleirom the New 'Tribune, on the Ritchie Job. Commercial Matters, k.c., see the first Home Matters and Telegraphic News, see .age. Iliscellaneone articles; Poetry;the., slee Page. • tomcat. Reroar.—We have received the I made by oar attire representative Mr. from the joint committee to whom was referr d that part of the Governor's Message which relates ti, the publication of the Geologi calrt su ey of the State. The report is concise and w 11 written, and gives some interesting in fer= on. Is t e year Dir3G the Legislature authorized a good cal lind mineralogical surrey of the State. The S to Geologist was directed to make annual repo to the Legislature, and, upon the com pletion of the survey, to report for publication a t comple e account`of the Geology and Mineralogy the tate. Nen the survey was commenced by Pm . Hell' D. Rogers, the State Geologist, it was stimated that it might be completed in -- . The work was vigoPoUily prosecuted • [years, when the financial embarrasment !ate rendered it necessary to withold the appropriatiorui;• but •Prof. Rodgers, im y hia devotion to science, and his desire his work as complete as possible, con .ia labors three years longer, "for the it of this period without salary, and at expense." The whole mass of informs + materials collected by the survey, were d for the press, and, in compliance with for six of the annual polled • to mak tinned chief p his o • Lion an. `the law 1 ., deposited in the 'office, of the Society of the Co monwealth in die year 1847 : =id those lihey e rested ever since. The report repre sents e work (as it would appear when pub dished) exceedingly valuable. It would con tain ab at a thousand =auto pages, wit h fine geologi al maps, besides illustrative plates &c. . The port port urges, lo the strongest manner, with o the m t conclusive argument, that the =dart.- - Ling eh uld be at once completed. When it is remem erect that the great source of the wealth of Penniy Tanis is in her mines, anarguments is at once o red which should, of itself, bo sufficient, withou the addition of a comment. Our farmers , are not a whit les.s interested in thiS stir . ithopt an acquaintance vrTi the local Jr- .1 his vicinity, the agricalttitist can peter To -elf of the whole of his natural velour- ke due and grateful nekriowledgements in his t. of weal.. ish kin. till the 0 happy d kind, b reserve his awn eagernef dustrial practice of thoboinitiful Boraces • which the benificent Creator, 7ithlav- IleS3, has spread beneath' his feet:. To earth and call forth heri fruits, is the . .y assigned to the greatmnss of man • t through it there would Seem to he In destiny still nohler, the cultivation of • ..ultiesund powers, resulting:km his to convert to human use, by increase of Imo edge, the qualities of common things.— In stud g the very commennest of these, if they be but crumbling clods of stone that strew his field he sees everyWh ere that the physical laws sr. divine appointments." Thetport furnishes soo le valuable statistics from wh ch we take the fol The present annual yield of the coal mines of Peruisylt 'min is estimated as follows: Anthracite to be sent to the market in 185 , 3,700,000 tons - - $14,800,000 Bituminbus coal, domestic and ex tra State consumption - * c Prop Orly at rope walk at &sts comoimptiou - - $3,000,000 Haring gi value at the in data of con gumption - - - $11%800,000 But lame as this refara has already become. it. s ie ....... ea ti a as this . - sinks in iasi gnlficanc e when we calculate from the past to of crowds oethe anthracite cool trade, the ma tude it must svmain to at the lapse,of on ly tivent years. .fis.srnoing, as we think ire ar6 justified in doing, that its product has been don-. bled cad successive 'seven years, and that the rate of expansion emsreot NI materially checked i, in the present genermtioa, then by the year 1670 it .l TO grown to. th e extent of 25,000,000 of tons. d the whole yield of the State will pro. bably 1 e approached the present enormous ar l i product ( Great Britain , which cannot be much less than 40,060,000 of teem. England doubles her vast "eld in about twenty-five years. . The _ ual pindu.ct of our furnaces, forges, . — ..... .. - " ling, filling in, thousand three nashing, en hundred dol. airs facoaces, truitiringlor rd, ittading, set% fifteen thaaatad and rolli 1 00 g' ill, 'Was, in laid, estimated CS • State co rention at over 423,000,000. The natural i crease, even in the present depressed condition of the iron trade, cannot fall below 53.000, . The amount eaperided by private canal an rails:mil companies (exulusise of he State works) in order to remit the mining ,dis tricts of d'enn.sylvania, has been 540,000,000, When we take into consideration that the meats. facture of, railroad iron in the United Stateldis yet is i .Irifolicy . —that the nee of our anthro- -, cite and itnatitious coal in this process of Pro ducing it n its just in process of practical dev clopemen both of which branches must incal culably dto the value of our staplo products. We scare ly know what would be a fair esti mate tw ty years brace, of the Annual' value of the mire Pnnsylvaniu. , If the i on manufactures of England doubled its prods t, as is well known it did in twelve years, f In 1836 to 1848, and amounted at the later da te, to 2,000,000 of lons, and our own at tained, a it did in 1847, the magnitude of 8,- 100,000 na, it is very easy to see t hat ht the rate at wlpch production marches in mar country this bran• of our industry must in twenty years m ,. reach di enaions truly colossal. .. • ' ' • The gel mines of California, about : thich the public mi d is so much excited, sink int. i insigni ficance in the comparison. At beat, a ge aeration or so will :haunt the gold of the former, while the min I wealth of the latter must Pie con stantly u steadily increasing. `Spain, u ¢threo hundred ears, monopolized the gold end silver mines of t i, erica, and is now the most impover ished con r. 7 in Europa. Great Britain, during the same eriad, by the assiduous use of her coal her iron, ad her domestic industry, is now the grand re for of the money market of the cf. v nixed wo d. The re .•rt concludes with an eloquent appeal in favor of the publication of Prof. Rogan' v ork; an. ills to be presumed that our Legislative trill not I.fig delay the perfermanco of such 'an important duty. . - RIGHT .1 WAY FOIL 7711. lIZXPITELD RAM IE ILOAD.-4 'eleeslatare of Virginia has granted the right of way to ttle Rempfield Railroad to Wheeling under certain conditions. The Irtw granting a privilege is entitled, "A bill to in corporate o We ll aburgh and Bethany Railroad Company, ad for other purposes." . Section first, appoint...commissioners to open. books for o purpose of receiving subscriptions to the IMO tof two hundred thonannedollars, divided in shares of one hundred dollars each, to construct a joint capital stock for the purpose of construct:llg a railroad from the town of Wellsburg, in the County of Brooke, by the wny of the town of Bethany in said county, to ouch point on the Pennsylvania State" like as the Pre sident and directors of the Company may I ;elect. Section Iwo provides that th'ii Company shall be incorpo . tad whenever four hundred shr Tres of stock are - .bscribed, and shall be known ea the Wellsburg ..d Bethany Railroad. Section Railroad e 1 Bethany : sengers IL • ternection the rat.. . 1 passengers Section burg to en • ttal stock . tern Bank said capita, ia provides that in case any other ell lnternet the saidtWellsbu eg and oad, the latter aliall carry th a p,” nd tonnage from the point ofi ID either termini* of the said road at r mile that they charge for the three and tonnage four authorizes the town of Wells scribe five hundred aharen to the cap sa 'd Company, and, the North Wee at Wellsburg four hundred shares of dock Section • vo authorises the towns of Wellsburg i to issue he bonds to pe y for her stbek_ Tho rem finder of th e Oct is ni follows 6. Tho 1 empfield P -ailroal Company incarpo- Ito rated by vi eofad t of the General Assembly of DetlasYi nab', spy dosed on the day of 1860 2 all be. 1 .nd'are herebreuthorized to extend and onstrur .t their railroad from a point on the W tern ba andaryif Donegal township, eania, thio gh the territory of Virginia to', the in %shin need oty, in the said State of Pennsyl. city of Wh big ; and if the said company shall avail themselves air the privileges hereby grant ed, they oh Ss to all 'their right; Dr . :Tel - 4' , franchises, • •W era, dutiei and obligations, with-. la this Sts • ? se subject to all the provislaus of the code • IP irginia, solar as the same are ap. Plicahle. an. Oct' inconsistent with the latent of this section * 'and they shall oemmenee their onhi elt ' elni°° ' thin three Teen.: and complete' the "Me Willi , 1,11.5. years tram the passage of this PITTSBURGH The North British Review for February con tains along-article on the subject of Gold Mines, in -which we find a great deal of statistical infor: motion. The object of the writer seems to be to check the popular idea that the lute discove ries in California will no reduce the value of gold an to deprive it of the title of a precious metal suitable for a circulating medium. The writer's calculations are so interwoven that we find it al most impossible to separate facts ,which could not fail to interest oar readers. The following paragraphs, however, taken from the close of the artcle can be understood without reference to that which goes before. The total annual produce of gold and silver from North7atod South America, Europe and Rus sia, in 1846, was according to M'Culloch, £9,- 000,000, of which £5,600,000 was from South America: and the total consumption in the nrts, £6,000,000. Deducting from this one-fifth, which is his computation of the quantity supplied by the re-conversion of old plate, Ac., there would remain ,C4,200;000 for exportation to Asia. and 1 for conversion into coin. There is . a wide dif ference between al - Culled) and Jacob respecting -the present amount of the metallic circulation Cr Europe and the United States. The £313.- : 308 . 660 at which the latter estimated it in 191!.:. would be reduced in 1819 by abrasion, nt the rate of one tart in four hundred and twenty an nually, to E 298,642,952, and this would require an annual 'supply of about £711,000 to maintain it at that amount. M'Culloch on the other hind calls the - metallic currency of Europe and the United States £160,000.000 in 1846, and esti mates the annual waste as high as one per cent., because Jacob had made allowance only for weer, and none for loss by shipwreck, by hearths con cealed and never recovered, and by other acci dents. On this calculation the. maintenance of the existing stock of coin would require an rut ' nual supply of £1,600,000, or only £600,000 leas than hie estimated surplus applicable to I coin, after providing for the export to Asia, nod the demand for consumption in the arts. The export to Asia for a few years prior to 18251 had been decreasing: and in 1832 and 1833 the cur. ' rent flowed in the opposite direction. With re. vett to India, the drain resumed its old Chan. nel in 1810, mod amounted in three years to £2,. 000,000. • If in the absence of more definite information we assume the present produce of South America I at £6,000,000, and the united produce of Sibe ria and California at $7,000,000 more, we shall have a total sum exceeding by about £2,300,000 Humboldt's estimate of the annual produce of Europe and America in 1866, before the declen sion of the South American mines. It would be ' necessary, imoreover, that this excess should continue for nearly thirty years, in order to re store the £60,000,000, by which, according to preceding calculations, the coin became redu. ced between 1809 and 1829; to say nothing of further diminution between the latter date and the commencement of the increased eupply from Siberia about 1840, only recently swelled by the golden tide of California. Whether California will produce £4,000,000 of gold 'annually during the next half century. is very problematical. Reasoning from the analogy of other ouriferous regions there are great doubts of that supply being maintained for any length ened period. It matters not that ten millions may have been raised during the past year, or that the same, or even a larger amount, may be rained for several years in succession. The supply • will the soon er be exhausted. It must be limited.. nccenline to the analogy of all other gold regions ; and the period of -its. exhaustion is purely a question or the number and energy of those employed. We repeat, there in no -reason to suppose that Cali fornia is an exception to other auriferous regions. There, as elsewhere, from much geological in. formation as has reached us, it is known that gold is dispersed through altered slate-rocks, and the igneous masses to which the alteration • is due, and that their treasures have been ren dered remuneratively accessible to human labour by the recent operation of great natural forces. which have ground down those rocks, and have collected their gold in the gravel formed from their ruins. It is another general rule, to which there is no reason to believe that California will prove an exception, that,the rocks cr veinstines which contain gold, unlike the veins of other metals, diminish in productiveness as they ere followetkdownwards. We may thereforeconclude that there, as elsewhere, the richest portions are for the most part in the superficial gravel. It is also another general rule, that, whether as re gards the rocky matrix or the detrital accumu lations, the productive portions of large nurife roes regions arc separated by intermit; of bar reu,ground of greater or less extent Here follow some remarks on the different processes of mining, and the increase of expense after the first supplies have been exhausted.— The writer then concludes. On the whole, even should the future supply be greater than we bare assumed, we shall only be restored, with respect to the preciouametals, to the same position as when the produce of the American mines showed for each decennial pe• rind a great increase on that which preceded it. Mexico, as producing half the amount derived from America, may he taken as the exponent of the whole; and the coinage of the Mexican mints increased• from .C 10,777,289, for the decennial period 1709, to £23,702,033 for that ending 1740 and to Z 47,149,814 for the ten years ending 1809—with how little effect or prices- we have already seen. The only defect in all this is the assumption that the treasures of :California will not prove more abundant and lasting than those of other 'countries. This conclusion is adopted with more haste, that) the facts will warrant, and after all alew years may place the land of gold in a po sition which will overturn all tine spun theories and minute calculations. OCEAN SITAMER3.—Iive steamships left New York on Saturday, viz: the Southerner, for Charleston ; Florida, for Savannah ; Brother Jon athan for Chagrea ; Pacific, for Rio Janiero and Valparaiso; El. Primer°, for Valparaiso; and the City of Glasgow, for Liverpool, from Phila delphia—making !Li steamerenniling on thesame day. The Now York Tribune publishes the following table, showing the estimated value of the proper ty belonging to the city, which is laid out as public parks:or walks: ;, Bowling Green Battery, Castle Garden, • 100,000 Park, ~ 2,600,000 Buildings in the park, •• 600,000 Duane park, 16,000 Park at Cross, Anthony and Little Ws- - ter eta, 16,000 11 aahington Square, 816,000 Abington Square, 12,000 Union Park, • 504.0110 Tompkin's Sgiaare, 337,0010 Stnyveaane,Sqliare, 190,000 Madison Square, 620,000 .Triangular Park, Fab avenue, Broad way, and Twenty MTh street, • 10,000 Manhattan Square, 89,000 Hamilton Square, , 97,000 Mount Morris Square, 40,000 Total . 458,9840110 . 7; -.Jr the Said Hempfield Railroad be end con strained by way of Wellsburg, in theaidd eotnit ty of Brooke, the raid lieMpfielil Railroad Corci . pony shall, on pain of forfeiting the - priiilegee granted them in this act, construct a branch of their railroad to some convenient point on Buffs; lo creek, at which the Wellsburg and Bethany Railroad way connect with the same, and such branch shall be completed as soon as the said Wellsburg and 'Bethany Railroad shall be cote: pleted from Wellsburg to the said point. of con nection. 8. The said Wellsbureand Bethany Railroad shall not, nor shall any branch thereof, be con structed to any place further Eastward . than Bethany, except on a proper route to make the said connection with said branch of the Hemp- Odd Railroad, and for that purpose only; and the said Wellsburg and Bethany Railroad shall not connect with, nor transport freight or pass engers to or from any railroad which may be con structed in the State of Pennsylvania, except the said Hempfteld Railroad. Bill the foregoing pro visions of this section shalleease to have effect if the said Hempfteld Railroad he not commend ettwithin two years and completed within six years from the time of passing thin act. 0. If the said .Hempfteld Railroad Company accept the privileges hereby granted,`they shall make no greater charges for the t sportution of freight or passengers on their ro n to or from the said Wellsburg and Bethany Ra road, than l it on freight or passengers carried to r from that part of the Hcmpfield Railroad i this gluts for like distances and under like circu tan ees. 10. Neither the said Hempfield Railroad om puny north said Wellsburg and Bethany Rail road Company shall conatractany part or branch of their railroad Northward of Wellsburg afore said. ' 11. This act shall be in force Cram its pas sage. 'The Ilempfield Company has now a clear track, and we will see whether it will proceed to build the road. Acting under Wheeling influences, the Virginia Legislature has restricted the Wells burg or ltempfleld roads front any Northern branch or connection. This is a hit nt Pitts burgh, and is intended to prevent an intersec tion of the Central Railroad at this point.' The inhabitants of the Northern portion of Washing ton county will recollect this when they are ask ed to lend the credit of that county to assist to the construction o f the Ilempfield Railroad. TEE INCREALC6 OF GOLD R.,',W.'"ErrEirsos.—lt wipe ireitothe.adaisa. tisement in anotheepoluiri that thiedistintaish erlessayist and popular lecturer will deliver the first of a series of addresses before the slarean• tile Library Am.ociation, this evening, Is the new and capacious City Lecture Room, on the second floor of the Lafayette braidings, 00 W oo d street Aside from the well-known reputation of the lecturer, the Library Association is one every Ivey deserving of encouragement. We therefore confidently expect to see . the . room, large as it is, filled to its utmost Capacity on the evenings of the lectures. Our readers will be pleased to learn, from our telegraphic despatches, that a Whig Sew., has at last been elected in New York, in pla‘cr of Mr. Dickinson. Two new Whig Senators hat, been elected within a few days--one from Niw York and one from Ohio. Gov. I'm is the Senator elect from the former State. The Senators elect from Rhode Island and New Sersey will not be found very Locofocoish, so that we may congrat ulate the country that the Senate is improving. HORRIBLE TRAGEDY IN HIBBIAMPI. - • A White lroman violated, and with her infant child memdered by a nsyro—the negro burnt at the stake, The Paulding nartnn, printed in Jasper coun ty, Miss., of March lot, contains full particulars of a most horrible tragedy, which could hardly happen but in countries cursed with the bitter calamity of slavery' We ISondense the account from the Mississippi paper. The, victim's were Mrs. Mary Dixon, wife of John Dixon, and her infant child. The violator and murderer was Haley, n negro roan belonging to Mr. Zechariah Thompson, Mrs. Dixon's father. The revolting facts, as given by the editor of the Clarion, are briefly these: On Tuesday morning; Mr. Dixon, unconscious of the awful doom impending over his family, Martha from home in quest of cattle. tie little eon, an artless child a few months over two years old, Started fondly after him, pursuing hfm some distance, unnoticed by the father and undiscov ered by the mother. Mrs. Dixoti•eoon missed the boy, went after him, and called him to return.— She lens then approached by the brutal villain Haley. who nt once offered such indignities ns ' the virtue and pride of civilised woman resents and resists; even at the peril of life. She repel led the advances of the bestial monster, yielding neither to threats nor disgusting importunities, when he felled her to the earth. An outrage, too abhorrent for mention—an outrage that stirs to ueappeasable indignation every manly and gym , psthetic feeling in the human breast—war then perpetrated en the person of his victim by the incarnate demon. Reft in a moment of her most precious jewel—forcibly despoiled of her 'purity by the rillatn elate of her own father—the wretch ed lady doubtless felt that everything valued in this world this lost: but she was not ready for eternity. She eked, at the hands of the A r end, life--life, that she might prepare for her solitary remaining hope—n refuge for her crushed spirit in heaven: But the ruffian heeded her not: Inc spurned the prayer of the wife injured beyond reparation, and beat her on the head with pine limbs. and stabbed her until she died! Bruised, mangled and,defiled, lay the corpse of this lady whom a husband had greetnl gladly and MIS.- pectingly a few honors ,before, presenting a spec tack ton hideous, too replete with horrible mem- I ones. for an unaverted eye. The infant we., found nbout hi steps from the mother. its throat cut twice, with long, deep gashes. It Istlfe pro bable the little child was the last victim; that it witne.,ed the unnatural pollution of mother —heard her piteous ehrieks--her supplications to heaven and an absent husband toraid—nod that the last nepkration of her unutterable agony fell appallingly upon his infant ear, before the cold knife of the monster assassin passed over the throat of the innocent erratum, and tinged its guiles, spirit to an avenging God. • .1 Coroner's jury sins ernpanneled, who return. I eel a verdict in accordance with the facto. When Haley WM arrested, his clothes were stained with blood, and the wretch attempted and did throw away his knife. After being se verely whipped, be madethe annexed confession ' His implication of the boy, Paul, is entirely dis credited by the citizens in the neighborhood, ea- Hon, circumstances strongly tending to the ex culpation of thelatter. On Thursday about two hundred persons assembled, including many la dies. The guilt of Haley WOO too manifest for doubt: and while indignation was it its height nal the bloat curdled in the vivid recollection of' the unexampled atrocity, it was proposed that Haley be burned to death. Tin this proposition there R. not a single dissentient, if we except the officers of the law, who, in compliance, with thrir sworn duty, protested against the illegality of the net. All were eager for the instant nod signal punishment of the worse than murderer. Accordingly, he was borne too tree, chained to it, and surrounded with light and other wood.— It is worthy of remark that the slaves present evinced commendable abhorrence of the crime and the criminal, and assisted with alacrity in his punishment. We will not dwell upon the horror, of the monster's death scene, nor do we deem it necessary to utter a word extenuate of the violation of law which the punishment involv ed. I t was ala we. act, but who will say it trap not just—who will urge that they, under the same circumstances, would have noted in a different manner! Never have we been, and, we trust. never shall we be, the abetor of mobs or the ad vocate of mob law. In the instance under con sideration, however, we have no censure to in.- dulge tint in simple justice, we would observe, that those who participated in burning the ne gro, So point of respectability and character, would rank favorably with the same number of citizens in any community or State. HALTY'R CONI"LS6ION-A8 ttiken by HenSy Round, Esq., 'chile the .1/orderer tros confined to the trse--neing his second Confession and contra didtory of Int first. • (It is proper to state--,what we omitted to do laboro—tont in the first confession, made after being whipped, Ilaley implicated no one, but constituted himself the sole afithor of the mur- I der, without other principal or accessory.] lie said he was not the only one who was en-• gaged in the aftair—that it wan a plot made be tween him and another negro slave named Paul, the property of Men. Quarles, who lives near Montnme, but was hired in the neighborhood where the murder was committed,) for the pur tl peso of entrapping 31r, Dixon to violate her person. Ile said he always felt like-having to Ido with Mrs. D. Well, Ile said he was, out of to- Ibacco, and as he had no money, he would split rail,for Mrr. Dixon for it. We, (that Is, him ! self and Paul, I went up to the house to get some I tobacco, end found no one nt the house; so we turned back to where we were at work splitting and then heard Mrs. Dixon calling fur her child. Paul said to me, that is as pretty &chance as you will ever get nt Mary, (meaning Mrs. Dixon.) Says I, well, lees nee if we can aocom- plish our demise. We then camp up to her, and I laid hold of her first. She commenced hollering, and said, "Boys, would you treat mo in title manner, when I 'have a dear blessed husband and children," that if they would let her loose, she would never tell. After much 'Muffling, we suc ceeded in accomplishing our purpose. Paul said to me, after this, that if we don't kill her, we shall get hung for it. She begged and prayed fur her life, calling on the Almighty to help her. But it wan nu laWhoth of us said that she would tell on us. I first killed the child, and Paul kill ed the woman. I killed the child for my part, and Paull kPled the woman for his part. Ile struck her on the head with oak limbs and light wood knots, and made his clothes bloody, and took them to the.creek and washed them. I did not get bloody when I killed the child. I then told Paul we had best run away, but Paul said if we run away, we shall be suspieioned.-- We mode nu agreeement between us that if it should be ((Pend out, whoever wan first suspicion ed, should own it, and not implicate the other.= After the commission of the act, when we talked of killing her, she prayed and begged for her life, saying she was not prepared to die; and although so much disgraced, she would never tell on us. Thin is all I can tell about it. P. S. The negro man, Haley, was put to death by burning, on the spot where he committed the murder, at 10 o'clock on 'act Thursday. in the presence et near two hundred ladies and gentle men. For Ow Plltshomb Garet., • • Mn. EtuMm—Various means have beeri pro posed to check the tale of spirituous liquors, by diminishing the' number of licensed houses, as well as enforcing the law against those who, in violation of its provisions, deal out poison to their fellow men. But, if we are to judge from what we every day see around us, with but little success. It is true, that when some eloquent speaker, such us Mr. Gough, comes along, and hq s before the community the blighting—nay damning influence of Intemperance, there is p spasmodic sensation felt throughout society—and men rush into the temperance ?auks with the sincerest wish to reform themselves, and assist in working a reforaiation in others, but tempta tion comes--an incident to all things human— and in too many instances, they forget that they stand upon unsafe ground—they become, as V.ie apostle James says, "like unto a man bchohfd l i g his natural face in a glass," they go away ,and straightway forget what manner of men they were—and all le lost. The great object of Temperance men should be a at least keep the enemy at t o maintain the ground which they Lav e con : b thelnanity become, mo go an d m ‘l'u o Ye re —re :ces n ib i le ' t i o w l 'Yc th um e mighty evils ' of intemper ance—they will be able to make one sure atop anther panther In advance, until that crime which casket , so Many hearths unhappy, shall cease to be known in the community. Now there are tiro or three things which present themselves to my mind, which, I think, if rigidly carried oat, could tilt fail of going far to accom plish that much to be desired end. let. That none but men known and noted of. all men for their temperance opinions and prac tice should be elevated by suffrage to the judicial btfficli, as likirviise the inferior officers of our courts. id That the Legislature should be petitioned to so amend the law in relation to the granting of Reamer, as to require the applicant to bring (slice men into Coact to certify to hit character, and the propriety of granting his petition. In this way the Court could form a pretty correct judg ment as to the merits of the case. There is the petitioner and there his certifiers, the very op.. pearanee of whom would, in nine cases out of ten, work a denial of the grant. Friends of temper ance, eon the matter over in your minds, and I am persuaded you will be of the same opinion of A TEXPEEANCH Man. Market Street Store for Rant FOR RENT.— e Store, 118 Market reet, th e wend d from give n orner of Markftr . 2 eaLiberty Meets. reran give the lid of Afirll ea= InGuire of the6l3 GAINED GEER, Bem et ttention ! 49- PM= AITURION Is moat rerpeetfar Maned ; 0 th. MM., annul:a/Med statement ofJobn Watt, who was eared at an old Cbnah br the um of the PLTIOLWX: "This rear rertlfy that I have been enrod of an old Chronic Cough. by the use of Four Bottle. of Petroleum. The cough attacked me a year ago lost December, and Iliad let all hopes of getting •ell, as I had taken the .dries of several physicians without any benefit. .I was benefited almost hutudly by the Petroleum. I MuOha during 010 u w of the Iktmleule, a ha. minium useable. Gone.— I make these statements without any willeitation from any one to do so, and solely for the purpose that °then who 0.7 be suffering may be brunt.. Ten are at liberty to publish this certlfkate. I am an old cilium of Pittsburgh, having resided herr thirty- here yea.. Ily residence, at title time, le on &cud Meet_ 101121 WATT. Pima.. h. February 24, lASI." For sale by Keyser & McDowell, ISO Wool erect; R. E. Sellers. el Wood street; D. A. Fahueztock, A Co, corner Wood and Front ztreetr o D. 11. Curry. D. A. Elliott, ]mph Douglaas, and 11. P. Schwartz, Allegheny, aus by the Drs Primo, 8. M. ICIER, feb2sal,ll zr.l . Canal Dezdu.Sereuthst. PIRA/on:R. • ..ADELYIII, fame co„ U., Yeb.13,184C iltagr+ KJ.A d tli--Wr wish to Inform you that we hare not all of your Warm Bprelde you left with 111. We sriall you to send Ell INIPOs more ea wain u potalble. se It has given general satisfaction herr. We have many calls far It Anew we are Out of the article. It Lea superteded all oNrf PrlPfl/119611 In thy. county, and for thls reason wr wish to kw, Pk supply on hand. IL t K. A. Parrdesow.” The shore ie sum of the hundreds of thriller communi sations which the peeprietors of this medicine ant daily ne eising. .Whene it tme beim Introduced, it has become the mein popular rrtricaly In toe. For sale by J . KIDD * No. CO Worst NI. Foreign and American Hardware. LOGAN, WILSON & CO, No. 129 Wood Street, HAVE NOW LAI STORE A full and cocuyiete Make FOREIGN AND AMERICAN , HARDWARE, Suitable for the eyries trade. awl which they are snowed tooter to purchasers at nucn that will COMM". fartuablt with ear of th e eastern due.. Domestic and Forms?, Exchange, Bank Nola, Gold ,} Silver, Bonght,Sol4,s- Exchanged x* EXCIIANGE AND BANKING HOUSE OP W.M. A. HILL & CO, No. 64 Wood Street, Pittatrorg,h. Pa . /MOM? pi.“Oirrp 02 nu MOWS. J/1/0,1 Citizen's Insurance Company of Pittsburgh NCOURAGE HOME INSTITUTIONS. Moe Nit. 41 Water stroci. In thevarebouso of C. Lt. C. 11. on Breen, President A. W. Mum, Sec' Tble Cu a n ‘ 3 . ll:y la !apron:and tu Immo onidllee In An 'Mete nun ty the and toteml_ty of nu lostltutioa. l• atlMixt to lb.character of the Merton. . who are 'di mi. rituhurch, U and deth.bif known to the community Mr their prudence, lotellimmee. Lpgvgal..„. „„,0„,, 1T,,. Late., Jr. Wolter Itrnol. flush D. King. Ldn;ard Ilesieltom ten.: tionneth 'lunation. S. Pd. Ake. apantf LOOK HUM /KY FREUD! RE D YOU A FATHER,• laboring for the A.turert or a fannly,,and suffering m enu a de .o icter . y.:. s so b Laatae tit. .loM menu a burdeta Are you a Mojer. sulterttig lb= dbeases to .bleb fa =l:t.nUJ D. a...•. auk.. pghet::" ,,, Zl , :f.ll:7lllll:ileriL'en%tre t .t sapertile, es permed by Dr. P. D. Rat, boa been the hraw of nerroaneotly curing num 41....... to which the. uman tonsils ant nyntiouelly subject, than Stir Ob. trernration of Sarsatartlls re yet brought beire the Th it:left:tar has establlabed Its blab rejrataikm by B. numernos and well attested cores. thil "* Crrllt ' ll .n .l4l;y " n iz th i; 'dr al . ll,. '" nme. ablcb senders It &Dogma:n. 4 2[101.• valuable to ma our, partunlarly to females. Re vote and enquire Me Dr. R. D. 1.10WI•Te SHARER SA Ft r LI.A. and tat. meth. Prue II per bottle--G bottles far µ. Vat tale by DIL b. D. ROWS It CX).. Ptopeletom 1 College 11.11. Clucimmtl. BEM Ta wham all orders may be addressed. AI., for We by J. A. Jones. J. bebeentintker A Co.. W. Blunt. R W. )1•211.2.. J. B. Townsend. J. Mohler IV. Jaelt- Zreilr i n!Cililm b le A er t rtling. J. i d. Patterson, kW E. O. moron. rt. Clontelllos Mellen At Knox. Cadiz. oantlewT Ilunsotx Aarimet.—Adrertlnnts.snd antneriptlense LI b ppwr reached and Ibrwardod few of expense, from Young Men's Mercantile Library Associ ation. EMERSON'S LECTURES. TTILE DISTINGUISILE'D LECTURER, PROF. R.ALPII TVA LDO EMERSON, of Mom. I hosen, has born film:lmi. by the above Institute, to di yer to Its members, and tbs. •iltimos of Pittsburgh Rem , ally. a Feria, of Lectures Teed lately prepared, and upon ththrestlng sutortils. The mums willcommies Lee three an the Cream or embrscing the following logien 1. intromictor, Lows or Swam 2. Ornate. a. Eomowy. • 4. gown. A. Cutrrea. O. %Yount,. The Lenore* will be girth on Timely& Thandsrs,an 4 roli f sruor.4;llE.:t Tim LECTCRE W O oc O 4 ;text. y•Momenclug on Thursday ' 4471 ' 4, Hamb Zith, at if; before 8 o'clock_ Coors. Tlrk o. ete ..... ......... ,Sig;ke go. o. to d tl i llietbe riror W3l 7::. oA fg name for member, (single or for the muse,) nre obtained of the Libralien. or of Mmrs. flora. Wilkins, mill kleKalght Committee. Tickets for citizen, (thlgle or for ronm_.) to 04 11 RlchWmo s ; am i P. IL " J. 'War NEW NIISIC ! c. 03. - E IS THE CALMNESS ; a:Li by V. Wallace. __MR; 'Wog. I don't Ilke to Nee; tarok song. 1' coa I forget New Englond! r i . .atded . l . 4 m lorzre b John . . Part, Vole. of by .= too 1., Power. Aotoi, Laurie. 1 igt the , e erittilZ7l.o%. I Pplka. liatchelor'n ' LaZenh 'by the liotettlot ofj k 011ela Poilok Grand Polka de Conown thy W. V. W elate. NMI] all the late popular have. Walton; Oaldllons, Nib. os, ster* Marches, Variations, Rondos. 6 e., tn., Issued In the eaMee. New !foci: remind story week. A very large and new stock of • CIIIOKERLNG'S PIANOS, '. To wilco Ole week. al 6. kid, ex, .. .I 7 00t..64,.,,,,p100d Plain. Istriloq to price from ll2: ato 11500. Also, too lioUt olnoent timed glow., from the Won onlebrat.W tranufao. ' The *bore, with a full and general stock of Maxie and Mont.! Slorchatellte, for min by • JOHN IL MELLOR, DI Woodt.' N. 11..—.Tw0 Plano Fortes to hire Old Plume lake, In atefat new ones. • rochg3, loossi NEW BOOKS! l i t T 11 , 0LMIS th ' LIT, Poe F!Lti . ty DEPOT, Thini 'te %Vernier Veall.Lia by Prlgt Forrester. Caroline of Brumrelek, ho. lk by MeTnoida rtanfield Hall, • I liatoriad Romanme—complete. 'l" - :' The Kickleboras on th• Rhine; by Thule:my. Tootle La Vaihora or conclusion of the Iron Mask.l The Queen's Neel ET buroaa. . Polly Pesblossoot's aoldinmillustmatal by Dm.ly. Port Folio of • Modkal Student: d u do. Th e one Slerchma: td a. do. Skißrth • ilumoroos Nose!: .1 veries of an Old Maid: crellhas to Young Men. Orman. and Oaliforni. Otintlemen's kalquethl en.. LPOrtay. Wiese Nannette and C olet Book. lattelre ng Age, No. • 7. hL•rengroe th e Prholar—ani 0 11soy.-the-Priest—by ben. m. 0., author of the .. 01ble In s r tlra' New supply. Harper's New Monthly. for klarah. Blackwood, its February. Boston h between, No. 34. Appletou'a Meettanlnd Ilegul• e . N o . 3. The Horticultural, for March. . The Cultivator._ :: .. , -. .. .. . r blellohat7 of yleelmoks. On. 24. ernlainspt p thAZigi4 b ar i t Ft..l. Petrres,mpletr. IPe c ni7O n ntaLls; a JecrZfte etca t rolti. am of U... London P.ll James, Go. Art Journal. tar February. lkston Shakapare, Nn. 33. 4401.3y1a non. or Ufa and Adventure. of per rival 31.- berry, written by himself. lass .4 Am..., a Noiel by the au.. of "111. 3 k 4- rllivellslppl grows, or Eketcbra of &lathers . Wk. e. ousebeld Words, N 0.13. Dr. Hankies W 0 1 .144 complete. mcb2o Rockingham and Domestic Cineensware. wo( f : wt DW urn A . R . D i aL . AKE am . L . 41; .t.O Cane 9 . , l' 4a n : BAST larsarome Ohio. air.eample boom, Na 101 Fourth at met. near the 4lay oes oboe. elttsburgh, Our ...Ivo Works enable us to f dl orders promptly. toes,mtrt dethtn , bring ....lal r employed , alto en. no to keep pare Pl. all the rat• and .Post.rtYlml of the day. weirr Urns SpltoonssFitebTs a Franey Tomb... Bets, 'loopVG. Gob's. 31 , o.ess e at a , em... Jars. and wild. for c e ne .,... ,y e ,. i t . v . ed v . r i. ‘ ,.. Orders rem.... ofkit,i, _ , ~,,,,,w o ri, I Cr LET—An I Yr'FieE on Water, be_-- . . a. .. t. u 31arketsi • e'L luulat ' JP i d . 1h r 8111741 . 9 l Water utr el. '" ARD OIL, --10 bbl. No. 1, Just reo'd and for ask by R. A. FAIINKSTOCK 3.- 00., .10.1) • corner First al. Ito.' ...,, ;S...OTRY',l7—'l% — e undersigned bassrid: fro. the firm or "Mau.. Plunkett a 3.lcEnty tr.sposed of his Intern. In raid Bern to Ch. . 1I 1 tome CHARLES WEND:WT. 'I 3 AF' tette, March 1901.133triMe103/11t__ _l , 1_ )1. (Ws AND APPLES-- '--- 4 ,•„i btl'''' =&rapplea• P.n. by WOODS A 301/.1 .. . SEILERS' IMPERI L COUGH SICRI?P. —it l• cheap, easao . tats4and bled/ arEcarl 13 uz. Cr...l.larch 29 VMS I 131 r. R.C. salmi—Air alum. 111. erth..:l....bmt. wort to trouble... .....'..1 baalbut Wad ditreftilt Idle. to sou Ilat/epurpom I mu Induced by adres , II meats about yot. Couub Btartt, to tVt a MIL. i iti it to t.o a ner bolla al. lalao foal Mar aurae em t timers and lt has meat fulled tome tbs.. . I have to It to coy nolithtona and do mat' cc lenclowly belie. th at It. th e hest cougla Medicine Os. hae ores beets offered to the public, ; 111.000/ .6116,10.3. Ip.,jt..bouid i r9t rallt thrtr_dald_ren t. t.9 modulo. 1 ., .i.t:4121 0 , amen the .0 .De .74 or •l. c bottle of tole Prepared am Bold im n. n. UST rill, 1 Tula/ Or Waal It, Ord Drug.% maw, .., Infcamatien Wanted . ..... WILLIAM 310111,1{Y, of Hinckley, tlvJ coootr of Wonder, Alb ,mt b .1 1. 1 . , 19 Tr .r .°l feVfNTaTel b" bl2h ) th. barn hsilsri of hi' his le1:11 1 ira n' 11 Ift. %rad h n. ." vith Kane smident, or leer hie d .ay one .Do man Of infor mation Mit may had to hie discovery, (ohether doll OT .th°,) Oil greatly relieve s disarmed family. Mad shell be rewarded fur his trouble. by addressing s line to A.Sreros, Nicetcorn. near Philadelphia. Pa. ...WI:4S Executors' Sale of Beal Estate, AT AUCTION. IVtiL ., L ir p u E . SI . )LD, • in f tuj u stia L tice of the or e the *Ay of Milefttryb, " drl7ll ' bland 4, bar of Amid 8.51. at 10 Ws sok. A. art,,, at the Court Mom, in the City of Pittsburgh. pubite auction, • valuable Lot of Ground, situate m Quarry MIL near tbe New Buin.in th e Sixth It aid. contain'. newly ONE ACEth be.ing pmt 1 • bar? Plena mound whkh was hel d thf toft , LoomT, and others, and which. for virtue of noted. Poinedings um Partition, in the District Court of the County of Allegheny. Nu. 66 January Term.lBlB wss aseigned in eereraity to the-feel. of the said Martin Low. n, deed. by lutes and bounds. ge_ as by reference to the Inquisltim and OM thereinto unesed, end other pro s reedit it i tt, t&. .uo bed. now fully and et large sty ( Fa' P ' f?fo u tTirett= " 3.7 " ntit ' !int e :1 1 1=1 pmertert of the city nod the two ' num bolos eau of ar t for private knidenee, and storming In excellent mom fit for building pommies—as they are well known. Porn plan of the property and further Information, apply to biessra..blitthel aniLPaimer, Attorney. and LlianuelMr. to Law, Pourtle strretJor teener of the undersignedath reunite of the lest Will nal Testament of Martin LowrY. dyed. JAMIIII BLAKELY. • JOHN COLWELL, OH NESMITIL N. 11.—The adjoining Lot, cord J abein N g about the nun quantity of land, la also far We. metakihr A Blast Furnace fat Sale lIE UNDERSIGNED offers for Sale his BLAST YOENACE, situated La T Oatromary, Gram* known c. the "Allatoom t0te...," with al l the outs buildiugr. SAW and OH/ET MILLI and every-thing MY Git•Sary mrry the Smelting of Urn It bas 1,400 Acne of Land atteehel, with ae math more onion:dog as would be neeess.y., vadat mu be had from 76c. tot, per som. It has the most favorable loan. In the South, for making Iron, having the on, within °what( to one roll. gretO v gtlea l • ' .c.c. " 4 " t " . " lll ' s oirttelle° lute., iLV = d ig Etowah Rolling not where • ready ere can be finand the all Its prolncts of Pig /dotal; and It two miles from the Western and Athortlc Hallmad, which Is one of the lines of railroads commetlng the Ten Barer with th e to. Mood. which has six Um% of raincede running out from IL tanned and under contract, panting through all the im portant Towne and Ohm thtargle,wbere a ready eel. is Maud for Mg Metal, Machinery, Hollow Ware, An Ills now I ona full blest. worked by water power, with • fella! lb feet. part of the South. Letters may be sdiressed to me at Etowah. Gas on, On. or I can be men et say time on the premises. _ " • THOMAS S. STOVALL. ALL.OO,II .CILNACL, Werth Int mchOlettrawft.n IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS of Allegheny amnty. of JOO Tem A. D. 11142. 30. In the toatter the voluntary malgtiment of. Patterson Vandyke, in William Willem: nod non to win klatch WM. ISSI; on motion of Wm WlllsomEsit,suil hearing MI petition, It Is ordered bythe Court that notice of the application of lit raid Asaignap fm discharge, he pablishal than weeks In thetTeekly Or mtle in,l l , l% , fi./mt. [F ro m the' Record] CFO. B. RAYS. • To Paper Manufacturers. TEN TONS ASSORTED RAGS, for sale hr WOW ancbest cub price paalM3L CARPEIS, OIL CLOTHS, &c. W. ENCLINTOCK - • la now constantlf melting hie Spring Stork of CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, & TRIMMINGS, Comprising hi part tbe following to:teflon CARPETS. Extra Royal Velvet lila Caner do. do. Tareett7 odic do. do. Brosnan extra miser. 3 ply; superfine 3 sly; do. ► Murrain; exxra dna do: line do.: anon= do: oottondo: 4.34. 54, and 24 twilled Venitiato 44, 34, 34, end 24 plan do: 44,34, 64, and 24 wool and mittou do. RCGS, liIATS, OIL CLOTHS, &C. Ribs Cheinlielethog Mrs do: do: robs tufted do: doe do. ON common do. Chenille Door Main tufted do. do: thorp 'kin do. do; Adelaide do. do: Thrum do. do. Cetunb Clothe. Weldor do., Roeting 124, balld 24. Al.—Sheet Oil Clothe, rat to 40 .7 Elor nx. 04,14, 44, 14, 44. and 3-4 Oil Cloths. STAIR RODS, BLINDS, TABLE COFERS Atop—Stair Rada. of an grim Carpet ntodlosm I.l4,Cari mon Rondo: G.4.44.a0dn; IdattWom Table Wort, Cemh and Diaper: Lleettbeck do. Transported WindooPhaden llolluidse Venni. leinthe lemttosed Piano Cooff do. Tubb doe do. stand do: Worst., Tanta do. flaring Impelled and mothaaol our stackdletet from the moot ridebrated inctorlaw, Wog of the latest and mat ap florid grim mid mkt, ms are proparrit to .ell to mu I aod mammon at orates as Ate co Mr, cm. hpartl - tom Pit Amtern ediss. W. cordialls Motto all to tall and orstidne tar stock at The Carpet Warehouse, SA Fourth street. roehlS W. McCLINTOCK. 8200 REWARD. N PURSUANCE of a Resolution passed O, ineanimourly by the Eagle Fire Compeght, their not beki 10 %Dant Hali the lith toat,the) here by off.. • reward of 1.0 1100 40.4 DWI., for the ammo helot= and comietiori or the pers. pL 0. I ore to their Encl.. House. ea Saturday o , r th e 15th .11=1. 1611. 11 - 11. GORMAN, Fresident. C. SUM& Jo, Recreteri • toeblY3t REMOVAL. NM. WAKEMAN & CO., No. 79 .1. 81 (late 76) blarotx Last, BLIS TOLL Directly.opporize at .01d Stand. AttANUFACTURERS AND JOBBERS of liatmor in GENTL t ENESS' FrRIVIVIING ARrirar.sr. con- Coder ' l a F ris mid Dronerr—lieary mil Lien. Wool, AM go/a, hhaker. Bock . Merino and (Wain, Domestic and For eign. StiA.--Eatin Ulk. Bole. Bombazine and fancy of all nide. nod qualities. :kartrs ans andd Do ties—Vane, a esea—Of a kin all ilk. die. Bleak of nom kind. • reorme—Fattey ellt and BaLin. tualbdt Madras. holm Italian Clime Albert Bomar, Twilled Ludlam Plato EaniDerctafe—Coran, Linen Cambria. ta .surni i ierFrench and trmilah. new style. Domestic ” Cleers—Tid. 00k. Line. Thread, and , all the lated of Vernet, andeEnelDh.imeortatlons. Cotton. floner,—Shakeh'..llerino. Lamb's Waal/LC.l.