The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1851-1861, March 27, 1851, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    long before they came through the coppice, and I PiT'
told me of the fearful- devastation which Satan I
had made in the village and masse by the per- ! -
Mission of nil-righteous God. My child had.
~..gathered.togetber a few books,which she brought l _ • ' t i PITTBB U R 0 H.
----
with her, above all, ilicie and a Greek Si - TICHRODAY -MOR- ______
ti, Ft NING, MARCH 27. 1821•
ble;- And after she Mut told me that the carper- 1
tertwould not have done till next day, and we bad T the Whigs of Pennsylvania-
Istiseed the,erniings of hunger, I made her read ; --
~---- A ATE CONVENTION sill be held' no the MY
t 3 me again, fur the greater strengthening of my :of Lan Ls TUESDAY. Jun. gtin. Isp , ,,tg . tb: , l.uri
faith, the Loins abort the blessed raven from the . if:." rr, I ciseir --did..--,f....y2-,17,-' 00 l i , ~,,,.
'Greek of Luke, at.the 12th chapter:. also, the Co .rA urt. ‘ .' '''‘."-. IMitY 4 - 1. AALER, Chohusa.
I .Sarauel MeMenau, ;
beautiful Ion?, puruYtellm, Matt. vi. After which i.... 7, „..,ni,„Fn`,.' l °. 1 c. Th0m...n.)011.4, •
the maid said the evening blessing, nod we all , s we,. ft Slinalutt Eatou..l B. TAM.. .
-John ti. Den.n.
went into the cave, to rest for the night: When
I &Woke next morning, just as the blessed sou ; ' ';', A ; m 7i 7J " . l. Ftc l i i in im ... " ll.. -' I C A) e T . lll ` r ' ' '''' '' '' ' ''' ' wn.:
rose out the sea and peeped over the mountain, I : IP', V, r-.r. , i' ;`,...° ~.
1 1 a
n l : n 3 .., , :::. i
~,, Al .s i .
1 ( 4.. . . .
beard my poor hungry child already standing , 1 , . 1 int... , I ' h. ''' . " 'ii i. i.beli... •
Cha U. &adman. s ha m an ,
_....
entaide the cave, reciting the beautfal verses , • ,,,,,.., 0 .,,,, ta.rin t.. : WU .
:shoat the joys of paradise which St. Augustine, P. A Yinn,-,
f
I John Ahlynn. i
wrote and I had taught ber.f She sobbed for J,.h e j Lyn.run,
i ( 11 . e'XiI M .ArCturr ,
. grief as she spoke the words: . Vi.nyjEvana. . led, Jordan,
j " h ", 3' '' '' 'U ' . R. IIbiDLE 1!..111111. i..erren.7.
1 Enn pa Oyu. I-I,es ntri....pe partrhr
• Av!.ll si e rra rer rh•n1,110.1 been! &Ad...rant
....• ..t. r...cora t G...tolii. n.pie 1... es crudr.l
...,.-,_ ri. - --
vvariety, see the different
tomstivs ~ c 1...r.: .roar. ....Arhus iMilant VW: - IF Or our USU. .-
110 , rwrirtill. noaruto 1,. :toll perp.tonm.
• VII, nt pmts....l-mutt...a, rirl meth. lunutant
pages.
l'untentoru ln rph•al oth.rl..,nor et aeon...turn. _
.. • Yendrnt soma llori,lnnno 11::n 11:Wura nem:lrmo EvEllsots's LEcrear.s. —This distinguished gen-
N.,.tx olt..nut tun. ri....,., poi vet tin True .ydretun
Anllll4. fehd, urb. lam, tuo,blutita.'T, tleman lectured to a large and very attentive au
.
At these words toy own heart was melted: dience on Tuesday night. Each evening h.
„ and when she ceased: from speaking, I asked, 1 hrotigh with an increased number of our eit
'•What art
• thou doing, my child ':- Whereupon Lens to , bear him, and see doubt not such will be
She answered, -Father. lam eating. - Thereat
my tears now indeed began to flow. and I prais-. the case this evenin g,, when he lectures spur
ed her for feeding her soul, so 01w had' no meat •• Econerny. -
I
for her body .. I had not, however, spoken lung,.
lkefere 'she cried to me to some and look at the
wondergrittt that had risen out of the sea, and
already appeared over the cave. For behold a
cloud, in shape, just like a cross, came over
us, and Ict great heavy drops, as big or bigger
than large peas, full on our heads, atter winch
it sank behind the coppice. I presently arose,
and MU op the mountain with my daughter to
look after it. It Hoisted on town.! "the Achter
water,r where ft spread itself dot into o long
blue streak, whereon the sun shone so bright
ly that it seemed like a golden bridge, on which,
.as my child said, the blessed angels danced. I
fill on my knees with her, and thanked the Lord
' that our cross had passed away frets. us;•but,
alas Four cross was yet to come, or will he told
hereafter.
rghl* I. an nnor. Tin filluriug rot., n. writt”n by
tins Caplan) Bilhupottlnia Poser DAniurras id. 2:41,a,
10721, star Augustine. horn.
E=i=il==
"In SILO fir:and the citionsitil slime., nue hetad.
Athl keep desire and hun no!, athtintch :a fa Iners Lis!:
Veterderesi be salter), unreel:lsl itv Itur,c-c ekrifi,
Tin herShe/breathe is irsurittlini:tru, nevi .quit slat :if.. t.
.Aratilsl Ottani brig!, with exhilets iwrfetua: routs
• biters:
Kenn belocis ri.tefu II y etude 111111,Am , her: um.
ctheasnr. and Haw , sOutit, hirw ilassthis in the cult
Sirens meadows ylclit them haver- drum. sod 'streams with
hotter rim
I:4lbrelon crony the laden , houstit, with hear,- fru:lace
SOO
-Of incense nod of Wort. sinto,t/in air is nsitilcnt:
Atli neither Fll. udat worm..ttispect..3. their
ebsne..ful lialth •
Eat the leualt's eternal ginrynnatt•the happy cats blight
IA weak formed by thc Itiver Peelle in the neighbor
Geol.
Cool or RAISING rtAx.—On a recent occa
sion wn invited some of our agricultural friends to
favor us with a statement of the cost of raising
flax and of the quantity obtained from an acre.
and we Lace now to acknowledge the attention of
one of our friends in sending us a number of an
excellent agricultural and family journal, enti
tled Moore's Rural New Yorker, containing the
information desired. in a letter from one of its
mirrespondents, from which we take the follow
ing. extract:
"In 1847 I raised sixteen acres of flax, pro
dociug a •litt;o over $BOO as gross receipts,—
Pram my botik of that year I copy...the following
results of one acre I surveyed, or - about the av
erage of the field: Weight of flax and teed be
fore threshing, 3,84 S lbs.; weight of flax after
the seed was oft', 2,804 lbs.; weight of flax after
it was .dew-rotted, 2.009 lbs.; weight of ant
when dressed, 34b lbs.; quantity of clean seed.
thirteen bushels one pint, and one and a quarter
bushels of yellow seed.
Flax Rticl fur 10 eta. per lb $34 E 0
13 busbek 1 pt. seed, lOs per bllsliet 16 27
lf bushels yellow seed, 7o per bushel 70
"Expenses of seed, interests on land, at "S.'io
per acre, and every expense attending the lax,
$l4 75. This, however, is less than ordinary.
..tte I own n mill for dressing the lux. Thi+ sea
'son one acre • of flax has produced 10 hush. of
seed and 518 lbs. of atix."
The average , here obtained is, we believe, con
siderably more than the average yield of cot
ton lands, and the advantage resulting from the
fact; that flaxseed is of 'great value fur crushing,
anti feeding purposes,:is very great. The co,st
"pen acre is set down nt $l4 7.;, but that includes
rent' nt three dollars per acre, and the expense
of palling by_hand. At a late messing of the
New Toni; Agricultural Socis.tr, it teas stated by
Ellsworth; late Commissioner of Irateno.„,,.,
that it could he raised in great abundance. upon
the cheap lands of the West, and that it could
be harvested at very small cost by aid of the
reaping machine, now so extensively used in
some of the Western States.
We observe that improvements have been made
in the preparation of hemp, similar to those
which are said to have been effected in regard
to flax, and, as the subject is one of much inter
est to eiery portion of the Cnion, we shell he
obliged if any of our' agricultural renders will
furnish us with a statement similar to the above
in regard to the cost of robing it and the amount
of product —Rsoubtic.
Mormonism," ears the Dlitor of the Chris
lain Wrechman and Refro.or, (Boston,) "grew up
amid scenes familiar to our boyhood. The ele
vation on which the golden plates are said to •
have been found was well known to us before it
received its present name of Bible Hill. The
*taro in which we performed at short clerkship
used to be occasionally swept the father of
the Prophet, for a glass of grog, or such articles
as would sustain his needy family, who were
mere vagrants, making shift to live as theyenuld
and spending much of their time -ill nocturnal
money-digging. The men whose testirnoney
and aEviavits concerning the family are contain-
edit, the bookalluded . to, which is an expose of
the - fraud, were several of them our familiar ac.
gallant:mem We know that what they say of
`Atte money-digging, sight-seeing, fortune-telling,
lying and drunkenness of the family is reliable.
Marlin Harris, whose farm was mortgaged to
print the Golden Bible, and some of the printers
themselves, use names familiar to oar youth.
Those acquainted with the'enterprise in Ito • in
ception, smiled at the clumsy cheat as a thing
too contemptible for a thought, and that must
, die Ira its birth."
•To us, therefore, its subsequent history is one
of the most unaccountable things of this mum-
• ,ortistable'age. To see 'Joe Smith hailed as a
" ; ,;prophet of the Lord by seventy-live or a hundred
thousand people; to trace his footsteps through I
' Ohio, 'Missouri and Illinois; to -re his followers
threading their tray amid privations inconcei,,a
ble across the great Westein Desem, and plant
ing-theinsolves in the rich vales of 1.7ta1l and on ,
the borders of . lhe Great Salt Lake; to know that
gorgeous tempies have risen under, their hands
in Ohio and IDiaoie, aud that another, the largest
structuro in the world, is projected at their new
home; to observe their missionaries traversing
', this gauntry, Great Britain, and making their
way even taPalestine, multiplying their pronely
' tes by hundreds, and shipping them to their pro
mised land in the West saggests the mien that
some powerful spirrfroin the offer world must
preisilo over the movement, like theilevils whom
'Milton represents as dividing themselves among
the gods and religions of the ancient heathen tm
.tiona.
We are happy to hear, in letters from Berlin,
tint mar new minister; to that court, Hon. Lk D.
Barnard, is enjoying the confidence of the Prus
sian authorities, and increasing the:respect en
tertained for' our nation among the German pow
ers. His gentlemanly character and knowledge
of whatis due in courtesy to Americans abroad,
have endeargd him .mach to all our countrymen
that are majournetain Berlin, and they all feel,
in the information which he is rapidly acquiring
of Herman politice, that he will be a useful min
ister and a credit to cur country. They speak,
too, in the highest terms, of the attention to the
intermits of our nation which the secretary of le
gation, Theodore S. May, displays. Be is inti
rnately acquainted with the German Iminitage
and with German politics, and has no uncom
mon tact and shrewdness iu the mtutagement of
busineliS. His long residence abroad, while it
has inCe 4- Cased his knowledge of our foreign re
lations, has not diminished, in the lettat, his at
tachment to our democratic principlcis,/ktet-
• •
SOUTHAs
sociation of thin StategenerUPfr-es we learn
from the .Ifereury, have nioulevselections
gates for the Convention proposed to be held in
Charleston in May next. The iissociation for
the Charleston parishes will meet on the Una.
Monday in April, when it will uncut its delega
tes to the proposed Convention. At this meet
ing thin various committees will report, and it
is expected titat Judge limier, Mr. ithett, and
Mr. Chores will be present. .
. The Mercury cootainsa Icing letter frein Cei.'
Isaac IV. Boyne, in reply to An article which
appeared in the first number of the new Greer,
vilk . ptper, in regard to the alleged apathy 44
thopeople of South Carolina in the election of
.members of the Oh:mention. It in a vrel I-written
latter, nnd, saving one or two intemperate and
'vffensive expressions, it is nuohjectimmble in its
manner,_ though we of course cannot commend
its doctrines.,—Rquidie,
Market Street - Store for Rent.
OR RENT The !Store, 11S Market pr ,
• Ad:vet, the mead doer ti am the comer of Market
Libertystreet.s. iteenet,Glng.n= /a of tioril
nest jinutrof DAVID tam.
=biz 100 Penn et
SBURGH GAZETTE. I
==IMnB3CHI
Con adjourned, 1 ,,
ess having adjourn, reliering our col
umns f m a considerable pressure, we shall be
able for some time to come, to give our readers
a great T• amount of literary matter than usual , .
and we ommence the publication to day of a
small book of remarkable interest, which, thoigh
it Las been published for some time, is not gen
erally known. Probahly_not one tenth of Our
renders have ever seen or heard of the work,and
those Nirt) have will be rejoiced to see it agifin.
It bears unmistakable marks ‘ of classicality, and
c:m be - a again and again. , .
London Quarterly Neview says that it
fraluable work iu the" original, and has
, Ilieen adopted...by Acclamation in the Ea
theory." Our readers will find it of en-
Interest as it Advances.
Was
areadyl
gash Liz
c •ssive
NOLOOT —By reference to our advertising
it will be seen that Mr. 0. S. Fowler
hi city, and will commence a course. - of
a this evening. Mr. Fowles is the lender
hrenologists in this country, and troll who
p ith in what J. Q. Adams irreverently
e "mapping off of the head," can have
tural characters dissected by one is an
land the result set down in black end
is in tu'
lecture
of the
have t i
called
their n
ty, Pittsburgh is becoming n home fcr all
lot philosophy! We have lectures on 'the
fl philosophyof life, experiments in the phi
-1 of spiritual manifestations, feminine lee
] female 'rights, wrongs and destiny,' !cu
lt Phrenology and all the questions connect.
I, it, besides clairvoyance, mesmerism, bc.,
.1 .5
of Pittsburgh being merely a plodding.
dollar loving city, it is becoming a
t lyceum; and all its citizens will soon! be
, hers. As each one of the schools tow
:
fed among us differs essentially frominll
, it is to be presumed that the seed .of
tru
fireside debate is already sown. Al.
there must be a great deal of error tel
. th, there can be little danger that the lat
to triumph. There is nothing like dis
c o bring up new :facts and set common
a their proper light.
turns o
el wit])
tastes
busines
a great"
phileKo
Since the above was written, Mr. C.S.
l as called and requested us to antiounee
trill, in a day or two, commence a c — iree
mos to the people of Pittsburgh, with ex.-
.to in pathetism, to illustrate the laWs
duce somnambulism, trance, ghost see
rroynoce, somnipatly, knockings, C s 'C'
teeth extracted without pain or en-
The cry is still they come!
spirits have a fair right to a hearing
emocratic country, we most willingly
oom, to day, for a communication An
ence, if it really can be proven that
t ier between the dead . and thi , living has
',ken, we will be; very happy to acknotil
i fact, notwithstanding our present 11141 k
I
every inquirer after hidden knowledge
adly disappoint.,d if the spirits fail ,to
ore important revelations than have iet
reined if these knockers are spirits.
Ino wiser than beings in the flesh. In
me who were known to be strong minded
lust have Jost their intellectual power since
t the fleshy tabernacle. Moreover, they
charged with humbug. They pretend
1 something important, yet when their
as are spelled out we are no wiser than
If they have nothing new to reveal, it
ibly not their faulclut why not corlie'sa it
As th
1
Is this
alke
their 1:.
is bar
rage th 4
;lel but
1, .11 be
make n
1 ieert
they ar
Met,
men, . I
they Ic
ecy be
w tell
1-e elu
before.
;3 prob:,
. camel
'y can du nothing better than bore ni
.mmonplaces; we had betteenvoid theth,
eis alas ! a great deal of living and
• athing =rapidity around as which we
bored with whether or no.
If thl
•rith c
for the
And 1,
must
[coincidence we End in a history of the
on lying before us, a fuc simile of a part
cr written by Cotton Mather, concerning
} l a gs of evil spirits. Here it is
e I won preaching at a private fast (ketit
Issessecl young woman)—on Mark 9: 2s,
• devil in ye damsel flew upon me & tore
, as it is now torn, over against ye texhi
p, 1692..
By
Kerala.
f a let. ,
tite doi.
, 11 . 1
for a p
iPaf,
or.
COTTON MATHER.
.ow nearly a hundred and silty years
letter was written, and although the
made wonderful advances, we know
about the spirit world time Cotton 'MS
, and not the smallest fraction of what
,ht he knew. if the disembodied spiriis
.ove faster the world will soon grow inf.
It in
since t
world to
no mo
titer di
he thou;
k not .!
indent
handsonie
ph of a gold cup, of 'a large and massy
e in the form of a vase, which contain
flowing inscription upon its side:
timoni n 1 of the high regard entertained
AYES COLLIER, CUllector of Upper Cid : -
, y the Officers of Customs of the Port of
.cisco, Jan. 15, 1851."
•
• A
Cur Col
ifornin
F.m F
This •
and Bro
troll
Bred do
Iplendid cup was manufactured by Joel's
her, of San Francisco, from California
its weight is 30 ounces--cost fifteen hemi-
coful tribute to the worth of Col. Col;
kg by those best acquainted with his
elity and merits, es a gentleman and
beer, is a sufficient answer to those whti
encored to asperse his character, and
future usefulness.
This
her, ru
limes fi
public of
hare en.
From the Iferrielmrc Teleraeph.
•
INZEBIST LID IIIEOTSY LEWIi
: Sowing table, exhibiting the /ego/ ratO
t hallo different States, and the penal ?
bed to irsi!r,.;lol.l be interesting to thir
enders: llr„
Legal rives. Penirlty far Ersury
6 . forfeit interest & usury,
G " °forfeit usury.
Mt 6 " forfeit whole debt.
6 " forfeit whole debt.
8 " forfeit interest it usury:
8 " forfeit 8 times us'y,[duO
6 " }forfeit 3 times us'y Sr. in
6 " forfeit double the usury:
7 •• jforfeit 3 times the us'y:
6 " forfeit usury and cost
4 " iennt'etes'ting us'y,voiri ,
1 - 6 - li contract " "-,
6 " forfeit entire debt.
retts - 6 - forfeit 3 times the us'y.
- " forfeit us'y Sr i the debt,
" °forfeit usury and cost:
" "forfeit usury and int.
i k 7 " forfeit entire debt. •
paliire G' - cortzit 3 times usury.
ey 6 " forfeit entire debt.
Olins 6 - forfeit double usury.
ii " contracts void.
k anis G " forfeit entire debt. '-
r land 6 " forfeit usury and interest
F. rebus 7 " forfeit usury int. & cost:
17 " contracts void.
10 " contracts void.
6 " recur. inaction with costs
6 " forfeit double the usury
k n ~,_ ''7 .• 'Ft ----, i
rrom 9 " contracts void. ,
.41 tOlll24Ct .1t high as - 10 per cent.
. allowed
cent armed on Tobacco contracts
• ntracts as high as 10 per cent. -
" " 10 .•
rata agreed upon by the puttee-.
ITLYAMTRADI LAD: ERIE 145.1111 DAD. I who think that the whole thing is jugglery emit
c orr e,tondeseeof the eitoaessiiiii Gana.. impos.nre, and who go, net for the purpose of ;
Entc,'Marell 21, 16.51. inquiring, hot to expose the trick—who think
Enema or Gast:me—Dear Str :—ln your pa- that it cannot possibly he true, _but must neces
per of the 17th inst , you state that if the editor : earthy he false, has a tendency to disturb the
of the Erie Gazette will inform you what are the • medium, and to prevent the communication. But
"embarrassing impediments" in the way of the , admitting that this sloes constitute a difficulty, is
early commencement and speedy contra lion of it eno.tgb to overthrow the thousands of facts in
the Pittsburgh rod Erie Railroad, referred to in I favor of the spiritual origin of these tappings or
a former number of his paper, volt will a id i n sounds, which cannot be contradicted! Those
their removal- I infer from this, that you are not ' who have consulted the columns of the New York
advised of the existence of entailsr charter, by Tribune must hr ye noticed many statementsfrom
virtue of which a Rhilroad extension from this men of unquestionable veracity, whosecharacters
place to the Ohio State Hue is contemplated—are vouched for by Mr. Greeley ; also statements
that of the Franklin canal Company, greatest due- I
by Mr. Greeley himself, which put forever at
ing the session of the Legislature of '49, fsr'tlie I rest the charge of collusion and imposture as
purpose prvontia!ror ovtrosibiy of building n ; competent to explain all the phenonems develop
road from the town of Franklin, in Venango ed in the ease. As gentlemen arc so fond of
County, along the old Franklin Canal bns, to Lake showing that runic things cannot be about which
Erie. This charter is in the hands of a respec- . they know nothing, and are too self-confident
table fellow citizen, who has evinced extraortli• . even to inquire. I would like them to try and
nary enery mid perseverance in endeavoring to • explain dorm numerous facts on some other hy
convert it to the use above specifimi=i. e. form. ; pothesis than that of spiritual agency. Again,
ing a connection from this city with Ohio—and ' if the cracking of the knee-pans are sufficient to
adopted all necessary preliminaries for under- demonstrate that the rappings are not true, it
taking the enterprise. This project, with per- will not dispose of the many physical tridnifesta
haps some oppressive restrictiens and iruposi- tits!s produced by invisible power, and which
Lions contained in Mr. Hones Bill, which has .•are as clearly proven as any fact can be4oichaS
gone through the Senate, and is now before the I the moving off tables and chairs—throwing ea-
House, constitute, in great part, the “emberrass- riotus articles about the room—and even islaying
ing impediments," spoken of in the article of the upon musical instrumersts. Can any sate man
Erie Gazette. read the statement of the Res. Dr. ,PIMIps. of
I think you do the motives and intentions of • Stratford, Conn., on this subject, a Presbyterian
the Pittsburgh and Erie Board of Directors great clergyman of high standing. and welliknown by
injustice, in attributing to them, by even inuendo, ninny persons in this city, and not believe, or at.
a design to evade the full requisitions of their i least be mortal to make a brief examination of
charter. lam entirely persuaded of the honesty the facts before forming an opinion. Those con
of their declared purpose, to build the whole elusions which are jumped at cannot he sworn
road within the shortest practicable period—to ! by.
do it in good faith, from a conviction not only of I The mast of men are divided into two classes
personal duty, but of its great public import- I very clearly distinguished from each other—the
once and practical utility: In common with the Progressive and the Conservative. The Progres
people of Erie and Erie County ggperally, they sive is often let too far—the Conservative lags
deim it as possessing a lora( value far trans- I behind the truth until he is lashed into it. Ito
eroding any similar improvement hereabouts ' tween the two, the troth in generally found. It
projected—and the hcipe is now indulged that iis a fundamental position that theories should
the citizens of Pittsburgh, in view of the Linter- conform to facts. and not that facts should bends
eats involved, personal to themselves, will not !to theories. Inquire first—make up your spin.
regard it with perfect indifference. The inhabi- I ions afterwards. Most men have a form of be
tants of the counties of Mercer, Beaver, and [ lief and every thing is tried by it non touchstone.
Lawrence look to it as a grand means of fully de. I Thus have the reientille rovelatiens of Newton,
veloping undoubted abundant resources, and , and of all tine great dirm,verers of new truths,
opening to them easy and convenient market kern tried and rejected, until the light which they
communications; and manifest a willingness m struck out of nature became so intense as to blind
contribute liberally, to its speedy construction. tl•eir opposers. It does not disturb me, when a
It can scarce be doubted that a cordial union of I conservative rails me a foul fer believing io time%
the available energies and means of the different I manifestations, for I recollect very well that the
localities proposed to lie affected, would be found same man rolled roe a fool for believing in Mire
competent to the building of the entire Road. nologY..Animol Magnetism , and Clairvoyance,
within four or five years. But be this as it May, which are now demonstrated truths. There is
I feel confident that, in the absence of , any re- I something very strange in the self importance of
strictims and impositions of an absolutely crush. a conservative. If it should he proven nine
ing nature, an extent at the Southern, and equal hundred and ninety-nine times that he was Mi.,-
to the extent overlord at the Northern end. can ! taken, when the one thousandth question arises,
be immediately made. he will still think that he is very wise. and call
You seem to consider the tax feature in Mr. the Progressive a visionary with as much cont
lingo's bill a very trifling matter. Not so, in stenoe, sod with as triumphant an air, as if he
view of its practical effect. As here coutemph, had never been deceived in his life. No experi
ted, it, more than any other provision of the <ince will opens his eyes to the fact that the Dui
bill, threatens the demolition of the charter.— ! verse is not in a not shell , and that he eau."
The tax proposed would very probably absorb. i see all artiund it. The existence of spirits he be
the greater share of the predits of the road, and, I Neves itr:becanse that is traditional—it has been
therefore, present poor encouragement for the i Mantel dowtisto.hins from his fathers, it has the
investment of stock. Such cprovi,inn, by,,,, ? ,.n,A z dost of antiquity upon it—but the very subordi
bdity—the right to tax being merely resin elt:Xo I nate fact of spiritual communication cannot be
the Legislature—would, it is to he feared, se- ! entertained fur a moment—thiatis a novelty, and
riouslyembarraas the progress of the centering', consequently. infidelity in disguise!
ted work. Still lam inclined to think that. with
proper encouragement from the different points
interested, even this burden could he got along
with, and the road be put in successful opera
tion.
Hoping, sir, you may be convinced of the dis
position to honesty of purpose and good faith of
the Boardp Directors and that you may see the
Pittsburgh and Eric Road in to intrinsically
im
portant light, and lend yoOr influent.° and exer.
tionsin its behalf. I remain,
Your, very respectfully, J. B. GAB :1,
Editor Erie Gazette.
The above, we suppose•, it the Lest reply which
can be made to our strictures on theconduct and
apparent designs of the Directors of the Pitts
burgh and Erie Railroad Company. We shall
answer as distinctly and briefly as possible.
Our correspondont is mistlyen he his sopposi-
tion that we were not aware of the eristence of
the charter of the Franklin Canal Company.—
We have frequently miticed it in our columns, as
well as its fraudulent attempt to obtain, by
means of its charter, the right of way across the
State of Pencsy!vania for the New York Roil
roads. But we have no fear of it whatever. The
attempt to pervert a charter, given for the par-
Pose of constructing a railroad from Franklin to
Erie, to thr separate and independent purpose of
making a Railroad in another direction to the
Ohio State line c co outrageous a fraud that
there is__ not a urt in the State but art I grant
n injunction if the utterept it geriously undo
But we ?annot see why this matter should em
barrass the Pittsburgh sod Erie italinuad Com
pany in an honest endeavor to carry- out the
franehi-es of the charter by building a Railroad
from Pittsburgh to Erie. What connection has
the attempt to pervert the charter of the Frank
lin Canal Company ton purpose never designed
by the Legislature, with the carrying out of the
spirit and intention of the Pittsburgh and Erie
charter! No honest connection, that is certain.
The only embarrassment we eau see in the
case is, that the Pittsburgh and Erie Company
contemplate using their charter fora like fraud
ulent purpose, that of gaining the right of way
across the State fur the New York Railroads,
and to this end have advertised to place the road
under contract to Springfield, which takes it
along the Lake shore, west of Erie, to within
two or three, or may be four miles, of the Ohio
line, and this gap is propose , ' to be idled up with
a lateral road from Springfield to the Ohio State
line—or. brother words, the Company chartered
to build a•Rtinroad from Pittsburgh to Erie, are
building a Ibrifrond from Erie to the Ohio State
line, to be used as the grand trunk line fur the
trade of the West to he carried aeresa the State
of Pennsylvania to the New York and Erie Rail
road!
We admit that the Pittsburgh and Erie Com
pany has the right to build lateral lines when
their road is finished, bet it never could have
been designed by the Legislature to give the right
td build the Lateral line before the main trunk
was constructed, and to accomplish an object by
!! which the Legislature has refused to grant on
its own merits.
' When we see the Director, of the Company
pursuing such a course, Lave we not good reason
for doubting their sincerity of purpose in regard
to the line south of Labe Erie , • We do not be-
Here, if they succeed in their — object of reaching
the Ohio State line, that they with trouble theat
selves about the remainder of the route, and It
behooves the people of Crpwford, Mercer, and
Lawrence counties to look well into this matter,
and guard their own rights. The people of New
Castle; especially, have a deep interest at stake.
and it in time they took a careful survey of it.
The other embarrassment mentioned by our
correspondent, is ti bill now before the House.,
and which has passed the Se.te, which given the
Legislature tho right to tat the tonnage ,and
passengers passing through the State on the
Lake shore line. The whole object of this addi
tional Legislation, to secure which bore,. have
been sent to 11.risb.gh; is to legalize the
attempt to pervert the charter to a wrong pup.
pose, or in other words, procure the right of way
across the-iltate. The Pittanrgh and Erie char
ter dies on We 15th of April. unless the construc
tion of We road is commenced. To save the
charter and legalise the Lake shore lino is the
object of this additional legislation, and the Sen
ate, without due consideration we think, has
passed the bill, with some restrictions, and one
is the right to lay a tax, as we snot above. Now
this tax is entirely too low. It is but fair, if the
Legislature will give away the right to go across
the State,that passengers and tonnage should pay
as high a tax as our own Central Railroad pays
fora like purpose—whieh is, we believe, some 75
cents or didollar per head, and par ton. It is
useless torn ay that the rood cytmot pay iv, as
the Company having the key between the Ohio
and New York Roads, along the Lake shore,
would charge remunerative tells.
- We trust, if the Legislature persists in pass
ing the bill at nil, it will make it obligatory on
the Company to finish We whole of the Pitts
burgh and Erie Railroad, before it shall have the
right to use any la teral
, road, and that it will re
tain the right to tax passengers nod freight pass
ing directly through the State, from Erie to We
Ohio State line, by any lateral road, as high ne
the Central Road is taxed.
For the Gazelle
SPIRITUAL MANIFESTATIONS.
The Buffalo doctors, in your opinion, as ex
pressed in the Gazette of the '2.';dh, have com
pletely exploded the spirit ruppings, and fully
demonstrated that all those who profess nay faith
in them are fools. It seems from the statement
of these doctors, that the sounds could not be
heard through the medium of the Fox family
when their feet were placed nponeushions This
I =not explain in any. other way, thaii that the
presence, not of doubters, but scoffers, persons
CHARGE TO THE GRAND JURY.
Prmenunou, Much 26114 11.151
To Lantz]. Itmnra, Foreman.
Dear Seer:—ln compliance with the request of
the Growl Jury, f furnish them with the charge
dolivcr,„l on the Erst dsy of the prebent session.
Very respectfully, &c., yours,
1 WM. B. ..M.sCLURE.
I Grna•vien n tie Grand Joni,
It becomes the duty of the Court to charge
you from time to time as well upon matters of
public concern us on those whish belong to your
peculiar cogokance.
Am Act of Assembly was passed April 4th
I t.. 02. re-enacted June 13th. 1836, as follows;
••T he supervisors shall cause poets to be erec
ted at the intersection of all public roads, within
their respective townships. (where trees are not
convenient I with hoards firmly fixed thereon, .d
index hands pointing to the direction of said
roads, on which boards shall be inscribed. in
large and letrible characters, the name of the
town, village, or place-to-which such roads may
lead, and the distance thereto computed in
••lf any aaperrisor shall , after tell days per-
Eonul •nvtice, OrrOCCt Or refuse to put up. or
keep in, complete repair. index boards as afore
said, such euperrisur shall, for every ffucCof
reyeu, forfeit and pay a sum not exceeding ten
It i,. represented that this Law is but partially
carti.a! nat. Persons going into the country of
ten get astray for want of this direction. Nest
to the great advantage of good roads. is to know
where a tau is going on them. The facilities
afforded hp railroads and plank roads now under
contract. or in contemplation, will invite and in
care au amount of travel out through the coun
ty heretofore altogether unknown, and renders
still mare imperative the literal fulfiment of the
requisitions of the Act The law demands noth
ing but what is reasonable, cheap, and conveni
ent to the travelling public.
The number of persons committed to prison
in Allegheny County during each mouth and
year us vagrants, is very great, and their
reuse to this community a very formidable item.
Many of these are scarce out of prison one day
until they are back again. These persons do
not shun the jail as a punishment, but seek it as
an asylum.
The wants of this community call loudly for
some house of correction or employment for such
persons: some work house or place they would
strive to avoid; then, if they went elsewhere, we
would he rid of them; if not, they should he
sent where they were compelled to work and
square their account with the county.
Our present system encourages vagrancy and
invites vagrants.
Vagrants and malefactors seek or shoo those
States and cities where their.. are mild or strin
gent, easily traded, or rigidly enforced, just with
the same regularity and certainty that commerce
obeys the lowa of trade.
Many persons convicted of petty offences 'are
sentenced to imprisonment in the Contrty Jail,
from one month [la year. These are all a dead
weight upon the omlty, being entirely idle,
when there, and very Litany Of whom are ea well
contented in jail as out of it, provided they are
fed; and have nothing to do.
In this connection I may mention what has
been advert .1 to before, and would direct your
especial attention to the fact that there are bush
els of rocognixnneel, which are never estrested
or eued.
In as much as nine tenths of crimes and mis-
demeanors am committed under the influence of
intoxicating liquors, thisalnne makes It the du
ty of the Court, trona time to time to bring it to
your notice.
Independent of its effects, individual, social,
moral, religious, and political; drink, wields the
club.—brandi.thes the Bowie knife, hurl, the
bullet,—nerves the berglar,—inaplres the thief,
—and kindles the torch of the incendiary. It
first maddens the t ier, and then unchains him.
At this time the court takes regular cogni
zance of Licences, and I shall say a few words
respecting the power and duty of the court in
this behalf, and the practical operation of the
law.
Now, the court must administer the licence lase
us they find it on the Statute book, in short as
any other law is administered without permit
ting itself .to he swerved one hair's breadth to
the right or to the left, by its own or other peo
ples moral principle, opinions, or desires, in
the premises.
In a district like 4, it will be conceded that
no court can he informed by personal observa
tion.
It is the duty of the court closely to inspect,
c i
that each requisition c the law has been com
plied with, and each s orate application will be
granted or refused on s, own individual merits
or demerits.
The court can only act on testimony before it.
The applicant makes ont his case. No one ob
jects. If from abundant caution it is held over,
he come,. armed with wltnesses, antleouneel who
i
waken it xtrunger than t was before. The tes
timony in all oe one Sid , in furor of the appli
cant. To reject it would be unjust; the granting
of it may erect a nuisance.
Now, 'whatever may by the moral . oense and
disposition of the court, a perempto r y rejection
pr refusal would, under the circumstances, and
as the law stands, be & capricious act of tyranny
and a decision not only without evidence but
against evidence, and until the court can know
by intuition and decide right by instinct, as mat
ters now stand, licenses will be granted which
should have been withheld.
To assume the power of refusing one petition.
under there eircumetances, implies the power of
rejecting nil : but this would be an act of judi
cial Icgalation , fand a judicial repeal of a law
idready in force.
I It is true the Court is vested with discretion,
but the very inoaning of the word discretion is,
I knowledge to govern or direct ourself, but so far
I from knowledge on which alone discretion can
wit at all, the Court is in prOptitid ignorance of
everything except the proolof the petitioner.
The spirit nod the letter of the license laws
imply and express a cession, a treaty, a compro
raise They seek to regulate what no human
law has ever been able to restrain—they are not
prohibitory, but restrictive only, and the act of
April 30, 1850, left the luw as it found it, end
conferred no power that the Court did not pas
' sees and exercise before thit not was passed.
Nine-tenths of the power, obligation, and re
sponsibility of this law is vested inland rests with
the people, but that which is the bnsinese of all
ceases to be the concern of any, and men never
consider that what is inctubbent on all, ought to
be Imperative on each
The Court ineita that knowledge which ta
withheld from it, and without whicifits action is
for evil' Men sign certificates for no cause but
the fmir of giving offence, and even where duty,
inclination, and interest, all prompt them to ap
pear in Court to abate a nuisance under their
nose, they fail to do ery for the same reason, and
from want of moral coinage in the eitiven to do
his duty.
As regards tippling houses, the returns are
very imperfect. It is a duty men dislike, and
content themselves with a careless and reluctant
discharge of it. Grand Juries often find true
bills on the mere return of the constable. and
when the cane comes up for trial the COMMOMF
wealth fails, for want of evidence, and the coon,
ty pays the coats.
The keeper of a tippling house is tried, con
visaed, and sentenced to pay a fine. Ile goes
jail, and the county pays the cost of suit, an
also for his maintenance in prison, and his oho
veils twice as much when he is in prison as whe
ho is out, for his friends look upon him ass mar.
lye to a law which iby them is deemed sei
'ere.
Many-keepers of tippling houses are bound in
recognizance to appear and stand their trial. and
are never seen or heard of afterwards. Their
recognisances are forfeited . but never entreated
or sued, and the county is in for it again.
ut the owners of tippling houses watch the
progress of the criminal calendar with the utmost
vigilance, and know as well ...the district attor
ney, when the jail is delivered, and the tippling
boom cases are likely to be reached, when they
are off like migratory birds, and can nowhere be
forma until after thejury is discharged.
A law is but the expression of public opinion
in constitutional form. • To this the law'ttot only
owes its existence but all its vital energy: and a
law in advance of, or against public opinion, will
remain a dead letter on the Statute book.
The pernicious effects of drinking houses in their
widest limit are conceded: the temptations they
offer, the facilities they afford. But where thou
sands will drink, hundreds will always be found
to administer it; for it is a money making busi
ness. It every grog shop in the cities would
close its doors in an hour, their places would be
supplied forthwith by others, provided the de
mand and consumption of the article remained
the same. Building a barn does not raise a crop,
nor the erection of a stable create n horse. So
long as men will drink, men will furnish it, nod
the supply will keep pace with the demand.
A thief can hardly ho acquitted in a court of
justice. The keeper of a tippling house can
hardly ho convicted, or even tried, and this for
want of evidence, When a hundred witnesses
could if they would, each and every one of them
ensure a conviction.
Now. it' public sentiment and habit had been
az wholesome, unanimous ana strong, with . re
gard to
.What is willed drink.-ng, as it was with
respect to stealing, nu liceuce law would have
ever been 'passed; and if public sentiment and
habit was now as healthful as good , men desire
it should be, no man would petition and pay
for a licence which yielded him no profit.
If that blessed day should ever arrive, when
the public voice and habit ifreunauimous,s ociety
vi ill get along ai well without a law as with it,
fi,r then every man will be a law unto himself.
Experience, here and elsewhere, demonatrates
that human legislation, restrictive or prohibitory,
has achieved but little. He engages in an up
hill busineis who legislates against the'passions,
and here at the threshold he encounters a habit,
a-passion, and a fashion, no fixed as human frail
ty, universal 63 the world, and hoary with a thou
emdsears of prescription and impunity.
The precepts of temperance are as old as Chris
tianity, awl the-practice of its opposite dates
from Noah L and the deluge down. In aid of its
"oppression; the law has done somethin g ; —the
stated ministrations of religion something=the
press something—individual. example rinji czar
t.on something, and all combined, had done
little. Thaworld was steeped to the lips in strong
drink, and reeled under it. •
This vice, 'social in its nature, origin, progress,
and aggravation, at length aroused and invoked
the social principle, which met it, in the form of
temperance societies, and surely every rule of
reason and justice authorizes society to exercise
thii - whole of the social principle in the way of
remedy. The achievements of these societies
Lave eclipsed all precedent.
Its effectual toappression trill demand the ac
tive, combined, nod unceasing exertions of whole
masses of men, who most add to their kcal, dis
cretion, and to their discretion, patience, and to
their patience an enormous amount of christien
benevolence.
It is the opinion of many of our best citizens
who hrive devoted time and energy to the good
cause that the time has arrived when no license
should' be granted. Whatever may be our own
cipiniati on the subject, we judicially know that
the laiije on the statue book, and its repeal,
modification or a total prohibition is in the pow
er of the Legislature alone.
Sol. this Court approves or rejects in its die
cretion every bond of every•ru.istl.ian, trustee,
constable, pedlar, alderman, and justice of the
peace, ,tc., in the county.
Now supposing the Courtshonhl say, they had
Legal evidence of gnardianscheuting their wards,
tronteesahusing trusts, justices exceeding their
powers, &e.. and would approve no bond, now
or hereafter 7 It will be readily perceived this
would be diunstrous to society—and should be
fatal to any Court.
The pi:inzipteis the mane. but the application
to different..
A dead of any license would be looked upon
as an act at virtue, the refusal to approve any
bond. an act of madness, yet each would be an
equal usurpation of power and defiance of
law.
Now, from the fact that no cases of tippling
houses come before the Court from information I
from justices of the peace, it may be supposed
that the Grand Jury has no other way of reach- :
ing them but by the returns of the constable.—
Now this is a very great mistake. Any person
who knows of any one selling spirituous liquor ;
by le., measure than a quart, can go before a !
magistrate and lay an information as for any i
other criminal offence.
This proceetlin , -ould re
big proceeding would reach them effectually, i
and ensure a conviction in every ease, fur party ;
cod witnesses would be bound over to appear,
Lot as it is, all the returns that are made, are
made by constables, and there are no witnesses.
The constable only knows that a house has an
appearance of selling by less measure_ than a
quart, and in most cases testifies no more. Each ;
and every citizen in this community has itin his ;
power, therefore, to bring every offender to cer- I
fain conviction, but there can be no conviction
without testimony, and no trial without an
formation.
There are about as many tippling houses in
this community as licensed taverns. The de
mand, 'therefore, is twice as much as the supply
authorized by the court, and far more, for one
grog shop sells more in one day than a tavern
sells in a week.
If this court could, by any lawful exercise of
power, rid society of this dreadful scourge, it
would have been done before now.
•
If this court granted no license, it would not
stop the sale of ardent spirits one moment, but
grog shops would increase and multiply to dou
ble the present number, there would be double
the number of ifidicoments for this offence, which
from the same causes would share the same fate
that now befalls them. • The first effeci would be
to withhold severaL thousand dollars from the
treasury, now paid for licenses. The second ef
fect would be inflict upon the county the pay
ment of several thousands of dollars of costs in
tippling house cases, in addition to what it pays
on that score now. The increased burden on
the county would not fall short of ten thousand
dollars a year, nor exceed thirteen thousand as
things are at present.
This cannot be entirely disregarded by the
court.
I have looked at and spoken to you of these
things, not as you and I and good men think
they ought to hr, but as I know they are.
Most of all the offences that will come before
you, will bo offences involving the lose of proper
ty.
The learned District Attorney will be frequent
ly in the Grand Jury room, and the Court is
ready at all times to render you such legal as
sistance as you may require.
Peon Lrits. SUPEILIO3L--Quite 3 party from
Lake Superior passed down the Lake on the
Ocean last evening. Their route from the min
eral regions, where they spent the winter, was
by the way of Green. Bay. They bring rich ac
counts from the Copper and Iron mines, the win
ter labors having been very successful. The
Cliff mine has turned out more copper than ever
before, and the mines about the Ontonagon are
yielding freely.
A pretty large force has been at work in the
mines the past winter, and farming improve‘
m eets, plunk roads, Ac., are in progress.
There is rest wealth in the Lake Superior re
gion, and its Edevelopement must be rapid in the
Inture.-=Citc. Hold.
Attention!
SFr Prang Arerertor Is most respottfelly invited to the
cluvareishel statement afloat Walt, who NY cured
of m old the oip by the UN' of the Poses th e
"TM., may certify that. I have been cured of = old
Chronic Cough, by the use of Four Bottles of Petroleum.
The cough attacked me a year ago betDemmber,aud I had
left an hope+ of getting well. aa I had taken the Maine of
ievenl phystrimas without any tenant. I form benefited
almost imptantly by the Petroleum. I coughed up, during
the ant qf 000 rideoleue, a futedefLance emending tene.—
make these statements without any Pelican= from any
one to do rt., and relely for the purpose that other. who
cony ho suffering au) be benefited. You are at lawny to
publish this certificate. lam avoid citizen of Pittsburgh,
bating resided here thirty-tam years. Hy reeddence. at
We time, is on Second street. JOHN WAIT.
Pernartue, February 24,1211.. .
Far w , by Keyser & McDowell, 140 Wood street; IL E.
eenen 07 wow street B. A. Fahnertoek, A Co, earner
Word gra iiont Assets; D. It. Puri y. D. A. Elliott, Jogeph
h0w1... H. P. eghtegrtA ARritheny. oho by the pro.
prietar. D. IL KILN,
• feblltdgmeT Corsalßssin.Serenth st. Pittburgh.
- •
A LEATHER POCKET BOOK; 'Contain
/IL ityg • =all son of= wes lost between 84th
law &Tenth AM% co 8 street, on Toesiar. the
~,,,, w t. The gLealse , will moor • gnat . WmWu
mtwit the omit. Wooth th is am. mob=
der P
21310 e en b ligera•
'lavingdetained by himineas at
New Orleans and tit Louts. during the but few Inset, I
will not leave this dtr, fur Europe. until Tuesday, the eth
of April next_ JOFVf D..DAYI3.
eort..ior Wool eed Filth eta.
A. dead Opportunity for those who want a
LOTS ANT) LAND FOR SALE—The
subscriber offers for vale the f 'Rowing pt , et of
t n•tuml.
No.l- Four In. in Pride's plan of lotat in the Eighth
"'" lot Lelag 21 Pet by 104. These lots are p.m,
vie oltuated. nod willsold at a bargain. a• the owner.
11. t o aI d 'h 'ac' folV.rtit;.l;. '' . , ; ` Tig,i th .l..l D..
,tueatte - Way —ads aumaeauely boatel f, either butane, or
private rrat.lene,
Na. 3 Ten L. Iv the liomutrit of Lawrrocevilfe, well
tutted for pnvatenwidettee.
No. 4. Twelve .rote ref Land in P.whiet township. This
property Ls admirably lartu.,l f.,r country sea.. being but
than dist %nee fn.m the city One. and adjoining the Railroad.
N... 5. One Lot on Webster etrret. nor Rim. 11l feet by
1.00.
band.
A THREE 611/RI IfillttiE FOR RENT.
A three wtory 11.4, tear the eornerof Woteter and Elm
streets. oontainintr II wore, will be ren4d very km to •
maxi &mill. It Is au runstrnetel that two Wolin ran oe
onPo L Apnff to ROBERT WRAY. 1.1. D
tneh27:llll truer Weletter and Elm streets.
•
EC 'D THIS DAY, per Express—
jut. ia) dot. Alexander's Dents' and Laditli Rid ti ionic
pigies
Irish
P Silks, choice striiiM
Devices,plins,
125 Gingham.
MO Liner, Linen liar'. da Cambriel, do. Lava, de.
A. A. MASON d CO..
moh27 A 2 and 01 Market g.
Board of Underwriters.
•
T a Meeting of tile Board of Underwri
ter, the fullowing . mtllun was atuinhatunalt .Joy .
. I jege:o7'hat rut u irn b t e u ' aVatter th e publication of Ulla no r
,tlcc. no FUT WA, whether orlminal or renthaued, gull be
turnable.' v. taken say Inaurance olnee
In,
tido elle.
until the pimothan la paid In ram.
Ine p ti4 "
te Boanl.
TO CONTRACTORS.
.pROPOSALS are invited from Stone Ma-
MILL% Rona Cutter, Carpenter& An, fir the erection
ot it Protestant Ephicopid Clinrch, at theimmer of Diamond
and Grant *treas. plan handed In on or befonithe weny
of Anril neat. A and specifications-Iyr tie at
the Lecturn Room of Trinity Church, entrance on Sloth al-.
gatunlay morning near, between, the hours of V o'clock
A. It and I edict. P. SI, where aliou full Information will
rte. inon br au ahitect. Proponela 1:1111rbe with Time.
Ilowe. at the re athange hank.
By onler of the Coalmine. . • melt=
NEW BOOKS! HMV BOOKS!
lT HOLMES' LITERARY DEPOT, Third
eZe r la , ,Pgte th l e: . Foot 0111zw---
Dirttonary.' of Mechanic, No. Ti.
London Art Journal, for Marrh.
Living Ate. Noa.
The 111.nory and Jutrentures. of Fen Own. Ly the author
of - Laurie Todd.'
TOM Rezone, and hit Throe Maiden Aunts.
Pirtorial th a t
Aronok No. 12.
TIM., the er: by ilrs. Martin.
Pone Joan: I, O. K. M. Iteynohis.
o.toutelo, In I vol-50,
Lour 1,11 Volhere, or enuclution of the Iron Mask.
01.015,14 11.11,a Iliotnrical liontanoe—eordphde.
The Warteirk Wonllend, by Frank Fern ter.
The Kickleburp. on the P.hlr. Thaelint, '
The tine., Neel:lac," by Dumas.
Peablietenn., Scalding; Illustrated by Damp l,rt Folio or a Medial Student. du. do.
The City Merchant:
Beni a llonnwoua Norsk do. do.
Iteveriet of so Old Maid: or flints to Young Men.
Oregon mid California. •
nentlernen • Etiquette, ho Count D'Orsay.
Ladles' Libtnette and Toilet Book.
Lavengro: the Scholar—the Olpaey—the Prieet—by nen.
Borrow, author of the in %Wu." New supply.
Harper'. Nem Monthly. for March.
Ikw.n , 'laltslanare. No. 31.
Anpleton Mechanits' Magazin, No.
The Horticulturist, for March.
The Cultivator.
Crulaing in the Lad %Car, by C. J. Peterson — eOn l Pioi.e.
11,0tory of Pendennl, by Thackarey—oarnylete.
Caroline pf nrunawle/4 by Reynolds. mch2:
,MORRIS'S TEI, MART.
(LATE MORRIS & HAIVORTH,)
In the Diamond, Second Door from Dia won d alley.
F lOU WISH FOR TEA that is really
Le., this Ix the planto buy It. as Inferior lam prie4l
sm , ar i Legis i ! , : m itzt , a , t a t .s his establlthrnent.
ruperior qualities
hest 75,
TLc $l,OO
This is the only sthre In Pithsburuts that keeps for sale
mrimiqr the same kinds of Black Teas that are sold fiats..
toed and Ireland at 4450.14 a. Ihice, 50i Se.
•1ne15.27
GA3ll{OliE--62 lbs. recd end for sale by
me 14.1 • H. E. SELLERS. 57 Irrund Pt-
I INNAMON-5u mate for solo by
E SELLERS.
CIIINGER ROOT-600 lbs. far gale by
1 rlcht.7 IL,E. BELLER,:.
fIOX'S SPARKLING GELATINE—I gru
1,._) tor alr b FL IL SELLEIM
LIT.MEGS-75 lbs. fur sale by
1.1 nwti . .l IL E: SELLERS.
`CP. CAltB. SODA—IWO lbs.
SE (prime) fur
1.7. mate by mciar R. E. LLE.E.:,.
1 EMON VANlLLA—Preston's extract, for
j.. 4 1 sale tly alai= R. E. SELLERS.
T 0. SUGAR--156 bldg. arriving, for vale
~ bi 1..1127 W. 2 F. WIL.SON.
V 0. MOLASSES-500 bbls. (oak) for sale
b, Ind.= W. WII.J.ION.
-
bbls. Mass. No. 3 Mackerel;
" I 8.4113... for as.ln by
mch77 la F. WILSON.
rp-ri
rrHE PUBLIC are cautioned against re
x. opiving a one drawn by Later, Sonnen & Chaster,
to In, order, datasi Un.. !Mated 1. Mt, Si 4 =math., for Sit
Ilnadmi Mal able at 13.ank Pitzobttrgh. as payment
Gar maind at )lever , on 10
Nan.h. :ca 1 SIreANDLESE. anal never received by
them PARDON SENNETT
nrehadl:ltwlET Eris, Pa.
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
T"Epartnership heretofore existing be
tin:. Rota. Lorre , and Jetta Ilm.north, doltur
redersl Slreet Allegheny cite and hi the Dia
mond. l'ittiburgh, owlet the flan ot . 34OItHIS & IIAY
-11,01ITII, thts day &molted: All persons indebted to
the late firm will pl.,se rail and settle the eatho with Itobt
.Itorrir at either of the above dtoreg.
-
J. D. WILLIAMS & CO„
Cvrntr of Wood and /IN Streeta, rinsburgh,
jIIII \ OR' IN STORE , Bad to anise thin
1A
.real Imir:ry
tattons. which ar the e
Turd OLP the tuned rma ¢vale of the m
ntable terms:
115 catty Num praue tireen 12.5 domni Patebt 01.uc 11U..h
ea.
45 hf. chests do. du. 50 boxes in pile Starch:
40 " lkulona a Choler; 2:1 " dslentuc
100 tags No Cam , 73 LIN, 5.11.
lII"
, ItorN - rarNi Jaya: "S. ll.tor
To " ba'n...K 4'4 1r . .: 1 ' ...1 4 f7C.P1f1M, and
lAA.. sus. I and 3 Mach. Powdered Sugar.
• MO ha seadleaa
4,0 1. and Li 40.50. 1 do. 50 dm.. Smyrna Fi¢r.
• 2 and !, do. Salmon: 2Jjars li.rdeaus rrimm
5u boxes &Idol Ilerrblz 50 20.
1300 120. extra 31adder, 5 bouo Ruck Candy:
.0 bale, C 05500 citn , .
1.10ve, , COOOl
oavtt
1 bbr:4.11174r, "
tloag
3 - Cryan Ulna,: 12 dal. Military Sous
I" P0P1.17 1 1.01... up. Carl, 60.110
1 " " Piluent‘a ' 1 - Cream TurtAw-.
10 how, MNtard; • 1 Sang
lu - (Seale: 2 "
10 - Cloyeo " SHIT and Hearted
• bbl.. Garrett, Suultl Liquorice:
45 I.ox. Stearin Candler. 1 ^ Arrow 10.4
10tltar " Bathlo " Suer. " 1 Lb). Flour Sulphur,'
100 dam Maeou's Blacking: lot gO.O. Match,.
100 Ile. sup,rline him Flour. 10 the.. Mane of Lemon.
100 ludig%and 0..1100
du[. 1010 5 " Lemon sugar.
1.10 Corn lirtaxrue 1 raga Sal Soda;
111. a. Nalla. White Lead, Lard 011. Sr. triele2l3
LOE.
te.bt..4.1 to the Estate of
cf the Rao mh of ilanehmter,
.11.ra:uveol: and th...e haying
11 pre-..eut them for rcttlemeca.
11. ItottlN:..S. Esorutor.
elopec__
ALL PERSONS in,
Samuel Rnblenun, late
Ir.. make payment t. the u
elate. 1t.r.11.1l the eame,
guele.?fu.t Jull
Euve
EPM N'S AIME!
Y and pmtKinkh Hr e
gum
mule the rarer( tronire.l
paxhmen4 paper. which
friction or hvgeturr. For
owl. at the guar of
DISPATCH EN
the Eager In water. and melt.-
lamed edge, three Envelope% he
'd that v. Iltral— Wag male
etc ill withstand any ortlltwe
""17'21t bi the
iT.T7I3, It "1`
Iiik:AUMONI"B ('.TENT STARCH POL
ISH. f.'s airings healthful alms to Limon , 31 . 11 .4
hambrie,, Collars, Shirt ffonotaa and ail kinds of minin its
,0« prevents the Iron from adhering to tbr Linen, and dud
from wirkinm It contains nothing in unman to clothes in
any temp, The ladles have- long since felt the nrasity
of such an artkle, and in thin them ram•rtation nul In ful
ly, realized...sr no competition is reams! after an impartial
trial.. .
..N . :l3.—One Cake will do thirty dozen of clothe, and no
family 'honk' by without it.
&La.. Farb Cnke with fall Jlreelkam
Far Web) rac61221 IL E. SELLERS. 61
Gbbls refined. for sale by
:arta; B.A, FAILNEFTOCK
bble, for wile by
tr,13115 a A. FAI/NkSTOCK it CO.
BIII3IStONE-12. bbbi foimlo by
meth3l ILA FAIINESTOCK R CO.
TO PSO3I SALTS--30 bbls, for saleby
B. A. FAITNEETOCKR(.I.I.
SAG SODA-20 casks English, for sale by
11 FALINESTuCK a CO.
if I LOVES—ZOO lbs, for sole by
ILA. PAWESTI:CR A CO.
25 bills, fur sale In ,
n A. neunestocn & co.
bile. just rued and for sale by
meWAS J. 11. CAIMELD.
HULK MEAT-100 pineal; for sale by
HULK
sorh2.l J. B. CANE' F.LD.
TIMED AIIATON 11,111 S-1 'cask (S. C.)
Ijr for rale by rnyb2s J. B. CANFIELD.
1 L INSEEIVOIL-542 &ails. to arrive and for
m d:ll? „, by
it,
, E.Nl.2. ,, l2.ll d Agl i E r nrre , ,
T3IOTII Y SEED 50bbls. fur sale by
triontn ENOLISII k BENNETT.
nEEsivAx-250 lbe. for sale by
:Ey mch_s, KNOW:Ill A ueNNETT.
IV, a F 2 4., ; LEAD-2.s } o,,k umti fn .t r g: ,, f e NE h ic. ,
11 kATS.--iOO bu. for sale by •
vs soolal ENGLISII &BENNETT.
SENDRIES
-150 ream. Wropplog Poyx%
tAI dos. Bed Curdy.
10 kegs G's superior Totem,:
MO Es, Cloven
I AN , mils Coals
1 LLLNutynegin
I 25 bblo. 'Finegan In Aare and for Fes by
Kma-un • BENNETT.
nrehtnl 112 Sooond, orol 151 Front otreni.
VINEGAI-30 bbls. Cider (warranted) fur
gale as main-is/lent. by T. WOODS A SON,
1 mcbsll No. GI Water st.
CQES MEAL-5 bbls. for sale by
, mcb2.3 KILEY. MATTHEWS kgP
111RIED PEACHES-200t ) bu. (halves) for
1-1 ed. br mcKl, HUES. MATTHEW?
SUNDRIES--
70u bbl r. prim,. N. O. 111ulaumg
5 Übl.
O.N &war.
1,0 ructil
LU 15 tierces
100 hull' 01.4. L. H., Imp% enJ U P. 'few;
lUD arru BNOCII.NMro
30
tux.. Duval , B . ."rol.uuu
IN/ 1 LI lump Tuba".
20 - Jean, Hue. 1 lump Tubseco n
No Tullurou, vatic. Exude,
50 dm ;locket;
' TWA
10 •••
30 bblu-looluuW. MAW, gtotll - 13141 ssle by
zocb.2oßHaY, XiXtlithlrS t CO,
•
. •
1 .
CpOTTON-2,51 bales 'On consignment, per
.....rn . .4,1, 4 1",. br .1* br „ t irt
=633 ALEXAND E R 0011D0.... , . 16. L
TACTFirk. E.-11501..6
b. p
I!°rime N 0.3, land-
‘ AI "X '.4
Lr
itgr RiPPERT.
--
kNIONSEED---a this. 6A sale he
:I Awn.' - RIMY, MATTIIEIT'S A OD.
1 . 1EF! ) r?
bbta7ertmlital Sugar
170- " Potr•lend
elarilhat
70 " and Clarified Spit gr.:
"
rachli Agents St Looks SOggy Refiner[.
NEW MUSIC! NEW MUSIC—
T THE GOLDEN KLEETR
So.
3" . ,...nwt;*' i neort. as Derforrard by Prude n Stos
contOtaTd b y r.iln • b e : Cm vilt,d-
WM thou br Tz . ,, h+Ve. A se,
The Exile Set;, a bets son g . by TT T. Wallace.
Tgro Soldier's Wile:
by Barate.r.
ril Y lLVl on o m are of thee : comprsed fcr and Ant by
Mar Catarbs•
Ls•ly : on my in
Anay with rain rTeuseis wax Ann . estr.h..
IThrre arr the trim!, of Mr Youth.
.001 tronAmaillm
4 1' tleatT. &oath., Bridal, Call,: 1851.
Near York w l;ll . ., te— t ea
tin month. hituriox Exertise.
Cantle. Lawn. (fresh suppir) by L Mason Webb—
nequestimtably th e bsst Exceed !lurk book ever pubhabed.
.11.0. nit extensive and varied sapoly of Masked Irrtra
intent. Ileialeon.. Stri a e. and every thin. e lee in
the Mlll , ll 11. KLEBEE, 101 Third et
f. 11.—The new and mad Otabionahle .0m& received 'six
nlO 0 pnblishod. huh:s
bbin. 76 and 92 degrees,
for gale by
nteh2S J. SCEIOONIIAkiII. k CO.
fI . OPPERAS,—. bbl ,. in fine order, for
I_l sale br
roett2s
T I C.OO Kt.. liNtlllll3 1.1311 Croo4
rTITT. Lowe and Strorg;
:JO Apo,
Tor Tale bT tochTt J. ECHOONTIAKJER !CO.
PRINTING PAPER—TO Reams for sale
low to close cormiko.mr
at 032.5
TANNERS' 011 L-1.5 bble. No. 1;
" fur aide bi
mchr J. SCHOONMAILER & CO.
I II SEED 011.-30 bbls. for sale by <
rneb2s J. SCIWONMASER La).
QUGAR ANI) MOLASSES
-75 blrls: prisie O. Sugar.
bbb, Moirrers: for sale by
tbrEls JAMES A. HUTCHISON s CO.
6AI , ble. Small, for sale by,
AA sr.= JAMES A. HUTCHISON A CO.
1410 E-1 5 tierces Carolina, for sale by
rsch2s JAMES A. HUTCHISON A CO.
VAL AND SHOT-
Sou Galena IL.kl;
4080 itm. B.
D 3 kegs Shot. assoded• far ale
mehlS JAMES A. IJETCHLSOST t M.
U:t.iDRIES--
bblo. Lord No. I:
Gteame Loot
17 1 au Bum Hurt:
9 •• Ebouhlem
acts
P r o b t=.
4 1. Run:
1 1 1 Olymn
1 1. P ni osobern
4 1. Apolen
ells.Eggn
note Dorton
Coil to &Mr s on the itramer
Gone,. for tale by lon/AII DICKEY t CO..
boctoli Front Intd Riles slx
d YOTTON---86 bales to arrive per Mr. Gene-
Ya..'nbul for Allie by
=LIZ ISAIAH DICKEY t CO.
I:3 G.. I I ,., {rEE O T . r ., T d AZO .!, S--5 11AIA 0 a v Ft
b a ble.ou hand, in
ter
mcb23
BACON SHOULDERS-5 casks for sale by
met2.s 'SALMI DICKEY a CO.
DRIED PEACHES-500 bu. for sale by
toch2s ISAIAH DICKEY CO.
ThlMilg Lots.
irOR SALE—FIFTY BUILDING LOTS,
itual* in the Ei g hth Wrd, OW of Pittsbur g h. Ten
o three Lots front on Penrisyleards Avenue. In q iiire of,
D. W. A. S. DELL, Attorneys at Law,
nich2Sdrir Fourth street:
BOOKS I BOOKS!
eyoL. Ist. LOSSING'S Pictorial
Field Book of the Iterolottost QoUt 2( . 11
'
O. /2. Pictorial Mid Book of the Ilerole-'
tam. Pamphlet sere.
e.frimooubt Story; by the author of Bob
Time: the Avroger, to the author Of the
"bertha Arnold," "Mon/dant Le.
The above w orbs just received and for ralel u g mer ,
K.. C. STOCKTON, Bcobaeller and S
No. 47 Market Oren.
ia L'N DRIES—. .
1„.3 317 Las. prinana. Conn WO ba3.3f.R. &I. Manua
120 pkgs. Y. 11.. Dupl. sod 3.11a0 W. Alm ,
Black Tom; 25 bales ktrasll Nutn '
120 bins 5'6 Lump lb. mad 21 " 011 g. Wain
63 Roil Totems 60 " Ground NoVal
26 tea M on ' MI drama Plas.
u boom
50(0 Ea 0
Renl3l ssl6; om 60 lates Ylre Crackan t
5 Prawn (
13/ bbls. N. C. Tan 6 " LeMou 61 11.131 L
CO 7 we 0 crd Seg. 33 " Tomstolictolonn
100 cuss llassna 13s dens= 39 " Pepper Saga'
hbda Maddrn ' a
: min,
4 capons Indian
100 Pas. Pslo. 10.1201 mm 110.310 1913331 fserFx. .
23 gm t 4 t... hr 1 11.31asla 6,21 . / llamas “
50 or. Ns. Nat, Arlan's!: 1.099 d. 1.1.1pa0. "
50 alLs No. 1. 2. " 100 Lis. Rams. Eagle and
3.0 lens Nail, lased Seek Boner Crack run
- , :luo lbs. WLltion ...130 Ms. "Smith's" alm .
40 tblx.' Tanners' 011: 100 gross C. a. D. To&mm.
WO gall. Lamp Oil;
1 100 oos. Ilosken , 3) ",.- 3..3 ,
L 3.3 baaos Roan Roam
20 - Tuba 200 " D. A 3Lcssaller.
23 " I.R.stlls Paw
N. 0. Sugar and Mohnen Garda Comod sod Us...
quand,:lpicelr,C • onlag.riyrillnif arld .. 9l"mrpol I'osoo
cral
rie
enurement of nada woolly kept let oar nor.
Per tale by. 'El:Gana* BESNXIT.
roc= 1= &cola. and la Front rte.
13GAR--92. hhde. N. 0. to arrive this day,
k 3 for ask by oobM 8. t W.II6IIBAUGIL
OLASSES-140 bb
puth2.l
.la. N. O. for.aula by
a a w. HARDIXO IL
MALLOW-20 ibis. prime, for sale by
meh24 8. It W. HARDAMIL
EGGS -A few bblz. (freshifor solo by
racb.24 E. t W. HAZDADGIL
LAAtoARD-10 bbls. k. 75 !cgs. No. FLard, in
En azu.l for sale br
ccb:3S. W. 11.111BAII011.
nRIELI APPLpS-130 bg. prime. for sale
br Int= S. W. /16RHASIGIL.
11 , 041N-I. , !Ll:ble. to ar e rig r birbar, A lo a r n. sale
rrAR-40 bbls. (Wilmington) to to
1. day. for we by bh24 B. a W..110/BALViI.
MANNERS" 01L--10 bbls. No. 1, for sole
by mch2l . S.* W. HARBAUGIL
_ _
FISH-8 casks recd and for sale by
mcb2,4 d. a W. IJAREAUGII.
LOLL BUTTER-10 bble. for sale by
B. a W. ITARBAUGII,
meb24 N 0145 Finn and 116 Second K.
SUNDRIES--
bbl. Fanh . Roll Rotten.
BS Ls. White B.
bu. Dried Apple%
b b
awal Fo along
bu. am' Chealustal Jun reed per canal
boat Keystone 6titte. for wan by
nada! ROBISON, LITZLE't CO..= Liberty at.
I LNSEEI) OIL-25 rec!g• and for ode
b, meta! ROBISON. MILE
REEN APPLES--18 bbls. Russets;
tlo Pinsiss.
. _
Just mod and for ,al. br
tucteJJ RORIEON. LITTLE a CO.
QALMON-5 bbls. No. 1, for mile by
AO Inch= - K. DALZELL a CO.
HERRING -5 bble. for sale by
tucb24 IL I).U.LELL k CO.
YINEGAIt- 0 0 bbls. - (Cider) for sale by
sicazi a. DA.I.ZYLI. a co.
(aALERATUS-12L boxes and 10 bble. for
sJ 01. 1,, • ft DALZELL a CO.
mcb2l Lawny stm.t.
W.
ANTED --A Situation as Book-keeper or
Cl3vieeptional!le city rtf:rc u l ` c4 r ,,l7l 3 ;;V o u' .in x"' ,,d- -
h"
dr...meal to (7. IL, earr of Mutillls & Roe, .111 a rec-..1•!,
ton. me&=.tf
Temperanceville and Nobleatown Plant
Road Company.
NOTICE is hereby given to the Stockhold
er eald Company. that they make payment to
oon lt 'Serpent. Treasurers of the add Company, of Aye
Dollars int each shoe or the stock. on the leg Monday In
each and every month hereafter, until the whole stock
full—es the mad will te graded and tuidired by
July 4th, ISM. The Stockholders are requested to to
prompt and outlet.' In their payment.
melichtuf 31. D. BROWN. President.
APPLES -al bbls. Russets and Pippins
rot sale by S. V. VON BONNLIORS2 it CO..
reeh2-2 -
GROUND PAINTS, in Oil, neatly put up
is tin can of I 1r to lu tbs. oath, moons whims ara:
itmlne Groot, ' Part. 6 mem
Black. Tallow dela%
Term do &maw Prusoito Moe,
Umber Haw, Umber Burnt.
B. L. I'AUNCSIVedi n CIL
corner First and Wool sta.
SWEET 011--2-casks superior, for sale by
tnchf.l R. E.PRLLERS, b 7 Wad .t.
%VALL PAPER—Largest a.ssorfinerit in
Los Wc4.-artudning of t rent+ and AMC MGM R•
per ihmid.g. Ra• IN.rtura. stu.lClventwn, os price:,
'66 1%11 6 6"
cent.
. S.
i t . o .474tirAtf, Sa Wood of
NVANTED-45,000 Allegheny Co. Coupon
V liknltg. to ON an order, for shish the highest mar
ket prke will be paid. Apply, before he In nroolose, at
the Nanking Bowe of WM. A. HILL &
NOTICE.—The eteconner ASIA, in July Last,
brought flem.C.nsinnall. 01 Patent Churns, and I
corougned to Jewels kora, or to place. Notice is
hereby given, that it the said Munn and Valls, ant not
rolcera by the llOth Olt- they .111 ba sold at public sale
to par tight and charace ir31.11. 6CAIZE.
cache;
ULVERIZED CORN—Refined and Pre
ram.ly fur Pont—This Incomparably puns
b.eutlfUl article is cacrodingly healthy,
the
bvildisors. enstuda am. to, nude_ by
the directions accompanying each package •111 be iba ffi
soom me...neat Prim tor lambics. IS cents.
For ode by Mad:: R. E. iibiLLERS, ST Wad st
WHITE WINE VLNEGAR, of superior
Cider
y„T .AUftcfts'ais.brrn4dlSir./ a vicar, on
Gymers sad Tins Dealeisa,
vox PIES AND TAElS—Presh Cherrien
4 . end Plume, put up in MOP module., Peestrelue the
onzioil lissor of tlio fruit. eleo—Cteiper's celebratedies.
.m 1 short Iniusenes and Preach Gelatins. Par Jell
Menge ie., for intle bp;
ent.4l2 IVSI. A. .114'LlIfto .1 CO.. 256 Melte et.
VEMBC — ig DASIS-43 -fo saleflr
ft CO.
1.1 ACON--5 hhde prime Hams;
Male to 6 66
666 =1111 Z n
lOr d
. .
TANNERS' bblo. warranted pure,
lb. de by tech= . It. E. SELLY.b.S.
['TERRY PECTORAL;Starch P 01.6 14 Soap
Li Power, ea Etreereedole C.JIMDCI4I3.I. Ibr .s.le by
Mcb l 2 IL Ir. SELLERS. Ca Hued mt.
11111 ARPER'S MAGAZINE, for March, re-
AA. calyad and fOr .alo at ' J. B. =raw.
Lttentrr De pat, Marl stratt.
area .naolta die Pan Wm.
AMUSEMNTS
COGSWELL'S
GREAT PANORAMA
LIFE IN CALIFORNIA
THIS MAGNIFICENT PANORAMA is
. Imw or'n =the ANIE.F.Et v it Taxan
Srarre. igat
LECTURES ON IdAN
1 O. S. FOWLER, td' New York. or Phre
„,.i, iolo
and ny.g, perfectkin
ft] LK I NS 11ALL a.. follow.
Thursday.ererthw. sign..cf t'arxter.
Friday recning...... , th.
s.aturila, er-n, _nthrf,tbst ely.l Juvenile
Training.
Met, I:!iii..ry
tun..
IVedncl.day arid.sl.r.l and 4th MATRIM(S
NY or the liclenon f.re.selget.on. Courtship and Ilar
.
Ye who would enjoy antriruortial telitity, and middy
oznlL rem,
Monday and ll'edneadar.:th end lith, Wornaria Pbreno
- Sphery flight, Wrong, liatzr., influence, rhea
Tnatinent Br . ut Pers,lnzt.
Let le" • Lnltt It penk... to taproom he there.
Friday, Ilth. Ilereditary Lave and Fade.—stich re.u.
1151.-al treat_
. orulay and Wieln,day.l4th and irdh,
Ptettetellt. llll . rertnt.ilt end r..-a,
IY of
Liorneteir.rat . if o'clock and rith rUBLICEX:
AMINATIOI.S.
Fleet Lecture fore. 71Ante to Men. 15 centa . ifo.
seen. 10 mot, or 10 f..r $l. rrof....lrcal delinciatlate of
chancier. with ritnober•t chart, and atom rett. mitten
pink... including .I.oviry tooetung health. llecuration
Faults, de., their rettmly. aelf rerfation, managen.et of
children. Zr.. ae.,daily 2.1 unoccupied crerun.;”t !deri
vate at.artnaenti. at Itn.nrtes hotel. rad..A;
Young Dien's Mercantile library Associ
ation. •
EMERSON'S LEOTCRES.
TIIE DISTrNGUISTIED
PROF. RAI.FIT WALDO E-VERSON, of 3lataa
tte. hoe teenier...lml. by the above ttonitute, to de
liver to 111 member, and the nttrent of Pitt, Lorgh grate
.air, • =lion of Lactates very lately firmed, and awn
Intereettne cabfeet•i
The =ln* Will otenterlae Sts Leciortat on the Comer ow
Likr., embracing . alp
I Wu.t. LA WS Men
1. IttMlu n ctlll" -rn e
flocoool..
4. Ponca.
5. CCl.lvad. •
11. Woutur.
I= u sfr
ROOM, find door of l
I OrmaNcs, entranee no
n E d
Wtxxikrtniet. commencing on Thomas,' evening, Ranh
20th. at V Tickets t -cook
emu.. Ticke
do. do. a ts-dmit:lug $2.00
and
Single do. to be )110 ncent. t
the:dour 50
naTicket, for membet, (single or th council can be
btained of the Librarian. or of
.Ifeat
nd McKnight. Coganittre.
Ticket, for cltizont etinele or for the course.) to be pro
cured at the grincipml lkok Storm: at. J. L. Mcraddesgto
lt. Ilichenthant's arid F. IL EatoWei
CARPED, OIL CLOTHS, &c.
W. MOLTETTOCK
Lno consaantly tweiving his Spring Stock of
CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, & TRIMMINGS,
. Competing In health, fellow - ha, raeletk‘c
CARPETS.
nxtra Itoyd Velvet Pile Cartot.s do. do. Tapeetry Ern.
aeln do. do. Hruatu/c extra super. 3 ply; eorperthm 3 ply: •
do- Irearalm extra floe do: hoe do: common do_ cotton4o:
4-4. 34, :A, .424 taillN Venitiam 4-4. 34. 58, and 24
Idaho do, 44,3-4, 54. and 24 wool and cottuudo.
RUGS, MATS, OIL CLOTHS, Ac.
Extra Chenille Runor fine dozdo4extra tufted do: tons
do. dem common do. Chenille Door Matsu tutted de. do:
sheep elan do. do: Adelaide do. do.: Thrum do. do.
Crumb Cloth, Felting do.. Ikekinu 124. G. 4. anal it.
dlan—hbeet CAI Clothe, of
to rit any era hall or mom.
04. 54, 4-4, and 34 Off 1.71011 m.
STAIR RODS, BLINDS, TABLE COVERS, &c.
Aleo—Stele bo de. of all sir,: Ceepet Illodlo Lista,
Pet. Ilea do; 64,44,and34 )factions TableLmenc Comb
end Diaper , Hocketock dn. Tr. :1n....0at Window Shade;
Huff Window- Holland.. Venitlen l Ae Embuesed Plano
Comm: to. Table do: do. Stand do:, Wonted Table do.
Menu Imparted and nurchmed dur rtoeltdlrert from the
moat celebrated Factories, being of the labot and now sp.
annol styles and color, one are pm... 4 to Fell to nee
Mends and curtomers at prices as Hie as Ilary can tujamen h
need in any Vie Erffmar
We cordially invite all to call and etatnioo our stook V.
The Carpet Warehcruse, S, Fourth street.
mehl9 W. MeCLINTOCE.
A LCOIIOL-25 tibls. for stile by
mch= .1. KIDD k GU.. allTood R.
NGLISII VEMTIAN RED-20 bbls.for
We by 2 meh22 .t. KIDD dM.
SPANISH WIII TING-50 bbls. for sale by
J. KIDD t CO.
ARIS bbls. extra tine, for
P
rale by c eh .1. KIDD C 00.
100 nests for gale by
J. KIDD t CO.
12 bbls. for sale by.
E. ,lELLERS. 67 F•
r IIOUSE-KEEPERS--Ordera for Paper
rii.ovrs W e l ran beleft at th. St.a
neb2l W. P. MAI:SHAW , 05 Woad a.
Ladies' Writing Class.. •
OK. CMAISBEPJAN will re-open his La
dles' Writinz Room. at l'lttA t ifrah t ez
m om ,
a T r i :• " pared to give lostrartioni
la [be Art of Patmaanshlp, to sorb as am desirous of oh.
tairtinz tiesaut epinolary !mod. Mama tostrattloa.
mcWl
from 2 to 1 o'cock la the cart-mem.
RAZORS!
TLIE SUBSCRIBER has been appointed
Agent fin the We of •
LCIIRIST'S AMERICAN RAZORS.
Theseus the best Raton which Lane ever been offend to
the nubile.' The nye anal:len mauve the public that the
dchief improremeut necaesurr In that which promotes the
untbillte of a fne edge. Haring combo:n.l the beet Al
en. steel with a enure mend Wad, and from the pent
[tar poserag they undergo In tempering. together with the
great eery bestowed upon them In /Aruba, henna witheon.
rd.. recommend them So well natiaLed is he with the
Ittpreinrexcellenor of MO Rater , that they are each sec,
tad if found impertert In any rcaNat. the =wry 4
refereed
.. • .
tt=or to Ore perLeet tatidut
For =de,by tbe dorett or single oar. by
ty. RILSON,
mb 2 / comer 311r1,1 and Fourth att.
---
SIT'S:DRIES—
that N. O . -Some- .
.. .
-_ ao hbla. N. 0..110w....' we
.
10 bir th . Dried Sprimo .. •
1000 ex. Slam •
:40 Able. Limeed 02.1. •
44 tat new Diem
70 tem. No. I Lord:
ai bales Ilom, wearers. N. Y.; --
Di bide Fresh Itoll Butter s ,
40 - Timothy . &id ; I . arm, sod for ale by
BROWN ,i; KIRKPATRICK,I
Liberty street .i,
YEW IRMO!
qOSE IS TIIE CALNINESS;v, gxv , 3 l
by W. V. "
hints I don'tte Er n w t i szt d ranne stilt
t Wanted tiorertnen by Jahn Parry.
in.sttia Ir. very parte:al..
Vol. of hrt . ts Annie Laurie.'
1117lrerItt by M h r i s. ilidarl7llZie :Irk Polka.
Batehelor's Lenent. by the llntrbinso.. Olivia inan-
Grand Polka de Cowart by W. V. Wallace.
With a ro e poral ar son., Welts.. Polk
., Marche% Vatiattom, Hawke, 4e., an, Lanett In the
nantern Cities ;
Nen Moir ereared fray werJ.,
A very large and new stock of •
CIIICKERING'S PIANOS;
To aantrellils week, of a. Gyj, 01...na1notth..r'irendatur
ilf ' l l lr lZlifttrrt7ien i=laie saellet,l
t VI
Musi:ad. with a fall and general stock. of Untie aml
1116;ebandlse, far sale by
JOU?: NIELLOR, .1 Wood et.
N. 11...Tw0 Plano Fortes to hi. Ohl Plan. :alum In
Part for new ones. %elan
MITH'S HORSEIIENOVATIIiG TOW
DEP.S, cose t w eed chiefly of Vreci.bhc. will Preto. tre
Immediate health. This Powder is itoraliAbie for the cure
of the numerous distaste to width Cs . .tic and Hones are
subject. Tic lilanderairiward Screlnit, Ma e tipopo,L o ,,,, p r
Appetite.
C ud.tioree.Dlrtete. llerned lartrooper la Cattle,
del th e hieing of the . mai Itlieurnetiem. commetily
call b anes : plat. wbleb rw,i
abl and prevent* bc..c a a from p re cordp g my pp
to wmanTrslu
forindered; it moire cel all awes humors. rind r urilles the
Mood; it also a enb arc;, certain cam for th e rinser. al
so for Collate. end +tom to the origin
many Wel to will dm eleincee the dtorusch and
3111 w from BM, Wc A tits. Po, mod azain restore the stomach
and bowels to becdpy
tebiAdiele or retail. br
in WICKER:JIM!.
corner Sixth end Wood to.
Rockingham and Dom4tic Quetmmvare,
VirOODIVABD, BLAKELY S: CO., Man
? tilketureri of llcektrialato and Saltily Cane War,
Ewer LefeePoO. Oblo.
if£P , Sanarle llama No. 104 Fourth strict, near the Mar.
nee 0111ce. Pittrborgh, Pa.
Oar extensive
Merlin enable no to an onlers rrainptly.
A f
oonipetent dweigner being conatontly employed., also en
ables
da us to keep pare with all the new and improredetrlari
tba
W y. ater Urns. Flacons, Pilaw". Fancy Tore, Deareitgets,
Flower Vase, Goblet., Mantel Onuonenta Medicine ant
Snuff Jara, and article, tor &a:arctic use, in gnat owlet,.
Ordria werporrfalir whodat. reetaktf
LmRD bbL.No. inn rec'd and
pale by It. A, FAUNMOTOCIi elk CO.,
corner PlOO and Wool eta.
NnaOTICE.—The undersigned as wit Iniravm
from the arm of "Ilinalen Plunkett a Ileragght.^
g disToaed of bls Interest ' ln arid Om to Charles T.
amen. CHARLES 24eKNIOUT.
barite's of ibe firm will be rontinu e 4
so wont no
der thiaGyle of lIDIET-N a PLUNKETT.
Plttrbargh, Taro , .
fIGGS AND APPLES—
i this. t ow d Tam
100 - t Green Apple.. Mr ode br
sochUO • . • T. WOOLS TON,
.OAP-114 boxes No. 1 recd. for sale by
• tolil9 T. re OF. HARB4UI2III.
CIREV—V—AP. 8810
by turblo • 0.0 W. IiAKDAINOL
PIG
.3a,IJAL.-440 for sale
Itll6Y, MATTIII:WS
DlRst
ESSED SPIKES--Itlo 100 (improved)
. 2_ , LT ...by Imolai, Willi, Minn (improved)
CO.
►j
1 6 Fres
d u fhill Dne,
0 b bbl.
doa
• 25 Ws 1.161.4 Oil. •
bbls Pearl Ash. •
5U bath:airs Cream Chocr.e. •
do. Corn Bentrixr.
200 has Dried APP.,
Lns Driel Peachor, for sale bx
melil9 J. B. CANFTRT
•
BLoo3ls_sso tons Soft Tenn. for sale by
tachltil J. DA LZELL, CA Water k 75 F4st
V. ---I— '.IIF.LSI.--50 boxes for gale by •
I.J lada9 JAM'S DAIIELL.
4EAUTY.—It. is universally oDncedad that
hourty Is mine Cotrallon thitnwetry than In m 7
. while at the tame um It in euld tlyt in no other
!Weary is it lost at as younu m age. Now thU it true M•
Metals extent. but the taut o man cloned by mghtet
O] to de net omit, sour pergnal almadertee. but
tend the following. and too need tot lack god looaa—
Thew artklea ate nieolinv Jaelatrotetnn , ont Lava all, oe'
Woad a high populantr. •
Juke Ihturi gerrian or ChM.. Ponder. r.r kr/Parting
to the lawn I.llllom colepieten a natant whgenent.
Pa
should a gamut in nem medal than the use or a
Pander for the Ado. as rimy or thane told son to.) Injuri
... s‘aa kri. remmotab .1 in • urinal& man
ner, andrecntaita 00 logettliont utd.h can pomibly indict
itsare,
Jui Ilaaers Inuilatorg Ponder.
thanramsog
out gl. What LI man aavirbey hair uovo rye Ley
sor • lady: This gill emote St Inja cheek
timeithout the me of any Outer I mtratnent
ja„ Vegetable gull flair Instants,
nenculy impart to red. white. or gray ha,. a beautinally
black. brawn, saturnt n.t.st. It gal a...kph,
Mortar Om, and men eget-Wally than ant Clikr dye,
la~ t the .are time itafeplble.
am, t ream—ft a racily a plasentre to
Mate thy menus. There tam. or the vatarting
aer
slim sunnily ent.en , tne 4 to th"
mono most Kam On
We ,gagary, It Irema the too atuonth and *Mt as an
'Leta. tad not liable to been.. chappe,
Jules limier. luee Tcnth l'aate.—Sett to the hair, we
tinErmanTeeth ata1...W.1 the
nothing
to to
e thm but eheh uegketed, nothing la to glea.
Ong. or ~ l onniY,!ontn., MY ittrat Tooth hvete Moat
tam. teeth • Penny , rd.r...”. • 01 the ennto thne keelant
this gums trot and nesithy. • -
JliLFar IAUEL Pegtogrgiag a l Op. sgs t,
120 chesaut Plata •
lot gee glsokalegod regl, gg vo s .j a ',* 04
. ss g g. gegen. naming. sa4 Itittbel.4 All
_
Pg.