~_= - ~.~5_.. . torn to say that any Wadies, model, =chine, or fabriepf decided merit which may ruche= • ••• Commiasioner free of charge before the end of lone, willlhave a place maligned it, althonghlt will probably bitoolate tq have a chance for.the . s These are to be mainly medals of the finest - 'bemire, - to cost:rad, $l2: end sfi leSPectirely. Probably about cats thousand of. the first Fhuss, 'tlirri thousand of thesecomtind fire thonaand of the third will,be distributed. But th ey an not to be given for different grades of excellence .in ;,,). the same field of exertlim,ibut' for radi c ally 41.. versemerits. Theirstola r si will be - mainly,' if not wholly given. for inventions, - discoveries or original , designs of rare'srxeelleneet-the second .close for novel applications or -combinations of ..principles already known,. so as to produce clis of signal utility, cheapness -or beauty; the thlid class will be given for decided excellence of. quality, or workmanahip, without regard to ..By this course it is' hoped that per. Soul heart-burning,. and invidious rivalries among exchltdtees . may to a great extent he , . $-I,cannot,close without s'irord of acknowl 'edgment to om-Ambessador, :Ron. Abbot Law :-. rune, for the interest he has taken and the. la- . hot he has .cheerfully: performed in order that our country &all be creditably-mounded lii . this Exhibition. For many months,• the entire .buithen of conespondence, Sol, fell on his ehoidders; and. I doubts whether the Falrerill have cost him less' , than flee thousand dollars When it closes. That he has exerted himself in . erery,way in behalf othis countrymen attending the Exhibition's nomore than all who knew him anticipated; and his eornudent location, his • -iride acquaintance and marked: populariry hero enabled him,to, do a great deal: Every Ameri- . _':: ean'e voice is load In hie praise. • . I Walked through - s-good part of the galleries el the Crystal Palace this morning,-with 'atten-, thm,didided between the costly and dealing , liana and febricks around- me- and 'the grand punnet& below. Ten thousand MUM and wo . men were 'lttlOring from cue:to case, from one theme of admiration to anther, in that nusgnifi . cent temple of Art, as vast in its proportions , !that these thousands nowhere crowded or jostled rya other; and as many more might havegazed and enjoyed in like manner without incommod , ..ing these in the lust. And these added thou . suds trill come, when the Palace, which is still labanktomor workshop, shall have beanie Oat it aims to be. and when the charge' for ..• didly admission - ehall bo 'still farther reduced • train fivethill• ings (sterling) to one. Then - will • •• the artisans, the cultivators; the laborers, not of ; London only, . but to a considerable extent -of ,:,:(treat Britain, flock hither by tens of thousands' ugaze an thia • irutrrellous:achiereenent of Ro man Genius, 8011, Tuns and industry, and be strengthened. in heart and hope by , its content : Iplation.. And as they observe and rejoice, over those trophies of Labor, might and beneficence :shall they. not also preceive foreshadowed here • that fairer; grander, gladder futile for them and .. • :,theirs, whereof this show is a' prelude and a • predictiowherein Labor Audi build, replen ish and adorn mansions atonally, as greeted, as ~,,commodioue aa this, not for ethers' delight and wonder, but for its own tne and-enjoyment-for the life-long hismes of the builders; their wises anti their children, who shall find within its walls not Subsistence merely but Eduestivn, Refuse . , silent, mental ,Culture, Employment and season able Pastime as well? •Sueltis the vista which this edifice with its contents opens and brightens. - ; before me.. Heaven hasten the day whet it thall be noionger . a4coupect but albenignant and sure Niiiii:{.Mittei;triYADvmoll PUBLISTIBD, 'BY WRITE * Co EBIIIUM! TUESDAY, MORNING, MT 27, MI. 9ountY Convention. jeThitiVlsigs and Ant - unisons of Ails - etteay Conatr will=ett oa Eatusley, tha ' o u t of Xigy, 4 ", a g.° -I Pl = f e k t ' 3 1=.:3=4: teerral Werde and Itaroughs at T. Otto P . M, to select • t=o drates ham es,* eked. Ditted. Moor = =tiro c ' N ' rt i k : t": 17 a t; to Ur. s — nuTocogru Enonsnon.o 41491 '" a4 " 4 '- ;, :e . .he Mete Ontretodoh. to rant tee...m.l=oa the 24. a 4..• C. Tauar,c; F.tat Ine—/Ncnr York Correspondenso—Let- Ittifato Z4V.lon, by Homo (freely.. Tbird Aye—Um= )fattero—Fire—Te.l4rapbic .—Neva tr.i the Caned": . • You.g 4 l.3risielianies• - OOPCEPTILLTION OP xsaDvanoN lbrions are groin' with more profit in Beth «afield than any where else, mad why? Because .• ervay body grown onions. Now short sighted imople, or mere theorists, wad nay thatit every '.'body ie at it, the tmainess must itecestaugy be over done and ruined; bat that is a mistake; as feet Owl experience • more. Wethersfield has a • wand-wide reputation far onions, and their onions brit =item' oino . contemptible amine& in the world's ,commerce. • Almost ail 'the people of Lynn,•:Eien and • lumen, boys add girls,nralot shoes; and they do • better at the husinessihere than they, bould do any where else. 'Lynn, is famous for its shoes, and its fame is theca/net:fits somas. 'Sower ei:ireat his been the expangca of its production in this line, its celebrity lute expanded . greater ratio; and the prosperity-of the old .9siates" is' enhanced by the incoming of the •, Jaw maw There .is a town in New England where, as is tseetionsly 'said, "every' man makes hackets to sell but the parson, and he maks his oem;" and ho place is more proeperons and thrifty than that town. Other villages are almost solely em ployed tn tasking corn broonm, and oo of many othervutefol parsofts. Conneeticut ;supplies the civilized world "rids clocks, and ssoacimil supply no email part of it pins; whUe New Ledford, Nantucket and New Landon ham nearly monopolized the I=l - of marking whales, and making epenn can. • In Old. Bagland we find the same mantra tion of :productive industry, Ibmbester'being noted for its cotton goods, Leeds for Its woolibm, Sheffield for its stulery, rind Birmingham for Wiry Welkin Iron. . - But in return. Pittsburgh is known over the verldfor its iron, nails, and glees, and for the Ac adia= of its agricultural Implements; but the truumfacturenr - of the last nanted'uuticle would thrive better were their number increased four ' Cold; becituse the celebrity of the place fir that "kind of production would be increased is afar greater ratio. bathe article of steam engines, too, littsburgh luxe a kleireputationt but it is to beregretted that far more 'capital bad riot been Flt into this business years 'ago, and this have placed this city in a ?bitten abbe the fear of Xs. . tent imuPetition, a position. which it would be extrmnely difficult to give it now. • The same reaming applies to raernanble pmt suits, as any one may cominee himself byte mo• rues .redection upon thei ; relative progrem of our great seats of commerce, as compared with othrirplaces posxasingegealnaturai advantages. We have been talking a little, recently, about the of locomotives in or near this city. rill adroit the trittla and facia irhat we have said. .ITe phial not now go into aity further a/- guinea to prove the:lmporter:m.l'of the enter . prise; but this much *swill say—if this thing is to be attended with a high degree Of success, Pittsburgh m u st be made as noted for its loco motives as Sheffield is for its - cutlery, Lynn for its shoes, or Pittsburgh for its iron aid nails. Competition abroad is hartfal; sometimes die+ aritrotun but at hoine, to paean old adage, it is .the life of busbess;" and we think, in the few instances given 'above, we have proved the troth of the adage: ` ThS littlejealousieswhich spring up sometimes in the-hearts of men towards their neighbors happen to be engaged in the same pursuit, ars as untrbe in point of policy as they are re preieus - Ible in morals; and it is a truth attested by aßerience, that obedience to the command— lima shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," to, all other divine requirements, prnifitable for thii life as well as that is' to come. Cuns.—A correspondent of the llew York Sx prean sys:—"An American gentleman weU and estamintly. acquainted with Cede, Art arrived in the Ohio;informs us that way erroneous opinions pre vail in the United Suttee in regard , . to the Aron and opinions of the people of Cats: The mane are loyal to the Government, and will oppw all change. That there are dieesetmted, • people there, as ererhere else, but their nUm - 'mule ltemusichnehleand composed of the wont sdidleast neefol_clan. A few ambitloaa natives, Moneta , Yoram; lawyers and:mm:4i, who hays been smith's to obtain office, a/rsßeet comp ply; wish for any ohangi toletter them selves; that iheywill never eiredtheobject;that the aoirrnims bsrlorig,'d*ldediaid irisoFis . • and *en ii utus . o va *. in trinenalds:PtiOdSlnt , ,erlil be me. i ) 11 . J . 1•17, 14,140.. -5r aoK, e.eren.' ,•0 N e W i! ' , Wet l i s 4 iltll " 4e* g ektlig .into S Minirtire'lridin ire urged the estab lishment of a locattiotive manufactory is Ws cd -4 or neighborhood;' an an kadenalva 'scale; but the loomed came ont,yesterday morning, wiih long sirscle,socusingwsofhostilitytowsz dhfesma Thompson k Tomlinson, of this city, who have 'Prepared themselves to make L0001:6011•01, Can, ta.; among eer things. The Journal rtes goes on to give particular accooMethe prepare :B.:lasi:l3Sb by-theso gentlstoen to go into this huktiestr,all'of which . we're pleased to learn. The lotirtua's inalmaition of personal hostility ono= part towards Messrs. T. k T. is unworthy of notice.; • • TIM ibis it, not the question at. a 11... Now, ad mlitiag all that thalamus' my aboutthe mirth tigth'ent, isle adequate to the supply of the bCOMOtil.e3 which will be needed on the eiteasive lines of Mad which ere now or soon will.ba constructed? Can it give to Pitts burgh a plunder abroad .for this. important broach idiasuinfactiret Why as well might we argue that we ought to , have but one rolling mill, one aottoti•idll, one engine builder, one yard , for lading lattinboatt• . , But mdtheril this to the point. The question is not ono between rival establishments here, bit betweenlitisimighand rival cities. Suppose the establishisent which we pleaded for here should be located at CuMbiumtheand suppose that city 'mould hive within its limits two or three such estibliMments, its reputation would, then be up, Aid then indeed It would be true that there would be (to use the 1 miguage of the Journal) "tin= unaware of the fact that that was in Pitts. burgh, an establishment prepared. to =tau orders for ..eamotires." As for "airs and alt descrip tions of railroad work," that is another business, Of Which we have said nothing.. • ' •• in another article—written before we read I We article in the Journal - -we have discussed this questipn on general minciples; and as ascappli cation of that argument we say, that it would 'be greatly to, the advantage of 'Messrs. Thomp son whose champion the. Journal assumes - to bp, that their competitors • should be locateldiere rather than in Cincinnati,' or Cleve land, or Wheeling, or Nashville. Our. oldest certainly was not to disparage the laudable eaten:be of these or any other gentle men, but to get iv a ; spirit which would place libtsbmgl onyststage ground in _this important branch or • tunntdicturk and if this object is to be blocked by pettyjellonales about the inter ests of hulirldnals, why it will be bad for us all, Mesas. T. - tr. T. Included. We repeat; that our object in : this matter is to Settlle ifpopible to 'Pittsburgh a reputation for this blinds of prodnotife industry 'olds* as to place it s'oor the competition of other and find cities ctin Ileum Thorimans& Tomlinson do this shigielainded? for if they =Mot, their ef forts to . Make their .estitadunent profitable, . aren tortheens.llles, wi l prone abortira . Wo.prifeas to be quite as friendly to those gentlemen tithe editor of the Journal can be; and a* mane advise thein, as Mei r a lne Meir onn.eueeeis, to' silence lieir injudicious chtun- B...erammi.Q.—Wstore indebted to the Wash ington Repnblio;for a table of the population of '-all the Ste* a 'pd Tordiories, with the Repre sentative members, and the number of Repre sentatives in Congress to which each State is entitled, which wEI Joe found - in another column. By this it will be seen that Pennsylvania gains a mecaber„ having 24 on full ratio, and one on her large. fraction:, New . York Meta one, and Ohio holds her old number: In free population, the free non-Elsie-holding States ontnumbex the Blare-holding - EMUS 7,119,571, or more than two to one. - • • , . The reader may form _ some idea of the mag nitude of the locomotive business shah inforin ad that thate are 'kers 113 locomotives on the Nei York :sad Nrie Itakmad, mid that the iiieSen to be iicremea to 110. It is also in dicative of the Teat amount of bushiest dome= that tat work. Gni= .13 Lownos.—Amonsot the immense represnMOsei of the .dmericali item mar in London, is .Mr. Harsco Oreeley, .of the New York .Tlentla, who, am a letter of May 9th, may he aeon almost dilly at 'the iSthibitian, prontetuitlng with some distil:gabbed oharanter, iti..theSlioeldng bid hat" and old "white coat" Ono at his letters,will be . seen in our columns to day: Tin Plarttwares Preastss—E'reaident Fill more and party; kir. Webeter excepted, arrived at..Mbany at 8 o'clock Wednesdah afternoon, and were enthusiastically received. The Presi dent was addressed by the Mayor, an behalf of the cleamas, and briefly • :expanded. There was a large procession;. after which a din new was jails to the Perth end al they were Conducted' to the bait, fireworks were 'lit?' played along the route. Puma Lasnn—in our Atoka= this morning will be found the adiertisemerd of the sake of iargebodite of public land, in the State of .Lr- MIZELODIEZ MOUS CA I& , On Thursday afternoon Mr. Lord concluded hb argument in the cue now on trial:before the 8. (Inuit Court, in the city' of lbw Fork.' . 31everdy Johnson, Esq., for the complainan ts,;- then raid to the Court, that bo his argumentoi. the power of the General Coaferesse to author- , . he a reparation, he should rely upon the cue t h e American Insurance Company n. ,Canter, 1 Peters 642, in which Chief Justice • Mantle' made a decision as to the of the Federal , Government over thaT tortes under Ast- IV, Elea Bor the Constitution of The United e l a tes,' a I which ems aralogqns to the powers of eral Conferenceomder,its constitution. , .. Mr. 1.1. Fauber, solicitor for the d efe nd- :. 1 ants, then commenced theradig of thelr doe: amentary evidnute: chiefly, In 1 extracts from the official report of the Proceed", logs of: the: General Conference of 1844, ithe Beek of Dicipline, cad other publications with which readeta are generally acquainted. On Friday morning, the Fifth ley, the Court Boon wu densely minted with spectators, de sire= of hearing the. Eton. Bubo Choate open the defendants case. They; were, detained to disappointment, however, for at the opening of the Cu _rti, Ewing stated that Mr. Choate' nFdtininerone aaa- Me to commence his argument.: The Court•in consequence granted an adjournment until 10 o'clock on Monday morning, when, it is under stood,-the case mostgo on, whether kb. Choate . appears or no t: - The documentary evidence read by Mr. Pu cker, for the defence,- yesterday afternoon, went to show that the traveling preachers are not the ' 'owners of thin fund.,but that it Is held by the Garth in the natur of a charity, and comes within their fund for chesitable uses. The trav eling Preachers in distributbigrbooks did not do so, an had been alleged, with a view to 'fund for old age, cite., but were compensated for doing so, the books being Tarnished to them at 26 to per cent. discount: The Book Concern has been raised, not by contributions, but by the =um), of its blindness. It was established in 1799, on a capital of $4,000. In Ave years at itirralue was $28,000, and in four years more, being in 1808, it was worth $47;000, - and has continued to increase until ; it is said now to be worth $760,000. It is not it Tested right in the traveling preachers, as had been contended. ILoproof of witch , might be mentioned the im portant fact that the annual- conferences create ! traveling preachers,- who in process of time or muse of eituunsummes, become claimants upon ' the fecal- Yet the annual conferences hare no thing to do with the look Concern, its officers being appointed and its affairs controlled by the General Conterenee: Ile - else 'Wowed that the Scathe* Conference has been supplied Idiom 1844, with books on the ea= terms as the Can ada conference l- that is 7 per cent. less than the wholesale pica . . . Psi Ou Pifiebwy Gt=tte. . " id& Wittra—i do not know That I ever penn ed a plO p*ph far • newmpor with more re lintel:tenth= that whichl now near Amon name bia been introduad into' the late Colo! citation' Meeting Wittamt my consent and with oat Ocnumiting me upon */ *Moot' I was once an'ardent friend to that cause; and for some time cantribnied liberally • _ Mr* moun, to, its rapport, tilt of -Istityreore nty.opinions hate 11=a change; and elthongit' at this ma: o not 'esteem myself 'an enemy of •that scheme, yet Iby no meant, 'dad' myself so eitiedly and diettnedy friendly' to it u to permit my, name; Ulmer bitable or tadsfluentlal it m I y m b o n on e erdn nln ditts fuer at . if propetty gowned, Tel eondzihnte. toltbniligtad. d antablatir and CMIZILS I O4 I O2I . 4friCS:'to . ifillittialt CIO 00141itahrbizgoir to the env,: tradt;'Wideb ban* long subsisted to. the, grievous injlzry :Africa, and to 'the disgrace of. the Christian stations who ; tare been engaged: in it . ;4;1 .-- But I think, I perceivenlearly, that under the ; color of this scheme, to benevolent and well in tended in its prominent.features, great injustice is abeit to be inflicted upon the free colored population of this country. Already laws have been passed in some of WEI Slave States, prohibiting the coming of that claw , Into those . States ; and Virginia has imposed a partial and opPreesive tax upon' them, to relict revenue for the transportation of their emend- 1 pated brethern to Africa. °lithe , other hand, - some of the free States have, to their eternal disgrace, passed laws Fri.:, hibiting their entrance therein. The Irishmen, the Engliebtnen ' . the Frenchmen, the natives of every foreign land—the fugitive cut-tbroat, or the exported pauper—finds free admission here,. in every State, while the most moral, well-be,- hared- native of the land is prohibited entrance , Into some of our free States, if tbere.happens to be sense African blood in his Uhl& This policy does seem to me to be most devilish; and all this , kind of legislation,. both the free and slave States, seems intended for one common, deeply designed purpose—and that is, to leave -the free colored man eo resting place In this free land,, and thus drive him fmm the country. This course of legislation, of itself, creates doubtsi in my mind, as to the propriety of free citizens, of FreeStatesjoining itra scheme, which is to be aided bye par tia l and unequal tax upon a portion of the community already .oppressed, down-trodden, and denied those very rights, as- I serted in our shorter of independence; to belong to every man. "Taxation without representa tion" wan a power claimed by the omnipotent Parliament of Great Britain, but denied by the freemen of America, and yet this very pewee's' now exercised in Virginia for the farther op pression of the prescribed race. The colored' man has none of the attributes of a man to en title him to; a vote; he is only three-fifths of a man to entitle his white neighbors to reprints tation, but be is a full grown man for the pur pose of bearing such taxation as white men.may impose upon him. Had these, however, been the only objections to the Colonization scheme, I might have let the matter pass; but there is another. objection which should be explained, if it can be done sat isfactorily. Lieut. Forbes, of the British Navy who spent some time in Dahomey, and who has written a very interesting account of Dahomey and the Dahomans,. says : "That the citizens of Liberia are guilty of buying and holding slaves, I had ocular demon stration ; and I know personally two Liberian citizens, . who owned several slaves, in the gen eral use °Vie term, though not in a legal erase. These pawns, as they are called, arras each olives as their soli e prototypes in the parent statcrof Amer. I know that Dr. Lugenbeel and Bee Dr. Bacon have published an article denying that slavery existed in Liberia.- They state that the exten sion of Liberia along the coast of Africa, has, so far as it extended, eat off the slave trade.— They also declare, what is well known, that the constitution of Liberia prohibits slavery. But their article was written for the very purpose of 'sentrallsing the inffnenee of Lieut. Forbes! tatement.. WIN that, did . they not meet di , really his aisertionl , lie asserts that there is a class of people in Liberia, called patent, and that they are as mach slaves as their sableprototypes in America. Is that true or false! If there were no each persons, how easy would it have been to say to? If there were persons there' called pawn., Ili* easy to explain the difference between arnica and a slaver Why evade the real questions!-- South Carolina and other Southern States" were very indignant at the prohibition of slavery in California. Such prohibition was a stigma upon the "peculiar Institution"; but those States are greatly in love with Liberia, prohibition and all Why this difference ? .Do they perceive that the introduction of these poem into Liberia, will.be nothing lees than slavery ? Do they hope it will afford them an argument In favor of hold ing their elates—a. balm to their consciences, that even the liberated blacks grasp them when they have the power? Do they suppose that all sympathy for the colored race will cease, when it found that IL, soon as they are erated themselves, they rue ready to enslave their brethren! The constitution of Liberia says: .'Slavery shall not be tolerated." The . ordinance of 1787 reads: "neither slavery nor incoltsiary sciritarir eheli exist?"' Was the omission of the words •'inrolnntary servitude" designed in order to permit the introduction of these .parons E" I repeat, Ur; White, it is with great velour tante I write this article: I have delayed it long. You ]mow that lam usually very prompt in writing what I do write ; but in this care, I hesitated about the matter, and am rather en couraged to proceed, by the hope that my article may call the attention of Dr. Lugenbeel and Dr. Bacon to the precise questions needing replies. Are there men in Liberia calledpsoms f and if so, what is their rendition? NEVILLE B. CRAIG. From the Mita lire& TEE N. 8. GENERAL ABSEGLY. roryLni DAT. Mama EVISLIG, May 19. The American and Foreign Christian Union occupied the attention of a crowded congrega tion. Dr. Fairchild, one the 'secretaries, read an ab stract of the second annual report. SWentysight hare been engaged as raid3loll - this country, during part or all of the :jest, 14 among the German, 20 among the Irish, , TO among French and Canadians, 2 among Span. Innis, and 2 among Portuguese, and the rest among English and Americans, in their respect. ire languages. Thirty-two are ordained min- : inters, 14 hcentiates, and the rest lay erongel iat‘receltmlastically Methodist, Baptist, Preby. unites, • Luthern, German Reformed, Dutch Re formed' and other evangelical denominations, with few that hare not joined anj Protestant, body ainenthey have left the Boman chureh.—, Churches gathered 23, 10 of them -connected with , the Board; beaides 20 congregations not yet organised as churches. Fields of lab:tr— Boston, Providence, Blackstone Valley, New. Eleven, Northern and Middle Vermont, Oswego; Rochester, Buffalo, New Ark, N. J., the Ports , gesse colonies in Illinois, Wisconsin, Now Or leans, and the Valley of the Rio Grande, In ,Teass, and other fields are open at-8t Louis, Cincinnati, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Baran jab, Charleston, Raeford, Lowell, Portland, and other places, but missionaries are yet to be found,' In foreign parts—in Canada East, Hayti, Val paraiso, Dublin, Sweden, Russia, Belgium,. France and Italy, aid !AB been panted-30 mis sionaries in Europe. Among the Waldenses encouragement his been extended. .Bibles have been distributed. ' One hundred missionaries inthislandand:other coati -fries have been employed in this well- Becuipts of the year hare been 1 , 56,206 82.. The objects of this society see— • 1. To awaken Protestant-churches to imp. lire Paphos. 2.'To (impress the duty of feeling for them . 3. To induce all to lidor for dot; salvation. Addresses were made by Rev. Meares. Palmer, : Hopkkis and Parker in advocacy of the objects of the association. 1:=12 Morning Session:—The first order of the -10,, being to appoint delegates to =responding bad ies, was deferred, and the second, the hearingof delegates from ouch bodies, was proceeded with. Rev. Lorenzo Carey, delegates from the Gen eral Association -of Massachusetts, made a gen eraletatemeot of the blessings which God had conferred upon the churches in that connection. An attempt is in progress to bring the control:of the temperance movement into the hands of the church. The Theoldgical Seminary hi flourish ing. A hope is cherMhed that Harvard College will be soon changed in its board of -manage ment In answer to au inquiry what had taken the temperance Out of the hands of Chitty.' dans! Rev. Mr. Carey stated it was Wathingto nianism and the order of the Sons of Temper ance, - Rev. Uriah Baum, from the General Confer ence of Maine, gave a historical statement in re lotion to the churches ccrntieed with that body, from which it aka= there are 200 churches, 17, 000 members, and 165 pagers in the connec tion. Bondoin College entirely the property of the Conference. Ile paid an eloquent tntruto to Rev. lir. Btone, Profeersor of natural and ie. veiled religion. The Theological Seminary' at Bangor has been long under embarrassments.— Much attention is now paid to education, and to the training of young men to the ministry. • ,Rev. Cyrus D. Drake, from the General Con vention' of Vermont stated; othe 'Congregatlon. alists have 191 churches, ands little over 16,600 members." Thu pupation of missionaries,land teachers for the West, furnished by Vermont, Is much greater than that furnished by any other State, In proportion to the population. :The causeaf temperance is flourishing. HIM, John Gridley, M. D„ delegate trod the Presbyterian and Congregational Geneind Con vention of WISCODZIII,"zave the history of the I=he presented. In 1830, there was bet one ter In the State; In 1839, there were three. Now in connection with the General Convention, • ate 100 ministers and 128 churches. „The tither .denaminstions In tbeBtate were noticed . at soma length, reference temperance; be reciark id that the law, of 1860, by which warn seers ;we bound tO defray all expenses and to suntan ' ill injuries caused by the liquor bought of them, lad proved a failure:. A law has due been,gaas 'od to take drat June Ist, which requirla the Payment of $lOO for retail lieenseli.ang for wholesale, *5O. " r . The ale opPoing agenda to ininilaie4 in iViscp Eamanban inn! low. cotniinfieition, signed by "man e. appointed delegate of tha&leurilitywnt at the 1 Elyeberitaiurch in the United Stales, "tuned by:the teropoiur clerk. It &Heusi that there nrei, in that connection, 820 ministers, & ent raps, 7 • thnologial seminaries. • It supports 7 mrasionarico, 80 beneficiaries. Daring the put _CO men:aid .70 , churches lave . been xd. A communication -tae also received from N. A. %eye, appointcd delegate of the 'General 87- nod or the 'German Reformed' church in - the U. S. hoe 171 inhabiters, it clerical professors, 2 editors, and 14 licentiates. Under its charge srel7l pastors/ chugs", ooispri s i ng_ 616 con . greptionsawith 40.018 cconntuniiints.. There artralso 8858abbath Bchoola Rir. D. C. Lansing,. D. D.; delegate from Gni General Association of Nair York; odd that con nected with- the Genenl Association are 167 churches and congregations, and 110- nth:deters. 516,000 had been sninut'ibed during the put year to the adasionary came, and front $20,000 to: $30,000 far education and churches in the West. . ' The bloderator remarked he bad been moth affected by the 'statements and exhortations of thadelegates. The extent of 'territory of this body had been referred to; front Idalne to Ulnae• seta and Iowa; and even to California, and at the South, steno? obanthes: He felt a deep sense of the • respon•ibility: resting npon the body. Many of our chnrchen take their mien from N. England: .00mOTot tie have not only Porltan but the,Pi/grim blood In au vet= Hence are de rived the emu, vigor and talent, which char ' netrrize those In our connection. With the congregational churches InNew Eng. had, we I}old a common baptism, ends common theology.. We nee the same catechisms and a confeseltn'of Faith. 'We Aro amociated with them in the Home Missionary Bociety,atid in the work for sending the Gospel to Foreign Lands. A great part of the contributions to these objects come from New:England. We are also ,assocle ted with them in our views of our Minh, and the nature of piety. We - indeed differ chsam-- stands/4 in bur views of church order. We love Presbyterianism, and our love to constantly irk. creasing. But we love our common Christianity mote than any ISM. He declared a kind and fraternal feeling on deepen of the Assembly to the Several corres ponding bodies', and especially to their delegates mathis floor ATTNLSOON SCISSZON The committee to audit accounts of treasurer and stated clerk, report thee theittaie examined the accounta which hate - been prosented,snitind thank. accurate. • - pi the accounts there has been received 'dar ing the lost current year : For Commissioner's fond For contingent fend Amounting to $939 39 Of whirl there has been expended for various puppies $Bl3 89 Balance onhand $76 00 The subject of the adoption of the report of the committee ma bills and overtures on the sub ject of slavery was taken up. The Rev J• T. Johnston thought a refusal to discuss this subject threw a slur upon the pre vious Assemblies, Who have spent much dais: with it The report rejoices not because al►- very is removed, bat because . agitation is pre . Touted. A new question his arisen by the passage of the fugitive slave' law, which ought to be an swered: Our silence will give support tOthe pernicious sentiments diffused throughout the country, which choke all sympathy for the op , pressed. ' Her. H. L. Hitchcock, of the Franklin Pies bytexy, 0., moved to amend the report by strik ing out all after the words "by that action,'? in I the report, and sutotituting "wad to devote our time to other !objects 'which .demand attention, always praying that God will hasten on the day Of unieurital freedom throughout our land and the world.' Rev. Dr. Platt thought the fugitive slue law demanded a declaration from the Assembly. He Proposed the report be amended by adding the ibllowing:. - , The Assembly are aware that a new phase of this Subject has been presented by a recent en actment of Congrem, commonly known as the fugitive elate law; bat we suppose that the pria diplee already settled willba a sulludentguldirto all intelligent and sincere Inquiries after trails and duty. „While all active resistance to legal au thority is U,be avoided (except In eases which justify a bloody revolution) It of the tight Mai duty. of all titian* to speak and vote according to theirbonest convictions, in favor of goodlaifre. and far t h e repeal of those which ari evil. And no human enactment can make it our 'duty to refrain from acts of charity toward the ;rarer lug or to in lifework of seeding back to persons who are Inn a hocent of aims, and who re, according to the law of nature, already acideved their trident. Rev. Dr. Riddle thought the fugitive slue law precisely the sublect that ought tan to be brought op for discussion. God hu given ;rosy man • conscience and a Bible, and • hes not ems the General Assembly any legislative or oracular Rev. A; Scofield, of the %shrews Presbyte ry,, thought the Assembly ought not to bring the Congress , of the U. S. bdore its bars for arty lain it may have Been fit to pass. Eld. B. Conger; of the Brooklyn Plushy tem thought no - motfbn on the subject wow needed. ' A motion to adjourn haring been lost, HO- W. Strong moved to reconsider a vote prwricronr ly takeo to adjourn at half-past four o'clock this r. re Lost CloisOlith przym ASIA ZICAX SONDAT 11C311)01. LNION A meettog in behalf elf the . AISIeIiCOUS Sarulsy School Union Immediately convened, at "Web Bea. Elijah Rhoades, id Onondaga Presbyter,' presided. • Rev. Joel Parker; D. D., of Philadelphia, and Rev. B. W. Chidlaw, agent of the Union. In the West, addressed the meeting.: iII[MUCA.II Immo or corissuorilis'rataos A meeting in behalf of this Board, was bold at the Bleecker et. Baptist Chunk last Tnesdny evening. Rev. Dr. Pomeroy, of Boston, and Be?. Geo. Wood, ware the makers. LTG DAT. We compile from the columns oath* Utica Ga zette and the Morning Herald ti nixistive of the sixth diy's proceedings of this impartant and in influential body—a considerable poptime pf the day bolos occupied !nth* discussion of, the shi very memorials, of which debate it is not nem*. sari to give a full report At the morning session the Assembly finally adopted the report, by analmost unanimous vote, of the coMmlttee on overtures, leaving thu sub• jeetof slavery just-where It was placed by the last ~ifteembly. . At the afternoon sessions, the Bet . Mr. Dick inpon, of area Rim, o ff ered the following res II - olution; the discussion` of which, odeupled the whole afternoon session, the reedit `being that leave was unanimously given to- the. mover ' withdraw it. Resolved. That a committee of three be ap, pointed to inquire Into the intellectual and mo ral condition of those slaves, held by man Wis of the Prabytertanchurch, and that a statistical ta t . ble be appended, showing— ol. The whole numberof elaves;nwnoderheld bo members of the Presbyterian church. . "2. The whole number who enjoy stitod' and. regattr preaching on the Sabbath. . "3.The wbolenzunberclebildrenundortwelre, wbo attend the Sabbath school. - W. Thowbole number Over/welive, who attend the Sabbath school.. . "5. The whole number of - those slaveswho are, members of the church... : ..G. The *hole number of children bapniied during the hug. year. "7. The whole number who can rend intelli gently. "8. The whole number at present receiving,. either in acboola or under private teaching, an elementary education." A meeting In aid of the Dlblelt3ociety was held, on Wednesdey opening, at which the Dee. Dr.' Con made an address say big* IMOVezz of by the Utica Gazette. -• The Assembly hare finallyAlsposed of troublesome slavery question, and have wisely refused to permit it. o become a wedge for the separation; of the Chirch on gehgraphied The decision appears to base given very mend sathifaction, though all spoke their . minds freely while the matter was =der debate. - .Frobt the Republic. THE EOUTSAND THE PEEKED We find in the meet. speech of . Seale= Butler before the Sower Carolina tiom the following passage. 'lke southern States can no Linger be the ntuse i ef great statesmen.. , The ambition etre eagles Tight will be no longer seen—we niayi to crown and duelling, who will be. ready t o be entitled with the crumbs and of ace. There ire those who well be to nub an 1 maxlmursition to degradation, by es oil dates for the eezmulaq end anberdinate of flow. .SUPpeiee' Mai was a provistiiis the Conmit emirs that no man (tots the SoutLitattatic Stuns head be sliOle to the .Prtsitletuy, it' would not e lege the preunt side of thiuste Sad a douse rap at well beta Cottutituticei for Ali practioul . pp , • , . . Wbetti Mr. swig; riciotaid Mi. sti4 tt: fir gii gg estiagrocunim considerstians for see. maitin • • heshoialdidmasif ha Nero I=l= sorted tit milisidetallonibuf llitlettiore elevated. Mr - Butler tame be are that in the order . of j Wigs the southern States may weal enough wait • whllebefere they stupon dimolvinelus Union, boontose they are not allowod to furnishthe Pres dents. It seems to us they have had a very fair char hitherto, so ample, indeed, thatthey have no reason to judge from the post that they will not be fairly treated in future. Washington, Madison, mauve, Jackson, Harrison, 'Tyler ' 1 Polk and Taylor--nine out of thirteen Proildents in view of the relative population and wealth of the North and Booth, certainly will mower very well as far as we havegone, :Perhaps the Beath has had several more than it was entitled to, if we are to , put the matter upon tictiMat greunds; and then we are to consider Shat Jim of the southern Pretidents have' served two terms, whereas none of the northern Presidents has hitherto served more than one term. Botithern Pre/Mints have tilled the chair of Suite ahontfif ty years; northern Presidents about thirteen years. Before South Carolimosill be honestly at liberty to secede on the ground that the South dimattot furnish Presidents enough, she will have to wait lent half • century: Here we see the main spring of all these se ditlom movements—tho Impulse of disappoint ed ambition. It was this which stimulated the action of the Hartford eon i lention. This led to the sedition, treasonabl convocations at But and Nashville. Ma. COBB', 05103 BMW= NI SAVA2III.AII.-- The Sarum& Republican, of_ Friday, contains Honorable Howell Cobb's trpeecb; from which we make the following extract He did not believe that South Carolina.had. the right to jeopard the indention of the South by, her hasty and ill-advised action. Other States were equally interested in those institu tions, and she could not in justice to them take It upon herself to decide upon such momentum's issues, and drag them down with herself into the bottomless pit of revolution and disunion. For one, he hoped that Georgia would eviller to understand, io far as we are concerned, that she need not look for aid or sympathy from this State In her efforts to overthrow the Government. We may regret the coarse she has marked out— we may even sympathise with her—but nothing more. We can never raise our hands against the Union for anything in the past Mr Cobb deprecated the formation of section al parties, whether they: be called "Southern Rights" or otherwise. Organize sectional par-, ties at the North and South, at the East and West—let them meet in the Halls of Congress— let each insist, "at all hazards and to the last extremith" that It la right and the otters wrong —and he did net believe the Union would endure one month. It could never survive the bitterness, the Weed, and the violence which such a state of things wcoald engender. MirWe again refer our readers to the ad tertimnacat of ILO. Sarrell's Arabian Lienseenf, whiettaP. Pars to another colonm, slat by which you wtl see It Ls highly reconunersiol ; and Vale is not all: bennsduces ear tilkates of those w h o bare need it and menaced Its ben curial effects on their men perms. The cum are certain• ly viol remarkable, sad at least the aseeliethe U lotetbr of • trial Re lariat all to go to the weal, wbo wN furnish • pamphlet vats, contabalog 1.12/ ealtialge recipes Om the treatment of .Ws. to . sp115.1•1 L DR. Ittlidli7:ll great remedy for &man of the Hoer, tic( much older date than Its,lntoduetlon to the public.. Its db.:darer, one of the bra Iddidelaus to ti do eouniry, used it for years In his gradlea, brfor b• awn sanonneod It to the world.. Mishit= of to many quack retudlea, braided Y tos. callus th. =it inarreloal cioallthi for healing all Maso ns. disgusted an accomplished and Homed bbysi dare, .ho naturally talc ,'we dread of being obnfourrEd with tha- crowd of pretender,' to the medical art. whose maenad more ;waded in weary userapaper Y aorerslgn muddles for all the Ills that gab la heir to. The raw. mastic= of throe to ottomtdsplllshad peen E.. mar, and tb• urgent so/WWl:on/ by phydelana with ohm n. tdd assedatad In kW practice, and oho hot witoasped the Irmilortfol cons elleetni by his remedy, stt length in duced hint to nab It publio. potent. by ute.A.dikoltES • - Suddenly. on Bibbit.la mist& Mth iou, 0.0.4 s 00c. 5.A.2, Eng, one at the okk.st. naktents 'of this dlr. la his 4.l74aara , 7esr lir. Quctex cm. to Ptttabozatt before the dose of the loot centarr. rev were taare attached to Plttahoffh, trt mhos &Ivied to Its 14124,. Id eculdte *est to bla,not to mad= seen la We Wel record of his lifb. et bat wit ow of his grant et&ects, sumer loot 404 c 4 hit devotion to Americo. taker ta, ecitedellY 1a Ills ft= of onattfac resat A large tittle of amoaterteoces sod Weeds will beet tesslotoey to hlaftway excellencies of character, let,De Ida Mallen lament !dm far thoeo boos mita, of latch lbsy hate =et, 317. Comaes betonsel to • clue may 1.5.107 Dsadog ionui the suretant of the old school, Ws tietpdehed Dar peculiar and dellcate tiros of boom, lacer .47, end patztotteet. • lIIe trieuls, alb!. ito Meade otthe WWI Sr. hcrlted to Waled hte foseeat, without further oothe, from hie reaLleace, Baud stn,4, above fealthfield. Ude (Toodf.y) aftemzet at 3 eacel., to ascend to the Cemetrer. Birmingham. rrWhigs and Anti-Masons of the Bor-,, agh of litrialasbAsm. vdll mat th. Elar rhtehall m tlammtay arming. tha Ilst Inn, at 1 o elect. Me mamma! •IMlsh Miaow thoOmalyChamattal ihrFalmrhat • El, • . . adrMlKtt • ratiligglierv/raitagait land that bto aso bj bas i garadr= l l l l :: . a 'ldalear.nrthaitenrialeerc)%lll D•Unlxtfolly Taal, NOTICE TO 00151TRACTOBJ3. SEALED PROPOSALS will be received by the brithrelthetl, at St. Oath's; Mr, auttl the 1411 day of Jane. Int, the the frays:ado. and thstetrottloa (Pr anther furoblele thatortho of the — 37. Granite 1,.. ant Pike rimro Plane Rear; three Bk. tienthire .boat $0 lulls to to Imo MqI2IIUISI Nod Wot KeNb. ?moths .111 be received either (lA.) by the Mlle sth ell wort gad mtherthle to eaothlthe meta; or otharthrth, #plait $ In knob, Wiest./ thL of mad convenient Witham. (11) err lathes blank t eod root OM) _far plank deliver.' and lekt Into Md. to 1.1101 tolahlor Ith.l for gthltutkio er Mlle. thleitelleth R.bdnp sail cleating atth coheres of under 4 .6. `vil"..tertr letigttk Ith singly or tarether- sllthe: Win of the nod to be coothlebot 14 , 11 let or Deeember. 1141, sod tho balsaco by the Ith of sober. 1 1 132. ix az moth wooer the et may eelth. It Is yr:Toted to bleak the mod us wlth phlth - oak, cr trblth there Is en shear deem us .met e. The details oY route. boil theelexterkiss or the ethatker or tralldtoly: .111 Le rthdy roe eutthsattho on and other th. dr OS Jl,ll. next. tither at bt. trear thee or at the once t O&au. o.lLUlL.o.l.sthrt.thr Of the Florae Balleoad. ft. Lamle. mytheo4.l.7elo F. t. Man. Preethert. Implements. Agricultura .1. HAVE JUST rec e ivedfrom the Eaat the gglowlog tonlocceore. all of the .best manufestun tlWaa , Zl nom: Inevatkon. and I would unite all to WI and erotaln . Attlab:t. Maine, for bent. tatater, 1, 4 for wheat. rer , . ww , .." bU I "' ECobertuthera. . Sheller. for hone end , hata Down. gnaw end Corn Budk Cutting &nes. Vegetable Boot Cotten. . Ogloese end Cow Chola Elolteni ' Cagebeet tints and tirsee Bethel, ant M.. . Coasted two, an. end fen. pm, Was. All mattafertined from theof best ontertale. ansl for tale of the Inn lug Beal awry __, O. I , W1C1E68911.A51. still Coon of Wool awl Meth streett, QUNDRIES-- 2,1100 lbs. er.trs tr. to.. • bosbtla reed ou u...b. 4 Lo 60 barrels wisps 1.1 • cidr "P vinegar. 60 " alrrWe 103 FLOP loam • 160 " FLOP tuqqa toY oarn. , 1O fns . w • Ch Oir rale cin . No aID. NWrit qui#EB3l TOMATOES, hermetically sealed, Atga.v..artr-..-;ylElTlcartar.e:,` nu • Orourn sad Tim Derlart D BEEF.--Evins 8 Swift's Sugar J 5 Cored Boa esnosoOO, for Ws Or • Wll. A. Ircuni.'3 a co., 2.50 lAboir V.,ENUINg SPEjihil OAN!)I,,EB paraltipaLent pollabol " fm aal• Dr 6.II'CLIJKO & Co., .2•3lll.lbany at. tOTZ • . - Steam bigir for:SAle.' I. SALE, at aboat half the real value; . 0; teasonible Usu., a Wahl* fitentO Zoete. of now mak'. Woof, ► mul floileriberetnfon teed la the Ak.144 elooolas will. Mullion 1). L Y. &PLAIT, Outer. , Boa of htsseillon, Mar 22.1•61.--rof•Tn2V ALARPER'S MAGAEINE, Vol. 2d, tiound la cloth. '. I 6eOo4IU W Z IP TArtIiar tI VA . VIt ta l rraTV ' ("u" . Utcoll's Laing tre,_No.,of. ',.. —.•- • ..1 1 oodwit t li0 10. lAtor U. TbIM ix4p ,op:. L OAF SUGAN-100;bbls. tiv'd Nos.; 6 vv. AZT 14. , /Int. awl 1111114.4=1 hhda. Clarified, far sale by S UGAR74P EN01.13 A RATUS-50 bores foVoale b .a 2793 . • •• . O,II.OULDERS-12 cooks for Edo by mr 27 , Rumen* imistrr. ITS-2 . q Chestnut/ 4 , i ,, • NNtra Rll-5 kegs for sale 12 . 1 ,V 4 1.154 ki6NNEIT. , 151 First street. PARR REDUCED! . . • i s s a t IiONONGLICIU 1101M6._ Ea Cumberland, to Beltimaro BlORaßOlete l a ' ves the Wharf above tb yh u s . ll=d c a u ..lll= 4 l o'e u or.2e orsclael!', co. 6.1 loam &As (mann Sands/ scantnio a chkca l conocorlort vith Stu can Cumbraland nezt e v ralftgan ennaltinuna,S2 bona. Fars mils SO Titus Shona& to Phtlactelpnia, 40 berms. pa. Itur Nannast EMI norrool,- Conductors so }tar Coimbra •,totnesu nrcorms and Curntoclandr ninon atakss thio ee.daoor the bat mite Rost. . • J. SIESICISSEIS. da=t. Mrs In th e Itorronastrala noton..: : ono= B. _ABEOLIgit CO, mins stricrctusol, COIN, iiaxx :cam, IC. - .Fo T i t rou rr e to , eel to Dank of netiOtoott Lekilroutta so ld on eon 28.1"8=" " " 1.614.7T -11),Qincr4011S-41Z054 CO no 7 superior itielxu*ereretr, 3 lb. l.ruiVicas uooa - ea wwitet., IJNBEICD 911,r1300ptI 0 ns for sale by X.= * oomo4 - _ _ BY TEE IBIEBBENT OF YU TIN M Inn* , IN pursuan c e of law,' li - bittuazo Ficxxold, Preddent of the Unitd Steno of Amain, do berth/ and make known that public salee will be hold the tutdramontlothl Land Mote In the Bute of ArkenntA at the periods hereinafter dotijfts!thstaho At use load Ofilo. at BATaaN tontheted.th if..den the dna day of Bramber nert== I=tbilo w Lesals alWatteathha T tr North 414 tax seed reed of thrhili Tranahlp two, of range down T rr.u..i .ccuta9 czc,,..adca p ~rtsea: north of wma dm. of runp Wm .11"Orta giantess/int anima the Me priacfpaletesistims. Township nftra, of .flues wo. Irrational pots slum and twelve, of tangs £1 the Land Mice et OlLiairaGNOLE, oaminenchig as I Monday: the illimenth day of Bentember next to the die- j pod of the toblie Lands within the ontim , ll tam , sh to wit , s.en of the tasaisilrild mat/ Mt Afthßricalca Township' cloth sad thane.% of tarp , , TOIICALID den% of ranntehthteen At lb. Land Oeith at nbibra.ecetronmeten cm Mc. day. the e lands day_ of anksiet ihr the hlftstuf_ of nubile lands within tN , 'mud thlmtdth.t.Po put. of towed:dart • North Vac box • esid ender his Rthywhorfpoleteridkok Potion. thirteen,twastrihne,twyntydrarandtwethr : cad of the kt. frauds rim, to township three. of I untie fa.. Townahlp ohms, of range oven. " ' smth ethe bass ism and Iste4r Utr a teluktmleTklin% ll Township fan aged put of an in eutems =Mr- I two and thirtnthrea. towndthe thirty.% of range ttnn At the Lend Me al LlTilsk BOCK. oommeseing on Monday, the het day of September next, kr the dietwuld of the publie lands In the following Waned toots on net neer Croress lake, els: Nova Vase boat/ins mai surto/ Oa Aith Who:4W The month half of section that. the oath bolt of too,' fractional retie. tarts., and anal, ths mirth ball of I seventeen, the eget half of twenspont, Maarten., the north belt and mythical!. Quarter of tweatynbreeL the northwest owlet of twentreir., aral the wan belt of the northeast quarter of twentreerat, in townahl.p three,,of .Landsm • • appropriated by law lie the use of selmoti, tail and other pursues, together with .tbome mason et l 1 overflowed lands mods neat thereby nor outtivelninor nay. width than be gelatin' by the Etats antteatties fosse the day . rlted for the tothnotorment of the wish tie oda re of ander the act entitled "An= enable the 8 of Arkansth end other States to Prbfft "." ,thir l eid " waln fta titis Ara age rno W t: Mu ., had bounties herretoann granted oy eitY low of Cionkrra, Wilt serryines rendered to the ume.4 Mu., son Oc • 0.13 ff Os aboonseefoosed land 4 se provided by the act coined •tan Ad , nuking Mann dims kir the den and h, an, approved &I March, 1861. • • • The chains of the than mentloned lards will be caw tnel on the dens appoinud, mad will mood in the or. derive which they am edverthed. with all command db. patch. until the whole than harshest:l ofieud mat/or/a , thus timed; but no ode thedi kent 01te .71100 two weeks, snd 1,, , Z10411.001 Of 027 o f 4.• hoed biredialtied until the min..= Of the tern wed% Caren undu toy hand at the Cis of if UM:gm. this dash der of Man. Atm ]timid cour thrown& ht but dud aod liftponn . MP , w P.thlaitsflE.. By the President: J. BITTTERIMD, Commitsioner of the dtheral Land Mx. ZtorICE TO PHESZI7.IITON.C:LA7NA/ 2 t. • . f Eve pane eatito t ta . , , /a.gg . lll:l irnotaran to an) D. ' abertlr .u v . eu . solierated. Molted to U .... W. of the !tetchier the flaftlTlß of proper lend ohloa and make payment therthe es sops su Ors Oiler teeing Ma rakes, and ben. the day la the coo of the Puha. tole of the Ong the tract claimed. othendee nth mom will be tams- J BUT= LP ;ins , OonviU.L=tr of threi — n . l . eiZT:slX(7lc . my=las:l3t QOUNDS FROM KENTUCKY; by Rob b:xi,- - 111 n and Dublin Weitzman:oo. Warld's Fair Walt. fiere oLllood Luck Polk. Where vette Dien& of retatie Thou but =andel w th n e Ma Good toot. J B en an ntLlnd'a Bid n that ere briOtest.. . : . :s'. . New Yeses Polls. trio Polka. Blue Jambi. Uld Bar:Lir sad Old Mat _ Lament of the HIM One= OW. - 'fly toles Is =tuft to mins elm lamentst the laish Rosigesat. O.K.'d and fm tabs by mrlz JOUN IL MULCIFL. 81 Wood It. Carley Hair liratranet. I HAVE on band a large stock of Matrons i. mem...to/Jun ther. Maloales ß ttrot rata ".d ttl l P 4 .1 Tblbl L stmt. owalte tbs Post ace. • Western Insnranee Company. • STATEMENT of the assets of thelree4orn 1rm0... oteepeer of 1itt410.0.03 1 3 4 1 1 4 4Er 1147,1331: Balaac• doe o¢ , Stcct,.. lA* .bags 30:4 Wedeln 1333r3304 24130 00 seat 43 gat ,. ;111.3mountd—..--. 43313 06 Not. resiTed fir =.00112 J. JUDD It OD, No. GO Wad rt. 1110000, -11Cjedjar" 5a72013.-1.1 14„L'K SILK LACES—Large aseartaient, T. 7 chg*l4 ratl u st ap tiratcr . mr.D3 OURNING GOODS—Blackliombazines, lyiL Alma. ilth Dambadoe dula. Mut= Ckau. awe asulTassato, red and Waal 1.4 br mr.D5 MURPHY i 80 PIE NO.l MACKEREL-40 qr.bbla. ecnii, for family rue, for =la Dr ISALIII DICIEST W., la Y 2 6 Wan ea Met st. • Isutra NDlGO—Uaraccus and Manilla; on can als:mesa, 6r w. by , W 19AltIt DICES!' It mom" Wl. and mac . . ARD OlL—Bennett Joan' brand, for mai by aly26 11111/11 MOSSY • CO. LARD -19. bble. Na C I for sale by: , " RIIV .7 . 23 corner cod nalW ater us. • OATS -500 bu. for sale by VW23 & & W. 111112110011. PORN-100 NA. for sale by IL/ mym & aa.umuuti&n. EGGS.arze -3 bblet. for sale by i _ . e W. ILLIBArtiIL' FLOUR -10 bble.Rye; csyZ3 * 14° 'vb"ifrefilirmartm. PEARL ASII-5 tons for sale by ming a 1112tNETT, 1 arrVi 1111 &mod. angt Ito lint .t. 1100PS-49,000 Split Ash, for sale by _ RA was INGLItiII 111 TR-7516h. N. C., for sale b 7 r= ENGLISH I BIaSETT. LLNLE-0 bills. White Louisville, for sale by my.X, TNOLI.9II BEIWEIT. - • tt:Tahir. mot,. an. 4 S4ant -50,,0c0 • tilith.amil MIMI. LIISIIING TACKLE—Canes, Rode, Lines, br w.,w. myVI 67 Xarket otnet, am= of Ifoaota. WATChkS, Large variety, .and at the lowest lar mean gash prl" WILSON. wholesala re L. tar%) . ricLEE PENCIL OF ROBERT BURNS, the Pont mar he ma at sal On.. la • satanded assatiasatat a Gold sad Slur Paa.-44 Gala Yaw at taw best taanathetura Padua CtaalaM !Nara Manes. ae. latr.tatWilAUS. 11.11312 casks Bacongn i r Elie by II :t am. yz JAM=S . , RICA Crimson V C I VC t aadG Id Pr per llaneaFs, Syr /haling Rouen tal Todd [task P.lll. I= We by • W. r.. 514. . • tiS Wood mt. mO3 OILN M CRACKEN Ts. JO& &ABELL. Nate Diotrkt , td Atlor.bastr Colostr Vold. • ;" 7 , . "' i r t. ll ?ky D ati,.l6sl.e. Co s ort alatoiAt 14 (1211.11=t, Nog. AlialtOr 4J:triba, thie ale smog croditT imu iras ta hl is. =k y. the Auditor4lll anted b hls oyydntment t his oft.. No. 1W /mak divot, PltuoUrip. tot tiototor. Joao IM.I. at Y ofaxt. Y. IL Obit A.B. IioCALIIONTOLooIItct. Smith's New thwaphies. Q bIITIPS First Book in Gewalt 'an in. bo'thwomouo.ogoago., n ab.. i tram! with VZ ettentrina 4u m mP5 Mint Smith quarto. aelmood HMI la cey; • mac* 7=a l sil re rd I V= h l itt " =.4= 111m.I. Must:Meg with Mt Meet amps, atel snattrota env. 1 vif i gly . r.ll C. Smith. A. 61.- 410. a. nom% my 24 . . TS Apollo Bald • 3 . Fourth et • PRINTING PAPER—A large lot Double ',tedium ant tconoul P!tutoaynt i rt me.. 4 . WRAPPING PAPERS—A largo assort. 011):4 •PAPlit ifarobcnua, oor. Mukot. fad Men GROSS STEEL PENS, of all quail , : i r= t i k a o i rli u =4: 3 4 ItifiVolli otVr 0.10 brutal masoartnntnkt lor sale el • W. ii. LIALE.4IS 176' BUM ' ;21 corner Mmtlmt figosa4 Ms. IJourtina. Amadeu, thirpir Pod eogyi) ARARE CHANCE is offered to a person who whobes to tent et:hi .bo bas • ay:dial - of from wen to Wet bal & ntart~at led Mu to twenAgl%.= '7! W. LINZ& FOR SALE & RENT—For vale and. rent, 1: zrillee uoalllll6llNll . l=pl=dati t zed . b a r N!, , 7474L0kb0• f.40%.401 . • beam and lot totbe oeighbozW+o , l be is 3 tow. Or a me 24111 Meaty and Inteultsoar omen Liam It. • ShOolder Itntor. ' l IIOULPER BRACES, - o tho moot op redalio, ilpsols In drachm sad eirainta4, k rrnzwho =plain than —jan .724 'lt a. Bain, 61 Word - OUISVILLE WHITE LIME-50 bbl. X/ Irak breed and far salt bz W. &T. WILBON. mr2l let mas t bad 111 Berard sr. TO LET—A commodious little Dwell:EN AtzgarLl:mtub.l.l.l—A .srmx-* :or or WM. A. Jas.+. 64 Wood“. D RIEDIAPPLEB-15 bbis. for sale by my 24 SIIAD-40 bblo. No. 1; 1 MYR{ " 111;611a11/17NOIMAI i UGAB-100 bble. Powdered, for sale by BDRBRIDBB a. INGIBLAM. G REASE bble. gopcl greTe. now land thic trout Reamer Cultragrgo at tr a se o e bT u 1,24 we hint am. SUNDRIES- , 1 bbl No. Wool last . . . 4 bogs stb4rs 1 do Wool:, • ..._lb - * : r; di , AIIDI 4 K D . "" ii tWa item. C. 4 1 b 7 /.. l''' VIVA VICEIT a CO.. ma y Watra 4:4 Rivet W. boxelaor landing andfot NJ ca. DIONAT 00., Warr sod hoe Ni 1.by724 BUTTER - 3 bbl d freely now. • 'and roots b 7 and ded, ROUGH CUT BACON HAILIB cub, wall card, wW Mindu I=an c r v ir.o3,_ . 'rimy pEAVELES;—• -40 sackt i ls store, fcs• .up br , Down Di I 01. • mr.24 WO= AM hues sta. MAR-80 bbl. store, sad sold low to slow 5•726 7 - "g" r aa 4 WC19628%. LARD 01L--(suporior sztioleTin half bbls fos ul. bY [a7241 3. Km a co.. ao Woad au AC DYN-500 lbs for rale by ' • • 1a721 • 7. KIDD• CO. co Warr st. WANTS D—Places for several 'clerks; magswil. school umbers, • ales' roans it= ID dia,...t.O.M.7ll3=tbrieW amtrid iced coax,. tumagrozed famllka. Wet sa3 deT nom., sarl bresoaida bareral gccd German girls irsztpd. Phrerma=An•- - era boy. of .11 ago, and • number of lab.ing mai young WOUltO Irsat to go u norms. 4 - pend Eth 1")!? tigotrit ottiodoa to rot otmotoio O'bo o p.. Maw cal at ISAAC nasals , me.h&• As'""'d htliatte="b"4 • IHE DAILY GAZETTE, and all our Pin s-' Lr.l=l. sad trod of oar Weekly, sad oboatleo I Z •orm•most oor ottios and Onng=i West Countorfol_ To Letr, Moak Artlelo of A.v. Moen Tab* • .mall MAW% ..cly& WI Its 4 twin*, o moth', m 7 N . Agent =am: orettant.Llbrrty et • INDIA WASH 5L1.K.8,-.0) pieces just re;. tithed. a very desirable article. uurtuutat b t'iltib^- a Imp asectrimut. of foulard Bilk. beautiful stylea. - my= A. A. MASON it CO. • QTOCKS WANTED- dew rt.( Eittrg .. itg amk ipimbro; Exchange Bank of Pittstnirgh. n'SHARES FOR SALE on favorable am , urnms. br .1,..11LLL CO. ..722.1• - -.• NEW'MI7/31C% • • : I . . _ 111 ICLEBta has jiiet received •'• ' . Jean. dick. ' lttigiational Union, • pattiqio song, dadicadni n.. inn Bring de /3•rigg new Ethiopian En= atephis C Varier of Pinnhorgh. Ed= ...,,,,. a ., :rall i v= • gnat Homer, oil sans brJear.y Linl, with nag soiiona. The lionntsin Darr. , , ThEa;•%_,Vt2o4l%__""W.' . - hy . Poet, ana dAdkaSKl to ..n. Arm WX:01vi,....a Go wham Ina inanglng dual.. 1 know who. _ ths• go. . . . bo M don=lovin darn. .. .. . £lc.—Nag Waltna, go. . . . Nnlol Third stroat.... . • li.V—A oplendid lot of Pisan and 3 =trogi• .. - - T ROBBER GLOVES & MITTS— ILA hrnhable to LAW at a protection to its Lanni In hookoattaL b agur g u alno= eon of Tx 5,t...1: 1 =, L S = Inaba Ant, a:W.4 • J. a ILL PILLLEIPIL VLABET WINE, (Bt. Julian. Medoc, of cos ors ooma, vouraited purs.• Trke. Valor Mr ib lio D oen bottle. esFip%rn LIGHTEING RODS—Sprat* Patent. JANES JACIESON, OMEXIAL AM" Induale Dtpot, 86 Wood gred, Piashrgh, Pa, :3.,5E 291ffteerare so con rtris a i it t sg"raffr " Tril? Note; 1.• liTailkawarogaikaud 1 itc . uousemat as• • • r • • • • t at o. Rand 7 New Mute. • ~ .• tatiimery. • _. WS. 11.A.VEN; li tornes of Market wed Se-. e coed Mee, he. lag eleehg ire eel* the 1 . , dock. or enlace In the Boaloncry Um bronaht. to tau city, cooristinir at ara7 qualhy of . .EseZh, Yrearb,_ata ArieliCSll Prating Paper, illWiozo, Donn eaa OW Blank laoker i l i,.. s eerry ark at Etna= Areal's, Itarrhort's,lhr seer, 0 Tbootpioa's, sod Ilibberr• Wrhhor /oh.. black rah Yobaos.hlortrol..Taeltam'e, end other eel. Dated atearcErrhea&l , Pedr. Quin. Water; toe. Imre, ell aloe and, easllllea steel Par Meager, Boot asid ccd Pas noldazMg mien earid Boma ink Stands.Wafor Bold.. ; aq2o Lam! Lawns!. • A. MASON k CO., No. 62 and 64 Mai • kitsteed. us row= j 0 dLo Wisdom. Tbs sa atm/masa of s srest Tsrlsl7 the stosmoada 012 MOO emu P. Md. MT'a • Ir. PARTNERSHIP heretafore'emilting between the anderdped, under the Arm sad etfle Inlke. Mirth a N. alt the Ketodestam Goo Waitak. thls de dheoffe rr : VI Matted eoasestt. ALLIANDIM. having .rtorehesed the entire Inhume of Cherth a to nil 'Mousy as the rale ae weal. . ALBX.It at ALMMEL CHUM . . . . . . ItORd7S-1-6001bs fot auty >ts 21 J. rmu a 00.. Woc Englifski. d ot SE FLAATNERSIIIP heretotorn existing, twttreen the ovionignidotada ftnatof "ar oma , • sad •Llatur.4. Carothers ti Olt oar dlsoolved by isotual ecostou' sot the oantea of =to to to met br elt• Samuel Charrit or ;tae 9ozotbots• m lho !main[ 0! of ' h. bU4', SAMUEL Clll3llaLf. • YITZTOT.' Procatronth, Afar 241.1551.--roay2l3t BURLINGTON lIERBEN9.—Jast recd, M ban of Um ieUbsal34 BarUilito. Us 11= amber, szkl Ibi a 4 by A " FISH—New Shad; . . Baltimore l'lnyribi. seUryb ' - Mai bed No 1 U • Orme atak 0:11142: Ibr yal• " • • say'Z ' • Wit a. bUCLUILO 01./.2.SeLiteityst. PARTNERSHIP heretormi existing Diseolnticn ri ß Da. tbr lirro sarei QTY at INILLIIat. CifUltell a harts' expired by Ibblatiao. dbrohnd by mutual lbw V.1.111.1,—at FcrAP OIL CIATILS—Just reed, from the: Feetary.l93 Pates Cap 01109tb, a twastiralty 9996. iteWter p 4 .boles, e u ire an eset.99 , l" th• On Cloth Wigwams. Dice. 14194 9 Weal st. ILILLIPS. UWE LACE SCARFSJust reed at most . I PAM ZATON'S. ABROLDERIES—A. d. Moos - & Co. rEsteia.r=i Mt: I =M ce.suakt a =, HU& at u tez d s ris=t- o. Cl s anl6l Marl= st B ACON -10 hhde. prima Sides; . 8 - " Meares, 1D tiaasaertn Tor ale by . 6. WATERZIN /j0 1b234 BO 636,1 61 Water. and 02 Franz at. ARD-25 kegs No. 1, for sale by my= L. B. ITATLBMAN a 20N9 LINSEED OIL-25 bble. pure, for sale by u‘r= • • - • - ,r. °immix . irtiMESE-2tX) bares for isle V mi ner. c D RIED UAW:LES—NO bu. for sale by G IIAIN-6 1 0 bu. o.st!; =7 . = .I. IL irITVRN t SOM. DRIED PEAORE&H.OOO Imelda (bright avve) In ohne awl fir rale myr.. MINT. 2[L1.ii.k. , .1b a 00. Dbr =rg IES-30 sae . i ma s trimnelValc'' CASTOR OLL-9 bbls. ( Blow's Drake) for Id* by lar2l MILT,ITIREW4 W. :tut: 11l p ri r oo ,.: of sae D 7 Viy= SIISY. MATHEWS CO. Important to Druggists, Hardware Herr, •• - And Store Keepers in rural: • MEM is to inform the ahoye parties that 1,.1.14 MUM ha animal from MUM** bartrivrith War imumbri of their LIQUID GLUE, for Oa , polders. and all blade of ono' amen Iron, Mae, WOW. Glam. (Una and a any mloms4 rold bath* of Ulm - Mara •Abo. the r r rsr t baking Pomo:slim mipereadlon tiro a Your, a n d crating a Leant:Mil. ontritlons food. in one ha/11m tie arm may artkin out One or fro agendas Irnalerl UM Mr. huller ',Wain( engage to Moo ODITe; K Mt. M. any aitotax. Lesm.& wort It dands Inadtall sb. al Tab sou at YORBYTWllCaossolsdon Mars. Plud.ur ' SIJNDRIES-- Ira tir rsln c ; l : rth 33 . • le k 333 fresh Him meat JOINVIT le4.=itr"lstit!r e t fEAP BONNET RIBBONS-A. A. MA. Oa an a= srpaatua a larga lot of taatital co Spring Ell:4ms, at 1.2 K masa= rant. Than gooaa an ailanspsmd fur eta:ammo, as tiny as yell womb yenta. a. and 64 Market et. • 1.721 FURNITURE OIL CLOTHS—Of English, German, and oar ours moorittetare, for plo al the Cloth Worm:a, Nor. 7 and 9 Wo 111.od st. ary2l • ' J. rtaLLIPS.. To Tea Drinkers. _ rat, n want Real Good Tea, go to MOik TR& MART. hk DismoTsk bra Is la th • 'OAT. hices-40s, tok-,16.1,== rtOPLEY'S POT CLAY-36 bbi&justreed satta sale by. .J.I3CIICIONUAM 90. EeRENCIi FLOWERS—A splendid variety t the anted dike trench end ]mama L nttepeepkrel bwll MT Chet& Vheieadll or DItIED PEACHES-35 sacks in etoreolin h esid bmr t064.° 144 ' MlAtt imam a cc;: sarri B UCKETS -50 dor:Marietta, for sale by 101ROOIS-100 dos: Cony J. for o O ak b • ..en • FL gALERATILIS-100 boxes pare;- • • "'mays bbla. 3. B. ottraldar EARL ARE-25 auks for'sale bp mrsl • J. B. CLOJTZLD. r 1 49 . 11-4 caaLs puiTiloploaAl.=m kALERATUB-6 tons 11 Ixats ItO • boxes and corks; IZM DRIED APPLES-20 %ig for sale,b& p-1 72 .i t iSH : - . —casb. for 111 "Ina" 1 co. LlAlawl:peclirrnvyrririll TRANSPARENT WASH BALLS—A Szke JL lutaw reed agut kir tab at a C . V . DOMPA,„ WOO *LI XOHANQE BANK STOCB—For Bale .11.3 • IL D. 1130. - auto Banker and Iscbasts• amts. uNintigs.-14 (2,1= picapnrwisiogLir AMUSEMENTS. PEOPLE'S CER • S! NVESTRIAN, DRAMATIC AID 7.001011=1 •Mrcust Theatre!: Menaprial . A