PITTSBURGH GAZETTE' .-P.IIBLISIIII II .,BY , RJ . LIT Z PITTSBURGH . TEURSDAY - MORNING, JUNE 12, IMI Ansimanonic and Wbig County 7OLIODEff 2.02 01 DIMILICI COM?. •-.' WAR V 0 II WAII:D. of • • ASOStail . 3CDOW OP OM= OOLLT. • II ENET• W.. . W / I. LIARS.Of Pittsburgh.. FILLOW. AWL Of =LT Or OOMITIICIIIIONJ, WCLUILE, of Pittsburgh. /Nectars =us or earn or alums% stattain4 act WM, BOGGS, of Lau.. St. Clair. ,SLIOBLAS BP3IILLV.i, of Allefilteref. suistrar. • ':JOHN lI'CLVIKEY. of Botauca. • Ye: 10!..L'IllbAlro:rdig;.,..h --,,•,. • TIICIS. PENNEY, of as'lleruport, • MILLI 92 liA31131:1.7.1.111IA&%E, of Intisbursh. ILICILL S ZYSON of AnficOCOT. CLUI 07 TILL meat. JARED' bl. BIIUSIL. at Pittsburgh. 4fffiN ROWUNI), of Viper St. Moir. ZOBERT E 1 O. intl.burzb =Mt= • .10111 =MICH, of Ml:endless. . • lEEE TRADE PALLAcres. - Tb6 leading article in Hunt's Merchants' Ida (wine tor Jane, is entitled •"Tbe Union, Past and Future!. It is written by L IL Darby; Eaq , a Massachnietta, and is a rejoinder to an wilds by the Hon. H. M. H. Garnett, of Virginia, pub lislie4 in the April number of the Ilagasino. Altiong the complaints of the North, by lltr. Gar nett, ',yea one; that duties had been levied on imports which imposed unequal burthen on the 'South, 'The author of the rejoinder in exhibit- . . dug the fallacies of theNirginia advocate for free trade, presents some troths which the Locofoco party of this State would do well to consider. The effect of a low tariff, such as the priment,. to hipoictish a country, by encouraging lame portage* and to cripple, its infant manufac tories, is set forth in the following extracts:— •• "Theft is in . this New World a constant ten. ' dewy - to overtrading,• to overimportotions. It i‘the country of courage, energy, and hope, of • daring cad udrenture. When duties on mann , ftettnes aro low, importations are at first large, manufactures are paralyzed, and soon exports nreinsufficient, specie isreguired. What is the ,:.,immediate effect? The Banks Curtail, scarcity ' of Money ensues, the The, previously held • . with a strong hand, oink in price, and are bur ., ried to a sacrifice, unless a famine occurs it Ettrope_, or gold mines are discovered to post - pone the consummation. Let no recur to the. .condition of these States, when coheres of Eng * land, whale free trade existed with-the mother country. . Wore - not the colonists surfeited with ! goods, and indebted for one or two years' sup :plies,' the 'specie currency. drawn away, labor cod . piodaee at depressed prices, and bills of 'audit the - general citrate,. ? Look at. Howl Brcurckk to-day; standing side by aide with Maine, with• nobler streams, with greater re soirees .in-timber, minerals, and fisheries: - see; virtual fret trade established on one side of the Alta-and our revenue laws on the other, while • the imitations of both ere virtually republican, .andmarktheirrelative condition. Onthe one side is prosperity; activity, and advancement; on the other, imports in place of manufactures, emigre , Jinn, depression and poverty. Notice on the one side the merchant indebted to England, artisans earning thirty per cent lets than in Maine ' and ' the greet export, lumber , often sacrificed inEng had for freightand charges." 'Take another view of thesulijeck—the duty on Imports loss stimulated domestic manufac . MIS; •has 'directed New England sapeity to every process, and led to inventions which have reduced the cost of production; wenierfolly ex tended the markets, aided the ,prica of raw ma - - serial, , arid made exports of many of- our mann-• &stares. There Is truth, too, the suggestion , of the British statesman, that every new loom • , setetwentyplows in motion. An American loom gives an impulse to Americaniplowa. An Eng llah looms starts, at least, four, plows in Europe for one In America. Which of them has most beeditted the American producer ° There is, • too, an incidental effect of manufactures at bores . • often overlooked by the polities' theorist; it Is 'the electric effect on property of the growth of marmfacturea an offset in most Instances to any extra cost of the home manufacture. Let us • consider for a moment. another view-I-the di version of labor caused by our home manufac tures, And the market they furnish for agricul tural produce.. Level our factories to the ground, banish to the West the million of people who are dezzdent on New England =unison:tees to wheat, corn, airtobacco km the banks of the Ohio, and convert-the sugar makers of the 14411th into growers of cotton.: Would not Such Sudden change at once create en overphis of of wheat; 'corn and tobacco; would not the slave labor diverted from sugar, wheat and tobacco be thrown upon cotton; and If the loss of one-fifth • of the cotton crop has in-1850 doubled the price, teChidi;7ll a to farm an increase of twenty five par tent in the production of cotton? Again, •• with the excess of production in the West comes the loss of the home market in New England, Which now annaa/ly, absorbs at least twenty mil ' lions bushels of cereal products and nearly half a :talon bales of cotton. What effect would ,"titillativeupon the price , of cotton, tobacco and This writer is no advocate for prohibiting duties; and such iS not the wish of the 'Whig All that is asked is each encouragement and; Support of 'our infant manufactures as will enable them to stand, and successfully compete with the foreign manufacturer, Ur. Derby says Ulna were endowed with power to make a tariff • for the Value, his first-movement -would be to - follow England, and repeal the duties on drugs, dyestuffs, and roar material: He would copy the 'free- trade ,system of. England, about which are bade° much, Which seems to be based on OM idea of promoting mannfacWres, and re . VoiVini all restrictions en their growth. He • 'wou l d not dream of aide:ring fervige broadcloth, linens, or iron. But. when it became -apparent, as L it now is, that the addithan 'Of fire ilallare per ten cm iron, would rescue from the nee* or the saaignee the fornaceSided forges of „Panuavinnia, and raise from slumbering ore se portion of the 810,000 tons of iron now Ili:cried—if an addition of one cent per yard on - lrinalins and 'prints, and five cents per yard on "Ihntees, and twenty cents per yard on broadcloths, 4facific duties, would set thoussndi of spindles ha - motion, and furnish employment for ethane iw idle, and the best and meet reliable 'market :far :ear productions , at home, he would feel it : rlgh,t to transfer the duty now levied on the raw ertial to the . predict 'of pauper labor which - ens, dot:mese: and ruin our .rainiefOtoeles, and daidesq the forever's home Market. . . 'where hs time a Pen:kV:lranian, not ideally besotted to party prehadice, whq would -not say that such a course is wise, jest and pru dent? It mamma to us a matter of Veinier, that - wer are hero in this Old coramoManualth which • boa alwayieestained the policy - of home protec . tire, compelled to struggle against a powerful Ivety which hu adopted a political creed on subject which Is destractive of 'all Om best leduitrisl interests of the State, and ruinous to • its proaperit y and prospects of future compass • - tire proper and greatnesa. The Weebetween reasonable Protection to Pemnsylvede; interests. and the ,inmost entire of :those .Interestoaticne beton Ai people at' the' fall thetas:us: the Whig - 11y' iertsneceedsi the Democrats willnot venture , p in the Presidential canvass without fitted '. ;lag some relief to our paralyzed and prostrate hadultrial interests, and 'the - nest Congress will givens • bethr tariff. If the Demoo tsts seeeeed, We mina prepare ourselves to safer on. . 1 10 TE TOMISIUS A YAll3l.'• Ones& the newest crotehets of the LoUsfeco DlNlOatey is that " man hai a natural and in. disputable right to scr much of the earth es Is necrldiarl for Abs.' maintenance of himself and •r. his Willy, to guaranteed to 'hint' and his by -: whop Ind aslutsr* laws." This sago doctrine ie --- ittributed to Thome" Jefferson and Andrew janksen; but we do not remee3ber that those •, • great maniere, wrer guilty, of uttering' such an- Petial4re 'nonsense. L claimed. " BO much of the eartkae 1,q114, . _ f3s no:emu for the mainteoanee of himself and breillf." Of course miry man then most be gainer; and grow his awn , coin and potatoes; *ll . ft9ot, so much earth - would be useless to him. - Shoat: Kit so happen that ho would find it more coniemiel to his taste to make. shoes; or easts,, - tcr hats, or turoseholdfarnitore, or it might , 4 oe 1401* a newspaper, or pretties Melanie. or nikanolattil other Wags that =honest man may ., . . of sight do, what then is he to . to With this Ludt ' - Or It be Amid happen to be a eldftlais, worth 4runkell eagehelld;what irOuld. he do with 1 soMi . MiCh the earth ? "dr tilinig)Le happen (as serf _often does happen iith pmplewito put - Roth sock roan& notions) to ins reridesirons (di en election to s some office, Vast use would that meek earth - be to 12.40 Or suPpone- - -which is the eery best Wag that wa aas tuiroHltss he hi/ sober, inapt, indistrietts - man, wk a lreriahed to become a farmer, we tell you such • roan bemoan deer,s to obtain had in any such way. lie wishes that his land and all the land around him should haves tangible value, a thing which cou l d not be =let' the " vote yourself, farm" policy. Land is cheap, and any EMI who is ableto improve s /arm liable to bay one; and such men would not have the public lands at . alt upon such conditions. But again. Suppose a man has already pr.- chased and Paid for say 160 acres of public land, and is living upon it, and improving it as fast as his industry and means will enable him ; sup pose his farti is etuvounded with unsold public land, equally good, with his own; and then sup pose you adopt the policy contended for by Sen ator Walker e nf Wisconsin, and kindred dema gogues, what beomes of the poor fellow who paid the government two hundred dollars for his quarter sections ylis land is not taken from him, it is true but its valuer is taken from it.— Should he die, and his widow find it necessary to sell the farm, ihe would soon discover that she had been. robbed by these very particular friends of the poor man. to long as such nonsense was confind to the purlieus of grog shops, and rose no higher than the range of the small, irresponsible brawlers who preside at such places, it war not worthy of notice; but when Senators in Congress advocate such doctrines, in letters written to the chiefs of Locofocoism, sesembled in the 'Tammany wig. wam, it' becomes the duty of e journalist to . sound the alarm. loose P. Walker, one of the 11s:eosin Sena tors, is astride of this hobby, h lug to ride in to the Presidency upon it! and e landless but miterrified democracy of New ork—many of whom have only recently hono d the country with their presence - 7 /m* the up their caps for "hut for President, and farms for'us !" But thishallo age of progress. Heretofore only a few were: privileged to run their bands into Uncle Sam's pocket; but now it seems his pro perty is to be seized and given away to any per son that wants it. Heretofore the honest, Ira gal, • and industrious man had miny advantages over the idle and the profligate; lint now this an ti republican inequality is to be done away.— All men are to be equal; and if they cannot re main equal, because -one does more work, or drinks less whiskey than another, then we must, at'acme future time, derive some other method to restore the equilibrium. We ackeonledge the receipt of a finely en grandportralt of Hon. IVansta FOARAZD, from J. J. Gillespie, 76 Wood etreet. The painting by Lamb(tin, engrattal by Sartain. - .• TES LONDON P Very few of our readers have just concep tion of the *minas and rural niaguificence of the London ;Parka. The following letter from A. J. Downing, published in theiltorticolturiat lot: the present month, will help to cense). pro per idea of the extensiye trylenn )scenes in the heart of a great citT . If everything one sees in England lead one to the conviction that the . English do not, like the French and G ermans, posseas the genius of high art, Mere Is no denying that that they far cor pus all other nations in Ai profound amanita of nature. Take, for example, the what end of London, and what do you see there? Magnifi cent pal•ve*, enormous piles of dwellings, In the shape of “terraces," “squares," and "places"— the same cosily town architecture that you find everywhere in Gm better potoioos of populousand wealthy capaitils. But if you ask me what is the peculiar and distinguishing luxury of this part of London, 1 .answer, in its holding - 'the country in its lap. In tho midst of London, lie, in an almost connected aeries, the great parka. 'Hyde Park, Begent'S Park, St James' and Green Parks. These names are almost as familiar to you as the Battery and Washington square, cud I fear you labor under the delusion that the former ore only an enlargement of the letter. Believe me; you have fallen into as great an error us if von took the "Brick meeting house" for a suggestion of Sc Peters. The London parks are actually like districts of open--country—meadows and fieilds, country estates, lakes and greens, gar dens and shrubberies, with as much mkt) , as if you were in the heart of Cambridgeshire, and as much seclusion in some pate, at certain hours, as If you were one. farm in the Interior of Pena -1 sylvanis. And the - whole Is laid out and treat ed in the main, with abroad end noble feeling of natural beauty, quite the reverse of what you see in the continental cities. This makes-these parks doubly refreshing to cftisens tired of straight lines and formal streets, while the con.' tram hightins the natural charm. trimmer tossed to his breadth of imitation of nature— this creating a piece of wide spread country 1 1 large enough , to - shut out for the tame all traces . Of the homes, though actually in the midst of a city, an Amer-bean is sleeps half inclined to be litre, (notwithstanding the abundance of evi ideate to the contrary,) that the London parks are a bit of the native country, mirprised and fairly taken prisoner by the outstretched arms of this giant of modern cities. • t ?St. lames' Park and Green Park are enormous I pieces of real pleasure ground scenery—withlarosd glades of torf;nobbs trees ' rich names of shrub bery and flowering plants—lakes filled with rare water fowl, and the proper surroundings, to two royal palaces, and the finest private houses in. Londow; but still, ell open to the enjoyment of hundreds of thousand daily.— Yoalook out neon.' the forester verdure in Green Park, as you sit in the windows of our present Minister's fine nuausion in Piccadilly, astonished, at the breadth and beauty of the green landscape, which seems to you more like a glimpse into one of the loveliest plessure-groonde on the Hudson, than the belongings of the great me tropolis But the pride of London is in Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens, which, together, contain nearly 800 acres, so that you have to make a circuit of nearly seven miles to go over the en tire circumference, if you enter Hyde Park be tween seven and eight in the morning, .when all the world of fashion is asleep, you will Jamey, after you have left the great gateways and the fine colossal states of Achilles farenough behind you,to be quite out of sight, that you have made' a mistake, and strolled out into the Country un awares. Scarcely a person la tole seen at this time .of day, unless it be some lonely foot-pat seller, who looks as if he had lost his way, or his wits, at thleesrly hour. But you see tatad grass meadows, with scattered groups of trees, not at all unlike what yen remember on the smooth banks of • the Connecticutt, and your int premien that you have got astray and quite oat, of reach of the metropolis, is confirmedby hear ing the tinkle of the sheep-bells sainting flocks of these •and other pastoral creatures, feeding quietly on the short turf of the secluded por tions of the Park. You walk on till Von are quite weary, without finding the end of the tut quite ter—for Kensington Garden, which la only an other and a larger Park, is but the continuation of Hyde Park--and you turn bask in a sort of bewildered astonishment at' the vastness and wealth of a'cityi which can afford such an illim itable apace for the pleasure of air and exercise of Its inhabitants. Thiele Hide Park in dishabille. Now go In again with me in the a ft ernoon, any time daring the London season, and you shall see the same place in full dress, and , so altered and animated by the drassatisperrour; tha t you 'willhardly identify it as the locale , of the solitary country ramble you too f o ur morning. It is half-pasn the afternoon, and the fashionable WOrld (who dine at seven all over England) • is , now, taking. Its morning airing. If you will sit dorm on one of these solid looking seam under the sladow of this large elm, you will see such a display of equipage peas yonin the course of a single hour, as no other part of the world can parallel. The . broad, well-matadiunited carriage drive, which Endres a circuit of some four or five miles in _Hyde Park, is, at this mo nrent, fairly filled with private carriages . of all degrees. Here are heavy Coaches and four, with postilions and footmen, and massive carriages emblaioned with family crests and gay with all the, brilliancy of gold and crimson liveries; yon der superb buotiche with eight spirited horses and numerous outsiders, is the royal equipage, and as you lean forward to catch a glimpse of the Boversign,, the close coach of the hero of Waterloo, the servants with cockades In their hate, dashes past you the other way at a rate so rapid that you doubt if he who rides within Is out merely for an airing. Yonder tasteful turn out, with liveries of a peculiarly . delicate mul berry, is the Duke ofDevonshire's. Here is the amine of one of the foreign ambassadors, lees showy a nd lighter than the English vehicles, and that pretty phietott drawn by two beautiful bleed horses, is, you see, driven by a woman of extra nrlinary beauty, with great skill. She is quite alone, and behind her sits a footman with his aluo , folded, his fees as grave and solemn as stones that have sermons in them. As you es 'press your rarprise at the "air of conscious gm. with which the lady drives," your London friend quietly remark., "Des, but she is sot a lady?' Unceasingly the carriages roll by, and you are less a stonished at the inunberiessauperb equi pages or the beauty of the horses, than at the old world air of the footmen in gold and silver i lea, gaudy liveries , spotless linen, and snowy - silk web-inv. • Some of the grand old coachmen , la full piwdmedvrige, - decked Is. all the glory of ' laced costa and all= calves, held the ribbons with etch an air of C011116711/1 grandeur,. that I willingly tempted them se the treitixentnee, the most blooming blossOms of this portent) °legal , pap. It seemed to me that there may be (o=4i thing comfortable In thus banging all the tren; plop of station on the bitcks.of coachmen ana footmen, if one must be bothered with, nick things—so diet one may lean back quietly in plain clothes in the well-stuffed seat of his prt yeti carriage. Bat do notlet no loiter away all our time in ij • sin l e scene in Hyde Park. A few steps farthel on 13 Rotten Row, (rather an odd name, for an elegant place) the chosen arena of fashionable equestriana._ The English know too well tie pleat sures of riding, to gallop on horseback over Lard pavementsoind Rotten Row is a soft circle of a couPle of idles, In the park, raid off for this purpose, where your horse's feet have an elastic surface to travel over. Hundreds of fair vines'. trims, with- fathers, brothers, ur friends, for couipaniolut, ore here enjoying a more lively and spirited exercise than the languid inmates of the carriage we have just left behind us. The Eng lish women:rise in the saddleAke male riders, and at first they look awkwardly and less grace ful to our eyes—but you soon see that they also sit more firfuly and ride more boldly thin lakes on our side isf the water. • • • •• • • • • -• • To stsuur , by and see others 'ride, seems to be alWays toelantaliting to be long endured as a Pastime—even where the scene Is as full of nov elty and variety as this. Let ds ,go on, therefore. This beautiful stream of water., which would be called a, pretty "creek" at horke, is the Serpen tine river;-• which has been made to meander gracefully throuph Hyde Park, and wonderfully does its bright water enhance Ike beauty of the verddre and the charm of the *hole landscape. As we stand on the bridge, and look up and, down the river, amid the rich groves and scrota the green lawns, the city wholly shut -out by groves andl-plantationa, how finely one feels the contrast of art and nature to be realized here. - That delicious band of musk which you heir . . DPW is in Kensington gardens, and only a belt of trees and , yonder iron gate separate the latter from Hyde Park. Let us join the crowd of per of all ages collected In the great walk, under the shade of gigantic elm trees, to hear 'the It is a well known air of Donizettra ' and as your eye glances over the company, perbps some five or aix thousand persons, who form the charmingly grouped out of =door audience, (for the afternoon is a bright one,) and as you are the radiant pleasure sparkle in a thousand hap py faces, young and old, who are here enjoying a little pleasantneingling of heaven and earth, in au%innocent manner, you cannot but be struck with the fact that if there is a duty belonging to good governments, next to projecting - the lives and property of the people, it is that of providing public parks teethe pent up 'nimbi tants of cities. ' "Imperial Kensington" is not only more spa- cions aid grand than Hyde Park, but It has certain antique stateliness which touches my fan- 1 ey and pleases me more. The trees are larger'. and more grove like, and the broad gladei of slit I green turf are of a darker and richer green, I and invite you to a more private and intimate confidence than any portion of Hyde Park. The grind avenue of elms, at the father part of Ken sington Gardens, coming suddenly into it from the farther Bayswater gate, is one of the noblest geometric groves in any city, and was laid cut end planted, I believe, in nig Williams' tiMe. An avenue some hundreds of years old is alwiya I majestic and venerable, and when it adds great extent and fine keeping, like this, is really a grand thing. And yet, perhaps, not one Amyl- can in fifty that visits Hyde Park ever _ gets far , 1 enough into the depths of. Its enjoyment tonx.- 1 plore this avenue in Kensington Gardens. No carriages or horses are permitted in Ken eington Gardens, but Its broad glades and shad owy lawns are sacred to pedeetriens, and are especially the gambol fields of thousands of love ly children, who attended by their nurse', ke a kind of infant Arcadia of these solemn spiel groves of the monarch of Dutch testae. Keen the dingy old brick palaces of Kensington, which overtook one side of the great lawn, cannot chase away the bright dimples from the rosy I faces of the charming children one sees hgra and the symbols of natural aristocracy—beauty and intelligence, set upon these young faces, were to my eyes a far more agreeable study than those of accident, birth and fortune, whicteare - so gaudily blazoned forth in Hyde park. My London friend, who evidently enjoys .our astonishment at the vastness of the London parks, calculate. that not less then 60.000. persons have been out, on foot, or horseback, or in carriages, this afternoon, and adds that upon review days, or other occaaions of particular brilliancy. he has known two hundred thoueand persons to be in Hyde j'ark and Kensington Gardena at once. I shall not allow yon escape me without a.' glance at Regent's Park, another link in the na sal scenery of this part of London. Here are three hundred and thirty-sixacres more of lawn, ,ornamental plantations, drives and carriage ,'roads. Regent's Park has a younger look than any of the others in the West end of London, having only been planted about twenty-five or thirty years—hut it is a beautifel eurface;con mining a great variety of different wenn with in Welt - Here are, for instance, the Royal Bo tante; Garden, with its rich collection of plants, and its beautiful flower-shows, which I have al. readj, describelto you; and the Zoological Gar .den, some twenty acres in extent, where you may see almost every living animal as nearly as 1 passible in the same circumstances as in Its us , tire country. Over the lawns walk the giraffe and camel-leopard, led by Arabs in oriental cos tame; among the leery avenues jousts elephants 1 I waddling along with loads of laughing, half frightened children on their hacks; down in a 1 deep pool of water you peer upon the sluggish hippopotamus; you gem at the Soft eyes of the gazelle as she feeds in her little private pad-' dock, and you feed the black swans thst are floating along, with imenmeratle other Ism I aquatic birds, upon the enlace of glassy lakes of fresh water. And the "Zoological" is just as fall of people as Hyde Park, though of a totally different appearance—many students in natural.] history, some fashionable loungers, chiefly wo men, more curious strange rs, and most,of all, I boys and girls, feeding their. Juvenile appetites for the mavellous, by seeing the leas astonished I animals fed. And whose are thews pretty country residen , tee that you see in the very midst of another pert of Regent's Park—beautiful Italian villas and ornamental cottages, emboirered in trees of their own, and only divided from the open park by a light railing andbelts of shrubbery? These are the villas of certain favored nobles; who have, at large cost, realised', as you see, the per of a residence In town, vim a country house in the midst of a great park, isbielt is it self in the midst of a great city. Ilk thew fa vored sites, the owners have the luxury of quiet, and rural, surroundings, usually confined to the country, with the whole of of toe great world of May Fair ind polities within ten or twenty min utes walk. And now, having been through mare than a thousand scree of park scenery, and witnessed the enjoyments of tens of thousand, of persons of all cruses, to whom these wham open from sunrise to 0 o'clock at night, you will naturally ask me if these luxuries are wholly confined to the West End of London. By no man. In • almost all parts of London are "square' --open places of eight or ten acres, filled with trees, shrubs, grass and fountains—like what we call "parks" in our cities atltome. Besides these, a large new apace called the Victoria Parke-of two hundred and ninety Berm, has haunted cps late ly In the , east part of London, expressly for the recreation tad amusement of the poorer classes, who are confined to that part of the town. Yon see what noble breathing-places 'London has within its own boundaries, for the daily health and recreation of its citizens. But these by no means comprise all the rural pleasures of its inhabitants. There are three other Imagetifi cent peddle places within half an boar of Lon don, which are also enjoyed daily by thousands and tens of thousands. I mean Hampton Court, Richmond Park, and the National Gardens at Haw. Hampton Court is the favorite resort of the mid dle classes on holidays, and a pleasanter sight than that spot on such occasions—when it is thronged by Immense numbers of - citizetts, their wises and children, with all the riches of that grand old palace, Its picture galleries, halls and splendid apartments, its two parks and Its immense pleasure grounds thrown' open to them, le not easily found. Indeed, a man day be dull enough to care for neither peaces nor parks, for neither nature nor art, but he can scarcely be human, or have a spark of tympathy in the fortunes of his race, if be can wander with out Interest through tinge magnificent halls, still in pgfeet order, built with the most kingly pro digality by the most ambldous and powerful of subjects—Woolsey : balls thst were afterward successively, the home of Henry VIII, Elizabeth, James,'Charles and Cromwell, balls where Shakespeare played and Sidney wrote, bat which, with all their treasures of art, are now the peo ples palace and normal school of enjoent. I am neither going to weary you with catalogues of pictures Or dissertations upon palace architec ture. But I most give you one more impression —that of the magnificent surro=dings of Hamp ton Court. Conjure np • piece of 'country of diversified rich meadow surface • some five or six miles An circuit ; imagine around the pal ace, some forty acres of gardens, mostly in the =dent taste, with pleaehed eller*, (Queen Ma ry's bower among them,) sloping hanks of soft turf. huge orange trees in boxes, ands "wilder ness" or labyrinth where you may lose your in the most Intricate perplexity of shrubs .; imagine an avenue a mile and a quarter long, of the most gigantic horse-chesnuta you ever be held, with long vistas of velvet turf and highly dressed garden scenery around therci.; imagine other part, of the pork where you lee, on all Bu only great masses and groups cE oaks and elms of centuries growth, and all the freedom of Ittruiant nature, with a broad carpet of. gra 4 'trot-Meg ou all sides ; distant portions' of the park wild looking, dotted: with great bsw, thorn trees of =dudes. growth, with - the tangled copse and fragrant fern which are thibelonginge of oar own fazed§ and down 111 up the ecsuse to . . the liae n4 before rh ear d d, oTa til h e o Plilace liday with d th garl onsan m ds " o l f happy faces, while in, the, secluded parts of the park the'timid deer flits before you, the birds stealthily build their nests, and the insect's hum fills the silent sire and you have some faint ides of the value of such a posseision for the popula tion of a greet city to pain their holidays in, or te:go • pie-tucoing. I will not let the ink dry on my pen without a word about Richmond Great Park—also free to the public, and also within the reach of the Londoner who seeks for air and exercise. -Rich , mood Great Park was formerly aroyal hunting ground, but, like all the parks I hose mention ed, has been given up to the people—at least the free enjoyment of it. It is the largest of all the parks I have described, being eight miles round, and containing 2,250 acres. It is a piece of I magnificent forest tract—open forest, with grass, tufts of hazel, thorns and ferns, the surface gently undulating, and dotted with grand old oaks—extremely like what you see on a larger scale in Kentucky. Its solitude and seclusion, within eight of London—are almost startling. The land is high, and from one side of it your eye wanders over the valley of Richmond—with the Thames—here only a silvery looking stream winding through it—a world'renowncd view, and one whose sylvan beauty It is impossible to praise too highly. Just in this part of the park, and commanding this superb view, with the towers of Windsor Castle in the distance on one aide and the dome of St. Paula on the other, and all the antique sylvan occlusion of the old wood . around it, Mande a modest little oottage—the favorite Summer residence of Lord John Russell, the use of which has been given him by his So vereign. A more unambitious looking, home, bud one better calculated to restore the faculties of an over-worked premier after a day's toil in. Downing Arcot, it would be impossible to con ceive. • •. I drove through Richmond Great Park 113 the carriage of the Belgian Minister, and his complished wife, who was my cicerone, etopped the coachman for a moment near this place, in order that she might point out to me an old oak that had a story W.W.1.. washere—juet *Hi der this tree," she added, (her eyes gleaming slightly with womanly indignation &Bebe sold it,) ••that the cruel Henry mood, and saw with his own eyes. the signal made from the Tower of London, (five miles off,) which told him that Anne Boleyn was at that moment beheaded!" I thank ed God that oak trees were longer lived than bad monarchs, and that modem eirilization would no longer permit such butchery in a Chtistian country. will close this letter with only a single re mark. We fancy, not without reason, in New York, that we have a great city, and that the in troduction of Croton water is so Moretone a luxury in the way of health that nothing More need be done for the comfort of half a 'million of people In - crossing the Atlantic, a young New Yorker, who was rabidly patriotic, and:who boasted daily of the superiority of our beloved commercial metropolis over every city on the globe, eras our most amusing companion. I chanced to meet him ono afternoon, a few dayaat t er we landed, in one of the great Parks in Lon don, in the midst of all the sylvan beauty and human enjoyment I have attempted to describe to you. He threw %Ili his arms as he recognised me, and exclaimed--"good beams: what . a sceneolnd /took aorta Londoners to the item of the City Hall, hut tuunmer, to show them tAiPark of New York!" I consoled him with the advice to be less conceited thereafter in his cockneyiato and to show foreigners the Hudson and Niagara, instead of the City Hall and Bowling Green.— But the question may well he asked, is New York really not rich enough, or is there absolute ly not land enough in America, to give our citi tens public parka of more than ten acres • lie-TRUTH FLOATS ABOVE FICTION LIKE OIL ABOVE WATEJL—The rick man am tell • cool maki.a by trying it,a quirk as • Lk. nn tell &Awl dinner by gating it. And if one man tries It. andfinda It dor. it will raft Introducdestroy the popularity with the whole eliT. You e medicine into pannier use unless it poste.. real y sultaantlal irtum, frog from'all Lei glisete ..114 objections, and It is thll facithst has established the reputarionof . llulfs Compound Plull Eft/1.1 , a Ea. separate," bryuud all mill or Abp... Its wiloo upon .the human gystem is In soma.. rsilonal wad phi' lowddrail printiples—lt prommise the ratious secretions and olt-1110/33 Cr fhe body, ...Ta obstruction.: diePloo. Morbid sod diseased matter, - strength... the mama:ll and digestive organs, cond. PM P.m. •vel bmiltbj blood, and regulates the rations functions of the different eck.o of Om body. This icidl drforotel without the lead danger of Item the preparation bring to mfe at It Is efteadon. It may be thoritcht by the skeptical, tl.Ol 1t purports to cute tau maw d 8... but °Cm eagaito . “ tior . , 6 llTilbiAt e nt that engt= majority of the rives. ut Mats of the blood. Be not deeelvel, Met . P g.. en d being offered Thu by tellers of motto.. end water ;prep...Me i ds aistiot :CT the original John Ball's Esconardla I Y valuable preparation We province warrants to be superior lo all dB.. Csamos.—Beekr. and ask Ar lb. original Dr. John Ears EnWolvoiat fn. gx.ftene—asci have noother It.. nivariligment of another dtd. KEYSER* WDOWELL. 140 Weal at. JeleattenoT Wholesale Befall was. gar DISEASES OF THE LIVEIL—DTi- tempt the Liver .re becoming alarm:Lb:air bwlluent In th• United Valet Indeed there are Dm formidable dtsewes wLirh an not connected :n alal warn other with a de. ranged eaten( that langurtant won. belly of the come Valuta •tdsh ST usually classed under the head ot ...ad., have their odala In the liver. —guy renredr which would Insure regularity and healthful action in the (leer, would tea blessing to mantled I . be. been the exclamation of entering thoucands. That remedy hat been found; It li safe and eon. When a fate trial has been at. Medal to It, it has never been know to fall. Reader, have you any dhow of the liver. or divests ankh you .believe proceed. from hepatle denies, mentt Lose not a moments bat purchase a Loa of br. It'Lane's Liter Pills. and they will note. , You to health] They an the only remedy ever lit abroverol. Ls certain to ellen a cure For male by =MS Petroleum! Einstrrescao, llantirt,rdos, co., Ps., March 4, %A B. M. Stns --Dray Mr, Tau Pehdeum " la working .. • . • , den In Wl. "clad", therefore te• would tbank TOO tOSOOd us two down by the Penusylvende Railroad. We are en- Reedy out, and It le bedew tuquired for almoat eitrf day. Too.. rl•Peetfulle , I JO/11 LONG • CO. Limearcus. A. laud 0., Ruch 10, '5l. I. IL ALP"—D.. air, Your Arum, • free wed, gum left .stir us four dosen Rock 011. -which ye ham eold. Please forward to us tie damn ludasalattly. Your mallet!" In 00&100 minden thin !veva. IT. CIO obtain Nevem' mallard cerUflestes,lt you desire Yours, Au, M.W. ICOTT. For sale by Reran. • Ilabewell, 100 Mood "met: R. Z. Belle", 01 Wood etra•t; D. A. Fahuertoei, f Co. CGII. , Wad mat front sueeto D. 0. Curry. D. A. Elliott. Joseph DPW". ead IL R. Behteerta, Alleirbeep. Lbw by the pr. pettor. S. M. KIER, ealllAlenT Reuel Raele.Pereuth et- Pittabursh. srer Farmers will rejoice to know that at w t they can procure an article width they may &SSA up= at MI times in mains the melon allmenta of cattle, such as sweetly. Ald complaint, distemper, iddh., entand. wrathy. mange, tarry. Dards% Landow, sore ere. Med nen mom main. ired of the joint deter, or enotrastrd med. K, am The article referred to la 11, G. Farrell'. Arabian Littintent, the bed medicine ever /wowed far man OT bath Sideeethetetht. Citizen's Imsurauce Company of Pittsburgh riNCOURAGH 310 ME INSTITUTIONS Haat to 41 Wadr street, in the vorchaax ore. 11. Yr. c. O. Ilustr, Prakient..—.—.A. W. Kuno. Seey. spy(Xoor../ noo Would to Inure.' morehandise In Mon. ono In troneitn, vessels, An. An asnrie onarenty. tor the ability and Integrity of W. Ironitution,ts tannic' to_the elearseter of the Illmatiro, po ern, tn ' O l Orgelarty P er i rers%Zilee%tril= and Integettr. Drucroos. Illurry. Wm. Hauler. Lorimer. Wolter 114.4 Duet D. Khan !Anon{ gouleton. John HA/north. IL Hubsoo6. B.ILX/en orrlttl Foreign and American Hardware. LOGAN, WILSON & CO., No. 129 wood Street, 111111 NOW IN 13TONIS A rat anAtomplete nester JPORSIONAND AILIMICAN HARDWARE, galatble for aptiag twat% and which they are prepared to eft, parebanal at Maw that .111 samara favorable with wet the eastern altlea mirNOTICE—A meeting of the Dry Goode Clarke mill be held this evening, at hedtpme eight *lx% , in the MorteNtehole Amenably Ammo comer of /Mb sad BmithAeldstmethWUMWOmWOMMouthel , MM e Y of solletirm they mnAltmers to elm, their storm et en malleYbour. Vane lAlt. THE NILE, at AFRICAN MISSISSIPPI, 1.11 O O W LI DD O OPBN rA fa T e AT Ta H nti E m N re X nt II Pa M no r H am A a of L, EGYPT 'AND NUBIA! With • olemild Gallery of Emilia Antreejlcunalleet tn., Lod superb Tableaux of Theme eat Sculpture. Oral Deetriptlous by Cleo. IL Glidden. erly P. Corr rul Who. Oriental Naito at each exhibition. ErelT evening at alibi Welott. —Wednentny 1,011 SLCIMI.7 nouns at 3 °Wort: doors open an hour belbre. Admbalon Lb rents—children half hriee—mhoohl of 03 pupils mul OWZ to vend—Tearhen with eehools rm. lei= THE Partnership heretofore existing be- Tgb a sl e ' "* Zi b rie m rilv b— l' u lt ud' it 3tb. ...iiv T .- I°- : ° ;11 "-„ I rj t a 7 Ind by June P. Tuner, Who te 0,17 entborthet to eettle the ol d battlthas. JAMES P. TANNER. ROBERT P. TANNER. Pittsbursh.June t.15M.—t).1231 DISSOLUTION HE firm of Clarke, Parke to Co. Rochester,l PA. b fhb de dleadred by mutual CrAlltra, the In. Wed of U. M. Afton being_ purchased by IMAM= Clarke An d ILO. Wu. who wlll continue the btmlnese as formerly, ander the mane and style of Mork P. 0., All the Malmo of the late Arm to be fettled by told limallton Clarke or It 0. Putt HAMILTON currier. It. 0. PARKS. 0. IL HARTON. Pittsburgh. June 10. labl. p ate made a change in our business by the yowls.. a G. M. lEteroxl Interest In the ate nu of .Clarite. Parka 100... all the bothaesa of am tra il ' . 3 Unita title toClevel ad. - • .late Etta and Mello Llne to Elie, • Badly and Bearer Line to ilmalllon. T . o Nast Lbw to Clevelan d . Ind alto Mutate.. Dertaltillag to neamboatt Miehliati .4 sm.; uru don. hereafter theme , JOUN A. CA1:1011gf, oat /4e= at Plttetargh, Pr OM.. oottll'r of Water az} Smithfield ts. groa , • CLAit)l2 t PARKS. len Rochester, Pa. 4 0v ritubms 5..1/.11.--IP ,ea b .NO E, or o. Sea Bathink-Cape Slay, N. L . cONG SS HALLis now open for the re ef natal. • The ptoprietor, thankful for the lUrel betetsibre received. would %sq.''' . wale% woo noncom u ! euitttos mo rib e bee the pretest mue, to thee* tds biome War luau.. ee. eutootrotstol ecostmoutorbue. he emu% Ell b. nu. ea tiseestary. enStootent thou enyirbleb tare hereto:tee bunt pu m as% owe the Isl.& Mee subscriber bee takes Woe to untrue trout Lod attentive colored fermata. ta.n• der the morsel.. that they inn held waited to the cutouts endj W el kloM 01 • laeSeehr or the tqloot , e , re oi m iM W. B. TA3IES P. TANNER, Wholesale Dealer in BoOta, Rom Boma., LW. Na ' Vrooi rt. Jel=t Proposals. ( E.AL.ED PROPOSALS be received by, 1. the aubecribera a any time op or before tbe Slot day Jane. 1051, fi r the power of building Brick Church ut De, Creek. to Indiana towns/01, Alto boor count), at or near the School house. an land of Harkoar f the fillowing aim 4U feet wide by CO In curl. 141,1 between the door and the edit= with 11 indows and 2 doom to be roofed. Plastcrul. P. 1 . 1441 t....4 *W 4 Te . IW a pulpit fur saki bon". The no to be fat ad luthe time manner awl after the same sttern the Toroth Arerelate iteructued Chard+. In Ba town, dear Beek's Brewery. The work in no parting to be inferior 10 th• work dons In raid house. The contractor to end all materials. of a gaud and substantial quality nersasarl AVIIVe d 'h ire; For 10 14 g l e' ln:11; $'" toy BACOT:CS PA RBSON, JAMBS THOU N. omtnlttee. 'Deafness, Noise in.the Head, lad all Disagreeable Dischargu film the .?ar,. Speedily and permanently retaored I 1111R,4•Hit!-ITFL.EY,4 I...ut,ii!it,e4al;ntrhs, niarenth street, Pal n ade L Tptila. h Ear ' ia? " fec er illed to prokiMit Nr " Irnifttrlti ti rotice, the licetor may 6.cm:o,l:Medici Re. trocu .w..,,ill r edtny fib, Me drat titrea etery brick boars beyond the dehool House. •rt. Doctor feels assured 15.0 his patients in ramauraa enjoy a pleasant walk to the dater city. arid for thelr credal sccommodatiote ha trill extend his hours af cot:mi tered, at the above phme, from 8 d. )1. to ti P. 31. Thirteen years clout and almost undivided attention to this branch of nuclei practice, has enabled him to reduce Lis treatment to such deume of rumen as to find the most conOrmed and steady et re:Mote to the meansobstinate cases yield, by • preacribed. feI:MS - . Notice. ETTERS Testamentary upon the last will 1,1 and testament of thew. Cochran of Richard, 31.- ens., late of shell:ay of Pittsburgh, having been grasit.l to the underaliond, I have appointed Jam. R. lambdin my Agent tor the settlement of said Relate. Ail and Indebted are rennetged to make immediate papment, and the. haring claims against the wile will present them duly authenticated for settlement. ELIZABETH COCHRAN, Executrix. Tlia undersigned may be found daily between the hon. of 1 and g Y. SI., wail dia Ist of July, at N 0.184 Second.. ielg•At J IthalßDlN • TAR AND ROSIN -100 bblo. Tar. In goal ardor: lw - bright No. for ale by Inl'lJiiHN WATT CO. s UNDRIES-- 5 kegs Shot seed Nap - and I elbl. Lend: 70 bbl.. pure Ylereeed Oil; 2.1 kegs ti twist Tobscres 5 tierces /resit 75 be. Dried APD/OX :00 dozen Corn Brooms; tar ate b left JOH:: WATT t CO: Notice to Cargenten. HE proprietors of Herr's Island, in Du t Ef t i _. L T 1.7: 1 ! t=7.m . ;.'t °=, rrtf, M 1 Ilttnborlb ' , for wratherßogrding, painting, and roofing tho Wand Brklge. AU ,recto Informati , n c to h.d of 51r.Thog Nessilth.jr., on WA /Bond. Duquesne Borough. Juno oth. 11931. jollutZt FOR MLR STOCK of the Merchants kManufacturers' hank; Stock alba Extbuzge Bank. by U. D. Elba, Banker gad ell Fourth st. WiIHUD), WESTERN BANK NOTES, 'at' lowest 1, mute rates, and highest_premln pald tor Asa Ft. caMaser, in gar funds. bY ksINU, Jell Bantu s Broker, VOnrth et TUE GREAT KENTUCKY REAIEDYI r DR. JOHN BULL'S SARSAPARILLA! T IS put up in quart bottles, ax,sl cen t/am the vtrengtb of am so moth ionSanotjpec con /am es any pep...ration In mw ona dol lar per botUe, or at bottles for Os. dollars. ' /t Las been a scull established fact foe Tenn last. that Sarsaparille. vsben pure and proPerll > If. the only true pomace Le all Oxtail. from an !to rue mete of the blood, the use of mermuT. Intoxicating drinks. cell habit, in youth, harmintem,, gm We boldly newt that JOHN' BULL'S LIT O SASSAVA. BILLA is Um only preparation bef ßA ore CT /h F a public thou Lv prepared an Idaieti, selentllla principles amd of uniform tsength. The Sarsapartila purchand ',lthaca regent to price, and ems pound, before being laud, is subject to the arktest chemical tests, amine tenulnusumemertainod before being meet 7 Narsaparllle also contains tho virtue* of sinfend other ealaable agents. immtk. t0.. 1 .$ Ob. best found, nod producing the dreamt coraUm. agent lath. lumen emit! WILL CURL WITIIOUT TAIL! Scrofula or Slug's Zell, Cancers, Tom o kroptkas of Coe 81.10„karelpelaa. Chronic 13ore Erns, Mogi • norm or Setters, sold it.a, fib.umar - Slug...gab:Lae Bonggi i rte, of ttAlands,Sf e ptal• is,DDby....spepdao m.,Kln. Lacs APP. - tito. 4 , seu es. arisin . .trot* tlar un of .Tharnr. Nan In flu Side and Shou d... , a.l.F.ll'4.'9"•_DriP.l ba;O: I=o, - ; CZ1;14;;;:lt. itTrual, OroattatisoJoax to. thAds. Weakness of tba .1.1133..r0y A ff ect., and all other &was. lambalt PRODUCE CONPLIIPTION • • - User Crsuptsints lrmda In i essdaritles end 111.1plihes, rick eusl Zisirour lbw's..., Lon EP/litac twe Dte ets, Exposure. insprudsnce LW, Chien Canstitutional rwies, sod I • Nursing and sundaes drink. and Ir for thy esisrui. superior 14; Blue Lick nr Coupsxa eater. oleo . • The f••Uoala .r the verbatim copy of rertifLeate no in the we...on a the proprietor of B.'s Sareaparilia.— Itev. Ft W. Schou I. widely aral arnerally known tan flognent and arenas phebed pallor of the 31. E. flint.. and hey. &Moven". ham been knoerwss one of the most .1- ..1.3 seaLoue members thu theSenincky Conference evold bow of for musE years...l at this Ume faiths he high sad reeronslbtestatlon of agent for the 31. C. hook Concern. Can the norkl priah. better, or more oati.factury testimony In favor of Mr ...M..? Vetter Testimony than war Era. Ofered in Farar.of Err. E. W. grwon.-6n. E. Errrrtson. • Locuron. EaAt 1850. We hero noel John entire Baeaparlh a, we wren known n/ be need, with entire satlelactleat end we ihee• nation Instating that we believe It to be a cafe and numb able medical cvni pound. and raltviated In prate. numb good and tonere meth entre:inn.: and twonld therefore ' rfentficr , ,. dlotod. 11. hTMENSOh. REAVTIFUL C LLAIt ACIN. flow vie all admire • clear beautiful wblte aul ro.ty colored cheek. Slow ofteu do .. ••• persona. not pew. teasing tiffs "cinder:nal ro deroolly to Le the porting to csnuetim. lotions, steltge, and coning matersale, to restore to them a .ember of whit Deena I has deprived them of. and that teas with great lite . y to the 'Us Bolts le the beg tureen wn. It besutlfsee Oar the AM. by reccoelng every panels of morbid nd discard nutter Mon the blood,thating It or.. he•lthy. 01000 e ectivity. to every =mgt. vont. and chnsitur the yellow data conntenne• to ffs• bloom and Donne of Youth. Intl.a , bandon the uac of want. en mleturcl, and eme Dull'. Sonatina! the only effectual remedy. "A word to the win le Inter ciont" and ahl at I. ono.h to the ladles. Testimony Like the Folloseing,"Rendsrs Superfluous all Comment on the Elieitney of Bull's Sarsa parilla. From Dr. L. P. Sanwa, Protosso i t o ot ChentnT the ' Sounille Modlcal Den. base Icond over the Mt of Itigrediente romptednit John DrmsOnabound Extract ot liananarillaAnd bare no Wanton In swim that they tmm • safe oittni.notitend on that brAinthice well to chronic discuses, to which Rlip Lpf o ighl.. 6.45 41 . L. P. VANDDLD, M. D. the Honorable the Judges of the Court General Quarter Emsions of the Pelee, In and for t Comae of Allegheny. . The Goo of Yr.. Borden , of the Yint Wank, , ei ty of Mainargh. the County of Allegheny. humbly ' thewetto yourpotilloner I. 441.4.011. land= • FOP lie house or tare., in his hoar, situate in tbe Ward above—that ice has provided himirlf vitt. neenuari.•for the couvenienee acciareommodatham of trarellers and sirs. ger, lie therefore pray. your ham. tirgrant him gill en. to keep a konme of pub. entertainment and be " g' 9" tge tthectibena t eillazna of the W.I a...a. do Um.. above petitioner le of good repute for how nit,' and tempera., and I. well procided vith house mom and couveulencee foe the secommodation and lode= of strangers and traveller, and that .0 tavern la neem.V Allen (andel' Noah Frew. EA.= Mao, them Rood, r 11. W. nose= Rkiall. J. Gee, Jiro. GMT, Q . Thicken. Z. balm.; Henry Orman. • Jag iraed DR/ I' 11 LS, l'ilync7. by . S' to tie Lots-1 13110 E-14 tierces for sale by abir inthe .ne Roma., sass cr l BULL'S' SA RSA PA. j_tr, ,SA I WICK,* 111'CANDLESS. /ULLA: J. KIDD t CO.. W. Wood 10.11 - 11.12, 311R/Ch 4A, 1540. I hare tumbled the Areuselptlonla the urepsrillou of John Dulfe Sarsidelrille. .od I belles. the deadoltualon to la ea aza/Ileut one, and well calculated to produce.o..l. tenth . .. bapreelon ou the oysters. 1. hese need It both*, publle and pirate rattle, lad think It the best article of cartapacllle la core. .31. DIME. M. D a Sal do= Phrelclau at the laulsrille Marine I.lcepital. /Gr . CAUTION—Wean earl ask isr the original DR. JOILV BULL'S SABSAPAILILLA.from kortackid—ead hese On other. KEYSER - lt 31'DOWELL. ILA wcua anal; lI urg ttellh. Pt, Wholeeale and Detail Adepts. roc dale Or GUILDS wad JOEL DOUGLASS. All.. pb.,f cltr. and bet' Druagteto seusndllr. jelleitydauT • Valuable Lot On Third'otreet for Sale. . WILL sell the Lot on Third etteet, - - ad. j co dgnale . t . 3l bg : te ig lotab i l b lehme uce o e f t of Wm , ticble an t[t rd i tilft7erltroo b" ltreit T o i llb i re * f.. "' 7 kelt. The pat, S 4500, one tit i oaestor to bead. Ile big: stow with Interest to be reared by bond cud mng. to. the Lot. PO Table to cow cad too year. from the deb, of pale. the tale it perfertlY CHARLES 911ALET‘ jell:d3w at the ofbee of C. Shaer A Co. Fourth et VOTICE.—IF MATTHEW LINDEN, the farlylled i tt..ln u SLet . t ratia r Ai c l . • I. igeredier=frarglrtirk'd to =Noror b irglinieWlrnri 1 r omothlng to his sdrusises. Free Lecture at Phllo Hall. TN the eciente of Mental Electricity, by Dr. Healy, an Tuesday madalr, th.llth Jane, At. ;leo lecture on Wainealay, _TburediejlideT. tret Seturday evenings at 8 o'clock. Admittance ka mu. The nowelmeata be more wcatdertul Ibun Sable. Ton on boast. knon ce. Ile will open m whim at Phil° m Madan the ICol:n at half-put two o'clock, to continua twenty dam.— TOT the erne otneahnow, dime. of the eye. monfteee. thmasellean ellepeptla.,•prolmens uteri, sad all other doe amee, particularly those mosidenat tameable by the Mani cil Lenity. Let all mch machine Ols testMoMda The chow and eclltois feeo • • Paced4e. • A:XiT on Penn street, adjoining Mat thews' stabls—orill be sold boor. Ifdsclesbre.tbs lot MI allied t salt two perms.. Enquire of .' 140 A. WILKICiE It CO. Post copy. . . To Gardeners. AFEW acres of gound near the ca - v. uuit I able of gardening. tor ole. Camaro la 0 A. 'WILKINS a Ca. ' b 1,13 in store ard for sale by 1.141A.11 DICKEY CO, 0 Water • from st. LARD OIL of Bennett & Jones' mannfne tun, GJS mac by ISAIAH DICKEY io) Water Jt. Front oto. CORN -40 bbls shelled, for sale by 0. Y. VON BONNIIOItaI . CO. LIEESE—ZS his for sale by Jelo 0. F. VON BaNUORST B CO. WCON-20 cla., received and for sale by elo WICK k 11,CANDLESS. LINSEED OIL-10 bblo for sale by jell) • STICK C SITANDLS24S. ITOCOLATE—,I2B bat,. Boston Chocolate Wr oda by jolo WICK it bECANDLKSE. DRY lIERlll.l4G—for sale by isle WICK * AECANDLESE. CIREASE-1.0 bbla in store and fore sale 11_Il by ISAIAII DICKEY t CO.. 010 Water and Yet. sta. TOBACCO --125 boxes as'd of the best breads Si and Ss In sISAMU D tore en 4 fo I sale Dr CKEY a CO. water sod Emu as. - • Beyene_Piang Pieceptor. AKLEBER. has just received Beyers'. g celebrated preceptor r the Plano, which is et lediped by prolessional teen - in this nunnery and in tame, to be the tat work of the kindeeer published. Beyer. well tetotrzt se OM of Unmet Mem:lW 0019ipeers for beginner , and pupils, has bore supplied • want bag and seterely felt by tbe causleal elements. Look heartache ad lareestga to the pupil, both in Its exereLees ad tunes. thus pally facilitating and ,month. la the gonewhat tedious and irksome Prot study of Inn. ea and pia° pia) Int. The following Professors who bete erehanal the wort, are referred to: Professor* Ilatorat. Landman, Vella. Noth. • fel°. b OVERECO'S. SUGAR.-20 bbla Lover msbol aaApulverizsolounrinet.nedvel sad .sle Tom by • WM. A. MULOIIO 56 Llboty SARDINES IN BRLNE.--1111 keg" Sur dna to trine (Bar&IleAO patll rec Leivr a OD i Ibt 5111 A. VGRAk '721 zautenr et RESII'TEAS—Jact received at No. 2.50, Llbeityrt, di Umtata, very sowria Oolong lad I.• H jraF=l 4 4rdi ondist y " • - - A. 11"CLUILO A CO. ttaxas sad Da Dalai, QITITATIONS in stores, warehouses, \..7 In our two vide* or town,and country around, Mr malowunem bccolOrmelm.. duol mestere, all waiters. farmera L.horec*, and for a number of boys of al a Alwi--envotod to hoer:Or 11150, 1300, 000. 5000. and atter aurae, for different period*. Wanted—plat. for *ew ers! mantatreasea bouseskreor., wet and dr] kinds of turnout sounded to for moderate chars". Je9ol2wl:T r A act,. sod Intelligence 001ro. Liberty rt: ACIIIOT CLAY-7 tons Copley's Pot Clay, No. 24,ust received and fo by • ]e IOOCROONNAKER A CO: IITEW MACKEREL-50 hbla No. 3, large II um mackerel put received and for role by lea 8. t W. ILARLIAVOIL WOOL, WOOL—Cash paidtar the differ -010 br S. & F. HAS M:ill. 1?/..OUR--110 libls. "extra" floaria store j and for este br jeln S. k W. HAldllitall. TRIED PEACHES-200 - bushel- 'dried Weacbes received Bad R. Imo uali. 1 ACKEREL—Quarter bbls No • BWee.t F COTTON -116 bales in store and y for 'pale by ISAIAH D182 .. ..0 010 Latest Publications IT i IIOLDLES' Literary Dept, Third et., bonito the lice Me. twist, . CnMutiny. The blechanles linguine. for Jane. tectureg on Amnio by the Earl of Lbyllee. Living Aga No. 309. M - Pee. Mutative, tor June, (a nen r.rpplr4 Jug Another supply of Superior Shirting and Irish Linen. MURPHY BURCHFIELD hive r.l e goen ate. and boo= Uneasy the latter warranted all Ilas— twit . I . ! ki ree:l t = the asen i t .h o . f th r l i ntangrotrer, and Meeting tattelles, =Ol4 to tgee 4 ' 41 lade, ewers on bend. Alto, hlllotrosse nondlna. -jet HAVANA SUGAR.—SO bxe white Fla . ram rogar,jast. received sad for ode by BUILIMIDOS INGHII.6II, je9 N 0.116 Wain street- LOAF SUGAR.-30 bbls loaf sugar (as 'rk.4 ra ''' h "'"' r niAluilwa a INGIEHA.t. ' No. Ile. Wataz Wart. IVHITESCARF SILKS.—A. A. MASON t Co l iallust ree.h . . 4lf .g wg i rLornlng Ta, l ,YigsdArdnoalevaDDlT c%aped trimming rliitoo., to bleb [Co attentkm of mummers Is Invited of. No. 02 and 4, Mork.t at. .N 4 More New Lawns. A . a a a. . a DjASp .. II! CO. have just received it") tiA. MASON &. CO. would respectfully . eel the attention of hortaakeeperl to their very sa re assortment of richly yrtnted and endesse ld•m eon table. covers, assorted colors. Also, avery ply of linen. and damask table clo th s. mains, doget Le.; at Ns al and 61. Market street. Jag VOA SALE--One Kiln - of Brick, Enquire j: at W. WCLINTOCK'S Csrpd Warehoure JeD NO. PS Yinceth thltIED BEEF-2,000 lbs prints,ust ro t Ijr aired and for tale by Je9 8. LOGIII. UOAR--64 Mle, received and for sale by leg B. W. LIABBAOOII. MLASSES-100 bbh just received and a We by Jeo B. W. TTASENWIGIL ACKEREL-50 bbt No. a, 1851, in .tare licr WOO ko a. W. lIARIIAL-011. The Family Triad.' itBAKING preparation• intended to en =reed. the use of Tesst—wllleh, whew =Wet with our, will produce Ite 278 the door, 10 or we= loaves of 41Iw yeast. T he Geed 7ratb eg, Earrl! h t:eluis Veko/, doe* - u of take r'''re:g of 20 mote, you use the prepeoetlre Indeed of =est =men= Thla winos of Lk= is also some coosidereek—und hotel Leapt= eswaseers of public schools. hellrmszies. bend. othret 00. etrtft il! d l`llTb e'Llt ,14. 5 . 010 tf `utt. •greenble, whams= diet for see Tom= •Wo P.m= In iwuutry pae. whore yeast lo boil w¢ tbie he found boveluable for teem= sod oakwr— lt will be tom= speedy old cheep. not forgetting Out Lb.] and be ileote =Liable-era sneers brows bleeder= we= digestible. kdd to bottle*. 12%.=. 00 . 01 . PHILLIPS d MAYERS. North Fourth d e Phtleelelobls. Polo Agent for Pittaburgb, R. 0. SRUHES. Wool jerelm I Are= Phillips and Mayen' New Article for the World's Pair! IQUID GLUE, whicheements wood, stone, eisit4 glean marble. queensware,or •T•l3 moor trouble or Droparation. - In a ebort tittle any ante of furniture ads he made sus good as pew by Wm tele erated and powerful. Demo:. Thenosuelterwers of din Slate are already . well aware of Ito genuine andsowed sdaptabilitr to their purboses. and three who hare not tried It are requested to to so No house should he whi t st Its bottle of Liquid Aware mid, - fortis, and mar be used brazil penes with on and ertiele, Simians, There ts no use for the ring pot. and to mechanics , Otto a real Mamba. Hatters it—the bred of the Statn are unsubsions in their omild. In inane of it. Don't throw as thing own with eut trying dna PHILLIPS HATERS. North Foorth greet Philadelphia. Alma for Pittsburgh. J. KIDD OD.. corner Fourth od W a9 odood street Ageut Lir Allegheny - oily, JOUN DOUG • s ces!Ladies! Ladies! loircuL you save your furniftum and avoid mush unneevaaan labor for To= Inrinsii , IfiZa i g i rkt t v d drrt, term funilin p 7 il inlV If:PERS' Matta!' ii7t o NITURT MLLSIi " . A fat: ibtg 0100 -vo2° to, r—'or.prabarlaVa" . u mush This le. plait th ing far furniture dente n. Ladd to now that, at 17,x, 1061. and IS PHILLIPS at SIAYSILS, 71. Slnith Yourth•treet. Philadrl;l3.la. to to s tz 12=710. rt. 101: it REITER, i c e v i e . ; , of Any - 4 1 dirm, TYE FLOUR.-20 bbLs rye flour for saleby jA WICK t AICANDLESS. ALERATUS-31. casks. for sale by WICK it ICCANISLESS. SCORCHINGS-5 casks_prime on band and COI' sale by je9 WICK MTANDLESS. VIRGINIA TWIST TOBACCO-20 kegs T Bar sale by TWIST WICK I WCANDLV33. L"D blds No. 1 Lard for sale by jeu Inc% a 11WIDL/23. oYELVEN CARPETS.—W. M'Clintook has in state and E. tale, the lamest astartetent of Vet. Ca irpets Fourth rear ofteled in Ws market Print Ws:ohms* t. F ILAX = I? Backe by lyceum= Piano and Table Coven. STABOH-40 boxes Bonbright's extra for tale try 1 , 9 WICE — t irdaDLEal. ti• • . " • net receiv • .111,,,urpet Au. Low e, Nn. /meth mt., ;um wid sa 1. throrply carpets. je ] 'W. WCLINTOE. LiAUSSELS OABPETS.—W. M'Clintock hula otor. nod for Palo Novo ossortutent or .up. Brosools Carpets, to 'dila h• arttn the otteatke of onstamort. Carpet Wanhouto No. TO. Youth et. ;PI OCO MATTING—Far. public halls and C mum in !tore and for . .. nn • • J. 7 • . Carpet Warelleme, ABBITPS.SOAP POWDERS are now •1;711 kikom uto mare elllm . tvell tboa. kciairlatervt:rto rot a ot l rni ftlic!:s I. rvrr-MIA de and retail, by w et. A..UVL111111 . 4 0 7224, muss et. EFFEVESCINO COMPOUND, a itabati tuts far yeast for raisins bread, atkea s aa e by whirls • saying bf 11 per ant to Clow Leaded For by by WU. A.. 11FCLI Z 54 4bewt7 et. JRO ABBITT'S Double Refined EnJustus, vet en WTI Ye and %pal m s. n ty very► . Vr i Zrb G r i ' •WA Wahl" a co_ . aT amen Tea Dealers. ILLINOS, WILSON & CO., Dianufac- I- - - I turns of all thrs tacks. hob 144 dots tacks, dear bus..ebbir. and 1141n4 mar. tiodotabb, eknkt. bob. 1123•1 oboe soli; bum barrel aool Whizz 4o; 0. 04 =1 . 41 blood oalto. to, Offlo. at bllTlLScurr a CO.. No.llB, Wain at; Pato. buret. • For Sale kIIANDSOSIE buggy, from a cel etwatal Lama manudeurce. Price SIM • . 07 . 11 ... 1 =WI. Rite SOD. Itmaire 107 at thii :,3t COPPE ft A —35 bbis. for sale by j. roat tt TAR CANDLES-10 boxes, prime arti c) de. for rale by SID DAt je7 No. GO. Wcrl. rt. I}.DILATED Wines and Brandies; afro. A. lot Jan er«lred bad for sal* by J. KIDD t CO, jet Na eO, Wood R. JPA.N VARNISH-3 bble. (Baltimore 7 aar wle by • J. KNID D CO, Wo CU, jeod rt. CREAM TARTAR-1,000, lbs. for sale b J. KIDD k CO ., del No. CO. Woo 3" at. SUNDRIE '.. 2 trbli No. 1. Lard. 4 do Dreary a do Tallow. r L i V. =7: 1 bag and Dbl. Flax wad. 2 Das Dry Applra. 1 do do eaches. Plt.t., Lrrair by 2l r.fr l I - 1 1/3.0. 1 1M1 DICKER .7 CO.F. B. T. Babbitt's Celebrated Soap Powder. W A ta Sgi- e l 24s w is i l ar hc o , , t , l t t e i tr e ! Warranted IgthrtiOth nn tin.—Put roni clothes in a =farina quantity of mid water to corm them, then add two table aticorea*of thda Bap Ponder. to each Ma owls of water need .111 t the clothes; if the water la hard. old mote- of • Powder. and boll them ten minute% in the amen time prenithens down with a that, then gut them la a tab and old sugleleat mid water. es that they will not be too hot to handle. Then rub the dirty streaks. or la other tom% mibdee tkan thorough riming, and that la to make them clean. !C. B.—There being 120 eosin to this Bath. It will loath the clothes ear white. and no bed oily oneth as some soapy do. The entire coat of ten mitheratt ciard dose not Warrant two oiwits, tit , =opiate • washing of Len pernota. 7 .. Wattentett not to tot ortamre the clothe. Mk Is altanier that onempor will make twelve (mitt beet family Eat Sow Dimon... rue Da.—Tags. my els quarts of water end ode the Powder withlt. and them kt It MU. raytattaa taw then . 44 "qo""'6d .""r"Ur, ih Nee l rn mother, sod wt it May where It ma when mid it will be very Wet sad Wm Mao Sew rtht will neat, well; twit will TWA eth me harsh like other Bolt Soap. nor rm. Um clothM. Ots bvtutott with hut or fait water. by-makut tM otothirr lath ids haute toted of trek.. The son soap la ewat ada464 ft. 'manna ealke gad ranch gords. • _. he whaler's sad retail by L unsay, - ha- - • • • No. ta. Woad st. • SPLEM.OI. I I,BIabIa. altiaj far Bala by WICK a SeLLNDLYISS. MANNERS' 01L-23 bbl,. for sale by 1 ' . Tam NA#SDLaa, Vf.). - 3.; C..Efirll.--50iblf. for sale by ' Pittsburgh . Lif e fi l earaim Company. 11 .--- ,- JAWS DALZ.CI.I. - 3.4 No GS Water sr. . CAPITAL, $lOO,OOO. RUMS' SARSAPARILLA.—rA reit, d 0;,,; OF,FICIE, NO. - 45 FOCR7II STRES ; II JJP In allot took, for sal. by a... WICItt.BbIIAM. ; , . Prosldent—laroa 5. Mode. .i.oV. Thoonfroe—Jana 5. usea. - ri.ANARY SEEM:L.3,SOOIIA. just received . se 5,,,,,,_,:„ A. ,;,,,,,,s. i_J - Voas the Enat, a Tfisoo ankle of SW.. and, formals. stir - _,_& - s odfoolOornent in another peft of ed. Pal" by P. N. WiCKERSIILII. ....a .. .a y e d _ Corner of Wand and Eldthaffnr.t. • F , COFFEE —3W bgo. prime Green Rio Col . - 1.„./ foe, resolved and for sale by - .4 ' . • $ll2l WATT A CO. '. F ISIL 50 Ibis. nee 1851, pickled Herrin, do do dodo , ;ICI I:2f . bras. no " do as In .tore and for tale by Lief.] JOILX WATT A CV. CHEESE.-31 bis. Cheese, reeetrusg , per 11._) Inilroll'a nm. ana for male Dr JAREN Da.211.1.. No. 6S Water rt. V s . - RD.-2,000 RA. Lard, for sale on eon- , . lgaroent by tl". T. WOODS & fiON. No. 01, Water 4. IEAT PLAID GINGIIAMS.—Murphy & 1 Burchfield have open MD mornlo& . asenftment a styles of Glnighanta, mat Plaids, 1405 and dart al. new hints, of nee and bandatme stykx at lfihi cent& al. Lawns, lenses, Pooling. of meat Mlle& al. Mout: Moo Ocala, la greatvariety. .11Ch a• liaray. 811/11, 0.• talcum Tissues. are. . 44" Bern Gonda opening. almost doll/. , - .ich 01L5.,-800gall bleaehedivintersperm oil. coo - awi etre ... .nlo - .- ! pens • . • 1,000 0 bleached . .SG) •••• lu itore aurror IMO " Tcmn • te? nL 67 MILLER 2 RICK VSO'S, 0 . 22 / a TA Liberty --- PLANTATION Sugar and Molasses 03 hhdo. prime pLotation= . 367. Lbls do do fn "F" and for tIM br snura • /I.I6KET9ON. • Nog. on a 2:=1„ Libertr rt. S UGAR lioasei , Molasses and Plantation 9.ll.llollsres-5L Jamie Itenurrr: 10 lOrlr fair Plantation Sugar. On roarignment and for Ws br • • MILLEIc & Ricarrso:s. -. • jab Nor. 1.11 Martin. ICE.-2O Tierces Rice in We store and for e by 311L N LY.....it Ava i l s° . bz4 fft. OMAN CEMENT-2 bbls.,• for sale by .14.5 ' C. F. TON BONIIOIIIET k CO. onottnt - ti.3rann: .nztlyruil fIEESE-30 bis. W. IL, for solo by ies 8. r. TON 80N11011.9T toe. R AISINS. -60 boxes bl. R. Raisins. y to lIIILLER raICIIETSCI N. - . jai Has =I a 22:1, Marti. N. - LI ,UR-40 bbls. extra familiflour. N. '.6...H.1 1 .4.1°, " 3.- * - - do lei mama 0 RICEETHON. gIiSESE.—Z3 boxes Cheeee Just received oo comsssseeoi sad Oatliatla z a simrsca. 4EMON SYRUP.--GOUs ! Turner ' d' lam 0,: . L Amp. cat amaignmett i m i t nllb ici AltD. OIL-10 bbls. pure winter - lb do a • b 7 J. 13111100 ?l N111.100. Je6 23, Wool a n r t. you wish fora real treat, try the Y. Hy ...v....tuns for st 00 pa lb, d Mmriv Ta 1 4 .1 IDisaiond. JO. • Notice. Fanners' and Mecham& Tarnpike Plant Road. 21HE Second. and final Ini3telment.of the subseribel4 to the Loan for nankin* the Sumo& 51.ichtnies . Turnpike lona. to hereby directed ,to be paid on or bac. tW ltth of .Inne. Inst. iniNt . RES lt! ILElB.l%issurte. • WHITE HAVANA BRAZILi SUGAR 331..1.111te U. ma " t r 1 1..3. 50 bra Brull . • sod for Ws DT ..VILLEE a mcgrrscrs. Jes :You = =. Llbert7 st. Birminglam and Brown:Mlle Plank Road VOTIcE TO. CO. TRACTORS. -- Sealed / i 7 , l .. Propettala +III be Instead the the' elrth tM the th day et Jana. 18.51. as the ease A. =an In Votath street. Vinaburgt• ter tha gradlnK of that prt ot Id road. between Ilareunty street and Xt. 011 ear, • di ► mere ef ono mile, or tbereaboute. A l ott l evil g the noart Ot Innetose ar L x .. uei. • ' Lace Curtains. ' • LHAVE j ust received, direct from the e Im• porters. &me awortment of Lem Cuticia, which I och low. Carialw.liatecials and Ilinisoichwof wllichwin. .iwi . ' , ~ WM. NOBLE. Third sC. "TOOL TWINE.SOO lbs. foi este by ju4., MIIHPirr a Lea. URLAYS---3 bales, 40 inch,. for sale by 1.1 JB4 - - SIMMS "FRESH TOMATOES, hermetically sealed, L retaining. perfectly, the carer and fieehnora of the ripe *cite, for rat, by W.N. el. SPCLUftIe Groom and Tea Dealer. DRIED BEEF.—Evans &'Swifts Sugar Cared Beerman-4rd, for saKM. le by_ mucbCHO *Ca-, ruff • 1% Liberty Boob! Boob! --•- - - QCHMITZ'S History of Greece.—A Histo• ocogs ° ,lc, ° n. r ra. to from IinI7IWIT" thirtiran D. D., Mahon o(8$. lierien By Dr. a...nen. neemica, IL IL S. D. _ 'th TEa he Dermour of Prophecy, or Scriptural Illustmtionsof 41 1g . h. Rem. Aleminder Line/ and mbar Items. t ri d Ay Parpotir ' Temper - Proverbial Philosogb y, alcdczna Pyramid,.and the.Po enie of King Alfred: By Martin TarlialuirThliTar. • The Ileir of Weed 10 &flan& • We,. By Italy Elotitt. The Philcoanhy of Matherrielkml tridalatnl from the Pours de Ph 10.01 Positive of Angora, Conga , .111 W. S1(1114116.. Harper* Neer York end fk . kr Ballwaid Guide Ploo col/- tab:dna • dreminlion the &mem Arena Tonna, Yil. Dam and most Important Work. =The Rod. With one h.ndred and thircy,ei•mginel•ga,byLangnicsallitirrilk, hmo original sketches made erninmlY for tots rack.. DT tree Ilerper'e Nor Ifonthir or for Jaw. i • . The Gold Worshippers, or the days ere im • DMn htetorical novel. By the author or t abby_ ^ :.. Theabore Doable= reeeired,and Err tabby_ - Je4 11. C. STOCKTON .47 Dana rt. NEW- BOOKSS L : HEW 4.1. HOMES LITERARY DEPOT, TIIIVI •tireet.ppliod.titlnTait Ofttcr.+• • ':- : =MITZI/L . %It 30, Gnaws, a tite of a rortzalk by 66111ifiti • • ' • T • Mir of Wu* Wilytamt, • We; DT U4z7 =vitt- - London Ehslupeare, Bac 2 wad E. ' Talbot watt Ilernou.s novel; bri..L..3leComelL International Alsesdas t June. . -- • Adrenbarte I Dfrica lietory . or Fenden by Thsoterey--coroplete. b.or Bradlee of the TOIFIX by L bltrrel M L 2=-Iww; by Mre. liouthworth..- Tile Gokl Worshippers. or the day* we the t. A BS., historical tenet: by Ilue author of -Whitetrierel, The WI Meter. or the Forbidden Alarriege. Louise Lit Falters, By Dams—No. F. Title concludes the wort. Art Journal Gor Bolton that:mar, No. 28, coorlaslon. &clue. 11ritwitt FARM •Abwre . 4- . -hi Q. W. AL Bel . , . . The ' rair babel, neernorel by Ensure Bye: Bodo'. of end Earteln Fone. Quoit= of BrnnewtrA—No.3. • rotas. c umn Oetict[e. The nein of Denrogreeter; Dove. by E.L. • . adventse P ee Wh7 T. E. Adta.T. et • by John Oat; .44 WCIO m L—C!dt u paid .for Wool by Boatuits! Bonnetit ' • ti4,AtASON k CO..vould respecto/ 2 MI) invite the ottentkot of ottebasera to • rm.:wirer stock of new style lioshata. to which thoy constahttr_eftlos now.torteties. The atom Goods tr il l to told Moog /of by the doo ea or doglo dome. Nos. 62 aid Morita Art . jot enthraatte Coal. on TONS just received, n'enperner article fbr l'oandr7 or brolly nat. for .nL C. A. Mc1.1:(131.11 & CO ie3 Corsi BAL.' T INSEED OIL-1500 galls. pure, for Wei j ' Bca°°l 4ott l efe L et. ' BORAX -6 cases Refined, for sale by *- 14 SCHOONIUM a co. AMFBLACK—.3O bble: fusaNVllr wile by La: OCaoONMA aoo NDIA FOULARD SILKS—Just reed, an additional manly of throb veal damn and dais,. India and. Yoolud AUX. Seca.. Goads artil ekani oat very any. A. A. - WA...NJ:I Oa,. • .1. 3 • 62 sod 641 Market R . ft LACK SILK LACE—Wo hue just rec'd • fg,21311.:.` th. ~hote detl[ubL 'o! all CRIMPED RIBBONS—The attention of VhT drimpoi l lifbboTri i l geurt 7 zatect b =l, 1 , , hid, we •111 dm out at ves7 :or prices. • ' • • • '. A .L MASON iCO. IG IRON-33 tons'Allegbeny, for mile by P je.3 J. J. H. FLOYD. Round Chorea Building. VINEGAR -50 bbls. pure .Cider,.tbr sabi. by E. . — 77* R. lILIYD. ,11S--150 .. d05. Ohio, f3r.,stlen) ISH-HMackeiel, Shadiand Herring, for Fi.3' • J. IL. ISOM. dlt--30 bhls. Boston, for sole.br J. Limon)!! TANNERS' OIL-27 bbls. Bank Oil, for nay by _ J. t R. YLOYD, MMOLASSES—_OO bbls. N. 0., for 'sale by ja y J. &It FLOYD. -.. . -TA51.1-30 casks pure, fur sale by ;' 7 4 id J. It 2.11,011:0 .. BACON - 3 000 lbs. Hog Round, on consift .l4 ...a, for We It/ T. WOODS k BOX, 7 EATITERS-1000 lbs. for sal , * isay. °.99 von • ' IDES-34 Dry Fl.';nt, for sale byy S.t W. HAREM:GU. BACON -7 casks Sidenjor sale by je3 B. W. ELlMitoll. FLOUR --100 bbla. New Lisbon Stm. Mills, ext. fut. ee salt br B. t W. HAABAGGII. :At AOKEREL-100 bble. No. 3, (PM) for uta by .1.3 B. kW, DARBAVIII. - - - LARD OIL 32 bbls. for sale by je3 B.t W. lIPABAVGa. - - G LASS-2O boxes ass'd sixes,.for 'gale by /4 a. a W. ItaItBAUGII. 72 ACON--A few casks Beams & Sbatdders, lJ fns b 7 14 1. aW. lIARDAGGII., UGA2i =;5 hhda. N. 0., for Bale by 4.4 I.B.C.ANYIEIJ) g. ItTt e up. 4. B. cAlinara).- 'MAGIC WATCH.E&or Double Month* Gokl ttlQ Watebes. =oda a, a• W alma on Dab de& sold am. or to aim Gloa cio at Dimon. Yory 111114. put xecishett EMS= gala - fe2 . tantoillasitaf sod Fourth su, SVGAR-48 bids: prime N. 0, for sale by 50 --- LA T IVATEI34.. & seas. - "!!_ MOD: A-50 0 02i.. for , coloub CARAWAY SEED-400 lbr. for rale by A A. NAMMITOCIL A CO. • • . . 1851.. SPRING , ARRANGEMENT. Forty-six hours to Philadelphia. Forty-four hours to 'Baltimore. '2AI miles Rail.rwid-103 mile, Canal UM; x rum', ctritra.l MB SOLI, TO PLOLADELPIIIA," BALTIMORE AND NEW TORE. .Pe in; free from the many. chaxstes and porta:go - connected with piece Lints. Two Daily lines Express Packet Beata. aim/ • MAN ernwarvxmc roa P4.913E2 , 362.5.) 11"VEPittsburgh for Johnstown, thence Dr PortuellaUtood-to HOLISDAYSBITAGE, Mtn tabs the NEW PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, Tro Ilmdred ani r l i st am ins rd4 im ilrect . Pukes Inane envy ntortdemnrocheir at - 12ght dolndt. and ovary analog at Um Santo hoar. Pan to Phßodalpida, 810. Faro to noltitoora. do. Uncorks •SO do llardsbard Passengers for Baltimore, Yoko Um Ton and C.A..lard RikihnO,At nu arrival of Can at that sine. Dann* Winn four team) Time, yni3s No charge for laooniogßoggage on th is routs. Tao On on thlo non on nen.mA monad armor Ifcoast:non= Ibr oomfort and natt. If you desire etuan novellas and onalbetatda not toodeloo, mean your natio at J. P. HOLMES, Agent, Sicaannabesflour. D. LEECH, & CO. 18514 • 'WESTERN MR. TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. D. IZMI do DO% LIAR. EigggiA TL. . Maga RAIL ROAD AND CANAL PITTSBURGH, PHILADELPHIA. BATLI MORE, AND NEW TOIGI. rCanal being in good order, we are e m E eedi to ILnLopart maw. , sad Loorshaadloo to ham too atovo eines, st the long ourront mem of IMO!. NW wptripe sallled di/patch...lto byes nod dors aro vor and by the paprie NW, of /Wad I.roasenittod, tootro add ILI/ I==s•tlm. Tdud/ tOre. Pd7 d* puled to.. . . ~ AVP I r-t°""da nlAlili tB . ' ' ProirnoLdm ElasiZi. Hood Pittoteszh. , ILLILRLS * LB):Ol.l..P.Aie , Boadrlng Apo!, No/413 i lA. South Id otrAdlo. • 01141 4 raMi D agiVlop "" 4" ' . . .1 1 • N 0.76, North nutooro. . • , ~. T. U. PEALLeg, Agent i.e . 1 . it.. 7. Wen stmt. Now Y.r lll 3 - 1 , 41103 MiftlE:D! 1.851 - .H.gfr - itiMM • .•••• mososomins. Earn. Via Brom:wills and Cumberland, to Baltimore and Philadelphia. a EoirE MORNING BOAT brains the 'Wharf hm the Bridle t . at o'clock tosciasly. vials tbo oars StCootbstiand next astaulas. TIN 'roam. Boat 1a...60Y (=Mt Sosstar sts6l6l) at 6 o'clock, Scastoctitor vith tlas cara *a rtlasbarlaatt.osaa essolog al 10 o'clock-.' , Tim tlooogh to Balitoota . Noma - Rats oniy vs. • mow atuaa.ah rattadslabia. 40 town.' Pan °sly 610. Ttut,2tatioast Road Is tow amd. Ccoultistors go bleb the Coaches between flrownernle and Cumberland. !bleb manilas decidedly IDs Lest moue Rut . SRISILIEN.'Agent Loy = ' Otlios 10 ta. alostonsahsla i ONLY 28 HOURS TO OLLVELAND. L agiE 1851 "117"N:PIASITRGH ANIII-D. XPRESS Packet . and Railroad. Line for Clarelar,d, trahout Zan - of stem.' 1E Stammers troM. qtraborsh to Bearer. Ca eortneettaraith too elataatly tra label Szoreas Packers at Clarke. Puts a Co. from Beata to Bataan, and tae sDtsa¢ld v..PUNT.' Q.. , U. Carload and litMOurgh llaUroad Ca.ta C Hama. Tezir. AIAYYLOWEIL Hamm Stamen leave tli - ei7lillist — orpoilialte Ilonongshels Masc. it 9 o'clock. A. IL. connecting with the Packete liner, which will lam inunedlattly on the ursteal of the steeiter, exeleing hennas in time forth. Emus Teske of Lere for Cleveland: kaasengere try_this Ilrue Kiln at tneekland in time to take the Relived Lins of Stamm for DV ITALO end DETS.OIT. and Use Milkmen for Min. go, .211Inenkie. Toledo. Sandusky %tr. Dunkirk' and &kr al fvr, ereldag testa of cars Le Col®bas, Xenis, Ana nag,. --cussz. pshas fi Cl), Prosaw... • • --- „. MOCtd.ri 11, Cent =dire : earl/f o r • C I L' '''''"3l r.Ml2lll corner of flooltlllokt Woof greet; n. AEA J UNION LINE ua the P Ivazda and Ohio Canals. • lklit i P/12.1115 C , 3”,. —..—.....Roaconick Pa. CHAMB LIS; CRAWFORD CO.— ett.it•tu%oi MS well known Line is now prepared tf j tindincin , hwhat and corawnirent Ittan PITZ",II CLEviuliD, u, any pttat co ts. Canal and Inky, lUofthal.lna uncarnancal In tituttbat..anni. , KY, and cap:dirt of Baton, aittarnarrof Captains. ua Ono &oatla w littstotrittand Maryland dalty.rmamt In connection with • I/no of steamboats. betwv.ot 111175. MOH and BISLVEIL, and a Line of first Ann 4., r ,bpac ttoopoUrr and vestals) an the - 4km - Parka kfict.Tacitystort.'4, L 6 Ye.at7in 94 C. litendat b Ltavenno, _ _ andww.: - .a nandnsky L 74.0: . Pcickto , ln At &air, 0 ^ Dar.en WVallotin vnCo., Dern* &cilium r • - naliOnanklai WLt; . • • • Ora Olbt Hit ._ o a b N k rakiii&Y. &Mt. ar,t nor. B Water and rtnithedd Ina. Marburg& * UCKETS TllitS-O cbinAincketa; farads by . ; je2 ' • L. & W BONS. • Troill,K-A far bbln. prime, and a small lot talk Mtal. Ike Ws lir ' L.a.wxrsaiiisig a BONS. BOITERS bbla. Pack : • • jet Eby •“ • • cut leed. Zr tale by • IV kegs (Ge"e) No. 1 Sit TOBACal=a3 nein, err sele or • • IA DALZICLI4 I.* ; 1.2 wersr. cur re Pint rt. B I t OBIS-ZO tons.SoVen%for nala by L set 01L-10 . :71 rperprE.Rs , 017-50 bbla. just receiving ansloutd for ab by JAIM DAISTLL. Eska Fine Oolong Tea, rsT.RECEIVED, at N0.256 - Libesty a., ntrrimpariar adds Wont .Wm In thawon• to mrsuead wond, a t th wa s 11114, srertnyttad to en Wu Mut Tr. ce rrynvti. pas. Int4Woooi LO • .E:74: dzbnmuttlll ra u fe e°7 Iffar BOWLER'S PATENT • FLOUR, for msk. fu-Orw„ pastry, Ciao. eh: ling his t of FO, withybeadditlon of cal leaser Indy. Moor ,j orth tenni 0 mod coneenient and etteanen that ,anrn be curl ea household Parma , * Ineinkdeper neat In but. ar and