• 7 . 7.1i.:3iff4 . 2. 71;i.: .I . J 'ir , ..: ;-: 1...E.r..t3.,t.j.it......-..?..1.:.;!. ESTABLISHED IN 1786. PITTSBURGH GAZETTE PUBLIMND DRILY AND WISELY: DT WIMP. 4% :CO. fuzon. cssuz as mei anal, ■C! D'ool sal ran miss • • DAIIN--3er. dellarsper nem.. Marla hat rearr. ere DAVI. If paid in edema.. WSEril,Y—arre Cohan peraurcum, ler edema. taro /II Aul7Pll.l ea the fellorriPS eaDdltloox Tl•ree gorges per mutual-- ..... DO T T' e "t l r relob i:; . 1 . ;;; Ia;;;a x. 00 • areere ner ' rerl ' l ' irearte ' Irlr sdraDea . o Club Pepers " %t be gee: an., tea yew expires. ere.. re. =ere/. emt tar RATES OE ADP/31781E10._ . Una FORM'S (10 line. of Norwell or lam) me .4 0 40 Po. , Ulm& 4 floe ..... Ig o m'n944.1W.:.=—::.... 9 00 00 , four m0nde..._........_.. to. to mantoz.. 27 00 Be‘fy3' C. (5 inn. or Ivo. per aanorn-44 00 One Onyny for ern toldpanal lino. •• -5.78 4 - 15.f5 7 . v ' ins• -•- istraii - 6671T ple . ‘us — .ls ther am• nuns)) exclusive of 3.1. paper..-.- .T. 5, 00 ..,„ . P. each edditlonal sin.; inserted ors one month, and' ~.issr then sithigothl swore =signal under the yo.ly retie; - ..!...'..l4vretiseciontlesmedlith a sonars, ind not creel tlibeth' ''...." . . k iVi ' ll= t n ' ti - C g'l " .. Cin ' intilni =tins:eds.:64MM be ,f - 'geed. pg. amount ' eruirged lot th r ei P.6 l . l mtholt• e ' 4 yl-:,,4 : , :liiN u msyitli for .0.511 g ,, Us tee ch.:. the moon *. d be " r l oirsiseirion ' s, viii k telio m ntha th urti ' 716 " Esuidd t" .au 'i4dr" d PO , ' - tent ueoeted - artenilittlli. - - ... . • The prirliege of statn.l i/lyertipira all strictly limited to . their own liserirdsys bosinom s sr. all sirtertleenosite for ',.,-; the benent Mother persons, na well as ell advertisements tort I,thaniestisfoly connemed with their own boo and all .. f ' the 111 ifO r s ' el; " Ye ..r, ' 5 1 . 11 a i . AL ' eo.,t o gt= b". l m , i.'.all ouch trattms ' evivertfelug h , bills W., be eep i liately ;-! ..-endeild. - and smosot mument la desired. • • i i . • '.41.11 aired/muscats for :.. of about .00 • hia 14.41ra 151 tat common tcf :16 la 572.10 at E 74. at Va. 60 and DS. at Va. Ind 197 at 11721 a tm L. -salty 31f1 plan 111..ourl.nod 354 Galena at la 13 11 oat. quote 1 34;1''W ICB4 Gs am eke range eta,. toartet for ttt.hcr sa.mml , 2Jl cot f.llnse: 1,0 Dbl. f. 00 . 1 . 3 • Y .F 3 ., 33, at lod brand ca . .' at 11.1 /Co I: 15 .33 a I.c..nOtrr 33 Ca. 30 l'eanillo estra sod 30 Albion at 31 30, and 101 on Na-.Salc, 1103 ..as 1.1.1 a a. 51 aka at.77.e. 23 at 54 at :Le. 115 at :ac. and :32 the 130 bbla Ex change, cowman to oriole. at (mot lift to au- V. Du, eudn- Ora cr eta and clic, ...ciatts--51arket W./coca doll. and the Gni) . gales we has. to notice to day. 15 b.his tam coca: at 11,3 c 'Bt. sod etA , bags U A Wt, lo bleached At, at !1 33 lit gag. Other .1111. e tio.utily guided unchnoc....l. Ysoctaloarrcuter thlatloul no hart hot little to notice knell aal.m of mw inrk to all colas at 114 1!..351.1 50. and mart. dull. halos 1.1. poor Nis Load at 1533. and bbla No 2atSe 10 lb. FORT OF PITTSBURGH. 11 , xo.—Then were 5 fvet F inetp, to rbounol. by pier mark. 1ut...v..u10g, Aping. ♦amrsn. leblcan. Pai.. Berm. 144•. r. Boa. brawl, . • • • Atlantic. l'Arkinwort, J. McKee. Ihthickson.3lcarewrort. Wwlwoo , ondward.rrwnwrille. Tbao Slari•tr. Walley - . Wart Newton. liurkeyet4s.W„D.an.Cllrluttlatl. • ChkfJustiee Mantual. New Utkan lionklogbarL I Tbowliwg. Arena. litanpr. Ttmannw. Mnrdoek. Wellswlll.. Cashier, 310 , 11111 m. &lamb : LI: Nll9.lkats. , ex.,. i. Ikaver.Grenl ,sx. Iketer. Atlantla. Parkkw , n, Brown.willi, J. MeTlce, n,., Mbrirwr. Sr, Newton. Redgnnin, Woodward. ItrowaliviWw. Clipper No.:, Umol. Cinr[amu. ',lint No 2. Crar,SorTflob fhtnnor SLAM. Contr. $t Louie KAunts. BOATS LEAVISII TIIIR FOR PUILAI,ELPIIIA AM) BALTIMORE. D Le,ll A Co's Pnimmger l'erto.t rd. 5 n m an p m. W.ELLSVILLE—Areco. tiltllxlElVELS—Cosbirt. ClNClNNATl—ltesfonicr. No. '2 10 lea Wet.letnur—Tbn One pect,et tame Arena. Captain Kinney. will !nu al alarm thni day, Fns mnpnrpom—Th e Feaultte packet attar emitter. Captain Me3llltirt, .111 Tenet. to above this atterntraa at 4 o'clock. IMPORTS BY RIVER. SBNIISII-1.“ Po. 2—= Wham tab II Graff *Co LO do Lerch A Co; 10 do situ it Jon.: 103 hh! flodr earl 4111. ' 14 ' ; .! tot, IV 11 Johusuon . 3an Bell I.lnnelt: .02, oar 4 .IrheAt q tlmorth t 0.0.1 n; 1(7 I.bls !lour H Bingham. CINCISNATI—Per, )1113n.yrica No . 2-4 logo cab, Wm Bingham. :I hhdo lob Watorman A. Ann: la Mx mtlon T An buck!, A CO. NO to. I 1.. hams II .p Baker A Pon ay th,• 23 bids whi,lcry 4 do an. Vrannis A Mom.: 10 do a - enhol nolionnmal..nr A Coo Birks baron J Daiarin 72 hal. lidos Nils bCromlnro2 t o ol G C r o eg o A lt ol l l . 16 h l ol n E aow ( a l r d NV , F IV r AaCn .n specie Maker A Lonylb. WIIEELING—Prit Premist-12 . htds •Insgm I'do 1 leg Smith Sinclair: 20 Shd tat Isrsch Jt Co; I pkg Supdts 253 bids Poor 42 sks wool CO: 2 tads. Minn Ithss Idlaths.. id Cm 10 its pinchrs gads. A kat* Ism blitslleur du Leif 10 himil cattle worsen. •• NEW 011.1LEANN—Pra C J kto.k•nAk.r,:• taut,sttgaz It 31 LI Ulm:lpm. 110 12 lobo loaf do It Wort, INO blots. moikk•es 1.100 It do liatukley A Co. du do Ida loaf sugar tturbrld, S Inane,: I oko 033.11 . 117.1e.ding S itabitliint; 10 kip tot. NI sett 110CE15517PORT— it 315evcr.-13 hhet• lob IT 11 k Jobir. Ann; 15 Jo 11 Le.ti• Cor, 7 to Clark 0 Thavr.7.ls , a .._ ~ 1 4 6. 21 417, ro Stownrt 0 11: dos hurkrte , SLII 1 baus s ls 5 du ask.) A C. Z t . Aroattrong 0. Croser; 6_ Lbli ~.1.11 J Pattom 400 111, tlrs awl ;„575.71 In 171 (tat boa tPenes k 1 It n. (lIILORATE POTASII-50 lbs. for solo H. A. PAH?. ESTOCK A CO. 101RISLI-10 drums fur sale by "x_.) .8.2 DILIVOIZTLI a CO. VOlt . N-500 bu. for sal!: by lJ jeL. J,LWORTII CO. B .,IIKELS--200 "; POI% DER loon krge Blaytlng. to arnrev - low by iJr2l '4) :" I.lll'SrlMlEl[7o.'4' cg A FETY FUSE-25 1)1.1, tA, arrive, for sole $r D. 21 J. a. DILWORTH 4 CO. k:FINED SUGARS-10ti b1)11. Clarificct, " !"" I " .d d ( lift= sox t tx).. f2OLDEN SYILUY—In hi. bblx. itnd ‘fi keg% from the kg.. LOW!. Itellsosp,Go by let JAMES A. HUTCHISON ACC% 111 ICE-20 tierces Carolina, for salo.by .1.2 ANKH A. HUTCHISON a IP3IP-130 bales Mi. D. H., for sale by je2 JA3rES irennzsox a CO. LEA D -1400 pi g lenn; irVA „22 iktL UslN & CO kegs ase'd Nos., for &atoll 1 ` le4 JAMES /11,TCHUON 00. UGAR AND MOLABSE&-- •hhdi. pripo ti o.Bstimm I.Vp 11111. • •• .31olsotrwit 1,7 JAMES A. HU TCHMIN CO • - - rroBACCG--103 kegs superior g ,twist, on A_ roosignmezt and tor b r Je2 • ' L. BA.. ATER3IAV tiONB. —4 • ILLOLASSES----*XO Me. prime N. 0.. (oak-)•- • • iiett- • ' fur rah, b, O. WATERMAN It 80ER WiNOSOR SOAP-50 boxes thrdo's, for attr . • bum) famizenoct e c 0.% PITTSBURGH GAZETTE INAN NEW TORS [P3irespand.uce arm. Daily Pltt.bmgh Olgiaitd.l lizw Yon:, AM. 7: Another Slave State on the horizon--Itforr an's- anon anprospert--Jerzny Limreparting Caneert— ` Catharine Hare Opera—Sfonie,—Cottore—Hon. C.. 11.'Esed—Hon. J. B. Kerr-21W r oute to The most interesting item of intelligence re ceived by the late arrival fnim.California,is that of the absconding of 6arter Master pear More hemd with the entire /inserts] of ,the Stater The general bad , vaniost4 fora destination not official ly known to Ida superioiro, taking with' Win all ==== . ammunition in his department. .This" Ocape would be infinitely amusing it it did not point to remits moat lamentably serious. All reports agree in repreienting that Morehead had asso- Maud himself with a band of desperate and law less men, and gone with them npon a forage in to Lower California. The event of this 'eater prise must bee disgraceful failure, as concerns the parties engaged in it, or the conquest and oc cupation of that province of Mexico, to lbespeedi- THE PAPAL DOlLlitilolll3. ly followed by an application for admissioa into The letter other correspOnUent at Rome, pub , the American Union, Thii would revive ; those lished yesterday , narrated certain movements'of ' furious, ,contentioae t o w hi c h t h e ...a m m o the French general, which may have very imper. ;t -or Texas and California gave rise, and which tent zonate, and which, whatever may be the. . issue, indicate a stet of thingswhich must be; , are hardly yet settled. I have great reliance 'up- painfullyhumiliatingstate the. Papal w Gor on the General Government , under its present Rome is nowessentiy, and has been ever since for the maintenance. of the put, the Pope's return, a deendency of the French lie faith_ and our national obligations toiards Republic. Pius IX, has no real power in the .. foreign countries. By the treaty of . peace with Eternal City- The attributes of sovereignty are not his; he is scarcely permitted to cover him- Mexico. we are bound W "Pew" incursions from self with their semblance, and when , General our own aide of the border, whethorwhite &then- Gemeau chooses to wear the robe.of authority... turers or Indian ifordes, and' to protect .the in- he takes it from the ahodders of the Pope with ' tegeity of her territories from such attacks.— oar saylngtro Much as— ,, lly tenni of your hod- , Unless our goverimisent interpose to defeat the Pius IX. has no subjects: the Roman t r e . o i eee p d. .l: a r e the'eubjects of the Frenolo armed object of thei. expedition, six months will not no army and no command, Oen. elapse before we shall have a. new peninerdar Genie= sends the Roman troops whithersoever State defaming for artexation. . : he will, and to show hie absolute power, not out last night Jenny 'Lind gave 'the last concert ly commands the Reiman soldiers to leave the ci aty,;dir de his n . i e n eof the earnestelidies of the Papa of her engagement with Barnum, at Castle ,Gar. , den. It was Is brilliant an well as profitable en- with French canon 4but and armed t ei l l ete ee n t s e in ane th ett 'et; ~ tertaiciment.4 suppose therewas between tielve rear, like prisoner' of - war driven forth front a or fifteen thousand &Bare in the home, and "bout 6,000 permits present.. Jenny eppenrettee greet h .Vlri li ly tir thenicture birdied from its excessive advantage, though she sang none of. her : best We ne e ed e tto e TdtVi L w te s e g eee path tl y tt wi th th feeet tbett e sen ... , . , songs; none at least of those which have chiefly Pontiff, either in his spiritual or temporal char given "her . her reputation in the United Statea otter,' yet:it is impossible to look upon the en-;' tire extinction of a greatpoWer without etriotionYet she was received with considerable enthrisi stnn and the immerse ... di. appeired per- 7 -to a le o ls a c rc i d u tty potentate mocked and insulted reettil satisfied with her Performance- The more Tit 'a finger, alml4erwitliotutbectnoll'aeblteo evend to I see and heir Jenny . Lind, the more difficult it remonstrance, against the proccediu l 7. Such ee is a is for me to appreciate the joatice of theferere the acted condition of the present Pope-fleeing which she has excited in the faahionableand mur from his own peopie, and restored to'dominiois bier them b a nenon wh h had itself ' ' deal world, - She is certainly an excellent eing- . - " rang to flee, and had repudiated the political er, but her superiority to other distinguished principle& on which. the Popo had gotrerned.— artiste whom we have had Mriong us, dries Oct Restored to his capital, sustained there on 4 by appear' to me sogreat '4,:is„,, manifest ,t e to t rar • foreign soldiers, hired to him only on the der ma so intense and prolonged a amnia dots aa she standing that hisgovernment should beret& rbe m oue .and more . liberal, he. who was ties& creates. She will now eirigon her nwiaeconnt, enough to escape = dispirit at rho loger and give her' ext concert at Philadelphia. She ing of. the storm, was now vindictive enough re owes it 'to herself to give one"or more in your vergehlosself upon those whom he had note ar city, for from all the accounts heriuddendepar- age to 'Withstand and impolitic enough to rec m indite his ostensible sovereignty uuniodifie in, tare from there last .spring was not justified by the slight irregularities by which she s;afrered- eta nines, , t°l6 -o r' - ' 2 ,.. th „ e Pi e°ee a 9 the . I t° ~ .qmsnions, oni.v to on . Teem with mese p ie herself to be so much dismayed, her flight bring- - "could not imitate his example of fleeing when e tug upon the city very serious imputations for a "-tables were 'turned against them through thes a very grav e matter. .. ' -tervention of a foreign army. ' 1 ~se Miss Catharine Hayes, the celebrated Isiah --Never, surely, did sovereign and his mist use . ~ i commit 11. , greater error. The presence of She er.iff let, is coming onwtoseceeed Jeuoy Lind 'no French army in the citadel of the Papal -donfin . the musical boand. I have no doubt from what ions' was a living, tangible, irreffnable evidelgo an I hear of her, that she is as great artist ng that the Pope and his Cardintis occupied e Jenny, though her excellence is of another kind.' Vallee', on ettllrewee entY -4 7 the permission Of a foreign armed power, adverse to the will and As 'Tenure arrival cadged the ene P em . ten. of tl 4--clesinii of the people. Having before him this Italian opera, her departure boarevived it.' A standing proof of the estrangement of his,,litte performance will be given to night. - .. This,-how= subjects, the-Pape, even without the possessitin ever; in a very sickly exotic. in New York, ina of infallible wisdom, ought to have seen the no has never flourished vigorously even for a single enei n 7 ef eentnthtter n . ned' nthe it in thne r iftt ' worthy of is, Christian mcnarelt—of which his Mown. holines ought to be an -- ' at and faultier Last week a million and a half of dollars in specie left here in• the two !Mainers for Liver: pool, - and' additional amounts .In.,.ves ,' eels. How long, the commerce of the 'country can stand a drain of eight 'millions a month :e -1 mains to be seen. California leh prolific foun tain but she never yet sent us the yellow dust at such a rite as this. There haa been a turn in the epecie current, in far that] ; for tho last week of our adrices the gold aid silver in the bank of England had increaseclA•loo,ol:lo nf tee-the amount had been decliziing !!or 111167 months. Such a result was tabors been eipect ed from the immense receipts:from Sew :Fork, and direct from California and hieffieo. '..Cotton continued to fall, but not - so fast as beferc. .It has gone down to the level of nine, 'and a half cents.. There. were three very heavy failures of cotton broken here on Friday, and =seam tot tereiag.. Fortune. ware made by the late rise, and fortunes will be lost In thtfall. lion. C. IL Reed, of Erie is - here, on rail. road business, I presume. He infoisnedme that the track is graded and ready for the superstruc ture for a railroad from Dunkirk to Erie, on the six feet gape. It will be completed in six months. From Erie to the - Ohio line Some diffi culties exist which may not be easily surmounted. Hon. James B. Kerr of Md., Charge to Nice ragns, is here and will sail on the 18th for San Juan. His route will son become a favorite one with travelers between this lac:a California, as byit nearly ten days of o diat ceasing sea voy age between the tropics ia avoldcl. The inter nal navigation of about two 'hundred and fifty miles, through the Ban Juan river and the lakm, impart an agreeable variety to the Sesrdition, which the Panama route data not possess. EMON ,NEW YORK. (Coemmedeam thaDailyPittsburgh o.eLle.] . NI,L• Yost, Julie 10, 1851. The Session of the legislature, ihich com mences to day, will not be'a tong l one, nor need it take much time to carry out the wishes of the people of the State in relation to our .public works, so recently and forciblY expressed at the ballot boxes. For onci'')ocofcconen Ens out demagogued itself, and the party that was so savagely couscientimis to to throw themselves overboard upon the question of intermit im provements, now finds itself floating uncured for In the muddy canal of ,pablie contumely. The completion of carious pudic workout the west has made the extension of the Erie canal' to its largest capacity a matter of prima necessity to New York, a fact which would require no argu ments to prove its existence. could one see the immense quantity of produce that now rearber us tie the lakes that has in. former years sought us via New Orleans. It is notorious that New ' York is now growing rich at the expense of 'New I °Kerma., And that too because of the develope. merit o, internal communication, that render I produce independent of climate in its transit to market. The enlarged canal is a commercial necessity, and it will not be' hard M . prove to the most drill democrat by the timings of the canal that his cows have' not to be driven off to pay its cost, as the runaway Senators, asserted in ef feet. . We are to have a new and very beautiful pub lic improv4 i ment in Centre street, upon the ground long occup od by the Beate Arsenal, which hes been leased to the New York arid New 'Haven Railroad for the purpose of erecting a depot. This road though built at what was thought -- op extravagant, rate, has been able to taiyand leas the moat valuable properti in the heart of Ne . f York, and at the same time 'shnw'bY Its ..i logs that with all this outlajit:le Worth a large premintu. i The new de of is to bierected Upon a scale 'that will honor the city 4314, the road, and eventually will, be the 'Easton &rare of New York. The Harlem road la steadily pushing to wards Albany, and It will. not belong era we shall. have two mutt, OemleCting Ifitil'the Hudson tie. ef;so long - thought to 'be out' of the reach of competition by steam On land. .' Another year will witness the depaitture of . ' carifrem a depot. formed on the very spot where a. few short jeare since the experimental boat of John Fitch made her first tits by steam power.'„. In 'Vfaltstreet; affairs martin unclowEedt - T The firtuness In the cotton market . at Liverpool has' given pperatbrs here temporary . ease at least and no new .failures are eamoutsiced. .All our, dry goodadealers are idle, and for the next. sixty days bit llttlianituadon will be seen. 3foney is accumulating le _ t h e street, but there le' little outlet for its use except in . emehispeculations, which are not a favorite with our mem...Uwe. lea real eaude there is`a puma:, canoed , lay the ee. .,,, nsion of some large holdeta, wheatterated top mach, It could be well for tenants coul d priceit amid as eqresent. So it bas already emu to this, that one of moderate tiseasti tenet either go into a hovel , within his law= hr a palace; the rent of ,which he atm . pay 'ogay a f t the hazard of defT 6,42 l hlt Crait'tax - - ,_ . . ... ..,.. . VOLUME LXIV-NUMBER• 258 Jenny . Lind is toTreturn to us, so rumor lute i t, free from bet engagethent with Bansum, deter mined to, sing to the, million cheap. Theeus cess of this experiment is doubtful, and she will find that humbug ahe must bare to coax the money' out of Sew:York. Barnum gees to Eu rope next week touee the World's pair, and buy some new toy for us.' The Grand /t.gatic, Cara van now travelling for him ,is a humbug'of the 'most shallow foundation, in spiteof sit elephants, and little boys and girls need not keep:theirpen nies until the show man comes, for they can get more for their money elsewhere.' In the M. E. Church case nothing new has transpired, though there are indications that the Church South has largely gained in public 'opin ion during the late trial Among the members. of other churches,. the expression is general that the northern body has, from the force ofcircum stances; for which, howerrer, they are not at all responsible, been unjust to their Southern friends in withholding the funds jointly acquired. It is round ly asserted by members of, the Church South, that the decision of the Court le an good as'made, and that, too, in favor of the plaintiffs. Should this bets, the matter ought to stop where it i; for a full bench at Washington 'would not change the result in inch a case an thitn larolr ing, as it does, that endless slarrzy dispute, which, even in religious societies, cannot, be ar• pled, nye at the expense of most of the Christian eminent and faultless illustration--should have 7ontitem back to their allegiance by the fluidness of his temporal 'away. Ordinary sagacity would hive apprised him, one would think, that vindictive cruelty and an iron rule blended with the renewed horrors of the In quisition, would ;cannily farther . estrange the people, and make him more and more dependant upon the French'army; and hi might have fore seen other remits Such as thosedepieted by our correspondent The persevering. determination to trash the people—to "teach them a lesson,". is familiar phraseologyr—taight possibly )11VI0 answered bad the Pope • by bin own might, by his own•muwess and courage, and the attributes of his own char acter and pos'ition, - recovered the pontitelal throne and subdued the insurrectionists. • Hat this was not so; nor without the continued Pres ence of the power that reinstated him darn toremain in the pessession of his restored authority. Here, then, was an additional reason forliberal and conciliatory government. The Roman peo- ple must indeed be lacking in intelligence if they did not thoroughly comprehend the actual Posi tion of affairs, and readily perceive:that the courage of Pius IX, as sovereign, vegetated Only ander the shadow of the French arioy. That army would therefore share in their 'hatred if the rule o(hie Holiness waS creel end oppres sive, and therefore sooner or later a conflict, of some kind would occur between the two only real potentates, the Raman people' and: the French army, in which he and 'llia Cardinids would be of no account-,would - be 'treated: as though they were not; would neither be Consnit ed nor regarded; would appeimizi theierial in stead of their ostensible positions-las ties. so far as they Velllpolitically'cimedderod:- To this Condition of 'things erventgaitgrepidly and 'surely tending. The Roinaff people - haw: learned that they are governed by die - Preach army and not by Pius LT, and against thastare their angry passions excited; while thegPrinch general commtuading,•consciona tharhe and not the Vatican is - master °tette:ly,- equally 'ex- - eludes the Pope and Cardinals from his ealeola tions and operations. Hence while an organized and reoggnited Roman government exism-s.while the Pope and his Cabinet are holding corincils at the Vatican, and ostensibly administerin-•aR the -. affairs of State modern Ministryfor euel:depirt tocut—General Gemeatt instructa his sroldierwto disregard the laws of the State, and setticalt:tim difficulties with- the people -by a direct - conflict; orders a bataltion of Roman soldiers to leave thy city, treats•vrith contempt the "earneet rennin,- trance of the Minister of War,.and both soldiers and people tit the expense - of_the deepest possible scorn end humiliation. to 'the ostensibigaushorities, drives vhern•unarnird for. seven miles before French carinon, althea t deign ing to appriee theth -of their destination:- 'and • then, lest the meaning, of all this should not yet be understood by the only party about wham -he cares a whit—the Roman people—he iisistee a proclamation, direct from- hfintelf, and - 'without the slightest reference,to any other ruling pOwer, containing a prohibition effecting cue ,of - the • commonest social and municipal rightg of the people. To this point matters have come.- The power. - before which mighty thrones and teeming mittens have once trembled and bowed dawn is most de cidedly in abeyance. - ThcPope holds Alt offei ronuniarion; and is made to feel it and .0 confess it before the world; and that commission is con ferred by art-publican government-- The agent of the power, that placed it in commission has thrown „aside sill disguise, and virtually' made— public proclamation thAt the Pope's power 'and authority tan at any time be'sfet asidgattd setat naught,-by the • general who happens to benons mending the French". troops in Rome! And yet • this very Pope by ,commission, who .in Rome submits, bressoag - ho mumot help hittmelf,, to be treated as a cypher by the French general, is snaking magnificent,pretensions to authority and- - power eta distance from home. Of course - Vim dispute in the Eternal City.cannot restwbere it is,.unliss, as a pretended sovereign power, the Pontificate is content to be the most contempti ble of all contemptibleipettyaorereigaties.--,Y. r 02a SUGAR-1 0 0 bbls. /we'd , - • 6 _..61(3TA1P 147 First, Ara • • UGAR--liltibds. Clarified, for sale by t 7 m z . arNmz,f, `AI.EftATUS SO for ea! by y m,27 ENCALIIIII HMO.= iaIIOULLERS--L•"casks forasals by mr.l7. . ENOLIM ZNNETt N ------------- -lITS-20bti.Chestn tag ; far sale by _— my= • .fg itiziNerr. SUOAR--180 hbuia N. 0. Sugar for sal° by JA.IIES DALULL. QODA ASR-20 make Kurt .brand, fai woe by aye a a W.11.411.11AC011. - - I I :1141EP VlT—Peaches; Pluxis; .d.br • suctoill Y 4!" l ! 4 121.11.5 Omen üba Ta nsakra. 11:1131P—M bales 3lissonri, Oncoaligemeixt. and tor ok/a Dr • mylr. NO Front V OTTON-2.5 balesA (EIFI Batting) for sale b .+t,,14M,:,