}' I'i"l'~l3U GH GAZETTE. CC • 1.11411 ED DT WCITX .2, CO 'll - ins i ie.ltril , P,T.VTG .I.I,4TEffIriLLIIE FoinVii ON EACH PAGE O.P.THIS PAPER. - -Ti.torica4 or oirDGES —We fear the imui' enoe - responsibility devolved upon -the people. by the Isle ameodinent of the constitution,. is net pro ,. .. • ,I•iity. realized. -"It is a very different matter to choose thelmembers of •a Supreme Bench, from . vhdse dsciltiOns respecting the property and so- 1 _ 1 - ri;3l,;profoit., - and' civil liberty of every citizen, i., Obr 7 o 34 laPPeal , than It is. to civets Clerk of the Courtorabigh Sheriff. The month:du ,erzue. cf the Bench is nisei immense,'' . as to people:c a n .. ‘. 'long ' Mairin it high otandard of moral. and lonorsble feeling while the seats of juStlee tire corrupt. The Courts are the safe guards of the people from Oppression, fraud, 'and legal rabbi). ty. -De r'jhe confidence of the citizen in t ile* , um irealetweettmon and man, and You '..d2stroy h s patriotism, .his confidence in the in ....ititutiOns of his country, and render hint ready T ~..„ far any: change which may offer. . .. ' -The pdoplo o f . l'etinsylvonisi hare decided to . bike - fearful responsibility - of selecting their ,ludges i I tO their on:ihande. : Many goOd and ri t e .. _...patirio c ' n have lOoked upon th is change with ~, ' . .,.regrei, a d watch the approach of th e first trial :with . . hiiich depends - giant starting tight. ,litho perlti '. mulcted in selicillig a good Bench ......- at' thet4eguttung, the' prObabilities are Strongly in'fa:Vor .fcoatinuing so worthy an exempla— . _ The electtorus-to take place iii October, then, will , at iniportant of any for the future, and cre behooves the 'people to weigh those ttili.'es well. • tVIto it theitfCl rhige have presented a ticket for 4e:raga:met which not one 'word has an be said: Every - man on it is a gen ' fine mind, profound legal attainment!; reproachable private and - public char ' , an tot much be said of the ticket of tie t-Candidates on that ticket have been promo beta or Coto= o l awl of i neter. Democ r crde Of t kitow Justly h altroo: issailed by,memhees of their Owl party. iem hal been pronounced by those who a I Patt ' grossly incompetent; another has his usefulness,. and 'nearly his former gh reputation. To 'get rid of him wee _ inducement with hundreds to vote for the nm i s iidment of the.nonititution. Indeed, It is donb ul whether the constitution would have hem: tered at this time, but for the desire to reform do Supreme Binelo. , . stun we then, by carelecanese.and indifference,' permit the evil to tm'atill!longer fastened upon tig We leave the voters,' eery single one of whom is 'personn/ly interested, to answer the question - to their own' eansciences. -: . k • . . Cni.!BtOszt's raopOts. Ltlncit lzmuirrescs ,Ztl;.--ilti'notioplig Cot Bigler's reposed safety fund scheme yesterday, we. only offered a few brief comments upon one of the minor proviairms of the hill, leaving its main fesiirta, embraced, in the ',first and encond*sectiotul, to another time. WO navy propmse to examine the provisions of the' second Eection in their practical operations, had that tall become a law. 'We rdrall take the cue 'or a farmer. We will rup 4 pope that tbraughinduatry and good manage-, meet' has become . proprieto . r of a farm, and that that form, though the continued exertion of biolwell•directed industry, hue becomemt the clear iraluo of two thousand dollars, or upwards. Such at form as this in Pennsylvtinia will afford to an 'etillstriocts and frugal family cotatortiable euppo I, put not' ucb more. Now we will inp tic, pose t at the owner is. the head of a family, as react good and honest men are, and that this family, is yet dependent upon the strength and lahor of - the father,' This supposed case Ls 07111 Ell i , C3' among the rural population of „die State hst it is the rule and not the exception. Thi .., seen, in the midst of his labors and use tutor. , is struck down in his strength , and laid on a lled of languishing. The test skill *bleb ...., the tatlighborbood affords is employed, remsrdleso .yr expense, to preserve biotite; but Moan. He diet. Illio,property remains in the hands of his aMictoi family, Who straggle . on, as beet they can, without him.. ~ . -, .. .. . le his supposed ease we bate not drain in ~ ~. soy peculiar or aggravating -circumstances, but ' it3TII .!itaplY depicted the ordinary features ot tilts% gictive dispensation which sooner or later, =setae/all erwalialaselaslat Yet at this eccize of dark:near and tiial,when the , ~ .."• • Pr'777 -7 ..kir0 61 0h. happily wan Itrattg-- I . in 'to birth) Wu al& hate 'come in to demand - oltld4widow and her orphan children its one pet cent. (antotmling in thie . s . upposed cue to treatydollars or over) in :Addition to ail'other to 5I t '''e: all oat tai Colonel Bigler with cruelty . or liardheartedacns. . .Tee,.think this ii- not his ‘ cliaracter;. but, on. the eother - hand, we believe that if e could have “perceiver the .ebearing" Obis wereeherot, he would have shrunk from . it with' horror. No, we shall permit him to tscape[undei the cover of mental weakens', of that ttuck•headedne'ss; which incapacitates him for lartstigation. - - So much for the provisions of the second sec, lion pt ( that that famous bill. ' The unconstitutional and u est features of the first section may forth • the rOb , ject of another orticle. • la the Allem 'time:he itsk the peopleshether they iniend ; sUnpor a man for Governor who;: if they cannot , allowllta the plea of, imbecility, .has rendered I rbiorsof oinfoxions to the charge of cruelty in its Worst form, in attempting te impose a heavy tax aeon widows and arphank at thevrey moment when e ery good man would desire to relieve tfitm if ' , ossible, of every burden. . . . .: -171.3=02.E, AND ITS CLUE: era are aware that there exists at panto and pressure in Neer York. In the fel owing article of extnordiriary force and clear:tele, the trio cause ie.pointid oat,' as well .'., es t c remedy. - - ' I i s - nttetly vain to expect ri return of pros: p trander the policy now prevailing; and It is a ' e - rain to hope tuf 'a cbringe of Paltal'ao lo g as the , 'ecotone party retain the legialsrilve r w4 . :1 - 7f the " U atri .' ". : ' : it We are purchasingtoo`tintelrfrotn foreigners, a . selling too little in return; .. ,Ilie balance of t trll - : against us: to an enormous amount. Thi is loftily caused/by low ad saforem duties on e imports. MTh WO great departments of oar national irides ry, the agricultural and mechanical, are .bith eranged bY the present policy ;if the 'gov ;r ~ . . crime ' x While the [trials overcroided and overthene—more being produced toeh-rean be . profitably cold—the other: is greed* depressed by Wet competition - of foreigners. .. . 3letiWlre irould be manufacturers if they could, and, iit ; cat ii , e,contomera to the farmer ; are caape ka to cultivate the volt; and thus putout of being the farmer's cuitomera, are' his corn , Experience has heretofore taught us, and in now.t4aching no; the folly of attempting-to be . come huost exclusively an sgricultrtral - people,,: mid o eseklug a foreign marliet for our aurplun pixie('••. gar farmers cannot compete with ' thane f Etruria; 'Poland, am) Proasis, In the i i., great arkets of Europe; ,itfrillown,Aerefore, that they are more intereallitot than' any other cinSit of bur people in susi.ntaining a borne market; - and ib ep can easily perceive that a home market can crilk be maintained by protecting American hulastrY, ugainit foreign craripetition. . ' • . And . the farmers know that • this policy, is earnestlY and 'steadily contended for by the Whig pUty; and that theopposit4.rir free trade policy yluseclopted and is yet aontained by the ' locefocoparty. ' , - . - ' . They know„ too, that nothing but the votes of the people can change this policy; and that the Men 'Whi. 4oten for the candidates of that party Luc* s l ight to Complain of hard times, scarcity' ,of .mop . low prices. for agrieultuntl products, of his i hilitY to sell at i 11....: - ' ....... . If _he will reflect a mement'he will recut:feet that in • instance have ; pried; of dour, inoti grain h en very low while we had ai protho' thy - !aria', and iti tiolnetance bare prices _tenni high It/le:parked of. the Zilch famine,eseepted) While” tho country was under a low tariff. • faraihre, if these thingiuresce—strul yen well an it , do that they it* ISllll.af of politicions ought you to bit Is It ar of duty to 'appal that policy which int promote your own and your neigthree, in.' lauds? Or is it better to heng on ta that tietA descript, ever changing pony* l 44...cella-itseit diaieratie, even' though by so doing you an sostaioltig the overgrown capitalists of Binning , barn, lads, fitanchesder and Sheffield agairat your.awn conotrymeit 1 - 'ls this'she thing you calldemoereo7f It mutt be,: for it is tbe cooly thing gisifig that name, in. PeansYlvania. Do you , If you &lit go ahead, defeat Johnston, send loccdoccu(-to the Lev' latme, and yen wil' perpetuate your favorite policy indell aitely. This election will tell poweffully upon this question. The elnetice of Colonel Ifigleri will be understood u the emphatic 'declaration of Terinsylventa io Savor et that pellet which has extinguished her thrisea; shut up; her work shops. arrested the march of improvement, crialted down' the prime ef.'egrieulteril pro &tete foone bait what they ought to be, and in oddities to all Ws, has enabled the English mann facterere to Issas their weakly bulletins,. stating that the state of trade is ..very satisfactory." To this last we have no objection, prodded it were not at our expense. 'Yes, his election will be a glorious . triumph to free trade. But, it is pbjected, CoL Bigler is ,s Democrat, =dam Johnston is not. Well, asthat objection opens p field of contemn' , 1114, led= refloll, truth, common smuts or rational argument can not enter, lie decline amcirening !t. Ton moil overcome it if you 'can, or yield to it if you We have anitE motet by may of introdaction than we Intended. • Here Ii the article 0t which we 'Take. Read it, and It Toter democratie To the Editor of the Tribune: ,-Tho pressure in out money market now ra ging, is just what, every man, sound In Wavle's of eeottamy. pruliated 'when the tarter Law of 180 was matted.- But for the famine In 'Europe in 1846, 1847 and pat of 1848, this pressure would. have reachetttm long before now: It has come now Mouse we buy more than-we sell; because we bring here en enormous amount of foreign goodswbich we oughtton manufacture ourselves, and Which' must be paid fork stocks I - or adn. . atooks are all sent to Europe or held by foreign capitalisti. Our canals 'and ridroads earn money which is sent 'off, In the shops •of dividends, to pay interest on out debts. • The amount of dry goods endsilksimportediato this country last year, sa shown by the bounty re ports, exceeded 84„000,000, besides, railroad iron, bar irony, orookenr,ware, iron-wire, bran. dies and angers, amounting to more than $60, - - 000,000, in addition to the dry goods. By !decocts to the returns of specie contain- ed in the banks of New York, London and Paris in 1848, we find that New, York possessed In round numbers, $7.900,000: London, $78,148,. 000; Peri 5,547,589,000; whilein 1850,New York possessed $lO, 800,000;* London, $53,751,000; Paris, 5n1,038000. We here see that the specie has increased on ly $2,910,000 in New York, while in Paris _lt has increased our $66,009.000 in two Yaw. The plain truth is, all one gold which we have got from California hug ate to pay ,fbr goods imported, which we aught to hen Made lunar Wespent $150,000,000 first and last ix the Mexican war, to require New Mexico and Cali fonds; We have carried-intO the harbor of San Francisco $600.000,000 of property. We have sacrificed 60,000 lines in California. We bare post the and labor of 800,000raen for three yams in California, and ourOcily reccarpense for all this, we here received about SO to 90 millions lof - gold from the Pacific coast And this has mrstly gone to France under our blessedsystinit of ad valorem duties; made upon a foreign vein al= 'A man In Paris makes brandy to sell:— Ile eau mike It for 50 cents a 'gallon—he will ewe= that this is themsrlet price. The brandy pays a duty of 100 per cent- ad valorem; hence his brandy can be sold in New fork at $1 per Igall., freight added: This manufacturer now opens a store "or counting-room in New Tork,and crib Ids bran, I dy, and receives orders for it at one -.dollar per gallon. The Americo.' importer *ender° Paris for hie brandy; he is now charged GOcents a galfon for the same article which the French manufacturer invoke!. at 50 Dents per gallon. Duties arenow paid by the American importer, GO cents a gel ion, MY per cent In ether words, by the tariff law s of '1646,7the American iinporter finds that his brandyhas cost him, laid down ballew York, $1 20per gallon, besides freight' and commis. sins, while the Frenchman sells his brand,y, by the some tariff law of 1846, at ono dollar per gal- Who dots business under such • lliw as air ? The Frenchman or the6merican? Them are the blessings'of free trade. All 'of our importing business is thrown [Moths hands of the foreigner; ell oar money. slides off to France, add in the mean time moneriseii*-46. mandiaz.rsesos!! 'Per cent. the best 6. import Let the Mattawan Company assign to pay its laborers, let our cotton feetmier break; let our iron mines stop; let the fernues go out let one woolen mills cease to do bushman let our stocks fall off; let as run in deft let as appoint Com mittats by teba, and tiftiesfed toY hundred,, to preserve the Union, last some wild Yankee should break 14 let us guile before the powers that re pedid, our TarifkLaw of 1842; let as dam, God sue the Union! according to the Castle. Gordon qatem; let, as, read homilies from 17Le Journal of Comourre on Tire Trade, on the Blessings of Blarery, as a struttrre of Republicanism. But it is no matter :whether our flour setts far.= or 87 per barrel; whether Ti buy Udell as much oz we sell; whether -omr etocka are owned. in Amain or Emopm whether Bankruptcy is nal sued in our, country or - A man of common ISOM will tell us, - thst the remedy for the diftenities which now beset as is to restore our Tariff to home vibration; to give us epftitio duties on our imports; to set our artinuis and Mechanics and.zmanufuotarere In operation; to sell our manufactured goals abroad, and to supply our own.marketa with the Products of oar own labor; to carry away our cotton,lleather, lean, and wooden goods to for eign.conntriea, after they are made up into fab rics by our own people, instead of exporting the raw material.. Let as no longer carryon a ruin bums trade with France, at the toneof $7- 4 ,000,- 000 to $80,000,000n year for imports, while we sell that nation no mare Van from $6,000,000 to 513.000,400 a year exporte . Let us stop buying sugar front until and Co- be, while we have hundreds of millions of acres of land - in Florida, Alabama, bflasiesippi and Texas, waiting far cultivation with sugar. ' 'Let on eat our own wheat and door in the iron miner, copper mines, and coal mines of the ff. States, instead of sending them to Sweden, WM" via, Siberia and Staffshirs, to feed foreign &borers and workmen. ,Let Georgia, Tennessee,Ohlo pmdNew England. raise and manufacture our ilk goals, instead FranieTElpain and Italy. 'Let di hear no more about the Humbug of przameing - the Union, irhich• . .praereation means Free: Ttado-41doh'preserratiost *Means; bay emything Auld sell nothing. . -P . HANIILIN . • , , , Itetrerer. Cucciamos.—The city authorities of Boehm, propose to celebrate by a festival at Patient' Hall, and other eppropriate ceremonies, ~ t he toil amplellon of the great lines of rail coy, uniting the tide *Mrs at Boston with the - Siena and the gust West, also the establish. 'mat of-America lines of steamers, between Boston and Liverpool." In making this annorce mat, the . Mayor of Boston lays: "There are now completed and In operation, in kLunchusetta alone, about 1200 miles of rail way ; and in New England 2400 miles. Bison. chnsetts alone, has expended-in the completion of -thue roada, the- enormous amount of , BM,. 000,000; and it appeals ham the report of the eeveral railroad corporations in this State, made :to the loot Legislature,. that these were trans. ported,onn the Ilestschnsetts roads alone, dor 'the -year 1860, 9,600,000 mangers, and 2,61)0,0W tons of freight.. But this Is not all 76e lines connecting na with the das, northern NeW York , the great lakes, end far. West, are now completed, uniting ashy rail, road and steam navigation with thlecinin Enna Of the Anion, comprising an area of 428,706' Naze miles; the two Canada, the laket, with their 5,000 miles of coast : ad bringing within our couunerclal sphere a population of 10, mil lions of inhabltanta.• .'drod if we look Pa -a me , went at the kindness of the Lakes and the Esn. a las, and °beau - its rapid . early increase, se shall be still more Itis (stint tad that the imports and exports of the Lake ''.harbors., emend,* of the Canada, daring the present year, will be 200 Millions of doll n.— : The anus' increase of t this Manua Is found to !_to 17} per ant.. thus doubling .Itself In le n I than yawls *Mitten to this, the importer I tad experts of the Canada' will amount, during ' the present year, to millions of , dollen." I It is,proposed Mani* , to be *sat, the Gov ernor General of, Canada,lds aids and alined, the . leading members of the Canadian Pulls, ment,- the Serpa - Oat of iiiimurial, the 'ending nietatanti In all the Canadian sittl4andOgdena . burgh, the President :if th e Col States and Ids cabinet ; Cie Gannon of; the Sifew-Engisaid Stites, the,gresidinte of all the'Bufirsjelitllii Eng4dd,'the Mayor. or ilia citl,s of New land, and others Interested In railway mid** teriPlitm." I " :11.430 . riiiscw - ovi.—On Monday sad Thuntlay of last week elections for lteprusenta tiresinConreas were held inner= of the Wade ern and Southern States, entitled Mille spire, sm o te to fifty members, Mu Senttle4 10, IMES:Mt 10, Tennyson 11,1mtkearouna 9, Alabama 1, Aaiun . ; 1, and Texas 2.'la &line of these States. flier' e wire ILO elected iteinheri of their ramective legialedire and State officers. The telegraphic bulletins, however, haring confined their information mainly to the Congressimud =TIM we giro the 117110/!11 as thus reported ar Dist I—Linn Boyd. Dem." • ' 2—Benjamin IL Gray, Whig. 2.—Presley Ewing, Whig. 4—Wm. T. Woods, Whig. 6—Jamest W. Stone, Dem. 6—AddLson White, Whig. 7—Humprhey Marsh 4 :Vibill.t B—J. C. Breckenridge, - Whig. 9—John C. Mason, Whig. . 10—Riohard H. Staunton, Dern. ALADAWA. • Diet I State Rights. 2.—James Abereremble, Union.. B.—Wm. 8. Mudd. Union. • :4—Wm. B. Smith,. Union. • 6-George. R. Houston, Union. • B. W. Cobb, Union. ' 7—Alexander White, Union. The Montgomery, (Alabama) Journal, of the 6th Instant, as we learn by. telegraph. confirms the report that the Union, ticket for Congresi in Alabama has carried every thing- before: it - 'throughout the State The only district they have lost is the fait, in.uhlohtharlee C. /. 46 8 . don, editor of the Mobile / Advertiser. has been beaten by John . Bragg. Tc the Legislature, Union men have_been fleeted From almost every county in the State. ; • sorts cumuli. • The Union ticket for Congress is generally suncessful. In the-eighth district, -Stanley, (Whig,) is probably defeated. Dist 1-4. Dellueler, Whig. 2—Cyrus 1.. Dunham. . ' ; S—John L. Bobineon„ Dem. . 4... Samuel W. Parker, Whig. 6—Tbomus A. Hendricks, Dem. 6—Willii A. Gorman, Dem. 7—John G. Davis. Dem. Id.=—Dacilel Mace. Dem: o—Graham N.litob, Dem. 10—James W. Borden, Dem. , I TRUTT wry! Posavoaa.—The New Yerk Journal of CCMUIIC9O has letters from Lisbon of 18th Jolt', from *deb welearn, that Sir. li ed. dock, our Clump to Portugal, has prised the air:Wore of that Government to the pew truly, -and has transmitted it,to Washington. The ru mor mentioruid in the Englislypepare that the itr• biter (Louis Napoleon) on the natation of dim, ages for the destruction of the privateer Gin Armstrong had already decided against the AMeriean claim, and in favor of Portugal, was was without foundation.. Esromao Mum:mt.—TheSanwa& Gearieut3 gins lb* following alit of a letter. dated Toomsboio. 'Mahn= county. Aug. On Tuesday lad a negro mum, belonging to Mr. -Haney Kiel, raiding In this county, viola ted rho persons of. ands ut:mania murdered hie mistress and her sister; Min Mason, whilst they titers washing at is spring near the hone. Bottom stole a horse and attempted to escape, but was so closely pursued by some of Mr. meg neigh bors, that he had to leave the horse and tats to, the riser swamp. Several citizens of the county turned out to search for the murderer, and sue ended is arresting him at 11 o'clock on Toes* eight. They then tied him to stake and horned him death. . Weal?! GT Broceneumms—ilow it Works— It is stated In the money article of the New York Tribune that Oa Bank Department at Albany had received nodes from the following banks that theiraffairs will be elated, and circulation with drawn so speedily as possible: H Adams Bank, Ashford; American Bank, Map ail* Champlain Beek. Ellenburgh; Cortland Co. ,Bank, trinchinstss; Knickerbocker Bank, The tiroulaiion and capital of these tanks is stated in the Cotopttoilar'e repti of test Decem ber, thus: Capital. Circalation. $l6B $64,744 /00 70,493 Adams Dank, American Bank, Champlain Bank, 6,000 120,880 Cart Linden. Bank, ACCIO I=ooo Kukla:evoker bank, " 12,496 147,468 :iris ouly etch banks am these, whose drools, licaa is about fourteen times as lams u their cap ital, that ma liable to be stetted by restrictive Isms protecting their note bolder". i Asomnmaraii.- 7 A few del dna' Inqad). ematidsdoptlon of this Inettatiom •W• -amfeas tremees somewhat Ineredaloas about themtbeiag a gui which could iestanbuteemskequateh a Mune and yet be inhaled by the Inman lama in Want. ty; bat this mstMeseems to beset completely at rat by the following extracts which we wake trout London papas • ••• • The London Tnnes in domains an exhibition or demonmastion of the pram:loll nosed this invention, by setting fire to n house and Irma lately extingtdshing it 'with this machine. he The ieetesee inatimea the cam of the Unit is endive' which took plane same years aincela the Mecilterranian,when an ialandwaa thrown up from a depth of 80 fathoms. The dames reach ed a height of three miles, but as man as a va por rose, the flames were extinguished on allthe points when It was seen; and, having witnessed this fact, his attention was drawn tome closely to the ridden. The vapor with which he extin guished a bintdeg masa wain powerfal,thatoren tit- Pears Cathedral In dames in the interior, he could Inflate it in two or three minutes, itrequi red. The vapor witepartectly intuitions and tended to purify the air sod under Ito shield s man child approach dm: to any leans, and ex tinguish the fire. It drew out all noxious guts and In the nee of foul draba,ifthent were a sect given, it wouldpurify. themlaunedlately. !sau nter to quad= put by a lady, Mr. Philips laid thit the materials • would Let. any . The partible Fire Annihilates Is limb she than I en upright coal Mottle, (eixtean inches In highs by eight inches In diameter.) . We copy the following from the London Morn ing Poet The gaseous vapor emitted, although anti combustive, is the oontraryL to the anti•respira. toty.. -it renders the, suffocating exhalation of Ere tolerable in the no midst of It, and Is so refreshing as to enable the bearer of the wahine to earl Riot° the midis of the Ere. It Is unquestionably the most,valuable lust*. mint furnished by Medina science and modern Ineentlon; no vittied, no-Uublio or private nub. I:aliment should be without it. It Is certainly the thespeatland most desirable method of in suring both life and property...„-., TheLottdon Standard sly': It wu utonishing to see with what we the firemen, protected by the vapor emitted from the eylinder, could deliberately and with Impunity walk Into the middle of a Gre,whose heat caused distant spectators to recoil, and mooed in pour ing the vapor into the Interior of the. building. This combination is by no means injurious to animal life—quite the contrary, although It Is indomitably antleomboatlve. . The flame of gee or of such - combustible substances or tinkle as cannot-be overcome (except by immenion) by mewl of water, era inlitediathly extinguished by it The followineremarlurvidah are perfectly coo *Galva on We point, are from the London Ob server; If the remits produced unbounded eariatii, lion and utoolatment, the ., ImPlan*non of the nature and construction of the Annihilag,r gave almost equal delight; the 11131:101:150 power- of three or four pounds of charooal,With two pounds of nitre and two &made of plaster or gypsum; when converted from a wild to a galleons state, And combined with's; quart of srster. appeared to reelitithe extreme of scientific calculations; while the eheamieso of the charge, its preserve,' tionlor lean in perfect readiness, 'the ficiUry of oPereling by a smart touch on • button, end' the innoxiorm nature of the vapor ' ha which Lord' Dudley Stewart . and two or 'three other - gentle-. men Immersed their feces without inconienience were cotteidersd the crowning practical merits of the invention; the- only disappointment, ea peciaßy among thiladia, was, that. Otis pro. team are not ready for purchasers. The London Bun fully settles part of the questicm u follows:. _ One thing, and a most Important thing It le, is, that the vapoi tete} , bestateijinhaled without misrmo, or the joist ill.etreete, which the Wren torpoweld to a demonstration trr . plaeiug the bote to his mouth, and Imblbing wtost, appeared to us a most tmeavorp draught, The Lottinilla Jonnui says that efforts hare been made in that city to pc:exude .Scits, tome of them ,at more am entree yew old; tread in an expedition against Cu* ender premiers that they would be provided witherery thleg oc ean:oy for their comfort, sad en their arrival re- - . ;Theigithwi , Swedish , 'scairteess, Joan? Lied. eft New Yorkan Friday morning la the douses Reindear tar ' Alblia7, intending to pass some time the interior of she State. ''Tmeltzw... Miran, Borioe.— . .A fell description of the . American lime, recently opened briarie Rimy the iroprienr; llfts pub -I•4eyt 3h.,tiostimi t Jilarnal and Tranec . The iciliriting iceount it` eendenied . from • :The American Reuse is one of the Finest Cr. : chiteatenah ornaments of the City, presaating • beautiful front, of the Italian style. The main building is 112 feet front cuinanoreretreet. with two wing) of sixistories, 250 feet deep to Sneezy inner, haling a passage between them of 20 feet In width; the areas bologna disposed as to adroit ample light and is from all sides, the whole coming :7,000 feet of land, erected and finished st a cost.of about $300,000. It has 340 rooms, and wilt 600 persons. • The Lain' and Gentlemen's Parkes occupy the whole fronton.the first floor, appr& Lc" bed by wide ham, with ample receleing rooms: A hal, cony extends along tie eniire front, the entrance to which le from the oriole windows In thepee lers, It;contains a suit of splendid DAV Rooms, very chastely decorated and richly far dished, ►tieep at which {says :the Transcript) might poesibly annihilate - the stoicism of the most incorrigible bachelor. _ The MAIM Entrance Hall or Gentlemen's Eltoluutito,` ,o , n the street =Mode through - the clattre,iof the building, and measures 160 feet in length 30 in width. • Besides five main stairways leading to the up• per Itoor,Abere are several other filgfits in vari ous parts of the .American House, so that in the ease of fife, or for any other wise, ample mesas of egretutltre provided. The Intmense structure has been built upon • unique 'plan combining the utmost convenience of arrangement with groat elegance and thor oughness of finish, and the introduction of all the desired modern Improvements, and it impro bably the best calculsted In all its appointments fora large busineu howl* of airy is thocounU7. A number of ear best mechanics and far - Maher* bare contributed their skill and taste to the no• his pile, which of itself sufficiently speaks their praise, as seldom is there found in a single build ao much of gamut perfection. STASI MUTUAL INSIMANCI would refer our readmit:to them:do( Mr. Platt, In another column, from which It will be seen that tile loss by the meat fire has been prompt. ly and satisfactorily adjusted by the State Mu , tual'Fireltsturance Company. Thisounong the many instanoes of promptness and liberality that have been manifested by tide CoMpany, in the payment of losses, is the more particularly hoe.. melds es Mr. Putt, by neglecting to procure an assignment of his partner's- interest, who had left the farm, in accordance with the conditions of inemmnce, evidently had no claim for over. one half the 1113131 covered by the policy. This Wititution richly deserres the extensive patron age which it is receiving: and so long as the same regazdfor the pecuniary situation of-suf fer= by fire - Is manifested by the officers gen erally as be. been evinced by- Ur. Carrier in this instance. it must continue to be appreciated by the public.. Mr. Dobbs, a gentleman who possesses a thorough Imowiedgs of the buboes, we understand, is employed to make surreys in this dy end eitinity.—Journal. Tax Beet IT TIMIRDS.AT NZWAIIL —The flirt ItijaGarrity, who killed her sedum., Ed reißunn, at Newark, a day or two duce, volontartly returned to that place on Wednesday night, end gaye herself up to the °Scent of jus tice. It appears that ebe tied to . Brooklyn the night of the murder, where she concealed her salt The current of public fooling seams to be setting in her favor. The appearance of the prisoner, we suslorstand, is quite prepossessing. Bhe is about 19 years old; her dress was careless, and her thee ind demeanor gate evidence of her Laving been the victim of almost unavoidable phrontsy.—..%: Y. Cour. • _ The Ann cargo of new ((flew Sort Statej ►heatartieed at Albany on Fridaylast, and sold at 10Oe. Thi first cargo of new wheat which ar rived last year sold at 180 e • Foreign and Amerman Hardware. LOGAN, WILSON & CO., No. 129 Wood Street, LUND NOW IN EMU • taU aseloampleattoelid 10/LEIGN .4:40411.1L110.11, HARDWARE, th• Oda; tredeocod rWeb tlarr aro prsperid to *Far to groxeluren a/ Pun dal will maps:. fanead, With.AT f flu ...um dd.*. . _ _ Peiialit= I lionnows% IlasibsyWo os..6.;Slageb Kure—Dew fir. Tow Pawl.= Is wasting wa 4sss ld IbLitielatty;lbusiw. •a 1.411144 U nu bawd tae &we by the Yslassrylraub. lisitscs4. Ws We es Wyly wt sot ft Is Wag IsKisleld kr Wood onry day. • Team rwa•rttully. JOAN warp N. . ammo., Aotglood 00.,..0-11orob 10.61. 1.11. Kmo—ifoor Six, Tow Afroar. c a lbw roam 'do.. loft ofitit ea tsar dons Root Oft .bleb .. bon, 5511. Plan 'brooked to sills doom immodlotoly. Tom molklas is mooting from:tonls and. nem._ lie two Waist .twat mance. torttliesti*.ft Tor desire LW . „ yam; W. VI. SCOTT. Tor ofl4l by /bT mar 1 140 ifiod moon II: datra. IT Wood street fA. Tabses6xt.l Co, ammo, Wool moi toootatfoot4.lO. X. Cony. D. A:, gthon..lcomb Doossfoso.oad r.leturorta..a.iiiiits. t 7 flo_Lor . grystatfemetly of the age seems 100 the totibectott ofedkiso egad If. 0. Farrell, jot 4 an Lholsofort. Itti mod sras eatornal *WWI.. audio mall to pool ow root sonollorfal qtalltioo for hoallosolo.fot• log Wu. roomful' poldal Mot* &a:. A Mood tido moot Immo hoar, foldeb atroafrood pOitifkoktkoo L. bad and Word rol000dfo• Jo so Idol; lobos be woo oototoorto try U. O. Ifsefotli Alablao Liolameld. Imo bottle of which ou- Only oorfOl Ala. We infoo flo doubt. tom Ow ostoot of IM NM. Voi se this oxcenoot foodlefoock..l4 bare bed • miaow Wu of ft. 0.. folgootiommot. ...IyZi Flig" - TBUTIL MATS ABOVE FICTION LIKE OIL .1 1 / 1 0Y2 WATOXLTbe skit man au hall goal Matineabg MIME Mae eakkamaihr. on mil mural Mame by rialu it UM Uam mu trim It. and Ws It Panr. it sm the pototimity with the whole rift Yea Met inimainci• mild= lota math, am a.b.a It lemassne maalystanutial Mater. Ike Doman bed teams of valid dangles; sad it Is this hat that has estabilabad tim repatation et "Sant Oomptanai Paid gotrset Ulu saparills." bmoad ali cavil a damn. Str action apes %a hum ernek bin anomiemn ebb Mkt& end phi. lemialakal magyar th• tanks annum ad maniatti of Ih. WO. lagamm obetmetions, embus mamba! lad Maud mita, stammilartm lb. numb sad WOW.* Moak ornam nem pum a mad healthy himiLang roglialas tha nem lianetiorm of the Mina= emus at thea body. This to all prthrtroa oltimirt tie dahrot dbum. the Petaratkat bnu a. aalh es it Is elikultom. It may bethought by the nutial, that it PelPirli to rats ho way Mums. bet atom runner .tlak it sill be ibud emi t • lake netiesity at the Maw.- if which Mkt lb. lamas family originate in in Impure aka. of the blot.. D• not Oseeimd, them by other em. ,sapartlim betas AMU 1W bt "tey Wks* amalgam and aster "ormanalme as a iratatityk Oat the - original Jobs Drags dimaniiritlar Thin makable yommat k a the ~Am umiak to in napalm to *Mu Cagruir—brarate and ask ihr the original Dr.• /Ma Dbas thouperilta/rma iskinota—au hare noothat. sakartiaroma on madam omm. KBTM=Da U OW Lb 140 Wood M. jelOalharksT Wholanne s listsli masts. jelf. ie 1 V ' Pt:a.m.—No Inadidilll) ever earned for Welt • bfgher mutation In eo .hart • tin., ae has the Leer Pill. around and eampowneted b 7 Dt. La Leneolf Thera. • Although boo • short time 01.03,113* Healy Wore lb. WAIN tt bat already woad tor Ithelf degree of popularity hitherto areurpamcd. Stue demand fir theta has become Immense. %ma. BM t Co., the Sreinteteow of the medicine, who reside In Ptheborgb, toner of north end Wood streets, am matzo tly retwiri • ordeal ablate they And It about utterly imporible to map. Ply. 'Us popoluity at them Pine Is not conlined to any particular section of the exmotry, the demand being erne, end, loom the North, South, Ent and Welt Ile troth ge doom le came common la all smarter, et the Unapt teatet , then Chet a the Liter. dad them Alb are the but temedy scar yet ditoonted fw Uthatle derangement. Mot M. by . J. KIDD A CO. atteirdeithlt.9 No. 8. Mott Pituborgh Litee /anima Company. CAPITAL, $lOO,OOO. . • OFFICE, 'NO. 75 l'onra snasr. OtYPCIERS. • Prukha—Jan.l3, Y 4 Pm:dna—Amu= rienterThammar—Jesum r-11. a..oouna„ adranlonseet la =alb., pad lblo mar. Citizen's Insurance Uompany of Pittsburgh No. F I AICOURAGE • INSTITUTIONS OINcAo. 41 Water suit, in tb•wsrebons• DAC. U. 1 . . Minn, Proklsol. .. .A. Atilt/ Beer. thelbsetinny ham preinaci to limn all nUtellan4lse In otom and in Insult% mui4A, as. . • An ample summit) Aetna nAllitr and Intigrlty or the lcuLllnUon Is ;Road In the ebsructAr Know% rho sicitiieun cl Pittallnrati. intll sad favorsblf rxtle inity !oFtm...it> their predonee. intelligence, J,t Di:amnia— Unosei, eagatio. Larirao ot. r.. W il t it,...ta.r Jong U.amentletouti. • . - A Card. 111AVINO raceividjull satisfaction from uu tn. ants maw vi01...4A. fbe tho lon or m r .to.. 4W mutant.. b y ere, on Pone Meet, t eiteie to reootateend the compeer to the petton••• end confidence of the-peLlte. fly .moks OM , MMLIT due foe the Menhir 104 naboority Inealtestaa In tint Itt• Anna, as by ler one tae. otelltions of the polity 1 nu oulttiod to needy. only oh. tat( tae mount of lb . Iwo. • •0114 ' baulky Of the flint of haft • Mal t,IiIGAR—GO Mids. N. 0., fur sale by suil4 • -= J. S. DILWORTH' Cp. • lioollld-Uu do:. fur sale byy pp Cecil . J. H. DILWORTII i cu. ciORN-M ba,.fur sale • J.S. DILWOII7II a 01' a - AFET Y FUSE-10 cassis for blastiug, for A by' J, B. DILWORTH • au. • - ICE--15 tee. prime, for sale b amid I J: B. DILWORTH CO. Gfilit,ESE-40 boxes prime, for Bale bi susl4 ' • IItrOMEDLE.S. jr.IODFLS augl4 Jl-4 tel. for tab by i " • - wroc a kaccaNurm. SCOTCII SNUFF-30 boxacßomus' eel& 1= 413 " 41°. "" VaTlCltlitat.. PRINTS!—A. A. Manx k co. N v e irt h =t o ed Ti cuss lessitlll,l ister stylo Also, 6 mos of P b o eolQat TO I L et z/rPAI TN, the