=NM .'~• upon the public mind ...weed by the presti, Is very iify , the authorities of Cuba aid deny that there is any retie. deuce of aubsequent outrages upon the i ts of the alain,utizers denounce it as mut.- i;,,,derons, and sufficient 10'01tce the perpetrators of the ant without the pale of civilized commit , ' unties , A meeting VOL to be held in New York; and the telegraph brings news •of utnlnteme popelationimotion at New Orleans, all, filigree, aieept in the matter of the insult offered to thy; American eteamer , n flticOn,,there is o ground of interference by - our ; EnoUgh has now transpired to show us that the people of the Island are generally loyal to their government; end that, at all events, they Want no. PoliticaL connectiah with the Ameri ,lgnorant and debsaad as they, may be, they show their sagacity in ,this ; brit' they .inee - give thenz . 4 footing theie, they will seen; find thethselvis supplanted by their more getin competitors. We think it extremely probable, judging from what we can gather from the reports from Ne reus; that Gem Lopez and his little body of ad . venturers have been routed and diipersed. It im riot all piolnible that lane hundred men could ' long maintain themselves against such over. wheiming wide: Should Lopez himself bo taken and executed, it would be well enough, provided thatbis delided followera.could escape from the -eery bad scrape they have run themselves into. The question has now assumed a new aSpect. -Heretofore the talk was that Caba was to be rpolationiya, bat now it Is 'manifest that it any thing in done, it meat be conquered. Bat whether thise.irregular, piratical descents upon'it win 'eoothroed remains to be seen. If they are conthineti„ it will be extremely difficult for our gavernmentto Maintain Peace with Spain; and iiltinistely.grow out of these unhap py. and .ffithonorable difficulties; then the con ' quest of the island weld be inevitable. But - when Conititired, Wait would bi dope with it. ? • The North Wahldnever agree that it should coral, into thelrttion 'With theihree.fifthe slave basis of representation.7-the 000,000 laves_:of Cuba be * bog equal to 860,000 . freemen—if,' indeed, they would . agree tort at all. -Oa the other hand the - South would be greatly , injared by bringing the sugar and . tobacco of Cabeinto direct competi .tion withiliose of the present States. It worild o he,4 be sure, of immense sommitchil ag, .e to. the North; but contniry toad their prin , tiptoe while it might agree very well with the moraf,and political principles of theSeutli, bat . would be greatly : detrimental to their interests; While ss a third evil, thecommingling dischrd sat end hostile varieties of mankind, in Cabs, rould'net be, iit#eiwise than injutiotaand dee . tractive to its social peicerand happiness for • The-New York Courier and:Enquirer apelike ' of the probable existence of tytentat treaty be , ' • tweert Spain and Franceend Hogland, by which . . . the latter poworahare guaranteed to-dho former the pimsessionaCciha . Should this be tree, the tfnattiottbecinees ode ofoyerwhe gmagodu leVisSo, doubt GU/government ii. Poe - • session of .the fact, and. will he guided in the ' matterby ill the ionsiderations of prmleuce and .firmness : which so greit a question deminds.— The:strong passions which hare now been =it ' ed bY',the slaughter of mme of 'our -misguided courdzymen, added to.-the feelings. of cupidity and rapacity which hare fougesisted, will ren der it a moat' difficult fask'for our.gortrumeut to steer clear of a rupture; and if President Filltenra and his cabinet Carry the country safe-. ly and himorably_through tide danger, they.will be entitled to the lasting gratitude of thcircoun:. • We closewith the concluding paragraphs of a long and able article in the New York Courier, disctuteutg‘ the question of the annexation of Cuba.. — The North, we repeat would greatly benefit by the annexation of Cubs, Gnaws should promp . ly admitit if desired by the South; but to the South, Aigr admission into the Union, would be The idisa of Cuban Independence, is an absur dity:.:Her people are ignorant and moderated, „ and unfitted for self government ; sisi.what is more; do not desire independence. Her best position is that of a Colony of Spain ; and armh we venture to predict,she will continue to be.— The Halted States 'eft never withont a war, see ' her pass into theism:ids of any other power; and .11.131F13 do not want her ourselves, and very possi bly cettld net obtain her if we did; let us rejoice • Ahat in , all human pretahllity, England and • Erante are boned by a ~...creg treaty, to preserve CubabiSpain,ltad to put down any attinupt at • revolution which f;*n cannot hereeltsuppress. If this be so, all sppreheiest - ens wising out of a Slaverj agitation to admit or exclude Cabs, may be at ofice . dissaisH sed. - With a white population of which . only one out of forty can read and • write, and only one out of sixty three of the ,children of which are sentlo school, wa want as little an.poisible to do with Cuba except as a Colony, of Spain. Onto A 1 .6 PLIIISTLVAXIA RAILAO-AD.—The znindrer . ol patsengers carried in the week ending flaturdayding. 22d, wee 2194; or.an urns or 8615 par 'day: , The reeeipb were $2,093 92 on the 26 nAed road jn me, an# the work was &hie with one engine and one 9assenger • train. . . . . • The secession - ferment in still agitating that ,• retitlees .little; Slate: Theeeparste or immedi.• • ate eecessionista ire evidently losing ground, while thosewbo call themselves "Co-operaticm 2 , • , brie are gaining. The latter (unless se may annt • • pose it to be a gracebil method of backing out)' • `•••• are really dangerom than the fonmee; be 2. CiA3,4 they are laboring to .drag . other' Staten, . .with them. Even in Alabama it is nearly over:: .• -it is likely,• therefore, that no.oPersitire semi , • sionisteirill be allowed to wait in peace•intil the whole id/M.:becomes very small but cadent! • item in the history of our countryrill affair not • quite so , formidable se , the famous whiekey in• ft , :ireiiic , a ' of rennsit• • • • 1 There does not appear to be anYlittionmerin . all in eolith Carolina; If there he.' they dare • . not es; any thing. So rampant, indeed, have •• • •• • • • •!'-r•'>•••. , • .•• they become In defence of elaverY,that they &ken. • tO litho themselves all beoitme the SUMS Or pop. • • uls.rprossion. • , The National Iptelligeneer, in speaking of the moionits there. says—" The 'lnternal division' in Sciuth Caroline. which was, apprehended by Mr. Shad; has minfested di nt , by - the withdrawal from his ranks of a numerous - and respectable body of follOwers, who are opposed to the sepe r&te• reilaitot Eolith Carolina, and have takeu • • 'die usme of Co-operationiste This party brace • emeiy of the most distinguished and Mau, - . ....ential.men of the State,. Most of whom art in favor of, secession or revolution for existbig stares, but are unwilling to embark in it with . out the aid of other States.: They consider the • • ' separate • Sedan" of South -Carolina as rash and visionary, and etand upon: the doctrine of Mr: Callieun, that ”withont union and mature of at tiodtheracari be no •effeetive resistance.'• Tie ;Million 'and Progiess of die seceders trim the immediate Secesdonlets are stated in following teary., we copy from the dreenville (ir The Siira .f de liust.—The• reaction goes Womb , on. S,ecession is on the wane, The signs are• all right...' will not be elines $ second Moscow. , The State *ill not se on Charien bus liPoken in a yoke Which will be heard and heeded throug,hout the Length' and bealn bt Barnwell the citliene have had -a publio meeting and Eddied • .resolution against awes. saw •. Darlington dm meeting was addresser:l by fflancellor Dino, and; hla brother Janis, wad Mr . Empty, a SOD Jags In favor" SVaitossslon, and by Dr. iticunortmin and J. 'Ashmore, Esq., in oppiedtkas to it ••.Our correo pendant says that the Wham owed were almost 'MallIMOUO; In % ihtir OPPaXitka Beceeeten.% .l ' pheeter.tbeinaetins vie; eastresxd .."by, the, Hew* S. Sheet; in foot, Sail:Col.:ifitodlilty, seceseion. .oetrerhelmUg majority' . • !, ">: i -1.1 the There are but two cocci wherein money Is , .snd s t s•-- .ce, plenty—when labor is reaping such wages rids. is pretty - srnu t :terms. it is creating • esidtal—and when it la so poorly ,SA the Bon ..J. A, , Woodwind, a re* Ptddiand in salittle demand, Volt - capital isnot in Congress, hen. hiPreßeed - himself required to Betit • motimi.. Oar: labor is now 1 '" ,ilOsitios 'separate liCit94oo a letter to between thom twe Points, Mid hal boa in that ,14.- -4 4ter the people of Chariethon. A correspondent of position foreeveral years. It cantor rise to, the isons •- ht ours from-Fairfield says he candidly believes a first while 'we import so largely of foreign mer teen to majority are opposed to secession. Ile likewise chant:Bee, and it probably will not' sink to the Aspen firm- informs us that hfr.llhett received but poor en, teat while we can export its productions to Cali the reoder coursgement when he attended the Meeting- in font* get half price for them, and obtain gold , that district Not more than one man in five 'enough to pretty nearly balance our foreign as - applauded him. While this struggle lasts there will be The Anti.secnesion partY in Sumter diatilet ups end downs in the market—with more ups are going to hold a mass meeting, and our car- than downs—but we shall see no ml plenty of respondent Bays that no secessionist will be money till coo are ;'wise enough to employ our elected to the Southern Congress from that. die-. own labor to the best advantage, of the whole ' country is , permitted by free trade, and capital trice ` York hie spoken in tie majeetyof ber strength 'becomes a drug for want of profitable employ. notwithstanding the efforts of the eecessionists meat This state of things may continue for forestall popular sentiment by calling a public , years—it takes 'along time tobteed to death each 'meeting twour three days in nasanen of the a country as ours; full of life and resouties— time appointed for the anti-secession meeting. but as the freetrade predictions of .plenty," so' The citizens of Spartanburg had - a meeting on liberally thrown out for a long time past, have sale day last. The anti-secession party several . been false; so will they continue to be while the months since proclaimed that there would ' be a present lust= is in operation..? meeting on:that dn. The 'secession party after wards selected the same day for their meeting, and sent for General Wallace to 'address ,them. lot'e have received 130 authentic intelligence as to the two meetings. But it is enough 10 that die- trict for the anti-secession party to have broken the ice. Spartanburg was a Union district in in IBM and will be in 1852. to Berry The antLeeceseion party have every thing their own way, and, at a public meeting in Bennettsville, they polled five hundred strong whilst the secessionists were so few that they'd renised to count or show their strength: Abbeville, Anderson, Pickens and. Greenville, 'all right, and the secessionists afraid to make , any issue by which their Strengthmsy be tested. FREE TRAM?, nosrsarrz The Poilt gave a glowing account yesterday of. the ' , prosperity of the eouttry." The picture is made up of generalities. There are no partic ulars given. It did sot mention the fact' that. one half of thifurnaces of Pennsylvania toe out' of blast, and that the price of wheat . has aunt to a , price too! low to afford the cultivator ordi . nary wages for thelabor epentin its cultivation. Nor did he meetion the fact. that during the last seven menthe we had exported 25 millions in ci`in, and a oast !amount of ,bonds to pay far Iron and gee:Emirs that we could as well hale ,ade onnelves. 'lie says our imports have been large. Thai. Is very true—our imports hare been enormints and our . exports have 'been very large,' of course, but whit were they', Cotton, which ie very well; gold, which a \pro tective tariff:would have kept at home; Hour, which did not pay the Cost of its production; a • • some other itenfs,..which never would hare been forced abroad hilt because theliome market halt 'eau in a gre at measure destroyed. Post mistakes activity for prosperity. Why the enor mous amount of carrying holiness going on both on sea and land is evidence that the producer and cotstimer, instead of 'being side by side, as they onglit tribe, are far asunder. This is the pros perity of free trade. Whether the editor is de ceived himself, or is trying to deceivebis readers. k is of little cottsequenee. • ' Owing to, the Sextons of tome of the Cern eteries- not having banded in their officiarre. porta:do publication of the bills of Inertia ily will base necessarily to be pottimined one dey. Wetasy remark, holteler, that the gett er's' health of thesevities is Teri good. ALLIS . ° Orr UT THE VOTE IN KENTUCKY.— The Frankfort Commonwealth says that the vote . for Goiernor at the. late election, cannot vary Much from 108,000. In 1848 the aggregate vote for the same Office, was 122,257. Decrease in I.4'oatt.d numbers 15,000, -of' which. 12,000 are Whigs and B,ooollemoerats. This shows bow negligent, the Whigs have been : : Victory migbt have been easily won by them. A, very little more exertion whonldhave sectired it: In many counties the vote for Lieut. Governor and Con• gremmen was much linger than that for Gov. . ernor. WHY IS MONEY SCONCE! iVe are toll, (earl Oneinnati. Gazette,) /bat ' , labor is wealth," 'Ent that is only tree ihen - the laborer, is liberally paid' for bis labor. The laborer's receipt mustbe_more than milfi- Oient to supply his dOly arMitsitolay by some- thing for a wet day, r his labor seinres him no health. , • The free traders insist that labor wee never so Well : rewarded, and the country was never so prosperous as at this time, because gold has been neared into the country from California in ran unprecedented continuous stream." This, it is so supposed, establishes the fact that our labor has been well employed, and dud • the hole• Country is growing, rich. Is this trae?— Far from it. The aeseArnn rents on a delusion. No country, seer prospered lent that depended 'cm the production of gold and Santee. Asa gene ral rule, labor is much better employed in pro ducing bread and meat, wool; hemp, coal, and 'ken. =dein working these raw materials, than in producing what are called _the precious me`t ' , Suppose, (sap the Mercantile Journal) that 100,000 men were employed in the g _dden fields of North Carolina and Nirginia,.and that their 'production amounted to nearly ratan millions in a year. This *mild be considered eomething Ipeat, and our tree traderi would tell us how much better it is thus to use our labor than tit put it upon corn awl wheat, or upon mines or manufactories: And really, 15 millions of gold in one year, the production of one. State, would soiled large, and make a glittering show of pros, pertly. It would probably take us some time to realize that the same labor employedat them-W -arne rate of 7.5 cents • day would be disposed of to landed better advantage, and yet 100,000 men working only 800 days in a year at that low ratepringes, would earn 22i mOlioris,- fifty per rent. more than the brilliant production Since the discovery of gold in California, the quantity of that metal sent to market from that State has been very , large. ,The production of the prennt,year, it is estimated, will reach forty five - or fifty. millions.. B,ut if this Is s profitable employment for labor, how is it that money has been alh the' time, and. still is, scarce in that State-that-in'the very centre of, all this pro- elation of gold, money is worth from five to six Woes- its value in the old States. The only rea ein we can assign for' it which bens the stamp of plausibility, is that the pay for labor employ ed in digging gold hashot been so very profits.- Ide—that it has' riot lett a surplus for capital, but is all expended as fast es earned. Let us see bow figures will bear upon it: Tli; popula tion of California is estimated at 200,000 men, who nearly all live—directly or indirectlB—qpoo the ,production of gold. Their - manufactures are nothing-tolir-,,agriciltuie 'hardly worth naming. If then the gold production of Cali fornia comes up to 5f,110,000,000 ins year; mid is epially divided among the 200,000 inhatiltants, they Sell bariesch for Mel year's work the, sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, out of which— however cheaply, this may live—we think there cannot be much actiturnlation: "Money is scarce in California therefore be cause the labor. of. California is not, profitably employed. It produces but just.enough to Jive upon. It Iris up noshing—accumulates no cap ital, but exports the iihole of its only prodoo don for food and clothing. . . With. all its snow of gold, it is a poor State., • and as e. State will continue poor, until a large portion of its labor is better be l lowed--until at Inst it produces its own bread and beef and its own fuer. Thus it appears that California wages, ire on the whole, low,—coneldering the cost of:liviug, very , low—although they, are paid in gold, about' which there is a singular and fatal fascination which draws men from the more healthy and more profitable cnitivatieri of the soil. i b "And .we are led away by the same fuchsia don. To get the gold of California, we send our own productions in almost unlimited quantities- Let us follow this trade, and see where it leads us. The production of 100,000., men in this country at 75 cents a day, is, as we have thou, 22i millions of dollars a year We take this is the amount of our export, of trierthatolise to Cal-. ifornia, and with the freight added, it will aut us there $3.3,000,000, for which we may get back gelato the ealueot.sso,ooo,ooo. The freight must be paid in. fall--there Is discount on that; and the bias faig oa the merchandise, reducing . the .221 millions nipped to I2i retuned ; re ducing the wages of our 100,000 men from 75'1 mote to about 48 cents *day. In the meantime, , free trade Is importing, from Europe without stint, and the mouteet our der. gold ar rives, it is paths resibisitlon to prep our debt to foreign labor, which. has bean .employed in' raising Moot, mining, Iron,. spinning and w eaving' our own cotton , and doing various other ',things forty bedMs it works cAcctp.: And thus we get 'Bo more benefit:from. the gold than the Cantor itisn—he Ina consumed Ito-seine before be Acts 11, end so have we, Under Cabin:D.o4e ammo= we hug imparted as extra 26,anlilloasorldch we In, alifor ona old; 04.04. a! o : PO s "' liona—in our *M Toy unprofitabl epu, II for altoacceiteel or -ibis side of tho-irate:6 Cu, liter. nab Californian** un LrofitaNystmoloyei—ltli barely getting,* Ih . =Vaal eradng wealth sod blealsarblg Then why shou2Fl not mot t scarce here as well' • Lerza.—By last night's boat ire received , the New York - Herald of yestesday morning, contain ing full details of the bloody dotage at Hanna, the mein tante of which are given below. 'Acor respondent of that , paper writes's tollows,ander date of liavaaa, Almost 16--41 , P.M. 'I am too much .sfeeted 'Tito to you more then to say that I have this day been witness to ono orate moat brutal acts of wanton inhumanity ever perpetrated in the amnia of history. Not content, this government, in revenging them selves in the 'death of these unfortuhate and, perhaps, misguidedmen, ended:itch, it may even be said, watt brought upon themselves; but these Spanish authorities dawn to be most severely , chastised-for their 'exceedingly' reprehensible conduct In permitting the desecration, as they have done, of the !coulees clay of our brave countrymen.., This morning Forty Americans,. One Italian, POUT Irish, , One Phillipine Islander, One Scotch, . . Two Havaneros, Two Germans, or HungarionV were shot at 11 o'clock--after which the troops were ordered to retire; end some hucuireds of the very vilest rabble-and negroes, hired forthepur pose, commenced stripping the dead bodies, mu tilating their limbs; tearing out their eyes, cut ting off their noses 40 fingers, and some of the poor fellows, (privatez,) these wretches brought to the city on stiek.4 - and paraded them under the very walls of the palace Oh, the eery re moembrance of the eight I. frightful. I never saw men-*and' could scarcely have supposed it possible—conduot themselves at such an awful moment. with the fortitude, these men disptoped under such trying circumstances. They were shot Biz at ex • time, 1. L• twelve were brought to the place of mention. mix Were made to kneel down and receive the. pre of the soldiers, after which the remaining:sir Weil made to walk:oozed their dead comrades, and kneel opposite to them, when • they also were shot. After being stripped, and their bodies mutilated in the bubarons manner I have de scribed, they were shoved, six or sem together, bound as they were, ..into bearssi, - Which were used best year for choler* Clll}ll6.No coffins were allowed them; and I Ala the No, they were put into the beanie was equally disgusting , a+ their, other acts; the hods of some were almost dragging oil the ground, and it had more the appearance of a slaughter cart , on its way to market from the slaughter-house I than that of. a hearse conveying the dead bodies''. of human beings. . A finer looking set of Yozongttin I never ease; they made not a single ootapaint, not a mur mur, against their sentence, and dreamy should here belphlown to their deed' bodies, in admi ration or the heroism they displayed when brought out for execution. Note muscle was eon to move, and they proved to the rabble Con gregated to witness the horrid spectacle, that, being the fortune of war that they fell, into the power of this government, they were not afraid to die. It would hartebeest a great consolation , to these poor fellows, as they repeatedly salted, to see their consul; and, through lint; to' have sent thriatsst adieus, and soon little Inennittee as they bad, to, their belovid relations in the States. One handsome, young fellow desired that Ms watch should be sent to his sweetheart. Lastly, at the very hoer of their triumph, when the people of the Spanish Owner Habanero knew that the execution of the American pris oners, which had , been taken to Hanna, was about to take place, tired two shots wont, or at, the steamer Palen, Off Bahia Hoods ; and, notwithstanding that this vessel was well known to them, having, es she had, the American Sag hoisted; Ac., she was detained and- overhauled by the Spanish officers, who, upon returning to their Tassel, com.menced cheering andlassing at the Falcon, proud, no doubt of the impunity with which they had detained an Americannall steamer on the high seas, at their passer,. ThoThilsdelphia pipers of Yesterday have the follewing: Lin non Casonses.:—Capt. Brooks, of the barque Louisa, at this port from Cardenas, which -port be left on the 12th instant, states that some -conflicts between the troops and pa triots bad taken place in the mountains, and In most instances the latter-were reported to have sustained a repulse. The planters vntre mock changed in their attachment to the government, and the citizens generally, without fear or favor. I gare•ntteranee to their sentiments of hostility towards the powers that be, Things cannot rte• main much longer es they are in Cuba. The public mindless gently agitated., and at the dia. posable force of the government, both by-lead and sea, was pat in requisition for the sappree sion of rpmors sod the interruption of private consendcatione '. • Th s e fact of the landing of General- on the island of Cali hes been already announced. The following version of it is contained in a slip teoexthe'Charlestoti Courier office; under date of Aug. 20,2 P. M. received by last night's mall. By the arrival at this port this morning of the schooner Zephyr, Captaboßjets, from hatanue, which place she lett 'on-the 16th instant, we learn that from information had been • received there that Clink. Lopez and his troops were land el from a is'asuoter on the 19th instanl, at Bahia Honda, a place about fifty miles to the westward, The steamer left for the northward as soon as she landed Lopez =dills troops, and they march ed immediately into the interior. , Ats soon as the intelligence of their landing readied Hanna, the authorities despatched e large steamer, &II of sharp , thooters, to cut them off. The Spaniards appeared' to think that the whole of them would be coon captured and shot It was retorted' in Matanzas that Lo , pez had only about 400 men with him. -« - , ' „ I :1 --1 ,; ". • EZ MEM Wee the xis York theme' The news from cube, which we spread before our readers, is whet we hays all along expected and predicted, but it not dories =dun its thrill with horror. The execution of fifty odd teen, in cold blood, however deserved, shocks us; and we are, the more shocked when Spanish and ne gro ferocity is idled to the horn le spectacle.— The whole United States will feel the thrill and shock, end loud will be the cries of vengeance; but there Is another ede of this question Thick, as s just people, we are bound to retie= end weigh with due consideration. • Apparently, the people of Cube rest contented with their Government, for the . Cuba= them selves not anlyabow no desire forechange, bat , actually revel in the mueltieseomndttsd by their Government: and its the midst of this content ment, bind of strangers, armed to the teeth, with bowie knives and six shooter eities, lead from New Orleans in a steamer, to force 'Liberty', down their throats, and such es resist thableu lags are bowie =Lived, or strecited en the pound in the agonies of death by the fatal bullets of the six - shooters. It wee the boast,-we were told last night by a peashtger, of the Amok= thee-1 hooters engaged lel this foray; that's phalanx of some thirty Americana. armed With these isyl inder rifles, shot 80 out of lift-Spanish =ldlers =tatting therm Indeed, the nontelt- Were= the Spaniards and the Americans was of a most bloody , character, for' the Spaniards, report tells us, own- - np to 460 killed or dangerously wounded on the • „:„ Now, here fs an Mind, peaceful, p _ us, and, for all weknoW, content, thus invaded the wooed time, by no nation, be It remembereat;— under thesithanc tion a o t f h G se e th erefore, •Hag t it ire, iced, =myriad by no legal authority on earth; and these freebooters—pirstes, rather, for in the nomenclature of nations that is their reel name tire, here, shoot, tut, shish, slay the people they find there, under the pretence of giving Gunn ..Laberty.''. Scillies in the discherge of their duties to their Government are shot with cylin der rifles,- Edens themselves in arms share shall= feta.- Whateier opposes or resists them is ruthlessly destroyed, cut dawn, or thud. In short, en blend in a stets' of apparent Peatels thus, of a stades, subjected by strangers to the horrors of war. It is not wonderful, then, nay, is it nOtzitirsl, rather. that these teen, 'when captured, era shots shot as we • veal.' shoot-rtree. with cruelties beyond sty we ever dream of practialer—Esnediane orMede=u time comieg here,:orEnglitharen,'lf tine they shoul d coma. Bring the mute right. home to ouredres, in 'apposing that the Abolithed4s of .lan dEner of the the Northern States ..should take into their heads that to send s steamer from Liter pool or Bogen, to Louisiana, bider** bless begs, of libertj'°` ukase slave population • there; 'and ryjpst dortbie,j,tbee; that the -Louisiade= would sho ot them, es they would mad dap in the fields or streets! is ix of Ws cla the its " that the thtimoOlersil * WAareeoludon waists, sodihstuneh a;goterumeif is . Mated eibith: flee &reign bitertaittith. These are &finial cries, the monstrous thiseitcmds muted for the New Orleasepress and for the New Yost press to pati,,whislt led the deluded fool' onboard the Tatupmci, andithieh ?wise sacrificed them on Cuban aoiL if .the:Cubans denim s rerolatiost, they have elven no!sart of proof of it; but, on th° Pissertger in the Chemskoo represents the people dim:Melees to bapronoune lug the invaders as PDanls,7 (Diabolos) coming out Webs to murder or to plunder them The feeling, indeed, we see! tru in bitter against 'toutitrymen in the streets of Havana,—not among theeoldiers, the reader hill remember,— that our pedple in e Falcon and Cherokeettere badly treated, and!!•ot safe among the Haban ems themselves . These are indica om, nay, proofs, that there la no synipathy wi • the inrav, but, on the contrary, that they see regarded as enemies,. certainly fa from be rag ;liberators or friends.— To force "Liberty upon such men the Missitodp. -pi Valley lute been awed to arms, and even now armed staggiere are going down the .ohio, the tal anhai Alabama and Chat pale, to be food for gun powder in Cuba, if it e Psonpero can be got to WO them there. • • • . The firing oldie 8 steamer into the Pal-. con is excusable al not defistudble; excusable because, &ninths let;ding.of aped men from one America* steamer, the Pampero,"tbete was no certainty that • • then might not be swarming with like armtd .m • • ' We inter, hoverer, that the Spanish comm • • a pretended not to know, perhaps did not kno. , that it wait the Falcon he . was firing Into. ... EMMY _CI:AT sr TEM BALT.,OI , BoX.—We hats beard it mid some, . aliment ifidge .wbo neglect ed voting at the last. election, auntie themselves, by eitying that Mr.' Clay himself did not vote.— While this would to no sumo whatever for any man who makes it, yet beforinlying . upon it, it would have been better to have ascertained the facie.. 'Mr. Clay, it is wall known, bee for some time i past b,en In a very feeble state of health, requiring o his poet great oirctumspeo tiern.in the expose e to which be might be sub- Jested, and in aro! Mg all =necessary or over fatigue. Under th new election law Mr, Clay was cut off homily, privilege of voting se here il tofore et Lexingto but was confined in the ex ereiseof that right his own precinct. To have voted, therefore, h would hive been compelled to have redo some eight or nine miles to the polls and both 'a in, and in weather.when a doe regard to his e arth would have compelled him to remain in he hones. It will be recol lected that it wu damp, =pleasant day, ad cempanied by m e or less rain, both in the morning end eon. Vet, notwithstanding all this, Mr. Clay did go to the poll, early 'on the morning of th election , and cast his vote ler the entire Nithi ticket. This we learn from reliable authority These are the frets, and they show that en b'persona strolled upon Mr. Clay's not voting as even a palliation to their own strange eond t, will be worse off in public estimation than ill they had made no excuse at all.—Losierd/c .' rier, 18tA.. . ' Gov. Joexrtos. The contest in Pennsylvania Is raging:beim:ea • a tumid firs that is brought about by the app hof a fits . t e eleetiod. The outward and pal • appearanefes MID to indi- CIO) little reason Or this Genre contest,' Or for the datotion, by • pen, of whole powers to one single to or intefest of the public, unless It is to beroun d growing out of _the pres ent condition of a manufacturing inter eats of the State. . Governor Jo totes adminhdration of the *se turtles dotimi his, asevary man knows, been es wised with grea dignity and impartiality. The I f Beate, u a State, his prepared under it. The debt of the Stat owing indeed, much to the provisinos of part legislatures, who for their high sauce of honor perseverance in integrity; de serve much credit, WM been reduced grades/lb firmly, surely, add N.S. as to give the falleliceon fideuce to the creditor" thereof. We do no[' ask for Governor Johnston the whole credit of this; hat we would suggest that it not only shows the Integrity and firmness of the Officers -elected by the people, but the high character of the minor officers of the State Government coming under the appointment and direct supervision of the Gov ernor. :.ile who =mum a battle well and Is victorious in the field of camp is called a good I general: and he who sits at the helot in the ship lof state, and paws smoothly over,the foaming waters of civic strife, pecuniary straggles, and political dissensions, should justly 'receive the uric honors all. country. la this way has Pennsylisaila passed over waterer of time under the administration of Gov 'moor Johnston., It hasbeen to the State 1000 !Cohn aim, and an even and dignified More• leant of the wheels of the State, to defiance of the obstruction* of a great State debt, and the awfully parelyting effects of the tariff of 1848 open the pecuniary 'nearer:Mot thi State. `Un der-Um Johnston the State debt has been re- .dneed, the lamest promptly pald, the rassunts Tully preserved, the Judicial lagislardus and ex inutive affaira of the State have been conducted Ina sound, iliipdfied and_antexceptionable. man npr,the public works bassi beau preserved and Well conducted. • • What fault is then to he found with Gov. John- Stan, by the hontat and faithful *Mont the citizen a None. Ls it /404 then, bad policy In the State to change her Cloyernor for one who, though be to perhaps *Way areelbsd man, ityet untried in the executive calamity? CoL Bigler cannot mate a better Somme than Johoston-'-will be be as good? Tide Is a question which is seriously sat in the State by those_whose lots of the Stara is more powerful than their political prejudices, and we hare the fulled confidence that the re sponse In October Will be the triumphant rtrilec mon of the present incumbent.—Whwitaglire) AWFUL ilitliENT-41111=IN LIM LOST. The Telegraph last weaning communicated the cad intelligence of the death of tante= persom, by drowning,', near Hippies', C. W. It seems that • party of Carty-five, belonging to the most respestable families tn. Kingetob, proceeded, on the morning of the lath, to 'large yatch, for • pic-nio• on Long . bland, a feW miles from the town. No strident occurred on the way out; but la returning, the wind blew fresh and 'a' sadden I I squancapaised the boat, throwing the whole party Into the water. • The nineteen, ten of them young peo ple, were drowned:—lfts. , Youlden, Miss You); den Muter Youlden, Mrs D Jenkins, Miss Jenkins, Mrs. Captain Gaskin, Mine May Ann Picky, Edintrd Prgiby, Miss Mason, IL A. Mills, Miss Mills, Miss H. Haigh; Miss A. Haigh, Mrs. G. A. Hunter; Mrs. A. Heater; Mr. Thorn; Tho mas Gitet;: Miss Walker, Miss Stacy. .. : As soon es the onlizotikli eatutroChe was known, fisteiniboit promeeded to the rescue of those who ionised, and to recover the bodies of the deed.—Alicaty Evening Journal. • REITis FLOATS ABOVE FICTION. OW AILOVE WATEL—Tbe eat cum an all • goad Malaga by bung thm plat men, an tin 61rad diner by aging It. And II am men trim It. the thee tt pot% it will destroy the Potailegtl _kb You omen Igraine math* Igo Pager the oblla It pOOMOININ 11111t4Satilla yirture. tnethli cutti of vsll4 gentians, sad it thin ihet thee Imo establaimi the replant= Of .12We coothouse MLA tetrad of Ear reperille,7 beyond ell a name.. Lie Mann UP= the human loam 1414 sozedthae with rthatel mud Pe theagthel Piteleim,lt promotes the thing mastic= erg eurtionnot the lady. mono getruetithe. theleces mortal sad aimed marts. etmmtbeue the et tenth end r elimalve 'orgasm, Penes um yam lag Maltby blood, sad emulated. the 'ark. thintioes of the elapsed. orgum of the tnly. Tht. is Paibeimg tatbatt the leen damn of hem the embentlieei bele/ se rate ea it Is gam:MP .11thay be thought by the .mend. thee It pupate to are toa away dimem., hut Mem thug.. thia. It be Land miti.liro =Om, of the thew m ',Utah said the bomb walir cds4st• W an 1.40.• IMP at the bloat. Be not embed. thee. by .than ger manillas being glared yuu by . tery *Lae of magma oat ..ter ptheretiou" ge • nitetititt• In the anginal John Bathe germpoillefnth est.ble terpastica the gropietormarrants to be apnea to ell others. thathe—Beires• sad Ask err the paging 'Or. John Doty. Rovoperale ham Keeneake—the Um anot er. gm gyertitesput ou =gm p.p. - IRMO t spoowns... ILO Wood 1 eltalthareS Who4e.nt &steel &path • Petroleum! SamLOrworrA, Mostalidoiowo PA, Marra 4, S. L. Bus—Door Sir, Your hhodoum la working woo. flair lo Ltd. ricluity; tberOlaro wo would lamb you toloot uo tyro doom by tho Pounaytraido Botha& • W. sr. or linty out. and it lo bring todultwi for about earl day. , Sous, rordoutrolly, .1011 N LONG A OLP. ; • Aohlaud ero, ay March 10.•81.! KrtuDoir air, Your dandy •.6v roar . 1 4C.. lait.witti In hut darn Bock Oil, Taloa wo wad. • Meows tumult tow rill darn hutoullidoly: Tow =WWI. Is variant 'rondo,. this mks. MCI mu obtain am& cyrollout oortilkstos. if lon dostrottows. a..' For soh by Mayo. - • AlgDowoll. 141 Wood itrooO L L Was, 87 Wood Womb B. A. Pabworlook, oo,lurnat Wood mad hour irtrortg D. LA °Urn!. D. A. Mbok 7 ohyli =lto , s.oud IL P. llobworts. ALLoOrrobitiVilatur aulDikwry ,Chual Dada,homatb sc. Ylttobursh. Citizen's Lima= Company of Pittaburgil ENCOURAGE HONE • INSTITUTIONS Oen No. 41 Wateratroo t la the tambour DM IL L . O. Maar, Prodatta--1. W. Mau, leer.' Otlaptar Um* Myna ta (mama' atalaltuallat la aloft. Imo la traumas, votola,ae. •• • _ agrirt=lait tia . = . 84 ,4 24•00 au an I calamas at ' ettatbargh., aaa tatorata n. • i li taws to caawatalty las ttalt rattoaaa, ."24=" . WO', Wat_paglan, Was. ftig ; W ig% at - IMrtrllk"Var24l4r.nt Pittsburg h_Lits Immo* Ocanputy. • •CAPITAL, $lOO,OOO. o pprow, NO. IL FOURTH BTRENIt : AlaPn•Saant4LUEM XeCICUAIt. AM . stWardaiMil la amain meg of tids,PlPer. 14t i'¢-...rr a rantiiporiatoifoigudirmikuelicae. ' VirLSONI; CO., No. 129 Wood Street to ttor. tiaaantea attention of lidear e nte atn:ottiats . , toszum. AND DONBSTIo lIRDWARE, CUTLERV,'. : WARE, SY EECENR PACHEIS„ .Nth the . ! xi no oilaritanoti Winn amacietnuador ILLNEIII celebrated C. S. AXES 0 TIM AFFLICTLD.—TO tbose tifileted with that dreadftd worm to Artaniera—tha Liver Oretr. plaint, the proprletsreof dame'. Lfier ;Slim TAM to argi this rentodrax . at nun annotate aortas/a It bat begot tried alb. to •11.terte of the oeurtUif it by been road In the prectke of the meet eminent obratriarth and alarms With triarapharit sr:o.. In offerimg these Pine to the public. the proprietary a. actuated by a desire to Altavista heroin ..!.des[, and offer a resiiady gar one of the moat terrible Macrons, whkb ellaU her Vithin the euy reach of all tva, •N.Go.wocart. for sate by i=xl6telt9 isody•Let every one who has not yet need the 'ealebratad Arabian Lialnierd. Eo to tha agiat, who vAI fdrolah them with • PaloOhlat. mt 4, eootehabarroweh valuable information with regard to thitnwitroard of eat , thy te... and it will alma gin TCa ..."4/.a. err" ibronal 14 IL 0: Tarrell's Arabian Liniment.' whkit hare neva been rptelled, gad eta. - • were altettect after the talon of the meet melted& phreleians. $.. *dm dement. • - In Manna, Minsk WI, ars. Annan. Wann.. of Capt. Stammer White, wad motha. of the editor it , f this paper, in the 1 atii Tray of her ate. Om Ihneetee moroing, Annuat 2let, MI, at tho rod dame of his father to Megaspore. Loll ?UM. egad rears and 0 months , Oa nanntay, the 234 Ina, bis rettdena, In ALaah► ESSE 31 ho p Potter's Appointments. 4130135 T 28th, ;IP. New Castle, 414- ' log corner Mfg) • , olg!tst . illt ib h,lo3‘4l- If.a 1,. P1a .r 1 s. D 444444. olst,'lklef. Christ CirteMlegboay,(eo2. Atioo.) 4 P. BL eadros Church. Plttibtogh• • " 31447[ P. Trinity Choral, Pittsburgh; Spteiaber 144. 4 r.ll-Aircesksburgb.tlaying eornarsig.) ProL Thompson's Female Seminary.. fillE First Session • of the Fourth Year of this Ihstitutioa will mamma. on 34094.7 toaber 211. Early ImJiestlon will be wormy tabor rum sdabslom only • Umlnd mambo. ran be womb modated. For terms mama. at Prof. T.L roams. at bibs, ty Stmt. Eltisbnish, Abreast 26611,1161. AMERICAN HOTEL, • SUPERIOR STREET, CLEVELAND, OHIO. • MBE PROPRIETORS having made ample et ndllaxvinel r,t,lpttb•'= larawald .. ,o esertiout with we reilto r . stul It• opened it tor the iteanstmolation of the e wohtto. - She Drawing Mew, Clambers, Bedding, Uhl.. awl Battu, will not be nailed er the beet elottle in the Allstate Clem end the robleniber Will eadeetwer to nuke tile Ilona, In orretw department intlelletaewto Wetmore. atithittLiee WILLIAM IaLWORD. confectioner Wanted. 'lwo good Confectioners wanted at N 0.317 pberty amt. 140 ...10k34 MWrifl OR SALE—Two Homes and Lots in the Fifth Ws d--o9•on Libertr ,us. ad Os odor in P i... of groand, Lab reoit on Rabatrr strata. by ..10J fest 00 foam st. !tuatara at CT Libertys! exary.f . werfalt . Roam SILVER PATENT LEVER WATCHES, from 115 in =omit wszlicitai, lost ree'd by expires kr .1. bT [may N. waSoN. a.COOPER WATCHES-4n -Hunting and ,„/ plain Cam, and at mneoaili lon pekes. Than ore We bort London soanaletanal Wotan.; and of unequal'. npauataa. • imann W. WILSON.' JAVBIAS k.OO2BIVATOIIES—Now aau hand • good amortaledt.. Ituutlag add Plat wee, of tble old se bet unto. wood and du and have elves the beet ddlefactudi of any Waxers ever sold Ms ' W. • to corner Market and Fourth U. 10FIT.D.;--400 bag.o Rio, principally prime, N.) but twl'And for pfi br JOLLA W. W WATT CO, Auz24 • arty "WRITE FIRTI AND TROUT— • • bbta. W tilts InsiL L lUl; • td. btu. Trout. .• Lauding and bar rale by ns.% ISA Ali tilenzir a W. LI 608-5 bble. Fresh, for sale by. 1.4 ane.4 bre. prime W. it. for 151.14 a:1 .o oz lc DAL:ILL • CO. QAL:EitATEIS-5 tons in boxes and . bbls.,. 1,3 tam PI.NI Paws. for W.' by IC II ALTELZ &CO. tti,IVINTEr Tel4C4 — Stirting 'nines, by LP. N.J.:am Cad,--the mot laterawilat wart Ow rias *far written. dlso—Litbillb lariat adab No. ala--1111ad with intaradiat and nodal wad*. Per ado at 1101.11 LY Litiwary,laypot, Third gnat. op , Nadia tkai Prat 0111/..'aibral otitis7- • • AW E . RSo .lt biLk re ;, novring tbexasete . La; r - in.i•hr lotiw. JONN 317 Liberty ailailatiartt IJataNal ma.) [ 1 1 A NOINE 110SE-500 feet 2 Itleit3 - Ply . UAL Blabber How. broiled 1= :Flit: eu:relr=.ll`3lriewrlka tu r 3.111111a7.11141d 1. 14•11 d Nara preanare Man war Nadia howl taaaabietarad. la all cases whore they do oat taro out aa raPN•aaNd. the .saner VIII Oa neroadad or die lime , reNlarial by saw 51.1. • J. a 11. PILLIYI, 7 sad 9 Wood at. - _ -American Hardware. • ILIVEN k DOUGLASS, Manitfactuzers' Ltgarts, N. B Platt raeNkthreedanatteat Pearl et. 11 TOM, elpsW reopfttrollr melte the acrostics ofWh Hardware Trade to tbals Stock et irked^ rewind 4 Imo the seseefacturere, am for tale eel is - ramble rta.lia .--_— POMMITTEE for obtaining additional rob- IL) ortionotot to tr. Pittsburgh and ftautormille MI rca.lLismoanr. Taal ' ' g .1. '" 1 t hri .".. • . f. i rl Wt. in7l: Wade Ltamptost, . ... ( 4 .. ..1tide, S. M.Sunstati. tacky Puget. John timarl7 . Joseph Pennock, Epinal= Jona. J. 1114). Creme. John Itaithsry. Wm. M. Metall. James Thalia. Jelin A-Wilms,. Minima Patio% • 'Nathaniel iklinse. I woo= Porn John Immingham. Dimes rem lama It Bewail. . williaan Mean, Theme Clarke. Lanai Ilutehison. u. 000 IL mmrig. SUBSCRIBER having taken the store 42 1 r1171. BTRES7. .'hycalerlt r oientasel by' f. MEI 11. wet Wing entirely rah the sane, jpen. oa 14.4 Or et E•piesobPr. int AWV elect SaD., sleek of resat, trrenr, wintertime nouns rtiennicso gethe -DR? GOODS, rThQ • tor with a engt of =LIMNOS iND FORNLM GOtaus Z , Daz i = blattofore Wept by that well No would resneethirmee perenni bloarnlnt h enit Mem /Aleer .teltew Gowlea.ebet. to Me Was ay obb • more omelets stock' else here tn the I,lty. as h. team devoting leollenler ale*. bon to the. Onstage of beteiners.' Importing the win e ,. 1: . %.1..! , c h . e..000de I/ , IsBri z er m ln a mta r tefoet. ang21.15•06 ' inR RENT—A Storeroom and•Dwel n attacbcd. t . retail On:eery Waimea: TM rest VW Oa •!'""" 4 "'` biArruzwskoo., i t 6 matt 77 Wan atm% SUGAR lc MOLASSES— . 'Altman uoc "l2lll , Lryt uniarch Balla On condannwn4 MIA bt POWDER—ISO kegs arti' g, for . . by. M n ou* . J.l B. no BWI) his-z2 OO daiitOin for sale 'sada • J. sR: PLAT ' _ POLL HEADS--8 dor. India 'Rubber, Jost reed. • br•ollfial satiric tar sat o. tb• Ra6Lrr DO. ~ sod V Wood a rale2O I P. aH. PHILLIP& WINDOW SHADES-4 !su T pply of Trani. , • ' wh ! d "” w4 " ; V: ricet t ik • pou :l ßUll , B . ELOAPES—Zts.jastrea'd V«.l 7 t! '' ark' mat STOCKHOLDERS of the "Pentusa r ty lteg. tr4":4l l %.d'AV.dislit'Ven.r. "t7ma.jthl: M nhrd e of C t il b A . RWIIINNIerig t .. B =I4- z a . . Stonier of the lloord of Directors. • , • , 0 0 0000 E 1i 12: 4 1 ON Eat ramtno. Amt. • PALL FAIGLION. • Urs liave just received this bea • utiful - 4.74 ggrza . n tivaies, wo Welk. the War aurl3 • MOWED antrtn. Penn Obits- Works. kVRENZ (formerly of the , 0,16 of Wok. WNW . • Os.) lisnahrionors of all rms. BOTTLES, and WINDOW WASS, 63 Wateo mot GS Front Wad, PI tubargh. Ps. b. liztloalas 111.6000k050 to odd Aso of Alskkor awl 663 mint* atooldir t 1•1 asul Tads. sot 23 ritRABLE i i ROPERTY the rtushijU=ggaf glehmegguer, r ir tnet l';: r # C 1 Af t tgertgi bs*- orlig,eirt.gie g temsolifols ha maw woo • is 0 1.4 front as Korth o,al Aea. mooing beak to libesty ittsmt owe 276 tot, oar oaMbird of so atm oa whiels ta Bela 71.06"asbAar, • takki Istillas 11:44ahir7: til -- The 14”vtaris of Rug Perf•halc • his Mg. Thu Onatoee et tAlobora . Pet• Tanner. or eh. Oakes a Fr ash 1.1-eoo. Team a Praetor= hi tho ot -Altos Loeb." Tbe Tame. CoerV 101 h Illaetzstheu TraeloTs Onkte im U. B. sad ilukeda_-. Raw or the Boos ; • tale of nal Inn by Toro.. Trßrook by &items. ' • e Hard Woo Warleed. • tekt b 7 liuT UMW- J: — A — DiNittAL AND RITENDITS 11180STNI9T Of Wall Paper Ind 'larders, for the rallSales. I UST • RECEPTED, it the old established IP dead, bb Market Amt. smear hem_ met of the celebrated mt.. WWI.. ernes'or PAP= NANO SUB end NRD OIAS - .tootprieteut each • walk). of errlee utd pier es eau bully Nil to gratirrthetastee cwt the the mon luthdloma and eamoudest. .00 :mous PALM= OSQUITO BARB 500pc jastree'd and ria• vlirr dos,. LICABON CO, mod/ 0.1 0 Market 4. Ci BURPED RIBBONS—A. A. MASON & CO. ) baraereadred • lars• sapp4 cA tits alaacdo. ti find PO TARLETON—A. A. - Moos c 44 4 41=,...t • WV =mg NeaELY EMBROIDERIES-A. A. Mimi k .. OW to molar addilkoal quaatlast al tlful war Oil. anbroaladea. .11 that vary Oa or soar elating be. tb.l stack at DOW. =a s.o. de Wu. at has ma* atsama ant. aag2o HOULDERS-25 4 30 pes.BseonStkoulders, 4.4 ral from mot. bent_o2l:_sslo_ sar33 110amm. LITIIS • 03. i ii AMS--,511! =Canvassed; . 1 ---- H . 1 6 casts P Wm a go: . t r y 7 6l2/66 , 6tei S U . 111,--.0 . :1 Mb. N. for i sale 1 03. , p 4mßvs±ljr , i;;Ta ii O. MO • . . 1)1 'saes HUFFALO 'IONO net received from, yr M. Low, • Itm liosent thole Bask, . . • WRENCH GELATINE, 'White and Color 44 %,..11 4 =1,7 rarget raw la are for curiae A.IOCLIIIIR . Los2o '/56 raberry mt. VOCCIA qll FLLSI, received fresh from the soaantsetsult, and *or Met 6.IIeCLIIRG austb erases lad Tor VO. 2 BIACKEREL-5 bbls. & 7 Ar,bblis ss man J. &CAM= BEESV-100 Una Cream: 7.5 p Camseotr. J.B.cawnx . MOSQUITO IsiETTING further sap% mbd " a -mr.III7IIC;IMILD. Steam Boil em. : .1A e . 4o= : hula lituutor, RIK 13 hat Iftsg. May ans mem a. baud lb* xtranr / 011ettepad... anillket . SCALES. •NTIINDON t OKILY. LIMARLASH-18 caaks Atiams'Crt:ye, ado by • • - & 71). sails 11=34 Church 101KITASII-16 tub pure. for 641914_ J- sew .7.1111. noTD. BuTT--5 'Pls. and 5 kin i i * Eve o lAb . y pirkal exti :4 :41A tsrillnrsier,mg AV r°" 7 s , .. wk° for "le b 3 . a ic.=nm M u OLASSES.-20 . 0 bby. N. O.; a antl9 16 • " SUNDRIES -0) bap Tatham 0 hf. and qr. cheats Y. H., for sal • *net* ISAIAH MOSEL It CO. IaIIPER MOHAIR MlTTS.—Muirtrf & Bencamin Iwo twatmed this briber p! la, of lb. ebon sane ma asetnaa• men • man Mahn arths!. NEW NUM VrOMER, No.lol Third street, hos just etu r o fro z mraroooolooakub?.. aortal 1 n bass aortal 1 rnk r tsz tilsvlsO.l - 7 Maio usasoudY . itszia t s SA Mee% 4tisr' n i W as c ra—Tossnf - And vs we thus estspeUid I'4 offiv On* Ms bead Was Lr1 " % .. ! 4- , - - Inoonwr Palm' • N•117110T ". , , 0410) : . ': 'MON 0 TIM GOLDIN EULIP: : AND. WARRANTS WARM! I—The A ljlw l u tMVl i r= 4 "" . O O to ifPtabasi. 1911 EMOVAL.;--We intend to =ova flout T r WreAin c "trai: Mat i tat ox,"*.ommtbtairlvto dial t be blesebt la turbid:. mey , mine se anal • • • • eagle • • 11.4[8.7 esel-9 Woad R. a.• .1 MATTREaIs 4"'" -I-bnie in stare &large led Hair.:" Osamu ow. A INA_ _Ol Man. WM. N o pp UNglx. Arse. edits W. Post 0111 ea . !1I Xl5 bbis. Pure Liuse°j.frolgg. LP' EARLS-8 tons No. Lin store and for male by (salt) 3.11.13437111 D. CHEM-10 0 bares Cream; ..Uty . RT WINE dp FRENCH BRANDY— .a4piod crpre*t mdletasl 9 r 9 9 . 9094 919 AM 99 Um , 991=TIkeartais. PRUCEBLFS—BIock Lead Crocibkm, from %_r Tanaka, Yaw Croak No. SD to 90. Le ado Ha b 7 utola J. moot .E9co wood a. - Elegant Light Cordova at Auction. St MI-ANKUAL TRADE w...tenco , Otebthee. et 10% o'clock, et lb' ea of tn. wunar. hl Immo, comer Moth sod Worse eteceNallADAT. Pll I 1,. will to old fbe club to the teutee collaction of *scat LIUUMLLAtiII . 24 auuui wauozis. U. In.= I D ' S " Ilmeri s Co., J. D. Dooktitz t l . Lace br is %ht. el a t i j gArA. Amemg the sacrum= trill be !band ce low styie 'llrWeitossollth standlas sad top. o lv. ..nroni &Wads wood hold wawa. and cholco at lAM& • No Coebkoklocat s *mom the lemma.' • Open toe esasobtatiost the dayp ot leclocts. - • AMMO lIERICSMILI, Auctioneer Magid& noticeoct Curlew . men Minh and 00.11. LEA.II-50U pipi Lead, (to - artirp) for t nisbr (.41) vra miaow. nra V. "1.41; • .. - BO bap Mock holler; .." • ; 1O Ptolosto; • • t ti . hic ts - - • • 18 W fDßoodal.; VEDERW sry s TOMATO KETCHUP' VA-I•lrcrradd. Ito ale Or our II3L A. IfeCanil • aiind6maiter i ndo,,,,3! itr AN, WXSolt; & M * i :ood • : • mmt...dunirpbe tt=eb rj h Aar du at um tart *start, Adapted. SAr thA.PAENAAGLA As the wharf- ANAGNAGGoriniall rim Abra• A ' satte:Aa • LOGAN. LEON CO. . Hew Mile. 01131-11. 81:8LLOR; No. 81 Wo . od steed; us :yarn!! tturll,•latitor fLff settolar ybettiltf aim me thy head. C.mIeDIPDD