• , . 'I'TSBURGH GAZETTE • . . P(1130611ED fIY WHIT% t CO. PITTISBpIICIE Y foIORNING, 00T. 25,0861 ;gy:RL4 DING MATTER WILL BE FO LINO CII E. 49 E OF TL US PA Pn. hn 11141 - ;114u.; . 1 - ork Courier arid Enquirer. says tlntelblipplised Gov. Johnston “Leeause hs de cla.nrithinle4f in favor of a repeal of the Fugitive Shiva Lito:7*'•• '. • inot s pitq It is, then that that paper had not beetibettreinfomned. Its whole opposition was foUnded in error 'for GOT. Johnston never advo catist'the'repeal of tho Fugitive Slave Law, nr ilected himself in favor of such repeal. In his speeeh at Lancaster he said that the Fugitive ',. LaW l'dettianded oar obedience, and on honest or Tight-minded man would resist) ~ it," hot "if it emild be amended and made m e perfect, it , woidd be more acceptable." This wan the whole of IGor. Johnston's offending. Neither at his opening speech . at Lancaster, nor in any noble queitt iiiteeti during the campaign, did he adin ,ctitF)Hitifpeal ofthat law, but in every instance ~- c otitisigled mobnitesion and respect to it. If the laW.ittso'nicked,.that it cannot be discussed, or . ammided, and made more: acleptable tovhe peo pleninkiigwhoni it is to operate, then has Gor. f-.JObillr4ll.ofi'vldp4; anff nnt. otherwise. Tbe Cou rier:rejoice& over Gov. Johnston's defeat; al though he in as good. and true a ithig as ever lived; iiad the 'belt Governor Pennsylvania ever ':ltak i iiliff: we do not intend to interfere in its jitYff; but we protest against the adding of libel to: exultation. Tho day will POOL come When „ , boti Pennsylvania and the whole Union will do justice to GOT. Johnston's two positions in the IstaUmpaign, daring which he had to contend not only against an open and more manly enemy, . that.o!..tacoftidoiern, but against the insidions . assttulttint'professed Whigs, who systematically ... misrepresented , his language and principles.— Will the Courier correct its error! RAIL Re/tn.—The Engis riliatvire play Locating this line from Crestline, thei!"tertlikincts of the.,Ohio and Pennsylvania itaiinhill,ito tort Wayne, Indiana. The line is alreakleetitedln Van Wert, and it is expected tp..he.iesdito let out to contract in four weeks. OHIO, LSOIOLATIME. —The Ohio Statesman 4i]bllalici a table which shows that' in the Ben atei4bO. Locefoces have twenty-fire memhers, the Whijo nine and like Free Sellers one—the. lattextfrota, Lake, Ashtabula and Cleauga. In . ..Ate. Muse the Lemke:Cis have sixty-eight mem bera,,the Whigs twenty-six, and the Free Sellers *ozigLthe latter from Ashtabula ltol 0011:15 ASO TIIC• SAIMATR.—It is S grafi tifyfnifitet, as stated by our New York Herres-. that nearly all the railroads entering that. - -city.unspend operations on the sabbath. The resd leading to Philadelphia, and the cam p: ratirely utumphrtout Harlem road, being the 00i:qui that violate the sanctity of the day, sod; they, the writer says, most soon-yield.— Ihedirectore of the Philadelphia road have been ilmoSt equally divided on the question for the last two prthree years. ' ',-.' lire . '' 11 - From—From various sauces nr . e ..."';"..7.• :--,,....,,,..MJL,. . derided improvement in 7.,-,f_ini:ttiere is ii. " '-' ''',n -' . in New York. The large ship ° '.:i-1"617:. r ers • rn . ' '3 ufficiency of hills of .".. ' ' . 3' ' *i?Ca '.-1. ?tt"U:ef f urnish ' exp exportation of coin. ''':- - " .: I:4ll`. s4, :refir l e to 'verjrhile it will pre vent difsasit;ble— :,,,.•'-'4::':,,ihqii:iiix a - ivOrepressure everywhere, urn .- ::- '.-.:' - trai lae — 'ii , liet to manufacturing districts like '. : em'i -,01-t-- - •''''.fd to announce the moneta '• ; ic:-..-C?:''itiii,ltuilvea7'g' ---.-- ,±,fit.. . .. • ~-....,•-• ,IT unrn , - . . • osT, the leading organ of the New r England, 'speaking of the k''''•'''.',•:rPiLlitt4cition to l!ennsylvania says— "' tariff issue seas math by . .461blitlic*;.11Ziti dal:. 360; is decided against the .• tbn'rhigaz. - , The,rendt will be hailed with joy by dPlaskpaSsicattdcainot give dissatisfaction to true patriots of any party." 1 • Nalt we ettpposa oak "tariff democrats" will • - see where'.thcy stead; boot is too late now to repair the damage they have done to the state. lio,t'isown so must they 'reap - ISCTHCA Cenon Exrantmos.,A latter from liven Sarah, Laj to the Nashville Thinner; sap another Glibartexiedition Man fotit in that State, at thellead of which is General Felix Huston. The ,t'citer says From what I can lenin, some nice of inhoence and means havebeen approached 00 the anbject. I knoworie who has been offered a command. The .plan. is: Seat to get thameans to procure orruft;.: A near neighbor of,Mine was offered a' am4orry to say—at first thought faVornbly;lofit. - The object was vo.gct anoney,..it 'Wog managed as secretly as possible. _ DiFSAT op limos Pittzburgh ' Caiholic treats the democratic party to a dose of -: hitter oarcasm.for their failure 4, elect Judge 'Coo:tithe li to 'the Supra:lSe bench.l We quote its remarks, because we think our rea ers would like see whit it:says. ~ C ontter, Whig, bas.been elected over Camp bet; Dernotwat, by upwards of 6,000 of nimajori ty. . Heir itcomes thatill the Democrats, for the 'Supreme Bench hut one happened to be elected cannot be accounted for—not at all. Mr. Camp bell in it Catholiebutwhat of all that—a man's religion is not token into consideration when he' appeare.before his; fellow countrymen in politi cal mintiest; by no means—what has religion to do with politico?-nothing whatever,—a man is a man, itilocanot matter what creed he prates ises;ilietherlitilie &Protestant, Jew, lilahome dan, Infidel, or even a Catholic, he is on unequal with hittertopetitors for public patronage,,—the • Sonstitasion pats - them all on thvsame settle of balance, and thereby does away with all religious tlifferinces in polities,—Why the very thought of proscribing a man for ',conscience' sake would tiriudo•blush to the cheeks of the voting popu• lotion . Of the Keystone State, the seat of Demo, erney—and moreover, the Democratic Party be, ing the friends of religious toleration, and the avowed enemyof bigotry and intolerartre, Cath lic might safetyiiime before the public 'with his name itLlCritToall on its.spotiess banner,—religion had;therefore, nothing to do 'with the defeat of Mr. Campbell, be : Must aft/State it to ' some other' bad quality of which he is vetssessed, anti which his partris well acquainted • e r ibr the Dern *critic Party would acorn the man that , would vote against him .eerily' for the salteot his re ligious view's, it would look upon him as a trai tor—the-very.thought' f being guilty of such a thing Would make them tremble and fear for the safety of the glorious fabric upon which all our free institutions are built—indeed,' they would not be guilty of the like, not they—by no menus." . The Maley Market in New York' is sensibly easier.. The Tribune of. Tuesday, :jays: The Motteifilarket exhibits still more amelior : ation!tozilay. Loans mean are negotiated with .muchkreater facility gal per cent.; although a - - commigsioTt in' additiOn is not 'infrequently paid.' 'her:Vetts for paper are lewer.... with a • moderate supply pf first class names. The in terinission of failures fo . kten days has tended to revive 'Confidence lit mercantile paper, and buy ers are aPpearing in market more freely for pa per not. strictly firstelass. We quote first class names at 7010-Per cent.; second class, 12018 per cent. ...tie Banks are discounting and lend ing with ninth more liberality. . The Illinole;;frour Chagres, probably brought a larger amour:Car gold than any steamer which has ever arrived at this port. She had an her freight het $1,519,000, cad an unusually large Reload in the heads of passengers. ,One of the partners pf the 'house- Reimer, Cook & Co:, of San Fr:theme°. Who came pastenger in the bigotries among the passeutcms vthon' thleAviat4 and his-estimate ranges tram tr,i,zo, to $1,600,000. ; Taking his lowest figures, which hefeels confident are, if anything, - under the'mark;: and the amount on board of her was $2,800,000, which would make over five and a, half ricilliOns received this month, while the shipments have not exceeded a million. This scounlalatich of gol4„bas had a marked ef -feet upon the money =hot The gentleman alluded to 'above also states,' that- the adyiees from the mining districts are all very favorable; the gold Is corning very' freely into San Fitan - etsce, and that the receipti here must Inevitably continue to increase.' TINA MOMS AND Onto RAiLDOAD.--From Mobile papers We learn that this road is - rapidly advancing. .I'he 'length from Mobile now deft- 4tely settled is twohondred and tirtyteren mile, ;thirty 4 t!,ire . e of which are nearly finished, induct . I.! . trie,- " ea c ei d ere ° ;o ' r gr tfxe nil l ' ole na ro w ar t ht .. elf hts" the Ohio ricer , and two henared e tt ° l2 M d . il.ol . 44t4rtairO. atio arl now readrtor grade ,gon= as 600/1 it fix: d ' o c t r t i btixi be to readily. , "obtilifyiW,urtignc; the: riehnees ' l of ths - ;eornitieetlitiing/ttfittels it to to pus Is token into '"*""*; , 111301 WABIEIN! teorresppudenmee of Ltte WkIiIIINOTON dct. 206, 1851. Townsend Haines Esq., havmg' been elected to a judicial office in PenusylviMia, it is reported that Mr. Nathan Sargent, whilome recorder at the land office, has been aPpointed to till the vacancy caused by Mr. ittiretnent from the office ct register of the treasury. I shall say nothing mord of this appointment, if the report of It be true, than that I thidk it ought not to have been made, and hope ilt not he confirm ed. Mr. Haines leaves the d pertinent regreted by all who have had official .r intercout,e with him. It appears that Mr. Owen, .!tlnAtil at Harem., has been removed hut, that a I previous conjec tures and state.ments as to hi successor are in correct. The new consul ineither ] le. Lang dun of Mobile, nor Col. Walt n of New Orleans. „, Ile, is a citizen of a Southern State, but I am not yet, informed of his name. liretain my impres sion thaC 3 there is nothing in Mi. Owen's con duet that makes his case a very glaring excep tion to the general deportznelof American con suls to their countrymen abr nd. •But the op portunity was favorable for conveying to these unfortunate and responsible agents of the got ethment, in the most impressive manner, intel ligence of a change of systel as respects them and their duties. It may be onsidered as now a settled maxim in our government that its re presentatives, from the rank) of ministers to that of consul, are placed in their stations not alone to draw salary and fees almost a el:dear est. conviction with theM, bat to protect the in terests of their country, and /ri particular the personal rights of its citizens.l Mr. Corwin has his subordinates busily at woik in prepairing the macs of annual returns which will accompany his rephrt. The able se cretary of the Treasury will hgain urge upon Congress the necessity of some action to coun teract the destructive effects i f the now nearly exploded free trade theories and schemes of Mr. Robert 1, Walker, as.developtl and embodied in his numerous reports, and atm, e all in his tariff of 1846. I think the try hest argument, bat for! its tediousness, which coosd he laid before the —Collected wisdom," to convince them of the indispensible necessity of our immediate retina to protection, would he to republish asan •roc companying document . ' of the message Walk erVemons report of 1845 . , wherein he prove, that tihe ezports of 1831 were to be 'j840,000, 140, some hundrdd or two millions in excess o our imports. It is a curions'coinchience that of the very time what all his magnificent predic tions in regard to the foreign trade-of the coun try are proved utterly incoriect, Mr. Walker should be in Europe aiding to demonstrate their unsoundness, by flooding the country with mil linns of foreign productions mere than we caoget (loth for in the ordinary course of commercial transactions. The object of his mieeion 11 to pfocure for Illinois, on an extelnded credit, hun dreds of cargoes of rail rood is n, which ought to be inadi , in the United States. Mr. Onrwin will present n Mtn startling p lure of the downward progress of the .count under the present system, and of the 'per whith threaten our commerce aid mainfacure This is the city of rumors, end reminds me i more ha than any thing else that ~ a substantial ext9tence of that famous description in Ovid o the residence of the deity who presides over the rinds. I presume you have noticed that - prob. hie and startling' ctbry that France. England, Spain and most other niviiited and chtintsso gov ernments of Europe including, ilt may be suppos ' el, the model Empire of Itu,sia land the redoubt nhle republic of San Marine,t4ll instituted a commission who were in proceeld to the United State, and lay 'dove for the in t li' , '.rmation of the l'reaident and Cabinet, a *A, t. defending the tights,of nations, in view of the rec..: si:rtni Lyon Cuba, Thai (011.1i55C11!las not arrived, and it now begins to he susPected that the rtm etotetneut-nf its creation wasp stare. There is therefore reason to hope that we are still safe from the assaults of another Holy Allisnee. The furniture of Sir FL L li lw, is adverti sed for sale. I believe that th 'honorable Am hassador is now In England. • his is an indi ,cation that he does' not propos to return. In that event he will doubtless stop here a sums. tor. The affairs of the embassy,'for the present remain in the care of the secretary of Legation. Waseurtoros, Oct. 21. Chancellor Shackle,- of Mississippi. has been appointed Consul to Havana, and a despatch has. ;been received from him this evening that he accepts the Once. Judge Shackle was President , of the Nashville Convention, which met in, May, 'ISO. It adjourned, if my memory is not at fahlt, to June of the same year, rind its disunion tendency having hien developed by some of its proceedings, Mr. Sharkie declined any farth• er connection with it. Ile was known as a Whig before participating in the doings of that 11.11- semblage,,and was probably placed at the head for the double purpose of giving eharniter to its sots, and of conciliating and committing the Whig party of the Sough to the movement then i in contemplation agei st the Onion . The Judge repudiated the Conti non in time, mil Perhaps its meeting had a g di effect upon the country, for it ahowed how weak in rinmheral the disu. nionistaveally were, and the additional very im portant fact that the people of the Southern States cannot be brought to the support of ex-. treme measures, dictated alone by the avarice, the (care, or the prejudices of the slave class.— And in this tendency of the privileged and aris tocratic order in the South to decline in impor. lance and power, compared with,the commoners of that Section, I perceive almost !the only e'olu lion of the slave question. Henri Clay occupies his position of moderator and conciliator in this fierce controversy, only in Tirtne he 'is the ;'great commoner" of man of the people, sprung from th class who owe nothing to slavery, , thing from it but odious social di. eventually a deplorable conflict of But Income back to Judge P I the adjournment of the Conventio n his place on the bench, and singe been in private life, hut is unde weight of his name and'induence party in the contest now in-prngr sippi. Under these cirnumetarie ment of the Judge will commend i .proval of the country. From informstiOn reeeived by GI: meat, there is; Mason to believe , movements on the Rio Grande frd result in any thing of greater lel compromise between, the Chief, gents and . the lilexican °overtime! the former will secure to themaelv portant private advantagem, while tl auxiliaries will be politely pot ur: o retp-o to the en ...tern Fide of the have been on Aeveral previdne There willbe no annexation in the present, either of eager growing .r mere hide produding States. It is amusing to observe the tone of respect and even of affectitate regard with which. all the Fillibustern or of,that frontier speak of Col. Canales, the4ader, selond in Command of the insurgents. This 01. Canales, duling our late war with his cbuntry, was in the estimation of every body or one side of the bor der, the moat ruthless, savage, treahlierous, and sneaking villaid, that ever plundered a rancho, or desolated a ben roost. Now I Orceive he i 3 considered a very worthy and patriotic individ i nal, the particular man marked out by Provi dence to confer liberty and prospeliity upon his miserable country. There le some conversation here among those who have time and disposition ca l , indulge in that sort of gossip, which derives its zest and flavor from the scandal with whichit is spiced, concerning the part alleged to hay been taken by Mr. Webster in the late Pcnnsylv is election. i For, my part, I cannot believe the any distin golehed Member of the Whig partyl. ould imag ine that he had any thing to gain from the de leat'of Gov. Johnston, nor can reasonably hope to receive the vote of the State except as a Whig, and no ono will be so recognized wlscl played into the bands ,Sif the enemy on an occasion so im portant is , hat whichlkutd just Passed. it shmild not Ise the:policy among Whi gs t o to w many side issues, paNaularly auci as here a Personal beerin,:untiletter the next PTesidin del tileoti!m, wyen't4ere will be ample opportu nity to trusetuteldieta. For dada . ~ - mg; inde , -, _ pendent of hiti-Ling services and well tried fideli- antadaritiated by the testimony of numerous of , if toRN STARCII . 300 lbs , a choice arti ty to the party, kis obvious that the Secretary of one most respectable citizens, who were eye- I 11. ) el.. runnufacturT.l rannaaly foe. di e tl e and eullnar State could not have desird nor sought the re- , witnesses o f tbe.^b6l° proceeding. We: leave r:ll,7rr.erLa"L';:.t.Z.,iilitr'il.tr';`:.n:u.'e-bi..‘d,:at.r. , our readers tunudie their own e.smento. : ...med.. grtddle eakr, ent-rid e x. ar. rut ur in I Wt.,' suit which has jnst been brought about in your cacketo... will. full dirTrtiour hor 1.. Fur ..1. by State. . I -•••-• I ..-.!.. J. KA on k off. at Wood st • . ' '."' °"' - N . LL 1 . 1!!, ,, 1. , ' ,,, 1 , 1•1A5"1' Pt»Vlth,'l!-- , 4ar- t, A desperate effort is going .to fosse the 1 opinion entertained among the Whigs of this ; -, , i ,, A government to pay some half dozen millions of i , lnarter in regard to the nest Pt es itieff r y, _ a nd . ttoot.' s er ' :V,l. ' shett cts-; no s n7.7sVfi l 'tif7ii ire, , ti.c7.,': that cub no other man than lien. Stirr. ; ''''r . T;"" " '''''''' J.Tll't.:l.ltt.. i.o le...Art. interest on old Florida claims, arising nnder the I that i'' , treaty of 1819. The rule that the government 1 h.-l' u n ft i e l.a. w Y lt i tl ' ,.t e w ' it h ?l ' ll e il l'h as t Wi l e . i h r leader , currying the ' To the Christian Public! never pays interest, is an ‘ 4,1 anti good one. and as certain a rictory as if We bottle trt-e'orr- A R I:1.161011S SERVICE In the French to depart from iv now, would take ss,ooo.imu ready won And indeed so otrong does the feel- ', , tr. Ant. ‘ Nri . r:Z. l ' r . k . I . E, ' VNl"e=rM ' u '.. 4l . k . ... ' n It 4 out of the treaSury. . Susie, ing run in favor of the Old Rero, that many avow j ' 4 ..,'':„''''''' '''' ''.'".'' 6.a ' r. '' t ' l P. ' s ' .161 ta •• ••• their determination to support him regordless of rirt V COIIVPIIIi.AIS, or any thing a the kind ; er''‘`''..' L . l'. I.' rs'v. le. , , v ,'",.r.',Uzi'Lll'..T:t. —, ...I No them the nerntoar• u,abure. tor LI. rnattnu.. FROM NEW YORK, . Fur our own port, we are for Soon. sett Vis,„- h..!' "; ‘'..'' - 7 ----- ;v .." , ""th. ;. ". 7 .2' --- ~.,,,,,,,,,,.„,„, 0 ,.. e, t ,..b ar o, n a il, „„,,,... ~,...,,,,,i fur j„,„ .0r 1, ~ sours„ ~, wills core hi,, IVt ~ are .nstruotet. ..y the owne.S to 1,,,0n0 Now VORK, . ICI i2l, I Kt I , , el ,,, ce i t i t ,. e , o u, o t i t; h i: - n o r r e t h h e , c t o i f , t , tr i him k s ~ f , r , y om il l !,: ii s , t , : r ri i ' i ~ ,,,., , , , ,i, .. .i,:i! .i ,' , : ::; ' t - ' 1 ,, 1 t ' i n : . , 7 ,.1 ' ..7.1 , : !, ,f,:te;5 i. J. 1.- 7 L' '''' ' rot "" . 4" ""' The air i., soft and balmy Boots Jane, mud our co. vilhonously robbed him of his command, and t - ' ..i so "sr' etreent wear the gay appearonce a Cprutg, and : disgraced hint MI the field of het glory find in I : - .', - ;.`,",',2.",'.,`,', k :::',,':',.',.' e ' t . ..' - the it ., teee , „ eh ,. t ., „ hit , for e etteh by ~y . 1 I li i. N., of boo gallant ormy , our heart and oar , •eu tit item * LEE cry one out of doors. Fires are ref 1..] ite well. i p ' r ., t :: i i . b h :,, n ; 1. 7: 0 7,, t ,t..t.,:t., his p"' " i " to (hi ' / T 'lt." ''-'n i li " I "'‘'''' Sit'''. sou'i s, . s 's and I thick coats and ehised doors, and ontntner roles I watch Woe ' d — J l.o lftWd!r;huv'Pr ' l r le,;l ‘ .oe ' ; '''' °"r ... 4 2:4; " .4-'4”'"44'" 4" "4 174 Vii ATT a co. the house completely The new propellor steam- ......- tOFFEE-7,s hags prime Rio, nrrivinF and ship, the City of Pittsburgh, left 'ant bay, at Esse.. To Tile iinoCLAMATION.—Th e people i l .4.r, t i . ° l E :' i L lioi) 1t.,. priin°,l.l.NZArTT,, sucked, ed, noon, for Philadelphia, to take her place in the i have respond e d t o Gov Johnston's proclamation, proclaimed in thunder tones, that he , fr".!' l '' JUAN VI , AfT A ell. I,Lverpool line, under Captain Stolesherry'a cont. r end hove le unworthy of the confidence of all honorable I g iLAss--;=oo bores Window. need ~i.,,,,,,,, ready heen stated, pt mend, on the '',sth, She thus l - milt, . has al- Nl toe al. 0, .101 IN Or An. a mi. men —liarn.thurg !'mart. Wlllininotturgh, by )leers ‘ll (Ben e cannot see how the late 311 elect ha's proved Perrine Patterson Ii Stack , who have turned out Gov Jutissron to he unworthy Ile confidence ' t .LASSES—'?II Idris. S. 11. Syrup ' A ' O5 " I "" i" .loth Waljr aO. for 'r a ship complete in every part, and fully cpfol. of All honoroble men. when a is,stlil known that t i i is NDRI ES—.;flit doz. Cora Er t e, taa; . •I • o et,1,.., N.l 1,1112, in eyed • point of view, to the •Monehesters and every dishonest knave , escaped convict, traitor. i•- ,i et ' . Loaf and Crumh.,lS.,,nr, on= politscittn. , ttnd selfish hound , disappointed Fur 'al. br ;,,,t1 , JOHN WATT at, Valfsgow.• which i have • prece,led ' her. The In the race for Alec, has voted and worked Alle g h eny k a ih.tj a a . 'Pioneer' of Masse," Spofford and Tiloston 's .40,,,,,, hint. m ., ~,0 , , dr. ... , .. illogic. , in. line, went arowded last Saturday, and there Terence Irma the result It was never charg. I N plrf Ilan,. of the directions of an act of seems no good reason why the propeller lines 1 cot in IS.lfi, that the defeat of Gen Casa, for ~—;‘,:7:-4'.: VjaV'nf..'lhernirl,l.M.. 0:',I.,1"?:1„.-LP,';:,n,',7..' 1 President, er M,mitis Lorlosrarvit, for Governor, 'ttn`,.f",L r a',4'.". t r o ' t !'". l X,',! ‘t h7:4!'i, e li e ' d , son'uo no , werreo should not attract the greater part of the travel of that they were unworthy the confidence to the cart. stock of - .aid•rue:m.4'V ro''',..7 i ''''' to Europe , Filing al, they do. steamship fare, I ' E 7 ' 4l hen:n . lo4, men. Some IhO 004/citizens of "' ""'"'"'"'• Nn '""" ''''• " SI: ."' '''.'<-'''••i A. tio.: and On." m'iwhe'°l steam speed, "" r t"/"‘" 1 Pennsylvania hove hhown Some confidence • ''''' '' '' ' ;4 ''''''" l " •"'"' l r . """' - ^ '—'"(...'" „:, ~„, ~,, • ~. ~ Kit numb., ..•I sbary. mar Is' mul,..ri.-1 fare A fine war steamer called the Edgar, has 13,1, JoIINSTON by voting for hint Does the var,; . ,fh;,;'Az7 ~v s, „,„•,‘: , just been completed for the MexiCan Govern- , I Won assume the office of judge, with Such clean it It e1• ,,, , , Ni 3 mn , Er1. higohl;iiiili.'ilieL meet, by Mr Rckford Webb, and has gone, on a I bonds and untarnished reputation thalinichar,o i ! E ” P"" LIN T I 'S• " 431,0 tilt Y 5 ~ • , b Daily (isa t trial trip to-day. I The friends of Sabbath reform have at last succeeded in perruOing the Long Island rail road to discontinue till Sunday trains, and there are now two ways o l nly of getting cot of New York on the Sahhottllhy Philadelphia. and far lem. The Hudson ;liver road refuses to start a• train on that day, and the Harlem and Phila. delphia roads must loon yield, thus giving the metropolis bresithingrtiree of a whole day Oor bills of mor l lii.y show a high state of health, there having been only 324 interments for the past week, fr ; L I m a fixed population of half a million, a transient population of ten thousand merchants, and the usual quota of em igrants. Taken togther the climate of New York city is as conduaive to general lielilth or any city in the world, and with only a partial observance of natural laws,. , The past forty-eight hours has been marked with M 11131411 activity in Stocks, and in `votne 1 . sorts a very large ‘ adranee has been obtained, I the money market, attrioon, etc-mg in raver of buyers The state of, the money market is Just now very curious, and it is not Gut et the I range of reasonable iroliaitility that the past ninety says of ocarci ; y, may ii e followed by n • profusion,of money rarely seen A 'democratic ' writer on finance, and deservedly •lield In high esteem, argues that tie rush of cotton abroad, ; t and the fact that brew I is to he deur on the von, Europe will oon regulate the «ac ti ; tinent of Euon- i , gee, and, perchance, IV the month of February, i turn the current of c in hitLerwaril from Eu• I rope. Not a single failure of a merchant has , been announced Silli i , I the lOh Oat . nor hare any names been ouspep led. a state of things no I one anticipated in September. There in more confidence among moony lender', aid should we • o.st/et/ober well, thee doer not appear to he ' any reasonable cause why the winter should not , be a remarkable easy , i•ne for debtors. Trade continues go (-tire 34 ever. as is shown by the rush.of goods hest The Erie railroad earnings, this menth,will come 'aril up to 4.1.:0, I OW, a sum never before iouched by idly railroad in the world, The Hodson Hirer root has ot• I • . mined wi-otaruct for lie MOO and now ticket. • paiirrogeri to Ciociuna i rind the Indefinite Wei,i, and %cern determined, in connection with the central route, to compete with the Inowiter Erie route The vatic.) eampaip rags on about as no w. usi The lorofocoo ha -e made up their tritrt. to epei.,l the money f o the canhi enlargement. and think it all con titational, 4114 Laval the money will be weillsi out. The locofoco., led., epecii the, mliney• . I toiminder it, end the whir will hare ill the odium that ever nttnehre to the incurring of de t, and the etpoditure of money, no mutter h w honestly done The press here hardly take the tronitlS to post up the Ohio and Pennsyl tan electinerctunis, no much are they disheartened at the poor show made by the whir . these. • C t —_— ' . . Faithe Pitl,:'. 'sq. Gaz-s, ALLEGHENY AND BUTLER ELAN% ROAD. Mask. , ButYene! There anpeare.l in your . paper of Wednesday a 'iece signed' •' T. 11. S," the initials of my name: It stalk, to ray I never wrote it, lint' con en.lar, nearly every senti ment contained tEertin, (with the exception of the twelvebridges—there being only eleven—and in place of a tunnel, it is a straight ent:tbrough a bill, Some 230 feet high ;AA:3o.Oct Wide, costing as natichOf not more,' lt,lertrue Die stock (hold is burton elharovbeliides /wenty more I offered to .tak:e sm:souditionnf the Directors keeping the oltT piiie when their charter was olatnined, but theyeaw proper to refuse Ye't small no it is. it is enough to lose. Hy iexperience on that road proves to me very conclnsively that there never can be a dividend deelhred that will pay the ! sttmkholders two per cent. for their ,money. If Thos. II Stewart or Robert ,Stewort were the only sufferers, it would be hut, a timil.. matter: ' but stockholders general/' expect at least ten, and in many eaves they wee protocol twenty per cent- for their money hyl the present Directors: and in order that they may have an opportunity of making good their p mises, I coy, reelect every man of them, an let the experiment of taking It off the old road he fairly attested. It would not only be wrong) but 'madness, to 'turn them out after the work's let. I woo pleased to .find there was an effort making by one of tlie Di rectors to secure as many of the proxies as would elect the old Board. Onjtheon rests the responsi• bility, and to them the etnckhaldern will of course look for the completion, of the road and their dividends. In reference Ito the article that ap peared in your paper, signed "Right of Way," his too small a business for rue to waste tune and paper to reply. I hhve only to say his illit crate writings give the public a good idea of his capability of engineering. It the fact the; the South, th e .'e rankaof tha pod expect no . tinctions, and From t4t.' . 1,..411e RorA Bunn, arkie. After he resigned hat time: hat tood to leave 3 the Union ss in Missia ,. the appoint._ elf to the ap 'r ATTEMITAT4BI3ABSINATION—SENATOB BOB d LAND CONCERNED. u On Tuesday inst. our, usually quiet city be- O Came the scene of a most unprecedented end n outrageous brutality. . We give WA.' a pLain, unvarnished statement of the facts as they oceurred., These details - have been collected from the representations of nearly every disinterested witness of the affair. With regard to the utaini features of the rase, there is a striking uniformity in the opinions of all a - rho witnessed it. e While standing at the corner of-the Anthony t House, in this city, the editors of this paper • were simultaneously attacked by Benj. F Don ley, the Sherilt of this comity, C. E i Donley. , Auditor of State, William! Bartley, a steamboat engineer, and Solon Borland, U. H. Senator . The attack was 'made ion. Mr. Whitely by ' Beni F. Donley and C. C. Donley striking at him i with heavy bludgeons, both at the same time Whitely fired a pistol at If F Stanley, without effect,nnd closing with him, succeeded n in wreeh ing-from hie stick.; add with it bent Ihin, t o th e ground; during this time, C. C. Donley orris ritrikinghini (Whiteley) on the back part of the head with a heavy sane. Whiteley, upon turn ing to ward off the blown of C. C. Dooley, was shot in the right breast by a pistol ball rime B F. Donley. In the meantime, Mr. Kettrilon, who bad ta ken no part in the affray, VIM seized from behind .by S o l on Borland, twisted tn. the ground, and' dinarmed. Borland held hint down nod choked lim, with a pistol presented at his head, until ulled loose by Gordon NSPray, Est. As Mr Keardou was being raised from the ground, William Donley, coming up behind him, dealt him a blow on the side of the head with a heavy litick. which left him appariently lifeless. , When the feat was accomplished, the enginder and the lion. Senator joined their companions. the Auditor and Sheriff, in , their murderous WI- N ult. upon Mr. Whiteley, Which was continued w th murderous ferocity until he fell, exhausted b the fierceness of their attack and the wound he had received in the outset_ When the by s en shocked with the cowardly , Inhuman ity of the proceedings, sought to prevent the oold-blooded murder of a nian no longer capa ble of resistance, they . wire hurled aside by Borland, with pistol in hand, who continued even then to cry out to his cenfederams . -Shoot him! kill him? kill him l"" I , It is due to Mr. Whiteleyito statethat he only saved his life by a most &Swale resistance to • the combined attack; that though assailed from every quarter, in front all from behind, by sticks, knives, and pistols, , ui d defeliding him self under !every dinadvan ge, (bit right arm being rendStred useless by .tie pistol ball,) he never so far forgot himielf as to strike Captain . C. C. Donley, the cripple,; though he bad fre quent. opmtaimiogi la - l e i reued! , him to the liar 11 parf hat the late =Mir ortance than r the Inner .t, by which certain no .e American i ently invited i , rer, as they oeensioas lEIM!ffl Itearon