The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1851-1861, November 26, 1851, Image 2

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    PUTSBUROH GAZETTE
PUBLIgLIED BY WRITE k CO
'P IT T 88118611
WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOV. 2G, IS5t
Iar:READDTi MATTER WILL BE .POUNI) -
ON EACH PAGE °Anus PAPER.
lareormairr Bchlstos.—The decision of the
Supreme Court on the sabjeet of the rights of
of the Btateb and corporate cities in relation to
the geadeoaf 'area., which we published yester
day, is of the highemilmportaoce in this coca
mcmity; where, from the uneven nature of much
, of the giound, grades exceedingly injurious to
many Oaten," have to be resorted to for the frost
Atialwellithe. It appears from this decision that
. theytharethe light to establieh such grades u the
Wisdom of their councils shall decree, and that
, agrieved parties have no recourse to common
latelor damages. Whether this in strictly just
or not; it certnir tly very convenient, and our
city corporations will not be slow to not upon it.
Wuthink it's jest in the first instance of fixing
a grade; but 016 the grade is established, and I
Itnildinga 'are erected to it, summon
- ?-4' Justice Castes,
.appears to us, o reasonable
compensationfor damages. This decision, haw
:.t.;,'''Vireier, cats 'aff all claims for damages up to this
time, bat a atatntory provision can he made by
the 1460mm-ter future cases of injury grow
' lag out of changes of grades, and ibis ought to
. 'be done. Snob remedy should ho contused, how
' - eser,^to damages occasioned by a change of
•_ Pe eStriblialied by a city ordinance, because
elona snack purchase property before any grade
•• Is fixed upon, buy it with all the uncertainties of
the man tnlly in Tien, and pay a price accord.
A grade once established ;ply. a fixed
ralse.to property, and persons who purchase
property, :or build to it, afterwards, if the grade
is changed, and they are injured thereby, have
•
aunt compensation on the principles of
: egnity and justice. So it appears to us.
388 caurrry.
IN NEW YORK.
The'Sew York papers continuo to give fur
theCiFtieulare of the sad disaster by which BO
autarchildren lost their lives- In the Tribune
there're Several columns of details, a few items
of whioh.tre append.,
Miss. Harrison very soon recovered from the
attaok„:of paralysis, and at 9 o'clock in the even
ing was nearly well. The full extent of the ca
lamity had not been told her. She says she was
perfectly conscious all the while, and would have
given worlds if she could have uttered a word
to quiet her scholars.
2'At an early hour. yesterday, Capt. Lovett,
Capt. l :Seabring, Capt. -Taft, and a number of
';theiiinen repaired to the building, and upon
matching in, and around the bottom of the well
hole, they found a outland of chlldrena's wear
' iDg appaxil, consisting of shavtla, bonnets, hate,
• shoes, stoekings, carpet-bags, and other articles
belonging to the dead and wounded children,
. all cif which were conveyed to the Station Home
at Jefferson Market, where some of the gar
. mentii were rocogniz ed
. by heart-broken fathers,
mothers, sisters and brothers, many of whom
called at the Station, and when viewing the
heap of clothing torn from the unfortunate lit
tle ones, in extricating them from the well-hole,
~they harsh into a flood of tears, presenting a
heart-rending and affecting scene.
-';....TheCoroner's Jury called in body at tho
residences of the families of the deceased chil
.
dren, near fifty in number. We given few of
the notices of these mournful visits. _
The first place visited was No. 19, Christo
pher street, where the body of Virginia hfingay,
/0 years old, was lying. She was neatly laid
out in her coffin, hod' no marks at violence on
her body, but seemed as if she was quietly re
posing in a gentle slumber; at least a person
. might have imagined so, but far the sobs of
. mourning that'were heard around. Death was
supposed to have been caused by suffocation,
and a certificate in accordance was given by the .
sating Coroner to the father of deceased.
Tbajurythen proceeded to the house No. 80,
Greenwich ay., when a more melancholy night
met their view. Two lovely little children, a
brother and sister, who hark been taken up dead,
vr ilis.l44Stlaziili. The girl, Debit=
, ','`years and cue month old, was a
• beautiful creature oven in death, and had been
one of the most promising pupils of her age in
- .1 - L 'ilitt.school—the boy, .1. L. Woolley; was 9 years
'.tierty months and twenty days old, and bore a
stionerresemblance to his Rioter. The poor
miither had only a abort time previous lost ono
• child; and this blow had made her childless.—
' Since the melancholy occurrence she has been
almost distracted.
Proceeding to No. 109, Eighth ay., they found
the body of Abby Antoinette Jacobus, aged six
pang 10 months, and 14 days. So calm and
beautiful appeared the corpse of the little - inno
cent, that the Foreman called upon the Jurors
in the back ground, to come and see it, for mid
he, never SSW a more angelic countenance in
my life." It was true, far DO mark of suffering
could be observed on the countenance of the
child. A smile rather lay upon the lips, as if
the spirit, in passing away without a pang, had
lingered to impress a kiss upon what was once
its earthly prison before it went to God.
• On going to Washington et., they saw at No.
745 the body of Timothy Weary Abbot, aged 7
years, 8 Months, and 6 days.
Two doors from-this, in the rear, they visited
another family who had been bereaved—the pa
rents of Anna Maria Hill. Deceased was in the
10th year of her age, when death cut short the
thread of her existence.
Their labors were not yet finished in this
. - neighborhodd of mourning, for on coming out
they had to cross to the opposite side of the
street to NO. 746, to find another body—that of
Lucy C. Garlbugh, a child 8 years old. All the
above, deaths in this vicinity were caused by
suffocation.
The jury indeed had &painful duty to perform,
visitation of mourning that lasted from about
noon to six o'clock, sufficient to harrow the feel
ings of the toughest heart—and delicately and
nobly did they perform It, though, as we men
tioned before, some were so deeply affected that
they were unable to ask the brief but necessary
questions that were deemed proper to be an
swered. No other conversation' was heard from
their lips daring the above time; but on the 'ob.
• • ject which they were investigating, as if their
minds were entirely absorbed by its magnitude,
• or their, feelings so excited that nothing else
could enter into their thoughts. A remark on
the appearance of one of the little victims would
be followed by a word of sympathy for those
who felt the lose more deeply than any one else;
this would bring out an expression of like feel
ing from another, and thus it wonid continue
' until Doe next visit changed the subject of the
theme, bat not Its tenor.
The above extracts are taken from above
forty of similar tenor. Nearly all are reported
to have died from suffocation—one hawing fallen
upon another until they worts piled op in the
confined apace into which they fell to a coned:
arable depth.
Our New York correspondent states that the
disaster was in a great degree attributable to the
firemen, who in their rough effort to reach the
Rime of a !supposed fire; tore down the balus
trade, impeded the egress of the children, and
.thus added M the fearful toes of life. This Is a
feature of the calamity which it is horrible to
think of,' and we hope it is not true.
It la stated that most of the sufferers belong
ed to respectable, and some to wealthy families;
but some were very poor, as the following para
graph shows. •
The parents of some of the dead children are
very poor, as wells' those of some of the injured
',cheers, and in some instances they were not
prepared withfunds to bury their 'dead. Yes
tory monting, Mr. Lemon, on behalf of the
Trustees, took a carriage and visited most of the
bereaved parents, administering to their wants
as fared, he was able with the funds that were
in his bands. He found the pier creatures; in
some instances, in the deepest of poverty, living
erten in oelars end back garret., and to those
why sully needed it, he cheerfully gees relief.
Oao poor widow woman, who had an injured
was in the act of borrowing two ceults to
bay some biscuits for her offspring.whenVe en
tered, and on his supplying her with a few dol
lars to nourish the injured babe, which wenly
Awe or six years Old, she shed tears of nk.
Sadness for the gift, which prevented her utter
•
Pair Ulu Crrv.—A letter from Salt take
City, written by i leading Mormon there, has
been - shown to us, in which he makes no allu
sion to the occurrences which are said, by oar
advices, to hate caused the departure of item
. Govemment officers from that Territory.—
These officers have not yet arrived here, though
theY are looked for delly.! lie says
. • The public work' are progressiag at this place
and the Saints are rejoicing in peace and pros
i . perity, though two of thu,,Apeeme 'Judges of
the Territory, Eon. Perry E. Broth= and Judge
• 'l3runileburg, also, Secretary Hauls, have left,
return to tho - Statetc also, as is sopposed, the
labia Subagent. They appeared to think
their Sallies rather too small fora - mountain
life, which, in fact, is but too true, for every
thing is much higher here than in the States
pltolt WASHINGTON.
iGarreezoodomea of the Pitteibuish Deily Gazette.]
WMIIIIIICITON, Nov. 22, 1851. -
Some of your ;seders will recollect the view
I took of the great suit between the Northern
and outhern portions of the Methodist Church, •
while it woe on trial in New York, last summer.
The suit, In itself, was of no consequence to any
body out of •the denomination, and in reality was
une in which the body of the Northern Metho
dists took but little interest. The Southern
Chinch hadparted from their Northern brethen,
either in i 845 or 1847, and sued . for a part,
about one-third, of the money and property, in- 1 .
volved Lit the !'book concern," which had before
the separation been common to the entire church.
The amount they alleged to be due to them was
not far from $250,000. The Northern Church
did not absolutely deny that something was in
equity duo to the Southern brethern, nor did
they refuse to pay, hut they insisted that the
matter must be gentled in conformity with cer
tain rules, and by the concurrent action of the
General Conference and the confirmation vote of
the Annual Conferences,:which:would take some
little time; but they likewise ssid,•that according
to principles which the Southern Methodists exi
ted upon, when the Canadian Church was Oct oft,
nothing was due. The Southern Church, howev
er, demanded payment to be made in their way,
and in that way only. The North was equally
firm, and a law suit followed. f looked through
the pleadings attentively, and talked freely with
the counsel for the defendants, and made up my
mind that in laic nothing at all was due the
Southern Church, and that' had both patties
Ikept in good temper the difficulties, in the lefty
of an amicable settlement, would bare very
speedily disappeared. And yet it is remarkable
that oven among those membere•of the bar who
had no doubt that the law was altogether with
the Church North, the opinion was universal
that the Circuit Judge, Nelson, was with the
Church South; I thought so because, I confess,
I feared and felt hie legal judgment. Would be
deflected byhis prejudices and position upon the
controversy in which the cause originated.:
So it has turned unf, Judge Nelson has lately
given Judgment for the Southern Methodists
This result has given rise to a great deal of com
ment, turning, however, lees upon the merits of
the case than upon the effect it mai have upon
the project of a re-union of the branches of the
church. Marty suppose that the chief difficul
ty in the way of that re-union is now rem - oved
This is an. error. There are two other suits io
be decided, end I believe they •do not rest upon
precisely similar principles. /tad if they did, or
should be deded - in the same way, the defco•
dents may appeal to the Supreme Court, in full
bench. Bat, as au influential organ of Northern
Methodism, the Christian Advocate;ohserres, no
legal decisions nor any freight of judicial author
ity can restore the dissevered limb to the body
from whieh it has been amputated, or rather
orn away. The Southern Church seceded from ,
the regular Methodist organisation in America,
because its ritual and doctrines on slavery bad be- I
come, as they thought, inapplicable
to their con
ditiou as members of a slave holding community
They contended most warmly and zealously fora
change of the established doctrine and disci. I
pine; and failing hero, they insisted, in open
derogation of it, upon having slave holding
Bishops, who, beside thus I iolating the rules of
the Church, must hare been, and were, unac
ceptable to those northern: congreigatifins over,
and among which, they - bad local jurisdiction
and ministry. The question F. brought to is
sue in the case cf Bishop Andrew, of Georgia,
whose duties carried him at times into Ohio and
Western Pennsylvania, and who became, as the
Church in convention decided, a slave holler
after his election. Up to that occurrence the
South had had two-thirds of the bishops, al•
though the North had two-thirds of the Metho
dist laity. Thils latter circumstance shows con
clusively the cordial, liberal feeling of the
Northern Methodists toward their brethren of
the South.
Now I awl inclined to think that int-he root ,-
versy in this rue, which ended in the
of the Church, both parties were right. Slavery
°abb., at thetiouth, - as asocial institution--which
cannot be placed under the ban and denunciation
of any religious denomination extensively pre-
sailing there without danger to the community.
If so denounced, of course, no member of that
church can conscientiously support it. It was
so denounced by the methodist creed and disci
pline from the origin - of the sect, a century age.
Southern men think slavery right and con;ist
ent, moreover with the revealed will , of God.—
Southern men think slavery right and Consistent
moreover with the revealed will of God.- Southern
methodists could not endure to are their men
of substance and consideration excommunicated.
eo far as concerned the dignities of the Church.
On the other hand Northern methodist , said,—
slavery is wrong in itself, and in violation of the
teachings of our Common Mazter.and our Church,
accordingly. enjoins that no slave bolder shall
tie a bishop to mile over us; but allows to pri
vate members of the communion liberty as to
the holding of slaves: but brother°, that see may
live together in harmony, we will confer upon
your learned and pious ministers far more of
the honors of • the Church than is their due, but
let us obey in good faith the mile. and`cantions
of the church. The South rejected the offered
compromise, forced a elate holding bishop on
the North; the North rejected hi m,and the Chumh
.divided.
To say that after these events a voluntary
fusion is possible or desirable, is absurd, and all
argument or agitation in favor of it is super
fluous. In the present attitude of affairs
each is governed in harmony and peace.
The voice of agitation is husked, and the
charge of aggression is no more heard from one
aide or the other. It is ..hardly too severe a
commentary upon, the pre-existing contentions
in the church upon the slavery question, to say,
that they were a scandal to the christiaxi world.
The difficulty in regard to the distribution of
the money, might all have been avoided but for
the passionate precipitation of the Southern
delegates, who, seceding from the general con
ference at New York in 1845, broke their con
nection with the Methodist Church of the Uni
ted States. Had they proposed sepaiation in
an orderly manner, a plan to effect it would
have been submitted to tho laity by the conven
tion, including terms for the distribution of the
funds and property. That they took counsel
rather ofAtheir anger than their reason is their
own fault; and Riney turn out to be their mis
fortune, for they have not yet got the money,
and possibly never will, though I hope other
wise.
Tho Vermont legislature has refused, by a'
vote of 65 to 182; to repeal their IoW of last
year intended to secure the right of habtas cor
pus to persons arrested tinder the sot of Con
gress for the recovery of fugitive slaves. This
law of Vermont Is entitled her habeas corpus
and has been very erroneously denounced out of
the State as a nullification act, and tomanifest
violation of the U. S. Constitution. The refu
sal of the legislature to repeal it, by eo very
large a majority, has excited much indignant
comment. Rut all vituperation of Vermont for
this cause, ie entirely gratuitous. The law is
addressed to the judges and t ilistript ;morales
of the State, requiring them to act in - behalf of
the alleged slave, when brought before U. S. au
thorities. They are the persons to know if it is
In conflict with the constitution of the IL s,
If they think it is, they will simply refuse to
act. But if they believe the act of their State
to:he constitutional, they will on the arrest of
the first alleged fugitive, by welt of hobe. tor
pus, seek to take the person from the custody of
toe U. S. commissioner, and bring him before
aiState court. Tho return to the writ will be
"held under oat of Congress." The State's dis
trict attorney, or the defendant's counsel, will
MOTO his discharge on the ground that the act
is unconstitutional. The District attorney for
the U. 8., will doubtless appear for the com
miesioner, and argue the constitutionality of the
act. If the court decide it to be constitutional,
the defendant will be remanded to the commis
sioner; if otherwise be will probably be dis
charged, though there may be a process to hold
Lim while the attorney for the government
lodges an appeal to the courts of final resort.
Setif he cannot be to held after the Aeolian of
tbei3tatejadge in his favor, then the question
can be broughtup by en arniigenent in the
cirinAt court of the IL 8., of the Btate's•attor-
ney, or the officers who took the prisoner from
the commissioner, for obstructing the execution
of the fugitive law of Congress, and it will be
Its sufficient answer for them that they acted
under the express injunction of their state law,
if that law he decided to be in conflict with the
constitution of the United States, and laws pas
sed in conformity with it. And if convicted
upon the indictment, the attorney, sheriff, and
constables of Vermont will tie yunished. Is
there .y nullification here? Erittently not.--
It is a State law necesvary and proper for the
protection of the personal liberty of the citi
the, nod for barmy ih „_
gitiVe art Of COnyros.. I deeply regret that Penn
sylvania, New York, and Ohio, and every border
free state, hove not passed such an am; for T
firmly believe that, passedlimough the crucible
to which the Vermont law subjects it, the fugi
tive law would be found a gross violation of the
constitution, and that thus agitation would lie
quieted, and harmony restored. lint if other
wise, if its constitutionality were affirmed by
the supreme court, still, tin same result would
follow, and the rigid enforcement of the act
would be submitted to, or the States which
should Continue to resist would do it in the form
-of armed and organized hostility to the govern
went and the whole Constitution
I have gone into this detail to sloe that the
action of Vermont is free from any taint of nut.
lifioation, and that the - aisciples of that mon
strous and treasonable do l etrine, and of the Inter
dogma of secession, -an 41 , 1 in it no justifica
tion. di sirs.
FROM NEW ',,YORS,
The great event of the week ‘ boon tim.her.
rible accident by which so tuut?children were
suffocated in their.attempt i escape from the
public school in
. tireettsctch Arena: inn!.
hog an event ha! not oceurred without ample
note being takea'tof it by the ilt.t:tte, and it le
only necessarc tobenumerate here come of the
causes that a re supposed to have added to the
horror of the Scene.. It\the first place, had the
assistant teachers:been posse—el of the least
Felf-possettsiort, the pupds would not hoer been
panic stricken by the iu,ltien illness of the
head teacher. To this want of firmness must
he nttributed part of the ilionnter, hot there in
good Esser, to believe that the tire department
helped, by moot i190.10 . .0„, ;27', r 0 murder the
poor children The riding I f the stain:ay
were of the proper construction, and would have
withstood proper use and is gond lcial of a ims,
but when a Edna,' of firemen attiolaniteil LI roach
:the upper iicrl cif the hdlustrads, no wonder
that the poor children were dititodped nom the
stairs and fell headlong ill 0 ILO pit L 0 the emir
way. if the stairway gage why by the peer
sure of the children. how i ould the firemen. al.
ter forcing the outer doorOhave seen the poor
things fall like 'grain from the h o pper: It i s a
fact that the railings of the stairs gave way at
the font.and were tern down the whole extent of
the btstrasy occupied by the children, who were
thus sarriacc.: to the real of ilie rowdies who
first reached the scene of Alai,. We Imes thou
nands in our fire department as worthy as uni
class of citizens, but the stews, the porter hone_
I es, and low groggeries of all lolls arc the places
from whence issue the bi utinh zeoliits who climb
ever children's heads, and Earl I hoot to nitro
death, when seeking the source of an alarm of
fire. This an accident not soon ti be forgot- ,
tell, and toe Liam: :::•,et !, pi:teed Whirr it lie-
longs.
More than A million of)l.4lateo in gold wont
out :in the Baltic to•ds '. makinr tea, and a
~,m et e r f or thr week exclirive of what hoe gone ,
by the packet ship,. Thin payment of debts in
gold le a famous buviness, and shows the tidy.-
tage of buying abroad We sn-re once told by !
the freedraiers that if re wool I only open oar
port' , to pauper labor, the pelvic,: who in,ke
the iron, the cotton, the hardware would he pt el
to take in exchange our brendetutle The pie.
sent appearance of things would ....ern to Ind,
cute that the paupers had nn hand quite a stock I
of edibles and are not quite ready to commence ,
the barter trade that is to enrich no. Mean
while they are q uietly pocketing the balance,
against a., thre...tening in the operation to quite
destroy the balance •,...c_hiivioe,s in,: The
hgnnkri are gradually cothroctitic their loans, bot
it iv obeeme,l on the other hand that there is
little firer chi.s paper offering. Some of cur i
shrewdest financiers and banl.drs think they ere I
day, en far as the export of non is concerned 1
The rifles of the south and west are now full, I
and the crop of cotton will go in market. The
presence of any considerable sant of exchange,
they argue, will soon put prices down herr, thus ,
lallowing our banks to accumulate coin at the
rate of era mill;cim per month. The receipt of
two milhoris of gold oust in Loo,ron, f,,,,:ry also
argue, will, in the present state of thu money
I .
market have the effec: to induce Britivti
capital to seek investment here in large ruin.
Should these opinions prove true, nothing can
prevent a season of unparalleled ease in money
I matters this winter, awl : lower rates than were
ever known.
in spite of the present extraordinary low
price of grrria here, and the had state of the En
glish markets, the furdee may toting goat relief.
The crops on the continent are bet abundant,
and the Government of France is already in the
market, a large buyer, should the coming elec
tion in France produce trniild e there, and should
it extend to other continental Onions making, of
an array of producers, a legion of consumer,
prices hero would advance and our national pro
fits be enormously enhanced. This is specula
ting, 09 many, upbn remote emtin3encies, but
upon near examination they Will appear quite
probable.
Cotton in better upon the strength of the near
from abroad, and the Baltic' o mail of ,to day will
make it apparent to English buyers that their
limits must be extended or no cotton be olitaiu-
ed at anything Ike present rates. There is a
speculative movement in clear Russia hemp, and
the whole stock is understood to have been
bought by one house. ,In bread stuffs there is
little movement, except to supply the home trade.
The re;;eipts by canal begin to flag, but the lake
depots of the iii.l/reals are crammed and long of,
ter canal navigation to swpcuded, ye shtdl hare
very large rveipts
A Nit. Coster.—A letter from Berlin of the
28th ultimo states that Dr. Brown has just dis
covered, at the Observatory of Berlin, a new
comet, in the constellation Cool, l'enotonos
This comet is very luminous, and has two tails.
As it will soon ho in conjunction with the sue,
it may bonen in the evening in the northwest,
and in the morning in the northeast at a dis
tance of from eceea to eight degree? from OA
last star of the tail of Ursa Major.
PACWC Batson. Within the past week,
the county of Jackson has subscribed $lOO,OOO
in the stock of the . Pacific Roilroad Company
and the county of Morgan, the sum of $20,000 in
the some company. As noon as the county of
St. L 01219 subsceiKes the $lOO,OOO which the
people have voted, the company will be prepar
ed to notify the Governor that $1,000;000 of
stock hove boon token by individtials and coun•
ties, and the obligation of the State to loan its
credit to the amount of two minim:leaf dollars,
will be binding.—St. .toirts. Republican.
RAILROAD &FROM --A party in the employ
of the Steubenville and Indiana Railroad com
pany, under the direction. of Mr. Pratier, of
Steubenville, run an experimental line from
Dresden down the Muskingum river to
Zanes
cille, l o ot week, with a view of ascertaining the
practicability of a connexton at 7 anesvillo with
the Central Ohio and the Wilmington roads.
We did not Oct the engineer in charge of this
party nor could we learn anything about the
probable cost of the construction of this rood.--
As to Its practicability, there can be no doubt
about that. There is no connexion that could
be made by the Steubenville and Indiana com
pany which would afford them ouch advantages
as this one. It wo o ls give them an outlet East,
West, and South.
The road is lure to lie made, and that soon
If that company do not construct it, another on.
toff —Zonerrille Courier.
itAILIIOAD Mar rum —The Cleveland and Ma
honing Railroad meeting on Wednesday evening
last was quite large and considerable interest
mtipitested. ❑on. Jne.oh Perkins addressed the
meeting. We think that no one, after hearing
that speech, could come to any other national
conclusion than that the conternpletett road from
Pittsburgh to Cleveland, through Warred, is got
only highly desirable, but one that will pay a
large petcentage upon the stock. The objection
that ibis road would be too near the Cleveland
rid Pittsburgh road that passes through Havan
na, be dissipated by citing the contiguity of
Eastern roads, where the average , distance, in
many instances, between them dues not exceed
7 miles, whereas the distance betveog the two
roads would be 20 miles, and; by showing khal
this road would be 9 miles shorter than any oth
er route, end the grades infiikitely less, which
would give it the chance nreecnring-the main
through travel. Ity a calculation, hued upon
unite reliable date, be made it appear that the
money Invested in stock would reality totitaet 7.0
per .cent.
It was resolved that we have a 1 1 06 d, and the
following gentlemen were appointed a committee
to solicit addition al subscriptions H. Mor
ley, J. H. Kibbe' ' , Ira L. Fuller, H. E. Harmon,
John Hutchins, E. E. Hoyt and Edward Speer.—
Warren pen., vg.
terDraPr P9L4 CUBED no XIII me or Da. Mc-
Ltxtx. dboase, with pendia, the Mogi.
exception of c,nsurnption, is PO much dreaded In the fin!.
fed Slut. s. UTePoPela. Origlunttht In a dieremel state of
the beer. It Is often confounded with ronsonualort Itself
by the unhappy sufferer. who pint, rural. until death ix
leases hint troni pain; yet a remedy Is ulthin the roach of
all, which wilt relieve ell rase, of the kind, and work is
speed) and effectual cure Dr. Oliver Nlorgsn, a di•lio
cinched phyeirian of Virginia. with livery exten.ive prar
Lou, It. used there pill, In ell eve r of dystelosia, end lo
all erica with mmulete aurr,,a. Certlfiretes in abundance
•re to the bends of the preprimarst of this laminable me.
dicta,. (J. Kidd , Wood street. corner •( Fourth, Pitt,
burob The following. Imwerrr, trotn Ohio, will speak
501001., to thew suffering under nor of [hoer diseases
which iirise frxm a diseexed liver.
I.{..cumouo, Jed non count, U.
Meat, J. Knit' Co.2—Thot Is to certify that my wife
ha. nova anbcted for parent.. from with the following
lane. at periods, morn nr leat . Pain in the right title.
%bout the ttive of the ribs. extending to the right should
or. pale to the back part of the heal and above the nor.
accompanied hy ocaknets..loss of appetite, a d Known con.
gently confined to her Led. :line.. August rite has nod
three k. 104 of Dr. Alelane's Lieor Pill., and I hare not.
tate fiat he then t.. of [hon e gills rho he,. bo on b o n,-
uted in on ordinary degree Under the prneideneo of riot
o e now anon, • areal health. and 11 ible to attend to the
domettlt cnnecrut of no famllr. J A 2. hTI-2W ART
For oaf« by J. KIDD & CU., No 00 Wood street.
....222,1/w•A
Petroleum I
Iti&r A MOST RIMAUCAOLE CASS or TOTAL
nuauanr COXnn nr i'm . r.o“un —We •Inelte the sttontion
r.r the .filleted and the public tornerallj. to the rertlecate
I Wm 11.11. of thi/ rite. The cam may he mum by any
ymon whr met 1.. ekentical In relation to the beta here
5 M. KIER.
atlltrted nemeral yearn with a eurenerxef Loth
et ee, tehteh runt Mum! to itimmum until Feptenthtm,
iunntunuation ut Wat bale haring Involved We whole
0 t,coembrane of Loth eyea. and ended lu th.. dereille
t Mtn. ' , high degtroymi 1:13, eight I had
an Teratmu performed. and the (hi/ lrning remo red. *bleb
won returned and left me on as Io) a condition an before
At tla• 'Lure et Nw complaint I made onOltrntiun b , ..•rt .
ttm ntal eminent nikAiral inuo. Ingt-mml mr
tL•t r sould never gel irrll; thteLlmn Mould
not dio gmh en/ olneat the sari, of acme friends
I ..oLutomeod the tub 0 tn.. Petroleum, Loth tuturnally
1 etll,. muter a hod, CA, nTer bare lPtPrn , rd doll; Ur'
11... tnne, owl nate recover, Imy eiobt mit."
t, ge. gal h.-atilt ite sectmuch itapturmi by W.
get ~,,, nand 1 Mthhute the reqttrattun of my night to
I, 1., I r..11.1e al Sn. 102 tleonnd street, in thar <or, and
s LE. L. Leggy to zire any tuturmatiou In relation S. nt)
ore WILLIAM WALL.'
F.l 0.9-0, l A1A1401,11. 140 Wend land. 8. Z.
Is.tment.,Ak, A Co, Lt,rurr
p.,11 Li Cunt.
11 11 ~. b•arta. Alle.a.ruy.lll,,o 1.5 tte pry-
Al. 0 I Elt.
. .
• .19 °emit:co.., to In 4..1.1t1-•.. ..h1
Fall Importation of Harcimare, Cutlery, die.
LOGAN, WILSON & CO.,
No. 129 Wood Street.
;he er Mere!int,
their r. 01 1 1 X wen, or
FORSIUN AND D9Y-ESTIC
lIAIWWARE, CUTLERY,
011'011'1E1 1 BY It ECENT PACK CTS.
.h t -IL •tt , nr prtpant.l tn nu-la prier,
a:, 1 lug I wow, avant or MANN'? rwletrahal ‘l,
W ect ern Instriance Oompany ofrittsburgh.
f APIT $300,000. It. MII.LE la.,
I I F. 11
Itwow soon.l all till,. at ri-th MTan; `Marina.
All 1w0... .111 I. 111.1,1, wlJualoal ant twohahlt ad
A I. Inwlthhow—wwwwwwl Ihrawho• w o well
two. ,u tommuolt, 101 l who a/. trtrralls
phourtarra awl Illwralitv waoctaal the charw - t, .hi,h
they haws nderin. IL- Lr.t inctortl.n to thow.
D00r.1.4-I,ll,njr. .1. W Butler. Nm 1,.
n.O I Thal. ,11t. Alex 11. Blarg.
N berg, NaFt.er....l
11“.."•••• I Si II 5n.151.
at, gtrsst, l w00...h0ur.. of epaapr I Co.
up IL•int, ,u 4411
A PIANO FOR 8125.
m,kiloGANy t; ."•wv, mutl,rn wade
Nut. , ,avit, 11 , t4i Lb,. year, 1, ash.
A. , e. • v..:•11......t0n.1 Pomo. Fia
th• mc.ott...r
A 1.11., 1.411 of rl/9.3. 1. lAEA •al•
t.. tltm JoIIN II AIELLO&
... el ‘t •ml atraM
_ • -- __
I N ACCORDANQE with the sth section {,f
i
L,, t k . ororrora Una 11, rentimivafila ,:xl. . k
Ril. A ka
P r-• 1.1. nil r•I 11, ,r , tal Cocoa, A , rir,itutal letloi , ttea of
rou•alvtoott .., ',Mr , ' to trubac.t Knuatalry to •
;al Mb •.! .I.ral.f. $., tbo bammaa , l'..tooottao of (no
l'-bmt :lama otm. Aga.olot or. aoLooty mi atzeb rabobt,
~^.. MTh:mt. ,r ,r• mium. boaothar mull an My•rat
I ill., proowaluc• ilmtt, a, you,
I rt.. nr (10. flata. Ac r j!'ecv. ". ' K y,
Ilt
‘TICA IIYSOv Tr ,t.
KA— •^ r 111 I •
[•-•,• t it :tor e :4
L3: ... ; 41,0 ; . 7 11. I I,lota Tra.t, t 1.7
No. •
nnvri
Stray Cow.
, AME to the re,hience of thn sublft
.nt.rne'lentline . In L.,1.1...nn tnete.hrg..
I.,Ler .nut, nr. tte tildrintnnu n r eet,
SKI ibunit the tuLltile f Sntrterth.r
r.., re tLrn, .t,nt %rot ',ere 4.ltr• trailrenlat
enr n.Ol trtere knt aret,L. tr rtn 'writ In d0te...L..1 tLe
A IrrA 011,UN.
Notice to Creditors.
r pit ECB lillOHd If the lete firm Ad.
Ps . art
Ir. eltvor 0, ‘tnd,..nr,t.
•tgt. arm. at It.. Mice a ' , en./ t , t.er , lty N.
1.4. I: tedet•tedlo',...l3
Lrg“ at tat.l get., darir
J PENNEV. liwurte,
No. IN. •:,I 1.0•?.5,11.
FALL AND - WINTES. A ItR.6•GESIENI
18 5 1 kat
BETWEEN CLEVELAND AND PITTSBURGH.
I PAVING l'ittAborgh tinily t Sund a y', ex.
A M ti•
STE A MBOAT
,
FOREST CITY.
Capt. A. :111citno. c.
Tr , ICELLSVILL S.
Fr.. to-u• ••,,e t Int, id
hum' 7, ,rer • t:Nbr. aeLi eft lelnfrirt ttLXVELA:II, uele
t'. mune ut 4 v't Itt time to take tneLlittrtaritat
te reel er treat Ly tto , strem Lome oat the Laker 11 ,
flue, the r•ttiottaorn ttavitratlea.
axv b
to .11.yiiir. by wrj3 4 g
11 , YbUrgb I . lnyabet;l ' d Ly!":l6,ryr,''''''
F. r Tlekri, Apply to U. NI BARTON, A
en., tt fle.ttent.mhela llowey hag.
..
To Let,
Ii E COMMOdi. , II3 Warehouse, cif o pOl ,
the St Charle. , !lota. W. nr,,c. rue.
I. to TLlrd WV, 11GI• oa-upted 11 era
111e.,1 4 4 . .. i • 05t...:51.1 [teenea the lit 4
lit. 11 L4Ol
' 4 1 1..15-3 ton , for suld
to IinCANLII.REIS.
LACK WOOD, f r November
Art J..0r.1, our November,
h , eO, the. 11an of 1V..; now work D 7 Llong
J.-mid—ph, I - 13a (write
Itece,...lat 11‘,1.10:5* Latter, In.pot, 71 Third st r eet.
opp.w,te tho Port "ON no 9-5
•
First Rate Farm and Coal Land for Sale.
E subscriber nirerit for sale his Form,
no the third Pool 01 the Monongahela Slackwater,
In Elltalwth towathlp Thit Farm ie one of th e beetin , I
Alioahao, rou,,ty. an run;aint nearly DA, A:ret. gd of
wlkh at , Coal and Lloon.tens, with ever/ raeilltl to
in a dmg into boats. A large portion of the land le ant
qn..tity toter bottom The' Term will Le told entire. or
eubdividml to colt porrbasert. The erel will he told with
from the Verna. Thilt laratlegenerallr well
Grown. and any person . wlthing to bur tjw be liken to
amlue for hanself ion inh , rmation fff regtrd Is ed.
eoJ tr r t o . ot payment can he ured from the ottbomi.
tTr nn tL. 1,1111..41. or from T. J.filiihatl. Kp., bl
n022,1101:w9m• 8, Wbl. Mei:LURE.
-
Novel and Rare Entertainment.
THE Great Emtern VENTRILOQUIST,
nr for the fret time
_P:IOFES'S..O4' 11.43111N0T0N,
Prom Dona, well Mullen he au , Fast I , belng the meet
poni.hing Ventriloquist hying, end whose
the
In Ne• Tort. tendM Phillphia, Baltimore,ard
ell the principal vitt. Warne leethe boot. for the last
M year,. Lae been unprecedented. reopectfutly announces
hi. Prot 11.10 to Pittsburgh. and will have the honor ol
ea paring hlo unequalled and fsolaionable entertain meets,...an:meeting on AItiNDAY EVENING, November
2,lth, and continue all the week. Alm, Thursday tad
haturder unarm... et kIAfONIC BALL on widen m.o.
he .111 ..terelee his moot wonderful power. in
Nolen, in whirl he goods unnealed.
/1..111 also exhibit • greet variety or Magical Experts
menu, men, of which have never been exhibited in thi.
part of the country Particulars will bo round In small
r.
ee
tua.l4
HENCH mERINOS!—MoRriii Tißuvca
,
rinn have test red easortroent of above goad,
•17.11., of Drab. Green,Oolfee Cut
or. ee . Si 'or/ low Pehwe fne quality. Alec, Coburg/I of
the Krim. rotors. t 02 4
BLACK ()LOANING VELVET !—ltlum
or Procarreto have reed and roller low theatmve
t
noel
I: I EATIIER.S.-21 sacks prime Kentucky
't"'" 2.MA n A'. d iftfr i ttic y oN k CO. _
FEATIIERS h lIEESWAX
-109 sack* Feather.: 4 lierrvv fiervirar:
LandLod and for rale by 18A1All MCI( 61( 6 W.
n 024 Water evid Trout an.
UNDRIES-
Ib bids. Loaf Sugar
I brava Lovering'. Bunn.
6 lA. erwhed.BugAr.
• A Pulverized fluirsr.
10 , U berm D. , . al It. Kalzirm
FO)Laza. ervam Chvesc
resizuvatravi and Hag Wrap. Par.:
Jun ree•PrErm and for rale by
1.42 10119 WATT A M.
FLOUR -30 bbls. Superfine;
In. - Extra;:ynat reed and fur rale br
null ]OLIN IN Arr a cs).
d I ATS--1600 bu. on cons
WO
awl for
gLy 'ale tor T. WO WS A DUN, '
.24 GI Water street
111A2 ,i i i iI , .
, G
n E D . . I 10 0
0 0 4
. D . 79 I
NT
, A .. .
b . il . a ; I z i i t i
h e aci l i s & L . ' u , ..,
If r y 01.0, mllabllr damaged' by wenn, enriPlislng Cun
ene. tiinvberna, flannel., Ilivoii.. Cheeks. ae. ie., all of
re 6 Ir. li .111 be odd at nearly one half the usual brim.
nu:l4
110111 , 1F4JAN RINGSI—A large assort-
Ijo%"+" ct v.'l°-,r.'116;717.3110°,1,8.
II tacker at.
fiIIEESE--100 boxes W. 11., for 'sale by
1194 8. A W. lIARCAUGIII.
POT ASll—+ , bbLe. for sale by
.21 A. W. RARBAOOII.
OSIN-1(X) tale.by A y
. 11 ru.2l
•
ITALLOW-6 bb o. Peer;
11 •• and 11 W., Mutton: far au. by
.21 . El. AW. 11.1118.1151111.
LOUR-100 bble. Sprixger's Extra;
75 bildthesex "
.210 "BureMnr ler ub bT
15. # W. 11#1111AUGII
111LASS-lUtlbous assorted; for oak by
n 0.21 9. i W. ILLBSAUCIH.
THE PUBLIC ore cautioned :1;:, most re
r,tving the follr,:toz111,1/1 the ,rtnotnt. twine •t..r.
a+ they I: ere stolen from the of Pre gu:r.rril,:r.,
Vele?, o ' tt :NC I ; ' oPiro r ' w n -i t Jr. doted
No:ember lob. lASI. for 5.4:1 Aloe:.
si.,lormly, to :rder of .000.. V/ thy:, del.,:
Chetober 1411. for Aillt;,:1.1. S•4ther of the Id.re
tu,tor slre ex:dome:l A
i... !Aidso, Tor sale by
rl U n Gl e — . N.
s a W. HARDAelill
- “ linsT'S CANVAS-200 pia. prepari A 'A,
uAl ''' l.f . d. Tor ...!A by ! J 1t.11 , b A i.'o, .
-t.
' ~. .P %lona
_ . •
II ADDER— i OW
. 1 , h+. tine (:,
, 1: . 0 . 1F:%t,r,, k i,.
NUFF—NM J h.. 11 t
_Atte:A Seth. , i ~T. ,3it.
CT by .l KIDD k (' 1., , +1 W0r..j,.?
A RSE , ill2-111otilt .
T, T, , , f,, ,, , , : 1, ,, , , ,,,.,,a)
.SACAMMONIAC--125U Ihm. for /.111” by
no ,, J. Rib)) A 01.. ,1., Workl..t.
iiirSii - MOSS-3 1114 Z. Fresh and 14ite,
o= J I IDD A CO_ C., 1N , A.1 .1..
FISH- .
... ...
, Limbo , pupprior !ANL., 11. ustlob.
;,A bblArlio 1 MaokerAl, tar, Atol W.
. .
111:1:
•
100 •- 1 I.Alte tutoortor tottlmon
A, • fin I • • Ai too. tl.
Jo tt r,relvina owl lor Anltt r
11,=f .IiIIIN WAIT!' • to. I tt.rt%
_
BATTING-5(1 Lot, t or
1111•KA
Wm./ and ;root At.
IJIIO IRON-121 was r.,iratz Fornao, for
1_ rola from 010 Allttultony Itorr.
oolt. .1 I: Fl.t/V11" It hur
.
IttA - NNERS' OIL-21/ bll • , { 4 . .. 10, 1,,
_nor - 1. Flanl
(I t :OVER Si".,F:O. for t.ttle
0 022 I Au 111.11.
Exchange Bank.
FEW SHARES of the: Sittig . Al atit••ll
ant:: A ail o
• -
Ohio and Penn. Railroad Stock,
FOR SALE AT A LOW RATE 1.,
nra. A 1111.1.1 tA At 11
Sight Exchange on Cincinnati.
F OR SALE at the
A amt.,- A
Fresh Fruits, Hermetically Sealed.
F RESH Prat.hr,: Freeil St: twto rto ,
rvilt Tt.trn ANA ,
1'11! VI:IIT , ,;
Trodh l'hurrloh r I r.. 1. Ihorn
Thr ar.-
rvlzict rito:ot thor a., ' ••
Tor hr %111 .r
ooTI.
• • Vulcanized India Rubber Soling
t'Sl' ll C'l , , a 1:tr•-‘ . i oaatav ..( t in,•.il ,
n.I grntlan , bnnt., nml t' ,
i. thn n the rqnr"sn...l
,tr to Om S ,, lne. *hien h.• ttt • .st non, il,
the "a"l..ru inll.lr 11,1 f nn•1"-rntnn. , ..1.1
110 elf. /.. II dn., 1,11.• tc•rt...., •. t .nt
lorl. nn , l •• • tit nrrn.nlr nf 1.1
ral introlortiort to llot roar. J i.t / 1,. •
I tolia Ku!, r It. not, tit Mar 11
. .
PiAN° COVERS—( 111.z.illrarilz1,1 jr
. din lititirarr Piano. tort o..tt I trorn I t t , ,
tala an ittiridttr Itttp.d. ti
Slarrt it
on.. J 4 11 1 . 11.
NEAT. At,llg. leather top no, Uri : oil.
.air r tint, and le. nat • . 1'
• allNV , rto is Mitt
"Kimball's 011em4ual Waatilug Fluid.
F1.1:11) is far to rri.rl riv .Ainr
hood fa Soap Powdar ofietri..l tit ttitt..ll
A It need* A dot a trial to nail , . tor wit r.t t
• • . .. -
I.: It will t.: in ..., .ntr 1n.,.. th...,.....,,..
II
avllon Gr .1.411....1t,.r1.. 1........ ...1, t •
. Inn
II . lull rrn 1,1, • 1••• It• • I.• .
Lr•la• `tont , I :I `• It ••'h t lullL` 01.
uc.2l I
d LA , :s _IOU lx,. !
ti."" •A,ll, 1., F'l.l.
it ICE— 10 to•rren
ILVEII
mach 1+ 4 . 7 4.1 1111',111 it 51.. 1• i• 5 • • 51 5 4 .5
l'a:nune•
II • %1.11
o,t
111 F:SS Si'
4rs•l. ,
.....
Ns. 11. - 1,. 1 • 1.1/0 •I 1 I ; I G•
nut, rut r I
4ark...1r+.1..
i:s -urn. a l ull,
t 7
7 7! '74'. t: ; 7 7 •
at ..
n,l
Smith's Patent Self-Acting Hinge A: Spring.
A NEW INVEtirloN
rilliE • atterm-in of CArrwnie - 1,...1•'. I:tui•lers
rnr.l. .n., t...... 4..,. arls.;.....rh.rt D a.r. t , .onnf-.1 , •
ff• I.one LA. mime Tefunl.l. Invrnt on ot . .. ..f..
tn.... R ban F...nn •ft-n....u11.. Inlr.•lnn-I .1.! , 1.......1
nu r•er• ler, nl‘.fing• DIM D.ref...4
II ronoo., nf .11,a, tn. , ntll fr., nn...4.•• r nishef
na, with • •prir.: In Ch. tr.p nf I 11..10nz t O.
plan.. to .mutt tb..,.1 •••1nn..r..1 prfn 0 •,-`.. o 11..
0 n'' . ' .!7 . .0 . ''' c n U: tr. ' , '" r!;;,:• g r.*
II r! ' •••••'I
t 1 "" 'i
.''-'''
n I J 4 If PLOD
• myln fin,. •0 1 1, th. nnf.r.o.•t.r. ~1,,5e.-1 r , -1, ...• It hi 11 1 M:0-- 1..11 .iOZ. Poland, 1, , r .ale by
, I .l`. A PO iDM i ' . JUP a, • J ex R FLOYD.
0 ,, ~,,,, p., ,h, ~, n f f ' . ' ,,l, ' :: ' ; ' .. ' ff,.. A .1 i•nr • b 1 1., it f.:.•11 I E - ..\ "..—oo hi. chests Y. Llysnn;
Non. Inning IlmeLln.. for ;O. II ...t. r.. Kn.] •...DIDOn I,' 0' p•-• I r . n afnektfr /I Imperial.
Ste, , Y., hf 7 th et...up -11,
Tn.,
• .1 A.II 1.12. YD
I) It U.TTER--11, 1 s. i rt,, , e ret• 41:,,,di0r ~ e ' - --- '''''
~,, .--- --- -.. - 1,40..1 W. II Ct . E: %LIM I 1 1 . :.‘ ME R-1 - ,1. , nudes N. Y., for sale by
A 1 J A to ELOYD.
Ir , ARTNEitSIIIP h lore exl.ant
I) 1 1 ( .1: , 11— • f; E.,.1... Imre. 1 sale by
toa ..nr. , u-o n. nsrat. enem.r• I. ‘1, ,, -rrdith.l, , ,, 4 , i ~ ,
.1 a R PLoi o
,Mttiru ' rg: con 10 0.1 Ipfll ART. 1:4‘14 L , .
owOlitti. I, Ni.. p., Rut/NIS-511 dur.. fur sulc by ..,
' , IS ,
\ ~. , i. W. 31,1• A VIN, 0 Water sL
CARD ,
,eco on ens ignment
The Leather Business will be e..11111111D iII t PP I. L : ' ,--. ;‘ , " .I '.
, - ODS .11S.
nt I ~ r ,- .•• 14
the 01.1 stand. N. , 1.13 1,...,1 .try. l l.. a, 11.,...N., t , , Ili. ~- ...,' - , 7 W000: 1, ~; , , , N , .. .,
~i ~ .
underele,,l. uu , l, dr 1,, , ~. n•, •,., . I ,i 1, , , ,,, I ~. - '
11iCilA111 , LAI, i, 1 1 :N COVER:m - 2 der.. India Itubbej Gull
1' ,11,1 . 11 4 , 4. 1,,, r le. >1 ' i "I I " " Al""" ' I •.•".. , ,Il th,,nriarent 1en,111,...1u,t ~1 and
tu our Itnr. sr tt , ;,ethallr 01 , c1 , . 5 ~,''''"' •-' • ' ~. '
\ Having a very I.ge ..ock of every
. ....., ..: „ r .,i,.1,, , revie. i ~ s, Ili , Mark. t.t,t
• . 1 0
ll.plimue,
_..._ _
.: I'ItESEIiVERS &JACIi.f.TS-6 Ir.
f•ruvrv. , l-• mud Jacl,, , ,crulllll.,lllTerent kin,
• . . .
'''' ' '''''"""‘"""' :;7l ' irig l i i i t i.llt! "
.
4 .• , tx —I ease for sale I.y il
'?
..4 01.11', 1 ER a 11/41011 . 1iLL.14., Wood A
, ; , •)M E GREEN a YELLOW--I eases,
""'''ai'srani.lianYr.u.,loo vi'ew 4.
• .. _ .
• • ' ' -, itE.Sll FRUIT—:I ,-.1,:s ionic Currantle
lie „J...
.1 M. IL ItalsitlN . _
tIO !A A . tx,xe• M. It. Ilixl , lmuL
.1 ea.... Let,. IlAtript,
. J ! - ~/aqina Citron:
. 11 WILLIAMS a L\ t,
I, 11 115 W,,..,1 .rant.
" 'v et .
WALL i'APEß—itencl, rilui American
W Il Pal., Arti Corder, for Y.AL. by
WALTIKII NIARSIIAII.
11116 ' 1440N---till tolls Jenny Land FumiTt;;.e .
fnr the Allegheny brblyr. by
r.. 51 J A
DOLL 11U PI Pit-1.2. bids. 4 .- dit i,for snlc
hr
InUCKWIII:AI'ILOCIt—Mhmeks to .. , mre
LP and (or sale I; au,l J. A R. Li SY IS
NEW FISH received at N. r,c, at.
Attu.
No. I )Ipcserol IL 1.b., Nun a., 1/. klll..
• .• 141/SA in b!rly, novo Nt
Ealmr.b.• All Illy tall • curio, for •ftl• Sr
boW
ROLL BUTTER-6 hills Prime ree'd ntil
jUL ihr .515 13: nr2u 5 p 111 51 Vl,n.
Rl/
UTTER-50 kkereedfresh reed hrr snip
by Iva, s I. 51151 V 55.
V,UGA it-20 bbis. Loverind. Crushed for
'tin hr nnth§ 4 P hillllVKit
II
11 110051 S-100 dot. Dry 12,:rn, fo4
n I' SilltlVEll
Q ALERATUS-15bbis. for sole hr
no2Il N. I. Sri,: un
("I ii)ER Ad
INrms, llr loll' by
I' .50015 Kb.
iekOKYNLITS: 2 -30 1)1)N. for sale by
1 neCI
Rem Rail Road Hotel to Rent
THE extensive and well constructed Rail
Road lintel, at Latr..bo, Westmoreland
forty milea vast of Pittaburnb.. Ilm line .4 the Contra'
Pennsylvania liallroad. dll LA, rented curl, n, tt month,
Helel 1.
t
midst of a thrlying. Yttleuitntel , enlou. niKre rovl.o
W.-
are
plentiful and cheap. aud at a poutt on the lino of tile
throat Railroad whore an extensive manes, may ho re•
bled upon. It will im el, nearly onionlated hi, the time
We 'taller...l 0;41:1, early nest month. so t rend,
for occupancy. It • handootor brick bottling. Pi tel
(rant on the Railroad, and s 2 feet ie.. three on.rios Nob.
beseletutono basement f o r
kitchen,. Amnesty It 1,111 be e.p., hie
of acromModatims
(.... .bout one EIII,IJII, Ilf,, tetr. l
ootoOrtably. y way veil Loi n
tor • firer
Hotel. and for prwsitting meal. for 20.)
Yuen an opportunity ael,low ones. an artit,.. entorpr,
sing hotel keeper W realise bane', ,1,1111 • tund,ran, in
vtment.
Applications for the stove Hotel. addresoo! to the el •
scriber, Youngstown. Pa. will be reeelved 110111 the kb
day of DKrmber next. It I. deolrable that upnileations
should be made in venom: if try lattrY. , , , tiraftnni.,houht
be enclosed kat...done-el and favt.ral,le known hi.",
Y be preferred.
Latrobe 1. *bout nine mil , . e,
t or Ormtl•cturet. nod
Mt.to
11 Ell . 11A It N
m.Jnl
maenadmar M by taklrl
tow D.
n020.30x111,7.
INDOW bv,Sxl();trld IU
xl2, for nle by no - NI ii I'. SUM VER.
CONSTANT SUPPLY OF MORGAN'S
cgogh Hy rut, llorgen'e Iroral /Clary Nlr•renn's
JA, and Dosherld'e Nerve and Vi to• lelth a
general assortment of Druee. )in root l'aAnte. Mlle, Nye
ofnlYs, Varnish... Perfurneriee, it., Or., whalers:de and
tell, et the Pr. Ntore of J.SM}Od MclitiFFEV,
noln t 73 11 - nod etroet. PlttNbrirgh.•
-
120 — D58EL'S AMANDINE, for Ow Cur,,
ten.at. sales of Ilia odin., during the loot lhlt t..n
alw that vtntnunitr' and so rl rvioo. or. It.
imay. without examearatinu, ba regarded no
weer falling . remedy fee the aaperity
Au, with wtfleb oo maw, are Satiated &trios, tho [helot,
rut aectuan a the year.
(fresh)lon tied nod for tale by
null) H. KLLEHS, IT Wood at.
ii L 9 TUILPENTIN 1., ALCOHOL.
13 bbls. Wow,' IU bids- Pulphur.
Itpletr t ef i cu r ut
( y r ofllan had.
IU A,
•' (71.7) ''''' ' I,ego l;q1 ' 1 " ee Lead
1' •
'4ll 2 maks S I rods,.
•• 132 , 121.11 tytr ii attano 3l .rtAr,;cher. for Fak.bl
uol9
1 ,
17131TTA PERCIIA ! ust rou'd,Tcoci;-
‘fi iota nsoortmont nl Gints arrlin
Y, loupe
irl put of the following: Droll die do, dm, OTC ' , Flturer,
largo sad anal Wee., Card Pi leo. rrud Itivner. 'Weelo
~..0 . , p.m.'s, !runnel. and Bottles vr different Crew
p g r v •ntl.lorispeable Oil tenvfor, marbistr, iq c r ur ,. y va , gv .:
D.orr.otype Vramr., Shoo Sole,. ' , Cater Yell.. Sheet Fat
% Territa for lining drowses, Bread Treys. Sods VIM Si
and!( inch round . W with sir...fell of arttokw mu nu.
miaow In =eating For sale at NJ .
110 Mug Vary.' t.
noill ' J. a It. ruit.i.t re.
DOUR SPRINGS-1 groie Intha Rubber
Door DDOIOOo, loot reed at No. 116 Market .1-
nOllO Jr t 1L riULLIM
OIL CLOTH CLOTHING—On band, a
nn .1. e t if.rnfLurs.
QACKING FLANNELS—Grey, of differ
/?t put tun, rs try, fpney rolor, jun dby
uole MCIII4IC d RCRFIELD I
- • , ,
F,LSII FLANNELS — A full comorr.rnent
ob. anctle .1110.1 low. ballet's, gt-yra
so law+ Aptl•fer,on our en , totP , PP. owl by
,„ 311 - 111•11 C
•- • •
AS Tt- BIN G----100 feet 14 and. 1-2
it II ludla Publ., Opp Tubing, for ..le by
.1. a 11. PHILLIP:LID/Market of, f
v F:W GOODS: — A. A. MASON & CO.,
X... P.! and Pi Mork., ttr.„4„ am pow opoulag and ',
rlrtrr..„,„„ votp-rir New Goals, cntaprlp
of Lout .nd 6 , ,Pare Wool., She It Al tape.
C„turp attl Carpi:D.4U Cloth. 15 raxe , [`whams, Persian
nt.l It. ray. Altams, Ympch Mermos, 1
ll.mtb„atn„, Pe.. Pe Ino pltmp Mart pp/ bow, PlllOl 0I
levee •ol C.pt.>lo „ Trn, llatikerthitt9. Che. 4
or.lr.rtrer „mbr A 1,,,. Flannels Calls.,.lopP,u, Polk
I-I EAL'l'll, ECONOMY, and COMFORT,
ov.ro ra/.1.• than loothor, end korpl.hofert
u.
.Ir, 1.1.1 rotolorto,le I. or ',LI. k dowlson• for onttOlg
on vt 11, nrk..l. .1. 4lt 1.1111.1.11.3
Limn - h ItURCIIFIELA), N E. eur
iy ner Fourth owl Marl. otroots, booin; m.eptl T
t11.1.0e uldtoons to [brtt. so.ortmoot of NEW FALL
MIS l'E I; OKI 00o1,S, prepor..l Direr to their
r,nior •101nergi •nd hu, oenerally, oo Cotowlve re
IO C ll•nrn 1101 A
OFFEE__ bag, prime Green:
• for rod,. by
JOHN WATT a t'Ai.
- •
I 1 IlEall
TEAS-35 hi. chests II.;
e l pr
„, JOHN WATT ;CA,
I{l - 1 4 N [MIR.
MAXI VAla RE
F l h i
•• Pro,. • Ilorw , .,l'd •••
•• I. llotn. 41 , leo.
lii' }l'm.ll. Groot Yr; •
Co.'s It,
,•• • 01 orlor. Voir h
PittAborat °pun:
•• 6 . 7 ./Isl.,
. ' Cavendish:
155 rt , r • ..5,1 1. r rah. br JOHN WATT 4 (X).
55,51.
E. TIIER---210 sides New Yolk;
i I L 51•5 y Calf Skink be 5,51. by
JOHN WAITA CO
11) L l' I i IF, A T—loo sacks Hulled, for sole
) .ssi. WICK * )15•I'ANIH.F.Str.
11 117f . }:11--.72 kers
l i s o „ ..tre K , e' .. ( i i :, f0r , 5 . 1 , 01 . 0 , 1 , y
I RLS— rI 1 day rgs•A angl for solo by
WICK et 11,ANIDIJOI9.
1i NI/WE , - . bills. prone Roll Butter;
I'trinrr 11,5,5 •
•• 1•5,5•155.1
455 , 1 I,tra Cheer,
15•• 11...-r,ras 15; Pal. by
1,511 , 11 I. MINN ETT. li••• , •D'I
1-5 , 5,5 ti s.s.lan•yurothnelsl rtr
5• • 1) baCo Crode, to arrive
ISAIAtI DICW.rY
Water •n/Y rent as.
. . - .
Cold Weather has Come.
\L. PETRE-.
arA,,
DIAm..III hAley.
IV tit riNG- „WI) libls. best ktry,t,,r \by
v
New Dress Silks.
W E liave jest reed a variety orFtyles new'
lueilithng a fr,•
“ou ao I th. Ltttrr of new
1o.o•I Oornna. a aaroe articir. and yrry
1:!. .11 a...0m-la a Coat.* o•lorol, .Green.
r.rt . It un.l -ttoth. or plain 1.4.10 M
I Sl..rovo, ..holo••
drat. and MI, rotor,. Illark
MMWM=2=I
•
MI It rime 111911.3IFIELD,
...r I•oarft. ffud Mar•rt ft,
I 11,11. K KS!—J. A. MeKNIGIIT,
. n.. f•-'1 ryr.,olno, by Ads Mali
of CI,. Swot, if off•t•le for La.
I . x'
re, fall • 01 ..curiarhofte Far.
.
und of I.lllmi:if/A. o 1
I
'lit 7t; :Ind 6'2 per vt.,for
MM=I
1j A . 1:1 1 , , f lihnta , r
i : ,. .it...r:tie2 , 1 „; for
A EL. A.MM.A.NIA—'4 ,ade by
- , r 4ELEOua.
N )1101ras and Ninnilla, for
u 0. SEf+Eltn.__
t ‘ T . l \ . \
I
6 11 II ATE PUT ASI.I-300ki II); for
J KIDD CI
171. k ' 0 ar7.l - . C. for ootety
-
1:•:sf;i11) OlL—'_u obi., for ale
-
a I Dr, ig Co.
SA vial I 6 Mex. ou4tn.. for sale by
I. o. E LERS.
illA L 31 llt-- I f_0r .... q 5 a10 ... b , y ,
n• I l`.
NiqiitEEK t.ll fir sole by
3 KIM 1 CV
1 )01 . —lO casks !moot., for vale by
.o KIDD d CU.
1) 1, 1.1 , 111 TT ER—IS bble. Plain Grove,
J. • IL FLOYD,
band Choral Huil,lleC
. . _
•
Ni ANI . P.Ic:Tr Itl".11 TOBACCO—
Ir.ll. ‘.... , :u..e1l l Lohicisfm'• s'r 1..01.
11; ASH ItUARDS— iO doz. Holman' Pat
V era Zinc. f 1.,
J. W11.1.1.111S a CO.
I ) LACK I \ l7—llU d oz.
IjoT Asu —lO ea t•km for sale by ,
* CO
I I li , ( 11 , 1 4 MS-175 doz. t ‘ l r o , r . l } l, o tl:lzl N e i pl a.
w 110 A to "
buSCS extra Cream D. H. F.,
1.,•14 Wit K s MeCANDLESS.
CIIEESE-300 bxs. Ilexlep'a
rid , •l.not. IpTlsam and Ntlt{,:e; Chet..
,11..1 and for L., .1
• WICK & AIcCANDL}ZII.
.
ClU'r•rl Nu LEESE-400 boxes for gale by
WICK *NoCANDLFI6S.
F SI I—ln v l L l C A : .:r , i i ,! c hf rsiD b L lgn i for
91.1111. E SALT—In boxes, for sale by
nelll WICK& MrCANDLY3.3B.
IDIOT A.54l—A prime article for gale by•
• n•• 11 W leg • MrCANIONJI.
• INTERO , LOVES— . Now in store; acorn
pr, ,n A. A. e ar.=`,T i l"'"
0/ and follartOOmet.
TE A M BOAT COUNTERPANES-We
• h..r on ronrumuetat n large lot of Couutergunes;.
•rL lo• will .01 Lio.l, the at of monelacture.
A. A. 11A-.0.71 k CO.
N DI A ILUIIfiER CLOTIIINU--Jukt rec'd,
Officers' lAnt,
1a Ruling Capcx. with Alersee
21 reit - l'ant•
L./.11 , 48"1ta.
!hurt:
•
1:, , 11..krkt 1 ":
N Ith a coin, le a,,,,,t.snanl of dillerenl rt t iloi of Rots MO
Ceyo mut
' lIG Morkot fo.
NIIIA RUBBER SHOES--Just recd. 20
I alley% tiontlernen'a, Miaaes' India /Labia.,
1,1.. of it, orwrat ply!, manufactured. Th. put:Ma
ern lortie.l to mai and wsainitn..ur 416 et. as they
are ant...nor to any ev•r orlernti In tin, cttr. For salt al
the India Lubhet Depot, Nix. 111 Narkat aniv
null J II ; Pill LIPS.
11)1:11CUSSION CAPS-2,000,000 or sale'
by (.13j II. J, k AIIN ESTOCK A \CO.
AMP BLACK-40 bblr. i¢ pnpern
,
rani
tok bo m lt.
<OO Itu.Uermantco for salOby
and I 11. A. FAILS ESTOCK l al
INCKD MEAT—Put.upin4; rs,
17 for lawn. uro. fur ulr by
UM. A. MeI,LUTIO CO,
d ItoLIN A URlT'lS—lust reed nt
NJ Liberty Prrrort. owl for polo by
WM. A. AfeCLATItn ~
p ucK w HEAT FLOUR—Put up in 50, 25
11% lb. erwta for oga
M t,
W. A. McCLURD 1 CO..
Tes Deslers.
U I I I 1,01111)k;01 LIME-01 the best, qua!
en hand and (or aabt by
lie.NN MT. matt t CO..
nnl3 • Frooi L. o.tr 31.tet-
01L--1° titils. Winter Lard Oil, landing
mul fnr sale by 0. BLACKI3UfL'i a CO.
3,Q1:3
4. it EiESE ---5110 prime Shipping;
)0 orrarn.
:u.O I.Mmonorn red and for pl. 117
• J. U. IIaNFIZI.D.
4_ l'll;ES-7 0 bbls. fur sal:.
IL b y CANY D.
BUTTER - 20 boxes prime Roll, jusCracq
sal bly orb/ by J. B. COJIIIILD:
I AEANL ANN-10 on No, 1, for sale by
non Z. 11. CANIIMIL \
TURYEDIT
0 sale b 7 13.121
, .
, C 0 AT AI ER C 1 MA: \
— ried l.
i .- neou7dieve cde.—Advertl:roi .m ietaand . sii ii.. ree-nie
la
, Itillipepir received mod forenerd tree or. ww v , ti tro ssi
ihiseitilie.
. . . .
.
EC
R . Eir
I$V7 OP T PITTSBORGH. MA.R.ZET. ,
.' FO \Plr week mina, „Vetsem, 31,3551. '''
\ ..• . 'r l
IM Eli/IRKS—The
G ENAL market clOying• tly•
wpk rust clowal has been comparatively, unie/.. aLI . 4 ,
reriheary !pm ellen have taken place In any branch of
txade ' l Our rirettsontlnue In splendhl comfit/on for all
els-sm./II atennatwnstk, and e.,lristderab:a aftliity tt. pre...-
veiled 14 that snarler. /teary shiPmenta of niers/Mad/se
hart• ivrok made a\
, cie the rise,in the liver. ap.l let. guar,
I/4s yet rrmaln t br eh/ppm/. whkh .111 glee an sub-
s 4 fil ' hu tufas.?nee to \, k
rade for tome Ilene to nom, \
{'ho receipts of : Produce' for some days \ past
tia•been'unhke full. 'and prices in some instances Irate
allabity 'receded fnam OUT tart week's report, the canal
will 14'5 1 4.1. P . Mbabl.r. \ VI a few day., which will tend to
incsTawr , tin rnpißea 6r Pk 4... In this ...let.
ASIIFSAYS'e hexe Near./ °Prs larsooperatkmaduring W.
week. Salk. hare boon mainly, confined to mall lots, for
the regular imam coniumptlon, ',at' the folloiing rates 4.
Soda Ash 3s.(cNPearlasliV aloo t 4airstm 5a51; and Pot-
API . ES--The \ ricsiptaal: green smplea tiara been confin
ed to s all lots, arid supplies are'.., Ilmltssi. Salaonthe
wharf are beet ronflned ja, small Int, at S 2 2442 .5°43
it ~N for rommool,n4 priMf,qualiti.
AL--110 notice a , rontltsra Ortouesi In pokes, with
• fair holiness doing 01 the toll ' hysinn refer
- t.. 1 4
1719 r. ' t. hell hbl' . ; - ''''''''
' ''S . '',,'.. ' ilt Q l
---!'"..,. B al
l ' i half I.ht •• ' :;•7 ' ....... - .A -- ''
' ' ''
''i fAI
,AL.OOIIOI,—STa have no alit:rat/on Vi notira * lti, Alc.l
- The re,rular current rate.r.are 50 in) \ roc vi 41, ac_
corami to stronstth/. • .
BulrrEß bill been abirodant.Ant pricas'ae
fairly Maiutafned. gales of roll amount to tyro,. to 1,./.
in sturi.ll lots. at lks for choice, and /I (4 I . IN for torsi.,
qualit,..• tod. 21 k. at f'fi. and bi krt., in lots, at litg.tp,
lue Ti b.. .aelt..cl In bb la may,,..stiv quot.scl af 73.14t1e19,155. ,, „:
4111C11N..-huseka of old haconaN pretty well elan out,
and sales due rag the wes: Lave been onotlneil to email lots
at .4.0.140 fors oulderrs, and 94,U91ie for ham.'
lILAS.I---Kop lies cf beans continue liebt, receipts
having been limb d We may Ono , . from Soil hands at
SI 2f.4.1 hi, and Sr ~17441 Ell . 0 hu, from store.
BRAN—Vales SO Otk hostels In lots on the wharf; at
12c ? bushly. \
11F.1,21VAX,--We mak \ ntu,ts nominally at'-"'.: from tint
hands. • ....IN/o- Co .
,1,,c •
111/CIiETS an Tlal., The market is will supplied
with regular Nader' from st.l% ,, at S'2 12,5i,',/2 25 for buckets.
and IPS4S 44./ Vlsit/fen to ou s.
ItlttalNlt-140 nonce falr \regular sales from .tyre at
SI 12)ifal 2.5.1/,1 T,', ot.ordina Mut/Olt, Prom Ant handl
•
we war quote at Co , collfosl 1251 ; as in duality.
oltt,loo SIIKETINGS—Pittst gli manutactural brOirll
sheeting,. an selling at 7..4e for A No I. an Te for Son
amok.
4 /WIN mEAL—IVe caws Halt et:pints, with light ra-
with .al, In arnall luta Lu
CRANIIItItIIIES--Itecrtota Lave nado roman' alonlY
Jed ruppina continue Intutt , Al. Small \ale% have trau,
rind (min .tore at W 43 * - bOl. We atm heard at no
aryl hand aka,
CiErtt/N YARNS AND CURDAI./ F.—We ha*, no change
4. nutim In trim,. A toll C.naral huainme ha. Leen .10-
106 at lean 4untat,on..
hale Peen fall during the akeetc and
the market ie •hundantly suoyllal. Salm 20.01faa In
m". ha, at ntiliotAar Crk prim, sod Sis as fAi ne
11l
Tari
A.dluari and conatuan.
I.X/PPEW—The maular Pittzburah muaufactureea ce
..pf calm and tturota, an 11k42.1c: tale. bratler's and of
:haathlng at 2442.5 e. mob and time. and of all copper at
17o* Itir
Oi4eRElll , --Our manufaetori. mandato. to do a IMO,.
hubs, with ..100 of all they tan Make, at the folloallM
oticala
Wakes Crackers, 'd barrel-.
nuc-
Pflok IS btreat
Nagar lieackera I. Issued.
CANDLE.S \.\
rhere I. a re:olar demand in the market at
111Nfent .ay for Pittebur:h manufactured Sta. =Ma
;gold tallow li, ' Inhie, and common dipped at Deset In—
n, manufacture 7 are doing • fair business at Shona rate
DRIED Fit lIIT \nuppllee an mall, and wa have heard
f Ilttl;, doing during die weed We may dumefrom OM'.
t S 2 2,4403 :,0 for peathes, and 0.2:: t 4 ,, 150 Ti ton. C. ap
lee, in small lots. \
EtiliA-41alra =CI down from first Lancia at Il.e'e dog.
Yk:A TIIVIS—We 'nava heard of go large sal,. The
egoiar rates from store. In small Icts.'are '..,74Z13 e e 7 ih: , .,
or meal Western
FLOUR--The market for \ the past few days has tows'
e'er atilt. and Drites gave de:siland. ' Owmg Co the near '
, opecach of the aloft., of the . ranal, supplies here ace+,
nulatel to some extent, and bu, to hero been robber slag
.1 taking bold even.: the I...duce:l net,ece,,in mnsequenee
onstderable Quantities hat, m.nu into ature,te await theta
nremoiernetita of tta marter. Sales in (ha kmt two days
maenad to stout WO Ghia at CI 64 3 ID ®a I:Ajar a f. and
•ates bonnie. drum lame vales have bairn , ronflued to
ntall lots et 1.3 10 (4 3 2.1 a, 3 ,-,: lit bbl. for e. 4.arel extra
jar ,S, DUCK W LIE., I VLOCR—We have heed or
,nothlon of con...queue. dom. in 11, e 15 Li. iwcripte'keinit
`cry bght. We notice WI sorlaies of Rook. heat pith •
ili , i iil
l market. The nallas rain from first bands i• 1 1 •AV \
Its end from 'tore. in . racks of 50 In. at /70.9.1 e
.41 sock
I. ciit—The market hes hewn goiat• 'with • fair regal.,
bositleas et the followlma rotee,-No I Slarkerel 111 60t No \,
212 :AP and No 3 SU 764.7 t Herring to Damn lots at 115'0 '
• 25: I.4)+,7her.erior White firb ISt Trool 17 V tad. eel 14
B hi' bbl. 1/4 \
FatilTSt.-The following al, the pen.et.,riging mime
under Mil ikad • .. .
Raisins. ne,, crop 'a her
do old,
i tga
en:. Coorant. .• ''''
..--
_arn Hum
Einzli.ti watnuts\
I,llsn-t. .
.... , •
tinion.l nut la htikhel ... ' ov f
1.1 \
',als le tna , t
ORAIN—The receinf's t.: Wnest have b-en molete.
and en be., 1.44. of IA lat:e salt, We may quo ta
te
C. 5. a. the prenent ruling rete, Wfor R, anl 5. fur Bar.
ley. from first halals. hales 3.14.10 be Oats at 25,1.000 tm
belled Corn at 4... and WO bu in est? at 41.'1.4 , 4 bu.
tiItOCIIRIES.—ate armor,. niarket,rootinura quiet, witti
9 Laapor:unt ratiation In pr.,. Eat., 14 MA. S•ysr et
ihs, 1 mos; Gdo common at Ge; and 1.1 do M 6.4 eq.:c for
Edr and mod Mir dualltim• &NU: HI this Slolames,M lots
st 371e(3'll‘efor Vrleapa szd 411 - or*mar loose. Sales 140
Ms Rio Code. a; bla. and fA dolt 95:09)0. on Maio...Small
esJea of Ulm at IMllie
RODS--Sal.-0 In mall tato tranevrest
tiolice .adr donn]. aaltla lair sal., ',pm
saoo at 51C4417 f , tea.
01.165--Wlndon ..•w city branis. 0 by 10 43; 10 by 02
50: 10 by 11 41 01 roxo country brand* ster.in.Ay
st 11 Iris it bontliau city brand..
LE kTIIER —The use stegulT. , ,at about last
soles uuolationa lialtimore is <ward at 2/4 22t. New
rock do l&p,lee
LARD—Supplies coktious Very limited, auk us sales of
auxumence Pere tranotred.
LUMBER—V. market Ls to. fairly supplied. We
soots at ill for common, mil SZ: for rlear.trom die yards.
t\ Its 3. Shingles frt., yard are selling et 84 PI 1,:l RN 5O
MO.
w ALT—The remalar curtent rib. Of the market aril „65
V l.%:! ‘ te±There le • regalar dtma od In the market. at
ro plu. awl LW: for bor.'
Loth Put--the prewent range a mien le Dallic.iccord
to 4 to e. ,,
Sara t.
...
PI 5, vetet rut.
\
WHITE to—Pure Lead le welittm at $2. and No lat
111.60 it hg •
OlLß—Pie are outurther Charts la ootlm to Dile.—
Doan ealet eplte of thifollowiug rates:—Ltrowed 70
i ..
No I Lard 70, a No Ido at 0./c a gallon.
POWDER.Dupont. end ain a Smith's Dille
Powder no, beg tat la large quantities, a 514.75; and CI
%
to 6.1.60 , for luiteal am .i.l
ell 4111110. '
POTATOES—The ariust is well engglied. Wi th aalr 6
from iirit bands at eh or Red. and 60 for licshannoelia.
PIU RESAL—LargeVcalhlee a mew - h. , 0 estwiTe4
from the Allegheny drui g the lit. ti.. ..1 0..44 e.
rL. heard train. a:mini 1730 tome or (Okra-100 tons
Pestle ai 624. I moo 400 en'tur.hatuirs .11x1.6 mow 113 do
01..1 at 623 22. 6 nine 4.10 de Sr Charles at 24. 6 ma, and
401 do et MOD. 6 moo 126 A Richland at Ott, 6 snag 116
•
do:Nati/a 111,0 mss. Marra:win unsold.
— ilii.litli—dalesion eastern steoant, of zico yes bans", In
die salt. u 734, and PRIO yes slinulders at 6a V lb. tlal
iway 0 Stigler bars been paying VISO i 104 foi hews, du
t%the week. ,
.
liS—Hail ars 'worth 3)tc P.A. pool dean =Lard with
I.\VDS—Prons ilt , st hands we mafigtinte Clover at IS Ta
T oitir at f 1 4 Peril at 11 \ 12$ V bushel.
/111T—dal. atiII.6.PAVIi V bag. arid \lll3 tag.
EIPLUIT3 21.11tiiIINTINN.-41alesth ibals at 461 V gal
—We eitra charite,
PPICES,The tUiti tha gaTrwiassilves for atdetia
a • 00 ground Sie
Pitnetr I iirsll=if ' elan
SPfSCSS—For‘a eonveted. ist of Vbe priors of atierik. sow
drat page of to dirr tuner.
BALT—Sales 'Mfg bbis In I • the canal at 1110
barrel
TIN PI.ATE—The 6000 prima of th\ market are 311.60
43/3,6oV\is. 4 nitur—Ne. 41 boo otor ra=k tin
aelllng :1142.5c Univ.
\ BACIXT.-Tbore I. • detniud for I deseriptloils
Of inanntlititired [_hence,and DU... rowtinUr vrTT firm"'
The following igar 4 00..4 u the 00 tiaing
Virginia anintifileduird priPt7r, Elalt-P1 20131 . r.0, Lynch
burgh ping 17e, Virginia tarlst 07®090 e. 1.014 19c.—
Ilea tobacco Is otiobed at was. Row. and Robinson's
an hold at 270. ‘,
VINIXIAR-801es In liailtad lots by the 'i. Pitiv store
IlliWns _
hare beta counts:id to Ilv
2 1 / 4 0 21e Vgal elk ncutiod.
\ , Au.soesstr. lit
'Ths offerings et tbs.:yards on Alondel
!binge
mall, but edtces showed it lust
\binge !v.:l last teak, ,
\ Berreci-The celesta p we. ahuut 300 hit& u bleb tes•
pearls all Vlklltt at 12,100 2% vase. equal to Si 30 tii lu
lull'oet.
Suess—a 'elmltsel num \ br Intl lam :::, a 1 ;$P head
Iluul 7 Sa.les \ 31:00 bead at /q9,62..t.3 11 100Ibe mea.
lbws 7 c.„,_A„ml number uere roll at 51 9 41
123 each. \
. \ \
. , \
CATTLE '
_ .
the otierms, macaw 11L
• e oold to ettt butt tin,
L• 1 1 ,41..
'Prim , ranted from s2*k
.
it
14,7 . 746 1 . );;;% - arainveni,
Lloga3,T. supply toUlh, or s ileas.d
eq.! thereto, Y, • onohi • ',
Parmareratu. piov ‘ l3).
The ikemand has fallen off consitferably wince ,
last welled\ rangy), borathe prkoes ha. undergone \ 3,
ob.ge.. \ . ,„ \
In Braf tral.l 4 n. all ofteran,,,rert \ rid. The lumber eM
7760 bra., alualug IEN .1,10.40,1: Id..
Yot . Tn.
brought from 550t0 7 V , IMY
Co. won Calt.—.7.2loffrayO. .I vales frerat vs at"
111830, Yralogrralii23l,26, . Der errs SA 5,13.
Flogs—Then U . ebanne miniiv 3 . 1 " " 33 37
PHCP varyingfroncSigt, ZS lb, as n oo•iiir.
sbeep and Lamb 2300113nd I mar t. Tb• rairan of 1
tb• forma, new St 60. and • Ira 111 60 72) 3 • , ,ali
In in poraity. s
\
GREEN APP Bbb for eby
. Mu.
Pena itt Irra nu.
PORT OF PITTSBitRGH.
\ N4Tra..—Then. yeas 7 toot 0 i;;h.-..g chaos
1.,t4.1114 at dusk, 11.1. or Dins, sod at a stand:
J. McKee. I.l#udriekaon,licEoesPo rt .
miautm. Droves.
rhos Nhrien. Half T Kea[ 4r[non,
on. Ytmrer.
, • ieftlarva. Voir*. Bum,
J. Bayard. Praln., Ellsalvtl.
Forest I;itv..lluninch. %Vanilla
67D:4bn...1411m Ken Nestoy.
No l. 1,
Norval. 4 . 2 Empri,.D.ot.l.4eas Mo.
!offer...3. Jnhast" 2 I
I. ‘ nuis. '"
CLTor.I4 - 3.lngort
Mt lento. °reef:tit. St o l.ouis
•
tl U i n tf ' • U' lie r '" t in" t. 11 ' n" Tirl "'
Vb. :".briror. Bail,. West Keaton. •
*are, tiordon. Iteseert. \
Sitelitsra.u. Heave,.
• S tarard. nret.loa. F.11,5t,t1.1
Fouts CILT, Mar d,ll.
ti U'Let Nowtou.
•lYtneq ter. nonce, whmu.•
N 0.2, M µ'o... s loµ'o... s loG.ooµ'o...sloG.ltiberulgNo. 2. Ilatcholur:Clucluna\
I.llo[ 2. Craue,ll.xXiugport.'
BOATS, LEAVING DAY.
YUIF kIIL-Or.LPILIA D s DALTIMOitY.,.
D LeechCVe Packet dallr • \\*: d
•
,
NA, , ,lVlLLi;—thiv. ''.., ‘,
, 47ELLSVILL..-I . .tvet City. ,
NASHVILLE—Irene \: .
ZANKSVILLE—Emorm. ~,,
WIIEFILING—DIuroaI.\ ~
1.01:1;•S'ILLY.--T.varots s k
.
e , .T. 1.11t1.-11abt Ilaieri
111-AVEII.—Mon.. boae:, 9A. IL \
EvroiDi; boat 0. r u. \
nrarcrotlu.r.r.64ri L \
BicoWNSVILLE. 5 t. 31. itn,l'6 r . \
Ho! int Ca6 , l, MI-That th.er, etoeuior. nod lidWer of
the pat I.et line. latticuall. Captaha „1:ho llirminshem.
\ \ ;"
le-01 lea', Od• thorn:matt an- mmtons et 10 o'clock. aircr-....,
mit a rate oppattocit, for the inane al quick tray•eit WI , r
losurmus fair. ~ . ‘ \ \ •
, ~
\
.
„
Foe 6 ~xtriu...-The splendid lista drausht steamer ',
• ,
'roue, Captain Roblyeou. nod llama. Captalla 31,111.1110. s7;‘, \
rein irA T e ht ,
Par the abore and all ly•roardiate part. thl4 ,
day. Theo a, both goo" twat, aO.l admirably' arrays.' ~
\
for the arniammodetima of trave(hrs.
POI IPriartm , :-.She doe pocket Amy' DinthA Cal o •
\
Cr-weelt, will leave LA 2,1,,re this mnruth.: at 1 , , lock.
''
IMPORTS BY RIVER.
't,
PT 1.01118-I . ra Room . , 11.10.4-4 1, Mee lead Ihm-
_,
eern.l9 bbie tallow 8 1 IV Ilarbausln 10 blils 50 ks.l, la.nl ;• :,
&Ile, A Nirole:2l hilt whiehq , -I 3lattlatt.,%dt Aerali • .
ie.,. ao are I, glee, Mrti A J II Shorniwrger; 1 ha Iftltela
t , ... Map. I' II Loushytarn to bar. 14 tru Rh, Wine 4. Ixrd
0 bids aln,hol J 1...e.nt; 2 dt , AcKee: '65 J 1. Slice.]:
ae its
ham:neat Km r A lit Dowell; 1 n1Ico:11 A Leon: 11l Li,. •
lard oil J 'rho num. , : 0 1 ... ~t .h. LW... , . hale.
dr, Inane VI l'nuen.; a Co. I bide berm,: . 1 61 0 )04 4 hash. \\
, .
3 bole ainnny., :.1. ~ 1•1•1 war Murphy II Ikon .4 Co; cA ,
et,l oneet, 4•1•• fnathere I do wo.l 11 Chilo• it thr; 15 b
radon Ithe, Mathews A Co. . n \
Pro ALLEOOI- . 27 lih•lo tamer,
..1 la do A throlam:, .
i 1 6o 10 , 10. h A 11 - Ilerbauli. 46 la, moan E Reale' . ,
hone hruith a... , ,tielasr \
•
Pia Mt V LE,M--.4 eke o - rwil .8 A IV Ilitelraugh: 959 pigs
lead Ilekt•peli Pnare a Ce.: 1 16 eks feather. tired a Co. :nt ,
G. Nitulek a f 6:; lot Mg metalrum, 5,5 ,•ite Immo .1 A P. -
Flo,d, 21 bl• rattan 11 ern, Park A Co: 40 bble .orno iron \ . . •
.1 atl 11 Shnenberen, 4 has Md. It Ilan', WO bits Dm*. , - .
Lawrence a Wightman ' .
.
CINCINNATI-PLIt C1NC17..1,-/ pk, Kidd L 6:10 ski \
Vmkere Graff A Co. 3 table 6, do eund, I roil rm.. 1 trunk. \
Ileynnleb , a thee: 10 bhde ohoulders Carol. d Cole, 4I bee %
riser. Itaseley X Co; 15 do Lambert Aitlpton, 15 do 3 \
Nunter, 245 do posy, J Taylor; 15 this whiskey 11 haekrt•
chamtiaidn A Colber4 , u ft Cob a nap pkus Ada,. A Co, 4
ban u.• 0r... obeli Mathews S. 1: , '.. It Gbh al, A a A Wood: , ~
9 do 0 IV Smith; lut I urniture wharf brat; 2 eke pota,hd
8 Dilworth.
••%,
WEI-1.5 1 / 2 ;ll.Lll—Pto . Foam Ctil -Int allude. J SleCfronS
2 bbla dupe Its eke hart, BZ. IV Ilarbaush: let sonde ',
11,cit A slntandlene, lo eke •erep key hvorseyt. S empty \ \
\
141661 Nlorri,vm In Ithle hour J Moran, ~
St I:KLING-POI tete. No 2-142 1.11.• Poor 'ado ti
lord • rnagrog 4. erm : • la .. ALA vl.e Hanna a Doer:
W bbl nun, 3 tlorlou. ,In It Irrydee,, 6.• do Vardar's: 3 .
:rah, e ii.rz 10,0. e payer llowonl a Co. ' 1
Mt V. S•urersa=.l ,A.Nleker A For,eth: 5n btda (our . • •
•
AT174.010 A Cr,,,,..i \:a .1. is I. Crawford: 106 do Storin- s
~
~, Id'fa
b., barley 21 empty I. lib. A 9 4L Wood: 33 ske
b '
. .
arter:LW ,V keg, Campbelt Co, 2 (bid 3 bas mils. 10 .
in. hooks 4 flour 8 kelds. , •
, .
__ ' NTT I , Eo &C. • ,
ZAL\I_YORALTY..- . '
-- ...s
[cube imam o — ANDHEw MeAles - rxn will - •
, City
for nomlnlktion et the Whig Convonliau of
City of Pitlehorsh, fol. \ '.he theca! Sheyor. nnt`4,lc 4 's
,
. '
_ S4l`
or.
"pi ... LEONARD . fli. Jr . uss is s candidate for
llaysr nt the next Ca t ElcotiOn. subject`,ln the doeVirin of
the i ;ltee.ottic and Whig Co tent:oa \ n0.41t0
t \
please nr.nounce t rough ; L outs , ,paper
JASII{S lATTIILVt , . as a wadi nte for ' - -et.l'e-*
to the rip of ion of the AntitNiaeo car
t 19,.
fair.. l l.t 011ALTY.—Mr. Ed4r
r.ounce that t friends of D. C. SAWS'
els.* for tomairkstion for Morn, xel , :ectlt.
the Whig ConvenVort ' So
5W:4310 \ '.
\ 1-.-,,,,,,,
‘ 91.11 - 14 DIRECTORS of the Col
\A. Csscriptm. of Ilichloan. harp Ibis ..t.r
4.at at taty coots on
t l t l.l Khan. of the ct
110 er.1111.3, One half Y.t. , 0 o?‘p' , 1 , ..,
Iv \mrr. and Ltwother ( ... ., , ar mi., w.•
D.
.... I.bd.',"th" to U IIYiSEII7 T. lII'
oc: • .
Nosr.u.s
T,,,,,,
... an Ilahufhet
'
at . ll M lSet ebante ltils as apeinred .
IV; ' "Clfah ' t ' gPa i lt oltllia k 11.'" for
• W. IL , DENI
1.553g0c
31441tx.
OTl.C.f'.—The person'T . ha
eumewreel raletehr—trees Tet
use ererhner tnetked
requeeted rethrtt IL as lir eentinte are A
the °erne, f R. t . -
Rouse of Refuge:
\
THE Rubseribers for the eree
thou, of Refuge fcr We 4,11 l'enrAls
hr.rbe nbUO.d that mot aere..nnent oi tIreAT ten
the amount eubserihreh by eech. ret,x ,
MO Treasurer, or betore the
nrxt al! JuS
Re order et she .rd 1'
me I
130,000 Bwittets Cpt.
SEALED PROPOSALS a)
itty....m. Louts COO Llabt.Qo..
her. Inst., for furnlthlng 141,101
of YlD:burgh Coe% solmLle r'tna
ored at -Me eta Don works of ,11
aering and summer deli
of
busbelo to be delivered ou 4' s ee
nest. and the hole asout,A
met,t, be mule no deilverr
1.1/.000 txu.hola. Tbn,quant.ltY. te spi
nr, moot or by Irilqblng at St Lea, 11
hi - cry . ..suet portion I. may be deem la
tale by at, ca.ve :Le whole amount del It
JULES D. DA 4
St. jam, Nov. Ist. 1551 —inoltt: r
notice.
ItiETTERS Testamentary
James Ito/. lace of Indiana to
eoy, dee% have bee. uran.4
ge . tlurr n iVie C lNaTf..l tv.drne'VVV,
M=MI
Fresh Teas at Redui
Now being received, ar
at No. to being
Wave, avi
came CIREEN AND ELM
bought elute the recent
Whith w e elm eel! at fully per
hood Black Tea 17lie.litical
Choice ••..... uiTalr
Extra ec, Suer,
Very One English Buiskfutt -
We have the above louse la the urban.' cheat.. nod halt
chnsts. an put s neatly put up in Thi Foil packagew, to
0510 we cularly invite the attentirn of Retell Oro-
Quarter Cbean., and 12, 10, 6. 3. and 2. lb. eannlstaraDU
up 66r family „v. 31: A. MeCLUltll le '
tots a Tee Dealers.
/
VIIENP PIANOS!—Just rce'd
% I tr.p Me manufactory of liana.),
-
rla a Co., , lWton. NIX of their by of
slk11 1 $W001.41•1ANI/o. from 11= tor—
\ Ala. a.. 1. from Wooatrard a Nrova, too; arto Stmt.
.c t. ZAT, Y7k. JOLIN 11. 34 1 /1.1.0 11 .
111 IV , o ,
-- t ---,
\ \ZINC PAINTS,
MANUFACTURED BY,'
JEMMY WaYLORL'iI)/iND =NV
at Newark. N. d.
v. 1114 ta.airany lapreparad to farulah • .
um:do,
ZINC PAINTS,
Which barn been *mud a ft er sertral yens
Europa United Rams, to retain
beauty .W 'proteetlve properties mperte
p. 1.1 hateve, Their
WHITE ZINC PAI:
Is pumly an Osideint Zit., and M warrant
adulteration arid impurity whatsoever. it
beauttnilly white. and 6a antl,m/y tree from
e'arbrZintre=dtb'eriii d
IT WILL.NOT TURN
When imposed um. or' mephitic
even when shu rep lu • elms rm, AP ansi
It Ithatands a southern `climate and the
thin any caber s not being Itabla to tarp
crumblor and rub OIL It may be worked
wltti water and elm ar with eanslah, which
braes/ porselain Onish. \
BLACK AND COLORED MN(
fled, toiralshed ata low prland at
Alm cheapest and test paints id the ise, marl
mad fencing, cutbinima steamboats, Or id
Ade of woad, trick. tin. or iron. mighty an
\ WEATIILIt AND FIRE 1'
Fpr iron near. they am particulSriy •
Limn galvanic cuilection, and entirely
[lon, .they dry lely, mid baying a pu
..m
do not chum. color Ilke man/ 00 the earth/
Deal... .applied au !Metal terms by tlis
04Man p a aY 4 261 7 bout M c .
Wharves.'
BROOMS -50 dozjor ealo by
was \
F /5R7-20 bble. and 10 bf. bbl
Wblte Fieb: need
ENGLISH LAID PAPERS
of English Uhl Paimixi...D e,11 7.
Statim, %WI I'
a 01.2 enrciex 31sulr.rt awl'
PAPEIE-51)
111,11 um Printin4 Pa Paper, 2.1.11.1; \Rrat
•nnthur Paper. 2,.4:171. r sale by It
.
Aol2 Paper Dealer._ /Isaloklat
4,..Z (NAB, 24i111d8. eale by
n 12 r DALZELL • C.‘1...
Ally ASSES-1W Pinntation,
r ue e.. 1.1.1 fc,
not/ ' IL DALZarico.. Übe*,
MO_P_EL,ARCIIITECT,
Ilorticaltaritt. for N4ltini.:
idleritor, tor Noreen bra
Natiottal Nla for Derrad
Itemlrol and tar ale agarin e la 110LALLS' UI
74 Mint ...di oarosit• Car Prat Odd,
IIitCALD SILIf.S--Vie have on
Plal4 brlt m/Aza.
nol2 A. A.1...0Th
loses Cream, r
0.5 W.
MU=
MIU
iya .os l t.NaEIoSoU,I SHN
oWf L,-W
ur o o: lAspw S an
rOphaalok
\ltsiSGN
,/eXI
sad
~.t.
1 bbL for
\ ZNOLLIII