" . . I ,' ===:;l FOB nLMMZITESS, . good ibiitg to give thanks to the Most 'atheism:4 . lone of impiration, and wheth 'anka are ..'uttered or unexpressed," if ' a edit in 'grateful homage Ltewaris ' I:good, it is a good thing. .. „ ,as pleasing as it is sublime Th. 8114" Pen spontaneously and aim % 4 ei4 t ,,atitle their avocations to mi -1 ( 21yar: almighty-"for the great bear- I . lat Via hand, and to set forth his • plir7!r.orthjr"praise." This, in itself, is a cause o .. resjorauf ratituile; this alone is well colon ..,,::4lited,4o:7:tiuspru the lore which the Christian beara tit[las 'country, and to inspire patriotic hope that , it is. safe, for it is written, ••Blessed is that people itboocMod is the Lord."' 'Nell may the American' people, In their na - •:tiOttakobarscter,render thanks to Maker, :for be has "oat det_St_so..:with any people as be , bas with them.: I...tcalth, peace, plenty, liberty, 'and late, bless - them .in all their borders. No • evil too great to be Couttolled has been permitted .kodieradetheir heiliage, and i n bointeona Provi• , dettetildut OrtAre:rett,aPcii . them as many good th:ey-entdd safely enjoy. lidiTiddnliy'each has his separate, cadre fur ',gindittldm,nad.whether his lot has been what the, -world 'calls prosperous or adyerse, it has .IMeei idea, and ought to call forth :htnotions of grateful homage towards liim whodaes all things . . - nTlititlay, in view of the beneficence of Ilea wen; 'ought to call iforth thoughts, and words, •lutd acts of kindness and charity—to open otr hearts - and hands' to the relief of the destitute. If ought to be marked with efforts to restore the wandering, to comfort the afflicted, and to ce ment the bonds of brotherhood between us and all with whom wo ore; surrounded. 'lt is a day to cherish and 'cultivate St . ° kindly affections of 'the heart in the bosons of our own families, and In society aklarge, to reconcile: those who may hare been enstranged, and to "forgive those who hare trespassed against es." It is a day of cheerful gladness; a day for tht 1.. interchange of aocial affections, p.md for the en . joyinent of the bounties of the season. Let it be marked..iith temperance in all thing., and then may tie. hope that God will bless as, and givO msny.rnturns of 4houtigiving day, and many alditional reasons-for giving thanks. • 'beEeve he is a Cardinal . 'nos; and wonfd make a good Pope—does not like Kossuth; Or rather ho hates him, and pro nonnces him a "Atds/dig." It is easy to call nameS, and that the Cardinal knows gs well as body, aml'when lilt Eminence opplies that term to Roesuth, he knows he is disgracing his - (manhood, his intellect, and his priestly office.— ; • no - world it the present day, ecercelyirolle the ••••••• 4 „equal, at ..Reastith in intellectual Tig . 9X end-true . • ;eloqiCindei.and there is probably no term which • jarinipreisively tells what he is not, a$ the mod ern word - used by the Cardinal. iVhsterer elFe the great Hungarian orator and siateeman mny .•-. be, be IS certainly not a ...hamlnig.•' Kossuth ••• is a large-minded, warm..hearted, prudent, and sagacious man, who adapts himself with woo - derful Simi sod - dsliesey Lathe circumstance "with which ho is ourrouuded, and thus avoids • giving offence, while he commits himself ti.; Huth- t' . .:ftrtag stung. warm lover of Republican insti tutions, he praises such true freedom az he finds _arming every peOplo, Without marring the inte rests of liis noble danee, by pointing nut their ams.' In this he net, with a wisdom and fore cast _which do him infinite • credit, and which short that tho , judgment of His Eitimence is not ANEkICAE CHAPEL AT Rowc.—The Pope haifmally revoked the grant to perforit Divine tilqship 'accordlUg to. the Protestant faith and forms, within the walls of Ito — m - e, which ho had himself expressly giron in an impulse of gmti 'tide to thc American Charge d'Affaires, Mr. ••• Caes,lnictitidi for the inliortant services which that fUnctionary rendered to the church by pre senting 'the Propaganda College from being turned into barracks for Garibaldi's legionaries by theillepubliedn authorities during the seiga • of that city. The AmeriCan chapel has been "..suipressed, and the bnilding, or room, shorn of its pulpit and other appropriate fittings, has boon - ensued into a painter's studio. The American Protestant congrgation now meets Cass'a residence; ' Such is religions liberty - under the 7' . lattniaitiiralertho official head of the Roman Giarrit or Curies.—The Neill American iUtereeting article upon lbw relative ail ;:wineeli.Ofkitiliidelphia end' New ti or in calumet.- tutd:numerical greatness. After having no their population and commerce, relatively, at stated'Periodi from 1760 to the present time, the editor comes to this just and forcible conch'- . . , Id,iew, then, of the obvious present supe riority' of .the city of New York over Philadel phia, in - conimerce, population, and the means and improvements required for the transaction of a vast dconestic . and eiternal trade, - .it may - be Inferred that the result is attributable to that lib epirit, individual enterprise, and sa gacious application of private and State capi tal, which have as eminently distinguished her citizens: They have neglected no opportunity ... of snaking the most of their natural advantages. ' , They hare been lavish, but shrewd, in the ex . , pendlture of their wealth upon welts designed to facilitate commercial dealings, and intercourse 'with them ;sand as the just reward of a policy so enlighteno and munificent, have acquired for their Commonwealth and its capital the tittle of the.P.lcipiie City and 'St ate of the confederacy." , Thi) trtillf...4 forth in this paragraph mist be otrvi'ops to every reflecting mind.' . But New York Is not the only example of the happy fruits of ,Ilbandity and public spirit. Boston furnishes a s.tilletronger illustration. We hope Pittsburgh vin troll! : by the example of both: It would be Iplesrlint for her citizens to be able to point to their :Own City, a few .years hence, to its growth in every thing that 'constitutes human greatness and happiness, as the result of the wisdom, wealth, end unselfish liberality of Its The resent is a time which imperatively calls for the exercise of a large and liberal spirit, if we void& nid. he left .behind in the great race now going on.. Every month that Is lost Titans relatively in the back ground, and renders the pelts noire difficult to attain. Depend upon it, "There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which, taken at the flood, letids on to foitnne;" and that tide is nowla fall flow ati regards this city. If eyelet it peas unimproved, it may MUT' flow again here. There is a feeling too prevalent in many com manlike- and poosibly there may be some of it here. It is this: Because Ais a chnrf and a nigoard,l3 and 0 will be elmrls and nigiards too lest A - should derive benefit from their liberali .:t.ty.. Thie'is a foolish and short-sighted policy,. we may call itpolicy; and one thatwodo not observe In 'the affairs of private life: Take an canaille: A, &churl, and B, a libearedu, each own a square of ground. A is ad ono side. of a street, end Don tho other. wishes to erect a row of fine dialling; on his lot, bat by doing ea he will greatly enhance the value of A's lot on the opposite side Does' that. considers ticat induce/him to hold back, and leave his pro party unimproved and unproductive? If so, he is a great Simpleton; but not any greater than the nien who teases to help. forward great public enterprises for 'the general welfare, lest some `niggards might "reap . where they have not , • Now we. ahati place the condnct'of the people Of Boston and New 'York in the matter of, their_ railroads upon no higher ground than an enlarg ed and sagadons nelfuthness, mere worldly win dom—ond worldly wisdom in a most excellent thing in Its plate—and yet we ,may eery !pro perly apply to it, and to Ita opposite, tip word of Solomon There ir - that sneeth, and yet 'hr. aeaerth -; and &tieis that witkitokleth more than ismar,'cndii tendeth fo porati" ' • outcast eons of abandoned parents, or ,ophans, their 'and of sneh as may have been convicted of petty offences. They receive in• etruetion in the Common branches of education, and in the doctrines and precepts of Christiani ty. They are also taught habits of indastry, - hy being employed a portion of their time id usefril manual labor, chiefly shoemaking. A corres pondent of the Courier end Enquirer speaks in highly encouraging terms of the success of the benevolent enterprise. ...toy the relig -.2 at the festivities paper will be isthed We do not any that such an institution, crat ing nn the same basis, would be expedient in Pittsburgh. Ere long a House of Refuge will he reedy to receive into its guardianship come of the wretched vialins of' bad trainitet, hut much more than this is needed. In the meantime can not gomething turdone for multitudes of,boys in our midst, whose language: find conduct pro claim shocking procosity in rice! The benevo lent man is pleased, it may he, to witness -at a distance their active and joyous amusements; but upon &nearer approach he is shocked and pained to hear the coarsest add rudest language, and often gross profanity, intermingled with their sports. Of many it may with truth be slid, ••they know not what they do, - but their ignorance argues, cad dereliction in duty on the part not only of ' their parents, but of .all of as who may happily hare been better in structed. in remarking upon the subject of the institu tion in New York, above spoken of, the Couri er and Enquirer utters some deeply impressive thoughts. •tWho," says that paper, "is not in terested in art enterprise of this kind! ' 'What tax payer, what citizen, what philanthropies, what man;within tice:botinds of this Vast city,le not interested in staying this rising, rising, ever ris ing,ilood of crime—a flood laden with pillage and. streaked with blood, faaming with foulness and reeking with infection. This flood is swelling.' The guardians of the public safety have cried out again and again that it is swelling. Every page declares it—every landmark shows it. What have we done: We have tried to dam it with penal statutes, but it ,goies eddying nod ywhirling through them all and still swells! We have built huge prison reservoirs, but it rushes into them, fills them, overflows them, and still swells: We have done this; —what are we doing now: Doing! Nothing but looking calmly on, and at intervals ejaculating curses upon our nature. But still the torrent all the while swells. There is not a day in which it does not widen and deepen its course Have wo done with our efforts': Have we made up our minds that thisdire tide is like the unebbiugriv er that flows through the infernal regions—a a yeritahle Styx, over which na human arm bath power, and by the Bide of which mortals boundsfor Elysium can only stand and moan!— But we have power over it: for it rises on the earth, and is fed on the earth, though it emp ties into the waters under the earth. Its sources and tributaria• are here—in our ve- I ry midst—all around `%. We cannot open our eyes without seeing them. They gurgle up from our rank city soil in every direction, and make their way down into the very main channel through the sheer force of natural gravitation. We see It; we know it: There is not an ob serving man in the community that dare deny it. Why, then, du we not act as the case re- quireq - Rear.. urges us away from the damn and the resierroirs, up to tne head waters; rind there she bids us work like patient, hopeful, earliest Christian men in turning every hitter fountain of vice into a green and fruitful spot. Could half the diligence and expense that hare been employed below, be transferred here, the stream that cones us would ere long shrink to its size. There are noble spirits that are appreci ating this truth and bending their factilties and energies to thisdrow field of labor. They meet with abundant success as far us their limited means have allo i wed theta to operate. gat they wish to extend and systematize their Inherit, and appeal to us for help. Shall they hare it! Shall they not hove it! "No social fact is better established than that Society, throsigh its own remissness makes a large portiOn of its own criminals. It leases abandoned children to grow up into abandoned men. It fails CO supply instruction and em ployment to those who have no appreciation of the one and no access to the- other. our Pris on swords show most conslusinTy that the great mass of convicts were unprovided for and uncared for in their boyhood, and that they be came what they are by the natural effect of evil jutinences, that might have been and ought to have been remedied by the community in which their lot was cast. Society has labored vastly harder to punish than to present crime, but it is beginning to e iscover its error. No in strumentality has told with each effect upon the criminal calendar as the Bagged Schools of Lon- don and other large towns in England nod the ' same salutary effects must, in the nature of things attend the introduction of them or any other similar agency in New York. We greet with pleasure the commencement of any such efforts in our city, and earnestly bespeak for them the interest of every public-spirited cid , ten-" We fervently hopelhat the sentiments no elo quently expressed in the foregoing may sink deeply into the heart olevery'readcr, and net him to doing something to dry np the deluge of sin and wretchedness which" the writer haii no fearfully portrayed. This day will he a good time to think and talk °flit. Mr. Sauna. CIaIIOITZAD is on n visit M this city as the agent of "Dyes Counterfeit Detector," which iv published in Cincinnati, and is one of the best works of the kind we have ever seem— The peculiarity of the work is, that every num ber contains new engravings of different coma- terfait notes—the places where counterfeiters have made the, greatest deficiencies in the en graving, are sought opt and re-engraved ; also the same part of the gettaine note, making the difference so plain that any one having the book will be enabled to detect the bill at eight. The work is cheap, and is deserving the attention of our business men. " Amine's C'ycloiedia of Anecdotes of Literature and the Fine Arte."—Tbia is a most charming publication, containing a copious and choice selection of anecdotes of the various foil= of literntare, of the arts, of architecture, engm viugs, mimic, poetry, painting and sculpture, and of the most celebrated literary characters and artists of different countries and ages. It to published in numbers, sembmonthly,'-and will be comprised in eight parts, making in the whole 700 large octavo pages. Price 25 cents per number. Boston: published by Gould ,t Lincoln. PROGELSO3 tv 011E0OH.—One year-ago there woe but a tingle eteamboat plying in the waters of Oregon—now the Spectator says` there are eleven steamboats of different kinds running on the Columbia end WilGarnett° rivers; not in cluding the Pacific steamers Sea Gull and Co lumbia, the former running between Oregon and California,. touching at the various points on tliti coast, the, latter running semi-monthly withAhe mail, between Astoria and San Fran cisco. Trips on the Columbia are now made in two days which used to require three weeks, and hu eineee on the river keeps pace with the increased facilities. Dr. Daft, the Indian - Superintendent, has concluded a treaty with four bands of Indians on tho Pacific coast, by which oSor 2,500,000 acres of good farming lends hair been ceded to the United States. The whole amount of this purchase is s2b,6oo,payaple In annuities. Set tlements, the Spectator says, no doubt will soon The Oregon Spectator of Sept. tlalb, says the market of Oregon City his been supplied for two weeks with peaches of a large size, grown on a farm-one mile from town. Price from 1 ,, 1 to 6 pet bushel. FILEVCif. CLAIM OA III& U. STATEB,-1413.13 Napoleon, in his message, says:—"The reclam ation which a large number of French merchants and shipowners have to bring against the Govern ment of the United States in consequence of var. tons arbitrary seizures by the Californian Custom HOU.Se, are not yet either liquidated or paid;.bot the American Cpgress and the CabinstatWash; ington b& o formally ie&lidied their juatioi, and we aka 'anon 'obtains legitimate satistae. .._;...•.ttutidn called - "Ai :vs." It is somewhat and management to a except than it is not a muninci .itcate charity. Its subjects are corn- . , There are eome pointed mid good bite, and no little iimuacment in the following article from t the . New , York. Tribune : Flaiiimonct--43Einam.. CABS Of all the absurd infatuations of our Bine, that of three or four ex-politiciatuf who cluster about the Detroit Free Press office seems least excusable.- Judging from the columns of that paper,,these *fogged ones would seem to ima gine General Lewis Cass a probable, or at least a possible, candidates. for the Presidency, when he has not backers enough in the whole Union out of Michigan to give him a show. In this city and State, tho Cain party is reduced to the person of our friend John McKeon, who main tains the fight just at hearttly as if ho were a host—which ho almost is. The rest of the crowd that once barrelled for Cass are now all in for Douglass, secretly or openly as they can work more efficiently, or else laying back with GOT. Marcy for the chance that "something may tarn nn' that will make maid Marcy, the candi date himself. :To far as we can judge, they are looking sweet at Old Buck, just now, but withno real intention of nominating him, but only of securing his friends' help for tiny- game when ever it shall have become evident that Buchan an has no chime°. The Connecticut leaders have neon figuring for Houston, but several of them are secretly in the Douglas arrangement—one (Toney) fur Buchanan at present, bat never a soul who can carry eYlfp a township for 1211.118.- In all New England, there is just one notable Cans man—to wit, the "Soldier of Fortune - - and be has a keen eye for the chances. Cass is elready undermined in Ohio—we know who ploughed - at her State Fair, and where the first premium went—and in all the States south of the Delaware there is no Cassism alive except a•mere shadow in Pennsylvania, which means nothing but hostility to Boehanan. The author of the letter to the Chicago River and Harbor Convention has no more chance to he nominated at Baltimore for President nest spring than we have; and onr'chance in 0, as the following cor respondence will show The Tribune to 111.1,71. Greer Donedvon. N 1,7 Yong, °Ct. 25th, Ifsl Geart,nman . Pardon thin intrusion I have aeon your names in the newspapers in a way that jUstities the ter that you are very well posted up with re rd to the next Baltimore Convention. Being shrewd, yon are aware that "the Democracy in in a ticklish position—that its outward show of strength is hollow and de lusive—that the coalitions with Free-soilers and Barnhurners, by wiich it has made a ehow of strength in Vermont, Maisachusetts and New Vdrk, are elements of fatal weakness next year —that Secessionism has eaten out the vitals of thp party in the South—that in short, it is into fill and must go overboard unless something de chiive iadoue promptly. Delicacy will forbid my speaking of the chan ces and running capacities of its rival candi dates fur the Presidency, but your practiced eye will see at a glance that none of them will do. Cass has been once badly beaten; and is itTead. Buchanan is nu old Federalist, and running him will pull the wool off n good Many eyes as to the party s democacy: Douglass is about the pattern fOr a Idinnelota or Utah Governor, and it is the Presidency we are talking of. Besides, the Extends , of these etc already undermining each other and will succeed Kilkenny -cat fash ion before' next JUDO. What would you say, then, to taking um up as Compromise candidate Compromises are all the go nowadays, and I belong: to none of the eliques which are now getting into hot (and dir ty) water hy their scrambles for the spoils I've read the story of Roman Cortius, who leapod into the chasm, and perfectly agree with what Niebultr's theory ought to be on the subject namely, that Curtin, COnsented to take the Fleet Consuleldp in order to save the country. Well; why shouldn't I tie patriotic and make Acerifi ces on well asCurtius or Welisteri• You under stand the unfeigned reluctance, personal sacri &c., he, which I may keep hick for my letter crucceptance, suffice it that I am willing to he laid a sacrifice on the altar of _our bleeding country. Don't you think i'd be the very man to hold on to lhe party's free soil tildes in the North And do you know that I'd answer re, markably for the 8,Cm:1101:1 wing of the party, asi am decidedly in farnr of letting any SW,. 1.441 out of the Union'thot wants to—in tact, I'd show them the door and open it if I . found any of the States addicted to tantrum,i— the snreit rare in the wor:d. They'a be careful not to go out. and if' one ever del, it would he mighty noon 'knocking at the d.'.' In short, I think I'm just the man for thie perplexing emergency—don't you" Yours; considerably, Jlerare Greer .1. Reply. Non, Noe 2 IW,I Dean Sine Yours received: Good idea, but won't do. We want a Detooersi, of COSITSC* 'regular nomination,' and all that—but one with his eye-teeth cot. Your Democracy isn't the sort—you really seem to believe in it Ste must have a man who gore hie length for Liberty in Europe Itli.l twice his length for Slavery in Amer ica—one who reverences a white Kossuth and stands ready to burn at the stake a black ono— one. in short, who regards the Federal Cnnvti• totion as formed expressly and entirely to en. able and help the Southern planters to catch their runaway Engross. So you see you wouldn't do at all, and would certainly be beaten in the Convention. We must therefore advise you as a friend not to offer, for, next to Gen. Cass, you would he the surest and worst beaten of all who let their names go before the Convention. loom extensively, C. II Dosstuson, of Terns. NATIeI. Garen, of lowa. —We shall take Itl.ars. G. 4: 11.'s disinter ested advice, nod keep out of the way of 11 de feat 114: it known of all men, therefore, that we shall insist nn not being a candidate for the Baltimore nomination. And now if Gen. PUPA will only come to the came wise 'and prudent decisions, he will nave himself from an inevita ble and mortifying diseoinfitures, and enable his few surviving friends to go in for the chances among the rdu candidates. Why should he hold back' Better cave appearances when it's per fectly cure you can't nave anything else. f nraa Hunt, SerrLant`x Maganne. HISTORY OF. STEAM. About 280 years B. C.. Hero of Alexandria formed a toy which exhibited come of the pow ers of steam, and was moved by its power. A D. 540, Anthenius, an Architect, arranged several cauldrons of water, each covered with the wide bottom of a leathern tube, which rose to a narrow top with pipes extended to. the raft ers of the adjoining building, a fire wee kindled beneath the caul/ton, and the house was shaken by the efforts of the steam ascending the tubes. This is the first notice of the power of steam recorded. In 1643, June 17, Blanco do Garoy tried- a steamboat of 209 tons, with tolerable succine„ at Barcelona, Spain. It consisted of a caul dron of boilffig water, and a moveable wheel on each side ,o..fithe ship. It was laid ankle as im practicable. 4 present, however, was made to Dares. . I • In 1850, the 4tat reilros4 was constructed at Ilswcastle on Tyno. The . first idea of a steam engine in England, AM in the Marquis of Worcester's 'History of Inventions;A. D. 1663. In 1710 Newcomer made the first steam en. i tan gins in En l and. In 1718 atents were granted to Savory for the first ap lication of the steam engine. • , In 1754 amen Watt made the first perfect steam tmgitte, in England. In 1736 Jonathan Hulls sets forth the idea of steam navigation. In 1778 Th..mas Paine first proposed this ap ,plication in A . prim ...In 1781 MsXquis Joutfroy constructed one on the Saone. In 1785 t , Americans published a work on it. . . . In 1589 WII 'am Tynington made a voyage in One on the For h and Clyde canal. In 1602 this experiment was repeated. In 1782 Re.. .ey propelled a boat by steam et New York. In 1787 Joh, Fiteb of Philadelphia navigated a boat bye et' m engine on the Delaware. In 1763 Robert Fulton first began to apply hie attention to steam. In 17'93 Oliver Evans, a native of Philadel phia, constructed a locomotive steam engine to travel on a turnpike road. The first steam vessel that ever crossed the Atlantic was the Savannah, in the month of June, 1610, from Charleston to Liverpool. NOTICES OF THE "CONDENSED HISTORY OF STEAM." CLETtLAND, 0., Oct. 8, 1851. 101 NT, Esq., Editor of the Irv-Monte , Peen iftai—lt was only a day or two since, (owing to absence,) that I noticed the short ar ticle in your Merchants' Magazine, for August, (vol. axe., page 2.140 purporting to be an ab stract of.the progress of iuv'entiou, in regard to the use of steam, and its application to water craft. From this list you have omitted amoral im portant names; such as De Hans, 161,2; Pepin, 1698; Bernouilh, 1763; Raynal, 1781; D'Auzi non, 1774; Perrin, 1775; Hiller, 1787; Stanhope, 1793; Des Blaine, 1802; Stevens, 1790; Roose velt and Livingston; all of whom, with others, preceded Felton. With regard to Ramsey, Fitch, and Fulton, there are some 11:aperient carrel,- tions to be made in the reported dates, which I presume you will 'cheerfully make; No boat was propelled by sitcom by. Mr. Jag. Ramsey in New York in 1782, as is stated In the ••Condensed History of Steam," nor was a boat propelled by him in this manner until the win ter of 1785-6, which was done on; the . Potomac ricer, at Shepardstown, Pirglnla, • Mr. Itaessey lutd-coed tt'workl.ttrmrs!lel,tobe - - ' cravat power, with setting rat attached • , /7840 and this the boat to which General Vlashingtr.n certifies, in his letter of September 7th, 1784, published by yea, ,: ; 111nasey's petition to the Legislature of Penn sylvania, Nov. 26th, 1784, was for the exclusive right to this setting pole boat. ;i John Nelson, of Philadelphia, says, tees Ram sey's pamphlet and Fiteli's reply, by Zacheriah Poulson, Jr, 17811.) that Ramsey told him he had theng/it of n steamboat in July. 178;l• William Little says that it urnsey enid, in 1784, that he had perfected the plan of to steam boat; and Charles Morrow and Joseph Barnes make affidavit that he began to build a steam boat in May, 178 r,, which was tried in DC,1:11 , - er, 1785, and o defect in the machinery discov ered- In the spring of 1786 he mode a IllteCe.,- ful experiment at Sherherdstowa, with a boat of nine (ii) tons, working agoisist the current of the Potomac at the rate of four or live miles an hour. I have before me a sk-tch of this boat, afterwards patented in Great Britian, anti fern haled by A. W. Boteler, Esur. , of Shepherdstown Virginia. Mr. Boteler has n, portion of nutuseys' first boiler. John Fitch first conceived the idea of a steam boat in April, 1785: in 1781; constructed a work ing model; in 1787 hnilt a hoot of sixty tons, called the "Perseverence," which . , owing to ink. perfections in the machinery, made only three (3) miles an hour that year, but in ()dither, 1788, wmv,..propelled at the rate of eight (81) miles an book end made a trip from Philadelphia to Rur.. lington, averaging six tU) miles an hour. Fel-, ton's first boot, the "Clerfoont," made hut four miles and seven-tenths of a mile per hour on the Hudson, in August 1807, ninteen years after. • In 1772 and 1773, Oliver Evans reflected upon steamboats; Mr. Ileary of Lancaster, Pennsyl vania, and Andrew Ellicott, of Maryland, also thought of the same thing; about, the .ante time, but neither Evans, !Henry, or Ellicott, applted their ideas to n heat, or even to a model. John Stevens, Jr., of New York, and blieho les Roosevelt applied steam to vessels in 1790 and 17;11. Ramsey went to Englend in the letter part of 1787, end died. there December 12th, 1792. Here Fulton mode his netpmintance, as ap pears bye letter from Runntey G. W. West. Fitch went to England and France, is 179;, and both Fulton and Livingston had his plans. Faltan's tint mention of etrombonts is in n letter to Lord Stanhope, in 179 J. Ilk lint work ing model was put in operation at Plompiers, in France, in 1803, and his first working boat on the fludaen in 1807; and yet the innaa of mankind regard Fulton no the inrentar of steam 'boats! Fiteh's moth.' of 17S5' Srhmi nt the sides. like Fulton's first working boat of I£tl7 and so had the boat of the Hulls in Eogland. 73C, Fulton's engine was made by Watt, in Eng land, and the "Clermont" did not inekii ao g“.l speed in IFO7 .us the i•Perseverenee" did in 1778, when no plan or description A . I 1 au', patent rotary engine bail readied America. In regard to eteatutmats dill Fulton in ert, r Ths Committee of the New York Legis. !More, in 1817, reported that the maehino used by Livingston and Fulton, under their grant, Rao in substance and principle the !dm' as that. patented to John Fitch, fn 1757, for 1/0 years, and that during the life of Fitchie monopoly, lie had the C.lflaFiro tight to it. long line of illustrioua mechanics had no. pendol their inventive gadns upon the atelaß• engine and steamboat for more than 100 years before Fulton thought of the subject : nail the plans of succesaftil boats and engine+ were before kiln, in 171 , 1. %%hat roam was there for inven tion • The hoot. with both wheel, and patilleg, .had been put in :notion by plena, in Fenner, England and America. The rotating engine had lievu completed: the crank connection north n n revolving wheel, and rotating paddle., had all been mode. and used at good 'red But no the Seine. on the Delaware, and on the Scotch Lochs, the amoont of freight and I),i:engem did nut coil, it a pun.- mg business, nod on the Hodson it do! pay It is not .surprising dint errors of dates and of impurtant (twin ri.ottla obtain notoriety on thin oulijeut The perfection of lion belong; to oo one Mi,l or gentliiiii,hit on honor itr which a great untidier of meth et high mechirniral grain, hare, or ought to hove, n share. and niji clip et in O - rttirz sketch n the parormonce tf a ditty crowd of illustrion. inventotle and improver, who preceded Fulton, but to whom common bone has m denied a just churn in the merits of the per feted steamboat The subject is heviol enough for n whin, Vottry, trly. . CII.IP.LES Will i11.E.41:1 GOLD wr...TUE Murr.—Tha letin Mote+ that the amount of gold bullion re ceived at the Min, in Pliilmlelphia Irmo tholes instant to the I h renelior the sum el Orl,r,00,010: This amnant ewe...lw all the ahipmenta to Varner of the present tnimth, lid the Cana da on Weilticador Then we have the ewuple ei millions received flint morning by the Georgia to meet future wants; so there will still hen liand• &Me eneofs in the itopnett over the CX141.1. The entire receipt, at the Mint in Philadelphia premise to he hr.!, this month than over before, een,iderohle mhos:tot hoe nlre gone to the New Orient. Mint. .N AV., ft LAWN %Then. underptand tint Commander Slatiivon, for name tints pant elation ed at Oar Navy yard. hat nevi emd hi• entnn,io. Pion in the Nary Ito had been arderod by the Navy Department to prepare the nlanp-ef.vrar I , ,rtenneith, and rake - command of her nud join the Pacific inward.: but he proferved a resign ation of Ilk eamtninninn to active pet-vole on nn long a eruine._/to.no, Tree-iler. .le•Turpern! ponder well over the (bou rn.' as.n.csis that Flails befall boss- •I cats.. hirls r.flen muter tril=trs useless lar .IFF tr sou mould uwake It a point to R.wt. :shear. Ark.. I..lmont• you esuld have the eured in a Ins day, sal thus not onir 'rune 11Mo. bast sou 1.151.1 asol the risk of !PA. the er@stur kllosssiker. yds.:moat-I next Fall Importation of Hariare, Cutlery, &c. LOGAN, WILSON & CO., No. 129 Wood Street, [.air. in ...11 ter Allen:tan Al•rrhant+ end nth,+ t their tutOilmnr. of FOIMGN Alb DOMESTIC HARDWARE, CUTLERY, &c., 1311 , 1 - JILTED DT nECENT PACKET:,. MMOEMI= • tun avortmnnt n 1 MNN'S rolo Ore ta-1 C D A, the,, on hand. A augl DIED, Uu Wednesday morning: tle :Mtn 100. M lie 1 John Lind.iny the tirm of t)ratl, Lind, 1 Th. fun. , nti rill Iravw tlio rn•iden, hu.l•and, r. liana Lan,Allectiro,, twarthc upprr thig all , rororu. to proceed ID Mt Union Crm.lrrt. Inorntl, 'Nat in.t., at '2 A M , U. six I) -eighth year cf his ay.. Mr. Puna Mato : an ,r.l and ro.twet.l citizen. ills funeral frill tyke play, from I. 1.0. rcNtarnm on Carrol street, north west of Lilo .arr. Anratieny Oty at half-nun one o'clock. tau 14. marrow. k'rllsy.r :511r Instant- Thom desirous of utteuling thc fun,ral. will awl ear riarrea al the stable of !tones Matthew+, ou Nun 01.1,1. (Pittolwrgh) leaving prooinely at one u'clook fur A 11..- ghony. PHIS DAY being Tlinnkhgiring, A. DON :11,70,1,1 •M#4l Will 10. the 2 1 . th. at 3 n'r Ci lork, Inr Vanua 171..1 m 1..11, at rrow. Friday lb% Prides Ilan. outman,. lo Waal ..trva.t. . •• P. 13 S. A. ~ N ernerwa rerportfitilY the citireno of Nen Brighton that bo .111 nywo a la.e 14 Lancing. %Flatting and Polka,. at th.. Merrick Item,. Monday hJ Tuesday. Doe. I and at 3 o'eloek P. M for V.. ulk, and !I for Bentioto-n, and at bridg,rater on Wodneiday, thn Bridgetrat,t Il3gel, t the name bnurn as Brighton. na12...11t • ACKING -- FLANNELS. Murphy & t - y Burchfield bare rreeiret thia morning by Bat.rera Block, Gray. and other nal‘tures of Barking Viannfla, one and In. price. ' AI.. yo an h.cA, the gennulne Unphritik,bl6 . 171.1.11 Flannel. sur..7 WALL PA PER—A fall and ;varied rieiy „nrmvrt e n't from :i th e L'IZII7 N ri D h OlV . n , LTD PA PAVI4:I[. F'D PAPER CIIR TAINS—A halldSOMI. annartnannt mod tandre,l and for tale , / I n 027 TdOS PALIFEIL A Card—Life Insurance It. C. A. COLTON; Seep.—Dear Sir— a ther entontou . Junk, 1 deem tar duty very preturt sol nsr meaner In whirl. the elelm nr a policy recently tneettrl I.r been re ohont (.16.0:10,1 fire Shoungrgi hro been wad. . .„ . "I T il: e bur Ii II bfral yrinriplon upon wh:elt the .alf4rt Ilta Llfe Into:mance CrnPant" Oroen. titles It to tho rowilderstion and .1 Itt, Thu prtneiplo of pruJontial benevolen.... In Ur contu..l arrancomnut of your organiratlon. la the Ova roriall.t traternal heulheence, %loch humanity And Loth ""'"'""' P A UTZ7.V1111TL7,74.41.;•..0. no al' of Firet Itnptlat Church. PlttnhOra. I. Drug Store For Sale. A N OLD ESTABLISIIED STORE, doing. a retail baxlnvoo. Enquire slit, lora and par ert aro of ; J. M. Townoend, Draawlib Mark n ol ntre..t. I l ittoburgh. 27.d1, (Pain ropy and °burn thir floret. vAlusti—in Idda and Wit ai lFiroritia. Peraring, Valiohlng Mail/14kb lir, forfah by no= J raIIOONAIAKE.P. a CO. SALADOIL-10 bnaket for sale by J. PUIIOOSA.VCI.II y CO. SUB CARD. SODA-20 kegs New Curio: for *ale by .an= J. 8131100S)IAv" jTERIVIILLION casks Trieste: 1 sass Chins.: • 1 Int 2 tans A msnrest : for sale by ml J. F.CIIoONMARNICS: CO. SAXONY 111AGANESF-1 cask; for male br ma! J. :--cnoor.atxxix.... PEICAN n 1 PEPPER-15 bosoa for ealoby • -,5.,601100N MAKER • CO. JINTER D bent 5121 . 4 ir 2l ' .J. knOONitaxEm a co. Equitable Fire Insurance Company, of London. e‘ittipany insures ag.ninst lons by tiro „nivar.guodg, woos, and merchnnllz, .fee Did, am Loma], aixty day. after proof of lou. NATIONAL LOAN FUND LIFE INSURANCE CONIR.kNY, OF LONDON. Tills Compnny insures Lives between the x 4... of 15 np.l c All.l.mtion for Insurance In either of the aboTol , mpatz. ine nvvlved et the Ilanklug 11‘)..4 WM. A. HILL k Co . htt*Aurgh. PHILO HALL! .Prd: A FEW EYELN - I.‘"GS ONLY. 14 . LYTHE'S Grand Panoramic Sketches of no the A I.1.1;.:IIEN V SlttltS I AIN r•-e4ttnethiur Ir• co, lard air/error in th.irrn. eztrulicto ant amt. , - [tient-. lecta ner thitte hitherto atrerett it, the-nolthe fele, relit, Itt. 1tt.1.1 the Ilnlettinntt Ilo.tkatoree. A PIANO FOR 3125. 31ATIOGANIT G nictare, modern made havinc M•eri it.r.l about thrto yes, for gal, buntlml Awl twenty-111.r EISIEMO2O=I: A .toot of new Manna on hand and for sale frrani.W./ to JOlLb 11. lIIELLOH, SI Stool at et ACCORDAI , iOE with the sth section of g ,he Art Inenna.retittz the I'ennatiranla Arrri 'l4.l:;;S:-:,..`„7.l",`,l;,'oVM'a2natry`!',;-„1r".11,4„..1),.,,,P!;:"A.,:h., Penn. Ir..m are reyttlii.d to tratudall atlOntlir the Ulotth Der...caber. I , ' the EZeolltr, COMtnittoe of It.. anin Stole A.trictlltnAl Sc.eiety all guell rennt,. a. 'her, ant rethlptl to dentorni and (rot tholittint• for I.reralntme. together with an al”,trart nt re,,, ,, ,dlnca dating the rear. Tll, *t_ [Mire of the Nona-State eoe'f, Nor..N . XTR.I F:NE YOUNG -tlm`o-o. ------- - 4; XTR.I • YOUNG IIYSON TEA. Ej_wm .I..llrMu tz k en.. 11µTPitn.1 wrrelrod few bnlt rI the owlehrkie.l•llnern Ilhot, loving 11,In üblrov,ally arknowledge.l In Oo east to ho hrlle al.snd of arty thing Inwrl.d In. this roontrT st.lt run N . elyslca Oolong Tea aufru eta \n. •" Lawrly ntreeL • --. sitie to Creditors. S of the late firmof Ad amsß Ge;eareyi IrKeeepnrt, Pa., merrhant, an , reepteatel I pe•Aeat it. " to the neJer.. , htned. nf rat n a treerslt. o Olen of Penney a Fterrett, No. 11 , 4. 4th etret. Plnahernh: anJ thee; 14.104,41 te Peet Orn, 1,1,-Ace retlf o:thr , eet,neelsce and pen. their v 0 PENNEY, Apogee., 1.11,3“.11. _id 1. PALL AND WINTER ARRANGEMENT 1851. BETWEEN' CLETMAIH. •TR DAVEL AND PITTSBURGH. EAVING Pittsburgh daily (Sundays ex crete.l) at to o'clock. A. 711.. l.y STEAM BOAT FOREST CITY. Capt. A. MMMOCK, Tfl IFFILLSVILLE: q. 4 .lre 1 ., - v.v. (P.I , mile.) t tlANtoVe:it Irdzln¢ et over ned arming ,0 CLEVELAND next etterneen at I o'clook, in thee to take the Clecinneti trait. 1... -nr:¢.l Or Wert hr' etraso temm on the LI,•11 do tin, tto, ..eutene un-. narlemtinn, Moot', Cleveland .„ • hex r.. ; 01,0,- I n a it',e fleet a .larootry.lSJ2, the aro 1.111 running to Welteellie. alt:eh than teteeesaen, vtll eeo tram te Ilene land In N T.eltete apply to O. at. II AltToN. .(cent. hleeengahela lanu.c. Pit.eureb. ennumodinstp, AVarehnutie, oppoo i te att. t. Pbarlr • 110.1. .rreL running.EA thltabtts to Third or.tr bccublod by tbtxtrlt, Pt ttiven bn thr 1.1 0 April. r.r r:Nuirrtl. KM AI. SItitPLE nr:=l tow for sale by WIC!: NIrCANIII.F.S.S. LACK WOOD, for Norierober. Art Joorcal, for Noromb or , .1, 0 0 ra ,l—prier cruta On. Man rf War: work hr Douala/1 11,01+01at /101.Alk1:0 Library lie 4o , :4 This, 000,, rpra.r.te !bp 1,0 11111, Firot Rate Farm and Coal Land for Sale. E subscriber offers for sal.. bin Farm. I no lho tr Ira 1,01 of 111.• Slarksrater, in 111:410th toril , blft LT 1.0 Vara. 0 ono of IS, All.ollly roust., ats4 ooatati, orarlr Arr.t. sn (10.1 and 10a14 , t0n., .111.1 err, larll.ll, 10r tots loat. A try , 1 -01,1, /11 .J 0 0. laud ,• 11011 onliferi , Ler bottom Ihr Farm 0111 t 0 , 1,1 ruin . .01.(1,61.1 Tl.. 0111. roparatrlr from arn r , Tho Farts 0 rri.rallr 100 koma t 0 awl al, 10.r.n0 • ...Ging t, it 1 , 01 10 14,1 t r 10.1.011 Fall 04..rmalr.n 1.. t o. , of tnoit coo 10 ,rca.-10-01 Irotn 00.0 r; 10r s./.4 nr T.. J. 110, 1 / a rn. 1 , , • sl 1 tall 0. let ,r - o• LS 11 At NI. •1 r Novel and Rare Entertainment. I II I IIE .I Great Em.tern I'ENTRI7.OQ U IST, 1 “1, th. fir•t wo. Ph , FESSOR ILI /2 I: Lye; ro.v • • • From 1144•41 0,1 1, Itl. n ,rt Kit.t lir 'neat n. 41.11124 aal a•E 1 •11,11,....1 iI.IIIC. .111 101.•M1, 1• 1.1-1.,1-1,4.11.11.1.1n.arv.and .11 Iv yr.n.,..al • • an.l ',lt. PL. 14 Ilse 1..1 •ne •••P ,1 1.11, ann..nti•.• 1 111. 4,4 al.i. 1 •1 ,4 urg1i...n.1 • .11 havo hanart4 h.• ~ .nt•rtr.a.• • n.tura•it, .41 1.41, 4/.11 , 401110. all • arul Thar tar and :••aiur.l.t, at 11AFLINII: II 41,, an 1•111, .111 .*•r•i..• marl •nr.4.41..1 1 .44,11. 7 ' l ' r \ I •I I mr/4...}.,...; .4 Itir• :/411•••n lert.eul ra • .1 , n 1..1 In .4•.a.1 Tilt,. . 1 .•,41 in, .aatra Lltt mr.;7,7, atat a fink, VILENCII E I :4NOS! 7.,; 4II'IICUY 11 , 1E1 La- 1 C I EATHERS--21 Aackm prime Kentucky, 'teams aral (by sal.. by .1.4 41 4 .4 111!T4 . 111,44N A Co 11 4 . 4.. k I'II ERS k BEESW .1 X 1.. Frulf,r4. 41..4,.. by ASA 1.4 11 10t.% Icy Wal.r and 144. • SUNDRIES— It bk... l.*t 1 4 41,rar: • s 1.1,14 erttolmd Sugar, Pulver - 10.1 4 1 u. o: ho 1 410. now. 31 It. 11,141nt• or .1 Ltfrs. . 14n4n.i'mata 1•11 , ..44, romns• 4 trn44 [awl Wysp J 4,41 11 , 01,4, b.r •Alh by . 1 0113/ WATT a co. FLOUR— 30 11!.. Superfine: )1141 reed itotl far PO. by ./44111.1 1141'1 t Co. A.Ts--4;40 1411. on ennsiznment and for "T 11tr tl,l soN , 4.1 Water stye.. .r k A)1 .11; P. 1) 11001191—A. A. MAsoN & Co. Y till ...4n nr Monday. Vrvemb,'24ll,. 11 en... of • y 4 1 4,4,113 Elattm4,..l by water. eralabrEring OW -1:14.114.1314. IlAniarls..Nl{l4lll3, Check.. . 411 of .4b,.•14 , 4111 ,41 orally roue half Ihr. 4.024 lORNELIAN lIINGS!—A large assort of •ari.a. Rizen na.l r.e'd at r. H sl Market St. lIEESE 100 boxes W. R., for salt" b 4 - s. t ILIRLIAUGIL, PUT ASII—S trbls. for sale by m'_4 0 t to. itAROMMAI. 144 - ISIN . 100 b1)1N. rilA LLCM' •to Sal V.. Mutton: format b k lIAROAOtiII. 14 1 I.°Ul{ 100 bills. Springer's Extra; , JI iillls.ex " "PS'ltTt'.llEtstt.ttgill if 1 LASS-100 bore:: .SOrted. for Hale by tll oe::: e 2 W. UARTIA1:1111. TIRE PUBLIC are cautioned against ra j.,rinc folhorlug not., lbw payment singb alny thc, ..union Inns/ the safe ~f the ratnnrlhnt, on chn ntht of the Inth ' A note drawn by John grb,. to n the on!, ol 11mon., k liars. rtiO 111 W.. Well nor/nnt.er 11 , 1. for 5ti06,40 Mow. otante drawn by Willinto 11.11ormly. In Old, of .10, la nll days, d•lnd Iletoln't 1 1 ,:.1, 140,141. Neither or On shore tiara are nnJorgenl hr .r. 111111;6Y A lI AVP. snrj UGAR-16 h 1 1 .41, N. 0., for laic: ii.llAlillAl.loll A RTIST'S CAN VAS--250 yda. prepared, fnr Ault , br J. KIDD Woml - _ xi A DDER--I SOO lbs. line ( 13 ,, mb r ro, fa i r sale . - 1 NUFF—SOO Ili,. Garret'a Scotch, for sale a. KIDD it Co., . . _ RSEN IC —lOOO lbs. for sale by 2 .22 J. KIDD R CO.. CO - Waal SAL ~.A I II II I CINIAIij - , — R 1 1 ; 2. 1 :r . , 0 20 b . 5 . t f . ff weon ale ,,, by bbls. Fresh and White, J. MOD R C0..00 Wood mt. 14,isa— stt truto. xmprifilw Large Shin No.l Mackerel, lark" ned.lat: SO No 1 • . 100 No. I Lake Superior Palmon: L. I s Irbil° Fish: i;,r)rit All' it CO. lactrin ct lorroN BATTING-50 bales nuttily. for lc by ISAIAh DICKEY 4 CO, Water nod Pinot its. 1110 1 RON-120 tons PiltnniX. Furnace, for onle frcul the Al J le . ghe 0. FLOYD Mo un d Wharf, ants: NNERS' 01L-20 !ibis. sup., for rale In I c,c.: .1 kIL VIAIID • C LOVP,it SEED. for sale by • .1 A It. kLOYIk - • Exchange Bank. FEW SiLlitES 0t this Stool vraxitcsi by ll_ eV! A. WILHINS A CO. Ohio and Penn. Railroad Stock, r , 91 . .. z ti , A1.1.; AT A LOW RATE by A. WILKINS A CO. • Sight ExchEingo on Cincinnati, FOR SALE at the most favorable rates by . . m a,. A. WILKINS A CU. • - Fresh Fruits: Herm e tically Sealed. 4 1ItESII Peaches; Fresh Strawberries; Pin. Arpl, " R..riberrler. kreql Tomato., 1:-T111;1V— . Pr .h ehrrrii, Frost. Minn, ti.woherivs. Th , ohnee orY put ti4getlieir own job, and !turmoil. rehitning gAinAlmrrarit&r,hnaa. /_ 2W Liberty id. PnlcanizE India:Rubber Soling. usr . kEe'D, a large quantity of varione of Voleania.,l Ite hays employ , daperleneed workinau to sole and W e !adios' and geu tletnettll Not, enoca, and tilippent. •We 1101 it:L- A.lw thO attention of the citizens of litteburp tad violet- to 1.1.1•4.11n,w. which nue boon oyawtna. favor with ir Lu bito (Or th. Teary reeoninend ,-L,..,gr, dvea. tot ID Ecoomy. Intrabilitv and am for oni o afoot pre...tree of lIXALTII. &peeves cene. rat totetidarthid tto the poople. J. it LI. PHILLIPS: • nos:4 7 - Rodin Hobbes Depot. 116 Plarkat at aNO.CON atS---1. doz. Vulcanised In 4ttubber Moot. 40.4 3 r . cil t fror . Dorton , and for tray ^ Dabber "* J. A lIFIAT, strong. leather top new BUGGX, Ft rot atnia, or eat/maga tar Nails anal Iron, at '217 Lib,. t) at tnn2ll4l FAWN anStICE A no \ XiMball's Chemical Washing Fhud. iHIS FLUID is .far superior to trip other nab] nr Snap I . nart, r ever otlered to ;Ina reran unity. t °ends itt hut trtal to ratittla any't rue y thtabt of Ito nacre, In iennortnat Met nrt Intruclontt• it nor anr nt9 aunt.. tha fabalc.. unetl are untint: 414,c...t0ntt. It an In. 1,1 At the caZion en In battle. to Fait nuenhaafra Prtrrne. .ittat,.c tn try the I. lui.l ran have n M.ttl. ft,. tir -hard .4141, Venn Stuto of s.wicitrastiam rota. r %cowl 1.3.11 , 1xtti 111:ESK-1•_"2 hosos Creani. for oak by l.' 11,11 J A )lE‘ D.ell.7.tLL. t Wrtkr nt " LASSI —lOO 1118. AS? skr.es inchm-, for b 14 1 , ( , ._: , t i —1u tic:roes Fre,t,.fi ,. ) , r ,i s;:i s le D 1 4 oy nLt:. L Napkin Purt Muonnie.4, .1 Alarm 1!1,k, fro 11ni.,.. (10ne renclx 17enl , DTPA•Un1n1A14, brA l'ariat 1,10410 l'icnirn/b,lll VAlnllug... Mlbun ot atch Stan nbar t.. (bird 3 Odor Cup., ete. 11. 111C/lAIIIII , IIC, n 1 nlarint .1. nn.Jl Ti S . l ti b !; . -31 n rt h rlIT , Phan Merl.nf exit, width and quality. nod iliturnl to of rich dimwit: nt , Ars. AID,, n Ir. pattiroa nt rirb PLAID/TA:M . II MERINO nrurconiel, ti CLagratAr Ton FAtin. , for cloak. an& rt d d 0...! Mark Mantilla and Clonartnn Trivrtti Niiar Ribbon. of littrat In coed ifarTloi tilian—tiortbeiv.t corttor of lourat and - Market 41.ei fa. rA IVlN . :E;S:k r. L o, l a C2 , !! ,2 lt ,.% . , i h r i• kir. Port Win, . 10 Madan%Shin. . Si t. Pi Jamaica , t ; t.rotch Irlsb for go&lo at MORRIS' TItA MART. in th. top mood. Smith's Patent Self-ActingHinge a:Spring. A NEW INVENTION. IrilE attention cif Carpenters and Builders fa callcil to the oho, article. which pronounced bf the acieritlL, mgiv of New York and other eavtern ride, Icong the mon renmtile Inveutitin of the are. end linen, It hoe been anciiveidoilli intriidured.and ono octal Oil every large huililing that 14 ererting• It o.onv,eta of • Hinge that trill work noiielevaly either nay. a lilt a faring in the top g f the door to keep it in its glare. thts• omitting the old iaihloned term to keep the el PHA and 111.4 h.• doing agar Iran the dieagrfaillfile arJ.e.•f clamming It Came. vrry cheap. knot liable TO O , OUT h.f ~pair. ic yeti einfily orDlled. and Woofed to gore, folding. it'll, ha, room, and other door A lam. vgliPir 'oat reef hied from No. York:Alan. a aid:rde door. frith the Improviignintrfj al J. ha tern "a application to JiillN A. 111,0001t:11. leeiten) ning Mille Alan. ecrot fee the We of Wald, for Pla the Wendeorth Potent Plantro, Machine, for the Weetern and S.t.uthern Etat., no2l 1m UTTER =4O kgs. prime. reed and fur sale [n""-al S. el W. II AUIIAUIII - 1. - - - • THE PARI'NEI:SHIP heretofore . existing under the name of It. BARI; A CO- Im Lb. til•• l 1., mutual ormsent.tdroree It. Nltte,, , •altdr.twins from the Item. RICHARD LUAU, Patahurtth. Nov. . GEORGEIt. ITO% CT. • • . The Leather Bummess wtll he continued at the .11,1 Nu. 103 W,.,1 t.tme4 ete b.ro.tat re. by the wailer-toted, ut.let the name and .{1 h. fit,: BA I. it len . RICHARD BARI,. !laving a very large mtoek of every In our line. a, re,netfulls tollolt n rt.tdlnnau, ~ 1" 7 . 01, oatrnnag,l..,lolore rxtrud,..l 1,, tlO. pledring unt uuned urve.cufito 0, do lne, all iu nur puver to give r.r.. esUelarl nn2lol T. lI.VIU t CO Notice—Lost Certificate. NOTICE is hereby given that application 1.. heron:Ale to the r. cloture /tank fc, Wet rem.v. if of Corwhente No ..10. for loomeenthare. to shot 1).,61.., altewthl to lA,. boero , tyorod by to .111 the luth AthenslfLlN ne.o ha..,, tf .2.he toe 11110 A AN!: tiltlEtt. IV t i t ,. A. , P , P ,,, 1f 1 i 1 ( . ; „ 1 . ' , A.1t ,r l ,. E i,b —Straw Wrapping , sr , t ,,, II i. MARSIIA4, SO ft oott street. American if i V A lv i j ' r "PE i ll n7at r . ren rr, t e t i • ' .art i ...!:1 ITNI.TEIt t , •,, NI ARAII A 1.1.. - IE -- G IRON-0 , tons Jenny Lind Furnace fir rale fro. the Alleuto.ny W harf. I, yr:, J. a 11. FLOYD. ... . . R O h LL I r tITI'LIt-1.1: hida. Id , im . e f ur ? ale 4 .` '‘.. C l oth . ._,-... I.II.IUE.Wiii.AT Fit/LT IlL.Stiaacks in stiire 1 and for .ate by tit:l, J. A. It. FI..IAD. _ . V,FAV FISH received at No. L 6 Liberty Ht, \'..w No. I Marl:prof Ip hblA Near .It.. Jo Italllty, ... Moo :qt.! to MO, .v err to. 1 Sr. c oe th.h. he. Salmon All thy , thn• (SOW ~.,, ' , Jr I.T - n. A. Mo,l.Ultt: A 1,1. 1 b (ILL BUTTER-6 1,1,14 Prime reed and El I. , renle by No, I • I'. 611111 1 /At. 14 I . TTER---50 kegs f ta, it ree'd and for rale II) ), an., , I. ,ftitimat_ _ .. t , U 4 i A 11,—."0 bbls. Lol ering's Cruslc: fol . 1. - 14ain to . 11,-, :i. P. ,III: V I.:: rßooms lin. 111., Dry Corn. for s s h 3. • s I' NIIII_IN 11, (..! A f.EitATUN—I ft libls. ft, Mai, LT - \.\ un:10 1+ I; StiltlVV.l . ._. d r II DER. I: I N Et; A I:—'A. ',Ms. for Hale by 1 ' It .11. , I' ollltl V Vit. If - II '1•01{Y N UTS—..tii bids. Mr sale i.y I JI . nn , .. e. P. hlllll V i.R. New Rail Road Hotel to Rent. rilllE vaumare and well constructed Rail 11,1•1,•t Latrr,be. Weattnorn etoolily, Pat, ft , rtt ut— cad w 1 1 1tichontlt, on the In. or 11., Centr•l L. liatdallrdad t re t ticd ..atj, neat moral), lyr the at , le watt, in • aithi tcnattl. thYl •illitatitaxono•lt "xltatat.l in ilte aiidd o•f• thti, aarteattztral regtdn, ea-,.u. e and awl at n point n• h., t pn. lo- of tn. cl,pre an extemdec pat•donste mat hit re ty n f• t ii,i,. It will , nearl, e•ailen , I, Y .1, It , dridd °pea.. caw! la nett month, 1., rt./ I 1Y , 11,411^,•. i/ • Ittna-rdne h/1.1, I , ill,llnc. 44 feet frot•t co the Rallro. and , •t2 tl, w i ll, not t.illee Acne G. , rdent Ittlettena. a.r. It will, cop.tl, of amdtdaddattint altmtt ~,,,, huh/Iml And Hitt per.mt,t ndidditaldi •t• et-, ay well cal.dtlated • ftr,d lintel. awl for pr,d,,lgn• mold tor 31.3 pa...cntrrn, irdi an °N.G. - tit., .1 , 11,1101 Tc, ttn active, ..h rpn. wit, Lae! keeper ld latt t elt u t i , n a amain - ate In vtatintot. . Aax-atoms for the dare ILa.d. 1.1.10,0n1 to the nub erlber. Youngstown. will le. ne.Lonnt until the Ott. ou o. .ensher h eat. It dens:Ann that annhentons sh hl he nia.le Iw onine.el Eannrien. nl aml faebrahle known Inunt keepers will Le preterre.l. Instrnbe seabout niu. miles rut of tironneburch, and mat be rea.lll3 meant hythe Asc.. to houncen OLIVER W SUR!: k. 5. trukbauwl.leel. IV 15110 W GLANS--. 2.00 Lxs sail/ and 10 :12. the nate ho ec.ll 5 I . Sill:It - Mt. - - _ 8 CON!STANTyrt. SUPPLY OF NIORGAN'S nn. 31orn-an's trnens lerunife auk Ilusbnere leers* atnt hone Lu.huenk k , with a general insanrtment of braes, slokicjues, Pau.," inks. b y e nun.. kart.ntite. Perfumeries. whobLeali. and to- tall. at the Droc Ruse ni JANIS:S klr4/I`VSLEY, 0015 Wee.% stre.t, Pittsburgh. 110 L'S , A Ay of h N :S1 , 1:, ni for T th e Cure ten.Cse ode od r of the Aram:dine. 80004 the thli T te7L. 1.1.11411 attent the Mull entiu.atiou in which it is b 3 the n - Lothannity. 10.1 rlllea..notla are IL, hoeit. tirtnrn that It nay. without exawneration. hn regardr.l • oter Inning ...minty Er the anportty asnt soreoena of th e skin. with which an many are attlicted during thy inclem ent eranons et the year. A 15 nto suPPIY sera and for 5.4 by R. E. SELLEItSI, 47 Wood It. lILS, TURPENTINE, ALCOHOL, &c.— oil; W n. 10 bblo. Taont.m . • %erlioll/11red: Turrntier, 10 •• aloe. 10 •• Alcohol. (7 , , I WU Whit. '2 maks Sal St.l*; epaitinh 011,101., 101 - 1 .17n.llatep,0 fur gale ET nnle JAllll.$ &HAI YFEY, S. , lUUTTA PERCIIA!—Just read, a eorn ifi yaortniebt of Oaths !Web. Geod.. ronviatlog m part ' of th'e follwing- tins, Aro. Floo huge and arnall: Face,. Cool Plate. Fruit 111.11 e, W..h llama.. prlttoona Forme, and Doilies of Jitter.. afro, Patent Collan”ble011Can•lor ma,blnery. heturn Framea. Dagnerrvott Vramea,Elhoe Sol, Water Pall, :beer Out la Pyrrha for lining delve, avid 'Nara, Soda and inch round Cord. adtb a variety of artlelea Icy at, morou• to mention For male at No. 116 Market street nol9 J. a 11. PHILLIPS. DOOR ante ~ JSPRIN GS— oel lagos.4t D o. 11“Ilk..t diait , obber J. l 11. PHILLIPS. 0 1 , 14 . r,eat O s i CLO TH etr or Gil 0 T 1, 1 , 11 ,.. r . , G h hand, ,,, 2 ,0i l o u . part 01 lover Coat, Reefing Jute., Pant.. Overall, Rots. Can, ke., for eels it the Ilubbor Ilepot, 116 Market .t. nold J. 011. 1'11112.11.5. 6 1 ,ACKING FLANNELS-44g, of dtller rut mixture,: dakony do. fancy enloreunet r00 . ,1 by Dolt aIIIIItOIIFIFLID. ELS!! FLANNELS—A full ~ante moot v w that auperiar article whledl has hlthertrl, 90 mush uttlafactlon to our eurtomers, reed br gap; 111:111.11Y A DUlte/IYIRLD, .• ILIAS TUBING-1760 feet 1-8 \ - 14and . 1-2. Ineb laths Ru bor TUBING— (Ira Tubina for ' aile be' nol6 \ b J - 11 - I . IIILLIVN 11 1r - t. • • ',.j.'11'.-- 1 1 ILTEW GOODS A. A. •NIASON\ .4, CO., Not. 62 and 64 al kat straed. an, now oponlugind ntectring Fame )0 ram. f . outirfle Dew Gewal,coMpria -6^1,:#.—:.....r and Lalnea 10 e Frenen urea,. 110robarlms. Sr., pl en Mork and Faller $lll, Ittkge ha Drennan,. Capa.:Sle veg. llandkerchleff. Cheraw tette. and 0110,0 embrolJerica Abal, Flannel, nation, !old! EALTH, FCON , f%nd to be th morn durable thlWlelttl• dry and comfortable. 101,14161 w, nr9 319.eket St. [LAS], and COMFORT; StmeSoe, lelt,ary tkr. and le RTI , the Tint ANI',VNAVINVTZP.,:rW,, ,sular cugonleri mad bp,fr• het, In relect hew. N. E. cor harimr of NEW VALI. n 0 fdr,a, t thew n lO COFPF.;-,11N.1 bugs_, il -"T ckTqWeTi; --- ILL . hr olf, JIM?. SW 01 F RESH 'PEA N.IS till.ehte:ts, IS . . .m M 44 .7 . nolS .. JOIN WA '4 A OSIN & T 4 R—lo la, N. C. . r, -. ` .7 1 . ..: int\Vil \ ' I]ll\ WAIT ~„ 84ANLIFACTO EIIiIACCO—T -- i i (.4 tni, , iSherny 'n 4% , an:l 11k: \ . .1 . '\\l : l2 , k 4 TA "': \ In' . Arm. lAi at'. , i'...1 , f . ,; - -: lit i N 9.. a \ in kcia r 4• - Caw Alan > ~ In •tore and for axle br ' VIII% ''',l. 4! 09.. • nolti .. 4 4 _ I HATE E IZ-200 mitleANnw I I tlic\ 4 dna. ear :4i..k c r. 6.. by nolg ...1011.' Wit . V.C . ! l.____ BUCKWIEAT - . - 100 Kicks I UHC , 4I.ISIIIO br (INAS' ' WICK 4;7I4`AN - DIISZ. ~ U UTTEIt--72 kgel i jurt rep , : ki, #kr ErtlO ' a) Dolls VIIV I'I , ICADLEF..i. - DEARLS-I;hix ree'd niul Id ale.,: ,‘ i . noll \ WICK t BIWA:0 Tss. - SI UNpRIES-3 bblg , , prime Roil Btkir: ~ a - , Li...t., ‘," 1 ‘l l ,lKle 11.tausl '• 40 : c s , Leg t. P=llutter. \:\ . Ilq It. Desnmigf.; fn rale bi \.' EN14.114111 .1 lIKKKI, 5m...114. between Wood apdArnlthflal4.l. Al:3 PETRK-49 bags _ for sale by nrrive •41f.tT;*'TAs Doldtiter has C... e. `0„ , D ON'T FORD '1 CIiESTEIII, I.j° M.doC l"°. W. W MT 0-,43,00 b C(11%1 ER C 1 \ILL liaLtrawne A olittc....— , Ztds . crti4ne... an‘nul.aelikt.r. 'fur this p...por recniv,l prwmpe,lfh. of ren,r • YITTSBcIRDIEE, MAIIKET. .liitia flr Tls‘trs•lar Tim markot yesterday was s. t.• any tart, ext.% but a tati\r. W ener W 2 very mat,rlnl ebange lyric . IL F1401:1% -The roc,ipta a moue r tto be 0 lg. ;port 1;0m m, tban rmalrlnt,..at 1.114 63 0, IQ 3 for :qtrs. tfittea`4rom rbt 4 • , •.1 17 for af. and eNtil brand, Tb • vervalutl. with aJe I , UO taudenrf . Oft ALS- e heanl..(uu thinq at. . ler Earley, It.teev, aro oritltou I roa,c. la, 100 b. from 61 Oata f Ol, al •-,r, ttud INtiao from t arhar at ttf 0 00 Int ab.lhvl Coro at 40,.. n 1 0 .13 0 40 1 ,10 0 11 1'41-Sal.. it tt, I bran al 12‘...e.and 500 do .Forts nt ••••••44 bu \ ^sllo . l Vhipis-s.i-4 of Sufraz hart, le..n•n fin to 025,11 loofa 61 4eiJtid. !tofu.. I' yore atarfv , a• am , z 4-0 3.0.10 r It..eu obtained fn. mall lota Orient:l:Nand 4 't - 4 4.. tar. 80,:ar hnufe. a sale of 100 hgtt „Rio CollifT at litta h i re mar he quotni at 44 - 4 4c witho\st .11 tnany tar, extent. I I t. ellt:E.E-4....4 4 les . 211 0 1 fa: crcarn ea 11 .!•,r.lf10 do soul - rmx - • - torat at ttNr. and 15.11 do at 10 To f or and Ira .crcn TT t. Fir-Emirs tt, 1..0. 1 . at tic. and' , o4.4u at ftfir. Choke n:11 rot:Um:ea In avott dera•od at 13r. ordifiarr an \ coda:non qualities 1114,a12,fir 11 A1 . 1 . 1..F. 4 ,-541,4 100 0114 seen north, from store at 5...1` eaff ;041. ar , ording In qualify. Suppllea are .a,r,x. iiitas-t , aiii IM:dry Dint stt 110011.4ie Pt 61:041: 0 -400,10:1 fin, ,prtrt, magi,. from S 1 t^ fl BAC:WV-Sale. 1000 Ifta rhoulders at Cyo 3, m. Haw ar, at 1 00 Syr. " L4llll (mltr-ttales 10 tdds Nn I.at PE.IIILASII-:talett 5 bblv at 0r: if 11. - 1V111, , K1•3"-tTlte market feu quite artire yrstonltty. with Nle.4 001 Md. at . .11e it halloo. GROCERY MARKET Itisw Olassne., Nor. 15. et;GAR—Tbo morOptent in the market haring been in terntpte4 during the past Ohm+ days be rainy Weather. t the eel., Lave boon /saint:led 10 430 hints. including 300 " . ..rd., rsir and plion. hake been only ht moderate request. and all other drerlpnont Lave been extremely . dull. The week'e ' , nun,. etdapthee MO hhdl. We /pion. Interior 1154031.4. tionttoeu.2.l... rrio 1, fair 4 t:l3tl. prime 'w , e. elo in . :list , . thunfittl command, Shar,:c. Xl(tLAnnkls—St the dote r.( our 'sat review, the. market chnel at . 2.144114t e r Our prime. whlelt IVR, a tle , lhatt of nearly or quit. le I N the ruhunratea torthrde the latter Mart ,dart wwk. Niers hare nave reottutted to tend and then. hae'leno a further decline of le TI eelloti The -.lee reinvent...7so Inds 1. Wednesday.. 111 WN..e.inte.ll, tenni.. at 1 ,3.10, 10Ou'on 'I bun s 's,. when too Tull,. opened al 1 2-1.h t en,41... anti etwoel 01 . ...'l. and 11 . 11 1. s.terenlss. the market onetime: at 11`te and liming at . ...hc. Thisuoakee no egurenate fur the thrre date of 1 ,7 e. hole arel St.,. I. the seek htial(l.lX—rt... heart Inter-anon. ntottertl in th.ir tart re s-hut. liSve been followed by I pan, in therlemand. which may be hartlr ettelLoted to unfavorahlu weather and the u s . i t t e, rort for the \i - e• awl the roles hare been mot . 1 t 1...1.0 bee.. Inelud T yur WO o eld mi, ye•tentro., bt: ' :..T 1 0t1 . 1. ' 124 . .11.,;.. L , 1 ' 1T:1.:1?.. ".- ;V ' ..%1! "' e r ril::;, ' ; \ rota .10,, th • .bek h. heel. hand. nt 4 o.ll9 r haus. ant in grocers 'IM i t:Li.. total 5.5,011.. agamat Zino, aa the er : re-notating daii; oat year. The imports Fiore rsuly I. to dew. eompri, .4,112 bi,.., direct. *satinet 193111`1n 1,541. 1 and ',I tio ent.rwiz, nutunq 1 1....7 1 t.ehorrluFht groot eye., ot F+2.tr2‘. heurs It Illi:-Ths qtor - nf Mee le aMple. mod there Teo...timely anS demand for thh moment. IV...tuotel3l.ine.ll, l Irt to , the ol nomin eropa. !. prier from tint aat.. the lowest rale testy r \ . , .. . . • NeNi\DTess Silks. ltrE have just re'd a variety of styles new I 7 7 lan,- Dress Silks \ Ineludinc I. few patterns Ter, net, l'ln.r.s,le Aix,, plain and floart..l Illack Silts, the latter of IN, style,\ r Alan. Plaid Froch . 1 1 , tinol.. a scarce article. ,and Vert' cl,ra ,ble, goods for tbL• possonl, riZ . l...‘ th' :r ' da ". .l h tt ' ! ' l . ti . e ' r ' l•lL n ... ‘ o' n f r p e l; ff" )l:D l' so r' l , L7n . .e . '" . Preto r Nerinc.. ' Ot rholro drab \ w0,t " .C.4, only,. }lliw-R lantil ' ls %.1.40, Dew st vie Sm.-ha Lnojr S 11 . i... % , 00 , .1 Shaw k: Scarf.: Pllrt.4 1titan0....., ' ~,: Nlig.ll4ll Lg.* ? 7,- .rthea4l con touttE and si„k,or, ILO AKS! CLOAKS:- 2 4:2 F . o.arlE hoe rer . 4 1h Syc ovroloo Adam: exyd,v n tel .0 bloke &DI lut, cos e for La. dor and CL.ldren. A o rarlytyall viii e.rst rn 42holee he,. Fain A /Ate...CA-01 IreNh * and large clock oeleiMpluarg.o: tgo.d eu,ls A . LCOGO L-25 bbls. ,ti and per et., fur by It E K. 57 'Wood pL 'AM) OIL-9 bblt. Winter Strained, for t. Ie—E—SELEEES._. CA U. AMMONIA-1: eakU for sale'lly • IL E .91.:LLEIL 5 eails.Madms and nln jlia for • or' It. K. Y.E.1.1.1,1, noitAk- - aiN) Ibe. for bale by z 3.1,4 \ 2. 01E0 s. CO, I, 0l W.l Of. ItAIItUMATE PUT. ASLI. I Ono 11,5. tor J. lillei) ii.::0110:1.7 bbl,. and 76, for male by 011,11 INSEED 611,--20 bbls. tor oah• 6y A n 01.5 J. KUM ENN A—SO.l) Alex. arid In., for sale Ak 0.01 R. E. SELLERS. ALSAIU FIll- 2 10 galls:fur bale, by nol7, ' It r_ sEiLtlrts. _ VOGICKEK SEEp--6on lba. for only by .1 1:11.1, t co. 11 01 4S I I - 1 0 easlcrime, - 1 7 ,7 r sale by RIVE • al. kROLL ISLII7EII-1.5 bid... Plain Grove, llk. .1) by J. k. PIAVE. 0015 Round Church IIuiILEOZ. ANUF CTURED 'TOBACCO— /NI In ..a Iluaxil C Roblod,ou'e Lamle. • 1 , 1 W. IL amore ,1 " AnA ' A A ' A C . Fr, poi. I, R. FLOYD ui ItOOIIS--1 1 tloz.l . ol.ind, for *ale by XI toil J.s IL kLIII TEAS 50 hf. gileStO 17. ‘ Uyiren; o .%.fr ' groMf.thr: ' . F., rain hr yolk .1 • it. noTti, EA9'HER-150 nl. en N. Y., for isalol s ly viola 3. ! 4 1 ' 1 4 r' re. E lsa eank6 B R? . ??1,S-50 e T. WOODSt!„L. A PPLEs-L-31) bbIA. reedßater !t. A. nolaaria fur sale hT T. ( COVERS-'2 liners, to 11 the dlifereat let for v ale et No. 11 - 6 Market etreer 11014 J . O LIFE PRESERVERS &J.•7slisbeth P.4`iint'.. - stzsi. tc14r111.... lirn ..e. 1 1 ,f. . 1 . , 1. o. , nn. pi,,,b rgik. 1,11.1. I.nuiscil.. 11'..nrb ter,Oiler., , , WLlt4,linz. , Clty., , ~.,0..2..114..r0, Wb....11.1,-, elN ix m 1 DEPRTY.D. • tt.l.ntl, \ rk.l.n.rn.llrn.nostile. altir. , llenio.l.t. Brewnsrlll.:. 11,•ii., llVlnck.so. T. 4. , 11c:kw .. z .„ , , m , '."' Perth.., b . %l 'r e . U : ' ; ': , : 14.18..L..... .. '.. 1 '. 1 ‘ ert.rk1.r.. _ . N .. iley, Vel . t N....r103. Conwell, 11 h,lin4. \ I. Hirtnin4.2. Cm/u:I., ‘ . WilOds,ett. 7...n..111.. \ Chilatol.l. eilnetnnstl., . \ tirrucane t..Err,x. 1 , rum, soy. 27 r withiout movement ILat.ivaos.vra...lA.,.... It. Oh. bib. •In.elzt fmrn Cut name I \m a s 5.3 : r i ' S r :;3 ,I f • tourket '31.1 . 1% %,..'... C \ ,iepre. •. I.lterns .om-inn I. .y...10r . TI IO. , I, TS 1. j'.."''' " . ' FOD 111 D Leech a Co WII 1 1 / 1 1EILI , • ts.IN II \ It I NASHVII. f \ ANESSIF I \ LIISL t.T V .‘I,I VI I , I; \ nckymt- .. . \ Lid - POETS, BY ItiVER s . \ CINCINNATI—Dm 17; - 11.4 vs - r-10 Dl i s , tnadiaitws ickld" S t:tt: t kgilnk D .I`r.&tr: 4.ltblx bonti Vanua A Dpart t; do 6t' 1.11 N exnpta Adam. a etv ttble ahlaati. Bmald l Co; ltt Ids cotton Kennedy a Cli del do B l Dit B . . reran t. Z.l NEtiVILLD--I'm Deritzm--119 bit t/lo mik7 Jo bran: J 11:ga 1 s: DO do `tltipttuClD ti It Co ~, A.t . i. • 1/0.,,, L 4 ,0. 4 7 \tt Co: 2 Jo __:.k• aborts Eta r enley A do s ; 6.. J thbt tlotrbotttamrr I.4m tle m i ' r. l, f7l,l2:,7LF!" ' i 6 ,bn ,%'..4,!.1";k.,111 , ,17, -g , Co. 117 132, bran I. Little `,c+9 .6 o' C%V Artnatronit . 7 ' do:. cutLl Grabs.. \ \,. \ WELLDSILLB—.I.tr. rourn , Crtr-1 bx moDein B Ent.lert / do J vt.twartt 1 Ito 11,31artio: lot • acme Has At: I Pkg. 4[41 Ilunting a 31illsan,, ha tands Al IkoD 11 It lour D Str.ott.:l/J do ttlantalt. \ , , DE tat:ll , -I,n. 3111 . notta-24 Ildn I La 29 krna butte J A Cauaber. .7 bd. flatt,..tl lt , ltaTet. 2. do bran owner 26 bbl. 11...ur ftbet Mellows S ftt..l6 dos 'melt./ bx Ts= ltonahorrt. . , . y The nnito of ANDceiv, SlelllAsTen will to .utrnittel the nomination at the Wh'if CourentiOn of the City of l'ittp , urnh. for itr offendl Mc or. tioUle Wife' LEONARD. k:. JOHNS is a caikdidalo for Mayor of the next CI Election. rubjert to te derision of th. 011 O'tsnnte and Mhlc . Cooyoutlon. ool(1,:te Le - Plane° announce through TOIL JAME: MATTHEWS. •• • randidnP• Tor Mal' to tt• uominatiou oaths AntS3l••outo and Whig ... ',. .Cte . sl.-I.SORALTY‘, — .l.l.x..tFtlttori Pleane lorlare that the friend B. C: SAVTEIt Rut press • ' cla.naa for nominationnlr.layor, subJeet to the dceniOn .1 - lb.. Whig Cl.orentloo. Form WOO. notnl. - nr• „ \ .. . . -, \ Prrrnlcsau, OeL IX. lIISL , rilllE DIRECTORS o the Culling Mining i. t,, , mpany of 7illehinan. har. Ilan day mule an wee.... turnt ,Itnty uvula un each ohar. al the capital des of avd Cccapatlymne half pa, al.le 0 rr Lehr.. 110 Z./th No -s.mher, son, the other half on or fire thy:Min De:entberi 1\ next. at thelofll, /0 v.l• fay. lit.:, NEI , I T. FRIFIND:Traam. 1 '\ !Ibvlnunn4ll7fiii: . .1 , 1 4 1.1 E Meiehanht' and Id anulnentrers' Bank ji . Cl l'itc..burh her thlA day neeler4l a IliThlrnd of 4' IL , ;;V..:::! - J!.. b . ` ; '' .V.I. ' Z."14.1 . n.."rf-mfir , "" b-1.. , IV, II I)V.liMi:CaskJer ' \ N O , T , I r C . IL :i i — , :ln r i , i . ;.1 , 1. e r , v , on ~,n 'ho. T ),.......its pN .- ay' '-come: n inark..l"tr to. l'oet. car..17E ! ..7;6. " 14" . 11,10 , 0,1 10 relo.l . o_ol. \if,d 0,10.04 ore vat nalLb/onnir t. t/.0 0!Iler. t.,,..) lt. I, n11.L1.1..1in, fa Wccal at. -• `, House of \of Refuge. -rrltE sill;soriber.s hAr the - en, t 11.1 u. eof 11. tun^ 1 .,e 'Wet:en. P.' 1, , ,by a:416.0 "that an •-..-.1, t / 4 ta• Ihn aitnotlnt atit,sil....l by ~ , ,,nj .. r.q.ur...... tho 'fro -unto, on or .1,0 !It` ' 101 it ,In,'. beat. ny ot.i., .1 t cob n.ntr:l.::111/...cr.:n:ca,I ----. ',,,, 130.000 Bushels Coh,l , i Wantud. \ 1. ‘I , ,A L I.; I) P 110P4.15.1 v. LS i Ibe received - I)j\ ~ .3 tisa ••, , t. !Anti lie, 1..1..1,1 t'a." uniktba f.itlk :10rmt....• \ Lir mot., tor Yuttonblnu I !"( ( 1 naabA4. bro:TC.Jor .., 1.0 . 0t.r.0 1',..!, othat.l., tof,sorattniC IMO.. la Oalta ra.l ta -ma 0.1. %Otte hi :VI etenplttlX (kiting the ;., mmtot and Netettler teLs.a.htt or 1.1:"... alart *not le. dawn \ :Amu buntalm ID to, dell'. ottdou...3 . t;el/. the ilt of .5 111 , naxt. am! the whole amount by ist‘ot Nuramtar. Par. . Mente te in mad.. on .1.41,ery ta namate-4 not 11.. IL. \ ; thl.ol/0 boatel, The nuatitt, In LO aatartanni hi mean H. , - nr•maitt rst by or•Mt:law at Fi 1-nula, In tbe.mrat.M'd., y,' ': 4isarri...eir port.. 1...-may 14,....5ed nat....an, 47orm -, - tan. ny a, era, tbe .Lola antoknt datlevta,L Jun!, it DAUM:TT, B.e. • \ K - .. St. L. , nia./ina.1.1... ISZ.I.—t &obi'. ~.. . , SN . ce \ ETl'Ell. Teßtaor ory 1 ,e estoo o .IL4 Jame. M.. Mtn 6f III: M.llg LAM I Cnontrof AI- s - . .-aqtany,..1...1, hare law n rant.... 111 a bmmbetm, all' `. \ . yamon. Miring elalnt , agano4 aMI art o RI reraent \ them duMAulhoiticitkNl fot fottlriSaut \ . It. El% Z., • , . WSI. artl/1- • ' \ \ u. ur ur n , , 1 , 4 . INS. , n114:(1;•)Ilt \ .. , E t. " \ - ..',„ Frals \ Teas • i , ,lieduced ' 'des. : ' VOW bell\v F eee \ e:ii, and an h (0, " LI hai , titi- 7atnAiri h il r r 4'.... be.. ..hi MOM ,r ail hn min won in Itie r ,uid win we •ran at nil> . e.c rent..brk7 our roma =I act Tra..• •-•••.TiVi , i(i. 1 c , li r .i ti , ...--e--- 4 °. \ C.h . "'" ' in' i 7. ,:q..n"\ •:: ,--- ""Very' In; k. ' n ' ili t e n ti, t re• • 'ir ' irtTr ea \ t ~,t 44 6* - :,..'" .t. i t \We have r share Amid ai \tile of lanai entail andhalt ViVc " i s i . w .L e 'd nr rui r a2 tl in ‘ l ,' l o (..!t ' i; a l itu ' l l iglf .r ittaTti rr, r, , l en ' ^ ' b ' er Cara' a 1-• O. . • Ind 21b1,rnnistarr rut tit• Q l 9 uur.ily u. 4V\ . A. alcC13;11(i &Ca, Tes,Dralorr. 'lre, for solo by J: •le FUJI D. \ consagnment\ out's* e(q. CI WAIL, sL lIIR Pit\ OS.-- ue: d - 1 ) t i' ' v ' ' ••• ' ' I from Ao rOano am-, of Into Da •—",.....1 ~• ri * Co, - Boinn, ?I .or tb••ir uvr ST, rArd , . . 1 I ' kW: EWOOR OIANOS. rom CZ.' to *AO ~,,,,, 'A 1., 11.1.t.Vrato IL • ar•l a B .1.11.10. awl btod• : 1 York •, . JIIELLORA ._. .'. n ',-.-'.- -\ .- , 1\ Wool meet- ', '', z r) - -AI 11 . 7. . .. fAkliF,k,O\T U .itK R " TOR NEW ~.... JAL ..ZV A EN.FLORING ND MINING VIIPANT:' , , , 1 . .. ::1: 1 : 1% X . P 1 O , O 1 .. tra to \ a lloll,t/ a worDir s \ \ , :f . llao• 'T 'k g ' o b ri l in:tt i l Vt.Z.n i i ii ialf e tb " ete . otl '- ' :''''.: 1•0,•...ge" ,.. a O . V . tioAire Oto'reios_Ouriziur to aix otheo : \ l c , i'ilM r \ ;(. I.:O .. P.A.UT \. ,:',\•.':: .•-; ' - ,2 t'Y Z i etfg . PIL,, i 1 ` 7 :.q . lty . fi at ' 1 , ./) fir d rca .,: n tr u iri. 1 1 l ; ' lf . • ' I N ,. 77, i -- R XEL W V. ~ `v lt ' t:gtm: . tii.. \ . 1 IVY A .0 ''' A. ir t ROOMS=-5O (toil. fc 'JP non VISII-20 hrls. and \ l i t) hi \ -I non 5 " ''' wh'''' . ' .. _ . t,NGLISII LAID PAP 711 s : r Eualish La al Naa r& zap a , PRIMING !lAMB j. Medium Pr.ling Ptwer. hlads: ... It!,DALZEL Go riCl2, * a. DA 11 - 131WARdilITE( II H utturiei. for Nei Cultivta_r,pr Nt . ..yeratnea 'Ylfforti is AID Sll,iS - -Wei;avo on hand 30 pee. etinu,ut cam. CO 2 \ •.116.40\ 4 boxes Cream, for ealo 'by IL/ u.;11 5.6 IV. II ARDAVO 11. .. bLI. for bale by is, 1.. E. A 1110U1:14 . TIV4l SIMIVLS:LW . e , will open IV tala akoiritair esatsV, 1.104101 mi. and wait...a • a.i.x,2 41yuroitt,1,17 ah.. 4.24. • \ \„ A. A. 1A.4.():•: CU.:Market M. 1..U.1ii,760 FIN. for kale by .eae D. A. S FAI!NY-STQC ., tix YiVisr kege enciplaa7at sad iur tor: 11A Lin, JON la at packed; . • :Y. Rego \ -174 Nilo bAL2R.LL a CO. FLO I / 1 l7:00 bags. hulled, ii,Lor, ink! a.r mte b., • . • ••molt. • •• ". lIARDAIAILL V417.114•`”ud 1,10 31arkn'st. nt rep'd, 20 IfJii Robber , TI public ( k.aa th y or rAI at ... , I. AGS-4 .tacks firr sale byy ~--. ' r- - ' 101 l . ~\ 8. k {V,ilititliAr.Gll. . ' A II trPiate.lll.279 bush received on \,, ii-7 .ol7l'7 , '"P' a L x xt1 . 1.1 . il t b i r onboN.l Vrobt kIL FLO 11... , 0 bble.'6. 1 . .; .. ‘. • .. , 11' do ill lee •ale by • , _. , /LEE:. AI,q ; LES -.- Waibip i fill: .by : 1 ,.\ . ; \ , \ 1102 \ " eenvr Peattal•l trtilk• •i.'', .. - \ 3 lik 1 , PIN , §P—A ne* and varied sivrt 1 \ : 1_) Intuit - I' bt•cl, Jet . , awl iloid.lun T•ed a t . .. \ ..- . : \ . it. itlell.ilttlit).•2. /I.l•DirS liitiltl.6l PINS !....-A Jinn , F1".1.,',c t ' \ •,..‘ us , it Lhastamik 0 as, gitl5l43tA.T . XkV:l.4 .. Itl . !S b .I , N S 5i '- • Ni ... . \sk.,,, rec'd, Ati FII4LD Ttl.n DAY. BA ♦.a dailT h at •so t, • NOTICES, &c MAYORALTY an `,... t- n 11144 .wr ffE== , \ \ \' \