PiI"FSLIURGH GAZE'l"fg: POBLIBILID BY WHITE a 00 PITTSBURGH 13AttRbilr MORNING, JAY.' 8, 1852:. - ifritEADING TriLL ka - o - D :': - - -., 1011 , RAd17 PAGE OF THIS Petra:. OPINIONS OF TUB PEOPLE. , . Some of our ootemporaries are gathering up the Ole:lions of the press against the udasion of Kosentli2._We Could also gather a very , formid. able arra' of opinions from the press in his fa ",-'3ur, but prefer, as 'relieve not rooaafor both, to the opinions of the people, in meetings :their primary capaeil,: to which the :','lteildest and atrorigest gronnd tins been taksn by .',..vnert of all pcAles, creeds, profeisions atul clam es. In fact there Is a mighty ware of.terror in :the canoe of civil and religious liberty for all Min, passing over this country, sweeping away • and moth-eaten 'prejudices, breaking down party walls, corroeting baseless and antiquated notions of human responsibilities, and invigor '.F.-.ating and mriifying the heart of the nation. - Onetstatiking feature in this magnificent 'reel • of sentiments; of human brotherhood and good will tenuity is the fact that it has taken told especially of 1110,r:eat religious heart of the _ nation. Protestant Clergymen, ivr,rywhere, joy . ', fully rash to web:onto Kossuth. and to express their - admiration .of his great character and greater mission. The quiet, the orderly, the in ' 1:v111v:tat, the reflecting,the churcli-gdio .those whofeelthat they hove the deepest Make in the • permanency of a free government—arts the men who take the deeptet Intereatin Kossuth and his. 'lnsose. The pot-house 'politician; - and the mere' demagogue an general rule, stand stud. They cannot undioStand this cause. It is too high, n too broad; dm noble, for small beer politicians. '•"„ We admit that many good and preident men • eland aleof—not from opposition, but froni a very:natural caution. Some men aro proreibi• ~ally elowin making up their Minds on new ques ;.. 'lions or so much magnitude, but they geoemlly clime to iteight: decision 'lit the end, and are ~antong.'the2llnrieid. 'votaries in a good cause. Others, Whetia great question of duty, justice ..atottnomla propounded, rush to a deeision • with stalest Instinctlrweagacity. Ono'thing ie certain, all hearts, not embittered by r.prejodiee;. nr; besotted with ignoiance, or frigid with aellistMan, are enlisted in this cause liremaynot hero *lithe heads of good men, but wo are =Viol' their hearts. TflE KOSERITIt FORD MET5l=22l= team the receipt of one fit:lndeed and fifty do WI for the Kossuth Fund, from the workmen and fropletore of the Dosquene Ivan Works, ISfesare; Coleman. llallaum Co. This is the 11Mt. Money which has-been received by the • _Treasurer for the noble °lima, and speaks well the love of liberty; and reg ard ter the cause of citil and rehgtous freedom, of the largo _ . tsarted woOmen in that. prosperous establish : sant. Heaven bless them. The blessing of those reedy - to - perish will surely restupon them . Now let others imitator this good nAsteple. 'VOICE OF THE PEOPLE K 05511721 NZETINO TN 11131TALO 4,/mmensio meeting of tke People took phee inßuttalo, Noir York, on Monday en:ening, the to isprve their opinions in behalf of , . . -... Hi:oath and , his cause. The Halt was densely ff - emilided at OA early hour.. Ilia honor. Mayor „...;;WanSworrn, presided. Speeches were made by the Mayor, Col. M'Kny, D. Tillinghast, H. Bey . ~mortr,- T e..;Mr. Davis, Mr. H B Haley, Dr. ninck, ' - llev.Dr.: Cheater, C. Q. Bristol, Rev. Mr. Thomp son,-and others. ...,lter. Dr. Chester, pastor of the North Creaby -:'L.tliettur Church; at the call of the meeting, a tn.. c'forW • aa and spoke like a -Patriot and Christian. .--- Mo =totted the docirine of Kni:suth, ~. with. r eal ~ and ciMeage, and made eery happy points. at woe eloselltd sociferonsly throughout. 'k )l In Cbtaplltmee with the call or the audience, a tie: MA L. R. Y. Thompson, Tadtdr.sf the 4'l' liiresh inAius Church took the eland,: and .in L a 'strong, well expressed speech, sustained , ....., in' all ' : prints the doctrine of non-intervention. -- , 4 . .14 . 11'd0wn' by Kossuth in his speech at '" ihe . Corperatimi banquet, His remarks were ' 7 ' se ee tted w ith grea t sa ilefi on, by the spill -• The rmolations were adopted - With &whims histioix; and the meeting adjourned with three .... - ;CißiScor,li.ose - tith, Hungary, anii,tilierty. Th. , f g th ees I • anl on ions. -:Pvasolved, That we do but give utterance to tiro j~eacr .: L judgment:of the civilised world, in Wroutitincing the Isterenppression -of Hungarian ;,-Liberty and Nationality, by an armed conspi. raoy of inputs, an attrocione crime against the rights nraurnanity—tending to Subvert the great principles of natural justice, which ehoold gor ";',erA'tbo„intercourse and oenstipate the law of Itesolved, , That thaaini.ted States as one of ,the great community of nations, holding itself ineuer,ge to the autheity of these-great-min of natural justice, has a paramont right ‘-wind interest -in their establishment and main. tenonce no law, by AU the other nations of the earth. , Itesolited. That the Inherent , right of every people to establish for themselves each form of _gcrveimnent as they tatty deern best calculated to - secure tbo enjoyment of life, liberty, and the -purruiteof happinum constitutes the very loon 'dation of separate-nationality-amongst the se.- oral-peoples tie earth—And their only guar - - ,anteefor friteeiito and.free inetitatitina. Eve itheiefore,,, have 'the people. of the tot ted Staice good reasontto think thelate outrage one infraction of-this right by the Emperor of romll4.•,nn..httser. upon their most sacred . . ,Ltecolved, that in the opinion of this meeting, the Government of the United States, represent • log the sovereignty of a ems people, bare not . only a right, butte is their sacred duty, solemn ' • ly . to ustert tts principle of non-intervention as an inherent right of nations binding upori all e;.iviLizett governments, end to use all their con '„:›tAtitriliontilintluente and authority to cause it to Wire univerthlly adopted mid respected: - i,rltesolred, That, whereas, in the inscrutable • . 'ilispensitions of the: Infinite Providence, the aPeiorktif nitod Etatcs, froma ship load of for liberty's sake—having i i ?itii t vg4tigithronagh the blessings of freedom and Treniiitititraions, one of the mightiest nations of the earth ought:not, cannot, behold with !unlit ;” !cream, the:death struggles of the peoples of 'Europe in their endeavors to achieve the like blettriuge ti nor will they relinquish or betray - ,:Hanncq„gLhont.assignedthembytheSupreme ihtin4uStiderrithLtdef of Nations—the poet of • ri • SidAlVe guard th in the great -battle of Liberty NifDespoutt. And, fierees, .The people of Hungary, by their 'noble struggles and sacrifices in the great douse of linumtetitreedom and Free Institutions, have entitled theirselves:to the heartiest sympathy and co-operation of Crory MU-hearted American— , therefore, Ai render our it3empathieri effective, in aid of their dellvenuica, be it further ..terialred,i That a Committee of twenty-five be appottite, by the officers of this meeting, the names lieretifter announced through the Announced through the public printe—to. be Imo= its the Executive ,Ilungarian Committee ' of the city of Buffalo whoup duty it shall be to ' eckipunite with like ComMittees, appointed in - - Other eitlea nub towns of thp, United States in rasing funds, in finch way as they may deem moat efficient, for the benefit of_ the people of Hungary; and to take stick other and further lawful action in furtherance of the views and wishes of th eir illustrious representatives, Louis , as from tittle to time they deem most Bemired, That a 7 Committee of fire be op- pointed by.this meeting to .co•nperate with a in . connidtlee-of the Common Commits, in present ! ha the name of the people crake city- of Bur -1 - I fslo; an address to the illustrious Governor of .a.gtFy, Lontm Ko's3utb, - expressive or'. their unbounded admiration and respect for. his - altar- Otte Ind =Mama ispapsthi with. his 2seeej fitit or-a sufferings, and to tender to him lut in -1 citation to partake of their , hmpltalitica , at his RoEstrra fossicaN.-!-A. Xsrio and .spirited mooting of sympathisers with ilungsiy, was _ held - at Alibi:oc F., Y., on Tuesday evening— • Judge dlfredeonKlag, presided, and on taking the - chair S.:premed hie cartel approbation of the objects of the zoiet!agin a brief 'peach.-- fliers' other siiechee.:Sreie aiade • reloluiions ernesrapsthy with the Hongarlan pause and approving . of -the erouree,of Kossuth, were ..adopted, and* committee teetotal, contitbetiotut _ . . Q venter In tho Rural icy Torter Eipithat vointoelt, viten In:!tp, it &apical on once b 7 one into boiling water, and gocatelk,•tlintimifect,thi 'grittlii,y 'Trill be =Wand by the freesint, •• ' • is now_ ery generally enteetaixi.. - ei ;ha thaf4te bold sad despeiate act of uatetx.- p:ntion by Louis Napoleon Wits the 'nailer& ti deliberate plan on the part of the absolutists of Europe: Tlls qiistrol with' the Atfeerably'rlds overbearing deportment towards, that branch of the go rernment, and his demagoguich deport neeltit, towarits the people ; his pretended friend ship for univereal eutfrage, wich, under his present arbitrary and tyrannicaLrule, is bitter: mockery and an outrageous i i nsolt to the com mon sense of Abe nation, were all parts of a ' canningli devised plan to onovert toe Republic, and place himself in ,abaluto and irresponalble pciwer. If be in able to' entrench himself in his present•position, there in an end of republican ism in Europe. The ever of Remits, she 110.0 of ilapshurgb, the Pope, and his well beloved non, Ferdinand of Naples, may all reel securely under bis protection.' It in really a most extra ordinary state of things—a paltry usurper, a perjured traitor, a [nest conSinnate hypocrite, without tarents or graatnesi of any hind except what he has borrowed from Lis great relation, to be able to not his foot upon the neck of a na lion the must fiery Sind tutriktable of any lu the world, ie SW event so strange, BO contrary to- , all reasonable extiectatiou, thatinot only Trance hut the worth is astonished anVetupified nettle tre mentions magnitude of his audacity. Truly the game is desperate which requires such play but all moot admit that so for Stites been managed wish an adraitnessiertual to its audacity ; and it is equally manifest that some of the moot acute minds in the world hare.. directed it. The miie • arable upstart, who' is put forward as the prin cipal actor, and for whom nobody cares, is but an automaton ; and if he fails leis employers will be no Worse off than they were before, and may escape'in the confusion which his fall will oc casion. Daring the past sixty years France has pass ed through Many political phases,-a republic in '69, the trittioverate and--reign of terror in '93, then the consulate, the empire, the restored Bourbon dynasty, the last hundred days of the restored empire, the Bourbons again, then a revolution which set Louis Phillippe on a con stitutional throne, for eighteen years ; then an other revolution terminatiugin a republic, which soon divested itself of all republicanism, and last a usurpation by -the chief magistrate who had been chosarby universal suffrage. During this period so marked by changes and agitations, France has had its share of bad government, but never before was it thoroughly disgraced The old republic had its wild and chivalrous democracy ; the consullate and the empire were radient with military glory ; the restoration could plead the divine right of kings ; Louis Phillippe gave his people a little liberty end abundance of peace and security, and was re garded as the coweriator of the peace of Eu rope; the repUblic which followed had at least the form of popular government, which might Some day be restored to vitality; but what is there in the usurped authority of Louis Napoleon to preserve either the nation or its ruler from unmitigated contempt 7 There is nothing ex cept unparalleled audacity. That must constitute -the glory of Napoleon the Little, for there in nothing else. Kossuth Made a just remark when he said that the French people would brook almost any thing from their rulers except insult, "but .a cult never." We think . he was right, and shall not give up the hope that as soon as they recover from the shock of the sudden end ands cious act, they will repudiate him and his vui veeeal suffrage, in which the sting of the in 'eult lies: Should this expectation be realised, there will be such a commotion as Europe never witnessed. We see from' this upon what rickety and trem nlous foundations rest the thrones of the Pope a id the other despots of Europe. and to what ex tremities they are driven when they resort to such desperate expedients. It is barely pos sible that tho - combined power of the priests, the soldiers and enormous police of France may be successful in keeping the people down. The terrors of the dungeon and the scaffold in this world, and Of damnatien in the next, are very potenthammines of pewee when . 'brought to act in unison. And then there is another power of 'tremendous availibility, which can be brought Cu hear upon minds too elevated to be Much moved by the other appliances just named—we mean die dread of socialism and anarchy.— Could that dread be removed, the French could not long be kept down beneath the heel of ouch a contemptible tyrant as now lords it over them. -We cannot estimate the poteney:of thesebogincs of Power; brit when the people do break through timer, their rage will be commensurate with the severity with which their oppreaMrs had crushed them, and the amount of degradation, insult and injury which they bad borne. Viewed in either aspect, the future of France is appalling in the extreme. 11,Louis Napoleon can maintain his power, the took frightful dos• p . o6= oVerspreall • not France' only, but Europe: but if, on the other hand, be fails and ie overthrown, the despotic patty who urged him to make the desperate experiment will lad that they. have only been "heaping up wrath nenieet the day of wrath." We hare had a great reaction since 1848, in (none of despotism, but that ware has probably reached • its culmi nating point, and, is now ready to roll back, and Use, back it will roll, nod its power will be proportioned to the force with which it wee urged in the opposite direction. After reading numerous letters from London and Paris, we are satisfied that affairs in France are to the last degree' precarious. Efforts ace made by the government and its supporters To 'terrify the people of Franoe with exaggerated accounts of the outrages committed in some of the provinces by the Sonialista and red republi cans; but a close scrutiny of theme stories oo isfy us that they have no other foundation than some outrages committed by some vagabonds, who always seize upon periods of agitation and panic to commit their depredations. It is erne that the population of some of the departments is in a highly excited state, and ready to strike for liberty, but they had noth ing to do with the outrages referred to, and out of which the government is trying to conjure up a bugbear. It Wils stated that Louis Bl.a bad bean ar rested immediately upon his arrival from En ema _But such was not the fact. He was at liberty at the last accounte, and in correepon dance with his friends in London. He neserts that the plot of which the President is the ac complice, is to form three great European des potism,. Austria is to absorb Italy, Russia is to extend Perself to Constantinople, and Franco is to ewaloWlielginm. If England reeists she is to be cruahed. . . This statement - of Louis Blanc receives some degree of confirtrustlon from an extraordinary article In the London Times of Bee. Fi, from which we take the following extracts: a • r 4a • It can hardly ho questioned that the recent measures of the President hare met with en tire approval in that powerful combination of absolute governments which now extends from fix Petereburg to theßhine, the Danube and the kitigdom of Naples. The destruction of consti tutional law, the failure of republican govern ment, and the ascendancy of .military power, are perfectly consistent with the doctrines which prevail over that largo portion of the continent. Hitherto 1..0rd Palmerston has not been consid ered an ardent adherent of this system, and we have yet to learn whether the coup d'elot of the 2d of December has among other wonders, ,ef fected his conversion. But, at any rate Lord Palmereton is too sagacious not to perceive that a political combination, on the principles sif com mon repression, between France and all the other military governments of the continent from which we ore unhappily estranged, is an event pregnant with evil to the influence and security of Britain. A second reflection; of equal mo ment is that when Louis Napoleon hes accom plished his mission of "tranquilizing tFrance," two necessities will preen upon him..-to. employ the energy and reward the devotion *Linn enor mous army, and to gratify the natural passion of a people whom he has deprived of its national rights.. We abstain at present, from enlarging, en we might do, mi. these topics, but we recom mend them to the most series's-consideration of the loglish nation; and Shove all, we conjure our, countrymen not to allow a false confidence in a man whose character ought now to be clear jr gnovm by.thero, either to relax their adher ence. to principles which eau never be !deleted with Impunity,:or . to lull their vigilantie for the p ro ttethati agEnglend. against awl; eoeiu m . cies as Posaaty warm exeunt tip States in the' Been, andinever e been do bound to One aliatber„• so tantuall :beneficial, and no able to work to gether, as the British Empire and'the United . States. •At present it seems impossible betthat the whole continent of Emma should fall into the hands of military despots; it seems equally im: (male that we, with our American brethren, should lose our entlandasm for liberty. Here, then, are the two parties in the great cause that threatens to divide and convulse the whole world.. What will be required of us? What attempts will do made on us? What crusades .ought we spontaneously to undertake? What assistance in any case are no to expect from Amerioa? For our islands we have no fear. Despotism is great on land, hut impotent and craven on the sea. Wherever our ships can go, there we have no compeer. As on the former oo casion referred to by Mr. Walker, we can protect the New World from the tyrannies of the Old. What, then,---remains to be done' Are we ex pected to land on the 'continent of Europe, and 'fight, single handed, with four huge military monarchies. mustering two or three millions of armed pleb: . What degree of assistance are we to expect from America, in marching into the canre of Europe? None, we should think. llowever, there are many things to be consid ered. A hundred years ago, what was Reims! A hundred years hence, what will be the United States" Au 'empire with not for shoe, of trio hundred million souls. Should any thing hap pen to us—should we-ever tie exposed to onwer• ited indignity and oppression, and our cervices to Europe be forgotten, we have only to pray Etortoreolipw ,menu oFsam. altar, and that the prayer will one day bring across, on occa sion, the messengers of a State that can apply to its purpose the resources of a continent and two oceans. here is unmistakable evidence of alarm at the gigantic combination of despotisM on the con tinent. To hear the London Time's callidg upon the United StAtes for succor against the march of absolutism is really something new under the Austria is greatly pleased - with the errq , .Pater of Louis Napoleon. Prussia is pleased too ; but is a little uneasy, lest the "Nephew of the Un cle" should cross tho Rhine as the Uncle of the Nephew did. Capitalists are variously affected. Those of France affect great confidence but the shrewd Hollanders, it is stated, openly avow their want of confidence, and are selling French stocks in large amounts. The secret of the easy success of the usurper is found in the fact that the Assembly, the de feated party in the conflict, won more cordially hated by the working classes than Napoleon. Very few of this class took part in the affrays of the 4th and fith of December. Tut Paca.ars' Bacaw‘ttus.—The New York Courier and Enquirer says Dar Nrtr Frrnrh oremmew is, in our opini on, a change for the better, in all that regard, affairs in France, and upon the continent gen erally ! !?. The Paris correspondent •of the National In telligencor entertains a similar opinion. Ito saye " If I were a Frenchman, and had, es such, same right to impress impulse and direction upon the politics of the country, I should in spite of all that is past, (and this "to spas of all that is pant" comprises an immense amount of most legitimate repugnance,) in spite of broken' t n promise i abused trusts, sad violated oaths, in spite of y love for, and faith in, well regulated republic n liberty, of my horror of tyranny, of my strong, detestation of the man who scruples at no menns to reach the ends of his criminal personal, bition ;in spite of all this, I would, were Iti retrchman, silently acquiesce in ac complished fads."' Perhaps I should natively sup port the Government of M. Bonaparte. • 1 • • • • • . ' ••Orderj order—with liberty, if it lie possible —hut ord r. It is the prime condition of socie• Rocit may exist, if it cannot progress, without li erty: hut. society cannot exist, man himself can hardly,ne, withont established or der." Such Ilse:been the cry of the apologists of usurpers 4iii despots in all ages. We Are afraid of the people—we must Lave order at soy AIWTHII.4 ! We cute trust an infuriated And brutal sobli .r), n tyrannical. selfish, Breech,. usurper,. de pot and. tyrant; hot: the people, those terra,: savages, who ,have their -Motto,6 end wives untWittle ones to protect, and whose every interest hinds them to promote order and secnrity, oh! we cannot trust them.. Shame on the men who utter such sentiments. rant WASHIHOTON • R'e+macros,, Doe he here to-morrow evening, or the day following. We hear ,f his having received a glorious and most enthusiastic reception at Baltimore on . Saturday. hope he will delay his arrival im- T til Tuesday, as neitherdeouse of Congress' will' he in session then. Ido not hear what specific arrangements have beet made to give him a creditable and : ceremonious reception. hot cannot donhrthat it will be such as the war mth of politic feeling in his favor. aeems to diatoto It is said that Gov. Kossuth has taken a suite of •fifteen roomsat the hue new hotel of the broth era Brown, and that he trill dine with the,Pre: aident on the'day. after his arrival. The Senate has passed a resolution providing for his recap. lion as well as one of welcome. The house has not yet concurred in the resolution of reception. The illustrious guest will therefore he formally presented to the Senate, and will, I presume, lie briefly addressed by Mr. King, the president of rho body. Kossuth will, in n few words, expresa his acknowledgments. Au amusing anecdote is told of the enthesi• aem which follows this courageous champion of liberty wherever he goes and affeete all who ap proach him. A gentleman of mature iears,n member, probably, of the select, conservative coterie of both political parties, of which the National Intelligencer is the beet representative, lately returned from New York, and described inlively terms the sensation excited there by the arrival and presence of Kossuth. The friends with whom he woe convening gave it so their opinion that the people in New York were infatuated. "No," said the conservative, "they are notinfatoated With the man, they are mad, stark mad; and there is not a none man left there, and lam the maddest of them all. And the silly chance you have of escaping the eame fate will be neither to gee nor to 'hear him. Go with in sounil of hie voice, and you will - be as mad as I am." The whole of licit week will be wasted, no cording to custom. This Is one .of those nu merous points in which Congress needs to be re formed. lam willing to make many allowan ces for a fortnight's apparent ulleneas. The house must be organized, the committees formed, and the work distributed and arranged:.. But this habitual throwing away of the first five or ate weeks lineally Is public grievance. finch manifest and flagrant neglect of duty on the Part of the National Legislature, the supreme directing power in the government, is an exam ple which affects every Branch of the public ser vice. The present session will not be a long one. It is almost decided not even to make a show of action on the tariff. River and harbor appro priations will givp occasion to more debate, but will also be postponed to a more convenient sea son. The real banana of the session will ho the making Of a President. That can be done bet ter in a short than a long session. The Demo crats have an irrcsistablo majority In both branches, and will ho responsible for the dura tion of the session, as well as all the results _The nomination will .ho made in May; the ap propriation bill!! will he in readiness for action, and will he peeked directly after the two con ventions. 1 think we may look for no adjourn tient by the middle of Lune. Several Democratic platforms have been al ready laid'down. Gen. Houston's, the other day, appeared a little the broadest. It will admit Diennionists and Secessionists of the south; Fre e soilere of the Nort; Free Traders and Protec tionists; Compromisers and men of principle, within its ample gates, and invites them to a higgledy piggledy fraternization without further loss of time. The tact Is, the General says he knows of no question large enough to excite di visions in the gtest' party of the Democracy. But I beg leave to record my decided conviction that should Gen. ' ; Judge Tionesta, Jim mey Buchannan, or ny other northern man, get the nomination, Gan Houston wi.I.I.JEtt it stump: In the event of Den. Sentee novainedira by the ledge, the no anion forth e Inca - Fronk (Ding,* ammo 'W matter: of wary goMt Om. glance, u he *llia two Beare oldeitihin Den: v; . Tayiar watt adieu etected. - ;', The ciao of the whole nation who deaerves that, mark. of the'con.: . . fulence and esteem of the Whig party is - Wor. Wm. F. Johnston, and I mid' vote fOi him whe ther nominated or not, even though I hare to form an electorial ticket for that purpose alone. WAIIIIINOTOX, Dec. 29, 1651 I know of nothing more remarkable than the weather. I learn that there is kept at the ob servatory a self -recording thermometer, acid that-on one morning of last week, probably Wednesday the 24th. this instrument showed that the mercury had fallen to nix below zero. The oldest inhabitant remembers something like it in the terrible winter of 1814—since which such extreme severity has had no parallel. I fanny you citizens of the Smoky City would blow your fingers at such a visitation. Here it almost paralyzed the Tuck - alums, who look up on cold weather as next to Abolitionism, and both an the oldest offspring of Satan. For a week or more, the snow has lain on the ground to the depth of six inches, but they know noth ing of that glorious northers sport of sleighing, and they are glad to seethe new year's thaw be fining. Yesterday a soft, warm rain began to I'6ll, under winch the snow is fast disappearing Onr new year calls will be made through mud and water, which is generally the case. .Bach changeable weather in winter is apt to , injure the wheat crop. Stitati will arrive to morrow morning A portion of his suite is said to have reached town to bight. It is expected that the many and or. dent efforts to chill the public enthusiasm in his favor will meet with a suitable reward, that is, with complete failure. It is said that, notwithstanding the popular' character and very strong recommendations of 11. m. J. Ogle, of Penn'a, Mr. Goddard, Chief Clerk of the Department of the Interior, may he appointed Charge to Denmark. I do not hear of any change in Mr. Clay's con dition. Ha is declining, and it the weather should continue severe, so that he cannot be re moved, there is much reason for the apprehen sion. now very general, that ho cannot recover. Should the strength of his constitution, however, support him through the present attack, and keep alive the vital energies nntil the opening of spring, the friends of the great statesman need not despair that he will be permitted to survive to the patriarchal ego of a Franklin, the elder Adams, and Jefferson; and that, though his sun must net 111 last, it will sink slowly rod serenely to its appointed rest, like the great Iti ! rutnary of nature when it declines from its place in the zenith, smiling with a mellowed radiance upon the fields over which it has passed. So may the patriot in the eveniug of his course look out upon a prosperous country and a happy per pie with the sweet reflection that though he shall soon see them no more, that his efforts to avert strife and disaster in the land have been blessed with success, and that the days of his useful -1:14,1 have not been abridged The population returns from the Mormon Ter ritory have been at lest received, and the num ber of inhobitautii is found to be 11,137. It is said that the executive finds a great deal of ill( ticulty in deciding between the very conflicting stories that are told of the conduct of the Sainte in their remote abode: - nothing will•tte done to their prejudice until toe most tioduutite.i rat dance of their misconduct slisll (tote bran re csived tIMISO,N, 11ec. 70, 1!.""•I Kotonth arrived today Ile wan wet'. tees,•• ed notwithstanding the pampered and govern ment supported press of the city exerted it, en tire influence to dampen the enthusiasm of the people, and to detract from Kusautb's claim to their regard. About two th,,umtl people await ed for hie arrival at the railrnsi station. Ile woe there met by the mayor of the city, the U. S. Marshal, and the Serjeant-at.Arms of the Senate. The, official personages formed his esc"rt to Browne Hotel, where ho iuts taken rooms. lie wan there smiled upon by Senators Cos, Seward, not Shields, forming the Senate's eamatuithee of reception, and by the Secretaryed State, and many distinguished cid... 110 interview with the Secretary of State was'emite prolonged. The democratic Jackson association next called upon bim, and the President read to him a short tot elegantly written and appropri ate address, from the pen of P P. Blair. To this Kossuth replied in an eloquent speech of half.nn-hour. It io undcretood that at twelve o'clock teener row, the great Magyar wilr'be'-presented to the Prebideot by Mr' Webstry. fn the ere• rung he will dine with the Secretary of State, at,whieli banquet ell the members of the diplo matic corps, in amity with the gauge of Hun gary, will be curate On. Saturday Komauth will take dinner at the White Houle with the President ahol family, a full cabinet, the commit ters of reception and many invited igueete The scene in the House teday was not very. promising for the imrmooldits action of that bo dy on the subject of the appropriate reception of Kossuth Soon after meeting, the House went into a committee of the whole, and Mr. Carter introducedn resolution for raising a com mittee of five members to act for the House in the matter. as the Senate has' already done, on its part. The Chair, Mr Jones, of Tennessee, refused to entertain the resolution, on the ground that the committee of the whole could do:no hosinees which hat not been committed to it by the House: an objetion, by the way, which was well taken darter the roles. But the Kossuth men were 13111.131111 enough to over. turn this decisiori by a vote of two to one,-and the discuesion went on. There was n-greatdeal of excitement. The South, as mral, went pretty strong in oppoeition to the acknowledg• meat of sympathy with popular rights and pop lar movements in. favor of freedom, In any part of the world. That distinguished Union Whig. Stephens, of Georgia, declared that the attempt to pass the resolution vrals revelation itself, and he protected, de. lei. Somehody moved to amend by merely giving Kossuth the privilege of the !Inn, by way of queshing the whole af fair. A Kossothian cried out across the House but that would bring• him in along Hide of the Russian and Austrian ministers,- and we mean he shall come in ahead of them.' Venable of N. C. democrat and eecessioniat, rejoiced that he was one of the 47 who, in 1898, refused on the yeas and nitys,td congratulate the French people on the eetabliebment of their ephiuneral republio whieh had just blown up. Ile then went on to promulge the most outrageously de spotic and tyrannical sentiments' I ever heard, declaring that all the nations enjoyed liberty who deserted it, and that none ought to have freedom and independence who could not achieve it for themselves. There unier was an Instance, be averred In which a greatiddlon espoused the cause of a weaker one, to.give it freedom, that the weaker was not untitled In the etruggle.— Thin modest and cautions assertion wee newer ed by a dozen of voices that this nation of Americana was a proof of its untruth. France, intervened at the darkest hoar of oar struggle for liberty, and by her aid we triumphed. lint Venable'e dodtrine is that of claret and tyrants everywhere. lf,a nation is ground to the earth by the insolence and rapacity of oppression they must not 'attempt to rescue themselves, or they will deserve the contempt which he, Venable, expressed for the gallant people of France both in their first:and eecoud revolutions. The afternoon IMO worn oat in a war of par liameutary stratagems..rid though the friends o giving Kossuth a handsome reception were two thirds of the Rouse, they could not carry the' point. The House adjourned without aollon. Nothing else but Kossuth is talked about here for the preient, and nothing else is done. You know m 3, position. It is to give to the noble apostle of European liberty all the honor that is consistent with perfect freedom from eaten , gling alliances on the part of our government, but to go no farther. I do not think anything proposed to be done:here doeScommit is to any tbingfarther, and therefore I am heartily in favor of all the enthusiasm for him and hie causefwhich it is possible to mdse. The debate In the Senate yesterday, over the letetits of the emus,' eltovrs that the democrats are t going to have the dislribntion of all that rod* xithont somiaittle;:oiPositket. ;• :Jean. FROM NEW YORK leorre.waletace er dm Pl.burgb NE,YouK, Dee. 30, 1,351 Business affairs are very ,otiet, and every bo dy seems disposed to postpone operations to next year. The money market is remarkably easy, and large amounts are seeking investment DTI call or upon short time, say thirty days.— The banks ore discounting all their offerings, and yet have net their lines full. The demand for exchange by the steamer of to-morrow is very small, and the rates not firm at-1101(,g1lb„ the chief business being dome at the lower fig ure. Theshipments of specie will be moderate. Thus far no large parcels urn reported, mid it is probable none are in contemplation- The cold news from California by the Prometheus, is re garded as very favorable, and bullion lealer. , are confident that our receipts thence will for. ni..h all, and more than all, that will he needed for.lNrope At present, there is every indica tion of a superabundance of money upon the commencement of the year, bet things change so rapidly that it is bile to speculate as to the fu turn. Lola Itlontes made her first appearance not night, at the Broadway Theatre, before an im mense audience, enniposed entirely of young men about town, old runes, mud the eurtnus crowd that always assembles when novelty is about. There wan hardly a woman in the house, and linear were chirfy-of Madame Lotus stamp. The new danseuse has neither inanity nor grace in her art, and ia surpassed by every thing in her line of linsincss that has appeared on nine liOnrdS. lire appearance has been a perfect Wore, and has settled the doubtful question that there is in New York a tense of decency too great Wallow the success of a discarded court, Jenny Lind clogs un more here. The last steamer anefdmcem death Cl her mother, and she has withdrawn all advertisements, repo' chases all her tioluits, and returns to Europe Her temporary absence from New York had been regretted by the mooted 'World, and her farewell concerts seemed to promise more suc cess than attended her first appearance under Barnum's admirable management. She leaves 0 reputation among us tint is as valuable as hrr hat-vest of gola. The mock world's fair of :llr Riddle does not make much headway here, indeed it har not been heard of except in connexion with the com mon council proceeding,. That extremely bon cut body is just now at tlie verge of life, and teem . di.posed to vote sway the money of the city with a liberality that uhowx the extreme de gree of public spirit, or in inclination to make the moot money while in power Mayor Kings land, however, wields the veto power with a go,oi ile.d.of energy end iii,retion, and n great q uantity of fat iquiils Ora by him kept out of the pockets of the common council and the lobby members in attendance. • The weather has moderated since Saturday, and we have escaped an embargo of lc°. F , ten slays the harbor opposite Whitehall, and and from thence to Governor's Inland and the Brooklyn shore. has been parked with drift ice. which only needed is little colder weather to con vert into n solid bridge, such as has been seen there before. So great has been the jays of ice, that Teasels have been unable to get to sea, or to move from dock to dock Thu ferry boats have torn otT their coffer, and been repeatedly in cot lision, thongh without loss of life . No progress has been made in the FOrP.t trial, and so tedious. stale, and verbose, has be come the evidence, that the pre ,s has abandon ed. to a great extent, its publication It no a Aimed render who can rift the truth from the quantity of Mutt that accompanist, it, and alb: to the pilaw. the true amount of 'dame The jury are s• much befogged as the outsiders, and will not he able to agree, nor will any subsequent outs and the case, after an etpasitton that en, era decent with titanic, must be patched 111- pri vateiy. Another line of strainers is to he placed on the l'acitic by Mrs.", Spattord S Tilestan, composed of the Winfield Scott nod another— The New tirlesns rouse 11r., not par enough. nod the travel on'the Pacific side in eupposed to be so large that the fleet there can he profitably doubled. The current of travel low-sr-is the gold mine. has perceptibly 10,P.P11, and must be still more enhanced by thin late , gold news, which exceeds the wildest previous account, The Comptroller hay made his annual estimate of Mae. to be levied its this city, which reach the auto of I.l:l.rmo.you, or half a Emilieo over fast year. dK this riam...s2,lC!7 OOltjo disbursed by the city abr.,. Who would Sot be an A bier mina, to nelp rift curb n goodly ,uto EIM=tMEME=CI hat St the regular market '0.4..1. 0 4,99f. benr,•t, ~, I ck)Calßel and mores. and 21,4 WO sheep, hone becit'solii Add to thear the- dead by boat, arid railroad, Ind you ran err to Men of the quantity of meat enter. by our pupillath. per Saturn. all odds, the greatest ...tight" in town just now, is the Aztec Children, before noticed The story aid Stevens about the identity rd these children with nrace nfpriests in lxymaya, has been confirmed by an officer who served an del. Gen. Scott at tho city or Motion. In ,hg• ging for an entrenchment. 'several onagee were dug up which in form and feature. xre Gte thee , epecimene of humanity They are very pleasing in all their notions, and ore not to he classed witlethe shoal of dwarfs that pertimhu.. late the country They are representatisee of a diminutive race. clearly. and as such • are worthy thn examination of the ethnologiet no well a% the torero of novelty in any ehape. C. BIARREED, Oct I hurgany enytong. Jarstmr, I.t, h 1 lie? 11r. hull lap. hey WILLI bib HUNTER, etllnty uI the Pill burgh ChYl•tlnn A.lrneslu. Thu URSULA Meg:ARTY. all or Allegheny City. tor ! A meeting will by hold on next Woo -1,1,1% i . l 1 , 11 , 1. W. Ttli toot . t tt to the Antil'itY t.f the M. Chureb. to the :MO Ward. the ot.. .)..ot of whi , ll .hall be to tat. Intoons...ion and sub mit plans far the speedy eroctiott of a I.ei Slethoth.t Church, no the...int 1110 a prineltile. eon:platter* In the li. elnlo of Locan and Witte etroete All lb. caentl.er. ni the rc nt I.tr with ....Inhere of other eltarct, mud ',aiding In that t letnlty. In mottos-non with .11 whom It mar ronnero. hemby reittiectfully 11111111 M ottmod. mita Sunday Evening Lectures. TuneHE next of the Conroe hill be delivered on I. , emetro• evening. In Sand .flh. by theyantor. Hey. W. D. 110 WARD. Setr• In eornrn•nee o.ltreet le, II Universalism 11FN. G. V. MAXIIAM, Iktpr or Lit, ra... will twrati , at tbt• rnr 1 •k turn , tt pod. 10ta... Thin] auJ I,barth otryttr. ou Jay tuartOuf •I lo ;Meru.° at .1 o'rlgalt. nod ...Ina et 7IP Ho,. The publir •rn 1t.11 , ,1 acteml 353 It• TWO PERSONS who an furniPh.mutisfar, tor] ref.rrnee. as la elmrarl. r Insoara. qw.lltl rattan.. to e.t.au , . In a pi-1A.61a stunner. s. I.:Snine 'real naanr. nnlnt Charity Lecture-at Washington Hall, 1 ()N MONI)AY EVENINIi. .lannar, stl , Ifor the benefit of A DISTIIKeiiED PAM LY, 1 y II NAY D. U'IttELIC, tbvdiallusunibed oratpr. :lel', The Lila awl NV rilinga of illlrcli liolil•uiltl, with extrae free, Lk licaortial I Wage, Vicar of Walieheld, and Tr3•l4/. r. Ticket. to Ls had al the principal Jan - e'er, Mon , Intl IM (tone. and at the Door. Aihnittancei front scare :Ai rent: Part cicala, 2h cent.. jsit2t Wanted, Itninoinn n pri• gihn,t..l l °TeartT:.%r preltor tyrant] Part of Lb. at,. Addr.....e. Kat l'attit.ttrgh. .11020 W ANTS—A young woman can go into a rommotabin family. and mirol %Mind.. viol nurse: mornral dry num.., obambermalds. rook, bonooloopors. and women and girls fur all work: a Moo young woman Hying lit Allrgbony did amnia • Pim. •n primard Mood All kind. of lagetirlo• atom to for moderato charga. IoAAC 11Alt1112. nadt. Ramon& A Ilmthouy oity • SVARIETY OF WANTS—A good ntendy rii rotomvartnlnl biot.krepor wan, s plavv by 1. ig rrrrrr I ralrsin.n. bmk.t.anurrn. warabonso nod rum and tuys of all age, grant emplormtnl. barrosrm , and tont- ISAAC P . 3 .1 - . Diamond. Alleahany nor. _ . Copartnership. I lAVIN~ thiN du l y Hold to J. S. , 1 1 ) 11 : 1'1) i lir? tll he otyl a. e the firm hereArt,4 wil Interns mT l he MA NI ITEL ' i: AIIItIVY.It CO. MIMI. P. AIIIIIV Alt. Pitt+burgh. JaituAry 1.4 Itt AMUEL P. SIIRIVER ,E Co., Wholcuale Ororero god Commieduct Blerehuats. and Drulrre n ' tflYll l .7. 2`oll."l . burgh. j. 3 JOlll. IL THLWOI7.I JOU. 131.1tOrtE. 011 N S. DILWORI,II & CO., Wholesale 0 ars., sod Agents for Ilsztrd'e Powder and Pala., Irom, 31 Wood et— Plltthuroh. )4.3 Dissolution. TILE firm of Cormie & Cole, AgentA of the rounarlraula liallnund en, manta....rsad by mutual ounont. to. ttll. dal.. All acco&FA claim. will Le Wed bi Jobe JOIIN 1300000, leittsbutab. Jan. 1..u2.—.1•114 JOHN Y. COLE. Partnership Notice. IIiVE this day associated with me Trios. at,l the Auruer of the l'ellti,itlania I will he hereafter cote/eche' under the oul leof -Coro& Alrehese JOHN COVODE. I...buret, Januar, 1.105. saes ........... 0n)... OVODE & Agento of Ponca. ) R „li 000 n co., osnuer of Peon and.Wooe fortal B.ln, Pit1.t.7,14..p.a. Dividend. TRE President and Direetrirs of the Hand Street Bridge Crampons. bare dir de , teret • ill. 'Wend of tun dollen and fittr cents pot ob.. out the profits of tbo het 111 Month., py 0 .14.,,,,h„ , LARISIED., Jr. Clttoburgh, Jon. 2,1ip2=1P12.1t • pIARPER'O =and Iniernstionnt Mttgezines, • t,,,,swors, 'east /101.3q1P,opsoeito am toot OS 1•3 sinirnrna-1,8 b • p T s. T ibbs. prune,for au.br 3 11 . aiaLLEILS. kI Wag O. THE Three WARLI:IOIzarB, on Liberty 2 tr...(. °wane the bead ,a 11nel, with TYAtit we bark. runniu.., tin ..an tm Penn Pt , now are, r , ..1 In It 1 , ..11, Nininlww a Pin . uo.and Iv. Lehnier T....- nen/am 4rn on un Me let .4 Atml. 11.14 t. ronnunaof ...• 11 h. nAltI. A ull .103 IVantn. To Let, FrilE WaitElliol er. now nerupied by e a , NicK cool.. No To ;Valet Potatotiiiin Clean rn tht lot of April. Enquire Ja , ll lea AC M. PFININIPIE. For Bile, t i . :l" A NIODERATE PRICE, n PAT hundred 6r ruumt.lNKu a PTEIVAIITIP 'anti: on iIN villa rliniphitt—WorMil so id on ktiiter. and artllre 1‘,114 eln tried, to m e t, TOBIAN N Philadelphia New Factory for Sale. Budding forty--is by , Ustv - tire feet; alrvnit bull.. ton ....lie. toot, oontauina i•ii• L' In Pli hatotote phial hint. r 1 , 11. ft fa, 1..1, 14h my ut,hmery,l,l,4. neth .The Ant, rn•ro , rty-i,t,,,1 ne..., led w•ttsatarelrin g and >cee , •• t., Enr • Itr.rl,l,h fltstwe.t..-r 4 1 LAXSEED 011,----1111.1)1E. pre, for onle by I it • L: -t. •- • 111,6. and 92 per cent . It V a1...1.1.111S AIM OIL—Ill 6hle. No. I. Winter. fir r SELLER, The Great Inven'ioa of the Age!—Steam Supplanted!—Gas Triumphant! 11 E firm Lull , of t i o•tei. century so ttrortlr , l thr r: rtertna It thr roam.. tt;tlt lillll,o The nnenn.l o 4 erntury 1.111 L. known an mat nano.. thn unv of kin [II dentin...l nnt nn:y byldt but nrl wltn to 1111,11.1 trattknlun 41 ITra Ih. Thin In. Gon nun 1.•,, Enu.n.now nom p.l.dne• -holmU.K ,nlou,on. MOT tunnty,4l ,enrn of 10..Artatin upon th..xg..tment• r•I hienwunrnl of tl~n ref ....moo , In make U.. prinntrln n 1 the noudrons .nrln,nin untd unn nvnlsl.l. aft nohen b.. 0.14 , 1.4 the 'Lune: nl ju.i rncritn/11.11., natrnt Inr - 11..1 , w/A Curtnni, Arid Etikan," now .1 nab. Int the Inn. thnrnrlf to the llninnl ot, tiny, non en. 114.1 In Indirnlnslx [Jr now ttrwim.. (1,131/. crf noon, nnuntl, or nal, The ...men. , eavnia of mon, and hahni e anel of human he .11,113. Melarrli liIP tow. of near MOW, e "ti ,nemnhly ...urn Its etwnely adonnan .11 Oar, nave, is nay Waal. 311 , i in thnts.un,ll. of other fdare— she, the great hulk and annaht of the , t nendrne hate hra Andrei its nee TI,. neat mator May nPritni allhtyr Inna the +lngle* horan rower tpr the en..., inn 0 010 Ina thane - awl borml non. r for •..n •Inatnere, with the expenne that that required I, the Inca.. en •t n,l%;l.l:¢7nl'l7n.7.:et'AV non. la. of the <lO4ll. , ItUlne• 11.1% annetablnthed by the eaparnuental ennme hnree nnse .et km. •1 einetnuell. as atireal in the fullanlnn fredn the thnetnn• Ii .T.aynerd the lath Iheartnteer. .n err toleaned to —oo ono J. C. F e•]••,•• • Ixt of hm. • patent Cro Int motor tof carte.oon ergot cote. on or applleat eon too an emoine etsent..lu) ononeroottenteol tloom troverotono wo re tont long eioe•got e n oo oottonol The tattle gent letheto tote re - voted 'another touttooot for the ...emit sod Prottellino power Alen. ruttote forth. not. of CA .. lhoproot eJ 1, 1. 4 lone enol a p o oh , Ai.toeratort." one peroulosr aortal., ..1 xAvl giant the "'loot •noolo nomplete no:Wool of tile t note toonoten lot t lon o 11011... T, tit. ho,ttio eloo•tmost ohs, m•a, af t .oo. oto le.e 'hoe than ift reooutleot to hoot her eon. Al-.. root,. nor hoe "I ontorroteol nloronor tolalle o " hog sotto tart eho , .hon,rot eto porno., dett,noal to r the trreetest too.- ..hoe .loranOnth bore. mod ruler ee, Inforne.e.m en r . ..askrel tee al - en - er• invaltesteln Ire• venison, ••nel tof ..t.twoinc redtets..r no. rernaiptl, ...nu] ley a.l.lrneeinez Ie I. El.DErt. •rvl A.rut for tit. . S.l..nth .1 , 11.11, Warlduvt...ll., Education. SELEC•I' ACADEMY. lir Six Ric,.le, nnWu•W bk. Mr MOM • . . ' MU o.rtin,ne. on Tue.d.,..h. , nia, inro,llno l'Arent, *OO,l, J. It ayd. At, and Mr 0 80urn..., wttr.n..r. /ml,O AllochnnY 911 1 11 E CONNECTION between the t.ultst•ri , etntown on this An,. A C1"LBEILS:4151.111 the mune (.1 the Brut to the .ettietnrnt of lb.. 'm em.... • • A. I'CLIIERT•AON 1.11 CLOUSE BSCRIBEIi Dill continue the •uJ it 1.114.11, .1. . • Dividend. rrlll.l Pre,.idetit and Board of Managers of the Nerthern COMpill, hart. de. the prof., h. oat./ Vt.upaht 1.4 the hitt e 16,0 *barn a the eat..t.. ethelt out et the t.h.tat 4 the 'eft, and Oho t.‘ll. the ert.1.t.....0tel ... the I.Athle .4 the tre..teer--the h., ...Le td...buidereen et •Iterth.e.lete 1 F. WAR,. rteneut... 1.1. tale.. B UTTI.:11-1 kegs l'aeked; bti, Holt, ?u-I 'vv . :A .1.1 . f., Mll , ll. hr INI 141. l• -11111,,:1: • CO A RD hbls. and 1 keg for sale by ,muceluro ) It . l Ell PE A ES--3 ) "'LES T " I •kOR y N k"r i,) iIIFFEE - -1.0 tag. { , rimy Rio. b,r sale ht II •i,l .1 F. MIA A• 1 31ffA sql Vask i pt . l7 ; ilk. fre,,h Roil, for sale by I J. r DII.W01:111 a ell 1 A 1:1 , -1,1 kegs Leaf. for sale by A ell J. S ca. Y Rl' for sale lay 1l ~1 tai cwitaTH aO , MACKEREL—UM bbls, for sale by Jii J. S DILWOIIIO L le be S 11-10 h rim5 . , , !,) , 1r i 1 . ;1 . ,:r ,:i 1 . 1 , ,,T A 51 , 1 TCIII ACO 1-4;0 keg,. Six Twist, Sw.nsp', bron, n nil J DILWORTH R J • , URN MEA L.- -WM. A. M,CLUItiI b UI ' will her.aft, wifi, cronr,l l'nrn whste- from thr Nrs wiL,..tt A“ld inw.A.b.J. , JJ, ni,ll IGS---150 doz. fresh. for sale hp M. A. IIeCLUBC ;1 CO. gtl IIIND NUTS---fl bags. ( to•arrivel for II 1-. AI All PICKEYO Co. FtI.kTIIERS-43 Saeb for sale by co A 1 i1TTON—:10 bales for sale by Is 111111 DI . CIiF.I . a CO 1310 IRON-2.9 tons Winfield I.'nrnare, In. male J a IL V1.0Y1.. (I. IIIOLASSES-80 bble. to arrive. lot /I . sale I, %Vat., F; ITRA FLOUR— A 10.1 s, Bararl, Oln roo 14-Imput - I•Notri; Fer raln hr BELL 1 MOO Err. 61 Canal Bann, I.lheray Ft 11R. ANDREW ROG E RS' Compoun,l Sy Lir run a lii EIIWORT. TAR, anal CANCILALAM'A. Allbrnr.sl of and recommend...l by nhy not.% uf Ihr high est nanding For the ample. elan e.a.h, Cold. Acute wntl lihronio Ilrunobillp.A•tbnonkil hoop Ing UntigL. l'houp, Ile • ran. Lire, Complaint. Pains In lb, else or Brent. Night Sanaa Spitting of blood and all other Long Complaints tendlaz u, Con•umpllon. lib haling• •grors gld. • but rough, or nil othor JllMuttr about lb. rhn,.t or lung, xbou Id try this inr•lnahlr nip. It vlllnirsly born you. II hn carol [11 , ....1 in this silty A bail onlJ nsalrolod awl sullersid to rue n r aka,• linAs in l•isl ron•umplion. gr., In l•rgo brittle. fl Mr botoig rn. bolthi• Inn IL. For •sle •loslrsalo .ud mull by E. Alton. AnAL 1 UNGARY AND KOSSUTH .or an Am. or m. laic Hungarian H. vol allow 1) 1 1. F r Trlii. Al rd. K0! , ,1.711 AND TllE HUNHAIZIAN WAR Compri•laa I.l7.T.Pl. h . "' ;lll:l=;OP;l=l:ll,l l. ,, ‘ gb?..7. l . l trftlnt,. ' z .bo dirlinculArd tursorclarn rouill tuLizZ i l i ir Uhl Apollo Building.. Fourth .1. • EOII.(JE 11011 LEY, Sr., will find n let ter aldreg , ...l t.. hint /from the "old Country.' Lt line lan the nul,....rit.rre. A. WILKINS • CO.. corn.r of Ilarket and TINtrJ . to. FRENCii ' ISIERINOS—A. A. Alesom Fr. Co. offrr their plxvlt. of Moller*. of mor.tttn:llo florin.; that roll nnowil •al., at one -mw iirre. than It. 11•01•1 nnrc. 1100 T CLOAKS—We 'aok d,mte lhu bulann of our Velvet Cloake to leas than eastern 148 , 30 l A. A MASON a CO_ Dissolution of Partnership. T"Epnrtnership heretofore existing under the Or le •0.1 tole /a JOHN I.oltTEtt A Co.. O 11/14 .le, .11cAnIved b, lb rttlk Arrows/ of JAS A. /IeKNIO 111`. The hiolne, oi do 1.1. Orm .111 be .40.1 br Jultu 1,.. or. • ho will ennotant the bueleno at the old nava. No. II NIRO. st/evt. JAN. A. 11/oICNIIIIIT, Ael.N , JO/IN COMM- ell IF; DA !WS Aromatic Schnapps-2 tam. Ii for Rale by o J CO. de:,/ CO Wood et AQ UA AMMONIA—IO carboys for sale by DO 0 ea EA LING VAX—ISU ibs. Sro sale by d.. 2.4 J. KIDD 1 , 11. URSI-2 bbls. for sa! i e i ll °. co A YER'S.Clkerry I ectoral—lS don. for sale A hr J KIDD t CO. A Leollol.-20 trbls. 3 and 92 deg., for .Itly by J. MUD a.P.s. . 1 . 1 EW BACON—llama, Sides and Should c., la nook. , hau.e. 1 . , sale by .1 e'n 11:11 t .ItIN BLANKETS & COMFORTS.—I hare re- P reirod another lot of Om, warm Blanket. and Item. ry Comfort.s. WIL YODLL d Third etre,. Holtday lint M 'ool , :i.R , tt. ,,,,, C t Lhtv i reedo u j A n T o f t ,,,,. i t27 .44 c 4 . to, *bids the, Invite thr attention of flentlemrn. de2 . l IAILD-111 tierces No. :.; 1 4 t. 7 We. Um.]: fur üble I, de. K MIL i JQN.I.,. XCIIANOE BANK STOCK—_4O shares !,s for rain by VWIII. 11. WII.LIA lit! K 2 . N. E. ruter c,f Third 411 , i omi au. 01.ANK I . :TS: BLANKETS !-51usear Ilaavaritho hares hr estr.ranaA forth, /imply al a .I,mq inalt.s of Isi gnaeta. Inrlalin, A h.., ph..., •ry. lays, &nil superior. of dexitall.ceslors..—A full rill , ply or. hau.l. turlualtus • lino of Mart vaned. fur p..rann• la saanuroing. •lan. Hiatt liatnny Ylaunals, Ivy erktuie. Hrr.' Flutue4 of a fine quality. al the unusual kyr Ina,. of 111 cent, TAI - RESII lIUTTER-6 bblo. !Loll, for pale r by rle23 . KICK a MrCANDLkS.I LACKWOOI), for Deocrober. Pram of We: a tale of the ',anon; to I. R. itar. 11 3 . 1 autbro of - Ilayrrina of a Bachekor. - . For rale at 1101.511r.5' Lilarary Depat. oppdel. Oho fat dr.2.1 Christmas and New Year's Day. T ub Banking House of W3l. A: tin,t & 00..111 do closed on the r.ath Inst. and Ist :toles and bills Wins doe on those dare mstil;; see at testtou the dare Onalettinib r— Select SehooL 11 WILLIAMS will open a Seleclit lotionl 1 In the bisetnent story or the lecture nisi Of the tr. Presbyterian Crssett. rittsburitb. on lay. the s t h of yannesy. 16'.2. Yntranee ou tbsth shiver,' RLAYplost B tsio,yy Cles, S 6 Da stala. tar tuarta if,ll wajci, J , 00010, 10 • COMMERCIAL ha a musi Ammtr-vgJons—Adrertiernmat• and rvbFerrip fin tht paper rere.l”lll mid fltrwar,l te,l free of expenet., from th • &Bs, PITTSBI7)IOH MAYKri Otrlcg FriJ•r m i, Jar' i• The weather yeeterday we dark. rainy and , 11..,.40.1.• fur Ot.t.lncr hitalorfn. end rsnth4. urintor.t ,nn, the market. tiltve 112.1 no arrnai. Num p3n4.. the rn.e the rif-r. ailkt .11 r, rucuiva 63t.k ;co an.l drift I u'oA, reA4l: - TG. yertrnla) nu Vi4r . S. nulk.r. Gar.' :131, (rum otnrt 11• N far.•l 12 1.4 1.I.• . S • fn , nl lire tihnd. from rum.. • •LalN•Arbearrirale. , f :rain ainer the ri. la the neer tu.t I% nu eueb a . tO ••••Ile brine, aunt:alba, an 1..b„r.. enluN Unr nominal. but we untr UN , , h^ "- lb sub, e• Se, \warn ihr lu...rut rah,. mbeee—M brag •. I.a•kra. llart-, be'. n. (*urn and Oat. -`al** text 11,4 _nom .h at 7V. :`ittf.. .1t nod taut. at .0114a+ Pl.ll:l4.—anhot,l 4 1.1.1. at SI, tit I malt-tit eit At 4 4 4 4 2 or 24..1 .23 at :o , ‘ and 2at , a* 4. I 0 , 11 - TER fit* nistiltiit , 4* 411140,1 In moll.. with Quark **ao. r. at I 44, li\kl *it for rolitruon to ;1111.? 2, II t• *lnalk l a*nt 1.0111 'II 41E,41—Tto, inattot o , !root, *notiltot. but 4,011 , 4 hav* liven to ft tiatmlotior ontottl onl,. at r:yt.o:rtlA for the laid.? qui44,11-• 5 , 11E5--e ha, litariof no\lar, naleit. Quotation* ai aro—ila A. II eartuias K 0 SaterstU* 545 5 . 4 . an , ' 'Tuna , 4'244,\ri Pli ILA DELP!! I A MA\III;ET. The tre 11 shut Is .Sl.,eurii-ertn, f r i trn ware sruti.. tuu, ptu•eran, ita. t . t t i t. ..... tun, vii, maure, \ruiwutuenue thr went tikttierati. Cluverou.l—lo to llir'tntettJ. and it.isntnltu arida! SI, .'"Prr Quie4 and risk ~a, an , St... Shorn nonfeature. I 111.• l ard tire•ja ere h •Id 11=11, at H n IV ASI•l. I•ut nu expurt I. The .ale, Car cif clunsuututioct`tuun vi.ri ' or— a• out limit, \ but he laet wS, at ST but little Intl.'', eft', ••intall fir at ~..—Thore I. hut little wheat offeans, and it I\ in tuutetul. ude. us tirtnu. Senna rutl. at 000 SI wlitte wurth II Tt... uterlet riluttnueS hare laith ,orn end rye. and thur wansuil, the furtiser 11. awl imt, 0 , tut, scwreo.' and' num!, beun‘ In and Provision* but hill. \lninc. • • Nlko.kry-11..141,, lusno 1.11,t1P1 , thiV , 1.i•I•• 2Z lor ht,.--In., moNEY MATTERS..:. • The ktoek Miirket has been rxther\„ inactive b. fir.t I..ardlhnirylrania ••.11i at 1.22. s after ward, d•eltkaug 01 1,14401 lwanin t 411 a 1114. aytl la he ca “..""." nal 12`. 'hr t r ,•• thane were di ea fuli Rene 14.4 at au.l , 1,•411111: nallraul at '_^ l t. 2,, and ag•l2l t.•• id n: ...LI at llfhha. nu• 01. hund•• at 0.. and FuNuentu...a.. nal lin at at, winch Ti a tl•-rhue 24 per rant inm la , taletf Alter lward Ih•adinct howl- anl.l at ,:ki. • la 01. and 1, - .ling n It at ,• !a •nd • \ The market elo-rdnnikly Imre, but dun iu New hunk The Money .Nlarket\neernm to be getting eloer blabsl , ..• Tear appenarho;\ late. fa day mai tut otunteal blab, lin. leer That 1.... t name, caw.. he Odd undeel2 W• rent. arol twat, kad an:nnlur , " ar•• ',fug at If• rt... later an•unOlt 1441.1..1,4.a Marl c l endured 1011110•Cvli h.,11.1/1, tiara. bum Fold in Ne h ne url I', l'inlsulelphia arras .131 al •• 6•4 111'0 erut..—l Ninth • \ , : nr i.nt. twc ...to The Railways fluctuated epuriderabli to day, Erie term the rltert. (I. au II n fa•rrahle \lrgrre. t.l the lace. Mut,- h. the re a m! It up, tr .1 at 9(1...t.e1ine of 1.. ' r u m entunla, after. o n fell to .9 in the t..,nd rived at 7r!. , ....,...... f l . ant . ..Th,re • ..* 4,m...0;am to I.n, health.: and Ilarlen...o tit... The -nrl. 4,1: 4 rneh.leurrver. r un... 4 ...at —lt.,aling...,..ll.arient ~7%. I.: ConrrrUblea fell oft to nu!....7‘v01. It was connected difficult to cat‘ch\the eooet \1,,,, toor-nf the Mow,' awl '„Earhanue market, rev; in part to thr. abreurr of the llnunda, h.., But the tut.• urte mrtalul, hrutht .i...thAtur4 Inn, alumni. Inn., ...Tr I. o t . 1. 7 inolltutneu. harm; ear ..• la. to a hr nu Un. 1.1 urnlitun. /owl deuvv.d hm, nen. moderal r b ..-• u u uut , war rea.1.1,, unatrunl raper Alt I CI•.. ton t ., a- u r n . ter re" Iret suguen. t....rhatme 4.nva It •- nrlf in 'utter •uppl, . The rat, are Ult.!, Irmo the tan rut ~.lcu.. to hr art for Wrnine,,dar, rtenoarr. Thr 11.1rao. hunt agent.* ari , Bern Ilthrr boos . nrr hie, .r .1 to draw fun.l, nt 111 , . t.I. ki ',tor franc, wern.ltn• \ I, hanker., at 1 1....1..1 I ...i. I The English awounte for American State'snil I Federal , tock•are ,oral. The 1...0dnn Nen, notke, ran, lI.V. mea. the Ir. or!. dirt nrhanr, ha. ni: .Ijrnul .t .1 In d ul tur. Oh. hall. tun that rule, under Inuit. I,r. tr teu.al 1., the pr. ...Au. rtrauser• Thnol Inxo. were n apt, her, and in um, tieinn., a. nth, • lean- iinl, hero tau., Ira ven aantnot Ihe maraet I. pa.rke eurrllrd rule ....vernment -he-, There ece era,. [hi! enormahr...... the lee. pareeh. atter, a-ere hula, Non.. hut Ile erre ht other It.ana are *anti - J.—N1...1y To,— PORT OF PITTSBURGH rb., pr. r, reel it into.: to , Itontott k t t . It.• mark, orol bay,. hu..l no arrtevi• trout belt, yet. The Diurbul let; ter nett El.. Pltilbts,ll Lr l'inetnuati e+, rtl, etc. r Vermont will for toui,ville titi. ti The gnat F.utureq.. - 111 10, IPIT. for 7..Aneuville. d 'HEAP FLArs;NELs.__3ll3B. •, PUY • UPHAM' rIFLD bar, r.relro.l a rotor fit, 14,1.11 mm ., .met rhry oirr• nt the kora,o,ly 1..• pr., a 31r. r Tapl. LONar IWi., “.• • f Sc NEW YEAR'SGIFTS.— I , r Inl.l tetps.tfollr 11. uttontwn ••I nII • 1,.• r. IthtM. , • whon... pod • eurrlint: hi: 1.• mud ersunlnr tny -1... c . 1.01 ratt.h.,l vithrr 'lunhl ht tartlet .n 1 r tine rertilthe. ent. trhole!•le teth.t .1.23 Is 4 NM la of I•NUTS-2 1,0 b 3. for sale by ~:tg 3. II CAVVIF.I.IO 1 1111 1 11I1N s—tai ) I r 7 Y FI L ! " x " I4I.• fo li r r d t '. l: lIA r i t 'Y E i l !II I Stt--.5 1,1,15. No .1, 1. Mils. ft, - tole Lc 11.1 . 1.7.ELL.1 I RAPES-1Q kegs Malaga. very fine, for .1.1.1, WNI. A 51rCL11IL0 k CO. IVIACKEREL-1 , bhts. lA. tA,I• • Ni. 3: •• for Atle to deal' k CO . Fresh Fruits, Hermetically Sealed. t i lktESll Poacher: Fresh Strnwherries Paw Aardra: Tomato., IS FSIJIT~ Frr.t) Fregb rluma Fre.h . The at.. are put up In their own ink., and heren..ti rail y realed. rentinh, their cd.lglnal Moor and frerhi.e., Fur rain hi W.ll. A. NeCLI/Hli (XL, e :3Libettr I iILY • ERIIITS-- . Sul.qa.Carr and Ann,h ltni tn.. Currant, trance and Lemon 1...1: ettrum flume. ebterie, Fared Yeaeheo. Fur Pale hi ICII. A. MeCLUFICI a C.,. • rollGraeera and Tea LMAIPTS. (gEIIII-ANNUAL SALE.—A. A. Nl..isoN Co. a>,. no. nlinjoa at their eenti-annual Aral. Erenrh Merimat. P a ranytta,Cnburct. Cothran... I. Lain., 0110, it ,le= 11 9 bales 1 ,;„ IT: wharf) QUNDRIES— c7 brme. and M. It /taint, 10 matte 8...11,. Ravine: 1000 ZAnte Currant, lOU In. 1.1.•0rn Citn,n, ' ' " '• C.,ro Punta ileakar , Farina: yon Labbitt . ,Qt., Paled' 1 rue 1 taliart Marcaroot; 1 InyevP. Lin Yen.. I erroloellit =Wto to. it., oolen L:di IW Ifordcatx Prover. For sale by J. D. W1L1.1.1119 a 00, deo2 carter of Sl - .1.04 Filth 4 , t. iILIED . PEACH ES--200 bu. for nolo by . 15 de= 110111P0N. LITTLE Jr CO. 1.161‘. WiIEAT FLOUR-20 ' sacke — lfullni, 11 bo lb. each. for ante by de4.l ' ROllllO2l LITTLE & CO. _ B UTTER-5 bbls. Fresh Roll; 4.24 keg" " r1117190;:.T.IP1 t 111 1 6). 1111t41.11.1211'S MAGAZINE, for Januury, u„..• roe{ at 110LIIi18 . 141.rary Depot. Tblzi et., oppo- A. It. 11.1 OM 40 7.0 L ASSES -22 SAL, (St.:Joirlps;) - N. 0.; firrale 0_ BLACKBURN A CO. Hardware VIII, subscribers would call the attention I. or ;lemma desirotto of dealln• In IlA11111TAIll; . to lot of frum four to thous.trid orth.rosal.rOuell tasty valusblo and saleable vtleles. lb* will maks It ea oWert for the ready money. or (.tr ait it tor socurltlrs or walla ate. rersou.t . dirt , ..std to trade will calk at our rcn.* luta szatatne the inTOitelt. dr= 1161 all a 1111010. IleSevottd et. . r ) PAINTERS and ,i otke7 11 A far the trade, corupripior —Paint. •roloh. Crib. ?leo 11. extra otaled Wsll sod (klut.t..r llro+hee; Brick Laws. e.eato Itru.h,. Menders. lt.urr and Carriers Hair. /biol. 0. Dunes, Vetch., Se. Au esnottaellol of our stock 111 obli•e us. For We hr . ' IpLID Jk deal 10 Wl.l Ult Elt LYIIItiATED, a transparent and Ash color—NA/ lbs In story nod for ash. by CO. . IiIVD • ENNA, burnt ltridl.rigated, a transparent I. sod ralt rolor, for rale by J. 011111 • CO. I- - "- IQUORICE' CA LABRIA-4 000 lbs. for ml. by J.OlllOll CO. Aftic. AMMONIA-RO O MS: for sale by J. 01000 CO. ViIItAVELING BAGS-2 doz. in - ilia Ruh- , three sites. first rate artlele, for sale by .1. • U. 1 . 1.111,1.11•: , , 116 Market et. FiSIIING IIOOTS--41 pairs for sale by. 4.01 J. All. PUILLII . I. - - • - . -- 1 Ni l lA RUBBER EBBINI;—SiIk and C.Atou:for Gaiters, for sale at'Tio. 116 Slark.t J, a 11. k l AR TI3.UMPETS-1.-2 doz. fr..i!edO 1;3; 4 ~,), , .1.• H. PHILLIPS. . .. C)OORINa. WINES A BRANDIES-2.;ic. per quart. of The. pa ifali.ha. for tale at . de:at , !WRNS.' TEA ala RT" ll'aztood . a. : \ Nop-ntervention. t S \ A NATIONAL POLICY. Non-Inter- C4l‘l,,"t=ti:,.. t Vic.:::Ver.4",g.Vg".2 l ;''..,',`l:-. 1;17:7 , o , re HMI I= at . llllkaTtlen " a i hl rOta .ukt, f - 07...7.41. jf lasterl:l! * .ltratfAirt7ltt . 4t :b . ohlp. and toodfratlou of pliers, faonot ha otinallal. Hot,' tHo , Inkt of all aiset and qua. AID, Dor.' Ethlrat. 13 itn . Peeks Stalataltra.Claitent.ll4Lo.Cafo,lo WK Errtmr I) PLi..SPL. deal 71 Soalthllfld st... hear Dlamoroll allay. CITIZENSVErsuraoce 6.-30 \ Shares o ..‘" 7.Waerio al deel9 .site 830.--2fhe'Stook of brPiILICESI} k CO. • ("WIZENS' D; IJ this Coasmar • GraAd Bank, (la rge,) \ NM ...GUM' a atrge7) - i ' V ODFISII-39 X./ for We =MI R. WI f NTE "S UNRIVALLEDMui : TION OF CRESUCAL DIORAII S, Dissolving Viewa , Chromatrop Views. &o. AT LAFAYETTE HA L. 1103131ENCTSU on llonday eve ine, De \ I ii•naLer '^J inn enntinning seem Evening lumng 11. • eel, td on 5,..• War, alteri/••,,,,,, , , ,, ,i,, Mr M Inter reineellnnr MlEmin• the eitiSera nf Pllt. 1ntr...1. eltvl th+ rielltp. that I, her mii, m•n, na uto ,innii,r , l , 1h , ./r Ali•I te•Ar , II• ettt .r,lumen which mole ri• ••••• the Tneit callslAtnni• At Lir nrrnerit .lar. For a.r, , t. Al .1.111 ersinthyr et dellniti.o. Lrilltan,eyt.l' c..1•rn ,, , •••I al the sawn tlnie en true n mitts, llt tand+ nn.-.0a11..1.i1l thl•EanAtienint. ' )., Thee tinbillt n will ei.nnaeung with • +, 14, a LIES L -1 l!iii A I Klin, 1,m0...dna Minn, Alt•Aallyhtx. LIM nes C1."'... ie . MA. nt,len•u• to tainHAv. (the lawalltledll ''' '''"'"''' 71 I A l A'1l 1?: . 1 , 3I * AVII I :,lltr \l ' i ' ..! ' ;' ' '' of wlth • ••ri•tr ../ rin11•11. MeGUIIOIIIII,, •.*Thoevenlng's enert•lnlnent hi ennel tide V' Ith the far-lAm•I CHEMICAL 0 [..l' ill A,. .11i , trntlye Of the- fintrw., mitlerty In. A it n.lb.• l urel,l 0 pe,thar It. ter ristur•l dm, is rs—rutin.: nnt in •11 ft, I , mlllintet -1111.1 N C11111'.1 1 011.. night Inv, r•lnbr•lttte MM. ni, tot Als•e. . . . rents only: ChA.l4 , n under 12 half rrim. itt 7, 1,1 h. nonrueurneurt. , .t , lon .ie.eri,..nn in oirnall bah. I WILKINS HALL. KIST3TAS WEEK, commencing Mon 4, • Tening. 111,_ contitmloz erm. fuq duroc Wr Ir.rk. wiluc. WELLS AND lIRIGGS, ETII [OMAN SKILENAD.I.:III4. • Under rho imnßJiate superelrlon t,f. Y. l)ItV. f3rtnerly . of tar ''franks OeNnehirro, and hieftr,t aprearanc• in this city for amt.. years. A. IV ELLS. I).rrnerl of ChriatT Miro/rl., Doable.. In Senn...ler...and the y lOriginallfari e nentsta . .1 F. IthbitiS. late of Felleree and Chrie,', and I.nmblet. , n's Ethiopian Serenaders. A to.Ofo this Trents,nay also ho foun.i.T.IIIIII9TIAN. the Tyrt.Yeett tYnehler; I. NIFPCIIOI.I., the relebrated LEtil , ol.o It Nly.VElt.the nn'enedSlelintat,rtth ether ertiel. el .q nal merit .I,..r.Chrlstniss I, and oyening. ton perfmnaners—at halupast 3 it. ter alt•cnee.o. and at the canal hour in the 26 rents—no hall prix. Door, Of. tql lt 7. lbo ,,rt tr. enmtnence at :`in'elnrc. r. A. IYEI.L9, Direetor. LLEGIIENVSAVINGS BANK.—One rtmre. ,r •alue• far rale hy T • A HILL* CO. • Allegheny City Bonds. 1011 PONS payable lrt 'prt\slau. in Phila delphia, Ins .alo by n'sl. A \ HILL k CO.. .lelA,Ftrarlt:T -01 - Wood IL A First Rate Chance for Business. „ryOF. subscriber offers for ssle Os property :hr tillace Renneclon, atoba bead of Chr,r, L'fial Railroad. It A•U'll•An at lot ot A.ronoo 1'4 , 4 by So net. a now Immo Ilonae,:‘l4ls together with a / Ltd nionaly a , lerted sa.bronent of Ganda. The abnn irnne at the beat mercantile loeltinne In the eonty. •ut.cribo'r Latin, retalle,l roe laa year Vl2.laal worth of Far (4 . lrth, imrtlealan en. quire of the nul , cribrr ou the premorea: .le•E'diortf:o N. It. 11.11[KFL Good News for the Ladics ! rr • R. LATROBE'S FRENCH FEMALE; cILL.SS. RD inttiocrut, elafe and Efferten.l Iterandy fur Alba, Nuppre•aion. Nem ILL Debility.. gen,al Weakneea. Newel, Paina In the !lead and Limbo, App..l,te. Tt..tunn. oo.tsrou.'ea. I I.y.Prpna odic , -tlnn. Ft...1-lene, lene, or W loLl. anJ 01 lit. rine Complaint,. Prtretts et, nr fire hntea tor. El. 101,1 I.olexale an.l regal by IV. 0.. JACKN.O,24o laberte 1110.0 h..J ..1 Itmi, I,l,N:in:En s.] 0 1 ALL Tilt , Oltb‘bllSTS C.r lull trash with earl-, Inc. Steam Saw Mill for Rent. it rIIE STEAM SAW .1. MILL, at the mouth of ,sss,t r Creek. 1 miles ab• Pitteburghoon the .11rdIrrl f renal able. reuL Th. 11,11 lain ,t .l running •••• • lot of ettennine Mona.. and[Co( Sma.hey. are enqueeted ith the ram.. The in .ation ,onoLL and lumber Lnde a very ready rata. A D•elllng [Mope attach...l In the nnanbwit. For lutther particular 4 yply ott the prt.tul-,. I;LNIN'.., • PAD N. trilkinghtimb 12. 1051 --idelaatatrltu:ltl TRIUMPHANT 2IICCES4 Qf the grtit -Arabian &meek far Man and Beast H. G. Farrell's CF.T.RBRATED ARABIAN LINHEENT , . 1 s cAuSING Co itiNTERFEITS to Epring a up all beer the country. Fri - sating Weir baneful In it.-new over il,. taut n....bing lb. taa ket , of the Imtuet and un.o,..petnn“.l.• impr.r.ng upon them worthies, and tfulennotie trT.....11. of 11.. wenn... IL O. Farrel'. Argloan I...drioni. Fellow Ci osen.! look well before rote nnr. um. ...... thot tb• 1.4.1 of the bottle booths letter. "11.0," I.eptre - karn.lr.. - t..e if it I.a• re t, it t. ea:wry...rt. The lan.l around cach bottle el all my Liniment roads them-- 11. 0 Farre're o.`elel.rated aratdan Liniment: " and my .ianature .4 written noun the b•hel ..J. , .. amt these won. .. Irrr bkw u on the glae. buttle. - 11.1.1.10.TIVire. II rabies. Lin n L . 11g 1 1 ..e trulY'nreat medirlux still cm. 1.5. mounering di.- 'nue. ...1 .liaL-hinc nosey a two Poeurle.a ri.hat from the _rare Py...powerfully Flimulatind. penetrating', .3 nmelyne .00010., to redo re. the me of limb. width harm taera teal,ed for year, and by I..itiotlar power or pmda.tnn the P I unrial Fluid or,loint IVrtier, if. cure. NI 01p , .... , ,.. ot the .1...,, wall rurpranng rapidity. Fur .."-.- 1k , ,na.t..m.. auJ albetion. of Me pp.rot and Pale., it ' 1..`. reowe.l itself a seartro, n... 1 I I' &Rectum.. of the Lui , . lArer not I.'idnera it to • ra. et TikittAbt. and pow ,., V. au a •Imr, .a 1.... 0.., .11 i1in.......... ..I the lihmls. Ferri , ~I l ; rg..e7./.. 7 eT.T. ' !.. N .Z . [Lat r a ' or ' 'l ‘ .Vt.l7a d l . .:l ‘' erytfre ' tl. ' llTit 1 e. 1 0 ,00, .Llll.lO. 4111,..y.Lti.A. .. • rf Orl ?\. 11.. Peer Ihnorti, one of de olde-tt 1 • teeth-co m iiiinor.t. It air re 1},1•. •.1....are to a. 1,1 my be.timoe• to the virtnes o f poor vr. .4 04.... brine. OM. sat to, blooLlnd homes had • , • a etrlnn orerkt be rap uf tbr I.t.rr. ',hour the ,iseul • ben'. I •lc . ~.1,1. ,A 1 It we. nr .1 KEntn. and N.... that A wati ,, 4 . ... t a ab•r In.rn the tr....... and entad not natured. I t . 0..; 7 : 0 07, C 0 V,:.;:3;:: ' 4 1 . 1 , 1 t, ' ; ' ,2: ^ ,. ' r:;!... 6 ;1 -- g. t t..... -- . tat ;mend.. to 11. ct. FareriFedratuan Iduanent,ami sr", happy tntud o lt take .IT., alter a few. day.. and It Lamar eon,' the nut,. mil .01001,. I think It 1. de , dolly l the .re.leq. t amentfor MP,. ao well se katiaint it.. Mr. lit 11: Porno'', lmbian I.onimela ha w tared aurae . / ' V.; ' ,. 0 .7. " .:/%7... 0 0ttir t !. .N.P ' 4I tt r ru=r s l. - 1. 1 11,1, ' :i ~ ~,,,..„ ~......,..,.. la. 4.0 Iv. bad vlthetall aw.)• ..I , fa. .. , enutrwled thetb,he bad an.. 01 , It. 'Threc t ~-ton bad t0...1 their elalt ape,. it in rola , and he war 0•6•-t -Aking to 11. um., ...lan tto h.q . ,. natter was 1n ...,11ntr• li. II Farrell's &calla. Linoment. neat. the 0.., la tar wt. t ,rd 111, he camalotp par. IV. steer. and Ibe tind word. T. said wen, ..110.01terker.1 want all that . I •t. m• n• 3.0. hot t in th•, nun; It.. l•II• , borate 1 got did t r tt to . M t° , tit ttU t tt tt , t4 all that Dad . re been done hr.- . o,.'' Yont`bot .. tour well 0001 heart,. and has Me use f la . ieOS fi Le 1:...t 1 „ r brain s. r00k... eta., barrow, awl ...Lain. , Beim: ful)".. r s att.f.ell , Mat 11. G. Farm" Arabian Lint tent 0. tse .. • .. tuedlcaue in the w..r..1'. I cheerfully.... rotornelad It 'l.t \ .4 Men alllated f a in to t r . with • most iCirr !'xt i ,i3 l l. o :4it':•i:'::T d .pO t rti: l ie.rii: n i l = =fd - on h 7l r lint, tu il, in bed tor t \ z , wo..ka its tim., all it. 1 11...1 our Linimmd oar It. , ut 11 , 00.1 me Naiad well. 1 hod. at the taut. ot mu . yor Licinuld,nne I , the wor.t. enugho I root bad in ivy lo t,, mat it ,ared t tc... 1 rubt...l It In well ore. m Irrea.t.nolahoalders. ' tho Ida? .N.llent for float belts t, rkdos, vat tang+, tontreihreat, m.u.re. or, pipet.,IP'AA.I.7I..LAVFON• Kietap,, Peoria co ,111: \ , —,_ Beware ojc6clierft: , ..e. TO GUARD . Ail kiji i tlif N LlllM .: ly : N o. l .. o.l/ , TITS FO , Tbe- Public are partienla.ll\ ..t. 0.1... l rdtalturt a ArCt, i OmMeefea whirl In. lately mad. t. •r y . r..w. and 01,1., \ \ Bal l ed by the Iturnuerwhomake•lt . 11 11 iarrelFaitrehb '. au Liniment." TM...a dangerous n.l and more liable Md.-e 1.,. Ism Lis bearing the namP..f. Farrell. Then , Mee hr• para....lax very to tall :for I. btr'5,' , ....... - r.....ies Liniment,” hot OrlffriOClpled. 4.lll•MiCrt. 'Till \ lIIIV. the SOLO .fi lOUS ...aloe. upon you fur the nentuue, hat ahmaja cut r....- ..11. 0. ihrea's .Irulaca Liratm , rd; and ta/a no ether, \ Wethenemaine ul.4..haa the letters 11,1.1.1whIsTandra hie rlpnature o. roba en the nut7idr a: \lt:pa amt thew, +route bloats In th. glare Imltl.- - 11. G. ,%r n ei• e l bast . Lotawent. itoria.” . Anvers wanted In sooty Town. t'ithot. tut iflllalft in the United Plate, in which one s• toot. e.-1.01, twat. Aro: by lothd to 11 C. Farn.ll. Perdu., 111., nub g vehereuat rte to charneter. re.pomiholity, Or. \ . Call on the agent abr. will ).mitt. Free 0 Charge,• bunk nentaltonn mu, lo tialuahla inf.rmanonfor vet lelas. 01011.1...u5t. Pluck-1115ern., &Poen.. and sue dollar per lot L\ ne yelp prairie" . men turd try ILO. Paraol.o.ale - inventor and proprietor. and almb ...la druerdat. No. 'l7 Main street, P..n...,. 1114.....11nr pale whelettaleand m eat prennotork prme by 11.1. CP.LLIME., da21,100, be. 51 Wood at Fold n• It. IL CUIlKti, Alleuteaur V.:. Situation . Wanted. firPILICI'ICAL and eafaaionced BOOK- KEl:Phit wishes a .11nalion on a Wholesale Doom , autaseturing Petablielan..... Pan. raelary seference- Ole delPtenn. Adam...L:l. W. 11., 11.0. -116, I....burgh P. 02' dar . • Stage Coaches for Sale. VINE flue Troy built Cuilobcs having 1,..ev run buts nhort rim: 7 102ga . wah .nnto A sna q to r rsoll 11 3 , 1.. 1.44'11 dr0.1131. • Cn5..113.111. Ladi r es' Secretarial. rriWO benutifill new style I. , .i,rns accanTs nes, Otitphed am/ for oninl,r . 11,1 Jos rat )IEY/Sit, ND. 421 P. 12 a. New Dyeing Establishment ROBERTSON A WIIITEIJOUSE, • ISABELLA ROW, near Federal street, op posite the "Emmet d11,..1,'C0r Cdr. Doh to oan the citizen. of Pittsbureh thattheydye Ladles' . Dr.+ (100:44, Or,. of recce and r`ict , • ,,, WW To'iwets dyed and finished equal h+ tuntl.fathdivreet'enkitierttns, IM Leine, shawl., and evert Cartel/ of dr.... ct.dle cleaned. awl the colors reetorni to their loran, I rflitney,and Isbetlntual tientlitorn'a ar. Mor dyed without belts taaen Pterc , and warranted not to 'oh oft or soil Mohnen. Lk .• red eithonlean t en , firr.d. or anyothey It- t•. lolnre the (*brie. Ire abaft teats oor $1,040 , cite the utmost satisfaction to limns who 131, an/ Wade 'not uteetinFtints whore, we • ill rf - dtt without forth. chard.. P tartar ouraslceso that —I acing the latest lit. plfforrlllents In this and the old manta-•oar wort 011th.. rtual to that of 100 other horl'A an the star.. Merchants' ticcele dyed edunt to thew afew coed.. Alt Goody warreated. mac. us • cell. rattan. OW inek.aut what We 'ours:free • W. IftwObro ft...farm his rrietdla ut he ha. sutur e In the anacentsilich that tail 10.1..4 it AUegh ,ne Cdr. deIWIT Removal—Wood EAgrtvinf. -- THE anbseriler, resi,petfaßy informa his t anner driersta and the Told': ,0,t1117. alit be has removed to the Scutt:Taft corn. of .iarnet etreetand the linunond. (entrance In toe th:tutrod. no ts pared to exert. all kiwis ft Deeltsaing ad It ond *mow . twat Of Ituithort.ll,te.....catts and 31 , Ildtd• neer. twirtier' sesle 01 every drrtitti tt. Ornantental NewsOstwelle - dds,Drnecials' Laben.Vott.l6tantps, Odle. le. Terme car nauderate. .d e lt 7.141711. PABILS. - zllsrc PAIET,S, • XIAN II IR A C R E BY . THE NEW EXPWIIINU AND !AIN ISO COILPANY. Nossark. N.J. ThlesCoestbaar U,Yretatnl to furni-sh rangy of Maio • ZINC PAINTS, Which ht. tern Sound after tiaireral L.' trial:nth In Nampa ant the Ihnual Ittates4, tu rem., their nalchnal beauty mat prunettrasprupetstaa mantri. msa \Mbar - arhatater. • •A , • WIIITE I. Darulran claire of rine': on. le varnsissal 64 hod all adulterattuo atea ILlptlclty it rna.s.vellAla Istatoutullr wl.dr. atM b vattn•ly Irekft• Cr pubt tubsr paha., tha Isenitls of *on. snit tart, - - IT WILL' NOT TIJItN I. I ',CLLOW \ When laborn/ I..itrbwou.4 or ru..l:lll“:kr.t.ditki,at. ci.e bts; Jr -': thmate and an r lb.. olb.r, 4. •to ruin or ervintile albs rub el(, ft may tte cart., Can assr eon.. bins water anti...or nab WI, plant t - rrW bated puerleiu n". BLACK AND COLORED 'ZINC PAINTS. - areTi rt, turalalted ars low peke... gra snannalatnal the airtime% Mad twat hainto In the malret for erartrirn runt; frantic, 011tb01.1leS, tleauthistss.ur bur eanteen rut Lae bf ssructl i tin s so Inut.ro they art-bran . -WEATnER AND rim: rßooF.':- Far km surf. our are pattinAarly alaahlittn‘ LW_ fora a sraltanse vie otrtfon at...D.li priTTISLOIM , nor onsisty. and having • 1-brit metal& OS* • 'du nut chatwe rotor like Many of the twa.7 • \ • cr • , . Wnkra rnbrasal lam: termsagtemig the _ Snutb Irlar.; 0 1 1.1 1 1. 16, 5' • • 03iE-MADE FLINNELS.z-Mveini linarnnun barn .rovived an addninns3 =blar Einbm.b . Lbn en bud. N . hit+ do.,Ensbn i t, „ Maxabl. blue . and Swarm bud. Iftr7, V FJ.t.7 tat11411......t , bffstunn to lbw, %rho Any* Wed UM:Us . . sonbcgtottlesElb tnyhrmkable always 1:1*!.b . 1.,1 1 9.4, CANTIA's
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