raiders, which they e'o herolially dispensed to the Holy City, when the Pope and his cardinals were out of 'harm's way. • A remittent Italian priest had the temerity to *- - Style the bayonets and bullets of this same loy , al a,rusy,..trio Nino'e sugar plumbs."- r pontifical _sweetmeats, clove token from the absent pas tor to his. dear' Roman children. Their cup • needed Some papal sweetening. It was a bitter o - ' - • one, and the French did. their best to make it palatable: - How the dear childen liked the •.. dose, is as yet secret. We are disposed to think they Would have been quite as well pleasdd if their dear 'Papa' had kept his sugar plume to himself and left them to the. tender mercies of thetted Republicans. We are done with these itrictures. We have • 'en bard feelings against any of Kos.suth's assail ants, Catholic br protestant We admire the • . maw. We believe him to be a truly good and ' great man, Bishop Hughes's caveat to the coda. • try, netwithstatiding Nay, more, we feel Tiles to say that for what in our judgment constitute great men-zrare intellectual endowraents, lofty sapiratiouitilfter man's onl7 , dignity and glory, eonsettratiOn of talent, life , all, to the cause of God and human happiness-4ot+ -Kossuth, in . his exile, frieddlevs and peritecutid, is,like ano ther 841 q, although in a far 'higher sense, 'head and shoulders' above all his maligners. Three • • gentlemen from Paris may write on. The gen . tltelen a the Press in thin country may print . on, Opponents may follow the stranger, as the Vooilhound tracks the-Indian : tin his chappend • retreat.' They mey live longenongh to learn that it in neither honorable nur safe for public men, In ebUrch or elate, in:their hot zeal to ' spoil any man's fay name—to break the ninth commandment. 'PROTESTANT. ftiri'SgUßGH GAZE 1"I'E =II P IT .T6BUSOR IC,KUNESDAY MORNING, FEB. 18„1853. pnai .11 ATTER . L REFOUND r)S . kACII . P.4/747 OFraks PAPER • Whig State Cofitt ntion. 151.61; S.tate, Conietithin will ha held ..Yarti.4turg, on Vat of 3lhrels, 1S 2. fb the Pun ...amain.; • enroll Calt.ntitrontr, locoing therlorral Veto!. an,gcbmning dolt c4tet to the Natiounl Cohvention. The Mill, of tho ruinna rountfeA of Oh. thuntstantrealth anthem by noufletl to elertJelegatet equal Ito umber to thtlr,ropm-entatito in the Sr nate and Wont< WlllPpre•entatire.t. to uttenkl taidl..ntentlon. fly ontler of tto Whig State Central .`ooklnitt,.. • 311Dp/dISITAItTII. Pre.hlottt. 61.1.1S . TPF4SSON JOSV,layr. Eibritarr 5 4 . 1,5?- vI I¢paprrl the eniUts willlkAeasn copy. Tl4e.Communicatioucif "Commerce" is appro. propialo as to its molter, but not au to time.— If thuwritoe will .cal upon utC'we will give him arenegood reasons why it should ho delayed a few dap. We think also he is mistaken iu the danger.ho _apprehends from certain move- • • The introducWary 'lecture of Profeaeor Locke Jut evening; was niterclea by o large and intel ligeot audience. The • lecturer took. a wide g o range over the general field of ecienco, explain 'lag many of ita 'wonders, and i gointing us to atilt grente; wonders which .4lie beyond the range of huinia investigatic • Oal;Thetraday evening, he gives the.eecond' lectlire in' the zenith. snhje;t,.trear..'' LITTER. YEAM JUDGE IiTAALANY- It gives ps pleasure to have. it innur power carrel. an iiitdveriant error into which we wer. ini4led by tim chronicle, by' publishing the thl lowing letter: lb the Elitorw of the Pitubdryk GrarTLF - xvir.:-1 hare accidentally Been n, copy -of your paper of the 15th inst7dn which you associate toe with the editors ef y the Chronicle, as occrtitiers and retailers et the !Mountain Rooee slander." If yon had-taken the trouble to have read my communication to the Chrout ; cle,' instead of- taking the etlitor's statement of • its, - purpiirt, , you coal not.' I think, hove done me this 'gross injustice. Res& my letter, and you will had it to be of the same tenor Be your editorial and-the scathing . 2etfer of Judge.Gillis, which, - by the way, contains little that is not conthicied in thy letter. That letter was submit ted io , Judge Gillis and his colleagues, and re ceived their entire approbatfon. 4to was written , to ,relieve;or rather defend GoVivuor Kossuth againit the 'imputations I considered - were made in-thie editorial of the Chronicle, mid to show that the enoimity of the bill 111113 more owing to tliet'eie - rhitant nature - o'om landlord's charges, than tiethe extravagance of Koesath, his suite, or the Committee. What does the sraihing letterof Judge Gillis, do more than this? It is !did enough to. have my name bandied abonrih this matter by the enemies of Kossuth and his cause, without being written down by his friends as ..a certifier and retailer of a slandet' which I have put 'myself to 'souk trouble by refute, and tin nntoeonlst of thoge,fto save whom - from farther indignities then - they.liail already suffered, I f allowed myself to bo4uttSideVed, to a certain extent, responsible for their bill. Judge Giuie will tell you, I think; that 1 htvie no question to settle 'with him. • !rpm think it sufficiently import-int to do hoe justice in; this matter, 1 should be pleased to see the papee in which it is done. Yonesi respectfelly,. • GEORGE IiFF.kiILANE, Homausssittnac; Feb. 15. 1852. Raring doile justice to Judge McFarlane, we rtow, iu order to our own justificatilm,.procced to slow-how we were led to make the remark Of which he Complains. As we frequently do not eoe the Chi.°Me4 at 011, the letter of Mr. Maar laite 'published to that piper never came tinder our notice. The firta kith:action we had of it was . the following remark' of the Chronirfs, which called forth the comment from to, of which the above letter complains, to wit the statements which the Chronicle made about lieesuth and hie 'suite at the iJoantaia House, in thie State, hare leen proven, by the se i's ,graflesion,.Judge JleForlone, hoop, who,was pledged for the, payment of the bill, to be trot. The Judge's voluntary commu nication upon the subject, published by tee a few &pingo, puta n thrit yleation to rent" . Here it in mewl that the Chronicle declares, that "all al , etateliwite 'Tidal it bad made, "ohout ..Koseo mid his eilite di tk..lfou . n:ain House," bad been' ; ' . ,Froren7 by Judge M'Ppenasin t—and that the- weolmitsry communication" of the Judge, published by:that paper, '.!‘pull that pestle', 'fa mar' ! i . . We natueitily inferred. frau ouch language,' .thatJedge McFarlane had sustained the Chron-! ichem genes slinders upon Kossuth, -tindhence . our remark of:which - the Judge coroplains. The utter haziness of the Chronicle, in attempting to entangle 'fudge bleFarlinie in the meshes of its own inciesy,. will be:sufficiently evident to aIL ' • . 4 11 E. PILATIP-A! .WPM 'pa ramrcx Most of env readeis will remember frestieht 5' notices ha the papert; botirreligions and :seen .. ler, of the Iteir.•Mr. Pttarre, the indefatigable and fearless e4ingeliet of Paris—ofbis labora among the people, and of thiannoyances - which he experienced at. the hands of the police after ' the reaction of 1849 commenced. He Is ntr in this eity, - leading In behalf of the Prete taut Missiotutry Society of. France. • , .iThis Society, previous to the revolution of Fetireiry 1848, bad in a few years grown from very feeble beginaing tel a condition of greet ,prosperity and lisefelnese. Upwards 'of 300 Ichnrcbes were established and sAktained by it in ' diffirent parts of France, and Is annual re ceipts, treas. contributions at home, had arisea to , 150,1100. Schools were established, colpor- Leers for the ill4ribution of Bibles and religiose tracts were seneout in every direction, and.al together the work was in a highly prosperous and enceuraging condition. -The politic - al, social, and financial troubles which followed the revolution of February, actedlso dleaster,ously • upontbfe Infant innate Lion, that in 1851 its resources bad conk to a ecup below 519,000. Many of their schools, and -. even their churches, could no longer lah sustain ed; and now the Christians of .rrance hove been • compelled to appeal for help to those of 'other and more favored nations. Hence thhi visit of Mr. Pilatto. On Monday evening he delivered In address at the First Presbyterian Chure i tt in this city. It was to be intensely intereilting. Ho drew with a master liand the,_ peculiar traits of the French character , and show ( haw that char acter has been debahed by tits joint operation of nausea ogaludt Which the !nation haebeeri strug gling, but struggling iri vainifor many . years. He described the poverty and sufferings or the toilieg millions lof that mitten, and Thrillingly peorayed tin; reckless .brivery , of . the oame calk's... ll 4ga ihey are to d esperation by.th° o bi lmlt i . iWes.nr'.. life:, Ile tOwithowlegath ered congregation of these poor people, who gladly eibMccsitthe truth, and. beatitifully exemplified the simple faith of the primitive Christians. Mr. Pilstte speaks the English language with •difficalty, but yet with great power. Although the very personification of modesty and humili ty, he is evidendi a man of great force of char acter, and seems to be deeply imbued with the spirit of his office. The world is now regarding France politically with great solicitude; but its political state can not be rightly understood unless we know some thing about France morally and religiously. If a nation is debased in morals , , and destitute of true and yital godliness, its folly to hope that it is possible for it to attain to true and per manen freedom. upon no other foundation can free institutions be built. Thirteen times within the last sixty years has France reared splendid po litical fabrics, but where are they now? Hav ing no solid foundation, they were swept away by the first flood that dashed against them. The French, like the foolish man of whom we read, built her hones upon the sand. France as a nation, has no religion. Popery is dying out—vanishing liken dissolving view— and in its place we see the grinning visage of the most flimsy infidelity, the one receding, the other advancing, and blending together, present an aspect hideously Indicrorm. The infidelity of France has no strength, no consistency—not even a positive existence. It is a negative con dition, indicating transition. It is the condition of a people who have become too enlightened to believe in absurdities which passed current is thn dark ages; 'but who have not discovered that there is a more excellent system of religions belief. Like liunyan's Pilgrim, they felt that they could not stay where they were, so like him they etartedto - ruiffund are now wallowing in the 'slough of Despond. French infidelity is not that tined. proud, obstinste thing which in (ler many, England and the United States has no burned something of the natant of a system, and which arises from a hatred of the Truth; but it ie the result of n little light, the first ilistrUiug of free thought, which hue shown to them in reference to Popery, that whatever may be true, that is not. So they have abjured it, and are now wandering about iu scitrch of some thing better: . Hence the rise of Socialism, and other utopian schemes for'the amelioration of the 'floral and social condition of men. But even these things, worthless and injurious as they are in themselves, are hopeful evidences of returning life. If France were dead, she would be quiet;-but as she is agitated, and struggling, :and trying to rise, she becomes an object of in ..tense solicitude to every one whose feet are planted uti n that Rock which no storms nor floods can verwhelm or shke. There is• another aspect in which France is an object otkettense interest4to the Christian-- It is this : Recause she bee no religion, she is not permitted to be either free or at pence. Nothing conid be more complete and penalising than the institutions which she establistie3 in 1818: There was noninterference from without, and very little opposition from within. The' confidence of those who had maintained that there could ba no true liberty without true 'Christianity, .was momentarily shaken. But Where are those institutions .sowl' Melted away "like the baseless' fabric of a vision," and the nation has fallen back deeper than ever in to the abyas of despotism. And well it is for France that she did fall back. Mt. Pliatte °t iered a most striking thought upon fhb; point "0," said be, "did I see France free, prosper ous and happy, without religion and without Ood, I should despair, because I should regard her tut given up, forsakenp bat whin I see her afflicted, troubled and oppressed, I know that she is uog fora►ken—that she will yet be brought back to God." This Is a grand'thoughcand one that we may apply as ground •of hope both for nations and individuals. Frnne doubiless in destined noon to Le del aged in blood. , Mr. Pilatte himself anticipates ''this Land so believing, he pleads earneatlt to be enabledlo cast plentifully into her soil, ?loon to be tortrand forrowedbf war, the seeds of Chris tian truth. The soldier will open the day for the colporteur, and the wounds' inflicted by the 1 sword will be healed by those lama which are for the bealinot-the nations. War is - now a sad necessity for France and Europe. Nothing else can sweep away therub hish of a thousand years; and break Omfatter+ I of despotism. Kossuth has come forth fitted for his great work of rousing the nations to the conflict. His is a great and glorious work, en. like.that of the meek and quiet Matte. bat not less necessary to the restoration of Europe to liberty and peace. Both plead for dawn-trod den humanity ; both ask for material aid; but bow different is the nature of that aid The one asks for the implements of war. wherewith he may hest back the oppresors of his errantry; the other desires us to enable him to carry the message of peace and salvation to his country men, no that they shall no longer be the slaves of superstition or false philosophy. Both are 1,, /riots; both are liberators; both are deserving of the sympathy and aid of Christian freemen. It stirs up strange tbrughts within on when we contemplate these two great men, both plead ing at the same time the canoe of their respec tive extunterea before the people of the dreat Western Piney—the one for aid to enable him to vanquish his country's oppressors, the other for aid to enable him to bind ; up the broken hearted, and to preaCh the gospel to the poor. We saw; and heard, Ind-conversed with bath— each made hie own peculiar impression upon ui, which we are not likely soon to 'Mee. Kos suth stirred the blood and made the heart di late;'yet there was something in the impreesica made . by l'ilatte whichwe shall still more Care fully cherish. It is a recollection that will he sweet and sneaking even at the gates of death. No nobler charity could be imagines] than Cud which would convey to poor, benighted, be- . wintered Prance some of that light which has been our guide ever eines the pilgrims planted their feet upon the Rock of Plymouth. There are 'many channels through which contributioos for this object may be sent. The American Bible Society, American Tract Society ; the va rione Missionary Societies, and also through the hands of the Clergy. Fillet we give to Kos suth may be soon lost in the disasters of war; we have no assurance blAhe contrary; but that which is cast into the treasury of those who are laboring to evangelise France cannot be lost Tenvananca PrIITION.—The follbwing peti tion, copies of which can be had of elr. Jona Atersanta, Chairman of the. Committee on pe tibons of the Allegheny Temperance Ansociation, twiner of the pitman/ ant Market etreef, ought to be circulated ecttnnefiely, and au ePued4 l .9 " possible, as the measure contemplated is now Pending before the fJegielature, and lb. advocates cannot be too strongly seetnined. To the Honorable the Bonk, and House of 2epre rrntalicu The undersigned, inhabitants of the county of Allegheny, reapectfolly tOik your honorable bo- dies to pass nn set at your present session pro. hibitiog: entirely the manufacture and axle of intoxicating liquors of every kind whatmovei, within this Commonwealth, excepting eoch as are - to be used for Incremental, medicinal and mechanical purviews:ender such severe penalties APl . Wiii be it:rectum' for that purpose. PROM WASHIHOTON. a (Comopoodrou or th• IMtLhorah Dollr Ostotto.j IYAII HI ROTOA, Feb. I 3, .1852 I "understand that a new arrangement hoe lately gone Into effect, for the tnindportation of the mail between Washington and Pittsburgh, by which twelve or fifteen hours .will he eared, and it is to be hoped greater regularity secured than has been heretofore obtained. .The mail now goes over the Central Railroad route, ria. Harrisburg, and the distance of stage carriage is reduced to twenty eight miles. This improve ment has been retarded, by the court' between the President and Directors os the Central rail road. That difficulty has been - settled by the election of Mr. Thompson to the Presidency of the road.. . . The committee on roads and Moods has deci ded to report a bill for the Construction of a leanal around the falls of the Ohio, on ~the Indiana side. Afthe last meeting of . the 110 M. mittee satisfactory reasons were adduced for the abandonment of the - idea of overcoming the rapids by .looke and dams in the channei of the river. •, it is reported . thst's hihjatity of ; the judges present have agreed to decide against Mrs. Gaines in her great suite. Judges McKinley, known to be in her favor, Judge McLean, and the Chief Justice being absent, four will be a majority of the Court, and it is not probable that the plaintiff will remain content under a aeci, sion sustained by only a minority of a fuliCourt. A former counsel of Mrs. Gaines, howeyer, in forms me that the rumor of die — loss Cot her case is not entitled to implicit confidence. lin one place to the zenith glory, and-of. despotic governments In another tot daring to decay—there U a pleasure. ' Still more at the preset tt. time when we hear of a stranger coming, pc or and exiled, to ,our shores—coming despised by kings, and outlawed by emperors, yet to find a whole nation almost, (nay compared with Enropeau governments, nary nations or states,) open their arms to re eelve him; and despite the meanaces of melee crate and the frowns of lordlingw, to see the ',tapir, the Come and risen of the nation; people of all ranks and - alt religions who love liberty, yen more, to find Ste lovely and the ; qaod from the aged matron to the little school girl, associate' together with a 'yea and adieu" response to thin down-trodden exile in his appeal tan behalf of civil and religions liberty. Oh yeti there is a pleasure in hearing this, a pleaentre which bring fears of joy, and causes the inmates even of a log cabin to thank the Creator who east their lot ,in a land of liberty, and induces them to give an immeasurable preference to that ru ral home above a seat in the hall» of Princes, where men aro dressed to day iu the trappings of Royalty to be undressed to . .marrow for the sword of the executioner. Ten these thoughts produce a glow of pleas ing joy arouralthe domestic hearth ; . but there is also a pleasure to be found by the contempla tive mind in other places Apart fr.mi them. We will mention one at the risk of the athi• eel's mock and the sceptic's sneer. In the house of worship on the Sabbath there is a plevsuro felt when the preacher judiciously turns the mind to the doings of the Saviour, whether in the universal Mediatorial Kingdom, or in the more limited, yet still more permanent Work of the Redemptiousl. But at the present day when the very existence of Dim who "exalts himself above all that is worshipped" depends ou the steel of infidel France, nod who now congratulates the perjured Napoleon .11 justifies him for his breach of the most solemn oaths made before tied and the French nation. When hy his instigations, or that of the snakeship confraternity elide council-. lore the Jesuits; such men es Achilli, V. Hugo and Maitni—and we might odd Kossuth—are' compelled; to groan in dungeons or Ilea their countrienTindtheir homes. And when the lat ter who Ifite now awakened the sympathies, and whose rause boo been tho subject of the prayers of all from the "fondly altar" to the "vonseeroled temple " When lie and his mission induce the masuwell rend in Scripture to bring before the minds of his people the sacred prophesies which concern the latter . days. There is a pleasure in- knowing that those who stand up against oppression, who aid the poor and the weary, are acting on his ride who shall bring in a universal kingdom into the world, net of ignorance and superstition, but of enlightenment and pence. There There is a pleasure also, in knowing thst mach of Ezekiel, Daniel and Revelations con cerns the days in which we nye; and that the toorm-cloud of Et 1., anal the hail-storm of Rev. XVI., gather—that the tiog,and Magog of Es. XXX IX., and that the toes of the image in Dan 11. rule in the present generation. But still more if the Meshes k and Tubal whose localities are dofincd in Oen. X., 5,,be the (Tog and Magog of Ex. XXX V111.,.2—if Illesheek he ,Nloi•cort the Eeropean capital, and .1%1611 be Trobitlek, the Asiatic—if Login:nab he the fa ther of the Turcomans and Spythiens-jaf the 'Waren ro.sh or rafts/be ti r itilsk of Ilisvitt, who we know In Moscow's prit es. And it prince is Is be "turned hanks' for a time as in Et. 3S-4 'by the ,King of Kings himself. Would it net be a pleasure to be able to assist his Instrument who is now in our land peeking all to torn him back, Ind keep him from extirpating liberty in the hinds which pray fair liberty anal peace and though '-in the latter days" lie may come with his Scythian. hands from the north, his Pet-sasn leers from the east, and his Lyman and Ethiopian armies from the west team's the rlllgei of Israel as in Er :Id-s to tight en Av. , ' mageildon the wrote, of 119 , 1 and Dan, as indlev. Ili-In---wben despotism shall fall never to rise again, and when spiritual Babylon also shall re ceive her final overthrow. Yet is there not a pleasure to knowing that before these 'latter days" the Jews who now are oppressed outcasts in every land shall he brought to dwell is their own, till the end of dime; That the Jew whom Kossuth cnuipastienants; and would fondly re-, here trona ii113!1110 and Austrian benalage, filet himselfcompassionstes anal will funilly, trlieveT lye live an eventful times.' flew mach has occurred since the Lutheran angel of Rev. lI- el, prociainied the . ..everlasting g wpel!" Row emelt shire the days of Cromwell and theist and .and Cliarleas--since the nage!. commenced to .-pour their vials on the earth! , If the . 'test vial painal the Nan of Sin, the ... J and oto-d deluge,' Europe with blood, the oorth obscareti the troth, and brought out an infidelphitorophy In one fatherYdays, smiths . e:tasnide - fine Sono the itt , a, - ,calektuaatt!ta livery to theta in our own, _what 041 be in the path anal esrelatS, We may not lire to see the erventh, tut the .eizza which shsll . -dry the Euphrates and Seven strrams" of the Nile may be effected.by tele graph or railroads in our own. That hr who wtdies to sail the Jew and e,- teblish a kingdom of Intellectual freedom In the Old Wort!, may he atiundantVy aided In the New, is the earnest desire of Semen lint, The temperance movement continues to-role Of the bill now berate the New York Legiga the hour, with the peOrir find the press, and eve. ry spirited argninents, are often heard upon the I l""' to aid free ''' lwr ' Y P ere "' in Ping to Li' mph- The.hrewers and dietitlers are naturally ; lierie • the Journal of C"ienereie rays active 111 opposition, anal have held rations meet.. "W° can hardly doubt that it will became a law, either as It stands, or in a modified shape tag, to adopt ....a.,,,, to preserve their hari - ! not materially affecting its efficiency It will rte.. , " The importers, to., art' at work, and ;''be as great a kindnees to the colored people, as should the law now before the Legislature pass. l to the whites.—The former cannel the men here; it will be a triumph of the question pi the moral- I w". they who are diwE'sw`litw favor [beat. ~ .n ity or ruin selling. The Maine f.aw will not.. 'in! see "y remennnhie l p re 'r ii r e' h i t. their ever l e obtain in New leek, for it would he a , aitiliif. ! Vennlit'f:t7:ei:-1"-wliel'ae",.!:Om'itle-ti,:.rei. with the O i l a ' l! Impossitde of exeention ; tut the Mends oPem- I ready made in Liberia it is easy 1.. t, see g in that peranco need net despair, for there isratiaLsOnte l:nlWnY the rmbrro of a greet and PP..'" 6.rtaiaiy of the passage at . a too , giving tha so _ . nation, in which the colored element is predomi • , . t e at and supreme. There nod there only. or, the pervisori summary power ever the sale of II- "rt,'„ of the earth , is the es ", . as, ... t oace gust, which will enable them to shot op an in- i t ,a,p atv i en t and f ree , ii n th at ca t aty th.., beet fixity of rum holes, and in all but the cities : hopes of the Afriean rest. Every intelligent, banish the fiery dem..n. The illegal oak of rum moral, induitrione emigrant adds tails etrength, will be checked as well as the 'ale of adulterated nn4 ar i a ii l 7 - 17 it- p-1 7 , af , warldrig out ~.• guff, which kills with the readiness of poison , 1 Z".. Y t he problem , "e 1 t ' eel ' ee ' l `ei'n run —-- - • The select committee on the ether or cloro farm discoverer will report in favor of WM.:T.(I. Morton, as the true discovery, instead of Dr. C. T. .Jackson, who has heretofore htait , the credit of it. They will also•report a hill appropriating $30,000 as a reward to him, in consideration that he did not, or could not, take out a patent for the discovery. The Sedate was engaged, during the greater part" of to-day. in a debate upon the great San Francisco dock contract. Your new .Seaator, Mr. Brodhead, poured it broadside - of his hea viest metal into the hill extending the provisions of the contract to the limits of the original de sip; which included a basin for (looting the docks and a railway for drawing off vessclann dergoing repairs. The total cost will he a mill lioa and a half of dollars, about half that of :the New York and Norfolk docks. Mr. Brodhead was against any additional outlay. In the House private bills were the order of the day. A very meritorious bill for the renef of Lieut. Col. Mitchell, was referred to the Com mittee of the whole, with a strong probability that it will pass. This bill involves a very ou. rions Mate of facts. Mitchell was Leaved in contained of the_foutons Doniphan regiment of volunteers. On the march from Santa Fe to Chihuahua it heemee necessary to oilier into the rear of the regiment, a titan of wagons be longing to the firm of peter harmony. Co., of New York. These wagons, being thus di verted from their regular trading route, were finally captured and destroyed, or otherwise totally lost to their owners. The order was given-by Col. Mitchell, a- he alleges, from an inventive regard to the public interest—rill the facts seem to prove 'this. llatruony t , Co., brought suite in the Circuit Court of New York, against Col. M. and obtained a judgment' for tfi57,000 against him It happens that he bas property in St. Look, worth that money, and that has been levied upon. lie now comes to Congress to claim relief, and the ,Senate has passed the bill. This case standing on its in dividual merits seems to he a proper one for the favorable action of Congress. And yet there is .. reason to believe that if the claim be allowed, it will prove We entering wedge for vast numbers of others resting upon similar grounds. Yesterday Commodore Stockton took occasion to Ith off upon the Senate another instalment of servility to southern dictation. Mr. Miller, the Whig Senator from that State, presented resolu tions from his legislature endorsing and ap plauding the compromise. to doing no, he : made a pretty fair sort- of speech, the purport of whicliryna that though he dot not vote for all the compromise measure, in detail, he yet. thought it his duty, to acquiesce in 'them, since they had beeneoerally accepted as a plan of adjustment of t ine many questions involved in the controversy open slavery. The rnmniodore ! followed his colleague, eulogizing State and. indirectly. himself no rather mote favorable to ' Southern inssitutiono than Southern men' them- ! selve. lie intimated that he woe aware that he had done'all that hit position enabled him to do, to place New Jersey in an attitude of defiance soot insult towards other Northern Slates, and Moto he had their disgust, so fir as he had beert able to gain their attention. he should think iq peculiarly hard if tins South should nostlooli coldly upon his etbirtii. The Senator here alluded. to 3 speech he male last summer. ! in which he hope.l that it - Ai...ion ever did come, ?he dividing line might tie the Iliiilseo and the Lakes. PO '3 l l 10 leave New Jersey in indissoluable alliance with slavery and the South. As to his indieidual likings or disliking, tbey 'are of little moment, but it is to be regretted that he should have bees cant to the Senate, from any free Sta.. after a decla ration so utterly del ngatory In it. peepte and at ititathittit A. rosy . serve es a hey to thy Sett' toes private mitiment, on public matters, tp. - know that he is largely interested In elver pro perty; if he be not actually it:roomier of many slaves. .161110 FROM NEW YORK. I=l The Califon:li. 11111 WP hoitho L.Allit! Webster is not very cheering, inasmuch as the gross amount of gold known to be on the way dome not excnell our exports fur the mouth. Htitt, theXtiniag news is 'good, and the Fait' to tninala ant The rush tram hem in enormous—go great that ships are DOW OD the berth for-passen gers alone, the same as when the geld was first discovered. Anf - elegant clipper, called the Grecian, was nit'fil • day or two since d i rt this purpose, fur sixty thonsond dollars, nod will fake her passengers "round the horn" inn style that imrpassen eteamsbips, inasmuch 65 her at cothmodationm wilt tc'hetter, anti her pamsage not a long one—just long enough to let 'them know the diffirenen between home and the . . Lopez, the Spaniard who murdered the polioe-' to receive 'nu unconditional pardon— thanks to the intercession of Calderon de la liar ea, in return for tho pardon of our Cuban prie. °nem It is•esid by come of Governor Rants Monde that there are extenuating circumstances in Lopez' calm, but thefacht do not bear them The Into of the State have been merle to yield to a queatien of International policy, and the truth may es well be told as not. The steamer's newt from England hhe &eh mnre confidence to produce dealers, and higher prices ore .expected. The Private 'store do not say any thing about the question of an invasion of. England, and,it It probably onlyihe old hug beitr, about which:all hate heard eo much ever since the days of Waterloo. small pervecoi i on in to he commenced against the American and Foreign Bible Society, by the First Baptist Church of this city. The Bible Society think ; and with good reason, that the old version of the Bible to good enough for them, ,'&1111 that the new readings arc non essential.— 'The Baptist Churth, on the other hand, no land• lords of the Bible Society, nay they moot march out unless the new &ogled words and readings are adopted. As these sort of quarrels ere al ways ..to the knife." thelioejety must roust., A movement ban been mule in our nlmshouse allnirn that promisee the happiest renultit if it in suncesaful. It is propene& to stop entirely the 100 of i'rnm" in all publio institutions under the chew of the 'Ten Goventors." They argue that as our prisons are filled with victime•of rum, and our pool houses populated by the some moans,. it is idle to give them any more of the vile stuff that hes res;ltteett them to the level of brute's.— Thin reform will ho contested by the Loco Pores who know the value of rum too well to allow their friends to he debarred its ugo ofibuse. Columbia College, the that relic of a oakum' left lo the lower part, of New York, in aeltiog the Consent of the Legininture to Hell its lends and go up town. So great is the demand for business purposes in its region, that money enough could he got for the real estate tolinlld the edifies, up town; and lease a large surplus user ter etlu- rational purposes. The privilege of selling will be granied, and the oldest College in New York is no more known in the regions of trade. C. ➢or the Pittaburgh Owsotte EinTutt—Bomo folks say . there Is no plesanro to he had in a log house out hero among the woods. Well we don't believe that exactly. We think that coming home in the evening after the day's toil is over, and sitting down beside a comfortable tire, with the Gazette or some other paper of the" right stamp in one's hand, in which we hear of the transactiou occurring in the old and the new worlds, of states arising , It is nat.! Mitt the Board of Dogeute of the Michigan Unirerrity, et Detroit, has pureed the following resolution: 11 - hrreas, Itev..D. • I). Whedos, 114 Methodist Ministerrhav not only puhlicly prlutebed. but openly advocated the . dorttine rerlifd Me high, lair—e doctrine authorirwthy the Bible, et war with the principles and precepts of Christ, sub versive of civil Government and society, and the legal rights of individuals; therefore, fe.v o f. I,4%—rhit Po,. D. U. Whedon he and is hereby removed..' We cannel believe, in the first place, that tmy College in thin country is in the control of men to ignorant of English ati to suppose that '•openly +noting" any doctrine merlin:l,4y, aggro...toe the offenao of "poblibly preach.og" it. And In the neat place, it etrikes on that no body of College trustee. mode up of erosible men would remove a Protector without, o more opecifio definition of hie crime than is contained in toe above resolution. What is the .'higher law doctrine" which Mr Whedon 'not mils/put, Holy preached bat openly i4Troested2' What doom it assert? If the Board simply adopted the Mang of partisan politics as a guide for their action, without_ any more diatince Inquiry into the matter thou that, they may be qualified for politic t Committee men, but they are not fit to have charge of the lutereete of a College. —N. TM, Petroleum I Ohio. don. '42,1,62. M. M. liar: Dear anower In your Inquiry, I 11,1 on.paral to wiy, that I it al. WWI tlittlretvoletnn rnalvely in the treatment of r.,„„ b „ nut Ie grrosts,Pll[ol•lls than the oar armany of the prin. •iple rtn...ben formerly nand and roootemmled by tb. Profolliptv du far an the r.rlru. dircooto of the lung, In voleo the 00.1 Liver 011 ha. been no ,highly tromp goonomi, I molt certify that the Metrolioni In my holvde hoe sof...receded II we •ruratite agent: In whirtiou to thy... d4na.e. above alluded to,verotninue affeetion• and enlarannoota of the eplenn, with the meat extrnordinari nrrer, have 10 , 1101.poeed with. With thror inporthierital WV, of the PetrO,tm I rimhalth your. truly, J. FLATTERY, 11. D. Eli,..Vore .1n by driii.thil•gerirtiall. t.tUAAwT MERCANTILE LIBRARY AND ME CHANICS' INSTITITTE. /1001413 . 0 N VOURTII OPPOSITE Al KNOWN BANK Ton. Mrrabersin--$1 lnitaatua+ Pre. a.' Si per annmn. anneo, in the Librnry, 20011; in Ifrudina Rpm N.lOl/1,,1 and 21 Alapannts. An thin is the only Public Library and Ibwllnu 1L... lu lbe Mr, those Deposed to aid tee ems lirring the nesuelation medal and parntatunt, aro reque.t. ted to boron,. members. fel Ulm.. , SerritllthlPDANT 'fairs 'noisy:to the Talus of Dr. tit , LANE'S VERDI/TDB. Reml,llthatdonht: - A !creel, when placed cat-the @mints.", of a rat-hole, °Went the aperture, lea eels along the postage, sites upon the rat, exterminate. hi. extmtmes, and dross the ani mal's defunct carmen to the light. And In lika• manner hare I found Ur, 31eLarte. Amerimn Vertnifutret to °per ., Worm., those dnnulful and dangerous tor Men• tore of ehi Id reo. This retuFsly. like the ferret, enters the aperture , of the mouth, ttalTill down the galled, luenta etc...eh, lass Ladd of the worms, shakes the life out of reptiles, elnar their den, and carries their esrese,pe elegy out of the system. Thi4 at leant has tore the elfin of the rermifuge upon my rhildren. Mt= :Ilia to . ch;titit that f hove used Dr. Vahan?. Per nod bar. Mood if ta operateln 'Ma manner annn my childrao. JOUti DRIOOB. N,Mtara. Jane. tail." Thl. Vormlforo ohoold bo In Ihnxiarotflon of ert,ry &inn,. A trial •111 tofrho. as, 1416 nt Its afOrsof. Yo 41.1 Rholerftle and !.tall by .1. KIDD 00.. raidaw2tB 90.00 Wood ort. DELFIIESS AND EAR DISEASES RADICALLY CORED. se-DR. Ls BRUN?: otters to those suffer ing hem Deafness. his Infallible aural remedbe. which hare teen enerawsful in nearly hirer thousand mess of mi nima.) dela... These remedies competes different courses for silwasee of the internal. middles and external Ear, and har e been pronounced by those celebrated ittirists—Dr. Kramer. of Berlin: hard k below, of Paris; Curtin, Pim,. er s Yearsley. of London—as being the most wonderful and effectual ever aPpliod for diseases , of the internal and wilily sari their effects are apparent on the fifth or mirth day. Ds. Le &man-antra cure In every erse.where the ear Isre.rLsct In formation, Ile ha. elahir.'en twrtiflcatre of cure* from (now who hod' been dat/ and dumb, and whose bearing le now complete', restored, and me now enabbal to learn the h..lttmcel The names of orer twee. hy.,,drrd ,raaws who hare been mind br Dr. Le 11. may to wan by application. Patienta, by wooing a de scription of their case. can hare remsliee sent M any Piet Serene—kb sonsultatinn fee; alp G e ro tr tam ebeo las Astral, is restored L. its orivinol osidesurs. or when a watt!. will to heard to beat rat the distanee ofelghteen feet fn., sillier ear. N. D.—Dr. Le Drunn'o Treatla* on the 01. and Ita Uir mut, and Treat:tuna of lbn Deaf and Dumb; tranalat...l from tbn French —, , rser. $l. A ddrcsa 'lran.. Union Snuarn Not 0111/.., N. T. OPFICIAL. • • • Department of State, 1, niannin , :ros, Yahruar, Ott, 1a52 I • - gj) Information lino been received from Aunn II tierime, Wit.. u. N. toned ollinamo, N. (1.. of Ibn &AIL within Id, C..011y District: or JAIIES U. CLIIAVIIII. I t ProsuylvAbliot, mad thtt Ihn elTecGrierl by him vere lake, char, of by WILII/11 Ilatrobo. 111,,,mrtner lo PACKET' OF Tl' ENTIETII MARCEL DISPATCH LINE for SAN FRANCISCO. •• Tho new al d elepo Clipper Slop .31Y2 Id, 1 1.11,0 A Wr. THORN 11(1.r. will shortly betilsoet-hod fe eptne ., , ,". . r . ' 1 . .771,1n of tt, magnificent ChM, le Mt., nI• In .111th /fa.VI, awl ek h oa.wenger will hare a sin,de 'floe no, ..1 pao.ak 10fta....1 at the low rate of Sind in oeron. COM, and loan,!, 11..P.L5 In Viral •I Sari, alddleatAti ts, necessary.. the Ski , wi11.. , god, any eirsornlttnees. tabu osor a nu.*, Farad's« and «therm colon to California. will flail tn.. the now: wdotorothle and erunum.sal eunaryanro nn., honing, tney will not Go ant : feet .... any ...Per.. giber lot-I, until lauded fill Vranctleo. vrto ref till pabi for.. rho grwat •srerlenue ot (kW. Thormlike in this te. ml bring hlo third voyage to San Oran. togs.p e e the nnednealei and karat OpaNl ni LI, vessel, oho har In a lo i n anklelad llie unedrall dawn as the celebrated elip.s.m Litg Cloud" - anrarta, - warn.) tto. Oa. tartation of a moat ralramalinary k snaxnuo Asoli to 11. surros. pt 01 Wall ofreet, New Yuri. - - - For Rent, ANEW FRAME 110WriE plemnially noted .n the Cool Hill and Unto, Nt. Chace' Fkak (load, eilfht Ir .m rittabursh—stlaehed to lonia, la a Ittnelsnuth alol t We.. nMliker's do% alto, two acres of gr....A1—y.11 r«nt. ' d with or without the *tufo, Knnulreor the silha rah,. Ming nn the premises. LI feISf.P•II..T JOIIN .111.FILLAN. Jr. Public Sale of Land. ' , pin: EMS of, Itorsr.rtT , qluNTr.l2, dee'd, I late of Ara.bington smut', will esp... lik NW'« a•aa• Orvlay. the fah Jay of klarrh, 142. Tract of Land at.ut 141 arr., situate on n Ida.t.et. or 51.1t , r , ran, In stunning laniard Lit,..11. John , Inorbea.l, and other, of •hird, alsott w re , arr firstr.l fhe lag! sus, Irtal Mittearti. and tho whole t ra ct Stuld nia44. th.1r01.1 . ,. farm. Gut it will to ...dim lad rlv toll« to suit IdireGw.r.. Scrous—rlcethlnl of tbe urrass mousy to be paid on the gm do, of Nord neat, .Gentos..wown. will Le Orr... ant Li, r•rnalaius tv.«thish. ln hrow annoal pa mewl. Per tl thy Ural ;tarn...v.14.1111.e required ao mon a , the land md.1.1 cif . Willey 1,1 lSrall• ao.t arnualy •It h Una rottlltlon. It wni he mamcdtately sot on ;pain tor rale_ Nate la araaramate al 1 . , 11 . onftiva-prf wheel dun attli«lanrs will to ellen. 11, the Intro of little. IlanOtr,dekt N. --Th. Lank If opt 0111 by rented for one year. t-itugg`rt For - • F Sale, rj\HF, mock of lltocoriep, the fixtures. and he un,prmi 1 ' of Ito. Ptor. Stott K-u, t... 1 by . hroihv v. K 51.1.1% t:4nmr of P.M! SC. 504 )1.1c,..“1.7. T. soy w. who slab., In go Iwo Ito rets.:lll,m-vry lu •ln+a 11, caw! offer,. ..trantacr• Inl-riot. cool,, to tt, at, Apply !trill , : IRWIN. •• - NEW BOOKS! NEW BOOKS I. liir . AL II II.I I ENFENNE , Y . dc , CO..tiare juxt 1n1et...13g 11 , 01, v.: Oeri 1 nr The lenenelt, or ,itbltes L.. 1 the T...., h, It. 'land. 14. a•• ol LW, • tale ..f •• of a twol.el,r., lb., (.1 /11,11-^rt. 1. Wm.. Wit, 1T0.1.1. ho 11iic•heth Wetherell, awl the 11.itle•ww5 Nat An. I w,l 2 a Pntbabn • I.thrary The W haq ,ihn•••••• 14.4t1..•.% • “etrnaro.-et OI 3Tvtu.l 11/..1,15. .n 1 Flu 4ei-tsrt 21 I.m.bors. 11, it llorrioon t.n.wortl. nee.......11.1,•11 the I'. rx.slesP•. al IT A. Gild.mi.enel A Vu Fooril..l I 4 Leer Yu Irral 1-sol; n ivrlandlita pyr f • )$.ll Alt VlClilrY a Vt.., ar..r awl irr,nl o• DE LA I NES! - =-A. A. 111 rt,r.roN 1 1.1. at. .!...for at..l of Vero. lir• to ona• ot 41. g , I.oTiis k •;Assi3lEßEs_.()”hood, a So.k Etra,lt ao I r,r t .f Onrr'..}.. tor s to. 11.0 wt ,tatorLtr Out WO - Al4.r. flp. lakat 4-* . of VA.., rt. Ert. , . A. A3l Crt . 024 4.4 'Hastert rt. g 6;Ett.sxrit)--33 lila prime, Mr tale by . 411 , WICK a !rtr - CASDLY- 4 1.. tar sale br 1 - 7 of, /11 , 11r.1:31:4;1r. 151 IMAM . Ufo.l.l{--3 0 prime N. 0. , fm - rale Si. L-i, • • • 11: 7' 110i,ASSES--50hlis. S. Jamme toil,,ter'4te ,0011.1:10MiC,AVIAIIKA1. 11A..K.AAAAAA. I OAF SINIAtt —l5O Shia. mie ' d Nuts. flats • On fir,a.l katorto, ralr. I. Lt' mate r 11ift 1111111 1.70 filikk N. 0., tur eabobv I fa"cri.r.ritlA.N U. NOLA SSES—.I° blAr. ler pale by • • fritA. CLLIIIII:Ti4 . . . 'AIJiDLS. Ata.eaubiimits Trunk ituarila. P I. 1,1'41,1 A. CULnxizr 4 aN Notice. • rptlE malereirne.l Lure thin JarientereA P trltrs PArtart , .ll , !..4.r.r - rtx'vr.4.yrn ArP Ili,rt'Pri.l itart alni Ens 1i Irk to ACo °Mei- 1, at th• grar.tooror ?at Irarlo A V.A., ajrr terr.tro prompt •12•11... .I.l4Krlt 11A% Or, I . l4trt.u!,,tr. r0..2. .11111% 11111 IN SA otlasietotrVer a lb. eAlat. of Ps tor 6eAr.l. I a the der..,.1. .144.1:31.,tte l'areAle and Itu. , ei,e, I-5 int. A ritio, Kee,. lA.A• Usneel • eepAriverthip • , , , h frAvit tia.ler lb* el J0.1t7 , // rIS . A . glAmt Onto. .sr• ulealle.4 to II, • nowete-r.arte,e,bip Ate 'nen,. h l eo.p.ore dl th. iv. Or at Cl IYG. Brat•l ; , c1 0.!11 AV JACLiMAN. Fancy . 'nen Party. lllrth Ito. ht;lietue It , 4 7 , - .11,11. 111. It role. tr strifot IS 0411, wolbol Ito lons All • thi.,n4 t TION'AFFONfS Fourth Party fo r thP im . . ofotorht of 144. 14 ill tiolloilaroon VeliAl• 401. Homy eirltotho.ll • rsory ...tarot ot.no otttors trill to athwittol Into lb. rtottr,. toto•ht plifontx I htitot vo.ngetttPlitlk • M wolf to prow ...Whim° int ot, othltnc. 'fluor tlfotrotot wo pt , 'h.. m undo, lb. sh rostul•thno of pro , ur. A 11. •1 tilt. tioalhpl gtuthlot roctl.tootn vOthoot will to ctietthol, ufttal. ooh.nowalty ta Ow. Moor ott ottattlt..h..ol.loll tot , to otttetly totfatood t loot, tor Ittlito lot zontlenton, oh MAI ...lir, L1\41 0 .1,111 attpilth,l with tbott troy. lirktqf P , oltiy•ty on tit:tot, too.lat the ttoc.r. To tho Public THE NOTICF: of the— Himullution of 61,.. .6 a into, P.tuti A A Cr, In thr tomtit", pilry, nf 0., 1. st,nnee. A dle.nlntlun is mnr.emplAlvd. of .birtt the inlhlin 'then have, duo nolk, lawn ron , ntntn, In/. VE%I. VARA, fehlThlf Of Ann of • JOHN PARKER A I\l Centralizaiiin f FRENCH bare centraliaegltheir ger ", rm... Am hvot 4. P plat sr 1,.....1h10. 111.0 cam .10 as th.., Oeh.r.e. trot ,I. toermoury:.i.vrn Arra, to .11- rralthe CIF, 1. - ..orr to rm.. ..., r..c.ell.et Ilsal:Cie.t., lo etrwrng ..ut•lb. / 1 0154.11 h e Meet 4 elothink •t' tb.. 1...,..At ~....gr0.1.,,r1r...p. 111. FW , It 01 Ho's' Clethinsr I. fo all t , .1i a., rocaplete lloyt of al ogto Dttftl Out,lome.liataly. Oath rat 4 , llllnitlo. nr ataar to pkato. abli - II M[141444.1 otre.L trot Diamond Alt,. 4aAIiTAIN'S UNION MAGAZINE, for L J Slarrh.junt rearltt/ at W. A. aII.IrENFIVINM A L'4l!s.ll. Noll rnt It, Ono 110.3 tor• A. %%ILION,/ (01 lIA W LS'—Hurt re ~.d. 2 easeg gureri or I moo L..c. rtorl3.l.o:lNnt 3,313,0, 1131,3 1,10 I,- 'n, Ovi 'l,l • 1.11 CO . L'2l, ,101 Mario, 31 I,LEIE-100 MAR. for-Rule by CN 4.44 .1. eC.I[O.IN . II,AK Ell A CO. RUNE IL , bill, tTeria r , for sale 11 , is, 33.31, J r , CII.O33‘SVAIZER k Co. f 4 (ll'LEY's SUPKIZIOR PO CLAY-1.1 I.st•l.rot,'3l 1.1 OT OVA .1 ~1000, • 41413t3; 1liti0; A PPI.ES—Iti hl,l . 11.. r sole Ily WV 'ACO, 1.14 `,,, , LiOrt, t. 1f• bo ' lO 81 11 ,1 '. 1SNn 1?4 K.al .nil i: ..le to UM: A-M.131.1.3101 A CO._ 1.14 fir,ern nol Tea 10.0,n, ,o.p, F It Wu.? suA .1- - I Allll-50 111.1%. noci - Limbo g from steamer a 4 11.4 , ISATAII 1,11 . g ET , iel. W•lsr Vrou.l 01.. Erie Cana Election Notice. I • - AL N }:lrettott of the Ihreet.or4 of the Erie ill Ca MI lM hehT• C. itehl tct ttottr ett the cnt 11.,t0, 7 ct Ifiterh het t, tit, CI T II E . Yel.r.ter. M. —I NI., tt. N TIIE lAT'ltit or the Assignment of C FIRMA' —All perw.n• e.4ainn wain •1411. will pre...l Ilasin at en.w. and poreont Lfwin can and ...Ole walne. al the warebeuee J Irwin .nnr. Wntrr ern, .101111 IRWIN. Ax.eiwnr, - • - Important to Msulufacturera 'VILE sulooriber4 am prepared to supply all I lit n.le l lY?nS'l AND Wilt it./n 111 LIIY. of eate•P.or quality; SAafifno dent Stilt Geerino. Conpline and 1,11 r,. .1-1, erhleb Pule twee itt wsnathio ' LOroNS of erne 'Weir .4 pattern.. for rem, ah.l en 4 (even one r in g gh •Aegnirs: far plain trmkt.g. rape. Woof run fronal:ni 17i1 pica. minute. Thwr are matde• fn. their •steti.i... unprorentent, priglne. Yarn. and linod• with eouiparaurelr to bor and al , before oureheaw their has- Odom., will do Well to visit Plida.telphia s uit •kitaitr. where the, earl Pen the ma. Liner, with ail the lat.! inr proetinento, In full and nu,teidul operation: or they ;wet be rer”red lei Metering In ohnogl terry' State wall and wee, by addreaging • line ni the gubw-ribere JAN liet • SON, 11 illr.deghuri, near Philadelphia. 11.--Phing fartoring, with the location of inaohln. wry. lb. etniple•t uhrhod of.drieing, and ealrnintion of speed. furoWheal free of abarire. • t01.1 . .1y Straw floods—Spring. 1852. rrHS Aubson - ber is now prepared to • ,01141 In Mee...haul. and .11111triere log 0.0,1 beser Mora of Ladle.' %V AND III( tots Nwllr , FRRAII TR14011:,:n, AND ARTIFICIAL !lAA; IMF, ftiNi Pananao. owl xru ntrt. of P:.l/MPN 1,0 1it , 1111.10.. wHeli. for extent, vulety, and twenty of nianulgetnre,lt well as nuilorinly el •111 be (mind unrigalill. 11101/40 710 41 0001 h tterond /e 411 PIIILADELI•1111.. • .Straw Goods-1852. AN UNRIVALLED ASSORTMENT. Timm .It , 1,1117 C, H soon noeond ( i g FF—A fresh supply of Sloceaboy, for ^".!"", J. KIDD fen • JA Widalst. CLOVES -5 Uhl& for sale by d 11 ) P-1:: J. KIDD a CO. 4,,.1 ICILY LIQUORICE—G eases for Fah, by AJ relj J KIDD a. CO. 1 1_11YPOSIMPIIATE SODA—ForEalo bi . 1 fol 3 J. K IDD t CO. . . - - --- - i QUA FORTIS-.-15 carboys for sale by IL •r. 13 . J. KIDD a CO. fl UTILE FISII BONE-150 lbs. for Tale .1-1, .r. KIDD a CO. A No :1 in the article of Teo. }-,YOU wont eitrictiv prime Tim, go to NWRIII! , TEA MARS, In . r.Ln Diamond. L 0• prim]. mvag.e.l er Inferinr Tete. at« never kept et th!ei establlnT tclent. Clad prive..--1 , 0,3„ :Sr.. nod SI per lb. 1...11 out l'..r 1by.61.131: TEA A:111MT. en which Li Yr rit• ton .11....-r.y . Tea Mete. 1.10 . ES:TRA SUPERIOR (MEESE-- • it boyesplat r,0%1 by rAllmitl,lny pule bY 643 Wll. IlAtIAl.lq A 1,41,- lb awl • , .1 Woo.l IL. I lIIOUOLATE, 13110 bl A, 5:e.... I.J - trots Ilellt, NorLlk elle Wt.; PO .. Mt Nn. '. ' no .. • Br.i. For rale by . r,lB Was. n NS A LliV A 01., 1,1 :Ltd . 211 WOOLI ft. 0 I ALERATUS--150 boSess . 61:adult...marA to for rale by fel] W3I. 11AOALEV A CO, IN .ad ;:t) Woad Pt. Dnquemno Iron Store fIOLMIAN, lIAILM 1N & CO. have m• I_l moron' to th• yraivhounallo, Int Water ntreot, late. ly nerttnted by MreKrn Lynn, bborb • 17,, And deer to th. Monongahela lion, 'thorn they offer Ihr •stn III••r.I term, the r seism caannlarturril artlelen t ntooog may found •lark of Juniata and Conamhn Imp. Spring, and Axle, nlnb. Spring awl Am. II 1' teat l're,ped Spikes, Vol Nnlls nod Spine-o. Nut; and Wa.ln•ra.Cnn• Haul. Slndregh dr. lm Steam Engine Boiler Wanted. penion•having agoad maenad hand 1.' 2 .. ,a,,a' rrliodar Boiler rffi two smaller 00. theY wow .1 liar W seebaniir AT a Div made n.ire ;7: t lYeli l .4 ' .; LEV telZee Valentines Valentines! LARGF, new Nopply or Pine and Comic 11 AU:WI:IRS, revelv..l Ig spmrr. at .nvt.t.l.vonit , 0111 m 1,12 Oil Cloth Factory for Rent. CIITLTATIID on Fulton street, Sloth Ward, rtlctimt of brick front, bYli li;throo AtUrl. high, doolgood es tar dwelling honer: awl rear build:l,g lid by P. two .torn., high, diriiird into work. 1014 Leila lio ma, with {amuse mid ponder 0510,,,. all 14. order, rot 'rail., a twee oppottanitr to ant ono a to embark In chi. raeJo Monona Or 6.1.1 stilt M1.11'611 . a Curb Yaotory, it !mil.. a gooil Yl.Platiolewdol with ph,a thrn, and opon remind. adjoining. _For total. apply to AI KIIN CIIbILIS4I, col the premiir• - . ur A IlYinitbiNti, rornor of Fallon etre,: sod 011uenirtile 4.1201* PLAID SILKS!..-A. A. 111.tsoN &Ca. aro • , dhag their stork 4,1 Plaid YAPfe, l? at rr durest.rd... VALENCIA CUFFS kCOLLAILS!-4 dr v olrahlr mtivk rn bowl st ,A..A. JIASON CO,. 62 sod 61 Marta etteet: fel: 11RIFTS!—Bestmailder colored Prints arc L Mint, at LA. MASON a tin!. - and Ml 4 llarkdnt. MDanAURICE TIEYNAN, 'art.= hr Mains Javan mie ektellont morel el:topee; pablithad In eta voloant. amajor ante at 110L.1133' Walla LIMO. Third st.l" hl2 COMMERCIAL tea' Norr—The quotatio. given in the following Re iew. we woold hare our country readers to undorrtand. ne e . the Wholesale prices, except `when otherwise notic•el, and that In all caw". In the Elting of orders to the city. as well ae the country trade. buyer PM. expert to Spa,. from thrto Wee per coot aline Moe. VlPAtlen. e fpnher tamach, that II:WM WV 131.500 artirlen which It I. exceedingly difficult to quote aoy further than the .run prier. But when we gine the correct Flory per, we thins the experienced country dealer will Brat hot little difficulty In distincalehing from the .01h. WM pricy, se to whet atunald be the Bret dual market price fur his produce.] REVIEW OF THE PITTSBURGH MARSHY, An tAe savk ending 11-bruary 17. tnn. ENLItal. Rustats.s—A fair • general. activity has preeaihrt In the market. during the past week. and qtionitlons. to the male. ehisr no Ter, material change from nor hot Weekly hotly.. to the early part of the orevit. the weather we. eery mild And pleuant far the men..... . hot Jorina the past three darn, •Interhu attain come upon tie with DO ordinary degiee of sorority. nod the 0000. 00 1b... present witting. lies on the ground to the depth or three or four inches. These few Jaye of Inclem ent weather had the effect of staying the progress of trade to a moriderable degree. and less actirily has preritiled in the general market than would base tarn had the weather Loco element. As. however, the seamy to wirer.- eina an Ent an the march of time will allow, and is h:>is eerr nearly approaching its end, we mar confidently an ltripale • general reaction In trade, en, the lapse of another week. The river continues in fine navigable order, an far as the dept's of water is conftrned, but navigation has Peon seriously Interrupted during the week. ns the Baiting Ire w birb b. run very heavily from about the heads of the principal:dramas. nod tutor of our steamers bars Coo ed 11 difficult regularly id perform the trips from this is,rt to the tallow. !mots below. Notwlthstuullng the. impediments. however. the amounta of Western and outhern pritductt~ which have arrived hp riser during the wick, have hoen large. IV. gather from our dent inim.rt list the following table of tecsipts of tome of Hie prim pal arLk-les of commerce. during the week etullan %hoofer oieulog the 16th initt:— • Floor. bids . 2,6oo , Bboet.ben • IV heat. bile , ...... ...........474 Iluckrtit. dor .- Jo eke 1177 Tuns. do 147 Churns, N 0.... ...... ..... RUI iiPßlera. • 'lBl unurannus,kga Baron, bbd. 007 Hay. tat.. Apples. bbis.---. di, . 4.1,2 loather. do "veers. ....... -Will Butter bb1a,....... Lard, do kegs, , . 15.19 TallOw.bbls . do Jan. 41 :Wotan, aka Whi.tel, tads "01 Unod beet dolsf lord 01l 1.b1e,...- .......... Paper. Win. CioverWol, bale ' dl Pork, bbla .... oise, pager Ll its Hominy. bids pager, blots. 097 hickory not, d 0....-. 1.b1.i1n.1. 517 Shlpstuff. bags-- do Havana. hes 44 lilatewart. eke ..-. Jo do Ira .g. 69 Decree Cotton. ..... ..... do s itin...mt. bk.. 111 Broken gle a n. at: 11 t .l litudlea. ban. Bridle.. do.-- ............ Hemp. bls p.date.4 , l, eas 117, lintel do litho 11,11u1011, Acire, 44. do eke... Our Rail Roads, Pest and east, ele far as enth oloted. continue In excellern ramie. They as doing • heavy business, and are daily verifying their vital Impor tnce, to the commercial wealth and prosperity of our ri a ty, and the nurrounding r.oci-ri - , the rich Pokthetluo or .hose soil see draw to this market. through these mile - ad sonnuonwatmn.. heckles the I.evy amounts at produce daily arriving the railroad. have Leen doing a geed 141.1.11- tar business, mod the enterprising men whoprojeeted thew insprocement,and the nockhOlders who liberally contribu ted their 'oh! In carrying them out, bays asseythlng to en- manna. thew, In pergolas to • anal completion Shoo* ice = prorements. which are w easentlallydruportanEto the com mercial prooperity of our dlr. Oar rrport to day, will be principally confined to actual solos, giving. at the name time. such quotation, of ruir.b article. as bare remained comparatively dormant.' do:Meth. tra think may s be relied on mi substare natty correct. At.11.Y.2-7he rake dual., the Vfl)e bare b maiti/Y rAotued u. SoLla A•h, eborit'ZO tone of-which. prtvelpatlr I..oust, barn been ,Md et the rmutir.corrent race— , ar mob acA tin.. late n( mottle eltsautl bhle of Paul Loh at .4 , 10 Si, ou Owe. SoJeratua hat been enlf ¢ is 1:illitn1 !At:...rt Pottuh ei 43143.4.54e"e b. lo er.ttlatr, dealer.. Ptarlruar he quoted at tikia.flBa a.1.3,4Zr.L. *ad Potaxl. 43045 e, A PPLE, , -11e r.iptP of preen CilkiellAre Lent light du al,: the end priere rule to,b. W. quote the better •:ualitu.. at 5,43 tr.. 411 sell hands and PIA 14 4 from A noti.-r a (air co‘nlar bu,ln.-.41., our Breurrs al 1: 1 4 CM woocrt.und ve.orta.a.nd tr , for Iron bound, ronm.u. and I , f r laud TI I.lntol for Iron boom. ostrn. ex TC alr, lo , ind'lneglbe ask,. ItAO —The reeois• of Iteeten during tbo week bare Leen brae, but a. the Isrp o. pertlm of, It Caa eorvicood ht 11, eau, tine., f 'Moment ea.... a eery ovterAier Atlttlow• hate be made to - etoetr, and ..F. bait be... .tout•raet ly en The b.dtow,i, uJt soootowthe .ale. t i r 4 the er.ek-3.10 let tune:,-/ mord. at :a Co. abolert.. ..de.. mud ..7k: toe nro WeltMll and err, oared , 1)i at] ONje, 1..0120 to ehonide,e 1 . .Lc00 to 7h., 37.1., nt. ehnuklere todee 0, 4. tam h 4). itt,Ote Ibt , uhleto at 7.'i r o, 100 do but, rot,: :e (or thou,d-rs. 0 Our ribbed. sad •Siot efaZtet Nu t. 1,. WO , at tehouLlers ss :Ow:.aoa Zfe 3...73kr cured hazor or Tbe %N.A. ws trawootteett from .bin. I MAII Or. hand. ..in. of enurer are al a Or a erttoo. • L•l'Lli MlRAT—Jteeeithe of ben. meet halo twee Les. fun. dom. the gt‘t Own the ',medico week. arri w. .co r.tewl but few tales of tmpr.stscoe. Sadee =AP Is eleett and neatly trimmed Obk , milt at 6.51 e. hoe round. iermsalualyblste!ta 136 - 140 Asatoagv stip. 0!, sod how. 7 he-5 'ft eye' olf tor ma'. BUTTEll—floorlpla L•rr bee• Ilrralµ asulliAltaccla- P. ,, 1F , 1y light. e,slog L tbla pack.l at t!, ❑ 11a tab rail at lr odo roll al 13 , ,i 441 14% a 153...4 kr,-et .t iLa.otoizt)Ctu.l.z. roll. pot op le small Lola* It sell/oe ragialul% far. plan /at 1. Ufa. IsPIAN S—No MU, tn report. We may quota nominally term bar Lan& st St (.11 50 tat mixed nod pare while' 111,KET2 t TOY-,--The manufaeturom prune,. of Bea ter Puck. have toot minced. nod • ur merebat.t. am ..taut .1 fllh 217 d..a. Tubs arc telltnn of Td7 lo CoPPlitt—The manufacture& prim,. If topper are un -1%.1'...T.t. kw map sad snaot, and 24 (la 2:7? r.r- Praner.. es• 11 and lime. Old roppnr in worth IS,. . - CILACKEr.S.—tir matturartnrieit'contlothr to Jo a lively bum..., with tale! of all they ma roakthat lb* following Vic*, Water Crae.kota , llbarsel-.-:-.—..—..-..--11.150 Batter •• t‘..rar Cry-krr.. :+nis .--.... fo CANI,LES—Ttna I. • regular demand in the market • lull rromimm lot l'utsburzh unnufaclureil 'Star R&M mould tallow md common dlpted mien 1 , Our manufacturers sr• bloc a fair business at illame rem COTTON YARN—The fallow itra I" a comecteCiat of t h e ericof of Cotton Yam, Dr IMAM It mill be Peen that • turner rotation hu bowl madf. br the manulacturen V --Ito • N0.14—...--ISt •• " " 771 t w.otaltthti. I rCoole i'??1 WItI r e '" :::.7 -44 =15 14 : 12; I 210:111/. 112.10“11 " Itemlimn to =toe ttsder tads tact litt aortas: woo, N4.6.__— Na.i togwkag—W e Imre no .1 11/.1. The following Is • • Drum Stud I. dos. Mulllla Ram Dr «._ 1 60 itik• Ito a IThlto Rope, by eoll CllENNE—Nopplles ors eounisruurely Ilubt, and Wes kissafAirein confined to Ilmltri lots at 6.40170 nor IV It. CORN MEAL—SaIe nt 45 Int tram ant hands nitric it Int From Mom ne mat quote In amltsd lota at 50 00 02.1 FRUIT--Bslrs 13 bbls apples st 81 50. and 15 do st tia 73 it Au. Solis In .mall lots' at 81 112 Q 1 fcr &p— -ram, t 3 for antoslot. and S2E. 23 for pealed *elan. No first band maces._ DUOS—Very firer are coming Ihneard at present A wool freib artlehr would eemmaud 14ye. ti doe." FLOUR—Owing to the late adeante in the European mule , =I • eftiTmlimidius Improvement in 11. - T.. and other eastern market', Ire notice a better Mellon, with an .flairllZlCO to our market We notice Wee during the weak of 3095 this, am tillowit-40 Mile at $3, .310 at 12 31E13, 100 at 32 80. 150 at. $3,330 at $2 101013. 112 at $3. GO at 1295, 03 at 3 3 05. 401 at 1302,70 at $7, and MO bhls on the wharf' on :kluge/ay. on primal tonne. From Mere minim - ea been confined to mall lota. for elty eorientoptlon. MIII3 12313 lal 133 22 for 0. f. and extra brands.. A sale of bble choke ; elma family brand. from atom at 112; Et A. dont is still outfit. wieenor it the cut we may anticipate a hirthor advance in this market. This result, however, x 111,13 end on the adriom 04 the next European firmer, There were fortleet maim temerday of 300 Mils testa arm bawls at. 130543 10, out 100* tibia on print. terms. - • (1311—Tho market continues pretty firm, with revoke miss at the follow inn rem...tmakfaekersd 312, No 219 00 No 3 17 IA Salmon Oil, 11111.1 lierrturt $$ 25 31 hbir Co-10M 11:3045:0 it 0. VEAT/lElti—R. continua our quotation, Its small lola from more, at 37413ne I , It. The !Wet hand Niers. may b astotad at 3.".(530e. VtiFlTS—Tim Allowing am' Mn Manta Malnn DAM sutler this head: du old Puns Itnulinh ma:nuns : _._._... _.. Sgsit ' Filbert. n.I laminas I , bot 4.50 liiLAlN—.The retrlpts of. Oats bare inereared, srtikts has enst.ad a drelinn In prier.. nlib Wt.. am wharf of 19011 hu a. fullon.-3(al boat 25.10.11 at Trs, 1309 at Zs Il ba. Salsa:rum MOM Iv Y+4 of nOU bU at 21e. emit btu roma furnant nnstly finely. and bag bean rolling ton fait . ..taut from: Drat hand, it 40e 110 tbrllird.a 450 "P doubts, bu fur rm a. oal. of** bn 11.70 from fi t band. at 44e. ant qui .tuall Ina firm Mora at Sae 3 Isn. IT. beard of vas Wes it . lawless but may quota It at 4igesSoe, , s . warkrt oontlnuea stead:, 'Mita fair g/nerat busing/dome. Bales 80 hkeld Boger. In ion, du ring. dm tratic, um nallows-12 bO4. at 444 (di 334 r. 4 tannin.; 3 14)41ln/cling at Se: it.. do at 51:C Id do at Wig 3 .- i/3 Ildy in 14trio% 314€4430:10 do al 44; 11 do at 03 310, fur runiman 10 fair nialities: 14 Jo, oa threliarf. yetterilsy, et tie, nob; and 4do at :44r.' the &bete em tiraers.the wit arid Won prietet. Batas yid bbt Orleana Slelawin, in th• lot-354bLe al ZiOtddfr: a , tin itt WI do ot 4430:wa1e; a.) dn 304431 r: :3 gloat :Wie, and 144 on the /wharf at 30. 4 moo. Sugar hilues our In quoted at 34440,. la corr.. ' , until. hwi Ic.o doing._ Small /ale/ i.lllll tran/piral at 9,14. to eltr, dod 91414/10 $o military /rale. Loel Mager gitntid at anJ 10. fin the dithrintt gredrs. tiles 1e arlarig in 0h:ow tot aI 441%3 n. IlOY—Selee at the redo of 74 to 100 loods at $l4 GO 16 Au •aaeo, augt $12411 from the river, .0 to*. 110 PS—blurted sees mooning fr010..t.4 tondo at 016 - 0 It Ifh • LARD—Ssaalks.ars comparatively 1411 t. Pa'sa 11 W, sad iW kep at 7.10. woad, sash; It; bbl sat Ti. mar SO kcal. In Iota; at 73( Se. IKON aan NAILS--We rubloin a Bate)" 612....a07 some the priuctralankl.a• Band.- ................... - tioap • .............. ...... V , Rut. ( .......Sr', , l-1.00 :0 t . .., '‘: 7 . ...... 4 rh•nor ............ .......... .„ , aa,“,,,--Cot 3 to 4!••i 3,5.• - C ut 6 to ..... _ ....... . 3,••64, ° ut 0 to 7 ...... The•aboreprtra, are. Oren. out t;••• in.onot tor cub. Liao Pira—Tba nr.arnt MR of PM,. ac to Man Parrr Lata—lteiular sat,. at 0:j.• Lr t:• 86,1, and 7. abr. rot • 1,1 .1•1 LA. a•1e.0..,1. I, 868 held at 1.186, kimlo a. , ~ .t• F. the no.. gu04,1 ‘11.7.11.--To,• only It; ,rt ono:: tto w.ok:ar, nz, For, th t, at Eli, 4 t0r , ..; 86.1 •41_, too. t•r- metal. on prisato [pt. SEEDS—enlu IJi hli Tiaauthi at S: !GS. hu . Clover hum duet baud. ittr. t. .na 3r ‘to elm, it Su, and It. ta Fl r ruin al ;I"; bu. !LAOS—Kai/. at , +wilt with • wool Jerlatllti. • PLATE—Th.. ruing Pr.. , .. nI 0,, a 1,1,51 hs. 3 tano—nlnn Lax off t..r Iln 1. Kith:Mat 2340 .e nn time iti 1.1,r Ili:. M.I. from ftar TA LIAIW—S flu nf 144 • WINDOW 01..1S:7—Quito ik 11,1 %.1.m. 1.1,14 V IV, 4,..4$ sl:+t 1,411...54 1,,V . Sri 1411 l'oulfti, tfrando fq..10 112 2.ti tit , . with U tsfm.aldifroolit rertifm. liar 1.4 c itir. We append the follntsing !i-t o 3111,CKLI.ANC,11::: AI:TICI,4 A I..pirg. . 1:: 1.,11 /1......1...1......,_ .., ~ ~,, ~,,, Alum ,i..... 4SiLm•tl...r. S t ~,,,, ~,,, Ar,af.t.11.1.• lk CY..2.5 dg 1401 0.1.. ii"...,,,,,, Alplet..rti. .1 ,er.l. .1.. nt,,,,,,kh,5:i0.1.,,0 1i0.,,va1., e 5 , ,,,...... _= 1..u..,,, /,..., ,„,,,,,,,, Bona 12..10 1,1 m... Lott, , i.,,, Nahum Ct..1.4.,..t.....1, .1 , 1 Leem , r.rl.., Aj. 44 , Itrin.lone ___ .... -h,.. 0 ' do , g , .. .. 0 k 41 i/ora4lo 1101mtk.IleaTer..$1.75 tatZ 11.1gter ..... ..-.• .2 , 1414 Oomph ..... ....,.....4,1„,,,x, lltclar..l. urvitod.,;..,,, . Cream Tartat....--23 ...I 1 1, u 1 1.1 , ir..- SI ... , iii r, , (..k , pr. , .rao ....---- 1: , ..14 2 NI.. rltm.• u .,,,,. Cer.m Nut, 7 as h . . de ra,..,..rig.1.41. , 716',,, , , Chwartion,unams_.:l.l ,411 do 1tue. , ...1 ....._. 0.:,,, , ,, do grouud.4o 04e.) gig, 10n1. ...... .... go ~,, ILltrou LI. 0000 i Perr.gl 111 ....e., eAto ....k1 ... 1.5.14 ,, 7 t uo gmtiod....- II OA Clore. tr. It ~..-,,,,,, 0, ~,L. „,,,, he' .., •-•-•-',..,' rd, ' ls Cr;, ,i 41,,i,,,b1 No I :;,.,, 0,,, a,. .4p,,1...-...51.75 ,41 4 ' Hive ........ ~. ...,.... 10 -11.. do 1 , ,t ,, 214... 3.0(1 OTA 1 SOl Soh.- ' —4it 4. Eglts In pint [l.dr.ralug .Al 4 I. Vultr. .. .- P.:00_1: :I,errh -. I ot. 0!.. }ii 11: , ite..1.0 ...14....t...• ..... ..._.. I:Sq,llt.. .......--- ” .. .. - . 12 _..1.i . 44 II illborto 85 0 a .. 1 . 10 1;: . 0 10—, 4ln 41s tilogrr, Iwo ' 0 01/ do sopa-451K, ....11 iir.ll/) do around .... 0 401:: Shot. 1 1 0.0:......,1 ..0 (rot h 5 Blau oo:O ) :a 1., from po.re 1 . ....5 0110 lion, Rh 01150.... ..li $O4O Tomo, Inl,l - 13 1 40 rz. liroutol N 01.5.-711.31 00 0 no V. 1 1,..- .... ::.5 10540 I I lISL, 0101 ...:. f114f " ; 1 ,: I r ' •.s l ;r i o " . r t k r i 1 - I . g ti:Vo Jo groon .. .. .4 ca. 0 Toro/ atilt, 01.1.....4.5 `,0.1 looloto ..........$I 11 onl '. l bolo, . • -1 ... Litleove .... .. . ... 4.e.'7 "1'0t,5r00.g00.11;n1,.._. 1 1 .. 1 i...p. • Llquon, ...... . IN 144 , I do. •oln. d 0... :'.l. oit. l . Losa, Oa 5 4:o 0 I Powarr. llozonl L an tO.l. ..... ...-.- 544 0 rol.. ...04 to 5. rO. :45 ,do h1a•ta0...5 00 oo:1:::, CATTLE MARKET Baxess—The cumber nt the yard was largrr than last week. unannting to nhkh were loft neer. and the ft:reminder. :,t4L, role • ..:!•; to. 4e II 5, five weight, equal to 6469..._ net—the latter er incher peke bola, m rhnten nurditr, aldrh I. an mtvanne nn last week'. prim, ten that deserlrt;on—eranw , a cattle rematn lag the .1.1.10. ll.wa—Only a limited nestled w..re rat r..d. which P 41.1 at 4%, la ID. nee aright- enruP—Nonn ar C0Li4,11,1".. urn. We may mutton. , qur quqtatinn. at $202 a 7%. n quality. VED estrus—No ...it , . trun,n, We mar 0 , " the oomknal rater at from $1::54 • I,ll.tt.rt au. F..h. 12- The market for cattle' is not near so hrhl and the numbers Fob.' hart tnet,..ert. ' 1 - 4,1 Catth—ThorPlZ4 , ll t/11.r5 , 1. which Foil at primtarylog Trotn S 4 4/111 In it - upcnor .Ith I•rl to No.. Nork—:tlMlLlain tatle.nld. awl Calrep—Tl, numlwr tx.l4 11F , I somewhat dw ellounl In . cur pre vl4. of frr,ll C... 11114 . ;mug., J. oe , and Dry coven prirc• hewtt At $171 , 67:.0 1.1,, e. hue Wtanrw—.a4s dal atkl Latabt—VJU - -•- Cattle—There *as a falling off in the eupply I.evaes it, to da,.•1.4 11.1.0...rn5,e rata, ruled bithatt. 1b I' • .6,111:1,F . r• ar 14.1 :to heal tt,te4, of whirl: oulott 4 4`l . 4.41 , ..4.1.1 - to t.t. tottrt•rt. argil ail .Intrn In Phlls loittbo, ranzol from St to. to 4 , .) C 1.,, to• Of. • egimlto 114. 0..: tr. too- 4.1 a • 4r4.40., 4.: . . 1:mt,..1. aW ctally of I•.r. lore, lave a wide Iczzo RIVER INTELLIGENCE SIEJLN 1:0AI B,ILZIVALS AND DEPAUTUILES. RRI VP. D. Atlas..< l'arkirr•ott. Ber.orarlile. J. %Irk., lirn.hiek.mqtMeKoes,...xt. 3. Da, aril, ilrabrztt. 14.1 et. 4.7ltc,.llerdM, 1 110,110 g. , 1",/fare. Rrottnntalle. .14...t.-041.1,4tc.. - • • • - tile. • lrimenal. fipciatat.L.Rirapin,ham. Cuminnatl. F 014.04. eltlr !40r43. - 11. Lim ibur., t 1 .W '.4llllinaer:Ctorionoi. R 11 Rn.vroffltit. J. Veßeo, Ileadriekran.Melireriort. Malta.. Bennett. lharn.rille. Ilarard, F.lnahsth. —l"..iature. Watkins. I.lnatKaille. , N 0.2, Batchelor. Cincinnati. Wlnelleater, k100.n.,U heeling. surnirb. Pllot No 2, Crane thactigni.ort- Irene, I:Mon..n, Wabash. BOATS LEAVING ba?, gIALLIPOLT—Gos. ' , CINCINNATI—Oncinnati• W.ELLSVILI.F.,—Foreq oils . R P. n). WILBELINB—InornaL Wi11,1611-11yrnn. cwowssrwax meta 6ROWNSV/LLE. x A. A, jsud 6 r. w urn:L.—The m were 7 Ciee °ladies in channel by pier ie 4nt}•ncnm: at dune.. snit IMPORTS BY awn AND RAILROAD LOOLSWILLE—Pert.BEN Coutnitsl49 sks [slithers Ei Leech 4. Co; 2 bra books SY 'Bingham & Co; 21 tea hams Willingfoid & Co;' 51 bbls trisect& 6 do brandy Simpson Young & Co; 29 bbda sidies Carson & 34cKnig11R p ro sides Kier & Jones: 27 cake hams 5311 pea shoulders 692 do aid. 19 empty csks 11 McColloagh; 15 cabs bame 5269 pea shoulders 565 do sides'lV It Holmes & Bre; 1 bx Covode & Graham; I lot lines and chests A 0 Richardson. CINCINNATI—Pen Ink Mitunoss.-3291 pea bulk meat Carson & McKnight; 44 colts sods ash Bednett Berry & Co: 24. tcs hams Corode & Graham; 74 bbls whiskey . Miller & Ilicketsou; 60 do IV Latimer & Co; 165 do Leech 111cAlphin &Co; 50 bbls molasses 2 (Co 1t Moore; 2 zsk.s copper I bell A Fulton; 2.csks claret 2 2 baskets I hos wines 17 hhils sugar owners. BEAVER—Pan 2--9 bgs oats, 36 do wheat 120 bbls flour owners. BROWNSVILLE—Pon It II Itarintr-120 bbls flour owner on board; 6 tits raga J Mills & Bon; LOUISVILLE—Pau BALFM-10 bhde lob Jiso Grier; 150%b1z mess pork II McCully; 33 lidula shoulders 17 do hams W B Holmes & Co; Behest lines 2 bra mdse. E lieszelton; 127 eks feptbera Nimick & Co; 50 bble molasses Carson & Mc- Knight 20 bbls midasses 0 hhds' sugar -Stewart & 8111; 2 peg bagging I) Hartgbey; 1 ha mdse Foiejth & Co; 15 has lob 12 muses smoking dd. Hardy Jones & Co; 5 aka feathers - Spang & Co;! 3 bag eareaprilla 8 hid. tot, I ha samples A Gordon 4 bus glass ware W McCully Co; 24 hhds ,agar 24 bbis molluscs Brawls & Kirkpat kick; 18 hhds sugar 49 Mils molasses - - W &:8' Wilson; 10 hhds sugar 39 bbLs molasses Miller & Iticketson; 25 hhds sugar, W Bagley & Co; a do 1 bx fob 1 do noes Inn-bridge & to ram; 19 bids molasses Leech & McAlphio; 6 b molass es A King; B.cskawire 10 hbls do .7 . . Keller, 2 bbla corn meal W AfeCullough; 2 has bandy Ls empty by( J Abodes- I— , ..IST OHIO & PA:RAILROAD. 7 -1 eggi - iton bit tat- 3do pearliiih 5 do butter'li I. Shinn Mils butter 240 dried apples Brown B Kirpat rick; 100 bills paper Mathews & 'Co; 12 Eta furniture Hugh ilhafferty; 1 bark will Belli:nano & Garrison; 17 hide 53 ligs nails ft Nilsen &Cot 49 bb's .ard West Newton wart boat; 161114 butts Jaa Patrick; 19 bhls lard Coved.: & Graham; 22 do apples J Foot; ;14 Id:, oils S do barley J Craig; 4 hbls apples 3 tax aids° 2 .kgs. 1 bag nuts 3 calves T Paintor; 4 bas Leona 587 4 dos brooms 3 bids bolter 3 bus 2 calves 27 dos brodins 1 sk 6 Mils aks 3 Iy/3'l - cheat S bga 1 ha 5 salsa bbl. Y chests 4 hgs 2kg's 1 ho Bid well &Co; S pearls W & bus whact Wiltnarth & Noble; 47 bile tlodr A Vankirk; I idle chickens 10 bbl, cider 3 do apples T J Whamberlan: WHEELING=Prr. AV; C c.ree---12 aka raga 3do L T Connell; 7 bbls hotter f eks L kgs lard 2 bar . 18 doe brooms J Black & Cc: IR Mind's wire J 11 Taylor & Co, 22 da -- J Barn-, dollar; till aka wheat Witenneth & Noble; I pkg mdsa V It White; 21 aka barley Tracy & '1 hog Jonathan; 4 hi' Mils (I IV Smith; 1 3 eks wool 1) Leech & Cu; 1310 'paper King & Moorehead; 4 horses owner on board. INDt RUBBER, PASTO.---6 griwe of that i.v.hard• artkle tnr rllt.br:u4 ltoe.t. and chive yr triurnnt and pllald..lntt r.ed (rt. 0. 1,11142mA/a Fa.§. tors. and fur rule at .Na. IIG Nark. ..1 .1_ At 11. 1.1111,1.11 V. -- FAIKAVELINO IiAGS--../ust. rec . 4.l, :1. auz. larrext riled India tuba Trat.llt.g Dims, futkaler al be Hub .r Perot. 116 .llmrket AL (err - • J. k 11. PHILLIPS. F INE LEsit ilia. TEAs_.:4oowir ebeptl a no.kuunil; Yong. iron . aerie.). it • •,..• Yo.k.l.llee.rlve.l br i'rons i:xii ( os.i., er Ivg..IIAtIALII.Vapo.. IR 1131 W 04.0 t•1i..., - , WRAPPING PAPER T Straw irraprng bs""'""a n 't"*.f""• ) " P MATIEICALL. WESTERN INSMANCE-30 aliazol of this atoct - for rata at ttjoT v g . tra s ql"& At coiner Marta& Awl Thirtt sta. I=l