. - . 'We - apprehend that, on an examination et,tho goestion, this differenos of 25 miles in distance withprove fatal to the giver route at &competing line srith the cut off recto .The pappleiaGitio, . west of Steubenville' for tarious reasons. will never be satisfied with a circuitous ttng that one should - he constructed along the I river, When they - know that there is a feasible ion:Re-where a road,onn be builtfat a moderate coat. 26 miles shorter, otouilinittcritiogly before . them. The, grades and curves 'on your cut off line are more favorable than 'those on the lialtboore - and Ohio, [lnstall and Albany, Nei York and Brie, and Ponneylvanjs, and most of tee Cast ro railroads, and the cost per Indio will be .• bout own fifth lan. • There le nothing oo the lone of your road to interfere with running • trains regularly. so as to net 25 miles per boor, . 'Which is a bouransaierage rain ,of our best r- - a Tine would make the' time between Steuben . vine sod Pittsburgh our hour and fort? minutes . "%Along a river route, at the same net rata per Mips, the time would be three boors and four ' Egoutes, being one hour .24. minutes longer - .(within a quarter of an hour of double the time). Thie would make the difference of time for .0 trip,arolng and returning, 2 home and 48 min. 1 The charges at the same rate per mile would be 80 cents each way, or $l. 60 per trip on youi line, and $1 60 each way, and $3 par trip on - veer line. The difference in the original cost - and cost of working the route% w ould ta•t war e.. rapt the river line in .redtring the charges ai ro nalt to the esele,rale es llili charges torrigh" ' - mayetir line; and the difference in toe ton, of ninning moat be Malys in favor of the cut-off a - "route. . ! Steamboats may Fairy- pas.tengers for lower - rates than we have aseuraed on-the railroad te - tweeo Pittsburgh aid Steubettvale, and some _persons may continue to patronise the bomts.in - preterente to the oars; buttes fare on thekosts . - 13 only Part of • th e eipensta of a trip to Pius . burga, and wheaatte easing of time is cOraider. I , . Cd., the total cast of a trip by railroad will, 1 in most eases, fiat short of the total cost I •' I by.' the -.river. airer. Even along' the Hudson, ' . I rarer, When the railroad is 'eel materially I - -f eborter than the Meer, and where tee navigation 1 " .fa much bettor than the navigation of the Ohlo, -1 - Mod with a much more expensive railroad route _ thou yours, tb e bulk'of th e travel hoe been attr a ct •• ea to the raltroad. In your case, the result: con ' . I tab scarcely be regarded as dontatful. Your fine can afford to carry freight bentenn . Pittsburgh and Steubenville—and particularly freight to and from points beyond these places, • , for 2h cents per ton per "mitt. In round hum • bin, one dollar per too, or 5 acute per 100 lbs. Can this be afforded profitably en the tier; route railroad? It would be only. about 11 cents pa.: ton percale. The same charge of '2i cents per, we, per mile the river railroad, would amount . to $1,86 per ton, which would be EG per ceot. mon than on'y.our cut-off lint. At certain seasons et the year, the steamboats ' amid afford to carry at freight ;a trine Weer or. . goods passing merely between Pataborgb koi ll—. Steubenville, bat if they are intended far points pug beyond those places, in Ohio or Peactsyl , . Tania, on the railroad routes the saving "could not, by any possibility, auroot the tranafen . from railroad to steamboat, and, inns: again fromsteamboat to railroad. • All artidass going beyond Steubenville from .Pitteburkli, or cite Tern., would cling to the care, and, with a as.- ' , wing at time and money,- The cotaaft line, - working in hartaony with the Staibenville and Indiana and Peumsylrania Central Roads, could Awn the name can over the different rands, as 'they nog run over the three Companies' beer a ' • Vetween Cleveland and Cuseinnati. - . • It thole views- and eslCulatioad are correot, the large atilottot of trade and trove' going to and. corning tram the lane of roads between , aSnabenville and. Colmibus may be relied on ~ ' As - fairly appertaining to your line. ".We are aware that another rival ,route be way of, thengtb. for of Yellow preek,'in Ohio, a {intersecting 11p Stenbetaille and ludiana l iana soon !distance; west' of Steubenville, has been talked of, though not inniOnely proposed to he . ' undertaken by any rospoenible parties. If etiold 'not stand as • competitor, can,, if iv Were coo strniteda banana, owing to the Mare of the ; `ground, it - would be longer:quite - lac esetit for mile, pad would' encounter 'fey beery grabs • awl Mad ounratures in passing froto the Ohha 'neer to the high.enmilait between the river and Connoton Valley. The only. thing that could! amiably amity , the construction of a railroad - -from the mouth of Yeßow Creek offer thin high summit, and' them." titian into the valley of Connoton, in preference to a route passing out ' • from Steubenville, would in 3 material easing of distance- .. ' ' : InTiew Of the entire practicability. of your .. a ~ road' across bendat the Ohio, mating sat an ", much distance from a great,thoroughfare, wel ' . ' sepal' tale mama °ti th e ea oat of she question. , .. . and ems which will not hereafter be adrOcatc..l i . " by prom-Seal man acetuanted withedlatte facts. a a a •Weametitton .this ,roots thus partandarly; not , -en aceennt of its intrinsic value, bra because lam' been hitherto referred to in eonneclicn 4 with the supposed Itoprecticsbaity' of a route I .- across the Mud of the Ohio, by nine who might , ...otherwise hate takeis a more decidea stand in , favor of .your road. • i. ' Theta is, and will continue to be through all time, * large river business, gad river travel ; ~..,,,.. accommodated by steameoats on the Vann river; I ' bet the business Whine we hove t us far as _ '' 2 : s eamed *a bringing revenue to your road is al •a . Most. 'entirely independent of, the 'legitimate river trade—a ausineas much of whiclawill be • - created or set lo motion by the . opening of the :.rallreade tbrottab Penttsylysnia and Ohio. A - a direct and continuous railroad between' Pitts _ . ' kargh, Columbus and Cincinnati, is caltadray et leas importance ;than a line between Clean-, .. ' lied, ColordbusaardCineirthati. Pittatnugh boa? -lied; font times. as great as Cleveland, and there Is no inch intermediate town as Sten.- ' ` abenrille, with nearly 10,000 inhabitant!, on the ' ' route between Cleveland and Columbus. 13y this direct route throngb Steubenville, it ' will be bat 209 miles from Pittsburgh, to Cie , din ;an ;8 said a shorter line be hereafter constructed betweetathe ateubenville and India,' • ' ' in road aiol'Cinoin.osti, leaving Columbus ta • 'the west, it moat neenarilythavo tine effect oaf a increasing tee business en your road. We mg ) treat of the route through Columbus, butanse - ; the work from Stenbenvillels all under contract, • 'in process of construction, quid -likely to be fig. ' athed'etithin twcayears, or as soon as your line could be compatal. 13y this rade, passeugers can leave Cincinnati at. Gin the morning, tepee --' ••" Pietabiagh at Gatireame evening, Philadelphia. a.' at 9 the next moiling, and New York at 2in the efteinoon. To Pittsburgh 12 hones, Philedel -• ' - '' ' ' phis 27 hours, NeW Tank 32 hooka. The dis ' Mon by this route between Cincinnati and New . ForIM is 746 miles, but by way of Cleveland - • : and. Dunkirk it is 866 Mies, making &difference of 120 miles in distance ' and several Aurs Ir. .:,;,.. time infant . et' the Pittsburgh route. It been urged as era objection to the pros emotion of Ibis line of railroad through Steulen aa.' 'elle, that "there will ben continuous railroad, s'aa• effected by way"ot the Ohlo anal Peannyvamin • 4 . ' road', anditbat anether railreed is enyneCteilary. F. " It IS Important to your mann that the , fan cy of this reasoning, if it, Is fallacioni, should • ' ' be made clearly manifest. In the Bret place, with the exceptive ,of the single, coven -of . ''. Franklin pf which Colman!' is the capital, the -" • Ohio and Perwaylvania railroad cannot claim to I .. • be an collet tor the heavy population and -gene- , . - --- ral trade described as belonging to the line of, the. Steubenville and Indiana region, and - that ' • region looks entirely to the conatruction of Its , l ; own railroad for Its outlet : „ al. • I It Is true Oita when the'profaned southern . ". . branch from thaOhlo a d Pennsylvania railroad " . .Is constructed from- adonville through Mount a' " • ' Vernon to Delaitare t ere will be a continuous 1 i i r , " r. railroad between P" . ate gh and Columbus, 234,1 miles hi length. Slot admitting tint this line was finisbed, could that be aarancel_ as an ara gement against the construction of your direct _ route of only 190 WWI It will not be amnia. fainter the frieuds of the Ohio 'and Penniyin. Oa toad to snivoisteaech a piinciple? How would it 'Work It carriad:out Against their own , • road? - There is new a. continuous railroad by - way of Alliatme and Cleveland to Crestline, at . • .theproposeditermlnatloi of the Ohio and, Penn sylvania road; the distance to 216 noilei. The , stamen to Crestane byline Ohio end Penney'- , node line direct, is 216 Mae, which. is but „1.,'9 Milts lees than the pretest touts through Cleve - ' 1 aand. If the saving of 29-totiee warrants the ' construction of your road toCretan', e, eo will - ~ - ; alie nein*, of 44 mites warrant the tiontructlon • ! or your Toad to Columbus. " The people of Co ; • -lambus frill net be satisfied with the circuitous - .! ;limn by Landoraille, soy more than the people . , of Mobile& mill be with alos circuitous route • to Ciestlinea Again; should the proposed line '.of Milreids be flnisbed &rough from Loudon . . :rains by way of Delaware and Sprlngiod Co alio ,. - , • . einniti; the distance by that route will be 841 • . ' miles), 'Ogress, by their ratite through Cohan :- . s bat, It willbeln,.aco miles—a difference of - its atile-a,.,:and In assent a more direct roots . . a a • ate.. the. difference would be itill more in fever , ; a a 'of the Steubenville route. '.,We desire to be on ' a •aeretotid In stating these facts, Mt ea opposing , the Ohio and Pennsylvania railroad, or ae alai ' a i ,arig. May dispoeition to disperege the menial et " '''' •-. that line. The original and legitimate purpose of • :,• ;',that, great road was to feria a part of the. main a ' 'Lew and West chain of railroads to, St. Loris and ChloagO. In loostlnglt with those points in view, , -paralculnlyisnaiew of Recourse townie Chicago, t t gould not at the one time be on themost direct ' route tp Lancannati. , The"relative distautee to 'Which we have referred, show that - it le nor.— . We regard - the Ohio and Permsylrrinli Railroad as the great placer lite - from Pittsburgh, : run- 1 : • . ~. Wag . through a &radii. abounding in the ele, 1 -• ,--... :2 - , menu of a rich railroad !matte. (Ye believe it j Will pap Iran as an' investment, - and 'be highly - • .' .-' teneflelnlto Pittebnigh. It hes a noble destiny, .' gad it win: be (Walled, WI feel assured that ~. .- t he Pittsburgh and Steam:mina Bond_ as n putt uttheishoitesta4bestennutaxionwith.Colnutbna EMENE MESE and Cincinnati-Lthe shortest and beat connexion between Philadelphia and CinBtnuati, is not less important to Pittsburgh. It will also eventual ly be extended westward by the prolongation of the Sumhentille and Indiana road through- Mount Frrnou.see sato connect with the Belle- Cordell:Le and Indiana Railroad, and thus form a part of a great east and west main route be tween 'Phileslelphia,and Indianapolis and :it. Louis. Its chances for &liberal blare of the great through trade and travel,between Phila delphia and Baltimore, in the east„ and Cincin nati and St. Ln - dal. the west, ore, therefore, fully equal is - any lino that can bn pointed not. It in important, then, to theitrite interests' of Pittaborgh and Philadelphia', that its construc tion should be n'ecurert nt the earliest practica ble moment. Amidst the reiltoad rivalry of the day, tie city is etrOisg enough to (obi 13, -arms with security; OA those which ran con centrate withiu • them the greatest number of :railroad avenues -must take the lead of their lees fortunate neighbors. The short, nod more referable the collie, the more likely it will Leto . retain old, and attract nen businee: and le think it in clear, that uu shorter or better li.ic ! between Philadelphia and Columbus and the Great Went= be found, than the route passing lI through Pittsburgh nod :Steubenville. There is another e t ionisterestionsto which we respectfully ask your attention- Should the rood be constrocted .from Pittsburgh up the Allegheny Valley to ttlesh. and Rochester, or into counciluu with the. New York loiprovo ments,i it will open through Pittsburgh number greitt thoroughfare between Elm:Volt ovi god Boe. ion and New York, of.e hick the Pittsburgh and ,liteolieuvillti road will constitubt MO` of th e Rake; and by way of the Situbuty gad Eric Rail Road, which the Allegheny Valley road will in tersest; an° additional raolrond connexion will Jie enedted With the city of Philadelphia, and with the northerly portion , of the interior of Pennsylvania. By means of the western end of the Sunbury and Erin line, it will cetahligh ' raroad Connexion between Eric and Pittsburgh, sad the 'southeastern portions of Ohio. • Whentheseextensiveregions are thus brought ! into communication ;its each other by hues : radiating from Pittsburgh es a rehire, eke must toke a high stand WI a railroad city. Katy point I in the I'i eat—no point in our whole country, ,possesses more important natural advantages' as a great manufacturing 'ller capital iv 'heavy, and, no yet, the vast resertioreof.credit which is at her cetatnand,'"hee scarcely been tappq. She has. beep Into in commencing lice radmad enterprii.cs, but there.is yet time, with boldness and -.energy, to '.;. - ecur7r the ground which has beep lost by delay. 'ln laying before your hoard the engineering and financial nuestious connected with this pro posed railroad, we ask an person' to accept, our sq . :tennis wlttiout invebtigatkon. .Oa Cho uoiarpc, lest our desire to present ire meitts ih favorable hare cabbed us to over look or nnderea obstacles, Wel invite the -closest scrutiny jest. We do not set down oar eptculed, ainouOt ,of trade or travel which is to pcs.s from ! Oistakit I points over this lies, and in presenting apPrita- g;inlates of rive., to ha derived friim the transport...Aiwa - 41f coal. local trait. 'and tgin col, Sc., we de no: wise them arbitrarily nit, thewe only ask fur 111.1 a) zolyseetion with the facts and c, , tich.i.EH which pt-aCcrle tvisi co eornpany them, a fair nod candid , eontitterittiti. I The inducements fir the speed) of ,thlacNort link In the Oat - Chem of railroad , ucw : ikyrogrovs sof V OOSittletalll, are WWI don of sufficient weight to attract the fseoratits?.. atttutitin of capitalists hero an.V.ewhete,; * eared ir, are red Vea3.l a'aa I.afCrinierli. Q.ltiChllikt is luerit,N, that itticati.eilbi capitAl l 0 1!Is stock meet pros° te. be safe .1.1 preit- Respectfully solntiiited. W Mitquit IiGUCJI76, Car2aia,,,7 D M Jr. Engiocerniiec... Pittzburgb Mirth E . ..';'lE;.;;. . 1.1.1-sr.uala:l E ==ll piii ~,, it ;t t II eATTYIKDAV ,Nloll.l6Nl3:4Alteli ZarREADLVGnr..477Er - GAF EACH PAW: (i.i 7 PA The preesure larim air e,loruni hie left us an room for elitori4s. or 'for acme. other ri"ttterr_ ceikiming attenliro. ' . ilib•ing relieved curseiTen of the loog:doe,rMentereihich command our apace to.dit,wek - shallreturn to oar usu.', v,iety 'ln per unit ' ' • .• Tiat?l - gotriiinttOir#'44r,..essj tact ... cret?ing. Wee Irtli attfO r ed-411. delighted din.c.. • Ze.4l , m half we lieterted to .ii manic eote.rtninmeAt of that description whjar slford .1 more ratimml e , tij ymerit . : ,( They sing egsi l to n 0 Monday ever, lag. •, _ BIBROP 0 CON 7N OR 61 LiCTURE, ilrr. CATIOLII IT itsl TUE. f CIVIL INIITITrTII.OIS tip TH C. ETATC.I. )14.1 . .1 iq Itycmit braU, 1 Tfh. 14;2 I ..E . teported Exclitoy arghtilk . 2.l, ; ' (meet' loco ) Under the eystrinby which Ho v watt) govern ed one city WIWI supposed to be! it:toren:le. and though the limits of Or Empire erre every day extended until they ematrar,l within their bor dere. the whole. chili:el world known nit that day, the iishabitantasceuired tights only by lief ing made citizens of Rome. Nominally. and ivy a fiction of law they became eissreas; hat this' ,syetem west toned impracticable, sad 'those only' . , 'who iltscit withlM the walls' ef the city really possediany power. Fir.ally, dthey overturned what alley hot built up, all power passed into the heads a the Prietorion edirtits, who become the =tem 'Of the Empire. • ishetc putt liras of ' goirnotoetit prevailed, this timitto of low could never satisfy the reason of mankind, and hectic it was necessary. te introduce tiskr eysitcuiof ro . , presentation. i • Some might demand of him, why if, as be ex serte& the )lAtftationa of this consitry were unzip identical With thcx!e of Catholic. Dig land, Bad we noftiheVvonl, nobles, and Moen, of whdin they real to isiceistn,edstholic dayes-s They ,bad - them tot, oterW baton's they did not ernes the ocean. i . :11 Kr:..tivzoistisd writer 'of tho frrquat day'auir, 'wfr great propriety, i "kings or noblei did tot cis - ate taut the Com mons merely,": and liej.lb •hadt be institu tions pow:tiler to ihrut,to tiro British Comnione —by which they hall formed a dentocratief : re, . übilc. But these instit u tions seeress, far (rota offering from those congeals! to th e sprit of Ca , ollcity, that they seers, in_perfrid. adieus e with 'them. Some supposrd diet the people tot former slays were entirely isoisbettaiwitteritli those "great prinoiciplee of liberty !ditch are poiliive, !tenet. Yeti 81. Thomas df, Attinit4.Whose' writings were used la Catholic Sarni ualies,aml h e n lyrobably ex ercieed more infltiencasitiOnlthe minds of the pu pils then those' Of any other must -= St. Thomas, a. monk of the rniddie'ages, had discussed the merits of etch aystem•of goveroznent, and, eon. oediog'to each the merit' to:which it was onti tiai, had Come to the - e""oittlitTsiTo'n that a repob- • Hoag was the mostberfect.: Bien where klogly goyim - meats prevailed, iliti•general doctrine of Catholic theologianstwaelbat :the monarch de rived his power from the people. sod wonld ter fait is, when groeelynboao 1. Thin WA, the doc trine sif • St,Thocias,,,the - stengel of the schools." it-was %tight andidefeaded,by Bellormin. So ares teaches It as the "gabfest doctrine of theo logians;"land aide 'ttifendsiit ogainst James let of kingladd. JantiTes asesertiii that this power of the monied' came immediately from God, while flouts showed that it came fromi nod wee held for, the benefit of the 'people, 00 eat hirfeited when it Wielmeglisgiethet their Interest'. Ile scouted the idea that kluge could not be defin ed, And showed !lOW in Catholic England that, doctrine hed not only been taught but ea : -Let them tools at:the , institutions which 7d . graph up \in the chUreh, and Ishtweets which and many of 'those painting its the Brit government a striking resetablancesexisted. Nay he bad ho hesitation in saying that many of our -wisest laws were derived -from those of the church. In it every religions order was a re.public,whlch 'elected lee own officers, evenita Superior. iDio asses were governed by' - Bishops, but the_ tosses direoting their govethinent were wall.. defined. Vat laws of ;the chzirch Were mention/91Y directed against soy other mode of• acquiring office fir honor, except by merit tiaibroi 'succeevien Wee neosPearily exclolled, and arbitrary pre; ' ferment made almoit impossible. I' , 1 2.,.., Ile did not hesitate to say that the rules-of 'the hesitate to aonnolls of the elzurch contained malty valuable hints for the govenitnen.t of el! deliberative bo dies. These principles had been adopted all over Chriatendam,' wherever the church was free. ' Was he not )Instilled than In Saying that a sympathy for this govitamtnent founded on an slegotts' principles, existed lo every Catholic heart'' a Tr a d mi t ee* , One would i the importance of're ligloader the government of society, since all knew Vhatif is were withdrawn, the mainspring o f th e treat machine would be broken. Consti tutions 'would be but as chaff before the wind. Lowe would be swept away whenever a sensetof duty and the force ..of moral. obligation were not imbeddid deeply in the bosom or socloy._:, Ard - Ibig truth would oxplatu the "origin p e t those convidelone which , thethsd lately wittier, sect in SostetY. Min had see - needed I:kph:Wet. from the hesrts gf the roultititht, e a lete !eCee. ligion—in,maiy eases even a religious belief was binished. Man was not a mere machine. Utb less his actions were governed by the laws of .God, his institutions would be like buildings erected on the aend,whicti would be swept sway by the torrent They had seen this effected, within the last few reeks in France, by the herd of one man, and such would be the Into of ••• • • gieternmentl to the hearts of whose ifeeple religion was not firmly implanted. The.Catho. lie religion taught hy.iti institntinns! It taught whnt•Ood was The mysteries of the incarnation and the redemption were held op before the minds of nil in the various festi vals and ceremonies of the church. Alen did not Merely hear of the Live of 66.1 when' they knelt at the altar to receive Christ concealed un der the my2tical veils in the :Aeronaut ; that 104 e won brought home to them m n monitor which nothing else could effect. The child learned to lisp praises such as these mysteries kopiretl. Th,s , feelings to which thoy _gave rise grow with his crowth and strengthen ied with his . strength. When tbo time of temp tatiou came they supported him safely through its trisls The tribunal of penance invited All the children of God to come forward to chn- feiol their BIDS owl endeavor to obtain forgive !ices. A guilty man might conceal his owcesin hut the'conariencu of xoclety was thu. always mode to turn from crime. Let him not he on:lel-stood no eying the , many religkens, mik!oh nor° nut Catholie. contAined censattiy, altogether empty. Thu Catholic roll. glen did not teach that those who we, not etc • braced in her fold could not good note It taught that they ,uI.I. If the Oothelic religion worked on a people, it werned ,tiy its 111611111- WOO.. and as nil religions piesittived wilco rem nants of them, he would do inpstice if he said .they timid no pied remaining. But he hoped they would pardon Lim if he boldly. alluded to what he considered on the inherent defects of all thorn wys:ems opposed to Ci.tholicity., The hest was itgat they produced no good by those fiances Of their systems in which they differed frpm theM. Whotever good they accomplished who accoinplisbed by the prtnelples and insittn tihns which they hold lu common with Oath, ay. Private lodgment well said to bean nano hting doctrine. For his pay, he ecirld !relic each quality in it. The point of difference on this subject between Cath6les and their app.° amonnta merely to thin: When shoal arose regarding the meaning of Scripture. or on. points to which the teachings of Scripture dii.l not extend, the question was put, was there any ©•:de by which the doubt could be er.lved—sae there any authority eptatlished by 6, , d by orbich the anetxotern micht Lc 9rcidrd Catholics •aid there was; Proteitariti , tknied This destitueiou. the absetie* of c guide, 'that in called the right of private judgment It *no the,rtyht to oeleel oueongot nettle Ihnkj4e Presented. what most pleased ench uneti fnn:y. though courinoed that all but on. u•t to ti Wbst its thgre in thin ol+nenee of light; that collld be considered .ennobling I rin'ttru „.„1 was eueking hie wny to.o dinuant hottie, came in a .rotorr,itl. wee it ennOMing to tell him that there were no huger Feuds—that there wan no guide'— .Thatnlte taunt choose for himself-I.e 'ltidei en. dent—follow, in a word, hie private judgment, yet this, after all, was the pron,l ponitien claim ‘'rotentantiete.i . the unit'. Which • they 'writ. 'lois wai I,is so re.!" the greatues• of Protestant nation, If the Protevtant3 hail dote their aloare—is tia„doebt they hid—in preserving the lentils itine.of OW country, it was by tneous of the 'Catholic doctrines which thvyLa.l prenerrel, for mind of their peeitive d.,ctrines wore CetboitC, whit the few which wer not were new repot.' et, e ed, andif-t.o,oed e pontlo , lllo to we .10,11httivil mnri . nc 01 tie: wnl win. former), • a, °too.. that Protentent;am wale tie own, and winch I.uther b,alcnte t. Lg.:1110g thew to C.W,,ider ,111 b• which IVO go cm at rider whit, gklltittl by 6,1 or the Jeiil lab the Cott...Mt., be. [leered not tell them that; a !bog time the doctrine of tree will het been denied by the, Protentante stud of 311 the ectda„l/ ;.enercinl doetrinet which then pro ter d, he dienet knew -on which et loot (aught, in nil its fuinm3l, in the tatholic CdtUich;lena before Protestantism had as ex )o meet nay that Protestaunnus wet a weak re,l 1. which I.i l. fir far fee to preeeht. irlySeciety, it could ean not even pernrs, Itself bek . on Europe, and what did' they see: : They ht.hchl shot e)etere which wag here term as ortholot or e•annelleat giving we:4 t rate - ,trein,m— in !,; beetted 11161Ctity2 Be had reointly,•net-with a honk of travels threegh the fintted :itates, written by a. Preno4 author who assorted that here •vergite promeard Ittigitit, rent. to eome'churelt, and those wim bad religion whatever, called themselves Coital-taus. This Unitarian. doctrine which reduced the B‘llol. thFizmrsitte Gal—to the , cemlition of a mere 4.Clor,Ctotlld nit hw regarded as, Christianity.; Ern, the Mat:Melees lookienin jlim in tv'he , ' tier light. They considered him an a frophet vent .hy Gott to men,inforior eel> to Nlatinmed. If ther now went to Germen,t. to Swtlerlend. 'er to France, they would fed few, very few Prottottantn rentantinc,whn believed ie the Di vinity of-Chrent They must not newer. that tie o uteded to ill,' fart with the vi.w offeed• iog ,47 nee :nuell an intention WWI ,t'ur from hint, 'ant he coeld hot hots regret that such woe the ..se, for littlretrr 11, might disagre• with the Proteetents in many point'', he conl.l not hot grieve to err there deny the Vivioity of Christ The fact t esC I,4werer, he att.ortnus when it alt.. mkt:die...l by trettertk of o'l ilea criptio.. Ile held In hla hand a bock, written by an Episeepaliao clime:tan, who had formerly been e. Presbyterian Divine, and who had deemed It -doe to hiettilif to gift, tile reienne which in. duced *im change hit religleue tenets. Th• book wit a &domplionoa of article , wh.ch had ' , eon wrirten.for, and approve I in the Choreb man daring the year. 185 0 and '6l, and he could not lielleve that'll. contained any ser:ous misstatement of facts. Ile tbOught proper to quote from` it, lest the inferences:which he might, drew from these facto., nitould be suppeeed to . Ile grattitooa assumptions of his own That =i;n-ntlemen tied said that in 1(38, when he was in Genera; though he was then a Prenbyteriars, Le hod found it difficult to reconcile it to tn... science, to approach the communion table in the church in which, Calvin hod fordierly preached The author tlibuiedlo a Prethytertvt clergy- T.A. who had been In his ccingiveyMn that cc envious, who thought,Jo use hie own expresoloo, "that the Church in ;Geneva had, ox,eded oho limits within which a church cobtineee to be a church of Chrint,l, and "with a conacience I ' doubt not as clear as my own In the apposite direction, he would not, and did not commune " The 'author did Mot mention thin ciergyrnan'e name; but he had good, reapo, to believe that he was Doctor Potty, of New York. ..Of the whole veneMble Synod of Geneve, but one solitary pmder, eS i was informed, when on the ground, Was seer ronpected of •Lelinving is the'dtvinity of Christ.. They began by denoun cing: it a auperstiqo9 to bow at pis name: they here ended by declaring it idolatry to bow to him at all. When, eOw years ego, the ven erable Malan dared to sag in bin discourse, that Jesus to the ttue„God and eternal life, nod that thee, are them that hear witness in ileuven, he waedriren from the pulpit, and hooted on the Attreeps an profanely, as if he lend curt hie pearls before a alueselman mob ill Mecca do Bey rout. In short; the old Church of Swil -1 verlantl,. the Zsiogli. and Ducer. of Forel end Bern, of Ecolampadius and Ctlein, bet become openly Sociales] and infidel • • • • Even the handful of "Evangelical Christians In the 'place, I found in 1838 di vided two against three Mut there agamet two: the venerable limbo firing in nettle° from lilt brethren, end Brownlee, and Opel:lapel.. cri,ep ing Into the fold " With regard to Germany. It was not/miens that Infidelity wee everywhere creeping 16— thet,lt 1710, preached ~ f rom the Thlplte, and taught from the Chairs of Proftemore of Divinity. They took up the bible as they would take up Homer to explain its moaning, it being clearly understood at the lame time that they were bet explaining one of the fabulous systems of antiquity. The speaker hed had in his possession, not long agn, the work which Ifla tee _ du the theolog ical text hook In the university of, ho believed. Jena. The author's name was Wegsobeiderdend •an idea of his eystiot and prineiplee might be gathered '!rem the following statement. Ile would take up a certain dogma, that of the Trinity for hutanao, and devote several chap ters to its coasiderntion. In one ho I explain the doctrine of the Old Testatuent,on he sob. ject. In another tint of the writers in e Now. 'llih teaching of the Wheys in eaglet d in a third.' lie will next above anything 1 In on the eubjeot that may - he toned la Pa writers, ,uniirlr,sily will give his nwu ' w—the trim one, This last generally eats aside all the others as so many,hunibugs. Each Wan the Theology which the young preankers stodied s to qualify thelnaelves to preach the gospel,andi.t. if as; rith thie book under their arms thatthey freqUeuted the labools where they were being trained tofill the pulpits of the eon. intl. at Augsburg. • .Ifith, regard to France, not long ago, a pre. p o a a twas made at a convention of Protestant -ministers in .Paris, that a proration . Of faith In the Divinity of Christ should to requited. The propoSal wearejected. Tbuattlhor tci whom be had referzed,itentlhat.of her biz hundred Prps hyttrian rgy; wag Informed a few yearn ego open the epos; there ;Were not found ten who dared to "ron.„that J'esus Christ was God man., ifetited la thy flash." When Went hat church, after which, for its vieenes andlid prow= tip. .whole world! I wondered 2 - t• is fallen .. lit , is fallen 1 7 - 7 Paeoy and at Parii, at hotel and at Char union, at Mimes and at Lyons, tt is fallen,' like _ millstone in the era.. It le a age granola= ',birds, It is the iroict of sway fOud eleirit; it Is EMME=I - 1 1 ti the worst of Antl•Chriots: it deniefit the Father and the Son!" Some were in the habit of attributing the downfall of the Huguenots in Prance to Catholic persecution. Without entering at present into a discussion of that subject which would, of it self, require a lecture, ho would merelysay ono thing, and that woe, their numbers were even now diminishing, for they had dwindled down one fourth within the last sixty years. Before the revolution. they numbered foorimillie, of souls, now they did not amount to nob million, and the charanter of !those who remained had been al ready described. - The same gentleman from whom be had be ,fore quoted, aprike of the fate of the Preebyte- I :rine Churches in England. two hundred and sixty parodies, established in their glory, in the days of Cromwell, two!bundred and forty are now Unitarian!" I was personally inform ed, a few years since, in London, by men who bewailed the fact, that op to a recent date, ev ery Presbyterian Chhrch and Chapel in the Me tropolis had lapsed into Soeinianistu! Ile might allude to other details of a similar nature, but unfortunately they were too notorious. But with regard to the Church in which this gentleman took refoge,had they net est. the Eng• BIM portion of it to within the paid few moths, tie 4 hand and foot to the government? Ile of Exeter, who. when anion, woo recently present. ed to it preferment, whom he had pronounced a teacher of heresy, when the case was brought to 'the knowledge of the Queen's officers. and the offender reinstated. he who knew the responsi bility which he hail undertaken as a minister of God, hod submitted to the mandates of the Privy Council. Now heresy wits epenly preach el to his dock, and if not entirely silent. be on ly 'domed those who had revered his decision. Bishops and Archbishops had been appointed, who were known by their writings to be Unite. Han. nod whAi the pastors hod entreated that the Church might he spared that ignominy, they ind been told to begone, and forced to commune with honor whom they regarded tie Unbelievers And in New England. to quote agaitefrom the came wither, '•what had thri seen at tilt begin ning of thej pi-exent century t The Uliuteh of the Puritans, niter ns fair an experiment as it way possible to make—with the whole ground 'rig - 4u to itself--eaten up, to its very heart, with Socinianiani! and a Souinianisto not imporhmi iko the by- i an,y• intercourse with degene rate Geneva, or l b or lloe lio, or 4We:it, or Montauban, but opranging up by the CI aturul law of generatione in the moral world, from ton gorm that, In a groo thinking theory is lut onto the pnrs,r-dittni Or:r. MI I the tenor rhtiq, r..—us to the uystem _ . "The blighting angel drops again the coned dew from his wing o•es bright N England. tad the other pulpit, of her capitals, and of her quiet villages: the pulpits of her Mother., her its•en port... her Fleekee. her 110hinsotie, her [Litter frtis, are occupied by preachers who, confront rd by no liturgy pr purer tunes. preach fear lessly nod dilaspltennocely that Jesus Christ to nor "the true Clod, - and that the Son nod the, 'Father ore ri:l veriis afrAid re said Incerote Mother in the heyday of Peritnn ism, that "in process of time New England will be the wannest place in all America' ..yes. we air fain to that math:lees and fully - -said ticlweirds" thee I ant persuaded if the [hell came : liethiy aciong many. and held out indepen dency end liberty of cotsicietier,L and .11 , 1,11 , 1 •rj-31,:a ti. , ..i koc.-c or,u no oast's, r,, ~,:, no 410 at all. but the•c der) only men's imaginations. with :event! other doctrines. he occult be cited tip, followed and admired, -arid the result Las tondo good 11.60 singular predictione " The Univercaliets alone, teaching that “there ( It on boll 'West of heelog, come in poeseseion a a thoosand pulpit., among the soar of the Putt- law, Io thl•Til-fait.i lead' In 1041.1_ they . bad but eighty-three preoehort, nog ttey hero toter , hundred preachers, and eleven hundred congre gstiam and elaint, in punt • f horst...re, to .•,. toe fourth denomination lit the country Near ly ail New England 11166. : , ,C:10413. Every obi congregation In Boston. except the ••Old :tooth," was Unitarian fhe I - /torch that looked down so long in pri le on Plymouth Rook itself. has yielded to the destroying heresy I have even beard that honor, 4 A.ti, liopi.orij Cr Celvioistic leaders. el a later i day, could , they emu book, wonld find their Churces and Souks engulfed tat the Arlest.grvp, • A. to New Ptigi.ati, we regard the lest caper imeot of C.slenniiin se mode. ••Te is years," says a earseions Presbirceri•ri divine, “will place the (o•de,dor I Churches of iNasraeltusetts. beyond .. redoropri..ri " Says theliditor or ••lhe Preaby• LAVATET It. HALL. terian." "The ' , mewl TICr eta-See in tar eon f [ISO:. itt;TCIIINSON'S return their bin test hit., toe hohiziteo to absent eatrfutile. The ~.,,,,,,„,„.„,,,,A , „„„,,,,s ~.,,,t,„„ ..,,,,,,,,,,,„,,, latter may Ito bobbin arms, withtut ' siviltiog a . ci;o 'twinm ho elo. , e . toeterr•ccochee:• ,4 t‘.t.ct , 4l : ' I I .. Mgt b, /..., , i• e,,Nfl.ter •111 Le these blow, and coondeotly await the'liana." I . et..., when the null I.llli, aeneni share -%L.m.A . • a , Theta facto demonstrate the character of I t ,,,, , f 4 11 u .'''s - ;t1.... ! .: .. `;',, 1 .;;,..' t ,'":„,' ;fc„,'! . ...‘4...1V, r• i 4 prisms peg:sent • d.. Ilt,Oct. ns sgßi 4420' i ant:evi::::-:100 ,- Anout't.e ' Veik ' -rn•st,Ad.tos.t. - ed It, his course became necessarily, an on. I ' , ..5. ,,, ,,4 ,1, 1,; Tb. , `,1 ... ....°M... - J . ...:,•‘,77:2;..,,n,1 ..”I .. ,1 . downward out, U. wrouid. he i Lnoft. w..!,.a . .1.:.. , 1i0n... set , ~ 114. oh. happy if he could express the pronise.dinata to • itt.1;,;,T,,,L.r...trj•,::!;r4 . 4T,17;..1'Yir*:“..,0ta inner., which prom/tan:a in Europe tigeowise ~,,a,sessaccep.o, Te•be tad ei th • ewinete.t lte,L. end 4,s hope that their course wag m eth wed. And i 1 ,. 1 . r,5 . t , i '•,Ill . gli( v .:1 1 :: ti, l 'ara ,y1,„!,tt i t,'ffi.:,!,1 . 1 . „',17...„`„":', r yet there were-to this csuotty Same Wha anti I „ rt , i ;a„ foils behove that in its infidelity Purope. wee r.,, 11:t5 . , ,5: . 1 ,1 „ . ....V: . , 7• 01 5t , 5s 1.1 -oss• - ' 1 o, s lLrrdll preparing the way for their own erctetai of ..-- - -- eroment 4.1 11 - .:Zit,:.:. for oil all el.m• . !Fellow.. terminated? Wawa d'utin.4ll.4ll.l',lii bon the lohde: sad the Protratett. usher Cbe rallying cry of "littmefulu - St Llartheleftwe's.. had untied lo putting to death the pritird, II Was fount that to destroying Catholicliy, Chris tianity ant destroyed. A dtstinguisted modern author, Nlseauisy. boa (raid that ell wile had I keen lost la Catitoiic:4m 'Suring the last cautery I had been ion; to Christi en i ty,aed that all that Lad I lucre gained by Chrishantly in Catholic aun t trios •do,ing this .....vetury. L.,: I co.". 0;N in. Catholicity The progress which Protestantism, bail made ;had been in the brat fifty years after theTeifor• ".sation, It hod net eine• gained one cation, nor rem/trod any additions but what resulted from the enteral merest of thosi Othowttachtd then:Witte 'to it during that pertitlo" :Ad hap • pened before it will happen again, arid wherev er Catholicity .... dettllned,Chtisji-Asiqww4l.3 /Mier or late; cease , if Ile bad detained them crutch' longer then. be had anticipated. cud yet bad nut found lime to treat :of several 'Pry important Ople3 which rose in this cohorciaa Catholicity eibibited a vitality that would give:any radectlug matt a gunnin , cc of its stabildy, and linparrion a great• measure that idubdity to the inatitoCima that grew 001 of it. eg nutty:alga it Iselltadl eon netted, If, ne he bad shown', chei itsititutionv of this country coed their origin to Oi.tboli, SA fluenc,c, they could Etta in them theirlhostiurC: protection. . The spirit ne equality elsielcred by Christian princlpire, the suture it:molested by Catholic morality, the obedience; a golf de . niul taught to the high and the low, brought here -diy,Catholicinstituticos would r e'e DO the beat snag - turd fur national liberty. ? • . Small metrwho carped. at trifle. lould tit - doubtediy lied in the histoiy of alierch. of 1 4 eighteen centuries enongh_to form a y pictbre they deeired In paint, but a candid et . uirer . for truth would mite himself obese IMO circum stances, not deurnd upon the charnelof 146- vidueis, and forgetting wbsy:nighr ha,'l, - ,:ibKid to the vied or the virturo of the fag seek the true nature of what he exeinined in tirsgeneral operations. . fl To use an illustration suggested, frOlsougli, .inn cork. of a learned frieod, let them riutem-", ber.that in the proudest day. of imperial Ao=e; a fishermen from a distatit land .. .ogre* her walla' without exalting any fealings4gobahly but of conterild. 'he cant to t prenc, Oeltie, t legion to tide ta e leiero of the storld. , *mitt: belonged to a tuition nuivereally ' , Se wed. In a abort time ninny 111,1,11)11e • mensbars • ol {ho . church of which he we, a minis*, tin the ! bleesinge of salvation were imparted fry:many of the proud slam of ,Rorao. But the:Vett:4 con of the land considered bid prosecutes ;bete dig. grace. They ,endeavored to shako off Christi anity so something threatening to hiteome the shame, if not the ruin of the eitipir !Uppity for thetuselres, they dliTnot enoesedn'he etch, from being a badge of Infamy, I beetrie the PI , - nament of the lionian maudardd, ant...`by Chrlii tlanity Rome gained imdiartlityi whereas, without it, her name might by c,pagred away, or her greatness, like that of Nineveh or Ariby lon, bare left sunnily a vestige behilid. •,: The men of thither' might cot regard Catho• deity with sentiments exactly almitar to those with which Pagan Roots met the Pante of the Apostles, but feelings gotriowitat amitosis, e baud In tho prelate of many: 'Pet tlial , afty might come, when It would, be • fond that this despised Catholicity Weald he hie talegliard of the Republic. When lumen made religions Right lend themeelves to efforts of Aestrutttiog, the tamper of mind and the habit, engernierml by Catnotioity would he the best supporters Alt those Institutions which they first founded, May they, like her, be perpetual. hIR) , the bright cruse, which was aeon a few yeah. ago shining over our Croohy City, as ho hair aeon It gtatgd in the columns of a daily paper, (the Gasettel be not n mendnatnral phenomenon, May IS be A sign that the faith of which that cross is ijmuol, le about to shed Its lustre Bier the land. This hope woe not .incompatible 'glib ego Teet h:lgs lately evinced hymns, he trusted a intno,- ity, of his fellow chisels. A persecution, forte and bloody, wee roging'when the crest 'Miasma hi. Copstautine in the heavens, Indicating his fottneltrinmph, and the approaching conversion of the Roman Empire. Might the phenomenon to wiiidh ha had alluded; bus an' emblem, fel , that nil the inhabitants oY lids land would soon report In the unity of Calhdlic faith, null par take of the blessings which It imparts. Hanotso Tut CooKoo—.Ameng the various da vices of retail politicians for erre; the go-by to the ?if lithe Law, is that of abolishing all Li censes or restrictions on the , salad' Liquor. 11051 enacting that•exch seller shall be rosportis; for whatever mischief may accrtiosto others f A udi safe ou his patL 'Let rai Cot:slaw efits. That the License system it, damned at 4 entail, - ire has's little doubt. „Team fervor nt friends; and they tie off likedead letter, mangestly, i f, either right or treong ttkiwat Intoxicating Beeerages: if rlgtu, the L 10411181) should be as free 11$ that. of selling meat or bread if wrong, it should not belawful at all. For the community to pick out a few persons of good moral character, rind sell them a monopoly of the hum Traffic, is not defensible on any hypo thesis. We do net gee bow it can dodure. As to the other Grouch of the proposition s we should rather like it it it could be curried fully into etlect. But those who have it-in hand will never do this, and donot mean te'do it. MI they aim at le throwing dust in tlie eyes of the earnest advocates of Temperance. :Let us ex plain. Burman n law to he enacted. tleVlaring that each seller of intotlcatiug Beverages Omit make good any damages sustained in consequence of his traffic. Well: Jolly Junes, wbo.hi, a Intent likiag for the Ardent, marries a fine girl with a nice estate, which in the cone/IWO( ten years he turns down his throat and dies. or absconds. lensing her with a broken heart. imptlired con , sittutkn and three helpless children to beggary or the Alms-House Where is she. 1., Look bir her premised redresal . Timothy Snooks, rt pram:dile, well behared shoemaker, Cif, it was n't for the drink,'l stalls out in the morning merely for a re:I:veil:11K walk, but meets au old actitiaitituce who ptIIIIIIAVO him to 'step into the Dutchman's and rake something,' one glans has awakened uu appetite for another, and this le..ds to 'muffler; until by, 111.11 he bas .frank a doyen times ih as many different grog :Kerie, awl is finally taken up by the Police an 'drunk and fighting in the streets.' Who will ref:pond. to his hapless' wife inel chil•irti.' for the winery and ehame Inflicted upou theta!— Oho man who sold the first Kta.e! the third' fifth! srectith• or tenth' Who, an tell! Agate: A sober, quiet, industrious mechanic has beau doing well for kwr sir five years, until n grog shop in opened iu the street lietworn his workshop and his dowelling. Ile carom nothing for liquor, hot he is a hit of a diblitiniton, liken company, and o is inocr i eihiy r, quires si habit of strpping iii the grog shop to hone hie:-•-'f (and othorol talk on nia way to and from ho- work lint he don't like 10 enjoy man's room, light and hro for nothing; no hi:: drinks and tees!. occo meroly by wify of keeping ten the square, • Thus he groduallr woquiies o lore of hiplor, which leads him to oilier grog shorn, who, lie 'icings deeper and stays longer thou he ever did nl the Grow Finally, he becomes nP.I. r, anis finre'ra pauperii a criminal, one: 41,1.04 lien commoner nit a n dsren ditleretit groggerms iu flip progress or his downward c, reer. flow shall iLO, RIZ., suffer ruin make our a ease and duaintnin an coition agaiont nap one Of tit kin not urge the fact thatmany 'lsmael lore are Insolvent, while others are constantly Itecomtast yo—that is needless. No law of the k.tl coutmnplatel would be anythinit but. 4 sham unit.. it promdetteffsctunlly that the whole body L.( dealers to Intoxicating Bereragmshuuld L. joint!) liable : end answerable fur all the evils re salting from their traffic. And ouch an act, retold. eufdroed, they would had far r—ore At Tr, I , prwi them tLar. Maine Law —N. Y Trtousd Nelson's lirst Premium DAGUERIiEOTYPES Isuad ~,,, Tl,“-.1 .errs' C riTZESS and strinwer.'m Ep , olr --rr hhogru tc•zit. PLIn ib I 51,,,1.t• rnntn.l r • rfn pirpp , n. ,:rs..,.tp:. ti pput Att.,:lll rit.lthltrtlatz ndPrint •rrtam rnr , ., png. ai printin,..l nf 110,1iipttia xtir hi. nrY. Nr h finttnri ip V. otan P.lnn thn kir,. or rho A rt. i rtr, nt Pict+, n+,irrn. rinO, r rroupi, whinhl.a• nninr iir .p,ritscpr. .0... Ar.. Pram nnit nrin n /1111i 4 1.1 wher4 you wal, tnik wtia muT, she, T r.. w 511.10., 11, Ar Vs rrl:'. (1.1,,,5trt e 7m. m tbn r•-••• rmrrk._.l-,,•..t var .11.•••••• r o•n11.• m %.1 foal aave:ts...c.rg Chirography. T CIT AMBERLAIN•S COMMERCIAL 13 , 41 tin. s cn Wne,ng 4' llf. k i , ero ", ,f ' SMW 1 :t1::11 . : i ': " Necolur Night of the Hutchison yamity, ... ;RONDA E ErEjvi.v,; MARCH 22. 1K.2. EIDWZM Ai! 110 L E.', A L and Itfqx.li , k „, k 1.4 w 71.11.1 J.lO 1.4,13 Chairs! Chairs! W holesale and Retail. 1 i 4 ~nr.rt,ini to I,ra Int, ,, ,re Imy chmvp Rat Swat rh.r • P..:lnct rrn and turkiilrl'hoOnoa. , usnars.tar.,-1 Sfl.l..Vnit , . I t•14.1” . 0.1a raw . , Era, tr..t At. I, K trab,l "T . + k,..1.11/ ;711.•• , 7• :00 • •16.1%.• tn.rto-1,11 Blanks Books and tationery. ntili+cril,t retotinetfitily inform,: his that he m v.yr o,rai,t a wool to et —nit:l,ra • t 1 , 1a1,4 nut", ri.ptics Ltd A , c r .s 1 •Lt tbe will .4, I,:n C. t.tt L,At ud ..... ';. rritr.lua ^1..t ., 0 , 1 • itia neap ruicl sal t 011 t, ! 01 . AI% I.lld t tlo rot s.l9yrrs Mr Cour,' arr as - rctlaira. r ro :a . n . , • t a n c. ..... SAS. 31 1).01 , C 9 a6s. Fife _ 10,701 11.116,10011, Cii oil L 10,060 end K. It. File acz rant l_ann • - L. 463 :Trona .ian.1 , 13 La cti t .4. 1 • btlareA VeLtaylTbai• Yr Ipp 1:16Ii 1 1 .630..4607. 0,0 .. ) P..ort•ylvsnia Stown. 81317 Corny ... 2,4.3 06 bo !ti,,ral.Oto .04 Nfauuttrturers'l!..... 070.,.a l'hlivin!pbt• 0.1 ii;vnl'ile MeatITOW Lo nt 2.511 :tho.ro 1161 . .1•11 , 41. - Ex.rh.ogo,:onapsnT.- 71 smuirr Mutual lo.trucnles 10,T43 TO 1:14160 , . tbe Ci7;4 snort,Prettl. !WON S—SG do:. Qom 107 531. , hi 1.10.00 LltkiLTT, Str : ,l7tln t,Th'f l . , -n .f ."'l6*. m, 0 6. awl 10 ClLEtna I'UTORA thug! /1, lust reed Aml,r PAL. 1,. V A , A11A113T04:% A Co • rnar•W ~tner Fret and WvA•ktl4 7)ITCIf--40 bbls. in stern, for.petle bj L rtur. 11,LACKlitilIN A CAI. Adamantine Candles. THE undersigns.] nre now prepared to fill • cnlers Act AM...LAW - AI:AN CNtiA , LI:A. Oar Are • Acauc. AticctitrA e,ta 'cll. L. Acll.lActc, tn cur , rAsAA tiut ea,uclers. W• .ball matte It for }co: Inter. • Aur,LAA•c, toAA•rAol ti. DO IS A 01 VAMILY •FLOUR --The ohoisest txmily Vearlsw Gael, for tem,. • 103.1.1 1.1.6 p.TT. Floor Oil Cloths. ;JUST reed from Phillipsville Factory 10,000 r.ritot Heavy, h 1.10.32 .ad Licht Elour tPI ! , 41 to S Tiardo Ode, of tile ~..111yteuf rett.us tt.t...nta A 1.1.0.. .10 flo-1 II to 10.1. oavo.ll c‘ll stad vratint.o.Ye.x. To6 , ...r i rga , artlero • OW No. 111 Stark...U*4a. Furniture Oil Clotho. tyWO lIUNDRED doz., assorted sites, of Table, SIAM &ea Iltxream Cotere. of b•aottful sty/. yatth.m. Wa.lotioos the htt .. n.it i kno n ~ f razri s go De , tieuler, to Ude artt,:lB. mat's 1852 >le.r l tat at. 1855: 1852 SPRL'sa.i ARRANGEMENT. PENNSYLVANIA BAIL EpAII Two Daily Traitui. PROM PfTTSBURGII TO:PHILADELPHIA • ANL RALTI . MORE. THIRTY HOURS TIIROUGII . Fete, till. EXPRESS MAIL TRAIN will leave tha Denct oo Liberty street, above tho Vaukl hrtdde, e'er, roorattht at ati 0" , hr :be eon 12 ria let to Turd+ Crett. ote.je ..ttek telltaldd the bret.ot Vutoh•-s .eadthoo to mom sham Z"nallatt, ooto • tot rate'Torttolke Itaid. Ikatty , btatitn: tGoodoc tok't ...alpaca, each train of Coechea3 athl than take the 117APA'1c; `ittlill:ll74". • itee Gtt eentrs tor Baltimore take the ems of the Took and Comber:nod Ilea Readat /terriabothh,attiving et thorn to breakfast. and Wkohington (Mr PlM. merit. 1121 j THE EVE:till() TRAIN will 1.. r• a.IIr at ASO P. M., trim .t Pb.l.l.lpitia nest evaniaa. liagaatta eboakel t en to Philattolpttia. v.-I.lcon A CO.'a ',AVILES!. PACKET LIME rill teal, daily at iveclczk, P. Il i ,connwAlaaat u1w..t14 with tha If c.Ol,- Tbruuo Pittabifrali Pliiiad•l. phis Paitialtirain eitot agora. ' PARR $lO. 'PeApiauwe will twvare tbeir Tiatatii at th• Olio. lb* Martinell:leis Haulm, Want. Street. wraClO:tl .l. MESKI3IEN,TIatt Aasot P. K. IL Pi - Onattaolana testa, haVal tttun aa”lpto. (ANNA, OAItItE'rSON A: CO., Whole• mite aroma..trants Cotion to i Formaraing aferchants atten atrovt, Cleveland. Ohm. Partleular attantion givett lief h put-thaw, •• for ate of Petaluoe. Pitnate-1 on the th their facilitate 'hip ping awl ecceivlng freight by Lake an equal to any boa. In the place. ull/alert Second Wid Pianos for Sale• A ittiocosi, 5 1-2 Oclave iiano $ 40 • Fr d Ng= IES A Urge Invoice cf NEW PIANOS fecoleed =CAA cm neat good. by Canal. dram the • celebrated ...Motor, 'of 'Tblek•rluf ," .11.1.!ntn, JOHN U. MELLOR, SI Wood else. merit/ FRENCH WORKED MOUR - NING Collars Cntriaut teed St narthecgt crtrner Fourthand k•t ttpeets. m impair & nuRCIIPIELD.. I'llY B1711011FIEL1) brio now ova es , ?AC! i.e.:clement of ihtinoi beam dossis. Odilt Washing Ellan blas ant t im:mesh's named mla d Silks red eery handsome. Id•• leet Iterage :dune Mt Lalumn N t . style Ilene, Moms aM Lathes. erre handsome: All noel lion. & Lames: net:drama rnalteh Chlnlren • A Melt:se...l:o7 vt reralan Clothe • mete ?Northeast Corner roneth an9sfarkvt at., CASSIBIERES—A large itock of •0....rgs Kul elothaa tx Bors.mmr, iout ned at jyorthwat corner Vtillilhom4 Itark,ed stnets. 1,,n;19 MURPIL . a Hutu:mu:a. Abids 76, 92 ec 90 per rept 7.9 !.°''''''' F ''''ll " :'TVii:irsiocrCk CO." miflV • Corn•r Nart an 4 itnt 4:11,11. ilritSED bble. in gore; foi,nale Ingsslni B. .A. ItaIINBSTOCK a cO. Felix REDUCED. West Newton :Plank Road Route BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA ¢ WASH /NO TOY C/IT. TIIE splendid fast running l ig ke atesmer, TIIO3IAB 13117 RIVER, berm Ilia Manua galielehere, above thy bridge. Jelly sty o'elofft, I '. M. P1L.C11114.17 Win ,F4llll llll On heard 1:141 mornine take the U. H. Mail Cunene', at 6 A xi. C 14.11140 niooetelne in daylight, tha Pleat howl. end take the kplondal Skytpingtara of the B. C 11 • Ita at 10 A. M. , at et o'elA.lt the next tnatninx. Pasa.n. gne that letter In the nigt.t tre..lonedtfa•t in Baltitacre and dine Philadelphia. the Morning tram. aril' at hew moo- Philt.l.lpLia at g A. 31: . I' age", gning tn can Map 14 Dalt..., 114 11 1 141 I tn th, and tesaley, the , Neat at any tin)f an the esmi. iLrt. tk. }Ara [a Itehtinofa.. . S ez:zse . • . ......... Fut ricks,. ul• lh.. Mronon 11011 N• . . H EMP -30 ble. to:arrive, for sate II _ 11.1,„ llama, Sides and houldo re, tor noir br .1“111‘41. , S, LITTLE 8 CO. •- - a - '1•01/hhi FOR APRA I ,I6 7 - - -tiodevci Ladier Book for A{,rll, YEA No. F.ll hap. hien recll at the Literary KEEL A CALLOW. m.rIO WM.,. Steamer Geneva v vorsons having clnitni yr .I.mite. on 111 ft ..rner (/nn .taa tly 161 h loot,•.111 t,leer I..••.• 1.1..4 bills at itmottlee ~1 A It A lU, lire I 1 121. , -(10 A EIRM ==IEIM • ER:if:ED-2. La prim,. for sale by m,lO Iplal. y. LITTLE s 1, 4 LOU M xtra ILO AY. E anti S. F. for sale I 1.7 luf IltlllllolN LITTLE dt I I EESE-1160 las. roe 'd, for sale by .0 nee rl.i Itt/EISON. LITTLE A CO. • - 170 Ws Lome No 1 311.-ker.l; Son 0 e.t - ar.aß br rm. to Lira.): a 1,11. flElllll 1)A I. !StYAIN KILLER grove II pret rer foraele by J. KIDD a IST , A . ft.'S , I3 , ALSAM-2 grove just r ea',l ME= Q M A , illtUM E YELL' )W —GII4I in /..tr/re, for , //../19/ J. KIDDa Co. [IRON' E GREEN --IUO MC Tiernan's IL, I r rn.rlgj J. KIDD 0 1... . . I ARD OIL--10 bble. fur sale by 1/1,19 I. MIA a no. _ 111 INSE.ED WAR just ratted and fl ././: sale by mwrIVI J. Kipp act. tIROUND NUTS—lilll elm landing-Crow VA .tmr Hartford. hr tale by rr///rIV ISATAII DICKEY • Co. I) APPLES— , S taiga landing trom str OT 1.3.”14 1,10,11 DICKE% a CO. UI NSENU--4 kavelno.ling from gtr. Hart turd, DICKEY t pEATifElts-53 Imgß lantlinF from Btmr 11 Ll•rtfra, Fr 1, , A1A It Uldi kV At CO. 0.110 Tial.ar and Front PCs. —I cask Hums: I a bal., landing I'm,. etr. Ilart • I.•r19) lAAIAII DICK LI tat n ACON err for .a. BONNETS! BONNETS!! 6E. The Cheapest Bonnet Store in Philadelphia is at No. 33 • 10111111 Sj/tErr. A DOVE AM:ll—Whore Merrbanta ant (qtr.', vitt cnd n harp appurtment of the moat uatildnal,!, au!, 1 tat.. and 'Childre. Bonnet. Ilaia. >rh6l. .at. and ratan. . . - . • .. I'.o BOWERS. ,„ 7 - car Dealer MCnk• Glaods .L'4l3 Ait'l A N ]Nlakkazine for April Zrm been rvrA at W A atILDI..:TENNY &CO No. 76 Fourth Al.o. `CO. 6 rntnam'A hlbr.rr for Troveltyro ond Ado._ She mutant. , n? tin. ou.t.or 1. l'ood'a own sel,t -,1 rk,,rll. and flall tb. Mar.bunt Rana.: lbotortc.l Romano, by Eliot Warourt. , .. outboy of - TA. I..notrant and tb, .11.sootr of !hint. I:ntoat and tho Car. oil - -ors" - 11,irm . ...1 lia•nno.,• OY. A.-. Lumber for •Sale. R EST qualite of eenenned W eite Pine. kJ, tw01,1.41.4 tt 11 lin, Plelnr wit,l bard, an plank, and hem. a-attire: .nd For Sale or Bent ITE ALLEGHENY FOUNDRY. corner of Leartrk an.l Asti strxwts. Alleeievy City. with act.. Ovens i•r - .• 0, C c ALES 31. 'X .315311. Attnney L.sw. . . . 10.10 rt . ..... ll.' b ' l '.f 51 4 1 ii.tu "`" . orb t A. ~. AGE. ma.rtf.:t 0 • JuAr.sm .1..... 2.1 W. 711. Alltgbnly ERAGE 111 LAINES—A. A.. Mason. .1, .1,.. tralcut. In r........ 1,1 of le.. 1 0 0 filen , P) Bunt.** .. nutTl 11111 ,,,, 1E1 , ,5 , 5 ,,,, ? , ? , 0 ,. 1 , 5;-- , W , e ;hall open open_ in a few er...i, ~ 8 1prohce In Ilrt• P. - ....;.1103, .13 t...zinti7eiflbatils. 1..E.1:11 , b Pituts, Ac.. V 111148 InOUR —7 bbli. S. F, in stare, for mils by [2.17 4 DALZELL & 01. c,;ALERAIUS-15 bble Saleratus; 7 o +•srn tad f stle Dr DLIZZIA t CO. /1 m. SEED-150,15. for silo by .1 curlS Lari.3. - 3 -, 'G • !TnGlit_4() h 5,14. in store, for sale by . 10 =aria: n. DAI ZELL itC.). OLAS , SES-- . 1:50 Delawaie Pitatual Safety Insaranca-Co. OFFICE. NORTH aOlOl OF EXCHANGE, Th.m.l.St-eer. PAdadelphra. . _ TE FOLLOWING STATEMENT OF th , . the company,. V11'110363 rani wah t I.:uvii , nn , f It. 01. ter rsverrl6 trttx.r, Pr.", Tar Tr. cnrol,/ WT. Slit. lES/ On Slnrior , and Inland Iteng... tick I It. , . 23.11. , 31 . 50 susoS nit leA• ru5t. ,..5 e5. ,.. 5s ann. - 012 " .$11 . :Itran " 11 " ;:tsul Uv ilsr. 101 S: . • T:i 1C 83:45.376 =As ftstersst,P•lssr. Sr 1365.(.7.4 56 • TA,A.tXPI,IIt, Le. vile,o I . or PLR rx. Ma r in• .41 thland Nstitsq= . 111 , ,47 2 75 121t24 n 1 II•llarn. , 1 Premium,- 01 '. ---r—' 1,10 , 41 Y.: F. ln.rin,../ ... , .......-. .... _ ........ ........___-_ 5b.4133 I% np-Lvo - ,Irarae.. w ire (~ a =musleas...----....- ',1.4b3 Di ilyel.m. Reu, lial.ri, Szamneari.lr.---- P 01 . ,.) :0 I.sll The Benxi of Pireeter. bane