HT W/11111 - A CI. rrsrnaosou TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 20. 1852 _ _ wma PILMIDINT, GEN'L WINFIELD SCOTT. of New Jermiy. 'vs VIC. rimAil:lmm WILLIAM A. GRAHAM, NI. Cmtins.. fOR CANAL 00111118810 ti EP JACOB ROFFMAN, or ULM VOONTT ZDT.GI O► WM SUPIRKE COil? U. tbi ("OM et thn flab. Illeitra Coulter. d.,wwd.),. JOSEPII 13UFFINGTON, or Armstrong Co. Port PticeinevriAL tukrtuu. o.sratost., J.As PoUna, • 1/41,kc0. District*. ti'ettall P. 11A011111. • 11. Jsxts 11. 1 101roria... JAlgra TaVlCark IS. Z4xn D. Pairox. an. W. I. l toul, IA. Join E..l 3 Avnonos. • o. Jou, P. l'atot. 17. Dr. Jw. Meilcuovon, A. Ammon A1c11,11... IS. ItatrU D 1 1.1.1. • e... 1.1.11 W. Pumas. 10, Jo. lona, • A. Juver 1 1 Axan3c. • . 111. 1 1.11033 ItoorAtolar. Joon Anorrrn. 21. Tonmas J. B l onlll. A..lAola 11 .11 1 3 1 1.11. 21. 1..11 Loan. 10. 000013 Ir. 36 A thrum. It. 14,,4 MA43. wall: 21. Daartx Parton, • 10, N. o..H2aous. • • Ti. 6.11P1 A. Pm. — l3. tint AlluntolorAirn. A. O. 4ao►x Antimasonic and Whig. County Ticket rna c.oirtsr—Llsr • rotrac, DAclP , Ktretit . e. nurnut, THOMAS M. HOWE, Allezt,nr • • r. crifr -01[011.01: DARYK. Allrghenr• • rx mean?. •• ?MOM!! C. APPI.XTON Bir , n;laes. • 1110 M Ad PRNNEY, Meli tn rrrPor , WHAM) ouvrAN. I'ltt.bnrA b. R. • NYBTRIt. Pitt •rmrstabil.. JOHN Tanntnen TVILLIANI 11.c/11.4 rittAt.wch. k . lll . olltrallr. r.DIVAIcu CANIIIIOI,I.. Jr., Iltrabctrzt, , 41/..11.1't Ma..? COVIIT 0? fICAITir. 8V11,10.1. JOAN OEMIART. 4111.4hr0y. WILLIAM MAUI, l'ittsbarab. c011011:11. )431E3 LAWItY. Pitieburgb. AMT.PIII. FRANCIS 1. IiAItDSER. klise.etb. DITTICVLIT WITU aaux BRITAIN.—We have two despatches this morning from Boston, rein. tire to whet appears to be a serious difficulty be teeen Great Britain and the Baited Staten in re lation to the Eastern Fisheries.' When the first despatch reached no yesterday afternoon, we were inclined to regard it as an Idle rumor; but a second despatch received last night seta the mailer before an in a more authentic and seri ous point of view, bat still very Indefinite and unsatisfactory. We refer the reader to the des patches; for as yet we can throw co farther light upon the subject than they, give. Should the two governments allow a series of irritating collisions t take , plain, between the people of the two countries, they may possffly cud in con. esquencee too painful to contemplate. This in too time for these two great nations to get tali; e • snared. Tao Chrtn Cereritai RAILROAD, .tap ire C' 'NEUTRON. wire rue . RALTINORD RuAD.—We learn from the Baltimore paper', that Co;. J. Sallies:l; W. Gallaher, end Gerregelloi,s, Cairo, are on a visit to that city, as n co:emittee on he . half of the Ohio Central Flatiron: Company. A meeting tool place of the members of the Board 'of trade, end other citizens, at Friday lan:, to hear the appeal of this commis,. which was bre :tinted by Mr. Sullivan. Alter some pretimica ,ryremarke, Mr. Sullivan proceeded ea follow.: ..Tho Ohio Central Railroad woo chartered in ISI7, and was now ficialtel front Columbus to 'Zanesville sin Newark, bat it hail always beets and was Rijn the WtOr cad intention of the Com puny to annual it on from Zanes•ine to Wilted Ann, thorn to connect with the fodtimore and Ohio Railroad. The line from Neenrk to 7.nnee villehis been in operation its menhir, and far has been' eminently aucee: , .•fill, there brans carried tear it an averse, of , 2oopassetig ere dei• Is., with proportionate ambeet of freight Thiity-one miles of the new rota from 'Zanesville ro Wheelleg were already :under contract, and 1 the remainder-was ready to be let out contrite. i tore at the present limo, and would probably hare been under contract ere Low, Sot for some conflipiisio istereet• betrica the citizens of iFhetling • and the stockholders as die tollotal 02055 b ye route in Ohio. The citizens of Wheeling did not wish she road to lathe_ the valley of the Ohio at any' point tooth of theireity, whereas the steekhold• ern wished to - tap the valley four mites below Wheel ing, eo as to form a nearer connection with the Baltimore nerd Ohio rend than could be done by going straight to Wheeling. The authorities of Wheelingeonaltided that this connection, .oath of - their city, would he injurious to their inter- Cuts, and they withheld.. their enhseription of $250,000, becatue that route was :selected. • The superior fiflrantoycs of (he southern route had induced the locating committee to forego the promised aid from Wherliag and Moose that route in anticipation of receiving arstiotsnee from other Houroere Mr. S. thee proaealed to point oat the adr'antages of this lower retire, eon of which was theenving of distance in passing from Co &embus to any point. esti of Wheeling on the Baltimore and Ohio Iliad, and as the conneotion with this road wairtGele principal atm, this ad vantage had - s preponderating influence on the Company.' Mi. S. nett read a letter which he Lad received hi his official capacity from a mem , her of the Periaaylvania Railroad Company, of • faring aid, in the way of a loan, If the Ohio Coe rced Company would continue: their work from - Zanesville to Stenbenrille, en the Ohio river, instead of to Wheeling, so as to afford the Pent, sylvania Company a connection with the works of Gates' Ohlo. This letter held oat several other inducements besides the loan, but Mr. 11 add the Ohio Company had refused to accept , the proposition, and replied that it had been and was still their Intention to connett, with the Ballimore and Ohio Road. la Me further remake, Mr. Sullivan - trent into as argument to show the great amount of trade which Baltimore would receive by its connection with 'the Obio Central Railroad. •. • At the' Mose of hie remuke, residatiore of thanks were pawed to 'Mr., Sullivan fin. bin t.velnable and satisfactory exposition," and in: favor of a satieription of stook to the Ohio Cen tral Road; and oonoldereble amounts of Mock were taken on the epot. We ilislaos from thee, proceedings and Mete- Meats : the following facts and reflections, to which we invite the attention of the Director, and Stockholders of the Pennsylvania-Railroad • Company, and of the citizens of Philadolphis and - • Pittsburgh: • • 1. The Ohio Central Railroad is not to tenni nit* at.,,Wheeling, bat at a 'point one the Obi., rater, four miler below that city. - 'The cdtisens of Baltimore are giving this • project all the ald'and notlifort" in theirpower, and will donbllosa beip' the Ohio Company to catryit to a sanoesefel itemisation. 3. The OhloCompanylermalierejecte, through Mr..Sitllirius; the trade of Philadelphia' offered to It through the Steubenville road; caul, War molly, rejects the connection with the llemptield • road, hy declining to to terminate their rood et - • 4. The Wheeling Bridge is rejected for rail road rupees& by the Olio Centril - 114ii raft j vorepiey, sad that argemerdie its favor falls to the ground. . 6. The ilempfleld Railroad cannot compete with the Baltimore Railroad for the trade of the West at !Yhooling as butt' cf that trade as pas ties ovcr tho Ohio Central road to to rase four miles South of Wheelirg, sod still never be seen there at. all. 'l. 6. If Philadelphia duires to otioure the !reale of the Wr 3 t. She moot seek tor it by' the Ohio hod Pesinsylranis eel Sttobearille.,ltillriiide, . . •• , and mast compete for It, nut u 7 Wheeling, hot at points much farther. West: She cannot torn it Skew Baltimore after it has got na to Hats of travel intimately connected with the Baltimore road! ea is the Ohio Central Railroad, by any scheme involving, great expeese,jduch as the Hempfield; bat she tun seek it, and compete for It sudeusefillly by Liam, tapping thittrodo in the - interior of Ohio, and the great Stites West of it. We have no doubt that. the Oh - fo Ceistral road has been located on the hillier route to defeat Philadelphia In hoe Ilemptield project, and to punish Wheeling for tier villitignese to eiteriSoe Baltimore interests to those of Philadelphia— ?lds Wales Is • death-blow to Wheeling. She has groped at Oki Each And' has lost all. A sew taws will spring up under Ultimate sus- ploy.. at th• O g ir o "a d ag.PY". sad a• Wheel lig boasted (bid Pittetrargli, owing to her ..uo• tortuate lOostlen," wee, to be left of the great t iinc at trade and travel, she may now appl: the talutlioe to her own llpe. , ' We tope PhiLedelphis will now jive :up the Hempneld project, and join hatoggioriao PLUor bone In canteen:lbw for the wide of the West by the Wit sod :lust Waal roam_ The Pottle in great tritulati . on lest the Whigs Lake a military gotten:talent of this by electing Soo. Scott. It says that— ' ••blilitary despoil= is the worst of all des (pommel. Tho people who are ruled by the Sword and 'the bayonet, inosketto, powder, and ball, epaulette and drams, soon become degra ded, vicious and brutal—strangers to the sub time precepts of christianity, and infidels in the moot obnoziottelanse of the term." This comer with a had grace from politicians who tried hard to make a military hero out of their-own little candidate; and stuck to it until the people laughed them out of it; and It takes no small amount of ridicule to make well drilled democrats give up a point. But the Poet need riot be alarmed; fox although the Whigs can and will elect Oen. Scott, and defeat General Pierce, nothing like is military deepotlem will result._ We have hail Washington, Harrison and Taylor for Preroldentii, sod no administrations ever par took less of a military character than theirs.— Mr. Van Buren, who never set a squadron In tbo field, tried to get up a large standing army, and Mr. Polk, whose military experience had never gone beyond a militia trainiug, plunged the country suddenly into a bloody and expert elve war. On two occasions Oen. Scott preeerv e3l the pewee of the country by his firmness and aiiirese, awl when a democratic administration bad Involved us in war, he repaired to the scene of action, and by a series of operations rarely, If ever, equalled, "conquered a peace," to use at rite expressioti 'of that day. The Post has clearly a column on this subject, some of which is very fine wr It ing —for instance , people arc the rource of all power—the people make and unmake Presidents. We have peat confidence lit the honesty and purity of the people." This is vary beautiful, but some of it is not true. The people are not the source of all pOwer. The power to kill. off the'old party fa vorites, CM., Bachanan Ca.: . did not come (icon the people. That sanguinary deed was no mare the act of the people of the United States than wan the coup crew of Louis Napoleon ttie act or the people of France. "The people make and unmake Presidents," says the Post. Tine; hut there is one Piesidential candidate that the people did not make, nor think of ma king; in fact not otos in ,tersitty of them knew anything at all about Lim. ‘. We base great confidence in the honesty and pdrity of the people,” continues the Poet. So * hive we; and because we hive, we:feel confident tb L it they will repudiate the unknown easdlida . t . t which a few politicians - have thrust upon them, acid elect the. Scott, whose name has been' a beineehold word fora generation. Millen Oen. Ncett had amicably settled the tranblee of the Canadian frontier, hie civil ea pacites scented to be far more apprealated by hie political opponent! then they are at present. Then Whigs and Democrats admitted that be 1;36 a statesman an well ne a soldier. On hie return from tie scene of his glory, he woe hon ored with a pnbile aopPer. U, v. .Harry dot The following were awo,ug the regular toasts: "Winfield Scott—No less the scholar than the e , ddiar, whose pen and sword have been wielded ith equal chili in defence of hie country. l'hr Soldier—Who has ever made the law or the land his Alapettlae rule of action, and who, r.titte ho has fulfilled its nimest require ments, bee never, in s eingle 111211.110 E, tran ,cded its limits. Our Guest—The invincible champion of our r:ghtc. the triumphant viralicator of our lava" ITLIO GuES TO NItOMEC—The time is DOW bo short, that it in important that those who Intend 1.1 jofil io the great celebration of the battles of I..tutWo Lane and Nlrgarn, shoal 1 announce tl , .u• names to the Cummitti•e. to in expected that cumber will go All the rollers of 1812 are e s l•euiaity desired to be prritent, and we hope noes will forego the pleasure of mectiogritheir tdd 'c:ommander, once more on the geld of his youthful glory—for it is now announced that ties. Scott will he present. The fullnulox letter in reference to these oldeuldiers, boa been hand ed to nu for publication: CU:TILLS; OHIO, July 16, 18(12, OHM LLIIMIII—.-WO learn that there Is a rom• mut of soldiers who fought it: Lundy's Lanunn. der the gallant Scott, nod it la the vortical. de mise 'mid special reqaest that you, Om Larimer, l;vhor the mod remnant of .heroce and bring them with you to Gimlet), Aiuil then to Nisits ro, nt the meeting on the 27th and 28th inst , in .ttimemoretiou of the litking Gee. Scott goo the British. Now my free roil friend, fail not arid be on hand, with the old veteran,. Come without fail twin) full of soap end bread. Yours in the faith and hope of Scott'. election. J. A BRIGOS. To Gen. Wm. Lorimer, Jr., Pittsburgh. P. 8. Fere half price down to Buffalo and rot. It is expected that excursion tickets on the Bei!road will be furnished for half pride—that four dollars will pay the fare to Cleveland and back. The boats will alto put the fare at belt' price. Tens of thousands will be there, awl the occlusion will be one Nog to be remem bered. Let all who intend to go, and wish to avail themselves of The low fares, send in their names immediately. We are pleased to learn that the Female Sem inary in Allegheny . , (late Mrs. Polndexter,s) has been very inceeseful tinder its recent arrange r:mots, and glees great antlefaciion . to those pa rents and guardians who patraiize it. We eom• aired it to the public, and beg leave to direct at trotiou to tbo advertisement in another column. Teta NIACIL2A lICIL7IIO —lljs expected that the concourse of Whigs which will gather at Niagara on the 27th instant, to celebrate the an kiversary of the battle at Niagara, will be the largest assemblage ever convened together in the United Stales. Meetings have already been held throughout New York to appoint au unlimited number of delegstes to attend, and Pennsylvania Uhio, nal the Lake region will probably lee there in muses. The Albany decimal rays: The place and the occasion are of themeelees highly attractive. A view of the Falls will amp ly oompeosate for a long journey. But, besides this, the Battle Fields of Chippewa, Lundy', Lone, Queenetown, and Fort George are in the i immediate neighborhood of the Cataract—all within the compass of a few miles. Those fields were rendered ' , studio by the gallantry of Gen. lcott and the briee men whom he commended during the war of-1812. The history of the world remising no more aeblime instances of heroism than are recorded In connexion with those san guinary contests. In each of _them the then youtfel soldier manifested the most accomplish ed.generalehip. The influence of thosevietoriee i is not to be estimated by the number killed or captured. They were achieved at a dark hoer in the history of the country. The surrender of null had appalled the nation. The most fearful upprehensione prevailed, and the most poignant mortification wee felt throughout the Union. The American arms had been dishonored, and a prompt obliteration of that' isgrace was India peneable to a successful proiecution of the war. G en.. 8 con treadle fortunate lustre ment by which the national honor was restored and the national beirt elated. The tide of victory wee turned nt ,i Chippewa and Lundy'. Lane, and It rolled for- ii I stud, with literalism' ',dame and glory, until the • i war woe eased by an honorable peace. It is I I highly proper, therefore, that these events should . , be celebrated. The cholera in 111a)nrille hoe taken • mildei furs, and fewer deaths occur now, than there did a few days since. The Maysville Eagle of a ' late date, eeye: We have not been able toProcure all the names of these who bath died of cholera; many of them being strange's, mostly Irlehman. We learn, however, that; sloe° the first outbreak of choler*, 191 interments have taken plactobe the oemetry, all but 18 or 14 of which ware cam; two have been interred ehoewhere; showing 95 deaths by cholera. Or these we reported 64.ocourring un der the drat outbreak, the residue .having menu , rod after it was noppoeed the dieeaae had abated for about • week. A latter from Jackson, Mo., published in the St. Louis lanaligeneer, esys: • During the past two . weeks the shirrs has hen ragtag most awfully In andel:iota this plats. Up to this date forty-nine persona In town hare fallen 'loam, to it, betides item/en thirty and forty In the oonatry. At least one-sixth of the town popilation is swept away. It now seems to be ablaut& at least in tows. Three went bur. led thls morning. A week Ago, when the dis ens. became very MAclams, vita the exception of sem or sight families, left in the pentad oonaternstion, harrying either to Hirst. dean or the counlay, Dwells corpses . unburied sad their nlatioas to did. "o's 11201 -WAXECINGTON Fortrapoudansa of th. Pittsburgh Daily (hurt WASHINGTON, July 17. More gaping wound. is the bosom of tie Denstscra cy—The Printing , Feud—pen. Cass denouncer the Southern Pres. in Caucus—The Press brand, Cass a traitor to the B .l4—Adjourment still dis tant—Deficiency Bill—Biter and Harbor Bat— h. probable success in the !louse and certain de feat in the Senate—President's tint to Point Comfort—Col. Benton coming to Congress—Go vernal. of Nem Saito. • The invective' which are still mutually launch ed from the magazines of the Union and South ern Preen at the respeetive proprietors and nip porters of the two organaahow the rankling and festering bate which lien under the cloak of the pretended reconciliation between the fetions. Gortaan's attempt yesterday to break - op the contract system of Printing, and to pave the way for the election of (len. Armstrong as prin ter to both Holism, was emended by hardly a corporal's guard of the party. About two-thirda of them at once declared against the Marione question, without which the matter may bo de bated till the end of the sesaion. The secret of the whole dif f iculty in, that the secennieniste and Free nonce. are disgusted with the Union as an adrocate, in season and cut of season, of the compromise, and are determined that it slab not be peunioued upon the treasury. Moreover, it is replica-al that Major Donnellson is merely lying low, and though nut directly cooties:tied with the editarship of the paper, retains his in terest in it, and will rename superintendence and central of it, if it he adoptel as the official jour s nal of Congress. It la an Important fact that Glen. Cass interposed In caucus to defeat the ar rangement for purchasing the oonductors of the Southern Press, and the Southern right', men to boot, at the price of half the printing. Ho said loaner than consent to it, he would vote to he etow that patronage un the National Era, which i was less sectional and more democratic than the Press. For this he is denounced in that organ of disunion and slavery, and itn editors and ear I reepoodeuts stigmatise him asorrady to follow in the footsteps of Van Buren and John Quincy Manse, in assailing and innulting the South. The Senate has still no idea of alp.urt tog. The resolution fining upoh this day mouth for the close of the session wasyeeteiday postponed for a week or two. The House bas.dono little or nothing einee it passed the resolution. Prom present appearances the Autumn will find them 4rivelllog or lounging at their accustomed easy pass. Mr. Reymoar, the Chairman of the Commit. tee on Commerce, is making hie arrangements for mailing op the River mil Harbor 11:11 neat reek. Toe pony in the House is not no well dis,iplio ed that hie motion est, he surcessfolly rotd,ted there. 'Phallil dill pm by n I . l T^ mFi•mlY. but Mr. bi.)tneur anticipates that it still be Sili ca in the Senote by the addition.s v f riders, and of poritsuirtdory tricks similar to those which out short its "thin spun life" on the memorable 3d of !harsh, The Deficiency BM has pt into the bands of o Committee of Conforert,e, who will probably mattap to transfer it into those of the l'rral drat to-inzrrow. The amount of.the bill is eery large, haring been swelled from the moderate 1ii9C1131u613 of two and a half millions to the enormous aggregate of 4:5,502,000—0f which much the largest portion is for the support of the army, and military movements, and for car rying into effect Indian treaties, or paying off stale and unfounded Indian claims. The Presiiient is abinit to take a abort sum mer excersion to old Point Comfort. That wat ering Place is already overran with visitors m anticipation of his arrivst. The American re publican Court consisting of 411 who ran pay their hotel bills, reveries the order oh. creed in Ronirobical etiquette. It precedes the bead of the State, in its movements; does not follow it. It is nearly certain that (lid Bullion will be returned to the Lower Home from St. Louie. Re has been suaceleful in his appeal to the boys from the regular Dietriet Convention, which no minated Cal. Bogy, said to be an old Fogy. • terser else Benton may be, be is not a Fo gy. The President has notninsted n Mr. One, of St. ie4lllll, 'to be Governor of Ne• Motion. Ile is o good Whirr, and his been eeleoted vriih ref erence to the peccdiarqualifiestions required for that post. Jusirs YROI mpg YORK. leorretwodenro of the Itlsburgh o.ut Oszetto New Yeast, July 17, 11332. 'The Carystal Palace in New York' has again made its appearance above ground in the shape of an announcemum that - two hundred thousand dollars hare been been subscribed, and that In May 1873 the exhibition will hc . opened to view. The plan. for the building sre'm the hands of the architect, and proposed exhibitors are unti tled to giro an estimmit of the room they will nerd. It will be a much superior exhibition to anything this country ban ever produced,thongh the profits will be absorbed by speculators, and the chances are all sold to exhibitors who wish to make the Palace au advertising medium for their ware, Crest preparations are being made (or the ob sequies of Mr. Clay on Tuesday, in which the neighboring cities will unite. Rosiness gene. rally is to be susperided,and the parade promi• eon to exceed anything of the:nature New York has ever witnessed. The %goal° frateruity,of which Mr-Clay was a member,will occupy a lead log position in the processionindeed may be con sidered chief mournets,elaimingaus they do,that the illustrious dead Wad as near the personifies. tioeof a good and title Mason as can bo found. In Wall street, as warm weather increases, there bream less Animation in money elfairs,and prices for speoulati we stocks tend downward The late report of the banks has not been cal. onlated to give eo much confidence in the aontin uerice of the present abundance of money, and there is more inclination !Alain to reduce ihibil Itirs than to Incur them. Tho banks are edvaire to be widely extended upon the loan item since 'the March return. They hove a large Amount of coin, to be nitre, bit not enough upon which to base their present expanaien. The poet month the exports of gold are equal to fifty per. cent. of the receipts from California. . This drain causes no alarm, nor should it while money is to cheap as at present, but a alight advance in rates Ironid cause a contraction iu hank credits, that would tell eerinusly upon the brainese of the city. Some of the California gold companies are again in the market as borrowers, and with fair mucus. The 0000 e.. with which these compa nies get inane le a remarkable instance of the power of Abe California prees,in keeping up the idea that the quartz rock la so very rich. company, whose President lift hero with first. rate machinery paid for to San Francieco, fills the preen there and here with glowing gold @M elee, and still hie spent twenty.five thousand dollars each without developing the resources of the rein he intends to work, sufficiently to get people on the spot to minium the fends neatest, ry to take the machinery from the chip to the vein. lam glad to -be corrected in my 'erro aides' etatement relative to the abundance of mamma sod recreita for the navy In San Fran cisco. My information was derived from the letters of shipmetere, one of whom say. h e shall get all he wants of a crew from diggers who rent out three year. ago, eome of them in the first ship that went round the Rom, to load the Pacific mail strainers, before the gold news reached New !fink. 4.3 to the abundance of la. borers, who earn W. 6 per day, I cannot judge.— The probability is that between Rincon's Point, and Clark's Point in San Piancisco, there are more unemployed men than in any city in tee world of the earns population. I hero seen the elephant royirelf. The departure of Kossuth se 'Aleisoder Smith' la made the ankleot of rather severe corn mint by those who aro so anxious to Sod (ault. with him when here. As Kossuth fiery inoonald. erste), interfered with the Pneldential campaign and cooled even hie friends' of the religious oe well as the secular press, be has not now a sin gle band raised to defend him from the imputa tions his olandeititie departure, at • time when he dotter,. his wife and mother ars on the way to meet him, cute upon him. An experiment is iu progress upon the liar lets railroad horses, which are giveti• portion of whiskey feed daily to made them to stead the heat. A doubtful cue. The jtev. Ju. F. Clark will leave Meadville at an early day. Probably, for Europe, In order to re.establish the health of Ms wife. The mate of her health and that of his own has rendered it Imperative upon him to decline alike a call from Brooklyn andAmo from his old church. In Boston, whore astendsd usefulness and replan. tin moat have attended hi. labors. 'Pennsylva nia cannot retain nor New York fume one of tee Mod obis an of the times. O. For the PitisbursA Graaf.. WHAT NMI AFRICAN COLONIZATION AL. READY ACM:LEM I This question, (says the New York ,Jourual of Commerce) is briefly bat effectively answered in the following extract from the Report of a joint a joint Select Committee of the Connecticut Legislature, at its recant session: African Colonization hes exterminated the Slave Trade on the westorn,coast of Africa, for an extent of at least eiz hundred miles, sod it hue been officially reported to the British Gov ernment, that it is suppressed on over 1800 miles of the coast, a result which armed squa drons alonewould never have obtained. Thin is admitted on all hands. Again: African Colonisation loot established on that heathen ehore civil and christion Insti tutions where missionaries had labored fermi lurks to plant missions without success, and shat must be the influence of thee° thirteen coloples upon the hundred millions who inhabit that continent! Again this scheme 13 teaching the world that civil - liberty, connected with a pure anA perfect ly free Christianity, is not necessarily confined to the Anglostiaxoti Britons; That it is a boon to bo,poescesca and enjoyed even by the children of Ham; that they are capable of maintaining *elf-government, and of securing for themselves o respectable standing among, the independent nations of the earth. Again; It hail opened the door for in exten sive and valuable commerce The exports of Liberia, it is eaid, amount to about half a mil lion of dollars per annum, and are increasing at the rata of fifty per cent Attain; It in furnishing an asylum and Chris -` flan home for, the exiled and oppressed chil dren of Africa, in ail lauds. Thom/soda bare already gone back to their father laud from this country, many of ahem wire teed by their masters, that they sniz.ht go. Thus has the door of emancipation seen kept open, where it i would otherwise have remained closed. Plushly; The pant history and the present prospects of toe cause afford meet encouraging indicedions I f its future prosperity. The last year bus bent one, 10 many respect , , of unpre cedented success In view of the foregoing facts and considerations, Co.nakitiue re- COMMEIIti the adoption of the following molt, tions Reeulved, That as Americans wo t owe a debt to Africa 1.13,1 to her oppressed and injured chil dren, alieth,r in this or other lands, which we should endeavor to discharge with all fidelity in ail suitable Rap. • Resolved, that the Ameriomtedlonitation go ,iety happily unite Christian philanthrope and pclifical expediency, ournbliganotia to tos Union :IA in (led, and that its principles Lod opera tions are tiond benevolent, not only toward. oar colored population, hot towards both races to this cdontry and towards two quarters of the globe. Ref°!Ted. That tbia osselnblv ruozni.4 wi.b eratonde the baud of God in the poet Nooses!. and grotwit.g ,ntereet matifeated ., ;in behalf of ttie csuse [CO II, II7NICATID.] MONONGAHELA CEMETERY. Thom who have elm yet eeieeted a family burying ground out of the dust and noise of the city will beeratified to learn that another Cem pavy hos been authorized to select a rural ceme tery, under the above name, nod that they-have in view the bluffs of J. H. Craft, Beer, in the rear of John Ambers, EN The herders of the two forks of ••The Beautiful Rivet" will now be decorated with rim,s of the dead, beariug the Maces of the rivers themselves. We rejoice to see the amicable competition which will no doubt exist a. to the; taste and beauty which way distinguish them. Their to ample room fur both, oat we hope the day is hot far distant, whoa tho grave yard, r! the city, where no 11, ing ohm!, or tree can 11 .aisto, wail hs deserted by their voicelers teurtute, wpn will find a more appropriate spot for their lard sleep in the eyl o chides of the varied bills which crown our city's lonlecape. A few weeks lace we noticed the depth of Mr. Woodard of Armatrong County, elate then we hove ceived by the Illioein the fallowing ad d•tional pariiculere: MDDOED OF Moon A WoODIrADD, MAIL Co, TRACTOR, AND Fora Mao, DI Tilt loofas. The 83er...t0 Union, of a late date, says: • Mr. It. 11. Woodtrarli, inter me tie that lie he. just conversed with Mr. Turner, who arrived in this city last night from Carson valley, who con veys to him the Intelligence of the murder of Ma jor Woodward. mail eel:tractor, and 'party, -by the Ludlam.. Major W. left thin city in the ear ly part of November with the mail, and ms no tidings had been reeolTOLI of him, his friends bare been for come time Unelloj for his eatery The last that was teen cf hint Waa iu Thousand Serino, Valley, near (loose Creek. by the return• log mail cortices. On the 2:td of this month, a trail) of Fit wagon arrived at Carson Valley, who hrlag Co, Intalligrate list no tidings hod been received of aim ur any of hie party at Silt Lake up to the timoof their departure. whi,:tt : WA. tome months after the Major should have arrived there. There can is no (1101214 that he and his party have fallen victims to the treach ery of the merciless eays,-.:e The following cir• coinsuntial evidence I . . no question whatev er iu regard to the fact. The party which left this rot; in December, a month afterward., reached Sal: Lute without animals or food, be rag robbed by the Indians tied narrowly escap- ing with their In: ~T hey travelled in that can. a Mon four day., Scrotal Indinne were warn in Salt Lake City daring the winter, with S(ty dol lar pieces, a number of which Mal. W. hail with him. and alto it is raid, in Careen Valley. On the Humboldt, the wagon train,abovo toe:Ahmed found a mole. which front the description of it, no doubt ioelongcd to MajGr W. These facts leave no doubt pf the tburder of the entire party. A %Snots Faint Pommy, —The. Mobile Regain.. of Wednesday, - gives the following ac count of a dreadful occurrence in that city; "Snob a scene of death and horror so was witneesed uu Monday, in &milieu Street, near Massochnsette, in ticketing to witness, regard, or hear of. Four deaths, violent deaths, in one family, canned by ratan administered too; by ono of its victims Husband, wife, 'child, and relative—all mingled inn fearful doom. The evidence before the CaP...nor (bowed that John Preilove, hod lived (or peen on good tenon with hie family, but a week since ems dlffiwilty occurred,durins which be tried to extort a prom ise from his wife that eke would never marry a second time. Yet durica their rtemiog union he bad expressed a strong and strange desire to poison himself and family. John Pretlore, who in reported to have often written preecriptious for himself and others, lent James Carroll, a relative ty marriage, to get him some medicine on Saturday lent, which proved to be nitric and. Of this he by same means 9o•lneeJ his wife, itosaline, their eon, William, 4 fine little boy of three years, and James Carrot, all to partake. Late on Sunday, the husband, the Suicide, tbo murderer, died! On the next morning at 7. the wife tin LBW— In the afternoon the poor boy followed; and be fore night cloned, James Carroll, also fell dead en the Boor. Doctors Itictitorkey and %ray, performed a poet mortem examination of the bodice in pros- Hence of Coronor Shreve and the Jury, who brought in a verdiot •'death by poison." The whole neighborhood waa in a Menlo! excite ment all y uerday." The Chicago Tribune has the following: It is eaid that...loo the tracks of the Railroads around the Luke were meld down, but one single wolf has Icon coon or heard of eolith of them, and it in thought that ho has error Leen nortli elate their construction. The farmers of Twenty Mile Prai rie. and adjacent country, are un longer Iron— bled about herding their abbep In peas daring each night, as they were formerly. The wolf is at all times exceedingly suspicions of traps, and it not disposed to venture, near iron or steel, howevert tomptleg the bait may be that Reamer it; hence their fear of crossing the railroad truck to commit deprelationg on the flocks In the farming country • south. At night; -too, when they lean their dens, the locomotives pass, sad their hideous 130611 is not calculated to inepire the'vermints with any remarkable degree of con fidence and security from danger. Kissotrat.—A letter to the St. Louie Republican, dated Jackson Mo. Junerib, elates that the cholera had been ra;lng in and about that place. Forty nine persons had fallen victim,, to it in the town, besidesseme forty in the adjacent country. Several bhysiciane had died, and the residents were deserting the country in awompiete pinto. • . . TUX ERIC ESILIOAD. —A Dintble Track. —Tye Erie Company bee mode a loan in Loader, 'of $2,500,000 on the bonds of the Company, hating fifteen years to run, sod bearing It per cent in terest, which, with tho principal, is payable in London. With it, a double traok will be laid en important ports of the road, for which 5,000 tons of English roll iron hate already been bought, by the agent who oontraeted the loan. ID". Sota's OABI nr GIIIII:1711.—A letter from Neple", dated June 24, age: • .The 11. 8. war -steamer Ban Jacinto am:hared In the By of Naples, yesterday; and will Imme diately leave with important despatches for the East, reepeollog the esseig an Amenotit tuts aionuy imprisoned in Greece. The Cabinet at Wield:Aston has taken up the cue with great epitit. The 11. B frigate Cutaberland is to fol low If neeessru7. Mr. Morrie, the American banterer at liapies, haa'Jnet returned from the , East, haring no doubt investigated the pending watkin." I New JIRRICT EPOCOPAL Ctisvatrivoic--ThW body has adopted a series of resolutions sustain ing the report of the investigating committee, exculpating Bishop Doane from the charges against him, expressing confidence In him, &c, and appointing a committee of seven to present the report to the House of Bishops, accompanied .with representations, the design of which is to intimate to the Bt.hops that a further trial will be utinecessory„ and not conducive to the inter ests' of the Diocese and the Church. Stoturtcarr.—All the States moat thoroughly wedded to Slavery, are claimed for Pierce and Ring by the Liemoorate, and conceded to them by Whige. The ultra Propagandists like - Toombs & Co , profeasing to be Whip, deserted the ban ner of Winfield Scott. Why to this? It is plain ly health.° Memo. Pierce and King are looked upon ILB more reliable to carry out the sectional views of iionthorn ffre. EUIOHATISIO TO rata UNITED STaTair —German ptpere state that, in consequence of n law lately promulgated in Prussia, toe Memnenites, a ra- II gi ono sect who resemble the Quakers, have been held to the performance of military duty, contrary to their creed, and that they ern there fore emigrating in great Damherp, part], to the. United States, and come to R6l.ilt. They are mostly persona cf comparative wealth, and one hundred families of them have lately crossed the Proesian frontier to settle in the last named country. DEPOT AT PASIMPIIOIO.—The Parkersburg Clasetee announces the purchase in that elty„ by 'the President of the Northwestern Virginia Rail road Company, of a lot of three acres of ground for the rite of a railroad dopot. The location is described as above the' level of the highest flood of the Ohio, easily accessible from bob rivers, and oentr4 an to the present town. • Other par-. chases have also been made by private parties in the vicinity with the view to the erection of produce and forwarding depots, and ware. houses. • The Liquor Merchants of Newport ore ceiling off their stock as fast as they con, During the lost two week, one firm hoe put up five hundred gsllons of liquor per day, in dem.johus—this Is teside what they hove sold in lor.Te quootitire. 'fon. husicea,4 liquor•nellitr will be no boil in. ve,inrent iu Rhode 'llona shortly, owing to the Moine low. Mr. Webster's hue inn bull, on his (arm at Franklin, neatly killed Mr. John Taylor. the tunaut, a few days ngo. -The animal seized him on hie borne, inflicting a wound in his thigh five inches lung and three inches deep, threw him °ler hie head, dislocating ilk shoulder, and turning uprn, would doubtlesa Lone killed him on the spot, had ant several men rushed into the yard to his rescue. FLAX AIAIittrACARIII....,.A linen factory, expect eft to cost some $200,01:10,1s now erecting at,Fall River, Maattchumetta, for the manufacture cf linen out of flax, on the Ciao.. prnoeme. A eituilar factory. is Mao going up at Moroellue, New York. One half of mankind pane their Here fri think leg how they Mall yet a dinner, and the other In thinking what dinner they Allah get; and!ha first ere modiste. Injured by 'immune.' fasts than are the latter by mental:it foniitg. girS. M 1114:1t—And BOW for to your Petroleum. I daunt:l ns I h..l deloywi witsusyn lough It ontl he well to wait until I hwl 'h....shalt. write." Whets I Grid ctfered the oil for 1,10. the pnryle thonoht it ma: perhaps like the .lanai pah.ot pro/oetnma nt the wee, eoJ to telt but itttle dirtnwel en boy. Out I an, It to woke trial. _1 perouwded entriti In hely. midi!) grit thm In test. pavers. It own legitn to rare ttio deaf and Inure, 0 A mon who had blind for cieht yo'Wra, sews persuildel to try Ile virtue.: and when he hail toed but throw bottle., he .void e the lion". and elrverly dlidlo odd: tls. o: eei while los i:eaLts iii!. Idiodue in appear, tea twee Lee,. Ilie teodt cl k n a very hi.eet. •101.. ewe, nacre nilqht 1.. gall of ther pidrere of Petreiiedm. but i t it to .1 Mkt 0 few ohtaiu el An estet../*/ Pitiulnrity fa tile no.iti. Its. I have roll sii mat von caw , er.t ms Aldo gold s hundred le.ta BEIII EPU7.II. gL . nnela.!lan h I Could not Recover. Tunourr.. IC.rr.o On., P., Jun. Mr. it, E. V.ll.an—Thar tlr-1 Imrsby real', that I ha, hewn a21.r1.....1 with a re ere and affection of wax •ITlwted ...sorely that an, fr.roda thought I ....Mont trent - rt. I ..4 txxcronend.,l to use your entagt, S hid! I did. with ;Le happy . am now and teal It to K. a , in , r th• at to Ito, disea...l In like If !.0 rho 5. to tt.. abar. r roan a• ,rt.et I, rar to, lours, Fe, J. :axe:, Preparrl tel for oat.. I.y ll_ L. SE:L(4:I, 4 ith 37 14"..nt F. S. Cleaver's "Prue bledai Honey Sciap." morTIIE only g•nuine pour, (it-uhould La remstabared) ial4epared by Y.B. rl rarrr, thy Ofirrir.l In ...tar, and sold at obi - gas:lle by his authorte,d agents in Europe =l the rnit...l htat...., who ar. known and or. ert , ll.ted.aa halt. It la important that pubis alt