PITTSBURGH GAZETTE "lIBLIOJEMD BlrWlil2ll & 00,,. PITTIIBI7IIOII SATURDAY MORSTAG, FEBRUARY*. Ifft3:- jar — READING If ATTRIZ WILL REFOUND Ed pH PAGE' OP MIS PAI'Mt irs;li,nntotorr. errne,e;rbo ortimalve <iron Ist= of our %War Gazette offers to our buotemes raen seen doetrable me¢ltua of onktsur tbair buslueek brow. — One dreolatlono to between Vror ood See tbourand, T exas Bud eeterr. lag slzscat.em7 soff ooroaty en R00t.% pouuert- Z Ohio. . - . 183'0 1DV.5.6T1.30.6 7 lict.ther the Editorial F.ooms . flee PHotlair EstAblisbcoint of the .Dint garcrro. &iv 'oOostel oo Octodfor. ADOEfLTIBER.I3 trlloyleslro thou •lierto appear la tbi • vapor oo !Soutar clocalak, liosolusatd...ttioso to before 6 o'clock... Satx.rdar 1:112 PISTEIBILEGIVAND CO BAIT ROAD. - he lett*r we giro 'below, addressed to Gen. LeAmer, from Boston, affords Indubitable evi dence of the high appreciation in which the Connelleville project is held, by gentlemen of allowdniee, intelligence and large Etailroadex , ',Orilltteo. It ,affordt, also, a most encouraging Aoutnotoe of the certain and speedy commence - foot and completion of thie greet work, which - la tCC wilts Pittebnegh In each intimate relation •ida Baltimore. l L p The almost absolnt eortalnty that the Cog•. ,stelittellle road will .bd one among the beat.pe,'o • Ingiteette in the conatly, is admitMd by every d¢ sot ftiOl . who boo investigated the subject. I;lrithifisiatwaye •been the opinion here, where . •..tliifessiblLitywiti capabilities of the route have .7,betwathoroughly understood, and it has always , been:deteinchtetildbaild the road es soon as a . - . fertrable thonidateire. That moment has cooses Ilielutooner, however, thau'Aras en ... Vetted—end; thanks to the public spirit and firltreing trapoity of (ten. Latimer, we find a thaMpanyttlieady organized, and ready to go to W,ben almost every body else gave op ....thecomptay as log, and the prospect u hope lets, Gen. Larimor quietly sod carefully pur r' 'ttuutttliqtbe erocit, and guarded the rights of the eorporiticus to cave it from forfeitu e, and 'patiently, waited in a lively faith, for the time to Wanes when file cherlehelprojant should receive public jaiiice. All honor to this patriotic and pablio.epliited . citizen.l !Enurement to care. We commend the .letter of.bir.Tilden to tlit " people of Pittsburgh twad Baltimore, and trait: that its pinpoint" and suggestions may lead ,to . a speedy and satisfactory aotioil in the matter of raising tins necessary meant • :•1 •• . Barron, Feb. , s 1853. 'lb Gem "(rm. Lorimer, Prret Pittedurgh and Con '• nelltaille R. B. Co., Itittsbuigh: . . .Disc, pm—ln conformity to your request made •two months since, I hive devoted some time to the subject of the Pittsburgh and Con nellatille R. R. Bat my engagements elsewhere hive been sash that I could not visit the line of -70 m Tail 1,10 . • • • Therefore, I cannot at this time, answer your quads= as an Engineer. I know enough, howev er, of the general line,and especially from the err•. ,spa and estimates you famished me witkand the very high ,standing of your Eughteere on the pre- Eadoiry line, to be willing to • state that if you datiie 'lt, and will raise $2,000,000 Mash, and • - will pledge the stock of the company to hear 4 per cast. Interest guaranteed, I think parolee can be found who would take the entire work complete , !..int about $1,000,000, one half clock and one half 1 - milt, or all each. The 'stook would be regarded a good. inveetment, and could, is the opinion of ram of experience hi readily converted into money, provided no bonds are tuned by the rem pany.. At pretent,l can only give in moat general tarns, the grotmde on which I venture to make I gnahan assertion. The road can be built motet& at aluendsome profit for §4;000,000, taking ngi wear Latrobe's estimates as a basis.- And with lewd to the $2,e00000 in stook, I think that the • project presented possesses attractions rarely to be Oast with in projected enterpriies of the kind. dikif yew have not already commenced vigorous 'Miler', I think the. sooner you begin the better. For with tote matter rightly viewed there con be no difacultj in snaring reeponsible subscriptions to 'the fidlltmount of money requisite to put the road tinder contrast'at an early day. I really hare not time to go Into details, but Iventure to =neat cettain general grounds an which the merits of your road are considered to rest. • - Pint, the grand ides of an Attnuttrand Pool. . lln Rslivid is getting to become saiatirmalidett. And:notin Atlantic port will fall to achnowl edge the - necessity of such a line of Railroad eeituriunioution in ten years time. Pittsburgh, the great and only head of navigation on the Ohio river, and. also a principal head of usilga- . tint for all the Allinits' elppl below the confluence • :of thoeo two thowingbfares, is naturally the float getunbog or clone:oiling point for through trade, travel and freight from tho Atlantic to the'scrath, West, the north-west, to. the west and the Pa . clfict =apt.. lailaßaltimore, at the other ratl. mate terminus of Year , road, is the most central prOtioftiO4 seaport on the- Atlantic chant. And the entire line from Baltimore to Pitts :.-tunrgb, via the Pittsburgh and Connellesin . Railroad, giree the shorteat known . or possl bleland route from the Atlantle Ito Pittsburgh, • i4dle the same time th e grades are the mini • . : ,Millngratleli that can pare from the rallies of the Ohio and the, Mlicluaippt to• She Atlantic 'coast, tor the same distance; between any two points tbit can be 'seamed on the East coast or in thole Tobacco,- Cotton, arid • Sagan' from Raw Or bital, tan be delivered at Baltimore far at least Apnea per cent. less by the ro . ttd proposed, when you take eMss .Of freight, Insurance, and en- : abuse, and time into the account, than by ship. Thelor.al coal and iron carriage eastward willyield jinmerme reTentle, and Baltimore will become ths most prominent port an the Atlantic for siesta Alpaca itemount of the facilities attained in that respect. )`And whin the Neill° Railroad shall be absolutely finished, which It most certainly will 'be some day, Baltimore wlll then be the Bret At; *le port f9i on Fgr gig n ihrousol tradiintended feithe Pogue' .I There &re a:Am& local momenta I cauld use, but I prefer to leave them for others. And without farther words .I would ray, that if I %eitze you, I would get up, a grand meeting, ray at thunberland or at Beltimero, where I would prettent these Ideas'to the Baltimoresim, leaving 4 far them to carry them out in explanatioo cad de to. And I would have toy stock books both thatiiiLtetlng and In Baltimore: You oin es- pnet nh old from BostM or New York, except `...freen.theae interested:in the contend iron trade gees the tine. and they eisonld be present. •j I Would euggest that a t s first meeting in Cum *nand, yen stake your Primary ansagemente irtd plant thigerm far the necratary enthusiasm burry diets/einem rightthrough. And then mill instetisg steams future day for farther action. ; Pint: got the matter fairly and honsetly under - stood and presented in the most elementary Yeti; and then you can drive It through, prof.- - tied yen are able to keep 'up with It. Yery traly and respectfully yours, (Signed)S - ' itsrenTP. Tamen. . . Oar ntsfesoent- of yesterday, in, reference to orrantement for furttleldng 20,000 tons of railroad Iron for the Allegheny Valley Haar*, b sing been called In. question, no deem it pro. per 'to say that that statement le imbetanttally • correct. In Ono of our paragraphs about .the Inatter, ehe 'amount nu, by an ororsighi, seated j45h12,000 tin: In the other paragraph It arse properly dated at 20,000. , The Bk Loafs, at tither South Western Bro ken, tease tn.reeelve the notes : of the Wisoon- Ifirtratid Dlertge - lcieurseoe Company: The ' 'trample is worthy of .general imitntlen. • irnlnlen„Cmenencir.—TneCier.innti Prick eirrent.'itt Wide:easy, in referent to money banal. - '. • , ''Btnnocarrent money we hare no new feature b florae. Of the Lidians Free steaks the only .notee brinkabieliere ere those of the Bank of . Oenwstritille„. Pridrie City Bank, Terre Haute, yawls - Walley Bank, Logansport, and State 'Fleck Benk, • Pert.r The Brokers lay, the r. mainder at per cent. amount, wall:the sweep. *lon. et :the North..Arnerieul Bank, Newport, _which is ilreper ottlid:'. Nona of•the lillards Free , Banka.are ‘bantalcle. " The 'Brakere hey pea.' *wen Dote, et a &secant, bet , for those not keg: lttma then Is . . . . . AMEGEMIt 'MIRY .AUBOAD The following preamble and resolution adopt edly Vie Board of:biatngvn of the 'Allegheny itedtio .. id 091144, the;question of :route batten , this city and E;ittehning, and. will be highly approved of :` to this community, • .;Krnexass, The proposals for work on the line between Pittsburgh and Kittanning having con firmed the previous estimates of the Engineer in regard to the comparative oast on the two sides of the river, sheirit4 the eastern to be the cheaper tilde; and whereat the avoidance of two extentive bridges over the Allegheny river, al ways liable to destruction from fire, and which would cause daily detention to trains, and the saving of all interference with the Pennpyl rani. Canal and the County road on the Wester& 'Bide, are deemed ef essential con- Sequence tothe interests of the Company; and the respective communications of Messrs. Raney, Logan, button, and others, on the sub- Jeetut local trade • &c., having been presented to • the board,the trade, and disadvantsgee of the bridges over the Allegheny, if the location were made on the western side, and 'Arians mat ters bearing on the question, having • been duly considered, the following retell:idea was offered, and unanimously ttdopted, viz Resolved, That the route of the Allegheny Valley Kailroad between Pittsburgh and the Bo• rough of Kittanning is hereby definitively roost ed on the eastern side of the Allegheny river. ofr rasa Nimmons .rit itusols.—The Legiels tare of Illinois, at its recent, session, peened a law to prevent the emigration of free negroes into that State, which, in point of stringency, is hardly equalled, eirtainly not Surpassed, by that of any Stave State in the Union. The adoption of such a law was made obligatory need - the general 'Assembly by the Constitution of 1847 —a clause to that effect haring been separately . aubmitled to the people, and by them ratified, by an overwhelming vote. If our memory serves; as aright, the previous Legislatures which have met since the adoption of.that Constituting have failed to comply with this provision, either through timidity or from some other came beet known to themselves. It was only after a stormy debate, and through the exertions of members from Central and Southern Illinois, that the point was carried on the Conviatiou, and it is to members from the same aections, particularly Sir. Logan, that the people of the State at large are indebted for the passage of this law. We &decanted the adoption of the constitutional clause In 1847; we were glad when It was sane tinned by tae people, and we take pleasure announcing that ate provisions have been coaled out fully and thoronghiy. Let but the proper authentic's eee to the prompt execution of this law, and we have no fear bat that the people of Illinois will sson be rid of a class of people, lazy and tlle, in their habits, and most troublesome to theiii - neighbors. There is one point of view In which we wish the fanatics of the North sad East to regard this action of the Legislature, and in calling their attentinn to It, we disclaim all, and any re &Mien upon the advocates of the bill: It en to the adoption of such a fau , in a fret Starr. The fact. Is significant, showing a just estimate of the injuries resulting to any community from an Influx of this cliss of people, and a determina tion at once to rid . thernseives of the impending evil. - Had anch'an 'net been passed in a slave State, innumerable vials of wrath would have been poured out - upon it, and all the avenues and sources of abuse thrown open, to the widest and fullest extent. Coming, howeder, as it does, from a free State, the rebuke is withering, and will be felt. Again we say, that the law 'should be rigidly enforced.—SL Louis Republican, The lay to a disgrace to Illinois, as it would bo to any 'slave State. Illinois Is only nominally a free State. But for the ordinance of 1787, she 'Multi long ago hare been a slave State. Her politioians are the =bit servile in the Union, and her legislatora ale usually of the smallest stamp. Central and Southern Illinois hi gener ally called "Egypt," from the darkness of the ignorance ovinrpreading it. No action of such a State can be held up, either as a rebuke or es an. example. PROM WASIUNGION. Como=Lame of the Pittsburgh Daft/ Gasamo. icleexaxcros, Feb. 22, 1853 The whole day hes been consumed in the Sen ate. in the performance of the obituary 'ceremo nies of the Pacific Railroad BilL It was.fairly killed.on Saturday, bet was resurrected on Mon day In order that it might be in a condition to receive a dig or two in parts not before pane- inred. The death of the bill was chiefly canoed by blows from the hands of two of its professed friends:Shields and Weller. Weller first moved to strike out the section providing for a corpo ration to carry on the work, end than he and' Shields united their forces to carry an amend mentconfining.the Oparstion of the act to the territories of the United States, and relinquish ieg any concern with the work within the limits of Shiite: Of course nornsible man desired to spend the money of the government on a line of road traversing only the Seurat' of the plains and the gorges of the Rocky Mountains, ander preaching at either end only within two hun dred miles of the ocean and river it woe intend ed to conneot. This grand National scheme of improvement has been defeated upon en abstraction of Dem °ratio theory.. The State.' rights school of be.- mporaoy cannot tolerate that a government rail: road obeli run wholly, or partly through a cove reign stata,Asen with its consent. Then, too, the old fanaticism of hatred to corporations was invoked; purl Came up from Its grave, grim and (orations. as the spirit of old Hickory himself. Them) motives of party policy hava (killed the bill. Had it been porsisted in, the party would hive been root in twain. The railroad, them: - foie, has been Immolated, that the perty.might be saved. Bat this Is not the end. The nem. ally of the rowd,.esti Its u 14117 as a Teat line of -oonaettion between the two ends of the Berth. make It popular, and will compel pablio 'men to break through the trammels of party dis cipline, and obeithe wishes of the people. • .There was one other reason - which precluded favorable action an the bill. That was sectional feeling. A eotithernßeruttor proposed an amend ment that the road should not be 'located north of hlemphls, Tennessee. This was defeated, bat It obtained' eleven votes, and the apprehension was frequently expressed by southern Senators Who did not support this amendment, that It would be a northern road. This matual tear that one traction cr the other will get come "ad vantage from the location of the road, trill pre4e the greatest obstacle to Its final success. It will be made thi eubjeat of. some comprcnise. The eastern terminal ought to be at St. Louis, and nowhere else, either north or south. Any point , desirons to compete with that commercial cen tre of the western interior, can make Its branch es to the Main trunk. The Inquest over the :yawns lasted all day. and at length, amidst a pointless debate which Promised to be Interminable, Mr. Badger pro; posed to adjourn oat of respect to its memory. That: motion prevailed by a vote of two to one; and so, as the story books say, farewell Cock- BOW. Gen. Pierce arrived last night, just as I was cluing my letter. He Admitted of no pared° in his - reteptioh, for he hastily threw himself Into a carriage and drove to hie quarters, at Willard's Hotel. Bigamies' was known to very few, and to those he @Sneed it tabs intimated that he wished I repose. This morning he was called upon by thirty or forty politicians of his piety, among whom. were about one-third of the expeotanta of Cabinet appointments now in the city. The General's manner is affability .itself. ile is MI easy and Careless of style as John Tyler, with more : dignity. is accompanied by Mr. Web ster, his private Beerstary. Mrs. Pierce will be present si.thelnallantlou if her health permit, bnt is not expectedto smite for some days. ne. Dallas came with 'the President elect, which tills the enamita of Buchanan with fervent hope that his favorite, Campbell, will be defeat el. If . Danes were elonatt to represent Pens liillllllll in this adminiotration, the event will Mark die commencement of the decline and fall of the Lancaster bachelor. lie would certainly be tent abroad, it hiwculd consent to sock bet crab's exile. • Justus. Here Is an Intimation of o field open for enter lelin enloieT ek Gonne' trieeller inform► the Ser. D. Phil lips, a misdoing la North Afrfea,,that he had die:arena tepees near the klogdom of Bombe. Ti. that aro Jews in-their religious observances. Need - yang 'fetidly ho rays, Ina among them the lew of doses, written on parchment, and although they speak of the Prophets, they hare none'of them in writing. There ere yet rut trade' of Lod...unexplored In Afriu, doubtless inhabited hy agrees who hue nicer looked up on the faco of it white onus... When adventurous trivelore penetrato into those regions, much will • e discottrod - aild. developed ea astausit and In-.. Meat the irositL _ - • . • Po, the Pil':6trrs,A Ga,tte RAILROAD SPECOLATIONS few turtights en the 'present condition, and future poopects of Pittsburgh; may interest some of y.ur reader - N." Alava been • close obeerver, for forty yearly of the spirited contest between New York, Philadel phia and Baltimore, far the commerce of the Great Wee. - The progress in • the construction of Railroads Lae iocreated this competition. Cincinnati bete: the great moat paint, around which the the trade of the Ohio vahrygravitates, end which the lounge of St. Louis must pass on its way to the east, has attracted great atten tion. The boot enterprise to gain that city, is a Railroad, supported by Philadelphia, from Greensburgh, through Wheeling, Marlette and Chillicothe, 811,1 to be eleven mile, shorter ,than the Steubenville line. Will the tonnage of CM. Menai, or any important part of it, reach Phila delphia on this line when Blatt:fished? 1 think not; suppose it coahl bo carried far a cent a mile per ton, (sad 1 am informed by an accompllahed practical engineer that It cannot) It could not compete with the low freight in ateamboati; the hundreds of tons now discharged at Pstiaburgb every day, are brought from Cincinnati, 950 miles up stream,.for two dollars per ton—less than half a cent a mile per ton. Any amount of freight, half a million tans, can be brought from Cincinnati to Pittsburgh every year at scent rate, and I am told a treat deal fist curled down at one dollarand sixty cents per ton. Now what, ever, may bo dime by the Steubenville nod Indi ana Railroad, or the Panneylvanis and Ohio Railroad, their lines. being at a distance from the Ohio river; the Railroad that runs a hun dred miles on the bank of the river, and is at no place very far from it, cannot take the freight from the steamboats. When the freight of St. Louis le drawn to the East, it will be carried on the Ohio river, at the tame rate, thirty three per cent lower they it can he carried on the shortest lino of Railroad that can be made -from Greeneburgh to Cincinnati, even at one teat per ton R.,' mile. This immense tonnage, equal to Slaty New Orleans, seeme, then, to re secured to-Pi tsburgh by the navigation of the Uhlo river, if it can bo transported to Balti more, Ph iladelphia, and New York at from $2,50 to $4 per ton, the oast would exceed that of bringing It to Pittsburgh, a much greater dis tance. The Ohio xiver is Indeed nature's great thoroughfare for Kentucky, Tenneseee, Southern Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. The great bend in the Ohlo, making-91 piles from Pittsburgh to Wheeling, - when a straight line la less than 50, is exactly what malice Pittsburgh the heed of navigation. If the whole fall in-the channel of the river were brought uptin half the distance, the rapids and obstruction Would. halo been twice as great, and might have placertheitheid of navigation lower down. This mast . base been ' overlooked by -.pastern men, In their efforts to Isnake-a great Railroad centre below this bend, on the Ohio river. AU this mighty tonnage, being the production of agriculture, animal, and vegetable; has to be moved, jest during the six months of the, year when the Oblo Is In first rate navigable order, and half what is expended on three hundred Miles of Railroad will some time hereafter make it equally navigable the whole year. The freight which will come to Pittsburgh on the Pennsylvania and Ohio Railroad will fall lit. tie short of that of the Ohio river. . This line will not be rivaled by navigation on either eide; and its lufluence embraces an area equal to a large state; and it has been located with such judgment, that it cannot be rivaled by any rail road unless one built along ladder it. The Al legheny Valley Railroad Is not cf less Import ance to Pittsburgh, bat in a different branch of commerce. It panes right through the mineral and lumber region of our State into Western New York and Canada, opening a new field for our manufactures, add" of great commercial value. Sines it is manifest that Pittsburgh will soon be the depositary of freight equal to that of New •s dear e; it is worth considering how this tonnage le to reach tidewater. Pittsburgh has . an in terest in this matter. Can it all be transported on the Pennsylvania Railroad; iand canal, to the beet adventage for .the West! Doubtlfal, the r State must cheriet the public works till the forty I million, of debt 19 paid ; and owning the Colum bia Railroad she has a check on the Company, and cannot allow them to carry lower than the Climb But the toll at $3 and freight at $ 6 , would be $0; that is too h i gh for the farmer when prices are kW; as they most be until we have a better home. market, by making more and importing less goods. These ecneideretions are favorable to the construction of the Connell,- villa Railroad—a work of great importance to both Pittsburgh and Baltimore, giving the latter access to an immense field of consumption -for her--imports which cannot be reached through Wheeling, and opening a line for freight and passengers direct to Baltimore, and which would .loon become -the main stem of her railroad eye- I tem; opening to Pittsburgh the commerce of Bal timore on the beat terms, and drawing to it all the tonnage of the lake valley seeking a market on the Cheespeake. This line will hardly be opened till it will require a double track, and by an honorable competition with the Pennsyl- I yards line reducing the freight, and fare of pas imagers, will be of great adventsge to Pittsburgh, and all the coantry west of it. By the time the iforesaid lines at trade are in fall operation, a vast portion of the freight at Pittsburgh wig b e I destined to a market north of Philadelphia, I In New York and New England How will it get there at the least expense ? The beet plan will be found out in time. The wisdom of bath Pitts burgh end Philadelphia will be employed - on I it, assisted 14 New York. I consider it certain that a vast amount of the weeterumerchandise will be cocurigned to coma. mission houses here, and will change owners in Pittsburgh. The perfect ease with which east ern merchants can transact that buidoess hero— forwarding to either of the three cities which may snit their purpose—Will lead to it. Let a merchant in the west exchange 20,090 bushel., of what-with * miller in Pittsburgh for .4,000 barrelebf flour, be etin choose his market In the east. (And that branch of trade here will soon equal that of Reetiester.) The distribution of merchandise here Is of great importance ta-Pitte. burgh. From the preceding oonsidendions, I infer that nothing Is to be gained by passing either' north or south of no to intercept the ton nage Invite way to Pittsburgh. Lairrentreale, Feb. 24. J. P. SSE DANOEIIOII3 MIVENOF2I OF POPERY Et= To the Rdifor of as Pias!urgo% Chcetre. Is answer to the queetion, what con be done, what meseares can be adopted in defence to se. cure a favorable result, is answer, nothing hey. ing the appearance of persecution. Perste- Con is an engine and means of convention which Catholics will always Improve whenever they have thepower, and can do It wiGsafety. Now, treat Catholics kindly, be hospitable to wards them In social intercourse, thereby their minds may be more open to receive Instruction. Let troth be often 'sincerely and tenderly applied in conversation. •Let the pulpit and press awake to station, follo*log the example sot in our !Teo lotionary struggle with great infinenoe, without which, s it has been often sold, we could nine? ' have obtained our liberties. Let the falsehoods of the Catholic press be expend. Ae It le a fa "mite maxim, a tenet of their creed that faith may not be kept with heretics—in other words Protestant", and in other words that false- 1 1 hood becomes lawful, even - a cirpr, when good, .1 as much AS to say, the Interests of Popery can be promoted by it, let the community; the more Ignorant part of it particularly, tto often re minded of this, that all may be guarded against the arts .and fabsehoods of Inuit prieeto and Cathollojeurnale, against falsehood dissemina ted in secret conversation, or disguised In the lectures of Catholic dignitaries. Falsehood, in truth, Is the great engine of jesuitism, by which it has prodeced infinite disturbance, mischief and distress - gin the-world, an indiscribeble mace of bloody scenes end horrors. The Jesuits are a seret society instituted by the Pope, commie eioned with extraordinary power", under Loyola, an Italian; powers little inferior to then claim ed by the pontiff hitneelf:vho claims the pow. ere as well sa title of Vicegerent of the Al mighty, sovereign of the aniverre, rent out into the world to convert It. Coniaelon, consecution and every species of vice followed wherever they went, and soh were the atrocities com mitted under their auspioee, that some notions banished them; even Catholic nations could not support them, and as'an order they were sop. pressed -by the civil power. Lately, however, the order has been resuscitated by Catholic au. tot 4 hori n ty, , a e th nda e isq ttemp um te i h u av c e m bee c n an tntl it de bobud it d l o s . esid,. nowbat that we have a secret host of Jesuits in our midst? The fruit of Jesuit labor even now shows Itself, and ample means are providing for more active andelteasive operations What as immense flood of 'foreign Catholics •11 pouring into the country . , in addition to what has already arrived, and become resident here. A large proportion of these, aside from the vicious and abandoned, are very iporant,'entlisither know the principles of our Inetitutione, and if they should,. perhaps; care but little about them, and know not the nature nod obligation of au oath, and if they do ' 'coosider a Protestant oath less I to be regarded than' the ¬ions and orders of their priest'. What shall I say of the remaii ingportion, the vicious sad abandoned? Is-the elan numerous or not? Mow great is the In crease of crime—et murders, thefts, robberlee, burglaries, ass& and batteries, riots, An., An. far beyond the numerical Increase of the genera alpopulations The records of our Courts may show la part, and a great company are, still at large, and who are those already 004715e/ They ere all legally good voters, and under the &settee of. • class of men more interested In' breaking down our institutions than ripbelding the tights and • privileges of freemen Buck things ought not to be; and It to owing to unwise legislation that it le so.. Aho for the govern ment Of our country, if matters primed as they have dons. 'What a cotes Is demageguelern! Au tome Itching for popularity and thiot for tical promotion, unless restrained; - will prove a Mum to our, prosperity. - • itiniieelled on the pulpit bud peers to tome tolhe Mamie. Let fate and truth, Irvin history, from - the dsys of the Apostles to thee• - time. be spread end continued before the peoples Give the histerief Popery, and expels° Darrel:Am, its falsehoods, enormities, persecutions, bloody massacres and horrors to the world. Popery is a moral 'pestilence, full of iniquity—blasting the seeds - of virtue, liberty and the best interests of society. A tree but !Alert description of it may be sten In Thessalonisne (2); read the whole chapter. Whoever reads chic, the prophesies ef 1 Daniel, and book of Revelations, will not wea -1 der why the Popish ecru leant to prevent the reeding of the Bible by the common people, ee peeinily as are year's. My tent member will conclude for the present. TtfADDEDd CL ARKE. Niue Briyltm, Feb. 21,1E53. WEN CROPS THE PLAINS George Wi lkes, editor of the Pollee Gazotte,in a letter from the Mormon Station in the Greet Thein, met of the Sierra Nevada, Auguat 9th, A great number of emigrantii entered Carson Valley daring the comae of this day, and as they all Med poet the Mormon .Btation, and moat of them stopped there for supplies, we had a good opportunity of inspeCting their condition and getting. the experience of their trip. Most of them were in line case and spirits : though few had lugged misfortune on their backs, and soma bad frequently been obliged to endure hardship in their stomachs. In one One I east two Ger teens who had trudged the entire journey to this pint, with bedding, suitable for themselvesand wives, airspeed upon their shoulders. Their' partnere walked by their--aides, with staffs In their hands, and carried packs On their becks out of which came the cupboard furniture that graded their meals. They looked dogged and sullen, but as an air of depression or indffer enoo le common to most emigrants at this stage of their journey, that expression did not dis tinguish them from the rest so. much as their burdens. Another ease wee that of a Frenchman of middle age, who by his muitache and military air, I rightly gueseed to he a soldier. Hs was acoompaniad by two beautiful girls of thirteen and fifteen, and ah three were traveling to the now land of promise on foot. A t night the girls had lodging* In a wagon, while the father slept beneath—bet in the day time they wont forward by his side, with no help bat their buoyant spir its and their elaatio yotinglimbe. The old man could not speak a word of Englinh, co the eldest girl interpreted for him, and as eho had one of those sweet faces that shine their ioduence straight upon the heart, and ono of those mel low voices that melt in the ear like mein mu sic, every one was in her way and ready to lis ten to her. Her complexion had been much hron xed by expo/m3,1,0t she pulled off a glove while I talked to her, and exhibited the whitest mite of a hand in the world with a conscious pride of its condition. There was no ostentation in this act, no straining for display, but it was an easy mode of communicating her caste, sad a pleas ant style of saying without the use of words, "You see, air, what pains I take to retain tho pleasure of being a lady!' As 1 handed back her glove, which ehe.had dropped by the merest accident in life, I felt an involuntary regret that I could-not offer her a sheet of mode and a piano-forte. Her father had been a captain in the French army, whose political opinions bad laid him on the shelf. She and her sister weie born in Rouen, where their mother had died the year before, and they and their father were now all Wilier! together, making what head they could in the tough campaign of the world. PERSECUTION-THE MAMA'. The feet that two Italians of humble positioo, husband and wife. are now and hove for some time been Imprisoned as malefactors in Florence for hb other offence than Protestantism, has nat urally excited, a warm interest throughout the Protestant world. Their characters Mond to this day enimpeeched, Cu defiance of the strong est inducements to blame any feat that might be adduced to their prejudice. Francesco and Bass Medial are poor and belong to the common walks of life; but they harmed no one, and they are charged with no other offence than that of blaring reopened the Cathollucommunioci for Protestantism, wad of hoeing held meetings (of lees than half a dcren persona) to their home for Bible reading--of course, In a verelun of the Scriptures oondemned by the Roman Choreb. Their Indictment and trial prove their cffence no ether than thin It is oo eztrurdinuy thing that men should per secute, oven in this Nineteenth Century. Pro testants have done It as well as Catholics—nay, are doing it now. The moat deplorable fact that confronts us in lb° very general disputation evinced by those who .peak fer the. Catholics of our country, to palliate this TOICIAI peresontion, if not absolutely justify It. Some of them quib ble about LOU Whose of which the 3lattlai are ecovictect, sod try-Ss:obfuscate it; some appear ' willing to blacken by insinuation the character of the victims; some treat the whole matter use all who choose to be Implicated in wrong, from the first murderer to the last slaveholder, hare done and wilt do, by exclamations of "mind your own baguets:" "What hare we to do with the laws and punishments of Tuscany!" &a. ho and some proclaim withian air of diecovery and triumph—" Well. what of itl Protestants have ften persecuted or, and they dolt still." "Well, Sire," is our ,reedy response, "whenever Pro testacta have persecuted Catholics they have done wrong, and brought diagraoe on their cane. I They ought to be ashamed of persecuting, and yen ought to be ashamed of not ehemlog them by your own conduct in like cues. Why wen's your • About the poorest apology for We- Tuscan outrage we have noticed, Is that which' links to justify or bolster It up by citing Instances of Wary to Catholic persons or 'property by mobs In this country! That la to say—lgnorant, big, - otta, remedy eusges,,t4eriitg dsfianee of oar leis, have perpetrateduttra&; of which it has , not been always predicable to convict them, but for whieli the Orderers have la some case been compensated by the State, though in others they have not been. New, what parallel sun justly_ be ruer between those, crimes so uniformly pro nounced loch by Guilts, and the Infliction of punishment by /iv en Protestante;„ became et their faith and worship, by Catholic States sod rulers? Are not these owes as wide apart se the poles? We have said thaj ire regret tge language and the seeming attitude of the Catholic, of this country with reference to the Medial case even more than the persecution itself. There certain ly in no sush unanimity of expression on that aide among the Cathollenof Europe, and we can not believe the Catholic laity of this country cherish any such hostility to Universal Freedom In matter, of Faith, as le evinced through their jot:runts. One of the most or e altat le and Jest movements of ouroge Is that initiated in the Senate by Gen. Casa, backed by numerous petitions, looking to overtures from our own to foreign governments for the mutual recognition of Religtous Liberty. That is to say: our Goverment Is asked to de mand of other Nations the free exercise of Faith and Worship for our citizens within the territo ries of thole Nations respectively, and to prof-. fer in return the like freedom to their *Risen' visiting ur. Now it to easy To sneer at thie prof fer as absurd.; or Imperil:mot, or certain to be rejected; but It ti a remarkele fact that (so far 13 we have observed) no single expreselon of die sent from or dislike wit has been uttered except oa the part of Roman Catholics! That foot Ina, plies a great deal. Now it is eany to bemuddle thbintatter so that a dull man who don't want to see the right of it shall be enabled to becloud his perception to the desl7ed extent—to urge that universal. Religions Freedom implies the toleration of Polygamy, In cest, Bataan Sacrifices, or anything elsethat knaves er lunatics may claim as prescribed by their religious faith, but none 'litho befog ged In this way but theee who with to bo. Let tho Parses who comes among .us' yeeehip the sun if he sees fit; lot the, Hottentatidore and obey hie Fetish; lot the Turk hold fiat hie faith In the Koran, including Its license of nygattlyt but if be ended:hes to practice Polygamy in 'a State which forbids it, let him be punlehed, not for his religion, but fur hie violation of an Im portant law, enacted with no reference to roll glee, but for the premetration of Family Unity and Social Partly. N'Teminnot siker a Thogg to murder, thotigh he pleatlthat,his god, command him to do so—not beeaave murder te forbidden by our Religions Faith, but because It wages deadly was on Ladivideal and Social eeourily and well•being. The Gistinction between this and prosecuting and puniehing Heresy or Idola try is as broad as the cacao.—N. Y. Tribune. - • "Toe • GOOD Tnce Conitta."--In one of our precious issues we mentioned the , fact that s number of tracts of laid in the neighborhood of Mayen' Mills had been purehased at high prices by • company from the East, in slew of the spee dy completion of the Oonnelloville Itail Road.— One of our townsmen informed us • few day. since that ho has had repeated offers from.' Eastern men to porchme hts lands lying on the. cuseinsan, and that a friend in Dauphin comity writes to him that on thenpening of the Spring. I a cumber of their wealthy men totnal 'littler Ms county, with the isitention of instating their temples fund, in timber and ore lands on the Rail Road touts. Wo oarxelree know of sever al large capitalists who will commence the Iran Moieties next summer, provided they can make suitable purchases near the track of the road.— Ail that Somerset county needs toloako hoe one of the wealthiest counties in thifitate, is the de. 'elopement of her. mineraliresonrees, end the good time is apparently at hand. Millions of capital will flow into borionthe opening of the , I Coollbeillt Ball Boat —4wherrsi Herald. iSTIII/4.11/0 FAME.—MIn hue the power of imiteting Minuet area motion but that of light- To , ellfreti thew he has, m his maturity and health, 60 bones in his head. 60 in his thigh and lege, 62 in his mine and hands; and 67 in hie trui.k. fie has also 431 muscles. ilia heart makes 64 pulsations in a minute, and therefore 3,840 iu an hoer, 02,160 in a day. There are also three complete circulations of his blood la the chart space of an hour. In respect to the comparative speed of animated beings and of impelled bodies, it may be remarked that size and construction seems to have little influence, nar has comparative strength, though one body giving any quantity of motion to another is enid to loon so much of its own. The sloth is no moons a small animal and yet it own travel only 50 paces Ina day; a worm crawls only five in thee in SO seconds; but a lady bird can fly 20,- 000,000 Aimee its own length in less thaq an hoar. An elk can run a mile ands half in seven minutes; an antelope a mile in a minute; the wild mule of 'Dietary has a speed even greater than Dist An eagle can fly ten leagues in an hour, find the Canary falcon min even reach 250 lenge - ea In the-short space of 15 hours. A vio lent wind travels 60 miles in an hour; sound, 1,142 English feet Ina second. .I.RPORTART BOUNDARY Door UTZ--TBO boundary between Maryland and Virginia, from the Cheq• opea)re Bay, westward, has long been a subject of contention between the two States. The boundary runs along the bed of the Potomac river from Ito source to lid mouth. Alt this is plain enough; but Maryland claims, and always has done so, that in the western section this boundary follows the course of the longest branch of the Potomac, which be the one denom inated South Branch, taking its rise in the Al legheny mountain., In Highland County, Virgin ia. A line extended due north from the source of this branch to the Pennsylvania line would include within the State of Maryland a large ex tent of country now practically included in Vir ginia, comprising parts of Hampshire, Hardy, Pendleton, Preston, and other counties. Virgi nia has always refused her consent to a com mencement of an examination of the respective titles of the two States to the disputed territory, except on the condition that the survey should' be commenced at the stone planted by Lord Fair fax, which; it to contended, is not on the branch claimed by Maryland no her tree boundary. We perceive that at the present session of the VW .Lettistature, bills have been reported for ginning, and marking the eastern and western boundary lines between the two Statee, but what are theirprovielorm we are not informed, though from the fait that they contemplate the riming of the entire boundary from east to west, it seems probable that the whole matter is to be examined. Should Maryland succeed in enforc ing her claim, it will very materially enlarge her present limits, extending them far Into the heart of Virginia. The Old Dominion him, however, territory enough, and to spate.—N. Amerif The Quadroon ladles of New Orleans excite both a feeling of admiration and pity—admira tion for their accomplishments and beauty--oom miseration for the unnistaral and unjust condi tlwn entailid upon them by the laire of Louisi ana. A. man cannot legally marry a Quadroon women, unless he able to ewenrthat he hakblech blood in his reins. As many of these women are not only very while, but very beautiful and ac complished, resistenee to their charms 'BllO easy matter; and, as love is not apt to be controlled by statute limitations, the consequence of this absurd state of thine is readily -anticipated. They marry, or plate, as they call it, witbant the sanction, of the State, or the benedictions of the Church. The mother cf the Quadroon girtoonseote to a temporary arrangement, pro vided her daughter is furnished with comforta ble quarters, and a couple of slaver, with a pro mise on the part of the mock husband to give his little quadroon's a good education. It is not a very uncommon thing for Northern bachelors, to say nothing of Northern Benedicts, to be tin ! der the necessity of supporting and educating the offspring of this peculiar Institution. I bare beard of one ease, invalid's mon was so madly, or perhaps I ehonld say, truly in love with a beautiful quadroon, that, in crier to marry her, bo injected a little bind- &food into bin veins pros oared from ono of his negro* stud took the re qedsite nuptual eeth,thereby fulfilling:the letter of the law. It may spoil the romance of the story to add, that the lady had a dowry of three hun dred thousand dollars. But In this age of gold the mercenary epirit is an element not to be overlooked; and hero in theltonth a bachelor In a bolt room is asked to be Introduced to a young Indy with to many hogeheadik cf sugar--or SO many bale. cf cotton—or so 131231 well•condi tinned Degrees A youngjady with - thoro charms of punt' than pence, overheard an ungallant fellow remarklog the other evening upon 'the number if freektea on her face, when she turned upon him with the sharp retort that her father had a ntyro for nary freak/ll—Nov Ortraisa ear rerpondatee of the Y. Mirror. Less or Tee SAM Cieu—Corzieion.—ln the Courier yeriterdey we published the sinking of the Sans Coon in the Mississippi, st Spanish Moss Bend. We he c slim learned that she wee sunk by coming in collision with the H. R." IY. NW, and will prove a total lou. Both buts were deseendiog the river, and the Bill, while rounding to, struck the Seen 'Clime end sunk her. The boat was run on a eared bar. and tank to her cabin door., The Lexington went alongside and saved a portion of the ilea load of the boat. The Memphis Whig, of the lfith, hoe the follow ing —Lou. Courier. The Bill was rounding out from a woodyard: It appears that tither one or both of the officera of the two boats were to blame, bat it hat be come so common to attar& no blame to the oilmen that we must remain client. This is the sec ond boat stink by the. Bill daring this her first moon. Yon can find anything in France ezcept blookguard. A Frenchmen may be wicked but be is never vulgar. fie may steal your watch, rdb yoi.of your pocket boot or apply, "an iron tutfe" to your vest pattern—he may do all this, lnit then it le with co mock suavity 'that It robl.the felony of all its coarseness, nod makes you rattier think threat-cutting ism aris tocrat% acoompilehment. zicitAo out or arrive Dom PrioN TB,BSBBD, opoz the taut favornbh; terms +Talon tae or Duos, by TILE PERILS . OF NAVIGATION, by Merle. or Intesol Route, hoolreett Xastera Cale, awl ell ;man of the Alleejelatpi . esd uouu the Western Rehm, • FIRB RIESKS also tat.a ov ury al, upon all tit la.rarablv.P.T.ll7. at moderato rat. of Pn.larm, It (MERGE E. ARNOLD, fe0:412 Anent frx Ilttibmrgh and AlleArteeyEauntY NEW OARPET STORE. • ROBINSON & CO., NO. 47, FIFTH STREET, NEAR WOOD. Now "opening ti largo and entirely new Ptak aim:natal and American Carpets, tocether •Ith eeerpthlna ticuolly kept In a Carpet Atom, skills Immat each mime. ocl9 Citizen's laustannue ucrziparty et Pittsburgh a D. KING. Pananniap. nAktUriL L.II,\OIIIIELL. non. 01710 E, 91 WATER, BETWEEN zienicin AND WOOD SIDEVra. *11" 11410111:3 DULL , AND CANCIU BLIMP ON TIIO 01110 AND 015511AIDDI RIVEN/3. AND TILIDUTA. PANS. . • i®'lntwm opmr.6 ZOO Or goonckle 01, FIR 4. .iraine the perils of No eiu ant Avi.A..vDT, v 4 rllO4 1-10. N mai TR.A.X.S.POBTATIVIi. 1111A01:0111: 1(107.. Wm. Latimer, Jr, ~..hip=r. I litiZliam. RohmDtmlop, Jr.. I John P. Dilworth, 11.1laraugh. Yranrln Mtwara uraoomon, kabooncitam. sitar Drmmai Wm D. Day. Dame N. Pennock. /022 I JAMES P. TANNER. WHOLESALE DEALER • • • IN BOOTS, SHOES, SONNETS, an, NO. 56 WOOD STUNT, rrrraamtan. &Wean Third and Purth, army stock ambraee3 every variety and Style of tl , sra. I, Thrones. Ars DrNobarsl Coat from N.OO the NeN Nog sagtotarsrs. llasfamd sr Orally for iv' sod a ll 111 to sold at Laws prices —Plea. all sal osszoloo Infers buy's. osoll -r ii - AGUERRkX)TYPES AT THE NATIONAL GALLERY. .0 MASON'S National Daguerroan Gallery, . 1 ..0 or Mora) I 'm lariat stnryt.loopo4t• WIWWI DCOS Mora) Pittsb Lath...au:a Oaackaacowlebloa rillbtn Wake Ilkaawea at =Warne prlom,ylll Dt'lo altl4 atvp...ltabliab• D ag ' , 4.114• 1 1 aratg viV4g?:tht ` moat loourata fao /Ural. ai [la boo. foroa with •11 the saLtaarlo:Lotaoltaattl HU.? 11/1171:113. 1.4 pll taiga( attaleftlik:iesarc "*. a.Veraous not refaullul taka• oar. rammallaoc ca„Likenames tobro of rick anddece•mad moona in any - par: of th.rlrrand vlanlty. ni r""*. • lian's First Precut= DAGUERREOTYPES.. Pest Office Building, TAird Strut. CI taTIZENS end strangers wisp wLsb to ob.: p $ll WOW/. *Maio end llfe ate nous, el a erry-roodrtete ec:, Iluel It to their Interset to sell et We well karma establisbruent, where entire ottltion LirVelfrotreAa=ghle"glPlMM".74le.e. eructed for tha t . urpose, • lustroasuul of Jhe nicia powerful Mod. awl bov=topteire e r et , 4 Dv , 'P'elligN:r3NerYor)g. Ir. ettighbroZtO shle ouer to the Wrap of the e em. mane.. either singly Pr Inatoups,attlahhas Peva Dna tcopsa cut opritlia, wsitbaaa 6.1 r aat., r. NPAELLLELED SUCCESS —The demand $l7 Dr. 111 . 4n54 Mom esh eeeeee ., Lk, W v. be...„, introduced. haw increased with astonishing. raj / blu r ._ Their roonitrity is unmoor...tented In the senates! cacti rte.. Even physicians are mane them/ to Many omee, when they am obtain than. Patients, however. need not be at the expanse of medical Le they can put. cline • hoe of the LIT. Pill., with wh&.h directlSos will I. furnithed.which will work a speedy Atm, Th. follow/ ino nitrate. tom a soutlemet in OLIO, `Peke wen s ', Cl Oh. efltemet of tile meat rem•dy PP...L.l,pm Co 0.. 11th mu. 3d. 1.0. sty a'ft eat elHl4rd ith the Limo Cynthia/a for nosed., bee year., and ecent about oat bon frd d parr e . e ci t imt obv.lei•ci. all 43 to purcoes. k beard of Nisbet:l6'r roll.. and got four boxes tib• 1. riowlenjoying mewl heslib. You may mote on of this. Vit. wild do you mod ocCmdi- Healer. tf you are &Misted with derannement f the go and purchase a 'box. and joa.will obtain lief at once. They may be had fret* matt drigglate ant • Manta In town and conntry, sad wholesale and re . i form kIDD, CO.. hole progrietera, di),Woad aunt. ra'" NVa believe Nature hos 'proeided a remedy for every disease which nub Lkbeir s io. PITITIOLbCSI or ROCK OIL, gut op ait‘l flows, from the greet laboratory. concealed deep in the bowelanf Moth. Earth, le. without doubt. one of the grketwet of them remedies. Read the following testloinny:•,stren by grateful parent: P 1316111. V. 0.1.12. Ohio. Sept, 11 1 01. Mr. S. Hier—blr: hire suLd all your r arrolenia. or beet Oil, some two month, rest. end have been met. Ina for tour ,gent to get • further muddy. I eetild have euld, some dozen more. We hate frond Vil ver7 t ime In flag and Dyseotery. My daughter., at the time your agent wet here. was 'dying very low erlol toe Huai 1 gay* hersleastiwtriful. and In three hon.. gate the amend. aud the Rua gapped. and sherecovered Immediately. It Is also anextraordinary remedy. fir er, and luestsed Eyes Cut, Bruin, and Itlieomatiam, and tut the riles; acme hare been voted of ion- misruling/. Your, with reapeet. 15m0 . 1315.14.W., .el.Er l ot . m In Pittahurgo. fit[Payer. etitertltlng Petroleum glees. coPY/I \ lkir SEE Advertisement of Morse's Cordial, en outride ran, Joll`l T. 1. , 0A\ nOIIT 1 KENNEDY, F. 1 ILIP WILS..IN ....... ........- ....... .....EDWARb Oftr.ol.l. EpaloveL. LOGAN, WILSON & Co. IittPORTEBS ADD WHOLES/my DEalliaill XE FOREM ANn Vl3lEl3l'lO HARDWARE, CUTLERY, is ar.e. have removed to their new and extensive kr:ay.:lo= Wool. greet. four doors alma the Bt.eharlaa thatel, wnere their en:Owner, and merchant, nanerallr. Inrl ad to an examination of the mast timplote =nate', <Ca:ad la Ulla cite. , feline geir BURKE & BARNES' SAFES—Hera I. the hint of terttomor 1l to the weloksof roe rLiVES, upon ohleh we eon tonSrleurfr rest the reputations of on? wort. Wr ha , , Limed, hobEsh.S. Sweet's' ceraftoet.e, proving toot torn made for oar rkEetter end orllssery Cole, sod sohl ebrowel. hays s can subj....to,' to the SEVEREST TESTS IN ' AOTVA CONFLAGEATIONS. Rol preserved Ihoir ex:tient. tots kr free from damage. The fAlowlur lo another proof of the mem Incontestable cheracter:— 310600 . WORTH OF ROO4 '4N D SAVED WITH A PIO\ EiAFE! , • ALl3loo,'Eoter ttenorr,` ‘ rag oyembte 12. 1832. . tiros. e a Dsents— hoar Slat: Your two letter. es rot duly rootless, I was absent althatuno. I wool soy. IP regard to tees one ; cattail, St leerlwetly 51114. nOO7. I taste I tees one 1 botsubtofroulastfall on the' tn , rnlng et the 10th at June latd— e nty sturefbulldlner 6..1ng burned to tubse. It was built Ol worstand brick— a largo three etory 00114100.. 111 Cita It at the. dam of tom Or., and fell Into the tenor, wherethbr• was • kaga at tn. It .. • r..r lr notes atol boor accounts that worn In the Safe. amounted to about Ten . Ibortsand Dolts", wlelals woe eatrod. Timer vas not a staple poperiaitered: Lod ;teethe, I would edst.. nay Oedema who Is doing busineos. L looe no tlele, but bay a Safe to tett, 10,10 pavers:au, In=mnd uall that lo good. I Call oiofely moan:mud your Rom any Mall. Your, truly. \ f•2ll:tf ' JOlltd MAIMS% gIe . CI.3aVER'S IiONLY SOd.PN W6lah i‘ttract\ of .0 touch lateral.. at tho World's Fah.. at* unioffered to the ettleette at Pittsburgh and Jilleahapy Chtter,lat tido Pre prletera trice,, erholaesto aud retail%lt Sear , i‘P•o• tteularly adaptod to !Iwo troubled tubled erlth bopped hitods to Motor. I KIDD f. CO.. 'Agent,. foll .tree!- \ jer IV INES, ,tc —Pepone wittkin to cameo FOLEIOO Worts oho LICIV.II of all dexript eh pan at too obtain tbeth. at the lout brie at the Ptore oe 11.C.011\ WRAlfkat, Jr., 0r1.5 and Float larks. irtrk r .... Front A. H. HOLMES,\ & BR ), Successor to H. P. Nclsel4 it ,Co., , ' ~ . . , , 1. ILLNUFAtertrfleald Ota \ SOLID BOX VICES, I , L .111.1) ALIO 1 . mtf r o wor..F 4.. erp t ,‘ , , 1101:5\ PITTSBURGH, MINA. \ • oac.. :,,.. 3:4. Water 8.914 thkr . i . Qom a1avv,!6.Y..106•141. ESMUI=IMM • • Soltr.rday Horning. Ztb Ins:act. , "KILLIA3I MOODY , ir.fsat fan of John Mai E 11.12 Th. .111 take place i . .I.IIB , SiORNING..‘ tent:. at th. realdetme of Ist* virante,'lttri a...taot abm Ymllthol.ll. w- NOTICE—M. MCOIN' Lieviy,Oulil tei hi, !Viso& and thy pukka f4lll.ll.llAtt, gnat h. Its, finoved hi, chnire .loct of clq ARS and TOI{ACCO, frere aid rtatol, 111 Mater strivt, to the Nairn . No, 123 nailer the 31trunik7hela Howie, osit doer tk 4 :126 lossovites Coa tr pany, es ter, ho will an aver, sit bYretotrrv, to keep ow, of Ito hest stooks a: Imoorted (boas loth, city. Ns flatters Mtt : GU that (h. stock of Cigars and Tobacco h. Is to the hal f niferitin for sale, it yufttelsotie well known In oseif nyvith.x recent:mode Cleft to secure ro bin,, at his tiro stsiri the woo patron age be roolred at his forticiAlcs of bdolnosS. SELF-HEATING:•, \ ', SMOOTHING IRONS: T"E greatrAt domesti improrement of a,..... 1..11•1 60.1 them • wt dwlr•6l. artab., tiblan Lauer. TM,. sad licrn•r. et wad ralleie carpel en Ill:weal term, Addr•raVewt told.) • ' , J. JACKSON. 123 Wood erre- alvat•urgh. IQ. Fin vale. also, at jea principal Hardware Marra In the tit,: by M. 6.11 a Cg 3. 661 mr.‘Jobn Car44l,c Al,o Tonne . tarts an the e rrinelpic Feltraltwly , ats - - —\--, _i,..._ . JACOB FO YTH, Jr„ FORWARDING ARMCO ANION ICIGICHANT, Ho. 69 WAX= wrack: . FISTBI3I99H/ 11. (-1. 4 .1:1r , 65 LATE ARRIVAL OF ITEENSWARE. HENRY RIG Y, . \ 15111..19TEH. 111:101.211.0.Le •Ziiarlp.AlL Deadq. IN CHINA, GLASS ADD QIGGINWAR/L \ UT Wow! atreat, Filtsbanl 1 S NOW receiving, dime, from Englisk a l'attaries. an ertarvaiva siaartalentor Goa, .mb, iqe.mr ....-1.,1 , In Et. Hoe. •iaobb wal.d4 are—Witte dranita Totals. lea and Danner tlata; a elatt=ltro sadol.4,o4l Iven,lnne. varrawly tar,llevels; tench wad Carlo. In while. golddamal. sad Tan and 'Anna. eat. Bows bin. wad analbartre•Hilist.-blwe ! t211 . 7...: 1 y . 0;Z:„It ' V . °;;.';',. 71:',Wst°'s.Itr; byr.y.assorwobtaf bluallo.l Graantalaaa, well hated to the retail trade of Lily - and country atercbsots. nd at verdant.. price. I tete:dine av 9 Eabbath School Book& \ • nAvisoN a AQNEW zza keeping • lop. n. - I , ltor Fowl•T , %kmot alqn art. Maurer...llr r. rnrderfs' vrthilestkr.c n.lar morn:nerd of t.rter'• ~ ,d other 11.1. rultatd• r de. bath nabs:atm Tract,. 'firth* It... Anne (dam and gar.. Con Books: Ilnor. eardn, .4\ecborr . P.:Samar to r..le rale •L Dna.* and rbilad.dpbla rd... by DAY,190.% AGNSW, fr., 5,5 Mark* Winn. tear roarth, ' B _--- - -- OUKS-65 Market strakt, Ef It Foarth—• Panersfts 111 or of the Etkibscates., 5 total Tall Tale, by Trust.. new supply: , Syr ord•• Prat .1 Alm anal ant Chpreh See.. for IBIS: Baldwin'. Ent Prannarrinef tlasAtteen ..Female Palriathrtn, ry. a. Wetherell; , ‘. lA,Asnie 01.-dogy: . Eclipse of Faitt—erssta nn Denalogi ', "• awl:lan's Country llnn . ses .81 . f. .. , do. Fruits asnl troll T a, 22m0. and arnd do. Landscape Bandanna k Pthst•tet F . ...7g \ lititcda CyrdoynAts. 1 vol'And 2 , 5.111..: M.O.'. A 'flardotre on !Moisture and.% tat 4 dn. Moral and itallgione An•Afntein. . Cliambee. El:m - 1101ml la of Eng. CI tf7t . 2 vela: Comp...4lnm of English LitgersOnne. r C I esnland; Fnr sal, at Fasten primes. by DAVABN k GNEW, • ten. BB Mafkan , street. • r l'ourtb. riIHE cc-partnership of the andeoln..ed - tonsalontnl, b 7 siren:aunt. on 'On lilt or lkbru v e ry, Y.. Arnold ba•lnn Purnbll•nd the•lnl. ,o 4`nt Bruno, la duly authorized lo WU. straltipt COPfrtnerealp. • • 1 , ..111t11N0T, 111081311, ARNOLD:' \ INE lIUNDRED, DOLLARS L will .... chum • terratory BRIMS DWZILLINO FIOUNIC, NUR • ',Pathan. Ile uee, 1•1111 on•••lghth of an acreelatons4 eltaatal a short .11eauce from the etailrand 111arion 9eatrkle,•llle. Tornes, •300 4a haul; Wane...SlM Da rear. 114 2 1 ' bikol.6.lC(. 21 rah SELLERS' COUGH4 4. I(III.IP 7 . 'Mansion Obto, January fi ISO 2 Me.. Subs, i.--I he.,, been or a Topple of your CDU2T Syrup. for vale , for the lecvo metre. and It hes eznelled an r iti eel lei ne end need i !enaction of oeuntrl. for Coombs end Cede. end ts hell t dalIV 1 cannot kzen Pp At PopplT trent Tour amt. I hntreet from letter) Youn. a'w \ 11.11,51 PP.. 116 Thls popular Cough Remedy leprepared Only, arid sold by 11,61 R. E. ItY.LLRRIS, ISTATood street la lITTER,--2 bblo. prime Ftjust reo'd A It and for rue by leMi VON nommonsT URPUY. TtheHonorable thOJuduell o 70 Court of General Quarter Beattows of the . in and Yoe the oonnty of Alleybenr. t `\ Th. Petition M /SALVADOR BLOGUM.of the Ward. Pittsburgh. In the county &format& numbly). the that roue petPittor blab provided' himself wllltsio finials for the Wooommoslellori of tranelete, end oth.re, hie d•ithinir house In the Wad afeettlYsid. and preys Qtat your lions. will be plowied no VW Elm • Reesulicto keep • Public Mouse of Entortabanneht: And nur\ll.7 %loner.. in duty bound , will way. .. , PiLTAT)3II. fiLOCI.I We, the substribere. eitisine of the Iva, Wird. PIM& - buret, do rortlfy that the atoms pething, hi, of wog repute, for honesty and tecopstanoe. and loved provided with bOy•stri%olll.o.i conronteetwe ter the seementrodatioA e a ic ,„„ th ,. or ouottgare mad - trov!lors, nod that ..LIC tarrlll le room,. -Tl Robert E.,. J. W. Taylor. F. R. Kritter..loisph Meier. M. . Connell y. Pent Yelbert. John Taylor, Jobs El ca. ..I. N . uniting,. Jacob therwig, John lilsoltin,'N. Sloan.' 6llei.llt PM AND OEDLIt WARE. \ dAN DEL KILOESEN keeps ooritinntly on 1.4 • W i smorttbent of W.h and B oth Toler e Btu. Oak W.U. Kitchell or DIIIM Booket4 Woodeo Heeds, 0 urns, Dry Ideonres, Oar ort4 CUM. Wseh Board& lued ell otber kinds or .x. lb by lip. , Meo-60 now Tubs end NO donor llbokite. yr, wareroore. Kumla 1141.,Y1f1h 4 n0ta1t1.4.414 \ P i . , :,, Wks . . . . NEW BOOKS—Just rea'd at 'central Baal liton.7l/ Yourtb oth ot= The coloploto Works of Barmaol Toe,* iisolootdim .ith nn wtomootory Wifll7 W. Ybil01101)h10,01, trk...kik sal opinions. by hofootor Bbeclddo sororo uth Vlooro Potent Thoolocy, emu:. T a AdOt.a Ch . " l' b7 J: " L ' .1176, 78 Yo Inal. XEW 000D87-411111P8.Y.-A• - • . • lIILD bay% Toed, tntn Then !-1 dth). 001= ht do; all rootaton.U. Witt .4 Whin plat% palatal Bills; at uttbilital azasir It /earth s.Wkl.ear ca.A. \ ND CBtrollY—. i.z,rik.itp the sillet • UTMEGS-0e INN A31614--1:10o A. We ar (NZ. eats, from ~ b i LTDD ::1 , 11 , jOnrelii:ol4 m o • riTs - ria fo r , gum a OP. • QULPIIATE QUINIA-I.OO,OZTCry co L.../ and I•• ••1• • • , , (fr.....q ' ,XI '" 7-.-. 2 -s. ti , YR WATEE - --2. gross Thecenso r ...EYe ce Wider. tn•sallk by (212.51 J , KID D '''''' ' TARD-2) bbbs. and 20 kegs, in etorsind i win 12• 1•111 lova° den cocidrac out. •?3 , . f 4.5 '‘ ' , ' J. T kJ. .1:.,BOON _.• .._,..._:.....____,-.\---,, 114 ACON - -13,Orlbs. hog round. in .smok j erts b''.. " d k` . '''' 5 f J. T. r J. 't D'ioNz. n S .ERb AIRI rello 00 \ lb J . nstJr Bao N for iIEEP' PELTS-10a Pelts it store , 4d , i fat rule bytfe7.ll '. J. T. A J. .t. 1300NEA LOVER sETizls AIL in store and fTq? .. .. gq We by tre.:sl \ 3\T. a J. Ji. , BOONE. IiEOO3IS-50; dos., list - tee'd, foi:sale by 1; \ fres • I , ',3. T. •J. J woNE_ - __ INSENG-2 bbbe. jait reed, for ri,le by C. '3k T. Sk J. J. 111111NR. RIN DST ON-E S- 1 -3 elx feet Mariettit llt Stenekt tee fist 46.6o:teed Roo. and far,.6•16 by' J. A : REPPERT. , 61 {Vat.. 4trew't, .OPPER&S-4100,bb1e: in good order, for C, Isle br . D 02.5 1, J. KILID 41::0 ,60 irco4 street i •: ~ • ~~~iii - rsann, W ILD store X101.A.81 (oak can cstlN Co. reit, PA Zinc: Grey WIN Var. Brown ZION litityki /HOT. Vag Bias 'A. uurclusoN I,CO jp. -- BA L SUGAR-160 ,bate white LIP BugArAor sale br , • 1023 `, JAJdliB A'llUTCllll3o* k MAR. ' ?fT011. and ROSIN—,For isle 'by E ‘f.i2L . ', JAMES A- HUTCHISON A \ CO. \ :.`r - ••• ,-- --- , -- -- • - 1 - INSEED OIL-20 bbla. toraalo by \ , 1.1 fott *. I J,11.3!E3 A. 1/I:I2CHISQK A CO, •• I - Q H. SYHOP MOLASSES 166 bbla. St. X 1.2 5 • !Await. marta• Molatus. for &Sl_ \ 140 JAMES A. HUTCHISON A CO. REFINED SUGARS —BOO bbla. prnalted.: Pandered •k and 'Small Lent In .sore anS•thr sale by \JAMES A—HUTCHISON 1 130... \ fe2o .. , drone St:Loofa Sum nannery. • 1, For Req.. ', \ '-, 1 ASTEAM Sp!' MILL, \in good ruitnink, I order. Coon Its Meaner. SAt ale,.) altustod the nsby Coal Work jut obese Dun No. 1. Monona/to/a Slum The Coal Work.Ocni nu ll rote constant entYlol- meat to Use 10111. The locatlths Ir curnmr.ord nr onus, Yard: • safe Mews Ass Inst. Alen,. soon Wm for a, Brilard: and, an oncost, Quarry of good Stone. eloie to Illoonnsham. • `,. q _-• Also—Three rood DWELLONsi.S. for rent from 0. Ist April. Invite of ; of \ F. PHILLIPS. f025122w t • , . But Birsolughsas• ItErb ER7ftlOgitA — iliffglLf6O - 6 — licres of LAND. in Western Vlsynals. sltnatts2 nue • ant, Sown —tltlis Indhsyntable. \ A .1 . , Ithont 2447, ',m ^ _ ,11e2 t B. HeLA,-- Ettb meet. _______, \ '. Worthy of A .1. tiim. „ I, '4R SALF-- t-' A SM 4° FARM of\ 56 Wok about ln Orbs. and Sof ' • • • winch Is greeted \ a st l r oo lo cottake-Inallt 1.10 • ..Islth ' re' consfort•lM• monde. • gml Ham Stable. no, • los owe; • roams Orchard Of choice halt —lb• pis • , ,ell at Situ. east Ii Robinson Townehlts, nlne, Iles co tot r ite near to Gan. blacks'. Prloc S5O yorlbsro— mos o alt. Ylftrols liat • ol LAND selsolnins Oa abort —4S oar ALxc— lel... and teasel: seed Spring _of Wster Prlels. StS bar 4,72.4 Arplr\c ‘ . B. kIe.LAIN, Rut Estate Anne ' , \ _. , t 21 Filth strut. Plttsbnrob. , 'Removal PlREEwideisigned having been apponatecl ialiti. for the Caen VIITUAL Cllt aa4 Et BV.-" . CNN. WYE 1,N80,11. tNCE COMPANIES of darrirbart, hart eglooaed t phew, tafaralts fykretal7 t faor a. t‘ W ro d gr a ta '\ li °An& , o f'"'d'rk; .• Arent.. Tktmk Lott. SUPPICi4F.JJ to bave \ been taken by triin . tatblae 11 rk ota fit, Clair !Intel:on Us e lire of Lis hada. c , •lired TRUSS. muted, "Zdar f . Wout t i g , Allegheny City." .Any information I.oettn Inv it will to the ,kftilivareeiral by tat/ oararr.aoll a 5.5511 paid fur, itr reroaltra. • f4C.l3t \l4 LOl7ll-20,418. Aockcitz, Pollock& CO. brad!". lan lin e .backyjitand.m. for rale by \ DiLWORT/1 CO. iakIICOND-11AND S,APryind'SOLLESA CT;of nee. Ibitale, low, tins been In use • 41ort ttinclleo • flier nal• br aafco*,ousNuot , sc muz.cgi*, • _ SNia'_l kpg No. \for salo , by , VON'PONLIOIII7t 31URP116 7A —3OO bble. OODtrfine, and extra;, forzal Oy ;VON DOWN 81 . 111141,111 f. P C• ' 3-100 bal nevi' just ree'd od for We b 7 NON NON Bornmurr & PdURPHIr. L~ALI4S-140 kits on himd, for '4.3 by fat I.,2oNatoxiaito.F. 1113/al3l. TICONv o k. godk assatmen - i,,lbr \ tab by , t f c2l \ WON WINN lIORSZ4 U11.143Y. ' Sl39Att ASSES-20n161.5. it, U. .... 11 " w ' B4 "' fr:i, N Y .) ?MOUT A .. .1{17.. lit. ellt `` eue, for fi Uy ARD-50 'kegs, 00, for rah, bi r 0 .21 \ VON i o ' f l oc D , C t!ztryt f-4 coV 0 • IP ecoN pHouunas47 eoks Bah* S Shcediers.• siticlo,jostave'll >Adios catT s .2i A. Cl:LBEyttAt.i. 363 aibs., rtroo2., '; • ' . ager oi ere, or. br Efe24l LBEILTBON. ASSIA.-250 mats eiPia, fol NCO--150 boxes junta' .I'll 1.71.4 brsods.for u 11.7 CLA.III,FIED'SIIO.SI}. hhdii.%N. 0. Client:l Sugar. lust t na 144 • I.Nousti 'aI.JOAR4ISO hhdo, &gni, itlErt /..7 nod for ckl• by [117.4)'. .BnOl.lBU IIYNNEtt. TTROUT -50 bbls. Lake Trutjsit liflf"'"r4 EXOLIIiii BiliNierr• , tor wen. ways. TILL dreiktir , lieduction in Priceal—A. 1.7 A. Ka SOf Z 00..771:cat and 61 Idviottstrrei. nrrentnne their last arratrear-Annaat ate for tii.EsTa len :411:telt?.' !! Tha l t hi th erol h tl. i e r tr i eti V:1174 tionabetore removal. be t en ant at tall ureter nab.. non tn . brlcna.i..nd at • large earetka hoer ran as It II the deafly teo the, their, whale stork, that Corr maw cront.'iteelr NAM BTOII/1 with, an enty• HMV STOCK. 11, DRIES-- Blt. R 4 2aked Cider; a) bt, bbua. Gold. ByTnig Dry ADO,. 2 T. 222 22,22 4 lobe Roll iluttrr T , bbls, To.2T; . 2 me222lettdoct 8.44 8 ten Lard: 02 . , 6 1. ° T d itres.. l 97r7rF 2 4 2,,,, , ,,ggrz. c. jo p r x. n ns le . by ARD au&:GREASE-54 tea No. 1 Leaf dn.eitttk• new taw:ling haw Mum Sum. • It. ma cstultramott., cpr te.oljy \ • f. 24 t‘s 'IATAH DICZYT • 00. \ logi 1 s. n Atom oalobr rit2ll DICKEY d CO. ANTED-2\;004 DRAY JIORtSES ", rnor T. ital.', old. ' • •• • H VILL LIGOILTL RF,AB',E LARD-4,, a4t, j r.o' and for axle bids. Grease' Lard, G. RElol.lllEL3f4mving removed tik n -a lt tthh n.II.4I tT P:IIIOV. Dr. P. Dll(.t,wo \ Z /0 re:Mg:4l a : ff2:114,2 uSTORAGZ--Saperior _Steritie , ,,` in Cellar I And Ser,ndari . l T?lrd Bal d er et \ •rettease Zia. CI, Te. rorapsx 6,II — EEAPPLBS-40 bble. orthoiite —Follie.b.tv, Pipplw, large Ilf•a# tralckM rvo'd 117111 for m 7 I WILLI/4 R ana , et kvo,• \ • , ear,nd alsgt lamb. • IhILAX.SEH 150 bu. in store,lLl for /ar ARBABOn.k by E-, \ bPIII.IPOIIt. pow.. BUTTER-10 bbla. Roll Bott.elt, f1: 1, "` " " i l d*? ", 1° birekniazte • ESD.OLL-1,3 bta. 6 4 11orneW. bract dd oul to Am sind \ '.aPHLWER, 111.g2SUG PPAINOHR UARBAlialt. lIGAR4SB hhde , to \athip by 'York tBtii m: w. 8. i Dl kaal ' an "' J 8 J. . \ co.. 18,1 181 Secani street. lEAD- 1 74Ttdia. Bar Letal - sad 214. -pigs I JIRO, by - stall:du Tort 8t t., fnis cat bt J. 13 MINORITE &.CO. Llg LEAP-4 kegs f9rsallw4 no:, RIBI) Ai ) PLES-3, btu!. in, dare, and for asl., tOr I I•881,` J. 8. DILWORTH • CO. OVEft SrED-IRO bus. in store and far . by 11.33.1 L. B. DILWOEIItt a CO. 1./BANS-80 lush. e 'ell white Beans, ix p skirl fajta!, by 0 .1A , \ J. . DILITOWNI 4 . Ca. FTS.Nt and FLAIBEEII,IS bags Bans; 23 do. Lls.viredil DN. do, IMllllFtlipir from stsva rate. /Ed= iiCIISEY OD. 143 \ \ Watior sal Trot% Oa. NIAPPIP\ BLOOMB-30 tank flow land /A e tna from. Elam*: !carpi !or tle:b RY PRAVIIRS and .APPLaS=4CO auks Nadu: 40 de.koloisi. how landfog from .13mm0r %amm t. forubs tej , • (RAI MILLI DIU11161\& CO. HACON and BU • K PORK,-4 cks,Baeoa, ILJ uuorted; Ido Sdlk rork,tiorylnodlng from ca &omt. lb , ' . 1,, by '11431. iIUTTER- 7 12)bth 1 . 2 7 7 lailittgypm'ft!a- V " aura\ racim a co.\ UPI'DR-4 old Ooppir Stith, now lond, . 'man 1.) ICY, it CO. s • . . F ' • .lIIERS.-59 eacki;„tui.r:Laxiini„From . -5,;p • 1...--,...",kr -T4rt.amiax..a.. , , a...5m..' '.... -.. \ . Important to TraVeavil \ , vapa i,:,, , ry,ENnii Pnr:E.t•ltr.rl2:B'°4lt, in thetfr:. .... " 41 . sta oi,Z3 l %bett able It vonoylneety• ter travaoro ioeltet by that traleo, tecobelltoult lei to? be ..abeeteot st e`cotott beettafortable tboote, tsar 2o , otbeett AA) a? ail , :t,Tvz. : p ig Ithttoto Tbie t. lbeemblalee t la 're:lb breattureettoaeir at LantObEetaotLod Of ?tett:lmbue-4d, nut termer. tut tab may*, rm.+. b ee - i t, et, a oektolo, it, by the Aettesut *Wb mina at Latrobe abYyi the Pox, bate pleasaat east% tete there am .44 at the lam and .healer Masa of .414.1.3pc5. er.1“...‘ emotonabir viob the o b. seem rd rOlivlrcriet Vi,u74/1 PAp u .' ~,'t*l'',4 toPhao&lobta or /*thaws. • Ivor stow= to nod. , at go!n_brLlP.Lookfooacdosorsockvand vuttor. I b r a.m. ► s 611T14 aleido slaw copir,:ko„iumnil at N. sop c.bsup O. JON6P2 O. YOST ft --- —...-\. l / 4 ,-.Potta a. 81444012 444, I t 1 J. P. BUMS) 1.----... \ .......Iffreon o tt w. aamool snot tirDaort open 1 / 4 ON o'clock: •' OF ADMISSION' e Ilti° A • \ Box- - . ..`4 , --,-----'' ,so• .u. \ saexti4 ............-------.--: 'if s . , \ r.h0.5..........-:,...._—..:-.ELI .1., \ OLlO..ot o*l/4 t ttiotems to aecinekst the Nerince. kohng the L.\ ' ',lei te extra theifini \ ..b mea -1/4 ---, ___ \ Odirfantsen.MBabierd MTV, bill ma t Throes! *mind thle nowt . UenAre adds.-don *ter Mimed\ hon. \ • , ~ . 'h a PlanAlist th\S m eeMe 1 . 4%)311.110 JElltfahnOn A. the grand *KA nem* gene :eons Wants &Law and opt gm; high. Berm SWIM flon9SchanOmet \ •`, \ TWO wernzakr. y . nt, i mill to diroxinceed thee mat X Opeotmlak% '`O Al ge - =...3. , ..........i t Tir4 \ t 7 - 1 D=.- ' sisilM - Gisie r ind ii. Zol • • \i,\-, \ - T 9 be • lowed ith the rem, P. 121111398 H BOTIPANR4III.IMit 1770, 1 0 \ .\ '' t . '‘, \ \,,, ~ watot . tilv d ..... :i . i:ic....-,1--- 11 1r,l i ttnt \ \ Tate maims. 1.i.i......: - ...i ---- 11:411alt; ClodMe of Liberty-I. 1,._., „.. i •-...N.rei. roster \ \ 113, ‘ ,...... ,1 r, a,ib lyt4i= ~,,3mt... w .t . , ... , , - ,\\ ... * To covets:de wit the gmarkstromenni4. \ \ .. • TOE AND \ :r TEB2. n Olt, LIFE, /I uOADINg. \,- \ , , Jrn . r.A.vturn .....n --....:c, _tea limn, \ \ \ f::.•.-: , .{- ----A- -- '--.—..".. .. -- `ll.wite.:' \ . \ \ ittr.q. re meial \ -... onnidal Dramal i e Al iwtstr..l, MN*. "T GetenbLeyn bir4V.,,,, 'l ceekslY,e, e \ ;., \Weir The ft Wore m om .. • caw,. end wmom.. • • \ A ... \ IMPORTANT HO EKEE \ r. \ ~,, ° QAMETIII2N79 botti; attd i ceJ.,n triltmlQ, \ . La tbanToda, Ordpot Tar*. or . oth er ,4 radon In exlsteme. foe waking..,DlTH .1 / 4 3 tititii to t. 1 / 4 • TICACT:or BANING POWlASltOeorredeitedDreed 0 1. e \ • /lied. ()riddle and Jonta Oak e& dinsEtto . - Pobries, . \ 'l/4- weed, emet Cake, Apple immtiture, netry. Ms ' at: Tble article team tbatimm P.M, ii tel. lioa l / 4 .1 •a • 1 / 4 \ Rona.. Lath. Salem. Snip, Tteamlwat, 'meet. Oen 1 , - • . • Both oc- oslii Obi. oho. a ...MOM*. to b e rim etio ' ' l / 4 ' . t. \ \ thing needed every Wade daTot their Wet m. \ - Its*. important adv.*. ortrile old ' sy stem, itty, A, , Lit, tave. the 4.41:4,4 01.1J14 eg t1.41,4t.,414,,, 4 1i 4 4 ', A bread, and the trouble ant: ro b of Trani g goad \ ~ ' l / 4 . N 7 1n•Vrarlig i fttiZ j Ce?r ' t7iMsizts ta rise bef n •\es bak. \ •*" \ it* °moven* broad Lazy beim :le la's fey menneme. \ \ o, it. etolt 441, elvers dewend %the...nee 11,M, itnet, \ A Under and p 414141,/ 4 brad .0 b nit, whether the . i - ur i • -'s be of the , tmt quality or not. . \ 7 4. Brkal ...a.. at. PM. , Mr. ( ch at an tritimee. tooter of 'Mgmtion. bite fitted or, •we stionnote. - \ tweeter, Whiter and ogater. than .04 wits 7 • b. The Mimi made nr termentlettochdOen net afford the, then saffoutt of nouriahment to Ull, Mods in, that It dots \ when made with this a.tanod I beweenac the T.t..bl* toil tontained In fermented broad, MIK& the proper . ,' , obtqlon of the Tatter told coon it, end ronnommely. • • \• \ met otar et. to ... the to - drool:die the .4. toad , . • to,rodoese dprpottrf• and its attendant ml4' . , This article has been Micro:lecher tested. and is nnimr. tout liked. When oiled semortUnif to tbe diroctione, it is *mended to welt.- \ Wil e .Be careful to ask for DI7II.ILNEIi BARING POW- • Dan s •and take no other. and Ton will not be deedmd. , Minden% odic*. IV Water IM*. Now Tort. Meld by Or • best armers .d druonietc .„,, irl y th a , ... \ \ leTdir• Asenta to rittebornte \ \ \ 100\ lbs. in SID° & CO. . — Mausse%, \ AIDDIE\HQUSE, • .4rtier .7rffer's'on Ave:,muo.-Itaindillph \ \ \ 1)ETROy!: DIBBLE, '.I.IILFS L rani. \ fe15:71 \ Btrmsk,Goods-`1553. AN \IIT?dENT. •A WEITZ. • fOLA:r,' Booth Boor at.. PA¢Anosaina. Macktik,el, bbll4- half ..gem,,. and kitt.r.No. I big, halfod kitto: a 3. salvo ho bbl, No. I !Almon. in bb.. rid kittr. rolood dr., id cob lin moo. 'grand Bonk coddrb... tior.d and rta role by. wait; 0100. art LOVER , : SEED—TJ . blitt.,.tco!d d for, W. br, IIIitYKO,DILVORTII •tab \ ' Nos , . rLd Focond MM.. • IIMOTTLY SEED- 7 1.5\bblArec:d tin 4 for • .1e by MVP', OH 17103, DIE4AOBIII t lot EAti&r.3o 1?bls. r - —25,000 sways M:1; OvevmutJa.4.-mlialtr TARD-40 bble., 20 kegs, 4 , l4ojeirs No lal L d. rec . / and t fela‘ sinavbs., Dims= *OO. APPLES-4') bblt„ Inwonxii,a CO . 22 \ aural's& BUTTER,--20'bble, freer. .11,411 and 36 jar*: . ‘antrlik; Ined and AKA. Dby X • \ SH amnßre sap. \ rati Nos. 130 &lad LT:lbpoand spat.. RINTS,\ OINGIIAMS, Au =~ILIIBPIIY &80/mum:ix ba» Jnet opened dal* and Vat en red Plitt". Mall patella Cllaqhms. wmsU 13gonal. FOR SALE--Seversltliatinand feet of DRY LOOEINLI sad WASH WARD, which hin boon' rued two ream Tor pardUrno two term DODICTERS cult Large WOW WIrIDQW with Glass Caro Inardr. shrhcight /les ar!. aro DiasDocr, I ttrZtir N. f.7lPak Warr Agra. lifth direr. S• lINDRIES-- \ • ZOO kanbala Cl &add ZOO blibes Hums. aasart'dt ao do. Timothy do.; \ ley. No.l TAM: ` ,2 • 10 Ws. Roll Batton 20 trams Oadlnh; . 60 bbl gib'd Ilsrdocr. 400 boat. Wbadow 100 Dbl. anyerilos 'momi3 aMta and for nala by JOHN WATT A CO. YE and COEN--500 bus. Rye; 8;000 do Atoned Corn, to !mire, for iato by • l A. 1181TVIT. I.IIIILDING LOTS itUlhtquesire Borough. liftruir Lori eitualed in Do/ hippo Borough. In orlon or lots. lariat ',Broken tat anus torondko tleTeonr.Banal. fronting.° tb. canak 0./120f.0t. rairsblr oohed fur building dter. Do told 'err Ii 4?" \ B. &WAIN. \ 110.211ttlb QMITWON CONTRACTS-;•A tin. edition. Isjorith le:hilt:10nel notes and referenbs to both Enhilab and American detbione. by Wm. LL. Rawl. , \ Rebind "1 " . lq \ L 'T, J. B. 'miaow:, ', \ • Pookeeller end Statinyer. ~ .1019 \ s .,` ‘ 63 Word bred, between b/. axe lob. IIAIVLS ON COVENANTS FOR TITLE. •Aeractioartrettiee on the Lew of Orrninante for la. .Hl Wiltlantitenry Hanle. -, • • • • \ , ml. waritie devoted to the enuidention of the habil. tire ebl AVM. of Vbniers of Real Bete", nib, gr from ' ' their tbrensatfor Tittle. II enthnbettents saw. In nob. . Mere or otber:betrodjsocel into nearlp!wery torrent:be ~ of real estate,. bothridder of the libebe, it la booed the yrofebion.w lb tot ilean unteoensm a work which bee Mr lb °beet their analysis and nt.ertieer effeet. ln Tacibb eructs** on the ten of Vender and Purthaserthe enbestef Carenante exr title bee allotted to It only• Ito. '. I !f!trnt ith t° i t . l b°4 n ofA l w ilmngtiTt t c 0,.t..r _ . • Laq. SEED \--8. for : 11.111a m C, \ Nos. 4Y sOd TO.Weer rtn.e. RIED 4PPLES.` T SOO bee. priree Dried Apple+. la teary and fde male by BXLIAt LIdOXTT. Water 'than. RILL BUTIER-10 bbla. primel and ior (6l9] DE Lt MINOTHE SEE 3 0 Tiniothy Seed, - Jac ob br /Mi t ] n, ALZkLI.s 00. RPUTTER --41 bbleAreeh• R BiVter, for .wor ‘4, • DAL2III. 41'00. RECD APPLES—IOC te. Jf In gam and !bin. by i\ it DAVY /2R.E.E.N APPLIIS-51ahol.qeit ittabrsett thi Nowt% ;ipthy Peatgret, .1 tee pet O . ' t tt. for w , , "Li \R. .....SLZELL .1 Ctt . =I Liberty. rtp.et. lo A rallab i 'AHD (111,20 bbls Np 1 in strat end itals DT 15.191 , A J. raw • co. SPT t S. ,TURPENTIN,E74O,.I?hI.I COTCH SNUFF--120(9ben_Sootoh Snuff, kJ "flarretrtrfor Web,. J. KIDD .6."CCI. BLUE VITRIOL-600 Ibe. Blue Vitapl, fix 'Om Ord tor oalo br \ $11)D 2 COl (~-tin i~5~l:f~►~A ,n • RING 8-12 groM g' JR Knee.. isprtad. ker We jACIDDAt. COy WUrr, \ E-150 Ibl, 1r,M41/,to. QPONGE s -200 \lbs. extra fine .I:tarhing 316 d o. ttsl.4DenVl. &o. tatUrgre•446 du. ens annams da; WO da eon.m os do.: s acrixT ORe rultpr.'\Donse: 0f,07.5it11vrged,01.7.3,,.., Mat t KlY a. DUFOUR - EL% bat% :filet retiiiiied. and opaiisd this day. blesshod Moslias N paw, \ Ll.ok Mob.. lauttes...44a FrMU.sissi will cottinciN to tscelse.,dally:, hats - I M S supply ' or a KUNO tiUNDP, to which tags Unite an earls examha Lion by pasohitylrantin• shety anal dasishbls goats, et ' ~ the timthrisst (Irma of Fossils =I Slitsket stn.. it01ii,...: BEANS—AbbIz. small White, BeariP, rood aud fox sahlf Entniata neseauoa. , ARD--ra kip and btda.lor sale by • rfilS] 13PH1NBEIS HAILLIAUGIL WINDRIES-- 5050 boic• ;wort* 2 tarots: 25 do No.l Palm Snss; 26 do SW Candler 40 do 51ou1d Coen, ICAO assort tit Ne.•looctry. Tab; 2 11t u V w .O.ICCYCg riliD sad • 10 61,4. vase CII4 2141•222; 25 kee•S's Tobacco; ‘5. boas. Y . do; `N • , CO Pa lsktodlook•to., 6 'do do nabs 160 2415. Wr•ppoi P•pon 25 bo bblo, stl2lo a:01102M ack U 11:; V: 60 hose No. • \ 1 0 0 do towed. .54 Intr. _ 22.,:te‘so v0r10rLi „ 1 .:34 4 , 3 , 1.1.1t Ta•A; b! t d pad 101 br T. 1.LrTeer4.... ,-- st2•4l. t)43IRH-1),000 lbs. bbcmldern 'and 40,0001 2a. -4 Mad. fi2 stdr• pad ter oda by 16 \ , • T. L . ITTLY. I co. - • I kRIED`BREF,-.5 tea.sugar-cura4 Dried B"CJ'Ar."l."f.""l.t7T. iiTTLE\O CO. r.SB BREF-9 bbh. 'Taw Beal), pi* eaed. for 11316 by \ ' IL:ROBISON Vngal ,4 t lbs nt W. 11. oOlnhB mo 4 PLOUB--75 bbla superfine Flan?, jail. nsre.ser Kb by t 41.8) •it SOMME I U). - _ PREBH\ PECAN UTV-1000 lba..freeh C Peen Sixts. inst. no amS me ads by tae \ 1 - "le:mi.‘'WUo:4"altantia*thglainatm ILOVEItSEED-50.bbli. in store and for i 11A I Ir,x;'?in'• OLL BUTTER , --10 Ibis.. prime Roll BIM or, by EMU 4 . 4.. 'LOYD. 1n kegs 'se4bbls : fet . cafe j ,s3Th ~~Ts. , a=-F,~=~--- d for. sale by nava= t MD:, ibd. redid and ion. t. MIMS= t CO. \
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