PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. PODLIIIIIIID BY WHITS I CO PITTIZUIGH. ,AIONDAY MOBNING, ILiTtCH 14, 1853 - READI7IO MATTER WILL BE FOUND ,SISMICIIPAGE 01 7 171.13 PAPER. liatulacnan W,nurr ounts.-1116 extenahn cure Intl of ogr,lrsoldr Gantta atm to OEM MIAMI 1•1111 • •••••••21•19 =WU= of =Wan eau. In:minus known. Oat alinsdatket. bet.= tow and nut tbannand, reach. tlllraio"4arerT rlllapandaanntltoWs,tiePeeesll - and Znatern Olga: . Iwo ADV=lBl=B—lisitber ta &Mortal Pawns apr Printing Estsbllghntsnt of ea DOILY Omni, err eland 'aft 'Sunday . . ktiTESTlligall who arise ihrir Yana In Marx la the. gaper' an Mandl/ turning. Plaplasatbsatt Mint la bribre d creinel‘ash Bawds/ Sten Ocorneremo '..The Committee - of Corr.+ peadoes, eenoboeed bf tie delegates to the late Antl-Ille 'Nob Mat OolatT fklemmtlosb are rbonedted to meet at the Oattetflome.on Babesday. the lbtb Ice, at 11 eeloek. IL. to anoint 7 da.mitea to tbe State Ooovestleo. ot Umtata.= the 21th of the present month. twist Commlistonni. Arolltor Ocoersl imsd dorreror Joann atad. - Moth 7.1513. of tea Pittsburgh Gazette. Lunn!' Ham, Daimon; Muth 10, 1858. We . left the plait at oily of Annapolis this marring, after a matt pleasant nit We were treated these with a courtesy and consideration whin I shall ever remembir with pleasure.— * had our MU prepared, and in the hands of Al k a''opmmittee,..and It will be read In the E 04130 ItC 4 / 7 . .The morning was tray delightful.— Tits lir weer balmy, the sun shone brightly, pghtingwp hilLand dalb, and glancing from the night wenn of the bay, while all status ap peared to be petting on her holiday attire.— Very pleloant are my memories of this old but most delightful city, Annapolis. . In the cars we met Governor Lowe, the prep-' eat Gilead neldent of the Government Home...c. He la quite yoeng man, frank and affable,.and expressed his tenni approbation of our road. • ' On arriving at Baltimore, we parted with our feigns of the Cumberland Connate; Meson. Georke . A. • Peen; J. if. Gordo; Normand Besee;J. P. Boras; and C.B. Thereto; Boca 'A Cemrslttes composed of more gentlemanly and Inseliella men never was fantod. Oar *nods tiensladth them have been 'exceedingly agreea ble, and we exchanged &dine te with old Mends, pnudiculg to greet each other on the tops of the Allaglienies, , ,,when our road is completed, if our lints should be spared for a few yeire longer. Dr. Gamut proceeded at once to Philadelphia, where ha will math some days. He rendered wiry efficient assistance 'in our negotiations, an thought no labor too arduous to promote OM Glint we had In dew. Lorimer and myself spent tha day in ma king, calls here. Our ant visit woe to ISr. . Gnu, the President of the Baltimore and Ohio Enron Company. He informed as that our connumicatlon had been committed to a Gam nine of nine moorhen, and that as 'soon as their report was made, It would be ocenuerdes • tad n inning. He expressed, however, his da rnel ophdon that an arrangement entirely ost fidenni would soon be made. • We next waited upon Mr. Bose, the Chairman of the Committee on Internal Improvement", of .the Board of Trade. He Informed us that the rep* en the Cannelloni. Railroad, which was published in the Baltimore.. American on Wed , sudsy; nth been printed' in pamphlet form, and would be stilt to the Councils and the members at Dia Leilsiattne. He will watch over our In tel:4l6lmi., and see that the matter is fairly • brio gstt brdorethe Councils. hir. Dobbin, of the American, politely invited us to daimon the eitj, during which we vis ited Grin Mont .Cemetery, a very beautiful sodjrieb y adorned nodal - plena. We also saw several other gentlemen, and fin ished zip , our truthless in Baltimore. We shall .lure toetight, or In the morning, for home, by e o.Phindelphis and Harrithargh. - =:l,olislCorm;ararlsj 288 linnowao BSIDGB • ' . , •Tire Sap= Coca of the United States has. . Umlaute, atijciorned until May withint algae *tot the motion of the complainant to tune props . Process,for the enforcement of its decree; so that this Commonwealth, end this City matt milissit still longer to the injustice of the .ob siOrt, snd to the colonies so industriously propagated. The complainecte in the cue have relied upon the justice end the propriety of • Writ appliciatioc, the defendants havi been di ligent Is their efforu to excite public opinion ....•egalast their opponents, and many persons Ilia alba* easier to join In so outcry, than to ex- Amine Into Its justice. • We hue; therefore, thought that a plain brief statement of the•faits of the out might be read whiSt a labored argument would be disregarded. FYra, then, we state that the Ohio river Is a publio highway, to he kept forever free for sari gatfon without obstruction. • &and, The %heeling Bridge is thrown over the Whasael of the rim, and has obstructed the peessge of tame cf our : koats at various different 'Third, The defendants alleys that the boats srhoso swages wee obstrneted, ha3thotrchfm ntesbtan nonaiseasary height In reply to this Wisgatton, the complainants produced the testi mony of many scientific men, and practiaal En &Mere to the effect, that high chimneys we necessary to great sped. Thu *as the cue presented before the court, argued spin and spin, by able counsel on both sittis, and after careful conelieration ; a .major• fry of los out of seven of the judges of the high est judicial tribunal' of the land, declared the bridge to be an_ obstruction to navigation, and of; comae a manses. The two Cueenting judges were C. J. Taney' fromlaitimere, and Daniels from Virginia, both Wirt to be biased by lOW feeling and in gnenese. ' While this nen was pending, the citizens of riesling determined 'to build it rival line of pents to run from that, place to Louisville.- - Several of these boats an troy built and their eldranies are all tan than those of the PIM . htirgh andelmilunati packets. Thus; .the4ltlzens d Wheeling line them mina farniahrd the moat conclusive evidence, • theithelr previouslairgeitors about the zurna unary height of tb• dittmln of the Plttsbzurgh • pronto erne groundless and folic, and also Fonigne soundness of the opinions of Bolen- We mat and Prsetleal Engineers, that lash eblmnfei.worn Sunman to give great _ pd.. - these"' tbliviboloSsie of the Wheeling 3ridge,sl to die feet of obstmonlon of emir'. • . Will Some of our eotamporarin who ban Joined In the ontoi4 against Pittsburgh, do her thiiintlinte publish it. • Parsatman'urn Wasrunoung HATLEOLD.-- , 410 i im tho day lamed by the Commissionen for opening books 'tor .the solneription of stook to Ski Pittsburgh sad Washington railroad. . The .song neoemary to mecum the charter i" 550,000, and this sum , most be subscribed dozing the thne advertised by- the C 011191138106- VC 'The looks "rill dose on Thursday next. Pittsburgh is looked to to imbscribe.at taut cue. Mg edit.: The folks its the town of Mishit:g lee do ast regard the mad with oter-maah' fr oar, looking upon it u e sort of rival to the Ifemilield told, and way little amok will aiir km eters. Along the line of the proposed road stook will be taken freely, but it Le not anticipa• ted OM Ora 1it 15 , 000 will be subscribed at The rut tonal moue from bre. penny, we think. dictates that Pittsburgh should not only take stock in this ruff enough toboxire the chattel, but enough to secure the canted of the rood, for ffe present Mae toad promises fa be en" important one, and es it most Daly- to and Pittsburgh interests, it . ought to he ander Pittsburgh controL lens Dun t that 'Pittsburgh should hold of from ft,, for sahib, trial it is seen what is dorte In Tiredy in rdsrencil to the right of way for AhlifltabetiOe Thb is urged upon the 'Mal Nat If oar Legislature adopt the pend ing Proviso to the hill anthortoing the Caudle Of Fidladolplda to nthrounai to the * .Hemplield : rced,,Wheoling sad Philadelphia will then 'bulb the Ilurpfleid road sad of WashicOut, end lib holdd the Pittaboish and Waildngton us-means .of atonsetbg Whesting with ^. 1 .0401‘, - tiat Mum, Whialbg would I .I AYO*O labkotoold to, withdrew hen Ofqx#4°2 . . . to the right of, way ; and the Steubenville road vapid he Indrideed by means of the Washington roe& This, we grant, would be a good Ttlllloll for not letting the Waehingtork road pass into Wheeling heads, but it furnishes, to our minds, tho strongest passible argument for putting it st nubs into the control of Pittsburgh hands. With that road wader our government, we °mild pre vent Wheeling from taking any advantage of it until ibe yielded her opposition to.the righteoul detuandkof the Steubenville road. We hope, therefire, that Pittsburgh capitalists will walk up today, promptly, and take enough stock to secure the management of the road in - hinds that will not use It to our disadvantage. I , Wsessr mereacn."—Oar neigbbors over the wwy have got out a "Weekly Diepatob," • copy of whleb is. before us. It Is very hand -somely got up, and is furnished at $1 per annum, in advance. • 07 Bai I of the e and frith dates: , as—The following Mimes - ern is a statement Great Britain e 1851, to latest of Bresdstaffo to tom Sat September ENSESIS MMMI New York; 408,618 ~ 2,296,608 New Orleans, 62,222 , 2,265 Philadelphia, 62,904 ' 805,504 Baltimore, 97,966 118,978 Bostop,' 26,885 .-ii 5,1601 Other Porta, 8,000 80,180' Total for 1852 666,540 1 2,758.629 do last 'ear l 611,001 1,6811482,008 do 1861 811,2562.7 787,9991 do 1850 280,694 2, 7 420,9291 PLAIN BIIInBEI3B TALL - , In notlainglhe new - Finance Minister of the Government, yesterday, incidental allusion VIM made to the condition of money affairs at the time of hie accession, mbelagnotelmgetherdif 'ferent from another eventful period in the finan cial history of the -nountry. Perhaps It is as well to speak to this point with a little more plainness. Oraturenetes within the last few days, render it, at least, timely, If not to all our read en, exactly palatable. The Fourth of March .was signalized at this money centre of the coun try by a scions disagreement between two of the larger class of Banking Institutions in and near Wall street, resulting in the protest of one party, for want' of ,Gold wherewith to pay its ba lances to the other and in the intervention and assistance of third parties to set the matter right again. It Is not pretended that the mere failure to respond on a weekly settlement day, grew out ef the bankruptcy of the Institution which ilorinighbeirlishonored. Indeed, we are told by an eiallftlg paper, it “was never strong er than at this moment, and will pursue its busi ness undisturbed by these rumors." And this we take to be no very great exaggeration. The Bank, like two-thirds or three-fourths of its neighbors, is, probably strong enough in every thing but Cad and Silver; he PLPIII. assets am ple, and its Debtor and Creditor columns equal the one to the other. That each is the ease, the reedy assistance of $300,000 or $400,000 grant ed by its neighbors, upon the transfer of a ear -1 responding amount of its Bills Receivable, would seem to verify. No unnecessary panic, there fore,-need be directed to the particular Bank in question. Its officers, President and Cashier, who honestly owned up on the 4th of March that they could not respond in Gold and Silver, have resigned, and the Bank is left to pursue its regn ler businees tinder different auspices. Bo much for the Wall street event of the 4th of March. The trouble indicated Is, or Is not, on the surface; is, or is not temporary. A cor respondent sends us nine plausible Tenons why money may soon be plenty again, but not one that looks beyond the daily opt and downs of the Stook Exchange. The trouble is deeper seated, and the spirit of adventure, of extrava gance, and Currency expansion, too wide spread to be arrested by temporary expedients. - The root of the evil may not be found in over of foreign Creditore, but this is one opinion, and it appears to be fortified by the weekly-reeurring Cacti:nu-house figures ' and the annual Treasury statements. But let this peas as tinged by party politics, and let us look to the branches' Bank expulsion is one. The free in of Credits abroad another. False val ues for'lleal Estate a third.. Exorbitant rents the fourth.. Recklessness in Speculation the fifth. And extravagance Id living and unreal Winans of what is called wealth, the slith.,- Theratelogne might be swelled to &family tree of enormous dimensions, bat these will' "Miles for present comment. 1. If Bank expansion bo net muted by the influence of the events of the past few dent— en& as the introduction of Wild Cat money from ninonumHeidlena, by one of the City Banks, , in opertidethume of popular opinion, and the fail ore ter pay specie, on its authorized obligations, by another—then it moat meet a more violent end. The spasms of the ,system may be fre quent and violent,ever and anon girinerhopes of prolonged vitality, butu speak-paying concerns they will all go to the wall together, mien the whole country, through which the spirit of ad venture is now so rife, is brought to en early sense of the danger. California will noOtherwise save them. Half ate princely product 0[1852 wassail abroad to pay for fabrics which, orght to have been made aflame, and the other half is now being boardedby the people of the inter ior: who hold fast that which they know to,,be good, and transfer to others its uncertain paper representetive. • The Banks of this City are. weaker in Gold now than In the Spring of 1852, and they ewe fifteen or twenty millions more to their demand creditors. We even look in vain for a different result in the Banks of the neigh boring cities. 2. The use of credits abroad will continue, while credit is left to the country. Those who take them profit by n it very peaty as a manu facturing people. Great Britain exports $355,- 000,000 In the fabrics cf her own workshops; we export $25,000,000 In home manufactures and consume $175,000,000 in Foreign; besides using $30,000,000 additional in the free produce of the Indies. The advantage to the Foreign, creditor Is great He will not Withhold euy fe alties to continue the business. We therefore loot 'to no very abrupt check in Bond bartering. 8. False values to Rea Estate must soon cease. The fabric of speculation begins to tot ter. The speculators Ind it uncomfortable to be bard up for money, and yet more uncomfortable to be reminded by the turn of the market, that , they are probably far ahead of the times 4. Bents will follow, and both these remits are not only desirable to healthy trade and hon est tenants, but they are as absolutely tenant to the safety of the Banks as the daily calls which they are now so Industriously making on their fancy stook loans. 6. 6. Speculation of every other species, and the inducement which it holds out to extrava gance in personal and household expenditure, all constitute together one of the threatened Veil of the day which nearly concern every good citizen, and every, prulent man of beldame. It Is this vicious spirit that has made our new and " prineely Hotels" a mark of derision. end the projeota andlobe and cognate of manithel le gislstion the source of corruption and common disgrace tv the City. It is this, too, that has estibllshed twenty-five or thirty new Banks In our midst, thus doubling the number which for merly served a more oafs and meld purpose, and increasing the danger of universal explosion by the Wee credit' in which they wore coneelved and Di which they are for thlt.inort part con- . Ducts These are plain words. lila *bait time, wi think, to speak plaielf.--1/. n Rita. _ _ The Whectling Gazette, In decidedly the most rational article on the 'right Of way, that' has ever appeared in its 'caimans, in reply to the Wuhington Bcporter, makes s'clear breast of the matter. It tays that the faith of the city is, pledged to the Ohio Itnilnmate 20 oppose SR that these roads have already expended *IEOOOOO on the strength-of the 'pledge, that the Ohio roads are regarded ne more important than all the other roads pat together, and Mildly, that for Wheeling to countenance the right .of way, to entirely out of the truth= 8o then, it to not far protection against Pittsburgh, after all, tbatil she has been besieging the Legislature, and sp• pealing is their sympathiee, but it appears she ' his sold herself, body, soot and breeches, and all her neighbors into the bang; to the Rail road caurpanisi of Ohio and wishes to Ineigle the Legislators into bieldn her g nefariou s bar. pine, sad inflioting an not of rank injustice en her neighbors. When however the truth comes _out; the Legislature may not be toned to elan; apenially Mane the Russell and Eliot Bridge no. eke has be= shown to' be a contemptible hem. bug, and perhaps en actionable consplney. abet is bilad and TODOMOULIS an gest rattle. snake, and may yet, get neither dat Ohio Made, the Hempfuld, or even the Cleveland--nothing but the iluhingtonnetenection with 'Pittsburgh. Thott, the may dimmer her situation.— Weil. beryls Erna. • - Donato, March h.—A coUlelon occurred last Erasing within the city Drafts, which was attend ed with 11117i01111 ansequenoes. The els o'clock train on the Buffalo and Rochester railroad left the Depot according to the Utne table, and In excaelag este** of the tie v York city railroad, an beaming Rain of the latter Can Into sad de washed the nu car of the Oils on the Boffa- 'that wee trot Welts 'to fifteen Utootigtill la the ea at the time the widest tmetured.— Beatly altat that vas more or lees Wined— some of them quite eeverely. • the men, named Time% mu thrown • eamiderable distance, tad iriatiSpy bl:ldt bat wlll probably eosin es pjecriss , The MOM of the smeiteder to were . - • 39rnitraz- owes icAtod. The follo - iing7tuild;ll Sentence of Francesco and Rosa Medial, embodying a statement of the efface Or offences) whereof they wore found guilty, to translates for the Naw York Tribune, from the Univers, a leading Catholic journal tuned in Paris: Considering that the penal ism, agreeing with the .nterputatione of the most ilinetrimisjoriste, recognise proeelytimn u a crime puniehible bJ the civil authorities— 'Considering that Francezeo and ROM Medial, born and brought ap in the Catholic have, within the last four or five years, been in duced to abandon it and embrace the religion which they call Evangelical— That Francesso Medial, availing himself of the letwons in the French langloge which he gave to a young man of 16, endeavored, though with out macro, to detach him from tho Catholic religion; gave him, in concert with hie wife, a prohibited copnof the Bible in French and Ital ian— That he has made to other persons propoenle tending to chow the eupetiority of the religion called Evangelical to the Catliolfereligion, coon sallies rook personenot to hear the priests, re proving the worehlp of the Virgin Mary and of the Sainte as an Idolatry, and especially turning into derision the pious custom of burning tapers before the image of the Holy Virgin—rejecting the doctrine of the Heel Prentice iu the conse crated Host, characterizing•as an insult towards God intercesalon by the Virgin and the Sainte, rejecting the authority of the Supreme Pontiff, saying that the obsereanee of the . feast days other than Sundays, and abstinence from testate aliments were the inventions of sinfal men; say ing that the sacrament of the Communion, the transubstantietion of bread sod wine is not true, that Confession is +melees, becauee It is made i to man and not to God— j That to make a young' girl of twenty; whd wee in their service, abandon her religion, the his dials taught her to read, so that ehe might un derstand the books which they gave her, inches the Bible translated by Diodatt, and the Book of Prayer, printed in London by the Society for the diffusion of the Christian Doctrine, in which it is said that Purgatory and the worship of ima ges are ridiculous inventions— Considering that what has been said by the defence on the subject of liberty of comminute and of religious tolerance is'gn to the gnu: Lion, seeing that the first is attacked when citizens are called to anew for their exter nal sots, and that the' secon is protected, in stead of being violated, when one preseives an other from the danger of seduction and abandon ment of her religion. The Court declares that the crime of Impiety has been committed.by the Mediate in the way of proselytism—and it °modem:is Francesco Me dial to fifty months' imprisonment at hard labor, and Hasa Medial to forty-five months' imprison ment. and to a floe of 800 Sores—and at the ex piration of their punishment to three years' ear veillatioe by the Pollee. . • • 171,362 176,964 5,787 3,600 2,586 28,515 The election yesterday demonstrated to Bish op Lefevre two moat Important facts. One of which was that he can use only the mon merce nary and vicious portion of the Democratic par ty in any echeme which they believe to be un just and anti-Bepublican, and tho other was that he cannot rely even co the whole Catholic population to follow him in a crusade against American Instications. The great mass of the Democratio party of Protestant belief and all the better and more intelligent and honest por tion of it, indignantly spurned an alliance with him, that required them to proetitote themselves to his unholy anti-Dvnottratio purpose. Like men who love the State and country aid their Institutions far more than party, they took • breve and manly stand against Priestly dicta tion. Equally manly was the conduct of many of our Catholic citizens. They threw off the shackle, which had ea long bound them, and did them. selvee the high honor of voting to sustain our free schools in spite of all attempts to control them. Even manyof the Irish Catholics refaced to give their inlinente against education and Re public:antral. Bat it is to the German and French Catholics that we are under especial obli gations for their manly independence, fora large portion of them - voted the Free School ticket throughout In this they have consulted their own tutored, u well u their duty and the wel fare of the State, and this election will result In more substantial good to the Catholic popula tion of the city than to any bther elan. But of this we have not time to speak to-day. They Lave contributed to break the chains with which their piteets were striving to fetter them, arid. have helped to preserve to themselves as well u to others, the .advantagee of our free schools and the blessings of a useful education.—Deroif Tribune. - The debtor beaks have been bard ran thislast week, and settlement daY did not past over with.. oat an exposure. Several banks, vs understand, were week and had to borrow largely oat of the street; but they borrowed In time to meet the demand on them. Ons bank, however, wee thorooghly cor nered, and admitted Its inability to redeem the balances against It le specie. When this became knoirn In general to the banker,, four of 'the strong ones volunteered to loan the cornered to ' stitation $400,000 in specie, through the means of which It Is said to be speedily gaining renew- ed strength. The Dank In queen= mu one of those established within a year or so, tbe Ilan. over Dank, which no doubt has been locking up Its funds in largo discounts' Its published state ments for September, and December, 1852, exhi bit no glaring excess In its movements. It has beep doing a fair bminess ; and from the large capital which it possesses, we should judge the corner to have been one created by too great con- Odense in the condoned ems of the market.— The difSculty is, for the moment, passed over, but it leaves a lesson of deep. Itopertenckto the community.—N. Y. Mere. Jaumat There sliest" to be more in the telegraph dis patoh received at Liverpool from London on the day of the sallies of tee steamer than we sop. posed. A letter from Meters. Brown, Shipley & Co. states that atoll a dispatch has been receiv ed; that the Bank hoe Issued the meal notice that loans on stock and other sufficient ser.uri ties will he made at 2 't) cenL No change in the disconnt rates is made. It would appear from this course, - and from the reduction of the rate in Exchequer bill, that neither the Bonk nor Gov emment look, for any continued or serious strin gency in money, but that the action of the Bank was adopted to cheek. speculatlon.—N. Trffi. floury CAM:O.—The chip " Bilerslian which arrived here yesterday from Rio de Janeiro, - H brought aeventy-one hundred and two bag' of coffee—a cargo that le said to be the- largest of . Its kind ever received at this port, and greater than any except one or two, ever imported late_ this country. The barque 'lit James" also ar! rived with forty-one hundred and forty-six bags —making a total of eleven thousand two hund red and forty-eight bags Imported into this place in one day. This is but adding another evidence to the many which have reocutlyoconered, of the rapid increase of oar commerce, and the .general growthof the city in prosperity. The extensive enlargement of the trade :of Philadelphia in the slug% artiole of coffee is shown by the following comparative statement: The total imports of this commodity in March 1851 woe. 8,001 bags. Ditto in 1862, was 9,772 Making an asgregate of seventeen thousand seven hundred and eeventy.three bags—while in only nine days of March of the present, year twenty-two thousand flit hundred and forty-four bags have been imported—being forty-erten ltan• deed and anealittscc,lngts 194r11 'alas Asp of Haab, 1858, inn the combined Importations in the nuns month of the two zest precedingyears. This certainly Is an immense inateue. Yet notwithstanding the greatly multiplied receipts, there is a less stook on hand at this point. The fact is attributoble to a very considerably aug mented demand for coffee - in this market by Southern and Western buyers—a circumstance that can be ascribed to no Other cause than our Improved facilities of iommueleation with the interior, and growing iibirit of enterprise on the part:of dealers, who now seem determined to make Philadelphiawhat it should, end eau, be made LB • point of--Import. We should add, In closing this paragraph, that other vessels are re ported on their way to this port with cargoes of coffee wblob will swell the whole imports for this month to twenty-live or twenty-six thousand bage.—Pdilo Nort rAme. A 8i611.1311 - 0; VIVI ♦ glI/MIL-6. lei days ago • large bear; owned by Die. Privet, who se aides on the Padualna, opposite Toronto (Cans• di), was shot In rather a novel manner—a com• moo osndle hawing been put In plate of a ball into the gun. The candle entered Immediately behind the ear, and almost Instantly deprieed the calms! of life. It was very fat, and was about 6years old. FOISION ITlNt.—DariDg the pest week Infor mation bad been received at •Lloyd's of the wreck of three chips with emigrant' to Anstra ile, with nearly 1000 passengers, all of whom were saved. The ships were the Sir Powell Buxton, lost off Paint Tabures, Rio Grande, Deo. 11; the Eglinten, Sept 8, near Preemantle, Australia, and the Expreal, date bleak, near Sidney. A new Company had bees -announced, under the name of the .93panish and Portagaue Sorer Steamship Company." Tlip hundred and fire reties were on the berth at the Brlthth home ports, for the Austre lien celottles, compiling 90,000 tons, with no scarcity of either paneogere or canoe". The Pharmeoeudeal Seedily had taken up the subject ofthe adulteration of American bird, end oat eubmlttingyarloae samples to analysis. A letter flom tlt .Petersburg states, that on the morning of the 26th ult. there were 487 c zoirts pitlooto la that oily.. In the course of ahadAy 1 1, Offliste gz aim eitiPti4. l /. 9 lltOlis end nem eas Wear Cour or Arerca.—By the Fasosiuk, Capt. White nevi from Betherst to Feb. 8 has beta reseied. The Favorite reports the U. S. ship John Ad s= at Bettis:teat, River Gambia, JILL 15 The John Adams had visited Garet, and sailed from Bathurst on the afternoon of the 16th last, for Bterra Leone.. Her resence on the coast bad been of mush benefit, se themselves far and near knew of ber arrival and being et Gore. and Bathurst Commander Lynch arrived at Bathurst on the 14th inst., in the English mall steamer Forerun ner, from London, and took passage in the John Adams for the coast of Liberia, A religious war woe waging among the differ ent tribes, the difficulty being about driuking— the being the !Statue Liquor Law and Mehommedan party, and those going for the fire water of the whites and heathen are the Mande goes, Berawellows, and the King cf Combo. Trade was much interrupted by the existing dif bonttiec. The King of Combo attacked the town of Bangs, contaieing some 4 000 inhabitants, on the 27d Deo , and woe repulsed by the klirabons with a loss of 17 men, the latter losing bat one man, and he • trader. His Excellency the Governor of lEllAM:int would take the matter In hand. A settlement of the difficulties might be expected.—N. Y. Jour. Com • ONE EfUNDEZD MILES FOll 110V11.—" A Milne Yankee" announces, through the National Intel- Ilgeneer, the Invention of a form of road and im proved locomotive, which, he says, will safely transport the malls and passengers at the rate of one hundred miles per hoar! The writer far ther says he has been made acquainted with the details of these improvements, "which are so palpably correct in theory, and feasible In prac tice, that every civil eogioeer and railroad man will, on examination, at once recognise and ad mit, Ls the desideratum, even to the extent of sifety and speed above Indioated." The next Congress, it is said, is to be invited to secure Its adoption, and give to the world the result of the first experiment A late letter from Paris, eaym—"A bears and more worthy tone is perceptible in the public mind In regard to the Empress. She rides out every day from three to five, and the four exits from the palace are all left open, that the peo ple may not know through which she le to pus. A division of the crowd is thus effected. She speaks English and French vernacularly, al- though Spaniel is her native language. The relations to be maintained by her toward her mother are tot fully understood. She bee not left Paris, and yet she his been at none of the fetes given to her daughter. She he appeared in public only' once eines the marriage—at the opening of the legislative melon." Nsw Foie. itimatos.—The New York QOM, Jourral eamthere are frequently not more than six persons preent at the week day iervieet of IMMO Church! Indiana has a moderato anti-liquor bill order ed to a third reading in the House by 68 yeasts 44 nays. 8111111D/01 KNOWI4II.—TaII well k1:101111anthor and actor recently left the stage and became a Deptist clergyman. It appears from statistical mums, published in the Annuaire dee Barean des Longitudes, that during the year IBM there were conramed In Paris 1,070,926 f. worth of. oyeters, which, at the average rate of 2f. 30a. the hundred, gives nearly seventy millions as the conenmption of the capital. The Charlatan Iferoury announces tha death of the non. Joshua J. Ward, who died at hts plan tation on Sunday from an *Gash. of parakysLe— He was in the 53d year of his age, and, was the the largest and most enceesafal rich planter In South Carolina. He was for many years a State Senator, aid at his death was Lieutenant Gov ernor of the State. It Is 'tilted that Comer Bell, alias Miss Brenta, was at one period of her life a governess In the family if Mr. Thackeray, and that the had that distiognialied author In her mind's eye when she drew the character of Roohester is •Jane Byre." Mr. Irving has been oeroupying himself daring a part of his visit with Mr. Kennedy, Sear start' of the Navy, In Waahingiou, with researches in the imblic offices, for his "Personal Memoirs" of the Fat her of his Country. Mr. Fillmore, eon of the ex.Pretident, it la will forms 6w partnership in the city of N. York, with a eon of Mr. Corwin. HANDSOIIi DOILTIOXL—Each inauranee coon pony in Mobilo hie agreed to donate $3OO- acne ally to the Fire Department of that city. We learn that contracts have•been made with Mears. Palm & Robertson, of Ude city, for the building of several LocomotiMmijo be seed upon the Ohio had Br. Louis Brpaqicen. .1154 - 01mnass, Montt The British ship Belmont, nearly loaded with 3000 bales of cot ton for Liverpool, 'took are this morning, arid was scuttled and - sunk. Alt the cotton in her wan either Ward or damaged. The American ship Maine, lying alongside, which had just commenced loading, took are in the rigging, and lia, slightly damaged. The Legislature• et Maryland have rejected the Air-Line .Itailroed propositio n , by a decided vote. The proposition thus stale condemned by both New Jersey sad Maryland, without whose toricurrecco it can never piano effect 11.0 A TKIIISPIILL—Iron will be the great ma terial for almost everything at the proper time. A company Is being organized at _Cloclunstl, 0., to pave the turnpike from the bead of Western avenue, at Brighten, to Cummlnerille, Spring Grove sad Carthage, With iron plates, Thealdes of the road will be filled in with grt, abdome n:tented with shade trees. The migration is good one, and will make 'he rood a fashionable "drive." The mother of the girl Corcoran yesterday af ternoon visited the house of Deleon Cuter In CharientoWn, and used all the persuasion In her power to induce her to renounce her faith. This Hannah would not do, and the mother left the prerciaes in &highly exuperated bum of mind. —Batton Bet of 9th. - gram Victoria, it Is Bald, le limited with an ides that As viii be driven from the - English throne by • revolution, and ii therefore Wrest ing largely in U. 8. INMETIIIIIII. it is new gild that the Baringe have purchased for her at leant half a street io the elty of New Totk. We learn from the Elk County Adeneate, that six fall grown Panthers were killed 14 that coun ty a for weeks eines. The largest measured thirteen feet from the point of the cue to the end of the tail. King Maximilian of BavarlkewhO4es lately been to Rome, In his Interviews with the Pope, declined kissing his hand, and only pildblax the ordinary civilities. The tournale deultinced him as half a Protestant, and the Boman bobles ob . ; „seated themselves from his loner. The Archbishop of Paris has publiehed a con demnation of the Univers neremer, - on hie an dimity as a Roman Catholic prelate.... He pro hibits all ecoleelastics from reading tier writing for it, and all religions communities In his die woo froM perusing it. Alexander Dames has fuoally arrangedhie ro mance of Ism Lagnedim so as to centime Its publication, without wounding the scloseptibill ties of the Jesuits. The new Territory of Washingtoniureated by b it the last Congress,. compriees that. of Ore gon which , lile Werth of the dein, Cohan bin elver, to when it croons the 46th ogre* of latitude, and Ulna alongefid degree laUtude to tho top of the Rocky Mountains. e had occupied by missionary stations, not Atieeding 640 acres to each, together with improtements, Is expremly eonfirmed to thlrMissionery Boole. ties respectively, which established the same.— Stations that were so occupied pea to the pat esge of the AM organising the Terntortf Ore gon, are aiso toiler:eked to the Boole which established them, evett though Limy 14140 oleo, been abandoned. . . TEM PULIZICT'S 011 SRO IIIMI) Srebs.-;-The DOW book on the United' States, by Phiois and Term Pnieskj is saaatmeedtheilloar nide, by th e Ws of White, !sok : Sketches of Booiety in the United Slate* =lug the visit of their Quit" A COXIIIIOIIOI/7 BILTIII Bfiss.—Tb• Middle town, Conn., silver mine boa rectally bawl sold for $50,000. It was bought about s yips ago for hum tbanssooo. ~.: On Bt.-Valentine ' s day 850,000 !attars 11, ed througb - the London Poet Office. 'The Crystal Palace, Net York, Is getting along slowly. The workmen have 'embed the third story; still they say they will hero It ready hy the day ppointed for cloning the exhibition. The Freeman's JoornaVof New York, claims for the Pope of Rome the following ektimeire limits The Pope of Rime., has rights,' that is, spiritual rights, and supreme authority In every diocese; and over every equate foot on this globe. His rights aro tiepin:ascribed only tithe ends of the earth, and" the „consummati o n. of ages." ; lifer= Sones..—At a late meeting of t' Par terre Club of Nei York, an amble was t don the subject of maple sager:Cud of Its so im portune as one of the products of out Co try,j By,the late MUMS m in appears thet the prairie. Coil of maple suga this country IA low was within • small Biwa= of thirty.tour telilleiut of pounds. An orchard of maple tress bas,bssa. fond almost equal, Nom for acre, with thosugar cans in producing sugar sad 00lasni, Park JUGGIIIO.-4110 Min Aly,lrko Wey manor a awor4:4l a Juggler's ealtdileo. Weeilegten oonty; lase , Veek, h file teem. de Onto of Qv iiipulgu/r7Mit- nu Your. Hirt The New York Journal of Camoacree nye:— The Acsa7ot3Spo about to beestablished in this city by virtue of an appropriation of $lOO,- 000 made at the recent session of Congress, will probably expand into a Branch Mint, and per haps will eventually absorb the mother Mint, now et Philadelphia. In the meantime, as an Assay Ofsoe, it i I produce en teapot tent change in the disposition of the gold dtist arriving here from California. Instead' of being eent to Phil adelphia for coinage, moat of it will be eent to the ' Assay Office here, and be cast into ban, discs, slugs and ingots, having a specified value, and being in all respects equal to coin se a legal tender. Blum Corns Tons.—We have collected from reliable sources, 'some item, of information in relation to the Important article of Coffee, which will not beiwithont interest b our readers. A well informed gentleman of Rio de Janeiro furnishes, under date of the 15th January, the following estimate with regard to the crop now in process of shipment: Escort. from let Auw. nut Dee, 1862,1,017.524 Wan. Do. from lst to lath January. 1t , 13, 100.767 " • , - Ptfok .t Rio On 15th January 10,000 toga. 1,121.121 Crop of low 1.0.450.000 bag.. of highland. 1.250.000 •• =Ell Th. crop of lowland I. atr f. Of Of the his bland crop or, boil believed to be left I. the ...try. .let CIT,OOO b.¢. Total supply which ean he eeeeetel from the peel eat , ' • •• Executor'' Sale of Real Estate'. \ \ - OON TUESDAY, March 15th, at 3 o'clock', \ : a..., on the neenatee. *WO 11361 hf onant . Of MessrslOwepb Collar; J. W. Hart. , end 31 walker., the foll=l6.l[ProW 6 tT:l ll tonl• In 6111.6 Ward. Via: Lot. et tbe eoener or•Yeberty sal Walnut Weye . tz.l3selng treat of 60 feet wsleberty Amt. and extending beet 103 feet to Winn alley. on .bleb le erected too 00100, and one Pam. twovetory DWY.LLINO,UO6I:III£.II. Alo e lot of gfound hselite about of 63 Wet en Penn latent, between • Walnut and Cellars etreete.w2d •extemelne but HO feet. - to 63_03nn alle4on whleb. la meted ett neck two stwy' , A `4: 52011L3 sad 1LL124(.6,110U311. Tersw.st • nine \ P. M. 136.3711.,Anetionenr. • ' "Ricks:kr Lbiet . to Lawren ‘ • ke and _ ',. . the Ceraudent., - \ \ '.. . lj olurespectfullYinforthea,that Ltieriatr i u l 41geaern si .24 MEW: Wm twatpu.. ' • by the ..Y..X0E681011 1.1511... mai that Inroad hete sod epbeedtd u51211110838:3 vitt I=oheitttel7 b. ten ' 1r the - real, fort salt=rit . and ...bops , l'=l . 4lZest ;Liam es. lab 44, en adia.turat -:. Itsabange Mee of Mr. ll•reisoehlett eritf be MI c a nt tra..7.1 ., i . : 4 lent ion ue=r ik - filint it \ .. sad the above ptoc. et JO i.e. shrt* Inte i snt ir g Fos t he ettictly Yen:rioted to t.?' / • AttL.t. ho \: ' er.'Lwilt beniated to p.m tb_ le _A Orli to l tb. to taste Me .Ezeehepr . • notelte7l7;' "\ oeseht•lnts end. may, be tasde, at the trlll. tee 4.6. to. - __... \ i lahttf '.I6EIZP/I . II,NOWDRN:, Amt' \ LONGit \ IicOLL ROMIE,6IGN,sTRairIOATAiii PAINT-ERF TIMID Mil; swim= ROOD I \ Too doors Ulm tto Book ter LONG lc Wevcriz, hit locote4 Mower., on tar or:oared ToUtting do tbo most rtaimottao tots. rootnotaci to tin thorn a tall. - MEDICINE,OLIESTS pet,,,,d Cum ": scurand they Walnut =DICERS .=M:2 suitable ter Wassabosta samtliss. t ty anterolltb tb• best Thelb, pinata* (or th e U. of the Illtstectulss._ Ecoliqmy itOtto Rod , ATO‘FANTLY - ehould be OrtiIIINS =SRAM pound &DM Itoralnal. artful, grnes I of Pltp. Dare. el.. Mt. bads? beads. giving It rift.. sad timer men faendlour. It \I. alsozuoro ul Preparedly tne crust nut, and tout.— num Areas: herds Cared Invigorating to to. _gold br J. P. D. HEATING. Dltn.burffb. uto II U. soannlosturer for the Dutton &alms. and to unmet Sudo.. soeoluptutuf with. Ms eash.orill meet wlth pro r s t d D Utters addreeson to,J. f. DALT! \ • Bps Lead, jest roo'd and i ItODISOS t CO. §EEDS, IIit'LEMENTS; FRUIT TRES! ancettarat v. sad Grass &eds. tar V ran' 11olictIng ' lthuixthrt=toosebrtria,. tba ". =a l Carraatt,litarptarrba Strawbrrttre.to.- am! bood Plante , Ma. Cutters, ,Ance boutas and abet .04 • lama attattlant of Ilardmatat la Ar a mats, ot tho latest improvalarstta. ' airman Ara ao el to eall and .taittioa the oatoat 1504 Bawer—far th.r. Clam. or Tondo. Torm arr , ,i t ter day imrsh Irlsb the gmttat awl aad ' ty, raring at Seed. Prial,“ 60, at tho tout troblentasat - Warettonta. lY Fifth gnat: att9 - A JAMS 3 WARDILOP.: §.OAPSWe just reoeilad-is largo. snarl:mug of FASIOS SOAPS, Wes IlromA Mask; Owr Go l do dl d d o o . .doD. d b lC h S A ce v A ez te i d ;d- 00. l d d o v . ar d 's Masous, Boom. limey Soap Sloont Soo: cluterli Mavis= boap:„ For sale bi L. WILCOX 100.1 qbv H.S.& Market Area aml Sadtatlekt. PRITNES-41.10, 1 5 -23. r- , ... t•ite•PMl•4 4M-et UK. Mist :D /M.* 'lf. Ra1814.4-ar.l. '1 • M..: . da. Tor talotr "N alnenrcEVllT. " : : Path flaw • MBE BIBLE HISTORY OF FW - R••••;.': With met , cal retteat..,by MarLe - A. Cloods16: II.". it: • for b 7: DAvi - Otis•0110W. luta 6sJiarkat stred.near fourt6. jakREFER' RED TO" ALL . OTIFEAS4:: - ..: • ratuut.., Dearmba 27, Int. • b. L 16.11.111tra—A nay a Dial of mini 7earl...4your Vertolfare. it ataada atmlyalled.aad eels la anheiren. to all °them Yaws, /le. • W. W. Trignascar. mum' atal sold by IL E. 8.114.1821. 65 Wood 44.4 and. by 1/nUttlala fa town sad Gauntry.. • . 11 6 00 P POLES -12,000 flour band Psleux, Med and by ilble by • ' A. RIPPVIT, ill Wager and.. SSOAP-60 boxes No. Soap, in store owl (wale by Data • J. A. EXPPLICC. WA: OATS— A° ' bus. Oats, in store and for side bl - lwta UZI/ t LIOGITT: A PPLES ; B°bb l tPPlesS te dana for .a tilkki Q, UNDRIES-25 hhde. N. 0. Sugar; ' ::,„ 1,7 400 this, N. 0.110144,0; g 001144. Lake Troutrlirj. ' 100 Wbll4 YU: 100 bt bbla , , do; \ 100 bf.bbla 60 bblr. tio. 1 841070 a; . 76 bbls: Yea York; sO bt bbla. s a, ra - Llabool 014 75 bbl 4 4 . 55411• &11.41 m. 50 " 'tkOnatur. . Paulsen 100 Arregg 114 Cloventld; ' 10" Elnttor.. 1000 bobpsi boona eb44oe;lo bat. do. 40.; %II bola Maori Nuts; i ben Mr? Palt e r, 10 ,torL.4 kr:ltt* - - 10611 1i0a.141 and. lia /nut stmt. • FLOUR—MIO bblz..Ans.huts, PoMoak & ban d; albs Ybibr, be ask by . cgla \ J. IL DILWURTII 4M. 13EARLA2II-10 casks prima - Pearlash, lb: .1. 1;7 & D11.1,031311-* CO.. sat WastatonO. ACON—_I2IMOO lbe. assorted•Bacton, in amoir-bac" lbanett at Um redaas4 rated.) sal sal. tarrat i 00. . 212 aod SIG Manx stmt.: LPs ON--20'oaaka Shouldm, store and ia, by• • BELL 41 140 01:27. oila \ .es sot TO Wooer ore. po n d - 1 8aLlk t : Should:re, in ilt 3a • Spring Goode. • arm ' •le EtIRCIIITELti - - e now opining. In= den 'Fork 'Philsig Ids. f . r=ttrid g irit= " ! "*" - • "1... 11/LB-400 b PTIEESE-40 4 :XF rhatie toruhe bi' mh7 DEARLISH-13 sails' fast quality, for W. Dr. 112E71 \\." lITMLY-11.001.011113. - Lnan--100 bhl4. and pt MU. Wtdta Ptab . lad trout.for N.Ey RCNAT U. MUM. BUT T 23 firkins Dirty Butter, for ma twin II){ AT IL count. ilj° P r in e!"ei.ltiLilizil''a!T CI RREN APPLES-50 met: p er uao : It DALZALL lM; • IILA atr "t. k .,-.„ : ,.:,.,-,-,„,,:: .: "., : ,,.•: E„•- ; . : ,.',.,.„, ■ b. 1141Markstriros Sellers' Vermifoze Oa•s, in store, for 118L4 k LIG° 161111111,—M 0011 .C I . t . Ci • • •No.2t TUS-214naks for sale b - .\\ \\ ‘; \ .- \\ v , , \