Ea= E=3:l , -•:-413,IDAT MORNING, APRIL 15,-18537 stipierlD.rNat MATTER WILL P6UNit ON EA WI PAGE OF THIS PAPER. r. ilaertwcma Wratt, Gest r yte.—The extetoshialro, lel= of our Weekly Gazetta open to intoliorlotoet ca. I=W, detrable natillaol riaklaq welt by tune known. - pore-L . :Walton le betveoll tar .4 fir* thottearti. teeth -124 eloort morr.7 and =mar in sod buten o . bl. • ;--- ADV gatl 4 tai—leith,,, Ls. Elitorial rtoolla nor Priorlak Cited/Ilehriaur or Lk , . DAtsi damn. ar. OSDe ADVEITISERB 'rho de - riro their kaiak tO ILDPaar In Thir paper an Monday morning n11101..a band tham In banns& d. lock. on Eatardat .ITanlni. DE MOCRAI I OI4.ILIG NOILLNATIOHB. . .. • 1 , 11 CANAL 003011ASrONNIA . 24038 3 - I'OATALL, Of Laxcuier County. ]) PaVA rtoN °LUAS. C. ' ALPir'3l.:llaC it VISE, Of Franklin Canty - . - I Y ICIVrTaIt ()BACILLI, outs 16N : SIEVERS. Of Cladm County. throonz OACCIC. —The 'Ohio and 'tedious Roil road company nave sppoictod a committee to ant Is sodas:non with a similar committee to be appointed by the Fart lysyue wed Chicago nom. • pitioy.• to endear, to get the other companies bo ' Aweenbiere sod' Philadelphia to agree to an uni - 'form gauge on the whole line. The 'committee Wlilrepair leziteediately to Pittsburgh and Ptitia delphls to fulfil their mission, and also to make '.'sierangtmento for terottof chanced= cf the ser i. teat Imes. The present gauge of the Pennsylvania Real. fiesolPatsbargn to Phltaduiphia, is 4 feet Bi io ,obilleP the 'Pennsylvania and Ohio Road from Plitiburgli to Crestline, is 4 feet 10 Inches, which I* thtrOhingorge: The Indiana gauge it teen 81 (caber,' sod the Chicago roads are the 'eerie:` It this shauld be Slopted, it would make -it-bitter for, annealing with the etverol esif foliar teetering et Fort Wayne and Chicago; tutaltlee amid be s great convenience -to preserve Siimibruken gauge dear through 'fetal , Waywe ' Weread the IthOTC suinouncement with regret. We 'Sere ha hopes that no attempt would be ,-Bade tp.oltaage the gang. of the Ohio and Penn -'liyivaida road, Jolt on the ere of Its completion. ..31*-Vad euppoied that the Ohio and Indium, Eort Wayne end Chicago Railroads were 'S`ta be "ciiiiistriioted on tho 4 feet 10 Inch gauge; erldelf would. hare given no a uniform gauge to . :Vidor; tut even if theyare not, and the 4 foot Atihich gauge Is adopted, we do not believe it Ie 01'49110y of the. Ohio and Pennsylvania road to • deny its gauge. 'Flieleiletineeinf a uniform gouge in long die • tances t to net of as mach importance ashes been inppeoed. It,ia not probabli that a single car, - , either for , passengers or freight; belcngiagto the . ..PettasYlvenbt &Inroad, would ever be perinitted • .:ta watt la Chiang°, tree were the gauge unl .. form. The line of that road Is so long, that It 'ls eleeidlogly difficult, even now,- to keep up a -7; ~. .prcipixlolstributton of care. There le a constant tettd_qpey for Oater to - accumulate at some ore Cr more filarial points; and it require, constant on. . .peralelon and great vigilance to regulate their 'dieteiblatiOrt`..-lethey were permitted to go off on 'to'clintant nal independent roads, the difficulty .Would ;became Insurmountable. • - Ilitebarglithe ileitis of the Pennsylvania road cratain freight Peourmerehants, for the river, and for Ylltiplls i0;11tII on the lake for Cleveland, A.t. - j.-forlYoolter and Mansfield, for Sandusky, etc, must of eeemeity be a distribution here, . 1111 Chlandens, a change of gauge a matter of no ' • tronseqUenete, - _ ' —T o - thol 7 b l Ohnd - Pentsylvaniallailroad it le a nratter of groat Importance ibatheegaugt should be the Oath. as that of the . Ohio! rnadaJ Care may be 'permitted to go off of the line to which they, belong for short distances, es from Pith,- balk tit':Cleveland; or from Pittsburgh to . - Beklitiort, ere. ;arrangements are ranking, el, . to eteisolidate,- for the purposes of rapid transit,' the Ohio and Penneylvailo, the field cad i r ttu6nr g b, s a d the Little Miami Rail *de. *ltte:cars are intended to run through direet. A. : Osage of guigOotald destroy all thile'strangemeats. Arguniii6.innitiply upon against a 0"04e of gauge but the' shovo.~ r - sirtitaie the Ohio ant Indiana, and the Fort Mims mid Chittago roads will adopt the Ohio ganger; • of , Cfeet It Inches.. Arrangements, can therrilitr, made fir the baggage care to run lispagb,and greatly facilitate a close alliance • between the - Companies; if they a. not, w e would net advise the Ohio and Penueylviele road to Change itsgange, oaken, such change is reolp ?Seal on - the part of all-the Ohio Railroads Coll .asetlog with 'lt There isonly once thieglWhich our Obio and ICI a friends have a right to . require of no, to give -them all the facilities they teed: That is $ railroad conneetiOn between the Ohio and Praneyleseis, and the Peonsylranis Railroads. :11fle - eonniction ought to be made without deley.: When this le done,lhe facilities for - the trans: :shipment . of paseengers and freight will be's° •,..iteat as to remove all eausesef complaint. We ,;,qtrustitte excellent Chief Engineer of, the Ohio and Peatutylranta Company, to whom the duty of mehigg the Eurasia, preliminary to a choice' rotate, will discharge that duty at the earl!- . est possible moment. The work ought to bawl under sonirael In time to have the pima of • bridge bnile !the coming Summer, and therq ' foie not a moment le to be 'oat. Thetis* Of this work ID lie cane of condi:nal complaint In the West; acid nffordeithe enemies of Pittsburgh . their moot weapon. ..de'the work Is re sale-ad on, and the money provided, Itshould go , On se expeditiously ad possible, as at the short est It Is st work ef.considerable time, OEIO :dal , - PCHNPiI'37,IIi - • tbotighitionew arrangements for running -the ibiiilthroughout rte whole length are not quite completed, yet the ioad is dotage splendid ba ' Ones. 3.11 its trains =lull of passenglw, and therzsraber of the latter" le contioutilly on the beerma. .14. Express .traln, yesterday, went end 7Sri.ften dirt °Liss earl full to oretflowing. tminet-freeineked themetirea op into a bad he 1:4 , 04ms sive ears were &aided.: MI were faulliideed tat - ono toothy gentleman, who badeotr.e tidier adder his charge, who would. not be.eaitdfled with any efforts to please him, and he Toe left behind. The uncommon rush el: pasis'imeeriieudered 1t impossible to supply ilt- , With every, accommodation they might de tire; but tho eondaetore and offmere of. the road are pitterne of politeness and gentlamanitbear ing, eta a - little &Girding to tolerable to call met thdr,stalled eftorts to acoomniodate and pry Cowan, still And it necessary, graolly to 410014 1,5,:s antatorc of their passenger ma, as nifty rainfall:m:4 supply will be too small for the *g• a 4 it fear•weeks. . • • Val - brit TZLtaiIAPITIO finnan'. AND Oirsarosts' .Couraitort. .Ellted by James D. Reid, if rbliadrlyble." This le g. quarterly publication, of :lime 100 yages s each number, agd InuodocCely plated. Its object as the ed. Itritells us, 3s b illaterate the history, to guard 'the sanotitr, to , teastiti - ths alms Ef the Tele graplieferte4eflimerlos,and to reader It war• thy, et the confolence and witch•eare of good roun'eVerivritere. .Idr. Itun_le yell calculated • fir the tie he heinadrritken. Bo has respoa• aide liteAry. quail:alio:ls, sad u thorough priatilitlknowledge of the whole system of tel . ; egroFhing. We Imre looked over the !lest num; terretltie Bellew with globate, and recommend tt to the *apparel ihe L vtl'ilw-etraesin Amiaman."—Thie is the tide erg Film, just cominensed in Cite eland, Dj Wie H. Day, a Waled Can of more than or dinary relerit. Ds title hillestes chars:ter . find .porpeee—munely, to 'vindicate the rights end altelide of tbat elites who aro aliens In our inidet.".althoezh horn epee dir soil. The paper la MU and we commend it to the favor, of these who sympathise with the color. d riee„' of the et:dread people themeless. rabihthediweehly, in Cleveland, 0., by Wm. H. Diy, At 11,0 per annum, in advance. • 11.• f . Ih i 0 y eet on et St. Louie wee the eieetlee of ttelienten eel:Mates (Hai) forlaier, sad 011/Abtrvator eendtdahes-sueds eed tritte Wet. ' , The 0011 gleest itte , riteat Nu :at tifreiktit l ;s 6l (R a . T4 7 targC. • ," - r 1•• 71 27:7710 NYOII • •- ea Yon : ; April l 12 ;1568. The town has been ell astir for the last twenty four hours withdumora of the settlement of Ex- Goy. blarcy from the Piorco Cab.uee. The sub stitaitlexter Judge Emmen for Mr. Dickinson,hoe very much troubled the rack and file who had raked the four quarter+ of town foe docil e:lents and influence available with Dickinson, but uselecs with the new mane The indecision Of Gen. Pierce, and the crowd of New York ex paotieste for the presidency, has already "the party" by the rare, and before election day comes they will be like the Kilkenny cats. Another new hotel is now talked of, to be erected open the fifth avenue, near Thirteenth sweet. The structure is to ho of iron, and, en Tumor me, the rooms era all to be fireproof. The new landlord is pi be Mr. Sanderson, of the College Place Hotel, and formerly of Philadel phia. The location of this house is tube in the heart of the fashionable part of the town, and its completion, which is to be acoomplishedin July. 1854, will elm us in possession of the most lama - mots hotel in the world. The printers have about cenaluded to strike for the arbitrary prices established by the "Prin ter's Union," end large losses Must be eubmitted to by the workmen, who are unable to maintain their position. A few offices hare yielded, but the large concerns that now pay their jouroey men Ilbeen dollars per week refuse to advance. Their men generally refuse to leave, and the lurnesmen will see the folly of their boar.. Already female labor has been sought, and we shall soon have an excellent force Of neat and decent compositors for day work, id place of a swarm of tobacco using, dirty, and indecent men, such an Gio many offices can now show. All cur public libraries have made arrange ments to move up town. The NeW York Society L beery, next in Importance to the "Actor," has taken rooms in the Bible Houle. The "Astor" ie nearly ready to open, and the Mercantile will anon be at "Astor Placa." A tow years only will S. before every thing but business will be haniehed above Eighth street, An attempt is on font to eel! the "Belot Church" in which Dr. Spring has perached for the past half century, nearly. It will command a quarter of a million of dollare, one-kaif of which the city claims as her share for allowing it to be sold. Pitt.burgti Giwittc in money affairs there is no change of conse quence. Capitalists and banks have no difficulty in loaning adh funds at full pricee,.withont at all leaseeleg the demand. In stooks there is no signs of activity, and speculation ID Col2fl/Itd to brokers alone. Exchange for the steamer which leaves Boston to morrow, was not active, end 914 was about the rate. Had the ship de parte.] here, the business would have been great er, but our merchants now regard the Boston *hips _as irregular, and make 'the New York steamer to the point open which they direot their labor. Next Wednesday specie will pro bably go hence, and to considerable amount. Our Legislature adjeurns to morrow, afterha ving.bovn of email advantage to the State. No laws of general Interest have been adopted, but the rest of the session may develops an extend ed crop of statutes. :The banks of this State will probably, be required to report every week, thus foreleg,them onto a most prudent coulee, and that is all A large and valuable collection of goods arri ved yesterday for the Crystal Palace. An at tempt Is being niado In a few obscure plseth to deerythls exhibition; but contrthutors need not be alarmed. :The bow will be all they or the country could desire, and will not be beneath the examination prEurtineatt visitors who saw the London exhibition. A cumeroUs party} of people who hare been unable to locate themeelvte seekers upon the show, grumble, bat the stockholders, (supposed to be a little iotereated,) are perfectly content with things as they are. Quite a number of Australian gold diggers are about starting from this port, but the nub doer not equal the California fluting. Canadians are the chief part of the diggers, and they are not Impetuous. The last new* from Australia iI.COL eo glowing as older advice!, and the ro mance hos been rather summarily dispelled by the stories of failure related. C. TITTLLIO Horsens.— i llpwards of 150 keepers of tippling houses hove been indicted by the Grand Jury at, the present term; a large mg:or .ity of whom, we presume, aro to be found in the . city and Its neighborbdod. The fact provokes the inquiry whether a lit tle more severity towards the keepers of theta hones is not required from car legal authori ties. It is plain that the =mare of punishment heretofore dealt out to them, has not bad the ef feat of restraining them; and it seems to tte that the Court will be jestifted Cot meting to all the convicted, is cues where there are no palliating elrcumstancee, the utmost penalty of the law. ' Forbearance, in this matter, is anything hut a 7virtutt evatotteserbeetowetket - belug al punishment, only serve as a tax equivalent to a moderate aseessmont for licence. Let the fines be heavy enough to be felt. • (inc other suggestion, in this commotion, is pertinent. It hes been stated, (and the state ment has never been denied,) that many persons, connoted of keeping tippling hooves, and sen tenced heavily, have been releases by the Coun ty Commieiloners, on giving their notes or duo bills for the amount of their fines andoosbe—the Commiesionore preferring this comae to the al ternetire of maintaing the guilty parties in jail. If this be legal, of course the Court cannot inter fere to • prevent it; bat we would like to have the question of its legality passed upon by that tri bunal. Without being understood to refit ct up on the motives inducing this course, we most condemn it ne tending directly tergjfie a legal immunity to the keepers of theioouses. Courts and Grand Juries will !Wee to-vain to uproot these acumen of. evil, If the offenders, when sentenced, can go scot free by giving their worthless due-bills for the amount of the fine, imposed upon'them. Let this practice be re. teemed, if. possible. COPPalt Brocze.- 7 The Berton Journal nye: ' , Copper mining• giros are creating the greatest excitement and while so many ele ments combine -to render inch stooks attrao tin, it is a feeling likelyto increase rather than diminish. The high price of copper, the great encores of several companies, and flatter ing prospecti of others, all of these things go to feed an appetite which grows more ravenous from week to week." Tiers is a stiong speculative tendency tawards investments in copper Stocks, ELLSO in New York. At thp onle made by 31r, Draper, on Monday, of 1200 shares of North Carolina Copper . Comps. ny's stook, a very large additional amount of stock could, hare been sold at the highest quotations: The Copper Ptookial the Min ing Baird In that city range at an gramme above floOse of any .other description of mine- The N. Y. Tribune of Tuesday nye: ~ A t auction, yesterday, Mr, Deeper eold 1,100 chu t e North Caroline Copper Co. at slo.slol. elating at sloi, uhiob is at advance of $1 60 at the loot public rale. After lulling 1,100 flares, harlog advertised only 900 shares, Mr. Dmoar anneusteed that he who authorised to bid slo} for &anther thousand eh►res, if any party wished to sill them." • Ten It=men arses MADIAL —The Mantas, husband and wife, wero released from prison on Tuesday, March 16, and were 'lmmediately smuggled en,beard the Prenob postaMce steam er Hellespont, which left Leghorn the next mor ning for Marseilles. They were not allowed by the rumen authorities talocomunloste with any of their friends, end wo rd sent an board very thinly clad, not being even permitted to take some clothing which was waiting for them at the hotel. Bome English gentlemen, learning their .dratitute eltuatton with regard to clothing, sant them some.. A correspondent writes to the Lon. don Times that Ross MOW appears a very In telligent and Interesting woman, bat the mind of her poor hatband is apparently gone. This Is no doubt mainly to be attributed to the many privations he has undergone. They aro travel. leg under the emoted name cf Fettucine and Roes Pauline, and were not allowed to land at Marseilles before the Tnecon Consul bad 0001- maniested.irith them. They are uncertain as to their inter. movements, bat will, no doubt, sooner or later visit England, to whose power ful 'sympathy and interference they are print!. pally indebted for their liberty. The Rev. The. Bleeman, British Chnplaln at Leghorn, writes, of date 17th tat:— .)to reportiof the 111 heal& of Francleno hia dtat bare reached England, his friends will ho plod to learn that (though still feeble.) ho le much Improved,: and I halo no doubt but that a few - wroke of freodo:n wilt perfectly resters him. I grieve ' however, to add; that bit mind ap pears to be greatly ahaken. The Iron hoe en tered into bit soul; and Ina protracted conver sation I. had with blot yesterday, I aleoernod, with palm many unmistakeable symptoms of meaterdisease, which afford ground for great apprehension. Emus Medial la well, and bee mind (no all who Anon her can testify,) it siren mere vigorous than her body. DWI is 6 toonotto who commands olio respect 66 well 00 *tattoo in rltzp!tiiy,. of In Who have the prlellege .0' cow yens with her. The ;bane procanloin of Ono moot laterutiag ttcoplo to to yet two onaio, 44 tboy ban( been bunted 'away from Vona, without tootle.* met with the greateat searilnyt but tbq room enaoila Lox at Maneillew until how. efscrojt boatels wo4lstrtath are notorod." ' '6 KEY trarcrz TON'S cnini This lons foe - wall is reviewed In the New York Tribute cf Monday, and long egfrante from the wort to gireii, The Tribune soya the Key Elaff°, •that ea fat frog exaggerating the hideous fstatorrs which site deacribes, Niro. Stowe might have iiranced :the picture by far deep er shades of cruelty and oppression. The facts and documents en which the story is founded are here set forth. The truthfolneee of the wtrk is confirmed by striking collaterial evidence, from n ve.riety of sources." - The Tribune giver the folltreleg general de ecription of the work. In addition to the main topic of the work. ex plaining the materials of the plot of "Coele Teen's Caine," H containeo folPdisecteelon of the legal relations of slavery, the domestic slave trade, and the influence of the knerioan Choral? on Slavery. the details of the volume positess a profound interest. They are marked by adrui , ruble seam, as well as by deep and earnest feel ing. Ira treating the rabject, although the words of film. Stowe often scorch to the bene,l.she dealt, lees in dsnanciation then in tette. Tble is one secret of her porter. She never mated spirit, .but always pre -Ferree the Christian tone of tenderness toward the uphold ers of the worst eystems Her eller-pest arrow's see winged with love., Of all modern reformers,. she le the most faithful to the del:undo' of Cktie• tine e.harity nod justice.' She looks to the eXer oise of religions principle in legislation, andie stela( customs, as the meet effectual means rev the rethoral of the evils which she combats-- Her appeals to the Church may perhaps leave a sting in the hearts rf many, as a diseased spot is touched, while elect no doubt will be pro voked to 'erpentanee and quickend to a now lifer by their Vera bat wholesome agency." 'VEOtake a few of the extracts copied into the Tribune, to give oar rettlers an Inkling of what it to ccmo in tyleacce of the mention of the took: P/OTOTITO Cr ocanar, BAIIBI3. - . With regard to the incidents of George . Har ris' life, that ho may not be supposed a purely exceptional case, we propose to offer 'Me par. allel facts from the lives of blares of our person• al acquaintance. Leiria Clark is an acquaintance of the writer Soon after his escape from slavery, he Wil ro ceived into the family of a eisterdia-law of th author, and there educated. Hid conduct do ring this time was such as to win for him en common affection and respect, and the lathe has frequently heard him spoken of to the high est terms by all who knew him, The gentleman in whose family he so long re. sided, Gays of him, in n recent letter to the wri. ter, ' , I would trot: him, no tha saying le; with untold gold." Lewis is a quadroon, a fine looking man, with European features, hair elightly wavy, and"with an intelligent, agreeable expression of emits- name. The reader Is now desired to compare the fol lowing incidmts of his life, part of which he re. toted personally to the author, with the Men de:as of the life of George Barris. Hie mother was a handsome quadroon woman, the daughter of her master, and given by him in marriage to a free white man, a Seotcbman, with the express understanding that she nod her children were to be free, This engagement, if made sincerely at all, was never compiled with. Ms mother had nine children, and on the death of her hneband, cacao book, wits all these chit dren, as slams In her father's house. A married daughter of the family, who was the dread of the whole household on stoma of the violence cf her temper, had taken from the family, upon her marriage, aSong girl. By the violence of her above, she Von reduced the child to a elate of idiocy, and then came imps riouly back to her father's establishment, de Blaring that the child was good for nethinx, and that the would have another; and so poor Leerier, evil 'ter would have it, laud her eyes . upon him. To scald me of her terrible outbreak, of tem per, the family offered up this hoy.s a pacifica tory sacrifice. The incident is thus described by Lewis, in a published narrative: 'Beery boy was ordered in, to pass before this female sorcerers, that she might select s victim for her unprevaked malice, and on whom to pour the vials of her wrath for yeari. I was that un lucky fellow. • Mr. Campbell, my grandfather, oljentid, because it would divide a family, and offered her Meece; • • • bat objections nod claims of every kind wore ,ewept away by the wild passion end shrill-toned voice of Mrs B Ma she would have and time else. Mr. Came bell weal out to hoot, and drive sway bad thoughts; the old lady became quiet, for sne was sore non, of. bee blood run in my veins, and, If there woo soy of her husband'e there, it was no fault of here. Blaveholdoog women are always revengeful toward the children of slaves that have any of the bleed of their husbands in them. I was too young—only seven yeara of age—to underatand what was going on. Bat my poor and affteasne,terietatbstancalmatoonoradaPPrea.',, it all: -Tlsen she. left the kitchen •of the ramialen tebuma where she 1/0.11 employed as cook, and came home to her own little cottage, the tear of anguish was in her cyt, and the image of nar row upon every feature 'Of her faze. She knew the female Nero whose rod wee now to be over me. That nightettep departed from her eyes With the youngest child clasped firmly to her bosom, ohs spent the nightin walking the floor, coming CPU and coon to lift up the clothes stud look at me and my poor brother, who lay sleep ing together. Sleeping, I said. Brother slept, but not 1. r I mar my mother when she first came to me, anidl could net sleep. The vision of that night—itslileep, Ineffaceable impression—is now' before my.mind with all the dhstinotates of yes terday. In the morning I was put into the car atop, with Mrs. B. rand her children, and my I weary pilgrimsge of' suffering wan ay be- I gun.' _ Mrs.lnton is a charnoler that can °alp taint where the laws et tho land clothe with absolate power the coarsest, most brutal nod violent tem pered, equally with the most generous and ha. mane. If irresponsible power is a trial to the virtue at the most watchful and careful, how feet must it develop, cruelty In those who are naturally -Meat and brutal! Ws women was united to a drunken huaband, of a temper equally ferocious. A recital of all the physic:l torture which thin pair contrived to inflict en a hapless child, aome of which him left ineffaceable marks en hie pardon, would be too trying to humanity, and we gladly draw • veil over it. Borne Incidents, however, are prevented lathe ,following extraeti: "A very trivial offence was eufftelent to eel forth a great burst of indignation from this wo man of ungoverned passions. In my simplicity, I put my lips to the fame vessel, end drank out of it, from which bar children were accustomed to drink. She expressed her utter abhorrence of each an net by throwing my head violently back, end dashing Into my face two dippers of water. The shower of watt: was followed bye heavier shower of Ear; but the words, bitter and 'cut ting, that followed, were like a edorm of hall op en my young heart. ' , She would teach me bet ter manners than that; she would lot me know 1 was to bo brought up to her band; she would have one elan that knew his place; If I wanted water, go to the spring, and not-drink there in the hence." This was new times for me; for some days I was completely benumbed with my nor. row." * ♦ . *** e* "If there be any one no lost to all fneling.an even to any that the slaves do not suffer when familua are separated, let each a one go the rag ged quilt whlett was my notch and Inflow, and stand there night utter eight, for long, weary hours, and ere the bitter tears crowning down the face of that more than orphan boy, while with halt suppressed nights and 'sobs be cans again and again on pie absent mother." irvlthon then, urrticmi of tbe tearer Jibed? 1/0 1,,, .7 1 in7 ,7 - 7 1;;7:areiry,V.74;k7a s art . If rekti even Vien , ore's jeatm: Jut boom." He was employed till late at night in spinning flax or rocking the baby, and called at a very early , boar in the inorclog; and If he did not east at.tbe first 0 , 121¢10113, a cruel chaetisement was imp to fallow. He sayal "Such horror bus totted me, lest I might not bear 'the first shrill call, that I tiara often in dreams fancied I heard that unwelcome voice, and have leaped from my couch and walked through the house and out of It before I awoke. I base gono and care other slaves, In my deep, and slaked the if they did not beat- mat• ter call.' Never, wh .0 I lire, will Oho remem brance of these long,•bittor nights of fear pose from my mind." . • Ile adde to this words which should be deeply pondered by those who lay the nattering =nen to their souls that the oppressed do not feel the aundering of family ties. ...13nt ail my severe labor, and bitter and cruol putiehmenta, for these tea years of captivity with this worse than drub family, all these were as nothing to the • Buffering' I experienced by being separated from my mother, brothers and Risme; the same things, with them near to sym. paddle with me, to hear my story of sorrow, would have then comparatively tolerable. "They were distant only about thirty miles, and yet, in ten long, lonely years of childhood, I was only permitted to sae them three times. "My mother °coati on ally fond en opportunity to used me sane CArn of remembrance end affection—a eugarpf uni cr an apple; but I scarce ly over ate them; they were laid up, end hand led and wept over, till they wasted away in my hand. illy thoughts continually by day, end my dreamt by night, wore of mother and home; end tho horror experienced la the momlog, wh s n : y sleek° and behold It was a dream, le beyond the power of. Linage to.desoribe." L o is beg a beautiful sister by the name of Dells,-who, on the death - of her grandfather, wee gold, with ell the other children of hie moth. Inutipli dkidlag th e estate. Eike sp• , o Aim girl; amember of timß spited chink Sin Iral into tho hand, of brutal; drunken maw; whi wished ti make her Me COLetteell, yfitton Clark, a:brother of ;Awls, is the nairstir' °ibis hfe deeeribes the !cane where he, with bismuth er, mood et the door while thin gist was brutally whipped before it for wishing to conform to the principlett of her Christian profeselom Asher rovilnHen wee unconquerable, she was placed in aide tad seat dower* the New Orleans. mar. ket. Here the wee eold to a Frenchman, named Coen'. He took ber to Alexia°, emancipated and married her. After residing come time in France nod the Weet Indies with him, he' died, leaving her a fortune of twenty or thirty dimmed del. lore. At her death ehe eudenecred to IMP) thla by will to parchsee the freedom other brothirt;* but aa a !lure cannot take property, or even hare it left in trust for him, they nerer received any of it. Saveral originals, it Beane, served to Bugged tho portrait of VIOLA TOM. The character of Uncle Tom has Nen objeett4 to 59 improbable, and yetthe writer tae rent?. ed more conlirmstions of thee chanter, and from ,a greater variety of eulorees, than of any other in the book. Many people have said to her, of. know an Uncle Tom In soak and such a Southern fltate.". all the histhries of this kind which have thin Jinn related to her, wosild of themselves, if ed. looted, make a email volume. The author will relate a few of them. While netting In an °beam° . town in Maine, in the family of a friend, the eonvereation hap• pened to turn upon thie aubjeot, and the gentle. WWI in wheee family eke VW : staying related tee , following: He maid that, when on•• visit to Ws brother, in Now Orleans, come years before, h, found in his poise:Won a moat valuable negro man, of such remarkable probity and honesty that his b rother literally trusted him with all he I had. He had frequently seen him take oat a handful of Mils without looking at them, aid hand them to his 'errant, bidding him to go and provide. what wee necessary for the family; and bring him the change. He remonstrated with hie iuother on this imprudence; hot the latter' replied that he had had suet proof cf this ' vant's impregnable conscientionsnees that it folt it eafo to trust him to-any extant The hiatory of the servant was this. He had belonged to a man in Baltimore, who, having a: general prejudice against all the religious ex-. erclece of elareit, did all ho could to prevent hie having any time for devotional duties; and' strictly forbade him to real the Bible and pray, either by himself, or with the other eerrante; and because, like a certain man of old, named Daniel, ha coaetantly disobeyed this undulatien edict, hie master Inflicted upon him that punish ment which a master enrage hay In hie power to inflict,—be sold him into perpetual exile from his wife and children, down to New Orleans. The ger:Samar' who gave the wilterthis in formation eve that, although sot himself's en listees man at the time, he was eo etntek with the man'e piety that he said to hie brother, hope you will never do any thing to deprire this man of his religious privileges, fur I think a judgment will come upon yen if you do." To this- his brother replied that be should be,rery foolish to do it, dace he had made np hie mind that the man'e religion was the root of hit ex traordinary excellences. - - A kit instance inrallel with that of Uncle Tom is to be found in the publiatied memoirs of the venerable Jotiab Hermon, new, as we bare raid, a clergyman in Canada. He was "reined" in the State of illarylsod. His first reroutes. lions were of seeing his father mutilated and covered with blood, suffering the penalty of the low for the crime of rehiring his hand against a white raw:l.—that white man being the overseer, who had attempted a bettud assanlt upon. Ur' mother. This puniatiment made Isla father ear ly and dangerous, and be was subsequently sold south, and thus mime t forever from his wife and children. Henson grew op in a state of heathen ism, without any religious inetruction, 1111, In a camp meeting, be first heard of Josue Chrie and was electrified by the great ;and thrilling neon that He bad tasted death for orrery man, the bond as well aa the free. This; story prodocod an immediate conversion, each as . we read of in the Acts of the Appetite, where the Ethiopian eunuch, from one interview, hear. ing the story of the crone, at once believes sod is naptized. ileneon forthwith not only became Corietiatu, but began to declare the news to those about him; and. being a man of great tha enrol force of mind and strength of character, his earneet endeavor.; to enlighten his fellow, heathen were so euccessfel that he wee gradual.' ly lad to assume the station of a negro preacher-, acid Mooch be could not res.] a word of the Bi ble or hymn book, his Inhere in this line were much prospered. lie became immediately a' vary valuable Cue to his roamer, and. wee in trusted by the latter with the overelght at his whole amuse, which he managed withgreatjudg. men: tied - prudence. His master appears to have been a very ordinary man in every respect—to have been entirely incapable et estimating him. rlarany ash* lipfievitlezhas teutreriatrglretatralile' property,sail to hare had no other feeling excited by hie extneratinary faithfulness than the de sire to make the mom of him. When hie affairs' became embarrassed, he formed the design of removing all hie negroes into ,Kentucky, and in trusted the operation entirely to his overseer.— Hemet% was to take them alontorithout any other attendant, from Maryland to Kentucky, a dis tance of some hundreds; of miler; giving only his promise es a Christian that he would faithfully perform this undertaking. - On the way thither they passed through knee lion of Ohio, and there Henson was informed that ho could now seonre his own freedom, and that of all his fellows, and he was atrongly urg ed-to do It He was exceedingly tempted and tried, but his Car - laden priocipic was invulnera ble. No inducements could lead him to feel that it was right for et Christian to violate a pledge solemnly given, and his Influence over the whole band was re great that he took them all with hint into Kentucky. Toone casuists among as who lately seem to think and teach that it is right for as to violate the plain commands of God whenever some great national good can be secured by it, would do well to contemplate the inflexible principle of this poor slava, who, with. out being able to read a letter of the Bible, was yet enabled to perform this most gublime ant of self.rernmelatioa in obedience to its commands. Subsequently to this, his moister, In a relenting moment, wee induced by a friend to sell him his freedom for four hundred dollen; but, when the excitement of the lmportenity had paned off, he regretted that he had suffered so valuable a piece of property to Into his hands for io light a remuneration. By an =worthy artideta therefore, he got postioesion of hie servant's free papers, and condemned him still - to hopeless slavery. Subsequently, his affairs, beocutiogetlll more insetted, he sent hie eon down the fleet with a flat boat loaded with cattle and produce for the New Orleans market, directing him to take Henson along and sell him, after they had sold the cattle and the boat All the depths of the negro'. soul were torn up sad thrown into convulsion by this horrible piooe of Ingratitude, cruelty and injustice; and, while outwardly °Mgt he was struggling with most bitter temptations ' from within, which, as he could not read the Bl hie, he could only repel by a recollection of Its emend truths, and by earnest prayer. As he neared the New Orleans market, be says that these convulsions of Soul increased, eaperiagy when ho met come of his old companions from Kentucky, whose despairing connteiatess and emaciated terms told of hard work and IninZ- Mont food, and confirmed all his worst !Dare of the loner country. In the transports of his des pair, the temptation was more urgently present-' I ed to him to murder hie young master and the other hands on the flat boat in their sleep, to' seise upon the boat, and make his °nape. He thus relates the evens where ho was almost brought to tho perpetration of this deed. i - Orte•dark;thiny night, within - a few days of Nei Orleans, my hear mimed to have I was alone on the deck; Mr. Amos and the hands were all asleep below, and I crept down noiselessly, got hold of an axe, entered the cab. ' in, and, looking by the aid of the dim light there for my victims, my eyes fell upon faster Ames, who was nearest to me; my hand slid along the axe-handle, I raised it to strike the fatal blow— whoa suddenly the thought came to me, "What commit murder/ and you-a Christian 7" I had not called it murder before. It was eeltdefence, —it was preventing others from marderbm me— lt was justifiable—it was even praiseworthy:_ Ent now, ail at once, the truth bunt upon me' that it was a crime. I was going to kill a young man; who had done nothing to 'Notre me, bat obey commands which he could not resist; I was about to lose the fruit of all my efforts at felt Improvement, the distracter I had acquired, and the peace of mind which had Inver deserted ma. All this; came upon me Instantly, and with a dna:nets which made me almost think I beard , It whispered In my ear; and I believe I ' Alen I turned my head to listen. I shrank back, laid' down the axe, crept upon deck again, and thank-' ed God, as I have done every day since, that I I Ind not committed murder. feelings wire still , agitated, bat they were changed. I was filled with shame and re. mono for the design I had entertained, and with , the fear that my companions would detect It in my face, or that a careless word would betray my guilty thoughts. I remained on deck all night lasted of ronsiog ono of the men to ee -1 sere me; and nothing brought compeller* to my mind but the solemn resolution I then made to resign/myself to the will of God, and take wide dui:daubers, If I could, but with submission at ail areas, whatever he might decide should be my lot. I reflected that if my life wet. motioned ' to h brief term, I ehould have leis to suffer, and that it wee better to die with &Christian's hope, ' awl 5 gad conscience, than to Ilse frith the in cement reeelleetioa of a crime the 'would de stroy; the valet of life, and under the!weight of a nearet that would - wash oat the mitiefeedou that might bo expected from freedom, hod every other bleating." .. •, Batmequentiy to. tble, hhryoims aleter wee . . . taken:violently down -with the river fever, and: i " became aslelplese as a child. He pasalocatelill esiircatedlisaeon not to desert him, but to at tend to the selling of the boat and produce, and pat him on board the steamboat, and not to leave him, dead or alive, till he had carried him back to his father. The yeang.router was borne in the arms of hie faithful servant to the steamboat, and there nursed by. him with uneemittingattention daring I the journey up the river; nor did be leave him 1 till ne had placed him in his father's arm,. ' The following brief allegory may serve as a epecimen of the puppet appeals with which kin. Stowe seeks to atonee the conscience of • tho American Church, Suppose a fire' breaks out in the streets of II isto3, while the . regular conservators of the city, who have the keys of the flee engines and the regulation of fire companies, are sittiog to- Igether is soma dirtiot part of the city, consult ing for the pablio good. The cry of fire reaches them; bat they think It • false alarm. The fire is no hue real for all that. It barna, and rages, and roars, till everybody In the neighborhood Bees that something must be done. A few stout leaders break open the doors of the engine houses, drag out the engines, and begin, regu larly or irregularly, to play on the fire. Bat the . destroyer still &deuces. Messengers come 13 hot haste to the hall of these deliberatars, nod in the utkeeleet language of fear end ter ror, revile that for not coming out. . "Bless me!" says a decorous leader of the I s bidy, "what horrible langusge these men use!" "They . ehow a very bad spirit," remarks ano thet; "we can't paeribly joie them 4 ..in sash a stem of things." • Here the more energetic members of the body rush out, to sea if the thing bo really so; and in s, raw minutes come book, if poseiblo more ear neat than the other,. "01 these is a fire I=As horrible, dreadftd. fire! Toe city is burning—men, women, children, all horning, perishing! Come out, come one! As 'the Lord 'teeth, there is but a step between us 'and death!" - .t , "1 am not going out; everybody that goes gets eiWV." says one. 'irve noticed," says adither, "tilat. as so on a anybody goes out to look he gots list no excited —I won's look.'! .' But by thistinte the amity fire has burned in %d Iclr very neighborhood. The red demon 'glares into their window!. And now fairly arous ed, they got up and begin to look out. "Well, thero..ii a fire, find no.mistake," nye one, N3ontothing ought to be dew," eays another. "Yee," Cali a third, “If it wasn't for being mixed up with emelt a orcrwd and rabble of folks I'd go out." "Upon my word," says another, .there are scowls to the racks, carrying palls of watert— There, one women is going up a ladder to get those children out. What an Indecorum t If they'd manage this matter properly we would join them." And now come !timbering over from Charles town the engines and fire companies. "What impudence of Charlestown," say these "men, "to be seedlog over here—just as if we could not put our own tire out. They have fires over there, as much as we have." And Dow the flames roar end burn, and 'hake buds across the streets. They leap over the f teeplee and glare demoulsoally out of the church windows. "For Heaven's nke, do something!" Is theory. "Pull down the homer! Blow op those bloke of mores with gunpowder! Anything to stop la" "See, now, what ultra, radical measures they are going at," Aye one of thee. spectators. Brave men who bare rushed Into the thick eat of the fire, come out, and fall dead In the treat. "They are Imprsotioabis snatislasts. They b►ie thrown their lives sway in foolhardiness," nye sootier. 3c, Church of Christ, barna that 'idol fire! Evermore braving, burning, horning, over church aad altar; bumble over senate-house And forum; burning op liberty, burning up religion! No eara'y bends kindled that tire. From !Unmet. el flame sad wreathi of sulphurous smoke glares out upon thee the eye of that lIIMMT who murderer from the beginning. It to a are - that anima ro roe wiser _ . Church of Chnet, there woe an hour when this fire might have been extiornietted by thee. Now thou 'wildest like mighty man astettishod—llke • mighty man that cannot arm. Bet the hope of Israel to not dead. The Baylor thereof In time of trouble la yet alive. If every church in cm laud were hung with mourning—if every Christian should pet on sack-cloth—if "the priest eheuld weep between" the porch nod the altar," and ny, "spare thy people. 0 Lord, and give not thy heritage to re. prosobi"—that were not too great • mourning for such a time as this. 0, - Chnrch of Jesus ea:alder what bath been mad in the =Mat of thee. What a heresy hut t4ou tolerated in thy bosom! Thy God the de. raider of Slavery l—thy. God the patron of slave -1111,0 hsWirdwred aturrutesofeby to be slandered I Thee but suffered false wtt. nem against thy Redeemer and thy Eturetiller. The Holy Trinity of Heaven has been foully tra duct in the midst of them and that God wheal, ' throne Is awful in juelice hse been made the pa tron and leader of oppression. This IS a sin against every Christian on. the globe. Why do we love and adore, beyond all things, oar God? Why do we say to him, from our in most emit, "Whom have I in Heaven, but thee, and there la none upon earth that I desire beside thee?" la this a bought-up worship?—is It a cringing and hollow anbierviency, became he Is great, and rich, and powerful, and we dare not do otherwise? His eyes are a flame of Fret—be reads the Inmost soul, end will accept no such service. From our souls we adore and love him, because he la holy and just and good, and will not at all-acquit the wicked. We love him be cause he is thy father of the fatherless, the judge of the widow;—because he !Meth all who fall, and ralseth them that are bowed down. We love Jesus Christ, became he is the Lamb tritAcut spot, the one altogether lovely. We love the Ho ly Comforter, became be comm to conduce the world of sin ' and of righteousness, and of judg ment. 0, holy church universal, throughout all countries and nations! 0, ye great cloud of *Humes, of all people sod language& and tongue& l—differieg in many doctrines, but unt ied in crying Worthy to the Lamb that was slain, for he has redeemed no from all Iniquity!_ aerate—min not silent! Testify against this heresy of the Latter day, which, if it were pcsalble, I. deceiving the very elect. Your God, your glory, la slandered. Answer with the voles ofmanylwatsrgand,lnighty then:der/legal Answer with the innumerable multitude of heaven, who cry, day and night, holy, holy, holy! jest and tract are thy ways, 0 King of saints!" • The editor of the Surthern Patriot dined at Washington not long since with Mr. Corwin, the Secretary of the Treasury, and reports come of the convereation and piquant eavlnya of the "in. imitable Toth." The following Is In reference to the Abolitionists, • clue that Corwin used to oonst meet, aseldoottely in this quarter of the world, when their votes were wanting 4o Ewell or make Whig =Prides. "Be said they were a whining, canting, pray; log eat of fellow', who kept:regular books of debt and credit with the Almighty. : They would lie and dent all the week and pray off their mins on Senday. If they could steal a De, pro. that made a very large entry to their credit and would cover &multitude of peccadilloes and, fraud.. Thirsart of entry they were always glad to make, because it cost them nothing. When. they could not steal s negro, they gave some. / thing in charity and for the extension of the Gospel, and then commenced a eyetem of hada and cheating till they thdught they had balanced accounts with their God:" Thetis the way ' , old eland-byeearo sow spo ken of by a politician who hoe receired as nartob Isror at their hands as shy living man. - Mr. Corwin le understood to bare purchased property in Kentucky, *bore Loolsrillo, for the purpose of a residence, which, if tree, may so. olunt for there y flippant, not to soy uojast, re tleitions he bestowe on his old frienda—Cia. Eng. The editor otthe Southern Petrlot,by publishieg the table-talk:of a gentleman whose hospitality ho wee enjoying, has shown himself to be a gen uine, unmitigated blaokeuard; and the man who made each comments as the above, upon a con versation so obtained, If he RAI not naturally liko unto him must have let his partizan malig nity expel the feelings of a gentleman from his breast, and completely blind him to all the pro prieties-and anemias of soolety..—Cin. Go. rata. Our Plltsbirgh neighbors are anxious to know bow we are . progresslng with the "Pittsburgh and Steubenville Ralisead." we will inform them that the attention of the citizens of this plUe, Is more partianbtrly directed towards the Bthubeeville and 'lndiana Railroad, which we purpose baling completed to Newark, 0, • die tatiee of 114 miles, by the first of January next It to expected that the Pitteborghers will take Interest enough informing a connection with the Ste'ubenville road, to have it completed to this place about the same time. Ale that Is the part, and a email portion of the great work allotted to Pittsburgh; Steubenville expecte her to have It completed promptly, rep/dies, of the "Pan Handle." obstruction. which has caused so much commotion: throughout the "Old domin ion."—Strub. Her. th• Baustoyegtirday • letter from Mr. Soule, resigning his seat In twat body, vas reed, he having snoaptod the appointment by the Pont! dent as Minister to Spelo.—Ryoubtir, 12th. GOT. Eleyossur, of Ne■ York, has determined ape eallteg an extra session of the Legislature, and tine rent to to. :message ressmniending speedy notion In Wanes to the srolsrgensont of the caulk • • Dv...Wants! Woluts!!-,A great many learoed thallen hue brat written: es - pleb:Da tbe nano of. sad dui:Vying, the Worms generated to Oh. bunter anus. Scarcely any ana of Iledkal imbue hat .Molted mon acute obeenattra and profound ruemeh, and yet Mantaaa are eery malt divided la opinion on the rub. Jett It matt be admitted. bourn, that alley *IL a mode of topelban there Worm*, mot bumf:lag the Ind/ from thee prenoes, la of more talus Mut the Irina rib , . IlanWad as to as origin Tber‘ , retillag agent boo at length boa trentd.—Dr. ICLamis inuelfutu it the Taub =ugh , aner Menne. and has alrudy seperaled all other Worm llrdlefnes. Its eftlanyiet:g naturally acknowledged oy pratlticoe for sale by all dmiggisa .4 ma ul to tout. ad coatu, ad wheleale sod retell by the sole promietors, J. KIDD ft CO. fd*ocd street. Ler BURKE & BARNES' SAFES.—Rere L. the kind of testtromy a* to the Talus of or BAYBS, upon which we am conniently root the menu nof our. work. We hare already publish */ a at th. wro. M W ot oe made for oar Impalas and miner/ 1 / 4416,,, .mles, mad mold *brad. hose Been sobjectedth e,, the ST SEVERE TESTA pr ACITIIII. OONYLAtiIiATI ‘7B. end preserved theft contents following tots/17 fr . Nollll dwl./.17. The llowing Is another groat of the i ineontallab \ chanatert— sio,ooo *a= OP Boon urn, rams SAVED WITH A $4O sank ALBION. Ens Cloinkr. PA} linernsrilmas A Bssass—DeoNl . 7 brn , To!gt . i tlt jeuers ..n duly rewired. I ono absent st the tuble.. qould Prr&F."lrtl aralrf . J.Z,VgrUVZ4.ll. %it mmoutg of iluf., Itch ot June laer—my eon built 00l of named to saw. IL was built of wool an/ brie U• large three en b e ll //y gab was to it et e be of Me Err. end fell int/ the aeller. where Mere wee o large mount 01 MI. It was •my bolts, ... \ .1.1, notes inn boo to that eery to the &B. , mionnnot to okbOnt Ten Thonend Dollard, whiob too med. Then was not a si.gkpq. , iniund; and further, Lwould adrim any tenon • # doing o to 100 Ilmo, bat busy • Pot to kre h tfttteirprlscrZ7l. o—nod coo Mat te Md. I an Weir MAMMA your Wm 1 ° altsf" yon,.. ~017. JOON PLAKE. seir erelieve Nature •Pas provided a remedy disease widen nab Le barn". KUM'S PhTKOLZUM or ROCK 011 e, put apse it dew% from the most tataratory, ommealed deep In the trowels of blather Huth, 1. , without doubt. on. at the =patent of those reused/. Hod the following testimony, given hr a grateint meat: VaLLIT. OW, SeP64 Mr. M. IL Kler,dirt / Imo and all roar Petroleum. or Hewn 011. .Duke atio r tnouthe pan, and hare then look. to ro,ye. went. ‘c . . fret a MM.. taDIA), mold hare raid soma dosonmpers.. We •Itare_ Shand I .4. tellaat Oh Mr In Plug and Orrauterr. dntlittler, the this Tour *yen; was here, was Wag IoW with too nom 1 save her 11-teasrooonn. end in tone home nee the twoo.ed and tbe non stopped. sod ehe .amead immedtaudy. It ale an el treordloar7 remwir ..ory arid Lohotoodnres, ChM,. Bettis.. and ltleu mad and the Piton mom hobo hewn eared longetamting Yount, wnh . respeot. ' Luc MaiL7W. • 100 Wit by Ali the Przywor lo Pittsburg/4 • fa (Palmy AdVertlslnk Petzolem. rims eimp.l TWINES, Itc,-Parsons wishing to par. cm.. somas Irma LID laAccne of all destelptionA :rare as tesintel, an obttlit them. at Me lourt ;Atm, at the Aloe Beare of JACOB WEAVBB. Jr. o d ß lttt Ltd host raves. Itair Minn. KIDD 4t hItOOJIIIIi received htuadral dozen of (Darn'. hlyhlyjnyntrawl BONDY SUPS, rosorrietort the ordinary Donny Soaps, cant sandal Drown lllndsor. tank Drown IClrEnor. Winter cod Hoary Sharing nosy. It I. atimittal by all, that (Acme,' Soapy aro thy Putt In Us world. rohl Stl oa Adyertisement of Morse's Cordial, en ended* wun. GEO. P.. SMITH & CO., No. M WOOD STREET, Inrita the attention of buyers In thir market to the my largo stook of , SPRING AND SUM ER DRY GOODS, 07 /AM n00n... an DIVICT tEpoatOtal. Whiall they a fra hr AT A DULL AMMER run CASH 01 sk , T CREDIT. PRINTS-Ors/1 larlitut ttTtat. For•tga nod roostlt: GLA.N434M D SI7I ZE h It/1/$l -" ll d e r.. . ri" V Land OO , DI-• vet/ 1.10 Mat .7 Cl•ATIIII-Of .11 deatetptionc • - . case tit ItILKS-Plain aad fara . 7 - siono $. lO l 0 . 1 . 1 to.••• tot town melo; 8 &TIN ETTS-41 II cola, nod qualltiec J.ULNY,-TWI ERMINIsIIII--tad • lug. nettl7 4t floo 811710110 WlCillt; CO ITON PA h TALOUSear-All leadlog makes, 1.1•10 sood [Loon_ LINENS-L.NEN DEILLB--0141' lINEOS--Tdll. E. LIN/31- lttel ono, newt otyleo Watt tioodsoott otts Rideirtre-tirg• andloandooma smorttont: TE 11110 . -14 / 1 110 8-41•311.106-4.1 to 0. -C111:011.1 -O,T SLIN MUDS-en rtenso •TBIPLS. -• Ever, variety.et bretest $H3111:1013,L 0811.11102-- ble.ett•l •RIRTINGs end 8 EMS Milt uarto6 racruare--{MAYA22,--111 tlacTiptioos of TARIXTT CIOoDN. a• 10. PlttsbUrgb. Agog It MI N0T3.412, j 103110 VAL. • POSTLEY, NELSON & CO., MANUFACTIMLICSII or HUM:gm AND Cam BMX SHOVELS AND SPADES, MIX BARBELS, - • SOLID BOX VICES, PICEA - wan, HATIOCHI, Ac. Ar.v. Hay° removed. to No. 17 Market fteet, where the" rartormars. mad marritantr Araorally. are invited to ...ohm oar lark ttortry otart.6•olo.o eirelrbent. dell.. take. the 000,7 1 0 / . 060 0•1.0 or Hamm N. 1.1.117.11. Co.. rcrbralrd LIAlt AND 111011 THE 1 . 0f1113 Delp., • aro 5011.0.04 10 W.I. arprrlar •rtielo of /oar al U • dall fooled.la , JAMEdi P. TANNER. WHOLESALE Dens.% ,:„.,,,,,, • IS 300211,8110811, BONUS % ..14WaeC.', x . 0 . -56 toot. assts, , 1 , ..,• ~ -- "" .---.. lirfiftelilittrititillii d Windy dock eniirraces every virinty rind sds.ip . of Enna. f. , ,,,. Bonne. tn.anare h o upd. &UAW.? he gp 7132 ;&1131: " 1111:, ' Lfd VIM :e s at Ztlc o . Maw/ p.m.; eozni.stas hnnwnt7 Ala H.. AS PM delphla and Sinn %ark. Nachman will piens. etdi end munns• bale Min. Inn 2 CHARLES R. Looms, \ STOCK AND BILL BROR. ; BcMßondi,Norgages Hei KE otisted. PART/OMAR ATTENTION GIVEN TO TIIEMECHASE AND SALE OT STOCKS. ot,r EL Jones t Co, comer Wood aad toorth stre.t. lals A. H. HOLMES , f.; BRO., 11ANUFAC71311.81t8 OF SOLID BOX VICES, SLEDGES, PICKS, K&TTOCKS, CROWBARS, &S., PITTSBURGH. Wilco 23 Wood mt., between lot and And. man All work warranted am' many manufactured Ovasen's Insurance vompany of itittabargh D. D. Prsonzrz. ■UIULL L. IdARSILELL. Ban. 0 /7198, 94 WATER, RITWEEH ILLBEIS 491 D WOOD Brazen INSUDEB ROLL ANT °snag RISKS ON TEN 01110 ANN K111315211PY1 ILIYEAN. '4.ND THIBOTA:, RILE. N.n or ganagft pausa ihrperar of Lie MIA and 1NL.C.NR,N4170.1170A and TRIO SPOI2r117011? DIZSOTOIN: fr .4 ift , x 7. I F a . I Wm. rbsZ3Noi,N. ON Dihropru4, \ NArboaNt.., Jr." Inert 11•11ars, toO'J. iSchonstasNer. , Wm \ • %lOW Bryant B. /lam 31. d.ZI \ JOHN T. Lo GAN..--..-..—..RORT. T. KENNEDY PHILIP —.—RDWAILO GREGG. REMOVAL. LOGAN, WILSON & CO. /MOM= AND srausieu mans W FOREIGN AN" DONNEITIO HARDWARE, OUTLERF, /Le se. Rave removed to their new and extensive itiel7i2swantr:=:g.do= elgsLch,tl4: ay. sal ad ta an lISSLI i.U021 Or the amtnOtaiNota man s.= oval. seated to th.s tltT. \ f.lt, DAGUERREOTYPES AT THE NATIONAL ' , GALLERY. AiACKSON'S National Da_ erne GallOry, eohior of the Dlittoond and lifarkat Meat. (ofmoolte lleoro Draft Omni.) Pilleimumb, Cohn and Oontlemen •lahlos obtain lifelike Illiremom .t moderato pekes. *ill pima. stab. above =tab hob.' moot, fitted op Pith vary pelf Y \ Md. and kik, I.lklite e arrangod irlth earn Milli that Die, perm°, cm bake tba meet seminal. Die similes of thy bo nYPTLII V all um "(17:4Tiolo.,'ParoVig,Ii'/T.,VitteeklMo•Plolle nod dip ?" . xe: 4l :grAWtrgr..../...r4r. fret rosemblzam. 1 A \ laoLlkeneasectaken of .let deommed *moos In any a = , :g7tatl~ Yalei g \ o wl a P. ll4 roirmee. lo ti. gimond. iambi • Halion's First Pzeingua A A DAGUERREOTIOES\ Post o.ficiLßuileliv, *I Sir" \\, C ITIZENS end stftngers wbc6xinia to Vo• tale au •oeurate. &Moth and 1115. Mei likeness. alio ret7 tnodefate r .111 red It to tbalr El Latest to call at . thin wall known astablialunsat, who,. entlra asfferartloa' Is nuarantsad. or ao Marna made. IlasSon one of the. /Araratttnl end b•e paSt arraofffnal Mrich. and Skyllahns .roar coo. aro for thrlees tratromentrief ths sm powerful kind. and bawl ng adopted Um speteuVot Vaguer. og U ttp. t r. air 'b?'l.,uo it of able to Mier to the patrons of the art. • al/le arl , nser• reotypes, elthsr rinalr or Inc:curs. wtdon Lao near Peen survasord. • Poona opao and overm an. In at. weathara. ara ln mafanersT SUMMER ARRANGEMENTS: PZ IrejagiMPAMIII I MI NNSYLVANIA 8.4 i ROAD. ON and after MONDAY ttil 18th, the Wad ItapnonTrala Lava Uri De en Lido" eine. alai the Oanal Bridge. lieeer eta UM al o'clock. glorying at all the regain Stallone mulls /load. and arriving la Philadelphia Um next lambing at 1 &area. eonngetlag at Ilaritilimeal pith tiii•Daitlinoin nouriebanne Ral/eoad. solving in Baltnneeest 7 airlock. The gegind Mall Train irtil have thie en 7 even lag It 9 dolma, stopping st all the t miner on Ma Road. and nrineatlag al Morita, with Us Crain foe Baltimore. arriving In Philsdulohla or Balthata, gt \ 'Amu ths next awning. The AG00610 , 1 ad= Train lam everf aftexel4ise a teenier, story at all terabit galloon , and rt \rea' e Car ag ob. Yin Phaul tElVllfiLVO T r lffalt . l. 2.l'l2". The net Engem rain. a Philadelphia at 2 r. D. will minim PlUanargh at 7.1 a Tao HOLT , Ptilladelphla u gig a. ar. rill rive In Pittsburgh tlx< tratroorrilug et Bo'clock. gooommodallog Snag will Nato Latrobe at 8J( a. x.; and antra la Pluabargb at a \ Salgain a& ming ahatkad to any Station. oa lb. Potaarilladt WeM litram—lti tug or 10eg. lb. Dingßy:lll hold that. tasirrogiblo Dermal tag may. glut frr au mogul riot sawsillag Oft Srilaloal NOTlCS—lleirra. N. a .1, Stiedenthal. Oinaltine Pro.' Voter...we bum wriglira t. ta rouxr sparrangsrs age , e gaga toagd Zr th e Ir. 12.57:e. L tr . 74 leantp4for for Mks* algae to J. ItZBEIILL2r, fittahafth. leff altslie at th• AB. Depot on ae. OA.B.DIS c Smoot Pint AM ; T ly FIFT cur& i. 4 a.L4DituY. SSION oPthis Institution IiND• V, tbeLli Mr; and b•alt fol " 117: 4. a. :f i • '4. r0.r 64"7 lb. YttL • t ,ty.dittatit bra all** d o e j . oooo Mt do. d . I .,,nmbLt by tint.] mode, of for n =trt ' et h r o Vo, 't* Z 0 ',.. i ... 7. °J q" rl• l• Is L.Wiei VVIVE. .40 . rzto .k•,,v• ocoldrect ttt•eumt• ore Invited to all & o d or , or B o lgr .. .gto.occtf,Okad• fob , them:en:au- Th• sa :Tins ot\tb• lb, kotiv have l. pc, l i T74 t fpc.r.d t, Ur. Moon/ btab Yocie.d le to•ctr at • d-rotollaltle.l..".""'"*"°"'b'r Vcr LeTl33 r " L o. f‘lctfc' fro— trant,atel J. t•;.trlas:' Lat . Tulyd ftrfot. ".4"• V\ r " l4 rNi'b f •fft.• L. ti.l 'ON. • East Lrnmr. April. '53. I anls-2.,1* Carbart's GenniaaDitelci4ens.\ \ KIEBER hag 6,9 t reecirea , 4 " >oeaw • ?rjerjr4oLo: .11444;;IV"At'YgE...14i emoklhfc of tbesition ' ealem I true:so:4 the\:dooleol \ WoaL . .f Aptit gef. se/ ee - 'hlr\fderbart hes , dhe est, (.odor of kooolaa that Ws 'abode are appocNed, end that Carhost's Potent Ife/Odeme tae cmoldered anwrior 20 el othere. of either Ataericeft r %woreao rom ode, tom. Orders for end an nod red from ell room. tj hod& Oeliknate schl Australis pot except...L . \ 80LE AQXNCI IP:..ol . l'Lfli \ X ?TREES. \\ ern of the old. Han, • \ _ .A \ xecntori, : Notlce., . LL PERSONS liviag claims against tho 31.A1A of JONATHAN KIDD. is Wlegbooy Da . 7 ' Assnbeanlitatld.\ \ \ • , JAMEI4 ADelt . telp; apls:der WELLS & bo.;\ \ ' C 6,113108 \ JPIELCHitiiITS AR WHOLEBAx aeoit.pr. VIBE/. PLCGIR, DRIED DELGYR2I. , COUNTRY PRODUCE GENERALLY:. \ No. 344,LtLertp ikreet....cornmere Row:. 5p11.4 • \ PITTSBUR.GII. ' 7'21. Opening of Spring Styles. \ WILL be opened TIES DAt, the ie7 erknea tTYLI , 3 t Dr= Iltsatets nd Taney generarr.it .5.,•27.16 /AZ a 'tree. apl*:4ll.• u Moms lac porton, • dbeit & Fredefict, • 1Z W IIGLSSALIVOROCERS,Piodnee Deal. .4 Po...mu Ontronlmani blerrhanta, 1 aunt. Plotebarn . emoted if 1151-Lina esira aash adeato7u enzrignmlntr. ID good. dma. 'Mulling Lots in the \Seventh Ward\ f or sale:\\• 'WO BUILDING Lops having each sa I front on Iredford street nt fern and extending tack \ 50 ram. Tema Lola are eitnatat to tbe neighbor, boat of the. Na. Dula, m a pan's the city that. t improeing—inlm 3250 mob. \ April to bleltAlti. Baal Ha Late Agent. apt& DMV.I Plfth strut. • WANTED—Am . etiosn': iiiDvei\• • T apatdah and Mario. Dollurn \ Frond and normal Croon{ \ Boar!ulo sad Mexican Doubloon; Povvrelgoa, Napoleons. and Trn nib.; ill of lelakh 1 pty . the hlgheat market grim for. In D Ponds H. D. KIWI, apl6 Coln, Bleck, and nxelmnge Drakes, WESTERN' BANKI , IOIIS bought end cou.ut d ,La t V:Me 7.:Niltrtlt"' l4 " WAS Cble. Stazk;ta"l B.zebincet • 1,117111 TE BAREGE; white Mona; le Lahti; v white Fr Merlon Pint. . dn. 2do. do.: Blue Mona. de Wm: liaff do. do. do.: Coded colored Meal. de Latar t of extra:panty. semi tia Indrmlng at store of apt& lIIMPIII' t BLI,COFIELIn' AtZLII:IOLASSES—In kegs and' half nls 1,/ D _ _ - 11131113111D3M t LtiOUILt u. reTioo.llB-40 dn. Brooms, it store and tnr. 1 .1.7 (a 0161 lIIIRBILIDOL4 itifiIIILAH. PI) LEAD-60 R.ga on hand and for gala D 7 • ll*lsl on t INGITRALL . . itD AR LEA3,OOO lbs. on hand end for sal• by (aplsl EITIORIDUE a IN:BRAM. CUBA HONEY-10 bbis. Caba • iustzofft end for sal• er 016 BUEBallnai INGEIEML, TACKEREL-21.1 bbla. No. 1; 20 do. No. a 7; .0 hf. tils.Ne.:l4 4 4) Ka na= foal. ty tap 18) DURatitolie * iNewtiat. LOOMS-14 tor. e Napier. Blooms o haat nr DT 6216 ISAIAH DICIEST It CO. DRUNES-50 kegs, on ooneignment,.for. W. by WU, MLITT DRUM •Mt ONEY-1 bbl. in 'liar.) for sale by coo ta.tlian 1131 ARAL PAINT-,4') bbls.; fire and Irma ;foot Nlissaral Fan,. f," ale bi .. 13.1.1 f MEET VO. ANT/F AC T CIRED TOBACCO-5U bxe Zlis."en.4 . I° 774eu l' Of(ll a &co' Openb of 'Spring ON THURSDAY. will be Opened a new ado. .r SPIIItitt•InJNSEIE, to soljoh tit.; L bw aro nottloolarly Iptiad, at Me nor et of• Pen n ani be. Clote Wow.' •019,11 w RemovaL aIL9. S. MOORE. Fashianisblev Dress Ma ker. has remood lc , NO .42 rourth Vete!. Ving• vtuzio sir wonl.l gukt diends iFsa FH PWAt4DOILLIJMI,.. Chickerinee Pima. 1 IdELLOR, No. 81 Wood et:vet, 0 is NMI receiving • feetberstanly ot PIANO VORTES recta the celebrated toarititaatorr of Joy.rlds,l, tkethu: They be open fa. • esaminiclon and ell. d A:l4ll2th. A fulmar Wanted. APRACTIOAL . MECHANIC, witha large alanatActuring Establiihmant. wishis i o_ alt a TWER, with a esah eaoltat of 1ia.W.13 $6.000, tht a.Let and bast rt , lettt bit inetw In ,hacity , Addrtigf* . ltarhihnic." boa Ste. Pittaburgh Port Utz, \ • '. aplhlatP MIACKERFL Obbsta utly ea band aid for ale by PELLA &&L Obr .1. PALMER & - 11/OULt)B, PORK, KREKST 8 nizrt IPIIARP, EIRKP • OIIIIKBLi • 8 LIOOLDKR.. Philaderphia. LARD IIb&OLLERPR. • abbid ri 1 0PLEY'S POT CLAY-10 tons Copley's 1..,) Pot CIAA • ••unierartin;•. for t•te •1,14 JN•01/CONI1Alitst • CO. a Woad GROUNDNIITS—.2(I9 Backs Groandanto; yld to arrlyr at \tamer Bur.. far gala by .. a IddL*ll MOSEY * CO. , 11 AY-40 bates prime Hay, in store and BA for We by Xsplii , BELL & IJOGErE. RADON -20 oailrs Has; 3 do. Sides; 14 do. Ebralderr; 1 drqole, Im Oar* sod foe sal. by apif .. IO.IUII DICKY A CO. FLAXSEED --300 tocs. Flatseed, in ?BOZO . and for mils by , \ ' rrE4 .__ _ IBELLB, MCBEE * CO. ..- ...—_ . . . .. '.. CI ITNITBD SPATES ' • ' LIFE INSURANCE, ANNUITY Alb s TRiTST. tOrP2 I / 4 2CY PHILADELPHIA. 1 riNISSILE PAPER--Assortid and To al L. ft 4 1 I OHARTERD:XPAIL 2.6 v. '- fr ,1... 'br TILOSIAAPAL3IEft. ' \ \ f ' . ./T. ,47. .E11P1M11AA: WI 65 Alaricrt Wort ' ç ..Q150,000.1 HOQUET WINDOW 16LINDVA \new °bk.; s. lira *ad .Cll L.II and Fay trantifal elle, fresolly roe imd fmesalo (0131 ~ TLIUMAB AL/Elt, ,debi ) 4. .. f I ROUNDNOT-15.1 sacks, now landia . ; °Fii \ nu ' • ILD•Ar Pfilf/li 11< ham otiolorr tarot Ban. tor /le by. , • \ .\ • /BMA II DICKEY /CO st.ibod ft B. Goddar.L. -------.--:- . ',,‘ Ambr , fr" mum Jobnom ta4rL.l ,To itlfuni. ‘. *pima f ra g.let 74. 4 ,, itaka.r...... • ....m FL 11111a0,5..H. Aihßst.., (AV, 'ACE,A,,hg - , \ •• ALEORGE ii, ABSGLit.' Amu . \ , mhl7 ' , • ... \ I 4 loriirth stnel.„ IltutbA,, 1 ANDSOAPE PAPE , llesteial beautiful We. Jut reed and. lor ES. Atte Wait Paper Ware. I=:.io. 56 Mutat same. br \ 711051d11 ALUM. CHEESE -40 boxes Ch - ese, in store;\ for see by tapl3l. /1511117 DICKEY & CO. F• RESEI ROLL BUTTE • 2 bbls. ' lra; Batter. laitore 2'4. bra MIIS\IBAIAL locsrr a co.' DOLL BUTTE#7-214thLo!' But 111;teit tar nle by ' apt 3, TON 80NN110881 . 4 lISOIIPEIT. V abocti ‘ l6 Mr] or.= able ta.attattaggeVersi sae mt. at andel:lag. . \ IMILIVEII,'DILWORTiN. b 3 , ~13 \ Sot. 13.....114 Bettnldifir•-• JERSEY PEACITESuri: ,“ ,d e r b ed 7 Paar..bayi prima ai rii4lgi.p.,,,‘.4C ayl3 4 ,11, ra c et:ln ' t . see\ UCKETS-450 Buca.t.is ...&tore and tn. M, by \ A. A i4t e a1t4.M. ,... 1 , IpOTATOES-30. hbla. variou to eyt fi unta, fir ;rte by A. A. aleliA Ng. \ apt' 'lli Beodatd_stivii. IANDLES--10 boxes extra ZCtatilk aW) 1 1 o dlen, So stars and ter xato b.. , ti d , a. • A IlellANX. 114 Steo IfitVOMS—;oo dos. (a +s'd Brdt, 7 11 "ei f. tta b , 4 eunna 0r..4 OLL\ BUTTER--2 ...tr,•,\--ruvrgeoirrotkroe""l h a• iirOgiOlfr i ilsf OhLrf• . grlfor for :W. 31111111A.L4. 83 %Too] strest. A MERIOANv o WALL PAPEUSEverp, gt7l.; bi;., • • %gra AtORDERS—UoId, Velvet, COPY r_ vxDs_ ratlr i 4 o lla bti rd.24:• . c a l L y in IrA l i k ; 4L.L i n. 8.. d. ppnto Clov,reee4 do . twat. VVABLARDs..._2S do :. patent 'Z ( inc f r a jfflt t l:Lllll , . 122 Wald wiATORS—Rid 'l,4—;:r—uktipocka, LL amtar°'(""I ! I COB\EAVER fiRY AP 4—.32 bage and 3 casks, DOW Istalaa boat .lakll. lota. at „ IsAI A H Dip 00. rift — T - 31ELEIMTORY' OF 'PAYER— nruerPrg— 'vot'stroTV.votoll:h, 41e : 411,1kac st rut. ‘ 544, FOP , tI , , P LI :UD--3011,k prime Ilaxsee4 fof I.' sale Ork etatsl T.k\ BELL 1 ONSiI .110 NE . Y \ ' t4To loan $5,400 Ziter etylD. titan 1..C.tc;4 mgattifi, flrsum,- \ A :PI "". "" . " 1 te1, A 215721 rota Erret. DIG MEV - A.i.447 teas 4pjer, cold billet, trtlz PEAtLIERSen'tI BUMAO24.24}Age Feat& vr d. imuoatmaa.lilliac. vow Istutkz; ttr..= ‘, MeAT FaRLABII-13 dusky first ciVality. for Mart by • nab?' ‘l, lI.VOLZ/KM. V • ERSE-800 boxes\ largo Cut • J Aand d° \ it ' su ‘ b Da ' 7 c."1!/•.%1-drr!toik'ti:11 . c,v_6 lihds I..elT . Tobacao WC 1 7.1 1 .az br ' , E. 7 1 untiz 4 6 ,i, \ N., s4.(kti.EtP,-20 mickti4.Bvr for:aalt itl I \ von . !Immoner,A MURPHY. \ \ A \ . V • I \ , . . V AMUSE HENTS. ioxnPrt a. I•ll .7TRltv..Ligt ldn IllAsaan J. P. /litTLdfuELlL:' ` • 060 samara cicuk. • \- MCI or ADMISE-ICgii , • r C fib. b • - • IhiLtS•dt. U 477 he sp. tuvut art e Bds Vuyotithent extru Mutt. Tourth nfdht nr the ettesrmeet 1b.% a: cry M. and Ihnit HAPI,I6.Ir . , ad- Mr. %Mtn,. as... Razzed au4Mr , II:" ; -WIWI.. •• Judy M . , Tr,,.. Tsn ST.s . llla A.TrI acted, the Ask -- Drama ex non j'esnoldn---.--1,......--..._1.11,/itregeogt \ Highland fling 31r. 411 LOU whtol, the male Ise.or • • • • aYn 's.4C""M n a27;7Tb lP*rk ALIVE AND NICKING. .air.llllsi WILIAZDA, . . • OIL YeKratarov—ltr. .4 A Atm BARNEY IBILLEAILA Yin .rE4r, • INEE CLISIPBELIS HATE CO= 0 ' MURPHY; WEST;, - .AND , _ CA WBELL .111INSTIME . ,& FRlBA:2\am' AN ENTIII6 CILLYGE. • ' \ Eir. - Iq iii NitS.O.,P2I TUB/58 Edell For aartl - • /or 'lnkota 25 ta -.A To b. obtuaa4 airy. r tioiJUofalti Mos 6.r., acd. at Undo.. noon area at V; dcleok; to eolalar....ts 404: ..• \ • \ .OREAT , ATTRACTION: *RIPPLE'S 4 D mairarnoli r opy \ • ➢ 10110 DISSOLVING: ,\•oxits.oiroN. - witt. nl_6l.= /01 szakerrioN - v. •—: -\ • prilay 'E O M 25Alt e ' • AND CONTISIII /MIT 17671X&701 0111 IMPS ltf, , , rrIS, UNIQUE AND FASHIONABLE; • Natartaltmunt hai Toasty beast tahtbited lan:ads& latialptua. and , WasMnatca to ettlnisd hams. Ottukce of Prostremma: asses 'vastly s.. Irach Palatial "I *I44 T:tTVM - A=MilgglffTlitilis' CE.IISTIMY. acts CaMeters Is =nee Ulla hats ear moron—su.nhamo to r.nxt tor slx.rboatgElaY7 t7tbrok Ptibled by a Gomm e . le ...cad • - 52.0a0. \ A aeries ot tarsity-tbiea V3,les la CillEk9iioli °KW XrEftr. ' TM, it the aceat popular Cemetery'da this, rdma7—Shoains ItS lively Waste; rautrrat%and • besattral tdononcenta-aZY Me sm. artist. ' . 1 4 1Iv7 STZg7git h igg L gtTgr,ilie -- - and Mstructlso—east SIOCIC us.l`huadred Vtelr , S t trahm°ermany, SMtaarlatM. IraTilril.TAMDllooEbt MICItOECOYE. ratialliarc L °o CO2 Anlauticalla ..tan wee es ;gents: it. Ni. cf liort , (l.l L tan.' feat In Munster: T=rl.°l7lViedggta :gettsVtorrlTllloitlY Ll° ItT. \ Thirty Sasses in the Llf. Ma Daehalan,:atery laashable. D.eoafut SNOW. STORM. `.sbane—Mebte Cutts.* and °facade. In ack eh. bosury Cr atteacurt; a Meffmmas. nfoaabeg bight mom oat Wm swan fantail Day tanks; • Maas strand ths *bole aeaumaa'tha. Raba or Writer. ' •• " Mama admixed CALI coaxiAEntiA/S-31oflag_4bitl Pencautins Meth of ettald limo a' , toed..oad: Chtrete:tritat or 1-teablent FUlocatea.Smay:Mad. ad. MasalGeent tmcmottanaV;•aa \ . Pet • \ • %e...S.A.Maittarceadtcats-0, bildria. wadsr triare, half .• t 3„. Dams matt at 7—tcyrti'n Mum at 73; o'alocit. MASONIC\ HALL. INSTRUMENTAL OCINCOULT. GERMA\NLA MIYSICAL SQCIETY;\ •• nit cavils \ IFES ON WiDAY VZHINIkAPIIA 20 At dm *lova U. assigted CA'LrEfailTilTil;*lti*"4lA. .1 ea. and tlarfl,l - 'oo7ll7='!"..;;lerra7o/Dritlit.-,lol(Nitat 12.- F. cliff 01. .11i0 \:!..<11 of /len \ esi.k.„ .0101 318LL011.- 18. 1.-Do 7 rio9o. 4kt 7 operameist 8 ' ' f8f.17 \AUCTION S ‘.lliglity•4lve dozeii FlizeGbirtGloths,` \ sizderei, Go:, 'at \Ayation. ,, 9N, 'WEDNESDAY. morNogy .t n( 21 , r * V ° /I ° X.= Zro e 4. ' ZiPs o%. " o rare. i * a , .r.,t, 0. ~...," $1 Aar d9Drf ,, 00, 1=4 \ =U.— \ El./birds dozen YINZ E L IITRTO. rotaiki.;l.4intir;., \ Tort lIVII a d Nogliff, “Loogloth: 102:20 sasd '21•220 , 0 . - '' 11"VVII." 4 1.1 tVf/e 7I ;PITZZIr.I . I4 4 O2=I : L. \ ‘IL i.,, t \ fA021 . ..d .. 42,1002Xi: !un, tf2sblasot. s sod Itsr- . \ ig7; vr rlcK faNu : rdlk a sr.il \Kebab buys `.td \ Eatipdva : • •f -Dry Goods at A, .-'• , ali - MONDAY .• d TUESDAY,roornso;'.r. ''- '''‘.. 11ItIlsold9th I • • ts. klO o'clock. ii: ilmq4kleit,,,'--- ' ' COTINOV of Wisniso Flfit stres. , \olll be solta\ 4 . , , ex.4..oinatt.= oftsznatto.bo.: i f:I . N . I: , 13.14 1.,,, el, .....,,,V:rl-:-.•-..--=:\ ' afirneartl Mir -a WM.:- Altsaseo_2ll .." .' yc 012.2ar. 0012d= sediEbestillsc lansar: Mad, 0 2 dsk . \ - ' }.. sod enstbrin illaslltar. 1..••••1 to o' be Ds. 1 Uatfalltal,\ \ \ ' L :, \ glitil::-Vin lad gT °" %!!: " ," w g "l ecillgiVerrar.,...\ ' . ' , ', 1 Also-40 ploref o.ovrk All/HEL . 4 _ - 'L',... , ..!„ '2 12 do. Soper BOLTING/0 1.6. L - , ~ 1015 P. M.. oNns. knolfto6.2, -_ \ I \ ' S \. \ \ , • . , \ \ ' \ \ \ \ \ , ‘\ EZEIMEM BI6SIINGIIAAI AND.,,EA.ST .B.I.IOII.NOLtAkt •• Building Lots at Auction.- aliN SATURDAY afternoon, April vet 2 OkYeeir. tb. Mande School Hon. In Blraltutbutn—raxli be, lownuvtargoatnto, 'bee critter moat valuable and deoltabte‘aucLoritt.LOlS sand SITES far Mal PAe?iatE3l the above Vee Tett beteg net of the (Irene Estate . T1,1, \ wort effete,. groat !edema:ante tonitravtumonv-ottanytyln • nom' medic than any atoned cut city. , , TutoOneablvd.castu ratline 'We:Wand too oda. , intinett. retuned by bond aryl, Inertayary _ea \flea . - be vein at the *all. Ronvel. • , . P. N. DAVIII. • lvietleuvar.N nN SATURDAI; s eyening, dariljetk'it 41TVIg - ,M4.ttr` r t¢ty. ' 14.47, e Vo r ;;;./ .7 th.l.l.t y ?many Ulm. rqpirn Or . ,Ebelist Blbo ' Book,. L., tier and Orr WHe"ir Pin. P... 2 */ Atio--A g.natlty Um Boob: Leedom int ter . . e :t Banto l tunz sr oiznian g ut..t var.,Ce. ' arl4 \ . . 1. . \, AMIOAN AHD POILEIGLAITENIM , •• •• • rtf — wepisrars, 3):cr.. - :' , :.,:; , : ::'..- ••_ A— . 1., PLEB lando‘Ozned offarelliffsailicei ittlhe " ii . 1 Imuontic... , ACLAlX;BErose,ouNoßigssgeatb. • , ~-.;. q. , \ \ orroral t.partia4tr. mod for thiLtraws.ellost of IS7 ••• \ 0. Mts. repairing siiithtion at 'ha osp tot. S ••• • •• • . \ 1 - •‘• Yerroor havieg trirtheas with UN Patera. Indian, Lam. \ , TegGlVl ' VVen ; :ttli b ll i ttr i gfirteg.a L - ..' , ., \ ; : 4 ' ‘. r. , \ ijzo , t rad felthgal . gt . eltle? to 1011= Si : . . i . i ....., ite-liiki ' lt Z r torterponalbr; Artt: 41. r...ti.p.... we , Cooks or ' 3 •ror in tor iortinn V .ttvi.strit' We. .., . i • . ' ti i-ri will h. tisid to the claw:#=o For oighnil - AIL • • • .4. , *,l..trropiticliititit writ for forttirhw.t. with referworel tw .- . • : , 1, :;istirrltr . Etats . tilt! to; . I , i-ri l l titt N TAtti . l4 , - . i . .1 - -.• T ,,r,..... z i a 4 In, '. - T - : r' ':\ ~ .. ! .\ - - L, \ \ acyze4l, tin f11C1ttx.,...., \ Aingief —lr. V. Saw. $l4 Caner. • Pat; \ . 84 e ells itS.o.s Vhobb Btu !erg.' .b t" \ . , ..7s - , .., TT,7,1 1 1,1..141.' ..___isr..4 inS)..eiriiiii:,‘ \ 1 ' :•\ ' li- illtr,liiitt \lutua \. C ,, 0t , .. Iwwph 13mars.y.,-Fi, ar, itr4:•,• \ . -,, ~ , -;4 :4; 7 4t 7 i '' iil ,b ./.‘ C= l l7iliti trik.*:-, :V• , „ I.- \ fl r a li f ti- hr irn Tmwiet. \\ . vilt il . 2.ti Voi7il Tw a 7717 \. \ z ‘. t„ . .. • :kanr a 11 . apfirrwaiiiit-wrotT t, t \ \ .. •- • \ \. \\ \ , \ 13; EiToIiES I si viqqa,Litreet; - : yOIIi.D Infiiige,tho. public: ~ that' he ' \ \ v r46,.4'14 BPRIX. FOrPLT V, \ \ , , . \ 13 0 \i' , , '',. \ C D.O THIN, G ' - ' ''''', hi\ Which will CW found more elte ' oiiwAiiiore,.onid now \, • woad:tom tw, Fig! AAA allisiwiwi4 tAwri skylwiwillowito . \ I • Thom whore*. litywwwitc • h ' irtllivAlistilwir. \ • lilzhcat wrpwiclkutw o bot, itsetweilwtit• wtataAci Ici. I \ yarn* OS L. .. as Ira I ail tacitairiwiNc al ...0., \ . „ Us h. a , . Ls.tsrsj a las, ~,,,, of Quircol..CAz., , \ Bix gRA r. .10 ‘ IC2IXINiIo • cogethar With All thit'ASIWAY \ ' ' ' of Ali/111/Mt tiChnii \ anlistay Gr Hit. cacqfwg \Anwicii. \ 'L . ... whlch wil Ihr Male to 'der wtshort acciicw and atWnwcp . . . , .„. . HO WAA,T4 - 42 B/19,2 EX\ '‘.. ~ 294 1, 14 11,t 13 ;:i7 13 \ ft4e lllB t. sne gl.l ar 4, 6 \ si• : i: - I\; , -‘‘ + \ \:',.\'''\:...\. SPECTFULLY \ itt( . 021:2 _their trie et;• \\ . '„,\" Piljitiob,.,r,r-tv2,,th-t th-t.v4..,..,....t.. n,.• ~.'', \ top MI .1.33. A . 11111 t. IMPN, , 1:11:V.Ifig- i bt s ,8,,k , \ ,/ '., .\ \ MANTI . O. of Ore,!an and Votialo IrtylogllONll Td k ', ,• ', 1-03.• LiNAD e COM. \ ATU/Illellat- ISLAM. 5 .r... '.., ',..• \ late, thoy 1 , 7 At extrelloor • v.ble hl Wk. Mobs. a Mired ord.*, • , ..1 '• : \ ' ^.... '•,‘ \ Cvatteryl crela7d...! • t-lio 11 1,1, , eipliel Steak ,-\ . .. 1 / 4 , ' Ina, _ Diasolut44l'.\ \ 'TUE' PAlitTEßSlllßfie;etofat e eizoing Imtvreee the u*lrnis.d. In M. , grwilik: . o,4ar latejkom• ILOWLS 141593 N. \ \ \ ixd =natal etrSonat. The Owlsters Nbo smial VAlTlP',lt; r .,..ttr!; vg l4 L " ' nowo Uti..•414 t. Ba.tneyou Cli \ \ \\\vl..pd. hal:mt. nenat: \ W Q 411LIM, a/f r\ \ \ - ILLIAM ZSAWBO Pttsbugh. Aorq 1401:42k . .. . , CI MKS t'.. SILKS!:=4 N. 1,7 ttne•Tso Eli WlplainiA Mealistrest:7. 71 VJT b.t..r..4 4 0.41 P .111 ;boles e•ission 0 101.1 .. , Lbs. thin Mack .Orp de Rhin& MI tutrts. , --.. 6 " 0,4 U , 7 4 17 Yard; Waal. insiormis Ty". \ ~ prlcen\ 71•11. Waus • ward{ hulls anti, \7O . 2-,:. t - t •4 _71; 71.7.• Yr.44• , 71 , 117.nu10,F . J!*!g ‘, ! li r°Ul". , LT!.T!u" : ..u x ,.... gar:. , ,..iii! Mit . yedera qt., e 1.004. \ \- . ' ' \ . \\ .\\ ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers