PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. .PUBLIBIIk.O BY WAITE I CO-- PITTSBURGH: MONDAY mamma, Fipatriltr 27,41864 tVooklir tinzette.—She ostensive :Stinmilii4ool' ono likktop.ar. arm lokoqrbnalr:esmr.en. a most desirable vie:Mama =Cog thelr.businsis _Our amniotic , . leixtoroonlonr.d five thosumnd. reeking almost every morehont, Irtionfieturer.and stmihke.rer Wagon pennotyinia, tad Eutorn qr ToiAdMertiaera.—:Selther the var.Pai atlas' Establistaaaatof the DaaY Gintte, are opened ett Baada7• ADT2111111314 who desire their anthres to appear to Om, vapor on ttomalay motaing, wit Pleamband theta in .airjya a 'Alia. mn ' Headline 3litrer , Bless or TIIE Timrs.Ottr eschssiges corne to is burieneil with intelligence of ilemonstratiiMs and manifeitstioneogainst the; Nebniska - .Slime of these are of the most un 4 ,trusl: charse- Ser, and,„ as,foremost among these,. we give the following from - the New Orleans Buttdin, of ihe • :-Nnestassn "Bnr. AtteAst.t.—The'3lohne • Trieste/. of Wednesday, contains a paragraph an- Liesinieing that the Alabatnf Legielature has pass- • 'ed lesolsition opposing the liebraslca bill of Senator Douglass. In the House ortteliresenta tives the vote sm.; BO.to 27. Surb's significant - demonstration will ,not bo "Without effect upon the Alabama Senators. It 1 "livery possible It wfft coupe both or them to op *e the ball;: and, Van, may jeopar,l the pros ',l*ets °tam "Llttlo Giant," tiliooia, for the neat Presidency, by jeoparding 'the passage of, the bill. We shall not care n whit. „ . Wo may properly characterize this as the most important intention of,th'e times: When the South thus to, spurn the fraud of Idinsirlasa and tile coadjitors, what must. those northern editors and politicians, who have made eh) derend it, think of themselves? . As another truncation in the Baum directioe, srwa giro the following from the N. Y. Tribune: • ,`We rejoice to'bear that John' . Crittenden, of lf.entuckyi is about &take the Beld against the egregious violation of public 'faith coutru?llted and urged on by the authors and of the proposed Repeal of the Missouri Comprontho.— It is no more than was to be expected from that gallant and high-sealed statesman: 'Sue:t a dem cauttration from him will-be warmly welcomed j and widely influential, though it must by con- - treat only render more poignant and lamentable the ellence and connivance with the conspirators - of his tonne colleagues John Bell and John IL i Vlaitort. But it is something to believe that the North not have to 'mount the fall of all those Southern leaders in whose - fidelity to prin ciple it has hitherto placed its confidence. We ,shall await Mr. Critteuden'S prtatoised manifesto . tioti with great hope and interest. In' 'former contests with the spirit of slavery proptitandisrm, the Whig party of, the North has 'not, unfortunately, been a unit. • A portion of the party lute heretofore deemed it the best to go with ; their Southern brethren. In 1, • she present contest, however, this is not the !The "Silver. Greys," as they hove been Csilled, the ultraconseirvative Whigs of the North,' ere committed to a man gy against the Nebraska boll. The Whig party of the North .never before rosentedito unbroken a front as it does on this - : question..,. The Albany Register, edited by a warm personal friend. of Ex-President 'Fillmore, and . 01posid: to speak his 'views, has a +cry able nr ,"...Aqaddreseed to tfie Whigs of the South, warn- .04.thei . dattgerous position in which they . like placing ileatselves Al' e . o may tor worrying considerable space with an extract 'from It ; the more so as its wordsof eounsel are I ,ooodune,ood;ir hot heeded by-Southern Whigs, mud then, at least, be taken by thorn as an indi cation that all party affilitition with them is lammailirth at en end. Bear the Regitter : When theDereocracy struck at the Compro mises of 1820 and 18.50, it threw away all, and more. Mum all that it had been gaining for years, and broke itself into fragments that can never be united. It did more than this. It stilled the elements of discord in the Whig party, united it into a compact body, and paved the way to a net acquisition of strength from its old oppo nimbi. /The Notional. Whigs of thO North, who stood by their brethren of the South, sustaining them through a warfare which brought no profit or • • 'nitwit to themselres, Mood there upon dy of their.old political associates and friends.— Theysaid, in.regard to Shivery, that - the COm prw.,•,,of 1820 should - be behl'inviolate. They said /Wilke maks* law-alas, due under the .„ , IConstlhition,- , by far-interpretation to the. South. They conceded, forllte . sake of peace, andtequiet agitation, that the territories acqui red of Mexico, though freelrom Slavery, might .monu into the Union, with,or without Slavery as ' the, people of those territories might determine. All this the National Whigs of the North • ecuce ded to their brethern of the South, as duo out: of comity at least, and for thil, they to some ex tent` incurred the censure - of their ancient friends , tunl,politicaLtimaxiates. They art true to their ' - brethren. ethe S,ath atilh They stand by the Vomproinises of ltsZiO, --are willing to stand by them always;.proVided the South is true to itself, its own honor, au& its faith- But if the ••Whigs, In the southern States", insist upon more then this; if they Mtiat ;upon removing the ;ancient landmarks--upon, abrogating, the law of 1620, ittid . the institation , Slavery beyond the line of 3d. 80 then the „Whigs of the North and the :Whigs if the South 1011,u-ere to part company. The IChige of the. South, in that case wilk..orr force have to rely upon what the Minn" is; pbeased to "the great and growing party of. the Democ racy." that the !Irhigs of lb o'SouthormS totes ahaohl ; aalon !Ito rft , ttlts that.are sure to fel - kite such en net Offaly.. They' should remetn 7 ....tww.thatuppoxithm, to the extension of Slavery ,toWerde the North le • a prineiple common to all Aunties at the North. That it:pervades the Demo cratic newel' wither Whig party: That it is de* ietitea,-Srm, Purseverit , •,e ul deter, .aoraeututiong thepeople of the North, the nteea eethat Make andlinmake Presidents and Mem-. bma of Congress, as the converse teat the South. If the South of all partlea unite ' la favor of the Nebrailis:projectof Senator . Donates, sending filivery Into territory censocrated to freedom by ancient laws, and soleum compacts, they will drive all parties at the North to unite in opposi 'don to the extenikkrt of Slavery. . They deceive ,tistrastives if theystippese thertople of the North. ..are divided on ~ thie, subject,. Presidential; avpi - , - ; ,eel. !, spoil hUnterro the ;sycophants that gather. around. ~ existing .. .Administrations,: may . smelt, to etury favor by,the.abandonment of their prtniples, end the Instrayalef their constituency; but the. reet, body , of the people, of the men :,.thafiote„,,are united in this matter, and. they will crush erery man who yotes for or advocates 'the abrciitation of the Compromise of - 1820. If. ..the Whims 'of the Southern States" choose: to. rely npon the . 4 grilling party of the Demecra-, I cy ," they Will have to' ally theniselves -with the aysrty of the Deineeraiy" of the Southern Statet slobs they.:lolll.ll.nd neither: aid nor°comfor t l 4 4Parti . tallto North. "...let this Nebraska measure be pressed-to Scoctiminviatimst and there triltbe'noeucbfactitDeinocracy in the Zlerth t - -There may not be a Whig party, ...The cohesive- . -; semi of partiaffinities may . he .ileistroyed,' ilsere Will-bea..at,'Vnited; resistless Northern.' - t partj bywhateebrnameltmsybeealleat, based open the principle of opposition to :the • eaten ',Ken of Slavery A party . whreewatehtierd be rePeelieot of We Nebraska enactment alone, .:but of all the other tneasnica that bate teen Sc- . . ''.. ' ' eordeff fee - .the : proteetion of. Southern histita : '....:„ , gong ; we desire to see no such state of things—. -- "We derivate this' array of one svetion of the riiien Against, another—we hero struggled ' agairistit for years ; theta with whom we have acted hate Suffered somewhat in endeavoring to ...-.. -- ,iirevent..lt.:., But.' if- "Whigs of the Eleuthera .., ; States," - uniting. with "the growing party of the .. ~ Demeeraey'!.ofthe Southern States, will ha te it 80, :: that so be it. if the great conserrative . prinei ' . ~.. V i ca whioli the. great lady of the Northern ~....:.,. have to steadily adhered for the cake, of • ... .-', the outb,:are abandoned and abrogated by the - - South itself, then there will he neither sense nor. .poliey in their melting any further escrifice. If ...tht,•Whlga' Of the - Southern:States"- will unchain ' • 'the whirlwind, let them see to it,-that they are ts fury. ; The Nation:if not the *at sigfaters by i " - , . ' Whigs of the no* have gone as far as they can le •,„ or will kninr the protection of the institution of • eery -• If the So u th - is tel to Itself they will 43 1:teite . to'thte Instincts and their honor. If .1 ' the old battle between free labor end Aare labor; between fen • Ina titutioits and sire institutions,.'. "la be fought over again,' they *litho found en 4 ..wde aide of free labor and freelmtlintions, ex toting themselvesjust as earnestly, and no firm :: ', ly . too;sdi they have i beritofore tlone to mrovent • strife, and to preserve thebeimonyof the States. " - The-Whip of the Southern Statds, and. th e D e . •-' sateiricy efthese States also, should nnderetaud' and UT these , things to heart. , They. sh9ulel re, •'''V , ''''' .., fleet upon them carefully. before they owing - out r •••• . pppn tbCpenan of agitation of whiph • they here „ao chart, and without knowing.where they inn! m '.-. 'halrifted by the currents or the storm, ..• 11'-'''.. - • • • - laie.gegiqer is right. The "" great ....iorlherii elf• - - .'''.:' Virtf t° . , '. . Ak;.;-:: tie free lrailiterelferdo),Tronseript, a paper r . ,,t.4 . r;'," ii iiseti?a,in 1 . 08, -Whim thnFree . Roil agitation in 4.1 :. ......: Ohio rent tie party in twain, sap: 1. ..P.2 :....14ietter las been rneeind in town, ad from lion: ~o'.. ,f.S.; p' Wade (Whig U. S. Senator ) rising a con ":?,,, tendinvotthn frbilide of 'free: principles ip . '' .", ' ;.'rstatilndi ono , . . , h - ' ' aged . Ithiatten'itiew - if 'the Nehrasha - fraud It. ~,.2 , 3 '''• ': '-usi•-• to be formstisitin the nation: IA 'atir ''' '.4.':l' ttesitroolei ciao Ibex , ' paliedifferitiOr sbanid k . : .-• .. - ' - • , 14;11 .. , , • - . . , j: ~' he 4 tli tth M nil ebony lac.ed T ' - one enz s - •c - ntrAntagisti ILittnosh Jtmattit, takes n ' -nhine Pateikt•Medicines, HENRY: II .' .. ' List of ie • .• forthwith aria's perfeettiontbe pia '!,isOted 4,0 thi. ,tb gages. of .. t b, t ,„' ..,.„ -.- ,_.- . P . 1 - ._' COLLINS,„. ... .‘ _ ' _ . - ..„Ttlo c Alu l-lII .' D ' --- - .... ~. ~ .” - 0N - - HAND AND ion !Aix at strictures on its-conduct towards . nliil ' 3 of iffifoTY extOsion.,Such . 4.diice is' '' raPcr 1 " - ' ''``Iswer r " . - mr'}. Pennsylvania ,C 0 - .7 , 1 MIS b I 0 'l+, 5.1. b.R C 11. AI% T , _;,..,_._ • _,_ BROTHERS.. . ' timely, and erainently worthy of the than. AND. WIIOLESALE ISEALER IN Ite.U.E.A. 'LING ;.in the matter' of the Erie olifficultics. After care- CIIEESE, BUTTE:It. SEEDS, FISH, And as still 'rather evidence of the work " f Proprietors-I,r )I'Lalled Vl:Madge and Awl Thelon , Generally. _ . . yreading 111 011,, defence we see nothing• Liver Pill fusion, the Traluteript makes the following nu- • No ''s 11'.xel etreet burgh.ritt noun cement :- . in it to., alter onr original opinion, a- the editor j, is - . ~ - . , , Itlotextle ty ro eta 4 Penton in Itittrit Stritirincr Cones Foottla and Wood etit,Dlttehurgh • still continues most pertinaciously tomntic. fron, Dr. Hoofland's Ge ' Blte — rman 1 rs, pre pared Keeler's 'AmeriCa, Conn...and: ' • • -'- The present issue of ihe Tranieri' id closes lb; ~.,.... publication as a - separate to'ordistleetioitrnal.-- t [ides Frunses , and to visit the peculiar sins of ,by Dr. C. M. Jackman, are -justly reekunnt =maga our - Jay ea . !, Alterative; - Carminative Italaant Next week it will appean in conjunction with the the people of Rile upon.tl • wl le State, and to ~Ft ~, room valuable medicine,. in eamet a dyspeeela, it eel - Ilair Dye; Western Rel.. ii''' I as6V.rontr e, (the Free Soil paper,) defend,the , gres's fraud of the Franklin canal no , ei . sci,stmnattombm the Wolof the stomach, alma, Wing the dicextive tenvers. and giving imddy health to o, Exhavetnrant: '. Sanative lilt. - • and the two papers will hereafter be motif 1 d • ' -• -A It. le -. Company. „Is a hiMcim en of his iomorrect state- Ito. fthdet. Add brightness to the ey e. There are thousands - !lair ,Touhe Wistaria Dolts= °Mild Cherry under the editorial control, jointly, of Mr. ild'w. ,I - ...ol i. of Litt. community who ran teatlty to their victors. and Bryan's Pulmonary Ballwin rnen.s, ue asserts that -" repeated atteliaptS art' and ourself. thousands will hereafter add their testdmony. told In Ituntland's German Bitten; have been made to stop its ;the r ran kri a Ctinal pin aburc h. by FLDTINt; 'BROS... Drudulete. nu 'w oo d - ,g. Welland det O . n . every side wo have heard it said, ...The op- I liootetler's Stomach do: position to the ;Administration. ilk our county is '. Railroad] progress by inibnetimo. but tile Finnic , edi , . dierehlevar Uterine Catholleon: one at heart, and the formality : of dmble organ- as often refused to interfere, on the ground that STATE MUTUAL Stamm,. Soatela Cough Candy: Prion's do dm !ration rend • era our strength useless and keeps in the complaint made did not show that any p er ' , FIRE A_ND MARINE INSIat ANCE (O. me do • the Ilerania du an . power . it pitiful n!mority." I •i 1 '-i) - ' - '' '' It is, therefore . 0 son had been injured by die Franklin Canal : " t'''NNSYLV-°IA- rmai.relk India Clualajogue: obedience ill this demand that wo act. There , 1111IANCII OFFICEE—Corncr Fourth and 5y,,,,,,, Invigorating Lomita]; Tiler', Gum Arable - Drum seems to be cordial and earnest deoiire on the C4m F an Y . ""sequentlY that no I.I'"'" of ftetinn . -I? Smithfield strode, Pittsburgh. CAPITAL, tka:io.ooo. part of the members of both ltilig and Free Sail existed." i•- oat , rnas:--John P. Rotherham', Dauphin C 0.,• P. C. a'Ari'•'''' Wait 1r Smiumiek. lianioloom Snoitiel Jnes, Pildelhia: A. '• ''y i 'd.'"“ ae d'' d o: t% alion.. hanker, lattabinigh: A. A. Carrier, Pittsburgh: , - I; ‘i'beh' ' . • 4° ' • parties, that minor differences shall be forgotten, This is a total misrepresentoition of facts. Au A. J. (alien. likrrieburm Ci. T. 'Jones, likardeborgi fh,hass " -,. jahit.l, l ‘ !lpf eftlehatri and that the friends of freedom unite upon one 8 r • motion for a prelintiner3 - injunction was Kin " - Cu •l ' n ut °, :',`,lll l , B i, E rNife• luul'hi° c . o. ' 'l7 11 ' e .p.r }...''''''''' a s . o .xtraetan - PP:FORD, Presidet. common basis to resist the encronclimems of the ! A. J.GILLET. ricrretary. t- 2 1 ' r '''''' h ''''' ^ ''' . or Jiliiin" Giorter, •made to the Stipresee Conrt of this State, min , . ,• illeAlllater's do- do ~- ,h e Blase power. Similar unions of Whig and Free ' A A. VAilllt. Actuary. , Kidder . . ludelibla Ink; Willi refused , - not because the complainants did in • Lli , : , Moors copr..rrillitiotr2,..g,..hoLt r ... f . r . Add Soil papers have already taken place in several.,rayneo• du dd: counties of the Iteserve, produced from the con- ' not show any Cause Pr action, but because the , ans roL ' r ' rtili ` l.l t io A clo ' crii, - 17. ' 4, 17,.t7,. - ., '' i. r0Ve .,, ,1 ' ''''''ll'o' Arnhoblis clan al•teut with nett. Policies !aimed •• t dwellin g re t,o *. '''' , Pr. Curtis' Ilyeanm %defier! that longer separation was only prejudi- I State c I mild tb ' no ecome a party to the suit without , either renedualiv ) .'er fora term of rr:ra. lorciimyll-ta "'' ' I is ''''' ' ' K '''' b ' r ''' ni -.:,..~ 6.14 to the great end far which both were strug- some previous legislation. I giving thin deem; Ladies Fanoy Furs. gling-the sumess of true anti-slavery princi- .. ' ' - I ton the Court - reviewed the whole rase, and two- 3I'CORD & CO; would most .respectfully pies. - I nounced the Franklin Canal. Company's Railroad , Melte the attention of Ladle', to their large and mandato It is impossible fob no to keep up a record of ' . atock of FANCY /Tail, nom ommlog. rovnerbdog.it Mat a frond of the grossest diameter. Subseqemot- j the meetings all -over the coniatry against the ISable , Stone Martin, Fitch, Lynx, Carmine, Siberian r%nal ,ly a resolution. of the' Legislature removed' the rel. Itoeß dlartlo, Genett, Coney and Swans Dow. ?lone Neturska bill. In addition to those b , foro noted, i difficulties in OM *ay, and another application , F . ift ct i, ri .i , ,, Polaarair duffs, Bums, dr, runlet Wood and there bare been meetins held ' at Mercer, Pa., for an injunction was pending when the Legisla- i - attended Ly men of all partite, anti in nearly I PEARL STEAM MIX, tore repealed the charter. Them are the only , . every county of - Ohio., In sereral counties of 1. ~ C ANAL BAS! N, A kLECI I LEN Y, cases we know of in which applications for in- ' Ohio, the Whig, Democratic and Free Soil County SEAR Tilt: RAILROAD STATION. I " Committees have united in the calls for the meet- junction have been made. \%hten an application routines w • ll hi 1 • supplieti with our inrioun for an injunction was made by the owners or 015- 35. , : : :1 . i i h ...14111 , , kaut;5i, ri.o , , . ‘.. :Ai , -..F Moving their ,' tags—ft .^.thstarktial evidence of unity of public l cers of the road, to r e s t ra i n the people from in ' w , .si .toad, or . B11:11117 r 1:e14:1 7 . S e t •-rn?• ' :Ti ‘ i.iti ' .3 4 .,:,j ' i.;t: sentiment. In the strong democratic counties, , jnriug it, before the United States Court. Judge i Vi`rab...,:t4.Nil..'l.`4l•;;-. It. P. sad:earl., oryl. T. Munele. such ;is Stark,Wayne,ltichland andeolumbiann, Irwin refused the application. and took OCUL7 , IOII , I. l ,TgZn i ,u' o , th riT, ~';.: 6 7 milk. in'""ofth. '"' .. .forominent democrats come forward freely to de- i Ito pronounce the road a fraud, and Without /thy . P'''''''' i Iff:YAN, KENNEDY a try. fend the interests of freedom. 1 legal rights. - thus in two high toi...ts has the I '''''''' n i" '"" ''''' """'" '' ' ' ' ' cor, ''''' •• - ' - '"'"1 ".."' Tho demeans of Cleveland, a very numerous FLEVaNG BROTHELS, ' , road been condemned, and still the editor of tie ' Slid respectable bodyet neon, have held's meeting- latmacenia to J. gum, co., American Railroad Journal appears to, its de- • WII0LF: s A E E DItITUU I ST 5, similar to rho ono held-here, and adonted strong I No. CO WOOD b'rliliki I'. ; fence, and. ignorantly, tee presume, perverts the , reiebations against the Nebraska bill. Hereto. l'lTT.S4irEGll, ?A. fore they have nearly all voted with ' the Demo- I facts i n th e case- ri Er mi rle.ors4 Dr. SCLatel•aCelelcannt Verandah:, 1. ,, en IVe have no desire to pursue the matter fur- t ' ' Crutie party. .1 Buffalo paper, in the German ' PROTECTION language, the Wettbuyer, of Felon IT the 16th, I . tiler. The editor of the Itnilread Journal clinked " ... T .e e ii ' the et, ..‘f 1"..- - - I.Di I'S ai RANCE • COAIPANy 4. says: .:. "The German press,nor err epiiill that of the South, has expressed itse:f almost unanimously and with great decision, against thfrepeal of the Missouri Compromise. So far as we know, there `are only two or three German newspapers which speak in behalf of the traitors 'td the rights of the North." At the Rochester (N. Y.) meeting, the Mayor, an old Hunker democrat, presided, and among the- officers and speakers of the nieeting were active Hunkers. Darabuniers and Silver Greys. 1 The people are all right. The "People's Meeting" bed at the Tabernacle, I New York, on the 18th , was an immense gather ' ing of the mechanics and workingmen of ;that 1 elty;;and their protest against Douglass' bilrwas a manly one. If not heeded now, it will he here. 1 .• , a ft er. I In the WbsconSin Legislature on the 14th, there was a strong effort m„sde to stave off the Anti- Nebraska resolutions. To effect this, a strong appeal, was made to ihe political prejudices of the members; but the effort not only proved abortive, but drzw mit several democratic mem berslin strong denunci lion of Senator Douglass. One Of them said that I"the name of Stephen A. - Douglas 'Would appe.a s r, in future history among politicians an that, of ' Benedict Arnold among soldiers." The debate was protracted and ex- citing;' hut the' Anti-Nebraska resolutions were finllly ordered to a third reading. ' ' The Springfield correspondent of the St. Loris Republican, writing under date of the 21st, ex presses the belief that Anti-Nebraska resolutions will pass the; Illinois legislature. - We append a few extracts from our exchanges. to slime the current of popular feeling: • . "So 'air ail it lies been in our power to aseer -1 min the sentiment of the Ohio Democratic press,. on the subject of the Douglass Nebraska repeal !of the Missouri Compromise, there aro nine pa -1 pers for if and twenty-eight against—a fraction over threats one against it. There are others silent; and ethers that we have not seen. There I are but very ter of the Whig press for it. The 1 -1 ."'""•••• - r---essa-thir..,.., ..Xressill with the religions : press of the Mat, are down upar ..., - ,,, --.i...../.. WAsstaGrox, tondos, .FA. 20, 18:-.S1.—Impor ilant develcrpementhdisclose the fact that the Ne braska bill is a pls:t of Southern disunionists, and that Toombs and Stephens are at the bottoni Of it. Douglass and. the President are bat their iastratnents. Further disclosures will be forth- coming. , . Mr. Marcy said to' a 'Soft' member that the 'President expected his (Harry's) friends would support the Nebraska bill. The member replied 'thaV he wars walling :to 'go any where for Mr. Marcy, but he could not, cruthistently - with his own feelings, go to the devil-1-..tat to support the Nebraska bill - 4as' equivalent to going to his [Satanic Majesty. Ile recomnuutdocksstkat the ' President had better use his influence with Messrs. ICittrislge and Morrisen, of New Hamp shire, and that Cushing. should talk to Brinks, of Massachusetts, the three being dead against the bill,Cor...V. Y. row. . 01Cenrusescrw nth licrenloll.—Of the 203 elec tors voting at 'the recent special election in Led yard, Cayuga bounty, ..t.U.t signed a renionstrance agnirst the Nebraska iniquity. Thus it seems there is but One friend of Slavery extension in that'town, and this, we doubt not, Stay be taken as an index of public sentiment upon this ques tion in the rural districts of the State.—N. -r. 31a.. SWISSIIELM.—In her paper of Saturday. last Mrs. Swisshelm endearors to create the Ica p,ression that she didnet represent Dr. ,31'Clin lock es a better anti-Slavery nun than Dr. Ca rUthers: and that all her efforts against the lat ter gentleumn were intended no an offset to our attempts to take away votes from MT. SteTell3oll, the Free Soil 'candidate. ,' _ . . INlth „regard . to' . .the first matter, our comic- I done Clear and unalterdble that :Mrs. Swiss helm did aver thatr,Dr. McClintock was a better I anti-Slavery man thau.Dr. Carothers. She rep resented that while Dr. ?McClintock wee in the legisDiture, he Toted against the repeal of the lin'o . lB-17;; which; being done in the tesith of the adverse position of his party, was %evidence of both moral courage and soundness on the Sla very.nnestion; while Dr. Carothers was room. Rented by her sa, giving but a cold and inanimate suppo' it to anti-Slavery measnros.. The latter, she argued, acted with his. party in so doing, and hence deserved no credit for it; while Dr. :Mc- Clintock acted tigsinst his party, and itt tIM risk of -sacrificing his influence as paitY Hence; Argued 3lrs. Swisthelm, Dr. McClintock wee the anat . -reliable if . . This was her' position, as her files will show; and It will not do, now -tilt McClintick has- proved so thoroughly. Prof. Slavery tad sen - ile r to attempt to creep out from the po'slticiii she' Toltudarby assumed. . . . . As to the :second matter, Mrs. Swisshelm is •equally unfortunate; We did not once allude, during ..the'whtde .eitutpaignito, Mr." Stevenson, the Free Soil candidate, nor asleone. Fete Seiler to ,rote against Lim. appeals in behalf of Dr. Carothers . were based on the grountilhat he was the-Whig candidate, mid.entitled to a faith ful Whig support. We urged his soundness on the anti:Slavery and'temperatice;,questions z as reasons *by the Whig party should sustain him; but tierce MO IlSkili the Free Boilers to aban ihM their candidate for ours.. MM. Swilishelm cannot hide behind *So vain a refuge as this.— ' Slie lad better mike's Clean breast of it at once, and admit that. personal rancor stimulated btr opposition to Dr. ,Carothers, and that she con tributed 01l shocould to McClintock's election to gratify her personelonmity agiiinst hie opponent; well !mortal; that in doing so she was aiding the 'choice' 'of one was betlkiro-Slaveiy and anti. tenaperince. . ItAILROAD TO TUT PAOUTC,—We have received from 'the author, by the ioriteness cfAd ad e ß lE x . PVCM;'S, capi'of aMtnal,lo iork, entitled, "Rail .lAe. Pa4c--Xo'rihern Roure—iis general elk - wacky.: rrlatisc merits, dc. E r Edwin F. Jobtl son, C.E..7, It. is n handsome pampiddrof crrer IZO octavo pager, accompaniedlowFsPlable easps and Illustrstions. It contains digest amountel ; most valtuqe and interesting matter in reiniteii letlieFnOlfle ItailresdAnd to the country through. "V:l4tc4AiliNortimiti route laiiroposed tob9 loca l 04; We barb previously 'mime:co:44lr 4 1110 p. I . stconglyin favor, of titeLNortbens route f iefid we re glad to have our opinion confinnidti so able no ETICIOOtia ft* JohMson has given td the world. Ir'ecdinnietieihi ;work to the attention I of all pim.hictereitod in the nationslh.ighway. VAHAN! -tit the Itailroa el-Journal ofee, Now :614 Bruns. r9n, tim.s.—qbosa wishing to entorinto lucratiro And sire tatiineor, ari -To tem(' to the lidvirtliertiont C=i*Drug Store' for ._ ~;. injure the character of Pennsylvania. .ter - 6; ifiliTAinth - Tx.i.kl:Q credit is too well base,!, and the probity of her • emits! soomd Premiums and Western toad, people is too highly appreciated to be injured by $1 090,000. • such puny, and manifestly malicious attack,— I i It'rull.kf ED 1825. Policies of Insurance i.suml ail all times on the We convicted the editor of inconsistency from most favorable terms, against his own columns, and he has not succeeded in ex- LOSS Olt DAMAGE 11 17 FIRE: plaiuing it away. We have now convicted him OIL Tau. of of a perveraion of fa : Ms, and there we leave him. PERILS AVIOITION •% • - , hiliAttlE AILNOLD; Agent.' For Pittsburgh and Allegheny Oa • jar 4.-conspiracy of a most ati-Oulutis chant- ter has come to light in Massillon, Ohio. A num Indigestion and:Liver Complaint Cured- • lir CUR'S PETUOLEILL.I.-Real the fllovrlnglettretri'un ber of young men were banded together for the hey. o. memwsm. • stoormssr, fn Oregon: purposes of robbers' and arson, and one of the Ma. r. tl trit-Dear --Myrrif and alp; haring Tern h ereatly beneLca thy; U. of your Petroleum. I ale, to rules of the organization empowered any mew - have you seat me a his itf, I iso or titer docru boles (- mn the fongrogstiorml Minister I this blare , and aortal her to take life when it sto'od in the way of the et toy penile are ;elated is ith indleirties and an in hob of the Ilene the eacno of ne end wine raliin • success of their enterprises, or to' shield ; them; yo us. PETICOLEtiIt, tilt Wahl "IL La t. ties-two nr then. nth-about • wear and e ago red from danger. Some of the ' cons rotors have f b ea r never enjoyed so good h (Cr .ran as :Ae been arrested, and the officers are after the 1 : ~b l "rr, others. t ic". rellevel.and • I.se Eh outlan d of It als o- nut theMy vibe ras also irlicera teen • chronic di I.; of the width hal been of several yeare standing, the use of pint Petrol. um. tol.l by S. NI. KIER. fatal RasinALEO. 11. KEYSVIL ILO Woid and Dragrler aturLielleins ikekker• Amery-- • herr ; earn.ms ad rettin no Ilettleau envy.; O'CONNER, BROTHER dc CO., B KF.P.S AND INSUILANCE DEAL-, Wood Wert, ono diet Duos Fled street- TIM. brgh-hay sod tell Par and Current F aust . , Sight and T u ime Exchan g e. fob., Sruei.r. tertrrit and Itesten. Thus. I Itills. and Inntuhenty Not, taloa d gat emit nu Time Do- o ceans of inc and Correct Mu n n, a nd I ncur n ee tin t 1 ; Marine rulielea far thy CiAreerl. Ira, f yahoo!, SI:UXUU.r IUI.I Isegasseifiratval, (Capital 1 ant, JitATS P. TANNED. liGlyEaA LE OIL:ALPE • IN BOOTS, SHOES, BONNETS, 1.17,ATI1111:. Nn. 56 Wool stroet. Pill burgh. • erretts Gate ern na ern: ; ; Mc Stock consists oil upwards of Zika)i,ffilcs, kw y r.:l " ,,ctV 71 t 41. 4 ) '• r s E s w d a m f n a tomes. a‘dsetel rot-retch t FALL and IFINTEIL -and vial be laid at sedisisetney Pecte•-usentadtut her alai. with Oman of Philandritaaand ‘suil(• sPhag. nil and .mama tithe, L rlt.g. Aim. 51 W Dr. Morse's Invigorating Elixir or ti 1. tuquired MD groat resterstivn 1. 11 scrumulishlas tech extramilinstr ear., we can Tait net, Unit In tic. Arabian herb that louse ill kwalliih kose..msot tows Lem bloated by Ile Quiniteranyt Ph). 1,1 •.• • Weer amount and greater earls-the e-arailve properlie• ; iwi heectofre teen era:nivel M re/4 In is' - &l'a . ;•thliT'ili artleir of the pharmarderia. A abode meth-Int cheat of remedies. MO In lona. wee. to have hero aeaabinsil 10 this heel and In the re. CDEDIAL we have trettent ecessed eseenne. It Ls th nut the 15 tr cr eaciltairaT9ausetten al the raeliell, Tire 'debus of a:Gelato. are rated; the nenona are retie vol. the Lunt yataty red resume their ante It, - , the the ruStarers fturn headache are Del-Monte! U 0 mare, w I ' te.o , ne Virer,ne the hut oflenndba the,' centipl.len of the bilious- the deptessial Lassie's-hewn,. buoyant. the siak is 'latest In *eel, earthier. tedinea. ;Deter tratiellete henett loom the tn. nf Ler, eleres's eineraLlng Mgr et Cordial. Three sulipOrted kw irrefrarai.ln Pri.of. tar perruted to the attention of Lena t ide, cOo can .eery then hy a elaiale tenth of Ilia mall ets, km, heckrial is rot op (,meet retest. la ring hsi Gra Prier thee. jells/rpm. Loth, leo to are Aoliarc sit Pd. Merle, dollati. ('. It. t 0,.). Protein.; ur. thealuay. h. Y. Sold by Drihretst• theregtmat the fatted trades, fans do and trot Indira . General Assui. In i s 1, anal, -11patImu Bros. nen., Wool and rOarth greet.; !and Gek:i/L Nammt, ruttier !Yostvit,t asst Ylntin abet. • )nl'bl w Lyons Kll6l/12011.—ror preserving. re , flOrille. elesurfue and beautlfrtna the Cal, alleriaring Innen. llnedreS, and entiagenstalon 4.sesyearif the sttu Its typal:stem. e..StreetVle Yak the de iliniLlott of the gint , Loo..ne all prods aupetlunuashese,tgerattan itnrac toot sinew It. diern.t)'taa food no sistalltuts to I ...petal. Ineundonet. it. imeiatridahle ruperhel(f. i Getunt end floonlettenhienoralde tithe. Dena all prafe; shins of ilia.-the leading Journal, of EenO. toot AMe 00 ladice who rl.O cd.l It upon theD dersitortaLles. mid Minters In their Nurseriev.-In fact Its million patrons sletTethetc- fr.t plebeians to klearaprottnnoes it ass moot pleasing and edeetire where either IP a lleditinal or Tulle( ;irsnarathns ore produord. Do nut foR Waive It a trial haw at D. 3. mut): Priptletse, 1.1 Broadway. N. Y. .In:.. in Littaburgli by R. C. Sellers. C. Year Croy. Piet, /lamina Erne- and 'Dann t Reiter. 11.21.-Im Syphilis;Serofula, and Diseased Blood. —Fee thesa.tertitle diereses,. COMIC* Sr omen maims Iv am slenhe , • . • The proprietors Lase in their DlA•Maion Over one tout dm/ certillmtos cf the most est raordiciaty curse eltfreted to It. We owe an apology to sorer of our read ers for the failure of our papers on Friday and Saturday. Our principal carrier wasidisabled and unsbled to supply his route, and we found it difficult to supply his plait. We will try and have matterszight again as ,wen as pus4ible. Facto TELLICO, one of the eeleth-ated victims of Austrian tyranny, died at Turin. on JOO. 81, aged 71 years. 'lle was born in Piedmont and stwitt a part of his youth al Lyons. lie return- I cot afterwards to „Ililan, where be was teacher of mathernatieit mealtime he coraposrol scveral his tragedies of which the most celebrated Pm/ern:l4 ii ifoning. He then edited a paper. of which.the Anstiian Government became suspi- • cioui and it was suppressed. The breaking out i of the revolutions, in Italy of 18:30, raised the tyrannical wrath of Austria. oho acc.ing Pelli co of a Carbonari, which be was nn lit re- - ality, imprisoned and condesnuesl him to death , in 1821. The Emperor Francis 1 commuted the capital condemnation to imprisonment for life and Panes; was confined with tont:do:tic - 6 and Maromelli in the fortress of Spileberg. At tla• and of eight, years he was set at liberty sad transported directly to the riestmantese frontier. , The period of his imprisonment 63 rendered eel- • cheated by his work. mid privrisol, n book translated into voriouS languages. There the Thritian forgiveness is carried to the stmost, 'With gieat• eroavity,„ Ile spent the rest 'life in Train, keeping aloof from ally political ;movements—a rimostievotee of the Catholic tolig ion—directed and influenced by his brother. a' -distinguished jetvait, Rhein he even :tided in' an 'swering Eloberti's first attacks aping. the or der, in a work entitled Pro/v. - wool. puldisbed about 18,12.—Y. Y. Trib.' The Journal of Commerce says t .-Two Rue slut naval constructors (of whom Mr. Orcenwol.l is the principal,) sad one engineer, arrived berg 1 about i Month since for the purpose td coutcr- • ring with Mr. Melt!), thir ship-builder, with re ference to the large - cleans propellor which ho I contracted to build for the Russian govern ment, while in Europe lost summer. After a t protracted effort, Mr. Webb succeeded in con- i vincing the Emilio government that be mod .l construct a ship superior to any in the Russian t. navy ; and this, which is designed to he a tnotlel shit', is the mde. It is proposed simply to furnish the hull and spava without any arms. must. The keel lituLegs are now in crosreecof preparation, and will soon be laid down. This, Wr. Webb believes to be the only now constructing in this city for the Russian gavern ment, or fitting for privateering pn -.re% sett t, the gentlemen concerned in her, having nernis pliAhed their business will soon return home." The Journal adds: - "We dare say there may be men - in our ports. base enough to engage an privateering or piracy, if they have an opportu nity, though, for the. boner of human nature, it foto be hoped the number is -small." Augsbur., rirnette announces that the Em peror of Austria has definitively vigne.i the de cree consummating the emancipation of the pee,- entry in Bohemia, Moravia. imagery, Serbia, Arabia, the Banat, and, the Iraiewodina, from all statute or aervice-labour hitherto paid to the noblemen, or original ownei of the soil. The decree prescribes that the peasant shall receive tam.= with the necessary buildings on it. in a w ord, a homestead, as his own property. The worth of it is rained, leaving the peasant to pay it on easy terros,whieh are settled by a special, commissiort,:formed to mediate in the matter be tween the nobles and peasantry. Incomplete as this emancipation may be, it assures indepen. deuce to the people, severs all the doe between master antrpeasankand redeems the latter from - the extortions and right of arbitrary ejection hitherto Oxerchsed by the former.. The value of the homestead once paid the peasant is free and wholly independent, master of his land, time and labor. Thin we may call the' best of the mea sures forced on the Austrian Government by the revolution of 1848.—N. T. Tribune.. AN Ant.)! Lzrrza.—Ez•Gov. Coles, of now residing in'Philadelphia, but once TOrrito -7411 Governor. of Illinois. corrects, iu the Notion al Itttelligencer, Senator Douglass in several statements' he mode about slavery and anti-sla• very action in Illinois. He shows clearly that 00 State also stood up to and acted upon the principlei in the famous anti-slavery Ordinance in 1787. Douglass was rash in his utter. once of fancies for facts. Tuo CUNARD SIZANZILII.—The • New - York Mirror isaye.:--“The Baltic brought intelligence that several of Cunard's steamers had been to ken up by the English Government to transport troops to Constantinople. Welearn that, aside from this, statement, no information respecting the matter has biertreeeived' at the agency in this city, though it is presumed that soma of Cu nard's screw steamers in the Mediterranean may lase been taken." ThnAlbany Register, of Monday, •snys that Rey. Dr. Palmer, in an eloquent nod Ale din cbnree, yesterday, on the. Poeial relations of Christianity, referred in no stinted terms to the wicked attempts now Making to astrod slavery into Nebraska, and pointed out•witat he con ceived to be the duties of Christiana in regard to it. - • SPECIAL NOTICES Have you a Diseased Livert—Tho queS- Con, though startling, sufddeotly suggestive, when the fulls taken Into consideration that diseases of the Liter huebeeoue mem alarmingly frequent In the United etates Indeed, them an few formidable disersee that are nut in, ; some way traceable to a deranged elite of that Important organ. Maur of the complaliatausuel/r clamed under the ImulorConsumption.bare their origin In the Liver. - "Any remedy flint would Insure Writubso tiod hooltlifwt ootOwi le the Lieer. would be • blessing to mankiruh" has been Alto exclamalierrof thoruninds. That remelt' has toen found: It le gals and sure. 'When a fah' trio] hu been' af• forded has never been known to MC. ' - nadir. have COs Any disease of the Liver, or tilseise WWl:iron Winn moored, from hepatic. dermatero Lem not a mamma. bat intrehare a boo of Do. )(tone's pals, and they will restore rots to health. : It Is 4ho onir curdy yetglsoome4, to whkh implicit conadenos may Plusher's+ , velltbe careful to oak for DB.. !PLANET CZLEBILATED LlYgg, PILLS, and take now site. There are other Pins, Po/Tut/nit to be Lire, IMlla, rufw4,efore Mgt public; alm, his Celebrated Vermifugo r tom wood" et ell respectable Drug Stores In the MAW Slater, slow tor isle by the sole proprietors, rtr.mmo nncrrimns. tgli.dkm• ,lirtoreessors to J. Illsld k Co., CO Wood M. Medioioes:—We eoliths stbraUon abeam of foodhoo,ibd otheit, to tilt sd vortloomett on tbo *Out). pagoot !la. vsloWs gm* SledWass. tom,., *`. ,~..... .. .;;X^>.,.7rl,