~ '.'. ESTABLIS PITTSBURGH.GAZETTE PLIILTSITILD DATIX AND WEEKLY BY • 1 • • .; WH/T El & CO. DAviu.mrz WRITE.] . (SAMUEL usrarrr. two ow rasa swam, mit noon TO tne roe? once. •TERMS: advanems. , DAILY-an doibira per anima, payable * bait Tea WEEKLY -Teo delleteper inn nm in edit, re. will be euppikel on the Illoeln!eteninione: . . Ten amts. do amts. do ...1. ~ "- The whinge for each dab to be adder...al - to ow. V/ ahlt to lIT mid Invariably In atrane. No debt= i x ': aent a ft er tb. year expitedt, mei... the orwee . • . a renewal. RATES OF ADIrERTISDIG: Ono square, 30 Una of Nocarndi.° Apia. 06 0 .. Do one Ineertion./....:: 0 05 . Do each additional I Do teaw ow w educ-- ••••• - •?"*-ti-• 3 00 - ' - - - ' - 4 00 • Do one mooch-- ...-..—,.....,.. , oo - - th, hromootbs.-....-.......-- ...... - . 00 Do three months-I —.:...-... , 1 9 00 i . ets montbs..... - ...-..., - ,44....... 11 00 • D o al W twelve months,-.............- DI 00 gt..dion Cards, it roll . ree Per annum) 600 • One dolier Me rich additiOnedliae. • Una senareorumehh, et e w, n ,,,.._ (.00 , . 0. egt,) .&thud.. of papon r .....-....- 25 00 'r Yoe oath additio.l swans larded over one morith nand fee oart . I d lolo .l Rua. Ineettekander the yearly rates, Adnertiannenis exiirdini &ea.., sod not over 1111een ID l Tlta b be ebarjed all & Keane and a half. nota 4 ble IV legal advertisements 19 r=ing candidate. forotgese . to C la'thm' the e _ es other advertisements. , ' I , Allyertisements not marked on the copy for a rpeolned n.l nor Of litiertkers will be continued till fated. sad - Partiteut exacted accordingiy. The privilege of annual sdvortlarre is Aridly limited to • .. I.hcir own 10151edlate InalitleSß, and all scleertitennenta for •. the Irian of other persona, RA veil no all advertisements not• immedlatelpeonneeted with their own Imainees. and ' all dames of edverthemonta In- length or other.., ha yowl the limits. ngsged..erlli liettsnrerla. thenenalratea For all .ach • tisamient - advertising, bill. will be separately rendered, od - r - uta.=......m. M.., war d . bl i n dbmn other pliblits meatier...and ell political meeting, &ad noires, to heeharged hslfprice, pay- • able strictly In edrentet. • . l• . Marriage =Aker to be charged 50 cents. • Oath notice Warted witbooScharge, eithr. 4a.t.PW raw by funeral Invitations or obituary mottoes, and when ..„ ,ftemntraled.to be paid fr. nessuar advertleces, and all 01.11611 sending ooriamonlear none, or requiring neatens deeigned to 01l attention to . ./eira' Soirees Comer% ot MY ;Pular eatertalumenta wherz==maitt for admittertm-all notion of Fri to eery WM* denigned to call attention 2 ./. l rds ...rather. adoulated nor 11:mended t he promote in Ividulll Interest, cau only be I.erted with t nude, talt,s ... that the Moe Is to be pad for. If Intended to In the load column, the maw will be charged • Irt . Mar• of 10 cents per Hue.. . it rate or gur natter. to be charged triple prima • ‘ . re , , e tis . ow Liontse NUtions $2 eaehi • e' 'Estate Agents' and Anetionewie advertisements not . .to be nod., mot onto., bat allowed a diaconnt of is thhty.three mid onothird per osnt from the .moms of • WEL I. . i • • _ ;•. a _,,, Arnim. on rWeigtir lit b itty 7 / 1 1.W. - - SR , . %U.% throe inantioria- . -.I ......---.21 50 ---: -- --•' 7.110.2 - __ each iddltiOnal howstion - SI 2_ ".', ADITIMMOCCIrft IX LlMlLtilr PIPtL • • ~." - flue 1 411.1IN'(10 linec) on. Insertion .50 rote. • _ - 4 - Do. - each additions' Issiertlnct....-25 contr. "'All tiandentldietliseMerntii . lo On paid in adranee. RUES' OF COMM= DAILY Ira Tan _ z "N. II OLALES & .. .m.i. *7 Morin st between Thin i I ,... k l' o a r N i ,NBa..V , ANLt. imLr •, IC.retanao tank of ' aci=parl •t - , . Cnrrit 31:nultagf., t.par 1. Bankao North Aroorlea...nar • - Bank of Mahe Ilbertka 1 •• .. I'll :3lllZTV , «Vitiir.:: ; , i. . busk of th•UnltAd States 1 ; • • Counasaill Bank of ra:-.4ar '' ... Partnere a Stricaar • . ....j ' it l ialt Bauk. Bia ' ". _ .'. :_.par ... r .•....a -,-• • idannike. a EdoeLuaak....par 11,1=ndurglae..--par '. • Poularrarl a t TS rudr...:: -.- 1:. ! riM ” sl2l -1- TV P4 .. : ' I. - . .= ' Bank orChankbersbalitt,- /1 Bank rof Chador Conn y-par 1 Bank 0r1anr1110...,.-. --par 1 Bank of Dal Co., Obeskar - • ! , :',. , Illank•Of thrwmarown...--. • . . : Bank' of Gett ßank :of zburati........ X Bank oflliddlatoern„.---; IC • Montgronary Ox Baak....„tar • flank of Norttounbartand.. Carllale . 1: i ; .• . par=at iiiird ia , Brie Barik,,..-....-.-.„..-- X 1 Farroare Bk of Baal 00-par 1 . - ran:weft of Lancastar-yar 1 If,h, • '. W ar m. Oent Bank or Beading. '4: 2 ar Irk of &Miran' Co-nar . :'• 1 ,1 i Par. a Dram. Waynesburg. X 1 , 4 1 ' Franklin Bk Wayhtnaton- . 1 I;',' I , 1=a r iZe_tf . .7.7..,: . ... § 1 L•.l ~;. Lancaster 8ank.,...,-.....tar Leanaster Carr . Bank. r 1 ' . ..;1 • 1. Miners* 8000B 000 ank oiKirtlll** 3.; : ...''', .. .- . U . r.il il "7 -•.-',• 7-7, XIMBk ti.,... wroming ,Wiketarrol l 1 I •m°*"'"Vi• York ii-,7 1, , ablo Sate Bank I'.:',.- ( Braactag Akron.._ "" do : :! 1 A ' Branch at Athen5.4......- .1.101 - .0 1 85ZE15 t.... 7 . ..........11:j 4• ' 'll: pflatht Ta.m.... ... - ' # I'l . m -e rt Nrtm.—...= do Q- =: e h i tiM"7 . -4. 7 ;'" :ill at , Aaktabuky. - ...;- do I 1 .. ' Mat adem.......... do I at Margadet..-...... • do I i . ' •,• .•. at Maar.; ....- do at Ctnelanal:.:- m c :1 • , ~. ,• tg.... 1 0.4--: ,1,. i at. Lancaster:7 do ' • ii - .• ~,,*-,- at - abrabenrllla-. do ( z'g ,- .., •. at Mt: VeThall..... do.l Jth--..i :llama*, ar Newart-..-: dolt ~ •1 ..,.:= it i r b .:. ...'... A d :11 I,' • , Itrarah at, Troy ......-.....d0 a. : i Blank at Mt. Mutant.- - do o r • 1 , • at ganaarllls.-.-. do 1 ~,,, =bat N ark. , .....- . - d !...,. ..Bransb at fiqua.......,..... -m' . •-... Brawl:kat Portantoran • - • • ' Col f. ...Rronetrat R tm... """ ;- " : 7 Mut e. b at Ca "* Pah ni" "" ..": ' _ st, do Woceter.--t --. , .41‘.%1 - PRICES • ILLKIIITED.7OII .1 A: WIL STOCK AND EX v • No. n FO Udtd Mat.. • • ;1.-1 ---- .•?• 7 Do. P. We Wri; , lcof Fillaborstim.:.. • :•• A.a.. --'k u tC... •sv Seta:lll. • • Itt. , • . . .. . Pittant Llf. Inausnat— 8 Zi Waincq Imams.. C 0.,....... ', atingle Imamate. Co-, ..• . '..:,, : Aradated ammen's C 0... rieut=irblu.... . 6O J t• ki ... f ell agna1a..... z. ...... 60 n r 3t 1.7 U.. =4,bn . ii ..v..en „. Yoga V. Nana tad Italletad.... 60 , Ohio* Penns. nallres4-. LA f,!' halt a Oblo warg.d.... = . ao ' armiand ,It Wenn , . It. R. 110 -- W nlta"llwMyOD. r - y Doek UM 1tr=8400.6535= 100 . 4,,.: - ta. - da. • Mall. Q, Tart!. Crask 'Plank Bald 60 • .4, AIM • Par Tor. Plank Rd . !S • °mamba/LIM*. ILL, .50 , Mts . North Western... .. I ~.Itte!itburstb tbl P.P2I-• I.` . : ..... ;= nl : I I 4 rt !MIASMIC AND BANEI!C A. WILKINS - & 41. mem states, Bradiop. No I ' P172:11817.6011: P POREIGN and Domestic e -Laza Ws t r itt 4to9= _t...41..ad c aod I. •mme llZAlDttit,and late 7'. GEORGE. E. ARNOLD & CO: BANKER& DBALEIt3IF YarllABoloms,llANKOlte. .1 , 10. 74 <mirth Arai, t,p,riti Ben, oe lall.Al2ransuctions et nuartllboral lZdtwT PORTABLE TBRAIThmAcHIN inns AND 7 11 rAi d t v, tel!'lk!'rj..Etll): th {~nnghlv built, • . s.t ; Shorapreeto. Rpjlin..llW.'4l *mt., 5 itttr . 1 ,., 6 - 6 .„„. Ku lremoter aourtareo• l num o born nnirea miNtt erdl47/. ^ildso Mum I).4thK, Ibrubmt tutor, cal ma " M " tha° WblZuTtirstlLt; r1 a 5:14 1 14= 11 4 4 1 100,0 Xi busbelo • ib r„ thcomirktefilL tho ban been repqnded ..taojp,br ocuapkt..."""" " """" ti galemndoc 11 Soot's Patent, owl to ly separates Abe straw sad du! Thissher, sad r.ths gmln=pratiFuttre sitlafsetion ortiesteTar . " 4 ); Adel. .T2z4T - DENTISTS. SCOTT, Dentist, 'Fourth street, • lire Gaon? of Atarket. Of b Ail watt- warranted. :ILITM. A. WARD, • DEN TI • T,..Penn street, VV , b Dates stanktrastd. Oftim • • fr ock 4A.x. to I * at. on 942ardlys no ote wl/1 b mewed or Wead*d b. labor um ar. a baba* by II Wiointamn OY awe !. • Outflow sufforlay. aOl3-o.d ~5...e'^.~.-.'~,~~~'~^ ~w~a.4~r~.s.'Y.~M ';.THE - .DAILY. y!ERNAN & CO., Bankers and Exchange Brokers. No. 95 Woml aired, corner or Diamond JUICY, t Imrsh..Pa. Sfirlluy and veil Bank Neiman.' GM, Diemmit Time Exchange, and Promiseory Notein mate Collectione In all the principal Masao( the Union; licocire Deposita on call Mid on in tnrent. and Eire their prime pt attention to all oth er matters appertaining to a Broker's. bath... Mt:astern Exchange constantly for sale. . mhZ.S.I7 amen....xxortn.n mum.. -....rhoaasce. maim KRAMER - RAII3I, Eankers and :Ex champ Broker. Durand sea Bold and Sneer and Notes, negotlete bonus pp feel Estate or Stock St•ta :lnlVeTtrd. ' rit -P •7l i ‘ an . rn d eP " elg i n l' . ' 6c= Ilona mnQ nnnil nolnta In the Colon. t he nn of mini dlt'nale oPpetdta the R. Chariest D l . • KIN , G,C oi t n, Stock and Exchange .1w q=en=etleV44:V.7 rent tateic. Collections made - on the Wert at lowntlets XV., tern Bank Note* Bought and aold. jy2B IWATZIXAN. —.lltll. I. liar. lALMER, HANNA dc•Co., guocemora to Mauer. Hanna k Bankers, Exchange Drokersand st i L in Foreign and Domestic Fschange, limtu of t• Bank Notes. and bipeele—N. W on of Wood and TV I I streets. Current Rion. received on Deposit. Bight Media alr sale, and collections made on nearly all prioci pl Irani,. of the ratted Rata,. Gold. The highest premium paid for Foreign and American Advances made on ecaudamments of Produce, chipped east, on liberal terms. "ATM. IL WiTIXIAMS & CO., Bankers and Broken, North put earner of Wood and led All t Arm; 41 1 4= 4. • on liberal hams, and eolleetlona Pnraarrali attended to. • jedelr 111 ,.. WILRINS & CO., Exchange Brokers, Nig 5 rit,..4.t.bona.trnliet opp ost rao r l , e; t l e ttek of t o t. WM.• LARIMER, Jr:, Banker and Bra , ter, 4th Arcot, No. 66, adjoiedulng tha Bank of Pittaburah. - DISCOUNT PtSTUMM GAUUTTI. IT SONS, Brbkcro. if and iFoarth ate. Pidttnovh• Branch Hran do ICltr 1.11, ei Y. u="rt. lik.elnenfl.. do • do Franklin Bank-... do Lafatt s, ta do Ohio llns.k Trust Ca. do Waste Revered Bank-. do 114. k or Mandlon Snail '• • NKW KNO - LAND.. • Ah wheat tialr - Aak EW CII7.. t fiIARTI:AIk - "; lalDmare ...... Country • N. JERSEY k.DELAWARk ... «. X Think Bank Y t a h . :•• F 4=lA'Ade= i t a NoillazternAlank..- NORTH CTRO - LLNA. • Rank Of Cape Year-- 2 !tank ~il6t off. cation T Hs IlerdhadAYß„Nearb at 4n, SOUTH CAROLINA. Rk °MAIM. of 13.Carollna Rank Or South Cardirra. 2 hank of Charleston- „.„. 2 PlardArnit Mealtan'ellt " 1 • ODORULA. •- I Aaseirla Ins. k RICE Co Dan al Angewla....- Elk of Brunswick. Azle., 8 ARaoh IKENVUena... " • 3 Ilk avtelAnclicy.Lindrea X Ilk of ionlarlayhuratent • 1 3 6:n r =rinerial. a MIKIGUIIL • k Ilk ignite of I n.u.Nots. State Dank and Itranebea 78 Rank cif /Ulm& ... 78 WIRX , NAiK Meninelt Vim In. Co. ebb, 5 MICHIGAN. tarTerbaninal/lank 3 , Govrrn t Stock Dank 3 • Ye.alus lar Bank.— 3 %Al COMpant:...... 3 9tat• ... .1 3 Ink• a l , C.ktrAili.' - f ' ' of 29 Amerk.a,_Trironte, A Ilk of Peonla. Tomato 5 Rank of ..- 5 Ilk of 11/Canada Toronto I. EASTERN EXCHANGE: On Thl Vgitariscaiistil - 3 - kr ..... .. • GOLD ASIRFICTI R. CktC IllkaAloona Spaniel. 16,00 • .149 no.l l l. Patriat.....-.1 „ 54. 7: 00 so • Tan Thaliers-..--- 7,80 , Tem Gst ...... 30 NIIOLIIIES SON, Dealer''s in Foreign' • an - d Domestic DDSs of Dubai., rectifies!. of an Dank Notes and Specie, No. On .tificket street., l i zfLifi tha ft t ff , :iirgions s tVe on all the priheiPel dtiee • WK. H. SUTTON. • WhoFmk (Iv. cer, Importer and Drain in .FOREIGN WINES, Brandies and Old Mr . sumengshola TIT. IThiSty.-11.12. South-tut owner Wou.l stud Front Ms. Pittsburgh. Nm,. tuh2l • _ .. . ■ T {~ W. POINDEXTER, General Merchan tiles Dreher and Commission Merchant. IG7 Front street and 118 Second street, Pittsburgh. ap:Bl.lmd WM. A. MeCLURG, Dealer in Fine Teas, Chafes Family Groceries, Wooden and Willow Ware. garner of Wood and Sixth dtroots. Is non receiving a large assortment of Fresh Goods, in addition to his already es tensira stock, purchased from first hands In the Eastern markets. which will bemid at the lowest market mien, Wllotals, Steamboats. and Fatuities. bluing by the amustiq. supplied .t wholesale rates. Jar Uoods delivered in Ma city free of charge. aplg A& A. M'BANE, Commission and •For warding Merchants, dealers In Wool and Produce generally: also. Pittsburgh Manufactures. No. 114. Sernmt erect, Pittsburgh. • angl y 1.3 d S. LEECH ; MiALPiN 4 CO., Whole- Or ulo armen, mid Drain* in ProTisionsOdelshi and Pittsburgh Manufacturer, N 0.242 and 244 Libertr str.e4. Pittsburgh. aL ILOWLIMM S ROBISON — CaT. Wholesale A. Prodno• &We and Commission El Grocers,' o. Nntr exact. Pitramrsh. QPRINGER FIARBAUG & (Succes- A 7 nn to P. llssbangb.) Commbaton and Forwarding, Were/ante, Wakes In Waal and Produre generally. ?lea. 145 11rmt and 116 6eecnd atroeta. Pittsburgh. pa. apllrly W. REA, Flour Factors, Commission es • l Forwarding Merchants and Dealers in Pr - dux imnerallr. Od.tr. for Pittsburgh 31 ...fiwturft attende d tn. NUL 74 Weber and 90 Puna iota, Pittsburg., Penna. •91-tr. ICIER & JONES, Forunrding and Commis-. • don lliershants, Dealer. In Produce and Pittsinugh Pittsanoraeturad aridetna Canal Main. near Seventh strnot, burgh. A. A. nSta 1111ARDY, RINE S 0:17, "- §Zi — cc r es..w " ATWOOD. JON ES t CO, Comattoßkpri anti Plttahe=te, Dealers In Dlt.t.burgh MannfacturedOooLls. limy, MATHEWS CO., Wholesale Gro cer. Cointeladon and Forwarding Merchants, and gents Ihr _Brighton Cotton Yarn. 87 Water et., P.lttaburgh. , 1 , 1 - ERCER ANTELO, General Conunis- J,V Won Merchants, Philadelphia. Liheral wieners.% on conslacisnenta of Produce generally. Jal7;y 110IIN WATT & CO.; Wholemle Giocerpt. CornmlsSiort Merehants. said Dealers in Protium nod Pittsburgh Mariam-bum:in. 268 Liberty Ist. Pittsburgh 'll B. CANFIELD, late of Warren, Ohio, wan 1.24'7,1'1,9= Merchant, nod Pot nod Paul Ash, and Western Prrebite Fer=ly. Water street. between Smithfield nod Wood. Pi tsburgh. bp..sToirics. Ul3o# OA 7.lrfTF, BY NS & CO. • CHANGE BROKERS, , CR= STR E ET. 110X111 LITTLE. R. TIMAS LITILZ. rt. (tote atm /tobilim. Little .4. Co.) T LITTLE & CO., Wholesale (11;verF, PittetZtrutt=l74li:tiirth'3o,VVVi.,DTl2,4llll.s3ilP-, t!. Arrll 2:o . ISIA ' 1• IfitOira ir . 1 I E S ) I b s i t t j til i . Int.jar.o.7aly • • .. r . no _ Ism.:ll.7*Nar 1 , w g . Dl.iliov..4llld. it I t 1 # 1 , fiIrEESE WAREFIOVEIE.-o,Nlit If. v.) oOLLINS, Format Rog sad Comminton IlereltiML and Dealer ha Cheese, Batter_ , Lake Flab sad Produce generally. 21$ Wood street, eves Water. Pittsburgh m 31 VON BONNIIORST & MURPHY, Whole vale Omen an! Comnalsehm Merchants, and Dealers Plttabnrch Mantrfactorm, No. = Water street, Pitt. burgh. Pa. 91 W 2 91 90 90 90 90 01 97). TACOB FORSYTII, Jr., Forwarding and ire Commission Merchant, l'icatt Water etrort, Pittsburgh. mfaa ,„ 1 1101IASPALMER, Importer and Dealerin French and Manliest Wan Paper. No. 65 Mutat between Third and Fourth iniwk Pittsburgh. W MeCLINTOCK, Im Retail porter and Wltole- 10 OH aoths..tatl fr,a"lable end (32ZIatow 14b Steam Boat awasonzs, N 0.112 Mutat street. Mval.2M,X7d. 15 d M, m, ON, PATT Wholesale and Re uallfocers, the Eudora Ado of U. Diamond. MORRIS. I Dir et Di,. N 2O 011 v. =X yRANK• VAN GORDEN. Dealer in Trim tar& Ifoolex7 and 61nnon I.loro GOMA. IfanlanWorks, (lent% FOrniddn Uooda and Fisooy 1.1.410. a fall sa Norton:a of Widen eta tansy, be had at No. 0.3, corner of Market atreet and the Diamond PlUnbcorgn. Pa. apll.lr Div. cfr d rft it. Div. Cfe mo A. A. MIKAN& co-' rrrreacita ANTMONT i CO.. N. TOM A. MASON. ft CO., 'Wholesale end Retail et.„ inetalers hi h. Fancy AM 13taplo Dre;jlccds, 25 Fifth Pittsburg 1 Mr. :an. 4 14 e hew Meek. Xs. Ilh, NIIILIFITic Dry . & .6.1501111,04.1,, W rner F11.01e&i.'11: ark. drool: PlitAborth; °BERT MOORE, Wholdmileorocer,lic; Wring !lignite,. Denier In Probity. Pittidorgh Man mkt all kinds of Foreign Audi/mantle Will. nod Liven., .."a. tilS 'Liberty stTeet. . On hand s very lure stork of superior old .I.lunonsobels Masker. mbleh .111. be Di.! S. G. 04211 . . G. CRAFF & CO., Grocers and Corn- Ap min ion Iferehantg also, DcaLeri in all ktnila or ttanargb Alantalacturod articles, earner of Snennd and lbw sta.. Pitta!arab. Pa. tntal y - auras Matte:MY • ' Jarr..l. BLACKBURN. CO., Wholesale Gro• eer,. Wed ',tin:dither". and Nano In Prodans and telnugh Mann ferlarem Met, and Indrunk Wave .cat band Ai their Warebourn.l4l Water rtnet, 0rp127 morn: - SAIAIi DICKEY, A . CO - ., Wholexalo Oro cerkikeninlatlon literehanta. and Dealers In Produce; No: as Water elleetoind 107 Mont etrrft, fittabstrah. roux Want. :.....unee .. Z4/CGILLS h ROE, Wholesale Grocers and CyCnna . l4.44l Eace,tturtt, 1 , ; 0.104 Lthirty street. puts. • • vs. RIO ...... ........ ILI 6 OW/UV; n. . 11.10/417f, JeTa; :i4;117: 117 M. BAGALEY tt CO., Wholemle Gro- Ty men, No. DI and 32 Want etraet. 71LLIAM ,A. M'CLU'RG, Grocer and corner of Weal and Plsth streets. ban ally ale on lands large asiortment of choke Groteries and tlne Tats—Vorehms Frulte mml Note. Whelmale and HOMY Dealers Pumped on the Inneet tecou R°BERT ALZELL' it -CO., Wholeeale .D armors, Connolarlon Nara:ants, Dealers In Prodoele •n I t 31anorartosys, . No. 263 Llbertr etroq ,schongo, Coin, •••sht and 'elk!. Cl==l .shored when left WIt)K. Lt . :iI:CANDLES% succoasore to y L.l J. D.iirlek.Wholosoh. Gramm Forwarding and rasamisrion Morrbanta, Praders in Iron, Malta. Masa, Cot. Tarn,. and Pittsburgh Maangsetarra generally; turner of Wnod and:Water shrewd& PI ttelaargh. : • • , AACULBERTSON, Wholceele Grocer and (km°Won Mershim 'haler In Prodootrand Pitt* 7nag MtatMUM.] Azteleo, 196 Melt T & ILfEdYD, Wholesale 'Grocers, . uslarion Dierchseig,abil-nuiderg Produce—Round t anis Bulldtrups.froitinit OA Llimity, Woad, gad Bath Emig. Pittsburgh. ~ L CLfiIIATL "tun lIALISAT, BAGALEY, !WOODWARD & CO., Whole o " , a.N.*.ttn liatat stmt. rtasdelphh. • .LEE. auccessa t 6 310)1PHY. Jr, LEE, V A ll ="o":„Varbedart Merchant for the ur4 Ito. In Marty Ftrset. BUSINESS CARDS ATTORNEYS. S. MORRISON, Attorney and Oottneel ey I M Lmr. Mice ,rozooved to No. 44 Grant etrwt. ~,,,...yoZrt.th Pitt/lanai. Pa. . .Attorney at Law, "Bake _owain! Hui Wings," Grant dant, between Fourth and au3OorlrT RdBgRT --- E. PHILLIPS, Attorney at 1.41 NC, et. Loalx.,llo Tel OBERT POLLOOK,• Attorney at Law-- Comer at Fifth and Grant stmda, opposite tiro (knot o n!. item iittabazgh. mr.:4-yl3 JAMES J. KULlN,Attorney rugri.h street, num Grant. Pittsburgh. ra13.41r FRA. I % Tise. FLANEG IN, Attorney at Law, Ta l's - 0 Fourth street. Pittsburgh. JASP R E. BRA.DY ' Attorney at Law, Na Firth ittnet.Plttabnrg b. 8,;.i BANKERS AND BROKERS. COMMISSION &C. DRY GOODS. GROCERS. WOOL MERCHANTS. . AGENtIti:S ACARD.—llaving been appointed the er eamt..agents Car Pfttainu-sit, far the sale afl•atent raed Cemetated and Stmt.:led Leather Belting, man : nfadtuned by P. JEWELL. &TN. of ILartfrd. Connecticut. We nor otter far trio a large *swarm:tent of all widths. reanufatetured. at the manufacturer'. ITU"... artide being repealer to any Leather Belting ever In rffered In this market - Also. a lame stark I.f all widths of Hotta BubbeelieltlngomotantlY on Dana. cod for the —l /taehlOe Behind Depot," N 0.116 Market Street. sep2l3 J. k IT. PHILLIPS : AUSTLN LOOMIS, Real Estate Agent, Staet, Merchandise and Bill Broker. a ttend No. 92 th street, adore Wood to. . Business prosuptlyed Jythdly QAMEFEL L. IILARSHELL, Secretary Citi- LI reel. blame Comp. • any 91 Water street- I`P. JONES, Agent of time Insurance r r_ • ea of North Amelia, 111 Front street. Fm. GORDON, Secretary Western Insti • ma. Co.„ 02 Water street. GARDINERCOFFIN, AgentforFranklin anal Fire irdsarre Insurance Company. north-east earner of Wood Thta 1. MADEIRA, Agent for Delaware Ma i_ • tool Instuance Company. 42 Water street OZOILOR n. TAII.OII. nollVf J. UMITON LI EO. 11. TAYLOR 1c RUSTON, (successorn to Taylor & idlorne,) General Commlseion and Poe, 'reeling 31erchantA and tgenta for Eastern Transporta tion Line, Wholesale Deniers in Staple °lnsert., Sheet inga... Cotton. Cotton Yarns. Batting, Twine. Douai and hentneky /temp. Tobacco. Soda Aah, indow Glam. Plg,Bar and White Lead. Navel Storrs, and Cinettc nati and Pittsburgh Manufactured Goode generally.— Agents fi r the •Tenn )WI" and 91anner 51111" &meting". Pittsburgh. No. 413 Front Amt. (oPpotdte Lotdeeille. Pittsburgh and St. Louie Packet Landing,) Cindnnati. ja2tbantd T A. lIIITCIIISON & CO., Commissioia OL te 7 i :rt, r. h i rp u , Nr ol onts e ty l b g e: n t ,, . d tcet i , =ll : ll r, 11131, Zhu; Point. &e.. ke. BOOKSELLERS. &C. y L. READ, Bookseller, and Stationer, No. . 7$ Fourth street, Apollo Blinding.. It. WELDIN, Wlolesale and Retail e Dealer In Blank and gavel Books. Paper end Ste liery, No. (71 Wood street, (botween Third and Fourth) Ilttsbrh. • reard) JOHN S. DAVlSON, ookseller and Sta- DAVISON, Bookseller ° to Dovit° Agnew, No. r I Market street, near Four th, Pittsburgh ' , Pa. WRY S. BOSWORTII, Bookseller and Dealer to Irtattonm. 8a Nu 52 Market etreet, near ond. Pittehurgh. •ifkAY & CO., Booksellers and Stationers, No. 55 ‘Coal greet, next d.r the oorner 'Third, teburgh, Febned and law Ivoke eorertantlr on hand. MUSIC, &C . . •ToriN R. MELLOR, Dealer in Piano Fertes, Thad, and Musical Instruments. ,Fchnot Books, nod Stationer, Me agent fur• Chlekerine. }'into Forte, for IFratept Fentutylreinia—No. Rh Wr.otl street lIE I N ,..I II , Y t ELEBER,. Dealer in Music.Mu- In =rut for Nunn. , T r Fr. nd o a f A W al i ft ' re ' lent::: with Commas ' , Atoleau Attachment Ala, fur Dunham'. Plane. SCIIRSEDER & CO., Music Stor,, 4th 'l..,rerVint'g.t.e.7l"Nflairat'ltlr.ituwn,"4:4nin.sf,TV`rjnkdo. DRUGGISTS. T . OTIN lIAFT, Jr., (successor to Jit.o. MTi df- O tey,l liluileetale end licteill Druggist and Denier In Paints, Oils. Ify,tuffs, Ar o 141 Wins] ettoet. 0 dltsu, lulu. - Virgin Alley. Pittsburgh. rii - liegular Agent fer Dr. Void's Medleine. nibrd L tenons .rtt i Josetiii ',SION; I WILCOX iii CO.: Druggists and Apoth- Xa t , ttflift. earlier Market street and theDiamond.keen ennstAntly on band et full and enniplete aimirtrnent of rO gL Ale dchsoa , ParfurryAdidarticlespertainingtothelr business. Physicians psesesiptlotis earefullycompoonded. tnyl9 •JOHN P. SCOTT, Wholesale Dealer in Pro,. Paints. Oils. Tarnishes and bye Stuffs, 1- a. 296 betty 'street. Pittsburgh. a All orders mill receive prompt attention. Ltir Ag e nt for Loudon & Cos valuable fansilly modlotnes. mar 21- y. ....._ A. FAIINESTOCK & CO.. Wholesale a Drvsav;lsts. and mannfarturess of Willie brad.fled and Llthare, corner Wood and Flood streets, Pitt. httriati stich7 ID E. SELLERS, Wholesale Dealer in lit• Drum+. Paints. Dye Stall), Otls. Varnishes, So. . ['Wood krret. Pittillov,:b. Bre d a warranted.. P r ice, lot. IMEDIEMICI GIEORGII Ann:, ItRA UN & REITER, Wholesale & Retail net l ialets, exalter of Marty aa4 St. Clair .meta SIAIOONNIAKER & CO., Wholesale • Prue:Arts. Na. 23, Wood atreet, Antral:Leah. TOSERII FLEMING, Successor to L. Wilcox :LA co_ turner Merketd ar. d And Dlattannd-- t nmn , ont Itiedllgles. Median. tlltta7 astlega partalnlng to Melba balance& Pbyeleltrut jlteserivdons carefully eranytnunde4at an betting. jaA.ly MEDICINE. DR. JAME S KING: Office and Residence, 2 Fifth street. optselte the Cathedral. Pitts- Ceifgh. N' " MERCHANT TAILORS. tw.l to V:'Z''. r'' r a t. I"eku}q' Var . ; , dStt entt. WILLIA3I DIGEY. Merchant Tailor, bra , per and Dealer In Tleazly Mode Clothing. 111 Lib erty street • • • rWATTS CO., Merchant Tailors, 181 A • Liberty streL—Wit _are pnyy retvielrir nut stit,v4Arg r 2if o ti n t , n w tlzmit niltt- OtTr and evettstere plvvie ' Ore vs • ealL ' lmht - - M_ ANUFACTURING. • ------ 1- W. WOODWELL, Whole , tale and Retail l i . A. l t tanteactitrer and Dealer In Cabinet Ware. No. Kt JOTIN WETHERELL, ManufaCturer of PATENT LION {ICES. & etsperlor article. SOLID ROY and lIRAZIID Ina - VICES. ournrr of Anderson and Stub. menu street., one equare from tbr Hand street Drldize, Al. k:lbw:ly City. erllduell TOOL WORKS, corner of Firstand Liberty .mote. littgburgb. Pa.—Machinlntal Tools of every I etr. turth ex IRON PLANERS, Slide and Hand TURS• !NO !AVMS, DRILLINU MACHINES. Ar.. dr— woodao• knead to IDIOM (tots) NIS. F. HASH LION S CO. RIBROIDERED AND APLICA MAN, TI LEAH—materiel, marked for Ernbroblerand As ork by ' SIRS. L. S. WI L SON. Je2tf N. LIIK Nan atm!, Ilan, Ilan& BOlivar Fire Brick and Crucible Clayldan ufacturing Company. PHIS COMPANY HAVDNI ENLARGED ji . th parity for manufacturing, ala now prepared to meet thennrwweed dernand thy theirOWlrk,‘Cenrible and Dq/Lng '1'1 " Order' "' XITIC I A °I JtitS=I r.. 1. Plttaburgh, September 21. ISM. JOSE. D. 10.%110 M'CORD & C . O. • WHOLESALE AND RETAIL pAsilloNAntn HAT AND CAP .MANUFACTURERS, AND DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF FURS. • CORNER OF WOOD AND FIFTII STREETS. • Pittsburgh, Pa. IM—Their Pena nni Warr+ every qyallty andityleof Ueda and Cana Muff,, Ikran, Cuf!l and l'lde lionnena _ang . d.}4ndely . . PITTSUURI)II V/F.. i .V -5.: COACH FACTORY. x°74 l , ..inrgialtrd;flriET;7l. - '" d. WOULD rexpectfully call the attention of Southern sad Weetern Merv:haute tn his nos ...el: or Carriage. ranging In pries hum $lOO to SIC.). These Carries,. are bunt reom the Icet material and wurkmags Alp, and under hi own eurertirlon: he eau. with moll derma, warrant hi . week to he Inferior to none matures. tared In the Colon. Tiro sum.. pi hie honor. and the grewt Inereeas In demandh. Mix Axes at work. has Induced him not to bullA an: , minium or low prlesdansrk In his establishment. /Senors wanting good homwt work will planet cell warrants& and examine Ids stock before soina East. All 'work • Now Coach Factory—Allegheny. ICI. 11. WRITE & CO., would re n.ttrollr induln thenubile that' they have mooted• a MW on 'stock. between Federal and t hey streets They are now snaking and are prepared to rereiyo orders rer entry dew:visitor, of vehicles, Owell.. Charluln, Banoughen. Thai.ons. Le., from their huuresperinnw, tbn manufacture alike above work. and tho facilities they have, they font wenfident they nor crab!. ed ts do work on the moat reason/ads Wen,. with (law wanting articles in their line. Paylng partleular attention to the selection errant-estate, and baring none bat(oll.llmtent. workmen, they have no bealtatkup hi warranting their work. We tivereSse net the attention of the'while te thin matter. N. B.—llegodring done In the beet manner. and on tile most nasonaide terns,. • jatekil - - • ' • Coach and Carriage Factory. TNSTON, & CO., corner of 41) Belmont and Behr.. streets. Allegheny (Illy, would respectfully in Agra their Biondi , . and the public generally, that they are manufnetwing Carriages, Haw...whys, Ps, Boggles, Nn. Sleighs a' Cheviots, in all their various styles of lininh and proportion. All order* will be eseented air, will regsrd tn dors. I.llity and kauty of finish. Repair, will els/ attended to en the meet reaannaKe terms Bohn. In ell their work the lest ranters MO% Poles and Wheel Stuff, they feel condilent that all who favor then' with their petrnnagn will Int_perfeetly IMUKINI on trial of their work. tharrhesere ere reoriented to givelehem o mill before pup. chasing elsewhere. - „re ----'-- • , Fifth Street Stocking Factory AersBILITY, ENERGY, AND ECONOMY.— The best gouda In Children'. !lowa Steka, Un hirto, and Drawer., on/d at tnnottrartantr's prlraw, at the Pitth O greet strewing Vsetory ‘ all made from trot pear *wool. N ADVANCR IN PRICY.. WM. VAIN, "Working Factory. ath dreet. between Wool and Market LlVlNOrtelt CALM ADAM J. I. 11DOanaAn W. P. COMAND. • Livingston, Roggen & Co. NOVELTY WORKS,. PITTSBURGH, PA. TRACK and Dopot Railroad Scales, Hay, oat% and Grain do.; Platfenn and Coveter dog Doer lee of Pup, Coring, Drop nod nom). Latrbee, Coffey Mlle of various ItlndotPaint MIN, approved patterno :Balla and Pastanlnglc Malleable lenn Castintpot every ea rtety In form ar.d dtf - W. W..WALLAbE. STEAM:ALARBLE WORKS, 519, 321 and It 3 Wetly stmt, opposite. Smith fi eld itral, • IfONUMENTS, Tombs; , Grams Stones, yurof tura Top Mantels. Imposing Roam de., al , *Ws on hand, and made to order. 'by machinery, at the lowed prima Three hundred original'andrlented &- slams for Monuments. he-Jon band. Meek and Slab Mur ble thrufetted to the Trade at the lowest price. All orders tilled with deorattch at 814 Liberty street: tun WOVALLACJI, • ,- Blacksmith Bellows Manufactory. CO-PARTNERSIIIP , NOTICE,.—Tho sub ialberswoold reget fally Inform their friend. and the public emnerally, t they hare .mbrod Into partner *bin rommerning on t 19th of Amtl, ander the arm of It. WILLIAMS at W., for the monfacture of ISLACKSMITfE BELLOWS Of entry deatriptlon; which they woo detertoln• ed to make T heye eery beat materlal. t on upertark manablp. Intend to bare always hand an wort moat of all ems from 28 to 40 lathe., at their manufactory. •norster a Itoldal and Sande pay ahead... ROBERT WILLIAMS, • ' . JAMES WILSON. Alletzhetry 4l May 2d. aty.ldly -,,,, ~v 4....r , .......1-7.. - qr , c+ , - - -.• PITTS -. BUR .. . . . , . .... NEW YORK ADVERTIS From TISSGITErt k SCHELL'. Gen. Muse, So. be Nemo Street, Neer'Sork, P.nlialie Firm. in Vie (Xy l Neu. Tack PERILM OUTDONE!!! MHE PROPRIETOR OF THE MERCAN e TILE GUIDE would respectfully call the attention of Merchnnte, Farmers. and Mechanics. reshilng out of the the (ley, to the reoffertue tcrersibr pearfg el:Lb...intl. , the GroMr, being to moil subanibers only Ally anti .rsx• leer. making it. unquestionably the cheapest Fandir Newspaper published LI the trill States. nohnu The tts of the Carafe contain the usual variety of Chiges!, Epley Action written not mar to Please but to instruct. sod will be replete with a synopsis of all the Load and OCACTIIi Neter of the Day. In award to politic., the Gunk maintsln an t o tone, and. from tlme to time, will advocate such measures no best conduce to thee Interests of the greatest burets, I. O.S7.IIANTERS and others are respectfelly requested to not as Agents for this Paper. to whim will be forwarded specimen nooks, free when desired to do so. PRE.ViL - MS.—As so inducement for persons to Interest themselves to ohtairt eubstribers for the Mexantae Golde, offer the following premiums, and upon the receipt of the names .d yap in whence, we will forward them, per expresa. or otherwise, If ordered, to the address of those entitled to them. For time hundred subscribers, cash .4...V.5 00 Von two hundred and fifty sub(eribers. we give nue splendid fine Gold Watch; (warrarital for time,) 30 00 bodge huodred, one elegant tine Gold. Locket, (4 gisases,) worth . ... _ ... ..... Bracelet , ... 15 00 For one hundred and fifty. me elegant Ginn .Id.) worth. 11 00 F. - r one hundred, one Gold Teat Chub, worth aOW For seventy-live subscribers. nne Geld Pen and Gold -Holder, handsomely engraved, worth ....... 1.0 OW For fifty, nne do engraved, ' ... 00' For forty. one do do do 6 00 9 1ior thirty. one ' do dn do 000 For e xtensionwenomil do in silver do e holder. worth 3' 00 For fifteen, one medium . do. dO 200 For twelve. one Lady's do do 1 IA vThis Gold Pen and Gold Rolder,ls the Ladies' also, and V a beautiful article. Alltbeabove .odds shall be procured from the New York Gold Fieigtlanuuring Company. the acklewledged best Oold Pend be Case 51antdsetumrsin this continent. (2.17746'enn be advantageously formed In every village (96 4 dtrint he Unina, and a large number of onbseribel-s oldalued In this way. Ouch as would Interes ofemselves fler the Guide, can be trermarded, as our listpremiums above will show FARMERS who vrouid deilre an excellent Family News. raper, ehauld at once avail themselves of the Mode the Price being much below any ether newspaper published. rautedfor every city lit the Una's( Mater and armada. Itesconnsible parties, who will not as agents for the Glade, will please flu-nish on with their names for pub- TO iztr. LADIES we would particularly appeal., know ing the efficiency of their eerrices whenergetically di rected. By their exeoperatlon our eubscrip en tion let would soon out number any yeper published on this, continent. and to gain this we elicit at all times :drive to embody to the columns of the Guide something to not only please hut itutruct our female patrons. Our eubscription price being PO low, theta will be but little difficulty In their proeuring for usennuah solvwribem to obtain any of the Rich Freon unix above described, and what lady would not &alio a handsome Gold Watch. Locket, flrarelet, Pen and Pencil! We want to print no Within of F.Ly rAnfarend Cord, within three months. This accomillebed, we shall enlarge the On,)!, to double its present else. Sipa& Srgbperiptionsmay be remitted In reatelficeeltamits. hirm, nommunientions should be addreesed, post-paid. , to G. E.lltaxxxxx, Editor and Publisher attic :Wm York -Vert-coll N ie Guide. o. 183 Greenwich street. /14 - 21'etairopers throughout the Citing. by publishing the' above. appropriately diailayed. including GM notice, for. nt. MOW'S, and calling attention editorially to the same, and sanding mt IMl•er. will be entitled to an change. In I neelve a GOLD PEN AA - Pr:OLD HOLD ER , worth le ' rlve Polio?". Dolly 101000 will be entitled totem, which will be forwapled to them ea they may direct. MTlds Pell and Holder will be of the manufseture ef the -Woe Terk Goal lin Mangfigthuring Omixoly. No, 183 Greenwich the moot extensive and reliable Gold Pen produrers Ibis enntinent, Knot in the world. apla.i.tor Staten Island Fancy Dying Establishment: =MMZ= amen racy rank MA T. MY YORK CITY. RDERS received by Express, or otherwise, ir of dill. or cleanrinst Da m :resses. klantillee and Stiawle of error dewriptinn. k and Marren Car. fain loautifully 41,11. Lace Curtains restored. Canton crape Shaul. died the meet hrilliant, or the more arson loss. All kinds nfsllk. woolen fend fancy ponds, (In the pler or garment.) treated in the most Pncee”ful manner. The tuoleraltuied here had long experience In tion of thlp business at Staten Ireland. and feel aerated that their encores in the net of dyine Is unshelled. BARRVIT. IiEPIIKWB .k CO. lk/lOLYNEAUX BELL, Mantilla and Cloak Manufarturxr amilmportor. GS Canal ct. CABO. BIILPIN, Paris Mantilla Emporium, kfi Importere dui of Palley Pam act Broadway. .11 BA lIIBRN & SON, Wild Cheiry I ellitters. Cinounda Salm pin., pole, s,Pil John at. 4-1. . _ 1 T. lIERLIW H American T, Amecan lionmeo e, dexatht- Pharmacy. Medicines. Vial., Caere, to. for o, Broome et. `TAN DUESEN'S Improved Walipene. It restore. pens- Hair toile oripinal color, and creates 0 new ...north °flair. Depot. PM thanihers rt. 1110 CT. GILBERT. from Memphis, is cur ing handmrte °remover, Tumors. Ulcer, and Wens ut the knife. et his apaeloup mune, 483 Broadway. ALFREE WOODIIASI, Manufacturer and Importer of autut. Week Pletols, to, led Fulton .t. V, 11. WARMCK. 51anufaeturer of Enam i.-I. elled Cottage Furniture. Le, 02 Wlite rt. 1011 N DAVIS. Commission Merchant and Imp - a-tarot Brundlea, Wines and Clears, 254 {Sash- Want, st. FGoon & Tato., Manufacturers of A er . st. st wm n. Cat Tobseen, Cigar& and Snuff. 3r:3r: and M 9 I &t W l 3 l t. E . E ur le . E . Ll! ,, l r S A l . l4 L S , ( l ll2liT te tle t tea . t h tf n id . Machines. °Moe . .3:sinnitlawy. 1 1,1r51. SlMMONS,Millinery, 564 Broad way, near Metropo litan COOPER MUSE, A. J. Pease , Bro., Pro- Mien.", 334 Itroculway. NaORMAN CUTTER, successor to Lee, Brewster k Co, Importer and Jobber in Staple Dry s, 44 Cedar mt. 40 CHAFFER, late W. Newman: Nitnufac turns. and Wholesale DealerlnLadleellalterkShom 6 Broadway. 1111663nte SCAtER, Wholesale al- er In Brooms, Painted Palls and Tula Deal- In and WO. low Warn, Baskets, Mats. 001.111,,,TwineOriathg0.1.1olt ea. an... 264 Grrenwieh et.. New York mio-1 viTINI)OIS' SHADES, Gilt Cornices, Table " Cloth, de.. Jt/IIN 11anniseturrwaral Wholexale healer, No.lo Catharine St.. and No. 6 Chathas Squat, New York. snhtolyr MISCELLANEOUS. A 01,111.1. S. 1. CCSVALLS S. OUTIEBERT & SON, ENERA L COMMISSION AGENTS, for /I - the see and purrimue or Road lo ut e. Colleetion of .Itent, Negw.fatlnv uuue. flu Bomb, Mottg•K oN No. l4olllrd Plttemreh. I's. ata•lr • • T. C. WARILINDTO4 DIPLOMA, LADIES' & CHILDREN'S SHOE STORE. ne hasalways an band a fall arsortmout. to strort. Pittsburg°. Pa. J GRANT 31011 TRY, Dealer hi Leather, alftz, an L ad d .. poe !lading.. No.= Litartkt p. r7t, opMaF FELIX'S GENUINE EXTRACT OF at.. IT rill alta"relebainlitillr6""ilLlP"Vlet Pam, street. Pittsburg), Pa. 1113Liraare of °amorous countertl4. asZidly JWARDROP'S SEED STORE in now ro e/ Pla t t th Early Feeds Mr the Shel flatbeds Premi og To atnneentare Orchards COO kas, &elk an,Strao Cratere, and every thing of interest to UM Farmer,dClardi ner or Amateur, Omar. from Dealers and eh and promptly on Ilbend term. WALTER P. MARSHALL, Importer and Drelrr In Plain. Figured and Decorative Paper Thar coon A Co. of Darla mh3.43 r AR IS FASII lONS, FOR LADIES' DRESS- Eat.—The Perla Fashions for JUNE, direct per .{eater w be on sole .n the Ist proximo hr MIDS. lo A WILSON, is2itf No. '2 4 1.. Penn. &sore Moil street. WILLIAM NOBLE, Upholsterer, mid. Dealer ho liolv hr, y, Witolewalo lietall,Thlrd Street, nearly opirwito the Post °Moe. - - •- - - - ---• COACII FACTOItY.—No.. .1% 0,4 40 Dlaiiiimd Alley, sir IV ,. u lt E rre A l iv,p,ovri - ator. A. BROWN, would most respectfully M op . form the pub& that be keeps on hood, at his stank! on the west elite of the mononod, Allegheny_ City, a rairry. plate assortment of Venillan Mitotic Aka Tenltisn Mot ten are mole to order. Ca te s. test style. warranted ednal to any In llse Veiled M His Dlinds ran Ye owtoorod without the aid of "mew driver. flaring pwrhemett the stock. to odd wood or the' Cabinet listaLlishment Ramsey k McClelland. I at mammal to (umiak their old customers well as the piddle at large. with &ell - thig In their line. Ageney:6lo. 6 Wood street. Pitt/Marsh. ' mell2ll J. A. BROWN. E NN QIITEER. • i'. GLASS WOMIS '" ; rhORE!'Z & WIOIITMAN, sfanufacturors g,!,itivTivag CIIii.I.III=PAtzn4IT.INDOW: N. ll.—lbutleular attention void la odd *ea of Winehnr 61111.1 and private. mo o t for Isittlra and labs snit: [SAM, !WWI Jong v. 001110. ONES & Blanufact . yre of Spritig iml_Tfilide: !gm!. Plnualr Slab S . . Snag Ptongh Is i tord S C r ' suir 1411 Mt:Jr= ' AVr7.f& '. l4% Ross sad nut streets, Pittsburgh. , ZONES k tlcldo 11.' ROGERS & CO. Ainnufacturers •of n • orm , . Patnnt Imptnyke a 4 Hteel Culld ,, --5-'.... Polo and Vlnrt. 'treat& I ittaburgh. :fel: PAWSON, MOHAN & CO., binnurneturern of Fllw , els, Hpadea Se., IVarohnum Nn. 9.1.1V00d 4, een Hind and ~ nnd stavent l'Utaburgls. I's. Penn Cotten Mills, Pittsburch. KENNEDY, CHILLS SoCO.: Flnnunte-' terent ef— • ' peen a_No. bee , 7 4 : 4 6 , l lZ in " C6ltzt W i lo . of all color* ehlkleg • Ite4T'ethe " Noe ab Lines and slaah Cord: m l ing fte . Pe of all lases tleactletletua • _I , grttgc:r . a left . at the ITardwate Store ' Silleote a I, *tenet, will hart atteatlon. jelGl/417% Arnold & WilEinos • • II - EATING AND VENTILATING WARE , ' .11 0 11131:---Illartufsetorers of Chlleon'e Faros.% ric. wl‘ t t n izmzicgegiValit . fur Steam. Vas or Water, 15,..ire hare min oar Pummel., Patteron,.te.. to Slam.. ARA OLD S telutAttg,whons Ira eortlhdly recommend to the patronage at the WAIT , ' act 7ttt.olFE. ATRINEON I CO. 110111 NE.—S AND. CEDAR WAKE: 1 KROESEN koala! constantly on hand • 3od — iimorV meat of Wash and Bath Tats Banta, htearnbrak Oak Well. Kitchen ar Draw. Barka* Irreodan lkmdr, C harrirr Measures, Man and Chaffy Wuh . Boards; and all °that. kinds of ware la Molina. Alp - -00 nuts Tuba, and 100 dos. Bnekata: WIIVIAOLP,MarenIa Ball. nth Area, aMtr Melodeons. • ,KLEBER has just met! a k ~ thci 'm livk i • i ti• fresh Flock Of .superior Melodeon, ro l a f ttl T . t - 711 1- 1 Elegy, Ay.,,,,,de nodal...lla lormedlate superrfidon of the original Inrontor,2l.r. Gerhart. and an, eoruddered flti veledlrt this country and to Europe. They are pro m e the nouns in= end other Important Improvement& Wee sit late Invention,' or N. Gerhart.. The gate lot Cotttprltee, among Otero— ' 2 Ilve octave 510104.001. round corner, gothlo and double eat ofreede—Plano ot 4 Fire octave Motodeonsorroll Mg& double welt etc... 4 Four and a half octave Melodeons,• stral l t levi t tloutge f n Agent for Gerhart & hielet - Ittim'e Melodeon& We • . ibr Wertorn Penns., No. 101 311.1. ~~~~ NG, Al h 'ific 28; 1854 ; RG ; GAZETTE FRIDAY DIORNINd, APRIL 28„1854. Adrerfasinz 818. BENTON'S PEAT SPEECH ON TIIE NEBRASKA BILL. irIiMSE Of ittPFLEEVITATIVB9, 1 ITuesdat, April 1814. The House went intolCommittie on the DAB - bill. i., thmThe galleries were crawled, and much eager ess was manifested to - hear Mr. Benton on the 'cbraska question. -. Mr. Benton spoke ate-follows: If any bill to pair the Missouri COmpromise linaof 1820, had been brought into this House, by a member , from a slave Stale, or under the administration ,of a President elected,from a slave State, I sheidd have deemed it my duty to have met it at the threshold, and to have made . the motion which the parliamentary law prescribed for the repulstrof anbjeets which are not fit to be consi dered. I should ;have moved its rejection at the first reading. But the bill before me, for the two may be considerid as one, does not come from that quarter. It comes from a free State, and under the administration of a President elected from a free State, and. under that aspect of its origin, I deemed it right to hear what the mem bers of the free Btatenhad to any to it It was a proposition from their own ranks, to give up half the Slavery Comkromiso of 1820, and if they chose to do so, Pdid not seehow Southern members could refuse io accept it. It was a free State question, and Hie members from the free States were the majokity and could do as they pleased. So I . stood aloof, waiting to see their lead, but without the slightest intention of being governed by it. 1 bid my own convictions of right end duty, and meant to set upon them. I had come into political life upon that compro-. mite. I had stood:upon it above thirty years, and intend to stand upon it to the end, "solitary and alone," if needs [Applause and laugh terl—though prefer4ng company to solitude, and not doubting - reran instant what the result was to be. I have said that thle bill comes into Congress under the administiiiiion of a free State Presi dent, but I do not menu to say or intimate by that remark, that thifPresident favors the bill. I know nothing of hindisposition towards it, end if I did I /should not disclose it here. IC would be unparliamentary rind a breach of the privi leges of this House to do so. The President's opin ion canSinly he made known to us by himself in a tnessage in writing. In that way it is his right and often hiii duty to communicate with us. And in that way thero is no room for mistake in citing his opinions, no room for an unauthorized use of his name, itii room for the imputation of contradictory opituois to him, and iu that way he becomes responsible to the American people . for the oirinions h 4 May there deliver. All oth er modes of communication are forbid to him as tending to an undile:and unconstitutional inter ference with the freedom of legislation. It is not bribery alone! httompted upon a 'member 4 which con:dilutes, 4 sreach of the privileges of this House. It is shy attempt to operate on a •member's vote by tfify consideration of hope and fear, favor or affeetion, prospect of reward or dread of punishroptit. This is parliamentary law, as old as English Porliaments, constantly Main- Mined by the British House of Commons, and lately decilitres] iu Onost signal manner. It was during the reign 0, George.lll, and the famous case of Mr. Fox's Bast India bill. A report was pi cseuted to Parlianient by one of the Lords of the Bed Chamber, stating that the King was opposed to the bill; that he wished it defeated, end had Bahl that he would Fnnsider any member his en emy who should vole•for it. The House of Com mons took fits at this report, end immediately resolved that,'• to ireport any opinion or pre tended opinion or; his , Majesty upon any bill in either blouse MI Perliament, is a high crime and misdemeanor, derogatory to the honor of the . Crown, a breach ef the fundamental privileges of Parliament andbinbrersive of the constitution' • of the country. Ibis resolve was adeptestin, a full House by a msjprity of seventy-three votes, and wad only declaratory of existing parliament ary law, such heel existed from the time that English counties an boroughs first sent knights of the shire and it - zes to represent them in the parliament ifonSe. . It is old English Peelle-. mentary law. It ;is so recorded by Hatiell and all the' writers on that law. It is also American 44, and as old as our Con gress,and as such recorded inJefferson'e Manual. It Is honest hasitlnntl as such' miso in every honest man. Sir ',the President of the United States can Send tape opinion, except in written mess:igen. mud noatee can report his opinions to • influencdthe coatis-I of members upon a. bill, aritliontleseominiiihnoxious to the censure which, the ,prithlh Most tif , Conainonsprotionced .upoti the Lord of the Bed Chamber, in the ease ottho King end the Fox lia.stlnilia Bill. Nor can the - President's Secretaries, his head clerks, as Mr. ..pandulph used to doll thorn, send us their opin ions on any subject of legislation depending be fore us. They can only report, and that in writing, on the subjects referred to them by law orby a vote of the Houses. Non-interre tion is their duty in relation to our legislation, and if they attesort to intervene in any of our badness, I must be allowed er sine to repulse the attempt. and to express no h glier `degree of respect than that Mr. Burke ex nested for the opinions of a i British Lord Chan tor, delivered to the House of Commons, It a case in which he had no con cern. Sir, I suppos4 I can be allowed to repeat. on this floor any deg'ree of comparison or figure of speech which•Mr:turke could use on the floor of the British Heusi,. of Com Mons. lie was a classic speaker, and, besides that, author of a treatise on the sublime and beautiful, though I- • do not consider the particular figure which I have to repeat, althoUgh just and picturesque in itself, to be a perfectlilluetration of either branch ofhis admired treatise. It was in reference to Lord Thurlow, who 4ad intervened in some leg islative business, contrary to the orator's 4COBO of right and decency. !Mr. Burke repulsed the in trusive opinion, and declared 'that he slid not care three jumps of in louse for it. Sir, I nay the came of any opinion which may bo reported here, from our Secretaries, end on any Bill de psniiing torero - us, and that, in any form in which it may come from them, whether as a unit or as integers. Still' leas do I admit the right of intervention in our legislative duties in another class of intermeddlerv, and who might not he able to meddle nt all with our business, were it • not for the ministration of our bounty. I speak of the public i printera, who get their daily bread, and that buttered on both Eiden or daily print ing, and who require the Democratic members of this Ifouse,-under the instant penalty of political damnation, to give in their adhesion to every bill which they call administration, and that, in ev 'fery change it may undergo, although more eking 'able than the Moon. For that class of inter meddlers I have no parliamentary law to admin ister, nor any quotation from Burke to apply, nothing but - a little fablelto reed, the value of which, no in all good fables, lies is its moral. It is in French, end entitled lane et son maitre, which, being done in English, /signifies the ass and his masters, and runs thus: ' "An ass took it into his head to scare its maw . ter,',.find put on a lion ' s akin and went and stood in Life path. Andwhen ho ma* his master coining. he commenced roaring, no he thought, but he only brayed, and the, twister knew it was hie ass; to he went up to him witha cudgel, end` beat . him nearly to death." - —.. This is the end of the fable. nud the'mornl of it iv a caution to nll noses how they undertake to scare their mnsters.l [F.xcessive laughter, long continued, and cries of "Not bad!" "Goo d" "Hal ha!"] Mr.. Chairman, thin House will have fallen far below its constitutional mission, if- it suffers itself to be governed !by authority, or drugooned by its own hirelings. I am a man of no bargains, but act openly with any man that acts for the public good, end in this spirit I offer the right hand of political friendship to every member of thLs body-tbat will stand together to vindicate its privileges, protect its respectability, and main tain it in the Once fur which it was Intend =-I‘l, the master branch of the American govern ment. The question before it is to get rid of the klissonri Compromise line, and to a l&wyer that le an easy question ; t That Compromise is in the form of's statute, and ono statute is repealable byanotber, That short view is enough for a lawyer. To a statesman it is something differ ent, and refers the question of its repeal, not to law books; but to reasons of State policy, to the circumstances under whiciPit was enacted, and the oonsequences which are to flow from its ab rogation. This Compromise of 1820, le not a more statute to tat for a day; it was Intended for per petuity, and so dechired itself. It is an enact meet to settle a controversy, and did settle it, and cannot be abrogated without reviving that controversy.,;t given the ootm try pence for abovethirty ears. , Bow many years of distur bance will , Its abrogation bring? That is the stitesman's.questiorl, and without assuming to be much of a stateathan,l, claim to be enough so to consider the consequences of breaking a set tletrient - which pacified a continent. I remember the Missouri con!"fer l 7y, and how It destroyed all social feeling and all capacity for beneficial legislation, and motzed all political .principle into an angry contest about slavery, dividing the Union into: parts, and drawing up the two halves into opposite l ,amloonfronting lines like enemies on the tleld-nf battle. I do pot wish to see tankh tiinosagout„ and therefore am against reviving them. hp hit•mtking.:np tho settlement -which quieted them; . - "The Missouri CcOprorolso of IMO was the partitlening betweeq the free and slave Eitatea of MEM!! a great province, taking the character of a per petual settlement, and classing with the two great compromises which gale as theordinances ofJu ly 13th, 1787,' and the Federal Constitution of September 17th, of the same year. There arc three slavery compromises in our history, which connect themselves with the foundation and the preservation of this-Union. First, the territorial ' partition ordinance of 1787, with its clause for the recovery. of fugitive slaves; secondly, the co tamporaneous constitutional Svcogaition of slave- ry in the states which choose to have it, with the fugitive slave recovery clause in the same instru ment ; thirdly, the Missouri partition line of 1820, with the same clause annexed for the recov ery of fugitive slaves. All three of these com- j promises are part and pared of thisame policy, I and neither of them could bare been formed without „the other, nor either of them without the fugitive slave recovery clause adiledr to it.— The Constitution could not have been formed 1 without its recognition,of slavery in the 'Stiles I which chose to have it, and the guarantee 'of the' rightto recover slaves fleeing into the free States. The Missouri controversy could not have- been settled without a partition of Louisiana between free and slave soil, and that partition could not have been made without the addition of the same clause for the recovery of fugitive slaves.—. Thus all three compromises arc settlements of existing questions, and intended to be perpetual. They are all three of coal moral validity. The Constitutional compromise, is guarded by a high er obligation, in consequence of its incorporation in that instrument, Mit it be way differs from the other two in the circumstances which induced it, the policy which guards it, Or the consequences, which would flow froni its iththgation. A propo sition to destroy the slivery. compromise in the Constitution whuld be an open proposition, to break up the Union. The attempt to abrogate, the compromise of 1787 an'llB2o would be virtu al attempts to destroy the harmony of the Union and prepare it fordisaolution,' by destroying the confidence and,affection in which it is founded.' The Missouri \Compromise of 1820. is a contin uation of the Ordinance of 1787 by l extension to the since acquired territory west of the Mis sissippi, and nootax differing from it `‘ either in principle or detail. \ The ordinance 4 1787 divided the then \territory of 'the U. S. \ about equally between the free and slave States. \ The Missouri Compromiae s lido did the some by, the additional territory or \the United States It, it stood in 1820, and in bothsoases it was don 'by act of Congressttand was the \settlement of a ditt \ ficulty which was to list forever. I consider. them both, with their l'ugiti is slave recovery i clauses, and the similar clause n he constitution, aapart and parcel of the samotransaction---dif fe rent articlea in di e same general settlement The anti-slavery clause indhe ordinance of 1787 could not have been put in, as was proved by three years' rejection:without the fugitive:s ve recov ery clause added \to-it. The conatituton could not have been framed without the reclignition of slavery in the States which chose it, ad the right of recovering''alaves fleeing to the free. States. ' , The Mi.smiiri controversy cotdd of have been settled except by the prohibit on f slavery in the upper half 'of the territoryof Lind inns, and that prohibition. could not have liken\ obtained without the right, to recover fugitive slaves from the part made free. Thus the.thrCe nieasureiare one, and the enlinance of 1787 fath- \ er to the other two. It ltd ta the adoption of the fugitive slave clause in the Constitution, and we may say to the formation 'ef 'the constitution itself, which could not have been adopted without that clause and the recor ' mition of, stave property in which it was founded. \ Mr. Benton mid this vital fact resnited of it self 'front the history of the case, which he pro ceed to trace, and then remarked: \ Thug, fits times in the beginning of this cen tury, and fire different times, and without, any distinction between Northern and Southern members, did Congress refuse to impair `the slavery compromise of 1787, notwithstanding five _times asked for by the people of the territories. ..,Ohl squatter soverignty, where were you then? :it ,was a. case for you to Lave shown your head, to bare risen in your might,, and I stabliebed your supremacy forever. It was a case of a con - .tion of the 'sovereigns themselves, and neit .er .', Convention nor the Congress had a dies .of the sovereignty. The convention pe tition.. Con. esaotra ward would its guardian, or child Al un erifge would petition their father, and Co •,, • s - weled like a good guardian or a fath , thatit would not give them an evil, al though they ...y.ed for it.' Benighted times, these; and inf • defy behind the present age. The mare's nest ad not_ then been found in which ,hail been laid the marvelous egg, out of which ' EMI been hatched the nondescript fowl yclept, •" Squatter Sovereignty." CLoughter.J. The illustrious principle of "non-intervention" had not then been invented. The ignorance of that day had never heard of it, 'though now to be learned in every torn-book, 'mad I believe, no where else, Mit in born-books. [tenewed mer riment] Five times in the beginning of this century did Congress refuse 'to impair the sla very compromise of 'B7, and now, in the middle of the'centary, and after thirty years of peace, under the Missouri Compromise, the offspring and continuation of that of 'B7; we are called up on, not merely to impair for a season, but to de stroy forever, a fir greater compromise, ex tending to far more territory, and growing out of necessities far more pressing. And how call ed upon? Not by the inhabitants, not by any one human being living or expecting to live on the territory to be effected, but upon a motion in Congress; a silent, secret, limping, halting, creeping, squinting, impish motion, conceived in the dark, midwifed in a committee room, and sprung upon Congress and the country in thh , style in which Guy Fawkes intended to blow up the Parliament Rouse with his five hundred bar eels of gunpowder hid in the cellar under the wood. [Laughter.] My answer to such a mo tion is to be found in the whole volume of my political life. I have stood on the Missouri Com promise for above thirty yeantand mean to stand upon it to the end of my life; and in doing to shall act not only Recording to my own cherished convictions of duty, hut, acconling to the often declared convictiona of the 'General Assembly of my State. - . -- It is said that the measures of 1850 supersed ed this compromise of 1820> \ If so, why treat it as still existing, and. therefore \ to be monied by en exception, in order to get add of it?ft it was repealed in 1850, why'do it over \again in 1854? Why kill the dead! Iltil, it was, Rot superseded hot acknowledged and confirmed s t* every speak er in 1850 that referred to the subject, and by every act that mentioned It. 'liiis`being a mat ter of fact and proven by all sorts of,testimony, parole, written and reconl, it bad to It s given up, though a test of political orthodoxy its' tang as It stood, andsomething else pain its place,,There=‘ I upon anpqsession was itself supersed` ed \by in consistect out of tho frying pan into the‘fire.' [Laughter.] Inconsistent signifies inability to stand together; two things which . ;cannot stand together .from eon and sisto. Now: what is' th2\ fact-with respect to the compromises of 1820 and 1850? Can they not stand'together ? And if not, why knock the one down that is itlrently . down? It is now four years siffee this inability to stand together took effect, and how da the two sets of measures make out together at,the end of this time? Perfectly well. Theyarii both on their feet : standing both upright, and will stand so forever, Miless Congress knocks one or the other of them down. This is a fact known to •• every body, and admitted by the bill itself; for if the first is inconsistent with the second, and un 'able to stand, why all this trouble to put it down? Why trip up the heels of the man already flat on his hack on the ground? . Then comes another reason that this Compromise of 1820 is inopera t;To and void. If so, those : who are against its operation should be content. It is in tlievery condition they wish it, useless, powerless; thee , tire, dead, and no bar to the progress of slavery to the North. Void is vacant, empty, nothing of it. Now If the line of 30 degrees 30 secOnds inoperative and void, it in in the conditiim of a fence pulled down and the rails carried away,' nail the field left open for the stock to enter. But the fence is not pulled ilowta yet. The line is not yet inoperative end void- It is an existing, sub stantive line;\ Attie and operating, and, op era ti ng effectually to, bar tho progress of slarery to the North, and will's° continuo to operate until Con , gil l s ! , shall atop its operation. Then comas the fitful reason-tsnt there never was any such lino in ,the world thnt it was unconstithebinal and void; that It had'un 'eiistenew, from its begin ning, and that Mont not berepeeled by a di rect act, for that would be toi acknowledge its previous existence, and, to , nullify the Conti.tutional argument; andorhat is more terrible; involve the authors of the in an incon sistency of their wen; and-thereby Make - !them themselves inoperative and void, And this is tho analysis of the reasons forthii , Netiraska bill, that part of which ii , to get rid of the compro mise of 1820, untrue, contradictory, suicidaLand. preposterous. And why, such a fnmag o of nal: ties, incongruities and inconsistencies? ,Purely and simply to throw upon.,Mhers—.upcin'the,Con gresisof 1850 and the innocent Constitution the •TilaMe of what the bill itself is doing.4the\ Mime of destroying the co promise ` of 1820„*and with it deetroying tilt confidence betweetCilie 'North and the South, and arraying one heir the \CAM against the ether In`desdlybostility. 'lSt ito to he able to throw.blank And what fatal this hatch\ 'patch for?, It is to establish a prieeligewthey say=the .prineipte of "aon-hiterrentioa,":•ot " sqUatter sovereignty .”.: Sin; Sorel ; is no aneh prinelplaThe territories are' the Altdren Utt, the States. Tbeinre Minors, Undfietweityroae years of age, and it Is the bustnessot theatites through their delegations in Conoess, to:take care of these minors until they,aie of age, until , they are ripe for State goremment Then give them that government, and admit them to en equality with their fathers. That is the law ind the image of the se, and has been so acknowl edged since the fi „ o inance in 1781 by all au thority, federal an tale, legislativi. judicial and executive. The States, in Congrem,' are the guardians of the itories, and .are boind to exercise the guardis jp, and mono abg.:. cate it without a breach lat trust and a derelic= Son of:duty. Territorial severeignty is a :men strosity, born of timidity and ambition, hitched into existence in Mallet inehbation of a Presi dential canvass, and revolting to the beholders when first presented. After further remarke, he prai , eeded as fol lows— I. object to this shilll-ahally,lepliy-won'ty, donty-canty style of legislation. l s oreExces laughter.] It is not legiSlatiVe. Itis°ot par liamentary. It is not manly. It is not manly;_ No woman would talk that way. \No elolil holly v i e in a woman. Nothing of the female gender wan ever born'young enough, or lived long anon to get beogged In snch:e quandary as `this.• ( ' newed Laughter.] It is ono thing or \the othok with them, and what they tray they stick to. 'No ' breaking bargains with them. But the end of this : Stump speech is the best of the whole. Different frern:goodmilk inwhich the cream rises to the top, it here Betties to the bottom and is in these words: ii Lefty! it to the people thereat—that is to say, of thik,States and of the territories, to regulate alaverifer themselves as.they please, only aub.:\ ject to the , COnstitation of the United. States." Certainty, this is a new subjection for the States. . Heretofore they have been free to regulate sla very for themselves, admit it or reject it,'..and that not by virtue of any grant of power in the constitution, but .by virtue of an tusurrendered part of their old , eovereignty. It is also new. of I,the territories. Heretofore they have teen held I to be wards of Congress, and entitled to nothing under the Constitutien, but that which Congress extended to them. .Thit this clause is not acci dentally here; it is to keep, pp the dogma of the Constitution in territories, but only there' in re lation to slavery., and dint for its admission, not rejection. • Three dogmas now effici.„ the find, videlicet, squatter sovereignty, non-intervention, and no power in Congress to legislate upon slavery in territories. - And this bill imserts thewhole three and beautifully illustrates the *hole three by knocking each one on the head bithe other, and trampling eachainder foot in its tire.' Sir, the 'ihill does deny sqdetter eovereignty;.*ia it does ntervene and it does legislate upon tiliiitery in the i territories, and for proof of that sec thebill, and . acrd it, as the lawyers 'say, passim, ; that id:to say, ; here and there and everywhere. It is a\.bill of j assumptions and contradictions, assiming'what , isunfounded and contradicting what it as/mines, ; and balancing every affirmation by a negation- i It is a see-saw bill, but not the innecent eee-saw which children play on a plank stuck through ti., , , fence, but the up and down game of politicians. A played at the expense of the pe ac e and harmony i of the Union,and to, the sacrifice of all business , in Congress. It is an ampliibologica . l hill, stuffed ', with monstrolities, hobbled: with'contradictions , and ia&gered witlea previso. (Laughter.) • ; \ ~,..., A mphitiology iFi denune for the rejection of bills„' of only by Congress but by the President, when 4rriedto him for his approval. General Jack . `son reje cted one for that cause, and it was less imphybological than this. It vas the last night otthe \ last day of his Mat administration, and a quartekbefore midnight. ~C ongress had sent him a bill to repeal the specie Circular, and to teen gurate the paper money of a thousand local hanks ; as the currency of the Federal-government. It „, was nn obj not to be alrowed , nor to be done in' . any di re cts palpable manner, . Periphrases, circumlocutitAi, ambinexterlty `and" ; ambiguity ; were necessary cover up the design, and it was piled on until iforas unintelligible..::The Presi , - dent read it and could make nothing of it; he .' sent to his Attorkey Chinni], who was eq . milly puzzled. Ile then returneclifovith a ; message to the Senate, refusing to sign the bill" \ for nm phibology. We should • reject this bill for .the same cause, if for nothNg else. Ilard:s the fate of party fealty. It has le keep up with the ev er changing measure. Often have these bills 'changed, and under every ease they hail to be received es a test of orthodoxy, and have more changes to undergo yet, and centinuelto be a test. under under all mutations. • S In the course of hi;earealtic comments on the bill, he said its provisions were a butlesqUenpon sovereignty. It gives .to the people, instead of ' receiving from them, an orgnaid act ; and what \an organic act? One in which they are denied every attribute of sovereignty;.denied freedom of elections, denied freedom of voting,. denied choice of their own laws, denied the right of fix ing the qualifications of voters, subjected to a foreign superviSion, and controllable by.the fed 'oral governreent, which they have no hand in electing, and only allowed to admit and fiotsre 7 ject slavery. Their Sovereignty only.eitenthisto the subject of slavery, and only to ono side, et that, the admitting side; the other half of the, power being held to be deuied by the constitution which is extended over them, and 'whdch, accor d lug to the reading of the supporters of the bill; forbids 'any law to be made,which will. preterit any citizen from going there with hie elaves.-= , This icaquatter sovereignty, nen-intervention, and no power to legislate in territories Upon Sla very. And this is called a principle, the . princi; pleof non-intervention, letting the4eople.alone to settle the question of slavery for 'themselves. How it? ' That ean only be done in an.or genic 'net, and they have no such act nor'' con they have ono unti they make a conatittitin for a State government. All the rest \ is.leg islation, which Bottle* nothing, and prmelt , contention et every election.. Sir, this"' \ rim , s ciple, of non-intervention is but the. p nci ple of contention—a bone, given to the peep et tcguarrel and \ fight over at every eleetion - en at every meeting of their : Legislature, until they, becoMo a State government , Then,. and' then only, 'don they settle the question. What iuleau• toga lathe Slave States expeet` from this bill'? Certainly they expect the extension of slave power and slave populetion. That may prove a .foliations expectation. \ Thslavery e question of . if,. iu these terettories, threwn open teterritonal fiction, will, be a question of numbers—a question of the majority \ far or againit ' sin very ; mid whit chance wotild the , idaVehold ere have in such `a contest No chance at alb,- The slave emigrants will be . numbered,.,and. compelled to play al a most unequal game,`Ant only in point of mum ors, but also in point `..of States. The ghivehol r strikes hi.A. , property, and •\ ?bas `to ran' it off or I go it if out \Toted at the - polls. I see nothing w ice slavellohlers are to gain under this bill, tooth g but an unequal and vexatious contest, in whi they are Mir losers. 'I deprecate ouch a contest, 'Ond did my \part 'to keep it one of , the State . of Missouri when her constitution, was formed '• It liv now foie menthe since thia.moceruent , for the Abrogation of,the Missouri Oempromisecorrinieneed in , this Coll gres3. It began Without a memorial; withent ,petition, withont a reqeeet from a_ltumin being. At has labored. \ long and bard in theSe halls, end' 'to this hour there is not a petition tout from elass of states fat' whom benefit thi.Movement, professesto have been made; not . a yrded . la, its. Lav'erlcomthe smallest peblicineetingOrprivatii tureens lage of any Slave State: This is the re-' 'sponee f the South - to this boon tendered td..it by Northern members under a Northern .I'resident. It is the response of silence more emphatic than words, andworthiof especial note in'this debate. It armies well for the harmony of the Haien, and, goes to shoWythat, in fact;\has. been often :seen, that this troubles of the country come from un- OW P9E 661 11 1) 3, its safety from the tranquil Tae Committee\tose Contatrulenee of Nom* , Adis:Ober. \ Wells Florence. . \ .. .. • \ , . . .., FLoultxcE, March 2.:11 1854i—Itonie of course,' is the central point of ,intereet. in Itak; : though those who visit Florence Ant, find so much to In , tercet and Instruct them. here, that they feel in' . no haste to prosecute thei.foilgribaige to the Etc?. nal City, which, notwithstanding its antiqtaities and pro-eminent net. Offers ntlo-auchinduceiriente for a residence astdoes ,Flonieee, whereone can .liveawell and pleasantlifor lestsßellan'and with fewer' inconveniences.. than in any• other city,.. Even Court lifehers . is exempt from exigencies and -restrictions .' elsewhere imposed. Any ono . who choMas may attend its entertitinmente—no uniform being required, and Americana, without having a minister !represent them te - ilia..diteal 1 '0 2 4, can obtain invitations by leaving a quest with theirbanker, The balls, in font, pre-' Sent more the :'eppearanco - of our yikite . ,liouae. 'gatherings thais , of the . : treAereole assemblies of other Italian cantle. : The English resides te at Florence have SlWtiYi outnumbered the ArnOti cans, is the Cost of-living :in : ,England induce many to livesibroad,' it would'lleelp, now : that the extravagance 'of our cities is,every day lissening ' thoilifference. - Ilubselli, the reports on thilhead . which coins across the Water; exeltestnprise and Feffret.— • ... . ,6,iin , "Americanxtrateganee," has b 0 e aby word with . altetEnglish. themselves,' who dotnitot ._ : spend money proiligalbeleg o as s s bc;dyt eon poetical-4ot through the necessities of society'. .An' English nobleman, now residing SVNtiples; who has an ineome;of sixty 'thousand delimit, seyeleSannot afford/to live,as hie rimkobliges hi m ., to, i n :.England, while. in. Italyheearilive \like a prince on half: of. it. 'Betides the-English. Who live hereto? economessake, Hanoi is quite a \ tire) of artists and: authors-who Make Floe „mum their residence earn:Muni of the advantagoi it *treads theta professionally, ;: ; • - , , . '. . =e= Mr. Kirkup, .the anthpunian brother of thp poet .laurel.' self a volume of poems nc TrellePec 'trir made, bet 'through her libellous\ Wor. then - her'prolific brainhas Volula.es -of so-so ~ talestO grow !Tate." Not mire& tier, MaCq ahlt - Imareaped tl pecuniary harvest, and tic 'villa - built by herself and _ successful story , teller. : Mrs. thelargest . and cheicest of V in ilia city: . The library Ai GotiMichall,.the furniture he tique,‘ and decorated with -1 ings., : hi.„this hall she bole ing receptions ; and strap; Americans ~M much as to hu thenmithltospitalitlea,- S sant old lady of about seem more disgusted \ With - '. her .: tures in the tinted Sates i she ridiculed in her spleen. : : • • Mrs. Somerville 4 near about '73 years 01. '' in an, excellent state \of preservation, and is al together a rectiarkablOroman. - She rises early, Verotes her time till noon in scientific study an villas, and at, otitee'times occupies he • ranch with ‘ sketching fro' M .nature, painting in oil;und embroldeay;, l thua 'owing that the . par suitlof .mathenudies is' nee - ncompatible with a love for the fine arik No livnag woman ever 'ceived*More - fietteribg torapliMente from h., own govhrnment;and f na great, men of all na trans, Him Mrs. Some , 'Be;"Ile; her bust 'stands in the BritialkAcederny,h tae side \of Sir Isaac Newton's, and' Baron\ H. bolds h as called her " thSkreateskof women." he is perfectly aim, pie and unosteneatioukio he man ner and ne ver refers to 14 own 'Aber Which, notwith. seelldiejetlie extelpi.ve eirettlati of heeworks, have yielderher autall peenniet benefit. \ . But she has a pension i\r y ," the 'British Crown, and lives here th her ahead, ik retired surgeon of the Mari, aid their odaighters, , going much ,1 4..r.e into'society,' being welcomed' every'? ere, and admired for their quiet - "Manner s and eable conversation. Mr, Lever 'lives 'genoro yin . a palace; gives dinners sparkiing-with \ his Wit and wine; loves horses, like a truk Irish m Eaglis*an; rides on the eamaie,with his ro‘ e cheeko daigh te on either side of him; en 'is literally . s good fellow," his conversation. :fig ae Tull humor as his Irish tales. \ ' '...' , ',, • - ',\ end, I Tennyson lives, retired , thou gh in easiand I elegant circumstances, occupying it fine villa' filled with choiae books and paintgs. The Browning* etillooccopy the Case Gui 1, an old' palace; never go into- society; but recei e their. \..... friends quietly in the evening.. 'I Mrs. B. is physically as frail as her mind and ve ry are strong; with such gentle, unpretending man re, - and Well a Pleasant expresSion of face, that z' o ,\ one to look at her, would believe that such and:passion could come out of such an apparent ly delicate, unperturbed nature. Mr. Browning, is alive with good - nature - and .humor; full of - practical knowledge, and as, plate and smooth in . talk as he is obscure next reughin his writings; in short;_es -is 'the ease - with Mrs. 8., the.very - . opposite of the beoli-:Browning... Mr. Read,ione - of our American 'artists, no* iu Florence, has painted lately cabinet portraits of both, and they are truthful lilienesses. ,', they belong to a gap-. Heiman in Philadelphia,. and will kivo all who see them there just of the originals. Mr... Reed is now engaged upon several well; conceived compositions, which . will do him credit. - Mr-'Edwin White, of New York,' who has been - some years studying in Fnince and Germany, is 'ow here painting successfully;" lie has conceived . a„ series of pictures on American subjects—most li Scenes from the historyof .the-Puritans--two of Which are already done. His chief work, herr ever, itsVet,:iit a'picturenf Columbus taking the . sacrament previous to' mbarking on his expedi tion in search of the new world. It Is an effee-,, Ling painting, fall of harMony—the "dim, religi-\ ous light" of the sanctuary; the benignant coun, tenance of the officiating priest; :and the apps=' ranee of the great adventurer,.humbly kneeling, whose face is solemn. With perilous intent, .yet beaming with earnest fliith, produces in the be , holder nfeeling in unison witlf . thb Occasion, and one seems almost - to :hearrthir.Orgen ; rene timed to his own emotions:4oole gaga, \ - - Mr. Nichols; of Coniecticut, who haajdit lof t , for Heine; painted during kiiiiii Months sojourn;: some fino-tonect laridscapitAwe Of .wbich tir.e des;;:, Jilted by the Inlialifiee. (libijor4Cearapy) for villa, in, the - vicinity Of Newark, as, are other:, paintings by.; Messrs. Midtp,y,Read, . Kelhigg,- - Geulikantl,Tait--allof 'whim have-received or dors from the seine , ; riffirient".liiiseyman, The last 'mentioned artist, ' Mr:,-T ait, , though, very - young; young; gives much promise ai * a:landscape Paint‘, er. He is' rom'Gineinriatll which has prodaced several artists of distinctiott:'' Mi. Kellogg ad ' Mr Gould, who have • resided : in ,Florence longer than any- other American 'painters, are both: highly . successffil In portinits; neitherlum as yet, peodudernuil , reoisikable'-esmitpesitions. Mr: hart, the Kentucky scUlpter,corittamloried by the ladies of Virginia to make a statite.of Henri Clay,, haErecently produced someelarMing busts of yOuill'Ameritsm ladies from '0 "0 or two sittings e with the aid 'of `an linreniona ineasering instru- I merit of , his own invention, for Which'hekintendii I soon to take, a patent, and - whicli''prerreifidf rare mechanical genies_ Re cannot eaft; ,. l.o .h, dis iinctiOnA, Indeed, Ameriearearfists at Ekren* form a` strong and respectable 'roPr*agagk7 body, with Powers for its head: *' - - .lc- \-, New- Goode and Easbitini for Gei { tlemens Clofl foj Spring of 1851. ,F./WATTS CO.:be&littire respectfully to Inftrita their nometett. cur/oaten, I. a. the tab ol'dl7:" k Tge 7.-th,Arku ern soorketr alb/v.-and that they are ready' to ..recelre, pr, den Tor •leaktria them op to their meta .4.'0 . otrio , '. • _ • Tha oatlsfactkm so amorally, „. expressed by- their endol mm. hitherto, 'nth th ei r. bumble effort' to Dime, Phan , latesthem to fr esh exertions itt M. same direction. Mak Li Y hone. lallo.:•in 1 1 l North ride. atitarti- 13t.`Clatr. 1p22. iEie fCd. to yoi .. /Isirsoe mar Troy Tu uvrgo'n 02 lo ad' **tam., .7.46 Cuutth el., ant YAM inl=t:ruLD .11E2671.INDIZE AND ..T.ROOFch„pR • . glUt titers . . thebnretl a so and Bala or Marebai • Ise hnq' • duc e 11414t.ba all4Taltal Hulk D. . D. T. ilordan Neap.glDb • .John Orahnm ; Times D. llarra_n ot r.7,44,caibir t eriapnv nro.4 0 . 4 11 Of tb• \ WAN .El 3 ITaleimen, quiLl T nted:in the ' • •'• • • feaimiaendatlorn. &dirt Pald.kvmSor STV, • :}loos bat wall CETMTIOneI4III2on ne2.l app L , al • igtmet,.C. W., Wluallag Fa. L ." ' SALERATI:FOAThhi:46 . i'iTIebi - ' CEARLASEI,2a bblzr.for;Pal. P.. IL bps: Mach* 4 far WON. , 6 , 021 • 9 7. R. CANI.I , I ' Iy;CKORY . NOTS-1.911A5. for warp by' A X, spirt 4. B. CANRpiLD: CIEEESE-1(X) boxes Thr );2',„ Q - OAP-100 bxe.;.Cineinnati Palm Soan - jo reed iudlbr sale by • .8. lIARTIALIM \ DRY . IIMES- - =Z,just ired iind fortalo UNDRIES , ;-60 bx.A. , Rofilkd Mould: C. dleiklolu.StareiCaud: - • - abuoito vin_trotfil.ard itrAlinrilr.=L;4l. IrEAS—Young.flyson;Tin catrbse. of 1 IL.11e: .tormku,by W.11.81E177 N No:12 Wood I AL I L A 1. , N- SWN .NvIILN sing a\ f k o r r a atn • liIEAD,OIO,,rALL!CATIE4IPOAtAIIip Goder for ,Mir; • • Pet/wiz/tutor/Jan: - • ;y ea tee ,NoZions forlrev - Just Bred and 14! '6i• •.' • •. _9:l4 LIMITE/Z. 87111notrit. V4KES, NOTIONS FOR MAYlian -tylrt!r" f° o:A.LA.tnnni. yIILLIEN'S MIJSIO-a-Prima Donna Wol r ou ./°ur Dn 4 elar'." lo4 fpc cc" ,, erth br far x rt dtlop, Jul 1104; luso. poky Jam = \ , ullieres Mideal Tour in-Amerles; 14: 1 , 1° , 11 1 1 ,,' A '*21Vr or t !rot; JAillares Prima Do* wvel„ 6 .lged.l. - 1 - 31=1,, Junky?: TN, Flolurni!to 81ru9tuF.aiduluit 4.1101. TI,. Ibker 'fr JaDl m.TAtt.p ,aksaltaßi tb. t oo lden at iden Thim INIAIt--56 Made. N. 0. Su'. on cowl Wltail-,-100,bblal and bait dp.',Whita ittol Trout Cos rol• . 40/IN MID k CO. EQAlir bbls. ciderVuye laaalar gdobT av ICEPIANTONIONEIEO . .bus. • phusekipldato•Agon • t, R. smilLANti, nomad o> re1ig ..... :47„..u .u .. ... „. . :74.,, ,. 74 , r,,, ,, : trAtlV7i-----: trlV,4t,kD4 1,-2-:::—.4tlete74; Vita SUY" ".A7Low wl2",,ilse: Mna:o4 Nrittp:VMl/6V: VI tittif:PAitott% Art& truism to; Pl- quallU T . -La,•11112.4* H .' ' , ~- \'' \\ ' • ■ LIIWE to-E6O B. awl x B. six. • hose To nr • kirT \ \, \ .\ • \
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers