~ '.'. 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 \ 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. 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