prri';'7*.UßGlE.l GA.,ZErI'E ----PZIRLIBMIIteB. RIDDLE & D. L. RATON"-, '. avemmEssiiir 3 7r.T u rS13IIAGH: MoNDAYMORBEG, DEC. 3, 1856 Ethitl/0 sarria"ou PiliC.or TOZa rano. ifAtul—L+lz Donate WM' 1211112121. In idrimor eirAz-wit„tv-7, ': t 3/r ..IPot mbe a dm u ittroi tytiub7 7 a eaten. aAd.az w sMmoirsay time e bymoding codolsr. /le - ll.mats areetr o tl . mutfould the ' Meer ' oPP&l en=ttfrear utsukoltb.rezened RATES -.01? ADVERTISING, • - 0 . 0 Dees of Neilihrill or Attate.) Do._ - ` - - one Ingertien--. 0 DI ' each additional Insertion-- OFS lito ens . , ..... •5 DO ••••..t'' ,- ,.151 • two 700 -: :Do .twelve 11 00 inerdha... . 18 00 Standing' Cads. (5 fines or al Hi a GO One dello. be ea additional Him One ellbe; changeable at glessure, (rural, ustinetinialualae of 00 KANSA/ . Am Boanenr.e.—Soma eottlers In .E.ansas, disappointed in receiving aid from same of the societies to ithioh they looked, have leaned en •• &judged and ill•timed aomplaint against those societies; and allege . that they do not fatth tally appli the money contritmtedlo them. Our neighber2o, the 'Journal, In view of the charge "'time preheated, suggests that "it in time that }hest oemailtioeselmuld ftiraish the publie with • ifelbacionnt of their stewardship." • We are incllttel to. think differently. The ••••' i • men ; to whonothat money was entreated are hon. -•„;_eieblixiattn, and Torymnah must necessarily be 'fen 4" , thelf - :;dlearetiort,•• They. have:been emu• pellet in Contend nittuist a great many untoward - cirmimetances, and to conduct the management ' of`#tieiu altaira in each n way as to keep the en ere/ ln ignorance of their ants and methods. To reveal alt-thie,,now, Midway in the etraggle, ' Would be eitdralent to giving up tho struggler altogether. Wo have no doubt the money hoe all been faithfully amtbonorably expended, and • 'the , great reteihrpwittl,':: that there was lIJT, , . ' enough of It. Many of' the large promised Bab wars, never realized, having been made 'conditionally; and the'.alatrlbuting com :.--:;,tiiittees hare not bed ono•balf the money In their hinds that come people think they had. Ea ' peolally have they not had enough to moot the wants of all, or half, the sufferers; and If those who fail, to- receive aid, complain, it by no • means follows that the fettle is in those who `have been the almoners of tioficicat charity. The fault lies- at the door of these who via - hold the needed aid, and not on those who have assumed thou burden of distributors. Us. on.- 7 A. Boston correspondent of the New f'srlt Thaw Bays that Ex-Senator Benton appears to be damaging his reputation by the totaling tour on which he Is engaged. it tbeifirat -opportunity. which the New-England raffia .hae had to acquaint themselves eaten . eively witNthi; old gentleman, whose repartees and abrupt epigrams have entertained them for to Mint years. Like almost every Southern politician who has over peregrinated among them, he wouldhave -done better by hie reputa tion to have staid away. General Honsmn and .flanator ToOmbs Buffered the same experience. The universal criticism on his lecture it, that MB Puerile. It is certainly somniferous, the only entertainment afforded lying in tho numer ous - Wales:lan. expressions of self-aatisfaction with which It is besprinkled. • ' The-whole scope of hia ergament name gather it from the meagre raporte or Ma lecture which :have fallen under l'our aye is, that it is true a patty at the South ate disloyal to the Union; .- that at the Korth we hare no political body ad -.locating suish.hidecus dectriaessts those of the . • Disunionists; but after all it is better far the - Tintke-of peattrand basu:My to let the latter have ti!elf ‘ own.Way; let them do as they like and all bretherly•lnie and kindness. Dses not Beaten kMew that there never has been auy sore to the - Unlot than there to that the Ohio rivet will turn round 311. i flow up Tote New York?' ,So loog .as the of the Free Elates "Vie trniou elesitho preservo3," . :4-43013 /10t lio with a h4Llful of 9:ave driven, 'rho are In mortal dread, of no'gro risings every dsy to disrupt it . „ 'THE RO4IA/I Cat san IN THE lINITE/i Stereo. 'article in the Daaitaber number of tho Marpliolitarsi Arohbishop Hughes has given his vteWiWpon the general character, management and influence of the Roman Catholic press in this - eonatry. 'There are more of each perio4iosta, he nays, here than there are among the niglish-opeaking Citholiea of the-whole world besides Tho rt. . Telly created try snob a ,'rapid growth has 1314. tunny led to difference, dieting themselves which have prevented the fall benefit to the 01 . 66911 e religion which might have been oxpeete , J. _The Archbishop cape he remembers when the only Roam CsUsciro journal in the United /States vu the ,Shosaroeic. publiebod -iu. New:York,— . which woe mainly Irish and only incidentally Catholic. It au annoceded by the Truth Teller. The Brat Featly Cathallo paper wee the Catho fie Ctaq4l2l4 of kharleeten, founded by Bishop Enithandiahloirhos sustained Wolf amidst groat trials with dignity * ond , erudition. Of the nu. mesons Catholic journals alit have einoe sprung tip,each :“Izaiits strong phase of merit aril its sinister &Spews of possible /okay to the .er.se .wkdoh is profess% to sdrooste." ' The`Arelbirbopithinks that it only rghires a - ekilful architect td dovetail our constitution and :laws and tho Catholio faith together, son that -.the/Axil fit ass key fits a lock—that without any rating° is faith or morals the- Catilidlo ohttroh i . amp be, so to speak, Americanized. Where's 7 , the . arohitoot tied in the published `, recptl of the-with ratios Donghters of the jut • Iy celebrated Jobn Jay la the New York Ikea mf•Friday, the following: • DAIIGUYSRS GS' ions JAY. We give below extracts from the wills of 211183 AIM Jay surd 31ra Marla. Denyer. Their be quests for charitable-41nd . religious pi:unease, iutiOnsiting the aggregate to $34,200, aro nearly-lei the extent of their forttutee. Uftes Jay diedMie.".l3anyer on Nov. 21, -- Thetilt of Hiss - lay was proved today, but the . - proving of Atte,' Banyei'e,- . t,6 actolostro, of, the shoelace of a witness, .1e deferred fors day ar • . pro: . The previsions sKis as , follows : - - :tine OftgligAßLlS • To.StrY two poor widows Whom her sister - and brother may aelect,instead of nand ImlotaleSpenses $2OO To the American Bible Soefety 3,000 'And Midi wag the nature of ell her bequeets. ,_" elapse., epirlt-prevalls in those of Mrs. Banyir. For example: dealt.° that my tonere. may be simple,. that ito aearfe be ' to lien - tbereof is given for thi Sunday , &loot of St. ntatthese'e Church, Bedford; Westchester. County, $lOO, and to the Sunday Scheel of (IMO Churob, Bye, $lOO. • - , Total . „Lavoie weatliolinbisloop in New Jersey, If we vemeniber aright, whit recently . Wand. an order 'Viet exeeptntider cot tain epecitincireamstanees, no wore than 'six carriages shoohl ahead a • tenerid of mewibers of thechurch over which he ' , held charge. Without'defendiug the method by :Which !Ms end Wasattainvi, wo do commend rho end Tio,lie peer, to_thole who have to labirtoi airaiy thing they got with their betide, the enetonOililOb. has ittairosealmoit the foroo of a laW, of hiring a tong :rounds of carriages io very burdensome: We profotnolly respect that . sentiment in 'livery ZI22A which promptu the showing,of all due regard to the metre of' - the :deir_ departed,. hat does love demand a greattr expenditure to tkia end than is coueistoot -with Viol:tendert:of-the living? We think not and we rejoice that`such a course stu taken by the e.leallent and benevolent Mite Jay, ns shall pro. :W8 4 4200 0a two poor widows Wetted or wisest . fintral expencee."'" What need says , the other that scarfs be wern:alley fat:terra t. "Let We expehte be spaied and gam to two Booby Schools named in my will." , IT is aild tilt Eatland &foie Lima ee tvir,n. nUy come $500,000-foi steel pew. Tills' is E trangu wbes we temembor that one o r =le taught 411_1 - 441, ztiittiltros bow to nnioO4or own peok - - ==ANZ= . Pan Crnsrms Scams Casz.—We republished a birder Eliseo Emma tioutbgrnpapees etate iamst thatiite sugar crop of the South ilk year Waco tell Iseks*. 100,000 hogellesde. . We also , Xletbseethe feet elated in a Southern Illinois impor that complete success bad attended the Plaited oultuie, hj way of experiment; of the ChineSe Sugar Cane„ s and that, in a latitude dif fering but little from that of Pittsburgh. The Banff upon sugar is so great—Fe being forced to pay for the sate of a harldfalirit raked in the South a honey duty upon all Which comes from abroad that tho cultivation of the cane, If any can be 'found adapted to it in our latitude, should attract our careful attention. This Chinese Sager Cane is as yet compara tively a- stranger among tie. The first seeds which we remombei to have mug of were dis tributed to the Wabash 1(111ineyi) Agriculturist Selecty In 1855. The agent of the Patent Of fice, Hr. Browne, says in his report upan tho plant, "he was led to Infer -that from the pecu liarities of the climate where it grows in the East and its resemblance in appearance and hab its to Indlan.Corn, it would flonelah in any re. glen wherever the maize-plant would thriva."— Subsequent erperiment, 69 we have already in timated, _ folly eistained the theory of Mr. Browne. The epode, Whosithietory we observed, were planted about the ralddlo of May. upon a farm at M'Cloary's Blade, and came up In good order. They yielded a very long and heavy stalk, exceedingly rloh Is juice to the taste &Cost as sweet in its natural atato as mama's: It yielded about 15 per cent of goad clarified sugar. Mr. Crown in his report says that "'in France the great object sought in the cultivation of this plant lithe juice , contained in the atalk, which tarnishes three important producte vie: eager, which is Identical with- that of the eager cane, aloohol and a formeeod drink , analogous to eider. The juice when obtained with care is nearly eolorlees and orate/as merely sugar and water prodieing from 10 to 18 per cent. of the former." Doubtless the etilt larger proportion of pare sugaiebtained by the experimeit In Roofs is owing to a richer and o more COIICC. , Dial temperature, for a good portion of the year. Since writinithe.abore our eye fell upon a communication in a late number of The Tribune, in reference to thia,matter. It is from a farmer in Mt. Vernon, N. F., and Is fall of interesting information. We make an extract or two front this !otter : • From the recent occasional notices In your paper of the above new crop, we are In duced to send you a brief coconut of our expert• meat with it during the season Jest elated. Our attention vine attracted to It both by an interesting pamphlet by the renowned M, Vll morin of France, in which be gives the remits of protracted and earcfal trials at Paris, and the analysis and favorable letter of M. Areal& of Now Orleans, which appeared in The New Orleans Dire. We proonred enough seed toplant a little more than a half acre. The soil was almost without exception a disallow, gravelly loam, resting on a pare gravel sub•satl, and offered great resletance to the introduction of the plow. By this you will understand that subsoiling was almost oat of the question, and agree with no that oar marked sunless ie to bo principally attributed to the free nee of special fertilizers. The lot was plowed on the 18th, and the seed planted on the 19th of May—ln rows at 8 feet apart, and in hills at 2} foss apart in the rowe. Ten seeds were pat In each hilt, which were to be thinned out .to six_ The tonere need was three parts charcoal dart and one of a super phosphate of time, made cn the place. The young sprouts made their appearance in about the same time en does broom earn—perhaps a little longer —and appeared at flirt very email and weak.— Intact, ee email were they, and en long did they struggle on to get the height of one foot, that we feared to be entirely disappointed In our experi ment. Bat the commencement of the two menthe' "heated term" of-lant rummer seemed to mark their reinvigoration, and from that time they got ouch a etart that they wereetiabled to atllin the greatest luxuriance of grarth. The following will giro azeful information specting the yield of this cane: During the early stages of growth ea very great difference is perceptible between its jolts and that ;of the sweet corn; but the season 'advances a somewhat:rapid chinge occurs sad the peculiar sweetness of the Louisiana cane be gins to be sensibly apparent on mating the esp. We testwall assured that the process rococo ',leaded by rrefeaser Mapes, viz to pinch . off the tuft before the seed-vessels are formal, would material, increase the proportion of saceharine matters in the juice. We found that by hailing 42 or. of the sap, we could obtain lu oz of syrup as pleasant and about as thick as ordinary maple molasses. It bsa a light straw color. The sap shows a density et 9° Biome. In boiling, green froth or scum rises to the top, and ehould be I ekimmed off. The juice is eemewhat more cur. bid thou cone jaica, bet may be clarified by milk of lime as readily us oan the latter. hl. Arcuate says the sap of the Sorghate,or catte,con tains somewhat more of the milts of potash, said phosphate of lime and plicephate of magnesia than the Sonthcro sugarcane. A titre (2 1•0 pints) he found to contain 7.60 grammes salts of potash, acetate, mariate and sulphate; 2 18 grammes acid phosphate of limo and phosphate of magueida; 0.12 grammes hy drated silica, mixed with oxides of Iron and maegtooter; all of which are M isolation, along with oceanic matters, each as albumen, vegetable fibrin, ehlorop byl, &.o. At 1.4° Rhyme a gallon of the asp weighs 8 Dm., 14 or., 2 drachms, 14 grains, and contains 652 grammes of sugar, salt, and organic matters, or 1 lb., 7 oz., 4 grains, English weight. It piece per 1,000 parte ho weight: Sugar Salta end orgsolo matters Water Total 1,000 M. Avegnin farther says that to make 1,000 pounds of unrefined •euger, cleeusod and well dropped, with the sorghum tap at a density of 1,064, requires 1,250 to .1,800 gallons. The eager 13 identical with that from the cane. Ono thousano pounds of eager gives no lees than fifty-five gallons of molasses, in some instances even more. On his calonlatlone, and taking his experiments as the eabstantial basis, we must believe that from 900 to 1,100 pounds of raw Lugar, clarified and salable, can be realized per acre in rather warm latitudes; to which must be added the molasses. The brogan, or crushed canes, afford an excellent forage, and are greatly relished by oar stock. These are vastly Important facts to Which re Invite the peculiar attention of farmers.' This crop has been tried In Dearer county in our own State, es welled by a letter to the Depart ment from Mr. Minis. Although in his report he does not speak of baying expressed the juice from- !ha cane or of having actually produced sow therefrom, yet his statement substantiates the fact that the crop grew luxuriantly on our soil, "requiring," to me his own words, "neither ' extra culture in labor or manure." The above, It would seem, it evidence strong. oneughto warrant a more extended trial of the merits of this crop, and if ii Fill in any way ns of the burdens imposed by government on the Imported artiolo, or anpply the piece of the common eagar.cana which will grow only In the warmer latitadoi, It ought to become a very Important end valuable acquisitiOn to the agrir cultural products of the Mildlai ; t4tatee. Even the more northern litotes may rodeo it, for ono farmer who had tried the crop believes that it will ripen in north latitude 42', the northern lino of lllieols ACIORISSION.—The way in which the spirit of age aggresses upon the quiet works of the put and displaces the monuments of the Bober age of our fathers io round la it letter which we ob. served in a :religious paper of New York City wherein 1t is anted that Columbia College will soon disappear as one of the great Institutions of the , great metropolitan city. Already one hilt of those beautiful grounds, have been dog up, tho patriarchal trees destroyed, and atone, and, marble, and iron buildings ocOupy what was once the neatest and most classicist ground in New York. The old college building is now wholly snrrouided by elegant warehouses for burinhas, and very soca the . , institution itself willVemoveto temporary Muommodatioeu in the tipper pert of , the city, until their new college buildings are completed. Tbo writer of -tbe letter, notteltbstandiag that all these •pleimat tiring° aro iald waste, !Me= to bo rsolguad to It, for be tolde :—. , Tbe °images la that looollty are ameriaz, bat (boy all holiest° tbo root growth and glvtatia baoineisoLthla tactropolltsa city." . Mennz.—.3 - , - XL Sittratriok,,Esq, will lee. tare tomorrow night, boforo, the "Sommer (Tory Society" of lillogbony. City. ,Loaturo• g er.oe....onotepend nn evening m ore , v elum * ar pr4flt4l,ythen by Atteadfcg. 4foreferittey ,would Iron to eneooregebY tbalipiiiennethe yinii 036 - 160 ililVo Adopted tbi ! - - 000tbo4 or taoptOtidg theitniinde. =;22===AIMMEII Flow Itaesos.—The het datos from Kamm report that .tho; land riles hod beim partial ly edjoumml, which is thus tweet:toted fir by tho info:Mint of Mo. Democrat.. "The land sales were adjourned on Wanes. day morning to Friday, in consequence. of W slight difficulty cecurring. It ecems some man bid OF a claim no a Squatter at valuation price, when it tented out Actear rs citiza of daesoetri.— The Commiesloner requires a men who claims the right of a squatter to be an actual occupant of the land." From this it would appear that the liliseen rims are no longer ruling the 'poet, as in times past. Free State men and capital are telling mightily in the ' scale whereon is to be decided the destiny of KanßEl9. The St. lamb Republican has the following startling paragraph: Sr. hum, No►.26tb,lBs6.—Anexnreee has just arrived front Lecompten with the startling haformation, that ejter Court had adjourned, and the military had left, a large party of Abol itionists came into town, broke open the prison and liberated all the free State °clavicle. Ile does not know the fate of Colonel Titus, or any of his friends. The crowd was eo great, and the excitement so Intense, that he had no time our opportunity to got particulars. Information hoe also been sent to the Fort, from which point, no doubt, the details will ho diAparobed yen. Too Pia Can CONCIEIIT.—The Concerto of Mod• amo Parodi will bo given on Monday and Fri. Bay evenings of this week nt Lafayette Hall. Beate can bo secured today. Latnyetto Hall, se newly arrongod„in att excellent nee for Concert.e. It aeOrtle the audience kit opportunity to gee the performers, and the performers can Lo, heard to moat excellent adiontago. Of the mer it of the - Parodi troupe, and their onexstopled mimes, it le not neeesenry for ua now to epeolt. Da KAM—Letters received from London, by tho last steamer, bring- diem:waging ho aonata of the health of Dr. Rase. Ho le very pale, mull redacted in flesh, - and has night sweats. Hit cough it alarming. His physi cian had enjoined him to leave for a warmer climate en soon as possible, and he was aeeord• iogly to sail, on the lith November, for St. Thomas and Havana. Ir the National Finances were a cure or fair index to the condition of the country, we might infer that ear commercial and financial affairs, as It people—not as a gdiernment—arc all ttrit they should be. But "all is not geld that gilt. tore;" nor Lea fall and overfiowiug treasury It cure index to prosperity. Every dollar received in the shape of Custom House duties beyond fifty millions o? dollars annually, is, under present circumstances, an injUry to tho country at large; because it involves necessarily an acorns:slating foreign indebtedness by our merchants and their customers. The annual report of the Treasury Department for the past year, whioh will be found In our columns in full, shows great and increseing activity in the commercial relations of' ' the coantry—that the great interests of com merce are yearly and daily becoming more and more essential to the permanent !prosperity of our people; and that wise legislation is neoessary to order to protect our manufacturing resources —the domestic industry of the country—from the powerful competition we hare to contend with abroad. For the fiscal year ending Juno 30, 1856, the Secretary reports the revenue of ' the United States as follows From Customs.. ...... " Publics Lands.— ..... " hihmeltaneous sources ix $73,918,141 The a:pm:liter/a agaisst this large revenue -ITCrO Civil and Missy Hansom.- $25,274,331_ Interior—Pensions and Indians 3,872,1E03 War 16,918,196 Navy........ 14,077,048 60,173,401 And I , dernpti , n end interett or pub• tip debt....', 12,776,391 $72,948,792 Thus there is a clear revenue beyond the ex panses proper of the Government, of over thir teen millions of dollars. A.l to till) foluto coadition of the i rrtaeury the tstimalei - tiro as follows: s rear rainy :rear ending June 30,15.7. June 30; 1868. $64,000,000 56G,000,000 Land , 7,000,000 0,000,000 blitectaneono ........ • 500,000 055,000 Cub on 15,023,000 22,345,000 Total Imo yearn... $37,12Z.000 S-TP,aO ,000 Expezze5...—......- 09,451,000 71,a05,000 17,67;000 23,1M,000 So that without tiny material change in the Tariff, the surplus, two yearn hence, will hare exhausted the notional debt, it the bondholders ace fit to present it for redemption befoto rity. We think, believer, that the Secretary under rates the revenue both from ountonos and from public lands. The latter will reach (as last year) about nitro 'millions of dollars. The onlignition to the West—to lowa, Kansan, Mionessets, and Viirconsin—has began, it is true, bat only begun. Those desirable regions are fitting rapidly with a laboring people, and will soon contribute to the national strength. lowa has already a pop- ulation of 6Eo,ooo—quite an large as that of Maryland, Maine, or South Carolina—and the increase in the Northwest will require; in the next two years, ionic twenty millions of acres of public lands. Thera is for the pin year sur. apparent surplus or fsport4 beyond our imports, viz : .$214,63%942 326,9C4,918 This apparent surplus is more than counter. balanced by real ed/er.a beyond custom house (or Invoice) valuer. Mr. Guthrie steely recommends a modification of the Tariff so that three raw materials which enter into our manufactured ar ticles, may be admitted free. This has been urged strongly before, nod should be.reepanded to favorably by Gongrees. He estimates the apt ricultural production of the country at 2,602 millions of dollen, which *Hi .bear out Mr. Speaker Banks in the perdition assumed by him recently. The estimated amount of gold and silver in the country is stated by Mr. Guthrie at 260 mil• lions, and by tho Director of the Mintier 200 millions only, although the coinage of the G.'S. has amounted $560,000,000. ,The eubjeeta die mead by the Bearetary aro of such rant ill, porta= to oar people, and to our merchants pamioularly, that the report . will be rend with great aridity. In order to show the progrees In our revenue system for earn° yeers, we mune the receipts from =Moine, end valid tends (friotions omit ted.) Year.; Custom,. Loads. Tidal. 1810 $8,688,000 $699,000 $9,299,000 1815 7,282 000 1,287,000 16,411,000 1820 15,006,000 1,632,000 15,779,000 1825 20,098,000 1,216,000 21,812,000 1830 21,928,000 2,329,000 21,280,000 1886.. . . ... . 19,891,000 4,767,000 34,163,000 1840,,.......13,500,000 3,494,000 16,993.000 1845 27,628,000 2,241,000 29,769,000 1846, 26,712,000 2,780,000 29,499,000 1847 23,747,000 " 2,598,000 26,846,000 1848 31,757,000 3,679,000 85,436,030 1849 28,840,000 2,727,000 81,074,000 1850 -89,668,000 3,707,000 43 , 57 4, 0 0 0 1851 49,017,000 8,295,000 52,812,000 1862 47,889,000.. 2,889,000 49,728 000 1953 58,981,000 2,405,000 61,587,000 53,024,000 31,497,000 135,008,000 1866 .... . 64,022,000 8,917,000 73,918,000 1857 *14,000,000 *7,000,000 *87,123,000 1858 .. . . *66,000,000 ,1 6,000,000 *05 , 10 0.0 00 4 EstimateE Cour. 4' Eng. SPECIAL NOTICES.' Liver COmplabt —Tbiz ;dangerous and ortfoi fatal dinars had long heated Um Aka' of the ree.t emir:out physician. when the do:ovary Ofpr. JrZeilifo Lltio 'Ms relred the difieulty, and suanted to the world the Great Extfic. which has atoll:m.1 ouch wide rimed oJebelty for lac certain : cure. Inds eurcessful xemaily was the result ofreanyve‘re Raldr, inuldeh the . lit:atoms were r.scrowly obrerred, euilors thin, dit.exie bed by the Doctor ",4arlientt via Di:ea:cif Licie—lislo 10 the rlibt cad sometimes to the left, under the edge or the ribe—tbe patient rose rarely able to Its on the left alin sower thee, 'maw the shoulder blade, frequently extending in the top of the shoulder—ellen rastaten fey „rheum: Cam In The arm r eilintli of atemseb, end !en of are, tits; bowel, woolly astir. but sometimes ellen:tits With to ;"dtU4 Mary sensation la the back wart 01 the Lead. loos of mamba, with nuesslneli of haling wolleaed elinething ; sometimes dry cough; weariness and debt!, ItY aenous Irrliabilltd; fart cold or,bnrule w, and calekly enduation ofeklu , low lialls ' , Rand!. watt dls iodination' to *Ryder, either:4th eatieded It .wunl4 bo beneficial.. 1n fact, patient dLotrusto eserfremedyd Itsrelort IsOT, Or all three.oluitoras t. If ieo, yen dad 'ft tense needy in Ito Diamee'e 1111. Idolised by flaming; BM, of Pittsburgh. ... • . ONIDMILIMVit,V.ZVdtgI4irtms 131106 bleintesatou. Theism, • • rille DlMporelbg OW Um fill., bow before the Datil e. Dr. , gO'Lactodo donolooldte-r1 . 11151. elan Vinatroto. con now bo bad st, resoodgblo drug on* , •10h. Mt lolbout U, rsgrzeturg 'of ,1 , L2111 4 ITEUTREIth., • Why will you ESoffor?—itoni rry or'Dr. H. P. I.co7itcP; De•rtllr:=l.loollsrui l e fleetnen, Eitt, tore Jove won- M• , 'X7 the care troop beet prertitloners•.witlnt 'roll and the rate_ reporled siotttlle yortne nuuo. alLturbin =trolly able to • get nbont, eoromecee: the picpe, found No much relief Pont the brit bottle. Pe =dinned to take, until . • complete ooze was el f octeth " Ha le tooW perfsotly 11210 littelltt ,r • „ .• • &ad, mbeienle itt4 Wag, - at Dr. GEM 11. SMUT Du s iWgi x ta . cf.tto.9olden=i2 HATS, CAPS AND FURS. Bl'O 0 R & CO.. •• ' WHOLESALE & RETAIL -1A • T T E •R S 13 Wood Street, Itar, ellrapion -bawl s 101 l wadr4:34ste dof • • lIATF,C&23. AVD • Wholesale. and Retail. :D i .l..zraltenrsPal,, to'blob t lty Invite tuat • - • DENTISTRY. 4.47,;;;; DR. ,T NALHERN SURGEON DENTIST, FROM NEW YORK, 'Extracts Teeth Without Pain, Br • Local BenUnadon Attest to the Gums otdr. Xirlneerts Teeth on Gold, tilrer, Plating and Gutta Perch; and perforina all Dental Op.rAtiotil to a selentlfle MAIILeT. grOarde end Clocalare at hie Men. 64 ,MITE FIELD STBEEL.177118131112(11.1. • ti/iMiIEL GRAY. MERCHANT TAILOR No. 52 ST. quail STRIET, IS now receiving a fine stook or Fall and Winton goods convicting ti Clothe. over =tiny, me iIIDGIIII, tectingeolc,:trhiell he Ix prepared to make to order= short notch Co the latest and most rachionaue otylen. Gel:diem. in week trFartilonahle can:mete for rail or Wlnter tr..er nitl Dud It to their &drain/iv , to sire Dimee2ll re ...4 EAGLE STEEL WORKS .TOSEPH DILWORTH & (uvocatsau ra nanneulstrt a c 0..) l.st Steel, German, Saw, Blister, Plough • AND. SPRING STEEL; AXLE% MOBS, BPRINOS, PICKS, Afatteeke, Wedge:3, Harrow Teeth, ,4e. I A - Aitzueon, he. 117 WAVER STIIRRT. R►tle►ln Wool see Ntalthil•azi, PITTSISI7RQII, rA. Jatnianr 1 leb&l►2a. ODIORNZ & BRO'ifiE/L• GENERAL COILLIZ.VOItt A.Y.D FORIWZDZITO MERCHANTS, N0..43 WALNUT STREET, 14te.ron Front w 3,1 Colombia, CINCINNATI. Consignments solicited and ordete filled neon the best tenni. A6rooW k 4 tea et the Town Ball, on BATOBDAY text. et 7 deock. All farorns.ble to the cause are reexectfol.r -tad to attend. .3 there F W t, buena. of tosportsece bromeht before the meothae. By 011.10 t , • • JAlttEli PAD.Ef, Jr,. (Iheiresse. det:ds cols T. A. Bxn,srsa. fee': Morris & Patton, LATE DEATO'S VO.l intl. Dianauni. 913Tarktt &rut. and lide,olaTed • - QOOD • STRONG TEA-25c per Morris A Patton'. . • !oat cf riolroon—Ss For 16 at Married Patton',. ,Throe'lent fat Matkarel—e; la et Maras & Patten . .. Good Wrench Crorranta-1194e Wt. At Morris d Pattah's, • •Grallksskgoz Matelne-10,711b0t Illorrtg& tartan. French Plual•-10e ?"fa at Morris & Patton's, L. Nor fire, on. 11.11111”. n•nr cas; hoer Cremate at Alcrele P‘ttote, Jet.. J etti es, Priv r al in,: Me st. at Morris & Pat , ton'. . . Frcetk and Pickled .Eateap„ Ceprrs , 60., at Morrie a Patton's. Tfavarts. Caul., Manilla sal. Vrinoima 'titan at,Morrla & Patton'. Ali k loos of attewitot Totar:o at Morriri & Paitote. The tweet' Tea, andoe =Make. at Morrie PaltoA'ec. Ratan Grocat•who bur forear.b. atill-901 P Tras•l3 tte cbrap•st house In the etty to buy Halmos and Currants for Christotss. • • trim LIVERPOOL and PHILADEL-4 . .tt. PHU 'STEAMSHIP COMPANY latenti dip W ing Malt arrleadiS sad powaral buratazblps its ..317 . Rnm WV OP ..... ....Drconher KANGAROO.-- ... - .:.11erenhor, 37. Age - ci s :Pl 'jleriaCa. • CITY OP WARIIIN6TOII-- ...... a-Gather • CITY OF 1.1.i:Vii1:8110t.. ---....,earaber to -P% - rm Lirrrloel.—Ealron--$1.44% lire reel STherrherarit . .... . liCr: 9. e accferphia er.ficr, York—pp. EI, sod iSS, see cadmic to Stateroom. - - AL Itmited number dlaird•rtarer Pansorrerai , ll be ts tea tram rbiliar . Igen =I. leverroal, an fa and to Pro vision. • From osmizar. Airing are crnet ithlmwait-LightTammenta. nudw prored s Enrg.qt 7and eash restel t.lVs an expc7fance6 • • Panic, wiahlog to 'Dena not their friends coa obtain mtlarol4o or Ool.pyr.od drafti 02 Llrerroolbo rums of Sl aerllouand utro-atd, Apply tn. JOHN 21.1.0Y1P50N.110 Liberty rt., Pittahtirels, Or 8.....11tL t copms, m .111.01411117". Now Totoe24olTomfT - - - GROOERIES,, FRUITS,' LIQUORS mo'd • the Petals Tea Stare - 160 bun, sir to_tnitee 1110 Oceor; • 75 toast. old.Gor Jets do; -100 asks Elsa Teas all =Mtn•" . • L 75hesYnan Hyena do do . 605bletiorering's rnished and powdered sapin 100 boesiErslei Barring; • RS bblis Etta Yielded do; - , 10 make No. 1 Irish Ealn•or.; . • - • 210 bare IL R. Jt Layer Lhateenr -. _ =drums Byearrns Elge: - 100 Teter box. do; " • 6000 Its French Pharos & Propel; 0000 Its Tents Cmcsa[g • "- 60 tete /...pllatt Mustard; ' . 000gallone Wrenn, Braßracey a - • • - 100 do halttle and - Idth Whiskey; ' 'dim graved Spires warm:dee titre toitether with • Mien] *porn:Kat Of gond., 'which we will eel wholesale • orretall as low se any other hoe. In the two ,eltles, however crest tlke_prstevelarts of saw othsrwetstl.. Icente MAY be. HAWORTE; REQ. & BROWNLEE, =2O. oor. of' the Diatnend & Disintrad /OUT, .Pittlfg. VESTCOTT'S PATENT...RAILWAY CIL x..l274gr t g4tt ' 4l °,,pktazglT .ft KIN I scent far this IrVeacers LA:We:O:w In sass aL 4E4 sa I clpal henlisre Lomas, Cerpmters and 44E= can be - sip tied.—. left inth g.bmlber. will bi beeeteelif atteaded to. 13p.u.. en. cut b.: wale mein the fis=tte Mee. Cceat Hew. sad =me pf ttopub!le boadlega. 14429:11m QADDLEDS AND DEALERS IN wrn End the bed errorttlene In the West. or arOry thluo In the he -of WILIPS,• RIDING .SWITLUES, O LASIIMTEOSOB it, et the wholesale whit, warehouse of - WELLS, RIDDLE ACO. :,e/3 __ • No. Se Pear se stmt. - T" ROAR'It OF LICENSERS Ti 7 :ll meet a n their _re= vnt SIOSDAY., Nth But, at 10 react A. ]L Tr . . 43i b tp t i7licttl::s 1 o , f h Ei11.41 114 Petrone who hot. to Bonds. blet el t tains trot limns., are teiticated to do no,tettve the ' rkartl makes their:note. • OltoEl3 08 . ITHS Ronk% Plttetovren. December. 6.18de. • . deeds& cleared, - 4O TO . EXCHANGE CITY PROPX.tril—A rolendid imt•lo.luss Mama cleared, Ur rat=41:686,1011 the vitae lend nod In • Meting* of eultles4ou; well watered: two arehscdo of 1.1 n• vatted fithrsee of Wonted dualities: Thelmprodw menu moist • lugs Mut dwelltna, balls in pods= sLyle, with whis`, bell. double pular., dining:win and kik:dm:4 togetttermith extend,. leaping ettnet • !arcs cement barn, .80 by - 40., with econe besaneut for eteldtaq; tone nod) tenant housed, wild-41%1th tent for Seper month: .2tde term to situated on • )1•11doad In duliolsdun .3=4. and will berrehauvel doe azer peere an d,- ne ply arLAINI-11014, 68!.; fourth st. AAIEETING of the Stockhaldets::ef the Wastinnteiend Coal Coalman =DI beheld eit the la m prox., - the Otano of the Ca, e. _E. or antra and Walnut eta,. Philsdelthla,' at 22 Veleta, EL, to rt eel's the Annual • Retort of the •Directonr. and eltet• Rand of Direetern for tan anteing year, and ma other 1431 . W at tita7 hehtenaht larerarf. hai.9awd • • JOHN IDOTODIent. tOreenaanrah . QII - OT AND EKE LEAD . - 20 kegehhot„ =petted oaten - •.• 4,000 ter Dar load: I n pore and _ or-MANDRIL OORDON. G.. I .,TEAMBOATS..sOpIied. with. - Medicine toCtcartDnt op In thonextrat mad most ton:erect mxnnn, at del . • - OPPERABT:IObbIa juit received, and ge. by Aid Et. B. BELLI:e3 c lAIN KILLER-5 Oro jest received and. for yak b 7 de/ - BYLI.KFIEI 4k CO. TIIN}(11.04-260 lbejnat received and II far We IT dd h. M. HELLERB t'CO. EAVY tITUYIVIt ET FRINGE foi trim- M inCFelnCQlcaky7netopenedat~' , . 1.10E.N1:76,17 Market Ansi. lansv - • wool, BA.sookk , ,. children's. 4 -• floods. Mitt% ()alter', and a silieral at eottment of ALOOdery Mr Elsa; wawa as children. jnstned as nouns • .... • - OUCKI OU whet atom --, .. - -60011 -- .621,3 to bud dforeaTeln ' 4, • - ,Ifiliii , 3l.oY7ll CO. FOR.COLDIVEATII.§II. rr Wo4l. ft..% tut Cao:tr, piwtti Gloves, Eleavy Balt Ectcr, • • - Balmy Under &arta sad Dtftwert: ' Chltdraas Glotjujutut Vt‘eilust; • • • Obllitena Volum:l4 g . • - •• • - Gikrnt and ettetiMit • • • • L Oleo Vera sad Rs►erq A remig*tt asOtttaeut of.theag irtKis sinlttd . :_to the t 9.1.06. at• low pant, tant.o bad at , j - - - OREOIP DAUB IRON-100 1134 Put feo'd a. s.ske sal. 465 PLEXAS33 'POWDERED OLOVES--300 Ib3 in store A. mite este y saursapcos. waszsvirast