I PUBLISHED BY WIME & PiRMRSOMOTO MONDAY MORNING, NOV. 27,r11RR-:: "WI. • :s : • • old SabMiptiOnStdeall NaraLliiner. sad thdtda &Mem Gammos, nflmWdlo atokrod faraiddad from UM ate. (MMIMOULL LIST LID IMILADMW isail=l.lll4ll=lll=e",fred, (10(kirirwled then this alike. • NNW TORS =Panes: we will men sad Wrenud, kow Am of expeasel vad*Weak *WI sobsOlto for this mot. Fall Linn Colophonld latelligenes,Malenia, M.r. In giver New% lmpeny Mawr, Malkstgake- gee IS• SOU pig* ear Ts**violas News. The mows we me enabled to give to day, of the Temaperanee Dissuasion, and of Judge Grier's Charge in the great egeettnent cue, we now Will Meet the approbation of our seeders. The labor wad' trouble of procuring and writing out these MEWS of local iceman, are very pear, but we our paper will be rendered more iMer. A WaSTITRX 11JU:M,AD There seems now to be same tangible reason to hope that the citizens ofFirisbargh are sufficiently Emma to:the importance of a Western Railroad, tit lead to some decided action. We have been leo long urging this menu, that any glimmering of liops that will relieve us from the &Uygur inch we 00negiVO it, of pertinaciously pressing the ;Mauer before the people, will give ea much real pleasure. By resolutions passed at the meeting on Friday. teaming, the large number of our lealing-citizens pretest, decided that the prompt commencement and early completion of a Western Railroad was imperatively oecessary to the welfare of the city in all its various interests, and at the same time re, ' ' commended arrangements for taking stab. Nov, Liris what we bite to_see. When men offer to dock, and thus furnish the means' to do a , we think they are in earnest. They are wisein this. '. The stook will be among the boa inthe Pittsburgh is not acting alone in this great timer prim The counties in Ohio, through which the road is to pass, are truly alive to the importance of the enterprise, and the taking of muck is proceed lag very suoctesafolly. We see by the Ohio Be. pcnitory, that the people of Canton are at ';weric in , Lamest, and that the subactiptions look welt All that is now wanting to start and complete the walk, is Or Mahwah and Afiegheay to amp Saw Iward, in downright good earnest pet this be done, end the whistle of the locomotive will soon be I heard in can neighborhood. I - Since writing the above, a meeting of the board !of this company has been convened, and CoL W. Rabiason, jr.; elected President. It was and, that the mad should diverge from the Ohio Rives, Si err neer the mouth of Big Beaver, and the Chief Engineer was instructed to locate and prepare for contract forty miles westward from that point. Pittsburgh was fixed on as the locarian . of the dace of the company in Pennsylvania—Salem, Columbiana County, in Ohio. It was resolved to make the moat vigoroos efforts to give the great Wean= Ran Road a good start in the right direction. We are unable, this =Maw° erre the re• itarka of Mr. Emma, at the rail road meeting, in as perlbet and fall a fans as we could wish, and therefore defer them. We wil attend to them, however, soon. Onnotnernea Ciunas—Julius A Idea* former. ly a merchant In Wooster, 0. was arrested on lima ptclon of having robbed the Wooster Sank some tone since. He was visited in Frisco, and, by • promise of being let loose was induced to confess Ws colt. He made known the place where the money was hid, and it was mostly fond true.— This done arosgistrete was Send, who on Moore's confession of gat fixed his ball at $400! This was I given, and the thief was adieled to roam at large! fto nays the Wayne County Demccrat. Such con. '• duct was disgraceful to the minister of the law, and thaw engaged in dins procuring his diacharge are M6My culpable, if not criminal. Szma.—Our friend Fah= is receiving ceding beams, by his firm bells. We cut the kllavrieg from the Erie Advertises. The linivenaliat Congre s afion of Erie have 'c rawly obtained • Bell be their Omura edifice, which =a raised to its worpra pardon afew days - Apr - iniigh• °Tar plhs; deo- ashes rad ohera.mand is decidedly the richest toned bell in Erie. We have frequently observed:in our ex changes notices of the excellent qualities • of Ma Fulton's Bells, end we have now in twitting a hill confirmationorthoes complimentary atateinente— We world recommend his Foundry to all who wish to obtain a good BelL Tug Vara or apeman from the ort• dal dams, that the whole number °fames polled at the late Presidenttal,„Eleotion in Ohio, was =Et,. 513. They was evert— For Lewhi Cam. 154,783 Zactotry Taylor 11a,358 Martin Van Boren .......... Majority ofCan over Taylor 15427 Taylor and Van Baran over Can 18 97. A Wens Parstazoto--We find the annexed card in the Mercer County Whig. The writer is we believe the Esther of David Leech, Esq., of Leech.. ha:Llo4th= whom a more active end devoted Whig does not live in the state. "Kn. Ifars—l have heard some toasting oftarge frmQy voting. At the late Presidential election, ouself, nine scam, and eight grandams, voted for des. Taylor. If any can beat this, let= hear from them. I have ten lons, but one of them is ■ point. cal tnungnmar. "Salem, Mercer county, Pa." Branbass or nit Panunra ler was 64 years old last Friday. He was tom in Orange County, Virginia, November 24, 1791, and received a majority of the votes given Or Prev , dentin that County, and in the native Counties of Washington and Jefferson in Virginia, and of Cass Ft New-Hampshire. He also 'carried the ancient Dalai town of Sindezhook over Menlo Von Buren. Gassy Etigiar gtosae AX ens Essrwaszn—A Dour storm of aboard unprecedented severity for this season of tiw — year, visited New England on Sunday night and Monday morning. At New Ha ven, the mow lay at least a foot deep on a level. Further North there is reason to believe it is still deeper. Travel had been greatly impeded. Mtta Mina Galan is about to petition the Su preme Court of the United States for a mandamus writ, to brae the Probate Court for the Pariah of Orleans, Louisiana, to execute the mandate of the Supreme Court ordering the but will of her Gather, as proved to have been surreptitiously made way with, to be probated. TO Ca.t.troaxu. - Ossoins.—Mail are to be dispatched for California and Oregon, in the Falcon, from New York, on the let; from Charles ton and Savannah on the 3d; and from New Or• Lesson the 11th December. The death of the Hon. A. D. Sims, of S. C. will leave a vacancy in the mew Congress to be filled by special election. Mr. McQueen, a Taylor man, who ran against him and ran him closely, will pre babiy be his anccessor. Placsuccuce, Parish, Louisuina, cast at this elec dam bat MS votes; while in 1844, the officers re turned 1,844, nearly all for Polk, thus giviay the Btata The fraud is — pus apparent. But i Deeded no proof, being googy palpable at the re meth elperpretratiom —Mr. Alex. Bun, In • card tie National Intethgencer, corrects a mistatement in reference to his applicsrton for • patent. He ewe he is not refused • intent—the 6u invenuon cots-dates Mr. Morse's some three years, and that tbs Commissioner has Pia ordered his patent to be honed. A Merriam Colascrio.—The Pittsburgh papers WO dismissing McClelland's mission to Wd ago ,,, „I:Xerrict and the course of the Bradford Reporter, the regular Loco-Foco county paper. A corm. yam:Sent of the Commercial Journal says that im. nuldnesdy on the arrival of the Cass missionanes in the Daniel, the Reporter “apostamsed" and hauled down Van Buren's name. The (act is It never hoisted Van Buren's name, but supported Cuss throughout from the date of the Baltimore a egninstion, and it was with great reirtetanoe that it eg bOthed SOCOIIIIIS of the progress of the Free ty - od mo vement In its own section. The paper, to b e m e, 6 rectt!ely supported Wilmotfor u ha had ritomvad the regular party stoanastirat E l / 4 ,m t ga f o r the Pittsburgh 'gabble and Wilmoes pmentud organ. There is only one Free Boil pa. per _in the District; the Banner, published at Wells beni, Mop Co wh?cit has been a steadfast swot. t. of Aim Buren and Adams. The . Taylor and Van Bon men have &roirbs nobly in Wilmot's IDiatiet dasste the ithrisdlo se.r , ffin th• Cue and Polkudinionaria&—V. Y. Tishans. ' tar ova suaarna.) rum annum arsemsaarT CUE. 110 TILI; 11:012. t atic.witii4 oe; a n iaiwor goriihigt, eau 00*.rthq*Iti.ine theiciaeiveiktothejnor& TheibilowiniArelke names of doiluio P. icefty,jr., f'orei:ins E. P. Tucker, Pete T 011. ewer, Jir: McCartney, - Jotegh Pollock,• Wm. Headmen, MeGeise, Joseph Piper, E. swable, Pennington,: •Samtiel- &nat. • bil—lavice Grier, ikedutngthe icily, maid: . • . . — , This la an On or ejectment in which the ffa claim to recover the two undivided third metal of a tract of bad 111 Lower fit Clair Town. ship;called Bergen Op Boon, lying on Beck's Ron, about ten miles from this city, containing about 310 acres, said to be of eon•iderable value. In order to show the title in themselves, the plaintiffs have given in evidence lat. A patent from the commonwealth to John Ormsby, dated the 11th of April, 1188. 2d. A deed from John Ormsby and wife to Wm. Lamb end John Webb Cheekley, for the =riders &tido of .E 437 18s. 3rd. A deed from Lamb do Cheekley to Richard Rundle—conaideratien, £5OO-dated 9th Novara • bet, 1190. 4th. The wgt of Richard Randle, dated 13th eehricary, 1824, in which he devise the whole of his estate, real.and personal, to the lessees of the plaintiffs in thii case. The plaintiffs, admit the sale of an =divided third of the land to the heirs of Oliver Ormsby, and demand only the two undivided thirds in this ardiou. They have thus shown you a complete legal S. tle from the commonwealth, and are entitled tore. cover, unleas.the defendants can show a right to retain thi i possession ens better title. The d efendantsidso claim title under John Orme by. They allege that John Ormsby had tenants on this tract of land as early ea the year 1790 or 1791, and received the renotand paid the taxes, cootie. Wag his possession in this way until the time of hie death, in December 1805. That Ulu his death, his son Oliver Ormsby, for himself and the other heirs of John Ormsby, cotinnedin possession by his tenants, down to the time of his death, in 1832- 7 . since which time the other heirs of John Ormsby and those claiming under them have recovered the possession of their two thirds of the bind, and are sow in possession. They rely wholly on the statute of limitations, as they do not pretend that Lamb and Cheekley, who had purchased the legal title from John Ormsby, Mid ever reconveyed it to them. It may, perhaps, be proper to give you a brief recapitulation of the testimony relied on to show the defendant's title under the Alamo. Hutchison proves that in 1790, two tenants were residing on this land, one named Dixon, and the other John McCormack, but the witness does not know under whom they claimed; that in the Spring of 1791, William McDonald (the grand. father of the witness) took possession of the part which had teen occupied by Dixon, who left, and that McCormack left in the Spring of 1792, sod was succeeded in his possession by Ja. Brush. That they paid the thirds as rents ohn Ormsby; that McDonald remained in posses. ;; • till 1809,and was succeeded byJacob Lammas; who remained on the land far fourteen years, par 'nig rent to John Ormsby, in his life time, and alter biz death, to his son Oliver Ormsby, who continued the possession by other tenants, so as to koep up • continuous pmrsoon until his death, in 1832 There is evidence, also, from the hooks of Oliver Ormsby, that down to 1811, ho kept same account Of expenses and receipts on account of this tract, as if it had been a part of his father's estate. The tax figs, since 1190, have been given in evidence, from which it is alledged that it appears that this tract has been assessed to John Ormsby, from 1790 jill his death—after 1806 and to 1820, to the heirs or estate of John Ormsby, and alter 1820 to Oliver These assessments do not particularly describe 'the tracts assessed until 1809, when Langrm is mentioned as the tenant, but from the number of acres or tracts included, compared with the other known property of the party assessed, it is more than probable that this tract is included in all of them; but of this you will judge. As the assessments of this county do not go fur. they bank than the year 1790, it does not appear whether thistram had ever been assessed to Lamb & Cheekley; most probably the change of owner. ship was never known to the assessor and it con tinued to be taxed to Ormsby, as before. The defendants have shown, therefore, a main. iced posseseon and enjoyment of this property, and -reception of the rents by themselves, and those 'under whom they claim, for upwards of fifty years l:before this ejectment was instituted. The possession required by the statute of limi. .tazions to bar the owner, oiler twenty one years, must be 'actual, confined, visible, notorious, dis tinct, and hostile.' That the possession of John Ormsby and his family have all these qualifications, except We last, bas not been disputed. The great question for your decision will therefore be whe. ther seceding, to the law of Pennsylvania, es un derslood by her courts, the possession of John Ormsby and his heirs are adverse of hostile to the claim or title of the plaintiffs. 11 is a question of fact, or rather a mixed question of law and fact, andtherefine it is the province of the jury to de aide it by applying the law, as stated by the court, to the facts as they stall find them to odd. The must does not intend to express any opinion on lee facts simply; but when the law draws certain infettearien front nertaln -W-S , l it is the day of the court to ketidet the jury. The credibility of the witnessea yon are to judge of. We shall therefore slate acme of the established principles of the law on this subject, as they have been directed by the coons of Pennsylviota, and which may have an application to the question be. fore us. And here, gentlemen, I moo further remark that ' this question is to be decided alone by the laws which regulate the transferor possession of real Imitate in Penusilvania. The court has nothing to do with the laws of any other Stemma this subject, um with any general laws which might prevail— gut the question is to be decided entirely and alone by the lawn which regulate these matters, las existing in this particular State. Then, tat. It is not necessary that &kerbside should show that John Ormsby entered under some deed or written title, rod or bad, to give colour of . . 2nd. A &swims is presumed to have entered for himself, until the contrary appears; and it is not essential to the claim of adverse possession, that it be try claim of right in the cocapant. The statute of limitations was designed to pro. tact the wrong doer, and to punish the owner for not attending to his title in time. 3rd. The fact that Ormsby had conveyed the land to lamb and Cheekley will not make him a trustee, nor does say presumption necessarily arise therefrom that he acted ender them. 4th. The putting tenants on a tract of land, returning it to the aaribwor as one's own, re. ceiving the rents, cutting the timber, and exercis. log all acts of ownership, without any abandon ment or Intermission for forty or 511 v years ore un equivocal arta of claim and ownership which of ford the best evidence of ouster. sth. The jury have no right to presume an in. tent contrary to the notorious acts and conduct of the parties, without some doe proof that the party had no intention to oust the owner, and hold in privity or 'subservience to his title. Have you, then, any other circumstance or acts or declarations of Ormsby or his hese, in evidence in this case,sofficient to satisfy your minds that the possession no long held was not in hostility or ad. verse to the title of the plaintiff? The testimony relied on for this purpose it will be my duty now to lay before you. let. That in 1805, before the death of John Oroasby, Oliver Ormsby his son, gave a memoran dum to his friend, 111 r. Gales, to Philadelphia, sat. ing that his father had sold this tract to Lamb Sr Cneekley, and requesting him to find out the owner, as be wished to purchase it, if he could get it cheap. 2nd. A letter dated 4th March, 1616, from Rich ard Randell to Ormsby, by which it appears that Oliver Ormsby had called on Wm. Randle, in Phil adelphia, and expressed a desire to purchase this land, ' it being a family patrimony,' with a propos. al by Mr. &laden to sell it to him. 3rd. The witness Hutchinson states a conver sation which he heard between OliverOrmsby sod his brother in law Mr. Gregg, in thin. That Gregg said ' I wish you could find the owners of that tract of land, till we could buy of them' Oh ver Ormsby said, I care nothing about it, I have as much lend already ea I want' 4th. Thai in lffitil or 1529, Oliver Ormsby on being requested to plant some apple trees on this place, raid 'there is no use for mete improve that place; it dent belong to my father's estate. lie sold it a long time ago. He was only keeping poe. session of it until the owners came for it; and when they came it was theirs. sth. The tesomoey of George Roachbamer, who was tenant of this land, under Oliver Ormsby, who states that when he (Ormsby) sum requested to make improvements on this property, said, dots feel as though I could build any thing on it. My father disposed of the property,m an early day, and if the owner or his hem was to come to-eight or before to-morrow, they must have the property." 6th. The testimony of Samuel Mau., Esq , and Oliver Ormsby, when asked why he did not im prove the land, and his reason was that his fath er had sold the properly to two merchants in Phil- adelphia, and if the heirs would come on, they would not allow him for Improvements, and that was the reason he did not make them. That the heirs were in England, and would come on. 7th. The undisputed tact that no valuable im provements Were ever put on the property but the houses and other buildings suffered to become ruinous. With regard to this testimony, given to rebut the presumption of adverse possession. the Court would remark. Ist. That the inquiries of Oliver Ormsby, in 1605, before his father's death, cannot effect the nature of his father's porsession, nor if Oliver himself had been in possession, roceivieg the teeth, and using it as his own, would such inquiries show that his possession was not adverse. 2nd. The same remark may be made with re. gad to the offer to purchase of Randall, In 1815, a mere offer to purchase the title of the legal own er, either before or after the statute bas run, will ant be 'efficient to change the nature of the ten ants posseavion—nor is it of itself sufficient evi dence to show that the possession is not hostde.— Bat if before the statute has run, the parry in pos.. session should acknowledge the title of the owner, and propose to purchase, and thus pot tom off his guard tar grim= or tnck till the statute had run, such oar stank' be treated as a recognition of his title, and an acilmorledgerdeal that the 1 ,024 .** session is not advent. atm loomed Judge here reed a qtrotaiirap from Judge Cason, in which he shows that the stating .JOELN LEECH. of limasheas was paned:to protect the occupant —not In his merit, 63r be had none—bat Inc the demerit cif his maagerdst in delaying the contest ..Aleyerad,,...lllllar gatiod missed 25 But this icitiiiqf Bandar' does :006illege Oliver! Ormibyarver admitted dna his occupancy aid theta Ithsfather had been in Sabservimiel or pricraq - willithe tale of Ettindell, ; • . wiz induced to delay the assertiortet his eight by any pretences or offers of the Ormsby'. Twenty. six yeses had elapsed before this inquiry was mail,, and. twentyasix more elapsed after it was )made before Randall or his devisees asserted their claim to this land by snit. If these fifty year" of total neglect to look after thie Lad has been ceased by anifico or trick of the defendants, or those under whom they data; I have not been able to discover it from the evidence. 3d. As to the conversations related by the wit• nesters it is for you to say what credit is to be attached to them. The declarations of a tenant in possession ore undoubtedly proper evidence to go to a pay, as the nature of his occupancy, whether it be heath ar otherwise. But I would say that testimony of this description should be carefully secured. It is impossible to contradict tti aad it is more subject, than any other kind of testimony, 41 misconaraction and misrepresent.. tion. The little reliance that 'laced , . CU be pts. .. on is shown in the present cue, where one of the witnesses;who:undertakes to relate a conver sation twenty yeara ago, gives an entirely differ• ent version of it from that formerly given by him. sal( on oath. There were ten points on which the plaintiffs counsel had requested the Court to into:met the jury, the whole of which the learned Judge read, and on some of them did instruct the jury; on oth• era he refused. The jury were absent about two hours, when they returned into Court, having found a verdict for the defendant. BY OM OWN IMPORTILIL TEMPEILLNCE IMICIIIMION 'Pursuant to annoancement a discussion was held at the 3rd Presbyterian Church, on Thursday evening last, on the question of the expediency or invoking legislative aid in the suppression of the sale of intoxisating liquors. At the time appointed far the opening of the debate, there was already a crowded and highly respectable audience, who lir toned to the debates throughout, with breathless at. tention. It would gratify us much, to report the speeches on both aides pretty fully, in come pence, especially, of the excellent temper and spirit in which the question was argued. We hope these discussions will be continued; they cannot fail to be productive of good. Bat stop! We are travelling out of our sphere. Wanting the reborn to funnett a full report of the speeches, we mast content ourselves with laying before our readers a mare abstract of the debate, as well as we were able to analyze the arguments of the several speak. eta at the time. Mr. Mime= occupied the Chair. The Bev. Andrew Black, of the Reformed Pres. I byterian Church, Allegheny, opened the question in I the affirmative. Aker stating the question, the I reverend gentleman referred to what had been I said in a great many louvers as to the seem I drinking* which had been the result of the late li- I cease law. He contended that this was an evil I winch would die away of itself; and that however I mach secret drinking might have been indulged in, the eye and the heart were not shocked by that bold and daring one of ardent spirits which moat so familiar to the community at the present time. ' The legislature had passed laws for the auppres- Mon of gambling, they had put down lotteries as being injurious to the people—es encouraging int. morality and idleness and improvidence, and who would daze to ray that there were such things as lotteries now, or that gambling was monied on at any rate in this state to the extent It had been for Surly. The position, than, he wished to illustrate was this —that those who fostered and encourag. eel intemperance were more injurious to society than the men who covered broad cast our land with lottery tickets or any other system of dialth easy which might be adopted by men to do harm to the property of others. The question then was, was there,injury done to the property, the health and the lives of men by the means which were resorted to to sustain the cause of intemperance ! Now, Ist, As to the property. Why had Penn. Weenie and other States imposed penalties on 'gambling! Had not a matt' • right to do whatever he might be pleased to do with his own? No. The law said a mu had no right either to destroy his own property or the property .of another by gambling. Now if the legislature could correct thin evil, why might it not correct a greater! Those who destroyed their property by gambling did not destroy their minds. The man who gambled at night might work lathe day at his trade. He might sacrifice io a few hours in the evening ter more than he had earned in the day, but the circumstance of a man's gambling did not render bun incapable of following his ordinary no ..cupaticto—but &ittakeait did. Tree, gambling ' encouraged dishonesty; bat to give a man for mon ey ardent spino—inunicating drinks—was equal. ly dishonest, for the money in that case was taken not far "value received" but without any value— nay for that which was a positive injury, at the same time takeing that which was necessary to the sustenance of Ids family. , , . It was argued thaimaral suasion axed Milano fluence should be used. These had been used with regard to lotterves. the ministers of God had cried them down; but did they succeed 1 No. There was no stoppage of them until by an act of the Legisla ture they were declared to be illegal. Now what he meant by “Legiabnive interference" in respect to the vice of intemperance was a constitutional effort to put it down. Men seed that there would be a great deal of eecret buying and selling of lot tery ticket*, and that there with no use in taking from the Government a source of revenue when the evil would not be remedied. Now the result was that this evil did not prevail, and, if it did, it certainly was not the crying evil it was before.— I He was prepared to admit that men would get I drunk whether there were laws prohibiting the sales of ardent spirits or not. There would still be drinking and drunkenness lint the same result would inevitably follow which followed the prohi biting the sale of lottery tickets, on the ground, is both, cases that a great public evil required the knife of the public executioner.—lf it ever would he expedient to invoke Legislative aid the present arta the time. They had tried moral means (or many years, they had persuaded men not to drink, they had given them examples and exhorted them to refrain from this evil which we. ruining them selves and destroying civil community so fur as their influence win mouthed; and what had been the result! Was there less of the vice of drunken- DWI now than there was then! If therefore laws prohibiting the sale of lottery tickets, and of horse racing and of gambling m general had done away with these evils, suitable laws prohibiting the sale of ardent spirits would be followed by the same hap py and advantageous result. He asked therefore that we might have just such legislation as we had to regard to any other vice which was mien one to society such as lottery, betting, and horse racing or any other system of vicious conduct which was injurious to society. He diel'at argue for laws to punish a man for drinking but, that the legislature should prohibit the sale of natoxicanag liquors for the purpose of making men drunk, as was the case in every place where they were sold for common beverage—la coricluaion he meant to say that the, whole weight of his argument with thie—that moral suasion has faded—that it has not accomplished its purpose. 2nd That similar evils have been to a great measure suppressed by prop. er legislation; that the present time is the crisis, and that therefore the evil of drunkenness may be suppressed by the seine means. Dr. Riddle rose to reply. He stated, in corn, mencement, the venous points on which he and the rev'd gentleman who had just sat down agreed: such as the awful prevalence of intemperance— the evil of the vice, and the necessity of using ev. cry feasible means to effect its diminution. They were also agreed that they had a right to invoke legislative aid. But the question was not whether they had a right to invoke the aid of the legislature, but whether it would be expedient to do so at the present time. • All things were lawful, but all thongs were not expedient: Here was precisely the point of this question. He would go so far as to way that ha had no question that such legislation would be perfectly constitutional. The judges of the Supreme Court of this State, in the recent ques tion before them on the constitutionahty of a late law on the subject of licensee had not decided against the constitutionality of legislative interfer. mina in this matter, but only as to the 001:111till11101, ably of a particular law; and it was well known that the unconstitutionality of the last law consist. ed in the legislature not taking upon themulvea the responsibility, but in throwing the whole of that teapot:ubility upon the people or particular locale' ties. Now, the question was—' Is legislative inter. ference expedient.' From the bottom of his heart be believed it was not expedient--because there was 'a more excellent way.' Now they must look at this matter in the light in which it bad been viewed in the past. It was well known that there had been a great number of laws already enacted on this subject, and it appeared to him to be pre. posteroue for a community who were not willing to make operative those laws that already existed to invoke further legislative aid. Was there not a law to suppress all kinds of tippling on the Sab bath, There was such a law, and yet it was not carried Into execution. The legislature might pro. perly ask—' Who has taken upon himself the res. ponsibility of carrying out the already existing laws" This law was at present inoperative; and was it expedient lot us to go to the legislature and ask them to do more for us until we had exerted all the power which the law put into our hands. It was inappropnaus—anewpedient. He believed the( there were more ardent spiels sold by houses that were unlicensed than by those that were licensed. Thera were lawa for punishing those who sold without license. Were those laws fully carried into effect; Should they go to the legislature and ash them to pus another law, when we had failed to carry out this one. We were bound then to do all that we could, and not like the wagoner in the mud, ^all upon Hercules to help us out, until we had pat our own shoulder to the wheel. We were sitting down quietly and calmly, and praying God to help us, while we were sot i.srrying out the laws in reference both to those that ware licensed and those that wore not. Were we doing all that we could in reference to the extension of licensed houses. It was known how these licenses were obtained—by the mgnstiires of twelve wen who thought such hormse accessary. Were Mow men always respectable/ Went they always to he de. pended upon! or were not them signatures fie. goeutly obtained through mere hiemliship, without lewd either to the truth or to the moral effects of ouch licenses! Why did'ot we pto btu Honor or awls Bou these m and my , we do sot believe the testi. sway of twe respeetable as& let us take bold of the names tithes* mea, and anemic them putkedarts. il Inwa 64 o( ' God thi" entr a ete a la w arof ce The bitw lawef een Gsd " would, euttite: itseK The beam of man require humus agency.' We were apt 691:#115 to feet satisfied with this transfer of reponiebehty and place nism the shoohient of others that which we ought to place epos our awn. The Rev. Doctor concluded by eau:lain/ the audience to take hold of Ustswork individzwll7-40 .me their utmost endeavors to carry oat to the fed: lest extent the existing laws—to make men good citizens and good Christians, and tuswas satiated there would be no farther need of legislative in terference in this matter. Mr. McMinn, one of the elders of Mr. Black's Church next addressed the meeting on the affirma. tins side of the question. Mr. McMillan spoke for I great part ado time with his beck to the audience and in a tone of Taira No low, that very little of I what he said watt baud for a considerable time. ' He observed that it was always expedient to use I I lawful expedients kw the athomplishmentof agar& I end. The experience of the past gave good hope for the future. Under the late law there certainly had not been that open, prevalent drub:weals which wasevery where observable now. We did not see men coming out of the market drank, ea hear of so much selling without Ileenue. Dr. Ride die bad contended that the law of God would ex. ecote itself Not so, the law of God required he. man Instrumentality, otherwise there wu no need of Dr. Riddle to preach the law and the Gospel. 4— There were =humus of God and human melts also:duty and it was the of every individual to n uke the aid of the legislature to protect sect y, whine duty it wu to euppresa every vice. I Now under Mr. Riddle s' argument every men would have to become an officer. This- the god. eminent did not permit; it had officers of its own or the people's appointment; and he much doubted whether Dr. Riddle would like to apply his Urn argument to himself, and turn constable, and search the tippling houses, and take drunkards by the neck and drag them beforethe Mayor, or even to go before soy Court and lay ea information. Ile recommended that at least, the legialatore should make ft imperative upon any twelve men, recom mending a house to be Unused to make such a recommendation upon oath. W. M Sturm, Esq.,reaponded to Mr. McMillan He contended that it was not expedient at any crisis I to invoke legislative interference in this matter.— The temperance reformation was a great moral movement, operating not open the drunken, the vicious, the law breakers, but upon the temperate, the moral and the religious. Law was the appli cation of knee for the suppression, of its breach— Lew without penalty was of little service. Upon whom did the penalty operate I Upon the law breaker. He thought that legislative aid could not be brought to,indoence the temperance reformation. It could not be brought to operate tiros the moral powers of men, or upon the temperate part of the community. It might be brought to operate for the suppression of vice, but not to promote a moral. rethrmation. It had long been a trite saying, that it was On. possible to make a law—at least such a one as would be observed—in advance of public send. meat. There was no use in it, for the people were the law makers, and they would only observe such laws as they themselves had mad. All past ex, picrience proved this. Every day showed it, even 111 matters relating to the city. Mr. Shinn then re. (erred to the practice of running wheelbarrows on the side walks, notwithstanding a city ordinance to the contrary; he contended that we should place temperance constables In office—temperance les exhume—and not tend drunkards to make laws, and temperance petitions atter them. A motion wan then made for the adjournment of the discussion to a future evening, at the church of the ivied Mr. West. Carried rum we. Foreign items. IRELAND. Mrs. Doheny, with her children, are about pm. ceeding to Paris to Join her husband, with a view of immediately going to America. We have been assured that Mr. O'Maboney has reached France, and we have been further natured that within the but few days he addressed a letter to a female friend in Waterlbrd, mentioning the par ticulars of his escape, are Mr. O'Mabonery is said to have been one of the best informed men in the county Tipperary, and a thoroughly accomplished scholar in the Irish language.—Tipp nary Vin dicate, Mr. Rickard Dalton Williams, one of the late Tribune proprietor., is on trial at the Commusion Court for publishing felonious articles in that pa per. The Primo Caor.—lt app6ars,quite certain that the potato blight has cee,ed in most parts of the country. The reports are much less unfavorable. An immense quantity—el least one halfof the crop, posszbly two third.—ha, been destroyed ; but the breadth sown viva very extensive, and the produce unusually abuadsat• It w now likely that the rest. doe of the crop will be saved, and will afford considerable alleviation of distreas daring the win ter. Mr. O'Doherty has, upon a third trial, been con victed of felony for certain treasonable articles pub lished in the Tribune. The new not atrolisbing imprisonment for debt in Ireland, for sums not exceeding ten pounds, except in cases of damages for &holder, seduaion,adultery, and breach of promise oftharrisge, came into open iron on Wednesday. The Carkaeporter states that them are nearly 400 patients in the Lunatic Asybun these, and not one of than natant restraint. • - A Kansan Gum icer.—Al the Sessions, on Thursday, the grand jury returned a hill rota court as follows : "Lwow bill on the fiat count ; a true bill on the last count." Rave. Paritonsos or mix Lt./sassy Eronorrs or Woaxma Edam— We are glad to bear that her hiaosty bar recently forwarded to two brother., working men, at Cheadle, the sum of £lO, to euable them to publish a new work, written by themselves, on popular education. LOncia.l.2l7 or JENNY Ltan.—This celebrated songstreas placed the munificent sow of £4OO, for the benefit of the poor, at the disposal of the Archbishop of Lublin, before leaving that metro 's:m ENGLISH Marumna—The last Edinburg Review, after adverting to the infamous grossness of English manners in the time ef George 11, says "We are more decent, more observant of banns, more nice in our language and demeanor than our grandfather were," and we are glad to hear it. Tun Lire or Sorrrstrr, by hi, son, the Rev. C. C. Southey; Ramble'. History of the Angliss-Saxons in England until the Norman Conquest; Loyola and Jmutunm, by Isaac Taylor, are announced by the English publishers. An Anextu Yours° MO:RICAN graduate of Har vard, Mr. Faxedward Hall, has been engaged in philological, herary and ethnological researches in India enure 1848. He is expected to make tarpon. tent contributions to our Oriental knowledge. u rnmored, that in cue the Imperial Bank at Vienna should be attached, with a view to pillage, it wu decided to declare the unto of the establishment of no value; and further that meas. tea had been taken to place the vaults ofthe estats fishmeal under water. Mormeuert ro run Ls. Rev. Dr. Cuauusta— A monument in memory of the late Rev. Dr. Chal men has just been erected over the grave of that eminent divine, in the Sonthern Cometery, Grange Loan, by his family. The design of the monument is extremely simple, consisting of three massive slabs of granite, projecting from the northern well of the cemetery, the one in the centre baying the inscription, "Thomas Chalmers, D D., LL. a, born 1780, died 1847," The grave is enclosed with an elegant railing, in the Gothic style. Anchor DMILL...-In the travel. of Lord Lind• say, it listened that during his wanderings in Egypt he discovered a mummy, which the hierwlyphics inscribed on it proved to be at least 2,000 years old; and in one of As closed band. was bond a to. herons or bulbous root. Thu root he planted in a sunny soil, end when a few weeks had elapsed, It grew and eventually blossomed Into a beautful dahlia. Tax Braman Potrricat Elites who are on their way out to Cuba rose upon the eapteijn and maw oft he ship, and corned her into Bordeux, and who were given up, contrary to the law of nations, to Spain, hare arrived at Santander. Nerves has, it is said, ordered the ringleaders to be Mot on the deck of their ship. Tux Sec/Tram Cesar= MI/IS—The Chartist trials, fixed for the 7th instant, are looked forward to with some interest. Grant, the leader, who was to be toed with his confederates, his, it is thought, run away, and left his bail to cadet Certain it is tidal they have followed in search of him to London. Some of the more chivalrous of the prisoners were to conduct their own cases; but from posters pot on every wall, it would appear that subscriptions ars raised to fee counsel in their behalf Lotman MIC/lANICZ AND Lamle:ea.—There are to London alone, at present, 80,000 mechanics, and 15,000 laborers out of work. Assuming four par lor). to each family, there would be than 380,000 people almost in a state of denotation, with troths bad, and very little appearance of its improviag during the winter. Among the transported Pans insurgents there were 150 artists. A Hamburgb emigrant ship has been lost with 122 passengers, bound to New York. Beautiful apartmeota in Pans, which formerly rented for air hundred francs a month, may now be had for tasty. Cider drinkers, it is now neatened, by medical to men England, escape the Cho era . t contains malic and tannic acid. M.Bueil, the last of the old commanders of the or d er o f Malta, in France, died rt.:wady at Angien at the age of 94. There are now unrented, in Paris, 60,000 apart. meats. Satin foulards are now fashionable in Pans, so are open work and embroidered atookings and Ica shoes AL STRIA LATIII Reno. ra.051 Vicens.—Our Vienna ad• vice. whioh have coma to hand this morning are rather conflicting. so that it is a matter al extreme none t of ou to r"'"g r a lLt the erects° position of strain at theletters. From all that we can learn, it is evident that much carnage has al ready taken place, and we fear that in the end the Viennese will be defeated—at present we cannot s ay whether the Hungarian forces have attacked the City of Vienna, and we may expect than the neat post will bnng tntollifteece of the entrimos of the Imperial troops into Vienna. WS base had pot into our hands the postscript to a letter dated 111th a l t. from a reapectable firm Si BM/11111, wino, states that the train bad just arrived not brought intelligence of the capita aeon of Vien,p, of the encoracy of thts report we are up to the present time unable to determine. Sine, the above w. written s telegraphic despatch hu Just usehisil os froth London which states that Vienna was horn. ing In slit dirthreth places. j 3 AV M Oct. 4, 4 I'. M. ITM4 mai has am ved from Vieulna vgliqui louan• The editor of the Stlehus Gazette has caw from duel place austabs that Ur ma as. am* gatako ass by arms& n tromps We herial.dered tostataill fa= lanterv , • .I.,Meaugetabyther "I o'4:kick tecic state thsttViene N Mita:Paw, not the result dlambartimeta, but frenithedreadfol'etuditsion 'which had prevailed trom the cannonade in the thoroughfare. trindis olrrata him proclaimed that all shall be abut who are taken with arms to their bands. _ ..... The postscript to a letter dated the 30th, from a respectable Arm attirealan, was received (in Lon don) yesterday eilentorn satin that the train had just arritted and brought intelligence tht/tr mynas lawn of Vimma. Tao Ceozza.e—A Landon letter of 3d Nevem• her, in the. New York Commercial Advertiser says— The general health of London for the past two or three weeks has been above the average, but the cholera remains with us, and although the cases are not numerous, the proportionate mortali ty is large. Up to the present time it has been I worse at Edinburgh than elsewere, the official re porta, from its coaunenooment on the 4th up to the 30th of October, showing 218 cases, 164 deaths, 46 recoveries and 66 remaining. Wirmaisvzs, Tneaday,, Midnight—Dreadful Expbsion—Thirty Persons EuffieL—The whole somber of bands engaged in the Whinnv.hill Pit, leased by the Hematite Mining Corappy, have been killed. Of these men 11 were married, and leave behind them each a widow, and, in the whole, 33 children; white 13, three being lads of the tender age of 12 and 13, were tll2Oll/Tied. The mine at which the accident occurred is about three miles from this town, and within the Lord. ski. of Egromunt. he accident took place between 6 and 7 o'clock in the morning. The number employed in the pit was 31, only one of whom escaped--the furnace man, stationed in the shall, having also succeeded in saving his own life. The explosion took place from some workmen taking MT the' top of their Davy lamps to light that:Opel, which flied the intlammable:air ofthe pit; and out of 30 persons engaged in the works one man only named Bradley, engaged in the furthest working from the &haft, succeeded in escaping with life. GLasGow, Tuesday evening.—Yesterday morn. Mg, shortly after eleven o'clock, a most frightful catastrophe occurred in this city by the falling of the large sugar house belonging to Mew. Samuel Wilson & Sons, Sugar refiners, situated at 71 Al.. ton street, by which from nineteen to twenty men were suddenly buried in its ruins, fourteen of whom epeer to be killed, and five are more or less scrims!) , injured. Tha Intelligence brought by the Overland Mail from India gives dates from Bombay to the 3rd October, and from Calcutta to the 18th September. Major Edwards, supported by a large division of British troops under General Whish, was encamp ed under the walls of Moulton, and only waiting • battering train to commence the seige of that strong city. The English forces, including those of their allies, has been estimated, perhaps not correctly, at 23,000 men, with thirty guns. Besides these, Sheri, Singh, the Durkinr leader of Lahore, had 3000 men. His fidelity, since his decor nue from Lahore in May loot, seems not to have been doubted. The enemy it Mooltan is supposed to have an army of 7000 to likooo men, and fifiy two guns. Notwithstanding this apparently supe rior force o• the British aide, the British General Which had been unequal to the task of crushing the incipient rebellion. The British troops, after a perfectly ineffectual investztuun and bombardment of the city during the seven days, attended with considerable loss of life, were compelled to re tire on account of the inadequacy of their forces and Shane Singh, who perceived that the English were unequal to the capture of the nay, passed over to the enemy, and rendered the retirement of the British to a distance of eighteen miles from the city altogether unavoidable. PREBIDENTIALL ELEOTXON. PENNSYLVAN IA OFFICIAL Comma I SI & 17121=3 Adams,— • 2576 1 752 25 2331 Allegheny . .10112 8591 719 8856 Armstrong.. 2030 2126 141 2094 Beaver, 2655 2303 530 2764 Bedford .... 2836 2516 1 2613 Becks 5082 9485 51 4207 Blair 2476 1435 4 2293 Bucks 0148 5364 183 5084 Butler 2505 2247 173 241 0 Bradtbrd ... 3221 1889 1 779 22418 Gamboa. 1233 1386 12 11 51 Carbon 589 1 1 bl 1 768 Centre,..... 1856 2611 , 4 1 649 Cheater.... 5949 5370 507 5895 Clarion .... 1372 2306 37 1255 Clinton 911 961 1 808 Clearfield... 761 1168 23 630 Columbia, .. 2263 3396 29 1950 Crawford... 2214 274 8 621 2590 Cumberland 3242 3118 52 2989 Dauphin ... 3705 2251 34 3249 Delaware... 2194 1547 64 1975 Elk 134 242 16 145 Erie 3418 2022 357 3500 Futile 3045 3141 73, 2776 HAW 31 99 4 3793 Greene 1476 2379 •52 1354 Huntingdon. 2590 1922 25 2259 Indiana.... 2410 1 544 As 2371 Jefferson ... 850 972 19 759 Juniati 681 856 1 1103 Lancaster ..11390 5582 163 9727 Lebanon... 2996 6080 2 2637 Lehigh 2973 3199 3 2550 Lu :erne ... 3516 3991 176 2967 Lycoming 1992 224-4 9 1850 Mercer .... 2977 3094 1080 3643 3109 MUllin 154 3 1 556 26 1443 1 591 Monroe.... 518 1830 3 425 1769 Montgomery 504 0 5627 251 4 645 5219 McKean.... 367 418 22 376 429 Northrunbld. 1 765 2258 8 1546 2124 Northampton 3191 4203 36 2551 3476 Perry. 1562 2295 5 1339 2064 Phila. city —10655 5266 8963 4972 Phila. Co- —20575 16244 5 877 1 6998 16025 Pike 216 799 3 126 612 Potter 226 469 248 218 627 Schuylkill .. 4939 3700 23 4264 3536 Somerset... 3019 1127 21 2755 1103 Sullivan.... 129 303 19 182 360 Susquehanna 1 853 2563 301 1597 2416 Tinge 1 313 1 344 960 1219 20 77 Union 3129 1 656 25 2887 1 686 V enango ... 1061 1 538 164 988 1 532 Warren • ... 946 1268 136 947 1145 Westmoref d 3124 5197 122 2956 4955 Washington 3998 3820 469 4065 3949 Wayne .... 997 1 642 202 855 1455 Wyoming .. 881 892 37 780 948 York, 4639 5151 4 41 62 4 345 Total ...195,614 112,186 11,184 168,523 168221 Taylor's majority over Casa 13,425. Over Cass and Van Buren, 2.214. •From throe townships in this county, no returns were made. NEW TOlLK—Ofietal and complete P1Zat0.71.113. our. 1 ti 4 8. 1644. . V El. Cu.. Clay. Polk. [hey 2409 42/1 7104 4010 124 2040 1401 3913 3840 435 777 1359 2661 2509 106 1410 1677 1743 9034 497 3990 1054 4009 5222 375 fw 1911 3617 3407 :114 2183 220 1791 2592 123 1481 2616 4915 4495 1143 2100 2111 4321 4691 11 11923 946 2170 MSc 343 1 . ..11 1172 1919 2110 410 901 786 31171 422 205 1914 :Mr 5767 527 37 7150 9161 6205 56311 415 1119 1211 2512 1990 243 VII 974 1594 1501 93 162/ 390 2107 2192 100 1111 111.0 3604 41121 Mc 1405 1551 2/68 3409 30 3193 699 . ...419 4346 r 2 ,6 4341 2445 5521 en 712 .17 441171 5107 44149 77 1254 799 1616 2073 154 2110 999 3776 2709 2111 27201 1545 3693 3049 1311 4671 1441 2187.1 5611 4314 1602 14.5 2.49 3270 95 5110 1902. 22185 1.4171/6 117 2080 1313 3100 2.5.0 o 4616 3505 6291 7717 1144 4942 925 6495 6979 792 19327 1472 4569 31150 435 1431 31111 46'214 3, 0 1 17 . 145 0' 6 2609 2.111 270 4254 1134 '1771 4.399 451 1941 :1774 1743 6010 413 41:1 996 979 1731 1.111 1310 2547 7711 1990 2225 9360 5610 121 121 500 1049 1213 1 255 1064 794 107/ 1 1405 2515 4.556 4200 1 19 444 1029 1611 1979 31 451 9671 216 3521 II 1 1.521 13311 2227 2595 191 9123 614 1572 042111 465 5221 9623 4393 5612 243 14011 11/51 1467 .275 14 53% 1911 17:11/ 11/64 311 7 , 9 1693 1999 264. 1/0 214. 1170 3915 4013 92 . 2 2175 1970 1904 4741 10 2021 1213 5024 .2170 911 610 1019 12.10 1711 11. 3690 797 3953 4046 5113 1314 2146 4,1.1 4412 114 in, I=7 2754 21.1 442 1263 1 411 2156 9110 2101 Total 210,551 451r4 =2,4,2 .2, ~e 6 Taylor's mar. over Casa Taylor's 1:116J over Van Buren Van littreti'm net. over Ca... Cass and V. Buren over Taylor Polk over Clay tu '44 Total vote In 1 , 44 ton • Total vote now. Including an e•Urnille of a,UOU for seattenng Fa/ling off to total vote line., '44 • . .... way. Taylor'. vote Ina than Clay's..„ Can and Van Buren loss than Polk • 9,477 Al New Lisbon, Ohio, on Saturday, 25M M r . B h101143.1N, wife of William Duane Morgan, in the Bill year of bar age. froutdo of the family are requemed to attend her fusioral at 2 o'olook this arlernoun, front the mien dente of her brother, D. T Morgan, Ldberiy enact. Al u.aa Watra k Co—Gent.: Pleue to annou Ilan u of Mr Ilan. Wit-auto:l, a. a suitable pat In at. t , t ,rrce at Mayor nt :la. city nor o.as hIgyosALYT os ALLiongnni erty.—Alt. Editor: will please a 11110,1111.3 the Defile Of Mr. JONATII•X 34 Ward, Allegheny, for the office of May eubteei the decision oldie Whig and Anhinasorde Co or, nventi • noeCtew Mater Vora. tdoemuLrr—Mr. Editor: Please announce that Cu B. ketua, Erg wall be a eandidma (or nomination ba oar• of ISliiyoT navtliti &son %Vasa allot ;sweat Eausr. unarm roz rsa prmaxman max auirnsi Ammer • Ftar..,:alas alum of fire was siren en Salim' •Ixog one del oak; in Stni>bfetd, near Seventh &sees. A greet ekotesatille of people quickly aseembkal, and two or threettnithrellwere out, but from all we =old learn there elks not more than a mad might safely pet en to the crown of his hat, without the least danger of burning otf the keep. We understand the water WWI distri buted in profusion. MATOI ' III Ganur.JA small complement of drun en canes. COMM or QOARTEII Szestose—Tippling ewes by the dozen—and fines in proportion. The Zimaierien case, with another of simt7ar chi racier, •te expected to occupy this court during the most of thin week. The case of the factory rioter. a postponed to this day week. Br reference to our advertising columns, it will be wen the Young Mans' Bible Society hold their Anniversary this evening. In addition to the speakers tumouneed, the ace. Mr. Bonhomme, (the converted Jew,) will address t h e meeting. Wm• Bell, Esq., requests us :to announce that he is not an applicant for the Post Office of Pitts. burgh. — Thaersta—Mr. A. A. Addams has arrived, and appears to-night as Hamlet, in the famous tragedy of that name. Mr. A's qualifications are duly ap. predated by the lovers of the drama in this city, and his appearance again will no doubt sewers the Governor a full house. Tannenswr Tarn:mos.( w the value of Dr. PtPLane's Van:Wage. Read, all that doubt. "A ferret, when placed at the entrance of a rat hole, enters the aperture, travels along the passage, seises upon the rat, exterminates his exutenee, and drags the animal's defunct carcass to the light. And In the manner have I found Dr. Itl'Lane's Arnelle. Vonni- toga to operate upon worms, those dreadful and dan gerous ton:newer. of children. This remedy, like the ierret, enters the aperture of the mouth, travels down the gullet, hunts round the stomach, lays hold of the worms, shakes the life out of the reptiles, sweeps clean their den, and carries their Clielab• clear out of the system. This at least has been the effect of the semi- Cage upon my . children. WM. ROULATT. Naples, Jan. 1847." “This is to certify that /have used Dr. brittle's Ver. mihsge, and have found it to operate in like manner upon my children. JOHN BRIGGS. Naples, Jurm01747." A genuine article of the above valuable medicine can be had ai the ding more ofJ. Kidd & Co, No. GO Wood streei. nor 97 DI. liCLArre's Ewan PILLS CI New You.— The ra pidity with which this invaluable medicine has become known and appreciated, can only be accounted for up. on the ground of its real Vit.. It has only rent:Ural one trial to establish its elem. to the title of the only medicine for the cure of Liver Complaint. The follow ing letter from a druggist in New York, shows the manner to which these pills are regarded in that sec tion of the country. ”Dr. M'Llute—Dear Sir—l have sold out all your Liver Pills, and am anxious to have another lot Imme diately. These Pills seem to take most wonderfully. I could have sold a much larger nuaruity, if I had been provided with them. The inhabnauts are sending to Rochester for them, but whether there We any there imnot, Ido not know. Please send me another supply mediately. F. Snot", Druggist. Hemlock Lake, Livingston no, N. Y. Mar. El, V." A !genuine article of the above valuable medicine can be had at the Drug Store of novro I KIDD & Co, 60 wood st ET Um Mx Pitman HikaL—lf you wish to be me.- pessful in any undertaking, you must always 'nse the eceper means.' Therefore, sf you have • cough, use .1 ALT.'S Exelmoamtv and be cured, for it is the purr means. Have you Asthma or difficulty of breetlung, then the only efficient means to cure you is to me Jayne's Expectorant. which will immediately overcome the spasm which contracts the diameter of the tubes, and loose. and brings up the mucus which clogs them up, and thus removes every obmuction to a free respi ration, while at the same time all inflammation is seat. dant, and a cure is emun to be effected. Have you Bronchine, Sinning of Blood., Pleurisy, of in fact any Pubaomry Affection, then WA Jayne'. Expectorant and relief is certain, and yon will find that you have mod the proper means. Par sale in Pitntburgh at the Pekin Tea &ore, 71 tth Meet max Wood. jarl7 1806 6164 2133 2383 2739 MATO{ or A 11.1 , 31013 T Cm—Mr. Editor: You will pleue announce the name of WM. BOYD, 3d Ward, A Ileg deny, On II candidate for the office of Mayor. Mr. Boyd, if elected, would make an active and effteion of and Is well Qualified us &rattan° the duties o that post. novin-tiloro MAST Crtizaks. W. M. Wright, M. D., Dentirt, Omura and residence onsfourth meet. opposite the Pittsburgh Bank. Wire hours from 9 o'clock to 12 A K. and Bore 9 o'clock lo 5 P. M. BOOT AND 8110 E WAREHOUSE. NO 52 WOOD BT. BETWEEN 3d AND Ith STE R. TANNER & CO. INVITE Canary Merchants and others to an exanci• mown of their stock, which is one of the largest to be found in any establishment in the country and consists of very desirable and seasonable goods, on. pressly adapted ( l as to size and qualiry) Igo Western sales. Prices aril compare favorably with those of the East. Terms liberal. no 14v-dlin POPULAR WORKS OP FICTION, FOR SALE BY .1011N 87 ON & STOCKTON, Ater ket street, corner ofTttird. Vankit ye-47, Fur; a novel without a Hero: by Wm. H. Rivard Ve rnon; Rivard Vernon My Mashes Einfryfty E. V. Childe. Mary Howitt's Translation of the Peasant and his Landlord. Capt. Idarrlatt's Children of the Near Forest The Bachelor of the Albany. Old Hick. the Guide; by Webber. Mary Grover; or, the Trusting Wife: by Cho. Bur den. Wuthonng Heights: by the author of "Jane Eyre. Tee Tenant of Wildfell Hall: by the author of slue • Ve " lmage of his Father; Illustrated: by the Broth< Mayhew. The Dinipline of We. Three Staten and Three Fortunes; or Rose, Blanche and Vlolett by G. H. LOW.. Thirty Tears Since, by G. P. R. James, Esq. noteir WHITER BOOBS AT 13/BTBKI4 PRICES. WHITE, No. 51 hLutsor main, in- UP tends making a change in his business on the rat of January neat, and will dispose of the following styles of good at original ease Hroehea Long and Square Shawls; French Tartan Long do French Ptatted Cashmeres; English do do litonaltue de Lollies; 14 and Gel Gala Plaids; High told French Gingham., and fancy Dress fAlks. Those wanung bargains are invited to tall nortl7-d 1 in A NNIVERSARY OF THE YOUNG HENS' BIBLE A SOCIETY—The &SLAVS nary of the Young Men.s' Bible Society will be held THIS EVENLY°, 27th inst. at half pasta o'clock, in the Ist Presbyterian Church, (Dr. Herron'sd at which ume a report of the Society for the past year will be made. Addresses will be delivered by the Rev. C. Cooke, D. D., and Rev. Wm Preston. novl7-It ASH—Supposed to have been taken by mistake 7 from steamer Yankee, Nov 0, le4S, a box marked Aaron Mathews, Camden, Dresden county, CUM of J. S. Early, New London, New York—weight 2,1) lbs Any information respecting cold box, will be thankful ly received and liberally rewarded by J NEWTON JONFR, n0v27.6t Monongahela House Q UNDEUFS---4 bbl. Chestnuts, 1 do Fla_mend. I hbl Timothy Seed; 5 do Roll Butter; 400 bosh Peaches; 4 bbl. White Beans; 4 keg Hammy; rec'd and for sale by nos - 27 TASSEY a Barr CHOCOLATE, COCOA, Ac —W Baker's No I Cho coLate, Baker's Cocoa Paste, No I Norfolk county Chocolate, constantly on hand and for sale by BAGALEY & SMITH, 4 nov27 Agts for W Baker, DorchedrY, Mass. UANCY CABSIMERE9--Just mm. 1140 A A Ma l: son & Co, GO Market st, a large assortment of the above named go-oda, which they oder at Eastern wholesale price. nosl7 WANTED—lmmediately. at dm office, • stoat BOY, to feed • power press. One accustomed to working in a printing office is preferred. Wages ffit par week.nottri.tf THE AMERICAN ALMANAC FOR 1849—.1 raced and for sale by JOHNSTON h MCKTON, Booksellers, 0v27 corner market and 3d sts C'HERLOCK ON DIVINE PROVIDENCE—A Cr roper. of the above work for sale ty novS7 JOHNSTON A. STOCKTON Post, Chronicle. Journal and American copy 11. MOLASSM-15 bbl. prune, In good order . 1 . 1. jam recd per seer Colen:ow, end (or sale b SUGAR HQUSE MOLASSES—Ia bbl. prsne, and In good order, for pale by no v-27 W & M NIITCHELTREE NO. SUGAR-27 hhd• prime. for ode by 11. nov27 Wa M hirreitELTREE LOAF SUGAR-30 bble, small lo•ye, for sale to by nove7 W k M myrcHELTREE ACKERKL—IOO bbl. large No 3 Mclckerel, ju 111 received and for Bale by nor:; JAS A HUTCHISON a. Co DlO COFFEE...-Jai sacks prune Rea Coffee. race It mg and for onle by C H GRANT, norr 41 Neater at ( - 101 WISH—IS Mole Codfish, tootling .nd for role h novt7 IIArrALE) COftCHED SALTS—ti Ras !Andmg from .tenm. Vermont' end for sale by . . c TAR— , ,too bt.d. N J T.r. In fine order, land . tole and bar sale by HAGALEV & SMITH tovT; V.ISOKI-ID HERRINGS-12V 1,11 Dtgby Hernng kJ N. trcelsed awl for role by nok•l7 HAGALEY & SMITH 1)IG IRON—MO tons Arlegheny r, K Iron, on tn. I wharf mod for rule by Ja ti FLOYD, • I M.,1/ v 5 ,I PI 5,147 I t I t / REEK RI() COFFER-20u baKs ‘tlev, crop,) kJ Coffee, la.odialg and for sek uy novl7 J L R FLOYD BROOMS --Al doa IV°laud) Royce., recd and for .ale by .1 , 17 J & R FLOYD • , inmarit I' SEEI-7 bbl. sood 5 ood Timothy Seed, reed 1 by canal boat &Wand Furnace, an tor late by BblAllll+—lo bbis small Warta fieans, V Y store arid for sale by nosl7 J I/ SPT'S. TURPk:NTINE,-.14 Lelajust reed end I , sue Ity uovl7 1 K11)D &Co 6.2 AL SOU A —l5OO reed and for sale by novY7 J KIDD & Co - LILETHANT OIL, ken/IWO-3 bask. plc . r.citlld 10, .ale by bov^l7 J Mau ASV. D ErD ktOttAX-40 Um reed anJ for Asir by lA, nov27 JK I 1,1) Co LIM= f 1 ASTOR OIL-5 bble Nat rec'd and ar K n i nic norl7 Chronicle copy PADES, SIIOVELS, ttc --5() dna Spades and Silo. 0 vole; 40 do Manure FoTkt; 20 do Or.. 30 do Soolol do; Axe., Hatchets, Mattocks and l'lcks, 8. 60 . 6, rine., An , for saleat rnanulnotarara prleeh by 00.18 GEO COCHRAN, 26 wood at Amnon BALE& Dy MMus D. Davis. Autetlea•er Stap& mtd . Fanq Do — Gods.. . On Monday morning, Nov. 11:7,!at 10 chee k , R[ 1,4 Commercial del. earner :el Weed Ina 1 / 01 areessorill be sold, without limey., for ash =rm. An eztrasive amortment of maple and Caney DrY Goods, among at hick are superfine cloths, eameitar.", ..unarm, jeans, tweeds, piled cloths and asalt%l.kiete nels, blankets, bleached end brown muallos, linen table elm., shawls and hdkfs, in great variety, per prints, de loins, alpacas., bombazine, cashmere,, plaide,ailks, satin, fancy remise, hosiery, gloaes, eer• tugs at, woollen comforts, hats, cape bonnets, rtb bands, e.e. A 1,., 2Ce peeks pins; lee do needle., gmat of buttons, IZO dos spool cotton, pope, Sc. suety Al 9 o'clock. Gm:cries, Quarnrepare, Furnitung, Imperial, Gunpowder, H, end black tea, Va manu factured tobacco, ground pepper,, own:oily of holm. bold and kitchen furniture. cooking and other moves, looking glasses, mantel.cloels, glusware, table mute ly, &e. At d o'clock, A quantity of ready made clothing, boots and shoes, mbrellas, single and double barrel shot gam, rides.pistos, fine cutlery, gold and silver aratches, German Uncy --As, hats and saps, Am turrla W. A. nrcLuito wishing to close out the balance Woodhis stock, final sale will be held at his stem, No kg Wood mem., by the sobseriber, at 10 o'clock on. Tues. day, the Ibtr, andeuntinue till all is sold. The stock comprises tui assortmel t of Cons, Cant ers, Cloaking's, ',citing., Ginghnurs, Prints, Cash meres, klpaccas, ke. Al.*, a large lot 0 , nave Laces and Bobineus; also, a large lot of Cloaks of every description. Th e goods will be amstned on tho Any previous to sale,ln lots cad numbered, when they tan be examined by all desiring to purchase. Terms, 3moaths credit for all sums over mu; for approved endorsed notes. nov23 JOHN D DAVIS, tout . FIRST NIGHT .OF MR. A. A. ADDAMS. MONDAT, Norwmact.V, will bt , presented HAMLET. Grave Digger Mr. Dunn. • Queen Mrs. Madison. °phone Miss Crqise. DAsca or Vsnisrions—Miss NValters and W. Good To conclude with POOR PILLICODDY.: Poor Pillicoddy 11Ir. J. Dunn. Sarah 111.1 Blius Cruise Tuesday—Mr. Addarou EUROPEAN AGENCY, For the Recovery of Dormant end Improperly With held REAL AND PERSONAL. FaTATE: the Set tlement and Arbitration of Commercial, Trading, and other Debts; Se-coring Patents for Inventions in Great Britain, Ireland, and the Colonies and Dependencies thereunta belonging, and Negotiating for the Pur chase or Sale of the ume. REFERENCE may be bad on application free of charge, (provided the motive is not that of mere curiosity,) to a List comprising oilman!. of 15,030 names in which uelauted property is standing. Also, an index to our 10,000 advenuements which have appeared for the past litt years in various British newspapers, addressed to Han at Law and next of kin. Communications by letter me recanted to be pout-paid. BENTHAM FABIAN, 93 Broadway, New York. References are permitted to Hon. Charles P. Daly, Judge Court of Common Plus, New York. Freeland, Stuart is Co. • Chu. Cartledge Ir. Co. W. tr.. J. T. Tapscott G. IL A. Ricketts, Fire. idwavd Schrodex t Eq., Cincinnati, A. Patclun, Eaq., Pdent Nanki Qhio. n Bank, Buffalo. nov9k-dfku Scotch Bol,tona Land for Sale. ripEN ACRIiI3 OF LAND, situated Peebles town. I ship, on the Mettoßgabela, three miles from Pitts burgh—ln lota tosolt_pateharters. For farther panic elan apply to Haney Woods, 3d st, Or to A. WASHINGTON, nov22-dif 4th, above Smithfield st HERLOCK ON DIVINE • PROVIDENCE,—This hitneno very mute and' exceeding ... Lvalnable lam work, has just a published by J. L. Mabee.. Wel Mao. voL pages. 'lt contains mem mendations of several clergymen of this city, of differ ent denorninatiota. In one week 400 copies have been distributed in them of Pittsburgh and mburba It is a book for every For sale by non Z B. HO 'KIN% Apollo Buildings, th et_ PITTSBURGEI OAS COMPAN4.--The Trustees of the Piusbungit Gas Company have authorised an additional sale of the Stock of said Company. The hooka are now opea for the sale of a limited mamma said Stock, at Ma Exchange orrice of linssey, Hanna & Co., Fourth arreeL JOSHUA HANNA. noveSter 'DRENCH BLACK CLOTHS FOR CLOAXS—W Murphy, corner and Market time., t. reed .other lot of Moms superior black French Cloths for cloaks, Kith's same lore price of the previous lot. Also. olive, olive gem., olive brown, and invisible green French Cloths, for ladles cloaks. • RICHMOND TOBACCO-40D packages best brands mannfactered Tobacco, corms:dog of pound lamps, ss, Be, 12s and Ids, and comprising the most favorite brands mar sold, just recd and for sale by nosICS HAOALEY it SMITH FOR BALE—One parr second hand Mule. in good repair, now running, containing 312 spindles each. One Cap Winder, containing TA qundle., entrants for woollen manufacturer. BLACBSTOCK, BELL & Co. Pin Cotton Mill„Nov. IBle-dilor KESWAX-1 earl now landin66 for sale by ISAIAH DICKEY fr. Co Bttorlt VF,ATH.F.RS-10aaeks prime Feed:m.onm reed on jr consignment and for sale by nom2l ATWOOD, JONES & Co L6SelaXL...lolbliConkitng'n beg winter strained Lard Cal, just aufland and for odd by nornl SELLMIS & NICOLE. • _ BACOINI-713 pea.Baeon, larding from star Hodson and for sale by JAS DAYZELL, aovYl 24 water sr UNDIDES—SD b. Choc.; 4 bbl. 801 l Mater, D 0 casks Potash, lauding from Michigan Line and for solo by 110•111. JAB DALZELL FEATHERS Bucks Feathers, reed and tor sale by currE6 C II GRANT APPLES -12 6611 fluni eating Apples, just reeeired and for sale by C H CIRANT, novas 4t enter tt L OVERING'S SUGARS-20 bbls Love!ing's ext., it j le ' Tot3 l Pu=tI7I:VAHI" tNLAXSEED OIL-10 bbla. In prime a=der,jast r eenell and for We by 6 E SELLERS, norZ 57 wood 61 MINERAL WATER CORES-000 grass abort, a prime article, Pint received and for .al by no r2s R E SELLERS BATE! BRICK-1000 Pan reed and for lisle by oords B A FARNESTOCY A. Co DURLAPS-20 ps. hood wad for We low by no r 2 5 MURPHY & LFX. 11OBACCO-14 hhd. Tobacco, just received on c aignnunn and for mile by - • •••—• OLL BUTTER—In store and for mle by nor/3 ROB? DA= : liberty n WEIRTERN RESERVE CLIESSE-400 b 6/Ti nog and for sale by novts ROBT DALZELL ALERATC-15 to. in store and for sale by novas __ROUT_ DRUZ ELL COFFRF.-15u bap just rood and for sale by nostra 8 r VON BONNHORST & Co rpEAS—AI packages Young Hymn, Gunpowder and 1 imperial, for sale by nomln 9 F VON BONNHORST is Co GLASS -130 b0.8:10; 40 do 19:12 40 do 10014, e ust noun) , country, for sale by hos-23 8 F VON BONNHORST & Co (TORN MEAL—e 4 sacks of 40 lbs, sifted ?deal, 1. sole o_ov B F VON BONNHORST &Co CHEF-uE-60 boo W A, for rob by noett/ 8 F VON RONNIIORST & Co DOTTER--0 bbl. fresh Roll Butter, for sale by nor 23 8 F VON RONNHOFtuT tt Co SALEELATUS—Iu casks for sale by nortn S F VON BONNHORST tr. Co SIRON-10 tons Nos% and VA Jonlnn, fo sale by 001 - 13 S F VON BONNHORS rk, co PERM OIL—I cue Winter Sperm OR Jost reed 0 and ior loidetA nos - L3 R E SELLERS r A MAICA ARROW ROOT—I case of superior try, for sale by novZI R E SELLERS FRENCH OCHRF,-4 cuk for sale by trov23 R E SELLERS CHEESE—IS 4 lAA N R Cheese, Imding .d for so nov23 J DALZELL 0 OAP—UbI• Palm Soap, laudtrkg and for sole by nov-23 JAM DALZELL TANNERs• OIL-20 bbls Lem Brown Ott, in no ond (or sole by nov23 JAMES DALZBLI, W & M MITCHELTHEK 180 Libeny F _ RKSH FRUIT-4006.1 ildneh Raisins, 1( hf do do do; 20 casts Currants, landing and (or sale by novel_ SAGALEY kOMITH PEACHM-240 hag. Kentucky Pdachen, J prime order, landmg mad for sale by 13.16.1.:ALK,... , __Y1e S2lllll -4 L Ch l."-' r. 75 144: able Tanners' ()Il i 75 do Wisher Eleptikl Lo Wisner Whale 0,1; Jost teed and le far sale by mr.73 RAGA_LEY k SMITH 1) 10 COFFEI. 0 :-7i5 .E 0 b.(. prime R io Code. for •n 11, by no, Y 3 TANNERS' Obis in fine order, for sfde e0v....3 J 9C E!{ 1)11,-15 Obis jui s rj....lB 4 l . .. 5 :116 1{,.... co - - - • Nns,2:lE - - PERM 01L—Itt caaha best mentor bleached and ury n ble . there, warranted pure, for tale by . i SCHOONhIAKER re Co TURPFSIINh;-40 belle in yae order, lot sate by nov23 H IC SCOONMAEFt re Co ITYl5OB\z • Vindsur No a, rust rood 11 and for sale by 11. A FAIINgSTOCK tr. Co. norms corner 1.., SASA PA RILLA-1110 km Honduras, Atm and sal. by nova bt A FAILNE-STOCK ACo P OIL'DIIIESS-1 oar , 111; i :11:41 1. ! ., o;U t or K szl , 0 0 by W Bl . uov.ll "r.iS t f .?' Nf f,o • r i ' EV;N b ri ' IIORST &Co • L , LAXSEED()LL-10 LW., prime order t post r mad for sale by n0,..2.1 R E. SELLERS • • ' , ANN ERs' ULL-10 mY'S and , or by novt3 R E SELLERS SUN Karrcis Dry real~. '7O dozen Corn Brooms, 3 MAh tVhitu groaner, 10 do Clavrr Seed. 4 bble and 10 teior4l.llor; Y bbts Rod Boyer, Just reed F.:Zi and for taro by t:LASH DENNKTT z,ovqll 37 woad s, =GMTI _ . _ _ _ . • ROUND sacks now IwYdrnir, for sale by ,acbar ISAIAH DICKEY IC CO, irelll Ol A kI.D-41 bbl. Nu 1, i.o.w rind for .4•1,. by IBA I AD DICKEY It Co K tl. IC, bits now landing, for .do by X nov94 ISAIALI DICKEY C o Ll.l. Da) Prat:area; 3 do Finaacad. 2 t , has Hog., now ,•odtnic from atonal., (' 000 , 0 .,i..,1 lOr 1y ov2, IliAI A 11 lIICKF:Y &Co bra Cream Cheese, for sale novw,_ DAV„.iLLIA3IIi CTDEEM APPI s ES-60 bbis Dossier Apples, for !We by noy4s J D WILLI& Ms, no good n ASH-1S auks, pure article, na store and r s foale_aL noes T&SSEY & ErksT TRIM A DPIADd AjiD PEACHES-3w bosh Dried p e .,„b", odd. do ispples, reed and (or We by ravtl T&BSEY & US ST Find and Positive Sde. AMUSEILEId'& 0:=1 M. A. A. Addams. STEAMBOATS. O :' =NATI & PITTSBIOII4III 410. Aga wag. DAILY PACKET LINE. rhwell known line of splendid passenger Steam. a L l i s 3 V now composed of the large ol swam, bas ad and famished, and most posse boats on the staters of Ltio Well. , ETC[]; necomm anon mid cam Con that Fan moinre, has beedproaided foi pa. seams. The boo been in operation 100 five years —has earthed re =Mon 6f peogUr without the least ims. ty their persons. 'The banns will be it the foot of Wood street the dayprerions m 'tatting, for the teeey. tiotinttrelghtend the entry Of - passengers on therest. ten In ail ease' the pamage money mast be Pala in advance. BIINDAT PACELET. TN, DELLte NEWTON, Copt. A. G. litaaria. leave I . .itrabargh every Sunday mo rn ing &elect; Wbeelnig every Sunday evening at 10 P. M. May WIEV. MONDAY PACKET. . The MONONCARIMSma r r,A, Capt. Sma r r, will lariat Purr burgh every Monday morning at 10 o'eloelq Medias every Monday everung at 10 r. r. TUESDAY PACKET. . . The HIBERNIA N.x C4apc J. 1LL1.112111.11211, will leave Pinaborgh ovary Tuesday rooming al 10 o'clock; Wheeling every Tuesday erelong alit r. a. WEDNESDAY PACKET . - - - The NEW ENGLAND No. Capt. 8. Ds" will cave Piusbargh every Wedn esday morning at 10 • 'clock; Mitering every Wednesday evening at 10 r. r. The min 1 IT , Cep. Gaut., will leaVe Pitts burgh every Thursday morning allO o'clock; Wheehas every Tlitusday evening at 10 I,IL 13C=ZIZEM21 The No. Y. CuPt:Cutxuut, tem Pin. burgh every. Friday racoung at 10 eciocklWheeling every Friday evening at 10 e . SATURDAY PACKET . _ . . . . Thu MESSENGER, Capt. S. Rmta, will leave Pius. burgh ovary Saturday moralug at 10 &cloak Vflicaliug emery Saturday averting at 10 r. NEW LISBON AND PITTSBURGH DAILY LINE OF CANAL AND STEAM PACKETS, m at 1 48. magas (vu oititimYo7,) - Leaves Pittsburgh daily, at o'clock, A. M., and ar iVee at filesgow. (month of the Sundyand Bearer Ca. nal,) at 3 o'e leek, and New d u at 21, wont eight. Leaves New Llstan at 6 o'eloak, .P.ll..(ln.king the trip canal to the river daring the: iftght)and;thugwor at 6 ..h*. e, A. hi, and armee at Plusbarstrat 3 P. M.-- making a contieuene Lite for CalTriag pas 'angers and freight between New Lisbon and-Plus burgh, In shorter time end at. lese;Talea threnby any other route. The proprietors °Mi. Lane have tie pleasure of in frcMpr,rlifbeth.atc they have VII o uts two first ri pweagers nse Canal to run to connection with le well .known steamers CALEB COPE end BEAVF.7, and connect ing, at Glamtner t with the Pittsburgh and Cincin nati and other duly lines of steamer, down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, The proprietors pledge them setae. to spare no expense or trouble to insure cool r e . safety atto and dispatch, and ask of the public* share MIIORIZED AGENTS. G. bf. H.AIITLN, S. & W. BARBAUCIFI, B. HANNA, & Co. New Lsibon. myllaf I. ILABEALIGiI & Co. NOTICE—The steamer BEAVER, C. E. Clarke, ma.- ter, will leave after this emcee, (or Wellsville punctu ally, al a o'clock is the amain .13 przvestraos t sztowarevn.z.z D.. 0 Packet Lino. • FEBRUARY 15t,1841 FEBRUARY In, 184 LEAVE DAILY ATP A. Id, AND 4 P. M The following new boas complete toe Use for the present season: AT LANTIC, Capt. Jams Patinae% TIC, Capt. A. Jacobs; and LOUIE bpj.,ApiE, Capt E. Bennett. The boats are entirely new, and are fitted op without regard to expense. Ev ery ecadat that money can proems has been goaded. The Boats will leave the Monongahela Wharf Boat at thirlea of Bow st. Passengers will be pemetaal on board, as the boats will certinnly leave al the adver tised hours, 8 A. M. and 4.P. M Jan2l lil7a?;==%M=Mll .0 r steamer CONSUL, Webber' master, rod! terve rognhirly for Wheeling, every . Monday, Wed.* Deadly and 0110 o'clock preenely Leave Wheeling every Tuesday, Thursday and Eta today, at 7 o'clotk, a co, precisely. The Consul will hind at 611 the totermeillale'' b o on Every aceemodation that ean be promared the the com fort and safety of promengers has been provided. The bouts also provided with a If safety guard to proven explosions. For fie, f o r pearaMmtly on board or to D. C HE fob{ canon of to sad Smithfield sm. ViDritligilitikfT:tNs4,v The nate and Bp - !entail steantlr D ST. AONY, imaisP Kinney, tonst NTH eneral run as a res ter_ packet between-Pittsburgh and Wheeling, coring this city even. Tneaday,.Thotaday and Elaninday,_ol 10 o'clock, A. M. and Wheeling eve ry Monday, Wettnesday and 'Friday, at Sn'elk.44. Foe ilurkinr Passage, having eoPortOr necOnimoda• dons, apply on boned or to /AYH:Et IttAY,4gont• The St Anthony is a near boat, and for speed and necomMeriallOne cennot be surpassed by any boat on the river. • nevi° FOR WHEELING dhl) 9UNFI= L; Easi.iiiina. The maw and fast atetuner WELLSVILLE. Barnes, master, will /eau Gar ann» all intermediate pOrts on Nadu.- days wad Saturday. of each week. For freight or pasj sage apply lon board or to novIS ! GEO B MILTENBMIGER, Ag Sitn.graMN - Wl3l/3UTSVLL.t..E. PACKET - Mini maimno sow and splendid fasfpasen ger packet, . • , ' TELEGRAPH No. 2, Mason, master. will leave (or Chute oad and Louisville ou 'Monday, the 16th Mel-, at in o'clock, A. 66. For freight or imasage apply on board, to BURBRIDGE. WILSON lc Co, or GEO B SIILTENBERGEIL U." Steamer regtona will Wave Loutuillafor New Orlear, on arrival of Telegraph No 2 Puungers can go direct, and eon have be rth . vomited hero if do sire 50016 11"*I ''Or44" Wm Ilaalan,masterorill leave for the - • hove and Intermediate pane to-da for f'rehibt or passage, apply on board. navy/ FOS ST. LOUIS. The new and fist running , steamer NORTitRIVFR Ceptarn Dean, will Mtn,. all intermediate ports ad; day, at itov.2s 10 o'clock, A. M. • FOR BRIDGEPORT. , -- Tho neat and substandatstesiner m at e, Andrew I . oe l , llj meostef i' , will ;pe dorm er regular trips between Pittsburgh and llLligr u irt d She will leave P it on Mon "Eir freight or r passage, apply on board, or to novto D WILKINS, Agt_ FOR CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE The splendid reamer RINGGOLD, s ati n cepe, anger, Will leave for •Dove and tatenaediate pone this day, at LU o'clock d AL, positively. noit22 3 IXPIIE9B ii*ft t To Axo R.* Pittsburgh and Phi d.tpbl., 'B-RUNNING ClialrelltlEntl4o ) • TIME, FIVE DA 'B—DUNNING DAY AND NIGHT. TE publlc nu respectfully In—formed ihat thw Lino will Commence running on the iNtli inst. A not will leave Philadelphia dolly with the MailTroin to Chambersbug, and from thence by Wagon, with a relay of horses, running day wad night. We will be prepared to forward 6000 lbs. freight daily. Apply to cord) D LEECH tc Co PIONEER TRANSPORTATION LINE, 1848- Malta BETWEEN BALTIMORE AND PITYSBBROFL irr Time, 5 days. Merchandise transported at Canal rates. FORSYTH & DUMAN, &sews, Water street, Pittsburgh. MALLEY lc MARSHALL, Agent., novl7 47 Liarht Weet. Plahasnora._ BURKE & CO% PAST EXPRESS . 40 .M. 1441, FOR CLlusi&O.a.eija Li, OALTL,VILE, ANT) THE EASTERN CITIF. TIIE Proprietor of tine Line have pat on Sew Stock, and are prepared to forward ',lackey ! of ell le isertptions daily, at the lowest rate.. 1 C. BIDWELL, Aaent. ' Water street. Pittsburgh 11011INSON & RORII3I, _octal 92 booth Charles et, Bratmove. EOLIPSIII T. 11.41.111 SPORT ATION X.• IN R. . 1 / 4 Eis 1848. Satia. 621-IPPERS uod others are twat-luau taut hos Lino 1.7 continues to run dotty Proditrc and mew-handle reccipted for by MYR DAY LINE and re g ular wag ons, at low rates and apinoJed time. J C DIDWkILL, Pittsbntgh, ROBINSON A ROEIIAL klalotoori- PETTIGREW & CO. T .k 111 BOAT Ati 1. °IMO: ktiOrlt I. ALLYN& Co, .131 No. 42 Water ore•t t CAktPETS' CARPETS:.—LiiinstaMly remnsine . MiClinto,lCs.:, sou inrset, every vari e ‘y ot Carpet., eons/sung in parrot o(' most beautiful promos; Ve.sets, I.est patterns imported, vers nob; 7 spestry. Bruin. y 3 p1y,.0 t and Venetian, all of whien st e sell a• low as ties an be pur chased m this market. Importing and purely sing tram theomnufarnirers, enables us to compete with the eassern market. nos ts QTE:AbI FERRY BOATS FOB `SALE.— The aus- IJ Fanners offer to one-fourth of the two terr y boats, Gen. Scott and Gen. Na orth, Dow runumg Iron. the foot 01 Pon. meet to Saw NMI Hun. 40 Os lo In•ko a profitable inaearment for cry:mall-Is, or an) who may vriah to engaqe in the uarnes.s. I or farther paruculax., inquire of nov - AZ tf 0 BLACKBUFL's; & Co, Water 4t hot oLivruitsG. IV P. NTILLErr, Draper and nt:or. frpm Boetos. Ye' hal estantishod himself In Una ctty ht lIIA/1 otacture ul Boy•' Clottung. Per tie present, Ito haa taken part 11, tie wsreroom No iet Fourth at, now °chap.! hy Sterrett as a formatting wore, where he w., h e happy m ' s ".; soy who way favor h voth a rail He soPP•ie. with the neatest styles at French sack,. Boundatwete, he., and will t:tenet rrgumilytrout .1 . 1. 1 / 5 for al. artmle• Ma line. ^ ` 47e""'t I:°‘ %,../ of handsome teca, Lci .0 Min, ot light feline and tine 5,.,.h. 'astir expreraiy for f Ladies ambler, a eotal r.oth ..tons wioeld give tit a call. AL L\ ANDEft .5 Li"i • marte! novl7 ,•orner toe diamond _ STEAM BOAT BLANKETS, MANI:FAL - Tel-It, .4, .oat ott..ntltro at ohort nonce, octal tn. , ...tor ol no. 60 , e.. n en.- kin Also. Cotton at, Mu.. ',latttaka•e• mad.. beat manner, on Imo lute ~ , : e: e ny Itf novlb-dly ‘% .rehouse, 10 IN ton I' 41 T FAIY--itypo rnsy Lead, fro , n •ular Roect.c for uie by nov7 FRIEND, Co riILA 13 CIDER —433 bbis -uyrrior. j ust 33nclin“ end for ,ale by nov _ _2l /011 N S I:3N (MTH LMOUR-100 bbl a Faculty, tor cialo by r novVI JOHN OUIL oRTH 1 ~FPL ES- b biz in nom a i se (or 0 Rlll4