‘'' s - THE YlTri~BU Pli:ifCitlat.)--• . & Co PITTen6B OB2 ."..---..."'FRIDAY-1•10R14111t6 cAN .19 1849 pumaßstLettus. Nowralmemosa. Advertisemeoui era isabigitirisiciihaNcititiAmer can and Uniyed States VallikallbOectirod traglll6 Wegwill rxelvedintlarnr lime of mensa l ad verdscznenu and_......-sabsclipticali toted , Met: COBLIISCS.CiaIIt 'MST ,AND.PEULARIttIo• zumacrilasarri , , • SONlC4l.loltll.othit T - 11 W" tiriVq Teeta,.d =I Conrail:led fratedir(l4447. Pramual ls Published Day, TaeWaskly, and Wealdre—TheAritjalw" Pam par imam; Ahogr_i 4 „,_.,__Veekh r .„,„ ofra, mime; the Weal, WIT" mho.. --'—' b. &db... t o -hand 1171anntinetthe are es.tnieraly reQmattM &ear favors r. I,or , ..}4:Atnia vq - IX, , ptactleshk. AdvertOmettikhetiesen= Wile wilt iny#,OttAi be charged U Soo siert pi/lora Tologrogiblo Vor llsSurs 'so itastrSlPs - - 'PIA= WAD& The suggest= of the fetedbaity and utility of .connecting Pittsburgh with the suitasturing towns svioguind digt,ficis by . Plank Roasts, meets with universal AZroi'in.of theisections concerned. On the route frooithns city torahs, active measures ate being takcn toy promote the desired object. and by the bun "Washington (Pa.) Reporter," we discover the attention of the people,in that wealthy country, is being tamed to thin 'Tiede of commune , cation with Pittsburgh. From a communication .in the Reporter, we select the following observes tio That a Plank Road could be constructed from . Washington to Pittsburgh, no one who is well acquainted with the country can doubt. And the —iidmatages of such a road are numerous and Ma. pi:lrma On a Plank Road, graded to 2or 21 de grees, T wo horse could draw a ton with perfect homes could draw as much as four can floor. when the roads are in their best con. dithm--and as much as six horses can in the with season—and they would travel faster and with lea labor. The following advantages may be mentioned . I. It would be an easy, cheap, and safe mode of conveyance to market, for the immense mOducts of the rich county of Washington. A channel al- CMyla open, and equally goon all seasons Of the gear: It would, therdom, be a decided adianurms to the whole Agrienkurof coseesunity. It Would raise the, price of land in tts vicinity and, perhaps, throughout the County. 2. TA( Marabout would gain by a cheaper traria. portistion of hit - goods, And by doing a Ismer amount of - business. He cordd•l sell cheaper, and this would benefit his anatomises, the consumers of the gonds,--which class embrace the whole commit. city. 3. The wording put& (and who don't travel in our country, and our • day ?) would be equally benefitted. Two horses would convey iss many sengers as are now carried in a stagewith kale They would travel at least as fast, with greater ease, and with infinitely more comfort to the pass engem. The cost of travelling would therefore, be dimtnaMed, and the amount of travelling increased. a Plank For travelling in pritsse cOnverilsCe , !, Road presents great facilities. Whal COUld horses sod more delightful, than with your own your own carriage, to jog *dm% at the late of six or eight miles an hour, and with motion as easy ax that of a rocking ;hair This, I admit, is a email consideration, bur it may have its weight with 101:1115. 4. Finally, such a road "would pay."—qt would be a profitable iovestmeht Or the stockholders. in the foregoing estimate by Prof Gillespie, hemlock lumber is supposed to cost 89 per M., board merc sure. In this county - oak lumber could be proem ed and laid on the ground for 510 per M..—And oak plank and sills or sleepers would, probably, last twice I. long as hemlock. So that for materials a Plank Road could be made cheaper, in the long eon (mnsidering its duration) than in the State of New York, where they have proved so profitable. The levelling and grading might cost a little more in this county, bat the materials, that is the )um ber, is the chef ems in the whole expense of th road. There is little prospect of our ever having a Roil Rood from Washington to Pitubsugh. And while Rail Roads are profitable to large cities,_ and are great thoroughfares, when!. there is on nimense amount of travel andltransportation to a forgoing eernoviesgt,who have their own teams and their fixagtr fille own 4411nrho wish to take their own oduce to' - Plank Road presents (1 verily believe) rr of greater advantages than a Rea Re ad.`; and emphatica ll y ca ll ed . The Farmers .- I trust the day is not distant when,suclt a will be-coassnicted over this mute.., • , On the above, are beg leave to offer the follow. tog suggestions. I. We entirely agree with the writer above, that a plank.mad, tom this city to Washington, would ...eireverrsairttexprozrose, than 'e'en a rail roa d .°°' lass the latter was intended to conned with some extended line of similar means of communieation. While a plank road wtruld afford facilities for ac cess to market to every farmer and resident for tethers' miles on either aide of the road, for the Whole diermee, the rail road would only afford Co.. eilities at 'iltz . depots, whirl might be too far off to bletof any adirantage. The plank road has the ad- Vantage, also. in such short distance, of enabling the farmer to use him own power for locomotion-- tile has only to load up, attach his horses, and drive Ito market, whereas, in the case of the rail road, he Would have to unload at the depot, and send hts *Mete home again. For long distances the rail toad is the hest and cheapest, on account of the tnving of time For short distances, through an 'enhural distriewthe plank road accommodates tome perrons r and in of more general utility. Y. The people of Washington county can and ought, in.connection with the inhabitants of the two St. Claim, and South Fayette Township, in the county, to Make such a road. Of their pecuniary ability to do it , there is no doubt. They have the best material is the world on the ground the whole' distance, in their oak timber, and it might ;be so arranged ea to require very little money.- I For ilistante--let the people of Washington bo • tough, had that part of the county interested, take 'immedhith measures to procure a charter for a joint stock company, and then subscribe a au tficient amount to secure an organization, and make their Sweeps HaVingsgletiled the route, and prepared it for letting, with the proper admixes, let the far. • meson tits route take 1131 much stock as they ma emit and pay in work, according to the estimates. Otte person might find it convenient to pay for 20 or . 50 triunes of stock in timbereenother in grad , .ing—eocsher in hauhng--another in bridging, die. ind thus the road could be built with comparative , ly a very little motley. Some aid, we presume, could be obtained from this city; but oar neighbors ought not to count on that, while we are engaged in 'the great work of constructing rail road eon, innuications with which they would thus he brol , into immediate conaection. .& The road worth.' pay well. Of this there can. not be a doubt. It would pass the whole distance theme. highly eultivanni and rich country. The coal itself, which would coma along such a road, would pay a handsome dividend on the cost of its construction. But it would pay in smithee way, in -- the enhanced price of property over and near the l 'the. Property along such a road would be in de- mend for country seata, and vegetable and fruit gardens, and thus double in value. • • Ravin offered these suggestions, let us ask will such a road be built, The people of Weer'. ingtou must answer the question. It is peculiarly • • their work, and will entire principally to their benefit. The whole cost would not probably ex. aced gfio,ooo, which certainly can be obtained among so prosperous a people. Hoe. A. W. Lomas. The Brownsville Free Picts, speaking of the suggestion of our towasman, Mr. Loomis, tut a proper parson to MI the office of Anprney General in General Taylor's cabinet, justly remarks, dint 4 Mr. L. In an able jurist, and his appointment to that station would be received with in' the country oven' We ire satisfied, for our part, that Mr. Loomia only needs robe known to be apprecisted,and that if be is selmaed by General Tillylo/, ea the legal a dviser of the Government, the country will have reason to rejoice to his appointment. , Goin DoLLana—We learn, says the Philadelphia Ledger,iroartke Horn Charles Brown, at Washing ton, thattlie subject of coinietgold Janata is now before the committee of ways and means of the House, as well as one of the committees of the Ban ato,and we have tho same tutthonty for saying it is . 1111cey to recommended by them to the faimmble • rionaideration ofCongresa No objection is urged to the mentally by. the politicians, that we have heard, ood tio:Lu , as the press may be taken as an avowal Athe popular wish, the country every when favors ,neecrjoinage. Under such a state of things, there reran to hope an pet authorising gold dolhuw . may become a taw the present session of Con• end;ti•to be a It Taig, . ed l i rebitte,. ra!e I tr 4 ll,7 o ;iti:; liard4r luu4a y perlanii es tfdl..atte'flU d aosearetiuinte Hamad eottattli u wee d wreathe * m e of the ‘- 4 -4 Poke Whig • omits - collar out , o f • the. Wh t0.1,27e_t there'd r“,a. nee.k , suo' , .ro ksalt i v # Comat WAild l 4 l " - . • IFROX WASHINGTON. • •cortespoluienee of the Pittsburgh Gazette • • Wseauxerion, Jan. 15,1849--10 o'clock. 4t the hour et which I write the Sootheen Caucus is in .eaton, in the Senate Chamber, and one of H-:1s ' ''~C~. the eecietariel is rending the address, which seems to be long. Soon alter the meeting was organized; Senator Houston tease, and said he was in favor of -publicity. He did not want to make n Hartford 1 , Convention of the proceeding. He therefore mo ved that the doors be thrown open, and that at least the numerous reporters outside be admitted. His motion, an I learned from himself, was defeated— ayes, sSc . nays, 50. The meeting is numerous— There is no certainty that the address will be adapted. It Is of en etching and inflammatory character, and it is reported was adopted to the committee by only one majority. There is nothing else of much consequence stir ring here. The weather has become warm, rainy, and foggy, which of course tends to increase ap.- ' prehenslons of the Cholera. The House made the Territorial Bills, including the Wilmot Proviso, or anti slavery clause the or der of the day for the twenty third of this month , by the vote of 114 to 51. These bilk will be pm tied without difficulty through the House, but stand but a small chance in the Senate. Mr. Sibley was this day admitted to a seat in the House as a Delegate from the remnantrof Wiscou sin Territory, on this side the Mississippi. The question of his right was not deemed of great con sequence, in es much as he has no power to affect the general legislation of the country, and only votes upon questions immediately concerning the territory. Mr. Downs of the Judiciary made a counter re port to that of the majority, in Mr. pouglass' bill for admitting Californians a State. What Mr. D. says or thinks upon the question is of no great ims portance,thr the bill is finally and effectually killed, and Mr. Douglass has signally failed in the attempt to become the great compromiser on these qu'es tions between the north and the south. The election of General Sleets a Senator from Illinois has occasioned a great sensation here, when connected, as it in, with the anti-extension of sla very resolutions of the Legislature. Judge Doug loss is placed in an exceedingly awkward and der agreeable position. He is instructed to vine for the Wilmot Proviso, and he acknowledgth the right of instruction in its fullest extent. Yet at New Or- Leans last summer, he declared that so firm and devoted with he in his attachments to Southern 10. stitutions end pretensions, that he would resign rather than vote for the Wilmot Proviso. The question now is—will he resign! or will he obeli' There are not wanting those who say he will do neither, while others are of opinion that he Neil abandon his seat, and that John Wentworth wil l beielpeaed to fill it. Thew are speculationt which Were rife in the,Capitol this morning. Juana. Ter. Caoum..e. achow.—The CoteMnau Commer cia, of Monday, states that the steamer Empire, arrayed it 4outsville on Saturday moraing,J.,l-3, having ieft spw Orlomr on the Cgh. Passengers stale that the cholera excitement in I:ew orleane has shag potirely subsided, and though there - *ere a few deaths m the Charity Hospital. tad al. so to the city, the &sense as ye epidemic had ceased. la the towns above, however. in the tin mediate vicinity of New Orleans, there was some alarm io consequence of the eiledettee of several cases among thaw who had taken flight from the city. At Baton Rouge there irsd been a few eases of a mild type, and three or four deaths a. en re parte-de-4d Natchez the alarm had almost‘entirely subsided. There were rumors at that point acute ' ay deaths among the Degree. or. the river planta bons in that vicinity, but these rumors were doubt less exaggerated At Memphis there was said to be no cholera at all, and the citizens were proareu ung their wonted business. The Empire had on board a very large number of past:engem, nearly all of theta frOm New Ora leans, and had but three cases of sieknewr and no l l deaths. The Belle of the West, retool:, also arrived of Louisvrlle on Saturday, reportx oil weft on b.'s& New Orleans is said to have almost eut,rely aimed itswomed wetter bustle, and the lever was linritere hive of commerce. On the whole, the reports from that and other co °mace the rapid dissipation of the resilience, and general reslxorn , tion of Inutnass. Cricaza. 1.1 • D Lrass—A writes In the Orezhasset Gazette takes the girountl, that the spread of anal. _ • is induencedby the drinking of water impreg na.trii by lime and magnesia He affirms that Cholera passel around all the primary und arena. ceons (sandy) tornateent—unless the water used by the inhabitants be impregnated with certain elements, elemen, as the carbonates of lime and magnesia—nod spends its force on the calcareous regions whether high or low. He rays that in tracing the course ot the Cholera on the map of Europe; it will be found to have passed around a great portion of Saxony, part of Poland, Hanover, Prussia, Am-, all which uninferm eat districts are arennceens; and abundance of am. filar facts occur 111 venous parts of this country. al( going to prove that it in an tecorrotis law which governs and directs as eoane- He states, that ell places situated 'on calcareous rock, (the blue siliman) ere erpectnlly exposed to attacks of Cholera, however clean tie places may or salubrious the atmosphere. la all clues of exceptions to the rule, he says the limestone wm ter is metaliferoos, being impregnated with iron, nine, lead, dre.,which he considered en antedate to the proximate cause of Cholera. He further asserts that Cholera has cover prevailed, either in Europe or America, near Chirlytem qtrangs. These thoughts are worth attention. A Srtremmocis Hoax.—The Philadelphia Led. ger contains a detailed account of one of the most 8111pm:idea. hoaxes of the age, perpetrated on a hundred or more persons, by a man earned Lister who represented himself to be the 1018 or Mr. Lis ter, the proprietor of the St. Charles Theatre, or New Orleans He made a purchase of a lot on Fourth street, from Mr. Michael Pray, giving a check for $5OO 86 binding the bargain, and cages. ed a distinguished architect to make drawings for a theatre, which was to be the largest and most magnificent in the world, adorned inside and out with statuary. After the drawings were complet ed he-proceeded to make contracts with the most experienced mechannw of the city for Ito immediate construction, allowing all their own prices, and agreeing to pay somecevert more than they asked for their work. At least a hundred persona were engaged in this way, and were noitously swatting for him to give the word to commence operations, when the hub , ble bunt, Mr. Pray having presented the check and found that it was good for nothing. Many er eons had also engaged with him for an expedition to California, and had entered into negotiations fur the purchase of two realm's. Among the rent, a captain was seduced by his representations to throw up the command of a vessel, to go into his ! ship, bound for the gold regions, and now finds himself without any employment. New suits of sails, and the most magnificent furniture were or dered for the vessels. Throughout the whole trans action there was no attempt made to obtain mon ey, and it is supposed the youth was laboring under monomania, but has been sharp enough to elude arrest since the bunting of the bubble FllO3l mix Ptairia—A lever from Fort Leuven. worth to the St. Loma New Era, states that the con tractors for supplying provision. to the army at Suns to Fe.on their way out, suffered excessively from cold, hunger and fatigue, the lout twenty days of its smirch. One of the men perished with the cold, and sixteen hundred oxen died on the way' This will be hard upon the company contracting to do this service for the Government. The oxen and other animals were the private property of the con- tractors. The snow at Fort Leavenworth, on the 27th of December, was twenty inches deep, and the Ma- morneter at zero. 11.1=liii GIULLT HOO.—IL ShireMT, of Allegheny eounty, Md., slaughtered the other day a hog named "Rough and Ready," weighing 495 pounds, and measuring 7 feet 2 inches In length. Ago 2 years and 3 months. That may do for a"Rough and Ready" hog, but it will not compare with the Free Boil porkers we raise in !gamer county. Our friend Mr. W. Gi Brown of Georgetown, killed two ofthe latter kind on Sainrday week, one of which weighed 624 Ito and the other 590. Who can beat this—Nrrcer DIMS nary. A bass Gann TO nal' AT. -- Oa Friday M lust Week, a couple of rowdiesi one of Meru owned .Powell and the other Bonaparte &Pre. got Into a hoherteariNtrille in.blercer countyi and agreed 1.0 cat thrusts (or a quart of whiskey. Alter a Easy seserod Boyce's jugular, and the latter died immediately. Boyce won kirraerly wall known by many in this city. He was or a highly respectable family, and a man of fine talents and educatian...--./oninoTis Jour. •-•". Farther Irextraet;fro;• Nth gh1 . 01• Pa pe rs recetreel by the Atnetica. From the LaiSSW; Times of Liecemberlets. • PRESIDENT POLK'S MESSAGE. When scarce a day passes without bringing, the inauguration of a c onstituent assembly, the address of a newly elected President, or the programme of a new constitution, the message of , on American President read, like a thing of the past. By•the rule of compAison the United States will aeon be an ancient polity„,.. The successor of Wsuemorros is on old friend. -One feels, therefore; somewhat more patience than usual for the annual tat on our time which a long series of Presidents have uniformly exacted. The Court style of the Union' is so welt known to the taste of this nation, that we need only say it characterizes the Message--; We can, however, add that Mr. Polk has given an account of American progress Which will excite the interest and admiration of the:Old World. In I the history of Stales there never was anything so, rapid, and never did a preternatural growth op. pear to rest on so solid a foundation. AU that one has ever read of families, multiplied as the sands. on the sea shore, of swanning tribes, of rising cities: and prosperous commonwealths, seems concenteM ted and magnified in this modern prodigy, whose Anglo Saxon origin suggests to as so many regrets and not a little pride. President Polk surveys with natural convincer. cy the troubled scene of European politics, from which a vast ocean, and a not less interval of in stitutious and customs separate the model repub lic. He cads the new burst of democracy In France, and the attempt at a federal union in Ger many; with what grounds for his confidence time alone can show. The vast resources of the union and the sound fatting of its commerce and km. eta, have saved it from any considerable participm non in the commercial calamities of this and the continental states. to the continued removal of restrictions on the trade of the Union the President ascribes much of its safety and prosperl IY. Mr. Polk then hastens to the strong point of his Presidency,—the enormous acquisitions of territo ry cheated within these four years by annexation, by treaty, or by war. Texas Oregon, California and New Mexico, are exultingly measured and almost weighed in the balance. They contain so many square miles and so many ncreu. and are equal to such and each countries; but es the Eng lish imagination will not revel with so much gusto on these venous measurements, it may be stab. Went to state that the United Staters pow emniue. hende a territory almost es large as all Europe. The President expatiates with delight on the climate, I the soil, and other natural advantages of the newly I acquired regions. Their rivers, their harbor*, their I vicinities and bearings, are reviewed. But to one topic he returns again and again. The mines, or rather the fields of gold and quicksilver in Calif:3w nia are an inexhaustible fund of agreeable discus sion and allusion. Paragraph tiller paragnspliglit. ters with gold and groans with bullion. The 4001) gold hunters wildly scraping the sands, and filling their laps with solid wealth—the greedy baste with which whole crews desert their ships 6or this Lotus shore; and all the other circumstances of a real El Dorado ore described Vigil gloating ecetacy. A toilet is forthwith to be established on the western a coast, which is to deluge Asia and Polynesia with' the glittering tokens of the fortunate republic There was need of many mines to gild the Mexis can war, and to pay its expenses. These ecqui , situate have cost the Union twenty-five millions of her money. It in the course of mit t ; years the principal and the interest he repaid e dust collected from the rivers of California, Untoe may deem itself most fortunate. Mr NM, bow , ' ever, disdain to measure the war only by its results. He points to the eeergy, the military skill, the administrative capacity. the martial spirit, the I, indomitable perseverance, and the ilex:lgram tact be which it has been so speedily brought to Its dhsired consummation, nriger otreonnttunces of', unparalleled ditliceity. It is demonstrated that the rnion, at a moment's warning, may undertake a war several thousand miles from home, grub forces competent in any occasion, conduct that wet Wait poinidee. and unity of purpose, and endure without burden 'all the necessary expense. A standing army, in the Earupean sense of that word, is found to he unneeessary.—Two million citizens occuseued to arms, many of thorn prac tised in the ride and hardened in the seventies of tam iota, tiallathins tor distinctive. supply a never failing Moil of viautieep. The army old republic consist. not of privates, but of knights its very staple is heroic. What erOwilS, however, bu the glory. the grace. and the ability of this conquest is, that an the Sates, ill parties, and all professions \ equally coatralettett their quota to the field, thus poising that Texas had Ne' Mesteo belong not more to this or that State than to ill. and exhibit. icy also a pledge to the world of that terrible 1 unanimity with winch the llama wi ll eg future 1 isies.sioid. kriaeollte As quarrels or its ends. It is our a lac value& at the vices of a republi. ! con Presidency. as of the ancient' Censulabip, that the Executive Chief noddles on his successor the hateful reeposibiliti. ,if his rare.. With him the beginning is the whole. He celebrates a tri umph. ate lair down his office. It remotes re another to carry oti the design. The Union doubled. so to .yan k . in B air years, and talon; old populations and setrudiarbalous tribes into On I.loi.oart, has nut a fear ,hdicotties to solve The question at savory is Opened again, at least in an abstract torn,. Mr Polk is d u mped to art study cm this ground . Ile is willing de -thiiku! - tits are art practical. that there will, la fact, he no slavery to the greater part ~r the new territory, and that the questiosin Pt-coml.:WM nail iaTt. den easily he settled as they stoic. - Weitt toot follow him into this thottestie ground. mil will we ahhcle to any inine of nature quarrels in this united family of ,tons, Irsertautly .s for the advantage M n il nations that they should remain tile •liappy fatally' they an. They glen us hied and the nun. tenals for clothing, and take on ~w ;mods the produce of our industry , That civil war which wise wen have predicted, would impede the ope ration of these warres But while we pass over domestic and conjectural &Amp hjes, it is impossible to forget that the same man who is mouse MU bril liant a Presidency, who has wretched the coral of his tobernacje to the Pacific, and almost to the Isthmus of Panetta, who boxes thyt by his men. sores he has saved. the commerce and the credit of his country from excessive iodation and ilead:y I collapse, is nevertheirss rejected by the people he has served, find* himself nisi reappointed, and • successor, bolding other views, trodalle4 is his room. Each a fart minderens either the man or the natlina—One as them (Mist he wrong Mr .Polk., by his silence on the snbject ot tits successor, tacitly acknowledges a sense of patios. Erum the Loot. Spectator, Ilt. ht. Beyoed taw fittronte James K. Polk has sent to has lost message,-ca huge velenane, which mew. lanes the charaetensturs of the Pariiesnewary blue book, the historical essay, and the traveller's guide }Kok. The moat striking point in the document Is its voucher:fir the wonderful and apocryphal stories of mineral rialtos in Califon:Oa. How alarmed Jefferson nod Whsbingtoa would be to welheir republic grown as large sp Europe, twumpletrit in wsrs of aggression, and now poisoned by possess. log nitoefhke those of enervated Peru or despotic Russia' Arrest. or Ano•xxvilatias.—The events of France have not passed unknown or itomorked by the Emir in bus confinement. He has addressed the billowing letter to the President: 'l'o Prance Loon Napoleon ponaparts, President of the Republic—The Emir A.bil-el finder de tained with his family in the Chateau of Am bout. "I will die In prison if unexampled rigors con demn me so to do, but never will I ha brought to tower toy character."—Prince Louis Napoleon, at Ham. '4.3cal is greet and Mahomet is his Prophet. May this God of clemency, under whose protection the National Assembly hits placed the French Consti tution. inspire the Chiefs of the Itepublie with an act o I - Justice end humanity, which will give to all the nations of the globe a high opinion of the hospi tality of Fracas, which country ts already renown. ed by her bravery and chivalrous spirit et elitism. When, guided Ily my confidence to the bravery end the:promise of the French, I came to place myself and Mine under the protection of YMCAS. by giving myself up to General Lamorleiere, ak that time commandant of the province of Omo, I received the formal promise that I shot:date sent the the noble land of Prance and be afterwards conveyed to Egypt. and front &mice to Syria, near the sacred tomb of the prophet, that I might-en lighten myself with new light, and my deli be wholly.devoled to the happiness of my family and, far (rpm she hazards of war, the theatre of which i I adoned forever to the domination of France, , in execution of the will of the Almighty, who low. en or raises empires as he pleases. Far from those sacred promises having been refilled, 1 and mine have been subjected to captivity, without 1 being able to cause justice to be rendered to me. Napoleon, after his abdication in Both, went 101 ('_seat himself at the British hearth, and notwitstands ' lag the sympathies which his great defeat lospirell, English polio , : inflicted on him torture on the rock of St. Helena One of his noble nephews has also been subject to exile and impriemament But moral tortures have an end. Ged so wills it; ' and enlightens the tempo r al goverment. If th e misfortunes by which I have been assailed in my family, which has. been decinotted since my cape tivity--if the sufferings of. my poor mother, old. -and infirm, can excite some Interest In the henna of the French people, and especially in ahead of wives and mothers. I demand the chief of the French Government to fulfil theromises that to were made me by the Gene:ohs of Africa and to accord me the liberty of going On parole with iny family into Syria, to follow the precepts of our re ligion. Grateful for such an act of clemency and . justice, I would pray our Gael to bestow on Franco! smaller chiefs all his great consolations and blew .I i I rely on the wisdom oldie President of the Itepublie and of the National Assembly. 'The Emir Ano-cx,lianza.. 'Amboise, 27 floharrem, 1265, (Dem 23, 1849.)' Souvenir° rue larntruc—We understand that , Major liughes, of the U. B. Topographical Engineers, late commander of the Maryland Topographi c District of Columbia regiment in Mexico, Is about starting to make a survey of the proposed route for a railroad acmes the isthmus, from Chagres' to. Panama, fur Messrs. Aspinwall de 'Co, of New Yirek. In the selection of persons to accompany him in this arduous duty, he has drawn largely , upon his old vegiment. Capt. Lloyd Tilghman, .cif the Marylluid Light Artillery, has been *elected as nateuint, and Captain Game V. Brown of this, city, gees out in some important capacity connect. nested with the camp duties. .4 number of others from Baltimore hard been Selected es a-part of the company. They expect i lareliseidseveral monthi. We believe they go , froan here to New York,and sail thence direct for Cbagres,—Baltimero We aclitidWiedgethe 'receipt public dociati . . meats from our member ai Washingtotkand Beth. end of oar member* at liiriaburgit.'.. ll 4 our *oaks for their alUatio;u: ? ..:: mffit hiergiffiarirlribtme. Wain* a n ',,Proftisi iniffixanfacUortiss.., ..,:: = _ 9 0 , 40 Marshy. _ r.: I..fact .fmany ir not , moat Manufactaring Establialune t o thiroughoutthe country have recent , ly reduced e 'rates of Wages paid to their Work. cuutim era IS es it should ettniet,gesieral atten— tion. Let a nsider it. „ . That the, f o e s of our Domestic Manttfactures generally : lower • and the difficulty of selling fe 4ortu tntm grep r than formerly , certainly des* no de. menstradlo The Price Cowards, the official stale. -meatier% ions, furnish abundant proofof the Saes That I mmardem for" example, far example, cannot afford hipay wag e when their product is dull at Sin per on which t hey could very well afford when the same reticle was quick at. S6O, sorely needs no it:tibial° proof And if Zinser prices were sitinen how.maintained as quMations, yet the home made' fabrics were elbowed and jostled in oar naafi:eta by rival Foreigeproducts,so as to reader sales slow sad difficult which formerly were prompt and *ash that would operate as disadvantageaudy as a re. auction of pnces. ,A man employing n.copital of 11100,000 in making Cotton Sbeetings, , for institnee, and able to sell every yard at a net profit of one mill as soon as it reaches the market, can live end often thriyq, when by, selling the 'name goods at five timed that profit bat being obliged to wait 21. year for a. market, he would be ruined. An ca., ger marret, rmall ;profits and: quick ?minus are the eleineats Of a healthy and prosperous brd. IleVi. But our markets are now glutted with Foreign &Dries; sales aro slowly fill:ka with diflienhy effected; our warehouses are docked with urtsolst products; many factories are slacking off their work; some have stopped entirely, and a Gm arealready in the keeping of the Sheriff: All the manufacturing es tablishments in the country could today be bought for less than coast; and, bqt for the hope of a change of National policy affecting them, could be bought for a great &utiles. In this state ,of things—with heavy Stocks of their products on baud and rin• salable ' with scanty or no dividends on the last year's business, their books often showing hen' vy losses instead, many 'of them have retorted to the expedient of reducing the Wages of Labor. This is in precise accordance with the theories of Political Economy which kw come yearn have prevailed in this country. All along It has been proclaimed (see Buchanan's speech in 1540) that the great obstacle to Manufacturing success and stability here was the inflation of our Currency and Petri—that the one way to protect andmain tato our Manufacturen was by reducing the money costc f the elements of Production, so that they migcompete with their European rivals in all the ope markets of the world. Thas(aays Mr Sachs ana )It a piece of (termer, cloth costa butsso, while a like piece of American troth coats 4100, the only way to give the American maker a fair chance is to reduce the coo of making the article hero, to 550, and then he may defy competition. Of comae, the partisans of this theory seldom say, in no Many words, 'You must reduce the Wastes of licibtir,' but they can't mean anything else. To in. duce the cost of a piece of American cloth front $lOO to 550, you must reduce the maid the Wool, the, Carding, Spinning, Weaving, Dyeing, (to. There is no other way. Shutting out foreign corn. petition will often reduce prices by immuring to our producers an ample and quick market instead of a partial and dull mei but to this the Free Traduce are averse. They could not have failed to see throughout that the adoption of their theories Involved a mime reduction of the Wages of Labor. But the moment that reduction becomes imper atiVe and begins to be effected. they set up a gen. end howl at the iniquity and rapacity of shove on whom ts imposed the necessity of effecting di— They feign indignation at those on whom they , halm C*3l the bunhen of carrying this leintatts this eMeutial result, of their policy limo effect. Bead log their journals or listening to their speeches,', polo would .taticao that they had always opposed and resisted the policy which renders this endue. ' tiro inevitable. To make this necessity manifest, only the dm,' pleat exercise of honesty and common seam to re.' . quirk.* Over in England, seperated from us but by a ferry of eleven or twelve days, there .are ' thbusiands engaged in making cloths, which riper eapenenee, large capitals, lower rules of interest, I re extensive and therefore more economical ea. ; lisheorrits, and in the average superior mead. eery to those ea the command of cult manufficust. era. The omit of whisking over fabrics ia warcely worth urentioulug. New aboludi. as nearly isamay , be, th e duties—end' mar thirty, twenty Ave and 1 twenty per cent ad valorems come very near I a th c—especuttiy m view of the thirty per cent duo ty the Ileky.nod coarse Foreign Wool from'. w ich a lurgoti of our coupler &Mica ate ufactured—and how is at mrsaßko thug Amer''' . I can Wages should remain an they train been, from forty to one heudred per cent higher than thew caul Mr ernilsr seretees in England',We =MA see how any candid Aran can fad to ereive that' , our Duties must go riper our Wage. come doers. We speak here albe general mall, to assn. mine to decide whether any matfett* reduction at out, given time we, Cr ern *54 lriaploraive..... 1 We see what must be without prestantog lodes r ide when or test bow for it moat ha l BO ;there Is one Modatnental assuraption ;under yin all this discussion Mitre Itedninion.of Wages. esperially he thine who would : use it to make espial foe LoonFocoism, which we wiab now to consider. 1 A company have wilawribed capilal,erectsd a 1 factory, worked It and set down to work. Anil have perhaps done middlieg_ well by years. At length they amt *or. lloirti Well ; and decide 44 ' Wry antit ril th eir ''otr - terr - elirlap,i7esa'attep going "jaw we reovnizo frilly the etelnef the Hind Workers to medic; and resolve tWe will have to much for our latter or we weal give it.' It is their right to do 10, and re long as they don't interfere with the right of others to work or. oat as they please, wry ma, bemired, thousand or aulhoe have a ;Mht to make such acompact and and live up to It. Bid the employers also have rights, and among them that of saying bow Much they can pay and where they must stop. IWe'speak here of the Employing .Viner,Wie do 'knit - thee:oral , right of out Or Of * few to woe* dawn wages below the eenertil men paid lit Remind theca) Fat we see neWria mit, Whieb Ptqf OW loeis tee arguing in this... Ashton :--Ttiti , maim Pourers ,oats made money al mine tatuntherefore %nought Doer to pay as high wages as"they have Acme, even though they , ran their works at • Law' AOthi*by the cosy, i* in its best aspect, directly in the trek of the Free Trade theory, which assume that, whenever money cannot be made by employing ~,,,n :p 4 Olen way, it is proeed that they could be sabre adirsinagermsty Amplote4 at rodairthoog else, and Gaeta to be 'dismissed to seek stink em.; ployment. We cannot realize that any Moral oh. ; ligation rests on proprietors to run their worts at a I 1,,,,,„. even though they' have tome* made good I di‘ideoils. ' But do the geotlemen who are voluble In Olt- rooms and eloquent in punish on the rtgtils and wrongs of Labor in Farther* even begin to prac. tom on the principles they present to others daps pose one of them has realized 1110,000; by printing a neWspoper, inodikie Pole in 01l 4 01 4 CP""' ment of enterprise) how long Will se opetiake that paper idler it has becomes bopeleastylooang con. ; cern, in order to insure good wages tail* mimes employed thereon 't Pottery the man who has Mt declaimed *el,. quietly on the oppressions of the Factory Workers home to his dwelling, and see po hues labar, do. 1 mestic or Other, °Natty better principle thou that of I paying the market price for It- , what it willfetch.— Where is the tanner, the meehanie, the triereheet. ' who Days fifteen dollars per month tor lerar that ' Ihe could hire for twelve, Aye pot the very !Sub. ers of our children, mete and ferngle, to o n sizt pum, officiating sections of the country, paid blips for 1 1 that most responsible service than.the whinge ' earnings of those employed In the Fectorimil— Who are dime, °Maid. of the FactorteS, ions n muo , abstract lestice and Fgriess, Instead of Interest. ' and Necessity, the rule of their banrethingi ' , Sow a there boa movement in favor of a radieel Sib= in the plinciplea of buying and realest, of biting I and paying,-it movement to supplant Necessity by Justice in the government of thew Important I relations—we say Amen to it, moat heartily but we, protest against applying a role to a Wag* des which n o body elm in Judged or follelllett by.- 1 Yeir, Mr. Orator et the laborers" Indiana/OA idea* , 'Mg, when min look out to buy a de of Iliad. I auto or Fall Ether Prints, never think or asking or 1 piying what tb• COWS =stem matergor the riper. .chat—ion manilla late“ they eao he bought kori, and, though thatbe Inn per cent. below lb. Of enalaellon, you do not think allaying any more. Nay—though the maker were to tell' yerir ; thst he, ' , bad supplied you cheaper for pears than yotteceild beep bought but far his making, you will sith say"— 'What is that to met Trade ;is governed -bp lauf of *apply and Demande-you sell yo ill you can get, while I bay as cheap as i can.' !We do believe a higher and better law will yet be wept.' edi but t no long as this so the law. for every body else, with what justice shall ere seek to &teepee ther upor.aannuacturiag etimpardesalonetv. •- , • 1 . _ Mu num or Arrrnoss::-/two or three yam ego, as we learn from the ll:Aetn a / a ble Hoiden, the an , nouncement was made ID the literary world,. that 'a new historically:ounce from the yen of C.T. nob man, would soen appear; Obitentitied,"Rdalipur of th e' Rel'epe," As it never hae.oppuredt moor hungry expoduiLs litrlkkony'uot - have herud the reasoner its . being kopt bailk.: It may m m i gniy , tm laid down among the mishapsof antlers. 1 - ' Idr.lloliknan, had bean et work with '.nnusual GM for the als:montha previous on his nunancer, and an endemic book publishing firm, had COLIOUT ed with him for the copyright. It had got to the e of the reading.pablio, and expectation was on th ui Tin for 111 aPpearaece. The withar r am. co og to his mugom,plaull the numnictipt sheet I io a largo portfolio by the side of his writing table, to prevent their straying sway.. 'Happening! - one day to take a look into his literary safe, 'millscoy. ered, much to his • astonishment and trepidation, that there were not more than half a dozen sheets GI S% in it. liisfeelingscannot. perhaps he even imagined. Itigiong Wont had :fume to nought.. lint his manner of sabutiulig to his loss,lnits -hint; In that matter, by the aide of .'Newton, in the titan of tribulation. ~ ~ ..: ... .. .. . who 34t. Hoffman called to the' .chambermad, W hod iskannaris ands .room,t6d' sand. , ~' , "Mary, have yo u '. ever. tikett . liny pOpenr kiln - Sure I . Late, . -1 3kI r lePlie4 4 10 wit) illadi.eut, "For what purpose Ton talten4oW' said the Author:. - -.-' ' • :,-' - , .: .1... c. : ', vSure,..sir, to kindle.dhjinr4gna I timeghkyop . Were luny good to puidtioa door said 1d10y.i.p... "Aull IdiT/1 110 .ladiv Lang have you been inthe .habitoftakingpaprot out of honer, . i ; A • , aAll the winter, %meg sahr thOl l l lO O ll V-' 11 01; .kn 4i4 tpitit h dkkth , ern wa . any g . oo, , oth d em•fo r -theyiikicisol4deqovermqr ~ 5 m:mone_eiols*id':tio k . - _yoikpow tritiodhavedene gr: )vrpst A e, • -,nitllYM-r, 9 - lr; t L+i .......,.,,... - -.-. t 1 t; '', ''''.'; SurereParebitt-infaryr sold _Moir, "whe t s that! §uret; but lrety stliTy;tie .. IL v ',. !. "Arid se anti: odd theandur but hiedid nietv... Jig Obre."7gerfforti t;s csommr.' , ... : of :, ... .;.,-,.-:.,,-.,,.., -',-..-.•;-,:.,,, -,-;..;,-;:!,,: - ' .::: ..- - .-. - .':. 1,-..:c.': - :-,,-- ~.c.:-. -.--,..- ,- ' . - -": 4 , ,' , •, - -- . ..i4 ,-, , , ;. q-1,:-.-:,,. g:n 1 .7 4 ,-; , Amz..;‘..... ,, 1kc4gL1ig , ; ,,- .!.M1 , :...ia , -?' , "f' , TA'A. t r. iirewswi‘oweekaiiiitiiAi . aiiiiiesi. pronifito corceslionfieno 001 m i -trier T ort= are' :: • ','• -- ' J 4, • Dirtiest, Nov. 4.181 1 ? t 1 ~ - : I *matinee elf 9 1 Alee at some of tb6=P3'' 'thatares it:lll4th !alibi dimmest to Am this deft, and tritineit to Irish ira.b.Hasers'asid Pao Rata. . Previa:llM tb3t,tbe poor in Ireland were wipe ported entirely .by private benevoleece,• ae,a the practical cried, of this abandonment of the poor. lir indivldital charity. Was rues° unhappy as an Amer Man - would infer - Awn:what be .sees in Ids own country. Sy the Irish CatholioCtturclitalms giving isnen •Ith. tee as one of the primary duties of Chris. .liall life; and the people generally,both from nature, dams of heart, and from . a lease ofreligions ob. ligation, are charitable teas extent seldom wit. messed elsewhere. ' Ifowevez'in spite of private axiality, pauperism increased at krapid rate. In IEIIS, one agricultural laborer out of every eight stood in need of relief; in 182.90ne out of seven, and ititlB3sone 011iallf every six. It became necemary establish a system of public charity, and the pre sent Irish Poor Law was enacted. In most of its .featrues It fa similar to the English law, but differs /from it in two important respects. It does not give the pauper a legal right to receive relief from the public. but makes the euccess of his application du peed entirely upon' the discretion ofthe local Board of Management; and the administrational outdoor relief forms no regular part of the system, but Is one resorted to ill times of emergency, like the present, [ when the workhouse is insufilcient to accommodate ,al who are judged worthy to receive the public `bounty. Ireland is divided into one hundred and fifty Unions, each ofwh Main's work.house, supported by a special tax on,all tbe real estate of the Union to which it belongs. The work-houses are usually large stone structures, built on an mi.. game outside of a town, sumathded by high stone enclosures. They are finished la good style, and are frequently adorned with miniature towers and ,other castehated appendages. The sums expended upon the mere construction of the workhouses have been enormous, and have occasioned load complaint. Separate buildings am assigned farce men, the women, and the children. A. family don ing its stay in the workhouse is alwayi kept entire, ty launder. The husband, the wife, bad the child never see one another, unless In the chapel on Sunday, and then only at a distance. The able. :bodied men are generally employed in ditching and repairing and improving the premises, and the. i Women in washing and carrying on the demeans operations—They have two mealy a day--a berate:. fast, consisting of six "naggers," or about three gills of new milk and a quart el'atilabout,. which Is e Ithfled mixame identmeal and water—and dle. net 'Men omen oflndian bread, and another small supply of flesh milk, or buttermilk. In many of the houses rye bread, or, as it is called, "hitch breed,"is used instead of Indian bread. The wo men who wash, and the men whose occupation is particularly Inborious, get a somewhat greater al. lowaase than I have specified.—The children ass. ally receive wheat bread with their milk. TiU within the hat three or Star years, potatoes formed the, chief nouriehment of the paupers, but their soueltysinee, hthentirely banished them from their presence. In the Limerick workhouse, I was shown a 'specimen of the Indian bread, which was daily ser. vet out to the Inmates. It was made of Southern men 4 was exceeding hard and heavy, and very moth resembled a real Virginia "hoecake." The people have overcome the repugnance which they first had no bread made of American corn, and are now, as I was told, very End of it, The inmates without exception, wear the workhouse uniform, which, for mates, is a complete suit of coarse gray cloth, and for female's, a white woolen gown. with blue underclothes. At the discharge of the pauper, his own clothes are reudred to him, and his work. Louse suit, are retained for future use in the eget. figment. .Sheturstre ant - supplied to-the inmates; those only wear them who can procure them by their ownittheurces; The sleeping apartments are ordinarily Very geed The beds are matrasses of clean straw, supplied liberally entb good blankets. c lean present crowded 'Meath* workhouse, however, subject' the occupants to great discomfort at night. Three or four grown op people are frequently obliged to sleep in the some bed.' To each workhouse is sumthed a school, which all the children under fif teen years Mime are obliged to attend, and where they are well instructed in the elementary breathe* of an Pettish education. The workhouse at Lim erick which, With two auxiliaries of a temporary character, possesses forte tlearrand inmates, has asehonleisnaining five hundred children. A chap el always forms a met of the appurtenance of a workhouse, sad all the inmates are required to at. tend divine service on the Sabbath. But the Catholics and Protestants have each their own chaplain, and each worship according to their own faith: The oist of the food of as adult is ?A m 23 pence weeklthat &his elothiegationt bar pence. Pm years aft er the establishment of the workhouses they were almost empty, oa account ot the great aversion of thepeople to the confinement which they rammed. The is me allowed to go out of the enclosure only upon Use MOP argent mums and the pear poderred to be in the streets and embus alemet overt privatson rather than submit to this restretnt. But stern ammeter has driven them to such public relief, and now there is hard. ILia warkbpuse in slip land that is ant straitened room sad obliged to provide additional accom • odationa. Asa gement thing the Poor. Law la behind is administered with commendable liberality.and the di/emu:cm winch tholes imposes on the Canino. *ems of each Been Is not often abused. Yet [hareem %Intone in ,whietr Aseadetdithnlabee W coadmanYwitlaresf Witham& The if:111121U of their workkt,:aoirra aris tressed with groan rigor, avid =O6ll for admission . d etente most pressing r are summarily reje, moray . granted after the most cruel delay. list such Manes are smelly andre the dims control of the landlords, who, on amount of the great burden which it ins poses upon them, are most bitterly opposed to the rebid* Pres Law ovum, and are willing to resort to almost any means to de9rat ililljUla ends, and brie/ it lab 13 meey y d Vitions, the poor rates are indeed well nigh insupportable. In Limerick the sate amounts to tarhithags urn every pound of the annual Metal, is Scent to 16 shillings to peace; In Clifton to 10•Milings 2 pence; in Killorew sad lellteuennia to 1 round and 0 shillings, in Castle bar to 1 potted tad 9 ahilliergs, and in Dimmed to 2 pmods and 4 shilliters on the entire rental— What 'maid an American farmer thy to a poor law which swallowed up his whole annuli] profits, not only once, but perhaps wipe over! Many of the Urn= are akissok(sly insolvent Twenty two Unions have received oil less th an £ 1,200,000 from Goiernment, sad yet they have found this lesuflekest, mad have leaded themseitei with an immense debt to meet their lith(Atims: In teeny pees of the canatty der poor fates can be collect ad'onil ht the peintof tbe bayonet. The levy of a readier military contribution mold not indict greater entering. Earl Gray declared in Paha. meat, at thetime the roc late wtfienarried teal ee should deraV,, Oinked Velten the poor ttates avert ithAlltight_penee Itf tbepound. 'The average* of all the Wane lii alriady 2:shifidige 91 (war end it is sopetiet* isestrudog, ConsidN er this in manection with the thoithat the County tax ranges from 10 ID 2teptlf Oda, the Grand Jury Cosa !tom 12 to 25, and that half* minim' of pounds la annually exacted the the support of the °thatch establishment, and yon wilt have eurq, cosseeptimi of the buydsu of IrMts4atton. Vella is exempt 1 from the lemma ind-isertaln sethised 'rides to which England Is Subject' Bat its taxation in proportion to its means isfbrheavier. Itt 'retold one third at least of theantitiel Istn.l4 is sheathed Is the payment of taus; in bu&an not more than one tenth atone twelfth. ' SWAM JOB PIIIITI 6. mu. itgAus, CAIdIYd,CIuttULARS, Mantptt, Balls Coarmata, Law treaLtA usn 191ta, ulca, crrrineavita cams, I.OIKON &a., Printed at tha shortnet notie,e (T I pio n, at the de29 TILOLO (TIMM DARIO Igto:scXonom—WOnroalit call sitoollort tO this excellent remedy for Lou hp Colds; Comm. Sion, mo m , exclioos of the Throat Mein intearstlinteroiliblO stew sloe IQ atu royipae ia(101.11 trid, sre haysby up.d4 my* iosiaa cntiroptqa. ll o±; And are prepared to retortiotenil /t to others. M,,teeers or other public mestere *Micro) :With Womble!, affection...rill and steal benefit from he non. It it prepared by • scion/1- En payslolo, amd all cloaca wit Pod h a so& arra ed. O•eldell ,Crlll{lllo. Wiltch his ro comet pec.f..-1 l• bos lr,ra o)Cyyn and ForslostnAl— ilo at the eany?ez arroyo, No. 711 Fauna Streel. * ar vas tap Paorlichtiafts—lfyoa with, to hi cue- Nutlet >o any usidrtialicy,, you mutt altraye`ate the crepe , menus" Thotsforc,if lon have a ealgh, ace J8111(e/NUfrr94141aT end tio Cured, far le the propel meant, put "AO:mu or difficulty yo u breathing, then thiLtitly eiPiclent means to core you is `to aro Jagao's Eapecteirant,orldell immediately overcome the Itaketst blclieoOtraell Abe diameter Of the tubas, and tooogni and Wings up the uncut which clogs them ap, and this retnoves every obettattion'to a free respi• tenon, whin, at Ilia same limo ail Ittgamotation sib duod, and a' mire is rennin to NI erected. Playa you Brouchitla, Spitting of Blood, Pleurliy, or la fuel airy paltoonary , Affeinfixs, -thou .114 e Jairuc's lizpoeterant and.ratter is:Certain, and Ind that you have uetl the proper manic - For salet-Pi linshargh at the Pala Tea Mott, ;4 Iffre44 tt trw ii.f:6llthy twintYcelean ed vinh /ones' Anther Tooth Paste. have the loon and Wok of ivordy;atid theisme thee to so Intweentand fine, th at dailtrise Is adventsgtous eve, to %use teeth Our *in good-condition, giving them a bowi e/lid polish nod preventing.deeay . Musa decoyed it proteins 'WOW' teeomLug wore—it elm fastens such as are - bectunlngloose, and will: Tender the foulest teeth delicately. white, and mune the Irma deliciously sweet: Vilna .23 or OM cents a box For tote Ly IVbf. JACKSON, n 9 hiberty street, sign ottlintilt Boat: ' • ' septO RH . MAUI Wawa= Eon Eldullya&—llna• dot—too fool limbo , of ft Mk bottle of Jonas , CO3lll 11W Reatorstlve 111,U3 Corea du, hod to grow on too bead or foto—or other/sort mature Intended halt to frr• • or we by WU SAdtagri, NO 89 }.lberly Moroi, logo Of the ilig 1100 t.., . . septO lUD Douai elltaa Tztra. , —Pareerts who have el ther ate honorably mural that a Oa. boa of Jones's Aber Teeth Pasta will, °nano tnal,arlntout (aU, • Make the Breath pare and sweet,' ' The Teeth white and Gems hard. Reader. Jut try:this once. FOT gala by IVM JACK sori, esi loam at. slgnoithe Ms Boot. oct3 Yr&Thiaxes ye or morbid aecrettoterar bile le l are - 4 known A° Mute violent dietaries/ice of the dries. Bee organ; arta briny oa .¢talliraant and untriougya blii (erepawhiela °Bea pat jukend id W. .11 . .Pre:baseh tol tr d re,,t,lnp estoeleaAatiar:rae which sre '' a n reesteabrable &may gethartie., ;May tea he given wbh safety at al , taut*, tad Word' relief liege y_ stuin axes. Prepared , -ascr mold B A FAUNESTOCiI ,& A' BBLEii;ba. &meta, llettegovr_ers,cit. 07.1 lorearlitreadaroOiaad corner bill and *oasts; J0L.,."80 by. dealt) F VON ISONNUONST*OBI • NATrIlt, E. D Derstt Or= and icsiOnce liti on Rooth I . tra ntent, manta tho Pittsburgh Bask. Ogle. hours Gout, Wettish mud/ n, Ltd DWI o'clock ton P.M. 69141 y - - 4 ' -• `W431.-sivarinwriutir th. tiravlar etention those wanting the Eiberri besas, to his desirable alackr eontiadeg o f the beat slake, (rola Oh moil ap• Mead stanatmunarers,and du leiter , starninted pure basiust receried additiooldelVfl.lr , and , a Or. 11 1 ,1; etaTuag N a mms.or a superior quality,. ata Sheeting and Pillow-eue , Diaper and crash; • Table Cloths, Towels and Napkins ; Btanliets,Rinlui.o_osnterpanea; and Housekeeping 1 Goode kenerally. Dla4A DRF.SS GOO neh as French Mennen., .Panunenos, - plain and Caner De Lanes; imam near styles just . rteeiredo Alpacas, &c. The bellSOlibtirig foe advanced. all these " ill be sold at prices ibut eanntli fail to please. IrrWlialesale Roosts up stairs.. tanls ntrieverAt on say BAlLGAraist vcoRDA:Cu i witthutg to closeout thew stock of li Muffiesd Vxctorien m% s for lie se wit' sell badante (embracing a good variety of LTla and Then. as well as the more common arttelms,) 'at EAS TERN COST—to Wale.o they would ?caret Welly invite the analog of norcbatcm. NOW In TIRE TIME FOR BARGAINS.. Call at corner Wood and Pith streets. 11111 808 BENT, AND posseesien gra., the Lit April—A Store In Market .reet; neat Liberty , . A Store in Liberty street, next door to the cor ner of Market and Liberty sts. The adjoining Starr, corner of Market sal Lawny Meets. Two Stores, with dorellimrs 'mech.], in Penn near the eaual. Also, a first rate wand, with or with - DUI dwelling, neat Ike Cane. POeleesion de im mediately. 104011001 DAVID UR :.E.ll, JaltiklAn• Pelle Wert. near the enlist . Inaprovensents fa Denttstry. DR. D. 6. STEARNS, bite of Boston, is prepared to atanufnoutre and eel Iltoca Tartu in whole ro.d part, of seta, upon Suction or Atroospherio Suction rtntal - TOOLBACiti MUM where the nerve is tooted. (Mee nod reridenee next door to the May er'. office, Founh meet, 'Pittsburgh. Ems ye--J. E3.•lll , Fadden, F. H. Eaton. jal9 7 - DOCTOR J.H. WiLLSON 9PFERS,his services In die various brooches orbit profession, toe sariciatrat , Sumner, to his nds and the public general y of Pittsburgh. Mee and reindenea Fourth street, near Weal, two doors from Mayor's office; jao-1.1111 WA.NTED, A SITUATION by a person of some VS years TV,I - donee—is acquainted with the modem system of Book Kceping, and business generally—has no objec tion to make himself naelhlis toy branch of business. Apply. et this °Deo for further information. isID- 21 IMEND IAPERS-0-4, 7-4 and 8.4 Linen :Table .1( Diaper, of eounnon figured, damask and railcar ' rep patterns. Also, Rama 13eotch Bird klyin Pat tern, IDIACBLETT & WHITE, jal9 VD woad st D. GAZZABI hu receured te. office ko the . Post Othee etory—entrrthee by Pbbe Hall MBrl. jalb deer ARD 011.-10 bbls coldred Otl, lending - from La the Hodson , end for pale p low me memo consignment jel7 JAMES DALZELL,water at _ WM. O. FRIEND, TrORNEVi AT-L4y, Foots street, near Brant. ~ jetedly LARD OIL-115 liblikpure winter .trained, in sin nd fortiy 0 BLACKBURN Coi• water meet S C Z: ° l.l:;:bl Crun } P ck7 & 012.1 x C u atig h t.! VC.' DEA RI. STARCH-15 bz. in mro and for .ale by balS O.I3LACRBURN h. Co POT ASH—II cosh rot Aeb, in 100111 and for sole . „11 laid lUII.LEU & RICKETSO? SUGAR HOUSE ISIOLA3SI2I-1 5 bbls La Rasar klomm nloissus, on consignment and lot sale by Ain IdILLES k HICKETBON WHIT E HAVANA etoAa—. l ) V:. midis Havana Sorer, Oa received md mid pate MILLER & RIYCKETSON ARD OIL-712 bbla No 1 winter strained Lard OR; adoNo 2 WI do dO do /oat received and for rate by Ala MILLER & RICKETSON ----- CIOFVEZ-10 bugs Riotoffre; 33 do super do do; 30 l.„0 do Lagnyra Co o, in surto and for sal. by join_MILLER & RICKMON -- • - aERY OLD 013.&15DY—1 qt. cask Old Co gone Brandy, "1230,' jest itoponed by us ard lon sale by the bottle. .IS MILLER & RICKETSON ANACHERVI,--76 bbl. No 2 Atacketpl, landing f • A 1 man brooklya and for oak by l i d JAMBS DALZELL "DOLL BL , TTER—Va bbla prima Roll Ratter, just eviccd lad for ante by min r S WATERMAN ACKEILEL-35 bills No 3 31. k erel, lard, in so m e 211 and tor, sale by ale 1..3 WATERMAN - - - LARD—..Mbbla No 1 L )4 Leaf Lard. . reed and f. Li gala by JaIS L v WATERMAN BE NI bbia white ta i rk, v ilmore nod 1. auk by jalb CRKAII (111 MM—set' hi. Ii Cheese: ilia, 7 61 do Western Reserve, to nsils by Isl 7 'w JAMES DAI4IeLI. 111 1 AN7Mili t EMIL/ I;I6iIiARTED—For which th e j highest market price will be psld by isl 6 • fl SMAIRS, 67 wood se DHI ED PEACIM-431/ bush dried Nubs*, Wave.' shipping order , for sale be iaL9 WOILI.S. & ROE DRUID AITLES--.1 , 0 barb dned Apple& for by L H O E ?SUU& & &OE bbl. No t Leaf LW, la fine Order. 015 NPOILLS & HOE B111"111t-10 tads packed Runen 10 do roll der, f. Mk" by 0.1.3 11111 ILLS & ROE C OB, !TEAL--d3 b it ta s , freak gr 2 o , n i = &loot: tibls Flow in gam d ug 1114/ILLS fr. ROE 0132ibill Na 1 Lad r 3 km - di:yip; 3 bla 0 fresh Roll Mawr, 3 kep Daher, bawl fil'o• Lake Erie In hllabigals Line, and fol We by iablffi DALZEI.I, water DUCKWUF.AT FLOUR—Sib - ass Backbotrat 1/011 to store and ler sale by J R FLOYD, 013 Round Chum!, Duibluzy --- POTA9II—M casks pare Ponasti, on kau a i d i r o d yp f. Labs )93__ 01100/41-4.-111403 Poland ihooma, , ree a ll i aa yw d 11 . 7 ) 1 o lan -- • - BOLL BUTTER-10 bbls Plamgnas Bauer, rev/ bb day sad for sale by lala Jk IL FLOYD Q ALEILITLIJ-1$ auk. (Adam') Haler ants,- 1a store 10 and fofr sale by jald J k It FLOYD LARD OIL—In bblsuitner Oil, No I; reeNi per slgg Rosen., and Dr sale by jat2 SELL.V.9 NICOLA_ ULNE notat-V)Vbin In store and tbr sale by -.dELLER3k NICOL.S LINBRED bbls pare, in doe order for rale br /ad SELLERS a NICOLS ARD--ICO kers; 21 bbl No I; forxkle bx .1J fall el Ellie :qCOLN aocnis,-40 4o; k. ce.a. 1 ,7 jolt. B vu. BONMIORST &Co DUTTEII-4±4 bbls fresh itotlilbr sale by% Al }sit; 8r voN #oxinuoust& ARD-6 hbls jut re . Cd sad for seao by 1.4 /at gt k' VON fIONNHOBST icey rwszs—sw q_st , rpr arbz . _ k rolusor lats ta l vf:MANuos and Ait t : 7 UOtfl HOUSE MOLASSES—Ib bbl, tor sale bi O laic s ryozy sciNratomlT &C 9 - 13CI:JC . 6 1 11 _7...9. 1 1er j.) andlot sale by . iaM Witkalli.buricz vin.ul-,4 bales Teabstabe Caliph b i sum irui io •110 - ?t' 1111...1/& &RD OEL .: 111011ACCO—to Md. KY Leaf Tabaabo, fp; silk by j jail 149/DIG ./Cl`lEfia &Co !ULU pupa Lyaf tobabb for talq jail IIARDY,YONSB & TARIM PEACIII-,,v each lit!tcg Pbeaces, on JIJ haad and tor sale ps J*l , 1.1.6.1tDV,40NE3 kin Ntrrs-43 wird oronaNuta t R. see by kW jail BA ROY, JONM , - - L ARD -93 bbl, rb 1 Leaflist i ‘ a y s , l , 7" . and fo r l , sal . 31 watts. kilt igtfrous 51 XMAS-2W bush drIU4 Pusitiss, tot oak, to • DLITrEIt.-1.5 keg.; 10 Obis .paoked Donor, 7 do _Lb Roll dcr, atom and for saW by All I. WATF.RSLAN • eriVi a ` SEED—Obbls arsl ID bags strictly prim closer sow!, in store wad for sale all $ WATFsRMAN -_— - - DWUR-11:0 bile prime whoa Floor tro d ( Il or do =r h o; n . f'l2ll".° ' " L ' .7 SVATEISMA ' N Jet IDEA NUTS-169 bush Tenn. Pea Nuts, In store and for sale by &eta _ ILLS DALZELL FLOUR -100 bbla ems Plans, Jost /5 ,,, 11ar and for ado by J DILWORTH & Co BOTTER—a° tap Butter, 4 bble do; just an and for sale by Jain J R DLIAVORTH d Co EXTRA FAMILY FLOUR—bS bbls for ode bl Alb ARMSTRONO k CROZER -10100KWHEAT FLOUR-40 samba for sale by .LP J.J9 ARIIISTRONO& CROZER SWELT CIDER - 66 ibis last ree'd and for sale by jalb ARMSTRONU & CROZER XTINEOAR-19 bola for sale by AP ARMSTRONG & CROZER ALMONDS—Wobas. soll awned, nut rac'd yarn Oriental, and for sale by BORDIUDOE, WILSON & Co, seater street ... efirbaliSilarridlii---Cbl-bond and tor side by .paa J KIDD id Co COIIIOIIIII6HELN-0116tuld nod for sale by 3a IMO .I.EIDD I Co BALTIMORII CHROME GREEN—On baud and fbr sale b OW J KIDD it Co, GENUINE UEIIMAN COLOGNE—On baud and for row . Jalo J KIDD &Co A LIDOMINAL SUMO:MRS—On hand and fop A solo b 7 KIDD & Co 1100fa-Za—by daa ARdII3TRONG k CROZET( OP. PRM.PRINTING kegs nooro wt Ink, do book do. Cylinder prou Ink in I bILE mei:aired nod (of sale by J SCROONIIAKER & Co. CANDLE.-1 1 4 bail landing and for liala by 0 &Oa /AS DALZKLL TAILW—Mm kelp assorted, for vale by I deal 8 F VON BONNUORST kCo PEPPER AND PIMENTO-4u bags Pepper, to do Pimento; to store and for sale by der2l MILL4R kRICKETSOai 011.-10 bbie best ,winter attained Lord Oils AA 11011411°M stmt /lessen= kad Mr sale by' daell - /AS DALZELLs water sr I AM C "T i rol ' IWO knitlriege cr eam I deolt • ' • JAr yhwrox --- 41 - k - awimit dneatr•.. • .114)1,211119 3 130?.1$ C." 11 . trw i tirito Nnotiv &Co S!,l:2,2itt co oakiak bib far ode by_ t o,r dem , OWILLTAbIS Vbenlllll ULK POILX-40, 000 Ina aroorted Huns, Skins and 'Btanddens,un arrive; for gala by 4WD MEND ; RIMY Y Co p 7 Jelin D. Davis, AllellWer• • yerckegm Dry Good. on tiara if tires awards. On Monday nusteinstrJars Ifiotelock, at the Commercial Sale. Rooms, comerof Wood and Fab ian:eta wet be sold, without reserve— A large and preneral assortment of seasonable sta ple and fusel Dry (lands, benig the entire stock of • man who has dissolved partnership and are cloning the concerts enthreeing superfine cloths, caedmereH sentient, Prins, tweeds, flannels, blankets. bleached and brown moiling, super pliant, ateghenw i ds lamer supaeas, casturseres,. dress silks, black saun, scores, Caney vestirma hosiery, gloves, -woolen, scarlet cra vats, woolen net emus, and a variety of fancy goals, c., et of which may be examiztedpretriorm to the wain At a oclock Geoc , lants, gescrass.um. Fuseratrosk. • ke- A genendassortmerst of new and:secondhand boa.- head furniture, variety goods. de. At 7 o'clock, An invoice or very superior raw siPrer tches end sn o s so style, received Irons one of the m lnest en. lenitive importing houses in New York, fine cutler) , s id e s, s hot eons, pistols, 'nosiest instruents, German fanc i y . rds, &e. JOHN D Ariel rfil=os • On Ramming reenuJel 201.12. at Toeloak, at the Commercial :tales Remus, comer of Woad and Fifth kirmets will be sold without reserve. to close consign. menus, • large collection of valuable medical, theolo gical, blsioncal. ciassical and miscellaneous Books, embracing many rare and standard works in the vari ous departments or science and Literature. Sp endid annuals and fine illmtmtml works in rich bin• family and pocket bibles, blank books, mmie Also. toxperior godity le!te , !_an . 4 . *up writing p ."M°Y *father ". 7OHN D DAVIS, toe Three Bui!ding Lao at Auction. Oa eniarday afternoon, .3 ILLI. 20th, at 3 o'clock, will be told on the prenii.es. for account of whom it may', coneern, two valemble Lots of Ground, sites , . on the! south side of Second street, between Grant and Rosa streets, having each a front of 2{ feet on BecOnd streeli and extending back 63 feet. Also, that very desirable lot at the N. F. corner ei extending t,nd Ross atreets, having &front of 44 feet arl extending back 63 feet., Terms at sale. join JOIIN D DAVIS. &net. AMUSEMENTS. TIIEATER _ _ . S. PORTF.II Manama- FIRST NIGHT OF MR. MURDOCH, The Popular Tragedian. FRIDAY, J. 0117.7 IV, n wilt be acwa AmLE-r. Hamlet Mr. Murdoch- Mow ' Mr. Oxley. Queen Mrs. Madison. Toes,.ludo with She WIDOW'S VICTIM • • - ~., . Podp,- Mr. I .Thanmi Jeremiah Mr. IMO, Jame' '• Miss anmi Cr ' Mrs. frznleten Mrs. Prior. Saturday—ldacheth, by M. Murdoch. i Norms—The Gallery will rrcalin closed during die •14 weather 24 and 3d Tier. 33 cents. .... • OHABITT SOIREE. ; FOR THE BENEFIT or vim Orrenstas or Sr. PAM:, Causett, orill evening, at Me Lafayeue Assembly Rams, on Friday February 2, 18411. 1 MANAGERS: , Hon. C. 811ALLIG, ' ANDREW Bum, Esq& Y Jona B. Guntur, J. J. !Woes; Jona Lareos, T. Wean, W. A. tdlductscr, Jon. J. bluctreu, ' H. Joan. /MIN Scan, 1 Wm. B. Mrrmormax, Jr., Henn Kato, Jones Dtrwatsa, A. M'Cou.ngon, • C. Goternosn, M. Batmtsn. ! - Mr Tickets can be obtained from the Managerst DRY GOODS NOTICE A. A. MASON & CO-, No. GO Ms.= Ram' PITISZIIIOII, BEO leave most respectfully to announce to flu numerous patrons and. the Intbile, that the consequence of contemplating • change in their utd. fins, propos, opening the whole of their extertsive warehouse ncluding all their wholesale rooms.' for retelling, a ndwill continue open until the first of Feb. Mari, commencing en New Years , ' day, 1549. 1011 r wilitlemb mock, comprising one of the stunt extensive and varied amorunenta of Fancy and Staple. Dr b y Goode ever exhibited in the western country, wal e offered as lower prices than ever before known. Eve ry snide, however choice and desirable. will be ac cordingly reduced. Upward. of fitly thousand dollars of our stock has been recently purchase d, the greater portion of which ore foreign goods, received at ;New York by late European arrivals, which front tbei late nem.' Mar season, as well as the known premdre th the money market, were sold at immense sacrifices at public sales, at rates varying from twenty-five tb fifty per rem less than similar goods brought the firstofthe mason. We are therefore confident thatone prices for the time above mentioned will be found fo be even In Man any Eastern wholesale rates. We anxiously invite all persons to visit our estab lishment, whether they purchase or not, and test the truth of the above—amstriturthem that they will' Incur no obligation thereby, but confer a favor open the pro prietor. Our assortment of Silks, Shawls, and fine Dress Goods Vial amply repay one for a visit; ridded to which, an unusually great di-play of Domestic Gash will, we hope, induce all to call. O. system of oat price will be strictly &aimed to. A A. MASON h Co . _ ICH MUMS GOODS, pet torems steamer Europa. I R—A A hisses & Co, No GO Market street, will open this morning, Rich Dress Goo., comprising the following styles, var. Satin plaid hlerinos, a new ern . ele, and the richest goods Imported dm semen; all 00l Plaids, high colors ice styles; ;all wool Cashmere, and alum de Unties; fine Coburg and Lyn nests Cloths, of any deseribable shade and color. Satin sulped Cashr.rm, in great variety. rall AA. MASON & Co GO Market street, have Just received another large invoice of plaid Long and Sonata Shawls, bought '25 per cent less than any previously received Ibis season. Our stock of Shawls is now the largest in the city, arid purchasers may be certain that our prices from this date will be YS per cent leis then at any former UM. At. NOTICE. • - • ALL persons interested in the opening of - Pilie street from Hurlson strut to the Sth Ward to A 11... ny strut in the gin Ward, are hereby notified that plan of specification for the extension of said street is now deposited in Menai. of the Recording Regulator, for public examination and tupection, as directed by the Ordinance entitled "An Ordinance for cipplying the higher portions of the city with Water, and Inc oils. er purposes," paused 15th day of June, 1948, nod the oilman. relating thereto passed loth day of October, ?trGOWIN, Recording Heyday:yr city of Pittsburgh. Jamey 0. 1t349. Extmot lheda ilaet/on loth of ,m net entitled "An Aet William i ß. Mitch o ll, late Supertntendene to Whofse nit tbe brought upon the ofacial Bond of e "And any owner, or canters of ground lying au the 1 line of latch street, lane or alley, who rball eoneider that . he, ate, or they, .1..11 suffer damage from the vesting Ofwidening of tannie, Amy apply by peti tion, to tho no Coati of atter Sem°. of the coun y or AeglttuV.L....' Per,qthe Partnqrablp NOttc.o., Jr.. e ar of Wood and lth XIIOMAS KENNEDY, omen, has this day ;ad with him ta the kiettlaa m e; Variety badness, Mr. JOHN M. NMI dr N.qclitt, MIO. '(De Bra tme.ite, wig 1m g 4 s .Vrn*.. .yino try 1, 1 - • ~... TIMAS , Ms Y. ItaW7l:l. aIIDT . jib BA LCtMiaUt. - Mann( ten, and Vaholes.ale la tlx data foreirs .sd domestic Variety Goods AM - merehanu, Pedlars and when are oohed to call and examine the priees and quality afoot stock, lta with Oat Invent Increased facihtim is roannamloc bg awl rarehaslmr, we think we can odes as areat r r ... harms as any other Imam areal Maw a tains. XO9- al t ( 'PRE FIRM 01.14.1 MD, PARRS es Co. is Lila day dissolved by Ismael consent. The business alba lets bra will be sealed by &U. ?asks or P. IL i II a tie eidetic* of R. G. Parka. CHAS. 21. RES% PARKS, Y. H. LULL Beare:, Jae. 8, 18417. • 1849. 1849. &mai sea—R.6. Palus _late Reed., arka & Co. P • CLARKS. & FORWARDING & CO;d=ON SLERCPIANTS, dad 'Agents for the i-Plitsbarsk sad Clevelaud Una, to Cleveland, 0. :rams Lute, " Cleveland, 0. WC. Parks' Express Pack. Line, " Er., Pa Refer to G. N. Harlon and John CanUT, Pi burgh. 100 PEII. 0110IIT SAVED!, OPPOSMON HOUSE. HE VIRGINIA HOTEL, ou Raltimora emu, near ..DaroAoCuora.tirlaane= i m on c o a t ing te ,.. ord i ez Rena. in searcher ease and comfort, will do well to patronize this establishment—they will Siel the chambers clean and wee, and the Table as well fur nithed a. any in Cumberland, at coreety-fire mats, guaranteed no pod at any that can be had in the place, at any price, or no Margo. No charge for trananortationol baggage to mil from the can. • t i a&,„ WASHINGTON &TANS. iRMA PRINTING PAPER. TUE obeeribere bating the exclusive Agency for .JL selling the Printing gaper of AnteS and ezteosive paper rain in Ode vicinity, will beet ail Weituap plied with the digerentinzen of paper ofaapctior slimi ly, which wo offer at the lowest regular prices. Any size, or quality will he manufactured to order as short notice. REYNOLDS is SHEA jadAns corner germ and Isom ate 10 cuts Pearl Ash, prlaut 6 do Potash, do; S bb d scorched Abo NOS ugar,-dosi crop; OS tibia - !delouses; " to 0 sugar how do; ICO boaCitt Bonin 05 bxitlin mould candles; 11) bbla No 6 oaf Sugar 55 keg , 0 twist Toblewpribled 100 bush cloths'etedi' - 00 'do tinted . ) , do; 10 hop Laidt'l bbldof unhand sad for sale low for cash, by TASSEX NW. JEW BRITISH PRINTS, ine,—Pl.4l. Murphy au ./1 Jam inaelved a lat awe style Proem and white Mara nil:knavery tausdanne, - arrieed by Late mem. en Also, an aanslassa ammonia of glean? mks of antaxican Prima tardealara alaUdw.PTlc. Mack 'Cloth Shawls, otaasioaccitSaltS"—a supply lust receivaL.• • Black Alpaccasi l ow Piked iod flan-• very • (WI supply, nada law viral Gr aunty. lalo - • atelairirarotalt• ay trAZAW (thus =wan) , Jos Itiaspas Sow hniaa, San naM sias simnel Urooalyn, and lbr aala 1 1 4 /OS MITCELLISER., jalB No Ira Lawny a ToiLAT. AtA STIDAS ROOM oa •Igszkot auott, a tow doors Coor rho rider, %wry mik ado for a cicoblog /lora. Eaptio of G. B. DIOSEY or TiosticAs .otairrat. t ists-da. Jona T. OCIVIMAN, • ATTORNEY2.7OLAy, Foam! .uvel betweel dmllhfiodtrxti Ani" " VA:II6 la{ hat coed and Pr sale BEtIOLDS & 13111 W., cor {win sad !rim W. k Powdor r • pOWORII-12,x, de 4LO half do do 30qt do „do Id ton asal•ter do do Obi. Pose. forblaatinl to megaxine, and lOU be dinkinuod to cny okerekano in one hoar's notion. JaW J S DILWORTH k 011) patoule'rArsa.;• , 103 roams fun Hook DO*, Wadi% " .oa=3owri hum. ri ." medium colored Ennelopei `to , lstilll" - , isKresSi and for by NS Jouriti MELLOR., el wood it 41RWRIE3- s bbts No Lard; 7 kegs dodo; 71 eke ,Floirstst; do Postb&lC Yin: Boast 14 do I tato ;tea! T 4 do Cltes itr Arnim for eats by jolO ISAIAH . Yll4O, front n - •• .FOLOALII—The good and sett,- sulatial itasenkssat AMERiceil er• Carta tor sale on assummodatlng Aly to a b pp uninna, eat, wator st • OINCISNATI & PITTBIIIIROII DAILY PACKET LINE. rwell known hoc of 'splendid passengeitteuic ets is now leoseposed of the Largest, swiftest, es ed and fordishea, and Most powerfal boat. on th. enters of the {Vast. Every accommodation and veto fort thanesney sail procure, has bee abed for pm. magma. The Lion loot been in Operationlbr fore yeam —has carried a million of oeople b t uwithou the least of ry to their persons. Thu a.m milt the f t at Wood street the day previous to starting, for the neap Lion of freight and the entry of passengers on he F ein a ter. In alr case. th e passage money he advance. SUNDAY PACKET. The ISAAC NEWTON, Capt. tioely, arid leave Pivabargh every Sunday morning at 111 vi Wheeling every Sunday evening -at 10 P. IL May 29,047. MONDAY PACKET. The MONONGAHELA, Capt Sins; arill leave Pisa, burgh every Monday'morning at 10 o'clock; Wheeling every Ikloity evening at 10 r. r. TUESDAY PACKET. The HIBERNIA No. 2, Capt. J. leave Pittsburgh every TELCSaiy morning at 10 Welsch; Wheeling every Tuesday' evening in 10 r. sr. , . WEDNESDAY PACKET. The NEW ,ENGLAND No. 2, Capt. S. Ilea% will leave Pittsbero every Wednesday earning id 10 o'clock; Wl...sling every Wednesday everatig 11110 r. la, TIOTItSDAT PACIULT. The 11R11.13ANT, Capt. liluce, will leave Pius burgh every Thursday inominse at le o'clock; Wheelies every Tharaday evacuee at 10 a. N. _ FRIDAY PACKET. • The CLIPPER No. Capt. Paiee Dest., leeee Pitichargh every Friday morning at leo elocl4 Whee• hoc every Friday evening at r. st. lULTDItDAY PACKET. The 111ESSENGER, Capt S. Ilamrutst, will leave Pinaburgh enrery Saturday morning at 10 pnweling every s autrday evening at 10 T. IL o'clock; NEW LISBON AND PITTSBUII6II t DAIL'S LINN • . . . .. • I a 8. alliffin (Its abasoow,) Leaves Pittsburgh daily, at 9 o'clock, A. kli v and ar rives at Glasgow, (mouth deist PaptlY and Nearer Co. nga at 3 o'clock and New Lisboa at 11, mime night. Leaves New Lagoon at 6 o'ckick, y. (making the trip canal to the nver doting the and Glasgow at o'clock, A. M., and amens at Piusburgh at 3 P. M.--dm makinga continuous lice for Camp ing pi...- wingers and freight between New I.l.sban and Pau. burgh, In Shower time and at Ins rates than by any other route; The proprietors adds Lane have die pleas= of to. forming fo r abllit th e i tt . they havatuied up twit ant alas! ttttOodasinu ciPa •-• niter. end Canal.._ a, for the a , mmurkodsuon m pas=p___ freight, to nut in emmeetion siith the known steamers CALEB COPE midi:I:AVM., end connect. ing, at Glasgow, with the Pittsburgh 'and Cincin nati and other d..0.1r lines of steamers down the Ohio and Mississippi ravens The proprietors pledge them , selves to spare no expense or unable to insure cam fen, safety and dirpuea, and out cid= publics share of then patronage.HOltllSED AGENTS. G. M. HARTLN, S. &W. HARBADOII, fittslnirgh. B. HANNA, & Co. mythic 3. ILARBAIJOH & Co. Now I"b°a• NOTICE—The ateimer BE.,04:11, C. E. elute, mar ter, will leave after this notice, for Wiellavillet pattern. LLI , nr 9 o'clock in the MOMillg, 111148. B PITTEIBUILGHIy Packet & B ILOYik Dai LIDA II FEBRUARY Ist, BM FEBRUARY Ist, 184 LEAVE DAILY AT ei A- M.. AND 4 P. Pi mataßThe following new boats convict& toe line for the present sason: AT LANTIC, Capt Imam Aultinosni ALTIC, Capt. A. /aeolna wd LOUII , ?SLANE, Capt E Bennett. The bents are entirely new, and are Rued op without regard to eipemse. Ev ery comfort that money can procure has beeninavided. The Boats will leave the Monongahela Wharf Boat at the foot of Boot at , Pamengers will be punctual co board, as the boats - will certainly leave at the adver tised boon. El A. NI. and 4 P. AI • janal PITTSBURGII AND LOULSVELKEPIOCNT Pi' ie The new nod rplendid , faflpassen g" kE yy TLEORAPII No. l Moon, muter. mill,leave tor Cinch, Batt and Louisville on Wednesday, the 17th just, at 10 &elixir, A. M. For freight or passage apply:on board, to BtfIIIIIIIDOIL WILSON & Mb or OEO ft hfILTENIIRROFJLI Steamer Peyton& will leave Louisville . for Now Orleans, on arrival of Telegraph No 2 Papensers can .° direct, and can have berths secured tare if do FOR 2ILARIETTA, PARKERSBURG, And Boekingport, lawmaßate andings. The fine summer, WELLS*II.LE, Poe, master, will leave for We above • every Tuesday, at 10 loci, a. . . cape apply on board. deicY2-Ina --- FOR LOUISVILLE.. • • in at t.i The oplendld new steam! TELEGRAPH No. 1, Haelep, master, wilt on for above a:lora:m6We ports on paturday, rad inst , at 10 Weigel. FOr Benin or pasmppl , on board, or to RIDGE, WILDON & Co. d0e.22 OED B MILTHNBERGEB. REGULAR FRA.NRIAN . PACREP. The fine Oenmei • FORT PlTT,nagitar URI= will raw regularly in above mile, learcnix piusburgb. emery Wednamday-and Fanirday waning, at 4 delock, Ff... (night or plunge apply.= baud; I deel9 PITTSBURGH Et. CONSUL, jESLtelsher, master, roll Wakeregehrl Wheeling, every Monday, W nesday and Friday, 6;10 o'clock precisely. Leave Wheeling every Tuesday, Thursday and Ets nudity, at 7 o'clock, a m, precisely. The Consul will land w all theintonnedNie pock— Every accomodation that can be procured for We wow fbrt and safety of passengeralas been provided. The boat is she wormed with ',seltzer:ins Watt aloud 10 prevento rto explosion. For thigh;r paset u S ß AFl7 rra board DAVID O r fcbg sonar eflakand Smithfield ins. M'XPRELEiIit ViA4ZON.LINE, . TAT, FIVES' DA 'B—BUNNING D • Y ASO P 1116117. T ' poblte use respectfully ialanned Aux }his Lour arffi commence running on the Zthin A ear will leave Philadelphia daily with the .Mairrrain Chambersbarg, and from then. by Wagon, lanai • relay of horses, running day and n4ht. We will be prepared to forward 6eo) lb freight dally. Apply to D LEEGIi & Co, Newburgh, or LlAl4llBtr. LEDUR, • noT2O = Y 1 , .. •hii PIONICZit ThANSPORTATION urNso„ OEM 1848 MAilat BETWEEN BALTIMORE ays: AND PITTEIBUROIL BA Tune, d menttandise transported a esidd rue. , FORSYTH & DUNCAtiftma, Wm: sten 1, , burgh. FELSILEY & MARSH Ames, 47 Llieldstie _hlams.. 1111111CE.45 CO 3 S . PAST EXIBEIIS E . A..tr a u b I iALTIMO ITIESR. E, , AND THE C NE Proprietors of this Line have patron Near Stock, T and are prepared to forward packages of all de *mimic)ns daily, at the lowest rater. J. C. RIDWELL,,Agent, Waxer aural, Mahwah. ROBINSON & BORBA om3l OR South Charles sr, Baltimore. TEWItePOLVVATIO , 4, Law Aga 134& =Ma , QIUPPERS and otters itainfdiviatt ma this Late cocaina. to nnadnily., Nada. and maaaaa.da , ... receipt. far by FIVE DAY LINE and . regcanc ...g -0., at law moo ale a rcified time. novl4 g IIODINIArhk =tam ono. PENNA. AND - 01110" weacm =pc.- .PITTSBURGH SNP. PUILSUELPFL Srums—atssaiss. ssT AND *IP • 11)Ila LINE, *ma puncotakty last me ter j. stets geatrolsifsstactloaorn. accamcitc• maniac as Ist of January nest, using Ilia Cal/11- train East a Cbstalersbarcb, and tears a t bassesen the turnpike. " CLARKE/x..7115W, Sittsbati LEWIS SEUSLLIL talderkat s7h Bingham , ' Espreal, "ago* Liao. . AND pIU kty, . .... . . ~, MIME, FIVE DAYS-4 1 onaloi Oaf 114' iqiabn-1.- !''. .1L" Cu will leave Philadelphia delft 6y ts.mat ~-/ Train to ChambendiumhiA wit:W.llllcent on So ' - 1 artisid, and haring reloYndd . bomb Twilabli day sad N Met, memo* Ma coital:s -mutual pi goods in Flu ;l:t Diyi No more Goode will Mt rooomem . than can be rt loaded trotaelt demo tkm ma dr.laywill'oucar. '-i wo tut bo prepared to famed 001X1lbadally. apply to WM. RINGIIIIM, - dual Baall-Pra f-1 BINGHAM A l% No 270 Market t :. birJ isr.l.tAti EATlgilt;i;skfipTositt f.j , ANNE.—ThIe combat. Om immedlataty alter :I k ., , mmeed my brother, who ditaboteusaapticet i n mmthoiste, I inulaten Pink 111 44 11 OluonnYdap .1' or Wier Costnl,aadwas Tamed. W'ow trim the ~ dimato; that tor tour mini/ maa oas.W ~40 emcee to g my !mine.% either. at *safe ,or et Wet for parr.. the. met tithe caulked to wi bit' Da rins II above pa , oil !edam,' I had exudate for medic ¨aut , 1 Male? I'llYsiellw and . medimdes, to the ammo or , woo, wnhout fp:aiming any, , bettefit 7refro. ,in l July, 1m0.. . . - commenced -. tahhm. Dr. V yite'rlaw' ; eke., end haws taken thein mom of ie awn Wooer t and beaus -that it wan by permuting , In dear !!!". ? that Leannowl.) , tln2hry, uteMli " Pu "'" b. ' ve voted oty beitlth:L'ibelmre UM* Jayne% in and Haymow= aro llie beat family goodisboop'" r • ,t... MI • ~ , ..r, y awl ILrmido irr , BOTlogOxid, Otuu dop dm ;late. eany_on a Comm and. nembilut' ad „. 14 . i - ; 1,, 'et din and am not interested it any truant!! o _,..'w - o m above'res, and Male WI um c• - • raTtri. ablbt those atilieted: . .......n 1 4 431 3.4 ' . Siltioadeld: N.Y., Sept 10,101. - '- ! I nacos 11(1011NO lust compleuglaos""`" t r i br A.L bOutet we ate now ' tea; G itlrk l. ollll3 . lo fi rr a w lSClt re.madio 0 . " 4 " 1:0 1. 300 1 1 MOW, MI are cap jsmswil. Basal, I 'DV A YOUNO 31AM...tom' Will abeot JUP.ttet . avictesr:lnTast tlo4 s' Keeper; or nap ether deeediat. of t wfll be -acren.632,,M.M./.o.4.muultitill. Addrcog . .!ANTILDs" - Ayouiamoc--,,,t,..tu1ii 'a thitative u trwede 6(ttts drTgoodt. 1 4(01 00 1 heetruts. it& arca "IFL:H.4 . ss this ofEtte, , with setetedes. W 8.2 sultablain othel vespee.W. • Lion ofa saat Saw: TAol#lo . l4 . office, in.tw rovirazo - ratidoz e4ri' ---• mouTysigh --- efir'n4 blame and for silo by ` llB J !'6 FLAWDai