THE PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. DY WHrrv^^o pfTTSBUBO Uf MORNING, APRIL 11. 1&49- PrrmrtßU Daily GiJirm l» published Weekly, and Weekly —'Hie Dally u Seven 1“ Tn-Wrtk'l, ,« Five OolUf p« Weekly ii Two Dollars per annum, ttrieHy nadvantt- ,• irTAurnniEU ore earnestly requested to hand in h«r fawra before sr. and a* early in the day aa oraetleable. AdrertiaetoenU not insetted form »peet led time- wSllrtTanably be charged onul ordered out Fo* iatm C«oune»ci*J lat*ll»g«tnc6,Dome»Ue t Mar- Iti: Kets,Biver New*, Imports, Money Market*, fcc. «€* ' MrJpape. PHILADELPHIA NORTH AltlkRU?&B(. Advertisement- and -nb-cripnon* to the North Aiuer ie*Q tad United Staten Oaten-, Philadelphia, received *ud forwarded from this office. |M MXt page for Tdegraphle S«wi. For Local MaUeri mc next page* T.rprvn Box. —The "Gazette Toiler Bor' has been removed from its old situation, a window Dearer the IW Office. Ths Bamwi Reviiwb. —ln another column will be found an.advertisement for the republication in thi* country of the British Reviews, and of BUck* wood’s Magiiicc. U is our candid opinion. formed after some experience, that these Reviews afford to the intelligent reader the beat source* of inHr» mation on a large number of interesting subject, relating especially to passing events of.a general character,:to be found any where else. They keep the reader posted up with the march of improve ment, add the increase of intelligence, oti almost every subject, and*especiaily on those topics which relate to the great political movements and project ed reforms of our stirring age. No person who can command the means to procure, and the liesurd to read these periodical*, should deny himself ao pro lific® source of information and gratification. Carr. Awxxdxs Coaifahy.—■A letter Iroma mem ber of Capt- Antrim’s Company, to his brother in this city,-dated at Lexington, on tho Missouri river, March 29, state* that tire company was getting along pleasantly, and expected to arrive at, St. Jo-, aepE’a on the succeeding Saturday evening, from whence they will take iheir jonraey across the prairies. The Washington I’oion publishes llie following certificate, showing that the Hon. LeWi* Q,s , who took bis seat on the last day of the regular session of tbe late Congress, did not receive pay for bis attendance as n member cf that body. • (Met oft he Secretary of the Senate of the V Arntb, 1548. ' 1 certify that'the Hon. Lewi. Cars, Senator of the United Slate, from Mietngan, took Ills sent in the Senate on the 3d of Maroh la, l, lint .declined to re ceive eilherjjay nr mileage for lheae«uon ending on that day. ASBLRI UICK.L.HS. Secretary of the Senate, Tbe recent annual report ol tbe Bible Society 61 Virginia soy* that most of the Counties in the State have been visited during the year, and about 30,- 000 copies of the Scripture* have been distributed- The receipt* for the Bible year, ending April Ist 1849, amouut to more than Si I,ooo'. This i* per haps the largest sum rained in any previous year of tbe Society’s history. , - There was a report at Cnrocna on the tOih ulk. that the two sons of Gen* Pae*. and' the'other prisoners {captured by the lorce* of Monagas at Maracaibo and ;Zuha, [had been eMntf»»n& led at Chraccas. The Washington Union says that Congress- in its h»«t" to provide a Secretary Afisisiatit Sec retory, 3cc., tor the Department of ihe laterior, for got to make any appropriation for the payment ol their salaries. fROSI WASHINGTON. Correspondence oi U»e Piu»t»urgh Gss'-te. April 7, 1519. Tbe week has terminated, and none of the ru mors, dissensions in tie cablet, changes, dwsoiu lions, and other mtgtay event*: have taken place. Things are going on in the qsuel and re special'* manner in which Jt was expected, they would proceed after the establubroehl ot' a new admufis tration. One political seer, of a mdtj? far reaching ken than any of his rivals in.tbe art of divination, has discovered that Mr. Meredith id at issfie with his colleagues, on the slavery question, and being strongly committed to the principle*; of free *oii, W3l only remain a member of General Taybris Cabinet until the death of Chief Justice Taney shall occasion a vacancy on the bench-of the Supremo Court, which may be filled by h»s ap pointment to that exalted station. This is a pru dent prophet Mr- Taney has been, a valetudin arian for thirty years, and being now only abouj m ths sixtieth year of hi* age, la jail as likely to sur vive l£e present administration and that of two or three of its successors, as he was when appointed, to live ont the terms of Jackson, Buren, and Polk. 1 pretend to no knowledge of the facts derived from the members themselves, and if 1 possessed such I could not profitably use it, but from others whose positiou is such as to enable them at once to perceive the effect of any difficul ties in ihe Cabinet, if such existed. .1 learn Ibat ail these stories are absolute inventions, originating in the eagerness of the gossips for something new. There have been protracted cabinet meetings, I believe, every day this week, but they been occasioned by a pressure of business incident to evefs new administration. So far as 1 have learned, the pent office and the district attorneyship are the only offices in which your community ore particularly interested which have yet been filled. The posts of collector and surveyor will probably be conferred upon shine member af the whig party upon whom yonr citiiens can generally unite. The place of collector t* now of more than usual importance, ;because in ad dition to his ordinary duties, that officer is pow charged with the supCrintendenceo/lhe cons trac tion and the expenditure upon the hospital now in course of erection at Pittsburgh. 1 believe the amount to be disbursed on that work, during the current year, will not be lew than twenty thousand dollars. I have been made acquainted with the names and recommendations of some of thopro. minent gentlemen from among wbdm the selectiou will probably be made, and l have no doubt that the appointment for each office when made will be such as to satisfy the community * •. h is said that Messrs. BulliH and;Sargent are making arrangements to establish a new whig paper, and that they will commence the publication of it about the first of June. Mr. QolliU is one of tbo accomplished editors of the flew Orleans Picayune, and John U. Sargent was well known daring the memorable contest oflS4o. as the able and powerful working, editor of the New York Courier and Enquirer. They will make a powerful journal, but 1 think- it may well be doubtmF whether thero ts occasion for another whig paper at the seat of government, or whefher the experiment of establishing-one. will wicbeed. Already there is an addition to the Nauondl In. teUigencer, which do one thinks of superceding— the National Whig—conducted by Mr..'Soelhen, which yields a prompt support to General Tnylor, bis policy and measures. The enterprise of estab lishing a whig journal iu such a city ns this is one that involves the expenditure of $W>OO, which iu the event of ultimate failure would be so much capital utterly lost. Mach interest centres m the Virginia elections. Old Father Richie, as'Mr. Benton call* hun, insists that the democrats will i carry all the districts but One, which would be a whig loss of five, the dele gation standing now six wings to nine democrat*. There seems oo good reason why the whiffs should not make a gain. The election of three democrats in Connecticut was obviously owing to a cause which can have no influence upon Virgtmq, or 11 exert any, that it n>' ,, ‘ feraratle to iho whig*; namely, the union of the hunkers, wilff the flee loilera. The Union, notwithstanding the horror and indignation with which it has always profound to regard the organization of thn frea “d party, kindly commends the proceedings of its friends in Connecticut, and 'fills with joy unspeakable over the election of the three “free soil, abolition fanatics” to Congress The hypocf Icy of the apods loving champion is well its course st this time- Bel three months sgo, it would have plunged Lhc nation into civil war, could it by that means have csrrieddnlo p-sctlco the detestablo end contemptible dogmas of the Calhotfh school, in relation to the diffusion of rlovery. Todsyil is eeen cheek by jowl with the free soilers it then professed to hate, and frantic with delight Victories of those whom it hw a hundred limes denounced ns “nbolMonista,” nnd iho most rabid of fanatics. '■[ There is a great straggle pn oveh the Philadelphia appoinunenls.At p?C*nl Gatosl Peter Skeu Smith scents new the top of the ladder, bet Utile eon be told of the ehatlce of .enyluiul after thn dovulopcmenle of the wit few cuverie* of lieologtoa nence. . . . Has ibe Creator Won robbed Of Ip-nor by di proving ihut the Earth i* tU* i-entrc nU>ul wJm me-un and stars revolve' Or by the evident mat the earth has been tt«e al*»de of I■ VJQfC rrc lure* for million* of years' Ur ha* the Sow of nob ore been *born of it* divine splendor by showing lijal every where, from the creation lo ihe present moment, wherever ninight ha* (alien on descend mgdrcp' c.l'raiu. "r on the spray "I me cataract tne area m beauty ha* b«-ea tanned’ I "peak plain !y. the time .« paired when men of sconce im«ht tic ooioiusJided to piu»e. and fivtore advancing lari her. tirst U» recotietheir with the Mosaic Record, tor uncr it ha* .cmr to be ttnder *,>_«* :hat * troth .at' dero-'uslfalu>ft can never yield pu*tr n a truth « f whenever perenan.-a a discovery ia science shall eiosa with the received interpretation of wiipcore history, the ia-*t of ret> oonltahca ha* been suited from lb* ptukeopfior to the theologtaa. The sublime truths of our repealed religion are tbe subject* of our t*Ub. And timegh the te**ar. c hes of tbe human mind bare ooen modified, and will doubtless coutioue to m-'J.y oof at these troth*, they'can never kief? one jot a* tittle of their true import. But while we feel the supreme importance of the divine revelation to communicate to us these truth* above our concep tion, and tbe necessity cf divine sanction* !o give authority to tbe*e truths, be it doI torgoUon, there is do sanction which can add la, or dimmish in the human mind the authority ol a comprehended truth. Armed ia tbe>ower of its clear convictions the humblest mill'd will stand upagainM the world. The litlJe child will rebuke the venerated parent with the authority* of a seer,, when ui n moment of weakoe** that parent may have assigned to th* child a false reason for a true one. How futile, how weakly impolitic it i* to attempt to bind theconvic lions of the mm 3 by the torce ofi mere authority But dn not think that l would discard a* of little worth the influence of received opinions, and the instruction of tbe paid, for it belongs to tha honest inquirer after truth, carcuiUy Jo ponder the weight of these opjaions; to make them-tus teacher, never his master- 'From such considerations as these we assert the great principle which lie* at the bot tom of ail scientific research; }bat the mind by tho. law* of its nature, both must, ami may confidently trust itselfto i(s own conviatioM in the pursuit oJ truth, for though there *re I KWh fiifie and true paths in which she may wander, yet she is never without her pole star to guide her erring steps back to the right way. The view you appear to entertain of the material world would fill my mind with a cheerless gloom- Speaking of the faults in modem plans of educa tion, you say,' ‘‘the moral and intellectual part of oar nature must be subordinated to that great mo* lenal mass aalled tbe universe, and all our immor tal energies buned beneath tfje lumber of the phy sical, world." From any one ttfit of acknowledged piety, thi* would seem rather disrespectful lan guage to apply to the handy work ol the Creator- In another place, speaking of the inefficiency eflhe work* of Xalt&e to lead us to trod, you say of the sun. moon, and stars—>’Tbey took orders before that sad catastrophe which involved manktrd in ruin, oonsequently they have nothing to say on the subject, nor remedy to propose.” You speak of the sun, moon, and sUp*, ns if they were so many government ships, wfcich having from port tn time of peace go 00 their way rejoicing, all unconscious of the devastate which o foreign ene my has suddenly brought to thejr country’s shores It is not logical to illustrate the limne (iovernmenl by lb- short sighted government* of men This has been n great fault of theologian*. In their de sire, perhaps, to depict a Ueity whom the people could compreheud,they have made him a being of hke passions and frailties with tljernsefves. There is a sound truth in the odd remark of J .ichtenberg, ••as a people improves so does their Uod also tm . prove.’* Let mu invite you, my dear air, to n higher view ol nature, and of the study of nature, than you appear to eniertam. We conceive of the Divine Mind as every where preset}*, and animating eve ry portion of his creation. There ejtiala no form of matter whidh is doi at every moment the sib jeot of rtiange and motion. The visible and tan gible forms by which we are surrounded are ever yielding their places u» new forms of creation, by a slower or more rapod succession. By a success sion of moments or of ages, what matter which 7 Ad absolme rest can no where bo found in lhc wide universe. *The thoughts of the Infinite Mind are ever pervading every part of the creation — are ever olothiag themselves in visible forms. We art* not in danger of being “buried under the lum ber” of dead and passive toaUer—we are living in a world of mind, of ideas and sentiments, of which that which we call matter is nothing but the embodyraeoL Wkto a piece of music nm* inaiev us with gluety.or us to melancholy, or arouses our courage, or awsikeas our devotion, are wn not sum that the feeling which this parti culnr combination of sounds elriles in our winds, must have tint exited ui the wind of ibe compos er. and is not the work of the artist simply this, to give .repression to Ibis feeling, by means of a cer tain succession of musical notes* Does not the painter seek to express aentuneou and ideas by means of the shapes and colors which he sprehdn upon the canvass 7 And vhere is the turnd so dull that it aever finds a seutftnaot in the scenes and sounds of nature as they paas tp chair endless sue*, cession before bis senses* Is there lux a wonder ful coooord, and distinctness of idea expressed in eitsry passing moment of Nature * hie* Tbe gloomy clouds and bowi&g winds of a Winter's storm sweep over tbe desolate asrth in full accord. The fresh colors of May, the opawjQZ buds, the young leaven, quick and trerauloub with chair new life, tbe air tiffed with the joyful singing of birds, are ail io true harmony; and Ibere is harmony m the sad stillness of the dying foreat u» autumn, broken only by the quietly Callios leaves, or tbe wind sighing among the branches. Ttpre ia har mony to the eye and car t ln the tbander af lie ca taract, m the noiselus* winding of the majestic river; in the aolemu roar ofibo great ocean. Tbe harmony is perfect in the cdoriag of a single flow er; in the wide landscape of which that flower is bat an msigo&ctntp&rticriiar; in tbe wide universe in which that landscape i»n feature of still greater insignificance. And so the world U full of living harmonies which are incessantly passing into and aocceding each other, without a stngto. disturbing sight or sound—without ever a jarring not*. The man who would explain all these things by saying that the order of-Jlaiare I* the necessary opereffoo of certain laws'.wito Tfhieb tbe Creator, in the beginning invested matter, kt 4 that the world moves on mechanically as the machineryAf a watch ia turned by means of its springy that man might easily mistake the ©ecbanieaJ grinding of a hand organ, for the soul stirring music of Mozart. The thought or sentimeoj orfeeltpg wmnb naive nroducea in our minds can only bo produced by b itotigbi or seaUaeo* w feeling «f tho ipiod which produce* nature. It may be ibis is what you style mWerialu>iic philosophy, if to, 1 plead guQty to your charge. Matter as *ueh, has no signification It is mind alone which can communicate 'frith mind. The hnmon soul is capable of discern ing the thought*, and of responding to the senti* menu of the Infinite Mind a* they are brooght to view in the works of Nature, and herein do we see as it stand* in the Gene»is that *-man was ere* aied in the image of God. r For as Goethe says in his Faust, “thou resembles! lhe spirit that thou comprehetidesl.'' And herein do we surely discov- the unisonal part of our nature, ior spuil alone can discern the things of the spirit Many of the inferior animals have a clear per ception ol the outward forms of objects which pre sent themselves to their senses, and are capable of au umutelhgenl imitation of motions and sounds. Thin faculty of blind imitation in also stroagly prom inent in man during the earliest stage of infancy, but gradually become weaker as the soul devel oped its power of self direction and independent thought. Then the blind imitative faculty gives place to a higher kind of imitation, winch may more properly be termed a reproduction. It is by this higher imitation that man baa appropriated to his ese the contrivances, and implements aad art- ful machinery which he finds in surrounding na* tore. Naked and unprotected, it taught Sim to im itate the clothing of the lieasts, first with a view merely to warmth, and afterwards to the variegated and bcuutilul colors winch be found in many am- inls and plants. He imitated the protecting dwel ng which the beasts build for themselves, some* lues of stones, sometimes in the earth, or in the trunks of trees, or of the fibre* of plant* spread over witli an ornamental covenog of leave*. — There i* nothing, be it the shield ol the cruslncioiis animal*, the web of the spider, the fins of the fish, the sails ol the} sea birds, the cutting, bortog and sawing instruments of the insects, wb:ch roan has not reproduced m other forms and applied to hi* use. Al first art provides for oar necessities. ... for our convenience and comfort, nnd when -ihe has relieved our nenrc*l wanes, she begin* to look about Ibr more ideal objects. By degree* she discover* tnat the thing* around u* have a higher import, and for us a higher concern, than merely their utility for answering the coda of our physical life. She see* by little and little that the forms and phenomena of surrounding nature, are so many in corporation* of perfect idea* mid sentiments. and noon perceive* that man in contemplating these ob jects until there arise* within himself the divine idea which animate* them, and then seeking to re embody this idea, may find a nurer delight, than in searching for the useful-element which they eon« lam m order to appropriate it to hi* profit. This highest kind of imjtttion bn* given ut those pro ductions of human genius which are comprised in the fine or liberal art*. The idea thus discovered, he proceed* to re-otnlndy on the painted canvass, or in the chiselled statue. The visible form rise* again out of the divine thought which has po*se*aed hi* mind, like to a second creation; and certainly, it is nn admiration of this high creating power of the human intellect which lend* to the master wotks of painting and sculpture their my*tenou» charm. The feeling, that a conception oi the sec* ondnrv and finite mint 1 is m combination anJ bar* monv wtth the work of the primary and Infinite Advancement in the fine art* has I'een followed by advances in science ll is the work of the arii»t to develope a particular idea or sentiment mlo tuo harmonious variety ol nature. It is the province of science, on theeootrary. to discover in the van ed phenomena and multiplicity of uatnre, the in trinsic thought from which these phenomena pro eeed She traces the tacts back to the idea which produced them. To discover this idea is the sole end of scientific inquiry His an etlort ct the hu man muid, ns Kepler e*pre*«e« it. "to think, the thoughts ol injd after him ’ U( such science* a« Natural History and botany, which hv-e been termed descriptive, in distinction trorn the ex pen menlivc science*. it i* the atm to arrive At a dn» •ideation ol natural ot’ievta, in accordance willi nn lure s own plan; or m otherworda to make a true analyst* ol the thotighl ol the oreaUng mind. No classification conceived upon any other principle can rank in strictness a* a science In the dtfi; cultyof arriving at the true analysts, an arbitrary classification may often In* useful to serve m the mean time the purpose o< reterenco Uko the index of a book. TlmsmHuany although the Uonnao , classification ol plant*, to which you have referred, lounded os it is upon nn arbitrary principle, cao not la* termed a scientific damnification; still it is o( immense advantage to the scientific botanist in his great labor ol recognizing and determining the limits ol (he natural fnmdie* of plants, enabling him as it dor* to understand the olwrrvaUons and reaenreh es ot others. Lmneu* wri qg driveller, and be did not overestimate hi* work as a preparatory step to scientific investigation. in recommending thi* physical sciences as * pr' mined part of the education to be given in tli»i High School, we did not dwell upon these high*' • ■'ije«-4s, l ur rea* »n» which 1 have before •taled - Km we alluded 10 (hem All that should be aim ed at m sncfi a school, i* to give the youth* aocli lUairuciioQ as will enable them to apply scientific woowhclge to the business of [tie, 10 insp'fo them a ta.sle for these studies, and to lay such a ’•.uadatioo as will enable them to read wi»h satia :'jt-noo and delight the works of ihe leading m;od* „t tie age. There is at present a wtdegap whtcC cuts off the common mind from ail eonunomention with these great minds- Their writings cannot be .underwood by the peop'e at lan* Fortbe »u<-«-re-« of the ir.du«n*J pur.urt* it is .admpeo«*i-le that this barrier between the artisan and t»« “i if uaecce should be Ifroken dowji ! *'l. u-'i t«*te up yourume byditcassiiw w oMi./o* a ponL t • Bot there la a charge often Wogfcj against men of seiner, of no grave a oanirehSal 1 should par* .1 over without a notice. It i* said by many, and implied ihrcuniioui your review. that it i« the ten* dem'V oi scent.tu- purMi.l* to create an mlidei.iy to Gbnsliamty That Ito* cannot be true in point of fae\ would seem to be clearly euougii e*-tabli*h eJ by the view* already presented- 1 would aitree Willi you. however, in lamenting the unnatural hostility which baa sometimesel.sled between the doctor* ol theology and the J.vlotsnf wiem-c nnd confess that among the latter there arc to be totiud many instances ol sceptical mdifferrncc to icvcai* od religion. But it most imperatively Ix-long* to the enlighted Christian to ponder carefully how much of the imputed infidelity baa received Us name from n narrow and thereto re incompetent judgment; and whether the actual infidelity which is left after making this large deduction, baa not owed Us existence to the follies and vices at’ the Christian church, rather than lo any pernicious m< fluenco of scientific studies on the mind. The unspiritoal character of the Christian church and worship, which has so often passed in the world for Christianity; and the absurdities which those most deeply versed in theological lore have so of ten proclaimed to the world for the doctrine* oi Christianity; however successfully these things might be imposed on the ignorant multitude who hare no knowledge to guide their fiulb, they could not fail to disgust those higher minds who had come to see and comprehend for themselves something of God, and who had become so enamoted of tbe hute living truth which they had found and tell, that they could no longer make common cause with sensuality and unreason, because forsooth it bad put on the garb and trapping* of Christianity. Tho gem they failed lo discover in the mat* of rubbish which concealed it. The church has been slow in recognizing that the union between science aooeu the wisest student* of Nature, and the biography of oar race will l«e searched in vain lo find purer ■pecuneas of virtge, or such admirable instance* a* the schools of acicoce will furnish, of that true liberality, the genuine stamp ofa nobio mind, which estimates with perfect fairneo the mistakes aod weaknesses of other mind* I might instance Bn con Newton, Franklin, Priestley, Davy' Cavier, and a host of other* that were equal ly imbued with the true spirit of their high vocation And I will dismiss this topic, by again quoting Kepler as an instance of noble liberality and irae piety The’advice which he gives |he objector* lo Copernicus *a bis day, i* eqoally applicablei to the objectors »o Humboldt iu our own; though l beg you will not regard it- for I certainly do not iniend it as having any discourteous applicalion to opinion* expressed by yourself “It «uy one be too dull, says ho, “to comprehend the science ol Astrono my, ioo feeble minded to believe in Copernicus, without prejudice to h.s piety,my advice to such a one is. Ihat he ibumd quit the aatrooomiaal school, and coudemmg, if he has a mind any or all of the theories of philosophers, let him look to hi* own affair*; and leaving Ibis worldly .travail, let him .go horns and plough bis fields; sod as often as be lifts m to this goodly heaven those eyes with which alone be is ahic lo see. icl fcitn poor out bis heart in praises and thanksgiving to God the Creator and let him not fear but h# is offering-* worship not less acceptable lhao his to whom (rod ho* granted to sc* yet more clearly with the eye* of bis mind, abd who both can and pruse his God tor what he has so discovered- ’ A* to the stereotyped coor*« of college ciucn* lion, advantages of which you have .set forth with so much ability and learning, I have not one objection to make ejeept that contained in the report I am very glad tkeJ you have availed youmell of this occasion lo recommend • course of study which may be in danger oi fajling info undue aegiect from this very movement m popular education, wfoib you have also thought fit to op* pose. Had you merely acted on the defensive instead oi also on tho offensive you would have had my beorty concuneoce and czKipezuifon. We never provoked tho attack you have made upon ua. We tgid nothing disparaging to college edu cation. Neither coyjd you fairly infer from the report that we intended lo ceded disciplinary education in tbe proposed High School, jnd make it uuwre “seminaryfor merchants, mechanics, and manufacttiiw." “till lam not on,a of those who believe that mental discipline must necessarily be •ought in those studies aioao which have no im mediate hearing on tbe duties of life. What you toy of tho menial discipline afforded by the study of language it very good. But you uoU admit yourself, J think, Ihat the same kind of discipline L afforded by tbe study of the German as of the Greek language- And as to the highest ends lo gained by (be study of the ancient language?, you have admitted that they are reached by college student* only in very rare instances, whereas l conceive that by a far less laborious course ol study, tbe student may be brought to appreciate the gems of poetry, of oratory and philosophy, coo tamed m the English and other modern languages. AJeorapendiooa treatise containing the well estab lished truths of intellectual and moral philosophy should be a text book in every high school, but unless a man is going to make metaphysics the study of his l.le. nolbrng farther should be attempt ed, tor to muster tbe subject of metaphysics, a ma- ture and well disciplined intellect must be cootenl to spend ten years m mysticism and inextricable j>erplexity. with perhaps the satisfaction ol being denounced at the end lor an inhdel. As to logic. I have a very low opioioo of the advantage gener ally derived by the students of our college# from this study. I would give more for the influence of one logical teacher than id one hundred teachers of logic.. On the value ul mathematical studies we are well enough agreed. Mathematics form the basis ol the education in the »i ibtary oradenn at West Point, winch you know has produced mds ot high cultivation aud refinemcut 1 am not surprised from th*' low view which you eutertam of the nature and importance ul ihe physical sciences that you should think they already receive a autlicirul share ol attention in our eollegas and higher schools but l am surprised that you should quote the cntnlogues in prowl id this. You say ‘d we may judge Irom the cata logues ofaggtr academies. IcniaJe seminaries and colleger. ahd from the prolineney ol onr graduates in the studies that generally compose n liberal course ol education, we should inter thul the physical science* meet with * l,< * ir d' l ** •attention.'' I thonglu von understood the trick 01 the catalogue*. It boys nod girl" col only ® rr speclable knowledge of lb»- ha" «*i»olained in the catalogue* ol' the** institution*. a» n general re« mark, they would be moch wiser than their leach era. Aod a* to the other evidence, “the proficiency of our graduates in the atudiea that genwnlly com |hm a itl>eml education" U doe» not aeFin i<> U'ai directly upon the point at issue If we look at then pruticieury in .the physical science*. 1 think w« shonld come to a very different conclusion. It one of the moat respectable colleges our country the professor ol natural philosophy i* mainly dis tinguished for hi* detraction ot glass ware, und he very commonly drops an eX|w*nmool with the aatmtactory nsauranoe to lu* claaa. *gentirmeii, although this experiment appear* not to succeed, you may rely upon it the principle is correct.' 1 know a professor of chemistry in another college which al*»> stands high tor classical studies, who complains that the greatest difficulty he encounter* •u the discharge of his duties, is when it comes to the making of oxygen gas, and he probably wntci on the oxygen page m his chemistry, htc lufat Hm oput rxt, for he is noi deficient in Latin l mention lbe«e instances to show how much more looseness prevails in scrutinizing the qualifications ol thr prolessors nt physical science*, than would be tolerated in the department ot ancient languaue* A'l regard an unreserved tranknes* the bee in ing spirit in which to conducl ilir .nrportnnl discus sion in which we ure engaged. I will tell you plainly Ute .impression which vour remark* have left on my in:ml You are well enough *al.-Aed with education ns it is. and has Immmi lor ng. v You lire afraid lest the old inoui.l in winch we and our lather* have been cost should tv* disturbed by modern innovation* You deprecate that the nc tivp researches ol lhe human mind »hon!il *nbsrri or even modify the opinion) ol the pi»t hm dare not trust men among the work* >*i Uod.lor leaf they should learn something not tevnaled m h * word You regard the body not a* the fitting ten* I'mi'iil ol the «oiil, thi* earth not a* Ibn theatre in which to put lorlh her utmost anergic*, ns a neon* •ary part of her training l>»r the ex.stenco whirl await* hrr, but this world .« the meru ••▼estihuie' to the true existence nudlhi* body i« the mem prison house m which the uulorlunile psyi he i< : ivedeinnsd to linger till m one w *v or another th« walla ol her dungeon tnnv be broken down, am the prisoner set free bm do not see tUol an an qunihcc with the laws nt the physical world i* m dtapvna&hlr ntwi i! in man » moral and rehfiou* a» to bis physical and intellectual advanerment ThM his religion n» vri II a* hi«*»ifwr .-onc« rn< have been ihe subject ol eimatani change, correc tion and devrhjpouient In-m the rudest *lsgr .1 human sivcMyy ujl 'he present lime, and iluo w< have not yet reached perfection ’lhat the tulle comprehension to winch, bv the aid ol science, w are daily arriving, ot our own nature nod the world We live in, ha* done, nml 1* dome mow than per. hnp* any thing ebe, to dispel tin- superstition w>r bigotry, the egotism and the absurdities. whuh more or less have l>ee«i mingled with int»o ■ .mpei (eel cjnroption* of'philosophy and retlgiou 1 <*ui very tar from *nying lhal such are your teal view* 1 ki.ow they arc not. hut i ttunk that u 1* the .b-o -tnn-j of yi>ur-remark*. \ou wrote for a particular cud and herein I thm!» n ive tejuslc eto Voorsell. Your parenthetical rib»erv#t -.n that the bibie 1* admitted itilheUxlord sod ir»*#evaii h'*rtrv *►** peafed to tue uncalled Ivrf. ll l*>rt unUir. The tsvok winch i» "appisedto br m every t4md\ m ' hr.« endoin. i-uDD >t be regarded us ehararfen* .» library in the »en*e m which l spoke In v> ur no nce ol rny remark* upon drawing, vou say 'hat the cultivation which the *ludv/U the ancient .’aligns gen afforJ* to ttl® miod dirter* from lliat aflorded by drawing “03 much a* laory and thought d-tler troni (he pencil and paint " Your opinions 01 drawing «nd of the physical science* very wrl: to gether The outward world is nothing but ’lum ber.'' and pmuting and drawing nothing but plum* bagn and paint. I might with equal turnes.* retort 1 that your fsvsn** dnaiei qreaAcetlhttfrtkrig more i nor less thgn Prtuler'* Ink l>> v*n tnfak thi* wonld be an effectual way of detracting Irom Uie value of classics, were I even inclined lu loke sui h a course r With classical, as well os scientific rJu< uln»n >B this cominmiitv. 1 remain. Wmr Inrii.l and (•ulleactti*. I.KMCKL STEPHENS. PENNYLVASU LEOISLATVEK, ll*&nucrn>m, April b SCUTS. Mr Bune, from tbe <>n the mil tin. reported the House bill to r«vi« the mihiia »v«iem ol thn Commonwealth sod provide far ihe (mining ol uniformed imliun, with tundry smenif tbe whole when «ome of the amendments were agreed to &« introduced by thi* committee on the militia, sod also others Tbe bill, as thus amended, Was re ported, wun several amendments sod then laid snide. Mr Johnson, from the Committee on the Judi crary. reported the Hou»c amendments to (he in nate bill supplementary to tbe art relative to tbe organization of courts ol justice, and olher objects, Arc , with additional amendments, which, on mo- Uon of Mr Johnson, were taken up lor considers tion, some ol which were concurred m and others (M>«tponed Mr Savery offered u section repealing the law under which ibe Auditor General and Purveyor Irenersl bold thnr ''dice*, whose term of ofire ei pires on the first of May next Agreed to—yea« 1 ~ nays I U. Tile bill is sliil under consideration The ijovt-mor nominated John J- Pearson ft. President Jugde ol the Twelfth Judicial Uistn.-i wh.cb wn taken up and unanimously coaiirin The Speaker presented a cominomoa.ioo (mm Dr I.' Reily, President of the board of Cammias siooerv for the erection of the .Slate Lunatio Asy lum. inviting the members of the Legislature to be present at the laying of the corner stone of that building on Saturday nexL Tbe bill relative t.< the purchase of lands ronligu ou* to the Frankfird Arsenal, by the I mind Slates Government. wa» |tn«-rd On motion <>t Mr G>«t. the g*-n* ral Appropnsi lion bill was taken up. |u-nk part, the amendments was agreed to yeas ’/J: nays 34. Mr GriUenger movrd to amend the seciiun by providing that no engineer or superintendent .(mil be appointed until it shall I* ascertained iluMhcre will be $150,000 in tbe Treasury not otherwise up propriated,'which was agreed to. Mr Myers moved to amend the bill authorizing ibe < roverpor to negotiate a loan of 910,000 for the purpose of avoiding (he Incliued Plano, by the route surveyed and recommended by W Mdnur Roberts, Engineer. After a lengthy discussion the amendment wan agreed to, yeas 45, nays 39. The appropriat'tin bill was taken up and slier discussion passed* The hill vi refaiiou lo the scrip issued by the Le high Navigation Cympany was flnully passed Rsrsors or tu« Cijolkka a i N ri. f )m >.p.— Tbo reports in tbo Western papers about cholera at New Orleans, ar*- lully enfirmed Notwith ►binding the New Orleans papers to (he 3l)lh tilt say not lung nl-cut it. we lisve ihn lullowiog in a letter Icom that city, ol the 2ihh, to the Charleston Conner “The cholera is still continuum Us ravages among u-* —the whole number ol interments in the city during the lest week, was four hundred And iwcuty one, of which twu hundred aad eighty eight were of phnlera. It is uow attacking the better classes, who.b it had gencrully spared on its Aral visitation ” The S(. I-ouis Republican of lho'3olh ultimo. M Th e steamer Jmnab Lawreucu arrived lost nigbl, wub four hundred deck passengers. She left New Urleuns on Ihe 91 si inti. On her passage tfp, ten persons died oi cholera—two deck liaods and eight emigrants. Her oiTicers report tbe disease qsite prevalent in New Orleans, and it was rumored that from filly to one hundred deaths wore occurring from it daily. ‘Two other deaths are reportedsoo the ategjo* er Jewess, on the way up—one, Mr. Lofayetlo SmurL.” The Louisville Journal, of Muaday,eaya. CapL Murtia of 'he Gen. Lafuyelle.statns that on plantations below Natchez, Urn chojcra was report ed to be raging with great fatality. The Lafayette had not a case on board.” Gut of 79 deaths in St. Louis the week ending 2Bth uiL, 91 by cholera, the majority of whom wj»e bpt recently from N. Orleans. Tbe Cholera has re»ftppeajgd at Notchitochea- The Now Orleans Bee says that in the Parisbo St. Mary there have been more than bve hundred cases of cholera and about one hundred and ibirty deaths, aince the end of December last. Horftd Harder at B*ndy Hill* Ud. It has never before been our duty to publish *o awfal an event a a occurred at Sandv Hill tn tbi* County, on Friday morning 23d ult Jatn«» Biard Bi*bop, a yonng man of high standing in *O. ciety. and of the moat respectable family connex ions, was aliot down by Rev. Thomas J. Burrows, a minister ol the Methodist Episcopal Church, sta» lioned at Chestertourn, in this Stale. The eircum 'latice*, it seems, are ns follows: Burrow*, some time during the pa*-t year, mamed at Sandy HIU, a highly respectable lady, of considerable property, named Holland, but this match was strongly up jioeed by inauv of tli<* friend* sod relative* ol the ot the lady. Among the Dumber who took a part >n this opposition, ns Burrow* supposed, was the unfortunate victim—young Bishop Subesquent t p hi* appointment to the Chesterlown circuit, and shortly after he look charge ol the same, lie wrote a lengthy and abusive article U !.e published a* an advertisement nuhi* paper, .and Jcstred the usual charge should he made lor it.) respecting l*r t»eo . Bishop, brother to the deceased, at J*audy Hill in this'artw le tie cast «nroi- grossly immodest and *innderou« reflection* U|*m the character ol the young man whom he slew. The communication referred, i> > we reinsed lo publish, not only because e knew the slat aments and inuendo* to bo untrue id malicious, winch wn*ot itselfA sufficient cause r it* rejection, hut because of hi- desiring the au- thorship lo lie kept secret, miles.* demanded lo lie known by ibe parlie* attacked. The nticle * a farm near (he village owned by his wile, and after attending to some business there, returned to the house of Captain J. M Holland. where he wn* stopping, nod WMre wn* *iioriiv after arrested, without resistance, and brought t<» Snow Hill, l'urmgtbe whole day he was perfectly nle tieart-ly. and his man* ner Imd rather the air of the bravado a I unit it. since, wp learn he bn* seemed p«*mtent He wn« mm mitteJ tcjii’i on the oath ot Mr Seiiiy. to whom, among other* he had made a confessingjf llie deed, and will be tried nt the May term "| our Coart, ii nln»* he claim* a change of irtmr.m which event, it is probable his ease wid be carried lo l>>rvhe*ter (sninty. We umlrrstniid tie has employed Hon James A Bearer of Kent County, as hi* lending counsel to defend mm —N'notc Hill • .VJ ' >7urii. Mittr* S': Tin- .New ' 'rleon* Picnytiue ol the 2ytb lilt haa ihe billowing particulars of the disasters which have befallen < '-of Weld.'* company, who had ta* km the K-» Crandc route tor Culiinniia. A brief lelegraphi-' "rejiorl lit* l*ccn already published fi-L WEBB'S CA 1.1 Ft »KNU COMPANY It .» wuh inexpressible regret Hint we learn the untoward events which have (•eialleu tins compas av A geutteman lately a member, called ou u* inst c veiong. and gave it* Hie lollowing melancholy account of recent CHsnniilir* among them oa the Rio '.made. The Company Ml New 1 ’rle«n* on the steam* •ln f, <>Uibe on lbe -lUi msi.. aii >n giawl health rn ■ lor i nhloriua. via Br izos Santiago and the lvi<> 'fraiide They arrived at that jsirt on the jftb *od on the same day prv*e«*eded up the river.— Tb- \ rein lied in «n!ri\ two days niicrwards an en camping cn.m-.J .mmrd.at*-iv opposite ('lay Hovi* ranch- >• ir v.ll *ge and I here poii'-d their tents being •in Hie Mexican territory. Thai evening ihe .-holcra hnL- "ill imma'd thorn. and inioim those utlHr-ked i.ne man J'ed The nev .foy lh*ee other., tell victims to the dis ease. \thich had «{lreud alarmnigly among the comjciFV developing itself hi Us graves! type The k'l" -wing day lour more were carried off. and lbe i , -ii-.ir m ilion among Hie surv-,vors. of whom a targe |in‘[*>rt«'n was more of leas atircted by the same morbid *\niplom* Uvaitie general. To complete the disorgaixalion ot this unforta iiate cnmpanv < -»>!. Webb, who had probably not dreamed A Hie extent to which the ravages ol the cholera were destined to go. Left the encampment the day after ita formation, and. accompanied bv a medical man and an interpreter, proceeded up the | nvrr for the alleged pur|>o*e ol purchasing mules I for the use of tin company. [. Mr. Aodabo».fh« ttestnen ageaj of the axaocist-; I lion was left m charge, and when Ihe malady be came «o grave, immediately gave orders lo break up the cnrseip-ijeui. hurrying forward those wba were *till m ficaltn nn*• vrntrrn mftnltrr* of the i‘t>mpany,oa the third Jay iii«ch.»Wn Imd dr.-*nred it*clf. rr-ttirtied to Hra /o«. where they iurt Mr i»sje H WilliaiDwn. of N«w lerwy, nod Mr. 11. MelW-ry of New \ork, twi. other mrrabcr* nt the company who had l>een detained at New < Meau*. and were then on route to rejoin their comrade* on the Rjo lirande hav ing leti this eity with store* fur the company nn last Sunday week (the I.lth inst.i The wleilr of these gentlemen, exrept Mr. Mal iory. returned tbrthwrth to thi* n'y on Utr Mine »team*hip. me * dobe, which arntuii here yester day from Bruxo* We have another painful ptere of' information from Ihe same » >nror m relation to Mr. Aaduboa. It appear- that during the prevalence of the disease, uiUi which he al*o was attacked the saddlebags tf that gentleman had, ns a measure of safety, been taken from benrath bis bed by hi* attcndaols. car ried across the near, and placed in charge of the barkeeper at the hotel in Clay Davis’s macho These bags contained SI 2,0U0 in gold. When Mr Audubon rec-laimeii hi* prosily, the barkeep er staled that it had be»in redelivered to ;i member of lit* company This being clearly nn evasion, he Wj§ arrested and threatened with summary pu.iisbment in ca*o lie did not reveal what hud become of the money Hr was steadfast, notwith standing a rifle waa placed to hi* head Haring tieen attacked with cholera, however his obsliUAcy gave nwty under the fear of approach ing death, an '• he rotif«**sed that he and another man had divided the coalrnt* of the saddlebags, indci-attng a *p.»l where a port.on of it was buried SlOUtl were thus recovered. The accomplice of the barkeeper hud ;»i*o l>cen lak'-n into custody, but his stubboraneiui was proof alike against -oho tation and menace. A loaded rifle was presented ul hi* in-ad n watch drawn forth and he was told that unlesaa be de clared whut he had done with lr* plunder at (he expiration of a given time, i.o should be put to death; he furiously lore Ins snirt U>muiji o|>eu, and bade them “tire and be d—d'" This i* the substance ul tie- 'iiftirniaUoii we have recr.ved, *1 crimes Irom an uilllieulie source, and we nwmt rtiri*•<-r intelligence uf ihc < ompany wilh evrein*-mix -iy |-->r the infurimilioii of the distnni Irieml* of Ihr parties concerned we append the Pillowed’ ],uf •’/ /*<>•' u-ho '••iiiriif.i on thr i ih>i* ytitetday —(virordus It I inv.a. .Spencer i •rahnui. Augustus f,' Uraliam Ktaineii Powell. Latiord Henson. Rob ert Ren-»dem Samuel L Li«coml>. J T Hdl. J MliMwisid, of N Y Wm. Hantson. of Cm* •-innali r'dward W Wbiitlesby, of Buffalo.— J Howard Hakcweil. 01 New Orleans, and John l/Qiuberl Tbe bodies of lhe*»- young meu were broOght . ver to the American -ide of the river and inter red at Davis's raheo 3N«w YoHK f‘*.aat.»—K*t»i-cn.>:» or Tot.ut —The Conn I Board for the pn*t w«ek*hnvn been engaged in reviling the lariS of lolls charred on property transported on tbe canals during the past year, and have concluded to tnabo several important reduc tion* on some of the leading arttcUf. which, we doubt not. wili prove alike uavuntageou* to I he in- Ic-rcsl of [lie BUdu an well as to shippers. A redac tion has been made on the lolls of 33 i per cent, on Indian per ceuL on Hlarley. < >als and Bloom Iron J,nsl year, 3 mills per 1,1)00 |«hiiul per mile was ,patd on corn and corn meal, this year they will be chargod •! mill s. Hurley, outs and bloom iron paid Inst year 4 mil]* |>er 1 QUO pound. line your 3 mills i« ,he rate established by the Board The reduction ofl mill ou corn and corn men! was agitated last year, and wa* agreed U(vr»ii. but after more mature reflection the Hoard tinnlly concluded not to make’ nny alteration in the tolls ol 1117, and they have coo*c4|uenily remained unchanged up to thi* year. —Albany .hiirnni. M'l.sns’s I.ivke Pill-lu otferm(» this inohcme to tbe publir. the propripior- ir- well swore ibai ibey have in riiraunler a In.•limy c.-ueralc] by the nounl let* imposition* which have been poJturU upon ihe public under ih* shape of paiem uiodic.iicu We are convinced however Inal it is only necessary tlieif remedy a trial to place u m public rrtintsuon far H b(iv« ail incdtcnl agents of Ihn kind ever offered lo the pdbllc H i» u»e tnventuiu of an enl.ghtoued, ex perienced and learned phy*icinn, übo for Disny years u-ed it in his own practice, when u- great success in duced lo» >o ofler It to the public at large. Fur talc si the Drug more ot fo-H ' J KIDJD 4. C.v WM. A. AVAKD, Dentist, ffStfgffiSff i’cnii street, It door* above Hand «J. Office hours from D Ull 6 \V« IS. Wrlgbt, n. D,, DcnttMi n- .I iTTi Ot Pics and residence on Fourth si., flB«uV opposite tfip I'msbnrgh B&rlk'. U{Bce ffWBHgHk imur* froirib o'clock to td AU. atuT f.UJj from it o'clock to 3 P. M. t4pJ4-ly DIED, Yesterday morning, at Bo’clock, Wiu.uw Rusinson, only son of Svillmm Payne, aged :t years uud 4 months. The blends of the fatuity tire jnviled to tliead the funeral to-dsy st 10 o'clock, from the residence t ( L. U talon, Jackson's Bow, Bokiuson street, Alleghany^ Hilda* P«rll KitenUu*. sttcnidattu.v o* THE LONDON OtafBIERLV’ REVIEW, THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, THE NORTH BRITISH REVIEW. THE WESTMINSTER REVIEW, BUAQKWOOD-S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE flMlEwlde spread fume of these tplemJid Periodical* X- render* u needle** to*ay murti in their P'»i*v A* literary organs, they stand far m uJvanca ot auv work* of a similar stftmp now published, while the pobnval complexion of each i* marked by a dignity- eaiidor, ■ml forbearance, not often found in work* ot a party character. They embrace the view* of the three great parties iu England—Tory, Whig, and Radical- Uiaekwoou add the “London Quarterly" aro-Tory, the •• Edinburgh Review" Whig; and the “Westminster ttevgiw" Rac ii'ill The '•North British it inure Ot n ir*l rious character, having been original y rditeJ bv Lit Oialinrrs, and now. since hi* death, being conducted h\ la* *on la-law. I)r Hanna, associated with Sir lhi .'id Itrewstnr p* literary character i« o' (hr very iiigtie*t order The •• Westmis*te r ," bough iepn.ue.l under that title ouly i* pubu-hed in Bnp>u'u( >iiy *ub»ert* bin* early ILsiQHUner* anil »houlii be alway* addfe»"ed, puft-uaid or franked, u> the Publisher* LEONARD SCOTT k Co. Fulton »treeu New York, Entrance in lioid *t. aplldllt M P. MOKSR, Piiubutgli. f|'HE SUBSCRIBERS baTing removed from No 170 Jl Not. 17U and 174 Liberty uroel, oiler for sale goods ■ » follows, in itore and now landing, vu -ISO bog* prirao Codee, new crop; 40 old government Java Cod V-e; ISO hhds prime New Orleans Sugar, S*o bbls Plantation Molasses; IUO -- 9t June* Sugar Hosse Molattes; HO bf cli Young Hyson Tea; ) 4u do (Junpowder and imperial Tea, I new 4u do Cbuion Powchouf’ do [ crop Tu do cany bi« V H anrf Cl’ do ) JiKi b«« white Brazil Sugar; Mi bx* white Havana do; 4b bg* Pepper, 20 do Alspioe, 100 bole* Mustard, In £ and 1 lb cant, 100 do Malaga Bunch Raisins; 30 do do do do, in la vert, SOhfbxa do do do SO qr “ do do Jo •JO c*k» Zante Currants; 10 balei Sicily Almond*; 100 t>x* Richmond Tobacco, 50 baskets Bordeaux and Marseille* Olive Oil; 300 bbls and 110 hf bbl* No 3 large Mackerel, 9 “ Honey. 1500 lbs Cheese; 2000 galls winter and spring Sperm Oil; IUU) •• bleached north weat Whale Oil, lOOU •* crude *• *• d(J 3»o,ituo Cruz and Sons Pnncipe Seg&rs: UO.OtAI Havana do •JO hf pipes Cognac Brandy, of various brands; 2 puncheons Jamaica Spirits; 1 pipes Holland Gin; •JiJ quarter cska sup TeneriiTe Wine, I" do Madeira do 'A) ilo Lisbon do 40 do Oporto do 50 do Sweet Malaga dc 15 Indian bbls do • do 15 hhds Claret; 2ti qr c»k* Haul Sauiern 40 case* sup Bordeaux Claret; 3U baskets Champagne Wine, 2 doz supr Stomach Hitlers; WO bbl* pure Rjre Whiskey, from 1 to 6 year* old *pll MILLER a. RICKET&ON r PHE SIMMER SESSION OF GREENE ACADE- L MV will commence on Tuetday, Ist day of May oii.ujuk Hn* lnautuUon i* located in CnrouchaeU, Greene coouty, Fm Student* who may wi*b to attend u du ring 'tie Summer Seaaion, are eafttreii'by Ibe tubscrt ber ibai no rdort wilt bo spared to render their con nection with ibe Inaiitouon both agreeable and profit able TERMS—For Knnliib Grammar, Geography, Arab mciir, ami Penmarump $5,00 per seaiion. For l.aio'uage*. Maihemauca, Natural Philoaopby, t. liCMiiKiry , Ac , $3,00 pier aeaaion Good board can be bad at $1,26 to 81.50 per week apt 1 :w4t*T t J LQUQHRAIN. Valuable Land for Blfaa> r T'HK *ob»cnber offers foi astodifeiHundied and 1 Acrei of LAND, of iC'J'jrtPpf H, on the Ohio tivrr, opposite Economy, Dtofjv9nd)fcaty— a por tion of which is •( ihe celebrated Eoitpnj. A larjre double frame floo*e anfF^jGttjrj(3raiH«Bahi, besides ntbrr tenement*. Also, Urel3ify--'BCraja-The Ohio it auacbrd to it; also, a tine^ftftflir^ppleOrch ard For terms, apply to R L." BAViyrtelPEiononjy, or to the subscriber on the premise* apilwTt*T JOMN'afeQty* At a very low RtVt< MA TWO story .Bnek House, on FeiieuJ »t one door above the northwest cornet oi thi North Common, Allegheny—wide bsH, parlor Oming room and kitchen on the first floor. Four rootui on 2d story, with a finished attic. Pocsrssiou to be had immediately Inquire ol spit OKU P MILTENBERGER, »7 Prom si BOARDI.IG. MRK I.EKT would rnancctAilly announce to her friends and the public, that she is now pre pared to accommodate boarders. Residence, Second sucek between Market and Wood, 3d door bora Wood street. * * Reference* exchanged aplt:d2»- HOBKY STOLEN. IP the person who euieiod a store ou Liberty street, last Momiiv, and took a Pass Book coniatntng sboat Forty DoUars in money, aud naaerous papers, valuable only to the owner, will return tbe book and papers, or send them to the Uareite office, there will be uo gaesuons asked respecting the oioncy apll.dlw DISSOLUTION. r pHE partnership heretofore existing between the X fubsent/er ano Samuel Moore sod Hiram Moore, under the name and style of S. A 1L MOO&E, ui Ro chester, Beaver county, Pa., is dissolved bjr the with draw si of the undersigned from the concern—said du>- • oluuon bearing dale trots the Sd day of Feb. 1&40 spUaMt* F. R. MOORK APHIBIBTRATOB'B NOTICE. rVnTEKS of AdmuLutraiion having beea granted j to the andereigned os tho Estate of EZtKHdL JOB, deceased, tala of Ehzabelb township, Alleghany county—persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment; aud those buying claims sfalntt said estate, will preseul them, properly au thenticated, for settlement. IRA JOB. splliwdtT Administrator BTotico to the Public. WE hereby uotu'y our friends and eorrcspondeui at home and abroad, that we will not. rxni **v ciBCCMrrAKCXS. receive freight from any Boat fi which J Newton Jonei is agent. aptl _ a RHODES A ALgORN \* r RAPPING PAPER—SOU) bundles, different s V V tea, of superior quality, which we offer Tot sa spit REYNoLM A SUEK CIAP AND I J'JrrbH PAPER—GUO ruamt fair to v> i ry tine quaiiues, for sale law. REYNOLDS 4SHKK I>RINTINU PAPER—ItX) ream*, various wte*. fu supplies kepi constantly on bands by REYNOLDS A HIKE. _ aptl corner Penu and Irwtn sis SAND PA PER—SOO reams of superior quality. ■ the different number*, which we are enabled •ell at the lowest prices spit REYNOLDS A SHKK Raisins— “o hfbx* m u Raisins; ~ IUJ qr ” do do; for safe iow to uiose conugntuem by aptl _ JAMia A HLTpmsON A Co SOA P-too bis No l Cincinnati Soap, for sale lo b> aptl JAMBS A HUTCHISON k Co CIAMPHOR— 10 bbls refined. Just rec'd and for sa /by BA FAHNESTOCK*. Co, aptl corner Ist and wood ft CIUOPER'S ISINOt.ASS—tM cases, sheet and shred, j just received and fur sale by B A FAHNESTOCK 4, Co SUGAR AND MOLASSES—S 7 bbds prune NO Si gar, 50 bbls N O Molasses, to arrive and for sal on ianding, by spit C H GRANT, 41 water tt SEO ARS-r-gOO,OOO common, for sole by aptl _C H GRANT SALF.RATUS —46 bis pure, ih store; for sale by spit ISAIAH PICKET fc Co, Front tt STONE PIPES—SUO bxt for *«l; by spit C H GRANT SAI.ARATI'IL— 10 casks Cleveland Salaratu«,ooblt Puiventcd do, received and for sale by *PU WICK A McCANDLESa BROOMS— 44 doi Corn Brooms, 50 da exic>t do rfo, for sale by spit WICIjC A McCVfoLßafe. WHITE BEANS—I« bbls superior white beans, just recs,ved and (hr sale by spit WfCK A McCANDLESS i ' 4HEEROOTS—tw bxs long Havana Cbcerools for sale by apt! \V>CK It McCANDLESS MO!' I.D CAN DUES—IOO bxt Cinni mould candles for sale by apt! WICK k McOANPLESS BACON— WO pcs hog round city cured, for sslr by apt t WJCfi Gt LASS —143 bxs hiio. 12V do 10x13 do for aale by T apll \flC% i McCANPLESS PEA RLB—4 cits pearls reed and for tale by spit WICK A McCANDLESS SCOttCHINGS—» bbls for sale by . aptl WICK A McCANDLESS LAUD OIL—IO bblsloTsafe by tpll i SCHOONMAKER a Co W HAPPING PAPKR-qli sisea—looo reams, fbr sate '-'J apU 3 SCHOONMAKBB ACo MALAGA WINE—la qr cska sweet Malaga wine, it) India bbls dry dodo, for sale low, to close cunsigotnaut, by aptl JASA HUTCHISON 4Co 14ABI Ji CLOTHS— Lmeu, bleached SJld brown, for sale. »pl« OARBITHNoV I AMD OIL—6 bbls m store aud for sale by ajflU JAMES A HUTCHISON A Co (NOTTON— ®4 bytes Cottoo, for sale by j apio JAMtM A UUTCHISQN kCo B~"aCON— SO c*k* prime lieptucky curtJ Shoulder*, juu rcc'ti oo goatlgnaieai ud for uleb’- qpiu JAMES AUUTCffIy I Bl OKS—6 ca»ii inttore and formic by * O ipTO JAMES* HyrbmSON A Co BOTTLE CORKS—67 bales qaaiL pj Q . soda Water Velvel Corlfe, Ju« iec\) ud for tale 9 A FAHNESTOCK A Co, comefluand wood ui RdaK PINK—Of ■uperiot’qnilUr, tor iale by "Pt° J SCHOON&tAKKB A Co ALUM-15 bj|| (oraaleby ■Pl<> , i BCHOONMAKB&-4 Cq IJOrASU—prime Pouuh, recs\l wd forsaie X by aylO WICK 6 M’OANDLKSS G 1 BEEN APfLES 60 bb)t roe’d a»d for sale by T aplO "VVICK A M’CANDLESS Dry APPLES-20 tk. for sale by" ®pu> wick k BrcANPLsfea DRY lll for i&lb by ... «pu> WICK A M'CANDUSa COTTON— 08 bales Cotton, for tola} by ~ scaivk a XreitosON, apB In, be! Wood and Market Hi SPIRITS TURPENTINE—IC bbts just rac'd and for sale by apv J KIDD & Co AUCTION SALES. By John D. Davit, Anetlome«r> E\gr>l Building laji and Dwelling ) I oust at On S.itnrday ntt-rnoou, the UtU io*l, at 3 o'clock, •Ail tie *o.d on tt»>- >:iftni«e* ; vi, , .Ir-ifHlite building -■ —— - • . . » :i l«. -tluilr On tl.r .W>l «idc Oi Put,..lf MJlft o «bur» J.*uin-e Nurtii ui lit- Nurih «'uuimwi>. in tne cuy ofAl ieflicny. eu.-i. lot uav,nc a troiit ol a bout 2U leet. and exienUma back ab.iut 7U 1.. ton two i>! which is creet eJ a t ikkJ two sttirv I. on, U.»-,L».. 5 i.oU'v, with book buildup; Trims -Oif .hi'»! oavh r« !«f in tout ..(Ujl Otißusl uaymrrii*. with ititcir»i Tm e i.frii-pulabir >JP ,j John u Davis, Auct I*ugr Steel of Stay/- a«d Fancy o>y Good a. tin Thursday moru.i r Apn 1 is. »t#ti yviock. ai the t'omna-reial Sale* Romm * >.'u; r oi \Yuod and Firth streets. \s ill br »OM, w|p on' r.m'rvr Aji extensive a, ->t>.lin<-n ai imr-i li find domestic -■taple a>itl lim i!n •, i i.in>..-: iHm-tt are super* tine cloili' < n-*iixn '- - "•-nr* e.-.u.-j; ncliami. dress -.am, lines, prmis, Idea. hr.! m.l > nr» •. itm-hx', «hnwU and hdkl* Ui greal van. :>. iibbn.i* hii.mh l.tone. y. coals, glow*. spool cotton -« - u me ».ia . m loi.», r her k* t ta -ble iimpcr^A.l l»n>i“rr.e« i)ui-ih'» n-' 1u • larute. Jn‘ A quantity oi \ irjmia minulauturr.l tobacco, II tea. N O inolsssi*•. wr.nm; and wruppios paper. «iaa»- ware, patent batum*es, »hovrl>, »padc», lurks, stoves, • lore tiitures, Ac A large and general asiortracnt of household and kurlicn furniture 16 bx* No l paJin soap; ‘25 do Lemons; 0 bales Span i» ii 'emf tobacco A t 7 oVlock, An extensive amt very valuable collection of Eng- Inti Hooks by catalogue apH* Istodon Hoots at Auction. Sale by catalogue ol a large and superb collection o: Kooks, tine lx>mioit editions, embracing standard authors on Afrliiicoture, Heraldry, Fine. Aft*. Natural History. Entomology, Antiquities, History. Voyage*. Travels. 4c. fcc . iflustrate.l with engravuies, many of tbrni beauliiully colored from nature, lo lake place at the Commercial Sales Rooms, corner oi Wood andsih streets, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening*. 12th. 13th and 14ih insts, at 7 o’clock. The al»ove coliceuou far surpasses any one ever of fered m this city, amongst which will be found Hume's history of England, 9 vol», folio, 100 engravings, Bow yer's edition, published at 100guinea*; the Bible. Mack- Ini's rdition, Vtx) splendid plaiea, 4 vol* folio, 120 gui nea*; Cuviers' Animal Kingdom, » vola, 800 colored engravtnr*, Ac. Ac. For further particular*, tee catalogues and booki at the Auction Rooms Kale positive. apio JOHN D DAVIS, Auct Imported Cigars, Spanish Isaf and Manufactured Tobacco, at Atietum. On Wednesday afternoon, llih mat, at 3 o'clock, at tfie Commercial Sales Room*, comer of Wood and Fifth »u, will be sold—o bales Spanish JTobacco: 8 cases fine chewing doj 6 bx* cavendish do; 13 M choice brand* Regalia, Principe and Havana Cigars. Also, 15 las fresh Lemons aptO JOHN D DAVIS, Auct Steam Engine at Auction. On Saturday morning, April- 14th, at ID o'clock, at ihe Commercial Sales Rooms, corner of Fifth and Wood *ta, will be sold— A first rate second band steam Engine, 12 inch cy linder. 4| feet stroke, 2 thirty inch boilers, each 28 feel long, fly wheel 6700 lbs. together with the machinery thereunto bclonemc. which may he examined on ap plication to Mr 'M'Clcltand, foreman of Messrs. Knap A Totten, or at J Heck's planing mill. Washington at. Terms at sale. nplii JOHN D DAVIS, Auct Administrator's Sale of Slocls. On Thursday ntormug, April 12th, at 10 at the Commercial Auction Rooms, comer of Wood and Fifth streets, will be told without reserve, by order of Thomas Davidson and Joseph Pennock, Administra tors of the estate oi A. Horbach, deceased— S shares Pittsburgh and Greensburgh Turnpike Co 133} do Conemaugh Bridge Company. meb27 JOHN D. DAVIS, Auctioneer. BlairsvUle Recorder copy and send bill to Auctioneer. AMUSEMENTS. THEATRE Leasee anflMantgsr •• C. 8. Porter. AciOio A.ID STAOX Ma.haoki w H Cbiip Third uigfat of the popular Actress, MRS. W H CRISP. [Jy- The Manager has the honor pf announcing : engareiocnt with Mr W H. Catu*, Co hll the duties Acuna and Stage Manager, and leefs asaured tfe t rangetneni will be saiisfactory to the public, and bet fieiai to the interests of the Drama. Triumphant success ef Ix>ndon Assurance, received by a bnlhaut and fashionable audience Mr W. H Crisp a* Daz* e j WshSEsoaT, Ackil 11 —ln consequence of the one quivocal success of LONDON ASSURANCF. It will be repeated this evening. Dazzle Mr W H. Crisp. Kir Hareourt Counlev Mr. Archer Chas. Courtley-• Mr Prior | Mark Meddle Dunn. Lady (Jay Spanker Mrs W. H. Crup. Grace Harkaway 'Miss Porter Dance i>y Master Wood. DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND. Copt. Seymour- Mr Pnor TomTmk- • -Mr Dunn ClmrlOttß, with a song -MiuCnust H ~r In preparation- • Hie Somnambulist, Victor Q.UADBILLB PARTY. ABoNNAFFUN K EXTRA AND LAST PARTN' • will take ptarr on Priduy. '.hr 13ih in*t. Pa rent* ot pupils arc mo»t tr-prctlully invited L> alleml. us an ciainaiation' will take place. The Polka and Polka (Quadrilles w ill b< danced by his pupils Tliose ladies \Wio recrivrd season tickeu are respectfully tu vited, aDd will be admitted with\h<‘ same A B will be happy to -appty any young ladies, (his fortxcr scho lars and their parrnts.) with tickets tor that evening.— Gentlemen s nckru tor •cholars of this season, 81.00 Par others. I^so The n gulauoa relative tv adrniiting ladies wnhot ickets, will be stnctfy observed on thotqreaißg. TWuJs will be ready on Wednesdhy. nth insh •ap-10d;h |Chronicle eopy J GREAT NATIONAL PAINTING. Panorama of the Dottle* In SSexleo. Most gorgeous pajntinu jnthecoun- TRY—View* of the ciue* of .Mexico and Veru Crux!—Thu great Pmnung. whieh hai been universal ly admired by the thousands who saw it id the East ern cities, a* the richest and most splendid in the coun try, will be exhibited at the ATHENAEUM, for a few nights only, commencing on Thursday evening, April sth lor tbe bench! of the Widows and Orphsuia of sol diers wbo tell ui Mexico, suid our disabled voluu'eer*. Tickeis of adinutsion, US cents; children accompani ed by their parents. Iree. Balcony exclpsively for co lored people. Doors open at 7 o'clock precisely An excellent band of music will perform during lh< exhibition. _ aps Cl BEAT CL HE OF LIVER COMPLAINT, by the J original, only true, and geuuiae Liver PilL Snout Oem, Ohio county, Vs.) March 26th, IMS. { Mr R. E. Sullen; Deur Sir—l think u a duty I owe to von and to the public renera iy, to state that I have been articled with the Inver Complaint tor a long time, and so'badly that an abcest formed and broke, which left me in a very low state Having heard t>l your celebrated Liver Pills being for sale Uf X R Sharp, in West Liberty, and recommended m me by my physician. Dr E. Smith. I concluded to give them n fair trial. 1 purchased one Vo*, and found them to' l>e just wtmt they are r -cuntnended, THE BEST LI VER PILL EVER USK]>, aud after taking four boxes I find the disease has entirely left me, and I KS, aavr perfectly Well. Respectfully yours. DBCgLKMAN. " «" Liberty, March ?S, im9 I certify that lam personally acquainted with Mr Coleman, and can bear lesumquv Ur the troth of the above certificate A r SHARP The genuine Liver Pill* are prepared and sold by R E SELLERS, No 57 Wood street, and by druggists m the two cities. TO THE PirBLJC —The original, oniy true and gen uine fjver Pill* are prepared by R K Seller*, and have - hi* name ttaiaped in black wu upon the ltd of each box. tnJ bu ou the ouutde wrapper—ail •fibers are couuierfeau, or baas imitation* ap,U . . H E SELLERS, Proprietor tMtt»bargh Water Worlu. PROPOSALS will be received at the office of ihe Puubatet Water Wart*, until Tue»day, I7ih in«t, u 4 o'clock, P. hi., tor furmahing WATER PIPES a* blioWl, VII 1 10 pipes, 15 inch bore, weight eaeh 1400 lbs. TO “ 1 “ “ * u 4GO All lobe can in a vertical pouuan,in dcj suadf The requisite number of brunrbes 10 be f«ruished at tho tame rste. The 15 In. pipe are reared as early as ihev can possibly be made: the others may be distributed over ibe lime bc;v,een Uns and the lsl December, if desired by the contractor. Payments to be m Bonds bearing interest, and hav ing 80 years to run. ’ Testing and delivering u> be at Qie expeaso of the contractor, aplO-dld J. 11 M*CLKLLA.N D, Bupt- THE WESTER* INBVBAKCE COMPA SY OP PITTBBUOEH. T N conformity wuh Hie “Act Incorporating the Wca- I tern Insurance Company of liie City of Pittsburgh, iTibe County of Allegheny,” approved the MOthday of i March, A D. IMb— Books will bp opened for tbe sub scription of Qie Capital S\syk of said Company, at Ue Monougabeta House, in city of Pittsburgh, on ' MONDAY, Ettday of between the bouni of lea and thy** o'clock; and continued at the > same place, apd during dw seme hours, from day to ! day,' until at leas; iwsiry-five hundred Shares shall ■ have been so Worthed. Five Dollars will be required ; to be paid on each share, atHheume of subscribing, i Dy order of the Commissioners. aps:d3w*p J AMES LIPPINCOTT, Bec»y Greenwood Garden, THIS delightful Summer Retreat is aaw eptti fos the reception of sinters. Ice Creamy frail. Nuts Confectionary, and nil tho «q4,tiwig* nature and an can produce, wiH bo •anfofl.uo.iit Uys best manner, in tbe Saloon.'-Tip TfrATaitle w\U bo sproad at G* o'clk every ev^oujj. - Contacted oa Teotpcwmoe principles, and closed on ,Suntaf- Bouquets of tbe choicest Flowers pot up at the short est notice. A large collection of the choicest variety of Green house I lams, Dahlias, and Annual Flowing flams, foj The new steamer THOa.aCOfTT wry. be ready, m a few days, to run from \ac Point ip the Garten. # P 9 .... _ _ J. McKAIN. M'_ EDVifjtTOJIS. - RS. A MISS UfLLAND respectfully laftsnn their mends and the public, tacv have procured and removed their school to a roomy unJeonvemeut house in Lacock street, second dwelling cast of Feberai st., where they prepared to take a few boarders, u well as a fiw more day scholars, and where lha• Wro*t and Har-c Nailr, and for *a>e by ; aplti HUBER » LaUFMAN, 73woodjt_ Cl REAM CHEESE—'iibXw aud Ibbl Roll Butler, J jim re j‘d not sow Lake Krtr; for sale by J U CANFIELD, «»»«••«. , jpjU between Smlthhcld and Wood CHEESE— 135 bn now landing; for Mdfi bj aptO ISAIAH DlCKKl_Jfe Q*,Jfro» t »t R T^„ LUUR “"“i l @^W^oo W "rapping PAPEss—«WO reams crown, double crown aud medium, tot »aie low by RHKV, Matthews a Co BARLEY ~4W> bush Barley, just rcc'd and fox saia hT SAW HARBAUUH, ipio A 3 water and UM.fmol »S -LEATHER-* bondtes Leather, la the rough, reeHJ aud for sale aplU 34 W HABHXUGK T.ILOUR—AIt bbis Holmes’ Family Floor, jadt J* landing and fur sale by apto -3 A-W lIARBAVOII irTKfcKN ArfL&-SrßßiJicire forming the public that they have fitted up two fim okua Canal Bouts, for the accommodation of passenger* and freight run In connection with the well known •learners CALEB COPE and BEAVER, and connect ing, at with the Pittsburgh and Cincin nati and other daily lines of sic am era down the Ohig ejid Mississippi riven. The proprietors pledge Iheur* selves lo ipuxo do sxpente or trouble to insure com fort safety and dispatch, and ask of the pabtic a share of their patronage. AUTHORIZED AUF.NTS. G M. HARTCN, ) Wrt ,, ltl _K ». AW. HaRHAUGH, jPin*bUTth R. HANNA, A Co. { N.» IJ»ha*x aytlstf J HARBAUGUA Co. jwewuaocza NOTICE—The steamerBEAVEILC. E. Clarke, maa ter, will leave arter this notice, far Wellsville panetd ally, at 9 o’clock in the morning. jeD SUnnRR ARRANQEMENTB tar 1849, MONONGAHELA ROUTE Only 7 3 SXllen Staging, Via Brownsville and Cumberland to Halnmorc Pliitadelph'u rrtHK splendid and fust running U S Mail steamers A. ATLANTIC, Capt J Parkinsou, BALTIC, Capt A Jacobs; LOUTS hTLANE, Capt E Bennett; are now making doable daily trips between PITTSBURGH AND BROWNSVILLE- The morning boat will leave the Monang*i\«» Wharf, abote ihe Btidge, daily at a ohtlock preci-selv. Passengers will take 81/PERn COACHES at Browns ville, at 3 o’clock, P. M., and the splendid ear* of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, at Cumberl-and, at*B o’clock, A. M-, and arrive in Baltimore the iame even ing, in time for the evening line to Philadelphia and Washington city. From Pittsburgh to Baltimore, only © hour*. Fore 810.00 From Pittsburgh to Philadelphia, only 40 hour* Fare t 812,00 The evening boat will leave atflo’eiock, exempt flttD* day evenings. Passenger* by thjabooi will Afrflge board in comfortable State Rooms the first WghLbaa* over the mountain* the following day in ryirtSJwKSi Coache*, end lodge the seconddiigin in Onmberiand. Pauetigers have choiee ofedlher Sl>amhoat or'Rai! Road betweeu Baltimore isd-PhibdeJphU, and the privilege of stopping at Curaber.uujd aud Baltimore, and resuming ibeu seats at pteksure. Coaches char tered to parties to travel as thdy piesse. We make up ihe load* and way hill* for the Coach es in the Pittsburgh offices* (iu order to save time on arrivtug er Brownsville*)ti it therefore important for passengers to get thev tickets before. going on .board of the boat, ai our office, Monongahcia Uouia, Water street, or 8l Charlr» Hotel. Wood st, PiuabaTvh J. MESKIfIIEN, Agent Pltuhargh * LeulivUls FOR CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE k. The splendid new steamer IPr i iiJf TELEGRAPH No. l, IfegJgaMß Haslcp, master, will leave foe aflora intermediate ports on Sun day, at 1U o’clock a. to. For freight or passage anplv on boar.Vbr to IJURBRrDGE A Co. apfi GEO B hULTKNPKBfiPP PITTSBURGH AND LOUIBVTLLE PACKET UNR • /Wf»* |a The new sad splendid fast passers- IbSSsSm prrt rKLEcnAI'HNo.-J, master, will leave for Cineio nati and LouUvOfo on Thursday, the sth inat- at 10 o’clock, A. W- Forfreight orpasaareapply oaooanl » BURBRLDGkT Co, oT^ GEO BMILTKNBESGEB. l>oulrviiie tad Bt. Lonia Packet Line. 1840. 1840. REGULAR TUESDAY PACKITT FOR ST. LOUIS jfcpß*- f. Tbo Hue (ii« lunnmr utusewre - atfamet ATLANTIS, aJßaagggßK Geo. W. Wlcka, mailer, will le«rv ■(■■■•■■■Sfor the above aiul Intermediate dim evety-Jfcesday, at 10 o'clock, x. u. Fortnight or puitze nnply ou board, or to E. v TUo 6lie fut running passenger steamer uEN. LANK, *2222£jlfiji_A. McPherson. master. will leave for nod intermediate ports eve • nr BBinidaT, at 10 o’clock, r. «. For freight or pawnee apply on hoard, or 10 E. C. KING, No 153 Com. Row, warS-dQta LooUviUe FOR NASHVILLE. . AQgMa K The splendid fast nmomr gteaser m riiniinr geneva, master, will leave for the above and intermediate ports oa Fri day, the 13th inst. at lOdrlock. For freight or passage apply on board, or to apC _ J W BUTLER A PRO, A genu FOR ST. LOUIS AND MISSOURI RIVHpf _rmim~ li_ The splendid pasmenrer packet i taglioni, IBrtCaSgßfc Cola*, master, will leave for the above intermediate ports on this day, the ltth lust. at 4 o’clock, r. n. For freight or passugc apply on board, or to apli PETTIGREW A Co, Agu. FOR BT. LOUIS. igwan* K The splendid fast running s leaser JCTIa SILAS WRIGHT, O'Neal, master, will (Are for the ■BBBESHBabove and intermediate purls oa this day, the lltfe, at 10 o’clock, A. M. For freight or passage apply on hoard, oa to _ __ PETTIGREW A Co. Alta FOR CINCINNATI! ' k The splendid steamer Calhoun, master, will Wre tor above mtermediate portion Wednead>v 11 th nisi, at 10 o’s lock, **. „ vveonwaay For freight or passage apply on board, or to - *?f l J PETTIORKAT a Co, Arts FOR ST LOUIS. [v *w steamer ..Jf 1 * 1 ' or P tt ”W® ■PPjT °Q brard or to CLO B BjI.T^S BKH6XR Agt TOR ZANERVn.I.t: ■n..^ja gs «K. l Boyd, naitei. will icava Cot die mbove uueßßeauus pom tkis ixj, at* „ ... o’clock,* k., positively, ror freight or passage apply on boanL apio REGCUA.H ZAJS’ESVILLE PACKET. K The fine tuamer {JL_ „ JENNY LYND, C Galloper, toaster, wIU nou a rer weekly paeiet barreen Ptns bUE{h ami ZaoesYtlle—leave* Pmsbnigfc •tery Tues day. For freight apply to . BAKER A FORSYTE, Arts, JfoilWtetst \ ualleuu otanxea. rjiHE subscribe™ having built a tonac* for the tnan- JL ufactnre of Malleable Caalings, tn prepared 10 nil orders in this branch, u veil u eamißop/Ujtbi etstinfs of over; bind. We are aljolhc original tnaa- of an improved Grate bar, to tho advents gk* of which we refer steamboat men to tba captains and engineers of ike following beats: Monoagahela. i New England No. a, Brilliant, Lake Erie. Bant io’ KJNGSLuIND i 9COXT, Bandasky a • Robinson and Lacock, ats, Allegluuiy aplOa»w_ ’ QOLDf OQLmi OOLDiil GQ£j»tnr THK subscriber, wholesale manaftcuirer or ipw ELRY, inrjte* whole**]© dealers and oedlar* ir» aiog Sooth and West—also, eotnOrr a calf and examine his atock ©fJowrlrT which ESft* i!* sold at the lowest prices fo» »*S « * ** c.a.ijn.o. m owro at oaaa% . OWING 10 (hf> m, April fl, t£l» of v?,™^SSSS^ES“ i 0” ‘•V,**- u ftitfk , ,9“’* Une—HAYS A BLACK .. Briftf® ff U,O T Wtt BINUHAW. w Pi e i*p”, U B r r e T. JNa M’FADEN A Co. Kius. Port. BC LIuo—TAAFPE A O'CONNOR. ■plO t •« HKWAOD. JL aktrea celebrated article, ike Sf5J & “?T !M ' l "» N«w Oriewl! S?'•‘"•el Jaac H OlidtetifCKWine Neamith, S r *kip. whick ikay arc prepared ta mU at tka •r'Weai, for culior approved bill* nurfcet ' t '‘“" mi ’. I ttTHEE. N. B.—They wiU neuv* ICO Liberty si meat (tU Philadelphia) r \?,. X - ®<«ub another thip w«id *^ r 8l > p Globe, and •pa