TIErEHTSBURGIU . GMTE. ruousuFs• av watrEld co • rimmivattnooTh -41 MONDAY Mori:NI:NG, MAY 14; 1819. ' 471annorossis orteantorui regaratoi 4.0 laud in .Leq favors before:Sr:sr,snd a.c.early Lathe day as practicable.'f Advenisemecos not Inverted !for a spool lied rhos invariably be charged untilloolerad .out PLECIADBI.I.IIIA ..14013.111 'A11114.11.19/014 Advertlsements end subscriptions tq the Minh ,I.ets lean andAllstlted States Gazette, ybSenelpnity received annforarazded from this °Gee. - p"Tlre Prrthistnean Dons 131ZIMS Is Pub h• • Ditty, frn-Weekly, and Weed - p.-41th Dolly is Slice. Dollars per annum, therTri•Weekly is Fly Dell= aaanmi the Weekly is Two Dollars per enneen, , istassies. See - Emit. pax. Cur Telegraphle Sette r Por Local alattsta aim next. page. UST= Box.—The "Gar= i Later .r.ktr,,9 ita2l been removed from its old situation,,a window nearer the Post Mice. 1311.T12011Z MID OEIO RAIL Rosneign -cense quence of the late publications. in the Bahnoara papers, in relation to the roam of the Beldame Rail Road to thy Ohio river, a meeting of thesDi rectors took place last WedneSday, and a report Warkanthotited to be published, is which the an nounisement is made, that the Board have decidep to go to Wheeling, through Yughilie, and that this declakm is inviersible -The line from Cumber" land to Fairmount, on the Monongahela river, will all be under contract in a few days, and be prose cuted With all the energy and means in Wei pew et of the company. It is useless, thereforM to ex pect that the Baltimore company wilt change its route: Their road will, no doubt,be built through Virginia to Wheeling, and from Wheeling to Co Innelias, and will thus become the direct rival of our... Eastern and Western roads. Of what vast im portant?, is it not, then, to Pittsburgh, that our road should be pushed ahead, with all the expedi tion possible. To do this, there Must be' more shicklisken by the property holderi; and "cap4l - Of Pittsburgh. As prudent men, rue careful for their own interests, they should:subseribe Libe inity. They will be richer or poorer, prosperous or declining, just as they eneourage and Urge 09 OUT Western road. It is not n mete question of an increase alone, but of increase or hrlB. We meat make this road to keep out . ..present trade, and the present value of our property. ! Without this, it is certainly and surely Lit. It is become a subject of stern secerstrjr, and not of mere expedi ency. Already has. a poitiob of our travel left us, and taken the mate, by rail mad, i nertias Ohio to Lake Erie, and when the ENtimoro,road ed on the South, and the Erie mad on the North, unless our Western road is finished,. weeliall be a dull, Wollner; spot, in the Midst bf the immense commotion of active business on [ Very. kirk of us. Bat is there not stock enough subscribed to nail the road? says one. r Yes, there is, but not enough to finish itiand there is no ire of - beg - inning unless we Intend to finish It will take one million eV dollaramore to finish the road, the most of Which ought to be, and must be, taken is Pittsburgh_ and linablergli is able to take it, if she will. We want this road tiniehed in two years. We wan , to / hear the whistle of the locomotive from the heart ] of Ohio, and from Philadelphia, whits Baltimore Is atilt cooped up in the mountains. Thisis the way to I anion towards ..4.l;te. various roads.now projected la l that state, and thus secure our permanent prosper. . By. To do this, wis most have the stock taken, and and hope our wealtlryand enterprising men will step forward and double and triple theit mibscriptiona. They need not fear that men of more moderate means will be behind. Our capltalude and prop. arty holders moat lead in this matter—it is then! duty, their privilege, their interest to do co, and any who hold back are bat chart sighted of their own interests, and regardless of the interests of the community in which they bre. - Patocalrrron.--Ourrneighbor. of the Gazette is vary much amused at our remark that "Dernanarr hold Praraipcion rs be unjust andl.eril." Then is no doubt.that they should hold such a sentiment, and we judge from the data we fuinished a few daye eire, that they de• — ••P'eurY• • The "data" our neighbor furpishbd ih . been pronounced all wrong, on g00d,.. aritiotyl That the Democratic party of Pennsylihusirarythes hold the sentiment aeon - bed !iia tt hithriOercury, we prove by the Wowing olttlibri, "aired by Ms Democrat* Stare Caureartan, Litd at Earrirburg, Marra 4, 1847. eßmalvta—That THE REM OVAL . from the verbose drums at Washingtourof EVERT 'OP PONENT OF THE NATIONAL ADMINIS , MATION, or of the Democritjc prbaciples and measures, has long been maid for, and is alike rtermusdal by the voice of the Ikthoxnaio party and the bars interests of the country, and ought not to be longer postponed or delayed." , Here a Democratic State Convention, held two years ago, declares in solemn . council assembled , that the Proscription of. every Whig in Washings toewas "ilematided by the VOICE of the Demo- erorseparty." As it is well kiown that there was scarcely a Whig in office wheri this resolution win passed, Gym Passamaquoddy 4ay to the Gulf of Mexico, except a few clerks in 'Washington, whose services the Administration einnid hardly do with out, and the' voice of the Democratic party de manded the removal of these,i end we think have clearly proven the assertion or the Mercury, that "Democrats bold ProseriptiatL to be 110p1S1 and evil," to be unwne in' fact, having no foundation either in the expressed and • siutliorised opinions, or in the practice of that party'. ' But if, by any possibility mir neighlid may be unconvinced by the tiboveglohnloo,of - ha error, the following, we think, wil49iffect his conversion, and he wfileclmowledge . thiit his misstatement of the opinions of his Dedwcratie triends was quite en marked us his mhsrepicsentatloo of the Whigs— The resolutions which follow, - were Owned by the Democratic State cortuentionj held et Harrisburg, Much 4, 184°: . . "Resolved, That in our opine:in aDemocretic Ad ministration, the Senate and Bowie of Reprinitia tattles of the U ailed States shintitliamoya surround itself with its political frictula, and as. the 'Official stations of the country are tote iregaided ten as "spoils," but as grave wawa of influence and pow er, Or which the holders areresporteihie to Mello* pie, they should invariably be placed in the hands t r.. of the party who atexesportsible,for their exe ' ise, and, for that and odder obvious reason, the. nags of TAnnocratsc AdininUirations Amid , . d:e., tribunal to Dernrxrati slant- . r., • flywheel, That wi) would res p ectfully eat the attention 'of President 'Polk sod the he_adi