The Pittsburgh daily gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1847-1851, June 11, 1849, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TUE PITTSBURGH GAZETTE,
BBBLIBHED BY WHITE &,C0
PITTSBURG Hi
MONDAY MORNING, TUNE 11, 1840
DsMPrrrornraali Dltt.T GAStrrlt IT published
-Weekly, and Weekly.-The Dolly a Eleven
Dalian POT annum; the Trl-Weekly Is nee Dollars per
annum; the Weekly Is Toro Dollar* per orlesly
sideman,
Mr . A11171116.8 are earneialy requested to hand in
Aar, favor. before sr. a., sad a. early lathe day ar
man cable. advertisenent. not insetted for a aped
will invariably be charged minion:Jared not
AD , lA • 0 , • • •
6Nieniscments and subscriptions to the North Amer.
lean Out United Stems Gmettr. Philadelphia. received
am& forseurtled from tam attire.
Sao Mort page for Telagraphic Sawa.
Vor Local Platters aro next Page.
ASTEKAISONIC ANA Wll/0 TICKET
4.
ROD?. C. WALKER, f Eia.obeth 13orougL
JOHN MILLER, of up‘burgh
CALEB LEE, of Pit burgh.
W . M. ESPY, of Lowi,r St. Clary
mi4mr,
CARTEECURTIS, f Pittilwrsh
IIIoT4OXOTAIy,
OEO S. RAYS, of pyu St Clary
1 - 6.1011331,
JOHN MORRISON! of Al'oghetly
SAS 5/ITCHY-LC.: of Peetitin
COBOXIL
WM. M. ARTIII;IiS. of Pitiolitiqh
♦COtSCC
JOHN BYERS, of Findlay.
The following is the cholera specific recently
announced by Drs. Blaney Sr Herrick, eminent
physicians of Chicago, es an important discovery
in the ouzo of cholera. We notice that .011.
the Chicago and Miiwaukie papers are dirt:rasing
the merits of the discovery, some for End some
64;11h:tat it. They say it has already performer
wonders there.
Cholera Specific —Oue part of pulvertred cher
coal to four pads of sulphur. One dose of four
grains uniformity checks premonitory symptoms.
such as pain, Might diarrhma, e. The same dose
repeated every three or four hour., emetiorate,,
the patient's condition at once, and when used, in
a kw hours entirely dissipates cholera symptoms.
limey be proper to slate, by the way, that a re
spectable gentleman of this city tnforms us, that,
having been afflicted with alert( Dewitt:ea for sev
eral weeks, for which be had tried Opium, Mor
phine, and all the approved remedies, without
Met" on seeing the notice of Dr. Bud's discov
ery in the Gazette, he tried the sulphur and char
coal, and one done cored him completely.
Dr. Charles A Stevens, of }Milo, publishes n
card in the Republic, in which he claims for hit
%seam of practice. (liarniepathyj the discovery
claimed by the Chicago M. of carbon and-sul
phur as a cure for cholera.
OUR BOOK TABLE
Plituvrik and it. Romaine with RD account of
nail to the Chaldean Christians of Kurdistan
and the Goanho, or Devil Worshippers; and an
Inquiry into the manners and nets of the Ancient
Ahsvrtana. By Austen Henry Layard, Esq , D
C. L, an MO volumes. New York (3eo.P. Put
nam."
Seldom has our table been more highly graced
titan by these splendid octavo volume ,got op in the
tea style of American art. Although it 1, but s
law yearn since Lapsed was heard of—in ISt 0—
yet he has since, by his researches and amount
ing cit,ovenes, gained a hone as wide as a ven•
oration for antigu,:y, and a lore of troth in religion
and literature has extended. In these licatittfui
volumes we have a Fratory• of his travels, labors,
end discoveries—of his intercourse with the no
tives,of his atrangc adventuresend of his wonderiu
skill in manngtog the wild and excitable children
&the desert. The narrative," says the cettbra•
ted Rev. E. Robinson, D. D, author of -Radice'
Reientrehes in Palestine," 'is liken romance. to
its incidents and descriptions itt toei indeed rt. ,
mind, one community, of an Arabian tale of won
ders and genii " The moat interesting feature r:
the work, however. to the wonderful discovsnei
made by the anther. "The work of Mr. Layard,"
sayi Dr. Robinson, 'brings before us, atilt another
step of progress. Here we have to a., not with
hoary ruins that have borne the brain of centu
ries in the presence of the world, but With a reser.
rection of the monuments themselves. It is the
disentombingeftemp!e palaces front the rept:Ochre
of ages; the recovery of the metropolis of a pow
extol naton from the long night of oblivion. N.n
each, the great city, "of three days' journey," that
"was laid waste, and there was none to bemoan
her," whose greaterm sank when that. of Rome
had jam begun to rise, now stands forth again tc
testify to her own Splendor, and to the eisnlisation
tad power and magnificence of the Assyrian Em
pire. This may be said, thus far, to he the crown
ing historical discovery• of the nineteenth century
Mr. Pam= has conferred a greed favor on tin
American public, by giving us these volumes it
such a beauttful form. The nnmerons tlluatra•
Lions are are in the best styles of lithographing anc
wood engraving, and the work is printed on fine
white paper, and with large clear type.
'•The Crayon Alisrallany. By Wanbingion Irving
Author's revised edition. Complete in one vol
ume. New York . Geo. P. Putnam."
These celebrated papers, from the elegant and
fascinating pen of oar admired connuyman, art
well known. They consist of "a that on the prai
ries,' "Abbotsford' and 'Newatead Abbey.' Mr
Pubiam is publishing the entire works of Mr. It.
wing, in a series of volumes of unilorm size, and
binding, of which this volume is the ninth.
The-above works are for sale by Mr. James D.
Lockwood, No. G 3, Wood et. Mr. Lockwood war
for many years connected wall Messrs. Wiley 3:
Putnam, and late John Wiley, in New York and
London, and offers the public a rare selection of
choice works of most elegant editions.
° The literary World, a Journal of American and
Foreign Literature, Science and Arts." Thi, work
is published weekly. It is a miscellaneous journal
• of all matters of interest, connected with Books,
Music, Palming*, Reports of Science, 6. - e. One
its chief feataresof interest to o. literary man, is as ,
advertisement of new books, American and Eng
lish. Published by F. A. do G. L Duyelchick, New
Ydrk. J. D. Lockwood, 83 Wood at, is the agent.
s The ,PhrtigA, the .10701, and the Anvil, for June.
has just arrived. We have leaked over its pages
with pleasure and profit, and we should rejoice if
every former and manufacturer in the land, could
bare the privilege of reading Its ample pages
monthly. And why could they net , Could any
money be better spent than in acquiring an large ■
flied of useful information. This number brings to
a close the fast volume, and we learn from the re
marks of the publisher, that he has received only
sufficient support to pay the expenses of publics.
lb*. But ho intends to persevere, and we hope
he will receive a liberal support. Published by U.
a Skinner, Philadelphia. J. 11. Weldin. agent,
Pittsburgh.
• PHONE WASHINGTON.
•
Correspondence of the Plusburgh Gazette.
Aniaricani And 8 Navigation Law.
Concladed
Wesautrrois, lime G, 1849.
I proceed to continue and death the remarks I
haie commenced in the Gazette upon the propo,
eed repeal of the British Navigation Laws, and
the true policy ol the United States in tetatence to
that important measure.
The general system of Navigation Laws of
England was eitablished in 1650, under rho aus
picea of Cromwell and other republican chiefs,
and the chief objects of the policy were to promote
seamanship and the growth of the naval power in
England, and to strike a blow at the maritime
strength of the Colonies, partici:dirty
whirl was still attached to the Stuart cause, and
was growing and thriving upon the. active trade
with the other Colonies in the West Indies—
Twenty years afterwards, under ,Citarles Second,
these natrictivc laws were made much more
stringent, and were so shaped as more effectually
to weaken sad depress the maritime and rout.
menial power of the Netherlands, against which
these laws were, among other purposes, primarily
directed. The two great principels of the aystem
were, the entire monopoly of the commerce be
tween England and her dependencies, and as
near a monopoly as could, in the nature of things,
be possibly secured of the trade between her and
all Other countries of the world. is now the
fashion to decry this policy, and te depreciate the
efficacy of the means employed frr enforcing tt.—
But after looking over, with some care, the histo
ry of Britiah.,,Naviipetion, during the intervening
period, I am perfectly
. satiefied that the policy woe
*arise one, and that llinaNaarigalion Law's of Eng
/and vete well adapietfie'lize accomplishment of
the end proposed.
-Among the. lire proceedings of rite Congress at
the United States, was the eamiiiliguneat of the
American System of Navigation, upon the same
basis aubatantially as that ofEngland, confining
the coasting trade wholly to American vessels,
gal limiting the direct natio between the United
Stain and any other country, Id the vessels of the
,United States and that country, auo laying err
min onerous discriminating duties on all foreign
vessels, no matter 'whence they came, an as ts te
nor all other 'teazel& That Ruch a system was
not unsoiled to our condition, and not unfavorable
to the deve!operneat of our eapatnlities as a man•
time power, is sufficiently attested by the fact
that in 1913, twenty-fire years after the passage
of the act, we possessed 631,29 f Wsa mgig"'"l '
and 513,633 tons of ones' led shipping, showing
nn
aggregate of 1,369,127 toes. even then, before
the nation had fairly emerge) from its infancy. and
just after we bad suffered the losses of a horrass
ing three years' war, and at the close of a period
during which two of the moat powerful naval
countries of the world appeared leagued for the
destruction of our attuning interests., we had attain
ed the rank of the second maritime power in the
world.
Still, our statesmen were able to perceive that
liberality in commercial intercourse, as well as in
the principles of government, was the true policy
of the United States, and it was proposed to Great
Britain to abolish nll countervailing and alincrim.-
eating duties of tonnage, and put duties on the
ships of each other, and accordingly, by the com
mercial convention of 1515, each country agreed
to relax the rigor of its Navigation Laws in fa
vor of each other, so far as the direct trade be.
tween them was concerned. But this conven
lion dad not admit American ships to a share in
the colonial trade of (heat Britain, and we did
not pommel any colonies. The British Govern.
meat persiated in the refusal to concede to us
any participation in the trade wuh the colonies
in the West Indies,and North America. In ISIS,
for the purpose of compelling that Government
to ailptst the question, which bad been raised in
reference to that trade, Congress passed an act
totally prohibiting intercourse, either direct or in ,
direct, between those Colonies and the United
States, and in 1523, pearled a still more !strin
gent act. During all this time, and to the end
of Mr. Adams administration, negotiation was
going On between the two governments, which
was at length settled in 1930, by the passage of
en act of Congress authorising the President to
take oil die restrictions upon British vessels trio
ding between these Colonies and the foiled
States, whenever the Home Government should
admit Amerman vessels in the tiorts of those
Colonies on the same footing. as to the direct
trade between them and the railed States, as
British vessels. Greet Britain accepted the
and thus t hat question was settled.
From 1818 to 1935, we made "reeiproctty trea
ties" with nearly all the maritime countries D.
the world, except France, ou terms net essen
holly different born those of the Convention wtti
England, in 1815.
During the thirty-five years which have sue.
peeled this first departureStiom the strictness nt
one exclusive Navigation Laws, during which
period they have been, in many important re
spects, almh.hed, our tonnage has increased front
1,385,000 tons to 3,15-1,000 loos. The registered
tonnage, that part of the whole which is employ.
ed in the foreign Trade. has increased from e50,-
000 toss to / ,3 , 50,00 U 40/38. CO.IIOU, 10 stood
next to Crest. Dream as a maritime power, and
we bid fair, in the course of lea: than another
generation, to pass, and to Mr outstrip her, in
the moo ter commercial supremacy. li-r tote
nage now exceeds ours only about six hundred
thousand tons, or less than twenty per cent
We cannot tell what wated have :re u:
position, bad at great a liberty of trade cawed
betweer. the rept
proposed 'by Great I I I not that:: t
would have been ntalextally . lLlTerent. England
on, found that reStrICIIVe trltMillreo Ifjortes
the maritime growth of puck countries as I , le
United State, Sweden nod Derinark...:.d r.ne
offers to enter into tree competition with
them. It we accept her offer, Bnti•h ships w
carry' Sonthorn cotton, tobacco. and nce, from
our ports to all other parts of the world, and the
poncleione grains, provisions, lire stock, and Wil
ber, of MO North, not only to England, bat to
all other countries of the world, sod will be free
to enter into pertectly equal competition with
American et-ascii ,Importinz, into the United States
the mapufactures of Europe, the produce of the
West ladies and South America; palm oil. ivory.
and gold dur,t from Africa, and teas and Wlla
from China. la short, with thinexecptias of the
coasting trade, there will be no sort of discrimi
nation, in anyipart of the United States, between
a British and an American ship, and rice verse,
as near as we can now understand the import
of the pending repeal hill in the British Parini.
meat, the only difference between an American
and a British ship, in a British port, will be, that
the former will not be privileged to engage in
the coasting trade of the totted Kingdom. Up
on the whole, if Great Entail/ means to admit us
to an equality with British ships in the trade be
tween her whole empire and the rest of the
world, and between her home dominions. and
her colonial possessions, and between each of
these colonies end all the others; and if she de
mands no share in our coasting trade consider
ag total exclusion from tact as balanced by a aim
liar exclusion from the coasting trade of her home
dominions, then I think our navigating interests
will be promoted by closing with hoc promptly.
Our coasting trade and our whale fishery can
not be affected by the arrangement, and together.
these employ 1,954,000 tea•, or nearly two-thirds
of elf oar atiippMg. And ofthe foreign trade, strict
ly so called, employing 1,170000 tons, much of it
,onsiats of the direct trade to England, in which
there la already an equal competition, end the
rest we have uncured, and I thick shall be able
to I.l2lllllinin by our native shill and energy. So
that we can hardly lose say thing worth mention
ing by the conceasion, and MUM gam immensely
by a free admis•ion to the now prohibited trade to
and between the wide spread dominions of the
British mu tau.
WAIIHIMOTON, Juno 0(0, 1049
Cholera' Cholera every where' at the dinner ta
ble, in the parlour. and the chamber; in bar rooms,
and at the street corners, we have cholera, and
nothing else: Cholera in all Its varieties, and with
all its adjective& Cholera asphyxia, cholera nim
bus. western cholera, cholera infantum, Asiatic
cholera, and last of cholera Virginians. The chol
era IS not a thing to jest upon or to lye laughed at;
vet every boll appear to be laughing at the panic
of the Valuate Legislature, which maned through
here last evening, running away from the cholera.
Yes, the cholera came to Richmond, and the Leg
stature of the old dominion, t'varnmed the ranch,'
to yeah metaphisically in truly undignified style.
The Richmond Wing professes to rejoice that
they are gone, and in fort did advise theta, while
debating from day to day the propriety of the step,
to run away with all speed, rather than to remain
exhausting their talents in spreading an uonecces
',try alarm among the enigmas of the Capital. Ac
cordingly, they did adjourn on Idouday, by trn or
twelve majority, to the Faumner Spring& This
trugratton reminds us of the scenes which might
be expected here during the soionrn of Congress in
an alarm 01 pestilence.
It m ay be proper to state, that 01, e u t the mem
bers was taken with the ap...lome of cholera, while
paying through [lns city, and now lies ill at one of
our public houses, and we have a report of a
death from the &scene lias afternoon in a house
not far removed from that in. which Ires.de. To
confess the truth, there tea great deal of alarm,
whether well founded or not.
We have no important terns of a pollt.csi o h s ,.
ac•.er. I 'relieve it has been determined to recall
Mr. Hopkins, oar representative at the Court a
Lisbon, end to appoint Mr. Clay, the Pon of the
great statesmen, in his place. In reference to the
Spanish mission, I hardly think that any thing more
has been decided than that it shall be given to
some prominent citizen of North Carolina, but
whether the successful competitor shall be Mr.
Stanley, or Gov. Graluun, or Mr. Barringer, de
pends upon proceedings still pending. Mr. Barrin
gee i s still h ere , and I think has the influence of
Senator Truman Smith, to back him. Senator
'Badger is:understood to be favorable to the claims
of Gov. Graham.
Col. Webb has gone home, as is believed, after
a definitive assurance that the President...ld not
appoint him to any mission. and it in feared by
some, that the Colonel is in a very bad humour,
and that in the heat of disappointment he may turn
the bitterness alas formidable press. against the
!alley of the administration. An article in yestrz
day's Couner upon CoL &Mb., ,is pointed to, as
nn indication of this revulsion of sentiment- There
can be no doubt that the press which Col. Webb
controls is a powerful one, and that be possesses
the ability to Inflict great itoury as well as to yield
egoomat support.
Every thitg Is going on smoothly here. A few
petty dissatisfsetthos exisa,lt is true,and they always
most mho Whom themes dims to be &MOO,
and where there are more reppbeanta than placer, California and New Meaux, are now free from
Ina all such feehtpwill soon pass away. slavery both by law end by fact; and will or ever
Ido not net that the accession of Mr. Burton to Tomato free from it, Tooth b y biw and in fact. A'
the 1 - nion, has much strengthened The num. Lo a gbeneral pro pos i t i on
batif u i " t nece
is p d i wry v: ou g ht on.
bar for this morning rr.vents a rare farrago of fee- provision, having no practical effect whatever.
bl,romp,arts'spleen..tnple,Totzaili.enani;riiiizurpe
r atr i :s . t n it i bet c w a een t t io n r o th th and
heretofore, "proscription." Among other things
and ..a the part of the south an issue made
for de
it contains, in a letter from the fames. "B. F. ! feat, for Delaware has instructed for it; and that
Brown, of Ohio," who last year spent several ensures a majority ,n the Senate for the proviso,
sod oiootioooor , jog,
who con- there beingalre ti :dy , a . ln ru rg d oza f j o o r ri ii ty in the Wine
pared Gen. Taylor to Ike devil offering kingdoms But PL.7 t in s tronger reason to claim forbear.
and tannted his friends with having no offices to once. This proviso is the last card in Calhoun
confer or refuse, and who, finally, having meanly hand' his last stake is the alippet7 Some which he
I sought In hold on to ha airline after the inaugnra.
hol been
no Ta i, k an el ,t iaatcard from him
rand Ns
l ktcy—and x h c3on""nki Olion°f the very man he n° ionoleoty denommed. barrp he must be drvent
was last week turned neck and heels' out or office. take the act. Be will have;to haul down his sign—
HI. note is addressed to Gen. Taylor, and is chars
' sc el° h7du h le i' o ° f 2117 — eife 'h e ' : n " n P d irtr d ad g e 7 nal
seterinlen ll 9 impudent nail empty. He WO , beautiful schedul, it will be.
beautiful specimen of that species of the pectins t‘Myttpintons. - They are wanted. Heretofore
democrat called Lot:et.° .n office, and in doing the public acts of public men, have mood f.tr their
I opt moor: it has been only the new man, unknown
his best to sustain the character when not by their act., that have been subjected to political
I
The conflict between Col. Benton and the pow' catechism. Thirty years almost, I have been to the
ors of Hunkerism la Missouri, is watched hero Senate; and during that time hove always been a
voter, and notes a speaker on this subjeet of slave
with intense earneatnesS. The Coloaei's Kral coM
ry; and commenced with it in my own State. I was
plaint, addressed to his private friends here, was, ppooy b rn out of a stave agitation-not of the
that the old standard democratic press was in the hi/aspen restriction controversy,artO have acted an
hands of hi. enemies. It now seems that the open part on it from the time it began to the pre,-
day. My wntimpt had some influence on the
Hanker Editor of that concern has run away, and
formation cut
the COnStillatiOn of this Stale. They
that Lis place will Le filled by a Barnborner, and were pretty well known inen,rhough forgotten now
of course a friend of Cot. Benton's. The Hunker They contributed to keen off restriction, and to in
organ in New York city, the True Sun, has also
Pen
n t hee'a rU urged ed th
the e "
''ll'tellect for the sanchoo
of slaver y '.
putting it in the contour
collapsed, and the party is without an exponent Lion for the purpose or siring security to
there. Let but the Albany Argus and the Wash- i peoperty.and preventing agitation. I wasted peace
ington Union follow PUlt, as they 'lost, in good I
from the qtien lit home,
Land mmtribeted to pr.,.
vide for lt, by coniributlngput that clause. in Mr
time, and then we shalt have heard the last of an
I constitution and new n is hard that we should have
multi sang. itrxtut , an agitation imported, or transported upon us. tn
barrass tin about slavery, when we hove taken
such care to beep out agttation. My votes in Con
green have been consistent with my conduct at
home-non inlet . ..enc., no nattation--secunty to
property-sod tranquillity to the people.
In thirty years I hove not given n vote that has
been complained of I have voted thirty years.
avoiding all extremes, and giving satisfaction. The
old generation, and the generation that has been
horn during that time, ought to consider thin, so
far as to let it nand as the evidence of my opin
ion. But it will not do. Finding nothing in the
past to condemn, some people must go into Gaunt
ry, to we if any thing can be found there' nod
even into my bosom.to see if any thing is hid there,
which can be condemned. Very good' they shall
know my opinions. And first, they may see them
ia my pubiio ants-in my proposals for the mien.-
Mon of Texas five years ago, in which I proposed
to limit the wes'ern extension of slavery by lone.--
todinal line, I believe the lhildth degree of west!
longitude-in my next vote upon the Oregon btll
in which I opposed the Introduelsdi atm,
aere-anol, again in illy letter hi the pectle of fire.
gon in which I declare myself to be nn propsfran
: dint of slavery. These were public riels. But you
want pi thh e deciarsi4ons of personal sentiment•
very good you shall have thew.My personal
sentiments then, are agtainlit the InatitutMn of sla
very, and against Its intros:Melton Loki 'dares
Then it does notexiat If there was no slavery
in Mtssonn to day, i should oppose its corning in
there wan none in the United .totes, I shoold
I oppose its coming into the l 'oiled States, as there
x none in new Is:lex,, ur California I ant against
sending it to those territories, and could not vote
for berth n rden•ore-a declaration which roots me
' DUI little, the whole dispute now being about the
abstract right 0 carrying Isla.. there, Without the ,
elem. of the rigid. No one n.k. for the exer
['lse of the right, rind cannot oak :I in the face tit
thr dogma which denies the power to cra, i t -
itates do as the plea, These tat, my prier ,
pies, and they reduce the difference Leta- sea Mr.
• Calm:tun end myself to the difference between re
tumng and not asking_ And for this the I nion is
to be ettliverird . bib' metaphysics! ;althea! meta
physic.' far Leader suck to the sic , .: ant busosess
Of amending the Constitution by putting three
t+tntes and a fitter together
If env one waste. to Loom st , '' - .pi A , it.: 'a'y
e " Za r'-
'; coil '
ahem In Tor Cars cdunn of Itlaek
stone s comtnctitanso, append, to the se , 1 , •
volume where l inissosed I .r•y otr year ag
wben a student al is and Incm herd lost to Mr,
et er siner. all but the rethedy. and Inc d di .i..s•
of Ilint :sone .1 toe vv.!, ,:-0.1 ~ - c ry. and
on sit the scrumps:Ws against ore set t,l relic
putting it upon another. and a slsstitat 0. pr . -
ple, espectalty wlole they are lithos their implois
Ina hands agninut .1
" ISM. is:. t,torsonat Mkpoitition I have to sot
that icy precession and -ontlii,-oo unultnist Ihnm
wtili frail iininaritty-do not scree. I wets i.•
the inheritance of slaves. i.cd have neve t rtbeen
without them. I have bought sonie, butcol) ot,
the, own entreaty, and t e Ines:, Uore execu
tion sales ; have sold som e but cot,' tor 'wise, c-
doer. I bait had two t :ken limn me by Ihe
, titionists, laid he.er insulted after them: and
ibgrated a thing, ,Sso Wonid r.-t go WllO 11.111.
bane educes now m Kentucky, Woo were elevate,:
11 i e &gill,' of real rotate. by being remove.
from Miriam'. to Kentucky, and will have I,
descend next tall to Inc low degree of a Odd:r.
Interest in Spite tit toe laws of Kentucky, when !
shall remove them back to Mtssouri. Anil i hove
staves in WasitufflOn C - re-perhaps the Col,
mend - , of Con.rreitsx ti:a: has any there-4.31.: am
;tot the:er.t.t a.said that Congress will pa-s any
law to orlect this property caner micro or herr .
I have mode no slave speech" in Congress,
and do not menn to make them. Properly sa
timid; and slave penreety oh lye al' It not
right to thaturb the quustude of the owner-to him
roes him with groundless apprchenstons. It Is a
t private Wrong to disturb a sine le to di v -dun' he
• making him I.eliesre, Unlock,. that its property is
insecure httrontes a public sr,: dt.turb a
whole c oamunity. It eremite! a general once.-
I new, generates antmostites, deranges Itu••nt -,
I and oven leads to hasty and improvident legoda
hon. I have seen or danger to the slave prorserly
of nay State in this Croon by the actlon of Con
; prem., and cannot contribute to more. the country
by engaging In dIIICII,II/000 which assert or Inapt,
! Hui I have atoll higher re•sat, tor not-ino o,
these discussions We a republ:e-t he Item: so
;hot form of government- ars
an dnure a great r sionp •
to struggllng
and agoinzed world Al, the 7i ,
ofl,llo States of xtparusin engin .n spare of Ito dilleme-,
religion. language. coulees, e1...MA.11a, 010140 tl
! our examples Europe ow •ceinputis to imitate it
Licerty is now t i n e crag in ..nment Empires, a d Oct
votaries are looking to to , tor the exerriplifienumi o:
the Merging. of which she is search. nod for an ,
i aliment iu favor ot lien effor is, what do they see
wrongloas mid stria, and bluer deuunesamuns 001
threats 0/ menorah. They se• guurel bout s . a irs'
very! t.s th em n strange and Incomprehe ..bie cnse
of s i uorrel ney ace slavery sod disunion coupled
in one eternal eerie They see us al or in a state
01. isorgartiroonn legislation pormyred-di•tan: ter
roortes left without 00Ve11.10•111-1.,U11. viu;ener, out
, sage oa 'he nom. Congresis-stssunion threst..d
The, hearts arc ordled at this sad spectacle. their
enemies imoice ut 0, and he every mail sli p dm:
ssem nor shores the repress...llv., or dm crowned
al Euro,. send !cloth the r of oar debates
.0
-times :he enrimes. end Ir , c ecord
.f.. the Inends
of ['team:: Fla..re a:, par• of Its!, -even it , % pa.
pal Awes; ad parts of lierranny-evert i.n and
..,
eioomy of Austr a, all, all are struggling fr
, liberty, and turning anxious looks to us tor aid 'mud
succor, not by •rms. for that they lincEs he tomes.,
ile but fht the moral aid of a grand example They
look in rain Onr eaampte agasnat them and it the
present struggle tot tinerty shall again /Inseam 10
EUrorre, we may lake to ourselves. a Ist. share of the
Insane One called the model Republic by our friends,'
we are nob so railed in derision by our me• nod the
.flovery thseursiono and slissenEons mixed as ire
proof. of fire impracticable fetal of government whs.
wo have adopted I cannot mime in on. m. 0.-
sions, 110 f do anyth,ng to depress Inc cause of stool
sling freedom Isotope Nor can I dispar
age 111 C work, or abuse the gin of our unrest... Ne
ye. has there appeared upon earth a body rat me, woo
I, a rt•her inhertiatiee, or a nob rr eretni , r •ti thstr
posterity 1 1l "dont, Inc-dee y decorum,
dtgrut, snorter.... perverted their work, and
enarsetenged al/ toes. ..ondo.i. Tbey 4etol..rteil a
revolutron nth the order of on old esooldithed govern
ment; they founded a new government with the ,
dona of sages, they administered it in their day wlth
temper.. and rudgmeht. They left us the admin..
non ..1 the envy of .lie found. 0( freedom throughout
the wend And err We, them posterny. in the World
generation., spoil tit. rich :500t...c0-moo th:s no.
too work-dm-rad. gradtex.siple-ona .nrow Ins
weight of the repot.° agsmst the oleo, or repabli.
erotism 111 Ms, dead, struggles I c•nnot do it.-
Taught to ad., the founders of our 4olernment in
my Carly youth I rr . ....ranee them on-le. taught to valise
lls• it work net,, I worship it how, a senator our thwty
I /var., I minor! degrade it e :senate I.y engrigin, to
slavery ansi ti,sun.uti 1,11,11,10110. I,o</1,10 111111i1 Be
anie is my pra.ser. sc.sl dthes comiot be dor, I silence
myself.
MR. BEI4TON'S GREAT SPEECH.
The concluston of thu formidable document ban
at length arrived, and happily we bid he bums up,
in the concluding paragraphs the substance of his
whole argument, and states hie opinion on slavery
n very clear and compact form There para
graphs we shall copy, and our renders will find
them replete.with interest
The reader will recollect that his speech is a
reply to certain resolutions at instruction on the
subject of slavery, plotted by the Legislature of
Masouri, last winter. Mr. Benton appeals from
these iiisuuctisus to the people, and he launches
all his batteries of argument, historical documents,
and sarcasm, at the bend of Mr. Calhoun, who, he
saps, is the author of the doctrines contained in
With these prerntratory remarks in mind, the
reader will understand more luny the meaning of
Mr. 13eaton, in the fe.lowing elersing paragraphs of
his speech.—
b l consider my proposttion — the one with which
I commenced my speech—now mode gent, name- .
lv, that the resriuthins of the General Assembly rsembly
Wrath I complain, are copied front those of Mr
l'ainoon—that to understand their design, you
must understand his design — and that. Irons the
worths of his own resolution, and from his conduct
the twenty years part. the subversion of the Union
is intended. In the execution of this design I can
not he an instrument, nor can I believe that the
prople. or the ma. of the General Assembly wish
it, and I deem d right to have a full understanding
with toy ...tomcats On the whole matter.
I, there...ire, rppestdrom Ihe inatructinos I have
reeci ved,..cau• a they are us roultict wino matron
bons already received and obeyed—because they
the not emanate from any known desire. or under
stood will at the people — because tney contain mi.
run smut tonal expositions ol the constitution, which
i om sworn to support—because they require or
1.. promote .I.llllnon—becauee they pledge the
State to co-operata with tuber States in eventual
war—because they Fae copied from resole
dried the peat ncarnietl which I tine r.
r got to oppos. and hid 0p..... Lt. itir piece of
oator the t'enaie 01 toe United Stoles. and
Inch I tsar hid ceosc opp,lng walii.ut i.ersonal
dLsgrarr and torn of pubi, duly,
and bri•au. I think it due to the people to tt.se
then, an opportunity to consider of pr ceedings so
Kravele atiml.ne them. and an winch they have
I appeal the people—the whole body of the
people. it ts n queem.4l above erty; and should
be I.ert about I ran to keep ..
And now - 1
have a secret to te!;. to relation to
these resolutions, which I have guarded long
Gcosh. 1 marked their nest app-carat rr to the
eneral Assembly, knew their origin and design,
Ind d , term:nrd hi let them gooll.II .0 happens
that there ere a tew cdissns sin this Start hoeres
sorts to other; w 1..; bier passed away, and Who are
demanninaled in the ACCOrtiac resOtntma• ar;uneta
to Mr. Calhoun. The tivnoth.nutiosi is appropriate.
Alljunct,(Enalltsal is,root ad and ItiVal 1 .1 (Latin)
and signiSetruhrd which this set of caratns
teem. to be, both sock sad bed). with :aspect to
their southern leader. There few are in a stale of
permanent conspiracy hg oust me, ell sr on the.,
own account, or that tit their ' lead", In•nd at
rho South.' or both, and hatch a perpetual facets
-1,011 of pints again , t me. 1 o a. , no rurther bark, I
refer to lhe stintmed 01 Intl, and lee Inc ;to Me
Texas annelnliOn tpictnen wt.,. I i the
Jews harp plot. it rnanaleranon of the mw e. wlnt,
Was to be then inEde apron that 4,trutr ent, and to
discriminate it nem others Thor plo showed its
head, but hid itEetf iff di - wards. It faed. and Lis
contrivers went back into tuc•r ~Eyetilk. stale of
incubation.
When the Calhoun re•otutions were meted to lea
General Aswrably. and that wa• at the commence•
went of the •va.iion, I,nair that a new plot was
hatching, and deternyued to let it quit the shed
I knew that if I gave a !Ant in what they were
abotn—if I had commtinicated Th. tithe of what I
have aid to you to dtiy, it would have %tipped
the proceeding 1:u: would have cone we no
good. It would only into post e onod. and chang
ed the form of the work. t I determined to let it go
on. and to do nothing to 'alarm the operators; and
or that reartin wrote Oat a word—not a word on
the subject—to any one of the hundred members
who would have blown the resolutions sky high if
they had lnoarn their origin and design. I did not
even answer a letter from me friend w•ho sits there,
.I.;:enh (toy. Pr.ce,i The resolutions were lutro-
driced of the very beginning of the session they
lay airpid until its end. The plotters were wait.
I mg far the signal from the ulevling fr.end
—wan
mg the Calhoun address. The moment they got
U. they acted, although it was too late for the res.
°haloes. to have the effect of instructions.. They
were passed after Congress had adjourned. and
after it must have been believed that the subject
to whoch they related bad been disposed of, it, it
was notorious that the territorial governmeet bills
were in process of enactment, end in tact they one
ly jailed alter mitWeld on 14 lot night of the nes.
con, and that on disagreement Let4reeo ta., two
Houses: and their failure. on the 71•1 of March, was
not known of Jefferson on the 7th—the day of
passing the resolutions. It was too late to pass the
resolutions Awthe purpose of instructing me how
vote at Washington. It was too late for that ; but
Was early enough for the summer campaign at
home; and, tnerefore, they were panned' and now
I have them. I mean the plotters; and between
them, and me, henceforth and forever, a high wall
and a deep ditch • and no communion, no com
promise no caucus with:giberm. Nor does it re
quire any boldness, on my part, to give them de
dance. There,tro only about a dozen of them—a
baker's dozen, perhaps—and half of them outside
of the Legislature. Woe to judges, if any such
there am in tio,t - cork The children of Israel
could not stand the goverum,c: of
. edges nor
can we. • •
Citizens! I have finished the view which I pro
posed to take of the subject which has induced my
appeal to the people: but there ere other matters
upon which my constituents desire to hear from
me, and in which desire it is right they should be
gratified.
"Barnburner". And what did 1 gar to New
York tor, last summer, but to use my utmost ex
ertions to prevent Mr. Ven Buren and his friends
front engeging in the Buffalo convention , I went
there, that in certain. My public speeches show
that I went for that object, and the newspapers
in the interest of those called Bernburn•re, ail as
sailed me tor so doing. not with billingsgate, and
an black guards, but with keen reproaches for
coming out of my State, contrary to the practice
of my life, to interfere in the politics of another
state, and that aganori those who had always been
me f r i e nds. My answer was, that I came to use
the privileges of an old friend—to give my opti
on that the separate: °meals:lima contemplated
was wrong ,r/ principle, and would I. injurious to
those engaged in it; and, what was more, 11.jsrl.
Ott. to tne great party to which they belonged.
Such weuthe object of my visit to Now York, and
such my recept on. The event disappointed my
hopes and expectation.; and I had my trouble
for my pains, and n v•vvil deal of newspaper cur.
&mention into the bargain. All tors was public
and notorious,publiehed in all the newspapers, and
known to every body. There Is not a men in
Missouri that doe, not know it. And now, what
are we to think of the language applied to mel--
, Why, that It le a moat excellent titans for me. It
show, the character cf the plotters, and that they
will nullify and falsify public, recorded history to
villify me.
“The Wilmot Proviso." Well' I think it in the
Jefferson proviso—the same that Mr. Jeffermon
drew up for the north western territory in 1784
which was adopted in the congress of the con
federation of 1797, with the unanimous voice of
the slave holding States—was ratified by the Vir
ginia General Assembly the 30th of December.
I.7sB'—which was applied by the Congress of 1820
to all the upper half of Louisiana—which wee
aoohed by the Congress of 1915 to the Oregon
Territory—which was recommended for the new
Territories by the Missouri General Assembly,
February 15, 1817--and never attempted to be
condemned until Friday t a day of omen) the 19th
of February, 1547 musttour dayaafier the date of
the Missouri recommendation,--when Mr. Cal
houn brought to bis resolutions declaring it un
constitutional, insulting to the States. and sub
vented to the Union. I think Mr. Jefferson, and
not Davy Wilmot, was the author of this provno,
and thgt n should bear his name, and not Davy's.
With igiapect to the character of the proviso, if it
should- 4 1m prescribed by Congress Lor say new
.Terriiory, I think It will remain just what it has
been for sixty years—a constitutional provision,
made in pursuance to the constitution; and that,
being so made, It is binding upon all law abiding
citizens, and that its resistance by farce and azmi
militarily, would be treason against the Unified
Sates, and punishable by death under the laws of
the 1100" With respect to the expediency or Me
fact, theft is no necessity for ii, and there aze
pro:Amnia AMOS* wily Is should MI be passed.
VERY LATE FROM RIO JANEIRO
quick. Triol.:Dlsturbuz to• — l;lth A merl
Tot bubo., I.uhelu Haynie. AI New lork truths
elutes thew It, Junetto 0, Apt il 25 She inude the
passage out from New York end buck, taking in
cargo at Poo. .n 7. , days and lel hours—wnich i.
believed Lo be Inc shortest .royage ever nccam.
phoned.
She brings intelligence of the arrival at RIo of
17 Cadforma bound American emetic, iroll2 2181
to 24thAcrd—including barque John Potter,
Watts, Iron, Baltimore, arrived April 23d, and
bargee Kirkland, Phillips, from Balihnure, arrived
21st. The Kirkland sailed again on
and I! others h“d also sailed.
On the 72nd of Aprt, un her oi,tward paseage ,
the Isabelita exchanged wallah. od Cape Frto wan
the C. tl. !Potently Lexington, bound to New Yoflr,
it was repotted et Rio Janeiro, that she had on
board 5350,000.
The Tribune tranplaies from Rio papers the fol.
lowing aeamot of a serious affray at Santa Cathe
rine, south of RI", between a number of Amer,.
cans and some natives:
•Eight American vessels, on their way to Cali
fornia with from 700 to WO passenger?, on board
have touched here. On Sunday, thel&h, anon,
ber althorn, while on shore, committed some dia.
orders. The natives, who had shown hostility to
ward them from the day of their landing, colleeted
In groups, armed themselves and attacked the di•
orderly characters. These also took arms, a fight
then occurred, In which one Amencan was kinal
and four severely wounded, as wall as about the
same number of natives.
• • • • ••_.• • • ••
"The disorder bad hardly commepced, when the
President ordered out the whole police fume, the
Infantry and the National Guard. Pursued with bps
the Americana took refuge it a hotel, and there
continued to light. The armed force surrounded
Oa hotel, which next day careen Jered at the com
mand of dm apthaFfues.
The examination which was held ten:dowel
without being able to rove upon say one Innl he
wiginnted the aorder, nor_ that, on both aniesouty
onekful don. inan 4•144 61ra,s itt the
Provisional Assembly them is morn declamation
against the President, scanning him of having Te
lma violent and illegal means against the Ameri
cans. Happily, quiet has returned; the sty has
become tranquil, and the Americans have again
gone en board."
Rio 111surrs, April 24—Buster. has been I m
i•ed since our last. Flour—Arrived 3,302 bhls,
Ga- 111, 6 9 , 3 , 74 0 Hezall. 2160 New Orleans, 7r , e
Southern. Bales, inclusive of 1,000 btila for re
export. acount 4,200 bbls. principally in stood lots
at our quotations, which. however. cannot's): of- '
tamed for a .cargo, and the market is vers dot.
stock 111 first hands,: 32,000 bbla-, shipped coast
wise, 2.200 do re-expotied, 410 do., stock iu seas
on.) hands, estimated at 26,000 do. linins.—Arri
ved 1.293 Amencan. Sale*, the bulk of the Opor
to at 3708375, and In 340 in oil, 4,225 American
nt 400 ra, and at 16012000 re. for ordinary
Laril—Arrived, 400 keg*, prior to which were
sold 150 keys at 160 rs, at bond, for re export. 400
kegs at 100 rs. per lb. Lead—Sold 30 rolls •hcot
at 10 per p;1 Mess Beef and Pork—A roved,
hhals Anterioan pork, 40 beef Sold 139 li l i.s beef
at 21,,1 1 .00 each pork at 431140_ Tobacco—Arr
ved. 23 Idles. 172 boxes. Vinegar—Arrived 1 r
piper. Sold, 40 pipes at 55 :fif6.5.1 Wax—Arrt
ved, 6.250 Ihs. Sold, 15,000 lbs. American a t
000 rs. Gdiee—Better accounts, both from En--
ror, and the Valved Slates, have lead to more ni -
t;vity. the sales having amounted to 50,000 lines.
Paces, in consequence of inquiry, and a hunted
stock at market. having further advanced—Wash
ed per 3 10(204 .200, supertor, 3 , 4 000 1 3. 200, 14
good '' 90083 000 first ordinary 2.700203 'on
Freights—The number of disposable vessels in
tort has become much reduced, and the market s
firmer. Tim latest charier* were nt shill ego
for Antwerp 371. Hamburg's 371642 t, Untied
States 40830 e.
TEM E LC r rut 0 Vfllr LOW AT NEW ‘Jli •
LE,S.—The New Orleans Bee et the 29th nit,
nityr cpealung of the numerous inconveni
ence, etpeneaced by the earn,
earlX 10 conweuetwe of the overflow, continues
` . Thi.i water for the last week has been steadily
though slowly using, and in ire progress has :non.
dmt the yards of most or the residents in the hark
port of the city, lying in many of them to the
depth of a foot or 19 inches There is little mos
lion in the sluggish mass and it soon becomes
stagnant,',its surface mantled with slime and filth,
enanting a noisome and disgusting odor. The all
penetrating power of the element has enabled it
to forue its way into the cfnaer, and these recepta
cles have, in same instances, hursted and scatter
ed their infections contents in all directions. while
in others the Water beCOrnea thoroughly impreg
nated with feculent matter. and sends forth a hor
rible stench.
In the meaowtole the yards be,ng submerged
and the water gradutdiy encroaching upon the
.nter.or of the dwellings, all domestic employment
is either suspended or very .raperfectly performed
Cooklng can hardly lie got through w.th, ac well
In consequence of Inundated kitchens, na on nc
roam of the extreme thlticulty of proem-nig wood.
It .6 absolutely dangerous, too, for },1,111,11 to
move about the yards, ocletut their limbs are pro
tected by caoutchnue overalls, mace nrsirm. rep
tdes abound and VEllOlllOu., •nak es are I ne p t . ally
seen irlancin p tinnng the seater,
That such a (southern su bags he emi
nently pernim Itis to health neetla no ebb rate
argument to rove. The atmosphere ...mutate!),
charged w.th inotsture. the hut rays of the tsun
a:L.lg upon the riecaytng vegetation which en
must. the water, In the aul.rneeged
be prottfie of peatilentlnl malaria The v.:e wham
wh.en avrati me umstele and wiedh pruned front
the enures adverted to abutr, must aid it genera-
ting an alin:lol.llPre nlicwihrr ,n-ornpattb!e with
heaithy extatenee."
The Bulletin entertains an entire., ildierent
opinson in regard to the .011itenee whieli the over
flow ..hely to evert upon the general health
ter rip. Ihe quit°, say trim nu apprenettsions
are ICII by thit c.tozena on that sul,ect. each
111.titOl'it where previous overflows have Lac!,
place the honsons that plowed have been
Oft,ti
rinly lit was. continues the Ito:iun that
the ponut
nil a wh.. rr.tcht tie vireo ft, , the
sutimerged district into be fiber ',m .n ons iha
g ht.
fr ii be euttutiai.y cruwded it grtt
e- • more or less dise, particnier!y as
sdair dews of cholera were still ase lincering among
as hut thus ler nothing of the kind has Occurred.
ind :ruin inqwry among our phasic:an, We trot
I.o.urdb.e ',ports as to ills cellars] Ilea th Cl
From lio4;on we tearh that !no Jury in the et . oe
.1.1,01 n ! coneptr nu In IL, I,a.t r
DICKEY CO. Fro, it
•!..e Frankhn. ter den n vet:. gO.! ,y or
Tne.day. The rata Oar been or. tr a! •, weeks
S riA-S1 oJA L.1r1,N10,1 AT Area-4c II leara, —A
fever oree.ved lets toore:ng fro.. A I,lxehoux!u, ert,
DICKEY 4, Co
dule.Litlee aap;— . l.l,t our mod u, aLoau •
—rt I,f ,:s n• 'rot, •-!:‘
to 0,!,a, t!, ot,„lnrr to V.1L.111, L •
exploded her 'ere, loduos and Av. ti,hg x rem. &
.... _
person'. The boot is a tarot wreck
Irisimprovements to Dentl•try.
.1 SI s. 14 , ,, , :0n,
,•• wtoo , oo•
•rbo. upos ~ or .Conn.
r ,Jr•s ne es v.', \Si , ss,err,, te, sr
so, Tro.lco, xe lo y
or • Foet ri , . • .00
um to— !'.arms • /
Par.,,, Ive VC • -Prepared ,y IIV 'y
Widiarn N oi:d for salehv A N..
o rourta *tree. founol a oeheb:fu. e
'OO rn:
o: Oeverare Ls: nunlima, aandpail.eolar.y iur
Bl r1I'l• Peo-s• —An tarov,l eltnec.;mte
11.JA.1,.ng a omf
f'or nt.• .• .. •
11.,h',• nx
u !Of va rre•pt.,•l..,
Alv•• and tor la,. ,r) JAVNI:`, u. ,n • 1 , ,n.
fre ' , ore.. No 7 . 0 1. - norln ••
W. M. Wright, DI. D., Dentlot,
irlr: rr,pdrn, I ,
nppoc:tr the I . ,lll , t.urg'l ne, 0:1,r
e rn ., orock 1 - .1 ANI
rnn rror I: In M. •.1,14-!y
Plre an S Maria, losuranc•.--Tirc Pm,
..tp
errd 1-0.1 entianur• mutt, tipoa every Jr.
scrip:to. of proa-r, at Lk, iowea rairr
Urricv- No - el rset •Ircet
SA 11 El. C. .%11.1 s
m)5 .51m
Haert“
JOB PRINTING.
RILL BEADS, CARDS, CI RCCLA
1 r
R.
Loa' .g, Cont-oar, lani,
4ND ,
ournE. dc , I
prxes, an ISt
(..zzrri; lens, "nu RD
DR. W. IL DA K E
VhIO3III ST tr DENT! •
oi w Vori. )
Innna—Srnonnnn strret. br;wren Scacrah and
St...wherry ntlry
Ti H•tise e 4 of the mouth, gk,mn tooth tr..tod
iium.zopath,ea.nely pl 9 dim
Theatre.— % cal. —Mr ClO...ford i. 134 the pious
by
nt me to not frirra. end tho ptti,l,d that
h.a Ilenrfd aid takr place on Monday, June Ilth. on
wtorlt nernkJon wni he prodnred me met , .dramn3e.
roanor to 'I net., rnittled ••Tux Ilx•kr ott MinLoxm. 1
••• - to whk,;r the wnroe rtorhirth or the company Wliil, - 31,01-Nos 1.3 and 3 Mackerel; No 1 Salerno, No
appear role holowrd hy the Fox Hllnt-r• Joe by 1.7 I <had and Herring. :JO bone. I.uhee aCa1....1 Her.
a ) own; ',oilcan To wairb i, 11l be added the nr•Y rlog. tOr saw by 'oh ID WILLIA MS.
drana• or the - riteak klat , taa, and the whole to - ..___
roor ludo with the gopumr tater nt" the .31aomek • (1A l',-5., t•ten 0., .t c'd and foi aule by
link ah.rt now open nlJ3l2t , ~ .-4 1. Fi IN A TER al AN,
, j,..; 31 Water and .33 Front at
VIED, 1 )AC , PN.-- Me la. Baron, Shoultlera, , fttdea and
(t., ...Vida, evening, the Itl.h at .a' Cholera, !dr. 1) 1i...,,. (or rule 11 jail .1. 8 WAIt.R3IAN
MA.V "...h ' ".''' °""n P (thm''" the " 1 " >'... I 'll.l R-131/ Idda •upettor a fine Flour ree'd and
of mr age
. . _ .... L
~
_ “1: bale by J. 4 .3 I. S WATER Sla t ',
liar Mends, and Coo, ot Inv iaindy are raspeci.„ity ,
, .1(1 Dra, Grain Cra.ll.s. and a few do, Hay Hakes.
ii.atic-il to atiand it., fu octal, this 11/or:wig, iLt it Id. m
, o , ro 00,. m,
..., 0 bv
clock front her ilia re•idetirr, on Wi sac atm,. acar t 1,.. L S WATERNIAN
- -
Wittd-na, .
. WISII-1,1 ... it , 1 bis targe No Nliutkerel, Boston uti2p't.
- - -- -- -- 1 - ,
DR. GEORGE 3IeCOOK. a, - fresh trimmed Shad, No I,
ita '' Darting, to arrrie /thtl for vale try
( .)E.'2:ll,l::.nemenutspri'cbd 1 7: 1' ; , le n r ' m a a r r r . ' ;1 ' 1 ' .; ',: r, '" im U iri ' vd t • o a , te "' ioa L 9 WATERN. Aa:
0,-i.. in NI: Ilakeuiel,,, He may be .ou 'Si at aitht D RIED egAcitr.s-17 LA/ rec'd this day al ... for
.21 No N. i-: 112•rea [logs. Jall•dd,n
' 3, •‘-a hY iatl TASSEY ik 11F. 4 T
~ ,,, : 0 1 . 01 1, ,c , r , .r ot t , g p s k l , . .r a c i .12 , 2 n 5 , . , •1:- . 8.5it , .. ,, '0 , , i-1...qal clear Sides, ree'd ,r :!: .,L td , f:) . : • s t a,c u b iLT
II L e l :i n t i o N s G' arciT .." o:s‘l so lo "
cot Ly ;all JANII:4 DA LZEI.I.• Water •t '
111111.05, It -111 Legs tied, s No I a raw TI,
oliarco' TWA' IARN-3 tks to ..tort and for sale try 4 :
••::, TASSFY A BErr
lab , , p-r ntinr Homburg :sad for saic ti,
LAIIDOIL--10 bbls Lard Oil. landing from strainer
~,,,
a 1331 F-3 DALSIiiLL
New England No t. W S ReONVII O. Co 's branitl
TAISINPi:CTINti ,r , i.crioN 01. cit LoniDE so. ! „nd f. , ...a1e low in dale consignment 11
Lt DA.-II fleCOlnno.e. :he tiros or percent pm, ' 'O9 J AMEN DA LZEI,L, ar, at
p., al all t . he
&t ease.. It removes the flange, ' „....,„. . .... . ~.
Gas rilluria of rick roman, Ise Ily na cleansing c.d., ( I, ' , r'ti ,--, Lake i- tt . I , tore an.l to, foil.: Ly
relieve. liter, and litiertept• 2.1. r,,a-0,,,,,„ 2 .1 0 , .../ Jo , .
"AN.IP-t1 DALZP.I.I.
ae,
b aler iii torso or 3 ntr.ais Ac iu't ~,, i. - ..... , t'NtiltlliiB-_;NI tbs Ca•sits, 3WI chests Tea, Su li,s
sad for stale bi Ins- UI. 41 , f F.3r. f; , ~, ,
- - -""--". •-; • 1"...-11.1 1.../ Afthrticii, It Is,. Chocolate; IS'' lii. [lndigo, land•
--- • , ii., rosin: and for "de by
.1 ) Ht , ita . ty . il ,. i:lr ii '-----
1.. J AMES DA LZELL
C . ...ar,,,,,,,,
ti si Park Pre..,, 1,.,,, ~. Irani • . ail,- ; •lis Wool, Ido Fratlicrn, tenth.: ,um
N.,ratc ,i 1,,.• tai C,,:ialba, L I's. lc Nil...i.i. and (or sale hr
11'
lames 1'... -, lci t;Pric Aelfl,
J . .'IP-S DIL7 PLI.
-- -__ •. . .
Casoilde Sod... Phlorte tither.
Dr. WlckeVe Celebrated
111trael Illi.ou 0.. EltrUel Qt,„c.,..
Clifq,2ll4 AND DLIKRIHEI 11E1111'1,4ES.
.1,1,01 and fur si. , 1.. II i:8E1.1.V.R6,
ai . Wow( •I Tilt'. pub!, Pre reya"..led to read the to.iowtat ver•
I.y I n ....al, Tao( Metlfeof• li elle°, Vely I,ed In
( )"; — .. — .'l's''''' ' '''''''"' ''''''"`;'l.,';',"','..°,. ,or .n:, —..... ~,,—.....0 E.,...,„ ~.._,
'a!, taat Dr Lola. , ii,. of York. Pa.
kJ(/ , BEEN CILA Pt: AND CAA PE Lli+E-W It NlLii- . too k ..„ 0 - ; 2 2 2, rota apt( fnaaagenuf f!, oft (a al o o f ; ly e
?HT 113.1 1,11.11 . au'lt.P o ' . w a. , o 'ed 12 , ii ... i 4 ii,l , or 11.i•ti .i your, Ina a iat2s,.i.g u..der a
(.. alleff of,' nape 1....--amoag the fatter areen said ~... ~ .1., of "Milk, CLulath . l 101 l tr.:lna,
other desirat, •• .....,,, Ai... skin,. pins, and bloc oo y • ...: iinticat" nod found hien to i.a ~, she c., ..
Susi nil 1% at:, Pin
,tt. pill ia 2 ., i ..t.,,d tit itiiii ill•ease, Willi thew...land copio.s I
1 ' N , HaiNSAIII.I.: PLANNI: , ..S-W It. tdrarat t''''' '' 3 - ' ''', -r h.rigea• That we PrOttoaiiec 1 ,, t c 3 ae
L' . 0 ,,t •c , . , ~ j an ,i bur." to , sia assortntent " t g''''''‘'' Cholera, 33, 4 -dc , irtd ioorao , er tna. we
of strove o7 - , mr o aolt - .rid.. 12, ug io, gem...a doslitin' ' ''''''''''''. it, con sl P an '''..... ' 3 ) .03 ' the hope o t s ited'
to I la 23, we thought the ',uncut wou.il the
able arueld
Cause am: Petstan Flunac!. o; •urierior r le . , . 3 d ',' det•dred at the U. ,
A.. -. ,
__ , _... o _
~
~,,
~,,..0,, ~.a, 5.d., ~,,,,,,, 11, : further certify that the stun Ida.. 11 iclsey par- •
„,.... Y ,: i tt . ,, ' ,,..“,, a ,..." 0 ' r. ' 00 `,',' . ., , 0 , 00 . 0. voari.. and
~,,, %odd
. lits own mode of
bull
W treatmdct, kW/ adnunisteret, ai.
Las sta. _ . holt ra Itratii iy, aid eirceted a ',a 31 ute patient.
. . e ..kh 1 , 1 four s.r:;:to -caller the said 0000.5 Mall
VE ATRERS-1, •k. Pri me resth•ra ~.:. lending ' •• at ri, w.rt. and peric, r, w»,. ,
I/ and for sale by WP.S.TuN MD% F.!...
1 ON C DualILT. 11/.1.
Vo From .t T. 21 [boom, NI D.
il
11 ' ' ',',' : ;;!, ' ,7 d s t:„,: " ,.. n r.'';',';.l: ,''''''' '''''' I". ' , 1, .u.. - lasi 1 .i-ircd ti, son of meddled ch 01,...
4.,,,,,, ix ii ,,,,,. .'er ‘,., cc, of DS' 1,4114 IN tr fry, and that I hen,. c
,itt I
_.__ ___ _ ` . 2_ ' lik medick c rul.uted Mtn.
as KW AND VALUARLF: ROOKS ',ate in Maryland. Washington County, to wit .
1.11 I —Hints on Public A relniernire, prrparen on I c , rtlfy that lam n'll aegis -
rated with the gentle.
netinlf t , f the Ruldnig Committee in the Stro.lisonout nett ''''" pore rig d" hr ...ai r ' ‘'rnifteales cJ Pr
hum anon. by Rotten Dole Owen. 1, large rporto, , 1 .". 1 ` " lrkeY• and they ore mw of ,aapec attiltry
elegantly printed, with 113 illustranuoi in the bent' Jr lesor-oni wt. tkitfl hereunto subacute my
style of the art t • stn.:. and adm the SCR] of my order, this four.
i oei,th d,ll.:_,:iLN,norytneontnehlort.nr,,,•-•iyigt.chLioel:Artii,.ihxisu:c,dyirleili,,,dand
11 —Groin on Bronchtini, serail etittlon. reused
nod en'arged A treatise on itseases of the awl.. , 'Si , / 'tare
/ages, compris'ne au inquiry into the history. rune A
and treatment of those affections of the tbroat. cad. d
Bronchitis, Chronic Laryitairs, Cleigyinso's 6 05 . : I niinesat't tho administration of Dr. Louis W.ci- 1
Throat, Ac he By Horace liner A. 61 .NI 0 , t ag. : e)'. , mitt. on for Cholera in the rasa or ati appren-
Plates unproved and carefully colored. Roy .1.,„ , 1 nee to the plorentir lostuess in mil iown Maga,.
gill tops, 63 Dl. • tow,. i 11,, was a aell uiatkaJ case of Asiatic Cho
111.- Now ready, the 4. edition, revised and ~,,a , , t,.. w.th ore water ever nallens, cold clammy at..
ged. with addition .1 illusteattons, A Treatise on Laud. , rout in tgue• small tremulous pulses —I co- sidered his
w.f.. Gardening and Rural Architectuw , ~,,,g p , tro., it , itir al and alarming 1 row him pre-
For sale by JAM h. D. LOCK WOOD , YOU* to Dr Wiekey, and wait present at the aileron.-
6, W oo d 1 i,.,.„, , i I woo. of the not dose at medicine, and saw him w•
For many year 4 connected with Messrs Wiley & I in'stullY ...log the attendance of Di, hVichey; tin me,
Putnam, and late John Wiley, New York. wirererl an as to be able to attend to and wort ut his
Alr. L. has lust returked from the Eastern eitioa, I tend< in a few day,. lUM sun he to k none other to;tt
lull I th e medicine saran:deed by Dr. Wirkey
- Nts ND'S SA 'SAP-1 ' LA-2 , 0 I .... , 111wItarin W, Dsvar,
dozen of DT Townsend's Genuine Sitarsaparilia, I 'a' my trot and genuine Da. Wicarsl Cholera
pot we'd and for sale by R E SELLERS, and Manton !Redwine . prepared and sold whole
-67 Wood at, only Agent for Pit.burgh sale and Mail. M
ail. by JOHN D. ORGAN, Dranalst,
toy DT I) M cUititY ; Afoot for A.ilcinnoy clry ; ,,, • ,
VIA 00* door bolo,. LOconond alloy, Wood n
GEIRrLr.etEN , .
FITNISHING GOODS
-,, r- , ----,_,---.-, ),---,
' . lis- _
' A —•-:: '.--
. -- .l_ `—' -- 4 1 . 0
a , ) .:,
_•;,' -- ,:_ s, --- ,
_ _
__ / ,_ , NEIN yoRK
-
stsAmott.. -
Importer, Manufacturer, and Dealer In
SHIRT , . CRAVATS. SCARFS. STOCKS 130
SIFRV. OLOVER, UNDER OARMEqTR
..41*SI;ENDERS, BO.ONIS. COLLARS,
DRESSING ROBES. !MOULDER
BRACES, DAN DURCIDEFS.
MONEY BELTS. METALLIC
WA I P ROO E CO ATS,
OILED SILKS, C.
- - -
The Meddles of the rube. ..bet . for importing sod
hannafacturhag his goods, enable ham to supply his cure
tomer. et me very lowest 'awl,.t pricenc and every
Mint, writ f.e made to render oteect lot merchant&
nod dealers from every metaou of thecountry to gave
hint a roll C. B HAT IH,
'Ol 97 Wlll.arn Street.
034) REWARD. ____
c STOLKNiI from the eubseriber, living in
i • .N
Indiana eountl:, Pa., du Tuesday, the sth
f~
int, ti fiREI HORSF, with Saddle and
NI arunenlet; about 17 hand+ high, and 7
rears ud. a white mane and tail—henvy limb.. The above reward will be 'mid for the rerover7 ni
,he horse and thief. or tdilli for the hone.
JANIE: , NI CALIP, Wein Lebanon P (I,
iiiii,l3trcwititS Indiana eo. Pa
\V " 1 ,T2 . : "LANVF'V,',: — ,3I,IghoRsT k.
-
(-llil-Al:3li --n. bar Western Reserve, for sole by
V I , S F VON BONNHORST &CO
I' l
I) 14 " LY.S-2' ; ' ; t t. t"n 6 r
137;jV . IfORST u
1.A 4 .;u1 Lis -110; 40d do 1041 do 10211
dd do 7x9: tor .dln by
_
S F VON BONNHORST & CO
S' , V . T . Z E SN E 16YRsT
_
u
liA j l' , R &Er? ..:01
s Linz for "'
I n).
F VONII ' ONNHORST & CO
BEEF iU I'SDS-10 tzerren Dried Reef
11 RoLnd•, yen. rer and for nide by
SELLERS & NICOLL,
A LLICOIIENTeIIIKETEJiIr.
the t,ruunds. o. , ,earar, fttn Jong, inst. at :II
I. NI. at xrti tsme the Annual Statement
will be 1.-ad end it 1-1,..1ra of Managers elected for the
J Jr.. , :eereiary.
The t01,.1.v.na peroms rompoie the Bopird 01 Corpo
:,..r. —l4 J K. Serer, W ktobin.cm. Jr., Thor.
How e, P: W. S' , .;pne.t.. T. Hignant.
Tot', Id, It b F Lorena. Char. Ave
ry. J II iGloek.. igt r, Gen Hoar. II Childs, Jacob
John Stet:Jag. Wm Unpin.
ern.. II y. Ca•se:t. Wm. Elch , atim, F Hai ey, flee.
star I /envy. R timer. G W Jackson, Char. Brow.
W, eon Otrr.en. roat Holmes.
J rd. Runt Burr, 'Noe. Irwin
./ns•-• C.l.oth< rg, A. Colbert.o.i, C F
Spent R. IV C Bradford, and /
F Jr m 7471
E lIA ABDONIIVAL WARMERS mode fwni
V uku, approved Enghsh putter., :ornlea.
J ..I r•Tullialc.lard Pp Thomas BakewclJ,
num. of ern •c• 11, Ly..‘•:4:lC t.ctng a t 00.41 CptlVcl.l.
••..l •rparatu• 10t me appC:auon of wnral Or it W
tbe 1r0,r14, Ol crimp. a Choi ce .. A.
pre,pn et to •Luill , •..ltech., no
.00u. , l w , 11“.n1 a! lea.l
,weir Etc ATON
; 1.7 T.,. mt. betert.cit WIO :.S
Quit ktl
fII'ADLA. 9 MON V, ORA—The Adirontmelr. or
1 1., Wood, by I.l' H,Et4l. awl:or of
nnd
a:1.! Mitlnv of DI Wttt Chnton, by IV
cop . -c n.rrc/ ttordrr fVoi inn Jw~rc; - :
1C • lii•tori of V. onderlul litventloo,
L..,.‘”orled with numcroor engravlnr, on it unit,
I Vl.l 111114.111
Inc I..rornation or po tort, of the Vlrrin and her
t.) Vtorrtes Ikert.or. Fort Vl wtin
-ttro.luttory e•ray Ilarrirt lirtrettrr rtt.rwe.
tIiNr•TON NI( r'K
7 corro.r .4 and Market
rc LI 13.1 r for • r
J 11 CANFIELD
A. ON —7 3/.d rftc'd
ir - oxiron
I) ' - M 1 I.lld. astcotel. 1an,1112 fro). •Itnr ) . 1.1)2
s:, p," 41 D)CKEY & C.)
1 1 - '!11.1: , -2.- roo) 1%,),1x)/2 I. bur, Cum
14 'prii..37, an nom rleuscr
11 A FA (INFSTOCIC .4 CO,
corner 1., and Wood sta
r . ,•!
nlal for
Fil=
I=l
1:, 7 1 s. —IZO ox Farr', juil rce'd and for ow, by l - 1( U
A FAIINESTOCK h CO
1) It I I'EACII ES —7 par-I:age* unpnr , d Pr ar.be
ox ph: •, recd And ,or by
VF:F er.0 , 1 qualoy fine ranrrrFn
I r ordrr and Ffilr lay
LI.RS A NICOL,
S•;R I C1 1+ IAI , —;2O F'v e k wilCe
. ,
1 p r a'
ELLE RS d: NICOLS
I ...Kt, i.t• No I. !I do No d. In fisie order
.47 SELLERS d NICOLS
It !.• te• Bret, reta/tmc just tr,ll and
4ale •,7 t .-. .i.L..F.RS VICOLS
PF.AC/lES-10. , 6.n Dry Peaches n prime
jJinx, Jo. a... 1 r, .1 and tor •a:e Fy
JUIIN ATI 3. CU
Vl , ll-50 1,1, • No I trinuord 13 do No I {ler
udo No I Sr. WOO lbs Baron tqdci
n for et'r /.0 100 JO/IN \VATrO CO
/1111.1,4:-1ln la• N. rev d and for rale at ilte W
and Depot. and for ruin S' r
i H CANFIELD
s c4 , lßrill Nt .ons, praue Reuel, for sale by
N t'INFIF.I.II
tT ,,, o , a , :e , r r o i,, j r ust received
- HRIIE; ‘1•11.soN h CO. NVeter si
1.11 /1101.-11/ ln prime order. Junl tee u and
.1-1 R SELLERS, 57 Wood at
1)1J11 D ELM H.l RE-1 1.1 , 1 just reedd for sale
111 1 P R 1 , PE an l LFRS
. .
[jet RIS LiREE7c-2c.e, .mad! reedn:id (or gala !.y 2. R E NELI,ERS
doub , c reflood Crushed, 5 do do do
CI Powdered: :1 do Refitted: 3 do Clarified, IU do 14.
•• roerived sod for sale h),
1) WILLIAII9. 110 Wood st
AUCTION SALES
n D. Davis. A Isellyski sr
Lisdertratit,"s I).linogrd Dry Goods.
On Friday. mornmg, Kt 10 o'c.na-k. su the
r n. NVon.l and Fitth
Ftreet4, .old fe, ,non
and hdh-v L
r.
-timer.
e
Dry r:oome.l.r ettu. rdaer Idae r k.
Identbutsod. pa-a• :eds.
and dr,. Aden chrahra,, ia •.
haat lawns, haitartries. JJ p.ecoa HON la - 14 Geitilt•ted
rrttl ' , tamer . ev. h,, arab d' err. . 11.vgar. Co:terms:l and to,rr
sho,ng, J vekd g.
The elave have her, datnade.l 1., wet e,. rde
Canal. m.O w Ii 1/... fur edarthhatiOn alt the lith
trim., In winch the dr,ITP• tette:dated, a.,
the datte in phdittv .
lull
Large .SaLe of Skirts aad Cloe;tog eatalogme.
On Wednegday morning. 12th in.!, of 10 o'clot.X. al
the Commereial Sh'en Room. corner o' Wood and Slim
. • • • •
•trcet. :t cr. Jib GC . unit LI (lass for all
. o , Ba ov e r SIM, an exueoeivt invoice of +nal ,
elothing, eoloptietng loick.i . lans!sn ]I fn., linen bosoms
and e nave, .uper r made do yoke neck and
F rench eleeve Merrimac, mnriner. e.r.pe:fialiey union
and loelioryil,ll Lace drill ,trace r. summer, Fre n •11 :se, suspender.. eicih, calei•
Score, tweed. alparen and raided dies, trotk and sack
coats; Wads ant Fren:li edea , mes, pants, sat.
01101 drOl. cosionede and checked do Cala °goes
ran be obtained and good. easonined on Tuesday
_ Je)ili P DAVIS, Anet.
Large of Staple and Fancy Dry GalriC.
On Monday 'coining, June 11th, at Iti o'clock, at
the Commercial Roles iiJOITIA. corner of Wood and
Fifth streets, will be sold, without reserve, for rash
currency—
A large aworunent of staple and fancy Dry Goods,
ana, g which are roperke• cloths, caseimeres,
sau
naa..renr., tweed., rotary vesting.. drillings, cram:l
ades. rummer cloth, •p nadir! printed lawns, hnlanriner,
bo., de lain., .t.per kinghtune, shawl., e:lk
hdkf rer s. blark .anti, sewing. WI , 'Pon! canton , comb.. hosiery, raid and leghorn bonnet, and hats,
damakk liners table cloth, checks, ticking., bleached
end brown mush., he.
Al II o'c'oct.
•
Grocei,e, Queenswitico, Purtioure,
Young Ityson a td Imperial Tra, Va. 'manufactured
tobacco, Spaimsh Apgar, No pa al soap; wrapping
paper, store's spade, hors. fork, tiansparent nod re.
paper,
window tdinds, looking glasses, ruiv•tel dock..
tic
A /tithte and qeorral assnritorld of new and second
Land household fuintturc. gldsatoure, lc
7
Fruit/anal/le read Aty
madeo'cl coockn,
t., panta. aeat-r• laneolins,
shots, bon, rlares fine rtstlery, si.ot awn. pistols, vi
olin, aceorthrona, new and aeroarl band waieher. tr. e
--Ls,lgneel Sale of acre., or gze.elle Cal, anJ
42 acres f Land,
On Wednesday, June Mt, nt 9 o'clock. P S(. xi the
Commercial Sales Rooms, corner of Wood and Falb
miaow. is ill be eold body of AI,. Vein, Eno., /in
signe, of Robt. iiacla,r, font'-ave yeses of exnellent
coal, and about rOrty-two'neren taint, situated on
the bank of ;he Alotiongiihen, opposite 111•Recskort,
on
which is erected 9 or 10 dwelling house, 2 coal
rod madilinnd other improvements for cate9lng on
the coal tionuies, Ter m• at sale
is JOHN D DAVIS Aunt
Country Seas at A 11.:"al.
- •
On Monday evening. Jar, tun, at •• o'clock, at the
Commere, Saka Itoomv, corner of Wood and Mb
atreeta, he vont that splendid private resineme
of:Janke on the :Janke of the (thin, in the Flint rierkini
of the arty of Aileallenv. nory 'Ale occupancy of
ml. and it at. Wickersham, havlng o front on the
inver te3 , e-t, rad exlending back a overage of
unatarii. of hot feet. ennipnving 0-0 a•-re n
of ,rnund, pt
high ...sq. of c frail trees, iikuhlretl i
No. Tr, m:lr.:no,
r, bo..e 40111310 1,,.0 .tory bri,Y, fin
jibed to tho letter tty he, orb on the modern conveni
earn: •ail improveurentr, guitvil•le out hooves, sanali
house, arable and earrta . ;e hoore. kr. Temp at pole.
juIJOIIN D DAY/S, Auct
AMUSEMENTS
THEATRE
Lessee and dianaQea•
Ant?, ....Mb MA1,4.4
h:N EF - rr Or MR tiI.ASSFORD (1,, Aura
'Jon. Three pope nrpicee..
Most,' Evvcr.V..'ca . n -
To cutumen, "ellh
IIEARr tr,r MID-LOTHIAN
Tle Lyrti Wllunatwthkr, •• • • •Mr
'Woad DVIII, • • ...... ..... Hoy,
Johb. Duke 01 Agcy., prior.
Jrarla
AlaLlgo tldfire • • • • • •1111.• Cr. 4.
DANC• h) n - ,ouni; grallamAut of ma r.ly
Tu be tu .oweu hy
'run 13:10TIIERS
.
P
,ong • ~Mr Muri.by.
Sccneso ttl Arend. MP•wri \Noel
cw.c.i.ter svo.t, t“. /I,le. h.ree of
SUMMER. AILPIAK GEM IstNTl9 for 11441 h
• . • .ttr.l,inailord. bitiNriNUAIIELA ROUTE.
Only 73 fallen Eltoglaff.
fif Tocado, —A I , let :unit, Via Browns-erne and Cumbernme to linhiroCrre an 4
•
Phitaddpitin.
i INP:Ii TAHLE DIAPER: .',S A AlL:inns ..tiutes
. rlrlly spictidid and Gent mumne U 9 &lad stc.a- ero
I-4 - v " "'”;." 0. l'-r ~ .b. ' 4 ; . '•'" ."`";"'..'°; ATLANTIC, Capt J Parkinson; BALTIC, Cafe /4
;A. , a ua. , •;". rt; tn. , . .5 79 . l`r o .t ;"" ' '""" "v." to cat..t.; LOUP 9 bi'LANE, Copt E Rennet; am WI.
otfr , cd. A,o. Inca Omper I at, c C 0.a.. oi v 3 ri,:ui , , L“ax in. double ds• ': 'ripe between
sat, ti-ry v".;.• -j 11 . 11 - ...ARufIGI AND tieoll,-N9PU.4"-.
•
Tl, moirileg
tot
win /nave tho It"onerw.hele,
I.,'INV , CR AS" — A l's; ''' "•'-"' s . ;"'''. "'''' -'
'" th - norf, shove the 13,ty,.;,, doily at 9 Obt)ock preeisoly.
x ...re :sag. P-oeter :. at !try Gouda lino .e of
in.s lA' R Mt:1(1'11Y ht""";;It"r" '''il; 194 . bUPILIth 00 . 6 1.1 , Hint Dnhanni
.llo. or 2 ",,sock. P Al., arid rim hpleorlid ears et the.
t. GAR —ri Wads '.l t; Sugar, 101 l rood and for sale prd„...nrr and Ohio Ilalltro.l, at Cumberland, at d
oby rob Crlt , RA :VT o'ebte I, A. !IL, und arrive In lintdruglki the nnmec A rce.
-
, .. _ _ _ _
CI H EESE-- . ..7 tn. l'tte,r, !,,,,,ling from Lake Erie kV.5,..tt,","::,,k;:,,,,t,'';' evening 1. .f1a " 011 ialnd. 1 1:4.1 and.
l_g and Ali, hig•n LI ne. ..td fc r tri,e LI
' From f"..; ' orsh to 9.ollbitorv, only ra itolars.
ter J A Alb. 9 DA LZELL. t Voter P.
Parc ...... • ............. 1110,IYJ
1 " . .t II NI9II— 7i.; gal . °. Furor. ry do do carriage, From Plush:l9oi to Philmlelptua, only 40 boom.
V co, Hael.,l manaftztur , nPL lar f. upcnor quidity, Fare. 54*.80
„.. r ,,,,,, , ,,,,, , ,,„ „ r 3. ~,,,„,.,,,, „„,,,,„,,,.,,, to; The evening hint trill leave at IS dedock, except Soo
an • 19.4/.4 tIMCKEV .1 Co Frost .s day evening,. P.aenger, by this bona, will la, ~,,,
--, , board ir. comi'ortoel- Sine Rooms tknifirst night, na.
, . , •
--Alt 1,--,u, Lb, No I, ~ itv tarcinr. lot Re," by 0 „,,, m0,,,,,,,Lin. the ~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,„ d. . 74. ~.......„. fi ttts
ins_ lan i All LACKEY' & CO; Coaches. and lodge the second night m Cumberland, •
p't Co.\ —l4 coal" ",dc, .to :01 !ow; 19.1.1 Do o, P.sencern hate choice of either Steamboat or Rath
1 ) .,,, nok" i ,, t.,-- mot q Alums atil - ;lionhicrs. randy Road nettrecn Itaintnoro .d Philadelphia, nand Me
I.tr Jeliv,, tor st.te by I+A 1.1 II DP; nEVA 10 I.r.lol!ere 01 AtOpplag at Coartle . r u loo n,... d and flahiono , re,
a and reautrung M., &rata el ple C 04.11.. kv..
It, el as they pleano.
) I LIATI , R I .. I:,k- ;" ,"7" N _ rw t, ;; ; ;; ‘„„,"!....''',„"" l 'On
' m r ttl ' e o l o l o p ' Clic " l ' onds and way bin, for the•Coactia
I ~,,, rain ny ,o,:, 11AuDt, J.. ,- .. , et CO , , ,p, ,f, P.S.sl;ttob MTV, 1., lin order t. save tittle on
N.. -
I
LL F,--nti LI,. :a , s .0. :,:', 33:f i.j arriving at tiroarnsvitleo it ia therefore important for
N.. - i. , . SCIWUNftI-41 , LR &CU nt ‘Vood at : paseennera to get Inc, irckets before goi ng CM boardi
In Rouse %Velez
iNlA,'.:}L',7irL7-I.th'o.oli:i);ZCol3.'n.r.i."fild:;.°lrl, ""r":.-''''''''''''',Sch,c.7k°,ll:,•P,lZl'!?...l'hst,'Plthbargit.
.pe.lion. tab. 1,1,.., old for •oir I, y nos rent J. hIFSKLMEN, A '
NIEL-LEI{ & RICK ET9ON, . i " . " -
rit4 110. and 114 later ;'
I at Itoo te)
'Or Le JS..
. . . .
ttstakniegn & Los:slay ilia Packet ILlsse
Fell CINCINNATI AND LOUISYII T P
, Thu aptendld new steamer
i,I.N.E. COUNAI.: liii.ANDIES. .:7 1.4.1:11 . pli...es 40.01000 1 . . -, r — pal TELE/311mm No. 1 . •
.1 . %.,L.n,s , s, of ou r own Importation per Commerce , : r; 3 I 1 . 1 . '
AA.eR, ...Ler, wit ell'lp 01
d ory
irom Boruer.•_.s, our
recd a/a1 or sa.e by
and mtermethate potla on Wedstell
-11,1 MILLER A. KICKETSON ' day she Ilth oho, al 10 o'clock A. Y.
(11 DER—*.O kl. proum Cider, lasi recd mid for sale ' For fr , 6'iii or Pooisago onOv on boank
_o+ to
‘._./ by 'at til-.0 W r_l SI l''.ll ACO • OURIOODGE, WILSON &G.
6EO TIMILTENBP.ROER.
11 ARD W ARI; I'Alth.lt—ihu —as I.s.st qwthly. for '''
u ..i. , ty tua ~ SeLICHINALAKEK :. ( . !I FITTSII FRG II AMU LOUISVILLE. PACRETLINE
._ _ _
The neer and splendid fastplamsess
li e ll r u : S Ll: "'RE''—'
t' l l' s • C f t ' l r„o t ' iN l ! '' AEl , .lt A C„
it iiiiit
, . ger pack
ALEGRAPII No.'
/„.•2 ALTPLT RE - 15 Legs ior r -air sr Meson, master, will leave tor Ciacta,
ti
LI tu4 . stuOoN - 41 AKER ACO nor ."d Luturritls urt Thursday, the 3d hat. at Ob
. u'rloch, A. Al. For freight or passage apply onbaud.
1 ICCTOR ROSE'. FANIII.Ii Al EDICINE....--A ihil to I.WRBRIDGE, WILSON A. Ca, or '
.1/ suppy .0... t Pet: d, for Bale by '. GEO II S.I.ILTENBEROF.E.
_Jet_ _ _ k. I SCHOONNIAKER. CO niq 2
_ _ --_-__ •-• 7 - --=-- --.7--- -_ _...--7,-.7,,
'I'IIE UNDICILMIGINED ran be Rand at the - - Riortot witarcr, okursv scrota"
.1. thee of Alderman A 0. Rri Mart, with the 20th PITTSIIURGIA AND NOCHINOPURT.
ono . where he a .il be happy to roe ail thou indebted
to hill, Atter Mu: time tibia will lie 1 naught againat ~,,,..- i ., ,, The ateamboat
PILOT Nt. Pt,
all dettrhortio. itbi , h i c,hihi o N .
isiaiCapt_ J N. Shunk, Piave, ?stably
•4 it r. 0....\ & IQ& .co il )11 i hr., dertriati Pit obi , '‘'p .. T... 1.7. .9 0 :uloilltt Pt
taming ilibrtr.a.ton to 're' to the Dumber of '... ''' ..- '''' mv .. L. P . i... al. .f.h.r i 4 . 6 Aort ll yi i ;
drat la toot wirer In the cay sa eickli; the ammeter of
Landing. N... -.,444s,i rdßai , Ratalemallt.sll 42,,
the tlitea, n, Ind the ve .., the p,,,,,,.. woul d f, ~,,, I. , Landing, Mutamorna, A. Sheet , . Landias, Voile I:
Miry request tar Phi istman , to report to them at the j Newport Cow errok, Morton., POtot Ilaroasie 1 -.
Cricrunivec Room, Old Court Route, on Friday evening t , Yabiergi DMpie, Little Nothing and liwchinAy
~..."
ot each, week. toll JOAN 11'4JILL, Crib.. : 1.1.77)Vi,Y.T.,L,T9:1 n Ook.RSPOY ,
. A __.M.XS 'r 47,id A y.
i IR L lir , . rte. rie -Pure it d Hark. Chian to Ellier„ " .. 9 ,:.:7' „ . , i n . ic i oii ' . n ?,,', U t i P ii . n
~F L ...,,,. . ) N) 'Ji CUL /11.,
1) lodide Poo •in, Strychnine, Chloride Cird,d, Lis er • l'-riii.-,4.% ;:i)eid`Y,,r,V" Ng h _ -• Wind SAO
oo phut. Wilde Pim:ll,ll,k.. Cs anuret Puma], Lust re- • 'l4,6:bore nrilngt•ln t ow 't i ' 'l7;* Lour vr . .. _et
m erd and tor am.: by mil it E SELDNES . ~, pttp,hary , h ~,,,, 8,,,..1„,, y ; . ~,,,,i k..pJ : . .' 4 ,_.° , 0 I.
S TARCH -la vs, Ft•Vm, for ante tny ' should be. at way as il
\.) ..iii Si) 11' I LLI A VS, 1i 0 W,,,,,1 . The peLlie may de cod uptaa WS be . ~, ~ • '
• • -
•" ' -- - the trade Oaring Net w watts sense . -- Z, 0 i31 t o
I) L'TTFII-1 bbt ...crier, 2 ion . . farm. y, for sale by ' —_-_.==-_-_,-,. '-!.:.-____)
I ) ;ad J D WILLIAMS t Louisville and Et, Lewis p,,,,,,,,i Lg.,
! 1840.
B E.A I: ; , s-...0 bid, ...II why.e. for
j au t l , e w hi ud.vo, : i ii ..., 4 .,.._ iat Th r Estinio; p fl ex i.E :
~,,, rounalu Err. Leta.
ii ncoN-:, casks.euirar cured O',o-alers,
' '''..-"..
":*"'• '1,9• Wle,Arottel'A.ot%a6.44ler'gsrrl7lea°74
V •• •• - awns;
For sale be
.u.ii J I) WiLLIAMS for tl above N A 1,,,,,,i.d.,.. pon .
every Tueso ay, si la o'clock ,
,
For fretght or passsqe. sit.
tit on board, or to
- K I. K., No. 153 Con. Ben,
... , 1 li 11l ES -14 i hi. No I Lard; 2 .1..) Grease; 6 c iks mar.14.41t0
sLoul ide,
„J Bacon, as•orted. ti tibia 1 boated. 9 bag) do, 4 du • ytEau LA y t. 5T.,111 inri• - i - c , , ,
OR BT. LOMB
Dry Peaches, do du Feather- li Co .:inset , • 1 10 sir: re; •
it Th. rine Cut nubbin
for sale by ISAIA II Dit-Kh.S & CO. 7'4.7- steamer GE% L a k 1 143.64 "
01..1., Froot t, ttrA,}o,4:" A. 61',Pheraort, mosteroril !pate to[
. a . :st.:-1:0 batrin an't i t b lo i e t . ) t i tt L y__ ,
_. b
c,, i 4 . -,- tt ,- " , -• • tee 'above antl tutermealont ports eve.
gin _ iri Booottay at 10 •J'elock, r. rt.
1.-! J.,l_.
, . For weight or passage apply on board,
Bor-i Ito.. liar on, we d end to! • Y
t' a l i t '. ~ R ANT RA NT t E. O. ELNG, No 163 COM t* Barsr •
ter .S. , lona
Lkmbrvlila .
Ig LA 3 i, A. 541-6 4.41 i; for mile by ---
.4. . all It ft.\ LZELL & Co. Later: yst 1---qi,t77,6.A 8.YV1L14.11.-------.-
- - The light erardirtittrrevmer
S C4 , / . 13 2 47 11ED SALTS-41 It his o f l i t , el l ll;l4 . o z r . late & b lty f' '
~ ' t 1 ,4
•
4,,..,i , Bold, =star, will loose far Cumbers.
I" II I
(o : _lea i.A, pr.me N Vattern It eI.tIVO, to stole . ' .te . ,T,: ) ,:, L n ,Vg.1 . „,tr, , F;'," . ' 1 : . th1. d.l', .T.."'
NJ and for aalr by iti! RDA 1.V.E1.1. ar. rio
, fr"ho. , nr 1'..i.11b• a pply Ou board
1 IRIED iiiPPLEO-4:01.1 , ... made tor ~1,---,7----,y - F'
- --._. • WM
t on ‘, “.. , .Aty AA 41 nitinlaillirillakrt.7....
,u 2 Tab.:ABLY & BE3iT
Tb 6 ono ood rubs:anted stenint
. i ''''''.-- *a
. HUDSON,
tft :,11 . ""'t 31c Nl:Butt, master, will pe (firin
. .•vr. , ... ter regular trip. between PlttibstlT/S
IVheetute a Ird Brulgeport She will larva Pitellnigla
on AV,ulunday and Saturday.
For freight or punage, apply ou booed. ,pip
FOR IVIIELLING AND SUNFISH.
. eft: dov . . s ync ft 4 ,6 twamer
VINDEHmasteELLA,
Otorge,Callioun, r, will loans
for above and itttera.outue ports ow
Mee.) ty• nod Thoi....!oye, el 10 4 at
ion it - v,gb, ,:r pao..nyt, apply on h o f.r. , • 'I'LL
It Fill CI -thht Z , \hESVILLE pAcgtY.
. „...... „ The fl7 . t i tw
LyNr
C Gkilagrr, master, will run tt• a reg.,
gar weekly' paekot between Pitta
bench and Zw.taville-learn P...:r,b:go':::::::lttk
\y. For frau:, Drib to
11.1 KEE a. roltSliTil_, &ids
porgy earn for oskle Icy
J.!
.1 D
uniin, to urn, in fen, daysTfor szce
A'n 1.1.71 . k Co, C. nal Einem
myJI
C - C2RIP-t) end Cou — my temp purrhafted t,
InOt
60N..3
LT - LOUR-150 bble Flour, recd euxbi
m 3-31 Ali rn. , Nc: CROZER
~ l in, r )CliAlNS—Jus: rem ved a cauudll asiort.
lad.ce and vat:en:kens' Co . d Guard
Ch , ,m. from Sid 83U ear h enorru price,
~ , udid I:,ogi 01 c.ra: go:(1, gold Yuudtli. Float,
Mug , . hat Ikags urrau Pin.. Uruc:e:boar
r \ W WLSON,
corer trl_atid :oi , tricet bta
!JARED PEA('IIFI , :I •,:l ...•.. -, - , 1,0r ..stl. h,
1
lit
'1'...,,1..1 . h. iw...-4
1
P b-'
I. itql-- . ...e.:, c.. 1,, 1,, :oic a:••! ~,a ~,,',. by !
I )44
'CI. -Y & }4(&T
S ODA .A.:li-16 c 4.
l PFST
0 epl" for :.y
sUNDAY TRIPS ro uff,,,,VET -- '' — ".••• . ---
• The U. S. Mali
so user MICHIGAN
At , pl /
T,lSSEy_kill-- - slT_ ' '''''''''-' N.. 2, will leave the landing'
the hlanongshela Ifoinno, ere y Sun
porAsH —, c s.k. in MOM aor:
. r r u 4 r
, 55 ., 10 i.. t, , y a
nt,.....,,r .
gym .,„,„, g , g ~,,,,„,,,,,,., far Beaver.
1 lan
- ____ I Iteanin, .t.ll arm, ni 3 o'clock, P. M.
SOAP-- - C bar COO Surip, for Lti:e 'ow (or en.M, by Farr to beaver imd back, Tura/ay-Gra Cents.
:11 _ _ Tas.4Ev aRh r i h.v2".
OIL SASSAFRAS— tun lb. ,u.l recd and for sale by!
SASSAFRAS—
R E sELLEILs. 57 Wand .1 , SUNDA T . TRIPS TO BEA V Ei -------°---
, The slctuner DEAVER. Will leave
- .
~.1
.L . ,..,',: „ , - , ' . 9 Om wharf, apposzte Me Uyormanaga
ciTyonli VELLOI:i: , —..I etifeltjutli t hr d4nd i qsr F ilit • ,
,• n . lima notr•e, every .;,,,T,a. y . ~,,,,,,,,,,m ,
" -i- " ' tI) o'clock, rer ;sterver. enaming.
Cl O ll , OOhlE. GEFIEW-2 ca.es jutt reed and for sale I 7'_', 1 ,..'7.°. ' l `..•ruy.' all 0'!0c.`.. . -e. op. At, a a *urn, 1 . 1
la.! it E SLI-LER st /or'a k• art% Twenty.:,,,, g ,...
_,,„
.9'..--..-..
_ _
CLOVIS-2 t...his pi.l r.: , I had fit: t,l ' t by css••=s , - -"srt-CINCINN,VPI.
in / it E SELLERS i Jr.,. The (a.: runntne warner
.
. ' .." PENNSYLVANIA,
Oreirilee master, will leave Ibr Or
•
~
. ‘y
l -111abobe nod Intermediate ports "PT
r;s// ,
,_ at b 0'01042., A. 21..
._..____,ftittill Or passage apply on board. ritTN
FOR ST LOUIS
i •
11 e splendid light draught mama,
cay,
- - ,.z#l.t - 4tret .e....... hit
V. H Connell, master, will leak. as,
'''------ _above ts day at 4 o'clock, P. At
For freight ur partaage flpmy rip bascir *r t's
len_ PENTIOREST Jt 00,?! ......._
- ---- fatTSEWT.IIIL.F...&NS. -
-,,,,,,.. The splendid smanscr
STOne,
5r.... napkin/4 matter, Win lasee'rey tbe
day R. 4 a elack,"P°."sl.4od in':'"dt"
P"I
" thi.
For (1,020 or patasme a;rply au 60 erd . to .., '
p. , 2_
-- 1 7F:PTIOREW P. Co.. Agents:
=stale
f t )1. 1211 )1111.1 no,fr—l. ease AA. bcc'd an , : lor maie Ly
R ~ SF.Ll.illzi
ii A j i T:F . :IIIII.ICK-1 care pot lec'd.i l il i k;lll.l4h
i lALONIEL II) d Fa' limed —2:db.t )...1 iee'd and for
kj a)e by
--- )111 R F. SELLERS
- • -
NA - 01.AS:r1...i 7 —Vol/ br.A for
- Dd. J $ DILWORTH & C.
V I.OL' R bbl, ;Lt. Irmlurig : i n: o f: o r:11 1l b:
co
k co
bbl. L T4L .11,4 Int &Me by
&w:11
Nolargo Macketol, to More
M A a C n i alL 3js un,WQR tit& CO
OP atThifta on New
Pfork. Phdodolphie, god
eonpurchnler,. ?ale by come fo
mr la
kands prixterrala y
...TK L S WATER:II.th
vrITIV CAISTLE tiLASS—,am $e 402 Al 01 ol ;4.
ill penur brand window Plus mewed, sad °Eder.
will b. mompily Alisd 41 . $ w asausuon
tubs
N tr SONS
STEAM BOATS.
h e eplendld steatner
SHENAN 130A11,
Itovrman, leave for the
a^.l tnteruesLate pone du. day
at lu M.
Vor fret ztz 1 , 4111,7 V art) . on heard, of 10 '
t2l _ PEI.TICrIi & CO, Are
Si. LOU?.
- did .
_ 'rt.c Illen maw .
J i bJ. J. CRITTENDEN,
mane, will leara for aboto
. .
..• ).
1., I I ht or paungv nropiy on Word or :o
Pl2 - rtzonEw'a co,
'OH CINCINNATI
. - .
'•....... 4 4 The fine po-klenger steamer
NIT. VERNON,
at Koontz, master, will leave for Quota
nob and intermediate landings Cu
th s day, ot I u ..'slosh, A. M. •
sig e s,gaz3
For ibetght or passage, apply on board, or W.
IU9 (iP.O II Nil LTEN BERGER..AIL
FORICINCINNATI.
kim . g , z ,.... t,thc splendid steamer . _ .
ZACHARY AILOR,
Laces, master. will-leave for above
and Intermediate ports this da7.
rbr ',eight or passage apply on board. ron9
..._
CINCINNATI & PITTS/MIMI
DAILY PACKET LINE:
Tins well known tine of aploadid passenger &asst.
en is nowcomposed of the tangiest, kwillaiati boa
atte,hed and furnished, and most powerful boats ea the
traten or file West Even nieommodatton and.ay
fort that annoy con precut', has been prontird forme
sentient The Lies has been in °pantileo for fire rem
--11..• darned a tuition orientate without the least nute
ry to their persons. The boats anti bo at the foot of
Woodstreet the day pre-none to austurj, for the neap.
uon of freo.. , ,i and tee entry of passengers OIL the ;Ts
ter In ad eases tie passage money must at p
sdennee
SUNDAY PACICE7, A
The ISTAU NEWTON, Canu t .a . Uniaolll,
I`l,,l , ulgh every Sunday SacErning at 10 oNaloaki
evrry Sundtly CV.4.111e, ki la P. IL
Ala y
- •
IGONPAY PACKET.
MI,I74vNGA lIEL A. Capt_ l s . rox",ve.lllveve Fla
bztry: every Itlerodny morning in lg. Wi.;ock; W 1.44.110.
evory Moroloy nvoning ot 19 r.
taleittCl'.
The lIIDERNIA st s Cal u. J. lit.llwartmni, will
PutshurJh every Tuesday mornm; at 10 valoati
beell It! ovrry TueNiely eVoniltrr , al 10 T.
wEDNieAv — pee ER..
The NEW ENGLAND sti
No. 2, Caps S. 12 2, witl
leave Ilinsbarsl every Wednesday 001111.1 lb
de lye k; Wheeling every Wednesday evening a Of. Sri
TIIIIRSDAT PAOLLICT.
The 14111.1.LIANT, Capt. Gshch !alma Pm,
burg 4 every Thursday moruins nr 10 Webset; Whatltai
v `TT Thursday eve:unK ut lb P. b.
"'RID AY PACIELIVr.
:Pe CLIPPIIII No. a, Capt. Po Dr-vai e will leinra
I . ..beret, every Pritiay mormaisailOcOo:oek; Whew
every Fraley eve,tair at 10 p, m.
NEW Irlf 4 l.lleN AND I . I7PDBURG II DAILY LiNil
OF CANAL AND STF—Va PACKETS,
. 451e ''''''" . 1 9 .
labs=
Ins sow,)
Loaves Pittsburg h datly,at ciLasi
delitmk, A. M., altd art
nvesin 1.1103 . Z.tv, (month of the Sandy and Beaver Chan
ny 1,1 at 3 o'clock, and New I, b., at It. same night,
Loaves New Lisbon nt a o'clock, P. M., (staking
trip canal to the river dun's the night,/ and Olasignss
at 9 o'clock, A. M., and &mires at Pithibiargh al 3
—thus making L continuo'. line for cattrylog
_pan,
onagers and freight between New Lisbon and Pitt.—
, burgh, In +honer Urns nod at les, rates than by ant
other route,.
The plopitetors of this Line have the pieunie et la
• foneiln4 the public that they have fitted optvotteat claw
Canal linsit, for the accommodation ov.sengen
freight, to an in connection Veda the well knc
%maniere CALEB COPE and DEAVER, and eastooolt•
icg, GtGla.tow, Rath the Pittsburgh and Cinctin
.
not and other daily linen of stearnan down the Ohio
13.114 river, rho puking:ant pledge thee,. sexier to spans no expense or troottlo to tome cOzO.
fort safely and diipatok i and ask of the public • 0414
of di., yotrunzpv.
nlrritoßizvx AGENTS. •
0 B. ItARTUN,
W. 11A RBA UGH. k'tlXib OM*.
R. FIANNA. 2t Co.
t intiltf J. lIARBAUGH& Nesw L"b"'
b. 8. Porter.
• •W 11 . 1.1.,r0r.
r BEAVER, C. F.- Clarke, m...
D l C l , e l :77:e , h a t ' llier:7 2 l, thi e e n. n r,..4... olloe,. for We pawn*
lea
atovat. • 11 40E0
B. 1111
8...40 L . T AG 0 .141 7.44.. . ?. hat" .
rt, t removerrro
Sauthli t ld aresA Fr'm'
b"."4"4