The Pittsburgh daily gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1847-1851, June 28, 1849, Image 2
PUBLISHED BY NV!LITF: it. 'l3O PITTBI3IIII.C4II THIIitSpAY MORNING, MIND 29, ISO. • Prrrcraiiirit D.nt 41...z.11-rs in piltdi a 11.97, 1 ;fa.Witekly, and Weerlyr—the 1:}44.11 , Se". DWI in pwr annum; Tri-Weet I y F-4,4 per annum; the Weekly is Taropollarrlier 4014 aeleisisrar. , icrlavitansens an earnestly 'resitteste4 to bank in lets favors . before 5 F. 1.1-• min.¢arli OS 111 , 5114 practicable.. Advertisements notlnltite for a pnel led time vril) invariably be charged atiitorderedsilut PHILADACLPUILA NOIITEI AZ141110131. - . Advertlierutma and avhseriptibm io th, North A ,I .ri luta mrd.United Stairs Gazette. rs Gazee. Pro tmirlphin, frt., or andrawardid from ttur °Mr.:. -: fiezt pegs for TelagrAphie Bergs, niFor.ltolial Matters sea ti t vies. .ANTIMAIONIC AND "VIrDID 491C11.01.. •118.1112,7,. • Awn'. C . WALKEII, of Eltiatt4tf, eirroott, JOHN MILLER, of Stattpkblagti' . CALEB LIE, of Pitudnorgh. WE. ESPY, of Lower Bt. Clair; $111,1117r, CARTER CURTIS, of PiCsburgi; OEO. S. lIAYS , o Upper St: Cy or itemocht, • JOHN MORRIS „ , of ASeghriy 01!R. 7, JAS. MITCHEL of Peelle. colon., WM. M4ARTII ,or Pim.burgb, JOHN DYERS, cat , We are sorry to p the Mercury maitiog„ but an illness which b confined us t:sehe- . house ior the tart Wee or fou dud, must (le oar exemi. and even now we a e ailmonisheepiy onnitstitkre able indications, that we most nuttier , slowly, : 11, 1 turning streilPh "' great calitimi., Ai the Mt, ' therefore, ofbeing charged with a "imetittwo day's' : inotibuion,"vve have been under "{he necessity Of leaving our neighbor on the "tenter hooks Of .e't. . pecistion." : - * Afiergiving vs an extract front•his lectureei L the duties and proprieties of the tess,', which we wi we humbly acknowledge our obliiition,this editar proceeds to remark, that:the Gazette has frequeisily attacked him; "as if to correct 1101118 errirr or Leif , , reprtmta ention." True, for once, We gave never lifted our pen to speak of the Merenrie, bot , iie were Melted thereto by a sense tef` deli - , fohtfie correction of some error or misreiresititation,il- cept in our notice of the first nuader; :When .ire spoke of it in terms of commendation, as the princiyeas therein set forth were i ii oharly le se co:dance with our own, and of th'i . ; Whig pef.iy, that we could not do otherwise that ails did, itae -r" seek° at 011. The next tuna we had oceasion;t6 speak of ;the : Mercury was in !anti of . ; re b 7 eke, yit. oncalleu ' for and most unjust assault upon tile' 7hia Pa* in which its character and principles .were leek shamefully misrepresented. We teak emasioi M the name time to show how far thi..Mtrettry talid speedy departed from the promise) :oel"lis salve tory address,..and how little it ental be relied upon to carry out those conservative principles it made so much of in the beginning.•: That article, the Mercury has not, and cannot aelsiser4 To evade the Mme of oar exhibilieur ef his er. centric aurae, the editor now v etttuldeell! as serts that the success of his paper:ffits orig Mated all our remarks, and that it is beeapie the "prcis. perky of this Mercury had begun to interfere will the busitteu of the Gazette," that we *ere led to see the difference between his poke' ' a nail his practice- -" they a change came over i i i , spirit of s 4 his (our) dreams!" This is tees ridiculoilbtor sober remark. It bas been the standing Ikeda of . com ment, and the avenue of eseake M r nearly every paper. which has arisen 'in !Ms/meet', and "strutted its . brief day" and then etpired.— "It interfered with the Gazette," mid that' was the reason the Gazette corrected their ertore r . We are sorry to disturb our neighbor's site, eamplieent egotism, but he may be assured thillithel Gazette views the existence of the Mereaell,:toffre as tie own prospeeity is concerned, with itipteine indif- ference. The Gazette's prosperity pr :stab ay Is not affected hi the least by the Merbitry, Mid (ne ther, has never been affected by theteitabli,shment of any paper in the city. It Is prolardilyeartv more propparolis Ilia' n it would otherwise Ite, but for the vigorous competition it haver encomiter, and so far tram being: eaten up with the envy Which the ydemary grves evidence it unildfc4, .0' Gazette has rather rejiliced in the number sedregbilliy of its cotempordries, feeling USSUTeII, Prom,this lights. of experience, that thelecrease , of papers: if not.: l beyond a reasonable number is miler beneficial' than otherwise, to theta long established. We • ... hailed the advent of the Mercury s&th pleasure, believing there was an opettitigwhieL:o4lit tote. filled in the Democratic ranks nod IP :Imirn . of its prosperity on legitimate grounds, glees as pleas ure. Bat we are not ready to SEM If :et Op a talst standard, as elute trigain support itti one hand, and to Misrepresent the Whig party ettd Whig prin- ciples and Whig men, to gairrpattony on the other. We like fair,: hooey dealiog. Wei have no pa tience with a Man who makes a stateinient of Prin. ciples as near,Whig as may be, and }lien Purim tures Whig principles in order to per Meade Demo. crate that there is a real difference Seiwten hint. retread the Whigs. There must be! Mmocrisy aomewbere, and we doubt not it will be Wand in pnetenditig to he at far removed linen' lecoLaco him, In the salutatory address. We eirlpect to find the Mercury, befoes a year passes, in ;kW COMeel- Well with the Locafoco party,—with`; "the rotten and selfish pol#feinn.,. th e ‘eiazy, doffing, dream ers, sell seletriers," and all the other classes count; crated. . .. 1 But to coma to the point In barni4 WO' editor of the Memulytteys, that in regard to Geti,Taykir, he "fully eatablished every theory he iienneed" —that Gen. Taylor had broken his eoleffin pledgee, and was, therefore, base; mean, vile end that no man ought to Speak a Word in his favini He has advanced proofs, he says, whiell."no eciphintry can overthmw." What are his proofs? The opinion, and sayings of others. Geo. Lipped, The editor of ' a vile, flash paper, in Philadelphia, fire illiterate:— What was theopinion of his witeesaes: flooded on! On their private and sell interested ' con struction of his letter, and on the one oily fact, that General Taylor had ?emoted a portion of Democratic office hoiden froVI their aituations, aneQ had given them to Whigs.— All these poinuivrere noticed In our reply, and yet the Mercury detains to answer us, tin tie plea that we hake not replied to his tugumeMil A con veustentexcuse:, Instead of answering out arta meat, the editornow makes this 'sweepingasiee tion,--Thet:Gont Taylor, "in all kes pledger, re pudiated aft party connections or party Prinalples ; as Nerdy as any man could." Thrs aseetticrats made in the face id . the evi dence which the' editor had before him; in the, ex tracts we gave fmuen Gee. Taylor's letters, tit oar reply, and which he has found it con!venient to pronounce "no reply." to his letter tto the editor oldie New Lisbon Palladium, Gen. Teeter em phatically declared—elm,. a Whig, and : male ev t7 be devotee in:individual opinion to the princi ples of that party];; Is this a urepacitatifon" of all party ccutnectiodtmd party principlek i In his let% ter to Capt. Allison, of the 13th Sept., Gen. Taylor declares-a-Who National Convention &kited me as me, strecremo Wele . lothiii a .reOu diation of alipatti connection and party principle!" Gen. Taylor says the Whig converitton!yound" him a "denied Mug," and "arkqesre' hiia Ea; such —and then he goes further, and reakei this re markable dectaration—.they [the Whig Conven tion] took me with the declaration of priiieiples I kid anode to the world, [i. e. Whig prioriOlos—a dtmded Mag.] and I would be wrrnairr:i esteems it I did any thing to impaer Ida fierce of e!ar :ircia. triton." . Azid in The same lever he mayeitua, al though be 'shoed esteem the support of Demo cratise VcompliMene to Innuelf,and tharke onght not to be expelled. to "repulse them meth jai auk." yet he finely and frankly declares,-4/,shan not modify my urine to entire them to my...ritle.7- lile was a "Whig?' "devoted in priecipte. -to 'the Whig party," a *aided Whig," and w6rld . hot, Therefore, =Ally hie views to gain datetactallc. te9Port ' - XII this the editor of the Mercury hail before Mtn, is our roply,'lhnd yet he collate Ski brod, • sweeping assertion; thee Gen. Taylor, "in all his pledges, repudiated rasp party connectiou or pas ty principles as ptfleoly as any elan anal!" So *from this being !sue, we affirm,ori the evideeie given above, ihat gen. Taylor, "as plainly as an& wan could," affiato . Wledged both patty irieeiple and party connedicw. Ho avowed Maw& to be a Wing, over and Oyer again. He pledged him *Wad to run 'es a candidate for 41ei Preildency in apposition to the nominee of the Whig *men , tioa. He acieeitert tile nomination of the Whig adro vaittoi,decliring that the convention had round him Fed adapted him airedecided Whig, and that ,ke ttlbe Twirkout sense'—mark the lamptage— tiii• ° weirs to shill thi4irleutotiakip which 'Alien tinbattled.", What relatiinahip P. That of Whig, of istmrse. l . None :othiti did 04,' could anbsisr.— Antijas this tango* was tat strong enough, and to put the queatiori beyond 'Cavil, he proceeds Whig Consentiort..took the with the data ' rart.4 of princrylea I hid made I to the world, and I would be without de f ence if did any thing to limperidle Aortae of that; declaitton." Whet de plarli on of principles fa . it, tciitoptti , the force of whic r i would leave hitictwithoitt defence Was it a tfeclaration that h e tti aa a n 3 party man, and lahatje was not a party imndidaft. or would not be I • o P Y President *ill the Intignege bear any such.cotialruction Stjcli s pet Version would be too brAre•faced to escape: condemnation. The "des larathn or principles" referred to in this sentence IN the alime as referred iopt the two preceding, that the fhavention adopted him as: it found tom. a derlis'erl TVlng." Thieves the relationship which • he cAuld not shift, and .be excusable—thin was the ttelaration of principles, the force of wh te a he etilld not impair, anti he defensible. Fullher, on this subject. The Mercury says, t.ten. l raylor . repcidiateil all parry connertnin as 'pain as any man copld.' To then declaration ..kve "pose the fact that Oen. 'Taylor agreed to ribidei ‘ by the decision ?of the Whig Convention, tabetKer he should run &w the gresidency at all, or not : If the Conventine nomiented hem, he was .a.caingidale—if it did oat, he with no, a candidate. Ii thet'e no. party connection in Lillis Again, we lopposii the fact, that the Convetition, art:orlon to his oPrn declaration, adopted Min as a Whig, and he aii,epted the nominntion,-witt the declaration that f was nominated an a Whig'. What ,trong er pat t y connection coultl exist?. Further, he woe nappriett . ed as the Witig•eaudidute, by the Whig partyliiind the Whig /mile.% anilm W. opposed, and Flllified , and abasest,:jas a Whig candidate, by the a mocetttie party. Ris pos4on as the Whig cendil!tatesins clear, defined, sptain—his party „conne7itionhieyond dispniet . "RI," say. the Meruity,"supllusing Gen. Tay lor hat, from the very centimencs?Ement of the can vas', ,•rtinounceil hlinselfpublichg as a moderate Whit What need of a euppoisrtion in so clear a case T.i In July, 1546, two yeive(ted three months beforiithe election, he ifeclared!iannsell to be a Whitiand devotZd to tlzttr princi'6es of the Whig party,ilt wu well know2,frcan the time Gen. Tay lor's acme woo Anil mertioned tar the Presidea thtt he was aWh 'and thiSl ; was the secret causenvf the efforts of the Loo&c o administra tion 14' uin him—efforts Which oiled forth his eel . ebutett letter to Gen. Gaines. Ileiz the Mercury further: - "1114 conduct, so farillll.ll beiin more culpable than tint of even the most desivl Whig Presi bleat sere ever had.' Whitt more " decided " WhiePresident have we ismr4 had: He, himalf, telly ita that the Whig Ckinv4tionndopted him as it fothid him, n "decided 0711,,itlital he would bc.tvithoot ± -excuse were he to shifithe relationship which thisa subsisted. Of courseihe will not change It now that he is elected. The tAinntry elected him with a full knowledge pf this"ileclanition, and itexpected then, and ex 'pees 4w, that ho will not 'impihir the force of that .sieFiaration."' • Whit "conduct" does the Mercury speak of as , cuipa,qa" Is'a Whig President culpable for car rying opt Whig miscurnrea? Or does the Mercu• ry sixtak of the appointments of Whigs to office? XVhn did Gen. Jackson aplioint to office " Where islhe lybig Ambassador, Or Collector,or Land Of ficer, at, Postmaster that he appointed Was h. - &ludo's!! ;culpable" in the opinion of the Mercu ry What Whig did Martin Van Buren or Mr Palk eii‘er appoint to' office I Was Misr conduct culpable' "More eulpableithan that of even the most Aided Whig President!" Such -language is - ziahMionidy supereiltotts. If it is right for a DamoClutic President to -carry out Democratic principles, is it not equally to her a Whig President tocarry, oat . Whig principles? Where is Gen. l'aylor'r , confines culpable,ihen vt 4,:e fear we have Wearied the patience of reiders. We have keen more prolix. than .probaki watnecessary,buMhe opposition have tri ed so hird to create an erroneous impressions° the ,injury she Whig party and Gen. Taylor in eel erenect Matters discussed} that we have felt it our duty to lace them in a light to clear that the most wilfullscperverse could not4so astray. We think Ave havjl shoWn, beyond ttie possibility of contra- JiCtion4llzat Gen. Taylor, previous to his election, did rasqepudime patty principle or party connec tion, bpp that he acknowledged them both in the Most Mlsquivoeal form, and that he ran for the PA' I6I •4•Y an a " 40 :dra71 4 ale,' and that he is briaklnt no pledges in carving out Whig princi ples and meaMses in his ailthiuisamtion. , ExasOnsvios.—We yestefd ay attended an ex asainaticit.'t of the pupils of Mr. L. Caton's English and Classical : Academy, in: the basement of Dr. liiddlei:Tharch, and mat ay that the proficien cy 91.'4 scholars redacted great credit both on their bailie: and themselves. Having been pre sent at Ite last examination:of this Academy, we had an opportunlty of Judging of the pnwess toads caeca then, and do nothesitate to say that &Ica pic x sorts avim have sea p tun!. to Mr. C. may dfdtgrats<me themselves . ffpon having met with iit4whkaan and will do justice to their children. Thealates, in every limuchmf an English educa dim, as tell as in the Latin language, answered protisptlyeall questionsltslireit„ them, and showed that thef thoroughly understimd every thing which they haaj,taudied. Stato4 the deaths recorded to-day the reader will fladltuat of Mr. John NV'hitteti, one of our ,31d eat . Margiet street merchants, and who wan probe bly:morwextecalvalilmowit by the residents in the-Com:4lg' than any merchant in Pirabergk— Altai dilepg business in . onesitand, for a period of between;:ihiriimad forty years, last spring he re tired to trpterlant, : natal reiaidenee, in Allegheny, to apeild the even:ng of hisidayi in peaceful re- I tirement: Bat oh, how abort! The end of three months Ids him the tenant , of the tomb. He leaves ani - unblemishad character behind him, and rests weir, Cauvoirus,--Two officia l, documents bran the Collficiar,Att San FratiCiliClN are publiahed in the Weittingttin RcPnbho. ettowittg the number of em !greets &raved there between the let of October, 1848, andithe 31st of March 1 949, in foreign and Ameiicattfvessels. Also, ther amount of gold ex ported ititToreign and American vessels, and the -value of (pods entered at the custom house. It will be isle"' that migraine are flocking into Cali fornia front ailpana of the- habitable globe. As Yet, flue fateign emigration seems to have outnnin. bared the American; but it Meat be borne in mind that ;this ifirdenient only incindes Americans who arrived tho , e by sea. it does not embrace the nu merous caapunles that have crossed the prairies, we gon e bOhe alp Grande, dr outer routes through Tko whet° number of entignints arrived by sea, between tll tidies specified, is 2,433. The amdunt of gold exported during the same Pcricta, 8 2 .1 363 ,72. The amount of gold entered at the Custom Bouse, 51A159,251,—80k, Amer. Fatiorlaiu..-13y the. turival bare yesterday from Havit)n, of the brig - AM/Ins Gray, Capron Schneider, rind the schooner Mary Ellen, Captain McConoeSiishe former having left on the 7th and the later ti the 10thiinst,—we have filen of th e Dian° and Foe Gamut to the OM, inclusive. Dr. Will‘a dhitingtlisked Eggert oculist, died at Havana 10 the Slit instii.thifingh the rupture of an artery, cilused by violent wilcbing after taking an emetic. ; ; Intelligence from Vilinexueltrtaa been received at Porto Rico to the sth ult. 4.r. Pomo has de clined:the nomination Hof bliiii4er of the Interior m place of*. Revegna, ailenfirtk that he could not nerve with en oligarch like Elr.'butierez, the Mm. inter of Finance, who was anheito be a friend of the opposite party. Cowan& closed its session on 3d; afterhaving passed ato Maid the Geo- ernruent in ate pecuniary resoirces. By thin a variety of the prOducts of the coil, heretofore tree of exportation, hove duties laid on them when taken out elat e Mammy. ' Goods, such m book., prints, sth., Which Cams ill duty free, ore now also to be taxedtind ill 'other ,icuport. duties are to be in creased tell per! cent. All Quit bodes evil to the trade and cOinmetce of Venezuela. A famouscaenor, Signor Ivandid; ale reported by the titivate papers, has beeiVengissoled for the opera at the' Talon theatre nest sennon,-Nsw OrLowis: Pixofoiria Ladies OP Tilittiszrrassai—vo gentlemen, as w e learn God} hli. Hoff Man, wlMi haa Just return- ' nactiors.—The Wow' ' obi' ed . hom'VenarCrui, lately Ma aommeursion ue , e ,,, ' BIB " A • wrl 'a P "bed the behnsua r ef Tehuantepec. They left Gam men- in French orrwapripers. slabs, in th&yricitaty of Vera Grim, on the 6th of A poor shepherd of the the environs of Yvetot, May, and performed their Irrifrney, filly eight father of a large family, for whose wants he pro !rogue/4 milianoe riavigetioe,quad thirty sever. ' 'ruled with very great dif f iculty, purchased last leagues - on Ittipmbick. :They niched the ahem, seminar Gem a dealer its clothes, furniture, doe., en of the Paeleorr. bathed in An waters, and returned old Bible, with a view to ocean , him leisure even to ffinatacuireos On the 2.11 - 'They were eight' logs daring the present winter. Sunday evening, days in solvent:id eight (toys itt4eturning, having as he was turning over the leaves, he noticed stopped twcy'AnyineTehrinetepl'r, distant about that several of them were pasted together. lie five immseecfrom ihe nap, limo. germem en , immediately act himself to work to separate those Measrs. , jorriea mid Duff, &We Mu .the expe lse leaves, with great care; but one can scarcely form tenured. in .erosedno the Latinos Ii slfi al the & conception of the sorpriite of the Man, when he' most. TheOuther informed hi).. Man= that . found thee carefully enclosed a bank bill of five small . bents, gay* thorn Twenty to twenty lour hundred franca, (SI 004 Oa the margin of Onoof Inch= otr.wol:4 ea run on .tbn river nine or ten the pages were written these words: months le thd Yea 4 The trait M ;home hire, from "I gathered together this money with very great the bead of Mtvigition to the 'Prielfie coast, will diffieuhii but baying none.' ea natural beim, but not amount tiiimuuti thee .1110 . • !mid each Nilsen- those who have abroluteiy need of nothing, I make gee—New i tam whoever shall read thin bible, my heir." ' - 'l..' i - - From the New Orleans Ron yune of J MEXICO. Gmeirgular files of Mexican papers, consisting of El-Slalo, El Monitor, El Fateersal, La Tra t i dlinitm, ace—front the metropOlus, to the 2nd mat and El Arco-lrii, from Vera Cruz, to the 9th hist, both inclusive, came duly to hand yesterday. To the ample extracts we made from those of similar dates which reached as on Friday, and. which we published yesterday, we add the following addi tional items. Measures of so stringent a character have laely been adopted at Vera Crux that they will effectually prevent smuggling in future. A. letter appears in the el Siglo, of the 2rl inst., exhorting the Mexicans to work the mines of So nora, which the wnter represents to bestill richer than thous of California. Portions of that State, of great extra, ore placers or gold deponts or es. traordinary value, on which the lamps of gold are occasionally timed 11 ll ounces is weight. El Sigh) urges the Government to originate the enterprise of collecting gold in Sonora, to be applied as a means of retrieving the affairs of the Republic. The Apaches present the most tormidable obstacle to gold digging in Sonora, as they hold n greet part of the State as a species of hunting ground. The population of Sonora exceeds 150,000 souls. Don Julian de los Reyes, Governor of San Louis Potosi, is said to be very disaffected to the General Government, and is charged with a desire to prO 'Emma. with a pang formed of a coalition between the Puma and Monarchists. La Espana, a paper printed at the capital, has discontinued publication. The Government la authorized by Congress to make a contract for the construction of a railroad between Vera Cruz and the capital,and thence to the Pacific. Who will be willing to on :ertake the jabs The Mexican papers complain loudly of the scandalous impunity wali which smuggling is car ried on across the line of the Rio Grand. Not only American but European goods are brought into the Republic in large quantities. El Arco Iris contains an article on Santa Anon, in which the luckier," ex-Di-tator is rimmed wall the design of returning to Mexico, and of resuming his lost power. This he is said to contemplate by recruiting eight hundred or one thousand men iu the United States, who, under the pretext N going to seek for geld in California, will be permitted to land armed, somewhere on the coast. Here they are to fncilitatd the disembarkation of Santa Anna, wino will then make a pronitneminieum, over turn Herrenn's Government and re-establish him self Dictator. The eight hundred orane thousend Americans are to be retained by Santa Anna as his body guard, and by their help and that of the Puree and the Monarchists, he will succeed in en slaving the nation. Fudge' The Legislature of San toxin Potou has been called together in extraordinary session, to take into consideration the vital question of the insur gents in the Sierra ( - Kittle, which is devastating that State, and which will inevitably ruin it tf Übe not speedily terminated. Two thousand muttrets have been purahased to arm the National Guard ofJa , isc,, at the exhor. Want rale, at the Siglo calls it, of 510 each. Correspondence of the Louisville Courier. FROM THE C11.10.F.R. NATION. Califon. is rosste—Canumchey—lndurn Charoci —True bennvoltNer, .Nonni FORK. CREILK NATION, May_l9, 1519. Mr. W. N. HALDS , LOI-Sir —For several weeks this place has hod camomiles preparing for Can thrum. Hero the Indians are orderly, have farms, and the companies fully prepare themselves for the long mute. Generally the Californians have arrived here in wagons. Here they learn the dif• acuity of the way in wagons, and find it to their advantage to supply themselves with moles or ponies. Mare than a hundred wagons have been bought by the Creek Indians trom them. The In dians have been greatly benefited by the exchange as well as the companies. Now the country in well supplied with wagons. From this place the companies purney very• pleasantly and will Make a successtul route. Per haps this is as good a land route as any. The mules and ponies rinsed in the Indian country sub sist on grass and can make the route without any other provender. Those coming this way act very unwisely to purchase wagons or even horses, here they can be purchased at a lower price, and can make a better travel than horses that have sub sisted on grain. The Comanche Indians, the most hostile, have been here lately and held a talk with the chiefs. The Seminole and Creek Chiefs have advised them not to interrupt the emigrants. The Camanches state that they are disposed to allow all orderly white men to pass through their country safely, and that they will make known to the tribe those going through are orderly. Gain the favor of a Chief of any tribe), and the entire community are friendly. A Cherokee In dian, Jessee Clusolm, can go among any tribe of Indians in the Indian country and escort any num ber of men in safety. Ile spends his winters among the wild tribes, generally Journeys alone, purchases their mules and ponies, and takes them to the States. In this way be has become quite wealthy. He is worth $90,000. He is a man of the kindest feelings, When he sees watering among the half starved tribes he alleviates that suffering, though frequently at considerable coot to hitt. When he Ends captives among them, be never leaves the tribe until he secures the freedom of the captives. He bas at his plantation tire Mex ican youths whom he purchased, and thus freed they, from Camel:loM cruelty. This is true [e• netiolenne. lie endorse mach hardship in Jour- De3ling among the wandering tribes, but his heart ;fail of sympathy 6411. lie is raising one of the matt interesting famiiies in the Territory. His anal poss6sa the noblest pnac.iples. I have three of them in, the ramlop school at this place. Then arelneapable at a mehn oat. He isane of nature's noblemen, and there ore many Indians of the same stamp. A. L. li. The Mennen Settlements In the Wmt-- SlngnlarDlor noon We publush, in another part of thin days paper, a thug hut remarkable and interesting document, issued by the heads of the Mormon Church, and styled 'The first General Epistle of the First Pre itidency or the Church of Jeans Christ, of Latter Day Saints, from the, Great Salt Lake Valley, to the Saints scattered throughout the earth," giving them intelligent= of the progress which the saints have made in 'witting themselves in the valley of the Great Salt La ke, soliciting donations and tithes and giving such iaforrnution to the I.ollata on their way to the settlement as is thought neceosary to enable them to reach their destination with comfort to themselves. • The Mormons, then, it appears, are far away from, persecution and have at length found a rest ing place. Dig work of culuvating the soil has becen commenced on an extensive scale—a large city has been laid out, and the corner stone of an other great Mormon temple has been laid no the Great Salt Lake. Their remoteness train the Western and Eastern settlement guaranties to them freedom from persecution, and they will be joined by their proselytes in every quarter of the world. The success which they have met with in making coverts, nod convincing sensible men that Joe Smith was in reality a prophet, and that the church over which he and his successors pre side is the only true one, is astonishing. Seven thousand English Mormons are preparing to emi grate to the settlement in the valley of the Salt Lake, and in the Society islands nearly too thou sand converts hare beau made within the past year. The work of =aversion is going on—mis sionaries are being despatched to nil nations, and unless something should occur to break op thelm. mety, it will go on inemasing and augmenting un til a power= nation be formed in our western wilds. The nucleus of a populous State is already planted there, and the 'number of Mormons con gregated on the banks of the great Salt Lake is so great as to induce their leaders to take !measures for procuring a territorial government. indeed, delegates will ba scat to Washington immediately, to effect that object. And the interesting tam connected with the Mormons is, the discovery which they made of an extensive gold mine in the northern part of western California, from which, as we learn by the epistle, published in to day's paper, they ex tract sufficient to make currency plentiful among them. Allusions have been made lately to similar discoveries by the Mormons, and we would not be at all surprised to hear that they have found as much gold as lies in this celebrated placers on the banks of the St. Joaquin and Sacramento, and that they are devoting as much attention to mining and perhaps more, than they are to agriculture and the building of their temple and city. If snob be the ease, of course it cannot be concealed very long; the fact will got known some time, and then thousands of enterprising people will rash in from California and from thellnited States, fur a share of the deposit. This will in all probability lead to a collision, attended with more persecution of those religitins fanatics, and more bloodshed and loss of life. They may, however, bekno any such invasion of their domain takes place, succeed in forming a great western 'empire, possessed of un limited agricuttaral and mineral resources, that may in time exert an important influence on our republic. It will be interesting to watch the progress of this extraordinary nod the work which they have commeneeT: with a zeal, such only a is produced by religious enthusiasm and Matta cistu—N. Y. Herald. Dye AMONG Tile CAL 41708111.4 EMIGRANTS.— We notice in our exchanges mention made of the following deaths among the emigrants an the plains Henry licush, of 111. died May 8, 1619 , T Adams, not stated where he was from; John Fuller 20 years of age, accidentally shot himself 28th April; a man by the name of McMillan, killed by the run. ning away of teams belonging to the Louisville company; Mej. Wm. GPI, of liocheport, Mo., Samuel Wilson, formerly of St. Joseph; James Thompson, from M 011196 county, Mo; Maj. John Austin, Henry Tarr and Dr. Tucker, all of Lining aton county, in this State; Edward Adams, of Pike county, mthis State, Mr. Gales, of Macon Co. St. louts Rep. Partlenalry of the Caesium M. Clay DM- catty. We expected to receive in the Richmond Chron icle of Thursday n fall account of the fatal tea 'centre between Cassius M. Clay and Cyrus Tur ner, in Madison camty, on Friday of last week.— The Chronicle, however, gives none of the porno. ulars, but merely mentions the affair, end adds, "that Mr. Turner died on Sunday morning lout, living about thirty -lour hours after receiving the wound. Capt. Clay is still in a critical condition, but the better opinion seems to be that he will re cover." We learn this following from a gentleman who wets on the ground: There are three Pro... Slavery candidates tar the Convention from Madison, Messrs. Witten and Che. vault and Maj. Squire Turner, (father of Cyrus Turner,) and but one Emancipation candidate, Mai. Barman. At a regimental muster at Wal den's on Thursday of last week, the candidates spoke, Willis nod Chenault leading. Maj. Turner iiilloweil--(although he had promised Cassius M. Clay the stand before him) alleging that Clay was not a candidate and the crowd was fast disper sing—and made n long speech. Clay then took the stand, and bore more heavily in his remarks upon Turner than upon either of the other can didates, and it was now evident for the first tiler that there was sonic unpleasant feelings between them. W e are indebted to the Boson Atlas if, the col lowmg expose of the cause and the neeessoy for the recent reduction of the Oaken of the Revenue Marine Service: Having heard rome complaint made against the present Administration, to consequence of name changes made in the Revenue Cutter service, we have Taken pains toinq i uire into the fact s of the cost. We lind that the Secretary of the Treat ary has adopted a new organization of that branch of the nervier, by which the revenue marine corpse will be somewhat reduced. Before this measure is condemned, it will be well to consider the eon. dition of that branch of the service, and the neer,. sty under which Mr. Meredith acted. During the administrations of Mr. Tyler and Mr. Polk, the number of rotten was erectly increased, and in some cases without any authority of law. This - of itself would justify the Secrithry of the Treasury in rodemeg the expenditures in that department. if, in his opinion, it could be done without detriment to the public service. But the Secretary acted in a manner from netes city. Though the collection of the revenue has , Mr years cost the Government all of two millions,' and toe last year eetuallv cent 52,100000, n law was passed on the 3d of March last, by which the present Secretary is required to, reline this ex -I,,,,dastre to sl,fiCo,ooo--thus saving to the Goy. ernment a half a ossilom at a Engle year. The ste t .s a tsry, we learn, has mode this whole aubject one el anxious inquiry and thorough investigatou, and has come to the conclusion that a portion of this great restrenehinent meat fall alma the cutter aerviee, which had been greatly, mid, in some re. seems, unlawfully increased under the two preced ing Administrationa. And while we regret the lions of Some meritorious officers, we believe that those best acquainted with the service are free to admit that n considerable reduction can be made therein without injury to the revenue. Bet, in order to a right understanding of this whole subject of retrenchment, It may be well to know the circumntances under which the law re. guinea this retrenchment was passed. The Dem . °erotic party have Essen loud in their professions I of economy, but While they were in power have been very careful to permit their zeal to evaporate in professions merely. Those in power would ' move in the matter, but would be very curful not to pass any law, or adopt any measure which would reduce the spoils of office, or lessen the chances of the faithful to be remunerated for their labor to the canna of Democracy. This principle in illustrated by the history of the passage of the law requiring thin saving of half a million. Mr. McKay, a leading Locofoco, and for several years chairman of the Committee of Waya and Means, introduced into the Abuse of Representatives, do. ring the first session of the lan Congress a bill requiting this retrenchment, without specifying any mode by which it could be accomplished.— The bill passed the House, almoat as a matter of course, and without debate, and was seat to the Senate, where it met its expected fate, by being permitted to lineup through the session. But, after the close of the second session, after the Democratic Senate found that the appointing power had departed from their hands, and that if the Whigs should imitate their example the offices would be filled by other. then by Democrats, they took up the bill, which had slumbered n year op. on their files, and passed it;thuough at once. Hero we have the whole matter before us. A Demo mita Senate, on one of the last days of tta ses Mon, with n fall knowledge that they had, during the administration of Mr. Polk, expended more than two millions annually in collecting the reve nue, decided that the Whig Administration should perform the same labor fur half a million les.— Ney, they decided that the new Administration should perform more labor than the old ; for, after the bill passed the House, and before it passed the Senate, several new ports of entry and collection districts were created In Oregon, California, and Texas. From this view of the subject it will be seen that a necessity Was laid upon the Secretary of tne Treasury totem. to be performed an increased amount of duty, and at the same time to save half Tux Catreasse.—We are informed by a gentle a million of the expense. That the Senate acted h aat it y, if not aaoooto d yi w i ll appcia , ba . the fact man who rutted the crevasse last evening, and in that the bill contained in itself an incongruity, I whose lodgment we have great confidence, that which ren d er , it almost uni , ciiip , c, if not the works are progressing rap, and w ith a good practicoble. The hill, as it passed the House,' been of success. The volume of water has contained several references! to dates, or future been reduced about one-half, and is now tonfined , pc „,g c a pen „,i , which wore conaiatant with but, by letting the 101 l to the mom chaneet, winch has mistimed the shape taa0,„0k.,,, 01 t h at time; of a species of funnel. - The breadth of water now , „ lan , to , one your, these „cfcronoca became noosing through th in gorge is shoot fifty kW., eongruous and absurd. But to eager was a Dem. ecralle Senate to force upon a Whig Administra mouth nod twenty-six feet at the smaller end. The lion that retrenchment which they alwayn preach theyh in about twenty 4.1. The sides of the fun. nel alluded to consisted of double lin. of piles.and ml, but never practised, that they pediably did not they are now being filled in with bags of sand ti edex¢mme Ira provisions an no to discover the moon. famines. This work will soon he completed, and F. ,. otty. every thing P"P"red for etnt'itg mom 'ham We submit these facts fur the consideration of Mnnel. Tvenhis works d thus far constructed very an those who map dsopooed to complain of th e anZ,li btace boiled, end ealaabWle e ofno. new org.reation of the revenue marine. The tooting an immense pressure. From all that we Whigs will see that if there is any h is in the learn, we think there can be an doubt of theldti... fih„, Ad ot t a n itint i on i i , not j notty . mate success 01 - ihe work. The ewe are healthy chargeable w Pr ith it, the Secretary acting Cram the nod in Rood aPiril-s. and 1...n010 , . are of good necessity of the case. And if any Democrats are quality and I - denote!. We hose 101 l emnfidence displaced by thus new orgacization, they may that Messrs. Humber and Sergi will soon lie able charge their mieliirtune tu the hasty and ill advised to make such n report of their labor., as will satisfy action „t that,. own political friends. the public. In the meantime, the water in the back wards JOB PRINTING. and all through the inundated districts is Nolen& RILL READS, CARDS, CIRCULA RR, HlanAs ' mg, and will continue to subside. We exhort all Bab Whose intervals are crineerued—rani they are the ii•rin BILL, LAMM, eiCiertinCaTim, nieces, , enure population—to look to the stiteof the streets,FOLACIVI, irce RS the Waters tlow off;to see the dirt and filth re. I , r~meit rat ‘ i. 4 .7, , : nre l.r o . ;; e s , o e . n 7,l; n o ton , lu et l n lt e., 7cut et Me moved, UM the usual disinfecting agents put in SC •••• Live operation. The sluices should I. opened just Improvements In Dentistry. lee half an hour every day, to admit the wafer DR t, sTi.:Allteei, f a t e or Barton, is prepared is from the river, to dentist the glitter] and refresh otautilaciare and an BLOCS ?grin in whole and parte the atmosphere. Lunges., perhaps, might add to m arta, coon Suellen or Aunospbene Suction Hate, the volume ol the retreating dood, and record it, il..is.po-rf:;,lisii'grai..'ioiljiaci,Xnut.%.vrna:itodhooerrei,livarz.vle;s final denim:seen:intro.—New (Alarms heaps'', or, oases Fourth Weer. Rants TO--J. M . Failden. F. 11. Felon. halo Death and Burial of ea.Priesident w. Kelly, Linder this head the Nashville True Whig oreet, N Y., and for sil ale by AJ. . Jaynes, No. glees, some account of the last hours of Mr. Polk, 7 ° Foarih Thin will ha ' ' L t.ms d ettglaul sm ote vanities, and parlieulair y tarfrom which we make the following extract. of beverage f ntk rooms. liiirrit's flaunt —An unproved Chocolate proposa l-He retained his conciousnesa, we leers, up al in COrlibina MINE to the moment or diasolutton. We saw him n .ens a "ottootuni of Cocoa in, InnOteill, ~,, ponte_ sit a period when hie physician, considered his case molly tor ovulals. Pre "oi ly toootonnooted pared by W Dorche, very eritioni. Hn happened to hear we were going ter, Mass., and for ode by A. JAYNES, at Um Pekin to Columbia, where his good old mother resides, Tsa Store, No. 70 Fourth si eachlk and sent for os. Upon enteritis the room, he ask. ed us to take a seat by his bedside, he proceeded W. M. Wright, M. D 4 Dentist, in a very .Im, deliberate manner to say that the . Civvies sad residence on Fourth st., exhausted condition of his body was not alarming from alaatta • tours opposite t he e e tt . . Pina b clock to 12 A hl., and urgh Beak. ode, •ma .lock to 5 P.M. sept4-ly to him —that he felt ,rushed that his earthly ea reer was fast approching to en end—that he wish. from 9 o c ed to fiend some word to hia;beloved mother, who Fire and Marine Insurance.—Tur. Pia. so unwell, as he understood, that it was probable i , a n . : ° it ' a ' fa N if a M a .t ° ,l t.t a: ii h a F o T irii i'mat . aea she might not be:ablepo comet° nee him—he spoke ~.,p „ „, wooer,. '""). Je of her and other members of the family moat aliec. times, No. 21 Market streeetrtr rata. tionately—among other messages delivered in the SAMUEL CORMLY, Presa. name calm, resigned tone, he requested as to tell Roam.' Fiance, rays:dam his mother that should they not be permitted to favor of the free Q 7 ting f all who are In meet en earth again that he had an abiding hope A mee n•vigatiou of the Ohio river, will be held to th . Ira n that, through divine mercy, they would meet here- o f Trade of Pittsbargh, ai past 7 o'clock in Me cvoning of Thursday, the tith Inst.. to take in COllli. aeration t i ns ob r ltruction about to be created by the Early in his sickness, we underatand, he con b dee at heeling. And or deternune neeted bin/self with the Methodist Episcopal r w " nri " t u' in ' e ' rou ' res ouglo to be adopted in order to Church. A funerol sermon was delivered by the vent the general nem of trade and commerce being Rev. .B. McFerin ,of that church, and his remains sacrificed for the benefit of a privet° cOrpOration and followed to their lam regain place by m large eon- local merest.. Lorena, Sterling & Co. Capt. J. C. Wooorlward. canna citizens. Ile was interred with Mason- BAP do John Klinefelter, is ceremonies, having been a member of that fro- ',t a ''' . do David Caldwell, tensity." P. nurbridge, & Co. do Standish Peppard, Lippincott & Co. do sand. Dean, Captal n Satter. Church. Cot - others & CO. do Tres B. Bevel, The following graphic skates of Captain Sutter W„So„teh• do Sarni. J. Reno, rind Sutler's Fort is from ea excellent letter from IL i c a 17.1.,a ers A Cu, `ako' IC J. Crate, California, in the last number of the Home Jour- .A . e a ry neatoe i r A c o . do James nal:— llattaley &Smith, AP.TV Cps I will give, as you have requested, the readers 11. Coulter & Co. rata, of the Journal n sketch of Captain Sutter, (pro- S,„.iatPro,„" ennock a ~ a. Jas. A. lisich S. Hemphill, iig i son CO. nouoced by himself Sorter,) his meane, the fort homing his name, and a few aims in relation to Bailey, Brown & Co. win. Helm. & Co. Lewis Ihdlell & Co. the gold region. He is about fifty two years of Leech A Co. Wood, Edwards & All/night age, of middling height, straight form, and possess. P. litairnor, tieorge H. Perry, es that symmetry and smallness of hand and foot, : L S.\Vnlermnn,Snips Nicholson &Co T o w & Minis, which Lord Byron nets down as a sure evidence J i I Oamne It Towesend & co. of gentle blond. In manners and coarersetton, Forsyth & Co. the Captain is a perfect Chesterfield; he is well 0 II Slaznherger & Co. It. N. NYrocrman, educated, and speaks several different languages Livlngston, Roggen LoaCo Wm. J. Reward, fluently; be in a native of Switzerland, and was w °°° Vi./en• 8 1 ai J . Hergh lady. Jones & Co. Geo R, Massey, one of the officers of the Swiss guard in the rove,- at. tta „.„ o „ . R. lit`Cormick, lution of Jetty, during the reign of Charles tile u. Moorhead, Copeland & Co. Caddy, Jones & Co. Tenth. After th is revolution, he emigrated to the /0/lell tbugg, Lyon, Short, &Co 1 - oiled Staten, became naturalized, and resided C !loosen 1025.i.1 neverol years in Missouri; thence, in 1839, he came to California. and obtained n grant of ninety ! DIED, miles square of lend from the Mexican aultiniities; o n Tuesday, me Nib inst., at 10 o'clock. P M., Jon, his title is a conditional one, and may hereafter . Witsrsau, 111 the Guth year of his age. create trouble for him. In his private character The frt.ads o f d'e iltatilY arc resPeeliellY immel io be is kind, hmpitable, and generous. In fact, bus ouend his funeral. front his late residence on Runk generosity frequently lays him open to be preyed Lane, Allegheny city, this morning at 10 o'clock. upon by time idle and worthless. When asked why he permitted such large demands upon his hospitably without a recompense, he replied:— "What can I do, sir? They come here, eat, drink, and sleep, and sometimes without even thanking me, but whet can I do? 1 cannot turn them out into the WJ.I incest." Surrounded as he was, on his hat settling ia this country, by tribes of wild Indians, he has., by Lind /11-136 cud mat dealing at tached them to his interest, and he now has from 300 to 400 of these thalami devoted lo him and his. They, for their Loud, and a pay of from SI to SG per month, man his lon, work hie farms and mills, and do all the labor generally required in new settlement, The captain, with all his landed and otherpro• pony, ie subject to many annoyances. When the Ressitmn, through necessity, abandoned their set tlements at Ross and &demi, he purchased their Mock, cannon, Licc , and transported thetn,,with great labor, to los settlement, at New Hettletia. Thu purchase was aerated fora tomaderation of $37,000,10 be paid in an annual instalment of Wheat, deliverable to one of the Russian For - Company's vesselaffiThe instalment, owing to the unfinto- Oate season., have laid over fin some years, and should a Russian vessel appear at this juncture,his large crop would lie swept away al a mere nomin al value. Sutter's fiat, now called Fort Sacramento, Is sit uated a short distance from the southern beak of the4lmerican fork, oti one of the tributaries of the Sitenunettto, five miles from its mouth, and- 120 from-San Francisco. The fort is in the farm of ' a' parallelogram, 500 feet fa length by 150 in tread& On the nest day, Friday, another discuasion took place at a regimental muster at Foxtown. Willis spoke first, Turner next. When Turner had spoke about an hour, Clay appealed to tint .tio , mve Major Burman an opportunity of defend ing the Emancipationists and their views; lint Turner refused, and spoke anti an hour longer, in a severe strum, during which he read from the "True American" newspaper a portion of the art,. cle that caused the Lexington mob and the remo- Cal of the Trio American office to Cincinnati.— Clay now appealed to the people to say whether it was fair that this article should be rerl,unless ac companied by the atatement so ollen made to Moj. Turner, that the article in gees/ion was writ ten by a South Carolina planter, (as many of his friends believed, for the express para.se ofbreak ing down his press,) and sent to his office and printed while he was lying sick of the typhoid fe ver. The article, he said, was as repulsive to his feelings and views as it was to Met, Turner's or any other man's—and .f he had not been confined tort bed of Airliness it should never have appear od in his paper. Mr. Wm. L. Neal, the printer of the True America, was on the ground, anti would confirm the statement. Maj. Turner continued hia speech, after this in terruption, and when he concluded, C. M. Cloy took the stand tbr the burp°se of making a kind of apology to the people Mit the interruptions he had caused. He again stated that he thought each party were entitled to be heard, and that each shoud be allowed a fair division of the time.— Thot she :friendi of right and justice by such a course hod nothing to one for if the Emancipm. Mon e a held incendiary notions, and advocated principles opposed to the best interests of the country, the people would judge of them correct ly and put them down, while if their principles were founded in right and justice, it was certainly not wrong that they should be known, in order that they maybe opbeldnnd supported. Aft, r making his explanation, which did not occupy more than than two minutes, he woo leaving the stand, when Major Runyon, o lawyer of Richmond, at a considerable distance off, plied him with questions, and Clay, with the consent of Chenault who claim ed the stump, endeavored to answer him. Some misunderstanding occurred in reference to the disposition made of the School Fund, in which Runyon pronounced a statement made by Cloy lobe and nature, Clay referred to an act of the Legislature in proof of his osuertion, and finally told Runyon, who had interrupted him before, that he was a mere tool ofTurner and was obeying his ronster. Cloy descended from the stand in perfect goo l humor, and without expecting a difficulty with any one, when Maj. Turner remarked that ..Runyon was not his tool." Clay replied that whether Turner knew it or not he was evidently ha willing tool. Cpoo this, Cyr. Turner, the son of the candidate stepped up to Clay, and pro nounced his statement a d—d lie, and struck him in the fare. Clay wee soon stabbed by soma One behind hirn,* . best over the head with a stick by Alfred:Turner and perhaps others, and a revolv ing pistol was snapped four times at his head, bursting a cap each time, by Thos. Turner. He did not draw his knife ;nor shake off the hold of those who worm clinging to him, Mall he per ceived the blood spouting forth from Ins side, and believed from the wound that he must die— With super-human effort he shook off those who held him, encountered Gyms Tamer and stabbed him. The wound took effect in the lower part of his bdomen, resulting in his death in thirty four hours. —Maysajle Eagle. • ! The walls and houses are built of the ofputen. cloned mod brick or adobe. Bastioss et the eagles, with omnonsicionated, protected on all sides, end numerous gone projected from the mad walls. On the Meer side, facing . the court, are flamer:ma buildimmormniled as store homes, dwellings, and barracks for the garrison. The main store house was milted daring the fever of gold digging nt 53,- 000 Per month. The garrison of the fort being more Costly men, aro better fed and clothed than tire farm Indians. The crop of wheat raised by the Captain for the year ISIS was upwards of 30p00 bushels, which m rained at the round cum of ssopoo. This is the proceed from the labor of 125 rude Indians. lie hos also erected mina for grinding wheat and sawing timber; and it was in the construction of a dam and race for a saw-mill, that one of the per sona in t un employ discovered the .gold. From the Norrona: Inlellngenoor. Reduction orthe Iteveue,e ici.rin. 2 1 .dlcal Soolety A regular meeting of the Medical Soviety of Arlo gbony Co Ile .will la: held 10 1/14/0:1 HALL, cora. Mull sod Sunthheld 'lrene, on Tueeday, July ad. 1040 to II (rel.* A M. J x . f {MIN ) jw.t.tdlw A.. POI,LbCK, (Kfr We Would call the attention of out renders the large Rule of hold end Silver %Vetehex nod l'ari Clout., to take place al 8 car for k to-titght, ut Dayll Auction Roome. ALIBRARIAN WANTSIL fur . U. 3 Young Men's Mere anale Lahr ar and !Mechanics' Institute .^ Address Box No. XS, Po y st Moo Good references requird. ststs:dlss A) ACON--10,1ft 11.14 Shoulders and Sides , reed and for rale by I. S WATERIBAN, juari -- M Water and__ rat Front xt "rk HIFI) 1 1 11111T—lati bush dam! Peaches; at,, do do 1.,/ Apple, in sto s re and for sale by matL S IYATERMAN ____________—__ _ _. PO aLt epli z t .I; :I st :, lb; I L dg LPATSRNAN klBre 11,1811—en bbls Ilening; IS do :Shad; , for sale by lowl. S.M. AEIRI,NAN TIOLL 111./111.11-8 !Ails Boner 15 kegs do, for JA, wale by ruts L tl WATERAIAN bbis L na..d oil, for sal! , L E T cArivieLt. ri l O% ‘ V ‘ yARN —1 L.i me,/ ratVELE, DOT Affil cake just reed and for cola by JD CANFIELD C UL:TF-00 bee joot reed end for rate SCAN • _ • 11. PF - PPER — DENT •A war icd 05alet:y juv l ' iMe RAU Craft!' Zr At the Amoral meeting of the Coreom'm of me Alio nberty Cemetery, held at the Sam ots.the grounds, ea Saturday, the dth day el.Ttme, A. D., Valk On motion, %Timers hrCartotium. .mon woe chosen Presidem, and L Finney, Jr., Secretary. An election was then held fur ogees for the earn ing year, ?deans. Totten and Culbertson acting as tel. ler.—when the followin g persons were duly re-elected TIIOhIAS. td. HOWE, Prestdent. Joan Lhasam., Nall 11011. Vtuoti ICUST. Homarra M nnogg,. ?d'CommrsA - Joan IL Suovertomnra. Jorms R Seem And J. Finney, Jr, Secretary and Tremonet. A ...einem of the affairs of lbw Commotion was mode by Mr Howe, Preaident of the Hoard, who also informed the Coryorator• that Legtrfonv e gang.. had been obtained for an inerenoef the ground~ . fo .hould it m non o time Im thought advi.m.le, or well as r the erecf a Receiving Tank within the home of die coy —a protect to which the earnest •ttention of the Manager. wan now direrned A General Financial Stair...cm of the Corporanon, together with ri report of no bustnem tor the pert year, .alinutted atid accepted. Upon comma hlr. J. M' Cord. Ordered. Thai the proceeding. of the meet ing. Including the Report., be publithe in all the city paper. Admorned WILSON :DTA N DLESS, Freud Jr , Sre'y . "AII..IIENT CO,l (.""". ... 0-"." 17Ar1:1: A I) t,49 Total gale. to date •• • ...... •• • Received for taterntenta and labor. " from C S Bradford, Rog Overpa,d by Br W Ad,liaon •••••• .Credn. Pal 1, A.Bayard eitr. purchase,l723.ool/ 00 lon-reat laprovauents• •• • • • 2.111 21 blaprnaa 4.236 37 Labor on uound. cyrej 01 Shrubbery. Stark, An 971 a.l Ca.lt In Treasury Note, .1- 0 .1 m44.14 of !kip( Duo on 1.41. u,lal .... 4 I,7IOICNT or TIFF littrtNutts or Tilt •tALIAtt :lett. Cmi .. tr[llll tor the yen, etultog June o r , Total Osier of Imo, front Jo. lot, INS, to May 31. lON Root-trod for Interpol. nod lanor • • • I,WI Paid to O A. Bayard Credat S-1940 VS Interest • . . 2.51,13 57 Gateway and Improvements • • • • 3,977 17 E.lrwnses 1.542 DO Ixbor and grounda :1103 MO Stauieb. ry, atom , Oke. T. 17 816 '...111 J. FINNEY. Jr., S., he. Otfiet• the Trect.rer. No. lb Water . l'itteburgh 1 . / o..argh, June, P.n. C,ry pap.,• ropy end elturge Allegheny Cemetery. " • Elm:Es• 4 Tri is r rouAcca—ro 1.31. Gedgeg' 6 tot, CoLneen, landing per Ft... Shenandoah, and lor gale hr to2n JAMES DALZELL. NNO,2 .11A lAble No 2 Mackerel, lan luS t.y ecoal awl (or /Laic 10cc..10 close Coning utent ]AMEN DALZ.F.LL. Water Pt 6-10 but, just recT and for talc by UFLAUts S Rkl f"F.R titilo, of u superior quality Just tee and for iiale by jit: BRAUN & REITER UNARY SEED-600 lbs recd and for ef.lo by •_/ BRAUN & RErTER Clt i b ,, lA4l TARTAR-2 tibia jo i nagar ir rz t. tittby LA it DOIL—IO bbla bent quality, for We by , • Wl7 J SCHOONMARER CO f`iFILORIDC LIAIFI3y the cask and al Julia Mus k) print h Son'. be .— st article, by J SCHOONMAKIP tt CO U 1.141. 4IUININE-70 o for sale by 13 _lug: 1 SCHOONIVIAXER te CO VINE SPONGE—Just received and lot te by _jo27_ J SCHOONMAKER ec CO OXALIC ACID, Chloroform, Chlorie FA her, Ilydraeg Cam Crete, Morphine and Sulpb. Donut. mot received by J SCHOONMAXER. ina7 PI Wood n REV. DR. UP /FOLD.—The Aged Christi..s patuon, containing a variety of Essnyt, adapted to the improvement, consolation, and encouragement of persons advanced in We. By Rev. John Stanford D. R. with a memoir of the author, by Rev. George Cpfold. D. D. Rector of Trinity Church. Putaburgh.. vol. roe. Just received end tor sale by JAS D LOCKWOOD, CO Wood e bbls No 3 Mackerel; 30 bbla and 20 bb do, As received and for sale by sto7 JOHN WATT CO Lib sy st 1)INK LINEN LUSTRES—A handsome article 1, 1 ;trim and children's Sacks. Alse. Mall and Scotch Maslins—For dresses and sacks. &leo, barred J.konett, for do, some as low as 12,l eta, minable for ladies wrappers; and a great variety or Eat broidered Mashes, for dresses and sack.; white, pink and blue corded Skirts, &e, lately recei ved at Dry Chmds Haase W It MURPHY, Jai; northeast ear. 4th and Market Ito, Ursa nwood, nosedale, and E./Amman' ON WEDNRSDAY, JULY FOURTH o. The eplendid feat running .teams . ...4 . 4ytirßtJ:i_ Will make regular tripe every hal our, from the foot of Pitt t, I. the above planes, on the FOURTH OP JULY.stree eh. will land on the Allegheny vide, fur the .rommoda him of paasungera. N —Parties wishing to he conveyed a short die lance down the river, can be accommudared by apply rag to IL T. WHITE, at the Ossetic office. i.tthetrq 4 .;I n iFI E N C IC (' III I /171 , 1 .i t 'FC Y, et OirtMte?t,.r.er'r T I: e KA rahIe ,O 4t: A N E C. I: . 3:9 1 . in the matter of the voluntary asatantnent or IVar not Alan. d Co. , to • Springer Ilarbangb and W. S. Courtne7. Awl nose, June 23d, NOLICt baying been prep In the Pittsburgh Chronicle and /Mercury, for litre wark., of the Gong of the account, and no excepuons baring been filed thereto, on motion of Sir Courtney, the iteemint is confirmed absolute/y, end Wm. &Aus tin, b.cy. appended Auditor, to amid and adjust the ac counts of ermlitora, and make distr.botion among item Front the Itecord. M VULT7,, Prothoutary : Efj. I will aimed t i thedolma of the above appoint ment al my other hi Pittsburgh, on the I7thioly,lBo, at 2 o'clock, P. M. WM E. AUSTIN, Auditor. uiSiat33. /1111 F. partnership heretofore existing 'between Sam underll3 Butthlicid and IVilliam B. Ilys, trading the finti of BUSLIFIELD IIiCYB, tO. daY t.ot 'l - dissolved by William B. Hays selling his entire otem,. in the rsn to S. B. Buteld. .811 accoun due the brm wil n l he coll ected by hfi 8 B. Bushfield, and all debts due by the late firm to be paid by the same. S. B. 1 / 8 911FIRLD, W. B. HAYS. PnLaburgls, June 2-0,1810 CO . PARTNICI:3IIIP.—S. B. Besnmaidi having this Jay meomated w I Menzel( HENRY LIADIZE., formerly et Becher. Po., and recently of the National Hotel, I . .tolotrgh,%mil combat. the business ander Elmo of 111.:SIIFIELD it LEADER at the old eland Na. Vti• Liberty .trees . S. B. hI , LTSIIFIELD, I'doborgb, June V, 11449 11 LEADER. thmog inured from the former 'bueiness, I tat. ple.ore In recommeuttunt my successors to the pa trottage of my customers and the potato generalty. j.T7 HAYS. OWN LOTS FOR SALE • Int 1 LOTS will be offered for sale, at Pahhe Atm- IIOROLIGIIo LPL/ lion, f TAR on the ENTC TtlIRDn M., o day off the JUL nett, e the most Dental. rid and flourishing towns on the Pennsylemia twenty-two miles from Pittsburgh, In a Mon fertile mad rapidly improvimi country. The Canal passes through the Cellt(V, while it is bounded on the sooty by the Allegheny river. on toe north by the State road, and on the west by Dull creek, forming n good i n s rbor for loa th er. tr.c. The nelghborhood abounds Iron Ore, Water Power, and is celebrated for its on. nitrous Salt Works., the most extensive to the state. There are &trendy severest Steam Mills in the town and vicinity; five or six stores, three well built places of worship, two public schools, and a population of about um hundred inhabitants. There is no doubt that a hundred honors would find tenants immediately. There evety I robability of it, beeoMing . aCm of juelkee or coeuty town. Capitalists, Manufacturing Associotions, all, filechanms and others sectiocg sortable locations, are invited to ciamine the advantages here presented. tit late , the priers allots has been rapidly increasing, and ft is not likely they will ever be purchased as cheap hereafter. All that is waiting is capital and enterprise, to give it a rapid growth. It is admirably situated for carry ing on the lean efleattnee mutant:Wren, which do not romaro to be placed in the great manufacturing cen tre of Pittsburgh. The two beautiful millers of Big and Little Bull Orects, Opening iota the mintry, hav ing abundance of Water Power, Coal, I ro n Ore, dr.+ many advantages for marptfacturing establishments, among which may ha MentlOned the following: Roll mg Mills, Salt Works, For - nice% Brink Yards, (firs brick clay is abundant.)Brona Ware, Seythes,Spades, Ages; also, Carding Machinery, Woollen Factories, Turning Lathes, Cooperage in all itabranchcs, Plow mg Mils, Wagon and Plough making, and man oth ers which may be carried an by individual% on fly in corporate totslille, under the lam Act of Aar.- biy, /wended glee a fur tr.al to the great industrial problem of Mmlent times, to wit, the association of Capital and Labor, without the clause. personal liability The sale will be to Tarenturo; the terms made known at rya time. Oue-fourth of the purchase money will he in cash, nr approved mile , at slaty days—a credit given for the rerg.igder• jars It. BRACXTINFUDGE. UNITED STATES WHOLESALE CLOTHING WAREHOUSE: LE WIS A. lIANSOBLD, Yon .= •nd 2/9 Plum, Susan•, (beior, Penton st and Burling Slip,) NEW YORK. Here., hand ;he largest assortn.nt of CLOTIIING IN THE UNITED STATES, ADArzza To ALL MAAA,crs_ In the arl u •!e of BIIIILTS end DHLAW Rita, w kdep wl endless variety Also Ole 111.1 CZlenslVa uallufariare. td VII Clothing and Covert(' Hall ha the world. PLAIN AND PASHIONABLF. CLOTHING, Of all kind& Catalano's of stock seta bymatt. Orden promptly fdiad. LEWIS tr-ILANFOR.D, iirni Nov. Rd, .C 4, tiad 2.19 !earl at. N. Y. DATIIS: BATUMI BATEifil Ur EN ex Tills DAY. A SALOUN Ludisa seal Gentlemen's rl. !lathing tittablistiment. llot, cold end .1 00 ,., Baths. Ice Cream, and oil other dolicaclea or the season. Ram). aucittsou paid to the comfort of thesevrho may lava, the above .tablisholeut matt a COIL WJinni Propnetor. lIITE BRA, bbls stiosViVlZa-Basins. mewed ant for sale by liNt a R ftI'CUTCREON:I2I4Ieny n. / 11MEESE-2W bee pritne•AVraYere Reaetve Chee s e, , Nit received and (or sale by WA R M'CIITCIIFS.9N lute LTININE-00e °lmo reed and for vale by A. 2 0 R E SELLERS, Li Weal et A LORS-37D lb. prime dry, jolt reed nod for sale 9 . pl. R E SELLERS OSMAN AND PARIS ELUE-One cue of each pat rood and for soh. by 1020 R SELLERS DRLIOSTD - RUOS!!-011 COO., Acetate Potaalt, Qum Atid, Promo Arid, Cmtneret Potash, Jost recd mod for wale jutbl R E BELLERE A LLISTERIS 01 NTLIENT-90 :002 - --for ilia by EMU:IO 't tiED-MikeviNg. Lani,--r-‘.Vi-orfor-Taliti „1,4. 1073 ' ARMSTRONG er. CROZER RAIMOIND s 00•11 h!.r.z XrE N S G E R 1 - 11 L. BEING THE - LE4tbliZt.:)3,4llVg. wIIiTZTION bF WILbBEAST Sr ' g ." IRD:S'A"'IVDREPTIL4I EVER BEFORE ca.!ntuDrEDItUTHEIJIITTED STATES. '!) N PITTSBURGH, os Tuesday, Wednesday and 'Fbursday, July 3,4, and 5, for three days only, at the MANSION lICIUSE YARD, liberty street. TIME OF EXHIBITION. On Tuesday, July 3d, Afternoon, from 2 to 5 o'clock— In the Everting from 7 to 10 o'clock. thi Wednesday, July Ch, there toldwil be four distinct Rthl ". o4 . •irl---Morning, from 8 trom 111 to I P. M ; Afternoon, from 2 to 5 o'clock, and evening, from 7 to 10 cPelock. On Thursday, July sth—Morning, from 0 to M Af ternoon, from e to 5, and Evening Dent 7 to 111 Among the most conspicuous features of this inter- CORNg exhibition, is the RHINOCEROS, OR UNI- since 18 CIF HOLY WRlT—thc only one in America 33. The great difficulty of reporting this huge and sa u','together with the almost impossibility f 7 "Mtn mpin im alive in climate so uneongetual to ! his hatin g a u d conshtunon, renders theczhihnton of a LIVING RHINOCEROS in the United States, the grentest curiosity iu the Animal 14i0420.- Foremost In interest, novelty and attraction, am bold and original performanem of - AUCTION. SAIi'S. ' STEAM BOATS By John D. Doris, Auctioneer Furniture! Fornitnrel! at Public Acadian. At the Cabinet ware roam of John llVFaland, Third street, near Market, 011 Saturdny, June 30th, at 10 o'clock, A. M. The underrigned will on account of whom it may concern, at the nine and place above stated, .it the stork in tire ware crow lately occupied by said APFarland, consisting in part at follows, viz splendid mahogany Sofa; 4do dollivana; Bm4 not end mahogany Dressing Bareausi t kdoo walnut Chmrs; 2 dox mahogay Chairs; 1 mahogany Card Table: 4do Dining Tables; do Pier Table, marble top; 9 do sewing, rocking Chalet; lidos wane!, cant teat Office Chturs,• 3 muhreenny Centre Tablet; high and low posted Bedsteads, Cribs, Cradles, Se. Sc. Sc. Solo positive, to close the concern. Terms ash, par money. Ja97 JOHN D DA VIS, Auc4 Stayle - t.ul Fancy Dry 09W X 10 On Thursday morning, June 29111, mu 10 o'clock, at the Commercial Sales Rooms, corner of Wood toad' rah streets, will be sold, without reserve, Larocca= whom it may concern-- A large assortment of staple ond mere Goods, among which are supertne cloths, casss, nottsocrum, tweeds, fancy vatings, drillings, comm odes, summer cloth, splendid printed lawns, brissuines, borages, de mans, toper prints, churhams, .howls, silk bars, black sum, sewing silk, spool cotton, bottom, comb,, hosiery, braid leghorn bonnets and haw, damask linen table cloth, cheeks. ticklugs, bleache d and brown mulles, Untie tuts, &e. At 2 o'cloek Groceries, Queensantue, frumitare, dm. Young Hymn and Imperial teas, Y.' manufactured Spanish Incense, No I palm soap, writ i ng and wrap , mg paper, band boxes, abovela spades, hoes, forks, wooing and wrapping paper, transparent and Seninian window blinds, manic! clocks, looking glasses , glass ware, axes, hatchets, parent balances, confectionary, A large and general assortment of new and second hand household furniture, cookmg stove, kitchen men ails, nke. ju22 st d, Layge Saliof Gold and Silver Matcher, Paris Cleat, gc. On Thursday evening, June at 8 o'clock, at the Commercial Bede. Room, will be sold, without re serve— 21 superior gold lever and avert watches; 15 silver cylinder escapement and quaruer do; 9splendid Paris el d ots, rim 15 days. 1 do do do b' black marble case. The above have just been reed Born one of the most extensive importing houses in the United States, and afford an opportunity rarely offered of pa chasing a superior watch or clock. The collection may be ex. amused the day prior to sale, when dealers or gentle men ushing to purehau (or themselves or ladies, are invited ID Gan. 1a26 JOIN D DAVIS, Aunt QMPR VITO VIII & SON'S great sale orsliferidid and unique Marble and Alabaster Statuary, Ari an. VMS., Urns and Ornaments, rich engraved and at Bohemian Blass, Preach C4i1:111 VIMs, Candela bras, Browse Figures, Papier a de /Uncle Tables, and a g - reat . variety_ of useful and luantifal article., will t'Aon'ff:ll,-ML" rs'tree7bentoweeen'—Fifl'ir rinil!Tigh,"%tgs; side. This beautiful assortment earulatrin part of statua ry In dark marble, licrettlei throwing Leander from the Altar, fignre of Aristides, Hercule., Farnesi, group of Enea. Statuary in Absbasten. ameba. on the Pu• ther, birth of Venus, Dancing Girls of Cocoon, Paul with Dog, Mears; large arusead Medians and !lobe Vase,, Agate and Yellow of Sienna Talmo, Hohmann Chrondoles, Bronze Tempoa Clocks, China Rocagtie Vases. tha Vestal , Lamps and Flower Stands, Grecian Vases., ruby and blur, rich gilt Goblets, mat eat Ratter Stands, Totquoise Grecian egt Toilet sett,2 Papier Maga Tables, inlaid With mother of pearl, ,2 do do Mosaic 'with marble stands,' Omni of Snails; ti superb copy of tho WursOck Vass, Slated Waro,k.o. Ths atiore colleaMou bar been inapormdtweet Dom Italy, Prance. Germany and England, by db*b Vito Volt Soo. • Tba roam open eo Wednesday, the 27th Mg, and sit tbe evening. The ladies oad Ire-midi:tem Pittsburgh are i t to attend and examine s beautiful collection. Terms—A H sums under $lOO, cash; from 5100 to sapp, ninety days credit, above 52U0, six months, for apprev,d endorsed paper. Jag JABII3I3 M'KENNA, Auctioneer. E NCYCLOPEDIAS AND DICTIONARIES, fotm• ters dison tub kl . speeial and cdin i the v ndep ancrna de endent wrks. nts. par edited by wri erstme Brude's Dictidnary of Science, Literature, and Are OoplmidTs Dmtionary o( Practical Medicine; Johnson's ?miner.. Encyciopmdia; London's Encyclopmdia of Gardk ring; Loudon's Eneyeloptedm of Plante, Lon don'. Encycloymtlis of , Treas; hrCallecks DietionatY of Commerce, M l CalloclittathctionarY of Orals Diononary Arm Ind Manutactaresi /Mama Medical Dictionary; Wathratores Cretop.vdta Com ftipree; Political Dictionary, vole. deo.; Wehmor .na Parks' F.ncyclopedit Domesac Eennomy; Andante Classical Dictionary. "These basks are Mil of Biformalloaorthe beet itind, arranged and presented the best manner. For silo by _lima, JA6IFS D LOCKWOOD, 63 Wood at 15RIED - ITEEF=IO turr—ce-s DrMdßrieve-RetTidn, armor and for sale by NM; SELLERS k !COLS L ARD—? 9 kegs family No 1- Lard, in more mid for _la? SELLERS 2r, NICOLE LARD 011 4 -16 Obis Conklin's No 1 Lard Oil; 16 do No 2 do, la store end for sale by Jed SELLERS Ir. NICOLS CU' /DAR CURED HAMS-..7A error ready to deliver from the smoke•houre,ofevperier attality,fo“ale IS&IA DICKEY & Pram el AI ' .ba, e. Applesi In do do Peaeliesi pureed and for gale ARMSTRONG &GROSE'S, u:73 gs Market in ACON-120 ps Sides nod Shoulders, to-dire reed and for solo by ARMSTRONG cnozEit jam . G ElikiN CLAN—Arrived at ship , ,Omar, !O Idos of Clay, vridet "" 9"4 ""a' 4n"" TA.`39SY & DEBT Wow D O'Y ABH--10 eats on hand and for.aal a by 1.." __TASSEYA .11E:9T D EARL ASII-1; mike in more and for ials _ .1.22 TABSEY & SODA ASLI-16 ells for sale 67 8122 TASSEY a, BEST .1) SIACONM BIDES—ZOO lb . reo'd WI fur itala by TASSICLA -4-1 1=4 Alt D-e kegs LAW Lard, as band and fay TASSEY BEM , rsala b bas on band and for sale by Ida TASSET &BEST 11 - TRITE FISH-211 bids (rash burietted; IB kf bbl , y do do; mac reed and for solo by ' J 022 S F VON BONIryBOBST & CO • by b7,4,l2Prirna Oltax&TintanCO"6 FLOUR -100 hula Flour, for solo by Jo= J 8 DILW, ROCKET POWDER— I bbrrir — iik — Yr JuS2 S AFETY FUBE—.S BARLEY—MI butto-A offg rtlefoEslei„by lag! Mbliateln rIRAB CIDER - 7. A few bar very r unor_tittaY, fc. a .la T - . -J A (MTl2lOz W I L T ! DE.ANS-4 IMIV/VOrtb&tOZEs A A. hIABO - "Frin C( i --- 1.7a,0, -- F7 o ff e . la!7;fittrZt' alla= -4 . 4 42j1:t; d 1=041: (:alteocs at ea cts; Walla Co, taateolos, avarraad; Una &rotas 18 and O,Se; - more Wrought Colima al 8 tout 11k; Chantizetta 25e, c. &a. AM 1.100 - 11bir - , - aitTun I.—ardiiiiloFria .11. Bunch; CO Ido do; Co aalo by __________J" l i ll WI:WAN% 110 Wood sr ______ par g ip—t tut Cr** hi &al imfargi:7 DIM/LEA-1 ao.7,wr mato by ju4l J DAVILLIAMS ft VI do LIV E 01.1.-2 bankets Murseillu, pint bottles; 2do qt. do; 2 do Borden. cit do. for .ale 42 ro2l. Er WILLIAMS B EANS -41 bbl. White'Reauw, for sale by JO2l RHEY, mArroEWs & co T0Tm0c0.... 15 k,g.Non o&nc& tk.b. gate. brand, for sale b)) jo2l RILEY, MATTHEWS h. CO Cif RAU Et—fl caseAsopeitne. for sale by Jl4ll D wiLLIAms IANDLES—G bx• Sperm; 10 do Sian 10 do Stearmei ‘,./ for male by jir4l J 13 WILLIAMS SOAP—£S bone iu .. linnitre; 20 do — No i Castle; 2 do Camlkl; 2 do Almond, for wade In2l J D agaz S ARoll iman, for sale by , S a l.l D TV 11,41 AMS TTALUSLE WORKS ON MANUFACTURES, MA. CHINEIIY, B.c.—dourra Ph.sitww ...d M heighill Assistant, being a wits of plans,assuUns and ovals'. liana of Steam Engines, Spinning Mastunas, AlikilTor Goading, Tools, Ac , in d folio WO. veIaP , SZII6III Mecham, and Eagiiinsils' MagiagitsF-8 o. Carpenisy aud Joinery: A cemprehenSithr olds boos Cur caveats) , and Mins.). ' , nth rajas for evert portof work about building, and pr.... mu . p ,... E , to. .. CM.Sr. D . Y ..I. P C din 0 CiV4Eii.girler.!int, i .nose thick vol,Elso. • Sees'. Cotten Aploner shit ISlerraettser, Pao- . Tredgokl pa the - strength of Cur - bolt new n ed hp ottgloaann, ntSsolii Iwo. • MSte Swim hhssine, by: ihpArytii w c h o : 1 yo h 4m : s?4,tharujityaltteinegter siikreSitret.E. ....Ti by AA L" A U Locti r wojko, e giv.i . r ., , Mara— fiffittM : SUMMER. AlLlZA.NOMBliklirrel-loe ;': HI 1 A ONONCiAIIELA ROUTE. , '4 - ~...4 t '., Only 13 Mlles Staiglate3 , - .; Via Brownsville and Cumberlzutd lo UnlnninAkinf* Philadelphia. IeUE rpltmild and Dm =tong 1111 - Mail stffistal*- • ATLANTIC,Capt J Porkinson; BALTI4:I4 Li ef obs; LOMB kIIANE, Capt E Emmen; strirrn!.' '4i4Mitrar Zabr . 13 W 9 NS 1 /ILffi; ', A ' The mender boat will leave' the hi Witati, Mord the Cridge, , Inayone o'clock . p 'V • Paiamagera mill take 'SUPERB COACH.E.Sat villa, at 3 aelock. P. Et, and - the splendid card • _ „",' 'Bann:pore and Ohip Railroad, at CureberlandynlB",.' o'clock, A.M., anitirrive in Baltimore thenantei' ,eni...,,'.. ing, in nine fox tnn evening lion to PhiledidgatoldBV,... Washington city. . , .. ' 'i.. i . t,", , .From Pittsburgh to - Riltimorei earl 30 hoireaj.T , ' ' l- I'q I Fare -810,00 ~'....': 1:: - - - , Pr= Pittsburgh to Philadelphia, only 40 hin*, 11' Pure 812,110 "•-st,,. 14.„., The evening boat Will leave at 6 o'clock, ter ; day evening.. Pussenge. by Win bald , will If' board in comfortable Kale Room the fint nil 4 over the mountains the following day id Fastftth, ~ 1 4, • Comicsi and lodge the second night in CuusbeinoiB ; f i Passengers have choice of either Steamktnir I Road between Baltimore and Philodelpffia, • sheL, !privilege of stopping at Cumberland Cod.Blti rW, • and resuming their acme et pleasure. Condon. ' ts.f.' red to p ontes to travel as they please. -ultl.; .. t . ' We make up the loads and way bills for theikkhlts,..•: r ",.. Pittsburgh 0f..., (In order to save Dom ' arriving arriving at Brusrasnlled It is therefore impol4llolQ.',l'. passenger. to get their tickets Wont going on :listriCl.l. I ofthe boat, at oar office, Monongahela ilonstiOntetel=i. I miect, nr.B4 Charles • Hotel, Woos! et, Putsbargh,t, ! ..i . , epa,dam .1 . aw..sIIDIEN, 4611 ~4 Pltiabstrxht ati LotilairtUto PaetifF,74: FOR GIDiCINNLLTI AND Lotrtsvuz;:;.. The .vadiitzlit,„4,,,.,i, 1,:f.,,,g,:, andep, master, will leave for ; iti..ptrif,.2sl d Intermediate pat. on Wstitc , * , 7,-. 9, the nth 1.4.110 o'clock a. x. For freight or p l as m i =nhq vi ttA r tri a. il47 ' ,. ii mug _GEO B hiIIffiIIINDERGER.. t. , 1 'l . -....' PrITSBGROB AND Lotr izAcitsra6V,A , The new and tipiendid histp n.Z m iaLrer packe T L EG . V ., :i 1 - - , BABB No, 9, 1 ,..,. ,..• . man, muter, Will lellog,for COOln4 soul and Lostunrille on Thursday, the 3111 is s. r. o'clock, A. AL For kelt% or E kem o sny on u1ter,„,...,. to Cat at: . ,pre. GEO BMILTENBEatuTi 'Wig • • - ii. - .•!,. —7_---,,_ -- - ----.'----r... ..„,- ~!•, FOR CINtAfII LOUIS - 4 . •,.-.-, The light droop ate ••,. • ,••••• • LAD BYRO, !I - • 1 ,,,- , . .... 4 WRerrostamer, wi ll lea ' Atiel,j•- rts thuds), at 10 oietrie I' , rl - . . For firJght or passage apply on board, 0 to ; e:,, E4,' Legravillo and Ilte Lostla Pa * lLi n lit, ~,,,,..,, T,A. ~... . , .: ih9.: , -4* REGULAR TUESDAY PACKET FOR.' Hs • 4 * . ate fine (hot am . .. x .,w4 t '''," I. . stammer ATLANTis, , •: , e.z ~-.., • Ge° • the W t. o'bWiekr"ovis nial'Urwintanssed!Umtier/rtle.,•. every TtlesditY. ot Di tdalock• a.ga. A • 474 ~ 1,, , 61 i ...Enr_freighl or goat oar on board, 0 , 6, i 'Pr' !:?-!' isle L 53 to •Ftl' .71 ilazt; 46 si l'' ' ' 4ilisv s. - I.REGULAR BNtromrs r.ro- ier . Foil It LAtio .:::;:'!, - . The fioe fast running/ Misitlar4;. steamer OEN. LANZ, ~,,.. 4 A. McPherson, ni ,atter Will lekilty-/- • above and unermediato porm 7 ,,,ii; 7!7 Nlll:44i iii t = l 6:ll6 - ov4l - . 1 • ~,, ; -,-• em I 4,. ...*.,? . tos.,llbulimi •-•?,- 7,.5 - •T etni—i2..r7,74.:-. '.•'.-ii The neat and substantial •i t•, - . - ,:e4 - . ' McMillen, mor t ar 111 pe r a•Og''': • ~ ' ;'!.'..`d,,.. er regular trips between Pitudi - • ••i , * Wbecling and Bridgeport. Moo arill coon Pitts* - ;.A..: on Wednesday and SatardeT. ,b , ,-.5,,,, Port eight or pa u wply on board. a "l. 1:111 - "m - 0 .6.1115 - 817s* is. . Tbn e steamer '‘X gegiiim CINDPAELLA, .4P,, Georg Calhong, master, cern Jeldir -•..,- r above and iliteratedlote game, da, '..?. Mo days and Thnradaya at 10 aat ii --.7 • :For hap' or passage, .apply on, board. Mr" I•ft ~,-,--, • SIMIDAYTII.IPf liTilLevx. , .: z*.. • The U. F. Mail ineamer MICIIKA l- 4 - 4 No.A uils 1••••5i.5...N.,g • . 1,..,.,.. Me MonengatirJe Donee,. ev o eu ..„. y nom.,F ..., a o'clock, to Soak 1 , ~i. liettiridng,. will arrive al 5 o clock P. M. :,a I_, - ;?' Faro to Beaver and beat, Twenty-five Ceuta . .f . .'lt, ~, fr..i , 'n.". / ----- V: NDA '3'4 4... azhs:h li a.7 li'd T.L n aLs.e. x v e r. E z ii ! : : :::$l. ii „, he& ifoose, every tilandv, • 47 ,.. : , 9 o'clock, for Beaver. hilt, - .!....,''' will icon Beaver at 1 o'clock, P. Id" .n e d the ; .;,,I; ! 4 iifolock.Jfe Tro_iylfirscent ng:?;.i. •,,r..:-•. mil. ,i . I .•• j , i ' LI 4,,, m i ~.. LiMOMOII.IIIILTN ...- A. D. AGENT, . . r ngerd4lll and Outnnus n i '. 41.•. Awn, has removerho No. 117 Front, bctw W 1970614.1-; oral Smithfield slmets. e • no ‘•••'`.% - -'1 !el virrATCULY--Jhasi received front Li mod alril , WV a very fino 101 of Oold and Silo: r e f , ' Levitag . I !iv ; Watches made expressly to order, by one o,e bi I '''''' manutactormg establishments in Eagland. - ; ;',4 • ...i• ~,y!._t !9.9p r ieis.si ! oitmeni of Gamma and Englii . 3.fi II'!,.• 7.,:,,,..4:17:, iir W u tZe i r ., from Sib to CO& , ! ,g. ;'..z . W w 4its c ciN, Watch Maker, ; i;',.l • :-.7". 818 comer Fourth and Marker ma i.• "iii:-.`. , i o u4itiscs.o2-...50 p".• • miiiiiticlioa - Tifimi4 Al various brands, far sole by ' -'?' .4- , . • S S F voNsoNurnonsrs co :$. 54 • _ 1 5.- F t L2l . - - g z h t i ti c, ,z e No 3 hia;kl4.eleitaia. -...,:,;.: ii.ssin. ' ' g*; as do Nol gi e piti 4 1,1 do Not tzimmel3 ,•,',. obsio; to do No 1 Salmon, Mat reeeivedenl for sale tip-.... ,jattl 1011 N WATT & CO. Liberia et .••ld ~t; 1/1 011 1/0/131 BILLER. .!•5;1•!• Prrrnstaen. Janet& 1149.:•.,, ;- - ..'i. • air. John D. Morgan—Dear Fia, fIOWA.ao. ir-a•Pwal. .631 - ' i•.'. i fall or your Worm killer to one of my cbddren, and so p ' i! , l' iho Mort time - alone WI boar it passed twenty Bovril, 1 , worms. Iteel rafe in recommerultragor Ve cidfitie-,•7 '-,...., as Ma beet medlciae that cambia for eirwllutf 4 - . -‘,.....,..• worm.. Juana Moutesn, near Noblestowu.4li,; . i•-;,, v- Prepared ond aold by dke propnetdr, JOHN D. tasmfi, 1.-. • OAN, Druggist, one door hebow Dottiond alieY, Wecidi,l • „_,,F, ! Brett. ........_.....,,, 0 ..1 ~;'_,, ' ;!5',.. EATTINCN o t. for ! by .. ••• , i ..07 .,-,..i , i - : ' )itia SP VON 4. ;;,.: -L ° 4 l.. 81'1 ;417 73 % E . YON , — nw ' li.m.l"aff.w.' * ''''' ACO•-.-; -.,,.• ... kn . 4la • q VOFCrii to CO bbls Safety Faso, (or blasting, J SDILWORTLI katO HERE DRIESRACH, The Emperor clan the Lions, is the derta'N . 7/Yrt " Beasts. Ilts performances Sider from all eiherAtaist only in the sktll and grace which he illlpPAgarrhill exercises with the TERRIFIC GROUP GniTON% TIGERS, LEOPARDS, COUGARS, SANTRELIO,4e. Hot in the matchless end almost aoperhnmag txiomo with which be etatts the obedience of IIteIeASIVISX rind most remorrzless tenants of the deseNdlelpt I s okkal anJ the Jungle HERR DRIESRACH MWIA.NE, MANY IMITATORS, bet HE HAS NO IS HIMSELF ALONE • • ! The LIST embntees all the finest Living l)" of of Wild Animals I That the great experience, enterprise an lssmsog. of the proprietors have entailed thesnlo tairbm in one LARGE AND SPLENDID COLLIO 14/14,%*: fall descriptions of the Animals comnine-d la• EA ST.; Lilian, will be feud In Pamphlets sad' vat orinetpal Hotels, previous to the arrival' of Oftpossf;:, dijr•Admission 25 cents. Children noderAticatsi; ti cents. joeht,te FOR CINCINNATI. "j :0-. .. ~. jElikThe splendid steamer .. `..- MAY FLOWER, O " : ,Y. . Marshall, master, oa Endayl - fltii itf4r: root. 414 o'clock, F.M. ?..... -,-.. Komi or : 1 '''''''. For fralg tar Paraag g a r F aG a ß t AW frYtto,l,o, hg.. -, jo FOR ClliCllsiliATL a ..: ,1.: , ._ : -: ~.1 , ,-,-.... ~I nia. ..s to The splendid %Macaw i . -, . SHENANDOAR,o • • ..i. Roorman, master, %silliest's. fes abakfe'. and intermediate porn this gay; Itw. mat, as 10 o'clock, A'Pt For freight or pasaaga apply on board,. or, s 9 i, • 1 it‘r+ , PETTIOREW & Cce.,. Itiireliiorgiiiii Akii.ouisvidati7. , , , maL' The flue liF o ht dra p m6 T ht sMail .. ,k:,F ~':`. kaUler, master, 11 21 run 00 it • .: ,. ,gee.) 4 1,_ • ng low mum, and will i.-.NeVYtr . Thew points lo atm day. For freight or passage, apply on board. grgo.l'4, CINiaNfIATI Illt, PITTIIIIIIINIft i .4• '=-, : : Ala 74 : bAILY PACKET Lti;itiL, rums well known line of splendbl passenter %SW • en la now -composed of the bergestrsni-; lied nod femishwi, and most powinful tinswi., AIX omen of Th e West. Every astommodoOloman4•o63* • sea that money can proenre, has beenprovidsd,No*,: semen.' The Line has been in operation for Oeite4ll - carried a million of people arithoni the lea*11130:7, ry to their persona. The ats mill be at taApt,M, Wood street the day progions to stoning, for theipt, non of freight end the entry of passengers on e. thterorst!, ter. In ail Cues the passage money mastmast ttagttia* advanc 4 4:i;;1--V,. SUNDAY PACKET. ~ ,"..' 2 , ": . The ISAAC NEWTON, Captain Lre...ikaviill'' leave Pittsburgh every Bmtday mortdris.,, t h, e ,„,..... , Wheeling every &nada) , eveniug at 10 ',.. ~,. 7 ~ ,f e", Mar 0,180. at'. ...;.: MONDAY' PAcATT„ 2.-' :1. The MONONGAHELA, 9.:,,L Bronx will ler FiktfP bu every Monday morr ~t ~, to ~,,ik,,k; Ail, ,: c ev e ery Monday e rental; re. , 2110 r. VERkEAPO2I2T. :".'''1.,,,,,,,:—.?'.: The 11113INI.NIA No. 2, Capt. J. IG.Evennza‘ '. ..2.,.:: leave Pittsburgh every Tuesday morning at - EL** „il . Wheeling every Tuesday eveningatt 10 v. au :..v ",;..---, INED NUITAT - PA - GKET. :' ,' ''' - ...P.,..? The NEW ENGLAND No. 2, Capt. S. -Dg .',.KiliEld leave Pittsburgh ever- Wednesday moms' oft 44 F WheebresiogtrlFedmeader erreuing ,4.1.21 A Tll.UKtalitY PiferradT. ;''t-. The BRILLIANT, Capt. Guam, will ,leaol 22 la; burgh every Thurwiaj4 cr oornin,g . at 10 o'closik; adri,* every Thursday aPe ll 10 P. U. l,: ." ..i. , 1 - PEW& PA-011. ''• I. !,t,,.. The CLIPPER No. 2, Capt. Pan IhrvaL,,VealyvWFg Putsbargh every Friday 'morning at IOokdoek: Tele". h"' ".7 e. Friday °veting atIO r. is. .. : ......:, i'4, .' ! I ••5; • ' , .., , A, ; i l': .'' AI