TtlE rITTSBURGH GAZET PITIIISIIED DV ‘viirTF, Co PITTBI3II3IIOIII FRIDAY MOELNLNG, .TrLY 20. 124.:t MrTam Parworswa DAIL, Warns is poko%hed ry, Tw-Weekly, end Weekly.—The Deily W ¥ Dollen per mimeo the Tri-Week I y is Five Dolling' per annum; the Weekly ts Two Dollars per nenum,:Arialy • admen. IirADVITEIItS are eautetuy mourned to filed in favors before 3 t. x, and as early in th6'4ay as grartleable. Advettisernents not tn•eneo for [;peed Bad time will invariably be charged until ordeqd out ANT/MASONIC AND WIIIO TIC ASSIMILSI7, ',4 FORT. C. WALLT.II, pf Etiubeats BaroneC, 1911N1111LLER, of Siarpobargh - rt ... CALEB LEE, of PititAntroh. :. ...MY. MPS', of Lower SL C1e.0.. ~ (100 ZR CURTIS, of Pitub argil rsoraommay, MOO. & HAYS, of Upper St. Clem JOHN liIOII2LSON, or legheny COMM .I¢a, JAR. MITCHELL, of Feeble% I t; WAS. as. ARTLIURS, IA Pittsburgh- AtDUOL JOUNBYERS or Findlay. V•r LOCILI Matters we next rag/Y.: gee tazt page for Tolagraphie If!rra The (Mahone. lit ii , We give, in another solemn, the comrebtlts or the Catholic on our remarks on its course'Oledive to the shuggho for liberty and indipendetne in Rome. :.i' * Stripped of verbiage, end of matters not rt.a. vent the defence amounts to this, that Si' " With regard to the civil and religiatthAther ty to Rome under the Popes we, rare Cathinliel have only to say that there was en riniet..tf not more, than under any 'Protestant Gever4ent " That— '.. The statements that "the doctrine date Pine burgh Catholic Is an enaggeriumn of the :* one of the 'divine right of Kings,' is purely ahisruon. unfounded in fact, and unjust in its opplii'nt'ne." And, finally—that the Romans thereiss are not engaged in the present struggle. li llDl' 4 Ttet majority being Piednoontese,'Ac. In support of the assertion that in Root under the Popes, there was co moat, if not et t, civil and religions liberty than under coy lii4itewant Government, the editor says that the Jewi::en r joyed more liberty in Rome than is any city oTlpurope, where they dwell in largo number; and * there is, or was, a Protestant Church for travVliers, or others who preferred going there. i : In regard to the tolerance granted the J ews, we ere _not Inclined to dispute it, though we -Innsider the feet, as suited, very questionable. Slit admit ting it to be true, it is easily accounted Oi. We can ery well believe that a Jew may be More to'. erab than a Lutheran or Calvinist—ePrekyterian or M thodtst. The Jew desires no conirk.rts, and if he did, is not likely to make any. Thltgeneral tendendy of things to to advance, not Lute back ward, and it to progress, not reaction, that Reese dreads and resists. Hence a thousanslitews are more tolenthile than one Collo:incur. ,;.1 Infarther moot - of:the religious libertirjenjoyed under the Popes, the editor adduces thielset that t here in, or was, a Protemant Church for tiivellers.. or others who preferred going there. ,, We be li eve this to be partly true, tho le, there lea Protestant Church for ircrelkrs. {lce have heard of it beanie. It we, established, wielelieve, by the influence of the British residentsg Rome.. a very wealthy body, whose expenditurel of eon sidarable consequence to the Holy Cu* But i t ' exists only on sufferance, cad during ,EMOld bella-' vionr. It is not allowed; toe believe, tii4,ear any, outward sign of being a place of : , , fltiorship,; and should its minister bogy himself very-idiligent , ly in the cure of nay other omits than relitallers, be: would find himself in trouble immediately, But grant the toleration of the Jewry` ;and the' Church La travellers and what a view* the no tons °lava and religions liberty of en*lnericau newipaper, (if it may be termed ue hjOoes the: question present. One Protestant C *Mt and' toienkth : in for the Sews! Thin is the edigg's idea: of hkerty. Having this, the Roman pole ougrit! to be ecmtent. Not being content with ikis moot GUM of liberty, (whichZafter an are en4sions othentrather than theauselver t ) the RAl:lona arc! sacra-glom villains, socialists and cominitlinsta, and worse, if there he any thing worm. ';';s Aa much civil and religious litany un der the Popes, sage the editor, as noilikany Pro-, testant government' fa this ip,norande'S or is it merely the bold assertion of a bad too* entirely reckless of truth, in defence of a bad ciAte , We are compelled to believe the latter. The editor knows, he Must know, that MI re4y there was neither liberty of speech nor libek of the prism under the Pope, and scarcely Mir trace of the essentials of either religious or eiviOhurty. Bat even grant this, ndmiyor arguM•it's mkei that the Pope's temporal government 4 a mode l of civil and religious freedom, we stiliOnaintain that the Amen people have the right.V. change their mode of govenuffent if they see ifoper. If they believe that their,affairs can be meter man aged by laymen than Aoy priests, it is (ten privi mein effect the change—peaceably iiithey can' forcibly if they most. Thu fundament doctrine of freedom, though evidently very rep grant to -dui Catholic," he has not courage, of does not deem it expedient., in terms, to avow. ~ E t t o evade It, be contend. that the &feuds,. of Rokie are not Romans, but bandits, ocaLsors, end foOtica from other countries, who rule and coostraintAte people of Bome against their will "The Catholic' does the band tin and ilklaws Ltd 'much honor, the Romans too little. .04 are wit., ling to admit that the latter are nolß&ently based, and hence the necessity of obtalOng lea& CM NMI a lees emasculated people. 110 still it Is' not pomade that agnuast the will of titt4 Romans' themnelres, the bandits could keep out t o,ooo ve teran French soldiers doing their minahrt to effec t: • inflation with their friends within tlitfd wallr.— Tho thing is incredible. The troth fA that thi present government of Rome is the:reijalt of uni versa] suffrage, it is legitimus becataiOt is so.—, And it:is a fact worth notice, that theshrjusurpers, as they are called, offered the French Agibassador to lay down their power, and again itbmit to a vote of the people, if he would wlikidraw the French army. We have not space to-day for any tist'saf that the sloonene:of the "Catholic”,is an exagged:*on of the old one of the divine right of Kings, but4re will at tend to it, en well as tome other matter connected with the subject, before long. Lotter from Mr. .A Mass Con vencio2 of members orthe Free 531.1 parry assembled at Cleveland, on f:nday, the 13th Ins t., or the purpose of eetabratt4the oeoi vueary of the establishment of theirdinatice whirl prohibited slaver/ in the territoeftiorth and west of the river Ohio. Among the invited guests true the On. Fleury Clay, and the Fallowing sensit.le and priotic let ter trona him, wee real on the oceseron.A Arrateen, June;Ffa, 1519. .Glerliarm--I received your office* letter, io behalf of the Freemen of the Revere% minting cm to unite with them, at Clevolaud, k-Iderehrat. mg the anniversary of the ptosagc ari . ihe Ordi nance of 17b3, on th e 13th of July nex t::: I concur entirely In opinion as to the wisdom or-That great, =sem =diem glad that it has eeck,Yed to the swum, on which it operates, an exemitott from thoeivils of Slavery. But the event dtthe plu me of the Ordinance has never, withiCjily know ledge, been celebraied in any or thei4ixty one yeah, which has since intervened. 106 propos ed for thefirst time in commemorate it:Eilt in im possible to disguise the conviction, th4ohis per-, pose originates out of the question, not unfortu nately agitating the whole ['Mon, a.. he intro.. deletion of slavery into Now Mexico eta Gabler— nil. Whilst no one can b r more opraed thln I am to the extension of Slavety into damp notderritories, eithei by the authority of Congress, or idly! enterprise, I should be unwilllngi to do any thing to increase the prevailing exekment. I lave that the question will be met, MAL spirit o calmness and candor, andfictally settled 41 • man ner to add strength and ttaNtity, insfrattof bring ing nay danger, to the existence of ourilanion. In all GM differences of opinion, we shehid never CeaSe to remember that we are fellow- 4tizens of One common and &runts cod n try, nor ifft exercise mutual and friendly forbearance- But, Gentlemen, waving all other cc;4deretion• indimenitable engagements will prevent:4lly atten dance on the °coulee, which you have'rdone me the honor to invite me. With great respect I Your friend and MA sherant. EVCIAY. Mews. Jon:NC. Vartmand comin i t l4 . Tun Beeitu, Journal''—We find a neutilasper at our table, with the above title. It purPOrts to be edited and published by J. J. Bite** Truth compels WI to any that it is neither taiatitiful la apptethjtme, nor reartatimble for editor/Stability.— Jte.,ijt/mprove. however. Ito se/oath:4ore mow. tms# ap ft°F 4 the *Min Post. A Itinssetty for .Cholrais We had coachltded not to palish any more remedies for Cholera, concluding Vela we had fatty discharged our duty, but the follniash imes to us eo highly .8 respectably recommended, and is 60 free from dangerous narcotics, thatiwe have been induced to forego our determinatiBh. The Civs. dams; G eau, in an cdito ro d erthrle, i ntrodoces the communication of Mr. Greenough, who is the inventor of the remedy, with the fallowing re- Marks : • • The Cholerg&--A Mr. Greenough, whose communllation we pub lish to day, is one of oar most intelligent and res pectable citizen& H. fa so wsl:whstover con tented with the preparation or salcuof medicine or drags of any kind, but so exCellent, active, benev : cleat man, who makes his stiveineitt public, rim ply hoping to afford some aid iii relieving a dis tressed community. He has •tetted many persons sick with Cholera, and administered to more than one h:lncited patients with entire success, nail has -presented to others over one hundred bottles of the compound, from which he has ft°, rabic re. itdas. We have, ourselves, conversed with sev end gentlemen of the first respectability, who have sui&nessfully U.S.' this medicine. And we are in formed that it has been generally used in the Choi- era Hospital, on Fourth street, where an unusual number of patients have been resdlied from death. if remade have a regular phylum* he should he e asulted, and his prescriptions dimmed that is Ono safest way. The attention of physicians is Called to Greenough's compound; t;end it may be Well to have some of it on hand, topse on an erne, gooey, berme the physictae reachda the patient.— Too mach care cannot be taken ty guard against the insidious attack of the dreadful disense—to '.check the first even slight derangement in the ab :domino] regions, particularly, an many of the most ;dangerous attacks have been preceded by ..discharge's, free of pain, arid hardly noticed, ex. ~ inept that the patient feels relieVed by the operation lid is therefore indoced to torbeat the use of rrrn , dice. The street course is, CM m neglcet a mo :meat, the firm Indications of the approach of ihe disease. Sane writing the above, we received t hi• rote from Dr. Jordan of the Fourth street Hospital hl Lave used Ur. Greenough 's cholera prepara tion with excellent success—gad consider it among the beat remedies for oholern. I tired it. and recommended it to my tint& to different parts of the country. Freemen to Inv conned kon with tie Cholera Hospital—not knou.ntr then whose preparation it was—Cone/id:erten it enrugh for me to (Stow that it was rood. I ha, r ner become acquainted with Mr. Greenough, and find, upon inquiry, that he has usial it extensively in the city for the last few weeks—and with re marinade success, even in chefs peen up by physicians. _ . J. H. JORDAN, M D Prkysteinn Ch6lera Hospital." Now it La well known that Teo:tart:nide auc,,,, has attended the treatment of ehoiera in th.r,rth street Hoapttal, under the charge of Dr. J,,rdan, far greater, no we have heard it 11,4LIell'y re marked, than has been witnessed".:n private prae ites generll:7. •. For c:.o Clrre..,aO Guns. —N ot lung singe I handed you a recipe for the core of the cholera, of wmen you gave publicity. t had , , in the year omit it .uccessfutly to the worst roses of chnit:-, cut have for the 17 years tance u,ad It in oil eves c 0 diarrhoea, cholera morhus, dysentery. and Idoody One that have come under icy notice, with eon, 111.14:;Cef.. Blare the prevailing epidemic, I have used it without a single tacure o 3 ',wirers, except in some few instances where save time( medi cines had bruit rieviously glare. Sonic of the cases treated were of such an ahorrning chancier that Ideem it a duty to make thi cd gith the facts, 4.1,0 - 14.:ndo,d.!ala who ale well known citizens. Some time in the early part of Puce, I was rnlied upon to visit a child (on Film meet, near Park 1 about 14 or 15 nears triage, who,: had been tageb violently with Cholera during -the prevou. She had gone tom as es.ure euilagerd leas, cold and senseless. After haring given her two or three table spoonful, at Intervals of (erie 15 to 20 minutes, and continuimi I. rub the tees, hands and arms with dry dannelfor about on hour. , signs of hle*were men;feated f y 6 fe^bie pulse and somewhat five respiration. SIiWrOCII spoke, nod requested to be moved. I made an attempt 1,, remove her Item off the hed...-.!hr.,1 she vn,ted I violently a large amount of the 'rice water," and sunk back and gasped us IT rising. 1 isouted,atey lea the house in search of ruled alrawtailec, on , met Dr. Richards near the carder of Park and Fifth esteem I requested bin to at,ordpany ins to the house. Upon entering and examining in, child he said that nothing would be of any avail, that she was Inenralde, and "dead re all rntenrs and purposes." Although she had at the time mane rearration- I left the house in robs h of some oet run no get the township tr istees . ro provide (tar her burial. I met Mr. A. D. Lootroson Park sire, n earrings with another gentleman, and n,t, , rrne ,, them the child was dead. Upon., I herr arrival at the house , the child Was still lividg. After a short time they plaid her in the carriage, and took her to the Fourth street Cholera Hersyntal. Sou coo. tinned to grew better, and in taro other days waa ' taken away from the hospital by a fr.end sad is now living and well. 4o other treatment was made except to continue accasionsuly the rise Cl the above mentioned mixture. On or about the middle of June!, Mr. lone, (residing on north side of Seveatt three doom from Monad,,) called at my store and rttgently requested, me to go immediately and Wit al , Onnir Man by the name of Isaac Henry, on Mound... near the north corner of Seventh street, stating that his physician Dr. Coxe, hart given him up; had said he believed els cape was incurable, toot in gll probability he would live bat a few hours. Ori:nay arrival et the noose I Goland Mr. Henry in a collapsed state, cold. paireless, and apparently remelts.. I gave him a terespoontal as ants, commenced robbing him with dry flannel, and gave him h 1.1 at interapds of 15 to 20 mamma, Mar or five tones.— In about one hour he had a pervieptlble pulse, and after continuing three hours rubbing, he was sen sible, knew his mother and other friends around him, and is now out and nearly ks well as CV,. I will mention one or .m(-re dance similar. On the Ith July, Mr. Wm. Hart, o shoe dealer on Fifth street, sent to me at my store requesting my asendanee at his house on Seirenth street. near Mound,stating that his daughter,aboui 10 or I I years of age, Was very low with cholera. and tom he woe (earful she was past Met:Weil. I went imme diately to the house, and there found the child , n great distress, vomiting and ponying at short in terval% nearly in a 0311apseil Stole, the pulse scarcely perceptible, extremitterileold, skin stir., riled: aher making the ingredients known, of w hies the medicine Was compared, the pliyincian in at tendance, (Doctor Comyge, office on Mooed street near Seventh.) said there could be no /.inert: in to administering the compound. ,We at once gave her a teaspoonful, and continurdLthe same amount at interests of 15 or 20 minutes.: and commenced rubbing the extremities with dry dannel. In the course ale hour her pulse Wes regular, and before 9 o'clock in the evening she was perfectly easy. I directed to give her half a teaspoonful during any time in the night, in care there were any signs of a relapse. They gave her half .en spoonful three times during the night. I called in the morning Mike nth, and found that ass ease was entirely arrested, but found there 'bad been a consultation by two physician•, and that ' the result of their deliberations were to gore the child au extract of bark and a qaantity of calinitei I could not with propriety, mete an open differ. sate troll them, but feared that - . such a course would prove injurious. On my Otero to my store I wrote 10 Mr. Hart, requesting )itin not to admin ister the bark and calomel; itiegwrre laid twite and not given, and on Sunday V,e, Sib, the child went out, and U all apperanee Rs wet, Llh ever It may be well to remark that previous to my see- ing the child, she had taken Ca4ghtls mixture of chalk, calomel, chalcoal, and dirtrous other prep arations, all of which were vomited up, and no ben eficial result apparent. I must be permitted to ray that there is to LDS a great inotiake with many physicians in the treatment of tqe early gases ot cholera; all, or nearly sit their efforts are directed to act upon the liver, Totten the fact is, the disease In entirely with the blond, being solely an analysis of the blood, the watery Parts passing off through the the interior v,essels, and int remainder coagu lating In the blood vessels. It then r egime . an ac. tine agent upon the absorbent verse'a in t h e sys tem to warm the blood in the region of the hea r t, and to impart a etimulation enhoot irritation; (upon this ground I object to caprice el ins it has a tendency to produce intlammonon end congestion, which has so often resulted in thO bloody dux. It would seem, that after the disease is =rested, to the decomposition of the blood tease, the liver and all the organs assume their 'wonted ettiviv, (olden previously disordered) and all the pen.' requires is light, nutritious diet cohnisting of either biscuit water, Indian meal gruel; chicken town, any of them in =all qoantiiies, 'and at short in. tcrattla • , It is not my intention in the preient letter, to at tempt Co philosophise theorise, of speculaie moon the probable cows or mesa of the disease, only to present my views or what the chillers is in its re sults, solely a chemical analysis tithe blood. I will mention another, which', is only four out of about one hundred or more trans , Dearly paint. leL On the day. of Jane,? was (-tiled on whilst at the drag store of Mr. Lie, on Third St., near Park, to go at once to a adman taken sod denly in a collapsed stale of the oiMlert; Dr. George mpg present, started with me; we went and found the woman lying OLD the Boor, in gent degrees web .crampaVomitics,&c. Dr. ()tole drew from his, pocket a vial inintaining a m•xtrirc, giving her eaout a table spoonful—that mixture caused her to vomit, and alto continued to cradle. He felt and pronounced bar noiseless, and said that his engage- ments were such that he !mum go. I then com menced giving her my mixture, And after having given her three or four table Oponfulls, she ap peared easy. I then started to get a conveyance to the hospital—nu:lnd a furnitute car, returned and found her easy, gave her another table spoon ful, and put hen into the car, and she scarcely groaned until nearly there. I told,Dr.Jonlan what Y. had given, and he ordered to have it continued, !stopped to two or three days and Dr. Jordan m farmed me she was Pp and abinaL I will here wane thin Avon encgiii p found , the woman had been leaded with ineesontefire.or six days, and wu - taken with po w sudden that she fall at onop upon Inn Door. The foregoing statement!, so far as I am con cerned, sr_ -"rem. J. 11. JORDAN, M. 1)- ottoee polverlzed gum gu , a ,, d 1 , 1 ounce ground clever, 1 armee of ground cinnamon;' To I.le-se add 1 quart best dth proof French bran dy; shuhe them meal xcerai times during the first 24 hours; let i hem stand and settle, and give of the tinerure (ruin a tea to a table spoonfu!. the nature the case requtreal once in 15 or 20 minutes. B. F. GREENOUGH. Prom the Pittsburgh Catholic, In reply to the remark. of the Gazette, on the cause of freedom in Ramer 1. Our readers will bear in mind what we do mended of the Gazette. We asked for facts, as dat.t, f..r the lipplication of hm lasulting epithets His answer is more insults, but no Poets. This may be a very convenient mode of arguing with some persons, but it is nct convincing. The Ro man Inquisitios, about which lie mike a question, was a prison and not a place of torture for eeeleei• alums who forfeited their liberty on account of their crimes. There were only three persons con fined there when it was suppressed. nth regard to the et& and relagione linerty in Rome under the Pipes, see kers turfy to say, that there was as much ,foot more than under anyProtettant Government. We bare no doubt, if Pius LX wsa not molested by the Red Republicans, every thing connected with the Government of Rome, againat Wilma any sensible man could o b ject, would be ere now totally removed. The Jews enjoyed more liberty in Rome than in any city of Europe, where they dwelt in large numbers. There 10, or was. a Pro testant Uhurch lot. travellers or others who pre ferred going there. We are glad that the Gazette repudiates the idea of being a Socialist at the TOlon ne school. We do not insist that ho is; but though Jt may be fake, It is not so very absurd for others to think it. when then find that the Gazette comes from and lin ant. the Tnbune in many dins Socialistic move. meet.. But, as the Imputation is so strongly denial, we retract our words of reproach. IS We regret the audacity of toe claim of the Roman Pontiff to temporal dominion did not tempt the Editor of the Gazette to give us a specimen of Ms historical and legal lore. Perhaps he could tell What the world never heard. In statistics lie is very clever, for he not only mmtradtets his own reliable somee of information, when he gives the census of the Papal State. as five or six millions of souk but he even contradicts himself Only three millions is what hr himself in another place I Gives a• the nuniher of the population. The vat.- moot, duet 'the 'Joanne of the Pittsburgh Cothalte is an eraggerormu of Lk, ono," of the 'hums ri..slst of Exe 4 , 1 .' to re et.ht asserrmo—unfoonded re Jut and unjust sn u., emanation" Too much and ton sorely have .r forefathers iutTerrd from kings. to make us think them either god like or good. We have not space ior boasting about the deeds of our ancestors; bur we defy the Gazette to prove his assert on. which he says is easy, that it can be shown from the pages of our paper, that "era senti ments ere not only monnrehical, but abjectly so." Prove th.s, and you will prove by the tame ratiocination that white us black. 3. The G a.rtter does not believe that the rulers and people of Home are tinged with ihe Social ist theories of France. The Romans. we believe. with a few excepttocs. are not tainted with thin soul..poiwn, but it Is evatent born every source of informant:tn. that Mare.nt end Gstreibaldi with their baukliitt are of the P 61111; reboot, and hold the name eenhatents with Ledru Rollin and Proed bout with the Montaanardr. "The Parsbargl. Cestitoir.: professes a peat st, liort'ence ot /isf tiepublienna. if it had an mach eonraee as dterittuv." would not hesitate to s VOW tt• totted CI any Republicanism For this and other persona: in•ults and epithets all we any in. Mr. Editor at . the Gasotte-- pots are a rends-man. Your scatle words—your charitable ineinuahone prove this to e eemouetratiou. But Mr ,- runderann Editer, do col, we besee yell, be under mistake about our courage. Wo and have always demi to Optmsc opinions. when We new they were wrong. We are ,10,1 g n now. We dared It lost year m opt, et 1.013 11, Cline or rrtends, in relation to poor Ireland WO hove courage enough always ti dare error, and apt ik our oonmetmoss even tbougn thread are made, snob as the totlowine, which is copied from last Saturday's - Go:ova We bane courage ettouan to dlr. For fhe PatAurgit (f,vate. -Prr. Bathe? Hughes or by rzsejotors here dart to at of names of A inertrans min •bbeer.be n3.•00v to toti a Ty rant .a Ln tiarlOg attoroot to •o guar and suLea rate the poopto of .Wouid any _itemeau citizen dare pub.R.ly Kibler-be money tar sort, ottrpoe!, or wil l such octet-rievta‘ be made w•tb the tatclerstandlng that icy :nail be kerl conceal ed} 4 The Genre haa very I ttic doubt mot eve crossly blander Lby people who are defending Rome. What the gentleman tem.:dem tuft inn a “cot.ticil 'irt cocs.derai,on a'a h ar d to ten. Put we .oppose he will have no k.l-Jyy• hail to a good Pope outer. One whom he loin self cal.. .13 gentleman of the b.ghest respertabdo ty limo, we have 'Doty to copy n .hurt ex:el:Let Cohn the Gocene of last Thursday The ventoman 11. n [ht. Gqt.,” entlnrsen. tter.t.• • The in+,. rifirtent men ,nt ttnt•t (the Ita..nn e ttl,•k wri .. student's corps. the I irrign lesion and Gardiaid. The loiter Ms a drrperatg .ct of follootee, many of amen oil band. by prVessofe.' 13at -00 n ban arm," says the Gagratr,"ini not with the, but with the, riga.," Whose ragas' The rights tbeae handitti7 They are thr getter" op and the revivers no o f this totiorrectioa; or, at the gen tleman sap, tahe mart efficient men And 00 man In his sense, ran say that these rialvlsers and assassins have any rigla to make Rome their pricy. What would yon ray if those heroes of yours would invade on or OM' Srnthern roles, terrify the In hhbitanhi, and under the mune of l.t.reity an! triviality, Liberate the slaves, confiscate all the pro perty they can put their hands on, and proclaim it an independant republtr' Have they a nob: to do eh , They mould be thepeep!each be the txeo , e -arha have en might have the right of choosing the form of government (or r foreign city. The Gerais 1.31,1 'they are chiefly Roman., with individual excepteine not worm, mentioning.' In other columns of our paper, we hive peen extracts from anoint which any one but the gen tieman of Gol-ette would take as worthy at least of some considerstiem But as we have to consul the GazettP, we can give Information from its own columns, watch prove. that the Roman • who awl a r.glit, no matter how their fears and the frauds prnetoied on them may make them not wet against these banditti. were, when the republic wo• pbeitaimed, merely spectators In the Gai. ,us of Jone 19th, a eorreapondent of the IV Y. Comm rani lountal mew.. -It now appears t list searcely a io hale individual among them to a ria. tee of the Roman States, the majority being Pied. inontese. Vhdcr these cirtionit•tanees tt is s i t t i e n ot to sporebend that, whatever torn the en- Alt mop take. tacy WI. 63 thenpoolated and betray ed in their Mum ate efforts It is, then only en• enuraging brigand, to cheer them un in the name of iiberty." They have no character which the Ga., 44. conaidera none or n. ;income, but yet it COW parr, these men of no character with those Irwin men who proclaimed and fought he Ilber , V. here Th.is undoubtedly ',Wrong a gross 10.1.0 IF, e very undoubtedly citizen. • b. The story of the nutting op of din Priesta not an canto/tiled sander. The Tr.bun• said it was, and en courl so dal the Gazette—hot other lemons with better opportunitie• nt knowing, and e n ually respectable, the bone I once Tne London Morning Chronicle that am! der o ,l, now re.esserts the brutal act. The lidelnirei Chron icle ofyeaterdav, though in another column land. inn the Triumvirate to the skies. menteins a fact significant enough oldie good order preserved in Renee . "Applicetion has been menet° nor Geare to stipend the Allter , C3n Gag from two princely houses, in order to sow then. morose, from Mofriar; and di iiionne Mc /bus:, of echicA are rne• r welly eacesnitre of tho odminsirroteon." After excusing the plundererA, the gentleman of the Gazette beCOlll.l valiant himself He say. "Were we a Rom., we would blow up the Va timin, St. Peter., yea, even every remnant of the alorean Rome of cid, a hundred orties, rather than ine French should enter." No doubt the editor mea nt all h e so.d. Such likewise wens the re. solve oftba brigsad, provided they escape from the rums. It reminds no of the test by whteh Sol omon detected the true mother. The i.dise one was w'ling the child shduld be destroyed. She would then, at least, ienpiv the graUltcatdion °flaunt. ing t h e true mother with tieing childless like her self. The editors valor likens him very much to thin hardened bad w>rmn. We have no space to asy more at present. FUNISP.AI. oV TUE LATE Ma, MADITA , —The rt;olAlaa of Ina venerable rulal of Es. President Maoi s m., were removed from her tato residence, :a Lafayette square, to Si. J >ha's Church, yester day afternoon. at a o'clock. The Rev Isle. Pyne, iLeettir of the Church, delivered, in a veer feeling menu,. an eloquent and just ettlezy on toe char• weer of the deceased, which woe leuened to with deep interest by a dallhe con. revnlioo. minding the President of the Coned States, the Officers, gentlemen of the Army and Navy the Mayor and City Gout - 1011s, and nanny dintingniahed eitliens and strutter', The Rev. Mr. French aid. ed the Rector u: St. John's in the funeral solemni ties. About ba.f past Zi &clock, the funeral rumans lion, a very laws and imposing one, moved tram the Church to the Congress Cemetery, where the Corps will remain until it in removed to its gent renting place at Montpelier, Va.—Nor. PLvoot-rte, (4114,1)PlyrOdllth., to a Now York. er, accustomed to Broadway and Wall street, seems to he sleeping is the embrace Of a perpetu al eabbath; but there is mach more vitality than in seen upon the surface. The wharves here are deserted, but distant seas are whitened with the coo vans of Plymouth shim, and a very respectable commerce in now owned in Plymouth. The Sa ving Bank here nas deposits. exceeding four hun dred thousand dollars; a fact that spiaks volumes for the, people of the town, and for the county, In which there are at least two other Savings Institu tions. 1 inquired as to who the.. depositors were, and learned, with plenzure that they were men end women of the smallest means and the largest econ omy This is but one( though s marked evidence of New England prosperity.—Corr. N. York Be-. 'God grant that a men may be selected by the Desnocrado party of the Union to bear Its standard who will pledge himself to remove from office ev ery officeboldeh who now, or for ins next four years, aetmoaledges himself to be a Whit!, and will religioaaly keep that pledge..-- , Traslisegus Union. If un prayers of the wicked were nat itu ebonn• name the Editor of the Unwu would doubtlest be eine:net/1i for the . 1 , polls" is the burdens:lf Its &By fUpplications.—Alasy Isar. • CorrespOodence of the N.Y. Gamalertlal Advertiser =M= The Romans atill keep the Gadget hay, but An cona has at last capitulated to their sisee the Aus trians. Venter, like Home, continue. to hold oat, but *lthaca a final hope. lo Hungary, the ',nolo. ding struagle to drawing near, and in Germany the insurrection bas been completely quelled. Such is the continental news of she meet. At home the Chancellor of the Elettequer has submitted his an nual budget, showing a surplus for the neat as as for the present year of about -£.100,000 and the House of Lords have thrown out the bill for the admission of Jewe to Parliament, by a ma orny ca 95 against 70. The detail. from Rome are an follows. The siege works having been completed on the 13th of Jape fieneral Oudinot on the following day soar mooed the city to surrender. The Triumvirs, how ever, firmly stood their ground and refused to list* en to any term. that were not preceded by a rec =ninon of the republic. "We know not if we snail fall," they said, "lint there are some tails which confer honor." Meanwhile M. de Coreelles, the new envoy from Paris, arrived to negotiate.— He announced toe disavowed of the convention made by Lessepa, but said that he was entrusted with a mission essentially liberal nod intended to protect the population of Rome. The reply of the Tritium," intimated that they could place DO trust in Frenchmen. They had treated with Lessep u the recognised minister of the French repubhc; on I the fault of a i•onvention with him they hod sue randered the important position of Monte Ma- rie, and they heti also pint experienced the bad faith of Oudinot in attacking the city a day , before the period to which he had solemnly promised to delay the commencement of hoauts dies. All devices of diplomacy having thus fatted, there was nothing left for the insatiable demands • of French honor but bombardments and slough ter. The batteries, accordingly, commenced play-I OPPIOIAL, mg on the walls on the 14th. For four and twee. I APPOINTMENTS BY THE PRESIDENT. ty hours, however, the fire was maintained with- i seams! R. Rogers, of Tennessee, to be Attorney oat creel, and up to the 11th no breach had been F of the United States for the eastern district of Ten- effected. Since then, on opening and even a neuee, vice Thomas C. Lyon, resigned. partial entry have been made. On the 22d, three unit OPTICTIta, broacher, were declared practicable, and under lames M MoLean, o f Huge', to b e Register of cover of night an outwit was conducted. The the Land Office at Palestine, Illinois, vice Harman troops employed were about 800, nod their U. Alexander, removed. eeal wan not nt first perceived, but the alarm he- Nathan Sargent. of Pennoylvania, to be Racer : mg riven, they were me• by several *milles of gr of the General Land Office, vice S. H. Lough. musketry. The French, however, are said to have l ie, „ Leve t, carried every thing at the point of the bayonet, so ' CoLLICTOSIS or TIM CUSTOMS. no to make good limit footing, and to have taken Nathaniel G. Marshall, York, Maine, vice Jo ' 106 prisoners in addition to the number shun.— seph P. Junkies removed. The French lose In eat declared. Joseph Euthes, Alexandria, Virginia, vice FA- B; this step, a lodgement is at length effected word Green, rein eyed. within the walla. but the difficulties in the way of obtaining possession of the city without destroying P.XCUM L.ON aPil•il—Prepared by J. W. Kelly, , Wellaw stern, N. and for gala b Jaynes, No. its monuments are nearly as serious an OVIST. It 70 Fourth „, 77 ;1„ b , is a greet event, however, for Oudinot to be able vie beversge familica, and porucolarly tor sick sick to soy nt last that he-is literally in Rome, and he moms. has appropriately celebrated it in one of those a•ISRISNIBISO3I4.—AII improved Chocolate prepare, shameleon manifenneo which seem to embody the usPs":rri,.:::gee.‘4l7:reP, hi g hly pare peculiar genius of tors countrymen. He assures chatty for invalid.. Peeper!! W. Ratter, Retches. hie soldiers that they have now "gained a:open/h. . To Mass., lend ror sale 1.) , A. JAYNER, at the Nine able glory," by “striking down the ramparts of Tea blare, N 0.70 Fourth at recht4 Rome," th , !tney will shortly ',liter as mature in- Fire ., la L. env.' taut they will then establloh crier sped asaall Nectar:nos Oka Fro. Luaus. Courant— /thily and that they will thus recopy a noble enartered ISAF—ceatinee• to insure, upon every de page in the history of a people who bare so- Ma- •cOTDOI. of P.;artY, at an Fenn* nun. ray dolma to their protection and sympathy.. urrica, No. 111 Markel street SinceSAMIJEL 00ft3IL . Y, Press the last advicea, up to the day preceding ,000.2 taxsv, bab y. yStallm the above attack, there does not appear to have been any severe sacrifice of life. One sortie was . W. D. Wright, D. D., Dentist. rahade in WEnell rvers/ Men fell on both rides, but omen end ,d,. led to a I lestlt, A story thst Garibaldi i s • • • , P a.% im Pc' s ' ir ' oro u' s r o , ekieli 'h m IS A la.. and had beaded a tort, Whleh all bra troops had •Rnatan: 00 % g 0 , 40‘ ..g to g p . m . „,,t4.1 7 been cut to pieces, torn, out 10 have been ei fiction.- A! '2ivtn Vtechia. of mune, the French ou/I hold Daprovernonta an Diantintry. DR.O. 0 STEAILNS, line or Flatten, Is prepared to and spate,: sway , but thev preteud have discos- , ma who , ." ered a coa.i.rary, and have consequently arrested eiopen Seen or Anaespeenc Sarno. Plates several ran i's,. :inns...eau coon. in nos Stains., where the nerve is carnal. •Iposed. Office and residence neat door to the May run, r, avert burgh. The csodul.loll of Ancona has taken place, or, thou TO—J ourti !d'Folde Pitts n- P. H. Fawn. iitlV but