THE VITTHBUQGH GAZETTE CIEMMEIIMMM:3 GLEEZTECIE TUESDAY MOR NG JULY 23, 1220. DIRIOCHATIG WEI ~ 0 STATIC TICIUCT rot c.i.l , c , isnomm. JOSHUA UNGAN, Of Ducks Canty. of ATFTOI anyrul- HENRY W. SNVDER, Of Dram Comn9. •i ' MI svax aintuat. JOSEPH HrfTfENDERSON, Of Washington ConotT. , Antimecard.: and 117 hIgNamoilnallons for Allegheny County. TO2 THITTT 116C0. ra.1128. TROBIAiI 21T. HOWE, tot Imo. Irmo", .renirr• tan cousins, BARB:kilt. DE 11', Or FISII.IOII. FOR OICUTi, JANItS CAROTHERS, 1/011 1110116 &IV ROBERTSON, Pittsburgh. T. J. BIGIIAM, Lower St. Clair. IL C. WALKER. Eltseheth. JOICi bi'CLUSKEY, Bohannon. JA:IO3 MBE, Snowden. IMMICCII.II FRANCIS C. FLANEGIN, Paubargh. 031011030 YE; ECIF.YEZFJI BOVLFS, Noh Fayetw. rotroo, WM. FLYNN, Lowar S. Moo. ort SLIIXTOR, L. N. COURTNEY, Ohio. ED"REE NEXT PAW; FOR LOCAL MATEESE TELEGRAPHIC NEWS, tie, Gan. Robinson has neturned from the East,where he has succeeded to pUrchnsing 11,000 tons of Iron for the Ohio and Pennsylvania Reif Road, all de tectable next spring. The terms on which this Iron is procured are extremely favorable to the Company, and the success of the negotiation is ■ matter of sincere gm/elation to every Pittsburgher who has the welfare of the city at heart. Gen. Robinson has displayed rare ability m this whole matter, and deserves the Mania of the entire com munity. RAILIWAXI NtALTTERS When we enadiaoree remark., the other day, In reference to the.'projects of the Ramp Geld and Steubenville RaiVenda, in which we endeavored to show that Philadelptia, if dm really thought • matter of Importance to bead Baltimore at. Wheeling, could accomplish the same object as -well, and cheaper, by the Steubenville than by the Hempneld. route—we had no Idea that any one would endeavor to misconstrue our meaning so entirely es the Peat has done, in some remarks yciterday suomlng. The editor of that paper doe* not appear to preneu any manly and liberal view of any. Ambler.; much less one in reference to the prosperity and welfare of Pittsburgh. For some 'Mari, known to himself, be loses'un opportuni ty of giving& thrust at the Ohio pad Pennsylvania 'Railroad, and even has the meanneue—Ger in that light only can we viewit—to use our remarks in regard to thelSteubenville project,to make ungens enens and entree ineinuations la relation to our magoillient western road. When we xpoke of the Steubetiville project, in connection with the Hemptleld, It was in reference to one, thing only--thit of competing for the trade of the Ohio river, with Baltimore. We said nab. log about the trade of the Weet—of the interior. And yet, the Peat hoe the reckleser..eas to OS.C/1 that the t. Gazette has been forced to admit that the Smnbenville route is the only true one to the Great West.' So far from admitting each a thing. we never dreamed of the idea, or, for one rot, meet, thought that any one would so construe our 'enable°. We admitted only one thing, and that woe s that Philadelphia could as easily cote. Pete for the trade cf t.. 11 Ohio river at Wheelie', if that was deeirable, by the Stenbenville, as by the Hempfield project--sod that wee all. We had no Idea of compering the Steubenville route with that chosen by the Ohio and Penusylvania road Company, as a great trunk and central hue to the interior and heart of Ohio. The location o: the Ohm aad Pennsylvania Railroad , bee ever met without. unqualified approbation, and we bare never lean any reason to alter our opinion. Were etre mute to be chosen to morrow, we should hold op both hands for it, im the very best for Pittabrugh end Pennsylvania—as the true and natural route to the M4 - re — lands of Ohio, connecting LLB both with the ireat Lakes emd the great West—with the :Moen sections, and tee most exteastve ayes - tem of internal improvemems in the country.— If It is desirable to romper. with BaltimeriCar the trade of the Übe river. auome low sautes o• water, the Steubenville road Is better Err our pur- pose, hot in every other emehtial, we deem the Ohio and Pennsylvania route the hest. It is sulpri!ing to us Mot the Post =snot let the Ohio and Pennsylvania hail Bond alone, when the editor knows that it is now under contract, that the work is now rapidly going on, that the iron is purchased, and that nothing he can say can stop it- progress. We have no desire to throw theta. eles in the way of the Steubenville project, al though our preference is given to another—but the friends of that nmd con expect little comet:met from us, if their especial champion is to make me of every favorable word we say to injure the real ty true Pittsburgh work. and one which bids fair to become one of the most prosperous end best paying roods in the country. 'Damn MIS Crancs.—lt is to be hoped that beads of families, or other', who may be questioned by the gentlemen employes to take the census, will not hesitate to give Tilithe information required by law. The only object of this "numbering the peo ple^ Is to ascertain and Gs the population of dm •vmntry at staled periods, for slntrireal outpost... The questions once answered, the individuals an swering will hear nothing more of ihr mailer, ex cep( lel the form of aggregate popular run The lorceal of the floa7F.argeent S. Prentiss took place a: Notches on the 21 (natant, and was attended be a large ma:mot:me of people, eager to show their reaped: to his menorti3. He wan buried lathe burr, hound el the Sergeant family near Natchez. a _-re reel the teo2ll.i.of Gov. Sergeant and other ancestors of Mrs. P.emiss. Ihe dbl. ease of vrtich Mr. P. died was chronic dysento. ry, from which he had suffered much daring the proclaim air months. It was but two or avert weeks before, at Now Orleans, on the examina tion of Ger,. Lopes, that his brilliant oratory and 'sparkling wit 'hewn in court with their wonted effect, blur the lam glimmering of a bright light.— The Delta sly, a conatiottan ell pervaded the whole electrified assembly, that it would he his he effort in the exercise of his noble oratory. Donau the late seasion of the Conventioa to form a new Comdttnitton for the State of Ohio, a memorial, nomerouali signed by citizen, of Haus iltun county, woe preYented, praying that in the new Cownitution promon may be made 'for the removal of all persona t negro or of part negro blood, from the State of ibis The tnemonalndit oak, 4 The geographienl pO4/1/011 of oar iitate,situated upon the Ohio river, end lying as it were at the door of the Srthern plantation:4. makes it a snits. b:e point for he collection of fugitive and menu tilaVes; the voraiequenre of which has bean a very rapid ti:ream el . ..micro population, in increase winch has much exceeded that of any other free State in the Union. In the Year 1900 there were but 500 negroes in the States of Ohio, Indians, mid Illinois; but to the year 18.19 they were estimated et 30,000 in the State of Ohio alone. This shows that our oo.ourd populatioo has been doubling itself once in every eight years, P ratio of increase which, if continued for fifty yesrs longer, will give us a colored pope. lemon of Over two millions of negroes and mined bloods. Thews! facts alone, we think, present matter of much moment for your coasideration i and call for sonic prompt nod decided action. lu the opinion of your petitioners, one of three l ' u ng . only, is possible, Hiller tie white people ennuirenters/min tp sStat e re it op to thine. genes; the tun nue, roan aererl germ:eta the .0, h err: mar 6. 'emceed. ICOUMMICATUD.j Emigrant.' Friend Society. Sa, 8. Faturr ST, Putt-Annul - no. Rev. I. F. Irvine, General Ageot for the Eggs Snots' Friend Society, hu lately arrived to Pitu- Lurgh, with the intention of furthering the objects of thm loatitutlon. The Society in designed to clout advice to all foreign Zmigrante,deferd them from imposlnon, and procure for them employ; 07 to give them direetion and aimatance, as CITCOI2I. Menai may require in going to the Western cony try, ond thus reileVe the more Easters States of the ba r g e! of ouppothiog them, Whilst they are put tots the way of .upportiog thomselvei. Bel, In whit the interests of the Satiety, is warmly reaimmeaded m the wealthy and benevolent of this city, on whom he may colt. George Lem, United States theriet Attorney of Liassachusetts, pronounced • most eINIXI3I and in. stenches eulogy on Gen. Taylor, in the Climes * court. poups, opl4oaday enalog. /MOH 14Z147 YOWL. C.Ment9tteace of We Pwstnargb Gaze.. Nur You, July 18. The town is quiet enough now for a country Tillage. in the any of braided, and the attention d le eeemsto be eat' The fashionable world has gone.to Niagara, Sam tram, the sea side, or the back basement, as the purse determines, for fashionables must go some where about the maldle of July, to maintain thvir position in society. In the fashionable gmrtens one can now nee nothing but tarnished door plates, unwept 'calla, and cobwebbed blinds, where, ten days since, all woo burnished with the splendor of a mirror, "out of town" is the reply of the porter, and it is the height of vulgarity to fumy you see peering through the blinds the persons you ask for, and who are sent on a cheap trip fo the watering places. Our streets down town have more than the ordinary gay look, from the presence of the belles of the Union, who make New York their common rendervocui en route for the *pas. The Signontas of California, the Creoles of the South, and the ruddy cheeks of the fair women of New England; meet one at every step, SERI quite com pensate for the perapatette millinery signs with into which New York dames have degenerated. A smoke emanating locomotive, in appear ance like a baggage ear, boa been sureesafulty introduced upon, the Hodson River road, and OUT street authorities have about couch:de:l to sant Lion its use, which will save a good dent of emery and much valuable time. There is some toll - cf building a machine like the one now upon trial m England, and intended to supersede the use of loco motives. Stripped of technical description, it is nothing but a locomotive, , the engine of which is horse power, applied in the same mouser as we see in threshing machines,' where the horse prods. me the power by the action of his force upon rotary platform. Its inventor claims that it will re duce the cost of power to a nominal SUES per mile, sod enable a road that now earns *ix per cent, to make fifteen or twenty. The expense of melon will give the new plan a trial, at an early day, and from engravings it appears very plausible. A good deal of interest IS taken here in regard to the Cabinet appointments, and particularly as to the Secretary of the Navy. New York In very anxious that non:lore Virginians atioufil 611 this port. During the administration of the late Secretary, so little work has been done in the Navy Yard. that the grass has grown on the spots where the feet of busy men should stand. The pretty town of Norfolk has had all the work, and the govern. ment has paid the piper in the shape of transporta tion of materials from New York and Philadelphia, Norfolk and Eastern Virginia natermen have gone to seed and are not tit to administer the Navy 'Bu reau. Every day developea new friends for Mr. Fillmore, who will noon arguirean amount of sup port that will enable him to fill the executive odiee with as much acceptability as any of his predecrn. roes. His mature judgment, his coolneas, and above all his perfect freedom from ell entangling pledges, will, ere long, demonstrate to the country mat we have en Executive 'who represents not New York hut the Union. In the stock market there is a marked dullness, exceed,' a fearkinda United States G's, coupons. sell at 117. Erie stock coritinues in demand, but es operators are now generally out of town, it is hard work to sustain prices. The banks far from being very scrupulous as to the kind of paper they will take, are intim street for mummers at rates under ' seven per cent, nor are they able to reduce very sensibly their unemployed foods. The southern merchants in town do not buy very largely, but are "looking around." For Callfonna there is a FoMetreal doing, and some sharp *hips get one dol lar per foot, and will be able to fill up at this rote if not more. The continued absence of me etramer America, and the expectation of seeing - the Atlantic to mor row or Saturday, =tees cotton dealers to pause Flour.is dull, and lower prices would be taken.— The remarlatbly favorable appearance of the crops, makes receivers 11.133i011, to close. In all hinds of barrelled provision. there is great dullness, a few retail - sales are all theta is to record. Ashes stand at SG. Teas are much wanted, nod are firm. Su gar is full higher. Coffee is doll. Tobacco is in active request. Sales of English bar iron at Sib. 6 mos., and No 1. Scotch pig of 5.211 per ion (ruin -lip side. PROM WASIIINGTON WAsztscrion, July 18, 18.',0 Cabinet thamlnation—Hew tlestenu Ceee —lmportant and highly latereetlag Develepements In the Senate apes, Disunion. The Celesta is sec yet msde op, though it will !winters an .hat Intelligent persona behove to he settled be yond contingency. Secrtary of State—Webster. Secretary of the Treasury—McKeenan, Pr_ Secretary of the Interior.,Vinton, Cnio. I think Eisend NM., of Missouri, lien. C. M. Conrad, of La., and Morehead of Ky., or Graham of North Carolina will come in Cr s ome of the other Deparanenta. It is eteted that the rotten of the eicenitaneoes retirement cf the members of the Cabinet, neat ' Mondlyn that that was the day deihreated by the Prihident In accepting their resignations as that on which he desired them to take effect. The. several Executive Menages sent to the Soruez, by ths President, relate to nothing more important than the appointment of halt d3sen jas• Coes of the peace for this district. sod two or three tee rite .Consols. The House has had an animated struggle to day ezer the admlnion of Hogh N. Smith, Nag so Delegate from New Mexico. Had the question been taken yesterday, Mr. S. would have been admitted. The Whigs and liberal Northern Dem• ocrate Ruppert him. The Southern Democrats and helr Heurao sOlies from the North, oppose. hll2l The latter confederates are movies every thing ',enrich the skies to make It • party question, and oy mechinatione last nlgUi and thismorninirnenr ty succeeded. They mustered 92 sgailin Mr. in in Committee Mi s afternoon against Ed in etavor, but I gill think that on the yeas and all% in Me Ilona% we should have beaten them by a raw votes, and I urgently advised that the ,nr.l should be made, but the directors thought differently, and aa It was late, 3 o'clock, force! an IdjouronsonL Tomorrow, the ounce:ton will hl7O bruo l ght all their party and crows to boar, sod will brut on most likely. There occurred in the Benue, to day, an inter eating and somewhat exciting scene. Mr. Hunter, or Va., made a violent and vary radical speech, of decided: disunion sentiments, and containing by the way, an attack upon Mr. Webster l oapeeets of yesterday, and • distinct repudiation on tho part of the Virginia Democracy of the Ire com bined Case and Calhoun doctrine of non inter. 7011tIMI. It in well known that Calhoun tinware. thia arlizie in the creed of the ?arty long Lorene hka death, but It still Cam' parOcidar cavorde. Fmte rose and launched at once into a eulogy upon Calhoun and hit non interventionism, which be maintained against the clearest evidence that no bettl up to the hour of his death. But ho rap idly passed into a touching denunciation at the ditanionists of the South. Be marched boldly end promptly Into the bowelaof the anb r iset. He eulogized the !spirit in which the Nashville Con , mention oriLinated, and the patriotism and talents ofsome of the actors m it, but presently ha dee'. red that its proceedings had been tin:graced by ;Teo:Amerind motions arbioh had no other leaden. up than to rank Lnoendiarism-and dist:townie.— Fle intimated that them arose many other mani festations of a like spirit In other pans -of the Smith and upon other wormier's. Jolt Davis, Footes collegue, conscious that the portraits preuutcd by his peppery little coadjutor came Dealt be:OWII likeness, elated upon Foote for specifications of hie charges. Foote responded that as to the Nashville Convention, he alluded to speeches by Pi ofesiorlTueker of Va., who bold ly preached the doctrine of separation, and to Ebben of South Carolina, who did the same. And .11i7 other places than Nashville, he pointed out the whole Stall of South Carolina which he de clared wu folly proved by the tone of its press to he ripe for violence sod separation. He said he had preserved adieu and extracts at home which ho should at the proper time produce and prove what he said, but he would now point hi, colleague to the Charleston Mercury, containing the 4th of July celebration throughout the Snute.— The ateurtints or those Crane were rife with tees. son and disttnionism. Bat he could not go into pintail/a. Ho had the materlshe, and 111 some other form Shona parliamentary speech. he should expose the whole of the movements cow in pro. grew to alienate the South from the concetlerey, and produce civil MIL He would strip every dlanionisi who should dare to defend himself of , all spevlous disguises. Davis, said he made no questlon gun news. papers, bur he did not know ono disunionist pu or In the South. Foote rejoined that he did, that he koala more aati a bUdr.d. OWN Iks; a ;Wood, sad this he would nemer.k them CI. tic was goirrgon to abort Professor Tucker, sea Mr. abet', vrith the moat offealuve vituperation, as firebrands, Oa 01011illa, conspirators, &c., W.., when hr. was call ed to order tar personakty and irretativ anew, end was ob!tged to let op this brace of wo •thies, with whom, it may be men tined, orie l yeas ago he was or would have trami,liad he fallen in with them, I hail frame Well met, and boon companion and bedfellow.: He complimented Sir. Webster and his noble and patrio&c speech of yesterday, and declared that ha had properly character , sed the Nashville Convention address, as an argument for disunion from beginning to end. • Butler erase to defend Spout Carolina, but In my humble Judgment he made taut a poor apology for that nest of contemptible fanatic. He did no , deny any thing Mat Foote had said, but went on In the stereotyped style of the chivalry to declare that South Camilla would do all that she had said ahe would do. Foote replied to him with an empty compliment to his State, entirely inconsiatent with all be had jinn so pointedly averred against her. Davis re plied to Foote et large, going into the Nashville C:nvention movement, but more particularly dis. coursing upon the politics of hilsaisaippi, and ergo log that, from the evidence ha had canceled, Foote vapid not be stierained there. Halo sat looking at this "fight hetweeu the der II and the bear," with twinkling eyes and a merry Malang of the lips. He rose and congratulated the country that the truth had at length appeared, intimating that nem was furnished another dies. trafion of the time honored maxim, that when rogues full nut, hon'est men roma by their own. He thanked Foote for having so conclusively shown that It was no longer the aholitiou fatuities of the North, but the incendiary agitators and disunion. lam of the South, who mete distracting and divi ding the country, plotting the dissolution of the Union, end by consequence seeking to compass the ruin of the Republic—an Foote wee deeply inter. anted for the aide against which he wan testifying, dome could be no objeouon to kin competency, and he supposed that he moat be implicitly be. tiered. Col. King came down from the chair, end offer ed an amendment which he said would make the Omnibus Big more acceptable to him. Ten prop• oration was to confine the boundaries of the State to the 33.6 degree of latitude on the South, and the Crest of the Sierra Nevado on the Kut. to the present shape be said be could not vote for the &IL Thiel is important, for K;ori vote has been counted for the Bill. This has been, nu the whole, quite a dart day , for It, though Foote'. amendment, altering the line fixed by the Bill la the boundary between new Mexico and Texas, to the 31:b, instead of the 32nd parallel, was rejected, 20 to 31. WAsnmowm, JWy 20th—G A. M Speculation and tribulation still prevail in re. gaill to the Cabinet. It is thought that the notnitia• lions will all go in to day, and n they should do so, of course you will get them by telegraph. Web ster, hlchennan,,Vintini, nod Crittenden, appear to be settled Upall, bill PO others. It is reported, on good authority, that the Print• dent has already resolved upon a course relative to the disputed boundary question between New Men co and,lreSos, sunder to that of his lamented pre; deeessor. Ile will protect New Mexico, until Cotigrew decides what elan shall be dune, at any cost or hazard. Such is the statement which comes to me through n channel through which no inten tional deception could flow. Thin subject will on. doubtedly form the first topic of consideration be tween the l'resident and the Cabinet which be is about to appoint, and the result of their dclilient• bons will be communicated to Congress in the shape of n special message. From all appearances, the Compromue Bill in the Senate must be considered derated, and the only thing to regret about it, is that the vote cannot be taken immediately. General Cass suited to his friends several days ago, that it tens lost,and yester day Mr. Clay by the tone of his rept', to the speeches of Messrs. King and Berries, who finally pronounced against toe plan. admitted that its pros. Teets - of cocoon had faded into thin air. It was thought that an effort would be made to day to pro• cure a Vote on!the pending moti on to lay on the table, but I learn that instead of IT. a prolonged discos. sion over the amount of indemnity to Texas, is ex pected. But whatever delays may now take place, or whatever immatavtal modification may be agreed upon, 1 imagine that no body hopes to change a vote or to rave the bill. Yesterday Mr Buttes ultimatum was rejected. This was a pr• position to ',quirt the boundaries, of Califon:CA to the emu hf the Sierra Nevada on the East, and the Videg. of isuitudd•es the South Thirty seven sores were entered against 11.. Thts decided King and Berrien spine the bill. Mr. Poole withdrew his trdt'ng amendments. as be said he found they brought en strength to the *chasm The final Vtim will probably stand ns follows For the 11111. Amon,. Mime New flamreh - Ma.achnueu.., Vermont, Mode Inland. Connetmeut, New York. - Now _teener, Pennnylnattu . Obto, Mtchmen, Wtwomm, lawn, - Himont, Inwn. D inware Alen lon ,I l rgait t - North Carolina South Gli ro me Borgia. FloruL , A labum , ALA spo Loin lama Texas Artarm. Ituout Ten Kontu Frra State.. di Nt Stmes The abteniee to Mr. &dead, of Arkaneas. d niom likely that Mr Underwood of Ky., and Mr. Green of It J. will oppo, than that a greater nunt-• Ler than 'Si Senators wig favor the Ltd The liourc have rejected the epphri9on of the Delegate trout new Mexteo, by the vole of 101 to Wt. It was dune by the Albance of the miserable Northern dough feces with the .davery ptopapuda of the Knuth. The former Hay, never worked more faithfully, or eneeelryfully la earn for limm selves the Idle of poor devile and aervile tools of the 'lace power than on floe urea,. For ths Puts6urg4 Ge 112411 DEATH OF GENERAL TAYLOR. Sleep no, sleep on—a nation monde, And standing, weeps her stricken brave; Sleep on—here rally freedom', bands, Whore tears Isbell mired - y.oy grave. Wawa Is thy spire, eurs•d in war, That rose on danna's eerie wing Tie gone Farewell the battle jar, The civil norm, hale', aspic burg; But ere wiled tut cold abode, Was It not true, and tried, and strong ' Was it not grand, when on that road Where honor stood confronting wrong' Methlnka from yonder holy sky, Where molls the pure stars on the sun, That spirit free, redeemed, and high, Bends o'er with that of Wan:neaten. Farewell to dander's poleon'd dart, The aurae, the wrath, in becretponed— Farawell—thon great, thou glorious heart, Farewell—l breathe that bluer word' Sleep Sleep on, as deep the mighty dead, Nom crumbling with the valley sod, Oa welch they swags led, fought, and bled Fur Man, for Freedom, and (or God! Tho fete John Bromheld's munificlent bequest to the ancient and beautiful love of Newboryport, Mass., being 810000 the Interest of which to to tie expended annually. for the improvement of the sidewalk, of the place, has accrued; the Select meu hpving been notified by Mr. Brornfield'a tea. color of 1:, deposit in the the Manacbooetts Hos- Mull Life Laurance; • moat admirable invest. meal. &pious Altman at Louisville stumbled while watitine, one very tiara night, and was. pitched head:memo.' down a cellar, which afforded him an "open entrance." Springing to his feet, he ea• claimed, "Brass de Lard dat I lit on my head ! If din nigger had scraped hls shiaa an hard. 1 spec he broko kis In.', Tire TrIVAI.37L7LC Roca —The Natioral te/ligreter, referring to the fact of the conclusion if Treaty with M- lice, wearing the tight of way fora Railroad aeons the lathe:ma Tehuan• tepee, guy.. The ounces. of thin negotiation cannot tail to be gratifylng to come:le:4,inl men, and indeed to all who look to the retention at our possessions on !tie ?swift°. Aa an ancillary tucasare to the great canal by the way of Nicaragua, It team go nuttier towards binding together the Atlantic and Pacific :limn than any thing which can be devised, rs• cept indeed that mageifisient enterprise which is now taken under the jcint protection of Great Britain and the United State., and will be• fore long be under the protection of all the mari time States of the world. President POLO instruct ed Mr. Trial, amen be sent him to negotiate the treaty at Gorda:4,e, to offer five milker., of dol lars for the rigor of transit 'cross at Tehuantepec. Every benefit contemplated by that arrangement, if our intelligence by tree, has been /moored by the administration of President TAYLOR, without cost. log the nation a dollar; and we gain the addtional adynntage of blinding Merle° herself to protect the aro* which is necessmy to unite us with our PacifirrTenitories. The benefits resulting to the United States from the canal and railroad will be incalculable; and through ages to came the name of President Taylor, who tenth the first steps to etude uniting all the nations of the world in an ,object go beneficial to all, will be remembered with gratitude. He has now passed to his Im am:let, and no flattery nan "soothe the dull cold etc of death° but we, who ifupported him in life, glad ly pay this feeble tribute to his honored memory. Cholera In the West In Louisville, for the week ending on Sunday last, there were 47 deaths of cholera, and 51 of other diseases. fu St. Louie for the it erne period, there were 212 deaths, 77 of which were of choieret. The epidemic hits abated very considerably in Nashville. There were only 7 interments for the 23 hours ending at 3 o'clock on Saturday, of which 4 were cholera. The Gazette, of Sunday, says: "Thou of our citizens wbo fled from the city on account of the prevalence of cholera, can now sole ly return, as the violence to the disc.° boa spent its force. The workmen employed on the capitol having ceased work on account of the prevalence of cholera for several days past, have returned to. thei r Moe." On Sunday last, the cho'ero had entirely ceased at Shelbyville, Ky. The Llniscilio Journal of Tuesday says: "Some three or four cases of etto!era have occurred at Cannelton, 12., seven! Cases at 1.01,713/.orl, sod s few Odle! at Madison." The same paper May!: •'Macy of our ,LiZel. came claws on the Counland from jtedford Springs last night. A fatal case of cho!era had occurred at tho apringa." Thu case is thus so. tied by the the Lrniav Ole Cozener of Tucadagi 'Tabula or Beer ran.—We iinderstaad that . the wife of Mr. Webs, a merchant of Medium, Ind., died of cholera, at the Bedford Sprirgs, Trimble county, on Sunday evening last. Ste wen well and in the ball room Saturday nicht,wee attacked with the fell diseac a short Yam after ehe returned _to bed, and died the next afternoon. This death created a peat panic among the au— memo, elation Were, and borne*. wakens, cars ellipse, Ste , were at once called Into rep:lmm. to take thorn away. a perfect stermyd, we are toad, ha. rarely been witnessed. Bedford is Gee of the healthiest spree in rho State, and this is air first case of cholera that ever occurred there:' Expulsion of the Jesuits 'souk Ma Ito It war mentioned a few day* ago that the Jo ends had been. expelled from the Republic of Now Grenada,aed a number thus expelled. had arrived at Magma Jamaica, from Ca rib mune; bat no details al the matter were given. We fad in Ito New York Courier des Etats Col*, of under. day. some facts which explain the movement, and which indicate a complete political and MOMI revolution, and open a new era in the history at the New Grenadian Republic. It seems that the :culla have been in power in, the country for about tea yule, and that during that time they have corned a very pernicious m. dunce. Thls influence had reached each a ,point at Taut, that the alternative of rentataintag it or of expelling, the body from the country, had become the moot important end euttirg ituut , oo, of the day. All the ethane of the disciples of La. yule, however, had been Int:dictum in hindering the pewees of thy liberal party, who, in spite of their rubel/ able adveroaries, achieved a twin]; b to the elecuons of 1510 and placed :a the Pretio. demist chair D m Joan Haute Lopez. 'roe acceupri of Lopez raised to the chief magfUrecy under tech auspices, necessartly e.g. [Wised toe end-of the reign at the Jesuits. A de mand was made open the new Prealdeut, signed by a respray ol the Chamber of Representatives, that the Jesuits should he expelled from the the public; sad con-equently, on the 18th of May last, a decree was issued for the expeluoa of the whole order. The authority (or this decree is foetid ins pin t:Mlle unction, given by Charles 111 , King to Spelt, in 1767, watch decreed the perpetual ex pulsion of the Imults from nil the termer., t.-- longing to the era ton of Spain. Tam iota, with el the laws of Spain, Led been adopted by New Girard., and had Peace, an it seems, been rem-M -ed. The perm ivon net ended to the Jr'n ite to • obluth tterroelves to New Gten.do. during the crisis of 1.40 12, was a vie tifitti.,• and not sit abrogation or Ow pragmatic 8.4:1i0n. The citizens of New Grenada, who have cons elected themselves with the Jesum during the last ten years, aro exempted, m it appeals, from. the operation of this rigorous caesium of expulsion. The chamber of Rs preoentitives have fully lams mimed this energetic act of the President, and I have declared that he and the Mitt:stem who with him signed the decree of expulsion, hive Nnents edowell of their country" for the Grmocau sad pa triottsm which embled them to discharge no psin fel and delicate . duly; sad they declare further, that the measure is one of vital iipportnnce to the Republic. The Conservative party, whose elites the Jesuit. had been made a strong, but lotdectu. al opposition to this measure of the Liberals. DeCl5lO,l Itzt,tromi: TIM MGM -, or iltannem %Voss., —ln the Court of Common Pleas, yester day, Judge King rendered a dectamo in reference to the rights of husbands over the property of then wives, under the act of Assembly oft lilt id April, Mat This Is the that deciston under toe new 1/Ive, ro* it will be seen by the dectsion. that a wile has nenly the absolute control over her own proper tY While living, bet may dispose of it on she plea .e”,9 o) . will, at her death, without regard 1,, the lite-Dnagni coorte.y The case before the Court woe that of George W. Condole, and the point dee:ded, WWI. that 111111 V the act of Ilth April, loriJ. the Mee hued of a wife, the °weer of real estate in-her own right,bati no interost it. ouch r•mite—lhrit he cannot either sett, lease, charge, or eac milter, uor way, witimdher consent, that the only interest : he has mehZattee, if it can be raliedipt ;getout:, expectant vigil therein, for life in the event 11/ t he I wife, dying Ineemte, seized. thereof, that this er- peetancy depends on each intestacy, bemuse she can, by will, depose of it absolutely. AvlthoLlt re gard to the husband.—[Philadelpiva Penns)leautan ill 14th. "Old if7ridy," the Velem]) war hope of the he re or Bacon Vmta, fotrood an elf . ..ruse and ekes Mg part of alt proeemton.at Wanhtostoa, on the Occasion of what tl.e Journal of Commerce ends "the funeral obsequies," on Saturday. The editor says that at the aasomations COLll2,led math him crowded upon esery one's mind. The old chug. er as he pawed the ground, and resghed at the sound of the bugle, seemed en:adly sad pupae ;featly to look atoned fur Ms rider, and omen snore to hoar him on the held." Liar IN. His Dan —The Boron Traveler noires as a tact that cotton geode made by the Tuscaloosa Manotaccortng Company or Scotlevide, Alabama, are now geld in the Devon market. This is a can of the tinier not without its Interest. It denotes that eCgtoll has already been brought to such perfection at the Sarah that sae Itrn compete With the manufactu rers of the East fur the supply of their own fly,• cial markets At pummel the remark doubtles• applies co only the coarser deretiploalla of mer chandise. But all experience has proved that where auervas has attended the martula.lare of these, that of the finer fabrics was sure to tallow In due season. In noticulg the estahliahment of a new factory in Georgia, some time since, the Auguata Clamor. c% took the occasion to remark that lie day wan not far thatnut when that state would be able to emu every beg at cotton raised within ite limite. To do to, it tool, would require only eel't or ten Niles US many emndlen Si are now ill operation to Me Statc. WitniT Hanetair.—la eOlue ,hte county, or nen! eil litog coMinaneed on early **Fri. day last, the I 'natant, and in very many Wares Yesterday The crop has not berm eo cenermiy good (or (ex years pour, and it may he doubted whetter Moutoo county ever belotc produced so great a yield. Mr. John Park. of Gale., thawed as yeeterdav, Hutchlawn and Suede wheat, which Cu , plump nets and bright.st of kernel, we have unvertwen excelled. These specimens were harceeted ou Saturday, juat twonty.ttlx davit aner the hr,: en. peunstoo of the heads.—Rornetter A auncan, July 16. . Animator ov Doom Wan•rea.—The Louis. vale Journal tells the fullowlng capital anecdote of Webster, in a letter from • Washington: The m 'best ere o ff sport that has lately occurred here It the great Dan's. Nobody, indeed, unless some times Crittenden, Is brighter, more festive, than greed Dem when you get mm Into a tularoua mood. He was in excellent humor, not lona since, at a party at Secretary Enloe's, and no, to moth, were many others. Well, you remember the declaim,' name of i•Solitude . which Emden got, in foimer days, by one Cl his spacemen when tho company was all in-high glee, in,the largo saloon, Black Dan came slowly and wilemoly up to Ew ing, where he stood, conspicuous to every body, and addressed him most earneatly In these lines, which Cowper put, into the mouth of Alexander Selkirk— 4 06, Solitude' where ate the chrome, Thu eases bane nem in thy facer' Mr. George Cabot, n_l3oston young gentlemen died on Wednesday morning, at his Indires hon.te Winthrop Place, Benton, of ao,overdose of opium, 'which be had taken for the sure:;ls Derv/Jul arc• tint, BY AUTHORITY. PUBLIC ACTS' " Fsssrd tiering the First Semen of the nasty First Cong Tess. [Pt sur—Na. 111 AN Am" for the enn.trnctlon of certain road, in the Tempi, of Minnesota, and for other per. pose& Lle st sneered by ti-o &new and Roam. trittra • ofuraticeo if the United Suter of Americo in Con gress aseresndleil, Ttkat the (allowing sums of Mon. ey he, sad they are hereby, appropriated for the oonatnichon of roads le the Territory of Minnews fie, to wit : For the Construction of a road from Faint Dattglaos, on the Mississippi river, via Cot. (tee Grove, :Stillwater, Marine Mills, and Fall* of St. Croix, to the Falls or rapids of the St. Louie river of Lake Supenor, fiLeen thousand dollars; for the constraction of a road from Point Douglass, eta Cottage Grove, Red Rock, St. Pool, and Falls Of St. Anthony, to Fort Gainesoen thousand dol. late • for the constructi o n of a road from the mouth of Swan river, or the meet availabloriboint between it and the Ralik Rapids, to the Winnebago agency at Long Prairie, five thousand dollar.- ' be Unseen. struction of a r.Jad from Wabuhaw to Mendota, Lye thonsand dollen, and 6r the aurvey and laying out of a military road from Minnesota to the month of the Big Sioux river, ma the Ml.. wan, fivethouned dollen. The eald roads lobe constructed under the direction of the Secretary of War, persoent to concrocthito be made by him. Soc. 2- And be itfurther emoted, That the Gov ernors of Oregon end Minneatita shall report to Congress annually a detailed stetement of the ex. penoltunt of money appropriated by Congress for the are or benefit of Paid Territories, which is ex pended ender the order or oupeririaion of the gore tenor ar,d .sembly. HOWELL 'COBB, Spesier of the flouts of Represented:ors. WILLIAM R. RING, President ciao Senate, pro tampons. Approved, July I e, - /650-t llit/LIARD FILLMORE. I [l t taue—No.,l2.l AN ACT authorizing the Legt (neve Assemblies of Minne.utio and Oregon T reliant* to prolong their-next annual 'moon t a penal' of ninety days. L Bo it exarre .1 by flee Senate. need lion,. of Rip. reeentaterer of Oa United New sal America in Con. Seas iveentbled, That the islative ANsarnblies of Mknikcaota and Oregon Te roan e be, and they are hereby authorized to prolog their next ennual feseion to a period of ninety ys, any thing con• mined in any former act or lacts to the tourney notwithstanding Approved, July IS, 1550. 'Pt:cur.—No A- ACT torrent the franhhig privilege to Mrs Margaret S. Taylor. Be tt rmstar..l Ly ef r e ~ e nwe mut !louse of !Cep re,nteat rea the ('cunt gars., of Ansertett to Coo .••,,,nedni, That the franking privilege here. toicre accorded to the widows of the deceased lies- Went. he, and the same is hereby, granted to Mrs. 111orzaret S Taylor, relem or Zachary Taylor, late l'resideor of the Called Sues. Approved, July IS, 18:14 IPtretac —No. ft I A RESOLUTION esprelsing the condo!enos of Congress fur Mrs. Ms.rgaret S. Taytor. It," ! , mils Senate and RP., o /lispresento• tlrts of Me Gaited :Staffs of Aouroca to L'ongress a•sentldsl. That the President of the United ..tea be requested to transmit a copy of the proceeding. of the two Houses on the 10th Instant. in relation to the detail el the Into President of the Culled States, Mn,. Margaret S Taylor, and to assure her of the profound reapers of the two Houses of Congress for her person and character. and of their sincere ondolithee on the late afflicting dlepetisstion of HOWELL COBB, Speo!er or flit !loose of Here..,laisres ' WILLIAM R. KING, Pro o the Sr:lani pr o tempo... Approved, July lb, IS:A. MILLARD FILLMORE AN kusatosn's mac . 'aril:mos of ENGLAND —The Bow. Mr. ild'Cintock, who went out to the Washington, tapering which ateemer be .87. s Inc very exunplimendtrY [Melo, thus derenheat in a Muer to the Christian Advocate and Joaznal, his omprerwons on appose/nog the English Collet• About aix miles Wert of the Needles we took In our pilot—a thorough John 8011, bluff, thick set snit rotund. We crowded around him, °femme°, slicing question,. Has the Atlantic arrtveo?"— t•Dan't know." "The city of Glasgow?' Haven't heard." "Have you any paper'?" He pulled out the meekly Tone. ol May 26! and this was his Welt news. "Has the Niagara anivedr— tt Yee." This last reply wee • damper, as the Niagara sailed bum New York two days alter ns, end we hoped, at least, to reach England be. Lae her,, _But the pilot's next utterance relieved 1114IODDIOd nor, "The Mtwara is pot of the Oriental Brimpanyie steamers, ion% she?" t!) And this was all he knew of the matter. In tact Ido not believe he.knew the name cf our steamer when he boarded on. Yet, as we learned after. ward, he is a very reputable man, and a very ex cellent pilot, knowing every point and rock in the channel—and nothing else. Bet you mold not, by any accident, chance npou an American pilot, from Paseemaquoddy to New °retina, so innocent co HI knowledge of what is going OD is the world, I heard touch of the beauty arum Isle of Wight, hint had not a glimmering coneepuon of thereality. No American scenery prepares one for this rural levertness of England. Approaching the inland Mom the Southwest,we bed a fall view of Scratch. off, Bay, with In towering precipices, of chalk, storeountef, et the histheet point, by a i ghtbotme, at au elevation of 715 feet above the It :el of the sea. This bay to qnite a meson for tourists la search of the p i cture/nue—and well It may be.— The d.rs'ing whiteness of the chalk cliffs is inter. ruined at intervals by attests of flint, giving them o rely teroarkeb'e appearance. At the North. western extremity of this bay stand the Needles —three sharp-pointed chalk cliffs, obviously seph• rated from the main Isod by the action of the sea, which is every day disintegrating these and Rhone entry, new needles. A eery tall one, 120 feet high, disappeared entirely in 1786. Tinning the corner of the Island yen see Alum Bay, aurreunded tif tall cliffs of very Writing nprowaree, (bore on the one aide being high chalk precipice,, while those no the other are composed art emote of earth at different colors, black, white, vel.ow and red, 'imming a beautifully variegated surface. A few nii'es farther, on the main, lend, is seen floret CasCe, built at the end of a tenon. tarty narrow promontory, pitting out two miles from the nowt at llstripshne, farming, with the Isle of Nl'ight, • channel leas than half a mile wide. Ati this was the tlmt rt al castle I had seen. I look ed very crossly. It is a strong erection, of the time oh Henry VIII. Charlet. I was removed hem from earyabrook Castle mane time before his trial Th. cantle is now accepted by the men of the pieventive service. We ran close to the Tale of Wight al the way down to Cowes, nod row it to the best bloom of ila beauty, under the brightest inn of Jdde. I will attempt no description of the coast, or of the transcendent loveliness of the harbor of C.O . PIeP is enough to say that our party, nova f whom had ever crossed the Atlantic Wore, were ell 'ratified that the beauty of that pot of Eagle,' had not been end could not be tugger. toed—GOL PO much at, antoral ferlaree, as that other I> bY Ilflil JKDD i C 0 w • 111TING--30 brls Jam necked tor by 1713 J KIDD te _ . • OiIITITS PATENT GLASS PAPER —:.clo rrun. Jo loomlor s.o by brEl] J KIDD rr po i r y t7HG e.ks prime qoality for an . ll hr Co iiOH - E—drsrieks on hong ' o l d 1 1) k G N R " •N. C AR Jett • Cor Wood & Kith an band WA for role oe R.N. WICKERSHAM 117 - nce - T= gale by I:74l7slEQuit iFertved end We 8. N. WICKYRS/,ANI °MONK in we Ite.l quality tui una J r:1le OP S Yra . -50 ntli fecinireig Eihrtio .4 Is J s rni.woßru & co Q F. FLOUR-114 Ws in earn J c DILWORTH a CO reZ.a:7d bi J 8 DILWOR CH d CO UDAR CURED HAMA— ID C•lll.received per meaner Hail Columbia, en corolgei JAMES A HU7CIII SON re Co BACON -10 conks reed oar newer flail Co irlaka on eenanpunert. for nale by jell JAMES A HUTCHISON & CO SIDTi4-7 easio clan rideihiTATle. orate by— /LIES A HUTCHISON A CO LUM-10 be. for sale by 5 g"1 R F. SELLERS 10 ell, extra (beam Cher to; 10 h( brio No.:Mackerel; 10 brie do do; 5 kegs to do; 10 has Solemn', 00 00. Maald Candles; 23 hes No 1 ;omen: 2.1J0z meal Eine Washbasin!, 45 bl chests aapcnor Greta Toni; 40 caddy boa do do: 10 Veber. ropetior Black Tel.! 5 ma thfield's extra Hams; j, f;or sale by J El IVILLIANIS l CO Cyr Woml Fifth am. Fib H-40 brig Its yawn, nib; 20 bra Lake 'boor; Nu Lake Fhadi MSbrig No I Harting; U, bile No I 11Imckerek lb Id brim Nob do., just reeod and art saia by /1 0 JOHN IV ATI' ra B w scms: HEW Bootless eft 'laza& Literary Depot, 7'Aird street, orp:orar rho Parr Win, LONDON An Journal for Jane. Lac's Livlrie Ag, No ere. Doldeldu I,ollor Degosino for July. Blackwood Or Jane. Tile Vale, of Cedars; or the Alotly a Cy firune 2 , gullar, author of . Woman's demon Sin :encore, NO 19. Pictorial Fold Book, No 3. David Coyfteratli, No 14. Nz . 1 . 11 .. • s i alrl i or: it he w t. c Fr( Ite M e ag. jr3 ( it • 1.1.11 C R GRANT te..• Ir •ne fil les farrier, (or rile by BA W HARBAUGII ••• • • • ALOr.-19 casts pnaustinomidersTGiale by - - Ilk jet] CH GRANT rJum ILL& s - Ireih - Whife - Lime mtle n 9 (1 , 181 C H GRANT Juer reeenreL-4 doyen Dr, belles Orpood, 10400 Cho!mosey, &afar sale by KID S tCO iY2 .Zior bo Wood wren CIUFPEJL—.IO begs No. f e. store store Kj by DROWN & KIRKPATRICK. iyl RAMI-13 nerve* In more .nd air rale by jyl DROW%a KIRKPATRICK tn.q• &ftekerel, tO do Hetrum to do &tad; in loom arid for stile by BROWN & RIRKPATRICX. it..F . Vl::k..-lAu bags now !an.dll2a.frnn ISAIAH DICKEY &CO Wren Frog% SIB =l:l=2T! ONE Large Patent Smut Mocha.. new, retested on croungronera, and for olle low by RODENT Da LZELL & CO 1719 . Liberty evert. U ur" "" -- tea Hite; Ito dos Corn Brooms; SO bits Vioopt,• in stars, for szie by 6 JOHN WATT/CO yais warranre,ToThao j HOLIOONM ALM • cO os M Woven !ME