\ r "• / * h-- ‘ w 'y v -ct'i- ' ‘ •• ’, -. ■ v - u‘ v C-r-» ./•>•• - ■■', .;. • \ ( * s*■*: ••'*»* • . •• • ' ' ’ V ’ ' • fgm V* V - -V*; •* -»•*'•• r " } ,' >v*\ * . . v < » C 4 t ~ ••> »V 'M.VS i*jjf -* *\f- ' .; .. ‘ V ,' V. * l Vi-■ ** ’ sfeV;ivv..-■ *• is^vtvv' •*• •'nr**- *£•;*, •* 'U-s L.. V/-"N ■•< .« •*, 4'V- v"«-. ► f **■*«,, mM; ;*va £&•« j--c. i : d s*;i 'Sfes>r *v --i £> **^i^ . /,*.'*'• V ::* .*;-**>^i' +V fejf, '.llf* T- ZjrA\t**r - v'^vSV^ " v S-v. . * 8 -■'•■"S.tiaSSsw^-; *• n •» 1 * **. ' ; • u ' 5 ■** •*'• *4, t * ; «f -J .>* ia* *-/ is provisions. -No person held to • labor in one State, under the laws oacaDlng into another, shall in coi.se. quence’of an? law or regulation nharecd from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim oflbe parly to whom .uch service or labor may be due. It Is scare* lv questioned that this provision was lnl ® nd< * i bylhose who made it,for the reclaiming of what w ? e call fugitive slaves, and the intention of the hw giver is the law. All members of Con .nuisesr their support to the whole Con stitution —to this provision “ “ uc^“ To tho proposiuon then, thAt & avea whose cases come within the terms of this clause shall be delivered up,” their oaths are unan national or State authority, but surely that dif ference is not a very material °e o h I, lho l ‘“ ij to be surrendered, it can be of bat litUe con ,-Zence to him or to others by which authorl- OTidone, and should any one, m *ny esse be con tent that his oath shall go unk.pt on a merely unsuhatantial controversy es to how fatil kept. Again, in any law upon this subject, ought not all the safeguards of liberty ' in civilized end humane jurisprudence to be introduced, so that a freeman may not m any case bo surrendered as a slave . might it not bo well at the same t "nn, to F”- vide bv law for the enforcement of that clause LSr^“.tsr=r:‘S SSSi"' thatltwill be much safer for all in oO.it! Md private stations, toconiorm to, abl “® by, Ml those acu which stand than to violate any of them, trusting to find 'mpu pity in having them held to be unconstilution “it Is scarcely seventy-two years since the tlrst smssss-ssSs ■=;a||Sfg Ml the express p [, nion wi n endure forever, fttitutiou, tbe dealrov it, except by , u being impose for j n the instrument aomo action n t.p United stairs be not a Ag ' PP but an aasociauon of rfho nature of a contract merely, can States In . peaceably unmade by less «? “ VXparta wCms/e it 1 One party 51..wp “?T™ftrmed by t“ history of the Union If l? ’ The Union is much older than the “t ~ '» if- >■’ £ Articles of Association in ln , . f sSss*-a rrtK“ “ . of .'f.» ' Btktesexpresslv plighted and engaged that t SSL's w^wtri^r ■ union : but if tho destruction of by one or by a part only of the be lawfully possible, the U mon is less - - *?Wnbefore,the Jons tltu lion, having lost the tkM> , ’. n f perpetuity. It follows from » iul ele “ that P nO P Btate upon its own mere *»“? V ‘ e rJwfully go out 01 the Union ; and motion ““ “„ . J d ? na nces to that effect are tb»t reeolves or , violence within Regally against the authority of J W StaLTe Insurrectionary or revo I therefore' onlwokw. Constitution and s , u y Bhall take bnd expressly oarCf : aH 0 f Union be enjoins on me, that . Kiates Doing sbSrSSsAW^ wmv rightful masters, the American withhold tho requisite means, or people, shall- wi mftnner direct t h e con ln B ° me this will not be considered as a trary. 1 V the-declared purpose menace, 'rat on y as eopstitutionally tW«J it- In doing this there need ' violence, end there shall be | be no bloodanwi n lhe natl onal no “ e ' conlded to me will be ‘“ k . ’ hold occupy and possess the property , pied to bold. lh e Government, and to duties on imports, but beyond what 00ll f for these Objects, there will no using of lorce against or interior locality. « .rreat aDd so universal, as to pre- Bhal . resident citizens from holding ■ ve ? there will be no attempt to federal offlcM. among the people Vr^ b oSrwMe.trict righ } may „_ _ ___ , V liy • ■i-y 7 rL-**-*' n ' __’ 1 ' 7V' * *• ' . i .'t j*. ■„ . '■'-■■ / > T * •- •_- • •• • \.-y -. . v »:• . , • . • ■, *> M -l*> * ■*.!- W. ' r*. -**• *4.n * }■■,.<* . - -. M «f* •' v * .■tt .*■ ( *?* i- t f ’ ’ • **+* [ exist in the government, enforce tbe exercise I of these offices ; the aUompts to do so would be J so irritating, and so unfeasible with all, that X deem it better to forego for some time the use of such offices ; the ma-ls, unless repelled, will continue to he furrishad in all parts of the Union so far as possible. The peo ple everywhere shall have that sense of perfect security which most ‘favorable and ca m thought and reflection,on the part of the gov ernment can give them. The course here indicated will be followed, unless curront events and experience shall show a modihea tion or change tQfDe proper, and in every case | and exigency mybestdiscrelion will be exercised according to circumstances actually existing, and with a view and a hope of a peaceful soiu tion of the national troubles, tba restoration of the fraternal sympathies and affections, that there are persons fn one section or another who seek to destroy the Union at all evenls and are glad of any pretext to do it, I will neither affirm nor deny ; but if there be such, 1 need address no words to them. To those, however, who really love the Union, may I not spoaa before they enter upon so grave a matter as l e destruction of our National fabric,.with »H benefits, its memories and hopes. Would it not be wise to ascertain previously why we do so Will you hazard so desperate a step while Uere is any possibility that any portion of the ills YOU fly from have no real existence . » you, while the certain His you 11 y to are greater than all the unreal ones you fly from Will >ou risk the commission of so tearful a mu .a All profess to be content in the Union it al constitutional right* can be maintained U A true, then, that any right, plainly . Ue Constitution, has been dented . 1 thins not. Happily the human mind is so consti tuted that no party can reach to the audacity of doing this. Tnink. if you can, of a single instance in which a plainly written provision of the Constitution has user been domed, it. by the mere force of numbers,a ma]ority shou.d deprive a minority of any clearly written constitutional right, it might, in a mora poim of view, justify a revolulum-it certain! would it such right were a vital one ; but such . V' ,■ » * ¥ ■■i *6' i.* *■ i •* ft b ■% J - * - , *■*• 1 *t . 4 5? *•«■'••■ .jfl - .‘f K p*y3«w ■, i " .-.J *<*v, <«i rtfrftjU' • ' N* is not our cast'. , , • All the viml rights cf minor. >« and of in dividuala are so plainly wural u> them J affirmation, and negations, prohibition, in the Constitution that <>on‘ro verbies never arise concerning them. Wut no organic law can be framed with a proven soecifica'ly applicable to every question which practical mlmlnutrrtion. Mo Prmidcnt can an tic..ate, nor any document of reasonable length contain express P-v> B ons for all possible questions. Mm,l fug> U T“' fr °” labor be surrendered by national or SU.W “ thorny ? The Constitution doe. not express y sar Mby CoDgress prohibit slavery in the ter ritories 1* The Con, t.iaiion does not .i | dose. say. Must Congsese protect slavery torias! The Constitution does not expressly «av From questions of this class spring all our constitutional controveis.es, aed we divide upon them into majorit.es and the minority will nol acquirees the majority must, or the Government must cease ihere is no other alternative lor continuing the Gov ernment but acqu.escence on tbe on. «d. or US other. II .minority in .uch cm. rather tb&n aeq'.eaeu they nut Kc. a \ dent Which in turn will divide and ruin tor a minority of their own will sec-ale them whenever a majority refuses b’ b “<= on £ ol y led by such a minority, dor instance,why m y not any portion of a new Confederacy a J®" two hence arbitrarily secede again P r “=' Be '> “ nortione of the present ll nion now claim to se- lrom it 4 All who ci.crlsh dla ““' on laments are now being educated to the exact u.n.»y p^pr educe harmony on prevent renewed session * Plainly, the central idea of secess ion is the essence of anarchy. A in restraint by constitutional ch«h and l.mU tatlons and always changing easily with the deliberate changes of popular timonts, is the only true sovereign 0 _ people. Whoever reject. ° f - fly to anarchy or to dec-olism. na ? possible. The rule of a minority, as a j rn nent arrangement, is wholly madm.ssab e o that rejecting the m.j -rity principm .n rch)■. or despotism in Borne form is all mat is b ft. Ido not forget ihe position assumedby some, that Constitutional questions arc to decided by vhe Supreme U>uri, nor d‘» 1 J ?b“t such decisions mud be binding in any case UDOU the parties to a suit, as to too object ot that suit, P wbile they are also entitled to ve high respect and consideration in. all pwt ltl cases, by another departments of the Oove.r uient. And while it is obviously possible that such decision may be erroneous in any give posa Bl jii the evil efleci foliowing n y g limited to that particular case, with the chance that U may be overruled, and never bccom- a precedent for other cases, can bolter be borne thin could the evils of a different practice. At thl same time the candid tillxen must confers that if the policy of tho government, up vital questions, effecting the whole people is ‘B o u^"rCou\\ I Cfnrt h th d thaf eminent tribunal. IS or is there ln .^* and ought to be extended, while lieves it is wrong, and ought not to b ° ® lU "£ ed This is the only substantial dispute. The fugitive slave clause of the Conal ' t ““"”’ il BaTt 8 aT t ihe law for the suppression of the foreign -lave trade,are each as well enforced, porhttps, asi any law can over bo In a community whore the moral sense of the people.imperfect y supj.orfc .. l»w itself The groat body of tho people and a few break over in each. I bis 1 tniua cannot be perfectly cured, and it wou.d b worse in boib cases, after the separation ol the sections ihttn before • The foreign slave trade, now imperfeely .uopresstd! would be ultimately revived Pbvsically speaking wo cannot “P*™ 1 "; "" vorcod, and go the P ihe differenl yond the reach of each olho . parts of our country cannot l^ ( b ‘ n intercourse, rn f rrkc a X::re^U a an ftU«Uc« make laws ? Gan treaties be more failhltiuy enforced between alions than law. t friends? Suppose you go to war, y fight always, and when, after much K* sides and no gain on either, you »aa« fighting, the identical old questions aa to terms of intercourse are again upon you. ibis country with its institutions, belong, to the neople who inhabit it, whenever they Bhall grow weary ol the existing government, they dxn exercise their constitutional right ot amending it, or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it. 1 cannot be igno, rant of the fact that many worthy and patri otic citizen, are desirous of having the nation al constitution amended. While I make no recommendations or " T fully recognizo tho rightful authority otlhe people over the whole subject, ?hl exercised in either ol the modes pre scribed in the instrument itself, and I should existing circumstances favor rather thanjoppose a fair opportunity being afforded the people to act upon it. 1 will venture to Z\A P that to me the Convention mode seems preferable, inasmuch a. it allows the amend. menTto origin** withthepeoplc themselves instead only of permHUßg-dljemt" ° r neglect a proposition-^ not especially chosen for the purpose, whmfi might not be preciiely such as wish to either accept or refuse. I a proposed amendment to the OonstitutiW which amendment, however, I have not seen— passed Congress to tbe effect that the Fed eral Government shall never interfere with ■*j 8 V the domestic institutions of the States includ ing that of persons held to service. To avoid a misconstruction of what I have ssid, 1 de part from my purpose, not to speak of particu lar amendments, so far as to say that holding such a provision to bo now implied as consti tutional law, I have no objection to Its being made express and irrevokable The to I Magistrate derives all his authority from the people, and they have conferred none upon him to fix times for the separation of the Stales. The -people themselves can do mis aIBO if they choose, but the Executive, as such, has nothing to Jo with it. His duty is to ad' minister the presentgovernmentas it came to hands, and to transmit it, unimpaired by mm, to his'successor. Why should there not be a patient confidence in tho ultimate justice of the people. Is thero any better or equal hope in the world ? In our prosent differences is eith er party without faith of being in the right. If the Almighty Ruler of Nations, * llh eternal truth and justice, boon your side of the North, or on yours of tho South, that truth and that justice will surely prevail by too judgment of this great tribunal, the American the frame of tho Government under which we live, this same people havs wisely given their pulic servants bullittlo power for mischie., and have with equal wisdom provided f-r the re turn of that littlo to their own hands, at very short intervals. Whilo the people retain th. ir virtue and vigilance, no administration, by any extrema ( f wckodn<..-s or folly can very seriously injure the government in the short ' four years. M y countrymen, one and , mink calmly and well upon this whole sub set— nothing valuable can be lost by taking time. If thorr bo an object to hurry any of you in hot haste to a step which you would never take deliberately, that object wu bo frus trated by taking time, but no good object can frustrated bv it. Such of you as are now dis satisfied, still have the oIJ constitution unim paired, and on tho sensitive point the laws of vour own framing under it, while the now ad ministration would have no immediate power if it wanted to change either. 1f it were ad mitted that you who are diaaatisiied hold the right side or the dispute, there still is no single good reason for precipitate action. Intel-.gence, patriotism, Christianity, and a firm reliance on dim who has never yet forsaken this favored land, are still competent to adjust in the best wav all our present troubles. In your hands, my dissatisfied countrymen and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not aasail you. You can have no conflict without being your selves the aggressors. You have no oath re gistered in heaven to destroy tho government, while 1 shall have the most solemn ono to pre serve, protect and defend it. I am about to ■we. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory stretching from every battle field and patriot grave, to every loving heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely as they will be,by the better aDgels of our nature. Wasbinotoji, March 4, IHUI. __ WATERCURE MID HOIEOP&THIC PHYSICIAR. RAINBOW'S CELEBRATED TRUSS STATIONER, JOB PRINTER, Blank Books for Railroads, Steam, boats or Commercial Houses, ruled to any order and got ten up in the best stylo. I'l-STOLS, Ami ail kiu>AM of Cl TLKRY, DENTAL ISSTRI MENTS. ** * *S • dil c. baelz, also-aqent Of RUPTURES. 130 89HTHFIKI.D8T W. S. HAVEN, —AND BOOK BINDER, ALL KINDS OF PLAIN —AML— FANCY PRINTING DONE TO ORDER! HK.VOLVEKB, KM' E: TRUSSFK, AC, W. W. YOl’NU'd, (Sueoeasor to Carlwrt(tht A Young i No. 97 Wood » reoU ron>*r of iJiaiTT'Od an**y- Xir ali/pafek,' win no w cu ktain-s YY lo„ »t wholi-Kie m-I « or r o( NO. 8T WOOD STREET, OFFICE <>F THE piTTHBDUon, Feb. ‘A 18f» ANM'AI. F.I.FCTION OF ISM'I RECTOR"* fG?CIK THE I'ITTMhLRUU. FOKT AM) SpiisiStssi <>t»o en.l W.Hyljanw, un» c which ban Wayne and tnhStookcrtiiF new (Vni| any. fit „ , K^creUir*. fe-*ilt27march --••-. .7J CIkCoNU CLASS HAND bNiilNfc H)K S memb-r. oflb. HE.TEK KIRK O, L wluh? bm 3,200 ponnde, »nd if m >n<» The R«ll«I »f/ j For further n&rcieularr £SsS;r i A BARE CHANCE mins SUBSCRIBER WISHING To I ,n ij>a Grooery bu-iness, wdl t ' enure rVk ui zro«erie> »n?li.tnorn. flxtaro-, 4c . »i“t » l < !, “ e giock V. ■ « n v lane hof lime require *, to auy per of the store for a ®‘ t^e biwQp**. Favorable Jj d g opporUlimy may terms stand is one of the moel eligibly »«™r *'C«henT oUy well calculated tor .lo in For turt partlcnlnrH enquire of JAMES PATTON. J No. 150 Federal t treat, near the market, Aljeahen QINCiNNAT 1 CATAVVA I’>A WIN —and— j STB.AUB’B laoeb bekr. 0 r be bad at im Wine ana Ron H> jj 0 2(} LMaroond-_ laSthSmd : ;~ — : - UTfI XV day armed and tor “ I |^ ißy H . COLLINS- vtn for sale by pIDtB N NJIOA BBHBT H;_COIXIN3.^_ Vi hi m ” LKMoM-HWyoxea first quality A i“‘ BROTHERS mart Oppo*iteet,Chariei_H oiel SMITH. PARK & CO.. NINTH WARD FOCUDBI' PITTSBURGH, PA. Warehouse, No. 149 First and HO Beoond str® B *®- Manufacturers of all slaes and doscripaons of Coal Oil, aborts and Btills, Gas and Water Pipe, Sad Irons, i»S ] Irona, Wagon Boxea, Bteel Moulds, PulW, Hangers an and Machine Castings of ererj descrip- ITcomplete machine shop attached- h> Lbe F „S Ml wessary fitting will be •4 **> . ; SL “ 10 LET —The Three Storied. Warehouai ££ Wood «r«>- EEYMEK 4 BROTHBES , * kV' ; ' . <'.'■)[' x,v ’' *> '_' ■»’ .' r, '.. - t> «J , ■ -'■ ’ K j^V '* . sS|f Path) fSaet. JAHCES p. babe, BOlTOtl AKD PRO* &lETOK. v ~ ...—iwly. Five Do'.lars per year, etriclly in »d -'"nee Weekly, Sinule subscriptions '1 wo I'oi l‘7, per year!in Clubs of five. One Dollar. local affairs. Arbitration Committee ot the Board of For March and April. WM. MeCaKERT.V. P. B. CAMPBELL IHALAII LACKEY, B. PRESTON, B B McF.LBOY, WM. MEANS. TO LETS for sale at this office. Meeting of the Horticultural Society. The Horticultural Society held their regular semi-monthly roaetlDg on Wednesday morn- President Knox in the Chair. Present. SuTß'urv 11. L- Bingwalt, and Messrs. Am- 'Bennett, Kesd, Murdoch Lowan, Gor- Jon Wardrop, Bacon and Bisscll. Tho prospects of the fruit crop were infor mally discussed, and members were requested ~ h : n „ specimens of fiuit branches from all .Mi .r.r which will be referred to a committee to' repo’rt upon. It is feared that the peaches I aro injured »o much that there will bo but few The importance of protecting the trunks of trots was also tiled for discussion at the next meetiPC, and Mr. Lowen was requested to bring specimens from trees which had been orotoctod by straw matting, 100 whole sub- Lt embracing "tow beads," will be included in that of pruning and trimming. Mr Knox exhibited a lino variety of cut flowers, via : Itododendron Arboreum, Aza la i s4i/.ia Albift. AsalU lndica Klorftbund&,Cftnnft indie*. Ali n.oa Odorala Scarlet Geranium, seedling, (dark » B *rlei with black .tripes,) l’etunia, ditreront colors, Abu tdon Striatum, Jasmlnum Multiflorum >pirea Wvruilora. Also * number of Knox, Kustots an'a iumoo Apples, and a bottle of Boch.lle U1 Mr 'Bennett had also a line collection of cut flowers such as Triompho de Luxembourg mX; Breon, LaAlarque. Ahutillon Hew boldii Canna W ar*enilzy. .... . f Mr. Lowen exhibited a splendid boquet of Cummings had also a beautiful hand boquet, with orange blossoms, px stated that the grapes exhibited at tbo last mebting had, as he had since as certained, been preeerved by putting up in “The subject Of holding a June exhibition name uo fir conßiderrlion. Mr Cummings and Mr. Wardrop opposed the exhibition, staling that they would not be *hle to made much diaplay* , A number of other gentlemen favored the exhibition and agreed to do what they could I consideration of this matter was nostDoned until next meeting. P The Socioly then adjmrned >o meet Wednesday morning, March -Oth. An lm-oBTANT Dicision.—ln the Court . , voftiordftTi before Judges of ComiuvQ 1 in the c*ae of Mollnn ftH » u VUO Ch«l« Slipper and David Graham vs. Samuel The I eat The plaintifls own lots in the borough of Maneuver, valuable mainly tor the sand which they yield. The borough has heretofore MercUed the right of selling or granting par- , ties the privilege of hauling sand from the 1 i. this borough, and under this sane t r he defendant removed and sold large lion me UO j „ r avol from the street tho'plaintiffs'’ lots abut. An action o r.respass was thee brought ‘gains (^ et P „r alley are enliUed to the soil to the nJht of way, and such other acts upon it as are necessary to keep it in re; ®aSnol 1 pOBC9 ° fl ’ lh U e stone gr vel or .and? or other excavate the stone gr u( making material therein, for I ono else “To do and tbe\wner of such lot can sus- EsrSSp him, hot ma king excavations, and taking ihwefromior for disposing thereof to others. TIUM FRiciUTKNKD -On Tuesday evening 6 the night and on ?iow\t 6 vy a B«t f m“nf bnt MrT'w.' could’" distinguish his features. W. P. MARSHALL. „ t n idw kh 1 S*vks.— The safes man- r B Y B Jt5 t S Burke & Barnes, Third ufacturod > r( . pulHllon (l)r B u r e« ; r r .tv U Another evid'-nco of this will be found uritj- * ntftim-d iii Choir advertisement m u.. letter coata nod u Cho. „„„ of !h«e«r» -- lb. me». of sav.ngmuch val lh hip nrf nortv The linn art) manufacturing sat, o P f all T „. K .„ s lollowing additional contri — — J 81 a,a Mayor’s offlco yesterda> . BSS «£•£ iSX£££S*z: 4T 00 A remittance of *661.80 w ini'll. wiih • a - i2S 6 jLUij te *2"» remain m haml. which ‘iffl S ?«»«««"'■ “ “““ ume - Taroknv of Clothing.—Mayor Drum, La.rckm» u . -j elr | named Jon. corkoF Ohio streets »£‘“ r ® De ’ doea no tdeny taking Thrkk voung lftda were before Mayor Drum, young, they were released on promising mend their ways. BLKCTioS.-The stockholders of the Pitts burgh Coal Uon. Thomas Lockhart, Secre “VAndrew McMasteo Wdnetdddlef A. «)• Woolslayer, J ohn Scott. u „ i —On Thursday afternoon of last Bad Fall. O’Neil, residing in " eek - a eounty, while Mt. Pleasant, We*tm her father’s tannery, playing in the loft f after Bli ding down caught bold ft twonly {eBt , break part of the way, fell a , - ot her Bevere ing her collar bone and receiving injuries. a a market wftcou w*a broken Runaway, —A market T*S irat aD d Grant to pieces at the corner colliding with streets, yesterday morning, y 6 d a .coal team, the horse having When Wg ran away. The contents of the wago I scattered about the Btreeta liberally. r ,r»!"c £‘.»rx’“- ft .."ia mV moved their busmea Fron t street- IXe^eTrder. and s'.eam heating, , 1 The (i rm tended lo by competent brar , ch „f have recently . t in devol , business, determined to do aQj rnufactuHng oil pa«P» S£&ktt%?£3 Mb James F, MußDOCii—Thismnstfinish surest Evelvne In the great flay ot M n( \ \ _ must'till the house. who wisn > - this great Comedian must go f'',m as h.s gagement closes on Saturday night. P7.SSSYLVA.VIA IUH.BOAD h.-BCTION - The annual election for D.roctor= of ho K. n sylvania Uailroad was held on Monday office of tbn Company, and re»u.t.d election of the old Hoard of Directors, 7.. Messrs J. Elgar Thomson, But cher, William B Thompson, Jos.iah »*. . »im Pittsburgh, W. li. Smith, Pittsburgh Military.— Prom the returns of the elec- AllLllAtl . ; jufO ot Ma'jor°C. Dement!., of Birmingham, Larimer end S. W. Means. Westmister College.—Tho students at sar?#* sr-ssntf s CoUege buildings are replaced by new ones. Charge of' Pause Pretences.-Alderman Donaldson ha. held to bail a man p drew Graham ~n a (barge of selling to AUwam MePaddcn a horse which he rrpwwrtrf as good and lerviccafclc. but wh-c.i provi worthless. Cotton —'The "Commercial" '* ° l n be . rwai [. to this city from Memphis, with MG bales of to mis tuy , r „ Kconom y brought cotton on board. 1M “ , .. M) up HBU bales, and the W. i- Maclay bales. Wife Beater-Alderman Julies yester , held to bail John Knowland, of the Ninth Ward charged by his wife with striking her a violent blow in the face and otherwise abusing her. . , r Pardoned.—One of tho last official acts of President Buchanan was to sign the of Washington Cline, sent to the Penitentiary from Whaling, two years ago, for passing counterfeit coin. There are now about, ono hundred and sixTy prisoners in the county jail,three-fourths of whom are conßnod for drunkenness, va grancy and disorderly conduct. Convicted -Bernard McNamoe, tried for aZ sdfWi at Norristown, Pa , ti tS of murder ft. the second degree. . Steubenville Postmabter. —' The RaP ub ’ 1 leansSteubenville, at an election held on Saturdav, designated Goo B. Fdson as thei choice for Postmastor. Dr. Stsbbiss & Muvsom, J i “ tisU '^ avo formed a partnership an oT Penn’a. Salt Manufact’g. Co. PITTSBURGH, PA. *n?;: s,irss c ivrxc lh TL o ßfcCoVd",con.Brva^«, n ßay^hat wUILt C t'wiSflSS? unyielding resistance by lh The£lutt h ; secession, says that no action of our convention can now maintain peace, border State ought to go out within the next , lW C P amhes h ?r U om Staunton, Va„ say that the inaugural is received with umver al faction, and resistance to ooercion la the leeling of all parties. Fort Kbauksy, Mr. oh G proas passed inis morning, with San * ran ' ciaoo dates to the l«th February. There ia a moderate business doing by J bars thia far, this week. The market is per haps less active than last week, and prices are generally without change. * During the past , week, Fort FoinV at. the entrance of San Francisco trns occupied for the first time by V mted States U The Supremo Court, in the case of Fremont vs Floreri, has decided that the holder of L. 8 patented lands, under the Mexican grant, possesses all the precious metals containedin lh0 From d all points of the State favorable ac counts are revived of the planting operations S“s season, the breadth of land sown in wheal hfunir much greater than last year. . The Legislature has done nothing impo which has in both bouß Qf DenTe r, and fusion movement is increaBe to the lu hta friends expect , apparently sion Democratic s nQ elecl t on pan about an even nomina t ing a take place th Douclas candidate, and an Brockinridge Do gl U ca n there op P° s n “ r that one coalition party will have a is danger ui a nd the other a major- that no joint conven ll°Tbe Pony & Express dates received from the Atiantio Slates, via Fort Kearney, are to the oih of February, with gloomy news on the U A.n olMsm of the people in San Francisco, will ioin in a Union celebration on the 22d, and business will be generally suspended. Milwaukee, Wis., March 6 —A. flfo at RarliD 'Wis , this morning, destroyed toe K* RrU end and the dotting s2o,ooo—lnsured for §12,000. - > , - ■ *, -j-. - - ■. - . ' , )• . •> • + t* * • ‘ ‘ •' ’ ! ;«■!«*( 1 oii-*.»" w -»* 4 '' ,> ’" :miipirt«teg|| es cautioning them to bo on powder plots at the which searches were police at the. building to ordered such, examination, that danger from 1 combustibles,. The Senate to-dav. unr the appointment oi Pred* Assistant Secretary of Si The President also no Jndd to beMinister at Bi The report that ex-Se be appointed to .the vans' Court is generally belie' The nomination w?smadi All doubt as to Sir., the Secretaryship of the according to a statement one ot bis iriends to-day The Vermont, delegatli Gen. Scott, Messrs. Sewi Gen. Scott 'made theul.ai thanked Vermont for hei 1862 The California r respects to Mr. Jiinco.ln. Atchison, March 6. Committees and others ii baring about 250, and r< was held here last night, tions were adopted expTt fldence in Gen. Pomerty bars of the general comr the system of distribi supplies for the relief' oi tent from Le&ven*!Ort&V#ugr CW£, - | aider it may have a tendency to eto^ plies which are yet bo urgently needed. *aa M closed with the following: - ' * ■ - Resolved, That it is the sense of toto mitlee that instead oLthe gross being attributed to Hyatt and -£ss misrepresentionß are greatly authors of the recent despatches -Woa - _ V- Leavenworth. j . - Forty tons were shipped, op Wyandotte and Topeka at both places foil supplies *wilt, and thirty tons more were lent -■ J to day to the same points. TheesUbjiinmenta - of these depots will 6a <» 65*~ settlers in southern and wosterh J -J| of Mr. Anthony, of Bhode Island, of the Tariff bill ware ordered for the use of the Senate. < Mr, Wilson, of Mass., moved that thp , Senate adjourn it be till Monday. „ ,/- Mr. Hunter, of Va., ho P cd « 1 carried, as he and others were milffoua to t home, and if possibly intended 3 f said be made the ’J soliciialion of several Senator*.- “*• % idea when the Senate would be aWelO get J> through with Us busfness. i ' _r,r.t,U. * Mr. Dixon, of Bhode Island,- - ft solution that the usual nnmhM/jf tfiSj?™** de s£ that it was a peace rather than* Without disposing of the quMtibn, toA. - 3 Senate went into executive session ana In *, j ~|g short time adjourned till to-morrowr-^ y ■' - Independence, March ft.— l ig mail, with dates to the 18lh, arrived today on. | time. ■ ' i Col. Hall, and Mr. Stewart. contr&ptaw on , , . the rhute, came in with it \M ness in New Mexico as i;J| say that hereafter the regular. ,V,l mail will be made, as no danger front., too dians is now apprehended. They weather in Santo Fe, and more; snow foiian there this win tor, than W.aa-evey-anowsff:* rffa before. Large numbers of Indiwa t#ere ae& - : ;|§ !at Fort W ise, but they were friendly,,.:-; -■ -17 Bichmohd, March 6.-The Cohvintibn da* | bated the resolutions of instruction oAtodand •. relations offered yestorday, andiadjouMpLon . I motion of Mr. Carlisle, who received. Several serHaotto«#»to? I » ■ * cession and ccerdon.iwe^ofwagafß^*^ The Special Committee ported an opinion that there ; ha>d-beenll® ' ,1 movement of armed nien by toe SjßdwalGdJ* /j. . ernment indicaUng'a or ,j,- coercion. _ ».,- n,su*m ■ .-i|» Laxcastsr, March 6.-BiP*wiaen^^ I -!i . anan arrival here this evening . TiWt-W? large miluarv display and he | Reeled by the' Mayo*. Mr J a fooling response in which Ml .4 political asperities had been ;.i| would now retire a friend to the 4 widow and the orphan. e r^M strong expression of U nion 1 j Detroit, March G.-At . £ ceipt of the Inaugural, yesterday. _H tupA took ft recess to horn it rosd, ..ftofl opO ~ jf hundred guns wore Bred 'in honor of tlie'senti* monte enunciated. Njsw OBLKAHB i: Marcb 6j— - ' I fled the Becosaion, ;<>rdinancd.. It is reported ,|| that Houston reaigqi.' '' r ‘. ° V '”'J : i WEEKLY REVIEW. ’ M Carefully Revised and Corrected 6y our Commercial Jleporter, _ :, : , n .. i . ‘ -f..— • v^c PirrsßoaQ3» Mjjrch..6tti>yttW«. Thera i. little change inbufness since our list, Mies being email as yaL MSnyCf themerchahtssM M Set replenishing their stocks, |Wch will oniy,b» |j moderate this spring. ‘ M Wehsvenowafine stage of water, there lanlstt TiT«-. business doing, large boots having *| Bat litUeooalwUl be run this rise. -i Prices require but little o'teration from 1 sat week, V» , figores for leodingartioles being without ohtagn. • The money marfcetoonUnueo.ea.re?, and still falling. The weekly bank statements bUo***W ; . ,Ji increase In the discount line, tmastagOTcfcetoifSW* latton. The summiagup ia against the bank*. ’ The following comparative pi -Jr from the offiolal autemenfof the <»nditltminf tt | City hanks for the: week and forthoseof the week % Assrrs. . , te«103»;a» y»«»,TSO 08 ,-X IxiOMand DiMh'ints Hue by other Banks---!-----" .ly , ,i Sg Holes, ic, «f 86Wn»>« 11.028,312 •» -•%! and Treasury BpOCJO ~.~**-*~**'* gQc _ h f~r^ haasomss- ;miOOjOO-\ ? 2**sjßU.*Ol> -« Biiki- •••-• *■ fouowl&peg^ve^';^ g; J Increasem !s^inS^dnemosmr&W^ show « gJE&nd a net increase —aw the difference against l|£. — j j. 4--M i-' i- 1,1 ■ >„v,r> ? ”?:/■' ' i j v ,v '-4®S SiZK* ,„n~ H ’ - r^l .VCS-rV.-yC .vAsrfe^ssiifis ■3^^«S yinM^i rg| PITTSBURGH MARKETS* moitK skw "'mmm —AT— BVBCHFIELD &»€©.%• ~. M OPEN THIS MOBHERGr; • . %€V SOFT FINISH BLEACHED M.JCBLINB, 7»j got up Mpnolj f« “H “ESTLKt, warrwUd' Ften< CiUicoß ? for spreads,' tot-'caMsg»jb < /IS 't dS “ ' “ v ■ •** North East tssSSEZ'-jF^'* JOBS • commission - ioßeßaaa^i»^||;- ■ TOS TH* ■ HO MffTAl. -. . - .' HO. Tt WATER gFBBKT. BKU»W ltts|jpft i mia, .... ~, I#'* CA.BBON OIL.— SS tor. ’ , .'■ - lU'S* te-i J-vtV'.v. /" ” „ - r * ~;-w . .,•*«. . « ** *s» "■* H - - - .#><%s■ ' ':. -.Awfe •.. -t^r/T-vA , , *• •' . • . r f ' * V -' ; “ . / 4 'J «W <■£' ’ft'".,. r-' T [t V - •*AW r r r ' - ••• ... - ■ ,--fcS^SS fj f-.f ' \f-y- . i ' <-'. * “ ' wL 1 : „ •-> V ■- ,-^gg \ :■-'? ' t ■ . ’:- -: j h , * -V " - ...„.* .- i’V ‘ ’ *%*s •» ... -• f lsA : -j 1 ** I.' 1 .' ■ r > - w • *- y •'- *,. :p= ***'■■ V -*• r *& v ' of'- r* ' . 2 : ■^*4s;; I £ . •„ >^-