0 . -C7iir, , , f6llllllll Dinner. 6-Yabe of Preseivea Fiat will be o -411111)nguarnelor the American deteocra- , 4ey as'long as the dinner 'to 'Lord Ashbur ton shall be remembered. The prompt erOphatie..deciaration Of Mi. Fish, as, 3i lett ~' t the labia, Therts are no Americans bete,' 2 itiWaking up -thousends of Arneri " CB* bete, and will wake them up through , . - •out - the :Union. He believed. there were no Ainericatis because of tbeirlomnious al 'lancer-when their" Chidf Magistrate was 4ttriiated, 'and - although he did not mean Owe were - no- Americans.there by biith or republican attatbmetits, yet he did mean that.theY might as well have been Britons AssfiAmencaus to have kept silently seated lie Bach an occasion. He did nut mean •thet they were not as sensitive to appa rent insult asthey should have been. We are pleased to find the following letters in ithit' last niiht's Post. We doubt not that limes Will'follow, and lessen the list of the 'sorry'. Americans, who permitted even Etiglishmercto be More observant of mere ' -etiipette than themselves, to say nothing .6ethe.stntradiction which many gave to lbeitlotitl professions elsewhere of person ' al reipnet for John Tyler. To the , E t ditat 3 of the Evening Post: • GENTLEMEN:- --1 am nut surmised at * tbOndiinant comments of the press on the neglect to pay - honor to the toast of the President, at the recent dinner given to Lord Ashburton. As one of the Committee of Arrange. ments, and also one of the company on that occasion, I feel it to he due to my self to disavow the imputation of having been a willing participant in this slight of the Chief Magistrate. I was both shocked and grieved at the occurrence, and so'expressed myself at the moment. It did not occur tome, however, that I was a fit person to . propose a reme dy. I therefore simply expressed to those near me my deep - mortification at the event. 1 can say, in all fraril(ness, that I should 'bavejoined with pleasure in paying due "honor to the. toast of the President, as a public functionary, and also fr.nn the res pect I bear to the incumbent of the Presi dential chair. .Respectfully, Yout's, -PROSPER M. WETMORE. To" the Bditors of the Evening Post: NEW Yortri, Sept. 5, 1842. Brat—l perceive thaLthe Tribune men tions my name as one of those who are veriporrale for the °mil - Sir - n - 1 of the usual 4emortstrarions of respect to the toast of the - President, at the recent Ashburton Dinner. was not present at that dinner, having been obliged to leave the city the day pre- VIQUS, on account of illness in my family. I acceded to the wish of one or two friends, who desired me to serve on the Committee of Arrangements. because 1 'thought peace between England and this country desirable for the progress of the •world, and that Lord Asburton had mani 'fasted a conciliatory disposition; but I can nernow regret that 1 was absent from a festival at which so gross an indignity was - offered, not, merely to the person who fills .tbe Presidential chair, but to that great antisfree people of which he is representa tive. am, sir, - your ob't ser'vt. THEODORE SEDGWICK. THE LEGISLATURE of N. York, as wi be seen by our report, closed its Ilabors -end adjoin ned yesterday noon. No busi , - nese of public interest has been transacted -beyond the Apportionment of the Con gressional districts; which has been effected ktd a bill which appears to give much more ganeril-satisfaction than we, had expected s any bill That could pass would receive.— Tile fact speaks well for our State Legis lature,and offers to the Legislators of otlar states— Ohio included—an example to which we piont'with great pleasure. According to the Vote given for Van Buren and Harrison, at the last Presiden tial election, twenty of the districts under the new apportionment have whig majori ties. The majority in the Legislature, 'however, doubtless regarded that vote as a every indifferent criterion by which to jadge of future results.—N. Y. Sun. I +3: iy i ,Il 1/11._ A Quiet Woman.—A criiet woman is like a still wind, which neither chills the body +willows dust in the face; her pa.- dente is a virtue that wins the heart. of Jove and her wisdom makes her wit well worthy of regard; she fears God, and flieth sin; sheweth kindness; and loveth - peace, her tongue is tist.d to discretion, and her heart is the harborer of goodness; she is a comfort in calamity, and in prosperity a companion; a physician in sickness, and a musician in health; her ways are the walks towards Heaven, and her guide is ,` the ; grace of:the almighty; she is her has baaars down bed, where his heart lies at refit; and her children's glass in the notes •Ofher grace, her servant's honor in the keeping of her house, and her neighbor's Aqtatuples in• the notes of a good nature; -etre acernes fortune, and loves virtue, and out-of-thrift gathereth charity; she is a tur tle in bet love. a lamb in her meekness, a eel) at in her heart, and an angel in her la BUM, she is a jewel unprizeable, and a joy unspeakable; a comfort in nature intomparable, and a wife in the world un— oiathable. I rt ture, says the r s e poiehr a . -1 xi , fh e way -of ...„inber noth ing , ''''"' . ker we `r''''''" old Seollloll tom b Ite;eherhi)c- 4 copied from an . wing, .-- , '',,• the 1811° , . „ • ~ pet on: 11,!e: lief the body o f ALErannz i a. , Mscenzason. 1 nelv ”-- a very extraord.ini,- stocking feet, neat: awael 4l ' 7 tromente very ke p t his awn° lir.th pay o arde high In \ iie aid • ,••' vias sleet' r wAterlncn Iris , clean and '''' , ci`• '' - high/ 4' - bullet -, - - h o t by a . . . - - - ***.ihrnas itti theta/let' ..,r-,--•,--',_„ hi. throats ' L e c . ' 0 : WI. '''. "V., 8 ba C k of his Ann e death infi''';!'‘'l"-^ this __,,- avll3:_,,i-414,,h,o vrg enuia to. •, ~ --r i . ingimpilt --= ''. -, 4. 9 ` being ' ''' aP","" 4010 4 0 441 ' ; 7 k4: ii ile a t°lo° ,n.. -tgit.,..l DAILY rtf9RNlsol ; 144. I' rt. Hi PII'' ; FSBURG, II , CET As the Gdzettee makes a parade of Mr.- Craig's doings for the Cross-ent Canal,wo tniy . as well mention, 14 the way, that ctir ctindidaite Alex.Brackenridge has frequently been conspictfoirs in similar services , He has been a member' 'pf null - lemur public cohventions, without any selfish interest, or remuneration: In 1825 he attendeo the great Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Convention which met in the Hall of Rept esentatives at Wash-, ington City, and although then comparatively but a young man, he distinguished himself, in the prt sence of Henry Clay, Charles F. Mercer, and of • er talented men of that b3dy. Subsequently, lie represented this County with Wm. 'Wilkins, Thos Bakewell and others, for colleagues, in the great Tariff Convention of delegates from the Wcste.6 States, which assembled in New York in October 1831, and took an active business part in their proceedings, t The , proceedings of this convention also testify4o Alex. Brackenridge's principles aFtd practice as a sound tariff man, and devoted to the interests of his native State. We do not'see that Mr. Craig was there. Again, Alex. Brackenridge within a few years past was owl of the Vice Presidents of an imper tent convention from parts of Pennsylvania, Ma ryland, Ohio &Virginia, which met to promote the Chesapeake and Ohio Rail road to PittsborghH He was also a member of a convention which met at Pittsburgh in January 1838, to promote an ear ly co mpletion of a continumis line of Rail read from Pittsburgh to Cleveland. In these, and Ma ny ocher bodies of a like description, at various periods, Alex. Brackenridge has participated at cart ,U 3 periods, without any other motive, as, far as we can perceive, than the public good. But we believe these are too well known to the people of Allegheny County to require a minute enumer atior; neither should we have taken the trouhlh to recall the foregoing circumstances, had we not perceived in the Gazette's late flings at Mr. Brick• earidge, an attempt to raise Mr Craig's reputation, not upon its own merits, merely, but by depreci ating that of his competitors. A London paper advertises fur sale the skeleton of Jonathan Wild, price £63. Wild Is one of the leading characters in the novel of Jack Sheppard, and according to the authentic history of the times in which he I,ved,the infamous light in Which he is represented by the novelist, does no injus tice to his true character. . . V. at strikes us as singular in this advertisement 's the evi fence it gives of the disgusting tastes of the people who so fr quently sneer at the "uncul tivated manners" and "savage" propensities of the Americans. It will also awaken the reflec tion that while £6O are given for the dry!bons of one of the vilest wretches that ever adorned a gibbet, there are hundreds of the honest poor dying daily for want of the necessaries of life, and their heart rending sufferings regarded with indif ference by the pauper lordlings who consider their money well spent when they give 60 pounds for the skeleton ofa thief whose crimes fill one of the blackest pages of the Newgate cal •near. Such is the refinement of England! The. constituents of this fomenter of nAschief , have made arrangements to give him public dinner at Weym iuth on Saturday, the 1911 inst. Although Adams aid all he could to defeat the Tariff Bill on its final passage, he will, no doubt, be toasted and "talked" as the friend of tile coun try, while President Tyler, whose firmnesis in re sisting the schemes of Adams and his copeagues has given to the country a permaneniuf iff law, unconnected with other matters that irighl endan ger its conti.mance, will be denounced asst traitor to the intereas of the people and an uSurper of powers not given to his station by the Constitu tion. The ways of federalism are indeed curious and inexpliC4ble. Thieving Sena'ore.—lt is sad that the co py of the Tr'eaty which wa■ publish al first in the N. Y. Courier and Enquirer was stolen from the files of the Senate by a member of that hody, and given to Webb for publication. Who i 4 the thief? o r Steam Boat Sunk.—The Quceit of the South on her u7ward trip from New Orleans, was List on the 21 inst. in Cow Island chute, fileen mites below Alorliphi). Her carg ),10d0 bags of cuffee, tog:ther with the boat and hcri appurte nances, except the engine and cabin ifurniture, will b.) a total loss. j Jo Smith has had a "call."—The State Regi.ter of the 26th ult—the semi ofriat organ of the Mormons in Illinois—contains the! following information, as to the- whereabouts of 'Lis Master: --“J.)e Smith the Mormon prophet, has recently received an important revelation, whiCh requires him to be tin England in a short tine. i It is ru mored that be has already departed io4 Washing ton where . he is required to perf,.rm a great acle." Yellv-re Fever in New Orleensi, —The Ad vertiser 'of the Ist inst. says—"lt world seem, is rather on 'the increase than otherwise.; The re. port obtained from the Charity Hospltal, on yes. terday, Will however speak for itself. Admissions from 6 o'clock A. M. ori Sunday, to the above hotir. 75 Of which were yellow fever 30 Death ; t:luring the same period, 13 Of which were yellow fever, Discharged, cured of do. The same paper of the 21 says- r " From the 12th of August to the Ist a the present It - tenth, there were admitted into the 11. S.lllarine tiospi tat 18 cases of this disease, out of which five resift ted fatally. . 1 o'licnefits of our present sysem. of Bank ing.—Tote are at the present tiile in eigh teen sta es of the Union, upwards 0 fL5190,000,000 -oi banking eipital wholly inconvertible into ape. cie; we stagger'under debts to tLe a .. ' . ant of upet,.. 000,00 we hairs sunk by the ; Atki • • system, as cording ; le 91p•tep?rkof the-1: . % . , iheiridine 0 3 SUM of 05,-,464467k„.§5.111114k.0, the bloecinge br the 'hankitig privilegC4l - • . • EffMMI litmus* a.iv rioPanerox3. tDNtSDAY, .SEPT' - see First Pate* Skeletoug. j• Q. Adams. ----- %Jfiretiittlf -S ,-- ---- ,- - --- - We alsereitrie lir, - Itto the Jet of ' , ....1 , that does littaflijuetliii to the :lllblOte cOoptttee, and has isl!dieeet Modeneictb:teit4r, a ArOli: . :e_f incendiarism among the idle and vicious portion of the comminity,thai naiiy place the livisa;i4 [CO' d pert . * of the citizenslarthe greateet,tjevatik,7-!: Speaking `of the ire" lbat occurred last Stinday morning, it says— 1. -:. .i- .- . . i t s "The fire on Market et., is arroti , tet evbiertee of the foresight bf Messrs -Fortune ..W' Cos F; ' the purpose of seving aboutpfifio to tl ' nail;,' u. ry, they reduced the .w'etch, at)d ,-). ,) eth)..,time property has been destroyed by . t :t;.:. u, -!, (re r. $ . l , cendiary, more than double i?')Ft. “1i.),. 1.., nem than all the saving to tht - :,.,, ay 1::;..,.,- char g e.of the watch." . ) • ' Now the fact is, and the eiLtor must 1,4. w it, that all the fires, with one exception, tlizai,hare. taken place since the new arrangement, w4rehe yond the jurisdiction of the watch, and the lateen diaries could not have been detected by the swish, even under the ojd order of things. I - The - reform in the night watch is a good one, and meets the approbation of the public. - Under the present system, there - have been fewer robbe ries committed than before the Change took place, and the peace and order of the city, were never better preserved than under the present arrange. ment. The Watch as now organized is abundant ly able to discharge all the duties expected trom it, and the character of the men employed is a suf ficient guarantee to the public that they will dies charge the trust confided to them faithfully. lithe editor of the San will think of this' mat ter for a moment, we have no dotibt but. ha, 'will perceive hew very injudicious is is for a: tublic j )urnaltst to become the abettor of incen4aries by inducing them to believe that the policep too weak to check their lawless doings. KrILLINOIS WOOL.—Large quantities of wool have been sent to market from Illinois during the past season. An Illinois man says that that state possesses natural advantages for the growth of wool not excelled by any other state in the u nion; her immense prairies are capable of feeding inumcrable flocks Et comparatively no cost. • There is no doubt but the facilities of Illinois for feeding sheep are unsurpassed, but we think her flat marshy lands are unfavorable to the rear . ng of such stock, as it is a faet well known to farmers that sheep always thrive better end yield finer fleeces when pastured on high, dry land. In this thspcct, no state in the union is better adapted for rearing of sheep than Pennsylvania, and we have no doubt bet our farmers will find it, under the new Tariff regulations, to their interest to embark more extensively in the wool business than they have done heretofore. THE ALLEGHENY HINER has su3denly risen very high. It is covered With drift wood, to the extreme delight of a large class of people who, at every freshet, sponge their oven wood from this rivrr. The trade is t tlerab'y brisk, the Kittanning de parted for above yesterday with a good load of freight and passengers. The Ida is in port pre paring to start for Franklin. Several other boats are running in this trade The Troy (sst. Y)irion and Nail - . W9alrar.e: - Et 4 gain in -operatioriAnd the Troy ,WiiiirAltip.444,tat under the new Tariff, the business will soon be in quite a flourishing state. We hope so, and Ural? , the profits may not only afford the proprietors a good recompens", but enable them' to give their work:nen "two dallars a day and roast beef," as w 3.3 promised in 1840. VERY PROBABLE.—The Whig papers say that a meeting of 10,000 whigs was recently held in the Court house at Carthage Ohio. Tnat Car thage Court House must be a good siz,id building to hold 10,000 enthusiastic wings. Pcopte should'nt use Camphine Lamps, or 1 they do they should be more careful with them. We scarcely open a paper without seeing an ac count of some accident occurring from them.— Throw them aside, and try the lard oil, or the pure lard as it is now in successful use in this city. A seizure of 140 volumes of obscene books with prints of similar character was made in Boston on Mondry the sth. The owners were taken into A BIG OX.They have an ox at Syracuse N Y.,raised b y N. P. Rust, which weighs 4100. 0::"2-1.1pwards of 10,000 persons went to.witness the fight between Bell and Sullivan, which lately came off at Brooklyn. Bell was most essentially whipped. (*--MISSISSIPPI —The election for State Au ditor has resulted in the selection of James E. Matthews, the Democratic candidate, by a large majority. (fj—John Smith has said many good, things, ant among the rest, that "a newspaper is lit i e a wife, because every man ought to have Due of; his John made.the above remark after !lading the first number of the Poor; he, as well as a great many other meifibets of the Smith family, intend to buy it regularl,y- KrEDITORIALCH A NG E.—ill r. John Hcas• • tings, of the Jefferson "Backwoodsman" has dis posed of his interest in that paper to Mr. G. F Humes, of Harrikburgh. 07 the New Yorkers just about now are death on oysters. oThe New York Sun gives a cheer ing account of the business prospects of that city during the cominoleason. Hur rah for good times! (?Thos. J. Smith has obtained a ver dict of 52:50 against the publishers of the New York Aurora for libel. At Norwalk, CrAln., there have been six ems of small pox and three deaths, but no recent cases have occurred. . The intelligence from Mexico gives good rea son to believe that Santa Anna is seriously bent on warlike operations upon a comprehensive scale, Elie intentions are involved in mystery; however. Fifty thousand men it is said are already under arms and further augmentations are making in military force. The navy is undergoing a reor , ganization; and is strengthened by : the l sddition of several -ships and steamers. This preparation is ostensibly is -ieconquer Texas would ha 'big* gulp: if the real- object was wsr with the United Statet.—N. O. Ado., - .1" -- NIMIEREM outfits. en of he British : Whig To ASTER#' Ata:Queen4litniiatil at thee . Aeililitiridn dinner, While the 'of thelTeited States.fwas passed round in si— lent contempt. That .paper says:--"To us it appears in an entirely different light. Had the Sovereign of England been a male the toast to him would no more have been cheered than Was that to the President.— The cheering was a compliment to the sex Stile British Sovereign and nothing more.' he N. Y. American, N. Y. Tribune, 'and several other Whig papers echo the same sentiments, and yet some of our Whig friends say that we arc wrong Li making political capital out of it. They must be held responsible, fur the sayings and doings of their leaders. Among the delegates td th,e Democratic State Convention (says the N. Y. Morning Post,) are Major Caleb Hubbard, eighty eight years old, of Sunderland, and John Dickson, Esq. about the same age, of Am herst. They were both in the battle of Bunker Hill, and are now where they ev er mean to be, on the side of the people, and in favor of those principles of political equality, for the defence of which, in their younger days, they pledged their ''lives, their fortnees, and their sacred honor." I:''Two young men of the name of Forrest, brothers, both boatmen, belong ing to St. Louis, a couple of weeks since, bad a fight near Guilford, 11l , in which one was worsted, who, to be avenged, sought a gun to take his brother's life; but, finding none, he returned, seized an Zaxe, and with one savage blow severed his arm from his shoulderl AN EXTENSIVE BUBTLE.—The Roches ter Democrat tells a story of a BUSTLE, which a young lady droppe3 in the. streets of that city a few days since. An old i gen tleman picked - it _up, and to his surprise found it composed of factory cloth meas. uring six yards in length! Nut knowing the name of the fair owner, be sent it to a charitable institution, where it was made up as night dresses for three of the young er children. During a concert at the Odeon, at Boston, the: ladies' dressing room in the second story, was robbed of between twenty and thirty valuable shawls and scarfs. Times in St. Louis.—The Mound City oft ho 22d instant, says:--'We are glad to see an evident improvement in business during the past few days. Our Levee has presented a greater scene of activi— ty than had been the case for some time past. The fall clop is coming forward, and shipments are made as fast as the means and the demands will justify. DIXON has finiihed his extraordinary feat, hay. ing walked seventy-eight hours, with out steep or rest, making three days and three nights. The greatest pedestrian feat on record. He left the platform at one o'clock, amid the enthusiastic ap plause of a large assembly, comprised o! our most respectable and scientifi c Dixon last evening gavo, after resting five hours, a grand musical entertainment, at . the Assembly Room. This entertammt was given at the advice of his physician, in order to show that his health is not in tlke least impaired by the extraordinary eat he has ust performed. FOR THE !dORNING POST. Lice of Henry clay, Published under the superin tendence of Earn Whig Committees of the city of .New York. J. Winchester, 1842. The superintending committees have not seen fir, to favor the people with even air extract from the greatest speech of the "MAN OF THE PEOPLE. " That speech was made in the Senate of the United States in 1811; and occupies no less than five pages in the Life of Henry Clay by George D. Prentice: That speech was an argu ment, replete with keen and powerful log ic, against the bill "renewing the charter of the old bank of the United States; and was principally confined to the subject of its unconstitutionalty. "This vagrzitt power to erect a bank" he says, "is referred, in 1791, to one part of the constitution; in 1811, to another!" and in 1841, the "superintending commit tee" might have added, "this vagrant pow er to erect a bank," after having wandered in vain, for half a century throughout the whole constitution in quest of some con genial spot to fasten upon, has been, final ly, refer red, not to the constitution, not to the of the people, but to the will of Henry Clay and his desperate partizans.. "What is a corporation, such as the bill contemplates' It is a splendid association qf favored indiViduals"—"that is, the cor porators have privileges, which no others possess." "In the exercise of this gigantic pow er, we have seen." said Henry Clay in 1911, "an Eaqt India Company_ erected, which has carrried dismay, desolation and death, throughout one of the largest Lions of the habitable world. A company which is. in itself; a sovereignty—which has subverted empires, and' set up new dy nasties—and has not only made war, but war against its legitimate sovereign! Un der the influence of this power, we have seen arise a South Sea Company and al Mississippi Company, that distracted and convnlSed all Europe, and menaced a to. tal Overthrow of allcreditanfl confidence, and universal bankruptcy." Why is this brilliant speciinen of prate . ry totally an2pressedl-EchoianswerS, why is its oye confidential genii of Gwynne," 'Wright and Spencer, wbe:e is your', occur Otion -Whig oOrriroittOes of New - York have usurped the ,(4,etiaten-, Via - c - e" ciiddi 0i1; aiiriTiaft trCybihrthe g7'We nonce with pleasure, the i t *. -, _ Scott, fide ctlitiady of Ninth Betulf , 41i:tuition diaitasadathi(vgreaest nPneekd Henry ClaYi'wan not s weat i li a a ' derman Watson, to Pittsburgh, r o ; 1 of expediency, but of ponstitutionality. °II ient;ririAlthileadftfoerre sojourn al S o p f r a in h gs w . du:4 his opposition to re-chartering the ---- Bank had been based upon the expediency i The skill of Pittetburgh Mechaeiet....Nl of re-establishing such an institution, then i h e might, still have,had 'some claims to con- told that of a large number of c: hundred) recently east in this city, e ,,„ 7 2 (114 sistency; for expediency is dependent on the trial test. This fact is certainly t i r i Z circurnWaces, and what was inexpedient itabla to our mechanics, Who have I I- 4 in iron manufactures. The General :, ti in 1811, might by a change of circuostau. ces, have become expedient ill 1841. But . The we hope, will not overlook this Henry Clay has no such apology. constitution is not governed by circuit- scninl:lB, all their future contracts for ar ras reum-sti stances; and its provisions have not been _ _ _ _ changed since 1811. But Henry Clay has changed his principles and his policy on more than one memorable occasion, and left it to time and the sagacity of his fellow citizens to develope his motives. Wheth er his motives were pure or mercenary whether patriotism or bank favors effected the change, it is certain that the once dem ocratic Henry Clay has become identified in interest and sympathy with the pros trate but powerful oligarchy of wealth. But why has Henry Clay's greatest speech been suppressed by his svperinten , dents.? Was it not to conceal, as far as possible, from the people, the evidence of his change from the Democracy to the Ar istocracy' Was it not to conceal, as far as possible, the turpitude of one of his moral summer - sets. Vermont Election. We received last night slips from the Spirit of the Age, Windham County Democrat, and Ver mont Gazette, giving returns of the vote for Go• vornor from 28 towns, which will be found below. The democratic vote is larger" than it was last year; the whig,rvote also exhibits an iacreae; and the abolition vote has fallen off. This decrease in the abolitioi vote has evidently added strength to the whigs. Paine is probebtv elected by a small majority. Fifty-nine towns have elected 18 democratic and 40 whig representatives, and in one town there is no choice. The democrats have gained a representative in each of the following town•:— Westminster, Newfane Braintree, Stockbridge, Pownal, and Woolford; the whigs have gain. d one inNernon. There is, therefore, in the towns heard from, a net democratic gain - of five repre.. sentatives 1.842. 1341. ~..----, ,---0.-.—____,, m ,-* -.1 7": ca . ..z = !..' ' 1 2 g. = 7 , C F = (° et . :' °" ti _ Baltimore 26 20 1 Barnard 202 185 4 194 169 4' Beth(' 127 158 23 117 125 27 Bridgewater 136 182 132 160 4 Cavendialt 24 227 11 25 4 9 136 Hartford 142 251 1 98 208 15 Hartland 171 263 154 212 47) Norwich 189 149 45 191 136 27 Plymouth ,81 168 11 68 82 15 Pomfret 123 214 1 136 137 19 Reading 109 167 2 77 122 17 Sharon ' 131 114 14 138 82 35 Windsor 146 323 7 128 287 12 Woodstock 155 515 34 117 430 24 Bennington 357 387 22 336 368 21 Shaftsbury 224 119 39 185 87 28 Readsboro' 121 18 1 98 46 Brattleboroughl3B 311 46 91 265 23 Guilford 91 127 6 60 3 119 14 Athens 54 32 13 57 30 Vernon 65 60 2 54 56 RoAingham 2t2 248 31 193 254 6 2989 4444 313 2639 3454 440 Dover 94 38 Galion 88 104 25 Jamaica 123 122 16 War dsboro' 105 113 2 Marlborough 77 100 Putney , 82 159 1 3558 4880 357 eontintrtial "Ntim From the Baltimore Sun Review of the Baltimore Market, for the week ending Friday, September 9. 1 , Beef Cattle—The offerings this week by the drovers, amounted to f 80; of these about 430 were taken by the city butchers at prices varying from 3 25 to $1 25 per hundred pounds.; 130 were taken to another market, and twenty' re mained unsold. Hogs are in less request, and may be quoted about $5. Coffee—Moderate sales of Rio at si to 91 cents, and Laguayra at 9. On Wednesday 340 bags Rio, partially damaged, sold at auction and fetch ed 6# 81-8 cents per pound. Fleur—The course of.this article has been downward for some weeks, and siace our last re port, which then quoted Howard street $4 62i, it has further gradually declined, sales having been made yesterday at $4 37i, and it is not improb-. able there may have been transactions at s Jere thing less. The last receipt price was $4 25 We have heard of no transictious in city mills, at-less than 54 15, at which it was..offvred at the close of last week; and which has been the offal... inz price during the pregei.t. Susquehanna is unsettled in price. Grain—Wheat has . come for ward more free ly, but the quality does not improve, and prices remain unchanged. So ne good Pennsylvania reds have sold at 91 to 92 cents..-but Maryland will not command over 85 to 90 for: the test that is offering; and inferior 45 to 50. Rye may be quoted at 45 to 50, with light receipts. Oats in limited demand at 21 to 22. Corn is steady at 50 cents for wh'te or yellow. Molasses.—Sales or New Orleans in small lots at 24 cents. Provistona.-Thc transactions in barrelling meats are confined altogether to the retail trade, for city use and ships' stores. Western Bacon ranges much as last week, both in demand and m ices: 5 to 5i cents per lb. for hog round; 6 to 8 for ham; 4i to 5 for shoulders;and 4i to 5 for middlings. No transactions in Lard _or Butter. Spirits—There is little or no N. E. Rum in Market. Whiskey is rather inactive; birds, are held at 20, and bbla. at 21i to 22 cents. - Sugars—Private transactions have been limit. ed, but they. as weir as public, show en advance of 4to a cent per Re At auction, 354 hhds• Por to Rico sold on Wednesday at 540 to $7 20 per 100 pounds. Tobacco—There bas been a fair business done in the better qualities of Maryland, at about pre. sinus rates, probably rather improved, ranging from '5 50 to $3 per 100 pounds; but the ordinary or common qualities remain neglected. N. Y. MARICETS--Sept. 9. Flout—is down again; sales of Genoessee to day at $4 a Troy and other descriptions in pro portion. Grain-4. sale 'of York River Wheat. about 1500 busheti was made to day at about 80 eta; Aihea are down sales of Pots at 5 37 a n d Pearls 5 75.' CMS2-1U market is quite-Moderate; sales with no alteration in prioe.---14. Express. Allegheny City. The "Uncle Sam." We have found bout this arrangement. It appears mat old 'residenter, '. but owing to decimate,. has, in her time, adopted several aii a4 , * maiden name was "lope," and a hopef t d • was; next Columbus No. 2 —next up a ger, , now "Uncle Sam .' She keeps good c o thoriglm•the Captain is a clever felkw. The feuds existing between the /f orm I Plebeians have ceased—a general Aimee, been declared. Business is beginning to since that momentous event. 7h, cotton Factories will cot be si o p pf winter as was apprehended. • I—The way to tome 11,rate — Breathe in no slrils. "QTwo great agents had Couplet& to throw the Drama, viz—Religion end the P. but the Drama has signally triumphed m et It is said that Connor, the Tragedian, above assertion in a recent Temperance in Philadelphia. We don't believe it. 0. H. B. T Whigs of Massachusetts dont what to do with Caleb Cushing, fellows., Vort of Vittoburgli, ARRIVED. Cleveland, Hemphill, Beaver, Michigan, Boles, do., Adelaide, Bovglien, Wheeling. Herschel!, Cl.irk, Cincinnati. . Muskingum Val!y, Boyd. Matietr. Della, Allen, Brownsville, DEPARTED. Michigan, Boles, B.•aver, Cleveland, Hemphill, Be...ver. Minstrel, Suydan, Louisville, Little Mail, Gaskill, Brownsville. Alpine, Cockburn, do. Mayflower -- St. Louis. In pont preparing tojdepart.—M asking ly, , Eveline, Herschel, Adelaide, Orphein Montezuma, Maine, Emma. RATES OF STEtAIBOAT FREIGHT AT PM For Ciucirrnati— 15 cents per 100 Louisville 20 " Si Louis 37} se AcaAville 57 /I'loB ACC° AT AUCTION.—W II be salt man's Commercial Auction Ronnie, 'HO - on Thursday, Sept. 15th, at 2, o'clock.P fd, u serve, 25 boxes of tobaico,comr.istinglif 2 Boxes Watkins 12.9 5 do Bea3ley 16s 4 do Enders 5s 4} do Sibby's, pounds St do Walter Scott do 2 do Bolden do I do Henry do 2 do Hancock 32e The attention of dealers in the article Is rs sep 14-21 TL A /MUSS! Ati, Aa. BLA NKETS.--1 tist received and for Fate ir Wood SI reel, 300 pairs of Blankets; con. , 16.4 Superfine Merino Wool, a splendid ar ::',... 124,11-4, 10 4, er 9-4, Duffield- 124.104.94, 4 - 8 4, Whiting- 12-4, 10.4, 0 4 8r 8-4 Mackinaw. ~ alt of which w ill be sold at I he very lowed CaBn, sep 13-3 t R. A. BAUSM AN, Aut*--,-: . , Boston Post CARPETS FOR S A LE.—Just received fro Manufartnres, and to he sold at prtvitea er than latent , ' other place West of the litounar 30 piecete-11 Fine Ingrain Carpets, 15 Superfine.. 10 Venß * s ian Stair 100 SplendidAillitton Rugs. 50 Door Mats. sep 13--3 t IL A. BAUSAI AN. Ai LOCKS.—Joist rkeived. and for Fair, 50 Superior Brags Clocks, Warranted 50 Wood sap 13-3 t SSIGN EES' S ALE OF REAL. ESTATE. ATION.—On Saturday,l,7llr.instant, at 3a't M. I will sell, by order of the Assignee, un tht the following described property. viz: A lot 32 feet front by about 100 feet deep, with a frame building on it, u=ed now as a 'machine' taining a good,igtem Engine and Gearings, Tao Saws and. Drams, situate in Allegheny City. Canal and the Commons. and adjoining\the Church—formerly (warded as a looking ' by T. A. Hillier 4- Co. Terms at sale. sen 11-71 J. 13. GUTHRIE , All' TRAY COW.—Came to the premises o L her. living in Ohio Township, near the the Ist of June. a small red cow. with two he'. r Ight ear, which seem to have been made with She is hipped on the right side, and was lames up. The owner ks desired to come forward property. W3l. II:Igl' IleP :14— at TAKE notice that I have applied to the C loon Pleas for the benefit of the I nsoire this Commonwealth, and that said Court hare Monday, the 24llfday of Octobe next at theC in the city of Pittsburgh, for the hearinz of Cif cr• (Mors, to show cause, if any they have, sikl i i not he discharged sept 13-3 t 175 138 -----T-r°f LS. WHITE LIME, a "P e 3 0 0 ° sale by J . G. A. GAS - No.ll On 100 KY . LEAF TOBACCIO ° for tale by 3. G. 4. A GOB I No 12,Walcl S . lIGAD, AND MOLASSES.-60 hilds• S ' n. 25 bbls. d0.d0., 100 do. Plantation !kr sale by A, . G. k A-G °llL sep 13 ' No, 12 Wstell„. ------:-. 1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS.—Take Neti have applied to the Judges of the Coes! mon Pleas of Venango county, for the benefit of: made for the relief of Insolvent Debtors; 04 I have appointed the fourth Monday of licoretall ef . ' hearing of me and my creditors, at the Court 7 , the &trough of Franklin—when and where fl; tend, if you think proper, end show cause. have, why I should not be diSCha Med. M sep,.l 3 —St WILLIA HD. SELLERS, M. D, o ffi ce and RI q near Ferry street. . . , 6.ITOLEN, from the shop of the sutscribet.. 17 street...some time isetweek , e n d lr ° , 1 .,... ' hair cutting. They are aearly. et q a 1 0 " very slim. it is imppoecii the thief gold tat. in-the city! i will. Ow purchaser any tee s° If . ni: will bring them to me. S. iep 13-3'. emu Ntituf. I=l :union Salts. RI A. B A USSI A N. Aar JonN m..ssoviv' r e SG -I;Went rOR it , ACI 17. L a. G. E. WAlit 4 TTO F AtTOAY the upper bridge. e manufacture at— e. Twine, Candlewick , repaired IC All orders tel the lal sod red the trieeager r the last Avis/ • ails• made to order, it the Pittsburgh Painter 4' CO. , L o o d street; will Address—S. • RIOT AND SHE L AND nYDROORAII,III - will he reeetv • 15th Otto' • , to the proportton. • , the following nui • t and Shelis,for the viz: Thirty-eight t. each. Seventy tit upwards, the precise veneer. Five !hum • reti. eight inch solid gonndcr snot. Deli , - n: Falzhan gnus in, shells Itivorcktidunsdheort gttn.„ irtwtwo pounder shot In. Palzhan :tins t in. shells In, solid shot , two pounder tune Irty two pounder shot 411.Ixtran guns t in. shells In. solid shot o pounder guns two pounder shot mast state Malin dred and forty po nd for the shot . subject to, and an. Bureau may dee be paid for that y be entirely sails two approveJ cur !tainted amount o the =mot of all ri'y for the faith only on the s; ' ninety per rent in properly authent the contract, withi o the Navy Agent. must stole at fluent to be made. he guns will Ite most be cast pact. instal is to be tlf mast received nee A fins nacs fo American Tempe Avocate for Septe , and a good assort limb, and the Fra es for 10430 1 Y it Grunt's New Pittal and Strangers G • ily. School and Psalms; Metbodi • uties °MHarnton • Harp with roun .st all kinds ors ;Day nooks an • log Paper; bine b bot'le; steel pen Ain of History, ty of Rooks and terms for resit nr RfttS, Agent and .—Prlnterts and .t the iqi'vetilser, meal, between ) and they will Ite lie mult.pileity of r required in rep , I, (relative to t h me to have a ngth a lillte,ar stematia order. STOCKTO anufaciurem N ERSON, Small onongatwla 110. B. JOHN, Alt r frorri I.rl,erty. OM& Elt, 011Vf , e •ny Co's Ght FINDLAY. Alt he Mayor's Office, AMILTON, Altor and Smithfield at • NER, Attof nay thfield and Four Ir TURNBULL' ood st., where t rappleg. prlntin - OWNSEND 4- ;as/eters, No. 23 E HOTEL, CO by ERSON, I r., Sir nfaeturer of La ill and Timber $ •''ili!li r 4• co Nerchan field Ms, Pit ORDON. Co ,Water st.. asks ha ms, a , and for sale °LASSER. to New Odes bads prime N. , and for sale b ASKS.tit or it.c MOLASSES N. O. Mot . r - sate br RD OIL, for B. A PERB German B. A. Prepared Cbal B. A. A well finish. . 1 0tetber With pomades gir Issitaatertbe Mr. lArwr, B a -terms inquire. a. Ws B '.K:`•:. "`1'"'"4!~