111/011/I~INNINNINN''' Boon the bent f was universal that the day of judgement was at haul About fterrhis time of the day, 123 clergymen were 'it ed over to Lambeth, it was said, to petition that a short `raver might be penned and ordered—there being 'note in the church service on that ocasion. Three maids of honor burned their collection of novels and plays, and sent to a bookseller to buy each of them a bibles and Taylor's Holy Living and Hying. The run upon the Bank was so prodigious that all hands were employefd from morning ti 1 nigl.t in discounting notes and handing out specie. On Thursday, -considerable more than 7000 kept mistres ses were legally married, in the face of several congregations. And, to crown the whole, Sir Gilbert Eleatlicot, at that time head direntor of the Bank ,issued orderato all the lire officers in London, requiring them to keep a good lookout, and to have a par ticular eye upon the Bank of England. ':Tames Stuart, a relative of the Preten der.—We regret to learn that this extra. , ordinary old man, so well known as an itinirant fiddler, in Berwick and the neigh• bnrhood, is now so reduced by age and its - infirmities as to be almost unable to contin ue his perambulations any longer. He has become totally blind, and was lately driven down by coming in contact with a cart passing along Berwicbridges and received some iniury. year completes the 114th year of hiz, age.— He is the son of Gen. John Stuart, and • grandson of the Lady of Airlie, famed in in Scottish song, who was pulled ant of egOwn house in Airlie by a party of the Clan Campbell and killed. Ho was a wit ness of the battle of Culloden, and indeed c laims kin3red with the Pretender himself, whose name he bears. lie was at' the battle of Bunker Hill, and held an ensign* cy in Gen. Wolfe's army. and was present at Quebeb when that distinguished officer was killed. He has been five times mar ried, and is the fatbar of no less than tw n ,,ty seven children, ten of whom love been killed fighting the battles of the country in different parts of the world All this and touch more equally wonderful appears, from all the testimony that ran be pro cured, to be literally ti ue.—BPfore decli ning age overtook him, he was a phenorn enon of personal strength. Kis present indigence seems to be chit fly the r,'sult of his having outlived nearly all the common ties of blood. He Was patronised by George IV. and won% have been intro , . duced to Sir Walter Stott, at the desire of that distinguished man himself, b•it for death intervening.---Bertvick Warder. his Business 01 eine'. The Cincinnati Enquirer is in ecetsey at the i mprovement in business within a few weeks in that city. Steamers are c onetanily a rriving and departing, and, says that pap". the q iiaiitities of freight which they bring in and c• nvey tot ahe re a=tonishing to those who do not reflect up t immense resources of the n WO ) , W. FA, and also upon the u ndeniable fact that there is more real, healthy, substantial Windt transacttng on our numerous thoroughfares of commerce at dile time than there has been at the same period for years., The great number of passengers that are now ar riving and departing. is a nother subs/antis) evi dence of the prosperity of the times. But the river does nut b:ar on its broad bosoat exclusively the evidences of revived c onfidence. energy and business. All around our city our eyes are met with new buildings, of the most sub stantial structure, going u p,—here and there the old are disappearing, and on their foundations are \ erecting new ones to grace and improve the city. Live Lords in New York.—New Y ork oir the business walks are displayed the rich is full of sprigs of foreign aristocracy.— 1 goods and fashion of springarrivals, and the lion- Lord John Hay, commander ol H. M dreds of drays that tr a v e r se the streets, are load. frigate Warspiie, is at the City Hotel.— . I ing and unloading thu immense accumulation of The Earl of M 1 ulgrave is at the Globe. He 1 valuable produce from the teeming valleys of ag• arrived.on Friday, tnl is on his way to England . , .84:Charles l3agot, ex Govern. or of Cant** expected at the Globe; the Warspiti--having been ordered to New York to meet him. A Naval Fight Expected.—The Texan men of war, A.ubtin and Wharton, the for mer commanded t y Commodore Moore, and the latter by Captain Lothrop, were towed to sea ftom New Orleans on the 15th in We st. learn that they ar6 well manned and we may soon exect to hear of IA ar m A Shocking ..Murcieress.—A young WO' man of attractive a ppearance, named Sas rah Daistey, was recently committed for trial by a London magistrate . , charged with having married two hush ands, and a child ten months old. She poisoned all three, and was about to be married for the third time when arrested. What a wretch. Commodlre Morgan: Tie Commerce of Genoa dr..—A correspondent of the New York Tribune writing from the birth place of Christopher Coluna bus, gives the following: Com. Morgan took rooms here, or rather, I should say, a pilaw of great magnificence, re cently occupied by Count Survilliers, in plain Yankee phrase, Josephllionaearte,) where, instead of cutting that k'nd of a dash all Commodores are expected to cut by virtue of their office and in honor of their country. he has been for four weeks airlifted to b;s bed with the gout, from which he m now happily recovered. You may know he is recently married; his bride is the daughter of 0. 'Rich, Esq., American Consul at Mahon, a gentle man well known and highly esteemed in the Unis ted States. Hit understood to have been ; .j ; of." but not rich; she is certainly beautiful , a d lovely as tile skies of the Mediteranean, she is young—not over twenty-five, I suppose—no: much more, certainly. And, since the Commo. dote is over fifty, it is reasonable to suppose he has married at that time of life, when a young wife is the most agreeable co npanion in the woad—one who can watch by his bid and nurse him when he is kept in the house four weeks from the gout, and read a French or Spanish Rotnance to him with that soft musical voice, which is no where heard in such perfection as in the 'Medi terranean, where the skies are so sot, it seems impossible for the heavens ever to be angry.— resides the Commodore is not too old or weather" beaten for romance. I am strongly inclined to Wok he fell regulerly into love, and would have "married his ladye had two devils been standing at the door," as old Ch, ucer has it. The com modore is a noble old sailor, full of heart, and brave as Julius Casar, T he , otherlday, went with him to the Governor's Palace. The Commo dore like Jack Downing. "talks nothing but En. OM ' , but that remarkably glib." Said bi 3 Ev. tenancy, "Parlez saws ',Francais?' str."— ‘Patlato Italanor "No sir." " Dr you talk . English Governor?" ' No, Monsieur." ••Then," replied the Commodore, "I'm very sorry; I hoped you spoke English." It was really a capital j ke. The French, you , know, is considered in all high circles a co ver m or Europe, as a "sine qua non" among gentle— but, throughthe medium of what Italian I have picked up in three months, the conversation was carried on trite vigorously. And the Governor, who has seen the world in all its aspe ts Ind ex perienced every kind of fortune, was pleased to pass some very well deserved eomplimeets npow our country and institutions. He said to me in lUilians "Your commodore looks just like Louis Philippe—as much as a twin brother: and what is bAter, he looks like a fighting fellow." Defalcation.—The Washington Globe states that the Collector of the Customs at New Orleans, appointed by Mr, Tyler, is DAMN his cash account about one thousand dollars. : . EEO .;:•;!;1: - ..•: . ;.,,.;' -. ~"". .- .. _ Prot Tneetourri - - 1 Art important IstOentstm.--It is stated 1 Confirme eceived.-8 4 . Louts in that city from Fort , papers state that AMES BUCIII/I*NAN, that Professor Bottinger, of Frankford on lettets rd snilect to the tieciatoo of a National Conventlon. the Main, has just discovered a mode of Leavenworth the pld rn-tg e., dition against the Santa Fe traders. It ap• rapid as the ordinary process. If this be so, good bye to miniature, pears that a ban lof men had to portrait and even landscape pa i n ti ng .— start from different points along the West Nature in therm branches of fine arts will ern frontier, and to rendezvous at a stated push aside the hand of man, as she has al- point on the route of the traders, for the plundering plating by the magne4c-electric process. them on their return this spring. Colonel Mid Killed.— A - smiall child came to Kearney left Fort L. for the Indian coun its death in New York, on Sunday, by eat• try immediately on the receipt of orders ing the ends of enure loco loco matches, from the War Depat tment. The maraud.- era had three days the start of him, and he which bad, incautiously, been left within will have to push on with great rapidity his reach. to overtake them. The United States troops took proviaions fur only seven days, as the commending officer wished his troops to be free from all unnecesaaay ens DAILY MORNING POST PUILLIPS H. 81111TU,XVITOP.11•ND PROPRICTOIRS S‘TURDAY, APRIL 29, 1843 iee First Page. Democratic National convention. The subject of the time of holding the Democratic National Convention is again revived in the papers and in the political circles, and creates considerable discussion. Several of the States have declared in fa vor of November, of this year, but a great• et n umber seem to prefer May, in 1844. At the late meeting of the Democratic members of the Legislature of this State, a preference for the last named period was e xpressed, and Baltimore was recommen , I ded as the place. We incline to think, that a majoril of the party agree in opinion, on these points, with our Legislative cenven. Lion. For our own part, we have ttequent ly expressed an opinion favorahl• to the earliest pet iod Err selecting the Democratic candidate. As there is no d. übt, however , that a majority of the party ate inclined to postpone a noosination 'ill May, 1844, we liesttilv an.l cheerfully acquiesce in .. their will, aril join in recommending that time for holding the Convention. riculture. The shipyards present the busiest scene of a At Fulton alone, that little town above the city, end one of the arteries of our proerrerily, there is scarcely room for the expanded energies of the mechanics. A gentler tan, who is ono of the most extensive boat builders ic the West, to'd ns a day or two since, that in Fulton alone there was plenty of wo-k for six hundred ret ebonies in the boat yards, for the whole season. Ile has contracts on hand for fi ve crack steamers, intend. ed for different trades, and when asked what kind I The Sandwich Islande.—lt is stated tha , of' pay he expected in these ' hard time "—this notwithstanding the opposition of the Bti no Bank paper and hard money era,—with a sig nificant smile he t en his hind into his pantaloons fish Consul at the Sand wich Islands, the and drew nut as many of those yellow -humbugs" sincere iGovernment of Great Britain are about to which have cost Tom Benton so many and hearty curses: as ho could gr .sp, and a aid acknowledge the independence of Hawaii. that for alt the orJets from below, he was paid in i There is • good real , n to believe the same nothing else. -------------1 c rse will be adopted by the French H ma, the murderer, whaso assumed name is ' Gov comsat. Hirai-man (quite appropriate for such a fiend ) i t 1 _________---_ appears, is the murderer of two wives an] his two i Coinage--The amount of gold and silo children. His wifo's sister, wile resides in Lau , . ' ver coined at the branch mint in New Ur don, Vs., received a letter from her in which she leans, during three months ending on the stated that her two children had died very sudden► ly - and that she auspectei her husband of poi on I '3 let March, is $1,065,000. Received on ing them. deposit for coinage during the same time, i $ 1 , 400 , 811 A mesmerizer in Charleston announces that he i O7. ii her Defaulter.—The Collector of the Port has discovered a process by which he is able to Ass, paralyze the tongues of ladies, they being awake of New Orleans is said to be miens $100.000. all the time, se that they could not speak without , A snug sum; which would keep a poor family his permission.quite comfortably for a long time. Forrest is playing in B 'sten. I '..L.----------- ------ I Gen. McNeil, the Hero of L..ndy's Lan-, is ! The Nup Flying Ilfachine.—All sorts of' jokes spoken of' as the next Dzinacratic can diJato for I are perpetrated at the expense of the new Aerial Governor of N. H. I or Hying Machine just completed in London. Governor ship Metoka, of this city, from Li verpool \ The inventor is trying to get up a company fur par New Orleans, out into St Tho.nas on the sth I its purchase. A wag has written the following inetaat, her crew in a state of mutiey, an d t h e jeu'd esprit on the subject. THE "AIRY NOTHING. , * leaders in irons, to he seat him 3 for trial. She I 1 Of all the pr. jecis wanting cash, would sail next day. Winch we of late have seen, None seems so equitable as This novel winged machine; The benefits it offers are Of the most natural kind— The wind will raise the company, If they can "raise the W incl." Bryant,the peat and edit'st of the N Y room rived at St Au ;ustin 1, Flori it, on the Bth instant His lady Lcconipanies him. A Fourie: .Amsociltion has ben established at 1 lochester, N. Y. Mr. Brisbitio has been lectu. i t , CONS.—Wei steal the following good 'one ring there: The Sylvania As3ociation of NN. Y. are abou (r )m the Boston Post. n egotiating for a tract of land . They will be in _ eel., ify Nu , ..;---To what color does a operation in a few weeks. floLlging change a boy's complexonl It The Philadelphia Sun is a good paper,—send it , makes him yell-0! regularl:. 1 Cox.— By an Occasional Coniribtstor.- --- ' What essence is most pleasant to a gen. A hirrihle wrcich whd keeps a tavern near l.ichm,hd, V 1., rec:ntly gave his wife 150 blows with a cowhide, bocrolie she would go to meeting iditea lof shying at horn: and miaddig the bar. Mai )r N )th h hlen suggested as a suitable parspo t) so:cold C ) n aodure Portar as Minister to Cnnstantinople, A gio si;o. —C.I3 New York San i 3 eo prei• toed by new a dvertiiemants that ab tut four col limns of reading, matter are di ly cro.v led out. The following, item of infortnati.in is from the 1 B,lt. Rep. It ie o. the Br ot inn order, somet Iling that every Fors kaow3: "The franking privileges of members of Con gress ceases when they are no linger members.% The New Albany (Ind) Democrat. which has had the name of David R Porter at the head o it columns, has hauled it down. It goes for Col. Jo lumen. There is another abusive article as the American press ii the last issue of the Foreign quarterly. A negro, who had broken into a store in Richmond. a few nights since, was shot by the proprietor, Mr. McCabe. It is Pu p posed that Judge Young wi succeed the late Mr. Roberts as U. S.'sen stor from Illinois. Col. MeClernand, Judge Douglass and Judge Semple are .oken of. They are to have a magnificent May Ball 'at Washington Hall, on Monday Henry Clay says that 'Women are t e I Cnrinthian pillars that adorn and support society. The institutions that protect w men, throw a shield also around children; and where women and children are protti• ded for, man must be secure in his tights.'. Eight of the ringleaders in the late in surtection, at Havanna, were sbot on the *1 inst. Fast Day.—The Governor of Georgia has appointed the first Ftiday of May next as a fast day in that State. Earthquake.—A. D. 1755, a portion o Lisbon was sunk, and where it stood the water is now one hundred fathoms deep More than sixty thousand of the inhabi ants perished in six minutes. The "horrible story" of the starvation o a mother and child at Florence, Oneida Co., N. Y., is without forndation. The Mormons are about building a new city at Seokokan, on the Mississippi, three miles below Burlington, Iowa• An t;----nciont e r observed that he would rather posterity should inquire why no rtatues were erected to him, than why they were. General Edwards, Master of the Grand 1 Lodge of Ancient Freemasons of S. Cato. lina, died in Charleston a few days since, and was buried with military and masonic honors. tleman popping the gnerion? .Why, acqui. essence, gentle reader. Why was the late Tippecanoe party like the city of Smyrna'? Because it was fa. mous for its raisins. 'Only think,' said Mrs. Brown to anoth er gossip, 'them locofocos r eae going to put on more taxes."Noi you ot say sol' 'Yes they be; this paper says they'll tax our credulity.' ____-- .• Rather •hard."—A man was tried the other day in New York for stealing pa ving stones! The stony hearted Jury cons victed him, and the stony hearted Judge sentenced him to fine and itcprisonmeut. Formerly, women were prohibite3.from marrying until they had spun a set of lied furniture; and. till their wedding. were consequently called spinaters,which contin u•na to this day, in England, in all legal proceedings. cumbrances SMITH MOVEMENTS. Mr Smith is giving musical entertain ments in Boston,unclt r the title of the Olio. W. H. Smith is playing et the Tre mont Theatre, Boston, in conjunction with Mr Forrest. Mr John Smith i 3 delighting the good people of Cincinnati, at the People's The atre in that place, by his delineations of the peculiarities of the "sable sons of Afr% ca Mr John Smith, Jr. is writing letters om Arkansas. Mr. 0. H. Smith is contesting the elec ion of E. A. Hannegan, in Indiana. Joe Smith.is forming a new Mormon set tlement at 5h01c...0.h00, near Barlington,on the Mississippi river. W. E. Smith has res;gned the office of Colonel in the 76 Regiment, Pennsylvania Militia Dreadlul.—A little daughter of Dexter Croseman, only t.ix years old, went into the scythe manufactory of Mr Inman, at Berri!' ville, R. 1., on the 15th inst., attend• ed by a little boy—the workmen being ab sent at dinner. Every thing being still, the little lady expressed her dissatisfaction , when her companion hoisted the gate to show her how the trip hammer worked. Unfortunately, at this juncture, the little git I was standing in contact .a ith the cog wheel which raised the harnnarr her dress caught, and she was drat n in and mangled in the most shocking manner. She was soon extricated; but it is thought impossible fur her to survive. NEW MAGAZINES The May number of the Catholic: Expositor, a mon hly magazine pia' lished it New V d pik, and edited by the very Rev. T. Varcla, and the Rev. C., C. Pise, has tvetn received. It ham a heautt r ol engraving of St. Pet( r' Church to Ncw Yolk, and is filled with matter of much interest to the Catholic reader. Sargent's New Monthly for Ma 7 is also on our table Itiembellishments ate. as usual, of the first ordsr, and articles in Prose and Poetry from the pens of lire. Berkley, Mr. Sargent, and other eel% brated writers, grace the number. __— FROM ST. DOMINGO. By the arrival of the Ostrich from Port au Prince, we have received information to the 2d. The revolution had terminated quietly, and the Haytiens had resumed their usual business, The preliminary steps had been taken to form a new constitution, but it was ve ry doubtful whether, under, it, foreigners would be allowed to hold estates. Among the many candidates for the presidency, the General at the head of the patriots was the mot prominent. The President in future is to be chosen for a short period. and the government formed as nearly like our own as practicable. The entrance of the patriot army into Port au Prince was celebrated as a high festival. A triumphal procession was formed, composed of the army and citizens generally. The streets through which it passed, were gaily decorated and orna mented with immense droves of flowers,' called "temples of liberty." The proces sion was greeted by the shouts of the peon ple together with the roar of cannon, which was continued throughout the day. The whole pageant closed by a general Monti-. usrion of the city in the evening. ' The U. S. brig Bainbridge had left on a short cruise and the only vessels of war there were a British frigate and schooner, and a French brig. A large frigate was seen beating up on the first inst., nation nknown.-IV. Y. Express. Mexico. Advices have been received, at New Or• leans by way of Havana, from the city of Mexic•', the 22d March; and from Vera Cruz to the 28th. On the 18th of March, Santa Ana pub lished a decree that the wars against Tex as and Yucatan were national contests and should be carried on until both nations sub mitted. On the 21st March, a violent attack of the fever made Santa Anna take to his be•l and apprehensions as to the result were en tertained by some. The newly appointed English minister to Mexico, arrived at Vera Cruz, in the sloop of war Spartan, on the 28th March. Another Ilumbug.—Mr. Robert • 1 Gourly announces, through a Boston pa- per, that he will deliver lectures on the art of living withoin,fileep: He asserts that he has not slept for the last 52 months, and desires that a committee may be appoint. ed to watch him night sod day, to convince themselves otthe truth of his assertion. etentingrda Nast. 14 feet water iti the charnel. tom.• All Boats marked thus (*) are provt Evans sally Guard. Rep °fled b SIMILE &It ITCHIL, Go. ra rill S Ag y ents, No°s, Market street. ARRIVED. North Queen McLain Nashviilo Pulaski Hanna Fmk°lin Alpine Cockburn Broivnrville New World Clarke Cincinnati Mclntire Scales Zanesville Pulaski Hanna Franklin North Queen McLain Wellsville *Montgomery Gregg Cincinnati Ori hens Bailey Nashville Alpine, Cockbure,Bronsville. •Michigan, 'loins, Beaver. •Clevela. d, Hemphil, do. Little Ben F DrankEPlin ----Wabash ARTED. *Cleveland, Hemphill, Beaver, •Michigan, &des, .do "Swiftaure Robinson Cincinnati •B. idgewater Ebbert Wheeling *Cutter Collins Cincinnati Herald Davoon 3t I -uie Cella Busman Brownsville Pulaski Hanna Franklin Belle of Allegheny Hanna Franklin Zanesville Hutchison Marietta ------------------ A new and splvdid boat has teen but, in Cincinnati called the New World,(Cspt Stewart.) by A. Gordon. P. S. The New World arrived at our wharf yesterday. She is certainly a splen did boat; every person who visited her seemed pleased with the manner in which she is fitted up; the Captain is said to be every inch a gentleman, and of course iris beautiful boat will fill the sub,treasury of I her proptietnrs. _ Allegheny Wharf.— The Allegheny wharf at the foot of Irwin street is con' stantly crowded with t nerchandise,lumber , &c., which gives it an unusually brisk ap• pearance. There is now more stir there than we wi.nessed at the Monongahela iwharf this time last year. 'This may ap• pear to some an extravagant calculation. we think we have not overrated it. Steatnbont Accident. The Harry of the West collared two of her flues during a late trip, near Nlem phis, Tenn., which killed and wounded a large number of persona. The following i• a c atalogue of the killed, wounded and missing: One fireman killed; one deck hand sca►. ed; one deck passenger's leg broken and badly bruised; two cabin passengers badly bruised and scalded; one deck har.d slight ly scalded; one mate's leg broken; one deck hand, two cooksorie cabin passeng e t s en d one deck passenger missin..r. The Cincinnati Sun says the Harry was on her return trip from New Weans, and was at a wood -yard below Memphis, hav ing reade the quickest trip on record S 9 far. When about to leave the wood -yard,which is opposite Commerce, she collapsed her larboard flue, doing slight damage to the boat. Six or seven passengers were miss ing—the exact number not known. The Grey Eagle towed the Harry to Memphis. The flues blew out forward among the fi re men and deck passengers. She was ca reened by striking a log, and the accident took place at the first revolution of the wheel after she settled i.► the water. The Harry did not sustain much injury. The steamboat Gen. Gaines sunk on the 15th inst ,on the Alabama river, four miles below Selma. She sunk in ten min utes after striking the snag. The Loui , iville Kentuckian says: American Eagle was coming into port yes terday afternoon, a swivel was fired off, whiJl we understand broke a man's arm and otherwise severely injured him. NASHViLLS, April 22, A. M. No alteration in exchanges. Alabama money in fair demand at 18 per cent. The Union Bank has received $50,000 in specie by recent arrivals from New Or— leans.—[Whig. Shipments of hay ate being ma the west into Canada. The article rea lv commands $2O to $24 per ton. One way to make a sober man a drunk. and is to give him a wife who is always scolding. 150 HALF CHESTS YOUNG IIYSON TEA. SO Boxes Imperial sad Coupes der; jest nodes! Navigation nn lakes Ontario and Erie. sad Cat 11114 luw for fi c rl b L . llllAN, .lENNINGS 1 co. has been resumed. • lip 19 43 Weed et. ------------ BOXES RAISINS. The cold weather has not materially injured , 50 50 Mitts Cavils; just received sod for sew, `the orange trees in Florida. HAMM AN, JENNINGS /Oh 43 Wool st. .Steamboat Boilers Bursted at ew York.—The boilers of the steamboat Mo hegan, fram New York, bursted about 6 o'clock on Monday morning, just above Hurl Gate. She was going, the Herald says, at her usual rate, when two sheets ofl her boilers burst off with a loud report.—, 1 All the passengers were, of coulee, greatly frightened, but none were killed, and only two or three slightly scalded. More were injured in the confusion by running over each other, than by the hot water spurting u s on them. Independent Order of Odd FetknosAn elec+. I - lion for officers of the Grand Lodge of Penney vunia took place on Monday evening, with the following result: —Grand Master, John C. Yea. ger; Deputy Grand Master. Jahn Perry; Grand Warden, Dr. N. B Leidy; Grand Secretary. Ham Curtis; Grand Treasurer, Dr. F. K. Morton; Grand Representatives, Horn R. Regan and Jobn W. /Rolfes: I s " Extract from • letter dries Itartssur „ ---- ' i e i l ' 183. I"Your C on nellsvill.• an 3 PittAroglartrail road procrediogs are intererting to us here. They are tu me a kind of a Bridge Tick,. et affiir, fur 1 can't see precisely how the matter wands. But lam rather inclined to think that Craig and Darsie hare mid* 'awes of themselves,and gulled your fellow citizens are interested in that project.... What tllllMto in for tbe - re• use did they g peal of the '7th section fort By that move. ment, they gave away all they had gained, and I can't see what better offthey ate DOW than they were under the old act. Mt to their compromise with Deford and Blrek. it is all ridiculous; they were gulled and gammoned, and as to the intimation that the Governor would veto the first bill, 'tie a humbug and a piece of machinatiun thipt I do not understand. for I heard the Gov— ernor say myself that he mould not eels that bill. It is true, that the section top ,sprung upon the Legistature by stratagem and carried stealthily thro': even the *lmp say that it was one of the mean tricks of Geo. Darsie, characteristic of the man, and of a piece with other contemptible tricks he has played off here, viz:—The Auction Bill. Darsie is called here the rat Catcher. the prying and peering snake, who takes great credit for doing a very little thing. The whigs say this of him; have they not learned and read him like a book. 1 am, in hate, Yours, &e. Sussex county.—We have heard tbat portion of the citizens of Sussex co llec ion ty have determined to oppose the co of debts from them. Their circurnetencea they say, are such, at, this time, that they annot ray what they owe. STREET PREACHING. Preaching next Sabbath 30th inst. at 3 o'clock. i n Water street, between Wood and Market AA.. by the Re , . A. M. Bryan. "Go 3 e i Ito all the world and preach the gospel to every craature.” "Go out into the highways and hedges. and compel them to come is that my house may b 4 -• 4 THEATRE• Last i ight of the engagemrikt cr Miss TON and Mr LATHAM• THIS EVENING, Nill be presented the Drama.taken from Maw,* nnvel, called EUGENE ARAM. To conclude with the farce of the LOAN OF A LOVER.. The , Dram) of the DESERTED VILLAGE Ishii eche' real Doors open et 7 o'c'ock, Perf:)rm sues to CAW mence at ion' pa.t Ljw"r Boxes, 50 centtl Second Tier . 37 emit* Pitt, 25 " I t 24 roars WM. EWER, Attorney nt LayrtOtt r Iloorpd street, s , road door abate die corner Or Solitheltd north mid r. op NEW LEATHER STORE. 3AI. HILILDXVI, Ws. &says. J. Her Amon & Co. LEATHER DEALERS. No. 40, Diamond Alley. betweve-Wood • and the Diamond, Keep all k fedi, of Le. then an l Findings ,f the best gustily and nt Inc lowest o flees. Thom w i shing toa imll Mirclaiala will find it their advantage In gve 19 , tame Purchasing els where. We are determined lo Pen vet, low for :ash. aNIIII. A C t AD. IFf Ayr P . on hand a lac,..e ad is ell assorted stevk UHOLSTERY WARE , sul able for the raps 11,4 summer business, and am prepared at short notice mill all orders entrusted to me. My stock is entirety new: made of the hest materials, will be sold at priees testi% the times. Merchants will find me well prepared to till their orders on the hest terms, for any description oftlp. holster' , 2oods for their restomers; and the eit lie IN Wee 17, log any article li my line, will he promptly Hive', aad their favors thankfully received. Whf NOBLE. Uholsteter. No. 4 Wood at Sear the river. ACS DE MY. DOLT roNEs will open aCM Omit end English A cademy in Inc first week of May nest. Fir has roasted for his purpose, a room on the waned floor on the South West corner or Market and sth tAs. Fu (her particulars made known nest week, apTS. 10 TIERCES RICE. 10 Roses Loaf Puzur: 18. Crashed do.; jolt reerlvod and for still RAILMAN, JE:NININGS it CS. 43 -Wotil by at , 29 20 BOXES Russet and Roberts° i's N 0.5 LUNT TO BACCO. 20 ROI eg a-sorted do. Jost received. together with general assorttment of every thing in the Grocery line.and for sate oat the Met accommodating terms. BAILIN MC * Co. 43 Wood et.- TAR. 163 KM; NORTH CAROLINA TAR, oa eat*. meatjaul for isle low for curb. HAIL3IAPI, Co. 33 Wood 11. • from 2so BAGS RIO COFFEE. .50 itaes St. Domingo do., Oat received sal ctir sale extremely low for cash. HAILS+, Ali, JENNINGS it Cs. 43 Weeder. 10 VIOLS. ALUM. 2 Caracas Indigo. =Casks Madder; last reeeivnt aid for why HAMM AN, JENNINGS 43 Wood ot FOR RAVENNA AND CAMPBELV 3 - PORT. PRE canal , boat American Eagle, Clark, master. will depart for the al ove and Iv termediate ports oa Tool day the end. of may, In tow with the 8 B Myeloid. For (refight oe parsage apply on board or to ap 28. BIRIdINGYIAM 4 co. IMPROF. SILLM AN'S LECTURES ON GE. OLOGY will be continued on this week, cm Tuesda, Thursday and Friday evenings, amd 05 Tuesday, Thursday and Friday's of the two fol lowing weeks, in the 3d Presbyterian Church. commencing at hall past 7 o'clock. Tickets may be had at the stores of C. C. Henry alr• Co., Wood street; W. W . Wilson, Market et., and other mew hers of the Committee. op 211 FOR CINCINNATI. 11E steamer MONTGOMERY will depart * I.above and interned , late ports on Matorday taulolll lost at 10 trelott a. 0. Tort rellti apewiiiioappep N board or to _ 5111111/111411/11 CID sp•