Idle is cubs.- A Tstssirs De Cuss, Feb 20, 1843. a , In my last I premised to give you a brief itietory of the magnificent scale upon I eiWiith at_ grt which business is tarried on here, and the of weather beaten asses and mules," some artmced state of - the Mechanic and Agri- tacking an eye or an ear, and all extremely cultural Arts. l'have delayed writing for lean, loaded each with four great bottles of some time, hen; an impression of the great water, each large enough for the animal to importance tit the sahject, and my utter crawl into, and a negro or mulatto moun inability to dojustice to it. To understand ted between them, and beating and pound - matters and things as they really are here, ing them with all his might. Then comes it is necessary to pass at least six months a bull, loaded with sacks of charcoal, and is attentive observation and admiration of mounted also by a negro, then a horse, the genius of this people • The tovrn num- upon the gallop with a load of boards— bars about 13,000 inhabitants,—about one that is. two boards with one end slung a halr'whites, and the residue negroes and costs the horse, the other dragging on the mulattoes,—and is situated on the border ground—thee a horse-load of live turkies, of a dry savannah, about fur miles wide their heads hanging down each side, and which stretches ft om the coast to a range the music of t their squalking chiming in of hills, beyond which are the cane-planta- finely with the babbling of the negroes and dons. Theme are about fifteen or twenty naked children along the street; while a. (milers of sugar estates residing in the mong the rest, now and then passes a Span• ty,"who are rich; hut how the residue of the ish Nahob in his volante with wheels six people get their living is more than I can feet high, silver mounted hubs, and two imagine, unless it be by cheating each lath- mules harnessed to it, one of which is al nr in the retail line, Almost every other ways mounted by a negto in grand livery. building is a retail store, where some les- I will conclude by mentioning one thing sons in keenness might be learned even by which does great credit to the place, to the 'shrewdest of our Yankees: In lieu wit—the Plaza or Public Garden. It is of 'elfin; by the pound they have almost walled up around and filled in with dirt, every thing ready cut or done up in qua;- aisles fligeel with fife stone, surmounted titles, which they sell for a real medic) by a handsome iron fence, and adorned each; and in this way get twice as much with trees, shurhs and flower.. Every as they could by any regular measure or holyday evening the public hand of music weight. Sugar is bought by the real me- plat s there, and thither resort all ranks dio's worth, and thus costs at the rate of and conditions of people to enjoy the fine about ten cents per pound, whereas it is music and indulge in sociability with their worth by the box not over 34 cents. friends. The rapid growth of the trees Most of the people buy every thing in planted in the Plaz i in 1839 is truly sur das manner. just enough at each time for prising, ,One palm tree already measures one meal, and after breakfast or dinner six feet in circumference at the groend.— they have not a mouthful of any thing to The almond trees are about six inches in eat in the house till the purchase is made diame . er, twenty feet high, and their bran• for the next meal. The meat and vegeta- ehes cover an area of more than twenty Isles in the market are bought in about the feet in diameter. A row of cypress trees same manner—instead '-f weighing the I have attained the height of about twentyfive - meat, they cut offso long a sit ip for apes- or thirty fret. Orange and lime trees are eta—so long for a real, &ti &e. Veguta as far advanced as apple trees would he Wes are very dear, even in good weather; in our countly in ten vears, and last year say about three sweet potatoes rot ten and this have been loaded with fruit. Yet cents—and when rainy weather comes with all this facility for raising fruit and there are none in market. Grass is ornamental trees,except in this Plaza. there brought to market for hotsekeepimi, in ate scarcely any its tor n Y Tribune bundles as large as a man's arm, cut with , a knife, bound up slung acrass a horse mule and brought four or five miles, and then sold—six bundles at six pence, or a bout one dollar for a large, and fifty cents for a small horse's load. Wood is bun• dled up and brought on horse- back, in the same manner. Corn is picked in the husk brought in panuiers on horse back, and sold by the fanega, as it is called, which skreans here 360 ears, though its true moaning is 200 pounds. S.> accustomed have they become to this mode of sellin g corn, that no price that can be offered will induce them to bargain for it by measure, or even by weight in grain; an d' the buy- silt' are about as obstinate, for a barrel of shelled corn will scarcely sell at all, and will not bring more than a barrel of ears with the husks on. Horses are not fed with vats here, because, among the other Wits discoveries of the Spaniards, they have found out they will not eat them; -they are also so sure of it, that they never try them—though as often as an Ameri eta tries the expetiment, he finds no &frt. qty in getting rid of his oats fast enough. *mother about as wise discovery is, that Neither horses nor cattle will oat salt, and it. would be very injurious to them if they iebould eat it. Tell them that we have [rt.. rd. sod they ropy:—'li may do for your tattle, but will not do for ours.' It tt ill not do here.' Among o- her objections to my giving salt to my horse, I was assured that it would learn him to eat his halter off. - Milk is brought to market also on horse back, in large jugs. Charcoal comer; to market on a grand scale also. When I first saw it in little begs; about ten inches long, 1 thooeht it was Indigo, or some other choice article. It is put up in this manner to adapt its measurement to the comprehension of the people, which does not extend beyond the rears worth And medio's worth. There is but one man in town who has tbs prerogative of shoeing horses, and his advancement in this art is truly interesting Its makes his shoe nearly round of a thick piece - of iron, without corks, and puts it on with two nails on one side and three on the other, with elevated and sharpened • beside, to carve in lieu of corks. The mas ter genius does not degrade himself 1 - :y Soothing the horse's foot, but has a negro ttl-buld it up while he performs the sewn tide-operation. After driving the nails, he puma board under the foot, on the ground Safi then goes around with his hammer and clenches the nails. It is a very good bu siness, 86 the shoe seldom remains on over a fortnight, and would be better if it were not for the fact that all sound horses go berefooted. ,Otten are yoked by a piece of wood lash. ed to the horns at each end, and to the qui hung in the centre. 'The carts are spade with huge wooden wheels, generally without tires, and the body is framed into the tongue and axletree; so that when ne.. meaty to unload a hogshead or other heavy 40016 it has to be tipped up by unlashing *juke of the oxen's horns, and letting the tongue and the yoke swing together with the body. Some have gone on far in the north of improvement as to put tires up. out the wheels,—in doing whibh, a great attempt of mechanical genius is displyed. Th. iron is put on in pieces about two feet long and fastened wall spikns with heads protruding above the surface about au inch elicit, the marks of which are distinctly seen in the tracks along the road. 'Ploughs are made so as to turn the dirt as lunch on one side as the other—a pieta , of wood with a point of iron on the encl.-- IMb American plough was first introduc es! the Spaniards tree - lured that it would not p; it Was impossible it should, because it tweed the dirt all ou one vide. The scenes which meat the eye of rip Frit: PRESIDENT, JAMES lIITCI - I.B.NAN tz„, j er, to the rieekion of n Nni lowa Convention. DAILY MORNING POST. PII(MIT'S %VIC 11. SMITH,IDITOR 3 0.710 PROPRIETOR WEDNESDAY, JUNE.: 14, ISO Ver,t P;lge The contest between the whip and the blue noses, is likely to he the warmest fac- Lion fight ever %% itnessed in our cfyinty, or perhaps in the State. The whigs are in tip-top condition, as full of spirit as a well trained thoroughbred, and almost as confi dent as the backrrs of a rung racer, that i 3 entered against an old nag, t% hoe puss ers have been injured by age and the unsktl(ul attention of bungling grocrns. The stakes are large and the conte.t will be propor tionably desprt ale. But independent of the possession of the offices, thi re are other questions involved that will impel each faction to strain every nerve for victory. It is a grand trial of strengqi between the vi hics and blue no ses; which ever party is left behind at the October election, will have to yield, and ever after follow the lead of the success-• ful faction. The strength of the two pit.- ties we believe to be pretty evenly ded, and if the contest were to come on now, the race would be one of head and shoulder. But unfortunately for the blue Doses, it is some four months until the election takes place, and the experience of every day shows that their sun is setting, and that the longer the contest is put off, the more unable will they be to make a vigorous struggle. They are not led on by the prudent, cautious, clearsighted lead ers of former campaigns; they have not the skill or nerve to bring the "whippable ar ticles" to proper subjection, and their only hopes are,that by re-dressing their old raw head and bloa3y bones' stories,and by gross misrepresentation of their opponents, they will be able to keep a sufficient number of their dupes in ti e harness to drag them over the course in October. On the other hand, the whigs ere fresh and vigorous; the desperatiin created by the harsh treatment they received from their antimasimie allies in former years, and which forced them to rebel against their tyrants, is fast changing to a feeling of self reliance, and their con• fidence and hopes ;lie increasing in propor tion as the prospects of their opponents become more gloomy and desperate. In Oleic case the.i Id adage that "power is al ways stealing from the many to the few," is being:realized; and there are now but few who pay any attention to passing events, but will admit that the whig faction of our opponents, will poll the largest vote at the coming election. We will candidly confess that our sym pathies are with the whigs, Et...d that we hope they may ride down the blue noses rough shod. We hate the spirit oftyraany with which the antimasons have driven the whigs for s o many year's past,fintl theheart less Cruelty with which the lash has been applied for the slightest murmur. Our feel ings of humanity have revolted at stuetbar. barity, and °OW that there is a fair prop pact that power will shortly change hinds, ;ot 'be permitted to escape without having a little of the treat. ment they ilflicted on the whigs meted out to thenr Our feelings are, therefore, with the whigs; we hope they may beat the blue noses, "black and blue, but first of all, we hope that the demo:Jets may beat both factions so effectually that they will not to ablo to raise their heads for the next ten years. "Them's our sentiments." Deßpicable. The Mr Snyder, who was recently cow hided in llarrisbutg by a person named Zigler, for an alleged insult to the Z.'s sis ter publishes a latter,ostensibly for the.p Jr pose of explaining the difficulty, but his real abject evidently is to blacken the young woman's character by base inuendo, and white he professes the greatest respect, he insinuates that she has been guilty of in discretions which should exclude her from decent society Snyder puts in the plea that he is a weak and f•eble man, and therefore is unable to fight the big brother, but he feels fully (qual to the task of de. stroying the reputation of the sister, and thus gain a revenge, the effects of which will endure through life. Canal Commissioners. The Clinton Democrat and the Berwick Star, express favorable opinions of Col. John Moorhead, as a candidate for Canal Commissioner. From the number of names already mentioned, the Convention of the sth Se•ptembe.r a i , l have a host of expec- tants to Pelee. from the interests of the public works are properly considered in making the nomi. nation, and candidates selected with a res ference solely to their compentency and disposition to discharge the duties of the office for the benefit of the State, we have no doubt but it will b., easy fot the demo.. crats to elect their ticket. But if the con vention is swayed by any other views, and looks mote to the gratificwion of that fac• tions than the selection of a ticket in which the people can have contid-nce, it is very doubtftl what patty will have control of the public works at the end of the present se SE•Otl. The Rich old Maid of Natchez. We find in our exchanges a great deal of twattle about the rich old maid of Nat chez, of whom it Vas r umored that she at ipmpted to bribe a certain Judge by r ffering an immense amount of the 'shiners' if he would lead her to the altar- Under her own siviature, (which is •Lyil is Dowell,') she denies the aspersion. bout her personal charms notho gis said, therefore it is quite probable that she is nu grem shakes in tt,r petty line.' We - admiru h. r spunk, when she declares that - Repudi:iiion seems to be life in Ma- she never v, saw the Inert she cared , ryland. A meeting in Talbot county has twenty cents for, or she might have been married years ago, to a real judge. She passed resolves, which amount to the has run a glorious career, if indeed sue- same thing as I epuli.ition, or the refusal to cessful speculation can be called elliious. ' pay the direct tax. She raise to Natchez from Philadelphia in The Louisville Whig says: It cannot 1829, under the protection of Mr Kenton be denied that our city is infested with a of New Orleans, arid accompanied by a gang of desperadoes, who are prowling brother and sister. Mr Broad well of Cin- ' about, setting fire to h. uses, and cominioi ciunati, received her g.iods as commission lung robberies. merchant; and can testify as to the favora- The Nantucket Inquirer stands respon ble auspices under which the first and only Bible for the following:—" Why _are the large trading establishment in Natchez, Cape Cod and Connecticut fishermen who conducted by females, was opened. She visit our harbor in ,pursuit of shad, like rented the same hcuse she now occupies, and a few years afterwards purchased it. lhe ghosts which appeared to Macbethn A huxter's shop indeed! It was at that Because they "come like shudders, so de time, the largest building in the city, and owing to the increase in the valuation of pi (mei ty, could have beerneold years ago for 530,000. lien busine-s was large and osperous, and in 1836, she estimated her accumulated profiti at $300,000 ! The Crusade. —"Calvin"atal "Jefferson," were out again in yesterday's Gazette, a gainst the N i t, an lin favo r th "Auro. ra," the new pad..r which they expect will bring into the dem )cratic party the bitter feelings of perseation against a particular religious portion of the community,that are advocated so vigorously by the editor of the Gazette. Ai the editors of the "Au, rora" have disclaimed any intention of es tablishing a paper on the basis suggested by the correspondents of the Gazette, we think it a sufficient rebuke of these fo. menters of persecuti m and discord,and we will, therefore, treat their base pervertion of our course with the contempt it deserves. ‘Vith these black hearted falsifiers, we can have no controversy; their venom cannot reach us. We would be loath to reply to such absurd misrepresentations and low abuse, if the proper names of the writers were appended to their articles, much lees can we be tempted to notice the assaults of sneaking libellers who pour firth their malice under anonymous signatures. China—Davis, a modern writer on Chi na, says that among the countless milllions comprising this vast empire, ..almost every person can read and write sufficiently for the ordinary purposes of business." T his is more than can be said of mauy countries in Christendom, and in sorpe sections of our own glorious Republic. Le Petite Carline is the name of !moth eidenseuse who has made her appear anco in Cincinnati. ii.liant receptor tinn in Philadelphia, nd the citizens of all parties laid aside their partizan feeling for the time, not to do honor to John Tyler, but to receive the President with that courtesy and good feeling to which t he chief officer or a great people is entitled. After he landed from the steamboat be was escorted through the city by the various mil itary companies, accompanied by a vast concourse of citizens. Gov. Porter, James M. Porter, Messrs. Spencer, Wickliffe and Robert Tyler jr., are in attendance on his Excellency. artielee,"•opo hope We are surprised, says the Newbury— port Herald, that some of the American whale ships which come home not more than half full, do not bring a few hundred tons of the celebrated GuEno manurefrom south America. About 40,000 tons of it were imported into England last year, where it bears a very high price. The Duke of Sutherland has agreed to assist, to a large extent, !several poor fe. males on his estate, who are desirous of embarking for America. The sum which his Grace advances, will altogether, it is said, amount to about. £3oo—a generous and judicious in t.t:nce of liberality .1 Vcieran.—Amona the persons to be present at the celebration at Boston on the 17th June. is Gen. Gideon Foster, a resident of Danvers, now ninety-five years old. He commanded the Danvers minute men who fought in the battle of Lexing ton and has survived all those who serv— ed under him. He is in the enkyment of excellent health, and bids fait ta live many years longer. A New Or!eans paper says, the fart that the gallant Commodore Moore fought Iwo steamers for over fe'cr hours, without sus taining the loss of a single spar, that he only lust three mu t . ] killed, and that the Gaddaloupe alone lost 47 killed and 30 wounded, and this under all the disadvan tages under which he labored, the affair may justly be regarded as one of the most I brilliant that has occurred in the last thirty years. A fact worthy of a place among the chronological events of Louisiana, is that the Total Ahstineoce Society met ina house where, one year ago, billiard+, keno. euchre, poker aryl many other gambling games were the favorite amusements of ho people. It appears that the late destructive fire at Columbus, 0., was the work of incen diaries, sill a mulatto roan and a white wo man, h a v, t h e ro arrested on a ell ir re o f committed the crime. part." Washington Irving, who had been se riously ill at Madrid, we are glad to learn by the Knickerbocker, was convalescent, and at the last dates was enjoying a brief and pleasant s , journ in the country. At Richmond, Va•, they are making a new cotton cloth called katabono, which is said to be very excellent for summer cloth• ing, acid costs a shilling a yard. A pair of pantaloons of it costs 62 cents, and a coat S 7! The N N 7 True Sun says the President is about to be married to a lady whose name is that of a celebrated island. This will set folks to gueving who she is. The celebrated Miss Clarenihn is about effecting an engagement with the manager of the People's Theatre, Cincinnati. It she's what the papers clack her up to be she must be great] C1?-4 number of lazy foreign vagabonds are strolling about Connecticut, obtaining money under false pretences. They ap* pear with printed certificates, representing that they have suffered great losses by shipwreck—that they left their families somewhere in distress—or some other pit iful falsehood. One of these rascals calls his name John Bedstone—another, his name ()timpani. tcjt.Wm H Jones, of Perry county, Al• shame, has been sentenced to the Peni tentiary for ten years, for whipping one of his negroes so as to cause death. (I 7 •A comet.—The Baltimore Repub lican of Wednesday says•-.-.6A- comet was seen by same of our citizens last even ing, in the neighborhood of the moon. It presented quite a brilliant appearance." _ Tile :..' ~ t ',..•.* Bi .:: ~ ', sHo ' ... Purcell embarked for'RegianderO titti 7 th phis Inquirer I,as information horn Wash. inst. On board the paeket' , ship George ington that another financial scheme is in Washington, from New York. contemplaion. It anticipates en issue Of P}'See if the Gazette don't have some u illions of Treasury notes of 8110' thing to say about the above. Sound the each, and redeemable at certain Banks in alarm, Deacon. the 'ti , se cities. The subject, it is hid, Papers of Aaron Burr.—By EOM° strange for— has been under discussion for some time, tune, says the Hartford, Conn.,Courier, a large a., anti various suggestions have tmtalettile Mount of papers which belonged to Aaron Burr, in connexion with it. The N.:l ti have come among us, and are attracting the no.. 411iiknO says--"We believe the scheme is now in tice of very many of our citizens. They are in a preparation. It will consist 0f115,000,000 vessel lying at our wharves, contained in some o f exchequer bills, from $5O to 1508, po half dozen bales or sacks—we mean so many of circulate all over the country—and to be them as have not been already abstracted by the kept curiosity of the citizens. They are said to have in circulation." bcen sold for paper rap, and are here on their Alusic.—A person named W. Vincent way to some paper mill, Wallace, director of the Dublin Anacreon- Among them are briefs in important law cases, tic Society is bewitching the New Yorkers legal opinions, correspondence with some of the with his performances upon the, violin and most eminent men of his and t ations other . mano. He is said to far excel Nagle on papers of a miscellaneous character, all of which r have an interc.t to the people of this age, end will the one, and the great Thalberg on the, continue to have for thine who comp after us—not other • Willis says that in his hands, the only that they once belonged to a great man who violin d:;es more than speak—it singe, shared a chequered life and fortune, but also that shrieks, supplicates, reproaches, dies, reii , they show the manner ofcomtnunication between vives, and realizes the fancy of Balzac,that Mr. Burr and some of the most extraordinary a soul i 3 imprisoned within it. 'With his men of an extraordinary age. bnw, he scatters a bright shower of melos, dy through the air, and rasps diamond sparkles from the strings. Working One's Passage.—A good eta ry is told in the Goicordia Intelligencer of a simple minded Hoosier and his opera. tions at Natchez. The fellow *came down' on a flat boat, and anxious to get. back at as cheap a rate as possible, strolled ou board one of the wharf boats at Nat— chez. but in hand, and askeo the owner when his boat would start for Louisville. Every one who knows any thing about a wharf boat knows that it is a fixture, as destitute of 'go •ahead' principles as a drift log; but the Hoosier was ignorant even of this fact, and as the owner of the floating grocery was something of a quiz, be told him that he should be off 'very shortly:— We give the rest of the story as we find 'Well, canting, 1 want to work nay pas. sage.' 'All right,' 1• as the reply. 'can you purnpl' 'First rate,' said the Hoosier:— 'Lay to,' amid S., 'here it is. ' The poor fellow laid down his bundle and went-to work in dead earnest; he tugged unrereiti , tingly at the pump for a couple of hours,— ' the sweat rolling in torrents from his hardy features•=when, happening to cast his eye around, he observed that the:boat had no machinery. 'Hallo! capting,' exclaims ed the Hoosier, 'where's you . Wert.— where's your steam fixtins?' S , in the meantime, had stepped ashore and collect— ed a crowd to 'Witness the joke. The poor fellow's question's were answered by a loud laugh, which told—'l'm picked up, stranger— but bet I can knock down drag oat any man that sais I'm 'a fool The latest from Florida. A correspondent of the Savi nnah Republican, writing from Jacksonville, June .2d, records an at tempt at murder by Indians, near New rnansville. The antrum was a lady, who was dreadfully inju red, but may recover. Two Indians were only seen. Sam Jones ntl gang bhould have been driven (torn the Territory before the withdrawal of the Army. Rumors of depredations by Indiana near Mican. opy, had reached St. Mary'a, but no particulars. Prince de Joinvitio was married on the Ist of Miy to Priness DJllOa Francisca, sister of the Emperor Don Pedro lf, at Rio Janeiro. Great preparations were making to celebrate the event in the most magnificent s'yle, immediately after the marriage the Prince was to depart for France with his young bride, in ti.e French frigate La belle Poule. All classes of citizens in Rio mani febted great j ,y at the proposed alliance. The Democrats of New Hampshire have nom. Mated H m. JOHN H. STEELE, fur Governor. o.to :quay is in St. Luuii The Hon. Daniel Webster arrived in Boston on Wednesday, from his farm at Marshfield. The boat building shop of Mr UN Glrd on, at Sag Harbor, L. I.,wae, together with its contents, destroyed by fire, n Wednesday last. Lass $3OOO. The Directors 01 the Ellsten aid Providence Railroad. intend to reduce th.t price of fare un that road, on the 17th of J one third from the u ual rate Frank Jobri:mrl and ban have been giving mu e.eal entertainments ut Carlisle and Harrisburg. A Lmfi)n paper says--`A husband and wife at tended Kendall niaricrt lat ly, whme united ag at the first child, amounted to 27 cniipoily in F ' hirid i k 1,053 Sprrie.—"Cice ship Clinton arrived at New Or. leain. , on the 31Ith ult. with 250,000 francs in gold y•five irilttary ewnpaniev, flu uheriug over 12,000 men, will parade on the 17th in,t.,;n ton. The Philatklphians are devising ways and means f or the sup pr es Ai,n of Firemcns' Riots. It is in't deed time something nos done,for scarcely a week passes that we do not hear of a fight, or something worse, got up by the members of the Fife Gilllpa• rues in that city. A well Ica'iwn tt.i:ter. named Folkenton, who carried on the business of a hair dresser, re cently died in London, and left a fortune 0f.C60,• 000 The encampment at F redrick, 11d , is in full billet. Twelve companies were on the ground u Tuesday evening, and amcng• them i 3 the United . States coil'', of Flying Artillery under the eons. mint of tlajv Iting4o:d. It is eNtiin stud that in and about the metropolis of Landon, there are 170,000 temale servants. As all evidenc , of the growing commercial im portance of Natchez, Miss., we may mention that during the present s4ason, nine vessels have clear• ed thit port, fu; Liver t ioul, taking in all 17,646 bales of cotton . o.i Wednesday a salute was fired in honor Of ,Ir Cushing, Minister to China, who, with his suite, visited the Boston Navy Yard land the U.S. s;sip Ohiu A lad about twelve years old, narued I.libk r, wait killed by lightning at St Llnis, Mo., the 2.3 th ult. (YA disgraceful outrage occurred at Philadelphia on Thursday among the fire. men, in which three strangers were badly beaten (?John Holden, a mulatto, has been tried at Waynesboro, Ga. for the murder of George Harben, on the 2d April, found guilty, and sentenced to be huug on the 3d July proximo. Lugan has again ari ived in Cincinnati, after a successful tour south. Right.—The friends of the late C. H Eaton in Cincinnati, are about gotting up a benefit for his widow. Max Bnhrer has arrived in Cincinnati where he will give several conceits. The Spirit of the Times does not. like Mr Forrest's manner of performing Claude Mein otte. Significant,—The Cot k (Ireland) Con stitution says that almost every door in the city has chalked upon it "Repeal or Blood." PROTHONOTARY. chum the course far Lie rldiragers. WILLI fi t aII&X.FOSTER, Esq. or Alleehen, city wit be a candidate Or the office of Prothonotary of Allegheny •My son,' said a pious old lady to her county, at the Ortober election. Pine 4. son after she had read to him a chapter in 'i SIARIFFALTY. scripture relating to Jonah, 'how must Jo. REspErrrptrm y present wyee ly to the c hime = a nab ha'• felt when the whale swallowed 1 Allegheny county, as a candidate for the Shaltalty, himi"Elosto' down in the mouth, I subject to the action of the Destora elle Conventicle „airline the 30th of August nest. • '.pose,' replied the little rascal, -. ' . m a jnne. eeta )9.-•-ditvrtc. ELIJAH TROVILLO. The first number of Kendall's life of Gen Jack son will be out about the Ist of July. MARK! ED Yesterday. at the Exchange Dote, by theßev Mr Worthinatna, Mr W. Outs, of .Caatas. hung, to Ml,s MART M. MoßoAs, of Clinton, All el:lra. DEATII oF A REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIER. uuLD, yei'erday morning, ri o dock, Mr. PETER BROWN, aged 105 yca s. Mr. Bro. It was a native of France. Ile ratite to %Ids country with General LarliT z - rrt, and fought In several battles during the Revela tion:lry War, His funeral will take place from his tale tesldeot. in King's allry, between 51.11 Meet and Virgin alley, at 3 o'clock this afternoon. lie will be buried wills wilitaty tumors. June Id: VALOR &C 0.% BEST REFINED CAST STEEL. undersigned, agents for the• above teiebgaled 1 stamp of Steel, will always keep on hand art ait aotta.ent of the same, consisting to Beet Refined Cast Steel, Equated, flat,round and Octagon. do do do do axe temper. Extra do do do for nail cullers. Best do Double and single Shear Sieel, English Blister, German, Granite. 'Cedric and Crawley Steel, at wholesale, by the case. or In smatter !auto Ink purchtv:erF. June 24—d3m4w6m.• QTE Mil BOILER EXPLOSIONS.—The Board ; sp. V.. 7 pointed by the secretary 01 the Navy '.lO perimental trials of such invention; and plans. *via ed to prevent tile explosion of steam boilers and colt, •g flue., as they may deem worthy of examination," re quest that those persons who have apparatus to pelie.nt for trial, will forward them to the Navy Yard; arWilab ingion, without delay, as the hoard will be premed to proceed with the experimental trials by the 151 b lest. The instruments sent must be on a practical scale, and be ready to he attachee to their boilers; that which Monaco prepared for the experiments is twenty feet 1011 f, three feet in diameter, and has two twelve inch -flues pansiing through It. Navy Yard,VVasitincion June 8 1843. Dune 13,34 J 11U OTICE.—The public are hereby cautioned ophott harlxiring or Miming my wife, Raclin., on my re count, as she has left my brd and board without toy just cause or provocation, and I have resolved not to pay any debts of her contracting after this date. June 13-31• JOHN IticBRIDE. TO THE VOTERS OF ALLEGHENY CO. My name having been mentioned both for Pro thonotary and for Congress—a diversity obvious• ly injurious—l take the liberty, under advice of many tr•iends, to "define my position," and to Mate in this public manner, that I shall be a can didate before the Democratic convention, only for the nomination to Congress. 4t. ALEX BR ACK ENR [DOE. PROTHONOTARY. To the Voters of Allegheny County:—l resptectfullyof fer myself to your consideration as is candidate (iiisitre drat of parties) for the Once of PROTHONOTA ay of Allegheny county, at the ensuing election, As 1 doom .come before you tern mme rated by a Cometwlion, those of you to whom I am not personally known will please e[- ' amine Into my qualifica lions, 4.c.;11t0d Ifs° fortunate at to obtain a majority of your stiffrilis, I shall endeator by at Oct at' ent ion to the dut les of ollice:to satisfy yeti with your choice. ALEX. MILLAR, may I 0 —tE , Of Pittsburgh; COUNTY COMMISSIONER. AT the solicitation of a numoer of friends of all poi ttica! parties, I respectfully offer myself td the eon. sideration of my fellow•citicens lor the office ct Count? Commissioner. That e'iy sentiments may not be nisue. derstood, either as to political or private affairs. I wake free to say that I have been all my life a conststent Re publican, in the true sense of the word. i As the county is somewhat embarrassed in its financial affairs. and Ilse reduction of salaries of public officers has received lb* norm - o,loton of levee majorities of the people, lire ufdW signed would not should be be so fortunate u to he elite led, to any manner attempt to resin this salutary re form; should It reach the office of County Crnimisskiner. r; 6: SAMUEL HUBLEY. LYON, BROILS 4' CYP. Foot of Wood*.