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'1... %;,.'' , 47,; •41-4 ' `lO - , . 4 )1 1 !„-,;,.;-,:' N '..:...„ ~,.e. , y44 . 1,, , 7:i. : ', ' ,: ;.,,r'' 4 , i '':. 4 -, , f • I X 4--....4 4; 1 , -. • • x - .„..1„,,,..4i- , . ~,, ~,,,,,, .. 0. , = 0 44, t • .1-4•.%.,cf...- , 40.4 „4%*1--,.f' • .. - ,,• 0 , 44r,iur ti. „, ! 4- 1 4 0 - ! 5 "„A-- k . N tO t:St:l7.41 1 4,tro'r t :Jitt46l • ' . • • • 4- t 41* )" 5 " . . 4.4. .4. . i Ely Vittsburo Vost. SATURDAY MORNING FOR PRESIDENT : JAMES BUCHANAN k saded to the decision of o,e National (lintrntion.) - • OCRATIC STATE TICKET ckloa. comxissionn: GEORGIC SCOTT, or CotxxmA. Co ATTIWAGEBMI.U.: JACOB FRY, Jr., Mooroomms Co. SCAMETOII TIMOTHY IVES, Pomo Comm APOL EON EUGENE LOUIS JOHN JOSEPH. There it is. That is the name of a new French baby. He is said to be healthy and " all right." He is called Napoleon after his great uncle who AllB a great man ; Eugene for his mother Eu genie ; Louis for his daddy ; John for the Pope, his godfather ; and Joseph for Josephine of awe- , den, hia godmother. Such is the boy, and such his name. He was born on Sunday, March 16th, and all France rejoiced, and all England fired guns and shouted. His father was once a rowdy in Now York,ra police officer in London, and the author of a book on gunnery. His mother was n descendant of a dilapidated branch of Spanish nobility. But she was pretty, went to Paris to " seek her fortune," and caught an emperor. . _ We like to see people get up in the world in a republican way. But French imperialisme just now is the result of bayonets not ballots, of murder not merit. And this unconscious infant, about whose birth so much ado is made, is horn to no C51113M013, and probably no happy fate. The career of dynasties is brief in France. Exile, banishment, assassination and the guillo tine sweep them away in rapid succession. The Napoleonic cannot escape the common fate. The magic of one great name cannot lust over three generations. The future of this new prince can be read in tho past history of France. The French people can endure despotism for a time : hut they love liberty and are very brave. Such a despotism as now oppresses them cannot en dure many years. Then woe to this baby. The French have already colonized a large portion of northern Africa, called Algerica. All the turbulent spirits of France are caught up and sent to the colonies as soldiers or farmers or mechanics. It is a sort of place of banishment for those troublesome at home, and such material is abundant in France. A nation is thus grow- ing up on the northern coast of Africa tha will soon defy the parent., and rear the banner o freedom. The next French revolution may begi in Africa. The young prince is styled king of Algiers. It is a singular fact that for 200 years•not a single ruler.of France, whether king or emperor, has been succeeded by his son. AU but one of them, too, had children; but the eons died before the fathers, and some of them by violence. The son of Napoleon I died a colonel in the Austrian service. The son of Louis XVI died in a dun geon, unless the Rev. Eleazer Willhams is the Dauphin. The son of Louis Phillipe was killed by a fall from his carriage. The casuslities to which French heirs apparent have been so often subject have frequently changed the dynasty; and Orleans, Bourbon. Capet or Bonaparte went / up or down, as disease, assassination, revolution er foreign swords destroyed an heir or dethroned a ruler. The London Times, referring to the birth of an heir to the French Emperor, says: " But, while hoping for the child that has just en tered-into this world of troubles and vicissitudes, a less checkered and more auspicious fate than has waited upon his predecessors born in the purple, we cannot forget the teachings of history, particularly of the history of France, nor be blind to the many changes which interpose themselves between the cradle and the throne of the baby emperor. "-Happy indeed will be the destiny of Louis Napo leon if he succeeds not only in founding his own power upon a secure basis, but in transmitting it unimpaired to a son who may inherit the talents of his father, while free from the difficulties and dangers which beset his early path and raised him only after long suffering and severe discipline to a position in which be has upheld the material interests of France with one hand, and nobly asserted her dignity and pro-eminence among the nations of Europe with the other." WHAT THEY SAY. To read the eilly articles in the " Republican presses is a task we are compelled to perform ; and if we could believe them we should be forced to the conclusion that the Democracy of this country was the most rascally thing on earth. Thus, for instance the abolition papers charge that all the Democracy want to extend the area of slavery. That lie has been told so long that it has got threadbare, and an addition iiii - made to it now by catching at an expression of Senator Douglas. The charge now is that the Denms:icy intend to extend slavery by force, and .44due " all the northern States to the slave powir• there is any body, fool enough to believe that let him. The next charge is that the Democracy is in favor of changing our government to a mon archy!! ! And it is asserted that a member of the present cabinet at Washington has declared for a monarchy !.! ! We can hardly conceive a greater insult-to the common sense of the people of this country than the circulation of such absurd and miserable falsehoods. The very utterance of them pre-supposes a degree of ignorance and stupidity on the part of readers that has no par allel in any other country. Yet with such bal derdash do the abolition presse! team. Again, they say occasionally that the Demo cratic party wants to get up a war t : A war with England or any other nation, so •we have a a war. Is there any one weak enough to believe that? But we cannot at present repeat more of these ridiculous absurdities ; nor will we believe that there are any considerable number of our fellow citizens who will not treat such idiot stories with the contempt they deserve. III'ICEESPORT BANK Our friends at M'Keesport will be somewhat disappointed at the defeat of their application for a bank. Bank charters have been granted where much less needed. A bank of deposit and discount only was asked, with a capital of one hundred thousand dollars. It is denied. There is probably a million and a half of capital actively employed in the coal trade, and in the iron making, steamboat building, and other enterprises in the immediate vicinity of M'Keos port, and the people up there thought a small bank would be useful. But the K ; N. Legisla ture of last winter granted charteti so freely that their democratic successors think best Le' hold up a year or two. It may come next year. M'Keesport is an active and growing place s and will yet be ono of the largest and most thriving boroughs in the Stite ; and, while we have banks at all, the facilities and advantages they may af ford should not be withheld from such a point, and given'to others where much less needed. WAR IN CENTRAT., AMERICA Colts Rica has formally 'declared war against Nicaragua and General . Walker. The army of Costa Itica numbers 5,000 men, in which there is said to'be quite a nUmberr'of Germans. Walk er's army by last accounts was about f,600 strong, nine hundred of whom are Americans, well sup plied with arms and munitions. There can be no doubt of the result in sueh a contest. With the exception of the few Germans the pistaltioa: -Army cannot contend against the rifles and the dare-devil character of the men under Walker's command. The war is just what Wallterneeded. It gives him a chance to ccnsolidate in the quick est way his power over all the Central American States. Ile T. C. Monona, Esq., bookseller, has just opened a new book and periodical store next door to the office of the Morning Post. He is in the right place now, and will sell books and pe riodicals fast. ERS stook, though not large, is choice and good. #.O - • MEM 7 41. t . . , TILE NEWS Pottoe,4o.,guropc is considered certain. The price of be has dein again is New :York, but the reialitylltnajtaprOred. , Pota.toCs arefselling (1,4 - n east at 20 cents per Little Rhode Island may turn up with a Demo cratic legislature yet. The confusion candidate is probably elected governor. Senator Hunter has presented a bill in the Unite Jnited States Senate providing for the gradual withdrawal from use of the Spanish coins. It is to get rid of the old "bps and 'levies." The Delegates of Kentucky to the Cincinnati Convention will support Linn Boyd as the candi date for Pr esident. Mr. Boyd for Vice President on the ticket with Buchanan would do exactly. The immigration to Kansas is now about one thousand per week. By the next session of Congress it will contain the 92,420 and come in as a State. Mr. Doughy has introduced a bill in the Senate providing for that event. Josiah Randall, an eminent Whig lawyer, of Philadelphia, s.tated in the Whig Convention of that city the other day that in the next election, "if the contest was between the Know Nothings and Democrats, he would vote with the Demo- untie party, and wish it success." _ The ice in the Susquehanna, just above the Juniata junction, on the let of April was firm enough to admit of persons crossing with safety. There was at that time no appearance of its speedy ,lisappearance This is almost unprece dented. A verdict fur $3OOO was, rendered against the New York Central Railroad Company in Albany, dirt week, for injuries sustained by the plaintiff, in consequence of the cars being thrown off the track. Ile was a drover, and had a contract with the Company, anti on his pass an exception to damages was printed. The defence relied upon this exception to exonerate them from liability, but the Court decided otherwise. IMPERSONALITY. OF THE PRESS.' On Tuesday the Journal contained an article quite prrsonal in relation to u,. We replied the next day in the sante. tone. On the next day the Journal gave us a serious and philosophic Irctare about the "Impersonality of the Press." To refer to the fact of birthplace was all right for that paper but all wrong for %I?. That is the I. , gic of oar neighbor. To such puerility we r tun ot make further reply. Tut friends of Buchanan don't get couch "pap' !lOW-a-days. Can't help it ; we are for Buchanan and ho will probably be the neat President. Denmark COIIIII TATIUN of ¶Pr• rot 'en la -• I have, says the Coponhageu corn-pm :Im, the Doily ..N . cas, informed you of the latest of Denmark to the ineritimo states t.• abolish the S 'tend Due , for tee itohlianification of 25,u00.000 rix ( about 4: 141011,10n11.1 The following is the way in which the llanish government calculates the umi.unt to he borne hy each State in proportion to the value of its Rallis 'rade : --England. t. 2,000,000 of ris dollars (11,300,. 000:1 Ru.fflu, 12,000,4(00; Prussia. 11,000,400 . Den mark. 2,000,000 ; Sweden, 2,nuu,000 ; Holland 2.- uOO,OOO ; Norway, 1,000,00 u ; France, 1,:.00.000: Belgium. 500,000 ; United States, 500,000: Nlecklen • Barg, 500,000; Lubec, 2.50.000; hamburg and hrem•-1, 200.000 together: Hanover, 150,001: W.l ',Autry, 7 54100 ; Spain, Portugal and Italy. 262,00 ii ',gather: South America, 17,000: and the other ; not Baltic States, dollars collectively. It further proposed to leave it to the option o f e a c h .Statt}•tn pay the amount at 00... e, or else the interest 'it 4 per coot. per annum, together with 2 per cooL annually to the sthking fund, terminable in twenty , •eight years. - _ SUNBURY A,n KRIS tinttaon D.—A bill is now rending before the legislature in regard to this Company, which provides fur the sale of the Main Line of the Public Works from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh, including the tax on tonnage passing ,ver the Pennsylvania Railroad, to the Sunbury sod Erie Company for seven and a half millions , f dollars, the whole amount to be secured by a first mortgage on the whole line of the road the said Company, with interest at the rate of per cent. per annum. Other ample guards are provided for the security of the State; and the terms of paymentare fixed at such periods as will be easy and advantageous for the Company. A Boy KILLED BY 1.)0134.—0n Saturday after noon a small boy about eight years of age, a son of Mr. \V lIITEREAn, on Cedar street, was attacked by two large dogs and so torn and mutilated that he heed but a short time after he was found. The boy had been sent to gather chips in a vacant lot near by, and was accompanied by one of the dogs t o stray and supposed to be a blood- hatind. which was joined by another dog: they were seen playing with the boy, and, as it is supposed, be coming enragtol, attacked and mntilited him in the most shockingmatiner, asnur informant states, tearing the flesh ahnost otf his body.— Crevelander. THY. Indiana ladies seem universally pugnacious this Spring. We have previously mentioned their assault on the groceries in Williamsport and Princeton, where they spilt much pour whisky. We now read in the Indianapolis Journal that on Monday last a company of ladies in Eagle Village, in Boon Co., visited a grocery keeper in that place, and relieved him of his stock of liquors, and on Tuesday, visited a grocery there and filled his cellar with large quantity of liquor previously kept in casks. FOR THE CITIZENS OF EITT9BUROII, II ERALLY A double hint, to the commercial and mernan tile clas,es, a triple hint, to those engaged in the tnanufArturing, the mining, and the agriculture of the country that surrounds Pittsburgh. Let roe sat• to one and all, the world knows compara- . . tively Lttle of the real merits of Pittsburgh : they are almost as unknown as those of Jeddo, or Mongolia. While the Toledo, tj"lilamu kies, the Chicagos And the Galenas of the land, with the Rock Islands, the Lasalles and the St. Josephs are ringing in every ear on both sides the Atlantic: while agents from these magic tosvn= are stationed and swarming in every eastern city, to flood them with hand-hills and maps, and seise on every European emigrant the moment he lands, and thus secure his money and his future labor, to those fancy towns, the citizens of Penn sylvania, of Allegheny county, and even of Pitts burgh, proper, are many of them in midnight darkness with regard to what is going on, amid die din and smoke of this American Birming ham, and as ignorant as our antipodes of the out side influences by which those magic northern towns are stimulated, and prematurely forced into notoriety and ultimate importance, to the neglect and absolute injury of cities and towns less presuming. And why? Because, hitherto, Pittsburgh has been, not as a "city on a hill," but like a "light under a bushel ;" and for want of a liberal hand towards editors and publishers, the feeble lights that now glimmer and flicker among, her thousands of work-shops, instead of being brilliant stars amid the general gloom, are like the burning of tal low candles under a basket, or faltering rush lights ip a tin lantern. While groping about for more light, in this be nighted realm of coal and iron, I accidentally stumbled upon an embryo plant, in your midst, that deserves, though it has not yet received, ' your fostering care and husbandry. Though in digenous and not exotic, it is to a great majority of Pittsbnrghers yet unknown ; and there are many to whom, if known, it would present no chipsd still it richly deserves the guardian MTV; Oite'and all. Though yet like the tender shoot that peeps from the shell of the acorn, it should be the hope and the aim of every Pitts burgher, to behold it, at no distant day, a tower ing, wide spread, deep rooted oak, yielding a goodly shade, and casting its broad leaves liber ally to every breeze. I allude to the " Pittsburgh Price Currant,"— the first number of which, though some months old, is now in my bands, and presents a whole broadside of valuable statistical 'matter, enume rating and describing hundreds of manufacturing establishment., in and around Pittsburgh, of - which I was before entirely ignorant. This single number, revised, put in proper shape, and widely diffused throughout the land, in imitation of similar sheets from rival cities north and west, would be worth to Pittsburgh tin hundred thousand dollars in a single year . ; and if continued weekly for a single year, it would I be worth a million of dollars, though it would ,cost less than a million cents ; and these cents would . be willingly paid by those who need the information. If business men would send it by dozens and by hundreds to their friends and cus tomers throughout—the land, it would be like bread cast upon the waters ; it would beget pa trons and customers by thousands, as similar I efforts have done in the more active, energetic, fast-going, fast-growing, 'wealth-accumulating i cities of the north and west. I- want a hundred coptcB. Your Rochester friend and neighbor, M. T. C. GOULD • . , . . . .. .- ' . . ~.e,,,..,-',"--• ' : , ' • . ' ' - : -7 7.:,•":?i' , • - '' -, ' .. . • . . . . ' • • , • . . , . ~:..!-, • . -' t •. . , c' •- ' . , ' "- .• '4 -.... ' ' ' . " ti. , 4 '' 't . ... r 7 '',. ' ..,.. '., -. • ..- :-.:., 4: '''' : . :.: ' " - '4 .' ' • ~‘ • . i:.").4-_ , .2^, n ~• . 4 „., . . ~. . , , • .. - -..- • I Correspondence of the Pittsburgh Pond TO WIIOM IT MAY CONCERN. FROII II AELRISBURG. Al 1101 Att Or REPR/tSENTAT IVES, 1 i DR. CALVIN M. FITCH, '-. I WednesW, April 2. j . H AVING JUST RETURNED FROM ii I l ouise met at nine o'clock. • EURODE. E wouId announce to his patients, and others . lit Western Permaylvaain,that he will visit Pittsburgh early Mr. Edinger offered lA:resolution that Thurs. ln the ensuing menth, and that thoitilwishing to avail thine ' selves of his system of treating day night beset apart for the consideration of , Throat and Pulmonary Diseases, Bank bills in their order as they came from the • Mutts PARTICULARLY Senate. After several speeches, and as many ; CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA svn different motions, the " resolve " prevailed. So CHRONIC BRONCHITIS, the House will meet at 7 o'clock and adjourn By. Medicinal Inhalation•, Mechanical at CI o'clock, for the consideration of bills named. ,temedica, ' Will thus an t d tve C s?t u oe s po ta r t t u un i i i ty m rt ol The Governor vetoed the printing bill, and on Da. PITCH nail replant in PITTSBUGH from THURSDAY MiNtlliTNO , APRIL THIRD, TO SATURDAY motion of Mr. Foster it was made the order for ; svtl.wtsu,3tAT TENTH, unsalted daily (Fabbath 0.- to-morrow morning. What will be done with it . ce lh e " 4l . 1‘; hith L im e "itlo"' may Lo I ; c ti TO FOUR, at bin Rooms I cannot say at this date. The Joint Committee lat the 4 I T. CLAIR HOTEL, on the subject of Printing will meet to-morrow . co rce.x of Penn and St. Clair arteets, (entrance on Penn et.) :It 12 o'clock ; therefore something definite should I For all forms of Incipient or seated DISEASE OF THE be done, and that soon. It is a waste of time ottusiNsols,,,gat•ittort.. agderan on Le 3 m . D e i n . ts u , f , the ti ? . . ,, ste ,r in ly proceeding this worse than useless way of proceeding. Catarrh, Dympzit, o Coatl i e n c tr ia, and Fe- The Governer gives good sound reasons for re- Pe les wishing . to consult. hurunable to visit DR. FITCII, fusing his signature to the bill. When it is print- I can do no by sending hint a written Statement of their case, to which a prompt answer will Is: retuned, giving opinion ed I will send a copy. Mcßae and stating expense of treatment. A PERSONAL On motion of Mr. Johns the use of the Hall EXAMINATION ALWAYS PREFERRED. was granted to Mr. Lane to lecture on the pro- DR. FITCH'S associate, Dr. J. W. SYKES, will he with. to priety of admitting Kansas as a State in the asse it I,,tati,tbatuerittbietathe f r. . ir . s i lin w h ' iTg " h f ls h tt a a P t men t, th m u L n - 1,1 - Union." On this there was a lengthy debate, tentinD hint early, that he may have them In charge an long in which almost all the talkerst ook sides. Mr. I'm [...ad.. Johns battled most manfully for the right of tint C1A,LY,1,N1,1,,..,,Fr1y,,111,,,u,i5h,,,,,,e5, it e, expressly , u vi n t d h erLt r ol granting the Hall. It was bitterly opposed by S EITtIr. and woUld roll attention to the Cflin which he certain Democrats; their hostility astonished me, I rotted himself called epee to publish immediate.[)' on his re for above all others Democrats should never fear tI11:111•T`1:—_ mit3L-4,1:w to hear the truth spoken publicly. Knowledge ' SHINGLE MACHINE. should be souglit by all and not smothered. Kendall's Patent IM P R 01' E D 'fie gentlemen who voted for the lecture did l themselves honor, for during the whole of this Double ACting' River &Shaver. session the Hall has been granted to all kinds of pi i E attention ,if Shingle and Lumber people, and to refuse it in this instance would . _ dealers. speeululdrs and utile., in dlEtitAlitt Lit thin tin. have been an insult to intelligence and worth. t o , , , , tas t, t , a; 1,te,:•,;•,:,t,t,e1,;,,pw,,,t,,,,,•,t,„, ti ts a t ow b , , , ,, , , , , , se e rt x ted i t , o f,,, the ßt o r e t,, b 4 lie t,, T•t d it is a long Lane that has no turn, and this the si,„;-,ag.st,,,,gt". •• Regular Democrats ' will hod before their Vartons euitosi s a d ...Its , ...thine. have been invented to tusking rqtingles, but it to a well known fact that Shin day is over. xi, , oi ~r wened acro's the drain are ,trite bs. flimsy fur tin MOI:013 of Mr. Met 'allnent, the House t ,.,titic purposes. Numerous Inventions have recently ttp agrekel to tueet hereafter at °t „' c l o ck ~i , M o e- i"...1 for riving nml shaving. tiel thoee Lave all been con days, and adjourn at one o'clock. Mr. More- '1'iu„':;:',1.,:',",,,::;."34,,,4„7,",:,1LT,Trtitn0.7,dri.„"„.',. "L'had,,,,,"brair,°l4:;. head then moved that this il , Ilse hold an lifter- 5i0.,0 , , 0 Md. alimAt invariably runs off. This difficulty is noon session on Saturday . at .., o'clock until 5 I rlttne , Y ouvlnled by o clock. Agreed to. KENDALL'S MACHINE, Reports were then in order front Standing, Which Oral sold,. foot the nide of the block a pine , thick t 'ornmitt res. enough Ha two shioxlen, which in in•parateit In the