:5 s ' 4:\ v w -T*fe ,jss>Vi .', • .f. ■-.- ; ; .. . •V'S Y aiY Y~;“- Y ' -.: '"S--. ■ v ■Y : . •; '• ■■ .- ■■ ■'. ' , > -‘ - : ‘ ' IhMM&g&N ■Mass feagf! IP&»WS&W mtium iMMP MUM WkW^PIS^ '*mmm «pMf^ mm mm? fWr *s§&? m M JEffliw j£b§a£ipM£s^M| -W'V-: ' : - - t ir"\ r -—?"*' ?hi>->-\ *■ a ?s>to*J»-A *r. &•'•* X'*t'L '? 1 "•-• - f «-'• r ,„ .*»i J - ■ “'■ i-S# gßfpn «M PS s&s&g Ip] ffi igl Inihj Anting lost. urn nTurui ritimra Harpor & Phillips, Editors & Proprietors.- PITTSBURGH: -WEDNESDAY MORNING:: ypygtht-BA S9tttl»,Ba Eatt. o» TTut, • nnrtf? th» Coa»titatfa>t*: «t»taimAa«f oftn«o«a!iUi&Bsail;M£trutoeTotlos4a tb» CoßUßonßrotierAt*^ NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET. FOB PUK.SIDENT. „ FRANKLIN PIERCE. op til- if iiAiirsinuL FOR TICK PBKSTpF.NT, WILLIAM R- KING > ■ ’OF^L^inAHAn FOB JCIKIB OF GEORGE W. WOODWARD, . OP X.VHBRtrKOOI'tiTI. TOR CANAI. COMMISSIONER, WILLIAM HOPKINS,' op wAsmt-GTOs cotCTTi: DEMOCRATIC. ADDRESS* She great length of this document excludes from oar oolumnsthis morning our usual variety of sens and editorial. A Cobbeceio:?.— -In the article io relation to the Cleveland Fair yesterday, we should have stated that .Messrs; Cornwell,-Kerr & Co. exhib ited: spesimens of gig homes, instead of gig har neas, as we were made to say. WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA STATE FAIR. 1 Wo hope that the citizens of Western Pennsjl vania "will agitate tho subject of holding a State Pair in this city, some time during the Summer of 1853. The facilities for. reach ing Pittsburgh by River, Railroad and-Canal,, are unsurpassed ,by any other city in the Union. The difficulties attending the transpor tation of articles for exhibition to Fairs in the Eastern part of the .State, have heretofore pre sented onr Mechanics, Manufacturers, and Farmers from sending abroad specimens of their shill, genius, and products. A Fair iu Pittsburgh, therefore, on a largo and comprehensive scale, and managed in a spirit of liberality, will do much towards developing the resonrees of West ern Pennsylvania, and exhibiting the taste, gc nions, and handiwork of our enterprising popu lation. If a State Fair for Western Pennsylva nia, is gotten up in the manner we have suggest ed, it will undoubtedly be attended with good results. The Board of Managers of the Alle gheny'County Agricultural Society should take a lead 'at an early, day in this matter, and Invito members of Agricultural Societies in other conn ties to join in.the exhibition.* An invitation should also ho extended to the citizens of other States to visit onr city on the occasion, and bo come competitors for the various prizes. . There are ample grounds in either Pittsburgh or .Alle gheny city, to accommodate one hundred thou sand persons, and there will.ho no., difficulty .in furnishing, all who may visit ns with good board ing and comfortable qoartere* The suggestions here made, will, wc feel con fident, meet with the hearty' approval of every | citizen of Western*Pennsylvania; and nil that ja neocssary to insure the success of an undertaking of the kind mentioned, is for men of, spirit and enterprise to make an early and energetic move-, meiit in tho matter. Who will seoohd our mo rion 1-Who will be a leader in this good work ? However much people may disagree on.the.snb-, jectof politics," this is'a question on which wc oaOkhuve unity ,:ttnd concert, ,-of action. At the approaching county Fair in October, wo trust ' the subject wilt-bp acted, upon, and every effort made to give form and character to the sugges tions above set forth. , “AM. THE DECENCY-” That modest, courteous gentleman who stands sponsor for the editorials' of the Gazette, - , affects to ha shocked at oar notices of the mean recep tion the whips of Pittsburgh gave to Gon. Scott, Hjb “self-respect” will not permit him to notioo th'eiu. This is on.old trick of this moo, but it has been played off so often that it lias become extremely 6tole. The same course. was" tried with the taemorahle't fifteen” in ’44,. but it .did not deceive the people. What have .. we .said of Gen Soott’a visit to .Pittsburgh that isnota,fixed fact ? The manner in which the facts are stated maynot be pleasing to the ** self-respect’’of the finical favorite : of. the celebrated “fifteen,’! hnt they are facts notwithstanding, and wo stick to them with the tenacity we do to positive truths in nil cases. - His “Self-respect ” appears to come over him at very peouliar occasions. : He forgot all about It, whenhe was uttering the most infamous cal ninnies against Gen. Pierce ; heconld not think of it when he grossly misrepresented Judge Woonwann but, now, he has seen something in the Pott about the shabby reception the .whigs gavo Scott, and he at onoe falls hack on his dig nity as an apology for his political duplicity.— This triok Will not serve him". The Port has said nothing about Scott:which ia.not.borrio out by facta, oud we defy the'matt possessed of such a doubtful amount of “self-respect” to prove anything to the. contrary. He will, not try it, however, for he knows that we have stated no thing hnt the truth. GOOD NEWS. We are pleased to learn, from, the Jefferson Star, at Brookville, that the Grand Jurors of Jefferson county, have authorized the .Commis sioners to subscribe $90,000 to the capital stpok of the Allegheoy Volley Boilroad. We also learn from the Clarion Democrat that the Grand Jury of Clarion county, with ouo ex •"orsption voted in favor" of requesting the Com missioners to subscribe onß hundred and sixty eight thousand dollars to the Allegheny Valley -Boilroad; This they did unconditonially. ; - Bhi Meeting in Westmoreland. We are informed that a grand gathering of the democracy of the «' Starof the West” will bo held ; at Greenshurg on-Thursday, the 7th. of Octo her. Westmoreland is one of thedemocratio stars that never sets, and we can assure oar neighbors that • they will have hundreds fromour benighted re gion tosee them Bhineon the occasion, vWe hope that all adjoining counties will he strongly re-, presented, and that it may be a meeting worthy of the cause and'tho strong democratic strong hold in which it will bo held. -■ - Omissios.—ln oar -notice of the Ohio-State Fair at Cleveland, we iaadvertontly omitted ma king mention of the nrtioles exhibited by Messrs. MoKstvi & Blatb, of this oity. They received a Silver goblet worth §BO for the best cast and blister steel, and thqfirst premium and a diplo ,ma for their wrought iron strop hinges made by machinery.' Experienced workers in steel gave it as their opinion, that the steel manufactured by Messrs. McKelvy & Blair was in all respeots snperlor to the host article imported from Eng land. A Compliment to Pittsburgh: Manufacturers, tfe have been permitted tocopjr the following despatch, and Ugives ns pleasure to record the hlghcompliment awarded to oar worthy fellow ; townsmen. CtEVSSAwe, Sept. 18,1852. - -MesBre.NEGLEt & Mohas:— board will forward to you twmrty-two " premium diplomas by express. The target 'number istuea. A Good Hit. —Join Van Burenin his speech ' at Newburgh, N. Y.,_ among other things said tint after November next, Gen. Soott would be delivered of oil apprehension of o “a fire in the resr,” whlch had been ihe mghtmaro of his life 1 because then he would he so fer behind {hat there would bB nobody behind to firo at him. ADDRESS - OF TUT. DEMOCRATIC COOTT COMMITTEE OF O lICSPONDIINCB. FEtLOW-clmcss :-ir» bediC " C r„™m»te7of tioiis from the Democratic County Committee oi Correspondence, we proceed “ > . add ”®= ' the importance of the political contest which la now encoding the attention of the American neoplc. Before alluding to the questiooß in. Yolved in the canvass, permit nB to say, that the prospects of the. Democracy arc cheering and fall of hope. The certain triumph of our party in November has already beeitfdeTeloppd. SnttUo united; ilnd cheerful manner with: ■which- our nominations have been received by the people.' Tho enthusiastic demonstrations of popular feel ing which have greeted the nomination of Pieroe and ltiog in every section of ourtmion, inspire SEPT. 22 t o conviction of their being triumphantly rati, fied-at the;polls in -November.: Oar party, which, when united* has always.beea invincible, is now complete and perfect in its organization; From,the Granite Commonwealth in whioh Gen. Pierce resides, to tlie far South, the homeoi Win; E: King, union nnd harmony in the Demo cratic rantB uro strikingly moniicsted, present ing a most gratifying contrast with the shatter* ed and weakened ranks of onr desponding op ponents. - Here in Pennsylvania, our cause -and candidates have aroused a feeling of confidence among all the members of our parly, unknown since ihe glorious days of Jackson. _ln every locality in our Commonwealth, a wonderful dc greo of confidence is manifested by our friends, indicating, with unerring certaintyj tbo. glorious i triumph which awaits us, But atnid: this joyous | and encouraging prospoct.of glorious triumph, ! we must not forget that wo have an ovcrvigilant and nnscrnpnlous organization opposod-to ns—- an organization Which is now making its last ■desperate strngglo under its present name, to retain tbo control of the public places of our Government. With such a party opposed to us, Stimulated, ns it is, with the hope of reward,mo matter how crippled and distracted it may bo, wo must not teat from our patriotic labors to re deem the Government from itß corrupting ioflu : eiicc, until the ballot,boxes proclaim our efforts ■ victorious:—Vigilance and industry will secure for ub this gratifying result. It is not impoSßlhlo, fellow-citizens, that a ma jority of'the people of this country will entrust thoir Government to Whig control. : To con clude that they will, after their experience of tUB-lnst few years, would bo to doubt their ca pacity for sfilf-government. The Whig party never obtained control of our Government but by deception; and, at no period of their exis tence, have they so shamefully betrayed tho trust reposed in them, uS they have during tho present administration. Their onlyobjcctsoema to bo to get possession of tho treasury of tho people; they ore not contending for political principles, for, ollthey ever possessed they hove abandoned; they propose nothing now in the way of legislation, and oven if they did, so mea gre are their numbers in Congress, that there would be no possibility of their suggestions be ine adopted. What, then.nro tho Whigs con tending for in the presentcontest? Nothing but office; they have nothing else to Stimulate them to exertion but the hope of place,—all they hope for is, to bo quartered upon the people. It ib this hope whioh prompts the Whig leaders to the , desperate efforts they are making to retain con trol of tho Government. , The hope of future , peculation upon the money of the Government is tho trno secret of the efforts making by lead ing Whigs to getoontrolof it.. ThohoncstWhig O'tizen, who boUeveß his party right, may con- ; sider these charges extravagant accusations, but ; they arc not: they are troths, nnd susceptible | of most triumphant proof. _ : , | Let us go back n few years and consider the public oourso of this profligate Whig party. We | all remember the coarse it pursued iu the., cam paign of 1841 and 1818. In the first, onr oppo-, ncnt3 in' Pennsylvania, in their attachment for , the Tariff of 1842, forgot every other question. : Upon this moasnre they planted themselves, and declared unless Jit was returned desolation and - ra i n would overtake tho businees of the country. They appealed to the people to rally to tho main tenance of their idea of a Tariff, ns upon it.de, needed thoir business and the'entire prosperity of our country. Thoy kept this offensive crook : iog in the people's ears for t years after, until tho assembling Of thoir lost National Convention.— Then they abandoned their notions of protection os conveniently as they formerly disposed of a National Bank. Onr people moat well remember the contest of 1844, and how onr opponents pre dicted ruin and bankruptcy in the event of Mr.. Polk’s election. Ho was Ucnonnoed as Free Trade* nnd mortal enemy of Pennsylvania inter ests. All tbo lies and schemes which: plottlog, politicians coaid invent were brought to; bear, in order to prove the Democratic enndidntcan ene my of American industry. The celebrated Kano, letter wos denounced as a Free Trade, document, and tea author ridiculed for daring to expect Pennsylvania's support for the Presidency. Do- : vaststion was predicted in the event of his elec tion, if in tho administration of tho government, hewbservcdtbo doctrines of tho Kanc letter.—. Every one remembers these doletel warnings of tho Whigs, and every one remembers, also, very , distinctly, the little attention which tho people; paid to them. . , But in order to give an exhibition of w big hon esty, or rather, Whig villainy upon this question of tho Tariff, wo propose to copy a portion of that same Kano letter, and place it along side of the Whig platform passed at Baltimore, and ac cepted as good Tariff doctrine by General Scott We ask Whig workingmen, and. honest- Whigs generally, to read and reflect upon these two documents. , -Extract/ram tetter “I am in favor of o Tariff ■ for HeTcaue, flacb a one w willjrißldftSunrcient nmowu -to the treasury to defray tbe ; expenses -of the government edministerod** - ■ Tt| Adjusting the details of a ': reronno Tariff* I linvo jicroto ■ foro' pancUoned sneb nioder* ate dlserirqlnatii}" dnUes os irotxld produce thomnounfoi revonnoneeded, and* at the tome time' afford-h^nabie : incldcntal'jmJWTOoa.to xntr homo induatty. •I- am oppo l :sed to.;a.Teriff for protection ■ merixTv -and not for xfrrcnuc, ■ - In my jodgmoat it is tbo . doty of tho .government to extend,: to for os it jimy-oe, practicable to do so, by. it* • revenue laws and all other : means vrithin It* power, fair and just -protection to.all the ; , ffreat intertsts pf the ■ whole Union, . embracing tore, Manufactures,, the .m* chan&sJ&r'; Commerce ;craz) - :: . yavifjaUonr . Hero now are the two platforms: the author of the first was denounced as. on enemy to Amer ican industry, while Gen. Scott and those who approve of the-other ore eulogized as the espe« cial frtends of onr manufootqring interests- ; Bc jnemher, fellow, citizens, that the; Whig National Platform; from whiefi' wo have selected this Tariff extract; was adopted by the convention which nominated Gen. Scott for the Presidency ;, and remember, also, that Gen, Soott has.-en dorsed its doctrines over his own name. _Readit carcfally, and compare it line for lino with Mr. Polk’o sentiments, and then comprehend, if you can, tho extent of the profligacy of those who have' been constituting themselves the especial frlend.ofi.Pennsylvania's. interest.. Is such a party fit to bo trusted with the government of this Union t A party whioh thus proclaims its own dishonesty and disregard for all .shadow of public consistency. After oonvnising the country with needless agitation about tho Tariff; prostrating tho cnergieß of the people by fearful forebodings, and propheoying bankruptcy and ruin throughout the land, we find these Whig leaders falsifying'thoir own teaohingsby aban doning the very polioy upon whioh they relied for State 'nnd Notional prosperity, ! Bat more than this • they have nominated a man-for Vico Presi dent! Wzf. A. Gbaham, of North Carolina, who it an oven and avowed Free Trade man. Ho was a Senator of the United States in 1842, when tho Tariff of thatyear became a law, and ho, was one of its most determined opponent!,—he spoke against it and voted asthe rpoordwill prove. Still, in the faoe of thesefoots, the abandonment of tbo protective principle by the Whig National Convention* .and the nomination, of an.undißguiBed Free Trade man, for. tho se cond offiee in tho Government, the Whig , or gans ond leaders of Pennsylvania have the affront? ry to 1 atUl talk of their love for the industry of onr people; • -. .-v: r 1.. ’ The’Democracy, and the honest Tariff, men bf the Whig party -can see from this simple state? mont of undeniable facts, the utter faithlessness of the Whig, loaders. No moto.need be said, we aro sure, to intelligent thinking men, to estab lish tne hypocritical canting of Whig editors and. orators upon this question,of protection. The sentiments which they abused Polk and his party for enterttoning in 1844, they deliberately: endorse as their own in .1852, and nominated an acknowledged Free Trade man to .be the exponent of their creed. Lotus now tako -o-hasty glahoe at the conduct •of onr adversaries the canvass .of 1848; then, as in 7 44, they acted with open. deceit.~ The prominent point in theiroreed, was Gek. Tatloe asd Feub Boinl Although ; candidate wasa large slaveholder, ail his interests i being identified with the institution: of elaveiy, i still the'Whig politicians* with their, nsualaudh*. he was opposed to slaveiy*; and in favor of the WntroT Pnovisp. -Many, very many, honest anti-slavery men were deceiv- cd by these statements, and gave voteß, according* ly, in favor of Gem Taylor.' But as soon as the Whigs obtained control of the Government, what i did they do t. Did they recommend ‘the Wilmot j, Proviso, as they, promised-to deT. Notat all?r. they adopted the dootride of- Non-Intervention, the dootrine of the Democracy, and the verycop-. poeite of that whioh they had contended for hut J a few months before. 1848 the Whigs advo* i o&ted theWilmot Proviso to the verge'of dissol- I ving the Union; in 1852 they have a platform | containing as much pro-slavery dootrine as South- I em slave-holders demanded; This Whig plat fqrm, pledged to the maintenance of the Fugitive Slave Law, to oppose aU alteration or amend i ment of that law, calculate! to weaken itfl pro visions, has received the public sanction of Gen. : ; Soott, who promises toenforco it in all-ita vigors Yes, - our Anti-Slavery Whigs ' of Pennsylvania > have bound themselves to regard.the Fugitive Slave Law as “ mtntial in the nationality of the I Whig party and the integrity of the Union” Docs I the annals of political proiiigooy exhibit another I case orapostacy so glaring as this.? It is oven -1 worse than their conduct upon the Tariff. This, I fellow-citizens,, is part of the platform of Alle- I gheny County Whiggery, which, up to the as- I sembiing oC Ub National Convention, .could .not . I Qnd words strong enough to express their detest 1 tation of- slavery. Thus wo hive presented to. j us the humiliating spectacle of .a great party,, which was for protection iu *44; indifferent about it in 1852, and which was Anti-slavery in .1848, 1 up to its eyes for slavery now., It is true that a | few of the most reckless of our opponents affect j to despise the -platform :of.their party, which. I their candidato endorses; but this shallow device I is but an-additional exhibition of their nontempt -| for tbecommou understanding of .the people.-rr * I With extraordinary audacity they V spit upon * I the platform,*’ and at the same time, urge the r | election of one who is pledged to observe its in * I junctions. ; : •’ * Lot ue now aUudo to the strange .coarse pur sued by oar opponents,: ia relation to those; who? served their country in the war with •Their conduct here is as hollow and hypocritical as It is upon the other subjects to which wo .have, directed attention. Every citizen,-be be soldier 'or civilian, is conversant with the unrelenting opposition whioh the AYhigs made to the Mexican, war. The war itself was denounced by damnable, and those engaged in its prosecution as murderers and cut throats. It is notorious, that the Whigs in Congress refused, to votofood i and clothing to tho atmy, aud even went so far i as to talk of impeaching the President tot re i commending tho prosecution of hostilities. In reply to patriotic* appeals, made by Democratic Senators, in the name of our common country, to vole food and clothing to our men, and push tho war to & epeedy and honorable termination, Whig orators and Statesmen denounced the war, aud hoped that those engaged in it might “ be welcomed, by the enemy, with bloody hande to hot Pliable gracee!" We need not, surely, ask the survivors of tho Mexican cnmpsigu, in this lo cality, to remember these facts. They ore his torical, and marked upon the annals of the time. But there is a matter which we remember well, and which wo wish to impress upbn the minds of those gallant men amongst us, who escaped the bullets and diseases of Mexico:—Had Allegheny County Whiggcry had tho control of their lives,- not a single one of thorn would overhayo, return ed to their homes, to tell the sad story of their comrades’ deaths. Wo have a .Tight to tell the survivoreof that war, how they were treated, in their absence, by those very Whig politicians; who aro’now asking their votes. Opposition to the war and administration was not bad enough for them;—no, they extended, their hatred of both to the desolate families of some of our ah-, sent volunteers. When Democratic, Committees were appealing to our citizens to contribute something to relieve the distresses of tho wives and children of those who were struggling in their country’s cause, they wore metwith sneers from tho 1 very men who are now soliciting sol diers’votes. “ Tho war is: a Democratic mea sure, 1 ’ they replied to our Committees, “ and let DemocraU take eare of the widow! and orphan! made by it! enormity. This was their .heartless reply. We charge this Savage conduct upon the Whig leaders of our county, who arc now on. deavoringto obtain the voice of those intrepid Soldiers, for whoso children they refused to pur chase bread. This heartlcssness was the conduct of tho Whig leaders of Allegheny county. Let us here pause a moment and consider what has been mado manifest In our remarks.— We have shown, beyond all cavil that the Whig parly has abandoned its doctrines of protection and aad-slavery. Wbat motive could have in duced tho Whigs of Pennsylvania to abandon these two cardinal-principles of their creed?— What object could they, and tho loading Whigs of the freo States generally, have inabandoniog all the little consistency they ever professed ?.»It Is, fellow-oitizcns, for the purpose of retaining power. -By abandoning their doctrines, they expected to lullthe Democratic party into a false security, while they themselves made another: desperate effort for tho spoils of office. This is their game; thoy JBo.longer openly object to Democratic principles, being contented with pos sessiou of the Qovornmcnl. They know that their principles have been condemned by the peo ple; that experience has rendered them odious, and hence the guerilla warfare they are now en caged in. All they desire Is power; oontrol of the finances of tho Government, .that thoy may continue to rob tho people. The history of the present administration-and the present conduct of tbeWhlg leadera. juStify us in arriving at this conclusion. In a time of profound peaeo, 1 under Whig rule, our Government has cost ns more than it did daring Mr. Polk’s administration, in tho.timo of tho Mexican war. Hour has this extravagance occurred 1 Why, by squandering,the people’s tnonoy upon favorite contractors, and paying off. old, absurd clalmß, in which the members of the Cabinet were thomselvesinterested. This is the manner in which the revenues of tho country have been wasted. We .ask Whigs,,as.well as. Democrats, to heed what vre here state, and be* lievo nothing thut wo do.not prove. Our limit ed Bpaco prevents us, at this time, from exposing many -of tho corruptions .whioh have been brought to light by tho investigations of Con gress we ask attention, however, to a few, to tho trntb of whioh Congress hos borno ppon tea timony.■ ■ ; ■, •• The first fraud upon:the treasury* committed by the officers of the Government, to whioh we direct attention, is the notorious Galphin fraud __one of the most glaring robberieß evqrperpo trated Upon the treasury of any nation. Cer tainly, notbing' ea reckless ever took, place in this Government before. Wo have put ourselves to some trouble to ascertain all the facts connect ed with, this shameful fraud, and we ask for them the careful consideration of our readers.‘ • “ Soventy-nine years ago, under tho reign of King George HI, the Creek and Cherokee Indi ans beoame indebted to Georgo Galphin, anTudi? an trader, in tho sum of nine thousand seven ' hundred and odd pounds sterling, amounting in i our currenoy to about forty-throe thousand five hundred dollars.. This sum the State of Georgia, i ' whioh beoame possessed of loads belonging to these Indians, agreed to pay., Attorseventy-five years, that State succeeded in tranaforring tho claim to tho great hearer of all suoh burdens— r the General Government; and, oa the second of. : Maroh, 1849, twodaysbefore,Polk’s administro- 1 tion expired, the whole amount (48,500) was paid by Mr. Walker, Secretary of the Treasury, ,un~i der an aot of Congress. “It appears that Gov. Crawford, of Georgia, afterwards Seoratary of War, had booome half owner of thiß claim, and that he. reoeivod nearly $22,000 as his share. It also appears that Gov. Crawford applied to Mr. Walker for the payment of the interest amounting to slBB,ooo—nearly-. ,two hundred thousand dollars of interest, on a ‘’principal of less than forty-four thousand—and that Mr. Walker refused to pay it. Two days afterwards, Gov. CrawfortJ became Secretary of War under Gen. : Taylor, expira tion of a year, the opinion of his colleague, Mr. < Keverdy Johnston, Attorney,General,wob procu red in favor of the payment of the intereet ; and the whole amount ($188,000). was actually paid, Gov. Crawford reoelving over. $94,000. as his, share. A more shameful transaction is not on record, or one perpotrated under- circumstances of grosser indelicacy—tme member of the cabinet extraotingfrom the treasury,undor the official opinion of another; an -enormous sum of money, the payment of whioh tho majority of a commit tee of Congress, after the most elaborate eXami - nation, pronounced , to be unauthorized by the act of Congress under which It was made, and not in conformity with law and precedent:; - “ About the Bame.time, similar-tranßoetions oc curred in the Department of tho Interior. The Seorotnry of that Department, Mr. Ewing, as ap pears by the report of a committee of Congress, paid $82,000 on - an old revolutionary : claim amounting- to $4,000; $28,000 interest on a principal of one seventh , that sum. Tho major ity of the oommitteo reported-this paymont to have been made in violation of law. -The same, committee unanimously report another paymont of $50,000 on an Indian olaim, to have been im properly ordered , by tho Secretary of tiie Inte rior: It appears that this olaim hod boon reject ed bv Mr. Medill, tho; Commissioncr.Af Indian Affairs undep Mrl Polfc’a administration, and that the rejection had. been sanctioned by Gov. Many, as Seoretory of War. . We might go on with expositions of frauds optt mitted npon our National Treasury, byGovem mentoffioials, who should have protected it from violation, but want of spaoa will' not'pSrmlt' it, thorn the lost VHv'g Platform. Government should bo con ducted on principles of the strictest- economy, - and reve4 auo sufficient fur the expen* n appropriated by Congress, though never, is appropriated, I think, and nearly $200,000 erest, which have been appropriated olse ere, upon a construction by the Attorney Gen ii, overruling and overriding the decision of > Comptroller of the Treasury. The princi iis monstrous, undue man can maintain itbc* n toe people. If such things can bo done, I seat, there is no necessity for this body to hold i purse-strings, and you may as well at onee home, and abandon your treasury to your At rneya General," tract from tpttch of Ban, R. O, Schenk, page 328, rob 22, parti, same Appendix to the Con grcssional.Globet •* I am inquired of,whether I believe it to bo Jpcr thattho Secretary of. War,-while holding ice as the head of ona of the deportments of s government, should prosecute, or be interest , ns Mr. Crawford Was, ia the prosecution ore dm ogoinst the government.- And being thus luired of, I soy I will not shrink from my duty -answering,-and am compelled to deolaro. that lo not think that proper. Suoh is thß answer tich 1 ehall-proposo by my amendment ; it is e answer which I shall bo constrained to give, some shape by my vote. Ido not wish to ca rgo upon the evils -that might arise from the cognition, as a practice,-of toe act or relation lion I thus condemn. All that I wish to say i the subject is this—that Ido not think the. lad of one of your departments should havo. a rim depending, and be interested in its prose ition, beforo any one. of the other, .departments. ’ toe government, of I which ho is o component urt,” Bublio indignation .became so aroused againßt icso plunderers of too public . moneys, they ere compelled to leave too seat of government, hey abandoned their posts, but took care to hold ito their plunder. Crawford wont back to. eorgia, but accounts of his conduct had pro dded him. The honest masses of that Stato re lived him with scorn, and drove him, not only ut of their presence, but out of the Union. He >ft for England, where he associated with Bri- Sh nabobs, rolllog in. luxury, purchased with ur people's money. Ewing, tho other plunderer, I still In this country, in Ohio, braving public ldlgnation, and devoting his time and talents to landoringthe Hcmooratio-parly. Nut with shind ig this corrupt man's infamy, he is the ohqsen sader of Ohio Whiggery; which not only en= orses bite,-bjit seems toglory in his guilt. Nay loro, this very identical .-.person,- who but (view liontbs before-was driven from Washington for heft, was chosen to preside over the Whig goth-' ring at Niagara, a few weeks ago. We leave lUr readers to ponderupon these facts;-they are bets indisputable, and ■■ Incontrovertibiy estab ished; and we may appeal to them triumphant-, y, nndinquiro whether wo have; not made good, rar charges ■of corruption; profligacy, aod randulcnt designs, against the National Whig tarty.' We have thna far confined oar observations to .he Whig party; and- when we say the Whig: tarty, wo mean its Tenders—not the people of :hnt organization. The Whig masses are as loncst as wo are;- and as solicitous, too, for lonesty in tho administration of - our Govern sent They, os well as we, want honest public tervants—men -who are not only honest them telvcs,. but who have the experience and capacity to compel others to be honest also. Against Gen. Scott, the candidate of too Whig, party, wo are not disposed to say ono word-,--we. would much rather cover up his follies and his weakness,; than keep them beforo the publto,— It is with the corrupt party leaders, who-torc using him in order to oontinuo their deproda tions upon toe Treasury, we are to deal. Against Sen. Scott we Shall say nothing disrespectful ; oor would we pluck a feather from htß brow.— Whig ruffians may abuse Gen. Pierce, who, al though never trained to arms, left his home and family to defend his country’s honor upon a foreign soil, while they remained at home in venting and publishing calumny against him and hiß comrades, but wo shall not abuse Gen. Soott, We have too vivid a recolleotion of- the calumny heaped upon the heroio Jackson, to say anght against Winfield Scott. Wo remember, too, the invocation for War, Pcstilenoo and Famine ra ther toon the election of Jnokson, but we oannot emulate such impious examples. But, while re fraining from following the base example of our opponents in these particulars,- we - may, with propriety, allude to Gen. Scott es a civilian, and show, in a moderate manner, his entire un fitness for-the position to. which he has so long aspired. We cannot here aikido to the multitude of silly and contradictory epistles whioh have ema nated from him. within, the past ten years ; wo may say, however, thatho has endorsed all the most oaious 'doctrines of toe’ Whig party. We most, at present, oontont ourselves by a haßty glance at the General’s frequent, absurd loiters upon the subject cf naturalization. , -Every intelligent citizen is aware that when Nativism raised its monstrous visage, Gen. Scott was one of the very first to adopt and enoourage its teachings, ■ In his published letters, toe eulo gised the Native principle, and pronounced it absolutely necessary to preserve the purity of our elections; fThose opinions he entertained andfrequently expressed, from 1841 until the assembling of the Whig National Convention in 1848—a period of seven years. Hothenohang ed his gronnd ifl the hope of seenring the nomi nation- whioh wasgivento Gen. Taylor; andhe changed most remarkably indeed. Instead of being a violent Nativo, he expressed himself the very opposite,-and deolared that while in Moxioo the Irjsh were the very best soldiers in the army. More than this; so fond was Gen. Scott of too Irish, when he qxpeoted to b® nominated for the Presidency, he deplored that ho never knew one of them to ” turnhis back npon either a friend or enemy, -although but a chart time before this fine saying, he-strung ascort of them up for deser tion in Mexico. Wp do not censure Gen. Scott for changing hiß opinions - about too naturalization laws, and those tot whom they ore intended, but wo do inqist that pneaf bisoge, (being nearly seventy years,)*--whose- mind-is .susceptible ..of anoh sudden changes,-upon great national ques tions, .is not, •by any possibility, fit to preside over tho destinies ■of thiß greet people- Wo al lude to these glaring weaknesses of: Gen. Soott ’• more in sorrow than in anger,’*- and ..wcuid gladly forgetthdmdn remembering; his milittuy achievements; hut, they, are before the people, ■who are soon to decide upon them and their au -1 t)tor. " . I It Is hardly necessqry fqr us to say a word up- I on Gen. Bootf a last epistle upon toe subject or I naturalization. It is so extremely silly and im practicable, that it exposes its own absurdity.— | This letter is the most unfortunate one: toe Gen- I oral ever wrote, aud ono which even bis frieods havo acted sensibly in pronouncing absnrd.— i Tho idea of naturalising the hundreds of thou sand* of foreigners echo come to this countryevery year, by making th(m serve ticelce month* xnour Army or Many, is tho moat blundering propose tion that ever emanated from any pnhuo man.?--.. The Army and Navy ora no places to qualify, men for the duties of oltizensbip, and no one having tho slightest cl aim to statesmanship would ever have eonceived- lt What a - singular Army and Navy we would have, if Buoh a proposition '-■L * t » * «• -•' i ‘ -•- - was adopted. Hundreds of thousands of sttfw* gersentering theATtny and Navy thai/iar, and making way for as many more strangersthepnest, ■The idea is preposterous. Such a system would make neither good soldiers nor yiorthy citizens. . But we must leave the Whig party and its eruptions, and say nomoreabout Gen. Scotland . his absurdities.' Both the party and candidate ' afford ample cause far disparaging hat time snd epnce. admonish us to refrain. Before dosing,: however; let ns devote a small space-to, the Democratic party and its candidate. Lot us | examine tho more prominent incidents of onri candidate’s public career. The 'private life and character of .-Franklin Pierce, are beyond reproach, defying the jealous scrutiny of his most malignant Tevilers. . His life has been one of; purity,'isimplioity'and in dustry, which, "in connection with his modest, unobtrusive public career at all times and under all oironmstances,’ form in.our opinion;his prin cipal attractions. His life has not been one. of political intrigue;, he has not heen.a,noisy, dis i contented, 1 ' aspiring politician, but an .nnobtmr. sive modest gentleman, who. never. ■ appeared, at political gatherings, except at .the call of public, duty. Ke has declined aoeopting many high and lucrative offices,-both State andHational, instead of having been ,an intriguer for them. This is the sort of a man our candidate is,—our who. has been running away from office ■■■initead of ajler it. This.perhaps will, explain to Gen. Pierce’s ene mies bis comparative obscurity ; had he accepted: : all the prominent trusts offered him, and fought, in some way, with soveral Administrations and cotemporariea as: Gen; Bcott has, he would, no doubt, be much better known than he is. But -whether notoriety, obtained in ■ this way, would add anything to his /aule, is a 'matter about whioh honest men may, without offence,: mate rially differ. Our peauUar aod triumphant boast is, that Oen. Pierce has : constantly declined, public office, instead of havingsonght it. There it not another public man in the Union about which tbit can be said. His. .disregard? of power and ] place, is on -unerring indication, that when Gen. Pierce docs go into office it will be. to faithfully serve bis country and not himself. The history of this country does not allude to a more disinterested, unselfish public man than Franklin Pierce is, and he will venture to pre diot that no Chief Magistrate, of. our Union ever camo out of office-..wiih.cieauor.handß .than, he will at the closet of bis adminUtration. . His whole publio and private, life justifies this pre diction. Were ambition the ruling principle of den. Pierce’s life, he would, ere this have been fa mous throughout the entire Union. Ten years ago ho resigned his seat in the Senate of the United States, and retired to bis quiet home in a rural district in New Hampshire. The Senate of the U. States had no charms for him, although he ranked amongits ablest members. The great Pennsylvania Statesman, James Buchanan, in a recent letter, ailnding to- Mr. Pierce and tis qualifications, says: “I know Oen.Pioice wolf—ho i> tho very omu tor the time*—he nlwaya commanded tho attantionof !tic Amer ican Sonata when he spoke—and he has tho Intellectual S .unifications ncceaasry to render his administration of the oremment wise, dUe. and lucecsef'd.” , In 1845, Governor Steel, of. Now. Hampshire, appointed Gen; Pierce to a vacant seat-in the U. States Senate, occasioned by tho resignation of Mr. Woodbnryi but be declined. Shortly af ter this a State Convention nominated him for Governor of New -Hampshire, his nativo Statc, which ho declined ; President Polk, who had served in CoMress with Mr. Pierce, qffered him the AttorneyUenornlship of theU. States, whioh ho also declined. The correspondence which took place upon this occasion-between .these two dis tinguisbed gentlemen - is instructive And refresh; ing in these days of political duplioity. ..Mr.- Polk in his letter- of invitation to Mr.: Pierce said: “It elves me sincere pleasure to Invito yon to aoeept ft - place In mv oWnct. by tondoring to yon tho offleo of -AttOT noy- consequence, for the reason-beibre slated, anil on. account of climate, -would be very likely to result from- my ncrep . tnnee. ■ , -:. '.■■■■ " These are some or the considerations which have influenej ed my decision.: Yon will, I amonre, .appreciate'tnyr mo, fives. Yoil will not believe that I havawclghod my personal convenience and ease ngalnst tho public interest, especially as the omce Is one which; ifinot sought, would be readily accepted by gentlemen wlxn enuld bring to your old nttnln monts-and quaHflcationsvastly superior tomtae.:.. Aorepi my grateful nesnowledgeiuente; and , belloye me, truly and faithfully; vour friend, - - ~ . • ; - TIUXKECf MERCK. The only contingency alluded to by Mr.'Pierce which could Induce him to leave tho quiet and comfort of home, soon arrived. Our country, shortly after his refusal of President-Folk's invi tation, became, involvediuwur with Mexico, andl tho tnodest, retiring Pierce, who hnd refused) Senatorial; Gubernatorial, and United States:! Cabinet distinctions, was one of the very first to ; enrol himself ’ among the-gallant volunteers of Now Hampshire. He left his homo and family, which ua civil station in the Union canid induce him to leave; and at the first call-of htß country ho engaged for her .defence. , He did not seek the. cooked hat and trappings of a General ob a con dition to his going; far from it ; ho enlietedns a volunteer;-berose to distinction, ob all Boldiers should; from tho ranks; .and when the war was; ended, he throw up his honors and'his title, and: again became plain Franklin Pierce. His only: ambition was to serve his country when it need ed his services; and when he was no longer needed, he returned to bis home. Nor did he, af-: ter his return, seek politioal advancement as a reward for military eervioes;. and in this he set an example whioh iB exclusively, his: own,: and' i and one whioh- onr country would • benefit hy,: r were it"mere generally observed., t Of General Pieroo!s gallantry daring the war, 1 while engsged'in its most- bloody and:obstinate engagements, it is unnecessary for ns to speak., i The man who donbts his bravery knows nothing of the campaign; and ho who was in Mexico himself, and charges Franklin Pierce with aught but the most undaunted valor,was and is a cra ven and a coward. The wretch who insinuates against tho unpretending soldier of New Hamp shire,-gives tho lie direct to not only all the brave officer! and men with whom Tierce wae emaciated; but to Qen. Seott himelf. Gen. Soatt, in his re port to the Government of the difficult battles in i which Gen. Pietoe was engaged, alludes to him 1 in termß of tho highest commendation; he styles i him the ‘igaUant Pierce," and seems to hovo se- ] leoted him from oli the_volunteer officers of hiß i intrepid army for especial compliment. General i Worth, too, the Marshal Ney 'of the Mexican i campaign—a man who fought with an enthqsi asm borderingapou desperatioa—speaks of Gen, i Pierce in his despatches' in the most glowing terms, and bears honorable testimony to hia con stanoy and valor in the most trying engagements of the campaign. 'Shields, Butler, Cadwalader, Gen. Soott himself,., and a host of other brave officers and gallant men, all bear ovidenoe to tho fortitude and heroio daring of Pierce. No inan in the army, unices he was,, and is, a coward himself, ever questioned the courage of General Pierce. Qnthe contrary, he was, prior to his nomination for the Presidency, always spokenmf as one of the band of soldiers who had, by their valor, added additional lustre to theanns of their country. This very glory, fellow citizens, ob tained by -Gen. Pierce and other Democratic offi cers and men, constitute thu chief capital by which onr opponents expect to elect their candi date. Until Gen. Pierce became oar candidate for no one ever breathed a word against him; then, and not till then, did be become the object of Whig dstwtion. Since then,-calamny has been busy withhis fame; and who are the men who are slandering him ? Why, lying poll.' tieians. corrupt office banters, who opposed Weir Government in its Btruggle against Mexican arms, and who weald have been traitors to their country, had they lived in We days of We Ravor latipn. These aye We set of men who how doubt Franbhn Pierce's courage, and who expect, try slandering him, to retsdn Weir hold upon the treasury of the people. Their only interest in the present canvass la the hope ef office; with We nomination, of their cendidate-they-abandon ed all for which they ever contended; but onoe ■pat them in power, and we will see them return, with naturhl sffinity, to the advocacy of .^hose ,• •. . -L.-jv , , , . X*. : - ~ f ■’• _ \i' * i '* J i i i 1 ,' 4 •*4-'' 7- rt r ' + * 4 K * * f*l >■ *. *■ ’-'„ * t- XW*' 1 * '\- XXX'~ ’ - 1 ' *’«'*'• - -'-' .. *3* 4 y ' L 4 j *• f w •* * -v j *•. * .•> b'':~ -^-^-r-'••*' •'•• ••>• v* 1 - * '•-.•^•,v't' , '4X : l ; r r '- X -.-- ~.r: fj.-'-X.. i V . r ' \- <' % T •> rV„V „ >■ ' _ " ' * *** a‘ . /> ,* „ _ ' obnoxious principles vhiob tha America&pOOplf *»• to .th0.,,- bave so frequently condemned. * • admttociuent of HALSETS FOREST WINE? ft ffiodldns 1 Bat, fellowcitizeDßt the die IscasVfor, ftscer- of great celebrity in tho cnn» of vartou* morbid tan l «a fairi' 08 the election day arrives, sfil| it tiealtby ronditiona ofJho human body, orbing from wtativ 'close upon the triumphant election of Fr&nfclui usually termed imparity of tho blood. Itiarecommeuxlai . fierce* Oar opponents see this inevitable re- fir the euro of Dropsy, Gravel, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, C»* 1 salt, &nd know nothaff to escape H; they are tlrcncss, RTiwimatism, Gout, and diseaws of the Heart, reduced to tho desperation of X* aSS^Am^' 'rately, indeed, are they. Acting to stay the,migjity, - see adTcrttaemunt in another column ofthls paper*.. ■ 1 impulsive onrrent of popular enthusiasm, upon ouiSaitw - wbieh the candidates of theDemooraoy eo gal lantly ride Under a pretext "of Government business; we find them dragging their candidate from becoming retirement, ; and hauling- him, through the country to arouse some , feeling in hie favor. While ’Franklin Pierce remains in his quiet homo, patiently awaiting the verdict of his countrymen, Whig politicians exhibit theircan didate in the humiliating oharaotet of a stamp orator. This is a depth of degradation to Which Whig politicians never before, descended; and, for the Bake of the dignity wbiOhshould belong to the Presidential office, and to those seeking that exalted position, we trust, most devoutly that it may bo the last. ; Bat all this degrading and contaminating con duct of the Whig; leaders, -will not save them i from the overwhelming defeat which awaits them. ?i Thocnonnltyofthe stupendous'frauds, which j they have committed upon onr National Treasury ;| —their shameless abandonment of nil shadow of i politioal consistency—their brsion retention, in their front ranks, of those who committed the Galphin and other pecnlations npon themenies of the people—theae abusoa and corruptions have oToused the honest masses, from their,lelbnrgyv Who; with unparalleled nnanimity, demand the, return of their Government to; Democratic hands. ' A glorious and enduring*triumph awaita ■ the. Democracy of the Union; let ua but make an effort commensurate with-our duty nml ability, nndviotory is ours. The effort.feUow citizens, trill be made, ifcisnow.being made ; from every State shouts ofjoyoua etuUation are ascending, in anticipation of our triumph—n triumph which.; trill add additional rigor -and security,to our BlfiSfled.--Dniott''i-Wlth7a.vflonstint:-;t»ud:,aoHd,:de-.;. termination to- achieve this' trinmph, let : n8 ; la-f bor for remembering that the . first and foremost debt an Amerioan- oweala to hia-country ; and, keeping constantly in our- tninda the memorable ; and significant words of.the heroic-Jaokson,'in' the campaign of 1844,' <• let us put oar. shoulders* to the wheel.-prny tO'God for strength; and purif on the column! ” . fly order of the County Commutes of Corretpojidtnct.; I A.MILY FLOU It—Warranted ltcsh, always on hand, and' S>r gale by [eop22], .. A. 3. STOAIVT. UUAK —0 lihds, on cooHignincnt and for sale by - • BCp22 • ■ ' _■ - * Ao: J*~ STUART. y : M°^- 100bWBrrlm °-~ Ne Kgo‘r’ioblu£[l». j i;<} Ait_Vrdr to prime N:Q. Sugar, in Store and for saliT > gep22 - KING & MOORHBAP. - ri^liAS—lso half -cheats Imperial, Gunpowder, Young Hy-, • 1 son and mock Teas; from, good to fine quality, received nnd far saleby ~~ (scp«2 •Kui’O & MOOSHEAPi . mOBACCO—2S boxes Busrett & Robisons, Grant's, >Vob- I stet’a Old, and other well known: brands, received and. for sale by * [«p22l " KING A MOOBHBAD. -1 nn ffIULS-N.- o*. ,TAtt—To arrive, amtfor sale by IUU TAAFFI3, MAGOIRE A BANB, * ecp22 112: Second street 0 ATS—3OO bus, just rce’d and lor sal© by A. J. STPAKT, < aop22 No. 6 Smlthficld street GUFKJSK— 200 bogs kir tO-pruno ilio Cotfeo; 25 do prime Java . do;, . . . . , ■’ : Arriving and for sale by, ■ fC p22 KING &. MOORHEAD. STOOKJJ— 20 shans Minnesota Copper tftock ?; 22-do Adventure do? . .. .. 50 • do- ; lUdge •: do;- . ft) .do Norwich : ■.■ ■ ■ do; 175 do Colling do; r 250 do Iron City do; * 75 do - Axteo • dot .■ , Pot sale hy »: LOOMIS A MTDOWELL,... . eop22 ■ over & Jflnfia A Coa cor Wood and Fourth sta. Home Indaitry* : TTSpronounrod political economy to encofurago.homo.vln'' J.: dn&try. If how muchmoroßociallyrto carry outtho principle. Examination wiU ptodqco conviction. Call at Gotlilc IlaU—iheTarcestandmost completo-fitock of MEN ANT) BQKSV CLOTHING, ,work equal to customer make, at 2D par cent less than the customer, prices.- .1200 HCITS BOYS’ CLOTHING; which for. Taricty of style and; fabric, is not equalled, In iho West.. All. of which Ist mantt factored in this dty; WHSTIXDI'TO PL£ASE, gpp22 ' CHESTER, U Mood street. SUNDKIES-,150 kegs Nails; 250 boxes Glass, 125do*ComDrooms; . . ,r...... •; 25doaBflgs: .; v:"-.,. - 50 balcs-Nol and 2 Batting; 10 bags Pepper; ••••■ •■•■ ft do-Allspice; 2bhljrCUm»*: - v . .• . -1- do r NuttdfigB; / >•- •.. 50. dox Reaver Jhieheta - : Received, and for sal < h'oaisc»atDo£aid9osJdanor r oi.tUo Gtniftt— by-Maria J. M’lntofihiv ; PrJhs otf ccntfl.; • -v. - Xti, 27 Plclcrial Jru«m liook of tbo BeTOlatum. 25 cxmtS. Vt>v Mlo ol Hi-MISKtt&CO;!B Sowspopcr and Periodic*! Store, No, S 2 Snxitbflold street, wjp2i *)fWV UAttti UU> COFFKB:, OU\7 30 bags Laguayra Coffee; . ' 10Uerccjffico; . . . 40 bnlf chests durifto ; IG* ' do - * Imperial Tea; ‘ ‘ • 10 do ■ • i Gonpowdcr Tea; • 'JQhoxea nawnted brands Tobacco; r - - 20 bbls No l Herring; •' ■ 20 half bblj* NO 3 Mackerel; ’ * •go bblsNo. 15 largo- . do; lO.bblsTannor&’Oll;.... • Togolher vitU. a general assortment cf.Groceriessnd Pittsburgh xnstmffectore&i • Also, tt choice stock afUquars, : Foreign and Domestic, consisting of Wines, Brandies andsu perior old Jtyc3lonongabtda Whiskeys- For sale by. .- v IIENEY -M’UCLUJtQII * corner of Pnnn and;trwla atr. TOUNH. MELLOU* No. 81 Wood afreet, is now opening t) a very largo and entirely nnw. stock of the i xr&ia and greatly. improved SAX' KORNS, and. at. greatly. I educed price?. ’ : - K Fiat Soprano Sas Homs; * E Flat Tenor do; EFlatAUo do;- v B Flat Baritone do;.. Band AFlntßasa' ‘ do; - .KnatancVFContreßassHonw; ; . > ‘ .• New fityleT?ost Homs; . - -• 'Now style Oarocttfl, la cases; ;• Grates & Co.'s Bogles, of all the different keys and styles; , COMPLETE SEWS OP SAX HORNS, of eight, tea and twelvo Instruments.. . Tho above will be warranted, and sold at NeW-York scp22 JOHN H. MELLOIL 31 Voodytreot 1 BooksS - Boobs! Books} ■ •TV if* SGUFFIES, Swaa’SjTown’s, Emerson’s. Comlcy**, Qta&~, . jyX'' mere’s, Webster's, Cobb’svand United States SpfcllcrsJ Swan’s, Town’s, Eclectic, and English Readers;,. ; • : • i Roy’s, Grecntoofs, Davies', gmjtb'Sy. Adorns?, sauloys, Kano’s,Cßkase's».nndEmerson's Arithmetics. . • ~i iGrcetfe, Kirkham's, Smith’s,Bullion’s, nancy’s,andßim-, rett’s Grammars. - . ; J v'Comstock’*Parker'sandOlmstead’ams tones,.: . J>aTenport’B,’Jiospo -and* Goodrich's Histories; of the United State'*. _ ? v .'• Goodrich's History of England, Franco, Grcepv and Some. . Mitchell’s, Olney's, Smith’s, Morse's,- Parley's, and T«-. hill's '* Ws Geographical . v r .. - Caylo» Algebra, Legendre, Bourdon and- Logie of Suuaet; unties. 5 Koy’a part I and fi, with a general assort jnontof other -;For.sald by sep33 B. T- CL MOBGAN, 101 Wood street v: Journal and Union copy.; ri ROCKKDiS, 40. Ajr ■ lOObags prime RIoCWToe; : • ' 53.-do tlo lißguayra; -/•■■-'• 20 hbds primo New Orleans Sugar ; ■ ’2O bbUßefitted ••:•-•.• - • • do;. : = v r : 10 MidsNoW'York Syrup ' 00 bblaandhalf bb!s Now York Syrup; - • 60 half chests Green and Black Teas; 75 catty boxes do do; , 200 kegs UlnaUng andßlfle.Powder; •. -.>• 150 dos superior Corn Brooms; . .00 boxes Clothes Pina; • - ; : 25 do* patent Zinc Wash Boards; .80boxesBcsloandPalmSoap; • 30 do Pease Starch; : 20 >do Sperm and Star Candles; ; ; 20. do Chocolate and Cocoa;' . :5. da Babbitt's Yeast lewder; v 10 do Farinaand'Coru Starch; :r . . 20 do Almoml, Toilet and Shaving Soaps ; ■ r 1 case. Bordeaux Prune?, in jars; ; 7 -r 5 bbla Smyrna do; 0 do do Rolstas; .5 boxes Genoe Citron; » 5 frails Yolontia Almonds; : . 50 boxes Ilb,l4jb,s's, - chfiß to awwt: thcnteV dhttrtet lino south, thiXM dcgrSf cast; one hutwlred and Plx perchra to a post; thenco & laud Of persons unknown, south eightr-saren de*. gree vS; two bVodrcd .porches to the place of mIBUt . •Rein, the south half of Tutcnt.Na So,ao4_MuJjHa*t Ottwto Of Patent No. 81. containing together three hpndraj ,/trtii and allowance.? ■ * .■ - ThenrojwrtyAs situated In .Pine, township, tw-l muS Sr the City of Pittsburgh, and dents to purchnsCTv from , its adyantegepus. lopaHoh: nw» : the rapid advanceln the nn®. ..og rpaf eatata in.' tfait borhood. Due attejmaaeu. wUlhc; givem and termjTSjgfr known on the day of sale, by - ’ .^1 sep2£3td#wts* Apm’r 'oX ,rg\s\T''r ■ -r- -v-. * , *. ; \ '■ ■ . ta ■' “ r.'.v; ; . < - 1 - >-■ _• Mli * £ _ V »„nr“ k .J /■ ' J ' * yJ“ v ir «■ ' , J „ J „T* . , . ♦ < *-~ J * \,-4- v-- . ’ «•' HEW ADVBBTipHENIS, BAND ISBTHVSISST9. Its® ► * f - 1 , _ - ~ c c, i? 7 s -r < 1 /• , r - •-.-’.- ’. ~V-r;-'-.^vJ , i-^.-.--- ,.\Jj-J.. sSv>’ f * i <■ 4 - * r » -r V (4 » *V 4 ** ■:r ;l f p' ; :^''.'n-•'•' ,;l ' '" ' ’" '-x'i '■ ■#3- Dt. Gnyxoti** Improved Etinct ot Velio w Dock and Bme. dy /or Hereditary Tainh. Thousands of Individuals are cursed with groviotxa coo* plaints which they Inherit from their parents. Tho use of the YtUaw Dock and Sxrtaparflla will prevent oil this, and save a vast amount of mlscry, and many valuable lives, • foT it thoroughly expel* fran the sytternVU Wad taint, which - lathe seedof dlscasoj and so-take# "off -ilia curse- by. which -the Rina crmlsfortnncs of tho. parenU are-ao often visited . , upon their Innocent offspring; . ■ ;; . T : • 3 r ftrcntfl own It to their'children to guird them against tho >■■■ effects of maladies that maybe ’communicated by descent, and children of parents that hate at any time boon affected < with GnwmpUorif &n^utoor;Syphflk,ttWßifetotbcmselvcft -v tp take.procanUon flealnst.the disease bclngmimi In them. Guysott’s Extract of ToUow-Doch.aud Sarsaparilla la ft sun? antidote in each cases. v 45»Sco advertisement. r»epl&dfcw •> Scrofula* —It Is duo to Kler's Petroleum to say thatlthasbecnknowntocompletclyeradicateevetyvestago J ■ ofthlsdrcatiJWdisoase inlets tlmo than any .oiher remedy, ■ aid atleascosfcor inconvenience to Ibapatbrnt. :. -Tbe thousands of certificates in the hamlr.of thoproprie- . tor, many Of wUeh are from well known citizens ofithqctfcy. of Eittsbnrgb and itslmmodlate vicinity, go to show clearly , ■ oiid beyond all doubt, that Kirovs J?rrnotmt is a medicine , of no common value, not only as a focal remedy in J\txtdy- .. . losiof Sight, but os a valoaMo < i internal remedy, inviting the loresiigaUnjf pbysiri&nSj A* . rrcll as the suffcrtog'patientj'to become acquainted with Its merits. «■ * , s Thosehavingodreadof-mlrtuies are assured that tola .. modi duo la purely ■naturnljfindis itflows from , tho bosom of the earth. . I Thefdtmtnng certificate ix copied frow a paper published at '■■■ SifrncnSt,. JV. bear*■ date August .’I, 1852,t0/tefticft ft • . also:appended the.ccriiftcate of t!ie celebrated T; IboijH. 3?.,. . qfSyracutfi l This may in truth, certify, that T have been so badly of* - Riotedwith. Scrofula fi>r the last seven years that most of tluv time -I have bcen,jmable to attend to any -kind, of business, . ind touch of- the time unable to walk anti confined, to my bed, ami have been, treated nearly all the tluio by the best Physicians ©or cauntryaflbrds: I occasionally , got somo re* list, but nocure, and continued to grow worse until Dr. Foot raommeododmo m -fry thb Petroleum, or Rock Oil, ns eve- •:•■■ rythlngelse had failed* -1 did so without faith at fin but . \ tnecllcctyrasastciniflhing; it.throwthe poison.tothe surfaco at Once, aiul l &t once began to grow bettor, and by nsins.. , seven bottiea I havo cot a euro worth thousands bf dollars,.- . 1 MBS. NAJiOY iL BARKEK. I ThlsmWthat lharebcou acquainted trlthKicr's . : . . Petroleum, or UocfcOil,‘for moro than ay car, and have re* .. pcatedly-witnessed its beneficial effects fn the euro of Indo- • • lent ulcers and other diseases for which- it is recommended, and with confidence recommend it to bo a medicine wor* ihy of attention, andean safely say that success has Attends edits use where 6thef medicine bad failed* v ■ V D. X FOOT, M. D. * For sale.by all tho Druggists to Pittsburgh. [au27;dfrw. i ’• BleJLattc’fl 'Worm Vermlftise. ■ t Xho followingordcrihows at onco. the demand for and the excellence of thisgreat medicines Certificates have ■been so multiplied in fovor of tbis’YonnlfugOj that.ws con* - .?.■ r sep2kd4w • ' 6a Wood street. EXHIBITION-Tho annual Ex hibitdon of the Pittsburgh Horticultural Society will bo held ist MASONIC HApv ou thn 21st, 2^1,23d; nnd 24th days of Sebtember: - All articles for. oshlbitionuimust be -re ported to too Committee of Arrangements* bc&re O o’clock, A H, on tho 21stof Septcapbor.. - • . ' :.FainUytietotssljSinglo3tclcßts.2sct£'.Bycrdorof, geplfctd . EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. JAMES P. TANKER, tfItOLESALR DEALER IS SOOTS, SHOES, BOHNET3,i&c„ JUb. M lVYo; 149’ j'*rt*rf and 120 Second ■ sis+ JPittsteatyrr* Warner* Parle 'dg .... ,do Shambrajs .do, allcolcrar. ■■; DyedCarpetChain,-ofallcaloranDdshades;-, Cotton Twine, white tuid variegated colors; 7 •• Do- Xams.BaUlngfCacdlowiclt,Ac. o sep2SaUe3m. * » - NoUceXoCoatraLerora. • Cy£Al£fr PROPOSAL will bn-received at Cf. Y. COUL tip to the l&tbdaybf October, CarGradhtir and Bridging that.portion .of. the 'Milltirs’Kun aud’CrGa*; Tying betwcroStewftrt r shrii}go,niv. • MUler’s Bun, and Venice.. 'Any information wnntc&wjlh. -resold to tbe Road, can be had at any time, by calllng.with Cbaltcr. / The Boad. will be eold In. aecUons-v.XetUng^'.to-*-- take place on thelSth day of Octobcr, 1852.; . : J sepaitd 0. BORLAND/ Boc'j. •'• Ohio nad FeunsylVAiitaHaUro&dt.:. t "PIXCTJRBION TICKBIS.—Fortho acccmmodatiott of per* JCi sons attendingiho Convention to bo held atPittsburgh, on Tf TUESDAY, September 23d. 2si2* Excursion Tickets wnii be loldatthe regular statioxuvfrtiarotbcre/irelfcket agent*,- firm Mochateryio>.}VbortcrfindttHvef at thesinglefore, for-; the.ronnd trip. ; Tocofite to.t > Utebnizh T aad.retuxn at any time tom- Wednesday to Satnrdoy,lnc]u£iv&,.of theVwcc);, of the Convention; but no Exoureion Tickets will be sold in.: the cars. 8.W.“ £OUEBT3< Chief Engineer •.-aep2LSt . . and Sup*t Ohio and rannsylvama R* 8.. ’IITHOLKftALE ANDRETAIL PLOW MANCPACTU* ■ r ‘\f RKBS, comer of Penn street and - Oedi Volley, (oik* square below tbeibcdmntfe Hotel,)Pitteburgh, have forsalo over one hundred different patterns and sixes of PLOWS, 1 oT ■. the moat impioycd kinds, and suitable for all descriptions of' raft- Among them trill be found the celebratedflrat Premi- . urn Patent Iron.Centre Plows, the best oadebeapest Plows to bo hadin.tho.lfaittri'Stetosrand, also;SQb4oU nnd Hill SidoCottofc a&d Sug&rHows; with plow: Potato and Cast tagsofevery description.--- ■•.■••• Merchantsshouldcall and see* boforepurchaslngi;.: repThtim - 1 . i. PIAHO POBIEB ERQJI KEW BCAIJES. - fi r-. • J* P. Warner do Co*; - 411 broadway, new-yoek, ‘ ' H vv , / BEtt to Invito publig attention to their fifiSSHMstockofEOSEWOODPIANO FOKTE3,-just W ' ffTMlmanufocturcd from their NEW AND- f» U» ! If GKEAXIY IMPROVED. SCAU3S. THo» J instruments embrace some points of excellence entirely orf~ i < gtaai, and aofctobofound in any others made in the United |C * States, such, for example, as sundry material improvements li inthQScalcSjtboOlobalar Socketed Tubular Bma, Ac* *&• ■■n-' Thoy ore made.of very best materials and by uie ablest S’’ workmendo be found In the countey; are warranted in nlb respocts, and ore soldonfovorabla tem& Secona- hand R.- h•' -aaostaken in exchange;. .•/ , ( >; •. tr Warereoms, fll Broadway, New*York. [J SBW JUWSICI Blanche alpe.v ; Kitty Nell; | •,. .. Home Again;. : -. llopoimdthaltQSor > Pictures of Memory; • • • Early Lost, Early S&rM; Reaper on tbo Plain; > Uttla ItaLßidise; Hood; v-.::-..:-:/ -■ • . Tla Pleasant to bo Tfcon art mans, thetfew --do- do: My Baby’s Polka; * Olympic- - doj- - : . • Pearl: <.... doj'. - Fashion ■ do; '■■?- . .; World’spßir Polka; ;.- r .Happy FatniJy Polka; < AlboniSchoUlsch; ' v •• -- ■ . . , Masldoro—Polka Mawtktt; * iAra. do do; ' i . LoontlnoWoltz; - ' -RaveitfTOcxP Waltzes;' t‘ • lafgft, all '-ifn* ptpnjw* £-f, Song*> ifcoifett, I Wal tte#, Aoij . Jest received and for sale by “P 2l - JOHN 11. MKELOB, 81 Wood at, , „ bectures on JSuropei i wishes of acvorallHena* the Hoy- A -Dr; Hm\H will give a Course of NINE LECTURES, ia. '' thls-Cty, TfllS -WEEK. AND THE NEXT TWO, and Q those things lu the Social, Political. Moral and Religious f t PUteof Earopo, which.'wLa to moet lik.eij to Interest Aa f l - American audience. - Thss* Lectures wiU bo illustrated by* *? largo and olejrantHapsof cities and roantrie?. • .•• •• • {.j • • The first Lpciurowdi k? giron TONIGHT, in.' theXccibrft 'Rqptaof, the I’irst -Presbyterian : Church, on Wood street,'—* ft' corottvaicijigato’dock. Tb«>'subject will bo RUSSIA. and POLAND., K >■■ The second lecture will bo given on THURSDAY NIOHT- p on the ScAxa-iXAms CoraTniia,, Denmark, Norway- anti h. Sweden. - * + Thro? on Gmnanjrand -Hungm?* Holland and - Switzer* l? ! land; ftwneo. Great Britain: an?°£olfind; Spain and Vortn* "I gal. Italy* Greece amlTurkcy, -will followln order.- >- M. TzHJi>--Ozwi-ticket, (Car. the conrses).4l3; two tickets $2,50; three and foWMitikets, $43. 'AdmhJ f’V lance to a fdnglolecture, bo paid at the door* f~ &&• Ticket* to be Ivad at the JJpoto tores of Slesso*. Stobl> * V; ton,: laanfo, Bead,Presbyterian Rooms, and at the doon >'•• THB'KATS 4KD SUCH IS COVlSru -V *i Y’tBEA? consternation hn» been XuUmaSSSrfyJ- U Unwani’ tMShsttiw cl^UcSt 1 SSSMSS® 5 *Ai&SiS{';' .^^SS^„^, olrc,^ y Jr n WlMby this most certain^’ «tb*S oci’^iSi o ’]?^^ 51 ™' 1100 01 ■ ™w^^^^ s ,% ai4tfan - nAtina itanseafft ♦ Si?jytSd -Hi Ta^na^e property. but they cron 7 • l!w«S^?JS'2?w^ Tcaof Wtce. WewiraiftH • SSra*** s ’,*?* 0 * ofKKATINO & ; uvi-ir 150011 xotwing; The/ may bo destroyed. t 33v t ' TnuttaQ of ysar,*rrUbaufc producing the disagreoabla etoplL l * , .aucndant .upcaiibe «piostonof thdr bcdi&sEmda . . quent decay of anjmai matte?- • Jn. the spring-, Keatta? ,'.. tcnaaJioldtttga'Rat'ifiKitioamocliaT of Mi tiwiiiToratA, -a c « piooTof Iho salutary effects oftd* Itat and Mouse Dus ■" *l * This propamUam Trhjjn nsod according to tfao dlrectiotaA' '• - ;fansadiiycfttott.fcff aa» - thBQL - ' *£ v ■ MannJhctarcdsDd sold, VTbolcaile and RetaU»l)j -».■Dk KEATIKG, comer of -Wylie and idjtrV ; iby Er. KEYBKB, lW Wood street;®. A. > OCL Wood rt»; J.RIDp A (XX, corner JfK ♦.■■'■. Fourth and Wood staj *nd by Druggists v*l §tpro ker»m< - generally. * aopSU ;£■' ■A •.■-■•* ■ ■•■ t- •• ... r -' : ' l ' ‘ ■.. -1 ;■..>* *: =i, - •'.■■">■ ■ c 5 w v- -*r\ ‘ ... ~ - ■- •• ■ v . r , ». ; r * S L - ,■ ; isfciiilffi a - V* V*-fro .TV i 1 A. J. STUART, '' ;' ir ■ v-*-. ~"V r .,.-; ri. • » ; h -a: