The daily morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1846-1855, August 02, 1855, Image 2

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The fail ere to sell the Main Lino of Pablio
Works has brought oat oar neighbor of the Qa *
ztiii ia a pretty severe phillipic against the Penn*
sjlvanift Railroad Company. It ohargos the
Company with a desire to got possession of the
Mala Liao too cheap. Wo do not see how the
Oisette oan complain of the Company on that
score, since it has been one of tho newspapers
that has laborod for years to prove that onr
pablio works are worth nothing, and should be
given away rather than kept. It is quite possi*
bio that the arguments of such papers have in
daoed the belief that they are really worthless.
We have all along condemned saoh a slander
upon property that was to be offered for sale.
In all probability it has prevented a sale, and
the peoplo should be duly thankful to those who
have thus damaged their interests. Tho act of
last winter fixes the minimum price at eight
fcod a-balf milliona if the Railroad Company
buys it. Any other company can bay It for
seven millions. Wo sec no good reason for this
distinction. Wo would prefer to have it pasa
into the hands of a new and independent com
pany. The interests of Pittsburgh would be
promoted by it. Wc should then have two com
plot**, and in some reepeots rival linos of con
vejHuoc to the cast But if the Railroad Com
pany is allowed to pnrebese at all there is no
good reason for making it pay more than any
othrr hiddor Lot tho Company pay a bonus at
ooc< f r ibo repeal of the tonnage tax, and then
l*- i> n ?- the Main Line as cheap as any other
1 P"- ->•
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Sailtj Jtloraiiig
OFFICIAL PAPER OF TBE CITY.
£*JTTSESUB-® H:
TBURSDAY MORNING
FOR CANAIi COMMISSIONER,
ARNOLD PLUMER,
OF VENANGO COUNTY.
— M. I’KTTINGILL A CO., Newspaper Advertising
Agents, urotbe Agents for tho Pittsburgh Daily and Weekly
Post, and are authorised to receive AdvrETlEEMksts and
Suu3caiPiioira for us at tho- same rates as required at this
office. Tbeir receipts are regarded aa payments. Their
otdeos are at • New Yoke, 122 Nassau btxxst,
Bosros, 10 State srnrrr.
MORNING POST JOB OFFICE.
We would call the attention of MERCHANTS AND
BUSINESS MEN to the fact that we have just received
from Philadelphia & number of fonts of new Job Type, and
ara uqw prepared to fill orders for Cards, Cirmiarc, Bill
'>■ Hsade, Testers, and Programmes Tor exhibi
tion*. All orders Will be promptly filled.
zjg- Persons leaving the city during On summer, t/»?w de
rive the diily or weekly Pbst‘forivardzd to them, can have it
dons rtgularly for any Specified time, by leaving their or
ders and address at ft* t&lce, earner of Fifth and Wood
streets- _
the news.
The present population of Texae is 600,000.
Tho Frenoh Empress, is not going to havo a
baby.
I- is Paid that Geueral Pellsßler ie the boo of an
Inc: man His father v?as & gentleman of Lim
erick. and had to leave in a hurry during ibo
troubles of *9B.
N--w altered bills—2oa on the Onondaga
Bank at Syracuse, altered from 20, havo been
put In circulation. They are exceedingly well,
executed.
Eight signers of the Declaration of Indopon*
deuce were foreign born; to wit: Matthew
Thornton, of New Hampshire; John Withor-
Bpoou, of Now Jersey; Robert Morris, James
Wilson, Geotgv Taylor and James Smith, of
Pennsylvania ; Button Gwinnett, of Georgia, and
Francis Lewis, of New Jersey. There wero but
fifty-six signers in all, ene-seventh being foreign
ors by birth.
The New York Tribune announced the final
failure of the North American Phalanx, located
in Monmoath county, N. J., and the proposed
sale of the domain and buildings at auction on
the 8i day of October next. Thua one by one
do these Associations, founded on Foarier ideal
of what should constitute true society, fall to
pieces, and now wc have the last of the Phalanx
to be knooked down at the going, going, gone 1 of
the uuctioner. Soma time ago we announced the
sale of the Brook Farm, onoe owned by a Fourier
ite Society, in Massachusetts; it, however,
fixzted years ago. There is still a Socialist com
munity at Nauvoo, under M. Cabet, and another
one recently started In Texas by Victor Oonßide
raot, but they are mostly under tho dircotion of
individual enterprise and have little resemblance
to Fourier’s plan.
THE PUBLIC 'WORKS.
rru f ulur« i» Hell at this time la not surprie*
1 ; g Tn.* Company is in a prosperous ooaduon,
bn» 'v million d *ilara down, and seven and a-half
meltons ifioro io few years* ifl a large underta
king at tbo end of a year of depression in busi
ness.
The price at which tho works are offered is
low enough. They arc worth it* notwithstand
ing the efforts that have been made to prove
that they are worth nothing. The Colombia
Road alone is worth five millions, and the road
over the mountains a million and a half at least.
The Canal could always be made to pay far more
t’l in the cost of repairs, in carrying lumber, ooal
and othvr heavy freights. Then the State owns
a large amount of real and personal property
along the line of the works, which the purchaser
would get into the bargain. The price is low
enough; and a sale could have been effeoted be
foro this timo but for the oonetant efforts to
prove them worthless. Sach offorts have en
couraged the belief that every year the Legisla
ture would reduce the price* nntil in time they
would be “given away.’'
The Dispatch in Distress. —ln an artiole of
a columo and a half we lately defined oar posi
tion clearly in regard to the fugitive slave law*
and substantially answered all proper questions
on that Bubjeot. But the Dispatch continues to
repeat oertain interrogatories, and insists on an
answer. Tho questions are not relevant or per
tinent to any issue pending. Besides they are
leading questions, and not allowable in a direct
examination. They are therefore overruled,
and our neighbor can have an exception sealed
if it desires.
We are perfootly willing to lot the Jour
nul have the last word as well as the first In re
gard to onr consistency. We can afford to give It
that advantage ; and prefer to do it rather than
search any longer for the point about whioh it
is contending.
f®- In oonsequence of a disarrangement of
our forms, we are compelled to work our third
page twice.
[For the Pittsburgh Post.]
Now that the mad antioa of the Kansas Legis
lature are everywhere exolting attention and
disgust, it appeare to me that rather too-muoh
Btress is put upon the project of annexing the
Platte oonnties to Kansas. This is altogether
out of probability ; for even if Missouri oould be
so absurd as" to part with so valuable a part of
her territory, the annexation oould not be valid
without an act of Congrrci. The Territory of
Kansas and its boundaries eiopositivoly defined
by aot of Congress.and there is no other author
ity in the United States oompetcnt io-enlarge or
diminish >ts extent while it is a territory. This
could only be done by the cononrrent aotion of
me d'aie of Kansas and the State of Missouri,
but Kansas is oot a State yet, and can have no
such p.,wer until she becomes one. I don't fear
ouytoiog from this scb'emo.
A. 8., A CoHSTAHT READEB.
nisEPtso oct or cooaa.—lt is stated that
Vnfh °\" lhrc ® thousand persons in New
, . w^o ® 6 on *y lodging plaoe is the door
stop, the coal box, or the benoheß in the public
•h ° Con f‘ d “ nD * ‘ he present state of the
enviabl” ' h ' lr c ' ,nd,tion “ not »® very on
' -
1 i? J ’ r
■y'.***K •
Our fo*s have bid a forewarning with what sort of a peo
pla they will have to deal; ani our transatlantic cousins
will become a trill# lets insolent and overbearing, when
they find that the fleet which aummere In tbe Baltic, can,
without cost or effort, wintor In -tha finlf nf Mexico.—
North British Bevine.
England and France together are atrong enough to bind
nearly all tho world over to keep the peace. When Russia
is settled, France may abate her nrtny, *>nd England her
navy, bnt wo must not disarm. Wo muet still be able to
nay “ No” to our lively young brother ncrof? the Atlantic,
if he wants Cuba, or takes any otLier little vagary into bU
head.— Blackusood*: Magazine
Our Government is Leithcr anxious nor am-<
bitiouß of gaining the good opinions of tyrants, j
and it is certainly likely to succeed;in its praise- \
worthy purpose. }
The political principles of our country have
ever boon the object of extreme jealousy in Eu
rope. The advocates of despotism and tyranny
have ever watched with awful and untiring vi
gilance every trifle which oouid be construed to
our prejudice. The extension of oar territory,
the spread of our stable Republican institutions
over a wider area, is particularly offensive ; and
as the acquisition of territory has ever been
obtained by force or fraud in tho old world, it is
easy to associate tho means with tho end in’thiß.
Let us examine and see: Our ancestors oamo to
this continent and took the land peaooably when
they coaid, forcibly when they must. We par
ohasod Louisiana from Franco : who had about
as much title to it as Satan had to all the king
doms of the earth. The people are the sover
eigns of the country—they are tho legitimate
Source of all power, and tho fountain of all
honor. AU we needed to a perfect title in the
eyes of God and man, was the consent of the
people Who had got the start iu appropri&tiug
the territory, and bringing it into use. Editors
of the English press eight to know, that there
is a time when men arc released from their r.l !
Icgiaooo. There is a time when resistance to
oppression and tyranny hecomes a virtue, and
inaction a crime. Laws are unjust from some
one of the following causes : When they are
opposed to tho oommou weal—when their aim
is uot tho good cl the oommou weal—who the
Legislator outstrips his faoultics—when although
iu other respects leading to the good of the com
mon weal, and proceeding from competent author
ity they do not observe suitable equity ; for in
stance, whon they divide uuequally the public
imposts. Such laws aro oot laws, but outrages;
they arc uot binding iu conscience. If any peo
ple upon our borders claim the right of self
government, and call for sympathy, is it wrong
for individuals here to sympathise with them? i
Shall we o'ultify oarbolvcs by maintaining such
a doctriue! Way Lafayette and a host of other
foreigners wrong in volunteering their aid when
we called ? It is right ia our government to
engage in do crusades ngainst ethers. It acta
for tho whole, and uot for individuals. It should
uot commit those who do not tee lit to commit
themselves Are we thas to be threatened by
tho prees of Eogland with a “ visit of her navy,”
for thus sympathizing with tbe patriotic Cubans f
Tho British navy, which used lo oxoito such
terror in other nations—which caused tho flags
of Franco, Bpain and Holland to droop before it
—whoso Lhaudcr dissolved the armed neutrality
in 1800, and wrapped Copenhagen in flames in
1807 —no longer oxoites any other eentimeut but
joy at the approaching downfall of tho most tre
mendous inetrumeot of tyranny ever wielded by
man ; and at home, moves only ridiculo and the
splenetic effusion of mortified pride. Eiitors of
the British press know that America has twico
beaten Into submission the powerful monarchy
of England : and while she is governed by the
voice of the people,‘she is u match eingle-hnnded
for the monarchies o? tho world. Tho govern
ment of England has her hands foil with Russia;
besides, ebe has within herself the seeds of her
own dissolution, aa the l&tc foreign enlistment
bill demonstrates. Look to India, tho theatre of
British ambition and British violence. There, a
population greater than that of France has been
annihilated, or reduced to wretchedness, and
populooa provinces rendered wholly desolate.
Look around tho globe—ere the English flag fly
ing in every quarter—in countries where roli
gion, laws and language dissonant Has
she not subjugated the greater part of Asia ?
Has she not foroed the ramparts that separated
her from China; and has she not been waging
another war, by her influence, on tbo American
continent ? F.arope ba? acknowledged tho bare
ful inflaenco of England's usurpations ; tbe blood
that has flowed for the last fifty years has flowed
at her purchase ; and the Turks wib farther rue
the event of a struggle that removes tho aacenJ
aocy of a great people for the domination of
British and French tyranny.
FERGUS MeIYER.
AUGUST 2.
4o*.
f From tha Cincinnati Kuquirer, August 1
Steamboat Collision—The Steamer Ken
tucky Horae Snnb—Logg of Life.
It is our painful provinces to record one of (he
most fearful catastrophic:* (hat occurred
upoa the Ohio river for nome time paid, icc-par
ticulars of which, ae wo have learned them, ar?
us follows:
Ou Monday evcoir.p, at a liitie after K o'clock,
as tbo steamer Telegraph No. 3 was coming up
under lull headway, on tho Indiana side of tho
river, when opposite tiagar Creek, about three
miles above Warsaw, Kentucky, she came into
collision with the steamer Kentucky Home, com
manded by Captain Rred, bound from Pittsburgh
to Louisville, striking the latter with her bow
about the forward hatch with such f-?roe that the
timbers were literal;;/ shivered, and ia less time
than it lakes to chronicle the foarful disaster,
she sunk a hclpk*«a wreck-
Fortunately the on the sinkirg
craft wore few in number ; but the coustvmaikn
on board was indoKcrifcnMe. Too unfortumto
vessel suck eo rapidly Chat but liitU time v/.is
given to contetup;*to tho dreadful lot: which
seemed almost inevitable, and the do unci b™t
surgpd heavily down, leaving these who but w
moment before wrre buoyant with life and liopo
Struggling upon tho dai k waters.
In an incredible short time, however, tho
boats of the Telegraph were lowered, and in al
most a miraculous manner all tho poasengora
were rcsoued, among them a mother with four
of her children, sho herself clinging with tho
desperation of despair to some of tbo rigging,
whioh bad dotaohod itaolf from the wreok, while
her offspring sustained thomaciTcs by olusplng
her neck, arms and olothiog When taken into
tho boat, all were nearly exhausted, and another
mioato would have sufficed to bavo loosened
their doath grasp, aud overwhelmed them in
eternity.
It is oertain that but four who were aboard of
tho boat were lost—three deck hinds, who were
engaged at the time of tho collision in sorting
freight, and a fireman. About SI,OOU in money,
left in the drawer of the clerk's office, Wiis also
lost. Tho Telegraph was roondod to immedi
ately after she got clear of the wreck, and in all
probability it is owing to the praiseworthy exer
tion of her officers that the loes of life was not
much moro fearful.
Divers rumors arc afloat as to tho cause of the
collision: both parties, wo understand, blame
each other; as, however, the melancholy affair
will doubtless be investigated, we abstain from
mentioning tbo rumors wo have heard. It seems
oertain, however, that the whistle of tho Tele
graph was blown twice, and that, also, the
whistle of the Kentnoky Home was blown, but,
owing to tho wind, it was not heard aboard of
tho former vessel.
About an hoar after the catastrophe a meet
ing of the passengers of the Telegraph was held
aboard of that vessel, at which a vote of thanks
was awarded to the officers and orew for their
prompt aotion in saving the lives of those be
longing to the sunken boat, and, at the same
time $45 in money was subscribed, and a tender
of clothing made to those who wero left desti
tute by tho disaster.
The Kentucky Home belonged to Messrs.
Reed & Mellon, of Pittsburgh. She was a
new stern-wheel boat, one hundred and fifty feet
In length, and was built expressly to ply be
tween this port and Louisville, during the low
water season. She is saifl to have cost $lB,-
000, and was insured in Lbuisville for $12,000.
Mr. James Melien, one of the owners, and who
usually officiates as chief clerk, is now lying
sick at the Spencer House. Captain Reed,
about tide time last year, met with a serious
loss by the burning, at the New Riohmond land
ing, of the steamer Forrester, of whioh, we bo
lieve, he was the sole owner.
Later —Bince writing tho above, we learn that
the collision took plaoe about .three-quarters of
a mile below the mouth-of Sugar Creek. The
Kentuoky Home was crossing at the time. We
also learn that, after the collision, a great por
tion of the cabin and the hurricane roof of the
sunken boat was preoipitated upon the bow and
forward dock of the Telegraph, which enabled
nearly all tho passengers to rcaeh the latter
boat by a plank, and those deck passengers,
were immersed in the water, and to this fortu
nate circumstance may be attributed the small
loss of life.
At the time of the accident, it was pitch dark,
the moon not having risen. It is said that the
Kentucky Home made the oroesing higher up
the river than the regular place, and hence tho
melancholy catastrophe.
s&* The latest estimates of the population of
the world makes it eleven hundred and fifty
millions, viz Pagans, 676,000,000; Christians,
820,000,000; Mohammedans, 140,000,000, and
Jews, 14,000,000. Of Christians, the Chnrch
of Borne numbers 170,000.000, the Greek and
eastern churches, 60,000,000, and Protestants,
90,000,000.'
***. * „ v-* *' •* v
[For the Pittsburgh Poet.]
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< Z •*'
■**«*¥•' 7 - ' 1
♦ « ♦ 4 V, .
Not Quite a Duel between Jus. B. Clay and
Geo. D. Prentice,
The public will recollect the controversy be
tween Mr. James B. Clay end tho editor of the
Louisville Journal. Mr. Clay made a epeeah at
Lexington againßt Know Nothingism, early in
this month, and oil the 18th a bitter personal
nttaoli was mado against him in the Journal.
Oa tho 181 h Mr. Clay replied to it through the
columns of the Journal, and on tho same day
the editor of the Journal commented on it in
Ma paper, tn a long and personally offensive ar-
On the 20th and and 21st the following corres
pondence took place between Mr. Clay and Mr.
Prentioe, by whioh it will be seen that Mr.
Prentice, declined to hold himself “personally
responsible as n gentleman” to Mr. Clay.
AsnLAND, July 20, 1866.
,8> r - This note will be handed to you by my
friend Msj. T. Lewinski. A similar one was
addressed tn yon on tho 18th, throagh my friend
Mr. H. C. Pindell, who having lately engaged In
tho praotioo of law in your city, found the deliv
ery of it inconsistent with his views of the moral
obligation of tho oath he, as a lawyer, Is requir
ed to toko.
The objeot of this note is solely to inquire
whether you hold yourself personally responsi
ble, as a gentleman, for publications made in tho
newspaper of which you are the editor, attack
ing private individuals.
I am, sir, your obedient eorvant,
JAME 3 B. CLAY.
To Geo. D. Prentioe, Esq., Editor of the Louis
ville Journal.
Louisville, Ky., July 21, 1856 Sib • Your
note of yesterday sent by the hand of your
| friend Mej. Lewinski, is received. This is the
second note of that kind I havo received from
the family of Henry Clay. About ten years ago
I received a note from one of your brothers,
saying that ho wob informed by some person that
I had spoken of him as insane, as asking
whether, if he should furnish the testimony of
a speoified nnmbor of men that he was in his
right mind, I would acocpt a challenge from
him.
Itou aay that the objeot of your note, of yes
terday, was solely to inquire whether I hold my
self “ personally responsible as a gentleman,”
for publications in my paper attacking private
individuals. lam not aware, sir, that it partic
ularly oonoems you to know what general rules
!of action I proscribe for myßelf as an oditor. I
havo no objection however to informing you,
that, if I do any man such an nnprovokod and
mortal wrong in my columns, as to entitle him,
in my opinion, to takeorscek my life, I will hold
royeclf responsible to him in the field, and that
if any gentleman does mo each a wrong as to
make me wish for his blood, I will call him to tho
field.
1 proßumo, elr, that all whioh It concerns you
to Know from mo, is whether 1 would accept a
challenge from you on aooount of my comments
in the Louisville Daily Journal of the 18th inst
npon your communication published in tho same
paper on tho name day. Without patting you
to tho trouble of addressing the question to mo
In duo form, 1 Bay to you plainly that I would
not. Ido not wish to kill you. and I am very
dear in the opinion that my article affords yon
neither just oauso nor a rational pretext for
killing me. I mado no attack or imputation up
on your private oharaotcr, whioh, for aneht I
know, is objeotionablo. I merely gave utter
ance to tho thoughts and feelings namraliy and
and necessarily exoited in my mind, and as 1
believe, in the whole public mind, by your de
molishlng tbo sacred old dwelling house of
your father and selling tho lumber. You stated,
ia your published communication, that “ asper
sions, both public and private,” had been oast
upon you for pulling down your father’s house.
■ You thus admitted that your conduct had al
! resd 7 bocomo a matter of public notoriety ond
| disapprobation, and a subject of public and pri
i vatedenaooiation which you called “aspersion ”
yet these aspersions, so oalled, had noi been uo-
I need by you. When you attempted a defence of
j your conduct ond assigned your reasons for it
| as yon did in your nrtloie of Wednesday, you
certainly gavo a liconso for those oomments of
mine upon the conduo! and the reasons for
vhiob, as I presume, you now wish to hold mo
to personal responsibility.
! My article was not a tooth part so harsh to
! " 6r,t 7° u personally, cs yours was toward me.
I \ ou stigmatized me, by a nc-cesssry aud direct
i implication, aa a “ public coiuminator ” charged
! in lhe , sam# mann?r Bhb '• the pr.osTm.-Tio:.-
ef tbc colomos ’ of my paper, and so used the
j words “ liar and villain " as to show they
j were meant for mo. I responded with more
I moderation than you had a right to expeot.
i iaercl >’ denouncing that not of yours, whioh, as
I it related to s gionoue old memorial of depart
i od greatness, was almost, ia Us character, a
I public act, and whioh h« m-tde tho heart of
1 u, nation recoil.
"l rc P ea {: » !r . t&ht I treated you with for
j bc&rance. . You spoilt) in your commuuioation
j as ! b° tnought of celling tho material of yor
; father's house never occurred to ycuunti! touch
I of it had bum etaiea and otherwise taken away
1 and you added, that, if you had sold one inch of
j it fur private profit, yea would feel youraelf
; “unworthy to bo a Kentuokiao,” and would
| “fly to some remote corner of the earth” to
! hide your “ vile and dishonored head " I might
i io reply have shown that tho determination to
| sell the lumoer of that old mansion, was not
; only fired in your mind, but avowed and publish
ed to tho world, under vour own band, a month
before the old nmosioa itself vi a broken up I
might have showu that you gave public notice,
. under your c-n name, in tho Lexington Obser
i ver Oi July 8, 1864, and in [levers! successive
. numbers cf that paper, that you expected to
■ take down your dweili g house at Ashland in
, August, that you would have for sale “a large
; quantity of tho old material " then in it and
\ lllat “ ASV OKE WANTING et-CII MATERIAL, Donut
j GET a BARGAIN DY APPLYI.NI os tub premises ”
i However, all this is very little to my present
| purpose. 1 havo only to repeat that I would not
| aooept a ohalleuge from you on aooount of my
urtioio of Wednesday. And, as I seo no nooes
| sity for my adopting the ctiquetto of duellists
lin tolling yon bo, I shall send this by mail 1
! scaroely need add, that, if I have erred In any
| etatements of fast in regard to your conduct I
, shall, on having tho errors pointed out to mo
1 take pleasure iu correcting them. *
i T„ „ Yo “ ra ’ &a ’ GEO - »•'prentice.
I J. B. Ciat, Esq.
! , rc P'7 t 0 tW « Mr- Clay has issued the fol
; lowing card :
ro TUB PUBLIC,
It is always a task, follow oitlsens, revolting
to a private indtv,dual, if ho have proper sonsi
bilittes, to obtrude his private affairs upon the
notice of his fellow men. But there are occa
sions when ho may feel himself compelled, how
ever disagreeable it may be, to adopt auoh a
course, and be justified iu olaiming public atten-
UOU; I feel myself placed, by the Editor of the
Louisville Journal, in suoh a position • and at,
peal to the tribunal of your calm and dispassion
ate judgment the more confidently, as I think
that your iberty has been assailed in my person
Invading tho sanotity of private life, regardless
of the feelings of a mot Jr of seventy fife yea
of age, the widow of tho man of Ashland, whose
memory he has pretended almost to idolise, that
editor has not scrupled, through the columns of
bis paper, to hold up his and her son as an ob
jeot for the scorn and indignation of his oountrv
men. J
Why iH-it that I have been so aaaailed 7 Was
it that I had personally offended the oditor of
the Louisville Journal? Not so; never in the
whole oouree of my life had I gi ?CQ hi m the
least oaose of offence; and if there was & nv
publio print in the land from which I ought least
to have expeoted such attaoks, the Louisville
Journal was that one. Was it that I had been
guilty of any aot whioh any one of you, plaoed
in similar circumstances, wculd have heaitatod
to have done? I bought Ashland, as I have
heretofore said, at tho desire of both my father
and mother; I determined to do with it as I
thought best for the intoreet and comfort of my
family. It aocorded better with my judgment
to rebuild my father's house upon the same de
sign, using iu its construction every particle of
the old material, stone, brick, or wood that
would answer, than to leave standing an old
mansion, through whioh the water coursed and
whose walls were cracked to suoh an extent as
to render it positively unsafe, as a harbor for
rats, and a resort for thieves and runaway ne
groes.
It is true that I did advertise la the Observer
end Reporter newspaper, as the editor of the
Journal states in bis letter of the 21st instant,
that I wished to sell certain portions of the old
material, but 1 specified in that advertisement
doors, eaßh, &0., which were utterly useless to
me. I was not so fortunate as to find a purcha
ser for a single artiole I desired to sell, and the
oonsequenoe is, that a large quantity of old rub
bish enoumberß my place, whioh X shall have to
get rid of by making a bonfire. It was not the
offer to sell such old rubbish that was referred
to in the first article in the Journal attacking
me. It was a very different thing with whioh
I waß charged. It was that, knowing them to be
hallowed by aßaooiation with my father’s name,
I either was, or had been Belling for my private
profit, the beams, rafters, posts, &0., of his old
dwelling house, to be made into stioks, snuff
boxes, &0., &o. In my answer, whioh was pub
lished in his paper, I gave such information re
specting my private affairs as I thought would
t .H. v * * -
have satisfied any candid and reasonable man
that be had done me injustice ; it is true that I
used language which was 'harsh, but I did not
conoeive it to be too much so towards the author
of fluoh an uttaok up me.
Iq making his attacks upon me, tho editor of
the Louisville Journal was not instigated by any
offence which I had given him personally, and
my oondaot with respeot to my private property
was but a pretext. He has clearly shown that
he oared little for my father’s name, his fame, or
his family. The true cause, fellow citizens, of
those attacks, was that I had dared to exercise
one of those rights of a freeman, and had been
guilty of the enormous offense of making a pub
lio address to my fellow citizens around my owq
home, in opposition to the principles of a party
to which he was attached. I appeal to you if
this was not the solo cause. In attacking mo
for such reason, your liberty and that of every
freeman in the land was assailed ia my person.
Tho reply which I thought right to make to
the paragraph ia the Louisville Journal of iheBth
inst., was published in that paper, and accompa
nied by an article of Its editor, a column in
length, more violent and unjustifiable than the
first had been. I felt that it did not become
mo to answer it by a new publication, and that
I Bboold be wantiog'jn self respect did I tame
ly suffer my name to be held np in suoh manner
before the publio. I accordingly deemed it roy
duty to address to the editor a note, through tbo
hands of a friend, simply making tho inquiry
whether ho held himself personally responsible,
as a gentleman, for publications, attacking pri
vate individuals, made in his newspaper. I rec
eived, through tho postoffiae, on the 28d instant,
a reply from him dated tho 21st, in which he re
fuses to hold himself responsible as cr gentleman to
me, and with a fiendiehbascncs-i, wholly unpar
alleled in the history of any intercourse between
honorable men, with the sole purpose still far
ther to harrow my feelings, alludes to an affair
with which I had nothing to do, and cf whioh I
waß wholly and entiroly ignorant.
Having thug plaoed himself withont that pale
recognized by oil honorable gentlemen, in this
region at least, I can never again, at any time
or upon ony pretext or occasion, condescend to
t&ko tho least notioo of anything whatsoever
that may emanate from the editor of tho Louis
ville Journal, either iu his public capasity or
as n private man.
I have thought it right, as I have boon pub-
UoJy persecuted, to place in a public manner,
all tho facts ondcircumstaDoca before my fellow
oountry-mou. The first attack of tho Journal
—my reply to it—tho renewed aosanlt of its
editor ou me—my note to him through the hands
of a friend, and bis reply through tho poatoffice,
will appear under the (tame cover of this article.
luthe fullest confidence that a generous pub
lio will pardon me for thus again bringiog my
self before its notice, I subscribe myself,
With great reepect, its ob’t sorv't
JAMES B. CLAY.
Ashland July 24th, 1855
Mr. Barringer's Contradiction of a
Know Nothing Calumny.
fFroia tha Washington Union, Julj IT.)
In our artiolo in Wednesday’s issue, denoun
cing as a malignant falsehood the currrcnt Know
Nothing allegation—that “ tho Tope's Nuncio to
Spaio, before tho cabinet of the President was
known to the public hero, declared, in Madrid ,
that the present Postmaster General , a Catholic,
xsotUd bt a member of the cabinet of General
Pierce. There is other and abuodaut proof to
oonfirm the opinion that this appoiotmeot was
secured to the Roman hierarchy before the. Catho
lie vote seas cast for the present incumbent f” and
also referring to the statement of the Raleigh
(N. C.) Register, of tho 21et instant, that “ we
ore authorized to state that tho lion. D. M.
Barringer in a day or two, re-osserting and con
firming his statement relative to the conversation
whioh took place between himself and the Popo’a
Nuncio, In Madrid, and the truth of which the
Washington Union, with no knowledge of the
facts, thought proper to deny ” —we took occa
sion to say that we did not believe Mr. Barringer
would ever assert tho fact of the occurrence of
tho conversation between tho Pope’s Nuncio and
himself, at tho time, and under the circumstan
ces specified. Intelligence receivc-i yesterday
from Mr. Barringer proves that wo were cor
rect. Ho is at present at Saratoga Springs, in
tho State of New York, and as he has stated to
a gentleman from this city, of unquestioned in
telligence and integrity, that the conversation
with the Nando of the Pope concerning tho
cabinet of President Pierce, which has been
mado the foundation of so much falsehood and
oalumniation, transpired subsequently to the inau
guration of JfarcA, 1853, and to the reception of
the intelligence thereof, and of the namez of Presi
dent Pierce's in Madrid.
Mr. Barringer also elated that ho had &d
-dresaed two letters to Mr. Hayoer, cf North Car
: nltna, stating the time of the conversation, &nd
its drcutUflUnccs ond purport, r v nd tiokinß that
gentleman to do all parties tho justice to state
Iho/jefi in tho csce, but that Mr. F.. '.ad sup
pressed both Alters, aud-had wholly refused to
correal the falsehoods ia tha preaiiuej
Mr. Barringer also expressed h;s purpose to
publish his last letter upon tho nul jrc; to Mr
Itayucr in a fow days if tho proper correction
and retraction was not made by tbit gentleman.
Thus perishes another Know Nothing calumuy.
Tho Big Swindle.
The committee appointed to iavesligate the
coco of Tackerman, tbc defaulting Treasurer cf
the Eastern Railroad, has reported.
The report says that Tackennan'* bocks wore
kept ia the most loose and carcier.s manner ; ho
kept no cash bonk, but made his entries rn loose
paper*, pocket memoranda, ,ko. The ever issue,
it thinks, will not exceed 663 shares. The only
way to ascertain the precise amount is to call in
till the old oertifioateo aud issuo new ones a
moasare whioh is recommended.
Tho amount of notes used by Taekcrman for
hio benefit ib, as far as can bo ascertained,
000. It may have exceeded that amount, Tbo
oash applied to his own use amounts, as near as
can be judged, to $llO,OOO. This ia other than
that received from stock and notes. The full
diaolosares on this point the report thicks will
never be made.
The total amount of Taokerman’s embezzle
ments are said to be at least as follows :
Amount received by him from of otor ip?ut? 1 s*ool:
ftTeraglog at par, <363 share.n $0U.300 00
Amount received by him of over-lssui. of notes
bo far as ascertained
Amount of tho Company’s rash ufed bv Mm at
least 110.000 Oo
Amount received by him growing out of tli-i
unlawful pledges of the Companv’a noiea OO
Other deficiencies not explained 1,003 ‘Z3
Making an oggTega e of.
Tho total amount of tho defalcations are set
down by tho report at $246,505. Tho property
f>ivon op by him to meet this is estimated at
$69,496, whioh dedaoted from the above, leaves
a loss of $186,800 to the oompsny. Thoro are
some other resources whioh tho company is
not at liberty to maho publio at present, and
from whioh Mr. Tuckerman expects that a largo
asm will bo realized.
In accounting for the manner in whioh Mr.
Tuckerman has disposed of this large snm, the
committee mentioned transactions in roal estate,
&0., to tho amount of $lBO,OOO. Tho balance
of his deficit must be aooountod for, if at all,
by the payment of largo sums of interest, both
regnlar and extra, and by his losses by opera
tions in various stocks ; and that bis specula
tions in these stooks mast have been very heavy
will be inferred from the foot that between tho
17th day of Deoomber, 1860, and the 13th day
of August, 1862, inolnsive, the notes given by
him to a single individual for monoy to him
loaned at high rates of interest amounts in tho
aggregate to the very respeotable sum of $279,-
828 89.
The report finds no evldcnoe of fraud on tho
part of tho Directors, present or past, but tho
question of gross negleot on their part it loaves
to the Stockholders themselves.
ErFEOTS or B/ulboadb on Lands. Tho
offeot of railroads upon the valuo of farming
lands Is a question much canvassed in the West
ern Btates. Tho St. Louis Demoorat says:—
The offioial tax statistios of Michigan show
that, through those counties where railroads
have been built, the taxable property has, with
in three years, inoreased 400 to 500 per cent.,
while in those oounties where no railroads have
been built, tho ratio of increase in value has
not been over one hundred. In drafting their
eohedule for the prloee of lands, we find, too,
that the Direotors of the Illinois Central Rail
road have eome far short in estimating the value
of their lands, for the road has caused the de
mand to be so great for them, that they aro now
bringing a large prioe above the minimum at
whioh they were rated. In some instanoes,
l lands that were rated at $l2 per acre, are soil
ing for $25. Railroads espeoiaily where they
course through rich sections of country, not
only augment the prides of lands, but they do
more, they promote social intercourse, build up
j cities, augment the population of villages, and
the farmer, having a oheap outlet to markot for
.bis produots, plants fourfold what ho did before
the railroad was established, aud his inoreased
aotivity and industry is rewarded by largo sur
plus gains, where bsfore ho had nono.
Maoaulat’s Hibtoet.— The third and fourth
volumes of “ Maoanlay'a History of England ”
are expected to appear the ensuing Autumn.
’• 'V>--, V*
• -w:t if*'-
■d 'X.;: : ■„ ;:V”
Aik an y one who hai «tct mad Dr. PFIfIIVJ TC A CTHRP I
M' Lane’s Celebrat'd Liver PiUs, what they think of them?
Ninety-nine in a hundred will toll you they are the best ■» * V VITQ
Pills for Liror Complaint, Sick Headache an Dyspepsia jr ft o ac , h . ■ * *V*‘ * a\
ttatther h»T B^t.»d. -B«a4 Ole °^^ 00r e “‘® f atohan B e Bank -,
our most reepecUbte nitons: . , ■ f}.REEIJ-«»SLSSkd WITH QBEAI
- ■■. ; NfiW ioßk, August B, 16G2. - VA care, and purchased direct-from the importers, for
Ido hereby certify that I hare been suffering from a JfJJ- J h » |U>ok consists of aU the different flavors and
pain in my aide and breast for a long time, and after try
lng many remedies camo to the conclusion that my liver "tiTAiL GiiocKßS are invited to call and get samples,
was effected. I immediately commenced using Dr: M’Lane’a r o our prieftn.,, ' _
Celebrated Liver Pills,and the few that I have .aken have the trade:,
already given me more relief than aU the other medicines 0 „ * Hyson No. I, Imperial No. 1,
I have taken put together. I went to a clairvoyant to. •< « ' «- : : “ .No*-,
consult him; after examining me carefully, he advised ad' a - *' No. 4,' No*i£
to continue the use of Dr. ITLane’s Tills—that they would H^n » Plantation Oolong,
effectually core me. W. W. PHILIPS, Gunpowder No. 1 ; • HjMg* *
No. 2 Columbia Place. English Breakfast, . Olajbountry Black.
p. a—The above valuable remedy, also Dr. iTLantfs cel* TEAS G 2? ALL GRADES BY THE HALT CHEST.
Klebreted Vermifuge, can now he had. etellthe respectable (JOrtEB-ißi, Wijffi"
Drug Stores in this city. LOVERINQ’S Coarse Pulverised-
Purchasers will please be careful to ask for, and take Pulverised A.; While Clarified C; Yellow Clarified and best
non- but Dr. M'Lar.-; Vermifuge T bere COCOA and oaoCOLAIE, eta, etc.
ore ether Yarralfugos and Pills now before the public, but Long experience in.the business is a suro guarantee that
all comparatively worthless. .. etow article sold will be as represented.
Also, for eela by the sole proprietors, .lore Aar no con«c«on with hny otter'
FLEMING BEOS., Customers are' warned not to place any conyfidence in the
Successors to J. Kidd A Co:, representations of persons formerly employed in this Efi-
J" K°. CO wood street, comer of Fourth. by for ai rote of
DR. JAYNE'S CELEBRATED FAMILY MEDICINES;
. Also, for the ealo of
jell L. JOHNSON’S TYPE, INK, 40. .
(Letter from Hon. .lohn Minor Bottfl* of Virginia.] ■
Ricotcosb, July 9th, 1856.
Messrs. Wm. S. Bters tfi Cc.—GmU: Considerations of
duty t.-» the afflicted alone prompt mo to send yon thiavol*
unt&ry testimonial, to. tho great value of Carter’s
Spanish Mixture, for that almost Incarablo disease,
Scrofula.
Without being disposed or deeming it necessary to go.
into the particularo of the case, I can say that the astonish.
;ng rcFulta that have been produced by tha use of that
medicine on a member of my own family, and nndor my
own observation and superintendence, after’ tho skill of the
best physicians hail been exhausted, and all the usual rum.
edicts hod failed, fully Justify me in recommending its uss
to all who may he suffering from that draidfal-malady.
I do not miran to pay that It is adapted to all oonstita.
tlons, or thet it will afford the same relief In all eases; for,
of course, I can know nothing about that—bat from what
I have seen of the effects, 1 would not hesitate to use it, in
any and every case cf Scrofala, with persons for whom I
felt an Interest, or over whom I could exero'sa influence or
control. Respectfully yours,
J*24 - JNQ. M. BOTTS.
49* Mortification* the instant a pi star Is applied,
must cease, and vigor is given by DALLEYS PAIN £X-
TltACTOK*ti galvanic effects, and except the parts are de
composed, they will coon be restored to their natural color;
but If io, the contagious Influence will be neutralised and
arrcaieil, for mortification cannot prefleed whe ever ths
salre bn laid on, ami new flesh will certainly be-generated.
poiso.v fbum ureters, p.shhb arm mftxa
Are rendered quite harmless by rubbing in instantly &'
quantity of DAhLBY’S PAIN EXTRACTOR, and after it
has swollen, and livid spots are visible. - Sven then, like
the volt/iic battvry, It will directly attract, dissolve, and
metamorphose the poisoning Influence. At the sting of
cud morquito»s, the instant it touches you the pain
ends. Tha bites of rabid animals also ora as speedily neu
tralized.
N'jm genuine without a- steel-plato engrared Jabelj frith
signatures of
HENRY DALLEY, Manufacturer,
C. V. CLIOKENER A CO, Proprietors.
Sold at Za cento per box by Dr. G. H. KEYSER, 140
Wixkl street, and by nearly every dealer in medicines
throughout the United Stated. All orders or letters for In
formation or advice, to be addressed to C. Y. OLIOKKNEB
A 00., Sew York. jylOaUfriZtr
*3-Stocking Factory.—C. DALY’S Stocking
Factory, where everything la made In the HOSIERY LINE
is at the corner of St. Clair and Penn streets. He is con
tinually turning oat every variety of Hosiery, well made
and suitable to the season, which may be always obtained
Wholesale and Retail at hla Store, corner of Market alley
and Fifth street Don’t forget the name—o. DALY and
No. 20. ap2s
T erwtta suffering from diseases of the throat or lungs
arc, in a great majority of cases, completely restored to
health by a faithful trial of Dr. Curtis* Hygeana or Inhaling
Vapor. Ry the Doctor’s new method of treatment, the
modical agent Is brought in direct contact with the diseased
parts, and c&onei fail of having a beneficial effect. All
drugglxts *ell it See advertisement la this paper.
Oiahor.—Dr Cuana* lIYQ EASA Is the original and only
genuine article. jel&3wdaw
W Juat Received, a superior .lot of Lutong,
Tongee and Grass COATS, which are desirable, and will be
foM low roc cian, at • QUIBBLE’S,
ijl No. 243 Liberty street, bead of Wood
OHIO & PENNSYLVANIA BAILSOAD
THE ONLY RAILROAD
RI'NMSQ WEST FROM FITTSBCRGIi,
T'ts Past Thai* leaves at 2 A. M.. through to Cincinnati
in 12 hours nod 40 minute*.
Mail Trmx lx&ycs at 8 A. M.
EttkissTkain *♦ at 3P. M.
Three Trains all make rlose connections at Crestline,
the first two connac? at AlUanro. The direct roate to St.
Lmsla is now epoo, via. Crestline and Indianapolis, 100
mil-- shorter than via. Clet-gland. Connections are made
at Maruflohl with the Newark and SaninakyCity read
and at Crestline with this three roads concentrating thero.
For parti ;uiors roc handbills. No trains ran on Ssodny.
Thrr lVrtets .sold u> Cincinnati, Louisville St. Louis,
IcJiaaapt-lls, Ro.-fe Island, ForMrayne, Cleveland,
and the principal Tow or and Cities In the Treat.
The NEW BRIGHT-jN .ACCOMMODATION TRAIN win
IrArc at lo A. M. snd 5 15 P. M-, and Newßrigfc.
ten at 7 A. M j.r-1 l P. M
r
kf-> iisj further Information, opj/ty to
J. Q. CURRY,
•rner oSce, un-lor the Monongahela floase
Or, at the federal Street Station, to
GEORGE PARKIN’, Ticket Agent.
Pittsburgh, July 23,1555. (ij24)
OHIO AND INDIANA RAILROAD,
HEixn the
Continuation of the Ohio and Psnna, E. E
TO FORT WAYNE,
fE&si nuxuasii naarcKi sm.z9 raoii pittsscsoh.
Trains connect at Crestline, t/'ilAoul dziealicn. -witf*
zd tht o.i fA« Ohui and Anna. Hoad, and also at
Forv-t wild Trains going North and Soatb, on the Mad
Hirer ur».l Lake Erie Railroad.
I r.r Tickets, apply at the Railroad Offices of the Ohio
and Penucylvanla ivaliroad Company In Pittsburgh, All>
gbctj? City, or at any of the following points,
tort Wayne, Bellefontalno,
Cincinnati, Ucbana,
Dayton, . Springfield,
Icdian&polD, Richmond,
Tiffin, Findley.
Persons desiring Tickets will be particular to aak for a
Ticket by the Ohio and Indiana Railroad.
. J. R. BTKAUQHAN, Sap’t
Wotlcas—The JOURNEYMEN TAILORS BO-
CIETY, of Pittsburgh and Allegheny, meets on the
first WEDNESDAY of every month, at SOHOGHLEITEB’S,
in the Diamond* By order.
M'-t G EO. W. gRESB, Secretary.
irS 3 CITIZiIKS* inauraaco Company of
PittslmargU.—WM. BAGALKY, President;
SAMUEL L. MARSHELL, Secretary.
Ofic*: 0-1 WittrStrc?t,b't\?ten Horkctand Wocdstrutt.
Innures HULL and CARGO Risks, on the Ohio and Mlsstu
•lppi Riveraand tributaries.
Insures against Loss or Damage by Fire.
ALSt>—Ag&inetthe Pcrilsof theßea,aad InlandtftTlgt*
tionand Transportation.
wascTOBB:
William Bagaley, Richard Floyd,
James M. Cooper, Samuel M. Kier,
Samuel Rea, WlUlamßlngham,
RobertDunlapJr., JohnS.DHworth,
1 ‘-aac M, Peonock, Francis Sailers,
S. Uarbaugb, J. Schoonmaser,
Walter Bryant, WiUiamß. Hny«.
John Shlpton. dec2l
.SC4S,SO3 26
Life, Fire and Marine Insurance Company;
CORKER OF WATER. AA'D MARKET STREETS,
ROBERT GALWAY, President
Jas. D. M'Gill, Secretary.
Thin Company makes every insurance appertaining to or
connected with LIFE RISKS.
Also. against Half and Cargo Risks on the Ohio and Mis*
eifvsippi rivers and tributaries, and Marine Risks generally.
And against Loss and Damago by Eire, and against the
Perils of thefioaaud Inland Navigation and Transportation.
Policies issued at the lowest rates consistent with safety
to all parties.
DIBBCT0R8:
Robert Galway, Alexander Bradley,
Jame« 8. lloou, John Fullerton,
John M'Alpin, Batauel M’Clurkan,
William Phillips, James W. Hallman,
John Scott, Chas. Arbuthnot,
Joseph P. Gaisam, M. D., David Richey,
James Marshall, John M’Gill, * *
Horatio N. Lee, Kittanning. fobl?
EUREKA INSURANCE COMPANY
OF PITTSBURGH.
JOHN IL SHOENBERGER, PasSmcrr.
ROBERT FINNEY, &soRETAar.
C. W. BATCHELOR, General Agent.
WILL, INSURE AGAINST ALL KINDS
MARINE ANd’fIRE RISKS.
DIRECTORS :
J. H. Shoenberger, G. W. Cass,
C. W. Batchelor, W. K. Nlmiok,
Isaac M. Pennocb, T. B. Updike,
W. W. Martin, U. D. Ooehr&n,
R. T. Leoch, Jr., John A-Caugbey,]
Georg© 8, Bolden, 8. S. Bryan,
David McCandleas.
43* All Loa-es sustained by parties inaared under poli
cies issued by this Company will be liberally adjusted and
promptly paid at its Offlci, No. 09 WATER street, f jyll
PEARL STEAM MILL,
ALLEGHENY!
S&- FLOUR DELITKRBD TO FAMILIES In ehhor of
the two Cities.
Oans&s may be left at the Mill, or In boxes at tbs stores of
LOGAN, WILSON A 00., 62 Wood street.
BRAUN A REITER, corner Liberty and St. Clair ots
il. P. SCHWARTZ, Druggist, Allegheny.
terms: case, o.r deuvebt.
jy£9 BRYAN, KENNEDY fc CO.
1 Moot and Shoe
JAMES O’DONHELL & 880.,
SSI Would respectfully Inform the
fHI of Pittsburgh, that they have opened a manufactory
* «»of MEN'S AND WOMEN’S BOOTS AND BHOEB.
At No. 79 Smjthfleld •••
, In Wxtmah’s BnoDuras, where they will bo prepapad to fill
nil orders of every description of Boots and Shoes at the
tfhortestnotlce. o> '
In order to accommodate all classes of customers they
will also keep on sale a sood assortment of the best eastern
work. Also, all descriptions of children’s wear.
. Terms strictly eaih; ffoodi at ca»h price*.
\ A share of the public patronage ts solicited, [ay2tom
HjVuV- 4 '' Vv.<:
-
Ltingi! Lnngil!
PITTSBURGH
PITTSBURGH, PA.
' • • t ' * e- J : r '
Pennsylvania Insurance Company
OF PITTSBURGH,
Cornor of Fourth and Smithfleld streets.
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL, $300,000.
rr'^ 2 ' lN5Cas BuLldin grand o;he* Property against Loss
ut£r or Damage by Fire, and the Perlla of the gea and
Inland Narlgatlon and Transportation.'•
DIRECTOB3;
Wm.J* Johnston, Rod? Patterson, Jacob Painter,
A. A. Carrier, , ; W, il’Clintook,! . Kennedy T. Friend,
James S. Negley, W. S, Hares, . D. E. Park,
I, Grier Sproul, Wade Hampton, L. M. Long,
A. 3. Jones, J. £L Jones, Hi R“. Coggehall,
OPFIOEBS:
PrcadenL.~..,.„. Hon. WM. P. JOHNSTON.
Via President ~.RODY PATTERSON.
SePy and TreasurerJs, A. CARRIER.
£ Assistant &eretary.£. S. CARRIER, [ je2B:ly
WILLIAMS & ALLEN,
sncccssoßd TO
ARNOLD & WILLIAMS,
MAMTPAcruaiaa o?
Chilson Furnaces, Wrought Iron Tubing,
AND FITTING GKNEBAIAT,
For Warming and Ventilation of Building!. .
&A. will contract for Warming and Ventilating
by Steata or Hot Water, Pipes or Chi Iron’s Furnace,
Churches, Schools, Hospitals, Factories, Green Houses,
CourtHousea, Jails, Hotels, or Dwellings. No;2& MARKET
street, Pittsburgh. ' spiff
Grand Plo Pile.
fiTS* A GRAND PIO NIC will come off on THURSDAY.
Attguat 9th, at MoKF.F/8 ROCKS, for the benefit of
St. James*'Church* Temperauceville. A splendid Dinner
will be eerved up on the occasion.
A Ferry. Boat, comfortably fitted up, will run pTery half
hour from tbefoot of Penn street to the Pic Nic'grounds.
One of our best city Bands will be in attendance.
augl
ITS* MATTHEW HARBISOOT, OF ROBIN*
ir«Sr SON TOWNSHIP, will bo a candidate for’the office
of SHERIFF of Allegheny County, eubject 10 the decision
of the Democratic County CoDTentlon. jvSi
stierlfflalty.—GßOKGß B. RIDDLE, of the
v*£r City of Allegheny, will be a candidate for the office
or Sheriff of Allegheny County, at the ensuing elec*
t{on - , • jy&dawte
JAMBS ROBINBOK.
OF INDIANA TOWNSHIP,
WILL beaCanildate for nomination for th* Offica oT
COUNTY COMMISSIONER, on tho Democratic Ticket,
at the October Election.
JY^ 3 * We nave Juat received from the East a
large lot of Panama, Canton, Bra!) and Canada
BTRAW HATS, which we can sell much below the usual
price. Straw Hats from 25 cents upwards. Panama Hats
from %lfO to $4,00. . * MORGAN A CO.,
tny2fl 164 Wood street.
ITS*, Befocepurchaaing your Hat or Cap
to-day, call a 16* WOOD street, and examine our
f^iarT HATS and CAPS, which will be sold as LOW fbr
CASH as any other house in the city can or jfill sell them.
VT x _ . MORGAN A CO.,
• Next house to the now Pwsbyterian Church,
One door from. Sixth street.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
[r*® Board of Trade and Merchants* El*
c liAngCi—The regular Monthly meeting of tho
Aesocadon will bo held at their Rooms, On FRIDAY AF
TERNOON. August 2d, at 4 o’clock. Business of impor
tance will be brought before ibe meeting.
W. 8. HAVEN. Secretary.
WOOD WELL’S
FURNITURE
CSSAffRS,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
EMBRACING EVERY STYLE OV
FURNITCRS,
ROSEWOOD. MAHOGANY ASP WALNOT,
SUITABLE FOR
PARLORS,
CHAMBERS,
AND DINISQ ROOMS.
EQEATi TO ANY IN
NEWYORK OR PHILADELPHIA,
AND AT LOWER PRICKS.
4r3?* Every ort'clo made by hand, and warranted.
Cabljist BXaJbsrs
Supplied with any nuanlity of PUIWITUKE uni CIIATR?,
Gn reasonable terras.
Hotels and Steamboats -
FOUNI.IHKD AT THE BUOUTEST NOTICE.
Warerooms, Nos. 77 and 79 Third street,
ag tf PITTSBURGH. PA
Hrrlng'B Great Work. -
TEE LIVE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON.—'The first vol
atile of the above wort is now ready for delivery—the
second volnme will be ready shortly. It Is ne.-lly gotten
up—printcdon fino paper, with three or more portraits and
plana.
This edition is published cxclutlvoly by subscription, and
payable on the delivery of each volume
T. J. &ISNKR 4 CO. aro sole Agents for the abors work.
Office, No. 2d Fifth, street, opposite Mason’e, ia Dr. G. E.
Shaw*a Optician Store.
£3* All orders addressed to T. J. K. & Co. will bo strict!?
attended to. ang22d*wlm
Proposals.
SEALED PROPO3ALS for furnishing—
-3,600 feet of 4 inch Water Pipe;
950 feet of 8 loch do;
Will be received at the ot2c« of the Water Works, until
Tuesday evening, the »ih inaU
uug2:3t j AMES NELSON, Superintendent.
RemovaL
SCCTKBERT A BON have removed their Real Estate
• and General Agency Office to No. 63 MARKET ST..
near Third. aug 2
"V/TAGAZINES, Ac 4c.—Putnam for August;
jjX Harper for August;
Knickerbocker for August;
Ranking’s Half-Yearly Abstract.
Just received and for sale at
W. A. GILDENFfiNNEY A CO’S Bookstore,
aOg2 Fifth at, opposite the Theatre.
CONTINUATION OF THE GREAT SEMIANNUAL
j SALE.—A. A. MASON 4 CO. will continue their sale
through the month of August. Tboy will again mark
down and still further reduce the prices of their stock.
Some 200 more cases and packages of NEW GOODS will
be opened, rendering their assortment more complete *>>»n
at the opening of the sale. aug2
10 MtjlAlr—2QO~tcns Ooal Blast Charcoal Metal in yard
and fokgatoty J* W. BUTTER 4 qq.
TENNESSEE BLOOMS—6O tons Napier Blooms fbr Bale
by [aog2] J. W. BUTLER & CO.
JUNIATA BLOOMS—
-60 tons £. H. Lytle's Juniata Lumps;
60 ton* Juniata Blooms; for sale by
aug» J. W. BUTLER A 00.
CLEVELAND GRINDSTONES—A superjot article,
HIKJ just received and for sale by
aag2 BOWN A TETLEY, 136 Wool Bt.
BRANDS, STAMPS AND STENCILS cut to' order, ttt
short notice, l>y BOWN A TETLEY,
aug2 . 136 Wood street.
COUNTING HOUSE BAFH AT AUCTION—On Saturday
morning, August 4tb, at 11 o’clock, at the Commercial
Sales Booms, corner of Wood and Fifth streets, trill bo sold
—One large Xrou Safe, in good order.
aog2 P. M. DAVIS, Auctioneer.
I?KOMHAM WATCHES—It la the universal testimony
fiV cl: Railroad men,;Bankers, and those In other pur
suits requiring accurate time, that the ** Chas. Frodaham
Watch, manufactured at 84 Strand, London, Is the most
reliable, and unequalled by any other maker. Many of
these which have been tested hate been found to run with
in a minute.in the year. I have obtained the agency for
the Sale of these Watches in Pittsburgh and State of Penn
sylvania.
Also, the F, B. Adams A. Son’s, and other first dees
Watches for sale.
Watch Repairing done in the best manner.
W. W. WILSON,
augl 67 Market fit, corner of Fourth.
Foil SALE—Two Lots of 60 feet by 140 each, In East
Pittsburgh, at the lowest prices, inquire of
augl THOMAS WOODS, 76 Fourth street.
WANTED TO FILL AN ORDER—
Stock of the Bank of Pittsburgh;
do do Merchants end Manufacturers’ Bank;
do do Mechanics' Bank.
Every kind of Stock bought and sold on commission.
WILKINS A CO., Commission Btook Brokers,
augl 76 Fourth street.
DIVIDEND SCRIP of the Ohio and Pennsylvania Rail
road Company bought and sold
amt! WILKINS A CO., 76 Fourth st.
IN DIANA FREE BANK and other broken Bank-Notes
bought at highest rates.
ftttgl WILKINS A CO, 76 Fourth st.
OIL ORIGANUM—SCO Its for sale by
B. A. FAHNESTOCK A C 0.,;.
ftggl Corner First and Wood sts.
QUILLS—6OO lbs for eale by ~*~ r .
aqgl B. A. FAHNESTOCK A CO.
INSEED OIL—3000"gallons for sale by
aqgl B. A. FAHNESTOCK A 00.
Magazines, books, ao.—
Ladles’ Gazette of Fashion, for August;
Harper’s Magazine, do
Putnam’s do do
Graham’s do do
Godey’s Lady’s Book, do
Peterson’s Ladles’ Magaalno, do
BOOKS—A Visit to the Camp before Sebastopol;
Star Papers, by Henry Ward Beecher.
Just received and for eale by
/ - ' W. A. GILDKNFENNEY A 00.,
„ jy3l Fifth st, opposite the Theatre.
Removal*
TJ. KISNER-& CO. have removed their cSics tb.No. £6
» Fifth street, opposite-Masons, in Dr. G. J 2. Shaw's
(Oculist) office, where citizens will find the hooka open to
receive subscriptions for IRVING’S-LIFE OF WABHING
TON, and other late publications, jy3l
ORANGES— 100 boras “ Messina » Oranges just received
end for eale by REFMEfi A ANDERSON,
JyBl No 39 Wood atreot»
rrUN—lOO pigs Banca Tin just received, in atore and for
"jL sale by {jyBlj J. W. BUTLER A CO.
WANTED— Ohio and Penoa. Railroad Sorip;
„. 0
y '.V ;. ■ *
A. A. CARRIER fl. OAIIRW
A. A. CARRIER A 800.,
Cbmcr Hmrlh and Smithfald sirtcU, Pittsburgh, Pa.-
AGENTS
mVJU, FIRE AND MABXNKINSURANCE C(
o» - Hi Asia air ao.
CAPITAL ............ ......9380,000.
„„„ - QIHABb
riUE AND MA2IHB IHBUEANCA ouaU-AIT
CAPIIAt PaX . l fl>Dl.PniA. '
CAPIIAL . 4300,000.
INSURANCE COMPANY ;
OP THE VALLEY OF VIRGINIA ;
, WIHOHBBIBB, VA. :
CAPITAL ...9300,000, ;
- CONNECTICUT
MUTUAL LIFE. INSURANCE COMP AN*
BASTIOBD, OOKS. '
mW] CAPITAL AND A35ET5.....Q2,lM t ma.
i NOB?H"WESTEBir INSURANCE COMPANY;
OPfICB, MERCHANTS’ EXCHANGE, PHILADELPHIA
' CHARIER PERPETUAL. I
OP°THE 00 ?
eS, fc‘: abl8 ’
AS''isa
Total '
XBFERENOSa
pxxxasuaao.
J&m eo M'Cally A Co..
W. A B, JUnehart,
>
Za&Uodßdy & Co, i
PTTTLAr.gr.'pfTTi 3
M.L.HolloweU4as., Wright, 1
DaTMS. Brown* Co, C.H. A <W. Abbott, ,
WnaleiOo, Evans A Watson,
Hod. Wo. D. KoUej, CJuo. Hegogoo ioo., ;
Caleb Copo A Co., ' ;
, , OEOKOE BDfQHAM, Agent, i
OB Water Btreet, PlttaboighS
WEBTEEH FABKEBSIHSUBAHCE COStPAH ;
NEW LISBON, OHIO. i
T J - HDNIEE, Audit, St Charles'Bonding, No. jl
. Ihlrd street, Pittsburgh. . •;
■ ' - ' omotas: " *
F. A. BLOOKS0&L President* £
. JAMES BDEDICKi VJce ftealdent;
LEVI MARTIH, Secretary and Treasurer, >■
.fraasonon nsnaiacia: • •
James W. Woodwell, Joseph Plummer.
Jamas Wood, B M. Biddle.
. tn Utobangbj . . Dr. Jno. B. P&rh,
jioj tfo. Simms, Birmingham* Dawson, Kewmeyer Ay.
British and Continental Exchange
EIGHT Mlia DRAWN BY S
OCSCAB, BBERISAII * CO.
ON THE UNION BANK, LOUDON*
.ls Sraa at. £1 asb Upwarbu. f
rtIHESB DRAWS are,ATallibls, at All the rrlncl
the a3NTINKNT aLAKD ’ S And IRELAND, .>
We else drew Enin*. Bni.9 on ; " -
M. A. etuMhua A BAIIIn,
_ FBANKFOBT A HAZS,, « * ;
an E d uolSd. aU rirts ? f QEKMAt ;
ln teodtogfo ttaTel abroad nay procure, throti
Us, s ,e i^ r ® CreJit, on which Money can-bo obtained i~
needed, In Ml 7 part of Kttropfe. ’ ' ‘ [..
Coiuono&j of Notea, ard other eeburltles In
rope, will rec« lye prompt attention.
- WM. H. WILLIAMS A 00, »
Wood, corner Third Btree’
WILLIAM HUHTE®, |
DEALER EXCLUSIVELY IN
FLOUEAP6MI
Ho. 290 Hborty jtreot, Pittsburgh, Pa.
RECOTim, the BEST BRANDf
PENNSXXVAHIA,
OHIO INDIANA end r
IMIBSOTOI, BDPEBFINE end
EXTRA FLOli
Which will alvaya be sold at the Loweet Oiieh ptleea. ft"
WM. B. HAYS & GO.
DEALERS IN BACON, j
HAMMDM&SHOiOi
DEIED BEES, . • . ’ 5
SCOAR-CUEED *od . s
~ ... CANVASSED HAM;-
Alargesawhalweyaonhaodat . ’ i
Wo. »07 Liberty atreet,
r. j. crHnnra...j. c. craaaire.«.n. c. Tcasa...w, a. woouw^
amebic an •;. * £ ;
PAPIER _M A C H i
HANUTACTUEIire COHPAHT, < .
KO. 78- SECOiiD STBJEET, FIT!SB UR on, Pj
VJ AIiU?ACTORERScr PAPIER MACHEOBNAMEi
ITA for Churches, Uoneee, Steamboats, 4<y Mirror?
Picture 1 rr.m-.'s Ui i::!rw and Door Heads, Brackets, Tni .
uirnlcee, V eatllators and. Centre Pieces 61 CeUtaKs,-
eettea and Mouldlnss of erery description, site and ate'
cHcarrs and warranted more durable than any other ari '
now In use, . • . ■
J&F Oalera executed on tha thortest notice. t-. * ■
N. ?rA l r tcntloa of Steamboat Euildeta la especial i
rated to this article, on Recount of its light wdgbt.
%T „ a • cumjiins,- tunes * co.>
No. % 8 Second et, between Wood And Market Btc- *
J* 2l Pittebmy -
Important to Housekeepers and -MBf.sffßirntmc
Fruit Growers. '^SjjJS
•Arthur’s , S I §§•
PATENT AIE-TJQIIT SELFBEALIHG JgjM |l
Cjlffl AND JARS» 'H |
jpor Preserving .Fresh fruit Mllllllillifflf
and Vegetables. . _gKllillllllllllif
I?GIt SALE at No. 12J Wood street, Pittsburgh, P.
. thf» China and Quetfnaware Store ofHENftY Hl*
who is the only agent lathis city for dlsposlfig of the 1
very useful article. Por a fuU description of these C
and the method ef tbeir .use, sea. Circulars, to be b
above; where, also, a complete and fall assortment of
and desirable patterns of CHINA, GLASS and QOP,
WARE, adapted to the wants of private ;
keepers and country merchants; may be Obtained *
Prices jel:
SEMI-ANNUAL SALE
DHY GOOBi
A. A. MASON & CO. ;
ANNOUNCE the opening of thaJr Great BetoW
Sole of thalr Immense Stock. Krery artlole Uu
oat the establishment will be marked down and
out. i
JOHN COGHRAN & BRO
MANOTACIOBEBSOP
IRON RAILING, IRON VAUL
vault doobs,
Window Shnltoia, Window Giiards, Sc
Nob. 91 Second atreet and 80 Thtr*
(BsiirrEH wood as. iiabksiJ
PITTSBURGH, pj,
llaya on hand;a'.yaciety 'of new patterns ani"
Plain, suitable for all purposes. Particular attsntfo
to enclosing Grave Lota, Jobhlcgdoneatsbon notice
S. M’KEE & CO»
BiOTMOIUBISS 07
M’KEE’S PENNSYLVANIA GL<
AIL 6IZK9 OP
WINDOW GLASS.
Extra, Double Strength, Imitation Crown and
Vl&is, Flasks, Pickle and Preserve Jars;
Wine, Porter andMiniral Bof
Telegraphic & lightning-Eod lands
SECOND, BETWEEN WOOD A MARKET ST
POTSBOEdH, FINNiu
But a abort distance from the Steamboat landii
from Monongahela House, Bt. Charley and City Hotai
J. a. JONES...-,...,... D, E
JONES & DENNY,
Forwarding and Commission Mercb
.pl9] 61 WATEIi STSEBT,
T R A N BPO R X A XX Ok
to audfroutbe kasteuk cr
VTA FENNA. CANAL AND RAILROAD,
D. LEECH~&CO.’S LII
Between Pittsburgh, Hew York, Philadt'
Rpd Baltimore. ~;
maiS BOBU4 being now in good order, we mj?
X to despatch property either tray on favorable;
Shipments consigned to either of the
forwarded without charge for nnTmnitJtfnTtfl y 'imfl all'
tiona promptly attended to. \
Addraa or apply to D. LEECH A 00i
Penn street and CanaL Plttat
TTAHWTfI 4 T.gg>:
Receiving DepotNa 13 Bouth Third si
Delivering Depot, Doek st, PhUa*.
A. BAIITH, Agent,
No.” 70 Worth street, Haiti
jno.'McDonald, Ar
No. 7 Battery Place, Ner;
ap4:SmlB
e. u. —....—i
WILKIIIS * CO.
HfgwypiviM to A. Wn.n*B 4 Co.)
AVB REMOVED THEIR OKJiTCB to No. 76 ?;
street, two doom east of the!* old stand, whi?.
will eonUnne the an
MISSION STOCK BROKER BUSINESS in all ita fcf,
as heretofore. „ „ ... ■
Wastzp—T*rentj*fiTe Eharea Mechanics* Banl >
jyl2 ; WILKINS ?;
MERRICK HOUSE, f-;.-,-
W. A. BLOSSOM, Pr.OPßijr
MEW BRIQHTOZI,'
EEAVES COV&TT,
w J£ liu warrants
40,
80.
»60 ACRE WAfiEAK?d»t
,1. r. . AIISTIB I.OOH
|rt« Dnlti In WrnwtJ, Stocks, to, WJfo'
' -v 2
■ • -
•It
• - T " >.' v,
PuTgppaog, Praate
-a;,.,