lot. Ho signed a alsirers to the people of 010 county, urging the subscription to tho Pennsylvania Road, in which ho maintained that, even if ilia coun ty should boo, tho interest to pay on th 0.51,000.000 bonds isened t-o that road, the benefit resulting' to the county from the construction of the road would more than overbalance it. was elected is delegate to and attended the Convention which authorized that subscription, and „ he feted there in favor of it, and in rarer of a reso lution endorsing the Conuellsvillo Road. 3d. Ile afterwards signed n petition to the Com missioners urging them to Rubeeribe $750,(100 to the Allegheny Valley Road. Thus Mr. Hawkins has endorsed and coven, • aged the annexed subscriptions by the county, and has done all that one man could to put the following load upon the county Allegheny Co. Subseriptlon• to Pennsylvania Road. 91,000,00 h Connellsville 750,000 Allegheny Valley Road, 760,000 Total Railroad Subscriptions Endorsed by Mr. Hawkins. $2,500.000 - , Steiiisma n iv:quotation at the head of its columns, advoest ing equality betwien whites and blacks., Which it ascriLes to the Tie StateVaui-nat, the Repehlican organ. The State .Journal -has pronounced and proved it to be a forgery ; but still the Starevaan keeps it flying, and every locofoCo press in the country is ex pected to.copy it. It is one of those lies which,, well stuck to, is expected to answer as well as ----- the truth. se wArrEn ON EACH PAGE OF THIS PAPER.. r. carox--1. irDrix..—.l/211ru.tanrre a. RIDDLE & Co ir l on-s a nei PROPRIETORS x!lxramtrzia-px. 'MONDAY MORNECG, SEPT. id, 1857: Wm. G. Whin the locoroce - convention nominated WILMan G. Gm:eatlia for County Treasurer we enlivened the opinion that he would not care to be found in the company he was placed in. We came to this conclusion from our 'knowledge of Ida antecedents.• It now seems that be not --‘ only eagerly accepts the place assigned him on the ticket, but that he was anxious to obtain it. He has signed the pledge of fidelity to the plat form, and even deludirir . himself with the idea that ho can, by double-dealing, worm himself into the Treasurer's office. . We regret, on account of Mr. Hawkins' age and previous character: that he should place himself in - this position; but lit his sense of self-respect is not sufficient to retrain him from leaving himself open to attack, the fault is his not ours. We hive no desire to attack him, and would rather avoid any reference to him, indi vidually; but we are not gOing to permit him, tinder the shelter of his past good character, to obtain office by the disreputable game he is now playing, without an effortan our part to ex pose that game. Rowsnvs, as we have said, has signed aidedge of adherence to the locofeco county platform, and permits himself to be represented throughout the county as a friend_of Repudia tion. Ile knows that votes are solicited for him an that ground, and ho knows, too, that an in famous handbill is now circulating through the county, by the agency of the county committee and the party Imam s, in which a Pledge is given that. be, Wita.t.tat G. Rousts's, if elected Trea surer, will, not cash any warrants drawn on him for the paymenbof interest. on Railroad bonds. The pledge thus given -he has never denied 'or disowned, inn suffers it to be scattered over the county as a true exposition of his views and purposes. And yet, this same WILLIAM G. HAWKINS, iu a late letter to the Post and I'nm,, puts himself on record thus: - "If I understand the grand scope and des!go of these resolutions, it is to place Me mainly ih such an attitude that there may he a full, fait- and thorough investigation of h . or railroad A Convention consisting of as pure and good means could be collected on a-similar occasion, collected together and, upon their own reaponsi- Wiles as men and as citizens, demand an inves tigation into abuses and corruptions in the man agement of our railroad liabilities, and because they do so they and their candidates are de nounced as repudiators. As one of the condi dates 1 spurn the charge with indignation and scorn." Here Mr. llswstss indignantly anal scornful . ly spurns theeharge that he is a repudiator, and says that his pie Ige of adherence to the re solutions of the county convention means that he is in favor of investigation, and not hingmore. -In other words, he permits himself without re buke or disavowal, to be electioneered for in an anonymous haldhill as a Repudiator, while over • his own signature ho disclaims being one. He Is thus on bath sides of the question: and hopes, by keeping up this double face, to be elected Treasurer. Now the anonymons handbill,Ss'‘i • far as it refers to hint, is either true or false.— If it be true, then the letter of Wm. (3. Hawkins is untrue; if the letter be true, the hand bill is false: and if the handbill be false. it is Mr. Hawkins' duty, its ..ari honest man; to de nounce it. But this, so far, he has not done. We have referred, hitherto,' to the fact that Mr. liswxiss aft led his name to an address, in • 1843, urging the subscription of a million by the county to' the Pennsylvania Road. Mr. Ilawkin.s new says that he never saw that ail .dress, to the hest of his recollection, and that if his name is to it, it must have been put there without his authority. This dodge will not do, Mr. Hawking. That address was published in all the papers of thecity, and distributed every wh-re among the people, and it could not fail to have caught your attention. The men who signed it are all honorable men, no one of whom would be guilty of uffixing your-name bait with out your authority. They were men incapable of that. You did not, tier, deny,the genuine ness of your signature; and any attempt, ion', - to get out of your responsibility for it by virtue of a defective.memory, will only redound . to your discredit. - The address is there , with your - name to it, nnehallenged for nine years, and it is too late, now, to deny it. Mr. HaWkins not only signed this address, but he was a member, along with the otherliod s-thg democrats we hive named, of the Conven 7 / Lion which endorsed the subscription to the ennsylvania Road. He put his name on record In/arse of that subscription, and he voted also, Conven - tihn, in favor of a resolution' en s &rinsing the Conn.\.llsville railroad. Nor did he stop here; for aftei•wards lie signed a petition, praying the Commissioners to subscribe $750,030 to the Allegheny Valley Road. • Mr. Ilswwisis' past record, t herefore, embraces these points : So much fpr Mn past record. His present re . cord may be , summed up thus: lot . . lie !steads tarp:o46mo of having signed the finusylroodo, Itoilroad address. .2d. lin writes d latter to ray that he is not opposed to the railroad tax, bat only in favor of inrenti;e t . tient; and 31..11e permits lilt potty friends to circulate hand , bills wilt:sluing a pledge that ho ie opposed to the railroad tar and that he is in favor of repudiating the railroad debt he did no much to load the county with. Ile is thus struggling. it will be seen, not ohly to ignore his past, but to obscure his present, iecord 'Slid to occupy, if possible, both • sides of the Ta ' question . It is a task ti.co much Pd. him, . fanny; certainly it is too muck for one who as un honored namCnntl who would scorn to do a•disraptuable thing. We dettire to say, in conclusion that it gives us pain to have to inty r these things; but we are determined to unmask this dirty double-dealing. -We care pot what side the loeofoco candidates take, so that they take it manfully and abide by -it, without leaving a doubt as to where they staid. So long as they undertake to carry on the campaign as they bare done, oolong we will be unsparing in our censures and fearless In ourexposures. If Mr. ilawkins does not like Oda •mtAtiat , warfare, let him cease to give Occasion for it.. Trilultock Island Bridge case is still on trial cltica,go. The third day was consumed in reeding- .the - depositions of Granmar, Mellon, 'Parker, M'Cllntock, hi'Lean, Batchelder, Shep ard; and others. The above named gentlemen -were witnesses- for the plaintiffs. They are pilots, steamboat captains And clerics, and their testimony as a whole goes to show the bridge a ::great nuisance and a- continual . obstruction to the navigation of the hlissiseippl.. The ash -stance of their eworn statements , agrees enb .lstantially with what we published on Saturday Meriting; lc, that It is unnecessary to repeat it . , ,PLIMrr or Banisr.—lt is,esti mated that thee were nearly ono hundred thousand ,bueheis o' barley/01W here yesterday. Thu quality of th hulk of thit Ida& finis arrived thus far this pea son isrery poor, and sellers here are thoroughly disgusted with 'pinch that is thrown upon their hand to:find a market for.-*Albeety Aryea, Bth. The Cincinnati Enquirer, when the Ohio Life & Trust Co. failed, started the story that the State bad a million of dollars on deposit there which would be lost., and this was made the ba sis of an appeal against the Republican admin istration of the affairs of that State. The State officers at once investigated the facts of the case, when it appeared that the State, so far from losing by that failure, was indebted to the Com pany in the sum of $6,000; but, notwithstand ing this fact has been demonstrated, the locofoco papers all over the country continue to circu r Into the base fabrication, in the hope that senate fool will be likely to believe it. The same game is on foot here. The only hope the locofocos of this county have of suc ceeding is founded on a confidence in their ability to deceive the people. hence the issue of that lying handbill, to which we have before referred, and which is conceived throughout in the very spirit of deceit. We have not scrupled, and do not mow scruple, to brand its authors as reckless liar., and to charge all who have an agency in its circulation as.participants in their falsehood ; but when we demand of the !mune° -organs to say whether it Is a recognized party document, they creep out by saying that it is anonymous, that no one is responsible for it, and that the party and its organs arc responsible only for what the party openly avows. Thus the party eagerly avails itself of whatever service may be reg,dered by that mendacious handbill, but when challenged and brought to account for it sneaks oLwith the apology that it is not ac countable for what nameless individuals in its ranks may do. But an lie, when once adopted, is no longer anonymous. That handbill has been distributed by locofoco candidates and locofoco committeemen, and loctifoco leaders, and re- I published in locofoco papers, until it may fairly be regarded as having been adopted by the party. It has been thus adopted, too, when its false and fraudulent character was well known to them, and after it had aces fully exposed.— Their hopo is that somebody may be induced to believe it ; and that hope is what they justify themselves with . . If they cannot win victory honestly, they are determined to try if fraud will not succeed. SENATOR SIGLER . . SrEzoit.—The Post and Unirm of this city, published on Saturday, a speech of Senator Bigler, delivered by that gen tleman on Tuesday, the Sth lust., at Clarion,— The telling speeches of Judge Wilmot during the last two or three weeks, in which he has held up the record of that recreant Senator to the people, ha, made a commotion int to camp of the “Democracy, - and his Illows have tingled no sharply that even the tough back of a man so used to political flaying as is Mc. Itigler, has bent under them. Vii lie wasn't the mall to meet -Judge Wilmot face to face lie conics here, learns the route of the Judge, and by skilful and forced marches, steals up to Clarion. is day in advance of :Um, administering the an tidote beforehand—a very quackish dose too. Wilmot spoke in the same place thec next eve ning and where was !Sigler thou On Thursilay, 10th, lie woo at the St. Charles, in thin city, with Gen. Packer—liar fratruns—ltTivg delivered himself of his speech and safely re tired from the inglot inns field. It is not our design to make any general re ply hereto this elf trt of the Senator. We wish simply to allude to one portion of it. It is known by all who have heard trr read any of the recent speeches of Judge Wilmot that be lays before us the record of WILLA,. Ilintaa who, at . the time of the introduction of the Wilmot Pro viiio-1847-18, was a member of our State Son ate, and in that record we find this Senator Bigler voting and Trakaly oor rezolutsou Pulty vv./or:log that Proviso, which . resolution was subsequently adap2ed by the unanimous vote of the Senate. it is necessarytor our present U. S. Senator to get over this hard place in -his polit ical history, and the following extract front ids last Tuesday's speech in eilarion will Elbow how scurvily he does it. Read ' , "Admitting all that Mr. W. alleges, Ido not I ' see that he makes out any man's destruction. The wisest men in the nation have often been wrong in their first impressions as to the expe t diency of suddenly proposed measures, and to be mistaken en a constitutional quest-ion, is no uncommon thing among able lawyers. As to the Pennsylvania resolution, it certainly did not receive that consideration to which it woo entitled. Ido not believe it wan under consid eration in the Senate - exceeding one half hour before it passed finally. For myself I knew but , little about it until it come front the House of Representatives, the day it passed the Senate, and had only thought of it as an abstract senti ment against the acquisition of territory, with the view to the extension of slavery and no af fecting the question of peace with Mexico. As a proposition involving the rights of the States and the powers of Congress, I had at that time , given it no thought. Reflection upon these things soon after, and_ long before I knew, that Mr. Wilmot intended to press the principle as 1 admissible when applied to territory which had I been long previously acquired by the common blood and treasure of all the States, withourany such original condition, convinced My mind that its practical operation wauld do injustice to the slavehobling States, and I di carded its doctrines entirely. Four years alter the tulv..tit of the proviso, when the Democratic nominee for Gov- ernor, I certainly was not charged with a want I of Sympathy for the South." Senator Bigler certainly deserves all the cred it such an explanation can reflect upon him.— He deserves all the boot he can win inn bargain between inconsistency and incompetency. • go when a rarthtirr twlrm4 W.l obit,. from • toddy by turn, Alp! 41.1 bat poor eller yr oln, Ts change, the rise but aw, to. rude But we are not. willing to grant him what lit- I tle,comfort his newly chosen position may af ford. "The resolution endorsing do WiLnot Proviso was not under consideration in the Senate exceeding' half on hour before its final passage," says Mr. Bigler: That is a lame dodge. How long was it under consideration and discussion before it came to a final vote? Bow long was he, Senator Bigler, conning it and cogitating it before if earn', to that final vole ? now long was he watching its progress through the !louse, and how long discussing it in. the quiet knots of politicians gathered ut the street corners who thought, at that mo ment, the saw Senatorship, Consulships and fat sulariet shining through the Wilmot Proviso 7 'Does ho eny that he went to lion. Charles Gibbons, al that time Speaker of the Seiite, on the day preceding the final passage of the teno lotions, and stated to him that ho desired to have the floor on the following morning for the pur pose of introducing those very resolutions "mhieh he knew very little. 0 , 00 l"? Does he deny that he did gain the floor for the purpose' men tioned? Are not his speech/mad vote in behalf of the resolutions on record, a speech which he had slept upon over night? A fine "Statesman," this, to eat up his own history, and declare to day that. ho knew very little about a subject oil which he bad with much perspiration prepared, 'by long and careful study, 'a speech whose sen timents do him Toro credit to-day than any act in his subsequent career! The record stands, and Mr. Bigler cannot falsify LARGE. EU SCIPATION.—Ieano N. Robertson, wl" lived in Charlotte county, Va., died on the 224 uIL, and left a will emancipating about 75 slam), and dividing hin real estate and Mho: property among them. hovision in made in the will for theirsemoval to Liberia. .• As exchange paper says "One little garden patch of ours has boeu profitable, very; this sea son. The males ate op the cucumbers, the chickens ate up the snails, the neighbors eats ate up the chickens, ana' we &renew Insearoh of something to eat up thecals." COCAP Coax.—South of Springfield, 111., on the railroads, some of tho farmers are coffering their corn at.ls cents per bushel in the tieldf others at $5 per acre. l'ho intlicationa.ane, less the frost sets in early, that the corn. crop sill be enormously large. A. mono in the Guernsey Times, says:— "Should.eier the colored man be 'permitted. to Tote, they (the Locos) will be the first Topples lohrig the negro •round the neck, ask- him .for.. his Tote and drink his whisky." I!=3 The Lying Game 0 .11YY•1 Plll. Ina Vele." Fryizer'e. lioneleyohea Pine. They will tun the wont aloknt headachy. Tl 4 srtll an r.atit holnla They area took as well al par,oliVo. 11 )"w head pains you 0110 due will rtire you. If you hare inAt4..Uoo the, will help yon If you an sick they will make yiTti wen. ?bay are lb. Nutt pill to cure Ittlaousatwa. Th., arc a plasn ptll nod a 0..1 pill No bettor pill own b. rosulatuadc.l. Tbt.y ctwt only z , cents a bog. Seat by mail to all partx of tit* Pelted Beaus. Dlme4yaler letters to Da. No. IW Wootiattlat, Pittsburgh. Pa_ lb.. Moth-tale deal. ettyliAll• SP TrA.l..i. STYLE FLATS. zarco.. Co.. 131 Wood Stroot. na•[ /VAT ILICIIVILD rag • (LENTS' UENTS . el)fT DOTS' FANCY cAM HOYT sarr.nAric cHILDRENe FANCY HATS. LADIES' 1:IDINO II TS. M'IYAD ro.ntror.. .10 . f . rlll.l. VANVEVfI & AND. A.TMO Fi .N.,I4:IC'S AT L. \v. mos SOL IC ITOIILS IN CIE All CETI V, .5... y Ahrit Pnittopc, /ono. 114 - iollentoms promptly made any I.4rt or Northern loror %Vattern Mammal°. 'V.I attend to the porrham and Vials of Real &tat*, O. Minna ?fumy on binds and mong.g. .I:lydr. s wITVC3.IS4f ci xx" Volt FAMILIES AND NIANI:FAVSLTSIVALE. WHEELER & WILSON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, .I.3ritleymport. Pittelturgh,oll/7111.6 741+ Maelate, Sillch.e the Finest or Coarsest Fabric, At the please', of the Operntur, multi ug rah ease One 11W,.,. and !A:maifel and due,ade Mit:he/per Maned, elneeetteelne ; kesly, reel are becnming itottspensal,le for family me— EnF:11•1, 4u No. CA Fifth areet: I - Ittsenrgh. BINGEI'S BEINVINO MACHIPIEItic Th. tre.t nuyerlurlty or SINGER:A SIACIIINES - • o'er all others kw lite um of Clothing and Shoe , )lartyfaciarere, Barnes,. Makers, Carriage Trimmers and Coach Makers, Has tang Irene it notrn and practleAlly neknowletiged. The 1 1104nlirlIrd Int•ing an AMMO,. variety of them Machine+ on loon!, aelopteti to every Allot of mewing and mitoblog, tovstee Homo Interestrti local! end examine 14.eni. n. ErPFLA.VVe Cbrner If Hernnd and NorAvi ,Auer!., eullblyl tmal PITTSIII/ROU, RC B. _ C. ULMAN & Np. 715 leolarth Bt t, PI ttrelettrgh, The, GEDVICRAL, INAV LANIC'EC •08111 TX AND Insuranoe Brokers. ' COMM CD CA Vital, it CritteananD 43,454,000. • Lire, Erre, Marine and Lite dtook MAE of ell deeerlio Mom taken of torrent vale. In the mmt reliable and prompt poylna compenler in the State. jrnelyro •. A. C4MI{Y - 11. CAW A: A. CARR.MR & 13R0., Pittsburgh, General ' Insurance Agency, Xo. 63 Fourth Street. .11778801 N PE.VNA. • Companies repmented ill Mahe. • ding. Chartered by P•unaylvanla and other &awe. Pim, Atari. and Life Malta taken of all doneriplions. A. A. OAIIRT)1t, N. S. CARIIIISII. zurmr*ox-x.A.../..rr TAILOR. Ifo. i 4 St.. Clair Street, (Pr. Lisle. Saw palldlng,) P/TVAIIUROII, PA se4loArlk Den t tttt e". • Dr. J. ie. 1- 1TTL.1..1.111?..N, kw•twiE ett l im gaged the eeryleee tho moat experienced Dim Workmen In th o United State; I, prepared to Itti ll '=' Teeth, adapted to men pentionlar nee, Vali set• of teeth, orparts aeon nude with ertlficial gll2lll, in one continuant correcor eolld ploegg.! Artlllehd Llygse hogerted, and oil deloi - golties 14,1 be dune ted. • ita - Openttlpneand work werragAeti. 011 ice No. 1115 Yoorth street, 40 tlreen Wood and Eitel mule exegete, eptblindro D.A. - W - lES do cyLiTtaror. • House. Sign and-Ornaneental Pointers, ,AND 011.41.11rEii8i Tzeirraßa.ArrArctioN7-Dr. Vono 4l not,, unthunt, 14 phmt bottles, price EGG3IOS Wstthe eimprr ims bdtir' any abut stiktO ererofreredto th Phhile for the cum of Outs, Gans, Births., Lesiettim, Orer heat*, An 'gem a tottle . le Misfit,* at tyG WOG .21=17 • ultrahle horn. Neu mobs mills= 4n.d & I. Tales ,Dep0t,,,68 Oortisadt street, New VAL Bad by Dr, ILIMuiL I4O Wood et.' • 1125:dela =ME Wr hear that a wealthy eakitahst of Boston loaned last isiek 1400,4p0 toli4ntuilZaWr ig: corporation al:15 par-cent., an Is4oo _l:ta City of Boston at 10 per cast, sad altialift hint bank lICCOUlltii 0 d $400,000. • DISD-0.1 Friday auirsillyfrst-.1.- o'clock-of dynatery,_ JOHN R6TILEIII,OIID, Infant km of W. u Cotmly , gaged . 10 months and 12 ChM- 71Evetial - jiotum - ra Nenralgis.—.A gentleman Using in Philadelphia ys. , gusing through Pittaburgh some moithaelnow par ' c bottle of Bowhave'e It 'relieved me touch, that on returning borne I bought trio mme botths from Dr. Drott, which complete:henna' me of Nen. rolgt, I have recommended the ertir to e4oy of my frirmis„and fouror tive of the number It cored them. think that my recommendation has done more for Its solo in Philadelphia than your adrictitlng." [Wears not permitted to publish the name, but say.per wm wiling at the store, or communicating with no by letter will be convinced of the troth of thin statememt] ail... Sold at gl per bottle, or tie bottlei for Why the pro- Rrtetors, BEN I. PAGE, Jt, & CO.,•klanulbcturing Pherztue• ceutistsand Chemists, Pittsburgh. Pa-,and Drug p ta b r many. See advertisement A • TIRED PR V 81CLAIN Whose sands of file havenearly runout, &wowed. while In the Fast Indies, a certelneure for Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, CoughaColds,and General Debility. The mmady wmi discovered by him rh ea lab only child, a daughter, wk. given up to die. He had heard much of the wonderful re tonalve and healing qualities of preparations mode from the East India Hemp. and the thought occurred to him that be might makes remedy for hls child. He studied hard and sac ceedod in realbdug his wishes. 111. childwascured, end is new alive and well. He boa since whalubstored the wonderfulrma MI fTWITILLVA of Cooking. Parlor and Heating BTP V-E 8, Grate•, Prolate, Fenders, etc. And Xamatoctannk of the Celel.rate4 C.A.Prr.a-Ia:COOICLNG, RANGE. 5103 LUIERTIC *TRENT. ir=kiTik PITIVIVIIOII, P. 73+>YDEN, (Stu-v..lr to W. IL WILIGAT,) • . ]lannteAtunrot ETLIENF.AL OIL oriel LAMPS, Co. 5.2 Fourth street, Worsen Wjasi and Market. Plttsbargh, PA, The tosistsigrial la prepared to furnish D. 4, 11 with liltherwal WI lust Owning fluids of a soperior quality, of his own nuinufaston, Also, Aleoltob Cabtithitta had and teary deirr_ri tloti or hide and Centre Table Lamm Mr andoles. Cue id the latest patterns and In./ * 1 I 0 ad style. Chan;idlers, Glinadates aad Lamp. nltsisnl and regvild. ed. Tboabove Orlseuppllod regularly every week toe...lto= root one wagons. 849:7yre