The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1851-1861, September 05, 1859, Image 1

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MOUPAOTIRMIS‘ OF Iv.tira AND
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Wholtliale, Mahn ISA 0114, Mate. Varnishes sad
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MAOKEOWN, Wholesale Druggist,
V V AvOlatin Oil Atatitactarer mad Agent for There'
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Fmt.Mr &TIMEX WHOLESALE AND
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. TOSEM FLEMING, (SUCOESSOR TO L.
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Eitslidstia,
Medicine Mars, Pericntem and all articles per
iertO A ta .L a , prair4tlr =stand comOtutideel *Call
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rfAR. - -GEO.- If. , .KEYSE ,R DRUGGIST,
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T. I IIEOII-It.' HUTOSINSONc. , .oommission
Arita dealers' In Witco% Bo
seers Rant. - Insll4' &ark Outtor, Unseen CC, Pot
sa dOnilm, - Dtted Milk sad Prode*
-1101$ haft float awns on hnn4.—
.11kestagr Maenad Co's' celatnied Patented
Penzl Shush; onllol3icandintil.oEnt et.• nnt•nnn
Woottnnd Bnittlafteldsta4 Pt ttitnegn, PL. stalYd
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Watt is Meese, Baser.; Lax Zia god !r . odttrot rmerally.
Serirobet.t, Om Water, 'Pittsburgh.: . wit •
g t fEE WARFAIOUSE.-4AS: 'GARS=
- Wholesale Bala .1a Mau, ftateota Pd
,Na.o Wreath drat, batmen Ilbqctr
autßmit=ttabnrgh"
AlirTernss cosh. pyrtly
SELLERS F
& CO., Dealers in Proci
dons, Laid 011, 24.,800 Liberty street, malt
litte bead damn/111dd Ornet. a 07.6.1, d
'lout:ante %%gents.
- - -
EUREKA INSURANCE COMPANY 99
wmansatat. 'Ron. imerair,Bm'y. 0. W. Bina.
100, Genera Agent. ' lal3
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ostrYti . .". „Fo
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Mats isurun street inoe Ocanpany of Pittsburgh,
urt •
M,AIORDON, Secretary IVentern
WIN Conaway. o 7 Watentreet.
JGARDINEItC O FITN , Agent for Frank.
w-• Cl/4.33P.1ny, NortE-east coon Wool
- -11L3DEIRA, - Agent for Delaware
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POINAEXTRI3,Ager4 Qraat West-
iltasprts.
W • • i AA. /VC ALLUIS ,
DP AVM IN 'CARPETS, OEL CLOTHS,
StATTIMM Le. Eled3l Yonrtla street near Wood.
Ittazuoti.
- -
PtlBll. dtIidOICENZI.g, Attorneys at Law,mkt sheet, Pittploargh, Pa. tiouo7 Pub
Ha sad Ohio Onatoisecnor.
OBERT WILNIOUT, ATTORNEY AT
lawocat &altar of file DNA at rituurrzth , = l . 119
carthetcreet;Pirtsbcrexh. delft
JOSEPU S. k A. P: MORRISON, AT
tamp et Law; , CISUO 50.1115 Amnia et,
zety2l
;Or Ovens.
L • uvula
I)IIIIRCHNIELD C O.; (successors to Nur-
AJP.plrfh wad Ratan Deem In
StapleJoid Mislay Dry Goad; Sottboestporner Yomitt uttl
is LOYZ,Driler, in Staple and Fan
/* D 7 Good., loge of - th• original BeeNo I
ihrinetagreet., Pll.l3burgh, Mole
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Lt . ; 11... PALMER, No. 105 Market Street,
Thaler tti Bow^ mem But. Trlscraring.,
1:25
Vooltstilaus, &c.
- 5011XSToN Br. CO.. Staticram,
Blank Boot lianutacturoi. lad .7 .6 ' , emu..., rt.
ST Woel Wed, Pictsbstre4 , . tan
,O.,OWURANT, Asucorssoa TO
1:44,a. Builf4)lVholoisalo 'wo2l Dooler Ist Book.,
fitotionory ttf Pim listagiagredemal Axel, 6tb dcar &
M. of blirkef Evora, Allegbouy, Po-
TOliN DAVISON, BOOKSELLF.R. - AND
Effatiover,siteceisar to Daytwa tANR No: a gam:
never, mar fourth, Eittaboret,
irr Ay & CO.; BOOKSELLERS AND
TIMMS, No. SI Wax' gm; to
door .tbercc.
awr of Third. Pinanigta, - soots am.
.tartly vn hand,
L.READ, BOOKSELLER IND STA.
=lira, mos north 4, *pato Ittahunp•
UN T B, eKSELLEE
tad ataknar,Mosctr. Ya2l. TM anat.
OHN THOIIIPSON & CO.,
EMMA 61311: AND 011,1113112P1LL
PAINTEIVS AND GLAZiERS
BO ras-nuso Brazier; pirrestraau,
air2Ctlyd
rill Estate agent";
VLA . LER ' IN- -PROMISSORY NOTES,
Bondi, Itortindesond ali omens for =nom
. .
acipecauslosta anon& my Sgamy, mt moo.
Idacno lid.P4 to ininti noir/many to exod aduntsgs,
tr.l3 slinprnnafinst sad' 'occult di.. snpor at soy Ads., for
•
An comscrus Arid intarsioss strictly conEdiratisL
Mrs (MINT =MC covets EL Pwal's esti:atria.
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WALTER' 1. - 11111 & OW, im
porton and Imatars,lfTWo:d dna; between Yortstb
Mabel ind 'Dimond Allrf, where mai be *and exteashl
anorfnurat of (Mu dalceptitni of Papa Liazaa. kw Par
kora, .Dteng lion and Oturobara. kw; Window
weld Shade', tastaat-faeloty at lowan prima to 000:cda7 dude=
WALT/311 P. 11118811.111.1 , .6 00.
Awns, at.
JOHN E.. NELLOR, No. 81 WOOD ST.,
Wive= mam sad Fourth street, Ws act
Orr CECUNMEGGI SONYIosscsOVSSINO 1/08M,..
609 a HAFELLNII.3IODEL MILONISONB dud °wart
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CARRTAOLSI'BUgQIESt iIOONAW AYSI
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PRIAXTOXIIIs oilCLiLtl, GIGS,
A:ND 0 0 1 7thint IA the lino, perchased from
Stainseat retiath •
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r- irautterattezniiii" •
R A =ivinifewitaliMoliator •doxiblotaa
nw i r. :
O tot ,
musiski l Ms‘ and for a ss% at reasonable prices by
, .1.. ,'• J 01321-3. BILILVINR,
• %wow d street, war Marty, Pittsburgh, P.
ifir otftwmcbc.thilindsold:cn? itepatr•
lit wady sad protaptlP Was: • . sel7Ully
StIIqDRIES;-25 Bo± Star Ca D dic f T
. 16 1,616 rulTerlalßuip.F;
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GOODS.
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DAILY 'PITTSBURGH :' -..:0-AZET..
Vittsburd Csaytte.
PUBLISIM vellX AND WEBBLT DT
R. ERRRTT do "00 . ,
To the People of Pexuasy'yenta.
The State Committee appointed by the
Convention of Delegatesrepresenting the Pee
ple'S Party of this Commonwealth which met
at Barris tug on the , 9th day of June last,
make this respectful ;address to yin on the
condltion of the public affairs of the country,'
and the - questions which invite your deliberate
consideration inviewof the aporoching annual
election. The ballot box .is the instrument
through which the People exercise their
sovereignty over the governments of the State'
and Union; end every recurrence of 011 oppor
tunity for them to employ this power, and
dise.harge the correlative duty which it in
volves', is an occasion which calls them to n
carded examination of the course of conduct
' of those to whom they have deputed official
' functions, and to rt determination respecting
the principles and measures which should be
recognized and adopted in the administration
of their republican institutions. These repose
for their safety on the vigilant supervision of
the people for -whose benefit, and by whose
authority, they have been established; and
unless the popular masses exercise over them
a constant watch and care, they are liable to
be perverted in the hands of self-seeking and
unfaithful agents, to the bate uses of private
advantage or merely pettier:in, and oven corrupt,
designs. Protection is the great purpose for
which governments are instituted. When
men resign a part of their natural lib
erty,. and enter into a political compact, it
that they may more fully secure the rights
and privileges which belong to them, as
members of the State. It becomes, therefore,
the first duty of those who are charged with
the administration' of- government, to guard
the rights, protect the interests, and promote
the welfare of the great body of eitizons.
Happily relieved by the achievements of our
ancestors from the oppression of crowned mon
arch's professing to rule' by divine right, and
from the imposition of privileged classes, the
People of this country, occupying a position •of
equality before the law, have the right to re
quire that the government of their own institu
tion shall be administered with a single refer
ence to their advantage and benefit. The first
settlers of America, for rho most part exiles from
their respective native countries, who sought an
asylum In this, then western wilderness in order
I that they might enjoy the religious and obeli lib•
cedes which were denied them at home—poor in
circumstances, and strong only in their devotion
to the fundamental rights of humanity, which
were afterwards so gloriously vindicated amid
the toils and =freeing', and on the battle fields
of the revolution, founded hero a civilized sod
otrristian state, in the midst of hostile ravages,
and subdued the forest and waste phioes to culti
vation, by the strong ararof manual labor; and
the industry of free men then was, and always
has continued to be the grearprimary interest of
the people of this country—the bulls of its pros
perity, sad the only fern column on which our
popular institutions rest for •support. It is this
which has not only - filled the, fertile sallies,
crowned the verdant hills, and adorned the rug
ged slopes of- forest covered mountains with the
happy homes of a rapidly increasing population;
but spreading over the prairies, crossing the
majestic rivers, and scaling the muumits of .
betehla and peake elotbed in perpetual snow, leas
extended the boundaries of the Republic to the
margin of -the ireesi Pardee Ocean, and estab
lished there communities of freemen wile proudly
add the new stare of sovereign States to the
constellation which adorns the American Flag,
and gladly share in all the bleseiegs and liber
ties whioh our political institutions,. if adminis
tered In their true spirit, and on their real prin
ciplee, confer to an extent which' no ether gee:
unmerited forms have ever bestowed upon thoeo
who lived under them. There' has however,
always been an interest which has arrayed itself
In opposition to free labor; and of .late years it
hes acquired an secendetcy in the epithelia, sod
iiver,the action of that party, which has, without
Just title, usurped the, name of "Democratic,",
and by its co-operation been enabled to obtain
a control over the policy of the Government,
which has been letimical to, and subvereiro of,
the welfare and prosperity of the productive in
dastry.of freemen. Thishoetility fade root
and ltd inducement - Sri the system of hereditary
negro 'Lavery. We do not question the sover
eign rights of the States in which this anomeleui
and exceptionsl kind of Labor exists, to main
tain and perpetuate it among them, it they see
proper. With that we have nothing to do—no
right to interfere, further than the mere expres
sion of opinion extends. lint when that system
becomes aggreanive, and insists upon eetsolisht
rag itself upon the virgin soil of our free territo
' vie', even against the will of the majority of the
resident population, we hold it to bo both a right
and a duty to prevent it. The wise, eolighten
ed, and far-seeing patriots and statesmen vlio
I I framed our instituttozurWashington, Madison
and Jefferson in the south, as well as Franklin, •
Hamilton and ring in the, north—ail regarded
slavery as an evil. They refused to permit the
word to appear lo the Federal Constitution, and.
expressed the united hope that ere long, by the
process of graddal emancipation, it would dis
appear from •the Union. They expressly fixed
a time atter which, under the legislation of Con
gress, the importation of 'throe should be pro
hibited, and Congress, acting in accordance with
the universal sense of the civilized World, placed
the brand of piracy upon the inhuman African
Slave Trade. Pursuing the came policy, Coo
-1 gress from time to time, and without question of
its Constitutional power, in estebtishiog govern
moots over the Territories of the Ithiory as the
I gradual advance of settlement required them,
by whatever moans of cession or purchase those
territories were acquired, up to the organization
of Oregon in 1848 ander the Presidency of Mr.
Polk, expressly eneeled that Involuntary servi
tude except for crime should not be permitted in
them, and with the agreement of Mr. Monroe
and his Cabinet, including each southern men
as Calhoun, Crawford . and Wirt, and of a Con
gress where Clay, Pinkney, and other most en
lightened etatesmen were conspicuous, fixed a
geographioal line which was henceforth to define
the northern boundary of slavery, and which
received the long subsequent recognition of the
Government in the terms of the compact by
midrib Texas became an integral part of the
Union. It was cot until the Territory of Kansas
which had been solemnly set apart for fete labor
by the Missouri Compromise, having passed
through the trying ordeal of a Territorial condi
tion, in the exercise of rights which hail received
frequent Congressional recognitions, presented
a Constitution of Government and applied for
admission as a State into the Union, that what
ever may have been the theoretical deciaratiote
of ultra Southern propagandists of Slavery, any
practical attempt was made to , overthrow this
established policy of 'the Government fortified
by so many concurring precedents, to the au•
thority of which all parts of the Union were
bound by the action of their representatives. As
effort liko this both to overthrow established
principles and to suppress the voice of a major
ity of the people of Kansas, was ecoompanled, of
course, by a series of outrages, unexampled Ito
the Meter; of the country. The ballot box was
polluted with fraud, and corrupted by violence.
Thskriglit of free electiob,was denied to the peo
ple, .The reeldents - were oierstred bY Divisions
of irmed men, who employed arson, robbery,
and even murder to Impose slavery upon the
ITertitory, and their forcible and fraudulent pro
loecdings were recognised as legitimate expres-
I Mons of the popular will by the Territorial att.
thorities actiog under the Commission, and with
the approbation of the "Democratic" adminis
tration at Washiogton. To 1856, in order to re
lieve itself of a part of the odium which it was
compelled to bear on account of these atrocious
proceedings, the Democratio party Dominated a
candidate for President whose absence from the
country dleobarged him from the imputation, at
least, of being a personal participant in the tote
of his predecetsorra- and, In accordance with a
predetermined polio; of deception which :was
to be pursued during the canvass, Mr. Boohoo s°
at onto bound himself by the moot solemn writ
ten pledges not to bo an accomplice id further
violations of tho rights of the majority, but to
submit to tho fair and uncontrolled determine - I
toof the people of Kansas themselves the do- I
cision of the question whether eke should . come
Into the Union is a Slave or Free State.
Thieves the burden of all theorisers:Les- of his
advocates, the printed addressee of 'the party
committees—the editorial declarations of the
"Democratic" press. Sven In his inaugural
dress, the same profession was made, and in the
instructions given to his seleotod Governor of
Kansas it was reiterated. But this would have' ,
been fatal - to the designs of those who were de
termined to fix slavery upon , Kansas, and the
polity thus repeatedly avowed was abandoned' '
with sudden and !rodeos:int- huts. - The most ,
attenuants efforts were made, and Presidential
InfitlenOn !ran brought to bear with its almost'
power, In the multiplied forms of patronage, to
fovea_ through Congress, and impose upon the
peope of Kansas spinet their will, the petitions
instrument conoooted by the conspirators against
. .pagfulitegights In the Territory at Leeoeoplon,
forthi.purpola of giving slavery a reoctaucd
poitticwasd tying lbs hands of the mejority In
their data to rid themselves of a system which
eel mailed ea intemilable with their
reels and prosperity. Foiled in. this the admin
istration, nevertheless, succeeded, by working
on the easy virtue of members, whose resistance
yielded to the blandishments and promises of the
dispensers of official favor, in foreleg through
Congress a modified plan by which the people
of Kansas were approached with a bribe in one
hand and a penalty in the other—instant ed.
miseion as a State If they would consent to the
introduction of slavery, but a continued condi
tion of territorial pupilage, should they spurn
the offer, until officers appointed by their op
pressors ehoold certify that they constituted
population at least double that required in the
case of Oregon, in the hope that they would be
fatigued into submission. But, thanks to the
indomitable spirit of the American People! the
residenta of Keene have stood firm in the vindi
cation of their rights, and by the cause of free
labor: and heedless of government prohibitions,
have formed a constitution in accordance with
the known will of the majority on this great
question. Of course, "the Democratic party"
as identified with the administration, in accord
ance with the policy of its chiefs, and the dicta
tion of Southern propagandists, have resisted
this action of the majority, and intimations are
now given that the admissiou of Kansas than
still be opposed end prevented as a punishment
for the pereistent devotion of ber people to Free
dom. Shall not the voice of Pennsylvania—
the proud proof of the mighty energies Of the
Industry of her freedom in, building up a happy,
powerful and intelligent Commonwealth—be
heard in thunder tones of rebate of. that oh•
strnotive disposition and policy, which deny the
soundness of those principles on which her in
stitutions are founded, and in effect refuses to the
mejetity of the people the right to frame their
own Constitution of Government unless they
incorporate in it a provision which shall eolith-
CA slavery permanently among them! Will
she not vindicate the right of her own eons to
go in and possess these new territories, and es
tablish there the dominion of Free Labor which
has wrought out her own solid prosperity, and,
has established her as the firm and unshaken
Keystone of the Federal Arch?
Not content with this effort to overthrow the
interests of free labor in Kansas, southern prop
agandists of slavery make atilt further requisi
tions on the yielding disposition of that class of
politicians In the North who have hitherto.lent
themselves to the furtherance of their domande.
It in now seriously required by them that Con
gress shall intervene in the affairs of the Terri
tories, should the people thererefeme by their
legislation to make special provisions in favor of
elavery, by enacting a code for the protection of
that "peculiar institution" and thus coerce by
federal power the majority to submit to Its
eetabliehment and perpetuation among them.
These men insist that while Congress has no
right to exclude,
it is its bounden duty to sustain
every effort to iatrodube slave labor into the
Territories, and wo find the Administration
"Democratic Party" in Pennsylvania, by the
resolutions of its State Convention • and the ad
dress of its State Committee, fully agreeing to
this doctrine, and conceding the propriety and
duty of it practical enforcement by Congrees.
This is the issue made and presented by those
who control the "Demooratie politico of the
South, and concurred in by their allies in 'this
great and free cOmmotivrealth. At the demand
of this dictatorial spirit, the Territories of the
Union are - to become, in substance and in fact,
closed against the entrance of the eons of the
people of. Pennsylvania, who by the labor of
their town hands would subdue them to the con
dition" of .cultivated said prosperoue States, and be
handed over to the thriftless labor of negro
sieves, which blights whatever It touches, and
' reducessoile of natural fertility to the condition
of barreb wastes. . Thus the great inheritance
which-we have received, and whittle might be
Made the dwelling place of a denee population,
situated in the midst of plenty and constantly
growing in he capacity for production, is to be
swept over by a system of enforced labor, and
exhausted by a feet Misses, then to be thrown
out in common and abandoned, because it will
no longer yield a support to its prodigal pro
prietors This hos been 'the history of not a
I tea of the Southern States, for the stately homes
of proud propietore which once stood in the
midst of vest possesioos are now ruined or eared
to the foundation. and even the churches of God
lie waste, the descendants of the dwellers and
worshippers being roattered far and vide, aid
the exhausted lands, returned to the condition
of primitive forests, or lying fallow and deep-
Isle in utter unfruitfulnese. Such are the re
salts of the eyetem which chums the impactor
and exclueive right to the proprietorship of our
Territories as against the labor of American
freemen, which conquers the natural wilderness
—improvee upon the bounties of Providence, and
from generation to generation increases the pro
ducts of the soil—adds to the natural wealth,
end sustains a population continually becoming
more numerous. more enlightened, and more
capable of faithfully and intelligently discharg
ing the duties of eithenehip in a Republic. Are
you, the people of Pennsylvania, willing to se
cede to a demand made on behalf of slave labor,
which thus deprives your descendants of the
right to introduce their industry into the Terri
tortes of the Union, and become free holders
there, unless they will consent to degrade then ,
seven to the level of equality with the negro
Mare Aro you willing that the powers of the
Government shall be perverted from the great
purpose of promoting the interests of Freedom
to a subservience to the base uses of slavery'
Are you willing that these vast Territories—the
munificent gift of a bounteous Providence by us
to be dressed and kept—shall be sacrificed to
the exactions of 'Lavery, and thus forfeit the
Eden of beauty and fertility which has been
committed to us, intrust, for the benefit of our
posterity, and of mankind? The requirement
of the passage of a slave cede for the Territo
ries, by Congress, is now boldly put forth, and
hoe received the recognition of that large divi
sion of "the Democratic party," which adheres
to the national administration in this State and
elsewhere. It is an tesuo which must be met,.
and it is fur you to declare at the polls your de
cision upon it. You cannot oppose it, lied*
the tame time support the aostyled "Democratic
Ticket" in P,eurteybrania. Emboldened by
. the
ready submission which hoe been yielded to all
their demands by the Administration Detheeratio
party, and resolute in their determination to
crush ant fire labor wherever it; elin come into
competition with their own heatilelsystem; ‘ th e
propagandists of' slavery have actually deletes
teed to take the still further atop of reopening
the African Slave Trade, and have already in
troduced into the country cargoes of savage neg.
roes, smuggled across the ocean, and now held
to compulsory service on the • rise, sugar and
cotton field. of the South. Tbe.point haearrived
at which in the path of retrowreselon whieh has
been pursued from the position taken by the
framers of nor Inetitutions; on Slavery and its
'cognate questions, men are toned who boldly
jaggy the infamous trial:tin human flesh which
was prohibited half a °augury ago by an Amer
loan Congress, visited with the penalties of pi
racy, and stigmatized in the estimation of the
whole civilized and Christian world as 'ilittectm
of all iniquities."
The lading coon of the Southern States, high
In the confidence of the " Dethooratio party,"
and holding elevated public trusts, ate heard
boldly demanding that Congress shall repeal the
punishments provided for those who introduce
eleven from Africa, and "Democratic" State
Conventions unite in the demand. Southern
Courts and Juries refuse to punish the pirates
when arrested and indicted, and the National
Administration is either impotent or unwilling
to intercept their vessels DU the sea, Or secure
the arrest and conviction of the offenders after
they have landed their cargo, and received the
wages of their crime. It le insisted that. the
South muet have an increase of eaves io order to
enable her to contest the point of supremacy
with free labor In the Territories, and to plant
now slave States to be admitted into the Union
to prevent the Free States from obtaining a °gm ,
pieta ascendancy.. The battle which has been
waged between the two oppugnant systems of
labor, always to the disadvantage of Freedom,
who has been deserted and betrayed by those
who professed to be devoted to her cause, has
its crisis la this attempt to revive the slave trade
—a scheme which le' made almost Incredible by
its audacity, immorality and cruelty- Unfortu
nately, facts prove its exist:once; and many of
the aggreeslone of elavery propagandism, which
have already been coneuatinated, were far more
improbable of acoompliehmen4 and received far
less encouragement and countenance at the
start, than this, the Moat flagrant of them all.
Obata principle is the maxim of wisdom; and the
voice of Pennsylvania should, be pronounced In
the most emphatic terms of condemnation of a
project irbleh must &tech the moral sense of
every one of her right, minded' chime. •
Tho industry of American freemen has anoth
er great and vital Interest whieh has always bean
refused the recognition of these who are engaged
In the eabemett4 slavery aggression which we
have noticed. The material welfare of the pea
ple, as well es the financial Interests of the goy
ernment, indicate a policy of protectionand de
fence :of our agricultural, mining, manufactur
ing, Mechanical and manual labor, against the
schemes of foreign nations, as the true peons t o
bo adopted in oar
Letebtiono n
the subject
atrff,Propedyenoraoldsactttelpe
revenuerleicaprovea, and p aeot on po e e ve n
At
periods in oar bletoTy_ when the labor of the pee.
pie woe beet *iheitarei Min • nnequal comps=
Won with icanandate . foriW napitaklenr.
trained skill and low rates of wages, the /*Won
al coffers irerro moat tally replatilictio ex-
perulitures of gavereinent were completely met
from its resoorcee, and theprocess of reducing
national debts -entilmoted under other systems
was in most successful operation. When, how
ever, discriminating duties were taken off, or
made to disoriminatesgalnet our home industry
—when free trade was put In praotice, and pro
tection entirely abandoned and condemned by
the party in power, not only did industry la.,
guieb and suffer in all Its departments—failures
became frequent, disesteem and overwhelmiug
-- . --furnaces, forges, 'factories sod workshops
oak unavailingly for
Cease their operations—labor asks in vain for
great foundation a ct u niLl :o r — .. no d eLh e s . ng
inter
eats of agriculture suffer in the general etagoa
tion of business' and.contraelloo of prices and
ecaroity of money, but the revenues of the Trea
sury fell off in rapid , diminution, and the gov
ernment which had Jest been paying a high pre
mium for Its own bonds, was compelled to throw
Ito notes on the market to raise the mantle of
defraying Its ordinary exitance and in a time
of profound peace, to centred a new national
funded debt. This has been the recent experi
ence of the country, and at this moment the
people aro suffering from the prudent conse
quences of the injurious policy of their puhlio
servants. , Pennsylvania boo witnessed, during
the last two years, the most dleastrene sacrifices
alba property of her people, and the moat do- I
presort condition of her great industrial Inter
tale. Valuable properties;ae been brought to
the blook of famed - salter pd at no time have
Sheriffs and other executive officers of the law
reaped such abundant barveets of fees, while
prodnotive lahor has stood idle and looked on
belpiese, at the sacrifice of hard-earned poases
stone passing from the grasp of the toiling baud .
that gave them all their value, for mere nominal
prices, into the:ownership of capitalists' and
speculators, Moat of whose means were wrung in
usury from the very men whom they were tans
dooming to hortsetess poverty. What more mel
anoholy eight than this can be presented and
how doubly bitter must the experience be to the
sufferer w hen he reflects that the cruet and fool
ish
polioy of the ruler' of his country, whom his
own vote may have assisted to their places of
Influence and power, has struck the blow under
which he bee fallen{ The entire commercial;
transactiorie of the isoutdry prove bow madly we 1
are pursuing a oottree of dealing with other na
tions utterly destructive to our own interests,
baying recklessly and extravagantly, paying in '
gold, robbing the country of its epochs circula
tion and basis of paper currency, and contract
ing debts abroad which Elitist be settled for in
the future. There was imported at New York
alone, of foreign dry goods, since the first day
of the year up to August the 6th, the enormous
amount of $75.62.3,418—nine millions of dollars
more than in the correepondilig period swild
extravagaucie just before the crash in September,
1857, and aboutforty-two millions more than
under the compelled contraction of the same pe
riod in 1858. We imported during the year
ending June 1, 1858. of foreign goods, wires,
end merebaudixe, 5243;239,000 ; during the
year ending Juno 1, 1859, $34000,000, an in
crease of almost $97,000,000. During the first
period we exported $52,033,000 of specie--dur
lug the last, $88,000,000, and is our imports of
the same article were ten millions lees in the
last than the first period, our stock on'liands was
$26,357 0 - 000 less then {49 year before. Our ex
ports of cotton, grate, flour and all other Pro
ducts of every kind of labor are vastly below the
importations; for while we sent out only V7,-
757,000 in the first seven months of the present
year from New York we had to make up the sum
of $42,249,000 In coin to pay the balance due
to foreign nations on the dealings through that
port alone. Foots like these convey their own
nest comments; they explain without any learn
ed parade of argament,the reason of the paralized
elite of our home industry, and call, trumpet
tongued, for the applitiatlon of the proper reme
dy. This to in the hands of Congress and the
execatiee administration of the national govern
ment toverhich the adjastment of the terms of
our commerce with Other nations has been com
mitted by the Constitution. But the '`Demo
erotic party," which wields 'those powers, re
fuses,oll relief. It Is bound to the opposite in
terest which professes to see in the protective
policy a foe to-all who are engaged in raising
sonthern produ.ute by stave labor. We believe
that policy la the best,which is most beneficial and
advantageous to every interest and 'tocsin:trot in
the country—the farm nod plantation—the mina
and forest—the factory end workshop—all have
then a complete harmony of interest.
Bat free trade 4 thorn delusion Of the South,
only mound in its-estentation to the. phyeisel,
moral sod political blessing, of slavery : and,
therefore, "abs Democratio party," WDOle seers,
Of conduct it dictates, denounces the protective
policy. Even the President of its chutes, guard
edly differing on this point from the control
ling power, is shorn of hi/lint/UMW. and regard
ed as wholly unsound; for when Mr. Buchanan,
in his last annual message, modestly suggeeted
to Congress that the advalorent system was prol
ific al frauds, and that specific duties, especially
on such articles as are sold by weight and mea
sure, as coal and iron for employees, would-be
much safer for the government as wall as bene
ficial to the people, he was flatly contradicted
by his own Secretary of the Treaaary in hie an
nual report of finances—hill paffy in Congress
never acted on the President's suggestion, and
be failed to temente In behalf of his Tariff re
commendation those influences whose -potency
wee en actively opulency] when, in concert
with his Southern friends he fought the battle
of slavery in Kansas on the Lecompton Consti
tution and the English BilL Ad valorem duties,
favored by oar financier', of the modern Demo
cratic school, are Rot only productive of fraud
and perjary, : but they have the vary admirable
quality In thearyes of, their advocates of being
lowest when they areanost reqnlred to be high
and when -foreign goods are forced into our mar
ket on. lair Invbices, sworn through the custom
pease by tales oaths to the entire destructioti of
the American manufacturer and producer,, and
olbeleg highest: when the foreigner, having
',Overthrown domestic competion, asks enormous
prices. for his goods and `compeLs our people to
'perthe most for articles of inferior value.
_ .
The epeoille duty of so much by the yard or
pentad, le, on the contrary, fixed and Invariable
—always the came: the American producer
knows exactly what to calculate on, and no
'fraudulently under-charged Invoice can be sworn
through, the Custom Bonze by individuals reck
less of perjury, when the article itself deflate
the rate of import. But the reasonable demand
of the people for the protection which would be
secured both to them and the National Trcaeury
by the substitution of moderate, fixed, epecifio
duties for the; ad valorem rates of the present
Tariff, falls unheeded on the ears of the govern
log powers at Washlegion, or le treated by them
with derision and contempt. Pennsylvania has
a *vast and vital concern in this matter. We
nerd not refer to the great coal and iron inter
eeto—her investments for improvements to carry
the products of her farms, mines, forges, fur
meets, factories, Act, to market, and the advan
tage which the active prosecution of those now
languid, or suspended, operations would be, to
the Agriculturist, mechanic, and manual la
borer, In giving them purchasers for their pro
ducts and fabrics, and employment for their mat
wart arms. The people of this State ars too in
telligent not to understand these things, and the
climes mentioned !hate, by bitter experience,
bad them deeply Impressed upon their minds
and memories. Will . they not, with united par
pogo, work together for the aceompllehment of
the great reform which is necessary in cur eye
tem of impelling duties on imports, and as "the
Democratic party"—ite repreeentations and ac
tive agents in public station end political man
agement—not only committed the wrong of in
troducing free trade, but refuse to remedy it,
themselves throw off the influence of this party,
and by rejecting its °undid : atm; make plain their
unalterable determination that. the protection of
American industry shall be the nettled, abiding
and irroveraible policy of the Government? i
When fully convinced that such is the resolution
of Pennsylvania, opposition will begin to disap
pear, and her true representative' will be clothed
withepower to make effectual her demands.
It is a remarkable peotillarity of the present
National Administration that Iwith a deficient
revenue and a people sneering_ In ell their bald
ness interests from the unfrietidly policy of the
Government, the public .expenditures have in
creased en unprecedented amount,. and cor
ruption, peculation, mismanagement and - favor-
itism, prevail at the cost of the Federal Treasury.
When Mr. Buchanan entered upon his ace, he
found a surplus of $24,000,000 on hand. Before
the tint year of his term had closed thin wad all
exhausted—the Leone of $20,000,000 in Treasury
notes, and a stock loan of the like amount were
authorised by the fat cession of Congress after
his inauguration—the total =Duel expenditures
et the fiscal year which ended on the 30th of
June, 1858. reached the enormous amount of
$89;628,867, and the apprepriations for the en
suing year covered the sum of $08,834,201.24,
and this eras lees by $7,769,090 than the "della
'Walton naked for. When Jolueeniney Adams,
thirty yearn ago, expended - some $ 15 , 000 , 04
annually , the outcry against' Us extrar ganee
was load and inceseant, Mr, Bidets= belng
among those who raised it for political erect;
but he ha not only nearly seztripled, b$ has,
in time of profound pesos with all nations, far
oxleedio the annual ezpenditures when the
°ountr7' wen eugaged;ln a foreign/war, - with'
fleets on the onemitichalte and a, I. armym, h
is
coital. , " If. these ;enema well/44494° a nd
tegitlmate, there eronbkcatiselo cam
buts nnfortnnately,4Y bigunmade
top improper papooto, and to ago plateau de
f.
•
signs. The nary yards at Brooklyn and Phila
delphia were. crammed with unnecessary men by
the hundred, in order to carry the election to
Congress of the friends of the administration,
and its supporters in attempting to consummate
the Lecompten fraud and outrage; contrasts for
building ships and supplying coal for the navy,
were awarded, not to the lowest bidders, but to
family connections of members of the Cabinet,
or to establishments whose recommendation, re
ferred by the President himself to the Secrets
of the Navy, *as that they exercise a strong T.
liuence in a Congressional District, and ought 0
be rewarded for deserting old political 61880CiII
ligt19 to contribute toMr. Buohanatee election,
and as an encouragement to them to work for
the re-election of hisfriends to Congress. Large
purchases of moles, wagons and other materials
for the Utah Expedition, were made of near re
lationa of the membe s of the ROAM, of Repro
sentallres, who pleas d the Administration by
supporting Its Ktilltla measures , or of members
of the' party euppos il. to wield political influ
ence
ence In particular lo sillies.
A mail line is kep up across the continent at
au expense of more ban three millions over the
revenues, while in bee parts of ' the country—
and especially in lb free states—the postal cc-
commodations of o people are diminished, ,
though the revenue of the department in those
States exceed the cost of carrying the mail. ' In
the department of
i tublio printing, large dotal
cations and fraud upon the Government have
been detected and exposed by a committee of
Congress, and it to shown that the press Isiah
supports the admlideation, lacking the upper!.
and sympa th y of l e people, is subsidized from
the profits of the r ioting and binding done for
Congress and oth departments. This specifi
cation of abuses a d note of mat-administration
might be greatly e tended, but we most content
ourselves with the samples given, and ask the
people whether the administration and the party
which sustains it are longer worthy of their
confidence and en port. Publie virtue is the life
blood of free government, and without it repub-
Doan institutions hasten to ruin. The leek of
reform Is the work of the people themselves;
they must achieve if." by dismissing unfaithful
public servants, and replacing them with othere
of fir= integrity and patriotism. While the Gov
ernment is thus demoralized by extravagant ex
penditure on unworthy objhols, for partisan
ends, emanation and uncertainty mark many of
its publio note. The naturalized cilium' of the
Union, to whom the administration was so largely
if not entirely, indebted for its access to' power,
and whose exclusive friends its party professes
to be, were shocked by an official declaration
that they could not claim the protection of this
Government shduld they visit their native coun
tries and be there required to rendes 'military
services; and they could not ho else than dis
gusted, when terrified at the 'possible result of
such a declaration, the President, Secretary of
State and Attorney General, put forth three sub
sequent official publications on the same subject,
each differing from the other, and ell iotianded
to 'avert the political consequences of the first
faux pot, and rather to prevent the alienation of
former friends than to gaud their rights which
they had first compromised, and under their offi
cial signature had placed in-the hands of foreign
monarchs an admission which would be retorted
upon them with . Irresistible - effect when they
ebould attempt t neatest with them th e doctrine
of the lealienab a allegiance which they Maim
to be due by th r native horn subjects.
In conclusion 'we Invoke the earnest consider
ation of these a bjeots whiob we have brought
to their Mtentio , by the people of Pennsylva•
Oa. We - have o doubt that the sentiments of
a large majorit coincide with the views which
we have eXpree li d. The only matter remaining
is to male th will of the majority effective
through the bal o f boxes. The National Admin
istration, in po elision of too immense public: ,
patronage, and all the advantage which it pos.
seeses in the dispensation of the large appropri
ations at its command, has a trained and pen
eioned baud of regular soldiers on duty.
No effort will be spared to pervert the expres.
aloe of the public emitiment of Pennsylvania into
an apparent approval of the Administration and
its =suer's. That can only be done by supe
rior vigilance and activity on their part, and the
failure of the great body of the people of the
State to attend the election, and make their
sentiments known at the polls. In order to
avert such a result, we urge upon you, the peo
ple, to form a then.ugh and complete osgames
don la County, City, Townebip, Borough, Ward,
and School Districts, with the single purpose of
securing the recording of the votes on the day
of the General Electron on the second Tuesday
of October bext,ittid attesting to the world that
Pennsylvania takes no step backward from the
proud position which she assumed last year, but
is ready, prepared, and waiting to go forward
in the cause of administrative reform and re
trenchment, told of protection to the free labor
of American casette both against the aggressive
movements of Slave labor at home, and the pol
icy which seer Bees our ieterests to the fallacious
doctrines of free trade, and prostrates them
under the unequal competition which they are
compelled to wage with the aggregated capital,
matured skill and unpaid labor of foreign na-
tions
The candidates nominated by the Convention,
by which we were constituted a State Committee,
for the offices of Auditor General and Surveyor
General, respectively—Thos E. Cochran, of
York, and Wm. 11. Reim, of Berke county—de.
tervedly enjoy the confidence of their political.
friends, are above reproach, and bland unmesh
ed by political opponents, and possess the qual
ifications of integrity, ability and fidelity,
Which make them worthy of publio support.
They are the exemplars of the principles and
mounres which we have advocated, and their
election will give the whole country assurance of
the position of Pennsylvania on thee. great
questions. LEVI KLINE, Chairman.
J.' iiIRON Foam, 1 Secrewieß
E. R. Bayou.
rp II E ADMIRERS OF STEINWAY'S
PIANDA Coo ropixclfully Informed that to have Joat
recelred TWO of these UNRIVALLED PI ANo-roar EN, vie,
One 7 Octave ronod corner, plain;
Otm 63.4 do do do : do
They need but to Le heard, and thkr 0000 argall.sty -.Ter
other. will et once he amolfsatsd. For ..lo by
11. ELILDER ♦ DEO- No. Of Fifth .treat,
Cal Sole Agents too Litehiternylii unrivaled Pi...
.Downer'o Prolific Seedling Strawberry.
4 6 M 1 juj QUA_L TO M'AVOI'S, SUPERIOR
to lievey'v Seedling in toss, evinal to Burr'. Now
Pina in
anyflera n
ol the one hundred yart.tie•
vor, ad from cm tu fell time
Inscultivation." .; productive
So
as
oth
4,
says Hr. DOll.l . f bit nos &welling, • gentleman with
whom I balm bee seq.:tainted sad done I.minews with for
years, and In all o r tratmailans have never had resam to
neledonlot his wo or bonorani. dealing. which Indium no
tu accept the agency for LI. wooderhally prolific het3r —
Bend for circulars of report of Inaatlcatlng Oommiliee
401114 Yellill11)0013.J11,
au3 Plitallorglt and Oakland Namorim.
N.FCW VI 12. M.
OALLAGTIZR, cp.ouc & co.,
331.L.A.89 FOIJNIDEV.S.
STE 01 AND OLB PIPE TITTERS AND PLIIHDERS;
VINISIIERS or ALL' , KINDS or BRASS
WORE, •nd &dm In OAI3 rrsroars, &c.
la-01 . 77DE AND WADEROOIII3,
O. 124 ROOD STRERT,
Flee door. from Filth stmt.
/r Totindry, N 0.11351 Pint Wont, Ono doors below One
Monoaphola Qon.o, botween Wood and Snathdeld.
Tho well known prutiall skill and experienos In t h e
floe. branches of Driae outings, Steam end Ou pltting of
the unto. , unnahus of our firm, who will stiie their personal
attention to all work- Intrusted to tbe.. •iroald eniatlo to
to • Mare otprilalc,patronagu
.crer.a. OMAN! PROMPTLY PILLTEVER
Jolt:di( ,
SANDER'S HAIR DRESSING ROOMS,
GRANT STREET, OPPOSITE TEE CATIIEERAL,
OPEN PROM 0 A. M. TO 9 P. M.,
Where gentlemen can bare their [lair Dresead'in the West
and moat faahionable =ulna. Ma has littad'up • room en"
pronly for Ladles, 'Whore particni•r attention will be even
to DRESSING Mint FOIL PARTIES, ItEPEPTIONS, ie.,
In tall verlone approved stVea.
iIIirSANDEIPS CUED ATER scsir TONIC kept con.
Stantsd
inaptly on hand and Ow ate.
REMOVED
C
G. HUSSEY & $O. hare romovett to
, thel; now Copper it arelmuse; O. 07 EMU
I the Iron Frost third door west of Weal
Weal.
Plttebrugh Copper Bolling Mill.
C. G. TIIISECEGY Su CO..
, surrracimuse OP
BRAZIERS BOLT AND SIIEITIIING COPPER
PR4SSED COPPER BOTTOMS,
IVES
Hobe
&a/ /MOM Cui rats of an Slat,
Brims Kettles, Sheet end other Bras,
EPELTZRAOLDER, COPPER rums, a°.
Dalai In Meek Tin, liaPlate, Lead Wire, nee. ZI.
Anita:wan Elltuet Iron, Mame Toni, he,
No. 37 Fifth Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
10181loota Copper Cot to say tattun. RAO6.ZI
L INSEED 011.-
12.000 onto Na, aarmied f . " °,
manufactured and for Web,
EUWIKa, 11611ILTON
'diddle allay batman& S. Depot and - I ttlr i t 7 ,
. _
5 0 0 BBLS EXTRA FLOUR far sale by
D• CILME./I)lC°'
ROLIT-45 - hf. - bb4E.: laikl-Traat-on eoa•
iigimmt g o t sag. W . .. IWO TOBT. VW=
Molassitd.—soa btu N:0, .10Testili, 60
to Worn fa rag Pr " NEW ILOTO cO.
..._.~~.. wu ...,.......~
insuranr:
Loae by Fire
Cranial* Fir* Iniursmos Compsay or
PHILADELPHIA.
Office 435 and 437 Chestnut at, near Fifth.,
tamment of Assets, luxury ist, 7359, published afftsem,
bly to an art of Assembly. being
Finn Mort es, amply ...... 11,791.869 89
RostEstate (present vane $103,1136t) wag. 77,701 77
Temporary Loans, on amp. Calatend
8 1 1,62 , 0 Z: 0
Stocky (present value $88,00772) cost.-- 71,847 97
Notes and BUM receivable. 4008 40
Cash.
42,007 98
$2,0113,823 m
wet„.Ttia only Profits front Prarniams onion Ma Compa
nyran divide by law aro n orr. 111.k.s whiat have been de:
termined.
Inrcirsnces male on every description of Property. in
Town ',am! Country, at rat. as low a• are nomistent , with
sorority.
lithos their InoorTeration, a parkel of• thirty years,
they have paid Loma by fire, to an 11030.112 t exceeding
Farr NEfforrs of Dollars, thereby afording evident:sof the
advantages of Insurance, a well sa their anWty and dispo
sition to most with prompt:sem all liabilities,
lEMEi3aI
DBiC7
o.
Oblation W. Rancher, Mordecai D. T.,ewie,
Tobias! Wagerer, I David &Drown,
Samuel Gant, Immo 1...m4
Jacob R. $
mithy
ma i Edward O. Dale,
George W. Richards, Georgs
0116. N. BANGER% President.
EDWARD 0. DALE, Vice President.
Vist. A. Etsm, docretary Pro tem.
J. GARDNER 00)71N, Aimt,
11376 OlDos Northeast car. Wood and Third .ta.
VIRE 12181311.ANCZ.
et .121
Reliance Mutual Insurance Company o
rIiI.LADELPIIIA
eou.iw6.. I.ln3ltrd or PerpbtoAl, lierchandlea, V11121.1t111.
===l
Office No. 30S 'Walnut Street.
0001701. $177,931.-Asarts $270,476 43.—In0earad n. wßoat.
First Mortgage ou huprovad City property, ortb
double the $161,800 00'
Ponca Railroad Cole 6 per c . c. Mortgage Lon,
$30,088, .... .......... .. ..... 37,000 00
Allog. county 8 percent. Penualt. It. Loan.. 10,000 00
City of Phitadelphia, do do . 6.000 DO
Pennsylvania PAIL.. Co o - 4,000 00
Stock
ofth•a
th• Rath.. Mutal Iceman. 19,150 00
Stock of County Vire hindrance Co. ...... - 1,050 00
Stock of. elawaro o• hindrance ........ 100 00
Colon M. InsnrsuCe Co l e Scrip.-- 310 00
$lll. Recisfeablo, badness paper..—...._--.... D 1.373 43
Rook Accounts, a.rued interest, etc-- --..- 7. 011 04
Oah cc hand and In Back_ - 15,0.63 05
•
~,L..„1 ,8 .1.1 TINGLEY , Prt:e5276743
Ettxtmot tiaphs.m.
nobert Eta.,
Williluxt Musser,
Bectl.lll.Tiogl , T.
Tttusball 1111.1.
Utittop,
telattd,
Jacob T. 13.13 ting,
ilnttb
Jolt° Ms ell. Citt.statt,tt
B. hl. TILNCLIM St,erutxry.
G. CitYYIN, Attent
t 4orriniTblrtl Attul Woad stroct.
Clam Thad.
1782. &Triumviri,
Frederick 'ircia i k,
O. Stasenscro,
Folio B. WmamlL
Robert Tolikod,
Frr deride Le d,
0.8 Mood,
'7loo'a S. Wrifidic i krd
Fire, Marine and Inland Insurance.
INSURANCE CO. or NORTH AMERICA,
PHILADELPHIA.
Incorpersted
Alisdta,lantiary 10.1659 _.41,159,924 67.
DEILIICITODS.—Arthor 0. Co, FAMOeI W. Yonne, John
A Drawn, Pentool T. Smith, 4:antics TWO( ' Ambrom White
John Nell, Ittcherd D. Wood, William Wtlab, William R
Ittose ja m N. Dickson, A. Morris Wain, John Mason.
Om. Ilneelson, Francis K. Cops, Edward 11. Trotter.
AI amass Stabs Fee,. ART OMt G. COFFIN, Prost.
I NSURANCE CO. or Tux STATE or PA.,
PHILADIFLPIIIA.
Incorporated, 1717.6—Copital $7r0,1100.
AIWA February 1, 1859 503,808 U.
LIDIDCTODR—fIoury D. libc-terd, Eamon Toby. Merits
Macaloster, William A. Smith, John D. Dodd. Descry 0.
Freeman, Charles S. Lenin George C. Carona William IL
White, Otorgell. Mart, Nontel Grant, Jr., Thom® Wag
bee. Thomas B. Wattnate DENNY D.BIIIIIIIINDD,
WasUAN Maim, fec'y. dent.
Ita..losurance [be abaci, Old and Dollable Compabiar,
can be obtained by application to
Madly W. P. JONES, Agent,6l Wear at.
Pennsylvania insurance Company
'SHURE!".
Office No, 03
Wa,la
L A. Carrier,
ftul..crt Patrick.
Liastry Pproot.
Nicholas Vonghtly,
JAM , . II Uovkits.
!web 1`.10..,
Oro. W. Smith,
A. J. Jun,
Pat.rsne
Tmautr,
1 Grier Opioul,
M=Gl
. .
am_Vira nd slan t .
Huk• taken of all de,criptiaaa.
cll&t•tka.
President—A. A. Omuta.
Pico Preaiderit—llent Pareasoa.
Secretary and Tetaaarer-1.. Osman Seat...
aartOrn InarMartoo Company
PITTSBURGH.
GEORGE BABEL% President.
N. 11. GOBIUN, Semetary.
Gyylejt, Na s 1 Water :Met, ,Spoii.;A CC-'• Wan:lOMM
up MB; Pittsburgh.
MI Anne o2..Miut cal/Y of Fire and Bri. Slut.
A Mow bathtub:els eltusagtd 3y Direehrs. oho mu toell
boos. etearosority, end are. eirtcrmirt ,
prompt... and Lißorstity, meuntain Vie character i l l
Boy 16,....p.05e4. a oftring Evlgroteclton to Mare 'eke
lqin to be iorirred.
ASSETS, APR.H. 93, MG
Stock 90,00 93
Mortgage 2,160 00
Oahu Parn1enr................... 1.50 04
06
10,367 Th
PremiumPAM 12
. . .
Bills . 1.61,3i9 29
Wm. Mcitehtbt,
Nathaniel Ilelern.
c«n oDs •
EL Millet Jr
ISSEI
J W Butirr,
O. IV J.d. u
. . ..
Janne kfulaky, 01Illnla U. 6laith
Aleisodre Eye.r, 0 W. Bickel.Alr..,
Andre. Ackley I
royal
Delaware Mutual Safety Insurance Company
hacarporated try fla L.e.ate.a.ture qf Praaryissaies,lB3l..
OtEata, S. E. corarr Third and Walnut sta.,
PUILADELPIIIL.
WASLVE INSURANCES on 'ranch, C..rign, and Iltaight
to all parrs of tn. world.
IirLAND EVEZIRANLES on Gayda,Ly Elvers, t)atuda.
(aka. and Land Oarrlai,ww, to all parts ths Unice.
JIRR LITURANCI9 on aterchandlza gonerally.— On
Store., Dwalling Ilona., do.
Bond, diortg.ge d anal ratat...._.....21121,p2
Of
820,291 05
Cuh on band 38,892 08
%Nome handanf Agents, PrI=IIIIDA on
Marine Polk:lasi . ..n:4y nal,and cal,
er debts doaabe Company
Babacrlralon :COtea-.
Jameslllold,
ThoophlluPenldlng.
Jalcorlivertslr,
William r.
J. F. Frut,ton,
Jcattia• P. Eyre,
Samuel E..Staltaa,
henry Mow.
Jam. 13. 51eFarl•
noccus O. 11.6
Robert Burtar4 Jr,
Job a /1.5.,mp10, Pltub'g.
11 T. Hum...
J. T. La,41.,
W5l. 11M1T1.51, Frooldonl.
T 1105.0. LUND, Vim Pr.51:1.4.
Milton. Martin,
Joseph IL Ektol,
Edmund A- Bonder
John 0. Dario
John IL renr4ek.
(Imago 0. Lester,
reheard Darllkgroo,
Dr. IL M. Moron,
Willlnn C. Lodrrig, •
Hugh °Mg, ,
Fpeserer
()barks Kelley,
IL Joon. Brooke,
Jam', P. !nom
nAlyJ—l*l3
Enrcks Ineuranco Co. of Pennsylvania
Oct, No. v 7 Water Sred, PittsNcrph
It RUOFJIBEBCZR, Prtndott.
HOBART VINNER, fitcreftry.
Conti:lnca to Insure against all kinds of Fire and Marin,
ASSETS, MAT 21, 1669.
Cosh In Pittsburgh Trust Company---.--480,800 BO
Mock DnaltiU.—payable on dearood—..»----- 41,040 00
Bonds and ..... 10,403 33
MKS shorts lam City flank Rock—coot—— 15,04 CO
CV Dachange flank 11,608
tisSO do Allegusny Book giock—oast.-----. 10,000 CO
100 do Mechanics' Bank titock—rsost--...—. 6,640 63
hook Acanthus . 12,333 76
Euu. ...... .... 87g 81
MIMSTOILS.
W. Con,
Isaacrentuck,
W. W.Marttn,
It T. Lomb, Jr.,
Davidaresailloes,
wuuam Dean,
].II. Shoenberger,
W. K.
Jahn A. Can gbey;
O.W. Batchelor,
It D. Cochran,.
Yarn. X. Bennett.
toy&lcad Wm. J.
=UM=Q;U=I
OF PITTEBOBAR.
Omcmo—JAASED A. UUTOLLISON, CreMan
MIDDY M. ATWOOD, 81K:rotary.
Omaa, No. 9s Wax, Mu;
NUJ /Imre eignoinN okkind. of Piro and Marine MA;
Atl=27s, ALLY 202 n, 1658:
Stook Dna BBL, payable oo &mad, accorod by
tan approved names.- 00
BfDa 36,645 Zi
AIBa Dlact3llol/4....-.. • 800 00
110 shares IlecluniceTaXiiroa:-702-1-. 6,166 0 0
100 do Mum.' do do do 5,126 0 0
60 do Dank of Plttanorgla do do 2,750 00
40 do Bretrange Bank •do do ----I- 2,060 00
Balance of Book Aoconnta.--------l. 6,061 60
O f2ca 4CO
•
OITSCIO.9t .
Wm. A. Caldwell,
Wawa Miler,
John lacDoriet,
Geo. A. Derry
lutchlsan.
WRY
U. ATWOOD. Se e'y
Wm.& llotmeL
R,t.DII2U, '
Wm. Rea,
Joseph Elrkpairtek.
Jima A. lin
III?
Philadelphia Fire and Lath
liilloll ll .Zi oll COMPANY,
No. 149 Chesnut Street,
o ppoBlTl TiS 0131STON 11-01:182.
VDU mak& all Ida& of lartrues, titter or
ileitod. oil pay dimiripion of Peirezr or I=ad i le,
otrueseblo rased
11. W. Iia.LOWIN, •
oLiztag P. Mimi : ~." IL IL Om : •
'Z. M'Eallabit4 •E' Own. NUtivn. •
P.. 8. emrS, f," iosiaot . ... 10%4 ,
C. Ettnlms. 1 ." Joba 0871 01) , • -
a. a. stegratd, ' = • , le. smer - =
4 ,..._ . r '''
I..„,,,,,„ l xtesserntsrF : ife: °via. APO;
isici*iiitriad ows wow rxwesk
.
- _
xE 2Jt
c ~ . ~.e...;,-,.~.,, ..
.a..:,..2 v
~,...~.~v.
Fir
UMBER 230'.
PAA),;(4=4;Wo; I O - 0.3i1.1;v01c.p0tt7X 1 4 , 1:4
OF PITTSBVILGII.
Orrzen—Ni). 37 Fifth Street, Bank Block,
TNSITRES AGAINST ALL KINDS OF
1. FIRE AND 11MILVE
. .
IBA AO JONES, Proddenn JOTIN D. TieCORD, The
'President D.ll BOOK, Secretarn Capt. WILLIAM DEAN.
armorsll Agent.
• • -
I %/Madman—lnman Javan, C. G. nGlrt y, Iramni
*wt. BI C. Ors', John A. 1V8.4 B. 1.. Frame...toner, John
1:1; r. Etarling, Capt. Wm.
Penn, t tux M. Howe, GaM, 11. Dnela. j. 4 Ipd
' PlltSbaign Insurance uompgv..
Office, No. 96 Water Street: '
prrrsstraati, PA.
• BORT. GALWAY, ?redder:L.
F. A. Rmansar, Rey ALEX.. RILLDLET, Tice Pm:.
linniros against RIM and (largo 11.1.03, on the Ohio end
bitne!Sij.:l riven and trthritar and Shrine But. g,n;
And. against Lass or Ramp by litre.
bad aping. thePosta of the Res red Inland 2:e.tigatien
sad Trenepprtstlon.
btiiigtOSS:
Abizander Bradley.
Jobe L. Leech,
John Warn:n:4
Nathan F. Hart, •
Robert Robleoo,
William Our,
Robert It Ilartbry,
lobo 1.1.0111,
Robert Outirity,
hicClorkeo.
Jowl* P. Gesum,
John Scott,
James hlArthall,
Mild Archer,
Junes W. Hallman,
atm. Arbuthnot,
my.lintrd3m
$105,605 67
(51-33.10.A.'1' WESTERN
INSURANCE & TRUST COMPANY
MICE IN 0031PANYI BUILDING,
No. 403 IV
ADEL PHIL Alati llT
PHIA. !STREET
♦olhcrlred capital .-•
Available mete our
FIRE, },,IARTNE, CARGO and IFILED INBURANCE
R. P. POIADEXTER,
No.DI WateratreeL
LIFE INSURANCE.—The GIRARD LIFE
INSDIULNOE, ANNUITY AND TRUES COMPANY.
at the Agency, No. 75 Grant eta tot, Pittsburgh, .ntitino
to
maim insarauce• on lives. In a:1 4M. to • pald 505150 1 of
$300,040, Gni, hare a large and Mere:mine ELLSZAVED 741(14
affording undoubted security to the !muted. In mom of
Insurance for 1.11. No bon. doctored from us , . Eta , .
has already exceeded Illy per cent 013 all premiums paid.
Tao.. R,DGIWW.T, Preatt; John P. Josses, Actrutry; Jos.
King, M. D, Medical Examiner, office No. lig Fifth street,
Pittsburgh. For tanner information apply to WA. BAKE
WELL, Agent for the Company, N 0.76 Grant street
mylElyd
EN YEARS OE PR ACRER-LIFE, OR
CEE.AtTPLS FROM AN AITIOBIOGkLarllY; by Roo.
Wm. Afllbtfrg, nether of 'The Mao, Ago and
1 001.1200. •
/H 12 DAWN TO DAYLIGHT, o otio/ Of • Wooforn
Homo.
CHARLES mecsers LIFE AND LIBELIT.IN
AMERICA: illumeed.
ADAK REDO. A now aopply.
L. READ, 7Aliornitt
EVEREUX'S KINNE'S BLACKSTONE
D
—Tho mot mstorist tarts of IllscOnt,um's tiomtnrn
reduces! to question. And answers, by Jona C. boles.
the lien nod in risen nt Enion's Iltactstocr, I
K AV d CO., Oft W 0,4 stmt,
UCKNILL & TLIKE ON IN6-INITY.--
la A ...um a Pry chologic Malkin, containing tbo
tory,nneolno7, diNicription. Catiatire, agnoe a. paibob
ogy mud moan:lout of loaauity, with xu App 0[ now.
by John C. Duckulli, M. D.aud Tuko, D.
0.2 6AT* C 0,51 Wood str,nt.
The Best Encyclopeass--Engilsb
E!7CYCLOPSDIA BRITANNV--
A.
Pi;hth Edition, 21 vols. IS volumes nom rmaly.
THE PENNY CYCLOP-SDIA,
17 coLL Now Edition brotobt down co tho ' , resent ilmo.
TIIE 'NATIONAL ENCTOLOP.EDLA,
.2 ♦Gb. in 6. The ba•t of it, size f 5 prbat..
THE ENCYCLORIDIA AINIERICANA,
033 bnea•n.l LT .s by
ate26:tf JOHN S. DAVISON, 93 Wood et
ANEW BOOK. FOE TUE COUNTRY—
Country' Life, • handbook of Agriculture• aortic:llM
rat wad Iswintacapa Gardening, by R. blerrts CT..laud, Kith
numrous plane and Illustrations.
Elt e elleyalemortalw eitt.a by Laity Fitellor
Tony eon'. Idyll of the aloy;
Love L.' Am., by Nicholls-Imph nrrir •
Sixty Pears Gleanings from Life'. Ilarrort, by John;
liroam: .
Ad mu Pea. by George Elliott; .
Owen Merediths Poems—Blue and G..ld;
r..f.r.P.... 2 vol., do d.
Edgar A. Pop'. Poems, do dm
Mr. P.t.lngtot...• Knitting Work—a Web of i•31.-.1 Tem.
toren
Arlan Halifax Gentleman, by kilts ll'ulobb—illastratod
.editlow,
Iteoolleorlons of Geoffrey ILamlya. by Henry Hingaloll
Walter Tbornley—a new work by the author of will.
Ftssant.. auM KAY k 00., 55 Wad et.
1161 - .EW AND.VALU.ABLE ILLUSTRATE
ICNOLIEH DODICS—
Holght's popular Illetury nf England;
Nalrd'a Cyclopedia of Natural &Intern
Nkhors do of Plug.' do;
Sea rode EindkA,lly G. 11. Lewin
Greener on Onobery; Stoke'. Diveridous of Pr.rlfY;
Pbtllye Illatory of Program of Great Britian
story of the Wolof George Stephenson:
Prof. Wilson's (Chratopher natl.) Works complriN
BroderiVe Zoological Recreations;
Fleming 's V.:atm:au of PhilowaphN
Telrecope Teactdoga—l.cautituny Illustrated;
Counterparts, by antLor of 'Charlea A.ticbcster."
Life and Nook% or, Record of Thought and Erasing;
Ballads of Bcotland. by W. R. Ayfono; •
ilistory of Prance, by Nor. James Whit,
Kirby & Opel:Lea's Entomology.
Insect Architecture, by James Ileunle;
Lardner's 3.bloeum andel:ice and Art, 0 ram;
lishies New Vole. Nary b, Laluartl.l
Encyclopedia Brittannin, 17 vols., 4to, to., 10.
/cat openvl E.o i DAVIS.ON'3,93 Wander.
6=l
NEW BOOKS.—Sir William Romiltou'e
locturck Tho Martyred Etivioceriek Tao kik of
Qom+ of Foatland; Fords" Grobifff. by faiib /WWI
Forty.foor Year. of the Lis of u Hums; Lore from the
French of B. Y. Muchelet; Ricoolleetleme of Goorrry Hem
ly xi, by Elogiley; route from • Locomotive, (by the author
of "Bolts Bottom) loyarvor Terrace, (by the imthor of the
Helm of RedcWiTeM Rattling Work orroarbt by Bomb
Partiogtoro Idyls of the Sing, (by Tolooyeoto) The Re.
mums Os Poor Young Min; A Boactieloee Mots. The ries
and the Old, (by Y. WE.G. COCHRANE,
atilo id Federate., Alleghouy.
=/:i=o
N EW BOOKS
Idyls of the atog—Tannyson's norpotate;
kratthes Work—Mrs. Parthesum;
Yorty.lioar Years of the Life of • Maryler.4 llnahr,
Adam Bede—nose sapply;
The Ahnerkan Home thrder,
Walker Thoroley;
Tha Romans of the Revolution—a ova . work'
Welder's IMckentary—new
J. L. ILIAD, i 2 Fourth Street-
NEW BOOKS—Thy Life of Dr. Jabez
Bootleg. rot. Lt, with. psstralq,
The Boman Queation—• correct Bodes editloo;
Adam Bul.g Walter Thoroley.
sods J. 1.. HEAD, 58 Fourth drat.
051,730 57
100,000 00
0402,485 2t
AICLEELICAN lIOUSE. DOECTOS.
TS THE LARGEST AND BEST AR- EN
IS
ranged Hotel In the flew England Stater, I. can.
trail) boated, and may of 11,...4 from ell the rimate of
trareL It contains all the modern Improvements, and
erery convenience for the comfort and accommodation of
the traveling peblle. The Weeping morns are large and well
ventilated; the miter of room. am well arranged, and emu
plate') funalahed for familia* and large traveilnic partite.
and the home will coutham to be kept ea • fire. dam Hotel
In over? minaret JalLdly,, LEWIS RICE. Prop
A. MADEULA, Agbot,
.6 Water Mimi.. Piltatnagil
84 MAIDEN LANE, AND 17 CEDAR STREET,
PA.PIP.R
E
SFEAPEIIiO
OE RAND OR MADE TORILDER,
FINCT, COLORED A 39 TIMM" PAPER.;
BIAM:LNO PAPERS, EMI:LOPES,
Straw and Bonnet Boards.
TWINE HOUSE
• WILLARD lIARVEY dC C 0. ,•
Si /trodden Lens and 17 Cedar Strad, - "-;
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. HEMP, COTTON, FLAX AND MIEN
raroarso aim um:Tacna=
C0R.7341,GE.
Of emory desctiption
COTTON, =TR MANILLA AND AmEnicAN imur
ROPE,.
. Tarred Rol; tithing Llaaa, Gating Tbrervin
SEINE TWINES,
EII 21113.P.AD, WlCK,and all kind, of
001W5 AND LINKS.
uSelokerStfaittO
1248190 Cl 3
Bargains in Beconn-Bat4 Piano&
Orosnore,re, Rotaarood clue,
nude by Chickening I • 4 ",
Sons, only two years old.
One 6% ORIET; 31<newooi csee, mind forum, =ay .y
flatlet k Oath
Ow lei octavo, llownwocel cane, nerved desk, plata =reed
'feet, nunta byffecons I Clerk.
One 0 octane, histlogany case, =do by Ignani. k Clark.
w 6 w N.Y.llllmarmeg Co.
w 6 w • Carding 16 Einnon.
" 0" ROOCIPX4 « Npoil : 3lblj
" 6 " 76663 . 333 8 33 "/ " " . Albsecht.
" " • " ImudA Bro.
" " • " " Gerona twat.
-
" A-3 " Mamma.
as 5 44 .4
Yar male bi rpyl23 JO= 11. 7.IELT , Cr 4 "..
YHSNCH A3O a6sittuGA o
CONI'IaCTIO
T. A. rd7.I3B.SCH 130.-
24 9. .11.2. ei. ClairStrvot.
Oppcsits the AU Oa . ,
RESPECTFULLY form ; t rM=
std the alle tuky .1v keep "raftautly
8t0n.,46. St. t 5 130 4 5dis,CikkosFrottlOcpr
"II band a loge ..n.Wgrandy, _ 6 ; Dr O PA Pure o
P I; u'ilrosh sad Driod ingt.,Nas.ra Mr, &rad
I , ..d thdr 151 J !allied IA can sad itrAirriliti Orr
D'gn".s":4rav77lovr T.auth
.6 6 ," • " A. AMEBA= & 6031.
liii.sibetarusor Preach and !Medan Coaton
=SUM
nNLY sl,3oo—ln • easy payments-4or,
.Ur • Yxcimmr , Ans. cur Inee. $3:O -3 , cr
Teo. 3 IJUse t034333.mentt,T3.3.0.,.r...1 ,• 0 ,
kt. G13=3333 3330 fat. Ur *Slob) , • • •:• • •
Ina° • • .5 COTEIBEIT it;
YELLO COI*
2000 4138 E /1113/8 -u W atasni gmazit.
fIOrPEE.--250 bags goo& prirbe - Rio Cof
-111 ow by GPI • AUER'S SA
illi=
=IEM
insnrancr
•
00
- -.250,000 00
t3oots.
'Mattis.
WLLLAILD 111LII.V.Iali a. CU
NEW YORE.
WAREHOUSE,
eery description of
PRINTING AND WII ITG
PAPER,