ESTABLISHED IN 1786. ,r“\ /»> /Hanuraciuwg. MA-OKBOWN,' TORST PRIKIPM AWARPED-gg ' ♦ o»rt»nooMki!iii»aom«li'li««'>» faTtora"* XJ iT , Tt to EES? (Mid and Flold Ertrjct* So. IB Bt*rtj .troct, flm- DT THE «TiTt »»IU TO KSgfc > nrS3« 81. FAHNESTOCK A late of the firm (Jr it A. X* l 1 Cv Vj U. , ♦it A Fihßtsioolt *C°. mJimwynto aiming MAITUFACTDRBIR9. OTiolasalttDraggl*- So. GD,eon»r\Food too fccrta. FOB TUB BBsT Vittabcrxb. P«. -- __ _ __ _ _ — STOVES. Scugaists. A. TAUNESTOOK A CO., WHOLIi • caU Droggirta aRd U*ouf*etcr*i* iffrj Lead and Litharge, conm TTood *t>J Pie** * tr ** t *» ?. tnrglu - - - - minmrt saTin* I 9WGMQB BlRin DftADif A REITER, WHOLESALE AtfP M> BatallPrppgleu.comer of liberty and St CWr j}i, Pittalnngfr. JOSEPH ‘ FLEMING, (SUCCESSOK TO L. TTiloox & Ccticmn Market* rr»t and comUntJy oa hand »fr.IJ and eotnpVtu Meoriraent of Drogi, Ufdldnffl, Med Woo Ohcstf, Perfnmfry.aod MV article for tab&lOßtoMibaslnwv ’., po*crfJ*loiM» carjfollj r<>iiii>ocnl*4ai all "' ‘ ■ ■ •; JaiKly DR.- GKO. H, KEYBER,- DRUGGIST, lWWood etroet. tnm»r 6? Wood itrtiM and Virgin Alley, Ptttabnygb, Pa. *' r ' JiOliNiP. SCOTT, WHOLESALE DEAL «rtaCrug4,PaIoU,WIX, Varubho* ar.d DyatuOi, Ho, MQLftertyttrM-ttPltftbnrgb. -All onion'will recoinprompt Attention. 'J&FAcrat for CchaneVePclmotrie Syrup- aitr2l:ly;U* IStoSiWt Sealets. RIDDLE, WIUTS A CO., General Com mission Merchant* and Doalora InOroccrie* »n 1 Pm jJar%No.lWLlb*‘rt7atrcct,PittBWr?Si,Pa. ' ' • and*Atufactory retnrna .roar* ■otiydr '2~'" • -~: v • ' daltblydawT T-AMfeif UOuMES i CO4 Pork Paakcrs U and Dealer* in Prorbion*, cr.rcoi of Market aod Vroot tt****- . Jafclyd* «. ncicKiwiwn, ...o. u. ltsofl LEECH & HUTCHINSON, Commission and Porwarjlng Merchants, doalora InlTeatorn Il« eom dune. Rout, IlAh, Bacon, Bettor, Linseed Oil, Tot and Pearl Aeboc, Seed*, Grain, Dried Bruit, and Produce generally. Beat brands Family Platfr nlweye on band.— Agents for the aalo of llsiiiou Oo’e celebrated Patented PaarlStartb, NoarJldSocotn! and 115 Pleat au-, bor»e?n WcodanilPiuUbßeljitA, Pittabnrgh, Pa. apMyd ptHEKBR WAREHOUSE.—HENRY il. V/ OOLLIHO, Vorvardlng aud Commission Merchant, and Dealer fa Chews, nutter, LXkn Rah and Produce generally, Id wood at, above Water, Pittsburgh. myffl Eagle warehouse.— jas. gahd insa, WholoQila Dealer In yicrar. PreTliicras ami KTOOBfagrormlly, No. 4 gtnreuih strut, tetvwn Liberty tad fenilbfißld.Ptttalmigh, P*. o»Terta»cash. F SELLERS & CO., Dealers in Pruvi • *ioos, tJkrd 01), 1&, No. Sbd Liberty atreot,opposite the head of StniLbfiald itreet. o«2Mjd - Insuiante^grnW. EJKEKA INSDBANCE COMPANY' 99 Water itrWt. “ ROOT. FI.NXUY, 8».-s*y. O. W. Batth- MOE, Qeoml Agent -» f raja A . ’,\-A . OARB J E K SECRETARY ft ■ PennsylTfluia Inaaracco Cr-mpiny of Pltttbnryh, Jopc*' BnflJlnfcfoxath street. 1 M, GORDON,Secretary Y» r fcstf\rn ■ a aona Company, 0* Waiarrtrwt. J ': GAKDINER COFFIN, Agent for Frank • .IfoFirulnjnnccaCompany, Nostn-ewt comer Wood and Third streets. A. MADEIRA, Agont for Delaware t &Icraal Ininrance 43 Watoratroct. W. POINDEXTER, Agent Groat West « orn Insur,»r.co Ca-,P7 Front elrwvt. fflatiifis. W. D. & It. FI’CALLUSI, Dealer in carpets, oil cloths, MATTXXQS, Ao. Sc. CTTaurthstruet near Wood. Sti> Gootm i. h.BDaourirLt* kqxseu, >».v. a. m liars t BURC&FIELD & C0 M (successors to Mur phy A Burchfield,) VTiioleeale and Retail Dealers In Stuplound~FabcyTJry Good*, corner Fourth and • Market at*., Pittobargh. enl H. LOVE, Dealer in Staple ami Fnnoy Dry Goods, sign of Iti# ujisinal. Hoc Uiv~, KoTl Market street, L url ?_ RII. PALMER,- No. 10i MUrket Street, p Dealer In Bonnet*, U»i*- Tritniulu£s l end BtrawU'Xd»gifoerally. ’ . (45 Wit. a. JOHNSTON A CO., Stafioner#, Blank Book,&auii£u:turc-t* and Job Printers,. £">• fcT Wood sireot, l‘*. , r *eS3 EC. COCHRANE, (SUCCESSOR TO » {L'Sadlefrj) Wholesale *uil BeUUI Dealer in Looks. Stationery and Paper llangingl, i’eJanfl strut, Ctb door 8- B.orHarkrt S<joanvAlkgbeny, pa. • «• JOUK3.d)AViSON ( HOOKS£XXEH Aiii> Etattcscr, ffncntwr w Da»l»cJi« Ignsw, £.'o. CTKarkst tract, near Fonrlb, Piftabargb, P». R At * CO., jrOOifSBLLEHS AND .STA TIOIfIISff, Kc. Wocd etrwei, aoVilcsf to the cor ner omUr*!, Vittri-'Urgfa. Pa." School kwl Tjsw’ltodWcou- Ktintly ou hutt l. ‘ ' ! ' ’ UiIEAD, BOOKSELLER AND STA -9 yiQXKIt, Mo. • 6 goartb st-, Apollo EoHdtos*. HUNT & MINER, BOOKSE] A&iTStationt.-r,&Uroiiis llaJl, Fifth rtrcri. ilamuta. JOHN THOMPSON i 00., HOUSE, SIGH AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS AND'GLAZIERS, no. third street, Pittsburgh, pa tofCOslyir SUai Esiatr aaentii, WILLIAH WABD, "PvEALEa IN PROMISSORY NOTES, 8 / Bends, UortgßfWOd >ll wcnritleg for montj. VenoDt oui yrwuxß loans throcga mj Agency, on raasae able trrras. ThoMvbhlog lo 4ave*t their money logcK»d advantage. alirsy* flat! first and tseoM class paper almy office, foT All rrm*—acd lntcrrlavt strictly confineti«i Office opposite 6t Paul's Oatluural. jnlidtf ’ r SJpOolstnj). ’Wall Paper Warcboui** WALTER P. MARSUALL A CO., 1m porter* and Dealers, 6”fT»tod street, letwaan Fmrrtb street and Diamond Alley, where may bo (bund an ©xtenstv* Msortmest of oT«ry description of Paper Hangingsjfcr Par {•in, Halls, Dlo'ng Room* and Chambers. Also, Window Bhadcs, In croat variety at lowest prices to eeontry daalcrs. aolQ WALTER P. MARSHALL A 00. ToJjnrTS¥i32siC^rSF s^o^Bt:, (I /Jetwoea Diamond Allay and fourth street, Sola Agent forCOTCKJOIES'Q A 80X5* (Snston) PIANO.JfOBTES, MA SON A HAMLIN'S MODEL UELODEOSB and ORGAN UAF-MONTUHE, aci Dealer la Mask end Musical Goods : _J jfr L_ Hv KLEBER A BRO., No. A 3 FIETH • 'St., Blgn of the OoldonHarpvßola Agent tar NUNNS k CLARE'S (Nov fork) unrivalled (fraud and Square P2ANo3,end CAItHABT A .NEEDHAM’S genuine WtW- D EON B and GROAN HARMONIUMS, Dealers In Mode an>l jlmkal fonmaepta. «■ , •' & ’ M CHARLOTTE BLUHE, MANOFAOTtfR. £B and Dealer Is Plano Fortes, and Imporierof Mails end MaileaJ Internment*.' Role Agent'iur (beIIAIIEUIUJ PIANOS,*!*} for HALLS?, DAVIS A. pO/fi Boston Piano*, «Ifh and-«f»hont ASolitan Attachment. lid Wood street mrß . fflacringw. CARRIAGES! BUGGIES! ROCKAWAYS! PHAETONS, iIABODCBSB.OIOB, A ND everything in the lim£ purchased from JOL tbVmoet reliable ; BASTE&H iXANDf ACTUEERB, Sogafhcrwitk afcli twnrttueDt of elegant Kutern {larntaa 'in otery. Varistj suitable for tingle or dcnbietaata*. Alto, A£les, Springs, and other Items, too numanmato mention, constant!* -on band and for sale at reascnabla prlctt “tr * JOHN fl. BIXAFFEB, Diamond street; tiur Liberty, Pittsburgh, Pa. '4tjr* Corrl&fti bought aoAeold on commission. Repair* tog nagtlj'and promptly dono. *»l7idly TEA'S!- - TEAS!! TEABM! —WILLIAMS A JDffKSIW; 114 ffmrttyWi Srtei, PiXkbzrsh, tuna a very choice eclectics of Family Groce rl«, cooaUthm In part ol tb* Jbllowfog: 104 tbwtafl&a to extra flna Oolong and CbnlatiTMe; bo ** •* *• Uyeoo.O. P-and Imp. Tea*. £0 catty bxa. - « «« «* “ to bbU'Cnuh*], pdherizaJ end Coffee Sugars; M mo bio, Ligiujis tod Old QoTe*n»e»t Jars Collet; 20bU**xrratfynjp« 1B( j Melaawc f iiS i po™ Oldtr yintgnn M bSTtotoiJKir *® bfl **“Y«&*a'a7rlsn4 ■ Boar; • *L “ Carte’s Toilet do 5 14 ‘““vQtnainand S? u Opaland MooldOaoai^; » ** t Pmfttsd eUmtilou BUrth; w^sfisassr ■W Nnttocgs, Use* and CaeHo; *2 “** QUr*.'Bordeaux and Virgin Oil*; ohm s?**o9cna,JlicinaaDd Cboeolau*; 2Qwige.«nne£<Jttrt>oiuteaod Sal Soda; ICO docaa Alason** and Annaart Blacking. Water, Untter, Sugar, Soda and Wine decked, dc.dc, whldi they offer WbotMale aod Hetall at frrr moderate ad vance# to the txnds or families, and respectfully cclblttLerr jatrooage,-.-; -. oelo . ' TjIROM I>AW-N TO w LIGHT-- or, Th» P SiasplcStor; of a Vfaiern llomtidir-* Mloteter'eadfo, iTOI- law net KAY A 00.; &5 Wood mV OLD PENS! GOLD, PENS largo m \3Tßortooctcl(kidTens And^.filltar CaMir'alvvyron band. All pens wcantoL.:W.fi OAYSV,?‘ ■ ocT Market * Second And Shirt* Wood ate- . FISH— 20 Jibl?, largo.Wo. t 3 Mackerel! --=. '".IO- . ■ ' lO.kltsUtckerai; -' ./ ... For pis by RIDDLE, WILTS * CO-, 1&5 Liberty »t. TTEBBING—2OO Doses scaled; i 1 ♦•iJ.-r -goo ••‘do'No.l;’ jStrrc’Jscdfcrulobj DS7ALEB * ANDKKfiOH, . acB : . -•■ •.■•:}Q-it. JgfcSß Woodatreot 'UTTER—4 bbb.primia packed Butter for > »i« iir »»a -Mtmrir;coixiKß. 2ftljßES. FINE QKEEN APPiES joss a<ra«i»aj , nareracomwa-- 10 tc?. orimo Kica rec’d. and fcr : bir..f. timz a teimblb. jacked Butter.red’d «n 4 «r ; , ; a b. kiso. SAIEY FOR TUB BEST COOKING RANGE FOR FAMILIES, With large Feed Boor for throwing !□ Coal, AND BEST WOOD COOS STO VE. DIPLOMA FOR BEST UTODRY BTOYP. Alto, on bend a targe auoTtraaat of Heating Movr*, Plain and Fancy Grata Fronts, Feoderi, Bod and Doy Irouj, Eu_gar Evltlei, Wagon Boxes, Hollow Wan*, Ac. GRAFF & 00 , No. 94ft Liberty Street, ATTOB HBAD OF WOOD BTRAEr, tf3-ljd Ptrtsnoaoß, Ptswa. WELI.S, RIDDLE * CO., *0 Fourth Street, tPittsburglt, Pa.. __ HAiujrtonaoM s»» AirniPS, THONOS AND SWITCHES. T V Order* »cdicib--1 (1 cm the ti ode, *u.l promptly ship paJ aaper Initmctlone > ?KUft— o month*. or 6 pur cum uUaxiui lot «*ah. «U:lytlAwT - HOLTiSI AN & WIRDBRIIOM), [eoccxsroaa *0 j. seiflsaf.l No. lOOXhrrd Street. Pittsburgh, ManufadvTtTi trid DiittTt in Oartnlna, Coratcaa, Oanda, Bbadei, Ollurta, Mattress©?, Comforts, Cushions, <fce. AJ-Particnlar attention p4l£to BTEA3IBOAT WOIUT. CABP£TS FmSD AKD LAID TO OBDBB. anlalfim . " " 1 HBMOVAL. ) mroxmaxm iron szosls. OOLBHAN, HAILMAN 4k CO., Mann&ctnren of Nails, Steel Springs, Axles, Wrought Nujs, Washers, Spikes, Rolte, ©to., etc , fUra r»mo«eit to tbelr new and oilonalve W'ar*bonio, No. 71 Water aud 04 Front Htraat, Wlibi a they ar* prepared to -uXaoqCa all order* in thatr Hn* having a largo and complete auertment of “Iraqaoane” t&aauUctan>d gooiUcoiv •tanllyonhotiJ, whichthcy »f- fer oq liberal term*. Iron City dtove WAreltouae. WAV. BBADSlUw k , (Succoss.ir to T. • J. CRAIG AOaO UfiOfacturor of TIN. IRON aodCOPPEr. WARE, and Dealer In STOYILH, Ko. IH4 WOOD STREET, between BbtA and Virgin alloy. Pitt* hargh, Pa. U t ly.l SUQUBHSS’S £ > OITN2>SL7- R. AIoCOV Jc CO, LIBERTY STItEMT, oppoiiit J\mux. S H.Ltpt PITrSUUBQH. PA. MANUFACTURE to order, on short notice, CASTINQS, KUAFrING A PULLEYS, »f all *<f*« •ud desniptfotK, of tha Ixatt malarUU and Int«t itylaa; aln WAGON BOXES. IRONH, URATES, Ac., nltrayi on hsnd >'t ca»t to onlxr. k3-Order* loft at tha FOUNbHY, .w at Oartwright A Toung'a, 6d Wood at , trill rws-lr* prompt attaotlou. laCafly' ■ ; j. a. tctu r j c. MDWKLL, Ist* of tlio Qrm of >. S flail A S|x«r. Lu ot Hall ft Hi><wr SPEER 6i. BtDWUiLL, .Valley Forge Plow Works. .Vo. 15& Liberty Sirtet, mar Manufacturers of every variety 01 Plow*, Plow Coating*, Ac, ~f the miot appr..vol Pat- Wot suitable furorory klmJ of unil and tlllan*. Thotr Impn>r»>d Pafmt Iron Ontiv, Potent Iroo C<>utr«* llltludo, Iron Centro t«nb-SoII, Palm! and Ootre JuTcr*. Stool Monldboard, Vollpy, Peacock, Sngar,o>ttcn ond othxr Flow* aro triKaasTie to give entire utUTortinn to parebaa tn, both as to rjnaiiry-and odoptation to «-Or4rr» areaollcitcd. .i.-4:lvJ OAftTWUIUIIT A YOl> N U , to John CottaTi^hi, 1 ) Manufacturers ami importers 01 Pocknt and Table CuUory, Sargicat tutu Doqihl In •ttuiuento, Ouna, Putula, I'iahitig Tackle, N*v rd Wiaul •Ir-WL They give opoclol attantlon l<> tUo oI Trnisra, Ropporters, ftc. Jobbing and tUpaii.g trith pane tiullty and dispatch. apUcdly yrtuuai oiurtnu... *. jau» u boc»u WILL I ADI DAILHUIU. ACU., G 1 Dennst, below Marbhry, Ihtlsbarch, Fa. STEAM BOILER MAKERS AND SHEET Tn n Wnrkert, Msnnractnrtr* »f Rarnliill’s patrat liniler, ImVoDi.Girt", Vldftl *ml Cylladur Roilai«, Dreithr.il, Hr* fUd, Steam Con !.<n«i rv Salt Paus, Sugar Pana, LruaYawU, Alio. i;iu:LvmlUrf' Work, Bridge and Vladurt 'lron*, d»»».« ol the Bbortcst no- Ike. All order* fron> « dHr«r<-e promptly ottrndt-1 to J 023 Ptnji CiHioa attlie, hiunurgh. Kennedy, childs & co., MANUFic TUBERS of- Penn A No. ] heavy 1 dShoetlusa Carpet Chain of ~1l i'oUj-k sad oau-iio. Cotton Twine; “ BeJ Cord*; “ Plough Line* anl Sash Ccrd: u Rope of all ales* aad ioomptlobti Batting. OS-Ortar* left at the Hardware &ua« of [/•£*», Wilw> A Co, 131.W04 trlU hair ■ JAMKU IliwiN, MAWDFAO T U K F. H OP SULPHURIC ETHER; Sulphuric A^id. Sweet Bplriti r.f Nttrc. Nitric Ad i: Hoffman 1 * Anodyne: Mmiattr. Ada Asiue Acunucia, FFF r.'iuM.* do Powder's Solution; «• Mey t* fcwjnl at John lr«rin A 47 Wai « siiwi wi.lliam'tatk * sow, PLUMBER AND OAR FITTER, No. 10 Poorlh street, PitJebnrcb, and federal street, under* ssath Excelsior Hall, x description of Fitting? for Water, OaS and Steam. no31:ly ®otnmto9um f Sit - i - <rm jntresn. crop & shspa&d, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, AND DEALEAB H IK FLOT7K, GRAIN <Sc PRODUt'H; 50. 313 Liberty Street, prrTdBUROB?, PA Choice brands of rLOOB, for Dakar** end Family, me, constantly cn bend. Particular ntten’i-Dn pil lto filling order* for Merchandise generally. ccffTvd HERBST & BARKER, ° FROBUdE AND PROVISION COMMISSION MERCHANTS, \ ~ 267 Liberty Stroer, comer of Hand, PITTSBURGH, PFStTA. attention given to (he purchase 33i ielo of Flour, Grain, Dried Fruits, Potato**, Perk, Laid, Butter Cboete,Clover end Timothy Seed*, 4c. Orders promptly BUM et the lowest m*rl*< j'tUej Ad vanr.es made on cooitrnzcents. ( oi the Pittsburgh B»g MaucfacL.r;. SAMUEL B. FLOYD & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Aud dealers In Fh nr, Grain end Prxlacd ■' Mi LIBERTY STREET, near Pa. IL R. Depot, FiTTSDUBQU. PA. tefcljd_ tr. r. waLSsB. Scw'ioik BtrvniT ueutasas, Late of Pittsburgh. phUedelpbia. PITTSBURGH COM Bi ISSIOX MOUSE 1 .. Walker & barhsts, COMMISSION MBRCH.AN'JB, ' And Agante far tl>» Sele ot PITTSBBHGff BIINBPA CTD RE D GOODS, Con. Oils and otdsb Mebcoandisb, PTo 160 Pearl Street, , ro ra w yob K . Cfistlnn thall be glrco, and proceeds prompliy remilted. Mostra. Cnee, Blcbarda Julio Black * 00-, Alexander Klog, Ea] ,| •* MeKao A llrolher, Uesirt. Adams, MackUa * Co. Wilson A llre!ne,'N. V. JoSUyd - i. w. oatnwicx wCHai. camsiLi. Oil AD WICK At 8078, COMMISSION MERCHANTS DSALEBH IN PAPlift AND RAfIM, And AgfeoU for lh» P*lt> of Mahoning Fire Brick and Pot Clay, Nob. l9l Wood Ptrael, nrar Sixth, Pltubnrgh. " &S. Wrapping Paper at -Blanabctnreie' pH cm. Cash palifor Kags. S. COTBWSJ— *• COtUMIW. S COTHBERT * SON. Qeneral Commis • slon for tfx* Sale and PnrcfiasFof Cast Estate, No. OX tlarkat strast, PHtebonth. Jnfct)<l LLOYD 6 pobstth. WHOLES aLB Q ROGER 8, dealers ib raoDDOD COMJU6BION UEP.CII ANTB for the sale of PIO METAL ANIt BLOOMS. 1 No. 397 Liberty Street, tti/j 1. lSSfreptO PiTTfiDPSQU. PA. j. o-aißrain. MBaoa ~ X B. OAHPIDSD A 00., Commission k Forwarding H.rch.nl., And Wholesale Dealer* la .WESTERN RESERVE CHEESE, Bums, I,*RH, PORK, BACON, rWOB. HSn, Pot A PbarJ Aebea, Bateratae. I>D9«kJ A LerJ OIL Driod FruuiaoJ Produce generally.; 2loi. lftl ud 143 Proßl|Btr<»t| FITTAHUHIiU, I'A. UITCRCOOfI, UeCaBKUV {* CO M [tcecsHOti to Hoffman, trCrtrtj A Oo.] '■ ForwardingftDd.ponunlbsipn Merchants, Aod Dealers is producei'Floot and i. /To. i&3 Front aad JUJ fittwnd JVtriwpA, ib . .aphlyd— • ' ’'' ' : 97K1H352 MaaaACOH—cßuucnr r. sism~.*atin.-VBiTACU V 9PUIHOKR HARBAUOB d CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, • ' DEALEHB IN Wool,' Hides, Provisiong & Prodqca. Genoiatiy, TTo. 20D L!b«rty Street, Pittsburgh. jaia' ~ ' • . Me BAM 1C * AfSJttU, HAIKU CM ' jflouiy G-raln «i<l Produce. 1 Commission' and Forwarding Merchants, No. -124 Jkflond St., PiUtburgi, Pa. -jpyttdyd , TlOßEftr MCIiIBV, Wholesale Oroctr, ~fVi 9jpdaM CoomJarioa Merchant, No. SIS liberty BaCroad Pmtsfz.t&at, HttßtastvPa. ipfl -..^cftiwnßiroa.ll^ j ''..fI*' 1 *' i' - ' - - -t.' PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. PITTSBURGH, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21, 1559 Pttslnurgj) PUBi.IaHJID MWLT AHD WKRKIA H i R . ,rc R.jR Ac C: < > nr™ sraitT. oxcrn smttmiLs SLAVfCUT DSPU2SD; Or K. U. M'Uasterbaa wrUlenftu article iu reply to a- oriUoigm by Or. C. Hodge in the Princeton Review, upon bis speech in tbe Ulc General Assembly. Y’ou object to my speech, that it* dt*eirine ou slavery is npsound - 1. First. Youeny that I tosiat on waking udin litiction between slavery and slave holding, which in tbe nature of tho onse is untenable. This ia an entiire misrepresentation. So tar from insisting on tbia distinction, 1 h*»ve where made it. On tbo contrary, 1 agrt-o with you that the distinction is untenable, anil that ibe consequences you draw from it,"to übovtbie, aro unavoidable. Slavobolding ia l ho'act of hording a elavo, a* n slave, and iuvotvos in it whatever moral quality belongs to' slavery. Hence: 1 have oarefully avoided any admission that what is properly tim holding slaves, «u tlavet, is in any case morally right. .My lan guage, well considered in reference to tbia very point, in this: “I think (but there aro mauj oases where men stand, tn the vi/w of the law and ils imr.nl/rf, in ihe legal relation of slaveholders which from various onuses they are unable right* fully to terminate; BOdHhal iu such oases, while they cannot, without immorilily, deem, hold, ad judge, and ropnio their servants to bo ckatlth in tho bands of their owners, to all Intents, con- BlroiUions anJ purposes, it is not only their duty to bold them, so long as (ho utoesaity exists, at their bond servant!, and, if uoed be, us their in rp/wnbiny bond-servants.” I am aware that some may object to this statement, an some have objected ; that it is a subtle distinction which people cannot bo got to make; and that it ie uotopable, because, If bond servants are held at all under slave laws, it must bo by the tenure which these laws cnioblisb, and thij is tbAt of slavery. Ido not sec that there la any difficulty in understanding tho distinction befe made, or tu acting upon ti. If the laws make a man a bond-servant, as the slave lavs do, this gives to his master fall and effectual ooulrol over him os a bond-servant; and this control, if just, ho may exercise. Noithcr his right uor his power to exorcise (his just control is impaired, by tho fact that the laws gofarlher, and pretend to give to tho master the right to bold his bond servant as td<r.'«JbVf, aad that be refuses to exerciso or to claim this pre tended right, and donii-s tho existence of any such right; just as, under tho Roman‘Uw, the father’d just right of control over his son, as a son, was not impaired by the fact that the law went farther noJ pretended to give him tlnrrigbl cfau absolute despot, with power of life anti death over him. and the father’s refusal to ex ercise or to claim this pretended despotic right; which was no right, but hq enormous and nefa rious usurpation 2 Second, \mi object to my defiuiiion of the term slavery. Whenever ! have w r itlvu or spoken on the -ub • jeot, i have been careful to give what ! think to bo into definitions uf the term FUvery aud its cognates, anti to adhere to those definition*. be causo l have been convinced that, among honest men, ibe controversy about slavery is iu great part a logomachy, which would be brought toon end, if the debatanls would defino their terms, and aJboro to their didnitious. Aon object to my definition,and adept what is id eubstanco that of Paley aud other?, that ••silv ery is nothing but involuntary servitude that is, the obligation to reuder service uot condi tioned on the will ot tlm servant.” With great respect for your authority, it Moms to mu that this is no definition at nil. any more than it would bo a definition of a negro to mt, “a negro is nothing but a man, that is a ration al animal.” All real definition must be by gepus and d'O'ereaiu. But in your definition the differentia is warning. It is no detinilion.tecau-o it comprehends oilier f-pccie* ufiuvoluutary.eor vituuu besides that cfslavery. The state of an apprentice under his indentures is nf tovol notary servitude; ih»t ia, the obligation to ser vice) not dependent on ibo will of the servant. B.i of tho Hu!# oi u<,l. Jd Jurlog bis tumor'll v. he i- hrii iu tuehin. onj 1:1 morale, lu t-e the servant of his Giber, uoJer obligation to eervioa not conditioned ~n Ihe will of (be sermni Hui an apprentice ia nut the aUve of his master, uor is a child tbe slave of his father, unless made so by that beautiful maxim of slavery, Partus **■ "vit'jr rtnirm Neither ia ever couceivhd or •spoken < f ns g» niikvo. nor is either ibe matter of so apprentice, or Ibe la'lier of a ehiM, couceiveJ of as ihe owner of his apprentice. Of of his child I cite two am hones, selected from maoy oth era, to bhow Ibe di*i i nut ion which I lake bet ween <he state of slavery and that of mere involuntary servitude, is one which coraoienda itself to th® juridiclal mind of eminent lariats «- Raya Blacketone, A slave the moment be lands in England leco-nts a freeman, though the matter's ng'tt to his tervxrtmsy y*o*vis/r/ eon tinv*." And again, recogniring ibis same du ticctioo, be says, “A elave, the instant be lands in England, becomes a free man; that is, the law will protect him id the enjoyment of his person aud properly; yot wi»b regard to any right which the master may have lawfully re quired to the perpetual service of John or Thomas, ibis will remaiu exactly in Lbe same §ta«w as be fore; for this is no more than the same siale of eobjcolion fur life tn which ih» apprentice sub mits for tho space of fccvep years or for a longer term ” —l. IFrtd. Btac'i 'f27, 42-1,125. Equally clear apd exjilipit is the rccngiiutou of ibid distiocliD lo a ca*a tried in noe of the Blateholding Stales of our own country. In ihe Supreme Court of TeoneeHoc, in IlarUell vs ,George, “The order of a competent coon upon the petition of a masier.ilhat a slave sboolJ bc liberated upon the death of himself or his wife, or (he rarriror of them, was held Lo La an act of emancipation m _r>r«>?n(i, lo tako ctfeot Tbs services of the slavo were held lo be due lo tbe uiRi>UT, bat (he tender of eiave was held lo cease, end hero after ibo act of oman otpalion, ftwdTefore the happening of such con* .ttngenc?. was held to be free TTuvtphrry’t Diytst, 2 i 3&. Here tbe diatiootioo Is made in etpress terms between the charac'or of slave and that of an in voluntary servant Of coarse Ibis disiinciloa could not l>e maintained if slavery ia nothing but involautory servitude, tbo obligation to acrrioc not conditioned on the will of the aervanl. My objection to jour definition 19 siiAUlneil by the altaoct universal reprobation of slavery, io.tbe Btrongi-al term*. by ibo whole 1 civilised and Christian world. Kor if it ha true that (slav ery is nothing hut Involuutary servitude*, that is, the obligation to render service not on (be will of tbo servant, then slavery is a con dition, or relation, of men, fooud lu tho law of nature, and as innocent as t bat of an apprentice to bio master, or of a-child to bis father, ilul bj the highest authorities, ethical and, logs!, political and ecclesiastical, auolent and .modern, and by tbo moral judgment or mankind, it has has been held that slavery, originated in lawless violence, can afterwards have a legal existence only by positive law legalizing tbo so oalled light of property acquired by ibis lawless vio lence, or by custom having the foroe of such law; and that it is not founded on the law of na ture, but is contrary to natural law,andnn viola tion of natural jnstice and humanity. If slavery ba the innocent ibiog which your definition makes it, how oan it be accounted for that it is Ihos oondomned in tbo strongest terms by the universal voice of humanity ? Lpl us bear some of the utterances of this voice. Tbo teslimooy of ethical writers against ulavery is uniform and dejdaivn. I need not<quotc them. Even the Epiourefm. place-man Palsy, with bis low-principled theory of morals, was not lost to the common instinois of humanity, aod bllod to the plainest azioips of morality; and be stigma tizes shivery as |“thia odions.inßiftntion,” and expresses tbo hope that the American Devolution might “ accelerate tbo /all of this abominable tyranny;” ebowirjg that, hie own faulty defini tion of slavery notwithstanding, bis very practi cal mind reoogoizjtd!slavery to be} a very differ ent thing from what his definition makes it. Mot. thil. Bk. pi Ch. 111. The Itijni authlerttics ore very full and ex plicit. i Tbo Korean Civil Law gives of slavery this definition: “Shivery Is that constitution of ihelaw of nations by which, contrary (a nature, aDy one is subjected to the dominion of another.” Ber vitas cit constituiid juris gentium,: qua qnis. contru Mlurant, ulifeno domlnio onhjicHnr.” ' Blackstoue eayH: ** Pare and proper elaVfery does cot, nay, oaonot* exist in England. * * Ills repugnant to reason and the principles of natural law that snob a stateobooMaub&istahy* wheto.” He denies the.three origins od which the alleged right of slavery Is planed by Justin ian, namely: o.aptivity, a mat»*e sale of himself, aud hereditary decent, and affirms that “all of them aro built upon false foundations. 1 ’ Of. the last in particular he says: “This, being built on the two former rights, must fall together With them. If neither captivity nor the sale of one’s self oan, by the law of nature and reason, re duce (ho parent to slavery, much less oan they roduoethe offspring." He adds, “Upon thesp principles the law of, : England abhort end will not endure the existence of tlavery; so that when an attempt wee made to introdnoe it by itatoto, • l Edw. VL o. 2; which ordained that all vaga bonds ehoald bo made elavee, the spiritof the nation could not brook this conditioo, «Ten iu Uu most abandoned rogoia.^—l Mtadcstcne, 423, 434.; '. The Coart of King'* Bench, Lord Mansfield Chief Justice, ifl the celebrated caeo of Sormrr t'U va Slttisri, which buo et«r since settled the law in England concerning slavery, says: “The alatc or slavery is of such ft nature that ii is in - c tp»h!e of being lulroJuceJ on any reatonx, or poUncal, but only by positive law. * * * Slavery is jo eJioi/ylbal nothing can bo suffered to support it but positive law;”—”0 State IVigls, 79 The Supreme Court of the United Stales, iu Friyy Ti. Comm. i‘rntiajivjnta t eaye: ■•'The slate 01 slavery in lO *’ e a mere munici pal regulation, toubded upon, and limited by tbo ranee i»f. the. territorial Uwe. I '—lo r r .un rt11.r.12. TbnSiipteme Court of Uouisiana, io Lumt/ord vp. Cofafl/on, says: *’Tho relation of owner and slave is, in the State* of this Union in which it bus a Isgal existence, the crcatttro of municipal law.”— -mUarUn, 402. The Court of App** l3 Of Kentucky, in Hanhin vs. da, fiftye: ."ShTCTy is sanctioocd.by the lawtr'of'ihts State;, but wc oousidcr this as a right, existing by positive law of a municipal character, without lay foundation io the law of Datura.” Judge Mills, in delivering the opinion of tbo cuutt, forgets the imperturbable ooolneeti of the judicial character, and betrays “fetliuga’*' which perhaps our vtwerablo General Assembly' o;»uld uut sanction, w»d with patrUJtio indigna tion repels the idea that hit State was so infect ed hy this moral plague, that the touching of bid foot upuu it* toil, and the breathing of Its atmosphere, could ntusa the condition of slavery to re-altach to a' fibte who had once, with the consent of bia master, gone without its jurisdic tion.—S Manhnll', 470. The Supreme Coart of Ohio, in AnJenon ?a Poindexter el al. t speak* at length In the strong est terms of reprobation of Slavery. 0 CVftcA* field, G2G, And the Supreme Court of Massa chusetts do« 9 the sams, affirming that slavery “is offonsivc to morals,’' and referring, in sup port of this, to tiuiqoraos authorities both ethic al and legal.— Id Pidmng, 202 Bat Ohio and Maasaahu*ellfl are, like some Presbyterians, spoiled with tbo leprosy of anti-elaverytem, atid their voioo is unworthy to bo heard. Ido not quote them That slavery, having Hu origin io lawless vio lenoo, is continued only by positive latr, or cue j tom h&viug the. fore* of lav, and that it ia not founded in the law of nature, but ia contrary to natural it Is believed, has been tbo uniform dotfrlna of Iho Coarts of the United Slates, and of iho several States, as well tbo alavoholdiog os the free, from the beginning down till Tery recent italea—"these men when,” ia your own words of severe bat just rebuke, "it seems to bo universally felt, that the greatest of all our political Institutions—the judiciary— is sunk bo low that oven tbo able bar which ia Btiil left cannot give respectability to the admin* iatration of law.” If it t>e true that, io the elo quent words of I looker, "Of law, nothing leas can be acknowledged, than that her seat is the bosom of God, her voice tbo harmony, of the world; all things in heaven and earth do her homage the least an feeling her case, and the | greatest as not exempied from her power,” ia it not worth while, on a question ench as this, to i bear the voice of (he law, ss uttered by its ac credited oracles, in one of (he most important departments of its domain* The testimony of the politico! authorities, ia c ondomnatiun of slavery, is Btiil uioro dear, strong, aud emphatic, than that of writers on law and the derisions of the ocuitg. I cannot cite this at length. L*t a reference to the'polit ical action cf uur own country, in the earlier days of its honest devotion to the ethko-political principles, which lie at tbo foundation of our whole system, suffice. In the formation of the I'ouHtituiion of the United Siatop, not by acci dent, I’Ul raft<• i debate, upou deliberate consider ation, of set purpose, tbo tcroA s'jvf aud .ii\irrry were rirluded, for the atoned reason that this system of slavery, beiogcontrary to natural jou nce and good morals, n must have no reoogui- j Uou tn the organic) law of the uatlon. j By the ac* of Congress of the ”-l of March, ‘ ItJit,, the African elave trade, by which men! were n-.'i • u> >try, but, Icing already tlavo tu their country, terra continued in tUxrrry under tbs Auienenn flag. od hoard American ships, and on American soil, was dcolared to he piracy pouiahaMu by desift Contemporaneous with and immediately following this political ao tiuu .-four own r-uniry, • h»> U-gmlstivu die cussious and a«.i».-u of Urear'Byitainftud the Unroprtu powers, to the uatao cnS. and the ahol nuu ->f slavery in the British CjAnie*. » U J ia eo m»oy ofutir own States, with ootfuituiional pro bthiiions of it in these and il.« newly or ganized Stales , Tim slavery are equally decided. 1 need uoh~ dwell un ih-* well-known fact that, wherever the church, clothed in her panoply uf light, baa gone io bgr triumphant inarch among the nations, the bonds of the enslaved have beau loosed, and (bij whole work cfdtirkuesg has diucppeered Let thetas liioonirti id our own church, in her earlier if not her better deys, represent the universal voice of the true church of Him who i.j the Light and the Truth It would bo ditlicolt to find stronger and niuro tmpbttiio terms, than those la which, io these testimonies, tho'falhers of our church express their utter Abhorrence and un qualified reprobation of his whole system of slavery, root and branch, the tree and Its fruits. I need uot cite hero their burning words, glow tug at -t white heat, ag&inr.t this legalised system of gross outrage upon mau. Now, whal means this concurrence nf all tes timonies. ethical and legal, political and eooleei untioal. the universal rnioe of humanity uttered In execration of—what* whal"—"Noiblugbul involuntary servitude; that is the obligation to render service not conditioned on the will of the Rervaoi* "Nothing but involuntary servitude;” a condition like that of an apprentice, or of the chjld in bis minority, and as innocent as either of these* CrrJ.it Judirui Afillii; non ay:' . No, it id not this But ii is that system aC-ftavory ve , hiobjß|A6»in# ! !ffil'slalQa wfl to belter 'tf''prcf}<rty; that is, of rea! estate, or of chattel). : which takes them out of (he category of ptn>n» t 1 having the the personal character anti rights which God bos conferred on and made Inscpara- Ido from humanity even lo its luwest estate, sod putting them tutu iho category of things, haviDg no rights No wonder that tho civil law eveo of iron hearted lloaieOjaUed it comtitutio c>n!ra na ti:ram v. This is my definition of slavery It is the sys tem which makes the legal status of human be ings to bo that of property, —of reaf tttaUor of chattih. The definition Is mine, not by Inven tion, but by adoption* I have given in my speech, as elsewhere, the authorities from which T have taken it. You are familiar with Arista- Go's definition,jihal the alaye is on anm.ue tool, a tool n-ith .t rcji.-! in it — organon toon, organon rnpvichon Ewery one ktiows the definition of the Romau civifl law, by which "slaves are held ao not persons;! as doad in law, or without civil rights; as beasts;” — “pronullia, pro quap- ripeJibus " The laws of Louisiana declares tbai “elaves shall always bo ropulod and considered as real estate.'] Tho laws of Soulh Carolina 'slaves, shall bo deemed, eold, declare that taken, reputed, jand’a'jjudged in taw, to be eh.u tle* personal In the hands of their owners and pos- sessors' and their excoators, administrators and assigns, to all Ijbtonts, constructions, and all pur poses whalovcr.” All the other slave States cither expreestely define. in the aanio or equiv alent terms tbo states of slaves, or assume, and proceed’ upon the assumption, that this is their statuei Upon a careful and elaborato ex amination of iheaodes of nine of the slave States published by authority, and of tho most authen tic sources of information as to the laws of (he other slave States, Judge Strong, of Pennsylva nia, says; 'Tho sqrdinal principle of slavery that tho slate ia to bo ranked among things ts an arilolo of property, a chattel pergonal— obtains as undoubted law la allibeso Stales."-— Sketch of the Lawn relatiiy to slavery; b. 22,23. This Is the undoubted ijaueo in which, as you yourself ad mit, the term olavery was takeu In all lbs ear lier testimonies of our chnroh on the subjeot If it bo true, as you sllsge, that the ancient, oon stant,uniform, and well-established sense of the term has been ohanged for a nne and* unauthor ised tense, In the recent-acts of our Assemblies is there not a cause? If, you ottered j?oor in dignant rebuke of “these limes, when it seems to be universally felt, that the greatest of all oar politioal tDetltmioDs—the jadloiary—is sank so low, that eveo the able bar which Is still loft oanoot give dignity to the admiolfllraltou of law,” , your attention had been turned to some other ooarts, por&dventnrc these might have ministered occasion, if not for like reboko, at least for se rious meditation. Tbiu thing of changing the monolog of terras and the names of tbiugs, as few men kuow belter thao yourself hoe been he oocitied with changes in men,la which the friends of truth and righteousness bate bad no cause to n-joice. /This ohaugo of the sense of words is a portenluobs thing; for words are thing*. But l think there is great reason to doubt the correotnefsdf yonr statement, bat tbo term slav ery is uso-i in tho,sense of mereinvolnotary ier v'uude in all tbo reccot acts of onr Assemblies, and by of our brethren. I have'al ways supposed that it was ia some such eenso as this that the term slavery and Ur oognates were nndcretood in thaamblgaonipaperoflB4s, by most of the hundred and sixty-eight men who voted for it, so far as the hurried and pre cipitate way in which It was poshed through the Assembly, without opportunity, to .examine It, allowed them to have aoy understanding pf it. Velit is strange, if the sense la tfhlch the As sembly understood the term slavery was that of mere iavolmitapr «rvitude, ; 4he -obligation to Hnder reniarfa oohdiUfmtd-n the will of the servant—a relation essentially like that of a master to bis apprentice, or of a father to bis minor child—bow tbe Assembly could gravely entertain the qQoslion; whether to enstain snob a relation “bo under all circumstances a heinous sin, calling for the disolpllne of ibechttrcb: a eio, the renanciiiion of which should ho made a condition of ohnrch membership'" TVnrafu n* sum 7 Tbe Assembly of 184«» may be regarded as reviving the old and well-eslabliebed sense of tbe term, if this had in any degree beodme ob solete, when it substantially rc-ffirmed all the earlier testimonies on the subject, in which, you admit, the term is used in the sense for which 1 eoutend. What then becomes of the sense of the paper of 1846 is not ourpresont ooooernmenl, .As to tho sense of ibo term slavesj in popaler usage, while U is true that tbe mass of people are not in the bAbit of tbinkiog-of every precise definitions of terms in their ordinary ase of language, yet ! think that, so far from nine* tenths of oar brethreo, using the term slavery iu the sense of more mvolaotary servitude, not one in a hundred would be found on considera tion to use it in that senso. It is notorious that universally in the slave States the term is used, not in the sense of mere involuntary servitude, but in that of a condition of servitude which makes men property; that is real estate, or chat tels. This is (he 6eose of tho term alike in the laws and in popular use. Nevertheless I admit that, in the loose and in considerate way in which language Is often used, while the trne nod proper sense of the term slav ery is that ofacondiiton which makes men prop erty, it is no doubt often taken in the sense of rnero involuntary servitude. Now Uis this very ambiguity of equivocal terms and the ovils grow ing out of it, that shows the necessity of insist ing on the true definitions of the term slavery aud Itaoognales The evils growing out oftbU ambiguity are of ibo gravest character. Not only does it give nee to an endless and mis chievous logomachy, bat what is far worse, it gives occasion to the affirming of slavery, in one sonßO, that it Is a relation, condition of life, or system of (hinge, not intrinsically and ceoessa rtly wrong, nay, whloh bright, and just, and good; while what is thus said of it, in this sense, is elsewhere understood of slavery In a wholly different sense, in wbiob the term designates what is inherently, essentially, and necessarily evil and only evil, lleneo it leads, in gravo discussions, and even ia the public solemn deliv craooes of tbe eburoh, to what, (hough it may not be so intended, has praciiaaUy tbe effect of the ohurob, in speaking In the n&mo of Christ, of a great question of publia and social morals, to palter in adouble senso,with a double tongue. Sacb, it is vory oeriaia, has been tbe effect of the equivocal and ambiguous utterances of tho paper of 1846. Surely not one word needs to be said on the evils every way of such a state of things, in the discussions and deliverances of (he ohurob on a subject sooh as this of slavery, so deeply moving tbe minds of men,and, as many think, threatening to shake to their foundations both our political and ecclesiastical organiza tions. Against my definition of Slavery, it is urged ns an objection that, “as the Biblo does recog nize slavery, thcetate of a ■ loulos, as consistent with the divine law. lo make slavery to be something which, by its very definition, the divine law must condemn, is to bring the Bible into conflict with iteelf " Bat ibis objection is evidently irrelevant to the question bow in hand. Tbo present question is, what is tbo meaning of oor English word tUu-fT’,, os used to denoto an actually existing slate of servitude in our own oouulry ' No one deuics that the Scripturrs resognice wbat they call rfouUt'i as oouaistent with the divine law Bui wbat ia this JvuUia eo reeogoired* You wilt say, a- slato of mrrr srrviiuJt, either volan*' lary or iuvoluutary, as the case may be ; and I agree with you in this defioition of No doubt this generic term was often applied to a state of servitude which was in /act one of slavery; just as with us the generic term tf*-vsn! ia applied to a shot. and just as in all languages genorio terms ape ofien applied to specific ob- | jeeig But. when so applied*it expresses only tbe y-ofri,- idea of servitude, not the specific bioJ of eerriiude which wo call slavery; the stale of tbo servant, the Joule*, not of the itave, the andrapo , don. It is then nothing to the purpose to say, that the Bible rcoogoites a Jouhta as consistent with the divine l&w Tbe question, and (he only question, ia, what ia the proper moaniog of our Euglh'h word «/I rtryt Is it the equivalent of druteui, (hat i«, a stale ct servitude, voluo iary «r iuvtdunlary, as the case may l*?* Or Uurn iliu itrm Uuooie a specific klud of ectvlluJe : which niAkee ihe servant to be property, that is, j real estate, or a cbaUel' This h which can be decided ooly by the own lingnage. Ti> thl« utego 1 bt in my references la tho eatboniiee ftod 1 thick that the/ are conclu6l?< PITTSBURGH BAG MANUK. 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TLcir assortment of FRENCH and 6W153 EM9ROIDE HIEB u complete In tlylo and prlc*. embracing all (be Utett Loyalties Id Collara and Seta, Bands and Fiounuings, Edgings and Inserting*, Breakfast Caps, Chemise Bands and Sleeves Handkerchiefs, Ao< Our cuen-nieri nod tha pobllc generally are tnrlud to call and examine the Gooda, (be price* L*ldj markad la plain ftgarta. N«*r filort. No.)? FlfQi at. cclft THfi~lEbn OZXY VRUBT 00., No. USB Llbirty SlratL Bank of discount, exchange AND DEPOSIT. Capital Stock. $ 180,000 Capital Represented, otm-™.. 1,000,000 Erocxsoursa a&a aiu> Isuuloaui Liibu. Oojd, BQTor, Tar Fonda and Carrency rerslred on dtpedt. AL.I/MONEYS allowed to remain far a SvtdlUtl fYras, WILL DRAW INIEUBST. Eight Exchange oq lbs (E*****-" and Western ciUaa constantly for aals lo toma to tnit Collections tuaua la alUha principal ciUea fu Uu Called ?*»*« * nd Canadas, and PROCEEDS PROMPTLY BE MITTKD to any desired point, on day of maturity. , . nißsorosi: Johni Moorhead, Alexander Forsyth. J.ibn Uealh, Gao. B. uead, J. Ilill. William Retbart, W. HcUUntock, Henry Ho* CnUocgh, Betart Anderaoa. O. 1. WARNER. President. H. 0. BCfIHBRTZ. Caablar. WINNKK’S liuslo OF THE TlMES containing the moat popular Pclkaa, WalUaa, Cctil* I lom, Marches, Optra Melodies* Basis, Figs, **, arnsgad u sn ttnj manner, as Boles, Posits, tries sad Qtartettes Sot VloUo, Fine and TlaJlacaUx Pries, AO,fer tala fey ... ' . JOBSRHJn3Oi,n wooditr«V' v Cepki sat by mD, port-paid, on ocdjt of Rta. bSB Indemnity Against Loss by Tire. kratklia irir* Uiirtß** Couptay or rail, adblpbi*. Offioe 435 and 43? Chestnut at., near Fifth. cuumeutof Amsla, Juurf Irt, 1859. pnblUUeJ agr«M tly to kq »ct or iMmtil;, twice I ir»t Mottgmjt*. imply «ocnr»d.- M R«lEtt*t*(prM«nt t»lne |1Q3,81361j coit TT.TW 71 T-ttporwry Lo*o«, on OollaUtil fi*- cnrltlß*„ (pret»Qt T»)a« IW.M* 73i co*t Notatiud |tl|l» rt-c*4rabl« Ouh ... ... , lm . s'AOia,32B 61 ~ r oßu t,lJm Hramlnm* which tbit Oompa- SJSSrf ” «*■*■ fc „. t„„5« Iniiiranoe. mail. .. u | f,..,.,,, Town and CoDntr), at ratot at »,.• «, mre > .•tairteot i»b ■worify. til or* Hiflr Incorporation, • |v«kHjJ u ( thirty ya&ra, they hart paid Looms by ftra. tgaa amount aataedituc Four itiHiomef DoUart, thereby effordlh* erUenoeof the advantage* of fnrermnee, as wall as thair ability ao4 dlipo •itluD to meal with prumptnea all liabilities. Loot* paid dnrtug Ih# jrear 1859 MUCTOtt. Ohariea W. Banokar, Mordacal l>. Lawla, Tobtaa Wag oar, Darld 6. Brown, Bamaet Qrmnt, Tme I-«a, Jacob 0. BmlUi, Edward 0. Dala, Qavrg* W. RJcharda, Gaorgs Falea. OUARLKB N. BANCKER, Pr**U«El EDWARD C. DALE, Vic* Ww. A Sun., S«T9t*ry pro Icm. J. GARDNER COrriN, Aaeut, uiyfl Offlco Nortbonat cor. Wood and Third KIRS IBBVRANOC, •t vsa Kelianrc mutual luiuranee Company of PIULADILfBU On ButUlugt, Limited or Perpatual, Merchandise, Furniture Ao., In Town or Country. Office No. 308 Walnut Stroat. Oemsi $177,031... Asm $276,479 43.—Invsetedas t.-llovn Ftrrt Mortgage on Improved City Property, worth double tba amount, ........ $151,600 00 Penn*. Railroad C»>’4 t) per coat. Mortgage L.^ir, $30,000, coat 77,»J5 <W Allegheny coonty 0 par cent Penn*. U. R. Uaa. 10,000 00 Oity of Philadelphia, do do d>< 0.000 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Co’aStack 4,000 00 Block of the Railwce Unto*) Insurance Co 13.100 00 Stock of Ootmty Fir® Insaraeoe Co- Block ot Delaware M. 8. Insurance Co Union M. Inanranca Ck/s Scrip Bills Reeetvabla, bcrinespaper.—... Book Accounts, accrued Intermit, etc Cash on hand and In Bank.... Clem Tinsley, ffm. R. Thompson, Frederick *<n>vu, C. Stevenson, John B. Worrell, D. L. Carson, Robert Toland, Frederick Louuig, C. B. Wood. Jams* 2. Wir^lwarJ, B«nJ- W. Ttngley, MAnhall BUI, Z. Lotbrop, Cbu. LeUad, JftCob T. Bunting, Smith 80*00. , John BIJ-ell, FitUti.ifiU b. 11. UlNOHUAN.&ecrutir;. i- 0. COFFIN, A««ul Nortti-cAji r .rner Thli J *nd Wood m*»*» Fire, marine and Inland lainrantr INSDRANCE CO. or NORTH AMERICA, rnu.AUH.FniA lucorparatal 17 S^V—Capital $500,030 AssaU, January 10, 1853—.. DIRECTORS.— Arthur O. Coffin, Sained Vi. Jones, John A Provra, Samuel F. Smith, Charles Taylor, Ambrose White John Nefl, Richard D. Wood, William Welsh, William R. Roveo, James N. Dickaon, S. Uorrii Wain, John Mason, Oeo. L. Itamaon, Francis It tVipe, Edvard u.Trottor. MATtaus Msats, £sc*y. AItTUUUU COFFIN, I’reat. INSDRANCE 00. or tub STATE or l*A. PHILADELPHIA Incorporated, ITW—Capital ~..|2n0,000 A »*els February 1, ISM .. $413,*0S H. DlßKl?rOlL*—Usury D Ehonerd, JUmcon Toby, Charlt* MacnlrsU<r, William B. Kn.tth, John H Kadi, H-ury U Freeman, Oharlca d. Lewis, Georg* C Carson. Rlllisiii H White. George U. Btnart, tUraoel Oraut, Jr, Thoms* Wag nor. Thomas 11, WatUan- HUNKY l> bHEKKfeUD, Woiiui Uiarxa, SK-'y. PrceiJout. •tp- tmnrsnr* Id tbs aLcvs ul.l au ! tUliabl* Cotupakio*. can be obtained by ig>pHr«ti»D to falft-dly W. P. JON KB, Agunt, HI Water .1 PltUatlmphia IfHrti nn<l I_,tlo INBUttANUB COMPANY. N.i. 139 Chesnut Street, d M' >) 3 I T t TUB IHI h TU II II o 11 K I Will make all ktuJa of Insurance, either Pferpetcsl or IJiuilel, no *»rlj •Inscription of Property or Merciiaadlea, P RPNO, President U W BALDWIN, Vita t-iJiCToas Üb»tl*4 P Ukjli' K B English I* B. Bavery. I 0 e barman, »* J. r buoitciTi Delaware ffluiimi Suftlaturaßct Compaoy Jby (A: / -rrria.'u' - : V J''-nt*ryliKtn*o, 1834 Office. S. E Ct-roer Third and Walnut st»., J/Jif/.V* I.•*S{?&4XCES ju YMB»l»,tter«a t aa.l F.-lghl to all paila of tlia aoilA. /.M.I.VP l .V.-? t’u-A ,Vr A J up br fttvort, Oaoala Lakes aod Land Carnaps, to all parte of tht Union TIES iy.SL T fi .IX CES on Merchandise ranrrali 1 —Oa etores, bwaUiug Uuaeee, Ac. Bond a. tfortH-Uoa. and Real EaUb. ... .0101,360 »« Philadelphia Ctty, and other Loans . .... .. 137,0 i 1 36 stock to Uinka, Uallroad A ln«nrancA>Ooa.. 19,609 00 BIIU UooelraL-la ... 890,901 B 9 OatbOb hami 38,809 G 6 Balanowa to bands ci Agent*, Prcatnm* ju 4 Marine Policies recently leaned, and er debts dnelhe Company ... . dut«Trf{-tfc>o Wstci . . William Martin Joseph E Seal, Kdmtmd A. B-jaJm, JohnC. Davis, John ft. Ponrosa, Ooorgs Q. Latpai, frlward DarlUirVos, Dr R. M Uttatoo, William a Lodwl, Hagb Craig, Slianoer McQvalo. Chariot KeUev, p Joa.a Brooke, ■ Jacob P Jaoss Jaaxea 0. EUui. Thecphflo* Paulding Jaztca Traqaair. frailua JEyra, it , J. F. Ptnltfou, Joabo* P. Kjra, Btxanel B. Etokoa- Heary Bloaa, JaDulj}, JicPatU Tbomu 0. lUoJ, Itobert Barton, Jr., Juhn B. Sample, PtUifj, U T. Morgan, *' wm ilAaira^^Saeot. TQOa. a ELAND, Vlc» PrwUaat lilSkj LtIAUiH, gacratarv. P. A. UADEIIU, Agent, No B 6 Water etrwt, Pittsburgh. *H IjJ—l»l’J Wttaten> Insurance Companv * NTTSHBOD. OE6aQB UA Bant, tVe*lJ«ut. f 51. UUJU*‘N, Bacr«tuj okfiGE, So. 92 ff*t*r atreet, (Bpaug A ou*« W*r«h.>UfV op flair*, Vittiborgli. vftil Insure ajtimtt ali Arirtii qf f\rt JrfarWJl einh A Eton* kutituUon moneyed fcy Directors. uAjorr-SfU krwion i«tAa community, and nho a rt-determined. Sr pronpAi/ii and ilitfraiiTp, Wwautfiift tA« ihorooUr wAici wy Uw ouunud. <u oftrity fAi kif|>n</*ttan to if,on uHo Jtitrt to 64 insured. ASSETS, APUIt. 80. tSW. BLicl AotoaaU j IW.OOO Oo Mortgag*. 2.10 J 00 OQke Pnmitnr*. N Op*B AccodDU i:,isB6 W o**b . 16,8*7 S 4 Pramtam BoU» UQ,ti7fl 12 Nwt*» aaJ Bill* L>l*CA>autMl. , . ...... 113,3*9 29 FOR PIGS:!! Ga..ra* Perth, I Wm. Mcltnlgbf. K. Hiller. Jr . Nathaniel Ilulmee, J. W lluiloj, . Aler. Nlralck, 0. W. Jaeka.m, | DarLJ M. Loan, Jamoa MoAnUy, William H. SuiUb Alexander fipcwr, | 0. W. Rlckelwn, Andrew Ackley, | °»t80 F. M. GORDON, beo'y. Busoagabala lnsaraaaa CooipaaJ, Ornoaas—JAME3 A. UOTOHIBON, Pnaldent HENRY M. ATWOOD, Secretary. Orvios, No. W Warn Btu», Bill fiuwr* AjainH aB Wndi of Fin nd itermi Hull. ASSETS, MAT 20TS, 1858: Stoiik Do* Bill*, payable on demand, ncered by two tpproTM Bamn 1114,600 00 I3HU RacelTable .. 3a,64& 20 Btlla DtaeoaoteJ goo 00 116 ibirw Mechanics' Bank Stock—cost fl.los 00 100 do Oltlrotu’ do do do 6,IJ* 00 M do Bask of Plltibargh do do ...» *,7*o 00 «0 Co Bxchinn Dank do do 2,0 M 00 Balance of Book Account* 4 051 93 Offlca Fnrnltor*. Oaib BIZX77OM: Wbj. B. Bulmci, Wm. A, Caldwell, Robt.PaUsll, Wtlaon Miller, Wtu. Scm. John McDovitl. Jaanpli Kirkpatrick Geo. A. Barry* James a. llctchbon. PEN BY k L ATWOOD, Ba c'w Eureka Inauranco Co. of Pennsylvania, Xo 99 Water Elrui, PttUburgK. J B SBOEXBKBQKtL PruiimL ROBERT FINNEY, E^rtUry Ocatioaes to Icsara • gain it all kinds ct Fin and Barv Bitk*. _ ABBBTB, IIAY 2d. 1869. Cash to Pittsburgh Trust Company- sao,6oojSs Ptock Daa.BUifr—peyiMs on demand. 41,940 00 Premium Notes 44,625 60 Discount*! Note#..—.* Ga,l2T 92 Bonds mod Hntnpi.„„ 10,409 M 300 then* Iron City Bank Stock—oc*t.._ .... 15,000 00 W 0 <U Ixahange Benk Stock—cost - 11,601*63 200 do AUcgnany Bank Eic^e—cow . 10,000 00 100 4o Mechanics' Bonk fijock—<o»t__ 6A46 63 Book A recants™. . . ~,,,,,,,, him j$ Bilb RaseiTable BT9 61 J.H.fb*>snUrjes, Q.W.Casa, W. K. Nlmlck. Isaac M. Paancak. John A.Oannsy, W.W. Martin, C.W. BatchMor, B. T. leacb/jr- B D. Cocbnth David M’Caadkn. James L Beoaait, William Deu, my<nri Wm. J. 4ad arson. GREAT WESTERN INSUBANCB & THTJfiT COMPANY. DFFIOB IN COMPACT* BUHD33TQ 80. AOS WALSCT ITnSST PWLJDZLPBIA. “* T » CHART** mPITFAL. Aulh&rlud capital «. nn nnn ‘ mo, MAKTHB, CAMO.hd nUASB iiurolurra “syswg* VOLUME LXXH—NUMBER 270 Insurance .f1M.505 57 30,373 43 7,311 04 14,603 Pfl (270,478 <3 ULBU TINUUCY, rr«Jd*ot. BIftSCTOU. Suaael BtyhAta, Ilobert BUeo, 11*159,924 87. E. U Ovae, OaorM IV. Br w ws, Ji»Hpri 8_ Paul, J.ibo Cl«yt.‘Q, 8 WJlnr J. 41. OOFFIN, Afoul, «r Tlu.O and Wr-ol iUn-U PHILADELPHIA. 0A,731> 57 100,000 00 »70«,T8S 8T $309,1411 i>* OF PITTBBURQU. Insurant*. ALLEGHENY INSURANCE COMP'Y OF PITTSBURG!!. Orrrce—No. 37 Fifth Street, Bank Blosk, INSURES AGAINST ALL KINDS OF FIRE AND MARINE RISKS. ISAAO JONES, President; JOHN I' JJoCORD, Vico rresident; D. M ROOK, Secretary; Caj-t. WILLIAM DBAS General AgenL Dtscaroas—lsaac Jjiit-*, C. 0. no<tsey, flairey Child*. eUpt R. C. Qr»y, John A. Witiou, R. L. Fahnestock. John D. McCord, Inu M. Pennork, R; P. Sterling Cbm. vr m. IM-sn. Thoe. M Howe, Robt, H. Darts. j r piy i Life insurance.—The giraku life INSURANCE, ANNUITY AND TUUST CVMFANY, *t tbo Agency .No, 76 Oran* street. Intabnrfcb, r«ntion» to make Uunrance* on llree. In addition to » csMtat ©I $300,000, they bare a large and increasing knuvui rm, aOordieg nodonbted aocority to the Inmrmi. i n cu<-* .d Insurance for Lifa Ihebonda declared from zitatu bu already excesdod fifty percent. Jfc all premiums pa«t Taos. lUpartriT, Pree't; John F. Jansca, Actuary; ,i«». King, M. D., llcdical Examiner, odee N0.A12 Fifth strtvt, Pittsburgh. For tnrther information apply to IYII. BASr- WELL, A.ent tor Ihfr Oompanr, No. 76 Urant street. __myl2:l,d * TV/fR. VANDENHOFFS BOOK—LcaVeS ,1 U * l rtur ’ 1 N °te Book, with remini.-cences and Anh-rir. *, <J ‘ V "" !L>cta and the Stage In England and - . DAVISON’S, W Wwd etrect* TO* . h ' ;*‘ST m' WOOING-Mrs. o ci T”*”' " ,,t; T 1“ of AMrU *.O. Abbott, Oarmatne, translated tromth* Preach-of h. Abont, antb.-r of Tito Roman Qncetion; Life’. Sl.,rou.g or Counsel* aud Knrunragementa for Youthful Christians- Al moat a Heroine,Denial; The Palaseof the Great Riaii by Her. U.Bead, author of Ood in History; Harry Lm, nr u‘.p* for the Poor; RepreaentatiTa Men of the N**r Tmucv*ui. Baldwin; Edith, The Backwoods Ctrl, Mrs. ToihU!} The Boys' Own Toy-Hiker and other new Jareniles; Oetctw-r Issue* of the American 8.8. Union, with many new Publi cations In the rarions departments of Lltoratnre; uowjrats elies ofWrttiQg Paper and Stationery. K 0. COCHRANE, No. G Federal street, Allegheny New Poblloatluos rtcelrlngdaily. J • oclb NEW BOOKS —UenrySt. John, Uentlemso From Dawn ta Daylight; Byl»l4*a World: L;fi and Liberty la Atbtrica; Adam Badn; Abb->U*a Uirt. uf French RoTolal’s Almanac for lath 1 . Mary d.» J I. UFAI),--* VVnrthat JJU.NT i .MINER’S ‘ PITTSBURGH ALMAXAO For: two, Cal. i.UitJ and EJKcJ !■) HANFORD r. till l, Eiq IMUOE FIVE CfiNTd. for salk r.vrp.YWii£i:E. Kmi ><y mill ou {fcelj-l of two tlir«o r*ot »t»rops, po&tega paid UUNT A MINER. YALUAIiLBLAW BOOKS— L’aJttsJ gtat«* Statutes at Largo, 11 OrMnleaf on Evidence, 3 toU i*a»otu on Contracts, 2 vein; i'aaroe 00-Ran&iudera,2 Tula: lloiitler’e Institotea, 4 Tola. Plnlllpi on Intoraace, 1 ?01/r Partoss on Mercantile L«s», 1 »..l. v Eourier’a Lav bictlon&rr, 2 Ruavt'l on L'nai«fl, 2 v .i. <•<l9 KAYACO.,:.*U\.c.i sv Jfiotrla. AUKRU ASi lIUtRK» UOaTOW, IS THE LARGEST AND BEST AR-gB raaged Uutol io the New England States; it ceo-j£j& trully located, ui<i m-y cl accuaa from aJi tha routi-a cl travel. It contains all tbe nualcrn irt>pror?Qeut*, tod •ffarjr tta« evrufott au<l acrcmm'Vlutt.ni of the traveling public. Tin*alee plujjrooms are largo and well voatllatad; the anllea uf rooms arc wo 11 arranged, a ltd cuui plrtely fnrnUbod for families and large traveling jmrtma, and tLebuuae wilt continue to be kept as a first ciat* H«'ta lo every rnapect. Jallaily LEWIS RICE, Proprietor. ittiscfllaiuous. FRENCH WHITE ZINC' PAINT PBOil TUil ' ViEILLE MONTAGNE COMPANY Ob’ IMLLS PAINT ih adapted to ull purposes to . which ilir* ['cat VVhlt-.la n i ia applicable, It, dSci &&£. '■■ tutu ytllcw. ai Rad iuvaiUUj .100-, and will-acquire tba ; ~ bardtiou and Bmoollme-H of U,ui.-ti panelling Without tlioaid - of rarufab, and U oasllr washr.l. lulcrrwitti a r.tna ba »f« . retain tbelr freahiiM and brilliancy of culur. - v 3W pcnudi »ill cover as much aurface, with_£ba ■. Y body, aa 2Sw pound* of load—• Lowing gteol rouuoiDJ UWfrU ~i? m beauty. Id order that peiliee may Jrp. i,;l up.'ii pulltan IhdtrtJclo Itrtctiy yurt they ahooKt t>uy ol hod* tint U»e oioet r/Sped& bit houses. Th« Company »hij> t-nt t»o .jciilltU'j. known W -Vo. 1 tod Sivju; It'tiii L>rj. K.-J and tlrvua feel. ThaJfo. I or End Siyal la the article iu..%: for parpcwos, tt>* Snow H'lilca or (Jreori .*<wl onl v mnl t..r the mrv.t eaponatre o-ot« Ji».iE»’ll M b I'Hu.Mi, A<eat for UleC i Ordere urtdre***-! |i> cither of Ihe f>lVi»i ut ; tiiraatw will 1)9 filled si ths new rcXi4o*<i tarty of priest, either Dry or ia Oil- IUI.L k CORN KM,, 123 Makfen Laob, ffnw York. KAYMOUM. DKVOR k I’RATT, li)3 tad JOS Fniu>n Mr™t» Net* Yi>rlt. CItiTEE HAT STORE, WOOD ST H B K X JJILLERMAN £ COLLORD Are aa. pr.p.rej tj meet the uero.aAi o( taaee wl.e may J_ HATS, CAPS AND LADrES' FURS. - 'J'HE FIRST BA prist CONGREGATION Or FEU TUEIH, CHUROU EDIFICE, cosersß osaxtaxo rniRD svs, fob sals ON REASONABLE TRR.Vs, Together with ths ORGAN and FTUMTCnR. Ic Is well sad robatactially bollt, cspabU of K-atfng six haodred pvraons oomioi'Ubly, and I* only offered for «lo baoausd It (a to? small (or tlirir accommodation. For Urius, la, apply to WM. H. ETeBSOX, No 01 Water ■trw>t, or J. BOOBVBH, Ja, No. £l3 Liberty street. Q. D- ANDKBSON, itary Board of Tm«tro« HUBBBa BELTING. HE NEW YORK RUBBER COMPANY*! A MitfUFAOTmiEEUBBEH MACHINE BELTING, l.y » cow pruceu, of aoperlor etxongtb to any heretofore mode s»l »l leu ihftD half (ho coal of Leather. The Ocmpaoy v eexclo»lea m*nofacton>re, “under Goodyear’j TOYS, DOLLS, BALLS, TKN'I'INS, - (larga ftod Ac. Ferula at all the Toy anti cane; Etoraa lo the UuteQ. Catalogues &od Prlcu Lists (by the cm only) by letter to the “New York Rabbar Liberty etroel, Na*7 York, wiMol pownoi’fl 1 1 m ifc T?QtIAL TO M’AVOY'S, SUPERIOR n All W B«dUng In tixt, equal to Burr's Now Pino In /laser, »n<S from lix to ten titan M productive m ony other of ihu ono handred rarisclo* in culUraUoa.’' Sj •ays Mr. Downer ofhls new Seedling, a gentleman with whom I have been acquainted and doue boitnui with for jr«ns, end In all our transactions havo oarer bad reason (o grUdonbt bis word or honorable dealing, which todocas mt to accept tbs agency for bis wonderfully prollflo t-errj Soad for droolers of report oflnrertlffatlng OotnmiUte JOHN HURbOOH.JfL, Pittsburgh and Oakland Nnrserlea. Q.TL CHIU ST’S CELEBRATED AMXCIOAK RAZORS AND TABLE^CUTLERT Rewired mi for Ml* |.y /n J. N. SQALLENCE6GKH * CO, (Boccea-ura to H. Paaltp, Jr,) 101 MARKET STREET. PITTSBURGH AGRICULTURAL WORKS, 5 Nos. 40 and 01 Ferry Street: ROBERT R. WILUAM3, Proprietor, IBaccasor to Wsrdrop, Stent A WillUss.j .. KiICTACTCini or ' j rs \» I ca P ors » Horso Powers, Threshers Cider Mills, Hay, Fodder Cut other Agricultural Mao^inorj. WHARTON’S EIiVALENTA, roll to* ccb» or DYSPEPSIA AND CONSTIPATION, A aimpla, aceeablaaod JoWJlblo idiul t*t«ooToredla rAtii, h) M. Wharton, 0f 6.1 Roe Rlebellao. unJ for tala t*v JAMEd L. READ, 70 fourth atract, Pittabargh. f>r a circular containing tail dliaoUoa* for __ «22 '\W WRAPPiwn «»• ■ STRAW WRAPPING PAPER f!,r ealc at (hi following L>« price*.- S™!"* K SiMlao— .. ■£•/£ do OoabU Grown «_6O «jo Tbe highest m*rS.l price [«*LJ p*Jd i D cash tw lUu b- I'HADWIOB k EON. No*. 149 md 161 Wood »mu. CRUCIBLE CLAY. —The attention of Glass Zltnufacturtrt tod often ta directed'to this CUy wbjch. far »U porpwtlo which to Intecso hot* U ttazind wflj Ufjotui MBtl to*nj *d th* cit y . anteßrklt of fta Tiry heat cjotUty elvers on tend wnd fjr nt« low hr M BOB'S, Wo. HI iffood gtrett, Pmfllrnr t {h. - INSEKD OIL- XIXON'S, wiiridotij pate, AJ - 12 006 i aatrafictai»l.»ad lor oalfcSqtd* * 00^... - lupoi isd Jiiamond, City r- 20 bbl?, Linseec \J W* law to clcao eooifgoa. **» ».B*LLsna iOii in stqroandlb P*. ' CO,, gy? Lftkrty rtrat piH£KSE.—G9 BOX! V nicest of tbs NMUL lost OcJO 3 VV. K. CHEESE, •Ocitbd a I-K-CAKFIELDi CO ’,3 CTARUH.-PUBE (PEARI, SxHuuT, « for cooklne or toDnJrj vorpM.., .!n;i on hind. j llO J-n.iMNmm * co. pi ALL cwdex amino BuscHritio ACo’s new V Meet of Dm. Pood., which tt» T « re e«Utoe dap- A LL WOOL FIGURED DELA INS, PJ»id», «£jL*ad EHfclH BPRCriTIELP * IIGLEAD for sale by ””7 <*o • ■-' ' J nwame l^ gPELTBK for sole by „ aEJ!:gL 3 tons for"«^^yn7coLmis3. r - J - ‘‘W'.T t !
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers