The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 27, 1868, Image 4

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    1 4..
1545 AND 1868+THE SAME lisig.E..,
After an interval of twenty years;- the.
* ll 7 l 4 e l' are ' l . vv r
40, ... r 4B receer oocte k 4l 4 4 ll \ tin P liali fratitton e
to the Presidency 1 - y an overwhelming; ma"-
ority. 'the great central idea of that earn,
Palgli itiii that thisii`opnlar will; Interpreted.
,
thioHigh its , constitutional 'representation
;in the law-making power of the Republic,.
an subject onlyto the discrimin a t i ng 'ex.'
'sainbuttion of the Judiciary, should be ac
'cepted as the paramount authority of ;the
iAmerican people: The Jialiciary ' depart-
Ment of the Government, by_ a long course
of clear and uncontradicted precedent, has
supplemented this idea with but one estab
lished exception to its function of revision,
otherwise unlimited, in this, that, upon all
questions of a purely Political character, the
legislative authority' s absolutely supreme,
independent of any "such judicial prerogiv
tive of constitutional judgment: With this
sole exception, the right of judicial appeal
has become settled in all. interpretations of
the ,Constitution, and, , with that exception;
the absolute supremacy. of the law-making
power, with the qualified Executive veto as
its legitimate adjunct, was presented as the
leading question of the canvass of 1844,
and the people pronounced upon it their
:approval by an overwhelmingly decisive
majority. Gen. TArLon, in his memorable
declarations which ' substantially declared
that he should have no will, no ' policy_ of
his own in the Presidency, except to exe
aite the laws' of the land With fidelity,
&landed the key-note of a campaign 'which
wits ultimately crowned ',,, by an equally
memorable triumph.
The similarity, between that canvass and
this which Gen. Gnerir now leads to a vic
tory equally decisive, is conspicuously
marked. The paramount authority of the
people, constitutionally exercised • hi; its
'legislation, is again made the'real issue, by a
Democracy Which; to -day as then, upholds
not only the one-man power of the Veto\
against the. absolute, right
_of , the millions,
but which;now as then, demands that the
individual in thi 'EXee,utive cliidr, with all
his human hnperfections, shall be accepted
hi the superior representative of the national
'.wisdom,'of the &bile requirements; of the
national honor;- and of its material intereits,
rather than that other law-making power
Which the constitution exwrissly createriand
to ' which, bills plain intent, should be con
fided the- entire legislative discretion. In
1848, as in '6B, the enemies of the popular
authority as expressed by Congress, de
timmded that the President should have a
legislative policy of his own, to which Con
gress must conform. Supporting Gen. TAY-
Lon, we took issue with them, accepting
"Old Zson's" idea that it was' for Congress
only to legislate and for the President only
to execute. And so said the people at the
In 1848, this Veto-loving Democracy in
sisted upon the unqualifiedand constantpar
ticipition of.the Executive in the legislative
function. ln 1868, they dispute the supre
macy of the legislature, upholding against
it the unconstitutional and abortive efforts
of ANDILSAy JOHNSON• to be a Congress unto
the people as well as to himself, guilty, as
he thereby has been, of the most dangerous
usurpations, which have not beenso wholly
frustrated but that, to-day, they bear dis
astrous fruit in• the disturbed condition of
public affairs in a very Large section of the
Republic. As they opposed TAYLOR. in 1848,
because he abjured= the assumption of un
constitutional powers, so now they oppose
GRANT, who also declares that he shall
have no policy in the Executive place ex
ceptto execute the laws. • In electing Gen.
TAYLOR, iiti Te-estaitlished ihe law:making
sulkinnacy of Congress, and recalled the
Extaitife power within its constitutional
:limits. In electing Gen. drum., we are to
reiterate the same. verdict-, , , _;.,.. , -
For 'that; and nothing eise but that, is the
\
•one great question I tuiderlyink this present
canvass:. :It Is not'merelywhether that leg-
Mallon, by which . Congress' has 'matured
'',the restoration oi a rebellious fragment of
the Republic -to its "practical relations" •to
the whole -Union' under the Constitution,
shall stand ae the ' national .law, until
duly., abrogated by a fresh exercise of the'
, same authority( The question is far broader,'
for it-is not one of disCretionin the exercise
Oka power, but bf the absolute right to exer
cise that power at all,; it is whether the
highest legielatiVe authority, duly chosen
by that loyal - people which had victoriously
,criished an armed rebellion, had 'any power
whatever to prioceed in the duty, imposed
by the. Constitution, 'of re-establishing in
the self disorg anized . cominunities repabli
_ forms of of , . .
can fo go ernment v it is whetherthls
necessary and ,pressing ' Conititutional
,
duty belonged , , to - -the law-making 'or
to the law-e rati ng . power ; . (it is
whether either-of these pearare k ,nnder '.tlie.:
still Supreme Federal,authority;' or that
other-law-breaking;', llniciulnting; rebelll.,.
°watt& titasenahla power - which epurnel
Our,`autfuirity,vesisted i our arms and lined
1 1 °' tuilOetilliall 4 to ta ke.the.: l4 lstidiud
ilifei.shonldasinine the interpretation of that,
..9uistittitioii,iiitli'all :thediscretion or its
.. e.? ( ,eriße l T : :Pie supreme legislative power of
the '
.Congress of the people—not of , one m a n
Amon,: E xecutive
, 'Chair; be, e4Ormactu, or
pinairr or l i v iiiarWetw not of the conquered
rebels , ,theiii`selvei, - a rch i te c t s 'Ortheir' own inin as 'they Vere—to which of these'bas
'dle,iveri of reconstruction belonged ? That ,
lathe *leaden. 4Deolde that, end yonr de- - ,
`iiiidon -upon all.thi 'colfateral or resulting' :
iiiieillons of the-canvass Will lcigicallifol- ,
,loW„';; iii that work was , for COngresk . OnTy,
itifiXeiC lB 9. presents oloestiolus of discretio n '.
not of right. If it was for the President,'
or for le rebel,;;VoimlatioMi; theteliiiei t
then, an then °nib
. 4070 1 ,00 84 ,: u aw e d,
an illegat authoriw. L . ll , r . ,
~.. 1 ~ e.
..,.
~,,:
_s_
..--We hold thiti r eartgress alone is conatitu
.
tionally tmtrtistedWith this work,,,end, e . ,_
:liolliitbribet;tha Utiiiiitik ,bia beleil , d4e
es wiakytas iGhlisbaettNtithhi P stilbey - etUi- -
4Litutiona) Mits. And so hold, General
y .
the ftiibliciiiiilliy:'‘The D'be
gr AI 2O I O KY, 93AelMalalt. Paw -or 0 012 -%
4144 " 5",1 41 1 1 0, 13 M.gig 4 . vf9Fk 9f; remit , .
i
'lliraidanlaw lir !Vow' JskthEr,tß i g*-1
1 - 044iiiiioiehi tie rails themeelm.,
i
,irc;rirciow, i# 1-iiiv Gt. 1
.... i p t i b er 44 _ _
........ ;#4 , 1 1 .seepsoeisa OW
Opoi,lolil ,h 4111) iillo .allsrf i
• 4 y
A #
e titOintr aat
• IS = "c 1
PgiainlX 01 L . -
PAPRAPOT" , -REED - li ' Co r'4l / " OPrieifil
414:11* JOSIAN'.IEING,
• NONSTON, ' • _IP. r. NEED. , _
• '", rollt,,iasirl Proprietors. •
• _ OVINE: • -• • j
811ZETTE BUILDINGS NOS 84 Alili f BB FIFTH ST:
OFFICIAL PAPER • '
Of PlttebuFgh, Allegheny and , Allegheny
county
,• • ,
2oisODatt_ . Semi- Weekly. 1 ...' -- -Frackitl. •:_,-, \
Ono year....o 00 , me year.EFE. 50 8111giet0P9`;•- 0 1E" '
One moat , i. Nix mos.. LEA
_f_.,coties, es . c . h. 1. 25 ts
~.1 th in e :w cz ee , ic._ _
.; Three mos E (--and
Env ex.,. '--
I—and one to Agent.
AIIGUST:2I, 1868.
National llnionikpublim Ticket
P.760/Mt--TTLY&SES S. GRANT....
s rue President-SCHUYLER COLFAX.
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS.
,AT LARGE:
t , *- O. MORRISON COATES. of Philutielltals.
THOS
I- 411 r H.
31. MARSHALL, of Pittsburgh.
Z , ItAENss,,SANDAL SNOW,
•2. w. p0i,",004 - 14.'8. P. WAGONEMLLER.
• g„pitenkria WILDgy,, I S.
MILLER,
4. OWATSON, W. RILL, _ e. JOHN STEWART,
EN P. MCGILL, 17. GEORGE W. ELSICB,
8. J. H. BRINGIII7IIST. /A.A. G. GLAISTILAD,
7. PRAWN C..HrATO/C, 19..L00ts SILL,
S. ISAAC ECKIRVI. O . 4O HA - BON.
8. OUIS HOOPSCR, H. `J. E.
;U. DAVID M. MANX. 22. WM. PHEW, ,
11. w x , ', A vis,. • 23. A: W. CRAWFORD,
w. w. Eirrettura. 24. J. S. RD/AN.
AudtWr General --4 F. HARTRAITFT.
6itrveYP 7 l 'General—J. CAMPlttlit.
. '
22d Diat,.--.TAS. S. NEGLEY.
" Dist—DARWIN PHELPS.
. . _
-- •
&cite ' Senate-JAMES L. GRAHAM.
issirennx. ---
1
GEORGE WILSON, M.S;HUMPHREYS,
GECL F. MORGAN,. VINCENTMELLER,
JAMES TAYLOR, SAMUEL KERR.. ~
• Deltriet .Attorney- ..-.L. PEARSON. • ' ,
. , AsetPietriet Attorney-AL IL FLACK. -
00stgroner.'-iinTRT-Ija&BERT.
__ ..
i. Con'oniattiTONATFlAN NEELY.
Surveyor—H. - L, MoOIJIJ,JY, • ' . ,
OnittfOrnneptreetor--J. 0.-MIIRRA.y.
- - • '
.3147j0-LJAREIr IV BRUNEL
Cbtrorter—. -.ROM. J. 2dCGOWAN:
Tripasu' re*--A. J. COCHWT:
Hein!quarters Republicanco,94l3 , Gom
matte
n ,, cit*,itau, markei%street. Open
everyday Pienty Coinnittee sleets every
"Vedieisdiir; at - 2 P.;
6lite on the ;inside paps of this
moraines Gamms---Second Pay:, Poetry,
"Billf.and Joe," • -Ephemeris. . Third and
EiMh-ragett:, g o nimerciat and: Biter News.
Beventh Page:,Litter frA 'Europe.
Golib' .elosed in New, York yesterday
at /44
FOREIGN LErrER'.-A — n interesting letter
-from itnris, from Ber. Bing,rill be found
mi_ouilleventh Page ' .
Gov, 4BABIr has ordered:that the vacancy
hi thci,;:;l4uicaster COngressionsl district,
oonsecipcnk upon the , decease of Mr STE
1114qs, shall be filled by a special election at
- the replat polls in'Octolier. •
• • •
Ex-Gov. linammarric of Kentucky is the
head centre of the Ku-Kinxin that State, and
is in a measure largely responsible for the
reign of terror Jnaugurated there ;So much'
for
_the, rebel Wing of the DemobratiC
Ova friends of, the Preed,oneeklincl, the
RepubliedriioOrikal . of this city, ioriblished
Yeatexdf4' coium*-#PPFt of
the mattiAirty,33peeCh of ettslere Sctrotz,
at the citirwt,, , , - 001:43":,F,y. iwijad nt the,
Priendlimihjication effitei of at the Repub
lican headquarters', 'City Hall. It should be:
read by'everl German-sieildng citizen.
WACMA are freely offered on the 4 streets,
, .
~that Mr. &tin= ,ALLlnsnEn, the it/depend
,
ent candidate for City Treasurer, will not
receive one ' , thousand vote's if he insists on
going before the people for the office. If
he gets -one-thlrd that, nuniber ,out'lef the
Itepabliean. party,'oir faith in the honor
and justice` A. politics will be considerably
A DEtnocitapc joutmal in Texas, mord
honest titt`ui others of that ' faith, tells the
negroes alai., salon as; they hai, a vote,
It should' be given - to . their beit Mends,
the Democratic party,. but that tide right of
suffrage is "an unmitigated curse" to, them
and willi3e: talon away at the first oppor
tunity. This is frank,,and-. reveals the real
policy of the Southern Dentocmcy„ .
TEC Pre§ident has another of
his "friends in need, "
_ , tir IPtortuulk i 'whw•
krring ,, PEnar - lfutamn, who is generally
supposed to have been,a prouttrient aCtor,in;
1
the corruitiraiiiictions which '6,3*teolia
nt,
peachme'Aildi.'ilu). lucrative • mkor Col
lector oCCultOinit:'4 *ew Oileans..... Mr
JOHEBON#oiirdiii:!grOtilde, 41
te , 14:4:30n
-, ing trait to exhibit, especially when hi
•
country foots taw bill& -1:-11 - ....-i :Irzz .1 v
.t:t 6:117
In view iii'& l fe'rribla'seenes of wrong
and murder s , daily "Ointnltted / cri the pap;
downtriedentlacks of the Sontbeibliatah
ty the hellish' auxillary , to the'Deinicielic
patty knOWn• j -the Kulitiutalan, - hoW
cat i chrigian`atisians :blind `their .eYee
countenance Salmons and , Sktrk.in3):4';
campaign titer hamn'tu,,ka elected: l
there is in itaigiSiiheieople Wdise retgn
: of terOi teMktleil known in the
eillighteuediveridl z.-
'Gan. GnarriiiChincitidit the Christian
and philatafililligetali:..:PiaitiCia
Quietly, airdielthont any PatentattotisAis.
play, h e iabl).leo2ClrB4 'A1511)1'0141%1'41:
son to secalik- widow of Gen. gl4,
TINS (MILES O'ibtstaWthl r ellla ltad
the,ttnexpirMlitmd i g it , d ecis s e t ta ggee
"kir Ne 7 &Of,
towards Ulf Widow i attdmpl3apapf
-political loe,Aids,il44oAiflylp*,llol
true_nobilitetjhalleasi ,Vi n tdici
t
4,74.P1 .40
elf.Aitai;l/1 itrj, 1.114,
PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : TBUR6AY, AUGUST 27. 1868.
.E. 4.111003.4.
If 24 k ti t° 1731 ( .701 tt d 9 -8 7Y 1c .i‘ d t*Pi e ff_
44....i1aigr0i -I n • ''—
That tot void, and - procialin their intention
t ki r 4-1:3 1111" i t
enter ipon the Presi
dencistiedid tiottanit Tavrxih; 'pledged to
ticceiAlitilli*nOit the deelqeci; policy : - of;
tieepWitireeeiitatlies. For that,- the,
Democracy oppoSe him -as they, opposed
TAvtort beibroi. Gen. Gustx : and his
friende uphold the , right' of the people to
control their own legislation; so did . Gen.
TATIOR,' and for that he, like GRAFT, was
denounced. Gen. tawasT and his friends
beldthat,although the armed rebellion ended
with the last military surrenderaet that the
rebellion lives, in the long train -of its dis
astrous fruits, until every trace of its de
structive contact with the true theory of a
Republican form of government shall have
been obliterated; until political institutions
"Republican in form" shall have been
reestablished in all those populations, in
syMmetrical harmony with the Union
against which they , have unavailingly strug
gled; until the majorities of each of those
populations shall have heartily submitted
themselves to the conditionavhieh the Fed
eral power has imposed; until there no
longer shall'exist, one State among the ten
• refusing to' render a cheethil obedience to
the supreme Federal authority. Until then,
the rebellion lives, in'epirit although not in
arms, as truly as when its closed and sullen
lies defied us at Fort Donaldson or Get
tYsburg. -•- '
When "Old Zang." saw that the moment
of triumph at Buena Vista was at hand, and
that one more vigorous blew would crown _
the stars and stripes - With a final victory, he
delivered it instantly and 'effectively. "A.
little more grape, Captain Bragg?" ::was his
order. in thirty ; minutes that battle was wori.
So, ivith us to-day, the power of the rebels
has beenbroken,,thOr arms are laid down,
but they. are not yet :loyally reconciled to
submission. They still breath defiance;
they threaten'resistance and War again. Let
us give them a little clearer perception of
the power of the Union, and of the unflinching
sentiment of its people that the Union muse
and Mali be accepted by all *Rhin its limits
as inviolable and perpetual? , Let us ourselves
understand that the rebellion ceases to live,
Only when its treasonabie'ipirit 'has Meyer
passed away! Let us show our fidelity in
securing permanently what our armies have
won? Let ns uphold the power of the peo
ple which upheld the Union through those
dark and perilous days! Let us also submit
ourselves to the authority of this Congress,
which, whatever majority may sway it one
way or the other, is to be the supreme
legislative power of the Union for all com
ing time? Let us by a last and decisive
vote, make an end of this rebellion against
he Constitution, which Democratic rebels
began and a rebel Democracy would keep
alive? And then we shall have 'peace.
•
- RESTORATION OF THE "LOST
CAUSE) , , •
"Everything for which the South fought
will be won.," said Goyernor Varna, of
North Carolina, hilds address to his neigh
bors after he returned from the New
York Convention. He was laboring to in
spire himself and his hearers with hopes of
the election of Susmorn and BLAIR, aid
speaking of the results which would follow ,
that event, the chief of which was that it
would, after all, make the rebellion a stIC- 1
Celt He did not say that the election of
the Democratic candidates would merely
put them in a better Condition they they had
been since their rebel armies were captured 1
andtheir Confederacy swept out of exist- 1 1
ence, but that "everything for which the
.1
South fought would be wan." , 1
Governor Valves is not an idle declaimer, ,
but a man who' means what he says; and
the key to iiiiineaning is (Mind in the words
of Plana P. Bum, who in , his. letter to
dol.. Bnoeunaan, says among qther things I
equally treasonable and revolutionary
"We must haves; President who will execute 1
the will of
.the people by trampling into the'
dust Ilse usurpations of ,Congress known al l
the t*onstruetitin 'Acts. I wish to stand 1
before ' the Cosaessikn upon this issue.",
Upon this issue he did stand before that
Convention, and Upon - that issue he was put
in nomination for Vice President almost by
acclaination. He and his letter were both
I•• , .
accepted and endorsed ,
by that body, and
upon its fearfully atrocious ;propositions is
the issue between the two great parties
joined., Well may Governor Vt.runt talk
as he dOes, for what he says is true. •
There are some people who , think that
these and other similar declarations were
histilY I and. imprudently • uttered by men
whose ,blood had become intemperately
heated in the enthusiasm of-putting a great
party into battle array, and that they said
More,. than Ahey really Ineant. But don't
believe!a word of it I These things were
not. tuiatify litik,itftbsiut deliberation ;-
~
and any s9fteningdqWn Of ,the tone which
weMay now hear frem 'the more sagacious
Initial' :that Party is all for . brte,outbe and
Will . ; go , for. banthing, , Bnia,atti letters ,to.
Bnuinintin iodiiiiiidorsiek by the Nen Pork
"POPeerstfois;* end if the candidates then,
and •thera-nOttititate-d?*iild Iti:eleCie.d,:ii
,
'mill be taken, and justly se; 'is anexidorse-
Aeat.by thenatfan of, the sentiments therein'
set, fOithi* tlia:kiesiiiint , elect.itonldletil
'fully warranted to „do all that 13zseta sayS,
she as3)t doilif,i , iride4, ho will not feel
.hound; in obedience to the will , ot the peo
.ple;'toctidie it, upon himself tesmullify : the ,
laws of ICongress , end disperie the govern;
xi*Auk Of, the' recongincted States. Bear in
.114,4 f its to net proposed to repeal those laws,
htt; .40. ,", ramples therm into the duet."
~. If ;thole men are pennitted to carry out
their ;406=4; as boldly and openly' do't
dared by themseliee,ltiiiith an end to this
geyerumentf makes 41Ant9i7AidtfttOtof the.
1r treiddeW. .000-; 4:.,r40 1 E Bu tni , ' al.
t prtomealti and sets everything afloat upon a
surgingeta of alterthyAnd conftuden; Then
iced t l 'iPelrgi,h_P,Pught so.dee e f at t lY , -
ior four arc to 34estroy this govertirpcub .
'wittleini eeerYti#l( fpr.which,theyibni g,
1-4 4 everything : for which the South fought
iiillibe wim." ". ' '
APorgii IRotilt* *6,44iii 0 1 .14* 1 ,
r ii.
I ,f luiet.l,ll,,P. ~,.,,i .... ...a ,-; 1 4
414..
~ • t 1 .4 ,- . ' , 4 0
140,11.04 P":1.131V. ; ; ' ..q.; 41. .4.
ati4oluaricited
• samailaberitelppropmetertieTtifi
is nothing lima -Oen I?? , ,ihrow us back into
another civil war, to which the fearful addi-
Lion of- anarchy is.to be Superadded ; for to
propT3e that the executive shall be instruct
td, by die mime vote which invests him with
power, to trample the laws of Congress into
the dust is /nothing more, nor leis than a
decree that the governMent shall be broken
up ; that the Constitntton shall be rendered
null and void; that the legislative and judi
cial departments shall be abolished; and
tits; the President shall be an irresponsible
autocrat.
Had Psalm BLein written that letter
after hia_nominatioU we might have sup
posed that the combine& effects of his ele
vation and 'strong, drink had turned his
brain and made a madman of him. But the
letter had ben written and published before
tlie Convention met, and, .so far from dam
aging his prOSpects, it was the very thing
that carried him through. •The rebel wing
of the party; ..were delighted with his senti
ments and demanded his instant ,nomina
tion, and the donh-faced wing promptly
?
obeyed. That, nolt
ination made that letter
a part of the De °erotic platform. There .
is no geping over it, and what is more,
there is no intention of getting over it. If
Szvslotrs. and Blare should be chosen, the
instructions there laid down will be carried
out to the 'letter; and it will be claimed that
it is done' in obedience to the will of the
people. And the worst of all-is, that, the
claim cannot be gainsayed; for if, with all'
those plain declarations of liurpose put forth
by the rebel-democracy before them, the
people of the nation shalLcast a majority of
their suffrages for that ticket, the President
elect will he bound to take it as their In
structions to him to carry out BI;AIR'S pro
' gramme as endorsed by his Convention and
re-endorsed by the people; and the rebels will
take care that he does iL
Those rebels have managed to bind their
facile fellow Democrats of thd' North as
firmly = as ever they had their ne
,groes. They can Make them do as
they please, and- they have done it. They
have succeeded in making Democracy and
treason and rebellion identical terns, trust
-1 ing to the strange potency of that much
abused party name to 'drag their "lost
cause" out of that "last ditch" in which
GRANT and our brave soldiers buried it.
They know as well as we do with what blind
fondness thousands of the people of the
North adhere to that word Democracy, and 1
they now-hope that the same unreasoning
love of a mere name will give them a Ma-7
jority. And we know that nine out of ten-'
—perhaps ninety-nine out df ahundred—of
all - the votes that will be cast for that trait
orous
and destructive ticket will be given for
no other reason than that it bears the label
of Democracy. Take off that label, and
every honest Democrat would recoil from it
with indignation and horror!
HOME DI AT TEES.
The attention of the- friends of General
GRANT In these cities has been pointedly
attracted of htte to the very free expendi
ture of money by the Democratic leaders in
many wards and precincts of the cities and
county. Their Club meeting-places, their
speaking-stands, music, and the extraordi
nary number of idlers who throng the
streets, especially in the vicinity of Union
meetings and, precessions, persons whose
only businesit seems to be. to *lke the
greatest possible noise for SEVmourt and
Bums, with as many brick-bats as can be
conveniently thrown from dark alleys and
corners, and who are ffoubtlesi paid. In
some way for their Activity., All these in
dicate the expenditure of considerably more
cash than the. Democracy ltave,,ustrally
laid out, here for electioneering purposes.
Thiel:nay basil well enough. It is not our
prelent purpose to criticise this line of tac
tics; 4113 desire only to say that these indi
cations should remind every good Union
man \ that our opponents "mean busineis,"
that they are in earnest, and that they are
making an extraordinary effort to influence,
the vote of Allegheny county. It behooves
every good citizen to be up and doing, to
do all he can, at once and with the most di
rect purpose. All that we need is- to emu=
late the • industry of the Democracy in all
proper and legitimate :ways. Let them
have all. the "mud-larks" if they choose,'
but let - us, see to it that all our voters are
"U p and dressed" , in good time, and that
the untiring exertion of our COunty, City
and Ward CommitteCs are seconded as they
should be, by they hearty cooperation of
every citizen,who looks to - October and
vember for, the daWning, of an. era of rest
and peace for all the people in 'every quer
ter of theland. '•
Berrnmno; ADVICES strengthen the itn,
pression km0111;1111 intelligent &publicans
that .the is and. resolute front, which the
lord tinthoilties of Tennedsee 'present to ,
the rehtds in edit State, affords an ,eitunPle
which mtsst bo d followed in nearly, all the
restored •States:. ..` l Througliont' the eh, ~'
:the', feeling ,Prifallethet , the interventionof
Caligrogisk.f4 session to lied:mid in Septem
ber, will. bcr absolutely' required,' Pat as
soon as ; it 'shall, be .estab l ish ed that an ade
gusto remedy may, not be applied by State
legielattm, Ire 'shall incline to :concur in.
,the opinlon., ;The rebel,plot to dragoon the'
loyal population of those:States into the env'
render of:their freedoni as citlzens by thri
Denl_oe!stW, Ilgiencis bilhery, violence
'nod niurdei, (whether Texas borrowed it
from Cletufield; or WALT ACEtookthe pat:,
tern froni4o,rt PillOw ,orrest , Sod the K.
IC. IC. Or is, not yet clear)
must be foiled, in l yshateter legal Mode inny
P,kemoet.explept). , , ,r•
. . .
CHHOIVIt.. IASEASEB OF • TiiE EAR.
In oniserviatens and notes taken - by Dr litiffiltit
ei this citr; on inti'Msifous, 'diseases:of the 'ear; he
says that ,nine out: of„ Way cases could be eared in
their. incipiency it auPileetion *ere made fe.seme
responsible' and Competent 'finial _lidteen. ,The
'Doctor quotes' trent 'the opinion' oewude, wel
Yemen autat taninion; *ho e ty - sif ''l fear not to : re.
Iterate the astertion which I made int 'seTeril fo'r.•
met S t imasions , that if the disease of the ear *was
*ell studied or undtrateed by fhe .renerallty of
practitioners, and as' eiiif attended' te ; as tliosis of
"the eye; it , weal*' be bind -that itiii-Were I;Uit es
Mach-within Mae - paid el 'dentine trimmient:' y• . •R
Detifnetis lasso common and IcVdistressibearCni..
1 i ,
._ ..
„ ir
~..,
~ . dimity; and'where cif, long' Standing se l iticuratkle.' '
• - r I •..-, • '• .j . '': :that we I:Motif:pa stron I a e a medical P it
Twk;BOiton—Drtiveliqrleresitgrolble for ,Ir . oti ne n est
- , , , ..... tit:mm.lst maktfthemisPeesihmillai.'with the treat,'
.: the follosylnd :" ',!;A:,young „man:DOM the, Mint bi the aloe/Me/1 Of theeat: t' '' 2* :. . -. t +! -
country. went '.nton.dyng store, the other - e , bb e s o r say' war' e lizeti.-1m4„,,,,,hi , 4. tns .-1
day, and siding.4e.,ppople freely ipatronin-. ~b,„ ~,,,,,,
Duzzings and Morbid Growths peenindow
lig the soda' founiain, at.lengtivateptied up. the organ, of the heiring, some erwifich s tuid tin
aliid celled for a dritek,ot , thne,arse.fer him-, , teems:through a score or twirafTeiret ban be Cured
eelf" Afc4, an,,aiinning:AA,learater.:cem.. ivr Meliorated by PrePerteestmenn ,
eof the il f r i , ase and layAlldentEmprivitt- , i i Pe. En Tatum EgaIDIEAT OFFICE for LIM% -'
a sattafie4 e p ee. , t h e ./ eeee teri i innerl: •ISICAXIN4TiaIie MID; THEASZATIMSNT. Or ~
nalith% ' what de 3 1 0II'Ciall illot that bilis 4 1 ',' r l . l3 liN kr i 0111 / 01 / O. D/SZABra, 3.50 xvi Nit.
94 *in 4 g 1 tOld It mtar *ban --!Wiiteia.
~• f' e ' 43161 '. 11Ar 1 , 111 4 011 . 1•41-• ofna,boun.troa
'Old I 106184 it''ilit OtiU 4o4 'irt A '''''' • ' 4 ' 444 '"'"'ill6rPii*, ' - ( • ~,, 4. u {
.. , ib., ~ . ... .. ~' lob
hes) W oe eLT` r -r AIT. 1 - hemiussAetaw-legs ' ' '
.. 4,....,:i.. , : ; :7.... , ...!.'w- •;,-- , 'O-- -- -'
~.
v -! - ui 1 i :...', 3 , ,v,ib!,ii ..;‘ 'tot 1 i ~ . .t,11,14. ) F';:. i.. 4 4. 1 . t. , 'it:411. , .- t il tr., ~, ,
~,•,, : . e; .,1 .1 . ....
~...: :• ,, ••eiti I ml 4i v• •tni '• iitiltiairii Vriig 1...v..4 5 4.3 1 tAi i,stoat 4 ' ,•,, ,I t ''`i ii t i
• . 11 ' /. 7 , . - 4 .. ... t . 4 . . C, • ....; ...L.... ,41...tg .-
A SOUTHERN OPINION OF NORTLIT,
'When the Charleston. Mercury printed the
annexed picture of the Northern Democra
ey, its martagers felt quite sure that the par
ty which it thus maligned, would swallow
any "amount of abusive denunciation, if
sugar-coated with in expectation of recov
ering lost power. What do our German
and Irish-voters think of the character thus
given to them by their brother Democrats
at Charleston ? Read •
Our women ale all conservative, moral,
religi_ous and sensitively modest, and abhor
the North for its infidelity, gross immorali
ty, licentiousness, anarchy and agrarian
ism. 'Tis they and the clergy who lead
and direct the disunidp movement. It is a
gross mistake to suppose that Abolition
alone is the cause of dissension between the
North and the South. The Cavaliers, Jaco
bites and Huguenots, who settled the South,
naturally hate, contemn and despise the Pu
ritans who settled the North. The former
are master races—the latter a slave race,
and the descendants of the Saxon serfs I
We are the most aristocratic people in the
world. Pride of caste, and color, and privi
lege makes" every white man an aristocrat
in feeling. Aristocracy is the only safe-,
guard of liberty, the only power watchful
and strong enough to exclude monarchical
despotisms. At the North, the progress
and tendency of opinion is to pure democ
racy, less government, anarchy, and agra
rianism..
-Military despotipm is far prefera;
ble to Northern democracy, agrarianism,
infidelity, and free love.
Our enemies, the stupid, sensual, ignorant
masses of the North, who are as foolish as
they are depraved, could not read the signs •
of the times, did not dream of disunion, but
rushed on as heedlessly as a greedy drove
of hungryhogs, at the call of - their owners.
They, were promised plunder, and find a
famine; promised bread, and were given a
stone. Our enemies were slarving and dis
, organized. The cold, naked, hungry
masses are at war with their.leaders. They ,
are mute, paralyzed, panic-stricken, and
have no plan of action for the future.
Better, a thousand times bitter, to come
under thedoininion of free negroes or of
Gypsies than of Yankees, or low Germans
or Canadians. Gypsies and free negroes
have many amiable, noble and generous
traits; the Yankees, sour -crout Germans,
filthy, whisky-drinking Irish, and Canadi
ans have none. Senator Wade says, and
Seward too, that the North will absorb
Canada. They are half' true= the
vile, sensual, animal, brutal, infidel,
superstitions Democracy of Canada and
the Yankee States will coalesce; and Sen
ator Johnson of Tennessee will join them.
But when Canada and Western New York,
and New England, and the whole beastly,
puritanic, "sour-crout," free-negro, filthy,
whisky-drinking Irish, infidel, superititious,
licentious, Democratic population of the
North become masters of New York--what
then? Out of the city, the State of New
York is Yankee and puritanical, composed
_ of as base, unpi incipled, superstitious, licen
, lions, and agrarian and anarchical popula
tion as any on earth. Nay, we do not hesi
tate to say, it is the vilest population on
earth.
Tun Springfield Repubitcan tells the fol
lowing stories : "A worthy deacon in a
town somewhere in North America, gave
notice at a prayer meeting, the other night,
of a church meeting that was to be held
immediately after, and unconsciously added,
'There is no objection to the female brethren
remaining.' Which reminds ns of a clergy
man who told in his sermon, Fast-Sunday,
of a very affecting scene, where 'there
wasn't a dry tear in the house 1"'
IS YOUR DISEASE RHEUMATISM t
\ Many persons, supposing they are sufferingfrom
this disease, have applied Liniments, Plasters and
other Rheumatic Remedies without obtaining any
relief, when in fact the cause of pain Is a derange
ment of the Kidneys: These ace small organ& but
very important, and any obstruction or Interferenee
with its functions are Indicated - 4 pain in the back
and loins. languor and weakness, difficulty in avoid
ing and unnatural color• of the 'urine. A Diuretic
should t once be resorted to.
DR. BARCiENT'S
Liuretic or Backache Pale
esti be felled on for these purposes; they hime
direct influence on the cells of the kidneys, assists
nature tn,rellevlng them of any foreign particles,
and ' mantes them to a healthy and,vlgorons ac
_
Dr; Sargent's Bscicathe • Pills
Contain nothing Wl:irking, being composed, of en
tirely vegetable remedies: they do not , sic k
ti nor
gripe=on the contrary they act as a gentle tonic and
regtorectone to thri gYttem, They are recommended
by allwho wbobnye tried them. ,
• Price 50 Cents Per Box.
FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS, Bole proprietor,\
UEORGE A. ICELLF, Widest) linaggiit,
37 WOOD STREET. PITTSBURGH.
THE BODY• RENEWED.
According to Physinlogtsts, the human body is
renewed once in , seven_ years. Every dal', every
hour, every Moment, the ffesh.'the cartilage, bane
and muscle of the frame are Westing eiviy, and be
lug. Imperceptibly _replaced by- new material. -
Health depends upon the nature' of that material,
.and whether it shall be phra or diseased, fail of
vitality and elasticity; or feeble and flaccid, depends
mainly 'men the action of the' stomach. in warm
weather the waste of the system lever/ rapid,. and:
it It is notai rapidly repaired by the reat euslain
ini organ:the consequence is , Emulation
and decay It U., thesefoie.. - of parantonnt impert
ince that the stomach bnicept in a vigoronsvondi;
Bon ,at ibis trying season, and the giant, ‘sorest
and, best tor lc that can be employed for that purpose
is HOST ER'S BITTERS. Thls Incomparable
,vegetable stomachic, gives Unwonted energy to the
digestive powers, protenteL-thee conversion of the
'food fato,healthful blood; (which 14 solo'speak; the
saw efiprial of all . the Solid portions of the i•ody,)
' and thereby Vats. the! system in the best posinble
state of defence asgainstipidernia or other diseases. •
The airollitreentrttit.toireep•up thete strength% the
WWI; tb re4nrigonte them. 'le Consists of the Trod
test 'elf i sh ;Slantwise stinutlabts.' charted' with the
- juices • ind extracts of- We most 'genial :,robte and
herbs,' ind .4 a permanent restormire—isot Mere
temporary exelpett acts' idinultannously cyan
the stothach, the bowels and the firer, and ts the
'best heaven remedy for d3itiensia, - billeasinets, cos
tiveneis and general debility , . ' • ' ' •
.I.l4tus4fied at silsarges z 'Penn:c ea
Saturday., last, an, old wpm,. known -as
Grandmother Posey s itb.e widow of a. Revo
lutionary soldier, at the advanced age of
102 years. She was followed to the grave
by gray-haired descendants, and was the
ancestress of the following progeny: Ten
children, eighty-one grandchildren, one
hundred and nineteen great-grandchildren.
thirty-three great-great-grandchildren, and
five great-great-great.grandchildren.
THE Illinois papers tell of a man who
lately stole his father's tombstone. That is
not as bad as the Democrats, who are rob
bing the Confederate graveyard of its buried
principles,
Sir NOM WM To ket," "Loat,• '
"Wants," "Found," "Boarding," &e., not ex.
leeding FOUR LINES ditch will be inserted in these
columns once far . TW ENTY-FIVE CENTS; each
additional tine FIVE CENTS.
WANTED---HELP
ANTED - BLACKSMITHS.-
Two good Blacksmiths. to go to Chlearo. to
wor on Tools. Inquire at No. 264 ,JACKEON
;STREET. Allegheny.
ANTED-MOULDERS.-Im
tuedtately, at Fourth Ward Foundry and
Mac Ine Works, three good MAURINE MOUL
DERS. .
WANTED—HELP—At Employ*
went ofnee, - No. 3 St. Clair Street, BOYS,
GIRLS and MEN, for different kinds of employ
ment. Persons wanting help of all kinds can be
supplied on Short notice. , '
WANTED-BOARDERS.
•WANTED-110AIID ERR—Pleas
ant furnished rooms td let, with Warding,
at 167 THIRD 6TBEET.
R oo
Bo Brotits.—Gemp ,
u emen boarders can be accommodated with
goo board arailodzing at No. 25 FERRY ST.
WANTED--110A1IDER8.—A gen
. . tleman and wife, or two single gentlemen,
can be' accommodated with first class boarding at
No. IS WYLIE STREET. Room is a front one, oa
second door, and opens out on balcony. . •
WANTED--AGENTS
WANTED -20,000 AGENTS..-
.A sample sent free, with bume,. for any one
is) clear $25 daily, In three hours. Business entire
ty new, light and desirable. .Can be cone at borne
or traveling. by both male and iemale. Hoeft en
terprise or humbug. Address W. H. CULL/ESTER.
260 Broadway. Yew York.
.1"T A-Nir B D-AGENTS-FGr
TIONAL CAMPAIGN' G001)8.-8:10 Steel
Engravings of GRANT and COLFAX, with or with
out frames. One agent took 60 orders in one day..
Also, National Campaign Biographies of both, BS
cents. Pins, Badges: hied als and Photos for Dem
ocrats and Itennbficans. Agents make 100 per et.
Sample packages sent post-vald for_ U. Send at
once and get the start. 'Address GOODSPEED &
CO.. 37 Park Row. N. Y.. or Chicago; la.: d&F
ViT ANTE ILIBIA - MEIDIA L
TEL‘
Two live and energetic Men, to solicit
first-class -Life Ibeniance company. , A_pply at the fors'
Office of the ATLANTIO MUTUAL .LIPS 111811-
RANCE, CODWANY, 108 Smithfield street, mewed
NTED---AGENT.--113‘
with tne Queensware and Glass business. None
otberneedapply..Addreas P. 0. Lock Box 197.
Conunintleations confidential.
WANTS:
• •
•
WANTED—A Pleasant - Home
- of 12 tu 15Toonis In agoon location, either
in Allegheny or Pittsburgh. Address A. S.. this
office. aa.T.:vat
WANTED—The- Patronage of
all persons friendly to, the Medical Practice
of A. nu.coN Etc, 45 years acqn lnted with the;
Science and Practice of Medicine. Drug Store and
Office in Lawrenceville.. Established 13 years.
WANTED—LAND AND REAL
ESTATE—In exchange . for LT1200112 IN
AddrelS imposTre., Box 2198 P. 0.,
Philadelphia. . .
WANTED --BUSINESS AGENT.-
By a drat dasi New York Life Itisurance
Company, with the .most liberal features to policy
holders, aC-eneral Agent for Western Pennsylvania.
Address, enclosing references, P. 0. Box 11339.
Phlladetphla. •
WANTED -INFORINATION-er
'FRANCIS 31. WEBB. W hen . ut heard
fron was stopping at `'Clottman's Exchange, in
the Diatubncr. (In-fay. 1860. g In the City of Pitts ,
burgn.. Any person who may chance. to read this
notice . , and know of the whereabouts of the wild
FRAN CIS- WEBB.-wlll confer a great favor on
his mother, M-s. B. FRANKLiN, by addressing a
letter to J. C. FRANKLIN, bleadowyllie, Umatilla
Count , Oregon.
lir . .
ANTED--PAIITNER.—A Part
. . Tier that will devote nie time to sales and:
eo lectlons, and who can Invest I. lfteen to Twenty
line Thousand Dollars. In an old established manu
factory. Address K, with full name, at GAl.yrilt
OiTtcx None need apply except an b
hese man. capable to attend to Mathes. ge n e ral ly.
ARMED-MEN .seeking bust- ,
hess to see the HOLLOW DASH 'ATHOS-
P 'anti CHURN: It win CIII/TII In three minutes,
makes fourth more butter, and of a tatter quality,
than by the old promm. Lim men, tutting 420 to
Invest, eau make a good arrang.ment hyLcalling
soon •J. C. THAON. No. 1O ST: : CLA I R Sr.
ANT 201041 ) triaCHL9Eil -- FOr
an Interest in in establiebedt business on
I l l ir
IP RN street. - Terms - 11800 cash. $5OO In tour and •
$590 in.eix months. Address BOX H. this °Mee
,
LOST:
LOST.—From a Dray; on Tues. ,
day afternoon, between'. Duquesne Depot and
et. Clair street on Liberty. a BALE OF HUM
GOODS, marked J. & H. Phdlips Pittabtirgh. A
liberal reward will. be pL. - id for ,reeoverror above.
Apply to J. & H. PHILLIPS, _Noi. 28 and 28.8 t.
Cult street, or AHEXT Allentown E. U. Line,Fort
Duquesne Depot. -
FOR. RENT.
114ILET. --Dispatch,
WO tiOOD OFF.itiK9 in the ^ Budd
inv., on seeond and third floors. For particulars in
quire at PLIGYOtiItAPR GALLERY. . , anRB
O LET,A ,T WO STORY 'BRICK
Dwelling, No. 1 .38 Lugar street. with hall.
ourrooms, dry eater, water, as., Enquire Mr.
ItoLizha,itext door. • . au 8:v31
TO LET—One Frame Dwelling
of five roonas, - hall and finished attic, corner
Fayette and Manhattan • streetb. Fifth ward, Alle
gheny City. Enquire of PETER • BATES, - No. INI+
Ohio avenue. _ •
LET—DWELLING.—A v er ye
A. desirable Dwelling, nearly new, containing
seven rooms and diddled alibi. with all modern im..
, provements. • Rent reasonable. Apply to WM.
WALKER, 88 Bo' le street, Allegbeny.
TO LET = FI.OOIII.--A, very desira
ble FRONT - 1100B1,1or gentlemen's bleeping
room. with or witbout boarding; it N. 34 HAND
rItERT. , first door from Dimple Works. Terms
moderate. - , • , - - •
ing tats tad nitte:rtiora. atidarrent of 7330
Der 'manta. Located on Second street, near Grant.
Enquire of d. C. PAtTEPSON, 73 Grant street.
FOR' ; 81LLE.
VOR SAL& - BUrli~FEeB - a 'wen
establlstiett Ind papin business' n one crib
best bpialow I m mo , of pli o
ttobvroi :,, zocuo moa t
aged, wi t h 4 thodetate`eapttO. 'tissibies for
selling: Address BUS 1163, fittsbuntbl'. t.
.
FOR . BAiLF:4I . ttonotikras STA—
, • - Tiora.—Lots for sale at ;this Ter y, dessrable
location.'Persons desiring t Imeure s 'horde for
themselves would do well W exaMintithin ProPertr
before purchasing any place rise. You can do so by
calling st7the °ince oIcI.ItOBINBON. -15-federal
street, Alle atii.olwbo will takes any person to ,
examine the proper 3% free of Charge, •
......_,_ _
N' OR
R • lii A L E-RAB E-: CII A N IGE:
PLUaIItING .AND GAB FIT MU ESTAB.
SUM It NT.pood , stand . and store. , spottier
with fixtures, *fp, Ac. of* PhD stilllisi and
GAS PIT 1•11.1 SST aBLISHM KAT. • dotng " a goat
hu O neas, is offerttfor sate.' T 64: above la situated.
'ln I gqod ptace for, business. rtseina engaged in
Other bntiness. tee proprietor offers tuts establia..;
rnent at a bargstn: ilror_part , CularL ite.. 4 tall sum;
.1.86(WO011 organ. Pittsburgh. Ps. •,. . , „ , ;
Limos SALE -=s' Beautiful Build
.l4
ING L ox. vsataicing • ear ► r s 'whit Zile_ ter ..._
a a s aes, attested on Mount 4pe, 10:W00111:
Run station,' Y. Yu W. aC. ICI olpixigg i tn r lkev - ,
Tf. bt. Mex. -xsykm; , VM: Nehott,'_N m : k ion
SM uth Li. • Tide is one .oX the. Moat .ctinituatiding
0510. In Inc vicinity o‘ the two Mich and •within g ,
satatius% walk of the station. Require at' 331 Lib-, '
er t meet, oral the reeldence of Mr. ALII7Li TAY-'
. , .
Olt Sittle."llollgEl3:-4.4i1i0W.1 ?
AINVE LIVERY AND DALE !STAHL% *he inik '
ritv
tto i xtu Liam UM DAPPLE OBEY
' 0 coe • ...D E.. AU 113..E.2;Avvi..
LAO INA ji um tili sb " MA.V.' ETUDE
Ho,
gyREEY usar II els 1101ridi• -'• .- •' ' -
FOR , 13,11,43 1, WAGIOSELOrie ELI t
vres3 Weinlat i cine . N borseaPendte.rlig t aje ,
corerectle,flitMgelllel
Da- A P.Y • D Jr.. corner - .
s treet:soul Allegheny avenue, Allegheny.
WilitliliALE""it4.69GAMlTZl 4 4l4 ll -::
-4,31.1 Pl / 1 " 7 1 L AP
.677' . „ hi ill. c..
tri.l
=MB
~. ':l't+~F
13
MEGIE