LI c=„ THE DAILY GAZETTE OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny City and Allegheny County. UAZKTTE BUILDING: Coniocrof WWI; presNo lialtkirld Wrote MONDAY, JUNE 13. IK7O. PETROLEUM at AntW.«tp, 5'21 Home at Frankfort, 95E305j GOLD dosed In New York on Saturday at 118M131. Tut Pilißil?ENT and his family spent a part of Saturday at Westport. Pa., on the west branch of the Susquehanna. but re turned to Harrisburg the Same evening en routs to Waihinirton. Tae Ohio Repablimn Convention will be held at Columbus August 10th. to nominate a Secretary of State. Suireme Judge, Controller of the Treasury and Member,of the &awl of Public Worke. Tits ItrtrutuAcarts of Philadelphia have given It to be understood by three of their unfaithful Representatives—Messrs. Davis, Stokes and' Hong—that the people have no further use for their offleial err vices. • Wit have no space to-day for \Aliens- Mons upon the very Important Memorial on our fourth page, addressed to Congress by the representatives of navig-atio6 Inter ests in this quarter of the Dili river valley. Wit surrender much of our apace, tide morning, to a public letter from die tingulabed citizen rif tide county:: Oar traders will find, as we do, lu thin docu ment much to concur in awl something to dissent from. THE public impression that, by the cud. den death of Mantes DICKEXS, his cur mnt serial story of “Edwin Dumd" hu been left unfinished, Seems to be without foun dation. It is announced, in well informed quarters, that this story wits completely written before the publication of its first chapters in ihis . country. Tin . two colored appointees to West Point aidetahipa have failed . to pave the preliminary examinations 10 which all lip pilicants are submitted. Their deficiencies. physical in one case and educational in the other, were so palpable that the ex amining board; a majority of which hap pened to be Republican, had no choice but their rejection. CI Malian Owtr has made an extend. ad tour through the Western counties of the. Commonwealth, carefully inspecting the public institutions.- He has every where been met by a cordial public wet come, and Ands his Executive course as universally sustained. He returned to Harrisburg on Saturday evening, but promises to revisit Pittsburgh and its vi cinitywithin the next two Weeki. for the purpose of improving his' personal ac quaintance with its leading 'industrial in terests. Tug naturalization bill has been sent back to its committee,' but with small likelihood of its pasasge . in any form at this session. The Republican policy on this question Is plain and 'just: It is to throw no needless obstacles in the way of immigrants asking for our citizenship, and to spare no pains In preventing all passible evasions of an &imitable system for their gratification. Nothing leas will vindicate the republican theory of Our government or protect the honest immi grant from the villainous devices of pail, tizanship. F:l43s-useort L. S. FOSTER, of WIRES , tkut, has been elected by the Legislature a Supreme Judge for that State. Only 'five Totem out of two hundred and two were cast against him—a remarkable testimony of au universal non partizan public confi dence in his personal and professional quid ificationa Mr. Foster served his State twelve years in the U. S. Senate; and Would have been again re-elected but for as intrigue arranged at the last moment, which succeeded In ahelving him on the plea of his alleged conservative leaninge. But for that, he would be still a Senator, and as President of that body, would have succeeded in SS to the Presidency for the residue of Mr. Johnion's term. For there are reasons for the belief that the home of the Lispeachment trial would have been different with Foster instead of Wade for the ccuttituient succession. In losing Mr. Foster from her service, Connecticut has mina found much cause for regret—and •none, the leas since the manipulations which were unjust toward hint have be- COM! Conspicuously and painfully applica ble to another of her present Senators. Tux ItrntaN cortsumecxx at the Capi tal have been elated, failing, apperently, to eeenre the expeetect results_..The Sioux &Ws relax none of their originalde "nter4and positively refuse to recognize treaty obligations which they roptullate fraudniently clamed. They are now returning to their lodges on the distant plains, avowed enemies and known to 'be ready for the erar-path, but protected while now in our hands by the inviolable safe anninct pledged to them by our gov ernment. • There has been much to admire In the deportment of these wild andlierce says. gets during their visit to the Capikal. They bare shown themselves Indifferent to all blandishments, curious but not overawed by the evidence all abodt thent of .the numbers, stealth and warlike Power of the phe faces, pressing at all liars and under all drcumatinces the serious busi ness which their mission has covered,and frankly avowing the disappointment of their hopes and the hostility of their fit. tem purpose. Logan wu more of the the _ orator than Red Cioud,. hut .. never until rum have we seen the beau ideal of a savage diplomatist. Red Cloud has evidently won hi■ esgle's plumes by sagacity in council as well u by prowess on the waristh. lie is a brave foe and not to be despised. Sheri• din will And him worthy of shot mad ' steel and skilful strategy, in the conflict 'odd& now seemiunavoldable.. NIL GEORGE K. ANDERSON We would ask for information, whether the Mr. George K. Anderson who Was re &tend aa holding . residence. at No. 1611 Green street, Philsdelphii, antwito voted intim% district last fall, is thi same gee. ileum who L now seeking the votes of the Republican citizens of the Crawford- Erie district for his election to the State gemenet • We keoUr that he is the same individual and would farther ask - how, ender the 3d section of Article let of the State Constitution he can offer himself for the office. 'The section reads: Sac. 3..N0 pWriiii shall be a represents• live who shall not have 'attained the age of twenty-one yenta, and have been a cid. min and inhabitant of . three years next. preceding his e lection , n and the birn yew' thereof an inhabitant of the dis trict in and for which he shall be chosen repespeentative, unless he shales* been absent on the public business of theUni . Jed States or of this State. 'tt. r ~3' Yi:x r es~` (~•,ti~,...,,k.Ks:+sar•:sp~v.<hr NM THE INCOME TAX • . Eturous OAzETTE: Though not sow in public life, and for the better port of two years part in no condition to take an ac tive part either by pen or voice in the field of politics; it is still innpoasible for me to 10,,k upon the current events of the jay which regard the 'final settlement of the country, or the welfare or the party which has. carried it so auccemitully through it. great tribulations, and is now intrusted with. its government, without the interest of a partial coadjutor in the drama which has just been closed. I may perhapertherefore be excused for asking a planefor a few wonis in relation to a measure now pending in Congress, which touchea not only the destiny - of that party. and with it the credit of the nation, but the special interests of American labor, of Which your paper has so long been the earnest and un wavering advocate. 'The subject to which I refer is that of the laconic Tax, on which you have taken a position which, although perhaps in ac cordance with the views of the adminis tration, and the opinions of a majority of the House of Representatives, has seemed to me—ifyou will allow me to say it—a little peculiar in a newspaper and amongst a community so greatly dependent on the protection of domestic industry, and so justly distinguished by its attachment to the policy which aims to elevate the la borer to thelevel of . all his dutiesovhile it insures the — mtrength as well so inde pendence of the State. The quriitiort, it in to be remembered, is not even one of the repeal of a direct tax no longer required by the. necessities of the country, although the object of emigre's; la avowedly to reduce the pub lic burdens by cutting MI an admitted ...revue; but of the reimposition, in time of peace, of an extraordinary impost of a highly exceptionable and Inquisitorial character, excused .and made tolerable onl • by a condition of war, confined accord. lag yin Its duration, by words of elle phatic negation, to a period supposed to be co-extensive with the probable extreme necessities of the State, and now expired by its own limitation. In this view of the case, it involves, of course, the inaugura tion of a policy of . internal taxation at a permanent means of supply for the pay ment of the interest, and the extinguish ment of thepublic debt, by extension in one direction for the sake of a larger curtail ment in another, and with the obvious effect, if not the covert purpose, of tram forting the burthens ohthe country to its own labor, and relieving to the same extent the labor of other nations. It In not pre tended that it le wanted. it is conceded that it may be spared. It is to take the Pplace of something else that is to be re eered. It is to furnish- srvider scope for the cosmopolitan philanthopy of free-trade theorists, who know no country—unless it Great Britain—and prefer to feed tl paupers and replenish the coirem of a Jealous and implacable rival, who but yes terday let loose her pirates upon our corn , . merce, and proclaimed exultingly, almost before a blow was struck, that our very name had perished from the roll of mi. Hons. And the vote of the House. refusing even to limit it to a single year, demon ntrates that the policy is to be a settled one. - Butte this true and statesman-like, or even practical?. Will it maintain the credit of the nation, by recommending it- st4f to the holders of its vecuritirs in promiaing them n resource on which they can rely? Will it insure the fulfillment of our obligations by making the burthen an easy one, and improving the produr tive capacities of the people? Will it. suit those who think that the only honest way of paying a debt is by irontiiig if off, and of course providing abundant reniun erative einployment for the laborer, the tax payer, by the protection and encour agement which his condition requires' Will it preserve the ascendancy of the only party which is honestly delirious to meet in good faith the obligations of the na tion, and Is yet weak enough to allow itself to be beguiled into the surrender of a per manent resource, complained of hybobody, which augment the ability of the debtor, and the substitution of another which, in the very nature of things, it is imptelsibl to maintain in a free. Chu - eminent? 1 seems to me that there can be but one an wer to all these questions, and that Is, that, in every aspect, the policy which seeks to revive and preserve the most odious, un equal, and oppressive of all Our war taxes, in time of peace, at the expense of the tariff, only because it pays. and is sup. pawed to be maintainable, for the reason that it oppresses only the fete, Is as short , sighted and suicidal, as it is unreasonable and unjwit. .. . Never, as it appears to Me, ha an occasion presented. it.elf in ill. history of any people so opportun for tiro, establishment of the publi credit and prOsperity, and the pre - ser, tion of the ascendancy of the party whir, created and Is its only 'Safe custodian. The reAst obnoxious and unpopular of the war taxes has now expired by its own lim itation. The plethora of the Treasury has opened the way for the removal of almost the whole residue; With the excep tion of the exciee• on distilled and malt liquors, and the article of tobacco, With a great simplification of the machinery, and a correspondent reduction in the army of officers, and the expenses of collection. The results of the financial measures of the ttovemnient during the war, in the stimulus which they adminintered to the industry of our people, and the amazing development produced as well by the high tariff and comparative embargo on the productions of other countries, as by the expenditures of the Oovemment had not only awakened us for the first time to a consciousness of our great re sources at home, but apparently removed the tariff, which the secession of the Southern wing of the Democratic party had so happily revived, entirely from the field of controversy. The occasion there fore for the renewal of direct taxation, which it was not supposed that any sane or prudent party would venture to revive or even continue in time of peace, and 1 which was the oily rock on which it seem ed possible that the Republican party could run the risk of shipwreck unless it was headed by some unskilful pilot directly upon the breakers—was happily re. moved. All' that seemed necessary to a clear-headed statesman was to seize the newton, and sweep front the Statute Books the bust remnant of the oppressive sacrifices of the war. And yet with a degree of obtuseness altogeth er inexplicable, except upon the idea that "whom Hod wishes to destroy the first drives mad," or from a desire to:propiti ate the monied interest of Europe and its agents and allies here, or perhaps with a view to a little temporary popularity at home, the - golden opportunity Is thrown away, and a large majority of a Republi can House of Representatives, decides to renew the very worst of these taxes, not because they are wanted, but for the put.. pose only of enabling It to remove the same amount from the. shoulders of the foreign producer, and thus to throw away to that extent its only reliable resource for the maintenance of the public credit. If the patriot has had occasion more than once to exclaim,- at critical pe— riods of the War,• when the blun dering tactics of the Rebel Oen. era had thrown' him upon the north ern hank of the Potomac, with a Republi can army in front, and an almost impassible river behind him, and was yet allowed to escape, through the Imbecility or inde cision of our Generale, "Oh I for an hour of Napoleon Bonaparte," how much more reason has the country now to nay "Oh! for an hour of either Pitt or Hamilton!" Mr. Schenck, although a clever man in his way, Is evidently not Pitt, as Mr. Etoutwell is unfortunately not Hamilton. If the - Secretary can manage to redeem In one month as much as four. teen millions of the Public Securities, it is glory enough for hint, no matter where the money comes from, - and even though in doing so, he may happen to kill the goose that lays the golden egg and future secretaries find themselves embarrassed to rase ways and means for the support of the Civil List out of the same revenues which he Is willing to surrender. No other Ad ministration or Secretary will ever yen tore, I think, to meet even a deficiency by a resort to an Income Tax. I doubt whether any such stroke of finance as the hypo. thecation of so precarious a security In time of peace, will enable him to put his bonds upon the English market, as he hopes to do, at four per cent. That a Republican administration and Congrees, animated only by the ambition of placing the credit of the nation on im moveable foundations—even elide from all considerations In regard to the profitable employment of thaw Dom whose sweat and toll this great debt is to be wrung at last—should have blundered Into the folly of endeavoring to support it on the bailie of direct taxation, and that of the most • objectionable quality, by way of substi tute for so much of the duties now levied upon foreign products, is evidence,l that they could net hays read one of the most Important chapters In commercial sci ence, in the sublime Mabry of the finan dal struggles of tireat Britain, In the maintenance of its • long. and expensive Continental wars, dazing 'the administra• Boil of the younger Pitt,and down till the clone of those wars in 181 g; and for Nano yearn afterwards. If there was any one question on which tfle statesmen of Eng land were all in harmony with each other. • it was, that direct tiomtiito, rad etiredly the most oppressive and un pop u lar uli its foram, Amt only a resomice for public sup • ply In ' of woe, and that the public debt could have no permanent foundation to real upon in a Constitutional tiovene matt, except the on assessments which, b M being a x consumption, and in their nature rolunfory, were not felt in the collection. and had the co Impensating virtue of tnimulating the industry, and enlarging the resources of the tax-payer. The system of taxation adopted by that great Minister, and approved as well by its results, ati by the concurring judgment of his 'contempont ries. and the consent of after times. is sum , meal up by the historian (Alison) as “cont Itining in a word. the important objecta of henry taxation attiring the- tear, itattant re lief an peace, and a permanent provision -for the lasting expensa of the State in the way Wet burthenminte to the pooople !" The war taxes, imposed by him for espe cial purPoses, were accordingly pledged.ttt be temporary burdens, enduring' only for' the year in which they were raised, or at most for a year or two after it, while all others were 'in the indirect form: and the same historian observes that the wisdom of this counoe is approved , by Mr. Hume, in the remark that one of the chief causes of the destruction of the Roman State, Wan the alterations which I Constantine introduc lid into the, provinces. lay substituting a universal direct tax in lieu of almost all the tither, rulltyni awl excise, which previ ously comprised the revenue of the on pire,—the people In all the provinces being so ground by this imposition, that they were glad to take refuge under the con quering (trots of the Barbarians. whose dominion, as they had fewer necessities and less art, stns found preferaltle' to the refined tyranny of the Romann. "It is to be regardeh therefore," says Mr. Alison, “as a capital excellence in Mr. PRO' fagot. .clal measurat, that lie not only provided in permanent impolite for the interest of the whole public deli, and the Sinking Fund necessary for it., redemption, but made that provision ex elusively in taxes In the indirect Pao, the burden of which is imperceptible, and in never the subject of any - general cont. plaint; whereas, the direct taxes, which are always felt as out opprasive, were re nerved as a lint TOOUree, for the nuavoithi• hie exigencies of war, and specially so snarl for those years only when the ten cilement and necessities of the actual' con• tat were experienced." And, again, in speculating upon the results as lessons for the future, be, concludes by.. saying: that "of all the PointsCofAMr: Pitt's financial system, none was mono worth,* of admira tion than that which pnividea for all the permanent expenses of the nation in the indirect taxes;" and, that “of all the errors committal by his successors, none Itan been more prejudicial than the obstinate retention of theta, ittlit -the relinquishment of indir . ed taxes." It WWI .1. refined tarn ny, - in the estimate of llume, to talk. the bandoga of the imperial floc, directly tipon the throat of the subject. In the judgment of the Bout wells. and Schencks, and Simmons, and a Republican house of Representatives, it is the perfection of Republican wisdom, to unleash them upon a free people., It Ls nn disparagement to the wisdom of Mr. Pitt. that while the war assessments ceased, of course, with its termination, no moth of the indirect taxes was sarrend ered on popular grounds as to involve the abandonment of the Sinking. Fund, AB, with it all hope of the eventual paymen of the public debt, without any materin benefit to the nation from a great. part o the taxes thus unprovidentially surrend ered. It is a noteworthy fact, however that I,rd Castlereagh, In 1816, in the en deavoe to Induce the iseople to submit fo a few years longer to the exalted rate o taxation required for the preservation of that Fund, fell Mto the same error pre. cisely so the present Administration and Congress, in making the Struggle. upon the laconic Tax,which being, as the SAUe historian remarks "a direct war impost of the Most oppressive and' invidious des cription, sods always intended by that great statesman. jUr. Pitt,l to come to a close, with the termination of the war, while its weight was so excessive that it was impossible and . unreasonable to ex. - pect the people to submit any longer to its continuance." •'Nothing. - he adds. ..could be more impolitic than. to commit the Government to a contest with the Iwo. . . . plo on so untenable a ground;' and aame may be wild, 1 think, no to the p cut cilia-lige to the nation in the of Representatives. But why itrit that this obnoxious should to- specially eingle.l out for fee .1 r:rpel ue9. at. f terit at,ollstoi is . . its object. and expired. as it was' * lntend ed, and pledged that it should di without resurrection 7 is it because then is anything specially to reconone. • • " . it to the favor of the law mak ing power, or only because it is a ready expedient forapprenticen in finance, and It is supposed that the parties atfret .1 by it ant no small in number that they may be- opprensed with impunity •1 Let us look a little into both theu questions. '11.• first experiment made in thin sort of taxation in England was under the ad. minintmtion of Mr. Pitt In 1799. It wan not until after the Continental peace of Campo Forret° In 1797; when.tireat Brit ain was deprived of her allies, nnd corn. ulled to struggle oil alone. and the nys tem • of.. annual - borrowing had al ready swo llen the debt of that nation to the then frightful total of one hundred and sixteen million pounds sterling. that this great minister became convinced, of the necessity of bringing the taxes within the year as nearly as possible to the level of the public expenditures;_ and it was with this object that, keepingin view the fundamental principles—first, that the burthen should be diffused an extensivel. as possible without the neceasity of suc h an inquisition as the customs, the manners and the pursuits of the people would ren der odious; 11Cf011(i, that It should exclude thou who were least able to contribute; and third, that it should admit of each abatements as in particular cases it might be prudent to make; be proposed at the session of 1798 to treble the untamed tar en, which fell chiefly on the rich, !such as servants, horses and carriages, while the house and window Tax, which fell in a great measure on the middle classes, should only he doubled—the whole to lie continued but fora limited time, and kept up only as a war burden. The ..extraor &nary taxes thus imposed fell, however, so far short of his estimates, while the war broke out anew under circumstances necessitating a grently increased effort on the part of England, that at the session of the following year he found it necessary, as a last expedient, to propene fife - extreme and novel measure of an Income Tax on all incomes over £6O per annum; so far, however, deferring therein—an our Legis lature did not—to the habits and manners of the people, an to leave the amount to be fixed by the Comminsinnernlenn the party affected chose to render a statement ct i . of ' his receipts, in which e only, he wan, if required, to contl n it by his oath. The opposition to thi measure, as one involving a departure fm the uni form and long nettled policy of he Coun try, which looked only to roam nption en a standard of supply—as a recedent which, from its arbitrary charact r, might ;lead In the end to contiocall7 sane -1 tinning en odious end dangerous inquiiii tion into every mans private Alfa rot, and u threatening the destruction of thernid die classes, by preventing the accumula tion of small capitals, and weighing with excessive severity on them, while it would bear but slightly in comparison on the highest, and totally exempt the lowest, was vehement and formidahlei hid' the ne cessities of the hour. and the public confi dence in the minister prevailed over these objections, and the measure Walt adopted; as It has on"•itieveml extraordinary peat- Amin mince that time been repeated, though in a milder form. . It will be urged perhaps, an it lies been very inconsiderately admitted In debate by Gen. Butler, who in one of the most diii tinguinhed of its opponents; in the House. that a tax of this description, if required by the necessities of the country, in about an fair and equal ea any other that can be imposed. Allow rue to quote, in the way of anatiferthe testimony of the anion writer to whom Piave more than once referred, u embodying the salient points of objec tion to all impositions of thin sort, in Inn gunge as terse and strong as any that I could empl o y. "A greater error (he 'remarks)in finance never was committed than the introduc- tion of the Income Tax. In appearance the most-equal, It. Is In reality, the most unequal of burdens, bmause It assesses at the same rate many . different classes whose resources are widely different. The landed . proprietor who. - emu.° in worth thirty years' purchase of the rental \. at which he is rated; he fundholder whittle stock is worth tw •nty or twenty. five of the same annual payment; the merchant whose profits on year may be be swallowed up by lc' the next neat vv al I . PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE : MONDAY MORNING, eTU son, the professional man whose present income is not worth five years' purchase: the young annmitant whose chance of life is as twenty; and the aged. spinster iu whom it is not two. are all rated at the 'mime annual sum. The tax in sans. quence falls with excessive and undue Se. verity upOn one class, and with itur - eason able lightness upon others; it extingbishes the infant accumulation of capital, and lefts an end to the sayings of MIN triune in dustry. while it is compatatively l unfelt by the great capitalist. and the opulent landed proprietor. Unlike theindirect taxes, which are paid without being felt. or forgotten in the 'enjoyment of the ob. jects on which they are laid, it brings the bitterness of taxation: in undisguised nakedness to every individual; and pro. daces in consequence a degree of diacon teht and exasperation which nothing but the excitement of continual warfare. or a sense of uncontrollable necessity tali in duce a nation to bear." If this picture be true, what is to be said of the mode of imposition hem, where inilustry and enterprise are Made to bear VI imrthen, and the great landed interest of the country pays absolutely nothing. except in the case .of property actually yielding rent, and therefore confined al most exclusively to The large manufac turing and commercial cities. where the middle classes are nun wiled to contribute, not from their profibe, but front their out trifitener::and where. in violation of the spirit, if not Of the letter of the Constitte Lion, 2.70,000 individuals are singled out of 1 . .. Hy millions,lo bear 'the bonbon for the whole? I regret to say•that it Is ap- Istrently far the very reas.at that this unposition is we partial and unjust. that it is in 'most quarters so obstinately Main rained. If it touched the great agricul tural, as it wounds the commercial and manufacturing communities. where its injustice and folly are both made doubly apparent from the fact that they are e : peeled to pay it, while its object is to rob them of the very protection which enables them to.tio no, I doubt whether it would Itnye found any advocates either in • Con gress, or with the press. If It had afl'ect ed them, the nation would have been spared the humiliating spectacle of a Re publican Congress. in 1864, under the lend of its Committee of Ways and Means, refits. ing to place the additional tax on whisky on hood, and thereby making a donation to the ring of speculators sitliatantially out of the public taxes, of at least *Lag millionx of dollars: on the argtnuent that it was unconstitutional and unjust to tax by retrospection, or tax the satne'article a second time, and afterwards at the same session, and under the lend li( the same men, making good the bas for the pay ment of bounties, by duplicating retro spectively the tax-en intamies 'which hind been spent. It seems to be thought. how ever, as it was perhaps thought then, that so small a fraction of our pojadation no 270.000 individuals can he oppressed with impunity. If they can he, it is not .at least from such I . olllllllillitieS as nun, where 4,715 of these victims are to he found contributing to the revenue In this form alone. nearly half a million -a year, t5454;1051 or nearly one fiftieth of the whole to about the one hn ndrcd and Nixteelli part of the population, that such legislation is to receive - support. Buys this so It may be possible that in merely agricultural communiiresias in the county of Butler. where only th(riy one individuals pay *1.644. and in Mr. Phelps county of Armstrong, where ter cnty ow pay s.s,6s4—while In the Alle• gheity part of the same district "ta.enN 'wren hPt odred and lwrtnte, ton r ply $lB6, 777—the people may he Indifferent to the sutferings of their less favored fellows here. bit in the great commercial as well as manufacturing cities of the mu:dry. upon which this burthen almost each, sively falls, the feeling must be a very different one. Who age the men that pav this tax in these coinmunities, and .npircl. ally amongst ourselves? They are not the nett or the poor, but the middle classes. the small uteehauiea and meg Challis. RIM salarit,l and professional men. wlio depend upon their personal earnings from year to year, and find in them tebarir sufficiency for the Poplar% of their fami lies, or an• roam!a aide in souse instances to lay nip their moderate savings for the time when it may please Providence to deprive their families of the lame fit .of their personal skill or industry. What are the !politics of these men whom it is thus pn.posed to victimise with our consent 7 'they are:aimed invariably Republicans— RN every intelligent mechanie at least must logically i.e—and amongst thin most actin. and influential name 4.1 the party Inform us. if you can. how many 41f this men who VI . the lAM . ll2Crati Ticket in these 1111 l tou Mlles co , tribute to the In Tax. lint Is tp is p se d that than who receive a bl . . ligthin in the I;oin.e ..f their friend,. which 'night be I...inc with. p1iii...,..p10 iit.ll4•ll resignation it f14:1. n 1). ---“M t“ . 11011 to n party whogol policy is injurious or oppressive to the ,or that the parts itsel' I can afford to desp se. or defy their Cd. plainta 'I Areth .y not :lien ' If prick then.. will I ley not bleed ? If .. . ........ trample on them. r become ill they not turn tit you, and if they what Is to . the rho favor this npprev nion—or of the Republican thauluation in this State, or even in don its Banner County Y Nay, what then becomes of the omnipotent nrgonaent. by which we have heretofore won not only the alining 11.1<ii. villed support of the manufacturing in let:ant, with its Orangeman of • hands, but that of the fannerstheinselves, that the policy of the Democratic party, though disavowed by them In this latitude, .was Free Trade and, direct Taxation har the supportof*the Government? If a Repute Congress will re-enact the Income Tax in violation of. the faith plighted to the when it was asked to nubmit to it, a Democratic Congresn will make a merit of taking it otf, even though it should fail to remote the indirect taxes Which its prederesnor may haven° weakly and gratuituounly surrendered. - But even if It were -true that the 210,000 individuals who are made to bear thin - Winos nod unequal tax; are nortutnet ically strong enough in thenmelven to re volutlonizethe thrvertiment, end overturn the administration which they assisted In bringing Into power, what Is to be said of the argument which defends this tax OR the ground that it falls upou no inconsid. arable a portion of the people.— ma d,. smaller by the fact that It holds out a attiring tempation to perjury, and there: by opprennes the honest, while the rogues are permitted to escape—in either Its moral or political expect? Its very Ante ment ought to put Its advocates to the blush. They greatly err, however, who think that-honesty and policy are differ ent till ngs.Linder the providential arrange ment of the. moral order of things In this world, that cannot be expedient in the di rection of n State which In essentially un• junt. The right and the true, though over laid fora time ran never die; and they who reckon on brute numbers to. areom. plish Injuntice would do well to recollect that while a just quarrel is the stmngent of arrant*, the lesson of hintory, thht there is always a reaction of the moral sense, which follows like an avenging . Nemesis upon the footsteps of injustice. 'liters in anothereonsideration,however, arising out of the peculiar strueture of our own Institutions, which adds ten-fold strength to the objections already stated an bearing no strongly in Great Britain upon the question of :direct Taxation for the support of the Government; and that is, that while the right of levying duties on imports, in reserved to the Federal Government, along with general powers of taxation, it In expressly denied to the States, which are, of course, without other regnant.es for their ',import, except In those means of, supply to which Congress is now looking for the payment of its owif debt. Whether under thtse theologian- COS it may not be reasonably expected to confine Itself in time of peace, at lean, to : its own exclusive domain, and whether it in reasonable that It iihitula invade with out necenalty the very limited sphere of State jurisdiction, are questiour - which may be safely left, 1 think. to Intelligent minds without argument. It is worthy - of remark, however. in this connection, that if the States are denied the, power of levying duties on imports. iheatercise of e the concurrent power of the Federal Government to levy direct taxes, is on the other hand abridged by the express qualification provided In the second, and again repeated In the ninth' section of the Constitution, that they shall be apportioned among the States' according to Federal numbers. nether In this view the tax in question is within' the power of Congress; I will not stop to argue. It can loudly be doubted, I think, that it is against the letter, as it is mani festly attained the Apiiit of the Conotitu- Bon, I have just. ',ern It Anted, Ina letter pub limbed here, from a Republican member of the present House, by way of excuse for the admitted short-comingn of the party, on the great leading subject of the Tariff, that the ltepubllara party, having It, ori gin in the horror of slavery, and reinforced by the accession of other elements during the progress of the war, Is yet but a hete rogeneous agglotneiatlon, comp a unded . of subjects)men t)L and.ev e ry pi s eawd shade a ji f o s p u l n c i h a t nother • flea policy on the subject of prof r( That i • not my view'. However tnerito- ions the reputed origin either on moral r religions groundri, it wan not the emit'. lon of the Abolitionist. and did not rest On any mere basis of Universal philanthropy. It grew. out of the diversity of interests ) and social forms nod pursuits, engendered by an institution,-essentially aristocratic anti aggress' vein its character, and distin guished by the overhearing insolence and the disparagement of honest lalmr result ing naturally out of the, . relation of ownership in human sinews, which . . AvoundiAl the self-respect, as it exhausted the patience of the NorthAand aroused Po strong a spirit of resistance among its PeoPle, who were awakemil for the first time to the full knowledge hf the fact, that. Democracy was only : . an 'tiler name for' do re labor as vonfradistingt teed from free. 1 and that every question - w lib t had divb ded the two gre,tt parties l if the. nation was resolved at not into a tin .Stion of f, vial forms—a point whiel it my feeble way I etitleavored'to cinch' te in a speech made by me at La Fayet e Dail' In the impaign of ISM; utsnt the subject of the Negro in American is titles. - It wan he logic of tub= position, n n member of he old Whig and Tarill party, that threw me into the Bepubßran ranks in 11356, with the assured- conviction, which I had express.] to the late Senator [toughesa a year before - that time, in reply to :his sug gestion that Ile\ Kansas Nebraska bill would be the test miention of the nett eantpaign, that theproduction of the• ne gro himself. who had been so long be hind the curtain. openly upon the stage, would reverse the politica of the nation and result in the disastrous overthrow the Democratic party the North. Th Republican party was, as I argued my self, In 18.10. in answer to the question pub hely propounded •by the lioneenbi Wil 1111111 B. Heed—an old Whig himself the 'champion of • the Democratic condi. date ( Buchanan) "Low can any Whig nu p. port the Republican ticket?" -the inherit. er of all the leading • principles. of the great organization which it superceded, only bemuse that organization had proved, untrue to its high mieeien faits ettbrts to. recommend (Melt to the South," and the, battles of Ittrill and 11160, were both fought here upon the Mlle substantial grounds., If there was any representative noun iii our ranks before the outbreak of the war, WhO.Wati not with us' on the sub ject • of priitection to American Industry'. I do not know . who he wan. If the- war itself made any eleventh hour recruits of that class; they Must have reasoned badly; or not reasoned at all, If they failed 10 See how complete an estinguisher it was of the whole theory of Fr., Trade, and how powerfully the doctrine or proteetion Mite 3===C=2:l the satin in the dark hour when we stood alone—with the money markets of Europe cknoNt against us—a imblitue spectacle to the world—in maintaining our armies and achieving the salvation of the country. nking men genemily looked upon the experience of the war, and lih legacy of debt which it had left behind it, AN a con clusive settlement of the tariff question -for the present generation at least. It Was scarcely to be expected that those who had been witnesses of the 'wonders which a reliance on our own resources had wrought—a mere repetition, however, of what it bad more than once accomplished our finances and credit in lime of peace —and were pledged by their pnesltion to the payment of the debt created by the war, would la , prepared to neerrender the vantage ground which had been gained, by discarding an auxiliary so efficient,. taunt as the sauna had passed, and when the obligations of tine country made it more important than ever deat it should be preserved. if Republican party was tent a tariff party at the ' be. ginning of the war, it ought. to have been at deemed of it. and those of its converts wino do not_ - Yet ieee the neressit v of - ad hering to the policy winkle carried tea an successfully though the war, and are elite Posed to return Inn the .now obsolete and unrene:onalelne theories inn regard to tine blessings 'of free trade, had better gmvi , tate backward to their 14,1 affiliations, for all the service which they can now iereader In fedfillipg the great mia ion of the lie publican party. 'That par y lee neceskarily and eseentially .I.ariff party, ir it in nothing% 'There it no queetion now left but the 1.113 - went of the debt incurred by the war. On this, an I think, the nation s will ultimately resolve itself into two au. lagoniatie reetiona, both for the time being profesaedly sOliritous to provide far the debt of the. war--one favoring aired. tat ation to render it ohnoxiiina. and Ito taty ment itnpoasible, while the other wilt in- Mat on making it easy and insenaible by meeting it in./jeer/1y ht giving entPloY. meat to labor agiii -augmenting the pro. durtive rapacity of the nation. If the He publienn party. i 0 I.llw prvi.ted 1., d0 tii it woitie ti toe, giVe teat' 111.1114, tor Ihlit I trust I • is; . underebnst us in no I.rtilided • in what I have said by soy 'special nense of individual oppression, or any feeling a personal interest an a tax-payer, in the question of assessing in.. comes. To men of my claw, who are not dependent on their personal or 1111d.13- 3i111131 labors, mud have enough for all their reasonable Wallis, without anynecessity or desire for accumulation, it can ma - , so .great ditterence, although. they may lament the folly and well complain of the injuntice, whether the tiovernment strips them of the whole or a 'Art of their nun pion or not. It does And * 111134 make a difference, however. to the man who looks beyond his - own times, anti desires the continuation to bin posterity of the Wenn. logs which he has enjoyed himself under a wise and prudent administration of our public attain., whether the financial policy - such the tiovermuent is to he directed in such a way as to insure the easy and hon. est fulfilment of the most acrd of its obligations, anti neenre to the people the largest amount of happinenn in tlieluture, or whether its burthens are to be aug mented, and its productive powers abridged, until lin sun shall gm down in a Pea of bankruptcy and ruin. My* indirid nal opinions may be worth nothing, but sock as they are, they are founded in the experience of the oddest anal greatest rm. lions, and nuntained, as I think, by the teachings of the wisest economists. Respectfully, Tidos. SVI [xi.% sr. =1 I .l°.`,lff Pglilgt,r,:rstt.'.4".lThm.TA:l7,44t.to fectise like Chloride of lime. You will On% • funk supple hurt received this day at JAIIIIOI E. 011ItN8 la (Xli 1/111.18 Envois,, corner of Penn and Sixth Almelo. ildorMe of Lime Chloride or Lime Chloride of Li Of L m me Vbioride e Chloride of Lime Chloride of Lime Chloride of Lime. Chloride of Lime. JAMBS E. B NS & CO.'S STORE; I. (old M. Clear) ' WWI/ Conker roan and Nal l;t 3 l7ll3l6l'i2izio9(:)NJoiWoli:l FABER & VAN DOREN 367 Liberty Stree PITTSBURGH, PA. STEAM ENGINES IRON AND WOOD WORKING MACHIN - ERIT, Steam Pumps, Engineers' and lilachinists' Tools, STEAM FIRE ENGINES BELTING, Woolen Machinery, Machine Cards. 111rIlanufactarers , and Mill Sup. plies. A constant supply on hand and furnished on short notice. 011.131EA9 Bakery, Confectionery AND ICE CREAM - - - • - The understood has whettishod the. ore best. 17 AlSt f l....=er. nO. inlet the Part, phew he le prepared towePir urdera In his Ilue. Ills elope ta handsomely etted up for the conewners of lee cream obo wlll hird IL very convenient. to the Part Sallefeetten mew rantpl In geode. attendance and priors. The Pah. Ile Petro...Se Is whetted. 4711 t. A. 11.110 DEL - mynah) - PEMENT.--1011 bblx. LmiLarllle Hy. drauhe Cement, the best lu use. For salcul J. D. CANFIXLD, 141 Firs 4 aseuue. NEW ADVER I - WM, SEM`PLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal Street, IMETE=I3 'MR STUCK WILL FOUND ~arge and I Comple Embisclui ill thi West Nnveltles In )RESS GOOD Summer Shawls CASSIMERES, JEAN COTIONADES LINEN DRILLS, Alt et the lowest teteeiblo prices AT 114 CRNTI4, Striped Slia AT 114 CENTI, WASH POPLINS ESE= American Black Silks (MEAT BARIIAINA WM. SEMPLE'S, 80 and 182 Federal Street, Allegheny Mil Morganstern & Co's 12!= IiACROM. GLYDE & CO SPECIAL BARGAINS! R./1 SOL Regardless of Cost Pongee and Silk Parasols for S INIEUE3 Shetland Nhal.la for roplltt Skirt. for... lirstlph Iron I.'nove Hoe. Law Handkercbt•fo. Ilerostitched Handkerchiefs, at. Linen Towels. ....... . . liens' Jean Bo w en. at Oreea Lid litovae. ai. P. K. far Balta. at ng.op t+lirt*. Wll and cnshtels yourindl that to other ho rod... low as we do. . Nos. 73 and 80 Market Stree 4‘ 0 RTH ARRIVAL Summer Dresses, ii 44 11, A NE • rITOCE or IRES: GOODS 20,'x5, 371, 50 and 75e., The Cheapest and Bandanales ASSORTMENT In this. Alfirket. BELL Si MOORHOUSE 21 Fifth Avenue. SPECIALTIES Hats and Boinets, lIORNE & CO'S. HAIR DATEJ_ • LADIES AR , O CHILDREN'S CAPTOR AND STRAW BATH. Fresh asaortiskeat TINIC FRENCEI FLOWERP HOSES, WlAlfaltS had PIIQUKTT RIBBON& al shad.ond widths. . . PARASOLS A Nib SUN UMBRELLAS, PONDER AND CI:MORRO LLNRD. A new lot Dud rireePrect. EMBROIDREIRS. SWISS NRRDLE WORK AND HAMBURG EDGES AND INSEETINS. A I i ZAA , A MI R MIZADN LACE COLLARS Cllcazzarreth Lijincs i Vit ig fitigirrsiggaiNin DRESS tIU TB. IMPARTS' EMIL ROBES AND DRSSSRS. A fresh Rat !Mt . KID ULDTES Lisht Rveglog Mugu. U.S Bright Colon. all ninhbarg. NEW, GOODS Arriving Every Day. 7 AND 79 MARKET STREET On a Par with Gold WE NOW _OFFER Our New Stock DRY AND NOTIONS EASTERN PRICES BUTEN ARE INVITED TO Examine our Goods & Prices ARBUTHNOT, SHANNON & CO., No. 115 Wood Street. INE OF lIF r E. - rbeffrt . Blood Av4 r .vt r=dar.7l4.-r& r , vunau appetiser and tonlo. and the linnet thl n orrin the world f or partfrtne am bloa. It Is tholes:ma om. ant and danoious arist. area einer to tea labile. far euperlor prand7. al,* bitters 0r...7 other art.. It la more Mantis and camper. Both oasts nod fol.conoroe oid can Salo tbe *se . " who 'l l& I L .14#07 =TX& 9= aMay 1,0111 t.• W Ina of We, It la btu =palms nor Wore tri use. It Is sold bi Omelets . alasat all espect able saloon. map 51.99. in quart boozes. • parillflllT TE 13, 1870. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS THE STOCK IS Dilly Replenished MEI NEW GOODS WI SEMPLE'S, SO . and ISP. Federal Street, =9 Extra Good_ Bargains In lisle. Bonnets and Sundown. Peniude and Bun timbrellse. =I LACE GOODS I= =I !=! lair Switches and Chignons, .adles% Gents' and Ch Wrens' Hose. I=6 alto Loaf and Fant? Fans, at WM. SEMPLE'S, 180 and VW Federal Street, Allegheny BUY THE GENUINE. CLARK'S "0. N. T" SPOOL COTTON. GEO. A. CLARK SOLE AGENT Sold Everywhere. Y 4 -IrStS yji4 VrAi ti s SAILEYBC° 12T1 li•CHESTNUT BT, PRILADELPNIA' pc ekrecsiort *pme cif The reputation and experi ence of 40 years, warrant us in saying that our stook of Fine Timokoopors of, the best Euro pean and American Makers is now the largest in the coun tryi.and we guarantee that each Watch we sell, is finished with great mechanical precision, has all the late improvements, and will run regularly, well, and give satisfaction. 7 :lequiriee promptly replied le. Wades lorwartal by Mress ler appwal. Mn JOHN STEVENSON'S SONS CO., JEWELERS, 93 Market street, Pittsburgh (THIRD izon FROM FIFTH.) Have on hand all the latest novelties In Fine Jew , elm; vise 811•81 . -ele0C. and Diver Plated Ware of new design imitable for wedding gift, Watches at all the AllittiCllo makers in gold and silver am,. Both Key and Pendant Winders con atantly on hand as well as • fell variety Of the er Grades of t he. Swiss Watch. IncludWg Jur geese., Jacob. Ferreous. and others. We call particular attention to our facilities for repairing and regulatlng ens Watchea To that branch of one butanes... give special care. Orders b y mail promptly need. Desks= Of any goods tent in drawings by mall at request. myleortn I= ARNSTIIAL & SON, ,Tirginia and Louisville Tobacco dgracy, SEG-ARS Fine Cut Chewing and Smoking Tobaccos, TO SMITHFIELD STREET, PaIsSIDES. sayE.H `HILL & ADAM'S SEWER PIPE CO,". '5 and ti 7 Sandusky St., Allegheny Manitlgiturg highly VITRIFIED WATER AND .EINWRIt PIPE. Dealers In CHIMNEY TOPS, FLUES and lITORAULIC CEMENT. O. Q. MoIAILLIEDT, Agent DRY YELLOW NNE AND OAK. A Orel-ellen lot, thnninghly swooned In the ough, or planed, at the rue JAMES M'BRIEII, 191 Sandusky Street, Allegheny City Joe:rl DECORATED AND PLAIN Marble and Slate MANTLES, Made bi otaam pwer. Tke onlyydave /n mtern Pennsylvania *be o ns Slate and Marble Marbleised Mantles me made. Elegant Marble almitlekWaln mottos. Modem Faro tore Took marbMub from white marble and .lab to elavSY MOrment the choicest marblesvaliattel and onkel/. Sold at New York pion at 319 aod I.IIIICRTT STREET. Pittsburgh. Pa. TLWO-T W. WALLACE. MORROW, (Lab wt FLualmanvis A Morrow.) (scrooEsioß TO KEAN [ELSE[,) itlascpar g of e Mar f f o r s zta l u lC U ß e Das. VORDER DECK STOVER COPPER and IRON STEAM PIPES. DAWKS Wended to D.K.P4ID No. 112 First Ayenue. (Near Martel co trimaJ =MCI P1711113Utt(111. PA. CHEAP_ ISTOIILE ANDOMER TINWARE. ERN .. , . n L'" " Willi vw. irlilANS..ie. as 1 0 REESE; k i leo b.... Doshen Cbwoß _ P. C. DDITTE . -- leg bozos 1 gam; for os mium -I. • J. B. 141 Vint SVIIIIIN. E=l 2:8+7.1. 74 . ,r 1" NEW ADVERTISEMENTS i rL "Sa Peait anti Ohio Railroad Ca The Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad ;doled sod runnlng !nom Illt"IMOND, VA to the celebrated WRITE In Watt Virginia. 24y wiles. It le beina rapidly ded fu the Ohio river, 200 whet turthitt ==ll In its prawns Westward. It penetrates and opens market the Wt/NDKRFUI, t OAt. I/ icrosirs OF THE KANAWHA BROWN 'IN WKST YIR. IN LA. And thna bri naa the superior and abundant Coal. of that wAsion Into conanuniodion with the IRON OltiOt OF VIRGINIA AND and lb WESTERN, SOUTH WI , TERN AND RASTRRN IMMOM When einniiletai It will eiinneet the SUPERIOR HARBOR FACILITIES Ole THE (NISDIAPEAKE BAY wllh reliable nevientioniinthw r OlileriseLsnd Ithus with the ENTIRE SYSTEM 01 RAILROAD AND W.ATEIL TRANSPORTATION OF TILE GItIAY WEST AND SOUTIIMENIP It Will make a SHORT. EASY. CU EA P and FA VORABLE ROUTE from the WEST to the REA nG will command a LARUE :MAHE OF TUE EaIOTLEOLLS Flt EIU UTE seeking traniiporteitlon to CM= It wilt that beennse orient the meet IMPORTANT AND PROFITABLE 4:ART AND WIRT TRUNK LINE!' OF RAILROAD In the connted. and Cm- n trade of iIIIMCIII4. value The completed p.rtlen of the Hood Is doing .HOFITABLE AN II INCIIKAdINU BUSINESS d Is fully equal In value to the Wholo amount of a mortgage upon the entire Line-415.000e The has,. et the eheeepeake end Menalime] • Com pan y. benur a FIRST MOETOAOE UPON THE ENTIRE LINE, PROPERTY A ND Eyu I P.MENTS. WO ItTII WHEN COMPLETED AT 'JUST 1130.- 000,000,1 s triers( ore one of the most cobetaritlal concertedly,' nod reliable Itellroad Leann ever of feted In the market, nod Is peculiarly StdaPtennt • =EI Investors and Capitalists. I= moat. rntlntnrtnr; Alsgurnnce .t POSITIVE AND UNDOUBTED SECURITY. The Bonds ere In denominations of ,$l,OOO, $5OO and $lOO d may be had COUPON or REGIBTICRED. ',tremor Sir per cent per menet. payable MAT t and NOVEMBER lat. PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST.PAYARLIZ IN GOLD IN THE CITY OF NEW YOUR. Price 90 A. ACCRUED INTKIUDIT In Cur ency, at which price they pay neap SEVEN PER CENT. IN GOLD on theirsoet. AU Government Bonds and other SeeurlUesdealt In at the Stock Exchmge received In. ...berme, at their full market value, and Bonds sent to all parts ( the country, free of tiznress charges: - They can be obtained by ordering direct from us r through any rerporalble Bank or Banker In any part of the country Fisk & Hatch, BANKERS: No, 5 Nassau Street, New York Map; Pamphlets and full information furnished upon application in person or by tt , mail. S. APCLEAN & CO. :BANKERS, 65 Fourth Ave., Pittsburgh =I 1 4 1111 f ir A'A I.LAII Copying Presses %VILER!. PRESSES, BAIL PItE.SSES, Ltrrnut slZkl I.II.INSKS CAC SIZR PRESSER. CARMINE AND GILT PRESSES. WALNUT PRESS STAND. MANN'S COPYING BOOKS, ' - FRP-Nell COPYING BOOKS. NOTE SIZE COPYING BOOKS. LETTER SIZE COPYING' BOONS, CAP SIZE COPYING BOOKS. AILNOLD'S COPYING FLUID. SMITH'S COPYING FLUID. FRENCH COPYING FLUID. VIOLET COPYING FLUID, RUBBER COPYING SHEETS. CAMEL'S HAIR COPYING BRUSHES WATER BOWLS. CHINA AND IRON. READ & SON No, 102 Fourth Avenue.. = CHEERY SEEDER. It has been In use for thetas{ ale yeamand never felled Man single Instance to give satinfae. Moo to the purchaser. When run to its Mill moonily. It wlll seed a bushel of (Ilienles In 20 =louts.. The Muhl. is Chentt Simple. Datable and Handsome. The Hopper, liadjustable. thereby adapting It to all sited [berries.. It 2 the best Cherry Seeder In the Market. Ho . 711 P i j olt ‘ ts addressed to • JAMES BOWN, No. 130 Wood Street I=l Will be Filled at MANUFACTURERS' PRICES STONE WATER PIPES Chimney Tops, - • HOT AIR & CHIMNEY FLUES, &c. A Wise rad full assorinsant constrain on rand. HENRY H. COLLINS.. t3s SECOND AiIESUE._ CM Lands, Factories & Mills, • JOS. C. G. KENNEDY & SON, *ASHINGTOti. D. C. Are Agents for the sato of largemd small FARES and valuable tracts of TIMBER and MINERAL LANDS and MINERAL SPRINGS {lmproved) In the States of Maryland. Virginia. North Georgia Arkansas and AllssisslppL They also offer IRON FOUNDRIES. COTTON FACTORIES and FLOURrff.d ATING MILLS at a great bargain. Iti WHEELER'S Patent Stamp Caneelers EDWIN. STEVENS, No. 41 S. Third Street EZIEZZIZI General Agent for State of Pennsylvania. All onion Will be Shod through [W1190106 for this aptge DISSOLUTION. The co•partner title tient tnfore rending between JOHN SPEEN. and .WII.IIAM Sl.Kan. under the Etta name tif J. rt W. IHERIt. wail droners. tneth Want A Ilegheny,_was dissolved by mutual consent MOlb., 3d Intl. The boolnem trill be continued at thei old mind and all Recounts of the late arm set tpd by William epee, JOHN SPEEN. alp W.H. SPEEN. FULTON'S DIMINO ROOMS, roa LADIIS AND GMTLEMEN No. HI FOURTH AVENUE, now wood stmt. 0P321 ON THIIRSDAT. acre Mb.. • PAWL --; 166 Grua. sw .1, CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, &o CARPETS SPRING STOCK. Fine, Medium and Common C.IRPETS. Our Stock lx the largest we have ever offered to the trade. Bovard, Rose Sr, Co., 211FIFTli AV.ENITE. 57tril April Ist, 1870. SPECIE PAYMENT Reksimed Prom thla , awl Silver ebonite will La given to It .4W:oars. at M'Farland & Collins CARPEr STORE, 71 and 73 Fifth Ave. w-Our prices are the lowest In thls instkeL CARPETS. New Rooms! New Goods! NEW PRICES! We have ineueurated the opening of oar New Rooms with the C./IRPETS Ever Offered in this Market. LOWEST PRICES SINCE 1861 OLIVER McCLINTOCK &•€O, - 23 Fifth Avenue. W CARPETS. Reduction in Prices k TO CORRESPOND WITH WHOLESALE RATES McCallum No. 51 FIFTH AVENCTE ini:omilinimia4l Ilanufactureo of SPRING. lIAIR.and MIRK M ATTRICAsent. reritoty n.Att.... and gulags. churen euohlont..intlea N ouldlnns and all king. of Upholstery work. Also. dealers In Window Shades. Bun. Green and While Rolland. *Cords. Teasels. •a Particular Attention Is. .loan to tat• Mg up. cleaning and brushing. mitering and rring. log carpets. Our mode of cleaning carnet L. the only way In which you me feel named that the cowman, pre served and the goods thoroughly freed from all dust and rennin. The price for cleaning has been greatly reduced. Our ennren will call for nod de. liver all goods free of charge. • ROBERTS, NICHOLSON & THOMPSON, Upholsterer. and Proprietors of Steam Carpet Beating Establiahment, N0..127 WOOD STREET, ..b7aro New Fifth Avant., Pittsburgh. Ps. CARPET CHAIN Of all Colors, ON HAND AND FOR SALE AT ANCHOR COTTON MILLS,- Allegheny-City: mramm BEZI=3 -ZOVED QUENSW ARE, .China and Glass SILVER PLATED UOODS.DINNICR AND TEA srpf.TKA TRAYS ANDCIITISRY. T~pps b ~ imppnnrW WIIIT BTONE WARR WYLON OW KO' R. E. BREED & REYNOLDS STEEN co., 124 Wood Street FRENCH, CHINA, FINE CUT CLISI'AND 11/"ThOlarpataasortment at New York price.. ESTABLISHED IS'2B. nsser 131C1UT.../.l.6=itr n b.L r ...K0f1. IL COST 11114 BY, CUST & CO . No. 189 Liberty St. Wholesale artel Retell Dealers .4 Joither In CULYA. ()WHEY:WARR, OLotliet antl BILVILit- PLATEDIVAItE. The aUention of .11 reentries geode In the above Ilse le Onetime to our non, imported directly from the best Swope. market., arte we are now noun.* a teeth .4 desirable lot. of the above Ruciits. DR. WHITr.itIR • • CONTTNITZEI TO TRYLAT ALL PillftrATlL BEA. flyphlits In all Its forms. all urinary dinesse.. end the enacts of mercury an completely tad: fthermstorthes or fiesolnal Weakness and Inn. Piiielioy, resulting from self-6bng or ether minim. and which produce some of the follow.; 'abets In blotthen. bodily wthimem. lair... coo sumptioq„ aversion to society. unnuto Inere.dres4 of future events. lons of memory. nano...), noc turnal emissions, and finally so Prost.tinit the eth. nal system es to remise marriage carat slactoth.. and therefore improdent... Penn...LlZ =nth. Perth. Minted with these or thy other macaw, oonsilistlonal commalnt shotild give the Doctor • DIM be never falls. • A particultirlittention given to all remale cont. plaints. Lencorrhes or Whites. Falling, inetmma (ton Or Ulceration of the WomO. Prorltia, Amenorrhoea. Denorrbegia. Dthmenorromm. and Sterility or Salleritiesf, ate treated with the pent 11=rivident that a pbyriclan who *thanes inimm u , Fr dwueely to the study of certain clans of dheaPJOP and inlets tbolayanfle of aisn every year must sequin greater skill to that•sPecialth thno one in generalFactie. The DOthor publi fa menthil pamphlet of fifty pytest ull can of venereal &O. imitate dthethes thot ran be had free at =gee or CY mall for twortamps. In sealed envelopes, _elven Denton. contains Instruction to the =kW.. lutt, muthllsuf them to determine the Pmeleeeettte... eolatielete. • The establishment, (=nothing tan =Pie elbtral. When lt is not ootheniont visit the ditht the Doctor' opinion am be obtatoed bygirloa Allen stateme s nt of the cue. and swath.me he ft:inn/See by mail or express. 1n..0.3=7; me, Mews, penmoal thainthation rr I4 M. = " .." lathers me spartmthla iiyas oath ent o provided Intla en LDS =PM bniC m All thrinre Prinsind In the irtmosi awn laboratory Under hit pernonal Median& pamphlet. st °Olen tir • t_gt by men tort roetamns. go manor Ithrir nts, tang wtst. he sem hones w YA.r.W e. IL FINEST DISPLAY or OtrEENSWAItE 100 WOOD STREET Cl= =I Importen and Dees iv In Qtieensyntre II
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers