THE ranSBPKSH GAZETTE. PUBUBHED.BX WHITE fc CO PITTSBURGH. j’ . ' WlaimaUAT MOBNIWO.reB.T3,IBi9. teqaestrtioaand la loihwi befere 4r.iL, and as early laths 4av as prsetieabla. AdTertsemeattnetraienedfara ««ei* lad time will Invariably be charted as til ottered eat PHiT.APBt.raiA ROBTH AKCHIOAV* Advertisements asdrebaefipuons to the NorthAwrr aa aad United Butea Gaze ne, Philadelphia, received pi fnwiided from this ofiee. i OncmTt>-a>W. Jane*. No, Hamsoo street, QactflWtl, is ear agent for the- dry. Auveniee«ea«» r niubcsaptie&A handed to hist wol> reeeire pnapt : anei'Mß.' CTtBS NEXT PAGE FOB LOCAL MAtTEBU TELEO&ayHIC NEWS, sc. EF fot fo—«<"g articles the reader is refer red to oar first pare* In pinmErtk Nomura*—'W. repot to nmtn n oridoni diipodiioo on tba port or the V ' siawotstleßeßbenottbo SonUe, booked by the I ' bfloeboe of tbo DetßOcrtUc prets, to ombuitn ! ? ' 'ifeadaiaJtfniioa bp delaying nnd oppottagtbe Msisattesoow before them—«ot, there is retsoa S believe, Grom a mere regard to the pobUe wel* fei» lint from political aad party motives. The •empiaint is, that Locofocos have been removed ftoaoAoe,tomake room for Whig friends of the lialafrrillnii They forgot the old aad time bon* seed aldago of their party, on which they Imre 'vigorously acted aioce the daya of General Jack* ! ! tee, that *‘lo the irietora belong the spoilt and la n factious spirit they annoy and embarrass where they cannot ccatroh This policy is neither feir, koacKable, norjust, and wOl bo scorned by orery ho—et and feir minded man. As the Whigs bare elected their President, and hare the responsibil id—of the Qorerameat, common hooeity on the part of oor opponents ought to prerent them feom j taking a eottne so decidedly unjust. If they can ■how any good reasons why any of General Tsy* kiY —oinatbna ought not to be ratified, fbundrd | oanfaetanilal peraooal or public grounds, apart &HB political considerations, then they will be j—(Usd in withholding their assent, but anoppo* aaiely reckless and ungenerous to a etvor. dinatHbianch of the Government, is unworthy of any —» the distinguished place of Sen* ater. It ia proper to state, however, while .we hold PeßKwwjiiw Senators to an account, that rumor as* eribesa disposition to oppoae,on the part of one or Be— Whig Senators, growing out of some per aoesl illMslldirilnn with the appointments or oth erwise. If rumor Is correct, which we cannot be- Stre, aeeh Seustoia will scarcely be abb to jotii> ty their conduct to their Whig constituents. A | Whig Senator ought to stand aloof from ell petty eliqoesla hia own party. His only consideration —pldd bo as to how ho can best advance the sue ' BBS of the Government, aa the welfare of his par ty aad party principles are Intimately identified ■ . i wßk the prosperity of the administration, and its •• —oobb in promoting the good of the country. But, as above intimated, we cannot credit this tumor. - It i» not the usual course of tboWhfgi to oppose the nominees of their own party, without •signing some very strong and cogent reason.— A oourse of lhis kind, would do an immense in* jury .to the administration, as it would be used as [ - on evidence that Gen. Taylor had not the coufi *! deuce or aopport of the Whig party with. him.— Wo cannot, therefere, entertain the belief that it it the intention or desire oi any Senators, belong* ingtoourputy, toenter into collusion with the DcßOciati, to defeat any ofthe nominations now hefbre the Benale; and until we have bctier asd Boro Mtisfectory evidence of the charge thin acre Inlerested-nmtgr, got op by those who ere 1 «wtola candidates, 1q order 10 ’[ get tte appointment fat themselves or friends, we t shall pbee bo reliance in them. It will certainlj %• pMtinf ttrasge, if iathljtiho first Congress ‘ eider • Wing administration, Whig Senators - eboald* etions and ▼otes,} ’creating disoord Pena afreet, ud his with him a few of uid Ganges. Those who desire to reader the use of »more safe, wilt do well to give him a call, Bb imp will at all tlmea give a correct account of the water in a a team boiler, with all its mlaute • variations, whether it foams or not; which eanno 1 be aald of the gauge coeka in common ear, or any other gauge that has ever been devised tor this Conaeqoeaily.Uiaealenlatedtoprevent Aom sad accidents whieh are the result of steam ; feoflar explodosr. This gaoge is aimplo in its OOBsfrsetion, eaxfly understood, ltct liable to be* ' so— deranged, and as certain to give at all times the of the water in the boiler, ns it is simple. If this be true, is it not then of the ■mum iimi to »*>"— engaged in the use o* steam as a propelling agency? Let the explosions, so disastrous to life and property, be a eafieknt answer, to this inquiry. The late terrible explosion inNew York, which is supposed to have been canted from want of water—and whieh is the ease, most probably, in •very explosion or bursting of steam boilers— Shows the necessity of having soma gange whieh W?U infallibly indicate the height of water. Who msoZd not, for the small expense incurred, or tor within his meant, feel the satisfaction «fknowing that he had done all in his power to pioieet the liras of those in his employ from acci dsstaof this description. ICr. Bryce feu in feia posseiaioo an abundance ofoYideacaof tke practical »UUtj of Ibis gange, yw—t tkoM vho fears fead it in ate (ram one to tfetee yean, saficicat 'jo satisfy any sswonsble addition to which, K can be mod in ope*- TtUg at tfeia ofiee, on the boiler of oar steam pres#, ‘ ax tbe Eagle and Pena Cotton Factories, Allegheny Gty, and Faber’s Foundry, In tbit city. Mb. Oat’s Smxcb.—We giro op nearly oP oararaiiabla space, to day, to the closing portion of Mr. Clay’s great speech on the alavery question. We copy from the Nitrons! Intelligencer, which g(rae tbe tpeeeh"ln fall, in Mr. Clay’s own lan* iyp. A syaopais of this speech has been pub- 1 fetfced in rmf of the papers, which, however well fails to giro the great western Senator in Mlfeii simplicity, his deep feeling, and aft hum* Tbisspeechmostdogood whether (be resolutions it sopports are adopted or m k, ; A Washington eorreipondent of the Belli* Acre Patriot *9*-““ ■ *Xr. Elay's praises are on every tongue, ia all sSMea, ana in ail quartets. AU concede that be iaaKoaiyasrenrgreat.botawonderfal ft* well am a very good man. His great effort, covering Ifea whole ground of the exciting conipveray, and Yjtfe and love to the freemen AUA might j nation, looeaae all strife and enmity against eaa another, and rally tor the preservation <Koar gtorioas Union, eomlng from such a man, in saofe a place, and apoa such an occasion, must aid wifl take a deep bold apon : the public mi ad, and lha hearts of the people in ail parts of this broad Uad. It wiU go abroad sad be rend with admiration by of people, who can fed bow to respect such aentiaunta and such a re paHfa™* statesman and orator os Henry Clay. J heard two conspicuous Lbeoioeos (ono a General OMd the other an ex Judge, and both formerly in Coras*) deolara to day, after liaieaing to Mr. <Bay*s speech, that they never before had witnesa- Adaay«fdrt that would beg:n to compare with M. Cbs of them confessed that when Mr. Clay pour mad the diudved Union, la alj its gha<iy and torrid colon, awl the misery and wretchedness woald (dUow, as coaeomitant\ evils, he could met prevfttt the tears from coursing down his Tbe other said that Mr.fSu’a descrip tbasraa the moat graphic and soul stirring be bad «V«f Hstwft to. It la conceded on all bands, by and Whig* alike, with a JeW exception* -w Atrta, whom nothing canid satisiy, that Mr. fln , l speech la unanswerable." * MARINE DISASTERS. The mails briag us tia details of the lon of et- Aral of tka New Fork Liners. lipaaof nsHotnaousa.—This splendid ship wantaahoreon ifeeeotti of Wexford, Ireland, mnJ was totally lost. She had 290 passenger*, all 4BV«d. CapL Burnley and 12of the crew, who re* Alined by the Teasel, endeavoring to sire her, AAt diawied. The cargo was a valuable one, AMlff laaasad at New York. Bbe belonga to Mmm Oruaell, Mutoria Sc Co.,, Liverpool Um. Tb* lirarpool Packet BMp, L.Z„wi»aban dual a toil OB the idkh of January. Tbs paa* Asmara ond eiew were ukca off by. tho Martov ta,efß«th#Meftte. ,Tfee tkird o4oer of the L. 7* Mr. Tbesualietoy, and two of lha puienfsry, ware drowned. When near Bermuda, the Mari* AnrtnyhflM, and was totally lost. Tbeptaaaa /ftawmoATod— emoagwhan WM.tke Eer. J. BiWiiMd, of BaflaJo, New Forte.: ( ; ' the wheeling bridge. W«wHinta r Pah. 11. Sm. towwc-Tbe Senate appropriated. two thamnddoßari to carrying tip rail against tbo 2VOmw. VWmHABBnBCBG. CcHejpooiiene* eftk* FUaburjfc FAttt. l*S(fc Io Ike Hooae of BeprceeetetiTei, to a*l, •»« the preM&tiiio& of buxbmmi WHj 403 pfltitioiu, mostly opon subjects of a priest* ehmeter, the '*«of lha" to the \ FiDlettar being Constitution vu resumed. Hr. - f to ihe floor. spoke, »* considerable length, iaUror of the resolutions as they *»» *a<3 in op jttculoa to any eetiouofibe Legislature thnt woold biro a tendency postpone .-final action upon tbem at (be preaentseaslon. Inthaeourseof bis remarks he bit Us Locoibco compeers, Messrs. Porter, of Northampton, and Conyaghtm, of La- 1 rente, some pretty severe lido, which bronghl Mr > Porter to Us feet, (though oecapyinf the chair u { speaker pro tempore) hr the purpose of *Tpl«q— itaa, and a farther deflwttfeft «fM« paring. This oondaet,oa the part of Hr. Porter, was oertaisly very on parliamentary, bat he to and act aaii ha was the Great Uoful and |^i * t j he was law. bat his own peremptory | will. Ho is manifestly the leading Locefeeo spirit of the House, and if it did not disgust, b would certainfy amuse you, to see the Lord Burleigh self sufficiency with which he issues hia adieu to the crouching Locofoeo riaves and tools who sore | round him. Whan bad men like Fester bear sway in a legislative body, there ta ; ho enormity which may notW imagined as likely, lobe perpetrated in the sacred name of the people. He has already proposed one scheme which, if ha was as pure as : Cmsar would bare his wife,-would damn him to everlasting infamy. . I allude to the bill reported by the majority of the Apportionment Committee ' in the House- This is understood to be Potter's , work, and I heard him say myself in his peculiar, dictatorial way, that. If the Senate did not pass that bill, they should not have any. This remark was ptfblicly made, or I should not have consid ered myself at liberty to repeat it, and I only do b to illostrate more fully the dishonesty and ttveneas of the »"*u who Is the acknowledged leader of the Locofaco majority in the House. You will doubtless have observed that even the Penn- j vylvanian itself; oorrupt and unscrupulous as Us j tfitnr u every where acknowledged, to be,repu diates and condemns this most outrageous mea*. sura. It is too much evea for his strong stomach, who was never knowu to gag at any Iniquity bo- Jbre. The Pennsylvanian, however, bright. He, opposes it upon the ground of expediency. He has the sagacity to perceive that the perpetration of so gross a Grand would be revolting to the feel ings of every honest Locofaco in the State, and thnt a complete revolution in the |>olitica of the State woutd be conaeqoenee. The beat thing thnt couljl be done for the Whig party -would be the passage of this bill. There is, how ever, bat Uttle prosjpeet of a resub so desirable. Mr. Kniieger, bom the minority oftbo Commit* I tee, reported a bffl'to day differing too «rfo from I that of the majority] There ire hardly tero point* I ol resemblance in p® tvo. I have .sot yet been able, however, to obtain a copy of the later bill. So toon as U is printed l will lend yon a copy tor I publication. la the Senate, lhA cosaideratloa of the bill pr» Tiding for the eleccttoa of a Reporter of the Eteci* I alons ot the Supreme Co art, by the Leftsbtcre I waa op and’ passed. Those Whig mem* beta, howorsr, who voted in the affirmative lor that purpose, moved a reconsideration, in the hope that the two ****«"» member* will rentra be* fan the expiration oil which requires a m> lion to reconsider to lie on the table oae day. I thtnh there is no doubt but that the Governor will veto this bn I, should it ever go to him for his sig nature. COBDEN. FHOBI NSW TOBJL* Correspondence of the Pittsburgh pamtts. • Nsw Teas, Feb. 9, 1890. |j The city is not overburdened with new* jus* I ( now, at any rale, of the kind that needs to be asnt I ] by telegraph. That queer thing known as “Newli York Democracy ” has fot a Isrge trouble on its I ] and has been ptrtdng itself to lb pun** 11 tiou, at a recent meeting al Tammany Hall, by I j formally expelling the infamous Captain Byndets, 11 ef thfi Empire Club, and the expulsion of all Dea> I ocraU from the various Committees who voted lor I, any of the nominations, and defeated Casa I • and Battler. Martin Van Boren was also de-l nounced as an ingrate, and turned over to the I mercies of any one who would abeiter him. Tbosl much for the old hunker*. The barn bunteti, I beaded by that prince of demagogues, John Van! Bores, have not been idle, but have appealed to | their friends with a vehemence that angnr* as* | other fierce campaign. The defeat of Mr. Win* 1 throp, they assert, is ample evidence thattheSteth I U firmly united, and determined to stand by her I bondsmen, though the Union be severed, while the j defeat of Forney is equally positive evidence that I the Democracy of the North is truckling, and in j sli respects unfaithful to the rights of the North-1 Free Soil, they assert, must again be the rallying I cry of the North, never to be silenced until the I print la carried. I Wall street was considerably enlivened yeatar* | day by the announcement that one or the largest I houses would not fulfil its engagements for the I r Jay.; The bouse in question is one of the strong* j eat in the street, and its representative at the ex* j change the terror of the brokers, to whom be never I extended * favor. His education was obtained in I the office of Jacob Lillie, Esq-, whose teachings j , were not lost upon an apt pupil. The amount of j differences to be paid cannot be known, but the | | failure is' ooe of old fashioned sort, wtcb as are j associated with the old U. 8. Bank and other Loco* I foco pets. j | The news from Europe reached here this fare* j noon, giving the cotton speculator* renewed eo* I , tivity. The staple is held higher, but la ibeab*f | »enee of the letter* all parties are shy of lergei operations. The general tone of the telegraphie I shows trade abroad to be in a healthy stale, J ’ and not in danger of sudden interruption. Tbe I ’ iron market contipoes Ip rally and gives some I hope that our own works maybe nVed into oper* I 1 *:ion affer languishing two or three years. Mer* J . fhaat bus are quoted £5 15s, aad scotch pig 3 , £2 16% or $l9 44, for an article which atlD sells j i bero at shout $32 06 per too. As this city is the . great Inlet of the iron which drives the workmen I , fjoca the furnaces and mills of Pittsburgh, X pro* I I pjte to show, in a day or two, bow much the] i people of the iron regions have made by growing ! I corn to seH abroad Instead of raising it to feed e-'j 1 pul of their family who were making the irosj r meanwhile. Let us reduce our theories to doQtrtj . and we can soon eee whether free trade is such a] bleating to the.workman. - 1 I lulbe money market there is eoorileable | , tivity, and a farther advaooeia the rate of inter* j eat, but not enough to say that the market is all I - tight. It Is simply a legitimate demand for the l Ipring busin ess,now open in considerable activity, r Np gpod paper is thrown out, and it is only bor ; rower* .on ej# Fho suffer. In markets, gen orally, thei? js 9 food degree of activity. Floor sells at quotatioir btforp given 1 fer the supply of the home trade. Wheal la-doll,: 1 but corn is dearer, and in good request. Provi* 1 | sioosaredttil.Mfi.the market unsettled. Coflee is dull, and bjlba steams a decline is noticed, I wbiqh will have great effect here, fjroearios are 1 beldiwithafirmßoasnot often noticed. Whiskey has iaUen to 23 eta. Heap la firm. Soma oew clover see d wu sold lor € cti. °- Vr, Clay’s Speech/ potvctunxni (la oar list, we broeght iows M** City'* speech, ial«a abremted form, to the does of fcip/cjaarjcs pn hisrespluticnt. The remainder of the speech, which give entire from the National gcncer, is as fpjlows:] Socb, Mr. President, is tic series of resolutions which, in to earnest, and ansjiovs fiasiro to prw* 1 seat the olive branch to both ports of this jsd, and st tie present moment onhsppy country, i u*ve thought it my duty to offer. Oi aufoen upon earth I am the least autebed to any productions -of ay own mind. No man upao.etrth is more toady than lam to surrender any thing which I have jeopoaed, and to accept in of it any thingibu is better; bat Iputitto this eandor of bp no able Sensors on tbeotber side, aad apqa all aides of the House, whether (heir duty will be per*; formed by simply limitingibeisselveafoptyocuoss to any one or to all ot the aeries of levtatioas that J have oStrcd, If my plan of peace, and pqcqoh mcdsiian, and harmony, is not right, present na 1 your plan. Let osaastba counter .pup*. nsj see bow all the questions Au have uisen oat of this unhappy subtfeet of slavery ega be better settled; more folrfy and justly settled tp alt ptuusera of d» Union, than on the plan proposed in the rem, otutioaa which I have offered. Present me such a jcbeme, and 1 will boilii withpieaUirc, and will. gpoept it wit hoot tlastfhtod .WN wp* my own was abandoned. Sir, whUj£ 1 was enjn* itdii |unxioo»co»*i4«ratfoeiq>ent]ap*|Agaet,tbo tdeaoflbeltfmowi eompronus* harteen termed, cane under my «e?iew, ton entldored by me. and finally rejected, as ip my *■» worthy of the common acceptance pf both of ihlsPalon than the prqjeet which I bore ojjcted for your coarctation. Before I enter Into n-partkmitr oTamlnalfoo, tamer, of Itat MiaoQii (Mifrooto, I be, lob. j allowed to correct a great error whfchtspi?vt3« lor. mi merely is this Senate tn* throughout the *Ue country, in respect to my agency in ibe Misaonrl compromise, or rather in respect to the line of 39 deg. 30 min., which mi established in 1830 fay c&aet of Congress. I do no not know I wfaelher anythisghas exeited more snrprise in my mind, ns to. the rapidity with which important I histories! iransarlions nre obliterated 'end ptsa I from the mind, than when 1 ondeatood every | where that i{dtad been the anther of the line ot I 38 deg. 30 min.,mUch was established npon the ce- I essioa of the admission of Missouri Into the Union. It would take loomueh Uae to go over the whole of that important eirf in the pnblio affairs of the eonn* tiy.Uhall not do iMdlhongh I have got ample mate i rials be&tfe me, derived from aesrefol examination I of the jooraals of both boosesi I will not occopy I yoor time fay going in detail through the whole 1 transaction, nit I will content myself withststiog that so iar from my having presented as s proposl* tloa this line of 3d deg. 30 min, npon (be occasion of the consideration whether Missenrt sbonld be .awtttfd into the Union or not, it did not originate in the Hoose of which I vu a member, ltorig* tested in this body, as those who will cast their I reeoQeetioe back, snd I am snro that the honore* I Ue Senator from Missouri, (Mr. Benton,) more I eorracUy than any body else, most bring to hisre- I the tact that at the Congress when the I proaosUion-wss frst made to admit Miaaouri—or I £tberto allow her to bold a convention and frame I n constitution and decide whether she should or I should not be admitted into tbo ’Union'—(he I uq fcy I disagreement between the two I hooses l lbdHonse insisting on and the Sennts dis -1 seating from the provisions contained in the ordl- I nance of 1787. The House insitting on the inters I of.'slavery, and the Senate rejecting the I propoidioo of the interdiction of slavery, ths bill I fell through; it did not pass at that session ofCon* I gross. At the next session it was renewed,'and I at the doe of its renewal Maine was knocking si lour door to bo admitted into the Union. Intne I Hoose thtrerwss s majority for the restriction is I to slavery inMistouri; in the Senate there was a I majority .opposed to all restriction. In the Senate, | in order to carry through the Missouri I Mil, or ; the , provision for her, sdmisi.on—or I rather authorising her to determine the qce»iion of j her ttii* bill was coupled with a bill for tbe admission of Maine. They were coaoeo’ tod together/ end tbs StntiO' slid to tbe House, • Yoa vut a bill for tbe admission of Maine pass* ed, bat yoa shall not have it, unless you lake along with its bill for the admission of Missouri also." Then fans a majority, a very targe one, 10 the Sen* ate for £onpbng bothjogetber. Well,* air, tbo bill went through all the usual stages of disagreements, oi committees of confer* enoe, tad there were two committed of ooufcr* enco on the occasion before the matter was finally tfttfrd, And it was finally sealed to disconnect I the two bflls—to admit Maine separately, without I m* with Missouri, and to insert in the Miwoarl bill a e'ause, proposed in the Senate of l the United Bta!es by Mr. Tboms«, Senator from ! I lUinofajeatricting slavery north of the line 36deg. 1 I SOmdauTand leaving It open south of that line, ei ; to admit it or not to admit IL Well, sir, tbe bill finally passed. Tbe committees of conference of i the twwHooses recommended the detachment of l the two esses, and the passage of the Missouri bill with the danse 36deg<3Qmin. in it; sad so it ao went to Missouri, so it for s moment quieted the country, by means of the introduction 1 of the 33 deg. 30 min. Yon will find, 1 re* | re?T» t air, if you will take the trouble to look at tbe I jftqrnr**! that on aa many as three or fourdifferent occasions, Mr. Thomas in every in nance present* i ed the proposition of SSdeg. 30mln- It was final. 1 ly agreed to; and E take ooession te say that amongst those who voted lor the line 36deg. 30 i min were the majority of the Southern members— I my friend from Alabama, Mr. King, in the Senate, 1 fib. Pinckney, from Maryland, and indeed tbe , majority cl the Bou(bem Senators voted in favor afthe line 38deg. 30min.; end the majority of the i Southern members In the other Bouse, si the bead of whom was Mr. Lowndes himself voted also for that line. I have todonbtl did also; but,sa l wu Speaker oi the House at the time, and the , journddoes not show bow the Speaker votes ex- J icept lathe ease of a tie, 1 arts cot able to ascer* tain, by a resort to tbe records, how I did vote, bat I h*vp very little doubt that I voted, in com mon with my other Southern friends, for tbe tdrp-1 |tioe, Inaspiritof compromise, it is tree, of the I line SSdeg. 30min. 1 I Well, air, ao the matter ended in 1620. During i that tear Miasouri held her Convention, adopted i her Coostitmioh, sent her delegates to Congress, I soiHnff to be admitted into the Uaien, but she had i ■ elanse in her constitution containing a proMbttiOA of free people of color from that Btate.. She came here with her Constitution eoatsiaing ! ' that prohibition, and immediately the Northern I members took exception to U. Tbe Same which had been repressed during the previous session, now bunt forth with double violence throughout | 1 tbe whole Union. Legislative bodies all got to 1 mfi** to keep out Missouri, In consequence of her interdiction of free people of color from within her limits* I did not arrive at Congress that set ; doa Jill January, and when I got here I found both bodies' completely paralysed in cotme sequence of the struggle to exclude Missouri from the Union -in eoaseqaence of that prohibt- sir. I made the first effort In the House to | settle it. I asked for a committee of thirteen; and a ef thirties was granted to me, representing all tbe old States of the Union. Th° eomtatttee met. 1 presented to them a resolution, • which eras adopted by tbe committee and report*; ed Hauan—not unlike the one to which i will ttesently call the attention of the Senate— and we should have earned It in the House but far the votes of Mr. Randolph, ot Virginia, Mr. Edwards, of North Carolina, and Mr. Barton, of North Carolina—<wo of the three, I believe, no longer living. These throe Southern votes were fr*in»t the compromise which was prepared by the committee, or rather by myself, as chair min of the committee of thirteen, and defeated tt. W«l! sir, in that condition the thing remained far several days. The greatest anxiety pervaded tbe country—the public mind was unsettled—. men wcreuohappy —there was a large majority of the Home then, as E hope and unit there ta now a large majority Congress, in favor of an eqnh . table aeooomodatio# or settlement of the quest fion; and the rewdotiou would htve been .adopted,, 1 believe, but when it casus to lb* vote-by yeas and nays, unfortunately then—mote ppfortoaite- 1 ly tben,l hope, than now, if there should bo occa. ■fea for it now—there were fow Curtiuses and I Leonidases willing to risk themselves for the so- J fetv and seourity of their country. 1 endeavored to avail myself of that good feeling, a* far as I and after a fey d»T» hsd elapsed, I brought fovwvd another propositi oUj S new one, perfectly uoprsctlsort in (his country, either before or since, as far as I know. I proposed a joint committee of the two Houses, that of the House to consist cf twenty th*** members, (the cumber cl the Senate I do aoi recalled,) and that this com mittee should be appointed by billot; for at that time Mr. Taylor, of New york, was in the chair, and Mr. Taylor was tbe very man who had first nroaind tbe restriction upon Missouri. He pro aba yboold only be admitted on the principle of lb* of 1737. I proposed, therefore, that tbe commute pa jpporaied by bil lot Well, sir, my motion wgtepnred tyc large majority; and members came fo tpe from all«oar ten of tha Home, and said, "whom, Mr. Clay, do too want to have with you on the committee T t —cot my list of twenty three members, and I venture to say Ibtt that happened on that occa sio* whfeb yjjj hardly ever happen again. ei*h teea of tha twenty three, urero elected on the first ballot—end the remtinfag #ve mb py Jwt having the largest number of votes, but not the l moved to dispense with any farther balloting, and that these five should be added to the eigh teen Urns completing the committee of twenty thrdi. One or two gentlemen, Mr. Livermore, of New HfiT?r* Mm i and ope or two others, declined te serve on the committed and, vp;r fpqch to my regret, and somewhat to my apcpyance, the is oenatedHr. Randolph and another person were ptaefed in their aitaation—l forget whether done by ballot or h? tbe Speaker; Uit enough to say. ' they were ppt.on tbe ooaojttpe. x ' Well, sir, the Senate immediately agreed to the proposttioo, appointed Useommitt.ee, and We met In this hall on tbe Sabbath day, within two or three days </tho of the .session, when tha whole nation Vlt waiting tirpathless anxiety for some final rndboabofi.SftWUft jWfftjbpdfsirttt log subject which eccapicif our auction. Ye met here on that day, scoordingiy Urn mo ment we met, Mr. Randolph made a suggestion which I knew would be attended with the great estembsmament and difficulty. He contended that oyer tbe two committees of the two Homes the idfairuaa of fi9 House committee had a right 1 to preridJjsnd na wu » jMjit n some (atmth that the two A commltwe* aboard noTijonaed together, and that t shoold' preside over both. I instantly interposed, and stated that I did nouhink ths| was tbe correct mode, but that the chairman </thanamaiittee of each House should presido ! over pu own and tint when the com mittee of one House a pro position it should be lb* bluer com mUfaeTsad if agreed to by them,.lt should then La reported to the two Houses, and its adoption recotumaaeti That was agreed soon, and Mr, HeTdies, Ibollavv. Pf®»rocd over the 1 would hot do at this session, took too muehjUsßMdinritedUouiton. J brought forward tha aropoSan wVfefi l will refer to presently; and I did more, 1 took' fee irmbfa to nseertam tbo views ofeaeb member ofthe wua^aUOf poUed tbe committee, if I may are tbo expression, I said, now, gentlemen, we do not want n proposi tion carried here by a simple msjonty, and repore JZj i* House, there to be rejected. I am for —fflpttitnjr practical, eonethiog conclusive, sooe thfaf derive upon this agifatfog cupstion, and It should be carried by a good mrioruy. Low «U jm toK, Mr. A. 1 ho. will ,oa row. Mr. B. I fanr will you vote, Mr. C. J and I polled them in th* w» 1, WeII » $lt ' 10 “ T V 7 V eel happiness, a mrifiaiattt responded afflnr- thU they would vole for ufo »o enable me to know that, ifthev oostfaue to vote i Jit ti« the two Houses, of wMch I had sot apiutirfo f& donbt in the world, the proposition wooldhe carried fo tfr? Etasea. According ly, tt having M awd, ly totb commlta teas, and repmted io thqir mpeiliva Houses, It was finally adopted .'This joint reabiution for the admission of Mis* tari Vt 9 paired It 1831. (I find I have been furnished two which was proposed, but not adopted. The right qaoMqenu/jjqiiu tbe statutes at large. 1 hare seen inhere). Well, air, tha resolution was finally adopted. I eaa etata, without reading it, what ijta provisions are. ft declares that, if theft be any provision In tIM eoßstttntfoa af Misgopri Inebmpatible with the eopstitutfon of the jolted Butes, Missouri sbsll fataar to enforce Jhe repugnant provisions of her eoutttutfan* and that the ybail by aome aolemn add authentic act declare that she will not enforce «Sp ptoyiriepa of fiat ooutttotiou which are in- compatible with the constitution of the United State* j tad upon her passage of such n solemn and tmhemio act, the President of the United States—who was at that time Mr. Moaroe—«h*U make proclamation of the fact; and thereupon, and vithoot any further legiilsuon of CoafraOi Missouri shall be admitted Into the Union. : Now, air, 1 want to call year to this period of history, and to the transactions which took place donna the progress of the diacossion upon the resolution. • Daring the discossion which took place' in the House at that time, from day to day, and from night to night—for the discussions frequently ran into the night—wh who were for n^*ni t,tn g Mis* ■ourt into the Union said to oar brethren from the North, ** Why, gentlemen, if there be any provK sion In the constitution of Miasouri which is re* pageant to the constitution of the United States, ; it ia a nullity. The constitution of the United States, by vinuo.ofits own operation—its own self operation—*vacates iL Any tribunal ou eatth be* fore which the question may be brought, must pro* uoonco the constitution of the United Rfitf para* mount, and must prononnco ia invalid the repog* nnnt provisions of the constitution of Missouri." Well, sir, the .argument was turned, and twisted, and used in every posaible variety of form. All was la vain. An inflexible majority stood out to tee last against the admission oi Missouri; and yet the resolution— Mr. Underwood. I have U here. Mr. Clay. If you will read it, I shall be obliged to yoQ. Mr. Underwood read the resolution as follows: Resolution providiogfor the admission of the State of Missouri into the Union on a certain condi tion. 1 Resolved by the Senate and Hoata of Represents tivea or the United States of America in Congress as sembled, That Misaonri shall be admitted into thts Union on an equal footing with the original State* ia all respects wha'ever, upon the fundamental condition that the fosith clause of the SSth section of the third. article of the eoattitatlon. sabmitied on the part of said State to Congress, shall never be construed to as* thorixe the passage of any law, and that no law shall be passed ia conformity thereto, by which any eltizen of either of the Btaiet in this Union shall be exelnded from the enjoyment of any of the privileges andim* munhies to whieh such ciliien is entitled under the Constitution of the United Btales: Provided, That the Legislature of the said State, by a solemn pablie act, shall deolare the assent of the said Stale to the said fundamental condition, and shall transmit to the Presi dent of the United States, an or before the fourth Mon day in November next, an authentic copy of tbo said act; upon the receipt whereof, the President, by pro clamation, shall announce the fact; whereupon, and without any farther proceeding on the part of Con gress, the admission of the said Buto into this Union shall be considered complete. (Approved, March S, 1831. Mr. Olay. There Is the resolution, air, and you see it is precisel? what I have staled. After all thi* excitement throughout the country, reaching to such an alarming point, that the Union itself was supposed to be in the moat Imminent peril and danger, the parties were satlfied by the decla ration of an inconieaiab'e principle of constitution al law, that when the constitution of a Stato is vio* lative in it* provisions of tbs constitution of the United States, the constitution of the UniiedState* is paramount, and the constitution of the Btate, in that particular, is a nullity and void. That was aIL They wanted something as a justification, and thts appeared, at least, a justification ol the course they took. There is a great deu! of langnag there of a high soundipg chsrnctrr—that it shall be s fundamental set, a solemn act, an authentic set; but, after all, when vou eoma to strip it of its ver biage, It is nothing but the announcement of the principle that the constitution of the United States is paramount over the local coauitalion of any ono of the Btstea of the Uoion. Mr. President. 1 may draw from that transaction in our history which we are now examining, this moral; that now, as then, if we will only suffer our resson to have its scope and away sod to still end hush the passion and excitement that hois been created by (be occasion, the difficulty will be man than ball temoved, In the settlement, upon just and amicable principles, of any questions which unhappily divide us at this moment. But, sir, I wish to coutrsuthe plan of accommo dation which is proposed by me with that which is offered by the Missouri compromise Une being extended io the Pacific ocean, and to ask of gen* ilecaen from the Bouth, and gentlemen from the North, too, whieh is most proper, which most jus', and to which there is the least cans* of ob» jociioa. Now, sir, what was done by the Missouri line? Slavery was positively interdicted, north of that Uuc. The question of the admission or exclusion of slavery south of that lino was not settled.— There was no provision that alavery should be introduced or established south of that Use. .In point of fad, it existed <n ell the territory south of the line of 30 deg. 39 min., embracing Arkansas end Louisians. It wnsu t necessary then, it is true, to insert a clause admitting slavery 0 that time. But, air, if there is a power to Interdict, there is a power to admit; and I put it to gentle* men from the South, are they prepared to do sat isfied with the lioeof36 deg-30 min, interdicting slavery to tbo north of U, and giving them no guar anty forthe pcK&cesion of slavery south of that llnel The honorable Senator from Mississippi told us the other day that he was not prepared to be' tala itfied with that compromise line. He told us, if I understood him rightly, that nothing short of a pos ilive introduction— Mr. Foote. Recognition. Mr. Clay. That nothing short ofa positive re* cognition of slavery south or the Une of <36 deg. 90 min. would satisfy him. Well, Is there any body who believes that you could get twenty votes in ibis body, car a proportional number la ths oth* er House, to a declaration in favor of the recogni tion oi slavery south of the line of 39 deg. 30 min? It is Impossible. AU that you can get, nil that you can expect to get, afi that was proposed at the last session, was action on the north of the Une, and noa-action os regards slavery sooth of that line. It is interdicted on one side, without any corresponding provision for Its ndmisrion on the other side of the line of 39 deg. 30 min. r Now, sir, when 1 come to consider the subject, and to compare the provisions of the Use of 39 deg. 30 min —toe Missouri compromise liop>—with the plan which I propose for the sesommodation of this question, what said ! to myself? Why, if I offer the tine of 30 deg. 30 min., interdicting slav ery north of U,and leaving the question open south of that line, 1 offer that which la illusory to (he Soatb. I offer that which will dpooive (hem, If they suppose that atayery will be introduced south of that line. It la better for (hem, J said to mjeeff —it is better for the whole South, that there should be ooj; action on both sides, than that there thoold be action imrodaeigg slavery on one tide, without action for the admission of slavery on the other side of the Une. la it not so? What, theo, is gained by the Sostb,{fthe Miesopri Uooisextend ed to the Pacific, with an interdeetion of slater? north of it? Why, sir, one of the very arguments which ha* been most often and most seriously urged by lha 5 jqth i;cs been this, that we do not want you to legislate upfin the tuojeet ti all: yos ought not in touch jt; you have no power over It. i do not eoocur, as is well known from what I 'have said opon this occasion, in this view b! the Sublet. But that is the Southern argument. We do not’want yau tq lc~jsj(je at all on the subject of slaveryj'bofifyoq adopt the Missouri line |nd : extend it to the Pacific, and iplerd/ct ajavery nortp of that line, you do legislate upon the subject of alavery.aad you legislate without a corresponding ot legislation upon the subject of lla* very interdicting sia/ewnajib pf the Ijne, the principle of equality would requirA that thdry should be legislation admitting slavery aouth of the lioe. Sir, I have said that I never could vote for it, and 1 repeat that I never can, and never will vote for it; and no earthly power shall ever make me veto ;o plant alavery where alavery does not exist. Still, ir f ih‘-Yv by » m#iorUy---coij there oujht to be such • rnsjurity—fb/intaroiAing davery V»th of tho lioe, there ought to be ah eqos! ifequtlity aod jastice be done to tie Sohih—to admit slavery tonth of the Une. Ami if there be • majority ready to accomplish both of these pur pos4s, though I cannot concur In (ha actios, yet 1 would lie onedftWJisufi qrtaiq tfoy disturbance, I would be ode of th‘d first’ lo acqoesce la ttfch legislation, though it is contrary to any own judgv ment and my own conscience. 1 think, then, it would be better to keep the wbolo of these terri tories b? any by Qopjfesa on the AWyectof emyery,'leaving it open, trade* cided, without any ifctionof{Jofigreaa id relation to it; that it would be bdst £ it the ‘Bouth, and 'best (or all tho views which the Sooth has, from time to time, disclosed to na as correspondent with her mihW * (know it may fee •%]<} with regard to these coded territories, as it ia said with' regard'to CaiUoraia, that oon-legislatioa implies tho same thing u the exclosion of slavery. That we cannot help. That Congress ia not reproachable for. If nature baa pronounced tho doom of slavery upon those l3rie4 a 'ifaj»q by Mf itnmutkUs laws; that slavery cannot an'd •shall not be mtrodueed there, whom can you* reproach but baton or na« tare’s Godf Congreia you edanot; Congreaa ab staiml; Congress is passive; Congress ia non ao tiva in regard to tbe sobjeet of alavery aooih and north of tho line, or rather Uongrasa, aecaVdiog to the plan which proposes to extend bo line', learda the enllra territories notruched by legislative etdltidi ’6* admit slavery. * * 1 ’ 1 * Well. Sir, I ask again—if you will listen to tbe voice of calm and dispassionate reason—! ask of any man from the South to rite and tell me if it Is not t&ur tor iua fcvCtica pf Ujo Uoiou that Coq* grere should reihaiii'puilvle, on o6th sidhs ojf any ideal line, tbah frill if aboiild Thterdld sllVery'On one side of tbe line and be pasiive' l& regard to it on tbe other side of the line? Eip. | am taxing both the physical and intellect* oaf powerS vi/iou a j,M JJfowldeissfo 1} as bestowed upon mu toi tnodo brfar—tbofrgfe I beg to be permitted if the Sdhato wiirhave tfitrpal lienee with me, to coooloSo what j have to say, for l do not desire to trespass another' day upon VQqr l;mo and patience, as I an approaching, SS5S \f h *J* t? r« nt "fiff 3 v if 5 f 01 !' Mr. Mangum. j( the Renaior will permit md,! will move an adjoornmont. Mr. Clay. No,sir,no; I will oonolnde. I think 1 can gat on better to day than I ahal| be aula ta do if tho subjcclife poitpoaed. * ' Sir, this Uoiou ia tbreajtoM wi(b aqpverajop.— I want Mr President, to’taka a vpry rapid glance at the' course of pobjic measures in this Urioa I want, however, before I do that, to ask tbq Senate to look bnek upoq t)w career which thiacoualry has niuaince the adhpiioobf this con stitution down to the patent dty. there ev er anaiicaupou whion the sun ofkeaven baa thooe that baa exhiblied ao ranch of prosperity ? A! tbe of this Government our popula tion amounted (o about (bur mlUioaf; if has now reached dp wards of twenty million*. Our fonitoa ry was KmUed chiefly and priaefrialiy to the bor der upon tbe Atlantic ocean ana thlt which in* eludes thosombern lakes of oar country. Our oouotry oow extends from (ho northern provinnea of Great Britain to (he [jJotyaade and tbe Gulf of Mo^io o * °h ° Q o aide, and from the Atlantic ocean to the Pacific os the other side—tho Urgoo| extest of territory under toy Governmentbatex- ihoUsios foo lose »»8 *U»es«Dd teeofw <**" boon befcds of be.earth,'with only two toUta- en; but here toitoe-reverttoa **<*"*£ * oufat ry"exceptions. Our tonoge, from being' nob- to have noticed before, because It to highly credU iox, baa risen is magnitude and amount eo uto tabto to the court* andjorie* of the free State*, rival that of the nation who he* been proudly chare Id every instance, a* ur as mytoformatioa ex* aclarixed “ the mistress of the ocean.” We have tend*, in which aa appeal baa been made to the gone through many war*—war* 100 with the very court* of jaitioe to recover peaaUie* from nation with whom we broke off in 1776, as weak i who h.re awUtod *7» ud feeMe colonies, end asserted ourbdependence masters—in every to**** o *} l * . nj j a*a member of theUmfly of nation*. And, *ir, the co"rt buasserted we came ouiof that struggle, unequal a* it was— the jury has nromptl? returaed an adequ«e wr armed as abe was at aD ooint*, in consequence or diet on bis behalf, well, i, TT 'Jl n c *?[J® just having come 00l of her long struggle* with remedy whilst |o° *P*T other European nation#, and unarmed a* we were recovery ofyouralaves, at aD poinu, in conseqaeace of the habit* and for their less. What would you have U-iheUoim nature of oar country and it* institution*—we wa* severed! y* eame, I aay, ont of that war without any tots would be independent ef eaca otnej—loteiyn o( honor whatever—we emcreed from it glory* countries' ■and:aU?e* escaping from one to Ure ooaly. other would be. Uke aUvesescapingfiwathoU^- In every Indian war—and we have been enga- ted States to Canada. There wouldbe no right ged in many of them—oor armies have triumph- : of extradition, no right to demand your alavct; no ed: and without speaking at all as to the causes i right to appeal to the court* of justice of the recent war with Mexico, whether it was 1 fyyoo for the to** of your alara. wnere one right or wrong, and abalaining from any expres- i slave escape* npw by running away iron au sion of opinion a* to the justice or propriety of the , master, hundred* and thousands would ucape lr war. when once commenced all moat admit that, i tbo Union were dissevered—l ***• not sow nor with tespeet to the gallantry of our foo ! where you run the toe, or wtottor independent glory of ourtriomphs, there i» no page or page* of! sovereignties be Wen, tfr.ftnaily, history which record* more brilliant successes, will you, In cu* wto Union, to With respect to one eommsnder of an important safer with your slave* within the separatediper* Dortioa of our armr, I need aay nothing here; no tiofia of the State* than you are now! Mr. rre»* praiae is necessary in behalf of one who has been that they will escape moch more frequent* slevated by the voice of hi* country to,the highest ly from the botder State* no one will deny. t.d/m »he could place him io, mainly on aceount And, air, 1 must take oceauou here to ny that, ofhi* gtorioua military career. And of another, in my opinion, there i* no right od the pan or any less fortunate in many respects than some other one or more of the Stales to >rom tne militsry commander*, 1 mosttake'Jhc opportunity Union, War and disaolntioo ofthe Unioaare Idea* of earing, that for akill, for science, for strategy, tide and inevitable, injny opinion. There can for ability and for daring fighting, for chivalry of be a dissolution ofthe Union only by consent or individual* and of masse*, th*t portion oi the by war. Conieot no one can aaliciMle, from any American army which uras conducted by the gal- existing atate orbing*, to Ukely to be given, ud lant Scott a* the chief commander, stand* unriv- war to the only alternative by which u dissolution ailed either by the deed* of Cortex hunsell or by could be accomplished. Ifeoaient were given— those ofaiv other commander in ancient pr mod* if it were possible that we were to be separated Snu me *. J by one great Une-iu leas than sixty dtys after Sir, our prosperity la unbounded; nay, Mr. Pres- men cao,ent wa* given, war would break out ident.l sometimes fear that U to in the fantoa- between the alavehoding and non-stoveholding net* of that prosperity that many ortho threaten- portion* of thtoUnioa—between the twolndepeod ingfito ofthe moment have arisen. Wildland er- eat parte into which it would be erected in virtoa ratio *chemea have sprung up throughout the uf the act of separation. In less than sixty day*, whole country, some orwhieh have eveh found I believe, our slaves from Kenrucky.flockicf over their wayluto legislative balls;'ud there to a rest- in numbers tothe other side orthe, river, wwald ieness existing among ua which I fear (will, re- be pursued bylhelr owner*. Onrhot and ardsnt quire be chastisement of Heaven tohriogua back apirlts would be restrained by no tense ofthe right to a sense of the immeuuresble benefits and bles- which appertains to the independence of the other sisgs which have been bestowed upon us by side ofthe nver, shooldlbat be the line ofrepare- Providence. At this momont—with the excep- lion. They would pursue their slaves Into the ad tionofbere and there a particular department in jacent free States; thev wonld be repeUed, and the mannfecturing business ofthe country—all tbo consequence would be that, in less than sixty to protprity and peace, and the nation to rich and days, war would be blaxing in every part of this powerful. Our country has grown to a magni- now happy and peaceful land, tude to u power and greatness, such as to com- And, Sir, how are you going to separate be mtad the respect, ifit does not awe the apprehen- Statu* of this Confederacy! In my humble opin» tlons of the Powers ofthe earth with wnom we ion, Mr. President, we should beaiu with three eome in contact. separate Confederacies. There would be u Coo- Sir, do I depict with ealora too lively the pro#- federaey of the North; uOonfeceraeyof the Booth* perity which baa resulted to us from the opera- era Atlantte slavebolding States, ud a Confedera tions of this Union! Havel exaggerated in any cy of the Valley of the Mississippi. My life open partlcalarher power, her prosperity, ot btr great- it, that the vast population which has alretdy.con nets! And now, sir, let me go a little in sdetail, ccntratcd and will concentrate on the head urater* with respect to awav io the council* ofthi nation, ud the tribotanea of the Mississippi, will never whether from the North or the Sooth, daring the give their consent tbst.tbe mouth of that river sixty yean of unparalleled prosperity that we shall bs held subject to the power <fuy foreign have enjoyed. During the first twolve years of State or community whatever. Such, I believe, the administration of the Government, Northern would be the oeaseqoauces of.* dissolution of tbe counsels rather prevailed; and out of tnem sprang Union immediately ensuing; tut other Cosfedera the Bank ofthe United States, the assumption of eiei would spring up from lime Io iime,a*dtosalis- Ibe State debts, bounties to the fisheries, pro tec- faction and discontent were disseminated through* lion to our domeatle manufactures. I allude top out the country—tbe Confederacy of the Lakes, the' aet of 1739, neutrality in the wars of Europe,' perhaps, the Coufede'raby of New England, or of Jay’s treaty, the alteu and sedition laws, and war the Middle Suites. Ah, air, the veil which covers with France. Ido not aay, sir. that these, the i these sad and disastrous events, that lie beyondit, leading ud prominent measures which weie to too thick to be penetrated or lifted by toy more adopted during the administration of Washington ; Ul eye or hand. ud the elder Adams, were carried exclusively } Mr. President, lam directly oppoaed to uy iby Northern counsels—they coaid not have been : purpose of secession or separation. lam for stay —but asioly by (he ascendsaey which Northern ing within be, Union and defying uy portion of oouniels had obtained in the affaire of the nutpn. | this confederacy; to expel me or drive me out of So, sir. ofthe liter period—for tbe tost fifty years. < tbe Union. lam for staying within the Union I do not meu to say that Southern counsels alone 1 and fighting for my right#, if necessary, with the have carried tbe measures which I am abou t to | sword, within the hoonds and under the safeguard enumerate. I know they could not exclusively ■of tbe Union, i I aa for vindicating those right*, have carried them, but 1 say they hive been car- I not by being driven ont of the Union harshly ana ried byitbeir preponderating influence, with the noeeremooioasby uy portion of this confederacy, 00-operatios, it is true—the large co-operation iu Here lam within U, ud here I meu to stud some instances—oi tbe Northern section of the and die, aa fey he my individual wishes os purpo* Union, And what are those measures? Daring set cu go—within it to protect my property ud that3oye*r*,oraearlyih*tperiod,rawhiebSou!h- defend myself, defying all the power on earth to era counsels have preponderated, the embargo expel me or drive me from the situation in which and other commercial restriction* of noa inter- lam placed. And would there not be more safety course ud non importation were imposed; war io fighting within the Union thu out of.it! &op with Great Britain, the Bank of tbe United States pose our rights to be violated, suppose wrong ,to overthrown, protection enlarged and extended to be done you,aggressions to be perpetrated domestic manufactures. 1 aiiode to the ptsstge you,' cu you not better vindicate them—if you ofthe act of ISIS or 1816, be Bank ofthe United ( have occasion to resort to the tost necessity, tbe States re-established, the tame. Bank put down, sword, fora restoration of tkoee tight*—wibin, reseatablisbed by Sanihera counsels, and put and with the iramptlhies of a large portion ofthe down by Southern counsels, Louisians acquired, population of the Union, thu by being wUbout tbe' Florida bought, Texas annexed, war with Mexi% Union, when ja Urge portion of the pooulatioa 00, California ud ober Territories acquired from have sympathies advene to your own ! Too cu Maxioo by eoequeat ud purchase, protection su- vindicate your rights within the Union better peraeded, ud free trade established, Indiana re* than il expellsd from the Union, and driven from moved west of tbe Mississippi, and fifteen new it without ceremony and without authority. States admitted i&» the Union. It is very pouf.' Bir, I have ssid bat 1 thought there,wuuo hie, air, that in this enumeration I may have right on the part of ooe or more State* to eecede omitted some of the important measures which from be Union. I think eo. Thu.constitution of have been adopted during bis latter period of the United States wan Bade not merely for be time—the last &0 years—but these 1 believe to be feneration that then existed, hot for posterity— the most prominent one& unlimited, undefined, endless, perpetual posterity. Now, stojdo not deduce from bn <*nnm*r«tinn of And every State that then came into tire Union, the measures adopted by be o and every State that has ainee come into the any juat cause ofreproaeheitb Union, came into ttbiadin# itself by Indissoluble the ober; though one sideorb buds to remain within the Union toro (n the two periods to « main within ii by its ‘posterity for ever. Like so red, These measures were, ti other of be sacred connexions in private life, It to joint work of both parties, ud a marriage which no human authority cu dissolve have uy jost cause to reprote) or divorce the parties from. And if I may be al* sir, I must say, in all kindness lowed to refer to some examples ia private life, tout of all ought the Sooth to let me say to the North ud to the Soub, what when wa look at tbe long list < husband and wife aay to each ober—We have under her sway in be count mutual faults; neither of us Is perfect; nothing in have been adopted, when we the form of bumuity to perfect; let us, then, be opposite doctroc* have been kind to each other—forbearing, forgiving each advanced bv ben that thee* oberia faults—and, above all, let on five in hsppU Bank of be United Stater, whi ness ud peaee together, the administration of Mr. M*j Mr. President, I have said, what 1 aotomnly be co-operatiou ofthe Sooth—l <1 lieve.bat dissolution ofthe Union ud war are fkmtb->ri do not, when I speak identical and inevitable, that they are convertible North,apeak ofthe eotireSootl terms; ud such a war as it would be following 1 speak of be prominent an adiuolutioD ofthe Union! Bfr, we may search of Southern ana Northern m< (be pages of history, ud none so ferodrus, so Mr. Madison’s administration t bloody,so implacable,so exterminating---sol even United Stales was established. the wars or Greeee, Including those of the Com* gtoknew—which I very much monera ofEoghtndud be revolutions ot France u* from having his attendance —note, none, of them all would rage wibsoeh Mr. Calhoun, waathe chairman violence, or he characterised with nob bloodshed and carried tbe measure through uongren. 1 to- and enormities as wonld be war which must sue* ted for Itwib slimy htart. Although 1 had been ceed, if bat event ever happens, the dtoiohitlon instrumental with ober Southern votes ip putting ofthe Votou, i . And what would be its lermina dawn tbe Buk ol be United frates, I changed lion! Standing armies’ud'uvtof, to gn extent my opinion *nd co*jper*ied in the establishment alretchisg tbe revenue* of each portion ofthe dfs of the b%nk of 1816. The tame bank was again severed members, woold take place. An exter* put down by Boobern counsel#, with General urinating warj woald follow-■not, sir, a war of Jaekaon al their head, at a later period. Again, twoor breeyeart duration, but a wib respect to be policy of protection. Tbe naWe duration—ud ware would Soub iu 1819—1 mean the prominent Southern ensue, until, after b* Struggles and exhaustion meu, bo lamented Lowndes, tyr. Calhoun, ud cfboth putties, some FhQip 0* Alexander, aoi&e other*—united in extcodinc a certain tqeksure qf pewer orNipdeUi WOuM lirfee gad guttleGQP protection to domestic manufacture* ay well at duo knot.and solve the pgohtom ulb* oapa boNorb. We find a few years afterwards the citv ol man for self government, sad arush the lib- Soub to tsrporiog most serious objections this enjea pf both portions of this common policy, and 000 member gf bp Soqb fOpire. OanWou doubt il! op bat oqeaston g dissolutioq q! the \Jnion orsep* Look at all history—coasult her page#, ancient aretiou. Now, air, let us take another view cf be or modem—look at human nature; look at the question—ud I would remark ibst all these views character of the contest in which you would bo ore brought' forward not in a spirit of reproach engaged Inlbesapposritonof war following ?ppp but of conciliation—not to provoke or exasperate, the dlswlotieu ofthe Union, as X hay* tug buttoq-tiet. to produce harmony nnd repose, if gosted; and 1 c*k you if it to posifole for you to possible. Wbtl htvo been bu torribrial acuutsi- doubt that the final disposition of be whole.would lions btafie Jjy lhis country, and to what tnteresta be some despot treading down the liberties of the have bey conduced! Iqoiida, where ilavery ex- people—the final reanlt would be tbe ista,.bas bees introduced; Louisiana, or all b« ofbl* last and glorious light whiph to V* most vnluablo part ol that Slate—for although mankiad, who are gattinguoon it, in the hope and there to a large extent oflerriiory north ofthe lino anxious expectation ftat b® liberty which pr*-, 36deg. uDmio., in point of Intptjyic yalqa aud im- vails here aooner or'tofer be broughr poruace. (woUifi obf give the single Sia'te o'fLou* out the whole of tbe civilized world. Sto- ua idsas for the whole ofit—all Lodtsiaoi 1 lay. With vou lightly contempUte there Caa tbe exfe-ption of bat which lira borth of 33drg. you yield youraelf V> paa»ion.amidit 30mitti,iacludlngOregon, to which we obtained dangers t have depicted in cobra for too title maioly on the ground of its being a of wnat the result would be If that direful acquisition of Louisiana; alj Tcxar,' blt be terrl- event to which I have referred, should ever oo torfe* witieh Have'been acquired by tba Govern- cur! Sir. I implore gentlemen, I adjure them, men! ofrho United Stales coring its sixty years' wheber from be Bouto or tbe North, W alf operation have been slave territories, the theatre they bold dearin bto t7odd«a*y‘all then 1 fete'of of slavery, with tho exception that I have men- liberty—b? authctfveueruiOh for'belV ancestor* Honed of that lying north ofthe line 3Sdfg. yd —by”alf belt regkrd for posterity—by all tbefr ql a> ? ' ' 1 grathude la Him who,naa'bestowed on tbefoaud^ '-And hare, lu ibrcaio of a war made essentially unnumbered ud oountieu Ml'lSie by the Snub—growing ofit of tho” annexstion of doties which they owe to udAU&tir-ua ey all Texas? - which was a measure proposed by the the duties wajc^theyuwdlothamwhre*,to pause, Booth in the council* of bo country, and which tofAuse at the edge ofthe precipice, bo tod to tbe war with Mexico—l da not say all iof tare be fearful: and dangerous leap to taken into the (bob, pal ioe inhjor portion of beSoab' bs yawning abya* below, from which none wba pressed the annexation of Texas upon the country ever take it shall return la aafet*. —that measure, a* 1 have said, led to tbe war Finally. Mr Preaidaqi, ia\iflDcln»ion. fitp i wib M.r xico, and tbe war with Mexico led to tbe plore, as wjilch can be ! acquis-tion of those teraitories which now siow tapoa bffjSpoh earth, bat it be direful I into the bone of cobtontioa i*o different *ad event of lltojlfuolntioa of bto ** memhCCJcUU ooafeddraoy? And new, sir, for happen,that lshall notsuTrivstobaamdthe sad 'jjie first time after be breo great acquisitions of and heart rendjpg Texas, Florida,' and Louisiana, have been made ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ %ad havti redounded fo tbe benefit of now, for tbe first timo, when three 'territories are mo LCT—The American Hotel, on Pena «irs-l, cp •httempled to be introduced wilboot the institotion L posite the Canal Basin, tram the lit qf AoHaexi? of slavery, I put it to the hearts of my cmintrymea Appiy «> this office. * ofthe South, If it to right to press molten tothe P, HiIQIHALL, 1 disastroos couseqoeuces which have beeo indicn- (scccnso* Vo imru c. imx,) ted no longer ago than this my morwuig oh tee TMI'ORTEK A Dealer in Preach and American Pa- Aodastvn BtijU'fifereAuXlQOOfCßrUih'wsolations A P er Hangings and Borders.. Window Shad-* Fire “ r,ho Udl °°- aL» n | w„ •' for an adjournment! KXCCCToa’fI balk. I fir. City. DOMf I do CQJ VU-Tf tW po- SATURDAY, the *M of Febrnary, wUt be ex. o.bn t prdler lo go on. I thbk \ \ ) po M d m ■«)«, ■> li o'clock, A. M. i»c eib begih to ace lefid.' I shall soon’come tothe oonclufii m'ol what 1 hake to say. Snch ia tbe property of James Union and each' are Ihe glorious fruits which are lhey^u?iSl£lSl w T<m wn B r!npr o 'c . now threatened wib aubveraion and - J - WILLOCIf. Rxr. Weil, air.-tho firstnueatiop wUc* itaiUfaDy ar.ies DIBIOLIJTIOI. to; suppu.tDg bo la>oD to he di*»olved for aU of X“ F?g?i^ P K&pSteSfSS Uie cusi* or firiotancea which aretompltlned of, .^ M , Ted s on lu | llh t-ct, ebhSnt Tb“ howfarwill i.erioesi will io •enUnuVd, at,the qld aund, N 0 .79 lf-b* Union is to be diesolvdd for \yiaa »i«ei, under Chh firin of “A H, Elliott A Co." —'-'ifig ciQse, it wiQbabcpsascelaYctryLs iu- by wbomthe buatoeatof the tonwpstttereWpwl'g; So? not a/osyed to fio .dtrodaecdlnT the «gg* MpSP riiuries; er Ssoadrerisvery f. thresteued 10 in be District of Calambia; ok be canse fugitive olivet a!ro not restored, as At tny n\HSOLDOIUAL, cla»rieal, and Banday Bebool a?,** as cause* which I can lead to the dreadful event to , {i. s.wwv*pi «r a^«stL^&sfr.sr^, **&**£«£*&■#&« fftw South to posh slavery into be CCdeo territory?— Crane, for a \Y*#h Mixture) »i*d a* uavoUlcg vnpo*-. How are you to do ■>» suppotiog the North, or all ton iu ihl* Btate are telling rights for an imitation, bo the Stale* north ofthe Potomac, in poateasion of P®°P}« «« n [ & 110 Wfc * re » M titfttogem«»« be navy ud arm? oriheUoited States! Can you ,r |J£ # figS t e SrmLdetaifeidfo.m, and in tba form expect, I aay, under these circnmtunqea, bat it 0 ( m The riget to bu Btau belong* to tbe in here to a dissolution of she Union, you can carry demgned. - -aiaverv into Oali/ornia and New Mexica 7 Sir,; Wanted—Good Asenu in »ell rights, dream ofauchu occurrence. If » ’S'iSS^ 1 P °’ er itaVAY aSl£2s. We aboOihcd in be District of Colombia and be E Editor in Peaniyivaara wfo> Y* ll P"bU»b bo Union werq dissolved, would the dissolution of oneo*r oriener, and forward»«• rePJi the Union restore slavery in the District of Colum- receive Iu reisra a family right, valos W iia? to yourohanco fortho recovery ofyonr fugi- ■ five slaves safer in a atate ofdinolution oreftev- | /-* AS BTOCK-«0 »Uar*# for sale by ennee of be Union thu when in tbe Union il- j IjT N HOLMES A SON9,^ aeltl Why, air, what to be state of the fact! In j fcbu-3i ' Tobwbirainir Sealed pbopo&als witi be retired mdn'Fri. day, the S9d davof Febrearxiast, at the office of tbe Chintrt Coot Company, ca Pena street. Mtia beryh, for the following tawed timberr 3W60 feet lineal, of white oak plank, Ul* inches ■« •• ■’valU.Bx?.* 7i®* piece* of white oak timber, 9 feetou. lour. Bx 7 inches. The timber to be sound and of the bed qualfty, and to bo delivered at the landur at McKee'* Rocks, on the Ohio Hire, two and a half miles below- Pittsborgb, by the tenth of May next - Z. W. REMINGTON, Manager. feb!3 ' Office Penn street. Pittsburgh. To bra Baaafacmeri. SEALED PROPOSALS will be received aatil Fri day, the 22d day of February XniL, at the Officeof the Coulter's Coat Company,-on Penn street, Pitts burgh, for the following described Iron: _BO ion* Plate Rail or Bar Six) U* of good quality, To bo delivered at the Undine at MeKee’a Rocks, on the Ohio River, two and a-half miles below Pittsburgh, bythe tenth day of May next. The form of the bar may be seen on application at tho office. Z.W. REMINGTON, Manager, febia 1 Office Penn street, Pittsburgh. VthafiJlafMtle Gcagii For PrtvtvtiagSuan Bciltr ExpUnoas- • ‘" fpHE UNDERSIGNED Agent for the above named A GAUGE, isnowo&avUUtothUeiiy,anidwillbe found for a few days at Christy'# Hotel, on Penn it, where ha wtll be happy to give all the neeeuary in formation relative to this important preventative of Kteam Explosions. He has three now In rperatton at the EagU and Penn Cotton Factories, in Allegheny vhei sttentiaa. 1 * oBndrT > 1® tI»U city, w which noia- Tho anbscriber will be happy to wait upon all those who may desire to avail themselves of this valuable improvement. - WM. BRYCE. Situation Wanted. uGARUNUL The best of reference given. APPjTU *• WARDROP,Manchester, febia-ot* near Pittsburgh. . a.iiKß, WOOL DEALER A Commlulen Merchant for the sale of American WooleuOoods, Liberty street, opposite Fifth. , '• feblt-y W* OOL—The highest price in cuh paid for all the different grades of Wool, by febia i HLEE /"IASSINET, TWEED A JEANS-14 cates on baud, V/ received direel from toe makers, on consignment and for sals at manafactnrert prices, bv • fehlt • IILEK, ICO Liberty et WRAPPING PAPER—Donblo Crown, Medium, and Crown; Rag, Straw, and Tea Wrapping Finer, on no for sale by WP MARSHALL, 87 Wood st PAPER HANGINGS—a great variety of Wall pa per, with borders, for Parlors, llslls and Cham bers, selected from Importers, and Eastern Manufac tories, especially for the spring trade. For rale by W P MARSHAtL, (late S C Hill,) fobia - e 7 Wood «t PRINTING PAPER—Aisoned tlxes, in storo or made to order, for sale by „ . fcbU WPMARSHALL,B7 Woods: INGRAIN CARPETS. RECEIVED this day, at the Carpet Warehouse, N< TS: Fourth st, a new and rich style of super In grain Carpets. Also—FUo Ingrain,whlehwe offer t< parehaaers as cheap as any eastern boose. fcbia : W MeCUNTOCK OIL CLOTHS—Wo have now in store the largest ard ben assortment of Oil Cloths ever before of fered In thU market—ranging from 87 iochss wide to 84 feet—all of which are iron tho most approved manafactarera, and of the richest and newest styles. We respecUoliy invite dealers to colt at oor Carpet Warehonse, 78 Fourth street, and examine cor assort ment before parehaelng elsewhere. _ . . „„ febia . i W MeCUNTOCK How Bosks Jnst&ocelTed. mHE Early Conflicts of Christianity; by Bev.Wm I Ingraham Kip, D. D. 1 vol,13roo; muslin. James Moonijoy. or-I’ve been'‘thinking; by A. S. Roc.. 1 vol, 12mm siasUn. History of the Missions of the M. E. Church. w® the organization to the present time; .by Rev. W. F- Strickland, A..M, with portrait of the author, and In troduction by Rsv, B. F. Telit, D. D. 1 vol, 12mo; mosUn. Sixteen Easy Lessons in Landscape Drawing; by F• N- Otis. Memoirs of Mrs- Angelina B. Sears; by Mrs. Nabn da Hamline. 1 vol, lfimo;ian>lln. Devotional Harmonist; a collection of Sacred Mu tie, comprising a Ursa variety of new and original Tunes, Sentences, Anthems, Re, in addition to many of the most popaUr tunes in common use, presenting • greater number of metros than any book heretofore published; to whleb U prefixed—A Progressive Sys tem of Elementary Instruction, for Seboolr and Private Tuition. Edited by Charles Dingley.' PotsaUby - B. HOPKINS, • - ftbl> . - - Apollo Buildings, Fourth ft A STORE BOOSTand DWELLING, on the corner of Carson and Wilkins street, Birmingham. In the store room there U a good counter and shelves, 27 feetipun; a kitehan end dining room on the first, and foor rooms on the terond floor; and a'good gar ret. The Storo Room U well adapted for either a dry goods or grocery store. For terms inquire of 8. CA MERON, at tho Wayne Iron Works, foot of Wayne meet, Pittsburgh, or on the premise*. feblXt* ' a.CAMF.BOV. BcHdaliTo Let- THAT beaatifa) situation for a Private- Headence. on the bank of tho Ohio river, in the borough of Manchester. For termi apply to ' teblX CEO COCHRAN, 24 Wood st OOAP—SO bus jut rec'd and for sale by ~ O fcbU • STUART A SILL /"'(ANGLES—IO bxx receiving and for sale by U fcbU STUART A BILL BUTTER— 8 bbU paeked, for sale by febU 1 STUART A SILL, US Wood it /HANDLES—2O bxs Cincinnati Mould; . v 80 bxs Pittsburgh Dip; for tale by BROWN * KIRKPATRICK, febia 144 liberty street SOAP— 80 bxa Ctnclnnau Soap, for sale by febia BROWN k KIRKPATRICK rpORACCO—IO kegs Gedge k Bro. 6 twist; - X 80 bxs ass’dd's, for sale by febia BROWN k KIRKPATRICK LABD-SObbUNotLeaf) _ . 290 kegs do on hand and for sale by " febU L S WATERMAN L'IXM/R—l2o bbU superfine: reckl and for solo by " febia ; L 8 WATERMAN BUTTER— 10 bbls 8011, la store and for sate by übta L 8 WATERMAN r\ILS-CSO galls Bleached Winter Whale Oil: \J 180 da Winter Sperm Oil; In atom and for sale by RESELLERS, febia NoB7 Woods: OILS «gS LhU flaxseed and 29 bbla Lord Oil; in •taro u 4 for aala by fcbU R E SELLERS, 57 Wood «t EPSOM BALTS—I9 bbla for eale by ftbia T R E SELLERS MACKEREL ■fA~few hf bbla beat quality (Mdiu- CBBsetu inspection) 1649, In flora and tor tale by .... i WAM.MITCHELTRES, febit r WoiCDLiVenyat SODA ASK—24 eaiki Steel & Sea's make, landinr <raa Lydia Collins, and foi tale by ,febt« r A CO QVTTB%-2 b»a 8011, pat up in cfoifcsj 'o«&\sKS* * bbUw *" l ‘ a *° e * nk "' fchl» RHEY, MATTHEWS A CO "TABOOJ43—I6Sdci Com, in atom and for rale by C ftm RHEY, MATTHEWS A CQ LaBD-30 ktrs and 40 bbla No 1, in store and Tor ante by fcbtf RHEY,MATTHEWS &CO ROLL BUTTER—I 9 bblt fresh, in cloths, just reeM and for aalo by BREYFQQLjfi a CLARKE, febit ‘ .109 Second at 1/ EQ key* In ftore and for sole by JX febit T ' uREYFOQLE A CLAREK T ARB—IO kegs and S bbla for sale by* ’ Li ftbia BRKVFOGLV A CLARKE CORN UROOtfS—lOQdax Cor Mfo by ftblt . RttRYFORLE A CLARKE /CLOVER BJEEB—3 bbft instore and fop sale bv U tibia 1 DREVFOPLB* CLARKE IfrARSUTHHOT HAS last reiuraed from the Eaziem Cities, and is receiving a largo variety of seasonable Goods, to which be respectfully invites the attention of wefch* anu and pedlar*. No 84 Wood at ' ' icbll KrU Ofiesra, fFHE St'c.bqideri or tbo Erie Canal Company axe A aytlfleo thtti ah' EleeUon will be held sitae of* \ 4?e ofvtid’Combany, in Erie, on Ne#dsi, ihe 4th day of'March, to choose Seven' piircteia’ foe the easuine yfcar. 'idblLd3w W-REED, Sec’y. * Di&pKna. 1 \ TO? R. MVBPHY Iteept constantly oa hand an as -1 IT • fOrtraent of Bleached Linci* Table Diapers’of wultha And qualities.. Also-Table Cloths and Napkins, Toweling Diapers nod Towel*, and a fall assortmenttf hon«e ftt;jx«hlnggoedl febll Mtt*pr*^AB9a« ,^AtentBo«l ! a AaU. . «JW*Q_rain4faeftirefc«, via New On leans, per ships Afafttßdhdlbiaj JKttica,andAaaunu which'will be •sold, Oh Moral, at ita lawast market price, by ' 7 - WAMWITCiIELrREE. • i • • 16Q Liberty at B/*Th*y will also reeeiTß large sopphes 'spring via Philadelphia! and Baltimore, * .'i Mourning pRiNTs-EcjMWe'traek a and blaek and davit corgud Prints, for Mounter, to be found tube VxKufclasHouse of • ftbU __ * ! •- MURPHY &VDuEfffioßSß— a! Ene dark sorrel Riding Horse* >S hands high; a gobd traveler, on bead and for sale by • , .ROBISON, LITTLE * CO, febll . l&g Liberty street DRIED APPLES—Okbatph'd and foreale by P J B CANFIELD /'IREESE— Wq.bxseiiraCream, forsnle by L febll : 4 D CANFIELD JEWELRY, Gold Silver Watehea, Bend Bag*. Bar Clasps, Mir el Beads, Ac., ree’d and ferrate by febll Cl ‘ Y CARBUTIINOr 1) Qj£pNS—Bfluneu C*p.tm4 Sl*nm» Ribl>«tu, rccU IvZngfomlcby fehU CARBUTHNOT T)OUCHONG t EA-** W cbe*tt IHaclrTe*, roe «*?•"- t iii* sgialM w'lTby! CI! OR*NT r . • • 41 ITatetn I VO {6 lb) Caddie*, fineo. fat family nrc> X'* Juit tea'JTjy i febU C HQUANT CLOVER SEED—I 3 bn»h jul rec’d on cooiifa. moat, for •*>? ; R feb|\ No 0 Commercial Boar, Libcnrn BIffTRR— Tbbli Fmh Bolt, on oeeiiffnmrnij for itj/br b a Cunningham! febll No O.CoaßQgrfMLl Bow, Llbenvl »t • BACON— I«JP U* He« Boond, Jnuroe’d on con* »l(Q(uni, for rat" by B A CUNNINGHAMJ febtl No.cCommercial Bow, jLiUnr]it ‘ pTLOYKR BEE&-33* bhla aWppln* order, V/ for into by 'VATEiIMANJ febll a> Wnfrnndw Front* . OUQA,R* hbd* primo (new crop) Saear; ' Q -S 1 . I **- 4® io : ‘ Rite; Laaiia* ftom ctr. Faro, firoa N. Orient*, for tala br fcwi _ l s Waterman • MOLASSES-ttO bbti N O, sew 3 Jet! Ke'dud for tole by febll LBWATE&MAN *f )Ot«L BUTTER—IO bbli Froth, for «Vf> by- | K febll BBOWMfc KIRKPATRICK GLASS— ttxU) In now tnd for ufo by ~ febll STUAOTABUA.II3Ty«uI.I /CHEESE—3OO bzt in Ua» ud for-ttlo by vWU" 1 • ' '• STUAtT k BILL OORN BROOMS—IOO dot in More vid for tale hjr V J febll STUART A BILL VINEGAR— B bbti prime Cider, for tale by j febU STUART ASOaL AUCTION. SALES. Bp John D. Davis, Auctioneer, 13 faclago Dtf Gnodt t Sfc* On Thursday mooting. February 14, at lOo'elock, at ihs Commercial Sales Rooms, corner of Wood sad Fifth streets, will be sold— A large stock of seasonable staple and fancy Dry Goods, embracing a handsome assortment for me re tail trade. They may bo examined.pievloas to the sa'e. ; - At 9 o'clock. Groceries, Qaeenswaro, Fußtitue.' 7 bf chert* YTI Tea; 0 boxes Virginia Manufactured Tobaeeo: 85 retuns Wrapping Paper, various qualities; S dax Coal and Devonshire Shovels, Ac. A Urge and general assortment of new andteeoad hand household and kitchen farm tare, mantel **ww lamps* carpet bags, leather and. canvass .covered ' trunks, Ac. At7o'eloek, Watehev, musical instruments, fashionable elotiuag eutlery. shot guns, pStola, variety roods, A*. febia JOHN q DAVIB, Aaet. STEAM BOATS PITTSBURGH AND LOCUVILLK jS&gk. STEAM >%CICET LINE. ENCOURAGED br Iho liberal patronage extended to all regular and well eondueted Lines, the own ers of tho following fine steamers have arranged them into a Line between Pitubargh and LoaUvilie. One of the boaa will positively leave Pittsburgh on every ttonsay, WxonsD4T,frkd Ftatf. Erxsino, aifio-'cloek-fulicrnotfulL The first boat of the Line will start on Muiday, February Sflih. - Steamer Genesee*”*—••••Captain T. Moore. “ Z. Taylor-. '“ M. Laras. “ Nomiueo*-'------- “ id. Smith.- u ML Vernon-- :H. Konntx. “ IW.Ebbert. “ Pftinnoont»—*—■ F °rlb f !?a , " r i;Es e g , a l S.T E «BE«0 8 8, Al REGULAR SUNDAY JACKET ' CINCINNATI, Captain Wittu* J. Kovim.-; L This splendid boat wu bail! by the I ftrrT FO owner* of ibe steamer'lsaae Newtoai a «2WWjfi and ttibUr*. for .the Cincinnati an* CBMBSSBnPitttbnrgh Packet trade, and.. will commence making herSregalar tripsin the Use, on SUNDAY, ibe UikietU ' , , = For freight or pitugr apply onbotnJ.or to ..a lcl-9 = *• b q DMILTBNBEROER, Agt? Stamm Boat for t»la. 1 will tell low for eash the steam t fl.**—& boat ARENA, with Engine Fizum MaHitlfiiff end furaim»e, n the boat now lies in «gwfigyffi-.h> All—riTer, mouth eflrwm street, Pittsburgh. The boat it _Wrn wheel and light draught, suitable for the Allegheny river, or low water on the Ohio. Enquire at the Coal Office of A.Leech, Jr.fcCo, Fourth street, between Smahfif'dundGtcmLorof tbo subscriber. - : : JOHN RODGERS. Steam BoattStoek for Sale* h . WRwiil tell, on liberaltarnc Leu .ifJVimg *Oue*eighlh of tteametlMesreoger Onawlghita of steamer SchuyikilL • Ooo'd&th of (tcamcr'Peßa*yl*aniß. Tbree.t'xteemV of steamer Niagara. feblMt WALLINGFORD A CO. PriTSBUBGU AND WHEELING PACKET. . vThs splendid fast running steamer I •LOUIS McLANE, W. S- ConweU, afftlMßt (haring undergone a thor- onah repair,) wul run hereafter as a ~ Tegular packet between' 1 - Pitts burgh and 'Wheeling,Mearing Pitubuigh eTery Monday. Wednesday and Friday momlogi, at 9 o'clock. ; For freighter passage apply on beurt. or to : —jaog W. B. WHEELER,-AgcnL FOR CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE. ' nf, .. k • The splendid steamer r FARMER. wSWffISS Benedict, master, will leave for tba wowwgMa.iywii and all lateraediuo pons oa Thursday, the I4th February. »llo> o’clock, A. fit F»rf,d ; t. or p.M.g y«TLT.aBEBogR, Af FOR ST. LOUJB AND ILLINOIS RIVER. : jgjo-a. <qsBBSßSSfr rf. MaEafll&ft -(Price, master, will lesre ;toy oea9BSfl&Sßthe above and all intermediate ppnrj. Thursday,at 10 o’clock, A. M.. . j r*!??* 1 ‘ffiKtiSSiA a„ FOR CINCINNATI AND LOUISXiLtIT"? „r, r n * The splendid stesmer V .4 t HAMBURG, ( s; yftaVßwft Csrt Klinefelter, will leave tor above SttßsESESVand all intermediate ports/ tfats day al 10 o’clock, A. M- .. . ‘ or ssrs m w FOR NEW ORLEANS. V • i L&g&BfiSt 'Smith, master, will leave 'fey abov» port on Utis day the. I 3& last, ait* o'clock a. a. - • • ; i • • ' - • r 'gg > “° ,p "“ r, TNE , s^f)S&,A«- FOR WABASH RIVER. mm k The splendid steamer i CINDERELLA. ’ afiSofewß Capt. James H. Hasletnwlli leave 0 RSEmSSEBESBaboTo, on this day, February lßto at 4 o’clock, P. hL For freight or paisago apply on board, or to feblS. J NEWTON JONESwAgt FOR LOUISVILLE. rt-TTw a. The Coe passenger steamer ■ . itrrvJa MAYFLOWER, - •toßgaßSg Fisber, master, will leave tor chw BSaßßSStoaiaboTe and ail interaadlat* pasta oa this day, the 82th Inst, at 4 o'clock, P. M.. For freight and passage apply on board, er to. febl2 . G B MILTENBKRGE* l/KNISON—tiOO Hams dried, for sale by i V frbU STUART k SILL DLOVKR SEED—7d bn prime new. for tale by L> tehll JOHN WATT A CO GLASS— 600 Ul» eas'd, In store and for aale by feblt JOUN WATT A CO*- CIHEEBE— SO eks Goshen: la atore and Car sale by t fehlt • JOHN W_ATf ACO> BROOMS— 2CO doz for tale by fcbll JOHN WA* DRIED Peaefcea: forealebr febll JOHN WATT A CO I/EATHERS —iuq ucit now Undinf, for tale br febll 13A1AU DICKEV A CO, Front M / JREASE-cabbUlaMonasdTer ralebv VXfebU, IS MAH PICKET A Ci> "1 ABU— K'& bbls N» 1, new lindinir. rot «mhj bt JLT&bll ISAIAH PICBBY 4.' Cl H EfiSlS-aw bore* ferula by . / Cftbl I ISAIAH D 1 BACO.N'— 3 caikt Hog Eoatui, 4 do Sides; for isle U* febll ISAUfrfacgBYACO OLIVE OIL—U casks trassUr, J>ist rec'd, feualsfcr fcbPi J KIDU CO, CO Wood st "DORAX—3 refired, in store asd for sals by X> iebO _ _ JKIDDfcOO kOICKSILVER—SO lbs bi soJs by yfebP JKTODfcCO NlNE—7so4Salphmte, Just recM^terolob^ tIiU)OROrOHM-at ih»jim ' ftbb JKIDDfcCfr legs lor nlsby .. I fcba . WICK 4b McCANPmsi (ACO.N—pieces bo* round, for ssi«~b» .*” > fcbg wick a McgaSplkss ILOV&R SEED-SI bbU for sale b* - * fcbP WICHA^CAWDLIgg LA Rl>—7Ukpg* mil tf bolt f*oTtT®F»*Je W v fcw _ WJCK L AIeCANuLBSS C'iorn <*/•**’ r WIQg&McOAWPr.BSS rTOEE ' —“ 1; tcbQ W M» bo v ream, tor mm fey" WICK h. MeCANDLKSS PiA fw talc by • lota WICK * AIeCANW-ESS ' O euki prime; ■ O 0 do palTCrUitS; 12 boxei io; fori&ta by ; ft*>S 1 WIQR* MgQANDLKSa KULL BUlTKK—iatjbUpstafi.’ftarialebj ’ STUART It BJLL> 111 Wood tt \TrOOL—I »s.c)j flux LJC’d tßd for i*Jo t>f r IT faW STUART fc SILL ’IMUVn«BE£I^“ A fcb “ BTUaRTA BILL 1t*I»OUR —iw end u lif bills for'acle br feb ' J STUART ASILI. UK,. ,.|. by duo edeke juit rco'ii qua Mr tale by yj fotll STUART i SILL. TJEATUERS—DotetbiMrM and for iota ay ' -T STUARTtROJ. rjioffnrsai'suss-A ■« TKT«;i~ —? 1 „ 6 do Fo*i do- ! 3 dq rjt* diu ■ *L do taper do* Pnr late by : feb» OYEAOKR,iaanfartetfe ; V l 9 W‘ N c&i*. aw’d, tec’d a»4 for oaio by , V kIJ :. ' CVEAOgß.)«aM»i>cnl 1 10LIW STiUNUS-MMlelU; .30 idle bd; ' . . > M dojßenj for sole by . feb9 C YRAoEB.ll'Bl!iike'. »r Yery FiNF.viotiT-sciT.VEitsrva-jsrs^ ceiTAil direct (tom tbs aeniUeemrer fj, lk te by febO J C VKAGKR. iw'«„b”n i A YULAtiskS—l7o bbl* NO, jati a*7T. i"i, L- * iVUb» DROWN A K^pa'tSiA SUO AK-ISU Unit Nq, for R : JL M , i BROWN k MRKPATEICK I jof-FEli-im bljrßio (o uWindfor •»!» br ~ '-'a.i, BROWN kXIECTATRICIf, 144J^b«nril 1? *f tTT *■**• njw. >u« re«y per itr. *cftayL, S 5 a** 1 ® Uy: BROWN ft KIRKPATRICK, ACaHD n> LADIES AND PilYaUJlAAa—rto reeon.asendaUon W to completely uilcfaetory, at .T-L 1 *«?ai e lienee and complete *oeee**ef any ia*en r.-nV-V: t *®»fo»ony of ihotewto have expe* *S«- iU i fc !: ne M II V Du ««« lu»» fifteen yea**, d* the United buiet, ©w most talented f**A eßjlaent phyelciaia, kayo daily born tetti&onT uv Oe H d BBiTO ’««ea> ;*™S l° T i *‘ ldls * jufferiog They do not cubjimi t>r PMMHte, whleh U now uroted to be ■‘.ic&S *T h *»,*?» CM *lofi mere difficulty thou h«a n ??• "® f long *tandiag in PhUadeJnkli. ud lent*,*®* increaung bciioei*botbJSVhole*ajev3d Heail* *■ S r * r * J itee of the eometueta of iha %boye» .Jr RL o ?' afß her Genuine Supporter. aMlyoaly.** ErwfrUi; « Market•t3ftioW k " ail outer* are counterfeit*. BEITS, Whalmte A,era. KOIAWf-H*- feb£l-<keod T . / - ~ DISSOLCTIOH 09 PA&MSBf BIPa r r H si.^J! ;a ?. r * ki P heretofore exUlinf 1 Arnold * Hogr.- tt •MttSJ' Mived _ AUpcrton* •“to £ra> > »•!* pleoao coll and ~ - • . . Thfl buoncss will bo continuity J**?.,? zSUL n„ J,„ s , jvtiio.il x JAHE3 eh¥ad ,n £ GIOTCS K ■‘S.'i. fA. Senritin* camera of Breaiiajt An*** * Wf* . Pliubar*h, Fob. I, tusa— CILOVKtt SKKb-ioo barrel* j>pn».fc*w, to «*» f oud for sale by « ..... r nBOWMtBB»*™«*. •mW . . w liknT at Cliy SmokibßOMi - TIIK •abtcSber*, fcoviaf SnokohMte** ore prepared, at «|| liar*, to wmA, taof oadi uaoke Fork on rtMonabla teno*. - • SEB k JONES. Proprietor*, j«n3li Ctpol BmB) boot
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers