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''.-1! • : • ',, . 4 ..7.. 1 ., ' '', ' .4..4.4 t "-:.4: ‘ 44 • •- e°-; , - 4 - 1. .. 4 ";'` ~.,.. n ,:: „‘ ~,- ~,-,.., ~....., 4: ~,:z. • :_ ,:•,, .`.-----,' , --' - ',:"' e''-'t"-:1 ..,-..„.,..,, r,, ~. 4 '' 1 1 .. :a ``' ,*- a. 4- aa! ak,k,Zl'l • I:fi:(Z * ` ; : 7 ~'; ;.°'; ' ; ''... .' .la.:'*.4%.*';`' V, ,'ll L' ,-- . - 1,, ', ‘ ,:‘ ,",' ~`,.-• .<-• .' ..'" " ' - , ."' ',--" " • a ' _ „,..- y' • -' " - r '', ~.' INNE .• 4 . 4, t•: -:f ? . • - :; L's • • -4 ?,-11 , , , L• 712 • - I=l'4 _ tyfr-1-4.0.., - • •-•• -• •2 • ; - • - *4 4"'! ' • :` 4°. Ost • : - • the Path) Vorot. THURSDAY MORNING- AUGUST 11 DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. AIIDITOR GENERAL, RICHARDSON L. WRIGHT, of Philadelphia. SURVEYOR GENERAL, JOHN ROWE, of Franklin County. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET ASSISTAXI L W IrDOV. _._..._.._..GEORGE F. GILLMORE, of Pittsburgh : *Tram szrosszr: 'e`.' joltilislftiGWßY; of Pittsburgh. STATE SENATE= SAMUEL of Birmingham JOSEPH•fr. DAvls, of Allegheny City; SAMUEL W. MEANS, of Robinson township; , PHILIP H. STEVENSON, of Moon township; JACOB STECERATH, of Allegheny City; ANDREW JACKSONBEAUMONT, of Pittsburgh' MIT CO , 31..741EM0NED.: VO • EDWARD CAMPBELL, JR., of Pittsburgh. , , TRT.AStlira: . . . , JAMES BLACKMORE, of Pittsburgh. COEIVIT rimirrott: . JOHN T. SYMM..M, of Pittsburgh COLINTI SURVEYOR: JOEL KETCH - 174 of Elizabeth. Dummy. OP TOO room THOMAS NEEL, of Tarentum THE WEEKLY POST. We refer our readers to,tho advertisment in oethe . paper, (which " he Who runs may read,'") of our weekly, which is tcklay issued froM this office. We have . - tilways devoted especial attention to making "The Saturday Morning Post ",a first class family journal, and we flatter ourselves we have succeeded. We keep pace with the general news of the. day, both home and foreign, political and miscellaneous; fur nish full and accurate market reports, give a sbmmary of all occurrences in the city, suburbs and surrounding country, and fur nish, besides,a very large amount of literary matter,and anew stor3.. every week. We shall continue to make THE WEEKLY Posir as in teresting and readable a sheet as before,tmd would respectfully solicit subscriptions from all who desire to read a good Democratic fam ily newspaper. We will furnish it to clubs at the low rate of ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, which will scarcely do more than cover the cos of tconiposition and the fine white paper on which it is printed. We would also call at tention to Tut WEEKLY Posr as an excellent medium for advertising, as we have a very large country circulation, reaching the of people to whom advertisers always wish to become known. Our next issue wil complete the present volume,and the begin ning of a new one will be a good time to subscribe. Read the advertisement. A BAD WAY TO UNITE John W. Forney delivered a speech re eentlpin Reading, in which he stated One word more : We have a duty to per form in October next. The Administration has plated its State ticket upon a plain and dis tinct. platform. It tells you that every man who votes for John Rowe and" Richardson L. Wright, votes in favor of its platform, which declares that the people of the Territories shall have no right to control their own affairs in their own way, and that if they take a vote upon the slavery question and abolish slavery, Congress must intervene to put them down, and uphold that institution against their will. I have to say for myself that I shall refuse to vote for that ticket, and I hope that every Democrat who stands upon the platform of . • ta, and believes in popular sovereign ty and the justice of the movement we have in augurated and carried on, will do the same. Let fossils and fogies complain, if they choose, of this action; they will submit. There will be no difficulty about that ; and after we have defeated the Administration upon its platform. we can come together in 1860 upon the old creed of the Democratic party, as expounded by Senator Douglas, and as advocated by the Democracy in 1856, and triumph, as I have no doubt we shall over all organizations, by an overwhelming vote. [Cheers.] The defeat of our State ticket previous to going to Charleston, would seriously inter fere with the right to make terms. The Pennsylvania delegation must take a back seat there, and behave with becoming mod esty. Whatever Mr. Forney may do indi vidually, we hope the friends of Stephen A. Dottglas will not permit. themselves to be rebuked by the National Democracy. for the loss of this State at the October election. The attempt to chastise the administration in this way is silly, and must recoil upon those who aid in it. Let the Past take care of itself, and secure the future by presenting the old Keystone as a reliable Democratic State, flushed with Democratic victories, and eager for future triumphs. It has been the proud history of her past, which gave her, in every National Convention, the commanding position of leader, but of which she will be stripped at Charleston, if we forsake our faith, and sell our birth-right, upon the miserable pre sumption that the present administration will feel bad about it. So far - as our information extends, the Anti-Lecompton voters in this State, do'not propose to risk the defeat of our State tick et. and will not vote against it, at the request of the editor of the Press. The honest De mocracy have no purposes to serve beyond the success of the party, - and - cannot be swerved from pledging their sincerity for .13emocratic principles, however much they may have differed from Mr. Buchanan in, his Kansas policy, by these bug-bear cries of vengeance. There is nothing vindictive in the Democratic organization ; neither does it ,grovel among private griefs, or hesi tate among individual wrongs, to accom plish its mission ; had it done so, it would have been' branded as an utter failure long ago. We sincerely hope the danger ous heresy;of permitting evil that good may follow,may not exteud,but invoke the earn est attention of the patriotic and resolute Demoeratio,masSes tO the one thing necessa ry—the successof the Democratic party. Eight Children at a Birth. (From the New York Tribune.] JoaNsoN, Trumbull County, Ohio, 1 August 4, 1859. f On the 2d of August - Mrs. Timothy Bradley gave birth to- eight children—three boyaand live girls. They are all living, and are healthy, but quite small. Mr. B.'s . family is increasing fast. He was married six, years ago to Eunice Mowery, who weighed 273 pounds on the day of their marriage. ,She has given birth to two pairs of twins, and now eight more making twelve children in six years. It seems strange, but nevertheless is true, Mrs. B. was a twin of three, her mother and - father both being 'twins, and her grandmother' the mother of five pair of twins. Mrs. B. has 'named her boys after noted and distinguished men. One after the Hon. Joshua R. Giddings, Who has given her a splendid gold. Medal ; one after the Rev. Hon. Elijah Champlin, who gave her a deed of 60 acres of land, and the other after James Johnson, Esq., who gave her a cow. Mr. Bradley says it is profitable to have twins, as the neighbors have clothed the others ever since they wore born: Mr. B. is a poor, industrious laborer, but says he will not part with any of his children while he is able to work. i • Charleston Convention... Chances of the Candidates The New York Herald of Friday,has the fol lowing letter from a correspondent at Wash ington City, in relation I,O= . the Nominating Convention at Charleston,, and the relative candidatf,a. I.tAs undou:btly in tended to Create a sensation: The writer seems to think liiiistott has the best chine.; gaulintion of itie Tao' tiglitii4osOvpr-the Re sult 'of the August Ele`Ottoiis-4ileitirs of Douglas and Others Aboufße;Opeillng tthe Slave Trade—Presldential Aspirations ---- - W-Asmerrox, July 8, 1859. The friends of Mr. Douglas in Tennessee, Missouri and Texas, write and telegraph to that gentleman, .that the Opposition gains in those States, is exclusively owing to the sym pathy, whielOsfelttor his position, and bete khit I deterinintition on the part of many of the; :Southern - , States to support his claims .for the Presidency, at the Charleston Convention. They reason that the Demur-title candidates have been elected by men who have Douglas proclivities, but will not bolt the regtilar ticket, While the bolters themselves are Douglas men par excellence. However un reasohable and absurd this kind of logic must appear, it has been sufficient to elate Mr. Doug- Ina beyond measure ; and, as he thinks he eon count Upon North Carolina, Maryland, and Since the publication of the Wise letter, upon Virginia:- he regards his nomination by the Democratic National Convention as settled nearly-beyond Question. Politicians, too, from Ohio represent that new divisions are arising in that State, which will make the future ques tion there to be Douglas 0.0 Anti-Douglas ; and they say that the fornier are sure of carry ing Ohio, in October, by large majorities, and that 'both Ohio and Indiana ql present Doug las at the Charleston Convention. More prudent calculators remark that, while the gerrymandering process which the whigg introduced into Kentucky and Tennessee must always render the result of elections doubtful in individual districts, the aggregate democrat- is majority has been quite us 'great as could I have been expected, and theysee cause for con gratulation upon the result on the side of thee administration, but not of its enemies. They look less at Kentucky and Tennessee than at Texas, where the real issue has been tested upon clear and unmistakable grounds. They say' that the triumph of Houton--.the last of the. back-bone Jackson democracy—is a triumph of the administration, which settles the question. between Mr. Buchanan and the lire-eating party •of slave traffickers at the South: and: they have no doubt in declaring that Governor; Houston•stands foremost in the field, from the present hour, as the candidate fur nomination by the Charleston Convention. ' The recent letter from Douglas to Colonel . Peyton contrasts favorably, in many respects, : with similar documents from other quarters. 1 It is to the point, and derives its main impor tance from the open declaration of war which may be made to re-open the slave trade. No one is better aware, however, than Senator, Douglas, that the traffic in slaves has been vir tually recommended already. He hau inure, facts in his possession upon this subject than any one man in the United States Senate; and it is fully in his power to disclose, if he chooses, not only the names of very many par tieA who are interested, IsTaliarly as well ii. politically, in introducing •• savages - from Africa, but he knows the very inlets in whieli they are landed, awl has heen informed of tli.• nutuber of slave cargoes that might b, 04-r:et-. ed to arrive within a given time. This ill it, oration with the accompanying evidence, ar, :t portion of the urina, ,-.4 ammunition which Senator Douglas is indmdriou , ly eon. ting, preparatory to the opening of next session el Congress ; and be is said to have initiated cor respondence, whil” at the South in tin. rn nth of May last, with many per-mrei in sari,',,- State , , who are I,ntinually suiplying 10, budget with additional farts (-oncoming the various depot. of ••:,avage!-," the nmdc td -up plying them, and to whom they aro gam•rali , , disposed. . . .. Since Ow = ricidal 1.-ti 'r of Gov Wi•e the national democrats here who de sire a ;;outh ,, rn candidate for the Presidency r the Irvt of practicables reduc, d Sam lloutt, n, Hun ter and Jame, Gut herie :-ince the desertm nation has been arrived at to ,•r,d Rr , without oppoiition to the I nitro Slat, he 1111.5 been eomider,d via of th,, , field, and the Chant., of other: a r, thought .CELic Ply Wr.rth Loving. C,,bh might have a ,11uW l.ut f..r the ell - norg oppo,ition in hi- own State, which it is feared by his may kill him Of fir, is tainted at: and Lan , . VT'S, FUpp6 , ,l, a months since, to have some chance : but a- ti - depended upon Mr. linehanati'm alleged ,upport of his claims, it has disappeared wrth the son• vietion that the Pre.sident'l inn-lin:dim, were towards another quarter. Lane chat.. el, tio 'Pennsylvania, but they are thinly attend,-.1 The real :etitinient. now he. 1 [bill k I'. Governor Houston : and lettcr: , have alr , ady been received here, and b ee n sent from lief , . which will give an impetus to the Hou-ton movement throughout the country, nhich wrll take every ono by surprise. —er• The Loudon Times It epile,, to Parliament:no Strictures, and has a Word or ltto to Say, About a Free Preto' (Fr,,io Ttils,„lu; ) sti * * If we said what was not true, th.at is another question ; but Hour crime is that we have sometimes said that which may hurt the feelings of an Emperor or his soldiers, then wo beg to state our case. We existed before either Napoleon 111. or Napoleon I. We are as much an essential institution of this coun try as they of theirs. We are precisely 1, hat we were, not only when Louis Napoleon lodged in St. James', but when his uncle was a sub-olffeer of artillery. NV° are what we were before either Mr. Bright or Lord John Russell was born. The era which gave Frame its revolution, gave England its ireo press.— Thatpress has preserved its freislom by acting up to itself, and speaking the truth, to the best of its ability and judgment, of everything and every body. No one can over-estimate its weight as theauxillery and mouthpiece of free Legislature and open justice. But here it exists, one of the chief forces of the country, ' now, also, a heritage from our forefathers, to be bequeathed to our children. The Emperor of tho French has had it before his eyes, as ' ono of the great facts of European polities, be fore he ever fired a gun, made a speech unso licited a suffrage. What good, or what harm we have done him, is a matter beyond calcula tion or conjecture; but he is now, as we are as sured, a cordial ally, and as all feel, a powerful neighbor. We are spending, Mr. Gladstone tells us, eight millions a year more than usual in our armaments, against a certain contingen cy which there is no disguising it, Is the possi bility of either an invasion by our ally or some outrage on his part beyond all endurance. Our words have certainly not weakened the French Emperor, either for good or fur evil. He can still make a terrible war and a mag nanimous peace. He can still punish and propitiate one great neighbor, and be im mediately formidable to another. If there is ono point on which we may venture to express a personal opinion, it is that Napoleon 111. is a man of singularly fixed ideas, and unaltera ble sentiments. This is the opinion of his e o creditablepabopuaapterp: him, he example, h : friends, and the very boast of his life. But Mr. Brightaffects to believe that he is as irrit able as himself, and that we, by occosional criticisms of his conduct, have estranged his friendship anti imperilled the alliance. We take this to be apute imagination, founded on a very superficial knowledge of facts, and a much less respectful opinion of Napokon than our own. Mr. Bright has undertaken a client who cares little for his advocacy. The Emperor knows us and our country too well to under rate that love of truth, and that plain speak ing which are to be found nowhere else. In proof of this, we can educe a recent and t most he p oterhy° 3 6: l : u fr e et h shteieln N e v wiser rno r ;tef than areettiisd: which he, his army, and France had in an au chthoere:rnesttLpecoranepdfdoerniemt, with the French army in Maly. France has to thank the Emperor, rather than his advisers, that a sci en tiiie soldier hasdescribed to the, world some of the most brilliant ex ploits of the French army, its admirable or ganization, -its impetuous spirit, and cool courage, and good generalship of the Emper or. The , few French correspondents who set out to describe the campaign, went no further than Alessandria, but the- representative of this joUrnal witnessed the first, encounter at Montebello; the attack on Pelestro, the bloody combats of Magenta and Malegnano, and the crowning glory of Solferino. France knows her own victories principally through his pen and through the journal al which iS Seribed nshervoret enemy.ut'lr ia s thisegedenniybeenothertiss shown? 'We clung to peace as long as peace was possi ble, and,. indeed, when it was desperate, be cause, great as were the wrongs of Itally, we had Meet against them the cost of a war; the sacrifices of which, would be terrible, the re- ..~.,~ r titi ~t =EIS cults uncertain, We desired that Austria should besinduced, one way or another, to quit the soil where national antipathy had made her a curse,and brought dishonor on her name; but we could not share t& responsibility of unsheathing the sword. When the Austrians were so infatuated as.: to'..eross the Ticino, it Was clear that peace Wits impossible, and their utter expulsion across the. Alps, seemed the least prize of th'e now inevitable war. The Emperor himself proclaimed thil„—wi, accept ed his programme—"ltaly shall be free from the Alps to the Adriatic !" His march from Ticino to the Mincio was one unkoken tri umph. The victory of Solferino Cost enough to pay for the independence of all Italy ; Ve nice was ready to yield ; and the great gnad-- rangle attacked on all sides, might-soon have been reduced, when on a sudden, without con sulting even Isis ally, in the next tent, the ;Emperor concludesa peace which leaves Austria 'still supreme in Italy. We may not yet know 'all that weighed upon him, but we cannot for get all we had said at his own instigation only , a month before. We share the regret of all Italy, of the French army, and of France her -self, that, having paid the price most lavishly, (both in blood and treasure; he did not win all Italy to independence. He feels thi l s regret, !himself, so strongly, that every day he explains ?and apologizes. Europe, he tells the Papal Nuncio, was, in general,was so unjust to him at the beginning of the war,that he was happy to conclude a peace as soon as this honor and in terests of France were satisfied. Here alone, in the British Parliament, it is held all hut treason to feel and express the regret that every party to the war avows to the whole world.— But is it true that the Emperor himself cares for our crildeiSTll? Why should he ? Napo leon 111, is the foremost man of his time ; thew most pnirninent actor upon the great stage of the world. Ile likes praise, no doubt; but he takes hiS chnace of blame. The one thing lie would not like is to be unnoticed and that is the treatment prescribed for hint by our Parliamentary censors. He can shut out the Times from all Prance whenever he likes—his underlingS sometimes do Fa; but he as often overrules them. He knows better than his officious servants, either here or at Par is, that we are the friends of both na tions. We deplore our own immense arma ments, but they are as nothing compared with those which the Emperor declares to be none at all. We have reason to protest against his estimate of a peaceful security. It compels on us no small part of the inconveniences of war; we sutler; arid. with the use of our tongues and pens. it is impo,siblo not to complain of a burden which weigh: heavily upon Franco as well a., upon England. Elie Recent Terrible Performance by M Blondin. INTERNATIONAL noTEL, NIA , ;ARA FALLS, Aug. 4th, 15!1. (7. , m :—.Proriselv at half past 4 o'clock, P. M., Mons. .1. F. Itlundin uppeared upon the American end of the two inch rope, which spans the chasm of Niagara river, a di , lance of twelve hundred feet %vide and one Illiadroll and eighty feet deep, it is only a short di-tenee below the mighty ottareet, and at that point, the current of the streeni is very impetuous end turbulent. lie carried a helancing polo thirty-nine feet long. end weighing forty-nine pound. 111 , sterted off at a smart trot, and cuntinttf , 4l that rtro until he reecho.' nearly the centre when a Most thtillial: wxm. Coot: piare, Gar b•• we. very «uddenly brouvlit to by test .0. his poi,. unkier guy rope, and it emu. , nearly throwing low off into the ,e‘Vnirig 3hy, led,,w, but by his pre3- eflei. !wind and -trtth o f tic quvl,l, tilreW ip hi, poly h a bring 111111- , 11 . "h. al I.llllolft - A i 1 ,411 th.• ~ t v 10 11, ~ ,11.11 6-sr 1,.r. hi= •nletv -J.l/34 tur,..LLAI LL:ter : -tr•L!.•:; we , r, tr. 1111.1. ii, IfIL - Lro , hay st..L•LLrIPLI 1,L:: LOtl,rll'l,4ll.olllll.lit a Ail ti1.4411/tll . let!, t oit• in , qt , • :Ln.l tho im•rie..3ll •horo , ttil :hot, ',lc 11 3 L . lLL•ttt nyL-LL from LL plr,:s.r„nl;rtrivdr.,tsnr.l(l, burL.lL•rin L ; .Lt Lb,mi htc L - L.LtLIraLLt At., LL tout, ti It:1 rota' t , II..• t ttfirl rttri tt r"1:131.71g .'. , t/I :LI• tt,.. .r. ,t.“l.' 4 - '4 1 4 4 4 ,i1l 44; 4 •4 4 , 1 Ow t 4,. r ~t ll 1.• , 11 Ili, is- Of OW •• 11'1,1 “! ill 11. t ;;,4 41. 41 ttr • . 441,41 , 411 t 314 4 • •• u . • t 1,1 lib,iiti.il)l;t4 Oil =lllll2 41:1V liittl,t7 nMs., vt, 41 r,t,l fi.i Int ni, but nab a tirm hri the eipo.tiirame CI, n•lnnt •• W hen :d.ittit t its nr, iny down with the pde rho-t. ~%11 torned s ,15111‘,1 I.•t, tt. V.7,41+ • •.,—/ h - then f.ot, ht. ro o L , the I 'V't thr er.tary., tt f y and performed the tto.,t daring teat'' I,mrtal titan Jar. , ..r er will d , going ; to aiel fid by love! , 1,1,1 hitt, If and at right angle , with Ow rop , tle.n laying aortm„ the ropo hi,: etontach, imitating wiunnin ; by hi, Monk ing lib. body back and forth bet v.een hi, arm, Soong 1 . 1 try.? fee! e,/ths "-- and list' at tin th , ditcv night of ,itio hundred and i,.ty 111 , turioin, and the Maiming . . roarim; of th e mighty cat:trial le•f.ire his oyi, In, tt.nt.i htl •! ncl Itro., from the tiiiineiovcrou 1., which t I tsted for o•veral NVIIO7I 110 ri.tinied journey; and he Mel nearly reachill the American he imitated the renting , of a drunkenman. A 8 he ...topped from the rope Io iirrezeo,.4 to hi, oarriago wa, im puted 1. , r /Ml', thin' by the excited crowd, wh,, wanted to ,e, - rit