The Pittsburgh post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1859-1864, September 26, 1859, Image 2

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1181
=MI
ely Pail') lloot,
MONDAY MORNING SEPT. "6
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET.
AUDITOR GENERAL,
RICHARDSON L. WRIGHT, or Philadelphia
SURVEYOR GENERAL,
JOHN ROWE, of Franklin County
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET
ASSISTANT JUDGE OF TOR COURT OF C031310N PLE LSE
GEORGE F. GILLUORE.
*DISTRICT irronsrs:
JOHN N. BITLOWHY.
VSATII BEY 4TOB:
Mytti 111" EE.
ASSIXP.I. I,
JOSEPH. E. DAVIS;
SAMUEL W. MEANS;
PHILIP H. STEVENSON
JACOHBTUCKRATH; ;
ANDREW JACKSON BEAUMONT
conxry cokeassicnem:
EDWARD CAMPBELL, TR
coany TICEABLIIEE:
JA15 . 17.9 ELACKMORE.
COIINTT AUDITOR:
Vitt T.
MONTY SURVEY=
JOEL KETCIIUM.
DIRECTOR OP THE POOR,
COLT THOMAS NEEL.
lO'STATE CENTRAL tIaIIIMITTEE.—The mem
bens of thh State Democratic Central Cornmittss
are requested to assemble at the MESCHIIs:TS• 111)
TEL, Philadelphia, - on FRIDAY, the loth inst. Panelled
attendance is solicited. as imiiortant hnsiness as ill Is
offered for their action.
Rot , .Era TYLER, Chammin
Extract from Judge Douglas' Speech pel4*-
creel at Pittsburgh.
Were the Democracy of Pennsylvania nos•
going to throw array the prestige of. the old
Keystone. Stale, to forget their glorious history
in the past, and to wheel into the ranks of Abo
litionism or modern Republicanism g If they
did, it would be their own act, and not the act
of their opponents. The Republicans had no
chance of success, except in the dissensions of
the Democracy, and while ho would always stand
up for principle, and never yield it for the sake
of harmony, yet., in ~i-der he peeseres tLr prih
ciptes of the parry, he, would surrender any
personal prejudices and hostilities he might
hare. [Good and cheers.] The part of wis
dom and patriotism was only to remember past
quarrels morder to pralit b'y them. Wherever
there bad been past issues that had died, all the
asperity. which they ever created should be
buried with them, and we should only look
ahead in the future, holding forth the banner of
Democracy, with our principles emblazoned on
it in clear and unequivocal langune - e, and
RALLY UNDER THE. ORGANIZATI(nN
OF TILE PARTY.
PUT TO THE WALL
The poor old Gaz, tte unable to impugn the
honesty and integrity of the nominees upon
the Democratic ticket, is desperately bent
upon distracting the attention of its readers
from the weakness of its own ticket by false
charges against others. First it attacks a eon
ple of gentlemen who have bad control of the
Ilomtnissioners Aloe, and when it, charge
were denied, instead of attempting to prove
them, it hies off in a tangent and pitches
into THE Pour with a charge of incon,isteli
cy in supporting the Democratic ticket
which we have had at the head td our col
umns since the day it was nominated. Thy•
ttC,:etit has most miserable pervt !led ali
truth in regard to us.
The Gw.:ctic charges that in Tut: '4 , T. oi
July Ist., in expressing, our olojection: as
Democrat and an honest man to the reps
liati on re, , olution , adopted by the 'onveo
lion, that we "then declared 11,,,•
I),,o - r,/ r~,~~61 N,.,. rt,-r,-, r, ~,~! rLN ~~~
HONEST IAN IV,IU
And to sustain this direct an l ummaliti,si
falsehood (itt,/te garbips a paragraph
from our artieb. of July Ist, tnus
The time has come when those who prote , .3.
in deed and in truth, to Wong: to the Demo
cratic party. should speak out. It is not right
that these deourgointe, and triel..lerN should he
permitted thus to override principles, and to
deAroy our party. N. tr,,-
cm( can supp , 77l ticket :1 ,10 'um , • t
Here i, what we did eay
"Bat it is damaging to the delegatos to this
convention that they permitted such a pteaf,”-,, ,
to be adopted. No true Democrat can support
if, no honest man will."
The btirefaced mendaciousness of the
in omitting what we did say in its t i n.-
tatiou, and interpolating the words t• the
ticket to sustain its lie and deceive its
readers, is beneath contempt. Such imp--
dent and transparent manufacturers of false
hood do not deserve the respect of any hon
est moan.
It istrue that all the nominee,- imon our
tioket are not the 111011 whore 110111111.11,,11-
we favored
Ti Our estimation, the Democracy of Al
legheny county had been injurisi in public
esteem, both at home and abroad, by hav
ing adopted a local issue, not connected with
general Democratic principles, :is a part of
the county platform. It was our own de
sire, as it ivies of every true lover of Demo
cratic principles, that the platform adopted
should be purged of all side issues. That
portion of the platform referring to this lo
cal issue, we have always steadily and con
sistently opposed. But Tui: POST Las tr•V v
as now, done all in its power, through evil
report and through good report, and in spite
of opposition from quarters whence opposi
tion should not have emanated, to sustain
the regularly nominated tickets of the party
upon the pure and noble doctrines which
the party has ever and does now stand
upon. We placed the ticket in its accus
tomed place--at the head of our editorial
column—at once, and were ready at all times
to defend and support it when it should be
attacked. As the election alpproached, we
have urged upon the people of the county
the fact that, in all respects, it is a better
ticket than the hybrid affair which the Re
publicans have nominated. The Ugzettii
feared to attempt the advocacy of its own
ticket fipini the repudiation platform, which
one of its editors—a member of the nomi
nating convention—was obliged to swallow,
The Jairrna/ adopted and :nlvocats.l (to its ,
cost) the repudiationplatform of the Ito_
publicans for a time, but recently it has
"dropped the subject." The Gazette, with
less manliness,has "kept mum." It dared not
advocate the platform adopted by the con
vention,and it lacked the spirit to denounce .
it. It was “in a split stick," to use a homely
but expressive phrase, and lost influence by
pursuing a milli and water policy. Tim
POST, on the contrary, maintained its posi
tion boldly and fearlessly. It advocates the
ticket, not only because it is the Democratic
ticket, but because it is composed of men as
far superior in competency to that of our
opponents as the sky is above the earth.
The battle we fight is for the Democratic
cause, and for it only. The Guatte will al
ways find us doing all in our power to pro
mote the success of the regularly nominated
tickets of our party. Our course as an edi
tor is before the public, and we are content.
that they should judge of it for themselves.
The lies and misrepresentations of the. Ga
zdts. 'only show the desperate position
into which the Republican party is driven,
and "the organ" is doing all it can to Make'
the confusiOn in the Opposition ranks worse
confounded.
Embezzlement in a New York 13ank.
William .1. Lane, Jr., son of the cashier of
the Fulton Bank, in New York city,,and act
in:; a; an assistant clerk to his futh4fielmeg- -i
ed witlNavin_g perpetrated a series 'of fraudki;
by whi4be haTobtalnial moliey
the aggetr,liteto,.§G9o42,l3. s was effected
(„. I . ,r o e f te ß nd e i ,, nk iii fol Co i. li agn e d ut d , c , , f l o )e r c:t A ii . l.6, B it;
„h D ise i tfnu.
ers name bills receivable in Boston, in i ij a d' u t , '
phis and Baltimore, which are supposed !h'e
all fictitious. The Ghtmcrcial says :
These bills he would enter on the books of
the bank to the credit of his father, and when
theywere supposed to be realized, receive his
check of the Fulton Bank for the proceeds. In
order that there should be no discrepancy in
the-accounts with the corresponding banks, I
young Lane would leave for a few days actual
'bilk receivable, uncharged, sufficient to cover
the deficiency which would otherwise be shown,
and it is supposed that when the general book
keeper of the-Fulton Bank made out his ac
counts current to be forwarded to correspond-.
ents, Lane would make a fictitious one and for
ward in its place, his position in the hank
affording him facilities for the purpose.
Mr. Lana is a married man, aged about thir
ty,,tind: without children. He resided with his
father, and though it was suggested that ho was
spending
than his salary as clerk
would wa r rant, more
m
arraid,it me Zas accounted fur by his I
friends on his explanation that he was receiv
ing compensation for the employment of his
leisure hours as a book-keeper. and as agent
I.r the firm Mr whom he pretended to act in
New Jersey. The money obtained, with the
exception of about twelve thousand dollars,
which he has refunded, it is supposed has been
spent in the purchase of lottery tickets, &c..
and as is common in such eases, a woman's
mune is mentioned in connection, with whom.
however, the delinquent denies any improper
acquaintance.
The fraud has been committed in such a MUD
ner that the father of the wiminal will be the
greatest loser by it. He is bondsman fur his
son, to the amount of ten thousand dollars, and
the bank holds his cheek for the amounts
drawn from it, upon the fictitious securities.
Ho (the father) is now an old man, seventy
years of
s age, thirty of which he has been in
connection with the bank: unblemished repu
tation, and remarkable Mr the vigilant care
with which he always guarded the interests
of the institution with which he was connected.
The bunk, ELM will be noticeil by what wi
hare written, will be a leer only on the oon
tingeney that the means of Mr. LIM!. ,enior
are not adequate to tnako what 11,1 , lieyb
abstracted. Even were it to ‘vliole, it
would only slightly atr,t. li0011(1101th. 11A with
its eupital of only six hundred thou-and dol.
Ilan, its surplus On hand IttllolllltA to
671.15.
The New York after Elating . that
Lane, who received a cearly talary of nine
hundred dullara, is a married in, and that he
and Iris wife lived with his father, relate, the
following
After Lane's arrest, on Tuesday afternoan,
he accompanied the officers to it house which he
had hired at Nis. West Nineteenth street,
at an annual rent of $1,090. Here they were
introduced to a young woman about• nineteen
years of ago, named .Nlesferale, with whom the
prisoner stated he had been living tor three or
four Pearson terms of most familiar intimacy.
The mother and brother o f th e y"Jn.4 . woman
also reside in the ::one liana-. Lane ea river. oil
quite unhesitatingly tf, ith th.• eflieers upon
affairs. Ile said that this establishment, a Lich
was magnificently furnished, had coid hint a
Sast 'sirs, of mom-v, and his :imolai espemli,
tures for its suppart hail been abieit
though. ta amid expo-ire. all hi , bill- \tar..
111,111 i. wit in this of mire, .1. Spark-, a
friend of his A tter th• ifitra•lneti-an fa the
,miser king relateil
nature of the %%Ili, It lie had
called, telling her that he w, 11d 6, alitiged it
she would pass over -
ry which Lane hail previms•dr admitted fa
Luse been L.e.uglit with the funds of the bank
nail pressentol to her. The lady, without
titian, ;freeled to the delmilef and going ta
which appeared t. , be the revoi
tore fir her valuable, ,he produced her jewel
ease. I
it were a ili:1111 , 11,1 cross which lu..i
cast $l,lOll, „ fie pi.ir ,-r gald bracelets worth
s47r, :in,,tin-r pair linked brae,
lets, live diatuand rings, n pair of diamond ear
rings, a geld watch -et with diamon d s, a nd
other jewelry, in All worth between fire and -is
thousand Nett. Lam- the
others to pill ate .table in le,.ing•
ton Tfventy•firf idrect. lit: ,
he -hawed thew four firmaliied
at six thousand dollar, sane them alidie hav
ing cost to transport trim Maine, where
it hail Leen purchased. I n addition
horses a variety if elygant
efirtifittl i i anti fancy
sleigh: , and es pensive harm-- h ea l ., rt),
too, hail all been purellasmil in the name of Mr.
Sparks, for the reason before mentioned.
Lane stated that he had friiimently tried tio, ,
animals on the road, at had never yet met
their equals at a trot., The officers iiondered
that the sisirtsinan'• taste of their iiriseine bad
-
never led din to purchase a yacht. He had
often thought of that, he said, hut, troth to
tell, the time lie eonlil devote without fear of
detection to his ammemonts was
short the pleasure of yachting had to be neces
sarily- forgone. CaHim:, next to the re , idenf,
of Mr. Sparks, a trunk found there was seized
•Ify the officers. Lane hail placed it there. It
contained drafts, seenritie:i and accounts la..
longing, to the Fulton Bank, but whether of
value or nid, failed to transpire Lane aho
told the officers that he h a d expended a large
amount of money of late in the purchase of
lottery tiokots. A .hors ton, aeo he Inverted
in on e day and .71 another , s - ti on
for two is et every flay he I.4foght tiohets to
the amount ofill He drew a prise of
tiff,(loo, and that had been :ill Ihe return the
speculation had made him. Disgusted at his
ill-fortune, he relinquished the amusement.
The prisoner is confined in the Tonit,
awaiting an examination on the charge. He
keeps up good spirits under the eireomilances,
only seeming alfected Whon.illui:ion is made to
the disgrace his conduct [lists upon his fandly.
Mr. Stokes: , Speech at Lancaster
We conclude to-day the ab,tract of Mr.
Stoke:: Lancaster speech. It must got be ii,-
surned tl . at we endorse all the ii•wi of thii
gentleman. !q,.Ft or them base mirAetirty
concurrence, some we th,ubt. and Ir ru other,
we dissent. Of the general argument there
can be n., division of opinion among sleet
men. It is a noble vindication of Denmerary
and Christianity, well worthy of the reputation
of its author. But the base, degraded and in
famous light in which Paine is placed seems a
harsh measure of justice to the man who moved
the masses to revolutionary resistance to British
tyranny. Perhaps the burning ardor of ge
nius, and the habits of the advocate have car
ried Mr. Stokes tor, far in his analysis of the
character of Paine. But in the main the
speech is a great:one, full of information as to
facts, teeming with original thought and ex
pressed in language which goes right to the
understanding and the heart. It is another
proof that Pennsylvania has among her sons a
great orator, worthy to uphold her reputation
among all competitors.
PoIN gini)
In one of his recent sermons in Ilivor of po
lygamy, at Salt Lake City, Elder l resin Pratt
undertook tos,rr, e , by the Scriptures, that the
I.ord had sanctioned its practices among his
people ; that mankind have been led astray by
the foolish traditio ns of past generations and
the uninspired dogmas of ignaront priests, es
pecially with regard to marriage; that Adam
and Eve, when married in the garden of Eden,
were sealed for time and for all eternity, and
argued that persons married according to the
order of God would be exalted to reign as
kings and queens over their posterity. It is
not to bo wondered at, therefore, that polyga
my stalks abroad at Salt Lake in all its horrid
forms, and that young women are daily being
married to gray headed old men who have al
ready ten or a dozen wives each, and a score or
two of children. A New Englander states
that he recently dined with a Mormon family,
in the vicinity of Salt Lake, where there were
seventeen children, under the ago of four years,
and ten wives, three of whom were sisters and
nieces of the husband! A fourth niece, only
thirteen years of age, openly boasted that she
livas shortly going to marry the same old Blue
._..__ ~
,^.. ;., .
THOMAS PAINE.
[coNcLuDED.I
~, , Lamartine declares his letteri7against the
king to bare been ignoble in itiSinguage, as
cruel in its intentions, a long aeries of insults,
even in the depths ofil dungeon, upon -
a num whose generous assiitrance: ho had for
merly solicited. An Aniciican .. a citizen, a
philosopher, demanded, if not, the, life, at least
the ignominy of the king who had sheltered,
'With French • bayonets, the Cradle of the liber
ty bf his country. IngratitUder'expressed it
self in outrages : and the philosopher degraded
himself below despotism in the language of
Paine.
. .
Orders, abuses, laW, and . responsibility Were.
all swept away together In the luiirietine of
frenzy, which culminated in the death of the
king.
The reign of reason was inaugurated. Altars
were overthrown, churches were desecrated,
the ministers of religion were banished, a
prostitute V 1.1 ., consecrated as goddess of the
new dispensation, revolutionary tribunal
was instituted, the guillotine was invented, the
streets of Paris streamed with blood ; the
sanguinary example was stpcedly followed in
the departments; neither manly defense, nor
the terrors of children, softened the hearts, or
stayed the hands of the assassins who had
usurped the functions of the Republic, and
themselves successively followed in the fatal
footsteps of their victims, to be succeeded by
other tyrants, who, in their turn, were also
devoted to death.
All men must condemn and deplore these
!excesses. Besides the unutterable agony of
the time, they gave a shock to the cause of
freedom which will vibrato through ages, and
made the Very name Republic " odious
throughout Europe. In France, the fury
of the. Revolution, wielded by the Executive
Council, and the Committee of Public Safety,
sunk into the weakness of the Directory, and
at length the people joyfully received from a
great genius and successful soldier, the secu
rity of despotism—sole refuge from anarchy
and corruption.
Mr. Stokes discusses the reason and objects
of the French Revolution, in a masterly man
ner, and shows the philosophical necessity and
the ultimate beneficial influence of the Revolu
tion, and then proceeds
Retributive justice required that the authors
and actors in the convulsion of the French
Revolution should bo punished, and they
promptly received the wages of sin. Paine,
though gentle compared with the most of his
f'ellows, did not altogether escape. lie lost
the con iidenee of the Jacobins, supreme and
sanguinary despots, and in I 793, was expelled
from the Convention un the pretence that, be
ing an mien, he was ineligible to a seat ; but
probably hiss vote on the sentence of the King,
for imprisonment during the war, and banish
ment afterwards, was the real cause of his
quarrel with Robespierre and his associates ;
mr, being naturalized, and acting without ob
jection as legislator and judge, ho was as
much a eittzen as if burn on the soil of France.
*.,on after, tinder a deeree of the Convention
he was couunitted to prison, where hu remain
ed, in daily peril of his life, and once actually
on the fatal list, until the fall of Robespierre
and his faction. Liberated in the Autumn of
I tot s he was restored to his place in the Con
, Volition, and participated actively in its pro
ceedings, lle uppo ad the new constitution,
which in 1795 alioliAed the committees of
Revolution and Safety, and gave an imperfect
' but improved stability to the government by
establishing the Executive Directory, which
was finally crushedby Napoleon. The disso
lution of the Cm vention Paine's
legis
lalive artier. but he remained in France seven
ionger, loading a life of excess; but still
tet-y a ith hi , pen, directed against the Chris
tom religion, which he had formerly appealed
1' the yr f. , tion of 111'4 and the best de
! tete, of frecdoill. agaimt the constitution and
~,, ,crnmerit et' winch he bad
pronoun, t h e only real tcpublic in character
unl Factice. against Gorge Weedlington,
svh,iin he had igten iitrered toldation even
r... 1 11g , T t han Isis
ir t its
I
re , ,,r,luct . eql, Ina new and most et
nictii.i• and popular fnrin, ,tithe oftrefuted
Chri-tianity, based on an as,uniption
If finite 111:111 tt. judge Of the juri
tie, ot the Infinite: amt a,slinies the universality
riiiw and the infallability of
imignierit. The entire IMplIllt•Itt is
••• it riot- on the,i2 false assent',
tion,; it Itellgion, which if of WO, must
e mat, to purely intellectual test-: it
the ni-t-rn•al, priiimmptive and internal
,•5 which in regard to a rrefalie narra
tit undilitited. It is ...arse tuid
strong, brutal :mil indecent: arraigns the al
mighty,a, khn Kn by revelation, for cruelty and
ty di-cards the argument deduced from
fultilment of priiphesy, front the eltraordinary
propagatii.o of Clirntianity, from its morality,
li' —if-abnegation, its charity, its countless
blessings to the human race, its redemption of
maim., from the bondage of superstition and
idolatry : treat- the miruelei fulso and the
A poiglos imposters, ridicules all biblical
fr , 4111 Plirailko to Calvary. Xenophon,
"aerates, Plato, Cicero, all the wisest and 'nest
virtinee.philo.or hers of antigaity, had felt the
mied of religious light, of a Divine revelation;
but Paine hold ow, the light of Nature was
sullieient ho rejected faith and shut
Ili. ej es to the blazing glory of the sun of
rightcousne: , ss and its genial fruits, in the order,
security and MOM/ ity Of Christian civilization,
as con - Tared with the dark developments of
heathenism and the diseord of infidelity
I is pui-on is iu it, style, easily comprehended
by the unlearned antidote is in its bitlA
pheiny, so profligate as to shock even unbeliev
er, 1 am not in BIN presence to answer a
malignant proclamation of hostility to heaven,
but I beg to present the opinions entertained
id it Is c illustrious philosopher, Benjamin
'h ranklii.. and an illustrious lawyer, Thomas
Mr proeeeds Lo quote from a
I.•tt,r of Dr. Fran and n specs li of Lord
Er;kine, and to enforce the defense of Chris
tundly by national and irresistible reasoning,
He then enters upon an examination of the
'vile attack, made by Paine on WaEhington.
His assaults on the American constitution
and the President are in a letter published in
r or i,4in 1794;, and adapted therefore to degrade
this country in the estimation of foreigners, to
exasperate the hostile feeling which Franco then
exhibited towards the United States, and to
insult that August benefactor of mankind,
who already received the universal homage of
the virtuous and wise.
I,et in, present for the approval of the pre-
Whiled patriots who follow Paine, his opinion
of our political system. '• I declare myself,"
ho six7s, opposed to several matters in the
constitution, particularly to the manner in
which what is called the Executive is formed,
and to the long duration of the Senate; and if
1 live to return to America I will use all
my endeavors to have them altered. It was
to the absolute necessity of establishing same
Federal authority, 023 ending equally over all
the States, that an instrument snine c onsistent as
the present Federal Constitution is, obtained a
sutferage. As the Federal constitution is a
copy, not quite so base as the original, of the
British Clovernmeilt, an finitation of its vices
was naturally to be expected."
So also in 1707, his letter to the the people of
France, speaking of the evil of a single Exe
cutive Chief, declares, " An individual by °lee
tinsl is 1111111171 its bad as the hereditary system,
except that there is always a bettor dance of
not having an idiot."
Advocate of a plural Executive, his opinion
or. the Pennsylvania Constitution shows that
he was in favor of a single legislative body.
These speculation: htIVO kern vanquished by
exporient.e, which has shown the inefficient
weakness of a divided Executive, and the dan
gerous rashness of a boil) in which rests the
entire legislative power. Paine was right
when years before, he declared this now assail
ed constitution the admiration and model of
the modern, as Athens had been of the ancient
world."
While we think the tone of the following
passage is too despondent, we cannot but ad
mire thii fine bust of patriotic eloquence at its
close :
'• It is impossible not to perceive that even
this government already exhibits the mourn
ful truth that all the works of man are tainted
by the corruption of his fallen nature, and con
tain the elementA of disease and death—legit
iinate consequence of the sentence of expulsion
from Paradise. But while we tremble let us
hope. Let us meditate on the past to inspire
courage for the future. Never forget that as
the constitutimi was the result of concession
and compromise, the influence of that same
spirit of generosity and conciliation is neaes
miry to preserve it. Its construction was a
labor of love ; let it be perpetually renovated
by the political affection of • this great
national family. It comes to us sanctioned
not only by, the wisdom of its authors and the
experience of .meny years,. tali, sanctified not
only by the tiltkdote of its autTaors wad the ex.
perienco of many years, but sanctified by the
approval of that great man whose signature
first authenticated it. bythe war of parties,
which may sometimes be right ; in the conflicts
of faction, which are AlWays wrong, may his
namb‘belhe ark of safety for thereonstitutiOn.
When ambitious men may. attempt to destroy,
when weak men endanger the existence of the
constitution, May his name bear it 'aloft .far
above the influence of these causes. When
the people may lose their reverence for, and the
States may wish to overturn tho constitution,
may the memory of Washington, like a holy
influence, mould the hearts of the people aright,
and arrest the progress of the greatest evil which
can ever, befall the country. The day for
inaking another constitution has passed ; it
cannot be done ; there is not enough of the
salt of political virtue left since the men of the
revolution have gone to their re ward. Difficult
indeed has been to preserve its purity ; impos
sible it would be to"toconstruct it. Let us rev
erence it as a holy thing ; let us defend it. as n
sacred treasure; let us strike down with a
prompt arm and strong hand any man whose
baseness can be bold enough to lay a finger on
it. Let us give it to our children, as full of
beauty and blessings as from our fathers it came
Paine's return to the United States, and his
conduct after his arrival, is thus sketched:
" Worn out in Europe, outlawed by Eng
land, and discarded in France, Paine became
anxious to return to America, and after con
siderable delay, caused by his fear of arrest,
he succeeded in landing on our shores in 1802.
With him came a woman whom he had seduced
or purchased, the wife of one of his Parisian
friends, accompanied by three of her children.
There is a mystery about this atrocity which
remains unexplained, but certain it is, that this
woman met the ordinary fate of those of her
sex who violate the sanctity of the domestic
relations. Victim of vice, she was subjected
to brutal treatment, suffered the pangs of want
and the greater anguish of hopeless and life,
long degradation, and doubtless perished mis
erably.
Mr. Jefferson, now President, had invited
Paine to return to the United States in a ship
of war, a precedent followed fifty years after
wards by Mr. Fillmore in the case of Kossuth.
These two present coins points of similarity.
Both affecting a philosophic rationalism, turb
ulent revolutionists, refugees from their re
spective countries, meddlers in foreign polities,
recipients of clamorous ovations, mon of words,
not deeds. I hope the parallel may go no further.
For us at least we should now know, that it is
best for us to manage our own affairs in our
way, and reject foreign proputmnists as prompt
ly as we would resist foreign armies.
When Mr. Jefferson saw Paine, the "sincere
esteem and affectionate attachment " of which
ho bad assured him in the letter of invitation,
was sensibly cooled, and as the organizer of
American Democracy, whose political charac
ter and services have embalmed his memory
in the affections of his countrymen, was not
easily shocked by rudeness or radicalism, but
had a strong stomach for a patriot, we may be
lieve, the temperaneous accounts which reveal
Paine as a revolting compound of filth and in-
decency.
He precipitately plunged into the turmoil of
party politics, then exasperated to intensity,
beside which the fiercest violence of our time is
tranquilly itself. But his day had passed ; the
moral sense of the public revolted against his
conduct, and the " letter to the citizens of the
United States,' feeble contrast to the demon
strative logic and fiery ardor of his revolution
ary writings, produced no impression.
From Washington he went to New York,
thence to his estate at New 'Rochelle. So odi
ous had he become that his person was not safe
f rom violence. old, helple& K having done the
State some service, to attack him was brutal
and cowardly: vet, I am ashamed to say, that
he was not only hooted by mobs hut shot at
in his own house Arms are not the weapons
of truth error can only bo refuted by moral
means.
The latter day' Pai no, and hi., death
are vividly portrayed
For the rest of his life, Paiiw fluctuated be
tween his farm and New York, perpetually
tortured by suffering, contention, disappoint
ment and passion His penury was undoubted
and unaccountable. Possesses] of ample means
fur comfort, he resorted hi every expedient of
mendicity, lodged meanly, lived wretchedly,
drank deeply, quarrelliNi with every one,
abused his mistress, was involved in petty law
seas, became ragged, filthy, offensive, disgust
ing, intolerable, ,u that no de-eat person
would willingly endure his society, and chrk
tian charity alone was strong CllOll4ll to sup
port those who rendered the last attentions to
tins shadow of greatness', tottering iii quern
lona imlAility to the grave.
tin the details"( bin latter days 1 dare not
enter; for there are mysteries o f ini q uity too
profound to be penetrated, except by the nec
rological examination of the student of human
nature in its lowest depravity, which, exposed
before this iniscd audience, would chill you
with horror, and then drive woo from this
hall.
lie rotinued, almost to the lied, with ever
increasing insolence and falsehood, to attack
religion and importune for money. But the
powerful tones of the ‘• Age of Beason," were
changed for the whine of doggrel rhyme, and his
applications for payment for patriotism were no
longer unsuccessful. These impious verses are
so gross that et en the few followers of Paine,
though neither nice of taste nor scrupulous ,4
ribaldry, do not venture to use them in their
weekly meetings, nor to King them when, in
profane orgies. they annually celebrate the
birth-day of their patron.
Ills application to Congress for money re
counted his writings during the war, for
which he had already received munificent
payment, and demanded additional compensa
tion, on the false pretence that he had gone to
France in a public character with Cu!, Lawrens
in 1781 to procure a loan for the use of this
country. A month afterwards, he again ad
dressed a long memorial to Congress, repeating
and enforcing his claim. In a fortnight ho
wrote another peremptory letter, threatening,
in ease of refusal, to '• offer serriees to some
other comftey. - The next week a fourth letter
on the Ramo subject was presented to the
House. The committee en claims, to whom
these rapidly recurring claims wore referred,
reported that the journal, .• were dilligently
examined but nothing was therein found tend
ing to show that Mr. Paine was, in any man
ner, connected with the mission of Col. Law
rens; that it did not appear that he was em
ployed by the government, or even solicited by
any officer thereof to aid in the accomplish
ment of the object of the mission with which
Col. Lawrens was entrusted, or that he took
ally part whatever after his arrival in France,
in forwarding the negotiation." The Claim
was of course rejected.
But the night of death was about to close
around this most miserable of men. The story
of his death-bed is a tragedy which truly moves
to terror and pity. I will not enter upon the
soul-harrowing incidents, enough for our in
structions is to imagine the revolting process
of dissolution, apparent to the horror of an
acute and perceptive intellont, appalled by the
iropending prospect of the final plunge into the
unknown ocean of eternity, unconsoled either
by contemplador: of the past or hope for the
future. On the Bth of Juno, 1809,his pain
was ended, his ravings ceased, his basphemies
was silenced,: in that forsaken chamber, still
ness soon succeeded the groans and screams
of anguish, the prayers of terror, the impreca
tions of despair, and the vanity of cowardice,
clamorous in the senseless defiance of the f . ,hri
nipotent. Worms embraced the body which
man rejected even from the company of the
dead ; and his soul, suddenly summoned before
the Judge of all the world; received a revela
tion which dissipated doubt as to the responsi
bility of the creature to the Creator, as to the
eternal consequences of the deeds done in the
body.
How awful is that hour Wllen eons‘oenee. sungs,
The hoary wretch, who on his death-bed lien
Deep in Ida soul, the thundering von, that wrings,
In one dark, damning moment, Sins of years t"
I pass by the dishonor of his corpse and the
desecration of his grave, for from these scandals
no more can be drawn, and for them poor Paine
was not responsible.
Of the man himself I have endeavored to
speak frankly and fairly. lie is dead, but 1 140
grave cannot sanctify treason to God and man.
lie was a public character he belongs to histo
ry; and to allow morbid sentiment, miscalled
charty to suppress the truth, should be con
demned as a weakness which would deprive
the world of many wholesome warnings. All
have need in the voyage of life of every aid,
and the mortal wrecks with which the world's
tempests have strewed the shores of time, aro
beacons of safety to after ages. Vice may de
ter, virtue may encourage, and both the vile
and the pure are the property of the public,
when they can be useful either for warning or
example. . _
►
The narrative of his life is tho development
of his character, and few biographies are more
instructive than Paine's. He was,.endowed
with genius, lived in aniomentous era, associa
ted with the leading Spirits of the age, wascon
earned in organizing a newnation. As a wri-
ter he was always strong and often eloquent;
especially ho excelled iMatement and invec
tive; as'a logialan he :111aS plain and striking;
fie know the human heart, bUt appreciated the
understanding - better,Cthough he has shown
that he . -could arottse -- the passions when he
pleased. His style 'was :so bold, bravo and ani
mated that he could always arrest the popular
attention; his air of confidence gave him the
conildenco or - his readers, whom ho did not
hesitate to flatter by appeals to their knowledge
and reason. Twice In serious crises of the
Revolution, ho rendered important service to
the cause of liberty and man, by startling, as
with thunder, the unthinking to reflection, the
irresolute to determination, and supine to ac
tion. Success always followed the efforts of
his earlier life in America; a grateful people
crowned him with honor ; the world was ready
to hail him as the champion of RiGht ; fortune
smiled, and he might hive basked in the sun
shine of prosperity, thrilled the earth with the
echoes of his fame, and left for posterity a name
glorious among the most illustrious of those
who have proclaimed,with the trumpet-tongued
power of truth, the heaven born maxim of man's
equality to man.
But neither the splendor of his natural
genius nor the adventitious aid of circumstan
ces, were able to rescue him from the doom re
served for those conspicuous characters who
are selected by Providence to prove that "the
way of the transgressor is hard."
The memory which might have been so
bright and glorious shines only with the lurid
glare of hell. He was shameless, presumptions,
passionate, vindictive, cowardly, unchaste,
mendacious, avaricious, ungrateful, slanderous,
false, cruel, impious. He has himself written
his own epitaph—infamous : for what infamy
can equal that of him who attempts to break
down the barriers of religion, which alone is
efficient protection for social order, domestic
happiness, confidence among men, security
for right; only comfort in affliction, only anti
dote for evil, only refuge for adversity ; chief
solace in this life, solo hope in the life to come?
Those are the dark deeds which have earned
for Paine an execrable celebrity ; and for these.
crimes, which reach beyond time into the bound
less future, crimes which sacrifice immortal
souls, the voice of ages will repeat the sentence
of condemnation, which the avenging angel has
already executed.
To each of us this vicious life and dreadful
death suggests a lesson for our individual in
struction, better taught In meditation than in
words ; and in our other character of citizens,
it is equally suggestive, for if our country is to
continue her career of prosperity, it must be
by the practice of virtue, -which is only efficient
ly sustained by religious faith.
A Republic in which each citizen is a chris
.
tian hero, is a spectacle for the admiration of
angels, the imitation of men. Such a nation
may defy the assaults of time, because it is
built upon the rock of ages. Such a nation
may this become, is the ardent hope and prayer
of every patft¢st."
Maryland Coal Trade
Last week 11,900 tons of coal were brought
down from the mines in Allegany county,
making for the season 372,087 tons. During
the week ending Wednesday, sixty-one canal
boats cleared at Cumberland with 7,637 tons of
coal, making for the season 2,024 boats and
219,175 tons of coal shipped over the Chesa
peake and Ohio Canal.
IT is said that in the event of the reversal of
the sentence, Bishop Onderhook has solemnly
pledged himself in a written document in the
hands of Dr. Hawks, and immediately to take
effect., to assign to Bishop Potter the exercise
and administration of the powers and author
ity appertaining to the office of Diocesan, and
furthermore expressing hi; fell purpose not to
perform Episcopal functions in the Diocese
without the consent of Bishop Potter.
IN Philadelphia, on Monday, the Common
Council passed an ordinance re-organizing the
detective police, so that they now hold office
during good behavior. The salary was fixed
at $l,OOO for the chief, and S7UO for the subor
di mites.
Ft.ooEii A. Pat - ort, ESQ., ha: been nominated
RS the Democratic candidate for Congreis in
the Fourth District of
GEonciE F. LERMAN, formerly postmaster
at Philadelphia, died at Mt. liolly, N. V., on
Thursday last
t to Sum lay, the :sth ivat., at four u'elock, H. H. RYAN,
aged to y,ar+.
tits funeral will take plaes on Turansr 3,4,11,117,,, at 10
o'eloek. from the residence of his nephew, C. E. Roper,
tack of Troy Hill, Reserve township. The friend+ ft.
the family are respectfully Invited to attend.
Carriage+ will leave the livery stable of William Tro
611 Smithfield street. near Fifth, at nine n'elook,
Counterfeiters, Beware,
A reward is offered for the detection of any
person counterfeiting, imitating, or the vender of one
sucli counterfeit or imitation oftWF.RHAVE . 3IIOI.I,IiNf..
BITTER. The genuine highly concentrated. Holland
Bitters is put up in half pint talons only, having the name
of the proprietor, B. Poi t. dn., blown in them, and his
-ignaturis around the neck of each and every bottle.
This delightfitl aroma. so popular as a remedy for the
Fever and Ague, weakness of all kinds, Dyspepsia, In
digestion. Headache, Costiveness and Piles, can he ob
tained from any of our respectable Druggists.
Rand ClarrioLly.—The Genuine highly Concentrated
literhave's Holland Bitters is put up in half pint bottles
only, and retailed at one dollar per bottle. The great
demand for this truly celebrated Medicine has induced
many imitations, which the public should guard against
purchasing. Beware of imposition! See that our name
is on the Label of every bottle you buy.
BENJAMIN PAGE, Jtt. h. CO., Sole Proprietors, No.
Wood, between First and Second site, Pittsburgh.
Xtur adrertisentents.
For Sale at a Great Bargain.
ONE OF THE MOST DESIRABLE RES
IDENCES Is Tilt WEST. This property consists
of a very large lot or block of round. equal to two Pitts.
burgh lots. (say 2 . 500 fret) with a most substantial mod
ern built Brick Rouse, 35 by 45. and fifteen or sixteen
towns and aparpneutu complise in every . particular.
The position, in Rochester, at the junction of the Ilea.
err with the Ohio, is one of the most commanding and
delightful between Pittsburgh and New Orleans—so ac
knowledged by all who have seen it. It overlooks many
miles of the Ohio, the Beaver, ten neighboring villages,
and a vast variety of picturesque natural scenery rarely
equalled in any country. It is midway between the
railroad station... in Rochester, not ten minute"' walk
from either. The Postoffice, Telegraph Office, Canal
Boat Landing, Steamboat Landing, kc., are just at hand.
Schools and Churches are numerous and convenient,
(twenty churches in three miles.;
Besides the dwelling, there is a well built Barn, Horse
and Cow Stables, Carriage House, Ice House, Wash
House, Wood House, Coal House, Chicken House, Sc,
and a good variety of Fruits. Shrubbery, ornamental
Trees, and large Forest Trees, Terraces, Gravel Walks,
with cu.: stone steps, and a Stone Wall In front, hand
somely capped and surmounted by a be-matted Iron Pal
ing Fence. Sc. The house is In the centre of the
grounds, with approaches from four sides, and no other
tenement within two hundred yards. This property.
including ground, cost some seven or ei . Fht thousand
dollars, but the present occupant, Mr. T..— Got - in, finds
the residence entirely too large for his very small fam
ily and his advanCed age, and it is therefore offered
much below its real value, being as good as new.
For gentlemen connected with 'Justness on the rivers,
railroads or canals, or attending to business in Pitts.
burgh or its vicinity, this locality has no rival, (24 trains
of railroads can pass the door daily—one hour to Pitts
burgh.) The title is perfect and terms etc.,.
Please call and examine.
MIME=
NICS4RR. KRAMER d RABA!.
" HANNA, BART Cu.,
A. W. LOOMIS,
ROBERT ROBB, Pa tatigh.
REV. M. A. PASSAVANT.
GEORGE Iy. CASS,
HIRAM STOWE,
THOS.- CUNNINGHAM, Beaver Co.
JOHN R SHANNON, j
WalPs Picture Gallery.
•
WM. C. WALL has taken the third floor
of Jones' New Building, adjoining the Me.
ehanics , Bank, Fourth street,foranAMBROTYPEAND
PHOTOGRAPHIC GALLERY, and having fitted up the
room in a style unsurpassed, invites his friends and the
public to visit his establishment.
His reception Room, he has no hesitation in saying,
hal4 not its snnerior anywhere, for size, beauty of furni
ture and appointments generally; and his Operating
Rooms, being en the same floor, are entered imme
diately through it.
In his Operating rooms, the most Improved combined
side and sky lights give a facility for taking a finished.
Picture, in the least possible time, that ho thinks can
not fail to make his establishment the resort of all
persons of taste.
Mr Wall's experience as an artist, is a sure guarantee
to hispatrons that none but good Pictures will be per.,
mitted foletive his premises.
The public, and the ladies especially, are invited to
view his rooms, and examine specimens. se2Blw
SHOT GUN S.—
PROM 112,59 ITPWARDs
The very best assortment oC S H TGUti 9 in the
env, at
BOWS & TETLEY'S,
No. 136 Wood streeL
B ALL ROOM HAND BOOK—Containing
I_,ll upwards of 300 Dancers, including all the latest and
most fashionable dances, with elegant illustrations and
full explanations, and every variety of the latest and
most approved figures and calls for the different Changes
rind rules on deportment and toilet, and the etiquette of
dancing:, by Elias Howe;—elegantly bound. Prieet , Oets.
Paper bound, 38 aente. For sale by
. JOHN. H. MELLOR., 81 Wood Street. Copie s mailed on receipt of the price. ee2B ..
,BONNET RIBBONS.--Select styles to the
.1„P cheapest in the sityott z - •
3826' • - JOS. ROBAWS, I.7...MazletteL.
Pm atitairtts,
F LOWERS, Ig t:exi FEA
It jC4 :::) 1(1
se-% JOSEPII.HUINE'S. 77 if w arfteet.-,
THE st) aENT eits-4 SPRIN(KI
and all +atlio gooa inak&Skirt-% at l.haPrical,at
ae2B jOSEPHift RN E 77 Market W.:
SI.TAW BONNETS Oicl Bonnet dunes,
cheap at Wholes4e;at •
se'. 1.'...11.:6.110 . RNE'5, TT Market at.
RIBBED STOCK.I . NUS and Wool Hoods,
very cheap at wholesale, at
se2B JOS. HORNE'S, 73 Market street.
ORANGES.—Three barrels Sweet Havana
ins', received and for sale by
REYMER k ANDERSON,
se26 No. 39 Wood st.„ opposite St. Charles HoteL
LINSEED OIL.-100 barrels prime West
ern, for sale by
B. A. FAFINFSTOCK & CO.,
se2B cor' First and Wood sts.
CASTILE SOAP.-200 boxes Marseilles
for sale by B. A. FAHNESTOCIC A CO.
ee2e • corner First and Wood sta.
W HITING.-200 barrels Tor sale by
13. A. FAHNESTOCE * CO.,
se.G car. hlrst.and Wood sta.
roUR.-10 bbls. Extra Superfine; 60
bbls. Choice Extra . Family . Flour, received and for
male by J AB.A. FET2F...%
se2l3 corner Martel and First atreeta
INE SOAPS.-Low's Broivn Windsor
_ - -
I and Glycerine Soap; Mayor's Honey Soap, and a
arge assortment of other Fancy Soaps just received, by
L. WILCOX,
seta cor. Smithflel I and Fourth sta.
AIR BRUSHES.—A new supply of fine
5 English and French Hair Brushes, in great, vari
ety. Also, American Brushes at all prices, lust rec'd by
L. WILCOX,
sets corner Smithfield and Fourth sta.
IaWN TOILET EXTRACTS. Lubin's
uoniewe,Demarson's,Guerlain's, Basin's or Glen's
Extracts for the handkerchief, in great variety, for sale
by L.' WILCOX,
se2A3 corner Smithfield and. Fourth streets.
COMBS, COMBS.—A large assorfinent of
Shell, Ivory, Buffalo and Rubber Dressing Combs.
Also, Fine Combs, Pocket Combs, &c.,ac,mst received
and for sale by -- L. WILCOX,
seat "
our. Smithfield and-Fourth sts.
AN DSOME SILK ROBES, Dress Silks
V Mous DeLaines, Robes, figured and Plain Frinch
Merinos, Coburgs, all wool; Plaid.s,,te. Also,.a full line
of Domestic and Staple Goods, all of which will be sold
at the very lowest rates. -
se26 C. HANBON LOVE, 74 Market at.
DRESS AND CLOAK TRIMMINGS.
The best stock:in the city, at
se2i; . JOS. HORIS'E'B, 77 , Market street.
JOHN GLASS.
SHALER & GLASS.
Agents Pennsylvania Railroad,
STEAMBOAT AGENTS, AND
FORWARDING & COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
No. GS Commercial St, arat 34 Levee.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
tm.Prornst personal attention given to Collectingttnd
Adjusting Freights. se2L•6m.is
W. E. SCHMERTZ &
FASHIONABLE
BOOT AND SHOE EMPORIUM,
No. 31 Fitth Street.
OUR WORK FOR NEATNESS, com
bined with durability, cannot be stu - passed, and
consists of everything of the LATEST FASHIONS,
some of which are as follows:—A beautiful article of
HEELED GAITERS !
Congress, Lace and Buttoned Morocco and Kid BOOTS,
ENGLISH WALKING BOOTS, KID AND CLOTH TOP
FRENCH BUSKINS,
White Kid Slippers,
Parlor and Toilet Slippers, with every variety of Ladies',
Gents', Boys', Misses' sod Chlldrens
BOOTS AND SHOES,
Of t h e best quality.
W. E. SCHMERTZ & CO.,
5 , 24 No. 31 Fifth street.
QTANDARD LIBRARY EDITIONS. -
Aj Grote's History of Greece•, 12 vols.
Motley's Dutch Republic; 3 vols.
Modern British Essayists; b vols.-3,i calf.
lientnn's Thirty Years View; 2 volumes.
Macauloy's Miscellaneous Essays; 5 vols.
lrving's Works—complete; 21 volt.
Cooper's Set Tales:s vols.
Coolier's Leather Stocking Tales; 5 vols.
The Cvclopedia of Ameriean Floquonc 2 vols.
Hugh Miller's Works; G vols.
Lce:sing's New Pictorial United State% 1 vol.
Brown's Hraminar of Grammars; 1 vol. '
Appleton's Cyclopedia of Biography; 1 vol.
Herbert's Horses of Arneri; 2 vols.
We are just receiving from the New York and Phila.-
del phis Trade Sales, a large and well selected stock of
skuidard Aliikellaneous Books, to which we invite the
attention of our customers and the public generally.
se2l HAY & CO., 55 Wood street.
WEL.SU FLANNELS.-
P •r 3.0 I, .it
J. P. S3IITIFS, Agent,
92 Market street, between Fifth and Diamond
MRS. QUEER begs leave to say that her
3011 N got a HAT and snit of CLOTHE% from
FLEMLNG, rorner Wood and Sixth, and ho ain't com
plained of 'em—nary time.
.e 2.1
F"" R CASES
Reeeived thin day, at
se24 U 2 Market street.
MIRS BACON wants to prove Shakspeare
a myth; it mac be, but there is no mythology
about the way FLEMING, corner Wood and Sixth, is
selling Hata, Caps or Clothing.
MONTEBELLA PLAlDS.—Another lo
rei•eived by Express this day, at
Advertising - In the Cars.
ER.,•!ONS WISHING TO ADVERTISE
P
in the cars oldie Citizens' Passenger Railway, will
apply at the office, corner of Penn and St. Clair streets,
for terms. ke. se2adw
LADIES' FANCY FURS
In the most durable manner, and in the latest styles, at
the CENTRE HAT STORE, 75 Wood street.
EATON, CREE & MACRIIN,
[Late Eaton, Creek Co.,]
Rave removed to their NEW STORE, NO. 17 FIFTH
STREET, and will open this morning with an Entirely
New and carefully selected Stock of (Mods. se'M
SUNDRIES.—
100 bags Rio Coffee;
20 pooketa Jaya do.;
30 bbls. Crushed Sugar;
25 hhcis. choice New Orleans Sugar;
30 good Sugar;
100 halt c Y. B. and Black Tea;
25 " Gunpowder Tea;
50 bbla Golden Syrup;
100 boxes various brands' Tobacco;
50 kegs Bi. Curb. Soda;
For sale by (se23) Will. H. SMITH k Co.
DRODUCE.—
X 30 boxes prime Cream Cheese;
2 barrels Butter;
10 firkins "-
9 bbis. Clover Seed; •
100 Superfine, Extra and Family Flour,
For sale by tae=( WM. SMITH CO.
ORFRENT—A comtbrtable Brick Dwel
ling House, of six rooms and a hall=well finished,
and in good order; situate on Centre avenue. .$175 per
year.
S. CUTEIBERT t SON, 51 Market at.
GOVERNMENT LAND SALES
500,000 ACRES OF CHOICE AG
RICULTURAL LANDS in Central
Minnesota are advertised for aide next month (October, -
16:Aif at the minimum price of V.,50 per acre, eith e r in
cash or Land Warrants.
said Lands being the alternate sections belonging to
Government for six miles on each side of the located
Railroad lines, and extending for same distance on both
sides of the Mississippi river from St. Paul to Fort Rip
ley, a distance of 150 relies; also;slong the Minnesota
river front Fort Snelling to St.,Peter,7s miles, and along
Crow river 70 miles, embracing some of the most desi
rable and convenient Fanning Lands in the State. •
From several years experience and a genertil know.
ledge of the country, the so recriber is prepared to make
good selections for those cleaning to Invest, who may
favor him with their patronage: • -
Lands bought and sold on commission. Land War
rants located - . Investments made. Taxes paid for non
residents. Money loaned at a high rate of interest,
from 15 to 30 per cent per annum, secured by valuable.
innncumbered real estate in this city. Reference Mich
00 CHAS. M. 130 - YLZ
SP - Paul, Sept. liSise—Ainwalwd General {_ant
4Altig9 A. rr.TZEIR, ,
FORWARDING AND COMMISSION MERCHANT
FOR TOM BALI '
pionr, Grain, Bacon, Lard, Batter, Seed
Drtod Fruit and Produce Generality,
CORNER Or MABHET AND FIRST STREETS,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Mara ro—Francis G. Bailey, Esq., William Dilworth,
Sr., B. Cuthbert & Son, Pittsburgh Boyd &. Ott, Betakell
A Swearingen, S. Brady, Cash. M.' & M. Bank. List &
Howell, Mangle Co., George W. mullion, Gorthy n ,
Paxton & Co., Wheeling. - ruy2l.lptt
DRAWERS ANILYTMLfORSI
Na 52 St. Clair street,'
irLdhw PI T = URCI .
11 EBB'S FREE AS M$N RR.;
ad& by Ems] 7 IL: 1011240:5.-,
=EI
FIZoN FIFTY CENTS TO ONE LOLL AR
1595 Short stre.L
MER IM ACK CALICOES,
J. P. SMITH'S,
J. P. SMITHS,
92 Market tree
ALTERED AND REPAIRED,
HILLERMAN & COLLARD
MC 0 'V A 1.
STATE- OF MINNESOTA.
a, GB A Y $ ;O:: R.,
BERM
Sew eldrertistmatts.
GEORGE W. SMITH,
BREWER, HALTOM% AND HOP DEALER,
Pitt street, Pittsburgh.
HA VI N G COMMENCED BREWING
for the season, I am now prepared to famish my
enstemers with a
SUPERIOR ARTICLE OF FRESH ALE.
In addition to my regular brands, I am manufactrir
mg a very prNsr FLAVORED BITTER ALE. put up in
small packages expr_ essly for family use:
This Ale s net only a delightful bet eragle) but i 6 hightr
room men ded bi the medical faculty, for invalids, wnero
a mild, nourishrng tonic 9 required. I have also my
celebrated
WHEELING BOTTLED ALE%
. ,
ConStantly on hand, consisting of KENNETT BITTER
AND CHAMPAGNE; PORTER AND BROWN STOUT.
Packages sent to any:Tart of tkie city. ' augll:6ln
. .. . .
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•
CUNNINGHAMS& co.--PITTSBURGIE
CITY GLASS WORKS—WAREHOUSE; N 0.119
Water street, and R 6 First street, Pittsburgh, Pa, three
doors below Mononhela ' House, INfanufacturersi 'of
Pittsburgh City Wintrow Glass, Druggists' Glass Ware,
an dArn e rican Convex Glass,for parlor windows,ohurches
and public buildings. sel2ly
SECOND ARRIVAL
0 1,
FALL AND WINTER DRY GOODS!
J. P. ;SMITH'S,
No. 92 Maiket St.,
Betwert Fifth st. and the Diamond.
WE T IT F. GREAT PLEASURE IN.
Y announcing to OUT customers and ottieu - s,thas
we are now in receipt of a very Large Stock of ooda
suitable for the coming season." Among the . Goods re•
ceived, and to which we would call particular atttantimi
is a great variety of
FANCY DRESS GOODS
Such as Silks, Rich Fancy DeLaines, Figured and Plain
French Merinos, all Wool De Liaises, in all shades, Nou•
veauti and Montebello Plaids, Traveling Goode: BAP"-
dere. striped and . plain: French Chintzes and Calicoes, .
EMBROIDERIF9--Woraed Bands, Jaconet and Swiss
Edgings and Insertings, Collarsand Sets, Alexandra Kid,
Gloves, Gloves and Hosiery et every description. ,
Shawls and Dusters,
. .
. . .
Of the Latest Styles, Duster Cloths, Bleached and Seowce.
Muslins. Pißow.Case Muslins 104, heavy Bleached and
Brown Sheetanga, Irish Linens and Shirt Fronts, Coast=
netts, Cassitneres, Cloths, Flannels, Ticking's, Cheeks,
In &Willett to the above, we are receiving NEW GO . OBEI
daily, by Express and otherwise, all of which we are de
tern:need to sell low. We heti) no old Goods to - shalt. -
our stock being all new.
Please call and exatnine.
J. P. SMITH, Age!it„
No. 92 Market street.
NEW FALL GOODS
HORNE'S TRIMMING STORE,
Na. 77 Market Street,
Near Fourth street, 'Pittsbare
R • • -
ICH DRESS TRIMMINGS, and hand
some Cloak Trimmings, in all the naiades of the
reason. SHAWL EQRDEM a large lot at lowlatioaa;
Elegant Saab Ribbon and Bonnet Ribbons.. Basionatr
Nets and Coiffures, and Fancy'Read Dresses, and the -
MARAPOSA,an entirely new ornament for the bead, .-
EMBROIDERIES.
Fins Lace and French Work Setts, Lace Collars, Cam.
brie and Swiss Collars, Pompadours, Crape . Collars and
Sets, Embroidered Bands, Ruffling, Cambno and Swiss
and Linen Worked Edging,lmbroiderecilltmdkershiefs
Infant's Caps, Waists and Robes,- Valencienes Laces,
Thread Laces and Edging.. • • -
Stockings and Gloves, of every size and description.
Large stock of Ribbed Hosiery. Men's Shirts and Fur
nish in g Goods—a full stock. Merino and Silk Under
Garments, for ladies and children. - - .
lIIILLII ERY-GOODS .
Ruches, flowers, Vetrits, _ Saatin, Blonds, Laces, Cram, -
Feathers, &0.,
Zephyr Worsteds-4dt shades °foil:mown importation.
Shetland Wool, Yarns, CheneilleAandllndtking Cotton. ,
Skirts and' Corsets, of the best makes. THE 1 3T.F4Th -
SPRING DOLLAR SKIRT FOR .88 CHNTS,
FANCY WOOLENS—Ladies' and Children's..'
it '
.
.
Our liolesiile Rooms IS,pBtaLes,
Are full of NEW AND SEASONABLE GOODS, to which'
we invite the special attention of hterelyinte and
As we are constantly RENEWING our stock, andlnalte
purcnoses on the best cash twins,' we can andlatill sell
all goods in-our line, es low as they can be badenywhma
in the enalltrr.
JOSEPH BORNE,
No. TT nirket street
. - -
fir STOCKING YARNS •at Marturacturor's - Price&
Large stork of FEW FALL BONNETS, at Wholesale
only.
5e13.1001.4...:
J. IL HiHerman Jas. Calbud,
HAVING ENTERED JSTO PARTNER- :
iiLi SHIP, for the purpose of carritug co the
HAT AND CAP BUSINEW
(Under the name and style of HILLERKAZI e 'COL
.LORD,) would respectfully inform their friends and the
public generally that They are now. receiving from% tttla
manufacturers, and will open THIS DAY, an (ph:MA*lf
stock of •
HATS, CAPS, AND ILADIERriIIiS,-.
. .
Of the newest and latest styles, to which we lllVite
attention, and solicit patronage of those desiring goo
in our line.
NO. 15 WOOD STREET,
(Three doors from Fourth at.) .
PITTSBUEGH, PENEN'A
CE.STRE HAT STORE
ARPETING, NEW CARPETING,
Brussels and Tapestry Brussels,
EXTRA AND SUPERFINE TIIREE.
PLY.
Tapestry and Superfine Ingrains;
Extra and Fine " -
Trilled and Flain Venitian; .
Listing, Rag and cats"'
CARPETINGS,
OF EVERY VARIETY AND PRIOR Also, •
FLOOR. OIL CLOTHS,
a m - wa k
Of am cllallln, maul of all widths
tthe,"Firra BURET eaRPET sTOHE of