The Pittsburgh post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1859-1864, April 16, 1863, Image 1

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    I'
1 , IA .1.::.11.T1 .-'....•
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- s a :;!,1 fir:
4 -BTOKES,
-fore the
_Allegheny County
Dehteerattle;CAub, on •
TuRSDAY EVENING, APRIL
_ _
1111
.. . ,
salute you, fellow citizens,. with
.fra,,
uta emotion, for we are bound together
aembera of thegrest Democratic fain.
*tied of polhacel - affection, - - -, and id
I f who levee his country; can behold
414 • Be r :h ve e pg ''n e ei r a ti n: b w e r i o e t . ip Pre d se o n n te e
. ,
- fie yon year faces—the fire of ,patriot
ic g leaming - from your , eye—strong
assemblage of 'the indomitable and'
Art ified, with resolutions of reparation. cite—Coh
on mOther, 'the Republic ; . stamped
' -111 70 r ea dy ter;aby emergency which may
age , or'..any Atity to which year ceentry
-ma all.you, whether to defendthe Union
age Bettie traitors of the Sou th 'or the
. ,' : ...__00 titption against the tyrants
..or the'
.No —no man can behold such a scene
, . JIB a and not feel reinspired in dove
, ' lion)lreintanred in hope. • For myself, let
nie 'rebate* :that 'While I rejoice in , this
avid ca otetomin g goed, lam appalled
by t e task before me. He who, in
tim ' like these, ventures to address the
_Pe
;impel
on thew topics of overwhelming
t
-' ia taiiib'e*hich now agitate the nation
'--iwb h indee
' - dr,- everywhere convulse so 7
-...-, r erietiL, should not, may, cannot .be un
' mindffil Of the responsibility he assumes.
Of course I do not allude to the peril of
beinii - dnapped by military
_power and
ft
inetir rata in Federal dungeons _ a fate
neith m e to be sought nor avoided—not ii
mine now. because already the tortures
wants ly - inflicted by the myrmidons of
c•••.•flowluiv.e enaged them to recoil aghast
Worn t eir hellish work, have reinvigora
• ted thpatriotism of the people, arid'
arouse the land from the lethargy of
false s curity. It is the Divine decree
that sit ation shall be by suffering. It is
in thel re of a ffl iction that the soul is
` Purged Li nd purified. The dark hours of
fe l i,
disapp' ' tine. and defeat chasten the
mind the reception of truth. The cour
age of iertue rises ander the pressure of
misfortikbe. The pure ore is produced
from th hottest furnace and the brightest
thunderbolt LS elicited from the darkest
''' storm. hese are the consolations of the
martyrs f liberty.
No, low citizens , the responsibility
to which! 'allude lies in the obligation to
condem the errors of friends and to ex
tend ch arit y to Anendes, to speak frßnkly
and:fair. ; not as a partizan - advocate, but
• r
t• as an in pendent freeman—nothing ex
tenuate n'
j r set down aught in malice—to
do igt - P ' ial justice between contending
/
- - Pardee, t - easoit calmly in order to coo=
viace, an even to court mildness for the
sake of 0 e. I know not whether I can
• conform my - own rule, for I confess.
that pom imda my perigees are groused,
- . .;40:1' ISA d ear Wronged - and ravaged
country_, e ruin impending over hec—
the unnurd ered cold and bloody corneas :
.of her slat' Nerve cap:nen—An enormous
;public 4 t÷..burthen's "-Of ' taxation too '
)
grievous be borne—the national honor
Bullied— 3a assassins of liberty sharpen
ing their daggers for the fatal stab. The
country Ohm* under the vilest wrongs
which tyran ny, in its worst frenzy, can in
act. De lation and destruction have
become so &mi ll er , by perpetual repeti
tion_ , that !th ey no ' longer strike the soul
with 'herr r. . The agonizing accents - of
i
'despair. ae, : often heard above the clash of
arms, and e loud denunciations of hos
tile partie I convulsed, maddened, by in
.testine strife. Surely Petinsylveana should
not sufferrself to be dragged into this
i
Vortex of o at perilous confdsion. No*,
as in past es, she should Stand constant
to her constative character— fi rm as her
own nioun ' s--unmoved by the tempest
that P•round her—resolved to defend
, •
the cause of conatitutionalfreedom and na
tinitional un against - all assaults, - from
- - every qua r. Oar State occepies a lie
• ouliar peg on, and, if we ever consent to
dissolution of the Union, of inevitable
and extre peril. The States North and
East of tie e protected by her geograph
icafinterpo ition between them, and the
South, wh - the Ohio :Hier river forms a
ruifil bou dary for the Western States,
.easily def ded, lint - the i- line between
. Virginia an Pennsylvania is artificial and
imaginary. Recognize the:Stnithern Gov
r' fed
...eroy, to
' orrillswltiathi next da ywill
i n
`'-''' - begin abo, er war, of - Which - yeti, Peen-
F sylyaniant,3t past :bear:. the brunt:lllre
: ; tiii)t4aleyelliwill seek refugeon oar soil—
' they will belmarsued and recaptured—our
people will resist this outrage on the rights
of a government foreign to and indepen
dent of t i li
.confederacy—conflicts will
ensue da l more numerous and exten•
Sive—the itia will. be called out on both
sides--pea ' elsewhere will be at the price
of perpetug ar for Pennsylvania. Look
to your too. I waive the disputed
question of t [ , rotection ; but for revenue,
, Itinresort duty upon imports is abso
'lntely neces . Lay direct taxes topity
the interest I the public debt, and they,
cannot, and 1' 1. not .collected.: .cellected. Ac
knowledge t e Confederacy, and the tariff '
lawkare, in ' ffect, repealed., and the mer
ilwil
1: cant& marl `e is destroyed. Smuggling
' cannot be pravented along a line of thote
sands of ait. Ships will not ententhe
,fetetiors.of it York,.Philadelphia, -and
1
' Tioston,.to y enormous duties. on their
caritfing,,w A 'they tati - enter" th ole of
...Norfollt f .C h leston and .New Orleans,
' - ' - ' --- Wi'' am:trolleysuch exaction. •- So, too, in I
regard tothe ississippi, in which Western j
Pennetkapt ' and . .all who live. beternen
the. - 4.11{0e ' i.and the Riackyldountifina,
i
ilAlik4 Septic •and vital interest. Stir-
- s'atiderrothe rt' r' ippii and you, in'effect,
'dfartilip all to - streams which find their j
w a y to_ 14.... t i, tlifitt e tWo, through the
channel fait.? t river. • Make what treat.
ier you pleas- 1 they cannot prevent half a
dozen men,. th ono. ..pgamt, troutc#trest•
iNaatztheir ; ealtatV- 4 aW.Witisel 3 Whioti
may attempt /. navigate a scream running
more than at r oesand mike, through ter
* ritory 'inhabqed by an 'exasperated and
impulsive peeple. These streams, hun
dreds in nugber, and hundreds of ' then
sands.bf tenet in aggregate length, the;
great eater ighways of a vast empire,; '
are the gifts o God for the promotion of
rAftnitatibiteo unse;-of civilization, of e el - itrA=fiftra dar not surrender them—hu
ntatiNenda, ve, . no ris4 to Kuptureithis
. higfelitihntlio -- ry Which Providence-tail
. boned tooi . i all' the people of Ihrf.vai
lerbt:the ‘. :•-------------- ---
i*
6
a' -4 tti sl.c M
f 'ike - unions nontuder •
dour,, . y. Ell Pennsylvanians, wheth
yon-asu ever '... sent to separation fro
yettraieter'S r .8 ; Belli beg also to Wask
„you'aitother.lipiestion, more thought .4
than talked of, in such event Idlers are wi
to Vol PenOlylvania,_ in coming into the
Federal Union, agreed to a government
which includt all the States, both North.
and' - South. lie ' withdieival of either
seems to be e destruction of the- Union
• for every Sta which formed part `of, it i
.„ for the am tof the Constitution ern ,
ibraces the w le. If the Atiiiglity iheeldi
• for oar man; Id sins, curie us. with thi
Cillati . 4.Ti it be for- thepeople et Penn:
Rom a& to. rmine what shall be their
- us* positiotg They have the right to
ri
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rp . Editor & Proprietor. :. ~ . . ~
THIJIFtSD A V WifirkW_Dl‘Tr7.,,... _
POST.
jil4g, - e-gi tliiitzkilie4 - jand :they have the
power to defend,themselves. themselves.. Here nature
haa lavished, with.generons,profueica, her
richest - gift af•cancentrating t in high degree,
ever ystitiree•Opindiyiditarprrisperity and
national wiiilth.:Hera is an Empire, coin.
plebs - within:Waft self-sustaining, inde
pendent;, a country equally adapted for
agriculture i manufacture, and, commerce,
abounding in mineral treasures ; a climate
neither warm enough to enervate, nor so'
cold ais to prevent A l l CAltivation suited to
a l e alteratarftipo,camtaanding alike the
communications of the Atlantic and the
MissiksWinhabited by patriotic, indus
trious• and virtuous citizens. The great
heart of such a people spontaneously re
jectia the idea7of the surrender of the
I blood' bon h t heritage of liberty and
i Union whic htheir fathers bequeathed to
them, and which they are bound by the
most sacred duty to transmit unimparied
to posterity . .
• Fellow. citizens, :1.. deny the right of se.
ceision—l deny that the C6nstitution of
the Erhited States reserves the right to i
eackßtate to withdraw from the Union at
any time, on its own mere motion: On
the Contrar.s, Phold that the Federal Go e
ertiment, though of limited powers. is a
legitimate government for the purposes of
its creation, perfect in all its parts, Execn-
Ltive; Legielative and Judicial, self -sustain
ing, independent, --making, construing and
executingita own laws, by virtue of its own
inherent force:
Reason revolts from the idea of politi 1
cal suicide—of-a contract to bind nobody
—of an agreement for dissgreement—of a
union for disunion.
This queitiop was anticipated and deter
initied by the unamimone action of the
`Convention that framed the Conetitution.
GENERAL Wasnixorox; the President - of
~that body, having-, by their authority, de
, dared in his official letter to Congress
submitting the Constitution: It is obvi
ously impracticable in the Federal Govern
ment of these States to secure all rights
of independent sorereignity to each and
yet provide for the interest and safety of
till.' Individuals , entering into society
must give up apartionot libery to preserve
the rest."
- * * "It is at all times difficult to draw
rights, that must be surrendered, and those
rights that must he surrendered, and those
which mast he reserved ' * "In
all our deliberations on this subject we
kept steadily in our view that which ap
pears to us - the greatest interest to every
tate - Anierican, the consolidation of our
Union, in which is involved our prosperi
ty, felicity, safety and perhaps our national
existence." ..
~..
But the question now presented by the
attitude of the seceding States, is one
not subject to the tests of the technical
lawyer, or the results - of abstract philoso;
phical speculati - on,oreven of historical au
thority.
We-stand in a momentous time, in the
presence of appalling mere. Are we
equal to the time and its duties—can we
comprehend these facts and their conse
quences? If we are not—the death knell
of the Repibblic is already rung—the great
experiment has failed—the demonstration
government' , -, - despotism has forever tri
unijilied ov er liberty.
Denying,the doctrine of secession, I ad•
wit the right of revolution. It is a right
reserved by every people in every govern
ment-without it tyrannywould be eternal.
Its exercise is in the sole judgment of those
who assert it.' Its vindication •is in the
result of war. But resort is only- to be
had to thitr - extreme remedy, as Mr. Jeffer
son well said, when tyranny becomes over
whelming, not ' for light and transient
causes, and only when all_other means of
redress have - failed. It is. the •desperate
and tardy remedy for accumulated, intol
erable anditOpeless wrongs. Its declare
tiou'of waris in the thunder tones of a
people united by the external pre•sure of
a crushing oppression, an& nerved to re•
sistence by, the extremity of a common
suffering.
It is not on this ground, however, that
the confederacy rests its case, though, in
fact ) , both sides, by appealing to organized
military force, soon placed themselves,
substantially, in this attitude—revolu
tion on the one side and coercion on the
other.
And now, my friends we come to the all
importact question, tokatis to be done—
I pass by the causes Which led to the con•
flict. -Neither side is retipongible for ,:the
extreires of malice and Madness into
which unreasoning fanaticti on tiath sides
often went, except so far as they may have
adiipted the cruel counsels of those in
fatuated andfurious wretches, of whom
SPEECH OP
cue antagonistic types are to bo found in
Sumner and Yancey. I repeat the ques
tion what IS to be' done ?
Recognition and just application of the
familiar_r_Mmxint - in union — there hi
strength," will answer this question. The
South is now substantially united, the
North divided. It was not so in the be
ginning of the present contest. Then loy
alty prevailed in the hearts, of the ma
jority of the people of nearly all" the
'Southern State's,' and the Vase leaders of
the secession movement were compelled
to' resort to force and fraud, in violation
of the wishes of the people, to take them
out of the Union, to whose flag, hallowed
bye tkousand sacred memories, they are
ready to spilt with rapture, at the earliest
Practicable moment ; while in the North,
patty was. forgotten in the unamimons .
eagerness of _all men to sustain the gov
enamerit in what areasserted and believed
to be its legitimate objects. No need
then for militia draft or ruthless conscrip
tion. The ranks of volunteer regiments
were crowd*, alike, with Democrats an d
Republicans,.' whose • patty predilictions
were forgotten in all-absorbing patriotism
—he only was unhappy who was excluded
from the army—the government was em
barrassed by the multitudes who sought to
serve' is the field. All this is changed;
and why? Because the administration
has abandoned its original notition; be
cause the executive and Congress have
proved recreant to the principles which
thekprofessed; because the objects of the
war have utterly, changed. When Mr.
Lincoln was inaugurated President he de
clared, under the solemn sanction of the
constitutional oath of office which he had
*kith:keit,. that he had no design, desire
rorTPOitiii. to interfere with slavery or to
invade, in any manner, he rights of States
or people. eftetwards appeared
Mr. Beward'sAiloulatidcircular,strength
eraig and expanding the President's dec
laration. A few months later Congress,
by, nearly tc=ona,resplutiou n folloired
1T1,V113 same , ageolemulyeetionnc•
g that the of 44„.. wen Pail to
setae the an promad to' WlMere ) Sf the
Constitutionesaa "the . .41*_ being
the avowed iMrtioseelif thtc.;goyernment,
it4eceired-the united 'aiiiittirt of all the
0o le of all the loyal Statft- 8R1L1444
Naetund TiOtweiftil body - le - 10 Sontii:
pyttferpl,t,hus erected hic.13 1 4.01i ,
cans -,; was Iva* one: crt Which Dettiocratti; both
North and' South, could stand, and did'
stand, because it was the platform of the
Constitution. So ittititm tite,Administra--
_VAI Anwee',.ffdtbYinlefelsepetext4;
'; lll ;44 6 'ninji incto,,the the
army
saueMlilemdieslitlicittiend DemeeratsEarkij
tEdt.thoimitelreestren g enough to defy the
source of all power, they commenced a
systematic GOWNS of perjary and tresses
•
C y
b •repeated and• avowed violations of t onstitution,and of their oaths to suppo he
uphold and defend it. In this horrid ex
igency the duty of the Democracy was
'dabs, arid was performed. The liberty of
the Citizen is the life of the State. They set
themielves to vindicete: the violated Con
stitution. They accepted the gage of bat
tle thrown down by its enemies, the' bed•
eral Administration. This war of rulers
against people, of servants against masters,
is now being waged with a reeiless and
savage ferocity which violates law; defies
justice, denies truth and tramples Upon
right. The government, :thus far, 'has
succeeded only iu dividing the- 'North and
uniting the South, in slaughtering heca-,
tombs of victims, in creating an enormous
national, debt, in imposing burthens of
taation too grievione to be borne in gorg
ipg the maws of rapaelbustplunderers, and
in makinethe very name of Republic a
by-word eif disgrace throughout the world.
Proof of theie facteis needless,inasninch
as 'they are often adnai4l. No candid
and intelligent Republican will, deny that
Mr. Seward's proclamation of thejrre
pressible conflict, eagerly adopted by the
mass of his party, alienated one portion
of the Union from the other, by organizing
a vast political body . , based on a geograph
ical line, hostile to orie — hf of the Union,
and pledged to the destruction of .their
State institutions—that, to give effect to
' this pledge, they placed their wicked and
visionary schemes above the Constitution
and the Union, and refused all propositions
of adjustment and pacification offered and
urged by patriots, North and South. Pro
gressing to the practical, application of
these theories, they besieged the President,
until, worn out by ceaseless importunity,
he surrendered principles which he had
publicly professed, abdicating hie constitu
tional power to become the passive iestrn
ment of a vast abolition society. The re
snit was soon found in the abolition pro
clamation, in the suspension of the Habeas
Corpus, in arrests without accusation,
proof, hearing or warrant, in confiscation
of property without notice or trial, in the
conscription, which laid every State and
every citizen prostrate at the feet of
_EI
single man.
The excuse for all this is an allegeiblie
qessity, judged only by those who indite
the plea. The arraig led criminals pre'
'tend to justify themselves by their own
judgments, defying the impartial- verdict
of the people now, and the historic sen
tence of condemnation in the future. Let
me address you, my Republican friends,
who have honored us by your presence to
night, and in whom we recognize intelli
gence, integrity, and patriotism—do you not
tolerate all these excesses, because you
think that exigency of national peril gives
the government a right to disregard
the organic law ? Now, let me appeal to
you'r candor--does not the history of all
usnrpation prove that it is in times of pub•
lie peril that the government, regardless of
law, absorbs all the powers of the nation,
giving as justification for their crimes, this
very peril. From Caisar to Napoleon this
has been the usurpers' argument. A tlcile
man, like Mr. Lincoln, yielding to bad ad
liirmarelater, the irrepa ' ilibTeT t "zurbrlfl3
country, as well as a successful soldier,
whose genius enables him to see before-
the fatal consequences of his con
duct.. Imbecility is no excuse for guilt.—
Liberty consists in the equality of all citi
zens before the law. The President is as
subject to law as any other citizen. How
can wewage a war for the re establishment
of the ascendency of the Constitution in
every State r if the government is syste
matically violating it. The Constitution
is our right--enr properly—purchased by
the blood of our forefathers. If Mr. Lin
coln robs us :of a line of it, even for
an hour, he may be impeached, tried and
convicted. Let Felix tremble. He will
yet find that justice doesknot steer forever.
How monstrous is the miserablepretext of
defending the Constitution by destroying
it
The general government is not an ori
ginal sovereignty, but the creature of the
Constitution, by which the people of the
States delegated to it a portion of the per
fect political power which they possessed.
That instrument, therefore, is a grant stud
necessarily limited by its terms. That
which is there found, and that alone con
stitates the power which the Federal os7v
ernment may lawfully exercise. That
which is not therein found is reserved to
the grantors. One of its own clauses ex
pressly declares ' that the powers not there
in granted are reserved to the. States re
epectively, or to the people. The hest
commentary on the Constitution is the
Constitution itself. It follows, therefore,
inevitably, that inasmuch as in the careful
ly elaborated declaration of the powers of
the President there is no authority for
any of the acts to which I have referred,
but, on the contrary, an express prohibi•
tion, in that clause of the Constitution
which provides that all the powers not
therein granted, are reserved to the States
or people, all those acts are null and
void. They are not the legitimate acts of
the President of the United States, but
the usurpations of Abraham Lincoln and
"his advisers. Even unconstitutional acts,
however, which have the form of law,
should not be resisted by force, but by
appeal to judicial tribunals, or by the ex•
same, in extreme cases, of the personal
*fight of self-defence.
Besides, this plea of necessity rests
Wholly on the fact that we are• at war.
During the war with England, all New
En g land was 'an organized conspiracy
against the government. Their Puritan
pulpits were converted into political bat
teries, from which the Republic was at;
tacked; they held Conventions in which
they declared the war te be cruel, bloody,
and unjest; they obstructed naval and mil
itary.opirations, they gave. aid and com
forttb the, enemy. In the face of all this,
le.
net Single -arbitrary arrest teak made.
Then nonian dreamed thettheConatitution
was binding only in times ofperiee: That
bold fallacy was invented by the sons of
the English sympathisers of 1812. Why,
if the Constitution is suspended during
the war, so also is the President, Congress,
and. the Courts for they all live, move,
and - have their being, only by, and under
the Ctinstitution
During the war with England, James
Madison:dully called "the father of the
4'o ii ' atitutton, was , President. I have
Chown:that hiscondnat was the reverse of
that now pnicied. Let me call your at
tentipn to•the language which he used in
Wetiesolations written by him, and adopt.
ed:bythtY - Ligislatnre - of :Virginia:
Assembly cloth explitiltoly and
peremptorily declare, That it views the
poWerc-efthe Federal Government, as re
sultbwfrom the compact, to which the
States are
,parties, as-limited by the plain
se_use t tud intention - of 'the instrument :con•
ffitutingth*tteompact, ai,ne farther valid
than dtey are authorized by the grants
enumerated in that, compact."
SO alsO the author of the Declaration , of
jpdepeadence said :
"Whensoever the General Government
assumes undelegated poiters, its acts ar
unauthorativeivoid,:and of no forteiflutt
to this compaet each 'State acceded` as a
State, midis, an integral party; that this
Government, created by this compact, was
not made the exclusive or final judge of
the,extent of the powers delegated to itself;
sine that would have made its disaretion
and not the Constitution, the measure of ,flii people may find final repose under the
its powers; but, that as in all other cases protecting branches of the tree of liberty.
of compact, among parties having no Not for ourselves alone, but for our race
commoi. judge, each party has an equal —not for the present only, but for all
right to judge for itself, as well of infrae- time, the great question is p l ow to' be aolv-.
tions as of the mode antl.eneasure of re- ed of the possibility of sustaining the gov
dress."
ernment.by moral means—of the , fitness
The administration, discarding the doe- of man for freedom. Dissolve the Union,
trines of our fathers, and ciiSsegarding the and Democratic liberty is dead--discord
constitution, seek to dazzle par eyes and rules until despotism succeeds, God pre
oar
judgment by the meretricious glare serve our beloved country from either
of a magnificent consolidated -Empire, to evil—from the cruel arms of conflicting.
be raised on the ruins of the constitution. powers, strong in hatted, but too feeble
Fax more true honor would be awarded to far effective defence, or from the' cold
the President, both now and,hereafter, if silence of subjection to irresponsible
he kept his oath and did hie duty, and tyranny I Heaven to our keeping has
are we not to say so ? Evin dering the entrusted the sacred fire of freedom 4 Let
despotism of Louie XIV, the Chancellor us be true to our trust, that oar children..
D'Agueeseau boldly said to the Monarch, may enjoy the heritage of liberty, th4t the
"Respect the empire of the law. Kings, uaiona may rejoice in the lifkt and light
the noblest images of Dilinity, are never of republican truth.
greater than when they submit all their
greatness to justice, and unite to the title
of masters of the world that of slaves of L._
the law." Undoubtedly, deSpo'ISM is
more splendid than Democracy; but the
people prefer happiness to glory, freedom
to oppression, and the rights of man to
the will of tyrants. Therefore, it is that at
the polls, in their public meeting, in their
newspapers and in social eonversation,
they defend themselves by denouncing
the errors of the administratioh,and this is
falsely called opposing the government.
The government—what is the gOvern
ment ! It is constitutional, political or
ganization, of which we are the defend
ers. It is not the administration hor the
wen who compose it. Nay, to the extent
to which the administration violates the
constitution, which creates the govern.
ment, it is the enemf of the government.
Mr. Seward well said in his letter last
November to Mr. Adams, our minister to
England :
"In 'this country especially, It is silabit
not only entirely consistent with ,he Con
stitution, but eeen essential to itrstability,
to regard the Administration, at any time
existing, as - distinct and separate from the
Government itself, and to canvas - a - rife pro
ceedings of th s. one without a thought of
disloyalty to the- other."
The source of ill our por4.-s is the dis
cord. which necessarily reaflte from the
dangerous doctrines and the illegal acts of
the administration. If they sincerely de
sire the suppression of the rebellion, let ,
them re unite the bonds which they have
raptured, let them re-inaugurate the reign
of concord by withdrawing their illegal
proclamations, by repealing their uncoil
stitntional laws, by respecting the rights of
the States -and ceasing to assail the filetr
ties of the people. Suppose even we are
wrong in these views, they arc those of
millions of voters, P' - ley are the declared
sentiments of novereii States, they- are
entitled to consideratio n and respect:
adopt them ai.d the country will be saved:
defy them and tt , e present conflict will 1,
indeanately proerastinated. Let cairn
eousideratiod take the pl a ce of partisan
passion.
e are all brethren, by whatever Oa
we are called, and we have like interests
in our common country. Letts be right
bstrunififtl
peace is to be desired; but to obtain peace
war must be vigorously prosecuted, and
every Oonstitutional means of coercion
used against those who are, at once, our
enemies and our brothers. No thought
must he, for a rri,nnent, entertained ! , of
consenting to a separation: for to restore
and preserve the Union is a sacred duty.
which we owe, not only to ourselves, but
to the memory of o and nr fathers. an tbe
rights of our children. UP CUll tint; t!
to refute. by our time, at we'llave hitherto
done, always and every where, the base
and baseless slander that the Democracy
is in any degree tainted with disloyalty.
We ,have the power—let us net' it. Let us
all tinite, party distinctions forgotten in
devotion to legitimate government, as or•
ganized, defined, and limited by the Con
etitation, and we cannot fail. Our troops,
no mercenary hordes of semi -barbarians
driven to the ranks by despotic power, but
citizen soldiers, inspired hy patriotism, to
defend with their lives the Union and
Liberty of their country—a body of inde•
pendent and intelligent freemen, sneh tut
was never before assembled under a com
mon banner, have exhibited devotion, sol
emn and sacrificial. Never in the annals
of war, has shone with more resplencLsni
glory the heroic gallantry of citizens, be
come soldiero, only to save their county.
Fortitude, patience, constancy, the highest
and rarest military virtues, ennobled and
sustained the prolonged and agonized of
fering of their mortal and immortal na
tures, which they laid on the altar of (hair
country. Their sublime sell -sacrifice de
mands that country's gratitude. Notwith
standing all the neglect and incompetency
by which they have been weakened and
obatruoted, they have steadily progressed,
and at this moment hold the moat impor
tant strategic positions. Let the Govern
ment strengthen and assgre them, by uni
ting the North on the basis of the Consti•
Whorl, and they will speedily vindicate
the sacred cause which has called them to
the field.
The high and sacred Mission of the Dem
ocratic party, united with the true men of
all parties, is to make peace with the
South—to restOe the ascendancy of the
Constitution, everywhere—to assure the
equality of the States, and to vindicate the
rights of' man
You must never forget that, Pennsylva•
nia was among the States that formed
and ratified the Constitution of the'Union,
and has always been its inflexible defend
er akainst all opponents and every attack.
Yon will not sully the emblazoned pages
in which the world reads of your patriots,
and reverences their patriotism, but you
will cherish these sacred memories, and
emulate these heroes of peace and war—
you will vindicate your birthright by pro
ving that.yon are worthy of it.
Product of patriotic effort, fruit of toils
and danger, reward of wisdom and valor,
parehitSedilii suffering and blood, crown
of the'lievolutiovary contest, is the Con•
stitution of the United States. Its con•
struction • was a labor of love ; let it be
again and perpetually renovated by. the-po•'
litical affection of this great national fam•
It fortned the 1. - niou and is its sole securi
tv. The Union, blessed mother of all.her
children ; b ntif it source of the iicat
nes' and glory of the Republic ; shield of
security ; assurance of prosperity; concert
trawl wisdom of its Immortal authors;
proof of 'their 'patriotism; lesson for all
nations and ages ; thgthappy expedient by
which freedom of di:lead° government - is
connected with nosier in foreign affairs,
each ample,. neither impaired; consoling
evidence chit there is in the human son' a
divinely inspired spirit of concord, strong.
er than arms, capable of political combine.
tions for ereeting a gtivernMent more pow
erful than despotism commended to our
affections by the tenderest recollections of
the pastt.,,. ! mingled With our dearest hopes
for:ltlfetoruturill t h e sacred legacy Orour: iiat IVF. T RR —T w IJOUNIOIRTM
aucegfitii, 'WC are ound, in faith , - SIP 14 Yet9. 0 can emPlOymiutt on
and hqiigTtAnetratismite algal:o6a CO' oar Vd=, a , t 'a a "l- bei t i best w*geg.
~ . ,
posterits l f-le*otttheetukworl4 3 light -•-•4444llaffoFAJDEcuul,
bf libtiftyrobtitihifted too ur care, thatfita wriaition worki. Loots.
rays, streaming across oceans and conti— 'airmrwl'm
nents, may beam the radiant glory of ADM% BILISBE St AND C AXIL.
equality; the sun in the political firma- A4l DIOS& Philidal hia and New Y: a ens_
meat, warming, vivifying, and fructifying t mc 7.111 d• ersitivni . par r
the seed of freedom everywhere, so that apt :1
DEALERS IN at
B. D 2. KIERCO
-
&
martrraoroorzts or
Pare No. 1 Carbon Oil,
AND
13 JE Z E
Pe 401POLdee oa LIBERTY STREET. opposite
nn's EL R. Depot.
oil warranted.
THE ARDESCO OIL awl - 4N'Y
M e trirr e a
superiorAr( ErM le Al f iD HAVE Fol
Refined Ardeseo 011
NoN•silmozkivn. ALSO,
PURE BENZOLE
warehouse. 27 IRWIN NTREET
PITLYBORGB. PKNILI
Z.ncient CI 11 Work
DUNCAN. DUNLAP 6c 00..
Manufacturer" of
PUKE WHITE REFINEb
C. - A. it It O I' -<a
Offico. NO. %WI LIII.ICKTY emasT, Pitts
burgh. Pa. corg-6ntil
The Philosophic Burner.
I.l[
A NEW 70 2 11 0 UBLE.ACTIggei
Philosophio gurnar for Carbon Oil is n ap
ready. It 1 , 06.30U003 many lidirt4ltairo9 Over the
Common Barnes.
1. It makes a lane or istalt i iiSht with Palled
oomissustion.
X It wlll burn anyquantity of oil with sdlet%
X It oan be used with a long or short chintnar.
4. It can be used se a taper night -lamp.
5. I can always be w winkedurn economicrally
6. i t is •more ensily than SU/ Other
burner. ---
7. It can, be trimmed and lighted without tr
moving the cone.
B. It throws all the white aght ahoy* Cho cone.
t. The chimney oan be removal or inserted
wiLhout toughie: the glass.
These burners are he crosinv.m :30. I ciao. and
oan b, wit on any lamp now u noo. Keen par
ono wing Carbon Gil should have a Phiturophir
Comm. Prioo coats: tier Jaren 112. Sold a
*7... Gin 1 7 01"11 Tl 4
-1 r‘ii• P. ' IT AV otvg.
PLANO DEALERS
I NAB6•N PIAIiOS4 A lIE STILL
ahead of iii.oinigay's and ell olber Pianos
matte to this eo:;ntry,.
- - -
CHARLOTTE BLUME
U FIFTH STREET
.Fote agent rm. Knabe'l Planes and Prince's
untigelled ntadeons. : 1
lIAIdt:AINS
SECOND HAND PIANOS.
XS-A CUII'HERING OCTAVE. U
-7 CTAVE. BEA dial black Walnut calm, You little
used- ..$220
. .
A 7 catava, Cbickerins Rosewood, round .
corners, a first rate instrument 200
A 7 octave, Hays ,k Co„ Rosewood, a
handsome instrunient. in good 0rder.....; 175
A 6% octave, Stodait, ftbsarrood, carved
pannola in frnot... _ 165
A 6 3i cataye. Zola tie*, Rosewood, round
fr .nt, an elaellent Piano 160
S. U octave, thiekeririg, Rosewood round
co
rne, a gold re Pav ltaePisno
6 octa r v s e, ol ia & Co, Itoetwoott 135
A 8 oct,. Stadart. Alabogony, round trout 69
k 6 oat Swift, do
A 6 cot, ()cruise. do
A 6 oct. Dunham, do
A a oat, Loud do
k 6 55 oat. Enol'sh
A °to, ue do
For vale by
JOHN H. MELLOR,
SI WOOD STREET
EUROPEAN AGENCY.
rigiNERMIAS IIL rlt N. RIITROPEAN
.R. Agent, f2il Monongahela. Rouse . Pitts
burgh. Po.. fa prepared to bring out or sekd back
Passengers eroin or to any part of the old coun
try. either b, Rissatu or sailing pacitote..
STUNT DR.AFTT. FOR PIA It paLY/tblo in an/
Past Of Serape.
Assent for tho Indianapolis and Cincinnati Rail
road Also, ti gent for tae old Black Star Lino cf
Sailing Paohots, and for the linen of SteamerseaU
int between Nei, York. Llearvool. Glasgow and
Golwas. fell
- 1111LAVIEL DIAMOND STEEL WORKS.
DD
PITTSBURGH. PA.
PARK, BROTHER elk CO.,
MANOY,LGTIM/CRS or
Beet Quality Refined °sat Stasi,
Square. Flat and Octagon, of all SUM WSJ rft 13-
tod elms' to any imported or manufactured in
this ooun try,
MI.. Wilco and Warehouse, No. 149 and 151
First and 12:0 and 19J Second stneeta. PRti3-
burgh. • febl6.lld
LASM PACKER—WANTED .1111311&-
I.W ...iatel9—.ln exp Lamp Pittierience , ' . Glass Packer.
must als.) understand ng, and pro
duce the most unexceptionable reforenoes as
eharacter and capability. No personneed apply
unless possessing the above toalifications.
ISCHIN.ERTZ &
mhll 153 Wood street.
NOTICN—PUESIIANT TO AN
or.ter of the Circuit Court of the United
&Oates for 'he Northern District of Ohio entered
December 3d 1862 in the snit <I Charles Moran
and otuers ea the Ohio and Pennsylvania Rail
road Company and others. Notice is he , eby giv
en to the h idera of the' Bonds luta Coupons o
the Ohlo•and Pennsylvania Railroad Company,
which were se:nrcd b_y a P rst Mortgage on that
part of the Ohio and Pentutylvania Railroad Beet
of Massillon, to the holders of Bonds and Cou
p•ns of said Company which were secured by Et
.firLt Mortgage n that part of said Railroad
Westof hiaseillon, and to the bottlers of First
Mortamg. Bonds and Coupons of the Ohio and
Indians and Fort W %yea awl: Chicago Railroad
Companies respectively, dint the undersigned
wilt pay to the parties entitled In receive the
Same apon presentation of the Bonds and Coupons
held lay teem respectively at the Wee and plata
hereinafter mentioned the distributive shares ap...
climb% M . Such Bonds and Coupons, of the pm
cued, of the sale of the Tittiburgh_, 'Fort - Wayne
end Chicago Railroad under the Decree of the
said Court entered in said suit June IlAth. 1.1181.
Raiders of snob Bands and Coupons ar e . hereby
required to make application for the shres of
snob proceedaelaimed by them. and in - evidence
of the right to twelve the same, to
_present the
Bonds and Coupons e bald to the undersigned at
the office of Winslow Lanier & Company in the
city tf New Yorkon ,or _ before the &h i l ly of
wiL
Aprillaffi. muut B. OOD
febVtawewd. ~Receiver
•
CONMECIAL
Arbitration committee of the Board
of Trade for Bev_ and Dee.
Wm. At. SHINN V. P I JAS. 1. BSNNHTT
JNO. S. DILAVtiRTH, in
W. III 6CREHRY.
• DAVID Mee NDLESS.
Movements of European Steatiera
•
• •
[ PROM AXISRMIL i,'.
' Europa Boston_ LiverpooL. ..... .AM.7I/ f
&soma New York_Hambnrg ~„„Apri '4.
Creole New York_JaavanagiN . oAphl 4
Bohemian Portland.__LiverpooL .... . . April i
Etna- ..... -.......New York-Liverpool -;.....April 4
Asia New Yorkr.Liverpool ' -April 8
N.Ame rlean....Portland--1kerp001....--APril 11
111i5it0w....'....-..New Ydrlc-laverpool .4pril:ll
. /MOM ZUEOPIS. I I/
Victoria Liverpool - New.2fork...Mitral.
Great East'n:-Livdrptior - MC*" Ybrk„. _.)MBtoh
SlaOttla, AlSoutham'a...-New York.-Ataznitll
... -.Liverpool New York,...Maretill"
Bohemian ....-Livertocil Mareh-11
Asia Liverpool Nz.w , ..Zlrk...Mitrollt 14
Glasgow Lfverpool..T.NCw Tdidt..;M4tiott-1111
N. American_Liverpool POrtland..--... 19
Canada Liverpool Boston .....
flammonla....Southam'n --New Yorli-1141Arch. 95
Africa ..... —Liverpool Boston-...„..P
MONET MAR ET. ' ..
(00/14/NITILD DAILY. YOE YDS MORNING PD132....,
The following are the baling and selling rata
or Gold, Silver, :
Gold --.
Silver
Demised Notes ,
Eastern Exchange.
5u23:171
New York
Baltimore
Philadelphia—
Boston . . ....
Par
Par ,V .
oar
par Ya
Western Exchange.
Cincinnati par
•
Lonicville
par 4~
Cleveland
St. Loni&. Dar
par 'A
PITTS BURG H PRODUOB MARKET.
(Derma OP THE DAILY POST. }
Thursday, April 18th, 1888,
Remarba—The weather has ..rwalergone.an,
other rhange when we wrote this reportit was,
it
raining. The money ,market remains it.s on,
settled res ever. Quotations that can
Tended on are difficult to obtain, the
New York occurring so often. Oils—The niarket ,
at present continues unsettled. buyers and - 4110 a
being apart in their views. it is selitini , We ob—
tain two quotations alike. The feeling MR ifesi
ed against landing oil in the city I vet) ,
stfong, and no doubt interferes with -Ope tmini
to a considerable extant. Councils would o welt
to take prompt action in tbenatter. Weliftvenia .
reports of transactions in the East by telegraph,
The rates at present depend principally on far:
eign markets. The stock in this market is not
large, but n number of lots ari"dally koteted\r
we note Pales for future delivery at fair ricee.
Flour—Tbe market NVE3 dull and ittactivr, ter
nl h ing only a limited amount of transwtioni,
and no change in figures, in fart, the figtirs we
quoted ten days since would answer for. ti , 4IILY. ,
The sales were confined aitozether to lota from.
store to meet the wants of the local trade.
Oils—The market was not very • actiVel theie
being a difference of !Opinion between briyera mark
sellers: crude, sales of - 800 bbls in hulk..7-Veacash
benzoic, sales of t) bbla crude at 18e.: 125:14)13de
refined,
Baton—We have to notice a fintz market f the
sales duringthe week amount to. a. lanai/kW%
500 Mro 'Thd sales_yestera l w. were 110.000
5,000 Mz a. c.
.
Sc : hates, .fii4c:
Grain—The market daringthe iveek
few exoeptions was dull, with a limited in tdry.
Wheat, the-receipts by wagon werellmited: salsa
were made as follows: red. first handa.. • 30:
white, first hands. Si 3541 40. Corn, sake • ear
loads, 85c: Pales from store, finc I.ooolnish a, oice
sold at Mlle. Oats, the demand exerseeis' the
,:appll U tV3O7Oc; salreirifrom•
in demand.
storege. v • 5,11,
Barley n M ominal. 11.ve, rates at ".900 0 A5mr .
Wiwarr—Dull, with no change in priewi: in
fact, the week's sales were confined altogether .':to
lota to meet the wants of the home market. f The
current rate , : from store were, Extra;:gg M=t-25
Extra .Family $7 NOT 30: some .very chrkiee.
brand' were solute Blade higher.
Flub—. Sales No. 1 Mackerel, $l5; 12 Bit
bbls do 48; 15 bbls N 0.12,510: 20 hit bids dcr:ss 37:
15 bhls No..3.larire,A3 75:.. bbls medium .1 4 43:
87: 10 bbls Hrilifax Herrings. $6
Sualsr—Same of 15 hhdr , Orleans at Ift.ic
10 do Porte Rico, 114 c: 3) bbls Crushed.lBe; ode
coffee A.1:0.1c; 10 do coffee B, 1413 , f,0: 10 do 0
Yellow, 13,.4n ; 10 hhds cube. 1134 c
Cadrea—Sales 50 sacks Rio at MIMI,:
fitolagere—Sales of 30 bbls Orleans at fist :
do Baltimore Syrup, 60e : 10 bbte not abolge4 li3a
Rlee—Sulm of 20 tierees at 61 , 40
Salt—Balert 150 bbl' delivered at $1
Philadelphia Cattle Market.
The arrivals and sales of beef cattle at rim:,
lips' Avenue Drove Yard 'are rather largeetbirr
week, reaching about 1,300 head, Therei3 slack
demand and ' prices are about the:same as 'Dial
:noted, ranging at from 50:$1? 50 for',Choieri:
Western and Pennsylvania; $lO DO@II for rioiod.
cattle. and E."9t - 'OO for common do: 13 very supe-'1
rlor Illinois steers sold at $l3 50.
The market eloped rather dull, but the drorkra
were firm in their vieirs.
Cows and calves are unchanged. with sales t tf 80.1
head at from $l5 to $4O per head, as teat:tali -
Swage—There is less activity in the . mar k et;-'
.ettr
about 2,100 head sold at from Wage Ib, groat
as to condition and quality,
•
• There was a fair demand for hop,. brit irkoec,
ae lower, ranging at from $7 50 up to pil'il."l.oo
t,
60
50
to
20
15
eowa and Calies
. ,
The arrivals and sales of cows at PhiLtilis'Av
enue Drove Yard ranch about 80 head thisligek.
There is a fair demand at from sla@32 for Apyaig•-
ers, end s.3 7 (gil) pot head. for cow and ealtite to
quality. Old, poor cows are sollinirin-$15&16 per
head.
CALT6B—About 50 hend arrived and sold sit .13Cal
5c for first quality, and 3./440 fia lb for seooind 8o,:
OS to weight and condition.
. Sheep.
-
The arrivals and subs of sheep at Phillips' v.
enue Drove Yard ate light this week. reach g
/ n
about 2,100 head. The market is dull, and pri ma
ran g i ng a t from 83..669 0 'f lb grass; as to . zonditton
andquality. Stook sheep are dull, and selling: at
from $4 to $1 60 per head.
DAUB & CAPPELL,
aing (NT TAILoE ►,
NO. 185 SMITIIIIIILD STRFET_
'*TE HAVE JIIST HECEiVEII.
V V tan e a n.l well Lelaated etottt of '
Spring Gootis,i
oun =flu( Gf
Neatiq.ges 414 4
ALSO--A large Fetch a
GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS,
inoludiag Paper Co/Fars, Neoh.rie,. and ovary
thing usua ll y kept by dna class Par n is&lag Sklar
Orders promptly executed. anEtidyd
JE W mecory Elll,le
To Strengthen and Improve the Sight
..... .
Tag ietill64, rEBBLS • ,
Ru.Saian Spectacles, 4
~
r
PERSONS SUFFERING FROM D E- , Jfeetive eight. arising from age Or other OFtIIB-1
es, can be relieved by using the.lltuasinnik Feb..'
ble Spectacles, which hale been well4rled hy-;
many responsible eitmen4 of Pittsburghgrid' i'i — 4
oinity, to whom they have even perfect
.04tiaf ag _•,
tied.. This eartiflemes •of tune p•erminn' Can be- .
seen at mr, office. . .
es.. All who ourehaie ono pair qt the Russian •
Pebble Spectacles arc 'entitled to be - euppiied in I
&tare freaa ehargewith thetawhi c h will alwaypz
give satisfaction, • .-., • ,
Therefore. if:you wash ~in immure en improve , 7
went In Your sight callow . • '
J. DIAMONDS Practical Optician, •
_... .manarantarer ache Ruasian Pebble Spectacle"; '•
latae, ---, 146.1;ra Fifth street. Poet Bandit R.
.
IS. M. IZE..-......11.1110 Toni ta
ITTSBTRAII FIRE BRICK MARI i"
P
RACTURTNG COh2.PANY
RIEB, GLOVER dr. CO
Manufacturers of Eire Brink. Crnaibles. o
T, t.
anti dealara In Fi, a and , fruoibia - 01ay... •
elt.. 0E1%6 3E5 of
arttab ra t rew.gh." opppeine. the P.
Paammger Minotfir .
Ordain papectfulli adHoitixl,4 • L felAtill);% •
r.
"`ltterrisiaibs Ail for aele by
rnUtn
4. FETZER,
ear Market and itat
TB. FAA L.EArrl
PM.rtc.rsda: lien , - Calf t ,, attt.r Rats 0 , 41F1
Gone Grain Leather Baltraorab. New rori twcz •
tom roads, weirevaisaxatassetroo;.
•Ti* 1 Mt
-.2O•ITHEIPDBLIC.-
.._ . ,
1 . ILIWP maxi Aur.A.rxx, ....., -, I -
, Azdtheignorpmtamitsbm_ ,
/7Modat Of'denconf. p. -= •
•,. t_lagarg..esema seartd.ansl., . '"` - -: -
' amietite•difitg a rvit: * .-- 7. -Olio
common an in- - , -,_ 4 4:' - e'-' ,-
giant to.yeatibrwwi- 2-:;a:.; :-. -..., ..., -
laze& Ana adaiteohaglot-or, Impale .-..,Berer-ms
. • ';'..ifiLtillituriandishes the ' fitaitly 'us e dais' reg
6 2. uk
ka gn MaiiinVlandestiannits" naffilly , -.
s a°° and • 1.4 ...Pnat.itin very Inatztm. ,
Xr - .dim on sad o=r+l amoral ' •
Ail ' ' ' Their
hy b cautions . to t them
that tipshe vanattead)r, •116.172
MOW*
_PO . ) Lest pklateratirt prad
tle.E. mot ow sow '^thertittmvtiVenfmoil
modest ~sad , pramegotatam ,
l'hifted id Utadiatioe, sprung JoaAeroms and
was ammo stieletty..tintesegeneCiletatot /co.. to
dollars and omits,- rarateriettpdy-, meamir eralF-
Fibttatc Utile pubiicritfeitotorenr,thntnutnena
1 7 . 70R4...and_ imarlinnli arthentosax tkat their
aaattntara - ator War previeusly feeble -
-stow mid of diditette.Madi wand. anpassammi
have been
_oreti. t0...);r304 anti:vigor by DR.
BRdilid2ll,llE,maw. ' , Wore mid after
;
3211 / 7 /111 graiirddia haVklieeneavOnmoh sag
tering: Se - , !Ilion„' dod._ - Spermatorr
hegerne=taare oangsletete eared
rai z *h.. 1,,,
Ina ver y sn Of ........ bar , inlyremedier.
with* are —Wiwi.- saiiireitompeandt
- sys,the igetabb tKinirdOWllB44lK Mint the
ramia;of "egiertnmialtreatment heiter aba.
04 =IL karrattala4o-Vsaosle db.
was asetwated tri guy, a_ lIC wzir had •
"ovitrfeetsc~irl " .af - ilien- tress.
meet lalownitaltot. tius-idth World.and in
the ilefted artateik lawis itinttWo ir with a
.We 414 ataithilltei b.giDDin , again blown
aped tibil owrvalted gamut. eno martwwlth
m ang4ttreakicbtit -emit IVO be ourtyl
areol As
•Clorumnoilmondfidi f ' Ilktired.direa;A• el. of
widalf -so ." , y., t inn 511 our oonnialea. eau '
- itea_gOloyiec I.- . • ;.hey •a#entl. to it In
time gutrp ant oan had off atyttelstomt
bYgilretattintra ootratOnkueldedkalAdviser.witieh -:--
Is von gratis to ail that a p pl y ,. Havieg..the • ad.
ventagetot , ever In; years "experpoim and i
Pellenmaton. eanewvs , be ha ;superior out
In the treatment - " f AI diseases. and who Is
dallteenratadhytitemtreitaton. agweltarrom •
=masa by re p e atabLe_altikeas,Pehliteara., kre
Prieto:WS of hotels.--ker: -- tAdoer"W'fbnitnaeld - -
street,
.:Diamond strait‘ • haute marmani. r
;Whims from all Path, Of Alio Union strfetly at. I t,
tendedts. -,- RiPet.t_to. .:.....; ~ s acs: .l -- -
, .110.1 C IWO;
id l e'
. 7 . ;- .;•_, - • ; 1- - -'...pi tti sio pogp flew.,
.
ilEitv tnICAL:._ , 'VERY..
~ i-i i - - - , ,-,: im
-vole - iiiikispremr - opo ma
101TIoare ed
2 .130N9RitifiLL:q4.154, ra,
PP Staab ad wealatoMildr Bads
-: . - • Isoontill Goaltal-
_ , Grit vet, end _ •
"Air i f e a e t t o e i i o 4.,.....-ar..:::
- . • nem and BAdder, - - - f •
Witleitlaitb‘ib need Err.":apwards of . .
' • • ' ONVIRTNtikifIi"PHYMIAtiaI
in their - - asa:practiee; with the. attro 410,1M 7_1
rtanizsetiattrto mi tat 4l = . (1 P . t-'•-` 3137 '
~i 4. 1 1CW..8' BrEGOIG , FiLT Rn • ._
area ly In &ado% often erica= Loan
few- ' and widersiMittlihreatadit i..•-I*-man..
eat.,
s t sa r aProlsitic+troesdreaetelder. extracts
thitt'ate na=setf on. titit.brefem. andneva name.
gist *oakum& an Am pregailtaah'elveath and
beinermir,ooated, sit asiewous taste la avolded.
-No iihanOqf diet italiceamism v./ant:labs them:
nor does thwrActiomintedera. with- btwii - fm l p Ur..
suits. Each wog' eonZt dawn link •
; :.4 • - ---: b
me ' rj - iONLO slO.llLAit s, r. ...
ites T ..ps cm seasonal
. --. 17.3 .2-:'. L'...3r. 'T Wessisittaig.,,,,r;'-==•="-'
Balt4l4esusei
...ocmorrhea,`OW.dal_; Phtephlet cd • .
-50 poratel' con holit v i e s Sc, :he s.- .
PilY
MOO postage. ' Mita F'.. .1: c. lezzeinur an rd to
. . , . - ---
rosatifilAVGßlAWilioViii;
- A .AoAgrAto._ TrestisoimAbitorxh#l,, mid, strie.,
um 4wissuia. Aro,in all the xatioaLstaosa, with'
.V , Powstriatiosie , W-. :•liiitt- , adaptett , for
ma Mama. without th!N4191,4 piggoiski.:e.
F';. , * -- p 1.....,.." .) pr. • 'as it , --:.•:.,•:, - --, --•—
"Buyine ?ening.
... - 61.1 00
1 40 ;00
&int. on'reooir ofhe mono
- JaßY.A. ll @moral ism : . KeeiferqtrestilVTfißes fio73,
- ?illor.filarict4.4rwcaztdßitartond.
...AgAt for Pittathrch.
Isom
a..T f' : A., o '::,kf , ifilq.'l,4 . .tl:,..Pi - ft s
TigOlN4SP.ll3l.3lll4stri2.4c'
/le
RA u .
Sw the Pequirair:Bo....%si z t,
77.-; tifit&g . 4 . * •
ALEIIINAOTIIBZ '7ECTI OF
-7:l3toone-REEttitea;zentink thoittAttielo one
hoot on4gam.hopas tad: for
78tiot! Hillict•ohet m•aoft'' ..: notor qeo.
inittietclai atter ...on to the eortimotionskt
Vviatottizaidaohlnow ktu tirritt-tillltc-ttd Ibt
to. tutlitml mist. par mina •
gotivk erolticitti fr. -4 tiblwaidairoadi fdisliia
-I.l4oAV'lMllsotfit7or,
.
_ _ Boilarocrittratiwevals.
WA: a • BUM tors alutnt4e3
thittosintfoot tt ro
.eu r vglistakiz.,. ,
. • IoW. ry bunt:lots& 1
Atof 7 • fEetaWsivotitorinion o i
II:Lott mien to i WisfatOon..
lm (SWEtrewtototit sillisittoof-tbecoitiitcreolloi . !
- aa Ma1:1PAT444.7.1; tP.gfi:4•""- „
JUNXIIIIIMIIVIIERI;AT_1101114.161.1Bvs.
I 1 TAW Iniatirartine — mritit , '-e -
Wks! 4ine Lauder
jimiCitialrAt' daktgit,./4401e , SEW- witt i ani
, elank4l6veatiolJand'assrollopitly- ins
I fine
II
ove .E.a___BAllaqtpl wad , enninear,Bo tst
Elentsine Oar Bootecoalmoral sad .tittatets.
frl al t ao r ll93 / 3 1- . 497rgah c 040- 1 0ejeW 8 oeis
as& Gel ever linis arid' dren's es , ,ltinel4
Blieetand ealtorslif altlindniald:
Be sere end tan, and at , leak ow** my
eleoegudornteirelnsikisTlier prion - Booeir else
, -
' ' 'eddies 10110 i,, 8 8 - 11 , rasjset
'doorfpuit Fifth J r--s• •
l
tuctßicoplynowatirruirira
q.,
. .641arogr4wAi ri
!nestle...Brad:lre arut Volt
Per Boltoznailtiva'
EVlger 40, ALsa Kailc•Aast
'etztlanilliateTalm,
Plate
atrtdastaintly 6t
BCO. NTREETS. Pii l3 l:nir4b.Rafras,
AnrSrecrial ordamit Oevvver *en§ desired
taken? • 7 , L. 4,21.944,,,,
P. (-). 15 1.. X- ••• tik-C .13% •%IZ ,
- . oll a InasOiti k akililusar,Unied Hams,
elmo t d Beer AP. •
Corer fdaticetoaakdc.Pho woe% Piits - biiiqi; Ps,
(110. N.:C.OOHRAN; .
Al744Nrirj4Jl7 COUNEtELLOR
ogee N 0.09 Grant ;treat, near GA Daum
House. Pittahtugh.
AL L BrignrEss ° E - TrzlisTio 'To r
hi s c a r e will mein prompt attantioli:ftecd•
leetiona =We and the money Promptlylremit t ted;
irtraiT szczirEn ••'• •
eiiicriditock of, F> >
BrgatieliPT , A HB &DRESS GOODS
CALVN)I4.BMIII4II*,4:
Bpadatattentioil latiallid to our ateickof? Moline
pied DIAL . L l / 1 4121.thatwas perobtsect,:before - the
great ittieleee to Dry Geottr.'Catieoon and aware
rojr,OpzingEloods4s , much tabor
• oemembei tbe placeiNe- 96 .14akket stre_ej., fir
tweealifth And ta• Memos& •
, • -Ni•-. 1 1
RQE 4 31D - 117{ Fg 5 -AnB4VAIN OP
aIIYSIIMMER
61 . 41 W WAND. -
" BABig ,l 4-3 141 N.zz=
U ca botiht.lo:Ciati, WO* aava a
at "Ifs!rrr944S9o
gig amervan
X ts deans iniviatod'
New. ort mail Mad prior st
J. isoutuAXDl4 - -
No. 913 Market.stotet,
ono door, from
ar MAW JIM!!
E e M i atail 61 • •
Orate AMMO*
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