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I,te ~..J • ft nl, (al l?" t° l etteru " tt • II II , 41 1,00 - ~ .. TAI3. P. BARB, . -,. -- 1% Ft T Film r - v r-... 1116110 noLY_lft M s7lx " rt n t • A 3 92.111Plare D A. fillkylevablerip .. Delivered In WEB Single want T ris :=Ww/ Twenty core% Forty (Me Hundred One time Two times.. .. Three time.. Four times.... One week Two weeks... Three weeks.. One month.... Two. months.'. Three months Six months... Nine months.. One year 011A2f13144 For one sq us Week, ofined advertiser n . All I I proportion. THE GEE T NEW YORK ETIN G. Speech of they lion. Robert C. Win throp. 1 James Galan, President of the Na tional Bank in New York, whose father was Secretary lof the Treasury under President Jefferson, introduced Mr. Winthrop who i spoke as follows: Speech of Robert C. Winthrop I thank you fellow citizens, for this friendly and flattering reception. I thank your honored President for the kind words in which he has presented me to you. I feel glad in being here un der the lead of one who, as the gentle mani who calle the meeting to order :i said, has added aw honor to a name that was alrea y associated with so much of true au tried patriotism, with so much of spotl ss integrity, and with so much of financial and commercial wisdom. You know me, men of New York—if I ma* presume to imagine that you know me at all—as a member of the old Whig party of the Union, as long as that party had any organization or existence. ',Cheers.) And that among rgy earliest political efforts, near ly thirty years ago, was a speech of this city against the Democratic candidates i of that day. I far that my faculty of making a speech, or certainly an open air *speech, is so what impaired by the lapse of years; bu such as I can make is heartily at the ser i ice of the Democrat ic candidates of to-day. (Applause.) I could not find it in my heart to refuse the request of your committee of ar rangements, secorided as it was by an . 1 'end, whom I knew so long ago as the tried and trusted friend 'of Daniel Webste that I would at least old and valued f be present as a iness of this great demonstration. or, being here, caul ~, refuse to respond o the call which has been made on me y. your honored Pres ident, and.to bear ,y humble testimony 1 tolbe cause in wh ch you are engaged. It was promised e that I should see . the greatest meeti g ever held in Amer ica; and no one ea doubt, I think, that the promise is fu filled. ("So it is." Cheers.) It is, i deed, a glorious sight —this vast asaeanb age of American citi zeus; =reduced I patronage, unawed by power—in the eat commercial me tropolis of the Un on—itself one of the noblest products o ' that Union—all ral lying beneath aco mon banner, all an imatad by a cormaion resolve; that ban ner,Ec. the Stars and tripes—that resolve, -to do all that in u lies for the rescue of our country from t e dangers by which it is encompassed. (Cheers.) You are I assembled in Unio Square, and lam glad to know that u all intend to stand square on the pla form of the Union. (Laughter and app ease.) You are as sembled on the an iversary of the day on which the Coast tution of the United States received by the attesting signa tures of its framers, and I rejoice:to be assured that you ar all resolved to up hold the authority a d vindicate the su premacy of that onstitntion. (Ap plause.) Yes, my friends, in yonder city of Philadelp a, which we are glad to remember, n this connection, was also the birth lace of George B. McClellan, (cheers on the 17th day of September, 1786, hat sacred instru ment was perfected, which has secured union and peace to our land for more than seventy years %et, and which, if this day's ratificati n shall be success fully carried out; ay still, I fondly hope and believe sec re union and peace to our land for seven times, or 'even for seventy times save ty years to come, (Enthusiastic apple se.) You are as sembled, too, on the anniversary of the day when the nobl candidate whose nomination you aro bout to ratify corn.' pleted his great wo k of resetting the capital of his count from the confeder ate hosts by the glori umpvictory of An. tietam. You have of forgotten those memorable days of September, 1862. • when the fate -of ur republic seemed just trembling in t wales, when al most all men's hearts were falling them - for fear, and when t o gallant McClel lan, forgetting the tin oerited indignities to which he had jhs been subjected— forgetting everythin_ but his country's dangers and his ow i 'determined= to sf4nd or fall with Sts` ; • ag, and responding without a murmer or • moment's delay . Se the personal appea of the •President, gathered up the scattered fragments 'of ,his brave, but broken • rmy, reorganized their shattered battlions i as by the waving of a magici n's wand, drove back the invaders ac ioas the iPotomite, and once more sec. ed the safety of Washnlgton • and of the Government.: (Loud cheers.) Iw .. d not, disparage the successes which h: ve boen achieved on other Elva and and r other pommand - era. We all reinernb :1 with grateful. ad. : .sairation- the splendi: victories which_ haveleen-woN pi - th • 'Mud and op i the sea, by 'Meade, and chart, and Stier . . man; by Porter; and:: omega Ffinsl6 4 4; and the 'heroic Parrag, i t, and byho ma- Jay others of our generals and Admirals. , ill honor. o the heroes of Vickaburgand Chattanooga, of Gutty rburg andAtianta, . Or /Labile bay, and ot the hlesired waters, _ • 'whatever they are called, which at last Ingulfed the Alabama,l and all gratitude to the; Soldiers and sailors by whose brave-hearts and stow arms those vie-: tones were achieved. (Applause.) But i , Bonk of them have ,clipsed,. or even '. Abitiipie gra 'brilliant r do`rd of tae Army - ' oEthe Potomac.-and -i s leaders 'during - thtise , eventful , • days Which, ended .at tiontkMMOitiikeptr VelairLi, For that gallant:leader:it is•glo . enough.. that it may le said of, him, as thelestrit-af fat brief but alniottt ' mint nietoleCalnintigi A, _ - )Pfatdynn in the Ind I e, c 1( the 'Con , - =Won, )4 1 "ttkia, .Ig, ;-;7l**lini'-1 ; -Adriorts•aud: peanut , ::ne d '.: to: ence tz t - ::, , -....-.:;,.Or*lts seve ty-1111101rth ... y„ - 1 1)e:86'144—the capital f his'' ''ion4 . . 2') 2.10,er,er , i...; .- , i. It:'/....i - 2 i ~,', t, i •.-i. i. n :.": • - .311 11 pa ',7ltt•il •••• ..1 i", .r. L. 1 Editor aad Props But, who of us is not ready to accept the omen that it 'reserVed Tor him who saved the capital on that day to save the country itself at this? (Loud applause.) And now, fellow.eitizens, you have not forgotten that this was the last mili tary service which General McClellan themited to.perfortn, the defense 95 of Union. You have not forgotten 45 that, only a few weeks afterward, he sae 50 was summarily deprived of his corn -76 mend, and sent into that retirement from 56 which no patriotic offers of his own, and 90 K 1 no persistent solicitations of his friends, 're have Prevailed --on the admiatittion to recall him. But the day is at length at hand when the people of the United States have the constitutional opportu nity and the constitutional right to revise and reverse the decrees of the adminis tration; and most heartily do I hope that this one of their decrees, if no other, will be revised and will be reversed. (Applause.) Most heartily do I hope that, disregarding all consideration of puttee and platforms, and with the sin gle and simple view of restoring Union and peace to our distracted land, the people of the loyal states would resolve, by their votes in November next, to take upon their own shoulders this leader whom the rulers have rejected, and to bear him triumphantly into that same White House from which thg rejection has emanated. (''We will, we will." Cheers.) That, as I understand it, is the proposition before this meeting; and for one, certainly, I gladly avail myself of this earliest opportunity which has been presented to me to exprelis my approval of it. (Cheers.) Young men of New York, and of the nation, will you not take it in special charge, and see to it that this is done? ("Yes, yes.) The candidate whom we support is eminent ly a young man's candidate; the young est in years, I believe, that was ever nominated for the presidency; but who has won more laurels in the field, and shown a discretion and a wisdom in civ il affairs, which would have done hon. or to the oldest. It ought to be the pride of Young America not only to see that he has fair play and a generous support, but to secure him an opportunity of showing what young men can do, and are destined to do, in the high places of the land, as well as on the field of battle. (Loud applause.) And yet let me not seem for a moment, fellow-citizens, to put the great issue, of the, approaching election on any personal grounds. The question before us is not about candi dates, but about our country;" not about the relative claims or merits of Abraham Lincoln, and George B. McClellan, but about the nation's welfare, and the na tion's life. (Three cheers for McClel lan.) In whose hands will that precious life be safest ? That is the question; and I do not forget that it is a question of opinion, on which every man has alight to form, and every man has a ight to follow, his own opinion. I do not tosget, either, how many honest and excellent men, in my own and °thereat:is of the land, with whom I have heretofore delighted to take counsel in private and in public affairs, have come to different conclusions from my own. But I have not been able to I resist the conviction, my friends, that the best interests of the country, and the best hopes of restoring the Union of the country emphatically and urgently demand a change of ailministration at the approaching presidential election. (Cheers.) I cannot resist the convic tion—or certainly the deep and earnest spprehension—that if the policy adopted and pursued by President Lincoln and his supporters-during the last two years is to be persisted in for four years to come, we, shall find ourselves plunged irretrievably into the fearful and fathom less abyss of disunion. I can enter into no detailed discussion of that policy on this occasion, - nor can it wisely be dis cussed, on any Occasion, in the hearing of our southern enemies. I cannot only say, that in my humble judgement it has been a policy fatally calculated to divide anti weaken the councils of the North, to unite and concentrate the energies 01 the South, and, beyond, all question, it has accomplished that result, if no other. Why, my friends, the all important end of re-establishing the Union has been almost stint out of sight; so mixed up and complicated has it been, with schemes of philanthropy on the one side, and-with schemes of confiscation, sub jugation, and extermination on the other. Instead of the one great COnSli tional ideas of restoration, we have been treated to all manner of projects and theories of reconstruction. There would ahnoAt seem to have been a willingness, in Some quarters, to vie with our ene mies themselves. in ; discarding and de stroying the, old Constitution of our fathers. At one time, we have had Solenin propositione for annihilating whole states, whole systems of states, and blotting out their stars from the national-banner. 4t another, we hays, heard open deplarations from the high - Places of the lithd, that we never again permitted to have."the Constitution as It its and the Union as .it was." Good heaven, what else are we fighting for ? What otherUrnion are . we striving to es tallish? What 'oilier Constitution are we straggling to vindicite't What other - Constitution are our rulers ariddegisla tofs solemnly, sworn to sappOrt ? We might expect such declerations as these from rebels in arms against the govern ment, but *ho can listen to them from loyal-lips, without recalling the warnliat words of a great English statesman and orator, tv-hen , ire bade us "look with hor ror-on-those. children of .their country who are prizinpt rankly to hack that aged parent to pieces, and put him into the kettle of Magiclans, in hopes that, by their poisonous weeds and wild incanta tiontritheysnay.regenarate the -paternal CortatitTactuAndrenovate their. father's life."igenvert sa r ve us from any such egenerati6if red - notation as that. (Great applause:) 3 times a thine a Daily. I week, week, 1 Sqr. 1 Sqr. 1 Sqr. 1 70 2 90 1 4 Oa 2 600 2 7 60 a 9 16 4 19 85 6 18 00 ,9 2 1 89 10 e one time each • te trusineu of the cements in exact 8 times 2 times, 1 lime Y. I a week I a week I a week • 4 70 00 8 60 6 00 16 76 10 60 24 SO 14 00 4e a 90 - 3 nm. rtion 50 cents insertion... - 76 As, per trip.ol 00 srator , s no- wean know. that it was ties aucCess of thibßepalblican partY, with its alleged sectional ; organization and sectional objects, which furnished the 6iiginal octattion, fonf - Yeers ago, for that atrocious and ungodly aMitult upon our government which initiated this gi--, gantic. Civil war. ("That's , so:" ApL' please.) We•all know that the seces sipn letttlete of the ?Quit, who s long been meditating te movement in vain; exultedin the election of ''Abts.-1 - hatniAttnciltr at that day—as Ifully be lieve they will exult again, if he is re chosen in Noyember-r-because it. sup plied the very fuel which was needed for' kitidlilt 'this awful 'conflagration. nal :math upon' the government can - never-be characterized in toms ,9f too Ewv . iltkcwoippli kt oilo N fall, if railing at the rebellion or Its atithois''ivisitld do It n T.Pc'dAhTiry.ening—if it. _would be ahytntnitettdi than' baying' . at yonder inFooncl ) wilttlfl ltifn yott-' in do inouholng itsmathe votabulary Of con po4 Vattdeitlignatm rAnt ~we all WWOO* 941,WILAR No roam nobly e nu ~rte,4 whaolit on of • • r i' '1 lirl%ll 1161111 ud Laslt , aurrr-n-n ;•3:11;1.;: party, to repel that assault; and that they have sustained4he government—Demo crats, Republicans, and Conservatives alike—with all their hearts and hands, pouring out their blood and money like water from that day to this. And the loyal states will continue to sustain the powers that be in all their constitutional action, until the end of their term, what ever may be the result of the pending election—not all of them, by any means, as approving the policy of the adminis tration but all of them as recognizing its rightful possession of the authority of the government. But no considerations of ; loyalty, or of patriotism, 'call upon them to go further. ("No," and cheers.) No considerations of loyalty call upon into prolong the supremacy of a party whose act and part it has so eminently been to extinguish almost every spark of Union sentiment in the southern breast, and to implant there in its stead a des perate and defiant determination never to be reconciled, never to submit or yield, never again to come under rulers whom, reasonably or unreasonably they have learned to hate. No considerations of patriotism call upon us to renew the official term of an administration whose peculiar policy, by inspiring this spirit of desperation and hatred, has rendered the victories of our armies a hundred. fold harder to achieve, and has robbed them of so many of their legitimate re. sults after they have been achieved For never, my friends, do victories cost so much, and come to so little, as when they are wrung from a foe who has been goaded and maddened to despair. This sort of goading and maddening process may answer well enough for increasing the sport at a bull fight, but It has cer tainly involved us in at least one Bull Run. ("Good," laughter, and cheers.) And I fear the day is still distant when it will secure us that sort of victory which we can reasonably hope to see followed by union and peace. Nothing could be further from my pur pose in these remarks, than to cast the alrglhest imputation upon the patriotism of President Lincoln, or any body else. No one can doubt that he wishes to write his name on the roll of history as the restorer of the American Union. It is a title which might satisfy the most exalted ambition. Ile may well be ex cused for his eagerness to remain in office until he has accomplished the work. He may almost be pardoned for wielding the enormous patronage and power which belongs to the executive in a war like this for securing his own nomination and his own election, if he really be lieves he can accomplish It. And those who are of opinion that he is just %bout to inf.:Teed—whether within sixty days or ninety days—before Christmas or after—are right to give him their sup• port. We would all support him if We were of their opinion, for we want the country saved, no matter who is to have the glory. But President Lincoln is ev idently looking forward to another title in the history of the future. He desires to be enrolled as the great liberator of the African race—a glorious title, also, if it could be legitimately obtained. But, .1 greatly fear that in aiming at the see- I and he has lost the first. No man, I think, can help perceiving that he is so embarrassed and entangled by his pro... donations, and commitments, and pledges in regard to slavery, as to be al most-incapacitated for bringing this ter. tilde struggle to an early or successful termination. (Applause.) He has con trived to weave a Gordian knot, which he hiresell is unable to untie, tied which the truest and sharp , 'st swords seem thus Gtr powerless to cut asunder. No one can have loteotten, certainly, that re cent and extraordinary manifesto "To whom it may concern," in which, in reply to the first suggestion of peace, he felt obliged to insert a condition which discomfited his best friends, and render ed all such efforts hopeless. Fellow citizens' we need a change of counsels. ("That's true." Applause.) We need a change of counselors. We need a return to the policy on which the loyal States first rallied so unanimously to the suppression of the rebellion. We must go back to the principles embodied in the resolution adopted by the Con gress of the United States, not far from the fourth day of July, 1861, and worthy to have been adopted on that hallowed anniversary itaelt, adopted is the Senate, on motion of Andrew John son, and adopted In the House of Rep resentatives on motion of the lamented Crittenden. That terrible repulse at Bull Run had then just taught us wis dom. Would to H. aven that wo had not to soon forgotten that lesson! If we had never departed from that resolution -if "ease had never recanted vows made to pain!'—l firmly believe that union 1 and peace would have been our blessed portion at this moment. You all re member that resolution. It embodied the simple policy of a vigorous prosecu• ,boll of the war tar .? DO porpose of subju gation or aggression, in uo spirit of re venge or hatred, with no disposition to destroy or impair the constitutional rights of any State or any section, but for the sole end of vindicating the Con stitution and reestablishing the Union. (Cheers.) That was the policy which would have divided the South, and! which ought to have satisfledand united the North. Let me rather say. it was, and is stil, the policy which steadily pur sued, under the lea 'of men against whom the whole ffouthern heart and niind, and soul naive not beConinhope lepily embittered and poisoned; under the lead of men, too, who are not ashamed to avow that readleAs Tor re conciliation which is the. highest ores , ment of the Christian character, and= without which we cannot rely on the blessing of God; this, I say, is thepolicy which thus pursued will again, if any thing earthly ever will, unite both North and South in the bondsof constitution al fellowship, and exhibit our 'Country and its flag once more in the face of all the world, with "a star for every Stale, and a State for every star." Ziyhat a glorious day that will be, my country men, for us and all mankind. . If to yearn fur it, and praylor c it, he, ,a sobject for reproach as exhibiting toe - that a ; willingness for peace , ) am the guiltiest men alive. (Cheers.) • And how' can we hasten that day more egectively than by supporting the candidate who is the very impersonation of the policy I have At/witted? ~Dtir *obi cant/14104aBen forced and' illustratedt it a thousand fold betterthan any one-else can do, Leh* memorable dispatch from Harrison's Landing; in his brilliant oration at West Point,_ . and still, more recently in ilia' admfrabla lettee_ii§coiting the nothiii lion we are assembled:4k) ratify, - (Three" cheers for General 'McClellan.) These are the true platforms Trot the'llopr; TO not for the:hour only, butt tbr Ull'titsr e ., (That's ‘so.") We need no other, 1 and some of us, certainit iltitir - kbognize • AlllAitir.i Voice i i rgineere g enough.") I rejoice to - libel - 1 mayorn thelmapbji,irnti., *ems and golden:sen tences emble,ioned on the cotentlifei. , .a, " /1 . 1. ;1.1 1),1 vs:.4 at& 143 - 4_440i 4 1 .0.. banners and illuminations around me. Let us cherislt them - in our memories and write them on all hearts. (Ap plause.) Yes my friends, if anybody is disposed to cavil with you about your platform, tell him that General McClellan has made his owri platform, and that it is broad enough and comprehensive enough for every patriot in the land to stand upon. Tell him that you should as soon think of holding General Mc- Clellan responsible for not taking Rich mond, when he was so rashly interfer red with, and so cruelly stripped of his troops on the right hand and on the left, as you should think of holding him res ponsible for any equivocal or any une quivocal words of Chicago conventions, or any other conventions, which malic ious partisans'may attempt to assert to his injury. Tell him that you should as soon think of the brave'Army of the Potomac having been frightened from following their gallant leader to the field by the quaker guns on the roadside, as of his supporters for the presidency being scared from their position by any paper pellets of the brain, Wise, or other wise, which ever came from the mid night sessions of a resolutibn committee in the burly-burly of a national conven tion. (Cheers.) General McClellan, I repeat, has made his own platform, which. ought to be satisfactory to everybody.`_ His letter of acceptance especially, ought to be hailed with delight and'with gratitude even by those who are too far coranditted in oth er directions to give him their support. (Applause.) It is worth an army with banners to the cause of the Union. It has the clarion ring to rally a nation to the rescue. (Cheers.) It speak,, too, in trumpet-tones to our deinded bfithern in rebellion warning them that there is to be no cessation of hostilities upon any other basis than that of Union, but pro. claiming to them that the door of recon ciliation and peace is open on their re suming their allegiance to the Constitu tfon and laws of the United States. And, certainly, my friends, that letter of acceptance has turned the flank of his revilers as handsomely as the gallant Sherman has turned the flap* of Hood at Atlanta. (Laughter and applause.j It has taken :away every pretext for those indecent and unjust insinua tions against the patriotism and lov alty of all the opponents of the adminis tration, which have fallen from so many ruthless partisanpens and do Many reck less partisan tongued. It has destroyed every pretense for the imputation that there is d party at tile North ready for a precipitate and ignominous abandon ment of the great struggle in which we are engaged, and willing to entertain propositions incompatible with the rea toration of the Constitution and the Uni on. The Union—"the Union at all haz ards"—is as distinctly the-whole import of George B. McOlellan's letter of the Bth of September as "the Union in any event" was of that Farewell Address of George Washington, whose promulga tion is so nearly associated with the day on which we are asset lea. (fond cheers). "The Union-it must be pre served"—is as clearly the maxim of M. Clellan in 'll4 as it was of Andrew Jack son in '32. (Applause). A Democrat. is President saved the Union then, and I believe a Democratic President can save the Union now. (Cheers). Let us rally, then, to the support of that great ' principle of unconditicnal Unionism which is common to Washington, Jack son. and McClellan. Let us go for the the whole flag, and nothing but the flag. (Cheers) Let us vindicate the rights of free opinion, of free speech, of a free press, and of free and unawed elections , (loud cheering), even in a time of civil war, and allow to all the world that we are, and still mean to be, a free people. (Voice—" We mean to be.") Let us bring no railing accusa lion against the patriotism of others, and let us treat all which are brouclit against our own patriotism with the con tempt and scorn which they deserve. (Applause.) Let us furnish all the men and all the money which are required for the aid of our gallant defenders in the field, and bear the welfare of our sol diers and sailors ever uppermost in our hearts. And as we throw out our Mc- Clellan banners to the breeze, let the world still and ever ho, alike to friend and foe: "The Union is the one condr tion of peace. We ask no more. But the Union must be preserved at all haz ards." Mr. Winthrop closed amid loud ap- Valise, followed by three cheers for the speaker. Rebel Guerril!a Raid on the Florida Accounts received from Mosquito In let, Florida of a late date, state that several parties of rebel guerillas, belong. ing to Major Dickinson's cavalry, made a concerted move ci on the inhabitants living near the seaboard, and captured a number of them, the charge being that they had taken the oath of allegiance to the United States Government, and had been in the habit of trading with hlckek &ding vessela on that station. One ob ,ject of the raid was, however, to wpWy their ranks. with oonacripts, as well as theipunishinent of those who have been in open ,and friendly : intercourse wits . our forces.. Among those captured were' several deserters from the rebel arm in,v who, until recently, had succeeded eluding their vigilance by camping in th e , swamps pordigUOUS to their residen• oea. Those.living under the iminediate protection of our naval forces were un molested. , The guerrillas, Lot content . with having captured, all the male in habitants withia.certainlimits, convict ed.the scheme by robbing their families' in several instances of everything on the premises they could conveniently carry away. Information from other parts of Volusia and the .adjacent counties. Is to the effect : that great, .clistresa prevails among the poorer clatisee of ;_PenPle in consequent* of these raids., Who United States schooner George )41anglian, is now performing i blockade duty off. this point, bra Was 'unable to render any assistance, not being aware, of the raid until after its terminations. Tait Secretary of War hal ordered that all Slaves who are:brOught to the re cruiting rendevottis iiithe'several slave States, and found physically disqualified =for military , sertrice,:and who do not del: sire to return .to their masters, but seek military protection, . Abell not be rejected, but enlisted and mustered into the.Liauted States service, with a viewqf transfer to the Quartermaster's Depaif latent / I RA Elow r g9,4 Xt 4u cam that fell in gcotland last „yes l / 4 ,5 / Fcpulgailleil hy. . large quantittee of puce stone;' were • Q AMO,I4 Thg crater em itter pumice sto ne' Yid the blar stOph i rijs substances which ore the, ju O.ll` q j:. ,Atti ao 1•7/ mte pang flost _ - ----...-.-"l':''- '‘, ' y z - . • ' ' 1 1 ~\Jjk!,./V . - ---------,---e::4,,.-:.,:,,,,,,4- 4•••:/.'; :!:: ' al , _ 0/4• • ~......r_ -.....= - ---. ...''..... ''"A. - • -::--- ... F .. .......7 - --/ - k:. -.7. ---- ' 4 ' - ' .."'---- - <--- -C-v:i PITTSBVIIGHe FP/MAY 11 .10ENTNIII, .SEPT. 23, 1884 NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. The increased and increasing advance on paper compels us to advance our rates of subscatp tion. From and after this date, our terms will be as follows Single subscriptions by mall, $9 per annum. Delivered in the city at 20 cents per week. To Agents $2,50 per hundred copies. Single copies 4 cents. FOR pßEiinErNir .77 GEORGE ,B, MeCT,ELLAN OF NEW JEESET FOR VICE PRE,SIDENT GEORGE H. PENDLETON OF OHIO POR CONOR4I3B-XX/I DISTRICT JAMES H. HOPKINS. STATE SZNATS. JONAS R. McCLINTOCK EMPRZSENTATIVEB. JOHN S. COSGRAVE, WM. Ms.fREARY, J. F.EVa - ICHA,M, VICTOR SCRIBA., C. MILLER, J. N..EWING. PHOTHONOTARY. JOHN FULLWOOD notary coulassioltaß CHARLES BRYSON. CORONER WM. NOBLE. Di FLBOTOB. CUT Foc4. SA.M.I.TEL ISIcCAULEY Organization of the DemOcratie Execu tire Committee of Allegheny County. THOMAS DONNELLY, of ollins Township Chairman D. H. HAZEN", of Pittsburgii, Secretary. A J. BAKER, Asst. See , y. JA.M.E6 IR WIN, '• Treasurer. IL - HAZES, a - Ant. Treat. Commit:et on Finance. O Zag, D A Patrick, ll H Hssem O ihmsen and John Mackin. Committee on Publu Ifteetingi. 00l Jae A Gibson, Joh"! HBalley, ea% and O McGee, mtg. C.mmillee on Printing and pubitc Documents. D H Hazen, John H Irwin and John Quinn. Committee on Naluralt4lion. John R Lame, John Pdatllarria nn. John Heldman. The tbacen4ltteefileet every gvednesday and Satntday, at If omlock, s. m., at the l bemocratic' liendquarters, corner of Fifth Smithfield st reets. The rooms of the committee are open d.y and night, for the distribution of Public Documents. Half Sheet We regret very much at being com pelled, for the first time, to issue the Pot this morning upon a half sheet; this is in consequence of ottr pnper-maker's machinery being out of order, an acci dent over which we, of CO4 6C, had no control. Bc Assessed All who desire to secure a vote Int the s,xond Tuesday of October should see they are assessed. Do notneglect this., • • ~ I MPORT AI NT MOVEM &NTS CON T EMPL ATE D." For the hundreth time, since General . Grant took command of the"arrayin gmia, the War Department awn:Mucus that "important movements[' .are con templated., Upon the success of' Gen. Grant the Administration depends, and, hence the necessity of keettlfrig him prominently and iavorably before , the people. To accomplish its lintse PurPra es, the Administration is midentring'l6 filch from Gen. • Sheridan the credit of h.s 11145'14story Oyer the rebels in ViT-' ginia, in order to sustain Gen., , Frant, anti inakt ( iiii for 'his farclitiekilittleaptur : , / in Riehntord. , ' I /hot the _Administra tion ae s Sts singularly ertaiggl,l443/rant';" from the day he took emraugad, of OUT e tstern army, It has done e.i'erypting in. its power to sustain Tim, 'and •it -is brit fair * to Infer that he Is entirely willing to sustain it. - Rut in doing- •so he makes, 'sbVldttrangb' annclunCeritfentli." i Firstr-of all he.Anclared—or the War-IDeil,rtialent did for lint—that* 1.1;10-Iiiht way to Richmond •overlartd4 if tit Wok. him all Bumbler.; and so greai: was his 11.,acrx that he yropld, z not, ttilse o .l. : ltne bury • his dead. The suriamer is gone, Richt:aim-ad is `not ilatendittTi*Lft him self, it in Washington or New York.' Bet before leaving the. army the Prat Department publiaßed a statement oyez Grant's nanteethat [the rebel -tarmy was 4atag.tly dose:alert., shout .regiment a 'day; then came emother:latermit that. notwithstanding these destartliiits "lie wanted anotaLet 'handfed-tgdlialld''''th: takethe rebel Capital; and, upon ;Weis of thatte advised • lbw Adminfaira-, ton to enforce ''_the 4 Oatt for tip hundred thitusind, heeausa6ll,6igglistape t i e d. Now, if the iebebrifirelhatneio44olo: a-day by.doaertio. all Nikakieddo wait afely Igtifdt4" . ,Tonger and we , laavßit. ) 49 l ;, et 4/V. - 49 3 4.71 Bat th'ese , istslaments are mere fal#rica l At~ :I,r.;G);~,yP.JL'G-l'H.t.P . 6 01 at 3320 0::4 trl4fifiC3ll r• : - - ,S , „AGUrf ,1 - ktv,l9l:l Etl . -41,riv ..40.14.Cd. ihedt A Draaii • , It is usin g his name in a most unwl rentable ' manner, and we are surprisi ,tbathe permits it: It may be that he re( under heavy obligations to Mr Linco) for his present position; if so we woul not be at all surprized if the imports' movements talked of meant that Gram was about to take the stump in, favor his patron,• and let Richmond take ca, of itself until after the election. THE PRESIDENCY. Another Important Change. The Ann Arbor (Michigan) Journal', one of the ablest Republican papers in that State; !las taken the names of Lin— coln and Johnson from the head of Its columns and substituted those of George B. McClellan and George R. Pendleton. In justification of its course it says:— Public sentiment in favor of General McClellan has been increased in force very rapidly during the last thirty days. A large majority of the people seem to be strongly impressed with the necessity of abandoning the Abolition policy of President Lincoln—of (Milne back upon the Constitution as it is, as the only bond of Union between the States, and of electing a man of military experience, wisdom and regard for the Constitu- lion; a man who is ardently devoted to the Union, and is capable of prosecut ing the waranceessfully and determined Iy to restore the Union as it was. I Being well satisfied with the nomina tion of General McClellan, and with the resolutions constituting the platform adopted by the Democratic National Convention, we shall 'give our support to that ticket, and have taken from the head of our colums the names , of Abra ham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson,and substituted in their places the names of George B. McClellan and George H. Pendleton. We do this in Vie full and firm bent thfit it Is impossible to restore the Union and to establish , peace throughout the United States under the emancipation policy adopted and persisted in by the present Administra tion; and that it-is necessary to change our rulers, with a- view to a change of the policy of the Government; that those Most 'desirable. and important objects may be attained_ The Intrigues Against McClellan. Everyone at all acquainted with the his tory of McClellan's connection with the war, knows that the Administration re moved him from the head of • tile Poto mac Army without causei .. and ever since that time, now - two years ago, it instead of giving him an opportunity to serve his country, has devoted more at. tendon to blacken his reputation than it has to put down the rebellion'. For two whole years, the entire power of the• Administration and its organs throughout the country have been en deavoring to blast the character of a disarmed man. Every one knows this; but every one does not know that the intrigues Against UcCiellati first com menced in Lincoln's Cabinet.... The Boston Omprier Bark • "We do not believe it possible to add to the words of General McClellan, but we desire to put on .record a. conversa• Lien reported to us on the best authority; more than a year ago as having recently occurred between a leading politician of a New England State and Secretary Stanton. Said the Secretary: "General McClellan is getting too popular. We shall-have to check Mut "You will hare to . check hint very quick then, or lie will get intb Itch, .mond," usponderl hie interlocutor. " "Oh; he cannot do that—he has not, Men enough; and we don't 'intend to send Win any more!" was the answer of the Secretary_ Well might he. be shortly afterwards charged to-•his face by the anti whom he thus soUght to-des troy with "doing • bis best ,to.- , sacrifi.‘e his army." Involuntary' tlfusticez to 'Mc-lillettan The - Wiislitington corresponcltftl ii:Sf that fierce A.bedition - paper, the Ohicnv Tri hune, candidly confessed, before McCiel laid was 'nominated, that in the event of his becOining 'our candidate he "would „receive the alcaget tine Illations_ vote of the Potomac army. Here Ia what he sail • ‘ 41 .414.1g ', , is oxtremolst-unsettled there is•nu chance forticriibt " rt contains so •many tlitgi-s elements, and is the victim of - 01 - 'imekt , wtat atm:Ault ( of.:44litical itis not to' be -wondered at that , there" is', little unity of political sentiment." Add "to this the faet, %Tit tiy: far the.largest; part of itergtmerals and field officers - tick'., from the old - FPetno cratic.party; 'onnd-Fite ..c4sef„o.r anti-bihnyhisera tioA967itArst674 is *444 ac'conited for. - .his - not a . ..peace clemocraey; :sentime 'barna fttr mom - dangerous to-Mr. Lin ,Wrt an the P3puldicutt Vkily. IF THE CHI-CA.I24J OOXIYEA'TON 'NOM INATEs", TENDRA•I3 • MeCIJE LL AN . Vt I LNA.A . §A."Sqy',A.II7.,E Tit ATrok4' THE - XotE 01-3 HE ARM Or THE' POTOMAC" WILL •HE LA.BGEIX ES.: TILMIED- FROM - THE PREBEiTT, ADMINISTRITIO4 I I. that should not be overlooked, n d irdelktindi develops - with more . pe - kaAic.ini , *.y 4 Him? s ;now 15f) po,viaota, Ts, TO-? . .44„ . 2 .EinToz.l-41avin g f ..11~ votes were-being bitten - arnanp-itie sot- , AT Om Vim i°B4 ,edi-Nute;Aug., ateremyegtordim azAsilig at PftEsila 7 .loblPftiefra-Vaytt Welt' Themel t. TipM m - ) gififttliBo 4 coll4ndeim ; :a-0A -4r-tedibrate limmistg.44,As,PLAl a: dust -4,14. Abe—and were fully at will oot lota I.afsl,Ll Pl Itt ; 71. , C...haikakeatits J.M.3l3fir) A nA at a4il.- =EMI . 1 , • . e you; why weretiiiiiiii.soltiV;lt=4l-114-:,-:',,S,:eal Annie Laurie... -- . . ... ... . . .. . /Utitt."ltiOrrar-„f.fi',.._cki',l,t‘c. Recitation -" Ala; ,'poor Yorlcit" • ( 7 . • W.1iatifi.:.:',!„:1q;.„,..:, i "We are all destroyed; some of ,na batil__Vr.j..=:-'"?..•Nt" (railroad fime)-Air, "Soldiers East it Ex Stutataxoi&T;'irv'W "Pot Asleep-" Tune, Pni,Atioal.f3l.n .I,dberty.Grtirrycittaii.::2?Od Greenbacks, Adleti -' , ' - ' ' flatraf• ' P.S. - Dzir - ',n - '•-:4_1 1 - From Walker and Webster-"I -A , „ -r ."Nt=" - -;•!z•-.7,c,,+:., to All" Rpgc. ,- :-.(4.: "Fair Land of Poland" f.L.W* V .., - ''' - Bs Ximnifft=2;, ,.4 .3:.,4-' "Ah I That Reminds hie ofThat flattfulthseadsa , rn e - . Story". -. . . .... ..- .. g ..,, Situfiltutti*.V4,l;,4-: "Brave Thaddeus of Warsaw lies cold 'tinfl , r1ee..:,.1'F., , ,1-a-:.., gotten" ' • 14-XcascatiT;.„',..„.„'..l.. Comic Song-"Bew Mani Backbtineirtrave;•Mt-i.i.r."-.#- Bulletins Broken"-Alt, "Padden 4pagf1.64., , „: - .,"4 - 2 - 0 ty" ' - Etttkimr,h3aVeur.:.,;-:-N,!,..67.?": "Can't See .It," - - R - S;'. l ,l_ ll !lt';W,, - * "I See it Still4n My Drearinit,..ioLheisosixonisc.i.,Av,i, Recitation-" Sweet Auburn, Lovataitri.if:tbet,V‘t:;%`44lll Plain," ..43iVriaaa"-,---:,--C".41 "'Up Salt River - ' - 8.1briauP , „,.:4, - - , Oh! Don't Wake Me"-"La Homnambittai!V*3i. - : . .. o l 4 9:tiPlnT4nli- .1 .' , '4 , ?e, Notes Oottipared--SWhat Hurt Doi '' . Pritliiiiiiiitftr • tion; My Plan 500,000 More; Letter.UlSlTAcue,a,X, It May Ocnteern: Stump _Smith at.'"AlßW:st._,4"'' Don't Agree; OM ,plan' • rfigiuy_p_alurrif . ~,-,, . w.,. _ Plan Thsee-Ifearm, cPtiopkon , , FE. ,7 , 4 ).•.- r ". Too Many Jokes; Holsee Hwappedf.2.akliagal,4.-L,_4....4... formed by Azar. Lturuxtkww - w - i:,-i4,p , Alter which Est Sottaterow will perfOrfalltAklp-p,, moos feat of writing two bullet lines each (0. K.) la - iforty„ atinittdo ' Altiw..- , ,, _.., -. and forwarded to - Dfx Ceyy,:: - " .. , ,lteltk' - ;:-,!..,_,.-4.. -, graph operators and the rest of m ' e ' - lre :f.- - ,INE will also explain to those subject to 'Abe -draft if-- +,,, his • his bite mathmatical puzve• showing thkt - .44:', , ,Tr.: : :":„.. , e7- 4 credit of 21.m.500 men is tivrmittgittalk.and that ;..;,,L'';- - 01 2 may be taken Hem :6 et M...„l4l6oacitn. ' Loya;f:::;' , .4..t!*.. men will be satisfied . • ' ..._,.. - -i,51 ; Debate-Subject: Is it easier to .pay a. Maildll;:- . 5:-'; : fki7 - 4-; sum than a large one. ' ',- . ' ' •-r,.,(i..-•W.. Affirmatim Anir...imrtrar.„_ ; : , /,...:Zsl":*0 Negattvedri-kle.-,Bluf-:-: A '..t_;r 7 .11 - ii- -- Z , ,,,. Who will take the position . thatide hi ai---easjr t- , ;;;;-•‘:g.gS-1-.. 20 pay as the other, when the party lit - °tit"' 0f46. -, .! .. . -. ,1,..,.., change. Amusing scenes from Rip Van Winkle. :- -: ',.., - -::11$0?'"% i t: Rip, (for the 290th time ' OLD.GLDD*O2lll=flrl;!.4,',7t :.11 in*l`6 ll- 41McOLORILL ,_. sT - :;,,, , :-: , .,1,-4: - 1&t:-., ownin g Song-"Up De Salt, Silt Ribbertk. bif:-Vi , *AFt...: the Ftrzt.CostrarrriA Sea timental Song-43n De Banks Ob Red:Ribbeiri'.-6f,.-71.4131.f',4 a-hooktu De Co4pan-two Voleea+Autar.;.'t-i''-f-,•. - 1. - ..ie. • ' .. - Iximrobk.rserptattAiTOlC'''-Z2gg, Wait for de Wagons. o;;WAltti,'3'l.i. How are you,Paper Collars Ille-Laute":-CW•i.--NA That's de way de Money Goes PiS.:Dlttralt„': ,- - , :-.X - ." , , r„ ; Not a tear among all for the Brave thatlistir4.;-.7,-,1e2r4 Fa11en , ; , ..;.t.,.--,,.' It .airAtuilit.7,ki"..,,,,,k, Oh! ho' w' 'Visit ''Vlit ' to.•Staitigneldi.agtir.?-ip,.... Atm- lisxmir?"l:-;.';',2.idlX Slain' on a Rail Putt, floUxuafgr,..-,•44,;:_,.k?„.1 To conclude • with the pleasing afterptess of . '„ . ',,7',W :t PAOWEEP; 7-.:-- , 4.77- - I, ':;'-':: - :'?,-. I Or, the Carpet Sect Retreat. r...ic,--'i.''''''' 1 Closing Dialogue, (music heard .. 7 R - = Yc '. ..,:i.- - l:'. ABELe-What horrhisioniiis •e ear.-.Lkl,- Say-good is it friends, -4ray Mat, a .little":1-1:E,,-.1:.‘r.."-', I joke I 4 E :,,..z,-., B L ARE-I think It is LITTLIMait:. ' -,-4.,::,--;:, 1.,; C. WARD-q . t. true ; g 004.• ....tix, hasi,.i . Why, don't you hear thettr'datt _. ''..;;V: - 1.7.-,; - • The people have swapped horses, Ana, . . . - .:1, " ge':.,..:r,- . ..,, , MCOILELLA.N is a-coming. - - r '...NZft,Y": ABEL-No jokes, friend C., the nixes havis.::::k*.t...V.*. : seriluivZiOrr.l. .4ripieilefta.Alis if ih t fis lost-theel ~,1 ' point,' yourlien, its clapper . 'Parbwell, a_---'lOug -'',Mi::',o44 1 farewell to all my former greatness, a Vlfotarffa' ~3 "6- .( TY (wooly) tear now dims mine eye. Come, friends,' - _ , .R."..V.L.-a-, this puce grqws odious,. -, - , • •-- : - 3,-.... , Te,:a• ttiffitit.VM4llo. - 4/4iad March.. -.J.... , 45'E i V.' ..„, i .__ '-:A-ifln?.„, r „- , 4T:" ED. PosT :—Please insert once, and expect ona,"•''.:,,--.71 hundred tickets gratis. - ; r-•- " _l -, ;;:::-5 - 7:F:-, Yo l ura i r esPeAtifdlii".! • '',l; ,- - - - ::: - ' -. Z - .....t.;' , Pz; THE AGHNT.'. - :--1-;:- . .,T.1".'..S7't: --........___ _ -,_,•:;‘,-.*R :{, - : . , ,t..,1, A New Mystery in London. 1 , , d....147;Pe -. , . The Londytn Morttinit.R..qnsso: ';...,`. A most extraordinary discovery Wati., '.';'-''r`,-'. - fi?f , made on Friday evening, August - 26th,-: - ;,..1!"-IL: - : , . - ic in a hones, IS Chnreb street, Mile. Encl - 11a.;'*gik: :Nevi Tom . Eltuqiieibinf,were arintsid.l - . ;,1,-:0.. .. ,: , ,,i1 1 that all was not right, and the neighbors ---- , :-. 2 .- ,- .--4s - 4 made a forcible entry. • ...,---,-;... In the froutparlor a woman was f ound -.;1..1:::,-:::V .4 kneeling by the side of a coneti, 41 ,,, , , : - _, , ,,,,„ . 1 quite dead. Lying on the floor, - partly.' - ;, i 41 - ,t.,.. - : in -khe trap, parlor and partly in ther,back .- - t.i• - • -•.,: . ,i . ,..i. piflOr Was`tlftebody of another woman, -1 , also quite.dead. In the adjoiniutc;ruClut c -. - ;. : .'-c.-1. 4 .- there was a man in a state of itilnlieyeintd..-.:-.''..Z.Ni ..,..._.., half naked. There were marks — oTa*uk.-. : - . --: - .• ; ft? gle in the rooms, but at presenti_titilald.-.--.-:..1.-1 --ratiteraemuthat poisonzwasAllikusiuks : ~ “ -- nf;' -. ." , -, - -,,,.;,il death. • One of- '..--,,,:i-4-1 of the lailiecile*,huselyinialt *Ciatin t f ham. . Be bean pettaroll*Fitt 0 10- .1 3 :..(A1t , -- ~ir -,P;I office. The other woMtlir Waktl}ttlutster . ..- -. t:': - !: . .0r, "of his - wife. - '7 '.' • -'-..- -----I ".? .. i`t' , V -- ' . ?.- - _ , *-.,.i.: When the 'P el *li , ;duc - ii - iiiiil ..tha...':l'-cf:i4TA Women went Into the -acilo,htlrie 4perei.:--,,,..7 'meat', th P.Y .l4 W. , Thio l4 4"gitilfilllg on 3 ' the floor and trembling. illthitihelier-- ceived•them-he crawled undrefeaththe,-....;.:3a;;1;:,;5., bed, obviothily to agape trona*. - 11e, , -,, 4 1 . was in,a cate of extremeleiror,and walt - - - V.;-: - .1-:t.. - noticed to be considera t , i.sajer and.. ` , l-' ,. ...rilif j is z , more cadaverona lookin g W - ii - the_corp s r - ----:.:„:,-4 .. .. „, , vs 7. , , : of his wife, which lay wittdrorniplo -;',-.7'..."..ti - -7. I - ~., - !'''..,:ti',..Z.,.‹..1 r yards of him. Tile ,p,eople...zw e- were '.; • :.• ... , :,-_,i-...-..,.,.. present iinmediately ,proaeeiled to...get-. •-a-,-,.. 1 him from, under the.. bed, .but this,. was ' . ;1 . - - */.,....k.; found to be a teek.citio'lifiliLdiflielilty,' .- - ;- - ;?; - -'41, he struggled wah,all i Ida';atflingth, and appeared to be in a-state of deepen:Moi,- -. , :r..-:--. 4 .1 He was, howe-Yer,`Ovout and diessed. .71-, ; , 3 for he was-clad Only,ut,his shirk -. Al- . i't-. - -!...„., though there,ho no reason to doubt the • ;;-.- 1';...1- - .N. , ,zi acenrecyi t /r his statement to IlitYlle Who;_:. . ~ .-t;....*..11. 4 foubdlii that lie had- nisi -;,...-1 -; - ;,,-.±.-...al for threte,days,„ nearly , a ,wholelloaf 0f.... - . , .., - 111 - iiz . -0 bread was found in, nother room oir-ther-:.-.4-e?,:g4l -seine floor.. .The bread' was(:.,;hard, - :aritirT - -::;?..-1 - 33f.-...j.4 ; ..had pot been cot.ilitat leasttwo . days....=, - ;: t is,-Z,1;41 The cups, jugsand Othsr veasehtfciund,-..i4 in the cottage. l=ave- been. ''parefilllY 1e5.'...:-.::....--F4..,,'V.1.21 a mined forAlleAlregil;fir!pOisint y . : „ Alt 0f,... - is.:! - P, - themswere - .found to be.covered . witlr.;:', - ::::::S.;;:g ffiltit,.:iiiittildithing. foispicipWr.9.rai.4lloi...:-::::::iir.p§f. 1 covered - iii:dhy:tifithein..l3l' "fie5i1,....r.,-*4? - ,,,-;,-.-4 broitgo ottudiesti*, and;,othe Inngs - --:..,-...p ,. ..;! . ,-3 r lound lyingabOut as ,it 1144,, 1 4 been : --,,,,* 1 7 used as missiles, were tenni) not - so have tiliy . tracet of,blnoduticul tliffiCitid be-, •,.. - . ; . :F,:::p. -- aides ' , eithonghlilOod-wasi.oliiii34sl/ing . ''.'-.t , , , g,.1' :,grilmthiS:dused anmonth of!lldri: ,- .liack- :-'-'"'; . ..1 ing*m..riCllcltilik *i7f+ - .4.1 8 40VPd ' riLweP'.- , ,;.-41mitted on the/bodies, of any of , the,ktecupotite of `the honiel What wakes the -oteunpre explicable is that it has beerfanfiraitted that Mrs. Mary Alm filtitibin„tlibitroman who is supposed to hatO;dlo4 s Aigst, did , not iiiteisi , the cottage. Mamma Only on a visit to her sisteratirectiftef ter death. fil l Nvkt! a..widow;and-Tellid ed in lodginkfrftf.,44o444, ati•Betlutal •Civecti.' , . iShe_twas the ividow Ofa unutF ---%li 'clan_i '' ' 1 , 4 1--,0,4 „. ; ' 1 ,. ...;•; , ,,, - 2 The 4 btliOriff . general -in"thelocalitvi ,iluit ULU,. Iwo dOceasid • came `t - MiefiC- 4.- t ; - . . - 'zl deaths by poisons. and tikattfia;itilatitte- --, i , •='.'''" , =.3 'o,lterjrlur t ,„ ~..,bl,,°l,otil,A''Vlitflll some ~....m., 41 , M1 , ..!`. a . ' `- c l it g e T i ii ii k i Alt tl i o lo . 4 i gie Bos. ton Travelier says: ;:±Yrtiiit-iegial is no : f adtlbt. sti . Textekr'in London;:_ from • - ,'"--....;: Wltic),:po a Mgettiv44/40,;An the . ..z lloekade-a • W i1 11112,00/4 • :,.ai - ,..... pr e _. .. :,.- - : ; -A1• :tiAnitilit.':'lief rlihntreal J 140,, _along our - ' ' - -;'.l r l eu coast."PlieTelliiiiiiiee; at liatitccounto, 1 ...ttfrl 3 4 X4** 1 )'.i: 1 ,d? , 1 1, 6 4,„air01it", u , -- Wron-4; ,up0n,:00924r Fun 10.4 ..:o_, , Q ti q : ,-. - . . - . -. ...iT.-..Li Alts..receatautware , Poleageot th steam- :- , •-, , 1_r3',.- , -,, 1 el': Ant4 l os - .thigMiliby way Of - 1101;:-. - ,. - L ~.'. . .,2•.; z :i ititt'fdr inerpotil,s4 .I?ut,y hloclf.%:::::;-:.:,v1,.1 ade mum a end fetielittjwitleardi.l, A...",:,*7:-iit,.-Y4 winger emelt : 4 frone.themAuf- - tha- '•- -. 2`,rz; q - -4 r iwitA it , i '-;: r ..AO.A. ?...e-,..ai• i "..:;:4 "' -2„: ''' 'mos __.•,'...) .stet---''' ':Yti:.4 : v 6O ' ' d 4r1 1 .1 1 15W, & , , 0 4M but le:'.;A - los b tv44--'`l4 4kintetttutegai toy '''tenternt 111"*.: - - .:''''tinSl . au TY9 :Iv , _... , - kwto-rit -. - '-' - t - , "I' '':•';':i kr-.., . - i4 . r.--....tt .kiizio - 4 - ' - 471 tAfiglail.t' , 1 . 4 ..1143 If =VAS E;ErTl9.4l)(k.zi, at , f-tA