Pittsburgh morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1855-1859, September 02, 1856, Image 2

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MEM=
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'TUESDAY MORNING
JAMES
Democratic Electoral Ticket of Pennsylvania
ELECTORS AT LARGE:
CHARLES R. BUCK %LEW, Gamut/A.
' WILSON lIECANDLESS. Allegheny.
let - District: GEC. W. I'iIEBENGEIL Philadt 'phut Cu.
Bill " PIERCE BUTLER, Philrult Iplit City.
34 " EDWARD WA ItTAIAN, Philadelphia Co
4th " WSI. If. WITTE, Philadelphia County.
sth " .101LN McNAIEL Montgomery County.
6th " JOIN H. 11RINTON, Chester coup Iy.
'7th '• DAVID LA ti ItY. Lo-high County.
Bth " CI( MILES KES'SLEIt, .11..rk..3 County.
9th " JAMES PATTI:I:SUN. Lou, .tor
10th " IS.I AC six,NKEIL, Colon Comity
11th " FRAS. W. 111.1tHiES, St huylkill
!2111 " THOMAS OSTERTIA CT. 1 4 y .M.h.g. Co
13th " ABRAHA9 EDINGER. Mon roe 0,
14th " REUBEN W3LBEB, Bradford Coanty.
lfith " acont3u; A. CRAWFWID. Clinton Co.
16th " JAMES BLACK. Perry Comity.
l; th" HENRY J. ETAIILI.:, Adama (2".
18th " JoRN P. Td Htby, ,Snratroot C.,.
19th " JACOB TURN EY, Westmoreland Co.
20th " J. A. J. BUCHANAN, tlremol co.
21st WILLIANI WILKINS. allogheny.Co.
2" JAMES 0. C.A.3II•FIELL, - NotlerCo.
• • " .TIICLAIAS CIINNTNOllA5l,llistieOr.Co.
242 ti JOHN KKATLEY. Clarion Co.
25th " VINCENT IbllELPS,.Crowtor.l Connly
DEMOCRATIC STATE. TICKET
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET
OUNGIC6.9
WILSON M'(%ANDLESt3, Co Lams TorN
SEN,6
HOPI WELL ITEPEILHN, ray
5A5[14111.1" •
THOMAS S. HART,
AUGUSTUS HARTJE. REs.,G TOWNSHIP
SAMUEL JONES, (in
L. B. PATTERNON, MIFFIIN TOWNSHIP.
SAMUEL SMITH, ALLEtifIChl
kTE JUI,E
Dr. JAMES POLLOCK, FIVI.I.FI T.ArCSIII
Pi: °SWUM/ Al'Mg FY
MATTHEW I. STEW ART, ALLEI•LIENT . CITY.
COUNTY
ROBERT B. GUTHRIE, R 0131,0311 Ton -
ArDITOR
EDW AR D THOMPSON, IrnstN, Towe,,n
COUNTY St USETOR
EDWARD M'CORKLEI, I st•lAss To•ms,l , : l
DIRECTOL•i AFC VIC •
HENRY HELTZHOOVER, B kirAns.
JOHN JOHNSTON, I,Awit.micEvritz,
- i . '_' :
There Will be a regular meeting of the
and Sixth Ward Democratic (flea Club on I •
(Tuesday) evening, iii Wilkins flail.
The Club has been invited, ai.d will pti,,iier
a meeting of the Democaacy to he livid in hit.
township at 6,1 o'clock
A GOOD NOMINATION
The Conferees of the Congresionsl
trict met on Friday at New Castle, Lawrence
county, and nominated Thomas Cunningham
.Es 3., of Beaver, as their candidate fur Congru,s.
This is an excellent nomination ; Mr. Cuntiinit
ham is one of the moat able, popular and eloquent
men in this end of the State, ant he will etutup
his district thoroughly; and his speeche+ tell
with groat effect We hope to hear that h r
triumphantly elected. ft is a hard district, but
with such a man at work in so good a eau, it
can be redeemed.
,"On Tuesday last we were Id that Jud,te N. p
burn, of Pittsburgh, had gone nver to Fremont 0•1
on the same day we saw .iiidge 11 ma n y Ilifo•;, •
in the Pittsburgh Pont as a candidate tnr man ,
to the State Senate by the Liemucratie eou venimn ~t
Allegheny county. We iidwire stir friends t, t, ,
all such rumors with many grains 0 1 a1i055,,,,,• 0 --
Washington Examir,el
" Grains of allowance, quotha!
Examiner, will you please ascertain the man, of
the scamp who started that gory in iVashingi 11,
and we will publish it. It is time the liars n • re
exposed. Send us the names of each rogues
from all quarters, friend, and we will let, tte
people know who the liars are
Twcr DARED Nur —The Black Republi.. to
members of Congress wanted to disband the
army, and turn some thirty or forty thousand
laborers out of employment au our arsynals, or
atories and fortifications. They were ping to .10
so by defeating the army appropriation bill. Lot
when they sew some of the consequences 11., , y
got scared, backed down, and passes] the
like good boys. The foot of their hacking tot
proves clearly that they were wrong from
first. They know it, they acknowledge it : thy
gave it up because they were wrong, au
saw that the people were finding it out fast. If
they dind4r4nly have disbanded the army. they
could haVigot up a Fpiendiii civil war in Kan- •Y:
and treason and murder would have run riot in
that territory. But the bill has passed—the
army is ready for service, and there will be peace
in the territory.
LAWILENOETILLR MEETING.—There was
and enthusiastic Democratic meeting at I.
renoevilte on Saturday evening. Col. 111'Cd1-
lough, John 211'Carty and Dr. M'Clintock in, le
speeches. Dr. 11I'Clintock conveyed to the meer,og
the intelligence that the Army Bill had pas , . d,
and it was received with loud demonstration. of
joy. Its passage at last shows which party it as
wrong.
There will be another meeting of the D.. 0.0.
crats in Luvreutseville on Saturday evening nt
to be addressed by Dr. M'Clintock and other-
COL. GEARY.-001. Geary, the new Goverii
of Kansas, reached our city, on his way to his
post, yesterday. The Col. is in good health and
spirits, and goes out to Kansas with a full
solve to do right and manage the GLIT:IirS of that
territory with impartial justice ti all pat (if
We have DO doubt he will do so; but of ciitir.c
the Black Republicans will villify him witii-ut
stint, do what he may. iie wilt leave to d
Many of our citizens called on him at the t
Charles, yesterday evening.
AT the meeting in Lawrenceville on Situ..
day evening, Col. Henry M'rullough offered a
resolution that the thank. of the Lawrenceville
Club beionclered to the liern,,cratie mrmb,rs ~f
the Senate and Ilom.e of Representitoveq. for
their firmness in standing up for the and
interests of the workingmen on the Army
It was seconded by Tilly Potter, F. ,l . and carried
unanimously, the Arsenal workingmen voting for
it loudly.
HEAR THAT : —A German who live! , in Bir
mingham told a friend of ouao, yesterday, that
he heard James Buchanan made a speech in
Pittsburgh, in which he said if he had a Bin r.rl p
drop of Democratic blood in his veins he wr,nl.l
let it out." The German said he heard it, and
oould prove it!!!
That is the kind of lies with which German ,
are to be deceived.
We advise all our readers to peruse carefully
the Address of the State Central Committee
which we publish to-day. It is a sound argil.
ment, fall of the facts of history, and the rea
sons why the people should stand by the Union
and the Constitution. The negro lovers cannot
answer sunken argument.
THE Address of the State Central Committee
crowds out nearly everything else to-day. But
the Address will be generally read.
BOSTON, September I.—Gen. Pomeroy, of Kanane,
is now in this city.
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.
•
FOR PRESIDENT
BITCHANA N,
OF PENN:NINA'' , LA.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE,
CEIMMEM
CANAL
GEORGE SCOTT, or COLLfilliA CO
AUDITOR OILS ER A.l.
JACOB FELT, Jr., Alcerraomorf C+3
STIRVETOR GENEIL.U. :
JOHN ROWE, ~F FD.A.NE.ui Co
MEETING
WILL I:L i keli, President
Another One
THE ADDRESS
Gen. Po . meroy in Boston.
`~ ~
.~ ~a+
NEM
ADDRESS
fo the People of Pennsylvania.
Fk LEO*, 43 n'Ns
SEPTENIBER
•
ThOlentral aommit,tee;•iappointed by the De
mocratic 3qt:tett:invention, have thought proper
to address On on th&queitions which you must
*eel& at dill next election: In doiritiesowe shall
be candid, frank, and fair. Apart from he prin
ciple which should bind all men to the 'troth in
political diseussions, and in every thing else, we
are well aware that any attempt to mislead you
would injure our cause. It is yet nearly three
months before the election, and there is no reason
to believe that the public mind will not use the
intermediate time in calmly considerin g the great
issue before it. We. are perfectly willing that
whatever we may say, which is not justified by
fact and reason, shall be set down as so lunch
against us, against our party, and against our
candidates.
The time has passed for the discussion of Batik
and Tariff questions. We bear no proposals to
enact a Bankrupt law—us word of opp,,,ition to
the Independent Treasur,. All these questions
are settled agreeably to Democratic opinions
upon them. The rise, the prosperity, and the
fall of the great Whig party, are themes for the
historian, and full of instructive lessons; but we
will not Elwell upon them now.
It is the present duty of the Democratic party
to stand over the Constitution, and " shield it
and save it, or perish there, too. - It is our task
in this campaign to heat its euemies, separate or
cotabired. just as they choose to meet us, to
conquer them with an overthrow whieWwill be a
warning to them for many a year. And it must
be done, or else this Union is not safe for a
day.
We know very well how easy it is to sneer at
any suggestion of danger to the Union. lint we
know also that the federal relations of this gov
ernment are PO delicately constructed, that they
may be ruptured at any time by a serious error
of the people in choosing a Chief Magistrate.
The States of the Union are not held together by
physical force, like the dependencies of a King
dom, nor oven by polical power, like different
parts of the same State. They are independent
sovereignties, united by the gentler law of mu
tual attraction. This law. operating on their
own free will, made the Union ; and when it
cease. to operate the Union will be unmade. let
a President of the United States lie elected ev
elusively by the votes of one section, and on a
principle of avowed hostility to the men, the
measures, the domestic institutions, the feelings
and the interests, real or supposed, of the other
section, and what must be the consequence ? We
•It, not Yay that it would certainly or necessarily
dissolve the. Union. Perhaps the good genius of
. the Republic, whieli ha- brought us through s,.
many perils, might save us again. But that
man must be intellectually blind who does not
see that it would put ua in fearful danger. For
this reason the election of a sectional candidate
must be regarded as in itself a great public mis
fortune. The party that avows opposition and
hatred towards a certain class of the States as its
, motive and rule of union, in entitled to no aid or
comfort from any man who loves his country. or
, lebires to he faithful to its government.
Th.' , reatest_ the wisest and the best 1111'11 t' is
, •utlntry ever produced. have warned us that the
I.uion'nuli tot la.l ur e ter the control of a 1 . . 1 ' 0
graphical party. Need we refer yeti to w i ,•h.
Melon . - Farewell Ad:res.+ " Need we remind
von of the admonitions which Jetlersou and .lark
-on have given If the solemn voice• whet
come Irom the tomb at Mount Vernon, from !be
sepulchre at Monticello, and from the grave at
the Hermitage, have ceased to be regarded, the::
we are lost indeed.
The rnJst illustrious statesmen of later times
felt the same fears for the Union, end assigned.
for those fears, the same reason. Clay and W, I,
ster, nod their great compatriots. overlooked a il
other eonsiderntions in the efforts they made to
avert this one portentious calamity. Even Mr.
Fillmore, the Know Nothing that anti-aboliti to
candidate, has not hesitated t, say that the Un'on
cannot stand 11.1 rase an Aholtlion President, ;:ite
Frelnrti and he lets it Lc t, ry
nn lervtood that, ill ouch a clot- he v,, , t.t I
thick n di-solution of it perfectly jtistitial.;tt.
When yyli com-itler throe things iu coitnett'..n
with the fart that the ultra AboldiouistA, moo!
whom are acting with the so called Itepublicau
patty, openly confess their desire to break lip
the Vition and to trample on the Constiluti ti,
how can yon doubt that Fremont's election. or
even the casting of a considerable vote for Lim,
wool l i,rove to he a fatal mi.:m . l,-
let we are no alarmists. We trust confidently
in the la rpetutity f star pr v s. lii G o v e rnm en t
But that comitleher based ii: the ettovic , .1,
that the people wi ll take titr a dvice o f 11'
ington, and lc, , wn indignantly 011 111, , fresh slay
The safety of this nion most depend on the
triumph of better pritteiples than tlim, of tt
dings, and Sumner, 111.1 Garrison, and ,
Seward : and upon the election of it better Pr,
dent than John I'. Fremont.
These men attempt to justify the trikeralde
crusade which they aro preaching against a pyr
tion of their fellow citizens by mooerting that the
South have eneronehed on the rights of L i y
:North. They have pertinarionsly deelared that
in all eontroversies on the subject of Slavery, 'si
n( the North have been overvome by the supc-i
-or energy and boldness of those who favor tit it
institution. ''The Slareocracy, ' •‘ the halt
the Slane drivers," the aggressions of theSl
power,' - these are the phrases with which t , y
describe the influence or the South in our
tiotoil Connell, Northern men who do not j
them in their elamortoin ahu-e lite South, .tre
charged with cowarliee n u ll habit ua lly cot .
Doughlitee, her, repeltir,l
tinuslly and t.o impudently tI, tt many per.
have at length been int preo.ed ti' it. There ,-
men among its win , actually think that the Nr.i•l,
has born the victim ofgrievous wrongs, to wit. ti
we Dave Lrrat BUiltrattitig with a disgrace , it
taCIIPTIe , III of spirit. This io an artful appeal to a
point of honor on-Which all men are sensitive.
and it if not wonderful that those who are trt oh
enough to he deceived by it should also be w ea k
enough to break out into denunciation o f the
S a cheap and safe way of showing tilt it
courage.
Candor requires us to say that if there is truth
iii this the Democracy ought to be defeated. It
that party has ever counselled sulunission , t
wrong, oppression, and Injury, it is not worthy
et your confidence and support. If we hove rv• r
yielded to our Southern brethren a right
I the Constitution. in its letter or spirit., did n
give them—if we have made any eoneession to
them in the wily of compromise, which was
required by a fair and manly sense of justiee
th en we admit th a t Abolitionism has the I 'gilt
side of this argument
But we totally deity the truth of this impudent
ftexu! , :tticti. It is false in the aggregate and tal-e
in detail ; fake in the sum total, and false in
every one of its items. We protionnee it It libel
on both sections of the Union. It could by in.
vented only, in a spirit of sheer mendacity: it
can be believed only by great ignorance or child.
lob credulity.
The fact that the Democratic party in the
• rectm...n.l :lir I inprovcd Pills elm tsmig bath mitt aim
.
_
•gauized territory. ‘VI., . .1...• ed I.\ the (muffle! of opinion .•n the slavery .tne-
Nora, bras behaved with honGrable magnanimity
.. - he
ii• d.' 1 • c J I PRIRPONT.
proposed to come into the Frtion rts a Sint,. teat i•Vlstind, a.:. this institution does. in some ••:* ' '''' " th' th
".‘".th ""
" ' .
Dr. Nlclane . m IMFKaren Llyer Pills and asettovsn Vermi
uud f: a irmess to the weaker section—their breth- l ‘r
t „ )
tto in tit ,
t , x0t ,,, t ,,, of at , itkin a
rik _ ht
..,
fte , tato.:. and prohibited. am it lr, in others• the
ren in the South--this i.. our crime—this is tl.O liar T. F , '
fogy, .d.s , Dr. I. Seoul. C'el•rated white Circassian Lint
' any people ever posseilSof I, anvle a r'..tir.titrit• o r - o•• prOaciple ‘filich ••tight to regulate the arisen ..• . .
...
~•_ .
..., . _ _ _ I
w rung Willa i 1 . 1 . . end our fatherrrhave been he,, , ,
.' 'ccre , :-. in fortmod territ trim[ dot ern menu , for ea 11 l'"'" , •1` 1, 1 8 ‘ ,, I eol• ll 111 0 5 r t h e 811 1 81 ” . 8 n , aol Dr. 1 . &sr t,
I for themselves. in which, with almost entire 'in .
nig. :ill our own beads for three quarters of la eon.
need, se.mirel domain. is to refrain from tall ledisla. a r”unlar Medical ;madame, and Physician of extensive p net.
nosy. This b. the offence which the Abolition. tatnity, they recognized the rights of the ..1., .
lotion on the ablest in the territory aegnirmi co 1un.. 7 lice. Noned•utnine•orly . prepared by Dr. I. Scott k Co,
holders 10 retnin tho ploperir ac•luired u tr .•, .
i-ts 'would punish by bringing our govern Inert' pr.,,,,,in0s law". 'flour taro, the wildest roll. , • ... it r. I s in, th e territorial form of government Bank Plre-••, 31••reantown, Virginia.
In it violent end, and by covering our who le ' 'ea, ins; t• ro the r•e•ple of 'mob territory, when they NEWS FltoM TUE FOUNTAIN HEAD!
fallaticisni• 1 • 11 :ge iili'''e - "I p i 'oi' l e '" ih - :la, ;It:illicit t.. it Condition which entitles then: to Moitasterowx VA., Sala. 12, 1855.
country with shame and ruin.
z
North, and especially in New England. led -o . . ,
i.,., '••.. n .•... a 6 11iite to decide 1.. e Ihern:elye, th • •
Retire the formation of the Constitution it w ic
,m 1 excited by the intlainniat , ry appeals of the', ' ,.i c ' Sii ' ..r i . p.c . / h e allow a nce or prohibition of •loMest• • i - 7 .l h i l An i : 6 5 ' 1. ' 4 '1 i:i f I% T l h in a f t rn i rvi l s a rr e Ve ' ru ‘ lift n o ed a t n ie d , f lo e'-ii r 't o• f r:d r.
feared that the interevtv, opinions and feelings leaders, grew almost frantic with rags The ' • ''' ' l ' . -''' i V - /See ‘ l ".iif''` , ;"/iiii ' , bit , . May 11 1 , 1 ..1. lever l'ill ' s by Dr. 1. tlk•ott, who has been i g n the habit • I' af 'p..f the different States were nu r irious and -
haring and using my origintO medicines iu my office
)iii
" eau•se of this outcry Wti, that the people of 111, p s ”, O • -,.!
,a
muck opposed, that no general government ••••uld
~ sours hod male their own Comditution to s.,:t t'el t ai i u ly u ,, Ens , of ordinary foresight soul I have .
. ' lilat thirumm ears and that 1 belit•ve he has Improv e d
l it- . 1 make the
t h e statement thmom
N E , P, 1
p''''''iblY be " t-41.1 kile'l• Suc h Wa ''' the view ''' their own view , , and lia I not pt's nsitted it to 1... I•••lieved t h at hones men in Ihe North, after ••••n- 1„,.,. u ” a me rem t h a th em whauever. C .
McANE, M. D.
the sill...met taken by Washington himself. rot
tending for this doctrine five or six year , . :qr.., would i I I ,
made for them 1•Y anti.slaverr own residing ot
Jr. N.C.-alit:6 111FatuVED Voillaftlali and InlatOVND Liver
the effort wns made. It °well its success simply
:urn around and repudiate it now. But these hypo- I
te
front,orthern States Thi , was the head and
• Pin., acc,ntoinast by rortinciae ‘.4 C. MeLarie, for sale by
to the fact that the right of each State to niamige nf
II ni t „If,,iin.g. N•illitio else tr 1 erittcal pretenders complain of the repeal of the law
Inagginte and Men•hantm everywhere.
its il wit domestic coracerats in its own way, was known as the Missouri Comproutise, by which Con , .„_ ,
cliaro.l against them Yet ev••ry Sou thertt Mr, ....
Da. alto. IL It E.l NKR, 140 Wood mt., Wholesale Agt ex
fully conceded.
' irre-s leoislated slavery out of Territory Borth of
her of CongreQs Who expressed the Orini,ln lil.lt :ili 4,, 'um a n d rerrnited it to in all Terr t , Ini. J. P. FLEMING, Allegheny, nom - Railroad. Depot,
It was easily foreseen that great difference or Missouri had a right to scar her own consti... ,„..ill'afthaj.line:ll;nd in exist
. ' ' ' 'r% A
yet, the platform wi no !, libolessie Kent, anThlawapc
opinion and feeling would exist between the pen.-
tion Was called an aggressor, a slave driver rand they he ve made for their vandidattre and party, they - • - --- - ----- ----
pie of the several States, in regard to the treat• ,
04- ketontshing Cure wren ONLY ONE BOITLY—
a , yrant, While eyere !Northern matt who assent s• , lconnly revarr, " that ice dray the oolloirity (;1.
talent that ought to be bestowed on the black 1 ..., v a mp :-1
ell t o tae s i m ple proposition w as de n ,,,,,,,., Canirt,..x. of aT, rritoriol l'.,olielerenrr, of any indi 3"". It, ib " C"' " 4:
race, who were among us, brat not of us—who
wean on our soil, and yet not a part of the pea-
ell and abused as a coward. a ilougl i fi n „ , an d a victual or astmeiation of individuts, to give legal ex. Vaxsour nu, Aroostook Co., Me, April 24, 1854,
recreant to the rights of his own aeotirm. s o istelliiC to slavery in any Territory of the United "We herewith mend you a certificate of a calm performed
pi e , unr qualified in any way to be our equals.
fiercely did this storm of ealumny blow that the States, whil e th e present constitution shall lie main. liv the rise of only one bid& of the Gorman Bitters; we
Thi. , race was then held in shivery, or involun
whole crovernment rooked and reeled to it. There air e d , "
[Res. 2 , 1. Republican Platform, I ssf,. j think NIT'. Clark u• be a man
ti
veracity, and have tau doubt
[:try servitude, by the laws of all the States ex_ seems
110 way left to avoid a civil, wan j, nt to . I'hirs the Wery COtnprOnliSo which the AbolitiorriabJ oil . the truth of him story."
cep[ one. Pont in the North their numbers Were
comprotnise. And Had) a eomprninise ' It
~,,,
l at , one momen h t pretend should not have L ien repealed. .
, lPs+rt• sAw. l3 . irier• fl.r.- 1 -lOentlemen in answer to poor
few, find the climate unsuited to them, while iti
sisted in an agreement that Nli-Aouri asst It
eNi`e- ed;:11 4 1 1 :87;, ' Ille tr e I ' 3 it
t a lre eg n " e . .x t .7„l"e.oiaolyinrel,nof,„„la:a an d illiiitiell, I will state that my daughter. aged about sixteen
the south it wan just the reverse. it was utterly
cise her undoubted right, and have her own coot- I,' no etilai v ialet ; nay. more, that i'l
was I , oVOnt: th.t yea's. has been colnplainine of a pall) ill her side for six or
out of the question to expect unanimity on a
stitution if do u bt
svvill.l abolish the iaw legal- power of Congress or of any human power to nua',.• scree yenra, and about the first of January last, was taken
Way only ; nod that was by agreeing that each
subject like this It could be managed in one
icing slavery in all of the territory outside o f such a law, while the Constitution shall last l But i1i14.11611d confined to lair bed. The pain in her sidereal very
that State and lying mirth of a certain line. That i, e pose front thin to nn other topic. severe, betides being troubled with pains between her
State should determine the whole matter for it- congress had any power to .1.. till , i. , now ajj,,,,,, Sotue iisorders hate I ,, urre , l in the contest o r shoulder,' and in her breast. From reading a number .4
elf, and on its own responsibility. It was thict
cures performed by 1bm,f1111.1 . 6 thrmall Illttr•rs. I was iic
universally doubted, and hy a large majority of opinion which Illati lii.en going on in Kansas r tw o Alf
solettibly ligreed that the Federal Govet•nnient the people it i,. totallY thrilled that slavery ..an or three Years hehvcen the pro-slavery men and the ,bare.) to try it in her eat., and wet to your store and per
,hunlii not interfere with Slavery ; and that no
I.e foreed, either in or o'er cf a Terri tom - , 1:v the • \ll-l U l 'flii‘t , Whatever they amounted to, it j, r,„ ,i„,„,,,i,,,,, 1.111 ,, ph e had taken it burn few days when she
Stnzte should interfere with it in any other t.4lote,
ledi•rlation of the genera: ;;overnmetit. . I , l ttt ,, lti, , t h . .' [hove Who c•lnlairti..l these lII,t/rderS shall l d Jireali to iniprove, aud m ov, a fter ttkieg only one. bottle, s h e
either directly or indir. , etly . And all the Oro it
car. the resi•ons•hili: and dray the Consequence,. ' i„, ~,..j..,in g better . heidth than shy hr. fur year,. She Grote
tr ier, clamor and aim., the North got on unc •:,
said amen ! If the solemn assurancf-s of mutual But No 0t..• con Mil to see that abalitionisiti has cx s o pain ill her side, in any part of her Imsly, and nttributes
stitutional ail% antage, in return for yiol•liird to ;a
forbearance then given and YWOrn to 80 Often
. 4_ , i..
-it/II:lien/ Mate a privilege which hi/ fair !Win ,
11 ,.. t; t a i r:r t i h t ed 101,1 i•ery•rtiol even, Inel•lent emunecte•l ,
ater cure entirely to the German Bitters.
since, have been belied and violated, it has not them in the W., srlii, ft in their eionion w.,
WM. CLARK.
can deny was plainly her own But even this bc , t cal all col t. •C ..t • •d• , and I ' Saloum Itr,mk, Afooalook Co, me.
been done with the consent of the Democracy. did not satisfy the Aholitioni-it, •
rhey
I.ontin_
,h,.
youth. Thei r
, Th i , : in ca , c pripi t• tr hatred :,gains
4•• adlverthiement.
awn ,hare in proe . r.kin z the‘e ' ' '
The question of involuntary servitude had en- ued to insult the South for not giving nil q u arre ls Ozer have tried rill they could to ••••neeal. For salt. by FLEMING RAO..Sand Dr. ORO, If. KRYSRIt,
gaged theettmest attention et the sages of the . everything, and vented their abusive and sla t ,. I Instead of pr„l„,,,aug tech mode of settling the dis. Pi--"burgh. an2s:2w-dsw
Revolution.. There can be no doubt that if they derons epithets 118 YignrOt.P.ly . as ever upon the `pates in l'an , a , amicably and peacefully, they have
rxi-Bateheloes Hear Dye—Do not Ipt the rsil
could have provided for stn amelioration and North because it had not, insisted on more. , artfully fanned the flame and . shown by their whole ,
tr - I thor dyes deter you from relying on the great
gradual emancipation, they.would have done so. Was this Northern or Southern aggression '.' E conduct that they o mild willingly spread civil war . " t " ' '
from Kansan all mer the Union. original. Ifwirrarded safe. sure and satisfactory. Made and
They found it, however, incorporated in the ' In 1850, this cry of Southern aggression .
moid. m applied at BATCTIELOK'S, (in ohm private rooms,).
Even an assault and battery committed at Wash
social system of. all the States but one, and they . on Northern rights again rose to a pitch which :
: incton oily has been used a. , a means of stirring up 231 Broadway, New York.
dealt with it according to•the exigencies of the i seemed to put the Union in extreme danger, j the bitter waters of sectional strife. When riots have, Reid, wholesale and retail, by Dr. GIO. H. Krim, 140
times in which they lived. We all know i Again the trouble was allayed by a compromi , e. 4 been raised in the North to prevent the execution of 1 Wood stied. itakisrdarr
"1 , .
.i . . , ' .• • - , .....
• , a.# Vt . t
~„,,,: a: .•,`..i.W.y,.....4.727. ;` , , r4 .. 4 15 - . p.t#.1ft........,.., •, ,it,. 4.. „ , .; , -,7.-;
.-. , 1.- - ,
. -
1 . ", r 1 .
•,`.'t
that even at that early (lay it rev, n Filibject of
mutual irritation and xeitentent ; and Ott-mail
the wonderful uses to whim the ct•tton plant ha
been applied, on a, contd. : of the . 4 .1. 0 ‘ ,,, ii/Ft.t iliy
coveries tueinatittfacture of machinery,. weft ,
then scarcely anticipated, it is Jrnottgb te say
that it republican fathersrrould IThi dispoSe et
this .I;:very question OM they agreedlipen the
basic wttich-lerl to the-torn:nation of the Cenat it u
thin , the .recognition of the domestic institu
tions ot the Stiritth, in the ratio of repre , etitittiou
313(1 in the provisions for the restitution 01 fugi
tives frmn labor. Twelve of the thirteen
that formed -the Conatitation, hold naves at tlio
time Oita instrument was adopted, :mil by ibio
quiet operation of their popular exclusive s, , v
t•reiguty six of these 8(4i1t., have since become
free. Throughout all the action of the framers
of the deral Constitution, the idea. which pre
railed woo that which regarded, the negro as
inferior to the white, and until atiolitiimi-in
aide to curt ince the present generati.m that 'la
idea is !logical and untrue, (and I, d o thi n they
must a-,ree to the doctrine et a perfect
betwee, the race.. i all permanent legislation on
the sul.jeet of lite negro race intuit and will lie
rontro!'•il by the ratne s-eiltiment. In the free
States, at the present day, the negro et
to a Ti', cal , and in Mini) respect' to a pity-iesi
rercihrlr, quitt, as injurious bi ins r .nilli!,,il aF
the mo t fabulous pictnres of Southern , lav, ry
represent his hrother••' e,mdithm in Hit.
\‘, do not esll the Not thorn rr gl 0 it • ki 0,
but in what free State in be tio• ryunl ..c 1 , , ,
white In •-oma States he is preceoto-1 from
voting, in others he votes 171)0I1 n property
fieeltion: even in Massuchusett4 certain disqu
fications are thrown in his way by those litopim k
philosophers, who constantly plate of the eiriali
ty of the races; in others still he is met by s
statute that excludes him altogether front 011-
trance upon their soil, and nou.hr , r is he ree
nized an the came level with the white. ~c
white who intermarries with the blcek is ever;
where regarded as a degraded being: and io
schools and churches there is almost a univrt,ll
bar between the two meet-. PO Thar the rn!ii-. nt
society and the laws of the St4ltek, even $a tl
communities of the tion-slarehol,ling region, .1!
inexorably opposed to the negro. Why i- it 1h•
Abolitionism does not begin at home and rrL
these things':
But again, there i no p :wet: which cnn pry %
any State from mm-ing :whatever iatrs it hi
please under the Federal Constitution, f
own, comfort 37”1 th.• very
theory which induces us tv re , pect an I to reo
nice the great ilectrine of critate -fight iu t;.
South. under which it bolds its own
peb us slot to recogri'.ze thri-e laws to which
hare referred in the North. to the V.
bittek.. The North rog.ttl:ttett it- relh,r e .t
lotion to it pie i r , .
by the l'un , titution of the Ciiitcd .st it r o ,
the negrees of the North nee reprewinted ih
ratio of federal repre•entritien. and •
all are dit,franedicil and alienated I.y th.i I
or the North. The •znittlr doe, 3u whe tidio • •
with its enloieil
is iiraitecteti under lii•
ita Llaveq ore only rispre-enti..l
three fifth , in lb f. , .d•rd i - vpre,entn:i.ot
In a moral iif VW"' at. 1,1 , t :•I
111,• ~• t, who s• t• rn
tirely silent in ref. ',Tor' 11/ ibe ellnsiiii“n e
tiegrlleY in the ire Stateit,
ly vituperative when they i'Aftle h treat 1.1 .
condition of thr of tho.lnve Bo'd
belong to the seine in feri,ir Beth i ar.i
gartlett in till the State. The S f..un
legacy in slavery. t: - .1.n. rnitted i it I.y if. Er,:
lirh anceotors„ and the i',nstill!“.. l , re -p,•, ....1
inotitution no it existed when thot , n , trtintent rr
framed. The Nerd], while it haw rid
olavery, jso far no the name in convey-n°(l. !
retain. the right to protect itself
with a raCI. whirl 1F , (3111p , :d
elat , ses of whites. wherever then ore Gntn 1.
The Northern tottntes. in the es.erc '-c t
undoubted consti:lttionnt tight, eon : tulted w , •
they tlet:ined their own true intereot. of to
ter rho other, in their own time and the,r
wily, at.. ti-Ite.l viwtely. Aettil.o: the-, to
the Norih the ntfor,,i not
et . tl.it the eicw , ,kl-.. 1
,otiltieen xre-r 1,,
l'hey be!iet...l tt !•t ntteth- int;
the g.rente , t'Li 7: i.4,le;•:ty
I/US l,i lJn tr very 10, • I
hi , Vl•t. nit
to which th,y ri4!,l th!. \
had to an Bet thy
fre.] to to and
At , It- errs r+t t'cm•rr~. L
WAN ! . .•rln, 11,11,1,,
very by I't nrn•.
hr ..wn leive L.••• 11 I .
Crl l l7n.`r• .`tii,r1'..11..t:11.111,1 i • IIIre.1 : •
pre , 11111..0, oil, •.f
11,1iCtiil
i• .1 I all. II '1 r
. Ih.. !••• •
be , n !L0,.:1, .1 hy
Northern Almiitioui•ts, ei r H i! i f
they had no business what, ver with the ,
.1 majority ..f the aid Sti.te , ma.lo ihe
free without from at roa.l.
wA, wise fiir the Neria to do t ,t
It Yea+ .11Id Vn ,,, er In Ih..
evmplaint i equally Our.
whether the South ha* gimul nny
,fflunitte,i nnl aggr,s..,i,.D. , with referrer, I.
new States.
Niaino art i Crrtiw. sttrt• tt,lmitt.•l 1 . .t. e e
St at 4,1; j... 17, 1,. put ;
111(0 I Lei r retettitutt,r, t •t tt:,
emiree. t-rt t ew. 1
I:nt with ren . r,uce the Tn i
-h:v•rs
-he •1;/-,'
tors north n!,•1 .4' 1
1 , -I. , ngi• 1 t\ . I He owns l !
the 11;01, .111 ; I••
the settlement of ever: . \that . is
ur triagnaninhat-iy 11,1
eat jurisdiction, hut al,- her prortietary right
the Federal Government. alltiwinz the vote, -
the North to settle its de-tiny. and itl it. l ..
coeds to go into the
had a spurious 111111111 ill IT pn. it it ,
precisely like that whioi, -li.• •ei III; •I ;
lt
Pennsylvania, and Ishio
Itut lier to the 1 e-t, , it ei
eeneeded to her ,he hots it,ll se'.•l I
thepreeeed- into il• ; 1 , 11 011.-ill
.1,1 [44.1 prate :t, i.V. TI itii ior•1 1 Till i e; ; ; I • ;
was p':<..l, -liivery within the Lai.
tory whieli Fill' ha -I lbm generously given awns
lVit, there any ag}, , res,iiiii in all Oil.' If thi ie
wits "ene.roachment'' on either who e, io
ntitted it " If there wit, mina,e
whom did it come t .'
The territory of Loni , uuut . including what
now Arkansas, 1 ,, W:1, Neiiraska, K
stis, rind the utmeetipied wilderne-i4 ber , ,tt N,a.-
pure,haseil from France in It war nti Into
tI rritory. SVp took it with 1;1..
it legalizing -lavery It eottlit not he read. Ire
without repealing that law had ! „•,'n
sewed long loifore by 1.. ‘vh.. own.' -i ••
and who lupl held them 1 11 , 1 - e. 12 1.'1111.g faith .11
the law. They were no' di.turlied during het
whole existence as an or,-
• +
• '
NM=
The nature, eherart,r and terms of the Compri,.
mi.. will ,how how zafirti ag4rr.'—.on had !ten
committed then. There were
Calitled in it 1. The admission .1. California IL ,
At free state. 2. The territorial organiLatitm of
-.N e w Mexico on the principle of non- in tercen tion.
vim* It WCa fa3own would exclude slavery. :t
%rile pfirottase of n large portion of Texas. taking
it away from the jurisdiction - otm slave State.
4 The abolition of thcslave trade in the District
of Columbia. The fugitive slave law. The
first four of the,e measures were And-slavery,
and were demanded by the North. The fifth one
, the fttgitire slave law) was a coneessinn, nut to
t h e s ouL h , I,w I. the Constitution. It Iva+ re
:luired by its plain and unelvivocal mandate,
and hall been admitted Ity every President and
erery'Confrre,s, front the foundation of the Gov
ernment, to be an imperative Constitutional ob
ligation. ,For this, the same infamous assaults
were again made on the eminent men who sop
, I, vied it. The only mea , nre which the South
ot,pos,c,l and resisted. even after its
, Lactinent, and in rum place , its exerutiou way
wholly prevented. We ileumol, A p t i n , w h ere
was the aggression
' it on -e far: , WC 1;3, the tn.:North - al that
iu every curtest where the rights of the North
have he”n entruoed to Hernovratie protection,
they have been guarded faithfully and well. We
have not resi,ted any jrn...t claim which the Smith
ever mmh., wC hove meant to treat them
:all to carry out in good ['Jig] the obligations
imposed on us he the Constitution. Yet if the-e
has been nnc itt , done , in which the South has
rot mnre thin it , due, the history of the transac
n boo cottoned our notice. tin the contrary,
we RllhOlit if) yon, fellow-eiti7ens., whether the
South has net got the scantiest measure of jos
ticc that could possibly be dealt out to her.
Has-not the North had all the preponderance':
Has not our section had the advantage of ail the
important concessions that were ever made?
The States of tltrin, Indiana, Illinois, Michi
gan and Wisconsin, were slave territory. They
presented to no ht' no a gracious gi't,
and we excluded slavery. The State of lowa,
Cie territories of Minnesota and Nebraska, were
, lave territory under the law of Louisiana. We
took them beratHe we were strong, and we made
them Free Soil. Slawry once covered the whole
Union. Its representatives in the National Gov
ernment are now in a minority. Could anything
Lot the gros-0-1 malice, the most stupid folly
er the most unmitigated knavery, have suggested
the idea that ,)awry wa , encroaching upon us
while these thing, were going on
(me iirn red -pane will not permit us to recount
the ninny unin,titialde injuries which the aboli
tioni.J, have perpetrated and rtttemnted, to per.
p,r r at e u p on the people of the South. upon those
in the N,.rth who do not unite with them, and
a!: the in,titnt:ons of the country. They have
nght evert occasion and taken advantage of
every event which could give then an excuse
p•onins out their venomous ,danders upon the
father , of the Constitution, upon the Constitution
it vir, upuat all who support it
Tli;.:iiritAii..nl , egati in England among personi
TIN' or ArnPrica !lie only
ti, ir lyi , tilits to "air Union
Thy mart ..A4 l' c,dintrr one Tliturnp,ion. a
io. C.,. hirtiarriiint, a Ivan of
Hit etnpli,yt•ri.. Under
hi.. influence ;mil dirvetiult
sct,r ti i f”rtri. were c , tablislieil in
Nao Etiztnnd of those
was to exeile insurrection amen;; the
a,greeA. Fur this. purpose, they
tr'boted :mom: the nef.zr. , es, by every means in
their power, pictures representing the scenes cf
tnurd,r and arson. thr.mgh which the
f'her would adopt them, might be fr..'
;Lino , accompanied by protnis ~ f
nit and sap pert from British and American le),1-
(,- Long tu the time we speak „f,
itng+, n member of Congress. on I
new the io,i;nz friend of (.01 Premont, admitted
th.• aeoomph-htneut f !hi object, sersile
1.•.1 by Roush “theor,. I to he the,le:t--
hon,l doullt he spoke
pt rty
thlti;the , itnati.,n in whi,ll
e ;,i144.,•,1 I
i • • tn , f, .I.lvi•ry INSrenl,l
!‘;tht.]r Ma,,y
• • t ..,;!. hut :„ It. c :
t :1,1 • •,I•1 neii her 1., :.1
vrlth r rt nor I•t aith ,Ifety. A , zyn...,1
V. 011 1 ,1 flax , hr. , r, i , turd Pun - N.l,r •
tk‘ •.. t.• 1.1 ~ k rare. pr..!..
. •tt., the a hit, in their owu hi
/ • :.•!- Itr,tl
I accrh tf rt,, , its t hi.
r .1 tll,lr -1;1: ll_,
=MEE
. .
1 1 oh fOl it h. rtlitHcr
ITI, '
I) I I
1:1It ~ .1•1111.1ni, r
It. 1,1.11. 1 111.' 1 '111 Jll l ll- 11 .11 raUeJ the att,o
to the Qahiee% Ind a hi Ii W 11.9 irr:•,, , • 1
EMMEN
;:i • the tr.Lnr thi—ion of incendiary .1.„ „
ihr,iiigh the nail, the 12,
I' Ira, net ~ni, 1. , .
1,11 I the 3.ropio.itiiin to prevent to, Irnitod Stntes rn Li
Pro.tituthrl to Iho piirrom, of atioio G,a
t:. 1. hol 11:11,1er. teal turole the ori-Joinn of a tiro
•lationi ag . eri,si,n, and e,ory Northern phi ,
•il it wni4 II g.ttu called a dough liter, vow!, 7,i
lEEE=
MIMEO
Now ht 31
In 11, I , ,,eat , ant-u>s. the At.liti.n party to
stronzth to hill, it rover hail hefurt. The cii•sobt•
to, 1,1 the Whir party krt tunny Talon ivilhollt.po! ,
Le:ni en:1 , 14.3.1o11:o and 1401110 of them have a 11U+elt•
in L : ittfalnrt the I.tem.reroov whirl inalies them
tno!.ra-o ,t.y
Many of the adLering Nan NUthir
"hi). W , tl. thrbr oyes shut. int.. rbo
7.:llallThey 101 l 0. not inn
, nrtylf , I n I uric 111',1, they .lure to all I:,.
t•••; •'i , \ or tnell,ll.•tin: , loot,
rH , ,o,n , or .16i.,,16 forOrimi nn , l develoinot :it
ilL',.q•••v , ted by Itritioh eintssartes ar:,
I t l.t in. lin;1-11 dire.; W....A .
1; • •..1 lilt' •••I 1.^1.116114
••..e.• I ee has heel,
,‘•;•,! i,.• and
1%••••••,,. all 11, if,r:tiet.i:o,, will
11,1' I N ti ••”.c;• that were.. IVhee that hut
• :,.• I,ok hank
111. , 11 , II think 11.IIh
rim Al 1,11 a few htnalies
s.. an•l
"r
• ii.hi perinithid
oqi , iliilPl l .ll rho to it
hs its hi.. and 'Thus it ri
r ,, :f‘ eff • "It Irving tru e l n i eu ,
, ftln.. art NafT Iff fofzisfafr slavery iSrti iti•V I
SIAN. ti, ~,itt,tn it therefrom. hut
Isay. Ike people ther.a.t perfectly Cron to thrill
regulate their dome:46 , itnititittions in their 4.11
salter co
the nstitntion of the
Stales. -
11 t. on,: the very principle of the
wrvc title of 15..0. will, refuremie to California and '
Yea' rilcsieo. and ail...oared by Clay and Cass, of l
N'ntator. hit \Vhigs, lienuierats and Americans,
411 rues whit lose th e tnio e , listen to the langmage
of the patriot Clay, in his lielelirateiLroport introilas•
th. Comprorilis43 title : It is high time that tln
wounds which it [the Wiluiot has
he hetilstl up awl closed, and that to avoid
f.'s"-, the agitation, which roust bo pr.i
. .
ISIZThiI
Lotit• rrc ;ii thy: I..ment. 'ln , ' i•r
- • -
the fugitive slave law, a law approved by Washing
ton, voted for 4,y Clay and Wehster, and signed by
President Fillmore. and murders committed for the
same purpose like those at Carlisle and Christiatnia,,
these same abolitionista clapped their hands in
tatMn, and cried well dune! When the South com
plained that her best citizens had been thuaslaugh
tered fur no offence but demanding their lawful
rights. the abolitionists answered with insult and ri
baldry. But now, when a Northern Senator is caned
hy the Representative of a slaveholding State, the
whole abolition party is thrown into a wild commo
tion of excitement. We do not justify or excuse Mr.
Brooks. but we think that those men who had no
synlpathy for Kennedy and Gorsuch might as well
he quiet about
In conclusion, wo will briefly refer to one import
ant fact. which ought to consign the leaders of the
so-called Republican party to their political graves.
You are all aware that the Senate of the United
;-ttat.es is largely Democratic. That body, some time
ago, passed a bill for the pacification of Kansas, no
itIA and eo equitable, that no fair objection can be
made against it. It provides for the admission of
liatisas es a State, with such a Constitution as the
people themselves shall choose to have ; and that the
vote apon it may he taken fairly, the most stringent
ccgolations arc made to prevent any man from put
ting in a ballot who is not a resident. It provides
that any one who has left the Territory on account
of the previous troubles, may return and vote as if
he had not gone away. It abrogates all the laws
passed by the the Territorial Legislature complained
of by the abolitionists. No man can deny ,and so
tar as we know it never has been denied) that this
bill, if passed the other House of Congress.
would at once elute the whole diffieulty in a manner
perfectly fair. Even one of the Abolition Senators
Mr. Hale- -admitted this, for upon the introduction
of the bill he said, in the Senate:
" But, sir, T do not want. to dwell on that subject.
hot to speak a very few words in reference to this bill
which has been introduced by the Senator from Geor
gia. I take this_vecasion to say that the bill, as a
whole, does great credit to the magnamity, to the
patriotism, and G. the sense of justice of the honor
able Senator who introduced it. It is a much fairer
bill than I expected from that latitude. I says() be
cause I am always willing and determined, when T
have occasion to speak anything, to do ample jus
tice. I think the bill is almost unexceptionable."
Yet. the Republican leaders in and out of Congress
are doing their best to prevent the passage of this
bill. They du not want the question settled. They
prefer civil war, disunion, and all their frightful con
sequences. We solemnly trust that these heartless
demagogues will receive such a lesson at the next
election, from the people, and especially from the
people of Pennsylvania, as will settle them and the
Kansas question together.
By ~,,t , of th, grate Centred Commiftre.
Gideon ti. West..lt, William Lill v,
Jas. E. Johnston, Wilson Reil.y,
George Plitt, J. B. Danner,
Alfred Gilmore, Wm. U. Kurtz,
William Rice, George H. Burlier,
N. It. Browne, George Stroop,
Geerge Williams, George White,
Thomas S. Fernon, .T. Richter Jones,
Emanuel Street, H. L. Diffenbach,
Wm. G. Kline. Wm. G. Murray,
Wm. V. M'Grath, R. W. Weaver,
Edward W. Power, Dr. H. B. Throop,
tleorge Moore, Asur Lathrop,
Thomas J. Timmons, Win. M. Platt,
Jesse Johnson, Julius Sherwood,
Wm. T. Morrison, H. 11. Dent,
A. 11. Tippin, Wm. S. Garvin,
Joseph Hemphill, Robert. P. Cochran.
J. I'. Leiper, Joseph Douglass,
.1. Lawrence Getz, R. F. Sloa n ,
Wm. Karnes, Times M. Bredin,
F'. Vansaut, .T. M. Keuster,
John Davis, Samuel B. Wilson.
Samuel l'. Statnbangh, David Lynch,
C. B. Gioninger, M. I. Stewart,
11. H. Swan.
Ja., H. M'Mnhon.
Isaac G. M'Kinley
Andrew Hopkins.,
Wei. 11. Miller,
Richard M'Allister
O. Barrett,
Samuel Bigler,
... . .. . ,
Henry Omit, J. S. Miller,
Wm. P. Withingion, F.. J. Keenan,
D. I). \V goner, IL P. Flenniken
Sri roue! Wetherill, Bernard Reilly,
Naknri Weiser, John P. Lord,
Thomas J. M'Camant.
JoRN W. FORNEY, Chairman
4W- Worms! Worms! ' , Worms I-- A gr
.nary lnarn.d trraliseti latro lava writtAn, explalniug
aa I . !aaaif) ill:, the wonw wawra:tal w the hilt::
ar.,.1, any of medical ha%
FREIGHT LINE-.
L2l AMNIMVaIitagENIN
-pH LIN NIS NOW pitEpA RED to bring
all kinds num Nola York, in [bran days, of
$1,1:o y hnt Itti. , and from Philadelphia in 40 hours at $1 Vi
1.10- . q ittltrt,m it. I. the notch, .mt!tit itftne t o o th,
• It.iirt;
1,;• are touch di, Well in opiu i.m on the nult,i•
imelt wintitted.h.oxeser, that, after all, a mode of
and ptirifyintt tho Lily from their preeence
tst•.l", %All, IliAll Ilic U 18.4. diKtplibillol. OA to their ori
...!1 nu 0N1. ,, P , 14., agent hit. at length 1* a foutol.
blirwcy 1111Ivemilly Ati‘ll,,NP 1y.b.,11 bytLi
zu,,tp• :aeult‘ An further proof, r,nd
.1 n —oh: %AYH Cl 1...te1..
New roRIC, (4:tober
'r!” , k to rer tif) tlett 1 wag troubled with worws to noon`
once 3 l none. I Ma.. to 311,aint's Celebrated ler
par.,l i v Fleming Bros, of Pitt,burgli. I Ink
au • bronght ninny skoll fifty worms; l rum
tuete.,l imprut kir at on,, 11.11.1 OM now perteetly well. The
pit Idle n learn toy name, and further particulars, by avid%
.ng N. Manhattan' Place, or to E. 1..
uggi•t, corner of Itut.,.‘Ter and Motwoo streets. •
Pundlaeon,
it ill be careful lot ask rm. lie. Al'hrtir's (17. ,
4,am( I.itvr I din. manufactured by Plowing 111 , 5., of I'itts
ottrgh. l`a. All other Liver Pills, In comparisott„ 'fro worth :
If . KM. Dr. genuine Liver Pills, also his celebrated
Verutifttge. can te.w be had at all respoctablo drug stors..
•,n-lattino without the signature of PLEMPNO
for sale 19 rho solo provriotont,
FLKMINO BRCS,
Successors to J. Kidd &
w No. BO Wood street, corner of Fourth.
4-4- Piles, neglected, oiled, prove fatal: lend to cott.un ,
:wild the parts three 6..41 a any with DA I.LEV
\l\ I: k - rtmt. If sei•relinn torn lie r.s..t.nui. lie
insert ilie •• I' d S, ring," fu el whit Et.tractilm, and
hArg,rt , iv syringe is withilritn n. It lie, •
talk t., I are ,tattatt :try Itgt• of virulence, Der to give 1111 tf,
at,tlt 111.44411 i) fa all. flatI111•110Y Vadat; by one applientien.
Pit,. Ire I b, the Ie sl, itching and pain of the
noun. Itliculing are caused iniunitiniec by the falling! Ile. it hole l a in. which then tiresn the intection!
..itinl tight g.o un the bib leineit 11111 i keeps the frino
I•t LIII till, aft fiat osit•lx, inutility to the Main! being kept ift
..111 lin,rer a hen n •trine; is dell tight r• , aml it
11. , 1111 ! I. an I rei met ainlana Itu iiiii re! 1111.1 tilrery t., furl
dela., then prat us, a iterlarl abdominal aupparter,
N.qll a cantina... I , the rerturst. and continue to 1.a.•
a. aka.. , alae nth it nee aver the loin 4 soul alalantru
411.• I.llst . .111./ 1.1:.• W11111:41 14.4, that support the Isotols mu]
• ••••ol 1,1 and muds stroug, and pt or hi sat ..l
Ilt • To. ly ~•ry Lau. tt 111 ourtal. It nets, falls
F 1:111/ IN, N ithout a stool-plate engraved label, wilt.
I=l
HENRY DAI.I.EY, Ntanufarturor
C. V. CLIUKKNEIt t (1. ManufarturtTß.
:told at '25 rents per box by Dr. 0144). If. KICYSItIt, 1 ID
Wood kdroet, and by nearly every dealer in median,.
throughout the United Rate., All onions or letters for I n .
i.•ruLitiou or advice. to to addressed to C. V. CLICK ICNI•:It
.4 CO.. Now York, nu'23.'tlaa 2w
Itav Margantowu, Vn., January 25, 12455
1 , 1,. 1. s,orr A. G.—Per severe! weeks past I had a sever,
lloadaolle, deranged Stomach and Liver, and my spasm gen
orally out of order. After udlng, it few &wee of your Nt,
Latie e, Improved Liver Pills , all the above mentioned avim
Puns are removed, and I lon new Textured to health. I ea. .
. . .
i ~ '~,~'
s {-. ~- ~ i
- 2" • -:, , .717.et - z 4- V- - *
. -
•
A RARE CHANCE. ' ''' n
18U() "11"8' .
OF 11 AlRtit , COA and/nor. eitx Lin, is Mita* for sale omtavoi
able farms, of..it, exchange for promarty In this 4iity or
counts,.
l'hir Land is heavily thnhered, and Ileaconseuleutlito OW
Cilitiell river,lo Forest . county, .. that the lumber am bo
floatedaut and brought to market.
It crilitains . an ELIIYIN roar 34111,0,....,,
ROOD liiiiflLlli ' . •
Undor 0 large portion of the lend. '--,' i
Iron Ore and Limestone
In Aluminum, upon it; and thenoU ia good and well we/aro&
• A RA ILRO
is surveyed across it, and will no doubt be built, whieli is
port of a line of ntilrotals front New York to St. Lonhit
The soil is fool and generally level, and is in the mydat'or
a region that will soon be one of the best far:wing reftlbsts of
the Moto. :
The 1800 acres lie together In a body, and will be sold at - a
bargain to the purchaser. Enquire of
- TIIONIAB'WOODSkItedt•Eittate April, • -
nail N 0.15 Foroth street, Pitisbugh.
PITTSBURGH •
LIF E,: FIRE AND MARINE
I..VSURANCE 'COMP ANY,
CORNER OP WATHR. AND AIANIErr STRESTEI
PITT'S/108G% PA.
DoBERT GALWAY, President.
Tuna. Gamma, Secrete:fp.
"T-Thia
Or ma.) with Compan
Lly
FE RISKS. makes exeryinstatince appertaining to
com
Moo, agairug• RDI.I. AND •OABOO JUNKS on the Ohio
and MU
merntly. dottipplliveia arid tributarioi, and:NADINE xusEa
p
And against Lots and Damage by Fire, and against: the
Perlis of the Sea and Inie6d Nateh,eittied hnd Transportation.
Policies issued at die lowest rates consistent with saikp to
all parties.
WESTERN INSURANCE COMPA:isfY
Pint Senses. —GEORG \ It, "tido/tit
GORDON" Secretary: • •
Will insure against all kinds of t an“ „AWNS.
All losses will bo libendly adjusekt an I I,, , ,onrrty ladd ;
A name Institution, managed by Do, 4 who art sell
known in the community, and who ire dot-mined. b,e,
promptness and liberality, to maintain the ..lionseter which
they lion, anterned, as offering tho best proto to the -It
who desire to ho Justin...l.
Lanscroca—R. Miller, Jr., C. W. lUcketeen, 3. II . MAP?,
N. llaim,s , Jr. W. IL Smith, C. I linisen, George W. Jaakk'Hat
Andrew Ackley, Jamo , . Lippincott, George Deraloolalte9
A !sky, Alexander Niniirk, Thoman Scott.
tr a y- 011ie.. No. 92 Water street, (Warehouse of Sluing &
C..., up stairs,) Pittsburgh. novSkly,
—-- - •
A. A. CARRIED. H H CARBJER
A. A. CARRIER dt BRO.,
No. 63 Fourth streets, Pittsburgh,
AGENTS
State Mutual Piro and Maxine Insuritac
Co., of LIARRISGURG. adrinfL, $350,000.
Girard Fire and Marine Insiera.nee Co., of
I'IIII.ADELI CAPITAL, $300,000.
insurance Co. of the Valley of Virginia
W I NCIII.IOTIAL, A. (1...W17'AL, 5300,000.
Commonwealth Inattranee Compway, DM
c.,1 $300,000.
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co.
C.l PIT A L AN!) A.VET,s; 412,154,450
Pert et aylvn i a Irks araitee Co., of PITTSBURGH.
I'ITA L A .N'D ..18SETX Nov. 5, 1855 1 51519,092 49.
Wu. F. Jonvvvorr, Prceideut A. A. CARRIER. Secretary.
decl..{:depely
PEKIN TEA
Wm. Workman,
Charles A. Black,
George W. Bowman,
J. B. Benson,
GREEN & BLACK TEAS
. S. Jamison,
Charles Lambertnn
A. S. Wilson,
Thomas Bower,
Nark-seed direct from the Importers for OASH. TLe
meek cousi.ts of all the different flavors and grades of TEA
brought to the American market, and
BOLD WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
AT EOM
VERY LOWEST CASH . TRIO - NSI
PACKED TEAS, PUT UP IN MESALIC PACE
kliEtth, exprtussly for the trade.
TEAS OF ALL OILADEE, tIY THE LIAT.F CHEST.
COFFEE, SUGAR, 0000 A and cnocorxrit 01 the am"
auxonn, ter sale.
Long experience In the bushman In a aura guarantee that
every article sold *lll It , to reprmante.l.
AtIENT. or SPECIAL APPOINTMENT, eon THE SALE or Ito
JAI NE', FAMILY MEDICINES. S. J AVE ES.
J titta 1050--(Jecel)
IrETPTS GIVEN FOR ME WIWI A
tiLla RANTER.
Iva_ No parer packrigi. or Knuth bundles received.
Mark goods " ECLIPSE FREMEIT LLN E."
K. ALLEN, Agent, No. 2 Astor Howie, New York.
J. J. !deli REV EU. Agent, ear. Itrowl and Locust, Phil,
For further inforuintion, apply to
W. B. DARItOLL, Agent,
fe24:lln--Journal copy. No..l34Fourth et..
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
HARDWARE.
No. 83 Wood etreef, between Diamond
alley and Fourth street,
•
TTSBeR Gil, .PA
Le- Tile nubeerilier ia now opening a well scientist
meat of foreign and domeatic Hardware, all new,and will be
sold on no good tempo as any other Maass to thin city. Ho
will always keep on hand a general assortment of
HARDWARE, CUTLERY, CARPENTERS' 'TOOLS, &e.,
T., which ie reitpectrtilly invites the ottontionnt purehawn.
SAMUEL PAITNESTOCIt
CotrisN M T. hill :N
J AISLES COLLINS & CO.,
Forwarding and Commission Merchants
Nos. 111 AND 115 WATER STREET ; PITT9BURRR, PA.
RHODES, 11,11‘EN Si. CO.,
FORWARDING AND COMMISSION
No. :in STekMOELE ST., CINCINNAT/, 0 fj,2o
PITTSBURGH STEEL WORKS.
ISAAC JONES,
MANUAACIIMER Of
SPRING, PLOW AND A. B. STEEL,
SPRINGS AND AXLES.
Corner Roos and First Streets,
13 .25 • PITTSBURGH, PA.
=l=
STEEL CULTIVATOR TEETH,
CORNER Ross AND FIRST STURM'S,
iS 26 P.
JAMES BLAKELY,
11 PEAS' AGENT AND CONVEYANCER,
Corner of Seventh and Smithfield streets,
PITTSBUDOIi.
•
.Passengers broht from the old country to Pitts.
'burgh, and moneys remitted to karcrpe.[ nap
W. 11. ROTH
WHOLESALE GROCEIt
1 Second and lal Front.st.,
Pittsbargh, Pa.
WILLIAMS & ALLEN,
CHILSON FURNACES,
Wrought Iron Tubing,
AND FITTING GENERALLY,
For Warming and Ventilating Buildings.
W. & A, will contract for Warming and Ventilating
by Steam or Hot Water, Pipes or Chlison's Ifitrztoubtabtircli
es &Mails, Hospitals, Paotorlea, Omen Houses, Dwellings,,
Court MAU., Jails, or Hotels. No. 2ft iIIARICET STREET,
Pittsburgh, egad
TERRA COTTA OR STONE
WATER PIPES.
From two to six inch calibre.
PRICES from 12 to 30 Cents per Foot.
.PEARL STARCH
For Sale Wholesale at Iltanutac.Litrers
Prices by
COMMISSION IVIERCHLANT,
AND WHOLESALE DEALER IN
CHEESE, BUTTER, SEEDS, FISH,
F LOUR. GRAIN.
BACON,, LARD, LARD OIL,
AND PRODUCE GENERALIA
O. 299 Liberty street,
decit;dtpi PITSBBILLIMIL
• • •
• •
.. -.'• ~
-. , i.... , .. , ;:i .-.. k, ,.`‘,F , ...,:.. 4.,' '‘'' ,,, 11..- , , ;' ‘,' 4 '''-' ',:',;:
;.i;:':47-,.4;.:,,,'.1.,,,*' -',•.'..i':5. -4;l.'l:l',::‘••••..l'.:''';','•i:'
ENE
Zl=2lM
flt rt, I, al.
DIRECTORS.
Robert Galway, Samuel hrClurhan, '
J/...srph P. llflSZatn. M. D, John Scott,
Junes., Marshall, David Bishop,
James W. Halhuan, Charles Arbuthnot,
Alexander Bradley, Joseph S. leech;
:lotui Fullerton, ManstlekllD. Browth
David IL Chambers, Christian Zug,
William Carr, Robert IL . M Bartley, ~ .
Jas. DcGill. rdeifj'
No. 3H FIFTH STREET,
ONE DOOR EAST OF THE EXCHANGE RANK,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
OLD ECLIPSE
SAMUEL FAHNESTOVK,
IMPORTER & DEALER IN '
PEOPIMETOBB OF TIIII
CoIIInb• Pittsburgh, Meadville & Erie
CANAL LINES.
MERCHANTS,
CAST STEEL.
A LSO,
D. B. ROGERS & CO
MANUFACTURER, 4 4 OF
gOGERS' IMPROVKD PATI E NT
.w. W. MAU.-
SMITH, MAIR & HUNTER
MAN 0 FACTURI3RS OF
111 - E.NRY U. COLLINS,
FORWARDING AND
AND PRODUCE GENERALLY,
No. 25 WOOD STRUT, PITTSBURGH. Urea
ALEX. IitiNTER,
DEALER IN
EMI
=MEM
4-
Tt"''
mom==:==
r• v:fer - ifigd;" .11*.fru mtait bra mocha/al 411
tolled forth tta solemn awl the gal togs of tillth4
sad the Ituntettatkes ofl odd pr ie g n , ae lbe buds Cr. iepta
arid ene luta 'been itcritt ‘ e;t&a twendittim mow who died
* ign
rough orance of. their &wine by tb who: attettded
',them, or tho admit/taxation of &drier-kW "Watt itleffddleiti
renudies. W. write title all sarrtieet ittidlittwer itirldtt
io thtwallodlnit to thedead would try the Hs-
W hat are some of the most fatal toed/tenger. ibis
3),C1.4 twthwtambr Wirtpla War , Elarefaid,ltyldpelas, and
01:1111ar dtwatem. Now. although'lkww4oso,w,
that ;Welt dletwees shall 'oxitt, it 'fiat 4dee of y
distilled frith lb.. herb of, ihelleld. mud ltaluso - bor :Namr.
arfi Dhoureq. Invalitt,l*J6ctit il4;1; - " ) :' , •
800 lout( adrattlatitoillt In ia4lite
wipryp
Sold witelowthr wad ?elan atDI46EOO/4:4L-OiSEVS.
11 , 0 Wood etr64;:efort of 14 idtWtar, - 40.4: I:
61./.IIING'S. Allelthett7- 'f. '
leeiintea•6idi y( 4)lmi;r;447,ltontan.
it* tit-4 prie .
- feint
Bo mark I A Ilegkeidt: bji:/(obi;..!en3nnt, llti
Cemetery. And Of riqiiliit:,itiovr.todp:,4*/:&;80(narak
SYRUP I.IVE.MVORt
will alkedy cam hunarods oIIA
amain Ws *OIL folly.
Foch delay to insanity. See tionittyst all FdiCriimonent.
.drir• For sale, &boreal!) and rot 4 b.y a.. - Oxixam a
CO., corner WOod and gecond sired& '
Sold oleo- 1111XDR1320De A BRO., I,lporty &tat; It I'
84.1111#ARTZ, - rind BECKHAM & MaKINNAN, Allegheny
• - • ,••• oitityainqw
tat-Why will youliwiTer, era cfDII4ErCAN
BS
94) RAAILY 9111WINID7.4tii-feeilee fti3F4siio li tQ.UtaNii-
Rbeunutchnxi, Neuralgia,. Ilintiebitie,CroniAtiFllbiacklfroat
&Dia, Rehm Smiley or take y*.ayateial
Vett
can PP relieved fiit orivi, aaiagAiiiii*DeAtlo4 . of
nil Llailealiiii..the .Iflitte eirmisian 'Lilklitgt,H:!.lllVsztd
by Dr. SCOTT, of Elorgata9wn, Sale cheap,
slwlaeala awl KETSRAl•ploiyco! eilyet,sad
JA&D. FL VAIING. new R. It. Alleikci#;See •
oortisomant to nnothor volcano of to4aVe - rdspet, 4.• • '•
.00ktitgo and Hooltariirtiitilleitotter.4.
It yoy tion't *rout your:fo.)tfitittittett Mat bad:and short
titceliina,.yiai take our advice and go to CL DAteei tor•
tier of nark* ayes. dadatiiet,ima - bit some of tfitile
*via as * *. stoe.?:4tm thgTWor YoUr - leetlik*ce,
comfortable, ' DAY itleo - oto - iteti every
[foolery that jou inn mention, at wholoodet44,fOtitt.
Itemembot tho glace. corner of 71 4rket - Illey:oid / 4 1th
.
_ _
•
Arai , Ha its.-,Via•havei justreceirati itat.:**44ll74B
OF SOFT DRESS IiATS of alfipialltlei, eelota ati4
awl we now Hatter ourselves that we map
,pla u so all orbit
fkyor iat with a call. .
an.o 141Vita6al *treat
— . all Style. -.We Introilttee
Annul 36, 'Lek., dnr PALL'ilTY,httl 011,9ilLE;;EUTS. OW
aeo them. A 'good Hat for '
au3o Eiloll4lAlli it 09, at.
DIED>r ,
,
parted this life, after a-thart Illuvas,AtW3/44r:Orovo,
r,O Sunday the 31st A ugust,lilfar..lDltAi aged_thtenytianfaa
font' months, danghtir of W., hltttftiairptagutattia
'Borough.
le this sadden bereavement thif•familyilato..''degiririldi
of the society of a lovely andtn9o;'lFterest%Pft'.'4444l
has fled forever front this earth Amt •
band Zola° will lead her'ont... - 5:'.-;
Through ell the Whey:it-road,
Till to the sacred mount ohellsea,
And ems her limning , God.",-
1W,!,11177 - Fl
. , .
crrimis , DEpoarr 11ANIC,41 5 1ttldoullti Sept,
41-,37 1, I&sB.—The Presidetit i d plreeldtC-Of-Abia-Bank
have Ibis day declared' a Dltfdeud o[ IYB nat._
___ o 3:l4
the Capitol Stuck, out of the pruifttrOf-the-w....i.r T,
wak
payable an or after dm
wz-td
STORE,
11 - 7 . , • OILAND RALLY OP TLIE wmocztAcr (van ,
Lr,y - ToWNSUIP.—There wW he altradd lan or the
Democracy,of Pitt, Township bn TUESDAY ' $V p
September2d, athaltpast seretetecrus TWOHTLEI
NI EL W BLACK, Eton- 1., a sziaassox r pr.'arconr,,
IL • •
D. 1). TOLUCA Req., and other-distinguished 'Speaker% will
Aidrras the meeting. The GLEE MAWS till - alsirty in at.
tendenee.
Townshi „,./It the inuneAlthe there wilt•hetsetukid , nned for
p
We .
ELECTION.—The Animal Election tin President
11 I,
-Directors, de., r the BOAltD; OP TlLikria:AND
ArEnotilairs , raciumaß aid be held at thelefteennois
WIWNICSDAY,Ibe Id mat, between the tetanal wad
o'clock, P. 11. (eel) . TAMES IVRA.IOI, Bee's%
N(YrlPE—TheStockholders or ,, Alice New 1
t,nstle and Derlingten Rafting! CompanyAuiltuie_LT
notified that ea instalment 4,being. thaseafind)orliblf DOI.
lure per share is called for, payable
surer on the Vith day of fierptsniber ext.,aitsi) at an
every sixty days therea ft er until the , whOle-iil idol' Is
Ilordrr of the Drente( Directors.
wx., l l.,wmuAni,s,.iteunrar,
(VEnce, conity,Third and -Wood.
VALITABLE REAL ESTATERm SALE
A UCITON, told Tina 'DAY - ...taeaday..
neptembor 2.143 P. that veluablo'property artnatrd' on
.-kroItNEIC OF MAST COMMON AND igAV:ALLEV,ALL.Z.;
OfIENY, fronting T2N. frit on tlni COnroilan..On' .
ereocd ono elegant THREE STORIED BRICK:D G
MUSH and two largo FRASIX.DWEIJANOeu,;,',..,:,..
.C.l7eLtano cash, and, balmy:elm fang-00a an
num! inatalinentt with intureat, seontid: by bond-amt.-molt
otr,. nu tho proluituit. 11*.Wit-POlnglg Jr.
• -11. kr. 110Y14,Anntioheor..
ror further Information attgritre -FLAMING,
Pa. it. It. Depot, or of Winn:WY r,(0157. (malt
COCOA N U TS -3000 ColSoardklnteljust re-
Mired and for aile try . EgriIIEII:4...A.NDWON,
le '. • • , stre e t,
.EItIONS—,6O boxes .Lemeoi'jcilit:',o4eivi3d
jj and fat' niltib ItSYMER AM:1$1181,41,
er.,2 No. a Void *feet.
FIGS-4.00. duals-fresh Ffitsjr2Witeoeived
matidr • •inat!Eire -ANDOBOI4
lie 2 • Wooltaitteet,
T OOTH ,
BRUSHES-4, AAteltipplyof the j .
bett Ithitll4ll iitaitrifittlifed 1tit,1441 - 4atiattalt at
J011.;-•mattrefro.
- ad, - ot.inid - D*nantl. t •
CIONGRESS WATEW--,PoWqrSW-Nater
_/ Jost received and for Fare at jtd. 41131141%
caner Atestket. tt. And.irititomit I
DEUE LICK' WATElVoitzilia_hiiitatiJOS.
II FLEMING'S; bythe gallon or, barrel. Quaint arket
street endure biattiond.
PPARISIAN TOOTH' PASTEThiliticel
lane article in confidently redommended top:numb&
an being superior to any other for beautifying . Aharaeth, re
moving tartar, strengthening thagnms, and i rrfiling
breath- Prepared and sold only by" -;7og; '
bol Corner, blarketatrambDttivi , -- -
M -
S. A. ALLEN'S' WORLD'S...IIAIR
.11L RESTORER tatoregroy flair toltiotightuil color
,uo beauty. Sold only* - JOS A LW%
eel Cornet
JUST RECEIVED, from the best bfariitfac
wren, a largo anti elegant AeowtuteutoriktOtrff&
IW, 80APS, YOMADEO, and other wallas, for triotrOlet,,
by 44..n. ~4,
el - comer litarliairt.,,andUlitatinit.
LT AIR BRUSHES—A. huge asqortitien . t of
,
ix every variety and atylv,,to istvity '
l ,
o ik
Cornet, Siathot,st. iirualarticmd.
FILL STYLE.
•
TIM FALL STYLH HATS ARE NOV
will be introduced this day, at C. N. PatiLsoNni,_
auilin3w
NI BOOKS! NEW BOOKS 1.:— . , 4 1414;', iif4:
1 . 1 Washington, by Waaldngton (ttenPibi * 447.'•,'
Sboepac Recollections or Wskyaklo attinputcontin
Life.
Nicholas Nichleby, In 2 vole illmtrafrdtßL steel 10014•
The Captive Taulbee! Judah—Rei. Rfinanni.Wilrot.
Paablowibl. Lite; by Mary R. - Badman, 's
Life and Adventures or John P. Beckworth,
victor* or the World by CarunntObinhro.
Western Border Life by Fanny flintier.
Memorials of his Time; by RineyCoOkinum.
Retribution, a Tale of Nadel) byErnni D. E. N.Soons,
worth.
The Life and Public Sarah:se of James': uchantin , :--Atb eta.
John C. Irrewmit--10 eta.
The Republican Campaign Songster7Pl%'dente,
All the Magazines received for Septettiberjainkireiling at
16 cent', at 'W. A. GILDENIMNIaRt-ii--.COII,
au3o Pilth ~oPPOtelbaThiatnit.
ETRIBUTION, by Mrs. Southwoilbv and
Alp -NICHOLAS NICKLRHY-12m0., in twnatylen.'
Retribution, a Tale of Passion ; by Idni.ll. D. D:S. South.
worth.. • 4
t
Duodecimo Dielrena—Nlcbcdas Nkhleby., in two vohnnes•
. .
.
39 steel plates.
SEPTESIBER MAGAZINES, POR 15 CENTS;
Harper's Magazine. Putrituzes Magsziit,
Godsy's Lady's Book, llonsetteldifforda„
Peterson's Magazine, Grainun'e Magtattne.
Leslie's JoarnaL
Coil or send to the Cheapßook Store 14
11. SI/NED. & CO",
No. 32 Smithfield- *nee'
.JOB. IL lIIINTEIt
ATAWDA WANES AND BRANDIES-.
A_! 40 uses Sparkling Catawba WU*, qt.& and 14, "N.
Longworth" brand.
40 cues Still Catawba Wine, "N. Longeorth"
25 " Ladles' Catawba "
70 " Catawba lari , ri.Y:
In stern .ui for sale by
CHAMPAGNE
15 baskets Ileldzick Charaymx Wine, qta..and:nlid
25 Douche
15 1. R. ti0. , 111 "
25 "M.li. No. 174 "
15 " Star brand " u.
in stoxy, and for msle by
^.•2n
RAW WIIISKY---7 bbls. Raw :Whisk
by (mom) MILLER 411 RICANIXION. r
AcKEREL__
100 bble. NO. '3 large 31ackerel, "near citiclz''
50 ht. We." "
35 bble. No.timedinm Mackerel,
In store and Mr 'Me by
ateso & Itictßisabr.
ICE-5 tierces prime Rice in store and
R
for ale by (an3o) MILLIMI it RICKS/SON.
MOLASSES— •
475 !dila Plantation Mobutaio,Ak onotOrage.,
120, " • 4' cytrees'.. •
120 " Sager Homo " " St. Ata Rat
In store and for sale by
*WO MILLER a itromersott.
MORTII CAROLINA TAR--2U'bbla North
Carolina Tar in store and for oda by
au3o Mlaslatit RIM/Ma
_ r
N
EW FALL DRE S S (2100 DS A.
MASON & CO. will open, on the .31 of September, ser4
ral packages of New Goods, centalnint+-:
Printed Del:lima, All binted Winton".
Black - French Merinos, Blank Mn,acas.
Cord nu , .
annotaa. New Platt Silks, • .i:
French Chintzes.
--
a. , .
IVEIV:EMBROIDERIES--Tust revived 2, 4
II cartons of near Itrobrolderioa; some apltadail iftko l
Lambda and Swill Coll."and some news tAaa of or
- hkoa
i:4-ed do''..,, do., Book and Cmlkik Ploarnottkp,, 1 .
Infants' Wilma, Brk Crape Ulu; 1 4to, Baattotio Mkt*. - - i-'
(1 - UNS, FLSIII- 0 'AO . A:
ur• vbigh,au g ia4 vo. Dents) Inlittlytatelit alilikak!
$._,4
illtEd thale4-titatit-4Nscriptfuni, fat rata itt /pa Mgt- a
mu wouNOA3G Wood ottooktw 4
atiaCt tws a TWAT.
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