Pittsburgh morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1855-1859, September 13, 1856, Image 2

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-
SATU R DAY MO '
"
~1
"THE FLAG OF OUR UNION FOREVER'
JAMES BITCH ANAN,
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE,
Democratic. Eketoral Tidal of Pennsylvania
ell Alt LE, hI CC A LEAS, t2tautttlAn.
It II //'; ti CANDI.ES: 7 \
1..1 Liana ti El t NElll'Att ER. l'hotto.ll•nia t.
I"! It: ite E RUT LEH, l'hflm•lt 11/11 , :tf' i ti
.I I% Alit/ Al .1N ['NAN. Phdndell h, t't•
4t .11.. U. r.maty
NteN A I It. stettatv/ott'r) nil.
1.1 •• JIM% 11 Mi IVI it... Ch.-4yr Cont:ty
ll' I I II I,A 11,1 , I. 10:11 County.
stir •• CII.I I: I% tterkA Coots).
loth A II
ItA I-A IC EH, I' nt..tl t:tAmt./ .
1 lilt •• FK.AS. W. II Ctili ,tivll,l.
i _tit •• T11..11 ‘o , ry.t;ii.t i.T. Up...lm: Co
AI:U:111AM PDI Monoyo C..
1411 i - , - .1
CKAWr.W.O Chub. t:o
14;th •• JAM i;I.A.:A. Pew: counts
114.N1.1 .1. Ti
ihth .1 1t.:1 , p1.
11 4 .1 •• .IA. I I. l'o
'lit A .1 I t:cll.A N. tit..
:141 •• 1% 11.1,1 A \III.h 1 tt,
1:1 t, I t1;'1tt , .1.1.. Butt
•• 'lll.lll It.
41}1 h 1 too
\ I Nt, I. \ T EI.I' tI a , 4 - 1 ,, t .1
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET
GEORGE SCOTT, C•a.rawa Co
A;U211,../ 06AEa 11:
JACOB FRY, Jr., NinNroouLas Co
nURVX.ToR AUNKRAL!
JOHN ROWE, ov riKLIM CO
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET
WILSON 111•CANDLKSS, CA , I.UNM TOWSSn,
iNrc 4FICIP , I. PIM I, I
JASIES A. GIBSON. PI , . T.w4s).ir
HOPEWELL HEPBURN, CITI
THOMAS S. HA ItT. T.,%.,1•1:,
A Irc.:l".T HI A HT.I If., T-ssr+.llll
SA !Virg,. .110%F.5. (1,
L. H. P A TTE.K.Orti, ‘111,1.11 T , xs.uir
SAMUEL SM ITIi, Al4.stirNY Orr.
5 ,, •1 %Tr
Dr. JOEIN POLLOCK,
.Fira,Lcr I%Arx,,liv
1 - 11,0.^1 ING %I I
111 ATT H IC AV 1. STEW A 11. T, LS.(//i. CV(
ROBERT B. GUTBRIE, RA,LI.II Toul-dir
E 01,V Aft D T 110 31 PN,O ,NV IIASINA
EDWAR D M CORKL E. I :on t's
HENRI" BELT 7. IWO VICK, HaLDWI , ,
JOHN JOHNSTON, Laws.•„ rvna.r. i t
Extracts front Buchanan's Spent on the
ludepersdrut Treasury 11111.
"MAT Niii: 4 7
LIALP , ININI
•• Igo)? ;ITT . I LSPECT I.A1301:1Ni; Nll\
AB. at 111. , \ if h: 10. VtLf II •F
Ll'l'.lo COONTILY. A Nil , l/1111.111.:1. )!: S,i', , r I.lr
kinSPl'A'rl,ll: Ili F .1.
I NTFI.I.I , :F.^.CI'. 111-A LA I. i i4I. THAT . 1
LI ,
I. TULII I, I
JOlf .% C. UREA Kli fil Mac:
cver mimic In, ut rearll
Multi:llly It 13. -e
tii3Pnt :it , tl Ole nidri..t. excite ,1 17.-re rid:
turn and entlitu•-taim. The stn. vett was eltarar.er
ized t`hroughout by it ittriettlea, prof.riet:
defame-, a btta,tholt, etident en.ndur
hunenty, n Leanly and e‘pret•-. •1
!Slid !Lai Om- ty•Vel . .hurpm. ••-•i
Ae Mr. r.'er}:air; , lgos Said, hr uttered
here pr. tn-ely the , mtne that he would in in
Ofiliforton. In South taro I iil. or Ken...
Fits manly spirit W. , 11:•1 re-ort to l'Afez•
Itnguage for ditferent .rt
and firmly upon notional grootol, and de- 1 .1.e.
that the p: ~pie of et. Sth: t• isrd rrit. r)
should Ie allowed t. tegliittie .r. Wit I° , ll at
fairtr reftre4enting c he by Lin 1 , -i•
Lion on the t.eltet, t h e great party of the /no. ,
of tile 1. ntou and the ronatttution, he deeta.cd
the charge that that path' wa.. ,11111ilig
or force .lavery into new trrri oroof a fakelt • L
Ile w 00...!
at , every 119tte- nu:9 knows .1!
idtLVN the 1.. t Ft• Irer hetl.,t:
people, aud then let the sot:cr. , in 11, te , s
ritory decide the pli.stinw log w;
out intetroronen or tr,,lr—tati,n
main rp.vs,tig,n frorly .t , ,tr I ; h-
it ..r tio,e 11L.wer, of
answerable urrintirlit-. that cirry ronVictloi,
every sound mind .1 better eFeeeh thin tl
fur the er•n•inn, the parpogO, and ter the
and the truth v;ne nec.•r heerl iu PitNl.urgh
In theevening 111. It' eokitir).!ge IWO ii' friers
at the : 4 1. Karl t•n lintel ; and he rernan,
as his Indite by the reply grasp the WI
and the pleasant nonverentinn. Ills tall
graceful figure and elegnut flitinik , r. won 11
hearty. We heard one man ear be will nut-,
ly be elected : triamph is Written MI hi' high
brood brow : and there in ridory in that large
bright eye."
It i. tilde that the country should turn up
another Jvkaun, and we are no Paig, ; turn
the gifted and acedyupli,hed Ranh/6.y oratnran.l
statesman to not the Mall. young •, et, and
there is a high /I.h.i I,,glit Inane 1. - r.ro Ilia
The people ne.-(1 onl . ] to know him to tolroire loin
—admire him for his candor liad ty.his
ty and eloquence; his firm and manly spirit, oiol
hid frank and cordial and elegant manners It i+
seldom that we ore influenced by much respo.i
for perrons. Bat in John Breckinridge v:e
recognize one whose career we shall watch with
unusual interest ; and whose triumphs we shall
record with reel pleasure. li is appearance
here did hut confirm the impression] made upon
.us at Cincinnati. In that Convention he made
two brief speeches; one declining a nomination ,
and then, atter being unattinowdy nominated on
the next ballot, he was compelled to make anoth
er accepting the unsolicited honor. Both were
brief and characterized by that nice sent, of
propriety ; clear judgment ; well chosen word, ;
evident sincerity, and calif] self possession that
form the distinguishing traits of his character.
Mr. Breckinridge is but thirty•six years or
age, six feet high, well built, and of a noble and
commanding appearance. But wha i t i is inure,
his private character is without stain, and 13i,
past career in an honor to himself and his native
314. State. Old Kentucky may he proud of such a
,—, c.' , .' , .
.2. '' - ' , ..?.4 pen.. Ile never yet was,a...finylidate for office and
defeat
—t . '''::
,tt.
2 - And isimi the same' ime of James Bu
chanan? Durinfogy y ru enttlic service be
4 1
. -ff e rt. ti .defeat at th e ds of the
er yet held on of at he ditih
with hotter.
,' . a..i
„ „ .
' 4,10'
.• , ',.* z,,t)-,:4--.Y.?.fir.i`-:::', • ,
,„
, •,. ~ dl / 4 ,.. '0'.'-''' , ..
4' 6 4 .1,! . ‘ I , ~.;- -5-, f 4 '
0 -0 - ' "`" ~ . , .c.' • - .t, ' . ' 4 . - , . 1
''
4'
: 'IF
' - -5, .. •
•-, , „ t it , , . • ',, ~ -
17 , .A....4:6 • . ' . ," 4 •
• e + r• -h L~j " `.c_ ~ .~.. '~ n.. 0 - ~•. 'tiy,..S.-..~.:' -, ms's'+(.
FOR PRESIDENT
OP PENNSYLVANIA
ID=
I=l
rail i;*
.0 ltr tie the Senate r
tfr Jaye
.:; N:
' ted against Yh'e
a, :in t e e .1 re
riet of Columbia.
3 s race party like that?
~. ton, while in the Senate, voted
' to aMdish the flogging of white
ry. We suppose the black race
leased with that.
Fffltnig
IMIN=I
r
'
- '
<O , l
•
ESIME
~.._To r i rd irlaW EN 4 . of the Ng - I'th, to he elecatO to ,equal position pv- , 4
........ .....--
LIN-11:.,IIP'''' - - ''' - 'lltrolillTy — ating-Atify with you 'finilYour clillrt . it - ti. .
THE TEbiltt iniLr __, ll. ; J. 1. 5) E r 4 ./.' Ba LTIMORE, • At( this point Mr tireckinridge arrived and
1.01.1ET1 CFI AND
• ' liTT 9 7rA — Mr. b. suspended his rein irks. lAllien the tu
j.ilanasAitutie-Pairt,' a tii AT THE PITTSBURGH CONVERTION!
miatttow, cheering bad subsided, the speaker pro
-
;7 .i: h e w : o that lae the Tele- . said:
from Katmai, i
posed to give way to the candidate for Pico Pre
_ _—..v, inns been very fltshy ;'' so much ~1 Mr. Bowen being introduced to the audience,* Bideat, but, at that gentleman's request, and in
ing obedience
Ile
pro
proceeded.)
o e t a h ed e
. vcciferous demands of the meet
'Fi:la:;9ilyh to
c :n o h n : t l:l ;o ; l l le ni44l : raut en Y ti t ie: be l i t 7 y e ItePub - FELLOW CITIZENS :—.-Truly this is a proud day
,
(leans..} Here, we have no fault to rind; we.: for the noble Demoerae' yof old Penesylvunia, I Well, follow citizens you are now, asked to
••
to be here amongst, you. Nutli- lose sight of every other great consideration
believe that - thy Pittsburgh reporter is Ilixere% I. and lam gl f ac !touching. the foreign or domestic policy of the tt.ov
careful and altogether reliable: if we hail E -
i ill i fer s c h st 'rt ir this t rilf;orta t i r t i t 't c h : t ti o it ' e m t l areePlri'fuliTs'(l. eminent, and choose your President in direct ref
thing in say against him, it would be that ho brought together front your surrounding country erenee to Kansas and abolitionism. Anil in the
feels too keenly the delicacy of his position as a i seen ait ultitteic of paupia. I feel
te, . ),
iieed
at mitni i nation of their candidate how are ;he people
. ,
this oenionstration, rejoivi - because it allow,
, in i s t u . te v 'i , l „. ? r
, T . li p e l y: . .l t n i, i , i . ot t
bp„rehs;
high
t a ry m m i l t i n t, tm r‘ i t n i m m 7ii e l- r
reporter. Yet be is often misunderstood, end '
too often the subject of rebuke. There are some 1 l a i s tti f t ,p 3. ,.. 6 n u lt . l ,o -i g. l i t ' i . l , -. ' l . ::':! s i i i a n ' i t t : .E . : l _: , li . i t g l ! 4 P r t t r . " . g.ii:.',v,'-
er e:.rir.it vor experteneit They know that n Pre•
pat tizans NVIIO foe so imbued with Black Repultli- i t ,,,t ret i heft) , ~.y , ,,z ra ,,
p.at , judgtant
apaa trident, itittempetent, inexperienced, and irrespon
can Mil. that they would naively knoret the ex- them Aed wcil may l'eiiii , ylvanians denntn- 'rible as J"lttt C Fremont li o l'east , l'ilY would be,
ictence of a Democratic era Fillmore party in striate their exulting z ea l i n ibis „„ nt „,. A , f. ~, „,,,„,
must become the more servile an instrument in
their hateis and, Renee, his nomination.
this region: hence the hare statement or an th hi : h A ,7, frei c e i : t i n t r i. 7, P ti le ,, n 2r , e ,,, al :' l ',7 s t t e r a r r o l i c , ": l ( : , , t°l fi l ,": %V hile I v,-:oulil speak of Mr. Fretnout in terms
occurrence in which either of these parties par- tliziiislied .on .t.f their Sttidit, .htili. , Di, I,•tnvt, of personal re-pect, I would fain in what
ticipatevl, is exceedingly distasteful to them. (Ai, t ,b inse , ) Tl, e e t.i ii „. n ,„I g h l t„ l i e gind f „ r c”.-thuic the claims that he may have upon an
intelligent and powerful peopl e for their support.
:' , ly Robert, the journalist, is one of this class : t , l t ''''.' s e ' t ln ii rT r i :' l ;, ; it. p a-I-. l ' / :*3 i=f ' ' ct - * 11 , ' , I have carefully examined every point in Inc
the account of the Fillmore mass meeting, re-I to ia r . l ej r a 7;,, i f .; l , i d5 " . c1 ;,,,7 i ` . ;,, ' t will 7,.. v :,':.',,?:', ::!' . 1 1„,',', 1 : 1 ;:, character and history as presented in the velum--
cently held here, though modest and brief, must enjoyment of those political blessings which have nous documentary eulogies presented by his in
have "riled" him considerably, for his news de- ennobled their fathers. etenious adherents, and I can full! nothing. Ile
is a mere adveuturer. I will not say a nentle
partment yesterday contained a side thrust at the script, as I might perhaps without harshness.
reporter, whose veracity is thus vindicated by (Lting.hter. 't They lay great stress on the fact
the severd highly respectable and well known ~,- hi. running away with Col. Benton's daughter,
and as I esteem it degrading to thus drag the
citizens whose names are appended below:
norue of a fair lady into the political arena, I
NEWS £505 P.BCUP. w;11 only say I can see no great merit in that,
[ Frosu the Philadelphia Inquirrri f.ot any man of you worthy the name of a man.
Pertseranit, September 9.---The friends of Fill- would run away with Col. ttenton's daughter, or
more and Donelson, haven large mass mooting thid any body else's daughter, and take good care of
evening, cud delegations from the various Wards arc
her afterward, toe, if eau loved her as you sliculd,
marching to it in procession, with music and banners.
and yet not be the better min for Presi•lent on
A 11U1nbcruf sreoetws have been delivered by French,
Ih a t to c-uitt. ( Laughter '; But his biographer,
Ectille , and others, and the greatest enthusiasm is
manifes.ted !! ! ! ,slt I suspect to be thm vold.hearted philmo.
! "
Prrrtimmori, September 12, 1856
We understand that the Telegraph Agent in
this city, of the Associate Press, is charged with
trail.eining incorrect information from this
point, and as evidence to sustain the charge, the
above despatch is produced. Now, we certify
that we were present at the meeting referred to
in said despatch, and that the account iv reliable
and substantially correct in all it." partieulLai ,
themeeling very large, and the pr.icreilitic's
were nun Led by an unusual degree of .nthn , t-
R.do ; the d.deg - nlions from Manchester, Birming
ham, the Fifth and Ninth Wards. of this city,
paraded the streets with music, banners and
transparencies, and came on the ground in a
body. For the truth of what we have stated,
we re'er to the Hon. Henry B.' Moore, of Phila
delphia, french R. Evans, Es l . of Wmdlinednn
city, Wm. Alexander, Esti., of Baltimore, and 11.
B givreope, Esq.. of Clearfield, Pa., who address
ed the meeting.
.1. E. Brady, S B. Cooper,
II T (' F Wihmu
Jcuel•L NI Bradley, It NI June-.
I:
Awn iirtle[unn
Threo month, ago h:entucky, :`:orth Carolina,
Maryland, 'Perm and Tennessee were declared
doubtful States by our roes. Their joint (.:,,e
-toral rote in 47. boos any c,ne doubt as to t,ither
~r them now ' lowa and Maine were
fol. Their pint electoral vete iv 12. Maine i•
uo looror duuLtful lowa )11. It VW , 1115140 y
Flll re wen that wets entiiiilntee at ttle tee , II
elect-lob there. Now there ta fieparate
cleetoral ticket in lowa to tie supported hr those
Know Nothings who refuse to vote for thitholi-s.
of whom they are Ratifte , l that Fremo•it is Cate.
Tnlt tteket wig proliaWy oin• or ten tt
•tan.l i eto So doing, Itluck Reruhlntantarn ear.-
not carry the State Pot Maine is lost. 'he
co, to th.t is cle3r,i up It,. v. in sr,
1."1. the. v-te, of New 1 url. nr, r •
tttiul_, v.t-eurv..l (or Ilitchanmn All I.lnni“:4 11. to
S..utherm rutea sr.• solvt,l If
... , rll;.i (291 narrr 6onllr4r ho vert,inir ,01
g4.t !my S—utlierh: 4 !...L'e I,r)firove
Frer,•nterm burr' ror 11 ,, r, of It lokik
=3lE=:ll
MEM
1:1,1,1. )I. , pi, l'or,r,y'vmnin, or of
.71,. aum,Nrw
Si. • a , lit tusk.- I'l
EEMIE
I r• tr,,
the
It ria tttAke .217
we loniee fur the preeent tlittliAn.! "7 he
rage 4 there with great violence. we
Thee(' it hut one cure for it, and that will he ui
•• t•T 1 0.•11c re that ono on t ., of ro,,k.
r-q,ernrs f.ir oncee., .t h their
,tie thi. year ta the fear that if they frill or
th friendi win 1. , 1-1,117 ht to PII
1.1 .t 5 t Ittit-hment or the erl.oe. f
nit.rd-r, at , 1 ral , t , err an., at-- u, vrbtch thry b
ene,sirn4zi,l:rl h
w,„ r• a r t • 1,r1.1 °H.r in kansA.m. 1
if - 111-I 1,311 , 11,0'c br.ti I❑ !If!. V 11110 tllO trrr•l
.%
nnw r9mrnotv , rl and Jr
trrww!! and murder lw }us I.an•l , 0!
outlaim an i thitrel are ultdotil,tt,Py gu;lty T
'nor: Ley will hrt . ,tigh!: t• • •••
i!, tvbo furniniir•l the 1:,ex0,, nt; I
urre•i I "n are equally gts:try
They now fear that unless Fremont i.i elec'ed
thu law will be evecuu , d upon their guilty head..
\., thef shriek and rave, and pour out
the, freely Ike it in all in vain. The
Republic will be preserved, and the traitors awl
murderers be brought to justice.
I =3
We publish to day a brief synopsis of Mr.
lt , weli's speech at the• Moen l'onvt•.nti , n at Pitts
burgh on Wednesday last. From its brevity it is
necessarily imperfect : but will present soul , of
the m:,in points in one of the beat speeches of
the campaign. It is not yet too late for South
ern into to be heard at tho North in defence of
the South and its Constitutional rights . and we
hope it never will he. Mr. Bowen, though a
t.htive of this State, speaks no a Southern man,
letninding nothing that the Constitution does
not give, and, as a patriot, deploring the wicked
and dangerous crusade of fanaticism upon the
diameter and interests of one-half of the Union.
I-Fs speech will be read with interest, and with
good effect undoubtedly.
system of intimidation is
now in full force by the nigger-lovers. Laboring
men threatened with discharge from their
employment if they express their preference for
Pennsylvania's favorite son," and in one in
stance several men have been discharged for
attending the Democratic mass meeting. We will
give !mines in n day or two.
White men are thus to ho made slaves, while
the negrotia are to be set free. The rogues prate
of '‘ free speech," yet put forth their puny etlerts
to crush out " free thought." Will the working
taco endure it? They are as free us their em
ployers if they will only calmly assert their right
to think for themselves.
The candle factory of Melvin, Knapp & Co.,
said to be the most extensive in the United
States, was entirely destroyed by fire on Tuesday
nieht. Loaf on stock estimated at $60,000: on
machinery s3s,otah There is but about $30,-
000 in.,u.runee, all of it in country companies.
The buildings belonged to P. IV. llendenbrook,
and were valued at $5,000, on which there was
no insurance. One hundred and fifty tons of
tallow are said to have been consumed.
Hon. Linn Boyd
'i•F'^'Oste of the thousand fabrications which the
q4publicans have invented and put in circula
tion, that the Hon. Linn Boyd, of Kentucky,
shot some man some time or other. A gentle
man writip from Washington (a member of Con
gress) efil4l . l?ws:
"800. atin' Boyd was in tuwn yesterday, and
says that the person which the Republicans made
him shoot, he has not seen in ton years.
Yours truly, GBORGB
,vra .~ i*. ~. .
p
r ~~
‘•
, • ,
.
Thus. 1 . . ?vixen,
Ed win than)
I I:.1, vr
Ichl,nn, ‘5 ..ts
Three we.
But there are many things, Fellow Citizen?, to
Sadden the hearts or true patriots—hopeful aml
confident ten they must tn. while not wliofly dis
trusting the virtue and it:merit . % et . oho procetiL
generation—for we are now in the midtt a!' a
fearful and threatening political cri,is. A strong
party in one section of our commop country have
ebo23en to.bid defiance to patriotism and duty.
and have boldly, and for the first time in our 1,;.s
tory, selected a presidential candidate, pledged
t.O and allied with sectional interest., ,eelonal
feelings, eeetional vi,judicos and sec tion,i
jeets. Because of the existence of
in one part of the Itepehiie, introduced there
l - :ngl Lad before this government wan estal.liclied,
and for the immediate extinction of which the:.
are no practical toellri whieh would net visit upon
the Union, the white rave, tic - black race,
all races in the future, the me.: territ.le
they 11' , VT rrttri,l` is cunt hloo.l and shame
le.. effrontery to insult the, entire South.
In alei:Ll..holy ..1,0 ,- teelf-.ll].nitff sort who i
he re,t,ieiii,ny I,l.other in (tic
The,' IC
v ii it ry ttp it o the ._then rilSrtro it M •111
-c.utb, th.o.
r. nt arc ar:ii.tiinie I In hear ktiokeii
d a y, ba Itordrr Ruth ,to , , NI II klliirtg.
Itrotod atttl The o f A p.. -
pit. who furnish...l rot! that Wa,l,ington xho -
rifte.l your early revolution:try hi,:ory, tivat
Jefferson whose geniu. w , rke , l out on paper the
immortal spirtt of the RrpohOe, And penned y,.1 r
eelehrfaed Declaration of Independence, at, I : i n
, ha! aori.,us rkrty
ban riled the c.otntry through nil but twolre
nighty year:. of .Nlndisott, M•onroe. Jaol. , ost, bed
others intwortal In irreat
flounced a> little in.:. than .nt, and al! ' - or
vt.ll tt , •an! ,! th. ir
oc
"0:.? I 1 -• :/ P.s • 111,.;%iti•
111411 nsi,t L. ,if unictll..:ll , i
I.t.k Ot: I:tv
tualrltmr, , l ~r
1%•1 - E,.tiong I. I
ti• ifli til
c,f cur ~tl,nre. 41,1 icr iTY i.a 16 he ct u< L. 4 •
brieiAgmotr• w,l;I;Int wo off 01-1
MON' • 111 tio• . 4, 111,h e IC •
\013! ILL" tiggr , .; I kir s. , •r:IJ
11. s tattiteiry i,v the 11,r e l ,e
her rektth•n, • ' ti, e „.,
fu! 111 :t1 i fr e Lb ,
1.0 Ayr. rii • .r y, .0
nil I
r w w12:61 .g;tatt Nest 1 1112
lAD 1. ‘al Li! f•a r rrOri to
11 V . 0111t• • 111, ;‘, tL,; '•/1 1;1
ihn 1.,;11,41 11 , 1 h,,... I I pi h:n h. !
t•,1.!. " .;
a,l • f„ r I
ti, 1,11...nr, in tht. nn • v , •T II
If I et• 1.0.1. i W I •• ra "IF .i:ey aa'
tv, if . 1 -arrr- n .1 !, •••:' ta . : •
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EINESIMIE
J, T.. n, nJ,: ..t{
OEM
MEM
wh.Je 11,4 , rt 3,
.• 11. g v rt 4
pr-Ti-I I fu-, r rt 0../
do-r piton g
vr.i.kni at rlavrr., , t 1 it- w ,„„,,,
long prayer , f•tr• thc sa, • c I : 4 .1:11t.,
An' 1.0• •I 11 re , i
!ii,,! the : 4 oe.), p
A. I iOri •1 IV !,
tiwy taut, n-;.e4 f - 1 .; in t h,. ..•
fr ler.try ' •,
op r —ed to ,!..‘v• ry
ones , the 5411 , 11. were
Union, and not an yob,.
( pplAuso I ••I" it :•• c,
ana, Arkansas, Fl.ri•lA or T.% I , .1 f , .1- ,•!
toi••don. then the cry of fAna , .ri.rn w,• n t
the c .untry w mld l,r r0a,010.,1 ors
dissensionwhat Itr hewer ean nn
heaven favored power which .loyod their haio; ,,
Ty,' saved the Union but the •datinch Dernooracy
(Arrkti, ; 1 veil! yon to run over
hist.ry of this T„.l Ins thnr
mighty d• lie this, and my own feeble eonditimi
this morning, the result of my week'elabor
your people. renders it unpipANPllr to "punk long
((Ties from the meeting, „ go on, gu on."
In duo time additional West ern territor
had to be provided for with civil government.
Kansas and Nebra , l , ...one or and were, by the
passage of a law, made twin sisters. In
hands of a faithful officer Neloramka passed
luietly on to her destiny, but Kansas, unfortu
note Kansas, became the scene of discord and
fury. To manufa.cture political capital up•m
which to be wafted into high Once, all the fns.
tions and cliyies of New England, th rew a „,,N,
for the time their cOtll en t ion,, and swore tve
thcr In a common league. They orgitnizel
party supplied with ample means to throw i nto
Kansas the assessors elements iif ri,tiftip+iou and
~(rife. Their Missouri neighbors, jeOlou,
alarmed us a probable conflict of interests nom
up, find ul fl necessary Ct.lleetillt'llCe, racers fir,
one side begot ences , on the other, and excite
meta and confu , ion has loam the re-ult. Itnt
irith all the noise about Kansas' wrongs, shrieks
for freedom and fallen martyrs, not a hundreth
part of the genuine tea is and bitter wailings
have been shed or heard in Kansas, ns upon one
of the many hundred slave ships sent out from
Africa by New Englund merchants. Upon any
one of their vessels whose blackened hulls have
' gone down before the storm-king into the deep
and briny sea, more heart-rending agonies have
been felt in ono moment of time then have been
yet heard of in Kansas. More human blood—
and blood of white men made in the image of
God, as well as you or I---was poured out in the
streets of Louisville, in one election day, than
has yet been spilled in "bleeding Kansas."' (Ap
plause.
'lf they had in view the peace and welfare of
Kansas, as they professed, why did they reject
the bill reported by Senator Toombs proposing
to admit it as a State, and annul those infamous
laws, offensive no les? north titan south It No,
they could spend a whole session, and even dare,
as revolutionists, to stop the wheels of govern
ment, in the plausible occupation of working out
of Kansas political capital, but they could not
afford to give.her`penee.
But it is not the freedom of Kansas nlone they
aim at. Whita ll the South does not !IA of yon
one solitary concession—doe- not ask any of mitt
to believe slavery right, if you regard it a ,
wrong, nor ask you to suffer anythin g fo r her,
but claims only the unquestioned titfht of being
let alone. Thee people aim ultimately to turn
the three millions of southern blacks in upon the
fair population, composed of intelligent laborers
•
. ,
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CV - 4174,14t; r • , ,,
• , :
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=MO
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_ •
ph, r of a thousand er,,rrhets, TI ,raco tireelty.
tays, in enuin,r.iting the list of reas,mr
sln Fremont sh,ild b.• President, that "he :s
nl t:tte feet nine inith.es high. and yet,,,snraetlines
as if lie were seven feet high: . (Laughter ,
„ rem , h;- ',ward after the manner of
•'.. early •- that i., he don't shave
II . reverend John Fremont.--••and th a t h e
~arts iii • hair in the middle." flannotirrAti•
4,4:i.ter and cheer , . Itut here hit itioglapher
ts in a rue or light t-. M tint views of the con
v,totiot, which nominate-I him. Ile says it Iv. ,
t „ h i n thus tee •• rould rornov , an of,
,1:,1 ill, I, tn.. T 1 3 .11111 ir he would metre ••if
and uosuli ibtferently. - (Shoots
laliglasr I flit :het Cod Fr, moat au,wered
in a -Hit Vkai Ih) " that he would
ear hls hair ua lie pleased, - --and this point hi,
tno,,Traphrr proudly puts as nne of his greatest
mimendations (or the Presidency. Laugh
•cr. ; Hro too nails CADIC off too by the fro-t.
an•l • • nn unusual thing in such eases they pew
at again." dlughter j Of course they did,
iiret.loy, and of conr.te they WOTIM not tinlYt.
Lrtr K(' for anybody el, j Laughter.] Arid
-te on through it witch , t, dam,. ecu find his h..)
prat I.er gr-ire•y hir j r oa t h teach, as lie
••:" r - . his cle.<
to the Presideney Laughter.l
th:li
re t , SOM.* ten
•hoito, y• V reurmt i, , a llEbtilip nl
11 , 1, Car-1, , M, n: ..:,le, ,snd in the
lo• tit u . .)on of hn , enriy life the liblintle of charity
as- k,„,ry bl, , ..bru over him by the gentle
':etch. of 4.,11,t another Sow/tern
Stae,; Ity tt , e Icindne,,,, and ~m iler or
;!, pc, 1 .;,- iflhn C. Fremont
"••••11111, I .n and o,t3tel iu ma.nhood
:„ the ;:,.nerom , a 5 0, ut heti) member , •1
nil , l WM, lai I the r0.1.01,,1
,f by- E„ove,e, 1" artmamrd
hv the viab„.l,:nen , •,f a party .4vr , rn
S•:,‘Lv of hi:. nativity
: I LI.. earn 11,11r:4 men,
n N, , : , 11.1 06i Oti-I,g , ntiill !c., the h•bfb...-it nl
rrinne., on! cv-u -I write ingrate nt ,,, n
!••.- pl•dv„,n•e I lVil! the Black Rep ‘l,
tr.!! 11. E. Iran..;:: - • • ••1... - ience---and t
v-e an excure
• re It",/1 c•I -as!! they : 11
I.: III• fI• • I •:i••n, re,zu•: vd Si •
~f net , kr 11/b , l l filb.ot, twenty r•nc
at . to :.• darinc
••-• •, .•WIIII yr.
• II
1 e'y reft,,n 3, 1 t h e 1,,,1 ~f
I, In I 1,, and hi,
be fo
, ••rtt,., - ..t . 1.n a - t'i
be itr-airit i , • 1
,
t; , I.4e•rt eles,:ed to b gt , , , r..,• • l•-"•, , , rittzt . r.
3r - ,, i,-, ), ..3 1 ., : , t.',•g,, , , ti• is, re ~ 1, ", L. .
• ' lIt• • ,I)j it, '1, , , 11\ Wh:L . :l 1 :'',...! :1 0
''' i ••
If 1 .. 7 — '11 , 'T.It . tr , •: , I . 1 , ,,, , Luray ,
~ ~, 13 ,i...01„: , •1 - S.; t h ey ~..stt me t . V. k r
,en 1.5. t,s,t r. 1.1 1..1 .0 it,: f c' 11,31 al f,,.„,.
t 1 , 7 , - t .fair.:tt. t' . , tittl, IL' 11.1 t, 1 , 00. ~
:10,, ,• 1.1. 14 - tit. — : . r T . : :11 ti,.. !not thwt he I, ,•
ckitltt , • 1.4, , . 1 t, i e' . . , ,01 la 1111 , 1,9 ,, r0. ,
V.;01 : :, Ft:vvr. Ir'.:••”, ~ .11, i ... tr, , it : as 010 00050 , 0,
03r.. , 1,0 htrb,, lA'S • ; : , ..1 ‘,,r, in the eliam • , I
1 4- 41 , I: , v ‘13 , 1 1:, , 1•••• t - zt , retr.ry of W ,r,
atisil t r, t 'Ol .ssecret.:ry of inter tor, franking !n
-ee', l' i-s i % ( . ,1”..1 . ' l.l l l.olter ! WhWt Phri.r..
. -• .
W , , n . 1 if, :• ,, ,tlth hAre it, their ennoti's - Neue,
A nd I tbls,l, the- , S. ti-t the anon in shit io
gosa who n mid r. ,,, in". I,'e. tidt - ,t3 - , r3', n
t . .it I • t , 33' , 1 - 1 t hr 0••11 ,,- . f , tir r , ~,, Fred Doorda.•
v. •i' I be the % tt. , rot - y I:pr.t•t•L' for the oil, ' ...,
c I r
per est •race, to tL;: 'lldlC ,, s Jts(l!l , .l
ILI. I s k
Ml,' Fl , l-. , 15.. Eli., II t,!:.-„k 1,,,t ms . „,
!, .nr„...,. th n i ii, —.....,!v :nicht !.r.. ~ , , ings-,,,,,, i
t ,1”.• •,,,, mid 1,,710,:fr IS hat a ,•otrlbtot,-
1 ..z. :1,1 Idlft . . 3 I-arty Atlotitt 4sivt. and Fro!?
s ': •• t ~,, , es aed ii ” ostm-s, s ellissail pars ess
4 ., ' ..: "ri: ll.i11.1(14 3 noon, tree love, and n'l
~„1 :,,,, as . nom sot h an arts-5" ';sown F.. - .y•
~, F .• ; - ...1 .., • t!.. ,,, !..prt.:7 , t . 3l l, ::tiont.tm, to. !
\I V.- -- lit ono in rt.;*‘ lA/ 1;..rrt,•,11. " I lido,
• ,•,,,,, ~ - .e. ~..: tite , tf . .l - .r,.;, , , .4 - nor -.trtt o , rt.- - •
11 - , ;her t.."rianon, this ''or i hil I need. reproof '
it• Ir, I and ,t, . 1 i•ii to make it ferpet , ,tt. t ‘l , l,
I , ~ 0'; 3 pretty minder pr . ..geny the efforts o'
It , they t'iirt,srtt - apt ', -11 , r Eisler have pro
do: ! :I 1 Tomo; tot on I Aug htcr l
's e •, f.lb-w citlte.,-, 1.. •k lot., the Convention
ii I Ch 11 , mom, d I'„1 Fremont. nod there y•-i"
ti I si .. ley site.—cetning fr.no sixteen, not Ibis
-rie Staie!"--Gi tiling . .. -who prays "for the
ex. •emination 01 the white race iu the South,
,iii oil 1 , 00 a-t , t 4 political millenium that, dav
.hen the torch of i'le incendiary shall light up
?h. Lowav and cities of the South." Seward, is le.
lf.' , MIC( . 3 .;avert' 311 , 1 predicts that "the tins,.
ts , ' lerv. ' , Miff peri.li in the coming struggle -
8A1A.... -the- t,-int,,,, or Amerka, who ~,i,'„i ••1.,
the [mon slide.' ('hale-• who says '- the fue.•
live 'dove leas ID utterly null android." Wade -
wlm said "the Whig party is not only dead bet
stinks, and that there is now to Colton betty( ea
the North and South." Spaulding—who said
s' if slavery must continue he Wtitt for dissolli
Lion." anti hosts of others voting for Fremont . .
:rumination and preaching treason. Was it thus
when our fathers and your's met in the Film'
Gal: yonder in your own great city of Pennsyl
veal,' and like brothers proclaimed to the world
the independen:lo of this country? (Cries of no,
imil cheers ) When the nlaveliolder of Virginia
mid 'lie member from Massachusetts in one Ion.:
nthd fraternal endireee solemnly swore t o liv e ~,,
freemen or die in the attempt, was there all II is
strife About the institution of sl aver y ? (~.i . i . ,
plause.)
Sot, gentlemen, I am done. (Cries go on !
go on ! I .No, I will not; I have been contending
l'or the 4 , 11131 rights of than, and I assert my on n
right now to lintre to the distinguished son id
I lientlicky, (cheers,) who awaits to address you. 1
In a brief sentence I ask you why shall these
states, which our nolde ancestors united and
baptised by their labors and their blood, be now
: , evened. The South asks nothing snore of you
titan your fathers swore and said in the Constitti
:bill they should forever have. They gave to
you of Pennsylvania the right to determine what
should be your own laws. You chose to prohib
it slavery—and did the South object? No, but
that same abused and slandered South, would
as readily drench their soil in their own blood to
sustain yids in this right, as to protect herself in
her own. (Immense olteering.) They sustained
the Kansas bill, not to legislate slavery into
Kansas, nor to make it a slave State ; but to give
to the New Yorker and the Pennsylvanian, and
the Virginian in that Territory the same rights,
politically, which each of you have, and for the
maintenance of that principle—without which
this splendid government world not be worth
preserving—whether it is to affect the citizen of
Khasi's, on Massachusetts, or Georgia, the South
ever will hpldly face all danger, and defy all op
ovitiSti "She never can—and never will sur
render it--!and she looks now to the honest, in
corruptible., patriotic 711113SCS of the North to
stmol by . .
r in the maintenance of this Irinei
ple, [A tinsel
Shall h ryltuad and Pennsylvania, standing
side by sid e , exulting in all the glory of their
Ilevolutionary remiticonoes, now be made the
bloody sceiv of contending factions? Shall our
soils, cons' rated to human liberty, be drpnehed
in blood to isatissfy the ambitious eravingtof wild
fanatics for! political power? Pennsylvania, that
noble oldState-o-iti empire in herself, rinitpeo
-11.1 by 91111'11y and intelligent beings—l cannot .
-peak of, lint in terms of veneration and filial
v--pert. Though a citizen of Maryland—which
stir the home of soy Ancestry—and Southern' in
my feeling'eand allied to Marylantlby those ten
der associatilons which cling to the heart and are
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centered_inailaeeta dearer to man than• his life,
yet it is upon The banks of your own noble Dela
ware,
which skirts the eastern boundary of your
lovely State, that I find the place of my nativity,
and it was there 1 gamboled and sported in my
boyish days. [Applause.] And there lie the
remains of parents and brothers, and am I to be
forced to wander into a foreign country to'renew
my sad memories over their graves, as you also
would if you wished again to kneel upon the
tombs of Washington and Jefferson. [Tremen
dons applause.] And yet this would be if dis
union comes! Already have they despoiled your
glorious flag. Fifteen stars are stricken out, and
this is hut the beginning! God forbid that any
of us may see the conclusion. [Applause.]
lint Providence has, through many severe tri
als, preserved us yet a nation. And it has also
preserved to us that great statesman James Bu
chanan.. [Cheers ] There he stands, after forty
sears of service its one civil station after another,
the generous, wise, accomplished and patriotic
statesman, against whom not one vile charge can
he found in truth, Slander has pitched her lance
against him, but hew it has fallen at his feet.
!bounds have scented his track but to return dis
pirited. Prentice avowed that he injured Clay,
the great light of the West; but Clay's own son
rose up and said to Prentice, you speak falsely,
and Kentucky cried through the voices of eight
thousand majority, Prentice is a slanderer and
Buchanan is a patriot. [Wild Applause.]
What a noble position, fellow-citizens, does
the Democracy of this country to-day present.
Coming down through a period of fifty years an
unbroken organization, standing up against the
alien and sedition laws of former days, as
against Know Nothingism of this; crushing
nullification as well as treason. And to-day it
is erect with one of the greatest of all living
statesmen at its head—one "in whom the ele
ments are so mixed that Nature may stand up
and say to all the world, "that is a man indeed,"
proudly giving battle to that fell spirit which
would brand a citizen with shame because he
-erves his God in the faith of a particular
church, /11:01 to that illibernl doctrine which
until I degrade and disfranchise man because,
perchance, it was his lot to be born on another
suit than this, (applause,) and while thus grap
} ling with these anti-American heresies, which
eima is , n he blotted out front the politics of
the day, it now takes issue with disunionism in
every forte, and from the Arostook to the Sabine
'hews a united party speaking one language,
knowing hut one creed, and that the creed of
genuine Democracy, based upon the eternal laws
of truth :--which is the same in Georgia as in New
Hampshire; the same in Pennsylvania as in
Maryland. [Applause
And now of till Maryland may I say a word.
Proud is her history. There it was that the ban
ner of religious freedom was first unfurled on
these shores, and that too by Catholic hands ;
and there has religious and political freedom
been ever sacredly preserved. And she has per
haps suffered more, in proportion to her num
bers, from the vengeance of abolitionism than
any of her sisters of the South. Year after year
has she been despoiled of her rights and quiatly
borne the wrongs. One after another has her
slaves been seduced away and yet she has sub•
witted to it all. Only a little while ago one of
her best citizens, and my own neighbor too, was
coolly murdered at the instance of a few wild fa
natics. Sadly I remembea the time when we
gathered round the mutilated remains of that
good man as he was returned to us, and yet no
doeds of retaliation or violence were advised.
Time blood of the murdered man was 'left to cry
up from the ground to invoke the gallant Penn
sylvanians of the future to stay the hands of
vengeance stretched out by a few misguided men.
We could not and would not hold the great mass
of the people responsible for the conduct of a
-Ludt but ferocious band ; and in all the wrongs
that Maryland bas suffered, to-day not a solitary
set looking to retaliation or revenge stands out
upon her statut% hooks. [Applause.] She
loves the Union ; she loves her sisters of the
Unien , she knows that when this great Itepub
.
destroyed the world will never see another
surh. Men have coldly sat down to calculate in
figures the worth of this Union, and to prove it
nas valueless and that the north could do with
out the south.( . 4:ries of no: no : ) Perhaps she
esui I cannot go into snub a reckoning—
I not the heart. It will be time enough
wh-n the south is driven out by fanatical fury
f',.r :14 to g.: into that calculation, and while there
1. , yet a hope for the Republic we will not tole
rate the thought which would staunch the bright
Ni , o,:nA of Ware glory which beckon us on.
kpplousc 1 When disunion has come and the
is found growing in Broadway, and the
wharf. of New York are rotting in the auo :
when the huey hum of commerce and trade shall
he no more heard in Philadelphia; and the gay
craft which nil the Pittsburgh wharfs shall
n•, 'acre seen, and your noble hills of Western
i`, nu , y, , anla shall he loft to slumber on with
•bc•ir vat minerals locked up in their bosoms,
thee aro will sit down and figure out how we can
without each other.
flu:twill pursue the thought no further. It
:s a hateful ward, disunion. Let us all, while
there is yet time, devote our fires and our ener
gies to the maintenance of this good Republic.
Men of Pennsylvania, you have a noble State;
it is the Keystone indeed to our arch, never let
it drop out nor be withdrawn. your own great
statesman has stood up for his country in many
a lark hour ; now will 'you 4tqad by him and
save y..ur country! [•• yes, yea,'.'. and cheers.]
why wa., it, not long since, when rumors of war
etir ancient anti mighty foe were borne to
on ever• brit...e.t . a, that the whole nation stood
-ereneiy calm, and not a single throb of agita
ti..n ..r fear was seen or felt! It was because
veer own great Buchanan stood between us a. , 111
danger at the Ceurt of St. James. [Applause ]
All knew—and even those who are loudest in his
ionise new, were loudest in his praise then—all
knew that war could not come and place us in
the wrong while the able, the wise and the pat.
et. tic James Buchanan was our minister, and
that if he tailed to sustain us without an appeal
to arms, right would be on our side, and we were
ready fur the contltct. [Applause.] Then Penn
ivanians rally around your beloved son now.
The fate of the nation depends on his election.
lirivo back iltaun ' , mists and all their fearful train.
Let no rising sun behold the fragments of a once
glorious union, hut transmit, unimpaired, to your
posterity the noble heritage your fathers left you
in trust.
Tnc Black Republican shriekers, after corn
monolog the civil war in Kansas, begin to raise
that howl which we predicted would ascend front
them as soon as they felt any of the consequen
ces of their own blood-thirsty violence and trea
son Whether ill the defensive or offensive it is
ail the Eanao with these hypocrites —they arc
poor, persecated victims:of ruffianism—who "do
no harm to nobody," but are set upon, murdered
and scalped for merely wishing to make Kansas
a free State. As additional proof of their in
jured innocence and suffering virtue, we take the
follwing extract from a letter of the Rev. Mr.
Nute, " an unoffending free State man" in Kan
sas, who writes thus to hie sympathizing friends
in assachusatts
We are having war in earnest—four fights
within the last five days in all of which the free
flare men were the assailants, and the victors;
four lives were lost on our side, and some eight
or ten badly wounded. Twice we have heard
the booming cannon and rattle of muskets and
rifles, and seen the flame and smoke of burning
forts and cabins."
garlfirs Busmen, No. 600 Fourth street,
tut), of Dr. NPLANK'S CiILEARATED YEIDLIPININ, pro
pard by 1 , 1.1.1.111 NG BROS., of Pittsburgh:
New Yong, May 16,1851
A child o 1 mine showing symptoms of worms, I gave it a
bottle of Dr. M'Liiiie's Colubmted Vero:dingo, which brought
away a bunch of worma, numbering, I should Judge., about
thirty. The child was vory sick during the operation, but
Ix now well and hearty.
Mrs. TWIST, No. 18 Avenue D, writes, under date of Au•
gust 10, 1852, and says she had been troubled with worms
for more than a year, and that she took one bottle of Dr.
Miami's Celebrated Vormifuge, prepared by Fleming Urea..
which brought away from her over three hundred worms,
big and little. She now believes herself to be entirely free
ham disease,
Mrs. LIUOGINS, a GOMM woman, residing at 204 Riving
ton ',treat, says that after tudng ono - vial of hi'Lana's Cale-'
brate4 Venntinge, she moused hoe carps tape worms.
The above certificates are all from parties well known In
this city. if there are noy who doubt, they have the names
and addressee, and cao satisfy themselves by personal
inquiry.
rumba-van will be careful to oak for Dr. M'LANCS
EARATED VE.R.3ITFUGE, mantillictured by 114:MING
111i08., of Pittsburgh, P. All other Veradibgeo in oinapar
loon am worthlem. Dr. 111'Laniee genuine VerinifUge also
his celebrated Liver PIM, can now be had at all nispec:table
Drug etore, w None genuine without the signature of FLF2d-
INI4 111103.
Lbw, for sale by lb° sale proprietors.
MIRING BRO&,
Socceseare to J. KJdd &
er&dewl No. 60 Wood etreot, eoroer of it caret
Qa- Holloway's Pills poeseas moat astonishing
powers in the cure of Generul Debility. Copy of riAlottar
from floury Antorue, of Iloriston, Chickasaw, Idleatalippl; to
Profeasor "Bin--I enffered for a numberof jean
from weakness and gamma' debility, and was brought to
death's door by the same. I wan told by th o s e I em m it e d
that there woo no hope of my recovery, when I resolved to
give your Pills a trial. After using them about eve
my health was conoiderably improved, an d at t h e endriitkm
of two months every symptom of disorder dlaappeured."
(Signed) 11..A4tTORNI.
IMIMINI
Ma=i
ittritleinti~irgettrinetr4rAli
WOll hi 1:1104 renprctfully invite the attention of these aft
flitted with hernia or rupture of the bowels Weny splendid
asno! fluent or Trusses of yahoos patterns, and to suit nvers
age. appliod.and satisfaction guarantied in every MAC, at my!
office, No. t4 O Wood street, Pittsburgh, Pa., sign of thd
Golden Maker. Among the Trusses sold by me will he
found
Marshy !tactical Cure rmis
Prtnch Tusses, very light spring ;
Gum Elastic Trusses;
Clakirests' Trusses, tingle and dauble ;
Chttlalicad Trusses, childrrne and adults;
Aln-rigs E/iptic .S'prist9 Prima ;
Dr. S. S. Pitch's Supporter 2'ruse
The price of TIUMSme vary from $2 to $3O. Iterxdal .
or Itupttwed patients can be suit.] by remitting money and' ,
molding the measure around the bin% stating whether the
Topture le on the right of left Bide. Lalao gen and adapt.
Dr. Banning's Lace or Body Brace, Teethe cure of Proiap
tow Uteri, Weaknoes of the Cheat or Abilomen,Pilea, Chronic
Dlarrhiea, and any weak neeadepandl iv on a weak and debili
tated condition of the abdominal ImUcles•
Fiteles Abdotatka Supporter
Enghits _nut* 4bdo,ninal
&lk Mastic 2PRI;
ud nearly every kind of Supporter now In nee. I also Nell
Madder Braces of every style, for weak cheated and stoop
ahonlderod persona.
El alie &outings, for broken and varicose velna.
&expetwiry.fitandapier, of all Wilds.
Syriova of every variety and pattern, and In fact ovary
kind of mechanical appliance used in the curo of disease.
DR. KEYSER would state to perilous in want of Brnceeor
Trusses that he can often send to emit the patient by writing,
hat it is always better to coo the patient and apply the Truce
or Boca personally. deldnass
JnlOl*wly
* Opinions of the Press.--The following is
from Gen. 063. P. 2florrin,fn the home Journal of November
7, NW:
All editors profess to be the guardians of the rights of the
people, and to keep them advised, through their COIIIIIIII4.
of whatever shall arise for their benefit. We will live up to
this letter, and Inform them that the most wonderful sod
valuable tur4Mixte for their general use ever invented, is
"Dalle.y's "flog/ /Aria Extractor." Its virtues are so rare,
mighty and eccentric, that often they appear to work more
like miracles than by science; so affective, electric and as
tounding are its powers on the human body, that, though
now it is daily tried by thonsauds of people, not one of this
great teens but is delighted beyond comparison, and candid
ly coulees they, on no consideratiou, will over Amain be
without it.
The inventor, yr• 11. Lhilley, has wisely kept the secret to
himself. Counterfeits aro busy about it, but without stic
ass. Its overwhelming merits dory all competition, end its
pools i lies analysis We confidently commend all parents
to • eek iteacquaintitura, for surely such a friend, who latarlo
at death •rod suffering, restores the blind, lame, hell and
scarred to perfection, and all from pain, is friend In
deed."
We WLuh the discoverer of this mighty blessing, who is a
real benektetor to mankind, Gal speed.
Hone genuine without a steel-plate engraved label, with
aignatures of
Sold at 26 coati par box by Dr. GEO. IL Kin - SEER, 140
Wood strixd, and by nearly ovory donlor in mediation
throughout the-United Steam. All orders or lettere fur in
formation or advice, 'to be addreeeed to QV. CLICK&NXR
A Naar York. seiktlikiner
fia-Prom a respect/x.lqt. and Intelligent
MECHANIC.—IIaviug tested and tried many Pills, I must,
say that the improved McLane's Liver Pita, preparwl by
Dr. I. Boat & Co, Dank Place, Morgantown, Va., are the
best and most effectual remedy for sick hsadache awl dis
eased liver that I ever ustsl, and recottegead them to tha
Mlieterl as being mild la their operation and =cativo.
Morgantown, Va., January 20, 1868
Dr. MaLane's noutoviro Liver Pills and =MUM Venal
fags, also Dr. I. Scott's Celebrated Valto Circassian Liut
meat, prepared solely under the supervision of Dr. I. Scott,
a regular Medical graduate, and Physician of extensive prin>
Own. None genuine, only as prepared by Dr. L Sopa t Co.,
Dank Place, Morgantown,
NEWS FROM TEII3 FOUNTAIN READI
Moatiairrowa, Vs., Sept. 12,1866.
This tr is ccriffy, That I have examined the Recipe for
preparing McLane's Improved Verminage and Improved
Liver Pills by Dr. I. Scott, who has town in the habit of pre.
paring cud using toy original medicitura in my Ake during
the last thirteen years, and that I believe he low improved
therri 1 make the above statement the more willingly as I
hare no interest in them whatever. C. McLANR, M.
Dr. McLane's mamma Versnifnge and natio= Liver
Pills, accompanied by certilloato of C. McLane, .for sale by
Druggists and Merchant* wroryerluire.
Da. 13 DX iI. KEYSI3II, 140 Wood at, Wholesale Agent..
De. J. P. PIAMING, Allegheny,. neer Railroad Depot,
Whelan& Agent- enlAelewene
Aar Age and Debtllty.—As Aid age comes creeping
on ilk It brings many attendant infirmities. Lam of appetite
[and weaknOsa impair the health, and Wont of activity makes
the mind discontented and unhappy. In cases where old
trze adds its influence, it is almost inipmeible to add river
cod health, and although many remedies hare been tried,
all hare failed, until IttERIIAVEII lIOLLAND ElTTElitill
were known and used. In orrery case whore they have ba - ,13
employed, they have inrariality given strength end rentored
1 the appetite. The: have become •a groat agent for this
alone, and are need by many poop!, who arc suffering &tan
lam of appetite and general debility. In cases of long
standing chronic diseases, they act as a charm, turigorating
the system, than giving nature another opportunity to le
pair physical Inituiee. .
/Damon I-41*rd against purcitssiog en imitation. To
provont La careful to sat for nonit
i Vol Honand
Bold at $1 per bottle, or Si bottles for $6, by the pro
prh,tors, EIGHJAMIN PAGE, via. a CO., Zreumnfactutihg
Pharmaceutists and Chemist.. Pittsburgh, Pa.; R. E. Efr:4
MU t Oa, corner of %mond and Wood streets:
Druggists severally.
sir &n Appeal to the Intellect-eh is one of
the features of Pulmonary Disease that it generally leaves
the brain undhaurbod. We therefore apneal to the intellect.
Jf all who are predisposed to Consumption, warning them
solemnly, that in neglecting what they adl slight colds, they
may be signing their own death-warrants. There la no es-
Cone for sue:. neglect. in Dr. DOODREC SYRUP oriargit-
WORT, TAD AND CAXCIIALAGUA, they hare within
reach, at all times, a pontire re, :lire. We make no reserve.
don or qualification ,if the phrase, and we are backed by
men of the bighted scientific attainments, whose approval
of it, if worthless, no wealth cuuld ptiminkso, oozing Ib et
it is en nearly infantile ee anything in this fallible vmrid
ran be. For particulars, me pamphlet in the bands of
agents, and an advertisement ott - Cfm business page.
Au- For male, wholesale and retail, by It. N. SELLERS .1
CO., corner Wood and Second streets.
SoW also by HRNDRRSON A BRO., Liborty iittaot; H. r
SCHWARTZ, and HROKHAM A hIcHRNNAN, Allegbruy
City. ea13a441
Public BaueguctorsecTbis appellation can
he applied with truth to Dcurdd Kennedy, the discoverer 01
Keunedre Medical Discovery, for who can lay higher claim
to the title than be who TENCII4.II his fellow roan from dicurce
and restores him to health. The Discovery Las become
Justly celebrated for Ito cures of humors, and the proprietor
Li daily rewiring commtmicationt from individuals, stating
that they have been cured of diseases that he does not men
tion se curable In its circular. Thee in owing to tie fact that
many discuses are brought on by humeri, each as allaftll2ll,
Lion, Blindness, to. We hope that the afflicted will be wise
and timely In the tweet so desirable an article.
air Bee long adrertbsoment in another column.
Sold wholesale and retail at DR. GEORGE R. KEYSER'S,
140 Wood street, sign ottbe Guidon Mortar, and at J. P
YLEMISIG'S, alterJunlY. o isellutaw
Au- Astonishing Effects of one Bottle, is
114.%T . & safari VW of DYSPEPSIA.
PUILADZLPHU, March B), 18.55.
Deur Sir—Daring the last five year,' I have beau afflicted
with Dymcpsia la its most aggrarated form, and have used,
without receiving any benefit therefrom, every remedy
recommended for that disease. In fact, 1 was afflicted so
bully that on many occasions I was in grad danger of dyiv
from suffoartioN in consequence of the rise of matter in my.
thfoat, and all my efforts for relief ware in vain. I was at
last induced, through the recommendation of several of my
friends, to try "Rootland's Getman Bitters,. and I assure
you the amount of relief I have received, from the use of
only one beatle, irsaatonishing, and romped', me to say that I
would not be without the Bitters for any money, as lam
now, thronglotheir use, enjoying better health than I have
known for many years. Very respectfully, yours,
ELIZARIMI GAIII,,
I't, Dr. C. t. Jackson. Nn. 12 Carter's alley.
SLY. , advertisement.
For solo by FLIIMING BROS. and Dr. ONO. H. ICII2BED,
Pittsburgh. se72wdsw
EN-Why will you Suffer, warn RELIEF CAN BE
SO EASILY OBTAINEDT—Rote you a Sore Throat, Quinsy,
/that:maim, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Croup, btlifJolnta, Enid
Bites, Barna, Sprains, or Pans In any part of your system t
You am be retraced at onto by using the most beautiful of
all Liniments, the " Whole Circassian binisn' eng," psepanal
by Dr. SCOTT, of Morgantown, Va., and for sale ch ea p - .
wholesale and retail, by Dr. KEYSER, 140 Wood street, and
JAB. P. yLguiNO, near R. R. Dapot, Allegheny. See ad.
vertisoment in another column of today's paper. [mankltn
nirStoekings and fluttery for Winter...
If you don't want yon feet pinched with bad and short
Stockings, you will take our advice and go to C. Dm" con
ner of Market allay and Fifth street, and boy 6001e1 of those
elegant fine Stockings, that make pouf feet feel nice and
comfortable. DALY also makes and melts every variety or
Hosiery that you am mention, at wholesale and retaiL
Remember the fplace, corner of Market alley kid . killlb
street.
oat
44-Batchelor!? Rale Dye—No hair is too red.
none to frowzy. gray or rusty, to be made boantifbily black
or brown instantly, without the least injury to hair or akin.
Warranted. Made and sold, or applied (In nine private
rooms) at 233 !roadway, New York.
Sold, wholesale and retail, by Dr. Geo. IL EMI% 140'
Weed duet. sekleriaw
/Kir Hat I.—We have Just received our FALL STYLES
OF SOFT DRESS HATS of all qualities, cobra and prices
and we now flatter ottraelvea that we can phew all who
favor us with a call. )•LOBO - AN A, CO.,
5030 UR Wood street:
•
•••
.1 3 !
.00 4 .4
4Z- ‘,
Da. 010. U. KHYBER, 140 Wood it.,
Digit of the Golden Mortar.
lIMTRY DALLET, Manufartaror,
C. V. CLICKMER. CO., Manifacturers.
J. 31. EXEin
:•;i3':lT,A,t , ::,-ii - !:',g ,, "1::
..",,i. -,- -,:i. , + - ','.4i2,..', , ;:',;ii,:.; .
!NA* ituvrgi
DRY -GOODS!
A.A. MASON& CO.
pvirenty.live t Fifth Street,
.
Dave rewired and will allied) in
.e tow days • LAMA And
-SPLENDID 'STOCK
Of DRY GOODS Ri . thailALL .4RD WiNTER. TRADE,
tenichang: of mare than
150 CASES. PACILItES
I=l=l
SILKS!
DRESS GOODS,
COZZI
EMBROIDERIES.
Elegant styles of ,
RICE PLAID, EIuDDADE, iNtilEnt gIIADED, EXTRA
HEAVY PLAIN BLACK, and OOLORED EIgKE; .
Denutifal axles -et
PRINTED hIOUSSELIN DB L'ATN.ES, WOOL PLAIDS 4
PRINTED &LEMNOS, COLD PARAILETTAS.
BLACK ALPACAS AND BOMBAZINES
New German and Scotch
EMBROIDERIES,
One Hundred °num of
HOUSEKEEPING GOODS
LINEN SEEETLYGE, DAMASK TABLE LINENS,
TOWELINGS, BLANKET?,, QUILTS AND 4DLIPED3
Fifty 4 Cascs of
LONG AND SQUABS WOOLLEN PLAID AND PLAIN
AND BTELL./1
SIIAWLS!
FIVE HUNDRED CASES
DOMESTIC
to GOODS,'
GINGLIAAIS, ENGLISH MADDER PRINTS, MIMING
CHECKS, TUNINGS, FLANNELS, nLitAcnitr)
AND BROWN AWSLINS,
2ffill) CLOAKS, TALIIAS & MANTILLAS,
Of new style, in Silks, Varela, Cloaklag Citaw and Ilea
r, Clotho.
New Goods will be doily recrived throughout the /season.
fhrONLY ONE PRICE. - V4
A. A. MASON 84, CO.
Pirmausee, September 0,
DEED:
On Sunday morning, September 7th, at tho restiltnee of
her father, inthbfll;4lreati County,..N. r. of congestion of the
brain,. MSPTD, 'second daughter of efil,lll and 'C'nthia -
Adamo, formerly of Y ttsburgh. Pa, in tier affeenth'yens.
NEW
OE'MEETING.—There will Lea meeting of the DEN
OCILATS OF PITT TOWNSHIP nod siclulty on
TUESDAY EVENING, September 16th, at 7 o'clock, at the
TWO MILE RUN, (Brinniock's Via" Haut Rotoo.
R. R. ROBERTS, Req., JOSEPH IL TODD. D. D. RRIDE,
EN., and other diatinguiehed apeakera wdl address the moot.
Mg. The GLEE CLUB, will also he in attendance. Come
one, come all h sea
DEMOCRATIC bitarradi IN TILE NIFTIE
WARD....-A meeting of the Fifth Want D, And IL
Club will be held at LAEG'S ILtLL, corner of Liherty stunt
and Stevenson'. alley ,THIS. EV. NIP,G,...tt The
Pier!" WARD GLEE CLUB will he in attentlarite, and WA
tingniebed SPEAKE' SS will addreas the meeting.
selB JOHN A. PARKINSON, Preeident.
YOU DESERVE CREDIT,
FOR YOUR DISCOVERY,
- DROP. WOOD'S HAIR BIZTORATIV a is, no doubt, the
most wonderful - discovery of thin agoof precrt•se, for it
will restore, permanently, gray hair to its original color,
cover the head of the bold with to mutt luxuriant in•Owtl4
remove at once all dandruff and (telling. core all ectofula
and other cutaneous eruption, sort as scold bead, etc.' It
will cum as if by magic, nervous or periodical hoe/ache;
make the hair soft. glossy and wavy. tool presern the collor
perfectly, and the hair from failing, to extreme Old age:
The following Is from a distinguished member of the med
had profession :
• Sr. Rum. January 1,1856.
Professor 0. J. Ifisid- 4 1kmr Sir: Unsolicited, 1 :tend you
thin certilicate. After being bald for n tong Unto, and bay- "..1
lug tried all that:ale restoratives extant, and fuming no faith ti
in any, L was hidithed, on hearing of yours, to give it a trial. Ve'
I placed myna(' in the badds of a barber, and had my head
rubt ed with a good stiff brush, and the Itestorutivo then apt. 7
pita:gaud well rubbed in„till the scalp woe aglow, This I 14
rniolfed every morning, in three weeks Om young hair
appear , ed and grew raQ Augunt,' last till the present K
•Osanouni is now thick, black and strung—soft and plum:mit, p
`to the touch: whereas, before, it ens her/01E11d wiry, whit f,l
little there was or it, and that Rttin wee elltempeiring very ":1 -
rapidly. I ,till one your Restorative about twits a. week, and
shall soon have a •good and perfect croprif Isn't. Now,l 11
bud lead of On= things--and who has not/ tenthave pot „,,,e'd
seen litberteraoycaao where any poroun'o hair Was really f.i , l
bane:SUM byanyof the hair tonics, etc., of the day; and It Is ,
many giver me pleasure to record the rmiutt of my otpe St
-
riettce. 1 have recconmended your preparation to tither&
and It already has n large and general ale thrunglinut the
; Territory. The people brie know its effecia,and have ;
deuce in It.- The supply you sent no, as whOlessle agents of 1
the Territory. is nrcelyawbeneted. and daily inquirlea . are„
m :de for it. Yon deserve credit - fir your din' coverlet; and I,
for on , return you my thanks fur the benefit it has dono
um, for I certainly had elespaired long ago-of vier effoctlug. tl
any such revolt. Yours, hastily, J. W. BOND,
Vino of Bond A Kellogg, Druggists, St. Mod..
The undoraignek Bev. J,. K. Bragg, lea minister In regu
lar standing, and peator of the ofthothot rhumb, at Brook-
field. Mmes, lie le a piglet:um-el great inftrienem and'uni,
verrally beloved. Wlt. DYER,: -
Brookfield, January 120861.
Professor Wind—Dear Sir: flaying" nneile a trial of your
HAIR ItNSTORATIV it, it gives me plensuro to say, that Its:
effect bee been excellent in removing hillanitiottion.;
droll, and a cunstant tendency to Itching, with which ITatte ,
been:troubled from my childhood; and has also restored: 4 l '
h ai r, which was becoming gray, to its original color. I e •
need no other article with anything like the same Plen re !
or profit. - Yours, truly, .7. II:
Sold et 114 Market street., St. Louis, Blievednii; 212 Broad
w ty, New York ; and all Druggists evortywhera All kinds
Patent Mt (Seines for sale on the twat pessiWe.. j
terms, at Professor Wocd'e establishment, 114 Market street,. •
St. Louis.
Ferule, wholetmle and retail, at Pittsburgh, he
KEYSER., end all the Druggists. setklbriatte
"j OR SALE OR . LEASE—That LOT OF
GROtßili In Allegheny City; atthe outlet of the Perm,
sylvania 'Canal, being t art of the '&Loam known ea
"JUNlATAAtutiLititt 11ILL" PROPERTY, togrther *Rh_
th" Beildiugs.‘Engina and fixtures. '
This fnt frontscuttbd Allegheny River 119 feek'estending
back !all% feet. lt hi eligibly situated for Manufacturing
purposes, end will ha lathed fora term of years, or told tut
accommodating ternm,,.. l gS9l4r.'? of -.:.
WM. 91. SAMPLE.
R. CUTllitilltlk- & -SON, •
f.I Market Went. Pittsburgh.
FALL STUCK OF PIANOS.
WWI` BLUME Laving just retnre . nd
twin the Pastern Cities witkp large stock -
..r;7.F.E;:',:-.
Piano Fortes. would respeefinly call the at. , 4
&nation of the musical public and ethers to ,
tim splendid assortment which is nhtv ;at hand and dal*
arriving.
Among the selection are the follog new and elegant
styles:
Octaves, full Grand, ,daberately curved ekse,legs, lyre, de.,
with new circular keys, carved sliding music desk,
carved fret-work, &c.
7 Octaves, fall aerpontine style, carved rave, lyre, legs; &g.,
with the usually open sparks at the corners Elks' with
beautifully carved frotwork.
7 Octaves, with pearl keys, pearl inlahi unme-boanl, circular
scale, dre.
Also, a new scale of P'. .octaves, being the largest sire yet
made.
0 4 ' Octaves, with carved mouldings, finished back and front, .
s‘idingutsic desk, etc.
eV . , octavos, circular sodomise, finished all round.
Octaves, round ownersoilidingin uric Moak, iron frame:etc.'
Altogether the amortmentla the brat ever brought to thbr
city, having been selected with great care as to the tone etel,
also to the style of fttrotturb. o
levery Instrument will be fully, warranted, and sold it 4 .
manufacturers' prices. Purchasers are respect fully Invited
Glean and examine. before purchasing else whorchits the sub.-
scriber will offer greater inducements than ever before. .".";-
1 CfIAILLOITH
:10'3 No.llB Wood at., second doer above Fifth
- TIRED! BRED I , DREID I a Tale of tliek
Great Dismal Swamp; by erriet Beecher Stower - :-,
anther of Uncle Tom'e Cabin. The'contents ars no follows-
of volume 1: The Mistress of Carona; einyton • Th. Clan 'l'
ten Patuily and Sister Anna; The Oonloo Featly; Ham
and his Wife. Tho Difemma; Consultation: Old Tift; The
teeth; Tho b`reparetion• The Loren; I..xplanattolig; Tom
Gordon; Aunt Nesbitt's Lose; Mr. Jekire Opinions; Itiftyle
Story; Uncle John; Bred; The Ounspinitote; Summer pat
at e Caverns ; TM". l'reparatioms; •.t.he Worshipp,e; The
I>np-Meetings. The contet4 of the seco4 volume csaAss -
seen at! W. A. GILDBNYENNisIY CO.'v BooKsvolud,
Fifth street, opposite the Theatre
riITNS, PISTOLS, AND SPORTING AP
pARATtra.—WO will pay strict attention t. rh o , 114. ai..
lahallre of filStedatlll Rives , tvlit the latest improvements.
Repelling of all kinds of Ske-anus, Stennis, hurglcall Sind
Dental Instruments and Mete - Ewes, ate,
Also on hand, a berm, assortment f I.r. ech lending and
common anus and Rides, of our own and foreign manatee
tore, warranted equal to any In the mark ete
All kinds of Surveyors' Instruments furnished to arder
Inanufactarent' prices.
Guns, Pistols or Rifles hired by the month, wo‘k or day.
sel3 DOWN h TILTIAT, 130 Wood at.
GAS STOCK can be obtained- in the Bir
mingham, Rest Birmingbani and. South Pittsburgh
Use Company. The Suhscription Books are open at the
Office of TIIOMAS WOODS, 15 !fourth street. It fe a rare.
chance. The Works will ho in operation on the first of
lanuary„lii.s7, and then the Stook will beiteg'a premium,, ass
do tile Gas Stocks of Alleghanyr and Eittsburfph, On
wish a good investment, call on THOMAS WOODS,
sel3 Fourth street.
FARM FOR SALE;—In North Fayette
Township, Allegheny Con ,ty, containing 65 Acres. 40
of which an, under cultivation; prime laud. The Warne
In timber. The improvement, are, rood courenient.
APPLY to (asl3) • • BLARKLY &
NEW PUBLICATIUNSI NI;W KJ lila
CATlONBil—Appletnn
Railway ard steatri N av l g don Gnide'for Beptemberntaliting time taldee, three, con
nections and distances on all the Hallways of the United
States and Cliatiadas; also ttte connecting lines of Itallwaye, •
& mi a o w, an d Stages; Thomas, General Traveling
Anent.
The Life and Adveptnres of James P. Eeckwontth, the
Mountaineer , Rand and Pioneer; and Chief of the Chow Na.
Dons of the 'lndians; with dinstiatiOns; written mom his
own dictation; by T D. Bonner.
&tribal:ion, a Tale of Passion; by Blnt, E. D. E. N.
Southworth.
editLifs
ofn George Washington; by Washington Irving; email
•
Humming Poetry of the English Lengtiege—Pa• ton.
Buttery of the Neely Settlements 01 the Juniata Valley.
A tired Tennyson's - Poerne.--wmplete 1 vol. eta gt. TS esk
Freemen's Glee Rook. a wllection gengs;Rieen,
Fremont' ongs for the Peogle;..hyl'yome4 Drew/
Republican Campaign-POngster.
For sale by. - W. A. eILBEEPENNfret 00, •
eel 2 Fifth at;, droptadohe alltettre.
MSS. STOWE' '„.isr.Ew:l3oo' . DitEl -
416,ML a Tale of the GrClitt Diuokl-Swikeilnnt recetr.l kas
yt , A. oumpfZlNNlVi k 00., '
eta pun k o_,uppcsite the tbetirk
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