Pittsburgh morning post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1855-1859, September 23, 1856, Image 2

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,INcr.thr.amianalsoeteetintainteltniliffiontft, anr
.0 , .
t ri s h lrg t [ , i ) t rz:,. lit concede to his friends no State of the Union.
Kciitufky, Texas, North Carolititi, Arkaiiittiantl
-)
t.
Nlis.otun have already uttered their unanimous
TUESDAY :MORN] NG suprio4Eß ,-
ectltnAipt ottthe Saulii^ 4 Ami, with out oppo
nents Ovitle4,,Bt4e atter State iti the North will
he foutill witiiiiintphant majorities in the Dern
.apre44:oline. jlat,artitqltedefeaforabolitionism
(his year, and thie'verdiet of the peoplti against
sectionalism and disunion, look out for the Whig
and American party under the banner of Fillmore
hereafter. The indications are that it. is from
that•dirtiotion will c6int . the fee with which the
ever-fighting Democracy will have to contend in-
• • -
'"•-fo.fr;
47.4
"TOE FLAG OF OUR unnN FOREVER f*
JAMES BUCHANAN,
FOIL DICE PRIVLIDit
JOHN C. BRECKINRII)GE,
Democratic Electoral Ticket of Pennsylvania
ELVICTOI.:B Al' LA ki.GE
CIL!). ES 11. RI UK ALEW. Polunibbl.
WILSON IWCAN DLESS, A Ileghtliy.
.
I.st Itlttrict : iTECI. W. :II kIIIING KR, 14111341.1 phi.. ea,
" I'l EWE SET LER, Phils.ll. Iph to City.
3d " ELIWA II 11 A •Pittledelphitt
4rh'• WM. 11. WI 17E. Pbthttlelidutt Clmot.y.
hth .1..11N MeN Al IL llontgontorr Ch..outy.
Gth '• JOHN It. 111{ I N TttN. Ct.mot 1.
" I/A t ITI I.A
h •• ARLES K ESNO.NIR. C.•ittllgp.
" JAMES PATTERSON.
IAIh ISAAC SLAV:NEER. Union C.onty.
II I h ?RAS. W. HART lI RS. Sitlttly l +1 C,,
12111 " TITIN A S OSTER II A 11% Wv . ..n.sing
13th " ABRAHAM hltlNti Kn. I'..
14th " REUBEN WILBER. IlraiLl..y.l
15. " I.: A CRAW Ft4ll/, Cllrit,ta Co.
I dt.tt " JAM E.. 4 B t7l(, Port-, Lte.nuty
IiLL lIEN ILY J. STA .I.thutte
18th Joust P ILI tuns. C,..
19ri, J ill MIN VY. We,tanown.l.ll/.1 C.
J. A J. BUCHANAN. 1tr0.q.,1 Co.
Sint. " W 11.1,1 AM WILEIN's, I
2Jd Et. , it. Ihttt• r C..
" Tll , tm CI'NNINt;II.I 11,
\ h PAVI.Cr I C
2.:.t111 " VI NI. TAT I' ravkad C..uuty
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET
GEORGE SCOTT, u F COLUMBIA 00.
JACOB FRY, Jr., 510Z , PC.011/KT L.
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET
rwrs. - n - •rnot• DIYYRICI .
WILSON MT ANDL CaLuss T.% ribut,
T 1.81.1111,17, rn.ml.l
JAMES A. GILISON.
2.1... NAT)
HOPP:WELL HEPIii , UN, (ATI'
7'llolsl AS S. HART, :NiAavt
A UGUSTUS 11 Alt TJI4:. vlth,
.111L'1dL JON ES, f'lir
L. B. PA TPER •0 N, 111rvuN TUK VBlll/!.
SAMUEL SIIITO, liti.cuExr Orr.
J :
Dr. JOHN POLLOCK" , I.IN - NA -r Tut, ..rtur
:•1 - OeIeI , ITINQ . r• , v•l
BSATTHI W I. STEWART, rx
ROLIICHT B. Gt'TIIRIE.,
S
EDWARD THOMPSON, WILLIN. WN:SII,
r”r7flT Hthvflick:
EDWARD AVCORKL.iG, I SbIANA TowNn,t
1:1121, ..1 Tor
HENRY HELTZEIGOVE.R., liti.np 1,, •
JOHN JOHNSTON,
Extracts from Buchanan's Sperla on the
1114.1epell.lciat Trelf_stlry 11111
"Tiii'f L'A1 , .1..Y IS Ai'WV •Sl•r:&rui 15 liICRF I A
BUN O.O:MANDS TIIE (01R1TI - -- IT
"FB.rM M Safi:l. llt r:SPECT THE I,IRuILIIVi;
LABOR IS THE IFNAINI , A,TII.O 1 V rijr: t.A ty
EVERY (NM NTRY, AND TILE FREE LAIst.R.F:I:. , ri 1 or
NORTH DEsEis.vE Rrit'YELITAP)R TlslslliPiti , blrl
,A • [o
I STIA.LifigNCH II ItAVY.,I VoRIIIII Tll AT 1 Slr . 'l'Ll'
DO THEM 111I'ING I"
, 4 I 1.3 511,E7i.V•S 'VII AT'V,
LI NI; %VII unit ILL Ho A It!! I\ I' 1.V.I;I
1. NINA CONZ 4 TUrtl . i
111 th •
Lliiillll (nri. , e pal I
trivitod to 241. )111
/,•Ln.u.r.tn and chnll. nu- Inre.ilg:lti.,n
Tti UIIrUA Y, inmt —At NIIUI NITo%VN. xi v 0.,
I'. M.
By vnlur Of the C. , iumitt*, ..1
DA 1 i P I 'A MPBEI.I..
THE WHIGS AND 1191.1,M0RE-WHAT
WE FIGHT FOR.
A hint.- number or the old line Whifza, 1.. Ili
north and south, have resolved on re-organiz;ng
e Whig party; and a few day- ago He
gates li: , ''n Caw: en lion at Baltimore, and adoptrd
a platform which has at least one feature in
it that is grntifyin✓ to every patriot. I.
national iu its tone and language. It den-ut
sectional parties and geug,raphipal i',IICS 11, dan
gerous; and it ret•olves that the Union ILIUM. IT
preserved. That Crutveriti,,n represent e 1 a lilt ”e
and numerous party in the linite•t httates, su4 its
proceed:figs will I n to' weight and influence
tens of thousands of voters in the appi °aching
election. It is true the Convention resolved to
support Fillmore and Donel.-mn. But it was
SUI, el to St and by the I nion, too, and maintain
fle Constitution. So far as I•illmore iv concern
ed its votes will he thrown away. But it help to
maintain the natonal sentiment against the wild
and reckless spirit of fanatical abolitionism. It
is another retake, another discouragement of
the negro worshipping party—another evidence
that the public mind is not yet prepnrvd for
disunion. Looking upon the proceedings of that
Convention as a Democrat we regret its choice of
a candidate; but viewing them as a friend of
the Union and the Constitution we find hope and
confidence that both will he preserved. The old
line Whigs and National .Americans together will
poll rill the votes opposed to the Democracy in
the South ; and their combined vote in the North
will be very heavy. In New York it is estimated
at I 50,011 : in Pennsylvania at 73,000; in Obi",
60,000. We have then no estimate of its ,trength
in
these our States lli together rlu
Michigan
u ottr i t
-l o t
iv h
$50,000. In lowa it is said it will he lo,Otai
in Massachusetts it may reach mi,otio, for there
a large portion of the Whigs have resolved to
eupport„,Fillature. la the other New England
States it will be small; but ill New Jersey it will
embrace one third of the votes of the State.
Fillmore's . yote, then, throughout the north, from
present appearances, may lie estimated at 450,-
000—all drawn from sources from which the
abolitionists hoped to secure help arid support
to their unholy and desperate cause. lint such
is merely the present state of the canvas:.
There are, however, causes at work that may
yet largely increase the Fillmore vote in the
north before November. In Pennsylvania the
abolitionists have not yet dared to put forth an
electoral ticket. This sign --this palpable ad.
mission of weakness and fear is strengthening
tile Fillmore party daily. And it is driving back
the deluded Germans to the ranks of their only
friends. It encourages all.the Democrats, too,
by showing the abolitionists the impossibili-,
ry of overthrowing the Democracy of the old
Keystone State.
Since the adjournment of that Whig National
Convention last week the enthusiasm of the Fill
more men is almost boundless: and they begin
to count on the chances of the election of their
chief. They claim New York, New Jersey,
Maryland, Louisiana and Kentucky already;
and some of the more sanguine are even lick
ing their lips "at Massachusetts. That is idle.
Massitchusetts is Rotten with abohtionisrn and
genteel infidelity. None but an abolitionist of
the most rabid intensity can carry Massachu-
setts. William Lloyd Garrison or Wendell Phil
lips could carry that State on the negro platform
against the Angel Gabriel.
But while it is perfectly apparent that Fill
more will poll nearly half a million Totes in the
t r 7 , .;.tsttilTs
.. 4 141,11.113.4t i gN05 ,1, 414 7 .,,w4. 1 Yi, it_
-1 tl:4o' • V7 4, I
. ,• Ik
• '
4 Crr '
;•-•,4 -
•
FOR PRESIDENT.
OF KEN rUCK Y
4:ENCk
JOIIN ROWE, lIP VIIANITIVS M.
22111
SYI
.411 . 1 4
N*
. , ,
' - 4
the future.
The Democtfltic :party accepts fearlessly its
mission of perpetual dance aud combat._ It id
only by such unceasing battle that it can defend
and maitain intact and strong the sacred 'cantina
of our fathers—our own glorious Constitution.
While that is maintained the Union will last, and
peace and prosperity prevail; and the proud
example of human self-government will still be
held up to the world, to encourage the people,
and frighten the despots. And in time the influ
ence of that example will overturn the thrones
of earth and set all the people free. Such is the
e.Auso in which the Democrats labor; and such
will yet be the result of their unceasing conflicts
with their foes. Wo fight not alone for all that
is sacred in Our Own government, and valuable
and essential to our own prosperity as a nation.
We contend fur the clause of human liberty every
where. IT, fight for mankind.
THE NEWS
Senator Isaac. A. Tommy, of Connecticut, bad
a public welcome on his return house to Ilart ford,
on Friday, by the Democracy. Over fire thous
and persons were present whom be addronsed on
the great questions of the day.
Andrew Kelly, by occupation an umbrella
maker, and Charles Lynch. n doggery keeper in
New York city, had a prize fight for $2OO a side,
eta place called the "palisades," which result
ed in the ilea°, of the former, after eighty-four
r.otioti- had been fought.
Don Vicente Hernandez de Ayala, Minister
i'lenipotontiary awl Envoy Extraordinary from
the Republics of Venezuela and °refugia, Afti.,
6:c., e•is yesterday arrested in Mobile, on the
12th lust., on charges of forgery and swindling.
After his arrest he made nn attempt to swallow
forged drafts to the amount of six thousand
dollars, hut was prevented by a prompt squeeze
on the throat by the Marshal, while Mr. Scollick
drew the papers from his mouth. Be IB a Span
iard, well educated, and a most accomPL•brA
and many sufferers in New Orl•ans
rej,,ict• at hi, ine4reeration His Linterti,,n
and arrest., en a tern slight cue, were alunt or
tistieallv planned and skillfully executed.
The teteeraph htis alretvly noticed the sudden
/ death of I.nrenzo II Shepherd, a prominent
lawyer and Demo:rare politician of the city of
New York Ile tray the son of Daniel 11. Shep
herd, formerly a distinguished legal gentleman
of that city : was born iii 1830: commenced the
),ractie., or the law in 15..41; took an active part
iu potties; was a member of every Democrn!ir
State Convention since IS-IS and of the National
Convention in 1862. He was also a member of
the New York Constitutional Convention which
Oct' i t , Igo.; and took an active part in the de
bates, was appointed United States District
kttorney in ISIS to fill a vacancy, and in
was elceted corporation •counell .1 the city of
Now 1 ark. Besides these duties he found time
to prepare several volumes which are in high re
pot,• sito.11 ; ! the legal profession of his State
I:!.. g ethsr he was rt workable for his talents awl
the perseverance which he brought to hear upon
naalttir in which he was concerned, either a , a
public officer or 'private citizen. Mr. Shepherd
leaves a wife wad five children t.'t mourn his to
. 4 . klwEtion:r.l minted rhirles 1111.rnen under
tttt t urtt Denlrtrytttit: meeting in W.
t • 1 - I'ning Ins:, and It.nd vcry
pot, • 11,•1.1., nt it. lIC then writes a false AC
e,anit. 4.f it and pnbli , hea it in the (ht,!•tf,.. We
are that his article in the ( , nett , may be set
down 3'l ono of the most unmitigated falsehoods
o f the campaign. There is to be another meet
inff, there en Thursday evening. Wu shall see
whether he will try it again.
TO-DAY a debate takes place at Indiana, in
Indiana county, between Burlingame and Thad.
Steven• en tlitt negro side and Will A_ Stokes and
Mr. Schnabel on the white rare side. The peo
ple hero know Mr. Stoke., aral may rest assured
that on Massachusetts abolitionist can he at all
c , iiipared with him for ability as a debater.
Mr Schnabel i- ,aid by the e 9 stern paper , to be
in e ai,b•kt stump speaker in that end of nor
State. Hurrah 1,,r ear side, with such champions
Another Monster
The Democracy or Ohio are to have anoth,r
Muss Meeting at Colatabue, on the day of
(Jet r. They are resolved to make it the latg
e•-t ot.c yet, and they invite Pennsylvania to send
ont a thousand at least to the great gatherni,!.
if our democrat. want to see the greatest show
of the ,atnpaign let them go to Colema n 's, Mao,
on the '2d ,d*Ooetolter.
Alto. WOL P.—This gentleman is now doing ex
cellent service in our cause among the Hermann.
He is an excellent 4peaker, and has visited sev
eral of 11., We,tern counties of the State and ad
dressed Herman meeting.. He reports matters
all right among the dernian voters in Erie and
ether comities, and thinks we may rest satisfied
that the great mass of the Normans here are
firmly wi-h UN.
Another Meeting.
There is to be another outpouring of the hod
democracy at Temperanceville on Thursday eve
ning at 7 o'clock. The democracy there are
thoroughly aroused, end a large turn out is ex
pected. Col. Black and others are expeoted to
speak, and the Wee Club is invited.
Tutu out, all hauls, to Temperanceville
We commend to the careful perusal of our
readers the admirable speech of Senator Douglas,
whii•h will he found in our paper this morning.
D. not fail to read every word. It is ono of
Judge Douglas' best, and presents a case truth
full) and strongly that cannot fail to convince
every candid mind.
SnvlMCK.—The man who demanded his rents
(41 hi, tennuts iu silver and gold is now the abo
litionist candidate for Senate. He has been
caned Shylock" by all the political parties for
many years. A nice legislator he would make.
J ouN N. PUTITIANCE'A letter is crowded out to
tiny. it is in type.
I CI, mmunirated.l
BANNER PRESENTATION.
At the meeting of the Buchanan and Brockin
rhlge Club, of Lawrenceville, on Saturday even
ing. a beautiful and costly Bag, which the fair
Deosocratie ladies of that place had prepared,
way presented to the Club by Samuel C. Wingard,
Esq., on behalf of the donors, and received by
Mr. G. F. Gillmore on behalf of the Club. The
ready and handsome manner in which Mr. Win
gard responded to the call won for him the ad
miration and praise of all present. After the
ceremony of presentation he proceeded to ad
dress the large assemblage in certainly one of the
most able and finished speeches that we have, yet
heart, or are likely to hear in this campaign.
After an earnest and comprehensive speech in
tierman, by Mr. Diets, of New York, the meet
ing adjourned, with thanks to the , gentlemen who
had so kindly attended to address us. The "Old
Church," where oar meetings are held, was
crowded to overflowing, and from the Interest
manifested we have no doubt but that Lawrence
ville will . donhle her majority of last fall.
kl ,
•
SPEECH OF
SENATOR DOUGLAS
- -
Mr. Douglas Order will reign in Warsaw.
. the gentleman says. Ail these rant phrases ,:re
. used l'or the purpose: , if - Coneeniiria a design.
Of Illinois. ;
None of you will pretend that Tiro, obnoxious
On the Army Appropriation Bill; delivered in the law , ' tai which'you...refer se ellee i . ive been the
enure of the diserifers• and diaturimaoes which
United States Senate, August 27 , 1836.
.have-nceurred ili K litea. •
Mr. Douglas.— Hr. President, the Senator again: le iforealjy.true that 1...11 ./ri , !illXi,sis
from \ew York (Mr. Seward) who has
• jii. , tt vi..i .tog 1 ra L e'ir the ese Ohnotio(iill ?Alt . :" If it were
his seat, has - made himself merry over the pros- .
,rue, with roar .r..Y.311i/.4- 1 1111.j,rjiy 11 the other
pent of thadefuat of the appropriation bill fur house. sufficiently numerous and well trained to
the army. I> lave never seen him so exultant d el ," the appropriation bilk eh .i step the
wheels
.and jubilant since ho has been a member of this! of government, could you not hose pouted a bill
body as on the occasion or what he considers to': t o repel, th e ebansiotts laws, You have not
be the great triumph which toll hopes to achieve I dared to repeal them for fear the Senate would
in Paralysing at least one of the departments of ' concur, and thus destroy your political capital.
the government. He has referred to the evils
Mr. Wade. The lines(' of Repeeeentatims did
and mischievous and unfortunate cenaegueueea
, e.,,,:n. m . iinni
;,€l.lt. it. bete,
repealing thoselal,i ,
which stay result, and has made them the subject v
-
of ridicule, and of laughter, and of mutts. I 464 , the S•e"ty has never 1° "' ".1 ii •
.confess that..l listened to him with no-pleasure k
' r.% -J-k "g laa * • V ‘ hi"' hill y
when I heard him discussing the ouestion in that I
Mr. Wade. It is called Dunn 8 Lill. lou
i
mood. I confess that I tun not able to syntpa counnented on it betore.
much obligedto the etria,
Mr Dou des lentberm
so
with the tone of feeling which makes him ;
.... •• . . les ' ' • .
roe- roe caltieg icy attelition fe it. He will, I
so exultant in the prospect of such eons.-
,
quences. suppose, beitranH enough to withdraw a part of
this statement I ~ . .ay I did Muth Inuen's dill,That misehiefe must result from the defeat of
; the general appropriation bill for the army is a and not very lightly ( mists a repel t upon it. l ,
ate made a speech upon it, and I showed
, h the
fact to which no one for a moment ono close hie
character of that bill Now, 7 will tell the en
eyes. That it must have a deranging and illsor,•
tor
-
, from Ohio that I sheered that that bill does
ganizing effect 011 all the operations of that ot
not repeal one of those loVN, unless it mily be
parte:mut, of the government, if it does not. en..
by the general declaration of rights : but, en
tirely paralyze them, is certainly true. Tt...:
arge if
the contrary, it recognizes the validity of tLe
must bring suffering and distress Ca a very t
portion of the United
all,
entire code of 'laws enacted by the legislature at
Stad is ndinUted by all, the Shawnee Mite-don, It provides that it shall
That it must bring dittoredit upon this country
ohm oad in the eyes of the whole civilized wont, be the duty of t4e judges, the governor, the mor
ahal, o the ilistrit - t litterneys, the ehmiffs, the jii.-
no one can question. Why : , them, 'should the, lei
a subject of rejoicing? Sir, the history or the'
tieee of the pence, to remain In stiles, and cco
world shelve that when ever an attempt has betel elite these very laws, in so many words. It wii;
: t;
Ls- a part of the arcitievet of this govern to overthrow any government. good or lo o t, .li, I
hill °1
40 for the Senator to sheke his head. The
the first step has been to cripple and de:troy the tw
mena fa will remain a permanent :re,itel 1, ,
army. Revolutionists at all times--men bent en
, Afire you in the feet', and convict every man who
the destruction of the gevernment, no matte! uy
dares to deny that the whole free-soil piety now
what purpose animated, or what cause they a:lege ~...
the Eb.m.„
et . Ri.r.sontott,o....
with
one ,
to justify themselves, first attempt to destroy. the '"
r e , e r p . t , i , on , ..v_eted ,i foza hill to recognize the validit v
regults force of the country. I have no sym
pally in this movement—have never . .admired
_'.',..''l'v.viu'' laws.
complacency :de As the Senator has alluded to ton'
complatiency which can rejoice in peril; misfer
tune since 1 road the story of Nero, who soul I to.. twice before, I wish terry to put this olio ,.
don to hint. If the repoblienn majority in the
make himself merry and fiddlewh'le Rome .il,
burning! l House by voting for that bill affirmed those law:,
- circumstances have begun to develop,.
Sir, did not the Stotoot 8 party, by voting artiost tloz
themselves which enable us now to see the whoa. hill, or noting agsm.i. it, .i.sathrm them -.'
scheme which has been plotted end arranged. Mr. Doetelas.--I will answer the Senator
and is now being executed The first part of the We do not disaffirm them for these reasons: Its
scheme was to defeat the uppropriat:ohe for the the organic Itts of the territory, whenever tne
Territory of Kansas, and. if possible, to tiara legislature passed an enactment it became a law,
lyze the civil government there. The next act- i web the approval of the governor, without being
to organize a body of armed desperadoes t.• o ' reported t•. C0r,...a....-. at all. No athrtnatom of
vade Kansas for the purpose of getting up i.li.(' ! the laws eta. necessary to make them valid. If
war. The political party woo, win.-11 th e sent I you bring in a proposition uow to affirm any law
for from New York i- identitizsl, and of which it in any territory—Minneeeta, Oregon or Wash
may be said he is the chief, in a convention at ington—ahout the propriety of which there is
Buffalo, agreed to raise SI I O,UOO a month to ne controversy, I would vote to lay it on the
employ men and supply arms to equip them to table, for the reason that no legislation isne et -
S
invsale KallSaB, for the purpose of making wit sexy on the subject. Yuu give no validity by
upon the law-and-order men there. They hart the affirmance. You do not impert vitality to
had their men hovering on the western boned. it.. for it hail all the sanction q law before step
try of lowa for weeks, waiting for the adjourn- action. Our motion was to lay thie bill on the
meet of Congress, and for it • tooora"hic .i. s I table, and I voted for the motion. It had no et"-
patch to reach them onnouocitig that the nen, 1 feet in the affirmance or ilittaffirtolltine ut the
hill had been defeated, s , that the war rtmol ' acts; but the !louse of Itepreeentativea, by their
commence. You kept ynur fours there, orat. 1 vote ou the bill prepared by themselves. have
to control the eleetion in lowa !iv foi , ..beent and ! declared In 4 c l many wont, I Oa t those l aws are
illegal votes, and then to be mar-tied orroso tie ' vs., I, and .l il be enfor , ed, with the exception
river to murder the othat•utant , mei burn the iot the criminal cede. You ittlirnied that slavoty .
towns in Kansas. Your men were kept there f. r Itaw, extract:: of whirl, were read by the Senator
that purpose, receiving telegrapltio tam - amt.-di I from Massochusetts to day Every freesodt.r,
from their leaders here, nod the moment lira every Vtern •nt man in the lionoe of Reprosen
were iufortrital that the army bill had been ‘l.- ttir:vel., l'utrl to affirm those very lows in rngard
feated, the civil war instantly conililetteed ./..1 I to elavery which toe Senator from Nle.e.trachusets
Kansas. Houses were Minket, buinhngs de t rend anti condemned.
strayed, a post °Mee consumed, innocent intit , Mr. Wade.— Is the Senator elniming that he
tracts shot down in cold blood, without ere() the u has changed sides with ti - ei aeclitioniets i that
slightest pretext or provocation. they are ot furor of slavery and he opp o sed t o
,
For weeks nievi.•us to Coat time—ye,s, for it ! L. that his posotan I
month. , previous—there hod been pence, quiet. Mr. Dough , ' -- When:!'..
1 the enudto asks thi
.
and order in Kansas. The people were happy. n t question and takes his '(Si, I will answer him
the rite that surrounded thorn, and there Me W ade I rut thi5,P.1.."51-toth
would never },,,,,, been noco o, r to t egoo mo, do.- I Sir Douglas. -Put the question and sit down.
speech or eommunicrtien Genre . ) leg the sad in- Mr. Wade -I nu say that this side of the
LeAligenre of bloodetted and murder if Lane hitt , house voted to emitinto• slavery in the territory
'tot been sent there by the tree "oil party to get . -f Kansas, and, therefore, you wore opposed te
np civil war sa n party movement, The Inds - f their action, if they beewne pro-I.:Livery liy
the case are too clear to alb,' any man tot deoy that, you become abolitioniete, being exactly Cl'
them; and there to nil our who umes tint rejmc i . ;tonal'.
when the news of a new contlagrntion or of n Mr Dettglas.---My object is not to prove that
new murder reaches y o n. It is sot , r1.,1,- , it, th o. lion,- become pro slavery or that 1 have 1., , -
E rery man in Washington t:mt if you .a.r the "note anti shoo). Sly ebjeet is to prove that
fr e e shiers with there eye: , glistening. lona 1-011 Owe tiro not sincere when they pretisnel that they
rratulating each ether, it is when they nave heard I wish to defeat the army appropriation bill bo o
of mania-, of robaery, of larceny, at houoe hIlrfl• " ,, .e of three laws, but that they wish it li.r
ing in Korn's" by their egentefor eeliti-•-it effect lilii -1, murder, robbery,-civil War, for politiesl
This is a part of the political Champaign I l effect, instead of the Tl•petake of those law,* in
confess that It is a end spectacle too beh e ld ; it k I order to make polifie*eapilal out of it, at tile
a mournful thought. that the hind of intom e at mote thine that they condemn the Biwa in their
men can he tubed, fer party porpose in put-solo s political speeches. .
of enneu'i arrangements, in ileier re e.nitr,oo rt,e s,r, I hove raid that every, man of that parte,
t . ,,idential alt ction, yet the lac' is lon glorino with one exception, v ii to reeop q ! zc th e y o u 1
for any man to deny or dotad it This invasion ity of those taveate tb ' De bay, pilidisbeni n letter
4
~, K ansas is unpr ev iie.-1 , le s ni.criler, are .'' in WIIIdi he assigns It 8 refigian ror hitt votf.`. 1
the most barberious nail crui ' ui n aroeler : I io- find the letter in the newspapers.
territory is being i a rued Gtr the pti To,. ..,' Wade.- -1
. I r'. ((ri ti-t ItlBll Li interrunt ihr ,
compelling citizens there to rally in tocir J. ".:. - e ter ; lint he eaye we ar c 0 / , / ,,...1 t, ti n .-
fence and bring on a iiitetied battle, in or: -r peal of thr3o lalaws.l Want to knurl( how it n, hot,
that you may show atone of your own men petosi this morning, on our entlealoring to re
as martyrs sacrificed to freedom! ' pool them, that every member on the other side
Your daily prayers and nightly iurocatio..s a, e . „ r the hoe , voted to lay the 1611 on ta„ table.
that a battle may take plate, in which some anee
Mr. Douglas— We passed a bill to ennui them
from the North may be murdered, that you ni to
once, arid sent it to the ll.op-e of Represeuta
piny the part of Mark Antony over The thati i o•
fives, rind soar majdrity• would not tak e it up atr. If apro eleven. man is kilhot, it us to o ! ,
an.l pass it. We then sent the bill a yorniel
1 roes triumph in your estimation. if a free
roller i. killed, it is no much poli tams, and your majority in the I loose of Itepte
tieal capital for _
motives would not take it op, Ir woo w. ,
the stump and for the newloile.t. It is en ,itell
known that the reeson why root Ht (ill (oil tad,
an issue 1 hat the I.4eluttio frit!! Mn.witichu.ott,
(I or tva , the fear that a few of your turn w ou o"
challenges and dares us to go before the counts: •t
us and pass the bill. It was tinnoteeeart -
Sir, it is en issue from whet.!: every feeling . f to )
r ~ to s u r d t, third hill—twiee assuredly, was
beast recoils. The idea that b1.,,,,t s h o o t„. ` l. '' ' .
enough. It IN no excuse to say tint stir b;il
pilled and murders perpetrated for pditical el
oontoined oilier matter which von did not
f t*C t l is ""' ltm g I '' ever). sentiment of l ' uni ,l l ''''.' '11(0 in connection with that repealing vection.
Yet, our, if it taunt he to, let us crirry th's iome
If von had insuperable objections to the other
to the country, and charge these mottles on the
timiter, if it involved your comseientuts or von,
heads of the men in this city who get them tir: •
! mortar-La you could h a v e stricken out all tint
and the party which sustains them. Sir, in nay
.- •
v t. ehi,•oleil to end sent us the residue. You
heart I believe that every drop of blood steel iii , have haul ~,,„,„,,,,,,I,A , i , n , t „ . , 1 ,,,. 11 , ,, , 1. ,.. 0D ,
Ken-na rests upon the 801118 of the Imolers ..:
action would have t been ;emelt reed ii, by ti,-
that political party which is organizing thin eito'
Senate in a moment if you had domr i!; and ;I*
war with a view to the presidential election . II
e
,• heele r folks are Sincere in (bodying Illece obnox
they Cali rejoiee ill the prospect of eon.; il iii !oat( n,:
ions hies to he rein:talc:it
their plan of the campaign, their yell will take up our
very different from mine. feeliogs a.e bill nu t cortainly pas,: the repealing yeelino,
whether you pass the remainder or not, heroic ,
What Is the excuse for all of C o ls orgoni-iati on 12 o'n'Ook to-morrodv. We shall now wait rosin
of militio-y force, this invasion of a poticenlilo whether sort are sincere in trying to get of these
pe,ple. this burning of hue-es and murdering t.! •dotoxiotio I two to be swept from the statote boil:
Ci67eLIS 7 The eXrnse (8, that certain laws, , until after the Presidential election. I bell, io
which hare been read to the Senate ,CVI.IUI time you hare in diolinot understanding that the
to-day, and on many previous oi - ea:Jibes itle, ;ire repealing hill shall not pats. It is the main
cru e l anti tyrannical, inhuman and barbarous. plank in your political platform for the prodiro
That is the only excuse which is ullere-1 f o r ell el e ction,
this crime. You say that y.ll pro not. Wilhhg 1 • , lint I said I would read an t otrnet from it
allow the President of the United States to use letter of one member of the !Sleek Republican
the military force for the onto:cement of those • party of the House who coubl not vote f• r y our
barbarous laws. When did he over propose to bill. Ile says:
use it for that purposel When lons he ever used : ,• We passed Dunn's bill for Kansas vr . ,dordov
it to enforce one of them? 1 oil know very Well •in n very objectionable manner. ft has ninny
that tip to this hour no one pro , ecution has ever good provisions. but extends the fugitive slave
arisen under nny one of trio,. Inn , of which coil how over Knows and Nedriiska, arch porpotuat, 3
complain. By common and universal roin6ent in ' there unti/ 1835, and Illateir oil children bowl
Kansas these laws remain unexecuted, and no ; therein up to that time of sieve mothers, slave , .
mortal man has ever made in complaint to a court 1 This was tie) much for me. I have always Said.
Of justice, to far as I can learn, fur a writ of pro . and now repeat my pledges, that I will never
ceitifor a violation of any one of there obuexiens ! vole to recognise elnvery; I will never vote to
laws. You know that they have never been eta ; make any human being a slave : I will never vote
anted. You know that the very officers of whom ;to extend slavery one Single foot ; I will never
you complain in KlOlBll.B do not pretend to enforce 1 vete for the fugitive slave law or its extensiee
them. Hence you have DO right to suppose, and ; over any free territory. I therefore voted
I undertake to nay you do not believe that those I against Dunn's bill, solitary alone of all our
particular laws are to be enforced by this appre. : party."
priation; and, therefore, the excuse which you ' A Senator. Who is that ,
give fur the defeat of the army appropriation . bill I Mr. Douglas. Mr. Leiter, of Ohio. He show.
I
is not sustained by the facts. It is a intro pre- in this letter that It Was known and understood,
text, and has no foundation in truth. I et the time when every member of the freeseil
Whenever I find a man Raying to me on the i Party hut himself voted for that bill, that they
stump that his vote against the army bill I were voting to perpetuate slavery in the Territo
was in order to prevent the President from en I ry by continuing in force laws which are so ole
forcing those particular obnoxious laws, I shall i noxious to gentlemen now, It also appere from
say to him that he knows that pretext in not true; i this letter that they knew that they were actin : -
that there is not an honest man living who does ; tin a proposition to make children hereafter hotel
not know that it is a mere excuse. You know slave s for life. amt their posterity after them, if
that the appropriation bill is not for the enforce. I born of slave mothers and removed from the
merit of those particular laws. You bane been I Territory before 1850. The letter shows, ton,
told before, time and time again, that no one of that you all knew, when you passed that hill,
those laws has been enforced, no one of those that you Were Toting to extend the fugitive slave
penalties has been inflicted, no case of the kind l low over Kanstiti Territory. with all its precise
has ever arisen ; yet when one of you rise t o i ions, at the atone time that the Senator front
make a speech to excuse the oritne of stoppir g ; Massachusetts, in his speech to-day, talks of the
the wheels of government and producing c i v il ! barbarity of the fugitive slave law, of its heavy
war in the Territory of Kansas, you cite these ; and monstrous penalties in not allow i ng food
very laws which nobody pretends to enforce I nail water to be furnished to the unfortunate'
Whenever men are driven to give a false reason i fugitive. I will not repeat his doleful speech on
for their persistent action, it shows that there is ; that branch of the subject delivered to-day. I
, a true reason which decency or patriotism does I wish him to bear in mind that every man of his
not allow them to avow. I political parry in the House of Representatives,
I show that the pretence in regard to these 1 with but one trxception,every wh oh he
did act i
laws is a false reason, and the inference is that . condemns, and is responsible for every manse
; there is a different one which impels their RC- I (pence which he professes to lament. Do not
tion ; and why not avow the true tine, if con- misenderstand me on this point. Jan net corn.
sistent with honor, with duty, with patriotism? 1 Plaining or the harshness Or the injustice of the
' I am constrained to believe that, if there were 1 fugitive slave law. I believe it WAS a law re
no/quire,' by the constitution of our country, and I
Presidential election approaching, there
would be entire peace and quiet in Kansas. I : sustain it for-that reason. But with what face
ant constrained to believe that each crime corn- i or Mew of justice or truth can one of this freesoil
milted there recently has been done by the or. ; or Black Republican party rise end condemn
dere of apolitical organization. lam constrain- ; that fugitive slave law, when he knows that his
ed to believe that Lane is the regularly appoint. - whole party have voted for it within the last
ed agent and commander for that purpose, end three or four weeks?
that this is not to cease until after the Preeiden "rben, sir, we find, upon looking into this ques•
tial election. When that election is over, if the , tien, that it is clear to the mind of every impar
-constitution triumphs as T believe it will, there ' tial man • that while the Democratic Senate de
will be peace in Kansas; for there will be no sire to get rid of those laws which violated the
. motive for any political party to spend money to ' freedom of speech, and all those great and nin
th out bands of marauders and desperadoes to I damental principles of liberty and justice in
get up civil war. ; tended to be secured by the Constitution and the
I;Mr. Wilson—Order will reign in Warsaw ; organic aet,;the free toilers, fur political effect,
then. ' , hive managed to perpetuate those laws on the
r •-•
••
, s 1 , •
'••• - , •
•„",
AK?, ,
4 1,r 1 41 1* ':- .' e
CI;
MORI
t'~
,y.
statute h, rk in ot •ler that they may use. Own for
political effect ((nor ( 'otigress adjourns.
Nttit Wis h .-1 should like to inquire him long
it tis sis:e .the Senator beestue con4ineed that
thoselavrS Were so .ribnosiona; and tik.het
awent awn:v. -It is" certainly ttinee-his - . first or
second report on the subject. t. _
4r. Douglas answer that question. -f
yoga( dell those laws to which I referred as being
repugruiAtt to the constitution and to the organic
act. I watt entirely willing to rely on the judic
iary to make wise decisions on that subject in
tire annulment of those laws. I did not believe
t hat a law infringing the freedom of the press was
cousistent with the organic act allowing a decis
ion of the slavery questi.da by the people them
selves. $o with a lone list of those laws, but 1
did not. deem it any part of my duty, nor did I
deem it neeet-sary to wipe out those laws by,leg,
islative enattinent, for the reason that the courts
world do it. 1.3 , 0101 cm it Was proposed bore I
was entirely wilting to pass a declaratory net
that they were null and void and shorild not be
enfore.cd, in order to bring the men who hoped to
make political capital out of them to the test, and
show that yen would never permit those laws to
ne blotted nut You cling to them as you would
to the last hope of life. If they hail been blotted
gut you would have lost all your capital on the
stump: you would have been under the necessity
of re-writing all your stump speeches, changing,
the tone of all your newspapers, and of making
an entire new plan of campaignfor the Presiden
tin] election.
Mr. President, I have shown that the House
would not pass a bill to repeal the obnoxious
iws. I have shown that they would not take
up and act on our bill when we did pass It. Let
oi trace this history a little further. In this very
proviso to the army bill they have not even there
a repeal of the obnoxious laws. That very pro
vise preserves those laws in force as they are.
You do not even propose to repeal them in the
proviso.
Now, let me see what you have done by your
appropriation bills. You first put in a proviso
not to alto w the judges to have their salaries un
til they should dismiss certain prosecutions. I f
they dismissed the prosecutions for political of.
foes they were to have their salaries ; but
when they got their salaries what were they to
do'! Of course, go on hold their courts, and try
murderers, thieves, robbers, and every man
guilt}- of crime. At lest, you reoeded from your
:edition or proviso, to the legislative, (-seen
:-ve, and judicial appropriation Lill, and allow
ed it to become a law. I will not say that the
fact that it contained an appropriation for your
pay and mine was nay inducement for thus re
cedieg : but it so happened that tlie bill upon
which you receded from your provisoes and
passed, contained the appropriations to pay the
governor, the judges, and all the civil officers of
the Territory. Yon thus have voted money al
ready to earry those laws into effect. Your pro
rise to the army bill leaves them in force, but
says the President shall not use the military
power to enforce them. Yon leave them in force
—yon make it the duty of the Governor of the
Territory to enforce them ; you leave it to the
judges to enforce them ; and by appropriating
fir their salarlea, you leave them on the statute
book with entire vigor.for them to enforce. Yon
furnish the money to do it, and you only provide
that the President shall not use the military
power of the governmeht.
Now, if yen intended to blot out those bad
laws, would you have framed language of that
kind It It is alear that it has never been the in
tention to allow these laws to be blotted out or
repented. Great skill was shown in drawing the
proviso to the army bill in such a way as to leave
the obnoxious laws in force, to be talked about
en the stump during j,he campaign, at the same
time that von crippfs the President, and de
prive him of, the power of coming to the rescue
of the civil Authority. Hence it is evident that
the proviso to this army bill is not designed to
prevent the execution of those laws. You never
intended it for that purpose. It was designed to I
:ripple the army—not to prevent the execution
of those haws in Kansas, for you left them in
force, you recognized their validity, feu appro
priated the money far the Governor to enforce
. .
I force them, yen appropriated the money to the
I judiciary for the same purposes. You did every
thing that could he doe, to aid the civil authori
ties in enforcing them, but you would not allow
the military power to he used.
I arm, therefore, forced to the conclusion that
I by framing this fauvism thus guarded, to pre
serve these darling laws, which you hug to your
oearts so dearly, in order to use them for politi
eni effect, yea wish to,get rid of the army in or
der to get up a eivil war on acconnt otthese
very•laws which you thus leave In force. Why
did you thus limit the power of the army at the
same tints that you recognised the laws as being
in force, sad autherised the governor and judges
to carry them into effect. If the governor end
judges did not attempt to execute the laws, per
haps you would not have any pretext for getting
up civil war. In order to make the scheme com
plete, it was necessary to make it the duty of the
civil officers to carry the laws into effect, 444
then prohibit the President from aiding the civil
authorities, and then moral an army of your ;
own into the Territory under your own leaders,
and thus you get up a civil war in which blood
can dew . , and names can rage, and the country i
ran be laid waste, and yea can have victims who
will answer as "good enough Morgans," at least
until after the election.
Mr. President, I repeat that I take no pleasure
in showing up a scheme of revolution so daring,
.0 reckless, so treasonable in its purposes as the
one which 1 have noticed hero to-day. Each day
nrings eonfirmatory news of the whole scheme—
an attempt to destroy a government that you
cannot rule. It is a painful reflection that one
of the great political parties of thccountry
passion, or prejudice, or ambition to urge
them to an extent that would destroy the very
temple of liberty in which we arc assembled. I
believe that it is a question of union or disunion,
depending upon the protection of the Constitu
tion of the United States inviolable. I look upru
it as a contest rising iu importance and magni
title far abovo any other that this or any other
country has ever witnessed, because we have a
:party arrayed against the Constitution on the
one hand, and a party upholding and sustaining
the Constitution and the Cnion of the country
upon the other. When the question shall be sub
mitted to the people, and fully understood, a re
buke will be administered to these revolutionists
more severe, terrible, and overwhelming than
any which any hand of desperato men who com
bined to seize and destroy the liberties of their
country ever received.
1 7 ruzik tbe Pt l delphln Ledgor.]
The Friends of Millard Fillmore In
Pennsylvania.
The American Fillmore party in Pennsylvania,
who are called upon to vote for the Fremont
State ticket, on the ground that it is composed
of candidates committed to the American Fill
more order-I•'remont occupying the attitude . er
having accepted the nomination of one Conven
tion that announced American doctrines and
3nothrs.r that dva,tniced them—are expected to
el: se their eyes to the fact that in the event of
the of the Fremont State ticket in Penn
sylvatiM in October, Ue only party yaininy Ilterehy
will 1, (lie Abolition party, headed by ii-emont, Ste
vens Greeley, Garrtzon Co.
The Fillmore National Convention held at 134.
timore a few days ago was an honest real move
moot, and everything CM done there to indicate
that such was its true feeling. It remains to he
seen, then. whether the Fillmore men in Penn
sylvania will help the Fremont party in the only
way that it can now be aided—that is, by help
ing to elect the Fremont State ticket in PennayL
violin, on the 14th of October.
- •
The NEW York Herald, speaking by authority
for the Fremont party, follows up Greeley's con
stant abuse of the friends Fillmore on Thursday
last, September 18, in the following choice and
elegant eraract
" Evil associations oorrupt good manners
in l the extent to which this fact has been proved
by the associations of respectable men with the
~Know Nothing Lodges is most remarkable. It
ha.a made the amiable Mr. Fillmore himself a
blathering disunionist, and his organs the moat
abandoned of vagabond presses. There are
i many respectable and honorable deluded men in
the Know Nothing'camp '- but its prevailing tit.-
mosphere is redolent with bad whisky and row-'
tiara. We dare say Abet, In the lump, a more
beastly, brutalized, contemptible, ruffianly and
'disgusting faction never matted in any civilized
Community. The basest instincts of brutalized
humane nature--the meanest and vilest passions
and pretindieee of. the.professional thief, loafer,
and vagabond are the garbage epon which this
monster of Know Nothingiam feeds. From I
the beginning, the concern was invested with I
some of the elements of a public nuisance, frcim
which we vainly endeavored to liberate It; but
from comparative respeotability, it has descend
ed to the lowest level of filth and degradation.
Itsleading organs sod orators go about like'
scavengers on duty, and carry with them the
repulsive odors of scavengers."
This is the sort of language applied to the
friends of !billiard Fillmore in Pennsylvania,
who are expected at the some time to assist as
ontrageons disunionist into the Presidency, and
to submit to the degradation of helping into
power their own slanderers.
wa call attention to the article from thel'hila
delphis Ledger, showing in what genteel terms
the black republican journals belabor the friends
of Fillmore. Guess they'll fuae
.Y. ' - t ~
?! 4 0 . ,r `r
"4' •
T oriri C 40.et1 Iy CJ
lipv'Yoltk, August 4, 1P52
Ar.,6i.i.tain•lidy in (his city lestiteathat. after tisitiii; tor '
4 311.spio's Voios3fogo,,treraeg'il by /quilting 8r0...
hurFlj, rho passoil s (41 . ..
01 , 011 0.1,. inches long ; In. 4o
khesitation i t r•cntu .
tvitier.t.tiorsoit iiklii4oit with
ba-r it far excels! orky otheirenody
j u«e at
The note ~ r the faith«, i ,
eon Ir. Itqunc..l I, cn:ltur, 011 Mr.,. klarL., 310011:at/Ur
or E. 1.. Theall, Di tiggist, «oilier of ltutirer 51ohroe sta.
Purchasers will be careful to ask fur Dr. APLAN CELr
EIA311,A1111) ykat3IIIMG4 nittoafactriritt by li'LklAnNo
13R05., of Pittsburgh, Pa. All other Vorinilligts in miaow.
ham run worthless. Dr. .111..tho's genuine Verinifoge, also
Iris celebrated now I. bud 4114 yrsikohitile
Drag stores. None g nui uu viittailat 1.14, 5160litre - of
IN4I ItNOS.
Aka, fer..ecilo. by.,..tlx.eato .ProPziatorsy - " -
FUMING BROS.,
13.aemeniora to J. Kldd A Co.,
No. HO Wool sareet earner of Fourth
•e 2 ;Jovial
__ •
414. Calif— 'Vance, of litettnlaaa.' illeastutt View,
Virginia Coal Mines, February it, L .V.tott
I gave to one of my black boys n part of,* vial of your
Alclatues Improved Vermifuge. It operated like a charm,
and to not nauscatliei, and brought from my boy between
two and th,ree hundred worms. MI pay had been very sink,
but Is well and doing well. Please send me four dose , more
of your Improved Vorralfrige: -
VM7114-
filget 41. t. Dr. I. Eirott'tviredebratell White Circassian Lint
men r, prepared Vilely Maier the isepr ' -iVision of Dr. I. Scott,
a regular:Medical gcadianni, nod Fliyaiciazi of extensive prne.
tire. None genuine, only as prepared by Dr. I. Scott .t Coe
tlauk Place, Ilorgautown,
NEWS nom Till FOUNTA-L'i WL DI
IleeeLuvrewa, S ept . 12,181,5.
This is certify„Tbat I haVe exataiited' the Itoeiiie for
preparing 31Cienie's Itatworell •Termilliga • and liaprovel
Liver Pills by Dr. I. For t, who tint • • en in five habit of
paring and using my original my.ii. revs in my "dice during
tne last thirteen years, and that I Mthit.Ve ho loam impruliel
them. I make the above statement the more willingly an .1
have no interest in them whatever. C. IIcLINE. IL L.
lIIPBAVILD Vyrruifogo an. txrnovnv Liver
flfTinnislnfod by certiticall, of e. McLane, for sale by
Drozyints nod fifer lbnntn ecorrubere.
Da
(I Y.*. H. KIST SER, 14 , 3 Wood st., WhQIE.4.I( I AgUnt,
De.. J. P. ELY...I:IIia, Alleghotty, ocor it;•ood Depot,
19il/r14,1.11• Agent. ~..*2.oothwate
_
the instant n };aster is applied,
must cease, nn.l vlenr is g,lven by DAL.1.F.1"6 PAIN EX,
TRACVOR'S galvanic effects, and eaee t ,e th e pa r t, are d o ,
omposed, they still soon be restored to their natural color,
1.01 if so, the contagious influent, will be neutraliz e d and
arrested, for mortification cannot proceed wherever the
, ; the be laid on, and now flesh will certainly ho gelteraird
INSEOT.I, REPTILES AND PLANTS. ii
r.smicted gait, harmless ley rubbing in instantly a gnantit,
DALI,ErS PAIN EXTRACTOR, and aft..n it has swonett,
and livid allots are Vikilde, ILyenthen, like the voltaic nat.
Lery, it will directly attract, diniul in. and metamorphosr the
po,soolug iullueuce. At ti,, sting of bees and mutquitces,
tho instant it touches prat the pain ends. The bites Id rat td
milloode also uro as speedily nevitralited.
None genuine without n eti,el-plate engraved lab6l, with
lagnaturve of
TIMMY DALLEY. Marmfacturer,
C. V. CLICK EN Eit B CO., Manufactuers.
Pohl at cents por box by 1:11, 140
Wood street, and 'by nearly every dee.ter ( fo n , dioiree
throughout tbe United Slates. All *Mere of letter - 44r hi
formation or advice, to be atldreatotl to C.V. CLICK Rbl ER
k CO.. New Verk. te-o..dasv2w
/16-No. Family flhoula be without fIOOPLAISItr:
OERMAN aftlicte.l wile WO" Auumier
Complaint outirely cured by them:
CAMDEN, N. .1, !forth 17 , ISri•.
Mur Sir—lt is with much ploasore Dna I Inform ; you of
the yTust 1,011e11241 derived trots the nee• ,f your (Serum ! ,
core is my family. During the greater part of last smuttier,
sty son, aged two years, WWI severely/Muted with the SUM
user Complaint in the worst term, fur which various mane'
dins prescribed by l'hysiclans and others were used, but with
no avail. I also sent him to the country, but it proved ef
but little benefit. !laving a bottle. of German later: in lbe
h.,ns•, I NMI persuaded to try that, 'which, to my netnal.h.'
merit, entirely enrol Oa. Ile continued iv take the Ritter •
some time afterwards, and hitanto healthy. I have the
greet:at confidence In the Bitteis, and feel nu hesitation in
laying that no family should be without them.
Respectfully, yours, .101 IN W. PARIS.
To Dr. C. U. Jackson. Tiara street, above Second.
Ste advt.raternent. .. "
Nor wan by FLEMING BROS. and Dr. KEYSIti
Pftdburgb.
•lerate.hrelear
•
. .
An Appeal to the Intelleel-..rt a one et
the fraturen et Pulmonary Diaense that It generally leave.
the brain uieliiturhe. IYr:therefore appeal to the intell:
or all who am pnstilepoi&ii to Cownmptien, warning th en ,
raletunlj, that in tieghating what they anti stl'abt .Ids, they
may be 4igning their own death-warnotte. There in no en
case ferenels negiert. in Dr. ION; Ercs• gp ht RC OF LI VElb
WORT, TAIL eon . ? CANCIIALAGUA, they have within
I reach, at nIL 'Haim a A, Welaperr roe' enneeu•
' thin or qualification 464,411:n/ f ie, and wears backed by
men of the 'highest eilentitir attaimmtte,..wtalso approval
0(14 if werthleme, no wealth enuld rinrnitnne, in eaying that
it is. as nearly inflitible m tinythht; it: this fallible world
can be. For 'pniticaelttre, ace. pamphlet in the hanibi
it. t teate, and au advertirement on tho'besin+fe.4l,
Z For sale, wheleenlo and rut:lAog &I:trait:Aß a
CO., hinter Wood and Sttrihil atreote.
Auld ahneby ELLVDRiitfiaN & URN LiNirry.btiet,- t
SCIIWARTS, and BECKHAM A mat mwilg, Alleglang
City.
entrt.-deat
Why will you Delay i l..-IVo are nerry hi
Lave to
„record the not, but Situp are stresbilit whassilf antler
&(y/1y ilny,mobtholler and year after year. with
Wait:tees, when their neighleirs /MIN, IM . 1•1/ ennui of the 0at,,..
malady that afflicts theta by a certain remedy. Nen, it
Deem prayed by substantial evidence that IZennetly's iledie3l
Ihs.w.wry will cure the worst costa of Feridula, Conker.
Ithearnatieru, Nonnalgia, &w.; yet still thine are those wt.
will neglect thiamine and valuable remedy. To such we soy,
try the Mimicry and he pnivineed.
See long adYciticoniont in another column.
Sold wholesale and retail at mt. x 011.01; 11, 131.118PII's
1 la Wood area, alga of the Golden Mortar, and at' Y. P
FLEMING'S, Allegheny. seAkilAw
4s - W7.yavtll you Suffer, WE ItEurytAN B 1
SO EASILY OBTAiIiED7-1110n1 you a &ire Throat, Qrii_h-y
Rh ountatista, Nerualgin, Bronchitis, Croup Stiff Julian, Fro, t
Bites, Burn; Sprains, or Poing In any part of your system ?
Yon can be relieve,' at one,, by URhit; the ',lost beautiful of
all Littimenta; the ,o 117,./r "Oimassien Lininronf,° pieporqi
by Dr. SCOTT, 01 Morgantown. V. and for sae cheep.
wholesale and retail, by Dr. K RYSER., 140 Wend stroe4And
Jag. P. FLEMING, near It. It. Depot, Allocheny. Sec ad
v.r,i,autent In another column of tooLny'n paper.
Are - Stoektogs and Lloulery Tor
IC you don't wont your feet piainhod with had'and short
Stockings, lon Will take out mud go to a DAtel4
ttr-
Ler of Market alley stud Fifth utreot, and bar Nome of tho s e
010.11111 t flue Stockings, that make your feet foul nice and
oedorteelo. Dias Also miaow and uella erory r.Oiety
At
thel e ry that you (nta tuoutieth at wholesale and retell.
Iteuteruber the place, corm: of mark.t alley and Filth
.ttl4
Orr /ill htlt received our FALL 5T1.1.8
OF SOFT DRESS HATS of all qualities, s.dors raid prkass
and we now flatter ourselves glint we can plenne all who
favor us with a will.
,k
Rua)
114 Wood street.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. -
DEMOCIt ATM WARD 31 METING. Ptuton.-ati,
its t Y Cizitang (In, Ist Wartl are regnaqted to tneet'ai th.
POLIMN HOUSE, Diamond, on Tait! CIVE.SDAY
E\ R\! NG, at 7 &clack.
an 2:.t. 1 t BY AltftiElt OP Tall COMMITTER.
TUN THIRD AND &INTR . WARD DIDIODNATIC
MO; eLlitt nm refitteat - al to meet at ti THIRD
tt VIM DAITNItS," TH 18 It V ENI NO, at balf ptatt
"'.-It;4, and Foxed to a- Daumantla Meeting In Pitt Taira
(ae2B) WILL lIDACN,-Pmet.
i . OFFIOE OF TEX PlTP.iiitqlofl, VT. WATNE
An 091CM/0 It to.rxia C
n OVFANT.. 1 .-
I Pltiolinrgh, September Z.1,18.66. ea l
• QTOCK AND PLATFORM CARS:—S e'd
0 Proposals - will be i*cclred by Ow nudersignell mail it
A. AL OCTOIIIIIt 14th. for
..
50 PLATFOItII CARS, rod
100 STfJCK CARS. • . -
Of four feet ten inch gunge,rid ~
arid qi plan and awarding to
eireifications•which will Le tererelloci on application at the
011ie of the Borrintenderit. . •
The Phttform tars to be - delivered by the lot of - January,'
14.51, or, the Thin of the Ronal 6f this Company, nod the Stock
ICora :it the rate of tweet) , min per mouth. -
Payment. will he mode monthly in Cash,. Company's.
Nome. 'First Nforlgilga Ronda. or had, : and bidders will ,
IVeer *tate which they propose to motto in pay. •
ae."Alw ' • ~ SOS. 11.,AlOORO.:Sxih't. .
.-......... •
riIHE PrONEkii.lB-bEFRNOEDM-..1110 DMIT;
X Ino no Stone, of this P,alliting, will ho exhibited a few
- dada at the More of J. .1,4111,135P111. '• • '
re:pat—ch.( .'' 70 1700 , 1 xtreel.. .'
NlO RGANiS COUGH . SYREIT' ho.s• cuied,'
can cure and will rare COU(111S..001.114,130.1/1.1441.
0 0 1A1118, TICK I,lNti SI:NSATTONS rx TA THROAT; I
11./FLUEeiZA. ki., do Lee. o e en. fait to i,,,,,.... e a bp.% IF,
Compounded and for 'nh, wholesale and rata% by' 4
Jolts Jun, J r ....
sea . Corner of Wood 411,1 Sixth .r as.,, fittabiarib. •
_..._ _
.._ .._.. _. ---__—_____.......___
YSIPE . LAS .A.ND 'rETTEIt.—PEAW
..
jut .13ON'S.SALVIE le the. only remedy- foi flrytirll444
Tetti.r.. Try U. all who are afflicted. Poi' two dollars Vex/RI. I
insure a perm:mat cam Thy sale by • .:
• JOMN WAFT. Jr.:. •
gezi cornm• Wood and. Slmtli ato.,PittotarfAit
..e_
.... . • _
TAILESS AI sI DCrOXIi.TRI2e.MINti&- - We
a_y have just meet - veil 100 cartons or every variety 4
' tS .alr and Oteta:Triramintte. A very large . asoortuient at
'Mack and Colored Moire Antique Trimming-a
ael3
A. A. irlAiViN A co.
T lIE N - NWBOOK by the qintliei o£t7i6
" Wide, Wldo World," and " gnackory"—TlS HMSH
OF TIIE SIIATIIMUC: 1 vol.-1.1,Z5.. For onto kr
8023
JOITIV S DAVIS%
' ES Market at.. near Fon:that.
1100 IDLES. AND R R AYE It .1100 K S. —Pliaite.
Ai ,mu and. examino my new M p ps .
stock now oponiug, at lo
nineior betwut.” lwentyPents 1 , 13,1 thirty dollop.. Among.
them are tams of the mast olegant and complete edillono of
tilt Lenten oral Oxtbril publiattera.
JOJIN S. DAVIRari.
(15 Market st., pear Fourth xt
i GINGER--30 lbs. Greort. Ginger,
vft g. 041 itrt rt.ceiTo Iby F. R //RAT%
243
..t 3b I tat.
kr67)turctico of titovi• inept at
•gelA • . A. A. MA:L . Oi At C.'B. Fifth et,
DOZ. LAROE CA S SPICED SA tatyN.
delicknis relish for tho tea tablo; I do. frtsdi
Rocoivad by (sots) 1 0 . IL DILVVU.
EMIGEMEI
%;-:
L K
7 3
- 7f=
6.!- •
16K
~r o ovta, W ;
•
•••, • • -
~,..:' ..;.• ,i :.‘,,,-'2•;-u1...,.. , ',.?•,.;:-.,, ~.,)-.
'-'- .-,-• ~.,:,%,-..,,,:;-. 0 ,::..,
, Um
.4t
=MA
PROPOSALS.
. . •
• • •
„N'Awrlti.r.urrussv,
Itcreau , "1 - Yarth anti It ei • ~k l ll er r Ii), te-e
.
SI EALED I'ItOPUSALS for eneL Reps
,
retch. endorsed Preporell for (Na., \ (..Me
Ore
(IT uar)'.ysti . d let t2:41411f ttgr yortt,) will te. ' , retired
at' until imon en, {/0425111 Uctol.ntr next, tw fur
aiaL iog and delivering at ate RErVerNI trivy.ptr.le wooed the
Ine+E'ri. l4 n)td.lutict.e....tenhterill In the following rht...o, and
whih' rill'. dcucri printer' schedules, whidt
will be.tarttiairedf upon Uppitmtlon, and enut by mall, if so
request:opt° lim7orts iteelritig to offer to contract for elver
all the chosen named therein ! hy thoA.vntroatici.tits of the
•tieverst - nery•yards,ll, - ,r thq uta.yrett far 'the...yarda tinder their
command,'Cr by' the tieropagent. neamt thereto, or by the
hareem for any oval' thoptrde. In _
case , bldtiere drairelhe commandants or riatragents-to
:send chem schedidealirninlhlt vitt ho.nf , t , esnitty, in order
to. insure their tranialitaticiri. 'that they thmild enclose in
their application- postu ge staitip4as the hew moires all poet_
age to be prepaid.
tilddera are honhycluttotted - nria - Particularly notified that
their offer.i.tetist be in Via-form hereinafter prescribed, and
be maned In time; to Tench their &situation he'foro the time
expiren for•tweiving them; no bid tefii, Lr. uanAlemi which
shah :reartimi. triter the period.. slated, ad nctilitodance
wilt he made fur faiturro,ql the whit.
To guard against ellen being opened before the floe ap•
blrldern are .recreeted to endorse on the envelope
above the toltireettomd oraerveline muter the . etnlorsenient.
tints: .Prrpoutir f t .(:mats .10. (tHone Ou let( for the
Nory,yard at (none tlee !tartly ,
To the Chief of the Bureau of Yards and Doete, Wash
ington, D. C.
FORM O P OFFIilt
(Tien thrte thr offrr.)
‘.f, (herr irsert the name,)of (uouo- Vet town,) in.the State
(traMe thr Mate.) horelty offer to throttit, under your nd
rertinement dated tetatc of aetratteernitd.) tired enhject to nil
the reaniremente of the mune, and of the printed ethedulo
to which it relent, oil • the•tc:ticlea end:raced In Mate No.
(+ntie the cht , s,) for the navy-yartrat Omni& the Nerd.) no.
cording fossild Ediodule, viz: (hcrapatte on The priotni elan
from the telablide, a- ecieh Erriele tot the prim, and
eer-ry out thranaottot in the cotiatril for oWittr3 onitolds, rent
2i...1 tip The gggrrypte ozsitnent the'llid for the eloesjanutent
int; to I Kerr writ. th• ,rmunt ix trorgo.)
I prot - 6.0 tw 70/ error. thole name the crime!, iJ o.nr is re
iteir,s4 by the whrotatc) ior Ito supply caner the el/I,exen tat.
celie-eotet, a,taots.rte.hieut of the piers of delivery: and
'ghoul& my lrff r lro nrrepicil . I req,mno the madract may lee
prepared sad rent L, r he nary-eV:at nt (atme floe ar,ency,) for
~ Iz- n aturos and tertinroto.
(arre:liec Wilder sign his name-1
FOR11.01`• 01:4114-NTEE.
nip undo - FIG - n°.1'(n..7;1. , of
.goorafab.r.) of;name. Lie , Leath,'
and State of (Rai. Ulf Slot-.) nod (awn(' ser.roul guaran
i ap_j het yby undertake Lim oleirosinine,it finwie the bid
e, or bladera,l 'will, if his (or their! Mier os -above be.oc
ep-t, tisl, Color foto contract with tlio United State.; tifthiti
days sPer the date. or notice.. throug.h.the post-of:leo, of
the itemptstico of his for their] offqs nolithnied.
' Witness, St:Oseture of auarani,,r4..)
certify t the above namoic /wry nonsit.thz ifiovenfors,)
ore It nowo to MO to be KO-xi and reeponsiblo 'glisi.antorit in
tills case. tgigniffairc.l
To be signed by the district judge. district attorney. Col
lector, natl.:agent, or wino rerton known to the bureau to
is. reogemeible.
PORTSIIoIIT 11.. N. 11.
Clem! No.l—Rricke. Qui& fn. I I—lron awl nalll
2—Stone. 12.—.5t001.
8--Yellowpiao Um- 1 1---" F 100.
l.cc, I : , —Palnli,oila, and
1— Yollow-pino NM- GNI..
hor. la --Ship chandlery.
h—Oak plank. 1 7-114rwarn,
G—White pate and Iti--Statii uery.
apruco lumber. 19—Firewo od. reasoned. • 2 11 7—My.
.
.
7—Lime. i'l--Provender.
B.—Cement. ::L—Charcoal.
'X.-Orrice' azul sand. 24—Iron casting?..
10--Slate.
Oth No. 1 -11rielo.
•
Yr.llow-pine trim
bor.
4 —Yellow-pine lum-
L.•,.
and hard
wool timber and
lumber.
5--Vi It o I e,
spruce. juniper,
sad cypress tim
ber and Inmber.
and.hitir.
U--(:ravel and Mind.
11—Iron, iron epikell
and nails.
NEW •
Chu No I—Brick
..
2—gtone.
5-I'cllac pine
• s—Hardrrood.
6-14' hit a-pEno,,
aprneo.
7—Limr, hair, &a.
B—Camera.
9.—Orarel and flans!.
Il—lron, Iron spikes
and moll.
12--t3te.g.
11-111 es.
15—Tairite, oils, curd
Op.&
Class No. 1-11rielcs.
5.,11ca--
' vino tilutrar
pint lannivr.
• t - am! bard
trGod
C—ovatroued
piap timber: and
';:tifireriwtr:
i.im- and hair.
#tals4.thi:
10--Ttn. •
-2474m1. iron apikel3
``rand.nos.
. • NAVAL
Crods No. I—Clokb.4l,
• -
$--Provision.
4.—t:rnceelea.
e,--ttrelut, ke. •
—Totr.zaxk.
S--Chrtnitlerk.
Clan lan. I—llVrif 4.
V ialt/W-Pintl tint
bor.
4 ti..ll“wpino lam.
bar:
f—White Ulna.
rmrilmjnaipar
• aIL cypress
-timber. .
7—Time null hair.
8-13,u6ntt.
9,- 7 -fintalami gravel.
11, Ji;sn, . frya naW;
•
Clam No: 1--jtrias,
• '
,
wa In at ,
boards.
MI itelduo.
a—Cowen t.
A—Aland.
71—Tron. Iron spikes,
and nails.
113—Etteei.
Nciturotx.
oil„,
,
la—Ship chandlery:,
11—Ifardware.
Is---,Fdathrnery.
ttn—llay and straw. ,
ttl—l'rtwendor.
22—(Tharcoal.
V-1--Belting and pack
tag.
Claw No. I—llriclue
2--lvtone.
3—liellow-pine
4—Yeilew-pinetunt.
her.
•
s—Hard-wool
tim
berandltmlber
j uni
per awl cypress
timber &
lum
ber.
7—Lino
II—Cockl) sheds.
11—Insts, boo nail",
and spare.
The schedule will aunts the dose within which urns
hv
will be required to tal r l ^.,lPteresl; and where the minted
schedule iatiot USA ) eta parlody °tided la It fur seeliverion
obloat le copied 1u ihtildtla All tho stri a
kites which may he
retsina:nal fur Mast In didirered at such place lAnce.,. ins
eluding drayage hal tierface to the pia-, where used within
the navy-rank respectively. Sro wit:th the offer /4 aunts, as
may he direct.° by t the cote u mailit s gwinterVierfal"; end all
o t bee things ',dug tapati..prittia-ente wilt le given, to Arceri-
OAR ortuttfai. tore. No ankle will be rue-Ind after the ex
piration of the priolspecitail fu the widabiles for tbonone
I printout. on
of deliveries, mitoses specially autitotigesl by the Iles
tiV't) • •
It Is to be n-dil
eee:l ill the contract, no V • e distinctly,
widenstewl by Do) hidden+, that the lunette[ anal number of:
at [kora entoperwhil In ebonies - • wiectaituasius •' nro
specified as the probdble qoaaltv wijd, iely hr, rt :pitted, es.
well as to ilfix data for &ten:a:rang the lowest bid; 1 , 18 the
OCUnteflAtOe 1 , to furnish more or loss of the said ownotitattal
ern rim, and en such quanta: er. arid al u, tr.- 6..
?Tau ortvennutalwof mast rep: ire. soot, le.w.)ve. not
to exceed taw-thlrd of the tiowitis he a; dud, (and requioni ent
tent through lip r cat bludi be ilwated goin, ht
tire,) during. the d cal year bullion- 50th June, Ibrin end s
tebelhor lie quantities required he treitenr has th ou
styrified, the prices e1.1.i.11 Cra.l4lll the estate e
article° notion the contract: must Ist of the best
quality, delivesedia pad onler, bee of all awl everye s
charg
. or expense, and subject to the iwspeation, count, n eight, or
ranuatrameat of tiles:ad ;navy-yard, and Le in all respects
tettinnotory to the tomottesdatttlaraf. Bidden. werpft.rk- •
•
rest to the yard for piano, twerannanolot t or rtanPlorttiati_
. further description of the anis:Jen (b.ni: non for clatiobi t.
ihyoh,i•ooliwsdisto e s oes ,o win rho not rebid° near the plain
whore the orikties are to be dative' ed,. ar) tie resiutreal to "
~t).nue•tn their prano i lal lin agent at
too city or principal
Plecantorthn,yard delevery, who may be called upon.
artic.ba...ol4•dd &icy:when that - !shun be required:.
Approved s'tifiafeillkthe entanut et we connect will
royuiresicaraftitunty i pircentuin' as additional security
deducted from each payment. taint the' Pe•Orni% atoll /MO ••
tarn completed tie tatotelltid,-frttleinotialtria) affianced by
Aiditleten-trecnt. clat,eo howled embo.lianesilita” to Nide--
4 , Yrno wrequ.iokdatu., tits 64 - 411,cetr, St. : to...orgy per cent: •
Yettsined unty t at flastliberettion of time ranarntiot, la) paid
quarterly on the first of..lantiary s April, July mid tic:ober,
irlaar the, dithytirtet.lraret beam waisfactory, the 'balance
A r eighlY • per rank) wilt be paid hy..ll)e rwrisective navy agents- •
'tondo thirty • tlaysi oiler , tbo preu - ntatiOu of ha* In tritti
,loan duly vouched and approved.,
-No furl of the per centutnreserved-hrto be paid until all
die relsaleti articistasastral. : under the enutract &boll have,
"Heins eremite' front lite yerd,uniesa apoxially authortred
the department- •
-It will be stipulated In tho et:anent thatlidefanit eh- llibe
mtule by the parthirqf the giielistrA In doll rained! Or any
of the artfclet, mtitif loused, n 1 din finality awl at tie; tn.,
atulplaten above provided, then, Arid. in:that rube, bc add
Vlrrettmot pap tothe ITatrd 84 oIrai Os ilquidattat
totages,,,sfitnu of homey aped to twice tla) °Mama of the.
Atntract price herein agreed upouso deep 4r to tae paid for
the articles le case of Who 'netttur delivery thereof, which
lignidateildimageirinifberestotatell from time to time as
thty ()ante,
2 . 110 sureties must sign the contract, and their vesp oiw ibit.
:tycertille4irt lity;• a nary , agent ceibwror, dlWYiet attorney, of
NOM-. Uttar person: Satattanrity knotin to th e b ot .,,t, ta.
I is beproviledin -the contract thou the lio ro ,;, • , ; ow l
have am power-of annulling Ito txratroet, win t „ ut
the goeerootent, In e4L‘c Ca , 416.11.1 shall
mad • wall, iat nro i s t a 'anrhaivslts, Ili , - a lates hams d. net
or f
-the coptealott olatta weeks catbnattalt e r. end ent wht it this
oi l besr otsiossett bawd. "tot I o lase the rob, rt o lit
&Mil:twit the <llll.lO its a named io live b to w
)i tt iod o -i tithe tlatteolia ' elate - lA..II°W twenty five per ant.
• perarars a hots effera shall be waeptesl eel be Lambed by
Iwo r through the pow satire, wislels raft.° shall be RUM 1:
eras to:ancient: end - Willey do not eutpt two Coutract for Ints
suswii • wannest Within illtsica slat frotts the dal° of ;wince
from the hweaus the tacesitat a et . law c met
"00 YFtl/a Mane ether preen or putenax. and the
guarantors nf Vuell dettulting bidder will be reeptandide
for ail deliequeociey
Ali cap f q rio t mod.: r,-;,4 ne huts thisadvenieve
ot et thetiptiesWor the human, be rjoi..t,l.
111 ratty teltebe 111 3 • Wit I 1.; e 3 b. ii.olt4•••:.
au t 0 0111111.,•ts will he reitri s l
as way ho practlcatile.
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44, and
cldirwhe
1 7—Hardware. 'Y.
ld—Stationery:
20-11ny end Ottaw.;
'2l—Prow:niter.
• 2t—rh. v . oa i
2 . 3 —Packing.
?s—lron carding!.
YORK.
Clan No. 10 --KiltirtrandlOry.
37—Barilwarii.
anit straw.
31—PwiscraUr,
Pack-.
bar,
24 , —1t0n-work'.. and ,
atalings..
2 1 3 , -;:krattilurrk and
tooje.
con
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ELPHIS.
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Claw' No. I 2.--,SterL
1 l—Filea.
'IZ--I'atilta, oil, and
chandlery. 5;7
Er—llarilware
In—Sta done. y.
19--Flnuart.mgl.
•2a--I;ay and straw..
27—Provender,
2:3—Reltifte,
log and • bum. :
26--ANChinery,
ASYLII3T
pasm No. 9 —ttardwitra.,
JP—lron tuyl ontia.
11—Pa.11.114, 1.41, and
It-CroVersilpr.
15—FIrmmod.
nil No: 12-itteeL
• .13--Pitt
14-11 ipm.
MESE
1,1 -81/Ipofiandiort.
17—aurdware.
Is---Stationery.
3A—Firewood.
W--nay and isttaw.
D—Proventlrr.
22—Chumnd.
Z l-4.4 . l 2),Repnckitv.- -
lair.,
COLA.
Cra No.
11 1 5-- 4-- Polio Fileß 4s .
le,glAst.
&c.
]r Clts)l elinnilleryt_
17 —lin rdwri re.
7 S—Sle-0UT1....V.
l A—Firewood.
al—Hay. •
2 1—Provender.
21—Balm,
h• 4, packing,
24--C c .
km. ,
...A —iron =stings.
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