,pittsburgh (gaze*. WEDNESDAY MORNING AUG. 12. Union Mate Ticket. YOB Gorsaistos : ANDREW Gti:Ctrifaiti, of Centro. ion JUNI Or Tar 1117PBKM 00IIST DANIEL, AGNEW. of Beaver. t/riot• f", ,, :z Ticket P-. t4dlrial °art :7r C/ I.' .7111011. iANNISTOti. 31011 MIL. 04•11 i wm. A. RIBBON. - '' 'Vent' AIICSR, ra. Alrtra; izooLoss. re. Gawp rosimplift...s. GYoi3Gli IittILTON. • t , cr Dirsetor 41 - 114 Poor JOHN T. DIIATO. Fortner Symptoms, of Dectine—no. _ :festers and yeomen to she Helene We have just had mansion to refer to the desponding toneof the Southern press, and and the confessions which the reverses of their arms helmet last wrung from them. We have now to add another to the list of symptoms of decline,' which we have en , delivered to catalogue, in the re•appearance of the arch-apoetate himself, in a harrow ing appeal to the absconding soldiery, and the women, who are-now -.Spaded to rein force that " forlorn hope," which is com posed of the Northern copperheads. "There is no alternative now" ha remarks, "but ' victory or subjugation . ," and he scoordingly proclaims' _an amnesty to all deserters, throws open :the prison , gates, sad calls piteously, and beseechingly, upon the very women, to drive from their presence every man, who is disposed to find shelter behind a petticoat. "It is an ill wind" the pro verb says, - " that blows nobody good," and here is, at all event., a jubilee for the jail birds, of whom it is affirmed, that at least Ave hundred have rushed incontinently • into his - Mini. 'WI Vila - him joy of his metropolitan cut-pursts, who will be fit as sociates for his cut-throat in the camp. - Bat whit about the women? Poor crea tures! One would suppose that they had already paid dearly enough for the encour agement they have given to this fratricidal war. Husband, and brother, and sonfiave all perished. Desolation, distress, and penury are now enthroned around ten thousand—nay a hundred thousand wasted homes, which were once vocal with hymns of happiness. And yet, when the arm of the warrior has failed, and the God who rules the Heavens has refused to be propi tiated by blood or hypocrisy, aid the meshes of destiny are gathering and contracting around the guilty authors of this great orime—the wife and the mother—the weep ing- helplessness of widowhood, and be reaved maternity, mourning, like Rachel, over its Brat-born, and refusing to be com forted, are invoked and entreated to pre pare , yet another sacrifice! What would ye more, ye horrid ghouls, of these poor, suffering, deluded, disconsolate viotims of your hellish. malice against mankird? Have you. not already devoured their hus bands, and their offspring? Look at your hands! There is a red spot, a blood stain, upon them, which not all the waters of the ocean will wash out. Stand forthi Jeffer son Davie! and yen, Robert Toombs! and you; Judah Benjamin! and you, Gen. Le onidas Polk' Apostate Bishop of souls and,ioul ye inferior ministers of peace— ye tali , .brotherhood of shepherds, turned into ravening wolves! And you, too, Lee I • and ileauregard 1 and Johnston! and Stone wall Jockt-on I and Pemberton! ye doubly perjured renegades, who have dyed even treason itself with a darker . hue, - by the superedded crime of ingratitude to thei bosom that warmed you into life! Stand forth, and witness the long and mel ancholy prooeseion of the wido we, and or phans you have made I - Stand forth, and listen, if you can, to the wardenounaing wail, whichis soon about to break forth, in agonising shrieks, from the Potomac to the Rio Grande, from the hearts you have bro ken, and tee homes you have made deso late—demanding of you to give them back their sons, and brothers, amnstends, whom you have murdered I And then ask, more if you can, from those whom you have already bereaved of all! You tremble, Jeff erson Davis, before this appalling picture, aa 'kimono up on the dark shadow that is now fast gathering over yourself ! Those who read your last appeal, will ularigh at your -calamity and mock when your fear oometh," if they are not reminded of the infirmities of a greater, though lea guiltj than yourself, es described by the prince of dramatists: • Ha bad i'fraor TINA bo was in Spain, And when the At was on him. I did mut How he did abate; nip true this God did Asks, His @maid lips did from timmeolor And thateemoip,whose eisracedothawatba world, Did lose his lour.; I did hear bim /WWI Ara asulabat tangos of bit that lade the Somme Hark blis. and write his troche. in their booth Ala. 1 it cried, •'fit» mew= drink. Minim,. As • sick girt Yes! Jarririsoz DAvls has s feier, too, that water will not allay, and stow Wants nursing, end attendance, and therefore, it is, we gnome, that he calls once more epos the women, for all the aid that they can give him. The only drink, however, which they can new administer, is the scalding tear, which he hae wrung from - their hearts, and rained down over their cheeks. i It is i bitter cup, but be and his eonfedeirates, With 'The Bucaiasse . and the Topours of the North, mast Arainit to the dregs. Commit no leotsanao. Oar English cousins ere beginning to trtat this country se though they saw in- scribed over it in greet letters, "Rubbish shot here." It seems that the criminal pop• flletian of Elegised is getting troublesome; the jails are fall; the retormatoriii' are fail; and the towns are full of "reformed . ' irinistswho, under theasmt of dstet- of eenl; ere aeniout from jsilsra dre, • foraratories to rob and steal avant Ra omtly numbers of these pests of sanely are said;it have hien exported to this Granary, Booze of ourootimporaries are flying Into a disagreeable rage about this last British .outrage. . Wiradviss them to keep , c 001.... It lino profitable to loss one's temper—'depo. orally is sash weather so this; and the less when, we bode it in our power toldke,pres mai, snob exemplary revenge upon!John Lotus sully bide our time'. thteday will Dome when the perfidious ?Mali will big so jAambly :to-forget end forgivlps h e s outraeouyoulkit zkoblo bird,the or; -- :',frgjupalt t34 1 , 57 4 6 tiTi07 1 47 - 114riair s ti - 4 1;of o.ig Ant us sidso.44„:„ we pond you iloyd; you int us owindlors— . ... ... ott.N.,-.1,2,,:..,..4,,,....-. ~:--•,-4..-,....;,;.,',i,r.'-.7!'r77.-•••:-:.., . .. .-• - , r.- V- 144 ' ...,-.....,.. ' -.401...Y.,,-4,...,,-,'^..,. ~,c ..- . .m .i -t- t 'A. ''— ' - r, , .0-. , . ' . 14,11,. ;41,,tD4.-.,'.1tt.070.0rf ' '. • !•,;'4.v.‘"tiet'llky'.i.Vil,l:-..,04,;?,*4*""' . . -';'' • 8 4i , * - i1W".. v %10,- .'• - \ . now we Bend you Jeff Ds,lz you sent us burglar's—now we send. you Thompson ; you sent la coarse lmllt.-now we send you Toombs; you lent utalle drunkards-- now we send yeu Letcher; you sent us highwaymen—now we send you John Mor 7 , gen; you sent no beasts who beat their wives—now we send you wretches who whip and indecently expose the wives of other men." 'Then will John Bull cry out - that hie Puni*nerii.ia greater than he can bear. A GREAT DO C EINT. ~ -4..', Daniel O'ConariVs Famous Letter to the Irish Repeal Associa— tion of Viucionati. Thie great anti-slavery doeunrent, the bitter protest of Ireland's greatest leader against.thepro-elavery eentiment onto many of his countrymen in Amer Lia, is again brought to light in. the Catholic Tele aph, of Cincinnati, August sth. A more allies o and searching review of the eili of e alyery and its sympathiseri has hardly leTer been written. The paper in which It is pub- Belied is edited by Father Purcell, a brother of the Archbishop, and intimate friend of Gun. R08C016113. WC think our readers will be glad to haws this powerful, eloquent and Indignant appeal of O'Cominthi to Me countrymen plaoed in their hands, and we have accordingly concluded to transfer it to our columns. Its length, however, ren- dere it necessary that we should divide it, giving the first portion to•dsy and the re mainder, if possible, to-morrow. The Catholic Telegraph, in Introducing it, says: We publish to-day, to the seclusion of ranch important Matter, the famous letter of O'Connell to a committee of our citizens who rebukedhim for hie anti-slavery opin- one. The document hes been concealed for twenty yearn by a well known Demo crat, to whom we are indebted for it. We invite our high Catholic brethren to read it attentively; and if any one wishes to see the manuscript, which is beautifully writ ten, and the signature of O'Connell, they can be accommodated at the office of the Telegraph. We intend to have the letter published in pamphlet form, aniliwe re. speotfully invite alt friends of the good paw e of liberty against bondage, to aid ns in its circulation. Tait Commie; to whom the Address from the Cuteinnan lash Repeal Association, on the subject of Negro Slavery in the .United States of Aneorica,', teas referred, have agreed to the f Moving Report: To D. T. Dumas, Esq., Corresponding Secretary. W. H. HIIHTZE., Esq., Vice President Emeriti," Com• I mitres of dm ' Chnoienati Irish Repeal As. soolatioll. •001ath. Cons Excnixas Rooms, DUBLIN, 11th October, 1843. GENTLE3I6B : We have read, with the deepest a ffitCtiOn, not unmixed with some surprise and mach indignation, your de tailed and /tallow vindication of the moat hideous crime tent has ever stained hu manity—the slavery of men of color in the United States of Ahierica. We are lost in utter anntsementat the perversion of mind sknd depravity of heart which your address evinces. How can the generous, the char itable, the humane, the noble emotions of the Irish heart,have become extinct amongst yen? How can your nature be so totally changed:as that you should become the apologists and advocates of that execrable system, which makes man the property of hie fellow .man--destroys the foundation of all moral and social virtues—condemns to ignorance, immorality and irreligion, millions of our fellew-creatures--renders the slave hopeless of relief, and perpetuates oppression by law i and, in the name of what you call a Constitution! It was not in Ireland yon learned this cruelty. Your mothers were gentle, kind and humane. Their bosoms overflowed with the honey of human charity. Your sisters ara, prdbably, many of them, still amongst us, and participate in all that is good and benevolent in sentiment and ac tion. Boa', then, can you hove become so depraved 7. How can year souls hive be come stained with a darkness blacker than the negru'e skin? You say you have no. pecuniary interest in negro Slavery. Would that you had! for it might be soma pallia tion of your crime I but, alas I- you have inflicted upon us the horror of beholding you the VOLMITST/L advocates of despotism, in its meet frightful etate; of Slavery, in Haziest loathsome and unrelenting form. We were, unhappily, prepared to expect some fearful exhibition of this description. There has been a testimony borne against the Irish, by birth or descent, in America, by a person fully informed ea to the facts, and in•apabie of the slightest misrepresen tation; a noble of nature more than of titled birth; a man gifted with'the highest order of talent and the most generous emo tions of the heart—the great, the good Lord hlorpeth—he who, In the< House of Commons, boldly asserted the superior so cial morality of the poorer. classes of the Irish over any other people—be, the best friend of any of the Saxon race that Ire land and the Irish ever knew; he, amidst the congregated thousands at Exeter Hall in London, mournfully, but firmly, de flounced the Irish In America as being amongst the worst enemies of the negro slaves and other men of color. It is, therefore, our solemn and sacred duty to warn you,.fh words already used, and much misunderstood by you--"to come out of her"—not thereby meaning to ask you to come out of -America, but out of the councils of the iniquitous, and out of the congregation of the winked, who consider man a chattle and a property, and liberty an inconvenience. Yes. We tell you to come out of such assemblage.; but we did not and do not invite you to return to Ireland. The volunteer defenders of slavery, surrounded by one thointand orioles; would. dad neither 1 1 .1 1 nilaalkor mi support amongst unties, aow" , Hated Your advocacy of Slavery is founded upon a gross error. Yon take for granted that man can be the property of his fellow man. You speak Iu terms of indignation of those who would deprive white zßeh of their "property," and thereby render, them less capable of supporting their Waffled in affluence. Yon forget. the other side e( the picture. You have neither eorrow nor sympathy for the sufferings of those who ye iniquitously cempelled to labor for-the effluence of others: those who work with out wages—who tail without reeetopeps•— who spend their lives in procuring fowl ers the splendor and wealth in Which they do not participate. You totally forget the sufferings of the wretched black men, who are deprived of their am withodt any com pensation or redress. if you, yourselves, all of you—or if any one of you were, with. out crime or offence committed by you, handed over into perpetual Slavery ; if you were compelled to work from sunrise to sunset without wages, supplied . only with such coarse food and raiment as would keep you In working order; if,.when your . 4 owner" fell into debt, - 74u were sold to pay hit debts, not your own). if it were made a crime tO teach yon to read and to write; if_7' o,4 1!1"..410leto be separated, in the distiibutiotr. AL , snots, from 'yenr wives and your children ,• if yon (above all) were to fall infirtlfd hindi'crwhrntal meg ter—and-yen condelianded to admit' that there WY sews btutatmaeteri 1u Amerlds if, among AU these ,cirentostatioes, some irlemiljuipiriti of a more -generous order Were desirous to give'libertY' to yeti and ourlainilies- 1 -with what ineffable disgilit smilditint -- .7oulanghTto :soft- Arose Who should. trance the Seltiyo*:lPrflis who 'Would "relieve you, es 'per now, - pseudo- Irishmen—shame upon you! have traduced and vilified the Abolilioniele of North America 1 Bat, you come forward with a juStifica- Lion, forsooth! You say that the Constita• Lion of America prohibits the ati.,lition •of Slavery. Paitry and miserable nubter foga 1 The Constitution in America is founded upon the Declaration of Indepen dence. That Declaration published to the world its glorious principles; that Charter of your freedom 'contained these emphatic .We hold these truths to be self.wrident that 'all men are created equal;' that they are endowed by the Creator with certain inalienable rights; that amongst these are 'life liberty Stitt pursuit of happiseesi' and the conclusion of that address is in these words: "For the support of this Declaration, with a firth reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each ether our lives, our formats, and our snored honor "There is American honor for you! There is a profane allusion to the adorable Creator! "Deco Deist that the Declaration does not Limit the equality of man, or the right to life and liberty, to the white, to the brown, or to the copper-colored races. It inoludes all races. It excludes none We do not deign to argue with you on the terms of the Amerman Constitution; and yet we cannot help assertingthat, in that Constitution the S word Slavery," or "Slave," is not to be found. There are in deed, the words "persons bound to labor, but it is not said how bound. And a con stitutional lawyer or judge, construing the American Constitution with areference to the Dealaraton of Independence, which ie its basis, would not heettate to - decide that "bound to labor" ought, in a court of justice, to mean "bound by contract to labor; and should not be held to imply 'forced or com pelled to labor," in the absence of all con tract, and for the exclusive benefit of all However, we repeat that we do not deign to argue this point with, you; as we pro claim to the world our conviction that no constitutional law can create or sanction Slavery. Slavery is repugnant to the first principles of society; but it le enough for us to say, as regards Americans, that it is utterly repugnant to that Declaration of the Equality of all men, and to the inalien able right of all men to life and liberty. To this Declaration the free citizens of the United States have, in the persons of their ancestors, solemnly pledged their "IJACHRD uoaon." We shall, at once, show you how that "aura honor" is basely violated; and also demonstrate how totally devoid of candor your address is, inasmuch as yon rely on the Constitution of the American States as precluding theabolition of Slavery; whilst you totally omit all mention of one Dietrict, which the Constitutional law, alleged by yo u 7 does not reach. We mean the I)ismio of Columbia. In the District of Columbia there is no Constitutional law to prevent the Congress from totally abolishing Slavery within that District. Your Capitol is there. The Tem ple of American Freedom is there—the Hell of your Republican Representatives.— the Hall of your Republican Senators—the .National Palace of your Republican Presi dent is there—and Slavery is there, too, in its most revolting form I The slave trade is there—the most disgusting traffio in !In man beings is there- Immanfleah is bought and sold, like swine in the-pig-market-- aye, in your Capital—your Washington! Yes. Let Americans be as proud as they please, this black spot is on their escutcheon. Even under the shade of the Temple af their Constitution the man of color crawls a slave, and the tawny American stalks a tyrant. The cruelty of the slave principle rests not there—it goes much farther. The poor and paltry privilege even of prayer is de nied them; and you, even you—pseudo• Irishmen! are the lideOtatee and vin dicator' of such a system. What! would not you, at brut, insist that their groans should be heard! It is carried still further. Even the free born white Americans are not allowed to petition upon any subject including the question of Slavery; or, at least, no such petition can be read aloud or printed. And, although the Congress is entitled to abolish Slavery in Columbia., the door for petition, praying that abolition, is elated, without the power of being opened. We really think that men, who came from generous and warmhearted Ireland, .should shrink into nonentity rather than Cuomo the advocates and defenders of the galena of Slavery. But we trust that the voice of indignant Ireland will scatter them, and prevent them from repeating such a Crime. in another point of view, your address is, if possible, more culpable. You state that before the Abolitionists procliimed their wish to have Slavery aboliehod, see. eras elaveholding States were preparing for the gradual eniancipation of their ne groes, and that humane individuals in oth er States were about to adopt similar We utterly deny your assertion, and we defy you to shoW any single instance of preparatory steps taken by any State for the emancipationjof negroes before the ab olition demand was raised. You violate truth in that aesertion. There were no 'mph preparations. It is a pure fiction, invented by eltiveholders out of their unjust animosity to the • Abolitionists. It is said that the fear of abolition his ren dered the slareholders more strict, harsh, and cruel, toward their - writched slaves; and that they would be more gentle and humane [(they were not afraid of the Ab olitionists. -We repeat that this is not true, end is merely an attempt to cast the blame on those who would coalesce to put an end to negro slivery. It is in the same spirit that the criminal calumniates his prosecutor, and the felon reviles his accuser. It is therefore, utter ly untrue that the elaveholders have made the chains of the negromore heavy through any fear of abohnott. • Yet if you tell the truth; If the fact be, that the negro is mode to suffer flir the seal of the Abolitionists; if he is treated with increased cruelty by reason of the fault of the friends of abolition, then, in deed, the slaveholders meat be a truly Sa tanic race. Their conduct, according to you, is diabolical. The Abolitionists com mit an offense, and the unhappy negroes are punished. The Abolitionists violate the law of property, and the penalty of their Crime is imposed upon the negro. Csn anything be more repugnant to every idea of justice? Yet this is your statement. We, on the other hand, utterly deny the truth of your allegations; sad where we find you calumniate the slaveholders we become their advocates against your es lumpy. You calumniate everybody— slavelyabolitionists,- - and slaveownersz— trainers of Constitutions, makers of laws— everybody I The slauholders are not fa vorites of out, but we will' do men justice and will not permit you to impute an im putable crime to them. You tell us with an air of triumph, that public) opinion, in your country, is the great Lawgiver I If it be so, how conch does it enhance the guilt of your conduct, that you seek to turn public opinion against the slave and in favor of the' slaveholder I that yon laud the master ea generous and humane v and disparage as much as you can the unhappy slave; instead of influencing, as Irishmen aught to do, the public. mind in WO of the oppressed. You carry your ersgptiatlons to a ludicrous pitch, denot ing your utter Ignorance of the history of the human-race: -Yon say that the negro is really inferior as a race; that slavery has stamped Its debasing influence upon the Africans; that between him and the white almost a century would be rered to eleiatathe character of thCone, and to deetrO:the antipathies of the ,fitherr Yon add—we use 'per own words—" The very , odor of the item is. almost Insufferable to the white; and however mach inhumanity may lament it, we make no rash declara tion when we may the two rsoes cannot ex ,• • let together ion equal termer under "our governmenVand our institutions.'" We quote this paragraph at full length, because it a replete with your mithhevious errors andl guilty mode of thialciug. In the first place, as to the odor cf the negroes, we are quite aware that they have not as yet come to nee much of the ono of roses or eau de cologne. But we implore of your fastidiousness to recollect that mul titudes of the children of white men have negro women for their mothers; and that oar British travelers complain in load and bitter terms of the overpowering stench of male tobacco spittle, as the prevailing "odor" amongst the natiVe free . Americana. It would be perhaps better to obeok title nasal sensibility on both sides, on the part of the whites as well as, of blacks. But It is, indeed, deplorable that you should use a ludicrous assertion of that description as one of the inducements to prevent the alio °Utica of Slavery. The negroes would ce: - lately smell at least as sweet when free, as they now do, being slaves. Your important allegation ia, that •the negroes are, naturally, an inferior race. That is a,totally gratuitous assertion upon your part. In America you can bave na opportunity of seeing the negro eduoatecL On the contrary in most of your States it is a crime—sacred Heaven I a crime to edu cate even a free negro! How, then, can you judge of the negro race, when you see them despised and contemned by the edu cated clause; reviled and looked down upon as inferior I The negro race has, naturally, some of the finest qualities. They are naturally gentle, genersue, hu mane and very greatful for ktudnees. They are as brave and as fearless as any other of the races of human beinge; but the bless ings of education are kept trom them, and they are jhdged of, not as they would-be with proper oultivatioo, but as they ate rendered by cruel anddebaaing oppression. It le as old as the days of Homer, who truly asserts that the day which sees it man • slave takes away half his worth. Slavery actually brutalizes human beings. It is about sixty years • ago when one of the Shieks, not far south of Fee, in Morocco, who was in the habit of accumulating white slaves—upon being strongly remon strated with by an European power, gave for his reply that, by his own experience, he found it quite manifest that white men were of an inferior race, intended by na ture for slaves; and be produced his own brutalised white slaves to illustrate the truth of his assertion. And a case of an American, with • historic name—John Adams—is quite familiar: Some twenty. flys years ago—notmore—John Adams was the sole survivor of an American crew, wreaked on - the African Gout. He Was taken into the interior as the slave of an Arab Chief. Ile was only for three years a slave, and the Eugliah and American Consuls having been tnformed of a white man's slavery, claimed him and obtained his liberation,. In the short space of three . . . years he had become completely brutalised; he had completely forgotten the English language, without having acquired the na. tive tongue. Lie spoke a king of gabble, as unintelleotual as the dialects of moat of your negro slaves; and many months elapsed before he recovered his former habits and ideas, It is also a curious fact, as connected with America, that the Children of the An glo..Baxon race and of other European born in America, were, for many years, consid ered as a degraded and inferior class. In deed it was admitted, as if it were an axio that the native-born American was in nothing equal to his European progenitor; and so far from the fact being disputed, many philosophic dissertations were pub• lishid endeavoring to account for the alleg ed abasement. The only doubt was about the cause of it. "Nobody doubted," to use your own words, "that the native born Americans were really an inferior rate." Nobody dares to say so now ; and nobody thinks it. Let it then be recollected that you have never yet seen the negro educated. An English traveler through Brasil, some lew years ago, mentions having known a negro who was a Priest, hied who was a learned, pious and exemplary man in his sacerdotal functions. We have been lately informed of two negroec being educated at the Propaganda and ordained priests—both having distinguished themselrea in their esizentdo sod theological . course. The French papers say that one of them Cele bested mass, and delivered aehort but able sermon before Luis It is believed they nave both gone out with the Right Rev. Dr. Baron on the African Mis sion. - . We repeat, therefore, That to jade pro perly of the negro, you should eta him ed ucated and treated with the respect due to a fellow creature—uninsulted by the filthy aristocracy of the skin, and untarnished to the eye of the white by any associations connected with his state of Slavery. Tana are Any vac/irides in the West Point Military Atm:letup, and somebody very prop erly suggests that they be filled with briga dier generals. owe, - aiirramzesszaticAigra. REAL ESTATE FOR KALIL—The undersigned oftrs ku• sal. • cur &drib • in.* of laud, oentalolnu 114 aorta. warty, situated In Baldwin townth.p. It Ironts , the brawnsclii• road on emu 1d...4 one side on Ins tasabodttown nag. It le part of ths White Bolt Vann. Ibis let. hat • hen. warted on It, and an trcbtrd or apple and cherry Irsat bawled troth Thla lot .111 be .old on acemmicettlag term.. It not .old b. Lea the dna of January. It eel be nor rent For further p .rtl =lan Inquire at WWI% BALL, of the sutaateta., In &madam to snablp. auld.•Weav ft. DAVID RIGOS. Tok %MING I BSallit I—Loather and Clam Belt ag , also, Gam f sating. How ' Gas. I mtvt ao , el.'s on hand at the ladle HabberDepst Jf J. L LL. PtIII.LIPI3, .12 26 and 211 FL Char an tat. FOR SALE—On account of siotnt se, • ?LOUT d. ON T6l )6VaNING OAZEIT(. Tido :oft. hot O Tory•largo gambar of solmordbori, and so Amor/W.lO maii MP Mite good wage, 607 at THIS 01 Latium rla, bums of 6 and 6 oWook p. m. - • anidad WN 01 4 i1e.11.0.1 . &V&A( le. —The poet 'wady batitorots e=Ltlat *Dews VII. Melt CR and w. w. 4.1 4 D 4 ,04, So del.* bud' bee. a.4i cite atyle of WV NOM 4Ott, was d'esolred by mutual oonwatoe th e VD fait', IDYL btOVIDe comae. W. W. ANDlelbsuN oatb4r boa to use the name of lb. Om to Hadley flee bedsore. IF. W. AriDeBBON; - uir W. ANDERSON, (einocessor 14 TV • Wit Nagai& Oe.) sill co-Wives tbe Brew.' M 7 Bestaese at the sll,Obe.T Chi BreWeey.; SO. eel Btberma atteet, Alleratooly thy. a.l4ilw w. w. ANDIIIB4ON. 13 0 A 81ii1.1.2i0 0- .A. P 333 I/ 1 1 S OPIGIAID, AT 87 FOHRTIi STREET, A lap wesortawait, wlit►h will 14 bold at • isry gnat reduotion tram - ' ' W D. & H. WCIAILDIII. nity Hlffilli-700 to aVrivis per steams! Fannie. Otos Ifsil2•ol.. diem to nabbo . . MUM (In g, Mt*ti 161,111 r 31/46 rooolvfroan4 ior .Le,/ 1111111 JAMB BuMM 1A1.1%,006 TIN A , u1,0,,C11n ,, S 11,1rilitia inly Wrinser tisit glvio part Ate eat. braction. es ti et d ~ire ditai;st Tiflis Bub% t Depot, No IS sad 5881 Oaf • strmt. , J. • EL PRILLIPS, oil rm. • FOR SALE— A 'tailor yr./let:on - K. Itatalre at BONDI Dar DolOt, Flat Ward.' Attest's y, as at it. - O. DATIS . , - )2altori7 area, atm ward.. - _-, 4 : -' % - - 'MBA, Norias TO . CONTBAOTO R 8 1:4•Yro• poses will be moiled win (be I7n AU4UKT, 18E3. et ne ctles alb* efteenl3l l3 : bitbe .. darkee bawling, for we ee!plling *ad reletileg with Ootb. .Ans. tr eaud attest Wood dnot to thokit - etti A wttioarr Lett() oil i Nli 1.) Ali tWithk. ~1,0 4 1,,5 . /a II —Vsloola city j r. fauselearontinc o ralbsti. C;nrwlfurd at VO•ti.eir stpesta, • timatorr brick dwallltig Loma of NOD, -root*. 100,1roat parch, Co 'Also a ttokti Mime house: ' ' , anal ,11 liilTelligiVre 80118:-6111101114 1t... , WRI A L° pug' Videll VII lows, for eat• L 7 Ile.tißY I. COLLIN!. Jrz w. .41 DrERTIS CILOSING OUT SUMMER GOODS, To Ingo nem tot oar NEW FALL GOODS! Rae tailcats% coati ban beta maim* dams vERY CHEAr t tie W NB, BSSAGP.F. OSO tfirriEd. 1.40 e ". 11ANTLIIA. d&C.Q1315. A Seale *tufty of fashionable 'WWI of .A.lpacaas and De Lairies. Aid a new lot of BA4KOSALB Just realised, et ALEX. BATES', anti is ' , yrs assess.. INTBREISTINie TO TOR LADIES! We Sr. selling at • lINDUOZD PRICE Cotton Hosiery, Gloves. Laoe litte, Embroideries, Veils, Sleeves, Skirts, ellgialt soiled, at ball price or gre sre toothbig tho Ltnt styli., of EIMID DRIt&%II3. INErg, rowVol/DBMS TEIIIIII B, BLLTI, 800KL.12. W 1101.17 b Lill BOOMS tp stain. MACRUM & CLYDE, NO. 78 M . MET STREET, wren 'earth and Diamond NAL BANK, FIRST NATI TSBUillift. . 1 TalllB . BY Dl2.llli2litST, Orrice ow Con • somas or vas 01zazsar. Walking • • My. kunst 5th.1663 } ic Warasu, By I. ear featory evidence presented to lb* Undeveigned. IC been made So appear abet it the MIST NaTlu A BUSK Ulf PlTTBfillfiagf I . in the County of Alleabegy, and hats of fertreplira. eta has bens dolly organised order and accordit gto the requirsinente el the km of C0ng0.... entitle! ..en Act to provide Notice:ail Conenor, united by tpiedge of United 8 a te weeks • and to poi Ida for he et:vocation and rseption thareof,•• apprrived rob nary M. 143 a nd has complied with ad th e p•crbions of rails I required to be complied with War* cimmendis a !fantasia of Banking. Now. Merefore, I Bros BOCaLtOOI . Comptroller of dm Cumney. d hammy certify that the sate 111IST Ziallifflri iteltg, Or PITIIBOOOC. ied county of Alksben . and Bate of Penesibania, Is authorised locomen me the business of Banking un der the ant almost . ...... In tetibsiony "duvet yams my band { Ba. Imsd lB63. sese of nßc.. this 6th day of august, • fititill 1110 171.1.00 e, ...,-. Oomptralier of the Onrreacy. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PITTSBURGH, PA., 1 (LAID PITTBDUIGH TRUST COMP/MT.) llama, $400,000. with Flyikgs mates to 03.000 000. The Pltttburgh Thud loapaap huts, orgsztui trader the act to Futile a Nationsl tairtawy. under the tWe of the !MOT !I aTII•SAT4 Bath Of PlTT"Btlildill. weak' geopectfaUr elks tannic". for Ikea:W*lU" of dots* Deem Odle of Ischarget go-, nacho gamey on &putt, end hay avd sell ltu charge on ell parte of Om coustry. The wheels which ha. ethadrd the PltteSzgla Trost Ontpury Once it' err achluthn la half. 1.. ere beaus. be a malfalsat ataarant.• 114 be et enuacted to the saw orgainattiot will receive tits WWI vo apt attaattnn. fisting a hay 'stench* aornry - adence with Banes sad Bantus throughout the consul, we be. , lees we eta offer usual leoldtlee to those who .du ba.leestruth on • • The Ludwig will be caudaeted by theta:as 018 Cu. aid thesoloes. DIlaCT0111: Jainet Lintltn, AU:234a Brom Bac t tl. Ilsjs, Primula O. Wiry. ?twit. w'ell, . /Mi. and•y, Thal Wletatsa &maid Bea. Wm, Y. Dilisilak lIGSLIM, Prosidemt. J 0111: P. 80IILLI Avow M. lB4 C tittiAtlA Y INCITIIIITIt. Boordieg lc Day Ithool for Tong Ladle,. Noe Ida coed loft torso. Bowe thtledaphfe The regolsir coarse es hotrod lon isaibreose the English .no french longways LL•cottirce— Leto, If required—and ell the breaches which con etttete • thorough bill* ohms to., geode' mitten. tram befog pall to the haw by Oa Principe!, owlet. ed by the erg Provosts - French Is the Immure of the fendlg, end Is con. 'tautly gallon Is Ise b.ltattom. The scholastic, yew otionsenece Illepleceber sad gloom Jcilg foe circulars And tditteldull,PPll to sulddlo MAMA II hlsehisl jllloll34 . tirUU • 'Vag rALti.-1 dill %amnia tablldloi; initauhty, 104 14th bilk. at 10 o'clock. • II it sostdoaos fn Obartiors towns3lp, Alltglosa Loonall. Lost Oboy's Tama, on tbo kitootosstlio7utnplk• 86 Isosdiallblood Durkin sod Guido Osttle ; • _ 4 hloodld Colts, one sod two saws old; • 1 Mons Xs" Sour Cann Oa 1 Drab Ism, tows ran o1d; 3 Clobwold 4 Oboe& Conoty stood Bonet 1 Two4lort4 Basoocbs7; 1 Imp aodtlog Box • , Iho atom *toes ts °outpost of soma it sr good blcod no l4ln tho Ws. • Thaw 'tablas to their stock, vW do will to weed. Podlgnolondobod and torsos mode known as the day sisals _wskltidoltoT CAttel3ll4 uIL ClLlYrklek, AND WINDOW IiIIIADIEt3. Palm reduced .t the NSW IJAHPZT STOIIIII MOlearland; Colli IL Co . ' 'TheeTLAID73 nPTeen . in, Iletirthe taw 0117503 Sad DIMS= BUFAILINV rafting to pudiais let the i'LL4 TRADa 1.1 BEEIRELY- NEW BTOCK, ele etllhig all rode -bow eft- head 9111hT 1 . 111011 • Beloit? Present Market pages. write iepeeKly belle' the atteitlen et goer. MY. Ellllloll4llllll sal .4//OLI/1 1 / 1 1.1 MOUES. G. or Litnni;:crsarr e, xissitV SOM TOMS MID CHUIDAIri BOOTS AND , ' SHOES To akar at aumars Auk et AlCOleigailed/ r f dwitoss,*llo.lll, IX= L. 1116.. U,; I VU :. • . . X.-111tistsoutestatott la the ..1134 titre Dlettiot of rentlivials booby notti.O . woke Manias or blare Ist, Ink the. .Leehtate tespeetteo Pleb. Dtrfatese, or at auk toglitee et a llo.lts !vett& street: 'lnt cue et governs g nuke return irtelaibCatrmil 'polka lboos Alan to. itreeti4 oiebtesse WI. todesook to semi the Ihte4 hylelylter steed to tend to ooatply. aexar „mit oHweele 196 tiktrlat. srßuyi t ti 4.ll:gaci..Ltuo , , PAID TO GAB.,,ANTO3TILLif , .W144441.TE; li.; & , rsDanst, 2d door bolo! BabWiwi, Albelay X'SW• 4DPVERT'ISIMMr7III A N A LYBlB. si -- e - : . t. , , pale • 49.50. 4 " 4 ? \ &tram* Pia Cm. loon LEO ..... ... ' Si." ' ( St LOUIS, MG. Lawn -- .01. (.., LA . 4 i 10 AG111101116...... .01 . Wall:IL-10 40. we..tor accepted toe Agency for the sale of the tiax.ra.L °LAT. toted =sr 11. Lon* Mo.. I I. OM the Moroi:on of alms aed Steel Planufacturen to the Analyst whit above. as reported by Prot. L.A. lin., of Dodo% and 1. O. Booth, of Phtledel• phis. w tcb, together tettbittie test Of actual expert once by • wanufactorese tn' Pittebugh. Cincinnati and Bt., Louth determine. it .to be the newt sad wet valuable Olaf now known. whether rondo ar Americas . rots 'made live It tithe stoodith the Glass Swims from GM tot mouths. the AnCyde is of - the Clay ee taken from the 'Wu*. without soy weakling or preparation what. sea. It powers great adhesiveness and p'eaticity whith sot shown by the . analyst. and which .dmlt or the admixture of a large properties of Mull or turned May. ota now prepared -to All orders 'for the above Ctty, to be shipped trot lit. bouts or delivered hest. FARM FOR SALE OR MINT, °OBTAINING 81 AOBSS. 411 ander ffmco, end Is • good data of cultivation. The lopforataanti consist at • nay BRIM DWILL. LING, containing 10 Irmo; hinge PILULE DAU; IXNANT ROW& with 6 rows; and good orshozi or '