EINEM 40Pasburgit 6azettil. THURSDAY MORNING. AUG. Is. Union - State Ticket. ros Goss &NOR MINDED G. CURTIN, of Centre. TOIL JAC/110T TAX BIIIILIMIC 001:11T DANIEL. AGNEW. of Beaver. Union Comity Ticket Por Prouldimi 1.4. el 1k Dr.4,:i Omni. :. MR". 4`tir , r o Ni NV l assaltie. I. 301111 P.OL/011. • n. •LVRIDIO. 4OI . m. ISOM D. 0111611011. - , i. THOL J. BIGHAL DINSIITON. I /I* VW k qf Clive. WM. S'.. moon— rOr. o,l.64l„Tnoarormr, . DAVID 1113101. JAL:. I* gooffilsr.. &DOM Ete1.00.11. • • WM. J. RIM DBOM. . ' P°P C" ,tiwini•iwmr. GIORGE CLL . F., Wiika , Pc.... • JOHM V. DEA ,0; ; t • ' The Pto • ova Sense. US'•• * I There is a text here for • sermon—and a' ' long ono 7 on the part of any use who has • desire to animadvert upon the causes of the rebellion; and the fallen. which have BO generally slimmed the prosecution of the war. They may all be found, we think, in , the depravation of the inner sense—in that obliquity of the moral perceptions, which has deadened our sensibilities to crime, and taught us to look upon the most heinous of transgrnsions against religion and humanity—upon perjury, robbery, murder, and treason—not only as venial in themseiveirbut u in no way damaging to the private reputattoni of those who in dulge in them. It is amazing the extent to which all moral ideas were deranged at the outbreak of the present rebellion. Thus, when grave Senators, who were sworn to support the Constituticn, rose in their places to dealer; their purpose of violatini their obligations, by abandoning their seats, and destroying the Government itself, which had never in. , Jared them, , Representatives of the Free States. instead of denounciing them as traitors, and 'meeting them upon the spot, were not ashamed to take them by the hand, as they were going out of that Cham ber, bresthing threatening, and slaughter, and to say—if not setae—the equally eig nipint word, "farewell." ' So, too, when some of these very men had the audacity, a short time afterwards, to present themselves, as Ambassadors, to demand of the President (Buonaux) • partition of the empire with the traitor mal-contents, instead of throwing them into prison, and directing their indictment for treason spinet the Government, as General JACKSON would have done, he dis missed them with great "consideration," as "honorable gentlemen," to carry out their plans st their leisure. And A 111111 1 / 4 when RZAIIIIIGAILD and Lin, the sieves o the Government, receiv ing its pay and sworn to stand by its Ss& by a doable perjury and treason, •whicit would have tarnished the escutcheon of the veriest Swiss who ever hired out his steel, abandoned their commands, and carried over_ to the rebels the knowledge which they had acquired at the expense of the GOverDl2lo3lt, their first official communisa tion to the General of our grades, was an swered by a kindly message, conveying to them his teadaest "regards". And so, also, when men of the same de scription were captured in arms, or arrest. El as spies, they were turned loose amongst our watering ,pleoes, to elbow loyal oiti sens, and be admired by Northern ladles,— on their parole of ham/ And *gala, when that parole was dela• manly violated, by soundest.' like these, and they were, taken anew in arms, al thorigh condemned to die, ***Oran' to the Isws of war, they were straightway par doned by the Executive for the breach—u in the cue of the Lieutenant Governor of MinourL And to ism up all, when an intelligent rebel like Stonewall:salmon, educated also by the nation, and without the apology of either ignorance, or injury for his great and laminable crime againstliberty and 'humanity, is summoned away impenitent, by a blow from hls own associates, which Divine vengeance seems itself to 'have di rected, to answer for his complicity in the wholesale - matter, and treason, and rob bery, which have broken up the fountains of domestic peace, and desolated the whole land With the terrible scourge of civil'war, I he is forthwith translated to heaven, by ' pious hands,in a chariot of fire, just because he added to his great offence, dui still Higher aggravation of hypocrisy, by insult tug the Deity, in asking him to bless cause, which God and man must alike un demn, and "devils damned" alone could look upon with favor, or toleration I Wo doubt whether there is a case in ha man history where the meanest, most cruel, and most sanious or crimes hate been so canonized. .iThe public sentiment, how ever, which could gild suck atrocities with the name of patriotism, or thei Lustre of herolemorim evidence of such a deep-root ed depravation, as was sufficientin itself to neoeseitate the strife, and the slaughter, of which we have been the victims. It begat the rebellion, and has so dealt with it as to aggravate its horrors ekthonsand,fold. The very tenderness which it produced, has cherished that rebellion at thsexpense of oceans of loyal blood, ..ustE it has couched the eyes of the blind, aid is Sow teaching them to look upon the arithors of this great crime, no' longer se honorable - gentlemen, bat as parricides and fratricides, whose lives would be • poor atonement for the rain they have made. A little longer, and even the Copperhead himself will be scourged into grace, by the suffering which will instruct him in regard to t h e tress character of the crime which he has been so elvers, to punish. We shall be all the boner for the education we ,have been re oeiviag in so rough a school; but we have Wood to reform our Mal I nds,and dog with treason as trsatio,ll . willbe idle o expect that we shall be able to put it dowel. . An important survey of inuto„depotite on tblienet of Pero hoe bnns eosoladtd, and the stooks were eetimetod st 1,500,000 tone on the hiteibt ialssk 2,6.00,000 tone on the - Gennep grotipinppottto the petal of fit. Ifilent.attnik4,oolooo tons..tra the.. LotiiiialUinfiterolutwi_t total gnaw of 210,000 COO or 6414000,W ellerthig,„-,;. - . - - ffil-Z;` =tl= 7 ..,. I 714144-'4l.l"`'; DOCIJXENT A GREAT ales Famous Letter Reveal &noels. Ciaciesati Daniel O'Cono to the Irish %ion of [coactunzu.] We next refer to your declaration that the two races, viz., the black and white, cannot exist, on.equal terms, under your Govern ment and your inetitutione. The le an ex traordinary asserttoit to be made at the present day. „Yon allndecindeed, to An tigua and Bermudas. But we , will take you to where the experiment hes been sae oesdally made upon a largescale--IllamelY, to Jamaica. There the two rases are on a perfect equality in point of law. The law does not recognize the slightest distinction between the races. You have borrowed the ter greater part of your &adroit,s from the cant phraseology which the West Indian slave owners, and especially those of Jamaica, made use of before emancipation. They used to assert, as you do now, that Aboli • den meant destruction; that to give free dom to the negro would bete pronounce the assassination of the whites; that the negro 10 soon as free, would massacre their form er owners, and destroy their wives and families. In short, your prophecies of the destructive effects of emancipation ere but faint and foolish echoes of the prophetic apprehenelote of the British elaveowners. They might, perhaps, have believed their own assertions, because the emancipation of the negroes was then an untried experi ment. But you—you are deprived of any excuse for the reassertion of a disproved calumny. The emancipation has taken place—the compensation given by England. was not given to the negroes, who were the only persons that d ed compensation. It was given to the so-called "owners." It wee an additional wrong—en additional cause of irritation to the mines, but gra cious Heaven I now nobly did that good and kindly race—the negroes—falsify the oaluminous apprehensions' of their task masters I Was there one single murder con s: quent on the emancipation? Was there one riot—one tumult—even one assault? Was there one single white person injured either in persdn or property ? Was there any. property spoiled or laid waste? The proportion of Degrees in Jamaica to white men is as SOO to 60, or 8U per sent. Yet the-most perfect tranquility has followed the emancipation. The criminal courts ire slatost unemployed; ninatenthe of the jails are empty and open •, universal tranquility reigns. although the landed proprietors have made use of the harshest landlord power to exact the hardest terms by way of rent from the negroes, and have also en deavored to extort from him the largest possible quantity of labor for the smallest wages, yet the kindly negro race have not retaliated by one single sot of violence or of vengeance; the two races exist together upon equal terms under the British Gov ernment and under British institutions. Or shall you say that the British Gov ernment and British institutions are pre arable to yours ? The vain and vaporing spirit of mistaken Ilepubliosaism wiU not, permit you to avow the British superiority. Yon are bound, however, reluctantly, to admit that superiority or, else to admit the falsity of your own assertions. Noth ing can, in truth, be more ludicrous than your declaration in favor of slavery. It, however, sometimes rises to the very bor der of blasphemy. Your words are, "God forbid that we shoutd advocate 'human bon dage in any shape." Oh I shame upon you! flow can you take the name of the All-Good Creator thus in vain I What are you doing? Is not the entire of your address an advocacy of hu man bondage? Another piece of stilliness. You allege that it is the Abolitionists who make the slave restless with his condition, and that they scatter the seeds of discontent. Now wi you treat us with such contempt as to the assertions of that kind in your address? How can you think we could be so devoid of intellect as to believe the negro would I not know the miseries of slavery, which he I feels every hour of the tonr-and-twenty, unless he were told by some Abolitionist that slavery was a miserable condition? Tame is nothing teat makes us think eo badly of you as Jour strain of ribaldry in attacking the AbolltionstS. The desire to procure abolition, is, is it self, a virtue and deserves our love for its charitable disposition, as it does respect and veneration for its courage under un favorable Circumstance& Instead of the ribaldry of your attack epee. the Aboli tionists, you ought to respect and counte nance them. It they err by excessive seal, they err in a righteous and a'holy cause. lon would do well to cheek their errors and mitigate their :eel within the bouads of strict propriety. But if you had the genuine feelings of Irishmen, you never would confound their , errors with their viruses. In troth, we much fear or lath er we should candidly say, we readily bee lieve that you attribute to them imgigary errors for no other reason than that they really possess one brilliant virtue—name. ly, the love of human freedom in intense perfeedion. . Again, we Dave to recoarle• that you ex aggerate exceedingly when you state that there are Sheen millions of the white pope bitten in Americo whose security and hap pineis are connected with the maintenance of the system of negro Slavery. On the contrary, the system of Slavery inflicts nothing but mischief upon the far greater part of the inhabitants of America. The only places in which individual interest is connected with Slavery are the slavehold log States. Now, in those States, almost without an exception, (it, indeed, there be any exception,) the people of color greatly exceed the whties; and thus, even if an in jury were to be inflicted on the whites by depriving them of their slaves, the advan tages would be most abundantly counter balanced and compensated for by the In finitely greater number of persons who would thus be restored to the greatest of human blessings—personal liberty. Thus the old Benthamite =extra of "doing the greatest possible good to the greatest pos- Bible nimble would be amply carried out , into effect by the emsnolpailon of this nee aea You charge the Abolitionists, se with Grime, that they encouraged a negrafiying from Kenn:inky, to steal a horse from anin habitant of Ohio, in order to aid him, if necessary, in making his escape. We are not, upon full reflection, sufficiently versell in casuistry to decide whether, under each circumstances, the taking of thii horse would be an excusable set or not. But, even conceding that it would be Sinful, we are of this quite certain, that there in not one of you that address.= who, if be were runditralmilarcirtramstanses, that is, having no other means of escaping perpetual slave ry, would not, make free with your neigh bor's horse to effectuate your just and res. !tenable purpose. And we are also sure of this, that there is not one of you who, if he Were compelled to spend the rest of his life is a personal slave, worked, and bastes, and sold, and transferred hem - laid to hand, and separated, at his master's ca price, from wife and family—consigned to ignoranoe—workinewithouterages, toiling without , reward—without any other stimu lant to that toil and labor than the driver's can whip—we do say that there is not, ono of you who would not think that the name of pickpocket, thief or felon would not be too courteous salute for the bidugvhs kept you in mug( thraldom. - • - We alma avoldiepesting our astonish ment that yen, Irishmen, _should be so de void el every trace of hustaidtysai to be the voluntary and pecuniarily disin terested advocates of human - Ind sepeolally, that you should be so in Amer , But what excites our . unconquerable 1 loathing is to dadaist's your' Address you - speak' of man being thapftperty , of Itout.--; of cue human - being being' the property of Whelk with as little atm* hesitatien_or itifilinsPutiallp of As boomer As field - -11 -thia,-thatalls with utter .astoalshisime: .• lilt this that . rtahal urdlielabli yet so evastrposs. We Cannot bring ourselves to believe that you breathed your natal air in Ireland—lre land, the first of all the nations on the earth that abolished the dealing in . slaves. The slave trade of that day was, curiously enough, a glove trade in British youths— Ireland, that never was stained with negro slave trading—lnland, that never commit ted an offense against the men of color— Ireland that never fitted out a single ves sel for the traffic in blood on the African coast. • —l.. It is to be sure afflicting and heart-rend ing to us to think - that so many of the Irish in America should be so degenerate as to be among the worst enemies of the people of color. Alas! alas! we have that fast placed beyond a doubt by the indisputable testimony , of Lord Morpeth. This is a foul blot that we would fain wipe off the 'soutoheon of expatriated Irishmen. Have you enough -of the genuine Irish man left among you to ask what it is that we require you to do? It is this? First—We call upon you, in the sacred name of humanity, never again to vaunt's , r in behalf of the oppressor; nor even for any self interest to vindicate the hideoue crime of personal slavery. Secondly—We ask you to assist In every way you can in promoting the education of the free men of color, and imdieeounte- Dancing the foolish feeling of selfishness— of that criminal eelfishoess which makes the white man treat the man of color as a degraded or inferior b-ing. Thirdly—We ask you to angst In ob taining for the free men of color the full benefit of all the rights and franchises of a freeman in whatever State he may inhabit. Fourthly—We oak you to exert your -1 selves in endeavoring to procure for the man of color, in every case, the benefit of a trial by jury; and especially where a men insisting that he is a freeman is claimed to be a slave. Fifthly—me ask you to exert yourselves In every possible way to induce elaveown .4l en to emancipate an many slaves as possi ble. The Quakers of America have several societies for thin purpose. Why should not the Irish imitate them in that virtue. Sixthly—We oak you to exert yourselves in all the ways you possibly can to put an ad to the internal slave trade of the States. The breeding of eleven for sale is, probably, the most immoral and debasing practise ever known in the world. It is a crime of the most hideous kind, and if ['there were no other crime committed by the Americans, this alone would place the advocates, supporters and prsaisers of American Slavery in the lowest grade of 1 criminals. Beventhly—We ask you to use every ex ertion in your power to procure the aboli tion of Slavery by the Congress in the Din , Isla of Columbia. I Eighthly—We ask you to use your beet exertions to compel the Congress to receive and read the petitions of the wretched ne green; and, above all, the petitions of their white advocates. NinthlyWe ask you never to cease your efforts until the crime of which Lord Mor path has amused the Irish in America, of “being the worst enemies of the men of color;' shall be atoned for and blotted out and effaced forever. . es You will ask how you can do all those ( things? You have already answered that question yourselves; for you have said that public opinion is the law of America Con tribute, then, each of you in his sphere, to make up that public opinion. Where you have the electoral franchise, give your vote to none but those who will 'mast you in so holy a struggle. Under a popular Government, the man who hart right, and - nuon, and justice, and charity, and Christianity itself on his side, has great instruments of legislation and legal power. He has the elements about him of the greatest utility ; and even if he should not succeed, he can have the heart soothing consolation of having endeavored to do great and good actions. He can en , joy, even in defeat, the sweet comfort of tabling endeavored to promote benevolence and charity. It is no excuse to allege that the Congress fa restricted from emancipating the sieves hy one general law. Each particalar slave Sate has that power within its own pre oinots; and there is every reason to be con vinced that Maryland and Virginia would have followed the example of New York, and long ago abolished Stavery, but for the diabolical practice of "railing,' as you call it, slaves for the Southern market of pestilence and death.. Irishmen and the sons of Irishmen have, many of them, risen to high diettootion and power in America. Why should not Irish men and the sons of Irishmen write their names in the brightest pages of the chapter of humanity and benevolence in American story 1 Irishmen I Oar Chairman ventures to think, and we agree with him, that he has claims on the attentionof Irishmen in every quarter of the globe. The Scotch and French plitlotophers have proved by many years of experiment that the Irishman stands first among the races of man in his physical and bodily powers. America and Europe bear testimony to the intellectual capacity of Irishmen. Lord Morpeth his demonstrated in the British Parliament the superior morality of the humbler classes of Irish in all social and family relations. The religious fidelity of the Irish nation is blasoned in glorious and proverbial cer thin' y and splendor. Irishmen I eons of Irishmen! descend ants of the kind of heart and affectionate in disposition, think, oh think only with pity and compassion on your colored fel low-creatures in America. Offer them the hand of kindly help. Soothe their sorrows. Scathe their oppressor. Join -with your countrymen at home in one cry of horror against the oppressor, in one cry of sympa thy with the enslaved and oppressed. Ileumlia _ln the duet glover, shall be burled,— and nature blotted from the wor.d.” We cannot' alone our observations upon the unseemly, as well as silly attacks you make upon the advocates of abolition, with out reminding you that you have borrowed this turn of thought from the persons with opposed Catholic emancipation in Ireland, or who were the pretended friends of the Catholics. Some of you must recollect that it was the custom of ,such person to allege that bat for the "violence" and "miscon duct" Of the agitators, and more psrtiou lowly of our Chairman, the Protestants were aboist.lo emancipate the Catholics gradu• ally. It,was the constant theme of the newspaper press, and even of the speeches in the louses of Parliament, that th e via 1 lance a ddd misconduct of agitators prevent. ed Emancipation. It was the burthen of many pamphlets, and especially of two, which were both -written, under the title of "Faction Unmasked," by Protestants of great ability. They asserted themselves to be friends of Emancipation in the abstract; but they alleged that it was impossible to grantEmanelpation to pinions whose Lead ers misconducted themselves as 'the Agita tors did. They gratified their hatred to the Casholitis as you gratify your bad feeling toward the negroes, by abuse of the Cath olic leaders as virulent as yours Is against the abolitionists. But they deceived no body. Neither do you deceive anybody. Every humane being perceives the futility and folly of your alaneks upon the aboli tionists, and understands that those attacks are but the exhibition of rancor end ma lignity against the tried friends of hu manity. - Tensity that the Abolitionists are facial, ics and bigots, and especially entertain a Virulent hatred and unchristian seal against Catholicity and the blab. We do I not mean to deny, nor do we wish to con ceal that there are amongst the Abolition ists many wicked andosiumulating enemies of Catholicity and the Irish, especially in that most Intolerant clue—the Wesleyan Methodist% but the best way to disarm their =Boo is not. by giving op to them ('the side of humanity, while you, yourselves, !tits the side of slavery. But, on the (sou -1 teary, by taking • superior station of rchristian virtue in the cause of 'benevo. law and charity, and in seal for the freedom of all mankind. / . We wish we could bon into your souls the turpitude attached to the trieh in Amer • Ica by Lord' Morpeth's charge. Reoollict that it reflects dishes'sr not only upon you but upon the land' of your birth. There is but one way of effacing each disgrace, and tha is by becoming the most kindly to• ward the colored population, and the moat energetic in working out of detail, as well as in general principle; the amelioration of the state of the miserable Bondsmen. You tell us, indeed, that many a era.. ti en, and especially the Catholic clergy, are ranged on the side of the alaveholders. We do not believe your accusation. The Catholic clergy may endure, but they assuredly do not encourage the slave owner& We have, indeed, beard it said that some Catholic, clergymen have slaves of their own; but, it is added, sad we are assured tositively, that no Irish Catholic clergy men is a slaveowner. At all events, every Catholic knows bow distinctly siteve holding, acid especially slaeo trading, /0 oindeutoed by the Catholic! Church. That most eminent man, his Helium, the pree eat Pope, has, by an Allcoution published throughout the world condemned all deal ing and traffic in slave. Nothing oin be more distinct nor more powerful than the Pope's denunciation of that most abomina ble crime. Yet it subeisui in a more abom inable form than his Holiness could possi bly describe, in the traffic which still exists in the Bale of slaves, from one E Americo. to another. What, then, are we to think of you, Irieh 'Catholics, who• send no an elaborate vindication of Slavery without the slighteet censure of that hate. fat crime ? a crime Which the Pope has so completely oondemnod--namely, the dia bolical raising of staves for sale, and selling them to other States. If you be Catholics, you should devote your time and beet exertions to working out the pious intentions of his Holiness. Yet you prefer—On, sorrow and shame I— to volunteer your vindication of everything that belongs to ,the guilt of Slavery. If you be Christians at nil, recollect that ilaykry is opposed to the diet, the highest, and he greatest principles of Christianity, which teach us "to love the great and good God above all things whautoever;" and the tient "to love our fellow-man as oureelves;" which commands us "to do unto others as we would be done by." These sacred prin ciples are inconsistent who the horrors and armee of slavery; sacred principles which have already'. banished domestic bondage from civilised Europa, and which wilAalso, in Cod's own good time, banish it from America, despite the advocacy of such puny declaimers as you - are. How bitterly have we been afflicted at perceiving by the American newspapers that recently in the city which you inhabit an opportunity was given to the Irish' to exhibit benevolence and humanity to a colored fellow-oteature, and was given in vain! We allude to the cue of the girl Lavinia, who was a stave in another State, and brought by her owner into that of Ohio. She by that means became entitled to her freedom, if she had but one friend to sestet it for her. She did find friends—may the great Cod of Heaven bless them! Were they Irish? Alas ! elan! not one. Yon sneer at the sectaries. Behold how they here conquer you in goodness and obarity. The owner'spame, it seems, was Scanlan; unhappily a thorough Irish name. And he, it appears, has boasted that he took his revenge by the most fiendish cruelly, not upon Lavinia or her -protectore,, for they were not in his power, but on her unoffend iog father, mother arid family And fAis Is the system which you Irish men, through many folio pages of wicked declamation, seek, at least, topalliate, if not to justify. Our; cheeks burn with shame to think that' such a monster es Scanlan could trace hie pedigree to Ireland. And yet you, Irishmen, stand by in the at utnde rather of friends and supporters, than of impugners of the monstrous cruelty. And you prefer to string together pages of cruel and Heartless epphistry in defense of the source of his crime, rather than take part against him.' Perhaps it would offend your fastidlotte netui if such a man were compared to • pick pocket or a felon. We respect your prejudices and call him no reproachful name. It Is, Indeed, unneaeSeary. We conclude by conjuring you, and all other Irishmen in America, in the name of your fatherland—in the name of humanity —in the . ; name of the God of mercy and charity; we conjure you, liishmen and descendants of trainmen, to abandon for ever all defence of the hideous negro Slavery system. Let it no more be said that your feelings are made so obtuse by the air of America. that you cannot feel se Catholics and Cnristians ought to feel this truth—this plain truth, that one man can not hare any property in another man. There Is not one of you who does not recog nise-that principle in his own person. Yet we perceive—and this agonises us almost to madame—that yew, boasting on Irish descent, should, 'without the instigation of any pecuniary or interested motive, but out of the sheer and single love of wickedness and crime, come forward ILO the volunteer defenders of the most degrading specks of human Slavery. Wool Woe I Woe! There is one consolation still amid the pulsations of our hearts. There are—there must be genuine Irishman in America—man of sound heads and Irish heart!, who will assist us to wipe off the foal stain that Lord blorpeth's prtivancharge has inflicted on the Irish character—who will hold out the hand of felloirship, with a heart in that hand, to every:honest manor every east and color—who will sustain the cause of humanity and hondr, and scorn the paltry advocates of Slavery—wbo will show that the Irish heart is in America as benevolent and as replete with uharitable emotions as in any other clime on the face of the earth. We conclude. The spirit of democratic liberty is defiled by the continuance of ne gro Slavery in the . United Suites. The United States themselves, are degraded below the most uncivilised nations, by the atrocious inconsistency of talking of liber ty and practising tyranny in its worst shape. The Americans' attempt to paill&te their iniquity by the futile excuse of per sonal interest, but the Irish, who have not even that futile eicuse, and yet justify Sla very, are utterly indefeasible. Once again--ind for the last time—We Call upon you to!oome out of the congeals of the slave owners, and at all events to free yourselves from participating in their guilt. Irlsheien, I Cali on you to join In (mask ing Slavery, anti *giving Liberty to every man of every ass*, creed or color. Signed by order, Basun Chairman of the Committee. Izmir listivsers.--This le said' to be the lirogyear eine° 1846 that the potato blight• has not appeared. tn Irelan& 'The hl:vest generally It reported better than It has been for several years put: This fact,' however, is not retarding tnilgratlon, And the peasantry are crowding the ships .that sail for Americc; ' • ' Tatum is only a slightverbal distlnetline between having a tooth drawiby a pro fessional surgeon, and Wing it knocked out by s fall upon theptventent. One le dental and the other seofdintal , , w AftrieasigursAiixTs 1114 at 4. • piANoe, ik 10i'ab 'or Pallor awl symiloani l tift of Luns,tay sad mrysab's tom*, sad wwtr "l 100 0 4 baTo. by Jodi IN Won pro:maned learreallnl. As to tag Tabalve works of ..csabes refer to tbs o Malta or mml. ..co. to caw petwairloo, Man Sbalbair: Blrallmett• 0 Panay and 11. Vtiannalapia, is alit In= OM Of lot most dualaillatbd Prafriaxa aad_bmatinss la tbao.ustry. boallifal pm stool. of Kbb Will Pi. boa bre now bolas ~pouf bribe sob.orlber. la Bahlisam. oammerre &WE AS P. 0 ., 5..104 2OU°bun, for sale fa bead cc Oro, by iba cor loul or oils bom rer.n. Wel end fit OW, Lalitati 130.74,...gU1rdiain 'Atgs A. lut mailisd sad Di • • . oula ..W11144.1h 11,4p,wiwiutm..1111Arimirst... lioKai!ea .:~ ~r~~ . SCHOOL, J.R.IIIIWELL, A. K. imam. Ne n l9l PUN biIIEST, PITTSBURGH, PA. ma r mutt. Intends to open• eslsot School la the loot air :011:1211 • a the second oor of No. 191 Peunotreet, y an the it NEM PION e.Sl fl Or 1111. SS. ' , BNB, MS Lola. Owen. Groh. Wench sad Geo man OM ba t tegbt. ethics So yoke b• spared to tmputt .to. the poolt.tboroloh. to the n out branakee of an ltaelbh etneatles. Ur. N propeets to pmts the number of poptlo. lb tt he may hoes the better eyyaonetty of muing porter ...eel and Walloons! cultism and more reel SRC • BURY DIPLATMI39T, Oman or aosmolaxii'ol an tostorcrr, Wasitugton thy, August fitb. 1t63 Wrivints, By malodors. mridenai pumentsd to V r if d ,isfrord,, it his temin suds to appear dist the A aBAT N ATLI, ii, I, B ASS UV VITTA9I7I6III. to the 0:000/ 01 911•10•09. sad lunar rui..0..- los. his tom duly ot agonised under and accordli g to the requinnienta al te• AM of Magma outlast An Act to mod& • r wand bp • ;dodge of tr cited alma m elts. and to provide far the air Watt= and redemption thervot,," appeared replier) lath , 1,63. mid hat mimplivd with sot MD crovisionnof mid sot nipdial to bis complied with before omamouct. E r . Cadman of Santis g. Zoo. User•tote, I Bran lloCinct on, Oomptram of eho Larr.aoy, it 5••• y asit.ll OW me 54,1 Tian ZlATlugtab lit Ail Or P,176911 14 3 8 . w arm of allegium , sod 13.16'• of Penoirl•anie, IA outitoilief . te coin vac • the badness of Builing un der the aCt al ret d. ~.—, In tests ooy . aeo .. othf witness fey hand • 55. i nod mat of ogles, this 6th der of A aitat, 1 J ,36 1 au,ka sta pi.,2.00 , too Oran of had, on• of 6% and one of 9 saw I —.-, • Frog's town—PO per !Iranian orrhe Months. To extra charges.; l'ulkus S. be pill darts/ the tint half of We &into' " - vshoel yours from o • m. to 2 p m. liar After the 17tb hot. Mr. N. any be saga daft, at the • cho I Ilco xis /tains the above hours sal3 td ATWATER LOTS FoR t3A.LE, ON T,311 ca o • P.A. P. 8., BIAS 001111T31111.8 InitTlOL—Ttui tuaderslgtild le attthoristel to Intl seek, froatin on the Ohio A Pa. B. X.. beteg pert of tbi farm of David Dkkoon, dimmed. A plan of tin Iwo • may Inset& by calling st lay Mae, an. TS rodent street, Allegheny Oily. JAMES n HII.ANDS. 0.)11 IaLLE--Ou soomat of slain , as p • ISOUTZ ON THE NYItt4ING tik7.ll l To. Thlt tode too • .op large stomas , of outootabotd. sad an osarptto an ma mate good lova, kepi, at THIS Olffloll, t•torroa the boon of ILatid 6 o'clock v. a. aullt:tf ADMIN It...THAW/I'B .NOTIVE.—Let• tots of A dslolatratlou oa Ihststat• of Hoban Yneywl Agawam:re,. lato of tel Boront of Tantalum, A 110w142 %I manly, Magog Non gasood to lb. An ders ll pose= Indttood Bala waste will mak* mglioillato say/seat. and-that lowing claim .Quoit 6.14 .to wall prwont dom. Pro Peril wa• t.ootlostwl, for atttlentot.. .n 111.1.410 wt . JAVAN illoal2lllAL. Adm't. VINAL NtYrIOL-13. d INIAME L TAX.-1111 parsons residing to the 214 Oahe. Vim Ditariot of Year-Weals are brreby nand d to Lae return on or bare ISIIPT3IIB nit ht, 1863, to to. Auittint dritesous, of their tentative Pub litrislose, or at the aloe of as underagna. So. 106 fourth lama. In ow of perrsre toning tr - wake return latish the above mailed thaw atattonte Immure ate lissustad to ell iostances to exact the panty tad by law, littlish to Myer oat. additkmal. finial a. Ws/0 att. Awes* 824 t•lstrfet. Pa D 1:1- 4 OLU I lON OF PAIL'ENICReiIIIF. —Taii port tonhip bentorors existing batman 94 Id. Mattel and Or. W. AltDlßool, defog tomb nom water tber style of WM MoILIIN • OU.. wet 4 moleid be mutual consent an the Bth Intl W. If oICOM milting. W. w. ANDKasuri to author. ten to nee the name of the fbm In ..tiling the boalame. WU. Kollin. W. W. attDiEBoll.. vW. ANDERSON, (novena to • wt. masa too.)) codasus Ms Btu.- .ty Boitaese at tee Allogli4my Brawory, No. 46$11.brom rani, alleahosi City. AND149.130H. ALBUMS! ALBUIdd 1 13C)C1 - Photographic Albums THE nava, OHEATATT AND LABAZST STOCK IN 1113 ern, Too E-'8 BOOK AND NEWS DEPOT, BUTE HERMIT, OPPOIPTII TH2 P. O. =II M AGAZINEA, roa thiriitzsza. PHOTCGILVII ALBUKL POCIET BOOES AED wAtarrs. rosTrOLtos ♦6D PLPV3T2IIIIII, STATIONERY AND MINE BOOKS. ♦LL THZ NIIW BOOLS. POOL= INISTANDS. 001 Z PEN, warrent•d the boil that sr• sub. 0111 TIS Di TU11211.. XILI TART ROC/S3. I=3 JOHN P. HUNT'S, WbolauM sid ntaß Book, Itttionery mid News Emporium, mum() HALL, Fast Elms. mis BABOLINd a A. R, T B JVI? mars% AT 3d:'Gallur'B. 87 FOURTH EITRIUM, veA hens witortmostorldth vill is sold al • very , st ridnation boa ligie pret. W. D. * a 1111111,LIIII. • pm:Nl:nobs, sumnr& ILIWIE. PAY. oirnt Aim% 104 ft. tlii dew kW do Cliiithead. All vosadot &Idlers she have tem la the Wit•. tar, or Wel estelee. Igo sanded $. SIIXI. Boast, awl Postage. ell. &Miss ' , sloe hare terra taro eho Willett° the poo Partuate. Wales hy tern of dhow, ere estltlad to pea, • lone. Widows at &Uteri wee die el are killed to the. welsh ere segued to peesksa end the stoo *seem Ito., to. • ells& aide* el every doearlpthee, poseptly et. traded to No tgae web la worn wan the mew to oodealtd. . • • itlh.lette pENBIt.IISIB, 130UNTY,'111143E PAY. auerrroMiss mad Cisks Arm Ka. Ut 1./.l7l3llTair.Plttsberei,To. u a du a , is mtioa_ cocalsi. ib Prousentes sou ag niss , mium ma _illos;Ap. z; soad ram. onelbr dis" Mem ur asir flo=loVll. TISS slid PISMO tot. WYkriar. Pinata, Oirphis ObStessi !WOO; sad Mum cre our kid now ruliathas of Mon ifto lanno died $ thamentalt or aim dal Mar Arhus. tem dinersCoallifillel illialk,daita• mita cadriadolul aa Wm . suL a• anirmayo mho • sausa.li swam 7. FBgI JABS • ADASSAIe 00.. NO. sr Wood 'Arad. hr• propturi tomb& whin who with to Oat • teeth huh dewing thi wilt* ateathe With that cal Buckeye Jar, and Cork Jar, %Itlel tbri eut eappli et the TN7 lava' prime, et 'Weals sad ratan. Rehm Oita sin& • ELTINtiI S I I 1 1.-Leat 'or au. • Una Bating sin, Gams Zsoktsg. gm, OW kap, iko , slims es kiwi ths hulls Zabbst &pot of 1 J. 9. PIIII.L;111, golf IS sail 118 it. Olstr stmt. , FUJI, - LABOR yzaTiorr._._-, , _.". 0. aillD'S DIY DOOK., Vett .Ward. ktl e at at R. 13. vArr, Italastry Moat s lama ward. • . • . NNAM -TO OUBMAMIIMUS rto wale win to nabs! op to do Wm AMOVIII, Ink at aim altos sluts usolardirsaa, L tba UYkK Itathilagjortis miming mai maittlawatiktkta• woes. Stead Weal in:milked street to MAK et. . aioulAT_ Navwdhin 0,••• la V tr dISCI Wittoti • orris / pi not vrUl. O. aid,••• gea. sa 144 . 14mr Dorn. Its M gbh-on-eft.- . , nto D • - —7 . strywler 11 alai, Mimi D l OZ ; WE Ties,for au. FIRST NATIONAL BARK, OF PITTSBURGH. OomWr 14r of the Qa~ rrae7• 'NATIONAL Walk OF THE FIESTVA.__,_ PITTSBURGH, PA., (L&TIII PITIOULGa TIIIIST 001111.11ffY.) ci•rriAl., $4.06,000 with VT igs to human to 61.000 000. lee Pittsburgh Trust ompsny Whig orgastsed ruder tee act to provide • listened cairowei y. nada the tit's pi toe PIMP Mai eillitL Ban& of PY1718011.013. viscid resporatall. offer •• wrviess for tke Viten of Pow, Praia Mils of Exelme_gs,. de , solie ey on deposit. and boy aid sell IX, chaon apermed the osustsy, Rae eaos which has' att•Mied the Pittsburgh Treat Coup soy sloes its moots itkuv la w we beams is a sateolsot goarant • ilia minuted to the new orgstsuivtlgn, will emelt, the same p o opt attention. ' nave g • veil ext•nsive conitermisnoe with Beals sod winters throughout the cormory, w• be. tors we C. 42 offer mound Isolittise to ikon who do embuu wtth no 1 he bade's' will be (inducted by tae moss OZ [ errs and Ylrottors. l rort ta tkl b a. ll :: I AI le n an di dir g. B r e a r. , 7b.. Pell, I lex A Smiley, MA Wlghtaisit, &mod Rm. Wm. I. Nlmick, /AMU LAUGELIAIi, rust:het Ja' D. 130113 LLY. Ocher. 411.0.1! 64. UIL AND WI DOW SHADES. Mots !coda:old at the lON CARPET STOIIII et McFarland, Coiling Sr, Co Dos. It ADD 13 IIITH MIST. Between the "an Orno ea Drams Bumosss. Verrhsa to purchase for the WALL 'IILkDI AN MERELY NEW STOCK, wow NOME all gash sop at baud at man Lace Mitts, Enibroiderim elision's. • 4111 e. Boo b Bkirto..DBltlf at batlike. PP yrs ars nothing the 'skit inv. a azikp. omens. sersoer 1/1383 Tanimica. BILIS, BDOLLIII. am. ° Bsr L 10Tr2H'0 I waoLshaLa Booms op Ingo. mi MtiOA Below Present Market Bates• sr- We espedally tivits the ettiiiMan MS TRY gIBOEILIVIS sae WHOLINII.II3O2/ 311 . sub GREAT -SALE AHD OHILDRIBII BOOTS AND SHOES, To elms cat Busoater 414, M JElcaelkind3s.duction ROOMS, 66 SIXTH STIMIT. r YOU WANT TO BUY pied, olissp . sad dyads Boots, Shoes, Gaiters or Balmoral', call at Ea at ItIIIIENT snrxr, as are an atcatag oat oot loam: Ckoda et greatly Moor! rites. Rumba thr plaak J. H. BO aLLSITII, 99 LAM dart, DRUG NOTION. • mukare PIMPTATIOW primula. Lammers IXPROVAD sceloo AZABONAIL OLIXART PEONS/LI. • 3XTIAOT PA ASAPANJALA. GOrINARDV ILED7O/MILD SOAP; B • UP% ItAgsZß ARID =MA WO= HOZ al soan. Busarrrs itavinisrci XXXXAM -111111 PASICIIZITIMOVA qr Mo Maim. aldusaa Paint IWAXI .101ITLT WAX I TRUPP WAX! tar mass MO assn seo yam am Moopro I. Pro" mod at - 0w.... aurnaL Diva Koss. 0rwa..411.10 maid lrodoral wheats hi cCARGO'd 16411,1111L8 A besattfal 104 ,add anoctsinst MARBLE MANTELS. Yonnments awl wave Sines. eLurrits PARIS, it t OOBSDJMI .AJ111.J08314 TOW' QUAUSUI% litibEl34llll , titorltity t 147 ctn., aslant fa. ILL J WaftTSD—sitrooa. tad Molotakt aptitouut oc oppolUdosent Ovid t. Chalosts. of t o ad of ss t k photal atidty ot WU visas am toad as to Sold gado.. 2tay irtS bon. maid cutlass to ugdatmott op alltdtcal load. *potato.. fat pearelau to spat tuba an Ss oWola //cord tout la ant to talisman floaent. lia up... allow d oaks. oppetosulat, Boy of *nil tut larva IWI 33,5 y of patina, ISSI. atm.= w. a 111.10.115E1. arum thooraL - - • -- titit*Att/LY MN Y/ITV B. BOlrding k Day Sehool for Young Midler. Nee IAST ad WS trios Berd, i9ao4l.piicc Rho maim enrol of laitcsotioa osibraoto the Togisk ono. hooch Lossposes ea. 111 iossuoo , Locus IS mph-ad—sad icS Abe braschst Istdcli cos-. Ocicsto • Maoist Issibb•oss lcs, monist Gatos tios bolos pad co Um Mut Of Priacapst, mist oil Os Si• .04.Trolnent. /MA Li Woo Wrap or as gam" said ft St.' stsaUF spasm is Ise Its Tb. scootot • par ONIUMIIIO.I LW.obr tgal tor .trculsissoci iscrldklitoes limply to mond. ICS Olio • WHOISNIbuT, Prisolsa. SeIkULILLi 41.1329fai1UD1 • . PAID TO _ OAS AND MAX IMMO, Iva:TATE, & co., ,dasairipsiii alum SO door bliOW SoSham At""Im"" 4tp .° " WM& " .. " 31.6% St LOUIS'S% e Pas or-laos. 43 /. Or 4 - a 'soolemt the ftemori;r. 114;4 W .sminin City,tilfel attar It. Lor No, Il*. lb. ationtion of SW madam& lbaufbebirin toll. Aselydo_lina lbw* se elpseted L. LUNN of Ikabah saCJ. Way se mhbas.bi **PM of utast sapid , as by inia ti owl IS. /MU It 1* be SuWI siest:TabubliOboy sow boom gilder co Aaterbein. Pi* nab tam it Ord - be the alma Swam from om Is a sestW Rho Auslys“ Y d le Cloy 'se tab* from ibm Wu, withest say 'nibs or yroyoriliso am. -111 garmis Vest adlisbrubus sr= vottlbs, wbS lwe ad olorwa by tits vilUeb Nan of Ow adatzturs et l lappegKipa . of doll est o ktusol = =. I Am wit tell] onfas he the &WI OW. to . 4vaLVI. IWO cm doltnesi W." ALEX. GOMM - Jo us moxoo ram -11.411.141, age • s• .„y - - 0811; 16 'OA LOWIILL. E3I!MI c h ANl*o' EltiOrOM Ma /Or ak, rigio,by JAN S. 116 Woad et; - - • tj.; V(' to • Ithlllol • I sassy IL comm. Igw, Nat AT -70@, RORNB tt 77 AIM 79 WARM Est, NEW GOODS BEIWG RECEXT•E!,,, DA/Zir AHD LIZ POE BALI AT =I LOWEST -CASH PRICES. OUR SUMMER STOOK -IS SLING CLOUD Oln 0 MT. 333 .A. P I GOUT SUMMER COORS, - To midi nos let car NEW FALL;GOODS! ha *Xmlift rk!is bnbr mated dolts LAWNS. BZWIISP, OW MONA, , 14,160% 140 E POLITO. SHAWlaiwnsaui • ttool;topply d tooblosoblo eluded Alpaccas and De WILE'S. Ana • now lot of 111110111L11 pat nodid. LLEX. st 'rapist aTs r. INTSIUMITING TO TEM LAMBS! We ire soalltOs at • MIX= 1P110:111 . Cotton Roriery, Glove., MACINUIP & CLYDE, Na 78 MARKBT EMMET, p. 12 Betwai lrearth tat 172P0211. BiNGLINII IN BNB/WIDEN= M. Burchfield's. Tie steak le eleeiNg eat et anumully low Om& k PUN= Mal) UM worth SU fir Ilk: Do.' roLLiari. masa Vabr KULL BLVD% tor halt poe. ZYBIOIDISIDD tot halt prim 3/100 NIT motions% JACOBI! NIXIIIIGIN ' , ma Eels f insi Tift6. LIN= MDCIIIIIB Do. DMIIR1I1G5; 71011111:D /NM !AsQum bat Flab. wmrs Biemaairra; WRITS DAMASK the Nat ee 11111111,01DIBMIrim — poifitild7 - - doing oat, saw Is the tine io ipt beepfam. wt COIpeUMING .]l - O July 211/1, IS $, 421011U111 GILT 1111DUOZI03 At B rk R K E _R.',,,tY,-. CLOAKS, sueowList hint good snd feat 0010r5—....M.' Shirting Muslims , LILL MEWLS, POINTS, MANTLIti t , : BORNOCS, AT ILEDUOZD-PillUZBl 8 hi To avoid swots; awn say gallon at 0ax11144 1111 inio74llo illbrO4l oo / to _ iirlas to lock a Petit' As will oeL ti ea, oldest Vith slerdesimi n ll r a. Oa Mot II sow fee eV= ntheels boss 4 6 . 11iddat - - S SW AID:111•11 GOODS z o ncrom.•dist e rmes ina =Or es Mahe Ilkekeits eu Dan irks bay fa Cul tin iiii.rEsebai is*.oll;w*tegabilk .._:11,620,11a0114 - wins sieiwt.: , NSW GOCumst . , GSM% PATIENT BULLBTIIIOOS . " 3 "4/4 4 6 1.161 ratail init . % • Iludrat, imam, 11911ese. 4dur ' , gra* atom VERY CHISAP t 69 Market Strc)at, DEEM GOODS._ IM===l REDOGID PllO3lO. Arsonsostsi - • - _USX WABOT do.* rimusz Guar Pill iiims alas; ate "kw 4k, (licit,. • aura 6. . , ea. _ iiiiket drool. RYMsDWpst.