Ilittsburff istuism- UtDL.D. 0. 7no U. BEIBETT & Co.. Xllifoßs and PROPilliToi3 prrras - c - zr.c;.l-i: TUESDAY MOENINO, AUG. 9, 1859. Republican State Ticket ALVDITOII OILIMAL, THOM L COCIIIIAST, of York comity WILLIAM B. BEIM, of Boob county Ilepithllean County Ticket umv,• ALIAS IL /WILLItAbv , Ab. Aiscomr, WILLIAM 'ARNIM, P h, DAVID A. PICIO.SLSY, Allegheny, CHARLES L. 0016IIRIN11, Rear., DAVID E. ILiTAILD, Peebles. WILIAM:UE/In, Loser St %dr. MAU= LIT JODOZ, TUOMAB KELLOB,UIm DtOflTLt AMU= JACOB H. MILLER, ElGibuitt. w GOODMAN Y. COULTER, Booth Foyette. COIO66IOOTiL JONATHAN DN.AUPP, South MitAtharg.b. ♦UotTDI, DAVID CORNELIUS. Sewickley. SPIKTSI . OI{, M. T. ANDNUSON, KAst Dear Drarcina C,! rat POOR, JOSECH MILLER, Snowden. Gov. Wies's Lair Ls - rms.—Governor Wise, ,i 7"••;. i ?::- in hie last letter, which for a wonder was very ~..,,,.' • 4 ! :,brief; has—to use a common expression—"put his foot in"lie operations for the future. With all his excentrioltles and •his extravagances, he . • ! has hitherto maintained a pretty fair reputation ! for rough honesty. Indeed hie particular friends, t., . - . • including hie two sons, generally held him up to L . ,:-...- - • public admiration on account of hie stern ad ---, ' herenoe to what he thought was right, and his freedom from the glaring faults of the politi. a:'..- ', Mane of the day. There was a vast amount of pretension and cant in all this, it must be grant rH,,,..-- ed, hut that_33 position in which the Gov ' :!"-'''r, •-•.tri_tor deatied to appear before the people; and many of his political admirers, north and south, were content to concede it to him. The publica tion of this letter will strip him of this false F.-. -,. livery and place him among , the most autumn r' • ~, ble orpolitical tricksters, who, to low cunning add the vilest kind of double dealing and trea chery. His dietaat friends were so overwhelm ed with astonishment and disappointment when the - unfortunate missive appeared that they at ~... _ once, and without hesitation, denied its germ ; • '. ineness. But asuffiolent time has elapsed since its appearance to afford its reputed author am , • ple opportunity to disowit it, and yet we have not heard a word from him or his friends. That . .1• , • .. the letter was not intended' for the public eye, . .. , t .. ..., we are willing to believe:4ot, to entertain- ; . ..- ~. _ a different opinion wonld t he.. seriously qua- L. . &r . :" Honing . the sanity of tbb. :writer. This c0n ,...' : • .V . ousien;-hcvrever, dui col 'help the Governor, ..., . . - . • out • of ; the diffioulty in !Ora his letter . has; -..' . . ' placed him, but rather adds to the enormity ot, . ! the offence. It is to be regretted that the only •c:"•, - .;',.. - :. •• '- effort at brevity, which old Virginia's Execitive F.'4,--'-1.,, has been known to make, should have beenat lr,.....•.". tended with so much bad luck. We fear it is the 1...,,:,..- -- last of the kind we shall ever witness, and on .f .. . that account we regret its sad fate. The New' fy-t-' . .. - .., • York Courier .1 Enquirer thus notices the ill advised epistle: :---- t . '••• "We could hardly think it genuine, and have refrained from publishing it, under-lame hope, ~.....': : though faint, that it would be disclaimed. There I ' 'S ' 4 - ''- are those of Gov. Wise'e political friends, we perceive, witestill doubt its authenticity; but the airse;see of all denial, to our mind, leaves no ...';',.*,,,,„,,. c at . t.tre hut to take it for just what it per .l' l' T Nut to be, _A•We confess we hardly know what to woke of this production. As an off-band confidential 1 ... note from crony to crony it would be odd enough; -_,.. as a missive deliberately intended for, or in any way liable to reach, the public eye, it is ittexpli . . . cable. Governor Wise, -we • know, is. some .' . .- thing of an exeentriagenins. Hehtiaa natural' temperament thatdeaightelin a sensation. , .Noth . iog snits him better than balanctiur an the edge of a precipice. A tight- rope lahle'delight. He - . - itifillicates "elan Pelle An lino" amid a.fissh of Trinkets, before a surprised multitude. Herr • - Cline himself never found greater sport in be miwidffideerinnlygsrlioaglidkldsinotfopihrao lo a n t s, n - o an si l s t ian hen t • attitude In the world. This has away' been __ ! Mr. Wise's way, and we can easily understand it. But snob an Idiosyncrasy after all is no ex planation of such an exhibition as this last: The object hereby no means is to Cattle- There Is no wantonness of that sort„ The ;Governor - evidently has a very serious purpose, which is nothing lam than to help himself on townids the Presidency of the United States. Buetbe cayth - ?cry is that he should bars even.fore . LOOMftlit fancied that his ends could be advanced by . any 1 snob" miserable trickery as Is Itereindicated. ' me immure:is to get the Charleston: nomlnation for himself by paralyzing the great State cif llew York, :skins he knows is *Weed - lehim "i -and 1 . this be Reposes to effect through th e appoint , ment, of delegates by 'district • conventions in stead of the. General State Convention, and thus splitting the delegation into antagonistio sec tions; and in case that plan falls, than for the minority to raise a rebellion in the State Con vention and send on to Charleston a bogus dele gation which will be admitted on equal terms with the other, and thus nentralise the whole vote of the State. This is what Governor Wise means when he says "our only chance is to or ganize by districts, and either whip the enemy or send two delegations." He must have taken the Democratic party to be the sorriest set of imbeciles on earth if he really supposed they could be made the victims of any such kind of jugglery, however covertly managed. It is diffi cult to say what he must have taken them for when he exercised no more pains to keep his scheme in the dark." , The Philadelphia Press coinciding with Mayor WOOD, denounces the letter as a forgery, finding it impossible to believe 'that the bold and die. slrous Virginian who, In 1856, so gallantly etr= countered the 'Blair. Knight with his visor down,' and who wielded his trenchant battle-ax fore most among the champions of the Democracy, would have written each a document," and adds 'that the genuineness of this letter would at 10 and forever smother all the prospects of ir. Wise for the Presidency, said that no terms of t:ensure would be too severe to be applied to a Presidential candidate resorting to thema chinery which ia' recommended by this letter. Th. Providence Journal double the genuineness of the epistle, mainly on the ground that it is so short. The Daily New (reputed to be Mayer Wood's organ) says : "We have no doubt It is a forgery, and aver upon our own responsibility that Gov. Wise has never written such a letter. It is a forgery, and we believe that some of the men who indus triously but confidentially exhibited it at Albany ':. knew it to be a forgery. If we are wrong, let them 'produce the proof. If they do not, they ' l ' will rest under the imputation we now east upon them durieg the belabce of their lieu." '-"- - :Bat The Aurae! of Commerce, which does not " appear to be entirely satistletk with the doon timeat, says : "We are not permitted to question the gene beaus of the production, since the original has been non by men in whose sagacity and ve racity implicit reliance must be placed, and we ere compelled to deal with it according to its merits." The Commercial Ackerlifer, which thinks that the letter was intended - for private circulation, 'There is noinonifor doubt on the subject. It - was written - with Gov. Wise'e own hand, to • gentleman well known in Democratic political circles here, and its history down to its publi cation cam be indisputably traced. -We have good Yemen to believe that not a word was al _ scrod, not • mask of punctuation changed from the orlglaaVind It it does not bring upeii the writer the y011%10%114% which he so elegantly pradlots for Senator Douglas, thou the Demoi or sile party are a Mamie worms than we take them ----to be." - - • . It is evident that tho "ohirshorm Virginian" _. 45 Mr. Forney is pleased to •designsto_tho Gbiernor—has, In his own person, furnished another example of tho danger of luditerimi• nolo letter writing. This last epistle has d e . strayed whatever chance he may have had for the offiee which lilt has sacrificed to much to. obtain. PlllOB is TOT] profane In 0$ CllTTlealaree of Loots. Napoleon's Peace Treaty. One of its pic tures represents "Free Italy" chained to the stumbling block of Venitia, on Fhloh stands her deputy jailor, Fitssois Jossru, with his keys, while the French Emperor Mate herjoir head hi:leash the extinguisher of the triple crown. This mejr . be taken eii fart:pectic= of English Weicatimeet in. re co\ co to Louie liapoliou. bat tut justice WC$ well' o questioned. :As A we d. eau, ire here ;vim o ,ottirt made objects o r British tcliieprertitailid sod it nol to ?~: ~„~ , , • blkpfepar4to lit ate vie rogiud I,olte lialion:quation.VA - Apse Aninace.; An Elk 4 11 hWiiter remarks that the Britiel, swim papers have described the charneter of the' French army with such stem, that the Zeuaves are regarded throughout the ballad with feel logs of ill-concealed terror. The Italian ques tion, however, has not monopolised all the blus ter of the English press.. The last eteampecket brought over a ferocious attack- on our govern ment, in one of the London journals, which is not only indecent from tho vulgarity which it contains, but ridiculous on account of the au thor's ignonnoe of our geography; - politico and policy. Oaytit. Anima the donations., to the Plymouth mon ument, whose corner stone woe laid on the 2d instant, we observe that Gov. S. P. Chase of Ohio, gave $lOO. The Governor is at pretr eat rusticating at Newport. He is to deliver an oration as we learn at next commencement at Dartmouth, where he was graduated. Taw New Yeas DiMOCILACR.—The deluge of the Democratic, State Convention at Albany, on Wednesday, are worthy of especial attention and study, as the formal opening of the Preeidential campaign in that State. The moat imUceable feature is the bitter ender-current fight between those of the brethren who, with ex-Mayor Wood go for Wise, and those who go for Dickenson or somebody else than Wise. Wood, and the so called Astor Hones clique have lost ground at the start, in the denial of their appeal "to limit the notice for the annual meeting of the State Convention exclusively to the election of dele gates for the State ticket, and to question of State policy, and that the choice of delegates to he National Convention and the modes thereof be the subject of future consideration." The action of the committee is a point blank denial of the ex-Mayor's petition, the call for the Con vention, ad finally adopted, explicitly declaring that "the State Convention is to choose delegates to the National Convention, or to determine the manner in which and the time when they shall be chosen." The %acid' people are reported to bo highly indignant at this treatment, and threat en, in the usual nay, all aorta of things—and one of these things is—an appeal from the com mittee to the Deteocraey at large, etc., °to., etc. At the meeting of the Committee a curious letter from Gov. Wiee was brought to light. It relates mainly to Now York polities, and starts by saying that in lie opinion the Tammany Re gooey will carry a netted delegation from New York to Charleston, most probably for Mr. Bu chanan. The Governor then continues: Our only chance le to organize by Distriote, and either whip the enemy or send two delega tions. If that is done or not done, we must mill rely on a united South. A united South will depend on a united Virginia, and - I pledge you that she at least shall—be a unit. Virginia a unit., and' persistant and firm on a sound plat form of protection to all personCof popular vet.. sus squatter sovereignty, she mutt rally to her support all the South. The South cannot adopt Mr. Dough's' platform. It is a short out to all the ends of Black Itepublicaniem. lie then will kick up his heels. If be does or don't he can't be nominated, and the main argument against his nomination id that he can't be elected if nom inatia. If he runs as an Independent candidate and illswardruna, and lain nominated at Oharles ton, I can beat them both. - Or, if squatter sov ereignty Is a plank of the platform at Charleston and Douglas is nominated, the South will run an Independent candidate on protection principles, and run the election into the House. Where, then, would Mr. Douglas be ? The lowest candi date on the list. I I hare the popular strength, you suppose it will itself fix the nomination. Get that and I am confident of success. The letter concludes by remarking upon May or Wood's relations toward the writer. The Gov ernor says he would be glad of the Mayor's in fluence, but he is "not completely, or at all, in the hands of Mr. Wood, or of any other man who breathes." He is ' , independent of all cliques, and defies all camera." it is said that Wood is much loomed at the prodootion of this letter, and pronounces it &forgery, but its authenticity is respectably vouched for. It is said that every means are being need by the State Committee and their friends to distract and divide the Hard Shell Party. Mr. Williams, of Buffalo, is promised the nomination as State Treasurer, in place of Mr. , Vanderpool, who is to be dropped, with Gideon J. Tatitter,.Secrelary of State. Mr. Lawrence; of- Queens, and Mr. Greep, Oeondags, are mid to' be offered nemina- Mani as Secretary of Baits; 'Mr. Green declines and adheres to Mr. wcog It is confidently asserted that the Botte offered Mayor Wood Tammanfliall and the Idayorality, if he would abandon his position, but that be resolutely declined to do w. Newark Memory. Tun New York correspondent of the Charles ton Mercury says that the Senator 0 , whose approachiag nuptials were alluded to in the rribtrne last week, is "no less a person than Es teban St. Cruz Oviedo, of Cubs, and the fair American is Miss Fanny Bartlet, daughter of Capt. Bartlett of Maine, late of the U. S. Navy. The gentleman is one of the richest residents of thoonney Island, reputed to be worth about $4,- 000;000. He owns two large sugar plantations, worked by 110010 2,100 negroes, and a large number of houses oad lots in the city of Havana. Many , of your readers who have wintered In Washington will doubtless recollect the fairy form, winning face, charming manners, and de lightful conversational powers of Mies Bartlett, (still in her "teens,") eminent among the crowd of belles who flutter in the gay sakes of the Fed oral metropolis. The millionaire Senor has been of late years, a frequent visitor to this city and to the fashionable wateringplaces of the North, and it is quite unnecessary, in this match mak ing world, to say that be has been an especial faiorite with ambitions mammas, belonging to the real and accredited "upper ten." But the "bone and the woman" had cot come for the Senor until last New Year's Day, when he'ruet the fair heroine of thin true tate, and surrendered at discretion. The preparations for the wedding are quite Oriental in their magnificence, and would have delighted the gorgeous author of Vathek, whose gem dropping pen could alone do justice to theta. What say you to $60,000 worth ofjewelry to begin with ' But the levieh outlay of the bridegroom does not stop here. The mast cunning artificers of Paris are now at work upon the bridal jewels and decorations, which will cost another hundred thousand, andamong which is a wreath of emerald leaves, diamond and sapphire flowers, declined to bind upon the queenly head a thousand-dollar nuptial veil. Bat I will not task your imagination by dwelling farther upon these dazzling particulars. The wedding will take place about the middle of Au guet--firet in Grace Church, to suit the Protest ant Inclinations of the bride and her family, and afterwards at the Boman Catholic Cathedral. The happy couple will forego the usual foreign tour, and settle down at once in a palatial resi dence in Fourteenth street, where a series of Inullient receptions will inaugurate the honey moon. I had forgotten to say, and will add by way of winding up the paragraph, that a Meter of the bridegroom testifies her cordial apprecia tion of her brother's choice by eendrng on a lit tle bridal present worth $lOO,OOO to her future elater.in-law." WITL VII POPE ACCEPT roe ITALIAN PRLET• °CHM—Some journals have already thought fit to communicate intelligence as to the mode in which the sovereign Pontiff has received the offer of the title of President of the future Italian Confederation. Some soy he has refused it; others annotmoe that he has almost promised to accept it. The fact le, neither the one nor the other know anything about the matter. It is certain that the Pope, who hid minima the annul President', in 1848 and 1849, has not negotiated upon this point either before or daring the war of 1859. The latest acts of the sovereign Pon tiff prove this beyond all doubt. With respect to the honorary Presidency, it is an entirely new idea, which cannot, se yet, have been the sub ject of discussion. Besides any other consider ation, one of the principal reasons which ten years ago canoed the refusal of the head of the Church still existed before the peace of Villa franca. The Pope did not desire any extension of his temporal domains or political action, which should have for its point of departure a war between the sone of the Church, and the dispossession by means of arms of a Clatholio sovereign. Doubtless, overtures may have been made to the Pope immediately after the interview of Villafrance, but no one can be Its a position to say how they were received,-because the la test intelligence from Rome Is anterior to the peace, They who amuse the publicity spread tog each reports u these should consider that Rome never decides without reflection, and never engages herself as to the unknown. Now, noth ing Is more unknown than the future Italian Confederation ; because many of the sovereigns called to fella part of it have not yet been able to exchange • word on the subject. To res u me, when people talk of the intentions of the Chief of the Churctiwith regard to the honorary Pres idency of the Italian Confederation, they are simply giving utterance to personal appreciation of gossip.—Parts CDLISNIIII• IN GIVING BiIDIOINE.-011 Thuredey lest, a lady - la East Baltimore, Md., had a child, tea months old, who WU crafluing severely from a cough; • female neighbor prof feted som e mow n ., which she said had done bor. firatt.Vgreat good. The offer .was accopted se° the "'g lib " brought in the mixture; Siting the patient two teaspoonful"- In a very short Was after 'wallowing the dose, the 'child beanie iseeneible. The roothei lent for a dootor, who gave an emetic, which had the tendency to re:, IMO the child somewhat. On examining the mixture : it was found to have morphine in it In considerable quantity. The,mtual dOse for en adult would have . been one teaspoonful. The quantity of merplgoic }n the dose sten to the: child wee 170 dropv• Wuo ass Int it aniusw.irpAe , ,da tpiiblie feel interested - ItOtotots pareidalarprelattes to the read srblohlies attZineij k diguistuoto-‘, riety by the fatad-afrair et - the Efebsedierobe Bridge, we compile the following from the An nual Report, recently published, of Van A . Rlohmond, Eeq , State Epgineer and Surveyor: The length of the Asa is thirty three miles nearly. It extends from Albany oorthward to Elute Bridge. The capital stock, by Its charter, to $600,000, of which $439,004,97 is represent ed to have been,pold in. A perspn fluted Philip Ford, the Tressurer, in a oommrnsioatiou to the State Engineer and Salveloi. dated January 19, 1869, represents this road aa_eutirely bankrupt; that it has been for fire yelp, and still Is, in the hands of Re ceivers; and he contemns that "the stook and bonds are believed.to have no value." These are facts which may tend to explain the condi tion of the murderous trap over Tomhanio Creek. The company could run its trains and collect fares from cheated passengers, but had no mo ney to expend in repairing Its bridges. In other words it was a company of thieves. It is proper that the public should know the tames of the men upon whom reels the reepon. eibillaul of the final massacre. Aooordiogly we append a list of the officers of the Company, all of whom resides la Albany, and are reputed "decent." men: Wm. White, Preeideni; Philip Ford, Treasu rer; Vissoher Ten Eyok, Secretary; Wm. White, Superintendent, These ars the men, who on Tuesday night last, at the &bight'coke bridge, murdered 13 human beings confided to their care. They bad the road in charge, and thus entered Into a cam merclal agreement to make it safe for all who should travel over It. It there be a I►w In New York, these are the men for whom the Peniten tiary yearns.—N. Y. Times. A HMIS Low DUIOCINAT.--SpllAtOr Seward happening to slate ins debate • few years since that the laws' of God and humanity should he obeyed before those Laws and constitutions made by men, the Democratic press and orators have never ceased to abuse him therefor, as a traitor to hip country. In hie recent 4th of July speech at Augusta, Ga., the Hon. A. 11. Stephens, the great Democratic partisan, made see of the fol lowing language: "In his judgment ours ie the only govern ment oonaietent with nature... .Ile did not agree with 8013:0111 to the manner of meeting our op ponents; while many persona were offended and astonished at the higher law doctrine of Seward, he believed, himself, in a higher law. He be lieved in a higher law of the Creator, and the Constitution must mania and rest upon this higher law." The higher law doctrine will be endoreed by good Democrats when it is used in favor of els,- ery, but in favor of freedom it is abominable In Democratic eyes. SUMMER Courcsarcr.—The fact is notirloo well establlthei for any ono to attempt to controvert It, that moot of the dhiessem which often prove fatal It sum mer, are produced by aim.n use of fruits and vegetables, hy which the atomach le diaordered, the ilverderenged, the blood stagnated and dig etith rendered lo.cun If not torpld. Cholera, Chokes fdorbus, Bilious and Cramp Cholla, Dysentery, Diarrhoea and thch like complaints pr. mlnete and thrive ripen Improper food and often them be come so dthp seated and axed upon the conetlintlen, that the ears:Java and meat Wire mineral medicinmare unable to arrest their programs until the patient la prostrate, and all hope* of relief areended. Who le it that ham not seen fine, healthy infant or adult, selord with one of 'Beau:4- k% diseases abase spoken of, and despite the skill and th ence of mediae' gentlemen literally waste away under their treatment: And how le U. treatment lobe arconnted fort Pimply by the tact, that Lutead of thurbletering some remedy to stay the adling etrength of the afflicted, and at the rime time check the eiaar to Upraises., the rem edy pmecribed aided lft tha exhaust'. of ths Want etrength, and at the time the db.. was maetered the inferrer mu per:skate, and fatting to excite • reaction tho petient Ord from the effect of the polo admlntstered to uproot the 'dimes. Not so with BUDIIIAVVeI HOLLAND BiTEEBB, which arecomposed thtirely of vegetable matter, and whkh here not only proved thesoselvee the best tonic In ue, bat have never failed to comet disorder. of the stomach and bowels when taken...big to directions. In the nom of bummer Complaint. they hero now.. Try them at once. Ithen Couirtffir—The GotioloehighlyConantrated Bur have's Unilthd Bitters Is put op in half pint bottles only, and retailed at $1 per bottle. The great dessmad for Oda truly Celebrated fdrielkino hal induced many Imitations, which the public abouldguerd egalnet puchseing. Beware of lorpoidtionl Bee that nor name Dan the 10.1 of every bottle you buy. 13211JA1d11.4 P.lOl, 30., a Oa., Bdo Nov Wood Nowt, berwoeolst and 71 ot-,Ptttobeogb. P. saldava lattn abbcrttsrtricMis OLD and YOUNG AFFIRM ITS TRUTH 1M11320 Professor 'Wood's Heir Rcstorative WILL PRESERVE, INFALLIBLY, THE promfA and odor of the hedr, If need two or throe Amass ...Ir, to., I.talnelols Aga Perfectly restore the gray; OM" the DWI with asture's own °remittent.. Nan mete It more soft sod bowlful thou .y 011, and preserve this scalp tree from all dim., to tbs wrested age. Stet.. men. Judas, Attorneys, Doctors, Citergymen, professional Men sod Gentlemen and Ltlit. of all cleaves, all over the favor world. beer ea Antim olonyioed. f Mat we d N do notet lay too moth In fie . Rd the en,— PBO/IPBSOR 8. Tire te see, erAMET, my% on hie ...al In .la. Oullsi el.. a, • - s. tacitly bocatidog slay, not on applying Wood'. Halt 14%/110(11liTa his hair .., “covw,ll IU ortgloal CHARLES OAADSW,I3 Ku.. Street, A T., =l= tare raw iftel'r War, turard Into a dark brava EMMaMMiEI A. a. FIATW Ono, Batt, Wei., Pats be to now alety year. old, wad hi. bah and elblallors won two-tbirda gray. hot by the woof two battles of Reirtorative the gray hairs bars disappeared, both on his had and Loa, and I. more soft and elcmy than for twenty flea years puska*. Ms wife, W. the age of fifty two, has mod it with the same effrct. VINLBY JOllBBON.Eaq-, of Naw Orlunaaay • tbs. he lost hie bah by the Yellow Teter, la 1851 Ile used Wood'. llair Iteatcratira. and Ms halr is no. thick sod gloway. 8. /I.IILDDIATON, litiogatoo, Alabseua, says the &Iterative has don* more good in his part of the country. Ile owed It for baldoare, and cow has a O. had of hair. T. I. 1101126. Lrbaloon. Ilentocky, says ha ha. amen Wool'. Ilelr Itratoratire to buoderds of ea ma, and never Imam It to-fail to arcampllsitiog .11 It prologs.. to do. A. J. •LDIC4, Motu/ult.:qv', !Wools, says Le had tea scald had eight yenta, sot was bald, bat by tha liberal Lusa Woold's Hair MOM, tire, he onw bu a rich glom head of hair . 421 , - Bold by all Druggist...and by 0. J. Wood • Co., 414 Broadway, Naw Yorkwod 114, Market shoat, Bt. Lords, 110. Sold lo Plttsbumh by Dr. ODO. H. ICRYBIIB, B. 1.. /ALIN OTOCIE & CO and all Droggists. I W.B TirDONALLD & Aare iiiii ng and Commission House Mo. 102 NASSUA synnET, NEW YORE. Adwartlemmeute twat bw received as dune, far publication In ibis paper. etigidtt Vulcanlssd Ilabbar Elastic Fabrics. THE • UNDERSIGNED HAS NOW IN lawn, at Wholesele, only, slid Le daily receiving from Fectortee In the U. &,wid from the best manulactories abroad, large quantltke of Web., !wooden, Garters, Tape., etc, and will grant Limas Bbetupe with suthollty blether. to import and gall the Vulcanized Rubber Plastic labrica All ouch etountie have • fait MOW) of coy name— without which no goieds of thin ductiption can be legally vended In the United PFetee during Ore lifetime of flood. yeat's Patent. lIORAON 11. DAY, Principal Warelicusa, 23 Cotirtland etreei, auit3td New Tort. _ . F ISH—No. I Mackoral; No. I Balmor.; N. 1 Mesa Ilbad; No. I Mesa Mackerel, In Hit* Whit. Ylell In half barrels, for rale wholesale and retail by FRANOIS'S Family Orcoary and Tea More, Federal Mast, Allegheny N.H.—Geode delivered bee of charge. aol EbIUSTARD--OunuinoColeman'a 1,:41 61asttrd lu 13 pound kegs, laud 4, 6 .ad 10 pound caa, ter .ate at trbolesalo sod total' at FILLNOL'S Family 64.- eery mod 'tea to tore, Federal /divot, Allegbauy. 11.—tloala dellattrad (mon( cbaras. 61/17 rirEAS I TEAS!! TEAS!!! 100 half chaste tine to astla fibs Ooloass, 60 " " Yams apex; 10 " " Ono Powder and Imperial, 10 " " Grange Pecos, 60 alt] Loxes astorted Milts and grades. Latest Im re:stations In store and for gate by .W [LUAUS & JOHNSON, 114 Elialthtleld 46. MANCHESTER PROPERTY—Three fine Building Lots, MI foot front P. Wubtugton otrcot by 126 fat deep to Bontb alley. Prim for tbo arno lots g 4160, or $4OO oa th . for We by an) & OUTIIBIRT 4 BON, 61 Market MM. QCOVILL'S COMPOUND EXTRACT OF SARSAPARILLA AND-STILLINGIA, for the cure of all dleolaes arlelog from bayortty of the blood. A tarp supply Jost nominal by aos. FLZ.ifISO, 009 Gooor MAMA and Marko irtreete. A FRESn SUPPLY OF THE OELE Apa,, DILATED ARTESIAN WATER Dad remind by .9 708. FLEMING, ear. Diamond .d Market .1. TS.PORTSME.N.—.I havo just roceived a J,„ large and fine 11100111.3311 of Hunting Fluke of every deacription. JOSEPH YLIGUING, auo • Corner Diamond and hiatkot Weer. MOLASSES -100 bblr. N. 0. for enle by •o 9 Sl= MITOREGL. WHITE LIM-300 bbls for sale by KIM 41 MITJ/iICLL. SOFT FINIS!" BLEEOLIED MUSLIN.— Axatbar tan ut tho ens soft dotall ILalio.)net redd DUILODYINLD a 0078. GOODS dill selling at reduced prices, at dosing oat male of DIJRCHYULD a 00. DRIED BEEF—IO tiereo3 Dried Beef just JIJ rteo spa fir sale by J. B. OANYJILD 411 Q C. IiAMS-10 toe Sugar Cured name rsed sod to Ws b 7 J. L. UAFfELu & 00. ' • 0•. prime .in store and for ale by J. b. O.II2IfIELD 00. tALUABLE SEWIOIiLEY PROPERTY POR BALS-A new well built dwelling lUtd, well arranged, 7 room on the drat floor, wide bell, portico In front and to th• roe r-6 IMO= on the Ronal ann.- aWO ler, 234 ecru of ground, fronting on the titer, and extendag but to the railroad, mar the dation, for sale by B. CUTHEMB:2 80:1, al Market-ea FOUR AND ONE-FOURTH ACRES—ono are .d • Lalfla timber, . Hater falling taxing, lc., salutetime WWI [tom 611,mberry Nty, near It,* ra11.0.1, foreale by Y. GOTELOBB,T BON, see N 0.61 Ittartot streaL T AKE FISH-20 bbla Mint, fresh caught; .LI . 16 Id do do do do . , 8 do White nob do .do tXI bldo do do do •- do 'Jost rai d on craglianosat and ter Nth by .dj ^ • • .ILDICERY li CO, 343 LUorty duet. oUli CAN—The imet no Inilt 1114 yat tibre tbs public; alisphy yet far WV _ Ersry_oodi mho Alava 7¢4lic ep met its ono "boa! seetlitscits tpfaropural ' - • . , T. J.CZAIe, Ode any wiiialattssolmamaitni. . ME3EMIIMEMM :AM =birds:units: - - - piTTSB (MOH' FEMALDCOLLEG EFS- t C. PEPIIIIISG, A. IL, Preddent. 3. U. KNOWI79, AI M, Tim 'Prealdeut, Amid= by Mee experienced teacher. lostruellom are ghee he oh branch= of a thorough log Ugh, Mewled and ecirntific educators Pupae - for advautagn no offer= to Oil Paintbox, W. ri Coln= and Drawing. Modern Lao. @Awe^. am Wright by a thoroughly podia= teacher. under the =parcel.% of Nor itohlecch. Fall term commence.. Wedneaday the Met day of Atlgrut. lot Circe. Ism giving particulate, apply id the College, arsetle &Ike and book *Crew M. SIC PtION e J'eatawd Prodder. Board of Trustee. H ARVEST ROME PIC-sia A GRAND PIC-2110 WILL TAR[ PLACE AT HOS' SUGAR CAMP, ON TIIURSD4 r; AUOUST 1104, 18.5 g . .ETA goo 4 String .od Brent Ban/ grill be In sttendacee on the pretaleet. Iterresbmente eel kinds on the yound, and soend. ed by JACOB HIM. P. 8.-1 Canal Boat CH loses from Penn street at 7 o'clock A. Id., end Yonne. Band .11 be In attendee,. on the Beet. au4 lAtetds. PUBLIC NOTICE TO TILE CITIZENS OP PITT TOWNSHIP.—The Commbwlonera appoint. *4 by the Court toloquire Into the/expediency and pimple. ty MMus division of Pitt township, will meet for the per• pram of emir appointment on MONDAY, AOOOBT, 15th, ISS9, at 10 n'el‘ww, a. M. CHRISTIAN FINITELY, BENJAMIN KELLY, HENRY CHALFANT. ON CARSON STREET—A convenient two glory dwelling with portico In front, tailor. Oars, ding room, thatch, Lary yard, etc. Lar yarcl, trawl, and in shrubbery. Yor We by 15. COTTLIBMIT k BON, aob No. 616tnrkot Meet, BURNIEW'S COCAINE 8111/NIL"r'I'S COCAINE B URN Ir,TI'S COCAINE liarA compound of Cocoa-nut Oil, &c., for dreallng tha flair Fur efflux., and agreeable..., It I. without en tqual. Ii prenent. the IL iefroto falling off. It promoter its healthy and eirrcur groteth ' It ie not pertoti It (caret no disagreeable odor. It Oen* the hair when hard and deg. ft roother the irrigated *raip obia. It affords the richrti /were. - It remains longest in