IS El tr. • iv s • t 'FOBLZHXD DAILY, BY Pte, &EED & CO., Proprietors. 7. B. PANNULAN, JOSIAH SING. 'l. P. HOUSTON. N. P. REED. - Editors and Proprietors. OFFICE GAZETTE BUILDING, N 05.184 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAP l ER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny Out Allegheny County. ; Terns—D tits.. Semi -Weekly. Weekly. one year...458,E0 (hie year. 112.50 Single c0py....51.50 One month. 75 Six mos.. 1.50 tscoples, each. 1.25 By theween 15 Thine mos 75 0 .-,.. • . 1.15 (tom •st " el . ) . done to Anent. WED? ESDAT;SEPT National Union Republican Ticket. - NATIONAL. .President--ULYSSES S. GRANT. rice sident-SCILTITLER COLFAX. ,PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. • AT LARGE. • G. MOBBIBOIIi COATIS. of Philadelphia; THOS. M. MARSHALL, of Pittsburgh. Diatrid. L am ` W. H. Thutliss, 1& SAmost.SNOW. 3. W. J. POLLOCK, 14. B. P.WAGONSYLLIR. S. RICHARD WILDBY. LS. CHAS. H. MILLER, 4. G. W. HILL _ 16. JOHN STEWART. - S. WATSON P. MAGILL, 17. GEORGE W. ELSZR, 8. - J. H. BRINGHIIRST, 18. A. G. OLMSTEAD' 7. FRAME C. Smarm, 19. lAMBS SILL, 8. ISAAC EMMET, H. H. C. JOHNSON, I. m a ws goopaa, , 21. J. K. EWING, 10. DAVID M. BANG, 72. WE. Fazw, IL Wis._Davis, • A. W. Citsimito. 11. W. W. Hirrcupar, 24. J. 13. ittrrAlr. STATE. Auditor Genera—J. F..HARTRANFT. Burverir General—J. M. CAMPBELL. DISTRICT. amgre.sB, 221Dist.—.TAS. S. NEGLEY. '" 2s4:lDist.--DARWIN PHELPS. dude &wMs—.TMME3 L. GRAHAM I=l i v GEORGE WILSON, M. S. HUMPHREYS, *EQ. F. MORGAN, INCENTMT.LLER, JA TAYLOR, SAMUEL KERR. District Attorney-- .L. PEARSON. Aas!t DistrictAttorney—J. B. FLACK. antra/Ier—HENRY .T.A mIIERT. aninitnioner--JONA.THAN NEELY. eurveyor—R. L., MoCULLY. _ away. Some Director—J. G. MURRAY. CITY. 21fayor;—JARED IL BRUSH. , antrorter--ROBT. J. MoGOWAN. . . Treasurer—A. J. COCHRAN. Eleidquarters Republican County Com. =Rita, City Hali, Market Street. Open every 114. County Committee meets every Wednesday,, at 2 Ws rain on the inside pages of this morning'l GlarrrE-1-Second page : Poetry, Ephemeris and Miscellaneous. Third and Birth pages : Anancial, Mercantile and Commercial and River News. Seventh page: Interesting Reading Hatter. Gold closed in New York yesterday at 1411. 'rill{ DE4TH is announced- of Hon. GEO. E3ummEas, a very prominent citizen of West Virginia, who died at Charleston, on the 19th. COP/1113 of the Electron laws of Pennsyl vania,, digested and arranged, with notes and judicial decisions, can be had -gratuitous ly by applying to the Republican Head quarters in this city, or to either of the Sen ators or Representatives of Allegheny county. - MIL It:,,swarrow denounces as a forgery the letter imputed to him, which urged his Texan friends to insist upon their tinim -1 - right of voting •at the Presidential election. We rejoice to learn something good or so thorough-faced a politician as Young;Greenbacks. Tiny Spanish situation grows desperate for the BoUrbon. Queen who still clings to her sceptre over a nation which detests her policy and abhors her personal vices. If let alone by their uneasy neighbors beyond , the Pyrenees, Spain is in a fair way to inau gurate momentous reforms ill...her public GEN. McCirizex is advertised fOr the Pennsylvania stump, in thenominalinterest of SEYMOW and BLAIR. Having BLAIR already, our Republicans do not need Little MAc's aid to. securOthe vote of the Key. stone. Moreover, we have also McCAL YONT. Insatiate WALLACE ! would not one such suffice ?. Man authority maintains that "the masses of the Southern people love the 'Union and ' would live or die forlit, if -let alone." How litterly tlien, in the coming days, they will 'curse the mad folly of their leaders, the des perate demagogues 'who are playing an other game of secession and anarchy with SEYMOUR and BLArn for their facile tools! TICE Democrats of Pittsburgh in convent tion assembled yesterday, resolved that it was inexpedient to nominate candidates for the municipal offices. They might have added to their resolution "and unnecessary," as they have not the remotest chance of making any combination to defeat the pop_ yl a r Republican nominees at the approach ing election. SECRETARY Eionorghti , pledges to Ala bama all the needful Federal aid for the preservation of tranquility within ler bor ders, and the engagements of the War Of -lee are held to be just and right, by the President and his cabinet. We are grate fully unable to. congratulate SEYMOUR and BLAnt upon any great amount of "help" they may be getting from Mr. JOHNSON'S adminietration. Lwr xo BRAM= fail to pernseevery line of the evidence adduced in the trial now progresting in the Court of Quarter Ses sions against the policemen of Mayor Midanixonz, who committed the =late gross outrage on a respectable htdyof this city, subjecting her to awful abuse for the crime of being in the streets unprotecied after "a certain hour" of night. We reserve our comments for a future oCcasion, not wishing to forestall the action of the jury in deter mining tin; "tiniiittre of the guilt of the ac cusg, 4.10,1-(411". t 4,i hilt • • - • ' .:,••••• • •••, • - -c•-•',41 43 .4A• ~srx - • • IFIECONOTRUCTICWAVIIEr ITWIIESEEV 1 !Li.I3ES4: ;': ' : - - • ;'':, It is impossible to reconcile the sonflict ing theories, and the inconsistencies of fact, i a which ve ;been promulgated in public speecheby, by distinguished Demcalratic lead ers. Gen. BrArn does not hold with his _ unsuccessful competitor for the nomination, Gen. 11Writo, nor do either of them concur with Mr. Jon soreslate Attorney General, HxNeor ISTANIIRRY. It grieves. us also to i - add that neither of these gentlemen state their facts precisely alike, either to each other' or to the actual truth, and that Mr. Bram, conspicuous in his official position, 1 1 maintains an equal superioiity, over those of his compeers above I named, in the dashing soldiership with which he marshals his battalions of falsehood to attack the 1 truth of history. 1 i Our readers are aware that two versions of Gen. BLent's speech in this city,, on Monday night, have been given to the world i —ene version being the corre one, and reporting his literal utterances, appeat i ing only in this journal, r and the of r ing a more carefully guarded oration co ord by the speaker in the privacy o his otel, before an audience of two or three reporters only, on the day preceding, and given to all the press of this city in advance. We judged it expedient, not a little in view of Gen. BLAIR'S manifest desire that he should not be literally reported, to provide for our columns a copy of the spoken address, leav ing the prepared manuscript, of the speech that was not made, for our neighbors. The results of onr wise precaution are eminently satisfactory to our friends and to the public generally, Gen. BLAIR'S especial support ers being alone dissatisfied with the bold assurance of his attempt to palm off upon them an unspoken composition. We propose to criticize such of his argu ments, and_ the statements of alleged fact from which he deduces them, as prominently arrest our attention. In doing so, we may incidentally allude to the marked discrep ancies between what he wrote and what he actually said. _ R 30, 18684 And, first, General Bunt; common with the entire mob of Denitieratic orators, insists that the provisional reconstructiOn, accomplished by President JOHNSON, and which Congress in due time repudiated, was Constitutional in method, ample in scope, universally acceptable in fact, and satisfac tory to all parties, leaving no traces of rebel heresy uneffaced; and securing to Loyalty and Peace perpetual guarantees. General BLAIR insists that General GRANT concur red in this provisional policy, as applied in' the case of North Carolina. Gen. EWING went further in his Zanesville speech, and stated that Congress and the entire Repub lican party were at ,one time committed to the finality of the same Presidential recon struetion. Attorney General STARNER , / goes still beyond this, and argues that this method of reconstruction, concurred in by the people of the Northern States, com pletely satisfied all the legal and constitu tional conditions. To all and each of which positions of these eminent Democratic ex pounders of the Constitution, we replp— Ffret—The loyal 'masses of the North, comprehending as well Gen. GRANT as the great body of the Republican party, (there being many exceptions to the latter, in which we desire to be reckoned,) acqai esced in Mr. LINCOLN'S policy of recon• straction upon certain conditions, as fol-' lows: that Slavery should be coru3idered; forever abolished; that the doctrine of Seces sion should be perpetually abjured; that the personal (not the political) rights of the cit izen should be everywhere equally recog nized, irreapective of raze, color or previous condition; that the rebel war debt' should never be paid or even recognized by either State or National authority; that the Federal war debt, including the obligations for pen sions, &c., should ever be- held sacredly binding; and that the right of representation and of suffrage should be held indissolubly an unit, defining absolutely thereby the political statue of citizens. These were frankly proclaimed by Congress to be the conditions, complete and final, upon which it would concede the sanction of the law making power of the Union to the extra constitutional assumptionsof the Executive. Loyalty,, victorious and supremely power ful, exacted no other conditions, imposed upon a crushed rebellion no other terms. In the same hour and with equal frankness, it warned the vanquished that the rejection of these terms would ensure the stipulation of other terms much less acceptable. Second—Alone of the eleven States, Ten nessee accepted all these . conditions, and she was thereupon immediately restored to all her rights in the Union. (The other States gave only their partial assent; they agreed to the' abolition of slavery, and the XIIIth amendment therefore stands a part of the Constitution to-day; their new State Constitutions,' made under the President's auspices, also abjured secession,—and here they stopped. Why ? Because, just at that moment, presidential reconstruction, in the policy of Mr. Jonrisow, changed front, and assumed the phase of a bitter hostility to any interposition of the Congressional authority. Because the law-making department saw fit to impose' these additional terms, all of which we have above specified, the Presi dent—who had strangely become transmu ted from the vindictive prosecutor of treason to the ardent friend of treason unpunished; whose ambitious purpose, of leading back into the National councils all the hosts of the late rebellion, and of maintaining them there as his own personal adherents, were about to be frustrated by the wisdom of the People—this Executive cast off all disguises and, leaping over the chasm hetween Loyal ty and Rebellion, sprang to the head of the conquered Confederacy and - announced himself the champion of their rightful resist ance to "Congressional usurpations." Was it to be wondered at that Rebellion once more reared its encwraged head, and that, under such a tempting leadership as , that of the President of the Nation, the Southern people should feel all their treasonable hopes:, mitred rejection the_ rttikuunif colulaoiiipealied'ObOvet",(iiidesiibodied in I PITTSBURGH .G " 4 11ftet. iiiis the issue again made betwec.ir, L -iiiyrnf and Rebellion, between the constitutional powers of the law-making branch of thivittotfous Union teverrinier!t, and the refusal of UR) late rebels, sustained .y our'own ExetutWe, to subMit to those powers es exercised. Third—At this point, Congress, the loyal North, the Republican party and General GRANT found - themselves instantly and compactly united: , From that moment, there has been but one question, and while they were on one side, the other was held. by ANDREW jotrasorr, the Southern rebels, the Northern Copperhead Democracy, and by none else. The power 'of the Union ought not to be and has not been thus resisted successfully. _Congress immediately resumed the func tion hriposed upon it by the Constitution: It swept 'away Mr. Jonxson's- assumptions and his bastard creations with a word ; it took measures for bringing about the estab lishment of legal State governments ; if had, no' right to exclude any freeeitizen of those States from the duty of participation in the orderly' and republican reconstruction of their lOcal institutions; it made temporary provision for the maintenance of peace and order in the disorgnnized States by military authority, but in the same act directed all loyal citizens of such States to proceed forth with in makinegoverninentsforthemselves. Slavery, with all its adjuncts, its peculiar privileges and its' peculiar disabilities had gone forever i• here lay the territory of tail States, States in area, ,States in population, States in everything but the possession Of any legally existing form whatever of civil government, populated by twelve MilllollB of 61tizens, all. of Whom had' equai natural rights, which God gave them and which- neither man nor man's government' could takeaway, and none of whom, no not one, white or black, had in the extinguish.. meat of his _rebellion, any political .rights whatever except Bach as ; ha 'might hold un derthe'Constittition and laws of the Feder- 1 al Union. Not one State law remained ex-I taut and valid throughout the South, which could take political rights froth one class confer them solely upon another. Slavery and all that savoured of its cipie had been blotted out forever. The removal of that great foundation made the entire fabric of municipal legislation, based upon its inclu sions and exclusions of political right, to topple prostrate and indistinguishable into i the dus ./ Thus, then, the Congress of the united and loyal people approached this business. They came to deal with twelve millions of natural' persons- within their several 'tate limits; they came to pronounce the extent and nature of, what political rights they might, individually and collectively, enjoy and exercise; they came to say who should be voters and who not, in the preliminary movements toward the organization of their governments; they came to that question of the suffrage,and of eligibility to election by the suffrage, as a question entirely nesr-- nova res—whereupon no local precedent was .binding, no local law supplied any existing standard, and which could only be defined in accordance with the great fundamental principles of Republicanism an liberty. What a spectacle would Christendom have seen in an American Congress, sitting un der the triumphant eagles of a Republican Union preserved at such an unspeakable/ cost, and proceeding to ostracise the loyal majority of these millions at the South, hearkening to the exploded prejudices of ignorance and brutality, disfranchising. the friends and enfranchising only the enemies of the National supremacy,and,with a fatuity as short 7 sighted as it would :have been vio lent in 'this 'era 'of Christ, disarming the Union in the hour and -upon the scene of its dearly bought triumphs, by reinaugumting the inexcusable and pernicious theory of Privilege of Race I No. thank God ! An American Congress had no right, and exer cised none, to 'consider aught but loyalty and.faithful submission to its requirements, when pronouncing the fiat which gave 'a political status to the citizens of the South. It found all loyal citizens, of whatever race or color, equally qualified; of these, and of none others, it made voters for the business in hand. It dealt with Georgia as it would with Ohio or Pennsylvania, rebel in arms, conquered, its municipal institutions self shattered, and awaiting humbly, as becomes , the vanquished, the reinauguration of its political existence by the conquering pow er; to us here, under the same circumstan ces, the Congress of the Union would im pose the same conditions ; it would recog nize no distinction of clas% or race among our vanquished people, because none such are now recogniied in the Federal-lionstitu lion; ,it would admit to the suf frage all loyal and submissive citizens, regardless of ,the distinctions "previously known only to the municipal regulations will& had passed away; that definition of the 'suffrage would complete its functions in the completion of the work of our recon struction, and the whole question would again lapse legally and naturally under the control of our own new municipal regula tions, when these had been thus provided, by virtue of our compliance with the condi tions imposed. Then, and not before, we could, ourselves, once more organized into lawful States, dispose of all political ques tions, the suffrage included, as we might please. And this is what Georgia may do to-day. Not as she has attempted it, in a mode illegal and revolutionary, but by the orderly method of a Convention legally called and elected, and framing any repub lican Constitution according to the will of, her peoPle. Ohio or Penn'sylvania, brought into the Union as Georgia has been, might proceed at once lawfully to/revise that ques tion of the suffrage, and wodd\again settle it as it stands now. Georgia busy do the same; ,she may ~h old a Cont ention to- : morrow; she cannot'restore slagery, but she can, •if her people choose, con. fine the suffrage to the feW, or confer it upon all. At that time And in that way, the' question' is wholly hern to control; until restored to this abeolete : PP:wer, akling4td only by the mulrement of true Repabllcrus. DAY. SE :WED ' ja gartrila&Orb v rxlia ' after a lawful Method, ei•ibnaicipal regula tions must stand as th y were created by the life-giving *Bath of e , Federal Gavel* . . . . meat. This,, neither ore nor less, is what the Party of , the Union demands from the reconstructed South!, ; TT his is all that recon -1 str ction has accomplished . And it has n done so well that can never be un do e, least of all by the revolutionary vio le ce with , which Bain; HAMPTON and tti tr compeers are madly dashing out the b ` ns of a once respectable and great p y against the immoveable and impreg ble bulwarks of the Federal Constitution. hose walls are immovable because they are builded on the eternal foundations of Lib erty and Justice; they are impregnable, be use their stamp' rts are crowned by the ..'ght of twenty-four millions of loyal peo tie, vigilant and courageous to defend them the last. We hold it to be clear that Congress had lawful control over Reconstruction ; that reconstruction was necessary for the peo ples who had no lawful governments exist ing ; that Congress might, lawfully impose conditions; that the l conditions imposed were in their essence just and right ; that, as to the suffrages in the preliminary popu lar action, the only question for Congress to consider' was not the race of the citizen, but . , his fitness for the trust, the loyalty of his motives, of his submission to the terms offered, and how far his exercise of the right would be compatible with the public safety; that reconstruction thus perfected remits all municipal questions to the people of . each State ; that, lawfully , revised and amended as these may choose, the super vision of Congress is thereafter lawful only to', satisfy the Constitutional requirement that all the gtate governments shall be re publican in form ; that each and all of the reconstructed states is the Cole judge of the suffrage now, as absolute in the future as powerless to dispute the results which have preceded its restoration. The Republican party demands only this `—that the ' conditions imposed upon, and now accepted by the late rebel peoples, as spenified In the' utset of this article, shall be.ever held to be, as of right and in fact 1 - they are, a part of the Federal Constitution. They regard all the steps taken to secure this acceptance as no longer inlquestion. They remit Negro Suffrage and all other ques tions of political rights to the States respec twely, and these may dispose of them how f r r and when they please, provided only that their action be orderly and lawful; they may adopt new constitutions every month if they choose, but they must and shall take for that only the lawful and orderly means. I No rebellion, no violence, no anarchy shall be permitted: He e is where the 13LArn Democracy take issue with us. They say that they can abolish such exist ing institutions an are distasteful to them only by violence and revolution, only by the brute force of ani army wielded regardless of laws and Courts by a Presidential Dicta tor. If this be their only remedy, the LORD, help them, for their case is beyond human 1 aid, past human cure. But they in fact have another and most accessible mode of relief. Let them educate and instruct the colored Democracy up either to the point of equal fitness to enjoy political privileges, or to that of contentedly resigning their pres ent participation therein. If the Uegroes are not smart enough to know the value of their rights, they can easily be persuaded to surrender them; if they are too smart for this it is safe to make voters of them, and it only remains to imbue them with Demo cratic principles. i So much for reconstruction and its Demo cratic enemies. A DEMAGOGUE IN DESPAIR General Buarn is unfortunate• in being a Biwa in'his politics. The Democracy are still more Unfortunate in having been utter:. ly debauched and ruined as a party by the fatal counsels which this 'reckless politician has been induced to represent, - in the inter ests of the late rebel South. We would rather speak of him as a General, for his military recordrmprises all of him that is creditable as a üblic man. As a politician he was long since completely "played out" and shelved, with the rest of his family, by the disgusted friends of the Union. His speech in this city on Monday night was plainly made with the hope of arrest ing the same sentiment of disgust which be gins to pervade his new associates of the Democracy. Thine years since, General BLAIR was so completely "used up" as a politician that nothing remained to him ex cept the destruction • either of himself or of his Republican associates. Attempting the latter, he has achieved only the former. It is true thathe may flatter himself in the tem porary possession of very doubtful honors, as a high candidate of that party which he •'once intensely hated, but it may be eonsid ered-as certain as fate that these honors have been purchased by so base and shameless an abandonment of his former principles, by a surrender so unjustifiable and disgraceful to the Copperheads and rebels who use him and despise him, that his inevitable defeat will be followed, if he be still capable of the sentiment of shame, by the keen'est remorse. Being a Brant, he may be above any weak ness of that s rt, but, if he were any body e t) else, the sens 'of deeply irretrievable dis grace' and se f-humiliation which awaits him, would be crushing to the last degree. Imagine the assurance of this demagogue, the audacity of his desperation, when I be could stand up in Pittsburgh, even before the ignorant and brutalized men who com posed a part of his audience, and tell them that "an army- of over fifty thousand men, costing $150,000,000 every year," Was now engaged in keeping , the Southern 'whites in stilxirdination to the blaCks. He Knew, when he said this, that not one-third as many soldiers were now stationed in the South, :and that the total cost of the entire War Department thit year is only $88,000,000. Again, see how coolly he asserted that the National debt had been ineresied; and not "diminished. •.lEyeti monthly: state- '..i .. --!ii,::- . .i;:: af.i. -, i14 . 4 , :i*,' ...... . • ~ :. ..- EMU - • - lie kamif dud this, ain t Mutit have 41 • known that every intellipmt man who heard him knew it to be a falsehood, and that the Debt has actually been lesaened by nearly three hundred millions of dollars. This deliberate mis-statement, with his equally false insinuation that the . National banks derive "some eighteen or twenty millions" from the Treasury, paying nothing back, reminds us that he had better i have stuck to his old idea that "all talk about greenbacks, the debt, banks and taxation is idle." His declaration that the Supreme Court has detided the reconstruction acts to be un constitutional; that the great body orthe Southern whites were loyal at the begin ning of the war; that the negroes were dis loyal from its beginning to 'its end; that Gen. GRANT has continuously approved the policy of President JoEssoN, and other as sertions which might be_specified, were all equally gratuitous( and discreditable to his intelligence and honesty. We have to thank him for his re-endorse ment of the Brodhead letter, and for the Us sue of falsehoods and fallacious reasimings by which he sought to defend it. ( The country needs only to comprehend the fall import of that remarkable document, and of the Democratic platform braided upon that as its corner-stone, and to know that such dangerous opinions are still maintained by the candidate who first propounded them,to be thereby advised of its own duties and am ply' prepared for the issue at the polls. It is noticeable that the whole of his argu ment, based upon the alleged fact of the general loyalty of the Southin people in 1881, but that they were deserted by our own Government, (Bueusi t ilair's,) and dragged by the conspirators into the rebel- lion for their self-preservatien, is i entirely omitted from the written addresi which has been palmed off upon the public as the real speech by our Democratic neighbor of the Post. We are half inclined to forgive the unscrupuldus audacity of Bram in his fab rications of fact, his' puerile weakness of sr] gument, and his shaineless invitation of the people to anarchy and bloodshed, in con= sideration of the candid admission which the Post would not print, but which ar raigned a Democratic administration as guilty accomplice in the first rebellion. Here is testimony conclOsive •antruiwn authority not to be disputed by the Demo cracy; that every citizen should remember: "The people of the South, the loyal men of the South, voted against these - ordi nances (of secession) at the very moment of time the Government of the United States ; were tinning the conspirators of the South—the Knlgl4s of the Golden Circle— and furnishing them with arms out of the public arsenals, with which to put down the loyal men of the South who ; stood np for the government." l This is the _public testimony of General Burn, the present Democraticcandidstefor the Vice Presidency; delivered in a speech at Pittsburgh, September 28, '6B. For the present, we have no Anther' u s e for the Wit ness, unless he is impeached by his present friends. A SLIGHT COLD,. COUGH, Or SORE THROAT May be checked If a reliable remeey is applied atl once, but if neglected very soon preys upon the lungs, and the result may move fatal. The past few weeks of changeable tempera ture and cold rains are Irriitful sources of troubles of the lungs, throat and chest. If You are attacked by s cold. no mat ter how slight, use at once DYL DOUGH SYRUP, Which is an old and well tried remedy for COUGHS, COLDS. ASTHMA, (BRONCHITIS, and all /free tions of the Pulmonary Organs. " - DR, 13.&ROBITS•COUGH SIRUP • • Is entirely free'from any deleterious ingredient, and can be given with perfect safety tj . ) the youngest child. DR. SARGENT'S COUGH 8!E Gives sure and alined immediate relief to boaria ness and that annoying sensation, tickling, in the throat. , If you would obtain a reliable remedy, be sure and call for -- .....V. URGENT'S MUGU SYRUP. If your Drugslet does not keep It, ask him to oet It for you. WE ARE NOT CAST IRON. Cast Iron undergoes marked changes tinder tpe alternate 'action of heat and cold, and the human body is not cast iron. On the contrary, it is a com bination of delicate tissues and fibres, which are exquisitely sensitive to atmospheric changes, and, unless protected against sudden and violent yenta-. tiens of temperature by wise precautions, are sure to be disastreusly affected by them. At this season the difference between the temper ature of night and day is greater than as any other period of the year, and the stomach, the liver, the bowels and the nervous system are apt to receive violent shocks from these changes, resulting In in digestion, bilious attacks, debility. low nervous fever, fever and ague, remittent fever, &c. Sustain and reinforce these organs. therefore, with the purest and most potent of all vegetahlt tonics and alteratives, viz: HOSTETTER'S STOMACH. BIT TERS. The effect of this matchless invigorant is to brace up the whole vital organization, and regulate its action. Useful at all seasons as a means of pro moting perfect digestion, an even and natural flow of bile, and a healthy condition of the bowels and tin skin, it is especially necessary in the Fall when the complain a arising from checked nerspiration are so common. It is found, by those who me in the habit of using this agreeable and unequalled tonic, that It so etrengtaces and fortifies the body as to rends r it proof :gains•. the morbid influences which infect the air during the prevalence of epidemics. DISEASED LUNGS There is no donut whatever that diseases of the lungs, or ulcers Of whatever sort, on and of tue In teroal organs may - be and are frequently cured, and a complete condition of health established. If the elaborative funetions, of which the stomach Is the primary and most important one, are restored to a condition to dolthe repairing of the bum-in system, ulcers or sores,tweether upon the lungs the liver, the kidneys or the bowels, or upon the legs, as is frequently the case, can be mace to heal, and a complete standard of health - re-established. We have frequently seen these results from the use of Dr. REYSE it'd LUNG CURE, a pleasant and agreeable medicine, which will ripen up and carry out the animal economy all effete and used up material. Dr. KEYSER'S LUND CURE Is enrich ed by some of the most valuable plants and herbs known to be useful and curative lo ail deteriorated states of the human blood, and whilst It adds to Its plasma, it at the same time stimalates, gently but effectively, the skin, the kidneys; 'the liver and the glandular system to sufficient action to 'enable the body to take on healthfhl action and eradicate the disease. The sick and afflicted should bear in mind the virtues of thts great medlcinc. and If thoile who arc sufficiently allve to the impedance of, health, will resort to betn the beginning de cli ner s ' h or cold, there would no, failing into and rapid consumption. so liopelepoly tocneuble,, and so most surely fatal. Let any one anllcted with any pultno• nary disease try but oue bottle and t ey will be convinced of the valtie of Dr. letysent t.ung Cure. Hold by the gross, dozen or single bottle, at Dr. KhYdElt`el Great Medicine Store, 140 WoudlM. KR.ThElitts tirusiDit NT OF VICE fur LUNG EXAM_NATIONS AND THE TREATMENT UP OBsTINATE (MEOW MEARES, 1110 PENN BTREET A PITTBIIIIRGII, PA. Wive hours irvsA 9 4.111. UNTIL P. 16 f3eptemtkr 1111311, ; , A WILL informed journal 1n _Georgia, says: begin - tn' nee and feel that' Georgia will, go for Grant after all. 'He will get from forty to fifty thousand white votes. This, added to an overwhelming colored vote, together with the grit daily displayed by the Legislature, will do the work up nicely for the General. The State is now Grant-ed beyond a doubt. At Elmira, N. Y., MOnday, Isaac Statz, laborer, while attempting to prevent a party of ladies being run over on the rail way, stepped on the track on which another tram was coming from the opposite direc tion and was instantly killed. NOTICRS-"To Let," "Ibr Sate," "Losto "Want!,." ."Found," "Boarding," de., not es. maids FOUR LINES sac) will be inserted in these ocdtitnne ones for TW8.1917-PI CSNTS sae* . additional Use FIVB . CENTS. WANTED--=HELP. MrANTED -JEWELLER SALES- MAN.—An experienced Salesman in the Jewelry engines...an gets go d and permanent all nation at IinINEMAN, YUAN & EiIEDLE , S, No. 42 Wirth Avenue. Best of recommendation/ . .. requited. 1- OWANTED -DINERS.-THE MOUNT CARBON COMA/CND RAILROAD PANY. of J-ckson County Mines. are in want of from 50 to 100 MlNEttil, in addition to those presently employed by them. Wagee good; employ ment constant Apply to the autitreigned. at Monon i f awls House,. Plitsbargh. WM. SNOW- ANTED-HELP At Employ -_ :Dent oiaNi. No. 3 St. Clair Street, BOWL, and MEN, for different kinds of employ ment. Persons wanting help of ail kinds cap be snapped on abort notice. WANTED---01IIL.—A good Girl, do general housework. . References re potted! and none others need apply' Inquire at No. 159 NORTH AVENUE, Allegheny City. CWANTED-4411t1G—To do gen.. eral housework. Apply at the GAZETTE WANTED -ROOM. . . VNANIELED GLASS. ALA PAGE, ZELLERS k DUFF WANTED-4-BOARDNRS. BOLIELDING--No. 325 PENN ST. Pleasant furnished front and back second and third story rooms, for gentlemen and wives and single gentlemen. Terms reasonable. WYM WANTED --BOARD ERS—Pleas ant furnished rooms to let, with boarding, atial THIRD STREET. wAirrni 0 A siorais.--Gen tlemen boarders can be accommodated with 1 40,1 board and lodging at Ns. 35 FERRY ST. WrANTED--BOARDEII&—A oii tlelfuta and wife, or two ' single gentlemen, / can accommodated. with ant Ow bosrdtag at - 18 WYLIE BTEICET. Boom Ls a front one, on second floor. and ovens out on balcony. WANTED--AGENTS. A NTE 1)--444E3M—For Na- TIONAL CAMPAIGN 0001)&1.—S/10 Steel Engravings of GRANT and COLFAX, with or with. ont, frames.. One agent took *XL orders in one day. Also, National Campaign Biographies of both, Ea 'cent& Plns,Madges. Medals and" Photos for Dem verats aad Republicans. , Agents make 100 per et. Sample - packages sent post-paid for Send at once AO get the start. Address GOODSPEED d 'OO.. 37 Park Row. N. Y.. or Chicago, Dl. dal WANTS. ,1 0 ., IiIrANTED--TO INVEST.---A Gen- Um= wants to Invest some capital In a pa ng manufacturing establishment; stove or form 'dry buslnesa preferred. Addreas IRON, UAZETTZ OFFICL. WANTED—ROOM---A Gentle man is desirous of obtaining'a tarnished front room. in som private family; in the vicinity of Finn and Want streets. Address . se2S BOX 739, Postoftlee. WANTED--LODG Ell—For a V v large front room, neatly furnished and well ventilated, situated on union Avenue. Allegheny, two squares from street ears. Address BOX M. wANTED-TO RENT—A small I, House or Building. suitable for a light man nfacturing businets, about 55x50. One or two stories. irdetsched from other buildings. preferred. Adoress MANUFAUTUREIII, office of this paper. H D . ANTED-INFORMATION- Concerning the !•WON OPE OF THE LI)." I have sold 50,000 bottles, and have warranted it to relieve and cure all pains of what ever form, acute or chronic, external or internal, deep seated or otherwise, such as Pains in the Side, Chest, Shoulders, Limbs, Joints Neuralgia in the Face and Head, Sick neadache, Toothache Cholle, Cramp. Lhoiera. Morbus , Diarrhea, Cold ; , Congh, and especially Catarrh, and never have I known it to fall. Does anybody know Mat it has ever failed to do all claimed for it? This is what I wish to know. I am willing to legally warrant it to cure, and forfet t TlOO if it .fails. Sold bY all dealers. J. E. 711 , ON, 10X St. Clair street. QTAINIED GLASS. • rAGE, ZELLERS & DUFF. BWood street. FOR. RENT. • rLET -1100 M--A handsomely fainished front, room, reliable for. gentlemen. Enquire e, No. 31 NASD BTISEZT. TtLET -ONE GOOD BOOM, in aixitch building, torah odice...Beat, $209 nuclear. L T E-11 0 ITS E.--Two.story T Brlck. with lye rooms and linished_garret. 98 Grantham street, above Robinson. or par ticulars call at the residence, , r r ° • LET—A TWO STORY BRICK Dwelling, No. , 56 . Logan street.. with ball, )water, our rooms, dry cellar, ac. Enquire or Mr- ROGSKS„ next door. au.16:111 r° LET—HOUSE—No. 65. Pride street, (old Bth ward )or 4 rooms, kitchen Bentnshed attic; water and gat, ran 11215 per month. Enquire on thep r e mises ~' I 0 LET--ROOMS.--The Fourth STORY of GAzErn: (Mee t front ' and bank dling. Splendid rooms, suitable for work shops If tesi.red. Call at GAZETTE COUNTING-ROOM: .. MO LET-Two pleasant unfair nished Rooms, wlih board. suitable fora fam ily, or a gentleman and wife. Also, a few day boarders received. at No. 68 FOUnTil bTREET. Reference required. TO L E T-T HII EE HOUSES about finished, containing ; 7 to 9 rooms each,. on Uaneock street. near corner of Venn, oppo site Christ Church. A most beautiful and conveni ent situation; wide space and suade trees In front: free from noise smoke and duct. Inquire at 277 PENN STREET. PAGE, ZELLERS & DUFF, ti LASS Id AN UFACTII RE RS. FOR SALF, "VORSALE-MULES.-Eight (S) LARGE DRAFT MULES. Reason for sell ing. want of use. Enquire of GEO MOORE & CO.. Brick Makers. ead of Bedford Avenue. Pittablb. VOA'. SALE-A NEW BRICK HuUSE. of seven rooms, with w.ter and gas; also lewd cellar. On Pride s•reet. near Pennell- Tanta avenue.. -Enquire of W. WILTON, on the premises'. FOR SALE—HORSES.--Two Sad dle Horses; two pairs nice light Harness Horses; and two large Houses. is 1D b • sold at low prices. Inquire at CH AXLES' LIVEHT STABLE, corner Sandusky street and South Common, Alle gheny. FOR SALE—LAND.—One Dun- DRED AND TWENTY ACitro of the brat land for gardening or country residences, situated on the Washington Pike, 114 miles south of Tem perancevil.e. Win be sold in lots of any size, to 'nit purchasers. Rennin at 630 Liberty street, or P. C. NEGLEY, on the Premises. KlegOß BALE —A Beautiful Build. INC. OT. containing 4 acres, with the priv.. e of 6 aces, situated on Mount liope, at A oods Run Station, P. Ft. W. A TC. R., adjoining proper ty of Alex. Taylor, Wm. Nehon, Wm. Richardson and oth• re. This is one of the most commanding views in the vicinity of the to • cities, and within 3 minutes' walk of Ous station. lenquire - st 351 la. erty street, or at the reeldtnee of Mr. ALEX. TAY. LOIL near the premises. . . SALE—R&RE CHANCE.— PLumniNG AND GRB FITTING ESTRB LIdHSIENT.—A. good stand anti store. together with li:stares, good will, Re.. of a PLUMBING and GAS virri NG EST a.BLISIIM g.rT. doing a goOd business, is offered for rate. The above is situated in a good place for business. Having engaged in other business. the proprietor offers this establish ment at a bargain. gor particulars, Re., call at No. 106 WOOD STURM. l'lttsburgh, Eon SALE--1,.000 kounds of old TYPE. Apply at the G AmaTTE COUNTING- OANDWATES Or CITIZENS) TEMPERA.NCE • CANDIDATE. IPOII COUNTY CO ISAAC CHARLES, , Otirtb Ward, ,a)leghear'Cliy, hoisdnated CoalteaUva, Atipst NM. 1414011111 Ha ,_ U ~ .#i.'s ._. -