~.._ • ,- . 7.. ___„:_., ,„,_ ..,...:. ,„....„ • ~..: t ~ k., /«.• / k it , , 'F' w-------._ \‘‘%. •\.,,. \ K 4* - : „ Tr , : - ,0 ,. ~. ~..%-; .if _.. ~.'',., , t _ .i 4 * , k -.0., ~ ...„...,-.-- . . E . 7 2 '4 - ~.. ‘ '' 1 \ • V Z -7 4 i.. Q , e'_. •%, ~; , ...,... - , 0.. , • 1 .,. •,,,, - .t. # „,-, .:-.r. 0. .: ~ ....... :..., zz,-, ......!..,,, ~- .-It•- - - Ss:os:' ~. ' - + ..' . - ' 1 1 11 11 .111 , -' 4 1 ''' ' , .. 5. N....• 2,... ' .111 4- ,- :... '. . . *-, 2 • t .., a -, • - -1- , ....- •••••••••,-7.•• '•-••••--- -,. . 0 . . -....., 1 .. . -.-: :,,,,:---- :„,.., . k•-- --, ''''---, -'-'-: ;„,- ---''' .. -,... ~ -'--,,- ...0 „„ ~..- 4, - 4 -,- - ,#- . e ,e -- e :.- - __—_- _.:,-,.,_-- .-t s PA. .. • .. •.-ViliNit N ''' , Z , -:.'''.- -... ...::'S .0 4 .'"--- t 4... ... k, , i''' -.:4 1 . .... 5.,. • - •.v z.......- -.......- ' -.--• . ---... ~ ~,,, ...t - 4.' z..-:' , -..-. • , ,,4-.. - ..: 'l - -- .....:''''..: ' ~--.;.--_-_, . ' - 1 4 ! . ---'` '. ‘,„ .. ' • ,:-. -,_-,• ....: „....., . ~...... . -,... ...., v.-" - ''' .-.. ~.........,.... ~..... . 2 ,„ • - -_------..----- -..---.., - /S--,' - ----7 , - ..... , . - ---,---- ----- Bit GEORGE BERGNER. ilittbitaL DR. JOHNSON MI-13:1-aTIZVC+CO1=1.311 LOCK HOSPITAL rAs discovered the most certain, speedy and '..JL effectual remedies in the world for DISEASES OF IMPRIMENdE Roma 111 SIX TO Tvrnva HOURS. , NO MERCURY OR NOXJ )17S DRUGS. A Ours -Weivasted, or No Marys, sn from 'One . is nos Days. Weakness of the Back, Affections of the Kidneys and Bladder, Involuntary' ; die charges, Impotency, General Debility; Ner ',imamss, Dyspepsia, Languor, Loaf Spirits, _ Confusion of Ideas, Palpitation' of the art, Timidity, Trembling:, Dimness of Sight or Gidaiiiess, Diseacie Of the .Head, Throat, Wise or Skin. Affections of the Liver, Lungs, Btcmach or Bowels—those terrible dtiorders 'arising from the Solitary Habits of Youth— those secret and solitary practices more fatal td their victims than the song of Syrens to the Mariners of Ulysses, blighting their most bril liant hopes or anticipations, rendering marriage ; &0., impossible, YOUNG MEN Especially, who have become the victims of Solitary. Vice, that dreadful and destructive habit which annually sweeps to an= untimely grave thousands of Young Men of the most ,exalted - Wants and, brilliant intellect, who Wight oth r erwise have entranced listening Ben .ates with the thunders of eloquence or waked :to ecstasy, the living lyre, may call with full confidence. MARRIAGE Married ZOOM; or Young Men contemplat ' bag marriage, being aware of physical'weak tams, organic debility, deformities, dm., speedily mixed. He who places himself under the care 'pi _Dr. 3. may religiously confide in his honor *Os gen tleman, and confidently rely upon his skill as a Physicisui. ORGANIC WR.tMNSM Immediately Cured, and full eager restored. This distressing affection—which renders life miserable and marriage impossible—is the pen alty paid by the victims of improper indulgence. Arming persons are too apt to commit eicesses irony not .being aware of the dreadful ooxise- Trances that may ensue. Now, who that. lderstands the subject will pretend to deny that ;the , power of procreation 18 lost sooner b those falling into improper habits than , by,_ the e prp dent. Besides being deprived the pleasures of healthy offspring, the;most serious and dcstruc tive symptoms to both body and mind arise. The system becomes deranged, the physical and mental functions weskenei, loss of procreative power, nervous irritability, dyspepsia,-palpita tion of the heart,- indigestion,.constitutional debility. a, wasting of the frame, ,cough, con sumption, decay and death. 017101 No. 7 SOME Faros grawar, Left hand'side going from Baltimore street, a few doois from the corner. Fall not to observe name and number. Letters must ba paid and contain a stanip . The Doctor's Diplomas hang in his office. DB. JOHNSON, Member of th. Royal College of Surgeons, Lon don, graduate from one of 'the most eminent colleges in : the United States, and the greater .part of whose life has been spent in the.',htlspi tab of London, Paris, Philadelphia and else where, has effected some of the most astonishing oures that were ever known ; many troubled with ringing in the head and ears when asleep, great nervousness, being alarmed at - sudden sounds, bashfulness, with frequent blushing, attended sometimes with derangement of mind were cured Immediately. '•nrw These are some of the sad and melancholy effects produced by early habits of youth, viz weaknessof the back and limbs, pains in the head, dimness of sight, loss of muscular power, palpitation of the. heart, dyspepsia, nations irritability, symptoms of consumption, &a. ..15.nuram:V.—The fearful effects on the mind are ranch to be drmied—loss of mernoty, - cos• fusion of ideas, depression ofspirits;•evil fore= boding+, aversion:to society, self distrust,' love of solitude, timidity, &c., are some ,of the evils produced YOUNG KEN Who have injured themselves by a certain practice indulged in when alone, a habit fre quently learned from evil conirmdozuf, or at school, the effects of which are nightly felt, =wren when asleep, and if not oared madam rineirriage impowilble, and destroys both mind and body, should apply. immediately. What a pity that a young man, the hope of ..his country, the darling of his parents, should '-be snatched from all prospects' and enjoyments -of life, by. the consequence of deviating, from -the path CI nature arid indulging in a certain ?motet habit. Sufi) parsons !MU, before op:dom :plating • . ißeflect that a sound mind and body are :the most necessary requisites to promote connubial happiness. indeed, without these,the journey thrdughlife becomes a weary pilgriiike : the prospect hourly darkens to the view;the mind becomes shadowed with despair and ilted with the melancholy reflection that the happiness of another becomee blighted with our own. DISBAR OF lIIPEDDIME. When the misguided and ;imprudent, votary of pleasure finds he halimbibed the seds - of this painful disease, it too often happens that an illtimed sense of shame or : the read of .dis cover), deters him from : applying to_those who, from edacallon and' osspostability, can; alone befriend him. He fella into the hands, of igno rant and designing pretendera, who, incapable of curing, filch his pecuolary substance, keep him trillin4 month after month, or as long as the smallest fee can be obtained, and in: despair leave him with ruined health to : , sigh over his galling disappointment, or, hi t,he MSEI of the deadly poison, Mercury, hasten the constitn- Mould symptoms of this terrible diseme, arches affections of the. Head, Throat, Nose, Skin,-eto. programing, with -.frightful rapidity till 'death' puts a period to his dreadful sufferings by send ing him to that undiscovered country fro tt i whence no traveller returns. INDORSEMENT OF THE PRIME/. The many thousands cured et this institution year after year, and the numerbuslmportant surgical operations performed by Dr Johnsen, witnessed by the reporters of the aippere and many other papers, notices -ofAhich have appeared again and again before - 41%0W, be sides his st a nding as a g.! tlerean of, cs6kacter and reepoubibility, is s sufficient , ginsiants4 ;to the afflicted„„, SKIN. DISEASE spElarLy ' Mice No t , south Frederiik pali g Etitorapt ADDRESS OF MI Union State Central Committee To THE PARPLII OP PENEBTLVANLS. : The day is rapidly , approaching Upon which you will-he called to choose between rival cm didatee for the high offices of Governor of the Commrinwealth,. and Judge.of its Supreme Jo , ,aicial tribunal. To the one -is to be committed the executive power of your great and noble State, and to the other a weighty voice in .de doling questions closely affecting your most al.; cred right of persons and Of property. To an intelligent exercise gfyour sight of suffrage, it is very neocessaryitbat you should clearly understand the ditlen.nce between the party whose nominees are Andrew. G. Curtin, and Daniel H. Agnew, and the party whose nomine e are George W. Woodward, and Wal ter H. Lowrie. It is, therefore, in obedience to a custom, wise and time-honored, that you are addressed by the official representives•of each organization hi behalf of their respictive prin ciples and carididah* Itis not vague commonplace but solemn truth to say, that there never, was a political coetest in America whose issues, were so irriportatit'and We o so vital to the f th'llepublie as, are, those involved in the pending' canvass., In other days' we prudently occupied our minds with qiiestions of State policy, local alike in their interest and their infiCuence; but to day the citizens of Penn Sylvania ascend 'to the higher and' broader ground whereon the nation struggles for its life, and.the ballots of freemen-lvere never more weighty with great consequences than those now resting in their hand's, containing, as they prlbably do, not only the queeton of civil war at our own homes, not only the fate of our Constitution and llition, but the destiny of free government throughout the world. It. is a source, tnerafore, of firofound all with all reflecting men, that: while all the gentlemen in nomination bear characters alike honorable and without stain, thus entitling them to the fullest presumption of honeat mo tives and conscientious convictions, ret the lines of division are drawn With such ditinct •ness, the policy proposed:is so plainly different andthe principles avowed so radically hostile,: that no man of ordinary intelligente i need :hesitate in his choice. ' The history of America before our civil war began is react and lutosfn of all 'men. In the years of oar colonizatten we were obeditnt to the plain purpoee ofiGod in reserving CI core tineat as a*theatre yid - 10411kt Wineify of the human mace for self-governdientiffagld:b6 fully and feitly,tested ; and •tho nigh W I" entrusted the great experiment in ;civiirfation 'fitly builded their infant States iiportllie prin ciPles of civil and religlous liberty; -.. When the condition of colonial dependency ceased to protect these principles, the act4tered settlements came together in the presence of a common danger, and in the interest of,*man freedom, declared their independence. ; ' : Joseph Warren, protomartyr of the Revolution, wri ting, just before his death, to Quincy, says: "I am convinced that the true spirit of liberty was never so universally diffused throug4altratilts and conditions of nun on the face of toe 4410 as it now is through all North America."' In In this spirit and for this cause oar fathers endured seven weary years `of `unequal warfare, and that their children to the third and Fourth generation should understand the purpose of the great struggle in the 'Calm peace which fol lowed victory, they Sideinftly engraved it above the entrance to the sources of the fundaniental law, declaring itto be, "To secure the blessings of liberty to the peop/e.and to their posterity." The Government of the 'United States, thus plainly established to preserve the liberties of its people, contained an element of weakness and discord in the legal recognition : of the existeece of slavery. It was beliiiiid; however, that this evil would soon dietti ti titi; and Jeffer son vied with Franklin In his Afforts to secure a result earnestly' desired ail gcod men. In the course of a few years it was confined itomi nalli!, as it had long really been, - to the States lying south of the line of Mason and and patriots' of all parties rejeicedle' the hope of its speedy'and total disappearanCe. , This reasonable hope Was. destinedfo disap pointment. In 1820, ,the first great concession was demended by the slaieholding 'interest at the hands of the National Legidature, and for the sake of harmony Misonri was admitted into the ;Union as a dime State.ThOnfotiowed ether and greater, demands"in favor or Silvery; urged with increasing arrogance.; ' and; not iiy,libetanling the wonderful prosperity • Which, liken benediction; attended-the North, and ttie stagnation and decay which began, to, cover and cling like a curse to the lands hy-edforced and unpaid tabor, a party, small in numbers but great in the intellectual powers of its lead pia and deveted to the defence and pihtiagan diens of Afneripan slavery, by the 'free and al ternate nee.of fisttery and threits,,Withe Obe dience to its requirements from' the unwilling band° of American statesmen. - . What followed it kAtice-told tale. The ad= mission of new slave States; the annexation of Texas; the war with:, Mexico; the conscquent accession of greet territories in the Southwest; the compromise legislation of 1850, including lid Fugitive slave livt; the repeal of the l!dis sottri Compromise; the lawlesainvaeion 'of Kan sas by the taints of the Southern bolder, with its attendant slaughter of peaceful Notthern settlers; and the culminating efforts'of_the Ad ministration of Mr. Buchanan, to force by .;the bayonet pre-slavery Constitution; whnse pro *talons were disgraceful to Civilised human na ture; upon the"heroic; people of that devoted Territory. Virbat were all these brit thesun ceadve steps the long and pail:dal &went, whereby the conservative,. law abiding people of the North Vainly endeavored to appease and even to satisfy the constant aggressions of their slaveholding:bretbrent The politicafhlatory,. of America for forty Years is written inthia bike statement of conces *WS* , slavery. We - had done much to please friends. We had surrendered,~ g almost Without ,the forms proteld, the chief execu tive Armes of the nation to •t 4 o:.r their _keeping. They were filled either by themselvel, or by , those Northern gentlemen- whom they gra cionsly selected for the merit of prompt and unquebtlening obedience to their commands. The jadicial,brench of the Government, en trusted with :the construction of: the Federal charter, and 'the consequent abrogation, when necessary, of all liaise, State national, was composed isf . judges of their choir,. The represieWtativiss of `the nation at the Qourts of EntopeJtadi- been treble:F*4th their tannings. etureonifervative intriblit of the National tire imacutoiniistionaby under their port.•. troll -, 1221111=1 HARRISBURG, PA., TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER: 1863. We had parted with many plain rights to sat isfy them. We endured the utter denial of free speech, and even of unmolested travel in the Southern State 3. We waived the protection of the Federal law, which should have covered us with a shield, everywhere beneath the Fed eral flag, and consented to receivo instead the jurisdiction of radially mobs, bred and, fostered in slavery. We saw without complaint the Korth made a vast hunting ground for fugitives from bondage. :We accepted, witk i meekness the constant lannteof our social andlioliticial infe riority: WC Permitted our representatives to be thieatened with personal violence in the streets of the capital. We stifled our juSt and sacred wrath when a Northdria Senator, graced with all generous: vulture, and beating the corn= mission of a free Commonwealth, was beaten. by slaveholders to the verge of death on the floor of thp Senate, for words spoken for liberty - in debatit.: Enduring alfin patience, for the sake Of peace and union we satin quiet obedience to the law, unwilling • but submispive pupils, re ceiving lessons. of ohivalriw honor from - Mr. Brooks, and of chivalrib manners from Mr. Wigfall, of loyalty from Mr. Davis, and of honesty'from Mi. Floyd. At last,,in the year of grace 1860, the Con- stitution ifforde'd to the eitizans of the land the privilege of ,again expressing by their votes their choice of national rulers. They exercised that right, quietly, peaceably, and in Perfect obedience to the forrn and spirit of all our laws.' The lawful discharge of this high duty, im posed upon 1111 good men by their country, was declared by a few bad, bold men to be jii.t cause of civil war. This proposition:; involved, of course, the startling doctrine that'goithern men must vote in the interest or slavery, or itsiriends Would appeal from the ballot to the bullet, de stroy the Constitution. dissolve the Union, and deluge all the land with its Most precious blood. It must be remembered that the Senate; with out,. whose consent no law can tier. enacted, was pro-sieVery. The Supreme Court, against whose' judgenient no law, if enacted, could avail; was pro-stavery. There was, therefore, 'no danger • possible to the institution ; and it was simply because once in forty years the people bad law- . fully chosen a President who wits , believed to be oppleed to frirther concessions to elavery;.tbat an embittered and malignant faction, who had been long nursing their treaeon, declartd their purpose to cause to flow all terrible eviltif, /flow ing in the train of this cruel war, - which has west ' (id our substance, and placed our Chiefest trees ores beneath the seals of clay. The utter ground-- lessness of their complaints, and the vraiat of evert a decent pretext for their threatenoVerime I against their country, was - p'aced in foil Ifiefore the world when Alexander ;H. Stephens spike to the peoplei. of Georgia those meluora ble worde, whicb history will alwaYs retncluler,, seat* with `ftre seal 'of lasting condentruttion this wicked and.causeless rebellion: WHAT EIGHT HAS THE NORTH ASSAILED ?g WHAT INTEREt,T OP THE SOUTH - HAS BEEN INVXDIUX. WHAT JUSTICE Has BEEN DENIED? OR WHAT CLAM yOUNDSD'ONIUSTICROR RIGHT HAS BEEN WITHIIINA4 CAN EITHER OF YOU' TO -ILLY NAME ONE GOVEien MEN TAL ACT OF WRONG DELIBERATELY AND itaroasyr DONE BY THE GOYEENHENT AT WASHINGTON OF WHICH THE SOUTH HAS A 5/0111 TO COMPLAIN? I croutttsraz AN arrawsal" While the ablest statesmen of the South were endeavoring with words like these to stay the hands of traitors raised to disisbnor -our flag, to destroy_ our Government, and to afflict us with the awful sufferings of civil Strife, the onorable George W. Woodwardi. then and how a Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsyl vania, deliberately disrobed himself Of ills ermine, and walking from the seatof judgment to the platform'of`a great meeting assembled in Independence Square, ground, sacred to free dom, spoke, and'ever and beyond his audience to the maddened partisans of slavery, ripe for revolt and battle, these words of sympathy with their b.aselets and pretended wrongs: "EVEREWHERE IN THE MOUTH THE PEOPLE ARE BE GINNING TO LOOK OUT FOR THE MEANS OF SEEP DE FENCE. COULD /T BE EXPECTED THAT THEY WOULD BE pronrysatarr TO SUCH somas AS HATE OCOGNIE ED? —THAT Trucr'wourxr STAND IDLE AND SRN: SUGiI MEAeURES CONCERTED AND CARRIED FORWARD son THE ANNIHILATION, SOONER OR LATER,' OF THEIR FEWEST'S/ lit FUCH , EXPECIATIONSOF IN- DuLoRD, ABB NoX IHAYLS4ABLE ; - And theseWoisis ,of encouragement eiagge rating the Soares of strength of which: they. biaaved.most : "Wins YOU beams AIL IN ; ONE GLOWING PICTURE Or NATIONAL PROSPERITY, RE-, MEMBER THAT COITON, THE. PRODUCE OF 'SLAVE LABOR, BILE BEEN ONE OF THE ININEPENBAI3LE EU; MEETS in ALL THIS PROSPERITY—IT 'MUST BE AN INDISPENSABLE ELEMENT IN ALL OUR FUTURE PROS PERITY. I SAY rt. stun BE." And these sad words, sounding like' an invi tation to treason : . " The law of se includes righisof property as well as person, 4lnd id appears to me there must be a time in the progrias of this conflict if it indied;is ir repressible, when stavehoklere may lawfully' fag back on their naturatright4,-and employ in defence o their property:whalsiier means:of protection they possess o; ern command. T hey.who push owthis copfleSt have conveswed one or more Southern States that it has . al ready come." ' And these sadder words. of attempted con secration of that , fearful combining of 'crimes against God and ell his oreatures Which Is call ed Amerkientialavery: "The provideiwe of that good Being who'has watched over us from the begin-: sting and saved us from external foes, has so ordered' our internal relations as to make negro slaverysin in cakulabA -biessing7to au. MOMr said study the Patriarchal ararkigettical institution, mill see r, the prineiA,of human bondage divinely sanctioned if not divinely iirdzineol.' , The addcasethias ,delivered Went,forth with the added ,Weight,nfludicial sanction, and; aided by many others Of 'kindred import, produced its legitimate eff ct in coriyinbing the traitors who I had hesitated that a large and influential Lion of the Northern, peoole were with them in spirit, rand only a gaited fitting opportunity to become ittVte accomplices In their tremion.-, Then followed ienecessary sequence thelbem hard. nierit of Fort Sumter, and the opening of that greit historic drama Whose shadow; after two weary years of sacrifice: of treasure And of life, still darkens all our land; who* sorrows have reached all our hearts, and whose terrible 1 consequences to the caueenf American ciesnoc-, racy, aid of Christian civilisation itself; s , et we. very dimly` , For those words, and only for those Words,- thus early, publicly and 'distinctly' Spoken, ten dining sympathy, encouragement, invitation, consecration even to the cause of the rebellion, Judge Woodward has been plat-d tirimina tion as candidate for Governorof Penney Iva and the opinions there eapressidhave been its tinctly reaffirmed, - auil . tirade the, preeent forM of big suppoi,ters; thef.:Aon; J. Biddle, their - rigida(revisit/tattle, in~ the recent address to the people-ti 4 tbe' blaring ' this speech to have be" , 4MritOld_ by auSae ite*. neap as a ster#, kiwi** statesinankel , v in 4 WearYi: livery of the good old Democratic party ,• aid rebellion waged in the interest of an arishrracy of hlaveholders, thus openly avows its opinions, and in manifold ways, by speech and presS-:—by the secret oaths of a treasonable conspiracy—by a i app'eals to the prejudices of ignorant me by calumnies against our brave soldiers and ilers -by denial of their rights of suffrage, dby constant misrepresentations of thelairas and re sults of the war, endeavors to attain its p rpose of assisting the armed traitors whq are striking' deadly blows at`the heart of the Republi . ~ Oar opponents well know that thei only strength of the rebellion consists in its , mmilitary Pgwer. Therefore, they oppose " every m saute Which tends' to strengthen the national Stades, arid-they-Su pr.)rt every measure whicli-topds to .uwaken them. If the General. Goirersment proposes to-require white men , to (l /ended,. mili tary service, they Appose it se Byle 4 OnotiPakbal j ittd, and oppressive. If the General over meat proposes to require black nien-to reticle rani- . tary service, they.oppose it asunconstitn o and favoring negro equality. If the.-G neral Government proposes to require, red en to render military service, they oppo \ it as un zonstitutional and contrary to t , ,e usages of civilised warfare; .and they have tans fadfailed to discover among the races of mankind any , whose skin is of the proper constitutions color to permit the Government to use them to shoot rebels and traitors. - t Opr opponents denounce the arrest of 41" loyal persons as violating perannal.,:liberty., They denounce the suppression of :disloyal; p ctiaes r i as t indiciting milltaly tyranny. Then - wart the needed reinforcements& our wasted a,ukieti r and the collection of , thc-national revenue by base appeals to the basest impulses of mei, and the inaugaration of riot, rapine, and mdrder, bringing the tennis of civil war tO out! very. hearthstones. Thus, by paralyzing the strength. and vigor of thEumailed hand of the nllticini i ihev.giye . eißntial,a ' ld- and o?mfort to tlite nat tloiirs enennies. Their' cardinal principlis to ernharrass the Federal Administration in II Its 1 merisnrei for the vigorous prosecution f the conflict,for the prompt suppression of .t e re bellion, And the swift , punishment of tr Ake. . it is needless to say that their triumph in - the :peuding canvass would potent' the war. : Lt.'s confessed at llici3mond that the only relief af forded to the darkness and disasters whih en bhrcud the rebel capital, and the only e °our `agemeirt, to continue a hopeless contest, Comes_ with the occasionargleams of successes of, their. Northern allies. ..." . .- : • . Oa all el her - sides despair awaits them. iThey aged , e they have to dig through a solid i see two thud ' s of ..their territory oouquered and • vein of eilver four feet thick .before they 'am' held in subjection,. New Orleans returned to its reach the gold. . ' • ' sllegiance; the Missisiippi open ; all their As Exciantsxx 1344intast.e-it,,tarepoitted that harborsblocka&d ; Charleston assailed; Retie- ,the•Prieleese of.ArMonniele, when flaked ..i/iy the crane and Burnside moving in triumph, mid the, „prince et-Wiles lot /Am tay4lOmirtlaga, pro great. streae : yo lbich embraced . rockethed half ' p ,d ttp, grant it • for twenty Ryty, attiflings. the Union-narrowing to Georgia, South aroll- which; said she is equali t yen know, to na, and portions of North Carolina anilVirginhi. one sovereign and one kw( I gland , .4 kade ef:::Wilatiogt — cur, 114.0.,, Ili mis The end is not distant. .Bean only be delayed , ' Tit a .. 1 /1.0 , iiitteiway bolt Piled with the bodies cf the erabiy inefficient.' Tberts...onktuely tett; brave men who willlngey tesie the tor their its on the sMtion, and thsefecilities e of getting tron er try w , _by the r tes ta t eoo umPil of Noithern 11 3 11 ?. 2 ii!s' in and - , out are . so great that regular lines: ot s ith t . approaching eleetteres. of fo Nis ' it V th • d dlt . Such triumph. would revive the desperate , ~tend o' f -deParture as though no interference was seu a Verise . ea ays ae ours , . _. . drooping fertemes of the rebelg, inspirit their axe eted, Amick ore eseetzse-It Is announced'- In the demoralized and deserting armiee / ;and Pined° '- e ' ..,. .,' their rulerato renewed efforts to getheran hurl new levies upon our defenders in the. field.. ' New Orleans c°Eit'i'ePorldence of the Chicago s- It follow necessarily that the triumph of our. Tunes that an attefkon Mobile will. shortly be made by three corps, übder command of 'Gener opponents, lry prolonging the war, will render necessary renewed conwriptions and increase-the bur- all Franklin, Ord andillenen r the whole under d= of taxation. Qiie way only leads to tiishort 'the dhectionof Gen; Ranks. Admiral Fairegut war and a lasting peaae, and that is the glorious ie.t° command the fleet, which!expectedto re ,paill along which Roomette is marching,. and duce the harbor deteocal. , .. , Repko, , *Kt Grant, and Meade...: Eveeything CONTILEIMTIONs Pole Lkinimial —Thtee thou which MIAs directly or indirectly le weaken or sand dollars have been ecittributed by the citi embarrasithese blessed peace makers is )ccini- zensmf Ramos City for the neuefit of the Law. ,fortiqg to the enemy, inducing them to refuse ranee suff,rem, ana, a thousand from the Tinton submission to. the. laws, and to continue, to League, which was ell sent immediately after waste more of our treasure and murder Other the massacre." Ger.'sWing'it order, No, 11, is of our sons. The future will lay the. regional- producing good 'effect ; numbers of rebel mo bility of lengthening this horribleconetint; with patbizers are leavingKlaily.. t; . , . whatever of sacrifice its continuance involves, Tun Desire:—,The report:that the draft was upon those Northern men;who , supply its • want no t t o b e en f orce d in the State ow l a tm .. of bullets by their ballots, and • by tbeir Byrn- true. The draft, it is said, will not be enforced pathy nerve its arm for further blows.. west of Pennsylvania until it is finished in the To these . principles ,, to this policy, to the efe isn part of the cerintry: After this' It will results they, so plairdyinvebre.. of along war„ of be anforcedtin all the : estern Btates. It is'es: other drafar, and of more heavy 'lava, as well* to timat.. that, ontefifth of the draft .of ,the first the candidetes who represent them; the .loYal clam will Yield 100,000 men, end bring - back at least 20 000 of the 116,000 - who'hiti;e departed men of Ramey !yenta. are irrecoocilably oppcsed. Our platform is brief , and plain and coin pre- the mili'ary service of the United Slides within heady°. We bslieve that the will of the , Peo - the past year and a half. - ..„' - - pie, lawfully expresoed, ii the supreme law; that „ te .no appeal can be permitted from votes to bay. Ricarirri FOR NIGRO Rsamarre.--Theresees •o nets,, and that when'ench appeal is made, the to be a renewal activity in the business of gath e only hope for the Repiblic la to crush it by force eriog recruits in the. inferior of the, State, for the negro regiments noir in course Of ornimisa of arms. We therefore snpport the war without Hon in this city. One hundred and eighty-ftve ilimitatiens or conditions, as the only meansn of , came in slew days ago on the'Pacifiellailnattd. 'preserving the National Integrity. We honor and Suetain our heroic brethien in I rber were Pat aboard of trains at , Sedelite and were gathered in ,thelesbilay of that plice.— arms on land and sea, the unselfish heroism of whose daily lives surpessea all that is .written in The musterinii'affente oat thens - take'tt, broadly;. view 'Of their duties , and 'daretNraste the knightly. romance of the middle age. They oeff deserve well of their country, and we desire that time inquiring whether the negr Wong to the.banner of the 'Union shell ,carry to . its de- loyal or disklYal-Allesters•—&. Louis REPubkoht. fenders, wherever they .may . be,. t ht of' PiikelYoortirmtiSiliiiiiiiii. The Kreixaiile suffrage the inestimable ptivileges of freemen. idtys ;We infortned that a lar ort ig wane We heartily sustain Abraham Lincoln, bre --,-Reemier. bet of conies of, Hendersonville N Car resident of the United States, in hie efforts to --- th e • - e. -, . . .:.olina, runes are sent.to the , varions.hospitals of suppress this wicked revolt against the laws he ' this city far gra tuitorisclieuration: We have has sworn to eeforce. and ' ** au mot seen a copy of tharener, nut-nude dit For the vigorous use of all men. , d ts a reprint of the Reileighs&ohdrunserecitrietrac mass permitted by the ,usages of ' civirze tt slam. With nineteee retailtab liquor ts nations, . hi; reach. peace through victory; for on the unequalled maintenance ,of the liehments national in successful overlainfa .-.. .., ~.3 e , and no lack of reconstruction appels tne soldiers of this credit, without parallel in history; for the ad- • e__ - .. . vity have plenty offoodto demoralize if not mirage frankness with ,. which the .. Preeitient , - counsela`with 2 the' people, 'audios the suaties to entiugate them. • - . f •-, , , , - which are everywhere crowning our 'ittins, BranalFxorimotte —GeneriolOooperbasimued the Federal Government deserves and receives a general order that -till discharged for"disahilf the gratitude of all who love their country. ty sballbgeheld as conditional, , dependentupon It alone, with the help of 'Providence,ton the disability, and-valid only; derin its doblin save the life of the Republic. It alone, ivitti dame. If, 'on examination, the diaibilitr is at the same aid, can.preserve us as a natiorili If, any tithe feundio have ceased, the holders-rail' therefore ; , anything is left uodone, which some be:liable to- conscripthelido servetheanitejoired think ought to have been done, or anythieg.has . tee t teof their enlistments. - ;,This r egulation ap beau done *ldol:Nome think should have been . piles to sUbStitrites, whether under or ili;rer ;the left undone; Vet reserve these matters for more ripe of meinitiription.: . Their services tuella for :opportune , diseuesion In,: the .ealrner days'of of the war. and the Geverifeamt - Should not be peace,• eTe.day, whilef,armed, rebels threaten: deprived of. them, for whet proved to be a tern the Federal eapitrdea4C/trat4Ple :itaff arid law porary disability. and Constitution under Omit feet, No come to- ‘a . &mantas --It is well known that in which the . Harts mountains, in Germeny, there is oc gather 'without,' distinction of, party, in loyal ' ainnßrAll • •• union, and pledge to the A.dministratien, our mit:Malik . leett the ; image of:a . man reflected on repreeenm the Government of ;oar Wheat, - the C . lonctit, the illusite .r being the effeeti of ..re- oticenditietal support . &anon from the person-of the spectator.. We eTheseatiXthe principles and this Whet policy t;theyoffer to your suffrages our preseot GOve ,flteld. m Vermont . that . the Rev., pre Kilrlt, if of the loyal'men of Pennsylvania. To retirement , observe, in moan err acclannt of -Bloneklant i wear; Afldrew G. Curtin; . , He needs 00 eulogy 'tre'nf hire Self, 'So that we too, have our moan- , Boston, was recently treated there with II - spec for he has so borne, himielf in his high office that his name is known and honorefikthrougeil 'Min .ilitaions. Dr. Kirk states thattone after eleveted all the laud, winning the love of the --soldiers noon he saw therodfm..ttencriye'(an and the respect and confidence • of a patritatJP°'ntPtl't— mountain ) . ; .shadowedon cloud. It suggeisted itself to him that core.tituerice. -Rio - great services to the cause of, a naming. -- a * r ip of th , . k • -e tp the Viiioh in its most deadly peril, hie aimfaut hewatht become e . s Ypi re; so ha top Ofstbe nate, he saw own im-ge,-bet-ofernetnit ioreainia note-ahle. Spreadktie his so licitudaagd Care for the brav e menhe sent to ascetic:nog tos i Vs battle,, hie retests hi, his energy / is fa thfulness twomfghtyinihtgi' in the dwfihaye t e ,, of, ever at/124'1,1401W a 4 art° 6o3n Y e gr e l w il k' ' , - kifialneeple to dis s iegard Itte,d,f(cliantlein.land P e sq c -WY-1-g re,l - 11 4 ° AN t hftdca-,TOISOKRimit, plicke - 6na,e,mora the henrier . fif 'the - D . 46n idt hie ,Zs a lPit ° i , f9, 4 494. •" 14 4 "VI% P r Pl i k t .*•#d e #l4 tiled and treaty bands,- --- . . . .1d0e5 . .z3., ? z ott,s- 4 )c l ut; &ire 11 :11 - o p im ok o4l, lk A i 'th the HpatAbio Under H. bpi* 6 ',wadi : . t rarely .' llsft "" '-'' - r .; . • ' " --=' 4 "':"-= I • '-' -•_ , , iat .< 1 ;-t.v.`':f 7..,:',1,7 ', "P , I",i 'N , %At - ro A caa nisi, 1 - date Is presented worthy of the support bf all men who desire to maintain the high charac ter for ripe and varied learning, for unnispect ed loyalty to the Government, and for Mite- Tepee to the duty of declaring, not making, the law Which our supreme judicial tribunal. won and wore in other days; Judge Agnew is an accomplished lawyer, kinow the presiding; udge of his district, and his elevitieh to the bench of the Soprano Court wilfihriiiidditionalsecurity to the rights of persona and property: Freemigi_ of r Pennsylvaniat Issue-4 thus distinctly presented in,which the oiagle, ques tion h that ofloyalty to the' Governmerit un der which you live, and the triurrOh of rhose arm's alone,can giTe you peate, and again, open to you. tinkeyenues to that almost mirahulous prosperity which attracted the,woriderini gaze of this c ilittkitte:'- ; -It only:teniairityfor kobillmien to ljerfect the local organisationt of triende of therOnion, to, secure ,diseussiorkof the questions 1n die pule,:tii brig. evei y loyaliote w the,polts, and to use alligoper 'efforts krtheir power topecore our seams. < -If this is done, Pennsylvania is saved - to the Unionoted the:. Union is saved to us and to our posterity. Thus we gather for the contest around worthy bearers of a worthy standard; written all over with unconditional loyalty ;" and uridktheir good leaderahip.we march : fOrlvard with the faith and hope of Christina sen t tfi the ctory which awaits the 'cause of "justice and Of free- In behalf of the Union State antral i Com mittee. WAYNE MoVE/IGli, VARIETIES. Kw: TnerattrOnori has Beimattpeintedhy the Qnee) -inatructresa InAther Bart.:4)f acuiptdre to the yoling:Princemes. TUB WHAT. Cign. Wifliteriszez--yhellindi , con Journal says that there (liver hailhien so , much wheat in Wisconsin at any itbie as there is now. It estimates the crop at thitty million hurdle's. ' cer A ,Mousi made; italesayinto 7 the desk in the refreshment rooms at Daihnry,pi, and oanveyed one hundred dollars in etkrtenny into a drawer , shove, of- •NarhirSh ° ' made a nesti reganiless of all expense: ' 1 HARD To Thyme! "--4:c4Fretpurieut at Pike's Peak Writes that the - zoinenkitt:e .clißcbur- Babel Sketch -of President Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln is a roan above the medium height. He passes the six foot mark by an inch or two. He is raw-boned, sham ble gaited, bow legged, knock kneed, pigeon toed, mob-side d, a shapeless skeleton in a very tough, very dir ty, unwhidesome skin. His hair is or was black and shaggy, his eyes dark and fireless, like a coal grate-in - winter time. His lips are large, and protude imiyond the natural level cf the face, bat are pale and emeared with tobacco juke. His teeth arelltfffr — ln our juvenile days we were struck Tire's ;?description of the ferryman who rowed-the disembodied scuts of men over the,river of death. Lincoln, if out memory fails us not,..myst be a near kinsman of that official of the other world: At all events they look alike, and, if a relationship be claim ed when Abraham reaches the ferry, he will be able, we do not doubt, to. go over free of toll. In the next place, his voice - is coarse; untutored, harsh—the voice of one who has no intellect, and less moral nature. Hicmanners are low in the extreme, and, where fre talk is not ob scene, it is senselees. In a word. Lincoln, torn and bred a rail-splitter, is a rail-splitter still. Bottom, the weaver, was not more out of place in the lap of Titania than he on the throne of the ex-republic. And this is the man, who, in capable of a stronger-or higher inspiration than that of revenge, aspires to be master of the South, as he is of the enslaved and slavish worth. This is the man who bid, armies rise and fight, rind commends and dismisses generals at wilt. This is the man, w 1 o proclaims {as such could only do) -the equality of the races, ,bbck with white. ' This is the man who incites ' 'servile ineurreotiom ordains plunder and eecour ageff rapine. This is the. man who trembles floret the horrible butchery which /leaven will call him to antiwar for, yet quakes like an aspen at the appreach of peril to his own poor car cass. This lathe man, in fine, who has been t4ectpd by the powers of evil, as- the only fit Apreientative in America to &tench dark deeds which civilisation [lushes to record, and men in other lands refuse to credit. Reeel down ant kiss his royal feet, men of the houili.— C/iattarrooga Rebel- Citarmark Sruarrs.—The Stuart-., who have fi.zured in the Virginia and Maryland camps gns as active rebel officers, are dekcended from David Stuart, of Inverness, in Scntland, who chimed as his aicestor an illegitimate brother of Q.leou .Mary. Implicated in the rebellion if 1715. under the lesd of the e&1 pleteuder, Day.d. Stuart fled to Virginia, where he was cogitated, as a tutor in the 'amily of Mr. Breht, of RI 1- mon.d. Prince William county: Mr. Br-ht had mania a Mies Gibbons, oleic of Sir Jahn Qiblmns, member of Parliament for Middlesi and her sister being at the time on a visit to Virginia. Stuart succeeded in winning her ft,c duns, and she mauled bins. , • - , • NIWSPAPER POETAGE —Arty num ber Of uewa papere can be sent b.g mail under a two cent stamp; provided tboy, do not ex eeed !cur ounces in weight. T.nia'fiv.:l has not been generally known: TereorapQ. FROM WASHINGTON. Our Forces at Knot*ille, Tenn. FURTHER FROM ciunigsrozr, &C, WBSEIIIqOIOA, Mt. 7. The supply steamer Union anneal! from New York for Charleston on September 17th. She will touch at Port Boyal Key West and all of Admiral Bailey's stations, also at Pensacola, but goes no farther than Pensacola. Official information received here up to the 4th or sth inst:, states that part of his cavalry forces had arrived at Knoxville, while others were at - Morristown and London, on the line of :the .East Tennessee and Virginia railroad, which towns are northeast and southwest respectively from, Btacextrille. . The Navy Department to-day received a brief dispatch from Fortress - Monroe, giving a few 'finds - relative to the'naval and- military opera tions before Charleston, to the 4th inst., when all was still progressing favorably, also stating that Lieut. Commander Badger; fleet captain, 'bad his leg broken while in the turret. This is the third casualty .among the re spective captains of the fleet during the last three months, Capt. Taylor b lug disabled by sickness and Capt. Rodgers being killed. YEARE:I3TIS BY TELEGRAPH, Partensterna, September 7. Petroleum is rather quiet at 35c for crude; isSigl6oc for, refined in bond: Incur dull—only 1,000 barrels sold at $4 7505 00 for superfine; $5 50®fi 00 for extra. family; $8 .50® .c 75 for middling. Receipts light—nothieg doing in Rye Flour or Corn Meal. Tbe receipts of Wheat continue small, but ma'ket is dull at $1 2901 81 for new red ;$1 85 for-old red ; 1,500 bushels Sentacky'white sold at $1 53® 1 55. Small sales of new Bye at 88®90c; old at 980. Corn less active—small salrs of yellow at 85e; mixed Western 82®89c. Cate advar end to 58®600 for' new - Delaware. Barley corn nuncea $1 0501 12. Malt $1 50®t 60.-- Coffee very, firm—sales of Rio at 28 6 1 ®290. Pro- Videnit are in limited request, Witeve: change fie* recent quotations. Whisky held firmly— sales 580 barrels at 58®5810. • Nur:YORK, Sept 7. Flour dull—sales 8.000 bbis at_ss 11®5 85 fOr Ohio; $5 10®6 25 for Soathern. Wheat dull—salm of 85.000 mrshels at 85r®,$1 04 for Oblong° Spring; 980$1 12 for Milwaukle Club, and $1 1401, 20 for red West.-ro. Corn ad vanced 1 c‘ut ;; sales.ot.4o,o4V busbekat 74? c. 8- of quiet ; PoreqUlet ; Lard' steady at 9i (3 1010. Whisky steady 'at 50c 'Receipts of Flour '18,820 Nitre s ; Wheat .9,34l;bushels ; Corn 21 (190,baehels. Stocks lower and onset _ tied. Gold $1 83 ; Chicago and R. Island 1 05; Cumbd: $1 281 ; Bls. $1 221 ; Sduth. $126 ; Reading $P 14i ; Miesourfe 69; Tenniesee's 66; Coupons 06; BALTIMORE, Sept. 7. Flour dull.; Ohio $5 624(4/5 75. Wheat is quiet at . 1020: decline. corn dull.. Whisky 1 4, LAIN OF MA bauW. THE Ante expressed .oil oflSkief Bone Marrow for beautifying and_strenwhenitig the hair. Porfumed with Livireii. epored and sbld by 11131411 EL, c.Apothwary libtffigiburg. AAriCWSGALMIIED LVJ :Irr4 e f E' IDs. fresi 444 riSeive Jr.pt Co. +, PRICK ONE CENT. .. ~'t .~ ."5 .... _.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers