The Pittsburgh post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1859-1864, July 15, 1862, Image 1
Volume XX. THE ELDORADO, (FOBVKBLr COURT EXCHEQUER,) CORNER FIFTH & SMIIiIfIELU STREETS, (Opposite the Post Office.) TH K SUBSCRIBER UTDa takes the abofo Well-known stand. will be pleased to aee his friends at all boon. Hu wines liquors, ales, and cigars are of the best. * je24-Bmd JOHN LUNDY, Proprietor. 'JWK KKW FUXUKE SKIRT. EATON, MACHUM & CO InTite the attention of the Radies tQ the Patent Flexurp Skirt, B aS& a ,«4?e d r. e,e * ,mt f °™' Bnd «“» Th^have^^onh^.su^o^thattavotite CRINOLINE DRAPEBIE, “& u^" preaaly,o;,heir «**. «*^s. EATON. BIACRVM * CO.. NO. 17 Fifth strek TO THE PUBLIC. VBPICIAI.LT , -■dJthaignonntand&lM v Modest of all denomi nations, treat secret and delicate disorders, self* abuse and diseases or tußtions common and in* cident to youths of both sh'ocktl*SS?S. t *v d ;?* l8el7 ““?“*•» dieadifaSy Jggfe-SSttL* SS'SrJZZIIZS rigSßartewssaaSfetjtti ImSt*?* 1 * be lost to them among stupid falsely presumptuous toSSius. T.oiiT.s Si?^.™. lsnor “ nc ' - i pr ! ln * V " mushrooms and Io?«°° m, ? r ® "?’«*’'■ intelligence, sense,'Ae~toI dollars and cents, mysteriously, meanly ori\h S™£Xa*i.!S to publicity* howerer. that numeroir 1 parents and guardians are thankful that the?* I tasSFE: Krteis* | Satjastsf »«tS:fer?S treated with hod ovcr forty y ? a m (40) experience in their trout- JS™^.?S^? ltals °f " oUI tbu Old World sndin the United States; leads him to say—to all with a tair trial, health and happiness will anain bloom “ p °“ i' S° w— C all6 dSeek. Trifle no^mger with montebankg ana quacks, but come and benured Consumption and all of its kindred m which so many annually fill o"SutoSTo™ 8®"bo relieyod. providing they attend to iMn rime Full particulars canbehad of my treatment by proeunnga cope of the Medioal AdvWWhi ?h 13 given gratis to all that apply ad h vantage ,of over forty years SperienM am observation, «n?eou«nt!y, he h« SuMrio? still in the treatment o? special diseases, and who is daily consulted by the profession, as wellos recorn rnended by repectable citisens, publishers uro s«c£ &nd^ ffl ii“ of the Unio " 1-2 1 3 „. BOX 800, Pittsburgh Post Office. TO OIL HEFINERS DSBQUienB HATE HADE A arrangements to fit up Oil Refineries, untie Dr.-Tweddle's Patent TROMP APPARATUS Patented February 4th, 1862. by which fire is ren dered totally unnecessary in distilling Petroleum or other Oils, and we guarantee our work canno be excellod in durability, simplicity or economy We refer with confidence to the following par ties, whose Refineries we hare fitted up: Messrs. Long. Miller A Co.. Petrona Works V ightoan A Anderson. Eagle do », • m r .*9°ahMebnor do A ‘ C *-I fl y l°r A Co.,Jefferson do • Lockhart A Frew, Brilliant do The above works were designed and constructs and put in operation by Dr. H. W. C. TWEDDLE The following works we have also fitted up: u„„ f® 0 ® 01 ?? Oil Company. Darlington; Maun. Chadwick A Crumpton, Kittanninc: Johnson Graham A Co.. Woods' Bui - Brewer Sill A Co.. Pittsburgh: Reese A Graff, do Johnson A Brother. do Forsyth Bros. A Co.. Manchester. DAVIS & PHILLIPS, Nos. 100 WATER A 104 FIRST STREETS. Bran Founders, Plumbers STEAM AND GAS FITTERS. ROOTS AN> SHOES, AT NO. 89 MARKET STREET, U)OK AT TBB PRICES : L “ t “ I Heel Matters for $l,OO forsL2s^ worthil Co n * rees Heel Gators si^wJ rt^m’ L “ linit Cmtm ‘ H ' elGaitera Morrocco Heel Boots for wShJLTS?* °® at Con * r ®“ Heel Boots for $1.37, All ethergeodslu proportion. JAMES ROBB. 1p24 *» Market.-treet, near Market House. N°othersT° m THE P£NNA. SALT MANUFACTURING CO. Having completed their arrangements for the manufacture of cohccxtkatbd oil of vitriol. :&eiriM^K t MiM. ,,,,, r the Orfe. therewith. iSSSSfwss itafiSL GEORGE COLHOUN, Agent, iell-3md Ogee, 24 Wood st. Pittsburgh. ★ * * asßsnemi arum*from Borons' tS„- affect ia ST Wnickina to core Spavin mui VUI abo upeedilj gWHySsfesas JeiPily-dawteow AjSSfapEtfadSpA WILLIAM CABB ft co 7 WHOLESALE GROCERS. A «o or ***’ OOAMHOB, am, M. ALSO, Diitillen and Dra]«ti <„ r ®^PSSS@S»™ ■’nniVUH, PA, T* *nnnumn ... c®*i. I THE ANDREWS PATENT PIPE. (ntUIiCD JA6TUABT 21,1962.)■• D£«II WEK «m A TUAL TO rin. “““PMuble eoperiority to ray SSSJOz? m UBe ‘ may be smoked without mi H. 1 ! not drawn into tko: month, and the InSSlfi? °® 8 P ot becom ® fnrreil or coated from in of th? r,n JL? n° nous Properties; The bowl is made fertranteaTh^iv^^ l^^; iLSiHFft uot proclaim to every onehe m t?W h \ h “, b l™ r ““iulaing.in a pipe." .When the . bo ' rl , becomes clogged,or the drip “““Uwiuuesoieansing. the pipe may be taken rcmo . v,n * *l*® rim - The clay bowl may P pu time be restored to its original whiteness ornSOw SSiS the fi s r “’ (filst dl 7“Br.it thoroughly) or a new bowl may be procured of the dealer t j i opinions of those who have tried .ifjfu? 5 ! • p * rsonal experience, wo know it to be ••i lsrspresanted. - ~Ph\lada. Inquirer. I «•a n!H «£“««* ynproTement."— Public ledger ah who hare tnea it bear testimony to its ex cdlence.”-JE,tKTOip *«ttctin. • ■ the best pipe in nse."-3f o ßayi.»t of * frank* are enhanced a giousand told by its use, and the deleterious ef J^>ntch nokmit "* *“ U,ely nhviated." —Sunday “ I heartily concur In the testimonial* you hove *>°hn V*3*"/!'/}' er nl 1 " tl>l:r ” i,,es in os6 -”~ t° a great extent, the deleterious •ettecu of the poisonous constituents of tobacco— an essential inland mootine."—\ c. Brivlenbach, Nttmemus other extracts might lie given, hut the above aredeemed sufficient. .!o\hS AKVAXS, ricneral Agents. S.O, 631 Arch street, Philadelphia.’ ' A * t,lis Pjl' B protected by Lot rer* latent, any person who muv imitate it shall be prosecuted to the fnll extent of the law. " ■ ’KHART. Agents, l4l> Rijtl I*ll \Voo<l street, Pittsburgh. iV" ;cl3.2wcotl KEW SACOEEN, *iw NAC<ll tS, LACE POIXTS, lace pourrs I . . LACE POIXTN, LACE } !Ecl ftS£ H « S SLeel w’ circi lara: SACQtJES from 91 ,1« to 81. CLOTH atCQITES IHO.V $3 (Hi A\T> CPWAIIDS. LIGHT COLORED CLOTHS Fur SACQUES, in (.lain un d Fancy Colors NEW STALES IN DEESS GOODS. .Tu>t cj.enoJ hq.t • , Veivr 01ieni>. lUECKED AND STRIVED SUMMER SILKS FOR ?;\i CENTS. W. & ik HKa s. t urner Ftftli and Market Hiram ieJS • * A **V Tf l- Wfor A - rt iK Y, “\i° exl, . erSo . noeJ teauwtern, lor th r\ ice in the Mountain- Department tt ages .>•«» per month hiul one ration per diem. Tranaimrtat"," will ho furnished to their destina tion. Ai‘i>ly to A. MONTGOMERY ,i.r ,1 Oiainr nndQuarlerniastcrU.S. A. OJice Quartermaster 11. .S. A.. No. *49 Liberty street. Pittslmrah. Pa. uryiitf eagle OS L WOEKS. WI&HTMAK & ANDEBSOH. R£FIN£RS AND PRALKRS IH pitbr Carbon Oil. -mallty guarantor, Pittaborth. hand*’ ® Bnio 8 anl lir Grease constantlyon o „ o , r f? rs ; left at chess. Smyth * Co’s on Wate streB ‘ f ’ m " l-rorently tiled. OWES BYBXE, MEBCHANT TAILOB, 49 SI. Clair Street. TO OR- H A vn?,r G FROM MEW frc Wlth i a of CLOTHS. .and VEbTl2f(}3 ( which can bo at prices t:ir below the aaual ratoe in(luc6ra «*ntB offered to cash bayen LABE SUPERIOB COPPEB MINES. - A N 15 - SMF.L'mr, WOR KB, i-Altlt, M’CWtDY A CO.. Mamii'acturers of Sheath, Braziers' and Bolt Copper, Pressed Cop per Bottoms, RaisodStiil Bottoms. .Spelter Solder, Ac. Also importers and dealer -in- Metals, Tin Plate. Sheet iron, r ire, &c. ConstajiUy on hand. Tinmen's Machir.tr W* Special orders of Copper cut to any deeirtd tt,rp - . feZl:lrd*w OPEN AIR GRAPE CULTURE. A PEaCTIOAJ, TR!:aT!3E os the Garden and Vinoyard Culture of the Vine, HANirFAcrntE of nonEKTicwrtr. T|ESI«MED FOR THE I ni: or ASIA “d ®*ere in the Northern and Mid dle States. Profusely illustrated with new en .pavings from carefully executed designs, verified bv direct practice. By JOHN PH IN.authorof Essay on Open Air Grape Culture/’ to whieh was awarded the First Premium of the American Institute. To whioh is ailded a selection of Ex amples-of American Vineyard Practice, and a Carefully Prepared Description of the Celebrated Thomery Svitem of. Grape Culture: Price HI 00. cent free of postage, upon receipUi^j^mce. ieis No. 20 Fifth eteeet, Pittsburgh. FARMERS, TAKE NOTICE. Office Gcartershstkr u. 8. Army, i PittFbanth, Pa:, June 14,1862. / qp»IIKSUIXED Will, PUR. CHASE food SOUND OATS. £!!l T ? re l V* l u » ntiti ' s not less than five hun *r «**«?£ m “ayment made on delivery, at Wo. 3-tv Liberty street, or on Levee. t ALEX. MONTGOMERY, wor and Quartermaster U. S. A SMITH, PARK & CO., NINTH WARD FOUNDRY [PITTSBURGH, Pd WmrehottM, No. MO First and ISO Second it( _ Mannlaetnrera of all miee and description! 01 vOftl Oil v Retort* and Stilts, Gas and Water Pipe Steel Moulds nSSHdIr of *"" d - Harin» a oomplete machine ihop attached to V ;UIIILT COAL DEPOT. WM. M. STEWART, DEALEH lin coal, BUPPU#d with -* “ A.CtEHVOS'. S«B3^?2W3fls®»B K>R SAUS. pwkto to », RlAil. l L e **• MOWIJfO u. SSS&ter "32W nut few to Han't Hotel. W ■• . . ; : . __ ®Jzi ES>-™ STUB* ■» “Siwsssaasu. Pittsburgh, tieshav morning, jcli 15, isea. daily pos THE COXSTITITTIOIf, An Oration Delivered by Hon. George T. CnrtU, Before the City Council and Ciiizens of ? f ™ e Academy of Music, July 4th, 1862, • Mb. Mator a.vd Gextlemek or the Cm- Codscii.—Had J felt at liberty to consult my own incUMions alone, I should have asked you to mSse me from taking part in the proceedinjg?|f this day. At a much earlier period|qf-life I enjoyed the distinction of being placed on the long roll of those who nave successively spoken to the people of Boston* at the bidding of their municipal authorities, on this, our national anniversary, jAt this particular juncture I could well have desired to be spared from the performance of any such public duty. I had prepared myself to bear what is now upon ns in siience and obscurity;—doing the infinitely little that I may, to alleviate personal suffering by sus taining the hopes of those who are nearest to me, and endeavoring to cherish in mv own breast a living faith in the strength and perpetuity of our republican forms of government. But private wishes are nothing—private tastes are. nothing-in the presence of great jpixblic trials and dangers. We can- II eSC ? p . e the responsibility htch such trials and dangers entail upon , “, we fly to the uttermost parts ofthe earth, the thought of our country is with us there. If we put on the robes of the Stoic, or wrap ourselves in the philosophy ? * kf fatalist, the heart beneath will beat for the land of our birth in spite ofthe out ward mar., Hiere is no peace, there is no {“’Kt ,here ,s happiness, in a state of indifference to tho welfare and honor of our country The most sordid of men. whose sole delight consists in laying, .lav ny day, one more piece of gold upon his already swollen heaps, has no more as sured rest from anxiety for his country, in times of real peril, than he whose whole being quivers beneath the blows which public disasters or disgraces' inflict upon a replied nnd sensitive nature. To love our country; to labor for its prosperity and re pose : to contend, in civil life, fo P t h,. measures which we believe essential to its good ; to yearn for that loug, deep, tran quil flow ot public afTairs, which we fondly hope is to reach and bear safely on its bosom those in whom we are to'have an earthly hereafter; these are the nobler passions and higher aims which distinguish the civilized from the savage mam I bring here, at such a time as this, the doubts and misgivings of one fearful for of?he f« j 1 crowded memories oi the far-off dead who have fallen in the bitter contests of this civil war admonish wLn of sudl fca rs. ,7 ho shall bring a thought ofthe exertions, the saermces, or the responsibilities of public discourse into the presence of the calamities of his country’.’ lam here for a far other purpose. I come to plead for the Constitution of our country. lam here to show you, from mv own earnest convictions, how dangerous i't may be to forego all care for the Conner tion between the political past and the po litical future. I am here to state to you. as 1 have read them oa the page of histo- O, the fundamental conditions on which alone, as 1 believe, the people of these bta.es can be a nation, and preserve their liberties. lam hereto endeavor to rescue the idea of U nion from heresies ofseces* .stop. I wish to do what I can to define to rational and intelligent minds the real na ture and bruits of tne national supremacy and to vindicate it from the corroding iu- ! fluence of |t!oct ones which are leading us away from the political faith and receipts •ofa free people. , 1 Do you say that there. is no need of such a discussion ? Reflect for a moment, l-pray you, on what ha,-, already crept into ! the common uses of our political speech >Ve hear men talk about the “old" Con stitution ; as if that admirable frame of government, which is not yet older than' some who live under its sway, and which has bestowed on this nation a vigor uuex umpled in history, were already in its de crepitude: or as if it had become suspend ed from its functions by general consent, to await a respectful distance the advent ol some authority, as yet unknown. We hear men talk of the “old" Union, ns if there were a choice about the terms on which the Union cun subsist, or os if those terms were not to be taken ns having been fixed, on the day on which Washington and hiu compatriots signed the Constitu tion of the United States. You will not say that this tendency—this apparent wil lingness to break away the past and its obligations, and throw ourselves upon a careless tempting of the fhture —doe* not demand your considerations. 1 beg also to, cai! before you another symptom of these unsettled times. With an extrava gance partly habitual to us, and part ly springing from the intense exer tions of the year which has just pass ed, we have encountered the ' doctrines of secession and disunion with many theories about the National unity and the Federal authority, which are not founded in history or in law. Are you not consci ous that there has been poured forth from hundreds of American pulpits, platforms and presses, and on the floors of Con gress, a species of what is called argument, in defence of the National supremacy, which ill befits the nature of Republican institutions ? When I hear of one of these courtier-like preachers or writers, for.our American sovereigns, resting the authority of our Government on a doctrine that might have gained-him promotion -at the hands of James or Charles Stuart, J can not help wishing that he had lived in an age when such teachings, if not actually believed to.be sound, were, at all events exceedingly useful to' this teachers. ; My friends, I cannot hear the thought of vin dicating the supremacy of National Gov ernment by anything but the just title on which it was founded; and 1 will not de sert the>olid ground ot our Republican Constitutional liberty for, any -purpose on earth,- while there is a hope- of maintain ing it. I know of no just foundation for the ti tle fovernment in thiscountry but content —that consent which resides in compact, contract, stipulation, concession—the “<fo tlcotuxdo" ofpobke grants. Giro me a solemn cession, of ; political aoreraign pow ers, evidenced bp a pnblic tianaactioa and a public charter, ana yon have given me ft civil contact, to vudil cift inilF tho ralosof public of justice botvoenjiiftawidinfta;onvkicli r I can separata tile legitimate powers of the government from the rights of the people; *>n wind-1 can, with perfect propriety, assert tke authority of thelaw mtSehS; 2 2 1 -“lS!i. J lf n 9!s ,de,,c ** or » need be, ** ««tth or the cannon. Bat when rightof onocd lection of people or States to govem an wer cdlaetiqnof people or States; whan create **■ hiiimuMt on something not embrMed by a grant, I understand yon to empty a language and ideas that ought never to be uttered by an American tongue, and which, if carried out in practice, will pot an end to the principles on which your liberties are founded, •<: For these and many other reasons—enost appropriate for our cbutderation this Bfey —let ns recur to certaiadndispntable tacts in our history. I shall make no apology for insisting on the precedents of our Na tional history. No nation can safely lay aside the teachings, the Obligations, or the tacts of its previous existence, ' You can not make a tabula rasdct y our political condition, and write upor it a purely orig inal system, with no traditions, no law. no compacts, no beliefs, no limitation, de rived lrom the generations who have gone betore you—-without ruinously failing to improve. Revolutionary France tried such a proceeding—and property, life, re ligion, morals, public larder, and public trauquility went down into a confusion no better than barbarism, gut of which socie ty could be raised ngain%nly by the strong hand 01 a despot. We are of a race which l ought to have learned by the experience ot a thousand years, thaCceforms, improve- 1 ments, progress must b« conducted with a I hxed reference to those antecedent facts! which have already formed the chief con- j damns of the national uxistencc. Let us attend to some of the well known truths I in our history: ■ 1. The Declaration, ot Independence *as not accepted by the people of the colonics, a..d their delegates in Congress were not authorized to enter into a Union, without a reservation Uo the people of each colony, of its distinct, separate right of internal self-government. To repre sent the abstract sentiments of the Dec laration as inconsistent with any law or institution existing in any one or "the colo- it to contradict the record and histo ry of its adoption. What, for example,, do you make of the following resolution of the people-of .Maryland in convention, adopted on the 28th day of June., 177ti,and hud before the Continentnl Congress three days before the Declaration of Independ ence was signed :-”That the deputies ol saul Colony or any three or moreof them. . authorized and empowered to concur with the other Ignited Colonies, or a ma jority ol them, in declaring tho United Lolonies Iree and independent States: in forming such farther compact and confed eration between them; in making foreign alliances, and in adopting such other mea sures as shall be adjudged necessary for securing the liberties of America: and,thut said Colony will hold itselt bound by the resolutions ol the majority of the United Colonics, m the premises: Pencilled. 1 he sole and exclusive right of regulating the internal government and police of that Colony be reserved to the people thereof " I his annunciation of the sense and pur pose in which tho people of Maryland ac- I cepted the Declaration is just as much ai part ol the record as the Declaration itself: and It clearly controls for them the mean ing ami application of every political nxi om or principle which the Declaration con tains. u was intended to signify to the country and the world that the people of Maryland consented to separate them selves from the sovereignty of Great Brii atn pn the condition that- the right to main tain within their own limits just such a system of .society and government as lliev might see fit to maintain should belong to them. n„twithstamUnr,nnnhuvc said in the Declaration to which they were asked to give their assent. ' Several of the other colonics made a similar express reservation: and all'of them, and all the people of America, un derstood that every colony, accepted the Declaration, in fact, in the same sense. *\° , m f n l ;LL^ e w,l0 t le country, from the Ith l ' ' ‘r’, t 0 I,l '' odoption of the Arti cles of Confederation, ever supposed that lie (evolutionary Congress- acquired nnv legal right to interfere with the domestic ! concerns of any one of the colonics which then became States, or any moral author ity to lay d w.t rules £>r determining what laws, institutions or customs, or what condition of its inhabitants, should bead9pted or continued by the States hi their internal government. From that day to this it has ever been a received doctrine ot American law that the Revolutionary Congress exercised, with the assent of the people, certain powers which were needful (or the common defence: but that these powers in no way touched or iuvolved the sovereign right of each Slate to regulate its own internal condition. | TO Br COKTIXI i:j». J . Why the Seven Days’ Contests , Were Victories. , the Washington star. July n. Newspapers having mentioned already , that General Andrew Porter, Provost Mar shal General of the army of the Potomac, Jflf 1 ;, 0 G , e " c ™>Marc.y, Chief of General McClellan s Staff, have recently been here we may no longer refrain from noticing the tact, more especially as it enables us to state that they concur in the belief that the •even days’ battles were a succession of substantial Union victories, insomuch as they resulted— -Ist. In the successful achievement of the purpose of McClellan, viz: so to change his base as to secure the co-operation of the gunboats. 2d. In the defeat of the two ends aimed to be accomplished by the enemy, viz— the Drevention of McClellan’s move for the James river bank, and securing our immense supplies at the White House 3d. In the fact that the rebel loss in kill ed, wounded, prisoners, and men other wise put hors du combat , was, at the very lowest calculation, two for one on our side 4th. In the fact that the rebels’ loss of arms, and expenditure of munitions, can not be replaced; while ours can, instantly, almost. 1 ’ , oth. In the relative condition in which the battles left the sick and wounded of the two conteiidtng'forces*; our wounded ““'‘s.ckall beingudmuably provided for, .whUe theira are dying like rotten sheep through their entire lack of any and every description of hospital stores and sup plies, and thus creating a state of things in and aronnd Richmond appalling to the whole South. " ® ma y “dd, that the general officers named above unite in declaring that it is not true that the enemy captured a single one of McClellan s siege guns, or any mu nitions or.stores to speak of. On the con trary, white-they lost more field artillery than they took from us, they got nothing worth notice, in the way of supplies of any description as an equivalent. Reflecting men will see in these facts proof that our army has indeed substan tial reasons for regarding, as they certain ly do, the seven days’ battles as a series of Union victories. . Delawsbe Responds.— The first installment ot recruits for the Fourth Del aware Regiment went into camp at Bran dywine Springs on Monday last. 'Tuesday asguad fam teipsie followed. Colonel Mnmanftw lntendi to l»Sy my m|r is soon fts thej in thorough discipline. Adjutant'Charies Lamiaotis nowcammaadiafttheeaiSD and fnsfrncting the .men., Ly-r jisca appointed Latest News from the South. ***s?. ° r “ Georfla RefoKee— Craps** ort,,e s «»oU»ern Srmla A gentleman from Atlanta, G a ., who escaped from the Southern Confederacy byway of Huntsville, has famished the New York World with an interesting statement concerning the present position of affairs in the South, The World says • He confirms the statement that there were over two hundred thousand men in Kichmond previous to the late bnttle. He was the witness of. the passage of most of Atlant ° PS Beauregard’s ar ny thro’ I Atlanta, and his impression is that half of them came East, and the bulk and best of them were sent to Richmond. A portion ".f™ re . ta ' ned for the defense ville and Eastern Tennessee. The conscription act has been very fully earned out The older soldiers were sent! at once to the field, and the recruits w??e armed with pikes, and driUed iu carnp? throughout the South. There is a scarcity of arms, und there are not near enough to supply the new troops procured by the conscription act. To make up for this de ficiency they are drilling the men with a i \ f 'i la . r kl ". ll . ot a P‘ke, invented by a Methodist minister named Graves, a Ver I monter 1t,., about as long as a musk?? with a bayonet on it, but by touching a spring the pike part will shoot out eightfen mches longer. It i, expected that it will te""'" carrying batteries. ?J 0 •' R ™ armies were never fuller than they are at present. The feeling at' was that McPM? Mle * Kic hmond, { was that McClellan s army was sure to be annihilated. But the impression was uni • vcrsal, that if by accident or want of man agetncnt, the I. nion arms should be victo rious, the rebellion .was over, I™!- to Atla^ta^ 0 < i' ;>nfederBCy had been Bent to Atlanta, and war material and stores h Tho r S?i hCrc , in J meuse quantities, the Southern people have lost all hope l k have formed a high’ 1 i‘, n v of - N °rthern valor, which thly held m cry poor repute i.revious to «h‘e }V ‘r- Alexander H. Stephens, the Vice lu'arT o U,,. 1 ?],! “ n rcgar, ' ed as at neart to the* old government. One important fact stated by this senile men is, that owing to the exceU£ g ??W i,', H at and oat crop of the South is a total failure from rust. The fact, has onlv just been mane known, and it produced t ? ,OS j consternation, causing an im- Sh n d ,!n e “ dv l uieh ‘“ flo *>r and corn meal. Should anythin., happen to the corn crop tin rnmt.i would he starved out. ,• b * e V'r “ f Sew Orleans ami the ,„t -trict fT' ” r '' at "' eal producing dis ■■l’uo- 'f'cre a svnous.blow. ami ..1.n0.,t ..-►.royed ihecupaciiy ..f the .South to supply ils.-it wuh meat. Their l„,s of portions o! \ irginm, of Kentucky ami feu tms-cc, has ul>„ .-enou.-ly added lo their ‘•inbarr-issuH'm. ~, ' ccf I ' ui, ‘ cotton crop has been .siroved, and there Me immense quuuti tip.s of it still on the plantations. The grown},, crop, however, is a small one.— "I 11111 ."' authorities take it upon hemselvc, to destroy cotton, sugar, -mo lasses ana tobacco, where there is any 01 thp : armies reaching it* but of course ,1 is not touched inland throughout the South. Our informant them r ?r V 3 rcport ; ,mt !he planters 111 ?£» i, l ° " 0t ~°“ch , .°“ ch their cotton, ami nil toe destruction is by the army. A Bebel Conspiracy Discovered. A Washington correspondent of the N\ \. Times writes : Evidences have reached the Government ot a well-planned rebel conspiracy, of a most extensive character, which was to have burst upon the country siranltaneou's ly with the battles at Richmond. The ™n rs Por -ddenHy relied on shaking oft McClellan and annihilating his army by their immensely superior numbers, and this success was to be immediately fol lowed by a rising in Tennessee, Kentucky aiid Maryland, and the advance of Jeff JJavis upon Washington in the midst of the confusion. The families of rebel offi cials who are hvmg in Kentncky, while their heads are in position in Richmond, were fully informed of the scheme, and in their boldness and impudence let it out.- ihe tacts were communicated to the War Department, and to Gen. Boyle of Ken tucky, and preparations were made to de feat the movement; but the utterfailure of 1 the rebels to break the power of the Union army now threatening Richmond made it impossible tor them to put their plan in Loretta Springs, Cambria County, Pa Mountain, near Loretto. 4 milee from (trea son Station. Pennsylvania Railroad. Cambria Uor° ty ' la " W 1 b ® op#n for the reception of Vis* Oa tbe S3th 4ajr of Jane. ,nri l a^ l i®.l tßaolofM “ eiowiu ho ia attend anee daring the season. For circulars and further information! apply to ***** _ FRANCIS A -°?rsSi£ WM. M. FABER & CO., STEAM ENGINE BUILDERS Iron Founders, fiENEML MACHINISTS AID BOILER ■l»rßs Hear the Penn. B. B. Pauengar Denote AiikhM of «£?!•• r * n *h>« from three to one netievaiginai ud Boilenerevary wpXtE&S} NATRONA. OXX,. ul'k: ssK^ t r cUU7 CAUSTIC SODA, to thuooontiy.. Onr WWt'i OMKOUMTniTE; SILT, IC. kn *• *• A°WSfisgr will be PKuaptly it-1 aolMj^Uwdi - VIV' GOODs. iircunnndKinnDnM vTthiHtcliliaaitMnMMihitf f SPRING AND SUMNER GOODS, fa-asEts* andYoaths wear. rahemohanall Ike mm MMOOAxaraa. immimebes and rratoroa. w.v-mbaiiK) bower Mart* awfoAMAMFig^iSF B tove A. bbadley, WO. 30 W6on STREET, comer Second, PUtnbnrgb, Manufacturer and Wholes ale and Retail dealer in * all kinds of Cook, Parlor, aud Heating Stoves, Grate Fronts, Fender-', dco. **~la our..ample room jbe found the CELEBRATED GAS BURNING COOK STOVES eureka and tropic, haTC b °™ fclly tested by hoti sands, and the Store pronounced unequalea y uiy in this market; together with a great many ther desirable patterns. • .We hare also a very large assortment of [ PARLOR AND HEATING STOVES. BE3T PATTERNS now ***** fronts ?* theneweatPirlw. Common Kitchen Row und .Jam Orates, all of which are offered at very low prices. §i;rr : *Upd«eeraonw -offered to bu!M«r-s in wantofflUATK FRONTS. my29tf ICECRFA n ! it’Kt'KKAMJ! STAU HAKEV AND COSFECTIONm KO. 22 OIAHONft ALLEY. would respectfully inform hufhends and the public generally. that ho it tred t ßthw^aloouto servePURK ICE vctrLAJH »t ill hours oi liie day and rAKiNm^S^h’-,. Q 9, e large assortment‘of *t RRkAIJ, °1 all descriptions; Kept °»hfind, the very best CONFECTIOX- in the Oir.v. n RAHTIES, Ac., will be sup pliea at tbe shortest notice. je2B:lma IMPORTANT TO LADIES! ■1 R - JOJISHABTEi; HATISO FOB upwards of twenty years devoted his nrt>- franonal tune exclusively to. tho treatment of hmmlt puficuliiet. and bavin* succeeded in thou sandsiof'casesmrcstonn,the afflictedto sound ?ol h ! ha 9 n ° W eDhre con ®^ Bnoe mofferingpnb- “ Great American Remedy,” OB. IMKVKY’S CRONO-THERMAL FEMALE PILLS Whioh have never yet failed (when the direc tions have been stnetly followed) in re moving difficulties arising from Obstruction or Stoppage of' Nature. or in restoring the, system to perfect health when from Spinal Affection#, Prolapsus Uteri, the nhttts, or other weakness of the Uterine Or tg™’ 4- l3 ° w all cases of IkbUityor Nervous Pyotfrfjfion. Hysterics, Palpitations, Ac., Ac.. Ac.. w “£ h ST 8 the rorerannew of more serious disease. m .r% T *' ime j * < \ rtr Vf cct J v kttmkeeontke cow* sftfirttOM, ana taken by the most deticalefe mate without causing distress/ at the. same time weyCTcf-AA-e a charri.bjstrengthening,inTiro nunc. and restonogthe system to a heelthy eon* .to bringing on the monthly period re no matter from what cause the obstructions may anse. They should, however, wof be takets dunof the first three or four months of pregnancy, though wfe at any other tlma.es miscarriage would be me result.' ‘ • n^tej co “ t# / E, S P U1 *' i*RWs One Dollar. and when desired-will be sent by osil pn*nii(l of the money c't!:? 1 Rochester, 3f.General Agent bold by Druggists eenerfllly. n Ua , jr ° J ‘ El ‘« WEMING, aul6.lvd™wff 4rke ‘ Strae ‘ a,,d ,!le DiHt “ on ' i - PITTSBURGH FLAG HAXUFACTIEING CO, Are prepared to supply BUXTIJfG FLAOS, ALSO. PBISTEDAHO *U BOILED Ml»l.iw F LAOS, AU Blm, from a lnebeatoiio Foot. At lower prices than can be boacht ]a $e Sut. DEPOT OPPOSITE POST OFFICE JOHN W. PITTOCK, , • • Agent for Company.' PITTSBURGH, PA, | |^ £SiS, ' wl ' ~N IRON AND NAIL WORKS. LLOYD * BLACK, Manufacturers of bo, Sana, Bm*nT Rail aadTUt'Bir Ralir' Work..^ , ' o uSSM^lg^OßK •plMam-b Cresaou;Springs, Cambria Co- Pa. T** 1 * „ D K*-»«HTFri- AND POPl ;f4^f;»=,=tea.s. snmmit or Mountains. &3QO feet above, the 'level of uit octeQ. will 1m omb* ibr raatifem the lOthof JaSkXlOth <*- tobor.. Sinne lag season thegxounds hove beta Rrtfttlv lmprovedacd beautiicd, and a number or Cottages hare been erected forth© sccotnmo dawn «f fiunslies. rendering Crtssbtf ©jraofthe most romantto ana attractive plaoeeinthe State. Lhe furniture has been 4horongUy renovated* The seeker of'pleasure, and the'sufferer from teat and disease, will find'attractions here in a inNkssLimr SuMe.BUliaidTaWee, Ten-pin Allm.BathSw ot&« together with the poiwt air and water, ana the most magnificent mountain scenery to De found In the country. Phiud,, - For further information, addreu G. W . MULLIN jcgndtf Orowon Spring. Cambria Co,. 8 „ ■—”^l. ■?"mil 1 x \ f^^ j*,*, KSSfffiMSi: :: M\ No.si »*■*■ Dr.BßOWNiiao of Ktfabnrfe, andhaa sssasE^s^Tljp^ CITIZENS AND OTRAiWER of a medical friend, should notaillto sg^^S?F4 h ISs?! u SS^ . .P*. BR01 !? , ’s kemkdies ’ ESfia*HS®S» i.jflA ft)Tn i remedies for the aunaiiu ltonhl« SstsssattssiSSSSt L D , BHEUMATrsM . i -prown s remedies never fh.il in mi»o a*.;. b«o2ffiiSiSsSS«SS<S“* Bock and Kidnm, Irritation of tba Bladdw t, **A h r.H Wlt 5 11,1 of an ' ” s‘#Spss^ Mtrsi* 4 *sss Nu - %S3SSS-i ICKOtEAN!!! EstabUshe^lB42. SAVINGS fIUSMTUTION, MO. UO SI (orposm thC cugrox hocsi.) CHARTERED BY TBE LEQISLAtURR OPPICBBS. VICE PRESIDENTS. IWV Al li LsemJm Ssllan Joshua Rhode, , • John*. Jennings, Jacob' Stuckrath Thomas & Blair Ata-Bradley Hour Lloyd Alfred Slack TRUSTEES.' Joiiah Kina C Z » £os Inlwotth SS Fowler w A Rood Jag WWoodw.ll RCSehWertl C W Ricketson J M Tiernau SH Hartman D MLong R J Anderson DE McKinley Wmsfnlui, Robert D Coohran Wm smith Wlhrasen wVfiC*? BF Jones WH Phelps 0 B Herron SECRETARY AND TREASURER. *>. E. HcKIMEV. Open daily, from •a. m. to ar. u. Also, Tuea day and Saturday evenings, from • to ft o'clock. Jgpoatai received of OXEbIME and onwards JDMlgdidWdnWdl. Doee^^'y^STf allowed to rein Ain are pUoed to the ta - JgßSg£StS t ** r ’ B *- Ismn '*o» to ram which win bo a resource when needediTtnefr money not only being safe but bemrfny interest, in- • stead of remaining unproductive”* ,myZl . .. NATIONAL LOAN. . ptl»i;*.\T TO IHSTKCCTIO9S JL from the Secretary of tlio Treasury.V took win "“AOUened no theWth day of Junm lias. ’ “A Third stree’ts.'pitoKmtlL PeH^l^^^f b a°MrerK^«sg&Si£ t pleaaureof the Cnited States..after -five jr+era. iwJ;S22Il n *i wen l 7 %" dat «» ****s£■ mg mures* at the rate of six peroentrinu payable gJ%^»WttednndcrtheActTreb law. nor for any fraction of that sum. eankTre gX“- Subscriptions for Filly or One Hundred £ a !fcn“S s , th ® K ™« ®f subscribing, in the D. 8. Demand Notes, and the accumulated mtewst from the Ist of May. IMS, in coin TenS scriptions fcr a larger sum may.at the option of the subaenber. Ik paid at the cone; .or one-third Bt ihe time of subscribing, one-third intweory7 and one-tbird in fortydnys thereafter. Provided be F 'fty Dollars. Certiicatet will be granted in duplicate to sub- K l\ ’f ”,‘ or tho amounts so paid, the original of which tho subscriber will transmit by mail to the faecretarr ofJho Treasury. Bonds, as aforesaid, will be issued thereon to such subscriber: or his order, or to the holder thereof, carrying interest as expressed in such certificate. .Any ether infomationdcsired will be prompt It given on application to the subscriber, personalis or by letter. JOSHUA HANNa”^ Pittsbumu Wh AoEKCy.f abMti,,tion Aw " t : June 27th. 1962, , 1 -JegMf T. J. OBAPF. •Paul bttoos. wesths STOSE wows, 113 ÜBEim. STREET, PITTSBURGH. QUAFF & CO.. IiUjrTIFACTtIBEmi Would call th, attention of the public to thdf b ABUTS STOCK olw, lies looted COOK.PARLOR AND HEJITUtti STOVES, ateo, nrpßovco *“*h« BaMfM. Orate FreaU, Hok ,ow 25aA?i£5 # 1 55u*g*gt w “ I Htevee la the Btaie. Th* Diamond, Advance, Air-Tight Eclipse, and Iron City,.... 'Wen .warded the FIRST PREMIUM at tie 8»U Fair for tb« BEST COAL, COOK T: . STOVSS. Abo FIRST PRE MIUM awarded to the ’ TRUE AMERICAN. GLOBE A RHPCBLIO. aTO^jssssaisw™” 3 ORATE FRONTS AND FENDERS IN THE STATE. tOWE «mun .fjL.tIDLI SEINEMAN, MEfbUHASIEIIU, Wo. 42 FIFTH -ISWff|Ar. PITTSBURGB. FA. ' " WHOLES. I,M' AND HITAH, nKAT-.Poif»‘ DIAMONDS, SILVER AND PLATED WARE CLOCKS, •:,,, of every detcriptioß. FANtY GOODS BaMte. Sfmtume*. .Stef'. WATCHMAKEBB' TOOLS* Materials and WholeeeleAceoerfortlieeelebrated AMHKAN WATCIES, Eeaafoetand et Wallhen, Rm. aplMad ROBERT ARTHURS, ATTORNEY at, UV, . »» FOURTH BTRFirr. " wrtiuaraaaa, MnArtii.»w. J, «S«STS > KEAIS.e COFFDr, (ftncceMon le M'Candlew. Mem a WHOLESALE GROCERS, ©oner Wood and WaterStreetn, WU* a,, : • . ■ ~, WYHWBm. FA.. nonet * k llih' STBEET, ■ww.oßarip