f The Constitution aa It la; BTlMiuiTflflSNnMW€ain< fiDAY MOBN oohcountingroom l a'blgblr interaßtiDg f,?cP4t*Ebi§fe a vMi|.ty,b'r|iit^ji?{-' . Th 7th is numb : w mm ! 9&&St3&. ing ngatter; ' Ariopt ■ Concjaaion' Of: A. ] Himsojf; a capita} B| TE(iCONSCBIP: os fiddly. passed, wii and ajlfendmentg. . , 'RICKARD O’doRMAN'S' ELO, , QXTKNjj? ADDRESsj fit the Celebration of the||22d of February by the. Demo.- matioUfntraLClub of Philadelphia STATE. CAPITAL' COBBESft>ND E NCE|;gevefal- lett^j*dwh^he.prb ; caedinlra'' of :the -Lefeislfftifrfrs'at Hams bnrg;[|| BEJ||BNCE OP tHOMAS.B. KEE NAN, tor the innrdfer of John A. Obey; reported In fall. ' | ! ■ ' > “ THE raiON LEAGUE ;” an eipo- : sitton bjj onAwho isiA the habit of “going rohn<rjj>||nightß.’' I ... BDITjOBIAL TftE3 on Camer on’s Ljstter of Resignation j Pen?; Scot* aai : M|GleUan ; Doainqratic.- VehtibiKEnss andifoi thersytAo. TQEI BYj .ines.” to a Deaf 'Friendjl j-’■. ,v ,J *'■ i CEj-iotn Taß| : LATEST i' TEEEgIiAPaiC. NEWS | join all; gnarters, inddding Coh greadaiM proceeding in the last days of the eessjofa. , M - ... , . •' MrBC®LLANEo\jS' ARTICLES on variona|i abjsctff. • j - fticfe jye cents a copy, in wrappers for mailing! jj. -vP~ iE LATE CONQBBSS. . ■ i, jcairie jinto being n pon th| aayTirhichwtfliefßa the ’ present] Admini||ijatiohTiJfoin 'a''^uffeni3g ; ' Jeopli4‘ c hM fte' iation hi« been relived ofoneptjthe powers which . the fanat|ciam °al existence. Itwastan extraordinary assemblage bf fierce t’anatic8 r demagogues and eontnajctors; its acts Twill be read ,in. ■ after ; wrtb atnazement. when the authors jofjthem are frtrgotteu ih depth.— It was the jfirst Abolitiqn Cpngresa in this countryJlnd we mey]safeiy congratulate our readdrs upon its being i___ \.ft» laBt.|jßpt yhife itjlnatpd.it made its period: #it» existi&cf, thaKhei people C&Q eradicate in the coining Not satia|ed with the jpiiraage of -enact* ments, intended to strengthen, the cause: of the .and of others calculated to divide thi peopleref th j loyal States,-and spread discontent eves among our soldiers ia the &ld, this perfidious ’ Congress usurped t|e liberties of the people and ' Wd them|>roBtrate at thje feet of Abraham ■' - Lincoln. ,|The pnrse and the sword have 1 beenthoroyghly united,the President hav ing absolute controloft|oth. He may by tba exerci|e of the.power vested in him, - plans ever&'city. and. ? tpjin, under uiartiil law and Expend the; writ of habeas cor . putt ia.i|lMa 4ho-Ihiigjage of the ' Qa aerte, yesterday, “Abraham Lincoln is almost anjAutocrat, but] it is not in his nature tobecomea tyradt.” We are in--,' • clined to bejieve'Ulit, if ]left alone, there ! is but litt|| ;to be .apprehended from the President]Jhimself.; i-Hisl understrappers, • Provobt Marshals, scattered throughout! (he country, ezerdsing a dis cretlonaryWowef,;.andiHittfe2Jh'etjSosfrbl: of maligctot whom ■' But, if ’fielingi, like thospjlf thef.¥4lagA]Parson,-‘;leai to virtue’s sid|jV j a8 t now itfdoes not follow that theywftl continne apt ,] These trifling feilings tna| become, apparently less offen- Biv©| deaigcß j against thettepublic, Tile history of the world isfali of ezamples, ! going to show that en ess ibiptiohbnowimessandvirtue, is bat the fiat ! ladder.’' ißoliingbroke, jat first, Phly] sought to his inh4itance, but bis craft and 'plfowers ’Joo'b | Buggested i the ff i%threnb,v:jrliilSi!:JheAfter ; wards perpjj|&ted th’e» mulderof the deS the inothet iconntry, Bpori after bissuc . oeis, becameSa usurper.. Napoleon, anoth er popular liberty, in ashort tine, P“t the French natiod at his diapo : eal r antii!h^e%^S*^^refiiSfßaf up complaifir ia permittefib: be -frkde Thisr of- our own institutions? pure and patnoUcaa they were, had ad idea of repnfgpg.muchpow’ji- in any one , branch of.il|e-:QOTernmenti HebCe the order to PtpTeut.fedeibl encroachments upon their citizens. ' Bu|jthe late Congress has des troyed all the-pheok's and- balances of our governmental-system, by the pagsage of lows subver'sKe of the rights bfthp States i »* d giyi»? the President unlimited VwrwMf- .Willie ibuse fl&h&'i ?rmon» auwprity ig a question of serious unport | - not dilectly,.-gfxtt W \ l ,l,? - I,rea!d^t *Ct through ***** -and; in this ii^the danger. Shn|liL^h«;.whichts!notlikely appoint as Mvost Mardialp highitohad will get along Well enongh, countre bp. ioflicted ffetfbws'wbo only want a] Plttle.fbftrttfipthoriteitb prompt them WteercisdM the' case will bo vdy different hWih eipe nenccd, sensib]e men for Prdvosts. who are above thereat of partizafn influence and malignitjji||thtf -countryl : tbtOQgh tie impe|iding;£lconl. and the 4th «> f *%rii.:lBo6,.aga?i take former,- exaUedipodtion among the first 'nation* of tbojearth." v „t |. *Hr * * From the Pittsburgh Gazette. THE POST’S GBAMMAB—A BEWABD., Pitwbugh, Marc! 4th. Messrs Editors: who wes on the border of Sutler county, in tormga me aopiejime since, thlt K he had Pbit\o>‘dis iMPSSlf ' jiqS thagjaper ta him, for wtunc nio . Bt $^ ortaat > cießtajd “Tu^arisms,' / ' F 'wfiich*s;-Mta: he, were destroying his children. gSihce' that time, I have been reading tbe*Posf more closely, for the...purpo3e of ascertaining whether the clergyman was slandering one ot our city papers. The result is, that 1 have become disgusted with its grammati eafiuagcttraoies and literary.defefcts. The articles which, appear in the issues of yes terday mid • to-day T ; are a school boy, and in order, to test the matter, I hereby offer a premium of five, dollars to any boy or-gifl ni the Grammar Depart .menta of onr Ward Schools who will give ■the grammatical analysis of the arti cles reierrad to. 1 T wonld likely have-passed this’ matter any notice whatever, were it not I that the Post is continually talking - about the “dolts"'and “scribblers” of the Ga iette. ■ ~ The analysis-referred to ahove are to bp forwarded to the'editors of the Gazzitz, who will award the prize, which will -be paid in a good greenback at the book keeper’s desk. Philology. . j Ever since we compelled the Gazette to. desist from publishing blackguard adver tisements,it has been absolutely frantic.— It has raged about “Union Leagues" qnd“ copperheads," and ixations" to crash out Democrats,'and bas at least reached the elimax of itk 'an gerin the above assault upon-onr “grain mfCr f>r ; we humbly confess that our j grammarmay not be faultless—we neve.r the benefits of a collegiate ed ucation as, some ofthe clerical scribblers about the Gazette have had, but, if we cannot. - compare with the Gazette in r‘l grammar,’! we have greatly the’'adfdh- i toge of it in “decency." We will try conclusions on this point-with any of The clique which surrounds that corruptLShd' ribald concern, not omittipg any who may. hjtppen to wettr clerical doth. .;jßut the story about the “clergyman” stopping, onr paper is simply a coinage of the Gazette itself—a very awkward one — for it leaves the reader to conclude, that The “children", of the clergyman (some of Them, we. presume, grown np) would not be injured by the obscene matter in the Gazette ,. but were in danger of being ruined by onr bad “grammar!” What a delight-, &1, ; sentimental and highly cultivated family this grammatical clergyman must be blessed jyitb! .. The truth,:is.we are not much concerned about our “grammar," if our daily life Is moral and reputable. We can’t all be edueated=To the high standard of the Gazelle— and we shall hold fast to decent deportment, and let the Gazette keep its loose morals and its "grammar." But the Gazette will give a good ll Jice dollar greenback’ for an analysis of some of our articles. Of course the Gazette can pay the greenback, or any number of them for do not the “legal tenders” pour in upon it in salaries from six different offi ces, auvifand military, and in payment of worse the Gazette m abundance. No doubt of it. Ajntl we have a greon-back or two, also, which'we earned in Onr regular business, and we will,pay the Gazette customary advertising rates if it will print some o those “inaccurate” articles of ours about its- blackguardism— any or all of them. We yill stand re sponsible for the “grain | ntar,” if the Gazette will only let its read ers have the benefit of the facts those articles disclose. They will show that ■the Gazelle published. some most dis gusting extracts in its editorial oolumns— that it followed in the same impure path by publishing, at Jive, times the. ordinary .pricejof advertising, a-gross, scandalous mid indecent notice of a pill, to promote vicious] practices—and that we compelled' it tq-withdraw this last from its columns. Those articles will show the real motive i the Gazette has for its attempts -to engeu der bitterness and strife in this commua g. . - toy. •■•>■ tipN L&.W, in fall, |h; ell the alterationa I *!• , Ws beg the Gazette to prove that clhr articles are not grammatical by giving them entire; they can make money by 1 it, and also illustrate their point; i i I , the Gazette ought to print [these jartides, tor, according to its own I “WtpKc they are' not indecent, like some of its editorials and advertisements, but only, inaccurate. 17 ' • Since it-has'ceased j to print matter for the abortionists, there w more room for articles of a proper -character—therefore, we may hope, if vie \gnswer for the “grammar,” which wp hereb * agree to do, that the GautU Vin consent to grace Ha columns with our lucubrations in favor of morality and de- “DEBTBOYING the CHIIr ’ ; DBEN.” The hypercritical cler ®rman who writes “Philology” f or the gazette says we Were “destroying his ohil- ’ by our bad grammar. We read this with shudder; “Is impossible ” .we |aeked ourtelyes, ‘'that the Gazette means •to-alaas us with Herod, the relentless mur- of the innpceuta?” But calm re flection came to heal the wounds made by the iinkjnd thrust of onr cruel neighbor.- The “children” of the pions philologist had evidently been readers of the Gazette, and if so they surely could not be “innocent.” After this we felt that-we were not guilty after the manner of Herod 1 7-and we experienced additional conifort that the Gazette’s plans for the children” were foiled by eaolnte,4nd persistent efforts of onr own uoes not the Gazette feel ashamed of itsel dL” A US about “destroying the chii- Sent? 661 pnl)hahi f«.r/^. ad fertise- jap£,;4 I needed and was able to pay tor iJlf 6 the,would-be purchaser !«w a Democrat 8 ; We do not think that . trade, in any very I I finable goods can be controlled by the ii.r’Wf and its inner Cfrcle of crazy fanat- • ®“‘ the tan control the en i“? e , ‘ D Pretmtite Pial lreiltimJl k \?'? moditiea ' becauße U>eyJ I are intimate with the renders. ; ■‘■f . n .Thrice »> armed that iiath his^a mslsUh .?8' ttMION LEAGUE. One hundred and thirty; were admitted t) membership on Wednesday night in the Union League. It is conKdered a good thing and only necessary ftfehave swo Sam ti receive an intimation <Mf@&aud!— We are to have a re§|titi|jl opthelMark h jle society—with grjl&.jJa and thimble rigging-|4nritper proscriptive' Know Nothing order.'- JEJow different the Democracy, with its public gatherings and announced principles, even in a commu nity three to one Republican. No seerets, no cowardly skulking-'througlr'alfej's to cyado the gaze ofhonestmenand Union loving citizens. Is there Anything in the condition of our country to demand this secret organization in a county"where Re- publicans have such a majority. . , For the Post. Mupmr VIEWS OP. THE KU-MBEIt TWO. , ! IIKiDQCiETEBS PrazSCTAVtfEYKiNaERS V ’’ . FeWuiuy 1363. • ’ /• • Soßie old -Roman—l can’t now remem ber Ilia name; :it is’ tit in the Army Regu lations, the only bodk in tlxe shanty j per haps itwasn’t a Roman ; bat it was a man with a roman nose—had for. a motto, “di vide and conquer. ’ ’ I believe he express ed it in Latin, however. 'The Tycoon of the War Department' .be,: (poms say its Halleok— some say it is’nt) has reversed, the thing: .His motttfseems tpbe “divide andget ebb qulsred.’ l Ihave' .mi indefinite notion tljat if tlq'Trinmvitate, composed of His Excellency, the ••Seme tary of my Lord,” and the Grand Com mander who did everything in the West till he toot the field in person, were to put their three classic heads together to devise ways and means to extricate a wagon from a swamp, with the assistance of ten | patient mules, it ib ten tdj one that they, would hitch the animals up and mate them P?“i i wo a f a time, keeping constantly eight m re serve, and that, haying exhaust ed the poor brutes in succession; they would unanimously jiroaownce the thing i an impossibility. It has been a matter of surprise to many people, some of them military men ot humble pretensions, that every time in the history of this war, that a repulse has been sustained, it has been Bimply owing to a want of concentration of our forties It seems to be a cherished [principle with the managing intellect, that it is better to annoy, the enemy in several places, than to defeat him in pne. Row, however un reasonable this may appeari to some per sons, and however .erroneous, as a general plan ora campaign, .it is undoubtedly the result of grave deliberation. Yon most rememler that the one grand objert of the administration is and has been, to ; upresß ,tha rebels with a conviction of t e una nimity of the Northern people. Xon must also know that the Secretary is a lawyer No man in his profession understands the managemeut of a case or the true method of reaching the understanding of a court better than lie. His observation and reading have taught him, that if you can bring before a jury ten different circum stances all pointing to the great fact which yon wish to establish, or as many wit nesses testifying to the same fact, with out any apparent collusion between them, there will be little room for the twelve impartial and intelligent gentlemen to disagree, The essential point, yon ob serve, tbst the several pieces of evi should be inlependent^oFTeiiirotte^ I heir strength is not that of the bundle of sticks, though gentlemen at the bar are load of the simile; for in fiot a bundle of sticks imi tas strong as a single stick of the same size. Bnt pieces i of evidence, Jiee the plat< s of a galvanic battery derive power froip their number and the minute ness of their coppeption. Well the Secre | tary knows all this, and ii has occurred to him that if some dozen or more Henerals and Commodores, with as many separate and distinct commands and coming from different parts of the country could all 1 pitch into the South at once, none ot them helping or supporting the other, bnt each-acting apparently on his own respon sibility, the moral effect of the thing would be immense, and the conclnsion irresistible, that the people were terribly m earnest m putting down the rebellion. This hypothesis clears Bpj all the wys tery_about the retention of troops at the Capital when they were needed on the Peninsula. It explains why M’Dowell. Banks and Fremont Were moving small and isolated armies over Northern Vir grain, when eomnjop fpiipda supposed that there ought to be a concentration of for- Jgb®, th ® «<noity of the Confederate Capital It shows why Pope s army, in stead of reinforcing HcClelUh’s,. spent a iSBUHner in an excursion to. the Rapid Ann, withg ut any line of retreat. Fii z John Porter's refusal fo feejp Pope in turn, was of a piece with the same bril liant system. On this , theory I too we can ; understand why Sigel arrived iat Freder- Jffkfibnrg too late for the fight, and why thirty thonsapjl troops arourid Alexan- Washl P^ 0B j.another neighboring pointß, never having been sentTttf Freder icksbnrg, didn’t arrive at all We can ® -aßk8 t ’ fu ho ;WM r< “Pi rte<s to be „A1»!l" g , at „ tke e atea 01 Richmond" pn top j?th of December, to produce a di- Zi I » 1 T° n r iP J alr °l o( PSFWden Iwaasome < -OBli apparently fprhja ; own diversion, and why the same aWe General,, when- he was supposed tn h e thundering at Vicksbnig to Wbt Sher man, wasn’t thundering any place, bnt -was relieving agentleman at New'Orfeank, who hRd not been, complaining I earnestly Wmtfipce. And we are also-enabled to perceive why it has ,al ways.happenid that after some linsigiriE f? Dfc ; S , ou , tliern port hes been effectually blockaded, an expedition has been usually ntted out at immense expense,! to land savsral thousand troops at the same point, oa a , badep acres of the coast doing nothing, but what a cealjihe.art; and fat is the * [ ooncealpenf goes, ,it has, Seen aS dneiihß*s M 'fb T k e P' eat object in duce the Southern people to believe ihni the millijms of the NorSi iirere actTng with out any consultation or Collusion, ind that their efforts were not directed by iny sin gle controlling and intelligent mind * and JJr W J at °™ 9 b J ecti <>“ to thisbt-illiant system of. operations, and that is that admitting the foil moral effect of the’plan, its physical results are somewhat disas trous; But what of that ? say the radicals. Convince; the South that we are a unit, and they will snbmit. To this end let the press Be maiziqd. Let every^man’whcrl dues- o/A* President Jorof ms Cabinet be denounced as a,traitor to IRgfgP- Le .t a yery ,body Ipgh ktthe Wbite House edition of anieqn&ted jokes. tinL% Sh,b ?° rn recblE « Cabinet con dera t et Dfl - a PP la “ d its iblon n l eeh f °- Bet troops around inf to In , comfortab le quarters with noth hand tha® dsol " e eulogies elf the to the world as^ 6 -?’ and letthese go lorth of the army. rJ ldBDce of the sentiukepts be stricken down if^* 6 fit to command. gratifyeereerof;ns|ful, our armiesbe demoralized ? all | nit y- [Bet Jfeatpff| jm4 letthe people’i»l oban an ? de ‘ a 9\ e B [Let f 1 OEIBIS, i rtof. A. COWLEY, long kn wn as t v o 11 ■,, Wr'ib J 6aillM 0rn “ n «“ al aid tiou. enclose ‘*«»lj^«cen'fi to.the RrincLs. fobaita-dewtf. K,!SN * smith. lalOR BERT IS AUEUUKIIT fl-l v ed Ko T ll lw? We !t iri: h(,u ;«of'its uodert-ign* JJ* fo»* i2 * * to °? t iD Av©duo, (second bank,' Po3* esrir ,o febVftGtd ’ ”• tA “- KIEH JsMKa oaorea johx pos-rea T»JTTNBTIIOU FIBE BBlti tu vn Sr FACTUKrea coxpa“y masc- KIKIt, GLOVER »fc CO, -^"‘S aoiblM - Ao -I''the p - *• tUMers reapectfqiiy sol oiled. fob^Cmd TeP I ®'® FOil S.UsG— THE 81’USrilI Mtho?o^”nt f « sal ° lbu P eligible slv/°u, e ?.' ree f A Tonne ffiiSSiro o.ob m ib in Pitt township.— ranniS?£sfcta h .i 4 n et lrcnt by HO feet deep, Md he itSSS to ? . alley ' an<l ar » entirely isola ffio 1 r 0 * 1 all s i ’ !l nn cver ? side. Xtto of , i^uO 1 1 . ■ iiera street, near Fourth. PRESENTS FOR THE RDPOAVS, T Sfmod SrBSC S iIBKKB HATE just « ro d io,»rrof tl,e Holiday's a very f>OU> AN D SELVES WATBES, notj&FSe“ttotJdS^ tlemen ’ a waar - an ' l ® ronla V ®IW*B.PUTED WAKE, carf tea' 6 et^ 0 oi nJ fI ? U baskets,goblets, suitable artloles forpreseib' 1 “ Urso wrioty MEYKaN A SEIBEE. <3 Fifth street JpUBE^AI,AfIBi A IacoKICB. Iral»lirS € ?. I, * )i,IIU MCOBICE, lije, purchased befifJL s *!:'* 8087ure CalabriaLivo- I wilt sell at less ihnl? reccr - t - advance which hand tle3J “““ Eastern prlfcs?. Also, on GUM CAJlPuos Ajcoljol, Gamphene and Turpentine, , Burning Fl«id, . , *>UTnin» Plnid At the lowest cosh prices, at 1 JOSEPH Fl/EMlNfl**? • »{S“ fit: mh3 - - “ Dlamon ‘l and JJarfcet st, day by mutual conieot dSved ’ beea ,hlB KerrYori, Feb la, T rife AMi nartno-shiD to thave formed a limited n a pKn 7° conduoted under the flrmof T this dil, and to.™ Sin isisaßsaaS.^mm partner, and that Be-JamfaDeASte m the city of Now Tnftr i and that aaidßenjaminDeFreo e S iSiJt,!i ,l ,? rt P eil contributes the .mTfan I ttoimd'doKte CMh tothe ccmmon stuck J jmS? in j New York. Nb26tMBfl3. ,T, **• KEBSD ANflfOl; SEES TO HIN aassaasss^® -w A oSr Bt ° feblS ocrn.rM^tSidW^^. £«« OATS, FHOM HABBISBUBG Harrisburg, March Bd, I*o3. in the Appropriating! bill reported: by Ch i irma S. of |SW> ||tted: for. ®he ®aHpspit4| $ 1( p 18 ..:Eonse ofiteA|e, §13,700; Mercy Hospital, §O#oo j. Weft cm Fenitentiaty, $40,000. At 12 in, the Senate met the tiouae ot Representatives in joint Conven tiODr tor the purpose of announcing the e ijbr. Auditor General and Surveyor be&erahat 4he late election. * The resu is aa follows: Auditor General—SlenUcr, L>. i Cochran, 1? Rlcnkcr’s majority Surveyor General—Barr, D. Koas, I; Barr’s majority 2,961 ' , r , e P ort of the result was signed by 'flousM 1116 ” a " J Tellera of l “ B tw ° I .3j e - Convention adjourned at . 12h. Gm. i ine House resumed tlie consideration ot the private calendar. A bill authorizing the Erie Railroad Companyto issue to the county of Erie their stock, in lieu of the stock of the Sun bury and Erie Railroad Company, herelo* tore issued to the county of Erie. • » h “•?' bating to livery stable keepers in Allegheny county was passed, i On motion of Messrs. .Hopkins, of Washington, and Gross, of Allegheny, the bill relative to the bridge over the Monon gahela , nver, opposite Pittsburgh, wbs postponed, for the present, j On motion of Mr. Hopkins, ot Wash ington, the further supplement.to thh act ' nc ° r P I °totn the Pittsburgh and Steuben- Company, passed March w . aa Postponed for ihe present. 4he House adioumed at 2h, 4m, until 10 0 clock to-morrow. I,A - TE —^ r " enL »/ intrcduceda billto authorize and empower the Governor of tpis Commonwealth to commute the pen alty of death in certain cases to a specific term of imprisonment. ' . The bill provides that' the Governor shall nave power to commute to imprisonment lit the penitentiary of the proper district, lpr such period as he shall deem expedi ent, not less than four years, the sentence ot any. person under sentence of death at the termination of the term of office of noy preceaing Governor, such time to which the sentence may be commoted, to be computed from the time that sentence ot death was passed upon snch person. DIED; nvrPiir ldas ', 07 ,™ i, r t \ at T o’flooV, Mm. JANE r-.a-iA® 1, nlect of late Major Beckarn, Qffea ,o ro&ra. Her funeral will take place cn Saturday after* noon at 2 o'clock, from her late residence No. 40 Sandusky s’reet, Allegheny city. ititction water, fetation Bitters; Rat Poison; Lindsay’s Blood Search or; Breckneli’s Bkla Soap; Lianld Stove Polish; Brochedon’s Soda Pills; McLean’s Strengthening Cordial; Cowell’s Rheumatic Pillr; Wood’s Restorativo Coriia*; Heed’s Magnetic Oil; Blixir Calwaya Bark; For sale by SIMON JOHNSTON, fcbiu ««r«sr Smiilffiald ai).j tV.irth ttN.U T“* i , I.AKOEST, CHEAPEST IVn t ,, but of the United Static JSffpaM f,lr*d iMlUilne r ui tcSSlfta^^f' Prio “- 6tnd ‘ ntfl « Inis JnctUuiion i« conduced Ity cxnerUn * 1 Teacaers and praotio.l burincM » .. £« , preferenoe for graduates at f U College by gu i uea men throughout tho country. as welUa a', J.D BEHNK, H. B. HARTi to-j Day’s advektisem|bn^s GTM BI TlO n! ;^ n T&sdayrEvening, March 10 th, at S^ r onDiamondsteML I ;suf« had the Lnembors " Indance? 0 "' Yo ' ntß B “>d pU be ia Doors open at o’clook;S fJIO IHK PCBMC : Daily artivats. by Express and Railroad, of \KW GOODS! at " - iHaci'uin & Glide’s, NO. 78"MAEEEfT STBEET,; ■ "• naffgtfiSEiajtsg l " l "' t > Large assortment of • Ucajery. Gloves* Porniitire eocda fn*. t «/«*... MAGRUM&GLIDE. N 0.78 Market Stre 6 C mh6 Between Eonrth and:tho Diamond. SPRING DRESS GOODS, S HAW la S. BONNET B I B B o IV Si tIOWEBSj GINGHAMS, TICKINGS, IRISH LINEN, Balmoral hoop skirts, KfD GLOVES, Ac., Ac., * van iurum ethnic aa bauxL^t WM. SEMPLE’S, 180 and 182 Federal Street, 4LI,E«HENV. a|^'I Ih»^S 1 h »^S. e rfLt roh “ te siit ry brick containing b rooms and kitrh*** o frame stable and carriage shed a Bae »Sp!9 ”'«»to tb. how* an Mpeliont3 of about 1 oyc ung tra*6 of ohoioo frnit an.,ta „„j food*. «od »Mt rate garden? iSJtad i, Sr sS^^fes&shsr tie w«,°S ,la ? d d timbcvd on jaMjjtd- SlDlMibad^eiV^fe S3«aOO.JF A^? ,;K,> q«e inoumbhince, ol \he mostftnrS- ytJa J* i?** 1 ® ***** i|Sps jn^*«a&sswa*u: SPRING GOODS. fe«™ aties mm m summer goods, embracing all the nojrtat „tji M ot PLAIN AND,FANQY CASSIMFRF,% \ suitable f«^^ e S ? iU. fii Afu,, cf d com,,let* CLOTHS ASD CASSIHERES, Plata and figured Silk and Oaahaicre YesUngs W.H.McGEB&CQ., ' ket^uare.Ali e gh**^, 1 1868 ’ SPBIK®. 1868.' NEW GOODS OPENING AT 0, HANSON LOVE&GOj’S, • • . • T - j ®OS. 74 & 76 MABKBT BTEBET.; I> ‘ BABBOuh. . vJFipH . . . ■ webb & 'S{3S"">" S!EAI COHMSSIdj HBECIUSiS, and agents for the sale of ' I Bnponts Gunpowder *, Safety Fu»e, Pm.?!, T A t ‘ n n8 9 U8 5 ,t of aU kinds of Western rroiuoe.andmake advances theroon. • ff»B "~Bailfoad track: In front dt WsMhnnaA to W V,H S nuJi* CoTMiuL i M®: RJV Spencer & Garrard, Culp & Shephard. pStL- »n&. DelffigS; PRINTS, DIAPERS, ' un^er ofßrßT?] J.SLCIiArRQBAY .',i- •■! ... 9I f)l mf**? M>n%r W 9 ™* th«nk>jtd;iorl RWcessorafo ac’ntirinaleo of I SHIRTING MUSLIN, SHIRT FRQNrs, ATTKACTIVE r! Xiu: GBEAT BA] | j -... .., .•: s vATL> *:• ' h^:;c- B A R ;R :^E SflatAfiKEa'is'nTnj'K n/> c.; l< O A; :K;:&;^ SJTA WRS AT GREAT BARGAINS. 11 and see UiPUTWN WEDDiNB. : Card Photographs pf TOM TI{UMB AND HIS WIFE, ; 1,1 , ? . , • >;s-■ ; ' -L-ys. yiil ;TGM THUMB AND ms 1 Wtaijfc l ' fOM THUMB amid his Wi»^, ! ■ . • . . . V P I T T o c K’B, j CLOSING OUT WiTOR GOOOS 1 1 '*■ i ! '.i’iil J Oii'J 1 i • , ""'-'A’' M-i’t ' f 0.-l.v'iin *io-i v.' .i -0? tßWfia*HB atv.iin; ;.... . ,r, ! ”*SI;. Ajls •I.'ix/Mtia « fie;;- ;roi: -'i . . 1 ?, V»sl. WARRANtED. h foblO ! -act.-, ;•• ■, b ; . ;W :■ M A S’ ! T I'lO- W O'B K ES'**?.' { ; - ,-. ‘ '•; '--v'.V.Tft!*- I? prepared to Cementfhe exteriorof buildln with Unproved JHaatieCement, cheaper SffSr perior to any done heretofore. lhi* eemenfc'hi. no equal; it forroeasolld and durabl«SsiSr** BSS t 0 “y ' taP«n»hable >byi*atrt v & ticji wdfkman in this cement in prac,-1 Jaa MoCan^K^?utj^^*y; fi, J*ed. | nil p /id h "- JT 3® ! S»”l «^&>. T o! ihillgtbn TO-DAY’S ADVBETIBB Theatre extrSoaß CompUnjontary ; | lotA||4> This Friday hiiMiing, when wiil will be performed for the first time in In qoaiunoUonwithjthe two oigjjinß! ©EVEN BXS TETJEt S . MxStrong- ==aT««Bfifc griat“sKdS’ r^ tags* thtelaa Ike Birth of Cnpid jib Jenis, T M3OT SPRIM GOODS, 186;! EATON; 'MAORI® '(E'tfO,' (.#?§• " W,fISIS S*SiBET f (, 1 bny ®%\®» Marketer aid tMjilcari'nowb'jTjr" jew.ana-degftWe a tecSsSSbss.es.SsS!, |B|^sMt!aj^Wg L .<*<* “! 1 d ' e fi“ n ? i ’ wl'afeedi’ dUra, md all who buy,to s«l;.ttgtiS'4hoa!d b ah(' KATOS, K .7-;? % 9 Ififti 3 trt et.'-- ii S,I ' TE ?- DEMAND SOTKS. of '#s«»«<*- 7 3.10 Bonds and Coupons, .mhs.6m<l,. Wopd »t.-aet,(jftrnercf.Xhird.:: J PAHTSEIiSHIP AuaccK^dnasakr £U!& - : r~. ■ ■- . : .. ..... ■ * j; Plpsssisiij : SAMUELftskti.' ' J«tc£AlßeßAfc !i March ! S i L K S ' m “y of tt«m at old ptiee,. i at leas than last eeaarn’e priooa ■ * ; FEES OH, BHITIdH and Sixbjfr" lj g o on s, ATOLD PfilCiES, WffiA'g's advebi'ibbm: S^r-isoo-jr' Sj|l> BA I K 23 & NTATION BUT d tlt" ilo;at3 l gfc VsSSJ^2stkss*i*iiu* T MU me “ T " T* p ? iin ‘? “ d ««voiLf ffoad mSSW* 4 gfcfegjF TW make the weak man etroncr and .*»•?*riL **?•? nature's great res*oror Thfv a Jt* * us^e ® ££SiiS," ,l &!SSS l i£S^S >o e!u^ i l n .‘l^™ e ™^"’° tr ' dftrJ i to p,ri foonsl*” IZ' is J i-arj.ii -ttE TXJtEXO. \- k .*£! r? 2 E b t .94pn| £ j»* with.tho donseatrated'Sxtrtetot F i'&. 1 A »« A; P Asa t «5- o-ti . <lit / ATtf) ifs ? t{}£r3 .ip A 615 'A-* •« » cFj'f'HSfS 1- dO vi / ;'. ;-ii'., :^i, :...t - V”: -.'t-Oli’d dl'jM i-rr ; ''-^l^ - 7 "AT • "" ‘sMast«tanj« '♦•HAagrrAa. afcg- f l / n 5 '* 1 ~ W .tatuttV. t&bnr£n“Hsb?27 ffi'HE. t\r '°' ;t '> e ”6''^miai i3 OT r ereoHn?a.£rwl^Ai!sr.i paCMH lofb frn 1 '- * SOD - * “ -gWn& n&m imb ; 2.BSP® am^OO B a A -,■; cS ?Ei iSS P'pSS»iiS:Bi3.'?iw‘i^^->i-wu^;i3il ” E2l*J§a«|'«BBS. !* lfSt§^gr4S^.§l^T ®S 9|l|prrfd iS&SllfiS-: J s ;' » «4 GW., ‘ 32* SCHMESyz & co:, .JSfc^CALf^ilTS, 150 “'"e steck «f Boys'and yq^iV:^ 6rain Enameled Balmoiak . .71 efe Gaitera arAfipo,fehs- fihey_#. ' ' F'e)14. 4. • . sti. W.P . 1 . 113'0A Ar. o. FIFTH ntitZET,: feSpfe 1 IjKrtOjSotue the *aa^oftlM^B^&fS§^ . I .•} y.fi.m-ito ifMAi. HtrausS »i>v ‘ HUGUfiL IfeilfPlSsS': #lls^3t.g &^Sagssf s <s’ Ki UCiiii ¥ / JlcliJ.ilii* rr^A^yfWSfSl* l ## r-n j | Successors to , swrasi 'w. ii‘i>?ir ! tjrtrtr : sv ! ' ;, ' r; FIFTH &. MARKET STS OPK.V }‘a ’’ MiOTrisH l.i.,»°° tnntvffi OPf ,rtcok of Mmli... - X)^6f^* p^?fe2SA«m>3»Km * I W*S OAITERS. 5 ;te| ~lSZSP*****'' i& *»»w*sbaci ii:h , s ; fth2l I .^:«Knr«^t Own«Mdri E gframlS^«‘.»«Lr v 6 ai:lSetf moncin&ofri Xtudacn MtKwS,^^ be sold: com. quantity iff at .10 ’ lA «’aEu A3ND>Auc , l -3i-'stj(Ki^ju b J , **AP*BS_ ASD ar*w . ' 'fet2B‘ ) “ S w. K AIAKKHArT. ’ ; '' ! - - . Wffoodrtqpjj,..., -•< r pianist. Low for cash or. acceptance • * ■•- •• •* wiseabhoxhbr, ... .\. . • sijeot, (ltaatod neiirtiePanetigerKuJwFv'Sn ' febMidt/, at 8« n.: r>o di.' »d* V' >• 1 -•
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers