Ihe Pniea as it ffas, the Constitntion as it Is. n. ,^!!S." ,aw «* WEDNESDAY MORNING. AUG. 6. --Bemooratic Nominations, FOE OOVEBKOn, geobgf, w. woodward. FOE SCPSEME JUDOE, WAITES 11. LOWS lE, COBBECTION. James Campbell is announced dn the State Central Committee as the‘member from tie Butler district. This is incor rect) it should be James G. Campbell, onr rate popular and handsome Marshal of Western Pennsylvania. Our Democratic oontemporeries will make the correction, because of there being in Butier ,a James Campbell, who is a most- intense Aboli tionist. THE CONVENTION TO-DAY. The feeling of hostility existing be tween the different factions of the Aboli tion party of this State, as exhibited by the delegates who hare arrived city is unparalleled in factional malignity. Each set prove the rest so many public plunderers. And, indeed, to speak plainly, we are inclined to believe them all. The struggle is between three distinct sets of hungry contractors and office-holders, .■.ho friends of Curtin are the strongest, bat the adherents of Cameron are active in their efforts to defeat or scare him off. There is a third set who are anxious to beat both theße factions by the nomination of some damaged Democrat, who,'like Tod, in Ohio, will suit the purposes of the Abolitionists. Those mentioned are Muhlenbnrg and Judge Strong, of Berks county. Anything savoring of Democ racy is preferable to an Abolitionist, but these political trimmers onghttoknow by this time that renegade Democrats are not always successful. They tried this mmo dodge, last year, in this State, and their ” war Democrat” or “ loyal. Dem ocrat, or whatever he waß denominated, did not poll any more votes than his Abo lition colleague. 'This looking after faded Democrats, however, proves one thing,— and that is the demoralisation and corrup tion of the Abolition party. Ttey not only change their name every year, but eacrifi-e their best men tor the meanest of onrs. There could not be a greater com pliment paid to the integrity and patriot ism of our organization. THE FALL OF VICKSBUBG. The fall of the rebel Gibraltar, Vicks burg, and the opening of tße Mississippi, which its capture secnred, form the most atriking incident in the history of the war. The mau, to whose genius the nation iB indebted for so magnificent a performance, will have a character in the history of the rebellion, which will Dot be obscured by the recital of anj similar achievement. Aa entire nation will respond to the fol lowing aoconnt of the fall of Vicksburg," from the pen of Admiral Porter. He re marks •. JaiL ' n ~‘ s, /nejil and capture of 1 tcbburg •nUfieeharactenKda, on, of the greater* mil la 4 acAtewm ml, eter known. The conception at tk, H° uh o ‘ r f r , at Oranl, t cho adopted a nw»e IK which orept labor watt perfotmed great battle, were faugh and great were rin 7 ??**• jpjtKSe would have involved us 1 0 diffi '^„’i, but ®° ? e ! wero all the plans matured S D r li,. we r 6 al ' timed, and so hi 1 oooQrr^? e fm^ dl ih on 3 formed ' that os mistnhe W tt>e Oflcsage ot the fleet by t ,‘ ot the army acroas »a ? of th£ mV 10 time. Bn confident ooth . Ln. v bll '7 “f General Grant to carry f ievor ho explained them to me that »rero; but the blows struck were Oor readers remember that, upon the announcement of the captnre of Vicks burg, those two modest patriots, TT-.ll. c |r and Stanton, addressed a crowd of revel lers in Washington, coolly congratnlating themselves upon thsir snccess. tickeled Stanton, and he tickeled back again, until the two panderers and moddy-mettled pretenders, glowed with the apparent conviction that they were actually the greatest captains of the ago. Bat the simple recital of Admi rd Porter, strips these swaggering Don QiUots of their borrowed robes; he tells us to whom we are indebted for the fell of Vicksburg, His exposition will fell heav ily upon tbs swelling vanity of the two mock heroes alluded to, and will fernish another striking bit of evidence,corrobera ting the well established conviction that, the farther our armies are from Washing ton the more brilliant are their achieve ments. Had Grant been within a few mileß of the war office, and subjected to its instructions, he would have been re moved after his first week's operations.— Being a couple thousand miles distant, he bad his own way of it, and we see the re sult of his own magnificent conception. Bimilar results would have happened .in Virginia, a year since, had not the plans of McClellan been frustrated by those in power. Eichmond, a year since, was saved to the rebellion by blnndefingorders from Washington, and, ever since that period, whenever the officer in command obey Halleok Bnd Stanton’s instruction, we have Invariably met with disaster. At Gettysburg we won a victory, but while it waa-beiog won, the Washington officials did not know where Meade and his army were. As soon, however, as a victory was announced, they were on hand to claim the credit of it. Women as Harvesters. Several German girls have gone to Ber ries in the harvest fields of Northern Illi nois, where they , receive one dollar per day wages. The Galena Advertiser says that German girls are not the only ones that engage in this employment, Last year, in many districts aronnd that city, where the men volunteering for the war lett a scaroity of outdoor assistance on the farms, women of energy turned out and a misted in galbaring-ihaoropa.—ln-many instances, in peculiar cases, the women of a settlement wfotild; (jo in a Body and harvest largafiel&sf corn for some po6r: ,J Uc'neri.l Burnside has declared the State of Kentucky under martial law on . the eve of its state election, which takes place tc-daj. Considering who it is that . makes this proclamation and how it is limed, the whole proceeding looks suspi- The pretext is a rebel invasion; bni how happens It that onr first and only knowledge of an invasion formidable enough to justify extreme a resort comes from the proclamation that profes ses to be founded on it? Considering the feebleness to which the rebellion has been reduced in the Southwest, an inva sion dangerous enough to require the whole state of Kentucky to be suddenly pnt under martial law, in, to say the least, surprising ; as is also the circnmstances that, if real, nothing has been heard of it t hrough other and less suspicious channels Military interference by the federal ad ministration with a regular election in a state and for the avowed purpose of con trolling its result, carries on its face strong | presumptive evidence of intended foul play ; it challenges strict inquiry and the most rigorous scrutiny. The country will demand to know what part or parts of Kentucky are invaded ; by whom and with what force it is invaded, that mar tial law is suddenly proclaimed through out the state, and a tremendous engine of military terrorism erected jnst time enough in advance of an election for a knowledge ot it to be diffnsed through the 6tate 6 B We demand to know whether the prece dent now eet in Kentucky ia to be follow ed in Ohio, which ia alao within the limita ot General Burnside's Department ? Will martial law be declared there to defeat the election of Mr. Vallandigham, aa it ia on the other side of the river to defeat what General Burnside calls •‘disloyal” (mean ing thereby, we presume, Democratic) candidates? General Burnside commands hia troops not to permit dialoyal persons to approach the polls, and thereby makes them judges of wbat constitutes dislov h-’i a \ W f, U u a 3 lke kin d of evidence which ahull be deemed sufficient to prove ‘ L . He virtually proclaims that he con siders the Democratic candidates disloval and intends to prevent their election Ilia order to his soldiers to keep dis loyal persons away from the polls will naturally be interpreted by them to mean that they are to keep away eituens intending to vote tha Demo cratic ticket. What other interpre tation oan possibly be put upon it ? Gen eral Burnside even goes so far aa to an nounce to the judges of election that they will be held strictly responsible that no dialoyal person be allowed to vote."— 1 hese judges of election are state officers theirdnt.es are prescribed by state laws with their action no federal officer or agent has the slightest right to interfere, whether their duties are well or illy per ,foi'“etk they are unfaithful they are liable to the penalties enacted in the laws of the commonwealth. It i 8 because Gen. ifupside knows that he has no shadow of a right to concern himself about the per formance of their duties by these state offi “r? that he has proclaimed martial law which being a substitute of the mere will of the commander-in-chif for all other laws, repeals them, for the time being, except bo far as he chooses to continue them in force. He might as well have de c ared the set ol candidates he preferred elected, without the mockery of opening the polls. Ucdar the terrors of martial law, he has virtually required the judges of election to make such returns as will defeat the Democratic ticket, and theatens to hold them “strictly responsible.” iv, ,x World. Koble Deed of a Catholic Priest Bewarded. Daring the recent riots in New York, tfee Bev. Matthew Nieot, a Roman Catho lic priest in that city, by his heroic efforts saved from destruction at the hands of the mob an entire block of buildings on Third avenue, between 45th and 46th streets The occupants of the dwellings thu ß j served met on Monday evening last, and presented father Nicot with a handsome] cane, a beautiful writing desk and cabinet, and a luxurious easy chair; the presenta tion address on this occasion having been umde by the Bev. Henry Bromley, f Bap tist minister, who occupies one of the houses saved trom tho violence of the mob. She London Times Scarified. From the Star. a«t, ..-K 5 . ,J Those credulous Britons by whom th<| Times is regarded as an infallible oracle on all thm relates to tie American wa-J mnet have found their faith sorely trie*! yes er ay. line Times lias been showing or wee"s back that Lee mast overwhelm overy resistance, and march upon Wash ington, arid Lee has himself overwhelmed, Md is marching quite the other way. The Times had been proving for months back t at Vicksburg is absolutely impregnable, and behold Vicksburg has surrendered.— The “greet leading journal,” and some of the paperawhich do their small best to fol low its lead, were put to sad shifts yester day to maintain a decent show of compo sure and consistency. One or two of the latter adopted the clumsy and dull artifice of affeotingnos to believe the news at all: but this sort ot trick was toe open, gross and palpable for the Times. Therefore, in.es | timntmg the effect of the reoent events it adopted a characteristic mode of break ing its own tall. It ignored, or almost ignored, the capture of Vicksburg, which it glanced at as an event scarcely worth mentioning, and it argued that “whether the second Southern invasion is to be re garded as a failure depends entirely on the purpose with which it was undertaken.” lo be sure , Lee may have invaded mere ly tor the purpose of being driven back, “V* this light his repulse ought, no doubt, to be regarded as a Confederate victory. Indeed, the gentleman who tel egraphs to the Times its special express rrom New York bravely assumes this point of“view, for he suggests that Geu. Lee-never intended to make the action at Gettysburg a decisive victory for his own side, and therefore, of course, the failure was part ot hia plan. The leading article suggest a that the whole expedition may have been only a gigantic raid, and that Lee haviog made a “calculation, in which 'he material advantage to be gained was balanced by a possible loss in the process*’ was quite content to be driven out so long as he could carry off good store of plan der in hia flight. Rather than ackuowl* I edge even indirectly ire own blunders and j blindness, the Times prefers to degrade j us-pet hero iuto a .Southern Eob Hoy - Bat this ingenious Sjilou ot the run away ! *f* d d f oes n °t serve Tt e very cay before Gen. Lee's defeat the Richmond Enquirer declared that “one tbiug, however, i* plain Gen. Lee's movements are direct ed, not to indiscnmiu&te plunder and de vastation, but t-o the winning of victory.” Lee s fame, aueh as it is, must be rescued 1 | rom the disgrace which his London adu lator would now, to save its own credit, * heap upon him. He came not to merely rob, but to conquer; he did hia best to I win, and, having been defeated, he at. least acknowledges the defeat, and leaves | the field to the victors. 1 Nothing could be more surprising to I rational Englishmen than the manner in which th£ Tisnes and some one or two oth* ! er journals have endeavored to delude the pobiic of England regird-ng the charac ter, the obj :cu» and the events of this war. They who blindly took the leaders and the correspondence ot the Times for gospel, must have believed tLree days ago that the federal States were literally prostitute , aQ d ddfe.ioelpHs at the leet of an omnipo* ; tent conqueror. Nothing j a the history of , imposture has been more grew? and mon , stroun than the astounding audacity with I which the “leading journal” and its cor , respondents have been trying to gull the 1 public. The adventures of Baron Mun- I cb&uaeu wero not m.re extravagant than ' the pictures of Confederate triumphs giv ®n bythgLgeotleman who wrote from the the gentleman who did the correspondence from the North we can i-only say that he might have taken very re spectable rank as a lyric poet, if, while en gaged in the production of the mild little ballads and harmless scraps of popular minstrelsy he once affected, he had dis played but a spark of the bold aud power ful imagination which his American let ters have exhibited. The general plan adopted by the Tfwc? was simple. Jt merejy consisted iu ignoring altogether ev ery I edeial success and magnifying every Confederate foray into a grand pitched battle and stupendous victory. To be sore, I the journal had its special telegrams, which of course gave different views of every event from Renter’s carefully pre pared, reliable and impartial dispatches. Given a narrative of events drawn up ac cordieg to your own taste, what difficulty can there he in extracting from them a moral to suit your own purpose? The Times certainly found no such difficulty Regularly every week, for the last twelve months and more, it has been proving that the Federals had spent their last dollar, and had seen their last soldier run away; that they were bankrupt ar.d beaten ; that they could not fight any more, and would not even il they could, and that, in lact, they themselves detested their own Gov ernment and only longed to be conquered by the South. It is scarcely a week since the correspondence in the Tima from Washington assured the public ot England that the enthusiastic longing ot all in the Worthero Capital was that Bee and Davi6 might enter in triumph. . ea ders at a distance may perhaps feel inclined to doubt whether any paper could have been found bold eaough co print, whether any peopl • could have been found idiotic enough to believe, such gross and extravagant fictions. But it is impossible to exaggerate the woudera which can be wrought by human audacity upon human credulity. They have been dosed until whatever sense they possibly once possess ed is quite washed out of them. Why we wonder at Zadkifl and his illusions and his dupes ? His crystal ball only decayed the eves and ears of a few silly people.— j 6 L lmes “ M ma de more fools and palm ed off more outrageous cheats any day since the outbreak of the American war than ever were effected by Zadkiel's ball since the days when it was manipulated by Dr. Doe. Zadkiel's ball, too did not ex- tract any money out of anybody’s pockets. But our literary juggler many a dupe to invest in a Confederate loau, on the faith ol visions more unreal, fantastic and ex travagart than aoy glass ball er magic mirror ever revealed. If the defeat of Gee and the fall of Vicksburg do not con vert some of the believers in the Times then we can really have no pity for such credulous and easy dupeß, and oan wish them no better fate than still to be “led tenderly by the nose—ns asses are*.” | JdHX.M.M; FLY HILLKH, KILLS FLITS INSTANTLY. without danger t 0 anythin* else. For sale by SIMON JOHNSTON. <501116? bmithfinlij aoH Ponrtb afreet Pre P a etiona still selling at 50 a 3 ., aud ernelts snoh as Bcerhavo's Bitters at lit* bait their iortner prioM. STOVE POUSH, Beaton. why it Is better than dry Polish : if “ already mixed a r* ues no smell whatever. 1 it f,™ !?°. e , a no dirt or dout s' if n r ”.L tile r “ o,t intense heat, a t. ? r f? er ™ from ruat 7 Iti. mos t economical poHdi, L. ii one-fourth tho labor. For sale by SIMON JOHNSTON. 17 cornor Smithfield and Fourth sts •aesage from England & Ireland 825 ©O. EUROPEAN AGENCY. btoopka a bnrdi.Pa?&M^,^ o W hola House. Pitts ppftmrs b ™4ont or send bask fry. either Wstenm « of the old ooim BIGHT DRAFT? f. w \, , part of EmroSeT 0H eALS ' p?yab ’ 6 !n «W r^f OT AiS. t sti?, d^ poi “ Cincinnati BaH ’HSilina 0 < Sleek Star Line of ernTfnd ft!, oflr th 2 .'farcer Great East bSw %rk selling between "kjj ort “ Liverpool, Glasgow and Galway. telegeaphi COmiTIOK OF FEE'S AH The Invasion a Failure. KOTORIOPS fifißKL OFFICER CAPTOBKP. Terrible Farfhquabe at Manilla. TWO THOUSAND LIVES LOST. ENGLAND AND JAPAN, &c ' &c. Ac.- Ac. New T ore, August 4.—The Times dis patches from Washington, dated the 3d, say: It .3 again asserted on the most un doubted authority that the main body of Lee s army is encamped between Bapidan stahon and Orange Court House, It ie positively known that this was the posi tion of the rebel army on Wednesday last. Lee 6 real depot of supplies is at Gordons ville, but the latter point is now the place of distribution. Two divisions of Lone street s corps now occupy Culpepper. It is officially stated that the total sum ber of the Union wounded in the three days battles at Gettysburg is abont 14,000 A fraction over two thousand still remain in the hospitals there. The Herald’s correspondence, dated Sperrynlle, August Ist, says: The 4th Pennsylvania regiment of cavalry was d.V patched by Gen. Gregg yesterday morn icg upon a reconnoissance. At Little Washington, twelve miles from here, they encountered a combany of rebel cavalry, about 100 strong, ana drove them through the town, capturing a private ot the. 2d ' irgmia, who had been directed by an oruer from Gen. Lee to purchase iW W , t 6 “«**• in the vicin ity of Waterford, Loudon county. It was ascertained that a brigade of rebel cavalry and S^eTryville 8 !" 8611 LUtle The private captured had in his posses th°e n r!!iT COrre “ p . ondence indicating that the rebel army ,s m a very desperate con dition, and bewailing the error ot their re cent raid into Maryland and Pennsylvania and predicting that if the war should much ? Dge L Lee’s army would be starved to death m the mountains. * jLaeHerald. a Washington dispatch says- Gen McClernand, havfug been relieved from the command of the 13th army coma State of d i e m d - to . remain inactive T in the / * lhno, ?t has tendered bis immedi te and unconditional resignation ot the office of Major General of U. 8. Volun teers. The General is now unwilling to hold a commission and receive pay ffom the Government without an opportunity of The secessioniste here are making them selves happy over the report that Jeffer son Davis IS about to raise a great army landft ro ?h 00 th l prom se of freedom and rtwten thetn Large slaveholders in this j region express' the opinion that he will * venture upon no such policy; in fact he d roa , not t ™ Bt the slaves, It will be re membered that the remark attributed to Mr- Lincoln at the date of his first essay of his emancipation scheme he had reason to bebeve that the rebel government was t . he “ me thil >g. end might be before him in the movement. A rebel prisoner of rank was bronght to this City some time ago, and, as the story wenthe was thought to be Gen. Evans, of Jo 8 Bmfffame. Later revelationa from the South have it that he committed all 6106885 ' m / he neighborhood of Leesburg, among other things destroyed property in and about several of the finest mansions and grounds in that vicinity. He is the only General on either side who has indulged in wholesale vandalism f Fra!,cisco > An K“st 3.—A late ar rival from Japan says that a terrible earth quake occurred at Manilla, June Bd, ruin mg half the city and damaging every ba Thl n h b "j? ‘ ho , ns s nd lives wire Joe 2 noI h b r ark iord had arrived from Kag nowga, Japan, with dates to June 24th. nnn-j P Bne - se government had paid $4OO . 000 indemnity for the murder of Richard son, but refused to surrender the murder ers, alleging them to be subjects of Prince Solzima, who refused to give them up Ihe Government pretended its inability to take them forcibly. The British admh , ral proposed to proceed to Solzma’a Prin- Cipaliiy and take them. The Government declined and contended that it would be essentially war upon Japan. Negotia tions concerning the murderers are still pending. Foreign residents are very ap prehensive that war is inevitable YO n K ’A Ug - .■‘•-Tke Richmond \\hig has the following from Montgomery he 2«„ h ult. The funeral of the late Vfm Th« wE ?e7 » t ? okplaoe tbU afternoon.— The Whig of August Ist, says J. B. Floyd is very ill and not expected to recover W, E. Sohmertz & Co.. NO. 81 FIFTH STBEET, ment7f “* r<,odTO B m-DEI£S ASD CONTRACTOR* We arc now manufacturing .superior aritlda 0 ] lime, whleh we arc prepared to deliver from our OOAI tara, 009 übebtt stseei, fc£d‘.. 4 i£& of P81B “y Coal aiww on DICKSOB. STEWART A CO. jj^ANKlft’S SPICED SYRUP OF BLACKBERRY. invaluable for or SDmm « Com plralnt, Dlarrbcea, Ojstnterj, Ac. From its very agreeable taste it is especially applicable to children. -o-ooiauj Prepared and sold only by . .A. J. RANKIN A CO Apothecaries, 63 Market street. C. A. VAN KIKK & CO., MAXUTACTUKSBa OP CAS FIXTURES 4 CHANDELIERS. Patent Improred Kicekoir & Patent Paragon ’ CO A L OIL BUbVE BS , 00LIIMS8, & c . Salesrooms, 517 Arch St. Philadelphia. Mfmiiactory, Frankford. Philadelphia, S 3. All goods warm ted. Y>B ADVBETf|SKi3K®S M'k fj -100 bush pritnhOat* inlbcrosnd forfialo by aus „ JAR. AsFETZBK, 0 ” B -” MfSeta®} Firtt sJrf _ QGS j? “ H^Trr.. 9 bbls fresh eggs last received and for sale i „ JAB. A. FETZbL' * corner Market acd First streets. Mccoeisteb a baeb, 108 Wood B‘reet, 0111THEIK ÜB6E TOBACCO, snuff and SEGARS, at the very lowest CasU Figures, elsewhere orim ‘ aeour stock- before; purchasing - - . - * .: jf23 Stiff rVh^?LS IJIsn P¥ D - oou-aks-osk D l,2fij;l [ e “a, o ? e Fin five annual payments hJSm » “ ne i>*J"o story frame dwelnng- d tw ° llot ® of >^ oan d. eaoh id mrfS rdiiyoE li- an al -ey. sitaatetitcor , S,CUXUBEitX&SONS, an * 51 Market street. JJ XTfiA Ifiuxi pr varo covers,; New an! boantifnl ttyks jnit'openeil at the NEW GABPET STOEE —or— . M’FARLAND, COLLINS & U c , 71 &73 Flint STBJEET, ag3 ... ... Neat door to the Foaioffica- , I jWPOM ASD ISTEBIOB Royal Mall Company's CEfcEBBATEO BE3TEDIES BLOOD POWDER A7SD * • ' II 1> Ol Id OXi»T 31 NT , ou ’;A for .Diseases of Hoi-SerandCattle. f£'''T?J° an P l l “od ooly by_the Company in their own stable, from 1844 until the opening of the SS?^Y^?. raiopm S lpalrou, “- After thegen- ConSv ifc”””! I ®,”' all the stables ol the ““ Qp ?? y their annnal sales of condemned stock n^S'rS? ue? weis - corrects all demiw? “ ta fltrengtheo& ths system. ft,^S 0 ? 1 L acd *J°ssy- : torsos bn£ sec down by hard labor or driving, quickly re- S?n e ii^ y 8 the . Powder onoe a day. Nothing j will be found equal to it in keeping houses ud in appearanoe. condition and strengths P m London and Interior Koyal Maxi Companys, CELEBRATED . BOSE OIKTMEHT. the^J„^tfe:rSmeS?so.° atraotlonß °‘ oietTutWor S5L &%g£L !r MoKeeson A Rorbins, New York. S= h ® A h iv inB:dlyo JpEOOR OU CLOTH, Just opened, one wide sheet of best quality; well seat one! and in good condition to pnt down; a new and elegant pattern, never befexe in tnii market, at the j IVevr Carpet Store M’FABLAND, COLLIHS & CO. FIFTH STREET, Next door to tho Poetofflc* I lst 186 a AT MACRim & GLIDE’S, WE ABE IK BECEIPT OF Anzir GOODS, bought during tho present de- I pression of prices, and can offer to wholesale and retail buyers, at much lower rates than usual, handsome assortments of Fancy Goods and Notions. AS-Country merchants will And our wholesale department well stoekod with all goods in our line and at prices as low as any house in this oity or in .the Basts MAOBUM & GLYDE, No. 78 Market St., aul-daw Between Fourth and Diamond. ' RENTS’ PATENT bullet proof riT KE L COLLAKH. GENTLEMEN'S NEGLIGEE SHIRTS In Hl 1180 l bT. AZEEIKE, and all other desirable eolors- GENTS’ FINE LINEN SHIRTS for one dollar and a half For sale by MACHUM A QLYDE, No. 7d Market street, aul-daw between Fourth ann Diemoed Omc* op Pittboteqr.abdJSostos ( mm, „.™£ rrTSßTttQlt Ju, y X 6a >. 1863. i T£? i 7 i ? bo ?® h *»» BOSTOST of , C “J? tany u has d6olarc d a Dividend Aawat e . r?hala - Ipay ‘ blßon and after THOMAS M* HOWE, Treasurer* FOS SALE. I TP®® VERY DEBIBAB X. E BESI- I -UISNCE and Horticultural garden in the | Dorongn of Tarentum. Allegheny conn y, located I on tue second bank ft the river, w th a beaut i r ui I ytew of the river and railroad. The ground ii 1 10 a high state of ca tivaddn There are upon | the place on -fourth of an acre of Strawberry 23.1 L s ™. 80 , S? pB ™* e 2 bearin * ‘Us season,’ 1 with 1,200 to 1,500 one andr two year old younv grape viDeaready for Planting this fall; iso a I Jot of New Rochelle buokberriea, from which there was made last fell 1® gallons of wine “and t S e l io 2 k ?*• now / a lot of raspberry I rhubarb and a few apple and peach trees coming Ihearing,1hearing, with flowenss shrubbery all nf *w? rJ*!?T?.AK lok ;» C t tta *l? wth'-six rooms and a halt md wash and lumber howe. a stable, and si» iaUinjg well of water at the door. neTW ‘ Owmgto domestic affliction I wish to sell otwT will make payments eaw &rw? o.i_. R and immediately !r e siden CT Tw^J^t^LdeSr tl fc 1 . Pri^, f ®3fiSS*-wfe» lwfltlty 0 - . JAB. WOOD. hobse for sale, of W^ 0r, %1 <:es fltlo, y “nder the .addle, trots in tones Bix years old. .Inquire of 1,2,0, .... . JNO. SOHIfiSFFBB,. , jiyZ/-St •« j- : »- Plamrind' Allefo,*-• Ttf ft 280BEDFOiU>5I.JPOftSAtE^A Wo U bliUt twojtdry dwellmg house and lot' or ground foraale. A hall, biz rooms, garret &nrf celi £K; water fixtures, two front porches one &$> fjS M Jtakct strict, ; p** : j).f., coßsTtt com: Loay.-pur- A PPIES, . an '- corner,M grand Festival,' The Third Atsnnal Festival, fo, the BENEFIT OF THE POOS, • ' will be girei at I i f i Gff.EV WOOD CIBQiVE, onn '^p^^^^ot - ” tii P?®"® Tlcßeta, as cents. hoardnri^ T "h tb da^ Im ? Ua7^, ? D ®J‘ ot *fery : g? 4 y° n l5 cents. Good PurnimrVirAiietion PM&iSSfiS®^ Quoensware. 'ltibs Bi*H, ii OlSaa and ugerhcr with other H n ot Matts, mentoned. Tlu afoi oi« U ii?nS*' to f .®? o<, *i Dot and should r“ , ,£. a ■ lot of "lolm. ke-epere. “ f a WWI HoW _au4 - d. a. McClelland. .Auctioneer. at MeOiellaod'a Auction* 0 Ha«o at *§* °*° ®®k» Bl &<*.£, Sowing Stknds HnqWw^ 3 * 0, cd Waahswnds, WritinffTahl«?frii* r * e3 * 8, l!r? 0 * 03 " Water Cooler, io, A^We »^oreauea J Chaire, JBBOrBR * BAKES HEffTVn ci?n*^rt> ch i nes ■' lt A “ c,i ™ this morning at Olellaoa’a Auction House. This CS.. 11 . tiraly new and perfect. “ fllechme is tn. ans 'i. A. McCiEI,LAjf D . auctioneer. TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS. CT B S£E&s7ft7 orfc - 10 FIH ' Sr M/UL Twenty.rive Dollars. l»p“|to oatby Sims v ““» ■* OhronWo building, TO VM *%£££%*. gJIASOS, Fuat toon new Pianos Jtei received fromtho factories of , IHUKEBISIO & SOMS. Boston o»rpSK^- J. W. ross, B 7s™ mBBSOSBo “ oa ’ aiTBiUuTTBI'SSES Ml) ‘ ” , SUOFI.OEBBBidIa, Sepermr Xriifars and Shoulder Braces Xfilaies and Shoulder Braces! SsiKai® Traces ana ShcSdSrS - —ALSO—.:. • : All tkn n a »' Medicines, All too valoaole Patent Medicines! All the valuable Patent Medioines, Ac the Lowest Price, At the Lowest Prioe, At the Lowest Price, At the Drag Store of At the Drag Store of At the Drag Store of JOSEPH FLEMTNa • JOSEPH Fleming! Corner of the Diamond and Market ■**»«*• & Corner of the Diamond and Market ggj K> I=l o o G 3 s Pi co P> & I—l & SOLFEKIHO, USC, Steam to Queejutewii aai LireiposL The Bret class powerful Steamship* HBOS | crn . D MARATHON. | . faS-OFr. SEW YflHg |aaSSaß3ew£ .„„ M C£S 6 from Liverpool or Queen n- OeTSlJoo fro “ s3i 50L Uoldorita equivalent m Currency £ p A%]^ Llma * jna ,Jo GREAT EASTERS, FROM NEW YOtiK TO HVBBPOOL SCALTEE PA TON, Commander WILL BE DISPATCHED From Liverpool. -Wednesday. Aurod U at 4 o'clock p. M „ precisely^ From rork... Wednesday. Se»t a. “* 8 o'clock A, H,.precisely. And at Interval? thereafter of about six woeb. from each port. * RATES of passage. FIRST CABIS, from *B3 to ils S ™ C ? N r l> rABIS 8ti “" toom ber£. meals furnisbe i at separate tables. h Fxcuraoa Tickets? out andback inthslo j? 2d Cabins only, a fara and a half dren under twelvey^Sfff Chll. HURD CABIS. mtermeTa£SSom fcntf: found with ~bU ' STEERAoe go^ah6tan ‘ fold , K « STEERAGE, with superior aoiw2H2i3£sßk •»^ »M A3 Rattman JpaSttoßg AttheOffl^B^^ ggjrtoAys AbVEBTZSEMKK'rn T ' A . McCIiSI.T.4 i»p —— Auctioneer. ON I* v Ptiosa from $2OO to $4OO. THAS. C- HEUOB, Bl Wood street. &JT3 •**. " O eS © P tU E es “® •§ . 3&| **S of C/2' 2a» S 5 0 K©3 55 Pw • &Z g O 'v tw O ;ft e fj o If. a 11 ** z* . a r s 8J cq a W w p: n | at ® © 2; ° Or V n a S Z M’S* - ?. j § S M fftS 3 ° *(5» g o 'Z. Pi § - Q g£a * ». g | ijTi s s W"i* 2 Blf a | • ” s f ga» Q l?| I ll i" m 3 US »£ «« «!5 STEAMSHIP THE STEAMSHIP Great Eastern,