James P. Bari - , , DAILY POST. ADDRESS OF THE Democratic Ftate Central Committee. To the People of Pennsylvania i An important election is at hand, and ** s&ffi Wfrf* in M i now claim ; yodr attention, The tide of war has been rolled back from our borders, and with thanks to God, and gratitude to the skill and valor which, by Hie favor, achieved the prompt deliverance of our invaded Commonwealth, we may now give our sol emn conmderation to the causes that have brought to its present condition a oountry once peaceful, united and secure. It is now the scene of a great civil war between Statea-that lately ministered to each oth er's prosperity in a Union founded for their common good. It was 1 this Union that gpye thenr.peace at home nhd'respect abroad. ; They coped successfully with Great Britain on the ocean, and the “doo tnneM uttered by President Monroe warn ed off the Monairchs of Enrope from the whole American Continent. Now, Prance carves on. of it an Empire, and ships built in England plunder our own com 1 ' merce op every eea. A great public debt and h cohseription burden the people. The strength and wealth of the nation are tnrnedTcqm productive industry, andicop eumedia the destructive arts of war. Our victories fail to win peace,: Throughout the land arbitrary power encroaches upon' L civil liberty. What has wrought the disastrous change 7 Nu natural cause embroiled the North add the South; Their interchangeable pro* ducts and commodities, and various insti tutions! were-sources of reciprocal benefit," and excluded competition and strife.— Bnt an artificial cause;of dissension was found in the position of the African race? and' the ascendency in the National Coun cils Of men pledged to an aggressive and unconstitutional Abolition policy has bro't our country to the condition of “the house divided - against itself." The danger to the Union began where statesmen had foreseen it—it Degan in the triumph of a sectional party, founded on principles of; revolutionary hostility to the Constitution ana the laws." The, leaders of this party were pledged to a conflict with rights rec ognized and sheltered by the Constitution; they called thiß conflict “irrepressible,” and whenever: one *party is determined to attack, what another is determined to de fend, a-conflict ean always be made ‘'ir repressible.” They counted on an easy triumph through the aid of insurgent slaves, .apdimtitia,reliance, were careless Soon ; they provoked a collision.— democrats SndNioifserVativcs strove to avert the conflict. They saw that Union was the paramount interest of their coun try, and they stood by the great bond of union, the Constitution of the United States. They were content to leave de bateable questions nnder it to the high tri bunal to decide them ; they preferred it to the sword as an arbiter between the States; they strove hard to merit the title which their opponents gave them in Bcorn—the title of “Union-savers.” We will not, at length, rehearse their efforts. In the thirty-sixth Congress,. the Republican leaders; refused their assent to the Crit tenden Compromise. On thie point, the testimony of Mr.. Douglas will Bnffloe ; he said ; ‘ I believe this to be a fair basis of amicable adjustment. If you' of the Re publican side are not willing to accept this, nor the proposition of the Senator from Kentucky, (Mr. Crittendon,) pray tell ub what you are willing to do ? I address the inquiry to the Republicans alone, for the reason that, in the Committee of Thir teen, a few dayß ago, every member from the South, including those from the Cot ton States, (Messrs. Davis and Toombs,) expressed their readiness to accept the propositions of my venerable friend from Kentucky, Mr. Crittenden as a final set tlement of the controversy, if tendered and sustained by the Republican members. Hence the sole responsibility ot our disa greemsnt, and the only difficulty in the way of an amicable adjustment, is with the Republican party.” The Peace Congress was another means by which the Border States strove to avert the impending strife. How the Republi can leaders then conspired against the peace of their country may be seen in a letter from Senator Chandler, of Michi gan, to the Governor of that State : ‘To his Excellency Austin Blair .- “Governor Bingham and myself tele graphed yon on Saturday, at the request of Massachusetts and New York, to send delegates to the peace or compromise Con* gress. They, admit that we were right, and they were wrong ; that no Republican State should have Bent delegatee ; but they are here and cannot get away. Ohio, In diana, and Rhode Island are caving in, and there is danger of Illinois ; and now they beg ns, for God’s sake, to come to their rescue, and save the Republican par rupture. I hope you will send stiff backed men or none. The whole thing was gotten up against my judgment and advice, and will end in thin smoke.— Still, I hope, as a matter of courtesy to some of onr erring brethren, that you will send the delegates. Truly, your friend, L. CHANDLEE. 1 B. S,—Some of the manufacturing States think that a- fight would be awful. Without a little blood-letting, this Union will notj in my estimation, be worth a rush. “Washikgtok, Feb. 11, 1861.” In Pennsylvania, too, the same spirit prevailed. It was not seen how necessa rily her position unite<f her in interest with the Bbrder States. She has learned it since from contending armies trampling ont her harvests and deluging her fields with blood. Gov. Curtin Bent to the Peace CongreßS Mr. Wilmot and Mr. Meredith. Mr. Wilmot was chiefly known from the connection of his name with the attempt to embroil the country by the “Wilmot Proviso,” baffled by patriotic statesman ship,in, which Clay and Webster joined with the Democratic leaders, jnst as Clay, and Jackson had joined in the tariff com promise of 1833. Mr. Meredith had published his belief that the mutteriogs of the. rising storm were what he called “stridnlonscried," unworthy of the Bhghtest attention. . By fife' Lincoln’s election in Novem ber, 1860, the power to save or destroy the Union was in the hands of his party ; and po adjustmen t was possible with men who rejected themdgment of the Supreme Court, who scorned conciliation and com promise, ana who looked to a “little blood letting” to cement the American Union. Till this time, the. Union mien of the South had controlled, with little difficulty, the small, but restless class among them, who desired a separate; nationality. The sub stantial interests of the South, especially JKttsburgb ;})ost the slaveholding interests, were drgwnj-e- Wctantly uitoißefciaribn.? GerE JTSIS'-Blfir, of Missouri, an eminent Republiean. said very truly in the last Congress : “Every ■plan acquainted with the facts knows that ifiis fallacious to call this a 'slaveholder’s rebellion.’ * * * A closer scrutiny deponHt rates that th&TQbellioQ originated* chiefly with the non-slaveholders resident in the strongholds of the institution, not springing, fcoweyer, from of sla very, but from an antagonism of race, l? 8 idea of equality with a *ll lP ?e emancipa |lt was the triumph of the Abolitionists ?if er xTto® Pe m poratß and Conservatives of the North'thaf Secured' h like tnumptffc the Secessionists over the Union men of the Sonth. The John Brown raid was taken as a practical exposition of the doc trine!of the '‘irrepressible eonfliot.” The exultation over its momentary success, the lamentation over its failure had been swelled by the Abolitionists so a 3 to seem expression of Northern feeling. Biota and rescues had nullified the consti tutional provision for the return of fngi" tfves. The fake pretence that slavery would monopolize the territories, when we had no territories in which it coaid t exist, had been need as a'meSns of con stant agitation against slavery in the i Southern States. A plan of attack upon it had beenpnblishedin.“Helper’s 800k,!.’- formally endorsed and recommended by the leadhHrof the" parly that was ahinrt to tksnnje the admraistratiou of 'the Federal Government. Leaders who openly incul cated’contempt for the Constitution,-con-' Wmpt for the Supreme' Court, and pro fessed to : follow, a “higher law,” Thus the flame of Revolution at the South was' kindled arid, fed with fdel, furnished by .the, Abolitionists. ■ It might seem superfluous to advert now to what is past and irrivo tcable, were it'. not.that it’ is against the same men and the same influences, still dominant in the councils of the Adminis tration, .that an appeal is now to be made to the intelligence of the people. • The -Abolitionists deprecate these aflnsions to the past. To cover up their own tracks, “'ey invito ns to spend.all our indignation. npon “Southern traitors;” hat. truth' compels ns to add tbatin the race of trea son, the Northern traitors to the Consti tution bad the start. They tell ns that slavery was the eauee of the war ; there fore the Union istb be restored by waging a-war upon slavery. This is not trne° or only.true in the sense that any institution, civil or religious, may be a cause of war, if war is made upon it. Nor is it a just conclusion that if yon take trom your neighbor “his man servant, or his maid, or anything that is his” you will thns ea tabhsh harmony between yon. No danger to the Union arose from slavery, whilst the people of each State dealt calmly and intelligently with the question within their own State limits. Where little import &nce attached to it, it soon yielded to mor al and economical considerations, leaving the negro in a position of social and po litical subordination,nowhere more dear ly marked than in the Constithtion and Laws of Pennsylvania. The strife began when people in State 3 whqre it was an im material question, undertook to prescribe the course of duty upon it to States in which it was a question of great import ance and difficulty. This interference be came more dangerous when attempts were made to use the power of the General Government, instituted for the benefit of all the States, to the injury and proscrip tion of the interests of some of the States. It was not merely a danger to the institu tion of slavery, bnt to our whole political system, m which separate and distinct colonies became, by the Declaration oflnde pendence, “free and independent States,” and afterwards established aFederal Union under the Constitntion of the United States. That instrument, with scrupulous care, discriminates the powers delegated to the General Government from thoso re served “to the States respectively or to the people. And let it be noted, that in speaking of the powers ao delegated and reserved, we refer to no vague doctrines or pretensions in respect to them, bat to the clear provisions of the written instru ment. which it is the-duty of every citizen, and especially of every public functionary, to respect and maintain. The protection of American liberty, against the encroach ments of centralization was, left to the States by the framers of the Constitntion. Hamilton, the most indulgent of them to federal power, says: “It may be safely received as an axiom in our political ays tem, that the State governments will, "in all possible contingencies afford complete seonntv against invasions of pnblio liber ty by the National authority.” Who can be blind to the consequences that have fol lowed the departure from the true princi ples of our government? “Abolition” vies with “Secession” in sapping the very foundations of the strnoture reared by our forefathers. In Pennsylvania, the party on whose acts yon will pass at the ballot box, has trampled upon the great rights of personal liberty and the freedom of the press, which every man who can read may find asserted in the Constitution of the State and the Constitntion of the United States. The dignity of onr Common wealth has been insulted in the outrages perpetrated upon her citizens. At Phfla delphia and at Harrisbqrg, proprietors of newspapers have been seized at midnight and hurried off to military prisons beyond the limits of the State. Against acts like these, perpetrated before the eyes of the municipal and State authorities, there is neither protection: nor’fedresaf ’"The sei zure of a journal at West Chester was af terwards the Bubject of a Buit for damages, in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.— It came to trial before Chief Justice Low ne. Rehearsing the ancient principles of English and American justice-, hecoedemn ed the the actß of the Federal officers as violations of the law that binds alike the private citizen and the public functionary. He said, “all public functionaries in this land are under the law, and none, from the highest tpthe lowest, .are above it,’'— Impatient" St any restraint" fronl law, a partizan majority in Congress hastened to pass an act tp take from the State Courts to the United StateaCodrti'all suits of prosecutions “for trespasses or wrongs done or committed by virtue or under color of- any authority derived from or ex ercised under the President of the United States; and such authority was declared to be a full deferrae for th&wrotfg’doeP in any action, civil or criminal. The Amer can Executive is, as the word imports, the executor ot the duly en&cted laws • yet the pretension 13 made that his will can take P la , ce of the laws. The liberty, the character of every Wtiagii«tp ßt £ & mer '7 ?» w functionaries called “Pro vost Marshals. A Becret accusation be fore these officials takes the place of open magistrate, ; and no wnt bf habeas corpus may ifqpi r 6 the cause Of the arrest. To illegaf arrests, have been added the mockery of a trial of a private citizen;'for his 1 political opin ions, before a Court martial, ending to &ityj invenwatjy-tneir resident Oral® ti qJ. tea States. We need not comment upon aots like, of the United Statis haS' r no' ; aultidrifv, in peace or war, to try even an enlißtedSoldier by Court Martial, save by virtue of and., in : strict conformity with the military down in the act of Congress “eatab- and dtftioleafok raentof th&armiea of-the United States.” Xet his proplanjation will make all citi: i Q .® a ®eAable to military courts. He has I violated the great principle of free gov ernment, on which Washington conducted ot the Revolution, and Madiaon the war of 1812, —the principle of the sub orarnation of the military 1 to the civil pow* er* He has assumed to put “martial law,” which is the rule of force at a spot where all laws are Bilenced, in the place pf civil justice throughout the land, and has thus assailed, in some of the States; eyen the freedom ofthe ballot box. : Thege are not occasional acts* done in haste, or heat, ocignoraacej'but a new-aystem of gov- the place of .that ordained and by the people. That the Queen v DOt *hat hec6uld,'waa Mr. Sew* f l / to>the British Minister. The ; military, arrests 7 ' of Mr. Stanton receiv- e P fhe “hearty commendation” of the convention that renominated Governor Unrtin ; and it pledged him and his party to ‘‘hearty co-operation” in snch acts of Administration in future. Such is the afe|rading platform on, which, a candidate f<?r Chief Magistrate of Pennsylvania stands'.before her people. These preten* eioQS to arbitrary power give ominous sig nificance to a late change in our military establishment. The time honored Amer- 1 man-system of calling on the States for drafts from their militia*, has been replaced •bv-a Federal cousoription on the model of hjuropean despotisms. We' would not .minister to the excitement which it has caused among men of all parties. Its constitutionality will be tested before the charts. If adjudged to be within the PP w ® p Congress, the people will decide oh J propriety of a stretch of power, on which the British Parliament—styled om nipotent—has never ventured. On this yt>u will pass at the polls, and the next Congress will not be deaf to the voice of the people. i political evils, a constitutional remedy yet remains in the ballot box. We will not entertain a. fear that it is not Bafe in the guardianship of a free people. If men in office should seek to perpetuate r 6l l £* >ower by wresting from the people of Pennsylvania the right of suffrage ; if the servants of ihe people should rebel against their master, on them will rest the responsibility of an attempt at revolution of which no man can foresee the conse j quences or the end- But in now address es you upon the political issues of the day, we assume that the institutions of our country Qre destined to endure. Ihe approaching election derives fur ther importance from the influence it will exercise upon policy of the govern ment. The aim of men not blinded by fanaticism and party spirit would be to | reap the best fruit from the victories achieved by our gallant armie3—the best fruit would be peace and the restoration of the Union. Such is not the aim of the party in power. Dominated by its moat bigoted members, it wages a war for the negro, and not for the Onion. It avows the design to protract the war till slavery shall bo abolished in all the Southern otates in the language of one of its pamphleteers, “how can a man hoping, and praying for the destruction of slavery, desire that the war shall be a short one. 5 Mr. Thaddeua Stephens, the Republican leader in the last House of Representa tives, declared, “ The Union shall never, with my consent, be restored under the Constitution as it is, withslavery to be pro tected by it. The same spirit oppeara in Mr. Lincoln’s late answer to the citizens of Louisiana, who desired the return of that State under its present Con statation. Mr. Lincoln postpones them till that Constitution shall be amended. The Abolitionists desire the war to last till freedom is secured to all the slaves; hordes of politicians, and contractors, &Ba purveyors, who fatten on the war, desire it to last forever. When the slaves are all emancipated by the Federal arms, a .COastant military intervention will be needed to keep them above or equal with the white race in the Southern States. Peace has no place in this platform. It proclaims Confiscation and Abolition as the objects of the war, and the Southern leader catches up the words to stimulate his fo.lowers to fight to the last. It is not the interest of Pennsylvania that a fanati cal faction shall pervert and protract the WB F’ ‘ O JL ru * noua > perhaps unattainable e ? North needs is the return of the South with its people, its territory, its staples, to complete the integrityof oar common country. This, and not more devastation and social confusion, would be the aim of patriots and states men. The Abolition policy promises us nothing better than a Southern Poland, ruled by a Northern despotism. Bat his tory is lull. of. examples- how wise rulers have assuaged civil discord by modera tion and justice, while bigots and despots, relying solely on force, have been baffled by feeble opponents. That a temperate Constitutional policy will fail, in our case, to reap the fruit of success in arms cannot be known till it is tried. The timeß nre critical. France, under a powerful and ambitious monarch, is entering on the scene, willing again to play an important part m an American Revolution. The English Government is hostile to us—it IfaS got all it wanted from- abolition, and Will have nothing more to do with it. The secession leaders, and the presses under their control, oppose re-union, pre ferring, perhaps, even a humble depen dence upon European powers. Bnt from noany parts of the South, and across the picket hues, and from the pris oners and the wounded, has coma the proof of a desire among the people of the South to return to Constitutional re lations with th ? people of the North. Early in the contest this desire was shown in North Carolina, one of the old Thirteen associated with Pennsylvania on the page of Revolutionary hißtory. Bnt the major ity in _ Congress made haßte to show that Abolition, not Re-nnion, was their'aim. In a moment of depression, oh the 22dof July, dSfilybeing«t rre f day battle' of Bull Run, they allowed the passage of a resolution, offered by- Crittenden, de fining a polifiy - for the restoration of the Union, But they soon rallied and filled the Statute Books with acts of confisca tion, abolition and emancipation, against the remonstrances of t.-minent juri stemud conservative men fof all -parties. JUt 1 Lincoln,-too, yielding, he said", ‘‘to pres’ Sore,” put his proclamations in place of the Constitution and the laws. Thus every interest and sentimental the, Southern people.-jrere enlisted onthe side of rcsis. tance by the policy ol e party, which, as Mr. Stevens said,,will hot' consent to a restoration of'the Union, with “the Gon-. stitution as®; is.” . It is this policy that has protracted the r wpp, and' - is'now the greatest obstacle, to. itg tehhihatiofi.— The re-unibn of thd States can alone give them their old security at bomdy and power i and dignity abroad. This end can never p®, r. e^c h®d uppn the principles of the-par , “ 16^r principles are radically false, and can never lead to a good conclusion. Their hope of setting up the negro in the-place of the white man runsmountertothaiaws-of nu»,~tKFlaws of nature. Their statesmanship has been Weaud found wanting; a ' .Mood letting’ ’ has proved a with our SATURDAY urORWIWOy AjuCHTST 16,-IS8& miea has often frustrated and- never aided their sucoeas, till it has become a military proverb that the beat thing for a General is to be oat of reach from -Washington; The partywas founded upofWhe politioal and moral heresy of oppoSitiontQ oompro miae, which is the only means of-union among States, and of peace and good will oh earth among men. In. a popular gov ernment the people are the sovereign, and the sound sense of the wholocomnuin ity corrects, at the polls, the errors of politi cal parties. The people of Pennsylvania have seen,with regret, the unconstitutional aims of the Abolitionists substituted for the original objects of the war.. They have seen, with indignation, many gallant sol diers of the Union driven trcm' its service because they had not bowed down to the Abolition idol. They will see, with hor ror, the war protracted in order to secure the triumph of a party platform, or as Mr. Chandler said, “to save the Republican P&rty from: rupture.” The time is now at hand when the voice of the people-will be heard. The overthrow of the Abolitionists at the polls and the re-establishment of constitutional principles at the North; is the first, the indispensably,step towards the restoration of the Union and the vin dication of civil liberty. To this great oervice to his country each citizen may contribute by his vote. Thus the people of the North may themselves extend the Constitution to the people of; the South. It would not be a specious offer of poli ticians, to be observed with no better faith than the resolutions of July, ’Ol, It would be a return to the national policy of the better days of the Republic, through the | intelligence of the people, enlightened by experience. It would strengthen the Gov ernment ; for a constitutioaal.government is strong when exercising with vigor its legitimate powers, and is weak whyn it seta an example of revolutionary violence, by invading the rights of the people. Oar principles and our candidates are known to you. The resolutions of the late Con vention at Harrisbnrg were, -with some additions, the same that had been adopted by the Democracy in several Btntes, and by the General Assembly of Pennsylvania. They declare authoritatively the principles of the Democratic party. It is, as it always haß been, for the Union and the Cons ’ I tution against all oppoaera. The twelfth I resolution declares “ that while this Gen- I eral Assembly condemns and denounces I the faults of the Administration, and the encroachments of the Abolitionists, it does I also most thoroughly condemn and de- I nonnce the heresy of secession as unwar- I ranted by the Constitution, and destruc- I tive alike of the security and perpetuity I of government, and of the peace and lib- I erty of the peoplh, and it does hereby most solemnly declare that the people of I this State are unalterably opposed to any division of the Union, and will persist ently exert their whole influence and power under the Constitution to maintain land defend it” We have re-nominated Chief Justice Uowrie for the bench which fie adorns. Our candidate for Governor, Judge Wood rard, in hie public and" privoti?" character, | affords the best assurance that he will bring honesty, capacity, firmness and pa triotism to the direction of the affairs of the Commonwealth. Long withdrawn by judicial functions, from the political arena he did not withhold hie warning voice when conservative men took counsel-to gether upon the dangers that menaced our country. His speech at the town meeting at Philadelphia, in December, 18ti0, haß been vindieoted by Babsequent events, as a signal exhibition of states manlike sagacity. I Under his administration, we may hope] that Pennsylvania, with God’s blessing, will resume her place as ” the keystone, of the Federal Arch.” CHARLES J. BIDDLE, Chairman, BANKING HOUSES; jW. J. KOURTZ .. pa. R. MEET 2 KOUNTZ & MERTZ, BAHKERB, BTo. lIS Wood St., Second Uoo ‘ above Fifth Street, DEALERS lJi FOREIGN AND Domestic fixebanyo. Coin. Bank Not« 3, and Govern* meat oeountics. Collections promptly attended apll SILVER. DEMAND NOTES Certificates of Indebtedness, tors Certificate. o ., 7 8-10 Bonds and Coupons, =nd MI by mhs;6u}d . Woo«a street, comer of Third> U. O’H AHA _ WH. 1, Q’HABA & BE’GINN, Attorneys at liatv, REAL ESTATE AGENTS, OFFICE Bj9 GRANT STREET, Opposite the Court House. Pittsburgh. K?pStrfSe WML ilera ° laimi ’ ColleotlonB r ?™if fanoos, and full correspondence In Wkyato all business entrusted to our oaro. 15 SSTIBIBI. TEEfH EST IIACrKI) WITiiOIIT pain by the uee ol Dr. Oudry’a apparatus. HOFFMAN A ERnCNDSON DENTISTS. All work warranted. 134Smlthfleld Btreot.^ittabure. A joint RESoi.rnoy proposing CERTAIN AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION. if iy'L .W and Hon «« of. JtepMnUkllva of theiVommon of PonujlranM «n Gmoral Attmblv mrt That the following amendments be rrooceed to the Constitution of the Connuonwellth in M cordanoe with the provisions of the tenth artiole thereof;.. Uiero ihall be an additional section to thethird article of the Constitution, to be designated as Beotien four, aa follows: U;-Section 4. Whenever any ef the qualified Selectors of this Commonwealth shall bo in aotual military serrioe, under a reqnisition from the President of the United States, or by the anthor ity of this^ommoiiWMiih.fjHjh .electors-may ex ercise the right of suffrage in all elections by the oituens, under suoh regulations as are, or shall be, prescribed by law. as fally as if thoy were present at their usual place of election. There shall be two additional sections to the eleventh article of the Constitution, to be desig f Dated as * ections eight and nine, as follows • - Section 8. No biß shall ba passed by tbe idaturo containing more than one subject, which the title, except ap . Section" 9. No bill shall bo passed by the Lev islature granting any powers, privileges, in any ease, where the authority to grant suoh powers, or privileges, has been, or may hereafter be. oonJexred upon the courts of thta cnnTmr.nw>»*T'u£? q u «. , « JOHN CESSNA, Spoaker of the Houae=of Representatives, JOilN P- PENNEY. Speaker of the Senate, Otooo OF TH* } PEfIRBT ABY OF 7HC- COMMGiTWBALTH *>• PENNSTL^W^ 1 - 1563 - i poranjoertalnamcndmonta to tha.Oodiititutton,” 0! tha same mmtinn on file In tfila office. r Dos to ba affixed tno day andyearabovewTitten. Secretary of the Commonwealthi c £IH£AJP B«WW ISO SHOES fIOMMBMUL ISFOKMATION. Arbitration Committee or the Board „ of Trade.- j Wm. M. SHINN. V. P. |; J A 3.1. BBNNETX |JNO - a 1 tMOßisr mAritct. . OORSTSOTIP DAILY FOB TUB WJRKIK3 POST BY AQS&S. KOtnrag <fc HERTS* BBOKXBS; NO, U 8 WOOD STREET. for T Gold U gK.To. t ! 13 baTlE * ond 80lUnB tO3 gold; 1 23 00 culver.,.., j . qa .Demand x 22 00 Eastern igaw York.i.-., «>&..... (Philadelphia pnj Q jßpston.%, par ; Western Exohange, - ...... pay w jL0ai5vi11e.............. par Q iClevel&nd «... par 2 ;OS» pa? j PITTSBTJI3H OIL TEALS. ;The market has partially revived- buyers man ifesting more disposition to operate. The prin cipal sales, however, weremade /or future de liVeryj several thousand barrels changed hands in that way. .. The market in New York exhibited a slight improvement. The rate?, however, are below tljis market, when the cost of transportation is considered. ? busineaa'in thfeoity is.in aigre&t measure speculative. The present rise in the Allegheny enabled a moderate amount of oil to reach this market. The river is egaTn on the decline. current rates, with light sales, were as fallows: :Crade—3sQ bbls, packages inoladed, 29<&29>£ci Inot brisk at the latter figure,- 1200 bbls in ; various lots as follows: 22@23c,packages return ed: 290 packages included. Refined—Bonded seemed to havenhe call. The sales were rretty liberal/all things con sidered. The rotes fo;r October delivery were 63@5-ie; for immediate delivery 490 was demand ed, Free Oil was held at the usual advance of from 9(jsloc per gailnn. The shipments East were 67f. bbls. Wtat, 231 bbls, . . The reoeiijtd by the Allegheny were 1,462 bbls aD told. wa? dull and the price* were too unsettled to five anythin? like correct quota tions. PITTSBURGH PRODUCE MARKET. Of non or mgDaily Post,! Saturday. Aug. 13:h. 1863. / Th« weather continues o.veessively warm; the thermometer ranging from SB° to 92“ in the ahade- Occasionally we are somewhat relieved by i no. bracing showers. else it would go hard | with us poor mortals that have to go the rounds of the city. Our rivers are again on the deoline. The new steamers that were ready made their arrangements to go out on the presont water. Bacon—The market was firm with u fair mand. The better descriptions are mostly held at a slight advance- Hams are becoming qaite snaree,hut prices hare about reached the top. os a further advance would out off a certain class of purchasers from indulging in that article. The seasen for country 13 about over. Flour- We have nothing new in regard to this article. The supply is fully equal to the demand, the only inquiry being for lots for loco' purposes at former prices. Groceries firm and in fair de mand. Piioes unchanged. Flour continues duP'land prices about the he l ?. o ' ' h ° East and West wo notice dull mar -6els‘ rS f" ot there is no active demand in any K» rt ° f the c untry. Amongtho sales were some tobblsin lot, at Extra, $5 25@5 35; Eqtra Fam fS£kr o s?Clsis°notlar^. riOM pno -- firm; sales at scales of new at s22®&; old wold bring *32,®;y per to? at 10c P«rdozen. 8?*h te * r derate sales atl7@l9sper pound fieda^4?@fse Unohanßed: Sale 3 “ bbls dt >’ ti! WRS9®ISSp , S^ r “ # rB4U63[: Sales 120 b °*<* u^hdng^* e, * SteadyWif ' ba ,fl ' rl^eniani t. Prices whiii CU t nt i n rS? a « S9@9oafnr prime crude whae. 1 4 @1 5(1 h,r desperm: 63(@65e for dis -1 tilled red city, and So@9Uo for Western summer JuitT? 1 * 1, to Quality. Linseed sells 3 j&i °v 1 orusi^ hand* at 1 03@1 10 in casks lfiai b Aft* bu iw2 i r *° a ? Ie ? C( l u dbe ‘-laoed oyer ? i( f l . 05- in improved demand, and is held with groat firmness, notwithstand ing the unfavorable foreign nows ; sales of 1.0,0 ».,irJ?t^ bon:l t '’"’’ora' option all this month at 5-J4@530, and 3 000 do do, buyers option for November delivery at 65a. We quote on the epot crude at 34@35c ; refined in bond atso(2>s2c and do free at 59®60p Spirits Petroleum or Naptha commands 20023 c. There is a very s'oady demand for mess pork si < t>/»io' 1 Kn r r t,n .? r^® ra aD d the market is firm at v>^t«,o n e fo I lgb J° (rood oountry mess, and 12 to@l3 for heavy do. Some holders of fanoy nIS. an £ s y C l 6! wUI not seU under Is 50@14. Those who have tn>» best means of knowing say the entire stock of barrel pork m the city will not roach 7,000 bbla; the country is also entirely bare- Dry salted hams are scaroe and hold firm at 7M@Bo, and the stock is very near exhausted. Shouldvis are nominal at ;kl c g 00 ij e ' Th'fohas been more demand for rough aides and sales are reported at $4 60 a SUPPLY OF HEIH. fust and R °" Wasb ' Jy3o 69 Fed’ora'ist AUoghJny. I CASK CARB Atf .nOfriA>JCST BR< oeivod and for salo by GEO. A. KELLY, jySO 69 Federal St., Alleghany* ATEBS' PECrOBAts, SARSAPABII* LA. and Pills, Lindsay’s Blood Searcher, iiurnott aCocome, Lyon’s Kathairon, Mrs. Wil son’s Soothing Syrup, just received and for sale b y. .. WBO. A. KELLY, JfSO 69 Federal St.. Alleghany. Medicine chests suitable for steamboats and families. The medicine warranted of host quality and properly assorted received and for sale by ' KENEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOYEBY, Mustang Liniment, Bcerhsvo’9 Bitters, To bia’s Liniment, Mo Lane’s Pills and Venniiuge, received and for sale by SAYINGS INSTITUTION, IStATCBB OPPENNSYLVASIA. Open for Deposits from 10 . -n. to 2 n ’dock, n. m. dally: also on 3ATUKDA V EVENIN&S from 6 to » o'clock. *®-Offioe.-63 FOURTH STREET. INTEREST ALLOWED On Deposits in this Institution at SIX PER CENT. PER ANNUM Payable to Depositor* in May and Novemb which. If not drawn, will be added to the priu pal and compounded. ' PfiESTDSKiF—ISAAC JOFEB Vwa PaKpiDSHT-W. B, OOPELANi. TSUSTSBS* ffrm Thoa Mfiowe '' I Hon »TK Moorhen Wa. >• f jj&Sm* .Harvy-Childs. B ' Troasnrer-A. A. CABRIBB ATTORNE?: A&P COUNSELLOR AX LAW. •>* It BIWIAIaSS ESIBBSTBP TO A primpt»tt«nt}on. Co? Jietiosa made dacftlrd ai9BHadnt(«. Buying Beilins Saturday, Aug. 15th, 1&3. York OH Mnrkel. Chicago Market, _ GEO. A. KELLY, 69 Federal St., Allegheny. GEO. A. KELLY. 69 Federal St., Allegheny* REAL ESTATE INCORPORATED BY THE 080. It. COCHRAN, DEAhEES 111 OiliS. B. M. K 1 EH &'SO,, aisnpAOTOajaa os* No. ! Oarboti Ollj ’ J . • ABD B ES I*-25 O Xi S SlEBsi * «*-«• oil iranantaiL onSJpd j TfIEARDESCO Olt COMPINy IWAHOTAOTiIBB: AHl> SATE fOB iTJLsalo a superior article of : . , ; Beamed Ardeseo 3511, UOK-EXPLOSIVB. Al<si>, ... VUS E B E H E O B S, ; warehouse, 27 1RW88 STRESS ; PITISBUHGE. PZSRA. ;’, . ' Lucent Oil Work DtmoAH, ptm&isb? * go;, : . • PPSR BEFIHSI9 ; €3 A. T& S 3 O KT O ; E . )S :*■: kP K0 * * r3 * a ItIBKaST 16-TRBET, Pitts-. bargh. Pa. myitaid (nfAiSPJ I,bbs l brackets, JU CORNICES, OANDELBRASS, LAMPS, 1 EEGLLDED OB BEBEOHZED. abd made equal to new. Alno. Clibndelierfi Ac,, altered to bum Carbon ;o£l, at the i Lamp and Oil Store of WELDON, REISTBKE A^SULTi, ap&ily ; 1&4 Wood,gtroet. noarfl™- 1 PIANO DEALERS. KBTABF/S PIANOS, Whioh for power and sweetness of tone, easy and agreeable touob, and beauty of finish have by judges been pranoancedjmtivalled* Aa to the relative merit’s of Knaba’s Pianos we would rarer to the certificates of excellence frhin TEA LB KEG, BTRAEOSCH; G* BATTER and H, VIEEXTEMPS, . QSalso from some of the most distinguished Pro- and Amateurs in the country* ' 1 " ’A beautiiul now stock of Knabe’a Ranpe are now being- aeleoted by the subecriber in Haiti, more- \ _ . . CHARLOTTE BLUME, •" 43 Filth-street* Modern school fos the VIOLIN, A thorough and arrangement of easy, progressive studies, adapted to the wants of scholars ra every degree of advancement. Add -19 to which is a large selection of popular Song* Walties, Polk*e, Danoes, Marches, Quicksteps, Ac. By L. O. Fessenden. Tr !^. o author of this work is a teacher of -the Violin, and gives this School after a long ex perience in its use. For Exercises and Examples selections are taken from Sargino, LabltskL Pieyel. Mcnani. Czerny and others of like celeb rity as teachers and composers. Tho second part of the book is intended to meet the wants of those whs are desirous of well arranged Airs, Quadrilles, Waltzes, Polkas, &c, Prioe, $i 00. CHAS. C* KSLIOR, 81 Wood street. SPRING GOODS, "WB WOtm> CALL THE ATOS> v v tion of Buyers to our stock of SPBING AND SMB (MOBS, embracing all the newest styles of PLAIN AND FANCY CASSIMEBES , \ raitfiblo for Business Suits. A lull nnd complete : assortment of duo black CLOTHS AND CASSIHEBES, Plain and figured 811 k and Caskmero Vesting, W. H. McGEE * CC., 143 fXBEBAL S a’BEET, Square, Allegheny otty CgigLgg UAQB,.— —...J. BOD1LU! HIOVS* SASBE «& HIVES, Importer! and dealers in Cloths, Cassimeres, Sattinets Vestings, Tailors’ Trimmings, 265 MARKET STREET, Nortb Side, PHILADBtPHIfI • iy4.—GoS-lyd HENRY W. BEAUMONT *CO. DIALERS EN Foreign Brandies, Wines and Gins. Aiso, BlackbOTry, Raspberry. Wild Cherry, and Cinijier Brandies, Old MononshAhela, Rye, and other Whiskies, Jamaica Rum, Ac. , No. S 3 Liberty Opposite Fourth street. PITTSBURGH, PA. a *~ Hotels. Tayotns. and Families, supplied at moderate profits for Cash, mygblyd J. & M. BI’S'S’EJEJ’r , Brass Founders* GAS AND STEAM FITTERS, AH kinds of Brass and Iron Coelis made to order. BRASS CASTINGS, OT ALL KIRLS Made at the shortest notice, 81 A 84 WATER STREET, near Liberty. The members of this firm bolnc praoueal mo ehanta, of many years’ ezperienoe in tho bnsi nMs, win i»suro to give satisiaotian in every re B"”*- seßlyd -cJu29 pBIYAIE DIStASBS DB. BEOWN’S OFFICE, 60 SMITEFIELD STREET, _ CJitijons and strangers in need ofi medical cA* vioe Bhoald not fail to give himanaU. Dr.Brown'a remedies never lalf-io'eura Impu nfiM. aorofolOTifl and venereal- amacteons—Albo nereditary taint, such as tatter, psorltisis and oth er akin ..peases, tho origin of w&nh the patient is ignorant, . bro,^ t oa by solitary habits, we the only m« Heines hnoora ■ "»*“*■ »* ■«*«» RHEUMATISM. iShl attain 0a " nfew He also treat Piles, Sleet. Sonny inhoe, Uretbal Discimrees. Female Diseases. PaJ hs in {he Back and Ridnoys, Irritation of Hie Bladder. striSt (trees 810. . . QITRpnT.LAP* answered must eontaihat least oirr sale of someb ra*of^’k£dT°-' Sno PmV rella> - SForfe as ®ss.“J^^.sMSi CHABLEB L. CALDWKT.jt., P n ° HKp AO K ;b B ;■ J)ealerlaß “oM^r4 1 Sarar-Cnred Hams, xr tflawked Beef Ac. ' First street* PUfabEigh.P*, fiKSTS usTiiu caaMat o.V~ TERSI “ EstaMlshedl&iSfc f la ! . TO. .THE.:F£TBtIO,, , ■gjispb.ci Ajat*"'' Ij Modert g fall denotat-' nations, treat sesret oil- flat——^neat*^ delicate disorders, e»w- ”WT|!lli(l(yy/awk, abase and diseases. oi taatlena oommoneiidin- '~~" :^wßßßßwsgss»r cldeßt toyoathadf both- 1 aajriaae throaah hlmhtTokaß.CT&Bimb,^ hea.or nocturnal muijlssi naa. are completely cii»t j - la a traty short npnii.of timesy remedUs, whiobnrepeonllarly.bls own, ntoyarodoapcandi‘ ’ Itfomthe' yezMwde-'lusgdomi'haviaa! neea-the trestmoai.to b« abandon, edit and OataHtated the yen table' Femls dis aareaara treated with marked Bcfcgfr-flaTcah&d < oyer.forty yean (ft) exporieneo .mthrnr coat- '' men tin hospitals of both the CbdWorJd and la ' tto United him to onyr-ta. an s«th,« . fair trial, health and hauplaess'yjSl tsaia bloom * npoa-the now—palled chostaiSriCo no lenyerwith montebanss and aoaoks. bat como and bo cnred Conaomptlcnand'eH ofit! "sdsdrodOlmmos, o| : K=gaaa ?^ M three firsts vant&sp'cf otst &*ty ycai? .expjEleneo find mmc treatment cif ead wfcoli dpi l7 consulted by tho profeaicn. as wdl as reooa mended by repeatable dtisens. publisswra. p» j pnetera of hotels, &c/ S& Smitaaild street;-a£a* v sJsane»d strcrte P?fc*te coaaSySS &<m sD »~-j vas« *tete«yfeE tencodtew virsrtti*-.:• ises'sefiu M fbs&iiiTesiOfisi, BYBUP or' atASDBAKLE AK& STH#- j ' •• 'Having had-a man employed for tfie last six years compounding the above oxcolloirtTemedieff■ mr my own and having; used them.with - uncommon, suoQgss m all that time,'l - fed it a‘ ' duty tu.flet themVMfb?^rtho v! pdt©ei : & 'ffiyexpe rienoe.le.ads.irietothinh theltoß ; aa iftto soberness as any. romedi^:'w@U f eati hamehr: .BtttjftuL- Coi&p; Syphilis,- tod - alfdii qaspa thdrariie' ftoht state t>fthe thie will convince .-any pimo of theirfitnessforthosediseases;v- • < Prepared tod sold by l J. W. BRANSTSUP. M- H. > 85 SmithfieldaW Pittsburgh, Pa. STiftM BOILDIIS Ea°OQ S’dsia'flC'sa s* SSBHM. BKBISiSTi &?§ ea®3 BAKESS. Hess tie Peas. B. B. Psssas®*' BotcS, ~' taST AJSWS'ACnrgJKB : &H 2, - SXHOS: .OF * t mscoonstnieiton ot Bnginesand for Eriai mills, ana for npn*ht3.'nmlBy ana cbrmlar saw min.y • ■•’■• Havealao on Asad, 3 nlshqd.andready for Bail ment at shortnotioe. Siidair sad Boilers orererj dossnptlon. • ■ 1 •'. '. , i... ;; Atevftmusi Boilers and Shervlron separately, Wronant Iron BnafHnir. Hangar and PuffiesTn ■ variety,. and eononaq the mnnnfaotnr&oi- . Woolen Maomneiy and Maehino <ferda, ’ Oar prices are low, oar machinery manafcbotnr- ; ed of tno host quality of materiel?, and warrant'd In all cases to jive Eafiafeetion. - ■ OSrOrdera from all jparts of the country ooEoit od end promptly 511 td fhzlrd&w ■MEW BOXUBR WOIIKi. J, J. POWERS A.TTMDS TO THK MASHTACTTOE ■*»> ef Steam Boilers, Stills. Tankß, Agitators, Salt Pans, Sugar Pans. Sheet Iron Cbimneyß, Breechings, ana all other articlesnsu&ily man ufactured at rfmiir.r concerns. • • . . Promnt attention paid to all kinds of repairs oa reasonable terms. Works CORSES OF LOCUST mi DUQUESHE WAY, sth Ward, Allegheny river, jyB*lyd . ; Hydropolts, or Garden Sprinkler. A WKW ABB CSEFCX ABTICIE FOB wettinyplantaand flowera, waahinswindowa; carnages. Ao. Pumps of every description sold and repaired. Day kin’s PatontWaor Drawer “ *“* w'kLD ON i fcELLY, TSi Wood St, J“>3 One door from sffih. GBAVNI. HOOFING. Repairs pbouptli at. TENDED TO. LIJFTOK, OLBBM &CO., Corner Fifth and Wood streets, second story. MO OUQUESNE BRASS WORKS, CAD MAN & CRAWFORD. Mannlhatnrors of every variety of finished BBASB WORK FOE PSUMBEBS ©A® or SS’EASfFI'O’ESS, MAUHINESTS asd CCPPERSMITgS, W»BASS CASTINGS OP EYRKY 08. Also, sole agents for the Western Distort oi Pennsylvania. fof the sale oTManh, LaiSdeß* ae. aPatont S 3 phon Pomp, the best ever invon* J? 1 ™ 1413 not i* ab if to «« oat of order and will throw more water than any pnmn wiee Jts oao. , reblpfiy. HOlom OP UVEBT STABLB ScL hayißKremovftd^Jilßiar^ ner&la will roaciy e mai roeoial attention* ; - NRATL BBIOEUjgB. ELSDIGBIIBG GBAPE. , W l .®*® fiwnsEA raw mas °** 29 J jhftSt. DAtrte & OAPPBUi, SSKMCIWABTB' 3 , AH 4 ©s*» i t We H4TB just BBcsmn *• toss and well stock of A Spring: CJ-oods, cosdstiiit of : cioiba.casimeres, Vestin&e,**. * Al£o— FURNISHING GOODS, taplndln* SechTia.md mrg uung usually keptby JSratjJaHParolai Ink fflorj vMera Promptly exeeutoa. sn3o:Jy« W. H-Uureos.. ~J,B..Qw»** LFPTOS & ©IBDEIf, 1 XAjroy4(nKlM* A3DDaxtnaTs: > FELT CEIIBKISfiBSVEfcBOOfiIiG §mm- svK aAuei^r Jj27-St ]B2£S»dflKy, t'XT^k’-fcicßSiio,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers