POS The Union as it Was, the Constitution as it Is. Where there is no law there in no freedom. TUESDAY MORNING, AUG. 18. Democratic Nominations, ootehnob, 6EOSGE w. WOODWABfI, t'OB. oCVfiLME JUDGE, WAITER H, LOWItIE. DEMOCKATM PRIMARY MEET i IN 2*. —ln pursuac.ee cf the fjl.owing Res olution of the Dem .cratie County Committee, the Democracy of the several warax, boroughs and townships will meet on the day named to elect delegates to the Coon'y Convention ; Jirsoivcd, ThaWthe Democratic citizsns of the several wards, boroughs and townships of Alle gheny nounty are hereby notified to meet at their usual place of holding primary meetings on Saturaay, Aug. 29th and elect two delegates from oacb, who will assemble upon the following Wednesday, Sept. 2d. at 10 o’clock a. m at the court house to nominate a a county ticket The meetings in t-o cities and borougbs'will be hold between the hours of o and 7 o'clock p m • in the townships between the hours of 3 and *5 o clock p. m. T4B SinnFAßLEYChairman. JAS. M. RICHARD d. Sec. THE HAND-WHITING ON THE WALL. The nomination of Justice Woodward for the chief magistracy of the State, was a fortunate circumstance for the reputa tion ot Pennsylvania. With a reputation above suspicion, and ability beyond ques tion, he stands the very embodiment of the integrity and genius of our Democratic system. With such a candidate at such a time, we look upon defeat as being im. possible. At such a time stalks with brazen front even in our State as well as our National Capital, we want such a man for Governor as Justice Wood ward. With him at the head of affairs the people might rest secure, not only in relation to his own integrity, but they might also calculate upon having the dark deeds o; others either exposed or punished. In t-.mes like these, we should have a man to govern us whose reputation for integrity at least is not open for discussion ; in this relation our candidate stands defiant. Knowing the lofty character of Judge Woodward,- the opposition to his election 1 •'.o: not ventured to assail it; ia this 1 -f h avG shown some tact, because of the I.:rrib!e ordeal to which assault upon ours . would subject their own candidate. In tne absence of assault, however, upon the personal character of Judge Woodward, some of the Abolition organs are abso- desperate in their efforts to damage his political reputation. These efforts are as contemptible as silly, and must only tend to swell his msjority. “The hand writing upon the wall" is plainly visible, and hence the desperation of the Aboli tiomsls to save their sinking cause. Among the most shameless of the as sailants of the Democratic candidate for Dovetnor, is that moat infamous Hheet, the Ptuladelphia Press. That paper joined With the opponents of Governor Curtin’s nomination, and hence Forney’s warfare now upon'Judge Woodward. Having given reasons why Curtin ought not to be i:-c Abolition candidate, that' expert Dimmer, and broker in contracts, must ■ow make amends by excessive zeal ■n behalf of his re election. But if the Press imagines that persistent false -ood, .n regard to Judge Woodward's t out,cal record ia l.kely to assist its can . !e it is terribly mistaken. The slang u-oout “copperhead and sympathy wi h treason” has grown nauseous, and will produce no more effect this year, than the stale cry “ Brtckenridge ” did last -ae people are thoughtful; they have aivon beneath the surface of such paltrv stud as the Abolition press serves up to them. They feel and see that their liber ties are threatened by the encroachments of those in power, and they are apprehen sive that their own freedom may be lost ia the name of giving liberty to another ana inferior race. They see our armies -ugmented by hundreds of thousands of new conscripts, and that, too, while they are told that the rebellion is crushed _ they are inquiring why this is so, and tney receive no answer. They see the anxiety ol the Southern peopla to return to the Union, but our Administration gives them no encouragement. They are inquiring whether, indeed, it is the resto rat.on ot the Union they are giving so much to secure, or are their substance and lives to be sacrificed in Abolition ex periments. These and similar questions are being asked and considered by the thoughtful freemen of Pennsylvania, and mily cry of traitor and Copperhead against Jodge Woodward, will not divert their attention from their profound cpnsidera vlGll, THE KENTUCKY DEMOCBACY The Abolition papers out West affect to misunderstand the exact result of the late elect,on ,n Kentucky, but their dulness of comprehension, in this particular, is easi y accounted for. Because the Democrat ic press denounce Burnside’s proclama tion of martial law, and also the outrages perpetrated in consequence of it. the) Abolitionists can not conceive why Demo cruts are satisfied with the political senti ments ofthe victorious party. The Cin cinnati Gazette, a rank Abolition paper, in reply to the Louisville Journal, the organ ot the Democratic Union party in Kentucky, asked for information in the , M following manner. We suggest ita pern- T he Draft in Philadelphia ... .. ,1. .r ft. „i ,ii. i. w. ,b.. . pn , porUop “w;n ft, t i c of those who have been drafted in Phila the Journal be good enough to delphia are entering the service as con mform us what it means by the “conserve- scripts. The Press says • tivos of the north ?” Does it pretend that The number of those who are not drafted the Lmon pcrty of Kentucky answers to >s s .° {'“‘go that there is no scarcity of the Valiandigham party of Ohio?" avail able substitutes, offer themselves To this the Journal replies: By the Cv>astiivativee of tne North*' we mean !"° l permit, their going into the army. Kv the Northern men who.are opposed to the I mte generally, and arbitrary/ and radical of tU fsTe^Vw^L^, Administration, and who last year sig- cot last a great while longer La nalized their opposition to such measures boul . itleB and 8 Probability 0 f very liLfte by overwhelming majorities at the ballot ha " dred . 8 men who, a box in nearly all the principal States of he prkU ibich beob! the notja. -Jo Qfhor jyorda, i?e. mean the .tojiwd vaneaso much-that an appro-iipa men referred torin the foJlowiDtresoiat’on, can he aven. The igure adopudbjr tip General of Ken lui. r.t the lat? and re-adojited even ooehundred dollars. i ; r— \ Vw l ance with military orders, and the ordi nance of the city government. Col. Green refused to permit compliance with the or der, and the centry stopped the carriage when Col. Green sent off for a military guard, consisting of a non-commissioned othcer and two men, and attempted to nr rest the sentry, who resisted, and Col. G. himself seized a musket, and took a hand also in the matter. The sentry, however, persisted in a successtul resistance untii Captain Lockwood, of Gen. Martinda'e's (the military governor) staff', came along when the soldier surrendered to him under a sort of protest, on condition that the capt. should be responsible for his (the sentry) leaving his post. The soldier was | taken to head- quarters, and by the inter position of Lieutenant Holmes was for the time released. He was, however, again arrested, probably for leaving his post and , committed to the central guard-house. I i he affair created considerable excitemem at the time The Administrations Whip. We take the following from the Hoston Journal : ‘The Government has decided not to | retain any officer in thearmy whose views on the war policy is not in consonance with his own. _ Cases still continue to be reported for dismissal for the use of what is termed disloyalty pr treasonable lan guage.” I Thus does the Administration snap its wbip at the manhood of its officers. It is as much wotße than the whip of the plantation overseer as the manhood of the white man is better than the bodv of the negro If there be anything ahead ot this in the refinement of despotism we cannot conceive of it. It is enough to make a patnot shudder at whaf is before naif this steady march of the Administra tion despotism be not rebuked—sternly ballot-box 6 * th 6 rebukebe given at the unanimously by the State Convention of the Union party of Kentucky: That this General Assembly hails with Pleasurable hope tho recent maiifosta ,W3i(.°i'onBt,rvl}t,v') sentiment amon g ?ho i.“f,- ali e o°th d er P Io?al d«?e thoi,: part 10 with of evera sectio^hna 8 '^ 170 Bc . carit y to tho rights the CMsHtnHnn’ the Union and found“ho°Eep n wfc y ° rdaincd by th ° That is what we mean by the ‘conserva tives of the North.’ We hope the mean ing is not obscure to the Gazette-, or, if it is, we hope it will grow clear enough in the course of the next twelve months. 1 Asto the Gazette's clap-trap interroga tory, we believe the masses of the party in Ohio that supports Mr. Vallandigham for the Governorship agree in principle with the Union party of Kentucky. Mr. Vallandigham is notoriously the candidate of the Ohio Democracy, not in consequence of his peculiar views respecting the war but in spite of those views. The single and simple issue raised by his candidate ship is the issue of the freedom of dis cussion ; and as wo have just intimated, wo believe the masses, who, notwithstand ing his views concerning the war, support mm on this issue, agree in principle with the Union party of Kentucky, whilst dis agreeing upon a very imporlant point with Mr. Vallandigham, has no affiliation with the party in Ohio who supports Mr. Brough. We trust we have made our selves intelligible even to the Gazette. ' WEITJJEL PHILLIPS ON THE Over a year ago, before Phillips suc ceeded in lashing the Administration into the adoption of his schemes of emancipa tion, he spoke as follows of the war and its consequences: now that the speaker has secured the “ bull against the comet,'' he is willing that the war should goon, until the spirit of the first born Cain shall reign in all bosoms, if it only gives free dom to the Southern slaves. While thus laboring for the enfranchisement of the black, it will be seen that Phillips asserts that the white citizens are fast becoming slaves. Ha remarked: “Neither will I remind you that debt ;a the fatal disease of republics, the first •hing and the mightiest to undermine gov ernment and corrupt the people. The great debt of England has kept her back in all progress at least a hundred years. I will not touch, neither will I remind you that when we go out of this war we go out with an immense disbanded' army, an im mense military spirit embodied in lwo thirds of a million of solders, the fruitful, the inevitable source of fresh debts and new wars: I pass by that, and lying with in these canseß are things enough to make the moßt Banguine friends of free institu tions tremble for our future. But I pass those by. But let me remind you of anoth er tendency of the time. You know, for instance, that the writ of habeas corpus, by which government is bound to render a reason to the judiciary before it lays its hands upon a citizen, has been called the high-water mark of English liberty. The present Napoleon, in his treatise on the English constitution, calls it the germ ot English institutions. Either say- that free meetings like this, and a free press, are the three elements which distinguish liberty from despotism, and all the Sav-m blood has gained in the battles aai tods of two huudred years are these three things. Now, to-day, Mr. Chairman, every one of them —habeas corpus, the tight of free meeting, and free press -is annihila ted in every square mile of the Republic. We live to day, every one of us, und-'r martial law or mob law. The Secr-tarv of .State puts into his Baslile, with a war 1 rant as irresponsible as that of Louis, auv j man whom he pleases, and you know that neither press nor lips may venter • u, ar raign tint government' without being Bilenc.-d. We are tending with raj-kl strides —you may say inevitable; 1 don't deny it, necessarily: I don't question it - we are tending to that strong government which frightened Jefferson; toward Oiv unlimited debt, that, endless army we have already those alien and sedition laws, which in 17US wrecked the Federal piriyn and summoned the democratic into i xist euce. For the first time on the coniine-' we have passports, which even Louis Bonaparte pronounces useless and odious for the first time in our history, govern ment spies frequent onr great cities.” Excitement on Pennsylvania Ave Lieut. Col. E. M. Green, Chiefgaartc; master of General Hentzleman’s Stall, commanding the defences of Washington, while riding along Pennsylvania avenue, on Wednesday afternoon, in a carriage, was stopped by a mounted sentry named Howard, and the driver ordered to keep to the right hand of the Btreet, in accord- The Conscription in Massachu- The grave and reverend National Intel- sometimes facetious ; alluding to the Conscription iu Massachusetts, it remarks: The enforcement of the enrollment aw in Massachusetts has broughtone very remarkable fact to light. Wo allude to 1 e general cachectic condition of the peo pie, as inferrible from the number of ex emptions granted on the score of physical disability. The affluence of the applicants claiming on this ground to be released from the military service is so great that the ‘streets and lanes' may be literally shid to ‘swarm’ after the manner predicted by Governor Andrew a little lesß than a year ago, though unfortunately not with men who go iorth to ‘fight with God and human nature on their side,’ but with men who pay the doctors to have them excused “ ' Ve haro tendered this carious deve’- opement with much interest and we have asked ourselves the question why it is that that port,on o, the country in 7 .h ch " some affirm, the meat robust type of ’pa m Pr °fh QCed “ d ««edf?ho„; d P be i s*- , re than an ) r other part of the Our Mte 8U genera ‘ Physical infirmity? Bail, IS 6 ?- cole “P°™>T, the Boston / -ddicrttscr. which from its habitual rnrfviv 10 ”’ n 0l 1 e , 83 thau fro ™ da natural partialities, would not be likely to exag gerate the pathological phenomena of the comments on the topic as th ß t a , t6rr " c catalogue of the ills tnat flesh is heir to as is now put forth in each of the enrollment districts in this tha H l3 ! } nythln r s b «t pleasant reading for the dog days. It ,s painful in the extreme ledt?. ' S f l be - f ° re one ' B e yes in black and whi.e that nine out of ten of one's neighoo-.s, selected by an impartial lot nerhan T'd UfferiDg I rom 80me Stressing; perhaps hideous,and very likely nameless dlBa bjdty, or are in that condi tion of general and indescribable wretch edness known to the law and the exempt ing physicians as ‘debility.’ What a de generate and wholly unsound race we are after ail, is tne inevitable reflection after persuing these appAlhng lists. ‘ But if it is unpleasant thus to be re minded of our common mortality, what brnGlv' -M'' f ° r ‘' h ° S 0 Wh ° Be name 3 and nubile'”"' f wllii hia wir on the cars, on one ot our hurried visits home, ihe tirst dividend for many years on the stock ot the road was paid on Sat urday, August, lsi, at its nllice in New ? ork. and on that very morning Mr. Camp bell surrendered his trust to a higher row er than the Presided or 1 Erectors. -♦ _ How the Government is X’e irauded. Tne li.\lti;noiv ‘“t morning. a circumstance oc currcd ,n that city which *bows how the government is robbed l.y the contractors. A man who had b supply the (iov ernmen- wdh hay .-rose up a Km i at the Western Hay Scales for the purpose o< having"!! weighed, whmh wav dune, when it was disyovoroil that aboat eleven httn area pound* of green, mouldy < lowr had been packed in the middle of the load Ihe Government agent, upon being in lormed of the matter, v,rv prop., rlv refus ed to receive it.. Colored Troops and the Attack upon Charleston. When the ISfh colored regiment, re cruited in Philadelphia, which left for Charleston, on Thursday, shall have ar nved, ueariy sis thousand black soldiers will be actively engaged in the movement against the secession stronghold The colored regiments embiared in Gen Gil more's forces will be as follows i 3 i' m ,j South GaroHna: ith Mass . General Wilde s Brigade under his command, con aistmgof the aflih Mass., aud the Ist W orth Carolina; 18;h Pennsylvania, Will of Archbishop Kenrick. | Two wills of the la.e Archbishop Ken rick, Ilf Baltimore, have been duiv pre sented in Ihe CilHoe ot Register of Wills in that ei.y. Yke last will, dated With of November, Ksut), is regarded as inopera tive, feeing signed by but two witnesses, while ,he law requires three. By the first w: . which is dated 20th April, 1862, and 8 duly attested and admitted to probate the Archbishop bequeathes to the Very Rev. Francis L’Hoinmi ail his real and personal estate now held or to be held and in the event of the latter's death or absence trom the United States at the time of the decease of the testator, the property was to pass to the Rev. H. £j Cookery, the relatives or heirs at lav? be' ing entirely excluded from any share in D e^?i? te - wiU was witu essed bv P. 0 Jieill, W. F. Clark andC. H. Stone stroy. Basignation. Or. Parley, Medical Inspector General ol the L'mted States Army, has resigned n p 8 R POsU, °? Medical Inspector, and Dr. Barnes has been appointed his succes DIED; WUI ‘f' ‘ >laCe T ° atlu “clock ,m her late rcMde.ice on Scott's alley, near Irwin street. near n.y BiiLEft, KH.LS FLIES INSTANTLY without danger to anythin* else. For sale by tJIMON JOHNSTON, corner Stnithfield and Fourth street ee^andTrJiXi’srhMXrha 1 ™ somettia* Uka iW^rlormTr^ri^s Attors « polish. Reasons why it ls better than dry Polish ■ 1. It is already mi jod ttl i“, B 0 5W,< ” whatever. aiJ ro L llO^ 8 D 0 or das* 4* It stands the moat intense hear •. It preserves from nm. h. It w the most economical noli-K Fo I r t B So Il by one ' foarth s te 0 1 S^ * ' --- -■ SObbl instr-c'd and for sale by -ner^el'a^^,. in fte N Bo T^ E 7T n , elM «0“ win theoity of Pitubnrffb on a T^-riH Tr& fi 0 iiorEDa in of August next at if ,? Q i T t csdiy ’ tll « »slh **ar iirectors of'flie Pittsbu!??« m ‘l to. elect seven fcaervo for tho Gra,r ' *'*vator Co., a'ftr'f 1 ' ».»«*. «“»>ocw.T. M ter w - Co iwratora. Amerh-iin that c-h Wbkk.v, n. C„ August 13 -A meet •ug of m.zens, representing every touml of the lire! and second Congrelaionlf Di/ U leta, and a portion of the third, waa held n,h ~ “n ? ° n ’ Nonh Carolinn on the Ith. Resolutions were adopted aymna thunig With the great conservative partv of the Slate and declaring an energetic ioTmIIITi the Wa l iD this D8 P""nent to b,. the only means by which the Union asking the Government for reinforcement ■or this purpose ; accusing the Confeder- Jeff nlv h destruction 0 1 slavery npon JeH Dav.sand his conspirators ; express ■ng henel that North Carolina wiU find ample compensation in free labor for the abiliiy \i. a , u t d p°. ml nenaing the coi.dum of tHl h Varl“L a ny° D ii U : h h e e the derstood the dispatches have reference to Ltd e n egn ,’f‘ ° n 3 on tba Mississippi It u to ai?? 3t i fa "°- ra °P enin e cotton trade to all loyal citizens under proper restrir tione, and recommends to the authorities ' . ashington the immediate adoption ol of hTl° CT ; ™ a WUI thousands of bales ot colton now hidden awav in swamps, and have benificent effects 7 on manufacturing interests Gen. Logan made a speech here iast asfemWedi 0 la airo 0^dO ' iraDdieDCe - er ealuta was fired from the gunboats on tht Gen. Asboth, at Columbus, Ky has been by order of General Grant. A. S mit h takes oommand there. f , nl T 'rn JODIS ’ —The body of Lol. Cornyn reached this city yesterdav The funeral takes place thfs ,’“ 5 appropriate m.litary honors. Oaterhaua leaves this citv h.e command .□ Mis uiesl fa* V 10 fhe estensive eotfeo «£) t ment of Hobert Ch»-‘ - tea establish troyed bv ' ..lb 68 wa ! entirely des '."Snred for $29,000. SS ® 30 > 000 i H. J. LTSca FRO.VT alterations, will bo found in In 4 atr<:et l to make rear c f old n O re.en tr “ce™^S addition,?® dour from nth street where Tw? r fe et first sold cheap. “ ere "*7 Goods will be aulo ] U WO JS SHOES, " OAtIERs AND BAMMJULS. e ID K fit great bargains for two weeks, SUMMER GOODS, to make room for n larßO JPall Stock. Cai and examine before Puroassiag es- Be sure you so to ih s right place at BOBUMps, No. 98 Market street Second Door fton ’ ‘ Fifth. • OOMCOBD SBAPB, S H VISES, » W^PEB telegraphic. #UI ABUV OF TUE POTOII Condition of Anny. the pjospectat charleston UfilON HSKTISC IJf JOfiTH CAROLINA. Trade on the Mississippi, **■> *«•. Ae. &e, New Vouk, Aug. 17.—The Herald’s dispatch says: Affai.s remain quiet at the front Picket firing has ceased entirely, and both armies seem to have settled down into a state of lethargy. There is no large force of the enemy north of the Rappahannock, though a sort of picket one has been established from United States Ford to Acqnia, via '■‘Hartwood Church and Stafford Court House. This line is very weak and offers little or no re distance to onr scouting parties. Most of the prisoners captured from the enemy profeßs a desire to take the oath o allegiance. They all express themselves as being tired of war, and utterly discour aged. The degree of distinction in the rebel army exceeds that of any previous period. No information has been received indi eating that tee has been reinforced to any considerable extent. A few conscripts and convalescents are arriving from time to time, but it is not believed any portion of the Southern army has joined the forces m Virginia, The activity of our cavalry sent in unr "M ° Sbyhaa checked his opera ion , and the sect,on between Washington and gneS; Bn °' from ■ a]d A 4f mOrC corree P° ndent of the Htr- at fanlt hitherto, iiWM , numher of reinforcements at 1 ' , te makee Le n. Ihe military iorce is not deemed sufficient, and will have to he largely re intorcr-dI before the finale is consummated r f |,u , bllc “ ay at once divest themselves of the idea that any startling news is com mg from Charleston at' present to close out TODAY’S ADVEBTIBBMBITTS.) TO-DAY’S ADVEBTIBEMEHTB. * g 2.2.2 S 3 y-/ s!*° £.” 2 5. • 8-?2*l-5b Ss - 2| 00 ts *E?SB~J O ® i® d '-C3 O BO S 5 Eg^®?©* 3 CJ^ B 3 S=g-fM *T CSS £ |ss=|se ® I • =!£!!£* g- % Ssf§£&3 ss « o =SL~»srei3 iki __ s ra§. ff si« m &* o. ' , *S l aS'i FT “ b, « ®S * SlßglU «4 -■B p » © S 3 — 3 Cn =a poo 55 2 5-° ESS’S® S' t5»- W “S=i3?“ *S tt r 3 ? w n c« O A —i 8 ss§o"?» 2 «s> H 2(B 94. se Slo?!’?* * $250 CAS P ASI> Siio iar rwo yearly raymentß will ruroh- se a irame dwe ling house and a lot of uroond 17 fnM f“‘ »>y M deep to an alley W fe't lu.ve w“sh?n?'° near “"ken«H%. Per"?i® k,t / c . hase a ebenp dwelling house and Applyto *** *° elaiiinG “1< property. S. CUTHBERT & SONS. 5l Market street. STBAYEDHOHiK C a „m E t< * thf - subscriber. re. l%h . h 1£ ln HoS3 towusWp. on Saturday, Aug. .IH H l r6 t t 0 be about soven hinFfnit Th d shoea “ n fore feot ' bat nODe *aril n?!,V^ h E? r *’ re 9“Mted to como for awav P nthi , ' orty i.' Pßs ’-f?? rsC9 Bnd tako her oFrdiia to Uw 0 wUI bo Prosed of ac- For further particulars enquiro of w„f„h , „ THOMAS COLLINS anl*?M n ° n the Pltts hureh, Fort TVayne & ° ulB 3td _Ch oago Eailroad. A HAMLIN S : CAB I IV ET O RG ASS, In Walnut, Oak and Rosewood Cases wmS, 1 ! 10 ‘ollflwininow and valuable im ajiCliAnor,’ ‘W Knee Slop for Upper Prices from $7O to $l5O. The eheapoit and bo‘t instrument of the kind ? desirable for email Churches Sabbath Sohools. Lecture Rooms, Ac vuurolies » Send for a circular. „ cijas c;. mbllob, '-ass iss«s‘i auls S P I mro rave st«A r* EPH FFK * Comer of the Diamond and Market streets, Superior Carbon Oil at CO eta. per Gallon Snn!? 0r n ar K on S-‘! at COcta - P er Gallon. Superior Carbon Oil at 00 eta. per Gallon. The SS °r S emon 1 (aT Fruit Cans. 4P 0 n f > aa v t y of Coment for Fruit Cans The B«tQuality of Cement for rv?it c££ At Prices that Defy Competition. a J r>" Ceß at Oefj Competition. At Prices that Defy Competition. Soda Ash and Pot Ash of the Best Quality. As {| SD j i> 0t Ash of the Best Quality, Soda Ash and Pot Ash of the Best Quality: Wines and Liqnors of Best Qnalliv Wines nod Liquors onicst Uaalltyl tor Medical Purposes. -or Medieal Purposes. Mineral Waters of all Kinds. Flaxseed Oil Turpentine, Camphine Burning Fluid. White and Ked L»ad „ JOSEPH'miuch n Corner of the Diamond and MaXot streets. DRY GOODS AT LESS THAN eastern prices. Haims Purchased. Them I'efore iho ATE ADVANCE FOR BARGAIN CALL early. e w PRINTS, new de LAINES, &0 NOW OPENIN'C3. 0. HANSON LOVE & CO. „'f 5 470 MARKET street. p AiSe T m ' property ofThoinhs B undersigned Committee of the “uA “f and b £, virluo of an order ifebs^’r^AlH 8 land V f Judee Forward's I GEORGE THOMPSON, __au°s!6td^ R ° Saand Second Pittsburgh and Minersville' PatT J^ nger Hailwa y Company. P“ E STOCKHOLDERS OP SJln RTilw^TSplnvTo l ?l the Oakland burgh. on W . P , itb l- Com loOt “ g “ Boarf 0 ?! the d ,h rd % fffij I ails-fdtd‘ ; “' A ».™i T ° N ' SeCretarS '- Dark De Caines New Styles. DAB S PBINTS, New Styles. Striped and Figured Sheeting Prints- PINK, BLUE, BUFF Atfr, BRQWN (HiSBBH G r dtIHAMS, - Quality, PINK, r JLUE. BUFF, ORANGE, MAGENTA and GREEN WOVE De LAINES, JUST OPENED AT HTJGUS & HACKE, Corner Fifth and Market streets. August 18th, 1863. NEW PALL GOODS. A VERY FULL STOCK OF *>w Fall Goods , OPENED THIB DAY, TO WHICH THE ATTENTION OF Wholesale and Retail Payers IS respectfully -INVITED WiH. SEMPLE’S, 180 and 182 Federal Street, ALLEGHENY, Above the Market. ST FRANCIS COLLEGE, lURDEB CAR OF THE FRAHCISCiS BROTHERS) T m S loretto t^?- h ’ U n i/ibout°fS« Cfr“B^“^SnnSrl healthy in PennEjlrania-thiaLrtinn Jf {ft? flf 31 thmy Moontshra belay r^rcbhdfnr‘ft® 5 ‘ Ihea-Sdii"'' “aPifemSMBoSSJ* PUrO iJoAM fbTio^STuausT 11 !^ 1 ' SSMSg* between the SefSoM ret Sf n hom « laittart4»Sßa?E in^nce®.™ Tuitkn - sayaU « balfyeaW-r ■ n Sneering ana LTsYof instruments; peVSi® 65 Studentssponfina°VaoSiOTa?H;e O C?UM?' 20 O-tem.m'th” Reff??? 0 % dl Vhbudeli>hm° a^v e br I some of I and female, old or youngl for male BULL’S .spgjGlF.fi prr T 0 aro the original and onG Over one hundred phyLin„ B . S 100 S feeble PilL their practice and ati,sp^w a b n “<«». them in and approve of ikcirVunnositi i effioaoy tor effecting a PermSneni? o Ji n f l ' r “ l , i£lbl e remedy ° a3a3 " “to cure in all I fftth all it* train of io - b?minal Weakness, I Vaginal QisohoW, Qw‘ h? Urethral and Involuntary ErE" 8 ?' the Whites, Nightly or ritabillty.&oentSiwfe* l D « b jity and lx kj?3 °f tower, n”iwou'/nim’r, llo6 ;^oakness or J b iPh arise Prineirmli? S f ? 0 ob, L t J'< fe o tf 4o.elt of S».f-Abu.e. or sonfo Ji i* xoeS3es or and incapacitates ih« «.?#?itutional derangement duties o/Married Ufe< erer fHlu fulflUinglhe Qonorrhes. Gleet and noys they act aa a chwm f Pe^r &^deTajld - Kid ~ bv taking « single box’ M experienced . Bold by DOLLAR. a They 7 roeciot o? hV™° nt by PittaburgG, | eceipt oi the money by j\y sealed on J. BP Consnlting Physician fjr®' < ' ? ry ’ ho*? 31 end me treatment of Sem wui send frte to all the , Nervons Diseases, who The Fiftieth work: [Treatise cn Self- Thousand.—Dr. Bell’s *ffid b- Abuse. Premature Decay, Im f)“?’:?el vVea oss of Power. Serual Diseases, tiinU 1 , ’- &r Nightly femisrions. Genital «hnnM g h ,rcw, A P»»phlet of filty pages, con- Should b- JPbrtam advice to the affletoS and Two ? cn tbel,? ,T6ry ““fferer. as the mean* to „ ” 8 . ,ag0 “ plainly set forth, postage. aul7d&w -VTKREsti Mi TO the LADIES ! ' Ve np ® 86j ling, at a REDUCED PRICE, Lot# on Hosiery, ® loves, Lace Hitts, Embroideries, Veils, Sleeves, Waists, »fee., ITo.op Slclrts, slightly soiled, half prioe. Wu are receiving the lateit styles of KJead Dresses, Wots, Ne’tv Fall Dress Trimmings, BELTS, BTCKLES. *<,. WHOLESALE ROOMS up gtairg. MAGSUM & GLTDE, No. 78 Market St., Between Fourth end Diamond, M, V