paily post. The. Union as it Was, the Constitution as it Is. Where there is no law <ii A . A « ' no freedom. *»w there Is IESDA^oKSi^T^EFirTSri^ emocratic State Ticket FOE QOVKBBOB, okobgk w. woodwabd, POE SUPREME JUDGE, WAITiJR H. LOWED!. Democratic County Ticke • FOR PRESIDENT JUDGE OF DISTRICT COURT JOHSf H. BAIUr. ASSKMBLT, JAMES BESrjfY, Sr., CttAS. P. WHISTOS, Br. A. G. JStcQEAIDE. JOBS BILJL, WM. WHIGJEtAM, sheriff, JAMES BLACKSrOBE, .... ’ recorder. EDWABD P. KEAB.VB. REGISTER, JAMES SALSBIRr FOR OI.ERE OF COURTS, E. HEIOLEBERB. TItKASt'REB, JAMES IK VIS. COUKTY COMIHSSIOHER, JACOB BEIL. DIRECTOR OF >THE POOR B’. H. WIOHTMAW. ■W-THE S EVE BAI Coailt J CommitU.es „f Su P orin7e“den,£ aO3 AA d t 0 °° mmunicato “>« names and Fostoffiee address of thoir members to the Chair- Stat6 Cantral Committee. Editors of to r Pa ? e '’ S m Penlm ylrama are roqnested to forward copies to time Ph,, ... CHAI I LES J - BIDDLE. Chairmao. Philadelphia. Pa., July 22d, 186?. MB. BIGH&M’S BSP.L* Mr. E.gham 8 reply to .. An Qld Line "lug, published in another column, is bnt an evasion ; the writer does not even attempt to prove wherein the articles of the Gazette,. charging Gov. Curtin with dishonesty, are incorrect. Mr. Bigham simp y gives ns his experience while in the Legislature, which, although interest * g, perhaps, from association, has noth ing whatever to do with another member’s C °L dlshoneß ty against the Govern or. Mr. Williams, the author of the ar- LelTt ° D ’ WSS 8 m6mber of ** Legislature during Mr. Bigham's term ? therT Sm r erlBßtyear ’ alBO - and is, teUer acquaiQted with the shoddy operations complained of than Hr. B.gham can be. After his legislative xpenence, Mr. Williams-a violent P T r Laan, although an honest citizen-public ■y charges Gov. Curtin with dishonesty, d provea bis allegations. Mr. Bigham’s evas,on of these grave charges, by one o wwhS’’ 7<isD ° a ™ oid. A FUGITIVE SLA VE LAW FOB WHITE MEN. The moat shameless proceeding npo u • h ?K Pan °I fnBnds °‘ Gover »or Curtin, is their effort to secure snpport for him from naturalized citizens. Their reason for this is a speech alleged to have been delivered by Judge Woodward, twenty-five years ago, in which he advocated a change m our laws of naturalization. Now, nl lowing the speech allnded to to be genu lae, what does it amount to ? Judge Woodward did n°t propoBe t 0 interf( £ with the rights of any one then residing in the country ; the proposition attributed to him was ,n relation to foreigners who might, after a certain date, arrive in and sack to become citizens of our State— Whether it is better to let foreigners vote, as they do in some States, after one year’s residence, or after five years, as is the law with us ; or whether it would be better to extend the term to ten or fifteen years, or more, are questions about which men msy differ with propriety. One thing is cet tain, a change in the law could not inter fere.with the rights ot those who are al ready m But, allowing that Judge I Woodward, at the time referred tn j-j! tion law, what was that compared to the tdrlwG o' 6 Kn ° W - of which ! Andrew G. Curtin was a shining member. Did George W. Woodward ever crawl through the dark cellars of Know-Nothing lodges, and take an oath to not only dis 1 ranehise all foreigners for all time to l ' C ° me ’ bQt *° Proscribe men of revolution- i 7the n r^-’ bOrnDPOD th 6 80iI - b6cause of their rehgmus convictions? Andrew : c C “ r ,n dld the deseendents of Charles Carrol, ofCarrollton-a signer of the Declaration of Independence-now a Pennsylvania, Andrew G. Curtin would be compelled to proscribe them because of their religious convictions, or lay perjury upon his soul. In the face of these notorious facts, is it not monstrous to hear those venomous Know-Noth ;ng Abolitionists prate about their affection for the naturalized citizen. Such baseness is simply insulting to the common undesrtan ding of the people who are expected.to be affected by it. ' But our present purpose is to direct attention to the fact, that while the Abo itiouists of the Pennsylvania Legislature, last year, were voting the hall of the House of Representatives to Wendell mips, to spout negro equality in, they were at the same time endeavoring to pass a fugitive slave law for the capture of white mem On the eleventh day of April last, Mr. W. P. Smith an Abolition mem ber from the Germantown district of-onr State, introduced a bill to incorporate a company for the importation of white la borers from Europe. The company was to pay the passage of these people and have control of them after their arrival until they had worked out the passage money with interest. The design of it remarks the Philadelphia Age “was to bring over multitudes ofpoor people, con trol their labor, pay them starvation wages, and, by charging an .exorbitant biil ; of expenses .for their transportation, ieepthem in servitude for years. -Jt waa expected, of course, that poor men from Ireland and Germany, and other foreign lands, would weary of this oppression, and seek relief from it in flight But Mr. Wm. -j.V ' v’v^’^s'. * \ Sadbkow reads the administration pa pers closely— to find ont, as he says, the true principles of government. In one of these he fonnd a biographical notice of Judge Ag.yew, who is the Republican can didate for Supreme Jndge. It seems to [ have been copied, he says, from the fami ly record of the Judge, and is very flatter ing to him, showing that he had a grand father. It also show ß that he is, or has a Slight connection with Mr. Jefferson Da now of Richmond, Va. This pleases Sadbeow very much, for just now he is a great abolitionist, and he says that all ab olitionists like secessionists better than they do Democrats, who he sneeringly calls doughfaces" and “Union savers." He will vote for Judge Agnew on this ground ol his kinship to J. Davis, even if he had never supported negro suffrage.— He taunts me about Judge Dowrie, whom he says has no relatives in Dixie, and has committed himself against letting the ne gro vote in Pennsylvania NTGGEB in tee wood pile. At a Republican Mass meeting in Man cheater on Saturday evening resolution were offered; by Jasper E. Brady, Esq of the ordinary character, denouncing cop deploring the election of Judges Woodward and Lowrie “as a pub lic calamity fearful to contemplate,” but neve, a word about Curtin. This was not to be borne in silence; whereupon John B. Kennedy one of the proprietors of the Commercial” offered the following 0 n hirown hook : Resolved .That in Andrew G. Curtin our candidate for Governor, we have an’ experienced Executive, a truly loyal and patriotic man, and a consistent and unwa vering friend of the soldier. . *]J?A SOh ' ed A T v at not withBtanding the slanders and political wasps, the people of Manchester will roll up for Governor Cnr tin such a majority as will * ur Modern C ° pperhe , Bds B °d the contempti ble demagogues who traduce him. P Resolved, That m all the essential ele < character which are requisite in the Chief Executive of a free people A G. Curtin is immeasurably the superior of his competitor, Judge Woodward. These resolutions were tendered the Gazette but did not appear. But the pub hc will hnd appended to the resolutions of Brady the following growl in the Gazette: „ r6port of the Committee, it would passes* ST : «-“£ Praising Governor Curtin is denoun ced as irty work. As it is not our funeral we shall save the crape. I TELEQHAPHIODEFEAT. I We received on Sunday night at half p ae t twelve o clock from the Associated Press a despatch from the New York Times in relation Fort Wagner and Gregg, dated Sept. We had received by mail on Sunday afternoon the New York Evening 'Post oi Saturday, containing news from the above places in detail to Sept. 9th two days later. fi@-MaJor Bntler of the Arsenal will [ be placed on the retired HBf at his own re quest on the Ist of October. There is no doubt the War department will issue proposals for a candidate to fill the Major’s place. Good men are scarce. I F. Smith, of Sermantown. wisely ptovi df I°' 2% f ntingenc >'- He introduced .ntoh.sb.il the following section, to af- Z ” F — LAW TO "WHrrE MEN THE FIRST ATTEMPT OF THE E.ND eter made on this Continent imrortod by B tMs«c°mn n t “ lgr “ t or emigrants fore the snmq rin , . ptUr? * this State bo fully paid it R h oompaT) >' shalliiave been officers oftM« & ksoompetent for any of the under th. ®?“Jirgfr«in service or labor, due Constat- ,h f? s «t ; on. article fourth, of the beoV tn U fU| n o fth ° UEUed 6lateB - and bring them b-h to this State, and the costs of such recov ery shad b e added to the amount to be repaid to said company by said emigrant or emigrants- Provided, That in oase said emigrant shall give Eood and sufficient security, by any citizen of the State of Pennsylvania, be may in that case not be required to return. P® a A tho , r 0f this infam °os bill was not rebaked by his Abolition constituency, on the contrary he was welcomed by them vant ” W ] ° De g °° d aDd faithfal vant, and rewarded for his conduct by a re-nomination, Yes, the violators of the ugi ive a ave law, applicable to runaway j s aves, were quite delighted with a similar statute intended for white men. This Smith, the author of the bill in question, was and is a leading friend of Curtin, and the reader may therefore infer their extent of sympathy with the poor Irishman or German. The elevation of the negro and the degradation of the foreigner has been the wish of the Know-Nothing, Abolition party since its organization. Could they disfranchise every man of foreign birth, who will not vote their ticket, they would do it, and at the same moment they would bestow the right of suffrage upon every runaway slave that entered the State. These are the men who impudent ly ask naturalized citizens to vote for Gov. Curtin; but they appeal in vain. The naturalized citizen knows too well where he will have to look whenever his rights are assailed by faction; it is to that gallant old constitutional party which has defend ed him in days gone by, and whose mission is to protect us all in the enjoyment of a: oar rights aad privileges. FIGB AND THISTLES Prom Sadbrow’s Lot, i My friend Sadbrow i s a ruminating . creature. He fancies he is thoughtful, and that he thinks deeply. But Sadbrow on ly ruminates. He thinks the Income Tax ought to be collected, and collected jioic. He says the Government wants money— that it is borrowing money of the Banks, and some of them Banks are making wry faces about loaning money. Therefore, the Bapient Sadbrow considers that the most paternal of governments should not be compelled to borrow, when the Income Taxis, or ought to be, all assessed, and was to have been collected in September He can’t see why the collection is to be | put off till late in October, unless it is be cause the election in Pennsylvania and Ohio takes place in October. This itinocent or cynical person thinks it can make no difference to the people whether they pay in September or in October—“ For,” said he, with determination—“they must pay it let them pay it now and save Mr, Ohase interest,” S&r Wt ' did not Buppose there was a journal m thnstendom that would jnetify Quantrell'e htdeous masßaere of the peo peo .awrence, but we Were mistaken. 6 lchm °nd Examiner declares that e expedition to Lawrence was a gal lant and perfectly fair blowat the enemy.”' t e rest of tho newspaper press of the world will agree that it was the most die- : graceful event of the whole war. o An Old Line Whig. In this morning’s Post I am addressed by name and asked to respond : “Do you or do you not, believe the ar ticles said to have been written by the Hon. Thomas Williams, from July 30th to August 6tb, 1863, in the Pittsburgh Ga zette, charging Gov. A. Gregg Curtin with dishonesty ? Are they true ? If not wherein they are false. ’ AN OLD LIKE WHIG ” Your inquiry covers less than one half of the papers published in the Pittsbareh Gazede reflecting upon Gov. Cnrtin I take .tfor granted that yon only desire me to answer m regard to the events of 1862 and 1863 during which r r f officially at Harrisbnrf Th- *? me 1 wasl lieves me f mm „n g '. Thls at once re-1 K3“o“ tI" ““ «£££. 2 I ™ They are six in number and cover bstween nine and ten pages T can E °t take them up in detail mor . e , l pace than the Editor of would be willing to spare or it. 8 ta read. I desife to ife brief TheS® hcations of these papers in 1862, relate •' I h-rst— lo Gov. Cnrtin’s surrender of a 1 ertarn agreement of Thos. A. Scott Vice fo 1 Mr de Th°o f mso he ! facts of ?h h a 0 t“ and h b V elie e ve a Te e n ! to take, would have been of no use'to'the ComrnonweaUh or to Cov. Cnrtin to keep f therefore can see nothing improper Tn Pn o h, : e C M«sage aV ' nEgiVen U D P “ Btated sS£S sssysas Legislative Districts of Bedford and Som R um r er and and Perr y counties. 1 think the Govenor would have made a tool of himself, after his own political fnemls passing this Bill, if he had vetoed i . t j°it la ll ? e house against the Bill, but had I been in the Govenor’s place 1 would have signed it promptly. 7V n' <i r Thaa PP° intmeEt and report of e rlopains Commiilee in 1862, brought up, to some extent, the tonnage tax ones t.on of 1861. The report of that CoS tee did not reflect on Gov. Cnrtin—in fact entirely exculpated him of all censnre in regard to tue tonnage tax question. Ido not think it any great stretch to say that when Col. Hopkins and Kaine could find nothing to censure that I entirely concur red with them. Fourth—The report of the Committee on Military expenditures in 1801, made to the House in 180:1, not only relieves Gov. Cnrtin of all eenanre, bat commended his vigilance, energy and fidelity to the State and the Lmon. In all this I fully con curred and now add that I heard Secre- B3y l ha V T h ? war expenditures of do State in the Union were so credits- Penn o sylvan n ia DClal ° fficerS 09 were thoEe of thfiTi 1 now . add in more general terms, that I have known Gov. Curtin for fully twenty five years-that I have never known him to be guilty of a dishonorable or dishonest act—that I have found him a gentleman in all the relations of social, political and official life. I have no disposition to enter into any personal controversy with the authors or publishers of the charges against Gov. Curtin. Ido not believe any one of them in the sense in which they are charged. h °°? e i Srai , DS 01 trutll are m 'xed up with bushels of misrepresentation. Sept. 12lb A ?«- Iris h-American Challeu .-,< a Mayor Opdyke, of New xork.'io a Test of Patriotism. Vi e call the attention of onr readers and the public in general, says the New York Daily A’ elw , of August 27, to an earnest letter or challenge (which ever it may be termed) to Mayor Opdyke. The writer is a man of character; he is well indorsed in Ilia district, and means what he writes The Abolitionists may call his sentiments emocratic, bat certainly even they must admire h,s patriotism, and acknowledge that Mayor Opdpke cannot with any grace or show of reason decline the cartel con tame d in his letter. Now is the time for Mr. Opdyke to show whether his love of country be patriotic or merely pecuniary. the following is the letter: •1 CHAU.ENOE TO THE MAYOR Th,e„ Si-b District. 4th Coxohkssiosal Dis 1 Nkw ioEK, August at, 13(33 j Hon. Geo. Opdyke, Mayor of New York thnSpn:rln P n UBi ?§ Jour Ttto message to the Common Connfcti last evening, I finda paragraph ,n relation to foreign «s, given by yon as an example to sustain your ob jections to the ordinance, and as my case comes under the head of the persons re en-ed to by yon, I desire to make the fol owing Statement and proposition : from Ireland, 6 *" though n^trom poverty and social degradation” and de® dared my ,ntentions to become a citizen of the United States. I happened to be drawn in this district as one of the oon ecnpta. I learn through the public cress T,' ia u?i o n r 8011 has beeQ drawn also in ? the stand by another paragraph in ssge, that the object of the drafting 1 was “to provide soldier for the ZionZ t a reMnrv a ’’ d ln otmon » y f ° r the na t'°»a • treasury, I propose to waive all exemn ho n nl C d mmSandj ° in the Federal forces should your son consent to dn ntw 8 ’ x d „ i 5 & on, for native as well as adopted citizens to sho* their fidelity to the national canae though I deny, as yon assert in yonr mes sage, that the war is waged on onr part in the interest of poor men I oianJ n that the rebellion w.?“p,oL3 “ft ; ggpsss KpSs&'a^istt 3 arms to sustain the constituted authorities in company with Mr. Opdyke ir Very respectfully, y oar obedient servant, p v - COLLINS, jr.- • S ; Yoan g °pdyke’a patriotic Pa, who said that the Government ‘-wanted soldiers and not money paid up the three ! hundred. i ina^ance^e 6 'detected™by a” al “°? t evei 7 ia t he clear and tran^eV^^? lo ° ks and not Bciatchv t?- 1 ■ 80 ~ ©ven, see if the iTT," 61 ! the , faces i natural and P life t; t, „ S dlBtlD . ct an f eaB }'i medallion mlini and If Ex , amme i spsrzsh “■ “sriTf 'Si:£ ceesfnlly imitated 7617 ;^ 0 ” Bnc line cf Eiam,n « the prmcipal f th»; „ » 0r Dame of ‘be bank. See even y or if !la P - right ’ r perfectl ? ‘rue and Cweftillv ll B '°P m h of a Qn ilorm elope, ruling on the feT lhe ? h £ dlDg or Parallel "St'i™"” *'• »' ‘ .m”b fofthe f“n a a e P e P s r 0 p C eoplf Ynnrf be to ° careful to guard against fire •aSSJ^ssrasttfSa! cannot h» a -' r p,r T [t > 8 a fact which “,s,t* ras 1, a z ■"■* regard to <Z« P r’i. , .? arelesBne “ m j . . lights, lucifer matches ard hat thev'h derB - Pe ° pl6 cann ot compUfin that they have no warning, and if disas S*^X-K2iXKS ovlriookTha 0 - ° f PennB^van > a must not Agnew \h» A ‘K P r - taDt fact that Daniel a-gnew, the Abolition nominee for fin irTpL^f6 ‘ B - favor of ne g ro suffrage Ihe R fi fn ylVa p a - Whilst a “ember of voted to con** oaven! ‘ c,rl ! he persistently ed men in ,h r hat rifiht upon all color ea men in the Commonwealth. He is the □ non fa AadrewG - Curlin ' and runn ng’ upon the same ticket: Lheir views anf freem°en ofpe C “ *“* meemen of Pennsylvania cast their votes eqnafity ? ° and ' dates ° f aad "egrf I The rower possessed by locomotives to ! strafed*?n BtBeP gradientB has been demon strated in a very remarkable manner bv at one long lift the grit helghfoM “fP' fto aT.ain h ed i 8 Nation hifft f« fift J by any railway incline. It is fifteen and a half miles longt and thf average gradient 1 f n b *'«« w!«. t pS„“S;r£3“" rf, "™ i ’" r “- Til! a r f e f t breach of promise case in 000 w P ere gitrfh 6 : hdy 9 *% Unt °- f! *“<: evidence 4s a, 0 h v:S_^/Jr e : rBl I remain yoara. T. J. Bigha Colonel Gilbert has been appointed Mil '^7 M Go \ e ™or and General CartarPro voat Marshal General ol East Tennessee j-^r-srrtrscr?^ ra^ he sa V VB° o im '“id 0h '°’ * P ' rit of /aty Bayß its advisers atatn thoh »u fourths of the 116th O. V I are t n landigham and the Democratic ticket. M lge j M Charleston has now lasted “ess" han y f ( d 7 9 ; ( , and dn f Dg that n“ less than four thousand men have been AXsa™ 1! ■' smS&£sts£sanis. Bh‘p in the First Auditor’s office for od and for ern emanc 'P ot l j on Proclamation, an ents 0 17. P ?. B^,t her »»ti- ™® Qa “ o . ver ( p a ) Spectator says the potato crop in that region is very fi„e, nn d sales are making at 76e. per bushel. Probable Speedy Investment of the City. w itro “ tho Louisville Journal ] , We have reason to know that, according to the present programme, Mobile is to speedily attacked, or at least invested.- We attach no importance to the telegraph- j ic rumor that the enterprise he. aL abandoned. The capture of it would be an-immense advantage to the federal e ° any S «d bl ° W ", Alabama river £* lav ' the np to Montgomery, Xcapiul ofS bama, and, in conjunction with the ad I o tL ß rmTp a oi a nt d plßBoTSJd7* B 80 T S J d 7 * or The taking of MoXlst Slf oTT greater importance than that of Charles- The Reported Movement Agalns, M „. tMorton eorrespondence of the Atlanta Appeal , We have information that the enemy are landing m force at Camp Parapet, above Carrollton, La. There are some indica SMn T° a / 6Ed f VOnB at or -TK2S that nothing will be attempted a n A ;°° i^ 16 decided ity The ’ th t " f t° f Charl «ton H»f"r,r„“ attention from General Bragg’s armv Jt Chattanooga, against whom all the avail able force of the enemy will be hurled The defeat of General Braggin T en would render the fall an! Mobile but a question of time, and cut off par communication with Richmond most serious consideration. But the nr ° e?a e iGranf’ neral J ° hnst ° n upon ofn" era! Grant’s movements, and he will k.™ to be cro P j 1? this State ia said pectß of nn and the proa better, -Baton Post* ° f W " e n " er ciiEEiaas. lions, blft b«“ thi “hght«t a H d bil 'f na a little calculation ‘ i- , end shows some minds an inn™:- Wtloh ma y give vastnesa of that debt or ldea ot the present liabilities .“‘ D g OUl ' entire which is far belowVcreujl!’£?o*o?o'ooo - and *m^ eCretary 8 own count 80 per mim t PP ,? B6 a man able to hours eaclk dav ™ e ]j Unn ® ei ght working of minutes to™ . d .. req ? lre 26 >°°0,000 this to the debt; reducing 142 yews s’ moDt , l3a and days, we have time spent byThT^ 8 and , l3 days as the ing our national °l COaat the iaithfal fellow Ad ? * b j tbe ** me there would hi ! h d u COrapleted hia task, mobile, The Operations against Charles ton. Prom the Boston Journal. A gentleman of much intelligence re Z D uILu m -n° rri f a l8 K Bnd ’ wherße h e had erint ; f clllt ' es and gath n a e v‘ n ; f< ? rm ? tlon - ha - com “>onicated to with If" 7 of I ? tar u est , ln g facts connected with tho siege 0 f Charleston, which throw ranch light on the state of affairs there .toil l™ r/ hat the ~ whyQener meni i?Ph e d ,' d , not cont ‘ n ? e hie bombard ment of Charleston with the “'Greek fire” » wa9 because the shells Bent were ignited on the percussion princinle being discharged from a gSn elated at ZT t Sl M l thirty-eight degrees, tooktheif uight at the same angle, with a nai rotary motion therefore struck base downward instead right were’at WhiCh W,U “ *l* “ h “ throw a shell no lees than seven grees “The t ? ? n , gle ° f fort y dt fon .V Th hrst shells went over Charles ton, the gnn being aimed at too share an ? n « le - °« readers will be pleased to earn that General Gillmore has no less throw sh fl Pa , rrott mounted that wUI throw shells plnmp into Charleston Also that the use of Greek firo o u«n 4 * Also,, fire burns for twenty minutes It will pismss set Charleston in'flamM l hellfl " 111 can subdue 6B ’ wh,ch Do ‘hing In addition to the Greek fire shells H rge quantity of improved shraDnel fi h ® l’ made by the inventor of the Greek fire shell, and containing from five hnn dred to one thousand bullets each tl. been sent to Morris Island,To betransfer red thence mto the rebellions 1 a manner not very pleasinv to .vf 7 8 These shells are fired with time fusesTnd are very destructive of life. ’ d The celebrated 300 pound Parrott „„ which General Gillmore has weTh J ty seven thousand pounds ’if , if , en ' thousand men nine' nigL o gef \Z monster into noaihVm 6 *w? j get tlle and men being killed nightly Noth i™ was done with it by »„n K • 6 covered with brushes it T-" 8 the enemy’s fire" The' diameter'of‘'the sssassss^g gnns have been 11. J T r,fled mere have been ordered tWeDty General G.iimcre aS U , naTy — Th t e“oo heril H 6JaSt l . been Bent to'him.- InG 000 pounder, when Jr j in charge of an infantry eaptain who’ hart Sfjer fired a cannon btfore in h £ °ife^ won,dhap e t rrhf w lett e v 0 e";ea a ;e^ ent On , he twenty fifth round X Xll was fi] I ]‘d 6 ,h; enteeD P oUBda of powder,’ Hs'-asvss-sa ffSSafISS"-® feet of earth lhe larveJ a Ugh ‘W sU r flebora i* 1 ?? a gun having o truer the ball or ahel'l p C p fl aCy t , 0 ' ?’ ifle ia attained R commenced tVnTthem fnZo W b ftv b £rir£“t--' F“T«*sasSssS if BueceasluPwilj 2000-ponnder.’ False Charges A gains (Tt wo Oath olic Priests. °u Tuesday a government detective proceeded to the residence of Bishop Wood, m Philadelphia, for the purpose of arrestmgtw 0 priests, named Connelly and O Reilly, charged with conspiracy against mmnT Be>l “ f } a7i ngbMn' robbed aodleft o Bnen informed a detective that been a captain ,n the Confederate service > then ln Philadelphia as and' M a cC b orenr 8t S d n b f h ® a r t erB warrants were Isued Z tZ/TrTsZ the two priests. On investiimt;™ k ' ever, it turned out tbatO’BrLn -* OW J Of having been in the Confederate seS was a deserter from the U. 8 Army Thi charge against the priests was th^nn™ a P re P rt" lthdraWD ' and °’ Bri - * How Prayers Prevail. A Cincinnati paper says ; «r al RoBeCrans . an early hour Monday mormng, was in front of the reb el works at Chattanooga, and his army in tTe B greral\ad b lee 6 ;ded A to a ° v 6 :^ ncetha ‘ battle yesterday is the fact that heTT 7 graphed yesterday mornint earlv .hl , 6 ' day, and that masses be the 8 th ® cess of the federal arms this d , he Bno ' day,) as he had fully determined 7 , eBter ' the rebel works ln,kj™ l6^to atta ck quest, the ehqrches were^hrown 0 th ’ 8 r ' masses held as desired pen and point! tmmed lately take place at shat I Convicted of Purchasing arm a from Soldiers. Wm. Sweeney, of Brandywine Hnn dred, Del., has been convicted in the Uni ted States Court at Wilmington of purcha sing a revolver trom a United Stales ged dier. He was sentenced tn „ c 801 SlOO and be imprisoned seven^mnmh 8 °' the extreme penalty of the la x Ta S3M fane and one years’ imprison™!, ‘ 8 s3o ° A superior stone-breaking l operation in New York . mactl ne the other day— killed Wor^ men. work' A # T HE GBEAT *ST PAIN CURER ! Try Heed’s Magnetic' Oii AGEI ?; r y Beed's Magnetic Oil* Try Heed's Magnetic oil. For m! 7 ® e . e< *’ 8 Magnetic Oil! °r Rheumatism, Sprains, Bruises. Pains in the Limbs, Stiff Joints A-.r> a * B ?r r fai!a - if >« d os dirked ’ & Sold by SIMON JOHNSTON n™ ’ *ettkai. jjj; , »®umi sutPHii-f op HJfS- AfcIJTBAI HCLPRiIc 2S f IME. SSSZ*** SCEPHITE nff H 2& NEUTRAL SULPHITP JS f!3E, AEUT^ ™KSH* 2f iigf §?5 bottle g££S ; S Cide, BiiS!figF Kg^S:teSS,aSE: SaSf^sss Cal Sd fJk° Renu ! no article, uaji and got the genuine article fPSSgIS fS";s#sfHl|i|f ISs s it: Sa a !■£“ f™s e_e!4 Andrew Kloiun. Henry Phipps, Jr General Partners. JKOS CITY FORGE, KiiOM-AW dfe PSffppg comotiyo Axlef, 3S' aS3anger ' P «Wht and U? - 1 sdO-tf I h S !!t De m South*wSfcra'pe? 0 C | on,h . tnt, ° n . hold a Grand Maas v ““' wIU I Payette County or? TO„'i Dg i at Ukioktovk, | flon. Wm Biller r?„„ Wednesday, Sept 30th. I Black cv' , U()n * Heiflter CJymer. Jadire i and address the meeting. The Wtt«k«i~ Ben 3 Connells viile ftailroad Company will isKifif I I cußsioy Tickets for the oCMsion" extra cars for the accommodation I along its lino. 'I urn out Democrats I making this the grandest political a "* m I tion eyer witnessed in PenneylyanL °Tn°M^ a ' T° 3UII ' DKK?j CySTßAcio^ '""'""STiSlST””*** T^« e - reprep "* d 40 W “ft««MeOAl T be* -®S! MSMM^rewAK,,^ “el? ° f board 3 and monWii^ l^ i r *J-A!ab?hal 7 1. PerHangmgj p®® ,f^ D ««!» FA-I eel 2 W; P. MARSHALL. / TUVJIS. Houto,iia.fis^gj 1 1^ i^^ afl onio Hall Aacdon r. A. IPGLELLAXD, Aoofioneer. Irii?^ oBeE XABBIEI. IS IS TIIp a ‘ *” St ' Charl ‘ s h ° can «e!4 Singular Incident, I In a town near Danbury some men eu | gage in putting np lightning rods called I pon a ore handed farmer, well known in county, and propoaed to pat some rods - He Peremptorily.de and a bolt descended upon his dweTne killing him almost instantly, but doing no thn£h 0 t £ Dy other P eraon ; n the housef al 86Veral iD Troops at Elections. By the 95th section of the act of Assem bly of the State of Pennsylvania, of July 1839, it is enacted that— ' ! Tj.M b “A of tro °P i ? in the army of the Rhn nl BUte8 ’ or of th!s Commonwealth, ? “f'- 1 ' either armed or unarm’ fwL 7P i a u Ce J of eleeti °n within this CommonweaUh, during the time oi such The Plagßhip Hartford. I A survey of the United States flagship Hartford has caused the discovery of two buU dr S n d m a » n ,V ne Bhot “ arks > BOme in the rrx, l as.£“r™‘ 3 The E curvy. [ It is stated that this disease is in the ar my of the Potomac. Fortunately the sol lers are within easy reach ot vegetables t a“?’ PnHinnlarly onions ton to thi ’- 3 a “ ly * snt fr °“ Washing partment eBImeDtS by ,te medical d " Alluding to the forged interpolation in Gen. Meade’s speech, by that “ scurvy politician,’’ Forney, the Philadelphia Aqe remarks : eroln \ h , at a vei 7 bitter feeling has fwTin P^- t H atmy a gainßt Governor th / '"Z d b,e fnend !< m consequence of , ) ee ch ged T l ePort , 8 ,- 0f General Meade’s that Z Th aold,erß DOW understand that the presentation was delayed from the early part of last winter-whenZ sword was purchased-until the present oT’o tlCal . ° apital might b ® “ode out ot the occasion ; and they are iust ly indignant that sentiments which their General never expressed should be palm" f, d Up ° n people in order to better Mr fcr ° f od ‘ ons a candidate as Mr. Curtin, while they naturally infer that men who are ready to perpetuate BU l?wnnb/ n< Ti? eqas l to aQ y baseness. L*‘S no 'ba very safe therefore for of th» p dl6rS i frl ? n t t 0 have tbe v °te of the Pennsylvania Reserves taken just srte : rV- h ? reliefl npon carrying Z State by bringing soldiers home to vote oZ , b i? a p dTiBable forbim ‘o get the out of the Pennsylvania regiment. While the Masonic fraternity ,were en | route for Greenfield, Mass., the other day, an inquisitive countryman at one of the Stations, after eyeing the Knights Tern plarßfor a few moments, inquired with dierOen 006 ? 11 ’ “ whether all them BrigaN lough?’” 8 WBS goiD ’ home on ‘'Well, what next I” said Mrs. Partin | ton as she interrupted Ike, who was reading the war news-“ The pickets were st‘4"dSir.'Jsrirs* pose they have to be driven in deen to un e d P erth e em C - eB9ionaderB fr ° m out A Wjsms-BTOi, paper states, on the au thority of an officer in the Quartermaster’s epartment, that no less than 650,000 sol diere passed throngh the city last year. DIEDs Penn Street h« residence So. 770 IQtJID STOVE POLISH T^^^^ thandryPi>^^ 3:itp£XeT n f d T,te; 4. It stands tao most intense heat d t» Preserves from rust. ' -v! nSnotoTZ-VonKfaffll ThojusN. Miller. Sptcial Partner* AULY FOB the t OXSTM l TIO X 57 Wood at. New Advertisements. —' a 12 DOMING, • c soh£SSSh-.hall, MOEEIS' minsteels I K. A S <& IS AIVD, BURLESQUE OLD FOLK’S CONCERT, From their Opera House Boston, *e£RaGW Also Iho wonder of the world. CP.vJrf^^L exhiMtod. a ° d ° nly in =trument ever fiTammo. ammo posters * Pamphlets and pro- Orone-tra Seats.... **'***** cents At.i- tsen ma«nifio7nTpictMVs 'At ‘ir-* 0 oo* to W. A. ABBOTT. Agm! MOEKI? ' «“«w- piaso ti£SSl. } DUETT& Piute and Piano Duetts, A ®#IIECTIOH OFPOPniiD tr ? l COLLECTION sl’wiOTEßiso^tf’ Pian <> Mailed, post-paid on rtoeipt of price. CHAS. C. MEMOS, Bl Wood Street T 3 'S * S-Sg S« fl S --Ottgg,, §3 . g 2=l feSg S g S H S S 3 t 3 ? a to a 2 ">2 Q «2 « SS 2 S’ £h gg oj § O Sr 5 s = g H i« s ll « s |3l|§i :j *« • sjggj," -=> Siis&g .2 6 fl fed £® ** ®a « & ® M 45 ,2 3-fIS &S k ?*'n3°s'S o C 3 P 5 O i » m G /—, £\ a f §i i ji 32> £ : !§ff °t .f of* °'i d I *@ »- a * S*j °o 55 §*-<.& .g'o § g y O g So Sad M J® « 3 s i si* s ? S 3 S & ft o £ o~j ca && Cjs t&3 dd63 o p © * O«w “c< a § le* s s w *~ °-s5 >2 ® Adminisl : rators~Noticer~ Allegheny Conn tv d ;, ate «»f Potton '.'ed:ed to aaid estate'JP©raons in loimediate payment, and thn««? notified to make requested to present ?h«ii 0 U e aviDg claims are for settlement? n th m daly authenticate! «‘atSs-iF Auctioneer, €r°TioN^.! v „ cl ' OTl nsro at Arc- EVENISGatTU £al S THIS TUESDAY at 10, 2 and ° n .WEDNESDAY Home, 55 Filth streetwilMia 'anS? 11 Aaot i o l» mentofnsw and deeiraton oonaign- Can bo examined before thecal? 1 " 18 ’ a ° oa *' Ao t. a.McClelland. Auctioncar. 1 Pl,, f®aEO» «KSCIHE BAT Rirw Jus t reoeived and (or sale by Rl,I “ ®f T 0 A. KELEV No. 69 Federal at. 13Q Sfc-A Q 11 - VIS ‘ E > AM* b V iUt-AN. JMt received ai ’df77JjL sels GEO. a. KELLY. — No. 69 Federalit. Jus t received aiid for saJo by Sm G X?* 4-A KELLY, No. 69 Fed oral et. 1 “f.TOSIMS"£«<».«<*. GEO. a. KELLY. No. 69 federal fit. 3.0 CAS f.^ f E J . CASTOK OIL. J “=t received and for enleby 35 15 oeo.a, KECLY. —-—- So 69 Fod era! st. O 0 CROP B En G AMOtT^TBESII CKOP - Jast r9:e ,jt n aDd & Seb? sel.s (i to. a. KEUL.Y. • No. 69 Federal rt. ’aesage from England .sTireTand @25 «0. EUROPEAN AGENG-y. Pam=nxera'tom *>, or a F? d bwk put of Earope. ir ■“ L BALJ£ - Parable !p »* T Bal li^d“-S? M Stcamor^reat mil to Queenstown and Liverpool c!aa9 P ° WerfDl s^p* MAHATU <** I ¥£BB^ sSJZZ*? WedjSfay°m Qqb « d *- GoTd'o^| : 1 w Q S®“»- Q pw 0 l. I‘* 1 ‘* Payable fa «tof* “■taSassfefefifc. AaiEßltASr HOUSE, BOSTON. A , 'f 1, , E lI LAKIiEST AID BEST *.•.2?.?“} Eotel U> the New AB ~ contraliy located, and easy of acceis ?» Statas : to routes of travel. It contains all the iJ 0 ? the Pnmments, and every convenienoft / c ° I “©m im- Jorfc and accommodation ef th« Io . r l«© com- The sleeping room* aw larU “*?«&&. the snites of rooms are well nit. eu , T 8 pletely furnished for lamUies e?^ Bed - «d coST-' 'parties, and the hon e wiU 00 a?>'*° tr a ,eW Boston. Sept. ■ *■<» h °opsk!h®s, ALL SIZES At MoOleliand's Auction House,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers