James P. Ba Medical, OT ALCOHOLIC A HIGHLY CONCENTRATED V egetable Extract A PORE TONIC. Dr. Hoofland’s GERMAN BITTERS : PitEPAftSD BY DB. O, D, JACKSON, Philadel phia, Bonna., Will effect na 11 y on r 6 Mver Complaint, DYSPEPSIA, JAUNDICE, ojraenoin OebOlty, Diaeaee of the Kidneys, and all Diseases Art sine from a Disordered Silver or Stomaota a BU6iL as Consti pation. Inward Piles, Fullness or Blood to tlie Head. Acidity of the Stomaoh. fer Distrust *3* at ft™„ 5“ e B%L -saffocatiiiß sensations whoa ini 1&« T&Ss?^mj^T-aP and fireatdeproa sion of spirits, tor'Mf' 1 ’ sweat Yellow Fever. Bil- THEY^CONT'AIN SO ALCOHwli'OßßAl>~'wmaiTT .S'JuttffwS*"" to ***** Induced by the extensive sale and universal oopuismy or Iloofland’B German BitterslnnSw vegetable) hosts of ignorant qnaoka and'untrorn pulous adventurers, nave opened upon sufferine ;?" a f lt \ th ?, aoo -1 of tfostarnStatheshSl 5L, p ° or compounded with ininrious tog and ohnstoned Tomes, Stomachioa and Bit of • ilB teptoarable array of alooholio iem nrnw s «? plet a!!£i <5 botUos ' and big-bellied • .5 «>e modest appellation of Bitteral frhioli, instead of curing only aggravates Hlsoaovto odleavotfaodißappointed indl^lin HOOJb LAND’S GERMAN BITTERS Btood n tho fes? of fvAS e *i, propr i otor ? thousands of Letters trom the most eminent setters Oergymcn, Dwyers, Physicians and _ citizens. Testifying of their own personal knowledge to Bitto™ 6ffeot3 and “oiiMlyirtnea oTthe^ 1)0 I^WANTSOMETHWQtoSTRENOTB- A GOOD APPETTTF t JT O ITUTION T t TOMmLI) DP YOUR COE DO YOU WANT TO FEEL WP.J r > DO NESSf AaT1 '° O£TRW OiNRR VO US DO YOU WANT go you want to sleep well ? f£ Stnst nl “ TUoro™ If yju do, use HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTE PARTICULAR WOTICE. m „?!‘ ere , S% manv preparation* told under the 0) (Ac ehmr q * M ioUte *■ aon-Pounded coholic Stimulants oj the rnorst kind thTdZirefl. Luptor „ encoded and leapt op, and the reLSHsaU aUenda ’“ Ul, ° n “ ' W Lor those mho desire and will hnvo „ / ‘*“ nr ‘« &dj (Aal reitt ™j •' be a Preparation Lr .nl (Urexcol in medium! virtues and true e-ccellen-e anyof the numerous Liquor Bitters in the market, and mill cost mooli lLiin y„ u have all the virtues rtf HooOund’s Bitters in lL0T : l' OnVni L l a * aoa article of Liquor, at a mill cittlJZ' Cr th ° r V fra^L t m d ? lo thoyc do no more forme" and * Ivisod me to see a clergyman, and to make such casposition of my limited funds a? best srit? ©d me. An acquaintance who visited mn «»♦ *i, a hospiUl. Mr, Frederick Stob™. of 6 “h Mow Aroh Steeot, advwedrne as n forlorn hope, to to your Bitters and kindly procured a bottle From ‘ ho “; m '’ I J o s un ™ c ® d taking them the shadow” death receded, Mid I am now. thank God for it getting better,. Though I havetalm but tU M tlM, llhave gained 10 pounds, and fool sanguine of beiug permitted to rejoin my wife and daugh ter. from whom I have heard nothing for eigh teen months; for, gentleman, lam a loyal Yimn. »». *3 m the viomity of Front Royaf. To your invaluable Bitten I owe the glorious privilege of ag&ih clasping to my bosom those who are dearest tojne in life. ‘ oaroomrarai< Oomn SmlthfleU and Fourth street A. J.BANKIH « CO., Market street. three doors below 4th. Pitahoreh Ai *^rbe«!ruiSjrr ©j c J]j] itts b urglj ;]|o&i ,rr, Editor <& Proprietor. __ '~^ rzz=z: - = = : ~~—~--~ - - THE DAILY POST—ADVANCED One your, by mail oix months. “ Three ** •• One " •• Ope week, delivered in the city** pintle oopies To agents per hundred TJ AgLYPC) § T. GPlf. BUBWSIDE S EAS !• -ok-w NESSEE CAMPAIGN The Trlamphant Occupation or the Country Without n Fiffhl-toyaltv Cumh C , PCO,,,e The S»»e„uer Cumberland Gap-i n oidents. From the Cijunmiti Commercial General Burnside left Camp Nelson on the 16th of August for East Tennessee. - He left Crab Orchard on the 24th, having completed his preparations, his columns having been in motion for several days.— He reached Mount Vernon, 20 miles dis tant, on the same day. He left Mount Vernon on the 23d, and reached London, “ 6 miles. On the 24th he reached Wil liamsburg, 30 miles from London; On the 2oth he reached Chitwood, Tennessee, 28 miles south west of Williamsburg, where he came up with Msi. Gen. Hart snff, commanding the 2Sd Army Corps - Major Emory here made a cavalry recon noisance towards Jacksboro, encountered two regiments of rebel cavalry, and rout ed them, taking forty-five prisoners.— General Burnside, with the main body of his army, left Chitwood on the 28th, and reached Montgomery, the county seat of Morgan county, Tennessee. 41 miles (rom Chitwood, on the 30;h. Here another Mlumn of infantry under Geneial Julius clntral'K™ 6 , , havln S marched from tirelln k !“\ Ucky by way of Albany, Mon ticello and Jameßtown. Colonel Burt, commanding the cavalry advance sent i hn)rr 'kfi tbe rabel General Pegram was i p ’ blng gap in the mountains, near the Emory Iron Works, with two thousand men. Ihe position was a strong one, and Valle? T gat6 ,0 the Cllne h River, alley A battle was expected, as there was not a better place in the country to ? nr . forcea -. Bat on ,he morning of the 3 1 st, it was discovered the enemy had m 6 ;l‘ n th ? f l ®,?' At Emory Kiver, Dine miles east of Montgomery, General Burn side ordered Colonel Foster to march di rectly on Knoxville, where he arrived and took the town without opposition, on the Ist of September. General Burnside pro ceeded to Kingston, where his scouts en countered the cavalry pickets of General Itosecrans, and communicated with a splendid body of cavalry of the Army of the Cumberland, under Colonel Minty.— , Burnside s object in movidg to Kingston was to make a push for the great London bridge, over the Holston river. This was twenty miles from Kingston. ’ General (Shackleford was sent to London. On his approach the rebels retreated across the bridge, which they had barricaded, and bred it. Turpentine had been poured on the planks, and it was soon a mass of names. Oar troops fired across the nvc-r with artillery and musketry, and the peo ple in the neighborhood said several rebels were killed aud wounded. General Burn side left Kingston on the 2d and entered Knoxville on the 3d. The reception cl our troops at this place was most gratify ing General Buckner with his rearguard had left the day before Colonel Foster’s arrival, for Chau mooga. There is reason to believe that Rosecrans had in front of him at Chattanooga, the whole force o! Buckner, Bragg and Johnston. The peo ple about Knoxville say the flight ot the rebels, when Burnside's approach wan an nounced, was something wonderful. Their panic was immense. They hod.among them a report that Burnside had an army of from sixty to one hundred and twenty thousand men, and were of the opinion that their safety depended upon their speed. They left behind a considerable quantity of Quartermaster's stores in pretty good order, and they had several valuable shops which they did net dis mantle. Iwo million rations of salt were among the spoils The secesh had a story that Longstreet was coming from Virgiuia with twenty thousand men, but it was one ot their vain imaginings. A meeting of the Union citizens of Knoxville was held and addressed by General Burnside and General Carter. It was attended by about five hundred men, and a large nomber ol women and children. The demonstrations were not boisterous, but there was intense quiet rejoicmg. Men who had been hid den for months, came in, full of gratitude tor their deliverance. Intelligence was received that the rebels were prepared to make a stand at Cum berland Gap. Burnside was not afraid of their standing but of their running and on the 6th, dispatched Gen. Shackelford from Knoxville to cut off all means oi es cape. On the 7th, General Burnsido left Knoxville with a force of cavalry and ar tillery, and arrived at Shackelford’s head quarters early on the morning of the 9th General DeCoorcey, who had advanced upon the Gap direct from London, Ken tucky, waß hemming the rebels in on the Dort 4 at®’ r- The r , ebel force WRB com manded by General Frazer, of Missisaip pi- He had, when rumors of Burnside’s movements reached Buckner, been order ered by that General to fall back to Knox vulle, but the order was countermanded bv General Johnston, and Frazer's instruc tions were to hold the Gap to the last ex tremity. When Barn Bide arrived, Fra ?!.A adbeen “oncd to surrender bv both De Courcey and Shackelford, and returned a.firm refusal. Burnside sent an officer with a flag of trace, demanding an unconditional surrender, instructing the officer to wait for an answer at the picket line one honr only. At the expiration of ! the hour, no answer having been given, the officer withdrew. Preparations for an immediate attack were made, bat in fifteen minutes General Frazer sent a flag of'truce, offering to surren der the position, provided that he and his men were paroled on the spot. Gen. Burnside responded that under the cartel between the United States Government and the Confederates for the exchange ot prisoners, Frazer had no right to stipulate tor a parole on the Bpot, and that he mast insist upon the surrender being uncondi- P "f [ soon General Frazer sent! very politely worded letter, saying he was convmced he could not ’ vieW to? 8 ? against him, and he would ' y ‘ e .\° fortune of war. Hus brigade WirMni? ? two North Carolina, g o ne sonm artil? ° ne Georgia regiments, and gnus The ry r COmpani ' i8 ’ With foar teen Jg Ge " g,a regiment was the. osth, and was 800 strong. The effec> k ; e a fo ”r BboVe two thousand men The prisoners are on their wav in iht place and will arrive here sonTe time t week. The North Carolina and Virginia regiments were small, owing to desertions •they were bitterly dissatisfied with the war. A vote was taken, a few days be fore the surrender, by the North Carolina regiments, (that ia the regiments were potted to ascertain the Sentiments of the soldiers,) and there was a considerable majority in favor of giving up the South- Tb L °n- e “ e T ac y an d restoring the Union! e however, were fighting men, and the regiment composed of them was the only reliable one General Frazer On the ith, two days before the surren n!,"' # tW ? S°“P aalea Shackelford’s men peuetrated the rebel lines and burned the SnIXA Bh !° h the garrison at ««« Gap ah*??? f ° r ?, upply of flour - It was a hazardous and brilliant affair T»l hen n Shackelford’s advance was at lazewell, tbey were fired upon by a rebel company of Home Guards and one man was killed. This was the only casualty of the campaign ! General Burnside expect* in ° B( eflV ! l i e Gap 0Q Thursday (10th) to return to Knoxville. ' v 6n ' a T ter > J an East Tennesseean, has Prov 2 st Marshal General ft 1 , ™'*' He is well known to, and it fh 7 ? B ! eemed b - v > th e inhabitants, The FW B t “ aa 1D the right plaoe - General T? I en neßBee troops, of whom General Bnrnside had a considerable number, were kept constantly in advance and were received with expressions of the profoundest gratitude by the people, who are described as the most heartily and State? 7 TV yaI P °' Ula,ioD in the United states. I here were many thrilling scenes diers 6 m ,TX D Z 0 / our Ea “ Tennessee sol diers with their fam.lies, from whom they had been so long separated. y ifce.information given of the ontrages committed by the secessionists, confirm and more than confirm all that Brownlow a a nef a )i lo i! a7 4 0 - f them - There is hardly a neighborhood in which Union men have We b been m hi r dd 6re f’ a “ d hundreds of them nave been hidden for months in caves in the a,onnta,BS ' and supplied with food by the women. Ihe able bodied males were nearly all absent, in the army or wander Ke ? 6 lf’ 6 ’ fhe roadß in southeastern W thOrM D °7 Bwarm W'th them retnrmng mid nM K des frted homes. The women and old men and children have done a W O? raiS ' Dg Cropß ' The whea t Zu P 7 a Z ery , arge ' and heavy supplies collected by the rebels fell into our hands at Knoxville, and elsewhere The conn Gy is full ofcorn, m°Btl y raised by wo men, and there will be no difficulty in sup plying the army from the territory it oc cupies. Guerrilla warfare is not feared, as the loynlty of the inhabitants will rre . tied U Th^ CtDCky " alS ° b6ao ” i '' g mi ’ i I“ E / e 18 r, ot a symptom of bush backers from Covington to Cumberland Gap. A traveler could ride from here to Knoxville undisturbed. Our forces have occupied the Bast Tennessee Railroad aa w?re?ha a t B tb nBt< l Wn ’ BDd the iud Kat.ons were that they might extend their lines at A c ° EBld « a ble force had pro down the road toward Chattanoo rehel. » U ? V6 if Sa report waB that the so thaMl re d ' Bhearte ? ed and demoralized so that there was no fight in them. They a k /?, he , ep from leery's Gap and showed all the signs of being a worthless Our troops, on the contrary, were in splendid spirits—perfectly happy and in high condition. The infantry march with Burpnsing alacrity and rapidity. They thought nothing of moving twenty-five aTe?a , ma d b y ’ WoU ’ d go iato atteramarch, merry as school boys. They were delighted to be the liberators of East Tennessee, and feel that they were not Tn an enemy s country. ln r,T,? b I H '’Pfe °f Knoxville made many in quiries for Parson Brownlow, who has Thev 7 0nfid , enc . e R s no other man has.— United « were pointing on | the hiding-places 0 f rebel stores, and were zealous in so doing. The prominence cessiomsts at Knoxyille fled with Buck ner There are a few left who haveasdst ed the secession blood hounds, and the popular expression was - they must leaye here or they must die. They can’t . ™ e Department was in chargo of Captain Morris; during Burn Bide’s inarch, and admirably condneted.- 1 he troops moving rapidly and for a great distance through a barren country were never without rations, and only two wav ons were abandoned on the march. They were broken down on the mountains. - - i fl >s astonishing, as the trains were very heavy, one of them consisting of five hundred wagona. B uvw The health of the army i 8 a n that could be desired. When ,t reached Knoxville it was supposed the hardships endured on the forced marches would can«* ? and a hospital was procured - But so few entered it for treatment, tha't the Surgeon m oharge said he had nothing to do, and asked to. he nermitiod i ■ ■ his regiment. The fortune attended the expedition throngh -Bacceß^°thlDE WBS WaDtlngto itß com plet e derive these particulars from Maior jy.' H ; Ch “ r elt. Of New York, Medical Director of Gen. Burnside’s Army, who accompanied the General from Crab Orch ard to Cumberland Gap, which place he left soon after the surrender. He arrived in the city Saturday night, and he is now stopping at the Burnet House. He is a gentleman of high character, and, speak ing of things he has seen, the moat im plicit confidence may be placed in his statements. Special Notices. 1. U. CORNWeLL nAU'L KKBJ «& KEBS, CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS SILVER & BRASS-PLATERS, and manoiaotnrors of Saddlery and Camaee Hardware, No. 7 Bt. Clair Street and ©aaaesno Way . . (near the tlndge.) ““ pjnrsßßßeH, pa POISON NOT THE HEAD WITH WITBATE OF SILVER, Use CRISTADORO’S HAIR DTK, ’ Certified to bo PURE—SAFE—UNEQUALLED, by Dr. Chilton, of New York, and other ominont Chemists gX ROD IT TEN ANT SHADE FROM Mellow brown to glossy black in ten ruSo U ,L ea to ft S i e 0 h 0 a n i t r alnfl D ° InEro<**? ooufd only* be made whole by vegetable food"—Animal food feo^M nd “" d ™K tobl ?«. Brandroth's fTH; 6 snould bo m ovory military hosnitaL lhaan ft 1 ]" Bilious Diarrhoa. Chr.Z , tai rhS! tf the er7, ttnd “j 1 Bovorsand AffeoiioS 01 tea Jiowolß, Boonar and more suroly than -m Saes s'hou'lH h‘.“. W | orld ‘ Brandreth's Pijla in thaso rKtafi “ d b j takon nubt 111111 morning. Hoad Direction.* and get now stylo. n, « CASEOF ROSCOEK, WATbON. ' I Ur. B. Brandreth.—JVeto Yorl: • Hs?Vortt W VV f. pr &W in .C®/Xl7th ltogimont, I was reduced to sain and bone. Among the c?£- I ~ an £ re qnito p tuinfer of members who had worked in your Laboratory at Sing Sing. They Pills Tho«» becau “°., t J h! >y BriSidroth? to use the Pin, Jj* T lod up< ?P mc and others lousetno rui«, and we were ail carod in frorr Hr °, w te, ti , ay8 \ Aftor this oar boys used Bran- Usm ‘° r 11,6 typh , ua fnTor - °°l A DISSOI.T TION- OP W HK'i’f r ‘ nCr | < tho IKONIMLK IRON *V KKbaro offered for sale. These works are situated at Irondale. on the '™ Mountain Railroad, TO mites from the c,7y - (««•.i.?" 18, f r " n!l » t >°e o: ono hot blast Furnace! ..(AX) acres of umber and farming lands, twenty dwell,n B houses suitable lor lab rers. one la?g! three Hury brick store-house, fine stable and bam, saw and corn in'll, about SUJ.no bushels ol charcoal. 2,i«iti tons of iron ore on furnace yard, mules, wagons, liar, corn, tats, tc, ,vc. The r urn ace and machinery in uorfeot ortler AlsoacuDtrajtwitb the American Iron Moun lain bun pa !,y i„ r the delivery of their i,re, hat ing twehoyeur: lo run: large banks ol hemali.eore in the immediate vinn.ty of the Fuaiiico. The S! >nT iT w , or , k ' llro ttull '-» the most desirable in n b rs!!, D « U f :li n,| d offer every inducement to Tf d -fl' r ' ,U K a " o-vaging in the manufacture Inline",h I , ho “ bo '' n , ,,r( |lcr,y inoludcs (he unsold 1. iv!?e mlo b"o° ro *' l ’ l cot eoW a < faturdav, iOtL Day of Ortobor, ISM, will on that (Jay, he sold at public vendne taa n whol° and without dividon.) t„ the hiXst'md dci-, ut the east front du°'( f the Court House in bulf C " y h o! h V Lon !"' at 12 “’'lock, noon Ten, " half cash, b dance m twelve munrhs, with six nor • cut, interest, or all cash, as the purcbaer may dettro. lorlurthcr information and particular, 7 aonly at the office at Xrondale. or to *'‘ lrucuuir!i ' BELT * PRIEST, ♦ Koal Estato Agents, St. Louis, DUQUESNE BRASS WORKS, CADMAN & CRAWFORD. of oTery Tari °ty of finished BBASB WOBZ FOB PLUMBEBB GAS or STEAM FITTERS attention ya£j» to fitting up xvennonoa for Jonl and Carbon Oils, Also, sole wreuta for tho Western District 01 ro”« 1 Ri I t« a^ I S' f °K tho u aa, ° °f Marsh, Lansdell A Si' v, ■ ' b> pl > on -Pomi l . the best ever inven. .\. alve3 “ “ Eot liable to get olt of ffo°o f M‘ thr ° W m ° ro ,h “Jf NOTICE. MAVIJfG RKCKIVCU INFORM* . , tlon that persons have at different ii m J m tbouame of iho Sntsiste-oe Oommi r tt« ??- ea th e eS°H tribatioD , 5 otJ?rait3 »nd VegetabliTrom od of giving notice, that we never author/ln? one to collect each contribuS for ” gX Stve P ‘n^v , =r n rea^dn° S ntr ‘ blUionß thua oolle oted W P. WETMAN,) ct ,, f J H° S M A A L Ki).} EI ' C -' shSSd tr K°fto f Me^r3Xm 0 a n n 0 110 0 n m ? it ?\ e ’ field st. or Aiefsrs Geo. r3 Arb^ m “on i |°C D iX h a Eel it DAUB & APPALL, HEBfBjASI I TASUGKS, IBi Smithfield Street. ’RATE have just recetvku a » » large ond woll selected stock of Fall and Winter Goods, oocfliatinj of Clouts, t afllmeros, Veotla B s, dec. AI*SO—A large stock of GENT’S FUBNISHING GOODS, PUKE WUVES. | BEG MATE to AJOfOIJATT Tn »- L n nz sisi*Erfs" brands of German Wine?oL„ f Old Lager Beer constantly on hand J. ROTH. 26 Diamond. J Banking Houses. FIRST “NATIONAL BANK OF PITTSBURGH. Orp,ne„„^ REABURYDEPAR, ™ENT. 1 PICE OP COSIPTROLLKB OP THE CURRENCY, V Washington City, Aug. sth, 1863. j t) the E n E n^ 9 Aj ßr a i lt ;*fiwtory evidence presented Congnus entities •* re A ™ Domestic mart SteotStfM IGO 00 g»ga Acoomta, isrrrrz.™ $, Kotfti,**.**..”'” 18.361 99 i Hfriij aid Biii3 iteiSZiSdL:?:.": • ifj;^ J ohc a. M ’Cano -»■ IHTSrjLSRVY, Grocer, NO. 4 DIAMOND, PITTSBURGH, PA. mr24lyd»w PITTSBUBtiII nuu COILJM, BEV. I. PERSHING, President, Jl?;®’ 1 ' SUSTAISEI) COLLEGE 1!E Waston, imj TaeL d except tU %r M .d»^a, BTEW BWtiLJEB WORKS J< J . POWERS reL r o 0 n m aKo a “r n m “ 011 P “ d “> *“ “»««* <*"»>«*. o 0 Worka CORNER OE LOCUST and DDQUESNE iyB-ly/ A Y ’ sth ard * A11 ««h«ny river, H. .1. LVMCH ife? door from sth street wharfi I1 T? Iar ,i eL ? Uoy i first sold cfieap. ‘ where Dry Goods will be . aulS _ DEITISXhy, T S.VJSVK.'KEW™*®' J * F i hoffmas, dentist. AU work warranted. 134 Smithfield StreetPittahm^h Hydropolts, or Garden Sprinkler A A ?° Vfinrvi. ABTICI.E tor and repaired. Da? kin’s Patont d W» nPtie i n Bol “ madoand Bold w ratoDt VYa.or .Drawer Jn3 YVEIiDON & KELLY. 164 Wood St. • une door from Sixth. ]V OW IS the CIIMTE to get bargains in BOOTS, SHOES, UAITEKS and BALMOBAL9, cheaper than oven auction goods, SotoßOßlAjfn.s, No. 98 Market street, Seoon d Door from Fifth.. ry Stable from the rear of tS*ScS nj2 c *“! Li 7e_ the comer of First End Smithfi.u >M Conn s old stand, is proparid7?fiil?^ e,rt ' w - c bnggios. and saddleLraSup™ otu-ria* ss. bco, Also horses kept at ‘bortest no rates. Undortakin* and ailS? 7 r ®asonab le nerala will receive his special^?i!s? ln ® nts for fev BSffSßgsgu™. J?I8H, ~~ No ™Eft*iXraoira. iLPJLM E R C I A L . PITTSBURGH PRODUCE MARKET, Office of the Daily Post, l KSDAV ‘ fcol>t * 16, 1853, * sieadi!y Ek Fo7i?,“l n£ ? 00nlillnes to improve fair domund a« rJi'*?' nS nttlole3 1 ™ I,hwi - I la-,000 Iba Piain Z l7 ‘ lb? do assorted. 9uJ. 10,000 lbs. j command tho firmer figmV readily JT 011 ’® sale; 25 tierces at 13H(&Uc as rm ‘ sales ti.ufJO ibi. riboej at ®@? o : 4 oS}' L H , d ' 3 ' at be. Country lots were di^n^LH lbs * olea r Ot prices according to qoalii/ d olf at '' arie <3' ti.rZS^ dm “ JemaDd ' oI W sZSfiTJE i" Frfto - has boon mainfiined We h t Te . beretoiore rectified at 50o* yn iko* , a^efl so lbs, city largef 1110 &galeS s!Us ' firm, Sales at depot at n=fde°we7rJn h | < :- £ l bo Ba >“ ofihelooj.l trade wa £ to .in®Bt the want? taith in an early id vandi n ee t ‘ Um . K flrm in their quontly they are d't anLon? S C P‘ rat ' 8 ' conSo ‘ stocks a the | resent Sis T? duiPOSO 01 thtlr load lots trlPo-isP e. s ‘ li 16 «a es m dray Extra hsures f r favcritrbSn^, 00 ®' 020 - , Ino laltor lower figures. Dran< “ in wagon lots sold at rii?ht’ndTOn‘‘e~'^, O E “Po k '| Wi “ ver ? firm at a ins. Os, sales lo bhn E Ph ni X? s -oHowa: Mo bblsoldcropSTo idobN °L 1 , 0 ' ns 05 ®7-’c; 15 ketnrm; Bales id sacks KiP mJan' ’'“doc. mar -Bjrnf»..s.i. s Si hat ° 30 @dlo: i 5 dj 10* 70. a wide ra?ge bbls oltra Ne w York t 6 to 1 sSHJ*"6*r : p“ I C»bs Hl* 5 do Orleans is ;e 1% Crushed l? a bhde Jo to ldii; if, t.bis do 100 d; ! a ! es I choice O o ra,l’_rdS o o ' w^-;i 2 bbls. 14°|!°‘* U bbl< ’" se tied; sales irom wagon SI 05 to y 'm trao L un " oats sales ,5-0 ba h,7e° 62 tX ° P " buBlE depot *2- t a o‘.“ l 0" bb,s ' tr “ m 60; 75 do., $33 I “si r p'' E r“m rke,Wa3firr;SaleB 19 loads at “ arke ‘ Steady: sa ‘ e = "f ■S6 boxs TV. K. PITTSBURGH (lit TRADE, The Wemsebdav, Sept. 16th. ket yesterday was inactive The ' T r ° f6W and far betw »™- A gen era! firmness has taken possession of the yJZi bar r 'o P f : n \ 0f °*i* Tha « breaent b 4 wUh Tha t V “ n ° thiDg l6ft *» add'and M rat r ° f frCight between Oil City j D . n _ 1* fcurgh partiesffromebip- Lvew Vork r tl U “° ln 1 ,l . th *"«k rt wasdull, and prices aito- Eether Holders just now have matters o r I L?Z D ™ h r BdS - Th ° ««>»* -X and h f 7 U ' T'' t ' d ° n,y 722 brla reflnrf we" U p d er ZT f-f* Per Al.egheny River 131 br's all Bolt The ex ports west was ICO brls refined va n L ,, ware H vm d y e p-oI I ?e r e B ,„ a ( Bt l n ' r - a - ■>*- °ne lot of 800 b .% wat l offirn^ b '^ a '- g t , bo 3amB - was not consuinm-i?sd» d at 280 la , bu,k ' ‘he hot. Among the “l “h , ,eftth,! “ar foilowing: t>4 brls crude ta tra l ‘ 13 P‘ re d wore the I turned, it te V tolll6o 1116 barre > ‘° be re of heavy oil 1A • 100 brl- d th?® 0 pnccs . ; 120 b-ls 5? Sl!4: some fiildere«thft„K? olt, ymno,ua,:li dtd not learn or 11 bold °“f ‘or 33. We noted, but tncro i< n abov \? "bat we have ' will bi iniitic at. n ° telllDff w kat the next sale ti(m. < , il'codo7s'of cout-^ 1 ' eaT l a 3 ' n *'<> ‘ransac- Buyers, however wer. shT? 8 f™ lj thelr tiows. to speculate, Wo oiintomfmf "' e . re n ? 1 -disposed present delivery, sSaEj,?. ?w”i? a 1, 3" S f „ Sra nded, delivery, 5ri(»070 • J,'. ee .JrV® 1, ° b l r a f d November ‘ per gallon advance- U WO “ beid at ten cents I Boston Cotton Woods Market a be«er h S i n^ i^i' , i e °La h rk I i th -T : F 8 notice demand from jotbirs "Ft™™ 1 ’S tb . an ‘‘creased firm stSfWSoc with ante/ , W iV, bbc S tmBs are now outside ir tuo vrs, 7’“ thcs c d ra rni s a n‘ i fl in dom < ?? d at $2 15®2 in! for fine. Baltimore Market. firal? ‘ iw?l° is - n Bcod demand and held Tory Sto^fnYr^h^dJr^Oba^ 019 “ Cincinnati Market. d„^f° V u‘ ons unchanged and firmly held hut aaggsswtt-teß^aa oav“?‘i “ e d f,r J at IDo. but'no buyers at over y? 4 . and not many even at this rate, Sixtv hhrfo Won sides sold at So. and 35 do. Ehomlfere £t JJ&BIVATE DISEASES DB. BROWN’S OFFICE, 50 SMI TEFIELD STB MET, ad- “Te&oS»° istawraiS on|nn of which tho Patient Dr r', , SK H™4 L WEAKNESB. by Boiltar/fflo! 1 * 8 f °r this affliction, brought on in tW« 4116 “'i! 3 ' modioines known iSrtoroto^thT^ 0111110^0 “ d ’ fUI ™ ed U, n „ , rheumatism:. inftilafflmaon remodi * 3 ' 3nro 111 a four days this Ho also treat Piles. Qleet, Sonnorrhoe, Urethal Utschargos. Female Diseases. Pains in the Bach and Ridnoys, Irritation of the Bladder, strict ures. etc. ONE DOiDAB! anßwored mnß * '“tain at least Medioines Bent to any address safely cached s^ssaafmara” 0 - 80 j||EDICiL CARD, F. X. DeROLETTE. M. D.. Ph™sidaß) ** Charity Hospitals, 4c. Date of Difc l?;T’ OFFICE 57 eBAJOT STBEET, St. HlCuOlSg Bn! Idffiy •agte.asgrfK.&j-sg v ' ■ art . Medical, Di^coTcry, , WARRANTED in all CASE! I I «• JfETBB spoedy in action I doea not “ansoate 11% K fro Change of Diet is Eeqnircd! Upward of 200 cures tho past mon‘h BAmA „* andfemnlo, oh^orytmng l U b adaptad formal! HiSLL’S SPiiCJEC PILiLa one°liMS?i qa c * l ? genuine Specific PlUs their nr?,H undrc 4 hava uscd them in ap^ovo°f?fcl?‘l 6peak of S ly vegetable and P h 31tl i D ‘ wil ich i» ectire- Mundredsof oertificift?,, bdnnlesson thesysiem, lihll’r. SpecificPiu?^ 8 0! ? beehown. - for affecting a permanent a® < f n,y reliableremedy oasos of bpermatS^Sea 1, d « Ppe t ed ? SP™ in “U With all it. train of e?a' B q L^ min ?, 1 Weakness, Vaginal Discharges, aSo;’ the V;hl. Dre v? ra! , Involuntary Emission's, Gi-iSi 1 iw s '? ,lsht f y T or ritabiiity, Iccontinenee, p nd b ' Loss of Power. NorTou3Dehilit T V„o; knc ? 3 °£ or dSuSo&td L h i!o s , a£Fmr from SSS?®*^ bvlakmoa ,iZuboxJ R lKf " Sold by f’fffCEOKEDOLLAE, .. .. i O SE?n FLEMTTTff, “ft* D r.arei'ta generally Ct “ d fein «2SS oY&'ey Kn J- BRYAN. M. D.. The Fiftieth Thousand,—Dr, Bell’/* poteiYo aS , m-oSltdgcS 0 S1t d gcS rhaC “e./allowing amendments bo t ronosed-hi s;a“«Kt»: af=SS HUS o& S a^l b V^“i^iX^! slatMe containing more than one sabrnot whmh . .Sxctios 9. jNo bill shall bo passed by the Lm islature granting any powers, pritUegM hi anv I sa ;»bere the author!,y to g?ant Sp”w«f tr i>rmlege3, has been, .-r may hereafter bn’ conierred upon the courts of thircomm„nwealth: BpeHlror of tho Hon.c ot'^epresentAtiy^. J OiliT p. PENNEY/ Speakor of the Senate, OFFIOB CF TEH 1 Becbhtary OP THE CoJ . r7l : J n „ d ° tc-oby certify that the formtoios Jribl u pinto* Ifae-aua correct copy A— v ) the orijnn&l Joint Kesolntion of Lhe(3f»n oral AEScmbJy. entitled “AJoint Rese ntion nro^ fico to be affixed tho day and year abovoStten’ Secretary of the'CemmonwSuth- TO gfJS VEOIAKL7 ' tnatlona ccunmonand in oideht to youths of both find adults, Sinaia or meni.. ~ - Da. Buaxsteci- pubiSnss vr' fl^ i T' ea and for contamination ? Y “!- y ljlm;ortlJ tioo nllrht be leet to -Si? luor&tivo praoS rotten. It is to h * oi?sSr meanly omtj o-«nia and gnMdiam .‘TSS 0 ? sx/ii£, datyfhteis and wrkl= to*t tiisn siokJrtsndDi deiirate :/jeSc have been restored to b - 1 ' !-' f,i)(^raaoOT BBAHBTKUP. r ‘ 3Dt t>7 i'E. ooMTlatte throaahMmlUvehr,*:? 111(1 ferine, anxiety, “aft bea or nocturnal emmiasioni Me^ni-oii'tS 51610 in a very Bhort spaSldKiyj?MonptetSiii oared which aiOMOuliariy his 0 w oLtS?iv 7 -o-ed-i;::, from the ©a it and Enfcstitnted fcha **2 h^^ba^ d , o^’ which t?t> many KHn , aaHv l ftijT,?i 0 T ca now bo .-(diSid. w iSi™,' 1 .? 65 - *» 1 time Jail P&rticula/s ona t ®/* ** ifc by proearins a copy cd tteJf^^a9£tSS^*?=.» 13eivcn 3ratis to all thus «SST vantage 0? ons ftr{y SfegTt-S 0 f 1; observation, coimqcontiy.i.o h.» ES. - I ’ s -' £=3 *? fh= treatment 0? bdocS. dlo^-^FS'rt?,* 4 niily consaftodbytiioprotesSoTS^i? l .-. wswt pnctorc of hotels, &c. 7)cU‘- p £.!f“tsji* S-Ji stream neaj Biamond **‘”l—”l catioas ftofc teoaasam > S4 tendrito, WmiSt ; ea C “ cu dt&iy nj H>.P.SS£)3 gbtggh ?02; Sfifl-s. SYBm» OF hamwke akto STEU th»°ab')vc'^/ 0 n *s® last six for my own practice and h7^^* ooUo P t J' ombd3M uncommon sn“es to all h thaOim® 11 ! h r em , " ith duty to set them before th a nnkr o-1 feel u a nenoe leads meto think iW p bho ' 38 my «*So as any renTodiM-i„ii 1 ttc { are “ uear specifics diseases, SmeiJ. uL? 11 ? V- for tb « following all diseases thaf r ltre * Syphilis. and blood. One triat^?n from a - n bnpure state of the “* person of Prepared and sold by oe J. W. BBANSTRXJP, M D 85 Snmhfleld st.. Pittsburgh Pa OSL i TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS. *WJ orlr ' “ «“* »»&£&. Twenty-Five dollars i^g**, o "** Vessel at Chroaide buildm*. 70 F,fth Bt, KSggfcjp,. lu4 LONH. SMITH, PAEF^CO"' 4 Rl!mi £>»^ ff sgassss^s^^*Srt6 Coal Oil. Retorts and gfflhfa£'^ l a^’'? l ' < ?S# «i ami MachlaacTr icnptipa taaue to order, sflblydtaw iobbiiCb wasted to repair shoos, * üBOBUBSA « MaiketW,