James P. Barr, E< ■DAILY POST.: DAILY rates, Oqo year, by mail. Slxjnonths. “ Throe " M One “ •• ’Onewdek, delivered in the city. Single copies... To agents per hundred - At Scranton WILKESBARRE, LCZERXE Co. 1 Sepi. 18, 1863. / ■ Editors of the Age.— Gentlemen: I send you a brief account cf the great Democratic outpouring at Scranton which oocurred yesterday in commemoration of the adoption of the Federal Constitution! and in ratification of the nominations of Woodward and Lowrie. Scranton is a new town, having only been inexistence the last eleven years, and now contains a population ot ten thousand ' i inhabitants, The immense concourse of people as sembled in the town at an early hour, and when the meeting commenced there was some eight or ten thousand people in the grove where it was neld. Speaking from the stands began at two o’clock in the af ternoon. At stand No. 1, Colonel Geo. 'Sanderson, of Scranton, presided. John A. Clark, Esq., of Philadelphia, was the first speaker announced, and aroseamidst the most tumultuous applause of thestnrdy Democracy of Luzerne, Wyoming and Sus quehanna counties. He began hia remarks by allusions to the denial on the part of the present Ad ministration o! the right of the people to assemble together to discuss the great issues of the day, wherever snch discus sions evoked comments unfavorable to the usurpation of Abraham Lincoln. This nght was guaranteed by onr State and rederal Constitutions. It was inherent m the sovereignty of the people. Loyalty was the allegiance one owes only to his prince Ia America we have no prince, no kine. no empercr. The allegiance ia due to the sovereign people. Oaths of allegiance ..phould be taken by Lincoln and hU offii cials to preserve and protect the liberties of the people. How then could he pre Vent their aaiemhling together to disease the-manner in which he had discharged .;.;his public functions ? In the face of such outrages, the people of Pennsylvania were called upon to decide whether they wrould retain the liberties their ancestors had bequeathed to them, and transmit them to their posterity, or whether they would basely surrender them to the pres ent Executive of the United Statea Gov ernment. Andrew G. Curtin is the repre -sentaUve of military despotism, George W. Vi oodwari the standard bearer of con .-atitutional liberty. If the course of the President is approved by the people, the result will be esteemed by him as an aban donment of popular sovereignty, and an acquiescence iu the doctrine of military necessity. Hon. F. W. Hughes was then iutro * °nade a most eloquent and brilliant address, and was frequently in terrnpted by. outbursts of applause. Dio speech was highly argumentative. He r ® a '» some Btartling extracts to show that the Republican party had been, from its inception, a secession and disunion party: that it.had come into power pledged to Abolition, and therefore would and could accept of no compromise ; that it lay in its power to hare averted civil war, and saved the Union by accepting the Critten den Compromise, as the records of the time show; that the final unmasking of their designs in the Emancipation Procla mation, has barred the only road to a res toration of the Union as it was, by alien ating hopelessly the hearto of the South ern people, and by asserting a principle which rendered it impossible ior those States to return in their free and co equal capacity. He vindicated the character of the Democracy for patriotism, and closed bjr giving his personal testimony to the mgh character and great ability of Judge Woodward. Hon. James Campbell fol lowed in a written speech, which will be published U fall, and which was listened to with profound attention. The concluding address at this stand was made by General Patton, of Brad ford, an old Democrat, who lashed un sparingly the unconstitutional acts of the Administration At stand No. 2 the first speaker was Theodora Cuyler, Esq. He censured the Administration for its attacks on the rights of the States. He spoke of the en tire devotion of the Administration at present te the negro. Mr. Cuyler’s re marks werb characterized by his usual propriety and elegant diction, and his agreeable manners captivated the au dience. The next speaker was R. P. Kane, Esq He spoke ot the old glories of the Demo cratic party, and impressed the audience by his tine voice and oratorical powers. Hon. William 11. Witte followed with a speech ot wonderful power and elo quence. He alluded to the glorification of the negro by the Republican party, and its ill-coucealed d.slike for the adopted citizen. He spoke of the deficiency of the leaders of that party in statesmanlike qualities, and called to remembrance the part which its principal leaders had taken tn opposition to the Government and Con stitution of the United States. He char acterized as treason the nullifying acts passed by Northern States in opposition to the laws of Congress tor the rendition of fugitives. He referred to the traitor ous opposition to tha Government during the Mexicon war. He showed how every measure of Government which had stood the test of time and experience had been the work of the Democratic party. His remarks were listened to with pro found attention by the vast audience, and he closed by urging npon evory patriotic citizen to be present at the polls on Hie second Tuesday in October, and depomt his vote for Woodward and Lowrie as the representatives of constitutional liberty. In the evening several thousand people assembled with their torches and lanterns, and evinced the same enthusiasm which had. been manifested through the day. When the meeting was called to order, James Buchanan, Jr., addressed the audi ence, in a strain of well deserved and in dignaut denunciation of the public acts and official corruption of Governor Curtin. He showed his utter untrustworthiness as the Chief Executive of the Common wealih of Pennsylvania, and exhibited the contrast between him and the Demo cratic nominee, Jndge Woodward. Miv Witte was again called upon for a speech, and aroused the enthusiasm of the audience by a renewed exhibition of his -powers of eloquence. The meeting has had a remarkable effect in opening the eyes of the people to their dnty in the coming crisis, and Luzerne county will be heard from this fall speaking in thunder tones its com demnation of the unconstitutional acta of the Administration. Lozesks, Who Divided the Union ? The answer must be, the South, undoubt edly» we look no 1 farther back than the several ordinances of secession passed by their State conventions. But what led to Buch a state of public feeling in the South that the passage of these ordinances of se cession became possible? This question goes to the roots of the Bubject. and a cor rect answer fo it must fix the ultimate rei sponsibility for dissolution on the aboli tionists. True, there have long been dem agogues in the South who considered disi solution desirable. But who gave to these demagogues their power? who supplied them with arguments? who enabled them to convince a majority of the active and influential classes in the Southern States that they ought not to remain in the Union? What headway could the seces sion demagogues have made without Mn Seward s • Higher Law without the ■abolition mobs for resisting the rendition of fugitive slaves; without the “personal liberty bill,” passed to defeat a plain re quirement of the Constitution; without the avowed and recorded abolitionism of the great Republican oracles: without the vituperation and slanders of the Tribune, the underground railroad, ihe “irrepress-l lble conflict,” and John Brown’s raid ? Jfete are the things which alarmed the' Southern mind ; these are the steps of the ladder by which Southern demagogues climbed to their ascendancy. He who digs under my house, deposits the gun powder; and lays the train, is as wicked as the incendiary -who applies the match. the evasive ingenuity by which the abolitionists seek to escape this responsi bility is all in vain. No change of party names, no attlempt lo restrict political discussions within the period since Mr Lincoln’s election, can blind the people to the broad fact that if there had been no sectional Republican party there would have been no war. This fact stands uo in bold relief, like the Alps against the sky, aDd no artifieo can obscure it. The Union was not held together by merely political bonds, nor was it. dissolv ed all at once by political action. The real dissolution was the alitnaiioii of feeling and sectional bitterness which preceded the severing of polit ,-n 1 .; r , It is notorious to all the wurid iI IM .i was the abolitionists that sowed lue seed- ol this alienation, that fomented this bitter ness. Slavery was the sore end sensitive spot on the social body cf the Sou;!; and the rough handed aholitici i.-ts kept 'jub bmg it. The greater the irritation tiny caused, the more the object cl their tor ture winced, the better they seen: J pleas ed. Much of theiest ot sue); f-n ,k« , IS Mrs. Stowe’s “ I'ncle Tom's Cabin.",!, book which was high toned and r.-sp.-ct a.ble compared with the mass of ai.ol'iuc.,, libels and pasquinades), consisted i n B perception efihe sting thev would inflict on Southern sensitiveneßu It was like tbe pleasure felt by a mischievous bov who sits on a shed and shakes and flag at a mad bull. Th's reckless abolitionism hod no respect for persins, nor places, nor the sacred things. It en'ered the church of Christ with its wrangles and -uc ceeded m severing that before it ds=solv e d our political Union. The churchfß of all thegreat denominations ,-xcep; the Cath ohc) were organized very mu -h like oar pol'ooal institutions. They ail hud n Con gress. Abolitionism first et. en-J the Methodist Church, as .Satan, the au thor of discord, entered Lien. u:.d pres ently that great body was divided, nnd the two sections plunged in litigation crowing out of their claims to their common j roner ty. The Baptist church was nrj > sundered bv thesame means: and thenthe I’reshyterian. Itistruetbet in all these divisions it was the South that seceded, but it is aiso true that the questions on which they divided were thrust into the several conventions by tbe abolitionists. It cannot bo pre'ended that this separation of tbe churches was the work ot ambitious demagogues, or that the eeceders were hurried imo acting against their deliberate judgment. The great „ee tional schism in the churches was purely the work of obtrusive abolitionism. Thou oh it preceded the political separa: ion by sever al years, the analogy Bud connection is such as to Bbowthat they resulted from a common cause. 1 oil may say, to he sure, 'hat the South was insane on the si;f j. c i , f r l tt very; but that is merely adif-rpnt wav of saying that their opinion ot. tl.o t U h ject different from yours. Ycuraiiemp: to domineer over their opinions, and to overturn their social and industrial sys tem, is what broke up the Urion y ou may sav, again, that this was only a pre text; but it still romains trnelhn 1 it was the abolitionists who gave them ihispre text in the face of repeated Warnings of the OBe they would prr bably make of it. . And our honest rail-splitter at VVash mgton is still swinging the enormous ab olition beetle and delivering his slurdinet blows on the same wedge by which the States were separated. The Union is as yet only a partially cleft log: if the aboli tion wedge were knocked out. the sides would spring together and leave only a seam. When, by nnd by the I>. mocrots render this service, let the abolitionists look out. that their fingers are not in the cleft — World. 5B 00 i 26 ........ iis LAZE £ UPEEIUR COPPEE MISEB -AND SMEIeTISrcj WOK KM. Park, 51’Curdy .t t'o, Manufacturers of bheath. Prozior.s' and Belt Copper. Pressed Copper Bottoms, Raised Still Bo'toms, bpelter &c, Also ioij.or’ ters at-d dealers in Metals. Tin Plate, bheet Iron. Fire, Ac. IS-Constantly on hard. Tirtnen'*’ Machines '£ aT0 * Joa!C . No. tOFIEbT and 120 SKJOND STREETS, Pittsburgh Pa. orders of Copper cut to any desired pattern. fo2l:iyd&w AHEBICA3K MOUSE, BOSTON, IS THE LARGEST AND BEST AR ranged Hotel in the Now E-gland Statoi- jg centrally lo«*ated«.and easy of access lr>.m all the routeß ot travel. It contains all tho modern im and overy convenience for the cofia- Thl a i a . c «°oimcdauon ef tbe trave ing public. Ar 6 room» are large and well venti.ated: Dieted l 0 ?/ a f e w ® i] arranged, a- d com uartie*a?d lamil , l6S and Ia 'ff B traveling n T hou rr e w,u continue to be kept 80510n.50pt.1663. - NIU IUCK ' Pr °“ SMITH, PABK & GO. IV in ill Ward Foundry PITTSBURGH. N 0.149 First and 120 So'ond sis Wanu£actarers »of all sizes and descriptions of KnriVrnrß^ e A ortS r afi Water pipes. Mtea^SmSS-oJaXjS 0 *"- Sed M ° UldS tionmade b it K rd a e ? d M “ hiner ®' of descrip- Having a complete machine shop attached to ftefounar?, all necessary fitting wrt, becaroTnllj attended to. oHUydiw 1 OX. SBIPU. QUlSllft, AfJtU RICAN*” Just received a**d f r *aJe by GEO. A. KELLY/ *e!s No. 69 Federal st. ONLY TWENTY-FIVE DOLLA E™\^ 8 Vr° h m oT«^ *&&£££?£"'*' “ pS ' SI clas^mTil Twenty-Five Dollars. ioSSM 0 aZIM oat hy BaiUn,t VesMl al C j™tf l 0 buildinK ' 70 at. Pita ™h,' P a Hon. Wilson McCandiooi. Judge of the United states Cironit Court. President. Corner or Penn & St. Clnlr St.. Pttts burgth Penn’a., *A* <3EST - cheapest AND rourre 53 pai » for a Commercial B^.^'te^^’Ssssr stoamboit ’ togSr-^^t^T^f^ oo - Adonis ec T i { d h. i r f t i , “} ion is conducted by experienced iarn'™, 8 „ “** J’™ ollo '/! accountants. who pro- S™ t men for activo business at tho leait rxpon. e and'bortest time for tho most lucrative i " mdrit'^iv 10 uali ?F 3 - u , lpl0 ““ fanred TTcncc Hie preference for jrrad* antcg at this College by business men. who 0 h f nfH« C ,°b W . < ’. T- ,h ° bcst Penman cf the Union. JiL'lts and " I V I num . bor Of First Prk- WriliVg. 1 C °” , ' OUtors ' R*PiJ n^me"g?adu^°e r 8 ®"» »» d «•*» of busi c.cSrTn!l',w I’enman 1 ’ enman bip and Catalogue ce.“t?S life Prin^air n ° n - mclose jRRfKK ifi A SSUT3n. E2ICJIIVMT PRSUIII awarded to the w n iiukr * lviuos Sewing- Machines London a.\d Paris exhibitions. T ,E SALE OF TIIESE MACHINES at,; ibe sale of all .thvrs combined, br adaptabl'ity to all kinds of Sow puL pro f .t cuJ the following from Douglass s i-hc-w.oi, the well known Shirt Manutfctu- Vnnmir 0 a>M 'be "‘heeler A Wilson Sewing •p.u jF-, ;;V klr J Monof-ctorysince J muary ...a.K-.j M ha* in/ired crt-Ved our bu*\nes» Af l' r i'f °FIi l ri ° anal machines before tho'l üb f-elorted j.urs. We cr mmonccd with one, N°.J J „ u " one hundred and strain „ k l ' " c a.O running one hunj id of h .i nos ;D “ no t'-oio. and yot such ip tho nn th,U ""iwFiU.on can be earned on in lon ,? "f voice. They nro ndaptod (o ovtry portion of our work ; sewing equaly well upon the lightest muslin and our ncavicst w. rk ofhaffef/,h n , in " l : ickne ” «• «”«« tbs,n being “ r ' floth. twool common cotton cloth, and two cl starched Upo. Its speed i, unexampled. op-r.on can i.ccoinplish as much as 0V1...1 w " n< W! |bout u, and twiro ns much as .o. .I. ° machine, cm Ihouaand lards l.f lit. TJZ'"' tt-- “tltcbes to iho inch, is an oidi nnr, nay s work ol en hours. We base ran it as ■ one ! iT>c bPodred acti fif.y yard p-r hour. Tho B ,"ra-’.bt < at our omployeos work tho n*. » r ' ,U k 'uY tfv ' d J<: * l lh Wocnn nct too highly rec mine mi vyioeor & Wilson** Uicfjine.", Mid our i-i-ini.'n? are shared by all " f e *P°rimce aid judgement, w i' fl w b mwe come in c.mtaot.” Ats '. Irorn Iho f il 1.,/ I'rrehplcrmn of Sept. if/ A ter more than one y,ar?eipene-rc. stem Wta w f. r "- ,nI »r nd r,ar ' J- Wheeler A k - k bonsch-ilil I nmi:lure with whi h any house can be tupphed ni tho but thing in oor - ra«v tui tmu'uuon iha: w.- w.mlu port wiih r ,| Very A "arrar.'cl r ibne yearn a^rrct'te'Jfar 111 M W »LU. S ' S “' KIFI '“ ‘'"“bPrgl.: WK ‘v FA BE I? At CO., «« 85 £ 9IM fi eU/LOSif * oss Uf .-ynsa tSs,' ,i» tSEfi.’L HACWHijn J»0 HIRER HAKtU Afi.r vhf. Pfliifl, E, R. Dsdqi IA-ACri.itifl AAJL KISDg a] ranging from throe to 00. a %.r ?cSr‘u ;t ti'om n ”° lOS ’ “oHar. of arm n Kk lI S :: lron toperatoly, .'/‘“jlrra ShafUcg, Laagers and Follies R H “ d ct ?V? a ' tb» mannfaotaroot Woolen Mnohinery and Machine Cards. 'S?' mrinneUnery manafaotOT ed of tho boy. e utility of maiorixis, and warranted in all etna, to give .atisfa-ition. D c * aw-Onlcr, trom ail parts of ths country solicit ed and protnpti7 OU«L frX dJtw' COj\C.'OHD (MAPE VINES W l, WtHE AHOh'U THE FIRNTTtt jo “ oc ? rc thu I.NFAI.I AKI.K (iltAI'F. srd have fruited it for live years. We obtained i[ i£l rheV> n ,f n from -'i;- PIELi jL Ut “ b “ r ®," Horticultural Society In us o.dttdomu (or its exhibition, S l»so A t,Mt? County Agricultural Sooiety .0 , »o®. a promium for it as - tho BEST now ! - ,?!.Yh ,f roro ' ln ail rospoota seperior to the Our slock el Virus In uuequHlled * J , C(7 l, ! r re t' Whlcb aYs » ir ° r at 20 omits each, imw'l "2 $12,0(1 per 100, jiloo per 1 it? 0 ;i, P all vmos a t loss prices. P 1 50 r C i.,UH^o r Si 6 o O Sh" W Mtra lar *° at f tO“ , , u _ J. KNOX, BSL-wxlAw. So. 30 Pi rib NI root. ST OOLLEGE ÜBDfH Cftfi OF THE FRANCISCAN BROTHERS r S I^ S T J^S'Ei T £ T]IOH * SITUATED •*-. LORETTO, Cambria county Pennsyl- J* 11 ** OQ f mi^as from Crass on Station, on the direct route between Philadelphia and Pitts burgh, was chartered in 1858. with pririSffi tn confer tho usual Collegiate Honors and Degrees. The iooatirottr' Rev Dr, O’Hara! Philadelphia: Rev. Henry McLaughlin AiK do'phia; «ev. Puree Mahar, Harrisburg? - ‘ " • A h«ok runs da'lr to Lo eto fr-m Cres -8! - - nepll bemotil. S 3 ?■ has REHOTED from Smithfield street, below the Girard Hoo S o N °" l4s Flrth Itreet opposite the CoS ’ «p2l‘tf, “THE U SIOB,™' " ARCH STREET, between 8d and 4th, PHILADEIPHU FfetUE UNDERsIGBTED HAVDSG ek -H. newod the lease of tho abovA for a series ofyears. would attention of the traveling pubuf 5fTiL,S~i r° oslity, either lorbusinos? Sr °' ntraJ fc “»h3;lyd THOMAS S,*wS§B - «fc SOH, OT AUOHOUO A HIGHLY CONCENTRATED Vegetable Extract -i PORE TONIC. I>r. Moofland’s OERMAI BITTERS OE. 0, D, .yACTKSOIsr, Ehileda: phia, Ponnn., Win sfife ct wn 11 y oft r s iitvei 0 Complaint, DYSPEPSIA, JAUHDICE, ailr oaU3, orjienoua O«omty, Dtaess** of the Hidceys, and all Dlaetuet ‘ Arlslcg from a Disordered lltar or Ktomecia, : 3UOJ» M CoffitJ pation. Inward Piles. Pollnesa or Blood to the Head, Acidity of tbo Stomach, Natisoa, Heartburn, for Food, EullneFs or W ight in too btomach. Boar Fructationa, Sink lug at the Pu oi me Stom .a « \r T R mim . n £ 01 ’ Hurried and difficult Breathing, EJuttariog at tho Heart.! or f?^ ocatin n BenaatioUfl when in a lying oortnre. Dimness of Vision. Dots or wobs bo- i tno sight, Fevor and Dull Pain in the Hoad, Deficiency of Porspiration, Yei io ynosB of the Skin and Kyos.Paia in the Side. Back, Chest, Liinba, &o. DuddonFloEhesofHeftt, Burn ing in the Pleeh, Constant imaginings of K v i I. and areat.deprea fIIOD 01 . . RplriU. And wnj positively prevent leUow Fever. BU-i ious I over. &c. THBY contain KOAL OUuL OB HAD WHlflflY £? D eS L7 l V c? i ro L s° bOTe in ninoty-nii e c ses out ol a hundred. Induced by tho eitensivc sale and nnivorsal ,'k,V. n ,^k, U f n* fbooflAnd’s Gorman Hitlers, (purely h ° Sta a{ bi? orant mucks end unserd talous adventurors, havo opened upon suffering lumnnity the flood gates of K o.’trams in tho shape >f l>oor whtfiky. vilely comp.cnndod with ininrioos Hmg and ohristoned Tonics, Stomachics and Bit iieware of the innumerable array of alcoholic k‘,^ ,a t, a^ ca> !? hlcfbonc hcttlcs, and big-bcUiod k'gs ondcr tho modest appellation or BittorSi which, instead of curing only aggravates diseases and leave tho disappointed sufferers in despair I UOOTLANL ii GEKMAN WITKRS Aro not a now and untried article, but have Jtood the test oi bfleen years trial by the Ameri 3an public; aii'i tbotr repulatinn and -ale arc aot rivalled by ar.y Pimilar preparation. ■v ♦v 1 * I’o* 1 ’ 0 * rioL * ra havo ihousands ol Letters I Tom too most eminent { nergym™, lAin-fm, Phyaloinn. and CftifcOUN. rcstifying ofthoir two personal knowi-dee to Uiltorsl OCC &1 cUf “ d 111 e dtea! virtue :ot theso 00 %jt vr%£‘?TSOil£TllE’!> a-a-a vo us do you wasted ‘ k vlgorca. If yja do, U3e HOOFLAND’S GERMAN BITTKRS. PABTICI'LAR notice. vZtr'r Slf ,rU un ,t„ V rhl, 17 t“ P ■" ,umirr,U to if.« tAe dealA of the dntnkot-i, Hv tl.eir us, ll, r nelan u kejA eemlmnaUg under she , a ii turner ej jI. xholte Simulant, ,d the word h ind, the denre fur /.".-or, y created and kept up, and the remit t< a t Uafcr 0 " drunkard', ive c£d fvr tho*e who dttire and VVIIIhnTC n T*** BtU Z: ,wrrui lit *h Bottle Hoodmid'D Oernfati ) or^,\^' rr »'?“«•«"uoA*■*&£' j that anil Tar excel Te whlZZ' ’I! Aav, ntlthentrtue. of r„, ..good article „f u"ar z/-‘:;i o r' :r ,han '*" r,a/^ ATTENTION SOLDIEBB »HD the rniians or boedi'ebs dc?M D n iKT t i n „ d i?il tS s 5^ l" CO'-UOII eufforin* | ri , m debility. K” , of that kihd can bo readily cured by ÜblbS blorniM Bittor!, Diseases resul.ing from disor- I” w Jha m remov- Weha\ono horilatiou in stating that if these Butors woro freely usod unions 01L soldiers ilSt'i'Jt! " ™ m “ h ' b « “»•<*. other*!" W • call particular attention to tho following °“ Q v * en aQt £ e nticated oure of ono of ao nation ehoroos, whoso life, to n«* »ng uago *han boon saved by tiio Bitter?:'' August 1862. ire appended, and wbD were mile cogniiMt S all tho circumstances of my case I nm y 1 been for tho last four y?is! a momb“r“ bhYr” man b celebrated battery, under the jotnmand of Cant. U B. Aim TK?I pwiuro attondant upon my arduouj dntie? j“a attackod in November last tri*h <-d c *7. the lungs, and waaio" ifvcnle' tw‘i? “‘.STM hospital. Ihis was lollowod by treat debflky heightened by an attack ofdysoutory “ in E romovod from tho IVhilo House and otty on board tho steamer "blnto “ Slsinl.” f™ which I landed on tho 2sth of Juno SEc. «, dmo I hnro boon about as low as could bo and al 1.1 rotainaspork ofvitality; Fora week "A ’« I able to swadow anything Pel^throwii'ur^agafn" 0 doWS itanoef ana, accordingly tho Shb rSp>sfkj?feS a?-- a,i , v ' p cd mo as u forlorn hope, to try your rmtors and kindly proenrod a bottlo Prom tho time I onmmonood taking thorn tho ahadow tf j6 . a .‘„J < 5, o< S od, .n? dl now ' t *fank God for it. totting bettor. Though i have taken bnt two bot tle*. Ilhavo gamed 10 pounds, and fool sangnirw, it being pormittcd to rejoin my wifo and dfEi? tor, from whom 1 have hoaS nothing foS: toon months; for, goatloman lam n loyal Virgin (*“ 10 my bo9om oso W tho truthoHh« l a b iJi'e2aie- EEWIS CHEVAEIER,'92dN' Y Mlmo - V s.¥2gsffii£ A d?hsr'fe». SSSSS Col th Main JOBS F. WARD, Co KSthMair . Mam '- HERMAN KOCH, CoH,72d K ¥ NATHANIEI. B, T'llOlrfAS do F as.u n ANDREW J. KIHBALE, Co A 3d Vwl™; fOBN JENKINS Co B, lfeth Phnia rmont ÜBWAHJS Of VOUNTEMFJsits fioo thatthc signature of -C. M. JACKSON ’* (« onthe Wrapprb of oar v bottle. m3UX *» i-ITEIBUT.GfI. PBICE PEB BOrriE 75 CENTS nit HALF BOZ, FOB $4 00* ■ Should yoM nearest drncgiet not havo tho ar a«le. ao not be put off by any of tho intoticatim, rroparations-that may bo offered in its nlm S -end to ns, and wo wifi forward, swurobr y express, 1 uticu Office, and Mannsaotory, No, 163 JONES & EVANS, (Successors to 0. M. Jackson & Co. ) „„ Propriet o’r j UTi .V'V 1 ?’?? Druggists and dealers is every wn in the United States, and by »r, G. H. KETSEK, Plttsbwgh, !». P. NCHWABTC, «-Albo for Bale at JOSEPH FLEMING’S oar lerofthe Diamond and Market Btwrt. r or Bale alfo by SIHOST JOHSF row. RmlthftuU tad Fcmrtii etroofr A. J. RANKIN «fc CO., ara ssasuiffis^ Medical, PREPARED BY fMVIA'G TO A DISSOLUTION 07 w the IRONDALE iron are offered for sale Irn v^ k -' “I, 0 , I “ n » , l ed Irondale, on (ho f f I V, Mountain Railroad, 70 miles from the city " iiin'-a ’ , ro P !, . stlr -7 of ono hot blast Furnao* i.uOO aores of umber and farming land*. tw*hs th-e."'? ho ? 8? ? s t Bolt ahle lor laborers, one large th ea Kory brick store-house* fine stable and about 200,100 bushcl“of m.ftoc « “ ,0(W l 9 ns 0f iron ore on nco yard, mules, wagons, hay, corn, cau. Ac., Ac. The rurnaco and inactunery in oerfoot order. Also a contract with tho American Iron Moun tain o«-mT>an.v it»r the delivery ofthoirore, having tw elvo years to run; largo banks ot hematite rro in th* iimnedi.ite vicinity of tho nimacc. Xho Y 0 am ? n s- ,ha most desirable in tho United Htatcs, and offer o/ery inducement to personß dcs-rous of edging in the Sin™ PU “eetUe b"e?oro and ‘f -ot sold at ppiilsls half cash, b dance in twelve month* with 7iV™Z e?nt, interest, or all cash as th« r.njJv,* * iX por BELT & PRITiST. Ileal Lstato Agent?, 'it. Lonia, „ NOTICE. RECEIVED ISF»R« 1 “ ssr lte 1 contributions of.Frnits and V? ge tablo3 Irbm rtlESbwSh and'a’T'? r ° 0I>l ” •»&«»«££ Allegheny. i?e take this mefh od of giving notice, that we never authoriaed anv one to collect such contributions Fur°fi?!s 151 hospital, and thar contributions thus collectea have never reached us. ua cou ® cle l I _-D|oeding, and the substitution of Brandreth’s rills m iho place thereof. Then will commence a in tho practice of Medioine, which would then booome emphatically THE nEAHSG ART. ! 1 nave for thirty years taught that no diseased ; action could bo cured by mercury or tartar emotio. That the human body could only be made whole * by “vegetable food”—Animal food Doing, in fftcr, condensed vegetables, Brandrotir 1 ? ri ,s should bo m every milltaiy hospital These ? Diarrhea, dhronio • iarrhoa, Chronic Pyßcntcry/aud allFerors and Affootiom ei inoßowota, 60oner and more suroly tban any medicine in tho world. Brandroth’s PUls In theit cases should bp taken night and morning. Rodd Directions and gel now stylo. Do. fl. ffliM ami on tho Rappahanttook near Falmonth, land many ol tho Company woro sick with bilious di arrhea. Tho Army Surgeon did nol euro ns, and 1 was roducotitosßLn and bone. Amongtheoom pany woro quite a numl.or of members who had worked in your Laboratory at Sing Sing. Thov a Jt'f 81ct - “ovaaso thoy nsod llrandroth i 1 tils. These men prevailed npon me and othors to 11-0 the Pill", and we were uii cured in from two to fivo Joys. After this our boys nsed BraS droth s Pi'!i (or tho typuasfever, oolds, rhoamt tam. and m no caso did they fail to restore Uttt of gratitude to yon for my good health, I rend you this letter, whioh L‘ necessary, the on* uro oompany would sign. u l am, respecttuliy yours. .RUSCOB K. WATSON 1 . Sing Sing. N Y t.ffioo, iw Canal street. New York * c.-la hr riteuiat tier path. Diamond Alloy, P,tt»ba,vD. jylarJAwiUc ]\ew Fall &Gods, HTJGUS & HACKE’S, Corner 1 i(th find 2u erect streets. fignred Delaines, 4'olored i. lisfers, IMain Fr. Ileriuoes. Fr. Repps, Him press 41olh, Broclie Velours, Turin 4 lollis E-rlnteil HcHiioes, OHoniaii Cloths. Figured Volencias, Nirippe,cfoo. . Draf.» uHurf 018 to K,™ th|™mlriomptau'lnt 0 i?n 1 ! n,Z ‘ ltion wiU >“*!• Having a very extensive corro?pondenco with Banks wd Bankets, throughout the ( ounto 4- wftMMs, r 4r r,,ttl *•“«- offl^We^! 10 COfldQOted b * *» «4« DIRECTORS: . Wm. K. Nimick, Alexander Spoer, Francis G. Bailey Alex. Bradley, ael Kea. IHLIN, President. JOLLY, Cashier. •tf. Robert tt Hay a, Thomas Bell, Thos. WightmaD. Same JAVKS LAUQ JOHN D. Sul Angoat sth, 1863:dAwi *■ «. KOUNTZ & MERTZ. BAJVEEISg, So. lib Wood St., Second doo abo*e Filth Street, JJEAhERS INFORMOS Am* Domestic JLr Exchange, Coin, B*nk Holes. and Govern ment beounties. Coflecticns promptly attended apllj Jh-.V 11 ? 1 SIIVEB. BEH4IVD ISOTES ° f lndob '- od —• 7 3-10 Bonds and Coupons, •nd aU ssmunties. bought by , w, tt, nILLIAB8& to. mns;6rrd w om street, corner of Third; state Fair, THE ELLVENTn ANNUAL EXHIBITION PUMA. I TATE AlifilMTUfiAL EOCfEff, WILL BE HELD AT i NORRISTOWN, MONTG’Y 00., P^. September 29th and 30« h, anri October Ist and ad, 1883, | IS ABOFT 17 JIILES " e M of Bhiladel; hm cn .the Schaylki:!' of ' he“ate.' ICC6SS,bIa b 7 RaLw «' ever/ifH The grounds ore beautifully situated, contain ug & acres of ground with tine large buildings theroqn erected, together with a large amountloF 4 be , -s saia *' 60 °ne of the be3l haL mile trucks in the Suite. The pfe tumms are the heaviest ever offered by tho ijo fe? y . , i? moa J t ' EK r 0 ab °«sLooo. Thepremiutus for all grades of cattle exceed $L€OO. live lof which are $3O each. 19 from $25 to Sib, otk£, s irmnrng down to lesser rates. Best herd dot !.remi^ n s». h . BROWER 1 gS-WABR; Seo\' P ; 6SidCnt - ' J. DCNJLEVY, Grocer, NO. 4 DIAMOND, j PHTSIIIKKIt, PaL my22:lydAw PITTSBURGH IEMALR COLLEGE, BEV. I. C. PEBSHIKG, President.' Best sustained college b the State. Suprrb Buildings, to which Ex tensive additions are making* Nineteen Teafch ers. Cnaurpasied facilities in the ornamental Branchee* Forty Dollars per term pays for;a!l expenses in tbo Boarding Department except Washing and Fuel. T . The Fall Term will commence oh Tqes day-, September Ist. Send to President Per shing for a Catalogue. M. SIMPSON, \ an*J6»3w President of Trnstei UTE !W BOILER WOBKS, jr. «J. POWERS A TTESDS TO THE MTATVIIFACTUPK -i*. of Steam Boilers, 8011 s. Tanks, Agitatbra Bait Pans, Sugar Pans, Shoot Iron Chimneys, Breechings, and aD other articlesnsuoliy man ofactnred at nimHg.r concerns. \ Prom tit attention paid to ail Muds of repairs on reasonable terms. Works CORNER OP LO CtJST and DUQUESNK WAY, 6th Ward,, Ulegheny river, ijB*lyd S H. J. LIfSCH HAVIXU TACATI® the FBOXT of hia Store, Xo- 96 M arket Btroet. to make alterations, will be found in the new additiXto roar of old • tore, entrance i m Marfcnt o)u« nw& jai' < ssj? h H ydropoltg, or. Gar den Sprinkler, A AJSD usefxi e abticee fob cmSea!k£!“p£!w fl ? w ers> washing winddtra amdnsS&Sg' 'i J™* d“°riPtion told “ 1 at « Dt 5 a » r W WELDON & KJ £LLY, lfii Wood 8t pne door from Medical, •Sew liig coy ery, WARRANTED IM ALL CASES ® fl BE BRfilKh OS. IT vcTeei to*wtibri {/.$ a ? 08 «* naaseatof njl} Fo Change of Diet is Eeqniredl Itdoes not interfere-with business pursul earfbe.nssdmthcQt defection 1... P “ • Upward of .CD cures {ho pact rodnTi, some ol “S3SS Itls . BELiLifk arsemc pu i* are the original tnd‘<-nly genuine' Sproido Pill, Overonohondred pbysiorans have used them In the ir pracUoeandaiitpeak well of t-eir tfflo-oy and approve ni > beir coffipositi'n, which in entlro iTiTuu 0 j :e ,andporlectiycharmless on thosyavem. nJvi S 0 , foreff^,?^ 160 PUi3 “Otboohiy reliablirremedy Permanent and speedy bure in afi In all Sexual Diseases, asGonorrhea, Gleet and Stricture and in.Biy tabtuff a tvnglt box l ' ' PKIOffOHBDODEAK ~ sun '<■sirrel and jSunnov--. and hy Druggists generally Pittsburgh. they mil be sent by tpail peourely isealed on rooei;’t ol thomoney by ' ‘ J. BRYAN, H. D., - m .'■. Jfo.VOfedorstroot N. Y„ bonsnlting Pbysioian forth® treatment of 6om :SSi'«iSd IP''! ,ex S?l a -'i d „ Nc^oß ? diseases, who will send fr. e to all th&followihff v-aJuablo ‘woikn. Tho . Xhonojfcnti.-r'Dr. Bell’a Treatise on Self-Abuse, Prematare Decay, Im potenco and Loss.of i'owcjv i-canal'Diseases n«hiJi£ * oak “oWo7cr r snat naaoioe sioHyand of ddicata condSoa££«:£££ SMsksms,‘s sißl tuarri&so through him have bcoa saTcdjaofli etSl te n aordfioatiom &&> l§matSS bdTsiyacrtES^ffig'ig^J^^ C&.QO vo treats ?nth rha?irtifiv'»ccfT,!s—nst-ih T..v*,i over forty years C4O) esperis-ew meat to horoitals of eoitw- 0% *& £ Owtcd ehittc; l?ads hiff> fc<* ga»—wm. - «?«d»i!SsarfSFg osa ffnl* pajiiggisTs raa he hadm* my p. LProounmj.apopy of the Mcdioai whS b%«n sratis to ail tint eTnIJ *S3? of ctcj ratty years -,-,,, l°-Mi"^ = £^® 3e s neQav ' !>= iMsasS” sf?' ii tha.treitJpienyOj spom&l v?ho i* -X SQZj . . r: cfctiigh foxs Q&iii MAHDBAEE 458 HTII- ' . v , UKGIAv Having had a man employed for the L-ut tA-x f(SiSv Co sf the ?V ove excellent remedies s?*®* own practlCo ». and having used thorn with uncommon Btieeess in all that timo. I feel it a duty to set them before the pnblie. as my esce- Bjfa-n w s?© to think they are as near specifics blood Ca Ono t fe t ai r wfn fr ° m “ oSe s^SStS^SSSSr 9ay 01 Prepared and sold by M. D. 85 Smithfiotd st- Pittsburgh p a . & JMSTBESOUITIOS PBOPOgIMfI g ? f«4s«i-ugr-- IhAt- the following amendments be i roc/tiaad of th -°. covnoZVdtTS^^ gj&g? mth the provisions oi tho tenth article b r- an a dditional section tothetidrd section fo4aa fon o wa atiOE - to b^in o i? bl - p for under the fl in name of KLO’dAfrlk 1 Puff Ps" Andrew K]omaa and Hetry • u end and Thomas N. i r V%fi?““ tew “ l-»w. tsustsmi--