pie with the wonders of Franca and of Frcnch industry fourth, an army ; by its example and its instruction. Thus, then, and naturally, by a diffusion and profusion of interests and of labor, the desire and need of firmnessin the po litical system will be .fortifietti In the great movement of our century industry and financial interests control and conduct society. Questions of politics disappear before social questions. Tweitty. years ego the opposition was republican—to-day it is social. And the theory of human equality no longer assumes to reduce the great to the condition of the lowly but to raise the lowly to the level of the great. The problems of general prosperity, of the increase of wage's; ot cheap I:troduction, of public hygiene, can be much more easily solved , under a powerful governmerit. The empire has disciplined socialism and put it to use. The empire has cououeredianfi decapitated anarchy. This it is that the empire is to do in Mexico, and this it cannot do securely and prop.rly until the confederate states have been recognized. In If war had not broken out between the Northern and Southern States of America Europe would not yet have been impress ' ed 'with the dangers which threaten her from the power of the Union. Although she become tributary io:the new world Europe had taken no precau tion to prevent the consummation of a er:stia which she had never foreseen, and which for two years she has been ender ing. It has cost us something to learn • how uncertain is the fortune of an indus try compelled to seek its raw materials in a single market, to all the exactions and all the vicissitudes of which it must neces sarily submit. In this respect the secession of the Con federate States is an event particularly fa vorable to France—foe England has now no interest in the cessation of hostilities and the consequent constitution of an in• termediary power between the federal Union and the Spanish American states. England trembles for Canada. to which the North, after the war, may look for the compensation of its losses. The com merce of England profits by the misfor tunes of American commerce—she looks with satisfaction on the exhaustion alike cf the South and of the North. She sup• plies both parties with arms, and while the southern export of cotton is suspend ed she is increasing the cotton culture of 'lndia. England, then, will never take the initiative in recognizing the Confederate States, and the way in which our proposi tions of pacific intervention were twice re ceived by her, ought to dispel all doubts on this head. France, on the other hand, cannot hope ti.iind the cotton which her factories need elsewhere than in the South. Every at tempt at the culture has failed, and it is unfortunately probable that every such attempt will continue to fail. The cotton culture, like the grape culture, is a ques tion of soils. A vine from Bordeaux or the Rhine transplanted under the same latitudes and climates will yield neither n • Chateau Margaux nor a Johannisberg. The wine changes with the soil; and so it is with cotton—its quality degenerates, with the soil. Furthermore, the question is not to produce some sort of cotton, good, bad, or ordinary, but to produce it at fair prices. Now, as well in respect to cheapness as to quality, the cotton of the South surpasses all others. The federals are ao well aware of this, that the war which they are waging is really and main ly a war of interest. The producing, agricultural South was the commercial vassal of the North, which insists upon keeping its best customer ; emancipation is merely a skillful device for entrapping the sympathies of European liberalism. If the North were victorious, it would never probe the slavery question to the c , re. Once masters of the. negro. race, Northern men would be slow to compro mise the cotton culture, for the sake of which they are so savagely maintaining an unjust war; they would then hasten to admit that it is impossible to change the vital economical condition of an immense region by a battle or a stroke of the pen. The Northern idea of the abolition of slavery by making the negro food for pow d-r or by exiling him from his home to die of hunger, is now thoroughly under• stood in Europe. 0,,r notions of phi lanthropy and our moral sense alike revolt from these ferocious exaggerations of the love of liberty. Honest and intelligent men are no longer to be duped by these omrse devices, and Mr. Lincoln's aboli tion cry finds no echo. If there be skeptics on this point, let ns remind them of the Lynch law which prevails in the North; of the way in which the Indians are still hunted down ; of the decree published but the other day by the Governor of Mince rota, offering a reward of twenty five dol lars for every Indian scalp. These are disagreeable things to happen among a people who profess to be fighting for the abolition of slavery ; and were that people to triumph the poor negro would find their way to liberty a path of thorns. But the first Europeau , ,power which shall recognize the Confederate States will have a right to obtain much more for the negro than the federate could secure for him through their " Union by victory." The first power being France, we may be sure that the cause of civlization, human ity, and progress will not be forgotten by her. All that is difficult, even impossible, while the conflict rages, will become easy with the return of peace. The emancipa tion of the blacks, the complete abolition of slavery can only be the work of peace BDi of time, and an alliance with the South will effect that great social renova tion which England, with her " right of search," has so vainly sought to bring about." Moreover, slavery cannot possibly be made a serious argument against the re cognition c f the Scir.b. France and Eng land live on good terms with Spain and Brazil ; they even protect Egypt and Tur key, and these countries maintain slavery with no show of a disposition to abolish it. France will nee her influence to secure the gradual emancipation of the slaves with out making slavery a ground for refusing recognition. The North, made keen eyed by selfish nese, has certainly foreseen this ; and the famous Monroe : doctrine is nothing more nor lees than a policy of insurance against civilization. What has become of those glorious days when the fierce and touchy patriotism of the Americans boasted of a confederacy free from public debt, of those days when political liberty in no wise trammeled individual liberty, and the free citizen of a free State roam e i freely over a free soil ? What has the North done with the prestige and the glory which it used forever to parade before the dazzled eyes of European populations, scarce able to believe in the existence of so mach hap piness and liberty ? They have all been sacrificed to the Union "Perish liberty, rather than that we should lose the provinces_ that support us t Let as mortgage the finances of the future, but let us not give up the scateg which fill the coffers of • the treasury : What though they long to leave us ; we, we the men of the North will never eon sent to it I" And So, were the Union re• constructed today, its debt would almost equal the debt of England ; the free soil has been disgraced by daily and audacious ' attacks upon personal liberty ; the title of American citizen offers no prote(td„,, and imposes no sacred duties upon him who wears it. The "model republic" exists only as a memory, and those who love it are left to cherish the image of a greatness and a grace forever gone. The pride of the North will never stoop to admit the superiority of southern men ; and yet it ie from these that the Union drew its best statesmen and the majority of its Presidents. The pride of the North will bend only to necessity, because it has not kept pace with the progress of the age. To-day the Americans of the North are as completely foreign to the family of na tions as they were twenty years ago. They understadd nothing but the narrowest and most mechanical mercantilism, the art of purchase and sal . OT , attd ft . h'hy long to an nihilate the Confederate States in order that theSguth, by its intelligence, its en . terprolec-and the talent" of Its statesmen stay not throw down the :rampart it has built up against Europeanipm. It was by Northern.men th4t Juarez was and is en houraged-to'persever& in his resistance— but the other day, at Frankfort` their con sul, on a public and solemn_ occasion raised the flag of the fallen President of Mexico, and although the changes which have to. ken place in Mexico have not yet been diplomatically published and recognized, this suspicions piece of bravado proves that the sylipathies of the Nzrth would seize npon peace as the opportunity for throwing men and money upon' the coun try in which France is seeking to found a new empire. The American war, from which France has suffered more than England, can be useful to us only if the North and South part company definitely ; and for these reasons: 1. The Confederate States will be our allies, and will guarantee us against at tank by the North. _2. IS:Nalco, developed by oar efforts, and sheltered from the attacks of the North, will reward all our hopes. 3. Our lactoriea will bo ensured the sup plies which they absolutely require. Were the American war to end other wise, all the adventurers whom peace would let loose would simply ding them selves into Mexico, and all that we have gone so far to secure would be gathered in by the men of the North. The American question is not one of those that can be deterred for solution to a more covenient season. It has been put to 08 point blank : it must be settled peremptorily. Every one now admits that Europe can live in peace under a perpetual imminence of questions—Eastern, Roman, Ducal Holstein, and others—because no one can see his way to any sharp and definite solu tion of those great international problems. Moreover, the interests disturbed by those questions are either religious or po litical : they are not commercial ; and they can be discussed. Now, in politics whatever can be discussed need not be peremptorily dealt with. Time is the great allayer of political and religiousemo tions. The American question, we repeat, has been peremptorily put, and it will be coin• pletely answered. Now, there is no pos sible peace in the recomdruction of the Union. The two elements have disengag ed themselves and cannot be recombined The North, whether in the 'domain of arms, of ideas, or of production, cannot and will not absorb the Sonth. We Bee, then, that neither peace nor absorption nor conquest is possible. There is nothing left but seers ;ton at the end of the war. While the Americans of the North could make Europe believe they were fighting against rebels it was the duty of Europe to let them go on, despite the sufferings to which Europe was exposed by the con test ; but the States of the South have act forth their policy, their purposes, their rights ; they deli e separation ; they re fuse to enri3ll the North ; they have de. termined to live their owr life. The North American exaggeration of commercial in terests has borne its fruits, and the South purposes to reconstitute its national sys tem with an eye to its own interests. Now. since those interests conform to those of France, since the cause of the South if not only just, but logical, France does not hesitate to declare her sympathies, and her first act of sympathy naturally must be the recognition of the Confederate States. Recognized by France, the strength of those States is quintupled at once, and their adversaries lose all that they gain. For other States are waiting to follow the example of France ; among the commer cial powers of the second rank many de sire the establishment of a Confederate re public as a means to the decentral.zation of the Union. These powers, hitherto kept aloof by the phantom of slavery, will follow France, because the whole world knows that France lends her aid only to works of social progress. These powers wilt naturally be joined by Spain, which possesses Havana ; Austria, which will be more directly involved in the affairs of the new world if she accepts the Moican throne for Maximilian, must likewise recognize the Confederate States. And England will then do what we have done. She will recognize :he South. The Northern States will no longer per severe in a strife henceforth become hope less. The navy of France is an argumen which, in case of necessity, would euppor her diplomatic action. PECTORAL. COUGH SYRUP, Prepared by Dr. KEYSER, Is the moet effectual and agrceab'o cough rem ody known. It hRe been sold here and through out the country for many years, render.ng ch utmost satisfaction. In bottles at 50 cents each, one bottle containing- abcnt three UnieF the quantity of the ordinary Tic orda los. S,dd by SmithfieldOH NbToli. Corner of At Fourth bts. LIQUID STOVE POLISH Reasons why it is better than dry Polish: 1. It is already mixed. 2. It has no smell whatever. 3. It prodUCOB no dirt or dust. 4. It stenos tae most intense heat. 5. It preaerves from mist It is the most economical polish. 7. It is not one-fourth the labor. SIMON J WINSTON,. corner Smithfield and Yourte sti. For sale by se24 Gr T R IUSS ES. TII USSES, TRUSS IS TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, A superior artrele of Trusses. The latent im provement. Hard Rubber Trusses, Hard Rubber Trusses, Hard Rubber Trusses, lhosa wishing a good Trnso and at a low !lice should call and examine ivy stock bolero put chasing elsewhere. Superior Carbon 011. Burning Fluid. Soda Ash and Pot Ash, Perfumery and Patent Medicines of all kinds. A large and complete assortment of G to Elastic and Hard Rubber Syringes. Rememk or the place, • At Joseph Fleming's Drug store. At Joseph Fleming's Drug Stare, At Joseph Fleming's Drug &en-4. Corner of the Diamond and Market street. Corner of the Diamond and Market street. fle` LCOMMUNICA7ED. U LMONAFIY CONSUhlPilati A CURABLE B!SFR,SE A CA RD TO CONSUMPTIVES Eg.. THE UNDERSIGNED HAVING been restored to health in a few weela. bye very simple remedy, after basing suffered several years with a torero lung affeeti.,n, and that dread disease, Cournraption—is aaaisus to make known to his fellow-sufferers tree means t f 0111.0. To all who desire it, he will se'..id a c ipy of the Prescription used (free of charge,) with the direc tions for Preparing and usiaig the same, which they will find a sure cure for CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, COI - GEIS, COLDS, ACC. The only oiject of the advisstiser in sending the Pre scription is to benefit tF e afflicted, and spread information which he co nceiyes to be invaluable; and he hopes every sal :ores will try his remedy. as blessing. it will cost hint nr , thing. and may prove a Patties •wishing a ,o prescription will phase address Itgr. EDWARD I A. WILSON. Winiumsburgh 8e25-3mdAii rings County, Now York. DAILY POST. PITTSBURGH. THURSDAY MORNING, OCT. 1, 1863 the Union as it Was, tilConstitation as it rap. Where there le no law there le no freenom. Democratic Nominations FOR GOVERNOR, George W. Woodward. FOR SUPREME JUDGE, Waiter 1. Lowrie. Fun Fief:SIDI:NT JUDGE OF DISTRICT COURT. John R. Bailey. ASSEVISLY. JAMES BENNY, Sr., ('HAS. P. WHISTON, Dr. A. G. HeQITAIDE, JOHN SILL, WM. WEI /GUAM. SHERIFF. JAMES BLACKMORE RECORDER, EDWARD P. REARNS REGISTER, JAMES SALISBURY FOR CLERK OF COURTS, ERNST HEI DELIIERV TREASURRIL COUNTY COUMISSIONEN, JACOB HEIL. DIRECTOR OF THR POOR W. H. WIG IFITMA IV. LEI TER FROM JUDGE WOOD WARD NEW CALUMNY NAILED. The following highly important corree pondence appeared in the Carlisle rolun teer, of the 24th inst : CARLISLE, Sept. 18, 1863. Hon GEO. W. WOODWARD : Dear Sir :—I have been informed that Hon. Lemuel Todd, who presided over the Convention which renominated Hon. An drew G. Curtin, in addressing a ratifica tion meeting, held recently in this county, stated that he had been informed that a certain Judge Hall said, that in a recent conversation with him, you had avow ed yourself a believer in the doctrine of secession, and in favor of an immediate recognition of the South. While I am fully satisfied that you have never held or avowed those sentiments, I deem it important that your friends should have authority to contradict the statement. Will you, therefore, be kind enough to in form me whether you ever held such a conversation with Judge Hall? Very respectfully, III:FUS E. SHAI'LEV, Chairman of Democratic Standing Corn mitiee of Cumberland County. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21, IS6B k rus E. SHAPLEY, Eq.: Dear Sir :—Just returned from Easton, where I went to attend the funeral of our much lamented friend, the Hon. Richard Brodh,?ad, I Lad your favor of the 18th, informing me of a story which Mr. Todd produced at a pablic meeting, after obtain• ing it tnrt.ugh a channel which is not epc , rifled. There is not a word of truth in the story. I know no Judge Hall, and cannot re member that I ever knew a man of that SO FAR FROM EVER AVOWING BELIEF IN SECESSION OR FAVOR I NG RECOGNITEJN OF THE SOUTH• ERN CONFEDERACY, I AM, AND ALWAYS-HAVE BEEN OPPOSED TO BOTH, AND AM IN FAVOR OF SUP• PRESSING THE REBELLION BY WHICH BOTH ARE SUPPORTED. My life has been spent, thus far, in up• holding the Constitution of the United States as the Fathers framed it—the Union they formed—and the Constitution and laws of the State ; and whatever of life remains to me will be devoted to the same ends whether it be spent iu public or pri• vote station. NEITHER SECESSION NORTHE MA LIGNANT FANATICISM THAT CAUSED IT WILL EVER FIND AN ADVOCATE IN ME. Trusting that this is a sufficient answer to the calumny you allude to, I remain, dear air, Very truly, yours, GEO. W. WOODWARD TO NAT U RALIZED CITIZENS AND THOSE wa 0 HOPE TO RECORE SO. Ridge WOODWARD, the Democratic can didate for Governor, has been charged by his enemies with a desire to extend the legal period in which a foreigner can be cc,me a citizen,and with general hostility to naturalized citizens. Elsas Is THE REFUTATION : the following letter was received on Saturday last by a gentleman of this city : PE ILADELPIIII, Sept. 24th, 1863 Dear Sir: Yon ask m., "Are you in favor of extending the period of naturalization beyond the present legal term of five years ?" I am not. I would not extend it one hour beyond the period now fixed by law. You may mane what use of yeur question and answer that you please. Very truly yours. Ono. W. WOODW 1111). That, we thipk,.is concise and conclusive. Nothing more can be desired on that point. But let us see how the Harrisburg " jobber," that is too corrupt for STANTON to associate with—let us see how he stands about the naturalization question : In I he swore solemnly: "I WILE. NOT VOTE nor give my influence for any man for ANY office IN THE GIFT OF THE PEO• FLE, UNLESS HE BE AN AMERICAN BOHN cITIZEN IN FAVOR OF AMERICANS RILING AA (ERICA, NOR . IF HE RE A ROMAN CATHO- The Know Nothing party, into which Mr. CURTIN thus swore himself, is now dead in name, but not in fact—they elected Mr. Po LLOCK Governor, and Mr. CURTIN was ma de his Secretary. Now REMEMBER that Mr. CURTIN HAS NOT RETRACTED ONI SYLLABLE OF THAT OATH. LIE Al )EERES TO EVERY WORD OF IT TO TEIB HOUTt ! CUaTI also swore, at the same time, that if e', ected to office he would "RE MOVE .es_LL FOREIGNERS, ALims's, or ROMAN • CATHOLICS from OFFICE or PLACE." This o; Ith he has promised to keep for ever "9. team AND INVIOLATE i" He has not renoi sliced one letter of it to this day. —toe le. tve the matter with naturalized citizens. 'SIX HUNDRED THOUSAND MORE The Abolitionists forced ihr Pre.ident to issue his Emancipation Proclamation, by promising him `nine hundred thousand volunteers," but after he obliged,;,the.rn, instead of thnir giving any aid at. all, they forceila conscription to raise troops to en force their policy. The news now is that "six hundred thousand" . more are to be drafted, in order to make our army com• plete. The New York Tribune, the other day, remarked of the war : "It has saddled us trial a d , bt that will take bread from the mouth of every I. kboring man's child for generations, and rend millions human' to bed." It has indeed saddled us with u debt, but that burden has not yet reached its full proportions. Wait for another two years' and a half of blood and death, and we may well begin to talk of going hungry to bed. And all for what ? to enable fanatics to experiment in schemes of negro equality. Let the poor man and his children go sup• perless to bed, because his means are re quired to meet crushing taxation, and all to carry out the bloody programme of emancipation and lasting war. Truly the first Abolition Administration which has been in existence in cur country—and it too, in opposition to nearly a million of a cusjority—has, so far, prof - -d an expen sive luxury. With its success came civil war,'and withits continuance in power will come the country's utter ruin. •The programme of the Radicals is nothing but the continuance of the war until the South erupeople are exterminated and their slaves made free ; and to accomplish these purpo ses, conscriptions of "six hundred thous and" more will be enforced until theirinfer. nal designs are accomplished. BEN WADE, the ruffian Senator from Ohio, at whose instance VALLANDIGIUM was arrested, and who is one of the radical set who controls the Administration, in a speech at Mari etta on the 24th inst.., avows his determin ation to continue bostilitea for the purpose of which we have been treating, he re marked : ' I shall fight this fight as long as I have breath, or until tho bonds shall fall fro_u every human being in tho Us:tiled S totes, and there will be no such roproaghi , u r glorious inotitutions so the poax ibi ity of a slave misting within our .iu riotliv ion." By the time we get through with this, we may begin to figure up our debt, and then retire hungry to bed, if we have am/ lo go to e reprint the followihg from yesterday's paper, to correct ma terial errors in it : TWO II USDRED MILLION' DOLLARS The Dispatch, after eight days' tribula tion, has something to say about 11,n aar tax. It admits admission that Pennsylvania's share will be . 7.:*.!,(10,- 000,0000. But the I lispatch says; "Cron what data does lhe Post fix this esti. mate Where dots it tidd authority :ur the statement that Pennsylvania's share of the war debt will he liva hundred milli.us, and of the Pension List fur millions ^" President LiNcoi.x, in fixing his de mand for troops, has fixed the share of Pennsylvania at ozit: isrtt of the whole —that is our authority for the apportion meat. Is it good, Mr. Diseeiren ? Our authority for making the share of Pennsylvania ~ F ,:600,000,000, is that the whole dipt of the Union will be $200t1,. 000,000 r •of which ONE SIXI II is 600,- 000,000, and the way we fix the sum of the Federal war debt at $3,000,000,000, is that everybody has computed the war expenses at $3,0"0,- 000 per day, and the war on the first of January next will have lasted 1,000 days, which makes $3,000,000,000. That is the way we figure. Moreover, on the 20th of June last, Mr. Curie had AUDITED $1,200,• 000,0011, or $50,000,000 a month—does aoy body believe that half the amount ex• pended was audited I Let the people who have unsettled claims answer this. We have said before that Mr. LIN - COLN is our authority for fixing the quota of our State, but yet the Dispatch presumes to say that cur share ia Pennsylvania is too high at 5600,000,000 Will it dare to publish our table and other ligurcs show• iug that five hundred tnillious is the proper cur. 7 Up to the Id of Rep!c tuber !art, ITii,uoo Pension Claims were allowrd by the Sur geon GE n.:7al. This list will be Mereased to 250,000. This at S a mouth is 324, 000,000—and UNE SIXTII of this is four millions. That's the way we figure— can the Dispatch figure more correctly" HE IS NOT A SAINT The Commercial yesterday, in defend ing its shoddy candidate from the charg of gouging the soldiers, whose par ex cellence friend he now pretends to be remarked : - We do not claim that Governor CURTIN is a saint—like all mortals, ho is liable to err—but that ever a cent went into bin pocket that ought to have gone to :he snldieiF in the field, we pro nounce to be a Lase, witntoi.., wicked and infa mous tal:ehoud." The Pitteturgl - . Cazi tic in 11,p following paragraph, rCil.!9 Llll Lcw Li: Excellency did it : "We have eutleal ored to eh ow that ho imposed upon the so:diers by farming them out to Lis friends, and then deny ing that he had employed them. We have ex hibi e d the record to cs•abdsh the fact that he had approved . a 1 ill. acknowl edged by him to be wrong, which robbed the treasury of many millions f m - ney; that as the condi t inn of his approval he had taken an agree meet for the :tate, which he abstracted and se• aretly surrendered to the parties wbo had given it; and that, when interrogated by the Legisla ture, ho unfened the act, and offered, as hit apology, a reason which is shown to have been untrue." Is it likely that ANDREW G. CURTIN, whose reputation was bad before he be came Governor, did all this merely to benefit his friends, without having an in terest in it himself? The editor ot the Commercial, who knows something ot the manner iu which "things are done" in Harrisburg, knows that CURTIN is not altogether indifferent to self. ROSECRA S' DEFEAT. This most unfortunate and untime•.y re verse, is undoubtedly to be attributed to the efforts of the Administration to delta, VALLANDIGHA3I in Ohio. It is asserted that 30,000 men who should have been with BURNSIDE and 110SECRA-NS are in Ohiu electioneering and waiting to vote for BROLGII. Of course, no man who will not promise to vote for the Abolition candi date can remain. Such persons would b e sent " to the front" immediately. GEL Cess RECOVER MIL — GeneraI Cass who was reported ill, was feared fatally, is recovering, and said to be out of dan ger. THE TRIUMPH OF ABO t ITIONISM THE DESTRUCT lON OF THE UNION, - - tho 7" ;:peole of Pennsylvania and tbrii3e of .the other States which hold elections in October and November, en dorse by:their, suffrages, the present Na tional Administration, by electing Aboli• tion'Governors we may conclude.that this Union's restoration is beyond all hope. The rebel leaders, like Jeff Davis, are as anxious for the success of the Abolition ists in our approaching elections, as they are for themselves, because in the event of the Democracy being successful, the masses South would take heart at the prospect of approaching peace. On the contrary, if the Abolitionists are retained in - power, the leading rebels will cite it as a determination upon the part of the Northern people to sustain the President in all his acts of emancipation and confis - - cation. There will be then no hope for a restoration of the Union, for there will be no alternative left the South but interminable war. As proof of this we direct attention to the following, from the Mobile : "There is only one party in the North who want this Union restored, but they have no more power—legislative, executive or judicial—than the paper we write en. It is true they maim show of union and strength, but they have no voice of authority. We know that the VALLAN- DiOLIAII &Moot wants the Us ion restored, for he toll us so when ho was here in exile, partaking of such hospitality as we extended to a real enemy to our struggle f..r separat!on, banished to our roil by another enemy, who is practio-lly mere friendly than he. And if VA LL ANISCHIAII Should, by accident or other cause, become Gov ernor of Ohio, we hcpet..LiNcotx will keep his nerves to the preper tension, and not allow him to enter the confines of the State. His Adminis tration would do more to restore the old Union than any other power ie. Ohio could do, and thertfuro we pray that he may be defeated. Should a strong Union partyspring up in Ohio, the third :Jute in ..ho North in political importance. it might find a faint response in some Southern States, and g re us trouble. But as long as the Republicans hold power they will think of con• que , t nod dominion only, and we. cn the o her Land, wit! curie up in solid column fur freedom and independence, which we wilt be certain to achieve with such sedstance os we may now (after the refusal of the Washington Cabinet to confer) confidently expect, before the Democrats of the C. ort h ones get into power again, and come whispering into oar ears:' Union, Iteconatructitn, Constitution. Concession and Guarantee)? Away with such stuff. We want separation. Give us Joel MOD like THADDEHS STEVENS and CHARLES ER. Thelf core, the ob.! Union and despise it so d o we. And we now pro sise these gentlemen that, as they hate the Union and the 'accursed Constitut!on,' let them keep down VALL ANHUI and his party in the Forth ; then they shall never be troubled by us with inch whining about the Union and the Constitution as they aro send,ng up." TEAL AND COFFEE. ()ne of the frrst acts of Gen. JACKSON, was to remove the tax UrOLI TEA and COF H-.K. lie, too, put down the Nullifiers' Rebellion without restoring that odious impost. Our present rulers have et - 'r ox A I.AsoKa TARIFF on these articles than lien. JACKSON PCT CFF : as they say, to raise money to put down the secession rebels. Gen. JACKSON removed the burdens of the people with one hand, and repressed re bellion with the other. Mr. LINCOLN piles uO the burdens of the loyal people, but does not crush the rchels. The money Liscol.N raises by taxes on food and drink, CI RTIN spends on shoddy and bad berf. ANOTHER DRAFT Is threatened. If the soldiers now in Ohio and Pennsylvania Rete in the army, no draft would be needed. AU men who desire to ece ANOTHen DRAFT and still fur ther TAXATION', will vote for ANDREW G• CURTIN. ICk•O' The Commercial construes Judge Woonwmto's remarks, that continued war will " never cement a perfect Union," to mean that we should give up to the rebels not only all they possess, but all they claim. This is mere pettifogging. Judge Wocn- WARD and his friends are irrevocably fixed in their determination to restore this Uniot, despite the joint efforts of Southern Reb els and Abolition dieunionists, to keep it separate. This is the platform of the De mocracy cf Penn rylcania, and to it we will cling with that tenacity which is cer• tain to insure success. Our efforts will not cease until the authority of the Union is re-established through out every inch of our territory. While we are thus labor ing to restore the Union, Abolitionism is straining to prolong hostilities in order to render its separation eternal. This it has b-en laboring for for the past two years. No union with slaveholders is its motto and design. DIED At his remiilensie, in o , eenn City. from Pan)!lsis, JOHN M. SNOWDEN. ir, sou of ,Lit. 3 Judge Snowden of this city. GRAND DEMOCRATIC RALLY, THERE WILL BE A DEMOCRATIC MEETING At the Old Scotch Hill Market square, Thursday Evening, Oct, is Hon. Wm. BIGLER, Hon. HEESTER CLYMER, Hon. C. INGERSOLL, of Phila. Will be Present an I address the meeting. COME ONE. COME ALL, and hoar the canto ~1 the Union and CorstitntiTnal Li oerty Vindi eat,l re3o-ltd. - NEW NTOCK MASON & HAMLIN'S CABINET ORGANS AND MELODEONS In Rosewood & Walnut Cases. I; UST RECEIVED BY THE SUB. e➢ scriber, to Which the attention of PCTR CHASE Etti is eolieited. CHAS. C. MELLOR. SI WOOD STREET, Solo agoot for MASONS HAMLIN for Western Pennsylvania. se29 TO BUILDERS & CONTRACTORS. WE ARE NOW MANUFACTURING a superior article of :1 - J I M E , Which we are prepared to deliver from our COAL YARD, 508 LIBERTY STREET, Best quality of FAMILY COAL, Always on hand as renal. mY9t DICKSON. STEWART A CO. New Advertisem:`,- G R A N 4) Demoekatic MASS iiIEETAG• THE DEMOCRACY OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA WILL ASSEMBLE AT PlTTSill[fß(iiia OCTOBER 7th, 1863, AND PROCEED 70 THE West Common•in Allegheny. TO REASSERT THEIR TIME HONORED PRINCIPLES TO RENEW THEIR VOWS OF DEVOTION TO THE CONSTITUTION AND UNION And to cent oil how they may best SUPPRESS THE REBELLION Thai tins so long disturbed TUE REPOSE OF THE NATION And at the same time REBUKE AND RESTRAIN The dangerous assumptions of power and Bold Disregard of Law WHICH NOW IMPERIL our LIBERTIES TEE FOLLOWING NAMED Distinguished Gentlemen Have been invited, and many of them are ex 'acted to be present and ADDRESS THE MRETING, HON. HORATIO SEYIIOIII Guy. OF NEW YORK DON, CHARLES J, DIDDL OF PHILADELPHIA H-on.Geo.Northrop, OP PHILADELPHIA Hon,Wm. H. Witte, CF PHILADELPHIA Hon. HEISTER CLYMER, HON. JAMES CAMPBEL EX. POSP MASTER GEN KRAL, MAJ. GEN. GEO, B. M'CLELLAN 1101 GEO, WI, WOODWARD, Hon. W. A. Porter,' Hon. RICHARD VAUX. lion. W. H. Welsh, Hon. C• R. Buokalew, Hon. J. S. Black, Hon. John Van Buren, HON. WILLIAM BIGLER, for, Geo. E. PUGH, OF OHIO Hon. CHAS. BEEN-OLIN, OF OHIO, Col. JAMES K. REIM. of 111. Hon. W. A. RICHABDSON, of 131, " JOHN NVEIWEENEY, of 0 JOHN L. DAWSON, of Pa. B. IL CVATIS, of Mass ` WM. MONTGOMERY, of Pa H. D. POSTER, of Pa W. A. STOKES, of Pa. COME OIVE, COMB ALL, And hear the cause of the Union! and Constitutional Liberty Vindicated New Advertisements, William Semple's, Nos. 180 & 182 FEDERAL ST., ALLEGHENY COUNTRY BLA.NIKETN, WHITE APIA BARRED Country 'Flannels, Ai William SemPie's Ft ench Merinoes - - DR LOXES AND REPPS, WILLIAM SEM PLE'S. SHAWLS Cloaking Cloths, At William Ceitiple's PLAIN COLORED SILKS, VERY CHEAP, AT William Semple's, BALMORAL AND HOOP SKIRTS, WILLIAM SEIIPLE'S. Prints, Ginghams, ac., A RILL LINE OF Domestic - Goods, At William Eemple's SATINETTS, CASSIMEELS, AT S'emple's, Nos. 180 & 182 F.EDERO2I. ST , A LLEG ENY, PA. oel NEW GOODS. IrigGILTS & MACKE Are now opening a SPLENDID STOCK itiew Fall Goods. FRENCH Alkll-I,NOS, all colon, VALOVER OTTOMANS, SCARLET DELAINES, SCARLET OPERA FLANNELS, WHI I E COUNTRY FLANNELS, PLAID COUNTRY FLANNELS, BALMORAL SKIRTS, HOOP SKIRTS, COBURGS, DELAINES, ALPACCAS. Ard a (al stock of DOMESTIC GOODS, At the 1- west Cash - / // - • • , // %UP*" Fifth Street, Pittsburgh, Pa, FOILINDED air 140. Incorporated by Legislative Charter.. Being the only COMMERCE 41. COLLBag in the Union conducted by e Practical -Merchant. OVER 7,000 STUDENTS, • Have been educated in the Principles and Prac tice of all the details of a business education from DUFF'S system of Mercantile Roo k -Heeping _ _ • . Awarded four eilver Medals and sanctioned bY special Committees of the American Institute and the Chamber of Commerce, New York. Also, DUMPS steamboat Book-Keeping. "A perfect system for such books and accounts." Alen _DUFF'S now system of __ P.a"tlro - a-d Book-Keeping. - After the forms of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Also, DU b F'S new system of Private Bank Book-Reeping. The only one in use in the city. The shoves; sterns of accounts are all taught under the dallY 'super vision of the author, and, it is believed, to. a lie gree of perfection never attained elsewhere, 12 FIRST PHIERIUMS, For best Business and Ornamental Penmanship awarded our present Penman by the United States Fair at Cincinnati in .1880 Penn'a State Fair at Wyoming .1860 Western Ponn'a Fair at Pittsburgh 1860 Western V irgisia Fair at Wheeling_ .„. .1860 and the Ohio State Fair at Cleveland.: 1803 all of which are exhibited at our aka Harper's Enlarged Edition of DuH'e Book-beeping, Price $1,47. Sold by Booksellers generally terThe following testimonials indicate thecharae ter of this work--the only modern one illastra five foreign and domestic accounts: •No letiler work upon book-keeping explains the eublect with so much clearness and sim plicity." Y. W. EHMO.NDS. Cashier Mechanics' Bank,Wall at., N Y. "It gives a elear insight into all departments of this science.' A. B. FRASER._ Cashier of Seventh Ward Bank, N. Y. "It contains much important matter to the merchant." C. 0. IiALSTEAD, President Manhattan Bank, N. Y. " The most complete work of the kind I have ever seen." JAS. B. MURRAY. President Exchange Bank. Pittsburgh. "The most clear and comprehensive that I have met with." JOHN e.NIDKR, Cashier Bank of Pittsburgh. " You hive put your own lung experience as a merchant to good me in this work." ' RItlliABD IRWIN, Merchant, No Pg Front at. N. Y. A@@ an extensive ship owner, American and Euroffean merchant, bank director. etc., he has borne the xeputation of the highest order of bu a i r . ere r e i gr a g ." JOHN W. BURNHAM. Merchant, No. 8 bomb at, .N. Y "Mr. Doff is a min of rare_gualiffesona for business." JOHN m, D,_TAITOR, Merchant, Union at., New Orleans. "Mr. Duff is a merchant of the first respects bility." J. LANDIS, chant. New Orleans. - "I graduated in Dud ' s Co ilege in half the-time I expected, His admirable system includes noth ing superfluous, nor leaves out anything ersen tiaL" J. R. LOALPION- Cashier Niagara Bank, Lockport, N, " The favorable opinions already expressed by gentlemen of competent authority are Well de served and pro_perly bestowed." ' CA ttLRS B. LEU PP. }Special Committee LEOPOLD BIERWIRTH, of the Chamber of ROBERT KELLY, Commerce, IC Y. Extract from the Minutes, PROSPER M. WETMORE. Secretary. "Your Committee unanimons'y concur in the .opimon of the utility of the improved method of Mr. Duff" GIIRDON J. LEEDS. Recording Secretary of the American Institute, New York. On W. H. Duff's Penmanship. Perfect gems of the penman's art."—pigg e _ burgh Post These performances can enly be excelled by the auttior."—Pittsburgh Gazette. new and rer , mar "A k l a l b l ithlEf eperf °rn or a m ul a en nc ta es i .. l— g ra ve s nrig Gazette. The late Western-Pennsylvania Fair awarded him SLY. FLEET PHRAntUB in all branches of the art,"—Obio Suite Journal. WP.For full particulars send for our elegant new Ci rcu l a r 1. 68, which, with samples of our P*Wrlalej3 usiness and Ornamental Writing, are malletlto those only who enclose us 25e. JP,. DUFF alt SON, Prinelps,lB BA quire for the College whose teachers never ma ae - $lB,OOO errors in a basinags Gallants eeeet, IVABEIE. WILL Ai& I , CUM 'TUBE. CAB. ILA PMTS. Aa.„ at 54 L cgan street THIB DAY ateo'.'eloolt, by J. AMELVEY, -ltd