ouncl. their I o in tho woode n throng =ISE ( 1 I - V,Ph.14,1111 ,on GC outrage. tit'. et; I.y :he minions ..f the Preside:it, what. can political mel.e suggest or invent, do or threaten., has not ht 1.11 door, under Iris soirees and hi , his patronage, who ilia , Nairs “partis... tnelieei" After g evety man whom offirP, or con trs.ete, or patronage might chEing , or drive fr.ini rinciple—atter threatening every roar, who dared refuse the enchant ments of the treasury or the blandish ments of the army—after threatening to c.7.;erminnte those who refused bribery, and held their opinions in spite of power —the P.esiderit ell the 17 nited States re• tarns thanks to those who, with epaulettes an d kindly give in adhesion to him wl•o can lavish, without stint, the treaseroi of the people. A. thrush it became a necessity to fel low a falsehood, because he had assumed a false position, he speaks of these pars cites, who live on public favor, as true to the "nation's life,'' and all honestly dif fering with them false. What is "the life of the nation." other than the liberty cf the people'? And host? becerning it is for him to speal: of the •Illiertics of the peo ple, or "the life cf the nation," who has blotted from the Coustituticn every guar anted rf human rights. Lod declared mar dal law over a free lied peaceable people! He says ti - e rebellioe is wrong, wicked, unholy, causeless. Grant it. That it. et -nld be pot down by force of arms. Grant it. That this is the only way. Grant it—grant everything he claims. Still he has committed -sneh atrocities as have never been perpetrated in any civil ized country. After all this, as though he were addressing a benighted people, he adds: "I freely acknowledge myself to be the scrvant of the people according t the bond of service, the United Stain.; Constitution, and that such, I am res ponsible to tem." To this responsibility let him be held, and by it let him be tried, He has proclaimed his own will as law above the Constitution cf the country, or the enactments of Congress and Legisla tares. The President is the creature rf law—the law makes and dehues his duties. As an exo, - .l!Ave officer it is his duty-t 0 see that the laws :ire eNecuteil. As a mil itary officer, he is subject to laws made by Congress. The articles of war e which govern him, are simply law. Every odi cer appointed by him is paid by law—is powerless without law. His term of office in the grant of the people, through the Cons*.itution. He holds it just as long as the Constitution prescribes. In the exer cite otitis othee., he finds precedents in the mcnstrons acts of Kings who held their power independent of Constitutions. In precisely the same manner, and upon the same perverted rule of law, when he lo ;ks after a construction cf the articles of war, he follows the precedents of Milli tary Dictators, Who had no articles of war but their own will, and no principles of justice but brute force. _ . This manner of government and this rule of the application of precedents. resolves the civil power into a despotism. and fastens the military power upon the necks of the people as a perpetual yolii The President can have no authority which - he cles not receive directly from the Constitution, in such plain language Ile may admit of n. 7) legal doubt. Nu law which is in conflict with the Constitution can give him such power. As Command er-in Chief, governed by the articles cf war, he has no discretionary right to v;o -late them ; and if Congress, in the articles of ray, were to uplift?: or: the Command,:- in Chief discretion to violate the Cont, tution, the authority would Ice illegal t.cid void. The theory of our governrnehts is a plan and simple one. Upon this princi ple rsste everything—that all power of government is delicud from the people. The people are above Constitutions, and make thrw but iv br, o,7lritivutiouu made, the people are bound by them, because it it their own act. The civil law it nothing more than a rule adopted by the people for the regales lion of their own conduct. and the re spcmsibility of their own officers. The mil'tary power is none mb.er than a phy sics) agency nerd by the civil power to enforce its mandatee. Whenever the military becomes superior to the civil authority, then government assumes prerisely the character of the man whose brutal powers demand the :7ht to control his reason. It leaves him a brute and a traniac. Gov,-rnment, where the military is superior to the civil power, is but little else than a ravirg Ravage ber.st. destructive alike of the l ate of reason and the purposes of so . this light, precisely, has the Presi dent viewed, and in this manner has he ire ..ied the ihcory of our goverment. has placed the arbitrary, unreason log power of military brute force above Cousti utions. above law, above govern ment. above the people. This is his theory, this his practice. Akain,be says: "I think that, the Constitu tion invests its Commander in Chief wilt. the law of war in the time of war," Grar.t it. What law of war? The law of :he Sioux Indian, which puts men to death indiscriminately, burns houses, lays cities in ns!ms, defaces tomb stones, (Jenks churches. ra , :it•ht's women, tortures the living and , malps the dead ? Certainly not. es!; the Chi. - 1 Magistrate cf the United States, what is the law of . war with which he is "invested ?" Is it the of an autocrat, which may designate its victims at whima.nd shoot them down at rlcasure: or is it, the law of a military dicta tor, who asssni PS, by usurpation, to do wh at rebels claim the right to do by revolutio r ? Here again the President falls into the same mistake as a military chieftaiu,that he per sists in as the Chief 'Magistrate of the rysintry. He observes no written law. Hs " thinks " and. ' believes, and is "persuaded," and places his "be lief, " his " t'aoughfs." and" courts, above the decisions of the courts, and the Settled sr.axirns of the law of the Country. The military law of the United States is written law, as clear, full and authoritative as the law regulating the collection cf taxes, imposts, excises and duties. This military law is :.lade by Con gress in pursuance of the Constitution, and is binding upon eery officer of the army, including the Comma[ der in -Chief, whoss duty as President was to see the laws faithfully executed. This has always been the doctrine of American law —the decisions of American courts—the settled Principles of American government. a cite but one example, yet the one which embraces the leading and absorbing point Of the whole controversy is relative to the extent of the military power, in the early law books of the country. A Pt ECE OF MAIIOMF:T . t , SHINT was burnt at the late fire in Constantinople. The city is in great dißtrem about it. Tin: N. Y. EniscocAL CONVIZNTION ad jrarnc,n . on Friday, after rejecting the proprfilt:in LO divide the Diocese. IT IS EST: MATF 1, that Fia thousand per sons have as en led Mcnut Washingtor, N H.. : 4 u r'rg the present seaion. A SILVER GRAY FOX, two figh Lawks and prbi ie w3lt h.tve b:ei added to tho eu r i osities of the. Central Park. TLIE FIVSSIAY SQVADRON hi New Volk 1 a-Lor carries 170 guns. and is manned by 2,400 men. TfIE II A YT11; IN I will leave Wash ingloa in a fiw dais, and make his per manent residen2e in New York. BILL RIJN lirspru, has written a history of the Prince of Wales' marriage. T HE FIRST NATION L BASE Of St. Lotti 3 will go hat* operation on the 16th 'kat. DAILY POST. PITTSBURGH. WEDNESDAYNtoirtNING, cir. 7, 1563 t't .A; ' •‘•• A ,t Where there is no Law there is no Freedom The Union tvil it Was. ❑e con.titution RN It Is Democratic Nominations, FOR GOVFXXoP., George W. Woodward. FoR. SITIMEME JUDGE, Walter H. Lowrie. FOR £RISSIDRNT JUDOR OF DISTRICT COI'RT John H. Bailey. ASSE/IRLY, JAMF.Fi DENNY, Sr., CRIAS. P. IV HINTON, Dr. A. C 7. 3IeCtIVA .1 . 011:41 Silt LI, 1117121GDA 9IIFR I T, .111IF:S 411,ACK MORI: rnwAirtn r. ILEARNS RKGIST ft, .111IES SALISBURY 3.111 C LERK O.ERTS, E N T 1:F10E1-DERV 7RIAST'FiRR it 51 mvis. COON TT Coll 14 IFSIONER JACOB HEll.. DIRF.CTOR of 711 Y. POOR W. H. WIGHTMAN. DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEE OF RE 00122E13 GC.. .10s. R. Hunter, I. , Henry S.rreul, Esq.. .14.mns I:ordinal:I. Esq. Cart .ine. btrutinzham, Chris:artier Zug, 11 a. P. 11. Eater), I Wu' 11. :- I taith. Harry Shir•:, Esq. Oho Cnmmi tee will meet at tie Ft. ("haslet, a 12 m., I) Oetobrr7,lBa. DEMOCRATIC COI Nl'' ( COMMITTEE COMMITTEE WIEI. MEET 11 1 - -. 7- at the Dettmeratie ( 11 1, Soon,: v.-me "4h and Smithfield vtreute on S11 1 1;ltDAY 4kXT, at 11 a. m, and it iv irup,..rta it that every mem ner ulthe Committee shout i hot re=ent.m9 there ie kneinesv of ;Teat impoltanee to 1, tranynvte CIIAS. SIIALIZR, D 11. HAZOn. Democratic tickets for the approaching election are now read• I r distribution : will our friends call 1••:: and gee them properly distributed 'I The political shies are bright, giving token of a glorious Iri un-ph on next Tussday. HON. W. 11. WITTE This powerful and talented orator yes terday addressed a mass meeting in Ir di ana, and arrived in this city last evening He is stopping at the St. Charles Hotel and will address the Democracy this iifie.r no:n in the Allegheny t7omrno:l. MASS MEETING TO-DAY Our Mlss Meeting will agsentlile thiB cif tirnoon in Allegheny Common. at o'clock. It is not necessary t 3 appeal t( the people to attend this gathering, fur if the condition of the country, and the time's abuse are I,ot sr tiii!ieut to stir men's minds, and arouse them to action, no words of ours could cfrect then Several spealiere ~f cunuenc. and abil icy, will positively be presrit, and th7iFe who shall attend will hear Democratic h^ hcre,olt pre', Aed 'to Oa. health t lie Emperor cif Rueia.' That toamt and that act sill be hoard with , lixttuil ; in fl it pulat es an aris( ,, rotec Eu r, , A , rile and I is allt-ged by the convenient, time— th , A,;,•• truth expounded. and Abolition fallacies anti iieeigni , expoEied alit, repudiated THE. HABEAS CORPUS serving crew who always wait upon those who beer office, that the suspension of the habeas corpus was a "war necessity . ' - -that the great and absoi bing business of y.utting down the rebellion could not go on without quickening the wheels of civil justice by stopping them alfogether, and substituting simple military despotism. Under these circumstances we are nat urally led to ask, what shall we consider around enough or provocation enough for the supreme central power to venture up on such a fearful experiment? And then, once, as is the practice under all well regulated governments, we begin to ask fir the precedents fir so stupendous an assumption of absolute authority. Can we find it in the annals of the war of 1812? Some time before this war, New England magistrates refused to enforce the provis ior•e of the "Atbargo" law, because they said it was "unconstitutional"—the peo ple of New England openly threatened "disunion" and "secession - - they tamper ed with an agent of the British ministry, ono Joii HENRY, and proposed to form a separate gorrrnment under the protection of England—the clergy au d the magistrates openly took ground against the United States government after the declaration of war—'•the Union has been long since vir tually dis. - Aved," said a great New En gland politic•id preacher, "and this part of th,. , disunited States should take care of themselves"—at least. three New En gland Governors refused to respond to the call of the President for militia, and Massachusetts denied the use of jails to British prisoners. In short, New England was on the verge of rebellion during the entire war of 1812-13. Massachusetts r•e fueed to place the troops she ha draised (for her own defence) under a Federal general. A rabid disunion preacher (a Doctor of Di vinity, too,) said that President MADISON had "blood upon his soul, and in the sight of God he was a murderer." In short, rl , moat the whole people of New England were one grand convention of rebels, who talked of disunion and secession, and re fused to obey Federal laws or requisitions, and offered to make a separate peace f o r themselves with Great Britain ! Bore, some might say, was a fair, fell and most proper opportunity to declare mar tial law, or suspend the habeas corpus, yet Mr. MADISON did neither, Eloping that he should be able to save the Union with out bloodshed, without any violation of law whatever, he fore:Jore, and he did save the Union ! Violent, foul-mouthed, re sistant traitors domineered over five whole Stites, yet he did not suspend the habeas corpus ! ' Was the habeas corpus suspended in the Mexican war, when ABRAHAM LINCOLN was voting and speaking against supplies to our armies, and when Tom CORWIN Wile recommending the Mexicans to meet our to a,rs wi-eh bloody Bands and haspit• able graves ' N:;! be :or 11.eught 01 IV rithtr ..)I.tolsos or PuLK, uud they leanaged tau greet vain. Why should we be i!: , ..ultt:d and outraged with such a tyruunicai proceeding now? FediEps some ready defender of Mr. I.ixcol.s may suggest that Mr. MADISON A,L=. strr,ng enough to forbear—that he cld hold New England in check, and litet Old England too. This ho certainly did do, bul if .\ - cto England had compris ed half the political power of the country, as the opposition to Mr. LINCOLN does to day, Mr. MADISON would never have been insane enough to venture upon a measure that would doubly exasperate the party who w.:ro orposEd to him. It ie vain we neck, in the history of our own cmintry . or in England, for any pr .co.'ett fur the abominable outrages on law, on private righi, on personal liberty. on municipal sovere'gnty, which hare been committed by the present rulers of our State and Nation. May Gon forgive th,rm for their attempted destruction of our libert;ce, and may the people take no further vengeance an them than to remove them from power and place ! - . ?VI 51. N. I'ILESIDENT LINCOLN be Wasiiington Chronic/e, the organ of the kitchen Cubic. t the other day con- Lit.in-d quite an elsbc.rate notice of Mra. LIN col.. N's last L,.N,w York. Last summer, we remember that the dislin• gulsitEd lady ri,i:ed one of our men•of war, then anchored near the battery, and there mingled beautifully with dashing and gay s( ciety. Thi3 time we see nothing • y extraordinary in Mrs. LINCOLN'ii visit to Got Lem, save the minuteness with • ,th hrr smallest movements are chroni c.,-3, for the information of the bloods in WusLit.g.ou. She attended 1 , 11111.0'S Gar dec, one evening, not to see FORREST in tiCTACI S, but a German tragedian in ‘ . i.ocs; and SJ delighted was she with that' she invited the talented Ts:t-ros to nine with her next day. H 3 accepted the invitatiouof coarse,and after partaking of 'bp 'truest the bake and boil, - ho recit • score b,:s from the play in ques non, Tile lines spoken by BASSINI), after op'nieg t i ' leaden casket Reerncrl to de light her very much. The scene OCCIrli in BKI.MONT; BAssisio,her lover, and afterwards husband, opens the casket and speak--s the following : " What find I hero 7 Fast. Pot T' 1 . 3 c-unterl•lt ? What demi, cod HaTh come ,o near creation 7 Move the, eye•" t_tr =hether riiing on the balk of Init,e. Seem they in in "Finn ? Here are severed li. Ported with minor breath? ,tractn her `-h,o'd sander su , h Meet biends. Herein herl,:or The p,inter p'n,s the spider, and has w.Yen A ',Mon mesh entrap the hearts cr thsn ruter than nit, in es,b-wed„_” This is very beautiful, nod Filuws a deli cade t.ppre, .ott . oin of tine poetry on the part ci Mrs. Liscorx. )id Ant: wrote to Id At K ETT th.V he preferred M . it rrli and lin :teen to all of SIIAK. , I'L knE's pr 3 n., : h.s w)1 , bat: hnwn, in her ee 1 t 1 ion of a love ecene Irom the Merck - kn. et Ven.(-0, a much talent nod jadg• Tie narra'.ve cf visit informs u= that she viiiited ii.ado. and "Raw with wrinder the tb. ,, drririg Niagn ' rt•iiat,le ..perhlip6 the in:.nt rrmartrable inn:tient rl h'.r t cv:th resu., r I IrC,l( mportlnce --wlw4 h , -; N.: l, whip war cf a fn.-I,lly Eurc q :a the port c.f . New on which coctt.ion, with the fa cf our inFtituti.iiii We can n,! iruagir, the extent of the 11.11: , '"? ;,, unl,lB it be In unions the who were Fuq:ehp•d trom their homes in Ni ~rsaw. But there• Is no dottl,t bat that England and Franca will tremble whin they hear of the leant to Russia. NAPOLEON will turn pale and old PAI I•IttSTON will insist upon dying o ap ,, plexy. The reason of this is to found in the fact of the toast in 91:psalm eininated front the wile of the "govern meat In earlier times the }'resident's w ir., m i g ht New Ycrk, g to the Tie clan( P, f? r t or stlf•(.7., and created no great sensation; but since the President has become the government all this has charged. Mrs. lAN - F01.,: had better take good care of herself, for in the event of her death the Government would become a widower ..but then the Govern ment would soon find comfort in the em• braces of tLe old lady at the head of the Navy Department. But why doesn't Mrs. I.lNcol.tv visit Pennsylvania ? She should come to Pittsburgh and see our establish =ills for the manufacture of implements of war; she ought to see our facilities for the manufacture of gunboats and big can non, and she ought to remain among us iorg enough to become intimately nc qqa.nted with that stupendous concern known as •• The Commercial Printing Company.— BORE PROMCHIPTION We copy the folio wing from the Phila delphia Age which speaks for itself : ''We learn thaton Y•aturday last Dr. JOHN H. B. !.,1( CLEI LAN V 70.5 removed from the po,d• Lien he held at, Chestnut Hill Hospital, the duties cf which he discharged for some time past v.ith great ability and en tire satisfaction. This art was the work of Ci FITIN'S friends in this city. The cause of it was simplg because he is the brother of GEORGE B. MeCixi.i AN. On Thursday last they went in company to the hospital, and the soldiers manifested the most intense enthusiasm and delight at once more seein7 their old and much loved commander. No public man has ever met with such vile persecution as General McCint.hAN has received from Cravrx and his followers, and now they have increased the measure of their infamy by extending their persecution to his brother. Let the soldiers who fought with 141cC1,Em...i.5, and shared with him the dangers of tho battle-field remember ANDREW G. CrRTIN when they reach the polls on election day." "JEIII.MY DIDDLER." We thank our ingenious and accom• plished correspondent for his paper with the above signature. It shall have place at the earliest posasible moment—and we promise two things about it—!one is, that, whenever it shall appear, it will amply repay perusal, nod another is, that how ever long it may be kept (and it will not be kept long.) it will not spoil. TOIII CUN.N.11t1;111A111 ON THE ATIUMP Tom CUNNINGHAM has taken the stump for CURTIN, but if his epinech, published iu yesterday's Gazette, be all he can say in his Excellency's favor, we think his of forts will be love's labor lost. This shal low renegade betrays himself ; he says that he has been for the National Admin• istration since the commencement of the rebellion, and yet he never opened hii Month in its favor until one day lust week in Washington. But like all disappointed renegades, now that he has spoken, he goes the entire figure in support of the most obnoxious of the acts of the Admin istration. He supports the President's suspension of the habeas carpus, be• cause General JACKSON suspended it, but Mr. THOMAS CUNNINGH AM , of Beaver county, ought to have told why Gen. JecKSON did suspend it. Our coun try was at war with England ; New Or leans was to be invaded, and the foe had already landed upon our coast. New Or leans swarmed with English sympathizers wish the cause of their coui.try, among whom was Judge Here.. Linder these circumstances JACKSON suspended the writ, because the safety of New Orleans demanded it. But what has such suspen Biala in it, to justify Lit:cots in suspend ing the writ throughout the peaceful and loyal North? But the advocates of JACK SON•S suspension of the writ of habeas car p 11.5, never for a moment justified it ex cept an a measure rendered absolutely necessary by absolute and impending dun• ger. But, it in not worth while to expose the flimsy aubtertuges of such a miserable trimmer as C ONNINTOHA lc. He was favorable to the nomination of Beet-a. 'NUDGE, until that aspirant's friends de feated him for chairman of the Reading State Convention ; he then in a fit of mor tification tacked on to Douglas, but was never honestly for him. For more than Iwo years the Democrats of Beaver hnve had no confidence in CUNNINGHAM, what ever : the rank and file soon discovered his recrenney ; they reposed confidence in others, and hence his apostacy. He was of no use to the l)rmocracy while in the party, and will prove a miserable acquire. Licit to the Abolitionists. But we heve spent too much space already upon this contemptible tool „f Abokicnism, A Sit U EFL' %4 DEMAG4I4: I n 1113 annual message to the Legislature last year, G071211101' Ct RTIs recommended that a law should be passed prohibiting the use of "store orders," or, as is some times called, "scrip,'' a scrt of paper em ployed by many mills. four dries, ano .ulacturers, in payment Li hando, ;I; lieu of money. It is known to all persons familiar with the iron or cotton business, that their "or ders on the store," connected with what ever establishment a working man may L, employed in, are used in place of a like amount in cash. Well. some sharp ad miner et the inalleable CURTI N . , knowing how much working men hated these "or ders" or "scrip," told htm it would help blca in the election if he would recommend a law forbidding the lean° of this kind of paper credits,and so Mr. Cr arts denounc ed the "orders," and asked for a law to prevent their issue. The law was passed, and the workmen all over the State who had suffered, or who thought that hod FOIE' *ed from such indirect exec :lons, were deligated with the prospect of reciiiving money for their work, which they could use to their own pleasure or ;heir own profit, at otht stores besides then; of the company or proprietor for whom they labored. fiat alas ! for the poor lays rcr I Gov. Ci ern concluded that a "shoddy" contract was a ticker and a our6l- way to make money and popularity than doing jastice to the working men. And so, after due consideration, and most probably. after consultation cult certain largo manufacturers who hare ;don, and Intl, her entry, here and elsewhere. GOV. riocris refused to sign the law which he himself bad suggested should be passed. It the working man who knows whether i.tich a law as this would benefit him, and who Ks:ow , : that itt. did not pay any thing to have it passed, can tell why it was not 11:-.1 is not signed, li t Lin tell all his tel Eire workmen what he thinks about it. Leine frang POSITION OP POSTIIASTER GUS The following important admission we copy from the special dispatches of the Pittsburgh Commercial 1•411 7 , I; T(IN. Octt her Post nanitcr Ibneral Ui ill: sde a speech on Saturday in an adjUn inn county of Maryland that is attracting much ttt , ntion to-day, He denounced what ho termed he revo:utionary rchc!ec ": the al oliti)nists t °rote tho Eltutet of the Beath, and declared it Ira, now the warn fee t duly of the President to xl oor hix course thri.ugh tlin strong conflicting tolf, of two revolutionary movements-that of he nullitiort4 to destroy the I and sot op a South ern court,' or /,,,1 i hit of tbo ui tr bolitionistf, wht.th y,•t i:t t ~ i3'taattbi3e tltt South on the pretext I tuaklug secure lb( Prnaticipation of the sac et. It is not inipr; b able. ho said, that the lattar, tinough aiming at lifterent result, wall be in favor of co-uperativi: n the end with the corowirators of the South 1:1(1 their f reign elks. They may prefer, be added, parting with the heuth to a partner ship and equality with there under the Contrtu Sill PITY—On Tuerd3v morning. Oernber tith IU o'cluck..ll6sii. daughter of Cornelius and Margaret Murphy. aged uno year. five mon• ho and twenty days. her funeral will lake place on this altercoor at three o'clock. , [4 , PECLORAI. COUGH SYRUP, Prepared by Dr. 3tEYSEB., Is the most effectual and agreeab'e cough rem edy known. It has been sold here and through. out the country f4r many years, render,na the utmost satisfaction. In bottles at 50 Cents each, One bottle containing about three times the nat,tity of the ordinary 250 articles. Sold by SIMON JOHNSTON. 5024 Corner of Smithfield & Fourth Ms. NEUTRAL SULPHITE: OF LIME. NEUTRAL sIII.TtI FrE OF LIIIF N EUTRA L SULPHITE OF LIME. NEUTRAL SULPHITE OF LIME, NEUTRAL SULPHITE OF LIME, NEUTRAL. SULPHITE OF LIME, NEUTRAL SULPHITE OF LIME, NEUTRAL SULPHITE OF LIME. One bottle will preserve a barrel of Cider. One bottle will preserve a barrel of Cider, One bottle will preserve a barrel of Cider, One bottle will preserve a barrel of Cider, One bottle will preserve a barrel of Cider, and get the genuine article. and get the genuine article, and get the genuine article, and get the genuine article, and get the genuine article, Corner of the Diamond and Market Street. Corner of the Diamond and Market Street, orner of the Diamond and Market Street, Corner of the Diamond.and Market Street. Corner of the Diamond and Market Street. Call Call Call Call Call I.A I 11 DIED Q(411111 ELASTit . N'FRINGES OF the be t qpa it , . t-tl.'M EL A STIO 41 RI Vt4r. the '-est nea:ity. Utr.M. gLA 8 IC SYli lat3ES of the be , t euslity. A !arra a . Form:tent at kw p•i:e.,9. A large a sortment at I,w !Tile . A large assor.ment at 1 - w prices. A large W3SOT tmenent low prices, At Joseph Fleming's Drug t tore. At Joseph Pleming's Drug Eto e. At Joseph Flemings Drug Store. At Joseph Fleming'o Drltg Store, Corer of the Diamond and Market street. corner of the Dtamond and M erica street. Corner o t the r..iam , nd and Market street Cor.er of the Dla:no-ad and Mart. et street 0,9 BD/AND/MTH'S PILLS.—YOU luny rocover your health by the use of other remedies: You may recover without any: but do not forget that you may die, and that Brandreth's Pills could have saved you. For re member that the AWFUL P.IIIIICIPLE OF DEATH, when YOU have it in excess in your sys tem, is evident to your anim,Ll instincts. Your count•nanci tolls your friends ; your dreams and your owu bc%rt tells you, Now. a: thee times there is no med 7 eine so de t,orvin g of your confidence as Itrandreth's Vegetable Universal Is the only medicine known that con certainly save, when all the usual indi!ations tell you that you must die. r4r. Join Pliancy, Fpringlield. Union co N. J , has used DR +t NURETH'S PILLS for fifteen yeasa in his fam;ly, and for all his hands: in which time these Fills have cured thorn of Bil'ons af fections. Headache, Rheumatism, Fever and Ague. Measels, hooping Cough, and says he his never known them to fail. Principal Office, . 4 94 Canal street. Now York. Fold by Thomas Redpath, Diamond Alley Pittslmrgh, Pa . and al respectable dealers in oes-lmlOo medicine fl' Ediio, lhe Milp roxt.—Dear your permission I wiF5 to say to the read ers of your rarer that I will .end, by return mail to all who wish it (free,) a Receipt, with ful , di rections for making and using a fitnple Vegetable 13a . m. that will cffee'nally remove, in ten days, ?iniples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, and all Impur ites of the Shin. leaving the same soft. clear, mooth and beautiful. I wilt also mail free to those having Bald HOaie, or Bare Faso?, simple directions and information hat will enable them to start a full growth of Luxuriant Hair, Val/eters, or a Moustache, in less thqu thirty days. MI app•icati gee anFtwere.lb;" return mail with cut claire°. Res, eedfally yours, THOS. F. CIIAI'MAN. Chemist. Broadway. New Yn k. fr:-;? A PYR 4 :VI ID OF FACTS CON eerninst CRISTADDKO'S HAIR DYI. is pure. poisonless, inst.ntan eon imparts a per feet black. or a magniti rent brown in the apace ten minutes; is odorless. does nit stain the skin and has never knnwn to fail I I'ALICRO'S EXCRIATOR HAIR DYE. mrnarsourod by J. CRISTADOI-1.0, ft Astor 11011FC. New Sr,ld everywhere, acd applied by all Hair Dresseri. Price, 11. $1.50 n i s'l per box, according re. ce-5-In3d3t .41P -IrnMitr ICATEDi PULMONARY CONSUMPTION A CURABLE DISEAS A CA RD TO CONS U PTIVES. TUE UNDERSIGNED RAVING been restored to health in a few weeks by a t ery simple remedy, allter having suffered Seats with areere lung affection, and that dread disease, Comumption—is anxious to Teske known to his fellow sufferers the means of Cure. T.) all who it. he will send a c . hy of the prescription used (free of charge,) with the direc burs for fire; wring and u.ing the same, which they will find n Nu, cure for CoNerurroN, AstottA, Be 11, ( . 11111-4, COUGHS. Cot.nn, ka lbe only of ect of the ad vet-trier iu sending the Pre sith,tion is to benefit the afflicted, ami spread fc rmati on which he ecmceicce :o be invaluable, nod he hopes every sufferer wiil try his remedy. us it will ccst him cothing. and may prove n Parrioa wishing Lilo prescription will rd.are itddredi R 1:r.F.1) Ali A. WILSON. Wil lia.msburg Ftl -31,131 w 11i41F Coutt.r. Now York. LONDON AND INTERIOR Rrral Mail Company's ICELEIIRATIED REMEDIEN BLOOD PoViDEit AND Ii (D LI 3 I N N A certain cure for Diseases of Horses and Cattle, known to and u.,ect only by the Company in their own suibio, tram tali until the opening of the itunway over the principal routes. Alter the gen eral use of these re:mystics in all the stables ot the Company. their annual sales of condemned stock were ducosiiirmed i a saving to the Company ex ceeding l7 : uto per annum. hi 18.i8 the London drew ors Anfociatiun offered the Company :or the receipes and use the articles only in their owl. stables. BLOOD POWDER. A certain cure for founder, distotnper, rheuma, taint. hide bound. inward strains, luss cd appetite weakness, heaves, coughs, colds. and all diseases of the lunge, surfeit GI seabbers, glanders, poll evil, mange. 'clamant/A.l.lmi of the eyes, fistula, and all diseases , theing from impure blood. cor rects the stomach and lit, or, improves the appe tite. regulates thu bt.wels. c , rrects all derange ments ut the glands, strengtheas the system. lashes the ekm smooth and glossy. Horses bro.. Ken down by bard labor or driving, quietly ro t:toed by umtrAg tbe pander once. a day. Nothing wail be tuunti equal to it to keeping horses up in f0.y , a,7111100. condition and strength. Landon. and Into:ior Royal Mail Co pangs Ft:LEI:MATED BONE OINTMENT A rerLaln cure lor gpavin. ringbone, scratches. iu:npt. tumor=, sprains, swolllngs, bruise:,. touo lehul :oet, chtllblal , s. wind CoI LY, contraouons 01 the tendons, hone enlargements, 111p.,L1 'ate per 12 pz, packarreui; Bone ht.uneht `llO per S oz. )ar. .o. 1120 Str, nd. Lon- Jon. 11.1eF °coon a Rorbinh New York. Prencti, Richards k L'o„ Philadelphia. ToRItEAR'E Ar MeGAMJR, Pittsburgh Drug Rouse. ;ua:dlye Cor tier Fourth and Market street G Li 111 AT Improvement in Eye Sigh! THE Amoloilig I'EBbLE Russian ''e• Spectacles § 110 YOU WANT YOUR EYE NIGHT Bir improved Y Try the ft nenninn Pebbles. 'Chet' are warranted to NTRENU r u ISN:aral tl\' l•; 1:111: tv 'T—this tact hav proved al• ready t.a hu . clr tie of people what was suff:rtair tr...n •I• focus o : i.tht They are Imported direct from Russia, Which eon be seal at my office with satisfaction Puroba.aera are eptitlod to be supplied in future , V the tire stir u!.i }tit free of charge. with those will always ti IV El rISrACTIuN• .1, DIAMOND, Practical Optician, F.fth .9tree.. Bank Block. hirßeware of imposters and counterfeiters. octi-d& w WANTED. A BOY BETWEEN THE AGE OF 12 and 18. to a", rlc in a store. A German Preferred. Apply at on; s d Fo. &55MITEFIELD STREET. ^ t x: AU+, g , 454 , 0 T, 7 . , 8 t et' 43 2 . 43 th a i > 't, g a y 1,4 CbCtr,o ,t- o r a , t.° ` .4 - . 171 ill 6 0 tz " g :4 = .1 ttiam—Ao T.: 2 " m 1 H 0.4 PI 0 }e§ "" . . .4 j o r 4 , •• _ ,e a 0 g * 41 ° g pp t• al f: w tow ' z ttO!z m .0 . 7476 . 4., on, 1 <4, zSe A ° ;Agi o Ql:4 0 4 4 04akti At e ei ° w " . 14 W•... 14; ■ g GRAND Democratic MASS MEETING. THE DEMOCRACY OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA WILL ASSEMBLE AT PITTSBURGH OCTOBER 7th, 1863, AND PROCEED TO DIE West Common in Allegheny. TO REAESERT THRIR TIME HONORED PRINCIPLES TO RENEW THEIR VOWS OF DEVOTION TO THE CONSTITUTION AN 11 UNION And to council how they may beat SUPPRESS THE REBELLION That has so long disturbed THE REPOSE OP THE NATION And at the some time REBUKE AND RESTRAIN The dangerous alsnmptions or power and Bold Disregard of Law WILICII NOW IMPERIL our LIBERTIES THE FOLLOWING NAMED Distinguished. Gentlemen Ilave boon invited. and many , of them are fa octed to be present and ADDRESS THE MEETING, UR HORATIO SEYMOUR, GOV. OF NEW YORK HON, CHARLES J. DIDDLE, OP PHILADELPHIA non.Geo.Northrop, OF PHILADELPHIA Ho in.W tn. H. Witte, CF PHILADELPHIA Hon. C. J. INGERSOLL, Hon. HEISTER CLYMER, HON. JAMES OAMPBEL, EX. post MASTER GENERAL MIL GEN, GEO, B. M'CLELLANI 1101, GEO, NV, WOODWARD, lion. W. A.Porter, Hon. RICHARD VAIIX. Hon. W. H. Welsh, Hon. C• R. Buckalew, Hon►. J. S. Black, Hon. John Van Buren, HON. WILLIAM BIGLER, Hop, Geo. E. PUGH, OF 01110. Hon, CHAS. HERNE/WIN, OF OHIO. Col. JAMES K. REIII4 .of 111. Hon. W. A. RICHARDS ON, of 111. " JOHN WBWEENI. IY, of 0 " JOHN L. DAWSO: !it, of P. " B. R. CURTIS, of :Kass. " WM . MONTGOMERY, of I 'Et `, H. D. FOSTER, of Pa. " W. A. STOKES, of Pa OME ONE, COME ALL, And hear the canoe of the Union and Constitutional Liberty Vindicated New Advertisements. Neumann Literary Society. riIpHERE WILL BE A MEETING OP 1 tit& Socie:_y THIS EVENIVO at the Ger man Catholic High School, for the purpose of electing officers to serve for the mutant xix , months. A fail attendance is requested. By order of the Executive Comtoltttee. oc7-ltd Burgeons Wanted for the Army. r! HE sA.NrrAwr cOMBIITTEE OF JO. Pittaintrahavo a call for TWENTY - ?FIVEVE SUBGEO S for the Western Department. A meeting will be held at 59 Fourth street to revolve app icatiorttl, Alf Barge= are invited tO attend. The members of the Sanitary. Committee' will meet at half-past eight THIS MORNING. By order, - ' oc7-ltd LB. HUNTER, Sexy: .O,TRAY DUN COW CAME TO 0 , •• the premises of the undersigned on the 26tn of Seotemb•r. The owner may prove property. PRY oharg.s and take her away. JOHN' HERMANN, 007-3 id Regding 1. mile from Wilkineburt. grt ARE TO THE PREMISES OF THE %L./ subscriber in u r eandess Township, a lot of 22 head of sleek Sheep. Tho owner will come forward. Drove property and take them away, or they will he sold, according to law. 007 ltda3tw EtaIIBLIS SALE OF BIIILDENO LOTS adjoining the borough of Birmingham.—The unders , gned committee appointed by Bt Env. M. Doemnee, will offer for sale at Dublin auction. on the premises. on TBUTSDAY, the Seh day °ter tplier, at 2 o'cloolt p. en.. one hundred dttirable ouilding lets. adjoining St. Michael's' Church. Male Orphan Asylum anXParstouists Montatery. The above lots, situate near the flourishi^g bor. ough of Birmingham, and well adapted for the re•ldence of business men and mecbartics doing business in said borough, w,ll be sold on reason able terms, affording all who desire it an - opar - trinity of obtaining cheap a.d convenient homes, having beautiful views of the ("Nestor Pittsburgh, Allegheny and Birmingham, to all of which plates there is eat's , and convenient aeoma. To (Ctrs 113 wishing to enjoy a Suburban Home with the convenience of at . ending to their busi ness in the cities or boroughs, thisproperty offers inducements not to be overlooked. JOHN M'DE VITT, R. J. GRACE }Committee oc7-2td ALLEGHENY COLTNI . Y. BS FIVIHE COMMONWEALTH OF PERN- A. SYLVA NI I.—To James A. Hutchison. ex ecutor, Mrs. Ellen Hutchison. widow of James A. Hutchison,Mrs_ Nancy C. B. Hutchison, sole de visee of Lewis D. Hatehison, Hon. Edwin M. `Banton and Ellen Maria Stanton. his wife. Dan iel Watfield, jr., and Diary A. Warfield, his wife and Char!es Edward Hutchison, devisee, under the 'apt will and testament ,of Lewis Hutchison ,reeased. Greecirg:—Whereas, in the Orphans' Court of s.id county on the 19th day of Sept. A. P.. 1863, the Petition of Cornelius as signee of Edward J. Burke, deo'd, was presemted, praying for specific per'ormanee eantraetvith LeNci3 Hutchison, dee'd, in regard to :.a en?tain lot of ground situate on Walnut and Quarx - ate in the C itg-of Pittilirgh; And then for we corn mond you and each or yet, teat you be and ap pear before the Orphans' C •.rt at Pitt burgh, on nATIT RD AY, the 31st day f char A. D., 1883, at 10 o'e oat a, to , then and i b ro to show cause. if any you have why the p tty , r of Petitioner should not be granted. Hereof nit not Wirgres, the Ron. Jamey P g t erre tt, Preslent June of lair asid Court, at I SEAL 'S Pittsburgh, the 6th,day of October, A. D.,1863. WM. A. HERRON, Clerk. MITCFIEL dr PALMER, Att'ya. rraklNTlr FEET PEONY ON. OREN'S -IK. Road, by 120 deer, a two story frame ing house for two tenants, each four rooms and cellar. Price sl2oo—torms easy. Also, DI INR A ()11S8 of trainable land situated four miles ftom the city, a good cottage house, stabl^, coal house, spring of excellent wa , e-, 100 apple and peach trees. gardvn, .&c. For price and terms a pply at e. CUTIIBRItT d 50148. oc7 51 Market street. J. at M. RIPSTEEN, Brass Founders, Gas and Steam Eitters, All kinds of Brass' and Iron Cocks made to order. Arse. BRASS CASTINGS. OF ALL KINDS. Made it the shortest notice. Par ienlar attention paid to fitting up and re pairing of OIL It EP tNERIES. 31 & 34 WATER STREET, near Liberty The members of this Rm.. being medical me chanics. of many years' experience in the busi nws will encore to give satisfaction in every re spect. We Are also agents for Guild, Garrison & Co.'s, Steam Pumps for stater and oiL se6-Iyd tIW 0, 8 ;61 xm an El yff) Jw , :16) e 3.3 ' 5l :11 S g M — A GC I. g. 'm tt: m. C 2 R, t ub 4 tt A -9 11 • •t•E' o• Qti MI P, gi es A S b. 2 .9 A 0 -0,) •6 , ;.laz 14 .11 1 tit A' mil V 4 oat ••• cia g . 12g. e Qg .4o , 0 1 Er .wFI 0 ) P ° :1 0 vi • O 1:1 g - - zir- 46+ fa l- 2 = -a et d at ;0 M 4.-, -- 410 R. .I; p o,ll= 1.4 q al &)"" AM A 6. 4.: 'to E say 4 0..f3 New Castle & Beaver Valley RAIL ROAD. A - 1W AND AFTER RIORDAN THE STH iest, (and until fur her notice,) trains on the N. C. ,Or R. v. R It ~wrll connect at Homewood otati, il with tho Mail Train on the P. 1?. w. & C: ~„ R.,W le r :Wing Pittsburgh,ut 7a. to . Al po w ith the Crestlin e nocommodaticn, leaving Pittsburgh et 230 p. oug Thrh tickets 4 or New Castle,_ Sharon, Afar car. Prank!' n ax.'d 011 City can be procured at the ticket c Mee of Oh" P,ttaburirti. Fort- Wayne and (limo Railway company in Pittsburgh. DIoIiSON. Pass. irt. New Castle, PC, Oct. 5 . D 36 3. 9e6-2w3 10,040,009 COED. KEROSENE CR &TER WILL WARN FOOHEOB THE B. by, heat water rr steep herbs,Arc , for the sick, make warm water for shaving ortody. cook . f ew oysters, boil or try ctn. , . make tos mad cof fee, toast bread, ,to.,kc in less time and expense than by any other means known. Used on any tamp without obscuring. the light. Prioe.s centre w mail postage paid, 50 cents. %leo o Patel t Lighter. for lighting lamps with , neinovng the chimney. For tale wholesale anoud „luny ozs 46 isrELHOlli ECELLTA Wood st., agents for the manufacturers. - ii - NA RE'S PIANOS.—JEST RECEIv.. -WIL ed L ‘.13 ,most complete assortment of the A' call call is run) They R teebe Pianos aver seen in this city. They ar e b c vend a doubt the best Pianos made. sedans eolleitai before rurchasinte eltetrhere. OBARLOTTF illantill. JACOB WAX 4iieztt IEI 4!;.12 • eodslit. 74-!" V - 4 ° m I m s c.)• Zs s Z 1 .4- ; z P igrng ow P.A3 lae4sl 4 ' NI4 9' 10 22 1 6f4iFf5 4! , -.otom' wt,5 1 , 4 11 • - gg 4l '4 1.1g 4- 2ii g Tasz —ZNct , :!gr.gr.o .‘'m 4• '"?,14 go • =Zs n g rii Eme 44 o zz,Q ITBIZtt .200.15 14 mAav o wg Tgsoel: 41°112 =1, 7 4E2J d g lrg Ltin wa H' .'A cg tat4 7 7: 2 1 - 04 g 74 2,>? oCgeitol , g2A .pm FfE«Op 4: 11 / 4 4 : 1 g:i d 0 , 0 .1 60m Fgam Prg Jaotsaeo -;001:4=1 , 1 Q44ligclal °
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers