DAILY POST. Pf ICTSBURGH. WEDNESDAY MORNING, oer. 14 Where Were lb 4110 r 'iLszir Were lia'ne Freedom. The Union as lit Was, 1. he Constitution as It Is THVIESULT lUMT.EIR.DAY The election yesterday in the cities of Pittsburgh and Allegheny,and throughout the county, so far as we' heard from it, was one which will be remembered by the Democrats who participated in it as long as they live. We have heard of outrages upon the sacred right of suffrage, but never, until yesterday, did we know the extent to which reckless partizan oppression was capable of going. Men, having an indisputable right to vote were prevented from doing so, while fellows, who never knew what a tax receipt was, walked boldly to the polls and ware received by leading Abolition ists with open arms. Idpiley was scattered about in profusion,-tehipt.ing the needy and encouraging the :reckless, in short there was no applience:whiab money and desperation could comMar4l,thakwas not f c arrayed against .ria.4 -- yeat - 's contest. The eon ' ' e .: 'of course, that we a; -wii , lid our expectations. Mut aii - siiirond, 'ln addition to the powerlial influence o mon ey we had to contend against camit of soldiers, having no right tc, 'Vote in this county, but who of course went almost unanimously for CURTIN. At this writing we can not form an eiti mate of the majority against us in the county; judging from what returns we have in, however, it is unusually large. In relation to the result in the State we can form no idea; but judg ing from the extensive and- extravagant reports of our opponents, we should judge that they had swept the State by a large majority. But as is generally the case, ihe official returns will doubtless reduce their majorities. In conclusion, if the Abolitionists have beaten 11E, we Wi,/ submit to our defeat with the beet grace in the world, with the pleasing reflection that if they can stand the further oppression of the General and State Governments, so can the Democ racy. —Having written thus far, we have re• ceived some intelligence which leads us to believe that there ie a prospect of the Democracy carrying the State. REBELs SAVAGE ON BRAGG Complaints against BRAGG from South ern journals are loud and vehement. The Richmond Whig of the Bth inst.. re marking upon an article in the Knoxville Register, (now published in Atlanta, Ga.) calls loudly for the reinforcement of Gen. Ba.saa, upon which the Whig indignantly remarks.: "Thu vary esiateace of not only an organized army of the South, but of the Btate of Georgia as an independent republic, and of the confederate States, depends upon the immediate reinforce pleat of Ba.e.co's army." But can we afford to keep on reinforcing a general who, after he has been made strong enough, by additions to his force to gain a "complete victory," and has "destroyed the army" of the enemy, deliberately sits, down and waits until that enemy has so • fortified himself and so strengthened his ranks as to be more formidable, relatively as well as really, than ever. BR/OG had tallen back before ROSECP.ANS,'.aII the way from Murfreesboro to Chickamauga, be cause the latter was too strong for him. But at Chickamauga BR/Ga was made too strong for ROSEGRANB, and turned the tables on him, beating him back easily twelve or fifteen miles. While he had the advantage why didn't he finish the work ? When he had ROSECRAN s on the trot, why didn't he keep him at it? Why call a halt, fold his arms and stand still, till BURNaIDE could establish a junction with ROBECRANS—tiiI fifteen thousand men could come from- Indianapolis, and tw, corps could be - sent from MEADE? Rein force BRAGG again, and will he not exe • cute some imperfect feat, and then wait for the enemy to gel tOit:Strong for him? Many persons think ,that, -instead of re inforcing General .13c..m, with pr. larger army, it would bq.iettsto reinfgrce his army with an ablir ¢ncenltier gNerwil BcrUNSIDiII NoVEMENTS Speculation has been hasy regarding the movements of Gen, BURNSIDE, and opin• ions among the Southern journals appear to-be conflicting. The Memphis Appeal, of the 6th inst., says that his not having effected a junction with Thosecrans up to Sunday evening, appears to be the general belief. We have met a gentleman who left the river, some distance above Harri— son's landing, on Friday, who informs us that a small force of his command had made their appearance in that vicinity, but nothing was heard of any considerable body. If he attempts to reach Chatta nooga on the South aide of the river, he will certainly be compelled to ran a dan gerous gauntlet, of which he must be aware; consequently he may be looked for, if at all, from the north aide. Oar infer matiun also leads us to believe his rtrength has been greatly exaggerated. He certainly cannot strengthen the belea guered forces at Chattanooga to the ex.— t tent that has been feared. The operations of General Jonea in upper East Tennes see will employ several thousands of his forces, and by garrisoning • the several gapa and towns, and keeping open his line of communications, his corps will be neeesga6ly still further reduced. We do not believe Itikfi:tn add ten thoheandto the dispirited army . of tie Cuu3berland; or, orit.-thiriPol•itfelosa in the.recent fight. 9, SUGAIt bas been obtained from the skins of snakes by a Prench - Chemist, and the proceas is given in the ,public journals. We invite the discoverer to the United States. He will find ample material for a large establishment in this - eityotiliere the species copperhead is abundant. As enraged mother in. I3linoia recentlj WOO tier Idite cit-springa nose until she fax:ea:wad the fir n.; : broke rn:ah er pl edge' nruli - end-ki:lei a third with a rolling pin. TIRE COMING CONGRECS TO AOOL- ISH SLAVERY The Washington correspondent of the New York Tribune a few weeks since wrote as follows: "I here now forewarn Copperheathl of,iirnie xrees that one of the first and. most id - Portant measures to some before the next Congreeg will make ale.veryln ali..pexts . of the trnitod States an odious crime, forever hereafter, inflicting the penalty of. dpeth upon iihnmsoever shall dare , o Niolape it after it shell he*e beinine a law, A r. j I moreoret-assure toitgrotlters end•neg 0 aWnen , and all their baohere of whate.C'e'i Lame, - "that such a bill will pass both branoh, of Dingoe's by a very large majority, and bo hailed by the People as the brightest and best of all the great and 8004 and °mai tutional rein die?. tre:. on Mud rebellion, which have brew invoked by or during the lIICYst glorious Administration of Father Abraham." This is bat the consummation of. HENRY Cray's prediction twenty years ago, When speaking of the designs of the Abolition ists, he indignantly remarked, " With them the rights of property are n3thing, ; the deficiency of the powers of the Gen. eral Government are nothing ; the ac knowledged and incontestible powers of the States are nothing ; the dissolution of the Union, and the overthrow of a Gov. ernmont in which are concentrated the hopes of the civilized world, are nothing. A singly idea has taken possession of their minds, and onward they rustle it, over looking all barriers, reckless and regard less of all consequences." FROM CHATTANOOGA A correspondent of the Columbus En quirer, writing from Chattanooga Sept. 29th remarks : " Since the picket fight, night before last, nothing has oc curred to break the monotony along our lines. Yesterday not a gun was fired from either side until about sun 'het, when we opened upon them with aB2 pound.r from a projection ou Look. out Mountain, overlooking the railroad. The pitting of this gun in position wee done very quietly, so much so that our own troops were not aware of what was going on. The enemy wins completely astounded when shell after shell exploded in the very heart of the town. It is sup posed by the uninitiated that this gun and others that are being mounted will effectu. ally command their pontoon bridgcs, If this be so, Rosecrans may as well capitz, late if his bridges remain intact, his army is still in a very peearious posifion, because we hold the ricer above and below Phattanooga,and the railroad along the base of Lookout Mountain. thus leaving him only.oneStqfr,f' from whence to draw the immense su ! d. es nerosary to feed his large army." THE TRIBUNE ON BEDIATI ON The New York Tribune, the moss htttor and partisan journal in America, in a recent number coolly remarks that "the fact simply is that new issues are con tinnally arising to divide and recast old parties, so that those who were together last year are antagonists this, a-td each new contest sees re-arrangements and re distributions of persons according to their own several predilections and pretert n em If this truth were generally under stood and regarded, party bigotry would subside, and the chap who boasts that he has always voted the regular ticket, just as his father did before him,' would perceive that he has sacrificed his judgment on public questions without preserving his darling consistency.'• History of a Necklace. The "National Quarterly" gives 03 the following stirring history of photographic short-hand : "The proceedings of tl.e American Congress were very imperfectly reprrted before the time of Mr. Joseph Geleq, senior, the father of the late Mr. Gal s 1 , 1 the National lntelligencer. He wau the first who made a report of the Congres sional debates which appeared in the paper the text day. This was considered a most astonishing feat at the time His son, Joseph Gaies, was also a reporter, and one of the best, in his day, that the country could boast. He first became con netted with the National Intelligenrer as reporter in October, 1807, he was then just twenty one years old. He and the present Mr. Seaton afterward were the proprietors of the paper. They were both the reporters and editors of the Intelli gencer—one of them devoted himself to the Senate, and the other to the House of Representatives- As a general thing they published only running reports special occasions, however, the speeches and proceedings were given entire. The peculiar talents of these gentlemen were duly appreciated, and they had seats at honor assigned them beside the presiding off.cets. To these enterprising and re complietted reporters tee Ane indebted for many of those splendid specimens of elo quence which adorn the political literature of our country. The speeches made by Webster and Haync, during their eel,- brated intellectual combat in the united States Senate, were preserved from ioblivion by Mr. Gales, whose notes hand somely hound, apd enriched with Mr. Webster's annotations, are kept as a pre cious memento in the family library. The following anecdote may, perhaps, be read with some interest in this connectioe. The day Mr. Webster made his reply to the attack of Mr. Hayne, of South Caro line, Joseph Gales met him as he was going to the Capitol, and inquired how long he intended to speak. 'About half i an hour,' was the reply. The editor's deities at that time were pressing, but he ventured to take so much time from them. Mr. Webster, however, directly after was joined by Judge Story, who paid that he thought that the time had come far Mr. Webster to give the country his view-3 on the Constitution. To this proposi ion the Senator assented. Mr. Gales took up his pencil unaware of this new arrange ment, and alike unconscious of the lapse of time under the enchantment of the orator, he continued to write until the close of the speech. But, when he came to look at the notes, the magnitude of the task that it would be to write them out appeared so formidable, that he shrank from it as an impossibility. Soon after Mr Webster called on Mr. Gales, and re quested a report of his speech. '1 have tho notes.' said the 'but I shall never have time to write them out,' Thia led to some remonstrance and perenasion, but the overworked editor stood firm. At this juncture Mrs. Gales came forward, and offered to undertake the task, Raying that she could decipher her husband's short-hand, as she had occasionally done so. She had heard the speech, and the resistless sweep of its urge e,ent, and the gorgeons magnificence of its imagery, Were yet vivid in her mind. in the course of a week Mr. Gales submitted to Mr. Webster the report of his speech in the hand-writing of his wife. Scarcely a word needed to be changed ; and soon a set of diamonds, costing a thousand dol lars, accompanied the rich thanks of the eloquent statesman. Thus was saved to literature the most memorable oration of the American Senate." THE IDEA of making gaslight from water by decomposing it is not abandoned. Mr. G. A. Reywortb proposes to do it by electricity, and to set his decomposing machinery at work by water-revolving coils at the extremities of dry magnets. iouTri.sßN The Rebel Triangle, with its POill Is at Charleston, atiehneard and Chats nootra—l'he Rebel Forces at these Points—A Hairs t Charleston— How the War l:eparttneut at Washington Unwillingly Reins the Rebels. ace, I hire be-11 put in possession to-day of the itillowing information in relation to the military situation at. the South and the mi l itary u:ove : meuta now in progresti i; fc.; 'nation comes from Southern tea.; zte:. and I have reason to believo that moo .1 had a semi-official origin ; at all events there can be no doubt of itc authenticity. It will be re memberrd that the . campaigns of the pr.esent fall and the ensuing winter are being carried en, on the part of the South, in pureuant e c f the pram agreed upon at the con! 61 of war which was held at Riehrnond about the latt of July. At the time these plans were adopted General Le--'s army. atter his campaign in Penn sylvania, was massed on the line of the Rappahannock ; General Gilmore had commenced his operations before Charles ton, Vicksburg and Port Hudson bad fallen and the Union troops engaged be fore those places were at the disposal of the administrajon for service elsewhere; Bragg's army in Tennessee had retreated before, Roaeerans from the line of the Duck river to Tullahoma, and from Tul home across the Tennessee viver to the strong position at Chattanooga. Those plans, as I have before stated, were based apon a strict adherence to the principle of the concentration of forces applied to the system of warfare. Singularly enough, the opening operations of these campaigns on the part of the rebels have bean greatly aided and advanced by the blunders and false moves of the War Department at Washington. It will be seen, on examination of the map of the seat of war, that the three points at which the rebels are now men aced, farm the three points of a triangle ; that their armies near Richmond, near Chattano. ga and at Charleston, are each within supporting distance of the other two ; that the railroad communication be tween the three points is perfect Leven without using the great Southern Railroad through Knoxville), while the means of transportation are known to be ample ; and that in all their operations they have the advantage of the interior linen, while the Union forces are compelled to move around them on exterior lines forming the arc of a great circle. Since the battle of Chattanooga, on the IlOth and 21st ,of September, the forces of Gen. Johnston and Grn. Bragg near Chattanooga have been considerably angemented. They consist now or the following bodies of troops : I. NCI Glfl. ER•GG HY, re:7i uocts of i 7 fivAry 1,50 gm Gen. 1C pee I er's cavalry I=RK. JOEINSTy" 2 ,i-vi,ion9 L •na,.trect's ' ry a 4 divi•ienx 01' Wevern tronpi.. CE.valrY 'Lou bet.t.riep of artil ery 12e,,rva mUina Total r,be!l,,roe near Chsttanooga......... 153.3)• , It may well he doubted whether the ab. , ve 20,000 militia from Georgia, hastily raised, undisciplined, and probably indif ferently armed, can be of any Use on the field of battle. But in every army of the above magnitude the services of about one-eighth of the whole number are always required for camp duty, guarding roads and bridges and keeping cummnni cations open. The rebel army, therefore. is actually strengthened to that amount, because it relieves from those duties 20,000 veteran troops, and allows them to go to the front. The effective force under Gen. Johnston' ii orders, therefore, is 133,0e10 troops, as stated in my letter of Seritt•rn her 22. In order to concentrate this large force near Chattanooga the rebels have had to withdraw nearly •all the troops from Mo• bile and Savannah, and some from Char ;estop also, in addition to those sent from General Lee's army. But they feel per fectly sale in doing so. They do not ex pect that Mobile will be attacked until the cool weather of the fall, in .November ; but they do expect it will be attack, d then, both by a land and navel force, Ii regard to chareston, General Beauregard has assured 'hi rebel atilhoinies nt Rich rnotid that "the Yankees . ' shall never pot seas either Charleston or the land upon which Charleston stands ; and it is said, too, that he has sent a message to Gen. Gilmwe containing intelligence which lea.] that officer to abandon his idea of ahellic g the city. Charleston, of rotirse, can br dentroyed by n borribiird• copra Lut even when that 18 done the wore ar , end the site will yet retnaii, to be taken Jerome the city of Charleston can be reail,,-.1. This will have to Le done, if done nt all, by the laud forces alone. The naval forces cannot co operate, because they ra.l , , t get their vessels paiJ Fort Sumter. It is now seen that what I said months ago in regard to the obstructions in the harbor was correct. It is beyond thr w,•r rf the naval forces now there either t., j.ass Fart Sumter or to remove ;hos , . ns. The way to take .`l,rle.,ii.n is to take Richmond first. Bit he Administration will not attempt to t.ike Richtuond by the only route from whirl) that ri.c a vulnerable, and the rebels. know i ng that. are able to draw troops tri , ie Lee's army adlibitiim in order to defeat li.usc,rane The Pence Movement in the Cabinet— ., hot it .9inotintti to— Cabinet Hopei epouly ilivlded Triton the Sub ject—The South Would Reject the 'rectos Premised—The Reason of thin Rejection, ite HAI TINIORE, Oct. 9, 1883. I have some information in regard to he recent allei.nd pence propositions be fore the Cabinet, which may he of some importance. It is to the following effect It is true that the question of peace, or what amounts to the same thing, the question of the further prosecution of the war is now before the Cabinet. No pro• pt,sel ul pc: 1,,, h.-ar cer, has been rec,-iv ad from it uth. the proposal for peace to the South, originat;--d, according to my info:intuits, with a tlisitnguished member of the Cebi net. Hie - proposal substanttel l is : That the South shall lay down their arms, acknoivtedge the authority and supremacy of the Federal Government, and send their Senators and Representatives to Congress. A general amnesty to be pro claimed, including all who are now in arms against the Government, except the chief leaders of the rebellion, who are to be banished. 'Phe Southern States to be secured in their State organi.witions, and the qiiestion cf the dismemberment of Virginia to be referred to the decision of the Supreme Court. The Confiscation Act to be repealed. The emancipation proclamation, having been adopted as a war measure, to he withdrawn, the States, however, to bind themselves to adopt a sy , tem of gradual emancipation by which all slaves row held are to be slaves for life, nut a!1 negroes born after the year 1864 to be free on arriving at the age of twent; -one years . The substantial It:attire-a of this propos al are favored by Mr. Seward, Mr. Usher, Mr. Blair and Mr. Bates. It is opposed in tato by Mr. Chase, Mr. Stanton and Mr. Welles. These three gentlemen hold the following views on the subject: That it is no longer simply the rebels in arms whom we are fighting, but the whole of the people of the Southern States. That they are all public enemies, and can only be treated as such. That no peace based upon the above or any similar terms could be lasting. That if the war is prosecuted with vigor, in less than a year more the power of the rebellion will be broken; their armies defeated or scat tered ; Richmond, Charleston, Mobile at.cl Savannah in our possession—the whole Southern country conquered ; and we will then be in a position to dictate what terms we please to the vanquished rebels. That it would bonnjust to the loyal States of the North to permit the rebellions States over again to enter into the Union on a footing of equaliky longer recognized former. That they are t 9 be no longer recognized as States, but .as conquered provinces, and are to be governed in snch a manner ,its Congreas . shall determine. In a word, the doctrines of the Whiting letter and of the recent Atlantic Monthly article of Senator Sumner are adopted by those gentlemen as the principles upon which the future action of the Govern mentleiwardsthe South shall be regulat ed, so far.sit that action can be controlled by them.. Although they forma minority of the Cabinet, they have really more weight than the other four members—first. on account of Mr. Chase personally, as wielding the vest power of the Treasury and, second, because they are supported by Senators Sumner, Wilson, Lane and Chandler and the influence of these four men at the White House is almost incred ible. But my iaformation does not end here. Every one will see that the above proposal of peace embraces terms as favorable as the Southern people themselves could ask if they wished to return to the Union. It is important, then, to know whether they would accept those or similar terms, if such were offered to them. I have the facts which enable me to say that if those terms were offered to the South to-day they would be unhesitatingly rejected ; and thin would be done, not by the rebel lead ers alone, but by the whole Southernpeo ple. This is a painful and unpleasant fact; bat it is a fact nevertheless. It might not have been so a year ago. Up to the mid dle of September of last year there was still a Union party at the South ; there were still some people who desired a res toration of the Union. But since that time the war has aesnmed such features of ferocity, since that time the acts of the Administration and of Congress have been of such a nature, as to crush out every vestige of Union feeling at the South, and to make the idea of reunion abhorrent to the Southern people. Ido not make this statement at random. I make it on the authority of more than a dozen gentlemen from different parts of the South, all of them men of veracity and intelligence, some of them men of formerly high posi tion in their respective States, but none , of them holding any position in the rebel army. The fact is—and this fact must be realised sooner or later at the North—the South, united as one man, is fighting for independence, and not for slavery. If, in order to gain their independence, it be comes necessary for them to liberate their slaves, or part of them, they will untiesi.• tatingly do it. The idea that the military power of the South is broken, or even that it has been materially weakened, is utterly delusive. The South never had such an effective army is the field as it has- to day. True, IL is only 400,000 strong, and one fourth of these are conscripts, but the other 800,000 are veteran troops, and they have a latent element of military strength which our politicians have not counted on hith ertm The great error of the Administra tion is in making war on the Souther❑ people, and not merely on the rebels in arms, It was a sad day when the first talse step in that direction was taken, by authorizing John Pope to forbid the placing of guards around the houses of Southern people, Pillage, rapine and unbridled license too often followed the army after that ; and the result is now seen in the state of facts mentioned above. If the war is to go on the hardest fighting it yet to come. 004. x.) to ow 100.) 1,30) 3) ow And yet, with all these facts existing. an honorable, lasting peace is in the power of the Administration, to be followed. perhaps, at some future period, by ulti mate reunion. Before next Christmas the path to such a peace will be pointed out in Congress by a member of the House of Representatives. "Hoarding." From the Richmond Whig. uct. Nothing is more easy than to accuse poor Mr. Memminger of bringing all our trouble upon us. It is not our part to aggravate these accusations by charging him with great but misapplied abilities. B has done all his knowledge enabled him to do. A second-rate- lawyer in Charleston, famous for the energy and persistence with which he collected small bills and dunned petty debtors, his eleva Lion to the head of the Treasury was a stroke of fortune which must have aston ished the good man very much. He has done his best, but he has been overtasked —that is all. But take Confederate money at its market value to-day, and see whether it is Mr. Alemminger's fault that the cost of living is so ruinous. A Confederate dol lar is worth say ten cents in silver or gold. Therefore ten Confederate dollars ought to buy as much as a gold or silver dollar in old times. But will they? Let us see. In old times a gold :dollar would buy ten pc nude of sugar, or coffee, or ten yards of calico. Now a days ten Confederate dol la• s will buy about three pounds of sugar. a pound and a ball of coffee, and a yard and a quarter of calico. So there is something mote than a depreciated cur rency at the bottom of these ruinous prices I hinge are scarce." Yes, bat not so sehrce as producers would have you be— litre. The Government wanted to buy bacon in Georgia. None to be had. Sugar was offered in exchange, and bacon came in plentifully. Sixty thousand pounds of bacon were found in Vicksburg after the garrison had surrendered on thi• 4: h of July for the want of something to eat. r The fact is, there is such a thing as hoarding. Hence, an artificial seamy ; hence high prices; hence a salary of $1,600 a yea: barely pays day board, leaving nothing for room rent, fuel, lights, clothes, taxes, doctor's bills, and other incidentals. Hoarding! Could a human being hoard the necessaries of life when fellow•men are struggling for existence? They say so. 'I hey say salt was hoarded last Spring and will be again this Fall. They say farmers are hoarding their wheat at this moment, and compelling poor pep rile to pay $46 and $6O a barrel for flour, when they might get it fors2s if the wheat were sent to the mill. They say there k a man in this city who has upwards of a hundred hogsheads of sugar hoarded away. They say there is plenty of flour hoarded in cellars and garrets. They say that these merciless auctioneers can always find s , mewhere "a friend" who has a few barrels of sugar to deal out as prices con tinne to rise. Every rise in sugar brings out a few more barrels from the secret and inexhaustible store house of this myste rious 'friend," who allows the auctioneer only his "commission." In the English dictionary will be found a word of talismanic power, to which we advise our readers to turn in this time of trouble. Tb4t word is, disgorge! Comments on Davis' Mobile Letter. The letter from President Davis, pub lished in the Mobile papers, may suggest to some persons thoughts that seem never to have occurred to them. They act as if they never supposed a President could grow weary, or might sometimes be refresh ed by the kind sympathies and encour agemeut of his fellow•citizens. On the contrary, they seem to think their share of duty in the present dreadful war, is to assail the President and to weaken his hands to the most of their ability. They croak, and repine, and complain, without ceasing; and they labor to destroy the confidence of the people and the army in him. Their meccas would obviously be our ruin. The only excuse they can give for thee course ie, that the Prewtl.nt dote not adi,Ll.-r e r tbe Governmcut t.ccording to their uoliutiP, to be and they take this means to coerce him to do so ! But there is not a man or them that the peo ple would be. willies td trdiiiiwith their -affairs; but foi-a single day. What right, then, Wave they to strike at the pillars of oursafeti, in order to force their views upon the country?—Richmond Sentinel. P. M. GEN'. BL„sia calls the men who follow Sumner revolutionsFy.- Why of course they are ; but what ie lie? They are not a whit more revolutionary, and are much more logical than he. The notion of being revolutionary up to a cer• Lain print, and conservative beyond is nonsense. Republican is a revolutionist per sei and simply because he is a Repub lican. He wants a Union with slavery out of it, but, unfortunately, our fathers left slavery in it. There is one way to get it out honestly ; that is by an amendment of the Constitution • there is another way—a compound of the Sam Slick and the Robert Macaire—and that the Republicans adopt• ed, which waa to keep within the forms of the Constitution, andviolate its (spirit. This wretched wooden•nutmeg trick has cost the country more than any man can yet imagine, and may cost us not only part of our territory but even the rest of the liberty that Lincoln has yet left us. Theo' a very small breach et first the water, gradually wasting, will overwhelm the ykes of Holland, and through a breach of constitutional faith, easyrepaira hie once, many men have come now to lose any observance of, any faith in, or any reverence for the Constitution, or in• deed any Constitution. PRESERVE YOUR CIDER. THE SULPHITE OF LIME Die . overed by Prof. Floraford. will prevent Cider from ttuming Pour. and. also ru-ciatly improve its quality. 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Corner of the Diamond and Market street. Corner of the Diamond and Market street. Corner of the Diamond and Aisrget arrest, Corner of the Diamond and Market street. oel4-w&t 001 f WON IC. TE'D. PULMONARY CONSURIPIIOI A CURABLE CUSEAS A OA RD TO CONSUMPTIVES THE I FDERSIGNIED RAVING ti•clY" been restored to health in a few weeks. by a very s:tcp:e romodY. Cter having suffered several yews with 0 revere lung affection, and that dread disease, Consumption—is anxious to make known to bil fellow-sufferers the means cf cure. To all who desire it. he a - ill send a c'PY of the Prescription used (free of charge,) with the diree dors for preparing and using the same, which they will find el nose cu,- for CONSUMPTION, Asruut Ilexuvortina. Corms. COLDS, &c. The only 0' ject of the ad , eniser in sending the Pre scription is to beaefit the afflicted, and spread information which he conceives :o be invaluable, and he hopes every sufferer will try hts remedy as it will cost him nothing, and may prove a hlensing. Parties wishing the prescription will please address Rcv. EDWARD A. WILSON.Thom/1131mill 50.5-3ndAw hinds Courts. Now York. Ec . o" - BRANDRETIVIS PII. L .—V otr Laos recover your health by the use of other remedie.. 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 PRINCIPLE OF DEATII. when you have it in excess in your sys tem• is evident to your animal instincts. Your countenance tells your friends ; your dreams and your own heart tells you, Now, at these times there is no medicine so de serving of your confidence as Brandreth's Vegetable Universal Pills, Is the onir medicine known that can certainly save, when all the usual indi'atione tell you that you must die. Mr. John Pudney, Fpringfiold, Union co., N. J has used DRANDRETIP3 PILLS for fifteen rears in his family, and for all his hands; in which dine these Pills have cured thorn of Bil'ous af fcctions, Headache, Rheuma!ism, Fever and Anne, Measels, Whooping Cough, and say,. be has never known thorn to fall. Principal Office, Eli Canal street. Now York. Fold by Thomas Redpath, Diamond Alter. Pittsburgh, Pa , and all respectable dealers in medicine. ocs-Imloo EcrEd.lor of the Daily Post.—Darr Mr.—With Your permission I wish to say to the road ore of your raper that I will tend, by return mail to all who wish it (free,) a Receipt, with ful' di re tion• for making And using a i aspic Vegetable Ba in, that will effec'ually remove, in ten days, Pimples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, and all horror ites of the Skin, leaving the same soft, clear, smooth and beautiful. I wil also mail free to those having Bald Heads, or Bare Faces, simple directions and information bat will enable them to start a full growth of Luxuriant Hair, Whiskers, or a Moustache, in less than thirty days. All app bastions answered by return mail with- ent charge. Resnectfully yours, THOS. F. CHAPMAN, Chemist, 831 Broadway, New York. A I.TR 4.31.11 D F FACTS CON ~erning CRISTADOItO'S HAIR DYE. It is puts. poi.,oa:ess, instantanewm, imparts a per fect Week, or a magnificent brown in the space of ten mitintes: is odorless, does not stain the skin, and has never known to fail! CRISTADORO'S EXCSLSIOR HAIR DYE, ronnfaetnrcd by J. CRISTADORO, 6 Astor House. New York. Sold everywhere. and applied by all Hair Dressers. Price, $l, $1.50 and . s3 per box., according to size. ocs-Imdaw LONDON AND INTERIOR Royal Mail Company's CELEBRATED REMEDIES BLOOD POWDER AND Et 0 INT JO. 4.) I/V '3C` 11FT E. IV "I" A certain cure for Diseases of Horses and Cattle, known ti) and used only by the Company in their Lem stables from 1844 until the opening of the hallway over the principal routes. After the gen erri use of these remedies in all the stables of the CAmipany. their annual sales of condemned stock wore discontinued, a saving to the Company ex ceeding 5-7.000 per annum. In 1853 the London Brewers' Association offered the Company £2,000 for the recelpes and use the articles only in their own stables. BLOOD POWDER A certain cure for founder, distemper, rhettma, tism, hide hound, inward strains. loss of appetite weakness, heaves, coughs, colds, and all diseases of the kings. surfeit of scabbers. glanders. poll evil, mango, inganatuation of the eyes, fistula. and all diseases arising frorn impure blood. cor ream the stomach and Liver, improves the appe tite, regulates the bowels, corrects all derange ments of the glands, strengthens the system, ranker the skin smooth and c100..7. El ones bro ken downby hard labor or driving, quickly re tored by using the powder once a. day. Nothing will be toned equal to it it keeping homes u in appearance, condition and strength. London and Interior ttoyai Mail COMPati.9B, CELEBRATEIb BOSE OINTMENT. A certain cure for ettavia, ringbone. scratches, lumps, tumors, °PrOna , swellings, bres, foun dered lest, ehillbtaics, wind galls. conactions of the tendons , bone enlargements. &a. Bleed Powder 500 per 12 or, packages; Bono • 543,3 per 8 es. par. No. Strand. Lon ineKeeson .k Rorbine, New York. Viench, Richards k Co. Philadelphia. 'PORRENCE & MeGARR, Pittsburgh prim Howie. itaiallye Corner Pourtn and Market street , J. M. CoELNWELL g.CORN WELL & KERR. CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS, SILVER & BRASS PLATERS; -" And trannfacturara of Saddlery dr. Carriage Hardware, No. 7 St. Clair street. and Duel:team WitY, (near the B:idiat.) New Advertisements, Board Wanted. T NY OUI G INEN WANT Central Part of •the City. _ Addre-s immediately ocl4-ltd HeCOLEISTER aQ BAER . Whole Sale Tobacco Dealers. 10$ , WOOD STREET. Itif AVE NOW IN STORE THE MOST ER competa assortment of Tobacco, Ligars, Pipes and moking Tobacco in the city, which they are selling at the very lowest cash Agars^. All orders promptly attended to. ocl4 VVOOD STREET PROPERTY FOR SALE—Seventy three feet nine and one half inebea front by eixty teet ilepth on Sixth etrePt. Also, fifty five and one-third feet adisin ine tnelabove. A.pply to • B. CUTHBERT & SONS. oel4 51 Market et WAREHOVSE FOR SA.Lik—A. thr Smithfieldo .Ok warehotute and lot of ground_ on street, between First atd Water etreett. Apply to H. CUTHBERT & SONS, 51 Market street. P. XERTS, Wholesale and Retell dealer in and manurao turer of Ladles, 'Misses, Gents, Boys and Youths ; BOOTS, SHOES AND GAITERS; IN ALL THEIR VARIETIES, No. 125 FEDERAL STREET, 0013 -Iyd ALLEGHENY CITY, PA. New Goods, Dry Goods, Baois & shoes, . Undershirts, Drawers BALMORAL AND HOOP SKIRTS FANCY GOODS, FANCY GOODS AT M'Clelland's. 55 Filth stre€ t (do Masonic Mill Building. NE W GOODS. WE ARE RECEIVING THE MAR gest stook of Iv ew Goods we ever brought from the east, comprising among othera—kierman town Goods. anon as NI:IEIAS Also. Trimmings of the latest styles and in area variety. A largo quantity of HOSIERY HO DP & BAL.MOBAL SKIRTS PINE AND WOOLEN SHIRTS. FRENCH CORSETS, And a large supply of RIBBONS EMBROIDERY, FANCY GOODS AND NOTIONS, At Wholesale and Retail. We only buy from first hands and soil at tho LOWEST CASH PRICES. MACliii M & CAL' DE, 78 Market street, selS Between Fourth and Diamond. BUY YOUR BOOTS, BOIS, AND GAM At I he cheapest place in the city, wirreu 1 BORLAND'S, (AO 8% MARKET St., 2d door from Sal. TO BUILDERS St, CONTRACTORS WE ARE NOW MAILIIIITFACTIIRING a superior article of LIME, Wbich we are prepared to deli r from our COAL YARD, - 1509 LIBERTY STREET Best quality of FAMILY COAL, Always on hand as usual. DICKSON. STEWART...Ic CO JOSEPH SNOWDEN, NO TA. RIC PUBLIC, NO. Ail DIAMOND STREET. BONESET. EXTRACT BO NESET. FLUID EXTRACT BONESET. FOR COUGH, COLDS, INFLUENZA BRONCHITIS, CROUP, &e. FOR SALE AT Rankin's Drug Store, 63 Market at., 3d door below 4th 008 PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS, Over 100 Different Styles From 50e, to $15,00. , For Sale by CHAS. C. RIELLOR, oelo-Ikw 81 Wood street. O r,T L -Nt TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS, /„. Itrzeti E MIGRANTS brought out from Liver pool, I..ortoorte Rork , or Gal. rry. way, to New York, in FIRSTVLASS MAIL STEAMERS. for Twenty-Five Dollars. Parties also lowest rates. Apply t brought o esse out by Sailing Val at . O'NKL. Chroniole TD Fifth et.. littsbmvh. Pa lyibtf Oprica or THE Puute., nutraencs Co., Frrrammou, October 9th. P 363. ri'lllE STO CKHOLDREIS OW THIS Ccrapany are hereby notified that t:e an nual electi• n for D , cctors for the etemiretear, will be htld at tbe 0g1e0..N0.63 Fourth stree be tweenthe hone cl ten o'clock a. m., nod lo' oek p s m., on MONDAY, the 2d Jay of November. 1363. L WILES BPJ:tOI3%, ocle-td ueoretary. [ERR New Advertisements. =, ,ECTIOIv - 'URNS. thert adies have Voted MUD ABE ENABLED THROUGH wit otir "sneolal" to give the public, even at this early date; the • Result ::of the Lathes' Vote On a veryimportant q lestion. a result. too, while showing the soundness of their Judgement, speaks lender than words for the pont:WAY of The Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine. The three leading sewing machine compan;es in the:county are the Wheeler dt Wilkon. binge?* Co., and Grover le Baiter, attd waken for the quarter encling.Time 10 :whichdeln shrew how, the ladies voted: , Wheeler &Wilton 7.137 Slower & Co,. . • 4,214 Grover etc Bauer 8,673 Showing that the Wheeles-a. Compani sold during the quarter nanied nearly double tae amr.unt made by either of the other& Ov..r 121.000 of these machines_ have been . sold, ands sh the demand for them islrtaterllist ever. Thiould be desire to buy the regarded at a TEST by those who Pimßuttcht. P. 0. BOX, 184 BEST FAITIJITAWINtqIIitODINE. Offie:, 27 Flit.lt;4l;e't, PEtsburgh. 0014 WM. suslicrEit, Agent 43 Et' EAT Improvement in Eye Sight. gua lli s i an 2 Spectacles,. , • • Mho YOlll VITANT .1 - 01711E1rE SIOUX ILY improved? Tt7 thabusslnu 'Pebbles. They are warranted to tiTRIDIGTHEN;and P sOVE handyßlGTh factas Waved al ready to ds of people Wha twas suffering from defective eight. They are Imported direct from Russia, Which can be coca at my office with satisfaction Theasers arc entitled to be supplied in future first should fait. free of charge,_with those whi.h will always UWE SATIBPACTIUN- J. DIAMOND, Practical Optician 39 Fifth street. Bank Block: Beware of imposters and counterfeiter& oc9-d&-sr • fIORS • E FAIR Collins Park, PITTSBURGH, PA. COIIINS PARK ASSOCIATION 'ill giro the followin7 Premium 3 AMOUNTING TO- SLOOO, Fs,R THE INPROVERENT OF THE MID OF 110 M, THE FAIR WILL COMMENCE WEDN SDAY, October 14, AND CONTINVE THREE DAYS. SONTAGS, ProTium for the best Draught 5ta11i0n.....„ $lO Stallion for all DM, . , ......... 15 PreTitan for the best: ................. ... ... 5 two year cid 5 three year o.el Cott__ 10 family Hozge, Mare GLOVES or Ge d n .............. Tho above Premiums will be awarded on THURSDAY, OCTOBER lath, 1563 AT TEN CPCLOCB. AL, AL DRAWEEI3 FIRST DAY,I34 P. FIRSTPREICIITAL Use FOR TROTTING HORSE, Eve years old, owned In Allegheny county, BRAIDS To To sezond Ho orse rse a ... ... :To Heats 3 i iiatnese rase FIRST DAY SECOND PRINSITTBI, $lOO Fast Fest Doable Ta 0 ..,,,,..,„ Beacnd best Double Teem—. Mile hews 3 in 5. SECOND DAY 1 P. AL PEENITO - Di OF $l5O rote PACERS. First best Ps e'ne. Ho . 2e ..... .......... bacon I best Pacing Horse— .. ..... Mile beata.3 in 5, to haenats, to rale SECOND DAY, SECOND PRE MIUM, $lOO. F. rst best Stallion. eor.d Ironing &a ...... Mile heats, 3 .n 5, to barness, tombs. THIRD DAY„ 14 P. D. GRAND TROT- Ttsw, PirE3llt/I, $4OO. SWEEPSTAKES FOE ALL, First best Horse ........... ........... .-....._..500 Second beat Horse 100 Alio heats, 3 an 5, to barna% to rule Th7eo or more tntries, and no: hes than Three to star:. ENTR ONCE. 10 PER CENT. Sir Entries to b made to the Treasurer eat the ground, a 6 p, m., the day previous to OA l:too. 11.11. PATTERSON, Treaer, JO O H 3 N IWA E . oN - & w-2-13-14 a , , . 0 . bi . d 1 t .pi. t-. 1 0 g • t 0 Z 0 P 4 111111 ~ ' 0 11l 4 0 ; i.,.. ig NO 0 e , ° 1-6 .y , ..". WI 0 4 A O ti m R6' Mil Ei I ' 3 41 A d o !ati 0 Ja 4.T:i 4 8 at 14 2 ,6 g 4 0 0 -,, .4 ., rut Xl t-i 10 0, co :: d 0 d, 0 !mg 0 E-I gl ' ' 641 Q 0 .., :: g - I,D, T A§..l a i i l . m il 1" ll ....- , ._. .. .- _. i , . ..x, . - la II o cl 4 1 ! ! . 0 6. ! 53 : ; i I T I : : g9 '' :1 I . e+ z al. O . . ~ 5 . A 4 .. o..ti -,-,.. J., 0 ' .rI I i 83 lA ' F 3 0 2 4 4 a t; 0 : 4 ' la Q 0 ......, P• , 0 t 0 Cf s :) 12,2 cm A T e l i- co 2 0 -24 M 0 N ;i A '47:-.; • a 41 CS `': ■0 l af lo g - 4 .4 tri v g: 0 A 6 0 .e. 4. f! j &' Oil )§ z .z. v ~.1 OM E . .04 , t , Als Q 04 - a . , A 7, , z , O'R IT, il V PITTbBIIIIGH, NEW Goo:jlDs. HITGIIN d r gAex.E S LENDID STOCK Atew Fall Goods, FRENCH MERINOS, aIl colon, VALOIIER OTTOMANS, SCARLET DELAINES, SCARLET OPERA FLANNELS, WHITE COUNTRY FLANNELS, PLAID COUNTRY FLANNELS, BALMORAL-SKIRTS, HOOP SKIRTS, COBURGS, DELAINES, ALPACCAS, And a fall stock of DOMESTIC GOODS, ocl At the lowest Cash.Prlow ---$lOO GO -«.-s7b 2b Are now opening& Emma
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers