DAILY POST. PITTSBURGH THURSDAY. NOVEMBER ««• 1868 The Union o’ l * *< The Constitution w ■*- *» Where there 1- no I-uw there la no Freedom. OUTS IP reading waiter. First Page. —The Necessity of Petting Down the Rebellion. Fourth Page —Spicy Letter from Gen. Leslie Combs to the German Aboli tionists—How Sal Disgraced the Family : Marrying an Editor —A Bride —A Snake Story. thanksgiving. This day beiog set apart by the Presi dent of the United States and the Gover i or of the State as a day of thanksgiving, and onr assistants like ourselves being de sirous of observing it in a proper manner, we will be obliged to forego the publics j tion of the Post to-monow. While re taming thanks for our, comparatively, bappy condition, let us not forget the thousands made desolate by our country's civil strife, and fervently pray that before another year rolls round, we. may again be a united and happy people. THE FUTURE OF SLIVERY, Independent of the moral of the exist ence of slavery, it would have been a bless ing to our people had the institution never existed among us; and it will be a day of thanksgiving and rejoicing when we hear of its final extinction in the United States. We are not prompted to these reflections, becau.Be of the horrible pictures painted of the enormities of slavery, by the fren tied imaginations of Abolitionists ; bad as ilavery unquestionably is—in its mildest form—its worst phases have never reach ed the depths of degradation aud guilt at tributed to them by our Jjforthern fanati cal declaimers. Were the entire slave population of the South fitted for emanci patiop, we should be glad to see them all free'to-morrow. As it Uwe hope to see Borne scheme of gradual emancipation adopted, by which the institution will speedily die out and be forgotten. Our principal reason'for this is, that it will remove a question of agitation and con tention, which will never be allowed to rest, so long as there is a slave within our country for canting political hypocrite and hollow-hearted pretenders to whine about. The great mass of the people North and South have no interest in this eternal slavery question, at all. Those of the] South who favor the institution most, are thoHe who make the moat oat of it, in dol lars and cents. Those in the North who are most clamorous against it, are persons! who care nothing for the slave, their sym ' jathies for his condition extending no further than how it will effect his party. | One Bet—the slave owners —desire to extend and perpetuate the system, as a means of making money, while our Northern agitator denounces it in order that he may ride into power and consequence. We do nut. of course, in these remarks, mean that all those who declaim aguinst slavery are hypocritical ; we allude exclusively to t_Kr>CQ ttamfttrnynoa Utlvn UOA lha ijiitnl u>n fcn political purposes. As long as the Southern slavery propa- were supposed to be all power ful in the counsels of the nation, we saw bow subservient to them were many lead ing Northern Statesmen. Mark Daniel S. Dickinson, Benj. F. Butler, For ney and a thousand others of the same sort, who were, acccording to their own teachings, the natural allies of the South. Look at this same set of reckless and dangerous persons now, in their denunci ations of their forme r Sonthern masters, as they were a few year* Bince of Northern abolitionists. When the great Silas Wright, in 1846, annoucei his opposition to the extension of slavery to free territo ry, these “Northern tools of the slave power” opened their batteries upon him, and never closed their warfare, nntil death relieved him of their persecutions. So with Col. Benton ; he took ground against Calhoun’s system of propagandistn, and he, too, became a marked man. In all the schemes put for ward for the prostra tion of such loftv Statesmen as Wright and Benton, the Northern men, alluded to, always assisted in the assassination. The most ingenious of them all was, per haps, Robert J. Walker, President Polk’s Secretary of the Treasury, and he, too, at the present time, is fierce in de nunciations of slavery. If we look South, we perceive another class, who, but a few years since, regarded slavery a 3 being a divine institntion ; but who, now, falling in with the Administra tion's idea, declare in favor of its extinc tion' Among this class is that stupendous demagogue, Parson Brownlow, of Ten nessee. But a few years since he appeared in public debate in Philadelphia, as the champion of slavery, baaing his arguments upon the scripluree 5 he now comes out as 4 informs us that he favors its destruc tion. From these evidences, and they are but a few amotig thousands at our command, we . feel satisfied that the future peace of thi B -now dietraeted and bleeding country, re quires the total extinction of slavery amongst us. We. dd not allude to its eradication tins year or next, or whether it shall disappear in this generation or in the next; our idea is that its final aboli tion, at some fixed period, is necessary for the;fature peace of this Republic. It mast be removed from the arena of poli* tics, or and scheming deagogues, will use it, not fur the benefit of the slave, but for their own aggrandizement. Could the effects of the commotion occasioned by the incessant '-on alluded to, be confined to those who riot in u w e could afford to let the tempest rage. L "-fortunately, however, this is not the case. Wo Ml PD ff rr Mihe. But therms a rainbow of premie*- shining through the gloom. One of the results of the present rebellion will be the weakening, or, perhaps, defitCQCti on or one of its causes—slavery in the South With that will the death of Abolition among ourselves. Theu, after the terrible efrpe rience of the present time#, oar cotlntry will be recreated, and increased civiliza > tion, on its luminous wiDga. will spread its blessings upon a regenerated Republic, destined to be the greatest nation which the Bun has yet shone. THE PITTSBURf?3a>? POST-. ’ TIH’USDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26 1R36 ai-*T~^Kae*Taat~mtmm ™»P———e■» * SANITAKY MI'PPiIEM We hope our citizens will at once pro j pare and send to the rooms ot the Sani tary Commission on Fourth street, such 1 articles as are necessary tor the sick and i wounded soldiers, now urgently requested by the military authorities at Chattanooga. This organization is certainly most com mendable and useful in its character, and enjoying as it does, an official relation to I Government., has extraordinary facilities for reaching at once, ahead of all others, I the field and the soldier. Supplies should Ibe promptly furnished, and they will be I instantly forwarded, as they are impera- I tively demanded. Let Congress Call a National Con vention. The lime has come when we are admun • ished, i y unmistakable signs and portents in the political sky, that something must be done at once to arrest our downward march to inevitable bankruptcy and ruin, or be content to Bee at an early day our country blotted from the family of na tions. As far as even the Northern States are concerned, we are no longer a political unity—we are as nomadic as far as law j and order and legitimate authority are in | volved as any of the roving tribes of sav ages upon our distant western borders. We are now living under a centralized military despotism. The Constitution, the old bond which cemented the StateH together, and resting upon unconcerned I voluntary public opinion, and the law of I reciprocal love, for obedience to its re- I quirements and obligations, has been vio- I lated and overthrown ; and in place of the I peaceful instrumentalities it employed to I ensure the enforcement of its decreed, we I have Conscription, martial law for muni Icipallaw where no war exists, Provost I Marshals domineering over civil function janes, and carrying elections at the point I of the bayonet ; in tact, all the machinery I which distinguishes an autocratic and ab I solute irom a republican form ot Govern -1 ment. It is the sheerest folly to suppose fur a moment that in a territory bo vast as ours, ! embracing Bach a variety of divergent physical capacities and interests, and among a people unaccustomed to restraint in their opinions and social habits, public tranquillity can long be maintained by the arbitrary and high-handed exercise of nsurped authority. The recent riot in tin city of New York, the extensive combi nation m the mining regions of this Stat to resist the draft, and the murders, as sassinationsand violence consequent there on, have a terrible significance; and all Bpeak in “trumpet tones” a fearful warn ing to the “powers that be” how danger ous it is to trifle with the inalienable right o of the people, and provoke “the might that lies in a peasant’s arm s ” If despotism is the parent of anarchy, even in old monarchies, hoary with tkr frosts of centuries, and where ages ot ac quiescence in the “divine right of king? to rale has cowed the native epirir. un trodden out the manhood of the primi tive subject, how much more pro It 6 ‘ nvi- ’ it be iu ibiß respect in an infant Rej-übh yet in its swaddling garments, whc-»e tr. ditions and historic annals are all firr.iv against uuwarantable assumptions ol now er. and where freedom is worshipped a 4 the common birth-rigbt of every oi'ut-p Therefore, if the people begin, a~ soon they will, to discover that the Government is their natural enemy— that instead of keeping within its !egnirrat< orbit, and attending to the duties pre scribed by the Constitution, it constantly transgressess those bounds to harass ami oppress them, they will no longer look upoD it as worthy their esteem and sup port, but turn thetr eyes to their respec tive Stale Governments , as the only refuge for the protection of their lives, their property and their linertiea. Whra that time comes, the Federal Government will be powerless either for good or evil— l» will be a mere myth, a thing of the pa.n. Without the States, and the people of the. States , it can have no existence. In view of this conjecture of afl-dra. let the Congress that is about to meet atone in some measure for the errors and committed by its predecessors, by passing an act authorizing the Governors of the re spective States to provide for the election of delegates to a National Convention c! all the States willing to participate, in ordered take action in respect to ’he pre sent disastrous and unsettled state of the country, and endeavor to find a remedy and specific for our national ills. genius ef a bleeding and disrupted t'nion demands this measure. The spirit of a broken and fragmentary Constitntion ap peals through tears of blood for this tardy act of justice to the raigtity and atupend ous cause c f outraged humanity. A. M. W. The Exchange of .Vrisoners The Boston Advertiser an c-arneet and able administration paper, in commenting I upon the exchange of prisoners imbrr* gl:o, is forced to confess that, so far as the controversy goes, the rebels seem to have the best of it. The Advertiser says: “The multitude of words has da-kened counsel hopelessly, and from a reading of the whole we can say that one thing oniy is clear —that in such a discussion as thir- General Meredith is no match for Mr. Gnld. Were not the latter weighed down with the odium of a cause which bad ns birth and existence in fraud, it would be strange it his adroit pleading did not leave the impression that the best of the argu ment is probably on his Bide.” Upon a full discussion of the whole oi* pute the Advertiser comes to the sensible conclusion that the government cannot do better than Ould's proposition “that all “officers and men, on both sides, be re “leased, in conformity with the provisions “of the cartel, the excess on one side or “the other to be on parole. n The number of prisoners in dispute is only seven thousand men, aud it is better that we loße their services than that our unfortunate soldiers be starved to death While willing to make this concession for the sake of onr poor Boldiere, we do not wish to be understood as indorsing the conduct of the rebels in this dispute. They have probably the right on their side in the controversy touching the ex changes ; but their conduct in torturing and starving the Union troops s.o unfortu nate as to fall into their hands is unspeak ably base, and is filling the whole North with unspeakable indignation. Much Consolation Forncy’e Press, speaking of th- Con scription Act, says: “i’he last cousrrip. tion taught us many iessons. It was made under a law which had been framed; it. was said, with uunouul ca;6 , a taw which taxed the wisdom of our legislators, and professed to obtaiD the largest number of men with the least amount ot trouhbi and oppression. The good iutentious of the legislators did not prevent the law from becoming unpopular; and we are very much afraid that those who supposed it would entirely recruit our armies wore dis appointed. Congress meets in a few days, and it is possible there will be an effort to change the law, making its provisions perhaps stronger and more stringent . The lately issued order of the War Department, enumerating the diseases and disabilities that wiU exempt the citizen from service under the conscription, indicates a deter rninaUon on the part of the authorities, to he more rigid hereafter than they have bteeiriieretofore. This is a necessity that can only be avoided by prompt volunteer ing now*- !. jW&muftt h&ve.iaeu to fight the war, or else the war will come to an end. \i W H t ki.itH U ASHL\r« Midem's Message. TK-. Htßt- lhat the President has no; commenced to write his annual mes* sag' • Vacuus** ot' the non-receipt of de i ar'rneuta: report!?, ia untrce, as it is well Thai he has completed that portion relative to the policy of the administra tion in ite bearing on the war, especially that portion referring to the status of States in rebellion, and the institution of glavery therein. Bosteed. It ha? transpired that Bmteed was ele vated to the bench of the United States District Conn at the cpec ; al req iest of Governor Curtin, bucked by John V.’. For ncy, to repay bis services on the stump during the lat° can rase in that State ; so that ;t appears he r.-presents Perinsylvania, arul not New York. For this relief to the honor of th« Kmpire State, many thanlcß ! Prominent Republicans denonnee the ap poi:.;me..t in unmeasured terms, anl none defend i l . The -New t.u«p<‘i or ibo War Depart Ihou shall hate George B. McClellan, with ail thy heart, and with all thy son!, and with ai! thy rend. This is the first and gr*rtl c m-mat.-iur ;i:. and the -ic-cond ia like unto it. Thou shah hale Horatio Seyniour. 1/pon these two commandment? hung all the contract!' and ad the 2>rojits. The Keren I Alleged Lake Pint. There is every reason to believe that the recent alleged plot to destroy < ertair. cities on the lakes id nothing more ihan a fable, ot llw same kind hs that relating ic a*i alleged ro, spiracy in Cincinnati to re lease u iot ot Confederate prisoners ; and that it was put in circulation, or n r least originated with certain well known par ties hire, who arc also responsible lor the latter tabncaiion These parties a r e no torious Aboliti minis, high priests and . chief pisiarrid ih» ‘'Republican" O.iorcb, intently ••loyai 1 mppm.icrs ol “thiGov erntr*'-:;'.’' and have long been distil guieb rd !c- J;eir hitter hatred of “c-j per h*-ad ' and “butternuts." as they desig ; .lit v uli members of the Democratic party. Now that the Administration has arch a firm hold cf the reins of power, a id baa decided to scruple at the use of no means whatever to perpetuate their tenure ol office, the public may expect to hear more >1 these Titus Oates conspiracies very shortly. When it is remembered that the habeas 'orpus is aboli-ht d —that the whole < vu \y :i v!ri..ul;y u • d.-r martial law—that u pretext is nil that i? i.t-edrd for :h<- mid Mgir a: re?’ M i: *• it. ti- c-tmcuH and purest pstno;s in ihe c r ’,ry --and that oi ce hi res’.-d, th-• v.an h incarcerated in a outre -iir ! ,>r years, at tfte plea‘ure o: h" mu;., amt without relief from the law r or h•"*pc ol r* ’.-asc and when it is Juither remembered dial the next Presidential campaign is » ion t > ripen. and that it will n ‘‘a good iring” tor the Administration to have Certain prominent men and influ tr.nal Democrats out >j' their trap, to that 'h.-ir inriui-nre may not he exerted eguin t ‘the G ;.v,.rnir.erii ' • when these ihti.gs ar«- rr ''.-unhi-rt-i . .in n »h»* d.v-.nti i that ’i.' /. u r.w-;., [j-ui rr.auv a }' i •;, s- Ofttes who will tir» as eager as his intv .h ub »•- ' • 1 ' d• •• 1 1 * ! >*-M :iu article up u he p-'r - 1 •: - k .-fl . n thi ! vrg “ I'l.r ,-Mi i-f- I'.iiG i r s«-wir.g is Ko ;‘ r ternp'.ibly s trail ' c im-ninm. Wh* r- a the =h.-ic.v , • . : ac ! or-a V Where nr.- tn n., : , Mian’hropiPlH ami -oou nbou' bu'. an Irt-cdcttl \Yf..-rr hi r> i»T; 1 Ahhiti'V iu tvi: o roi! up iheir f*y«-» m holy tir.r r< i ab, iu» flmny, ihe worM ku*d of slavery ex.fi* ir. ->ur very rnk!hi .' I>o ou:Cunr |, Ho nun.HUro preach h-np arrd Hitmen? H,f»cou! ** h hb<-u’ the rowl-- ’i-'-!i '!"••■ t <' . f ’ wh •• ] nh. .r uloU'l !<-l JL-Vwt' : f \\ !■ I ru»l thr* so railed rf spec .abi- women, whu in luvriry M;.l • **>r, do someth.i g to aid the ur.forN.■. e oi their own *rx .’ Will they not step forward and lend, their intfuenro lo al’-v-aui the sufferirgH of their less sisters “Do they invipius that going to i hurt h array o .n purj and tin»' iinr-o. and at tencujg a •< w meeting- (tunrig the week yclept scw.ig c.rcles. where scandal n tin presiding cm'o, will carry li-en, tr t3»wve",'' i : v J • h<- v will -hort. When ’ b*-y fraud before a ius God. will rrt t quea»ion be pat to ihetn iiavp vc! ;e i lie hungry c.d clothed ih» linked'' Hr»v.' yr.:i i ■;. f* an vthl ng 1 ■ rp heve the disirff*? of yrur poor sisters, or havr you been proud, arrogant and el fish mini 'r 1 ,c that tiien/ !. 11 r- yrur'- a go. The '-i, rrti{ w.i.~ .... i-.ffdav:! M E. C. 0,-. .-vate Register givt-s ::;•!> iiowing pHiiiCubtrM oi ;h.- case-: i‘. b"'-'0 »';»rk n r nl Moms wt-n- uu' huM>. -: • her. C;ark's le-Uimony is tha‘ 1 !• : v i .i:nr rv.-rr»H‘i a man in tbe woods, »: Morri- lirnw up bi =« gun ai:d sh">r mv.. bfif- \wc th-T. Ouri-nl ih- i,. .udi-rr i YP.-'iai and ! :>okn sol ip:i I'Mh »:«v-r to reveal the secret The < i»Mi hhM been kepi tor nearly ninv year* But ’'rnurib r wi : ! out. M —Clark’a oouHUr-nc-' c.i’-nued to cry out '-gains' him and Uistuio him wrli vibiocs cl ghost by night, and compunctions of dread and horror by clay. He could iitand it no longer, ar.vl bejic-- lh>- ouih b(.u:,d ;f*erct, so long locked ap id Lis tronbied breast, was published to the world. Morris now tbem..rder ha-- i-x* posed, arcuses Clark r-? hbvir.g i omirnlted the foul deed, but admits that he helped to bury ;h.* u-dm, and il.a‘ they had sworn ’-igtiiher m-ver to revr.vl ihe .secret. It is said th if Morris u &d Clark recently quarreled kbon: some buKiue.oS matters, and that (.lark made trie expose on thie account. After the- preliminary examination be [ •re the justice of thr peace, Clark aud Morris i;oth pointed out the place where they had buried the murdered man His bones found and exhumed The name of th f - unfortunate victim has not yet been learn- d. We have also heard that ihe mUrdcfed maii was a kind of railroad coniiaoior, and that be bad iu his possession at the time ot bis death some *7,1)00. which wa divided between the two, but as f o its correctness we canuol say. Legal Tender Notes. T. <• W. k , c •.■iTi-spohds-i.: oi ;h New York Post -vru* *, ' M.r. Chas*- w ll no; ..s»ue any cno..’ legal tendei t-.xcepi of the kirui hearing mlaraoi. H- has authority to iss:.** four*’ hundred uoliinnc of this description ol legal tenders '--an-.g fivo per inter 68t. This win entity bis wants during the next year 1 tie Secretary bus no power to issue uotea except tor th* na tional banka, and enough legal tenders (without interest) to replace the notes which .hftve been destroyed, and it ia as sertedliy.hiß friends here that he will not ask Congress to give him further authot ity to issue the notes without interest un- t. u uy be t - a small amount, iu litres ul dangerous etnngency in the money nmrkt •. l'he notea bearing five per cent, interest. and made legal tender will on doubtedly be issued in sufficient quanti ties to pay the debts of the Government after the resources from the duties, inter nal taxation and sale oi five twenty bonds are exhausted. W e need no longer wonder at the Pari j ipij.s who thronged the theatres during the worst excesses ot the Fro uch Revolution, In the .midst of this terrible civil war which is draining the best blood of the country aud mortgaging its property with a debt our children will stagger under, we here in New York are spending more money in amusements and gayelms than ever before. In our city columns to day will be found a p'atcrnent concerning th pnblic balls which are to take place durh g the coming season, from which it wih be seen that our young people are determined to drink, dance and be merry, no matter how many of their friends or relatives may be dying on the Rapidan or Tennessee. All the public balls are engaged for every night, to the end of February, and some of them far into April. Private balls and parties were never so numerous, and : s for theatres, they were never so thronged. It is quite safe to say that this winter will see twice the money spent on ball*, per* ties, theatres, opera, and dresses to attend them, of any former season in the metrop olis. This state of things cannot )a>t always. The intoxication the country iB now laboriug under, will be followed be fore long by a season of profound depres sion A T . Y. World. fcTySaNU MORE GREY HAIR! UXInIA.NTH.UR BY LMNU. r V 11 E It E*J X.” VE >i ATo H, tor Restoring arid Beautifying the LUir. This i< ud article bui recently introduced into ’his coontry, but has In p been favorable kDn Bold Heads. 6. It will restore the JSritur.il Srrrrtiont. •i. It will remove the Ihindnijff and Itching. It mil mtike thr [,'atr S\erase* o the fealp. It n not a bye. contati.? io- Nitrate u: Silver. or • i.y ( tn-r iti.roiiebi njori us to cithe .km <-r Hair Price*. t.'N K DoLi.AK. For i'Jc by all respectable Drop Up*. >.MUN JuHNcoN, General Agent. noi 1 - corner Fourth and Suiithtielj ?ta. OIL, Carbon Uil. Carb..n Oil, Carb n Utl. i ~ -t Oil. C 1 rheju '),! car bo • Oil Carr.'-n 1 'ii. Carbon Op, Carl-*n uil, A fur;h..r r cduct on in P;ioc A further * eduction in Pn-e. a :u;ihe- Ko«tu ti.-n m Pr ce \ fur'her I’.o uc’i-.-i m ► n ■/*. A iurthe.- Krdurti'-'! -n !’• t, 11. e o«*f t W hue ii I a ‘ ' c'-n: •< i er Oh ,1- n. Tn- b*-- - W bite ■ i! m A rerit.-* p»r Oh I i 1 lil i»ruv* c*i-o». At .!o-fc;h Firurj.p'i* I>rii fc e, A' .. ,i.l: * h u '■ :.cr . i :hr l*.«n, ; ,u. i M -;rr • - ii,c 111 :i;- n i i M.w■ .<* t '!>*•• f th«* I>i .m :.d »■ i Mir S* •• r • For- N : lv u-b ,v I -..-i . A--, P. - :■ i P ar..l - \ Pu. i .<■ :P •; D, an- 1 -•-. in A.-b, 'iriflp' rii M' h-:|. -1 ■ it VUIAI is It * * :• u th*'. i.Uck.r,-' prey wi, : *ki-r> in fi minute^'’ < RIHTAHOKO'S DTK! hat t i. ilkcs red hair t<- a rich and , uuij. brown ’’ 4 KiSrAl>i>HO > fl DTE : W ha' i 1 s o i-.-hiiH- iinthr.r hme. lead i. 1 r« 11* <1 hi I v cr i KIHTA IM»K()'N ! I’-, c lov*t trout > nr.-! r. r-srkly applied ’ < KISTA IXIRO'K : W.nn' i * i- mio : i |r o' t - ]>rH' [,i- j'f.r’ i« ;^,!n b;it 1 1 \ oiri >1 iif'e.’* the m<> ticmwr ’ ■ " w M truUciU.Otl hyJ. t H l.*-TAD I ;K< >. n • Hou«-. New \ .>rk £■•.! «• vor j when-, ar. ! a piie.l nv all [lair Drew.? •> Pi!'•*«*. i\. $1 :u. and*' prr box. nc-or lir,* t *•“ mill - * iii U * i- : - KKA.NDRLTHS FIMA... W 111 IK br iTniro.Ui f i ill? arc ?<> potor, t i r y ii U •lc-'e.i.ei b they are harm!«*w i.-cad Ihe i'.il.e si •bn bn of tbe man r.f r pc.- (fir*, and delicate cuialw, are certain t" root,-. e *ir. n;cri,i-e of 1 ealth tr'in the me r, f tho-c }\\; hie- ed ot ii oh v en. it ha? hern said by au able phynin- ; • h..- tn'-di-ine always benefit? aud i;r. w 1 Wherein is the suporlath o quality. Tbo a relh Fills have no p.«wer • r action but u |- n mi I-ure humor? in the 1... i*«i. Tho siezo - r,iy up-.n the itupun ics in hiid art ui;d the parts utVeciod hydiSfase: ni l the par:? involve! in dec a-el’i t •<;> are . per.ted upor. and cle?n-ed from all fonlpe:-*. and reinfu-e i with " Life” by the wr.r.- dorfu) curative powers cootnincd and inherent tl e most jdjrlj famed Bkandrkto'b Pills M illions People whose tires appeared t- he at the last ebb. worn cut by fever's cuo-urnDg fires, hy c nsamption’s in'idious advances, b> racking torn/enls of in tlammatory rheuuiatn ti. hare been cured by the u e ot these piln.. persons are iivini wifersos. and arc residents in every cry of America, Prircijn Office. Nd. £9l Canal rt.ree', New York. Po.id by Thomas Redpath, Diamond Alley Pittsburgh, Pa., and all respectable dealers in med cine. n ./-i f : -to comniMPnv*!8-the ad. • ver i.-or having been restored to health i? r» tow weeks by a vary siinplo romedy.a tor ha.» ing suffered several yeats with a severe long af ection, and that droad disease Consump'i r. anxious to rn:,l'6 known to hi j follow-sufferer? the means . f cure. T'. ail who desire it. be will send a c j.y of the prescription used i.freo ot charge,) with tho direc tions for preparing and uring the gam?, which they will find n 9ure cure for Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis. Coughs. Colds, Ac. The only object of ihe advertiser in sending the Pre scription is to benefit the afflicted, aud spread niorination which be concojves to be invaluable. aDu he hopes every sufferer wiil try his remedy, as u wiil cost him nothing, and muy p.-ove a Moving. Partios wishing Uio [.rcK.-iptwa will I'Udret--, Kev Kb vi a.'-.D A. WILSON, William* burgh Kings Cuunty, New York. Tue a’ ovo remedy miy be obtained in Pifg. burgh of Joseph Fleming, Drngsi-r ft 5- tmd Aw NEVER CEASE! ffvir Neither doer Dr T<>Rl As' Vmm.m Lin imenr over t.ul t.. su - .|. i‘ o most . Call on the agent and gel a pamphlet wit b e full Jencrijo t.m of this magic remedy. None genuine unless signed S I TOBIAS. Depot. Cortlandt street. New Y.rk Sold by all Dnurtrrits nol9-Sw.«lAw HTrPENTWAND LOVERS OF I*s? CHURCH MUSIC.- The well koowr composer, M*- JOHN ZUNX'EL. Organist an i Director o! Music of Henry Ward Beecher's Church, New York, will visit the city during the 9©*i month to give a short coarse of instruction in Ba-m-my, the Organ or Melodeon, and Choruc •Singing, connected wi'h public performanree on the O gao, and Sacred Concerts. Circulars, stat ing terms, etc., may be obtained at the Marie Stores of H. KJeber & Bt. . and C. C. Mellor nol2-tdecfi QALLAQHJSE—On Wednesdav morning, the 25th inst., Hannah Qallaghxe in the 73d year of her age. The friends of the family are respectfully in vited to attend the funeral, on Thursday after noon. at 2 o’clock, from her late rcsileuce on Fulton street, above W ehater. c ■ n-u. t > i. !i .ii : : u.w |;j .• :i un:i. r. . a .1 ~f .. w, ro uouoeed -.i e ( S ? < RIMT A IMIKO s T.OWJDOJM AJXJD INTERIOR HUVAL MAIL CUMPaNY t, 9 (KLKBRATEDREMEDIES BLOOD POWDER AND bone ointment, A certain cure for Diseases of Horses and Cattle, known to and used only by the Company in their own stables from 1844 until the opening of the Railway over the principal routes. After the gen eral qm of these remedies in all the stables of the Company, their annual sales of condemned stock wore discontinued, a saving to the Company ex* ceedlng £7,000 per annum. In 1853 the London Brewers’ Association offered the Company £2,000 tor the receipes and use tho articles only in their own stables. BLOOD POWDER A oertain ouro for founder, distemper, rheuma tism, hide bound, inward strains, loss of appetite, weakness, heaves, coughs, colds, and all diseases of the lung?, surfeit of soabbers, glanders, poll evil, mange, indammation of the eyes, fistula, and all diseases arising from impure blood, cor rects tho stomach and liver, improves the appe tite, regulates the bowels, corrects all derange ments of the glands, strengthens the system, makes the skin smooth and glossy. Horses bro ken down by hard labor or driving, quickly re stored by using the powder onoe a day. ..Nothing will be found equal to it in koeping horses up in appearance, condition and strength. London and Interior Royal Mail Company’s CELEBRATED BONE OINTMENT, A certain core for spaviß, ringbone, scratches lumps, tumors, sprains, swellingß, bruises, foun dered feet, chillblaijs, wind galls, contractions oi the tendons, bono enlargements, Ac. Blood Powder 500 per 12 oz, packages; Bod« Ointment 50c per 8 oi. jar. No. 320 Strand, Lon don. McKeoson A Rorbina, New York. French. Richards A Co,. Philadelphia. TORRENCE A HcGARR, Pittsburgh Drug House, iub:dlyc Corner Fourtn and Market tAreot Editor uf iht Daily Pott.— Dear Sir.—With your permission i wish to say to the read ers of your paper that I will <»end, by return mail to all who wDb it 'freej a Receipt, with full di rections lor making and usinga simple Vegetable Ba rn, that will effec'ually remove, ia ten days, Pimples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, and all Impur ites ol the Skin, leaving the same soft, clear, smooth and beautiful. I will also mail free to those having Bald Heads, or Bare Faces, simple directions and information that will enable them to start a full growth ol Luxuriant Hair, or a Moustache, in less than thirty days. All app ioatior.B answered by return mail with' out charge. Respectfully yours, THOS. F. CHAPMAN, Cherniy ocs-omd 831 Broadway. New York »^^aiFLOURLNGMILLFOH9ALE, The subscriber offers for sale the AL- 1 LiiitUaNY CITY MILLS situated in the Fourth Ward. Allegheny City. This well known Mill has ••cen rebuilt lately, and contains four run of French Burrs, with all the latest improved ma chinery fur manufactur ng the best brands of Flu,ur. Enjoys a good local as well as loreign custom, inis is a rare ct ance fer brsine a meQ. and .nvite a: y wh ■> wish to engage .n a profilabe business to call at iho Mi>L where terms will be made known. oc2l-3mdAw J. VOEGTLY. J. U. roft.HWKLL bam'l. kbhh A KERR. CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS, MLYKK& BRAbS PLATERS And u anuficturers of .Saddlery t t-v-ted without pain by the u?c of < >udn *•« »i>potato*. J. F. HUFFMAN. D E N Ti S T. \ II wr»rk wa’rantod. 134 Binlthfi«-](1 Street, u -dly PIT ISBUROH, o tz i ; a i Improvement in Eye Sight THIS ~ ~|| FEBbLE Buasian Spectacles, YOI* WA NT VOTR EYE SIGHT improved-* fry the KuitftiAii Pebbles, ft’ev nre tv >TRENGTHi£N.and IM -1 - 11\ y Tlf f, SD <>( people what was sufferin from defective flighi. ihey are Imported from Bussia, h can be see ; at tny offioo with Efltisfaction I'.i- hncern aro rnritiod to be supplied in iutnre . lirst should fail iroe of charg l ?. with those r - «-h will alway- G 1 K r aTISFACTIuN .I DIAMOND. Practical Optician, Fifth , «troot, Bank Block. Beware of impi-srer? and counterfeiters. ‘ o'.'-diw JFST OPENING- - A FIN i: STUCK uF He ad - Or n a m en ts, lilllPS AND TtllMlkft A lull line of VKIVFTKIBBOiS Also, ‘ox'onable Gloves A Hosiery, * uf every style and ty suit every body. HOODS, lor Hi.le and big, SCALING CAPS, NUBIAS, UEADDBKSSEs, HANDKERCHIEFS, NECKTIES, EMBROIDERIES, SMaBl WARES and NOTIONS Merchants and all WHO BUY TO SELL AGAIN, Arc invitid to give u 3 a oall, as we offer strong inducements from a Large and well Selected Stock. MACRUM «fc CLYDE, 7b MARKET STREET, Between Fourth and Diamond. JJjIRBIH ARRIVAL OF NEW DRY GOODS AT HLCil* «fe HAfKK’N Corner of 51b and Market Sts. FRENCH MERINOES. oash.mer’er, FINE WOOL PLAIDS. n.oAKS apH SHAWI.S. COUNTRY BLANKETS, WHITE and PLAID FLANNELS, GREY TWIL'D FLANNELS, SCARLET OPERA FLANNELS, A full lion of DOMESTIC GOODS Always on hand at the LOWEST CASH PRICES, no 9 --•- , JNew Advertisements. QYSTEBS! OYSTERS! FRESH BAL^ISIOEE. Parties purchasing Oysters for Thanksgiving Day, should call at HAGUE’S Wholesale and Retail Depots, Corner of fifth and Market. No hou3ein the trado can supply you with a bet te** article nr on more reasonable A SALOON Fu H COOKING OYSTERS is con nected with each establishment where Oysters are served up in the most approved f-tyle on reasona ble terms, and always frestx and large n ;2f> 2 l NEW \VI\TtB MIUIIS, WE WOULD CALL THE AT TEN tion of bayer3 to our : took of HIHTEB GOODS Ail .the’newest'style* offorogii aiiduu^.i-uc CASSIMERES aND COATINGS With a largo and choice so ecticn o' SILK AND mmu VESTINGS, W. H. M'GSJii & CO., Corner Marktt Squaro, Allegheny City, Fft THIS OCT.- 3 ®! PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS. Morose Albums, Holding ft) F’ictae^. $1 50! $1 50!! $1 50!! ! Mor.'.vn Album? Hi.-wtures $2 50! $2 50!! $2 50!!! Mcr.c.o AituTf Hold ng 40 Picture*, $3 501 $3 50!! $3 50!!! Morocco Albu.’-.ft lidding s<> Pieiu'es. $4 00! $4 00!! $4 00!!! Morcccv; Air-urn* Hi Min? t'O Pictures, $4 50! $460!! $4 50!!! Morocco A Ibums Hold ng 30 Pictures $5 00! $5 00!! $5 00!!! Morocco Albums 11, 1 ling luOPicures $6 60! $5 50!! $5 50!!! Leas than Wholesale Pii?** l , Let? t v an Manufa'v.urers' Prices, Loas than Auction Prices. Every Album warranted, and rat’afaction to tho parchaaer guaranteed. l argest, Greatest AfMorunent aun and Picture Eob poriuui, d-. 13 Oppo ite the Poatoffice, Fifth st. PiribHURDH- Wholesale and Retail DRY GOODS CLOAKS. J. W. Barker A Co., 59 MARKET STREET, Goods by the piece or package, or in length to suit, at Eastern P. ME RTS, Wholesale and Retail dealer in and manure- SONTAGS, Ladies, Mieses, Gents, Boys and Tooths BOOTS, SHOES AM) GAITERS, SCARFS, IN ALL THEIR VARIETIES, No. 125 FEDERAL STREET oc!3-lyd ALLEGEFNY CITY. PA, HOOP SklBT MAMFAOTOKL rgtUE WtH'U) H£- JL SPECTFLLLY inlorm the Pub u- tbit they have opened the sure No, 57 Fifth street, undor Masomo Hail, with a large assortment of Hoop Skirts, of every description, manufactured by them selves, and they are prepared to offer unusual indecements both to 'Wholesale and Retail Buy ers. The material used in the munuiaeiuxe oi our skirts is of the veiy best quality, and. being manufactured on the premises, the work ii guar anteed. All skirts purchased at our establish ment can at any time be repaired. Wee. dially invite all buyers to call on us before before pur chasing elsewhere, as we ice! confident that the extent of our business enables us to oiler in ducements not elsewhere to be obtained. GuLDbTEIN 4 GaKPUNKKL, se2-3md 57 Fifth st.. under Mw- nic llali- ANTIC CEMENT V . F . *** A T M O * * M a (!) r l C wol4 u t. It Ic tJi ’epared tv (JeuiOut tuc .'s Piaaoi. foil 7 octave rosewoo * Pianos are : ally warranted for $250; Marshall A XraTer'a Per.or Com Pianos fors22s{ Prince's Mtlocfecms. the best made— prices from $55 to $220. j CHARLOTTE BLUME. 43 Fifth street AtTI ftofo f|mt lor the above T "*fnn»mfr l 3 * . © © h a v £ T JI 4 g a g «l 5 « 53 s s j 3 g * i»< < * * ■ ? P O . H 1 A N* D No. 40 Fifth Street. 113 FEDERAL STREET. PXXTBBUUGH prices. 6'W A dver t i s e m ent s, jgITD-ED SHOKa, Rivlted Boo*. Warranted Shoe*, Warranted Boot*, Beat Whiles, Best Boots, Copper Fastened Shoes, Copper Fastened Boots, uf overy dencri ttiou for . Men, Women and Children. Guaranteed togive satlafao ion and F REE U^| If unsstiafact .ry, at t'oneeri Hall Shoe Store, 62 FIFTH STREET. & WILSON'S ■ssriato AWAHDED THE HIGHEST PREMIUMS AT THS 1 STERN,VTIOSIL EXHIBITION, LONDON, IX6B Industrial Exposition, Paris, 1861, In competition with all the leading Sewing Ma chines iu Europe and Ameriea, and the l\ r.e-l rtalcs AKricu’tural As ociation; Metro i V.e•hanPs’ In titute,Washington; Frank* 1,1, ir k itat.e, Phi alelphW; Meoh&nies' Aasocia* turn, Button; American Institute, New York; Maryland Institute, Baltimore, Mechanics’ As sociation. Cincinnati; Kentuoky lnstitute. LoiAa ville: Mechanics’ Institute, San FrandUoo; and at every State and County Fair where Exhibited this Season. UPWARDS OF 125,000 OF THESE MACHINES Have already been Sold, A fact which .fipoaks louder than words of the success and popularity of Wheeler A Wil ioq'n Family Sewinjc Machine—the cheapest Machine in the world, BECAUSE IT 13 THE BEST, Every .Machine warranted for 3 Years. iTgT'-MEEB RISK NOTHING IN PCBOHABISQ. LSKTRUOTIONS FREE. Always happy to exhibit and explain them. ASf Circular*. containing an explanation of the machine, with testimonials from ladies of the highest social ctaking, given on application, either in person &§7 mail. Will* DIMMER STKKET, Three doors above 6th atreol. Jacob hkluiii WOCLO XBFVitr paricul.r ..auction to hi* otodt of tfernuiS Wine- «»j Fr. :.ob Lrandia, which W C? lecccd ued ilepvnnl by tunwir Pamllll. ... churches coaid depend ou tabJubmen: the bbst and Liuttjs ol »U tooB. equal tqany in thooltr id ways on hand. Abo. pure oldityo Whilkv the best Rectified Monongaheia. |AOK THE LAI>LES.—AT M>CLRI -F LAND'S Auction House 6& Jfsh JtSf will be found a Iwko and varied Ladies' and' lii»er failtaorai BtotrE-r SUppsn. Bakins, Hum Over «h©£*£. it™* 1 * l v_ * **" LOUISVILLE. K.Y