locleven Ei1E4.100911311, PUBLISHED DAM trlkithedt+ BILORPIESDU BY JOHA W. ounancy. 0/7103. So. 11l Sommi' Rotuma STEM DAILV .ettsr.ss. rrrrEss Gists PEA Wing, payable l 0 the SMUT. • =Wed to Ilubeoriberi' out of the City at szvzis Doxxam • zuni. AlritnE. TIMM DOLLega PIPIT OREM 701 Mrs Oirs DOLLAR AND savatrTY-enrs OBITS POE "TERRE NOOTIIIII. hiviulablv in advance for the tins Old , dered. • • SNP Aillvortbeimeata insartea at she =sal rates. ILI soistlinto a Einar& • inns wit2c-maraos_me ,eruatis, wiled to Ba l marpors oat of the - Ott? - : at Fon% DoLaasa Iraa AstMt. ta. adraada..- CARPETINGS. REMOVAL. F..& E. 13.:0 RN E ELLVZ .13.11110 1 76 D PROM till CHESTNUT STREET, Opposite the State House. to their NEW , WAREHOUSE, •04 011ZSTNUT STREET% Es the "SUED BUILDING," and have now open their TALL SToOg OF NEW 904 CHESTNUT STREET. €A.RPETSI CARPETS!! JAS 13. ORNE, CARPET WAREHOUSE; CHESTNUT STREET, BELOW SEVENTH STREET. • I have received, BY LATE ARRIVALS FROM EUROPE. A large assortment of NNW STYLES' . CARPETING, 4 0eMprisingeome new kinds of goods never before offered in this country, for parlor furnishing. Included in Our variety will be found the WRENCH AUBUSSON. CENTRE CARPETS ; Also, FRENCH VOLANTE. 'TEMPLETON'S ENGLISH AXMINSTER CARPETING. CROSSLY & SON'S WILTON VELVET and. TAPES• TRY Do. S. CROSSLEY & CO. 'S celebrated BRUSSELS Do. With a large variety of other makes of BRUSSELS and TAPESTRY CARPETING. SNENDERSON'S CELEBRATED VENETIANS. With a fall variety of American makes of three-ply and Ingrain goods, all of which can be offered. at considera tble reduction from last season's prices. JAMES H. ORNE, CHESTNUT STREET, BELOW SEVENTH STREET. ee33•dim W. BLABON dt CO. N-04 • MANUFACTURERS OF ia.ILACYTX3C.Wi, (No, 114 NORTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Offer to the Trade a full stock of FLOOR, TABLE, AND CARRIAGE COIX4 OLC:1'1 1 =03, 1111-GLAZ-BD OIL CLOTHSES. AND WINDOW 484-2 m BRAD 44GLEN 'ECHO!' MILLS, li-BRMANTOWN, l'Ek. 140CIAIILIJM & lILLEDYAOTIIRERS. IMPORTERS, ASD DEALERS IN C .A.ICPETIN 4G-ii3, 'OIL CLOTHS; dbOt. winmougA 09 CHESTNUT ST., OPPOSITE INDEPENDENCE HALL. 163.3 m wiIiaTREER A CARPET WAREHOUSE. 31111 W Ctl s l.Xt.V o 3lll , 3 ' Xl•Tsark3. Ail the leading styles of NELvit BRUSSELS, THREE-PLY, INGRAIN, AND VENETIAN C.A.lt,p3urriv - crs, grow in 4*o. and Enna at THE REDUOIiD PRIM ifer J. nacKwoop, 882: ARCH STREET, Two DoorAplow NINTH, South Side. WOODEN AND WILLOW WARE. IL IrRA.NCISCUS, waotßsAta Dawn: IN YARNS, BATTS, WADDING% WOODEN AND' WILLOW WARE, AIL QOM WINDOW OHM% 'LOOKING GLASSES, CLOCKS, EANOY, BASKETS. tto. 018 MARKET and 510 COMMERCE tRa. - suit Rut - ALL , 1863 WHITE & TECHIN, • to. 423 MANNET STREET. WHOLESALE DEURRS WOODEN AND WILLOW WARE, MOONS, CEDAR WARE, OILXILOTH, LOOKING GLASSES, FANCY BASKETS. CORDAGE, &o. tor Meats for HALM, HORSE,. & BoIrDEN'S pier Farr max-AD USTINe CLOTHES-WRINGER," THE MOST RELIABLY WRIPORY SOW IN USH. soft-Im ( J. R. COYLE & CO., Wholesale Reams In YARNS, BATTS, CARPET CHAIN, WOODEN WARR. BRUSHES, &c. • 1110 MARKET EIiEET, PHILADHLPHIA. SEWING MACHINES. LON(1-LOOKED FOR COME AT LAST! MEE FERFXOTION OF SEWING MACHINES. (IiPLBS OP THE OELBBRLTRD ifIAHENCE SEWI3II MACHINES Can be seen at o. X 39 CHESTNUT STRUT (second floor). war K t o all persona interested in sewing machines are in ml call and examine this Wonderful Machine. It been the object of the FLORENCE SEWING MA WE COMPANY to supply a machine free from zahe jections attached to other lirst-class machines. and miterme patient, untiring labor of y ears and a liberal oxpealitare of capita in securing the first mechanical *Lien, their efforts have been crowned with snecess. and .11W now offering Jo the mablic the MOST PERPECT MACHIN& IN Tin WORLD. Among Its ana l iadvantages over all other machines, may be meta , Ilst t makes lour different otitehea on one and the .306meWschine, each stitch being perfect and alike on tothlidee of the fabric. 240hantrIng from one land of attach to another, as walks the length of the stitch, can readily be done while the Wahine is in motion. gdz ver yistiteh, i 8 perfect to Itsekr, making the seam mete and uniform, combining elasticity. etrcnzth and dt R has tile reversible feed motion, which enables Adteperator to ran the work to either the right or left, or ity any part of the Beare, or fasten the ends of seams -extant tnrning the fabric or stopping the machine. h, It is the most vapid sewer in the world, making .81 stitehee.to each revolution, a and there isrpothor 7 ,1 11 . 1a 10n dose largerange of work as the It does the heaviest or Attest work with equal fa wity, urithout change of tension or breaking of thread. dt. It hems, fells, binds, gathers, braids. Quilts, and whers and sews on a raffle at the same time. th. Re gimp/fatty enables the most inexperienced to ante it. Its motions are all positive, and there are lathes &wrings to get out of order and it is adapted to ,silabuis of ell eloth-work, from - thick to thin, and is isote. al gthh, The F LO RENCE SEWING MACHINE is unequal di,in beauty and. style. must be seen to be appro. a Waad no the FLORENCE, at No. 139 CHESTNUT hut. an stain. au3o43m AIIIIMIETICALLY' SEALED PRIIII'S AVD VIGETABLBS. 000 dozen cane fresh Peaches. 1,000 do do do Pineapples. 000 do do .do Strawberries. 000 do do 'do Blackberries. ,-4100 do do do Whortleberries. 4900 do do do Cherries. •.4:000 do do do Toihatoes, , its., 31 hand aad for sal/ by - REODS9 & WILLIAM% .101-Bouth WATia Most. , _ , 7. , i . ~ , .., --_:„..,,--...,-, „ -;.- -, -•_ - \ \\A \1 . 1 11, , '''''. " . 44)1r.'14 *- . '' . ''' ' ''': ll -4'' -::: .. , t.... (.... ..„,... •,.,,,.„;,..-„... -. ~,,......5.,\,,,,, f fr:/...- 1 - 4 ,' ~.,.„ :!' ? , ;?;.;,.:::; . : 0 ::..;,' , .;.,* . tx-, ft . . r 7 , -, e k ,.. , AC T A_ . '-„:„ i•-_-rz.__„_ :: -__ ~.-__. il t ~ ' •::•, 1\1,!:t/..;..___,,if. - * > --%•4< :".::?..„: ......: .- ;!:-!;:1 - ' , t ,,.1' w 4 '. . : •:' - --- '..' _ . ~, _ . •••-•' §-:, .› --,P. --=--•---:- ', • .. .''--•:•_ - _ <.: je . ._,_. ~.17,Hm i :..,...:,...:,::,.,.:„... _H_____.,:„. ..1i... r. , -5.z. ,-- -u.,., -- ", ,IPJ, - - ire --- , NI r , r - 40111 A 4 .. , -N-..... NE - - : . r - - • . ~, . , ---=',:. M - 4''i; ..„" 4. 1, °:',.. .-:',:,imr 0 .,...?. ;i , tl'.7:-it :' ' ' e'._l C ''''....'Y - fl' L';.. ~ , ,yr , < ,l 7. ' : .',.r::: , , , r4. ,i,e,,, , ,,..,. , .,. , .-,-,,: . , .._: ii eci,- i ~.,-".:-::::-77i::,(loo..6,61-;,..,;,.v.,...,i...,:,,,,.; _ i , , „ . - -- ,114 ,.. i z...13 ,- . ____..... - -i.- - ----__ ~ ' . ~.. ._ .... , ~.,--- ..4.1 Mill '' 74.7. '' :. - '`:. idgiioiii: - :•;1 -, .': 4 .S *- =- - '1,41'' - '• • ' -4 ---i'" ' •,.. ja ,-. ' „- - ,- -" , --I.' -..".,,--,_------, . ..,.. ~ - ••• i ..- . , ---...-- ...—..... ._,....._ -- P -......-- ----..---',4,2:r1 --..'--...- ........ - .• f VOL. 7.-NO. 64. SILK AND DRY-GOODS JOBBERS. JAMES, KENT. BANTER; 4% CO:, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF "DRY GrOODPS, Woo. %39 and HU N. THIRD STREET, ABOVE RAGE, PHILADELPHIA. Have now open their usual LARGE AND COMPLETE STOOL OF TORSION AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, Amon . which will be found a more than usually atiras live variety of LADIES' DRESS GOODS; Also, a fall assortment of NEREINACIK AN D nd COCHROO PRIN PRINTS. a PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. To which they invite the SPECIAL ATTENTION OF CASH BDTERs. anre-Em ' 1863. 1863. C,.11 OIOE FALL AND WINTER DRY GOODS. ROBERT 'POLLOCK - cfs 004 IN:PORTERS AND JOBBERS, NO. 311 MARKET STREET, Offer for Bale a large and well-selected Stock tot Fare! and Staple DRY . GOODS, Principally of their " OWN IMPORTATION, 'needing the latest Styles in SHAWLS AND DRESS GOODS, Malty of which are confined to their Bales. and cannot be found elsewhere. All of whinh they Cofieri the • niOet favorable terms FOR CASE, or to approved short time buyers. oal-bf CASH HOUSE. M. WILLOWELL & 615 OHBSTNIIT STBENI'. NAPE NOW IN BTORN, DRESS GOODS, BLACK AND FANCY SILKS, SHAWLS, BALMORALS, RIBBONS, KID GLOVES, &a., SCO. Bought exclusively for cash, and which will be sold at a small advance. se3-3m FALL STOCK SILK AND FANCY DRESS GOODS A. W. LITTLE tC3 CO. No. 3915 MARKET STRIIBT. 1863 . FALL 1863. DR's GOODS. HOOD, BONBRIGHT, di 00_ WHOLESALE DEALERS It FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, No. 435 ILLRICST STREET, PHILADELPHDL; The attention of the TRADE is invited to their lasso Eiook of STAPLE AND FANCY GOODS. Among which are chOice brands of Sheet ing and Shirting Muslins, Madder Prints, De Laines, Ginghams, and SNASONABLD DRESS GOODS. ALSO, MEN'S WEAR IR OMAN vABIBTY. GREAT INDUCEMENTS OFFERED TO CASH BUYERS. ta.22-2m CLOAKS AND MANTILLAS AT W HOLE SALE! THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE CITY! CLOAKS AND HANTILLAS AT WHOLESALE! THE CHEAPEST CLOAK STORE IN THE CITY 1 COUNTRY MERCHANTS will find a great saving by examining our immense stock of CLOAKS and MAN TILLAS. of the newest FALL ADD WINTRR STYLIA before making their machete/3, as doing business at a very small expense, and exclusively for cash, we can' ■ell 20 per cent. cheaper than any other house. -- D. WATKINS & 00., - N. E. corner of NINTH and. CHERRY Streets. Ceres. LewnsoN, D. WATEINS. I an94-mwrlns. 1863. FALL AND WINTER 1863. DRY GOODS. RIEGEL, WIEST. 6a ERVINi INPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF • DRY GOODS NO. 47 NORTH THIRD STREET, PRILADBLYGIA. We are constantly receiving large lots of all kinds of fresh and desirable Goods. Merchants will find it to their advantage to call and examine our stock before purchasing elsewhere, as we can oiler them inducements unequalled by any other establishment in Philadelphia. CASH'BU YERS, AT WHOLESALE; Are invited to examine our FLANNELS, BLANKETS MERINoES, POPLINS, BLACK SILKS FANCY Ana% IRISH LINERS, WHITE. GOODS, DRESS GOODS; and other articles adapted to the senor'. NAMES R. CAMPBELL & C3o.* 7,27 au2 . 1.2m cHzertrwr STSRBT. 1863 FALL IMPORTATION. 1863 EDMUND YARD da co.; IMPORTER% AND /ODGERS, SIMMID FOCI DRY GOODS, 517 CHESTNUT and 61* LIMOS Street, HIM now opened their Tall impOrtation of Dreu Coedit, DICERII7OS COS, REPS,_ ALPACAS, DELAINES, MAID NAN ST Y I A P N E D D BLA L KSi SLLKS. Also. A taro assortment of ,fnifJiW/sS t _ • • BA.L.DIORAIs SKIRTS, WHITE GOODS LINEA L EffiIiBuIDERIES, &Li whleh they offer to the trade at the LOWEST:MARKET PRICES; aa33-3m THOS. MELLOR & Co., IMPORTERS, Noe. 40 and 4* NORTH THIRD STREST. We !write the attention of the trade to our large stook of HOSIERY, GLOVES, SIIIRTS, DRAWERS! GERMANTOWN FANCY WOOLENS, LINEN CAMBRIC HDXFS., 44 LINENS, AND SHIRT FRONTS. AUTUMN. 1863. DAWSON, BRANSON, & CO., 51. W. COR. MARKET & FIFTH STS., (501 MARKET STREET.) INVITE THE ATTENTION OF CITY AND COUNTRY MERCHANTS TO THEIR STOCK OF FRENCH AND ENGLISH DRESS GOODS, SILKS; SHAWLS, &c. Cull Buyers; will Mild tt to their lotereit to Examine our Goode. • T. I. DAWSON.. ..... 0. BRANBON. . • • ».J. 0. SONGAILDNEI. CABINET BURNITIURE. rIABINET FURNITURE AND BIL: MAID TABLES. MOORE & CIIMPION, No. 261 SOUTH SECOND STMT, in oonneation with their extensive Cabinet businece, are tow manufacturing a snperlor article of BILLIARD TABLES. and have now on hand a full sup_ply, finished with the MOOSE & CAMPION'S IMPROVED CUSHIONS. which are pronounced by all who have used them to be M iVile t° 4;rgalig le al finish of these Tables, the manu facturers refer to .their numerous patrons throughout the Union, who_ are familiar with the character or their work, . .the ir CIAYrHING. GENTLEMEN'S OPErNING DAY. FIN - F. CLOTHING-. FALL STYLE SACKS, FALL'STYLE PALETOTS, FALL STILE WALKING GOATS WANAMAKER da BROWN, OAIC HALL. s, E. comer EMU and MAR= Me*, ANDRIQT,.*AGEOOH, & CO., • FRENCH TAILORS, No. 608 CHESTNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA. PAUL ANDRIOT. (of Pitio ) late Prinetfal OnttOr and Superintendent of Granville Stokes. JAMES B. MAGEOCII, late Pants and Vest Cotter of Granville Stokes, and _ D. GORDON YATES. ♦ holee Mock of Seasonable Goods always on hand. French and Gem= spoken, selT•3m Ej DWARD P. KELLY, JOHN KELLYL FORKERLY pECESTNIIT, ABOVE SEVENTHS LATE 10)6511 OHESTNUT STRUT. TAILORS 14:R 8017TH THIRD St.. NEAR THE EXCHANGE. Have just received a large Stock of Choice FALL AND WINTER GOODS, AND FALL STYLES, TERMS CASH, at prlcee much lower than any (dime list-glass eatablishment. an22-tf pjacK LASS. PANTS, $5.50, At 704 MARKET Street. BLACK CABS. Perms, 616.60, At 704 MARKET Street. BLACK CASS. PANTS, 116.50. At 701 MARKET Street. BLACK CASS. PANTS, 65.60, At 704 MARKET Street. BLACK CASS. PANTS, $6.50, At 704 MARKET Street. GRIGG & VAN GUNTER'S, No. 704 MARKET Street. GRIGG & VAN GUNTER'S, No, 704 MARKET Street. GRIGG es VAN GUATEN'S, No. 704 MARKET Street. GRIGG & VAN GIINTEN'S, No. 704 MARKET Street. GRIGG & VAN BUNTER'S, No. 704 MARKET Streit. mh24•tf GENTS' FURNISHING, GOODS. 606. ARCH STREET. 606. ME SHIRT AND WRAPPER DEPOT. as BLEQAIT ABSORTMEINT OP SENTO' FURNISHING GOODS, AT MODERATE PRICE& /01131 PREMIUMS AWARDED FOR SHIRTS, WRAPPERS, AND. STOOKS G. A. 'HOFFMANN. Successor to W. W. KNIGHT, ekin ARCH STREW. 606. VINE SHIRT MANUFACTORY. Thee bscriber IMPROVED CUT attention to him IMPROVED CUT OF SHIRTS, Which he makes a specbllty in his bushman Also, mon stantly_receiving NOVELTIES FOE GENTLEMEN'S WEAR, J. W. SCOTT, GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. No. 131.4- CHESTNUT STREET, ja2l-t( Fonr doors below the Continental. JOHN C. ARRISON, NOS. 1 AND 3 N. SIXTH STREET, • PHILADRLPHLC HAS NOW IN STORE AN ELEGANT AND EKTI3N-. SIVE ASSORTMENT OF GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS FOR FALL AND, WINTER WEAR. • Also, Manufactures from the Best Material and in a Superior Manner by HAND: Fine SHIRTS and COLLARS. Shaker Flannel SHIRTS and DRAWERS. Heavy Red- twilled,Flannel vaßre and DRAWERS. Englinh Canton Flannel SHIRTS and DRAWERS. Buckskin SHIRTS and DRAWERS. Cloth TRAVELLING SIITRTS. WRAPPERS, STOCKS, TIES, ac. And sold at the most nioderate prices. ' ocS PAPER HANGINGS. PHILADELPHIA PA.PER. %HANGIN GS. HOWELL & BOURKE, CORNER OF FOURTH AND MARKET STREETS, MATO7FACTUREF.I3 OF. PAPER HANGINGS AND WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS. Offer to the trade a large and elegant assortment of Dgoods. from the cheapest Brown Stock to the finest ecoration& N. E. CORNER FOURTH & HARICIT STREETS. N. B.—Solid (howl. Bine, aid. Bnff WINDOW PA. PSRB of every grade. sell-2m GAS !FIXTURES, see. 517 ARCH. _STREW. 0. A. IT'A.N . I IRS t 00., YAIMPAOTIIthiRI3 OP CIEVANDELI•ERS AND OTHER GAS FIXTURES. LLzo. French Bronze Ftread Orniznetits. Porcelain and Mica Shades. and'rs variety of FA.I4OY GOODS, WHOLESALE AHD RETAIL. !lease call and examlitexpplli, •• S ILVER-PLATED • WARE. SILVER PLATED WARE MANUFACTORY. TEA BETS, CASTORS, WAITERS, ICE PITCHERS, &c., &c. WIT-MR MOSS, seß•2m fi%s SOUTH FIFTH STREET. DRUGS. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & Northeast Corner 'FOURTH and .RACE Streets, PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN. FOREIGN. AND DOMBSTIO WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS, MANUFACTFRERE pp WHITE LEAD AND ZINC PAINTS, PItTTY, &a. , AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED FRENCH' ZINC PAINTS. Dealers and ansnuters supplied as • 'VERY LOW PRICES POE CASH se22-3m YARNS. W 0 0 L. CLIP OF 1862 Medium and Fine, very light and clean In store, and daily arriving, coneignmenta of Tab and Fleece. from new clip WOOLEN YARNS. 18 to 30 cuts, Rue, oa hand COTTON YARNS. No. C to 30's, of Ilret-class makes. in Warp, Dandle, and Cop N. B.—All numbers and deaoriptions prom:med at once on orders ALEX. WETILLDIN de SONS. anßl•mw&ftf SPECIAL NOTICE.- BARTELL'S ALL-BLASS . FRUIT JARS. lIEW CAPSULE FRUIT . JARS AMERICAN AND FRENCH GLASS SHADES. BEAUTIFUL FERNERIES. HARTELL & LETCHWORTH, se26.tdeBl N0..13 North FIFTH Street. TO MANUFACTURERS. OAST-IRON BEATER PIPES, of various sizes. for sale in quantitiesfo.suit puzehasers. _ _ a. W. at • 1 IsrAlt collar " • Pi.AR , R94i1L.T.111/W Most. PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1863. CLOTH HOUSE. WILLIAM T. SNODGRASS' WHOLESALE AND RETAIL CLOTI-1 HOUSE, No. 34 South SECOND St., and 213 STRAWBERRY St, A FULL STOCK OF ARMY CLOTHS. NAVY CLOTHS. CASSIMERES. NOBBY COATINGS. CHINCHILLAS. VELVET CLOTHS. FROSTED BEAVERS. ESQUIMAIJX. BILLIARD CLOTHS. BAGATELLE CLOTHS, &C. - ocl-124 IMPORTANT TO THE LADIES. PALL AND WINTER STOCK, FURNISHING GOODS. Bassi& Grath from 14 to 25 cents, Loom lincitaback Toweling, -LoomTable Linens from 75c to St 00, 'anion Table LinensAt 72 cents, Thickaback Towels—fine assortment. While Flannels of every description, Bed Flannels, Plain and Twilled. Gray Flannels, Plain and Twined. Six lots of Fine Napkins,: Thirty Pieces of _Russia Diaper. at TORN H. STOKES, 702 ARCH Street. N. B. —One lot of French Scarlet Cloth, for Cloaks, a superb article. se26-tf BWZKETS I BLANKETS BLANK- . . The Largest .assortment of 1314.A.NIECE'rS, AT . THE LOWEST.P.RICES, OTPERED WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, BY OOWPERTHWAIT ds N. W.- 'OUR. EIGHTH AND IHARKET STS. selOtde3l VERY IMPORTANT TO THE LA DIES I Staten Island Taney Dyeing Establishment. OFFICES 47 North. EIGHTH Street, - Philadelphia. and 5 and 7 JOHN Street. Drew Yo rk • NOW IS THE TINLE TO SEND YOUR VELVETS. SILKS,: CLOTHS, .5.11111N08S "AL A TRW, a l ° •' . To be dyed or cleansed in the ilnest manner, at this ol d and favorably known . establishment. With. an expe rience of nearly forty years, we present ourselves to the public this season as standing FIRST IN OUR- Lam BARRETT, NEPHEWS, & CO:, sel7-Im 47 North EIGHTH Street. SKIRTS I SKIRTS I SKIRTS I M. A. ANEW - NE PLUS' ULTRA SKIRT sr , Oen only be 'found at . - :r 1 No. 17 NORTH EIGHTH STREET / PHILADELPHIA, OVER THE _WAX FIGIIR4 ger lone genuine unlese,stamped E. A. JONES' NE rim ULTRA SKIRT, sell:ls3m - 17 N. EIGHTH MEM OURNING CLOAKS, ALV-A- MANTLES, SHAWLS, 40., JUST OPENED, EMBROIDERED CLOTH CURTAINS, SHEPPARD, VAN HARLINGEN, & ARRISON, CHEAP DRY GOODS, CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, and WINDOW SHADES. —V. B. AR CHAMBAULT, EBB - PERTH - and MARKET Streets, will open, this morning, from auction,. Ingrain Carpets, wool filling, at 37, 45, 50, and 62 cents; Ingrain Carpets, all wool, 62, 75, 57, and $l; Imperial Three-ply Carpets, at $1.50; Entry and Stair Carpets, 25 to 87 cents; Rag and HeDIP Carpets, at 25, 37, 60, and 62 cents; Floor Oil Cloths, 37 to 75 cents; Gilt Bordered Window Shados, 75 to $1; Stair Oil Cloths, 25 cents; Buff and Green Win dow Hollande, 37 to ga cents._ _ _ New Fall Delaines. 26 to 28 cents. • rich Plaid Dress Goode, 31, 37, and 50 cents; Stella and Blanket Shawls, $3 to dila; Bron, Drab, and Black Alpacas, 3 Linen cents; Black Silks, $1 to V. 75; cheap lot of Handkerchiefs, 10, 12, and 16 cents; Coats' White Spool Cotton, 8 cents; Pine,' 6 cents; Hooks and Eyes, 3 cents; Windsor Soap, 6 cents. Wholesale and Retail Store, N. E. corner ELEVENTH and MARKER Streets. sel4-mwf-lm EDWIN HALL & CO., No. 26 SOUTH SECOND Street, would call attention to their Stock of DRESS GOODS, embracing all the novelties of the season, from the lowest price goods to the moat OXDOII. dye Styles. Rich printed Merinoes and. Cashmeres. Rich and neat style all-wool Detainee. Figured. Mohair Reps. - Plain Reps and Mohalrs. Fancy styles of Valenclas. All-wool Plaids. Rich French Chintzes. Plain all-wool Delaines, double width.' Plain all-wool Delaines, single width. Black and Colored Alapacas. Wholesale as well as Retail Boyers are respectfully in vita. to examine our Stock. - sel7-tf 18 North FRONT Street RETAIL DRY GOODS. JAMES B. CAMPBELL c CO4_ No. 727 CHISTNIIr STUNT. Are now opening thetr To which they Jayne aktontion. viz IRISH POPLINS, SILK-FACED 'POPLINS, ALL-WOOL POPLINS In the most Desirable Shades. - • • PLAID . REP FANTASIE„ PLAID POPLINS, EPINGLINES, • ALL-WOOL PLAIDS In the Richest Designs. ji AND 6.4 MOUSLIN DE LAMES, BLACK, COLORED AND PRINTED. 6-4.BLACIT DE LAINES. - 6.4 COLORED efERINOS. all Shades. WELSH FLANNELS.,- SHAKER FLANNELS. BALLARDV ALE FLANNELS. SACKING FLANNELS. OPERA FLANNELS. SCARLET FLANNELS. GRAY AND SCARLET TWILLED FLANNELS. JACONETS. CAMBRICS. ' CHECKED - MUSLIN& SOFT C AMBRICS. NAINSOOKS. ' SWISS MUSLINS. MULL MUSLIN& CAMBRIC DIMITY. TARLETONS, Ste: LADIES' KID AND LISLE-THREAD GLOVE& LADIES AND GENTS' COTTON HOSE. BLANKETS in all Sine and Qualities. BALMORALS AND SKIRTING. RICHARDSON'S FRONTING, MEDIUM, AND HOUSEWIFE LINENS, TABLECLOTHS AND DAIMASKS, NAPKINS DOYLIES. AND TOWELS, CRASH, HUCKABACK. &o. • seSO-tf NEW MOITRNING STORE. 926 CHESTNUT Street M. & A aryAs ag Go AT REDUCED PRICES, For Dining Room, Lthraries, 1008 CHESTNUT STREET. se%-mwkflOt CHEAP DRY GOODS 10514 CHESTNUT STREET E. M. NEEDLES TB RECIBP7ING DAILY ALL DESIRABLE NOVELTIES ' Or TEI LATEST IMPORTATIONS: In LACES, EMBROIDERIES, • WHITE GOODS, HANDKERCHIEFS, VEILS. dm. as 1004 CHESTNUT STREET (APENING OF FALL DRESS GOODS H. STEEL St SON Mos. 713 and 715 North MIRTH Streak Have now open a choice assortment of FALL AND ;WINTER DRESS GOODS. Plain Silks; choice colors, $126 to $2. Plain Moire Antiques, choice shades. Plain Black Silks. 90c to $2.10. Figured Black Silks; Fancy Silks. Plain All-wool Reps and Poplins. alllerdOri. Plain Silk and Wool Reps, all colors. Figured and Plaid Reps and Poplins. Plain French hierinoes, choice colors. lot Plain French Merinoes. - choice colors. S 1 se6 COMMISSION HOUSES. ARMY STANDARD SLUE ON HAND AND FOR SALE BY FARNHAM, KIRKHAM, & CO., ocl3•Lt Nos. 230 and 232 dHESTNIIT Street BAGS 1. BAGS 1 BAGS 1 NEW AND SECOND HAND, SUNLESS, BURLAP, AND GUNNY BAGS, „. Constantly on hand. JOHN T. BAILEY t% CO.. No. 113 NORTE FRONT STREET. Sir WOOL . SACKS FOR SALE. ta204111 UMBRELLAS. UMBRELLAS 1 UMBRELLAS ! ! WM. A. DROWN & 00.. NO. 246 MARKET STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Manufacturers of • STRUM TIBERIUS. inlS-2m CARD AND FANCYJOB PRINTING; gRRITAILTC4 WOWS, U.S. . , Ett Vress. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1863. THE WAR IN GEORGIA AND TENNESSEE. REBEL DESIGNS IN THE REAR OF CHATTANOOGA. The Recent Skirmishes and Captures— . Chankes in'taseerans , Army. A ro.ig,la Among. the :11elle10. WASHINGTON,MOnday, Oct. 12,-,-The plan of the enemy appears to be not to make en attack in front, but to compel us to abandon Chattanooga by simply hOhjing Us in our present position, with their army in our flout, annoying us with their artillery, and breaking our, lines of communication by cavalry raids in our rear. The last part . .of this programme „ is now being parried out, by the Wheeler Cavalry, which managed to cross the Tennessee at Cotton Port Ferry, neer Nashville. After °roaring, the main body moved right on in northerly direction. A part of the force fell in with the train of the 14th Corps, near:Anderson, in the Becivatchie Valley, stimpeCied off the teamsters, and destroyed between 200 and 300 wagons, about thirty of which were loaded with ammunition, and the remainder with clothing and supplies. The mules they could not run otr.they shot, to the number of several hundred. As they were leaving the scene ,of destruction, Col. -,—, commanding a cavalry division, came up with apart of his mom mend, consisting of the 24 Indiana, Ist Wisconsin, and Ist East Tennessee Cavalry, attacked them at once, and bad a running fight with them to Dunlap, in which one hundred and twenty rebels were killed and wounded, and sixty of our men, including nine officers, - were killed and wounded. Our men used their sabres alone: GBNICRAL OST/BliS On the 7th st general order was- issued, in accord since with instructions from the War Department, consolidating the 20th 'and 21st Corps into the 4th Corps; and ordering their commanders, Generals McCook and. Crittenden, before a court of inquiry at Indianapolis. The same order announces Major General Rey nolde as chief of staff in; place of General Garfield, who vacates the positioi to assume hie neat in Con gress. All the divisions of the army will be consoli dated into six, to form the 14th .and 4th Corps, with Generals Thomas and Granger as Commanders!. The three under the former will be commanded by Gene rale Baird, Davis, and Rousseau, and. those under the latter by Generals Wood, Sheridan, and Palmer. General Brennan will bs chief of artillery. - Gem*Roaecrans denim officially - to have brought any charge against Generals McCook and Critten den. It is generally believed officers will chow a much better record than the reports circulating in regard to them'warrant, With the assistance of reinforcements already arrived .movenients will soon be made that it is hoped will drive the enemy from' our front. The army is still well supplied with everything but clothing and blankets, the want M which in the unusuallfeold weather causes considerable suffer ing. All the wounded able to bear removal have been sent North. The casualties in the late battles will not be less than 15,000. . On Thursday the rebels from the opposite side of the river Bred into our wagons and'ambu'ance trains passing over the Valley I/bad, wounding two men, and killing and wounding several mules. ' They seem determined on embarrassing our transporta tion in every possible way. ➢IOVEMBNTB Or THE ENEMY. The forces of Wheeler, after burning a portion of Shelbyville, were attacked by Colonel Crook, not far from that place, on Wednesday. We killed 1.20 or the enemy, took 300 prisoners, and three pieces of artillei y. The rebels were pursued by our throes in the direc tion of Fayetteville, overtaken, and 300 more prison ers lost by them. At lan accounts they a were making' their way into the interior, closely pursued by our cavalry, which is regarded sufficient to take care of Roddy has crossed the Tennessee with a thousand Men. He passed through Larkinsville on the Mem phis and Charleston railroad on Thursday, and made off in the direction of Winchester. . On Friday night they drove in our pickets at the tunnel, this side of Cowan. Some damage was done by throwing down stones, but to no great extent, and , the obstructions have been removed. - . - General Rooker sent a force last night to that point, but the rebels did not_ enture an attack. There seems 'to be good reason for believing that the rebels had a fight among themselves on Monday, in which five or six hundred were killed and Deserters who have come in confirm the statement, but difti3r as to the cause and force engaged. One version is, %hat The Georgia troops refused to cross the. Chickamauga, and that Withers' division was lent dowirto comperthen3 ;.and the other, that Ten nessee troeps had refusa4 to Olmy - vittorxi - and - ttfliT' 1. - ,ongst,-,.,,-.,-a,rceirwer.--sent against them, - with the result indicated. - . The lines of battle and the flash of the guns could be distinctly seen from the mountain tops. It will be remembered that this occurred atthe time of their cannonading on Monday, by which we concluded this was the nature of their trouble. QH.A.TTANOOGA--GEN. MUGS' . REPORT. From the Mobile Register and Adverticer, October 4.] "Quartermaster General Nelms arrived at R 080• crane' headquarters on Saturday, examined his po sition, and declares it cannot be taken short of a regular siege, which Bragg does not seem to be at tempting."—:- Yankee telegraph. , Gen. Ridge, we take it, pronounces his opinion as an engineer officer, for the Yankee papers lately told us he had been turned out of the Quartermaster Generalship: General Meigs is-one of the beat en gineers left in the Yankee service. He is a man of very large brains, of strict integrity, and high per sonal character. But on the subject of the "Union" be is a monomaniac. With all his brains, he has not the common sense to see that while he is lending his talents and strength to a base and bloody fac tion to reduce. the South to its yoke, he is at the same time fastening chains to his own limbs, and those of his own fellow citizens in Pennsylvania. He does not know that today, as 'a citizen of a free State, not himself- a freeman. Mr. Seward may "ring his bell," and General Meigs is hurried to prison . , without accuser or accusation, or trial, and there is no habeas corpus to get him out, for Mr. Lincoln has abolished it until his further pleasure. While he deludes himself with the idea that he is fighting for the restoration of the "Union," his masters at Washington know better, for they have decreedthat the rebel States have forfeited their - Union rights, and must be crushed into subjugated proiinees. . But this General Meigs has arrived at Honoraria' headquarters, "has examined his position, and de clares it cannot be taken short of a regular siege !" Nowthat's a consoling and flattering'account to send back to the North, of the condition of the grand army which, lees than two weeks ago, was on its triumphal march to take possession. of the Empire State of Georgia and the adjoining Commonwealth of Alabama. The grand army routed from Georgia by "old granny Bragg," as Roseerans called him be fore Chickamauga; has burrowed itself in the earth at Chattanooga, and the best engineer in Lincoln's service is able to telegraph him the cheering intelli gence that-.it will hold it unless ousted by regular siege. 'But if Roseerans sticks to Chattanooga mud, bow is he going to subjugatel The Georgians won't be subjugated at his orders, issued at such a ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. THE FIGHTING .ON SATURDAY AND • SUNDAY. Desperate . l3ravery of Kilpatrick's Cavalry OUR HUNDRED CONFEDERATE PRI S ONERS TAKEN _Lee's Plans Defeat-ea. The following particulars are 'obtained -from pat: ties from the front : ' On Saturday the rebel General Stuart crossed Robertson's river and captured nearly the whole of the.lo6th New York, who were doing picket duty, but-the - 6th 6th Michigan Cavalry made a charge and reciidured most of the prisoners.. Soon after. A. P. Hill's corps pealed our right flank, and we fell back to James City and held the rebels in check with artillery. On Sunday morning our whole reconnoitring force commenced falling back towards Culpeper, our rear being covered by artillery. General Bu ford's Isaiah's , fell.baok, as it happened, faster than . Kilpatrick, who brought up the rear, so that the latter was out off by .Stuart getting in his front and on his right and left flanks. A charge was or dered, and General Cuater's brigade gallantly drove the enemy into a thicket of woods, from which they however recharged in larger number, and our ca valry then made a grand charge in their front and flanks, - cutting their way through and joined Bu ford. Oar; artillery WAS brought into play during the day"irc covering our rear, and with terrible effect. In one instance the rebels charged upon one battery (111,A Artillery) ; when the cannonters mounted their horses, repulaed the charge, and returned to their guns, and , gave the retreating rebs canister, killing and wounding many of them. - - In this combat our cavalry performed the unpre cedmated feet - of making successful charges simulta neously in three directions. , General. Kilpatrick led the , charges with recklese gallantry, cutting his way through several platoons of infantry drawn up in the road, in the midst of a fire from artillery on each flank. On Saturday our loss was but, slight, but yester day, in killed, wounded, and missing,, General Kil- Patrick lost about 'onehuodred and fifty men. Capt. Dodge, acting major 6th Michigan, was killed ; Capt. Oliphant, of the same regiment, was wounded ; Capt. Hastings, of the same regiment, is missing and Supposed a prisoner; Capt. G. M. Dutcher, aid to Gen. Kilpatrick, was slightly wounded; Major Pauldi, of let Michigan, anti Lieutenant Colonel Sawyer, of int Vermont, are also slightly wounded. Yesterday-about 400 prisoners, mostly of General Fitz Lee's division, were brought into headquarters. At five o'clock yesterday , there was considerable skirmishing going on between the opposing cavalry and "artillery, but it was thought that the enemy would fallhack during the night. About two o'clock to-day a train came down from Rappahannock Station . , bringing about 32 wounded, mostly of , the sth -Michigan Cavalry. The reports afloat that Meade was compelled to destroy a large "amount of commissary stores, on Saturday, to prevent them from filling into the hands of the enemy, are untrue. Soldiers, when about to leave .a camping ground, will invariably make a bonfire of 'all the camp rubbish ; and, thus it was that on Saturday night the camping-ground of the army .to be vacated presented numerous fires, giving the idea of a pretty extensive confla gration ; but as already stated, very little of value was deatroyed ; and fiftv bales of hay, will doubtless cover the extent of our lime. The idea held out by the sensation reports- afloat in town, to the effect that Meade is retreating pre cipitately to Washington under pressure from Lee following with an immense, army; is absurdly errone oue;as those knew Who are aware how deliberately Meade is changing his front to guard against any possible surprise from Lee, should he attempt a flank movement. .Late reports from Richmond show that the idea is entertained there that Meade's army has . been depleted to the extent of four army corps, for the reinforcement of Rolecrans ; and it may be that Lee is manoeuvring to ascertain if our army is really as weak as reported. • If he'is acting upon, any supposition of the sort, he may encounter a disagreeable surprise, and find that the Army of the Potomac is quite as effective as when it staggered him at Gettysburg. %140 - jumetierk tldst Tice desigue< air* % force through Thoroughfare Gap, and..rumor has it that the enemy has already appeared there, but in this case rumor must be considerably ahead of the fact, and, in any event, Meade has the shortest line of march. to Manassas, and can readily post himself so as to confront Lee wherever he may make his appearance, if, indeed, the latter is not already taking the back track, tinning his plans defeated. The following is the substance of information brought here by correspondents of the Northern press : General Dleade , s army has fallen back to this side of the Rappahannock, followed by Lee's army, whiokiis in great force about half a mile from the southern bank of that river. The enemy made a feint of moving up the valley on the southern bank of the Robertson river, and our cavalry under Buford crossed at Germania Ford, and took possession of the earthworks abandoned by them. When our force was all acfoiss the enemy came against Buford in great force, drove him across the river, without time to destroy the crossing, and pursued him to Rappahannock Station, Kilpatrick, with a force of artillery and cavalry, Which had made a reconnohisance near Madison Court House, was out oft yesterday afternoon en the iiiad tQ Guipeper_by portion of 'Ewell's corps, which were formed across the only road by which he could retreat in twelve- ranks, with two regi ments On each flank. Kilpatrick was compelled to charge directly into the cul de sac here made by the enemy's formation. He led the charge in person, telling his men they must do or die. The cavalry cut their way through under a con centrated fire such as has hardly been experienced by our troops during-the war and probably his rear, with his Artillery, retired through Culpeper. KW patrick's loss in killed and wounded amounted to one hundred - and fifty. General" Meade is said to have displayed gOod generalship in bringing his army back to the , line of the Rappahrumock. When the enemy made his feint of moving up the valley, Meade also made a feint of following him in force to attack him in the rear, massing his troops at Raccoon Ford for that This dretv back Lee's army so that the intended flankieg movement Was frustrated. Meade has brought oil every wagon and all his stores to his new line. THE STATES IN REBELLION. Supernatural Signs and Omens From - the Richmond Examiner, Oct. 6.] But, as to vindicate the poets and supernatural late, the attention of the credulous has been called of late to two very extraordinary and apparently unaccountable occurrences. Mrs. Temperance Gar ter, of the town of Marietta, Georgia, or elsewhere, being to all intents defunct, was made ready for burial, when suddenly ohe rose from the dead, and inquired the latest news of the war. The reply wee r that Bragg was still retreating, that the Uourt of Inquiry in the - Vicksburg disaater had been dis missed, and that Pemberton was to be reatored to his command ; whereupon Mrs. Temperance Carter again, and without reluctance, died, permanently it la supposed, Since nertidings of her second resurrec tion have been received. ,)-o consoling interpreta tion wind be given to Mrs. Temperance Carter's singular behavior, and a-still more marvellous, but lees recondite, event was anxiously awaited by the aged females of both sexes throughout the country. Bence the great Greentnier wonder, which'is thus related': •' 'During the afternoon of September b Mr. Noses Dwyer,, an honest, responsible, and unimpeachable farmer, Ma. Percy, "who seemeto have every clear head," two other ladies, "a youth almost grown, and a servant girl, all saw on the side - of a hill or moun tain, ten miles west of Lewisburg, on which the sun was shining with full' power, "something" which they were not able to describe with "clearness and aceuraCy," albeit Mrs. Percy's head was probably as clear then as it ever was. They declare; never thelessf that this " something " was manes or bodies of vapor, mist, or something - else,'of 'a whi tistegreen color, rive .or six feet high; and! two or three feet wide, which floated above the tree tops in a perpendicular position, moving on in a line, with the regularity and precision, then passing through the tree tops, without having the line broken or disturbed, and then passing off In the distance. If this whitish-green vapor, or mist, or something else, had done nothing more, the exhibition might have been regarded as a common freak of.vapor on a mountainside ; but "then came a countless multi tude of men, dressed in white, marching in column On the ground, through-an'open field, up the moun tain slope, at a rapid pace, quicker than double quick time ;" the men seen "not only as a whole, but the individual parte—heads, arms, legs, and feet:" Occasidnally one would lag behind, and could be distinctly seen to quicken his pace to regain his position in the line. ..They were passing for an hour or more;' numbered, it is thought, thousands upon thousands; passed over a field several= hundred yards in length, the entire area of which they covered in passing; "their general appearance was white, and they were without arms or knapsacks." This is the entire strange story, which it 'must be conic seed beats _Mrs. Temperance Carter ' the dying prophets, the engraved eggs, and the intermitting springs, all hollow. The theory of the refraction of light, which accounts so happily for the wonderful phenomena of the mirage and the Pate Morgina, might also explain the singular spectacle in Green- brier, if the people of the Confederacy were not pre disposed to superstition and encouraged therein by frequent calls of their attention to religious observ ances rather than to the just appointment of them, and the light application of measures to the accom rdisbing of ends, in which only human agencies are involved_or need to be invoked. Many pretend solutions of the Greenbrier riddle have been fur nished by Southern visionaries, the lateat of whom "hopes" that the northward movement of the whitish-green spectres without arms, prognoaticates the speedy return of the vandals, deprived of their means of destruction to their own homes. It is fortun ate fox the propounds...sr. this sage interpret-a -_ ion, that the vapory, or misty, or something else bodies in Greenbrier, were without weapons, for George Cruikahanks, the comic artist of London, has justpublished a book to prove that, since the days of Pliny the Younger, nobody has pretended that armor, implements of warfare, shovels and tongs, or any formation of iron or brass, has a soul, and con sequently that the ghosts of such things cciuld'not be. As much might - be:declared of the ready:made clothing furnished the Yankee army, which, far from having a spirit, has scarcely any body; if we may trust the newspaper diatribe against '" shoddy" and " shoddy - contractors." It will 'be prudent, therefore, to maintain, in spite of the veracious Mr. Moses Dwyer, the 'clear-headed Mrs. Petty - , - and the "youth, almost grown," that the greenish-white visions witnessed by them appertain More to their excited optics than - to the realm - of 'departed spirits, and that, as a general thing; it would 'be' eater for the country to trust to good 'generale; plenty'of gun powder, and strong - armies, than to greenish-white ghostagoing up the . side - of 'the hill in Greenbrier. But -the question after . all; rests with ' Mrs. Tem perance Carter, who *may emerge 'any day frOm the tomb ; and be as anxious toimpart informatien from the other world ar she was' some time'ago' to take it from this. - • • .. GOVERNOR rinntrilsm'e AID--II'ARTICIMAIre OF HIS .... . [Cot respondence of the Richmond Whig. dORDONSVILLBi Va., Oct: 5,-1361. I saw, this morning, at Orange Court House, Col. Dulaney, who is an aid to Gov.-Pierpont. He was arrested, a few days ago, a short distance this side of Alexandria, by Moseby and his • gallant band. Major. Itioseby, having ascertained- the Colonel's headquarters, rode up at night with a few of his men and inquired if that was Col..Dulaney's headquar ters ; .that he had a despatch for him. The Colonel came to the door and. remarked that he was Colonel Dulaney. liToieby then introduced himself as Major Moi eby. and told-the Colonel that he was a prisoner. Colonel Dulaney -was en route for Richmond, under eh arge'of hie eorpovho is'a member of illoseby's oom wand.- -He seemed exceedingly cheerful, and talked fluently about " old times ;' but when asked by a friend why it was that he remained in the Yankee army, when his eon, - his brother, and all his relatives and friends were South, his only reply was, that he did not care to talk about the - war. Aloseby's men destroyed, on the Name trip, a bridge on the Orange and Alexandria Railroad, within two miles of Alex andria. All quiet on the Rapidan. There is no news from the army of any interest which can. with propriety, be communicated. MEDIOUS. A PASSPORT BOA NON•OOtBATANTS The Columbia Carolinian vouches for the following A lady presented herself at Branchville to enter the car for Charleston. The sentinel told her it was contrary to law, and she could not go. She ordered him twice to take down his musket, which barred the entrance. He refused. She. drew. a revolver and pointing it at him, threatened to shoot him if he persisted in excluding her. With some surprise he demanded, "Are you a man in woman's clothes?" " No," was the reply, "I am a woman." "Then come in," said the sentinel, "for . hang, "Me if I fight a woman, or be killed by one; you can't be classed with non-combatants, and they are I. am or dered to keep from going to ,Charleaton.".. She was recognized as a belligerent power, and. allowed to pass. • • • • - OKRA 0027310 . The Montgomery Advertiser has a specimen of okra seed, ground and parched, which had so much of the appearance and odor of the genuine coffee that, not withstanding our prejudice against substitutes, we had prepared in the usual way, and found it as good as the beet We do not believe anybody could die cover the difference. There is no reason why okra coffee should not be a most wholesome drink, as it certainly is a most pleasant one to our palate. It was certainly used in this =country as early as 1.82tf and it may be even at an earlier period. Parch the seed slowly and carefully, so as not to burn them ; then prepare the decoction properly, and, our word for it, you have as good a cup of coffee as anybody but a Confederate quartermaster, a successful block ade runner, or a sugar speculator can afford to drink. • isantn, - TEETIMONY TO THE "GOOD TREATMENT OF [From the Richmond Weekly Dispatch. Oct. 2.] We have conversed with two prisoners by the last flag-of-truce boat, one of them—Alexander Wiel, of the 2d-Louisiana—was from David's Island, New York, and the other—Thomas J. Grant, of the lath Alabama—from Harrisburg and Baltimore. David's Island is a place of about ninety acres, eighteen miles from New York, and the wounded prisoner is fortunate who gets there. Some of our wounded were carried there from Gettysburg. -Upon - their arrival all of their clothes and blankets were burnt, and new and comfortable clothing furnished them, Mr. Wiel says the clothing was of the most com fortable character, though the coats,. which are United States regular coats, have the tails all cut off before they are given to the prisoners. The men put them on and thus, Scoot ding -to the . jokers among them, become members of the "bob-tail bat talion." The food is excellent, and many delicacies are provided by the kindness of some ladies from New York, who have established three ,kitchens, inde pendent or the hospital cooking apparatus. These hales are very kind to the sick, and furnish them almost any sort of food They ask for. The 20th In diana Regiment was recently on guard there, and proved the members to be an unmitigated set of brutes. They were succeeded by the Ist Massachu setts, who were entirely different, and very kind in their treatment Of the men whom they were guard ing. When our wounded officers were sent from there to. Johnson's Island they were each given a flve.pollar " greenback," The quartermaster of the post Is NIL John H. Bosher, formerly of Richmond. Another place where the Confederate wounded are well treated is at Harrisburg, Pa: Our informant, Mr. Grant, who was wounded at Gettysburg, says the treatment there was most humane, and that the ladles did everything intheir power forAhewountled. The accounts of - these two gentlemen are cheerful rays in the dark history of Yankee hospitals gene rally, and David's Island is as different from Fart Delaware as day is from night. UNION sor.nnats IN PHIL 1110111SOND PRISON The Libby record on yesterday displayed a force of 8,566 Federal prisoners, including '720 general, re. gimental, and other commissioned officers. Of this number -4,850- were received from Chickamauga, which; ' including 2,600 sick, wounded, and played out, paroled on the field, make the total number of , captures on that famous field, as far as :lacer tainedo,26o, including ninety-eight officers. Besides the combatant officers in this, prison are twenty sur geons and nine chaplains. .. . In Castle Thunder there are nine hundred prison. era, of whom fifty are Coniederale deserters and stragglers, ninety negroes, and the, rest Yankee Unionists, bushwhackers, spies, traitors, and other prisoners of the same stripe. . =EI Ten days or two weeks ago, the cuatomary Itouxish of Yankee trumpets announced that the Qrand Army of the Potomac" was again on the war path, bound, of course, for Richmond. The south bank of• the Rapidan being too forraidablo:lkifOrd's ca valry were sent out to find a soft plata on Lee's flank. Stuart, objecting to the investigatiOn, drove Buford off; The battle of chickarcauga occurred, an& the grand army called a halt. Soon afterward, it wisp al/lammed tilat twv vS Meoltal orpo had pees THREE CENTS. sent to reinforce Roemana, and this etory is re peated ,in the last despatches from Gordonsville, with the qualification that " our scouts say only one corps has left, and. that there is no indication that the enemy intends to fall back." What credence the authorities attach to thee statements we know not, nor have we a hint o what action would be taken in case the depletion o Meade's army proved true. The latest Yankee pa pars tell us, what we were ignorant of before, that Lee is for tifying his already strong position with might and main ;'pretty good proof that he does not intend to suffer at the hands of Yankeenewsmakers, or be deceives] by his own scouts. Poasibly he in tones now to teat what faith the Yankees have in their own rumors about reinforcements being sent to Bragg, end to entertain them a la Chancellorville in case they are disposed to advance. But Lee is a man of his own counsel, and while he keeps his secrets well, seems never to aim at a ruse, preferring rather to mature his plans and then to execute them without regard to what his foes may imagine or really know. Ills disdain of surprises argues some thing akin to contempt for his adversaries. The only clue to the report that Meade has rein forced Roseorans, apart from the narrations of our own scouts, is found in that unhappy paper, the New York World; of the 29th. It appears that enough.of Roiseorans' army was detached and tent into Ohio to electioneer and vote against yalian digham, to have insured us a victory over Bragg had they remained in the field and participated in the ' Chickamauga fight.' It appears further that , f ten thousand killed and wounded, millions of stores and scores of guns lost, a disastrous retreat, and new in spiration to the rebels,' is regarded by Messrs. Lin coln and Stanton a cheap price to pay for winning a State election,' for this no one will deny who considers that not one soldier has been sent out of Ohio, in spite of the present danger to Boseoranc , His reinforcements will be drawn from all quarters till the election in Ohio is over, in spite of the in creased distance, time, expense, and'peril." Now, a clever little article like this would appear tcfmuch more advantage in the Tribune and Limes than in the World. That parer- ought to be above such dull attempts at deception. But the principles Which guide a " War Democrat" are rather loose. In the first place, Roseman is not in any " pressing danger," for he announces under his own hand that he "cannot be dislodged from my (his) position." In the second place, General Lee has some common sense remaining, as his active efforts to fortify the Rapidan prove. In the third place ' General Meade has confessed publicly that he owed his success at Gettysburg more to the folly of the rebels than to his own generalship. But the "folly of the rebels" was of such a quality as to convince General Meade that he as mole to gain by subterfuge, which shall draw General Lee into another trap like that at Ce metery Hill, than by an honest, straightforward at tack. Be his convictions -what they may, we will answer for it that Lee is prepared for him. Let Meade come 00, 'and we will wager a small amount -that it will not be Lee who will be repulsed this time. - -Richniond Whig, Oct. 5. Important Speech`of Earl Russell on American Aitaire. On the 26th of September Earl Russell was en tertained at Blairgowrie, Scotland, by a number of hie friends, and made a speech of interest and im portance on the foreign relations of Great Britain, and especially on her relations to the United States: ENGLAND AND THE MEXICAN QUESTION. Gentlemen, there is another question concerning our foreign relations on which , a great deal of nalsap prehension has at various times and very lately pm meanthe question of Mexico. It has been said that there has been intervention in Mexico, and that we in some degree took part in the interven tion. Now, that word intervention is unluckily employed with a great deal of license and confusion to express a great many different kinds of proceed ing. There is an intervention certainly when a Power, the subjects of which have been wronged, asks redress for theme subjects. When their pro perty has been windier taken, when the persons of their subjects have been injured, that is an in tervention quite justifiable and often indispensably necessary. [Hear.] There is another kind of in tervention against which I have often protested, which I think is on very rare occasions indeed to be justified, and which generally finds its condemna tion in the consequences which follow from it—l mean the forcible intervention in the internal affairs of' another nation, to prescribe its government and dictate who shall be its rulers. [Cheers.] Well, gentle men, in the former kind of intervention we took part, but immediately thelatter kind of intervention was adopted by one of the three Powers which were concerned in these hostilities in Mexico, we at once parted company with our ally, and have since taken no part in the, affairs of illarico. [Hear a l Gentlemen, such is our condition at the present moment. If the people of Mexico approve the intervention which has taken place ; if they like to set up, a monarchy in Mexico, and if they all willingly obey it; if they are enabled to establish peace and order in Mexico, on these conditions I say, with all my heart, let them have it, and I' wish , them success. --(Cheers.] But if they.do not choose it ; if the people of Mexico wish for the form of government which for many years they have adopted, wby,then, I again say we have no business to contradict them in that respect ; and that, with the people of Mexico, however ir regular their form of government has been, sand howeverthe country has been deformed by acts of robbery and violence, yet I do not think we ought to interfeie about their own choice of their own form of government. [Cheers.] THE IrenuLLION iN AMERICA. Well, gentlemen, I come now to another question, a question interesting to us all, a question on which taint beg for your attention, because I wish to ex plain some circumstances in which the character of this country, I think, has been maligned. I am speaking of what has occurred in what a few years ago were` the United States of America. A few years ago we were exulting in the prosperity of that country; we were harimr to -sca_s....paop•le, derived nom - the - same ancestors' as ourselves, enjoying free institutions, enjoying apparent harmony among one another, and with whom we had, at least just be fore the civil war broke out, hardly a difference—a difference only with regard to the small island called" St. Juan, and which we had proposed to refer to the arbitration of the Swiss republic. This was the state of affairs when that, which we certainly had no part in, broke out ; when, if I remember rightly, nine of the Southern States of America declared that they would form an independent republic. Our course on the subject has been attacked and blamed in the bitterest terms—blamed sometimes by the Federals, and sometimes by the Confederates. The first of fence was felt by the Federate. They said we had no right to grant, so far as we were concerned, to the Confederates the rights of belligerents. Well, now, gentlemen, that question of the rights of belligerents is a question of tact. I put it to you whether, with 6,000,000 people-6000,000, I mean, of free men, de daring themselves in their several States collectively an independent State—we- could pass over that as a petty rebellion? Our admirals- asked whether the ships they met bearing the Confederate flag should be treated as pirates or no. If we had treated them as pirates we should have been taking part in that contest. [Cheers ] It was impossible to look on the uprising of a community of five millions of peo ple es a mere petty insurrection—[hear, heafl—or as not having the rights which at all times are given to those who by their numbers and importance, or by the extent of the territory they possese, are enti tled to these rights. [Cheers.] Well, it was said we ought not to have done that because they were a community of slaveholdets. Gentlemen, I trust that our abhorrence of slavery is not in the least abated or diminished. [Loud and prolonged cheers.] For my own-part, I consider it one of the mast horrible crimes that yet disgraces humanity. [Cheers.] But, then, when we are treating of the relations which we bear to a community of men, I doubt whether it • would be expedient or useful for humanity that we should introduce that new element of declaring that we will have no relations with a people who permit slavery to exist among them. We have never adopted it yet, we have not adopted it in the case of Spain or. Brazil, and I do not believe that the cause of humanity would be served by our adoption of it. [Hear, hear.] Well, then, it was said that these ' Confederate States were rebels—rebels against the Union. Perhaps, gentlemen, lam not so nice as I ought to be on the subject. But I recollect that we rebelled against Charles 1., [a -laugh,] we rebelled against James 11., and the people of New England, not content with these two rebellions, rebelled against George 111. [" Hear," and laughter.] I am not saying, whether all these rebellions were justifiable or whether they were wrong—l am not saying whether the present rebellion in the Southern States is a justifiable insurrection or is a great fault or a great crime. But I say ' the mere fact of rebellion is not in my eyes a crime of so deep a dye that we must renounce ell fellow ship and communion and all relationship with those WhO have been guilty of rebellion. [Loud cheering.] But, certainly, if I look to the declare. tions of those New England orators—and I have been reading lately, it not the whole, yet a very great part, of the very long speech by Mr. aumner on the subject, delivered at New York—l own I cannot but wonder to see these men, the offspring, as it were, of three rebellions, as we are the ofrepring of two re bellions, really speaking likethe Czar of Russia, the Sultan of "'whey, or Louis XIV himself, of the dreadful drime and guilt of rebellion. [Loud laugh ter, and cheers,] Well, gentlemen, there came another complaint, and the complaint came this time from those moaned Confederate States, who said that we had, contrary to the Declaration of Paris, contrary to the general international law, permitted a blockade of 3,000 miles of the Southern coast of America. It is quite true we did so. It is quite true—and there, perhaps, there seemed atleast a plausible reason for complaint-that though this blockade was kept up by a sufficient number of ships, yet these ships, many of them adopted into the United States navy man sent to sea in a hurry, and ilatitted for the purpose, did not keep up that blockade eo effectively and so thoroughly as it must have been held an effective blockade required. But, still, looking at the law of nations, it:war a block ade ; it was a blockade which we as a great belligerent Power informer times should have acknowledged. We, ourselves, have had a blockade : of upwards of two thousand miles, andat did seem to me that we were bound injustice to the Federal States of America to acknowledge the blockade. But there was another leason, I confess, that weighed with me-rour peo ple were suffering, and suffering very =greatly, for the want of the material which was the great sup port of their industry. It was a question of self interest whether we should not break that blockade, but, in my opinion, the name of England would have been forever infamous ' if, for Me sake of interest of any kind, we had violated the general laws of nations, and made war with, those slaveholding States of America against the Federal States. [Hear, hear.] And, gen tlemen, I am mot speabing the sentiments which are peculiar to myself, or to those who have no im mediate interest in the question, but these are, I am convinced, the sentiments of that noble-hearted peo ple of Lancashire, who have lived and flourished by that industry, but who would not, I ant sure, allow a single spot on the escutcheon of theirs nation in order to maintain that industry. ["Hear, hear," and cheere.] • SHIPS 7031 TIM REMBLS. Well, there came new complaints—a complaint on the pal t of the Federals that we allowed a ship to leave the port of Liverpool, which afterwards coin, witted depredations on their comnierce. Gentlemen, it would lead me far if I were to go over all the par ticulars of the question, but you must know that in ordetto prove an offence you require such evidence as can be pitted in a court of justice, and it was not till the very day the Alabama left Liverpool that, in the opinion of lawyers, we had evidence sufficient to keep the vessel and crew. ;then I doubt whether if we had brought the evidence before a court of 'w law, it would have been found that e had sufficient evidence to condemn her, because, by an evasion of the law, the ship was fitted up without the arms necessary for her equipment, anti these arms were conveyed to her in the waters of a foreign country, very tar from the jurisdiction of England. [gear.] Gentlemen, these questions must ho weighed, and I think they will be weighed, as they frequently have been weighed by the GaVe.T.IIMMt of the United States of America, -in the balance of equity. - We know that the foreign enlistment, act, and the whole law respecting tbe subject is very difficult of applica tion. The principle is clear enough. If you are asked to cell muskets, you may sell muskets to one party or the other, and so with.gunpowder, shells, or cannon ; and you may sell a ship in the same man ner. But, if you, on the one hand, train and drill a regiment with anus in their hands, or allow a regi ment to go out with arms in their hands to take part with one of two belligerents; you, violate your neu trality; and commit an offence gainst the other belligerent. So in tho same way in regard to ships - . if you allow a ship to be armed and go at once to make an attack on a foreign belligerent, you are yourself, according toy our own law,takingpartinthewar, and it is an offence which is punished by the law. But these questions lead, as you will see, to most difficult problems ; as to: whether, for instance, a thousand persons here may go out as laborers to the Federal States, and in the next place &thousand muskets may go out in another ship, and when they arrive in America, these thousand laborers, having had an understanding before, may make a forme} engage ment and be armed with these thousand- muskets ; tbeugh, if that bad been done in the territory of the. Queen, and on the soil of this couxitry, it would dem PAU COW. Tliefe are. other queolouli IMEL3III W. IL 3E'2ElLM4ilkagi UTIBLISRID 'WSZKLY.I taw Wl/4 ruse will be sent to sabeartbers bb snail (per Annum tu eqvunce) M. • .-- three copies " • • Vivo copies •• Ten copies ••—......-- 83C 1.5 ps Lamer °labs thsa T3U Will be Warred at the Galas rate, Sl.6' per MT. The money Mat at wg azeompaa the prefer. and tet No ifeetance eon Mae terms be deotabeef.frome. aa theW afford eery /Ws more arm the eftt al the jasper. 831 - Postmasters ars requested to est as ireate TRH Wad Pl2/18& Er- To the getter-us, of the Club of tea or tweak'''. aa extra eery of the aver will be 'area. with regard to ships that have lately been prepared . in this country, because these ships are not like. ship* which receive the usual equipment known in wars or imes past, but they are themselves without any further armament, formed for acts of offence and war. They are steam rams, which might be used for the pur poses of war without ever touching the abores of the Confederate ports. Well, gentlemen, to permit ships of this kind knowingly to depart from this country, not to, enter into any confederate port, not to enter into the port of a belligerent, would, as you see, expose 'our good faith to great sus picion • and I feel certain that if, during the war with France, the Americans bad sent line. of battle ships to break our blockade at Brest, whatever reasons they might' have urged in support of that, we should have considered it a violation. of neutrality. Such is the spirit in which lam prepared to act. Everything that the lam of nations requires, every", thing that our law, that the foreign enlistment act re , quires, I am prepared to do, and even, if 12 should be proved to be necessary for the preservation of our fleth• notify; that the sanction of Parliament should' be asked to further measures. In short, to sum up, her majesty'a Government are prepared to do everything that the duly of neutrality requires—everything thatis just to softie' nd ly nation, taking as a principle that we should do to others as we 'should wish to be done to ourselves. [Loud. cheers.] But this will ..not do—we will not adopt any measure that we think to be wrong. We will not yield a jot of British law or British right bream. sequence of the menaces of any foreign- Power. [Loud and prolonged cheers.] COMPLAINTS; Or TAE hAfERIOAITEI-41/ii SIThdrEIRIS SPEECH: • And now, reverting again to the complaints that have been made, it is singular to oblierve howojann diced the .minds of some of those who'stneek New - Dogloutl Mutes are - on'tma suoject or our con duct. There were some persons, members of the House of Lorde, who thought fit to complain on ass. apparent care of grievance—and not oils case, bet many oases—of ships of ours that had been seized e ships in some cases passing from neutral ports,. in other cases on the sea, but apparently on a legiti mate voyage; and it was urged that we ought not to submit to have our vessels thus seiied, endear commerce thus interrupted. I had' to deal wills that case, and my answer was, that according to thee. law of nations, if a ship had an ostensible voyage to a destination which was not her reaidestination— if she was bound, in fact, to an enemy'S port witk munitions of war, the belligerent had a right to stop that vessel on the, high seas. I said the law had: been laid down by Lord Stowell and other great English authorities, and that now we were neutrals; I did not think it tit we should depart front Maw we had laid down as belligerents. [Cheers ] said that in America, although there was some of the' local courts which had not the authority of suck men as Lord Stowell and Sir William Grant, yet there was a Court , of Appeals, there was a Supreme; Court In the United Stateerwhich contained, and had. for many years contained, men as learned and of as high reputation in the law, and of as unsullied repte.- tenon for integrity as any that have sat in our Eng.; limb courts of justice, and that we ought to wait petientlyfor the deciaion'ot those tribtinals. Now, what is my surprise to find, add what Would be your surprise to find, that Mr. Sumner is so' pre.. judiced that he brings these declarations of mine against me, saying that I diminished the game tation of the American courts, end that I showed myself biased against the Federal States by the declaration I then made in Parliament!' [A. gen tleman from the Southern States, among the com pa, here ejaculated, " He is not to be believed."] I will not detain you further on these subjects; but one remark I must make on the general dincy of these speeches and writings in America. The Government of America discusses these matters very fairly with the English Government. Sometimes we think them quite in the wrong; some times they say we are quite in the wrong; but we discuss themfairly, and with regard to the Secretary of State I see no complaint to make. I think he weighs the disadvantages and difficultits of cur situation in a very fair and equal balance. But there are others, and Mr. Sumner is one of them, his speech ' being an epitome almost of all that has been contained in the Ameri can press. by whom our conduct is very differently judged. With regard to all these matters there are difficult questions; we may have reason to complain in some inetances;and the Federal Republic of America may have reason to complain also. But let ns recollect that we are, as I have said, descended from the same ancestors, that in the courts of jus tice in America the common law of England is con stantly studied, and the decisions of our greatjudges constantly referred to as decisions to be there respected ; that our Shakspeare and our Milton .are'to them classical books as they are to :us ; that we have the same inheritance of freedom, that many of our institutions,as you may see by read ing that excellent book'of M. De Tocqueville on America, are identical ; that the same spirit of liberty animates us both ; that we, after our revo• lutions, chose a constitutional monarchy as the best form of government, and they, after their revolu tions, chose a Republic ;but that thnsunited. having the same spirit of law, having the same spirit of li terature, having the same spirit of freedom, we ought, when this unhappy contest is over, to em brace one another aw friends, and that we in the Old World, and they in the New, ought to be the lights to promote the civilization of mankind. -((Loud cheers.) Now, gentlemen, with these feelings I own I almost lose my patience when I see men, in what is called an oration, heaping up• accusation after ate. cusatioe, and misrepresentation after misrepresen tation, all tending to the bloody end of war between these twonations. I cannot but say, are they not satisfied with the blood that has been shed in the last two years, with that field of.. Gettysburg where 10,000 corpses of men most of them in the prime, of manhood, where left lying stretched on the ground t Are they not satisfied with that bloodshed, but would they reek to extend to the nations of Europe a new contest in which fresh sacrifices are to be made of human life, of human interest, and of human happiness 1 [Cheers.] Gentlemen, I trust that that Lill rtrtl. efforts, such as they are-weak they may be, inef fectual I hope they will not be—will be directed to keep peace between these two nations, and to do everything which I think is just and right toward these people; and ready to meet attack if we are unjustly attacked;: ready to bear our part in the con test, if contest there shunt be, but yet believing that we ought to make every "effort that all these various conflicts may end in peace, in union, and in friend ship, I shall at all events have the consciousness that I have done my best to preserve peace between these mighty nations. [Loud cheers.] Gentlemen, it is a great subject it affects the people of this part of the world and of America ; it affects the future stage of civilization ; it affects the wellbeing of the black race, whom it was the crime of our ancestors to introduce to America, and who, if these matters end well, will be, as I believe they are fitted to be, peaceable and intelligent members of a. free country [cheers,] on behalf of whose wel fare we have been ready to make great efforts, and to sacrifice much. But we will not sacrifice any of those views of ours to mere pretence. We have as strong feelings for the good of mankind as any people can have ; we must maintain our own posi tion, and my belief is that the people of what were , the United States, whether they are called Federate or Confederates, will finally do us justice, and that they will observe—as, indeed, they cannot help ob serving—that in this free country, where there is so much discussion and so much difference of opinion, there are parties, very considerable in number, who sympathize with the. Confederates, and other large masses—l believe superior in numbers—who sympathize with the Fetierals but whether sympathizing with the one or the other, we have all embraced in our hearts that sentiment of justice—justice we will do to others, justice weexpect for ourselves, and I hope I am interpreting the feelings of your minds when r say that justice ought to prevail. Letter from Minister Adams; "LEGATION OT T.Hic 'UNITED STATES, LONDON. Sin : I have the honor to informyou that the President of the United States has received the re solutions of the Trades Unionists, adopted at their meeting held at St. James , Hall, London, on the 28th of Blarch last, and, heretofore transmitted to him through the medium of this Legation. lam di rected to request you to say to them on his behalf that he is profoundly impressed by the liberal senti ments which they have expressed in regard to the United States, as well as by their good wishes for the restoration of their internal peace upon the Only sure foundation of national integrity and union. The President, moreover, appreciates the earnest desire which pervades the address of the Trades Unionists for the preservation of peace and harmony and mutual affection between Great Britain and the United States. That desire is viewed by him aajust, natural, wise, and humane;while it is in exact ac cordance with the earnest vishes of the American. people. The President willingly believes that in these respects the Trades Unionists have spoken the voice of the people of Great Britain, and'in the same sense he responds to it on the part of the peo ple of the United States, with equal directness and not less earnestness. I have the honor to he, sir, your obedient eery"; CHARLES FRANCIS ADA ars. "JOHN BRIGHT, EN., M. P.), Trade on the Mississippi. Western letter stater that Gen. Blair's coarse abuse of Secretary Chase was most triumphantly refuted on Saturday evening by the Hon. Henry T. Blow, of the Second (Missouri) district. .The letter written by Gen. Grant to Mr. Chase, in July last, ix of itself an answer to Gen. Blair's abusive renaarka, This excellent letter is as follows, at date of Tuly 21st: " My experience in West Tennessee has convinced methat any trade whatever with the rebellions States is weakening to us of at least-thirty-three per cent. of our force. No matter what the restrio- - time thrown arouniPtrade, if any whatever is allowed, it will be made:the means of supplyingto , 7, the enemy what they want. Restrictions, if lived. up to, make trade unprofitable, and hence none but dishonest men go into,it. I will venture to say that no honest man has made money in West Tennessee the last year, while many fortunes have been made there duds.; the time. "The people , in the Mississippi valley are now nearly subjugated. Keep trade out for , a few months,. and I doubt not but that the work of subjugation will be so complete that trade can be opened freely with the States of Arkansas, Louisiana, and_ sissippi—that the people of those States will be more anxious for the enforcement and protection of-. our laws than thetpeople of the loyal States. They. , have experienced the misfortune of. being without them, and are new in a most happy condition to arp. predate their blessings. "No theory of my own will ever stand in the ' , day of my executing, in good faith, any order I may re ceive from those in authority over me; but my pe.. sition has given me an opportunity of seeing what would not be known by persons away from the scene of war, and I venture; therefore, to suggest great caution in opening trade with rebels. "I am, air, very respectfully, your obedient -ser vant. if. S. GRANT, Major General." SEIZITRE OF THE MARYLAND LEGISLATTINR.— The following passage in the speech Made by Hon. Homy Winter Davis, in New York, on Friday eve ning, was no doubt spoken in alluaion to the recent diecloaures as to the ,arrest of the members of the Maryland Legislature: "No man will more promptly raise hie voice—as has been proved against my own politicalSriends— than I mine against arbitrary assumptions of power,. but I will assert all the authority of the Government. to stamp out treason. If anybody is hurt, let hint come down to Congress next winter andlattempt to impeach the President. Although I live right on the border of flaming war, where Noma people have been arrested, I have never yet heard , of an error which picked up a man 'who was loya/Io the - United States and incarcerated him. There, perhaps. may have been some persons arrested• who were not worth the while. I think, perhaps,,after the Mary. land Legislature had been for throamonths trying to hatch an egg, and could not doit, that it was not worth the while to arrest them. Talk about the at. rest ofthat wretched trash saving Maryland t Whyr-. the egg ball lung been addled. I. hardly think they. were worth their bread and butter in Fort 'Warren.' yet they, themselves, had no right to complain. Ihe error of the Government is fellae side of leni ency, and against the bleed of ourw.citizens." lent•. TRY. Ortowx Rumex &ND PRIXCESS OF PR37.38L1... —At the dfjeuner given by the Crown Prince and Princess at Potsdam tathe members of tha Stsileti cal Congress, which has just met at Berlin, one of the Eaglish guests, says a Berlin letter, nearly sue-- seeded in spoiling the whole a ff air. Aimated, na doubt, by the most excellent intentions, but com.' vletely wanting as well in good taste akin a know. ledge of the peculiar political position of the Prince, he wanted to propose his health. He had sufficient. judgment to ask, with glass in hand, his Royal Sigh. nem' permisstn, and was told that of courae this Euglishmar might drink his health ; but now speechifying, no speeches," very earnestly added his Royal Ilighness. The statistician evidently wanted to make a speeeh, and, baulked of that, could only turn round to his friends and lay to'them, "The Prince says we may drink his health, but meat make no miss;" eWI liu4k it tiff 4 10 . 111.- '8(44114 sliceVe.