Democrats of the present day. These men deny the true Democrats of the day like Gen. Dia and ot h ers, The president then introduced lion. Charles O'Neill, who spoke as follows : Speech *of Hon. Charles O'Neill, MR. CHAIRMAN AND FELLOW - CITIZICNB: At this late hour of the evening, and after the marked and Constant attention you have given to the eloquent words of the speakers who have preceded me, I dis like to detain you ; but I feel that I ShOuld'say some thing, and endeavor to perform, in a brief period, my duty in adding my testimony to the fidelity, loyalty, and unceasing Patriotism of Abraham Lin coln. [Cheers.] I desire to urge upon all in this vast meeting the necessity of making every effort fer suoceess in the present campaign, so as. to save our country from the widespread ruin and de gradation which the nominees or the Chicago Con vention, should they be elected, would inevitably firing upon its. The only hope for this land of free dom and l'or this Union is in the re-election of our great and glorious President—[applause]— and, with him, to elect the true-hearted and noble-minded Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee. [Cheers.] Abraham Lincoln you have tried, and the history and life of Andrew Johnson I know, have satisfied you that his elevation to Johnson, 'Vice Presidency will add another patriot to the coining Administration of this Government, who will toil and labor with President Lincoln to suppress rebel lion, to uphold our flag, and to make the country cnce more the glory of the world, happy and united forever. Pellow.citizons I have heard the Chicago Con vention and its hingediscussed tonight. I have studied its proceedings, and I have looked in vain, for living loyalty and manly sympathy of expression in its members. The groat tests of fidelity in that Democratic assernbtage, and the real point in its plat f orm -is ponce—peace at any hazard—and the result of its labors the nomination of candidates, pledged by its ineffaceable minutes, to the dishonor of tire country, to negotiation with rebels in arms, and to the surrender to traitors of all that Is dear and near to the hearts of loyal men, even to our very nationality. That party has made its platform, and upon it the country must form its judgment; but whether George B. McClellan stands upon it, or whether it stands upon him, it seems just now very difficult 'to decide, although I am confident that the candidate and the platform, upon the day of the Presidential election, will fall together, burled in ocean depths by the votes of loyal citizens, determined to crush planks and men daring to sympathize with rebellion or to uphold the treason of .Tefferson Davis and his followers in this terrible conflict. [Cheers.] My fellow-citizens, every one ol yon desire peace. Many of you have gone to the army and sent your sons to fight for it. None of you desire war, but when you want peace, and when you pray for it, you desire notsuch peace as the Chicago platform re commends. NV°, no.") You do not want such peace as the iSe y in ours, the Vallandighams, the Woods, the alcOlellans, or the Pendleton would bring you. You look to Abraham. Lincoln and Andrew John son for that precious boon. You and I rely upon such peace.thaking as they will give us; upon the Grants. the Shermans, the Mended, the Han cocks, and other, patriot soldiers, whb not by cringing terms, but leading victorious armies to the, very threshold of the rebellious capital, and into the very heart of a traitor-ridaen Confederacy, demands , it and will have it, at any cost of blood and treasure necessary to uphold good government, the Consti tution and the laws, and to raise again that precious fia . all over the land. ellow-citizens we must not forget the October. election. Wo have-•a ticket nominated for State and city officers worthy of your support. You havo heard, during the evening, Hon. Leonard Myers [cheers for Myers], the able, faithful and eloquent Beprotentative from the Third Congressional dis trict, who has been deservedly honored by a renomi nation. Let me say to any of his constituents who may be present, that the country looks forwards to his tri umphant election. He has served you well ; your in terests are safe in his hands, and you can, and I know you will, return him by a largely increased • majority. In fact, we must all work. Pennsylvania must be represented at Washington by true and loyal men, who will stand by the Administration, ever ready to aid it, ever willing to satlsfythe coun try that they will labor unceasingly to carry out its views. A President whom the loyal voters of the country will re-elect by a unanimity never before witnessed must be sustained; the Thirty-ninth Congress must be in harmony with him. One year • ago we stood upon this very stand, urging the re election of Governor Curtin. The contest then was to decide whether Pennsylvania stood by the Union: whether her thousands and tens of thousands of patriot sons in the field shedding their blood and yielding up their lives for country should be upheld by their fellow-citizens at home. We succeeded in carrying the State by fifteen thousand majority! Attain a momentous Issue is presented. The con tut now is of greater importance. In fact, upon us may depend the destiny of the country. Shall we fail now 1 Pennsylvania ever was true and loyal. ["She will be still."] Lot us work on and bring the great old State into line with 30,000 ma jority for Lincoln and Johnson, ["Wo will"] our country and the Union. [Loud applause.] Mr. O'Neill was followed by Mr. W. S. Peirce, or this city, and by Dr. William Coates, but at this time the meeting on the main stand had adjourned, and the npise made by the bands of the departing delegations and by the crowd assembled, was so great that the reporters, although seated close to the speakers, were unable to hear them. At half past ten o'clock the meeting at this stand was adjourned. • Elje Vrezz MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1864. Two Lettere. . The public opinion of the campaign is forming rapidly. General McCLELLex ...May at least claim the credit of ,calling forth as prompt a response to his letter.as any public man in a similar position ever • received: When the Chicago Convention adjourned he had a very simple and easy course before him. There was no mistak ing the temper of that Convention or the tone of its platform. It was ruled by SVm . pathizers with treason; it professed sympa-.. thy - with .treason ; it placed-GEolibE H.- PEIiDLETON on its ticket as the Most plau sible defender of treason in the last Con gress, and added a little. military man, as a swindle and a'.subterfuge, in the hope of making the combination . popular during the canvass and available during the new administration. It would have been diffi cult to have arranged a more plausible scheme, and certainly difficult to have as-. signed a duty which a public man could more easily perform. If there - was any thing in GEORGE B. MCCLELLAN'S record as a soldier, or in his little narrow record as a civilian, he certainly had no business • with the Chicago . Convention. lie was *a soldier, and he held in his hand a commission en trusted to his valor, lOyalty, and fidelity. To paraphrase an almost classic simile, the Administration had taken him from the sordid dust and stamped him with fame and power. 'He might have given the gentle men from Chicago a very ready answer. He might - have simply said that he could not carry the standard placed in his hands by CLEMENT L. VALLANDIGHAM—he could not adopt sentiments that . no -American could read without a blush—he could not make his whole record a lie. We admit the temptation. The honor even of being a candidate for the Presidential office .is something that no American could regard with indifference, and particularly when there was a chance of the nomination being , successful. We do not wonder that an am bitious man, the tenor of whose life hereto- fore seemed to be confined to the railroad business, should yield to such a temptation. Great men had resisted even greater bribes —CiNcticriArcs, CROMWELL, WASHINGTON —but there was nothing. in the whole life of this young anan to lead us for a moment to suppose that he would imitate an example so illustrious. He. fell. He went to the Chi: . . cago gentlemen, and, with the sword given to his valor, loyalty, and fidelity; became their slave. After sealing FAUST'S bargain with hiephistophilea, he undertook to 'ex plain it with a letter... • We have all reed his letter. ' It '.has a great deal about the Union,. and - a pious allusion at the end, which Mephistophiles could hardly:relish. Indeed, that exacting . and crafty personage is restive about the whole business. He threatens to tear . the bond—but we know him better. It is very easy to unite lofty and religious phrases, particularly when there is a purpose in . haiing them Written, And when it is really intended• that people shall believe them.. We do not anticipate any release from the • laud, and as for Mephistophiles, his temper is of that facile character that can' never, interfere with his interests. VALLANDIGHAM: will get over his petulance, and continue his speeches. The, WOODS will invest their lottery earnings in the campaign, and see that no money is spared and no trick avoided that may insure tri umph, and the -little hungry • crew of home politicians will all rush to the polls . with the avidity of men who hope for fornething to eat. The people will look at -ibis man, and those who surround him, and question him closely, and put their :lingers through his professions. It is not' the first time they have been deceived. They have before asked for bread, and re ceived stones ; they ask for bread now, but hey well know that McOLELLA. - x has I:othing• but stones to give. He could not, is" he wished, not if he dared, refuse to do site bidding of the Mephistophiles who has urchased his soul. Will his letter, or any I...umber of letters, take him out of the liands of HORATIO SEYMOUR, 01 WILLIAM • HEED, or CHAUNCEY BURR ? Will it release him from RICHMOND,. and HASKIN, and BELMONT, and those who own him, and invest him, and put him in the market as so much money or so many shares of stock ? Will it keep VA.LLArinioakm from the Cabinet, or FITZ Jon - rt PORTER from the command of 'the army ? Will it pre -vent Lord LvoNs: l trom returning the visits cif the New York Democrats, and con cluding the : arrangements for . intervention ? Will it in any -way lessen the joy that every despot and anti-Republican in Europe would feel at the triumph of treason and the downfall of American liberty ? Let .1.18 not believe it. The bond has been scaled; every condition has been fulfilled ; and every infamous pledge will be exacted, even to the life of the Republic. Let us compare the humiliating spectacle this soldier presents with that of the Lieu tenant General of the American armies, the man who is to be superseded by Pm JOHN PORTER in the event of McCwia,LAN's -triumph. General GRANT is certainly a greater soldier than General MCCLELLAN. His early triumphs at Fort Donelson and Fort Henry threw upon McOLELLAN's career the first glow that it ever received. This man, whose military eye discovered one of the finest soldiers of the time to be the same General SnErtmAN whom MC CLELLAN buried away in Si,. Louis barracks as a crazy man, writes a letter which conies to us at the same time. General GRANT, were he an ambitious man, might have obtained the nomination of any Convention that has 'assembled during this yeai. Ile might have gene to Chicago and obtained,for the asking, the nomination that MCCLELLAN and his owners have labored for two long years to secure. it is not doing injustice to Mr. LINCOLN to say that he might have even obtained the nomination at Baltimore, and were he to-morrow to express any pre ference for this high office, his name would be the rallying-cry of thousands. General GRANT speaks with no dubious or uncer tain phrases, but the words of a bold, sincere, simple, earnest man, anxious to fight his battle and go home. Read the letters we reprint to-day. He tells us that slavery and peace are incompatible; that when slavery falls the Union will live. He gives -us words of comfort in a military point of view, and shows us that by one more earnest and united effort we can overthrow the rebellion. It is just such a letter• as a soldier like GRANT would write, and we honor him with even a higher honor than we have ever shown before. Cqmpare these two men.. MCOLnLLA sells his honor for a nomination, taking his place on a platform which he - professes to disown, and asking men to vote for him on false pretence. If he is sincerely for war,. then his platform is false and his request for Peace men's support a deceit. If he is sincerely for peace, then his letter is false and his solicitations for War Democrats' confidence is a deception. There was one . honest course, but that involved a decli nation of the nomination.' He has taken a dishonest course. He must serve or be .tray .one portion of his friends, and our great fear is that in his effort to reconcile a false and cowardly course he may betray the country. By the blessing of God this shall not be. We shall defeat this man so utter-• ly that his name will only be remembered as a name of warning and pity, and his party will be among those memories of the Republic that our children will regard. with hatred and scorn.. WE REGRET the construction that a *cor respondent places upon a paragraph that recently appeared iu The Press. Colonel WILLIAM MCCANDLESS is too well known for us to impugn his courage, and no state ment of this newspaper should lie rendered liable to such a meaning. _ Colonel WrlimAx McCANbLEss served his country during three years with great courage and skill; and we have always•been glad to recognize him as a good and gallant soldier. While we say this we cannot recall anything we have said in reference to the course of this gentleman during the past few months. He had an opportunity such as has fallen to the lot of few men. The Administration at the expiration of his service offered him a brigadier general's commission. He de clined, with the . offensive declaration ihat he could not *fight in a war like the present. We do not stop to inquire into motive's.. If he disliked emancipation he should have resigned in 1862. If the Go vernment's policy was unpleasant, that po licy was fully enough confirmed one year ago to excite his displeasure. He continued to fight until this campaign deVelOped it self, and at the time when the. Government wanted his services to aid in crushing the rebellion he declined.. A soldier who does this thing deserves the...severest. censure. We prefer to leave the. matter to this sol dier's conscience and record. He has made a sacrifice for the Democratic party such as no young 'man ever made before, and now that lie has taken his course we . trust that the party will appreciate this sacrifice and reward him accordingly. The New Deineeratic Secession; WCT,ELLAN REPUDIATED DT TRE 1E IV YORK DAILY NEWS' BIETROPOL/TAN RECORDS AND FREEMAN'S -JOURNAL • The Democratic camp is already demo ralized, and war among friends has en gulphed the . question of peace The-New - York Daily Hews • of the 10th takes bold and open ground against the letter of Gene ral McCLELLAR, and declares that it cannot find it possible to . support him. It calls for the reassembling of the Chicago :Conven tion in the following terms : "George B. McClellan was nominated upon a platform that promises an immediate cessation of hostilities and a Convention of all the States. Does he stand upon that platform to day? He does not. He has renounced the platform in his letter accepting tke nomination. It is as if the bridegroom should accept the bride's property, but not her person. A bond like that is null and void. The peace party will not consent to have their principle betrayed and then do homage to the betra} er. They demand all that is nominated in the bond. General McClel lan having rejected the proposition for a cessation of hostilities and a Convention of ill the States, de clined the Chicago nomination, and stands before ' the people self-nominated on a platform of his own creation. The Democracy must seek a candidate who will stand upon the plat form, for they cannot consistently support one who is in collision with the Convention that tendered him the nomination. If the platform accords not with the nominee's convic tions of the right, a due respect for the opinions of the assemblage that unanimousty adopted it requires that he should give back to . the Convention the standard of the Democracy. l'he De - macrons Na tional Convention is not dissolved. It is ready to con vene at the call of its Executive Committee, and, if General McClellan cannot abide by the resolutions through which the principles of the party have been enunciated, let the Convention reassemble, and either remodel their platform to suit their nominee, or nominate a candidate that will suit the plat form." That FERNANDO WOOD, VALLANDIGIIA3 I, VOORHEES, and- the leaders of the large Peace party in the West will imitate this act of secession, cannot be reasonably doubted. Preceding and following the de claimer of the Daily News, the Metropolita4 Berard, and the .M•eevian's Journal, organs of the Irish Catholic sentiment in New Xork, have declared roundly against Gen. -MoCismert's usurpation. Mr. MULLALY, editor of the Record, says : . . . -" General McClellan says : lam happy to know -that when the nomination was made the record of 'my_public life was kept in view ° but ho certainly cannot be ignorant of the fact that the 'record' of his public life' was the great obstacle to his nomi nation in the minds of the Peace Democracy, and that it was only upon the assurance that he was in faVor of the immediate cessation of hostilities that they withdrew their objections to him as a candi date. It was. their wish that his 'record' should be kept out of view, and they honey - eel that he-him self was not desirous of giving it a more extended publicity than it had already obtained; bat they never supposed that he would refer to it as a matter of pride or satisfaction. Are we to understand by this ill-timed reference to his 'record' that he re gards his arrest of the Maryland Legislature as a justthable act, and that If elected he will continue the system of arbitrary arrests inaugurated by Abraham Lincoln, and so willingly carried into execution by himself.? This 'record' tells us that he Is the enemy of habeas corpus, and it also informs us in regard to another very unpleasant fact—par ticularly unpleasant to the industrial classes—that he was the first to urge and press upon the Presi dent that most despotic of all despotic measures of the present Administration—the odious conscription. As he intimates his intention to carry on the war, the public should understand what that means ; that it means renewed conscription; that men shall be forced,•by the strong arm of military power, from their homes to wage a war of subjugation against a people who claim the right which we ourselves ehould be the last to resign --the right of self government.), The Popular Opening. The great demonstration of Saturday eve ning in Independence Square opened the political campaign for the Union with a wide-spread enthusiasm and earnestness which we find it impossible to adequately record, but which the people will long re member. Greater manifestations of the popular patriotism are yet to take place, for the canvass in favor of the re-election of ATIRAILAm LINCOLN promises to exceed all other Presidential campaigns in the un mingled rejoicing of the true and zealous friends of the Union and the Constitution,- and the noble war in defence of the national honor and safety. From now till liovem ber the great, honest heart of the nation will celebrate its continual victory over the foes of the Union. The meeting in Independence Square has Aria: the chord which will now vibrate throughout the State.- Numerous meetings. have already been held, and the fall of At lanta has been the occasion - of bringing the true patriots,of the State together. These meetings will multiply in all quarters of the Commonwealth till the great work of the canvass is achieved. !The cause is worthy of indefatigable and universal effort on the part of its friends, for the triumph in the end will not be the victory of a party, but the vindication and salvation of the coun try. LETTER FROM "OCCASIONAL." WASHINGTON, September 10, 1864 "- Believing that the views here expressed are those of the Gonvention and the people you- re- . present, I accept the n‘Anination." These words are contained in the last paragraph of the letter of acceptance of Major General George B. McClellan. Are they trite? That is the question. When we reflect that the man who writes these words was educated at West Point, and claims to be, on that account, one of " the *chivalry," and espe .cially a soldier and a gentleman, we may well wonder at an assertion like this. He " believes" that the views he expresses arc those of the Convention that nominated him, and, as he does hot reject the plat form, it is a fair preAumption that he ap proves the resolution of that Convention which demands that " immediate efforts be made for the cessation of hoStilities." In other words,. that he sanctions the monstrous idea of an armistice between the T'ederal Government and the rebel traitors. But how are these two positions to be re conciled? The Convention practically de clares in favor of an armistice. General McClellan declares in favor .of .continued war for the preservation of the Union ; and. in view of the fact that the one position defeats and rebukes and destroys. the other, he coolly . tells us that he believes his opinions expressed in his letter of accep tance are those of the Convention that nominated him ! We remember nothing in the tergiversations of party politicians so discreditable ~ts this.',General McClellan certainly. could nothave.meant to say that the Convention declared in favor of au ar mistice• and for an immediate cessation of hostilities, and yet approired his letter. Can he believe as he says ? Hit be so; then the Convention is a fraud, or. General McClellan himself has violated the truth. Now mark the difference between McClellan and Lin coln. 'When the resolutions of the Balti more Convention were presented to Abra ham Lincoln, he said, in a single sentence, " THE NOMINATION IS pIIATIIIFULLY AC- CEPTED, AS THE RESOLUTIONS. OF THE CON VENTION, CALLED . THE .PLATFORM, ARE HEARTILY APPROVED." No qualification here ; no false and dishonest front, but an earnest and emphatic endorsement of the work of the men who had put . him before the people for re-election. He heartily ap proves the Baltimoreplatform, because in that . 'platform there is not a word nor a sen tence that has not been inspired by earnest attachment to the GoVernment, by gra, titude for our brave uien in the army, by a desire to cOnclude peace on the basis of the restoration of Union, by ha tred to slavery as the cause of the war, by a determination to maintain the national faith inviolate and to redeem the public debt, and by an utter ignoring of all seats or parties until the war is . happily concluded and.the Republic vindicated. But it would seem that General McClellan fears his plat form, and yet, while fearing it, and doubt, ing it, and while writing a letter which he 'desires the people to understand as in op position to it, he yet coolly says ii his letter of acceptance that he believes the views he es-. presses in that letter are the views of the Con 'Mak% itself ! I think no man, in or otit of public life, and no soldier, in or out of the army, has ever deliberately placed himself in a more inextricable dilemma. OCCASIONAL. WAI3I - IINGICON. WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 1864 AN EXPEDITION AOArNST FLORIDA _SALT -WORKS AND SUGAR mrLLs-JEFF DAVIS' PROPERTY DESTROYED Captain THOMAS P. GREEN, commanding the East Gulf Blockading Squadron, communicates to the Navy Depart9Cent the particulars of several successful 'boat erptiditions from the United States bark J. L. Davis, Acting Master W. N. GRISWOLD, commanding, on the station at Tampa Bay. The first was made ot the 11th of July, and resulted in the destruction of sonic salt works belonging to strong Secessionists of Tampa, Messrs. HAVOOOD and CAirneit ; the second was made on the 16th of July, to the factory of another strong rebel, named MoCtoon, which was also destroyed. The third expedition was made on the 2d, 3d, and 4th of August, by the tender-schooner Stonewall, attached to the schooner Davis, and commanded by Acting Master HENRY B. CARTER, with his gig's crew of six men, proceeding up the Manitou river to the town of the same name, and a large saw and grist mill, with its steam engine and fixtures, was completely destroyed. Learning here that about three miles up the rives was a sugar mill belonging to Jana Davis; the party ascended the river and found an establishment which made last year fifteen hundred hogsheads of sugar, of which two-thirds yore sold to the rebel commissary department. After breaking as much of the machinery as pos.' slide, loaded shells were placed in various parte of the engine, and the building was fired, and soon totally destroyed. The expeditions, without loss of life or limb, show a very-commendable spltit on the part of the officers and men. The conduct of Acting Master CARTEnis particularly spoken of as highly creditable. THE EEW 75,000,000 LOUT In the list of successful bidders for the new 7.5,000,- 000 loan, as published in Saturday's papers, the name of Messrs. C. B. WRIGHT & Co., of .Philadel phia, who bid for $500,000 at four per cent. premium, is incorrectly printed as DWIGHT & Co. The open. ing of the bids was resumed on Saturday. The amounts were not so large comparatively as in those opened on Friday, but the average premium is about the same. According to present indications, about two-thirds of the entire proposals having been opened, the loan will be taken at four per cent. and over. The aggregate of the bids for the new loan is $72,762,750, and the entire amount awarded is near ly $82,00,000, nine•tenths of it at over 4 per cent. premium. , The remainder will be divided pro rata among those who bid at four. • Among the successilil bide opened today, in UAL. tion to those telegraphed yesterday, are : • • Bowery Sayings Bank, 4200,060 at 4.05. • Bowery Savings Bank, $l6OOOO at 5.05. First National Bank of St. Paul, 00,000 at 5. Bank of Freemansburg New York. $20,000 at 5. • R. N. Shoemaker, Cincinnati, $12,000 at 4.25. Battengill Bank, Vermont, $lO,OOO at 6. R. W. Bush, Louisville, $6,000 at 5. T. Steele, Louisville, $lO,OOO at 5. - Thos. Cornell, Rondont, N. Y., $25,000 at 412 g. First National Bank, Akron. Ohio, $15,000 at 4 60. Corn Exchange, Philadelphia, $60,000 at 4.055:4 4.30. Fourth National Bank, Waynesboro, Pa., $25,000 at 9.60. • G. Caswell & Co.. New York, $O,OOO at 4.50 Granite National Bank Maine, $15,000 at 4.02. Home Insurance (Jo., New Haven,s22,ooo at 4.05. South Berwick Bank, Me., $lO,OO at 4.25. J. Gulliver, Philadelphia, $15,000 at 4.20. J. Gulliver, Philadelphia, $16;000 at 4.12 - People's Bank, Baltimore, $lO,OOO at 4.2'41.50. Haddock, Reed, &Co., Phila., $20,000 at 4.25@5. Philadelphia Bitnk, s2:oo,ooCrai 4.5 4 504.75. Bank of the State of New York, $260,000 at 4.058 3larket Bank, New York, $50,000 at 4.60 There were ,numerous successful bids from indi viduals and corporations all over the country for amounts smaller than the above: . • It is stated that some of the offerers prefixed remarks to their bids saying that If these should not be accepted they would take seven•thirtios at par. • Among the unaccepted bids for the new loan there were two, amounting in the aggregate to over $6,000,000, at from 3.37 ; 1 4 to 3.75, and another bid for $1,400,000 at from 3.07 to 3.3735. A party of three citizens of New York subscribed together for $5OO worth, offering the highest rate of premium of all others, namely, 10 per cent. It will be interesting to bidders to learn that the bonds in payment of the . loan will be ready for de. livery at the Treasury Department to morrow morning, at 10 o'clock. Such prompt delivery is unprecedented, and is due to the arrangements made by Secretary F ES SEN DEN and Assistant Secretary Hanainvrox, previous to the opening of the proposals, the blanks having been printed and otherwise prepared so as to require only the signatures of the proper officers. Parties, therefore, who have subscribed to the loan, will not be subject to the inconvenience of de lay heretofore experienced, as the facilities of the Treasury Department, in this respect, are more ample than ever before. The adjustment of the bids, with a view to the award, was not completed until eleven o'clock on Saturday night. FOREIGN CEREALS PERMITTED ENTRANCE TO PORTUGUESE PORTS The State Department has been officially inform ed of the promulgation of a Portnguose royal 'do cree, that from August 12th last until March 31st, 1865, the importation of foreign cereals, whether in grain or flour, is permitted in the ports of Lisbon and Oporto. and also by the Eastern railway and the River Douro. TEE TREAT\' WITH ECUADOR The United States and the republic of &numlor have exchanged the ratifications of the Convention for the mutual adjustment of claims, which are to be referred to a board of two commissioners to be appointed by each country, with an arbitrator in cases where they may disagree. REVENUE DECISION It' as decided on Saturday, at the Internal Reve nue Bureau, that in reassessing licenses under the provisions of the now revenue law, full credit Is to be given to parties holding licenses issued under the old laws, for the same business for which the new assessment is made, altbongh the new law may de scribe the business under a new name. REPORTED SDItRENDER OF MOBILE. It 13 reported here that inobtle has .fallen. 'rho THE PRESS.-PHILADELP4I4I_, MONDAY, SEPTEVMER 12, 1864: Rawnrifo, Sept. 11.—The Union party of Berke county met in Convention on Saturday and . made the following nominations For Congress; Wil liam M. Mester ; Senate, Major William Bri ner ; Assembly, Louis Ouster, Dr: E. E. Grim mer, and George W. Yeageri This. Is ,an excellent ticket. The Hon. William' M. Mester represented Darks county in the State Senate for many years, and was afterwards Secretary of State during Gov Packer's administration. He is a gentleman of high character and ability, and when we say that he is the exact opposite of Ancona it will sufficiently define his political position. He Will receive the enthusiastic support of all the friends of the Union in Berks. Major Barter is also a War Democrat. He went out at the begin ning of the war as a captain in the Pennsylvania Reserves, saw much hard service, and rose to the rank. of Major, and . acted as such untilhis term of service expired. 'Dr. Griesemer was also a Demo crat when the name meant something more than utter submission to. the slave, power. All these gentlemen give a hearty support to the National Administration in its ellorts.lo put down the re bellion, and the whole ticket, deserves every effort that the friends of the Union in: Barks can make In its behalf.' WELAT OUR GREAT GENERALS AND STATESMEN 'SAT OF IT. Opinions of Generals. Grant; lioOker, and Lewis Vass LIEUT. OEN. mum' ON THE CONDITION OF THE RE BELLION, THE RESTORATION OF SLAVERY, AND TIM AIMS OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY,. HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, CITY POINT, VA., August 16, 186-1. To Hon. E. B. Wasliburne DEAR Sin: I state to _all, citizens who visit me that all we want now to insure an early restoratiop of the Union, is a determined unity of sentiment North. The rebels have now in their ranks the 'last man. The little boys and old men are guarding prisoners, guarding railroad bridges, and forming a good part, of their garrisons for entrenched positions., 'A man lost by them cannot be replaced; They haye robbed the cradle and the grave equally to get their pre sent force. Besides what they lose in frequent skir mishes and battles, they are now losing from deser tions and other causes at least ono reginient per day. • With this drain upolithem the end is not far dis tant if we will be only true to ourselves. Their only hope now is in a divided North. This might give them reinforcements from Tennessee, Ken tucky, Maryland, and Missouri, while it would weaken us. With the draft quickly, enforced the enemy would become despondent, and would make but little resistance. I have no doubt but .the ene my are exceedingly anxiety! to hold .pit u it - after the Presidential election., 'They' havd many hopes from its effects. Theg hop * e a counter revOlu lion ; they hope the election of the peace candidate. In fact, like " Micawber," they .hope for something to "turn up." Our peace friends, if they expect peace from separation, are much mistaken. It would but be the beginning.of war t , with thousands of Northern men joining the South bemuse of our disgrace in allounng separation. To have "peace on any terms" the - South would demand the restoration of their slaves already freed ; they would demand indemnity for losses sustained, and they would demand a treaty which would make the North slave.huniers for .the South. They would demand pay or the restoration of every slave escaping to the North. , Yours truly, U. S. GRANT. GENERAL GRANT IN 'FAVOR OP THE ANNIHILA 4 TION OP SLAVERY. The following is an extract from the letterer. General Grant written in August, 1863, after the fall of Vicksburg : • "The people of the North need not quarrel over the institution of slavery.' What, Vice President Ste phens acknowledges as the corner.stone of the con federacy is already knocked out. Slavery is already dead. and cannot be resurrected. It would take a standing army to maintain slavery in the South, if we were to take possession, and had guaranteed to the South all her constitutional privileges. I never was an Abolitionist; not even what would be called anti-slavery; but I try to judge:fairly and honestly, and it became patent to my mind very early in the rebellion. that the North and South could never, live at peaee with each other, except as one nation, and that without slavery. As anxious as lam to see peace esta.. Wished, I would not, therefore, ,be willing to see any settlement until this Nation is forever settled." GENERAL ROOKER'S LATE SPEECH. AT WATER - • TOWN, MASS. FELLOW•CITIEEIIB :'You have come. here to re joice at the success of the Union arms, in WhiCh am ready to join you heart and hand. My business is fighting, not sech-making, but let me tell you pe that the army of Sherman is invincible, and cannot be disheartened. We must trelit this rebellion as a wife.,parent, would a vicious ohild—he must whip him into subjection. No milder discipline will an swer the-purpose. Some are crying peace ; but there can be no peace as long as a rebel can bifound with arms-in his bands. Woe be to those .who.cry peace v hen there is no peace. This Union must be. preserved, and there is no way of preserving it but by the power of our arms—by fighting the oonspl racy to the death. This rebellion is tottering now - while I speak ; it is going down, doWn, and will soon tumble into ruin. Politicians may talk to 'you about the cause of the' war, but I say, put down the rebellion, and then, if you choose, inquire into the cause of it. Bat first put down the insur gents—first-whip them, and then talk about - the cause if you have loathing else to engage your at tention. I belie6e in treating the rebellion as General Jackson treated Indians—whip them first and treat with them afterwards, The Union cannot be divided, let politicians talk as they may; for if division com mences, where are you to end.? First. /he South would go, then the Pacific States, then New England, and I hear that one notorious politician has advocated that the city of New York should secede from the Empire State. In such case there would be no end to rebel lion. Gentlemen, every interest you have depends upon the success of our cause ; every dollar you pos sess is at stake in the preservation of this Union. It will better accord with my feelings to see the limits of our glorious country extended, rather than cir cumscribed, and we may feel it a national necessity to enlarge our .borders, at no distant day. -This Union, gentlemen, cannot be dissolved,- as long as . the army have guns to fight with. Furnish men and muskets. and the Union is secured. HON. LEWIS CASS OPPOSED TO SURRENDER.. The Cities go - Pribune learns from undoubted autho rity that Hon. Lewis Oass pronounces the Demo cratic platform a most Ignominious surrender to the rebels, and says he cannot support it. - The Fever at Rey West—Death or Drix. Gen. Woodbury. .• (Correspondence of The 'Press.] , • Ear Wasx, Fla., August 21; Ip4. We are still subject to the visitations of that monster, Yellow Jack. Almost every Northerner here has had a tussle with him. Many have'died.: Our commanding officer, Brigadier General D..P. Woodbury, who had been sick with this fever some ten days, died suddenly on Monday evening hist, at half past six o'clock. As soon as it was known, the business people closed their stores, and the flags on shore and on the vessels in port were loWered to half. mast. The town looked sad itself at the loss of such a good man. It had been difficult for a long time to place a man In command here Who could be satisfac tory to all parties. Such a man, however, was the General. Never before have I witnessed. such a -gathering of the people of this city as tiler() was on the day of his burial. The funeral took place an Tuesday afternoon at five o'clock. Previous to proceeding to the cemetery, the corpse was taken to the Episcopal church, where funeral services were held, Surgeon Anthony E. Stocker, of Pennsylvania, officiating. The procession, composed of fivo cow parties of the 2d U. S. Colored Troops, commanded by Colonel B. R. Townsend ; the hearse containing the corpse ; the General's horse, unsaddled and un bildled ; navy, army, and civil officers ; Band of Hope, (a Temperance Society) ; and citizens on foot and in carriages—then proceeded to the Soldiers' Cemetery, whore the usual ceremonies were•read, when the detachment fired three volleys over the grave. The fever seems to be abating ; most all strangers have gone through the process ; but It is almost cer tain death for a. stranger to come, here at present. Everything Is dull. Nothing doing, and the absence of the blue jackets renders it more so Died at Key West, Fla., August I.9th, 18% of yel low fever, Mr. Charles Schultz, orPhiladelphia, Pa. He was in tho employ of the Government, as enst neer on the - United States steam tug W. H. Romney, and leaves a wife and child to mourn his loss. Vollaindigliain will not Support • CoLtr.untss, OhtO, Sept. I.o.—Mr. Vallandigham arrived here yesterday, en route for Pennsylvania; to address the people of that State, at various places; Luton meeting r Geo: McClellan's letter .of acceptance hapromptly anthOrized the Democrat:lo oolrMittee of 01110 to withdraw his mime frOm appointments, and returned home. The pewit' teen are detiitinined to maintain their integrity, a n d will soon call a meeting to determine their Nurse of action. . news is said to have been received from rebel de serters, who assert that Dog river bar was passed by the entire fleet of Admiral FiLanAour, and that, after a brief shelling, the city surrendered, the troops having withdrawn into the Interior. This statement may be correct. It Is well known that Admiral RIERAGIIT'S appliances for removing the obstructions in the channel of Dog river bar were simple, and that the torpedoes could be removed with the greatest facility. Then the channel would be . perfectly clear. and an uninterrupted passage given the fleet close Up to the city. ARRIVAL OF A PENNSYLVANIA REGIMENT. The 83d Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers ar rived here on Saturday evening, under command of Lieutenant Colonel D. C. InCol - . It has suffered severely in numbers, and returns with one hundred and three men and seven officers, all that is left of a. total of eleven hundred who were once in its ranks. Colonel . 11IcLaaw, killed at Gaines'.;~l(lls, belonged to th is regiment. ANOTHER CASE OF CONSCIENCE General Signora, the United States Treasdrer, yesterday received a letter of which the following is a copy : "Please put into the treasury the enclosed 46, the excess paid me as a witness at a court martial in a neighboring city. The acting quartermaster, know ing the fact that I had come and was about to re turn the same day; made out an account for me Which he said was correct and usual, paying me for an additional day for coming and another for going. This sum in itself Is no object to the treasury, but if It be the moans of drawing the attention of the`Go vernment to the like abuses In this department of the public service, it may save hundreds of thou sands of dollars." LOSS OF A 'BLOCKADE-RUNNER The Charleston Mercury chronicles the loss of the new ldockade•running steamer Mary Bowers, which ran on an obstruction near Long Island on Timis; day week, proving a total lOss. The oEticers and crew were saved. NO COAMISSIONEES SENT TO Itteirsi OND. The President denies that commissioners have been sent to Richmond. PERSONAL SAatuilL Jamsow, Ist Pennsylvania :A.rtillery; ALsx.animux Herrn, Ist Delaware Ca.valry - s,GEOituis Murat, 184th .Pennsylvania ; P. , vritunctCownniq 69th Pennsylvania, died and were burled 'on Friday. TWenty-four of the rebel sympathizers arrested in Loudotut county, about a week ago, upon suspicion of being connected With the bushwhacking gangs infesting that neighborhood, have been transferred front the Old Capitol prison to Fort Delaw'arel; ' Berke 'county Union Notubtations. [Special Denpatch to The Press.] - THE CHICAGO: PLATFORM, GENERAL SHERMAN'S ARMY CON CENTRATED AT ATLANTA, WILSON AND STEADWA.N OPERATING Rood Claims t]►at Gen. - Sherman is . Retreating. REBEL REPORTS FROM GEORGIA. AN OMINOUS - QUIET AT PETERSBURG: HOW THE REBELS ARE SUPPLIED, A HEAVY ARTILLERY DUEL ON THURSDAY.- LEE REPORTED MASSING TROOPS ON GEN. GRANT'S LEFT. ADVANCE OF' THE SECOND CORPS. CAPTURE AND OCCUPATION OF RE• BEL ENTRENCHMENTS. One Otincired. Prisoners "Pa'Ken. DESTRUCTION OF MILLS IN THE SHE ,SIIBEIVIA1 , .: STILL AT ATLANTA-THE PURSUIT OF VIREELER-NO MOVEMENTS AT MOBILE, PETERS BURO i 'NOR IN TEM E RICNAICDOAII. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10-9 o'clock P. M. The Departraezt has received despatches from General Sherman down to 10 o'clock yesterday morning. His army Is concentrated at Atlanta. His troops are in position, and well. He says Wilson and Steadman are stirring Wheeler up pretty well, and hopes they will make an end of him, as Gillen did of Morgan. The weather was beautiful, and all things were bright. No recent intelligence has been received from Mobile. No movements are reported from the Shenandoah Valley or in the . Army of tho Potomac. Recruiting is progressing vigorously in most of the States. EDWIN M. STANTON, Secretary of War. , tiENERAL SIIERNAN'S ARMY. LITTLE ON VALUE LEFT ISY ROOD AT ATLANTA. -NASHVILLE, Sept. 10.—Hood left very little of value at Atlanta, most of the Government stores and railroad material having been previously re moved to Macon. • REBEL REPORTS FROM GEORGIA-SHERMAN SAID TO BE DRIVEN OUT OF JONESBORO-THE REBEL LOBS STATED AT 1,500. HEADQUARTERS AUNT OF THE POTost c, Sept. 9—Evening.—The Richmond Examiner of to-day contains a despatch from Hood's army, dated Sep tember 7th, which says : "Yesterday our advance drove the enemy from Jonesboro and captured the hospital, containing 'ninety of our wounded. Sherman continuos to draw back towards Atlanta for 'the purpose, it Is re ported, of strengthening the works on the eastern, western, and southern approaches thereto. "Fifteen hundred will cover our losses from all causes 'in the battles and skirmishes of the last week. The army is now in fine spirits." HOOD CLAIMS THAT SHERMAN IS RETREATING. The following despatcliappears in the Richmond Enquirer: " HEADQH.P.RTERS ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE, " September 6, 1864: "To General Braxton Bragg: "Sherman his continued his retreat beyond Jones. boro. • J. B. Hoon, Major General." THE ARMY BEFORE PETERSBURG. 01111NOLTS QIII - ET-HOW THE REBELS OBTAIN HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF TEE POTOXAC, Sept. 9—Evening.—The past two days have been omi- nously quiet.- Hours have passed without a single gun being heard. The enemy were reported mass ing on our left, with the intention of attacking us if they feund our lines penetrable, but have evi dently given up the enterprise, which they would have found to be a costly one. At the centre of the line the pickets have been very friendly of late, but within a day or two strict orders have been given against intercourse. A battery on the Jerusalem road opened on a working party of the rebels this alteration about five o'clock, and quite an interchange of compli pliments took place, but without much harm to either party.. The enemy sent us a Whitworth shot yesterday, weighing thirteen pounds, beautifidly polished .and steel pointed.- It landed - in, rather 'clime proximity to our qua,rters, and had travelled a distance of a mile and three-.quarters. ' • September 9. A. 111.-,A number of contrabands came into our lines last night from Chester county. They report that trains are running on the Weldon Railroad as far as Stony creek, where the supplies are loaded on wagons and hauled to Petersburg via Diriwiddie Court House.. Between 500 and 600 wa gons are engaged constantly in this business. They also state that all the corn in that county is being pressed by Confederate officers and fed to the ani mals, leaving the farmers none for next season, ex cepting just enough to justify them in saying that they did not take all. W. D. MeG. 'EE SUPPOSED' TO BE MASSING TROOPS ON OUR WasnivcTow, Sept.lo.—News is received from the Army of the Potomac that a heavy artillery duel took place on 'Thursday, with no important result, and that Lee is still massing troops on our left. There was a little light on Thursday morning at Davis' House. A small party of rebels attacked our force at the house, which contained some twenty or thirty men, and three or four rebels were killed,tut they captured all of our men save eight. Afterwards 'our forces attacked the rebels and retook the house, whiCh we now hold. On the evening of the 7th, a guard of pickets in front of the corps was attacked by a superior force. The officer in charge was killed, and fifteen or twenty men captured. TAR REBILLS FIRING AT GRANT'S NEW RAILROAD THE BTH NEW JERSEY REGIMENT. HEADQUARTHES ARMY' OF THE POTOMAC, Sept. 9—Evening.—The batteries on the right and centre of our line kept up quite a lively fire to-day at, in tervals. The noise made by the cars as they passed towards the front attracted the attention of. the enemy, and they endeavored to interrupt the work ings of portions of the road, but without success. Among the regiments whose term of service Is about expiring is the Bth New Jersey. It has lost a large number of men at Uhancellorsville, Gettysburg, and elsewhere. Major Healey has been in com mand during tho campaign, and was wounded seven different times. None of his wounds were, how ever, of a serious character. New Jersey will, doubtless, give these veterns such a reception as is due to their bravery and the important services which thoy have rendered. INCIDENTS OP THE INVESTIiENT-ARTILLERY PRACTICE. (Special Correspondence of The Press.) Etaponn PETERSBURG, Sept. 9,1964. A few shells were thrown at our works near the extreme - right of the sth Corps. This•is the first attention we have received from the enemy's batte ries at this point since settling down after their last assault. No Injury being Inflicted, notioe was not taken of their cannonading, which was soon discon tinued. The artillery practice will notion confined to one. or two places on the right, but be varied by occasional discharges on the left. In this locality is a large corn field. Our pickets hold one-half of the ground, the rebels the remain. ing portion. For a day or two back our men haie been pressing the confronting pickets, and showing a disposition to encroach upon their territory. This was resented by the rebels, who warned our men to keep to their own half of the field. I have read the wish of a Petersburg editor that Hampton's cavalry would drive in our skirmishers, that he Might thus get one of our newspapers and learn the result of the Chicago Convention. I do not think their bersemen - are in the habit of doing so; al though an Innocent reader of • the Petersburg .Express might think such was the manner in which they procured late copies of our newspa ,pers. Our pickets heard of watermelons being in the further extremity of this field. They deter mined on having some, and took the same way of procuring a supply that the Petersburg editor de sired•Hampton,s cavalry to pursue in getting him a "Yankee paper." They rallied and drove the rebel pickets from the field, gathered what corn and melons could be carried off, and returned to their former posts. Such men laugh at danger. There are others who practice every little deceit to keep them from endangering comfort or safety. When the rebels made that partially successful assault upon our works at the Weldon Railroad, wounded men came to the sear in great numbers. Some of the stretcher-bearers shrank from exposing themselves to stray shots, and, hoping for a brief ces sation of the leaden shower, suffered many a wound ed man to lie uncared for on the field longer than was absolutely necessary. Near a [group of out buildings alongside of the railroad, and about one mile from the Yellow House, were three men. Or avid( wounded, the other two had the front, and brought him. They examined his foot where -ently entered, and found , it ,e bullet had passed. through rot, slightly lacerating the skin the freshness •of face, and .uniform, the man: is unmis- 1," and have persuaded him, Ao take his mairaket; and go back with them into the fight. Just Mei appear two new personages. They have a stretcher between them. The tallest seizos a friend of the wounded man, and ingutresC," Hurt, ain't he!" "No, suree," 18 the. answer. " Well, you are." ho exclaims, as our friend with the frao tured boot is noticed washing the blood from "his foot." Before reply or remonstranoe could be made he was thrown on the stretcher and carried to a safe place far in the sear in spite of his struggles. I glve the man credit for not wishing to return to danger wine's. be had so narrowly escaped a short VI:TY31:.&:%; time ago, but cannot confess too niuoh respect for tkose n•ho were so zealous to he useful that they Carried a sound Man from the front. True, It saved them irom ineurring - further risk by taking them frtm perils they knew not of.. ,I. never thought of Ile rebel arilllerlita endeavor• to get ate range of THE WAR. AGAINST WHEELER. NANDOAH VALLEY OFFICIAL GAZETTE. BUPPL ES A FL9HT AT DAVIS' ROUSE It. His comrades made light our new railroads. Some shells from their Whit worth guns come very near the mark occasionally, but the . majority of the shots fall wide of the mark. Engineers working near the front were fired on yesterday for the first time, and forced to doilst; This acrimonious disposition of the rebels increases, and may soon lead t 9 a battle. • R. H. M. ADVANCE OF TOR 2u CORPS—A REBEL LINE OF RN. TRRNOHNRNTS TAEEN-ONE HUNDRED PRISO NERS CAPTURED. HRADQI7ARTER6 ARMY OF TIM POTOMAC, Sept. le—A. EL—At a point of our Une, just west of the 'Jerusalem plank road, occupied by the 3d Division of the 2d Corps, the pickets have been so close to gether that they could converse without difficulty. •On a part of this line and : some distance in the rear of their advance the enemy had thrown up a line of slight works, with the intention, It Is supposed, of falling back• to them when occasion might demand. It was determined last night to drive them back of this line, and thui strengthen our own. About mid night, when ail was Uniet, the division was formed in line of battle, and the picket line being reinforced, was ordered to advance. The rebels were evidently. not prepared, for such a movement, as they were completely taken by surprise, and nearly the entire line captured:. They made every effort to retake the lost ground, but did not succeed, and Our men now occupy the line and are securely entrenched. We took about one hundred prisoners, while our own loss was very light. Desultory firing has been kept up in that violnity all the morning, and the enemy evidently feel sore at being so taken by surprise. Some of them called out to our men, saying, "That was a d-41 mean Yankee trick, anyhow, but we'll pay you up for it before . W. D. IrlcG. THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY. EARLY REINFORCING LEE-NO ENEMY BELIEVED TO RE IN THE VALLEY. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Intelligence from the front and Shenandoah seems to lead to the conclu•, sion that Early's forces must be reinforcing . Lee. It is quite, certain that Lee is Massing reinforce ments in front of the Weldon_ Railroad, and they I are believed to be from Early's command. Whether it is a portion of his original force, or the return of Anderson's division of Longetreet's corps, lately tent to reinforce Early, is not known. Parties on the mail boat from City Point believe that the ene. my's attack for the possession of Weldon is near at hand. Our own position and that of the rebels is strongly fdpilled, and it is doubtful if infantry can take either: 'Areconnoissance toward the Shenait doah from this direction failed to find the enemy in „large force. . DESTRUCTION OF NTLIA BY UNION TROOPS. Mon. YoRB,. Sept. 11:-;;The' Herald's Berryville desalt& of the 10th states that Col. Lowell, with the 2d Blatsachusetts and two othir cavalry mgt. meats, yesterday destroyed four flonr mills and se veral other smaller mills on the Opequan creek, capturing several prisoners. . A Harpers Ferry despatch of the 10th says that the rebels are still in force near Winchester and Bunker Hill. All was quiet at the front. A lIECONNOISBANOERETURN OF GENERAL NAL• LACE TO BALTIMORE WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Advices from the She nandoah 'Valhi , state that a reconnoissance found the enemy in a strongly entrenched position. General Wallace has returned from the army to Baltimore, to retain command of the Bth Army Corps. TUB REBELS AT 'WINCHESTER. BALTIMORE, September 11.—The American's cor respondent at Berryville, Fa , says that reconnois sances show the rebels to bn,ken force at Winchester. TEitNESSEE. 110IISSEAN, STEADS! . WARDS THE TIM :•- • . OF DICE TAY-LOW ' • *. SCRIPT/ON /N - NASHVILLE, • ' —Despatches dated September 9th, fr i 11 ajor R. H. Polk, A. A. G., state that (} :seau has conceal trated alltho forces of Generals Steadman and Grail ger with his own at Athens; and has moved towards the Tennessee river. General Milroy has returned to Tullahoma. The cars will reach Columbia this evening, (10th,) coming north, the railroad being all right. The south country is tilled with strolling bands of rebel stragglers from various commands, and also a part of the Tennessee brigade which was disbanded for thirty days. A report has reached General Starkweathor's headquarters that the rebel General Dick Taylor has crossed the Mississippi, and is concentrated with Forrest for the purpose of enlisting in West Tennessee. A scout who has just come in from Savannah says that all the males between nand 45 have been con scripted in Mississippi. The loss in Starkweather's brigade was very small. THE LOWER MISSISSIP PI. REBELS RAID A PLA.IiTATION. CAIRO, Sept. 10.—The Vicksburg Herald says that one hundred and fifty rebels, under Captain McNeil, made a raid on Wilkins' plantation, near Good rich's Landing, on the 25th ultimo, and carried off seventy mules and horses and two hundred negroes, after killing the plantation guards and burning the stables. A SPEOIAL SESSION OP THE AItEANS AS`'REREL LEGISLATURE • OALLER-EIIFFEASSION OF TRW .SONABLE JOURNALS. Sm. Lours, Sept. 10.—General Payne, command ing the District of Western Kentucky, uts called a special session of the rebel Arkansas Legislature. .The circulation of the Chicago Times, Cincinnati inquirer, New York World, - New York Day Book, Fr'eentaies Journal, and Metropolitan Record, has been suppressed at Memphis. The negroes of Memphishavingexpressed a desire to assist in the defence of the city, General Wash borne-has authorized the organization of a regiment of colored troops for that purpose. DEPARTMENT OF TILE GULF, OEN. BERNOWS EXPEDITION-LARGE' DESTRUCTION RIINI. STORES AT OLENTON--REBEI O DEMON. - STRATION AGAINST BRASHRAR CITE.-4ITLITARY PREPARATIONS LLB. Naw YORK, Sept. 10 —Adviees froni New Orleans to the 3d Instant have been received by tho arrival of the Evening Star. It appeass that our forces occupied Clinton only two days and two nights. _The rebels had made &demonstration on Brashear City, but accomplished nothing. They are reported to •be preparing a formidable, expedition to attack Brashear City or some other point. General Banks will come North, probably on the steamer of the 15th. The captured rebel guns of Selnia and rain Ten nessee attract much, attention in front of New Orleans. Guerillas aro still hovering in the vicinity of Alexandria. They visited the farm of E. H. Dela hay, three' miles south of there, on Thursday eve ning, and robbed him of six line 'horses, valued at *1,200. The steamer Creole, on her last trip to New Orleans, was chased by a. pirate. A letter from Fort Gaines, of the 2d, states that General Granger has not yet returned from New Orleans, and there will be no military operations till he does. In the meantime preparations for the work are going on. The New Orleans Times contains the following despatch: "HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISIONOF WEST MISSISSIPPI, NEW ORLEANS, August 27.—Major General Herron has just come in from the expedi tion. The breaking down of a bridge near Port Hudson delayed the infantry column ; but, 'not withstanding this, the result was a success. Gen. Herron inflicted a loss upon the enemy of at least 160, besideidestroying a large amount of stores at and near Clinton,. Louisiana. Our loss in killed and wounded about thirty.,i CALIFORNIA. DEMOCR.ATIO NOMINATIONS-NEVADA POLITICS - - SAN FRANCIBCO, Sept. 9.—The Democratic State Convention completed their work' last evening by the nomination of E. G. - Lewls as remaining elector, and Jackson Temple -as the remaining Cowes's man. At night a large mass meeting was held to. ratify General MeClellan's nomination. The Democratslave carried Story county, Neva da Territory, owing to the presence in the flaid of two Union tickets, and there is probably a majority in fhvor of thd State Constitution. The Ladies , Christian Commission Fair has Closed, having netted over $20,000 in gold. The markets are quiet. Dreadful Aeeldent on the Pennsylvania Railroad. IVlimarr, Pa., Sept. 10.—A. frightful accident occurred last evening on the Pennsylvania Railroad, One and Malt' miles west of Latrobe,wbich resulted in the death of three men, the injury of a fourth, the destruction of 'a locomotive, and the total de molition of six loaded cattle cars. The freight en gine No. 237 left Pittsburg yesterday with a long cattle train, and proceeded at the usual speed until she reached a. point one and a half miles west of La trobe, when her boiler exploded; tearing the loco motive to pieces, and destroying the tender and six cars. The engineer, Charles Garriken, was Instantly killed, and his body was found about fifty yards from the track. He was mangled in a shocking manner. He resided in Pittsburg, and leaves a family. William Walter, the Conductor, is missing, and ibis supposed his body has been blown to pieces. He also resided in Pittsburg, and loaves a family. E. Jones, the fireman, must have been Instantly killed. His remains were found about one huxulred feet from the wreck of the eng,ine,.with.his intestines, &c... strewn upon the earth. The brakesman, whose name we were• unable to learn, bad his knee crushed. The accident occurred at Beatty's station, where the track was torn up for some distance, and most of the cattle in the•forward cars were killed. We have never witnessed so com plete a wreck. The passenger train which left Pittsburg at 8.49 on Eriday evening, was detaind six hours. The wreck has been removed, and the trains are now running regularly. Democratic Congressionril• Nomination. DOT,LESTOWN, Pa., Sept. 10,—Henry PrOSS, of Doylestown, has been nominated•for Congress in the Filth Congressional district by the Democratic Con vention. . Robbery or Adams' Express. Company. RRIFILIIRCK, Now York, Sept.. It —The office of Adams' Expmss Company, in this town was entered, by burglars last night and robbed of $l,BOO, LARGE POSITIVE A.ED VERY ATTRACTIVE SA./.7. OF 900 Loa's op Fn.r.swn Dnr GOODS, THIS BAs,_ The early particular attention of dealers is-request ed to the valuabla.assortraent of. French, Giorivan, Swiss, and India dry goods (including largt lines of Paris and Sammy dress goods, dress silks, shawls in gseat variety, bonnet and velvet ribbons, Paris gloves, cloaks, &c.), embracing •900 lots of staple and fancy articles in cotton, worsted, wool ens and silks, to be peremptorily soli by catalogue on four months' credit, commencing this (Itlonday) mottling at ten o'clook precisely, to be oontioued all day and part of the evening, without intermission, by John B. Myers'. ('a: , 90.1ni9T10:13, ?PA. 232 and 2,4 blariist greet. .ND GRANGER MOVING TO \IIV.RR-RRDORTEDJINION.' DIREST'S FORCES--OON- BAINDIOIII. cArtrtpLie: or & BLOCKADE-Ittrar Kin. The steamer Robert - Nem% Captain Bennett, arrived hate to-night, after a voyage of twenty days from New Orleans. She reports that on Thursday last the United States steamer Keystone State captured a fine blockade-running steamer, the Elzey; and sent her into Beaufort, S. C. OHNERLL 'NEWS Major Henry Z. Haynok, eminent proVost mar shal and A. D. C., has been relieved from duty In the Bth Army Corps. Thomas Hunter and John Neale were arrested by Government detectives upon the charge of having murdered a soldier in Washington City a few days since. Terrence R. Quinn was arrested at H.arpees Fer ry Upon the charge of running men out of the State as substitutes. He has been brought here and awaits IL military commission is in session, trying &num ber of officers oharged,with holding unauthorized communication mith the rebels during their late raid, THE MARKETf.t Wheat has a declining tendency, caused by thi decline in gold. Corn is very scarce, and firm for white'; yejlow heavy. Flour very dull, at a decline of 123,1 e. Whisky dull and nominal at Provisions steady; 1,500 bbls mess pork taken by the Government at 847.58418:25 ; 750 tierces sugar cured hanis at *24.40@24.73 ; 100 hhds sides, unco vered, at Va..10@i2.3.42. NEW YORK CITY. Nzw You x, Sept. 11, 1864. ARRIVAL OF RELEASED SURGEONS FROM CHARLES TON. - The steamer Kama has arrived from Port Royal, with dates to the sth. She brings a number of re leased army and navy surgeons from Charloston.. Arrived, U. S. gunboat Galatea, from' the West India squadron; ship Haze, San Francisco; harks Brothers, Lingan, and Queen Victoria, Liverpool; Laura, Cow Bay; Cima, Lingan ; Alacrity, Algoa Bay; R. Murray, Jr., Miragoane ; Bolivar, Aspin wall; Statue, Jamaica; A. A. Drebert, Rio Ja neiro ; A. Bishop, Matamoros ; brigs Alice, Belize ; Chesapeake, Boston; steamer California, New Or leans. Below, bark St. Ursula, Rio Janeiro. Reliable Information. To the Editor of The Press: • Six: As I constantly hear the' disalfieted . aAfert that the only reliable war news is what appears in the Daily Copperhead, I wish you would inform your readers what advantages for obtaining correct knowledge of the armies of the Union- that paper can possess over the loyal press. Reliable accounts of the Federal army we na turally expect from official sources.. Does President Lincoln and his Cabinet, and the loyal generals, send special information to a paper noted for its league with traitors 1 I, for one, cannot believe It.;. neither do I credit the constant assertion that Union men read it to Wain the truth. If so, they must be persons of obtuse intellect, for, whenever I chance to take up that notorious sheet (which I acknowledge is seldom), I find it to contain such garbled extracts from The Press that I cannot recognize them, just a 3 certain verses of the Bible can be taken from their context and made to prove the exact reverse of what Is intended. I recommend to all the readers of the Daily Copperhead that .they should read The Press, too, If they are really earnest seekers for the truth. If the people will use their own good sense, and sift the assertions of t Democratic party in the coming campaign, t y will no longer be led by partisan leaders to destruction and the ruin itottliribest Govemm i trt the world has ever seen. the watchword be; "Our country, our whole country, and nothing but our country.' , T. AUCTION NOTICE.-SALE OF BOOTS AND SLIOES. —The attention of buyers is called to the large sale of boots, shoes, brogans, &c., to be sold by cata logue this morning, commencing at 10 o'clock pre cisely, by Philip Ford & Co., auctioneers, at their store, Kos. 525 Market and 522 Commerce street. THE CITY. [FOR ADDITIONAL CITY NEWS BEE POUR:PR .PAGE 4 FATAL RESULT. Michael Welsh, eight years of age, who was ad mitted into the hospital three weeks ago, having been injured by falling off a house on llaydock street, above Laurel, while flying his kite, died yes terday from the result of his injuries. DllO.l7ltiED Clara V. Foster, 12 years .of age, fell Into the ea nal at 261 - anayunk yesterday and was drowned. • - - ACCIDENT WITH A PISTOL. . Elias IL Jones was admitted into the Pennsyiva• nia, Hospital yesterday, having his thumb blown off by the premature discharge of a pistol. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. The fall of 20 per cent. In gold upon Saturday took everybody by surprise, and none were more sur prised than the gold speculators themselves. As It is the forerunner of a fall in the price of provisions and the necessaries of life, it will be hailed with de light by the community at large. It would lie need less to speculate as to the cause of this welcome de cline in the gold market. The prospects of the re hellion are generally regarded as having been-heavi ly damaged by our recent successes, and there is a fixed impression that the end- of the warts-teach nearer than it ap - peared to. be thr4 montliskago.- The steady increase of exports" of produce, and a decrease in the imports of merchandise, indicate a continued light export of specie, while the reduction in the imports foreshadows a decrease ere. long in the demand for customs. Under these influences the natural tendency of gold seems to be plainly toward lower quotations. • The stock market did not sympathize with the downward tendency of gold. •On the contrary, there was rather increased activity in the . oil stocks as well as other securities, and prices were higher. The Government loans were held-more firmly, and for the ?Ws an advance of 1 was realized. The five. twenties sold at 111, and with coupon oft at 104—no change. The negotiation of the balance of the loan 'of 1381, ($31,000,000,) is an eminent success. The biddings were very large, and more widely distri buted than in June. This negotiation will indicate to Dlr. Fessender the readiest and most economical mode of replenishing- the. treasury. With the re bellion steadily tending to dissolution, the way is Open to get all the money required, above the re ceipts from taxes, by loans. The manufacture of cur rency can now be reduced, and a reductionln prices of commodities be enforced by putting the national Credit squarely upon the market, and buying money at the best rates. Company bonds were in steady demand at the beard. Camden and Amboy 73s sold at 100,.; ; Pennsylvania Railroad second mortgage at 113; Delaware Market scrip at 82, 1 4 '.; Philadel phia and Erie es at 112; Allegheny County Coupon 5s at 79X. City. and State securities were better. State coupon 55 sold at an advance of and new City Os at 19634. -Reading Railroad shares were weak at a decline of l;,. and Pennsylvania Railroad at a decline of 3‘. Northern Central sold at 85; Norristown at 68 ;.; Camden and Ambeyat 168. The oil stocks were very firm. Dalzell advanced ; Densmore 1, BleElhenny lc, and Bull Creek lllcOlintockclosed steady at 73‘ ; Rock Island at 3 ; Story Farm at 43g. Drexel & Co. quote - New United States bonds, 1881 10S 11(0 New United States Certif. of Indebtedness—vfslX 91} New United States 7 3-10 Notes 113 Quartermasters' Vouchers 90 . . . 91 Orders for Certificates of Indebtedness .... 4 4.8 f Gold - `a) 323: Sterling Exchange 2R (a 244 Five-twenty Bonds UOX 1111( Quotations of gold at the Philadelphia Gold Ex change: f 3 A. Ai 11 A. M...... 230 228 12 111 STOCK EXCHANGE S BEFORE 100 Noble &Dela • /53£ 160 801 l Creek 4.3( 12.50 d 0...... 5 200 McClintock b 5 73( 100 Irving Oil 734 100 Phi ft & Oil Creek 23( 100 100 Densmore blO 143( do rutgri . 300011 S coup 6s '31.c511.1083‘ MO.. do cash-101335i MO do 1053 1 ' . 4(00 do 1083( 740. .. . .. lots .109 1(00 II S 5 2Obonds us]] .1113( 50 do coup 0ff.104 500 do coup 0ff.104 WO do coup 0ff.104 200 do coup off 104 7500 do .. .... 2600 State coupon 05....101 2000 City 6s new 1063( 1(00 Alleg'y co coup ss. 79% 2000 do •. •• 793 16000 Del d Mutual scrip 623( _ WO Penne R n 2d mo. 11362, ( 10(0 PLila & Erie 65....112 100 Green liloutitain.. 63i 100 d 0.... 63i • %0 Northern Cen..,bs lOO Dalran b 9 12% 4 Mechanics' Bank 28 100 Bull Creek b 5 sco North Penna. bds —lOO SO3 Seneca h-40 - 1.3 i 15[0 US 5- 23 bds -con 0ff.104 200 Bruner lots 1.91 1500 do coup.off.lo4 100 Miller Oil 1,% 800 do coup off-104 lal Reading b 33 egti 330 Corn Planter. 4.91 230-. •do ' •• .• 544 HO Perry Oil 6% 1000 Olmstead .......... 23i" 800 Eibberd blO 211 SO Nav common ...... 13 t. , • ••2 No Bun Creek ........ 5% 200 0 CAM & Ala 'Us ...••109% 400 Rock Oil - 5 1005tou Farm .dir off 4% SCO Dalzell 11% 100 McCormick & DIcK oY -• 2 500 Buli Creek Creek. 534 NV MOMIntOOIO . . ....... 7X. 400 Philo, & Oil 2% 100.0rganic ............ 11 , ..4 SOO Dalzell.. ...... lots 12 600 Globe -2. 50 100 Irving 1%100 Mineral ........ .b 5 3 400 Petro Centre it% 100 do .... . . ... 3 r>o Mineral .4 503 Bgbert ........ sd . ys 3% NO Bull Creek - 53, 20011 d 5.20 s ........ ,.111 200 hinEllieny NO 8% 1000 •do coup off.lol 200 Big Tank 2% 200 Reading ........ b3O (MC 1(0 Cat& pref.... ••1115 4095 100 do • . b 5 603 10 do • b 5 40% 200 do bffa 00; SOO Bull Creek —.lots 5% = Bull Greet. it, . • ,2•• NO Dairen 15&int. 12% 50 Sgbert 3 44' & 0 Big Tank.. ..... Me 2% . - 5. X.) Petro Centre 4.11, 300 Dairen.. ...... lots 12- 'lOO Maple Shade.. 15 MO 801 l Creek 6% 200 Pl e as & 011. Creek 2%. 100 Dairen 1320 12% 7O Man &k1ech.13k.b5%28 .. 110 McElheny ......... . 8% •300 Union Pet 3A I ' 100 Densmore - 15 200 McClintock . h 5. 1%. 500 801 l Creek 5% 200 _do .. 74 200 do ........... i.. 8 200 Hibberd 2,14" 503 Organic 1% 400 Dalzell . LSO 12' , , 1100 Ball Creek:•..lots' i% 200 do 1)5;1 50 McClintock., '. .... 7% 100 Reading, . .• . • . .... 653,i".• 200 Story Fltrin•div on 43i 300 Pldla & .001 , ...... 23i 100 Reading.. ‘..• :b3O OW 100 Densmore .... 5..in23..11% 100 Dillon Pet:•••`2dys 3% i - • The Chicago Tribune of Iliedneaday. • thus fore shadows the stringency in moneJ,and the consequent decline in prices of produce, the. probability of which we have indicated : • The money market continuesclose, but at rirwat all legitimate calls are met by bankers at the regu lar. rate. Oar leading banking houses, however,, anticipate a serere stringency in the. market as soon as the packing season shall oommenoo„ w hieh will be in a tew weeks. A close investigation shows that from $7,200,000 to it.3,C00,000 aranow invested on speculation in:whisky in, this eity,, scarcely any of which will be available for other uses before the first or-middle of February_,abont.thatime the packing season closes. There is also a. large amount invest ed In the same rummer in wool, whiob will be una vailable, for the uses of packers The combined amounts will hardly fall short of *10,000,000 thus withdraten from use when most needed. In what way thia vacuum is to be filled is what now puzzles business circles. The immense crops which are now being gathered will also requlre the use of large sums of money. Taken altogether, , the cahcliarion is inevitable that there will be an almost unparatteled stringency in money circles during the in coming packing season, which can only }l n d re li ef from other sources of supply, the prollipeet forwhieh is not good now. IT looks as if,ono result would follow, and that is, a dOwnfoll it Vrico Pork anct BALTtiIO . III, I . Sepyimb e r 10. I IP. bi 22. S 920 4 P. 111 21St SEPTEMBER 10. BOARDS. 100 Coin Planter 4.49 2Rea do ding R c GiX 0 0 c 6611 ICA do bl 5 663(, SOO do. b3O 60K 100 do ' b3O 61.' 100 do c 61.;,1. BOARD... 100 Green 310unt....b5" 63; 100 Big Mountain . • b3O 7,4" SCO Irving 011 1 / 3 0 V.i 100 Daizell Oil 100 .• do. • ...... ••••• 11111 .100 do. • 1131 100 do 80)wn 11 .100 Reading, R b3O 66 100 do '......*565.04 100. ' b3O 663' 100. do ' b3O 100 do -.. 14 &bun .IG.Nr pref.. 3 , 111 31 do pref g),AI 34 cam & Am 11.10t5.16S 3 Pemba R - 311 2 do X 73 10 Norristown. R 66 10 do 66 BOARDS. praftz, and If this prove true, the stringency rut ,3 pated will hardly bring with•it any serious regr et; We shall probably continue to have large ,5 a ,..• plies of money from the Eastern banks, 23 the rae a l," - : faeturers of that section are" receiving large pr o r mi upon their• products, and' are likely to now h es .,, heavy deposits bathe banks : but at present a sea s s, le. rable proportion of the Eaitern funds sent h.r fl i s market. invested in certificates 'of indebtedness, and te e d ; little to supply the current wants of the in m vairi • .. • • •• -- The exports of breadstnifs fro the United States to Great Britain and the continent of Europa for the year ending September al, 1864, as compar e t with former were as Willows : 14. Britain. Europe. 1E64 T "t l ----, Flour bb l 5 ,51 3 113 Wheat, bu5h—.11, 4 7,577 95,M 1, 5 52,706 161t2943 3/9,427 16,22, 310 2454,4: Corn, btuh662,691 11,963 6ssossc ,o The decline here is very great in quantity, for the year equal to 9,165,617 bushels of wheat am 10,174,753 bushels of corn—a decline equal in valet to $16,000,000 in gOla,"or 140 t 0r0.w0 in paw, r u3 decline has been the effect of the good harvNr s abroad, that have sunk prices below the rates ordinary years, and below the rates that would 4 3 ruled here as a'consequence of the stoppage 0: E.zt Southern trade by means of war. W,The New York Erening Post of Saturday says: -Mr. Fessenden luts• every reason to congratutit, himself on the success of the new loan. At twei l ; P. M. the bids were _opened. and three oilers, at 3 fraction over 101, are reported to give a total twenty-two millions of dollars. The aggregat e tdd. are estimated at sixty millions of dollars, cl wb,ip e deposits for thirty-two millions have been -m at h with Dlr. Stewart; at the Sub•Sreasury in this (it-- Gold opened heavy at 235. and after selling as 14; as 2333, closed at flaky,. Exchange is dull. awl freely offering at 2543-.:012.55, or 109 for gold. The loan •Inar,ket is moderately active at 7 cent. - The stock market opened dull and elese.t steady. Governments are quiet, State stocks Ural. coal stocks heavy, bank shares neglected, railrol.i bonds fim, and railroad shares steady. Before the first session, gold opened at 235 and sold dtwa 2:3!”„'. Erie at 107, 1 . f. Reading at 1.3132. - The appended table exhibits the chief movement.; at the Board compared with the latest prices of yes. terday Fri. Th. Meted States is, 1581, rag 107 107 . United States Se. 1881, c0up....107% 107. 3 ., United States 7•30 s 110% ]1) Ai United States 5-9)a, COUP 11U nON - United States cart, car MI o3:£ American Gold. M s f 215 .. Atlantic Mail ' 185 '135 .. Pacific Mail 270 270 • .. New Tork Central Railroad ....1203 "IE3 .. Brie 1073£ - . 107% . Brie Preferred 10811 Is ;' Readingl.l2. 181 - , 4 .4 Pittsburg Railroad ' 111 111; . ~ .. After the Board the market was heavy and irreso. lar. New York Central elomd at 1273.g. 1 Eric at 10734, Reading at 182.1. Pitrsbarg - at 111. N. Philadelphia Markets. SEPTEMBER JAL-Evening. The rapid decline in gold and foreign exchange has unsettled the markets generally, and prices are drooping. There is very little demand for Flour. either for shipment or home use, and the market la very '•dull. Sales comprise about 1,000 bbis aunt family, on private, terms, and 400 bbls 'Jenny Lind at *18.25 111 bbl. The retailers and bakers are bay ing in a small way only at from $lO 50@ll for super. fine ; $11.50@11.75 for extra, and $l2O/13 bbt for extra family and fancy brands; as to quality. There is very little doing in either Rye Flour or Corn Meal.• Small sales of the former are reported a: 1;10.50 itt bbl. - Fiaulx.—Domestic is less plenty. Apples are set:. ing at from 50c@$1 haiket, and Peaches at lrouf 75c@$2 /ft basket, as to quality. Oit.m.x.—There is more Wheat offering, and the market is unsettled, and prices have declined 56/6c 1p bushel. 9,000 bushels prime new Southern tat sold at $2.60 ift bushel. Old red is offered at $2 50 9 bushel. White ranges at from $2.80@32 9011 bushel, as to quality. Rye is quiet, with small sales at $1.85@188 ip bushel. Corn is scarce; small sales are making at $1.73 for prime yellow, and 51.791, bushel for Western mixed. Oats are quiet, with sales of new, Delaware and Pennsylvania at 83*).).: IR bushel. Ban:K.—Let No. 1 Quercitron is dull, and offerel at 01 ton, but we hear of no sales. Covrox.—The market is very dull, and there is little or nothing doing in the wasofsales ; middlitqs are quoted at $1.81(01.85 14 it, offsh. PLTROLRIig.—The receipts and stocks are very light, and the market is dull ; small sales are re ported at 494250 c for crude; 80@83c for refine.' h bond, and 856 , 90 c ip gallon for free, as to quality. Gaociaaras.--..S.ugar and Coffee are very gale t i e ri.l there was little or nothing doing in either. SERTS.—FlaxEeed sells on arrival at $3.70 11l ha. Timothy is scarce and firm with sales of 200 bus at $6.50 1.3 bu. Clover is selling in a small way at 314 1-1 64 its. • laon.—Manufactured Iron is firmly held, but there is less doing: Pig Metal is rather Fearce. Small sales of Anthracite are making at 3437@T3 31 ton for the threanuMbers. " PIWVISIONS.—The market continues firm, but the transactions are limited. -Mess Pork is quoted at $41@42 bbl. 25,000 Its bagged Hams sold at 24 y A c V lb, and a lot of Shoulders In salt at 18%c Vf L. Lard is scarce, with small sales to notica at 24r, sst. tlb for bbls and tierces. Butter is firm, with saias of solid-packed at 486 500 V it. Warearr.—There is very little doing, an.l the market is dull. Small sales are making at i 35 @lB6O for Pennsylvania bbls, and 16; @lBBe lit gallon for Western. _ . . The following, are the receipts of Flour and Greta at this port to-day: Flour Wheat.. Corn.... Oats... CM( irrivi.s. Now THAT OUR FAstuaus HAVE, for the ratlit 'part, returned to' the city, we would advise our lady friends to . bear in mind that the Wheeler Sc Wilson Company do all manner of sewing, in tha most elegant style, at reasonable prices. They also send out obliging and competent ycung ladies, with or without machines, by the day or week. The most useful and economical article in every family is a Sewing Machine, and we know the Wheeler S: Wil son to be the best, most simple, and cheapest Sew ing Machine in the world, Every machine war ranted, and the money returned if not entirelysatts factory. Instruction given at the residences of the purchasers. Go to the Wheeler ar Wilson Agency, No. 704 Chestnut street,. above Seventh, Philadel phia, and examine these wonderful machines. Sent for circular and specimens of work. "Lrnm's FLonnaris.”--This inimitable arti,le for t he hair has assumed very much the same relations to every lady's toilet that letters sustain to litera ture. It is at once the greatest beautifier, the most potent restorer, and effective preserver of the human hair that the genius of man has over invented. You who have . not yet done so, try a carton, by all means. You will never be without the "Florilint afterwards. THE STOUR oB GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOon" offered :by Mr. George. Grant, No. 610 Chestnut street, is the finest in the city, and his celebrated. "Prize-Medal Shirts," invented by Mr. J. F. Tag gart, are unsurpassed by any. others in the world is fit, comfort, and durability._ "A ST - urca rw TIME Sivas Nrros."—This is a good motto at all times, but it applies with special force in purchasing sewing machines. For this reason, buy the "Florence," sold at 630 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, in preference to any other. It is the best sewing machine In the world, and is so pronounced by hundreds of the most prominent families in the city, who now have them in use. Every machine sold is warranted to give satisfac tion or the' money will refunded. Numerous families, in various, portions of the country, after trying many other machines, have decided that. the "Florence" is, beyond comparison, the - best family machine in the world. GaNgRAL MoCI.BLLAN Aconrrs.—General Mc- Clellan has written a letter accepting the Chicago nomination ; Mr.• Lincoln his accepted the Bahl more nomination, and General Fremont is "in" on the Cleveland platform. The ball is fairly opened, and there - will be brisk times between now and November. In the meantime all tho world mil the rest of mankind agree upon the broad platform of procuring their wearing apparel at the Brown Stone Clothing Hall of Rockhill .S; Wilson, Nos 603 and 605 Chestnut street, above Sixth. • "Nino - Ens ix ran Cans."—Mn. EDITOR: A. growing evil in our city is the various attempts made by niggers to ride in our handsome horse cars. Friday evening a nigger woman, with - a bundle of clothes in her arms, whether washed or unwashed, I did not learn"(l mean the clothes), had the Impu dence to ask our conductor. who, by the way, is a young man of the Napoleonic type, and means a, great deal more than he says, if she could ride on the platform, as she was unable to carry the " wash" any further. His prompt reply was, "N o niggers allowed on the cars of this line !" and the very bell struck with aclearness, and the very horses started with an alacrity that gaie unmistakable emphasis to the words of the order, as he said, or the prest ' dent and directors of the line. In another case it was a nigger boy who was the growing evil (as he ' bad about a pot and half yet to grow), sitting on . the front steps with a box under his arm and a five cent portrait of the Father of his Country in his angers, where an untutored driver had given the permission, not knowing that the "evil," with ltls parcel, was the cause of this 'cruel war, and who was u.noonselous that his seat was too high for hint (although bid one step from the. ground), sat quite Contented, until the conductor of:the crowded car deputized a white gentleman passenger, smelling of weak rum and strong tobacco, to push him off. The push became a kick before it reached the evil, and the evil consequently landed in the middle of the street. The conductor, in reply to the remonsirance of a passenger, said it ought to be into the middle of," nest week," ' The lid of the box that flew- off had on It. a picture of Charles Stokes & Co.'s one price Clothing Store; under the Continentalaotel. I merely mention this so that any partyreceiving a suit of clothes on Friday from that house ; some. what soiled, may know it was owing to. ttlnz " free soiler " being In the way of the president and direc tors of our line. The remedy, Mr. Editors Itsuggest is, to have two or three cars fitted - upto.carry the president and directors, and let the remainder be for resposfable passengers only, whether their skin is white or black, or their hair straight or curly, for in our car the, sympathy was wholly on.the side c f the evil; anal not on the side of the "president and di rector:a of the line." Respectfully, B2,RO,ArNS I\ (.11..oTErtre, Ra?gains in Clothing, Nargains In Olothing, litarzains in Olothlngy„ • , At Granville Stokes' 011 StanJ, AeGranville-Stolies' Old Stand. At:Ceram-111e Stokes' Obi Stand. At GranvlW&fekes , Old - 50.54. 669 Chestnuo Street. 609 Chestnut Street. 609 Chestnut Street. 609 Chestnut Street. No No No No 7.. 3. Punwnra,. 7 -Tho friends of this chaste. and elegant Hair Cutter will he' pleased to learn that be has returned from (United States Hotel} City, and is atthe S. E. earner Fifth and Claistaut streets, basement. T treated by ane d reoit teases, Catarrh, Asthma. succeszful treatment. Eye -- .4lllmaludieS Of the eye attended to by Dr. Von Itioschrisker, Oetilist .and Aura Office lar Walnut street. - 9 . sell`kt: A. S. Dorman, 304 North :. , trent, 031 % 1 dealer, would respect y. advise . ri s an-1 l c the public in, general : not to:delay int b ing to coal, and run th e risk of poling fur t h er " I . l a. but buy at once of his superior atook of far - 14 ' 'mall stove, stove, egg, &o. None to eigL I"' tuallty, durability, 0.2 eheapness. soli-ln Eva Arai E.& allot atioopeafally tmated by J. butes, Dl v D., Doollat itudAltrist, 511 anne at. lief. Adv. D..L. ''.1;474 bbis 12,600 bus. "2,0k4 bur. 4,700 bus. P'AZSTIZI 033.