The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 08, 1864, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rrOJEl o ;i'
PreaOSS „
1:0 vA iLy (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED)
I`4l JOS H '0", FORNEY,
111 SOUTH FOURTH STREET
T or, PAJLY PRESS,
u
,sbfllberS, TEN DO4ARSPER ANNUMWEEK, paYable, 111
to
TIVSYTi CENTS Pan,
# l. " !Jailed to Siabsolbers out of the otty,
rrier se ,
KEE .NEUM; SOUS DOLLARS AND F/FTE
P`
this MONTI:Is! Two DOLLAHs AHD TWSNTE.
tv'reKTIMES MONTHS, luyarlably in adOsnoe
'ive rdered.
oyerotlsoro onts Inserted at the usual rates.
011-74VEERLY PRESS,
ato S u bscribers,. kiss Dow:Ans FED ANNUM, La
RETAIL DRY 44()oari.
05E REDIICTION IN THE
PRICES
.DJEUV GOODS.
Es R. CAMPBELL & CO.,
OMST.NUT SKEET,
TIISIB ENTIRE STOCK OF
PRY GOODS,
CONSISTING - IN PART OF
,NOES, • -
'LINS AND REPS, - -
CLAN PLAIDS, -
ALPACAS AND MOHAIRS,
BLACK AND FANCY SILKS,
SHAWLS, * GLOVES,
LINENS, WHITE GOODS,
FLANNELS, BLANKETS,
LINEN AND COTTON
SHEETINGS,
REFELLANTS AND
CLOAKING CLOTHS,
SXTR I 4OMBLY LOW BA.TES
eg leave to aearire the pubic that we , have
down every article in our stock, and now have
power to offer
RARE BARGAINS.
SA.T STOCK OF
0 A. 'r rq - G S,
TOE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN.
MOTOR PLAIDS.
BASSETS,
VELVETS.
MIXTURES, am, &o.
OSTEN ,
SLOURB ,
:INCHILL IB,
1:1COTB,
chide and anatiti In the estuary. For cholas
Geode, call at the
CI.4OTH STOUV.
WM: T. SNODGRASS,
34 . South BECOND Street, end
23 STRAWBERRY Street
C: t
hiEDLES
111 %WM RECEIVIIIII
NOVELTIES
Zit
LACES,
'WHITE GOODS, •
EMBROIDERIES)
VEILS,
iiiiNDEERCIIIEFS,
In e agairit s r TIREaULCLE'IIII.I.tiIE.
1024 OHEBTIIIIT STRUT
'IGHT PLAID POPLINS.
;UST OPENED, several large lots, bought in NeW
at reduced prices for cash.
dot stogie•width rich Pialde. 65c.
lot double width heavygay Plaid Poplins, $1.25.
riots tine all•wool bright Plaide, cheap,
:en lots rich wool Plaid Poplins, $1.83, $2, and
4 let doe wide French Merl:ices, n 50.
e l ( ); Striped Brocade Reps, $1.26.
4lotiig - nred, striped, heavy Mohatrs,
dot figured Merinoes, 411.2,6; a bargain.
clot black wool Delaines, 76c; cheap.
pieces Araerleen Prints and Pelalnes,
COOPER & CONARD,
S. E. corner NINTH and MARKET Streets.
FINE ASSORTMENT OF SHAWLS
tor gale below the presencent r es rices.
xa tg Broths Shawls, open
Brocbe Shawls, nod centres.
care Broche bhawle, open.ce.ntres.
care BrocheShawls,ailed centres.
eh Plaid and Stripe Blanket Shawls.
tare, Plaid, and Stripe Blanket Shawls,
cg and square Black Thibet Shawls,
4 Mantilla. Telyete, pure salt.
ceted and other Buyer Cloths.
oaks ready Made,
sDWI ECALL & 00.,
IN South SECOND Street.
WRIGHT & SIDDAIAI4
Po. 119 MIRKET STREET.
Metweett FRODPT and SECO2TD Streets
W. WHIGNI.
DRUGGISTS, PHYSICIANS, AND G.E.
NERAL STOREKEEPERS
Can Ind at our eetabliahment ei fall amortinent
of Imported and Domestic! Drage, Pnpalar Pa
t Medicines, Paints, Coal Oil, Window Maga.
Proscription Vials, etc at as low Drina as Kenn.
Iret•elasa anode can be cold.
FINE ESSENTIAL OILS,
Fur Confestioners, In full variety and of the best
lit y.
Cochineal, Bengal Indigo, Madder Pot Ash,
Cudbear, Soda Ash, Alum, Lill of Vitriol, Annid•
to, Copperas, Extract of Logwood, &c.,
FOR DYERS' 8
hears on hand at lowest net l:l cash ß.,
prices.
SULPHITE OF LIME,
for keeping cider sweet; a perfectly harmless
PaParation, put up , with full directions for ass.
Is packages containing sufficient for one barrel.
Orders by mail or city wet will meet with
poropt attention, or special qttotationa will be
laraiihed when reQuested•
WRIGHT di SIDDALLi.
wanzekrat DRUG WAREHOUSB,
Jo.' 119 MARKET Street, above FRONT.
FLREWORKS.
WORKS.
e undersigned, at their
FIREWORK DEPOT,
50IITH WHARVES, BELOW CHESTNUT ST
e now on hand a treat variety of WORKS, pro
d correctly for ExMl:alone, Including
BENOOIA LIGIITS, &c
They have had also prepared a number of
rronc-n-LiGrirr„s,
EXPRESSLY POE "
NIGHT PARADES,.
Which viti hcirn for several hours; and MST be
*ld in the hand
JOSEPH B. BUSSIER
DEALERS IN FIREV701?,118
ocl•stntbknoB
MILITARY GOODS.
FLAGS I FLAGS !I
CAMPAIGN FLAG S ,
BUNTING AND SILK,
OP EVERY DESCRIPTION
` S WORDS. 1 :
SASHES,
BELT%
otether with a full assortment of
MILITARY GOODS.
4EVANS lIAISSAXII.4.
ael4.2m fp
•.-
D. L. rriNG-Liay,
TOBACCO AND CIGAR WARBROVSE,
No• 8 NORTH THIRD STREfET,
Arent for the sale of all the celebrated brands o
3 A 1 1:31Y, OBEEN, & CO., Cincinnati.
`BELLE OF THE WEST, "OINOINNATIA"
4. BURNI."I3, " &a.
"PINE TURKISH!" AND OTHER SMOKING
TOBACCO.
4 large lot of piirne CIGARS and TOBACCO, now In
itore and for sale cheap. oc26-lm
WRING GLASSES.
JAMES S.. EARLE & SON,
KG CHESTNUT MEET, PHILA.,
141 ' 6 1 1017 in store a very flne assortment of
LOOKING .:GLASSES,
of every character,•of the
N.R117 I3EST MANUFACTURE AND LATEST STYI,HS.
0114 PAINTINGS, ENGRAVINGS,
401 PICTURE AND pfIOTOGRAZEIPUIES"
VOL. 8.--N0..86.
MILE DRY GOODS JOBBERS.
FALL ,1 B ' l "°c l K. I FALL,
18 4 1344 NOW IN STORE eists4.
M 11••••••••
SDUND YARD & CO •-•
Nes: On Chestnut And 414 Jipme Street
zmrourzrs AID JOBBERS OF
SILKS AND FANCY <DRY GOODS,
SHAWLS, LINENS,
AID ifLITE GOODS.
A LANAI AND HAMMOND STOOK OF
DRESS GOODS.
LOB or FOBSIOIt AND oosuomo
13.i.A.L.MOJELAT.4S1
INOLTIDINO DRUNEET AND °THU MAIM
ta.2o-3m
COMITISSION HO'
TTAZARD & 1111 M
TCHION,
JL.L
No, 11S CHESTNUT STREET,
COMMISSION WIERCLIANTSi
gyl-Cm3 PHILADELPHIA- MADE GOODS
CARPETS AND.9.!L-CLOTHS,•
CARPETEiI CARPETS CARPETS
CLOSING OTJT LATE IMPORTATIONS RIO PRE CENT
LESS THAN PRESENT GOLD RATES.
FRENCH AND ENGLISH AXMINSTEIZS.
WILTONS OF ENTIRE NEW PATTERNS.
TEL AND TAPESTRIES, Wide Goode.
THREE-PLY AND INGRAIN CARPETS.
NEW *UNMANS, PALATINE. AND DAMASK.
DRUGGETTS:
WELL-SEASOND OIL CLOTHS. &0., &O.
JAMES EL ORNE eo 00.,
626 611161711 T STRUT.
sel7-stutb2m
1864. FALL 1864.
GERMANTOWN.
MoC ALIAJ & CO.,
CARPET WAREROCE6I 2
1509 CHESTNUT STREET.
21.17-Sze. PHILADELPHIA.
1864. - . 4864.
. •
DicCALLITIME
RETAIL DEPARTMENT._
1119 OMISTNUT STREET.
aerioart OPPOSITE IffiISPENDENCE
MERCHANT TAILORS.
1864. A-14
E. O. THOMPSON.
do
FASHIONABLE. TAILOR,
N.B. turner Seventh and Walnut Streets,
N. B. Haying obtained a' celebrity for cutting
GOOD•FITTING roTATIOONS„
Making it a specialty 3n my bueinees for some years
Pant, it is thought of sufficient importance to announce
the fact in n is manner to the public, eo that those who
are diesatiefiedmaa: know of my method, and &ire me
a trial. 0c27-thstu-2m
EDWARD P. KELLY, •
JOHN HELIX.
Timaraons,
812 CHESTNUT STREET,
will from this date ((Weber SO tell at
REDUCED PRICES,
7701
C A 8 li •
t064-tf
r. v. ernraLL.
OFFICE FOR THE SALE OF
No. 114 South Third Street,'
IEW U. S. 5-20 SIX PER CENT. LOIN.
The subscribers, having been the successful liiddeis
for a portion of the new 5-53 six per cent. Gold-Bearing
Loin, are prepared to offer it on favorable terms to their
customers, in large or small amounts, in . Bonds of de-
nominations of -
50s, 100 s, 500 s, and I,ooos,
The interest commences on the Ist of November next,
and is payable in Gold eemi-anitually, on the Ist of iltay
and November.
All other Government securities on band and for sale,
and information given concerning investments at our
TTNEW 7-30 LOAN.
• r • Subscriptions received, and the Notes its
risked free of thanes, by
GEORGE J. BOYD, Banker,
1B South THIRD Street
atiss-3m
(IT STOCKS
. vOTIGHT AND SOLD ON 002d1111NION.
UNITED: STATES INTERNAL RE
VENUE—THIRD COLLECTION DISTRICT OF
PENNSYLVANIA, comprising the Twelfth,friiiiteenth,
Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eihteenth, and Zfineteenth
We,rde of the City of Philadelphia.
The annual assessment for 1864, for the above-named
District, of persons liable to a tax oncarriages, pleasure
yachts, billiard tables, and' gold and silver plate, and
also of persons required to take out license, having
been completed.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the taxes aforesaid will be received daily, by the
undersigned, between the hours of 9A. AL and 3 P. M.
(Sundays excepted). at hie Office, S. W. corner of
THIRD and WILLOW Streets, on and after TUESDAY,
the idth Ina and until and Including SATURDAY, the
19th of November next ensuing.
PENALS.
All persons who fail to pay t Tl h E eir annual taxes upon
carriages. pleasure yachts, billiard tables, and gold and
silver plate, on or before the aforesaid 19th day of No
vember, 1164, will incur a penalty of ten per centntn
' additional of the amount thereof, and be liable to costs,
ae provided for in the 19th Section of the Excise Law of
July Ist, 1662.. '
All Parsons who in like 'manner shall fail to take out
their Licenses, as required by law, on or before the 19th
day of November, 1664, will incur a penalty of ten per
centum additional of the amount thereof, and be sub
ject to a prosecution for three times the amount of said
tax, in accordance with the provisions of the 69th Ha
tton of the law aforesaid.
All payments are required to be made in Treasury
notes, issued under authority of the United States, or in
no t es of banks organized under the act to provide a na
tional currency, known as National Banks.
No further notice will be given.
WILLIAM J. WAINWRIGHT. Collector,
ocl.B tnol9 S. W. cor. THIRD and WILLOW eta.
B. J. WILLIAM%
10. 18'NOWIS SIXTE STREIT.
Martufsetttrer of
VENETIAN BLINDS
AID
WINDOW SI-I.AD - ES.
Rer The Lergest end Thaest Aseortmeatt in the site ►
the
LOWEST PRICES.
Reatring atteedid to promptly,
a- Store Shedes Ned* and Lettered,. 5e313.1m,
41.8 &BCH Street.
NEW BUCKWHEAT FLOUR.
WHITE °Lona nom.
FEW-PARED PEACHES.
CULTIVATED CRANBEERIBS, &e,
ALBERT 0. ROBERTS,
Dealer' in Fine Groceries,
not-tt Corner , ELEVENTH and VDU Streets.
TO GOVERNMENT .. CONTRAOTORS,
AND ()TREBEL -;-Blank " Certificates for the Re
lease of Contractors with the United States from the
increased duties imposed by the Act of J:nne 30,1804, "
together with an , assortment of BLANKS in general nee.
for sale by MOSS '&
432 CHESTNUT Street.
0c27:12 mad Blank Book Iggittfactoll.
~.
.:, • ,-, itt, -
- .. . . • .
« - • _ . . .
..- .-•..v..•-•- .: - ' --',....-- • ,_ • - • ,• f:.... ,;., .i. ~, -,
~ rfr..• - - r t .- -''' -=','''..g , :'' . . - '-gt,.l , - ,-,,,,,,..',., • - :,,,, - "",,... - ' . . 7 , : - ..' ---.'. •! ''.."' ,--. . ~..
_ .i. .
I.
„000.0,1.4„:,\,,
_,,,,,..
~
~.
~
.. ,:o.
i l!1 ,1, -'77.•-•. ..<•,,,.
~_ "___*., ,,,\ \. k , i . .. ., ., : ( r.., ,,,a7;i i . 7 ...,i' , -; . ...'"- .' :"..'....',,-.'
...r . ;:,," ': r i0 . ..." 4 ,.- .. ` - ik,.. ;:. - ',....- •-:,.:" .- ' -'-'••.' - . .. 1 ‘ . '''''.. - : - . 7 -- . 4 .
...
. . « .
. * , - . .
7 ,....- . - - e. - • • ..:, .--: „. .• • Li! ,- 4 - s
- 7 ,- , , i
~...., .---,. • , 2..2, \ ,- ,,, , - ..F0 1 l I tj/ ~,---- ,- .-....;-,:-:.: . - 1: . :. ,, : - ;. - ,-S' ; '," ."- .:-:-. :.'-' - -- ;6 14- .' , '. 2 --
„.. ..I .' -••' ' -' '- . . . ..
...
.._ ,
~_-....-'''''- .. , ..-.; ..' ... ''. • • .. i• . '.' :. ....-..." / - 7 ,-.."."'". , ',, . ~- -,.
, I'.
r. . owl •', -
.. .. ...+:....,.. - . :..r
' " \ '-'
..
- ..7:-/. - '4 gm - ,- 4.,- , ~..- •--:. - -,,, .. - ~.,___L .7.. .. k -
. 7 . , r . r • .....,..........•
...........:„.,,,..i.„..„,„......•.,• . •.; rzt. l -:.--- - 5 - Im r , :. :. , :. • -: ~... •. ~ am ..,,,... .
....,. ;,., .. .-• .. -, , ~ ... •,,,-.
~.. -••-•; : • i - - " °* " .3ll ' a,
. . .
- ,:_......- '......•—• ,•'" .... ~. ....
. ,-
......,„...- ' '-.- . 4 . 7 .,.c.,: i i i . :.. „..,, -. r .....„. . :
~ , z .,.. .11(. :,. -•,,,' ;
~,,, :.;:.::..::..'444•4'...
.iltfiptlT‘liiArrt.l. iiiip"...'"' '7.---,,- ' , '' '' t% . . ,: :%: : d .. : :::'.•:.;',: . ' ,...... H . 111 ' Si. :
• i. : : . •
......:# ..,...,,::. , . p1.. 4! - .':
~.i...• .R.... ' . 4 ...1 ' ! 1. , 1'1 .7 ....!!'.71..2.?0,4. .. , .- 7.--j-.1.4.4•..- ' .-,-,.. '.....",-;•••• .-
-.- ........... .'' . ' . ' . -. • . . ,
' ;':i' ' - :;'''''. . - . .-
• '''' " . -
t..
. ............
t
'." P. . •i, 4 “„ ~. •. -- .s' litl ix... oc. &„.... 2 ._ ._ ... _
...;.....--...--..,...- -.,.-......-,,,- •
_-,.- ........,.. .
..
.... ~,: .
~ : - .._ .- . -
-.....:„ , 1. ;• -
....... , : .
. ;. ....,,..„-A,
.„;,,,,..,
.•----- i .. ...-=-7 - -,....---.7-:-.,.......„--..4-.4 • ,•-•-•- • - _ _
• 1 ., .-,..-----...- i.
,-...-
,„, . .- 1 . ••
.„,--- . ,--
~. •
„. •-- -..-• • •:. .. --I
.
. .
-- •,. MEI
-.-,,,,-..,--- -
~..„ - • - ,-__
. , --....-,,.......--: ~......„
- • .
, _......,...=,,,..x...i.4,,. -- -
. ..
..
. .
. . ,
- 11 •• ..; -•-•
. •
- . • . .. • - •:- : --.- • - .• . _: -
• . •
.., . -._ • •
. . , . . . . .. ......... . ...
. . . . . .
. ~. , . r .„.
. .
• .
_ - , - • . • • . . ,
... . . . .
. . .
- -
_ . „ . . ... .. ..
FOR.THII BALH OF
With a large assortment of
PIIILADELPH lA.
FINANCIAL.
NATIONAL LOANS;
PHILADELPHIA.
BOTH REGISTERED-AM) COUPONS
JAY COOKE Si CO„ Bankers,
rro. 114. SPINEC THIRD STREET. oclslm
GEORGR J. BOTD.
18 &lath THIRD &rot. au26-3st
U: S. INTERNAL REVENUE.
liTOTiCE,
C A K D.
LESS THAN COST OF IMPORTATION.
I. E. WALTI,AV3MINT,
StrOCESSOR TO W. E
T.T.A.SONRI W A LIA t
719 CHESTNUT STREET_
Nett'
1 026 CHESTNUT STREET. 1026.
CU_R PAIN STOWE..
Constantly on hand a full line of - •
WINDOW CURTAINS,
CURTAIN MATERIALS,
-FURNITURE COVERINGS,
WINDOW SHADES
CORNICES, BANDS,
TASSELS,. GIMPS,
CORDS, 9r..9.,
For first-class goods. The.workmanship of this estab
ishment Is second to no other in. the United States.
C. M. STOUT Si
No. 1026 CHESTNUT Stroet.
°al 2m
Below Seventh.
WE FLORENCE
-a-
THE. FLORENCE ..-
THE FLORENCE
THE FLORENCE
THE FLORENCE
THE FLORENCE
THE FLORENCE
TRX FLORENCE
SEWING MACHINES.
SEWING MACHINES.
,SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES,
SBWINGIIACITINNS.
630 CHESTNUT STREET.
630 CHESTNUT STREET.
630 CHESTNUT STREET. -
630 CHESTNUT STREET.
%BO CHESTNUT STREET.
630 CHESTNUT STEEL'.
foo CHESTNUT STREET.
630 CHESTNUT STREET.
1864 Fus. 1864.
As• K.' t F. K. WOMRATIi •
(SUCCESSORS TO THE LATE GEO. F. WOMRATH,)
No. 4315 Arch Street, ,
, . ...
HAYS Now OPBN
. . ,
A FULL ASSORTMENT OF
LADIES' FANO:Sr:V . IMS:
To which they Invite the attentionof buyers.
1864.
LADIES':FANCY FURS: '
JOHN A. STAMBACH,
IMPORTER AIM MANUFACTBBER OY
. _
FURS,
.
NO. S2B ARCH,STRgEt
• BELOW NIN TH.:
Just opened, alma and handsome stock of
'LADES' AND CHILDREN'S FANCY FITIP3
Of every disscription, and in: he newest and moat ap.
Proved styles, at the
LOWEST CASH PRICES.
06.-tuthsam
HENRY RA.SKE,
NEW FUR STORE,
517 ARCH STREET.'
The above respectfully hiferms his patrons, and the
public in general, that he has now opened at the above
store an assortment of - -
LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S
_ - - FANCY-FURS,
which for variety and quality .
• - ..CANNOT BE SURPASSED
by any house in the United States. Being the manu
facturer of all • his -Furs, and having imported all his
stock when gold was much lower thanat the present
rates, he can Offer them to his patrons at the most rea
sonable prices.. - -
All FURS made to' order, and repairing done in the
beet manner and latest styles,.
HENRY R &SEE,
IMPORTER AND 'MANUFACTURER
Or LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S FURS,
oclB-tf 517 'ARCH Street.
IL, MINING, COAL, AND OTHER
NEW COMPANIES.
""We are prepared to furnish Now Coreorations with ail
the Books they reonire. At Alert notice and low prises,
)1' Ird-quality. All styles of.Bindint.
STEEL PLATE CERTIFICATES 07 STOOL
. .
LITHOGRAPHED •••
TRANSFER BOOK, -
ORDERS OF TRANSFER.
STOCK LEDGER;
STOCK LEDGER BALANCES.
NROISTEE OP CAPITAL STOOt.
BROKEN'S PETTY. LEDGER.
ACCOUNT 07 SALM
DIVIDEND ROOK.
MOSS 41b 00.#
STANK 1190 K NAN UFACITURERICAND STATIONUt
A SHME&D 4% EVANS'
.131CVX ,ITST RECEIVID
A FROG HEWOL3LD A- WOOING GO; and LIFE AND
DEATH OF COCK ROBIN, from ortolan.l designs by H.•
L. Stephens Two beautiful books, full of humor and
amussuent.
' THE NA SHY PAPERS. Paper covers.
RAZ [RUE. Rules for playing this new game.
TWICE-TOLD TALES. By Hawthorne. New edi
tion,. two volumes, blue and gold.
• THE GY.kSIES .OF .THE DANE'S DIKE; A Story Of
Hedge-side Life in England in 15545. By George B.Phil.-
lips.
FAMILIAR LETTERS FROM EUROPE. By Corns
-111:03 Conway Felton
_ WAR LYRICS: With illustrations on wood, by F.
O. C. Harley, Printed on heavy tinted paperl
NEW JUVENILES AND NEW NOVELS, toonuMerous
tu eify. • • -
STANDARD WORKS and books- of all kinds in every
variety of binding, now receiving AD from the late TRADE
SALES, and will be sold. at SHM E Tern tow p es.ric
- A & EVANS,
Successors to W. P. Hazard,
NO. 724 CHESTAITT Street
PETROLEUM V. NASBY'S PAM.
PHLET!—ThE!NASET'S PAPERS.- Letters and
Sermons, containing the views on the topics of the day.
An 81ILLIBilla and interesting'pamphlet.
'OCEAN. WAIFS. A story of adventure on land and
ros By Captain Mayne Reid. -Ilinstrated.
POEMS OF . THE WAR. , By •Geo. H. Bolter.
PICTURES D LESSONS F.OR LITTLE READERS.
A collection of short and beautiful stories for children.
Also, A NEW EDITION of •
PERRINE'S NEW WAR MAP OF. THE SOUTHERN
STATES, containing a Chronology of the Great Rebel
lion to November, 1953. Price, - 60 canto.
For eale WM; S. & ALFRED MARTIEN,
- oc2S. • • 606.CELESTIRIT Street.
WEBSTER'S NEW UNABRIDGED
Y DIC,TIONARY.3, 000 ILLUSTRATIONS.
h
This edition of Webster as been thoroughly revised,
and has many 'valuable additions.. It Coll6lBtB of 1,840
royal quarto pages, with the.illustrations distributed
th roughout the work.
Alm
WORCESTER'S I , IIIW QUARTO' DICTIONARY,.: and
all the Greek, French; Spanish', German,' and-Latta
Standard Lexicons and Dictionaries, for sale by
LINDSAY- & BLAKISTON,
• Fubliehers end Booksellers,
0c26 No. 25 South SI XTR.St., above Chestnut.
.
A SHCROFT'S LO W-W AT ER D
TECTOBS. - • • '
laheroft's Steam Oaxiges.
Jostles St Shaw's Mercurial Steaut and. Blast gauge%
Clark's Damper Regulator.
Water Elatures, Scotch Tubes, ae. _
ABBE: S. BATTLES, Agent,
S 4 North 81 . 1"l'IT Street, Phila.
JF. FRITEA.UFF T ATTORNEY AND
• Counsellor at Law, Hollidaysburg, Blair Co. 5 Pa.
Collections promptly attended to in Blair, Iluntin%
don, and Cambria counties. .Refers to R. CLEWS°
&Co. 1213 Third Street ; F. R. sTABB.. Preside
Enterprise. Insurance Co. ; CHAMBERS & REGISTER,
Washington Life Insurance C 0..; WETHERILL & BRO..
Second Street T. A: BIDDLE & CO., Bankers; Phila.
dolphin. • - oclo-Iml
THE UNDERSIGNED, RAVING RE-
A. MOVER his REAL ESTATE OFFICE to No. 53
TENTS Street, - corner,of Arch, has there reopened his
REGISTER, 131 which the public may- enter their
PROPERTIES FOR SALE,
And is 'prepased to collect . INTERESTS, Ground and
House REAM in 'every part of the city.
ocl7-Em* WILLIAM G. BEDFORD.
T 17CKNOW BAUCE.--THIS CELB
‘." br" "u" on b 1144 a
slOtTitit %man.
WANuo
CURTAIN GOODS.
I WILL OFF=
'Letter from lbe - non. B. 3. Walker.
_To the Editor of the New York Tribune:
Sin: Deeming the speedy exposure of the forgery
perpetrated on the address of my brother, R. J.
Walker to the Democratic Committee, Pittsburg,
Penns , 1856, due to him during his abse ace from the
country, the accompanying letter from him to my
self is herewith offered to your journal with a hope
. that it will find immediate publication.
LACECURTAINS • Very respectfully, .ItiattrEce WALican.
MY ENTIRE STOOK
FORTY "Plan" CJONW.
AT THE LOWEST PRICES.
SEWING MACHINES.
FANCY FURS.
43% CRESTNTIT Strut,
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
PHILADELPHIA, RIES DAY,', OV EMBER )864:
(12,e ,I,lllvtss.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER , B, 1864.
NO: 26 HUDBOII TERRICE, HOpOKIM, Y. T., Nov.
1, 180,
Lostnort, Oct. 14, 1864
Mita. N. W. Coos—ffiY DEAR SISTER: I send
you a pamphlet of 57 pages printed in London during
my absence, styled "A. Familiar. Epistle to Robert
J. Walker," welch pamphlet on the reverse of the
title page contains tho following sentence pur
porting to be extracted from toy address of 1856:
"If my voice could reach even the. Black Republi
can party, I would say, Reassemble your Con
vention, renominate your candidates if you please,
elect them if you can, take all the spells, but tear
down your African platform ere you endorse Uat the
polls, and give to the South a perfect justOcation
for withdrawing from the Union."—Robert S. Walker
In 1856. At page 5. of this pamphlet this extract is
repeated and purports to be reprinted here from
"The New York Daily News of October, 1863—the
ergan.of the Democracy." Now, as I have not seen
a number of the New York Daily News for many
years, I cannot say whether this forgery is the work
of the Confederate author of this pamphlet, or of
the Deity News. 1 enclose you my address of the 30th
of September, 1866, printed, as you will see, by John
F. Trow, No. 377 Broadway, New York., At page
11 of this address you will find the following sen
tence: "limy voice could reach. even the' Black
Republican party, I. would say, reassemble your
Convention, renominate your candidates if ,yon
please, eleotthem if you can, take all the spoils, but
tear down your disunion African platform, ere you
endorse it at the polls, and give the country some
other platform, which will not imperil the Union."
You will perceive that the forgery consists in sub
stituting the words "and give to the South a perfect
'justification for withdrawing from the Union," for
nay language, namely, "Reid give the country some
other platform which will not imperil the Union."
Now, the torgery, as you will perceive, consists in
changing the last line in the extract from my ad
dress In 1856. In the address it is stated that the
Republican platform of 1866, if endorsed at the
polls, imperils the. Union; in the forgery I am made
to say that this platform woald "give to the South
a perfect_ justification for withdrawing from the
Union." If the Confederate pamphleteer speaks
the truth, this forgery is the work of the New York
Daily News, and was published by that paper in Oc
tober, 1863, with the evident view of influencing the
election - el that fall. If such forgeries were then
.-printed, by that and kindred 'papers, in regard to
myself last fall, what may. I not now anticipate 1
Illy address was of the date of September, 1856. It
was.first printed-by WU. Trow in pamphlet form. I
think about a quarter of a million of copies from
that office were circulated by the New York Demo
matte Presidential Committee of. 1856. It-was
translated into German, French, Spanish, Italian,
and Welsh. Several millions of copies were circu
lated in. pamphlet form, exclusive of the number
published-in the columns of the Dertiocratic press.
Al the New York Daily News of October 4,1856, pub
lished my address, the forgery of such a sentence
would be without excuse or palliation. -
Thisyamphlet, which was in the form of a letter
addressed by me to the Democratic Committee of
Pittsburg, Pa., was called "An appeal for the
•Union," and the sentiments expressea corresponded.
• with the title. That its true meaning may be un
derstood; I quote the whole paragraph into one of
' the sentences of which this forgery is inserted :
"Popular revolutions are always sudden. The dark
cloua is Seen in the horizon ; we hoar the muttering
thunder, nearer and nearer, louder, still louder, R •
toile above us—then comes the lightning flash, the
crash of the 'Union, and all is over: We will all
then stand amid the ruins of thiStrrevocable past.
We will stand at the dread judgment seat of our
country and of. the world, the books will be opened,
and despots pronounce our sentence, the doom of
our race as they believe, self-government is a bloody
and delusive phantom. No, better had we swing
the earth from its orbit, and scatter it in burning
fragments through universal space, than meet the
curses of our country and mankind, and the horrors
of that living death, which would follow the disso
. lution of the American Union.- If the surrender of
my, poor life; the remnant of my waning dive, could
save my country, gladly, moatgladly, would I make
the • sticrifice- , •the sacrifice 1 oh no, .the duty, the
gimp of such an - achievement. If my voice could
reach even the Black 'Republican , party, I would
say, reassemble - sour convention; renominate your
- candidates'if you please, elect, them if.yelf can,, take
) all the spoils, but tear down your disunion African
platform, ere you endorse it at the • polls; and give
the country some other platform, which will not lin
peill the Union. ,
"No man rat - nes more than revolt' the countless
blessings and benefits of the Uhion. But just in
proportion as are its great advantages, will be the
unspeakable disasters which would follow from its
overthrow. I have never believed in a -peaceable
dissolution of the Union. If 'the disaster comes, it
will be attended by civil war. and the sword must
be the umpire. How can it be peacefull Who is
. to arbitrate-between the North and the South 1
Who is . to have the army, the navy, the national
banner, the public treasure or revenue, the Capitol
of the Union, the Govertment archives, and 11041 ,
are we to divide the public lands and common ter
ritory? What compact or treaty of peace between
the contending parties can take the- place of the
Constitution, and how .or by whoin are the new
Governments to, be formed and pacified-1 No,
my
'
countrymen if. 'in the madness of sectional pas
. MOMS ,and geographical prejudice, you'over
throw the Constitution _framed. by Washington
'and. the sages-of the Revolution,. you can never;
'provide adequate substitutes. Those who have
achieved- our country's ruin can never re-gather
the scattered fragments of the Constitution, and re
build the sacred edifice. No, it will be war, civil
war, of all others the most sanguinary and fero
cious. This line which separates the North from
the South will be -known in all history as the line of
blood. It will be marked on either side by frowning
fortresses, by opposing batteries, by gleaming sa
bres, by bristling bayonets, by the tramp of con
tending armies, by towns and cities sacked and pil
laged, by dwellings given to the flames, and fields
laid waste and desolate. No mortal hand can lift
the veilwhich conceals the unspeakable disasters of
such a conflict. No prophet vision can penetrate
the dark abyss of such a catastrophe. It will be a
second fall of mankind, and while we shall be per
forming here the bloody drama of a nation's out
chic, from the thrones of Europe will arise the ex
ulting shouts of despots. and upon their gloomy
banners shall he inscribed, as they believe, never to
be effaced, their motto, Man is incapable of self
goverrunent., "
It Is true I did believe, and so declared, as above
stated, in 1856, that the tadorsenient at the polls of the
Republican platform of iSIS "would imperil the ,
Union ;" that there could be "no peaceable dissolu
tion of the Union " that such an effort would be at
tended by " civic war," which would be "most
sanguinary and ferocious ;" that none but a "lino'
of blood" could "separate the •North from the
South," and that such an event would be "a na
tional suicide," a second fall of mankind, and would
call forth "exulting shouts from the thrones of
Europe." • Was not all this but too true? It was,
however, said by me as a warning against disunion,
and against the giving-of any vote which would im
peril the Union._
then said, in'tha '
t address :
"Beware, my countrymen; ere 'lt is too late, how
yen adopt these' perilous counsels. . . Give no vote
that puts the Union in the slightest peril. Make no
such fearful experiment'. Friends of the Union, of
all parties, our enemies have combined ;Ailey have
fused, and, under their united efforts, the pillars of
the Constitution and of the Union are rocking to
their base, and we may have assembled in Novem
ber next, for the last ttmei under our country's flag,
and as citizens of 'a common Union. The enemies
or the Union '
have united, and why should we be'
separated 1"
Upon these principles I voted against General
Fremont in 1850, and against Mr. Lincoln in 1860..
But slavery having made war upon the Union in
1561, in consequence of Mr. Lincoln's election, and
the only means now left to save the Union being to
crush the rebellion,l go for the re.election of alr.
Lincoln. Igo for him, also, to vindicatathe right of
suffrage. Mr. Lincoln was ohosen in 1860 President
of the whole United States. The rebellious minority.
has thus far defeated the popular suffrage as regards
the South. Unless, then, liffr. Lincoln is re-elect
ed, be never will-have been President de
_facto of the
whole United States, and the great constitutional prin
ciple, the election of a President by the people, will
have defeated by a rebellious minority. Such
a result would be a fatal precedent. It would ren
der the election of a President by, the people an
empty form; it would inaugurate anarchy, and in
vite the minority to resist the election of every
President by a rebellion.
To save the - Linton from danger I voted for Judge
Douglas against Mr. Lincoln In 1860 ;
_to maintain
and perpetuate the Union, and vindicate the great
principle of the right of the people to choose their
President and inaugurate him as' such for the whole
United States, I vote now for the re•eleotion of Mr.
Lincoln. •.
Yours, truly,
Patriotism in Poetry and ProSe.*
There has just been. published,.by J. B. Lippin
cott & Co., a . Volunie Of. Selections and Readings, by,
Mr. J. E. Mardoch, the Well4nown actor.. When
the war was commenced, by the bombardment of
Fort Sumpter Mr. Murdoch voluntarily relin
quished his profession and entered.the military ser
vice, which his youngest eon was one of the first to en
ter when President Lincoln first called for citizen-sol
diers to vindicate the outraged honor of the national
flag. That son died in battle, and his brother, badly
wounded, is now in the Invalid Corps. Mr. Mur-:'
doch served on Gen. Rousseau's staff until his
health broke down, and he had to quit the field or.
die. But he " scorned inglorious ease," and has de
voted himself froni that time until now to the duty
of giving - public lectures and readings, the peon.,
niary fruits of which he has given to alleviate the.
condition of our sick and wounded. In this he
neither sought nor received _pecuniary compensa
tion, nor, while serving on Gen. Rousseau's staff,
did he draw one cent of pay. By the 'Army of. the
Cumberland his readings haVe always been re
ceived with enthusiasm, and he would have given
them to the Army of the Potomac had his health
permitted. As a substitute, he has' allowed the
volume before us to be published, the profits to be
applied to the fund for the relief of sick and wounded
soldiers and their families. The portions which are
in prose are from Mr. Murdoch's introduction to
and remarks on the various pieces of poetry which
he recited.' The authors upon whose writings Mr.
Murdoch has thus drawn are : Philip Freneau, J.
- Rodman Drake (" The American Flarj, Judge
Peters, lialleok, W. O. Bryant, Longfellow, Rev.
W. E. Miller, Anna Bache, Lucy Hamilton Hooper,
Oliver Wendell Holmes, John G. Whittier, G. H.
Boker, Richard . Coe, Janvier, and T. B. Read.
The frontispiece to this volume represents certain
Relici which are to be presented to Mr. Lincoln,
viz.: paper-weights, on whioh are mounted pieces
of the elm tree under whose branches William Penn.
made his treaty with the Indians ; a piece of the
wood of the keel of the old frigate Alliance—a vessel
that bore the pennant of Paul Jones "and bore the
first American flag that was ever saluted in a foreign
port; and a piece of the halliards of the flat of, the
frigate Cumberland, destroyed by the iron-clad
Merrimac. - •
"PATRIOTISM IN Poirray.eivn PROSE," being se;
- lected passages from Lectures and Patriotic Read
iDge. - By Jas. E. Murdoch. Also, Poems by 'Mei.'
.
Buchanan 'Read: George H: Boker, Frauds de-
Bass Janvier, and other American authoriccoral
memorative of the gallant deeds of our. noble de
fenders on land and sea. One vol., 12m6., pp: 172.
Philadelphia : Lippinoott & Co. 1811.4.
. .
J.
EZIOLIBII PIOTORIALS.—Prom J. J. Kroniir, - 40i1
Oheotnut street, we have the Mustiated London
News, add the Illustrated News of theWoild, of OoW
be; 49, and the 2'478 of the World Of one day liter:
Tilt A MY O,IIIE JAMES PAVER.
. .
The liteeeteVeahenstention on Blehmond`
—Bruit hduet o f the t &altnred Troop
(Special Core:ii'denee of Tbe Press.-]; `
i 15.49 A liAlatl34Bti DryfigloNaBTßA:loll,Pti,
Illiiija`ottE . KlCHlLOND, Nov. a, INC
AftervadkiyAmetfittalf bean made; a battle fought,
a defeat ellititAitVor a victory won, it is an easy,
but not atilaiikpieasant:.task; tollit in judgment
upon the martial-bearing : of those who were en;
trusted wititAraportant responsibilitleg., ,ThlB ditty
becomes painful :When ; ,officers known to - be brave
and generally efficient fail, from complicated causes
which - they could . not control, to accomplish what
is committed to the undertaking' of their corn%
mends. When the gallant conduet of soldiers,' rising
aboye the terrible exigency of the oceaaion, which
can neither , be paralyzed by the galling fire, of an'
entrenched foe or the threatening' consequences of
barbarougehleftains, faileficm: a lack "of, concentra
tion,. or ,a Misunderstanding or - orders—however
much circuinstances might excuse a man from a ob.
tizen's stand-Poiat;.Military lawlields an officer to
. ,
a fearful responsibilityfor all the deficiencies in his
command : A failtua is aggravated in proportion to
the position-lost-or? the victory that might have
been gained.. '. 4 - • . .. , .
One week. ago to-day, hadthe officers under com
mand of COL Ilolinan, who led the I.st Colored 'Sri'.
gado, 3d Division, 18th corps, against the enemy's
works and" oecTupied them, obeyed his commands,
we should ,have won a victory . that. would have
thrilled every loyal heart. That it may be fully
understood how a great advantage was lost, and in
what direhion the:responsibility rests, I subjoin an
account Of, the manoeuvring of, the brigade, which
consistedfof the Ist, 22d, and 37th U. S. Colored
Troops, the last-named being drawn up, in close
column by division as reserves. The 22d was fbrined
in line Of battle, with the Ist on its right, when
What appeared to be 'about fifteen hundred rebel
cavalry, •peared insight. The 37th wai_deployed
to diver, ~ .ir attention. Immediately, the ist and
22d e
le ma ft rip
r li c l k l al i ti 6 a u d g el lu b al e wqk , ° u ° l a csl f m h i l t e hil w
th e e intention rP,nearby
th
_of assaulting a. ; rebel hattary, which was :shelling:
General" Weitzers line with some effect: ,The,
enemy gew opened two guns upon Col. liolman's
right, which caused him to march the regiments;'
hack again by the right flank at a douhle quick. Ile
then gave the order to move by the right flank, which
was parallel with the enemy's works, and when he
was ready to assault he marched by the left flank.
This order not being fully understood by the com
pany commanders of the 22d, the regiment 'was'
throwi into canine : ion at a' critical moment. The
' first, and about half of the second company, moved
off correctly by the left Rank, while the others
le arebed by the right of cOmpanies to the front,
whichdestroyed the line. Instead of halting to rec
tify this misundeptanding, the oharge was made, the
first regiment striking the enemy's works at one
point'," While the 22d rushed at another, each one at
too great a distance to lend any support to the
other. The 22d
- did not quite reach' the works, and,
after a
-stubborn resistance of the veterans of that
regiment, it was obliged to fall back, though not de
feated, and far from being demoralized. The Ist
wasfar more successful. It^ stormed and captured
the,enemy's works, a battery, • and some few pri
soners, and was 'preparing to charge down the In
terior of his lire, when a heavy cavalry force was
thrown against it,'driving it back. ,Had it not been
for the mistake of the 22d, we would" not only have
been' met, but would have been-roughly handled,
and' ent back in confusion. . •
The recommendation of General Butler to ap
point Colomil Alonzo G. Riaper a brevet - lirigadier
general, for gallantly carrying his colored brigade
across the enemy's Works. at Spring Hill, with flied
bayonets, on the nth of September, has been ap
prov.ed by the President, and that title has been
corifbrred.
* Col. B. Wright, the excellent commander of the
10th United States Colored Troops, has been as
signed to the command of the 2d Brigade, 3d Divi
sion, 10th Corps. This campaign is not ended yet.
• ROLLIN.
THE WAR IN GEORGIA.
es - thon OF THE PURSUIT OP HOOD-ABANDON.
.111:NT OF THE PURSUIT-STARTLING MOVIEMENTS
BY SHERMAN IN PROSPBCT
A. correspondent of the. Cinoinnnti Comme?cial,
writing from . Rome,.Ga.i under . date of October 30,
gives the following detailed account of the recent
movements of Sherman and Hood
- • • TB) PURSUIT OF ROOD NOT AT AN EXD. •
We have evidence in the movements of troops,
just inaugurated, that Sherman's large army is not
"to keep up astern chase after Hood' comparative.
ly small one. -
'During the last week in ..eptember 'it became
•known, through General Garrard, whoio ,cavalry
'urea scouting in the vicinity of Sandtown, that the
.rebels had moved in considerable force. from Love-
joy; on the Macon road, through .Talthetto, on the
Atlanta and' Montgomery road; to the Chattahoo-
able ilier, and were laylig a, fontoon ,bridge near,
Campbelltown, and crossing the river. The pre
sumption was that it was a move_ to facilitate and
cover the return of the cavalry under Wheeler and
Fiferest, who were at that time operating in the vi
cinity of-Athens, Alabama.- But the weight of the
'enemy., soon indicated . something of greater mo
ment, and IV was suspected that's bold and formate,•
lairattiremarseete-beareadezon our communications.
-;On Tuesday, September 27, tame divisions of the.
army Were sent to the rear; It being understood that
. they , mere destined for Rome.._ Later, the force
moving up the railroad was increased. l
On Saturday afternoon, October 1, theist and 4th
Divisions of the 17th Army Corps—General Fuller's
and General Belknap's, under command of General
Ransom--started.on a reconnoissance toward Fair
burn Station. The enemy was found at and be
yond Fairburn, in force. Our men retired and
reached camp early on Monday morning. The re
suit was; that before the troops returned to camp,
the Army of the. Tennessee had orders to store. all
surplus baggage in Atlanta, and be ready to march
on'Tnesday morning.
We were all much excited, for the rebels had pos
session of the road north of Big. Shanty Station,
and were destroying it. Those who came from
Marietta reported that 'clouds of smoke could be
seen from illountalienesaw for miles on the road ;
that the rebels had their two best corps commanded
by Beauregard, and that we would be compelled to'
give up Atlanta, the prize of our summer campaign.
But the army was remarkably free from excitement.
As we marched from East Point, on Taesday,
passing along the outskirts of Atlanta, and saw the
heavy works which the rebels had constructed- for
tho defence of the city, and our men '
as busy as
ants, constructing a shorter line of earthworks
within them, we telt that Atlanta would be safe in
the keeping of the 20th Corps. The ?ad Corps, and
the 4th and 14th Corps, of the Army of the Cumber
land, had preceded , the Army of the Tennessee.
Nor did we fear because Thomas, Schofield, Logan,
and Blair were away, for Generals Cox, Stanley,
Osterhaus, and Ransom were tried leaders.
On the 7th and Bth of October our army came up
to E.enesaw Mountain and finding the rebels in
force orders were issued to attack them early on
the sth. But, repulsed at iLlatoona, they had
hastily withdrawn during the preceding nighty
and, on the afternoon of the sth, Sherman moved
from tKenesaw to Big Shanty, a distance of
seven or eight miles. It seems to have been the
design to remain here three or four days. and re
lay the track destroyed = but on the afternoon of
Monday, . October .10, ' the whole army was on
the march again, following the roads running
near and parallel with the railroad through &Woo.
na arid over -the Etowa river. On the morning of
the 12th of October Sherman passed through Kings
tbn, and camped about seven miles from Rome. On
the next day (October 13th) we were again am the
march, pressing hastily towards Resaca. Portions
of the army struck •the' railroad' near Adairsville,
and were transported to Resaca, seventeen miles
distant, by cars, for which purpose seven or eight
trains were constantly running. •• •
On the 15th the army now massed around Reseda
was pushed west, the 17th, 15th and 23d Corps mov
ing directly through Snake ,Creek Gap,followed by
the 14th Corps, after it had made a detour to the
north; The 4th Corps crossed the Ohatooga Ridge
. nearer Dalton. At Snake Creek Gap we drew blood
for the first and only, time during the pursuit, our
casualties numbering about 30, confined to, the 25th
• Indiana, and parts of the 68d Ohio and64th Illinois.
Snake Creek Gap is very narrow, and the enemy
had'worked like beavers to obstruct it. Tney felled
thousands of trees for that purpose, and though our
engineer corps was assisted in removing the ob
structione •by heavy details, we probably lost a day
by the delay. Previous to this time, we wore so
close upon Rood that it was not Impossible to have
'badgered a light out of him.
On Monday, October 16, the army, with the ox-.
ception of the 23d Corps, which made a detour '
through the Armutchy Valley, moved through
Ship's• Gap, and, heading south, passed straight on
.tbrough Summerville, a village about twenty.five
'Miles west of Calhoun, on the Atlanta Railroad.
The supply trains took a road leading down Taylor's
Ridge. . •
On the night of the 20th, the 'whole army was
united at Laglesville, Alabama,' a village about
twtnty-tive miles directly west of Rome and about
ten miles north of Coosa, river. 'Up to this time we
had followed Hood with all the speed possible,. bat
he,tavireg a. sufficient margin, crossed the Mesa
river at' Blue Mountain, and fortified the.southern
bank. On the 27th, our army marched south from.
Eoglesville, about five miles, and deploying into
line, encamped some two or three miles from the
Coosa-river. • •
-Eremite 21st to the 28tli our army remained in
this position. The enemy have disappeared In the
meantime from the south bank of the Coosa river,
,and, after making a detour to the west, have turned
: • north again, aiming evidently at 13ecatur or that
vicinity. As it Das become evident that Sherman
does not intend to follow Hood any further with his
main army, and as he is equally indisposed to tea
main idle, events of a startling nature may be look
ed for from this department. The marching since..
the Ist of. October has been very heavy, but the men•
are in betteroontlition than if they had remainedat
Atlanta, a prey' to camp ennui. •
• Sherman issued an order, during the march, directs
ing the men to forage liberally, but in no ease te
enter houses. . -
Sherman intended,: in case Hood-attempted to
strike his communications, to throw back heavy re
infortements at any needed point by rail; and he
could have prevented the destruction of his railroad.
near Big. Shanty, and the• attack at alatoona, had
not a freshetearried away , tiro spans of the railroad
bridge over the Chattahooohle just as he was pre
paring to load a large number of, trains with troops
for Atlanta. This break in the bridge,cut off his
trains, andle was consequently foroed to march his
columns to the rear. As it was, however, Hood got
off badly whipped, at Alatoona, and committed no
very serious damages on the railroad. •So, perhaps,
after all, the freshet is not to be regretted. • •
On.Tistirsday night, October 27th, the break in the
Atlantis .Railroad was up, and on the' 28th•thirteen
heavy trains passed it to Atlanta. A band of gue
rillas_, near Adairsvllle, have fired on several trains,
butabave been chased off by the train guards: On '
the Wit °Me 20th they attacked a train about 10
'o'clock' Gen. Elliott, who was on board, took com-
Mena of about one hundred soldiers, and quickly
diove • the bushwhackers from their auibusoade.
Pietro are the 'only attempts at interruption since
the reopening of the road.
The .promise made Hood's army by Jeff Davis
renders itnecessary that their "feet should again
press the-soil of Tennessee."' To compass ;this im
p.ortant pedal necessity, no doubt is endeavor.
tog to cross. We 'haVe - good - evidence that he' has'
all of his three corps vilth•him. In • the Meantime,
- the militia of Georgia, their sorghum gathered, are
• being remarshalled to drive the 20th Corpsfrom ' At
lanta probably by a grand flank moveMent, tor.
.014 militia are admirably calculated. • ••
• .S.berinan ignores the &Werke of Hood's army to.
the 'extent' of fiveheavy corna which, we may be
.sure,Cwill not be idle. •,The - 4th Corps; General'
Stanley, will be in Decatur,: Alabama, by the time •
this reaches you. It propteds on foot via I..afayette
• and Roseville to Chattanooga, where trains for De
rcatiir await , it. ~
The paymasters have reached' Atlana, and will
pay' the troops there before they embark in any fur-
ther movement. The ialeanirsuit has convinced. Sher? '
amen that he'can move a great' di:stance into the enemy's
-territory; atutsubsist mainly-on foraging. _• •
• Hood, here*cor t will figiA• troops wider igarateaad .
- .* _ •.
R. J. WALKER.
of General Tjomai.,(who is still at Nashville), if he
fights it all, and trtero can 'be nothing,comforting
to the enemy in the eta tement he wilt And art' army.
of 'United States sohlleri; Competent to prevent `him
treading the soil otTenziasede'to a reckless ontbilt.
The rebels, did,noteittaek.Rome, and were net' in
force nearer it than - .
4LE)aND/iILI:
,DBPARTVER OP, .042L - BLOB,EO ir.
,-PO:,,Tall
COL: Tri.Le-TO k 'TAKE HIB•PLACE. „
tElpeCial Deensiehto the SullitinA. . ,
•
ALEXANDRIA; NOV, 7.-General Slough" and'itaff
received orders late last night to repair immediatety
to the_front, to take charge of the troops on the line
of 'the Orange and Alex:andria a•nd , Manassas
Ile,left this city, this morning at five o'clock:.
, We learn' that his headquarters, for , the present,
• will be somewhere in,the neighborhood Of Manassas.
Colonel Wells, the present °lndent and accent:
modating. provost marshal 'general, has been de
signitted, by eiders from the same source, to all his
place as military governor of the city during his
absence -at: tbet front. No better selection, could
possibly .have been made. -
„BEATA OP A CELEBRATED;-GUERILLA—A.-VA.LPA
BLE ABIESTANT'LOST TO MO,SEPY,
(Special 'Despatch to the Bulletin ] • -
ALFXANDitIA, Nov. 7.- - --Plioseby lost Valuable
assistant, a few days ago; in the person of a desertir
froth the sth New York Cavalry, knoin as the "Big
Yankee." This fellow figured - conspicuously in the
capture of Gen. Stoughton, at Fairfax Court House,
over a year ago. Indeed; it was principally through
his aid that this dash-of Iffesebra succeeded. A tew
days ago Mosehy had some important messages to
send to a distant point, and the errand was con
sidered a very dangerousone. The "Big Yankee "
proposed to undertake the job, and Moseby, con,
sidering him very valualde, and not desirink to lose
him, endeavored to persuade him not to go, but he
persisted in going, and Noseby finally consented.
,On his way he encountered a small squad of' Union
'cavalry, who halted him and demanded his surren
der. Be refused,' saying there was no surrender for
him.. At the same tirno he commenced firing into
tbe squad *hi& had halted him. Our meareturned
.:the'compliment, which resulted in his.death. ;
. ,
•' Another Rebel' Consptraey.
A PLOT TO BURN CHICAGO—ARREST . OP THE CON- 1 '
SPIRATOES AND BEIZITHE. OP THEIR ARMS--A.
BROTHER OP OIniEBAL ItLAEMA.DTTEE ONE OF THE
CHICAGO, Nov.. 7.—Within the last two days a
number of persons have arrived from the Northern
part of this State, mostly from , Fayette and Chris
tian counties. It was supposed that they were
coming here to vote, but it has turned out that they
were members °Vile 0. A. 8.. Society, and that a
conspiracy was in progresi - for raising an insuxreo
lion on election day'and releasing the prisoners in
Camp Douglas. Early •this morning a largamtm
her of arrests were made, and in nearly all eases
arms were found in the possession of those &frost
.
ed. Amongst them is Colonel Marmaduke, brother
to the rebel general of that name, Who was a guest
of Dr. Edward. Buckner Morris, formerly judge of
the Circuit Court of this county. He harbored a
lot of bushwhackers and procuredelethingfoi them.
He is said to be the grand treastirer.of th.e.9. A. IC.
Charles Walsh, door-keeper of - the Rouse of Rep
resentatives, was also arrested, and in his house
were foUnd several men whO had been engaged in
casting bullets for the use of the conspirators.
Some that are arrested are reported to have made
confession that their intention was to fire the ,city
to-night and release the Camp Douglas prisoners.
A large quantity of arms, and ammunition was
found in Walsh's house. Col. G. St. Leger, Col.
Greenfield, Morgan's adjutant general;,:_Captain
Centre], of IVlorgan's command ; J. T. Shanks, and
Charles Travers, with 200-stand of arms, two cart
loads of revolvers, 'and. °a large lot of ammunition
were found in Walsh's house.
THK SOUTHERN IiTiTES.
WHAT MOSEBY WILL DO ON THE ALE-VANDAL&
RAILROAD -- MOVRMANTS OF HOOD AND SHIM.
MAN'S PURSUIT—BOW OUR ARMY LANDED AT
PLYMOUTH—A MARTIAL " BIRD OF ART.". •
We have received,. from our correspondents in'
General Grant's army, all the Richmond papers of .
tie 4th inst. Beyond a confirmation of the capture.
of Plyinouth and the success of Lieut. Cushing's'
expedition for the destruction of the rebel ram.
Albemarle, they have no news of importance. •
The Examiner has a fierce article on. the method
the Government has taken to protect the Alexan
dria; Manassas Gap, and Orange Railroad. It
claims.that incorrectly states "the duty which me
science and common sense" indicate to "Moseby•
and his men." 'That duly the .Examiner thus an
nounces : •
. " "It is taredonble their efforts - to capture, over
turn, and blow.up the trains running on that road,
with the especial • object of striking and capturing
those particular trains which contain some of these -
hostages.lf, in the performance of . this duty, they
'should kill or wound any of 'their 'fellow-citizens
whose bodies are employed by their cowardly ene
mies as shields for their own, they cannot help it.
!Their lives and limbs are of no more peculiar value.
than these of Lee's, or •Earlyes, or Moseby's soldiers,
daily exposed to. the 'bullets of the foe'; and if they
should be killed, they simply fall in the service of-
, their country. But having brought down and cap
tured• the trains thus hideously defended, what re
mains .to be 'done I This remains• to be done :..To
kill without sparing one,lind without delaying an
instant, - every-lLvingAningjen board, except the
Confederate citizens exposed thoreolif Wit Course
is taken with stern, manful resolution, it will not be
necessary. to repeat'the lesson. Once will do. God
and man will not be again insulted and outraged by
this shocking exhibition of 'mingled cowardice and
cruelty."
- . They have nothing from Petersburg but specula !
Lions as to the objects of different movements of
Gen. Grant's troops. The newsfrom Hood Is unlm
*port ant. The Dispatch says :
"Since the transfer of the seat of war from
Georgia to North Alabama, the news froth both ar
mies comes in more .uncertainly and slowly. Al
most entirely across the extreme northern portion
of Alabama runs the Charleston and Memphis Rail
road, its average distance from the line dividing
that State from Tennessee being about twenty
miles. The Tennessee riverruns through Alabama
in about the same direction, winding about a little
more than the railroad line, and crossing it in seve
ral places. When Hood started on his now move
ment, 'be kept south of the railroad and river,
having- the 'reserved privilege' of crossing , either
at any point be found convenient • When Sherman
found he could not catch him after his last. effort at
Lafayette, he turned north'and went to Chattanoo-.
ga, from whence he started on the same line
with Hood, except that he is marching on
the north side of the Tennessee with the hope of
meeting the Confederates at the point they shall at
tempt to cross. The railroad line mentioned having
been destroyed, he is now compelled to foot it over
a mountainous and barren country. He placed
Thomas at Bridgeport, with one corps, to guard that
point, and, on the 17th, Sherman himself, with the
main army, was making for Gunter's Lending, to
stop Hood there. 'As Hood was within a night's
march of that point on the 22d ult., it is pretty cer-'
tarn that he could have crossed, if the river was not
too high, without any interference from his antago
nist. Sherman has been making strenuous effofts to
relay the track from Chattanooga to Atlanta, so that
be may getaway thews engines,guns and materials
left in the city after the Successful destruction of dm
road tiy our forces. To consummate this end he has
been making a temporary track on thetimbers cut
from green saplings and trees along the road. Our
cavalry, however, have been annoying his working
parties to a very considerable extent, and material
ly retarded the work and the nee of the road. They
dash in at all points along the road, and, after cut
ting and destroying places of the most Importance,
•disappear to pounce on it at some far.distant point.
By these active operations, Sherman has been pre
vented, up to the present time, from receiving any
communication with Atlanta. The correspondents
with Hood's army agree. hat no general fight need
be expected immediately, as Sherman is too far be
hind and has no transportation to march with ra
pidity. Very large supply trains have been passing
•up to Hood's army. for the last fortnight. The ene
my, under *Kilpatrick, have made several desperate
efforts to capture these trains, but, thus .far, una,
Tellingly. Wheeler is, keeping in check. A
raid, however, is anticipated upon the Alabama and
Tennessee Railroad, in the direction of Selma."
The gallant exploit of Lieutenant Cushing,
which resulted in the capture of. Plymouth, Is de
scribed by the Dispatch in its explanation of the
"Confederate defeat e' '
" A lack of sufficient watchfulness on the part of
our .troops seems to have been the prime cause of
the loss of the town. It seems that, on Thursday
night, a party of eighteen men, belonging to the
blockading fleet in Albemarle sound, some eight or
ten miles from Plyinouth, took a small torpedo
boat and started for Plymouth. On the way, they
found a small boat, containing six of our men 'in
the river, stationed thee() as a picket ' and ; but all
of them being asleep, they were taken prisoners.
Then proceeding' to Plymouth, they found the Al
bemarle at the wharf; and running the torpedo boat
under her, andilship, biew.her up, causing damages
from which she soon sunk. Infantry was stationed
on the wharf, who. fired on the assaulting party,
and, after the .Albemarle sunk, captured the whole
of them ; but no one was killed and only one man
wounded. There was no force of the enemy near
Plymouth with the exception of the five or six gun.-
boats in the sound ; brit the loss of the Albemarle
opened the Roanoke to them, and hence the fall of
the town. Captain Roberts, it is stated, com
manded the Albemarle. It is understood chat there
were no lives lost on the Albemarle, and that there
were very few men aboard at the time of the ex
plosion of the torpedo."
"R. 0. Davidson, Concord Depot, Va.," con
skiers that in the straits to which the Confederacy
is reduced, he is the rising man—its savlour—to
more value to it than the 300,000 slave troops. He
writes to the Examiner':
•" AMR. EDITOR I see' by the papers that the pub
lic mind. is becoming excited upon the subject of
eliverrenlistment in our army, for the defence of
our country; as a. dernier resort. Now, would it
net be better"to first try my invention for aerial loco
meltion 7 If successful, my project_woald afford the
means of settling this war in six weeks. I require
only the paltry sum of ten or twenty thousand doll
Jars in Confederate money, or one thousand in gold,
to give practical effect to the Bird of Art. Will
not the citizens of Richmond, and the officers and sol
diers of the Army of Northern Virginia; who have'
alike been so hardly pressed and worn down during
the last six months, at once raise this small sum,
and thus relieve our bleeding country from • the fa
natical assault of the malignant- Yankeesl Sup
pose that my plan is ill-founded, still It at least de
serves a fair trial in this trying hour . of our great
struggle for existence. All great discoveries, and
inventions were distrusted at test, but all. such
achievements arose out of and in opposition to
doubts and deriunclatione. The test ef my inven
tion is the only mode of settling the question of its
multi, as in" all other cases hitherto.'
Tax rebel Capitol's undergoing its annual .
reno
vation, in anticipation of the assembling of Con 7
tress next month.' It was intended to have re
carpeted the halls throughout, but the
steamer in which the fine Brusseis was shipped
from Europe fell into the hands or the blockaders
eff'Wilmington So the . Capitol will live to go
withentits new dress thisseason.---Enquirsr. :
• TEE - NATIONAL &molts' Femr..—Among the
many rare and interesting donations to the Sailors'
Fair we would call attention to - a Book of Auto
graphs entitled "Our 'Friends in. Great Britain."
The - collection consists of autograph notes from such ,
friends of the. North and of freedom as Bright, Mill,
Cairnes Huxley, Eleallni, Hughes, Dicey, -W. G.
Fox, Lord Brougham,-Lord Houghton, Aubrey der
'era, Sir Charles and Lady Lyell, Fawcett, Potter, •
etc., etc., as well,sta the simple autographs of Gold:.
win .Smith, Newman,Oobden,.eleorge' ThornpsOn,
Baring, P. A. Taylor, Browning, Ludlow, Beesly,
the Earl of Carlisle, the Duke arid 'Duchess of At
g.yleT-the Du - elites of Sutherland, and many others.
The value of the collection is very mach enhanced
.by an original notice of .each_ individual written for
"Oleaurpose' by competent persons. The whole- hi
a waned ede gent votitmo to, be disposed of by
;nl:•tAf•ra°B(Fi'72l.M.M.-ifil •e . • : •
FOllit OENTL
Ink:xice Alsip THE WEST INDICES.
ams;. iceosy.,Ata AT LIMIECTYADVIONS ii3OM ST.
POMINGOO3 - AHA7IA, AND NASSAU.
1 1 ' NEW *bast, Nov. 7.—The steamer - TAherty brings
Havana datea of the 2d. Advicea n'OM mazioo say
that Gen. Dobbido was told he was s liberty to re
turn
to his county, but that his property was attb-
,
t; feet to the.determthation of the Empefor Maatird-
•/• - .
Dio tiew4a 4 Lbeeltre o9 l*9 l / fr,,OP9
Large numbers of slok soldiers, noway, &Mr! .
fioM there. •'
The blockade• runner flora arrived , 'from • Di mut
October 29.
The( Babaros - Herald of the 26th reportS
rivalnisthVßansbee N 0.2 from wlluisgton, kind
also that the steamers Florio and A. E. Fry get
ashore otitside of Charleston.
The Wando and Talisman left that 'port on the
but have not been heard from. The Leey
Armstrong and Virginia had arrived.
.the Narteau papers ere debating the idea of Nao
mi being declared a free port, only exacting an Im
port duty of 13('per cent. on all goods.
suabaserciN .01PsJIIARIST LEADERS TO MAXIMI•
,T. , IAN-lI4DOWTANT" TELEGRAPHIC ENTEEPRLSER
-ORTEGA'S .VORDEB DISPERSRIi-DESTRUCTIVE
- - - ,-
BARTIMITAKE-aIIiCHEASR OF . 131116SCIDAGii. ,
Intelligence received to-day from . Mexico states
that Garcia de la• Cardena,andeval, and oth
Juar is t leaders in the Deptetment` of Zacatecas
Lave given In their adhesion to the Imperial Go
verr.ment.
General Pliejia, in the name of the Ithperiallsts,
had installed himself at Matamoros. The Juarlst
forces there having also submitted to the new order
of things, telegraphic lines are to be established be-
tween the leading cities of 'Mexico communicating
by way of Texas with the United States. Another
line will connect Mexico with Yucatan, and a sub
marine cable will be laid to Cuba. In this way It
is expected that the City of Mexico will soon be in
direct and Instantaneous communication with New
York, Havana. and San Francisco. ' • . '-
The forces lately under the command of Ortega
are said to be completely dispersed ; whole'compa
nies have voluntarily come to the various
pal authorities and laid down their arms.
The newspapers contain long accounts of an
earthquake which occurred on the 8d of October.
The shock.was felt •at Orizaba at five minutes be
fore 2 o'clock. - Many houses and churches were da
maged, and several lives were lost., At- Tehnaertn
and Aunts the church corners fell, and many houses
were destroyed. Brigandage is increasing in Mex
ico: - Oath's 9th nit., a diligence was attacked when
'but two miles from the capital itself.
CALIFORNIA AND AUSTRALIA.I
. _
SAN Fuezionsco, Nov: s.—The monitor Comanche
will be launched on the 16th Inst.
Dates from Australia to August '22d represent
that the colonies are much excited on account of
the determinhtion of the home Government to con
tinue the sending of convicts there.
FINANCLiL AND COMMERCIAL.
The following le a compa , alive statement of the con
dition of the Philadelphia Banks yesterday and 'on last
Monday
Oct. 3L Nov. 7.
Capital stock 4 $13,018,105 '513;(25,470
Loans ' 41,598,194 41,763,747
Specie... ................ ....... 3.496,143 • 3,0:8,994
U. S. legal-tender 13,656,444 12 899.309
Dayoatta ......37,425,659 - 36.943.993
Ci renlation•
The principal transactions at the Stock Board yester
day were in the oili; other stocks were comparatively
dull. Government loans were generally lower. The
best bid for the 1581 -loan was 106 X—a decline of X;
there was a sale reported of the new 7-30 loan at 99; the
ten-forties sold at 913,—a- decline of X; the new five
twenties sold in a small way at 100X,-and the registered
at 101. State eves were irm at 93X. City sixes were
weak, with a tendency for lower prices the 'new sold
at 102, and the old at 99X—the latter a slight decline.
The market for bonds wa' very quiet, the only sales
being of Reading mortgage sized '443 at 1(15, and Lehigh
Valley bonds at 104 X. ghe share list was considerably
denressed, and prices ranged lower.' Reading opened
at 68—a decline of 1, and subsequently sod down to
673 i ; Pennsylvinia Railroad was steady at 67834'; Cats-
Wien preferred sold at 38—a c ccline of IX. - There were
no sales reported of Little Schuylkill, Minehill, or Phi
ladelphia and Erie; for the latter M only was bid—a
decline of X. North 'Pennsylvania also declined /f.
Thire was continued activity in Maple Shade Oil, and a
further advance of 4 was realized, selling freely at 44.
Noble and Delamator advanced y i . and Catlin' 31. .1L
large number of Silbert shares changed• hands at pre
ions prices. There was considerable. said in the Bank
stocks. Girard. sold at 49; Commercial at 59, and
Farmers' and Mechanics' at The only sale of
passenger railroads was Fifth and Sixth at 61.
Gold fluctuated during the day as follows
9s A.
11
12 M
1 P.
3 P. M....
4 P.M.9
2413 i
24434
0 4335
2'534
2443‘
The directors of the National Bank of the Northern
Liberties yesterda y 'declared' a dividend of seven per
cert. for the past biz months:
The nirector of the United States Mint furnisher. us
with the folloiving..statement of the deposits and coin
age at the said institution for the month of October,lB64:
DEPOSITS.
Gold Deposits from all sources ' 2233,605 32
Silver Deposits, including purchases 12,019 75
Total Deposits...
GOLD COINAGE.
No. of Pieces.. Valve•
17,816 11356,500 CO
13 L 3,788 34
Double Eagles
Flue Bars '
Total
Fine Bars
C 7o tg aent
aeces• • • • •
Total
. -- 1 . 190:C00
RscApintLenow..
•• • Piecs. V 0.28s 81ne. 34
17,898 $37
• • 6' 323 61
8 190,000 107,400 Oil
Gold Coinage
Silver
Copper
Total 8 917.844 • $477,011. 95
The following national banks were authorized during
the week ending November 5:
Name. Location. . Capital.
First Newcm tie. Pa $150,000
Union Bank Philadelphia 2.50,0:0
First Angelica, N. Y 100,000
•
Total capital during the week $5G0,000
The following increased their capital stock daring the
same period: -
Original Present
Name. Location.. Capital. Capital.
First oreenport, N. 1...550,000 $75,000
Winthrop Bank .Winthrop, Me.... 60.000 75.000
First. Flallowe.l, Me•:•• 50,000 60,000
First Bllenville, N. Y.• 120.000 170,000
First Amesbury, Masa.. 50,000
75,000
Tot al increase '
Capital added daring the week
Ptevionsly antlioxized
Fresent capital '' ' $105,381,070
Whole number of banks 661
The amount of currency issued to the National Banks
during the week was $1.765,926
Previously issued ha, 691.194
.
National currency i• n
circulation $60,450,100 .
The following additional banks have been designated
b 7 the Secretary of the Treasury as depositories of the
public money :
Name. • Location.
City National - Worcester, mass.
Blackstone Bank Boston, Mass.
First Wilmington, Del. —
Consolidation Bank Philadelphia, Pa:
The Second National Bank of Baltimore has declared
a half-yearly, dividend of Ilya per cent.
V 4,2-431- w
tg
Kf,Fte r,go;
..d4*.—...
!. u3;= cs
eft t.mt4 F., 5 C P
13'
.0 0 0
g P .
0
.5.0 - •
§ 4MWONWSW.MO)
btEg§thgg§§lll§§§§§§§§§
so .-s" retasors , n4.
Sao f)
9_
0-
. .
. . .. •
. . . .
. , .
Qb
IR 0.-• Nit , 1.. , 6.. Cb .8... b
. c‘cy, ..7.4,7 Ot., q • ...to iilb b 2 V 0 .... r.
CDI-.01.- , 434 , -.L , 1N.0 • .0.1.1.4".1.-• Wak
....".•""""• " " " " " " • " " "
§ p Spo-§o• ggfig§§§gra
op
ww
-
rgl§§§ t gggrrS - § - 0
aaggg~rrS-S0 Est
rao
gqESN c...A.
* wwWWww-alap wa
n§§nE3E§aW s l§§§
_
nSVU.,73 - 4 b2 i3W4larcrbt
gh§§flanrag9=ta
PROPs , .
§§§§§gliaME §E§ga
Clearings. Balances.
Oct. 31.•.- , '87,419.151 66 $i08,097 31
Boy. 1 7,917,043 22 :86,043 47
2 7,208,378 47*409,630 67
.114 3 8,217,184 88 ' 501,378-40
"s 4. 7,183,651 04 316,622 62
G. a 6,093.60714 ... . 467,536 70
The last weekly statement of the banks of Providence,
R. 1, , compares with the *returns of the previous week
as follows
October 22. October 29 •
Loans 824,032,400 $24,744,500
Specie 359,800 352,500
Circulation 4462.700 • 4,461,700
1 eposite . ; ....... 5,010,000 5;107;100
The followini derision will interest all who have oc
casion tunegotiate•loans upon c.ollatcrals. A New York
firm inquired whether' loans made by them for railroad
companies..upon bonds'and stocks, Were to be regarded
as 'f sales " of the notes; and it will be seen that the
,commissioner decides 'that they are considered as
"loans," and not liable to the taz'on "notes sold:"
Taassvav DEPARTMENT,
OFFICE OF r.NTERNAI , REVENUE,
WASHINGTON, Oct. 7, 1864 1.
GaNTLEMEX.:. I reply to your letter of October 4, that if.
Ton receive an order to borrow it:certain sum on United
States bonds for a customer, and effect the loan, depos,it- •
ing the bonds as security for 'Umlaut. or as collateral
for the note of your customer for the amount of the loan,
such transaction is not stale within the meaning of the
law, subject to tax either of the stock or note.
If A e ff ec t a loan of B on his note, pledging
.stock or
other securities as collateriel.ench transaction would not
.be a sale as between A and B, nor would a broker who
negotiated the transaction be deemed to have made a
sale, if the transaction was In truth and fact a loan
made by B to A.
If. however, the transaction were such that under the
local laws B would be entitled to treat the transaction
as a sale, and to held-A' a note. as parchazier, the broker
w ill be liable to the tax.
rThe decision of the matter depends upon the. fact
whetter the transaction Is a c t u ally
• Very respectfully, a loan or a tale.
JOSEPH J. Lawn, Commissioner.
• ' The shipments of treasureTirom Ban Francisco, from
the Ist (Si January to the let otOotatieithis year. com
pare
with the exports during the same theta in 1 8413 as
follows;
Exports, nine months in 1864 • *43,772,559
39,589,04
Sante time 111.1863 -
kacess this year 3E1,163;607
F.,ot..the past tliree I cat's th 9 attrlllo of. geld 04141:ate
2,05.776
2,619,385
$295,625 OT
.17,838 $370,288 34
COPPER.
6 680,060
2,610,000
56,8(X) 00
60.200 00
- llYxr,,
.135,000
6.15.000
104,746,070
0
d
$43,038,915 86 32.588,209 27
' TI-1-
Tine Was Pans will be b,
mail (per annum in advance,
Three copies
Five copies
Ten copies.
Large \ _ .atal Tea will be charged M
rate, U. 50 per copy.
-" Mt
The money must always aecompetny the order. and
in no inetance can th ese terms be deviated from, as
they afford very /tit te mere than the cost of paper.
41Kiii• Poste:meters are requested to set as aseate fc<
Tait Wita rams.
41- To the getter-up of the Club of ten or twenty, sit
extra copy of the Paper will be eitrea'.
from Fa n Frarctsco has been setting towards Riirland„
Until abo'ut two. thirds of the eznorte now go , "
a tnthst dt
reetion. The following table, ea, s Colenaaneir ,
tanetrates the change that bas take n Plata is thecillar"
ship.
'Meats: • .. .
' - 1964 ' ' 780 3.1863 . . iss
En gLlpt dl• • • 8)V, 864,670 '. 21.286,851 7,656,073 2 57 8. 134 1-
liow'Y otlt.. 6,745,277 7, 982,827 19,459,191 "21."21.8[3 ; x1/ Chili) a......... : 6,818.2(8 2,645,874 1,952.16) 2,7:18 . 471
Palmate, , .... 27,382 - 1,411,296' 842,605 735, a? ,
Mt or.L'e..•••••
.:_671,824 ' 263,204 289,896 2d,us
tyd3 r 772 : 45.9' 38,589462 29:639,817 30r 52,000
The foregolnlienhelictnal exhibit of treasure exports.
18114114 an encess in-favor of . thitysar
Of.thie large encore some, $0,000,0 0 0 Was compotwiti OC
shipzients by the Sub-Treasurer in San Frs.ucisco cur
Government account, being acemmulations of dugs*
upon imports. The•sarne psrty miumtei seat
gm a y 111,000,050 in the preceding year. ' •
The receipts of Cremona in San Francisco, from aft
Bc i ttro es through renter public channels, during aler
last nine months, have been as follows: ----
Frevn California and nevadit•Terrltory $34,130,20
Fron coastwise ports ' 4,849,141
Proms -foreign contacts'. 1,579,611
Total' receipts
$11,285,983
Ile ccvlsiparticin for the Hine pest yeareekows a steal,'
increase. The figures are as follows:
1862 1862 1864.
Total recelpts. •• • • 474,446, 443 38,5p.371: 41.265,938
The fellewfwg is the' New Orleans cotton Otateman
for the week ending October 27: . .
Stocbon bend' September 1,1864,141 w • . 4.675
Bet Oiled durivirtbe wtek ....
Reteit , ed'prevleuely w.. 6,51 Y
Tost •
Exported d Laing she week.
Exported previously
. Total - • .... 6,931)
Stock on band • -....... . • 4 fisS
• • The• Now Orleans- Picayune, of the"thti, ult:, says of
the cotton market-,
• •
'We have no improvement to notice is the maikot to
day. There was but little inquiry, 'and), if anything,
prices were still easier, middling. towever, being stilt
quoted at $1.15@k20, 'while low middling wits setdown
at sLl'.®l. id. The sales embrace 15 balos•of good ordi
nary at auction, sold- try order of the special agent of
tie United States Treasury, at $1 C 6 (6 per cont.-Govern
ment does to be pnid•by buyer.) and 1 bale damaged at
41c., same condittow. ,
PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCHANGE RALIK Nov. I.
BEFORE BOLRDB
100 Continental 2%1
0.00 do
2800 do. 2%
900 Brompx 2
1400 Bgbert Oil
400 d o o ' ..... Ws
1(10 • -
.100 El Dorado 2%
. 500 Phil & 011 Creek. 1116
Eto do 2
ICO do 234
2(X) do 2 1-16
FIRST :
2 Park Mec 8k..b3 139
8 Comm '1 8k...10ts 58
6 Oinird Bank 49
'lOO Penn g..b30 22
100 Organic 011
- 100 Dalzell 011... cash 9%
EMO Bock Oil lots 4%
ISCO Phil & 011 Crk lots 2
100 McClintock —cash 6%
100 do cash 6M
100 Maple Shade Own 44
tO do 44%
2(0 do .... lota.sswn 44
60 do 44
100 do 44
100 do e3O 44
103 Mcfilhenny Oil. 8M
300 do
6(0 Bgbeit 08....J0ts 5
100 do (Own 5
do' bid 6%
100 KO
do ... .bl 6 6341
100 do bib
100 Reading 11 X 34
BETWIE
5 Cataw B pref...:... 38
100 Leigh R 32
60 halley 84
13 do 84
SECOND
17,Girard 49
60 Dal zell Oil 9.14
ICO McEthety
100
60 Litt 'do 451 e Schuy 453 ii
%
AFTER I
10 Elmira It pref 51.
• 12 Fifth & Sixth. st R. 61
100 Schnyl 32
2 Cana .2 Am B. 150
5 Academy of Music. 57
1000 Curtin • 9
5(.0 Dairen 9%!
100 Story Farm ' 3 1
400 Brae er••z. /if '
100 IdcElheny .•—• bier isg
700 Hibberd 3.811
200 Contingutal . b 5. 23i
2CO Union Petr 0........
Ifo
Ito Excelsior • 1
503 Bibberd..... ..... S. Ali
100 Bruner ....'
SOO St Nicholas Oil • ..
8)i
200 Beading 63146
100 Hyde Farm 'blo ;13
200 Mineral
500 Corttinental......bfi. 2 2 4
300 Pope Farm•—•••.. )
100 Green Mt 1i 5
300 Feeder Dam 1 -
100 North Penna....b3o 2431
300 Bxcelsior 1
200 Big Tank 2.31
310 McClintock 63‘
100 Venengo
600 Big Mountain 61
. Drexel & Co. qaote:
New United States Bonds.' 1881. • '
ICASK
New U. S. Certificates of Indebtedness A 5 963(
New United States 7 8-10 Notes 109 110
Quartermasters' Vouchers 93' 94
GolOrders for Certificates of Indebtedness
244 3.1‘ 33‘
d 246
Sterling Exchange 264 . . 018
de
Five-twenty n
The .New York Past of yesterday . says:;
Gold opened at 245, and alter selling at 239 the price
advanced to 245. closing at 24434. •
Rxelange is dull at 10934 for gold:.
• • The loan market is more active, and a number of loans
have been calledin. But the brokers lave little diffi
culty: in obtaining funds at 7 per cent.
'The,bank depossts have increased-two milliobs, and
the loans less than - one Million: the specie line- has ia
creased $682,020.
Gcverr manta are stesdi. New five-twenties are
w. nted at ICO3f, certificates at 95X. ten-forties at N.
Before the first session Gold sold from 245Q233X(4.140.
Buie was quoted at 10f4; Reading at 137.
The following quotations were made at the Board on
some of the active stocks, as compared with ElatardaT
afternoon: _ .
Mn. . .
United States 9e. 1861 . coup. • —IO7 o X 1063( A X
dv Dec. .
United States 5-20 s coup 100% 100 X X ' •
United States 10-40 Coupons.... 94 943 i 34
United' Statee cert 9531 95 •ji ..
Tennessee &e.g..— • 56 66
Missouri 6a....
60% 61 • ... i
New York Central Railro ad....116X 1.2734 ..
Erie 1003% 102 X - .. 1%
Erie prefered 104 105• 1
Hudson River .. .-. •
123 124 « I 1
Reading • ' 135 137 .'• 2
A fter the board New York Central declined to 126,Erie
to 110, Hudson to 112 X, Reading to 135:
• At the I.o'clock call New York Central closed at 126%,
Erie atlooX,'Hudeon River at 122%, Reading at 134.
I'ktlade!ptila Maikets.
There is very little demand for Flour,, either for 'ex
port or home nee, but holders are firm in their vie Ws;
.about 1,(00 bbls City Mills extra sold on private terms.
The retailers and bakers are buying in aamall, way at
from $9.75010.50 for superfine, $10.50011:23 for extra,
$11012.50 for extra faintly, and $12.75(413 bbl for
. fancy brands, as to quality. Rye Flour is selling in a_
small way at $0@0.25 . 8 bbl. In. Corn Meal there is very
little doing.
GRA IN. —There is more doing in Wheat; sales reach:
about 20,000 bushels at 25. ®26Cc bn for reds, the latter
for choice lon. in stow. L2sBc for prime Deleware afloat,
arorwhite at 271)(AV1&% be, as to quality. Rye is Belling
in a Ismail way . , at 1700172 c 'B 1311: • Cormie r scarce;
smell sales of prune. yellow are making at 175 c VI be.
which is an advance. Vats are firm; about 6,00 d bushels
sold at EsSc in the cars and afloat.
BARK. —Quercitron is scarce; Ist N0..1 is firmly held
at $45 E 1 ton.
COTTON.—The demand is limited, and the sales ara
in a small way only, but prices have advanc-d_ Small
lots of middlings are reported at $1 30©1. 31 VI lb, cash.
GROCERIES. —Holders continue firm In their views;
about 150 hhda Cuba !ugar sold at 2W,@2?.3 !A.M. Small.
salesof Rio Coffee are making at 430-14 c , B lb 4
PETROLEUM.—Prices are unsettled! small sales of
crude are mak lug at 4C@4lc; refined, in bond, at 65@68c.
and free at from- 6C@F.5c 'ls gallon.
SEEDS —Small sales of Flaxseed are 'making at $1.30
93.35 bu. Timothy is dull, and quoted at 85 bit.
Glover has 'advanced; small sales are making at $.124-
12. f-0 $4 04 lbs.
PROVISIONS.—There. is very little doing in.the way
of saes, but the market is very firm; 1,000 obis Mess -
Fork sold at about $4B bbl for new. Bacon-la scarce:-
small sales of Dams are making at 21024 c "fl lb for.plaia
and fancy canvassed: Solid packed Ratter is selling at
from 35042 c - f lb. •
EilbEY. —The market continues quiet ,• small sales
are making at $1.77(41.78 gallon for Pennsylvania
and Western bbls. .
The following are the reeeipts.of Flonr and Grain at
this port today
Wheat
Corr.
Oatt,
Philadelphia Cattle Madre&
Tice arrivals and sales of Beef Cattle at Phillips' Axe.
nue .Drove Yard have fallen off this week, reaching
about' 2,£CO liead. The market is very dull. and prices
are*ltiolit any material change. Extra Cattle are sell
ing at from li@l6%c ih, the latter for choice; 1.3011)(c
for fair to good, and common at from 9012 c sit Ib, accord
ing I.'Phe market cloied very dall,.and sales
were reported at lois er prices than the above.
' Cows hi4re'advincediwitb - salmi of 76 head at from
035 UP to $90,1t head,- as to quality.
• SWEEP'—Prisesare firm. and the Market active; 4,600
heap arrived and sold at from 7®B3(c' lb, as to quality_
Hone'—''be market ia doll, end-prices have declined;.
3,500 head arrived and sold at the different yards at
from $llOl7 the 100 iba net, as to quality.
The Cattle on sale to-day are from the following
States: •
3,300 head from Pennsylvania. . -
1,100 head from Ohio. .
400 bead from Illinois.
The following are the particulars of the sales:
173 Western, Martin Puller & Co. Digl6.
100 . doCurrie & Daffy. 12@l8.
27 do •• B. Deming. 11Q14. - • • •
2E. Chester county, B Neaiey, 13(445.
3S Chester county, Baldwin & Co., 1341 , 1634.
1S Chester county, E. hbelly,
192 Western, N. Merritz. 1.2@16%.
9) do A. Kennedy. - 10Q12.
• do. J.:. Chhin„ 10015. , •
85 Pennsylvaiia, H. Chain, 5®7%, gross. '
as , Chister and'Western, P. Hathaway, .1.2(p5.
40 Chester and Western, Jones Mc ..aese, 1015.
152 Western, E. McFillen. E@7, Arose. ,
1 'do . C rlbrry &
•1 00 93 do M. U llman. 15@•16_
94 do 0. Smith, 1301634.
.130 Ohio, J. BlaFblen.
11Sawestern, P. s.lcPillen. 15N0-1535.
• 40 Chester county, B. C. Baldwin , 1.3g11.4%.
139 Ohio, 'Mooney & Smith, 120316, •
100 do Shamberg & Co.. icgo.
COWS AND CALVES. '
The arrivals and sales of Cows at Phillips' avenues
Drove Yard are small this week, only reachiag about 75
head. Th e d e mand is good, and pricer. have advanced.
Springers ere selling at from/P.35070, and, Cow and. Calf
at from $45 tip to $9O per head.. ay to quality.
CALvEs.—About 30 head: sold, at from 9410 c as
to quality.
TIIILSHIMr MAREME:
The arrivals and sales of Sheep at Avenue
Drove Yard are light this west, only reaching about
4,830 head. The market, in consequenoe, is firm. and
pried are well. maintained; 'fair:quality are. selling at.
from 7®73‘c, and good to extra at from 7110 8 Xo
ifr
gross, as to quality. '
. THE HOG DIABSET:
The irrlValsosind sales of Hogs, at the Union and Ave
nue Drove ;Yards, reach about 3.000 head this wee k_
_
lbs. t
The market-is:dull - and prices thehlaAviteerdraeotleinfeodr,p7mtth.s
sales at $16§17 the 140
corn fed. •'
at Hoary Glass' Union Dro ve Yard,
2,4&3 head sold e t, as to grainy.
from $'161.7 the 100 Rm. n et .
6:30 head sold at P . hillips A
venue_ Drove Yard. at from.
. k16@17 the 1 00 Ms,
Neer YOrk Markets, November '7.
Jon ss are qUiet The!2 for Pots'and $l3 for Pearls.
BREAD grurra. market for State and Western.
Floor is quiet and very tun ; sales 8,500 bbls at $9 60@
9 SO for superfine State; .$10.15®10 9.5 for extra State;
+10.30010 35 for choice do; $9 65@9.85: for superfine
Wt stern; $10.2M110 85 for common'to medium extra.
Western; $10.75011.22 for common to good snipping
brands extra round-hoop Ohio, and SIL 30®12 for trade
brands.
Southern Flour is quiet t. sales 500.bble at $lO. 90011. 7b
for common. and SIL BC®l5 for fancy and extra. Cana
dian Flour is quiet and steady ; sales 900 bbls at $10.204
10 30 for common, and $lO 40012.25 for good to choice
extra. ;Bye Flour is quiet. Corn Heal is quiet.
heat very firm and quiet; sales 31,0 CD ImeChicage
swing at $2.17;a2 28, and 7,200 bus bi antes club at.
816. g.
ye .le,"thill and nominal. Barley is dull. Steel'
Malt is quiet. Oats* are firm at 9149131. a fortestern..
The Corn market - is .3i@ l c Wig; talog 14lms aft
$1.65 for ;Liked Western:
...11,634
---
- ....... 6,6871:
400 &aka Oil ‘,... 34
100 Per Centre -...........11
200 Keystone 911:....:41•41
200 " ' :b!ifißi
300 Racel do
e'r 'Oll I
ID.) Beading II ' " ''" 58
• 100 do b5: . 6St
100 McClintock 6K
400 Olmstead 3'
100 Story Farm. 3
1600'Great Basin 3%
BC Soh & 011 Creek— t=
:OAItD .
57 Reading R —.lots 11554
100' do bl 5 68'
'lOO do: ' btO c 8 -
MO do b 5 68
100 do • :cash 67.04 -
LOO do b 5 66
100 Swatara Falls. 10)(6,-
100 Hyde Farm 8
750U6520 Bonds•
_.•101.5‘
500 do
cash
a 101
6000 do ch 101
300 do" ' Cash 1013 E '.
3000 Er S 10.40 Bde—lots 9i3f 4
700 II 5 7-30 s new 'csh 99
10(0 state:sB. cash 93.4 i
100500 City as new.lots 102
7000' . do oyer,7o.lots 9954
2 Soh May.. • — 4 , 3136
200 do 32-
100 ' ' -do ''. '''• 32
39 Cam & Am „lota 150
50 -Penns I ' ' 68 1 4
12 ' ' do .. t• • 68%
8' ' do' ' • 6834
' BOARDS.
.
26 Le high Valley.... St
2000 Lebigk Vat 11da....10134
100 Egbert Oil ..... :.. 6...5i
BOARD
.450 Little Sehtty 453
2000 Reading Aft 03448.106
• 400 U. S. 6.20 bds reg.lol
2600 City 6s new 102
.700 Organic .••• —• • •••• • 1
100 Seneca
1000 US 540 new .14
200 Densmore
4H) McElheny
200 Noble 6cDel . '
1134'
SI
1100 Hibbard.— . 2 31.
1300 Brune's. I x
1 500 Continental •• •b 5 2E
1103 Egbert ' ag
im o 5,h"
;100 . Phil d a di 0110reek. b5 .
2
.200 Briggs Oil 3X
'lOO Hyde Farm 73i
200 Olmstead •• • . ...... 3hi
100 Schyl Coal&lmp Co 10
:500 Hyde Farm ' S
60ead
200 C
Born
ing Planter. ••• • • 6 73
50 Maple Shade 44
500 St Nicholas Oil.opg 3.31
100 Eldorado 0i1..•—• • 1 .
100 Bruner . 7 1
500 Conn Mining V
100 McElheny • b3O 5%
100 Egbert 65‘,
100 Continental . 235
1000 Olmstead •• • 3.14:
200 Densmore b 3) 8
100, do • 13;.‘
NovorßEß 7-13ventnir.
.• • 1.00 bbbs.
...13,000 baa.
3.000 bus.
8.600 bal.
NOVEMBER 7—Evening