gaugutalittomptutt -NvE4'igi 3 P_4 4 t7 , .!Tf) lll l4rt - B;iim , i: - - The printing presses shall be free to every person 'who undertakes to any examine th bran e-pre-: ceedings, of the legislature, or _ell' Zit government; and no - law shalt ever. be made to restrain the right thereof. -- TM free =man= ideation'f thought and opinions is one of the invaluable rights of men:, and every citizen may freely speak, write and prin abusesny sub- Ject ; being responsible for .Ulse of that liberty. prosecutions for the publication of papers investigating the officialconduct of offi cers, or men in public - capacities, or where the matter pdbUshed le proper for public informa tion, the . truth thereof - may be given in evi dence." LANCASTER INT.ILLLIGENCER OFFICE. November 6th, .1865. JAME... 4 F. DOWITEY is authorized to re ceive money and subscriptions, and to con tract for advertising and job work for us. - ' " COOPER, SANDERSON t CO. Wont for the State Central Committee It is evident that the Democratic party was beaten at the recent election in this State because it was not properly organized. An energetic campaign,. conducted with all the energy for which the Democracy have always, been distinguished, might have sup plied the lack of organization and have given us the victory, That, together with a proper organization, would.have rendered our. success sure beyond a per adventure. The campaign of next fall will be a most important one. We must elect a Democratic Onvernor and secure as many Congressmen as we possibly can. The campaign will be a vigorous one, and every inch of ground will be hotly contested. This will bring out a large vote. But what we want, and what we must have is such perfect or ganization of the Democratic party as will ensure the polling of its entire vote. If we can insure the doing of that we shall most assinedly triumph. Can that be accomplished? We are convinced that itcan. Our present sys tem of organization is exceedingly loose and imperfect; so much so.asscarcely to be worthy of. the name. It leaves all the work of the party to be done by such men as are willing to do it volun tarily, imposirg no specified duties on any one, except it be the members of the different County Committees. These local organizations have been inefficient in the past for many reasons. They have not always been composed of the right material, _have had no specified and well defined duties to perform, and have been left to do what work was set before them in an indefinite and ineffi cient manner, because they were un guided and unassisted in their etibrts. Zeal, without properly regulated meth od, will necessarily expend its ener gies without producing proportionate results. We need and must have such an or ganization of the Democratic party as will give to its movement all the stead iness and precision of a well drilled army. This can be attained without a resort to the objectionable plan of or ganizing secret political associations. All the movements of this great party will, we hope, continue to be as open and undisguised in the future as they have been in the past. But, it must, and, unless we are mistaken, it will avail itself of the interval between this time and the opening of the next cam paign to perfect an organization which shall be vastly more efficient than the present loose system. It must not be left to waste one-half its great energies in the coining campaign for Governor and Congressmen for theAvan tof proper 'organization and intelligent guidance. This work must not be left to the mere voluntary efforts of individual members of the party, as has been the usage of the past. A system of organi zation must be perfected by the State Central Committee ; and steps taken to put it in operation throughout the State at the earliest possible period. It can be done, and. we expect to see the good work begun at the meeting of the Com mittee on the 21st inst. If it is not called together for some such purpo-e we can see no use in its assembling at the present time. A thorough compact organization of the party is what is needed. That is the work for the Com mittee. Let it see that it is well done, and done as quickly as possible. The Cholent The cholera has reached our shores sooner than it was expected. Stealing on board an emigrant ship at Havre, and lurking in the system of some one of the steerage passengers until the vessel was well on its way to the New Wbrld, showed its horrid visage and rioted hi its work of death while making its voyage across the Atlantic. It was hoped we might escape a visitation from the terrible plague at this time. But when once it starts from its home in the East on a journey Westward and North ward no obstacles seem to be sufficient to stop its still but deadly advance. It leaps mountain ranges and walks across seas, appearing unexpectedly and sud denly at places when least expected. Its movements are mysteriously un certain, and its presence strikes terror to the hearts of all who dwell in crowd ed cities or populous towns. Nor does it always confine itself to these. It not unfrequently stalks abroad through the country, visiting villages and sending up a despairing wail from quiet ham lets. Usually its ravages are greatest in summer when the air is most sultry, and when diseases of a somewhat simi lar character prevail. Yet it has raged with great violence even in cold climates during the depths of an almost arctic winter. So it once visited the Capital of Russia, and reveled in St. Petersburg, striking down its thousands of victims and causing the most terrible consterna tion among the people. It refused to be repulsed by the fierce winds that swept over the wintry seas, and heeded neither the falling snow nor the icy hail. It 'plied its death-dealing voca tion until the souls of the Muscovites - living in the brilliant Capital of the Russians had grown clothed with con - tagion, and horror had become pestilen tial. Whether the precautions taken to prevent its spread from on board the ship in which it made its passage from Havre to New York will prove effective remains to be seen. Whether it will ap pear .in a mild or a severe form when once it gains a foothold on our side, also remains to be seen. Heretofore this city has escaped its visitation, even when it raged in the neighboring town of Columbia. It is to be hoped we may be as lucky in the future as we have been in the past; but we should see to it that all superinducing causes are re moved at once. THE RETURN JUDGES of Adams coun- iy met again on Friday last, to count the soldiers, votes. The Compiler says - these amounted, to just two. After counting them and adding up the votes. for the various candidates, it was found that C. M. Duncan, of -- Chamberslaurg, the Democratic candi_ date for State Senator, had eightyLnine majority over his Republican competi tor, David McConaughy. It is said but ''five soldier votes were received in Frank lin: We believe Mr. Duncan is elected by a clear and unquestionable majority of twenty-seven. Mr, McConaughy ran behind his ticket in Adams. He was ' one of the busiest "treason smelters" in .Gettysburg, and the people of his own county and district have rewarded him " • :aceording 'to his deserts. Thaddeus Stevens went over and made a speech 'for bimilmt even abet failed to save close op gie The hour of defeat is riot the time for 'despondency, at leastsofarasthe DeznO7 C - ia,t,ie party is concerned. A (party , - *hose foundiknth rests on Ike pritzeiples of eternal truth, manfor at ine , thiroiigh the treachery of professed friends the falsehoods and machination" of opaii enemies, be defeated, but it Othmot.be annihilated - or hopelessly'variquislied. The Democratic party is indestructible, and, sooner or later, it will re-assert its sway over the entire limits of the Re public, and again place the wheels of Government on the well-beaten track laid down by Jefferson and Jackson. But to secure the reins of power at an'early day, it is absolutely necessary for the Democratic party to'close up its somewhat broken and - demoralized ranks as quickly as possible. Thtre , should not be a day lost, although an other trial of strength at the ballot-box is somewhat remote. In time of peace prepare for war, is a well-known max im based on sound philosophical prin ciples. And what is true of a conflict with bullets is equally so with ballots. There must be a completeand thorough organization of all the conservative vo ters of every township, ward, and pre cinct of every county in the State, and this ought by all means to be accom plished during the ensuing winter. It is a work for the present—not for the future; a work to be done now. - -not a few days or weeks before the election. The party should keep up an active, living, working organization all the time from year to year, so that the terms apathy and lukewarmness shall not be known in our political vocabulary. • We therefore urge upon the several ward and township committees to com mence at once the work of organization. The ranks should be closed up without delay. We must go into the next grand battle, if we would win, as a disciplined body of regulars; not as raw and inex perienced militia. Had we done so in the last campaign, we should not now have to regret the loss of our noble old Commonwealth to the Democracy. The time was in the history of Pennsylvania when we could afford to stand with folded arms and laugh at the puny efforts of the opposition to win a victory over us; but that time hasgone by, and we must work, and work hard if we would be successful. We have a des perate and unscrupulous enemy to con tend with, and it is incumbent on us to use all the energy and all the means in our power if we hope to accomplish his overthrow. We throw out these general reflections for the purpose of stimulating our friends to action. It is not our province to sug gest the details of a plan for organiza tion. We prefer leaving that to the intelligence and discretion of the com mittees above mentioned, and other leading and influential Democrats'in the several election districts. They know best what plans suit their respective lo calities. What we do insist upon is, pronipt and immediate action in the premises. With it we shall succeed at the next election. Without it we are destined to remain for years longer in a helpless and hopeless minority. Negro Insurrection The English, who have had so much sympathy to bestow on the negroes in the United States, have now on hand some very serious work with their own " freedmen " in the Island of Jamaica. The steamship Eagle, which arrived at New York on Wednesday, brings intel ligence confirming the news previously received of a negro insurrection in Ja maica. It appears that the negroes are rising en masse against the whites in every section of the island, massacreing indiscriminately not only the white men, but the women and children who are so unfortunate as to fall into their bloody clutches. The number of revolt ing murders committed by the blacks is increasing daily, and the utmost ter ror prevails among the white popula tion. The efforts of the handfull of military that are scattered throughout the island to restore order prove una vailing against the fearful odds against them, and the arrival of troops from Halifax, and other near-by British naval stations, was anxiously looked for by the whites. Although the British Con sul at New York has as yet received no official intelligence from the British Consul in Jamaica relative to the num 4'bers of the insurrectionists or the ex tent of their ravages, he has received two private letters from Nassau, N. P., where the British steamship - Wolverine had arrived _from Jamaica before they were written, in which it is stated that several white persons of prominence on the island had been murdered under circumstances of the greatest atrocity, being literally hacked to pieces. By another source it is reported that a white magistrate, whom the blacks had seized, was tortured in every mode of cruelty that the spirit of vengeance could sug gest to the demoniacal negroes. His fingers and toes were cut off while he was still living, and after life had be come extinct—anegro woman ripped open his bowels i=tt h. a knife. The departure oJAdmiral Hope from Halifax, with the lith Regiment, is officially announced. Tile PORTLAND Price Current asserts that "the development of the domestic wool interests during the civil war has to no inconsiderable degree compen sated for the losses on the cotton crops." This assertion is Yankee all over. It depreciates a Southern and magnifies a Northern staple, and steers far away from the truth in order to do this. We imported thirty-three million pounds of Wool in 1860 and produced sixty millions. In 1364 we imported seventy-five million pounds and pro duced ninety millions. The production of 1864 exceeded that of 1860 by thirty million pounds, whilst the importation of 1864 exceeded that of 1860 by forty two millions. We have gained in production thirty million pounds, or about one-tenth the value of what we have lost in Cotton! This, we think, is a very "inconsidera ble degree of compensation." But this is not the worst. We have lost in im portation more than we have gained in production ; for whilst our production has increased thirty million pounds, our importation has increased forty-two millions. Putting the best face on it that we think it can justly be made to wear, we must acknowledge a loss (instead of a gain) equal to the difference between the increased production and the in creased Importation This loss would amount to twelve million pounds. In deed we think we should reckon our loss at forty-two million pounds, the full amount of increased importation, be cause we have had these forty-two mil lion pounds to pay for in gold. The Yankees are great at ciphering in a general way, but it is no use for them to try to cipher doivn the value of cotton, or to cipher up wool and flax.— The cotton exported annually before the war, Co say nothing about what we con sumed ourselves, was worth twice or three times as much as all the wool we produced combined with all that we imported in 1864 ! The sooner we admit Southern Rep resentatives to Congress and get the southern people to settle down quietly end resume the culture of cotton, the better it will be for the whole country. The more wool we import to take the place of the cotton we formerly pro. duced and. conentned, the poorer we steal grow. . ""Itillthl - Vorruption. So long as Courts of Justice continue to be entirely impartial tribunals theirs is hope for any people. An incorruilti ble643iditAary* a batrAwhich evita* 'citeck.,„tha'o4 - de bf, pan - s ar4coriiiptioi cause lawkto be.#spOtited and:: nheAd. Xtdt, wtntni courts lead thernielves*injnatice, and, judges becometalant toc lwln the hands of designing demagognes r the strongest barriers against tyranny are, swept away, and the people hold their liber ties by a tenure which is most insecure. An elective judiciary.: isniore liable to. becomecorrnpt than any other. Bad , men Will have the "audacity aspire to wearing the judicial ermine, and weak and incompetent men,- who are favorites with' their party, will be eleVated to a seat in the halls of justice. Then, when party strife runs high, and the strongest prejudices of the human heart are all excited, it is not strange that bad and'weak men should be found registering the decrees of their party instead of impartially construing the laws. Sad as such a spectacle is, it is one which the people of this country have had to look upon frequently within the past Ibur years. There is scarcely a State in the Union in which justice has not been denied or delayed by Judges who have regarded party more than their solemn oath of office. Courts have in too many instances ceased to be impartial tri bunals, and the laws have been strained or disregarded, in order that political friends might be shielded from merited punishment, or political enemies pun ished. It is no little thing for any in dividual citizen in a State to feel that any of his rights are rendered insecure by the corruption, the prejudice or the subservience to party interests of those whose duty it is to dispense impartial justice. To deny justice to the hum blest citizen in a State is to deny it to all, and the whole body of citizens are I ' alike individually interested in pro tecting the rights of each one. The corrupt Judge who would allow him self to be biased by passion or swayed by party prejudice, would be found as ready to deny justice to a majority of the citizens of a State as to an individ ual. And this has been proven to be true in a very recent instance. In the Border States the people have been divided more distinctly than else where, and there has been greater bit terness between the contending parties. Maryland and Missouri have been racked by intestinal feuds, which 'have been bitter and uncompromising. In each of these States a minority have succeded in obtaining power, and their acts have been distinguished by intoler ance and disregard of law. In Missouri the most fearful deeds of violence have been enacted, first by one party and then in retaliation by the other. The courts of justice were closed, and the old law of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, life for life was the only law known. In Maryland that extreme was not reached. In both States, how ever, a convention was held to revise the State Constitution, and in each the result was just what might have been expected. An intolerant faction com posed of the most radical men of the State took good care to adopt such mea.s urea as they hoped would provesufficient to keep them in power by dis franchising all who did not agree with them in political sentiment. The Mary land Convention we know was com posed of obscure men. In vain did any one look for the names of the old and well known citizens of the State. The body was principally made up of a set of ignorant and unscrupulous fanatics, who had no reputation to lose, and who seemed to have neither regard for law nor decency. They showed them selves to be ready to go to any lengths to secure a continuance of power to the party whom they represented. Elected by force and fraud, they knew that their tenure of power would necessarily be of very short duration if the ballot were left free. To secure to themselves a con tinuance of misrule they boldly re solved to disfranchise a majority of the people of the State. This they pro ceeded to do in a manner utterly in de fiance of the Constitution of the United States and of all known and recognized principles of justice and right. Never was there a more flagrant, unlawful and unrighteous enactment than the Reg istration Law of Maryland. It is not only plainly in violation of every con stitutional right of the citizen, but is so flagrantly outrageous in its provisions that the more respectable members of the Republican party in the State, such men for instance as Montgomery Blair, W. H. Purnell, formerly Comptroller of the Treasury, and now Postmaster of Baltimore, and others, have felt bound in honor to denounce and repudiate it. A few days since this outrageous and unconstitutional enactment was by due process of law brought before the Court of Appeals, the highest judicial tribunal of Maryland, for their decision. The day has been in that State when the opinion of that tribunal would have been regarded as of unquestioned au thority, and its decision received as final; hut, now it is composed of men elected for partisan purposes, and they neither regard the sanctity of their high position nor the solemnity of their oath of office. By their decision, which declares the infamous Registration Law constitutional, they have shown themselves to be the mere willing tools of the baser and more unscrupulous men of the party by whom, through traud and violence, they were elected to fill the seats which they have taken the opportunity to dis grace. Such :in exhibition of judicial baseness is enough to disgust every man of sense. A few more examples of the kind will lead all honest and right thinking men to conclude that it was a verygreat blunder to make the judiciary of the States elective. 'lf it should lead to a return to the old system of appoint ments for life, or during'good behavior, we are not sure but that it would be productive of great and lasting good. OUR FRIEND Wm. S. Stenger, Esq., of Chambersburg, had a close shave for the District Altorneyship of Franklin county, but he got through by a majority of three. Considering that all the bal ance of the Democratic ticket was de feated by majorities ranging from eight up to one hundred and seventy-seven, this is a great triumph for Stenger. Wm. McLellan, Esq., Democratic candidate for the Legislature, fell eight votes behind Colonel Stumbaugh, his opponent in Franklin county, but ran eighty-three ahead of his Perry county competitor. The latter, however, is elected by the vote of Perry. The Case or %Virg. Mr. Lewis Schade, counsel of Captain Wirz, called upon the President as4.ing for an interview in' - behalf of his client before the findings of the military com mission shall he finally acted upon by him. There being a crowd of persons in the room, and the President conse quently busy, he informed Mr. Schade that he would see him on Wednesday upon that subject. DRY ions.—Our readers will be glad to learn that Dry Goods are falling in price.. The New York correspondent of this. warning's Ledger says: The pry. Creeds market closes up quietly; ull plusses et 4ornetiOps sre lower, hut the greatest falling 'off is in 'prints: Qualities "Which sold :the other xlayattSla age ; are; TiOW 011454, happy 0.27..0PP• The death of the British Prime Minis t*Lotilkl'almerston, which was briefly , . Wounipad a few days o, was born on tlfl.2oliir !ber,l d w4lldhlere JilPieted 'eighty- "I'yeat hOitid 11.„ved two days ; : lone*. Tkoughi' . an Foxiglisliniaan by,, blood and by birth; he was an Irish pee*, andtlierefore not en ta'a seat in the Bildt* House of Lords. He nas sat in the House of Com mons for nearly fifty-eight years. His first candidacry was in 1806, when he was defeated as the candidate of the Tory party 'in the,-Unlynfaity of Cambridge: At this tibie, he was not quite twenty tati - years of age'.. The next year he sue- - ceeded in obtaining a seat as one of the representatives of the borough of New port, having for his colleague Sir Arthur Wellesley, since known to all the world as the Duke of Wellington. He sat for this borough about four years; subse quently represented Cambridge Univer sity twenty years; then represented one or two other districts for a few years ; and finally was elected for Tiverton in 1835, and continued, we believe, to re present that borough down to the close of his life. Lord Palmerston has at several dif ferent times been a member of the British Cabinet, and is said to have held office longer than any other British statesman of the last or the present century. He was Secretary of War from 1809 to 1828, when he left the Ministry. He re-entered it in 1830 as Foreign Secretary; went out again in 1841 and resumed his place in 1846, and contiuned in it till 1851, when Queen Victoria dismissed him for writing to the British Minister at Paris, without first consulting her Majesty, a warm ap proval of Louis Napoleon's violent over throw of the French Republic. The very next year he took a seat in the Cabinet as Home Secretary ; and in 1855, when seventy-one years old, he became Prime Minister. This he resigned in 1858, on sustaining a defeat in the House of Commons ; but the ministry which succeeded him was able to hold on only till 1859, when Lord Palmerston was recalled to the Prime Ministry, which he thenceforth held till the 18th of Oc tober just passed, when he departed this life, full of yehrs and of all the honors this world could confer upon him. Curious Effects or Epidemics. The visit of the cholera to Europe seems to be as fatal to birds and beasts as to man. We hear of wild birds as well as domestic beasts dying in large numbers. In England, sheep, cows, and horses are visited as with a plague. In Belgium poultry is attacked the same way. In Paris, the dread of the cattle diseases is such, according to a correspondent of the London Times, that all dogs running at large are to be killed, lest they become agents for the transmission of the contagion. A com mon impression is that these various forms of disease among the lower ani mals, also the abundance of insects, are a precursor of cliolera, and originate in a vitiated atmosphere. The ,frequent shocks of earthquakes denote that the magnetic and electric currents which course through nature, are producing great internal disturbance of the globe, and the facts may be related to each other as cause and effect. Mexican Emigration By an Imperial decree Lieutenant M. F. Maury, now an adopted citizen of Mexico, has been nominated Honorary Counsellor of State, with the office of Chief of the Bureau of Colonization.— By another decree he is authorized to appoint seven agents of colonization, who are to establish themselves in the States of Virginia, North and South Carolina, Texas, Missouri, California, and the cities of New Orleans, and Mobile, respectively. Each agent is to receive as compensation for his services the sum of twelve hundred dollars per annum and the fur ther sum of three hundred dollars for necessary expenses. A third decree es tablishes a Land Office of Colonization, with Major General John B. Magruder as its presiding officer, and, for the pur pose of imparting to the people of the United States all the necessary infor mation on this important subject, ex- Governor Allen has commenced the publication of an American newspaper in the city of Mexico, entitled The American Times, which is supported by a subvention from the Mexican Treasu ry. One band of colonists, consisting of from thirty to forty families from the United States, have already settled at Cordova, upon lands granted by the Mexican Government for this purpose to Emilio Longuemare, formerly, we believe, of Missouri, but at present the recognized agent at Cordova of the Bu reau of Colonization. Wendell Phillips on Prestient Johnson's Polley. Mr. L. H. Baker furnishes to the Manchester (Eng.) Examiner a letter of Wendell Phillips, addressed to himself, accompanied by the following note: From letters recently received from the United States, I believe that William Lloyd Garrison will visit England next spring, accompanied by his devoted friend and our esteemed countryman, Mr. George Thompson, when I am sure that the people of Manchester will give to these great champions of freedom a most cordial and befitting reception. Wendell Phillips' letter is its under: BOSTON, Mass., U. S. A., Sept. 25, 1863. DEAR SIR: The Manchester Examiner and Times shows me how kindly you have watched over my good name, and seen jus tice done me in the matter of alleged argu ing for repudiation. Accept my thanks. I judge you see our American papers. If so, you will observe that our best guides—both journals and public functionaries—are now directing thy public attention to the very point, my arguing which, during the last year or two, has got me so much censure— mean the point that national credit in pecuniary matters is one and the sante question with justice to the negro. Let him vote, our public debts, State and national, will be paid, Shut him out from the franchise, and give back the unconvert ed Southern white race their old power, and there's great danger we shallrepudiate. I mail with this the Anti-Slavery Stizndard, September 23. Please notice. Thaddeus Stevens' speech on this point. of course you will see Sumner's speech, and will have observed Chief Justice Chase's obser vations. Our journals are just printing an excellent letter of your noble Stuart Mill, which covers the whole ground. I hope we shall be wise in time, but I do not ex pect that we shall. I fear that Johnson will deliver us, bound hand and foot, into the hands of the old tyrant white race of the South. WENDELL PHILLIPS. Large Barn For the edification of our numerous agricultural readers, we publish the fol lowing description, by a contributor of the "Country Gentleman," of a barn re cently erected on the farm of Lyman B. Lyon, at Lyon's Falls, Lewis county, N. Y.: " The barn is 221 feet long, by 48 feet broad. It sits upon a wall 20 feet high, which contains a thousand yards of masonry. The drive way is 30 feet above the bottom, and 21 wagons can be unloaded at once from the barn floor. The mows on either side of the drive floor have capacity for holding 850 tons of hay before you get above the level of the barn floor, and it is proposed to have machinery driven by water power for catching up the whole load and dump ing it into the bays at once. The stables in the basement wil hold 200 head of cattle, and near by is an immense muck bed where any amount of this material may be readily had for mingling with the manures or using in the stables to absorb the li quid manures. There are 13 ventilators funning tram the stable to the top of the building, the height of which to the peak is.Bo . feet. In the basement it is proposed to haven root cellar anti ma phinefy for doing all, the work of thresh. 1118 , ,,cuttIng roots ari4 feed,parried . on by Wafer "lifter which is conveniently • nein' This cost lirthe neighborhood 4f $12,000, and wheel complated,:aitto pup.- •fflikt4eM WRIWbOIX[Pp_ the, meet pterestyl bar 4 strivoure tioo • The:Cincinnati Commercial, one the 4arrit prominent and ably conducted mtpktr i .in the country, contains the foi -1 lowing:ln regard to the•airs,,trit *try 111r.' - • - lifePherson, in referemle Arourii he will pursue on the admi.ssion' of Southern members : Ykrehdel.l.Phillips, some menthe ag9i‘ made.his proclamation that "the fate of the nation.-was in the hands of the Clerk of the-last - House o f Representatives, who by law, holds over till the new Congress elects a Speaker, and whose duty it is .to prepare an official list of members. Mr. -Phillips - avowed thatin the firm ness : of the cierk, 41 excluding from the roll the names of members - from recon structed States, -was vested the only hope of National salvation. This was the rock or sandstone upon which we reposed, and he expressed a melancholy apprehension that the Clerk might not be a man of solidity. Mr. Edward McPherson, the Clerk of the House, would have been a singular person if he had manifested any consid erable, opposition to this and kindred efforts to magnify his office, but he would have commended himself to the judicious, if he had been careful not to show a disposition to assist in the pro cess ;:of the exaggeration of his conse quence. We find in the New York Evening. Post, a Washington letter da ted October 23, containing the follow ing : The Clerk of the last Congress. by law holds over till the new Congress elects a Speaker, and it is his duty to procure an official list of members. He calls the roll when the House meets, and when the election of Speaker takes place he uses this roll. Great power is conferred upon the Clerk, but it could not be otherwise. Mr. McPherson has informed his friends, without reserva tion, that he will not place upon the of ficial list of members any person claim ing to be elected from a State that has been in rebellion against the Govern ment. To be differently would be to decide, himself, one of the most impor tant questions before Congress; for to let in eighty Southern members at the out set to vote upon the subject of their own recognition, would end the controversy in their favor at once." That members of Congress elected in States that were involved in the rebel lion will present themselves in the Hall of the House of Representatives, on the first Monday of December next, is cer tain. "Knocking at the door," is a figure of speech. There is no military or other guard at the door to inspeetthe passes of members, and pronounce upon their validity. Horace Maynard cud Colonel Stokes, of Tennessee, will not encounter any more difficulty in walk ing into the hall than the Hon. Benja min Eggleston and General R. B. Hayes, of Ohio. Tennessee, we suppose, may be count ed a State that has been in rebellion against the Govern ment. Mr. McPher son has—if the Post's correspondent is well informed, and we have no doubt lie is—told his friends without reserva tion, that he will not place the names of Maynard, Stokes, and others of the Tennessee delegation (the application of this example to all the reconstructed States is clear) upon his official roll. Perhaps a motion will be made direct ing that he shall call all the States and the names of their Representatives; and perhaps he will refuse to do so. Can he imagine that the decision of this mo mentous question rests with him alone? An instructive precedent will readily be cited by readers of Congressional history. On the 2d of December, 1839, at the opening of the twenty-sixth Congress, Hugh Garland, Clerk of the twenty-fifth Congress, refused to call the names of the members from New Jersey, because the seats of all the mem bers of that State were contested. For three days there was an excited and wild debate, the House being both un organized and disorderly. Ou the fourth day, the clerk was directed to call the roll again, and commencing with Maine had proceeded according to the geo graphical situation of the States, as far as New Jersey, and was about to say. that he would not call the names of members of that State, ; when John Quincy Adams, who had not had any thing to say about the controversy up to that moment, suddenly took the floor and said : " I rise to interrupt the Clerk." Instantly there was profound silence in the Hall, and Mr. Adams said: We degrade and disgrace our consti tuents, and the country, because the Clerk of the house, the mere Clerk whom we employ, and whose existence depends upon our will, usurps the throne and sets us, the Represeutativesand vicegerents of the whole American peo ple at defiance, and holds us in contempt. And what is this Clerk of yours? Is he to suspend by his mere negative, the functions of Government, and raft an end to this Congress? He refuses to call the roll? It is in your power to compel him to call it, if he will not do it volun tarily. (Here Mr. Adams was interupt ed by a member, who said he was au thorized to say, that compulsion could not reach the Clerk, who had avowed that he would resign rather than call the State of New Jersey.) Well, sir, let him resign, continued Mr. Adams, and we may possibly discover some way by which we can get along without the aid of his powerful talent, learning and gen ius. Mr. Adams submitted a motion to re quire of the Clerk to call the roll for the State of New Jersey, and there was a general outcry of "how shall the ques tion be putt" All knew the Clerk would not put it. Mr. Adams said: "I intend to put the question myself." That solved the difficulty. Richard Barnwell Ellett, of South Carolina, sprang upon a desk, and moved that the Hon. John Quincy Adams, of Mas sachusetts, take the chair as presiding officer, and officiate until the house be organized by the election of its consti tutional officers. The motion was put and carried. Mr. Adams was escorted to the chair. New Jersey was called and the House organized. - If Edward McPherson, "the mere clerk," "usurps the throne," and attempts to play the role of Hugh Garland, it will not be difficult to rind one who can follow the Adams precedent in bringing order out of chaos. It was easy for the Courtiers of Ferdinand to make an egg stand on end after Columbus had shown them how so remarkable a feat might be ac complished. Payne, the Conspirator. EASTON, Pa., Nov. 2, 1865 To the Editor of the New York Herald: I send you the enclosed copy of a let ter just received frofn the man Payne's father, which is the first that has ever been heard of his family. It you think it sufficiently interesting to the public you way publish it. It shows at least he told the truth. Very truly, W. E. DOSTER TUE SATIIER'S 14ETTER LIVE OAK, East Florida, Sept. 30, 1865, DEAR SIR: On my return home some days since, I found your very welcome let ter, which brought me some interesting items in reference to my unfortunate and lamented son Be assured, sir, that your kindness, both to him and myself are high ly appreciated. At the time your first let ter reached me I was confined to my bed, and it was received only before the execu tion. I did not answer'it, for I intended coming to Washington as soon as possible, and started as soon as I could travel. At. Jackpuville I met the sad Intelligence of his execution and returned home in sor row, such as is not common for human hearts to bear. As to his early history, he was born in the State of Alabama, April 22, 1814, (I see by a statement of his that he was mistaken by one year in his age.) In the twelfth year of his age he made a profession of religion, and from that time he lived a pious lite up to the time of his enlistment. He was soon ordered to Virginia. From that time for ward I know nothing of him only by letter. He was always kind and tender-hearted, yet determined in all his undertakings. He was much esteemed by all who knew him, and bid fair for usefulness in Church and State. Please accept the warmest thanks of myself and family for the services ren dered the unfortunate youth. Very truly and aincerely GEOEGI) C, POWELL. "The Negro Bears of the Palm." When the white soldiers came home, General John Walker Jackson, Rev. Robinson and his clique, had no word for the brave boys. There was no ban quet given them, and the battle-scarred veterans scarcely received a hurrah. Now these free suffrage men propose to greet the blacks with a banquet, an ora tion, religious'exercises, and an address of welcome from the Governor of faun sylvania. , Why was not as rough done for the braye white boys. Was it be cause the "negrci bore off the palm" during the war, ()Y. what ?L -Harrisburg • The Omura of State h§nk notes now nifenlatien is $60,000,000. The Philadelphia Lutheran and His aionaryofthe 27th of July, 885, eon talijed,tin article entitled the Southern Vitiv . ,:efitiChurch,'!:by the 101 r... E. W. Eimer. Amgng olher falseborids, Mr Hiitter;Omilid thitev Dr. Bachman of Boutl,i Carollna,4ith having refused teltdadnister the cotnmUnlon to atnion soldier, and also 'With having gloated over the " barbarities" inflicted on Federal prisoners. Dr. Bachman has replied to these accusations in an article which appeared in the Lutheran and Alissionary of October the 26th. We are onlyable to,make-room for the_fol lowing extracts. We thought, that we had formed an adequate idea of the horrors of war, but as we, from day to day, learn more and more of the story of the late conflict, we are staggered in the effort to realize that the incidents of which Dr. Bachman was an eye witness could possibly have transpired in a civilized land, or that the demons of whom he speaks were begotten by Christian men. Such revelations as these sadly shake the faith of those who believe that mania by nature something more than the highest order of ani mals: Up to this day I have never refused to visit any United States soldiers, etc., and am still engaged in administering the instructions and comforts of relig ion to all who send for me. 'Tis true I cannot discharge these duties as quickly an I with as much comfort to myself as I once did. I am compelled to travel miles on foot to visit the hospitals; all my means of conveyance have been taken from me. In my large congrega tion all thecarriages and horses, includ ing those of the aged widow and non combatant, were seized by the Govern ment; there is but one left, which was saved by being claimed as British prop erty; it has no horses, and therefore is of no service. President Lincoln, by his proclamation, tendered free pardon, with restcratiou of the right of property, except that of slaves, to all who would take the oath to support the United States Government. That oath has been taken by all of us. But what has been the result? We were told to identify our property. My carriage, buggy, and the barouche of a benevo lent widow, were, •by an order from General Hatch, taken from my premises, which were occupied by an English family with the protection of the Con sul, and were not, in any sense of the word, what could be construed as abandoned property. When I inquired about the buggy, which I needed most, I was sent from one office to another— from post to pillar—fora fev, , days, until time was afforded to send them to Hil ton Head. I wrote to Hilton Head, but was informed that it was shipped to New York. My carriage I found in a depot in the city ; but when the men placed as guard ascertained that it was mine, they ordered me away and lock ed the door, That night they removed the pole, the cushions and wheels ; and by these manoeuvres, I am left without any conveyance. Pictures, bedding, a clock, etc., were taken from my house by Rev. Mr. French, who had specula ted largely and profitably among the poor negroes, in urging them to be mar ried over again, at only a dollar and two candles a pair. Many had no objection to the change, and, in the state of utter demoralizatim of the negro, have been, married several times since, enjoying their freedom ad libitum. I was sent from one office to another. Whilst thus amused, my articles, which I had de tected in my neighborhood in the house of the United States officers, were removed to the Pavilion Ho tel. I followed them there, and was told to write to the Treasury Depart ment and my goods would be restored. I wrote accordingly, but received no answer until a month had elapsed. I therrwent for the articles, but was re fused even to enter the room where they were stoied. The women of the officers had selected what they wanted; the re mainder, which was of but little value, was sold at auction. What became of the proceeds, let the heads of the Gov ernment inquire, Certain it is, that of the ten thousands of persons deprived of their property in Charleston, not a thousandth part has been discovered. We are in the situation of a certain man in the gospel, who fell into strange company. (Luke ii, 30). When these officials, and the ladies under their pro tection, return to their homes in the North, (God speed them on their way,) they will be much richer than when they came here, and, alas! the poor will be poorer still. Watches, ladies' orna ments, silver spoons, and all manner of household furniture, etc., must, by this time, be at a discount in the North. The Rev. Mr. French, who made a clean sweep from the houses in my neighborhood, must by this time be a man of wealth, and Gen. Hatch and another officer cannot be fat behind. The elegant carriage of Miss Annaly could not be retained here, but was sent to the North to accommodate Mrs. Mar tel. * I have been the pastor of the same church and people for nearly fifty-one years. During that long period, when five generations have been under my ministry, the harmony that existed among us has been disturbed by no dis cordant sounds. When the handful of persons with which I began had in creased into three large congregations, I was under the hope that I had not been a useless laborer in advancing the interests of the Church in the South, and strove to unite discordant material which composed the old General Synod in the Northern and Middle States. I certainly did not expect that the voice of slander would reach me in the ad vanced period of my life, being in the 70th year of my age. Here I have lived and labored, and here I expect my re mains to rest with those that loved and cherished and clung around me from youth to age. I defy you and your contemptible in former to produce a single case of my inhumanity—and when you publish to the world " that no man in Charleston gloated so openly over the barbarities inflicted on our prisoners as this same Dr. Bachman," you certainly do not place yourself in the position of a meek and lowly servant of Christ. You do not regard the command which enjoins us not:to bear false witness; yon drop the lamb and assume the attitude, the growl and the malignity of the tiger. I appeal to every virtuous citizen of Charleston, if I have not devoted my life to mitigate the evils of yellow fever, cholera and civil war. * * * * During the war, I will venture to say, I have visited, succored and attended at the bedside of more United States prisoners than you have done to the sick and wounded, including both armies. Allow me here to give you a few speci mens of my "gloating over the barbar ities inflicted" on your prisoners. You will be able to judge what were the causes of my resentment, and how I sought revenge when it was in my power. When Sherman's army came sweep ing through Carolina, leaving a broad track of desolation for hundreds of miles, whose steps were accompanied with fire, and sword, and blood, remind ing us of the tender mercies of the Duke of Alva, happened to be at Cash's depot, six miles from Cheraw.— The owner was a widow, Mrs. Ellerbe, seventy-one years of age. Her son, Colonel Cash, was absent. I witnessed the barbarities inflicted on the aged, the widow, and young delicate females.— Officers, high in command, were en gaged tearing from the ladies their ear and wedding rings, the daguerreotypes of those they loved and cherished. A la dy of delicacy and refinement, a perso nal friend, was compelled to strip before them, that they might find concealed watches and other valuables under her dress. A system of torture was practic ed toward the weak, unarmed and de fenceless, which, as far as I know and believe, was universal throughout the whole course of that Invading army. Before they arrived at a plantation, they inquired the names of the most faithful and trust-worthy family servants these were immediately seized, pistols present ed at their heads; with the most terrific curses they were threatened to be shot if they did not assist them in finding buried treasures. If .this did not suc ceed, they were tied up and cruelly beaten. Several poorcreatures died un • der the infliction. The•last resort was that of hanging, and the officers and men of the Wulff phew army of General Sherman were engaged in erecting gal lows, and hanging, up these faithful and 'devoted servants. They were strung:up 'until life wits tearly extinct; wilen'they 'were let down; suffered . to rest awhile, then threate4eAand talPg . again,ilt is not serpris4Pg that, some should have e n '041'4414 so lone thA thq were 4inddell ately these hardened men proceeded on their way, as if they had perpetrated no crime, and as if the God. of Heaven would not pursue them- with His veng. eance. ,But was not alone the poor 'blacks (to *bout they professed to come as llherators) that were' thus subjected to texture and. . , death: 'Gentlemen of high charaeter; pure and honorable, and gray-headed, unconnected with the military; were dragged frointheir fields, or their beds,'aml subjected to this pro cess of threats, beating and hanging. Along the whole track of Sherman's army traces remain of the cruelty and inhumanity practiced on the aged and defenceless. borne _ of those who were hung up died under the rope, - while their. cruel .murderers have not only been left unreproached and unhung, but have been hailed as heroes and pa triots. The list of those martyrs, whom the cupidity of the officers and men of Sterman's army sacrificed to their thirst for gold and silver, is large and most revolting. If the editors of this paper will give their consent to publish it, I will give it in full, attested by the names of the purest and best men and women of our Southern land. I, who have been a witness to these acts of barbarity that are revolting to every feeling of humanity and mercy, was doomed to feel in my own person the effects of the avarice, cruelty and despotism which characterized the men of that army. I was the only male guardian of the refined and delicate fe males who had fled there for shelter and protection. I soon ascertained the plan that was adopted in this wholesale system of plunder, insult, blasphemy and brutality. The first party that came was headed by officers, from a Colonel to a Lieutenant, whoacted with seeming politeness, and told me that they only came to secure our firearms, and when these were delivered up, nothing in the house should be touched. Out of the house, they said they were authorized to press forage for their large army. I told them that along the whole line of march of Sherman's army, from Columbia to Cheraw, it had been ascer tained that ladies had been robbed and personally insulted. I asked for a guard to protect the females. They said that there was no necessity for this, as the men dare not act contrary to or ders. If any did not treat the ladies with proper respect, I might blow their brains out. ' But," said 1, "you have taken away our arms, and we are defenceless." They did not blush much, and made no reply. Short ly after this came the secondparty, be fore the first had left. They demanded the keys of the ladies' drawers—took away such articles as they wanted, then locked the drawers and put the keys in their pockets. In the meantime, they gathered up the spoons, knives, forks, towels, table-cloths, &c. As they were carrying them off I appealed to the offi cers of the first party—they ordered the men to put back the things; the officer of the second party said he would see them d—d first; and without further ado packed them up and glanced at each other and smiled. The elegant carriage and all the vehicles on the premises were seized and filled with bacon and other plunder. The smoke houses were emptied of their contents and carried off'. Every head of poultry was seized and flung over their mules, and they presented the hideous picture in some of the scenes in the forty thieves. Every article of harness they did not wish was cut in pieces. By this time the first and second parties had left, and a third appeared on the field ; they demanded the keysof the drawers, and on being informed that they had been carried off, coolly and deliberately proceeded to break open the locks, took what they wanted, and when we uttered words of complaint were cursed. Every horse, mule and carriage, even to the carts, were taken away, and for hun dreds of miles the last animal that cul tivated the widow's corn field, and the vehicles that once bore them to the house of worship, were carried off or broken in pieces and burned. The first party that came promised to leave ten days provisions, the rest they carried off. An hour afterwards other hordes of marauders from the same ar my came and demanded the last pound of bacon and the last quart of meal.— On Sunday the negroes were dressed in their best suits, they were kicked, and knocked down and robbed of all their clothing, and they came to us in their shirt sleeves, having lost their hats, clothes and shoes. Most of our own clothes had been hid in the woods ; the negroes who had assisted in removing them were beaten and threatened with death, and compelled to show them where they were concealed. They cut open the trunks, threw my manuscripts and devotional booys into a mud-hole, stole the ladies' jewelry, hair orna ments, etc.; tore many of the garments into tatters, gave the rest to the negro women to bribe them into criminal in tercourse. These women afterwards returned to us these articles, that, after the mutilations., were scarcely worth preserving. The plantation, of one hundred _and sixty negroes, was some distance from the house, and to this place successive parties of fifty at a time resorted for three long days and nights, the husbands and fathers being fired at and compelled to fly to the woods. Now commenced scenes of Jicentious ness, brutality, and ravishment, that have scarcely had an equal in the ages of heathen barbarity. 1 conversed with aged men and women, who were wit nesses of these infamous acts of Sher man's unbridled soldiery, and several of them, from the cruel treatment they had received, were confined to their beds for weeks afterwards. The time will come when the judgment of Hea ven will await these libidinous, beastly barbarians. During this time the fourth party, who, I was informed by others, we had the most reason to dread, had made their apperance. They came, as they said, in the name of the great Gen. Sherman, who was next to God Al mighty. They came to burn and lay in ashes all that was left. They had burned bridges and depots, cotton-gins, mills, barns and stables. They swore they would make the d—d Rebel wom en pound their corn with rocks, and eat their raw meal without cooking; they succeeded in thousands of instances. I walked out at night, and the innumer able fires that were burning as far as the eye could reach, in hundreds of pla ces, illuminated the whole heavens, and testified to the vindictive barbarity of the foe. * * * * * * I was now doomed to experience in person the effects of avarice and bar barous cruelty. These robbers had been informed in the neighborhood that the family which I was protecting had buried $lOO,OOO in gold and silver. They first demanded my watch, which I had effectually secured from their grasp. They then asked me where the money had been hid. I told them I knew no thing about it, and did not believe that there was a thousand dollars worth in all—and what there was had been car ried off by the owner, Colonel Cash. All this was literally true. They then con cluded to try an experiment on me which had proved so successful in hvn dreds of other instances. Cooly and de liberately they prepared to inflict tor ture on a defenceless, gray-headed old man. They carried me behind a stable, and once again demanded where the money was buried, or "I should be sent to hell in five minutes." They cocked their pistols and held them to my head. I told them to fire away. One of them, a square- b u ilt, broad-faced,large-mout li ed, clumsy Lieutenant, who had the face of a demon, and who did not utter five words without an awful blasphemy. now kicked me in the stomach, until I fell breathless and prostrate. As soon as I was able I rose again. He once more asked me where the silver was. I answered, as before, " I do not know." With his heavy, elephant foot, he now kicked me on my back until I fell again. Once more I arose, and he 'put the same question to me. I was nearly breath less, but answered as before. Thus was I either kicked or knocked down seven or eight times. I then told him it was perfectly useless for him to continue his threats or his blows. He might shoot me if he chose. I was ready and would not budge an inch—but requested him not to bruise and batter an unarmed, defenceless old man. " Now," said he, " I will try a new. plan. How would you like to have both arms cut off ?" He did notwait fofan answer, but, with his heavy sheathed sword, struck me on my left arm, near theshoulder. I beard it crack ; it hung powerless by my side, and I supposed it was broken. , He then repeated' the blow on the other arm. The pain was excruciat ing, and .it was several days before I .coubloarvti my food or take• my arm out of a sling—and it was black and blue for weeks. (Irefer to Dr. Kollock, of Cheraw.)-At that moment the ladles, headed by my daughter, who had .otiiy then-been made aware of the tirutality "being ‘ practiced upon me, rushed frem • the honer), and came flyingtoniyi*ne. -,4-Y ottAlamtitflftardercraylitthennl a , my child,, be, has been minister x ixt the satins 'chtirch - for 'fifty Year*, and' Gud has always proteCted, and will pro tect hilt:" "Do you believe in a God, Miss?" -said one Of the brutal wretchettP "I don't believe in a God, a heaven nor a hell." "Carry me," said I, "to your General." I did not intend to go to General Sherman, who was at Cheraw, from whom I was informed no redress could be obtained, but to a General in the neighborhood, said to be a religious man. Our horses and carriages had all been taken away, and I was too much bruised to be able to walk: ' The other young officers came crowding around, me, very officiously, telling me that they would represent the case to the General, and that they would have him shot by ten o'clock the next morning: I saw the winks and glances that were interchanged between them. Every one gavea different name to the officers. The brute remained unpunished, as I saw him on the following morning, as insolent and as profane as he had been ou the preceding day. As yet no punishment had fallen on the brutal hyena, and I strove to nurse my bruised body and heal my wounds, and forget the insults and injuries of the past. A few weeks after this I was sent to perform a parochial duty, at Mars Bluff; some twenty miles distant. Arriving at Florence, in the vicinity, I was met by a crowd of young men con nected with the militia. They were excited to the highest pitch of rage, and thirsted for revenge. They believed that among the prisoners that had Just arrived on the railroad car, on their way to Sumter, were the very men who had committed such horrible outrages in the neighborhood. Many of their houses had been laid in ashes. They had been robbed of every means of sup port. Their horses had been seized ; their cattle and hogs bayoneted; their mothers and sisters had been insuited, and robbed of their watches, ear and wedding rings. Some of their parents had been murdered in cold blood. The aged pastor, to whose voice they had so often listened, had been kicked and knocked down by repeated blows, and his hoary head had been dragged abtmt in the semi. They entreated me to ex amine the prisoners and see whether I could identify the men that had inflicted such barbarities upon me. I told them I would do so, provided they would remain where they were and not follow me. The prisoners saw me at a distance—held down their guilty heads, and trembled like aspen leaves. All cruel men are cowards. One of my arms was still in a sling. With the other I raised some of their hats. They all beg ged for mercy. I said to them, "the other day you were tigers—you are sheep now." But a hideous object soon ar rested my attention. There satiny MI enemy —the vulgar, swaggering Li eut who had ridden up to the steps of the house, insulted. the ladies anti beaten me most., unmercifully. I approach-. ed him slowly, and in a whisper asked him, " Do you know Inc sir—the old man whose pockets you first seached, to see whether he might not have a pen- . knife to defend himself, and then kick- • ed and knocked him down with your fist and heavy scabbard." He present ed the picture of an arrant coward, ands in a trembling voice implored me to, have mercy. " Don't let me be shot;. have pity ! Old man beg forme! won't do it again! For God's sake, save me! Oh, God, help inert'-- " Did you not tell my daughter there was no God ? May call on him now ?" " Oh, I have changed my mind ; I believe in a God now."— I turned and saw the impatient, Hushed and indignant crowd approach ing. " What are they going to do with me?" said he. "Do you hear that sound, click ?" " Yes," said he, "they are cocking their pistols." "True," said I, "and if I raise a finger you will have a dozen bullets through your brain." "Then I will go to hell ; don't let them kill me. Oh, Lord, have Mer cy!" "Speak low," said I, "and don't open your lips." The men advanced. Already one had pulled me by the coat. " Show us the men." I gave no clue by which the guilty could be identified I walked slowly through the car, sprang into the waiting carriage, and drove oft Rev. E. W. Hutter, this is the way in which I have " gloated over the Barba , rities inflicted on the prisoners." This is the man whom you have wantonly and cruelly traduced. * * * * It is scarcely necessary to add that I have not sought this controversy, anti only defend myself when grossly and• unprovokedly traduced. It should be remembered that we are here writing under surveillance, and are at the ten der mercies of a Provost Marshal. The time may come when men can speak freely. Under present circumstances, it is but a contemptible, cowardly act to drag men into a discussion where the. freedom of the pen is restricted to one party, and given with unbridled license to another. Yours, &c., JOHN BACHMAN. CHARLESTON, September 14, 1865, Latest Dry Goods Quotations From the Age. j PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY,. Nov. 3. A slight decline in prints and bleached goods marked the only change fox the week. Desirable styles of woolens and dress goods are scarce and in demand at last quotations. The following are the wholsale net cash prices of the leading styles of domestic dry goods•sold in the Philadelphia market.— This weekly information, special! reported for the Tnk E, is of incalculable benefit to every dry goods merchant in the country and worth ten times the subscription price of the paper: Merrimac R 2 P. Allen 5: Sons " 3 7f.. Cock eco 31 Victory 2.5 Providence C10th...30 Wauregan 1-iiprag L ue a) Dutcher, B 25 ac 111 • '3O lAtlantie, 0 20 American 28 Spring % alley 17 Conestoga ?7 , ' L ondon & A dant c Gloucester 9 71 ' 4, 4 Mourning 28 Continental ' 3 7 A muskeag oti , ,', Lancaster '', York 'g DELA INES. Pacific -3.5 A nil u res 36. I Hamilton 1i High Colors 37 Manchester 35 l All Vool 41460 Lancaster Glasgow... jClimax—Phil. mde.3l 3 'Roan°lce SHILLTING CHECKS. _ .. Jas. Long's-Phi la. 'Caledonia WOO make 10@50 Lanark :Sti Mt. Vernon 2E440 Roanoke - 32% "Linen Warp....35@.50 Miner's Tweeds...3Uiaso SHIRTING STRIPES 251 Logan._ TICKS. Penn's Grove 4-4 Conestoga ExtraGO 7-8 Star 52A " " PreMilllll...Bs '' PeMbertoll E ...... 3ni " Conestoga 57 , /, " " X...... 50 7-8 " C.C. A . 7'A.3-4 Glen Riddle 9 3 4-4 Star aglAl EZEIMEI2 Farmers 5: M Ca55...75 Farmers. A 50 Belle 72'4fStar, A 5,5 DENIMS, BLUE. .3 !Lin wood Falls._ ...... .r.) .40 Mll o• (1. B 1 4.• 11 111 IMME BROWN DRILLS 'Greenville 30 35 A mos!: eag :37% 35 T'epperell, blue 90 I3L EA CII F D DRILLS ....... 37;.;';1 edi 3236' CORSET DRILLS. 40 Hates 34 40 Lew is iOll 34 3, Ipswich . 34 34 Standard Pepperell W.sttington Conestoga.... Ftslierville... CAMBRIC:4. 28 ,Paper.... 26 BROWS SIIEETINGS Washington Portland 4-4 Medford '4l Appleton, A 353,:', 4-4 Appleton, D. ...... 32 " do. r ....... 31 t.c. •• Oella 33/,r; " Pocasset, 40 in....Apr' " Pataseo, A 335, " Waltham, F,401n40 BROWN SIIIRTINGS. 4-4 Conestoga 35 Pepperell P 7 8 ao. 0 35 Flo lc 32.4 34 In. Washlngt'n 8.32 1 ,4 " Park Mit% '3132 7-8 Patapsco, 8... 80 Appleton, E 254 Shetucket, A 27 03NAB 4-1 Patapsco '0 7-8 Conestoga A ......2.9 3-1 8-nettle}, et B " Atlantic Al 9 7 " do. N ....... Ellerton, P 9 t} • do Al •• Farmers, EXLI . a.::.S. " Valley I,lllls 14 7-8 Patapac0.............40 - LANWEL9. Pemberton C. 'Colored, C 45 42 CANTON F Hamilton Tinb'd....52.1 " X.F." ......50 Conestoga 45 American A 22h: B 16 Russia, Fine .30 Coarse 15 COTTONS. BLEACHE 4-4 N. Y. Mills 5734 " York Mills 50 " Masonvllle 50 " limns 50 Wamsutta 50 " Willamsville 41% ". Androscoggin- ' Forrestdale 47 , A Hone 47Y Hill semperld'm47 " Allegheny A 42 " Hamilton A 42 4-4 Slaiersville. 40 " James Mill 40 7-8 Hill seraperiu'ro44 " Ldw. Harris 42 " Waltham X 40 " Auburn H • 3E -34 Pearl River_...... .28 Mt.Vernou 27 - " Canoe " Alexander " Roanoke WIDE 10-4 Utica Bleach dl3O 10-4 Waltham 8143_140 9-4 i• " -.110 I " " ... 100 142 in. " " 40 " Elgin Cloth_. 44, 5.4 Sell it Repent._ 10, 9.4 " 120 10-4 " Brown .......10i " Pepperell 81'd...125 " ...115 " Brown.:100 Scarlet, Plain 35045 Twit1ed.....40®70 Grey." - ... . —37%65 Plain ' 45c65 Orange 35460 White • 35@75 Ballard Vale, S-s, • 7-8, 4-4 406,p0 Shakers 500.0 Miners, Phila. rn'e4s/g i os Shillings. New- - styles, Phtlact'a, m'de • en,-=, .e 0,5 • ;arge,nuraber et clerks will.be 1:1J11.• Tama *Ol4 the. gparOrgigltersPe. Pllt' zuentin Deer:Rl:at iltN"