The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1863-1866, January 10, 1865, Image 1

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:TM:Er r `LXXVIII
itOir.ekOaxtite.
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d•LATESt NEWS
BY TELEGRAPH,
• lr • ') 21;
74,eport_of the Ittterview Ber
N ii.___
4Weeri Cotilter and Kali_ •
Howell Cobb.•• -.
• , ~ch) ,11.-.._-:,..-? . e ~e_.) ..v. :
Ign NGE OF PRISOIERMEAION.
• , .
ct - -
-ilretfiehttridt - SOrinfie &lois I.lle
=DOM BAY A= PUGET BOUND
je..(l,lpipmgawswe: ;e7.7.
~!~P_~.~ktly►.AakN toe Nd "• Duty.
- ,- . ... ~¢.., _4,
i O g4Ott I 4 III IWENT, tOn-NCE
The I#l4
sigorat
eof4SAttr-, l Uedee2:o*-
, ko - . ;LCCt`t• T: - ", r73 33 • \ .•• .' ; •
3 0,
' . • ••;31
lIMILPTIOIIB,IIITIIE COTEMPILAINS.
: -
. .
,InallfB cin Vieit
. .77.c.";>: T. .
iiiie:4lolClAL-AND-E4IIIIIIE APPROPRIATIONS
. . . .
. , -- —.- ------- ---- .-------- --- •
„ . • • grAourarrion, Jan. 2.7733te. P,onfident, ye t,
-'-; In gnawer to a rasohttlon fitthellause,t.ommu
, •• • • ~, niched the report of Col. Thoe. M. Key, giving
. i an a6coint Or in fieiaw betweet' ildmself and
' lion. Hewett' Mb ,on the fieh‘of June,lBo2,
- ' i •on tire banks of the Chickaltoraltry:, The report
' • • Is addresaed to the Secret..try of 'War. : Col. Key
• ' ' i . sayisi: "I am InstructeditY MAL Pell. McClellan
...:-to *Net to ion the inbitange of en Interview
-,'. '.• - I held by me witb;iliii.".llOliiii Cobb; ;MX; now acting
•1- as Brigadier -General in tle.rehelinny at Rich-'
•,.0 ; mood . I was ordered tirpnnimd , with a flag of
eruct, to be met by Getr. Cobb, for conference
- .
- witil mud -to an eiciinno4stirr)soners; and
i
••• •" • ; making arrangements fog &aciond:inceting. I
I, aletii received iernablelon; tri,ecinserse with Gen.
.;' . • ,
Cob'b upon the geneial subject of the
all.
' :-•-- , . contest-informing...bit% kowarer, that all. such
-• : conyrersatlon wakpatielyperional.-ana not In any.
:,.• .=
rtes to be considered.of an official character.
":=.'., • ''
i w Ito the place appeinto endwise met on the
bri _by Gee. Cobb. Inyegard to the exchange
.; of - eti'lte^.M.Mbited-,wiltten;.'airthority
• . I 'fromilminial Lee' glide% blm rnii point', to make
........ „ „ =mot:mond= on the subrect; as tb any or all
.:; prisoners of warottonvor 1' eitptured. Ho ex
.• ." ,•: preidw a readi ness I.6 • Mficir an agreement ern
. 7 Ie•D! . I 4I C-tant. PE1104#.441V4-On eilhor-Mdei' and
. . ~: , . useh such agreement applicable either to exit
, agpfthlhattor alsdto those hereafter captursd.
- • ' ..'. ....Be stated that hc 'would sign any cartel which
.. • ?oral-based upon principles of entire eqbality, and
~.' .; proposed that oktfainges: Should Wort trfate;ae
•.: t cording to data of capture; first, however, --ii
• I haiteting . the list of officers, their scale
. . t Of - equivalents to be any ono which we.
' rnlght,Rretene, :whidft *0.1,1, oferate.Vpiliirly;
. • ' ' for InManiih,•lbr one exhibitedtins y Gen.
•,. • • Wool at the conference between them, and
~ 04' which wee taken from the. cartel. ~between the
. ~1 United States 'and' 'Greed Britain In 1812, ex
;.• : i.; -changed
_persona to be conveyed by the cap
.,:•],,,; tors at the Ceptotte,espense to some point of de
.; ; ... • very contenklut ..14, *ha other -party and the
,:. i.:'. :•
...f exchange to operate uniformly. with
;:"..,,,.
.:.;•-.• . ,
.ht of reservation or exception In any
, .1,4-- '. ;'. -- et' : Re Iteofinsedignonsnee ..if any
:':'4 , :. ..:!'', i . ,•. , ' :=' - i• . a • .. . 4. is Government In any mat-.
'.',.:,11 • ' ter of cachou/tin priso ners and pledged himself
• - fr=.•TA l ..tr e iario.of 7 91Q411fir•oliton.
•• : •••'.'„,"- US C: - /TO itiggarted the
•• pixpritty of releasing. upon parole, any surplus
- .:, ?owl prisoners remaining on hand after exchanges
-• .. •_.•, ad pbatakw (A R party.." _ _ „..... ........
•.1, W'Uniwerroir, 3iin. 2.--The Supreme • Court of
the United States pronounced their opinion to.-
• daydndbccied'Of Stone es; United Btatei; af
:," firming to the •buterthe title - to the southern
part of the Fort Leavenworth reservation.
-;-!. ' The norainatiou . df 'Alexander 8. Johnson, of
"1 '`,,'
Kew Torir lute Items etonarnted ha Gommisaioner
.:•:: . .1 for the settle Meat of ihetelidithe Hudson's
• l!''.;• Bay salt linget llounlVAgrienlteral Company,
• TiosSan lei B.Diehlessou;'reftooli. -•
• ••'''..* ' Blot PioSideut Ins- sent:a munsage to Commit'
(
- ;f'.l asking...AM, appropriation 7. for a portion of the
money tole pahlty iloc fruited States under the
",-2.,:•* treaty with Belgium for the capitalisation of the
.. ..
Scheldt dues.. -- --- , • ,
Nair Toni, Jan: it!-:Tiuf Poif's Washington
-'.. .- " enU IP 4 3Ir
i h oloTt r— ar e ”g e . , it •
- - t
doing to well with hls 7-30 loan, that the Com
-1
..: :..'. mltettOtWayddMeens received a - aumnual:
catkin n o m Ha o n the. subject of the Inanecs,
•-::- which williguneblybs _deferred. Itis.pmbahle
•• -
fleas bscahaftma to !hit 10-40 loan Will aggregate
3- . •• ' '•• ',', piociaito the a;morernrol &weber, gate&
1
.•... , :-', t Wasltingtot, January 2;oqt : 11• Iii i oricsfidn.
LS :•.- -I whether Mr. Blair will go to Richmond. - Hawn ; , .... - cretonne(' to be atilt in Washington Moday.-r;t• ; %•
:. -*•..; t Mr: rase:den stilltidliy bls fitumelal fdatta
p. .t before Congress until be con harefelly ecunit
•,•,-• 1 ed his ancetossnr, who;11-is .said, tho President
:I": a: , will decide on this week. . _ ........
' '.•:l• Tlei''Paill' , WaAbutto'n' . apeehd Says : The.
i: - rt.] Ways
.end . I (canaConunltte e . had the tobacco ,
'--thx; rinestintedudciecoiedderatiotribia tnoraing."The
Fol interests ere eluting and It is-dlilicult to menu.
•
• ~ ' : -Site fferaldie - Washington. amnia' . nays: Th e
delftmion nom the 'Michigan Central -atitteoo
- nmting roads, to. secure .a- modification of the
;.,••••!gotwPort system; hid au intenntonlritli Secretary
'' 4 - i onlirard, but werermable toebromplishanything.
• , The ~parnagetal Aleerftscr's :Wdeltlngton spa , .
iat tapir. llorace Gieeley is here:agent and r•-
•••••• %MK -W.in birdman& rorpeaee, andpredicting:
• .i.... tki . pe.oy teigninatkinuf the war. ~ .. :
~ . trubseriptions to tho.lo-40 loan for the oth and
';'. 7th Inst., amounted to p00,0r,, - ,550,.. and to the •
:, ::.. 740. k u5e', Uta1 1 34 4 . 50 0,900; ' '' ' ' '-'
'•' • •
. 1
;,.`•
bud••
The_Jhdiciai and k are lecutitzt6Arifoprittlstxt
i ) !nillttd(lorcrusiezt Print
..... Ii 4glimumramputrti bit ski Mis a million and a
Z , v, li, Naretsoipiper slow beim/1629AD: , The total
-: ...; -amount forthe • Amerleatt . Agdenktural Depart
i . 4 .1 roest, , , intimiturjr**ink . and ;distributing
-: • - •I' l fra.t b . i ' t . 2 PeAt.lif!t,id terdebang la $lOO,OOO.
snrawl
%MN
MOON /kat 1/0
' •
1. • ..
!OM! r nanDliurttierriikiiis 7 , 000 .
t I (MV . Minn( NUMEM,
:,' • .
Os ".ertmori.
lIM
. ._
_
16twyentlfi Jan. 9.—The ,27otts' Huntsville
' • , e , doesiollideig,dathig tie 4th, some u,, the losses
' - ohice , .flood'; assumed - the. offenilve'
,egahist
:, • Thieirm - ,. ;as foikriestifood'sloair In killed, wont+
1
-.
ed and trdssiag, S 0 084.' , .
... '
Theines' total loss, 7,006.
T . liinhais lostbn generals killed, 0 ; wounded
mid captured, 5. They also lost 68 cannon.
' rlacti geed rearched on Franklin Itched 40,000.
Imen.. The Union force' at that time numb red
only 17,000.. -
A newcaingaign Isprojected, and the army is
ln.motlony the new base of which will be newer
Coiinth, ;Ilse., than hilisbrillc. Gen. Thomas'
#' headquarters will be on tho Tennesaei river, near .
I EastpOrt; a few days.
New Toss; Jan. P.—The Richmond Senlincl
General 4Therpan la doubt,
lees =Wag on BnuiebeVe.
; The Ariniantaer sys: A, dispatCh from Hardee
; report* the enemy before Rardetwllle, but no In
t dicationt o'in% Immediate attack.
The Conwthaeitalrit declares there were cay
' airrentren persons present at the citizens' meet
' CAintrtetr-commenis °is the affairs talks ,
saanahblwarffitgt.feorleiana *Phut subscdS-..-
k . spin, easing treasonable.-
The ,
The Ilniathecr denim/Fife, meetin g s I n
Ge.orgla to keep. up the to of the citizeirs„
and crent their tntatinie the remain of the
sesame:' Kae c esOrtw c e s n Loc!..7 , The Cie*
- iriummterotvian.9.--7'he mama&licked ,
p4 . ..:•:,cfrom New ,York. t for Wamdfigto k . 1 ,"„
..tz..,eb e o - peake Bay, on Frith! It is'
-%remrperiacd. were.r na
4
HEIM
_
- - ' .P.7•%k.X. •
.•••.•& 4-e-c•-•••• •
•
'4=±;d=:=l,
~
E ;.,t7.. _.
lei .w
MD TOR IC ALLED FOE.
etritimentOver the Provost Marshal's
Credit Order. •
A 117,-
MAYOR GUNTHER'S.PROOLAMATION
Vity 1164. 1it14.1F3345174 000
friEß ' ROA:NOX ' E‘',ltilrii EXPEDITION
. •
rnion .offiteis Ettimptipit Aims
Eacxl , ..t. tor 'RVICNER.
Ile nopett4l . tha Korth Irieritakttederidion.
.I);Titirrimat ovraXpßoolteD4 THE
L-Niw anmetingof_theCham
.
berßf vorp,i afrpepliCits:adopted
kar:alefoi
•the , :eitinens of Savannah., The .Treasirer.
ri LthAt - Ayr thouradd'dollara fiita been
. akititly.snheettbed. • The litur York , and Wash
haktan'Sitiantibip Company *ite.,i3l.6vd‘the tiro
of 'a Mammy to transport, the provialons contrib-
There, Is doneiderabincvitement leer& to-day
over the:Provost-31arshal GeneraPe order, that
;exilletteenbf Merlon& to 10th December mu to
IMmidlted on the quotas midietha last call. ;If
the order remains unmodified; the eity.will be
'compelled to :relsO - 1.4,000 men; instead of 4,000
airprevlonsli announced.
- The r oat editorially denies - the accusation of
the Tribunes special of the cabinet. of General
Jeff o,_Dinis In the treatment of negroes..
Crime appears to be fearfully Increasing. The
papers' of this' morning bare Maxims of, two
teore'lltal
Now Toiur:den.V,—Mayor Gunther sent In
his message tcithe Common Council to-day. Ile
completes of the creation of dew eerporatlons.
it wore,mnder the title of Commissioners, and
also of the elretimiferlbed powers'Of 'the 'Mayor.
• The city and county . debt li'srabl: tiara SS9,-
000 t 000. Against this debt the city licside I:cm:m.-
1y valued at &curl N0; 4 7400,000 to R50,00%000; and
the county also-hold& tolneonsiderayoramonnt.
. The TrZirue'irotidoW lettei,,eall:,,Thq, pro
'cceda qf '
Abe Liverpool fair are .to .he given to
the rebels abroad; who are greatlrln need of in
lb theimiliclpal' hotels in l'iris; , ,Over fcinthun
dred trunks hare bt , mi Pawned by Southern pre ;
tlemen, as aces:why 'Per :their. WM.:. The.same
letter says thet.the rebel' nerds recently brought
the steamship Rattlesnake Sister to Tallahasseet
They evidently d es i gn fitting.. her ;out as a pi=
,
Considerable opposition - Is Manifested In
some of-the - British North - American Provinces
to the propOied' ticiaTederation with
Prince Poiiiard , lsland: It has caused mints
testa -rtalimatiotti and- it.. Is claimed thart nine
tenths of the inanitaats there s are opposed to the
' scheme. I liir.Noya &ode. - nuthertrualy attended
we and entburjastic,snectinge by canal citizen's
re heid to protest akalnit -
Nita' Tome, Jan. 9.—The ./Irra/ePs Newbern
letter glymadditional particulars of tho Roan
bkc rtr a rorpedition: The Gs Otsego and
"BUiely were soak by to 00. LThe'rlver Wait
fotind'ibn of torpodb, and setenty4ve were
taken op inn distance...of twenty-live miles.
Sometimes eight or nine were found stretched
across the river to a single line. :+The Aeet -pret
ceeded to Poplar Point aitChtind the beauties
ton
with
be-tiketC to-owatios'
with a bind force, On: their : Return. the. boats
were somewhat aniuryed by stimuli/30w'. •
X Union officer; Initlnt from a rebel prison in
Columbia, says many oMeers are - es O mbut, one
handrcd • getting away In one ;day. The ra
tions of.tke Misoners.pensist-of corn meal and
sorgiuma molasses. • . -
The Savannah 'letter• as : Alla the.
mighlif - tau avuvrowrtdr.
ford'a Sag of truce lift Fort "Samter, thiliktek.
ado limner FOXrall through the flees and reached
Communication With Newbcin by canal, hal •
been rsnmed
It li rumored thatthattLerebel rains aiiiraparing
to comedown to attack theleet.- •
L; 4 q o- !u:JE'ts9L - TvIL.;.-
Akita FROM MOROLiMIL
BALFTABY'EFFECT OF OLLtii'S OIOOSS
Relay&tton'for-the Murder of-coet
grander Thatehei.
AN :EXPEDMON BEYW: `THE'.. AWAIAYA.
The Rani .TenniSg-fke':,
Ninrl4l t l F; 4 aa; l).. .4-Ailvlizativiailsriinzt a
I state ilust all vim quiet, width/it-titer recant strict
sueummusidolded , den.. lllliiuoi,iilatiro to.
comminkation' outside of that' post, has. Infra
most stiletto, effect on predatory rebels. -
The gunboat Gazelle had retaliated for . ;the
murder ofllommander Thatcher bY - dela:wing
the rebel nisideacos In the vicinity of the bloody
. .
. An expedition,' consisting of Innis' tdtery, ,
!and an infantry and'eurratry fonseJoul beat seat
;by Gen, Ullman beyond the Atelasfalays,butthey
;tact but few rebels, who no at their, appearance.
A report ;was torrent that': thesam reticence,
!Captured at Mobile; was to - 4e" sent up the riser,
'and probably to Tleitaburg.- :
The health .of the gardson at Morgans's' was
Brigadier General C. C. Andrews had - been ap
pointed-
to the ecpuunuf of the 3 d
, brigade of. the
GR~A.i~T~.
ALI QUIET ,AT • PETERSBURG.
ICANNONADINg ON. TUB LPPONATTOX
.ExEc,ullopr-orif nEmtittans.
ARRIVAL QF ;REBEL MMUMin'ARD REFUGES.
'../kstieff'aimmu *Ut Or mot Pcrroxici
. I
There Is nothin g new reptrit on the lines In
'frrivit or reteriburf. , Some sheillachiiek place
:UtiAppomattor,,youterrlllsy morning, with:
any important resultil . i . • .
Zinn. deeeiters were eieenied jesterdny. - : One
s s. htmg and three shot.
Some fifteen . deattteri froni_ the enemy talip
in this morning, forte , being cavalrymen; with ,
their horses and ogulpments. - ApartY orpsor
. whites numbirring about twenty -fivik.who said
they brnet* been In the poorhouse 1n Prince
George comity,' also camelnto our Ilnesyeaterday
and were sent North to-day. They . were forced
to leave on account of the scarcity of food, and
looked as though they had suffered for the bare
necessaries of life for some tlme.
•
• New York Stock and Money Markets..
"Speetal Western Associate Tress Dispatch.
New Torts; Jan. 9.--ttaUwe,. -share specula
tion was net' s ° This morning, with a general im
provement lu prices. There was great excite
ment on Northwestern shares, and a large busk
nest done at full prices. The balance of the .
Western was generally steadY. Governments
'were strong, and sales of gold-bearing bonds
. were very large r with prices tending upward.
State Meek,
..were quiet and without much
dmp. ;Coal shares were generally doll. Beak
stocks were not inquired for. Raihved bonds
wege In good demand. • -
Money was easier than'on Saturday, principal
-1,7 on account . of a reduction in the demand.
Foreign Exchange was quiet, though sales were
stronger. The gold market drooped slightly on
account of peace rumors, atul, there. woo 'Mu
lltUo cseltement at the board.' Stocks were dull
at the Petrolenni Board. The only sales were
000 bbls. Tack at 3.25@0.00; Germania, 1.10.
Market dens and. Inactive,- With". snail sales of
Crude at 51®50e., and Itenned, hi bond, at MO
Ur.; Free is dui; at94c.. " • "
• Few , Jersey Legislature.
TRENTON, N. J. Jan. 9.--The Legislature
meets tonsantnr. Mamma thirteen Democrats
and..elaht.ltepublicans in the Banate, and shirty
of each party in .the Rouse. There will be &
compromise reads on the 'organbunktuLot the '
House. The joint mediae to elect a IMMO'
Clizia?sbe held ;snipes thollouse consents , =a b
41 ,
DAILY
XXIIIIIII eIThtIiESS:4ECIAIrgESSIDI.
MONEY ASKED FOR THE MIFF OF REFUGEES.?
ard
Freeing'
Dill,
Tfie
Childrea of Colored 011111°" Soldier*
Jan.
.• •
Th.:dirt:avow . par, n 9, 1905.
Mr. Doolittle presented the memorial of the
Board of Trade of Recipe Wis., in relation to
the establishment if weeitil direst on the west
ern lakes.
Mr. Sherman prmiented the memorial of the
,president of the Refugee Belief eeititnalailon of
Ohio, asking for an appropriation of monk for
y
the support of Sonthern'refugees.
A.ki Shitlernt
in the thintertitte of
loyal refugees in the cities of Cincinnati, tit.
Louis and Louisville, and their condition was de-' .
'plorablor flatlets 'tfunrloo,ooo. White ' s ntenie
hid 'iteen';',Xtildered. lirettelees;....
: . 'scattered
I t h i S in tglitati - the'llionth'iby' the: ,foci of war.
.Methongld , Pen.gresi - ought, ici do .
some
In the matter, tintlae did not -believe the- appro.
:pylatien bf f its4Would , Me: the meet judicious ,
..entanCar theitil: - Mel thought the fiert- 1
leptseent oright , glie them work do foe the
- - armi, She . mannActurci of ,elothing,z; ite., sr .
triazatight -be Passedstiring. theta meat lands
subject to conacription. life,,,whthed . the me
_landsnorial t
a o be Yeihried tei tfin7ConnMitheoikrohlic
rid it-irai
Mr.. Wilson, stf the. Military :thimmitiee,c re
ported back the resolution to distribute, the pro
ceeds of the cotton capture - I at Savanna h among
the and eoldiersof.fleit.,lihermeree army,
with the unanimous recommendation that it be
indefinitely postponed, and was so ordered.
Mr.S.Attriony OlTened the remonstrance: of, the
National India Rubber Company against the. ex
tras lon of the Goodyear patent,. which was re.
breed to the;Cinnnlttielon-PateOla:
Mr. lkiedittle offered a resolution direCting In
quiry as to the treatment of Indian tribes by the
civil and military authorities. Referral to Comt
mittee on Indian affairs. •
Mr. ihmlittlecalled attention to a letter from
an ogieer,"etationcd lireolortio. in refereace to
the alleged brutality of Col. Chivingtou toward
certain Indiana, statlnw that'll.) slaughtered and
murdered thein ainjima no mercy.
A., resolution ras offered directing the Judi
ciary Cputinittio to inquire what. legislation Wei
necessary to enable the'President to call an ex
tra session of the 80th Congress without 'girlie;
the sixty days' notice now required, which
was adopted.
• Onmotion er Mr. Wilson the joint-resolution/
freeing the 'wives. and children of colored••stri
dlem was taken up. .
Mr. Sanisbory . spoke against the resolution.
lic epfesedihemeasurebeforelit theSeuateoothe
ground of policy and of humanity, and because
it was opposed to .the legitimate rule, of war.
This policy propOsed by thaparty In power was
Napoleonic. General Scott had expressed
Ida opinion against _the sighSotergra,s-jo
Interfere with stare& in the States.
...Mr, Davis mord_ to amend the resolatlonao
as to Make. liat ection prospectire cinlyi and not
reirogiective and pmsptctive,_ ao . , elTOTted by
the Military Committee.-lie regarded the resolu:
lion it o violation of the Constitution, bat If It
muit.pass; Its did: ot adelhat ftringlhoritrig,ei
and children of those already in the service, was
encoureging enlistments, and he therefor° hoped
that it would•be made to operate only in, the
cases of those who slicsidd hereafter enihs.
Mr. Clark hoped the amendment would not be
adopted, Mitgreipckelcrieni'aMilnist It..
air. Pomeroy spoke in favor of the resolution.
I Mr. Rendricks argued against the proposition
before the Senate, thoifekbe'belleved that a rote
for It would be a vote in favor of the slave own
ors;..l)e.) Itgbanniersinves had' 11l bScn put
into tfie army, it would be for the teleran of the
slave ownentto be rellevpd from th e care of the
... ~....
women.
.11:r.Wride thought thereoposition before the Sea-
SentieWai,ko 0014 that:ltMeiiScia4pelimitt.'. It
might to have been passed when Congress decid
ed to take colored men in the army.' Ile dented
tint' the Republiiiirt party .I,a 'a Vim° or "peseck
ever Interfered with sinvely in the Statcs,but when'
War broke out;: anti slavery tried to kill the GOY
eminent, it then becatneditTerent. Slavery isms
unorganized rebellion, and he hoped there would
be .Etpeace - aFttikivirnattilelishedt The war Was
in the commencement, stlictly defensive, .bat
now be hoped it would continuo aTtlartYlearli
leneccssary, dr Mufti nieliation was bankrimt
rathen-than it - sisonld esti - befele the - ebolitirct of
slavery. tic was gild that the Sonar had hold
out, and be hoped they-would hold out In their
blinincst until they necessitated the,only thilig 1
-that would Igiverui lasting peace. - '-' ,
s li t ireDestsrsuleastbiarctutricrtli opposition , 4.
to' efie - reiSolslftoll.. --
..'
.. ' " ' ' •"
•'' • .
Mr. Johnson dlspace she authority of Con
_ to, pass such wiefelntion. There was no
donbtof the authorityof Coagrero to enlist stare,
or of its right , twatnend the Gonstitation an as
to abolish slavery. filaretlirat Ait,Sitd:flottold.W
noirsided, - and:entknot . surrive,,even .11 weep
without its abolltlin was declared. to-inorrow..
Be: believed Una the rebels.,-had gbodveleforyso ,
believe Chat.Engikid and Franca afd Meth •
to'nettlettilleir Indenendence litheyartifild ista-; ;
Leh aliviety, as' they. isid Cilg•ht .to.' do: . What.,
would the denatohfrom Ohio, do then? Would .
her submit , tothedissolution of she Union pro•
'Mel the Smith should abollthslivery. ' lie (Mr.
Johnson) Wei happy to know that the Preeident
did not eoneur nr the views of, Mr. Wade daring
the last political canvass.. A pape.r, emitted - To
Whom It may Concern" was circulated. One of .1
the conditions ofreace named In it was the aboli
tion of slavery ; but the friends of tbd President
took good care to explain this away before the
people, and tell them it did sot mean exactly
what appeared en Its face.
Mr. Wade followed Mr. Johnson, and
said
that the opinion of the President had no more
weight on the subject than any other mates. lie
said that there was nothing to fear of foreign in
tervention or from any other source, °gerpt our
own injustice. lie laid doirri.thelsduriple a*
slivery should be eradicated, and Mr. Untold
bad moneented SO ht.''-Wont,' thel3eitatef from
p Maryland say, that . Mr. Lincoln luid,baskocl our
thus anti *Mee& :sci disi.rmarfi of the
c_ Souther' States whenever they laid down
their arms 7 :lithe Southern States would abol
ish slavery in orderto become reseals of an Ear
prmn pswer,hes (Mr. Wade) would make them do
'that very thing to Salm* to the authority of the-
Federal Government. We had the right, under
' the Minter wen to abolish slavery. When the
i South'-should lay down' their 'arhts and ens for
peace, they meet do so with clean hands. There
'. can berm peace white slavery exists; there can
not be a free nation that slavery is not at wat
• with. We have paid too dearly already to per
mit, slavery to.Ut, and _this was the sentiment
'of the Baltimore platform. Thera must be 'no
pence while there was a slave on American soli,
and he (Mr. Wade) did not fear Great Britain or
Pntnee. The- proclamation " To , whent-; is
mer ' co ncern" was' ;the; trek "ileetrbm ,''and`
they only doctrine lipoia - -which, Mr. ~Littc
ols :ought to . hare i been elected. If
1 tile Preeldeat backed out- of MU we, he,would
lie the most ligaments man that wiuteverftli tote
office biTalse pretences: . Re (Weds) knew that
the abolition of aLtvely was the „only ,eoadltion
tiPost 'which , the' Pr ealdeet.conld 'Motet, to:i
.
, ram /f It watt tree that'the.Prealdent, wax not
'for thettbolltien,of slavery as an illdltpIDEIMO
COiNil4oll' ;0.11)4* so- touch the worse forth*
Praddent.' __The people were better than - cany
President; and they were sight: .'''' • • ''
Mr. )i'lleen next took the floor in advocacy of
Am resofenlon, which, he said; wouldemaneip would
front 111,000 to 100.000 womettant children. , -
Tho.antendasept of Mi. Davis was thetsrted
z ~ic~tFseeares-
Mr. POWeil oared an' sanieednient that the
'Owner* of, the alaveacanancipakd ander the Pro.
:TLlkma et. the resolution should be compensated.
Mr. Powell spoke:against the mahatma. - 'lle
revleard the Came Of the star :Ind 14'1)0110 of
4140Aolulitebtintion. Ansi' whicisthiquestionatas
taken on the adeptlers of lily "amendment. . ' The
yeas ancinass were demanded, resulting fol
lows •The'llimendinent'
Banish my offered'an amendment- exempt.
log from the operations of the reabbation tat oftee
Stales that have not attempted to ".'Secede from
the 'Union. The Senate refused to adopt Mr.
fianishery's amendment:
• Mr. Carlisle spoke aitalnst thereselidlon and
denied the right of the Government to conscript
iither whites or ' Macke for the army. Ile do.•
Wed the right .to put. the slave ha the army in
any capacity. He believed slavery to be ativil
and political blessing, and thought the negro
was made to ben slave to the white man.. . •
The joint resolution. was then pa.stied;-yea's
27. nays 10.
The Senate thei went Into.crecutive session,
and soon after adjOtoned.
•
1101i8E. ' •
The house proceeded to • the' consideration of
the Senates proposed amendment to the Consti
tution to•abolisb tdayery'enerywhere
gr. Leaman gave reasons why- he would not '
rote for the proposition.. -
Mr. Merrill, of Vermont, spoke in: favor of
the negation, eilreasing. his surprise that tha
gentleman should refase non to. give the people
-the opportunity to asy.whother the .great wrong
'alavery,should be abellshed,' or - favored' the".
amendments. The tiroojaal-corno whe n H ie
Democratic party Would cut loose IVom_slavery
• and turn their backs out the dark past, and their
eyes to the bright future. -- _
••• Memns„.Voorbesta `and Clay enorally opposed
the resolution during the, debate.
Thellouse took upend eminarred la the tieq ,
rte's amendment to therA an BM.
• Elijah Ward lotroduesd, a b dirseting the
Secretary. of *thiTitaturtio Wood filo tax col
lected-am spirits priorloiderelh,-18844'-:rneftirred,
to DoMmitin .
on Ways and
"' •
• ddionned - ' • •
BAYr9rOnt L—Mr;lllnGryDratirA
= 1 0 4 4 Or *Sew York Weed, Mit been
602 . 1 IT'it Parc6.,.,t7:o43ltirWt
--•- • •
f .,, 0U ,T. ;•'. 4 ' ,. : , ,.:44].2.,. 7 ,. :
*.'.:'Z ." '- ';• 4 ',WAktti
piTTSII.itTRGH:
hiVil4 FROM REBEL 80ERCK9,t
Elifuatipn at Wiltitiligban.
LETITa iiltAtiG
The Itiebamid idkpatch" She
mart's Polim
Eathaeiastie Rrerptiati ortbe Pirate SCUIMeI
•' .fe• .11 f
.1' .
NORTH CAROM:N.A. LEG - D3LATUREL
•
OpposlUon to the Shspeuston of the Habeas
Corpus.
PEACE RESOLUTION OFFERED
NEw Irons, Jan. o.—The Wilmington Jeanie/
says „Braguiran writtpr a letter breathing the
spirit of chi-laden h ope. lie says : "There is
_
no Mune fir deem, esthete Es Ms estansibmwotet
Pfilinin g th " 4* 4 ink ;Itii the
present, forcer inthitikstint trill'he able to resist
any further attempt 4. tit 8 ,,
. 114 0 0 eni
by ailling prayers `cd* thrisUans for 'Wallet( and
Me innY.
The Richmond Whig of the Oth says , that a
Lir g e ,minb.Oildr rebel deserter, and Intfrets melt
are roaming over the upper etumtles of Georgia,
committing clepredationr on.the
The Richmond Ittrixdahtiya that' since Sheri
man left suataptin e be Us elAbgell his policy;
At that town end at Atlanta to • was all harsh
mes and hailadity; at. Revantuth he had been ail
conciliation. the Dispatch•forgets that Sherman
announced that his conduct would,. be governed
hy the treatment he received. .
'fbe Mobile Tribune learns that on the 10th a
party of ranker raiders. numbering about Itsoot
reached West Pasmgonia, and were embarked
on launches. They destroyed seventlfcrriesand
dal other damage.
The pirate Semmes met with an enthusiastic
rtteption in Mobile.
Itesolutitma have been latrodueml la the North
Carolina Legialatere of the opposition so the
turpcuslost of the &Lau corpus; to the impress
meet tto
nd eobeeriptiont (0 the surrender of State
eer!, a In aupport of State negotiations for
peace.
Afr..Carter„ln a marked specehowthe suspen
sion of lbw /hams corpus, said If gentlemen in
that Legislature and In-Congress could not pro
against Another illegal.auspension of this
tirid N entie;Wherinf-the Israel
of nature,he would bejustifled In starting a new.
rerohnion.. - - -
The majority of the committeeit of the North"'
Carolina legialatnre on the rmolotions to enter
into mgralations for-ap hotuarable Poem rePark
that fir erctreffint 'Which Was being made to .
strengthen the armies they should be accompa4
tiled hysome manifestation or anoffart and. desire
to . Secure ant..honorable .fiernm The'. cOmints..i
stoners having heretofore been refused by that.
United States onthe. ground .of Abe recognition
of the Confederacy;' this Is the' bjection,whick
la sought to be removed In the resoltition,l7
pointing cOmmisstemed - em the part of the Stet*
whose aril existence and authority hare never
been denied. These commissioners pre. not to'
lime powers front 'the rte ; St butonly-Ws-bo ton-.
tiered by the President f peace conference. 'l,
NAVE;' RIGIDE • DISBANDED.
The - Mille Capitision•'at Petersbuigi
WHO ARE RESPONSIBLE flifi ITS -FAILURE.
-Itxtbuire Unpin? Cornsillacats,'
• 1.V.Z% /
NEW Yong, Jar69."-ibe Herold', off Chaska - 4
, ton c0mp0.pa94,0„..1.04ria says*. Co C.
. mender l i sebternimil brigade hasions dia.
cd and sent back• to the vessels, to which they
, - •
The Twee correipo Went says: The Imolai.
gatiowof the tenure: In the mine eINOIIOO,III
flout - ofNeistrurg, is closed, and the, vordlet
will shows divided responsitillitylag upon
Rtirmiile,liced4ind the tieneral•trlailed the
. assault. Nor does - Ge neral-Grant bold himself
-entirely blameless especially in pertathig the
'selemion of the o ff icer with led the ataatilt,to be madeh )
The ' 's Army of the James conespond
. cat of the =h.-says -that Mc Pollard, or the
'Richmond ,liirambscr, captured tome eight
mouths since ; has gone, to Rickmond to seek an
exchange, of himself for. Mr. Richardson, corms
pondant of .
,the Tr one , catered some eighteen
months since: '
Destrietivi Fire at Portsmouth, Ohio.
ROLLING MIL DESTROYED,
ESTIMATE OF iiim . .11011111"M FORCpI.
One Hundred ind ftnl Wagons . Abandoned
by Forrest.- • •
A COMPANY: OF -% lifiloti "CAVALRY- CAPTURED
Ciaciaarrs, Jan. O.—P. este-wise
;rolling mill at Portsmouth, Oblo, wan destroyed
Ly Ore on Timmlay, With a huge stock of man
off/sawed iron. -Loss 6160,000; no Insurance.
• Com:nerd:4's co rr espondent estimates Rini,.
Band ',JOY. j actsini Thumisee from tweed .. .ye
Ore to: tirentynight 'thonamai men. , Per
'abandoned about -one hundred arietfifty wagons'
On the north side. • •
On PlidaY;Lyna; With about elgli . hundred
men, passed. thsongh• Ilelfloterllle, euphuism' a
company. orThaessea cavalry. He crossed the
Chattanooga , Itallioad . , below TanAttOMX,' clad
tore sm . a few:ralls.. !Re Is, on'' his way to Join
7trreat +1544104,-Me•
Mari, Constitutional -Caoventlon.-The
Evienitlott Of Forte Stathkand Van Bui.
ren, Ark. r.•-;
• Si'.; Lotas,-/an. CornreallotrUkfay de:
gilded toeompl trVbre theittrastUntlen, - and
ferent'artielts of flat Ockantetlot4tind whoaa daty
pasted 's reiolatkin hi theappdat of a coat
mit toe of eleven tOwhom, ah heWarted the dif
It shall be to report inch amicialtitelti tharete aa
ray bit deemed advisable. • - ' •
Voris. Brants - stal .Viit Vera; 2u4t.; have heat
evacuated by order of Gen. Reynolds.. II Is on. •
derstood, however, that the -.Prealdent has re
voked the order, at the Instance of the citizens.
of that section of =Fatty. •
Heller Meeting . In Sostota.
largo unilateral' anerchanti
and _lnaditg torn -61 &smea r . niet -at Faunal!
Mit tetlnsugurate moans for sending 'farwerd
hemmer, supplies to the people -of. Barnum&
May Lincoln gmadded.- Resolutions were *lop
led as to the object of the meetlng,and a commit
tee was appoleted to receive coatributlons. Ad
dreises were made by Mayor Linoutu,..coh..Jeli.
Ild
an Allen; want 'Eyerett, - and ethers. A. heavy
Sympathy with the purpose of the gathering was
tuanifented througbant the Proceeding. . and at
the:close three cheers were given for Savanash
and 13bennan. . •
Railroad Collialen—.4lereral . '
Wounded.
Bsurriworrs, Jan. O.—A cellislnra eitiOnted on
the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, near Farming
ton, on Saturday, between the Westward pas
scum tram -and the Eastward freight train.
Both engines were crushed, and the baggage.
mall and express matter. burned. Several sol
diers were wounded, one fatally. Jim. Robert
son, express meseenger, was badly berried; No
passengere injured;
From Fortran, Monroe --Arrival of See.
Mary Stanton and Gen. Melp.
• Fonnulea MOinter, Jan. 9.-43ecretary Stan
ton and Gen. Melgs arrived here last evening;
alto 811110013 Draper. and other attaches of the
Custom They sailed for Savannah at
noon to-day.
Weather very sternly.
A facer
$31316.--A. letter lkoni
rillessys "The man who raised the drat rebel
flag In - Brooks, a well known
journallst-iirthed hereyisterday; disgusted with
the service. lie asps that every man of his com
pany his deserted, and ho world-not remain
ftger lntill
H• • prfsonextiere In 1863, and wee
odkreilds liberty If he would take the oath of
alleglasee;•bnt he rafted. • Wow, however, he
has given the matter up.- He says that nd , man
le the &nth now.expects to mtktheir indepen
plea", - • •
tr.
' Amusuii Bloonny- pmbibir tbeiardsi Or- ;
In the.trolted "itose, aid at ..l.swre4etr.,
, lad., os Tusabil,it, at tato id/Mom/ k ip_
qf Ogre.
CITY IND sll6lllBri
—.-.,.
The Pittaburgh,TlOrt Watne and Cale*
„ Railway. ,
. - . . . ... •
=- The Tribritte; in &Ingo aketch of the'
aiiveral ralliolidi centering. iii'that city, speaks asi
Ifollawsofthe great.thie width cormonta oar city
With themetroptfili Of the West':
C"This I :l6a:vraicornmenced at, the boundary
line between the States of Pennsylvania And Otdo,
i_AulYr,.. 4 , . 1 540.10 v the . Ohio. and Pgansylvartin
Jtailroad eiiinptiny, Inettrporafed by in hct - artge
Le r ,is ioturtotraine3ieoldo.:' :The: entire track.
*as laid and the road opened for use between
Vittabrirrit had Caistline, ifdintabee of 187 milei,
11 ,p 1 1111,115.13... Crestilne 'was - tlins then made .
'thoweste.rd terminus of the road lwriew of the,
•.certilntythit tholtneirouldbepreettestairlod '
to the western boundary of Ohio irythetuildlti ;
' of the Ohictattd•Ladhunaßallroarl !lithe direction g
;
*of Indian:o3lls." Oillith9Bth'ieJairuary, PIM, i
jthertirectors awardedloMitehell it Co: are eon
rt.fmkbulidltak the road from trestlliota Fort
*ante.' :irdt=ie. l 2 l ; ti n fro4:VP3l°.;`,ll7. •
Vember, 1.554; the rhad.frain Fittaburgh to Fort
Wayne was ready for use.
o . antrielythen , 2Miree . gerieiii to have. a
western coruscation with Chicano ,-end- the pas
, hag° of MI ACV was lie:Cured - in the tillable Legis
lature liumt.l:lol*tij 4 ,the Fort Wayno andiOlden
go Thilinsad Coiropany, thus giving- the Indiana
dad le 1 Mittel:roe in. this State.' - The
anon
.of th hes .Waa begnp;ln - 1852„raral
completed - toO:4ll4Na afF,,twenty; miles i hoes
,kirt WityneslnFebyttary,.-1850.1,,
t. At this tired it beestnerevklent 'that' ta secure
hbe early coMpletio6ottbelitie to Chtengnsotoe
adatf f (71. 1 111 M10412111i all Intereati and creating a
lunit in the would have to be dams
:;e4l. A Plan for. the ammllidation Of Ouse three
.'eorporetlons into one ' -war proposed and adopted,
!a the - Pittsburgh,- Fort Wayne and Chicago
Ind
4011 road COMPany,. whoa Misteheit Wes.' from I
• Angaat let; 1836-wili fatted: Forty-five codes .between Columb ia' City and Plymouth WAS "WA
PAM on the 10th of 81Overnbet following, and
on the same' day the portion of the. Cincinnati,
Peru and Obiettgo: Railroad between Plymouth
and tmporte was also completed, clothes on t h at
day, a line was opened betsvcfair Pittabiugh and
Chicago for the ,tratlic of the N orthwest 334
miles in extent. • '
: en'thelst of Jnnuary, 1857, ',the Oew compa,
j
kby execu ted a 'walkup on their entire property
„for 810,000,000 to.-recurs err / issue of-the same
'amount Of thlriy.Year - boada-divided into two
!classes -ar follows: V. 1,500,000 Coast:talon
:ißoutle to he used in the construction and oquip
-IMene of the road, and, $6,500,000 Redemption
Bonds to be used in redeeming. ail the issues of
. the old' corporation.
^: In 1858, the company was ambled to complete
its track to Chicago. In December, 1853, the
Bondholders commenced proceedings for fore
closure and the property was placed in the hands'
of a litielTer. Bonn after the whole property
was sold, and purchased 14 for the benefit of the
creditors of all claast , s. d new oarporation was
created to hold the property.
From the commendement of. this great enter
prise 1613.10, to the minsuifiniation of the plan
of re-organiratlon
_a.150.2.. no creditor of the
Company was ever required to abate 'one dollar
from any Jest claim; nil sods • deide, with Inter.
cat, bare been paid In cash, or in the bonds of
the Company. .
.The entire colt or the railway with tte"eqiilp
ment, up to the first of January, 1885, will not
laigely vary from 180,000,000. During.the year
1804 its estimated earnings will reach a trifle over
07,000,000,0 f which sum probably 61,000,000 has
been received from Government for the transpor
tation of troops and supplies. The above earn
ings are 33 per cent. to excess of the earnings
for the year 1803. There have been no consoli
dations or extensions during the year, and few
nicideate. The additions to Rte. rolling stock I
hive been very' largts-how. large we have no
Means of deturtalnink-anti r consist of loam°
tives, passenger and nen: ' The following
la the present Board of officers :
Priaiden W. Cass, Pittaburgir:
'Vice Prarident m'l Hanna, Ft. Waynoi Ind:
• `l3nperudendent-4. M. IdeCullogli, Pittsburgh.
Chief Engineer-41. H. Jervis, Pittsburgh.
Becretam-W. IL Barnes, Pittsburgh.
Assistant Secretary-F. If. Hutchinson, Prim
.
"iiiastirer 7 -4. P. Henderson, Plusburgh.
Commercial end General Agent-.T. Bt. Moore,
Menge. • -
General' Wright Agent-J. J. Ilbastem, Pitts
burgh,..,'
' ocul* rakner Agepi—r. M. Myers, Pitti-
bomb.
/NA. E. E Shinn, Pittinrgh.
.Bupt. GOitiATII, Nrapr, lnd;
An Amid Rekaif ofrthea..Notathern,
R 00343 or vcp Cr4OI2MATI MUGGIER Brow
C0.113L18370X., December 18, 1864.
Since our Orm report was issued, the tramp of
contending armies to Tennessee, Alabama, Geor
gia end Mere of the mire Western u ell as the
Pattern State'', has th rown upon the border
towns an increase of refugees which, at this
season of the year, Is truly s i ppailing. A alle
steamer linded at our whar '
about two weeks
liner, near four hundred of these peoplik, about
one halter whom were children; and 'nearly all
the remdader women. Their aultstauce • had
beet consumed,' their • homes destroyed or made
desolate, and, unrecognized by any law for their
protection, they are thrown upon our borders
and Lapin the charities of thou:. wba, lu some de
gree; appreciate their condition. If citizens here
or elsewhere would know the desolation that war
mukes among families, let them Galt. the bar
racks, the stables, the temporary shelter of rails
or boards—where these sufferers are (band—and
Inquire IMO their 'family - and itidividual cases ;
bear their tales of privation and suffering, and
they Cline% be like ty to return with the Impres
sion, that "we will not help the families of
Rebels," or, that "thr class of people should
not have cone North . " They would find many
Tipton families (far the greater proportioa.)
stripped of their littlerall; while their trestmoda
or SOON were either kilted' or were fighting Tor
their country. With little ortm foo3—garration
maringthem In the fireeend even !fit wereexpe
dicta to meet their wants at home, no tramper
lotion could be bad femethe Government. The
frequeat reply of ' General . • dhcroosn to"
wren amileants for pamage rail
from Neshviile,lum been, "Jolt weidtt
hundred and tiny pounds, and If I allow
you to'go, you just keep so teach food from my
soldlers.!' Situated as they were, military oill
cers have made it a military- necessity to smut
them North, while, necessity ceases when they
reach the border towns. True, by act of Con
gress, they are allowed here a limited ration for
rnrh when they can not , otherwise obtain fOod,
.and. In extreme eases, temporary shelter Is pro
vided; but here prink, sympathy and aid must
come in, to protect, cheer, clothe and care
for all, and especially for th e who are sick..
dimes for families and for chi Wr= must he
found—transportailon to friends, or to districts
more congenial to thedrwants and capacities—ell
these and other occasional wade press upon us,
as family after ilnediedelly drop In.upon our at
tention. As la stated in our repedt, no State,
trounty,or municipal tamtreach these eases. No
hospital or. alms heave le open to reeelva the
Sg4d, the aide or the' Amble.. We plead not for
men, Tor we win gerseral to .them, you must
care for youndees, as you can obtaln - wmitt but
we pleat: for. belpices, houseleue women and chil
dren. Not so .much-for our Cincinnati home
want", hitt that -relay mod through oar mote
Intim to the gentles and dying "Nashville;•
where,lkie Mid, there areinowls.ooo deprived of
their homes- - e 5, Itemiphis, Cairo, Little Rock,
Louisville, and other palate filled with these sof
faring.--.Bbueltde as' we me of the may cane
(moon the - community' Ibr kiadred °Wets ' we
claim yet .another boon, that you as Christie:is
or thilanttrophrts, will aid in this: at the prelim •
moNeut„ the - chief of Manilla,. EVCO If we
sometimes give food to the (amines of rebels, we '
but obey the dictate's of.comnroit humauity and . 4 .
the Divine conunand, .thlne enemy hunger,
Ws ask the pi e ncie of churches to call the at,
kali= of their congregations to Ms subject;.
and partletibuiy would we ask of the Samna
'Stares who bare thus far been exempt from the
din of 'battle, and - the sufferings to which we al
lude, to help the border towel to bearing what
should be a common bunker. Wilt you not feel
it a pri vilege toco:OPerTrie with na is this worki
-
e want women and children's' apparel, how-
ever Come and
,worn--shoca,, caps, .food and
delicacies for the oleic. fkill another need-..and
that very eseential to the physical and moral
condition of these peopic 2 --money is nocessary
to send 8144 n to places ;where they can And
homes, free from the vices and miseries' which
must of necessity come upon them, ut their now
unfortunate and miserabincondition: Our Panda.
are nearly exhausted, and ; e wait with deep so
licitude the fixed& of our appebi. . ,
Goods marked "Refuge ;Commission,' Cinein
mai," (and advice of shipment - by mail,) will
reach us. Money should be remitted to 'B. F.
Brannan, Treasnrer, Frav kiln Bank, Cincinnati.
• T. G.' ODIOJINV,
/or the Committee.
Edgar Cankling, of Cincinnati. Ohio, Ia the
vette! Agent for procuring aid for the Refogo
Baer Commission of Ohio;:and .1s now-at the
Monongahela Roue°.
STRANGE PrronTnansurion.—Lasti.sllB.
Toted et , Co., of tills clth hOuglks lo
a lot !...rpwiclies at fourteen cents per potind.
"They . toft the peaches to Philadelphia and sold
them at seventeen canto; they, were &gala bought
there atlifteen cents. brought back to this plane
and re-sold to a Philadelphian at twenty-eight
cents. "We basso the peaches are yet la a good
state of preservalloi, mania' , beer two or throe.
Ilion THROVOU 21111 tOlte—TWO /wiles, whose
money We ad not Jearn, while stathkjentar
, 1 1 , Ignolb, MO* % bran thsongt tots .
end.
w» tom , using &mind. One of
pavan to her neck, but was gnat
Ikoun" bee "cool" poehloni !mint -lo
ved no ague inJoi7 th an a rein:alas dock.
• -
"A'Pittabnierer tii :Aterquelry - 011 Ile
' * .Ong., •
Owing latter Waa 'written by an
lntciU
geat and, obaerrant Mired. Mk. leas recently ,
Orada'an.oeiteasire tour through hie oil region or:
EerilaclZy Ma statement/ maybe Implicitly;
, , •
, • Cadagrratmo,./Iy.; Jan. 3d, . 1815.
1.11170 rt Detuatte.:—l have Just returned from' 'a
tour throug,h the oil district of •the "Sandy Val
'ley," and thinklog that a Tear of the Items pick
ed ute may be Of battens/ to sOme of your read
:era; I hare IlOtted." them :down, • and • take the
liberty of. edge - easing them - td y0u...... . • • •
_The Bigthuitly river had :its tributaries have
.long been known to yield petroleum, la - consideit
able quantltlm; btit the Mona detested Pretests
to 1639.didttot Whrrautarty further.teareti#thik
to conceal' portion of trim/ tamale AIM surfaee
'on spriogs, and. at "rich istihingetb along the
creeks end-Streams.
and.lB6o, Messit..Dixon,• Cumming*
yJ and others, commenced boriug at 'differ;
eel pts els In thowalley; but the work progreised
Very slowly, being concluded :In. the. old , fash
ioned way - -with• spring pole end - rodia , tonsi
finally stopped altogether; either.from the, break
ing WAX. the war in :the Arcing .of . 1881, or
froubthe relapse Id the oil htfaluess, , which OOL
entree et About the same time. • .Ever„ epee thB
reviled of.the -oil trade the :general Impression
bas been,lhat the "Sandy Valley" was isiaccei
and."oltmen" all over 'the country have
Ix= anzioualyuwalting the time that her rich
Store-,houses might be throngs open to Metric and
It Was not until into in the last.'suranter thee it
haute's' kpown to the ontahle weed Mkt the way
.wai. open.; since,which time;
been displayed. in. securing territory, forming
funalPersiet and getting machinery on thegrodisd
preparatory le commencing operations.
t _Surface makes. lta appearance In varying
quantities upon, most of :the mail streams or
Munches bum the month of Jig Sandy to the
bend oritstribleteries. either in springs or slops
along the runs or marshy places. At the month
of Blare creek an. id salt well;borech several
Years ago, yielded considerable oil. , The well is
Just above tow water mark, and, consequently Ia
frequently Ander „water, and has become filled
with sand and mud; bet the oil now forces Its
way up through it and runs 'out upon the - heath.
An oil well was commenced ;some one or two
runes above Blaine In 1860, with very:encour
aging prospects, but the too's got fast et. some
thing over one hundred feet,.and the welt was
abandoned. In sinking a well for trier, three
miles below Louisa, at the depth of about thirty
feet. oil camp into the Weil with the wafer In such
quantities as to neceseltate its. abandonment.
Similar Instal:lees are reported' in other Mitts of
the country
A few enterprising gentlemen of Louise are
now 'putting down a well on Contrary Creek,
about eighteen miles above the fork of 'Seedy.;
They commenced boring with- a SM-Incb bit and
espring pole, but have recently procured au Co.,
gine; and will soon be prepared to prosecute their
work more vigorously. The welt Is now dowh
110 feet. The that oil was struck at eighty-font
feet, ever 'since which time the sand pump has
brought up more 'nese oil
Paint Creek is now the centre of attraction to
reekera -after' thEttreasy.fluid," , although Tug -
Fork, Abbott Creek and Middle Creek are attract-
ing their share of attention. Oil has been pith,'
eyed. upon Paint Creek Sir the - last - tWeety - or
thirty Yeers,_...oll can be stirred up to the bed of,
the creek all the way from about six or eight
miles above Paint-title to its source . and there
are - teeny; "rich stirrings"" wheel two vim can.
Collect one or two herr& ii: . dest.7o/CILI Spring
Branch there_are a number of oil springs, where
the heavy tairj'inbataneeleff.by the evaporative,
cif the all running off from the springs has ac
cumulated, until it is haw ten or twelve feet in
thicknese. In soino instances. oil comes out
through crevices' hlglrep on the s a nd s ton e blunt!
and trickles deisn UM to ofthe rocks, leaving'
long black linmlo'hierhild cOurse.
In 1860 a well wee hered to the - dejgh of 268
feet at the mouth of Oil Sjuilig Branch, when'
'the work was !stopped by ; the, breaking ont of the.
war r Iri holism this wellthree din - abut seine of
01l were 'struck 4 - btat - norm of them. were ever
putisPed 'Before coinmeneingthe boring a shaft
west soak sorne/llelauseein the Mkt., The water ,
now atandtaboutlkleet •In this altalkund oil
collects cuirthe lop , of the water. The' 'water
nereseary to me th.o tic belonging is
mill; IsObtulped from to
well by runza n a pipe
doinillirough the - car Into the water below.
OW Oa accumulate} It displaces the water,,:and bi
time reaches Lute end of the pump pipe, when it
haste be drawn 'off - so as to allow the water to
rime. high enough to supply the esigine. From
eight to tee barnffs of on are drawn off In this'
telly several - Unice a y e ar. . .
ost lidudLkk Areek Amain. Cummings and
Bearowthatedn'weit i 141E88, totes ABO tees deep,'
With entudderahle show of gas. and Oil. SOme
seven - or eight Other wells were pit dowa on .
NIA creek to the depth of,about 105 feet; all of
which struck the first vein of oil.
A well war bored on the 'other aide of the
ridge, near the "Big Burning Spring," on a
branch of Licking river, . and et th e depth of 173
feet. - 'hecdunia of oil and'gas, spouted Into the
air, and Cul.contlnued today- for days. Nothing
was ever dose with this well, became, before the
necessary machinery cotdd be got upon the
ground the political troubles of the Cautery coca ,
relict the a4ndonment of the work. The well
now "blows out"•water, with some 011, at inter
vela.
Quite a numbart of salt wells were bored In
tbe Sandy 'Valley twenty or thirty yearsago, and
In (very hut/tote More or lets oil was
,met with,
and frequently; ha aunt 'quantities as to cause
• muchln convenience and delay to the salt-borers,
and In a few _lnstances necessitating the aban
doement of the well 'iltogether. -
Bet the time has come when Seekers:after 011,
and not salt, are exploring this valley, and al
ready the puff of the engine and the click of the
hammer - can be heard resounding Nee the deep
and ahollows.': Meters: Foster 'Co., the
flanßigCoal, 011 and. Mining Co., Messrs.
Rice, and and others, are getting the neces
sary machinery in• openticin to develop the ell
producing qualith l s of the iiiindy'Talley. Bat
oil and•ralt are not her only resources= nature
has been very prolbse in the distribution of min
eral wealth In AU valley : -- Situated at the base
of the coal formation.; the ' hills and meltwater
*mailed with rich beds of ilV11; bituminous and
enfant' coal
,which 'of themsclusi are worthy
attention Venn upttallita, as a safe Investment.
I could add Much more upon the resources or
thia valley, but lest I intrude uponour space,
will close. Your assured friend,
Our Book' .le. '
- Boone. •B 7 Louisa Boston. Lance.
We regret that we cannot praisethis book,' for
It /11 well written, and the story Is remarkably
well told.. But the authoress attempts to make
It the - vehicle of teaching the doctrine of flaphit
,iaal eddialuesw •in marriage44n other words, that
airlitimit who chatters to Milo's; Man she does
not love, may Icare bias fords wham she does
love: A book with awn* pernicious- lesson
should never have best pablished, at least not IQ
this guise. I
.110 mMion RCOM . Parent's: By Obriatopher
torment Boston ynknor Finds."
Theta' papers' listfaappeared; stanlitsw later:
yds, in the .Monthly,"and are • already
Well'. known : to' the reading public. They- are
from the pe n of darn Btenre and. are well-deserr ! •
Mg the earend attention ' et all housekeepers.
We do not re lish the affectation of the, authoress
In• appeerisgrntlder masculine' dlsgase, and es:
penally when palm were taken tole% the public
see under the disguiser; but ;hat does not affect
the sterlleg worth or these papers., ' •• ,
The Bor firarialfy - Catibite Mayne Reid, •
Ati,
thor of "The Boy flunten„lete. With tuustra
: Hots. Beaton riCialOn in Mead:
.
Ceptalaßeld Is entaliilY'tifsaille•iiriter, ant
for-one-who writes Os - Denny Wens he seldom
fella 'o'll'6n:ice something that will fascinate the
putLful reader., Ottitis • chow- Is -- this story of ,
tiro In the deserts ef •'
All the aboVe for sale by Henry Miner Fifth
street, next deer to the .POSPIa „
', asnma's Owe DlALOcHtlirs_ ;Nd.ll,"hai been
teeelted and is
fort
Sby W, Glldinfenny,
No. 45 Fifth street: It contains e choice c 0110...,
tiotrof original School and parlor dramas comn
diettas, burlesques, farces.'ne., adapted. for
stage, platform, or Nom, with full direction's for
representation.
"irteronr AND. 4 31:1127MM" is the title of a
discourse - Preached In the Second Fresbyterins.
Church of Brooklyn; by the Rev. Dr. N. West,
formerly of thls' elty, on the , day of the last s an
nual Thanksgiving. It is an eloquent summry
of the reasons which the nation has for grail.:
ludo in the successes which hat s° ter crowned
the struggle for free institutions and the authori
ty of law, and the prospects which seem opening
of greater successes hereafter. •
Tim "RouncLlON RECORD,'' part 45, contains
excellent portraits of Gen.- Negiey and Gen.
The Record has been tnsnsferred .by
the former publishers to D. VIM Nostraid, who
will hereafter publish it at former rates.
, .
. .
Rtmcitnon or Plarrriscrulr WABDEN.--The
Inspectors of the Western Penitentiary met on
Saturday, for thi,purpose of electing °Meets of
that Instirition., Dr. Campbell, of Uniontown,
Pa., was elected Warden ' rice Captain ,Tohn
Birmingham. , Itar• Thais. e rmiii_Pteri Wa 3 c°n
tinned asld'orsd Inatruetoroind .las,Alexasidor,",
be
ea Chief Clerk.. , The. alharaPPeletmen"
Tin' be made by the Warden elect, who will m
axima the Maloof his position during the Current
.
&maws arai'Lerwarms.—During the put
week, etyma' squads of soldiers hare passed
through this city assayer ferflartronalt, to Join
Merman; While stopping here they, are &ban
dgtttY,lnarldettfor by the enbastasee Comfit;
tee, and sent on their WaY fel ol o4ll. On a rct"
ni
day teritzig's`aqtited' of florernmeit rera; ,
Who canto ,trow Nashville, Maw they, had barn
al woili;took the Eastern train, and willto
Sarawak, sfa New Et* city. Co
GAZETTE.
• Caucus Ncminatlotu..
.Tbe Union membersof, Councils - i held their
• anted last night, when the followhig. nomina
:lions were made •-• • • .
•;" 7 1e9 7 .24/1.1 do . r-,Chaa. 141clutprarr.
G5ll/laiaesagi—it. Neirman, by acclamation.
- •cay Gaiojef , "".,ll: ktibbor • . .
- ay. of.2Lraitsta—Thifid.l3fros.
ClentofiXtroket;-401ai W aitaee.
lroolo.Firdicho :Where Mastor--Wm. Forsyth, by
acclatmnatlon.,
.• • • 1
Whar/ 2 7 .1: B. , Fattemou.
Salt litspector—Jacob fidget by acclamation.
'':fittl*Oe 4117t0.6 7 -1 -WI ,14,`ntson, by accla- j
m
TotileCoe Yllion, hi or.
" English) Gfegodte add Dißratrh
acclamatiOrru llerminpFreidomts
City rob 1 , aBl & *mg
Berea - CoshmkrictienriLlit.acolur Olicuk
ie4l ,
..t „pa n ,. -.4 • 11. is, Cooper.
faurai. redinck, acclamation.
' i f 5,14. of Trak, Troia- , josejah. P i th
;Ag.leAmr Bob Rt‘i- , •
s eeFeormers.--is9Vied;R: IV cr; ." ' .
*John.Grentingh,
" 3 d -" lalOriNgsteri..
4tls -"
B. McClure
" " sth- " , , &inc."- •
"
' 6th " :Thomah'Eliti
• ' 7141" ,Robt.-DonaldsOn.
Stn - " C. Koehn,
“9Lte , •
B. D. lint.
orguarter obwain.
'‘AtoiinAT Arrrinitox,,Tab:p.—Before Juagea.
Syc,riett and iaroint.
,
Frederick , Gohbert, Ludwig Wagner and Frank
. .
4.0=14dt, were arraigned on a charge of as
sault aid:battery, on oath of Theodore Beilstein,
prosecuting witiees. 714 complainant, It tip
, _
pcias;entereit a Saloon ft Allegheny on theeven
" "" . "F
tim'orthe Nth'o December, la company with
some fiends; 'alt of whom 'had' been drhaking.
There were another . party. In the saloon, who, had
also been 'drinking. An altercation occurred,
which culminated ...In a general row, In which -
...13cilsteln was, pretty toughly handled. • . During
the melee knives told missiles, were freely used,
,and the. complainant received severe gash. on
the side of Lie hCad, saver - 133g a part of the ear.
Two of the other party recelved.cuts or stabs,
inn in neither case does it seem dear es Co whose
hands inflicted the worende. The eXamination
of witnessed in' this cash occupied - the' attention
of the Court from eleven o'clock In the morning
until four In the Baena:in, when the dory re
tired.
tcruSavracminDAlLl' LOYAL GEOWUAY4.I
Finch lathe title of a half sheet paper, printed' in
Savannah, by "M. Summers, L. Q. 211, 20th ar_
my corps." The copy before us Is dated December
20th, and the first number weis burned on Christ
mas day. We are under obligations - 'to Thomas
S. Sloan, of linapp's Pennsylvania Battery, for
this and other favors.
The -:gallant division of Gen. :Cleary—the
White Star—being thedrst to enter thee:anti - wed
city, are enjoying a brief • respite attertheir ar
duous campaign. We know of pone more de
serving: -4 '
An , Oua Irmaurrax? Gosn.—The - funeral of
Hugh , Hcatlne took:plate on _last Tuesday, and
was numermutly attended by the friends' of the
fandly of the deceased.. Mr. Keating,was one of
the "oldest settlers, having. first come to this
county as a laborer In 1816, and by his indbstry
and perecierance bed necumulatectemddderable
property; among the rest several fine reiddenees
on Ferry and Third streets. Mr..litallog was‘a
flatten of Ireland. • •
PlT46lllllgat MID7'S72I3DMITILLit RAmsioan.
The stockhohleinof this road yesterday. held
theirannual meeting, and.those the following
named . gentlemen ..as. officers for. the, ensuing
Ann • . •
-
President —lsms Jona,
, Dirertors.l.'l3meh la.' B. Brown, etti
Schoemaker, M, (M y a Ma. Xi itoor J k es hea .
James B. Murrayßethi •
Bolaies. WrniPhil;
lips, Josinus Rbosies, S. Nicholson,--W. •8,
un-E. , . •
v inco - novurr.-This.rernerkable
01411k:15r the Dint time at Masonic Hall this
evening. Ofvotuee there will bee large attend
-
]'nee. and undoubtedly it deserves It as s it denies
highly reconitbended by thifthess. 'The Ruttiness
delineated embraee thrilling and' 1114-1110 repro
sentaticins of Life in the Land of the Orient, and
are solidi° be "sublimely beentlful n, by all who.
have ifitnefsed then:. , Vird hope to' be presant,
thl4 wrgaliC.and Judge for ourselves. .
, . •
E1.E7,110N Dranavons.—The
MinPeoples' In
&' ea Compa nyti-daj Veld' Bich , Formth.
so-
Mid 'Meeting, and the following named Odle
; men were elected Directors for the ensuing year:
Wm. P. Parke, Charles B. Bissell,
Wm; Van Kirk , John Watt Simnel P . Bhrtver,
James D. Verner, Capiala - John L. - Rboade; 'C.
;Rawson Love, Charles Arbuckle; JOU P. Kirk- ,
.patrirk, and John . Glide. -
Cotaisiow.—A collision occurred on the Baia.
'a ad
and Ohio Railroad, on '6aturdq night
near Farmington Station. An Eaatem bound
`Passengertraincollided with a, Western bound
freight train, badly damaging' the two locomo
dills and a number of cars. A store in the bag
gage ear, was thrown over, destroVing all the
bamge, malls and express matter and a passen
ger cat. •
_
Cr
..:31AUTZETIS V.ALLET RAILROAD.—ThiII COQ/-
Any held their regular annual meMing yester
day, and elected the following BOar4 of Direc
tors: James E. Moorhead, Isaac Jones, Jacob
- Fabler, Wm. Park, John H. Ewing, Win. Mc
;Kerman, David T. 'Morgan.' The President Mai
other officers will be chosen by the Directors..
. -
A Caxt..•--We yesterday exerting had a call
from within' Oxtohy, Esq., “ro Local" of
the Vheeling Register, who :tails this city for
the purpos.e of rsolleitlng Advertisements for ;hat
paper, and yrilldal!upon our business men. .
POLICE Coturr.—No Items of interest occurred
LC thellayor's millet yesterday, from whleltfatt
It might be Inferred that the morals of the city
are on the mend. - '
Tumuraz:-,ll:da evening the play of 'Mac
beth" will be given, in •which 31r. • Neade , will
appear In the leading chatwcter, and a rare treat
la anticipated.
; ettatir onamis.-.,We arc suro wo are doing
a real service to smaller churcheii and Sunday
schools, as well as to lovers of mule generally,
!anything attazthon to thc Cablziet Orgainstuann
factured by 31- cum. - Mason ;ffiandin, whoso
Warehouses sreat No. 7 Matti street. No one
who hears these hassrtutwayta will be sur prised at
the very strong tarot - with which they are re
garded bj Oar 'leading orgartists.,l.Their goat!
of tone la adagrable, manoonorans, pure and
sympathetic; while thty,have abundant volute
*lions for any private house, and quite suilinlent
for ellingttchlgratee and foe..oqcb
usually occupied. by eundopacloxie. With all
this, their capacit ee y kw expression:la wonderftd,
Who:n commas oven- that' of the
hugest &admen costly church °rpm'. - This
mainly effected. by 'the latroduction' of •
operatod women entirely new priaciple, , whi moll
ch
gives the performerve_ry efficient control of the
imam he produces . The - moderate prices at
which they are - cold, and the little epics' they
occupy; are' impoitant practical - advantages In .
these butroineute.--Yele York Canymeretal Ad
l'arf
lieu
OR • WAR, .Thaa'a lax Qttromon
There are thousands,:am tensor thetwands
v , of
perscms in our fandiwho are desirona of hang
rocs, hat they are so afflicted with .the,varken
diseases to Which ...flesh is heir, that there is an
incessant War ping on withltion account of the
impure ; state of their blood, that they have. no
PCJICO dajOellighi.. Their earnest hpdryis,
Mere.no balm in Gilead—on physician there t
Tea, yea I hoe Mammon's WAnoo - Ama Cara ,
ram Botoras, and YOU will aoonfind Mlle( and
poems. a complete .victory over .your ; troubled
and diseased eenatitution.. 'We speak thus coo
lidently because we have tried'them,- and the re
milt in our mute was most glorious.. Blessed be
these Bitters! Ladeed the a re “peace-makers.',
Remember, the genuine Ramo and Calisaya
Bitters have the.nanie of Jacob Pinkert:Ml:down
on. each bottle: • All Others are spurious:. , For
sale. at all respectable . druggists and wholesale
For sale at - R. E. Bellenr.,t Co. No• 26 Wood'
lit - ect, Pittsburgh, and of Geo..A. Kelly dr, Co.,
corner oflrederal andlcanock, Allegheny.
Ecoimevon -
_
A Noo4oonto Cora) may causeifientha ogee&
feting, andeften made, at last In Consumption,
Bronchitis, mother Pulmonary Affection. When
neglect la attended by results so dangerous, what
con jusillY the careless !edgier:lnce of•Nralting
fora cold to get well of- Ittelf.? , If theta. who
are now troubled with:Coughs, Colds, Hoarse
ness, Bore Throat, , wtseld surely avoid the
dreadful eneeringi of the Consumptive, let them
take. at once Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant, a rent-
WN W enieleneY La; been estabilelunithirty ,
years. ;Bold by prugghta everywhere. • . , t. :
' CLOAK' ixi) TRLIIIMid. STORE AT • Atamoic- T
The stock of. Morris lillfrdlorti:.ocalchr.
cloaks, crabroldcrles,:woole4.6o , Ods *LA trim-,
m 010,1,14 bo sold bY A: Loastotj'At./Otionesr.
at tholr:store,coraccof,reagal itrcet marl:loath
commbn, kneekcny; dttAcitaas.liyllllv t
ot -
a l and 9 e'crock. Tim lattertqc9c bawl 01'
wo Icarected.to
this , -
lI,NO Lint ' s lOW 00 tOPbite Wl* Aiers 1 ;4i4
im pa ct E leeed eAt4 ,. .e l 4 6 the G e n etheFeee 4( 10 M1
impaitg, the gtqut a4bi raki,:llpm mane,
tee ieettl'ClielttieeV,e aster terra Aid mew ae
aPdllSfheiePoo!' set *e'eetet Ten" , -; 8 . 6 4141.14. 1 . 1 1:410ekt,
" ;: t.l;
'Fos
LT 6'6626
Ditea, use ‘ 4 49rown's Bron:hial TrotAa,” baying
proved their ellien 7 by a test of many years.
- - -
1 - • Tun Ammomumemw Ittscricar for Stayor,'.
' trimettor of the Poor,' ind Ward
.tillident, 'Cakes
place today. We ..liaie Ask-the. limos citi
zens will attend the, itedb, Mid 'see to it that Chtt ,
regularly nathittstedtiekot eiskhltile the full Tote.
As atitaltudimul Itec , ,lnade?lv. Um: P)PAlsr 'JP'
tern itrAillieny; the 'tract. 'deiorresCthe sup_ port of Cho ilcinildanttinrtjti ti its'l' t
A sivelaLmectizmwahr..old. Ct.tmeils will be
held on Thursday gyenlng, _to hear tin report of
the Auditing Comtbittee. - The'lleW Connelldwili
meet so Friday ixionoing for orgazilitdiod..... !. i
Gael WA lir gelichrotic which 1,31
formed on the Allegheny side of the Aiiii;tirb
1 way on flundaY, ands. pt away a considerable
quantity of; lumber:that', tun been Ptilittits way.
. B " era l WW I, iv . = AlsdPolllleit Ol!DAitreal4. A
nnniber of *Mona' Wore. on the' foe , skating at
;thertime. hut' Word , reached; flOhijtlielr:!father.
proeFrlous sitnetion with much diflicultyel -IA
'The r Thpeditlori Agaiiiit "itihnlitital
-• • t . •iirhy_ It Failed.: . -t; , , 'i
Correspondence or the N. Y. Tribune. ' 1 , , lo'
, „.-.1 i NiiiigrOL; 'lll,llls*
' • Th e leiding facts Oftho Vilfmlnuton e
.xpodi
. ,
..
I. The colletakM , and•equipmentof thwahipk ,
or wii fdr w ont tii,,.m4lro c .ll4!"
tad tetirdiuhs': ' -.-.- ' "=•• • -
4' 9.1 When . It wis announced as bildj7thtftriitill
ports with troops started,: from!-414,elplonelloads
with the understanding that they
.yrunid ,40 ias de Cloacfy thlloWetf by',,tbe" - War lia ,
sc4o , ,- -,,; le 1 o;” '- , ',11 , Z Xli,,, 4 C:7O tkut;l
I no traisporia and.troopttltrritiod; oritrAWlp r
niltigron,"ind44gu there for- three, dig u 'zir m a
dld wtather,lheaea';aa , arnOth 'its 'it 'MM.
=Atha catcall htloWli,to be the ea ' •
In amen force; but thegdpeqf tor cantnitt9t,..,, ,, •
• 4.' Heavy weather act int'ttielhiptief r ap
,
•
at:
peared, bat the trahsporta hadlOY•thaftifteneae%
ly exhausted their coal and, systerp and s ,
were, compelled to seek Beaufort . harbor, .whlelt
they left again for Wllmlngtim as qulckiy 'he Gee
weather permitted. - - • - '
5. flux , without. awaltinelho 1-etdrn of the
troops and transports .from, Beaufort,,Admtul -
Porter; contrary to the - underatOod plan of 'ppm-
aticins, exploded the gunpowder or torpedo boat;
and twonharded the , tort: for , serum! dmorll4 .410
the plan of operations it . . had been, understood
thiethegunnowdee !Mat shOuld bo "engodeorag
such time,' and In each inanner,That - the trikor
could Immediately and,and take; advaataze,of
the demornlization' which It was expected 'the
explosion would create'mong the - '
_. When our troopt subectificatke.hurded,-Gots.t
Weitzel, (than whom o ur- .
, armY:iXtp , CAfiea aIIqQ
-
soldier braver, more skillful or more experierieed
. in assaulting fortified placos,) beinrorderedbyt
-Iten. Butler to rcescunoitro. 1140414 mound*.
Mice close to the fort, and ascertained Abet IL
Was uninjured, ' and that' an 'assaulting' party'
would meet a more bloody and.fatid repulse titan ,
our troops did at. Fort Wagner. -lie "therefore
advised' heir yjiltdrairal, to millet; I:leti. - BUtlec
ani;etiked. 'Fort 'Maher 'le More thitn'tarice ' tut
large, and twice as difileult, of assatilt. as, - ;Ftirta
Wa"ncr was,
•liiieniiitturY OittilOritiCs'inkete4 . illaVioiOiL
rat Potter Would ran the' gattutfet,rWitli some Of
hia . {Mr yeusels by Fort. Fisheri amk: up Gaper
Fear Illier Mid, in concert:with, the trttops tha4,
Would be'llicti , coveted' by the giliboatS,' cut
OM tho , fort:tura "Wilmtngton r and•altuttql thrio
rlyer,...`nutking
,the , capedition.•aoothor, Mobile.
afthlr." ' •
~._ . .
li. When on .au. gintrial,' Admira/..PorteriOc'W/W-i
quoted to da: ads- Farragut, or nay of halt as ._
dozen ogicers,in Porter's . onjtqat., would Jukso . ,
&WM It. • • •
•
8. The tokenism; that anyrtilf;thir inaentBrefft
the fort, lan mistake, created .by u.fulsogutoorl
started among the soldiers at the - cloge of the,
; reeonnoissinee. 'The trueitatemelie
nt of tkel.;••
dents that gaTe/ise.teiltfrtutibr is.thikd .0 •it
; Fhit- 7 A shot froni the dupe of.nreth th.q
Rebel ilagstaf audit loppled
the fort. A gallantodker otaielnditTer*lbek;
Wellz9l's Pakrian tISIDAhe Agar
clitch'Cif the Fort mid brought trg
.j.S f
eron'd-' bearet;ho , iirarliald sa l
f killed m thelort.; end his tusnse, brisugliebur.r
by one of our men, was - not instdolhi
Fort, hot one third Of eiteße from it.' ,-
Third-The Shot said to'befired;bisitte
men into a bomb-proof fail.; of zebelsotasViryid;zl
not inside the fort, but by a 4lisrpolpatex. in s
Weitzel's skirmish' line; Who - 'flreit'throue
sally-port In his front•lnto an open botitb-isroofirti
the opposite sideetthe felt, irt.whlch bothoughtr
saw some, rebels. h
Whether he. 111t.417-of:
theirs is not known ; but is ' knownthitt'not ond
of our men got inside the fort or. any; of its; dew.
.
. ~ • v. •
*While th e traniikarte Were waiting t r io ari
00l of the'war Teasels Andre tho Unit three days; ‘-
the feWs sent down hears- reinforeernente4ol
Sager, Lonft'amp„ In. the.stelnity pi; the torn; and,
these relnforedments were;ready to tundst the,foit:
In'ease of an assatUt: Oen. Butlenvetfre' rpm'
was but 6,500 men. • '
Tun &vista (Ga.), .C.mtWitationtidist, of re
, cent date, says It Is • infopned that the georeda
iitailroltd, running from Augusta to Atlanta.wilt
,be completed to Social Chefs by : the . l.sth . tit
nary. But isadda,'"from that point io rittlauttyr
trifty miles, 50 per cent. of. the Iron, w 4 :an the.
t material of every other descriptionbare BeeW,d&-
strayed or rendered unfit for met and the emit
;pony are utterly powerless:to pontecnto the wort 3
and , complete it in anything like a masettable
time, without tho necessary asalstanco from
.Gove.Government, - eat, and woretcrMto learn . that the Govrt,t
. ernment has not yet entered upon It with Alta
appreciation of Its great importance, aslt ihoulfit. •
rnornmamt E. L, la a healtbful
The Soured, tbattity publishes a :Hat of isa, r •
persons who died 'there La 1,864 at :'the eof 70 .
and upward., =or this number 51 were'mein and
85 fmalett• The two oldest, a:man hnirwotaan,
arere each' 90; two others were -9; one 94; one
03, ono 92, three 01, tire 90, three in, 88;
five 87, three 86, five 83; dight 84, two 83, two 82,-1
two Si, nine 8, three 72; twhlve 78, neyen..77,.
six serial . 76, five 74, eleven 73, eleven 12,, .
four:7l, and.eight 70. , . e • ...
The above numberseibiblt a• muck Idglior,,
average than venal; wien - in Plavldence..
. ,
• 'FRE WAX FORT MOALLISTRR-11*AiManit.1
The Cowell Conrier.hes small pliettialetter fecni
'a Loweirsoldier; who says that When tinraidiult
wan made on Fort McAllister, at Eiavannakthois
of our soidient - urho'form.ed the 'front:ranks
the tuistulting party leaped. into' the trenches;• <
aed those who followed rushed :across tho space,'4"
walking upon the shoulders of.their,,Contrjulakq
vritO boi -il.ect4o9 l innl4 l l . hritibre.;--T_4o 33
assault tras,a very daring aid ,sucoomild 4fratre.:.
and occnpled but a foe momenta. -
s.
A. new poem by kr., Teneyson—shottlil6he
pnbllshed ln England, Is said le bear the name 6f
"The Cruel Boa Captain ," - and ie.' be fonuded
upon a elreumstanceirelated by- . 21do
mo.os(wften denied) of the men OF an
frigate commanded by a brutal
their vessel. along : olde a -Emrich: -Illan-qt7lEdrs3
folded arms, nerer..etirred Whtleklrltif
afterlunadelde was ponied Into thim,
went dcrwa—all 'ow board peljeldngstlit„:4,,ti;
- -
A ma= correspondent; writhi - 14 a at Iltig='
laud In regard to breadsttiffs,lisys
market contitfues aathr
'without asymptiotnot retiyalp:'
If your supplies were to fall cdr„ Vormakt would
at once hatpin to Increaseher eons's:intent lomik
The r a
lly
one home ;
thus, effectually ,preventedi and the yew, .4940
with: tin price hread at a point *yet thazbeen kdotn within modern eperline.", ,
•
AL 71nrsco. .--,Chipialn De Forrest, of the lids ,
Con necticaregiment r writed to bin ftiandelbr LI. 3
tent-fiy tor chaparoof.' Rh' present hofim,ser
: pram he deacriboese "theDocembersky,floortgL4
With ‘Baliihern, aol4 The rilef loki;
.1 1 0 Sr -
eatchea the driPpings, and. hn„vralle..,l4TE
Oplyirhatettie certh - and AT meet:"
Tir ; sermon preached .by , Ble:SpnigemS - .4;bse , Me
Baptismal Regeneration, hare:cited an‘sinotieiVa
of • public - attention tmparalialed..:, -sider
reached 400,000 copies la a hie weeka; Indies* vr
lees_tban cighty.pamphicts have srppeared,eit
og
on hsig:'
9FP o aition.iP in defoucci
rt
TnaProrid eneS' Journal speaking of the matt:
treatment of. h 'child by'Ata mother:loli"
ehlikteertalitly should hnse the carotid attemtkßitaft
of some one, or It_ will bilmismturely.added to.
the kingdom of heaven, asd thus perhaps ,
3 4a 13 CnVY acnratcd ft , om itailaidr4 •." i•
' DR. Bt.' Barmz, of N . eraturypOrt; kirans*Ottit.! ,"
setis t lathes In the river or In the aPerLikait
daybreak during all the eold ipreattier: • After 4'
comes out he takes a ran of tent or a dozed natal
along the beach to get upabhunlatlon:
..;
Trii 11011$ ONU to dismiss unemPkojed ottertii
•Iri the army cane up In the Br.hate Friday;ori ,
.;„
:an adverse report 'prom the chairman of the Mil;
tar,
Committee and 'atter toil; debate, "i 0.14
MARRIE6V
iIkLISTOrt •4•0 MOndkr;Jantarf
.1806, by - Bev. J. icrolinnsm Lleut."llopEßT,St:).l
ALSTON; sloth P. V.; to Alio' ri:zocrAtri"
.su a:Allegheny City.- r.
RENL IEDIT — P.ENICP.DP—di
Pee. 32d;
Pho4t Todd, THOMASI.II2I2IATEDYf
tOrgk, 014111E4
.SENNEDP,.. di the fokime:l)
) l '4l
5i_ ....: ,_,.. ‘ „ , ~ MED: .. i•• : ... -, •,•rr
luwaiiiidealr, of dilswe ofthe gik. ) ,
bbairit"elniM .s 1 83f L
_.?,
split's", Eq•lia the Tist Year°E W.. S'
Patti/OW inn f Male kti tau;*ktenoetai 0 4 4 . d•
~.. . 4
as - Virsiwir,:leth hot, it 2Weliialc '
7 . 4 ,4
ityla. • The . ithiloas men**
_WM . **! l•32r if..oc Icif.i t '' 1
who*, I VbellidadaW tali EMU, Re real)0011111,„ '
1
;1110P1i tO ',lead WithOUtfUlthilt 16t111.: ~ 1
i NCOLNDLEBEL-LOSi tlidtidir' 8464,444 1
'R. S 1 WILSON, Yen 2Vit Chilli
arah INK %sod 3 mootho ..
..
IWO. of Catwalk - • •
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2.: , ..24 : ; i . ; ‘,:: , : - ‘
t:,,t-1fi,.: 11 4 41Z..;-ff, , ,r
't4-4,410 . 4 :04 ,6 i 1 .;1 - - , .-.4% ,- --.: , - --
.
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