News Items. —Tho Eris Railway Company sold $30,000 worth of tickets at Elmira depot, last month. —The President's family, Including Ms two fist= :starlet, when all assembled, will number Wl= witting. —The. ocean, betides being a medium of corn meree, la largely engaged In the manufacturing heel nem. It produced no end of bine and white urges —The Utica Beraid tuts the following In ita head ha before a published Fourth of July oration:— " Year of the Republic, LXXXt S.; of Freedom, T." —Miss Julia Cobb, sister of Ityleanns Cobb, com mitted suicide in Wisconsin a few days einee by bang ing herself in her father's cellar. —A party of soldier' have arrived at Savannah, en-route to Anderaonville, to ;rive a proper burial to the Union ooldloil who have died there during the —The New York Yews fe advocating suffrage as an Inherent right' of the enfranchised negro, and de clares that this will be the sentiment of the South on the question. —General Grant's monthly pay, hicomo tax de ducted, la $1,062,70. This sum is exclusive of com mutation of quarters, sit.o., which amounts to near ly as much more. —Among the colossal engineering projects of the present day, L 3 a scheme for constructing a mliwav tunnel under the bed of Severn, for the purpose of connecting the South Wales Union line with the Principality. The tunnel will be about three miles long, and is estimated to cost £750,000. —lt is understood that the first message transmit ted over the new Atlantic cable will be the price of Confederate securities in London. The qnotations are running down so fast that it Is necessary to trans mit the report by telegraph et ti3e curliest moment, or there won't be any to transmit. —The device of the State seal of Virginia has been shared by the new State Government The old de vice is retained, but the words Liberty and Union' surmount the Goddess of Liberty, trampling on the fallen tyrant, Instead of the motto, 'Ste Sonrr Ts/- mania —General Butler's resignation, which was sent on the first of June, has beea returned, marked • not accepted,' and be has been scut for to Washington, where ho is likely to be assigned to duty connected with the Freedmen's Department. —Encouraging accounts have been received in Washington of the prospects of restoration in North Carolina, and it is stated that a tnajority of the plant ers are pursuing a humane and judicious course to ward their late slaves. —The papers of the South seem to be adopting pretty much their old arrogant tone. General Ter ry has wisely given thertla warning by his suppres elon of the Richmond Whig. Nothing but military rule will keep the South in proper subjection to the laws, so long ns the old Rebel citizens have a con trolling majority at the polls. —Neat cattle, on the hoot, can be bought in Tole do for four cents a pound. Prices have dk‘clined all over the country and the rates at which fresh beef are retailed In the East and West., is attributed to a combination of the butchers to keep prices - up.— There is a good opening in our cities for men who will purchase and sell at reasonable rates. —A Carnal , . rebel In Canada, who was coming to the States, attempted to smuggle an alarm clock un der her boop-akirt. The waggish dialer in clocks. knowing her intention, set the clock en that it would strike the alarm just as she was going through the Custom House, and while the officer was examining her It eat up its whr-r-r, and betraying itself, was captured. —European emigration to America—from Germs ny, 1840 to 1860, 1,547,000; from France, 1820 to 18 60, 203,000; from Switzerland, 1851 to 1860, 24.000 ; from Behtitun, 1851 to 1860, 80,000; from Italy and Spain, 1840 to 180, 27,1360. Sweden sent out 15,000 emigrants between 1851 and 1300—most of them to this country; Denmark lost only 6,003 by emigra tton teem 1840 to 1860, most of whom went to Utah as Mormons. —Colonel Stodare, a necromancer, is giving exhi• buttons in London, and excites attention because be performs several of those mysterious feats of Indian Jugglery whicja have so otten been described. One is the rapid utmth, in the presence of the audience, of a tree, which is presently covered with foliage and fruit. In another trick a child is placed -in a basket, into which a sword is thrust several times, the child shrieking, but the b.aske,t Is afterwards found to be empty. —The Springfield apubtiean leans of thepectini artly successful papers of New England. The lowing am the Incomes of the different members of the publishing firm. A good sham of the profits of the establishment, however, are derived from the manufacture of albums, and Job printing. while Dr, Holland's literary labors have been liberally reward ed : Samuel Bowles, 813,300; B. F. Bowles, 55,519 ; C. W. Bryan, $5,960; J. H. Holland, $16,354 ; J. F. Tapley, $4,622. —The following are the advertising receipts of some of the New York papers for the nine months ending March 31st last: Herald, $453,12'2; Times, $193,274; Tribune, $160,674 ; World, $116,0)1 : Eve ning Post, $156,26; Commercial Advertiser, $56, 473; Journal of Commerce, $101.098; News, $40,- 78; Express, $48,803; Sun, $71,189; Harper's Weekly, $47,878; Independent, $63,965; Observer, $22,344; Evangelist, $9,667; Army and Navy Jour nal, $8 . 938; Scientific American, $4499. Probably the most profitable paper, after the Herald, Is the d ing TN, Its expenses being less than the so. calle popylar —Wiliam B. Astor is sixty-five years old ; worth fifty millions; owns two thousand dwellings, and L a lenient landlord. A. T. Stewart Is sixty, thin, ner vous, dignified, worth thirty millions. Commodore Vanderbilt is white=haired, red-cheeked, seventy years old, worth forty millions, drives a fast horse, and gives away his money very lavishly. August Belmont, twenty millions, coarse, stout, fifty yeam old, and very German. George Opdyke, five mil lions„ fifty years old, but looks younger ; an agreea ble glantleman. James Gordon Bennett, five mil lions, seventy-three years old, dignified in manner, broad Scotch accent, benevolent to the poor. —ln his report of the campaign in Georgia, after alluding to the destruction of railroads, Sherman says: 'We also consumed the corn and fodder in the region of the country thirty miles on either side of a line from Atlanta to Savannah, as also the sweet po. tatoes, cattle, hogs, sheep, and poultry, and carried awarraore. than 100,000 hones and mules, as well es a countless number of their slaves. I estimate the damage done to the State of Georgiaand its military resources at 8100,000,000, at least $a),000,000 ot which inured to our advantage, and the remain der is simply waste and destruction. This may seem a hard species of warfare, but it brings the sad realities of war home to those wbo have been direct ly or indirectly instrumental in involving us in its attendant calamities. —ln answer to a reception address at the Burnett Rouse, Cincinnati, on Friday evening, General Sher man stated this Interestinz fact: 'lt was bare in this city, in this very hotel, through which I passed to reach this spot, that General Grunt and myself met over a year since ; audit' that very room we laid down the maps and studied out the campaigns which ended this war. I had been away down in Mis sissippi attending to a little matter there, and when General Grant and mysclr ended our conference here, we separated, he to go to Richmond and I to Atlan ta. and u the result has been just as we planned it In Tho —F. C. Barber da Bon Exchange Brokers, of Au gusta, Gs., published a list of prices of gold for Con ledemie notes from January Is l , 1861, to May Ist, 1865. The price of gold started at 5 cents premium I December 15th, it was 30 cents premium- January a Ist, 1862, It started et lneads premium ; June 15th, It rams In notes for one Lagold ; July 15th, 1863, it was $lO for $1; January 14 - 1864, it orened at $2l for $l, went down to $18; May sth, went up again to V(1,• December 31st, it was 01 for one; January Ist, 1865, it opened at $6O for one, and went down, February 15th, to $46; April Zloth, it was $lOO for one. It thee MO 100 and MO a day until May let, when the last sale was made at $l2OO for one. —Lest week Lieutenant General Grant issued a general ordor to the Various department command ers, authorizing them to break up all the faro.banks in the United States. Major-General Palmer, acting under this authority, appointed Saturday nlghtTor a grand raid on all the ha Kentucky. Kr ery bank in Louisville NV closed upend their Stocks contisented. Most of the men engaged In them got wind of the movement and left the - title- One at Frankfort was seized, and the keeper and dealer ar rested. All others in the State have been shut up. This deecenton the gambling houses, we understand to be in the interest of the soldiers, who have been swindled out of thousands of dollars and left penni- Ims by therm —The N. Y. Zitruas has a tremendous sensation account of the burning of Barnum's museum, in cluding -descriptions of terrific combata among the wild animals ; the dying' agonies of the whales, who were immr.dlatcly transformed into spermaceti can dler; and of the polar bear stoically meeting hisfate, like an Indian at the stake, Without flinchin g . w e at first attributed this to the ambition of some penny .:lour, but the real. point finally struck us—how rould the finato of Barnum's museum be fittingly described without a little/lumber 'Viewed in this tight, the quiet sarcasm of the reporter* truly rich, and his descriptions fully equal to the best efforts of tire great showman. When P. T. B. establishes new museum, he should look out this newspaper mum and employ him to write his advertisements.— We throw out the suggestion gratis. —Documents are discovered daily which throw light upon the secret initial proceedings Of the B,,,dn ero confederacy. The archives containing a record of the proceedings of tho rebel provisional government at Montgomery, Alabama, have recent y been captured. In framing their constitution a strong feeling was expressed intwor ofnamingtheir fionthern establishment the "Republic of Washing ton," which was only defeated by a majority of one, vote io favor of the title of "Confederate (Rates of. America." There were long debates .over-propeel-, . tons to Insert In the preamble of the constitution recognition of the divinity of both the ()Id and New Testaments of the Bible, and in the body thereof a provision enforcing the observance of the Ch ristiso !Sabbath...The former Is understood to have beat voted down out of respect to Indah P. Benjamin, and the latter in deference to the vishes at the ple of Louisiana And Texas. Many other curious disclosures are Bode by these document-. IFNI Silt ingeptadat ppublican, • 1`.., "A Union of laltee and a Union of lands, A Union of Eitates none can sever; A Union of hearts, andia Union of hands, And the Flag of our Union forever." CIRCULATION 3,100. H. H. FRAZIER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. Montrose, Pa,, Tuesday, July 25, 1865. UNION STATE CONVENTION At a meeting of the Union Central Committee held In Harrisburg on the 19th inst., a resolution was unanimously adopted providing for the as sembling of the Union State Convention at Har risburg on the 17th of August. The reports of the members from the different parts of We State indicate an effective and tho rough organization of the Union men through out the State. TUE SAIUTAILT connussioN The officers of the United States Sanitary Commission have prepared an address to the branches and Aid Societies which have so lib. erally sustained the Commission during four years of war. They return thanks to the kind citizens who have labored so zealously for the soldier, and particularly to the ladies, who,, in city, village and neighborhood, have devoled their time and interest to philanthropic work.— The Commission specially acknowledges its ob ligations to every woman who has sewed a seam or knit a stocking in the service of the Sanitary Commission. The officers announce that the necessity of furnishing further supplies for the use of the army is over; that there is still a stock of provisions and clothing sufficient for the use of all soldiers in the field, and they re quest that while further collections of articles of use for the soldiers Maw cease, that the aid soci eties will, after settling up their local indebted ness, forward balances of money and unused goods to the parent society at New York. The soldiers yet in the field will be properly cared for; but the principal work of the Commission, until the final close of its affairs, will be the com pletion of its work for the collection of the pen sions and back pay of soldiers, for which work one hundred and twenty-seven offices have been established in various parts of the country. In a few months the labor of the Commission will be closed, but its work will be a household le gend in many a soldier's family. It was organ ized for a great task of philanthropy, which it has greatly performed. All who have been en gaged in its labors deserve the thanks and grati tude of their countrymen. FAR PETCRED, DEAR BOUGITT There is an inveterate opinion abroad that the profits of labor and the resulting wealth of a na tion can be realizaonly through foreign trade ; that a State growi.rich only upon the profits of its traffic with some other States, and the greater the distance between them the better. Tho doc trine strengthens in proportion to the size of the community. A nation must bring its wealth across a sea, and a fortiori, we must infer thst the only chance the globe has for growing rich all over, is by a trade with the moon, or some other outlying province of the solar System. The folly of this doctrine has only to be stat ed to be fully realized. Wealth cannot be creat ed by carrying property around. All tmnspor fittion of it beyond the nearest attainable mar ket, is a waste of time, labor, and machinery. It is the business of true Political Economy to es tablish markets close by production. The Plow, Loom and Anvil should be brought together.— The blast-furnace should be moved close up to the barn—the cloth-mill should clatter within hearing of the reapers—the machine shop should rattle its bread-earning song to the bread-supply thrashing machine. Ships are useful things to bring tea and coffee across oceans—they are ow frilly wasteful institutions to carry wheat to be exchanged for cloth and iron. Farmers, insist on having the swap made at your own doors! You command through Congress. Mr. Cameron The resignation of Secretary Cameron soon after the war began, gave rise at the time to surmises luje• rlous to the character of that gentleman. A writer to the Chicago Rimblirrn offers a new explanation of that affair, received from Mr. Cameron himself, at an interview soon after It occurred. He says : Mr. Cameron remarked at the commencement, " Well, f 3—, I suppose yon think that either I have retired In disgrace or that. the President has com mitted a great outrage upon me " replied that, to tell the truth, this was Just what he thought, and that he called to see what possible explanation the Secretary could give him for his course, which would remove the bad impression it had left upon his mind. The Secretary replied with a smile, "Well, I ace you are as badly fooled in this matter as any of them. But I thought that you, who imam me so well, would certainly conclude that I never would have left my_post under the circum stances that I have, unless I was compelled to do so by some great consideration of state which involved the very existence of the country. I will, however, open your eyes to the true condition of affairs, and which has made it absolutely Imperative on me to tender my resignation to the President, and es ab solutely imperative on him to accept it. You know that at the time General McClellan was called to the command of the army, things in a military view Were in a most. deplorable condition. Nowhere, except in Western Virginia, had success crowned our arms; and, in fact, nothing had occurred to res cue the country from the slough of despond into which It had been cast by the Bull 'Run disaster. We were compelled to call McClellan to the head of the army at a time when he couldsdictate his terms, and ha actually did so. He stipulated that he should pass upon all appointments and promotions, and the President and myself felt compelled, for the sake of the country and its safety, to adeede them. Weil, things went on, under his rule, from bad to worse, and knowing the condition of affairs, and finding no hope in the future, I saw that the only way to save the country was to break the agreement with Mc- Clellan. And this I resolved to do at the sacrifice of myself. I went to the President a few days ago and said to him that things could net continue on In this way : that General McClellan must be relnoved from the supreme command -of the army if he meant to put down the rebellion; that it was a question of triumph of the South, or the removal of McClellan from the supreme commend. The President agreed with mein this view of the ease but said : " Came ron, bow can it be done? We have passed our words to him that he shall have the control of the appoint mentsand wecannot break them." I replied: "Leave that to me, Mr. President ; I will eat the. gordian knot if Lean, and unravel It. I will resign, and you can appoint another to my position ." But, Ca:n th:et," add he, "that would be ruin to you politi cally, if not personally." I replied that I cared not ; that somebody must be sacrificed or the country lost,. and I bad made up my mind to the consequen ces of my act. Mn Lincoln replied that he would think the matter over, and see me next day. Next dap bo saw me, as he had promised; said he had Slept over the matter, and had come to the condo- ACM I had ; but said he would appoint me to the Hessian Embassy, from which Mr. Clay was about to return, which would be a proof of his entire con fidence in me. .1 told him I did not want to go to Hassle, but be Bald I must go in Justice to myself, and that I might resign ea soon as I saw f alter the acceptance of the mission. We then agreedupon. my Eucceesor, Stanton , and so have brought Mc- Clellan beck to the original position of matters in the army before our agreement with blot. Stanton refuses to continuo Iho agreement, and McClellan must take his pinker position or resign. Mr. 8-- do you see that you have misjudged me and thatl have done the only thing that I could bare done, ander the circumstances, compatible with the Un ion?s welfare, dignity, and even the very existence of the country? I may suffer; hUt las glad to feel .that the country will be med. Prison Life at ELndersonville The Otsego Nepali'ken publishes a letter from Lewis di. Bryant, 2d N. Y. Heavy Artillery, lately a prisoner at Andersonville, Georgia, of which we copy the material portion. He is well known to E. C. BlackmtM, of this village, who sends the sketch for publication. It Is a thrilling narrative of prison HAI : On the 21st day of dare about 8,000 of us were packed in box cars as closely as we could stand, like so many cattle for market, and started for Ander sonville. We were seven days on the road—the dis tance by rail is about one thousand miles—end we had but two rations of food or water during the pas sage. On the alai we arrived at Andersonvllle. The prison is a ffeld of twenty-flue acres, mostly of wet, marshy ground, surrounded by a fence or stock ade as it is =lied, built up of square timbers, close and tight about twenty feet high. We found in it thirty thousand prisoners—the addition of our com pany making thirty-eight thousand. As we enteral this place of cruelty, starvation, and death, I shall never forget the heart-sickening picture that pre sented itself as I cast my eyes over the twenty-rive acres. of filthy, ragged, naked, lousy, sick, and starv ing mass of still living human skeletons. Thou sands were without hat or shoe ; many without coat, vest, or shirt, and others as naked as Adam before the falL home were shouting, some pray leg, some cursing, sumo crying for food, some weeping, and some, (whose sufferings had crazed the brain,) were fighting their comrades and giving orders tor battle, under the supposition that they were charging on the rebel army. As we entered the broad gate and looked upon the horrid scene, a companion of mine, heart-sickening and trembling in every limb, looking up to me with tearful eyes, and voice choking with emotion, naked, " For God's sake, Bryant, is this hell Y" And thought it no wonder that the poor boy asked, for he had never before seen such a masa of pitiable, suffering objects on earth. But he was not destined to suffer long in so loathsome a place, for a few weeks alter, overcome by starvation and disease, he yielded his body to the malice of those barbarous rebels, and his freed, happy spirit soared to the home of the patriot We marched into the crowd and the gate closed after na—to thousands the gate of death. We were then left to make the acquaintance of one new as sociates, listen to their tales of horror, and as ap peared to us all, to prepare to die. We were allow ed rations once a day, and this consisted of a few ounces of corn meal to each man, and that ground with the cob—about ball enough for one meal.— This was given to us raw and without salt or other seasoning, with one stick of pine wood, shoat four teen inches lung, with which to cook IL This meal we mixed with water, and sometimes succeeded in cooking, or rather, warming it, and other times ate it entirely raw. The water was obtained from a slough or swamp in one end of our pen, where an old barrel had been sunk to keep out as much as possible the surrounding filth and mire. The 111th, manure, and mire all about our " springs " or " wens," as we called them, being at all times knee deep, and the water we drunk was always and un doubtedly filthy and full of worms and maggots.— it was not an uncommon thing in the morning, as we went for water, to find some poor fellow dead in this swamp, who had muds an effort to reach the water and bad sunk down in exhaustion, unable to ford the mire. There was not a tree or bush In the whole field to shade us from the scorching sun, or shelter us from the storm. The fence or stockade might have ef. forded a shade in the middle of the day to afro, but if a pour fellow, though he were sick and dying, ap proached to within twenty feet of it, he was without notice or warning, shot by the inhuman guard, who were constantly watching such opportunities from their stations on the stockade. Many provided themselves with shelter from the sun and cold night winds, by digging with their bands boles in the ground—something like a grave—large enough to receive them I had the good fortune to be the own er of about one-half of an old blanket that fell to me on the death of a friend—Smith Cook, of New Berlin, Cheuango county . I wns considered a weal thy man on receipt of this, and was greatly envied by many of my companions. I turned this to the best account possible. A. it wnuld partially cover three persons I each night invited two companions to sleep with me. We then selected as dry a soot of ground as we could find unoccupied, lay together " spoon fashion," our much coveted blanket over us, and slid off into dreams of home, feather beds, and mother's mince pies. But my blanket was final ly stolen tram me, and I then knew what. it was to be poor. Oar first business in the morning atter breakfast, lit any had a breakfast to eat—l always ate my l 4 hours ration for supper, and fasted through the day, ) was to carry out on a board for burial, those of our companions who had died during the night. The number of deaths during the five months that I was there, averaged one hundred mad twenty per day.— I counted them for one month. Some days there were as many as one hundred and fifty; and these all died, I kuo.c, from exposure and starvation ; for when they entered that bell of rebellion they were as hale and hearty a set of fellows as I ever saw to gether. When any of our company died, their cloth ing, if they had any, was taken to cover the living who were destitute. In comparison with many others I was well dressed, and was considered finite a dandy, yet I should hardly be willing to appear In church at home, In my Andersonville toilet. For two months I had neither last, shoes, stockings, coat, vest, or shirt, but I had a pair of pants, which hun " . in strings , loose and airy, and the back of an old blouse, the front and sleeves having previously been honorably discharged from the service. Negroes were kept constantly at work digging trenches In which to bury our dead. After we had deposited them In piles outside the gate, they were thrown by the rebels and negroes into a large nix-mule wagon, carted by loads to the trenches, thrown In amid the scuffs and Jeers of the rebels, without regard even decency, and left to sleep till the great day of final accounts. As I have said before, all the men were filthy, ragged, or naked, and swarmed with vermin. The limbs of many were palsied and stiff with s'enrey. Some of them were swollen by dropsy almost to bursting. Their bodies were emeared all over with the excrement of their alertly:ea in which they were compelled to Be trom sheer weakness. I have sees, thousands whose bones pierced through the tightly drawn flesh—reduced by starvation—and sores form ed at the hips, shoulder blades, he., were tilled with slimy maggots, whose every motion was untold ag ony to the unhappy sufferers who had not the strength to remove them. They died by hundreds, to be buried like brutes. And all because they loved their country and fought for their flag. It Is believ ed by the prisoners and sometimes admitted by our guard to be the policy of the rebels, to sta r v e In prisons those that they cannot kill upon the field— that such as do not die In their hands, shall be so utterly broken down as not t, he able main to lift their muskets against them. And It will never be better until the southern confederacy experienen re ligion, or our government adopt the system of re taliation—two things not likely to °emir. But lam making my btter too long. On the 2ith day of November, about seven thou sand of the sick and those nearest starved to death, were paroled and taken to Savannah to be sent on board of our vessels, hundreds of whom died on the way. Bat when we came in sight of the glorious Stars and Stripes, there went up to heaven three as hearty cheers us were ever heard. Such es were too far gone to speak loud, whispered " hurrah!" and "thank God." Work on the Pacific Railroad. The Stara and Stripes, a paper published at An burn, California, gives the following account of the rapid progress of the Pacific Railroad through the Rierra Nevada mountains: The Pacific Railroad is now being constructed through this county with a rapidity almost unparal leled in the history of railroad building. The hills are being cut down, valleys filled up, bridges erect ed, and all kinds of railroad work going on as last as 2500 able-bodied men, with a full complement of teams, can do it. It is astonishing to ace bow much such a force, when directed by able and skillful an perintendents, and the appliances of modem engi neering, can accomplish. We had hardly begun to realize that the work had commenced cast of New castle, bclore the steam horse was snorting on the hill tops at Clipper Gap, in the heart of the mount ains, 43 miles from Sacramento and ISIX/ feet above the sea. Soon his shrill vrhisUe will be hem dat lill nobstovrn. We learn that the directors have fixed September Ist for that event, and if it can be ac complished In that ttme, it is Mrs to be done. The work Is heavy, but the force is strong and the zeal is irrepressible. Our citizens now fully realize that the Pacific Railroad is becoming a fixed fact, and not many years will elapse before the completion of this gi gantic work will be celebrated; and what a celebra tion it will be. A continuance of the energy now displayed will soon carry the road over the mount sins, and then for a rapid race for Salt Lake. The heavy work on the line west or Salt Lake, is right here in Placer county, and Is now being vigorously attacked by the company. We never Imagined the work would be eo heavy, or that It could be com pleted so rapidly. One of the most interesting excursions that can be made by sight-seers, la a trip on the railroad line from Clipper Gap to Illinoistown. The cuttings are all in rock of greater or less hardness, and the boom of the powder blast is continually heard—frowning embankments rise as it by magic—high trestle bridg es spring op in a week. Let those who are skepti• cal about the construction of the work visit that por tion of the road and their eyes will be opened. Persona who have never seen the line before the work commenced, or while it Is in progress, can form no correct Idea of the Immense amount of la. bor required to construct the mountain line. But the company do .their work well, and when finished It will be one of tile greatest feats of railroad engi neering in the world. Tea, yes, twenty miles of valley road can be made as easily as one of this mountain line. Everything about the road Is of the most substantial character. Travelers state that it is not excelled by any railroad In the Atlantic States. For one we are proud of this movement of Califor nia enterprise. BLIMUM. ALL RIOUT.—Mr. Barnum Is In nowise disheartened by the destruction of his museum. Ile is promptly out with a card, tianking the people for their past patronage, and announcing that ho will immediately erect a museum that shall be an on:anima to New York and a honor to the country. lie says that an experience of twenty-fire years will enable him to duplleate In Europe and Amerkla every specimen of natural history that he lately pos sessed, while from historical societies and other maws be can nearly supply the place of revolu tionary end other relics which have been destroyed. Internal Revenue Decision The following _decisions have been made by the Commhsstoner of Internal Revenue: Tobacco that be. become Mouldy may be cleaned or reworked, if done under the supervialon of an In spector, without rendering It liable to an additional duty, fie duty bad been paid thereon, and if the to bacco is exempt from "duty, it will not become liable to duty In consequence of such treatment. Persons engage d s separating gold and silver from the sweep of jewelers' shepa, are not there by rendered Bab e to license duty or taxation as manufacturers or assayers. If a mortgage eneented years ago Is assigned at the present time, the assignment must be governed by the law now in force. if the mortgage has been reduced by payments, the amount of stamp to be affixed to the assignment depends upon the amount actually due on the mortgage when the assignment is made, not on the sum secured by the mortgagor without regard to redactions made by subsequent payments. A single license, if so applied for, will authorise any person, upon payment of a license fee of ten dollars, to act as both claim agent and real estate agent in a city or town baring Riese. . a than (1000 Inhabitants. Photographic pictures which are merely copies of works of art, are exempt from stamp duty when ever they are sold by the producers, at wholesale, at prices not exceeding ten cents each. But If sold ut retail, at any price, or sold at wholesale at a price exceding ten cents each, they arc subject to the same stamp duty as Originals. All drafting having been stopped by orders from the War Department this office Is of the opinion that Collectors may now be justified in granting ped dler's license to any Freon who may desire the same, without inquiry as to his enrollment. Tobacco manufactured prior to September lst, 1862, and sold but never removed from the place of manufacture, I s liable to the rates of duty imposed by the act now In lone. Tobacco made subsequent to September let, 1862, and prior to June al, 1884, if It lies been sold, will be liable to rates of duty Imposed by the art of July Ist, 1883, whenever it is removed beyond the limits of the insurrectionary States. If it has never been sold, but still to the hands of the manufacture, then it will be subject, when sold or removed, to the rates of duty imposed by the law now in force. Manulactured tobacco in the insurrectionary States, made prior to April Ist, 1b65, and not owned by the manufacturer, when sold, either to he consumed in an Insurrectionary State, or to be carried out of said State, is liable to the tax imposed by the law now In force, Tobacco, in the hands of a purchaser, may be 'sold Indefinitely within the insurrectionary States with out becoming Liable to tax. But when the same Is Fold to be transported beyond the limits of said In surrectionary States, it becomes liable to the law in force at the time the first sale of the same tobacco was made by the manufacturer thereof. Tobacco, from Virginia or North Carolina, can not be shipped by way of .",few York to New Or leans, though the same was made and sold prior to the establishment of collection districts in said States, without the paymeotof the tax. The tax would accrue on Tobacco manufactured by a firm, should said firm, on being dissolved, divide the stock on hand of manufactured tobacco among the Indlvtial members of the firm. If a sale of Bald tobacco should afterwards be made, to be carried beyond the limits of the Insurrectionary States, the rate of tax would be determined by the time when such first sale was made. In all eases where any party shall make claims to have his goods assessed at a different rate from the current mica under the law now In force, it will be incumbent upon him to show to the entire satisfac tion of the assessor that the precise time when the sale was made entitles him to the lower rate of duty. The Mormons. Mr, Bolles of the Springfield Republican, who is one of Speaker Colfax's party, thus describes in one of his entertaining letters to the Springfield ftepubli can, some of the chief men in Salt Lake City : " In Mormon etiquette, President Brigham Young Is called upon; by Washington fashion, the speaker is also called upon, and does not call—there was a question whether the distinguished resident and the distinguished visitor will meet ; Mr. COILL; as was meet under the situation of affairs here, made a point upon lt, and gave notice he should not call ; whereupon President Brigham yielded the question, and graciously came to-day with a crowd of high dignitaries of the church, and made, not one of Em• erson's prescribed ten minutes calls,but a generous, pleasant, gossipplng sitting of two hours long. Ile is a very bale and hearty looking man, young for 64, with a light gray eye, cold and uncertain, a mouth and chin betraying a great and determined wlll— handsome perhaps as to presence and features, but repellant in atmosphere and without magnetism.— In conversation, he is goo! and quiet in manner, hut suggestive in expression ; has ideas, but uses bad grammar. Ile was rather formal, but courteous, and at the last affected frankness and freedom, if he felt It not. To his followers, I observed he was master of that profound art of earnest politeness, which consists in putting the arm affectionately around them, and tenderly inquiring for health of selves and families ; and when his eye did sparkle and his lip soften, it was most cheering. though cut warming in effect—it was pleasant but did not meet you. Of his companions, Heber C. Kimball is per haps the most notorious ; his free and coarse speech bas made him so. He has a very keen, sharp eye, and looks like a Westfield man I always meet at the agricultural fairs in Springfield. Dr. Hen:liaise] has an air of culture and refinement peculiar among his associates; he is an old, small man, ands uggestive of John Quincy Adams, or Dr. Gannett of Boston, in his style. Two or three others of the company have tine faces —such as yon would meet in intelect• ual or business society In Boston or New-York -- but the strength of most of the party seems to he in narrowness, bigotry, obstinacy. They look as if they had lived on the same farm as their fathers 41:1(1 grandfathers, and made no improvements; gone to the same church, and sat in the same pew, without cushions; borrowed the same weekly newspaper for forty years; drove all their children to the West or the cities ,• and if they went to agricultural Wes, in sisted on having their premiums in pure coin." Home and Family of Henry Clay A correspondent of the Cincinnati Commerridl tells a melancholy story of Ashland, the late home. stead of Henry Clay, and gives the history - of his descendants. The old homestead of Henry Clay, It seems,h, now occupied by the family of Hon. Thom as Clay, one of his sons, and present Minister to one of the South American governments. It is owned by the heirs of James B. Clay, who, it will be re membered, died In Canada about wear ago. •The house in which Mr. Clay lived when at home, was torn down some years since by James, and a mag nificent structure erected on its site, and there is nothing now about the place to remind one of him who once owned and honored it,except the family bncgy in which the old man and his wife used to drive about and the oak trees in front of the house, beneath which he used to sit and talk with his lam!. ly sod friends. Mr. Clay had five eons. Four of them survived him. One, who bore his father's name, was killed In the Mexican war. Thomas, as I have said, is now a government minister. John is living on one half of the old homestead, now divided into two farms. James died a fugitive in a foreign laud, and Theodore (the oldest of he family) is, sod has been, for twenty-five years, an inmate of an insane asy lum, still avowing to every oue with whom he con verses that he Is the original George Washington, nod refuses to respond to a call by any other name. Mr. Clay had no possessions of any kind at the time of his death, with the exmtion of Ashland, which was, of coarse, worth a considerable sum ; but even that was heavily mortgaged, and he thought at one time be would be compelled to abandon it to Its creditors, until, one day, when he entered the bank to pay one of his notes, lie was told that he did not owe a cent. Kind and generous friends had taken his case to hand, and lifted the pecuniary burden from his shoulders. Just So! The Norristown Herald has a department called "Funnyorama" in which occurs the following : Two or three weeks ago, under the caption of the "Spilt Coming," the anything-else-bat-loyal /twist er predicted an " Open Rupture—if you know what that is—in the Union party, and concludes the milk and-water article with the adage : " When knaves quarrel, honest men come by their own." That's so! About five years ago there was a convention held at Charleston, 8. C. It was a Democratic Convention, too. It was composed mainly of the greatest Knaves in or out of creation. They Quarreled I And the. Honest men came by their own. And here is where the laugh comes in—they mosn to kelp their Own 1 TEE An... tune CanLl3.—A private letter Irons Cyrus W. Field states that all the representatives of the press of England, America and France are to be excluded from the Great Eastern daring the laying of the cable, the Telegraph Conarnretion Company, having charge of the undertaking, believing this comae necessary, as some members of the press might enter into conversation with the engineers, and thus distract their attention from their highly Important duties. A. journal of the trip and Its results will however be furnished the Associated Press Immediately upon the arrival of the Great Eastern at Heart's Content, and the connection being made with the shore at that terminus of the line. As the cable across the Gulf of Bt. Lawrence, be tween Cape Breton and Newfoundland, is now se• riously deranged for the flint time in seven or eight years, It is probable that messages to and from the cable will have to be sentneroes the gulf by a steam er, which will delay the press report from from four to six hours. Bhould there be enough of the At lantic cable left to stretch across the gulf, eighty miles, which Is confidently expected. it will, we un derstand, be Immediately laid, and thus, in a few days, net only restore the continuity of the New York end Newfoundland line, but place the two continents uninterrupted telegraphic communi cation. GREAT Weeraursi.r..—A reporter writes that he saw ono public spirited My at the International Hotel, who was determined to be even with the CROMIRIRI, as she sported a waterfall by the side of which Niagara is nothing hot an insignificant cas cade. This exhibition was free. The lady asked no Quarters. The United States Sanitary Com ! mission. IiAIIETTISLL ADDRESS. The following address bop:La been leaned : WeeinNoToN, D. C., July 4, 1865. To the Ilranchts and Aid Bocietie4 Qf ?he United Biafra Sanitary Comminion : In a circular (No. 00) issued from this office May 15th, you were called on to continue your labors in collecting and forwarding supplies up to the present date. For the alacrity 3ou have shown In comply ing with this request under circumstances so un favorable to zeal, we tender you special thanks. Your continued support has enabled us to extend a generous assistance to our armies gathered at Wash ington, Louisville, and elsewhere, before being final ly mustered out of service. When you have for warded to our receiving depots such supplies as you may now have on hand, we shall find our Store houses sufficiently recruited to meet nil remaining wants of the service. In the Eastern Department our work of supply Is substantially done, with the exception of a Mal service still required in the. neighborhood of Washington. In the Western De partment It may continue, on a very diminished scale, a couple of months longer. In Texas and the Gulf possibly the supply service may last all sum wer. But by economy al our stores in hand, we feel authorized to say that after collecting what is already in existence,we shall he able to meet all just demands made upon tis.' We, therefore, In accordance with our promise, notify our branches, that their labors In eollecticgg supplies for us may finally cease from this date. We shall make no further requialtion upon them, except in regard to supplies already In their hands or on their way to them. We hope our branches will use all diligence In forwarding to our receiving depots, through the accustomed channels, whatever stores may reach them from their Sanitary Aid Societies, or any they have on hand. All balances in cash left In the branch treasnriea, after settling up their local affairs, will be forwarded to G. T. Strong, esq , Treasurer of the United States Sanitary Commission. So far as any of our branches are engaged in other portions of our work In collecting and forwarding supplies, their labors will continue so long as those of the Commission itself may last. Bat the supply work is over, and the characteristic labors of the women of the land in famishing hospital clothing anti comforts for sick and wounded soldier are com pleted. Henceforward, during the few months of existence still allotted to the Sanitary Commission to complete Its work of collecting the pensions and back pay of the soldiers, In which It has 127 offices established, so make up its scientific record and close up Its widely extended affairs, there will be no probable necessity for addressing the women of the country, and this circular may be our last opportu nity until the final report of the Commission is made, of expressing the gratitude of the Board for their patient, humane and laborious devotion to our common work. For more than four years the United States Sani tary Commission has depended on Its branches, mainly directed and controlled by women, for keep ing alive the Interest In its work in all the villagts and homes of the country, for Watifishing and handing together the Soldiers' Aid Societies which In thousands Lave sprung up and united their strength in our service. By correspondence and by actual visitation, as well as by a system as canvassers, you, at the centres of Influence, have maintained your hold upon the homes of the land, and kept your storehouses and oars full of their contributions. By what systematic and business-like devotion of yoar time and talents you have been able to accom plish this, we have been studious and admiring ob servers. Your volunteer work has had all the reg ularity of paid labor. In a sense of responsibility, in system, In patient persistency, In attention to wearisome details, In a victory over the fickleness which commonly besets the work of volunteers, you have rivaled the discipline, the patience and coumee of soldiers In the field. soldiers enlisted for the war. Not seldom, Indeed, your labors contin ued through frosts and lads, and without inter missions for years, have broken down your health Bat your ranks have always been kept full, and lull, too, of the best, most capable and noble women in the country. Nor do we suppose that you, who have controlled and inspired our branches, and with whom it has been our happiness to be brought Into personal eon tact, are, because acting in a larger sphere, more worthy of our thanks and respects than the women who have maintained our village Soldiers' Aid So doh... Indeed, the ever-cheering burden of your communications to u• has been the praise and love inspired In you by the devoted patriotism, the self sacrificing zeal of the Aid Societies and their indi vidual contribetors. Through you we have heard the souse glowing and tear-moving tales of the sacri fices made by humble homes and hands In behalf of our work, which we so often hear from their com rades of privates in the field, who througont the war, have often won the laurels, their °Mem have worn, and have °Oen been animated by motives of pure patriotism, unmixed with hopes of promotion or desire for recognition or praise, to give their blood and their lives for the country of their hearts. To you, and through you to the Soldiers' Aid So cieties, and through them to each and every con tributor to our supplies, to every woman who has sewed a seam or knitted a soak in the service of the Sanitary Commission, we now return our most sin cere and hearty thanks; thanks which are not ours only, but those of the camps, the hospitals, the trans ports, the prisons, the pickets and the lines, where your love and labor have sent comfort, protection, relief and sometimes life itself. It is not too touch to say that the army of women at home has fully matched in patriotism and In sacrifices the army of men in the field. The mothers, sisters, wives and daughters of America have been worthy of the sons and brothers, husbands and fathers, who were lighting their battles. After hav ing contributed their living treasures to the war, what wonder they sent so freely after them all else they bad? And this precious sympathy between the firesides and the camp tires, between the bayonet and the needle, the tanned cheek and the pale face, has kept the nation one; has carried the homes into the ranks, and kept the ranks in the homes, until a sentiment of oneness, of irresistible unanimity,'ln which domestic d social, civil and religions, po litical and military elements entered, qualifying, strengthening, enriching and sanctifying all, has at last conquered all obstacles and given us an over whelming, a profound and permanent victory. It has been our precious privilege to be your almoners; to manage and distribute the stores you have created and given us for the soldiers and sailors. We have tried to do our duty Impartially, dill gently and wisely. For the means of carrying on this cost work, which has grown up in our hands, keeping pace with the growing immensity of the war, and which we are now about to lay down after giving the American public an account of our stew ardship, we are chiefly indebted to the money created by the fain?, which American women In augurated and conducted, and to the supplies col lected by you underour organization. To you, then, Is finally due the largest part of whatever gratitude belongs to the Sanitary Commission. It is as It should be. The soldier will return to his home to thud, his own wife, mother, sister, daughter, for so ten derly looking after him In camp and field, in hos pital and prison ; and thee it will be seen that It is the homes of the country that have wrought oat this great salvation, and that the men and women of America have an equal part In Its glory and its Joy. Invoking the blessing of God upon you all, see are gratefully and proudly your fellow laborers. Henry W. Bellows, President; A. D. Bache, Vice President; T L Olmstead, George T. Strong, Treas urer, &c., of the Standing Committee; Elisha Harris, W. R. Van Boren, Standing Committee; Walcott Gibbs, Standing Committee; 8. G. Howe, C. R. Agnew, Standing Committee; J. P. Newberry, Sec retary of the Western Department; T. M. Clark, It M. Burnett, Mark Skinner, Joseph Bolt, Horace Binney,rjr., J. H. Heywood, J. Huntingdon Wolcott, Charles J. Stiles, Standing Committee; Ezra B. McCagg, John S. Blatchfora, General Secretary. GILEAT FBESILUT IN THE SCIIUYLKILL.—The heavy black clouds which hung over the city on Sunday afternoon, but which only treated us to n grateful and pleasant shower, poured their contents upon the earth with the utmost fury in the neighborhood of Norristown and Conshohocken. The hardest rain which has occurred for many years, burst upon those towns and the vicinity, and continued for several hours, inflicting terrible damage on property along the river, and there is every reason to suppose caus ing loss of life in one or two instances. The full ex tent of the disaster is not yet known, and we have no means of estimating the pecuniary los& On Sun day night the ricer began to rise, and before morn ing It poured along in a resistless and overwhelm ing torrent above the banks, sweeping everything betore it. There has been no freshet as sudden in its rise, or as disastrous in its results, since the spring when the Tumbling River Dam was carried away.— Some of the scenes along the river on Sunday night were of the most thrilling character. EICRUSCS, logs, trees, canal boats, and whole lumber yards were hurried down by the current, carrying away every thing which they struck, and strewing the river bank for miles with debris and plecesof wreck. One man BM swept away at Norristown, and was supposed to be drowned, but was found, yesterday morning, alive on an island in the river.—Phtladelphta /widen. Tue Gminr PENSION LIEST.-It has been many times said, now that the war Is over we must set about paying the expenses. The national debt will soon ho placed in a position to be constantly diminishing by the method of taxation now in use. But there is one obligation which we cannot so readily dis charge, which will be valid against the nation for many years; and that is, the obligation to pension those who have deserved well of their country. We can hardly Judge of the extent to whicbttbir will reach, but since the war has closed, the claims are rapidly accumulating and are arranged as fast as possible.-. It la stated that since the war began 64, pensions have been issued: 34,000 to invalid soldiers, and 00,000 to widows, mothers, and minor children. The payment to pensioners the past year have amounted to 69,000 000 , and when all pensions arising from the war shall have been granted, the an nual expense will Do about $13,000,000. ' Kers TIE= Otrr.'—The New York Herald cer tainly has a very ccmclommy of putting facto. It. ' Thero never can be a party suers/irony construct ed at present, unless such men as Yallandlgham and Pendleton of Ulna, the BefreOare of Nnw York and Connecticut, the W o ods of New York, poor Plena and musty old Buchanan are left out of the ring That may be set down as a•fl.Ted fact. Thin crowd will kill any pa' A Juvenile Elopement Case; The Hartford Courant elves the . partictilars of an elopement which took place recently at that place. Tho facts have very much the same ring as In all cases of runtway lovers, and are thus: "kiss Anna Brainard Is not yet fifteen years old. John Vinton is Scarcely nineteen. Now these young and tender children contracted great admiration for each other, until their loving demonstrations be came obnoxious to the parents of the former, and they issued orders that Vinton should no longer visit their premises. This Interference, as usual In such cages, only served to strengthen the bonds of affection between the youthful pair, and the smitten ' young lady' resolved to curb her ' cruel parents' of their will. At night the lovers met by moon light—a horse and carriage bad previously been provided and was in waiting—and with bag and bag gage left the town in great haste. They proceeded to Essex and it is there supposed took the river boat to New York. "There were two persons who were knowing to the Intentions of the elopers, and made arrange ments to accompany them, but by an unfortunate circumstance to them were prevented. These were Stephen Kingsland, aged about nineteen, and Phalbe Rye, aged sweet sixteen or thereabouts. They agreed to meet tho lovers at Essex, and left Middle. town early in the evening by private conveyance. Alter riding two or three hours, they stopped at a house to inquire the distance to their journey's end. ' How far is It to Essex?' asked Kingeland. Twenty six miles,' was the reply. ' How's that r They told me it wasn't but twenty-six miles when I left Mid. dferown." Bat you are not out of Middletown yet,' and sure enough they were not. Elngsland has been arrested for falsely representing to the owner of the horse that he was going to Guilford.' A later accodnt gives the sequel of the affair: "After reaching Essex Friday night, instead of taking the boat for New York, as was supposed, the elopers proceeded to Lyme, and took the night train on the Shore Road for New-London. Here they crossed the river to Groton, where Miss Annie Brainard was made Mrs. John Vinton in a legal wanner. Fortified with a marriage rertitleate the youthful lovers started homewards, and now back to Middletown, ready to receive the forgiveness and blessing of all whose `guy deceivers' they have been." The Golden Circle. Nearly five columns of the New York 7imes of the 18th Inst. are taken up with an official procla mation to the members oi the order of the " Golden Circle" and an explanation of the purposes of this mysterious organization. Both these documents pur •ort to have been promulgated by Dr. George W. L Buckley, the president, who has been for two years a prisoner, and is now In Fort Warren. By the proclamation—which Is fashioned very nod) like those of the President of the United Btates, with the usual repetition of "whereas" and the "now wherefore"—Dr. Bickley orders: "I. That the order No. 7-6-15 remain In force, and the suspension of the labors of the several depart ments of the Golden Circle be continued till July Ist, 1870, when the exeentive officers of the several department; and the legitimate members of tha Congress of the Order will assemble in Wahiugton City, D. C., and with open doors proceed to dis pose of such business as may be brought before them. Immediately on the termination of the session of said congress, it will be assembled at the chosen locality, to publicly lay the corner-stone of the Saxon University, and to ratify the appointment ot. the Board of Trustees Ind Faculty ot the same." And so on. We imagine that after our readers find that the labors of the Circle are to be sus pended, they will not care to know much more. We are not in the secrets of the Circle, and the ex planation that the object and aim of their etistence Is to make ' Saxontsm triumph over Latinism" may be correct, but we suspect that to the general reader it would seem that the whole story is a very tiresome hoar, or else that the long eaptivtiy of tie [doubtless' worthy physician has somewhat shaken his understanding. A Novel Enterprise. Leavenworth, Eaneas,papers contain an advertise ment of the American L'nion Cattle Association, acting under orders of the Secretary of the Interior, inviting one-hundred awl fifty volunteers to join the Society for the purpose of going on the Plains to rapture a herd, and tame not less than dye thous and nor more than ten thousand buffaloes, with the ultimate object of driving the ultimata to the mar kets of the States. The Expedition is under the superintendence and command of agentleman who is said to have had the most thorough experience of prairie lite. A good deal of money la supposed to be in the enterprise, and no little amusement and physical invigoration; but the propriety of this wholesale method of killing off the wild herds of the Plains may be well doubted. They are the main support of the Indians, and their destruction can only lead to heavier Indian appropriations, and the increased robberies and murders, superinduced by the want and revenge which must follow. North Carolina The Raleigh Progres, says there is not a solitary case of yellow fever at Wilmington. The Progress., speaks in the highest terms of the administration of Governor Holden, and says it la growing vastly in nubile favor. It also glowingly sets forth the great benefits that Newborn has received from the Latina of northern business men. The editor says that in 1558 it was deemed im practicable to run a line of steamers to New-York, but now the northerners have established two lines, and one or two to Baltimore, While there is a larger trade for sailing vessels than ever before. The nor thern element is largely in the ascendant at New- Dern, and will remain so. The best of feelings ex ist between them and the natives. The travel be tween Newbern and Raleigh is large and constantly Increasing. Cott on has begun to blossom In North Carolina, being two weeks earlier than last year. LIGITTNING PLATING CURIOUS FREAKS ON House RAILROAD Tnscx.s.—The Chicago papers give in teresting accounts of what they call a strong storm, last Saturday, revealing peculiar natural phenomena. They say that the fiery element dashed and shot hither and thither all over that devoted city. On the North and South Division street cars all was wild excitement. The electric fluid toqk to the rails, and ran up and down the track regardless of stations, and far ahead of time. Conductors became frantic; passengers looked desparingly around for an avenue of escape. Without the crowded cars poured the descending river; on the rail came the element they dreaded so much more. The scene be came exciting. Some rushed from the cars into the street, and were drenched to the skin In a moment ; others, more regardless of consequences, watched the zigzag lightnings play upon the raga. The philosophically inclined were in their element ; the practical people who saw no beauty in the threaten ing lightening, bad left the cars, and were enjoying free baths in the streets. Locomotion was an im possibility ; the horses would not go. The light ning playing ahead of them on the rails was a novel ty which they preferred to stand still and watch. Some C. Brtccaraurooz.—This man has been fa• vored by a British steamer with a passage front Ha vana to Rmrope. The captain of the steamer Con • way is a very obliging man, and detained the ship for au hour beyond the time of aalling, In order to allow one Major Helm to settle a little difficulty with the Spanish Courts, caused by the arrest of the latter for a small debt which he owed a fellow Seces sionist. The ship was kept back so that it might not lose the company of the distinguished exile, and ere long he will be relating to Mason the particulars of the burning of Richmond by his orders. It will be a notable meeting, and as Slidell is now pretan officio In Paris he may run over to London and enjoy an interview with his renowned colleague. It will be a nice party, and all the harm that we wish the distinguished trio Ls that they will stay where they are, and that this country will never see them again.—Philddelphia inquirer, BAD Fog Gm. Lan.—A Rebel war department dispatch, lately discovered in Richmond, adds force to statements heretofore made to the effect that Robert E. Lee, recently commander of the Rebel Army of Northern Virginia, Is the person really re sponalble for the burning of cotton and tobacco In Richmond, and setting lire to that city at the time of the rebel hegira. It also shows that the evacua- tion was contemplated at least six weeks before it took place. The dispatch, which Is dated February 22nd, Is from Brecklnridge, then Rebel Secretary of War, to General Ewell, and advises Ewell to sec General Lee for the purpose of receiving definite in structions regarding the latter's order for the burn ing of cot ton, tobacco, ftc. • TROOPS BEAT Nontu.—Since May 30th, when the disbanding of the armies commenced, W 8037 men have been sent to their. homes over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad [tom Washington. Daring the same period 11,813 horses and 6,930 mules have been transported our the same road. gitto gtivatiormatto. TO NOM IT MY maul • 'j HAVE BEES TO THE NKR. AND NAVE SERVED MY Country. nag I can servo any see swim Is bulldog or malting cui do all Moils or 314A.S 0 :A' WO RIP., Laying Bricks, Plastering, Sanding rump Work, Ac. tV ¢o stag I serve? Mangoes, July 14,1165.—g55. g, J. HAMLIN, Jlll.. Teeth Extracted Without Pain 1 or malls or . NITROUS OXID E , OR, LAUGIRING GAS: DR'S. WEEKS, Dentlet, of Now York City. will to Montrose Augurt Sti and Tonal.% !mill the :Gnu prepared to ... n „l i At rit ° l °Qr Xrlldolts OXIDE and alma ovelt. Over two Team ha the u.e of this Gas r this purpose has moved it ititeeonfrallable, IL le breathed Ilk*, the air, le coon: weed of the lame bkpt.:Gnat*, only with twice the propoolou, of Ogyde, the Oro tostalning principle. The ematcOlotte *idle Midle% It, ore aped:lMo. motioning a plrasird sleep at a tOt° EhCh.durat i on, riming "blob Me molest! Is ineenstble to pain ILOLIMS OT OFFISJX. Boars from Ba. TO. till p. m.. Thonotays, Frisby*, end !Saturday* of mice week. l'tl otip t eenie r , nod et other hour wed he unprepared or Manta, doicas • previous engagement. In made N. O. The One cannot well be made Oftener Gun once a day end but n United txuaber of domes a lima, an Oat petit= vaehlek It 1W hello' Mit h r.° o thole littO 10 00,t lor there 'city not be Gum tonna the lut to %Mod 00. HIRSCHM ANN BROTHERS L.)& 1.40:1:1,1140)4a$3):77 BMO Oestrous or CLOSING OCT thOr larxe sod extemlye doctor Fancy sad ritopte DRY GOODS, CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, EMBROIDERIES, TI LUD O W DURTAINS, WM - DOW STLADES, S'EXTURES, dc., tfe netting their entlrs 611011•12lett:MGMItGE the bAnds)o3GSt Ltd rid:ma goods ever Introduced ID market. at title short NEW YORK WHOLESALE PRICES, In outer to reduce tbelr stock prevlotul to Melt removal Into tbelr GE. MOM If you slab to secure burgghts, cull at • T1114501:111&NN BRO'S. No Ns Cann Wet—taco of the Dee lave. Dlruthstrotcu July Mb, lsr6. FOR SALE, A?TIM two yew old Colt, (mane) decibel', With black Mane and tail—of Morgan rock—tine style, Also,a three year old Wank, Wok° to harnew—llgat bay—rated to am work. The litter will Devoid cheap. Any one adenine to purchase will cell on OLOBOX (111i.PktAll. Brooklyn, Pa, July 17. 166.5,-11,. 500 SALESMEN WANTED To antic* and fla orders for U. LIFE AND TIMES OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, BY DR. L. P. BROCHLTT, rag extgrzar rruumerrEa AND ingsyrillag. ALSO, S ARIA IN's MATCHLVIiii PONTRAIT ANNA. NA PI LINCOLNI, and other ring clan Books and Zap. OD= Lrenlg of Territury ghee, guaranteeing =huba right or Apply petrol:l.ll7.oz gams, R. Q. OlllLltaiall. Pehltrher, Ramer, N. Y. Ckneral Office and 8.11c:r01121 at Slain Street, =rem of Walt., 1,000 BOUNTB VOLUNTEERS FOR MEXICO. MEEKER'S PLOWS ARE JUST THE THING! Shop al Now Milford, WHERE Too will always Ind the WO 4trlse out. Plows and Coatings mold by maned: Co., Montrose, U. Pane. lialfoni, and S. L. 'Mama% one below horlAxvillo Bring on your old Iron .d get a Ord rata Plow. For rnyther uarticulars All oo (.3..r.UKEMM 1211M1 NOTICE. lIEBSAS, my wire Jana A no, has left my bed and board v without Just ovule or prOVOgatiOrl. 1 hereby sortill all perneu harboring or trustlna her on my llMmuta, M I • , 111 ;my on dement her contacting actor this Gate. JUIUI b. BURDICK. plmaeh, J taly lith, 1.985.-seep DISSOLUTION. F A A. Wes la tills day &nob:v(ll , v metal O k ttlho bualnera Intl hereafter Le carried an 1.7 Alfred Mlles ALFII.EI) !MA!". I) muck, July B. 1666.--urso AGENTM WANTED FOR VIE NURSE & SPY. 1 7 .%b4 Scout and Spp. nivltait a moot vivid tram. pinta of tha Teach..., ladies, encreatic young meat and awaelally retuned and dl.alded °dicers aod aoldicrs. to vont of profitable mylo,. m.nt, find necnllariy atlaptad to their condltkm. have son. clew litz VW per month. arhlca Ira ;ran to toy dip: b . lint applicant. Bend for circular.. Adams drtiVMv, BROS.&. w. E corner Sloth and Minor atreeta.rbiladcithia, rt. July Io.l'4s.—turp. Dissolution. THE eopartnerably beretanta allstlag belytto J. A. DrA 1.f7. 8 Oax,od & J.. Unit, nod, the name and !style J.L D2Vit & Co, la thls day dissolved try mutual emautut. J. A DAVIS Its obcioob, J. OtiliTL4. Onta, Bead, July JO, 1PC.3.-1/. Cultivation of the Voice. PROF. TILLOTSON MS leave to announce, 11 particular requeet he will girl mother hjArmcijo. to thti Kin ng IgIiGLNG Term will c.ltnlnence ktonekv, July ltth tad caption° 4 ortki rupllo are expPoted to take !meoee dully. Terms of faith:a% Ire°. for h2O. Perrone takblg lean than kt, ono dollar per loom All d,tdrlne to take lessens will apply before term nomtP oo om During :tenet of Prof. IlllotiOn , ell tonotonds to be lett Lt 0. D. Lleman`e Made Store Montane, July 1, THIRTEEN YEARS OF CLOSE APPLICIATIOX TO nAmugniNG deoludj yawl.. In retlrlag fo , a sesama, I omit] make my bad for to my Wanda, Loping they arl/Lall sad em rat won as maventeat.A. J. BREWSTER.. CARRIAGE SHOP, BLACKSMITHING, &C, At Friends ville, Pa., By J. W. Flynn & F. P. Ryan. ALL r ltta i r u zost :: ,1 7 :1 1M . 7 , !i . Amd promptly tom, Tr? a SPRING AND SUMMER TRADE! 1865. atifterlbeN;ilanobilOri& eo, 11211Pa4a la a '"'" l '‘ ** ,, P ' thm° that She ' ' ' '''i '' SPRING AND SUMMER TRADE IS COMPLETE, nal they would r ainectr-Ilv invite their p•lrons •ad the Guth , . Iverally to call and examine the same. !teeming that our gov 4 tree selected with great care and every advantage le th• trade. are.theref"re eaahleet to oft, great ludocament• to cavtorucrs Vg prepared to Loh pretty nearly all that are In want of DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, PIECE GOODS, MILLINERY GOODS, AND READY-11ADE CLOTHING, Either in Price or Quality of Goode We Invite V nod terry role of Von pun , agale. to eall tn to before parchattln: el.wtone. no IA rill on to poor Eton Intenot do so, SPECIAL ATTEIVTION Is cal lcd t oar ifirga stock of MILLINERY GOODS Straw floats, •U rtyle. of Nato owl Ilmocto, TM bore o' .11 on and n 0.4.1, • rtlsclol Flow's end fancy 0111.113[11t* Io e:d 4 • aart•ty. Crape. Ulundi, /AC.. arc. O. We aro •meted ortra Indoccraents In UN lino to 2.lllllnErs, and ell orders ',No tootool7 ottooded to. Our HIV) of Spring Shawls, Cloaks, Hasquch and Capes Ent" , In (loth or fdllt, cannot be excelled Outride of the CitA clther to siTir. or Pieta. HOOP SKIRTS ! HOOP SKIRTS! CORSE:I' I I'S PARASOLS BY TIIE-TBOUSANT)! BODO Skids Thm it to SO epen.r and from 40 etc to the new and todpu`da ELLlerli) Included. Alan wverai ot.V mew ATI. lug Introduced, IJINEN TABLE CLOTHS, TOWELS, ANT NAPKINS.- Finn CoU6aeta. a pit. Flee white Linen Elsner' chitik /6 eta. • pl:m. u rtn Eno Ilalt Nets, llosicry, sad 'Jh,eo Mai Vatitty, For. Gentlemen's Wear WE STILL EtaffrrrAcrußF: Emily G 4 ME.VT TVE SELL. And have P.:amnia:s topetior advantages In Ulla Inaneti of ire4l W. wonld endow look At one elOthlnk CU ce L.T. Wc • add emery ion both y. In Akio and quality amt sore pm ar scie 10 per ecnt beside.. Call and convince konrealves of the ha, IT' apartment of ncoadelotbs and Casaillercie for custom • ode iel nr WO label menantto and make tilottdo:: to order no of i a Mon and F annl Sa I etktie ra tia m rtsiV, Sr guaanteesaltfacllon. In Vona:llnd )ad% boon • r; eI.V Alla and l front. ar . Yß' h 01111:10 d hTt e aaac L Y GUTTII.VBF:IIO, ROSENBAUM CO . Ifontroati. May. 1847. IM. N. DESatalnit. ktaibudiee DR, A D. TEWKSBITAT Physician and Surgeon, navesa.pint one year as 13t113013 In lba Unttekt :1.5 111 bas analn. located Auburn Uealts, sod will 44v P in Lisprofmterk, Scamp 180,...tr0dJ n t==2o =!ZMg23